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P
olitical
Lukens
Star
on
the
•
•

COLUMBUS (UPI)- U.S. Rep. Donald
E. 'Buzz' Lukens, one of the rising young
Republican stars in Ohio, faces a crucial
test this week as he seeks approval for a
state Senate seat on an interim basis.
There is a good chance Lukens may lose
- a damaging blow to the man some Republicans consider top timber for the
governorship or U.S. Senate in 1974.
Senate Republicans, who will decide
Lukens' fate, are hushhush about behindthe-scenes maneuvering for or against the
congressman. But it has become clear
from private conversations that Lukens is
no better than an even bet to capture the

Now You Know

•

try a comeback in the Senate.
Lukens attracted about one-third of the
Republican vote for governor and was
untouched by the "scandal" which ruined
other top candidates. So he would be a
logical prospect for higher office in four
years.
However, the 2!knember caucus is split
down .the middle on his appointment, and
the two-to-four undecied senators may
hold the key. So might Senate President
Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, who will
run the caucus meeting and decide how the
selection is to be made.
Senate GOP sources report that if the

PVT. WIGAL
Private Glenna J. Wigal,
daughter of Chester G. Wigal,
187 Ash St., Middleport,
recently completed eight
weeks of basic training at the
Women's Army Corps Center,
Ft. McClellan, Ala. She entered the Women's Army
Corps in September 1970 after
attending Kyger Creek High
School near Cheshire.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Outgoing Gov. James A. Rhodes
said today except for a "dirty,
underhanded" magazine article
that attempted to link him with
the Mafia there has not been
so much as a hint of scandal
about his administration.
"There hasn't been a bit of
scandal in my atlministration,"
Rhodes said. "No problems in
the Liquor Department and not
many people can say that. No
contract shakedowns. No flower
funds."
Rhodes, who will be succeeded Jan. 11 by John J. Gilligan,

said the new administration
"may question somebody's
judgment, but they won't find
any pattern of dishonesty or
graft."
The magazine article Rhodes
referred to was one published
in a May 1969 issue of Life entitled "The Governor and the
Mobster."
The article dealt with Rhodes
commutation of the life sentence of 1930's mobster Thomas
(Yonnie) Licavoli, setting up a
chance for the aging Ohio Penitentiary inmate to be paroled.
The parole board, however,

SAIGON (UPI)--Communist a spokesman in Vientiane said
troops stepped up their pres- about 600 North Vietnamese
sure against supply lines in troops crossed from Laos into
Laos and Cambodia today and Thailand last week.
The U.S. Corrunand said
American B52 strategic bomI
1\.T
•
I bers struck near the southern
edge of the Demilitarized Zone
~ews
(DMZ) and against a Commu1
I
By United Press International
nist base camp ~ea further
south in their first raids in
Firs;, 1llin~ Cunference tonight
South vietna n in a month. The
raids followed increased ComWASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON SCHEDULED a munist pressure below the
mini news conference for tonight with four television DMZ.
correspondents in what apparently was one of a series of efforts to
Purpose Unknown
widen contacts with the press. The hour-long "conversation,"
Gen. Thongphan Knocksy, a
announced last week, follows a surprise social get-together with a Laos defense ministry spokeshandful of reporters on New Year's Eve.
man, told newsmen in Vientiane
The television interview, billed as a discussion of the a North Vietnamese battalionpresidency "in depth and perspective," will be staged in the about 600 men-had crossed
ground floor library of the White House, a new setting for into Thailand at Ban Huei
television audiences. Nixon will.be questioned by Eric Severeid of Poon, 150 miles northwest of
CBS,
John
Chancellor
of
NBC,
and
Howard
K. Smith of ABC. A fourth panelist, Nancy Dickerson,
Hit-Skip Driver
will represent Public Broadcasting Service.

