<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9965" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/9965?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-15T21:37:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20405">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/d327e1df14e4bf4f4b9c31316c88a1b0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f808b68466efeb6f45d5b31237ba3cb0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31873">
                  <text>''
'

'

'

8_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 4· 19 74

Guard called out
by Gov. Gilligan
Gov, John J. Gilligan Sunday
ordered 900 national guardsmen activated in an attempt
to halt the violence of an independent truck drivers' work
stoppage which threatens to
&lt;lisrupt the state's economy.
Gilligan said the guardsmen
would aid the state Highway
Patrol with convoy escorts,
aeril)} surveillance and ground
patrol. The guardsmen were
activated following a request
from federal authorities
Saturday
asking
state
executives to do whatever
necessary to curtail violence
during the trucker 's strike over
high diesel fuel prices and low
freight rates.
"The actions of a new lawbreakers have created an atmosphere of fear among truckers who want to drive their rigs
in Ohio " Gilligan said. "By
activat~ units of the National
Guard and placing them under
U1e direction of the Highway
Patrol, we hope to convince
truckers that it is safe to operate in Ohio."
Lt. w. A. Sternad of the
Highway Pati-o! reported early

" Most

of

us

think of
.. . after

w~ather -s tripping

we see the mercury dip ping

Don ' t you thm k this is a
good tim e to check your
doors, wi ndows and home
for proper insula t1on ? If
you

f ind

t hat

yo u

need

weather str ippi ng come in
nnd falk lo fhe "FR I EN DLY O NE S". (WE'LL
H ELP YOU GET FIXED

UP, TI GHTER THAN A

DRUM ! I

today no incidents of violence
had occurred in the state late
Sundsy night and up to the
early morning hours.
"We have had many requests
fr om drivers for eScorts and
very few incidents all day Sund
dsy - the last one coming at
3:30p.m. EDT when a trucker
reported sniper fire on Interstate 71 in Morrow County,"
Sternad said.
The first four dsys of the
work stoppage, which began
Thursday and has gathered
momentum almost daily, has
resulted in lay offs for some
6 1100 workers in Ohio, halted
g~soline deliveries in some
areas and sharply curtailed
food deliveries.
Industry spokesman in Ohio
predict massive layoffs should
the strike continue through
next week, with auw and steel
plants based in northern
portions of the state hardest h1t
because of a material shortage.
General Motors Corp. officials have indicated 20 plants
in the state may close because
of the truckers' strike, The GM
plant in Defiance announced
Saturday it would layoff 365
workers beginning today.
Also beginning today, four
General Electric facilities in
northern Ohio will shut down
because of a material shortage.
Food deliveries in the state
have been sharply curtailed by
the strike. Fisher-Fazio Inc. of
Cleveland reported making
light deliveries to its 63 stores
in northeastern Ohio Saturday
after making no deliveries
Friday.
Deliveries by Fred W. Albricht Grocery Co. in Akron
have been cut by 40 per cent,
according to company officials. The firm supplies 50
hospitals, 300 schools, 300
supermarkets and numerous
restaurants and factory
cafeterias .
While announcing the mobilzation of the National Guard,
Gilligan said there were some
indications the violence of the
strike was ending. He cited
Highway Patrol reports Saturdsy which showed fewer incidents of rock throwing and
shooting and an increase in
truck traffic Sunday.
"However, we realize that
many truckers have been intimidated into refusing to operate their rigs," Gilligan said.
"By providing the additional
protection of national guardsmen, we hope they will realize
that it is safe to driy&lt;c ill_Qhi~

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK
~----

and will return to work, thus
averting the serious economi c
consequences the truck stoppage threatens to bring.
"In additiorr, we urge local
law enforcement authorities to
use all of their resources to
prevent violence, and encourage them to contact state
officials if they feel they need
assistance from the guard or
the patrol," Gilligan said.
The 900 guardsmen activated
were to report by 8 p.m. Sundsy to National Guard armoories in northern Ohio, including Defiance, Napoleon,
Toledo, Cl eve l a nd,
Youngstown , Warren and
Akron-Canton, according to Lt.
Col. Joseph McCann, assistant
adjutant generaL
McCanh said other units may
be ordered out later in the week
if deemed necessa ry to
maintain order on the state's
roadways .
Gilligan also urged federal
authorities to contin)le their efforts to find solutions which
would end tbe strike .
"I urge the President to respond inunediately by examining the demands of the striking
truckers and determining
which of these demands are
legitimate, and what can be
done to provide relief.
"The states have already
done everything within their
power to ease the economic
plight of the independent
truckers. But the grievances
and problems of these truckers
must be discussed and resolved
at the national level," Gilligan
said.

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Feb. 2,1974
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 50.25
to 62.40; 300 to 400 lbs. 48 to 08 ;
400 to 500 lbs. 45.75 to 51.50; 500
to 600 lbs. 42.50 to 48 ; 600 to 700
lbs. 41.75 to 45.25; 700 lbs . and
Over 36.50 to 40.
'
HEIFER CALVES - 25C to
300 lbs. 55 .75 to 62; 300 to 400
Ibs. 52 to 56 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 47.50
to 50.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 42 to
48.75 ; 500 to 600 lbs. 42 to 48.75;
600 to 700 lbs. 41.10 to 46.50; 700
lbs. and Over 34.50 to 36.75.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULU! (By
The Head)- Stock Cows 210 to
340· Stock Cows and Calves 348
to 445; Stock Bulls 280 to 370;
Baby Calves 34 to 72.50; (By
The Poundl - Canners &amp;
Cutters Cows 28.75 to 34 .30;
Holstein Cows 30.40 to 34.80;
Commercial Bulls ( 1,1100 lbs.
and Over I - 38 to 41.40,
LAMBS- Tops 90 lbs. to 110
36.50to 40.50; Seconds 75lbs . to
80 30 to 36.85; Ughts 40 lbs. to
65 34.50 to 37; Stock Ewes By
the Head 2 to 22.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 64 to 71.50; Medium
200 lbs. to 300 60 to 66.50; Culls
48.50 to 62.25.
SHOATS - 14 to 29.
NOW YOU KNOW
The volwne of mail in the
United States is almost 90
billion pieces annually - just
under half the world's total.

An

important part
of service

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Henry Werry, Pomeroy;
Mary Scott, Pomeroy; Jessie
White, Pomeroy; Robert
Freeman, Cheshire; Belinda
Fitch, Cheshire. ·
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Arnold Wilson , Charles Guy,
Ros s
Morris ,
War ren
Sali sb ur y, Harley Johnson,
James Hawk, William Chafin,
Bertha Smith, Robert White,
Er ic
Walker,
Barbara
Buchanan.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Stella Stahl, Pomeroy; Carl
Greenleaf, Pomeroy; Virgil
Hudson , Pomeroy ; Joseph
Bowland, Middlepor t; Linda
Reeves, Pomeroy; Rosemary
Wamsley, Marietta.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Norma Lehew .

The Mason County Fair was another
PT . PLEASANT _ Lawrence Gerlach
Jr ., 46 , prominent farmer , and prime interest,. He was inst~wnental in
businessman, died Sunday morrung m the acquiring land to locate the f8ll'grounds m
Baltimore Cancer Research Center, the TNT area and was co-chairman of the
fair's beef cattle division until his illness
Baltimore, Md.
Mr. Gerlach, who re sided at 1101 forced his retirement.
He was a member of the Point Pleasant·
Meadowbrook Drive, had been battlmg h1s
Mason
County Chamber of Commerce , the
illness several years.
_.
Farm
Bureau,
and Odd Fellows LOOge.
Associated with his father and brother m
He graduated from Point Pleasant
management of the Quality ManufacHigh
School in 1948 and Mountain State
turing Company since 1948, he ~
Business
College in 1947.
operated the Gerlach Stock Farro smce
Born Nov , 8, 1927 in Point Pleasant, he
1952.
.
'
was
a son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Showing a great interest in Republican
Gerlach
Sr., 2420 Mount Vernon Ave., who
politics and Mason County in general, Mr.
Gerlach served one six-year term on the survive.
In addition to his parents, he is surMason County Court, four years as Its
vived
by his wife , the forrner Mabel Gibbs;
president. He was widely recognized in
LAWRENCE GERlACH, JR.
one
son,
John David Gerlach, a student at
farm groups and perhaps was best known
for his association with persons mterested Point Pleasant High School; three p.m. Wednesday in the Wilcox~n Funeral
daughters, Mary Susan, at home ; Carol Home with Tom Clark and Richard Mc·
in Hereford and Charolais cattle.
While on the County Court he was Goff, and Linda Goff, both of Charleston; Cleery officiating. lnterment will follow in
particularly effective in advancing three grandchildren ; one brother, Oscar Suncrest Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home
projects to benefit the county's 4-H'ers. He Gerlach ol Terra Alta , and a sister, Mary
after
4 p.m. Tuesday. Those desiring may
Ellen
Wischner
,
of
Cleveland.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
was steadily pushing for unprovm g the 4-H
Funeral
services
will
be
held
at
1:30
make
a contribution to tbe Cancer Fund.
Discharges : Mrs . Carroll Camp Site at Southside.
Church, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Harold Fisher, Letart; Mrs .
Arb in Roush, Mason; William
Phelps, Point Pleasant; Ida
Richard Homer (Dick I Middleport; three cousins, two
Putney, Point Pleasant; John
Leona Hensley and Ada David Smith .
nieces and a nephew.
Brown, Point Pleasant ; Don Bissell received word of the
Mrs. Virgil Bogard visited Hayman , 61, formerly of
Me~orial services will be
Racine, died Monday morning
Fowler, Point Pleasant; Mrs . death of their cousin , Ollie Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins.
held
at Huntingdon Valley
Mary Ellen Andrew, Pills- at his home in Huntingdon
Jasper Eden, Letart; Mrs . Assel, in Missouri.
after which time the ashes will
Conrad
Berkley,
Point
Steve Goebel, Tuppers burg , visited Mr. and Mrs. Valley, Pa.
Mr. Hayman was born Oct. be returned to Meigs County
Pleasant· Lori Manion, Crown Plains, and David Wise, Francis Andrew ana Mr. and
12 1912 in Racine; the son of for graveside services at the
City , 0 .; Vickie Donohue, Point Cheshire, were overnight Mrs, Larry Collins.
'
'
Greenwood Cemetery' Racine,
Pleasant; Grant Roush, New guests of Mike Larkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Walls and the late Ralph H. and Margaret
with the Rawlings-Coats
(Maggie)
Weldon
Hayman
.
He
Haven; Mrs. William Jones,
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bogard son, Canal Winchester, visited
Funeral
Home in charge. Time
was a member of the Ratine
Point Pleasant; Judy Young, of Medina visited Mr. and Mrs. Ernestine Hayman.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James Sammie Rairden .
Mr . and Mrs.
Virgil United Methodist Church and of the services will be announced. The Rev. Robert
Pashk1 , Jackson , 0.; Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bissell of Wamsley , Betty Louden and Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM.
Survi vlng are his wife, June Bwngardner will officiate.
George Payne, West Colum- Colwnbus, visited Mr. and Jea n Ann and Melissa of
bia; Mrs. Larry Bradley and Mrs. Joe BisselL
Cheshire, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Sansbury Hayman, formerly of
daughter, Gallipolis, 0 .; Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs , Howard Young Kalibough, Belpre, and Mr.
Michael Cremeans and son, of Paden City, W. Va., recently and Mrs . Dwight . Logan,
CALLED TWICE
Middleport, 0 .
spent several days with Mr. Pomeroy, were visitors of Mr.
The Middleport E-R squad
·MRS. NEU!ON DIES
and Mrs. Garth Smith. They all and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins.
was called Sunday at 10:28 p.
Holzer Medical Center
RUTLAND
Blanche
Jared Spencer spent an m. to Middleport Hill for Mrs .
went to Lancaster to visit Mr.
Births
Nelson,
82,
Dexter,
Rt.
1, died
and Mrs. Paul Osborn and evening with the Larry Collins Jimmy King who was taken to
Feb. 1 - Mr . and Mrs.
family .
'
Osborn.
Veterans Memorial HospitaL early Sunday evening at Kimes
Robert McCarley, Vinton, son; Edith
Convaleacent Home, Athens,
Arva Jean Holter and Violet
Mr. and Mrs. Harlis Frank
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Blaine, were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Smith. were dinner guests of Today at 6:47a.m, they were Funeral arrangements will be
called to North Second Ave. for
Gallipolis Ferry, son; Mr . and
Phyllis Larkins.
Lawrence Boyd who was taken announced by Walker Funeral
Mrs. Gary Lee Sargent,
Home in Rutland.
- Violet Smith to Holzer Medical Center.
Henderson, son; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Eberts, Hamden, son.
Feb. 2- Mr. and Mrs. Nick
Blanton, Gallipolis, daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Kimbler,
Jr ., Jackson, son; Mr. and
Mrs. William Fyffe, Wellston, Jack Pickens, who was
seriously injured in an accident
daughter .
SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 PM
Feb. 3 - Mr . and Mrs . at Graham Station is reported
Marlin Escue, Pt. Pleasant, as slightly improved. His wife,
Ruth and Mrs. Harry Pickens
daughter.
visited him on Sunda y at the
Mt. Carmel Medical Ce nter in
Coiwnbus . His room is No. 756.
The Rev. and Mrs. Clarence
McL1oud who were patients at
Pleasant Valley Hospital have
returned to their home in
Mason.
Mrs. James Lloyd and sons
of
Nashport, Ohio, Mr. and
Meigs Cointy farmers who
Mrs.
Stan Saunders and family
wish to apply for a new burley
of
Colwnbus,
Mr. and Mrs.
tobacco allotment must do so
Curtis McDaniel, Mason, went
by Feb. 15.
To be eligible for a new to Pt. Pleasant, Saturday
allolment the applicant must evening where the birthday of
own a farm and receive 50 Denise McDaniel wa s obpercent or more of his income served. Denise is the daughter
from products sold from the of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Mcfarm and have had experience Daniel.
Recent guests of Mrs. Clara
in raiSing burley tobacco. For
Smith
were her daughter and
cigar tobacco, the applicant
husband
and grandchildren,
must own or operate the farm
and have had experience in Corporal and Mrs. Andy
raising cigar leaf tobacco. If Galford, Brian and Greg, of
the applicant has a burley Madison, W. Va. On Monday,
allotment he is not eligible for a Mr, and Mrs. Charles Moore of
permanent cigar leaf allot- Huntington, visited her sister,
Mrs. Clara Smith, and her
ment.
Requests must be fileq at the brother, Grover Roush, at
Meigs
Agriculture Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Vaught Smith Stabilization and Conservation
of Gallipolis visited on Sunday
Office in the Masonic Temple with Mrs. J . E. (Dolly) Roush
building, Pomeroy. Tobacco
applicants are accepted at Mason.
regardless of race, color,
religion, sex or national origin.

News, Notes

News Notes

ADMIRAL

,.

M\M ~E R

FEOfRAl

I

~_!!O~IT

--

~~

r

SPECtAL VALUE!
THE JOPLIN Model C1897P
(18" Dla. Meas.)

- - - -- --

INSURANCE

CORPORA T ION

BAKER

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Visiting in the Russell Roush
home over the weekend were
Mike Rhodes, Mrt. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis, Mrs. Walter
McDade, Mrs. Gladys Shields,
Cookie Weddle, Debbie Weddle
and Jltnmy Riffle.
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Sayre ,
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre
returned home Friday after a
week's visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Dean Sayre at Middletown, Pa.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Herbert Sayre over the

Marriage License
Wayne Evans Well, 21, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Air Force, and Unda
Kay Anderson , 21, Logan,
student.

MEIGS THEATRE
Mon .- Tues.- Wed.Thurs .

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Feb- 4-5-6-7
NOT OPEN

NO. 206

Now You Know

enttne
Devoled To

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~

ln14?reaiJ

Of~

No president of the Un ited
States has been an only child.

Meiga-M(JII()n Area

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1974

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

•

conomy staggerzng
Uulled Press International
a strike by independent
truckdrivers protesting high
fuel prices threatened a crippling blow at the nation's
e.:onomy today,
There were numerous
reports of food shortsges and of
housewives raiding supermarkets for necessities that 9oon
may be in short supply, Scores
of plants were shutdown because their production and

distribution facilities are serviced by trucks, throwing
thousands out of work.
As the mllitant independents
sought to keep all truck traffic
off the highways, there were
increasing reports of violence.
In Pennsylvania, Gov. Milton
J. Shapp declared a state of
emergency. He said it was
prompted by violence which
"er.dangered the safety, bealth
and weUare of a substattial

number of citizens."
millions of dollars, perhaps
In Washington, officials were hundreds of millions within one supermarkets of America,"
Butz told a convention of the
meeting in lengthy sessions to week.
United
Fruit and Vegetable
consider
the
truckers'
"The real loss will be for Association.
demands.
consumers, indeed for the
Reports of frenzied buying of
In New Orleans, Agriculture families of truckers themgroceries
and the closing down
Secretary Earl Butz predicted selves, that aren't able to find
of
food
suppllers
cropped up in
the truckers' strike would cost the products they normally
most
parts
of
the
country.
the American economy tens of expect on the shelves of the
The nation's largest chicken
processor, Holly Farms Inc.,
Wilkesboro, N.C., stopped
operations indefinitely at three
plants causing the layoff of
3, 700 employees.
-,.it119118lli!J'I!!.~~'1$W:!::::~,_;.m':::::':::&gt;.::::::: : .... ~;;.w;:::::::::~:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:.
At a Kroger store In Cincin!lll ti weekend sales were
almost doubled . The manager
Mrs. Charles (Dollie 1Hayes, at the Holzer Medical Center, said the normal purchase of
Oak
St., Pomeroy, Monday and Charles II, who is em- $12,000 worth of foodstuffs had
By Uolled Presalnternallonal
filed
petitions
of candidacy for ployed with Bell Laboratory in jumped to more than $22,1100.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON has been giving
Stockyard
owners
in
White House staffers pep talks, assuring them he will be Ule Republican nomination for Colwnbus.
county
auditor.
Mrs.
Hayes
is
the
second
to
Amarillo
and
Fort
Worth,
exonerated In the Watergate scandal, according to an aide. The
Mrs. Hayes was employed as file for the Republican Tex., said no cattle had been
aide said Nixon himseU appears more confident he can ward off
deputy
auditor while Perry nomination to the auditor's shipped in four days while the
demands for his resignation or Impeachment, despite a recent
Gallup Poll showing only a 26 pet. approval of Nixon's perform- Riggs and Gordon Caldwell post. Howard Frank, in- Interstate Producers Livestock
held the office over a period of cumbent treasurer, filed Association said all 48 of Its
ance,
15
years.
earlier.
buying points in Illinois, Iowa
Another Gallup Poll made public Monday showed that if
Presently employed at the
The Meigs County Board and Missow-i have been closed
given a choice, a plurality of voters would prefer VIce President
G.!rald Ford to Nixon in the White House for the remaining years Meigs Inn, Mrs, Hayes is the of Elections also announced "until we are able to make sure
Ward the names of six additional that livestock can be moved to
of Nixon's terrn. The President was moving on several fronts to Pomeroy , Fourth
on
the Democrats who have filed for slaughtering plants."
spur a momentum of his administration and project the image of representative
Republican
Central
Comcentral committee posts of
The truckers' strike caused
a man who is planning a busy year ahead. He diacussed with
mittee.
She
serves
as
executive
shutdowns
of widely different
their
party.
They
are
Robert
Soviet Foreign MiniSter Andrei Gromyko his plans to return to
Moscow for a summit meeting with Communist party leader secreq.ry of the Meigs County Burton, Pomeroy Fourth ; consumer products ranging
'·... . - ... • ~ ..... 'I{ &gt;# ..
Leonid I. Brezhnev this year, probably in JWle. Other White Tuberculosis and Health Martha Husted, Rock Springs; from roof bolts to glass
• •. ,'F. •
~­
•
Association,
Plants
in
Illinois,
products,
Winston
E.
Varney,
Portland;
House officials have passed the word that Nixon plans to do a lot
'
..... ··' ' '
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hayes
have
two
West
Virginia
and
many
inSteven H. Eblin, Pomeroy
of traveling abroad with Ew-ope and Japan in the picture in
BOULDER'S PATH- Alarge boulder, approximately 12 feet in belghl, fell off this hlU on
children, a daughter, Mary Precinct; David M. Brickles, dustrial slates announced
April ,
SR 338 just north of Antiquity at "The Narrows" Sunday a.m., landing just off the side of the
Sue, registered nurse in the Bedford West, and Audrey
(Continued on page 10)
road. The flattened bushes show the path the boulder took during its descent from the cliff
SAN FRANCISCO - MAYOR JOSEPH L. AUOTO'S wife, obstetrics department nursery Young, Pomeroy First.
above.
mysteriously missing since Jan. 20, telepho~ed home late
Monday, said she was safe and promised a family reunion. The
call to the worried California gubernatorial candidate came only
a few hours after ber disappearance from the swank resort at
Pabn Springs was made public,
OUtside of saying that "the family will be reunited" today,
Mayor Alioto's office declined to give further details or say
where the call originated, Mrs, Alioto, 58, the former Angeline
By BOB MIIJ.ER
on to shippers the increased consin.
The most serious effects on some of its production and largest processor of chickens,
Genaro of Dallas, was last seen at a resort cottage where she had United Press Internatloual
cost of their fuel.
National Guardsmen were on food supplies were reported in reported additional layoffs.
suspended operations ingone with her son, Lawrence, and his wife, Ann, to join the mayor
Violence connected with the
The proposal came as talks duty in Ohio, Pennsylvania and the Midwest, where 15 meat
In
Wilkesboro,
N.C.,
Holly
definitely
at three plants,
at a campaign appearance.
independent truckers' strike continued Into tbe wee hours of Michigan, and were placed on plants have been closed, Farms Inc ., the nation's
putting 3, 7110 persons out of
expanded Monday in a number the morning in Washington standby alert in Kentucky. In among them operations of two
work .
WASHINGTON- SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER Andrei of states. Plant closings and today between government re- Tennessee, state troopers were of the largest national packers .
- In Alton, Ill., about 2,500
Gromyko so far has not discussed U. S. relations with Cuba layoffs spread, while many presentatives and owner- ordered to work 12-llour shifts
Seven Plants Closed
persons were laid off when the
during his visit here despite Soviet public demands tbe Western areas reported fears of short- drivers in an effort to resolve with no days off until the
One of those, Armour &amp; Co.,
Owens-Illinois
Glass Co., was
political and economic blockade of Cuba be ended, according to ages of meat and other the deadlock over the truckers' violence suboides.
closed five of its seven plants in
shut
down
indefinitely.
State Department officials. Secretary of State Henry A. perishable foods.
demands.
The work stoppages threaten the area and curtsiled operaI Missouri Beef Packers
Kissinger, scheduled to confer with Gromyko a second time
The key demand of the inThe meeting broke up at 3 severe economic dislocations lions in the two others. Wilson
closed two plants.
today, told newsmen Cuba was not discussed during their 2'h· dependent truckers, who began a.m. without resolution and a in many parts of the country. &amp; Co. Inc., closed its Cherokee,
Mines FaceSbutdown
hour meeting Monday, Other officials said they discussed their strike last Thw-sday, has new session was set for noon.
Gov. Shapp said 50,000 Iowa, plant.
West
Virginia Coal
Ew-opean problems and the Middle East.
been a rollback in fuel prices.
'As long as we're meeting, workers had already been laid
Hog and cattle receipts were
Association
officials said
"There were 'several other subje.:ts," Kissinger said when But they also are aaking higher we're optimistic,'' said Gov. off in PenMylvanla, and that also down sharply in many
major underground mines face
asked why Cuba had not been discussed, Gromyko came here speed limits, more generous Mllton J. Shapp of Pennsyl- the number could rise as high major American livestock
a
shutdown because of lack of
Plans
to
conduct
tractor
late .Sunday from Havana, where he had accompanied Soviet fuel allocations, and per- vania, who initiated tbe talks. aa 400,000 unless the strike is markets.
suppliesranging from fuel to
pulling events in the afternoon
Conununist party chief Leonid A. Brezhnev on an official visit. mission to pass along to
Vfoleocefo Reported ·,
settled this week.
Deliveries of other foodstuffs and evening of the first day of roof bolts.
As Gromyko met with Kissinger and later President Nixon, the shippers increaaed coats.
Incidents of shootings, tire
The strike put at least 20,1100 also were affected, with reBy.this weekend, significant
Soviet and Cuban governments released a joint communique
The Nixon administration slashings and other violence Americans out of work Monday ceipts of produce in Eastern the 1974 Meigs County Fair food shortages are expected to
demanding the Western political and economic blocl!ade of Cuba
propoaed to Congress Monday were reported Monday in alone and choked supplies of terminals declining. Buyers were completed Monday night
be ended and that the U. S. naval base atGuantanamo be closed. a joint resolution to speed Alabama, California, Connec- meat and proquce from coast were bidding up prices of when the Meigs County Fair • (Continued on page 10)
financial relief to the in- ticut, Delaware, Illinois, In-- to coast.
potato futures in commodity Board met at the Rock Springs
i
NEW YORK - A GROUP OF GUNMEN burst into a Black dependent truck operators in diana , Iowa, Kentucky,
Food prices, particularly markets,
· fairgrounds.
The tractor e.vents will be
MOIIem moaque in Brooklyn Monday night and opened fire. Four an effort to halt tbe work Maryland, Massachusetts, Mi· meats, had already been rising
Both American Motors and beld in cooperation with the
stoppages.
The
resolution,
The
persons including the sect leader and two of the attackers, were
chigan, Minnesota, Missouri, steadily before tbe strike, and Chrysler shut down some
ldll~ the shootout. The gunmen fatally shot the leader of the New York Times said today, Ohio, Pennsylvania , South the stoppages are expected to plants, and 18id off workers at Soulheasiern Ohio Tractor
sect Identified as Bilal Abullilh Ralunan. Members of the Yasin would permit truckers to pass Carolina, Tennessee and Wls- increase the price pressures.
others, General Motors slowed Pulling Assn. Also discussed
was securing grandstand
M~ue returned the fire and killed two of the intruders, police
entertainment
for the evening
said. A fourth person was also sialn.
hours
of
the
annual
five day
Assistant Police Chief James T, Sullivan said the apparent
fair,
target of the attack was Rahman, minister of tbe mosque, who
Delmar A. Canaday, former
The board went on record as
died at' the scene. Another victim was Ahmed Mohammad, who
Pomeroy
mayor, said today ,
highly commending C. E.
died in the emergency room at Brooklyn Jewish Hospital. Early
Two new members began
A tentative offer of land for to Mrs, Jeanette Thomas , board authorized moving the
that
contrary
to his earlier
Blakeslee, Meigs County
reports had apparently mistakenly named him as leader of the
their duties, and a propoSed the new school and workshop
adult
activities
group
from
the
announcement
he
will not file
Agricultural Agent who has
sect, Another man was wounded and·llsted in critical condition. location for the new school and which has been offered by a director of the achool. FWlds
for the new achool and com- Rutland building to the former served as an ex-officio member petitions of candidacy in the
1be two slain attackers were unidentified,
sheltered workshop was group was discussed. Nothing
munity workshop w_ill come Waddell Grocery building on or the fair board many years. Democrat primary for 92nd
discussed by the Meigs County definite, however, has been from a $250,000 bond issue Uncoln St. in Middleport, The
district representative to the
WASIDNGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON'S chief defense
Board of Retardation Monday finalized on the location. The approved by Meigs County move, however, Is subject to Blakeslee, who has stepped Ohio House of Representatives.
lawyer says tapes and other "evidence" support Nixon's version
night at the courthouse in offer being discussed is from a voters last fall and from the approval of State Mental down frotn the board, has inA Democrat, Canaday said
dicated that he will assiSt in the
of when he first learned oflhe Watergate coverup, not that of
Pomeroy.
group which prefers to remain matching state funds ,
Retardation
officials
and
that
!)is change in plans was
future fairs if he Is needed.
former aide John W. Dean IU. But Special Prosecutor Leon
Beginning new terms of anonym!l"S, but the land is
subject
to
fire
and
building
brought
about by the illness of
The board discussed the
Blakeslee, who has· been . the
Jawonki, wfio has el&lt;Amined much of the same material as the
office on the board
which
1-.
i~
";
r
.,
!1crth I , .,;1(1 , : ..-. ' .
being
offered
free.
The
board
is,
inspections.
adult activities program which
'
agricultural agent here for Ill•'
White House, has said be has seen no basis for a charge of per· supervises the program
for the · stiil open to suggestions_ on is currently being carried out
·(! .... "
·p0or lc·ad(•".:;hip" '
The Rev. Bill Perrin was
jury aga!Dst Dean.
·
retarded of Meigs County were. available land for the ach.ool. in the Rutland Elementary named new secretary. Ed past 33 years, will be honored the Democratic Party in Meigs
with an open house from I :30 to
Since the public ha~ not seen the tapes nor the docwnents in Judge Manning Webs!.!• of the
A minimum of five acres is School building under the Kennedy, chairman, presided. 4:30p.m. Sunday at the Meigs County. He did, however,
question, It was left to guess which side tbe evidence supports. As juvenile and probate cow-ts
required. The board prefers it direction of John Krawaczyn. Others attending were Iris
extend thanks to stale chairof last weekend, when Jaworski declared that prosecutors "are
and Richard Chambers, be centrally located in the Plans are being made for the Carr, Grace Weber, Rick High' School. Presiding over man, William -Lavelle , for
Monday night's meeting was
aware of no basis for a perjury charge" again•t Dean, Jaworski Middleport, a• executive of the county . Anyone ,havi ng
adult 'retarded group to make •Crow, Mrs, Thomas, Judge Fair Board Prfl\ident Wallace assistance offered to hil)l in his ,
,
Continued on Page 10
,
Pomeroy National Bank.
· suggestions may pll!sent them pottery to be sold locally. The Webster a.ld Chambers.
intended1landidacy. '
Bradford.

Mrs. Hayes asks
ews.. in Briefsl· for nomination

..

,

,,

~

·.-

Truckers' strike spreading
Tractor
pulling
planned

CanadJJy will

U:

Easy Wearing New Tent
Shape in Misses Sizes by.
JUST ARRIVED

not file for

Location of school considered

_

DEVON SPORTSWEAR FOR SPRING
Ready-To-Wear Department, Second Floor

Main Store and Warehouse Open Week Days 9:30to 5
OPEN FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS 9: 30 to 9 P. M.

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

\
·I

VOL XXV

following a long discussion as to responsibility of the gym,
Ralph Werry agreed to meet with Hargraves to determine a
solution to the problem.
Council has had on order for six months a new police cruiser
from Pomeroy Motor Company. It was agreed last night that
Mrs. Jane Walton, clerk, and Webster make a contact by phone
with General Motors in regard to the delay.
Representatives of the Disabled American Veterans met
with council in regard to public use of a lot on Butternut Ave.,
owned hy the DAY. The lot is 75x100 feet and adjoins Sixth St.
The lot is being abused by village equipment according to
Marvin Kelly, spokesman. Kelly asked that the lot be returned
to its original condition as it is needed for parking space for
members of the DAV.
Council agreed to survey the area and report on its findings
at the nex t meeting. A resolution was approved granting the
clerk to renew notes at the Pomeroy National Bank and The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
Permission was granted the United Methodist Church at
Enterprise to hold a bake sale Saturday in front of the New York
Clothing House, the Pomeroy Little League to hold Tag Day
May 4 or 11, the Heart Fund to canvass the business establishments Feb. 18 through 23 and house to house on Feb. 24.
Attending were Mayor Dale Smith, Werry, William
Snouffer, Harry Davis and Globakar, councilmen, Mrs. Walton
and Wehater.

•

j

weekend were Mr . and Mrs.

Brice Sayre and baby of
Jackson,Mr.andMrs. No~an
Styer of Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Styer also visited the
latter's brother, Paul Sayre,
Saturday.
Debbie Weddle, Cindy
Roush, Cookie ~eddie, Sharon
Roush and Jeff Miller spent
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton.

"deplorable". He stated that he and other residents of that area
have offered on numerous occasions to donate ground to
alleviate the situation.
McKenzie said he and other residents were willing to do
anything they could to help,
Council agreed to make every effort to improve road conditions. Phil Ulohakar, councilman, will inspect the road and
will have gra vel placed on it tmlil repairs can be made, weather
permitting.
Also meeting with COWlcil was Don Griffin of Scientific
Sanitation Inc. in regard to next year's lease for picking up trash
in Pomeroy,
Earlier, Griffin reported that monthly rates would have to
be increased from $2.50 to $3. Council took no action at that time.
Monday night council agreed to prepare an agreement for
Griffin and the other two haulers in Pomeroy and send to them
for approvaL Council will consider the 5&lt;kent increase .
It was suggested that Griffin charge by the bag, or container. Griffin said this was difficult for the drivers to do. Griffin
will meet again with council at the next regular meeting.
A letter having been read from George Hargraves, Meigs
Local School District superil)tendenl, at the last meeting of
council in regard to use of tbe gym at Pomeroy Junior High
School, the issue came up again Monday night. Chief Jed
Webster had said earlier he would not be responsible for the
gym, nor would his department.

Weather

due by Feb. 15

Fairview

because if those under consideration now to fill it weren't interested enough to.run in May tbey won't be interested enough to
devote the time necessary to cope with the ever expandif\1!
problems that wiU be facing , our village in the upcommg
months. " (Signed) Jim Mees. ·"O.S. I believe my past accomplishments as a councilman should be considered enough
proof as to my devotion to the town of Pomeroy , Just ask the
people who elected me and I believe they will agree."
Council, after hearing the letter read, felt that the
resignation of Mees had been submitted and accepted and
should stand.
Council in other business named L. F . Schoenleb as the third
cemetery trustee to fill the vacancy created by the recent death
of Allred Elberfeld. Other cemetery trustees are Roy Mayer and
Jack SeidenabeL
Council approved the third and final reading of the annual
appropriation ordinance for 1974 and the third reading of an
ordinance that will increase tbe natural gas rate.
Meeting with council were James O'Brien, attorney, and
Lester Zinunennan. O'Brien, who spoke on behaU of Zimmerman, asked and got council's permission for Zinunerman to
cross the sidewalk in lront of his property , the late John Sauvage
property on Butternut Ave., in order that be may build a garage.
Also meeting with council were several residents of
Pleasant Ridge whose spokesman was Don McKenzie.
McKenzie said road conditions on Pleasant Ridge were

Light snow spreading over
the state this afternoon
changing to rain south late
tonight. Slowly · rising temperatures tonight. High
Wednesday in the mid 30s
northwest to the mid 40s
southeast.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

New allotments

Contemporary portable features hand·
some roll-around stanq, Walnut
grained finish on durable polystyrene
cabinet. Wide-Angle 172 sq. 1n. p1cture
tube, Super Span VHF/UHF tuners
and AdmiraUnstalli.PiaYh .. -,.

$20,000.00 Maximum Insurance For
Each Depositor

By KATIE CROW
Lou Osborne and John Manley are new members of
Pomeroy ColUlci! today. Both were appointed Monday night by
the COWICi! to fill vacancies arising from recent resigua lions.
Osborne, operator of the Sears Catalog Store iri Pomeroy
fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Elma RusselL
Mrs. Russell resigned due to ill bealth.
Manley, a member of Pomeroy's Fire Dept. and first aid
squad, and past chief of the E-R unit fills the vacancy created hy
the resignation of Jim Mees. Manley will serve the balance of
Mees' terrn, two years.
Mees wbo resigned the first of January due to the fact he
was employed out of the area, submitted a letter to council
Monday which said:
"Recently I submitted my resignation as a member of your
councll, this was done with the belief that I would not be living in
the area and it would not be fair to the people of Pomeroy for me
to remain a member.
Since that letter was submitted and accepted by you, the
situation has changed considerably and I will still be a resident
of Pomeroy. I still have a portion of my term left to serve and it
is my hope that you will reappoint me to serve it.
I realize there are many people in this town who are more
quallfied to serve in my post, but I falled to see them come
forward to file an election petition in the May primary . For th is
very reason I feel I. should be given my council seat hack,

Mason Area

When you choose us to be your
bank for checlcing account and
savings account service, you
are establishing a valuable
connection for use when opportunities or emergencies arise,

POMEROY, OHIO

Osborne, Manley appointed to ·council

Long Bottom Social Notes Richard Hayman died on Monday

is helping to ease
money squeezes
on our customers.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

Lawrence Gerlach Jr. is dead

'

,.

seat in How;;e

�3 - The Dally Sent mel M1ddlel"'rt Pomerov 0 t $ 5 1 74

2 TheDa ly Sent nel Middleport Pomero}

0

Feb 5

Truckers' little
ones have to eat

ONE OF MEIGS ffiUNTY S FIVE GENERA T!ON F AM!LIES - The blfth of three
month-&lt;&gt;ld Jared James Murray marked the filth generation on h1s father s s1de Shown w th
the new arr val are front row I r H Ida Baum Carnahan Long Bottom great grandmother
Bertha Baum age 94 Long Bottom great great grandmother mfant Jared Della Ca rnahan
age 98 great-great grandmother Delbert Carnahan great grandfather back row Lynne E
and Jane Murra&gt; of Ne" London W1s parents of Jared and Jean Ca rnahan Murray and her
husband Dale of LouiSVIlle Ky grandparents

sleeper But not now who s
go ng to lay down out there not
know ng what s go mg to
happen to the truck'
Cam I Pay for Rig
I can l pay for my ng if !let
t s1t but I can I pay for 11 n
normal tlffies either What are
you gomg to do These guys not
runmng they have kids too I
know that but their kids got to
eat to Maybe they re JUSt not
as concerned about their k ds
hell maybe they re more
concerned
I don t know That s up to
each mdiv1dual He does what
he thmks he has to do and I do
what I think I have to do
Jack Oswald of Longv1ew
Tex JUSt arnved from a three
day tnp carrymg lettuce to
Texas from Califorma he
carried chickens on the tnp to
the West Coast ) said bottles
were dropped from overpasses
m Anzona onto a truck he was
teamed with Wayne Hammons
of Jacksonville Tex made the
same tnp and said his life was
threatened at a rest area near
El Paso
Don Spradlin of Oklahoma
C1ty was JUSt headmg for
V1rgm1a with a load of steel
and thought the truckers were
all gomg broke because of
themselves
Some of the (boycotting)
amount of support m the
truckers don t have any
commun ty
family any ties Oswald said
Especially on Sunday
They don t care whether
said Applegate w th tongue n
they
re sitting stlll or runnmg
cheek
Kieffer said attempts were We got to run If we don t make
made to close the camp last that trip our k ds aren t gmng
year I would hope any actiOn to eat
Moonev sa1d the boycotters
you take today would mclude
consideratiOn of fundmg (of
Zanesville ) for another year
The board d1d not do that but
11 d1d approve the requested
transfers for the commission
Ensign sa1d 11 would cost
$465 000 to operate the Zanes
VIlle camp m fiscal 1975 He
said there mcreasmg problems
w th secur ty and education
I can understand the state s
fmancial positiOn Applegate
sa1d I would hope we could Sit
down w th CIVIC commuruty
busmess and church leaders
and talk about the future of the
camp
Your act1on here today
doesn t open or close the door
for the camp Ensign sa d
We would be happy to meet
regularly with the people of
Zanesville
and
their
represenlat ves to see what
can be done
By I!:UWARD A FULTON
DALLAS (UP!) - The m
dependent truckers st II haul
mg poultry to the West Coast
steel p1pe to the Deep South
and carry ng produce nto
Texas are not defy ng the
nat onw1de boycott beca use
they want to The1r lam I es
st II must eat
Truckers passmg through
Dallas desp1te vwlent-e and
threats all along lhelf routes
say they agree with the
demands of the boycotters but
have to keep their trucks
mov ng to make th eir
payments and keep food on
:helf lam I es table
It s a dec1s1on they say w ll
teep truckers d1v ded for
nonths
Charles Mooney of Lufk n
ex stocky deep voiced and
carrymg two days gro wth of
beard held out his qulvermg
hand
See that JUSt nerves he
sa d I came m here last n ght
about 9 o clock Now or
dinar ly I d stop out there
somewhere and get a nap m the

Zanesville wants youth camp
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
ffiLUMBUS (UP! )
The
OhiO Youth Comm ss1on has
pledged to seek money to keep
Its Zanesv lie Youth Camp
open 1! that Is the w1sh of the
Zanesville commumty
William J Ensign director
of the OYC told the sta te
Controlhng Board Monday his
agency 1s willing to 1sten to
public opuuon on the matter
and discuss poss ble solut ons
with mterested parties n
Zanesville
He repeated howeve r that
the 40-bed mstitutlon w1th some
35 young residents and 25 em
ployes Will have to shut down
by April 1 unless additiOnal
state funds are discovered to
contmue operatwns
Ensign showed up at the Con
trollmg Board meetmg w th an
entourage of 10 comnusswn
employes to defend a request
for a budgeting transfer of $1 I
mill on m unused OYC funds
He said published reports
that the request would result m
the closmg of the Zanesville
facility
were
m1scon
ceptions and that comrruss on

personnel had received a
heavy number of telephone
calls Sunday objectmg to the
proposed phaseout of the n
stttution

Board members also had
been besieged w th a flood of
phone calls from Zanesville
followmg the Sunday report of
the planned closmg
They Immediately bega n
questwnmg Ensign when he
outlined the commiSSion s
request for money transfers
The d1rector ms sled the
plans for the youth camp had
nothmg to do with the request for transferred funds
But he confirnled under
quesllomng by Rep Phale D
Hale IU:olumbus a board
member that state money for
the Zanesville Youth Camp
would run out Apnl I
When we started this fiscal
year (last June) there was no
money budgeted for the Zanes
VIlle camp Ensign said We
had an mab1hty to move the
residents so ~ e had to mam
ta n 11 eve n though we were
gettmg pressure from the Fm
ance Department which said
we couldn t contmue to operate

t w thou! any funds
S1t1mg Down
We w II be sittmg down and
workmg with the people of
Zanesville on th1s Ensign
sa1d under quest onmg by Sen
Douglas
Applega te
D
Steubenville another board
member and if there 1s a
general feeling of the board
that the Zanesv lie Youth
Camp should rema n open we
would make an attempt to get
the money somewhere They
(people of ZanesVIlle) are very
concerned about the Joss of

JObs
We ve started to work on
alternallves for use of the
campsite m case we have to
phase 11 out Ensign said
we re not gomg to drop 1! like
a hot potato
The director had sa d ear her
he hoped to have the camp
phased out m 30 days He said
employes would be offered JObs
elsewhere m the OYC system
and resident youths would be
transferred many of them mto
foster care programs
Rep Rex F Kieffer R
Zanesville told the board the
camp has a tremendous