••• zn

1

rze1 s :

Wanted by Lawmen

Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach is investigating a
hit-skip accident Saturday at 5
p.m. on SR 248, about 1.5 mile
east of SR 7.
Ralph Hutton, Sr., 63, Portland, Rt. 1, said he was
traveling east on 248 when
another driver was traveling
west at tlie sharp curve neat the
Chester Hill Golf Course.
Hutton said the other vehicle
came left of center, sideswiped
his car, and kept going. Driver
of the second car is unknown.
The
Hutton
car
was
All commercial growers, Johnson, Racine, and Joe Lang,
agri-businessmen and others Marietta, on problems and demolished. No injuries were
interested in any of the phases observations of growers.
reported.
of the commercial vegetable
industry in southern Ohio and
West Virginia are invited to the
Meigs-Washington Area
Commercial
Vegetable
Growers School in Pomeroy
Wednesday.
AKRON, OHIO - TEACHERS IN THE Akron public school
system voted overwhelmingly Sunday to accept a new two-year
contract that will make them among the highest paid in their field
in Ohio.
The pact between the education association and the Akron
Board of Education calls for a $474 per year increase. Starting
teachers with a bachelor's degree will earn $7,350 and those with a
master's degree $8,000. The contract must now be ratified by the
board of education.
(Continued on Page 8)

Growers Meet Set

C. E. Blakeslee, Meigs County
Agricultural Agent, said
speakers will be Dave Coulter,
Ferry Morse Seed Co.,
discussing vegetable varieties;
Robert Partyka, extension
plant pathologist of Ohio State
University, discussing disease
problems and control in 1970-71;
Larry Bear, Bureau of
Markers, Ohio Department of
Agriculture
on
marking
regulations, and Howard A.
Rollins, Jr., of the Ohio State
University Department of
Horticulture.
A box lunch will be served at
noon. The school will begin at 10
a.m. and end at 3 p.m.
Afternoon speakers will be
Lot Smith, Colwnbus, and Bill
Brooks,
extension
horticulturist,
Ohio
State
University, on post harvest
handling; Brooks, Warren
Pickens, Reedsville, and Jerry
Witten on "Is Frost Protection
Possible"; Richard Miller,
extension entomologist, OSU,
... . . a,,
llll
W.i.t,,.
pesticide applicators law, and
C. J. Cunningham, Thereon
• l

'

•

subsequently turned down Licavoli's request.
Rhodes has filed a $10 million libel suit against Life and
the author of the article as a
result. The suit, handled for
Rhodes by famed attorney
Louis Nizer, is still pending.
The governor, who blamed
adverse publicity from the article as a partial cause for his
defeat in the Republican senatorial primary last May, said
he "laid the law down" that
his would be a clean 'administration.
". . . and everybody knew I

Thailand Invaded

Teachers accept contract

•

Some heheve Lukens would use the
Senate ~eat as a sprmgboard for governor
or the U.S. Senate in 1974
One senator said Gov. James A Rhodes
has been exerting his influence m the
matter and IS trying to make sure Lukens
Will not be making a run for the Senate in
four years in case Rhodes wants to go after
William B. Saxbe's seat.
"The last thing Jrrn Rhodes wants is to
get into a bloodbath With him," the senator
said. "If Lukens wms this week, the
governor made a deal wtth him."

Weather
Showers, chance of thundershowers and warmer today.
Chance of showers, turnmg
colder tonight. Lows in the
lower 30s. Cloudy and colder
with a chance of snow fiurnes
Tuesday. Highs near 40.
Wednesday cloudy and cold.

Rhodes Proud of Record

:

•

A senator whose scorecard listed Lukens
with nine votes, Levey with nine and two
undecided, said: "If I were a betting man,
I'd bet against him (Lukens)."
Levey, according to various senators, is
highly respected as a person and for the
work he has done as chairman of the House
Judiciary Committee, often working handin-hand with the GOP senators on common

problems

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-M(JS(Jn Area

• f---------------------------,
B . ,+.

•

to Levey's eight and four senators are
undecided.
"If the vote had been taken several
weeks ago, Levey would have won by 3-1,"
the source said.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT", OHIO

•

•

senators have to stand up and be counted,
Lukens probably will win. If the voting is
by secret ballot, Levey has a good chance,
they say.
"I would say 99 per cent of our members
are opposed to Lukens but are afraid to
come out and say so," said one GOP
senator. "They feel he would hog the
spotlight and not contribute anything to
the work of the Senate. If the vote is taken
by secret ballot, I think you can say that's
the end of Mr. Lukens."
Another GOP source agreed, but said
Lukens had gained during the last few
weeks to the point where he has eight votes

zn

The Daily Sentinel

A runcible spoon, a utensil
yclept by Edward Lear, the
writer of nonsense verse, in the
19th century, is a fork with three
broad, curving prongs sharpened at the ends, used for
spearing pickles or hors
de'oeuvres.