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Sweatshirt to bed
By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Your
arllcle about burs lis prompts
me to sugges t someth ng to
your readers that I discovered

several years ago by ace dent
I suffered from burs t s for
man) l ears
Extreme!)
pa nful shoulders caused me to
have to exerc se each morn ng
but the exerc se was pamful
and llme-consummg One cold
mght I wore a sweatshirt to bed
and discovered the next
mornmg that my shoulders felt
better than they had m years
Cool mghts n the Southwest
and cold wmters m the East
probably expose many people
to siluallons s nular to mme
People don t seem to reahze
that with conventional blankets
on our beds that our shoulders
are frequently exposed to the
mght cold without our bemg
aware that they are much
colder than the rest of our
bodies
My acquamtances often k d
me about the habit I have
developed of wearmg a sweat
sh1rt to bed but I can assure
you that 1t works very well to
ward off achmg shoulders My
condiilon had been diagnosed
by a physician as burs11Is and
I was told that the only th ng to
do was to continue the exer
crses that were already a part
of my daily routme
DEAR READER - An
excellent suggestiOn Many
readers have found that warm
socks at mght help prevent leg
cramps Cooling the muscles
leads to muscle cramps and
stiffness I m sure that a warm
garment over the shoulders

and neck could help a number
of people In this winter of fu el
cr1ses your sugges ti on 1s
particularly welcome
DEAR DR LAMB
In
reference to your column on
the mother wh"'- was an
alcoholic m) fwm ly was

Eastern, Southern teams

1974

appalled that you made ab
solutely no mentiOn of
Alcoholics Anonymous This
orgamzabon and ts related
group ~I Anon help nulhons of
!am hes that haven t found the
least b t of comfortmg advice
m a psych atnst s off ce
Alcohohsm Is an Illness
not a sign of severe problems
It might be to your advantage
to become better mformed
about Alcohol cs Anonymous
and f you see f t n the future
g ve more prudent and
realistic advice to those m need

of help I myself am not a
member of A A
DEAR READER - Don t get
so excited If you were a
regular reader of my columns
you would know that I have
prev ously recommended both
Alochohcs Anonymous and AI

b•t' And won t you consider
that regardless of your own
exper ence w1th alcoholics
perhaps m your lam ly th;lt
not all such problems are ahke
Alcohol IS often part of a
ser ous psychologiCal problem
needmg psychialnc help
Individuals who have evidence
of real psychological problems
as the mother m the case you
asked about did
need
professional help Why try to
downgrade
either
the
psych atnst or Alcohol cs
Anonymous Both serve a
useful purpose

Send your questions to Dr
Anon The latter as you know Lamb in care of this newsIs for the lam I es of persons paper P o Box 1551 Radio
w1 th an alcohol c problem I City Station New York N Y
th nk they are both !me 10019 For a copy of Dr Lamb s
orgamzatlons and both serve a booklet on balanced diet send
real need
50 cents to the same address
Now won t you admit you and ask for Balanced Diet
overstated your case a little booklet

Carpenter News, Event
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey w th co workers Clay and
recently entertamed Reverend Dorsey Jordan attended the
Homer Chck evangeliSt and Farm Managers Conference m
his wife and Reverend and Wooster from Tuesday unlll
Mrs Cecil Cox n their home Thursday
Mr and Mrs H E Starkey
Mr and Mrs Clyde Walker
Jimmie Kent and Carr e were m Columbus on Fnday
Thurman Mr and Mrs Glen and Saturday for the regular
lrwm Jane and Raymond monthly meetmgs of Insurance
Dale Marysville and Mr and Com pan 1es Directors and they
Mrs Chester Baumgardner called to see his sister Jessie
and Tim Coshocton attended Jewell and h1s nephew and
a lam ly gathermg at the home w1fe Mr and Mrs Cecil Jewell
of their father Dale Dye local In Columbus
Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers
Mr and Mrs Bill St John
spent a few days with Mr and have returned from Cahforma
where they visited theli' son
Mrs Rex Cheadle
Mr and Mrs R A Whit and family Mr and Mrs Lee
tmgton attended the funeral of Jeffers and fam ily m the
a cousm m Buffalo W Va and Bakersfield area They went
called on Mr and Mrs Earl especially at this lime because
of the death of a great
Reedy at Redhouse W Va
Mr and Mrs Herbert Wolfe grandson three months old
Enc Lee Kmnard son ol
and daughter Beth Ann
formerly of Wash ngton C H Stephen and Sandra Jeffers
have moved to a new mobile Kinnard and grandson of Mr
home on the Mattox farm n and Mrs Lee Jeffers He vas
also survived by a brother
th s commumly
Mr and Mrs Lewis Smith Jason While m Cahforma Mr
an d Mrs Reed Jeffers spent
v slled " h his porcnts Mr
some lime with her brother and
and M
\1 nfor I Sm h
Carroll
sistel m law Mr and Mrs
Bob IIch manager of the John Cordray Fullerton
Mr a d M s , B I ~ n
Exper cn t !Farm here along

NEW COACH
ADA Ohw (UPI)
A
Wallace Hood a 1957 graduate
of OhiO Wesleyan Un versii)
bas been named head football
coac h at Oh o Northern
Umvers ty
Hood a nallve of Mentor
served as an assistant coach at
Colgate Umvers1ly last season
He was selected from among 50
apphcants

In 1969 the Federal Com
mumcatwns Corrumssaon made

a start toward banmng the
adverllsmg of cigarettes on
radiO and televiSion It went
mto effect Jan 2 1971
Poca W Va spent a weekend
here w th her brother and
Sisler m law Mr and Mrs
W lham Lawson and family
Mr and Mrs Earl Star~ey
accompanied
by
their
daughters W Ida Wiseman
Harnso nv lie and Wanda
Jones Nelsonville and n ece
Beulah Jones Albany spent a
day m New Lexington w th
Mrs Starke) s sister and
brother Mrs Elma Vernon
and Ben Caster Mr Caster s
spendmg some time n New
Lcxmgton w th his sister

t

were 1 kely men workmg on
wages for a compa ny
Got Nothing to Lose
They got nothing to lose
shuttmg t down he said I
got t1ed up m Oh o the last
tlffie The people doing t
w e~en t the ones that owned
thelf ngs They s1t out there
and they re draw ng five
dollars an hour and I s t there
and I m losmg seventy to a
hundred dollars a day
I think we re all gomg broke
slow
Spradhn sa d
All
these guys still out there
dr1vmg are domg 11 because
they have to They don t want
to
I borrowed $2 000 from the
bank some weeks ago and now
I ve got to run my truck Ill
take th s (steel pipe ) on mto
V~rgm1a and maybe then I can
JUSt park 11 We re up agamst
some greedy people
They d1dn t put this truck
stop out here for my con
vemence They re out here to
make money and at 50 cents a
gallon for d1esel they re
makmg money
Mooney and Oswald said the
effects of the boycott Will last
months

I d hke to get m my n g and
head for Lufkin and park 11
Mooney said
The other
truckers will remember my
ng They ll know I kept run
mng Maybe months from now
one guy will see me and ask me
why I d1dn t shut down There s
gomg to be some grudges You
Just can t go to bee and wake
up and forget about this

Today's

Sport Parade

in return match tonight

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK UPI
Everyone has his own cross lo bear
Hank Aaron keeps hearmg how he couldn t ca rry Babe Ruth s
shoes and poor old Davey Johnson has people tell10g hlffl how he
couldn t even shme Rogers Hornsby s
The b g reason Davey Johnson has to put up With all th scorn
meal s because Rogers Hornsby generally was known as one of
the grea test n ghthanded hitters who ever I ved If not the
greatest and without even settmg .. ut to do It m the f rst place he
broke Hornsby s all tlffie home run record for maJor league
second basemen Uus past season
Davey Johnson whacked 43 fo r the Atlanta Braves last year
That topped Hornsby s 42 for the St LouiS Cardmals 10 1922 the
same year he hit 401 and drove m 152 runs for them Johnson
managed only 270 and 99 RBis for the Braves
I ve heard some pretty good stones about hlffi says Johnson
about Hornsby who d ed 11 years ago I u derstand he alwa)S
smd what he thought and was very blunt
Hardly the Word
Blunt 1s hardly the word
Rogers Hornsby never beat around the bush m his I fe He had
about as much subtlety as one of George Foreman s punches
While he never went around knock ng you down With th e n
format on 1! you were born n this co untry he expected the least
you d know IS that he batted better than 400 three different
tlffles led the NatiOnal League m hlltlllg SIX stra ght tunes and
his lifetlffie average of 358 was second only to Ty Cobb s 367
Chances are Rogers Hornsby would congratulate Davey
Johnson on break10g his home run record proVIdmg someone
pushed him mto domg 11 but chances are he d also tell you how
Johnson wouldn t compare with the pia} ers of his own era If you
pushed hlffi there also
Rogers Hornsby never needed a ~hole lot of pushmg
Neither for that matter does Davey Johnson who has a way
of speaking his mmd too
He d Have Sassed Back
If Hornsby would ve given me some sass about my breakmg
his record I would ve ~1ven 11 to hlffi r ght back says Johnson
I m outspoken also I feel the one thmg any ballplayer should
have1spnde Ifhedoesn thavethat hehasnothmg
Rogers Hornsby would buy that all r ght
He also would ve have applauded Johnson s straightforward
approatil w1th Atlanta General Manager Eddie Robmson this
past year after bemg dealt to the Braves by the Baltlfflore
OriOles
You know I was hurt when I was over m Baltlffiore Johnson
told Robmson I think I m all nght now but if I can t play
without pam I m not gonna take your money
All season long last year Johnson who had hit only five home
runs at Baltlffiore the year before kept hearmg about how he
was really playmg m a telephone booth m Atlanta
Schoend1enst s PuiDown
One day when the Cardinals were bemg shown on TV s Game
of the Week Curt Gowdy mentiOned that Johnson was leadmg the
league m home runs to St LoUis Manager Red Schoendienst
That tells you somethmg about the Atlanta ballpark said
Schoendienst
Davey Johnson wasn t watchmg the Game of the Week that
day but when he got to the ballpark some of the Braves with the
typical ballplayers way of enJoyably amphfymg some
statements needled hlffi
Jeez Schoendienst really ripped you on TV
1 w~nted to tell hlffl never mmd the ballpark I m playmg m
you ought to learn how to bunt and run more and stay out of the
double plays with the Punch and Judy hitters you ve got You
know I probably hit more home runs on the road this past season
than anybody on our club Smce when IS Schoendienst an
authority on home runs? I was gomg to send hlffl a telegram but
I d1dn t bother
Now that s where Rogers Hornsby was different
He would ve told Red Schoendienst personally

Fiscal shell game charged
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen Howard M Metzenbaum
J).()hw said Monday President
NIXon s budget for 1975 short
changes urgent medical research
This proposal IS $30 b1lhon

Apple Grove
CHEERlEADERS FOR MASON KNICKS- Making up
the cheerleading squad for Mason Elementary School are
pupils of grades four through siX Squad members are front
1-r Lisa Stewart Alicra Roush and Angie Proffitt back
Beth Weaver Terri Johnson Tanowa Hill on top and Karen
Brown Instructor IS Janell Call

He'8 a Wolverine giver
end
Gute s restrictions mcluded
--Said tract shall hereafter be
known as U of M South East
- At no place upon said tract
shall the word MICHIGAN
be uttered except m the most
reverent terms such as those
normally reserved for the Al
mighty
-The colors of scarlet and
gray (OhiO Slates colors) shall
not be diSplayed upon any por
lion of said tract
- False and-&lt;&gt;r mflammatory
s gns or advertismg of any sort
as Bucks are No I or Go
Bucks are striCtly prohibited
-In the event that the gentle
man ( ?) commonly known as
Woody Hayes shall ever ac
company the Grantee upon the
descnbed tract he shall re
mam a m mmurn of 20 feet
from any yard markers photographers or equally destructable objects on said tract
-Before the above described
Grantee may transfer the above
described tract he must f~rst
face the general dlfection of
Ann Arbor M1ch and utter the
words Go Michigan
-In the event that any of the
above restrictions fall to be
carried out may 11 he willed
that the Grantees best scalpel
be used by a weird holy man
tc periorm a tonguelectomy upon Woody Hayes
Gute a surveyor filed the
deed 10 Guernsey &lt;;ounty re
corder s office Fr day

News, Events
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Jeff Donohew
of Belpre spent the weekend
with Mr and Mrs Roy
Donohew
Steve Hill of Racme spent the
weekend w1th Dean H1ll
Mrs Ed th Gilkey of
Galhpohs and Rolhn Dill of
Pomeroy VISited Mr and Mrs
Jack Ables Sunday
Mr and Mrs Henry Euler of
Racme were weekend guests of
Mr and Mrs Don Richard
Hill Harold Roush of Portland
was a Sunday dmner guest of
the Hills
Mrs John Hill entertamed
Thursday evening m honor of
her husband John Hill who
was celebratmg a b rthday
Guests mcluded Mr and Mrs
Don Bell Mr and Mrs Chuck
Mugrage Linda Hill Mrs
Beverly Wickline Ice cream
and cake were served by Mrs
Hill
Mr and Mrs Jlffi Bell of
Mormng Star VIsited Mr and
Mrs Don Bell Saturday
evemng
Mr and Mrs Robert Smith
Sr VISited their grand
daughter Michelle Johnson
Sunday at Racme Michelle
was retnrned home Saturday
from Children s Hospital
where she had ear surgery
Mr and Mrs Hupp and son
Ricky Mr and Mrs Kenny
Wargo of Norwalk VISited Mr
and Mrs Arnold Hupp and
sons Other guests of the Hupps
were Mr and Mrs Charles
Hupp and children Mr and
Mrs Kenny Bass and children
of Marengo and Mr and Mrs
Lawrence Bush
Mr and Mrs Robert Smith
Sr were dmner guests Sunday
o~ her parents Mr and Mrs

more than last year s budget
yet 11 short changes some of the
mose urgent re sea rch m
diseases which are costmg
350 000 American hves each
year Metzenbaum sa d
Metzenbaum sa d the budget
s JUSt a f seal shell game that
md1cates the administration s
msensiiiVIty to the needs of the
American public
The senator noted the budget
for cancer research was $200
million under the $800 nullion
the President s own adVIsers
told hlffi was needed

Social
~ CalendaL
THURSDAY
THE
MEIGS
County
National Farmers
Orgamzatwn will meet at 8
p m m the Vo-Ag room of
Meigs High School
WEDNESDAY
THE
NEW
Rae ne
Emergency Veh1cle will be at
the Chester Elementary School
llam
MIDDLEPORT Fire
Department Aux1hary w II
meet at 8 p m at the hall

&gt;

~~~N._

By Denny Fobes
RACINE - The Southern
Tornados broke a 24 game
Eastern ]lOX last December 18
but Eagle fans hope to sta rt
another one of those strea ks
tomght as the cagers of Bill
Ph1lhps came here lo battle the
hoopsters of Carl Woife
The Initial battle th s eason
played at Eastern ~ent mlo
overtlffle With the Tornados
commg out on top 52-50
The Tornados behmd 48-44
with Just 30 seconds remammg
m regulatiOn lime scored
stole the ball and scored agam
on a M1tch Nease Jumper with
JUSt five seconds left to send
the first battle mto overllme
Southern chnched the v ctory
as seniOr Randy Warner hit
both ends of a one and one w1th
Just eight seconds showmg on
the clock In the extra period
Forward Pete Sayre and
semor guard Bob Miller led
that Tornado tnurnph hitting
for 18 and 16 pmnts respec
tively

elunmated the Tornados from

the SVAC title chase as no
league defeats are n sight for
undefea ted Hannan Trace
But all IS not peace m the
SVAC as the Tornados and
Eagles begm a stretch drive
for second place n the !mal
loop stand ngs
The Tornados are currently
7 2 but have rugged Hannan
Trace commg to Racme a week

5-11

6-1
6-1
6-1)

5-10

SOUTHERN
VernOrd
Norman Curfman
Pete Sayre
Randy Warner
M1tch Nease

MATCHUPS
EASTERN
Steve Dill
Tim Spencer
Tim Baum
Steve Goebel
John Sheets

C
F

F
G
G

from today while Eastern at
6-3 has Just Soutl western and
Symmes Valley reman ng
Wolfe who sa d I ~on t sell
these k1ds of mme short sa d
the Tornados have ~orked
hard on their defense for
tomght s battle He added that
he II be send ng any com
b natiOn of the followmg six
players mto tomght s ga me
Norman Curfman Pete Sayre
Vern Ord Randy Warner
Dave Theiss and Milch Nease
Ph lhps meanwhile will be
gmng with T1m Spencer and
Tim Baum at the corners
Steve Dill m the p1vot and
Steve Goebel and John Sheets
at the guards

6-3
6-1
6-2
5-10

6-1

In tomght s pre I m nary
battle Coach Duane Wolfe w11l
test the wmgs of his Green
Nestlings as they try to avenge
a 32 30 loss to Southern s
Funnel Clouds n the r f rsl
encounter
Mik e Roberts a Funnel
Cloud guard hit a JUinper w th
JUst eaght seconds rema mmg to
g ve the reserves that WID The
Nesthngs will be gomg without
guard Don E1chmger who
suffered a fractured ankle on
the lockeroom steps follow ng
Saturday s Nestl ng tr urnph
over Fairland
Game time for the reserve tilt
s 6 30 p m w th the vars ty
game to follow 1mmed1ately

Gophers topple Bucks

By Uruted Press InternatiOnal
Oh o State dropped another
A new sumner baseb(jll
R g Ten basketball game Mon
Warn
1 b~n
g
1
day
n ght to the Golden
Me gs County lh s )ear a
Gophers
of Mmnesota 56-51
Meigs Babe Ruth lean
desp1te
outshoot1ng
Mmnesola
Tl e team w th Ron Logan
and Charl es Marsha I as from the held 52 per cent to 32
~r cent
coaches w II play m lh I t
The Gop hers more than
Pleasa t I eague walh ;,~ p s t
made
up for the ir poor shootmg
season to 1rname nt leadmg to
percentage b) convert ng 16 of
slate champ onsh p f 1als
All bo) s bet"een the ages of 21 free throw attempts wh le
the Buckeyes now I~ m U e
16-19 who res de n Pon eroy
conference
and 6-11 overall
Middleport Syracuse Rae ne
Rutland Cl ester or any other could manage only f1ve of eight
area of Me1gs Co un ty as fr om the cha r I) stnpe
Denn s Shaffer the Big Ten s
welcome to s gn up
s :orer dumped n 22
leading
The f rst s gnup will be he d
at 10 a m Sa turday Feb 9 at po nts to lead Mmnesota to Is
thtrd consecut vc conference
c ty hall n Pomeroy
Win for a 3-4 mark m the B1g
Ten and an 8-10 record for the
BORZO\ WON'T RUN
season
LOS ANGELES UP!
Freshman I arry Bolden was
Valery Borzov the Sov et
Umon s double go ld medal the only bnght spot for the
Winner m the sprmts all he 1972 Buckeyes with 21 po1nls Oh o
Olympic Games m Mun ch Stale s leadmg scorer Bill An
wont run m four mdoor track dreas was held to JUSt 2 points
Oral Roberts Un vers1ty
meets m the Un ted States and
posted a 78 72 w1n over
Canada as had been an
Bowhng Green m a non
now·ICed
Borzov wasn l aboard a conference game dcspate an
plane from Russ1a wh cl out standm g ga me by the
landed at the Los Angeles Falcon s Cornehus Cash w o
Internatwnal Airport Monday hit for 28 pomts and grabbed 21
A spokesman for the Nat onal rebounds
The wm raised ORU s season
AAU sa d Borwv was left I orne
record to 17 3 wh le the Falcons
because of a sore foot

Irish hard pressed in 91-89 win
Paterno connected on a 19
Notre Dame has come up foot Jump shot With JUst one
With a new 1ceman and JUSt m second left to g1ve the th1rd
ranked Fightmg Irish a 91-39
time
Dwight Clay the man who VICtory over Michigan State
ended UCLA s 88-game wm The Irish blew a nme-pomt lead
mng streak with a long JUmp and Michigan State went ahead
shot IS normally Notre Dame s With 6 12 left on Terr y
top clutch shooter but fresh Furlow s basket Paterno s
man Billy Paterno stole his act shot put Notre Dame ahead for
the first time after FUrlow s
Monday mght
By Uolted Press International

crushed CamSius 76-58 and
Kansas ripped Colorado 81-U
David Thompson had 23
pomts and Tom Burleson h1t 19
as North Carolina State
bounced back from a sluggish
start to beat Duke and Terry
Compton hit eight strmght foul
shots m the last six mmutes
the last two w th 35 seconds
left as Vanderbilt won ts

basket
John Shumate sco red 27
pomts to lead Notre Dame now
16-1 and Gary Brokaw added
21 Mike Robmson haq 31 pomts
for Michigan State now II 7
In other actiOn second
ranked North Carolina State
beat Duke 92-78 No 6 Van
derb1lt edged eighth rated
Alabama 67-65 South Carolma

So uthea ster n Co nf er ence
showdown w1th Alabama
Alex Eng I sh scored 27 pomts
and Mark Gremer held Larry
Fogle the natiOn s leading
scorer to his lowest ou !put of
the season as South Carohna
clobbered Ca ms1us Fogle
averagmg 34 5 pomts a game
managed only 18
Rick Suttle came off the

Wolfpack moves to second in UPI poll
NEW YORK (UPI)
The
status quo was mamtamed m
the Umted Press International
Board of Coaches maJor
college basketball ratmgs this
week with UCLA keepmg well
ahead of the rest of the status
seekers

The only change among the
top five m the ratmg was North
Carolina State s wrestmg away
a No 1 vote from UCLA and
depr1vmg the Brwns of their
accustomed unammous ac
clalffi as No I

However
the
Brums
received the other 33 first
place ballots as the over
whelmmg No I select on
The Wolfpack was second
followed m order by Notre
Dame North Carolma and
Marquette Marquette held

onto the No 5 ranking despite a
narrow defeat at the hands of
the Irish
The second fiv e teams
shifted slightly In pos1tionmg
but the cast rema med basically
the same

Vanderbilt shpped past
Maryland mto sixth while
ProVIdence dropped out of the
top 10 after losmg an ove rtlffie
decrs10n to Duquesne
Alabama moved up a notch
to replace Prov dence as No 8
followed by Pittsburgh and
Southern Califorma

bench to score 20 IJI)mts and
grab 10 rebounds as Kansas
routed Colorado while else
where Denrus Schaefer s 22
pomts earned Mmnesola to a
56-51 victory over Olw State
and Larry Wllhams and Lon
Kruger scored 12 pomts each
as Kansas State downed
Oklahoma State 65-48
Elsewhere Detro t downed
St Peter s 95 2 Tennessee
stopped Auburn ~0 Wilham
&amp; Ma1} topped The Citadel 64
57 Eastern Kentucky beat
Marshall 83 77 Kentucky
edged Lou sana State 73-70
Western Kentucky defeated
Dayton 67-33 Flonda mpped
MISSISS JlPI State 78-75 MISSIS
Slpp downed Georgia 59-55
Auslm Peay beat Murray
State 87 80 and Denver
outlasted Southern MissisSippi
112-93

he

Pon s

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Red-hall'ed Bill Walton the
Howard Hughes of college
basketball has been named to
receive the AAU s Sullivan
Award for 1973
But that wasn t really a
slU'pnse The surpriSe was
Walton was at a Monday news
conference at UCLA to pose
with his award as the nallon s
top amateur athlete
Walton who has kept his
distance from reporters smce
he arrived on Westwood cam
pus from La Mesa Calif loW'
years ago showed up With
UCLA Athletic Director J D
Morgan and Brwns Coach
John Wooden

l don t mmd talking to
people but I m not real com
fortable where there are 30
people starmg me m the face
with bright hghts UCLA s
two-tlffie College Player of the
Year told the phalanx of
newsmen And I like to be
comfortable
AAU President David Rl
venes of Miles City Mont
announced Waltoo s selection
but srud the presentation would
be made at a formal dinner
Walton IS the 44th reCipient of
the award which IS made by a
vote by members of the AAU
Board of Governors The board
represents all 50 states and
each of the AA U s 20 sports

Complete drawing
NEWPORT BEACH Calif
(UP!) The National Football
League has dealt Its hand and
the new World Football League
Will be seeking any money
cards left m the deck today
when 11 completes 1ts college
player draft
The remammg 30 rounds of
the draft (the first six rounds
were held Jan 22) were
scheduled to begm at 7 am
PDT
Pullmg the rug out from
under the NFL the WFL
Signed UCLA star runnmg
James
This Week s Spectal

VALUE

RATE'D

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of snow Thurs
day and Saturday fair
Friday High In the upper 20s
and 30s lows in the upper
teens and 20s

Kermit Johnson and USC
guard Booker Brown last
Monday before the elder
league s draft Tuesday
Now that the WFL clubs have
had a chance to study the
NFL s draft they ll complete
!hell' drawmg today
The drafting order Will be the
same as that used Jan 22 With
Memphis leading off followed
by Boston Flonda Toronto
B1rmmgham New York
Southern
California
Pluladelph1a Hawan Chicago
Washmgton D C and Detrmt
The WFL s draft of current
pro players will be held Feb
18-19 m Chicago
In addition to the draft
several teams were expected
to announce the s1gmng of free
agents today

USED CARS

The Daily Sentinel

68 DfEVEUE
COUPE

'

moto
auto t ans
m ss on N ce car for the
V8

pr ce

•895

Karr &amp;Van Zandt
You II L keOurQual ty
Way of Do ng Bus ness
GMAC FINANCING
99'2 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs Til 6 00

To! S PM Sal

DEV011tD TO THE
IHTERIOITOF

MEIGS-MAlON AREA
CHDJI'ER L. TANNEHILL

,... ....

ROBFJIT BOEf'Ual

aoyUttr
P\ibUihed diUy extePI s.twUy by The
auo Valley PublilhinK Comp1111 111
Court St. Pomeroy otUo M'1ll ouane.
OfDce Phone lft.mf Ed.ltonal PIMW m

""

Secancl claa poage pakl •l

~

Ohio

National advertil n1 rep uentaUve
Bo tlnelllr...U. per Inc 12Eat4h1 Sl
New York New Yort
&amp;tt:.rtpt!m rlliel Del.ivend b)' Clnier
where avaU.ble to cents per week By
Motor Route whert cartler ten&lt;ict not
available One month $2 «&lt; By m11U 111
Oh o and W Va On! Year 'II Sb
mon Lh1 19 SO Thret mon hi II

Elsewhere t'-2 eo yur.

IL_..te.
~r~. months

.a monlhl Jn 50

IUO SUb«riptkln pr ct
~y 'nme.&amp;en 1111!1

plus members of the sports the one who gets picked out 2
media who cover amatelU' I m sure my teammates 3
rea hze the lfflportance of this s
athletics
It Is a great honor and I m trophy as an award to our team 6
very pleased to receiVe this and our coach
8
In the votmg Walton -only
award Walton sa d But I
think the coach knows and the the second basketball player
guys on the team know that I m honored by the AAU-rece1ved
really not rece1vmg thiS for I 902 pomts to I 856 for 1972
Olympic IJOO.rneter gold medal
myself
1st
Dave Wottle of Bowling
We JUSt all understand that
the meclia tends to pick out Green The first basketball
mdiVIduals and I happen to be player chosen for the Sulhvan
6-11 and have red hrur and I m Award was Prmceton s Bill
Bradley m 1965

339
290
2 6

•

Fifteen Game track record
FG A Pel
45 131
34
57 131 114

Dan Dodson
Lonn e Coats

79 184

43

57 62

35

Steve P ce

33 I 3 29

Je ry C emeans
Or on Blan chard
Ch p B auer
Perk Au t
GregB ownng
Steve Wa bu n

14 47
2 34
6 53
83
612
6 27

M ck Ash

6

M ke May

6

J m Ander son
M tch Meadows

30
35

30
26

50
22
17
17
18
50

21
2
00

Chart e Marshal
M ke Magnotta

0

TOTALS
338 951
OPPONENTS
403 860
Scormg by Quarters
Megs
Opponents

FT A Pet RB
20 37
54
66
6 33
.48
46
35 48
73
93
35 53
66
40

23 36

64

20

15 23
11 23
16 26
49

65
52

47
58

61
44
75
55
37

58

34

59
38

00
7 1
22
00

00

00

35
47

196 322
216 liS

64
I 00

he 973

PF Pis

38 I 0
43

29

7

130
193

30 149
3
89
15 43
73
36
30 48
9

3

20

5

13

6

17

2

2

5
2

'

10
0

6
0
0

S96

277

0
61
69

J
2J
9

8

I

4

0
0
872

603 298 I 022

198

224

207

2.43

223

269

26 1 269

872
1022

29
6
5

J
8

•
J

s

s
s

o Col eg e

Oh o Un
To edo

e

s

W L
2
s 2

W

Prov dence 29
Roc hes e
26
Nova Sc o a24
Boston
16
Sp r ngf e d 12

He shey
Ba mo e
C nc nnat
Jksnv e
V rg n a
R chmond

2
5
19

6
0
o
J
7
24 12

64 2.4
62 98
58 76
39 65
36 5

173
169
l.d7
2 1
93

South
w
t pts gf ga
28 S 9 65 2 7 57
27 8 5 59 179 59

26

a

6 58

5

60

19 29 5 .43 55 210
15 28 8 38 43 92
13 33 5 31 -lO 2 9
Monday s Resu ts
No ga mes scheduled
Tonight s Games
V g n a at Bos on
Only game schedu

ech

Intern atonal
Hockey League
North

w

Muskegon
Sag naw

3
9
25 26

Toledo

23 28

M am

.t

6

3
4
4
6

9' 8a

Wes e n M c h
3
Cen a M ch
2
Ken S a e
011 o Conte ence

9
8

177

w t enbe g
Musk ngum
Cap a
Oh o Nor hern

8
6

•
2

2

6

2

4

9

3
J

9

Ma e a

s

Mount Un on

s5 •'
s s

Woos le
He de beg
Ot e ben
Den so n

''

Kenyon

J

.
5

3

'""8

1
5
5

9

0
Ba dw n wa a e
2 B
Obe n
s 'J
Oh oWes eva n
9
B g T en
Conference Ove a

6

••

95

pts gl ga
!&gt; 213 73
58 213 2 0

57 93 176
0 54 74 188
Monday s Results
No games scheduled
Ton ghl s Gam es
No games scheduled

For'· Wayne27 24

f

353

.42

2 6

2

pet

9 b

W es t
w
ilh

J
9
30 2

(

604
593

66

San An on o
526
nd ana
29 7
5 8
Den er
2
2
4
San D ego
24 35 .tO
Mondays Re!i. ull s
U ah

05

v

g n

a

8
0

98

On y games hedu ed

Tu esda y s Games

San An on o a Denve

s
6

e

show, Squires lose
SALT LAKE CITY UP!
George Gervm where are you
Gervm s disappearance was
the major fa ctor m the Utah
Stars 105-98 wm over the
V rgm1a Sqmres Monda y mght
m the American Basketball
Assoc1allon s only scheduled
game
Even Squires Coach AI
Blanch Is baffled
I don t know anythmg about
t I m always the last one to
know-and I m the coach he
sa d after the game
Sqmres owner Earl Foreman
had sold the young superstar to
the San Anton o Spurs for a
reported $500 000 earher this
week but ABA Comm1ss oner
Mike Storen stopped the sale
for the good of the franchiSe
and the league
Gervm unhappy about the
deal disappeared and a team
spokesman said Gervm may
have grabbed a fhght to New
York With mtent ons of Jurn
pmg to the NBA
The Squ res obVIously upset
about the loss of their star fell
behmd 10 pomts m the first
penod and failed to threaten
the Stars until the last mmutes
of the fourth quarter
Down 103-&lt;19 the Squ1res
scored mne unanswered pomts

Col ege Basketba I Rcsu ts

By Un t ed P ess nt e nat onal
Ea~t

Ru ger s 80 Buckne 69
A eg hny 69 C ng e M n 49
Shepherd 85 M Ha vey 5

Susequeh anna 62 un a a 50
Sp ng f e d 4 Tu s 6
New Ha mp 63 Br andes 55
Haw lho ne 90 Cu y 87
Vermon 94 N o w ch 45
N aga a 93 Bu ffa

oa

Be kl ey 8 W Va Te h 83
Ha w ck 68 ha ce 55
E ztown 60 Ku zlown 5.4
F a l ed6B ona4
De o t 95 5 Pe e s 82

Soutll
92 Duke 78
Vanderb
67 A aba m a 65
Tennessee 88 Aubu n 80
W &amp;Ma ry 6.4 C ade 5
Md Es n S h e 96 Hwa d 86
So Ca 76 can s us 58
Easte n Ky 83 Ma sha
7
Ga ell 55 Po omac S 53
Ken tucky 73 LSU
Wes Georg a 8 LaG ang e 76
Ga So uth e n 95 Samford B

ca

o

Rch mnd 93 App achn s 83
Cmpb 83 enor Rhyne
Shaw 72 El z c y s 67
UNC C h
te 8 Tenn Te h 65
L v ng s one 85 Gu to d 2
gan 90 Emo y&amp; Hen y 66
M
Eas Te nn 95 Ga S 84
C a K Ga
70 F Sk 59
M ss Co 78 J ksnv S
2
A co n A&amp; M
2 ex S h n 0 .4
Western Ky 67 Dayton 83
Geo wn Ky 6 Un on Ky 49
Be a m n e 69 Thos More 5
Ky Wesleyan 90 SW Mo 89
Tu ane80 B mnghm S h n 63
F o da 78 M ss Sl 75
M ss 59 Georg a 55
A Peay 87 M ay Sl 80
UT Cha 96 M d T enn 90

M dw es t
No e Dame 9 M ch S

89

Loyo a
9 Lew s B
Cn n a y 6 s U c bnd e 65
By Un ted P e.ss nte nat on a
Kansas B Co ora do 66
East
w
tm ph gf ga Kan S 65 Oka S 48
New Eng 29 2
2 60 94
3 M nneso a 56 Oh o S 5 1
Southwest
o on o
26 25 45 62 293 Ab Ch s 99 Su Ross 9
Quebe
26 13
3 55 9 69 A kansas 5 1 2 NE La 7
A A 0 T n y Tex 6
C eve a nd 24 '12
5
59 62 H Payne BB Ange o S 62
er se v
22 28
2 46 52 90 0 Robe Is 8 Bw ng G n 2
Texas A
.4 am a J
04 E Tex S 93
Ch ago
3 45 ISO 58 Texas A&amp;
22
ex Lu h 75 E Tex Bap 68
West
w
I
pts gf ga S hws n T ex 9 S Ed s
Hous on
29 17
.j 62
99 38 sw Tex St 79 T tn s 74
Sou he n S 5 A k Co
52
w nn peg 26 n 4 56 83 85 Ok a c y 9 Ok a Chr s 73
Edmon on 2 23 0 54 9 0 F l ew s 85 N M H ands 79
M nneso a 24 25
.4 9 92 86 Adams S 95 W N ew M ex 86
West
LosAng
20 33
o
o 5 208
Van ou e 9 32
0 38 83 2 9 Denve 12 So u he n M ss 93
0 egon Co 12 A aska 67
Monday s Resu t s
Cen Wash 93 s F ase 70
Hou on
e sey
0 y game schedu ed
Tuesday s Games
w nn peg at Ch cago
e sey a Hous on
C eve and a M nnesota
Edmon on &lt;1 Va n ouve

On

v games sc hedu

2

2

6

J

J
6

2

6

ed

8

5

0

See for yourself
why th1s new

STIHL 015
Automattc

What

1s

11,

Doctor?

1s the Number 1
Value buy 1n a
m1n1-s1ze saw
at

Pomeroy
Home &amp; Auto

Pomeroy

OhiO

to pull w th n five-b ut the
buzzer cut off their rally
Stars Coach Joe Mullaney
called the game our poorest
performan ce n a wtnn ng
effort
I think the only maJOr
advantage we had over them
was that without the help of
Gervm we got off to an early
lead bulge which gave us the
momentum to mamta n the
scormg edge he srud
The Squ~res Cincy Powell
who led all scorers w th 26
pomts expressed the team s
bitterness about the Gervm
deal
Every trrne we get some
momentum gomg Foreman
sells one of our key players It
happened With (Juhusl Er
Vlng (Swen ) Nater and now
Gervm

MAZEROSKI RESIGNS
PITTSBURGH (UP!
Third base coach B1ll Mazeros
ki whose famous home run
gave the Pittsburgh Pirates the
1960 World Senes over the New
York Yankees announced
Monday n ght he was ret1rmg
from the Pirate orgamzatwn
after 18 years of sem ce with
the club
Mazerosk1 mformed P1rate
General Manager Joe Brown of
his dec1s on m a br ef telephone
call from Bradenton Fla the
Pirates sprmg trammg camp
Bill sa1d that as trammg
camp drew near he dec de l
he d had enough of baseball
after 20 years and that he
should spend more tune with
his family a Pirate spokes
man srud

s

J

6

e

s and ngs

With 18 po nts dropped to IH
for the season while the Hill
f.9ppers evened their record at
99
In the only other Oluo college
game Monday n gil Cedar
VIlle knocked off Walsh 66-59
fo r Its n nth victory m 19
games Walsh s now 0-13 for
the season

Gervin fails to

W L

6

REBOUNDS
W ght 5 a e
eubenv e
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ed SYoungs
own S a
Lawrence Mount Umon s 6-8 U bana
R o Grande
center from Newark leads the Ceda
v e
Ohio Conference m reboundmg Cen t a S a e
w1th an average of 11 9 per WaSh
Case Wes e n
game Manetta s Art Clark s w lberfor ce
Xav e
runnerup at 11 5
C eve and S a P
Lawrence IS the conferences T f e
n
defendmg rebound champiOn Oh o Don

F nt
19 31 3 4 168 20
Por H u on 7 1 2 36 45 74

Sou ttl
w 1
Oes Mones JO 7
Co lumbu s 28 26 2
Oay on
27 25 J

9
0

Conte e nce Ove a
W L
W L

Ash land
John Car o

1 pis gt ga
5 67 189 60
2 52 2 5 200

A

l

5

y

PRJTCHE'IT SIGNS
J J
'
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
2 '
0
No hwes e n
2 6
0
Cleveland Browns announced Oh o s a e
'
6 0
owa
.4
.4 2
Monday they have signed run
nos
.t
4
rung back Billy Pritchett thelf
Hoo se Bu c key e Conte ence
Conte ence Ov e a
thlfd cbo1ce m the recent
W L W L
football draft to a three year Hanove nd
0
9 J
9 3
4 4
contract Pritchett 6-4 and 252 De l ance
Ea ham
nd
J
5 5
pounds was named to the All An
de son nd
s
2
Missouri Conference team and B uff on
6 J
'
7
F nd ay
4
9 9
voted Back of the Year as a w
m ng on
7
6
sophomore at West Texas M an ches te nd 4 8
0
J
0
State Browns phySICian Dr Tay o
Ott1ers
Vic lppohto pronounced
W L
2 2
Pritchett free of knee mjuries HAk am
on
2
'
that plagued him his last two C nc nna
5
Dayton
J
5
years at West Texas
4
Ma one
6

1 t ph gf ga
New Hav en 30 15 7 67 202 157

u

2

3

WHA

Baskelbal R ec ords
By Un led P ess lnte na on a
Th ough games of F eb 2
M dAme can Conference
Conte ence Ove a

nd ana
M ch gan S a
W s ons n
M nn eso a

w

2

35 24
8 3

standzngs

W L

No th

Ken
k
Ca o na
v g na
Memph s

On y games schedu ed

M ch gan
Purdue

A m e can Hockey League

A BA Stan d ng s
By Un ed P essJ..rH-emat ona
E a!!t
w
pet g 11
New Yo k
35 22 6 .j

J3

Oh

Fol ow ng are th e stat st cs for th e I sf 15 games o
74 Me gs Maraude ba ske tball season

PLAYER
Terry Qua Is
B II M ye r s

204
66

are now II 7
Dayton Umvers1ty dropped a
close game to the Hill toppers of
Western Kentucky The game
was lied 19 llffles and the lead
ex changed hands 12 times be
fore Western Kentucky pulled
away m the last m nute to wm
67-33
Day ton led by Don Sm th

No

Walton top amateur athlete

:::

Martin Cunnmgbam at Racme
Mrs Erma Wilson VISited
Mrs Kathryn Hunt Sunday
Mr and Mrs Walter Me
Dade of Troy spent a weekend
with Mrs Gladys Shiel&lt;js and
Mrs Edna Roush of Racme
and VISited local relatives
Mrs Edna Roush of Racme
spent Tuesday thr~r1day
With Mr and Mrs. 1'1!rbert
Roush and Roger while Mrs
Gladys Shields and Mrs Etta
Mae Hill visited Mr and Mrs
Howard Roush and Mr and
Mrs
Bud Lampen at
Wellngton Mrs Faye Lampen
IS unprovmg

Eagle guard John Sheets led
all scorers w th 21 pmnts 18 of
those commg n the second
half w1th Steve D ll 6-3 sen or
center addmg 19
The game tomght could be
just as close as the f rst one
although Southern w1ll have to
go without Miller the team s
lead ng scorer and playmaker
who suffe red a badly spra ned
ankle m Fnday s 55-47 loss at
North Galha In the three
games previous to that North
Galha game Miller had
connected for '!/ 28 and 31
po nts
That loss to the P rates

Mmgs to put
te~~m m Babe
Ruth Le~~gue

Some
Ace den H ea th
nsu ance pa ys a hosp tal
an d su g ca expe nses
ot her pol c es
n c ude
d sab ty ncome The
Down ng Ch Ids
Agency
has var ous pol c es to best
meet your needs

DowningChilds 1
Agency, Inc.
220 N 2nd
MIDDI EPORT

NAMED COACH
BIRMINGHAM Ala (UP!)
- Ja ck Golla IS headed for the
deep South and the challenge a
putt ng together a football
team totally from scratch m
the World Football League
Golla who dire cted the
Ottawa Rough Riders to Grey
Cup titles m 1972 and 1973 and
Canadian Football League
Coach of the Year both
seasons
was announced
Monday as coach and general
manager of the Blfffilflgham
entry m the WFL

-----

~IRACLe~

DO
Jl~
ITmmilllREfllll

Do

you

eve

ge t

swa mped n a sea of nches
fee
ya ds and m es
M os t of us have emem
be ed that 2 make a too
J t n a ya rd e c But how
m any ya rd s n a m e'
Th ese od d conve son
num be s we e ar ved a t
by ace den
An n h was
o g na l y th e eng h o he
th umb r om he t p to he
knuck e the foe was he
length of a oo a ya d was
he d stan ce from the nose
t o th e f nge t p o he a m
s e ched ou t t o he s de
The m e comes I om t he
La t n wo d fa
housand
a nd was o g na ll y th e
d s t a n ce cove ed by a
ma ch ng so d er
n a
housand paces pace be ng
he d s ance be t ween
places whe e he sa me l oo t
ca m e down n rna ch ng
The electro se ec o of a
M racl e wa l e
e,f n e
pa ces th e amoun
of
ref ned wa er needed n
home No need to
you
hand set or wo ry about
how much ef ned water
w I be needed for ex ra
demands Let lhe elect o
se ector do t fo you
automat ca ll y wh e you
s t back and wa ch you
avo t e TV p og am

SAYRE

HARDWARE
881 t l l l
New Haven W

�3 - The Dally Sent mel M1ddlel"'rt Pomerov 0 t $ 5 1 74

2 TheDa ly Sent nel Middleport Pomero}

0

Feb 5

Truckers' little
ones have to eat

ONE OF MEIGS ffiUNTY S FIVE GENERA T!ON F AM!LIES - The blfth of three
month-&lt;&gt;ld Jared James Murray marked the filth generation on h1s father s s1de Shown w th
the new arr val are front row I r H Ida Baum Carnahan Long Bottom great grandmother
Bertha Baum age 94 Long Bottom great great grandmother mfant Jared Della Ca rnahan
age 98 great-great grandmother Delbert Carnahan great grandfather back row Lynne E
and Jane Murra&gt; of Ne" London W1s parents of Jared and Jean Ca rnahan Murray and her
husband Dale of LouiSVIlle Ky grandparents

sleeper But not now who s
go ng to lay down out there not
know ng what s go mg to
happen to the truck'
Cam I Pay for Rig
I can l pay for my ng if !let
t s1t but I can I pay for 11 n
normal tlffies either What are
you gomg to do These guys not
runmng they have kids too I
know that but their kids got to
eat to Maybe they re JUSt not
as concerned about their k ds
hell maybe they re more
concerned
I don t know That s up to
each mdiv1dual He does what
he thmks he has to do and I do
what I think I have to do
Jack Oswald of Longv1ew
Tex JUSt arnved from a three
day tnp carrymg lettuce to
Texas from Califorma he
carried chickens on the tnp to
the West Coast ) said bottles
were dropped from overpasses
m Anzona onto a truck he was
teamed with Wayne Hammons
of Jacksonville Tex made the
same tnp and said his life was
threatened at a rest area near
El Paso
Don Spradlin of Oklahoma
C1ty was JUSt headmg for
V1rgm1a with a load of steel
and thought the truckers were
all gomg broke because of
themselves
Some of the (boycotting)
amount of support m the
truckers don t have any
commun ty
family any ties Oswald said
Especially on Sunday
They don t care whether
said Applegate w th tongue n
they
re sitting stlll or runnmg
cheek
Kieffer said attempts were We got to run If we don t make
made to close the camp last that trip our k ds aren t gmng
year I would hope any actiOn to eat
Moonev sa1d the boycotters
you take today would mclude
consideratiOn of fundmg (of
Zanesville ) for another year
The board d1d not do that but
11 d1d approve the requested
transfers for the commission
Ensign sa1d 11 would cost
$465 000 to operate the Zanes
VIlle camp m fiscal 1975 He
said there mcreasmg problems
w th secur ty and education
I can understand the state s
fmancial positiOn Applegate
sa1d I would hope we could Sit
down w th CIVIC commuruty
busmess and church leaders
and talk about the future of the
camp
Your act1on here today
doesn t open or close the door
for the camp Ensign sa d
We would be happy to meet
regularly with the people of
Zanesville
and
their
represenlat ves to see what
can be done
By I!:UWARD A FULTON
DALLAS (UP!) - The m
dependent truckers st II haul
mg poultry to the West Coast
steel p1pe to the Deep South
and carry ng produce nto
Texas are not defy ng the
nat onw1de boycott beca use
they want to The1r lam I es
st II must eat
Truckers passmg through
Dallas desp1te vwlent-e and
threats all along lhelf routes
say they agree with the
demands of the boycotters but
have to keep their trucks
mov ng to make th eir
payments and keep food on
:helf lam I es table
It s a dec1s1on they say w ll
teep truckers d1v ded for
nonths
Charles Mooney of Lufk n
ex stocky deep voiced and
carrymg two days gro wth of
beard held out his qulvermg
hand
See that JUSt nerves he
sa d I came m here last n ght
about 9 o clock Now or
dinar ly I d stop out there
somewhere and get a nap m the

Zanesville wants youth camp
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
ffiLUMBUS (UP! )
The
OhiO Youth Comm ss1on has
pledged to seek money to keep
Its Zanesv lie Youth Camp
open 1! that Is the w1sh of the
Zanesville commumty
William J Ensign director
of the OYC told the sta te
Controlhng Board Monday his
agency 1s willing to 1sten to
public opuuon on the matter
and discuss poss ble solut ons
with mterested parties n
Zanesville
He repeated howeve r that
the 40-bed mstitutlon w1th some
35 young residents and 25 em
ployes Will have to shut down
by April 1 unless additiOnal
state funds are discovered to
contmue operatwns
Ensign showed up at the Con
trollmg Board meetmg w th an
entourage of 10 comnusswn
employes to defend a request
for a budgeting transfer of $1 I
mill on m unused OYC funds
He said published reports
that the request would result m
the closmg of the Zanesville
facility
were
m1scon
ceptions and that comrruss on

personnel had received a
heavy number of telephone
calls Sunday objectmg to the
proposed phaseout of the n
stttution

Board members also had
been besieged w th a flood of
phone calls from Zanesville
followmg the Sunday report of
the planned closmg
They Immediately bega n
questwnmg Ensign when he
outlined the commiSSion s
request for money transfers
The d1rector ms sled the
plans for the youth camp had
nothmg to do with the request for transferred funds
But he confirnled under
quesllomng by Rep Phale D
Hale IU:olumbus a board
member that state money for
the Zanesville Youth Camp
would run out Apnl I
When we started this fiscal
year (last June) there was no
money budgeted for the Zanes
VIlle camp Ensign said We
had an mab1hty to move the
residents so ~ e had to mam
ta n 11 eve n though we were
gettmg pressure from the Fm
ance Department which said
we couldn t contmue to operate

t w thou! any funds
S1t1mg Down
We w II be sittmg down and
workmg with the people of
Zanesville on th1s Ensign
sa1d under quest onmg by Sen
Douglas
Applega te
D
Steubenville another board
member and if there 1s a
general feeling of the board
that the Zanesv lie Youth
Camp should rema n open we
would make an attempt to get
the money somewhere They
(people of ZanesVIlle) are very
concerned about the Joss of

JObs
We ve started to work on
alternallves for use of the
campsite m case we have to
phase 11 out Ensign said
we re not gomg to drop 1! like
a hot potato
The director had sa d ear her
he hoped to have the camp
phased out m 30 days He said
employes would be offered JObs
elsewhere m the OYC system
and resident youths would be
transferred many of them mto
foster care programs
Rep Rex F Kieffer R
Zanesville told the board the
camp has a tremendous

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Sweatshirt to bed
By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Your
arllcle about burs lis prompts
me to sugges t someth ng to
your readers that I discovered

several years ago by ace dent
I suffered from burs t s for
man) l ears
Extreme!)
pa nful shoulders caused me to
have to exerc se each morn ng
but the exerc se was pamful
and llme-consummg One cold
mght I wore a sweatshirt to bed
and discovered the next
mornmg that my shoulders felt
better than they had m years
Cool mghts n the Southwest
and cold wmters m the East
probably expose many people
to siluallons s nular to mme
People don t seem to reahze
that with conventional blankets
on our beds that our shoulders
are frequently exposed to the
mght cold without our bemg
aware that they are much
colder than the rest of our
bodies
My acquamtances often k d
me about the habit I have
developed of wearmg a sweat
sh1rt to bed but I can assure
you that 1t works very well to
ward off achmg shoulders My
condiilon had been diagnosed
by a physician as burs11Is and
I was told that the only th ng to
do was to continue the exer
crses that were already a part
of my daily routme
DEAR READER - An
excellent suggestiOn Many
readers have found that warm
socks at mght help prevent leg
cramps Cooling the muscles
leads to muscle cramps and
stiffness I m sure that a warm
garment over the shoulders

and neck could help a number
of people In this winter of fu el
cr1ses your sugges ti on 1s
particularly welcome
DEAR DR LAMB
In
reference to your column on
the mother wh"'- was an
alcoholic m) fwm ly was

Eastern, Southern teams

1974

appalled that you made ab
solutely no mentiOn of
Alcoholics Anonymous This
orgamzabon and ts related
group ~I Anon help nulhons of
!am hes that haven t found the
least b t of comfortmg advice
m a psych atnst s off ce
Alcohohsm Is an Illness
not a sign of severe problems
It might be to your advantage
to become better mformed
about Alcohol cs Anonymous
and f you see f t n the future
g ve more prudent and
realistic advice to those m need

of help I myself am not a
member of A A
DEAR READER - Don t get
so excited If you were a
regular reader of my columns
you would know that I have
prev ously recommended both
Alochohcs Anonymous and AI

b•t' And won t you consider
that regardless of your own
exper ence w1th alcoholics
perhaps m your lam ly th;lt
not all such problems are ahke
Alcohol IS often part of a
ser ous psychologiCal problem
needmg psychialnc help
Individuals who have evidence
of real psychological problems
as the mother m the case you
asked about did
need
professional help Why try to
downgrade
either
the
psych atnst or Alcohol cs
Anonymous Both serve a
useful purpose

Send your questions to Dr
Anon The latter as you know Lamb in care of this newsIs for the lam I es of persons paper P o Box 1551 Radio
w1 th an alcohol c problem I City Station New York N Y
th nk they are both !me 10019 For a copy of Dr Lamb s
orgamzatlons and both serve a booklet on balanced diet send
real need
50 cents to the same address
Now won t you admit you and ask for Balanced Diet
overstated your case a little booklet

Carpenter News, Event
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey w th co workers Clay and
recently entertamed Reverend Dorsey Jordan attended the
Homer Chck evangeliSt and Farm Managers Conference m
his wife and Reverend and Wooster from Tuesday unlll
Mrs Cecil Cox n their home Thursday
Mr and Mrs H E Starkey
Mr and Mrs Clyde Walker
Jimmie Kent and Carr e were m Columbus on Fnday
Thurman Mr and Mrs Glen and Saturday for the regular
lrwm Jane and Raymond monthly meetmgs of Insurance
Dale Marysville and Mr and Com pan 1es Directors and they
Mrs Chester Baumgardner called to see his sister Jessie
and Tim Coshocton attended Jewell and h1s nephew and
a lam ly gathermg at the home w1fe Mr and Mrs Cecil Jewell
of their father Dale Dye local In Columbus
Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers
Mr and Mrs Bill St John
spent a few days with Mr and have returned from Cahforma
where they visited theli' son
Mrs Rex Cheadle
Mr and Mrs R A Whit and family Mr and Mrs Lee
tmgton attended the funeral of Jeffers and fam ily m the
a cousm m Buffalo W Va and Bakersfield area They went
called on Mr and Mrs Earl especially at this lime because
of the death of a great
Reedy at Redhouse W Va
Mr and Mrs Herbert Wolfe grandson three months old
Enc Lee Kmnard son ol
and daughter Beth Ann
formerly of Wash ngton C H Stephen and Sandra Jeffers
have moved to a new mobile Kinnard and grandson of Mr
home on the Mattox farm n and Mrs Lee Jeffers He vas
also survived by a brother
th s commumly
Mr and Mrs Lewis Smith Jason While m Cahforma Mr
an d Mrs Reed Jeffers spent
v slled " h his porcnts Mr
some lime with her brother and
and M
\1 nfor I Sm h
Carroll
sistel m law Mr and Mrs
Bob IIch manager of the John Cordray Fullerton
Mr a d M s , B I ~ n
Exper cn t !Farm here along

NEW COACH
ADA Ohw (UPI)
A
Wallace Hood a 1957 graduate
of OhiO Wesleyan Un versii)
bas been named head football
coac h at Oh o Northern
Umvers ty
Hood a nallve of Mentor
served as an assistant coach at
Colgate Umvers1ly last season
He was selected from among 50
apphcants

In 1969 the Federal Com
mumcatwns Corrumssaon made

a start toward banmng the
adverllsmg of cigarettes on
radiO and televiSion It went
mto effect Jan 2 1971
Poca W Va spent a weekend
here w th her brother and
Sisler m law Mr and Mrs
W lham Lawson and family
Mr and Mrs Earl Star~ey
accompanied
by
their
daughters W Ida Wiseman
Harnso nv lie and Wanda
Jones Nelsonville and n ece
Beulah Jones Albany spent a
day m New Lexington w th
Mrs Starke) s sister and
brother Mrs Elma Vernon
and Ben Caster Mr Caster s
spendmg some time n New
Lcxmgton w th his sister

t

were 1 kely men workmg on
wages for a compa ny
Got Nothing to Lose
They got nothing to lose
shuttmg t down he said I
got t1ed up m Oh o the last
tlffie The people doing t
w e~en t the ones that owned
thelf ngs They s1t out there
and they re draw ng five
dollars an hour and I s t there
and I m losmg seventy to a
hundred dollars a day
I think we re all gomg broke
slow
Spradhn sa d
All
these guys still out there
dr1vmg are domg 11 because
they have to They don t want
to
I borrowed $2 000 from the
bank some weeks ago and now
I ve got to run my truck Ill
take th s (steel pipe ) on mto
V~rgm1a and maybe then I can
JUSt park 11 We re up agamst
some greedy people
They d1dn t put this truck
stop out here for my con
vemence They re out here to
make money and at 50 cents a
gallon for d1esel they re
makmg money
Mooney and Oswald said the
effects of the boycott Will last
months

I d hke to get m my n g and
head for Lufkin and park 11
Mooney said
The other
truckers will remember my
ng They ll know I kept run
mng Maybe months from now
one guy will see me and ask me
why I d1dn t shut down There s
gomg to be some grudges You
Just can t go to bee and wake
up and forget about this

Today's

Sport Parade

in return match tonight

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK UPI
Everyone has his own cross lo bear
Hank Aaron keeps hearmg how he couldn t ca rry Babe Ruth s
shoes and poor old Davey Johnson has people tell10g hlffl how he
couldn t even shme Rogers Hornsby s
The b g reason Davey Johnson has to put up With all th scorn
meal s because Rogers Hornsby generally was known as one of
the grea test n ghthanded hitters who ever I ved If not the
greatest and without even settmg .. ut to do It m the f rst place he
broke Hornsby s all tlffie home run record for maJor league
second basemen Uus past season
Davey Johnson whacked 43 fo r the Atlanta Braves last year
That topped Hornsby s 42 for the St LouiS Cardmals 10 1922 the
same year he hit 401 and drove m 152 runs for them Johnson
managed only 270 and 99 RBis for the Braves
I ve heard some pretty good stones about hlffi says Johnson
about Hornsby who d ed 11 years ago I u derstand he alwa)S
smd what he thought and was very blunt
Hardly the Word
Blunt 1s hardly the word
Rogers Hornsby never beat around the bush m his I fe He had
about as much subtlety as one of George Foreman s punches
While he never went around knock ng you down With th e n
format on 1! you were born n this co untry he expected the least
you d know IS that he batted better than 400 three different
tlffles led the NatiOnal League m hlltlllg SIX stra ght tunes and
his lifetlffie average of 358 was second only to Ty Cobb s 367
Chances are Rogers Hornsby would congratulate Davey
Johnson on break10g his home run record proVIdmg someone
pushed him mto domg 11 but chances are he d also tell you how
Johnson wouldn t compare with the pia} ers of his own era If you
pushed hlffi there also
Rogers Hornsby never needed a ~hole lot of pushmg
Neither for that matter does Davey Johnson who has a way
of speaking his mmd too
He d Have Sassed Back
If Hornsby would ve given me some sass about my breakmg
his record I would ve ~1ven 11 to hlffi r ght back says Johnson
I m outspoken also I feel the one thmg any ballplayer should
have1spnde Ifhedoesn thavethat hehasnothmg
Rogers Hornsby would buy that all r ght
He also would ve have applauded Johnson s straightforward
approatil w1th Atlanta General Manager Eddie Robmson this
past year after bemg dealt to the Braves by the Baltlfflore
OriOles
You know I was hurt when I was over m Baltlffiore Johnson
told Robmson I think I m all nght now but if I can t play
without pam I m not gonna take your money
All season long last year Johnson who had hit only five home
runs at Baltlffiore the year before kept hearmg about how he
was really playmg m a telephone booth m Atlanta
Schoend1enst s PuiDown
One day when the Cardinals were bemg shown on TV s Game
of the Week Curt Gowdy mentiOned that Johnson was leadmg the
league m home runs to St LoUis Manager Red Schoendienst
That tells you somethmg about the Atlanta ballpark said
Schoendienst
Davey Johnson wasn t watchmg the Game of the Week that
day but when he got to the ballpark some of the Braves with the
typical ballplayers way of enJoyably amphfymg some
statements needled hlffi
Jeez Schoendienst really ripped you on TV
1 w~nted to tell hlffl never mmd the ballpark I m playmg m
you ought to learn how to bunt and run more and stay out of the
double plays with the Punch and Judy hitters you ve got You
know I probably hit more home runs on the road this past season
than anybody on our club Smce when IS Schoendienst an
authority on home runs? I was gomg to send hlffl a telegram but
I d1dn t bother
Now that s where Rogers Hornsby was different
He would ve told Red Schoendienst personally

Fiscal shell game charged
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen Howard M Metzenbaum
J).()hw said Monday President
NIXon s budget for 1975 short
changes urgent medical research
This proposal IS $30 b1lhon

Apple Grove
CHEERlEADERS FOR MASON KNICKS- Making up
the cheerleading squad for Mason Elementary School are
pupils of grades four through siX Squad members are front
1-r Lisa Stewart Alicra Roush and Angie Proffitt back
Beth Weaver Terri Johnson Tanowa Hill on top and Karen
Brown Instructor IS Janell Call

He'8 a Wolverine giver
end
Gute s restrictions mcluded
--Said tract shall hereafter be
known as U of M South East
- At no place upon said tract
shall the word MICHIGAN
be uttered except m the most
reverent terms such as those
normally reserved for the Al
mighty
-The colors of scarlet and
gray (OhiO Slates colors) shall
not be diSplayed upon any por
lion of said tract
- False and-&lt;&gt;r mflammatory
s gns or advertismg of any sort
as Bucks are No I or Go
Bucks are striCtly prohibited
-In the event that the gentle
man ( ?) commonly known as
Woody Hayes shall ever ac
company the Grantee upon the
descnbed tract he shall re
mam a m mmurn of 20 feet
from any yard markers photographers or equally destructable objects on said tract
-Before the above described
Grantee may transfer the above
described tract he must f~rst
face the general dlfection of
Ann Arbor M1ch and utter the
words Go Michigan
-In the event that any of the
above restrictions fall to be
carried out may 11 he willed
that the Grantees best scalpel
be used by a weird holy man
tc periorm a tonguelectomy upon Woody Hayes
Gute a surveyor filed the
deed 10 Guernsey &lt;;ounty re
corder s office Fr day

News, Events
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Jeff Donohew
of Belpre spent the weekend
with Mr and Mrs Roy
Donohew
Steve Hill of Racme spent the
weekend w1th Dean H1ll
Mrs Ed th Gilkey of
Galhpohs and Rolhn Dill of
Pomeroy VISited Mr and Mrs
Jack Ables Sunday
Mr and Mrs Henry Euler of
Racme were weekend guests of
Mr and Mrs Don Richard
Hill Harold Roush of Portland
was a Sunday dmner guest of
the Hills
Mrs John Hill entertamed
Thursday evening m honor of
her husband John Hill who
was celebratmg a b rthday
Guests mcluded Mr and Mrs
Don Bell Mr and Mrs Chuck
Mugrage Linda Hill Mrs
Beverly Wickline Ice cream
and cake were served by Mrs
Hill
Mr and Mrs Jlffi Bell of
Mormng Star VIsited Mr and
Mrs Don Bell Saturday
evemng
Mr and Mrs Robert Smith
Sr VISited their grand
daughter Michelle Johnson
Sunday at Racme Michelle
was retnrned home Saturday
from Children s Hospital
where she had ear surgery
Mr and Mrs Hupp and son
Ricky Mr and Mrs Kenny
Wargo of Norwalk VISited Mr
and Mrs Arnold Hupp and
sons Other guests of the Hupps
were Mr and Mrs Charles
Hupp and children Mr and
Mrs Kenny Bass and children
of Marengo and Mr and Mrs
Lawrence Bush
Mr and Mrs Robert Smith
Sr were dmner guests Sunday
o~ her parents Mr and Mrs

more than last year s budget
yet 11 short changes some of the
mose urgent re sea rch m
diseases which are costmg
350 000 American hves each
year Metzenbaum sa d
Metzenbaum sa d the budget
s JUSt a f seal shell game that
md1cates the administration s
msensiiiVIty to the needs of the
American public
The senator noted the budget
for cancer research was $200
million under the $800 nullion
the President s own adVIsers
told hlffi was needed

Social
~ CalendaL
THURSDAY
THE
MEIGS
County
National Farmers
Orgamzatwn will meet at 8
p m m the Vo-Ag room of
Meigs High School
WEDNESDAY
THE
NEW
Rae ne
Emergency Veh1cle will be at
the Chester Elementary School
llam
MIDDLEPORT Fire
Department Aux1hary w II
meet at 8 p m at the hall

&gt;

~~~N._

By Denny Fobes
RACINE - The Southern
Tornados broke a 24 game
Eastern ]lOX last December 18
but Eagle fans hope to sta rt
another one of those strea ks
tomght as the cagers of Bill
Ph1lhps came here lo battle the
hoopsters of Carl Woife
The Initial battle th s eason
played at Eastern ~ent mlo
overtlffle With the Tornados
commg out on top 52-50
The Tornados behmd 48-44
with Just 30 seconds remammg
m regulatiOn lime scored
stole the ball and scored agam
on a M1tch Nease Jumper with
JUSt five seconds left to send
the first battle mto overllme
Southern chnched the v ctory
as seniOr Randy Warner hit
both ends of a one and one w1th
Just eight seconds showmg on
the clock In the extra period
Forward Pete Sayre and
semor guard Bob Miller led
that Tornado tnurnph hitting
for 18 and 16 pmnts respec
tively

elunmated the Tornados from

the SVAC title chase as no
league defeats are n sight for
undefea ted Hannan Trace
But all IS not peace m the
SVAC as the Tornados and
Eagles begm a stretch drive
for second place n the !mal
loop stand ngs
The Tornados are currently
7 2 but have rugged Hannan
Trace commg to Racme a week

5-11

6-1
6-1
6-1)

5-10

SOUTHERN
VernOrd
Norman Curfman
Pete Sayre
Randy Warner
M1tch Nease

MATCHUPS
EASTERN
Steve Dill
Tim Spencer
Tim Baum
Steve Goebel
John Sheets

C
F

F
G
G

from today while Eastern at
6-3 has Just Soutl western and
Symmes Valley reman ng
Wolfe who sa d I ~on t sell
these k1ds of mme short sa d
the Tornados have ~orked
hard on their defense for
tomght s battle He added that
he II be send ng any com
b natiOn of the followmg six
players mto tomght s ga me
Norman Curfman Pete Sayre
Vern Ord Randy Warner
Dave Theiss and Milch Nease
Ph lhps meanwhile will be
gmng with T1m Spencer and
Tim Baum at the corners
Steve Dill m the p1vot and
Steve Goebel and John Sheets
at the guards

6-3
6-1
6-2
5-10

6-1

In tomght s pre I m nary
battle Coach Duane Wolfe w11l
test the wmgs of his Green
Nestlings as they try to avenge
a 32 30 loss to Southern s
Funnel Clouds n the r f rsl
encounter
Mik e Roberts a Funnel
Cloud guard hit a JUinper w th
JUst eaght seconds rema mmg to
g ve the reserves that WID The
Nesthngs will be gomg without
guard Don E1chmger who
suffered a fractured ankle on
the lockeroom steps follow ng
Saturday s Nestl ng tr urnph
over Fairland
Game time for the reserve tilt
s 6 30 p m w th the vars ty
game to follow 1mmed1ately

Gophers topple Bucks

By Uruted Press InternatiOnal
Oh o State dropped another
A new sumner baseb(jll
R g Ten basketball game Mon
Warn
1 b~n
g
1
day
n ght to the Golden
Me gs County lh s )ear a
Gophers
of Mmnesota 56-51
Meigs Babe Ruth lean
desp1te
outshoot1ng
Mmnesola
Tl e team w th Ron Logan
and Charl es Marsha I as from the held 52 per cent to 32
~r cent
coaches w II play m lh I t
The Gop hers more than
Pleasa t I eague walh ;,~ p s t
made
up for the ir poor shootmg
season to 1rname nt leadmg to
percentage b) convert ng 16 of
slate champ onsh p f 1als
All bo) s bet"een the ages of 21 free throw attempts wh le
the Buckeyes now I~ m U e
16-19 who res de n Pon eroy
conference
and 6-11 overall
Middleport Syracuse Rae ne
Rutland Cl ester or any other could manage only f1ve of eight
area of Me1gs Co un ty as fr om the cha r I) stnpe
Denn s Shaffer the Big Ten s
welcome to s gn up
s :orer dumped n 22
leading
The f rst s gnup will be he d
at 10 a m Sa turday Feb 9 at po nts to lead Mmnesota to Is
thtrd consecut vc conference
c ty hall n Pomeroy
Win for a 3-4 mark m the B1g
Ten and an 8-10 record for the
BORZO\ WON'T RUN
season
LOS ANGELES UP!
Freshman I arry Bolden was
Valery Borzov the Sov et
Umon s double go ld medal the only bnght spot for the
Winner m the sprmts all he 1972 Buckeyes with 21 po1nls Oh o
Olympic Games m Mun ch Stale s leadmg scorer Bill An
wont run m four mdoor track dreas was held to JUSt 2 points
Oral Roberts Un vers1ty
meets m the Un ted States and
posted a 78 72 w1n over
Canada as had been an
Bowhng Green m a non
now·ICed
Borzov wasn l aboard a conference game dcspate an
plane from Russ1a wh cl out standm g ga me by the
landed at the Los Angeles Falcon s Cornehus Cash w o
Internatwnal Airport Monday hit for 28 pomts and grabbed 21
A spokesman for the Nat onal rebounds
The wm raised ORU s season
AAU sa d Borwv was left I orne
record to 17 3 wh le the Falcons
because of a sore foot

Irish hard pressed in 91-89 win
Paterno connected on a 19
Notre Dame has come up foot Jump shot With JUst one
With a new 1ceman and JUSt m second left to g1ve the th1rd
ranked Fightmg Irish a 91-39
time
Dwight Clay the man who VICtory over Michigan State
ended UCLA s 88-game wm The Irish blew a nme-pomt lead
mng streak with a long JUmp and Michigan State went ahead
shot IS normally Notre Dame s With 6 12 left on Terr y
top clutch shooter but fresh Furlow s basket Paterno s
man Billy Paterno stole his act shot put Notre Dame ahead for
the first time after FUrlow s
Monday mght
By Uolted Press International

crushed CamSius 76-58 and
Kansas ripped Colorado 81-U
David Thompson had 23
pomts and Tom Burleson h1t 19
as North Carolina State
bounced back from a sluggish
start to beat Duke and Terry
Compton hit eight strmght foul
shots m the last six mmutes
the last two w th 35 seconds
left as Vanderbilt won ts

basket
John Shumate sco red 27
pomts to lead Notre Dame now
16-1 and Gary Brokaw added
21 Mike Robmson haq 31 pomts
for Michigan State now II 7
In other actiOn second
ranked North Carolina State
beat Duke 92-78 No 6 Van
derb1lt edged eighth rated
Alabama 67-65 South Carolma

So uthea ster n Co nf er ence
showdown w1th Alabama
Alex Eng I sh scored 27 pomts
and Mark Gremer held Larry
Fogle the natiOn s leading
scorer to his lowest ou !put of
the season as South Carohna
clobbered Ca ms1us Fogle
averagmg 34 5 pomts a game
managed only 18
Rick Suttle came off the

Wolfpack moves to second in UPI poll
NEW YORK (UPI)
The
status quo was mamtamed m
the Umted Press International
Board of Coaches maJor
college basketball ratmgs this
week with UCLA keepmg well
ahead of the rest of the status
seekers

The only change among the
top five m the ratmg was North
Carolina State s wrestmg away
a No 1 vote from UCLA and
depr1vmg the Brwns of their
accustomed unammous ac
clalffi as No I

However
the
Brums
received the other 33 first
place ballots as the over
whelmmg No I select on
The Wolfpack was second
followed m order by Notre
Dame North Carolma and
Marquette Marquette held

onto the No 5 ranking despite a
narrow defeat at the hands of
the Irish
The second fiv e teams
shifted slightly In pos1tionmg
but the cast rema med basically
the same

Vanderbilt shpped past
Maryland mto sixth while
ProVIdence dropped out of the
top 10 after losmg an ove rtlffie
decrs10n to Duquesne
Alabama moved up a notch
to replace Prov dence as No 8
followed by Pittsburgh and
Southern Califorma

bench to score 20 IJI)mts and
grab 10 rebounds as Kansas
routed Colorado while else
where Denrus Schaefer s 22
pomts earned Mmnesola to a
56-51 victory over Olw State
and Larry Wllhams and Lon
Kruger scored 12 pomts each
as Kansas State downed
Oklahoma State 65-48
Elsewhere Detro t downed
St Peter s 95 2 Tennessee
stopped Auburn ~0 Wilham
&amp; Ma1} topped The Citadel 64
57 Eastern Kentucky beat
Marshall 83 77 Kentucky
edged Lou sana State 73-70
Western Kentucky defeated
Dayton 67-33 Flonda mpped
MISSISS JlPI State 78-75 MISSIS
Slpp downed Georgia 59-55
Auslm Peay beat Murray
State 87 80 and Denver
outlasted Southern MissisSippi
112-93

he

Pon s

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Red-hall'ed Bill Walton the
Howard Hughes of college
basketball has been named to
receive the AAU s Sullivan
Award for 1973
But that wasn t really a
slU'pnse The surpriSe was
Walton was at a Monday news
conference at UCLA to pose
with his award as the nallon s
top amateur athlete
Walton who has kept his
distance from reporters smce
he arrived on Westwood cam
pus from La Mesa Calif loW'
years ago showed up With
UCLA Athletic Director J D
Morgan and Brwns Coach
John Wooden

l don t mmd talking to
people but I m not real com
fortable where there are 30
people starmg me m the face
with bright hghts UCLA s
two-tlffie College Player of the
Year told the phalanx of
newsmen And I like to be
comfortable
AAU President David Rl
venes of Miles City Mont
announced Waltoo s selection
but srud the presentation would
be made at a formal dinner
Walton IS the 44th reCipient of
the award which IS made by a
vote by members of the AAU
Board of Governors The board
represents all 50 states and
each of the AA U s 20 sports

Complete drawing
NEWPORT BEACH Calif
(UP!) The National Football
League has dealt Its hand and
the new World Football League
Will be seeking any money
cards left m the deck today
when 11 completes 1ts college
player draft
The remammg 30 rounds of
the draft (the first six rounds
were held Jan 22) were
scheduled to begm at 7 am
PDT
Pullmg the rug out from
under the NFL the WFL
Signed UCLA star runnmg
James
This Week s Spectal

VALUE

RATE'D

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of snow Thurs
day and Saturday fair
Friday High In the upper 20s
and 30s lows in the upper
teens and 20s

Kermit Johnson and USC
guard Booker Brown last
Monday before the elder
league s draft Tuesday
Now that the WFL clubs have
had a chance to study the
NFL s draft they ll complete
!hell' drawmg today
The drafting order Will be the
same as that used Jan 22 With
Memphis leading off followed
by Boston Flonda Toronto
B1rmmgham New York
Southern
California
Pluladelph1a Hawan Chicago
Washmgton D C and Detrmt
The WFL s draft of current
pro players will be held Feb
18-19 m Chicago
In addition to the draft
several teams were expected
to announce the s1gmng of free
agents today

USED CARS

The Daily Sentinel

68 DfEVEUE
COUPE

'

moto
auto t ans
m ss on N ce car for the
V8

pr ce

•895

Karr &amp;Van Zandt
You II L keOurQual ty
Way of Do ng Bus ness
GMAC FINANCING
99'2 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs Til 6 00

To! S PM Sal

DEV011tD TO THE
IHTERIOITOF

MEIGS-MAlON AREA
CHDJI'ER L. TANNEHILL

,... ....

ROBFJIT BOEf'Ual

aoyUttr
P\ibUihed diUy extePI s.twUy by The
auo Valley PublilhinK Comp1111 111
Court St. Pomeroy otUo M'1ll ouane.
OfDce Phone lft.mf Ed.ltonal PIMW m

""

Secancl claa poage pakl •l

~

Ohio

National advertil n1 rep uentaUve
Bo tlnelllr...U. per Inc 12Eat4h1 Sl
New York New Yort
&amp;tt:.rtpt!m rlliel Del.ivend b)' Clnier
where avaU.ble to cents per week By
Motor Route whert cartler ten&lt;ict not
available One month $2 «&lt; By m11U 111
Oh o and W Va On! Year 'II Sb
mon Lh1 19 SO Thret mon hi II

Elsewhere t'-2 eo yur.

IL_..te.
~r~. months

.a monlhl Jn 50

IUO SUb«riptkln pr ct
~y 'nme.&amp;en 1111!1

plus members of the sports the one who gets picked out 2
media who cover amatelU' I m sure my teammates 3
rea hze the lfflportance of this s
athletics
It Is a great honor and I m trophy as an award to our team 6
very pleased to receiVe this and our coach
8
In the votmg Walton -only
award Walton sa d But I
think the coach knows and the the second basketball player
guys on the team know that I m honored by the AAU-rece1ved
really not rece1vmg thiS for I 902 pomts to I 856 for 1972
Olympic IJOO.rneter gold medal
myself
1st
Dave Wottle of Bowling
We JUSt all understand that
the meclia tends to pick out Green The first basketball
mdiVIduals and I happen to be player chosen for the Sulhvan
6-11 and have red hrur and I m Award was Prmceton s Bill
Bradley m 1965

339
290
2 6

•

Fifteen Game track record
FG A Pel
45 131
34
57 131 114

Dan Dodson
Lonn e Coats

79 184

43

57 62

35

Steve P ce

33 I 3 29

Je ry C emeans
Or on Blan chard
Ch p B auer
Perk Au t
GregB ownng
Steve Wa bu n

14 47
2 34
6 53
83
612
6 27

M ck Ash

6

M ke May

6

J m Ander son
M tch Meadows

30
35

30
26

50
22
17
17
18
50

21
2
00

Chart e Marshal
M ke Magnotta

0

TOTALS
338 951
OPPONENTS
403 860
Scormg by Quarters
Megs
Opponents

FT A Pet RB
20 37
54
66
6 33
.48
46
35 48
73
93
35 53
66
40

23 36

64

20

15 23
11 23
16 26
49

65
52

47
58

61
44
75
55
37

58

34

59
38

00
7 1
22
00

00

00

35
47

196 322
216 liS

64
I 00

he 973

PF Pis

38 I 0
43

29

7

130
193

30 149
3
89
15 43
73
36
30 48
9

3

20

5

13

6

17

2

2

5
2

'

10
0

6
0
0

S96

277

0
61
69

J
2J
9

8

I

4

0
0
872

603 298 I 022

198

224

207

2.43

223

269

26 1 269

872
1022

29
6
5

J
8

•
J

s

s
s

o Col eg e

Oh o Un
To edo

e

s

W L
2
s 2

W

Prov dence 29
Roc hes e
26
Nova Sc o a24
Boston
16
Sp r ngf e d 12

He shey
Ba mo e
C nc nnat
Jksnv e
V rg n a
R chmond

2
5
19

6
0
o
J
7
24 12

64 2.4
62 98
58 76
39 65
36 5

173
169
l.d7
2 1
93

South
w
t pts gf ga
28 S 9 65 2 7 57
27 8 5 59 179 59

26

a

6 58

5

60

19 29 5 .43 55 210
15 28 8 38 43 92
13 33 5 31 -lO 2 9
Monday s Resu ts
No ga mes scheduled
Tonight s Games
V g n a at Bos on
Only game schedu

ech

Intern atonal
Hockey League
North

w

Muskegon
Sag naw

3
9
25 26

Toledo

23 28

M am

.t

6

3
4
4
6

9' 8a

Wes e n M c h
3
Cen a M ch
2
Ken S a e
011 o Conte ence

9
8

177

w t enbe g
Musk ngum
Cap a
Oh o Nor hern

8
6

•
2

2

6

2

4

9

3
J

9

Ma e a

s

Mount Un on

s5 •'
s s

Woos le
He de beg
Ot e ben
Den so n

''

Kenyon

J

.
5

3

'""8

1
5
5

9

0
Ba dw n wa a e
2 B
Obe n
s 'J
Oh oWes eva n
9
B g T en
Conference Ove a

6

••

95

pts gl ga
!&gt; 213 73
58 213 2 0

57 93 176
0 54 74 188
Monday s Results
No games scheduled
Ton ghl s Gam es
No games scheduled

For'· Wayne27 24

f

353

.42

2 6

2

pet

9 b

W es t
w
ilh

J
9
30 2

(

604
593

66

San An on o
526
nd ana
29 7
5 8
Den er
2
2
4
San D ego
24 35 .tO
Mondays Re!i. ull s
U ah

05

v

g n

a

8
0

98

On y games hedu ed

Tu esda y s Games

San An on o a Denve

s
6

e

show, Squires lose
SALT LAKE CITY UP!
George Gervm where are you
Gervm s disappearance was
the major fa ctor m the Utah
Stars 105-98 wm over the
V rgm1a Sqmres Monda y mght
m the American Basketball
Assoc1allon s only scheduled
game
Even Squires Coach AI
Blanch Is baffled
I don t know anythmg about
t I m always the last one to
know-and I m the coach he
sa d after the game
Sqmres owner Earl Foreman
had sold the young superstar to
the San Anton o Spurs for a
reported $500 000 earher this
week but ABA Comm1ss oner
Mike Storen stopped the sale
for the good of the franchiSe
and the league
Gervm unhappy about the
deal disappeared and a team
spokesman said Gervm may
have grabbed a fhght to New
York With mtent ons of Jurn
pmg to the NBA
The Squ res obVIously upset
about the loss of their star fell
behmd 10 pomts m the first
penod and failed to threaten
the Stars until the last mmutes
of the fourth quarter
Down 103-&lt;19 the Squ1res
scored mne unanswered pomts

Col ege Basketba I Rcsu ts

By Un t ed P ess nt e nat onal
Ea~t

Ru ger s 80 Buckne 69
A eg hny 69 C ng e M n 49
Shepherd 85 M Ha vey 5

Susequeh anna 62 un a a 50
Sp ng f e d 4 Tu s 6
New Ha mp 63 Br andes 55
Haw lho ne 90 Cu y 87
Vermon 94 N o w ch 45
N aga a 93 Bu ffa

oa

Be kl ey 8 W Va Te h 83
Ha w ck 68 ha ce 55
E ztown 60 Ku zlown 5.4
F a l ed6B ona4
De o t 95 5 Pe e s 82

Soutll
92 Duke 78
Vanderb
67 A aba m a 65
Tennessee 88 Aubu n 80
W &amp;Ma ry 6.4 C ade 5
Md Es n S h e 96 Hwa d 86
So Ca 76 can s us 58
Easte n Ky 83 Ma sha
7
Ga ell 55 Po omac S 53
Ken tucky 73 LSU
Wes Georg a 8 LaG ang e 76
Ga So uth e n 95 Samford B

ca

o

Rch mnd 93 App achn s 83
Cmpb 83 enor Rhyne
Shaw 72 El z c y s 67
UNC C h
te 8 Tenn Te h 65
L v ng s one 85 Gu to d 2
gan 90 Emo y&amp; Hen y 66
M
Eas Te nn 95 Ga S 84
C a K Ga
70 F Sk 59
M ss Co 78 J ksnv S
2
A co n A&amp; M
2 ex S h n 0 .4
Western Ky 67 Dayton 83
Geo wn Ky 6 Un on Ky 49
Be a m n e 69 Thos More 5
Ky Wesleyan 90 SW Mo 89
Tu ane80 B mnghm S h n 63
F o da 78 M ss Sl 75
M ss 59 Georg a 55
A Peay 87 M ay Sl 80
UT Cha 96 M d T enn 90

M dw es t
No e Dame 9 M ch S

89

Loyo a
9 Lew s B
Cn n a y 6 s U c bnd e 65
By Un ted P e.ss nte nat on a
Kansas B Co ora do 66
East
w
tm ph gf ga Kan S 65 Oka S 48
New Eng 29 2
2 60 94
3 M nneso a 56 Oh o S 5 1
Southwest
o on o
26 25 45 62 293 Ab Ch s 99 Su Ross 9
Quebe
26 13
3 55 9 69 A kansas 5 1 2 NE La 7
A A 0 T n y Tex 6
C eve a nd 24 '12
5
59 62 H Payne BB Ange o S 62
er se v
22 28
2 46 52 90 0 Robe Is 8 Bw ng G n 2
Texas A
.4 am a J
04 E Tex S 93
Ch ago
3 45 ISO 58 Texas A&amp;
22
ex Lu h 75 E Tex Bap 68
West
w
I
pts gf ga S hws n T ex 9 S Ed s
Hous on
29 17
.j 62
99 38 sw Tex St 79 T tn s 74
Sou he n S 5 A k Co
52
w nn peg 26 n 4 56 83 85 Ok a c y 9 Ok a Chr s 73
Edmon on 2 23 0 54 9 0 F l ew s 85 N M H ands 79
M nneso a 24 25
.4 9 92 86 Adams S 95 W N ew M ex 86
West
LosAng
20 33
o
o 5 208
Van ou e 9 32
0 38 83 2 9 Denve 12 So u he n M ss 93
0 egon Co 12 A aska 67
Monday s Resu t s
Cen Wash 93 s F ase 70
Hou on
e sey
0 y game schedu ed
Tuesday s Games
w nn peg at Ch cago
e sey a Hous on
C eve and a M nnesota
Edmon on &lt;1 Va n ouve

On

v games sc hedu

2

2

6

J

J
6

2

6

ed

8

5

0

See for yourself
why th1s new

STIHL 015
Automattc

What

1s

11,

Doctor?