VOL XXII NO. 183

•

seat of Sen. Walter E. Powell, R-Fairfield
who resigned to take Lukens'
congressional seat.
Lukens gave up the seat in Congress
when he ran unsuccessfully last May for
the Republican gubernatorial nomination.
Powell won the seat in November.
Lukens has support from all four
Republican organizations in the Senate
district for appointment by the GOP
caucus to serve the remaining two years of
Powell's term.
But he is being challenged by Harry
Levey, also a Middletown Republican, who
retired from the House and then decided to

•

Vietiane. He said the purpose of
the border crossing was not
immediately known.
Military observers said recent North Vietnamese and
Pathet Lao strikes against
highways and bridges between
Savanhakhet and Pakse in
southern Laos indicated the
Communists were trying to
disrupt communications and
facilitate movement of their
forces across the Mekong River
into eastern Thailand.
Knocksy said Communist
forces Sunday night blew up a
~ridge cutting road co~~icat~ons be.tween t~ef admm~~ttve capif:al of VIe lane an
e
royal cap1tal of Luang Prabang,
130 miles to the north. Fighting
also was reported around
P a ktha, 100 m1·1es wes t of
Luang Prabang, and near
Muong Soui Airfield on the
Plain of Jars.
d Atta k
Reb d. c Cs
. t
In Cam o Ia,
ommunis
·
h
120 nd 82
troops usmg
eavy
a
mm mortars bombarded the
southern colwnn of a two.
ff .
pronged Camb od tan o ensive
aimed at reopening Highway 4
to the sea· The attacks
· came
near Sre Ambel 82 miles south
' h
D 1 d
of Phnom Pen ·
e aye
reports said 100 Cambodians
.
were kille d there Chr Istm as
Eve.
RED CROSS TO MEET
A meeting of the Meigs
County American Red Cross
Board of Directors will be held
at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

meant it," he said. "Outside of
that dirty, underhanded Life article, there was nothing."
Rhodes, who enters private
business when he leaves office,
said he believes he has done
"good things for Ohio."
"I have had eight good and
exciting years here and enjoyed
it," he said. "Some programs
the people and the legislature
didn't buy. I'm not pouting. We
live in a democracy and if people don't like or want something they should turn it
down."
He outlined what he considered the achievements of his
administration - primarily in
the field of education in which
he has been a consistent and
vociferous proponent of vocational and technical training.
"Education must be more
meaningful," he said. "There
are too many high school dropouts.
"We are all for everybody
going to college who wants to
and can. But we realize a big
majority of young people don't
and we wanted a place for
them in high school education."
Rhodes said his administration balanced the budllet, tried
to promote industry to settle in
the state and increased teachers' salaries.
"I did what I thought was
right," he said.

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO Association of Life Underwriters have opened a dr1ve in
cooperation with the State Association's "Organ Transplant Donor" program. Shown above
(left) is C. "Mac" McGinness, National Committeeman of Southeastern Ohio Life Underwriters, presenting the local organization's first card to Gallipolis City Manager Kenneth Morgan .

Organ Transplant Plan
BegUn by Underwriters

Death count
R UfiS l 0 526
By United Press International
.
..
.
Traffic fatahbes durmg the
long New Year's holiday
weekend stayed within the
expected range compilations
showed today , but delayed
•
reports could push the figure
beyond the 500 mark.
A UPI count at 9:30 a.m.,
EST showed 440 persons killed
.
,
.
ITnh tradfflc bedtwelel~596 p.m.,
·
p.m.,
sunurs
d ay an
ay.
The breakdown of accidental
.
.
deaths: Traffic, 440; Frres, 43;
Planes , 6·, Other 37 · Total 526 ·
The National Safety Council
had estimated the toll would be
between 400 and 500. A council
spokesman said that because of
hazardous driving conditions in
the closing hours of the holiday
period, "the final toll will
probably wind up surpassing
the council's estimate."
Texas had 53 traffic fatalities,
California 40 and New York 25.
Dlinois had 21 and Michigan 20.
FLOOD WARNING
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
National Weather Service today
issued a flash flood watch for
extreme eastern Ohio to be in
effect until Tuesday morning.
The watch in Ohio affected
Monroe, Belmont, Jefferson,
Colwnbia, Mahoning, Trwnbull
and eastern Harrison counties.

The Ohio Association of
Professional Life Underwriters
has launched its new statewide
"Organ Transplant Donor"
Program
"Would you help me if I were
·
1r
dymg ... and you were a eady
dead?"
· ,
.
That s the ~uest~on 28
Southeastern . Ohw Life Underwrlters will ask as they
promote the "Organ Transplant
D
"
th'
on or program IS year·
The program was launched
tl b th SEOLU d .
:ecen Y. Y e
uri~g
tts meetmg at the Jolly Lanes m
Jackson
"Our goal is to let the public
kn ow how th ey can give
· the g1"ft
.
·
f · ht
of 1ife to a dymg man, or o stg
to a little girl who has never
. ,
.
seen Spnng, accordmg to Don

To get with the organ donor
program all a person has to do
is fill out a small card life underwriters are distributing and
carry it in their wallet or purse.
It notifies any hospital that you
have authorized the transplant
of your organs if you should die
unexpectedly.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov .-elect John J. Gilligan today designated Martin J.
Hughes, Cleveland, as director
of the Ohio Department of Industrial Relations .
Hughes, 49, is presently
assistant to the international
vice president of the Communications Workers of America.
"Marty Hughes has devoted
his life to the working people
of Ohio," said Gilligan at a
morning news conference during which he announced the
appointment.
"He is keenly aware of all
the problems that confront the

state in this area-health and
safety, the establishment of fair
and decent . minimum wages,
the enforcement of laws which
protect all segments of our
society ... industry and the
general population," said Gilligan.
Hughes, a native of Youngstown, is a member of the
boards of the Cleveland Welfare
Federation and the Cleveland
Mental Health Association. He
has also served on the national
boards of the United Community Funds and Councils.
He joined the Ohio Bell Telephone Co. in 1940 and, shortly

Stanley, Gallipolis, Public
Service Chairman.
The thinking behind it is
similar to life insurance,
Stanley believes. "You buy life
insurance because you want to
know others are taken care of
after you've gone. Now you may
'will' your bodily organs to
others so that they, too, will be
taken care of after you've
gone."

The project was made
possible when Ohio passed
legislation implementing the
Uniform Anatomical Gift Act.
House Bill H. B. 852 passed
during the 108th Ohio General.
Assembly and became effective
August 27, 1970.
The distribution of the
"miniature wills" is being
coordinated by the Ohio
Association of Life Underwriters in Columbus and
taking place through the
group's 40 local affiliated
organizations and their 5,000
individual members.
All professional Life Underwriters in Jackson, Meigs,
and Gallia counties have donor
cards which are available to all
who wish to participate.

Direector OfODIR Nanted

thereafter, was elected to a
local union post and has served
as a union official ever since.
He was the CWA Ohio director
before being named to his
present union post.

E-R UNIT CALLED
The Middleport emergency
unit answered a call at 10:41
p.m. Sunday to 729 Be!)ch St.
where Patty Taylor was ill.
Suffering from a possible attack
of appendicitis, she was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted.

Crucified R emains Discovered

A BUSY TWO YEARS -Ohio's lOth District Congressman Clarence E. Miller surveys
the avalanche of printed matter surrounding him as the 91st Congress draws to a close. The
material- bills, committee reports, hearing transcripts and Congressional Records -is a
compilation of the daily activities and proceedings of the House of Representatives during
tht! two year session. The 91st Congress, the second longest in history, will last more than 700
days. Dunng this time over 800 individual House committee hearings were held and 27,619
1-J;Jk and resolutions were introduced by the House and Senate of which 812 were passed into
1"'' .
to. As a footnote, Congressman Miller was one of the few Members to answer every
roll cnll ,;u
t!Jo House during the 91st Congress.

JERUSALEM (UPI) - The
skeleton of a man nailed to a
cross about 2,000 years ago
shows crucifixion may have
been different- and even more
painful - than the method
depicted by history.
Dr. Avraham Biran, director
of the Israeli Department of
Antiquities, said the skeleton
was "a very, very important
discovery" but said it would be
"mere fantasy" to think it
might be the remains of Christ.
"It cannot be Christ for the
man's name is Yehohanan and
it was chiseled into his ossuary
tomb," Biran said Sunday.
The Hebrew University in
Jerusalem announced
discovery of a second major