1s the Number 1
Value buy 1n a
m1n1-s1ze saw
at

Pomeroy
Home &amp; Auto

Pomeroy

OhiO

to pull w th n five-b ut the
buzzer cut off their rally
Stars Coach Joe Mullaney
called the game our poorest
performan ce n a wtnn ng
effort
I think the only maJOr
advantage we had over them
was that without the help of
Gervm we got off to an early
lead bulge which gave us the
momentum to mamta n the
scormg edge he srud
The Squ~res Cincy Powell
who led all scorers w th 26
pomts expressed the team s
bitterness about the Gervm
deal
Every trrne we get some
momentum gomg Foreman
sells one of our key players It
happened With (Juhusl Er
Vlng (Swen ) Nater and now
Gervm

MAZEROSKI RESIGNS
PITTSBURGH (UP!
Third base coach B1ll Mazeros
ki whose famous home run
gave the Pittsburgh Pirates the
1960 World Senes over the New
York Yankees announced
Monday n ght he was ret1rmg
from the Pirate orgamzatwn
after 18 years of sem ce with
the club
Mazerosk1 mformed P1rate
General Manager Joe Brown of
his dec1s on m a br ef telephone
call from Bradenton Fla the
Pirates sprmg trammg camp
Bill sa1d that as trammg
camp drew near he dec de l
he d had enough of baseball
after 20 years and that he
should spend more tune with
his family a Pirate spokes
man srud

s

J

6

e

s and ngs

With 18 po nts dropped to IH
for the season while the Hill
f.9ppers evened their record at
99
In the only other Oluo college
game Monday n gil Cedar
VIlle knocked off Walsh 66-59
fo r Its n nth victory m 19
games Walsh s now 0-13 for
the season

Gervin fails to

W L

6

REBOUNDS
W ght 5 a e
eubenv e
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ed SYoungs
own S a
Lawrence Mount Umon s 6-8 U bana
R o Grande
center from Newark leads the Ceda
v e
Ohio Conference m reboundmg Cen t a S a e
w1th an average of 11 9 per WaSh
Case Wes e n
game Manetta s Art Clark s w lberfor ce
Xav e
runnerup at 11 5
C eve and S a P
Lawrence IS the conferences T f e
n
defendmg rebound champiOn Oh o Don

F nt
19 31 3 4 168 20
Por H u on 7 1 2 36 45 74

Sou ttl
w 1
Oes Mones JO 7
Co lumbu s 28 26 2
Oay on
27 25 J

9
0

Conte e nce Ove a
W L
W L

Ash land
John Car o

1 pis gt ga
5 67 189 60
2 52 2 5 200

A

l

5

y

PRJTCHE'IT SIGNS
J J
'
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
2 '
0
No hwes e n
2 6
0
Cleveland Browns announced Oh o s a e
'
6 0
owa
.4
.4 2
Monday they have signed run
nos
.t
4
rung back Billy Pritchett thelf
Hoo se Bu c key e Conte ence
Conte ence Ov e a
thlfd cbo1ce m the recent
W L W L
football draft to a three year Hanove nd
0
9 J
9 3
4 4
contract Pritchett 6-4 and 252 De l ance
Ea ham
nd
J
5 5
pounds was named to the All An
de son nd
s
2
Missouri Conference team and B uff on
6 J
'
7
F nd ay
4
9 9
voted Back of the Year as a w
m ng on
7
6
sophomore at West Texas M an ches te nd 4 8
0
J
0
State Browns phySICian Dr Tay o
Ott1ers
Vic lppohto pronounced
W L
2 2
Pritchett free of knee mjuries HAk am
on
2
'
that plagued him his last two C nc nna
5
Dayton
J
5
years at West Texas
4
Ma one
6

1 t ph gf ga
New Hav en 30 15 7 67 202 157

u

2

3

WHA

Baskelbal R ec ords
By Un led P ess lnte na on a
Th ough games of F eb 2
M dAme can Conference
Conte ence Ove a

nd ana
M ch gan S a
W s ons n
M nn eso a

w

2

35 24
8 3

standzngs

W L

No th

Ken
k
Ca o na
v g na
Memph s

On y games schedu ed

M ch gan
Purdue

A m e can Hockey League

A BA Stan d ng s
By Un ed P essJ..rH-emat ona
E a!!t
w
pet g 11
New Yo k
35 22 6 .j

J3

Oh

Fol ow ng are th e stat st cs for th e I sf 15 games o
74 Me gs Maraude ba ske tball season

PLAYER
Terry Qua Is
B II M ye r s

204
66

are now II 7
Dayton Umvers1ty dropped a
close game to the Hill toppers of
Western Kentucky The game
was lied 19 llffles and the lead
ex changed hands 12 times be
fore Western Kentucky pulled
away m the last m nute to wm
67-33
Day ton led by Don Sm th

No

Walton top amateur athlete

:::

Martin Cunnmgbam at Racme
Mrs Erma Wilson VISited
Mrs Kathryn Hunt Sunday
Mr and Mrs Walter Me
Dade of Troy spent a weekend
with Mrs Gladys Shiel&lt;js and
Mrs Edna Roush of Racme
and VISited local relatives
Mrs Edna Roush of Racme
spent Tuesday thr~r1day
With Mr and Mrs. 1'1!rbert
Roush and Roger while Mrs
Gladys Shields and Mrs Etta
Mae Hill visited Mr and Mrs
Howard Roush and Mr and
Mrs
Bud Lampen at
Wellngton Mrs Faye Lampen
IS unprovmg

Eagle guard John Sheets led
all scorers w th 21 pmnts 18 of
those commg n the second
half w1th Steve D ll 6-3 sen or
center addmg 19
The game tomght could be
just as close as the f rst one
although Southern w1ll have to
go without Miller the team s
lead ng scorer and playmaker
who suffe red a badly spra ned
ankle m Fnday s 55-47 loss at
North Galha In the three
games previous to that North
Galha game Miller had
connected for '!/ 28 and 31
po nts
That loss to the P rates

Mmgs to put
te~~m m Babe
Ruth Le~~gue

Some
Ace den H ea th
nsu ance pa ys a hosp tal
an d su g ca expe nses
ot her pol c es
n c ude
d sab ty ncome The
Down ng Ch Ids
Agency
has var ous pol c es to best
meet your needs

DowningChilds 1
Agency, Inc.
220 N 2nd
MIDDI EPORT

NAMED COACH
BIRMINGHAM Ala (UP!)
- Ja ck Golla IS headed for the
deep South and the challenge a
putt ng together a football
team totally from scratch m
the World Football League
Golla who dire cted the
Ottawa Rough Riders to Grey
Cup titles m 1972 and 1973 and
Canadian Football League
Coach of the Year both
seasons
was announced
Monday as coach and general
manager of the Blfffilflgham
entry m the WFL

-----

~IRACLe~

DO
Jl~
ITmmilllREfllll

Do

you

eve

ge t

swa mped n a sea of nches
fee
ya ds and m es
M os t of us have emem
be ed that 2 make a too
J t n a ya rd e c But how
m any ya rd s n a m e'
Th ese od d conve son
num be s we e ar ved a t
by ace den
An n h was
o g na l y th e eng h o he
th umb r om he t p to he
knuck e the foe was he
length of a oo a ya d was
he d stan ce from the nose
t o th e f nge t p o he a m
s e ched ou t t o he s de
The m e comes I om t he
La t n wo d fa
housand
a nd was o g na ll y th e
d s t a n ce cove ed by a
ma ch ng so d er
n a
housand paces pace be ng
he d s ance be t ween
places whe e he sa me l oo t
ca m e down n rna ch ng
The electro se ec o of a
M racl e wa l e
e,f n e
pa ces th e amoun
of
ref ned wa er needed n
home No need to
you
hand set or wo ry about
how much ef ned water
w I be needed for ex ra
demands Let lhe elect o
se ector do t fo you
automat ca ll y wh e you
s t back and wa ch you
avo t e TV p og am

SAYRE

HARDWARE
881 t l l l
New Haven W

�- ...

"I' •

.,

. . .
.
.

'· •

.

~

•'

I

.

.

..

•

· .·. ·· ;,.-., · !"

I •.

~

T
'

4 - Th~ Daily Se nt in• I, MidrlleP&lt;&gt;rt-Pomer&lt;!Y. r·•·L. 5. t!l74

.

progmm ':
d {.
tS pJanne

,--~;e:::p;;;.-;;;;:-.~c;:-t;;~;;;;:;;;~:-.,·1vew
1
1

than 300 words long {or be sntJPct to roductlon by thr
edllor) and musl be signod with the signee's address.
Names may be withheld upon publication. However. on
request, names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good

I
1
I
I taate, addressing issues. not personaUUes.
·I
..
I
. -- -- s~"fdith
~
fh,L.

I •••''Vlll
I
RI'•'I Cf

•"III C[

.

:

- Helen Lyons, Ma nager.

Donations coming
in well at Racine

.
..

.
''

DST wrong

'.

says PTA
CHICAGO - Immediate
repeal of daylight savings time
legislation has been recommended by the E ~e cutiv e
Committee of the multi •• million-member National PTA
at a recent meeting in Chicago.
11
0W'" concern for the safety
of rhildren has compelled the
executive committee to take
this emergency action ," said
Mr s. Lillie E. Herndon ,
National PTA president. ·"if is
obvious that daylight savings
tilne is a grave mi stake, and
we feel it shoul d be re p~al ed as
soon as possible.'!
Mr s. ' Her ndon sa id tha t
children have been killed and
•
injured as a result of traveling
• 1o school in the pre-dawn
darkn ess. Many crossing
guards al so have complained
they cannot see to help children
safely across the street, she
added:
Tile National PTA's coordinator of legislative activity,

..

..
•
•
r•

Mrs .

Gra~

Baisinger, has
directed to infOrm

been
congressional leaders of PTA's
position. "We also are asking
OW' members to impress on
· their congressmen the' urgency
of repealing daylight savings
time ," Mrs. Herndon said.

•

.: _:

Aspt•da l cllild ren's progrmn .·.·
to be held weekly wil l bt'
in itiated
at till'

Wt&gt;dn~·sday

Mid dleport F irol Bapti&gt;l
Church umll~r the rl in•clion uf
Kines,

Mrs.

Swisher. Jud~ · 0\\ t'll ami Mrs.
Nadine Barton.

The Meigs Theatre had the pleasure of showing Romeo and
J uliet at a malin~ Friday past for the pup1ls of Southern High
&amp; hoo l. A la rge stu dent group attended accompanied by John
Bailey and 'Mrs. Robert Hobbs, !reachers.
The cooperation between teachers and pupils was commendable. The teachers treated each pupil w1th the utmost
respect and received like. treatment in return. Upon entering the
thea tre, dur ing a 2'' hour showing, one would have thought the
thea tre was empty . Quiet reigned supreme!
During the many years of theatre operation , I have never
experienced a more quiet, cooperative group, and this in 1974.
Th e fac ul ty and pupils of Southe rn High School are to be commended.
·
Many of the pupils of Mrs . Claude Husted , English teacher,
Meigs High School. attended the evening showing, and the
conduct of those who attended was comparable to the malin~
gro up .

.

:;:

Steve Skaggs, Mrs. Willi:11n

bo/it'
l't'!
.:

RACINE - Members of
Racine's ER squad are pleased
with the donations thai have
been thus far received toward
the pur chase of a new
emergency vehicle.
Th e new truck was on display
all of last w~k in different
locations in the Racine area.
Submitting donations Friday
were Joe Stewart , Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Holter , Roy Bush,
V. S. Nease, Carl Ihle, Homer
Circle and Roy Jones.
Satur da y donations were
received from Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Sayre, Carrie Nease,
Raymond Hartley, Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Bailey, George
Moore, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Efuer I.
Pickens, Mr . and Mrs. John T.
Wolfe, Racine Home Nat ional
Bank, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hudson, Mr . and Mrs. Clint
Jolmson, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Cleland, Enuna Salser , Mr .
and Mrs. Richard Ours, Early
Roush , Betty Christopherson,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
Gladys Shields, Mr. and Mrs .
Herb Sayre, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
William Hayman, Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Johnson , Sr .,
Larry Roush , Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Sharpneck , Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mallory, Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Wolfe, Eileen Buck,
Ruth Tucker, Mr . and Mrs.
Darnell Taylor , Mr. and Mrs .
Marshall Adams, Mauri ce
Loll, Mr. and Mrs. G. E .
Pauley, Lizzie Wood , Laura
Circle , Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Fisher, Stella Bush, Ed lhle,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Gluesencarnp, Mr. and Mrs.
David Hensler, Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Nease, David Fox, Jim
Cundiff, Ann Coe, Gary
Walker, Homer Warner, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Carver, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Bissell, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Waldnig, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Sayre, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Baker, Mr. and
Mrs. Wiley Ours, Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Yokum , J . K. Swart,
Harriett Neigler, Jess Wood,
Wilma Sayre, Laura Byers,
Ben Slobart, Mr. and Mrs.

.

Mrs. Manning

Dennis Evans, Richard Duckworth, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Ervin, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Rizer, Glen Rizer , Mr. and
Mrs . AI Crow, Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Huffman, Mr. and Mrs.
J . W. Weaver, Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Dai ley, Edna Roush , Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Bradford,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Proffitt, Mr.
and Mrs. Ha rry Wilford, Mr.
and Mrs. Dobbin Powell, Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Circle, Mr .
and Mrs. Herman Carson,
Frances Foster, Isabel SimJ&gt;son, Mr . and Mrs. Harold
Gibbs, Cynlh1a Tucker, Ruth
Simpson, Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Bradford , Frances Roberts,
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Saller,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Manuel,
Mr . and Mrs. David Sayre,
Mrs. Walter Kennedy, Mr. and

Soc 1·aI r Income program set

o·: ·:·:':·:·:·:·:-:,:·:·:·:·o;:·&gt;:·:·:·:,:.:·:::-:-:-:-: -:·:-:-:·:·&lt;;&lt;j;·

::::

(·•

caIendar: '

::::

TliESI) ,\ Y

Ol!IO J-:T,\ Pil i Cila'pt&lt;•r .
Beta Sigma Phl Soror ity, i::Hl
p.m., ;1t tile ('o lunilJUs n11d
Soutlwrn Uhi o Elt•drk C'11.
Ka r l'n St:rrd~·) i!flll S;111 di
Sar ge nt to l1a v t' t·ultur;d
prugr; un: Ketthy K 111~: and
Li nda !':iauvogl' to bt• l;ostC'sses.

Communi ty children from
ki nderga rte n throug h the sixth
POMF: HO Y l'llapt&lt;·r tBG.
grade are invited to enroll. The
sessions will be held fr om :1 :45 OE S, nu..·t•l ir iJ.! 7:45 p .11 1
to 5 p.m . with crafts, songs, Obliga tion n1ght tu ill' oband Bible study to be inducted se r ved . DL' linqu ent dtH"'
on the pr ogram . Tra ns· I"CQU L'Sil'd
portation wi ll b£&gt; pr ov idt&gt;d f Lw
WEDN ES fiA \'
MIOD!,!&lt;POHT
:-.,."l;.JSolllc
thosC' who have no way ilume .
Lod ge :16:\. 7::~ 0 p.m Tu~ sdHy
at the Mt1Silr1ll" TPrn plt· i\!l
ma s te r rna snn&lt;; \\ll'\cUIIH.'.
Kdr e!'hnwnt.-; will bt• snvcd.
WEI&gt;NESIM Y
Ml DD I .E PO H'r I .i ter ary
Club. lwna· r,f M rs. \lltJriJHJ

Blakeslee
recognized

Special recogni ti on wa s
given C. F. . Blakeslee, who
rece ntly re ti red as Meig s
County Extens ion Se rvice
agent, and Mrs . Blakeslee, at a
fa mil y nigh t observan ce
Sunday evening at the United
Methodist Church, Pomeroy.
Several members spoke in
tribute to Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee. long.time active memb ers
of the church. Also noted
duri ng the fam il y night was the
birthday a nniversar y of Mrs.
Ca rl Hi cks, and th e 38th
wedding ann iversary of the
Rev. and Mrs. Carl Hick s. Mrs.
Blakeslee presented them with
an anniversary cake which wa s
se rved with the dinner.
Guests were the Rev . and
Mr s . Robe r t Bumgarner ,
Heath Uni ted Method ist
Church, Mr. and Mrs. Edson
Roush, and Mr . and Mrs.
Pa trick Lochary .
~-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::~:::::::::::;:::~::::::::·

»

u ·

I Pe:~:·:~ I

Mrs. James Murray , Grant
St., is recuperating from in·
Mrs. Dwaine Caston, Mr. and jur ies suff ered in a fall Friday
Mrs . G. S. Wolfe, Clarence at her horne. Spending the
weekend with her was her
Baker , Faye Powell.
Residents of the area will be da ughter, Mrs . Randolph
re ce iv ing letters from the Ward, Ravenswood . Sunday
guest• were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
emergency squad which will
contain a red sticker on which Dow, Mrs. Mike Comer and
will be the squad's phone da ugh te r, Ka nd y an d son,
numbe r . The sticker is
Chad , Rave nswood, and
designed for placement on
vi siti ng on Mond ay was
telephones.
Richard Ward, also of Ravenswood.
Mrs. Donna Russell was
returned home Sunday from
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Sharp
and daughter, Marilyn, Za nesville, spent last week here
vi sitin g his fa th er, Robe r t
Sharp , and Mr . and Mrs. Paul
Haptonstall. Sund ay guests
were Mrs. E. W. Bailey , Mr.
and Mrs. Winfield Glaze and
COLUM B US , Boa ts , daughter , Francie, and Mr .
r e cr ea tion a l v ehicle s, and Mrs. Eddie Gla ze, all of
sports equipm ent , trav - Lancaster .
s tage
en terel , a nd
tainment: combine these and
you have the 1914 Dispatch
Charities Sports, Vacation and team ; the Don Jacobs log
Travel Show, February 9-11 at rolling and canoe tilting darethe Ohio State Fairgrounds devils; and Lor alie Delaney
Colisewn and adjoining exhibit and her hunting dogs, one of
pavilion.
the best dog acts on the circuit.
The Sports Show, a Central The stage show lasts about an
Ohio tradition now in its ninth hour and will be held in the
year, is sponsored by Dispatch Colisemn . There will also be
Charities and produced by clinics on fishing and other
Hart Productions Iric. Visitors outdoor activities.
can see and eXamine the
Sports Show hours are 6 to 11
largest variety of campers, p.m. Monday through Friday, I
trailers , recreational vehicles, to 11 p.m. Saturdays and
boats. outdoor equipment and Sundays. The fin al Sunday,
sporting goods of any area February 11, th e show will
sports show .
close at 1 p.m. Admission is $2
There are also experts on for adults, 15 c•n ts for
hand at most displays to give children.
advice on getting the most
from your leisure time outdoors or to help you plan a
vacation . The show is also a
real travel attraction with
nunierous states, resort areas
and Canadian provinces
represented.
The Colisemn houses the
bo oths representing major
tourist areas throughout the
United States and Canada as
well as many smaller booths
featuring sports equlpm ~nt or
supplyin g in fo r mation on
various outdoor societies or
associa tio ns. The five·acre
exhibi t paviliion adjoining the
ColiseW11 has the exhibits of
recrea tiona l vehicles, boats,
motorhomes, sw imming pools,
motorcycles and other large
displays.
The 1974 Dispatch Charities
Sports Show has live entertainment stage shows nightly wi th mat in ees on the
weekends. The popular Johnny
Matson returns as MC. Other
acts includ e Vktur , the flOO lb.
Ca nadaian Black Bea r who
li kes 11• wrestle- volunteers
fr om llw audie nce ;· sot.nd
59 N. Second St:
t;&gt;ffe&lt;'~ rnan We;; Harrison; the
Pcnn sylva11ia Anglers, a
992· 5560 - Mi
ort
l·twmp iunship bait cast ing

F rench. 2 p.r n. ;\1rs 1-:\·erPil
Haves to re\· lev·• "Hlcwkhrrry
Wi ~ tcr ·· by Mw·J.!,arct Mralie .

Roll ca ll will be "' f"h lldl wod
i n c:id~n t

in the li fe of

:-1 f&lt;!lllU LI;,

citizens.
According to Mrs. F.:leanor
Tho u Je~!j of tlw Meigs County
Counci l nn A ~: i ng , the people
l•' r id;t_\", FJ•h ·)· J
: . ...... u:-J:--1 the
who have li ttl e or 110 regular
~~ ~ ~w pr\Jgram 011 Supplemental
cash
income and who do not.
Security Income a vailable to
own
mu ch in the way &lt;Jf
the i.lked. blind &lt;Jnd disa bled .
t•.1:
l'•· iv r~ on .
h t ;J fWil . pP,perty or other things which
111ana ger fur Atln•ns &lt;-Hid M c i ~s ca n be tur ned in to cash ma y
CtJutltics. and Norm a11 Cupps , ge t th is federal supple mental
fiPld rt:prese ntativt: fr om security income.
The aim of the program is to
.' i'lt "l i d Security will be ~:~t th e
pnwide
supplemental sec unty
ct'Jiterat IOet .ll l. un thC~t da te to
in come pa yments when they
CISSlS t in I"Uillplctin g SSI &lt;IP·
a
re needed so that everyone
plk;t!Jun :; and to train
who
1s 65 or older or blind or
~-~~lunteers to as.c;ist with th e
di sa bled tan he~ve a basic cash
pro~ ram .
Mrc.; , Margar et Amb erge r, in come - for one persOn at
least '$140 a mon th, and for a
."\&lt; l t·s. Leafy Ch&lt;1 stee n, Mrs.
PPCJI"I Wdk er , Mrs. Jcwme married coup le at least $210 a
Braun of the Senior Citizens month. The amount is deter·
Cenwr , Mi ss Lucil le Smith of mined by how much other
tile
Rl't ir ed
Tea cher s in come the ind ividual or couple
i\ssotta liun : and. the Rev . has.
Additiona l information on
Hobert Bumga rner of the
the
program and what is in·
Ministerial Association were in
Athens J&lt;Jn 25 for a meeting volved to receive benefits may
relatinJ; t.1• the new pr og ram be obtained from Meigs County
Council on Aging, 992-1llll6.
~lftd tile addi ti onal in come it
offe rs to eli l!. iblc !'Pn inr
l {t·pr~':-&gt;l'n tat lv t·s

of ll h' S(ldal
S-.·cunl} Ad lllin is lra ti on will ht·
;II th 1· St·n ior Cil izf•ns Ct• nler .

Silver Circle meets 1

POME HOY J.odge tli4.
RUTI.A'-:D -- A bake sale
F&amp;AM, stated meet!llg, i&lt;W held Satur day by the Silver
p.m . Wor k in third degree; ~dl Cir cle Senio r Citizen s at
Master M:1sons inv itl'd
Rutland was reported successful
with $43.10 being made
Tlfl'RSOAY
REVIVAL at (':1rlt'lo11 on t he sale.
Art icles made by the
Chur ch , K1n1_.;s b ur~ · n.o~Hl.
JJi
embers
are displayed in th e
through Feb . 10 with William
window of the H.utl and Center
Cundiff spea ki ng at 7::10 e&lt;.~c h
whtrh is located in the former
evenin g. Pu bli c rnvi ted.
Pomeroy Na t iona l Bank
CATHOLI C Worntll'.c; { ~uild .
building
Meeting there
a p.rn . at Sarred Bea 1·t Church,
precedt:d by M a~ crml Rosary Wednesday the members spent
the day quiltin g and piecing
at 7:15 p.m. P lans tfJ be
completed for r um mage salt' .~
to 3 p.m. Fnda y.
QUA HTF. HJ. Y J.unclll•on
PLAN SUPPER
Club at home of :V1rs. Dale
PLA INS ~ A
TUPPF.RS
Smith for rwon lun cheon. All
members ~u·e ;1sked lu e~ltcnd. Jilney supper w!ll be held at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Sehoul
from 4:30 to 7.30 p.m.
fN IIOSP ITAI.
J ac k Abbott, (; ;dl 1pol1s, Saturday unde r the s ponform erl y uf :vJiddlf~p1wt all(] St. S(Jrship of the school boosters.
Petersburg , Fla , i:1 seriuusly Meat loaf. sca ll oped chicken,
ill at Vet.rrans Hospital in ma shed potatoes, gravy.
Hunt ing ton, W. Va . Those nood les, gree n and ba ked
wishin g to send cards arc to beans, cole slaw , pineapple
address them to .l&lt;.t ck Abbott, salad , app lesauce, rolls and
First Floor, Veteran s Hospita l, butter, pie, cake and beverages
will be available.
Hunti ngton, W. Va.

quilt blocks .
It was reported tha t a piano

·"

Special service held
oh:.:ervance o{ the ..:Jlst
ann iversary uf the s inking of
th e USS Dorchester a nd th e
l1eroism demonstra ted by fou r
v&lt;.J lie:mt chaplains . a specia l
ser vice honor ing veteran s w:J s ·
held Sunday mornin~ at the
La!irel Oiff Free Methodist
Churr·h.
Members of Drew Webste r
Post ~9 . Am erican Legion,
attendin g and re cognized \'t'C re
All en Dow me, Ed Van lnwage n, Charl es Swatz el,
George Nesse lroad, Leon&lt;J rd
Jewell , Rooney Karr , Lloyd
Wright, Ernest Powell and Jim
Gilmore.
Other veterans prese nt ;md
introduced were Phil Wise,
Ja ck Jacobs, Hoger Kl ine ,
Thoma s Lan e, William Hailey,
Junior Pull ins, Gera ld Pullins,
Richard Fnend , Mabel Tracy,
Benny ·wright, Ja ck Stanley,
Robert Kenned y a nd John
Nash.
Families a ccompanyin ~ the
In

Betrothal

vete rans to the service were
Mr,. Allen Down ie and
dcwghter,
Mrs . George
:-lesse lioad, Sr .,. Mrs . George
'lesse lroad, Jr , Mrs. Robert
Kennedy , Mrs. Mi ldred Mitc h,
~ nU :vtike T\' esse lroad.
Congrega ti on sing in g vf __.
·•onward Cl1ri stia n Soldiers''
opened th e se rvit'e with the
Hev . Huber t Buckley giving
pr ayer Th ere was group
singing of " America," and a
selec ti on, " I Am Free" by the
ehoi r . Scrivture taken from II
'J'mwth y was read · precedmg
the se rmon by the Rev. Mr.
Buckle y who told the story of
the four chaplains who went
down on the USS Dorchester ,
Feb. 3, 1943, after the supply of
life prese rvers was exhausted.
Several deceased legionna ir es inclllding Lawrence
Sm ith , a member of the Laurel
Cliff Chur ch, were me ntioned.
John Card, wh o died recently
while se rving in Thailand, was
also among th ose given tr ibute
du ring the service.

GROUND ·BEEF SALE
From USDA Choice Beef! !

Joe Hus lhe
/Jest R eef

GROUND CHUCK

Ruy ln

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
rJI',, Aecept Federill Food
Second

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Towu!

ANY
SIZE
PKG.

FRESH AND., LEAN

SIIIIIIJIS

PHONE: 992-3480

MIDDLEPORT. (1

"We Reserve The Ri ght To Limit Quantities"

•

::;,~:

Package

•

$} ~.9

announced ~v-0-01-.-,-D~

Mr . and Mr s. Anci l H.
Burbridge, Rt. 2, Albany' are
announcing the engagement of
will soon be moved into . the '"
. d 1'" L' d K
t
Center by the Amer~can ute tr aug h.~::r ' m a ay ' o
M t.
f th
Gerald D. Donahue, son of Mr.
.
Le gwn.
ee mg o e group ,
d
R
d E
apymon
·
are held each Wednesday and aDn h Mr sR.t
. .t.
. .t d t
ona ue, . 4, omeroy.
II
a semor ct tzens are mv1 e o
Th b .d 1 t .
t d t
tte d
e n e-e ec IS a s u en
a n ·
at Me igs High School and is
Refreshments were served
at noon includin g a variety of employed at Hecks in Athens.
sa nd w i c h es,
po t atoe s , Her fiance. a 1973 gr aduat e of
dress in g, cheese, coo ki es, Meigs High School, is emcoffee and tea. Attending were played as an oil well driller for
Victor Braley, Dell Luckadoo, Wichite Drilling Co., Boston ,
Edi th Wi llia mso n, Diana Mass.
Williamson,
Pauli ne Buck ,
An open church wedding is
Mae We ber, Elvir a Ba r r , planned for May 16.
Marie
Bishop,
Donna
Williamson , Marcia Denison,
IMMEDIATE
Edna Mac Sw ick, Leafy
HE.LP
Chasteen, Adria Wi lcox, Alma
AVAILABLE!
White , Jestie Mold en, Melva
From Nurses-Mat es. We' ll
Turner. Jim Barker . Hazel
he I p you look and Jee l
Taylor, Ada Tay l or~ Katie
pr ettier With th e most
Robinson, Isabe lle Brancomfor tabl e s tyl es a nd
fashions th ere ar e in a
deberry, Muriel Foley, Buck
professiona l se rvi ce ~ho e .
Wi lcox, Bla nche Braley , Sam
After a ll. we sup port pr etty
Nixon , Ji m Doss, Ja net
girls . Co me in and l et us help
Williamson, and .lean Braun of
you at
the Meigs .County Council on
Aging.
M idd le por t, 0 .

heritage house

FORGET

Coi'IHH'op ia

Fmu il v Pin

Superiors Dart

79""
BOLOGNA • ••••••••••••••••••••
oz. 89 e
WIENERS
SUPERIORS
BY THE PIECE

lb.

tiLL BEEF
BY SUPERIORS

12
pkg.

SLICED
BACON

,..

12

• •••••••••••••••••••••

oz.

pkg.

Es pecially created to
por tray your fami ly's
stor y in beautif ul bir th m onth co lor s.

:'!; 14.95

All Flavors

Goessler's

ROYAL
GELATIN

JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

of
Fme
Foods

Sports show

SEALTEST

BANANAS

LITE 'N LIVELY

ICE MILK

Choice
Golden Ripe

59¢

lfz gal.

'"'"'•~• ... ge Cheesel

79~

24 oz. crt.

-

Coliseum

Fresh Collard Greens, Muslard, Kale.

1h gal.

Available Each Week.

69 ~

GOLDEN CARROTS

FROZEN FOOD BUYS

pkg.

6 49e
PAK

SIZE

RHODES

FROZEN BREAD

BATTERIES

5 99e
ORANGE JUICE

EGGeS... .......... ········ ···· ·--~?~: ..49¢

KRISPY

2 lb.

RC COLA
16 oz.

bots.

oz.$1
5
6

cans

PAK
EV ERY· DAY PRICE -

8 PAK 89•

DAD'S ROOT BEER

9
9¢
TEA BAGS .................... ~-~~-75¢
CRACKERS.......... .........~~.
4 $}
DOG FOOD..................
79¢
CREMORA ..................... ~~ .
3
$}
PINEAPPLE .~.!!~.~~-~~- --- .
100 ct.

m

for

SCOT LAD

TETLEY

"

lvs.

SIZE

VALENTINE

89¢

Fresh
Southern l-Ib.
bag
Grown

BAKE IT YOURSELF .. • IT'S ECONOMIC

PANASONIC LONG LIFE

Dor C

FOR YOUR

J.

Homo Milk

CLARK BARS
10~

f

A '/': IS'/'1-.' fW ,&lt;-;J' IUNl;!

BOOTH OCEAN PERCH

CANDY BUY!

i

BROUGHTON'S

FAIRMONT

-

offered ill

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE)

bxs.

PURINA NEW CHOICE MORSEL

for

FTD Lovebundle

CITYLO.AN

&amp;SAVINGS
What makt·, u~ a difli.-rcnt k i~d of loan compan_v makt-s us a better kind of loan company.

Dudley's Florist

£ST. 1912

BORDEN'S

GEStUA

.

.·

NEW - 'NEW • NEW

125 E ~am St. o 992 -?1'71

CRUSHED

-

16 oz.

DR. PEPPER

20 oz.

cans
BOTH REGULAR

·Roman Meal Bread Kl::~1zE

POM EROY, OH IO ,

.f
j

.LB.

GROUND
ROUND

LB.

Any Size

19

$

'

'

··! .

�- ...

"I' •

.,

. . .
.
.

'· •

.

~

•'

I

.

.

..

•

· .·. ·· ;,.-., · !"

I •.

~

T
'

4 - Th~ Daily Se nt in• I, MidrlleP&lt;&gt;rt-Pomer&lt;!Y. r·•·L. 5. t!l74

.

progmm ':
d {.
tS pJanne

,--~;e:::p;;;.-;;;;:-.~c;:-t;;~;;;;:;;;~:-.,·1vew
1
1

than 300 words long {or be sntJPct to roductlon by thr
edllor) and musl be signod with the signee's address.
Names may be withheld upon publication. However. on
request, names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good

I
1
I
I taate, addressing issues. not personaUUes.
·I
..
I
. -- -- s~"fdith
~
fh,L.

I •••''Vlll
I
RI'•'I Cf

•"III C[

.

:

- Helen Lyons, Ma nager.

Donations coming
in well at Racine

.
..

.
''

DST wrong

'.

says PTA
CHICAGO - Immediate
repeal of daylight savings time
legislation has been recommended by the E ~e cutiv e
Committee of the multi •• million-member National PTA
at a recent meeting in Chicago.
11
0W'" concern for the safety
of rhildren has compelled the
executive committee to take
this emergency action ," said
Mr s. Lillie E. Herndon ,
National PTA president. ·"if is
obvious that daylight savings
tilne is a grave mi stake, and
we feel it shoul d be re p~al ed as
soon as possible.'!
Mr s. ' Her ndon sa id tha t
children have been killed and
•
injured as a result of traveling
• 1o school in the pre-dawn
darkn ess. Many crossing
guards al so have complained
they cannot see to help children
safely across the street, she
added:
Tile National PTA's coordinator of legislative activity,

..

..
•
•
r•

Mrs .

Gra~

Baisinger, has
directed to infOrm

been
congressional leaders of PTA's
position. "We also are asking
OW' members to impress on
· their congressmen the' urgency
of repealing daylight savings
time ," Mrs. Herndon said.

•

.: _:

Aspt•da l cllild ren's progrmn .·.·
to be held weekly wil l bt'
in itiated
at till'

Wt&gt;dn~·sday

Mid dleport F irol Bapti&gt;l
Church umll~r the rl in•clion uf
Kines,

Mrs.

Swisher. Jud~ · 0\\ t'll ami Mrs.
Nadine Barton.

The Meigs Theatre had the pleasure of showing Romeo and
J uliet at a malin~ Friday past for the pup1ls of Southern High
&amp; hoo l. A la rge stu dent group attended accompanied by John
Bailey and 'Mrs. Robert Hobbs, !reachers.
The cooperation between teachers and pupils was commendable. The teachers treated each pupil w1th the utmost
respect and received like. treatment in return. Upon entering the
thea tre, dur ing a 2'' hour showing, one would have thought the
thea tre was empty . Quiet reigned supreme!
During the many years of theatre operation , I have never
experienced a more quiet, cooperative group, and this in 1974.
Th e fac ul ty and pupils of Southe rn High School are to be commended.
·
Many of the pupils of Mrs . Claude Husted , English teacher,
Meigs High School. attended the evening showing, and the
conduct of those who attended was comparable to the malin~
gro up .

.

:;:

Steve Skaggs, Mrs. Willi:11n

bo/it'
l't'!
.:

RACINE - Members of
Racine's ER squad are pleased
with the donations thai have
been thus far received toward
the pur chase of a new
emergency vehicle.
Th e new truck was on display
all of last w~k in different
locations in the Racine area.
Submitting donations Friday
were Joe Stewart , Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Holter , Roy Bush,
V. S. Nease, Carl Ihle, Homer
Circle and Roy Jones.
Satur da y donations were
received from Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Sayre, Carrie Nease,
Raymond Hartley, Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Bailey, George
Moore, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Efuer I.
Pickens, Mr . and Mrs. John T.
Wolfe, Racine Home Nat ional
Bank, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hudson, Mr . and Mrs. Clint
Jolmson, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Cleland, Enuna Salser , Mr .
and Mrs. Richard Ours, Early
Roush , Betty Christopherson,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
Gladys Shields, Mr. and Mrs .
Herb Sayre, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
William Hayman, Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Johnson , Sr .,
Larry Roush , Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Sharpneck , Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mallory, Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Wolfe, Eileen Buck,
Ruth Tucker, Mr . and Mrs.
Darnell Taylor , Mr. and Mrs .
Marshall Adams, Mauri ce
Loll, Mr. and Mrs. G. E .
Pauley, Lizzie Wood , Laura
Circle , Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Fisher, Stella Bush, Ed lhle,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Gluesencarnp, Mr. and Mrs.
David Hensler, Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Nease, David Fox, Jim
Cundiff, Ann Coe, Gary
Walker, Homer Warner, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Carver, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Bissell, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Waldnig, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Sayre, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Baker, Mr. and
Mrs. Wiley Ours, Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Yokum , J . K. Swart,
Harriett Neigler, Jess Wood,
Wilma Sayre, Laura Byers,
Ben Slobart, Mr. and Mrs.

.

Mrs. Manning

Dennis Evans, Richard Duckworth, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Ervin, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Rizer, Glen Rizer , Mr. and
Mrs . AI Crow, Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Huffman, Mr. and Mrs.
J . W. Weaver, Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Dai ley, Edna Roush , Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Bradford,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Proffitt, Mr.
and Mrs. Ha rry Wilford, Mr.
and Mrs. Dobbin Powell, Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Circle, Mr .
and Mrs. Herman Carson,
Frances Foster, Isabel SimJ&gt;son, Mr . and Mrs. Harold
Gibbs, Cynlh1a Tucker, Ruth
Simpson, Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Bradford , Frances Roberts,
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Saller,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Manuel,
Mr . and Mrs. David Sayre,
Mrs. Walter Kennedy, Mr. and

Soc 1·aI r Income program set

o·: ·:·:':·:·:·:·:-:,:·:·:·:·o;:·&gt;:·:·:·:,:.:·:::-:-:-:-: -:·:-:-:·:·&lt;;&lt;j;·

::::

(·•

caIendar: '

::::

TliESI) ,\ Y

Ol!IO J-:T,\ Pil i Cila'pt&lt;•r .
Beta Sigma Phl Soror ity, i::Hl
p.m., ;1t tile ('o lunilJUs n11d
Soutlwrn Uhi o Elt•drk C'11.
Ka r l'n St:rrd~·) i!flll S;111 di
Sar ge nt to l1a v t' t·ultur;d
prugr; un: Ketthy K 111~: and
Li nda !':iauvogl' to bt• l;ostC'sses.

Communi ty children from
ki nderga rte n throug h the sixth
POMF: HO Y l'llapt&lt;·r tBG.
grade are invited to enroll. The
sessions will be held fr om :1 :45 OE S, nu..·t•l ir iJ.! 7:45 p .11 1
to 5 p.m . with crafts, songs, Obliga tion n1ght tu ill' oband Bible study to be inducted se r ved . DL' linqu ent dtH"'
on the pr ogram . Tra ns· I"CQU L'Sil'd
portation wi ll b£&gt; pr ov idt&gt;d f Lw
WEDN ES fiA \'
MIOD!,!&lt;POHT
:-.,."l;.JSolllc
thosC' who have no way ilume .
Lod ge :16:\. 7::~ 0 p.m Tu~ sdHy
at the Mt1Silr1ll" TPrn plt· i\!l
ma s te r rna snn&lt;; \\ll'\cUIIH.'.
Kdr e!'hnwnt.-; will bt• snvcd.
WEI&gt;NESIM Y
Ml DD I .E PO H'r I .i ter ary
Club. lwna· r,f M rs. \lltJriJHJ

Blakeslee
recognized

Special recogni ti on wa s
given C. F. . Blakeslee, who
rece ntly re ti red as Meig s
County Extens ion Se rvice
agent, and Mrs . Blakeslee, at a
fa mil y nigh t observan ce
Sunday evening at the United
Methodist Church, Pomeroy.
Several members spoke in
tribute to Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee. long.time active memb ers
of the church. Also noted
duri ng the fam il y night was the
birthday a nniversar y of Mrs.
Ca rl Hi cks, and th e 38th
wedding ann iversary of the
Rev. and Mrs. Carl Hick s. Mrs.
Blakeslee presented them with
an anniversary cake which wa s
se rved with the dinner.
Guests were the Rev . and
Mr s . Robe r t Bumgarner ,
Heath Uni ted Method ist
Church, Mr. and Mrs. Edson
Roush, and Mr . and Mrs.
Pa trick Lochary .
~-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::~:::::::::::;:::~::::::::·

»

u ·

I Pe:~:·:~ I

Mrs. James Murray , Grant
St., is recuperating from in·
Mrs. Dwaine Caston, Mr. and jur ies suff ered in a fall Friday
Mrs . G. S. Wolfe, Clarence at her horne. Spending the
weekend with her was her
Baker , Faye Powell.
Residents of the area will be da ughter, Mrs . Randolph
re ce iv ing letters from the Ward, Ravenswood . Sunday
guest• were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
emergency squad which will
contain a red sticker on which Dow, Mrs. Mike Comer and
will be the squad's phone da ugh te r, Ka nd y an d son,
numbe r . The sticker is
Chad , Rave nswood, and
designed for placement on
vi siti ng on Mond ay was
telephones.
Richard Ward, also of Ravenswood.
Mrs. Donna Russell was
returned home Sunday from
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Sharp
and daughter, Marilyn, Za nesville, spent last week here
vi sitin g his fa th er, Robe r t
Sharp , and Mr . and Mrs. Paul
Haptonstall. Sund ay guests
were Mrs. E. W. Bailey , Mr.
and Mrs. Winfield Glaze and
COLUM B US , Boa ts , daughter , Francie, and Mr .
r e cr ea tion a l v ehicle s, and Mrs. Eddie Gla ze, all of
sports equipm ent , trav - Lancaster .
s tage
en terel , a nd
tainment: combine these and
you have the 1914 Dispatch
Charities Sports, Vacation and team ; the Don Jacobs log
Travel Show, February 9-11 at rolling and canoe tilting darethe Ohio State Fairgrounds devils; and Lor alie Delaney
Colisewn and adjoining exhibit and her hunting dogs, one of
pavilion.
the best dog acts on the circuit.
The Sports Show, a Central The stage show lasts about an
Ohio tradition now in its ninth hour and will be held in the
year, is sponsored by Dispatch Colisemn . There will also be
Charities and produced by clinics on fishing and other
Hart Productions Iric. Visitors outdoor activities.
can see and eXamine the
Sports Show hours are 6 to 11
largest variety of campers, p.m. Monday through Friday, I
trailers , recreational vehicles, to 11 p.m. Saturdays and
boats. outdoor equipment and Sundays. The fin al Sunday,
sporting goods of any area February 11, th e show will
sports show .
close at 1 p.m. Admission is $2
There are also experts on for adults, 15 c•n ts for
hand at most displays to give children.
advice on getting the most
from your leisure time outdoors or to help you plan a
vacation . The show is also a
real travel attraction with
nunierous states, resort areas
and Canadian provinces
represented.
The Colisemn houses the
bo oths representing major
tourist areas throughout the
United States and Canada as
well as many smaller booths
featuring sports equlpm ~nt or
supplyin g in fo r mation on
various outdoor societies or
associa tio ns. The five·acre
exhibi t paviliion adjoining the
ColiseW11 has the exhibits of
recrea tiona l vehicles, boats,
motorhomes, sw imming pools,
motorcycles and other large
displays.
The 1974 Dispatch Charities
Sports Show has live entertainment stage shows nightly wi th mat in ees on the
weekends. The popular Johnny
Matson returns as MC. Other
acts includ e Vktur , the flOO lb.
Ca nadaian Black Bea r who
li kes 11• wrestle- volunteers
fr om llw audie nce ;· sot.nd
59 N. Second St:
t;&gt;ffe&lt;'~ rnan We;; Harrison; the
Pcnn sylva11ia Anglers, a
992· 5560 - Mi
ort
l·twmp iunship bait cast ing

F rench. 2 p.r n. ;\1rs 1-:\·erPil
Haves to re\· lev·• "Hlcwkhrrry
Wi ~ tcr ·· by Mw·J.!,arct Mralie .

Roll ca ll will be "' f"h lldl wod
i n c:id~n t

in the li fe of

:-1 f&lt;!lllU LI;,

citizens.
According to Mrs. F.:leanor
Tho u Je~!j of tlw Meigs County
Counci l nn A ~: i ng , the people
l•' r id;t_\", FJ•h ·)· J
: . ...... u:-J:--1 the
who have li ttl e or 110 regular
~~ ~ ~w pr\Jgram 011 Supplemental
cash
income and who do not.
Security Income a vailable to
own
mu ch in the way &lt;Jf
the i.lked. blind &lt;Jnd disa bled .
t•.1:
l'•· iv r~ on .
h t ;J fWil . pP,perty or other things which
111ana ger fur Atln•ns &lt;-Hid M c i ~s ca n be tur ned in to cash ma y
CtJutltics. and Norm a11 Cupps , ge t th is federal supple mental
fiPld rt:prese ntativt: fr om security income.
The aim of the program is to
.' i'lt "l i d Security will be ~:~t th e
pnwide
supplemental sec unty
ct'Jiterat IOet .ll l. un thC~t da te to
in come pa yments when they
CISSlS t in I"Uillplctin g SSI &lt;IP·
a
re needed so that everyone
plk;t!Jun :; and to train
who
1s 65 or older or blind or
~-~~lunteers to as.c;ist with th e
di sa bled tan he~ve a basic cash
pro~ ram .
Mrc.; , Margar et Amb erge r, in come - for one persOn at
least '$140 a mon th, and for a
."\&lt; l t·s. Leafy Ch&lt;1 stee n, Mrs.
PPCJI"I Wdk er , Mrs. Jcwme married coup le at least $210 a
Braun of the Senior Citizens month. The amount is deter·
Cenwr , Mi ss Lucil le Smith of mined by how much other
tile
Rl't ir ed
Tea cher s in come the ind ividual or couple
i\ssotta liun : and. the Rev . has.
Additiona l information on
Hobert Bumga rner of the
the
program and what is in·
Ministerial Association were in
Athens J&lt;Jn 25 for a meeting volved to receive benefits may
relatinJ; t.1• the new pr og ram be obtained from Meigs County
Council on Aging, 992-1llll6.
~lftd tile addi ti onal in come it
offe rs to eli l!. iblc !'Pn inr
l {t·pr~':-&gt;l'n tat lv t·s

of ll h' S(ldal
S-.·cunl} Ad lllin is lra ti on will ht·
;II th 1· St·n ior Cil izf•ns Ct• nler .

Silver Circle meets 1

POME HOY J.odge tli4.
RUTI.A'-:D -- A bake sale
F&amp;AM, stated meet!llg, i&lt;W held Satur day by the Silver
p.m . Wor k in third degree; ~dl Cir cle Senio r Citizen s at
Master M:1sons inv itl'd
Rutland was reported successful
with $43.10 being made
Tlfl'RSOAY
REVIVAL at (':1rlt'lo11 on t he sale.
Art icles made by the
Chur ch , K1n1_.;s b ur~ · n.o~Hl.
JJi
embers
are displayed in th e
through Feb . 10 with William
window of the H.utl and Center
Cundiff spea ki ng at 7::10 e&lt;.~c h
whtrh is located in the former
evenin g. Pu bli c rnvi ted.
Pomeroy Na t iona l Bank
CATHOLI C Worntll'.c; { ~uild .
building
Meeting there
a p.rn . at Sarred Bea 1·t Church,
precedt:d by M a~ crml Rosary Wednesday the members spent
the day quiltin g and piecing
at 7:15 p.m. P lans tfJ be
completed for r um mage salt' .~
to 3 p.m. Fnda y.
QUA HTF. HJ. Y J.unclll•on
PLAN SUPPER
Club at home of :V1rs. Dale
PLA INS ~ A
TUPPF.RS
Smith for rwon lun cheon. All
members ~u·e ;1sked lu e~ltcnd. Jilney supper w!ll be held at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Sehoul
from 4:30 to 7.30 p.m.
fN IIOSP ITAI.
J ac k Abbott, (; ;dl 1pol1s, Saturday unde r the s ponform erl y uf :vJiddlf~p1wt all(] St. S(Jrship of the school boosters.
Petersburg , Fla , i:1 seriuusly Meat loaf. sca ll oped chicken,
ill at Vet.rrans Hospital in ma shed potatoes, gravy.
Hunt ing ton, W. Va . Those nood les, gree n and ba ked
wishin g to send cards arc to beans, cole slaw , pineapple
address them to .l&lt;.t ck Abbott, salad , app lesauce, rolls and
First Floor, Veteran s Hospita l, butter, pie, cake and beverages
will be available.
Hunti ngton, W. Va.

quilt blocks .
It was reported tha t a piano

·"

Special service held
oh:.:ervance o{ the ..:Jlst
ann iversary uf the s inking of
th e USS Dorchester a nd th e
l1eroism demonstra ted by fou r
v&lt;.J lie:mt chaplains . a specia l
ser vice honor ing veteran s w:J s ·
held Sunday mornin~ at the
La!irel Oiff Free Methodist
Churr·h.
Members of Drew Webste r
Post ~9 . Am erican Legion,
attendin g and re cognized \'t'C re
All en Dow me, Ed Van lnwage n, Charl es Swatz el,
George Nesse lroad, Leon&lt;J rd
Jewell , Rooney Karr , Lloyd
Wright, Ernest Powell and Jim
Gilmore.
Other veterans prese nt ;md
introduced were Phil Wise,
Ja ck Jacobs, Hoger Kl ine ,
Thoma s Lan e, William Hailey,
Junior Pull ins, Gera ld Pullins,
Richard Fnend , Mabel Tracy,
Benny ·wright, Ja ck Stanley,
Robert Kenned y a nd John
Nash.
Families a ccompanyin ~ the
In

Betrothal

vete rans to the service were
Mr,. Allen Down ie and
dcwghter,
Mrs . George
:-lesse lioad, Sr .,. Mrs . George
'lesse lroad, Jr , Mrs. Robert
Kennedy , Mrs. Mi ldred Mitc h,
~ nU :vtike T\' esse lroad.
Congrega ti on sing in g vf __.
·•onward Cl1ri stia n Soldiers''
opened th e se rvit'e with the
Hev . Huber t Buckley giving
pr ayer Th ere was group
singing of " America," and a
selec ti on, " I Am Free" by the
ehoi r . Scrivture taken from II
'J'mwth y was read · precedmg
the se rmon by the Rev. Mr.
Buckle y who told the story of
the four chaplains who went
down on the USS Dorchester ,
Feb. 3, 1943, after the supply of
life prese rvers was exhausted.
Several deceased legionna ir es inclllding Lawrence
Sm ith , a member of the Laurel
Cliff Chur ch, were me ntioned.
John Card, wh o died recently
while se rving in Thailand, was
also among th ose given tr ibute
du ring the service.

GROUND ·BEEF SALE
From USDA Choice Beef! !

Joe Hus lhe
/Jest R eef

GROUND CHUCK

Ruy ln

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
rJI',, Aecept Federill Food
Second

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Towu!

ANY
SIZE
PKG.

FRESH AND., LEAN

SIIIIIIJIS

PHONE: 992-3480

MIDDLEPORT. (1

"We Reserve The Ri ght To Limit Quantities"

•

::;,~:

Package

•

$} ~.9

announced ~v-0-01-.-,-D~

Mr . and Mr s. Anci l H.
Burbridge, Rt. 2, Albany' are
announcing the engagement of
will soon be moved into . the '"
. d 1'" L' d K
t
Center by the Amer~can ute tr aug h.~::r ' m a ay ' o
M t.
f th
Gerald D. Donahue, son of Mr.
.
Le gwn.
ee mg o e group ,
d
R
d E
apymon
·
are held each Wednesday and aDn h Mr sR.t
. .t.
. .t d t
ona ue, . 4, omeroy.
II
a semor ct tzens are mv1 e o
Th b .d 1 t .
t d t
tte d
e n e-e ec IS a s u en
a n ·
at Me igs High School and is
Refreshments were served
at noon includin g a variety of employed at Hecks in Athens.
sa nd w i c h es,
po t atoe s , Her fiance. a 1973 gr aduat e of
dress in g, cheese, coo ki es, Meigs High School, is emcoffee and tea. Attending were played as an oil well driller for
Victor Braley, Dell Luckadoo, Wichite Drilling Co., Boston ,
Edi th Wi llia mso n, Diana Mass.
Williamson,
Pauli ne Buck ,
An open church wedding is
Mae We ber, Elvir a Ba r r , planned for May 16.
Marie
Bishop,
Donna
Williamson , Marcia Denison,
IMMEDIATE
Edna Mac Sw ick, Leafy
HE.LP
Chasteen, Adria Wi lcox, Alma
AVAILABLE!
White , Jestie Mold en, Melva
From Nurses-Mat es. We' ll
Turner. Jim Barker . Hazel
he I p you look and Jee l
Taylor, Ada Tay l or~ Katie
pr ettier With th e most
Robinson, Isabe lle Brancomfor tabl e s tyl es a nd
fashions th ere ar e in a
deberry, Muriel Foley, Buck
professiona l se rvi ce ~ho e .
Wi lcox, Bla nche Braley , Sam
After a ll. we sup port pr etty
Nixon , Ji m Doss, Ja net
girls . Co me in and l et us help
Williamson, and .lean Braun of
you at
the Meigs .County Council on
Aging.
M idd le por t, 0 .

heritage house

FORGET

Coi'IHH'op ia

Fmu il v Pin

Superiors Dart

79""
BOLOGNA • ••••••••••••••••••••
oz. 89 e
WIENERS
SUPERIORS
BY THE PIECE

lb.

tiLL BEEF
BY SUPERIORS

12
pkg.

SLICED
BACON

,..

12

• •••••••••••••••••••••

oz.

pkg.

Es pecially created to
por tray your fami ly's
stor y in beautif ul bir th m onth co lor s.

:'!; 14.95

All Flavors

Goessler's

ROYAL
GELATIN

JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

of
Fme
Foods

Sports show

SEALTEST

BANANAS

LITE 'N LIVELY

ICE MILK

Choice
Golden Ripe

59¢

lfz gal.

'"'"'•~• ... ge Cheesel

79~

24 oz. crt.

-

Coliseum

Fresh Collard Greens, Muslard, Kale.

1h gal.

Available Each Week.

69 ~

GOLDEN CARROTS

FROZEN FOOD BUYS

pkg.

6 49e
PAK

SIZE

RHODES

FROZEN BREAD

BATTERIES

5 99e
ORANGE JUICE

EGGeS... .......... ········ ···· ·--~?~: ..49¢

KRISPY

2 lb.

RC COLA
16 oz.

bots.

oz.$1
5
6

cans

PAK
EV ERY· DAY PRICE -

8 PAK 89•

DAD'S ROOT BEER

9
9¢
TEA BAGS .................... ~-~~-75¢
CRACKERS.......... .........~~.
4 $}
DOG FOOD..................
79¢
CREMORA ..................... ~~ .
3
$}
PINEAPPLE .~.!!~.~~-~~- --- .
100 ct.

m

for

SCOT LAD

TETLEY

"

lvs.

SIZE

VALENTINE

89¢

Fresh
Southern l-Ib.
bag
Grown

BAKE IT YOURSELF .. • IT'S ECONOMIC

PANASONIC LONG LIFE

Dor C

FOR YOUR

J.

Homo Milk

CLARK BARS
10~

f

A '/': IS'/'1-.' fW ,&lt;-;J' IUNl;!

BOOTH OCEAN PERCH

CANDY BUY!

i

BROUGHTON'S

FAIRMONT

-

offered ill

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE)

bxs.

PURINA NEW CHOICE MORSEL

for

FTD Lovebundle

CITYLO.AN

&amp;SAVINGS
What makt·, u~ a difli.-rcnt k i~d of loan compan_v makt-s us a better kind of loan company.

Dudley's Florist

£ST. 1912

BORDEN'S

GEStUA

.

.·

NEW - 'NEW • NEW

125 E ~am St. o 992 -?1'71

CRUSHED

-

16 oz.

DR. PEPPER

20 oz.

cans
BOTH REGULAR

·Roman Meal Bread Kl::~1zE

POM EROY, OH IO ,

.f
j

.LB.

GROUND
ROUND

LB.

Any Size

19

$

'

'

··! .

�-::

~-···

'• . I

'

·'

.-

-.

' l~,

I .

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., Fe.b. 5. 1G74
:;~::~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::;:::;:·:·:~:::~::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·.~:::::::::::·:·:~:::::~::::::::=::;;:;:..--::x.::::::::::::::::::::::::::~=:=::::::::::::::::::::::.:::·:=::;.=i·

Industrial riations conting
up to critical conferences

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middll'puri ·POIIIl' roy. 0 ,. Fl'l&gt;. 5. 1!114

By Richard C. Longworth
BRUSSELS (UP! I - IT the
industrial nations . are to
rebuild their frayed alliance,
the job begins lhis month.
The occasion is Feb 11-12
Washington conference that
President Nixon called to seek
a unified response to the
energy crisis. Foreign and
finance ministers are expected

from 13 nations - the United
Stales, Canada, Japan, Norway and the nine European
Common Markel nations.
To many Americans and
Europeans, the conference and
its successors are as important
as the Bretton Woods meeting
of 194&lt;1.
Pattern of Cooperation
At Bretton Woods, the major
na lions built the monetary
system, which, although badly
in need of repair now, has
financed postwar prosperity.
Similarly, the Washington
meeting can set a pattern of
cooperation to meet the longterm oil shortage and other
problems which could give the
allies a much rougher ride
through the 1970s.

Despite this, both Europeans
and Americans here are more

gloomy than exhilarated. The
international mood has seldom
been less cooperative.

France. Britain, Germany
and sma1ler EW'opean nations

are scouring the Middle East
for separate oil deals, despite
warnings from both U.S. and
Common Markel leaders that
this competitive scramble
could send prices soaring and
set ally against ally .
France, indeed , has in dicated it might torpedo the
conference. And the Arabs
have warned Japan, which
depends totally on imported
oil, of retalia tion if the meeting
even hints at a unity front of oil
users Ill keep prices down and
oil flowing.
The Final Test
The United States already is
"disgusted"-lo use Secretarv
of Stale Henry A. Kissinger;s
word- with the Europeans'
recent refusal not only to side
with Washington on alliance
issues but even to cooperate
with each otHer. Reports from
Washington say Kissinger and

~

~

«

~

.i!j .Bookmobile off~r~ sample service
Bl' Vlltna Pikkuja

::1

Wf' h(Jpe we ha ve £ill ed these
needs. If we can h{"lp you in any
W(:ly, let us kn ow.

bookm•,bilc ''measurement '' in
terms of good ser vit:e .
rll'W undor the sun in the way of
Follow the regular reports,
selected to speak your mind
library Sl' I'Vi Ce , bul what is , 11 " •' ' ' ; 1 ,''&gt; \ I •. 1
I&gt;! Il l IJ.&lt;; II I!~
take Q pcrsonill interest and
Nixon see the me eting as thr ordinary service in one comYou f!li:l)' hdp form a pattern of watch us grow .toge htcr. We
final test of Europe;lll willing- munity may bt' a novelty to
:-;ervice for ;:m other com- are ti('SiJ:: nt&gt;d l.tJ fi ll the loca l
ness to maintain the alliance in another.
munity .
t'ommunity need.s from the
its present shape.
We are inclined to think of
I
hope
you
help
make
the
toddler through tee nagers,
TI1a l the all iance has prob- Meigs County as one of the
wnge
earners to reti red people.
lems is not news. Differences counties on the "poor" side.
over money, trade and deten te but nut when it comes to
SON HORN
have led to hard feelings--so library serv ice, beca use your
GRANDDAUGHTER ILL
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
much so that the allies are commun ity bookm obile has Ra ymond L. Rowe, Racine, Rt.
Mr. and Mrs . V. D. Edwards,
writing a "new Atlantic char- become a "sample" serv ice for 2, announce the birth of a son, Pom eroy, were advi sed
ter" to patch things up.
public rea ction and as one Ja son Marshall, Jan. 29 at Monday of the illness nf their
But the Washington confer- to demons trat e eff ec tiv e Holzer Medical Center. The granddau ght er , Wend y,
ence is the first challenge to the library service.
infant weighed 7 lbs. and 5 ozs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Atlantic allies and Japan to
The year 1973 put your book- Gra ndparents are Mrs. Nondus Wayne Shere, Midland , Mich.
lake immediate and joint mobile in a very definite Hendricks, H~tdne and the ht te F our -year -old Wen d y un action . Th eir response will t~ll " public se rvice" category. As Richard B. Rowe and Ruth derwent surge ry for a ruptured
him much about the world's such , its value meas ured Hendricks. Racine , materna l append ix at1::10 a.m. Monday
next 25 years.
at the Midla nd Hospl\iJ I.
because everyone using it can great-~ r;Jn d m othe r .

t\ t:l !l'fH!rutioll in G r (,ll/0 ,
C1mn . maint~li n s the fJO ly
lih r ~tr y 111 the wtJr lll deVfJlcd

l•xcl ltsivcly tr, subrna rines.

Ld l •1 lly hl· ~~ u:-;int.: i I \1d~.:s
('oun 1i·,n . , j . :.. : •.._.,,; lJt:t.:ll

Then•'s really not vf'ry nmrh

&gt;

•

ZENITH
-· COLOR TV

'. \

•
e BlACK

&amp;

WHITE TV

•
e STEREO

MASON FURNITURE

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

HERMAN GRATE
77J.559l
MASON. W. VA .

SHOP
YOUR
NEAREST
STOREA OI.SCOUNT
Of:PAilTMUIT STOitl

PT. PLEASANT
MASON

PRICES IN EFFECT TUESDAY 5 PM

BRIDGE P

CHECK THESE VALUES!
12

CLEAR VINYL

COLORS

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS
Out They Go!
Regular !:. lock - former
valu es lo 2.94 . Sizes up
to 16. Long sleeve styles,

Mens Soft

$

ol cou r se .

ORLON
SOCKS
ONE
SIZE
FITS

FREE PARKING
OPEN DAILY
10 AM TO 9 PM

THICK VELOUR

BOXED VALENTINE
CARDS

67!.

o.

1 1J

BATH
TOWELS

For The School Ages

By Cannon

Bo)(e s of either 48 or 60
count. co mpl el e w•th

e nv e lop es,
va lentin e
lett cher.

plu s
f or

11 pel'icc t , you would
pay VIS. Se led from
ve lour print s, so lid s.
&lt;:. tr i p es e tc . E x tra
thi ck .

CANDY
HEARTS
TOO!

a
the

19" PATIO TABLE

Women's Long Sleeve

Mrs. Nelson dies

•
01

.,I
I •
And when electricity is fully put to use, the
staggering amounts of' oi I and gas saved can
be diverted to other morecritical uses.
Such as transportation.

It can be the major solution to our present
energy problems.

To be sure, burning the coal at hand as well
as. extracting new coal as quickly as possible,
is not without its problems.

Electricity, in turn, can be used for virtually
all energy needs, except some forms of
transportation.

Teacher's Association and a
charter member of Rutland

•

Friendly Neighbors Garden
Club.
Mrs. Nelson is survived by a
foster grandson, Paul Nelson
Aidman of Zanesville and one
cousin, Emerson Minnon,
Kingston, Ohio. She was the
daughter of the late William
and Lena McElhiney Johnson .
A foster great-granddaughter
survives.

America is self-sufficient in one fossil fuel
source of energy: COAL. We're sitting on
about half of the world's known supplyenough for over 500 years!

Coal can be used instead of oil or gas for the
production of electricity.

DEXTER - Blanche E.
Neison, 82, Dexter, Rt. 1, died
Sunday evening at the Kimes
Convalescent Home, Athens .
Mrs. Nelson was preceded in
death by her husband, Miles E.
Nelson in 1963.
Mrs. Nelson was a member
of the Dexter Christian Church,
Dexter Star Grange 778,
Wilkesville Eastern Stars,
Meigs
County
Retired

And when you start to tick off such things as
labor stability, price controls, hopper cars,
environmental resistance, new mine
development and land reclamation, the

problems seem formidable.
But they are nothing that American ingenuity
cannot lick.
Coal..:_good old reliable coal-can help solve
the energy crisis if America is determined to
do so, and we have never known timidity
to be our national characteristic.
Let's start using that coal. Fully.

Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
Dexter Christian Church with
the Rev. John Bryant of.
ficiating. Burial will be in
Nelson Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Walker Funeral Home in Rut·
land after 2 p.m. today.
Eastern Star services will be
held at the Funeral Home this
evening at 8:45 p.m. The

Now.

American Electric Power Company, Inc•.

(1 1 'i. 2 1,

·•

TOPS
100 Pet . Polyester
On Sale
TUESDAY
5 P.M.

.$399

J

eWOMEN'S SWEATERS
eWOMEN'S PANTS
eWOMEN'S BLOUSES
.GIRLS SWEATERS

EAGLE DECANTER
CORDIAL SET
12" Eagle Bottle
with 6 small glasses

3 Colors!

NOW

$ 99

12

EASY TO ASSEMBLE
NO NUTS
or
BOLTS!

FOLD UP LEGS -

ALL METAL

TV LAP TRAYS

PRICE

A $2.98 Value
1_n_so_x_ _ _ _ _
sE_T_

Laurel Oiff _
News Notes

"MARSHAIIAN" METAL

New Spring

Type.~

Are In!

present for worship service.

Offering for all services was
$158.40.
A number of persons fr,om
Drew Webster Post, American

Fold up legs lo r storage.
H.1ndy f or many oc ca !:&gt; ion s. Regular 1.79.

ARTIFICIAL, WASHABLE, LIFELIKE

"Foxcroft" Qualitr • $6.95 'Value
Spring Bouquet PaHern - No Iron

$

PRINTED SHEETS

A wide variety of new spring
flowers and greenery . Everyday . - - - - - - - - - - - ·
low discount prices . Start your
spring arrangements now .

BRAIDED THROW RUGS

Legion , Pomeroy, attended

services Sunday morning at
the local church.
Mrs . Pearl Jacobs was
returned home Saturday from
Holzer Medical Center where

SIZE 81 x 104 OR
FITTED FULL BED SIZE
~~:11!-NEVER IRON!

SIZE I9x33-REVERSIBLE
FULLY- WASHABLE

she was a patient for two

KINDERGARTEN STAKES
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UPI)The Kindergarten Stakes
scheduled for Oct. 5, opening
day of Beulah Park's fall
session, is expected to draw a
record 250 nominations, ac~
cording to Robert E. Houser,
Beulah general manager.
Nominations lor the race will
o . Kenneth Morgan close Monday and already 125
Proje ct Dir ector Ohio-bred two-yeai-olds have
Southeas t Otl i o
Emergen cy Medica l been named for the race,
se rv ic ~
Houser · said. The race wiU
carry about a $40,000 purse.
7tc

wctt~!

TV TRAY
TABLES

BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Feb. 3 was 150; 106 were

weeks.
Mrs. Norman Schaefer has
been reported ill.
Mr. Vern Story, Columbus,
spent the weekend with his
family here.
Mrs . Ed Bauer, Marion,
spent a day and night with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Karr, Sr. while her husband
attended a meeting in Ports·
PUBLIC NOTICE
mouth . Mrs . Karr and Kellie
sealed bid s will be received Sue DeConnick, accompanied .
by th e Ohio va.ll ey Healtr
Ser-,~ices Foundat1on . In c. • . l Mr. and Mrs. Bauer to Marion
Blue Line Drive , Athens, Oh10
457()1 at 12 : 00 noon . Thursday. for a week's visit.

. .i

END OF SEASON
CLEAR AWAY

SCREEN PRINT

COMPARE
-'.AT 89•

Hollywood Brief Style!

I

WOMEN'S
PANTIES

March 7, 1974 for furnishing two
(21 fully equipped ambulance s
as specified . The buyer also.
requires an alternate .b i.d to
pro-,~ide four ( 4) add1f1onal
identically
equipped
am ·
bulances at the un i t price , said
alternate to be exercised within
180 days .
Specifications may be ob ·
tai n ed at the office o t D Ken
neth
Morgan,
01rector .
Southeast Oh i o Emergency
Medical Service, P . 0 . Bo)l:; 80?,
415 Vinton P i ke , Ga ll ipol.(s. OhiO
456 31.
.
Th e right is reserv ed to re 1ect
My or a l l bids .

•

'.

family will receive friends
today from 2lo 4 and 7to 9.
The body will lie in slate at
. the Dexter Christian Church
from 9-10 a.m. Wednesday
morning.

Heavy gaug e see lhru
plastic . Va lues to 1.77 .
limited quantity .

$

Former Values To $8.95

PAPER GIRL - Jenell Kelly, 12 year old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kelly, Middleport, is a carrier for The
Daily Sentinel, Jenell is a sixth grade pupil at Bradbury
School. She loves to read, and believe it or not, loves to play
football and basketball. She believes having a paper route is
a wonderful experience. Although she rrillnages to save some
of her earnings, she spends part of her profits on things she
wants. Her father is a teacher at Eastern High School. Jenell
also has a younger brother.

CHAIR
OR
SOFA
COVER

White and Pastel Colors!
1ST QUALITY

SIZE
5
6
J

STARTS
TUESDAY

PM

PERFECT QUALITY I
Sheer seamless nylon panty
hose, at a very special price .
One size fits all , superior
stretch and recovery .

¢
PR.

SUN TAN
TAUPE

ROLLS EASILY
ON CASTERS

~INNAMON

COFFEE

WHIL~

THEY LASTI

�-::

~-···

'• . I

'

·'

.-

-.

' l~,

I .

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., Fe.b. 5. 1G74
:;~::~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::;:::;:·:·:~:::~::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·.~:::::::::::·:·:~:::::~::::::::=::;;:;:..--::x.::::::::::::::::::::::::::~=:=::::::::::::::::::::::.:::·:=::;.=i·

Industrial riations conting
up to critical conferences

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middll'puri ·POIIIl' roy. 0 ,. Fl'l&gt;. 5. 1!114

By Richard C. Longworth
BRUSSELS (UP! I - IT the
industrial nations . are to
rebuild their frayed alliance,
the job begins lhis month.
The occasion is Feb 11-12
Washington conference that
President Nixon called to seek
a unified response to the
energy crisis. Foreign and
finance ministers are expected

from 13 nations - the United
Stales, Canada, Japan, Norway and the nine European
Common Markel nations.
To many Americans and
Europeans, the conference and
its successors are as important
as the Bretton Woods meeting
of 194&lt;1.
Pattern of Cooperation
At Bretton Woods, the major
na lions built the monetary
system, which, although badly
in need of repair now, has
financed postwar prosperity.
Similarly, the Washington
meeting can set a pattern of
cooperation to meet the longterm oil shortage and other
problems which could give the
allies a much rougher ride
through the 1970s.

Despite this, both Europeans
and Americans here are more

gloomy than exhilarated. The
international mood has seldom
been less cooperative.

France. Britain, Germany
and sma1ler EW'opean nations

are scouring the Middle East
for separate oil deals, despite
warnings from both U.S. and
Common Markel leaders that
this competitive scramble
could send prices soaring and
set ally against ally .
France, indeed , has in dicated it might torpedo the
conference. And the Arabs
have warned Japan, which
depends totally on imported
oil, of retalia tion if the meeting
even hints at a unity front of oil
users Ill keep prices down and
oil flowing.
The Final Test
The United States already is
"disgusted"-lo use Secretarv
of Stale Henry A. Kissinger;s
word- with the Europeans'
recent refusal not only to side
with Washington on alliance
issues but even to cooperate
with each otHer. Reports from
Washington say Kissinger and

~

~

«

~

.i!j .Bookmobile off~r~ sample service
Bl' Vlltna Pikkuja

::1

Wf' h(Jpe we ha ve £ill ed these
needs. If we can h{"lp you in any
W(:ly, let us kn ow.

bookm•,bilc ''measurement '' in
terms of good ser vit:e .
rll'W undor the sun in the way of
Follow the regular reports,
selected to speak your mind
library Sl' I'Vi Ce , bul what is , 11 " •' ' ' ; 1 ,''&gt; \ I •. 1
I&gt;! Il l IJ.&lt;; II I!~
take Q pcrsonill interest and
Nixon see the me eting as thr ordinary service in one comYou f!li:l)' hdp form a pattern of watch us grow .toge htcr. We
final test of Europe;lll willing- munity may bt' a novelty to
:-;ervice for ;:m other com- are ti('SiJ:: nt&gt;d l.tJ fi ll the loca l
ness to maintain the alliance in another.
munity .
t'ommunity need.s from the
its present shape.
We are inclined to think of
I
hope
you
help
make
the
toddler through tee nagers,
TI1a l the all iance has prob- Meigs County as one of the
wnge
earners to reti red people.
lems is not news. Differences counties on the "poor" side.
over money, trade and deten te but nut when it comes to
SON HORN
have led to hard feelings--so library serv ice, beca use your
GRANDDAUGHTER ILL
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
much so that the allies are commun ity bookm obile has Ra ymond L. Rowe, Racine, Rt.
Mr. and Mrs . V. D. Edwards,
writing a "new Atlantic char- become a "sample" serv ice for 2, announce the birth of a son, Pom eroy, were advi sed
ter" to patch things up.
public rea ction and as one Ja son Marshall, Jan. 29 at Monday of the illness nf their
But the Washington confer- to demons trat e eff ec tiv e Holzer Medical Center. The granddau ght er , Wend y,
ence is the first challenge to the library service.
infant weighed 7 lbs. and 5 ozs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Atlantic allies and Japan to
The year 1973 put your book- Gra ndparents are Mrs. Nondus Wayne Shere, Midland , Mich.
lake immediate and joint mobile in a very definite Hendricks, H~tdne and the ht te F our -year -old Wen d y un action . Th eir response will t~ll " public se rvice" category. As Richard B. Rowe and Ruth derwent surge ry for a ruptured
him much about the world's such , its value meas ured Hendricks. Racine , materna l append ix at1::10 a.m. Monday
next 25 years.
at the Midla nd Hospl\iJ I.
because everyone using it can great-~ r;Jn d m othe r .

t\ t:l !l'fH!rutioll in G r (,ll/0 ,
C1mn . maint~li n s the fJO ly
lih r ~tr y 111 the wtJr lll deVfJlcd

l•xcl ltsivcly tr, subrna rines.

Ld l •1 lly hl· ~~ u:-;int.: i I \1d~.:s
('oun 1i·,n . , j . :.. : •.._.,,; lJt:t.:ll

Then•'s really not vf'ry nmrh

&gt;

•

ZENITH
-· COLOR TV

'. \

•
e BlACK

&amp;

WHITE TV

•
e STEREO

MASON FURNITURE

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

HERMAN GRATE
77J.559l
MASON. W. VA .

SHOP
YOUR
NEAREST
STOREA OI.SCOUNT
Of:PAilTMUIT STOitl

PT. PLEASANT
MASON

PRICES IN EFFECT TUESDAY 5 PM

BRIDGE P

CHECK THESE VALUES!
12

CLEAR VINYL

COLORS

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS
Out They Go!
Regular !:. lock - former
valu es lo 2.94 . Sizes up
to 16. Long sleeve styles,

Mens Soft

$

ol cou r se .

ORLON
SOCKS
ONE
SIZE
FITS

FREE PARKING
OPEN DAILY
10 AM TO 9 PM

THICK VELOUR

BOXED VALENTINE
CARDS

67!.

o.

1 1J

BATH
TOWELS

For The School Ages

By Cannon

Bo)(e s of either 48 or 60
count. co mpl el e w•th

e nv e lop es,
va lentin e
lett cher.

plu s
f or

11 pel'icc t , you would
pay VIS. Se led from
ve lour print s, so lid s.
&lt;:. tr i p es e tc . E x tra
thi ck .

CANDY
HEARTS
TOO!

a
the

19" PATIO TABLE

Women's Long Sleeve

Mrs. Nelson dies

•
01

.,I
I •
And when electricity is fully put to use, the
staggering amounts of' oi I and gas saved can
be diverted to other morecritical uses.
Such as transportation.

It can be the major solution to our present
energy problems.

To be sure, burning the coal at hand as well
as. extracting new coal as quickly as possible,
is not without its problems.

Electricity, in turn, can be used for virtually
all energy needs, except some forms of
transportation.

Teacher's Association and a
charter member of Rutland

•

Friendly Neighbors Garden
Club.
Mrs. Nelson is survived by a
foster grandson, Paul Nelson
Aidman of Zanesville and one
cousin, Emerson Minnon,
Kingston, Ohio. She was the
daughter of the late William
and Lena McElhiney Johnson .
A foster great-granddaughter
survives.

America is self-sufficient in one fossil fuel
source of energy: COAL. We're sitting on
about half of the world's known supplyenough for over 500 years!

Coal can be used instead of oil or gas for the
production of electricity.

DEXTER - Blanche E.
Neison, 82, Dexter, Rt. 1, died
Sunday evening at the Kimes
Convalescent Home, Athens .
Mrs. Nelson was preceded in
death by her husband, Miles E.
Nelson in 1963.
Mrs. Nelson was a member
of the Dexter Christian Church,
Dexter Star Grange 778,
Wilkesville Eastern Stars,
Meigs
County
Retired

And when you start to tick off such things as
labor stability, price controls, hopper cars,
environmental resistance, new mine
development and land reclamation, the

problems seem formidable.
But they are nothing that American ingenuity
cannot lick.
Coal..:_good old reliable coal-can help solve
the energy crisis if America is determined to
do so, and we have never known timidity
to be our national characteristic.
Let's start using that coal. Fully.

Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
Dexter Christian Church with
the Rev. John Bryant of.
ficiating. Burial will be in
Nelson Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Walker Funeral Home in Rut·
land after 2 p.m. today.
Eastern Star services will be
held at the Funeral Home this
evening at 8:45 p.m. The

Now.

American Electric Power Company, Inc•.

(1 1 'i. 2 1,

·•

TOPS
100 Pet . Polyester
On Sale
TUESDAY
5 P.M.

.$399

J

eWOMEN'S SWEATERS
eWOMEN'S PANTS
eWOMEN'S BLOUSES
.GIRLS SWEATERS

EAGLE DECANTER
CORDIAL SET
12" Eagle Bottle
with 6 small glasses

3 Colors!

NOW

$ 99

12

EASY TO ASSEMBLE
NO NUTS
or
BOLTS!

FOLD UP LEGS -

ALL METAL

TV LAP TRAYS

PRICE

A $2.98 Value
1_n_so_x_ _ _ _ _
sE_T_

Laurel Oiff _
News Notes

"MARSHAIIAN" METAL

New Spring

Type.~

Are In!

present for worship service.

Offering for all services was
$158.40.
A number of persons fr,om
Drew Webster Post, American

Fold up legs lo r storage.
H.1ndy f or many oc ca !:&gt; ion s. Regular 1.79.

ARTIFICIAL, WASHABLE, LIFELIKE

"Foxcroft" Qualitr • $6.95 'Value
Spring Bouquet PaHern - No Iron

$

PRINTED SHEETS

A wide variety of new spring
flowers and greenery . Everyday . - - - - - - - - - - - ·
low discount prices . Start your
spring arrangements now .

BRAIDED THROW RUGS

Legion , Pomeroy, attended

services Sunday morning at
the local church.
Mrs . Pearl Jacobs was
returned home Saturday from
Holzer Medical Center where

SIZE 81 x 104 OR
FITTED FULL BED SIZE
~~:11!-NEVER IRON!

SIZE I9x33-REVERSIBLE
FULLY- WASHABLE

she was a patient for two

KINDERGARTEN STAKES
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UPI)The Kindergarten Stakes
scheduled for Oct. 5, opening
day of Beulah Park's fall
session, is expected to draw a
record 250 nominations, ac~
cording to Robert E. Houser,
Beulah general manager.
Nominations lor the race will
o . Kenneth Morgan close Monday and already 125
Proje ct Dir ector Ohio-bred two-yeai-olds have
Southeas t Otl i o
Emergen cy Medica l been named for the race,
se rv ic ~
Houser · said. The race wiU
carry about a $40,000 purse.
7tc

wctt~!

TV TRAY
TABLES

BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Feb. 3 was 150; 106 were

weeks.
Mrs. Norman Schaefer has
been reported ill.
Mr. Vern Story, Columbus,
spent the weekend with his
family here.
Mrs . Ed Bauer, Marion,
spent a day and night with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Karr, Sr. while her husband
attended a meeting in Ports·
PUBLIC NOTICE
mouth . Mrs . Karr and Kellie
sealed bid s will be received Sue DeConnick, accompanied .
by th e Ohio va.ll ey Healtr
Ser-,~ices Foundat1on . In c. • . l Mr. and Mrs. Bauer to Marion
Blue Line Drive , Athens, Oh10
457()1 at 12 : 00 noon . Thursday. for a week's visit.

. .i

END OF SEASON
CLEAR AWAY

SCREEN PRINT

COMPARE
-'.AT 89•

Hollywood Brief Style!

I

WOMEN'S
PANTIES

March 7, 1974 for furnishing two
(21 fully equipped ambulance s
as specified . The buyer also.
requires an alternate .b i.d to
pro-,~ide four ( 4) add1f1onal
identically
equipped
am ·
bulances at the un i t price , said
alternate to be exercised within
180 days .
Specifications may be ob ·
tai n ed at the office o t D Ken
neth
Morgan,
01rector .
Southeast Oh i o Emergency
Medical Service, P . 0 . Bo)l:; 80?,
415 Vinton P i ke , Ga ll ipol.(s. OhiO
456 31.
.
Th e right is reserv ed to re 1ect
My or a l l bids .

•

'.

family will receive friends
today from 2lo 4 and 7to 9.
The body will lie in slate at
. the Dexter Christian Church
from 9-10 a.m. Wednesday
morning.

Heavy gaug e see lhru
plastic . Va lues to 1.77 .
limited quantity .

$

Former Values To $8.95

PAPER GIRL - Jenell Kelly, 12 year old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kelly, Middleport, is a carrier for The
Daily Sentinel, Jenell is a sixth grade pupil at Bradbury
School. She loves to read, and believe it or not, loves to play
football and basketball. She believes having a paper route is
a wonderful experience. Although she rrillnages to save some
of her earnings, she spends part of her profits on things she
wants. Her father is a teacher at Eastern High School. Jenell
also has a younger brother.

CHAIR
OR
SOFA
COVER

White and Pastel Colors!
1ST QUALITY

SIZE
5
6
J

STARTS
TUESDAY

PM

PERFECT QUALITY I
Sheer seamless nylon panty
hose, at a very special price .
One size fits all , superior
stretch and recovery .

¢
PR.