archeological find today - the
first stone bearing a Hebrew
inscription from the Jewish
temple the Romans destroyed
in Jerusalem in 70 A.D. A
spokesman said the 2,000 year
old stone was from the top
southwestern corner of the
temple and was believed to be
the spot from which the priests
of the temple signalled the
beginning and end of the Jewish
sabbath.
As generally depicted by
paintings and historians,
crucifixion - including that of
Christ- was with the outspread
arms nailed to the crossbar
through the palms of the hands
and the two feet nailed to the

upright with the feet pointed Department
of
Hebrew
downward and the nail going University Medical School, in
an article in the latest issue of
through the top of the foot.
the Journal of the Israeli ExInstead, from the bones found ploration Society, detailed the
by Israeli scholars, the arms 1968 discovery of the 2,000-yearwere nailed to the crossbar old remains in three burial
through the forearms. The feet caves at Givat Hamivtar in
were placed together and northeastern Jerusalem.
turned sideways, with the spike
The bones of the crucifixion
driven through the two heels
victim
were placed in the John
and into the wood. This left the
man with his body twisted to D. Rockefeller section of
one side, in the case of Jerusalem's Israel Musewn,
Yehohanan with his knees which also received a trove of
pointed to his right. A small fresco fragments. statuary,
wooded seat called a sedacual vases, jars and other artifacts
was on the .::ross to give him from the burial caves. The
added support - and prolong bones are not on display but
may be seen by qualified exthe agony of dying.
Dr. Nicu Haas of the Anatomy perts.

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 4, 1971

Thin Ice

EDITORIAL

WIN AT BRIDGE

Accurate Bidding
Gives Good Score

One World, At
War With Itself
The steady unfurling of new flags in the underdeveloped world after World. War 11 he.ralded a new age of
nationalism, of Pl'.:! forgmg of natwn-states out of formerly subject peoples.
That process continues, but alr~ady w_e se~m to have
gone beyond it int~ a.n age ?f m.tcronatlonahsm, of ~he
fragmentation of existmg natiOns mto even smaller umts.
Place a finger at random on a map of the world. :r~e
chances are good that the country touched, whether I~ IS
an old, established one or a newly cr.eated. one, con~ams
some kind of minority group struggling etth~r f?_r mdependence or autonomy or "a piece of the actiOn.
These groups exist in the tiniest of natio_ns as wei! as
the largest. They range from the racial, as m th~ Umt~d
States (and elsewhere), to the linguistic a~d e!hm~. as m
Canada (and elsewhere). to the tribal, as 1~ N1ge!1a (and
elsewhere ). to the religious, as in the Soviet Umon ! and
elsewhere) .
The internal struggle runs the gam.ut f~om terrorism.
as in the actions of Quebec extremist.s m Canada;. to
periodic riots, .as between Fr~nch-speakmg and Fl.emishspeaking Belgians or Catholics an~ Protestan~s m ~re­
land · to official repression, as practiced by Spam agamst
the Basques or Russia against the. J~ws; to attempts by
minorities to build power bases w1thm the system.
An example of the latter is the formation of a political
movement by Eskimos in Canada's Yukon and North~est
Territories. The "Committee for Original Peoi?l~s· E!thtlement" demands a bigger share of the Arctics mmeral
wealth for the region's inhabitants.
Speaking of original peoples, Australia's aborigines are
reportedly adopting an increasingly militant postur~ t?·
ward the government. Taking a cue from Amenca s
Black Panthers, aboriginal leaders use wor~s like "honk.Y"
and "the man'' in airing grievances agamst the wh1te
establishment.
Examples could be piled up for many weary pages.
Even a compact homogeneous nation like The Netherlands has not be~n spared the effects of this worldwide
phenomenon.
Currently on trial in The Hague for political kidnaping
and murder are 35 young Amboinese. They represent
30,000 other Amboinese who in 1950 fled the island of
Amboina at the eastern end of the long Indonesian chain
after The Netherlands relinquished its colonial rule and
who are demanding that the United Nations force Indonesia to give them back their island as an independent
republic.
"It is time that the United Nations recognized that
there is also a new form of colonialism, of which our
ease is a tragic example," states Amboinese leader Dr.
J. A. Manusama. "This is a case in which colored people
are dominated, not by whites. but by other colored people."
An even more tragic example is found in the report
that Ethiopian air force jets bombed and strafed the city
of Keren in the province of Eritrea on Christmas Eve,
killing 500 persons, in a strike against a guerrilla group
called the Eritrean Liberation Front.
The nation whose suffering under Mussolini's bombs
35 years ago aroused the indignation of the world is now
called an aggressor and oppressor.
The closer the world is brought together by advances
in communication and travel, the more it splits and
divides. The more crowded and interdependent mankind
becomes, the more do ancient racial and linguistic dif·
ferences evolved over the course of millenia come to the
fore.
The centripetal forces of technology and the growing
awareness that we all share a very small spaceship,
rather than producing understanding and cooperation,
are resulting instead in an increasingly violent centrifugal t-eaction that makes the old globe shudder in its
orbit.
·
We no longer have world wars; we have a world of
wars.