SUN TAN
TAUPE

ROLLS EASILY
ON CASTERS

~INNAMON

COFFEE

WHIL~

THEY LASTI

�• I

,_ ,.~,,,~•..., """'"'"Se~fi~el

BOYS

~----

Classifieds Get R es'ults!l- -B-tt-s·m
-. _e_s_s_S---,.'-e-r·--v-ic_e_s_']

In Memory

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

IN MEMO R Y Of LM tH S (OJCI O
wt o pass ed "Wi'ly H y pnr &lt;; 1 10
F eb S 19t&gt;~
H s s n 1 nq wC'Iy
f a ce

~ nd

pt e 1s ct

t

Are a plea sur e to r ecal l
He had a ktndly word for each
And dt ed beloved by all

Som e day w e

r~ ope

to m e ellltm

So n e day we k lOW n ot when
To c a sp h s ha nd r1 HH• belter
lil nd

Neve r to pi!rl aqa n
5 o dl y
Ch ldrc n

ss ed by
and lr end s
1

w te

2 5 lie
IN LO \otN C. l H' l Or y of J .Jtl
E Sn dt r who p asse d away 2
y e ar s il 9 0 F e bruary 5 1971

Tw o year s have passed s m ce

GIRLS

you v e been gone
And we 11 ss you sr II as t me

1011

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

CHEVROLET BELAIR

IU

11

lA

\U IRAI L Eh:' ,
Va
un t urn &lt;,h d

h l al

pl! a

!ilwn

HEDROOM mob1 le home a ll
elec l r •c ~1fl0depo s ll \130 per
month plu s ut I t•cs L ocated
on Rou t e J3 Pomero y Phone
(61116 752 2-16

1

1 door l ac~ I 1 owner eM .,.,11t h tess lhiln 15 000 miles be 1g e

S895

&lt;1 Door VB eng me a utomat c t ran s
pow er st ecr• ng
I Ctclory .=11r rad 10 good t.res cl ean nter or blue lin sh

52895
dr v e 350 V 8 eng m e locktng frt hubs automc. l• c
tran s power s teenng &amp; brake s rC1d1o velu c le ot milny
use s c ustom l r tm sharp 1 owner

1971CHEVROLETBLAZER

.t wh

1 5 &lt;t i p

TRAILER I b edroom n ce for
coup l to Phone 997 7479
2 5 tt c
TR A I LER sp ace for ren t n
Rac1ne Cal l 992 283 8 or 992
24'19
'l J Jtc
197JMOB IL E hom e Jbedroom
bath
and
washer and
dryer. Cn ll 99? J S09
2 3 JIC

QO CS 01

5adly m S!&gt;ed

by

S s and

g r andch ldren
Barbara
P a uldt e
Nancy
Randy
T ammy and J mm e
'l 5 tc

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY, OHIO

IN L O V IN G Memory o f Jane
E ll labeth Sn der who passed
away 'l y ear s ago F eb s
19 !1
In a graves de softly sl eep ng
Wher e th e flowers gentl y wave
L es fh(' mother we oved so
dear y
But whom we cou d not save
We d dn 1 k.now the pam
had

she

Or hear he r f•nal s gh
We only know she passed away
W•thout a la st goodbye

11
OR OLDER
BE A
PAPER
CARRIER.

Deep n the heart I es a P•Cfure
Of a loved one Ia d to rest
In memory s fr ame we shall
keep ''
Because slle was one of the bes t
Sad l y m sse d by cl'111d r en
grandcll ldren and g reat
grandc h ldren
~ 5 lip

LO ST
K eys n bla c k key case
"c nlly Ro l l n s and Jrd
St r eet New Hav en App rOlt 3
keys Ca ll 882 2259
21c

BEDROOM hou!ie t ra le r
n ce yard L ocated n
SlladeAva tabl e
•m
med a t el y
Phon e 69t 1'1 83
'} 1 61p

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to th e
sma ll e st Heater Core
Nalhan B1ggs
Rad1ato.- Spec1ahst

Open 8 Til S

WOOD TRUSSES

tpl~
Built to Your Specs.
Dcltvered to Job S1te

NO 1 copper 65c r ad ators
J2c red brass J5c batlenes
Sl 20 M A Hall Reedsv 1e
Oh•o Phone J78 6'149
1 27 ti c

For Rent or Sale

Employment Wanted

L ARG E unfurniShed Jrd floor
apt for r ent m downtown
Pomeroy 6 rooms &lt;1nd bath
Ca l 992 2789
1 17 li e
SL EEPIN G room over wm e
store n Pomeroy Reference
requ•red Ca ll 992 5293
1 10 tf c

Auto Sales

1972 NOVA 4 door automa t1 c
EXPERIENCED pa nter
n
smoll V 8 fa ctory a 1r co n
ter or and exter1or Call Don
d•t on.ng 24 000 ac tua l m des
Van Meter Phone 98 5 39 5 l
Phone 992 7084
2 J l ip
2 3 261p

MATERIALS CO
773 5554

Ma son W Va

EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works E
Matn St Pom eroy All k•nds
of salt water pellets water
nugg ets block sal t and own
Oh 10 R1ver Sa lt Phon e 992
3891
6 5 tf t

STEREO RADIO am fm
8
track tape combm at on 4 way
spea ker
sound
system
Ba l ance $10 2 66 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 11 tfc

NCOME TalC. :-:.erviCf' 9 am to
5 p m Dally except Sunday
even1ngs bY appo ntment
only Co Rd 22 off Rt 7
44 2
OLDSMOBILE
bypass Phone Wanda Eb lm INTERIOR
and
exter o r 19 70
automatiC w 31l Good con
992 2272
pa 1nf1ng by hour or contra ct
FORO rear mounted mow er
LOST
n Middleport near
d•t on Phone 992 7519
1 2 JOtc
20 year s ex per enc:e Ca ll Ca r l
Se nes SOl bought new la st
2
3
6tc
Thompsons trailer cour t
Nelson 992 5083
year extra SiCkl e never used
S amese ca t be ge body dark
1 30 6tp
$500
7 month old He•fer calf
pomts reward Call 992 3372
FREE llome demonstrat ons of
1966 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass f or
Here for d Holsl.e•n m1xed
Fra n c 's Bearhs or K•m Neal
the Compact not a vacuum LIGHT haultng Call 99'1 37 16
sale 8 cy l nder power brakes
$175 1 man sa wm1ll w1th Allis
clea ner but a new tdea 1n a
and
power
st ee r•ng
2 1 6tc
1 31 8tp
Cha lmers power untt good
home care appl1ance 25 yr
automat•c tran sm ss wn Wd
co nd lion $275 2 row corn
MALE cat black w •th while
guarantee Ca l l 4.46 0447 for WILL babySit n my home by
sell reasonable Phone 99 2
p lan t er
John Deere 290
stomach between Bashan &amp;
appt
i31l6
hour day or week Non gilts
needs new boxes S75 Call
I 30 61p
1
I 4t C
Rae ne area on County Road
Pnone 992 71 02
a fter 5 p m 843 2064
213 had on bl ack flea collar 1
1 30 6tc
2 J 3tc
year old Phone 949 4609
1969 FORD piCkUP Explorer
WILL do tree 1r •mm1ng work
'l I 6tc
Phone 997. 3640
and Will sell f1r ewoo d Pllone
1 27 12tc G R OC ER Y bus .ness for sale
949 3910 or 949 3918
Butldmg for sale or lease
------A c H tl D s pet dog answers to
2 1 6tc
Phone 773 5618 from B 30 p m
Brown
the name of Cmdy
1968 CHEVROLET Mal1bv
to 10 p m for appo ntment
and tan sma ll fema le Pa rt GRADUAT ION Present" 16
automat c 307 l=a•r cond1t on
3 20 tfc
beagl e and part bassett Lost
days 1n Europe (Rome Par•s
$?SO Ca ll 992 7637
m lie oul of Chester Phon e
London
Sw tz e rland
1 27 12t c SIN GER sew ng mach nes 1972
985 3356
Naples )
June 24 July 9
-model '" beaut•ful walnut
2 4 5tc
Teachers as chaperones $750
1970 DODGE Co ronet
a •r
cabmet Make s des1gn st t
Deadline Mar ch I
John
cond 1t oned and new fir es
c hes ztg zag
buttonholes
IN THE COURT OF
Ba ley 985 4246
Call 949 5381
bl.nd hems etc Like new
COMMON PLEAS
'} 1 4tp
2 5 Jtc
On ly Sl39 95 Call Ravenswood
PROBATE DIVISION
' - ---273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
1965
VALIANT
P
lymou
th
good
WILL GIVE away lumber for
12 7 tfc
J B 0 BRIEN admr of
cond• t on
Contact Roland
comp l ete removal of a larg e
the estate of Verna Dav1s
Sea rles at Rutland Furntture AM FM rad 10 stereo 8 trJck
budd•ng Phone 985 3831
Deceased
or Patty Sea r les at Blue &amp;
2 3 3tp
tape co mb•nat•on 4 spea ke r
PLAINTIFF
Grey
sound
system
Ba l ance
vs
2
5
5tp
THELMA WOOLR lOGE el at FAB RI C SALE large select•on
$101 52 or terms ava I able
polyester double kn ts tn
DEFENDANTS
Phone 992 396 5
coordmated colors S2 79 and
1 28 tfc
No 21 065
up Carol •na Fabncs Route 7
one half m lie nortll of Chester
PAINT DAMAGE 19 74 Z1g Za g
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
AKC Toy Poodle Pupp es
Oh 1o
Henry and Mary
BY PUBLICATION
SEW IN G MACH IN ES St tl l n
$7500 Samese K t1en s SIS
Hun•er owners 9 am t II 7 BABYSITTER wanted •n my
To
HOW ARD
BICKLE
or1gma l ca rto ns
No at
Phone
1
256
6247
home
must
have
own
trans
m
Feb
4lll
througn
Feb
p
whose known address 1S '1518
t achment s needed as our
I
10
20tc
91h
pori at on s or 6 days a week
W nona Ave nue F l or da whose
co ntrols are b u II •n Sews
2 3 6tp
Phone 992 2550 or 742 6551
exac t addr ess 1S unknown and
w th
or 2 needl es rnakes
I 30 tiC POODL E groom ng ~5 Black
can no t
wtlh
reasonable
buttonholes sew on buttons
A K c toy st ud se rv .ces SSO
d1llgence be ascerta ned
monograms and bl1'1d h em
GRILL cook car hop and k1t
Ca ll Coo l v lie 667 3915
To The unknown he1rs and
Sf1tch Fu I cash pn ce $38 50
TRAIN WITH
chen help wanted Apply m
'J 5 St c
dev sees of Howard B ck e f
or budget pan ava 1lab l e
FULL
PAY
person Crow s Steak Hou se
deceased
Pt10ne 99 '1 2984
1 27 tfc
open1ngs
for
To Mrs ELMER MOLDEN Imm ediate
1 28 tf c
whose address IS unknown and spec 1a l tram ng m Mechan•cal
DIRECT
Sa
leS
DtStr
butors
Av 1at 1on and
VACUUM Cleaners new 197A
cannot
w.th
reasonabl e ElectroniCS
wanted tor v t am •ns and HANDMAD E quIt Ca l l 992
Cler•ca l f 1elds •n tile U S Navy
d •ltgence be as certamed
Model
Comp lete W1th all
organ 1c products Part or full
To The unknown lle•rs and Pay starts at SJ26 per mon th
c lean ng tools Sm all pa1nl
7252
lime For ntenn ew
wr te
dev•sees of Mrs Elmer Molden from f 1r s t day - We furn1sh
2 I 3t c
damage m sh 1ppmg Will take
Mary Eng l e R R 1 Box 19
quar ters food and clothi ng
1f deceased
$27 cash or budget plan
Un
1
0n
Oh
•O
45322
Sc hool guarantees before you
To
WYNONA
BICKLE
ava l ab e Phone 99 2 2984
1940 CHRYSLER
19A6 Ford
I
16
16tp
whose address 1s unknown and s1gn up
1 28 lf c
Tra c tor w1 t1'1 equ•pment and
BE SOMEONE SPECIAL
ca nno t
w.th
reasonable
attachments 1973 Hoover
IN THE NEW NAVY
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S
di11gence be ascerta ned
D•al a mal c Power Dnve SINGER Automat c Z1g Zag
We have the product on lland
To The unknown he1rs and For mor e nfo call or VIS t your
Sew ng Mach nes m se w•ng
Phone 985 4132
and we del •\ler to you per
dev •sees of Wynona B1ck l e 1f Nav yman at
2 1 Me
table Makes buttonholes
221 Columbus Road
sonally Hel en Jane Brown
deceased
sews on buttons bl nd hems
Athens 0 45701
992 5113
To
NE TT IE
MOLDEN
etc Top notch cond1t10n Pay
vernon E Harnson
1230tfc YOU NG STOWN k tc hen S1nk
wllose addre ss 1s unknown and
S51 or terms available Phone
w1th faucets S50 gas range
Telephone 614 593 3566
\"nth
reasonable
c annot
997 1984
$40
r
efr
1gerator
S40
All
n
To ll Free BOO 282 1268
NEED woman to 1 ve 1n and
d1l1gence be ascerlamed
1 28 tfc
good cond1110n See at 256 So
take mothers place of 'l
To The unknown hers and
Fourth Ave M1ddleporl
dev•sees of Nett e Molden tf
children m a new respectable
2 2 ffc
home You may also have 1
de cease d
SHOP THE
To MARY LATHEY wllose
c hild of your own Phone 992
8 FIRST CALF Holstem he1fer s
2536
address 1s unknown and cannot FURNISHED mob lehOme Will
RUTLAND
Will se ll one or all Phone 949
w•th r easonable d•l•gence be
1 8 tfc
cons 1d er selling lot Ca l l 949
BARGAIN CENTER
3777
ascerta•ned
5381
1 31 6tc
To Tile unknown t1e1rs and
2 5 3tc
d ev •see s of Mary Lathey
1
10 HAMMER mil l l1ke new
deceased
1969 ELCONA 12 x 60 awnmgs
To ABNER BICKLE whose
a 1r cond•iloner utI ty shed
w •tt1 overhead
p1p e and
and
marr 1age 1S unknown and
attachment
1- - - - - - - - - - - ' \ baggmg
Wtll sell furn•shed or un
llammer m II be ll Ca ll 949
cannot
wdh
reasonable
turn 1slled
exce ll ent con
10 P1ece Walnut
dilig ence be ascertatned
'117 s
d1llon Call off 1ce 992 5130 or
2 1 3tp
To The unknown he1rs and
Dmmg Room SUite
home 7tH 4122
.- -- - - -dev sees of Abner B •ckle 1f
2 5 31c
deceased
SAL T FOR ICE A NL&gt; ~ \10\.
Kmg S1ze Bedroom
To The unknown he•rS and 12 X 60 TRAILER w th pull out
Rock salt for town shiPS
Su1te by Bassett
dev1sees of Verna Dav1s
towns
and
busmesses
n
set up m Pmegrove wtll
decea sed
bulks and bags tor ICe and
f1nance
D
R 1chardson
You are nereby notlfted th at
snow ExcelSIOr Salt Works
1&amp;2Piece
Ge n eral Dell\lery Mann W
you have been named defen
Phone 992 389 1
VIJ 25635 or phone (3041 5113
L1vmg Room Su1tes.
dants n a l egal action entitled
11 11 tfc
6507
J B 0 Bnen adm m.strator of
2 3 3t c
, Used Refngerators $25 up
the Es ta te of Verna Dav•s
BEAUTIFUL Walnut st ereo
pia nllff vs Thelma woolr1dge
1957 WESTWOOD mobile home
rad10 am fm
tape com
et al defendants Th1S act 10n
electr 1c furnace exce ll ent
blnatmn 8 track tape deck
has l;leen ass1gned case No
cond1t1on Phone 992 5867 or
I - Balance 5103 49
or terms
21 065 m the court of Common
742 4211
Rutland, 0
992 30(]5
a\lallable Call 992 3965
Pleas Probat e D v•s•on Me.gs
I 29 Sip
1 21 tfc
~e Herb
Dave or M1ke
County
Ohto
Address
I .- - - - - ------Grate
Pomeroy Ohto 45769
BEAUTIFUL walnut stereo
The ob 1ect of the Compla m t 1S
r ad1o tape comb•natlon AM
to sell the real estate of the
UPHOLSTERY fabr cs by the
f!" M rad10 8 track tape de ck
decedent Situated at Rt
1 OLD furn 1ture oak tables
yard 54 nches w de as low as
Balance
$114
56
or
terms
Rutland Olllo whiCh r eal estate
s1
95 per yard vel\le ts as lo w
c locks ce boxes brass beds
available Ca ll 992 3965
s descr bed as follows
d ts hes
or
complete
as il 45 Imported velvets
2 4 tfc
The followtng descnbed r ea l
S9 95 we also have nylon
households Wr.te M
D
estate s11uated m tile Townsh p
herculon
cotton
prtnts
M1ller Rt .4 Pomeroy Oh10
of Rutland Me1gs County Oil to
EAGLE go can W1th 4 horse
call 99'1 6271
tJmyls remnants by t he yard
n Sec t on 23 Town 6 Range 14
power motor Phone 949 2789
or by the p•ece Pomeroy
5 13 tfc
bounded and descr bed as
Apply m person
2 3 3tc
Recovery 622 E Man St
fo l lows
.
;
----Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
at
Beg nnmg 658 feet west of 1964 AND OLDER s lver coms
1• ACRE or acre lots for sale
1 29 26tc
Will
pay
22c
for
dtmes
55c
for
tile nortlleast corner of lands
Ctty water ava ilabl e tn
quarters
51
10
tor
halves
formerly owned by Abner
spr ng
L ocated on State FOAM t o 1111 your old couch and
S3 SO for dollars Please quote
B1ckle th ence south 526 feet to
Route 143 Phone 992 36.40
c:ha 1r cushtons as low as
the
k
nds
of
coms
you
lla\le
the run thence 1n a westerly
1 27 12tc
S10 95 Upholstery books only
and send repl1es to Jack1e
d1rect1on along the run w1th the
SOc .4 mch covered foam
Wamsley
Rt
4
Pataskala
meander.ngs of the same to the
mattresses tor standard S1ze
OlliO
west lm e of th e sa 1d Abner
ONE 2 year old black 7 e
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
2
3
6tc
BICkle land tt1ence north to the
Tenne s,see Walker tor sale
Recovery 622 E Mam Street
north I me of sa d land s t llence CASH --;;-;.dfo73il makeS and
Phone 992 3640
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
east 329 feel to the place ot
1 27 12tc
1 29 261C
models of mobile homes
begtnnmg
c onta•n•ng 5 96
Phone area code 614 423 9531
W
Second
St
1968
F
L
H
HARLEY
Dav1S
acres more or less 1t be 1ng the
4 13 ftc
motor cyc l e Phone 882 3205
FOR SAl..E Large level lot on
1ntenl on of fh• s deed to convey
Pomeroy, 0., 45769
2 5 6tc:
New L1ma Road Rutland All
the west one th 1rd of 17 87 acres
ultl1f1eS ava1lable Phone 742
formerly owned by Abner 1 HIVE of bees Call 992 7003
1 31 6tc
308 3
SEWING Mach nes Brand new
B ck le
An EQual Oppor tun1t y
Ztg Zag m n1ce walnut table
Deed Reference Volume 109
2 1 ttc
Employer
RIVERSIDE Auto Wrecktng
In or1g nal cartons
Never
page 168 Me1gs County Deed
w II pay ss for all 1unk cars
used
Clearance on 1973
Records
Pt1one 1304) 882 5244 or 773
models
(on ly
a
few FERTILIZER available now
Tile purpose of the sale s to
haulmg on regu l ar schedu le
5890
ava•lable
)
S63
40
casll
or
pay the debts and costs of ad
TELEVISION Talent to par
Clles t er
Agrtco
Se rv 1ce
1 27 26tc
terms avatlable Phone 992
m1n1stertng the estate of th e
t1c1pat e
•n
weekly
TV
Center 985 3831
decedent
298.4
program
No prev1ou s ex
2 5 lfc
2 3 3tp
You are requ.red to answer
per1ence necessary Back
the Complaint w•th 1n 28 days
ground 1n tnlerv•ewmg help
Vacuum
a lter the last publtcatton of lh1S
ful Sen10r CitiZEnS 1n v1ted tO ELECTROLUX
not ice wll1ch w II be published
Cleaners complete w1th at
apply Aud itions to be held
tachments cordwinder and
once each week for s•x con
RESPONSIBLE
Wed
Feb 6 at 6 p m '"
pamt spray Used but tn lll&lt;.e
secufl\le weeks
The l ast
WOU
8
TV
StudtOS
Athens
PERSON
publ ca t 1on w1ll be made on
new cond1t1on
Pay $34 45
Oh o 45701 TI'11S 1S a non
Wanted to own and operate
March 4 197A and the 28 days
cash or budg et plan ava1lable
paytng pos1t ton
candy &amp; confection vendmg
tor an swer wtll commence on
Phon e 992 2984
2 3 3t c
2 5 tiC
that date
route Me1gs County and
In case of your Ia lure to
(2 Good O.•os)
surroundmg area Pleasant
answer or otherw•se respond as
COAL FOR SA LE JAYMAR
bu
smess.
H1gh
prol1t
ttems
requ r eC by th e Oh o Rules of
1-S•de by S1de
$150
COAL
COMPANY
THE
Can start part lime Age or
C v I Procedu r e IUdgment by
MEIG S &amp; GALLIA LINE
1-2
Door
default will b r rende red aga1n st
eK pe nence not Important.
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
3 AND 4 ROOM furni Shed and
v 1 ' lor rf' ' 1 r1 emanded 1n the
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM
Requ1res
car
and
Sl,l95
to
unfurn
•she
d
apartments
umpla r
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
Phone 99 2 543A
SJ 750 cash 1nvestment For
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
4 12 tfc
deta1ls wnte and mclude
., 5 4tC
Jan et Morr.s
POMEROY LANDMARK
~ tcrk of th e Court of
your phone number
PRIVATE m eetmg room for
Common Pl eas
9 .. _ Jack W Carsey Mgr
M AY TAG gas dryer used \le ry
0(!p.u1ment BVV
any organ•zatton phone 992
Probalc D1 v 1s on
~ Phone 992 9932
1 ttl e Phone 99'J 5778
3938
Meadowbrook
Rd
3975
M ro ~ 5 COI.Jn l y Oh 1o
2 5 Jlp
I

Lost

rnE

DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.

Pets for Sale

For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

Special

Wanted

WANTED!

Used Furmture
Buys .. .

POSITIONS OPEN
IN NEW

Call
992-2156

FOOD STORE

•

Wanted To Buy

OR FILL OUT
AND MAIL

TiiE COUPON
BELOW
~;C-;;;:-A-;:;;;;;;E-;,;--

ITHE
DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST
I POMEROY, OHIO 45769

-l

I
I
I
I _ _ _ _ _ __
I
NAME
I
I
AGE

ADDRESS

All kinds of food
store employees cashiers,
carryouts,
stock
men, bakery help,
expenenced meat
cutter, etc

Powell's
Super Valu

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

Busmess Opportunities

- - ------ -

GOOD USED

REFRIGERATORS

For Rent

CITY

ZIP CODE
I
Ir____________ l

RuHand Furniture

,,

~

IJ19lflt1

51 LOUIS Park, MN 55426

~.._;::.:..::::.:.:..::..::..:::..::::.:=:.......J

3 11 tfc
- ------ --- -----

2

Gene's
Body Shop
Ph 992 5271

0 R 3 bedroom
home
basement alummum s1d 1ng
storm w ndows and doors
for ced a r furnace
fenced
yard Phone 99'1 3791
2 J 7tc

NEW 3 bedroom home l 11 bath
garage ba sement on Gravel
H1ll M1dd eport Natural gas
already 1n
Phone Dale
Dutton 992 3369 even1 ngs
992 2534
1 17 tf c
DESIRABLE two bedroom
nouse n M ddleport ready to
occupy Ca ll 992 5310
1 31 26tc

-

NEW 3 bedroom t1ome good
water 6 acres 3 ou tbuil dlnQS
and ce llar Off Me gs County
1 on Wil ham Sm 111 Road 3•12
m1les from Sa l em Center
1 27 261p
LARGE sol1 d 2 story older home
•n Tuppers P lams 8 rooms
and bath Fam lly room w1th
natura l f •r eplace K tchen
w•th gas range Carpet and
panellmg
wrap
around
porch
good garden area
storage shed ce l lar one acre
With large trees and shrub
bery Forced a1r furnace o•l
furnace or LP gas heat On l y
S16 500 Phone 949 3195
J /
2l6tp
SPAC IOU S b1 level and sp l tt
level homes are now under
co ns lruct1on on c tty wa t er
and sewer
Many de lu xe
features mcludmg a 1r c:on
d•t •on •ng
Best f1nanclng
availa ble Ott1er type llomes
m d fferent areas on F H
Adm f 1nanc1ng w1th no down
payment Call co l le-ct (837
6540) or wr.te to MEIGS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 M ddlepor t Oh10 45760
1 9 tfc

NE I GLERS FOR BUILDING
HOU SES We II draw prml s
or
build
to
your
specd•cat•ons
Ne1gler s
Build ng Supply
Rac•ne
OhiO Cal l 949 3604
2 5 261c

-:;1-- ----------

CLINE S ConstructiOn
com
plete remodeltng new homes
1 acre lots. available Phone
742 6261
2 5 6tc
C BRADFORD Au ct oneer
Compl ete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821
Rae ne Ohto
Cntt Bradford
5 1 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sep t1 c
tanks tnstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re wrll haul
f1 ll d 1rt lop soli l1mes ton e
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n1ghl phone 992 3525 or 992
52 32
2 11 tfc

6 45 7 00 -

REALTY
Close lo

Rut l and
2 s tory house
Large barn
Co rn cnb

$1090000
'' ACRE GROUND - 1971
Mob1!e home 12x60 L1ke
new In new add t10n Will
se ll separate ly $6 500 00

Excellent

es tablished bustne ss wtth
rea l estate No phone m
lormal to n on thi S one please
1 apar tmen t over for ad
d1l1onal mcome

7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Rocky &amp; Bul lwtnk le 13
Jeffs Collte 6
Jack LaLanne l3
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6

8 25 -

8 55 - News 13

9 00 - Pau l D1xon 4 Fnendly Junct•on 10 AM 3 Abbot &amp;
Costello 8 Ph1 l Donahue 15 W ild Wdd West 6 Cover to
Cover J Mov1e Wake Me When It s Over 13

9 30 - Sec rei Slorm 8 To Tell the Truth 3
9 55 - Chuck Wh1le Reporl5 10

10 00 -

D 1nahShore J IS Joker sW 1Id8 10 Company6
10 30-$10 000 Pyramtd 8 10 Jeopard y 3 4 15
11 00 - Gamb1 l 8 10 Pas sword 13 Wtzard ol Odds 3 4 15 M tke

Douglas 6

11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of L1fe 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13

l1 55 - C BS News 8 Dan Ime! s World 10
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 News 8, 10 13
Jackpol' 3 15
12 30- Search tor Tomorrow B 10 Split Second 6 Baffle 3 15

12 45 - Elec Co 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Nof For Women Only IS
Concentration 8 Secret Storm 10
3 On a Match 3 4 15 As lhe World Turns 8 10 Lets
Make A Deal 6 13
2 00 - Days of Our t:1vesJ 4 15 Gu1dtng L 1gh t 8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13

1 30 -

2 30- 0octors3 4 15 EdgeoiN1ght8 10

SYRACUSE - Lovely 2 yr

3 30 -

old home 3 8 R (doubl e
cl osets) K1tchen has many
cabmets &amp; range
D lnmg
area Utd1ty R Oak floors
some carpeted All drapes
Carport Storage About 1/.4
acre $19 900 00

4

MANY PROPERTIES TO
CHOOSE FROM ANSWER
TO YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS CAN
BE
FOUND HERE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259

USMC 13
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Beverly Hrllblllles3 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

I I no answer 992 2568

TEAFORD
Vr 1tpl B T (·.JirHd :-;,
Brol&lt; .. ,
IIC Mec h ,lll t( )It r-•·1
r o m f' r o y , O hiO 1)76Q

BISSELL Construct•on room
add t1ons and remodeltng
Protessmnal floor sand ng
and fm 1sh ng old and new
Relerences ava1lable Phone
949 3833
1 25 26tc

-PRICE
------------CONSTRUCT ION

Roofing spoutmg
kitChens
and bathrooms Complete
remode lmg Phone 742 6273
12 3 tfc

----------

SMALL INVESTMENT - Wrll
buy lh1s nice 2 bedroom home
Has
bath
gas
furnace
basement and large lot Only
$6500 00

COUNTRY HOME -

1 29 12tp

New

modern 3 bedroom all electnc
h ome
Jlh baths. d1nmg 2
fam1ly rooms and double
garage In full basement Large
lot No down payment w1th
excellent credit S27 500 00

DOZER and back hoe- w;k
ponds and sep tic tanks d1t
ch mg serv~ee top soli fill
drrt
l 1mestone
B&amp;K Ex
ca\lat ng Phone 992 .5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

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

WILKINSON Small Eng1ne
Sales Repair on all small
eng•nes
chatn
saws
prec 1s on ground 399 W Mam
Street Phone 992 3092
1 17 26tc

For Sale or Trade

YOUR FUTURE - $500 00 a
month lr'l-ome 4 untt apart
ment bu1ldlng 1n M1ddleport on
good stree1 out of h1gh water
All
f urn rs hed
for
only

$35 000 00
IN THE COUNTRY -

One

acre of wt ld and wooly land

S1800 00
BUILD YOUR ESTATE BY
INVESTING IN ONE OF THE
ABOVE PROPERTIES OUR
SALES STAFF IS ALIVE,
DROP IN AND SEE 1ST
HAND
SMALL FARMS NEEDED

3 YEAR OLD horse tor sale or
trade for good used Camper
Top Phone 7A2 38.42
2 .4 6tc
- -~- - --- - --

WIN AT BRIDGE

Standard bidders found clubs
NORTH
• K83

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

STIREO
92.1 FM
WMPO

.

· - .Micklleport-Pomeroy ..

tour diamonds

5

TODAY'S QUESTION
He contmues to five d1amond
What do you do now?

' K 10 7 s

+A
ofoQ9843

~

...

.. .. ;o..» ....

Generation Rap

@

By Helen and Sue Butte!
Women Don't Have

In 1904, Russia and Japan MERRrrr REJECTS BID
By United Press lnleroallonal broke off diplomatlc relations
NASHVn.LE, Tenn (UPI)
Today 1s Tuesday, Feb 5, the m a dispute over Korea and - Tennessee State football
36th day of 1974 w1th 329 to Manchurta
Coach John Merrllt has
follow
In 1969, the Federal Corn· rejected a b1d to become head
The moon 1s approachmg 1ts mun1cations Commission made coach of the new Wnrlrl
full phase
a start toward banmng the
The mormng slar IS Venus
advertismg of cigarettes on
The evemng slars are Mer- rad1o and televiSion It went
by THOMAS JOSEPH
cury, Mars Juptler and Saturn mto effect Jan 2, 1971
Those born on th1s date are
In 1971, astronauts Alan
ACROSS
40. Placid
41. How
under the s1gn of Aquar~us
Shepard and Edward Mltchell 1 Inver
ness,
e
g
soon'
Amencan evangeliSt Dwight of Apollo 14 walked on the 5 Part of
DOWN
Moody was born Feb 5, 1838
moon for four hours
SWAK
1. Hunter's
.(l.
On th1s day In history
11 Astrm
quarters
gent subZ Onones
A though! for the day
In 1631, Br~t1sh clergyman
stance
toes
Roger W1lhams arr1ved m American h1stor1an Henry
12 'Scar
3 Send up a
Salem Mass seekmg rellgwus Brooks Adams sald, ' He too
face
lnal bal
freedom He founded the colony serves a certain purpose who 13 App&lt;&gt;r
loon (4
lion
wds)
of Rhode Island
only slands and cheers "
14. Zoroas
4 Scolhsh
tr1an
uncle
btble
5 Bearmg
15 Golhn·
marks of
case when your brother can prove non-parenthood w1th a doc·
structor
wounds
16 Pr10r to
tor s statement - now'? - SUE
6 Roof fea
(pref )
ture
+++
17,
Moslem
7
IIDIIale
Dear G E
Easter
8. Get rusty
'Showmg someone up" publicly ISn't all that llllporlant - or 18. English
(3 wds.)
all that much fun The gtrl needs help, not ndicule and your
royal
9 Under
family
lake (2
brother doesn t need a court case to advertise his ster1lity Glad
wds)
members
your parents realiZe this - HELEN
20. Mesabi
10 Cul-de
+++
depostt
sac (2
ThiS IS to ' Kook" the 13-year-old square, ' who wondered if 21 Bnti8h
wds)
t:onserva
gll'ls like boys who talk d1rty, as hiS fr1end seems to 11npress girls
live
w1th h1s cool" talk
22 Presently
When 1 was 13, 'talkmg dirty" was the only way a kld could 23 Loesser
show he or she was cool At 15, we were dating,and girls couldn't
or Love
JOin at dll'tY·Joke-tllne any more or they'd be labeled sluts Boys
JOY
S1IIllTiered down aroiUld age 16 because they realized girls were 25. Exhaust
26. Took off
attracted more to personality than tough, show-off talk
27 Bndge
Now I'm a htgh school semor and the cll'cle IS complete In
term
our 00-&lt;ld diScussion at get-togethers, we are talklng sex again, 28 MeXIcan
tree
but wtth a new twiSt We can openly diSCuss sex wlth each other
29 Italian
w1thout blushing, g1ggllng or maklng ourselves targets for
City
hum1bation Though the topics are the same, lt's great to realize 31 You
we are no looger 'talking dirty ' - CRICKET
(Ger)
32 Wurttcm
berg
measure
~t1J1~)1)J:@ 11uJ 4D•nc&amp;loJ .-1 , The~lmanac

Football League Detroil
Wheels, reportedly bec8118e )he
coachmg job would be separate
from tbe general managership
of the team, a neW8pllper
reported

~~IM~tu(

Muscle Here

Rap
Too bad the g1rl "ho \\anted her schoo l to get behmd a g1rls'
basketball and football team doesn t hve 111 the mid\\ est We
aren t mto high school football yet here m Iowa but our
basketball games drew btgger crowds than the boys, and our
mter-&lt;&gt;tate championship games are something else
But w1th all the Interest g1rls are sill! far behmd m athlehc
scholarships The reason, l guess 1s that college sports are
mamly for men
I'd like to get an athletic scholarship as that's about the onlv
way I'll get through college I excel m sports but I m not an A
student
I m told the chances are shm Can you offer any hope? BASKETBALL STAR and HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR
Dear Star
And I'm told that many scholarsh ips go beggmg each year
for want of students to apply for them Your h1gh school coun·
selor has lists of avrulable scholarships, and wh1le not many are
stnctly for g1rl athletes, I'm pretty sure he (or she ) could fmd
several colleges mterested m enrollmg a girl who excels
whether It's m sports or science - SUE

++

Dear Star
A recent magazme article reports there are probably less
than 50 American women holdmg athletic scholarships as
compared to 50 000 men who wm them each year
But the picture could change radically by next ) ear what
w1th more and more compet111' e sports opemng up to women If
you make a name for yourself m rrudwest g1rls basketball, I
don t think you'll be overlooked when the 1975 scholarships a1 e
banded out Good luck' - HELEN

++ +
Dear Helen and Sue
A gll'l was crazy about my brother, but he never gave her a
tumble She spent a lot of time at our house as she knew my
s1ster But she kept telling everyone my brolher wanted her here
He already has a steady
When she fmally reahzed she couldn I get h11n, she dec1ded to
'get" him So now she's blanung her pregnancy on my brother'
Says she'll make a btg lot of trouble, and her parents are
threatenmg to take h11n to court
What she doesn't know 1s that he bad an operation and can't
have children Shall we let them take h1m to court and then show
1er up by presentmg proof from the doctor' 1t would make the
parents see how lowdown thell' daughter IS, and maybe teach her
not to play tricks on people My parents say 'No - tell them
fll'st,' but I m all for - GETIING EVEN
Dear G E
I'm w1th your parents Why go through the hassle of a court
6 00 -

News J 4 8 10 15 ABC New s 13 Sesame St
sonallty &amp; BehiWiora! Deve lopment 33
Truth
sequences 6
\
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Room '12213
7 00 - News 10 6 What s My Lme 8 Tr ulh or Conseq
the Clock d Elec Co 20 Know Your Schools 33

20 Per
or Con
3 Beat
J1mmy

Dean 13 I Spy 15
J() - To Tell the Trulh 6 Sale ol the Cenlury 8 The Judge 10

Beat the Clock 13 Po!1ce Surgeon 3 On th e Money 4 An
t1ques 20 Ep1sode Act 1o n 33 TBA 15
8 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher ll 10 B1ll Moyers Journal2:&gt; Chase 3 4
15 Washmgton Connecfton 33 The Cowboys 6 13
8 30 Theater In Amenca 33 Mov e Cr y Panlc 6 13
Powers of the Pres1dency 20
9 00 - CannonS 10 Mov te Sam Wh1skey 3 .4 15
10 00 - Ko1ak 8 10 Doc ElliOt 6 13 News 20
II 00 - News 3 t1 6 8 10 13 15 Day a t Ntght 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 d 15 Great Folk Rev1val6 13 Mov1e
The Asphalt Jungle 8 A Tou ch of L.;~r ceny 10 Janakt33
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News J3
200-News4

fHNill

h y

An~w~r

tion

22 Church

section

23 Poker

hands

24- Assuage

25 Bombay
belle s
atlire

ISII')I SUffi~

37 'Mar·

JOne-'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Is

KJ

AND He$ OUIOF
iHE i&lt;:lJNNINC&gt; 1
arran1e the clrded lette111
to form the 1urpri~e an.awer, as
sucres ted by the above cartoon

Now

FINAL

HIATUS

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter limply stands for another In lhiB sample A Is
uud for tbe three L's, X for the two D's etc Smgle letters,
apostrophea, the lenl(b and fonnation of the word• are aU
hlnla Each day the code letters are d1fferent
CRYPTOQUOTES
VN KSAX NGXUXJM IGBXOUVNNB EU

A t.I'T'Tt.E INJUFCY-

(Aal•~n

\

a hope

chest
30 Emulate
WJ
Bryan
34. Elhruc
group
36 Chern·

admom

City
37 Twofold
SB. Balanced
39. Recorded
r::eed

I ""O:..a:s' I a I I JA''rX X XI lIT"
v~~h·rd•y.

tomorro•'

BOTTLE

If here lim chap 111 lnml
oftua g()(;ll - ON LIPS

QXOVSEGJR EKWNUUECJX HEVZNIV
MSO OXSQZEGF QNKWOXZXGUENG Nl
VZX NVZXO U UVSGBWNEGV - Q
F
DIGF
Yesterday's Cryploquoto· WE DO NOT QUITE FORGIV!:
A GIVER THE HAND THAT FEEDS US IS IN SOME
DANGER OF BEING BI'I'I'EN -RALPH WALDO EMERSON
(@ 197-4 H!1nlll' li'eatul"f.!w Syndicate Jn,. '

• Q J 109

• 7 6 54

'83
+J98 53

'Q962
K Q 102

TI-l£ ~i(f0!151JIU..E.

ON

ofoA7

ofoJ

IT &amp;l.QH65 TO

WI-IDS£ TR~GIC OEATH T~UGHT SO

+

CfUS'

OUR~ PE:.RFni1V.A~E

COI.JLt::l

Wf:. CIU.. Pl=?llY ll !Y()ME.HT FOR ALF E
~

VES,GRANOMA,T~.A:

OC&lt;:UI'ANT OF
OUR HOUSE IS THAT
AWFUL SKULL:
SAYS MISS RINI&lt;~ES .

et/T eEfC;QE Wf:. Rai6E. 'Tl-1£ WRTlllti

151'1 T JIJSi .Q!8

SOUTH IDI

TO -x&gt;~a US'

SICUU. STARTED AI.L
THE TROUBLE.

• A2

'AJ4

• 764

ofoK10652
North South vulnerable
We!iiit

North

East

South

Pass

1•

Pass

t•

Pass

Pass
Pass

4•

6...

Pass

Pass

••2•

Pass

Opemng lead- • Q

CAP1 AIN EASY
YOU Ar.lP

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

YOU~

The reason club systems
are too d1ff1cult for ordmary
players hes m the problem of
what to do when your su1t IS
clubs Of course you can open
two clubs to show a normal
one club openmg, but expen
ence has shown that this 1s
madv1sable when your hand
IS of mm1mum type
Believe 11 or not we
watched a pa1r of expert club
bidders pass th1s hand out m
a duphcate game Another
pa•r dtd even worse South
passed North opened one
heart Eventually, he played
at four hearts and managed
to find a way to get set after
East opened the kmg of d1a ·
monds
Stanrlaro b1dder&lt; all
wouna up m clubs Some
stopped at a part score,
others b1d to game Barry
Crane of Los Angeles the
number one man on the
master pomt hst reached s1x
clubs playmg w1th Dr John
F1sher of Dallas
The slam depended on
locating the queen of hearts
' As you can see Barry could
fmesse for 11 e1ther way Ex
perts expect to handle a twoway fmesse correctly most of
the t1me and Barry IS one of
the best m th1s department
He could not be certam,
but he d1d fmd out that East
was long 1n hearts Hence he
was more likely to hold the
queen Barry finessed sue
cessfully agamst h1m and
made the slam
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

Pass

t+

Pass

I.

Pass

3•

Pass

3•

Pass

44

Pass

"

The b1ddmg has been
West
North Easl

You South hold

FOR:EICIN A&amp;ENTS

NOW '10 l) Yf 6 0T ME: POir.J(!:I I'T
T ~T ~ME

'

HIUI'

dressing
29. Item
for

whole

b
[X) I I
Jumhl~:• l POUND

~

or
bacon
19 Word
of

3$ Montana

I VUREC

VOU'ES±

16 Ham

33 Killer

A ri NII I I) "" ' l\011 l F f

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words

IROTTAHI
[J

Yelllerday's Answe'

EAST

WEST

INFORMATION ABOUT:
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

..

~

7

Trails West 15 Hogans Heroes 13
Earl N1ght 1ngale 15

5 ;c:; -

SEWING MACHINES Repair
servtce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Autl'10nzed Smger Sales and
Servtce We Sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc

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

..

00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love

Amencan Sty l e 13 Speedracer 6 Lucy Show 8
Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Gil l igan sIs l3 6 HazelS
Jackpot• .4
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Griffin -4 Andy
Gnfftth B Bonanza 15 M1ss1on lmposs1ble 6 Gomer Pyle

AUTOMOB ILE Insurance been
cancelled'
Lost
your
opera tor s l 1cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

DILES Hear•ng Ad Center
Athens s.ervtces all makes
Hearmg
te s ts.
by
ap
po•ntment
Rental
plan
avallabte Phone 592 6238

..%.."-: ~ »

Pn ce Is

4 30 -

SEPT IC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern Santtat1 on 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

FOR electncal plumbing and
remodelmg work Call 843
2341 for FREE ESTIMATES
1 11 26tc

L1fe6 13

One Ltfe to L1ve 6 13 Ph 1l Donahue 4 fllatch Game 8
How To Surv1ve A Marnage 3 15 Washington Stratght

10

*--~

Talk 30

SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Galllpol•s John Russel l
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

WILL tr•m or cut trees and
shrubbery
Also clean out
basements a tt1cs etc Ca ll
949 3221 or 7A2 4441
2 2 26tc

G~rl~nMy

Another World 3 4 15 Genera l Hosp1tal 6, t3

Rrghl 18 RFD 20

your
Fr ee
3284
Co

FOR your new home or com
plete remodeling Contact
Greg Roush
Roush Con
struct on Phone 992 5039
2 3 ltc

Dick Van

8 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Capt Kangaroo 8 10

CONCRETE

30 tfc

Farm t1 me 10 Mom1ng Report 3
Today 3 4 15 CBS N ews 8 10 P1xanne 6

3 00 -

:::::.~».:!t..~

-j

Dyke 13

10 4 tfc

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 ,

Mov1es

Story 13
6 35 - Columbus Today 4

DOZER work land clearmg by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds road5 etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years expenence Pullins
Excavating Pomeroy Oh10
Phone 992 2478
1219 tfc
delt\lered right to
pro1ect Fast and easy
es timat es Phone 992
Goegle n Ready M1x
M iddleport Oh10
6

Can

WEIJNt.~UAY FEB 6 1974
Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Urban League 10 Folk Ltteralure 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Ha rvey 13
6 30 - F1ve M1nutes to L ve By 4 N ews 6 B1ble An!iwers 8 The

RIDERS AUTO SA LVAGING
We Buy Scrap Metals and
P1 ckup Auto Bod•eS From
State Route 124
Route 4
Pomeroy Oh o
2 5 5tp

READY MIX

Mov 1e

6 00 -

SEPT IC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SA NITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035

CLELAN

POMEROY -

Hawa1 1 F1ve 0 8 10
Evenmg at Pops 33 Hall of Fame 3 4 IS

9 00 -

0

All work guaranteed

115 ACRES -

Happy Days 6 13 Movoe 20

8 30 -

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 1315 Janakl 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Chant of S1lence 6 13
The Badlanders 8
Rhapsody 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 .4 News 13
2 on - News 4

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

--..,

Johnny Manns Stand Up and Cheer 4 N ew Pnce I s R1ght B
10 Bea t The Clock 13 Lass1e 15 Read1ng For the Classroom
Teacher 33
8 00 - Maude 8 10 Bil l Moyers Journal 33 Adam 12 3 4 15

10 30 - Day al Noght 33

Area's. Most
Reasonable Prtces.

----

7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 RFD 20 Hollywood Squares 3

9 30 - H awkms 8 10
10 00 - Marcu s We ! by MD 6 13 News 20 NB C News Report 3
4 15 Washmgton Stra •ghl Ta l k 33

FURNITURE

- -

a

Painting A Specialty

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

PHONE 992-2156

A route m•ght be open
m your neighborhood
lo fmd out

OFFICE SUPPLIES

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

1974

6 00 - News 3 -4 8 IV ... Sesame Street 20 A~C New s. 13
Truth or Consequences. 6 L1l as Yoga and You 33
o 30 - NBC News 3 4 IS ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 y
Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
our
7 00 - M a rco Sporll•te 33 Beat The Clock 4 News 10 6
Electric Co 20 Truth or Consequences 3 What s. My Lme
Oustry s Tra 1113 H1gh School TV Honor Soc 1ety 15

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

Lincoln H1ll Pomeroy

and

SYRACUSE

For years, The Sen
tmel ha s helped young
peop le develop the
attnbutes and talents
wh1ch spell success 1n
adu lt life

992 2094
Pomeroy
606 E Mam

.

S

Ellen Be Saved? 6 13 TBA 33

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

PAPER CARRIER
WANTED IN

earners

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Matn Pomeroy 0

Pomeroy

Ph 991 2174

WANTED

Th1s could be your
go lden opportunity to
learn
bus1ness
methods sa ve money
for clothmg or college.
wm pnzes These and
many other benef1ts
are
available
to
deserv1ng
Sent1nel

P001eroy Home &amp; Auto

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Help Wanted

DELIVER
The
Daily
Sentinel

- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

FEB

T•I&lt;~DAY

water Lines and Power
L1nes All work done by the
toot or contract Also dozer
work and septiC tanks m
stalled

On Most Amencan Cars.

c~Cira

3 MONTH old beagle Whtle
browl'l"l'-and ba ck Has choker
cham and fl ea co llar we1ghs CONCORD Travel fra iler n• c e
tor co uple Call 992 7479
17 tb s Phone 992 2883
2 5 Jtc
1 31 lfc

Not1ce

TR AILER
Browns Trader
Park M nersv• l e Phone 992
)]14
I '17 lfc
1

Wanted To Buy

lost

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

P hor c 17 3

r-

Television Log

DITCHING SERVICE

EXPERT

2 5 tf c

I n• sh blk v 1nyl top good w w t r es st and1 rd V 8 e ng•n e

1968 CHEVROLET BELAIR

!

l

~91~

\2495

,-.utomoil c power stee nng &amp; brake s rad 1o spoll ess cl eetn
1nter or W1nt o o; hnrp cnr ell f hl pn ce o l ~ ve rage ca r ?

, Jl (
Pi t r lr

• - The Daily Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 5 1Q74

Jl I DON'T KNCJ.N
AOCUT THE flE&amp;T
OF YOU 61R.I.S

Soulb
1•

8liT I c;tJN T TRU5-T THE
OAL..IGHTEil I OQtoJT LIK E

IDEA OF I-IER 1/\0RKING IN
OUR DEPARTMENT I

~POR T

I~ nll&gt;or Ck'£,
'100'1.-t- FltJD IT

WENDY I WANT m TELL
HAr HAP PE\I ~"D TO
ME WHEN I J OINED _ /-"VI

YO U~~

I~ TI1E'

BONNA'Z

HIP

FIXI&lt;ET UleRE
M'I~H
~D'be£1

AILEY OOP
HESUPW15=
HIS FELLI\

JNc.JUI--JS,
DANCII-J TH

DEATH

DANCE-

('}JLP '- 'I&lt;Ohl DERWHICH LI'L IN&lt;JUN

1-&amp;GONt-.lA.

DIE'~

JUDGihl' FUM
TI---\AR HI6H5PIR1T5
IT '-NOt-J T er=.. ONE

THEM!!~_,.-~

" ''"~~t'

.I.r

'
5

WEIRD L001&lt;1N 6 H0fi\8RE-

WAS AT 'TH E A

COME ON'
LET G WAl K. A
COLIPLf OP BLOCK?
AND SEE IF 1-fEFOI.LOI'V, 1..1~ '

.
THE Ot.: ALMANAC
WUZ RIGHT!!
IT $AID THAR WUZ
A OUTSIDE CHANCE
OF RAIN
TODAV

BUT IT NEVER SAID
NOTHIN' ABOUT NO
INSIDE CHANCE

I

WA&gt;~T

RECEIVED

1l:1 KNOW WH~ I
S~C&gt;I A iER.I'Ie&lt;..E

6RAOE ON
~

&lt;1&lt;

PAPER

• A K 7 6 • A K 7 6 t 2. K 10 4
3
What do you do now?
A-Bid rour diamonda.

U your
-- partner is showing elub suppor&amp;
youdon'C want to be Ina slam 1r
he is shOWing the c[ub ICe ttr
wlh make a strong bid over your

-

�• I

,_ ,.~,,,~•..., """'"'"Se~fi~el

BOYS

~----

Classifieds Get R es'ults!l- -B-tt-s·m
-. _e_s_s_S---,.'-e-r·--v-ic_e_s_']

In Memory

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

IN MEMO R Y Of LM tH S (OJCI O
wt o pass ed "Wi'ly H y pnr &lt;; 1 10
F eb S 19t&gt;~
H s s n 1 nq wC'Iy
f a ce

~ nd

pt e 1s ct

t

Are a plea sur e to r ecal l
He had a ktndly word for each
And dt ed beloved by all

Som e day w e

r~ ope

to m e ellltm

So n e day we k lOW n ot when
To c a sp h s ha nd r1 HH• belter
lil nd

Neve r to pi!rl aqa n
5 o dl y
Ch ldrc n

ss ed by
and lr end s
1

w te

2 5 lie
IN LO \otN C. l H' l Or y of J .Jtl
E Sn dt r who p asse d away 2
y e ar s il 9 0 F e bruary 5 1971

Tw o year s have passed s m ce

GIRLS

you v e been gone
And we 11 ss you sr II as t me

1011

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

CHEVROLET BELAIR

IU

11

lA

\U IRAI L Eh:' ,
Va
un t urn &lt;,h d

h l al

pl! a

!ilwn

HEDROOM mob1 le home a ll
elec l r •c ~1fl0depo s ll \130 per
month plu s ut I t•cs L ocated
on Rou t e J3 Pomero y Phone
(61116 752 2-16

1

1 door l ac~ I 1 owner eM .,.,11t h tess lhiln 15 000 miles be 1g e

S895

&lt;1 Door VB eng me a utomat c t ran s
pow er st ecr• ng
I Ctclory .=11r rad 10 good t.res cl ean nter or blue lin sh

52895
dr v e 350 V 8 eng m e locktng frt hubs automc. l• c
tran s power s teenng &amp; brake s rC1d1o velu c le ot milny
use s c ustom l r tm sharp 1 owner

1971CHEVROLETBLAZER

.t wh

1 5 &lt;t i p

TRAILER I b edroom n ce for
coup l to Phone 997 7479
2 5 tt c
TR A I LER sp ace for ren t n
Rac1ne Cal l 992 283 8 or 992
24'19
'l J Jtc
197JMOB IL E hom e Jbedroom
bath
and
washer and
dryer. Cn ll 99? J S09
2 3 JIC

QO CS 01

5adly m S!&gt;ed

by

S s and

g r andch ldren
Barbara
P a uldt e
Nancy
Randy
T ammy and J mm e
'l 5 tc

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY, OHIO

IN L O V IN G Memory o f Jane
E ll labeth Sn der who passed
away 'l y ear s ago F eb s
19 !1
In a graves de softly sl eep ng
Wher e th e flowers gentl y wave
L es fh(' mother we oved so
dear y
But whom we cou d not save
We d dn 1 k.now the pam
had

she

Or hear he r f•nal s gh
We only know she passed away
W•thout a la st goodbye

11
OR OLDER
BE A
PAPER
CARRIER.

Deep n the heart I es a P•Cfure
Of a loved one Ia d to rest
In memory s fr ame we shall
keep ''
Because slle was one of the bes t
Sad l y m sse d by cl'111d r en
grandcll ldren and g reat
grandc h ldren
~ 5 lip

LO ST
K eys n bla c k key case
"c nlly Ro l l n s and Jrd
St r eet New Hav en App rOlt 3
keys Ca ll 882 2259
21c

BEDROOM hou!ie t ra le r
n ce yard L ocated n
SlladeAva tabl e
•m
med a t el y
Phon e 69t 1'1 83
'} 1 61p

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to th e
sma ll e st Heater Core
Nalhan B1ggs
Rad1ato.- Spec1ahst

Open 8 Til S

WOOD TRUSSES

tpl~
Built to Your Specs.
Dcltvered to Job S1te

NO 1 copper 65c r ad ators
J2c red brass J5c batlenes
Sl 20 M A Hall Reedsv 1e
Oh•o Phone J78 6'149
1 27 ti c

For Rent or Sale

Employment Wanted

L ARG E unfurniShed Jrd floor
apt for r ent m downtown
Pomeroy 6 rooms &lt;1nd bath
Ca l 992 2789
1 17 li e
SL EEPIN G room over wm e
store n Pomeroy Reference
requ•red Ca ll 992 5293
1 10 tf c

Auto Sales

1972 NOVA 4 door automa t1 c
EXPERIENCED pa nter
n
smoll V 8 fa ctory a 1r co n
ter or and exter1or Call Don
d•t on.ng 24 000 ac tua l m des
Van Meter Phone 98 5 39 5 l
Phone 992 7084
2 J l ip
2 3 261p

MATERIALS CO
773 5554

Ma son W Va

EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works E
Matn St Pom eroy All k•nds
of salt water pellets water
nugg ets block sal t and own
Oh 10 R1ver Sa lt Phon e 992
3891
6 5 tf t

STEREO RADIO am fm
8
track tape combm at on 4 way
spea ker
sound
system
Ba l ance $10 2 66 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
1 11 tfc

NCOME TalC. :-:.erviCf' 9 am to
5 p m Dally except Sunday
even1ngs bY appo ntment
only Co Rd 22 off Rt 7
44 2
OLDSMOBILE
bypass Phone Wanda Eb lm INTERIOR
and
exter o r 19 70
automatiC w 31l Good con
992 2272
pa 1nf1ng by hour or contra ct
FORO rear mounted mow er
LOST
n Middleport near
d•t on Phone 992 7519
1 2 JOtc
20 year s ex per enc:e Ca ll Ca r l
Se nes SOl bought new la st
2
3
6tc
Thompsons trailer cour t
Nelson 992 5083
year extra SiCkl e never used
S amese ca t be ge body dark
1 30 6tp
$500
7 month old He•fer calf
pomts reward Call 992 3372
FREE llome demonstrat ons of
1966 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass f or
Here for d Holsl.e•n m1xed
Fra n c 's Bearhs or K•m Neal
the Compact not a vacuum LIGHT haultng Call 99'1 37 16
sale 8 cy l nder power brakes
$175 1 man sa wm1ll w1th Allis
clea ner but a new tdea 1n a
and
power
st ee r•ng
2 1 6tc
1 31 8tp
Cha lmers power untt good
home care appl1ance 25 yr
automat•c tran sm ss wn Wd
co nd lion $275 2 row corn
MALE cat black w •th while
guarantee Ca l l 4.46 0447 for WILL babySit n my home by
sell reasonable Phone 99 2
p lan t er
John Deere 290
stomach between Bashan &amp;
appt
i31l6
hour day or week Non gilts
needs new boxes S75 Call
I 30 61p
1
I 4t C
Rae ne area on County Road
Pnone 992 71 02
a fter 5 p m 843 2064
213 had on bl ack flea collar 1
1 30 6tc
2 J 3tc
year old Phone 949 4609
1969 FORD piCkUP Explorer
WILL do tree 1r •mm1ng work
'l I 6tc
Phone 997. 3640
and Will sell f1r ewoo d Pllone
1 27 12tc G R OC ER Y bus .ness for sale
949 3910 or 949 3918
Butldmg for sale or lease
------A c H tl D s pet dog answers to
2 1 6tc
Phone 773 5618 from B 30 p m
Brown
the name of Cmdy
1968 CHEVROLET Mal1bv
to 10 p m for appo ntment
and tan sma ll fema le Pa rt GRADUAT ION Present" 16
automat c 307 l=a•r cond1t on
3 20 tfc
beagl e and part bassett Lost
days 1n Europe (Rome Par•s
$?SO Ca ll 992 7637
m lie oul of Chester Phon e
London
Sw tz e rland
1 27 12t c SIN GER sew ng mach nes 1972
985 3356
Naples )
June 24 July 9
-model '" beaut•ful walnut
2 4 5tc
Teachers as chaperones $750
1970 DODGE Co ronet
a •r
cabmet Make s des1gn st t
Deadline Mar ch I
John
cond 1t oned and new fir es
c hes ztg zag
buttonholes
IN THE COURT OF
Ba ley 985 4246
Call 949 5381
bl.nd hems etc Like new
COMMON PLEAS
'} 1 4tp
2 5 Jtc
On ly Sl39 95 Call Ravenswood
PROBATE DIVISION
' - ---273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
1965
VALIANT
P
lymou
th
good
WILL GIVE away lumber for
12 7 tfc
J B 0 BRIEN admr of
cond• t on
Contact Roland
comp l ete removal of a larg e
the estate of Verna Dav1s
Sea rles at Rutland Furntture AM FM rad 10 stereo 8 trJck
budd•ng Phone 985 3831
Deceased
or Patty Sea r les at Blue &amp;
2 3 3tp
tape co mb•nat•on 4 spea ke r
PLAINTIFF
Grey
sound
system
Ba l ance
vs
2
5
5tp
THELMA WOOLR lOGE el at FAB RI C SALE large select•on
$101 52 or terms ava I able
polyester double kn ts tn
DEFENDANTS
Phone 992 396 5
coordmated colors S2 79 and
1 28 tfc
No 21 065
up Carol •na Fabncs Route 7
one half m lie nortll of Chester
PAINT DAMAGE 19 74 Z1g Za g
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
AKC Toy Poodle Pupp es
Oh 1o
Henry and Mary
BY PUBLICATION
SEW IN G MACH IN ES St tl l n
$7500 Samese K t1en s SIS
Hun•er owners 9 am t II 7 BABYSITTER wanted •n my
To
HOW ARD
BICKLE
or1gma l ca rto ns
No at
Phone
1
256
6247
home
must
have
own
trans
m
Feb
4lll
througn
Feb
p
whose known address 1S '1518
t achment s needed as our
I
10
20tc
91h
pori at on s or 6 days a week
W nona Ave nue F l or da whose
co ntrols are b u II •n Sews
2 3 6tp
Phone 992 2550 or 742 6551
exac t addr ess 1S unknown and
w th
or 2 needl es rnakes
I 30 tiC POODL E groom ng ~5 Black
can no t
wtlh
reasonable
buttonholes sew on buttons
A K c toy st ud se rv .ces SSO
d1llgence be ascerta ned
monograms and bl1'1d h em
GRILL cook car hop and k1t
Ca ll Coo l v lie 667 3915
To The unknown he1rs and
Sf1tch Fu I cash pn ce $38 50
TRAIN WITH
chen help wanted Apply m
'J 5 St c
dev sees of Howard B ck e f
or budget pan ava 1lab l e
FULL
PAY
person Crow s Steak Hou se
deceased
Pt10ne 99 '1 2984
1 27 tfc
open1ngs
for
To Mrs ELMER MOLDEN Imm ediate
1 28 tf c
whose address IS unknown and spec 1a l tram ng m Mechan•cal
DIRECT
Sa
leS
DtStr
butors
Av 1at 1on and
VACUUM Cleaners new 197A
cannot
w.th
reasonabl e ElectroniCS
wanted tor v t am •ns and HANDMAD E quIt Ca l l 992
Cler•ca l f 1elds •n tile U S Navy
d •ltgence be as certamed
Model
Comp lete W1th all
organ 1c products Part or full
To The unknown lle•rs and Pay starts at SJ26 per mon th
c lean ng tools Sm all pa1nl
7252
lime For ntenn ew
wr te
dev•sees of Mrs Elmer Molden from f 1r s t day - We furn1sh
2 I 3t c
damage m sh 1ppmg Will take
Mary Eng l e R R 1 Box 19
quar ters food and clothi ng
1f deceased
$27 cash or budget plan
Un
1
0n
Oh
•O
45322
Sc hool guarantees before you
To
WYNONA
BICKLE
ava l ab e Phone 99 2 2984
1940 CHRYSLER
19A6 Ford
I
16
16tp
whose address 1s unknown and s1gn up
1 28 lf c
Tra c tor w1 t1'1 equ•pment and
BE SOMEONE SPECIAL
ca nno t
w.th
reasonable
attachments 1973 Hoover
IN THE NEW NAVY
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIG S
di11gence be ascerta ned
D•al a mal c Power Dnve SINGER Automat c Z1g Zag
We have the product on lland
To The unknown he1rs and For mor e nfo call or VIS t your
Sew ng Mach nes m se w•ng
Phone 985 4132
and we del •\ler to you per
dev •sees of Wynona B1ck l e 1f Nav yman at
2 1 Me
table Makes buttonholes
221 Columbus Road
sonally Hel en Jane Brown
deceased
sews on buttons bl nd hems
Athens 0 45701
992 5113
To
NE TT IE
MOLDEN
etc Top notch cond1t10n Pay
vernon E Harnson
1230tfc YOU NG STOWN k tc hen S1nk
wllose addre ss 1s unknown and
S51 or terms available Phone
w1th faucets S50 gas range
Telephone 614 593 3566
\"nth
reasonable
c annot
997 1984
$40
r
efr
1gerator
S40
All
n
To ll Free BOO 282 1268
NEED woman to 1 ve 1n and
d1l1gence be ascerlamed
1 28 tfc
good cond1110n See at 256 So
take mothers place of 'l
To The unknown hers and
Fourth Ave M1ddleporl
dev•sees of Nett e Molden tf
children m a new respectable
2 2 ffc
home You may also have 1
de cease d
SHOP THE
To MARY LATHEY wllose
c hild of your own Phone 992
8 FIRST CALF Holstem he1fer s
2536
address 1s unknown and cannot FURNISHED mob lehOme Will
RUTLAND
Will se ll one or all Phone 949
w•th r easonable d•l•gence be
1 8 tfc
cons 1d er selling lot Ca l l 949
BARGAIN CENTER
3777
ascerta•ned
5381
1 31 6tc
To Tile unknown t1e1rs and
2 5 3tc
d ev •see s of Mary Lathey
1
10 HAMMER mil l l1ke new
deceased
1969 ELCONA 12 x 60 awnmgs
To ABNER BICKLE whose
a 1r cond•iloner utI ty shed
w •tt1 overhead
p1p e and
and
marr 1age 1S unknown and
attachment
1- - - - - - - - - - - ' \ baggmg
Wtll sell furn•shed or un
llammer m II be ll Ca ll 949
cannot
wdh
reasonable
turn 1slled
exce ll ent con
10 P1ece Walnut
dilig ence be ascertatned
'117 s
d1llon Call off 1ce 992 5130 or
2 1 3tp
To The unknown he1rs and
Dmmg Room SUite
home 7tH 4122
.- -- - - -dev sees of Abner B •ckle 1f
2 5 31c
deceased
SAL T FOR ICE A NL&gt; ~ \10\.
Kmg S1ze Bedroom
To The unknown he•rS and 12 X 60 TRAILER w th pull out
Rock salt for town shiPS
Su1te by Bassett
dev1sees of Verna Dav1s
towns
and
busmesses
n
set up m Pmegrove wtll
decea sed
bulks and bags tor ICe and
f1nance
D
R 1chardson
You are nereby notlfted th at
snow ExcelSIOr Salt Works
1&amp;2Piece
Ge n eral Dell\lery Mann W
you have been named defen
Phone 992 389 1
VIJ 25635 or phone (3041 5113
L1vmg Room Su1tes.
dants n a l egal action entitled
11 11 tfc
6507
J B 0 Bnen adm m.strator of
2 3 3t c
, Used Refngerators $25 up
the Es ta te of Verna Dav•s
BEAUTIFUL Walnut st ereo
pia nllff vs Thelma woolr1dge
1957 WESTWOOD mobile home
rad10 am fm
tape com
et al defendants Th1S act 10n
electr 1c furnace exce ll ent
blnatmn 8 track tape deck
has l;leen ass1gned case No
cond1t1on Phone 992 5867 or
I - Balance 5103 49
or terms
21 065 m the court of Common
742 4211
Rutland, 0
992 30(]5
a\lallable Call 992 3965
Pleas Probat e D v•s•on Me.gs
I 29 Sip
1 21 tfc
~e Herb
Dave or M1ke
County
Ohto
Address
I .- - - - - ------Grate
Pomeroy Ohto 45769
BEAUTIFUL walnut stereo
The ob 1ect of the Compla m t 1S
r ad1o tape comb•natlon AM
to sell the real estate of the
UPHOLSTERY fabr cs by the
f!" M rad10 8 track tape de ck
decedent Situated at Rt
1 OLD furn 1ture oak tables
yard 54 nches w de as low as
Balance
$114
56
or
terms
Rutland Olllo whiCh r eal estate
s1
95 per yard vel\le ts as lo w
c locks ce boxes brass beds
available Ca ll 992 3965
s descr bed as follows
d ts hes
or
complete
as il 45 Imported velvets
2 4 tfc
The followtng descnbed r ea l
S9 95 we also have nylon
households Wr.te M
D
estate s11uated m tile Townsh p
herculon
cotton
prtnts
M1ller Rt .4 Pomeroy Oh10
of Rutland Me1gs County Oil to
EAGLE go can W1th 4 horse
call 99'1 6271
tJmyls remnants by t he yard
n Sec t on 23 Town 6 Range 14
power motor Phone 949 2789
or by the p•ece Pomeroy
5 13 tfc
bounded and descr bed as
Apply m person
2 3 3tc
Recovery 622 E Man St
fo l lows
.
;
----Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
at
Beg nnmg 658 feet west of 1964 AND OLDER s lver coms
1• ACRE or acre lots for sale
1 29 26tc
Will
pay
22c
for
dtmes
55c
for
tile nortlleast corner of lands
Ctty water ava ilabl e tn
quarters
51
10
tor
halves
formerly owned by Abner
spr ng
L ocated on State FOAM t o 1111 your old couch and
S3 SO for dollars Please quote
B1ckle th ence south 526 feet to
Route 143 Phone 992 36.40
c:ha 1r cushtons as low as
the
k
nds
of
coms
you
lla\le
the run thence 1n a westerly
1 27 12tc
S10 95 Upholstery books only
and send repl1es to Jack1e
d1rect1on along the run w1th the
SOc .4 mch covered foam
Wamsley
Rt
4
Pataskala
meander.ngs of the same to the
mattresses tor standard S1ze
OlliO
west lm e of th e sa 1d Abner
ONE 2 year old black 7 e
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
2
3
6tc
BICkle land tt1ence north to the
Tenne s,see Walker tor sale
Recovery 622 E Mam Street
north I me of sa d land s t llence CASH --;;-;.dfo73il makeS and
Phone 992 3640
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
east 329 feel to the place ot
1 27 12tc
1 29 261C
models of mobile homes
begtnnmg
c onta•n•ng 5 96
Phone area code 614 423 9531
W
Second
St
1968
F
L
H
HARLEY
Dav1S
acres more or less 1t be 1ng the
4 13 ftc
motor cyc l e Phone 882 3205
FOR SAl..E Large level lot on
1ntenl on of fh• s deed to convey
Pomeroy, 0., 45769
2 5 6tc:
New L1ma Road Rutland All
the west one th 1rd of 17 87 acres
ultl1f1eS ava1lable Phone 742
formerly owned by Abner 1 HIVE of bees Call 992 7003
1 31 6tc
308 3
SEWING Mach nes Brand new
B ck le
An EQual Oppor tun1t y
Ztg Zag m n1ce walnut table
Deed Reference Volume 109
2 1 ttc
Employer
RIVERSIDE Auto Wrecktng
In or1g nal cartons
Never
page 168 Me1gs County Deed
w II pay ss for all 1unk cars
used
Clearance on 1973
Records
Pt1one 1304) 882 5244 or 773
models
(on ly
a
few FERTILIZER available now
Tile purpose of the sale s to
haulmg on regu l ar schedu le
5890
ava•lable
)
S63
40
casll
or
pay the debts and costs of ad
TELEVISION Talent to par
Clles t er
Agrtco
Se rv 1ce
1 27 26tc
terms avatlable Phone 992
m1n1stertng the estate of th e
t1c1pat e
•n
weekly
TV
Center 985 3831
decedent
298.4
program
No prev1ou s ex
2 5 lfc
2 3 3tp
You are requ.red to answer
per1ence necessary Back
the Complaint w•th 1n 28 days
ground 1n tnlerv•ewmg help
Vacuum
a lter the last publtcatton of lh1S
ful Sen10r CitiZEnS 1n v1ted tO ELECTROLUX
not ice wll1ch w II be published
Cleaners complete w1th at
apply Aud itions to be held
tachments cordwinder and
once each week for s•x con
RESPONSIBLE
Wed
Feb 6 at 6 p m '"
pamt spray Used but tn lll&lt;.e
secufl\le weeks
The l ast
WOU
8
TV
StudtOS
Athens
PERSON
publ ca t 1on w1ll be made on
new cond1t1on
Pay $34 45
Oh o 45701 TI'11S 1S a non
Wanted to own and operate
March 4 197A and the 28 days
cash or budg et plan ava1lable
paytng pos1t ton
candy &amp; confection vendmg
tor an swer wtll commence on
Phon e 992 2984
2 3 3t c
2 5 tiC
that date
route Me1gs County and
In case of your Ia lure to
(2 Good O.•os)
surroundmg area Pleasant
answer or otherw•se respond as
COAL FOR SA LE JAYMAR
bu
smess.
H1gh
prol1t
ttems
requ r eC by th e Oh o Rules of
1-S•de by S1de
$150
COAL
COMPANY
THE
Can start part lime Age or
C v I Procedu r e IUdgment by
MEIG S &amp; GALLIA LINE
1-2
Door
default will b r rende red aga1n st
eK pe nence not Important.
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
3 AND 4 ROOM furni Shed and
v 1 ' lor rf' ' 1 r1 emanded 1n the
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM
Requ1res
car
and
Sl,l95
to
unfurn
•she
d
apartments
umpla r
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
Phone 99 2 543A
SJ 750 cash 1nvestment For
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
4 12 tfc
deta1ls wnte and mclude
., 5 4tC
Jan et Morr.s
POMEROY LANDMARK
~ tcrk of th e Court of
your phone number
PRIVATE m eetmg room for
Common Pl eas
9 .. _ Jack W Carsey Mgr
M AY TAG gas dryer used \le ry
0(!p.u1ment BVV
any organ•zatton phone 992
Probalc D1 v 1s on
~ Phone 992 9932
1 ttl e Phone 99'J 5778
3938
Meadowbrook
Rd
3975
M ro ~ 5 COI.Jn l y Oh 1o
2 5 Jlp
I

Lost

rnE

DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.

Pets for Sale

For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

Special

Wanted

WANTED!

Used Furmture
Buys .. .

POSITIONS OPEN
IN NEW

Call
992-2156

FOOD STORE

•

Wanted To Buy

OR FILL OUT
AND MAIL

TiiE COUPON
BELOW
~;C-;;;:-A-;:;;;;;;E-;,;--

ITHE
DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST
I POMEROY, OHIO 45769

-l

I
I
I
I _ _ _ _ _ __
I
NAME
I
I
AGE

ADDRESS

All kinds of food
store employees cashiers,
carryouts,
stock
men, bakery help,
expenenced meat
cutter, etc

Powell's
Super Valu

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

Busmess Opportunities

- - ------ -

GOOD USED

REFRIGERATORS

For Rent

CITY

ZIP CODE
I
Ir____________ l

RuHand Furniture

,,

~

IJ19lflt1

51 LOUIS Park, MN 55426

~.._;::.:..::::.:.:..::..::..:::..::::.:=:.......J

3 11 tfc
- ------ --- -----

2

Gene's
Body Shop
Ph 992 5271

0 R 3 bedroom
home
basement alummum s1d 1ng
storm w ndows and doors
for ced a r furnace
fenced
yard Phone 99'1 3791
2 J 7tc

NEW 3 bedroom home l 11 bath
garage ba sement on Gravel
H1ll M1dd eport Natural gas
already 1n
Phone Dale
Dutton 992 3369 even1 ngs
992 2534
1 17 tf c
DESIRABLE two bedroom
nouse n M ddleport ready to
occupy Ca ll 992 5310
1 31 26tc

-

NEW 3 bedroom t1ome good
water 6 acres 3 ou tbuil dlnQS
and ce llar Off Me gs County
1 on Wil ham Sm 111 Road 3•12
m1les from Sa l em Center
1 27 261p
LARGE sol1 d 2 story older home
•n Tuppers P lams 8 rooms
and bath Fam lly room w1th
natura l f •r eplace K tchen
w•th gas range Carpet and
panellmg
wrap
around
porch
good garden area
storage shed ce l lar one acre
With large trees and shrub
bery Forced a1r furnace o•l
furnace or LP gas heat On l y
S16 500 Phone 949 3195
J /
2l6tp
SPAC IOU S b1 level and sp l tt
level homes are now under
co ns lruct1on on c tty wa t er
and sewer
Many de lu xe
features mcludmg a 1r c:on
d•t •on •ng
Best f1nanclng
availa ble Ott1er type llomes
m d fferent areas on F H
Adm f 1nanc1ng w1th no down
payment Call co l le-ct (837
6540) or wr.te to MEIGS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box
33 M ddlepor t Oh10 45760
1 9 tfc

NE I GLERS FOR BUILDING
HOU SES We II draw prml s
or
build
to
your
specd•cat•ons
Ne1gler s
Build ng Supply
Rac•ne
OhiO Cal l 949 3604
2 5 261c

-:;1-- ----------

CLINE S ConstructiOn
com
plete remodeltng new homes
1 acre lots. available Phone
742 6261
2 5 6tc
C BRADFORD Au ct oneer
Compl ete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821
Rae ne Ohto
Cntt Bradford
5 1 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sep t1 c
tanks tnstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re wrll haul
f1 ll d 1rt lop soli l1mes ton e
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n1ghl phone 992 3525 or 992
52 32
2 11 tfc

6 45 7 00 -

REALTY
Close lo

Rut l and
2 s tory house
Large barn
Co rn cnb

$1090000
'' ACRE GROUND - 1971
Mob1!e home 12x60 L1ke
new In new add t10n Will
se ll separate ly $6 500 00

Excellent

es tablished bustne ss wtth
rea l estate No phone m
lormal to n on thi S one please
1 apar tmen t over for ad
d1l1onal mcome

7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Rocky &amp; Bul lwtnk le 13
Jeffs Collte 6
Jack LaLanne l3
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6

8 25 -

8 55 - News 13

9 00 - Pau l D1xon 4 Fnendly Junct•on 10 AM 3 Abbot &amp;
Costello 8 Ph1 l Donahue 15 W ild Wdd West 6 Cover to
Cover J Mov1e Wake Me When It s Over 13

9 30 - Sec rei Slorm 8 To Tell the Truth 3
9 55 - Chuck Wh1le Reporl5 10

10 00 -

D 1nahShore J IS Joker sW 1Id8 10 Company6
10 30-$10 000 Pyramtd 8 10 Jeopard y 3 4 15
11 00 - Gamb1 l 8 10 Pas sword 13 Wtzard ol Odds 3 4 15 M tke

Douglas 6

11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of L1fe 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13

l1 55 - C BS News 8 Dan Ime! s World 10
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 News 8, 10 13
Jackpol' 3 15
12 30- Search tor Tomorrow B 10 Split Second 6 Baffle 3 15

12 45 - Elec Co 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
I 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Nof For Women Only IS
Concentration 8 Secret Storm 10
3 On a Match 3 4 15 As lhe World Turns 8 10 Lets
Make A Deal 6 13
2 00 - Days of Our t:1vesJ 4 15 Gu1dtng L 1gh t 8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13

1 30 -

2 30- 0octors3 4 15 EdgeoiN1ght8 10

SYRACUSE - Lovely 2 yr

3 30 -

old home 3 8 R (doubl e
cl osets) K1tchen has many
cabmets &amp; range
D lnmg
area Utd1ty R Oak floors
some carpeted All drapes
Carport Storage About 1/.4
acre $19 900 00

4

MANY PROPERTIES TO
CHOOSE FROM ANSWER
TO YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS CAN
BE
FOUND HERE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259

USMC 13
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Beverly Hrllblllles3 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

I I no answer 992 2568

TEAFORD
Vr 1tpl B T (·.JirHd :-;,
Brol&lt; .. ,
IIC Mec h ,lll t( )It r-•·1
r o m f' r o y , O hiO 1)76Q

BISSELL Construct•on room
add t1ons and remodeltng
Protessmnal floor sand ng
and fm 1sh ng old and new
Relerences ava1lable Phone
949 3833
1 25 26tc

-PRICE
------------CONSTRUCT ION

Roofing spoutmg
kitChens
and bathrooms Complete
remode lmg Phone 742 6273
12 3 tfc

----------

SMALL INVESTMENT - Wrll
buy lh1s nice 2 bedroom home
Has
bath
gas
furnace
basement and large lot Only
$6500 00

COUNTRY HOME -

1 29 12tp

New

modern 3 bedroom all electnc
h ome
Jlh baths. d1nmg 2
fam1ly rooms and double
garage In full basement Large
lot No down payment w1th
excellent credit S27 500 00

DOZER and back hoe- w;k
ponds and sep tic tanks d1t
ch mg serv~ee top soli fill
drrt
l 1mestone
B&amp;K Ex
ca\lat ng Phone 992 .5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

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

WILKINSON Small Eng1ne
Sales Repair on all small
eng•nes
chatn
saws
prec 1s on ground 399 W Mam
Street Phone 992 3092
1 17 26tc

For Sale or Trade

YOUR FUTURE - $500 00 a
month lr'l-ome 4 untt apart
ment bu1ldlng 1n M1ddleport on
good stree1 out of h1gh water
All
f urn rs hed
for
only

$35 000 00
IN THE COUNTRY -

One

acre of wt ld and wooly land

S1800 00
BUILD YOUR ESTATE BY
INVESTING IN ONE OF THE
ABOVE PROPERTIES OUR
SALES STAFF IS ALIVE,
DROP IN AND SEE 1ST
HAND
SMALL FARMS NEEDED

3 YEAR OLD horse tor sale or
trade for good used Camper
Top Phone 7A2 38.42
2 .4 6tc
- -~- - --- - --

WIN AT BRIDGE

Standard bidders found clubs
NORTH
• K83

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

STIREO
92.1 FM
WMPO

.

· - .Micklleport-Pomeroy ..

tour diamonds

5

TODAY'S QUESTION
He contmues to five d1amond
What do you do now?

' K 10 7 s

+A
ofoQ9843

~

...

.. .. ;o..» ....

Generation Rap

@

By Helen and Sue Butte!
Women Don't Have

In 1904, Russia and Japan MERRrrr REJECTS BID
By United Press lnleroallonal broke off diplomatlc relations
NASHVn.LE, Tenn (UPI)
Today 1s Tuesday, Feb 5, the m a dispute over Korea and - Tennessee State football
36th day of 1974 w1th 329 to Manchurta
Coach John Merrllt has
follow
In 1969, the Federal Corn· rejected a b1d to become head
The moon 1s approachmg 1ts mun1cations Commission made coach of the new Wnrlrl
full phase
a start toward banmng the
The mormng slar IS Venus
advertismg of cigarettes on
The evemng slars are Mer- rad1o and televiSion It went
by THOMAS JOSEPH
cury, Mars Juptler and Saturn mto effect Jan 2, 1971
Those born on th1s date are
In 1971, astronauts Alan
ACROSS
40. Placid
41. How
under the s1gn of Aquar~us
Shepard and Edward Mltchell 1 Inver
ness,
e
g
soon'
Amencan evangeliSt Dwight of Apollo 14 walked on the 5 Part of
DOWN
Moody was born Feb 5, 1838
moon for four hours
SWAK
1. Hunter's
.(l.
On th1s day In history
11 Astrm
quarters
gent subZ Onones
A though! for the day
In 1631, Br~t1sh clergyman
stance
toes
Roger W1lhams arr1ved m American h1stor1an Henry
12 'Scar
3 Send up a
Salem Mass seekmg rellgwus Brooks Adams sald, ' He too
face
lnal bal
freedom He founded the colony serves a certain purpose who 13 App&lt;&gt;r
loon (4
lion
wds)
of Rhode Island
only slands and cheers "
14. Zoroas
4 Scolhsh
tr1an
uncle
btble
5 Bearmg
15 Golhn·
marks of
case when your brother can prove non-parenthood w1th a doc·
structor
wounds
16 Pr10r to
tor s statement - now'? - SUE
6 Roof fea
(pref )
ture
+++
17,
Moslem
7
IIDIIale
Dear G E
Easter
8. Get rusty
'Showmg someone up" publicly ISn't all that llllporlant - or 18. English
(3 wds.)
all that much fun The gtrl needs help, not ndicule and your
royal
9 Under
family
lake (2
brother doesn t need a court case to advertise his ster1lity Glad
wds)
members
your parents realiZe this - HELEN
20. Mesabi
10 Cul-de
+++
depostt
sac (2
ThiS IS to ' Kook" the 13-year-old square, ' who wondered if 21 Bnti8h
wds)
t:onserva
gll'ls like boys who talk d1rty, as hiS fr1end seems to 11npress girls
live
w1th h1s cool" talk
22 Presently
When 1 was 13, 'talkmg dirty" was the only way a kld could 23 Loesser
show he or she was cool At 15, we were dating,and girls couldn't
or Love
JOin at dll'tY·Joke-tllne any more or they'd be labeled sluts Boys
JOY
S1IIllTiered down aroiUld age 16 because they realized girls were 25. Exhaust
26. Took off
attracted more to personality than tough, show-off talk
27 Bndge
Now I'm a htgh school semor and the cll'cle IS complete In
term
our 00-&lt;ld diScussion at get-togethers, we are talklng sex again, 28 MeXIcan
tree
but wtth a new twiSt We can openly diSCuss sex wlth each other
29 Italian
w1thout blushing, g1ggllng or maklng ourselves targets for
City
hum1bation Though the topics are the same, lt's great to realize 31 You
we are no looger 'talking dirty ' - CRICKET
(Ger)
32 Wurttcm
berg
measure
~t1J1~)1)J:@ 11uJ 4D•nc&amp;loJ .-1 , The~lmanac

Football League Detroil
Wheels, reportedly bec8118e )he
coachmg job would be separate
from tbe general managership
of the team, a neW8pllper
reported

~~IM~tu(

Muscle Here

Rap
Too bad the g1rl "ho \\anted her schoo l to get behmd a g1rls'
basketball and football team doesn t hve 111 the mid\\ est We
aren t mto high school football yet here m Iowa but our
basketball games drew btgger crowds than the boys, and our
mter-&lt;&gt;tate championship games are something else
But w1th all the Interest g1rls are sill! far behmd m athlehc
scholarships The reason, l guess 1s that college sports are
mamly for men
I'd like to get an athletic scholarship as that's about the onlv
way I'll get through college I excel m sports but I m not an A
student
I m told the chances are shm Can you offer any hope? BASKETBALL STAR and HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR
Dear Star
And I'm told that many scholarsh ips go beggmg each year
for want of students to apply for them Your h1gh school coun·
selor has lists of avrulable scholarships, and wh1le not many are
stnctly for g1rl athletes, I'm pretty sure he (or she ) could fmd
several colleges mterested m enrollmg a girl who excels
whether It's m sports or science - SUE

++

Dear Star
A recent magazme article reports there are probably less
than 50 American women holdmg athletic scholarships as
compared to 50 000 men who wm them each year
But the picture could change radically by next ) ear what
w1th more and more compet111' e sports opemng up to women If
you make a name for yourself m rrudwest g1rls basketball, I
don t think you'll be overlooked when the 1975 scholarships a1 e
banded out Good luck' - HELEN

++ +
Dear Helen and Sue
A gll'l was crazy about my brother, but he never gave her a
tumble She spent a lot of time at our house as she knew my
s1ster But she kept telling everyone my brolher wanted her here
He already has a steady
When she fmally reahzed she couldn I get h11n, she dec1ded to
'get" him So now she's blanung her pregnancy on my brother'
Says she'll make a btg lot of trouble, and her parents are
threatenmg to take h11n to court
What she doesn't know 1s that he bad an operation and can't
have children Shall we let them take h1m to court and then show
1er up by presentmg proof from the doctor' 1t would make the
parents see how lowdown thell' daughter IS, and maybe teach her
not to play tricks on people My parents say 'No - tell them
fll'st,' but I m all for - GETIING EVEN
Dear G E
I'm w1th your parents Why go through the hassle of a court
6 00 -

News J 4 8 10 15 ABC New s 13 Sesame St
sonallty &amp; BehiWiora! Deve lopment 33
Truth
sequences 6
\
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Room '12213
7 00 - News 10 6 What s My Lme 8 Tr ulh or Conseq
the Clock d Elec Co 20 Know Your Schools 33

20 Per
or Con
3 Beat
J1mmy

Dean 13 I Spy 15
J() - To Tell the Trulh 6 Sale ol the Cenlury 8 The Judge 10

Beat the Clock 13 Po!1ce Surgeon 3 On th e Money 4 An
t1ques 20 Ep1sode Act 1o n 33 TBA 15
8 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher ll 10 B1ll Moyers Journal2:&gt; Chase 3 4
15 Washmgton Connecfton 33 The Cowboys 6 13
8 30 Theater In Amenca 33 Mov e Cr y Panlc 6 13
Powers of the Pres1dency 20
9 00 - CannonS 10 Mov te Sam Wh1skey 3 .4 15
10 00 - Ko1ak 8 10 Doc ElliOt 6 13 News 20
II 00 - News 3 t1 6 8 10 13 15 Day a t Ntght 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 d 15 Great Folk Rev1val6 13 Mov1e
The Asphalt Jungle 8 A Tou ch of L.;~r ceny 10 Janakt33
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News J3
200-News4

fHNill

h y

An~w~r

tion

22 Church

section

23 Poker

hands

24- Assuage

25 Bombay
belle s
atlire

ISII')I SUffi~

37 'Mar·

JOne-'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Is

KJ

AND He$ OUIOF
iHE i&lt;:lJNNINC&gt; 1
arran1e the clrded lette111
to form the 1urpri~e an.awer, as
sucres ted by the above cartoon

Now

FINAL

HIATUS

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter limply stands for another In lhiB sample A Is
uud for tbe three L's, X for the two D's etc Smgle letters,
apostrophea, the lenl(b and fonnation of the word• are aU
hlnla Each day the code letters are d1fferent
CRYPTOQUOTES
VN KSAX NGXUXJM IGBXOUVNNB EU

A t.I'T'Tt.E INJUFCY-

(Aal•~n

\

a hope

chest
30 Emulate
WJ
Bryan
34. Elhruc
group
36 Chern·

admom

City
37 Twofold
SB. Balanced
39. Recorded
r::eed

I ""O:..a:s' I a I I JA''rX X XI lIT"
v~~h·rd•y.

tomorro•'

BOTTLE

If here lim chap 111 lnml
oftua g()(;ll - ON LIPS

QXOVSEGJR EKWNUUECJX HEVZNIV
MSO OXSQZEGF QNKWOXZXGUENG Nl
VZX NVZXO U UVSGBWNEGV - Q
F
DIGF
Yesterday's Cryploquoto· WE DO NOT QUITE FORGIV!:
A GIVER THE HAND THAT FEEDS US IS IN SOME
DANGER OF BEING BI'I'I'EN -RALPH WALDO EMERSON
(@ 197-4 H!1nlll' li'eatul"f.!w Syndicate Jn,. '

• Q J 109

• 7 6 54

'83
+J98 53

'Q962
K Q 102

TI-l£ ~i(f0!151JIU..E.

ON

ofoA7

ofoJ

IT &amp;l.QH65 TO

WI-IDS£ TR~GIC OEATH T~UGHT SO

+

CfUS'

OUR~ PE:.RFni1V.A~E

COI.JLt::l

Wf:. CIU.. Pl=?llY ll !Y()ME.HT FOR ALF E
~

VES,GRANOMA,T~.A:

OC&lt;:UI'ANT OF
OUR HOUSE IS THAT
AWFUL SKULL:
SAYS MISS RINI&lt;~ES .

et/T eEfC;QE Wf:. Rai6E. 'Tl-1£ WRTlllti

151'1 T JIJSi .Q!8

SOUTH IDI

TO -x&gt;~a US'

SICUU. STARTED AI.L
THE TROUBLE.

• A2

'AJ4

• 764

ofoK10652
North South vulnerable
We!iiit

North

East

South

Pass

1•

Pass

t•

Pass

Pass
Pass

4•

6...

Pass

Pass

••2•

Pass

Opemng lead- • Q

CAP1 AIN EASY
YOU Ar.lP

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

YOU~

The reason club systems
are too d1ff1cult for ordmary
players hes m the problem of
what to do when your su1t IS
clubs Of course you can open
two clubs to show a normal
one club openmg, but expen
ence has shown that this 1s
madv1sable when your hand
IS of mm1mum type
Believe 11 or not we
watched a pa1r of expert club
bidders pass th1s hand out m
a duphcate game Another
pa•r dtd even worse South
passed North opened one
heart Eventually, he played
at four hearts and managed
to find a way to get set after
East opened the kmg of d1a ·
monds
Stanrlaro b1dder&lt; all
wouna up m clubs Some
stopped at a part score,
others b1d to game Barry
Crane of Los Angeles the
number one man on the
master pomt hst reached s1x
clubs playmg w1th Dr John
F1sher of Dallas
The slam depended on
locating the queen of hearts
' As you can see Barry could
fmesse for 11 e1ther way Ex
perts expect to handle a twoway fmesse correctly most of
the t1me and Barry IS one of
the best m th1s department
He could not be certam,
but he d1d fmd out that East
was long 1n hearts Hence he
was more likely to hold the
queen Barry finessed sue
cessfully agamst h1m and
made the slam
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

Pass

t+

Pass

I.

Pass

3•

Pass

3•

Pass

44

Pass

"

The b1ddmg has been
West
North Easl

You South hold

FOR:EICIN A&amp;ENTS

NOW '10 l) Yf 6 0T ME: POir.J(!:I I'T
T ~T ~ME

'

HIUI'

dressing
29. Item
for

whole

b
[X) I I
Jumhl~:• l POUND

~

or
bacon
19 Word
of

3$ Montana

I VUREC

VOU'ES±

16 Ham

33 Killer

A ri NII I I) "" ' l\011 l F f

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words

IROTTAHI
[J

Yelllerday's Answe'

EAST

WEST

INFORMATION ABOUT:
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

..

~

7

Trails West 15 Hogans Heroes 13
Earl N1ght 1ngale 15

5 ;c:; -

SEWING MACHINES Repair
servtce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Autl'10nzed Smger Sales and
Servtce We Sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc

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

..

00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love

Amencan Sty l e 13 Speedracer 6 Lucy Show 8
Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Gil l igan sIs l3 6 HazelS
Jackpot• .4
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Griffin -4 Andy
Gnfftth B Bonanza 15 M1ss1on lmposs1ble 6 Gomer Pyle

AUTOMOB ILE Insurance been
cancelled'
Lost
your
opera tor s l 1cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

DILES Hear•ng Ad Center
Athens s.ervtces all makes
Hearmg
te s ts.
by
ap
po•ntment
Rental
plan
avallabte Phone 592 6238

..%.."-: ~ »

Pn ce Is

4 30 -

SEPT IC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern Santtat1 on 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

FOR electncal plumbing and
remodelmg work Call 843
2341 for FREE ESTIMATES
1 11 26tc

L1fe6 13

One Ltfe to L1ve 6 13 Ph 1l Donahue 4 fllatch Game 8
How To Surv1ve A Marnage 3 15 Washington Stratght

10

*--~

Talk 30

SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Galllpol•s John Russel l
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

WILL tr•m or cut trees and
shrubbery
Also clean out
basements a tt1cs etc Ca ll
949 3221 or 7A2 4441
2 2 26tc

G~rl~nMy

Another World 3 4 15 Genera l Hosp1tal 6, t3

Rrghl 18 RFD 20

your
Fr ee
3284
Co

FOR your new home or com
plete remodeling Contact
Greg Roush
Roush Con
struct on Phone 992 5039
2 3 ltc

Dick Van

8 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Capt Kangaroo 8 10

CONCRETE

30 tfc

Farm t1 me 10 Mom1ng Report 3
Today 3 4 15 CBS N ews 8 10 P1xanne 6

3 00 -

:::::.~».:!t..~

-j

Dyke 13

10 4 tfc

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 ,

Mov1es

Story 13
6 35 - Columbus Today 4

DOZER work land clearmg by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds road5 etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years expenence Pullins
Excavating Pomeroy Oh10
Phone 992 2478
1219 tfc
delt\lered right to
pro1ect Fast and easy
es timat es Phone 992
Goegle n Ready M1x
M iddleport Oh10
6

Can

WEIJNt.~UAY FEB 6 1974
Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Urban League 10 Folk Ltteralure 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Ha rvey 13
6 30 - F1ve M1nutes to L ve By 4 N ews 6 B1ble An!iwers 8 The

RIDERS AUTO SA LVAGING
We Buy Scrap Metals and
P1 ckup Auto Bod•eS From
State Route 124
Route 4
Pomeroy Oh o
2 5 5tp

READY MIX

Mov 1e

6 00 -

SEPT IC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SA NITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035

CLELAN

POMEROY -

Hawa1 1 F1ve 0 8 10
Evenmg at Pops 33 Hall of Fame 3 4 IS

9 00 -

0

All work guaranteed

115 ACRES -

Happy Days 6 13 Movoe 20

8 30 -

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 1315 Janakl 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Chant of S1lence 6 13
The Badlanders 8
Rhapsody 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 .4 News 13
2 on - News 4

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

--..,

Johnny Manns Stand Up and Cheer 4 N ew Pnce I s R1ght B
10 Bea t The Clock 13 Lass1e 15 Read1ng For the Classroom
Teacher 33
8 00 - Maude 8 10 Bil l Moyers Journal 33 Adam 12 3 4 15

10 30 - Day al Noght 33

Area's. Most
Reasonable Prtces.

----

7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 RFD 20 Hollywood Squares 3

9 30 - H awkms 8 10
10 00 - Marcu s We ! by MD 6 13 News 20 NB C News Report 3
4 15 Washmgton Stra •ghl Ta l k 33

FURNITURE

- -

a

Painting A Specialty

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

PHONE 992-2156

A route m•ght be open
m your neighborhood
lo fmd out

OFFICE SUPPLIES

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

1974

6 00 - News 3 -4 8 IV ... Sesame Street 20 A~C New s. 13
Truth or Consequences. 6 L1l as Yoga and You 33
o 30 - NBC News 3 4 IS ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 y
Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
our
7 00 - M a rco Sporll•te 33 Beat The Clock 4 News 10 6
Electric Co 20 Truth or Consequences 3 What s. My Lme
Oustry s Tra 1113 H1gh School TV Honor Soc 1ety 15

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

Lincoln H1ll Pomeroy

and

SYRACUSE

For years, The Sen
tmel ha s helped young
peop le develop the
attnbutes and talents
wh1ch spell success 1n
adu lt life

992 2094
Pomeroy
606 E Mam

.

S

Ellen Be Saved? 6 13 TBA 33

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

PAPER CARRIER
WANTED IN

earners

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Matn Pomeroy 0

Pomeroy

Ph 991 2174

WANTED

Th1s could be your
go lden opportunity to
learn
bus1ness
methods sa ve money
for clothmg or college.
wm pnzes These and
many other benef1ts
are
available
to
deserv1ng
Sent1nel

P001eroy Home &amp; Auto

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Help Wanted

DELIVER
The
Daily
Sentinel

- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

FEB

T•I&lt;~DAY

water Lines and Power
L1nes All work done by the
toot or contract Also dozer
work and septiC tanks m
stalled

On Most Amencan Cars.

c~Cira

3 MONTH old beagle Whtle
browl'l"l'-and ba ck Has choker
cham and fl ea co llar we1ghs CONCORD Travel fra iler n• c e
tor co uple Call 992 7479
17 tb s Phone 992 2883
2 5 Jtc
1 31 lfc

Not1ce

TR AILER
Browns Trader
Park M nersv• l e Phone 992
)]14
I '17 lfc
1

Wanted To Buy

lost

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

P hor c 17 3

r-

Television Log

DITCHING SERVICE

EXPERT

2 5 tf c

I n• sh blk v 1nyl top good w w t r es st and1 rd V 8 e ng•n e

1968 CHEVROLET BELAIR

!

l

~91~

\2495

,-.utomoil c power stee nng &amp; brake s rad 1o spoll ess cl eetn
1nter or W1nt o o; hnrp cnr ell f hl pn ce o l ~ ve rage ca r ?

, Jl (
Pi t r lr

• - The Daily Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Feb 5 1Q74

Jl I DON'T KNCJ.N
AOCUT THE flE&amp;T
OF YOU 61R.I.S

Soulb
1•

8liT I c;tJN T TRU5-T THE
OAL..IGHTEil I OQtoJT LIK E

IDEA OF I-IER 1/\0RKING IN
OUR DEPARTMENT I

~POR T

I~ nll&gt;or Ck'£,
'100'1.-t- FltJD IT

WENDY I WANT m TELL
HAr HAP PE\I ~"D TO
ME WHEN I J OINED _ /-"VI

YO U~~

I~ TI1E'

BONNA'Z

HIP

FIXI&lt;ET UleRE
M'I~H
~D'be£1

AILEY OOP
HESUPW15=
HIS FELLI\

JNc.JUI--JS,
DANCII-J TH

DEATH

DANCE-

('}JLP '- 'I&lt;Ohl DERWHICH LI'L IN&lt;JUN

1-&amp;GONt-.lA.

DIE'~

JUDGihl' FUM
TI---\AR HI6H5PIR1T5
IT '-NOt-J T er=.. ONE

THEM!!~_,.-~

" ''"~~t'

.I.r

'
5

WEIRD L001&lt;1N 6 H0fi\8RE-

WAS AT 'TH E A

COME ON'
LET G WAl K. A
COLIPLf OP BLOCK?
AND SEE IF 1-fEFOI.LOI'V, 1..1~ '

.
THE Ot.: ALMANAC
WUZ RIGHT!!
IT $AID THAR WUZ
A OUTSIDE CHANCE
OF RAIN
TODAV

BUT IT NEVER SAID
NOTHIN' ABOUT NO
INSIDE CHANCE

I

WA&gt;~T

RECEIVED

1l:1 KNOW WH~ I
S~C&gt;I A iER.I'Ie&lt;..E

6RAOE ON
~

&lt;1&lt;

PAPER

• A K 7 6 • A K 7 6 t 2. K 10 4
3
What do you do now?
A-Bid rour diamonda.

U your
-- partner is showing elub suppor&amp;
youdon'C want to be Ina slam 1r
he is shOWing the c[ub ICe ttr
wlh make a strong bid over your

-

�..

• •
"',\

"r

'. . . .
------~~~~~~~~~---------------.· ·
·-···
·· ·
- -----

• '

"

.
•

Nixon

.'
li'ro., ~; 1n·H

10 -:- The Daily Senhnel. Middlcoort-PomPro\l ()

Oil price rollback has
agreement of conferees
/

" /

By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
WASHINGTON (UP!) House-Senate conferees have
voted to roll back the price of
crude oil, and one Senate
sponsor of the move says it
should reduce retail gasoline
prices by about four cents a
gallon .
The 12-4 vote Monday by a
conference corrunittee of sena-

HOUSE DESTROYED - Fire destroyed the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gilbert on Rt. 141
Monday afternoon. An appeal has been made for clothing and household goods for Mr. and Mrs.
Glibert and thetr five children. Bob Cox, volunteer fire fighter, waters down rear of structure
durmg peak of blaze.

Home of 7 razed
by fire Monday
A family of seven was left
homeless in a fire at 3:52p.m.
Monday on R\.141, five and one
half miles west of Gallipolis.
Gallipolis Fire Chief James

Free 3600
S&amp;H Green
Stamps when

you purchase
this Frigidaire
Center

.....

~

Frigidaire Skinny Mini:
Fits almost anywhere.
(Only 2 feet wide)
Install it where the WISh h~itchen,

batb, nursery ... an7·
where rou ctn cet ldeQuate wir·

int. phnnbtna and wntinc.

$389

BAKER
NITURE

A. Northup said an overheated
coal burning furnace was
blamed for the fire which
destroyed the five room block
home owned by David Bryan of
Patriot Star Rt. and occupied
by Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gilbert.
The Gilberts have five
children, ranging between the
ages of 5 and 14 years. An
appeal for clothing and other
household items are heing
sought for the family by neighbors. Mrs. Gilbert was at home
with the younger children when
the blaze broke out.
Mrs. John Yost, New Lima
Rd ., Metgs County, asks
anyone wishing to help her
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Gilbert, should
phone her at 742-4447.
Mrs. Gilb'frr said she got a
chair out before the structure
became engulfed in flames.
Two of the children arrived
home from school at the peak
of the blaze .
According to Northup, the
dwelling may have been saved
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Albert
Hemsley, Syracuse; Mary
Hendricks, Syracuse; Marvin
Darst, Pomeroy; Lyle Hysell,
Pomeroy; Clyde Tucker,
. Racine ; Ronald Bostick,
Cheshire ; Earl Frye, Rutland ;
Craig Howard, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES
Paul
Hoffman, Karl Grueser •
Rosemary Wamsley, Lydia
Weyersmiller, Doris Kiser.

tors and representatives aiso
broke a deadlock which has
heen holding up legislation
giving President Nixon sweeping powers to deal with the
energy crisis.
The committee adopted an
amendment by Sen. Henry M.
Jackson, D-Wash ., which
would, if enacted by Congress,
put a ceiling of $7.09 a barrel on
crude oil which has been
selling for up to $10.25.
The provision was .substituted for a controversial
proposal to control windfall
profits of the petroleum industry. Debate on the profits
measure hefore Christmas was
so intense that Congress-ended
its session and adjourned for a
month without passing the
energy bill.
Based on May Levels
Under Jackson's amendment, prices for crude oil and
virtually all its products, including gasoline, would he
based on levels last May 15,
plus provable increases in
costs to retailers since then.
The price of crude oil actually could he as low as $5.25
per barrel under the amendment, but the President is
given discretion to raise it to
$7.09 as an incentive for more
production.

if enough water had been
available. Fire fighters had to
reload their tanker trucks one
and one half miles from the fire

OOPS, SORRY!
An Eastern Local School

District bus driver, Sandra L.
Fire fighter Neil McMahon Cowdery, 28, Reedsville, was
suffered smoke inhalation parking her bus at her home
while fighting the fire and was when she backed into her
treated at the scene by other husband's auto according to
the Meigs County Sheriff's
volunteers.
Dept.
The accident, at 3 p.m.
Damage was estimated at
$10,000 to the home and $3,000 Monday did moderate damage
to its contents. Fifteen men and to the auto, belonging to James
three trucks answered the 19th Cowdery, while the bus had no
damage.
alarm of 1974.
scene.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - John Glenn today charged the
Democralic party In Ohio with 'l"'ndlng $250,000 he helped
raise to Ald hand-picked candidates, Including U. S. Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, In the May primary.
Glenn made tbe statement when he flied his candidacy
pedlions for U. S. Senate with Secretary of State Ted w.
Brown. "It is the part of what we promise will be a fighting
campaign," said Glenn.
·

GOES TO HOLZER
RACINE - The fulcine E·R
squad took l.enna Brinker,
Racine, to the Holzer Medical
Center at 9:45 a.m., as a •
medical patient. The squad also reported Feb. I, it took
Harriett Hyatt, Rt. 2, fulcine,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
CINCINNATI - What do
when she _w~s suffering a Delta Qten passengers enjoy
breathmg difftculty.
most about cruising on the
grand, old steamboat? They
enjoy cruising on the grand, old
steamboat, naturally!
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
That is what a large majority
The Middleport E-R squad
of
1973 passengers said on
was called Tuesday at 3:05
conunent
sheets filled out at
p.m . for Mrs. William
Reynolds, a medical patient the conclusion of each 1973
who was taken to Holze; cruise. Passengers were asked
to list favorite activities during
Medical Center.
the cruise. A large majority
responded.that what they liked
HQLOCATED
best about the cruise was
experiencing
the last real
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Lottery Commission steamboat.
The Delta Qteen is the last
today voted J-2 to locate the
lottery headquarters in steamboat in overnight
passenger service in the U. S.
Cleveland.
Other favored activities

Last boat
Just great

were :

Personal!
By combining your Auto
and
Homeowners insurance into ONE policy

AUTO LOAN PAYMENTS
WITHIN YOUR BUDGm

You may be able to

Would you like to purchase a new or used
car but feel that your budget can't afford
it? Investigate a bank loan plan . We'll plan
your payments to fit your budget.

Auto Teller Window and Walk- Up Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p. m.

Save 10 to 25%
on your yearly insurance
premiums.

We will review your
insurance
program
with you free of
charge any day of the
week.
Call or stop
and see us.

PITTSBURGH

l.ilbens
,alioru~l B hk
--c.
CINCINNATI

Reuter-BrQgan
Insurance SeiVices
l!\RRY BROGAN
EDNA SCHOENLEB
GERALD REUTER

"'IDDLEPORT, OHio··
Member Federal De~'lsit Insurance Co111oration

Phone 992 - 513~
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy .
......;,;;;,;;,;,;,;._;,;;,;;,;;.;...~

- Viewing the picturesque
river shores from the deck of
the boat.
- "The calliope concert on
board the boat, followed by
showtime in the Orleans Room.
- Passing through the locks
and landing the boat.
- Learning about the river
and shore. towns, and making
friends with other passengers.
- The weather and nature.
- Leisure social activities,
sing-alongs, daytime activities, getting to know the
crew, shore stops, little river
towns , and sightseeing in the
big cities.

Jackson, predicting the re·
suiting retail gasoline saving at
four cents, said the amend·
ment may clear the way for
Senate passage of the energy
bill, authorizing the President
to order.gasoline rationing if he
sees fit and a long list of other
conservation measures.
Meanwhile, federal energy
chief William E. Simon urged
motorists not to buy gasoline in
amounts less than $3 worth at
one tune in order to reduce
what he called "tank hoarding" in which motorists make
the rounds of service stations
buying a few gallons at a tim~
to keep their tanks always full.
"Panic buying isn't helping
the situation," Simon said.
" ... Many gasoline stations and
trade associations feel there
would he enough gasoline if
motorists do not use their tanks
to hoard gasoline."
New Regulations Proposed
He also proposed new

Truckers
(Continued from page I)
develop around the country,
and there's already evidence
that shoppers are buying big
supplies of gr9ceries as a
precaution-a move that will
only hasten the shortages.
At one Kroger store in
Cincinnati! the manager said

weekend sales almost doubled.
Usually, he said, he sells
$12,000 of foodstuffs over the
weekend. This weekend, he
said, it exceeded $22,000.
At least two Pennsylvania
supermarket chains said their
shelves were almost cleaned
out of some perishable foods.
"U this thing continues another
day or two we're really going to
have problems," said Doran
Zimmerman of the 72-store
Thorofare chain.
Truckers and food market
spokesmen said supermarkets
in Southern California will
begin to feel the pinch bY the
end of the week if the shutdown
of independent long-haul truckers continues to spread.
The Biggest "1\'orry
''The biggest worry at the
moment are shipments of
poultr~ and pork from the
South and Midwest and citrus
from Florida," said Food
Employers Council spokesman
Bob Voight.
"The supermarkets say they
are okay n0w, but they may
begin to f~l this thing later in
the week," he said.
Texas will run short of
produce and the rest of the
country will feel the pineh of a
beef shortage if the truckers
strike continues much longer,
shippers say. Several prnduce
truckers said they are having
problems getting shipments of
California vegetables into
Texas, New Mexico and Arlzo.
na.
Charles Ball, a vice president of Texas Cattle Feeders
said "real critical beef J1I'Oblems" could develop in the
Northeast because of the
strike.
Stockyard
owners
in
Amarillo and Fort Worth
Tex., said no cattle have been
transported in four days.
At the Pompano, Fla., produce market, the nation's
largest winter produce terminal where 55 acres of fruit
and vegetables await shipment, Manager Ma:x Goza said
deliveries to the populous
Northeast are down by one-hall
and the situation is "wo ·.
sening."
Buying Points Closed
The Interstate Producers
livestock Asociation said al148
of its buying points in D1inois,
Iowa and Mlasourl have been
closed "until we are able to
make sure that livestock can
be moved to slaughtering
plants."
The violence is compounding
the shortages.
In Baltimore, Md., four men
were arrested with a 12-gauge
shotgun and three molotov
cocktails after a trucking
company told police it r&lt;:c&lt;!ived
a telephoned threat that it
would be firebombed if any
vehicles were operated.
A WISconsin truck driver,
Don Schiffer! of Marshlleld,
told authorities he was abducted and his rig hijacked near

LOCAL TEMP
~ncer.
•
. d
Carson, Calif., 10 shots
Tempera ture 10 own town from a large caliber rifle were
Pomeroy at 11 ~.m . Tuesday . fired Into the cab, btunper and
wa~ 25 degrees w1th light snow air horn of an out-of-state truck
falling.
while its cafgo of frozen
r-~111111111111111.......- - . chickens was heing unloaded.
There were no injuries.
'
To get 1.5 miillion pounds of
Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.
heel to market in New York,
Feb. 5-6-7
'
Iowa Gov. Robert D. fuly
asked state ' troopers to ride
"shotgun" -to escort a convoy
N0 T
OPEN
of 40 ' to 100 trucks to the
. ._ _ _;..,;;,;,;.._ _.. state's eaatern border today.

MEIGS THEAJRE

:

f

regulations to equalize prices
of home heating oil in Eastern
states, where some people
have beeh charged twice as

News.

••

in Briefs

., Continued from page I)
still hadn't seen all of the White House's evidence. He said
Sunday there were still some tapes and documents he wanted hut
hadn't yet received. He didn't say what they were about.
Jaworski added that the White House had promised him an
answer ~onday· whether it would give him the additional
material. But Monday passed with no public indication from
either presidential spokesmen or the prosecutor's office as to
what the Whlte House answer was.

Economy
(Continued from page!)
shutdowns.
News of continued violence
frightened authorities and
truckers.
Nick Borkovich, of Team·
sters Local 273 in Pittsrurgh,
said tanker truck drivers were
refusing to make deliveries ·
hecause ~ou take one rig
coming back empty and it
would go like a bomb if
someone shot at it. It's hard to
ask a man to drive under those
conditions.''

''One of our drivers was
surrounded in a public parking
lot by 35 or 40 sa&lt;alled independents," said Charles
Caffrey, chief counsel for
Stroehmann Brothers Baking
Co.
"They told him if he came
hack, they would get him and
they gave him the old 'cut
across Ute throat' sign."
c

Council ~
...

to study ~
new tank
•

rehire four principals, an

assistant principal , and a
supervisor in the 2,000 student
system.
The board gave no reason for
its action.
Teachers voted to walkout
following Monday's board
meeting. All non-certificated
workers in the district supported the walkout today.
Terry Lee, an Ohio
Education Association spokes·
man said picket lines have
been placed around the
district's schools. Employes
and students refused to cross
picket llnes.
In addition to not renewing
the contracts of six administrators , the board
reportedly agreed to Investigate legal steps involved
in terminating its five-year
contract with Supt. Ralph
McCormick.
McCormick confirmed the
board actions today and said he
would fight to retain his job.
Administrators whose
contracts were not renewed
included Jimmy Wood of
Bundy Elementary School;
Adam
Wood,
Central
Elementary School; William
Hayden, Coalton Elementary
School; John Wolfe, federal
title coordinator ; William
Lockhart, high school principal
and George Nutt, curriculum
1

NO MORE MATCHES
RACINE - The fulcine Fire
Dept. wlll end its shooting
matches, according to fulndall
Roberts, because it can not'
obtain meat or shells due to the
truckers' strike. Roherts said
that the shooting matches will
he discontinued until further
notice.

director.
The decision Monday came
on a split 3-2 vote. Board
members Ray Hamilton,
Roger fulder, and Mrs. Lois
Hill approved the motion. It
was opposed by Allen Griffith
and board president Earl
Buckley. Griffith is the only
holdover from the old board.
Mrs . Hill replaced Ralph
Crabtree by appointment last
week.
Monday's action is the latest
in a growing series of incidents
which have occurred in
Wellston since the election to
the board two years ago of
Crabtree, a former teacher in
the system.
Crabtree is now business
manager of Wellston Schools at
an annual salary of $15,498.
~ince last month, the board
has decided to increase
Crabtree's salary to $18,000 per
year, noting the hike would
cover
fringe
benefits,
retirement and insurance.
Last month, the board appointed Crabtree to the post
following his resignation from
the board. Crabtree was placed
in charge of building maintenance, transportation and all
financial matters.
Crabtree
has
been
authorized to have the board's
newly appointed legal counsel
from Columbus check the
legality of Supt. McCormick's
five year contract given by the
previous board.

•

MASON - Mason's Town:;
Council
is
considering·
acquisition of a new water;
storage tank and a pennanent'
library.
Both matters were reviewed;
in a regular Council meeting
Monday night in city hall.wiuh
Mayor Ira Atkinson presiding.::
Two consultants will attend the.:·
council meeting on February.
18 to discuss with interested"
citizens and council a new,·
storage tank .
~
Mrs. fuly Proffitt reviewed:.
with council the town's Book-.;
mobile. Mrs. Proffitt extended.
her appreciation to the towns-'"
people and to the Councll fo.;
cooperation in making (he!,
library project successfuL She~
listed the service it provides~
and reported its activities.;
During the month of October"
books loaned totaled 434, tn:'
November, 477; in December,:·
327 and January, 540.
"
,•

RETIJRNS HOME
Mrs. Nora Nltz and son,
Russell, returned home
Saturday from Columbus
where Russell underwent ear
surgery at Children's Hospital.
Russell, a third grade student
at .Middleport Elementary is
confined at his home, N.;..th
Fourth St., Middleport.
PERFECT
COLUMBUS (UP!) -When
Northwestern hit 16 of 16 free
throws Saturday night in a ()8.
61 victory over Ohio State it
marked the second time this
season a team had a perfect
night from the charity stripe
against the Buckeyes. Minnesota, in a losing effort,
connected on 21 of 21.

~

r ~

NEW HAVEN- Mrs. Viola ~
(Virginia) Moore Roush, 73, ~
New Haven, died Monday ~
evening at the Holzer Medical ;
Center.
•
Mrs. Roush was born May.18r
1900 in Hartford, the daughter
of the late William and Anna
Gibbs Moore. A member of the
First Church of God in New
Haven, Mrs. Roush is survived·
by her husband, Birdie Wilson
Roush; two sisters, Mrs.
Lusema Weaver, New Haven,
and Mrs. Kathryn Weaver,
Kenova , W. Va., and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at ttW
First Church of Gnd with the
Rev. David Fields, Jr., of,
flciating. Wllbur Leifheit will
assist. Burial will be in Kirk·
land Memorial Garden.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home from
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 pm. Wednesday .

WILL YOU HELP?
Would you Uke to help
alleviate the shortage of
blood In tbe region?
We are aure you would, ao
donate a UDit at tbe Blood· -.
mobile Feb. 11 wben lt vfllll
the Pomeroy Elemeatary
School between the boun of I , ~
aad 6 p.m., the Meigs County Red Cross sald today.
18U

-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
· Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 p.m.

·------------------------w
~

So Many Ways
to Speak of Love ...

DIVORCES GRANTED
Pearl A. Scott has been
awarded a divorce from Fred
Scott in Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court on the g(ounds of
gross neglect of dutf and extreme cruelty. Also awarded a
divorce on the same grounds is
Vivian Orlean Mitchum from
Richard B. MitchUm.

•

••
•
'
'

-

-

.. .
• '
,
,
'

.

•"•

.
'

Messages can be casual, sincere, humorous, dra-

matic, light, flowery, shy, formal, traditionaL
Whatever your style, we have Hallmark cards
that speak of love the way you prefer, for Thursday, Feb. 14.

_,

•
••
II"

.

' '
"

I""":B~i~g~Se~lec~ti~o•n•o~f~F~ann-•yll!l.!!I!!F!!Ilannlll!l!_!!ll~r-. :

Valentine Candies.

.....-~~
' ..;;;;;;;:;....--J'"
"

NOTIONS DEPARTMENT, FIRST FLOOR .

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy

•

at y

e

bargaining sess ions with labor

and management, but w1th no

authority to issue price and
wage orders.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio Democratic par ty main-

tained Tuesday that a
pohtician pu ttmg in a good
word. for a pros pec tive
government ~mploy e is no

than a

d1ffe1·ent

reco m·

mendatwn from a former

employer or "leading indi viuals in a profession "
tContinued on page 16)

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXV NO. 207

ByJOHNT.KADY
United Press International
At least seven plants have
been closed in Ohio and production cutbacks put into effect
at 14 others hecause of a strike
by independent truck drivers .
The president of the Council of
Independent Truckers called
for an end to the violence which
has punctuated the work stoppage.
The strike has idled at least
20,442, including 5,000 independent drivers, since it began last
week. Hundreds of company
drivers, who are afraid to
drive, are also out of work.
Republic Steel announced
·Tuesday the layoff of 650 persons in Cleveland and another
150 in Canton and said the total
at all of its Ohio plants would
reach 6,000 by the weekend if

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

the strike continued.
The closed plants include the
General Motors Foundry at
Defiance; the Armco Steel Co.
plant at Washington Court
House ; Ohio Corrugating Co.,
Warren ; Routh Packing Co.,
Sandusky; St. Marys Foundry ;
and the Youngstown Foundry
and Machine Co.
Smucker Plant Closed
The
nation 's
largest
producer of jams and jellies,
the Smucker Co., said it had
closed its main plant in Orr·
ville on Monday. Company
officials said production of all
its
products,
including
preserves, jams, jellies, fruit
syrups and pickles, had been
halted.
George Rynn , president of
the Council of Independent
Truckers in Akron, said the

JIIR!II':I!m='-'l.":&gt;:"-::~:~::::;.;::~::~~::::::::::::::::-;:".:::::.::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::

ews.. in Briefsl
...

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - IF AMERICANS KEEP checking off $1 of
their income taxes for campaign spending, the 1976 presidential
races could he the first in history to be entirely financed by public
funds, two senators report. Sens. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., and Edward
M. Kennedy, 0-Mass., based their estimates on Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) statistics of early income tax returns.
In a joint statement, they satd "if the present rate of use
conlinues for the rest of the current filings and for future tax
years, the Treasury fund will contain about $50 million by April
15, 1976 -enough to make the 1976 presidential election a historic
first-paid for entirely out of public dollars, thereby relieving the
candtdates of both political parties from the need to resort to
large private contributions to finance their campaigns."
WASHINGTON - ARGUING TilE NATION agrees with
President Nixon that a year of Watergate is enough, Republican
members asked the House today to set an April 30 deadline for
deciding whether grounds exist for his impeachment. But their
effort aweared doomed agalnst the opposition of Rep. Peter w.
Rndino, Jr., D-N.J., chairman of the House Judiciary Com. mittee, who said he did not want to be bound by a cutoff date.
Republican floor leader John J. Rhodes, Ariz ., supported
Rodino against the effort of Republican Roher! McClory, D1., to
force the panel to bring an impeachment resolution to House
floor within the next 83 days. McClory said he was reflecting the
nation's decision for a final resolution of the issue.
Adoption of the resolution will throw the inquiry - on
whether grounds exist for impeaching Nixon and putting him on
trial in the Senate- into high gear. Nixon would first he asked
then ordered, to turn over materials the panel wants. Rodino said
a refusal wants. Rodino said a refusal would itself constitute an
impeachable offense.
SAN FRANCISCO - THE WIFE OF MAYOR Joseph Alioto
finally showed. up Tuesday after "disappearing" for 15 days and
confessed she did it hecause she felt she was heing ignored and
her busy politician husband of 33 years needed "a little punish·
ment."

•

'

medical sector has slowed
con tmued government pric~

•

Teachers walk
Viola Roush
out in Wellston Mrs.
died on Monday
Teachers in the Wellston City
School System went on strike
this morning in protest of the
Wellston School Board's
decision Monday night not to

restramts could help prevent a
'·cost explosion" m doctor and
hospital fees similar to the one
that occurred when the
director made two recommen- Medicare and Medica id
dations :
programs were mtroduced in
-Continued mandatory con- the mid-19608.
trols on the health industry
- Turrung the CLC into an
unhl Congress passes a inflation watchdog agency with
national health insurance bilL power to hold public hea rings
Although inflation in the and behind -th e-scenes
In testifying before a Senate
Banking, Housing and Urban
Affatrs subcommittee, the CLC

.,

much as lhetr neighbors.

lri other energy developments:
-Consumer advocate fullph
Nader said Monday he would
investigate the Federal Energy
Office "to see how much mfluence" the oil industry has on
the agency. Simon said he
would welcome "Nader's raiders."
- The auto industry, ciling
parts shortages resulting from
the truckers' strike, hegan
closing some plants Monda~.
General Motors reported 5,400
workers were idled at its plants
in Defiance and Dayton, Ohio.
Chrysler Corp. scheduled a
one~week layoff for 4,700
workers in Belvidere, Ill., and
closed a St. Louis assembly
plant Monday with 5,100
workers.
- Rep. Wayne Hays, ~io,
attacked Simon and his deputy,
William C. Sawhill. in a Hoose
speech
Monday,
saying
"Simple Simon and stupid
Sawhill are not offering anyone
relief" from the gasoline
shortage.

program .

"I love my hushand very, very much," she said, with Alioto
standing quietly at her side. "But he didn't ask me when he ran
for mayor and he didn't consult me about running for governor.
It would be nice to be asked ."
Mrs. Alioto said she slipped away after a political rally Jan.
20 in Palm Springs and made a leisurely two-week tour of the
famous California missions under an assumed name. She said
she didn 't tell her husband and others hecause they "needed a
little punishment."

WEDNESDAY. FEB. 6, 1974

council would guarantee the
public delivery of necessities .
In r~turn, Cleveland Mayor
Ralph Perk said he would go to
Washington to work for a
rollback on fuel prtces which is
the key issue in the walkout.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
said four bridges in the Ironton
area, which had been closed by
a bomb scare, were reopened
today.
One truck was shot at early
today in Montgomery County
and two windshields broken.
Michael Mack, Tiffin, and
Thomas Borer, Sycamore,

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

So~thern Valley Athleti c Conf~re nce Se e stCW) r,n Pa J::~ 3

(PICture by K Crow )

were arrested in the Tiffin area met in Franklin, Ohio, late
in northwest Ohio today and Tuesday to organize a total
charged with scattering shutdown of fuel suwlies and
roofing nails on U.S. 224 and large trucking companies in
Mack was also charged with the Cincinnati-Dayton area.
Asks Guard Removal
carrying a concealead weapon.
Rynn asked for the removal
Nineteen shooting incidents
were reported Tuesday to the of National Guard units which
Patrol. Objects, including are patro!ing the highways.
"We don 't want another Kent
rocks and pipes, were thrown
on roadways; two trucks were State," he said .
"We are asking our fellow
heavily damaged by explosions
at a Warren Termmal and two truckers to help us curb the vi·
others gutted by arson-caused olence now occurring in some
fires at a stop at Mineral Ridge parts of the country," Rynn
near Warren.

Several hundred truckers

said. "We are now close to
achieving our aims and violence can only hurt us."

Roush elected
bank director

OOUTIIERN BASKETB~L fans still had a glint of winnmg in their eyes at h;, lf -lam' wilh
th_e score tied at 25 Tuesday rught. Eastern took the lead in the fourth quarter wmn 111 1• j'&gt; t" 4fi
Pictu res by Katie Crow.
'
'

Father of three killed

SALEM CENTER - Orion W. Roush, Salem
Center, was elected as a new director Tuesday when
the annual shareholders meeting of the Pomeroy
National Bank was held.
Reelected directors for 1974 were R. E. Boice,
Edison H?bstetter, Horace Karr, Roger Morgan,
Warren Ptckens and Eldon E. Weeks .
Roush is married to the former Kate Webb and
they have two"children, Wayne, with Shell Chemical
Co., Belpre, and Dixie K. Roush Green with the
Farmers Insurance Agency , Aurora , IlL
For six years, Roush was
employed with the Union
Barge Line and the Tri.State
Materials Corp. He worked for
several years in the Letart
Falls area as a truck farmer
and is currently co-owner of a
dairy farm at Salem Center.
Roush helped organize the
Salem Center PTA and served
as president. He was a member
of the Rutland Local School
Board for six years. He is a
trustee of the Salem Center
M.E. Church and a member of
the Meigs County Farm
Bureau . The new director
served for 11 years as a local
and county 4-H advisor, in 1973
receiving an award as an
outstanding 4-H alumni. For

Agriculture Stabilization and
Conservation Service. Roush is
now serving a five year term
on the Board of Trustees of the
Rio Grande Community
College and is chairman of the
Meigs County Action Plan
Committee.
Pre si dent Hobstetter
reported that the year 1973 was
one of exceedingly fine growth
both m deposits and earnings .
"This increase renects the fact
that economic growth in Meigs
and surrounding counties is
hitting a new high," Hobstetter
sat"d .
"In this, our 102nd year, we
look to the future with confidence in the further
development of the area. We

several years he was chairman

continue to try to provide the

ORION ROUSH
reelecwd by the directors were
Edison Hobste tter, president;
Richard J . Chambers, vice
president ; George H. Hobstetter, v1ce president; Dennis
E. Keney, vice presiden t;
Maxine Griffith, cashier; Lera
K. Jones, assistant cashier;
Don Nelson, assistant cashier;

Richard J . Poulin, assistant
cashier, Joan Wolfe, assistant
cashier ; Marilyn Wolfe,
assistant

cashler;

Doris

Snowden, teller; Emilia
Midkiff, secretary; Donna
Nelson, head bookkeeper ; Lee
Ann Nease, Maxme Rickard,
Manlyn Rubinson and Linda
Spencer, bookkeepers;
William J. Hobstetter, vice
branch
president
and

of the Meigs County Extension most modern and convenient
Service Advisory Committee. banking facillties, with our
In January, 1974, Roush Auto-Bank, which will be
received recogqition for 17 openmg on Second Street manager ; .Joan May, assistant
branch manager ; Marcia
years service as county soon," he said.
Elliott
and Kathy Stewart,
committeeman
of
the
Officers and employees
tellers; Jane t Williamso n,
bookkeeper , and Sharon
Buffmgton, custodian.

10 more file
candidacies
F1ve additional Democral&lt;
and five Republicans have filed
their peti tions of candidacy to
run for their party's central
committee in the May
primaries . Latest to file with
the Meigs County Board of
Elections are :
Democrats-George Carper,
Bedford East; Celia E. Bailey,
South Chester; Lawrence M.
Stewart, Middleport Fifth'
Ward.
Republicans - Cla rence
Lawrence, Portland; George
M. Collins, Olivedale ; 0 . J .
Pennington , Alfred; Alva
Swick, Salem, and Sheila
Hicks, Po:neroy First Ward .

WASHINGTON - PROMISING TO FIGHT for a national
health insurance plan that ''would preserve and strengthen our
present health care system, not destroy it," President Nixon
today sends Congress a plan aimed at assuring that all
Americans have health insurance at a price they can pay.
Nixon's newly named Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan
(CHIP) would require employers to offer minimum levels of
insurance cove,..ge to their workers and to pay the bulk of
premium costs; would subsidize premiums' for low income and
sick persons or workers in hazardnus jobs for whom insurance
costs would be exorbitant, and would continue Medicare with
lroader henefits for perso!)!l 65 and older.
.
.
On a cost-«haring basis, CHIP would cover such health ex·
penses as hospital and doctor care, drugs, laboratory tests Xrays, medical devices, ambulance service treatment' of
children, alcoholism and drug abuse, and m~dical bills that
exceed $1,500 a year for a family .
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO HOUSE Tuesday approved
legislation requiring public schools in the state to offer courses in
venereal disease education . The measure. passed 7().14, would
!Continued on page 16)

NORMAN CURFMAN DRIVES hard here past an
Eastern defender at Racme Tuesday night but h1s team lost
55-48 to the Eastern Eagles in a battle for second place 111 the

DEJECTED BOB MILLER stands on sidelines while his
teammates Mttle Eastern at Southern Tuesday night. Mlller
IS fourth leadmg SVAC sco~er, averaging 18.1 per game. He
had a bad spr.am m last Fr1day night's loss at' North Gallia .

NOW YOU KNOW
The only two Whig candidates elected president ,
William Henry Harrison and
Zachary Taylor, died 111 office

A father of three children
was killed Tuesday in a tractor
acc1dent, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Wayne Edwin Chappelear,
31, Pomeroy, Rt. ~.wa s found
dead on Roush's Lan~ing near
the old Racine locks and dam
at appruXIlnately 8:58 p.m.
Tuesday . It was determined
that Mr. Cha ppelear had been
dead fiv e to six hours.
Mr Chappelear apparently
was attempting to pull a truck

More gas
•
m
summer
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Energy chief William E. Simon
Thursday Will urge the nation's
refineries to cut back hea ting
oil production and mcrease
gasoline output, it was learned

today.
Sources in the Federal
Energy Office said the move
was designed to head off the
growing possibility of gasoline
rationing during the warmer
weather .
The report came as Congress

moved to give striking truckers
immediate help with rismg fuel
costs. Sunon said today he had
heen assured Congress would
act quickly on a resolution
allowing the truckers to pass
on '' the exploswn

w fuel

costs."
The resolution passed the
Senate Tuesday and went
hefore the House Conunerce
Committee today.
In December refineries were
told to cut back gasoline
production to insure enough
heating oil through the winter .
The energy sources sa1d
S1mon is considering a prtcing

formula that would allow the
refineries

to increase their

proftt on gasoline, but at the
same time lower the price of
heating oiL
Simon said today on the NBC
Today Show that motorists,
who have been plagued with
long waits at service stations to
'f1ll thetr tanks, would not face
gasoline rationing m the near

future .
LOCAL TEMPS
The tempera ture in downtown Pomeroy today at 11 a.m.
was 34 degrees and a fr eezing
rain falling

up from the riverbed with a Coronr.r: Sl,enff Jl dl lt·lilhl( h
tractor when the tractor ctnd the H arm~ E-H un!l Thl'
nipped over on him, strikmg body was t&lt;:tke n U1 L\l ll!g
him in the back
Funeral HunJL•. Funer nl
Ca lied to the scene were Dr. arran gements w1 l1 IH• ;mR. R. Pickens, Me1gs County noun ced

Hearst appeals
to kidnaper s
BERKELEY, Calif. I UP! ) Newspaper publisher Ran dolph A. Hearst Tuesday appealed to the three young
kidnapers of his 19-year-&lt;Jid
daughter to show compassion
and free her unharmed .
FBI agents and police today

l1 usp!lahz~ d .

said the kid napers ··acted very
purposeful and u.tent '' He
des crib ed them as " co m-

mandohke."

He said the wom an ca fue to
the door of the apa rtmen t
Monday
night and t he two men
Interviewed witnesses and
then
forced
their way in. He
neighbors who might provide
added
11
appeared
.\!iss Hea rst
clues in Monday night's abduction, whtch occurred when two was blindfolded The wunmn
black men and a white woman acted as lhe leader , hl' :m ttl ,
invaded the apar tm ent of and at on e point dec lared,
1
Pa tr1c1a Hearst five blocks 'They 've seer our f&lt;1ce.s. We

fr om the Umvers1 ty of Cali- hetter clirrll nat.e them.'" He
said he heard a tn ~g er cocked
forn ia campus .
The FBI said Tuesday night and fled ou t a patio doo rway
Neighb ors sa 1d they hea rd
that the kidnapers had not tried
M1ss
Hearst cry: " Oh, no' Not
to communicate with authorime
."
ties or the Hearst family .
Miss Hearst was dragged Fear SLA Responsible
Police intellig ence sources
screaming to a ca r after her
fiance, Steven A. Weed. 26, was said they fear ed th e Svmheaten with a wine bottle and bionese L1b era t10 n A~m}
kicked. A witn ess, Sandy L. might have been responsthle
Golden, Woodland Hills, Calif., for the k1dnap. The ~ !.A m
said Miss Hearst was "half letters to the ne \\' S media
naked, bare from about the recently claimed responsibi:ity
waist up" when shoved into the for the Nov . 6 slaying of
trunk of the car. Police said she Oakland School Supt. Marcus 1
was wearing a blue hathrobe. A. Foster , and other le tters 1
sa-1d promment Bay Area
Hearst Issues Statemeol
Hearst said in a statement residents nught be k1dnaped
issued at his home m suburban for ransom to be used to f1ght
Hillsborough: "Mrs . Hearst "the establishment. "
Police said the kidnapers
and l pray to God that the men
also
bea t e1 neighbor, Ste ven
who took our daughter will
Suenaga,
21. who tned to
show compassion and return
help. They then fired several
her unharmed .
shots
from a rifle to scare off
"At this point, thetr only
any
others
·who migh t try to
crime is abduction. For their
sake and ours-and especially help the young woman .
The abductors fled in an
for Patricia-we plead with
automobile
la ter found abanthem not to make it any wor·
doned
,
and
then
used a sta tion
se."
wagon.
The
first
car had been
Hearst, president and editor
of the San Francisco Examiner taken from Peter Bcnenson. 31.
and . boJU"d chairman of the who was held capth efor a rime
He~rst Corp., also said if his and then freed . He w1derwent
daughter was released un- mtense questioning .
Police described the kidnapharmed he would not "seek to
imprison her abductors." Rut ers as in their 20s . One of the
FBI agents , said prosecution men was 5-foot-10, 150 pounds.
would be left to state or federal
, 1Contmued on page 161

·'

..
..,

grand june.s.
Weed, who was

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="748">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11148">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31875">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31874">
              <text>February 5, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