The Price Wosn 1 t Right
It was a minor item in the Wall Street Journal, but it
looms large in this matter of environmental pollution.
An outfit called International Disposal Corp. is closing
a $2.1 million refuse reclamation plant in St. Petersburg,
Fla., and may go into receivership.
The plant used a composting process to turn refuse into
fertilizer . Unfortunately, the process proved to be more
expensive than anyone thought, the fertilizer produced
was noncompetitive with commercial fertilizers and the
plant's 100-ton daily capacity didn't afford enough volume
for profitable operation.
"It's a shame it's going to close," Richard Steed, a
director of International Disposal, told a reporter. "The
country is reaching the point where we'll have to do something about solid waste disposal, but apparently at this
point the cities aren't willing to pay the price of solving
it in this way."
Not just the cities. The states and the nation aren't yet
willing to pay all the prices we must pay to solve our
many pollution problems in the di!ferent ways they must
be solved.
We are still in the talking and the accusing stage.

, .

Was Granted Land
Baron von Steuben, the
German soldier who helped
the colonists during the Revolutionary War, was given
grants of land and a pension
after the war, and spent the
rest of his life near Utica.
N.Y.

Climbing Perch
The climbing p e r c h of
Asia and Africa is a renowned l a n d traveler. 11
possesses spec ial breathing
eq uipment which permits it
to leave the water and journey overland in quest of a
new place to live .

BEARY'S WORLD

"May I soy who's calling, so I can find out if he's in,
or not?"

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH (D)
4
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WEST
EAST
. 93
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SOUTH
. J62

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t AQ983
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None vulnerable
West

North
1•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
4 N.T.
6

+

East
Pass
Pass
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South
2

+

4 "5•

Pass

Opening lead-• 9

r---~----------------------------------- ---

1

Voice along Broadway

I

!
!

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK- Pals say Steve
Allen tried to reconcile the
Jolmny Carsons and was told to
butt out .... Who-who-who owns
N.Y. license plate "U U U" ...
Raymond Burr's aide Len
White quit show biz for real
estate .... Mitch Miller's dealing
for a summer NBC replacement
with a new gang of more
modern singers .. .. Loew's
Hotels boss Bob Tisch signed
The Glass Bottle group for three
more spins at Shepheards (N.Y.
niftiest rock-spot) .... Danny's
Hideaway chef Guido Marchitelli won top prize in culinary
art at the Int'l Expo, 2nd year in

a row (his display which flew off
with the award was a tallow
eagle surrounded by a flight of
chickens)
Old movie
showmen tell us Elliott Gould's
too hot not to cool down; too
many movies too fast.
Melvyn Douglas got the
happiest word since his heart
attack: It's a good solid ticker
again .... WCBS radio's "outdoor editor" Mark Sosin may
move indoors with a TV series;
just did a pilot .... Czechoslovak
Airlines is the first Commie
country flag-line to locate on
Fun City's airline alley - 5th
Ave. (at 45th), and why does
that irk so many people? ... AlP

BRUCE BIDS S AT
Bewildered Citizens

Politicos Blamed
For Less /Bread/
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Less and less do Americans like what is happening
around them . But the evidence is that they also are increasingly bewildered as to where. sensibly, to fix the
blame for their discontents.
A western governor took a poll some time ago in his
state and got a quite astonishing result.
A majority of his responding constituents indicated
they expected to be less well-off in the year ahead than
lhey were when queried . But more than 60 per cent of
these people said they did not know who in governmentthe President, Congress, their governor- to hold responsible for what they saw as their worsening condition.
Until a national polling organization asks closely similar
questions across the whole nation, there is no way to
know whether the western governor's poiJ is symbolic of
broad-ranging bewilderment.
Yet some respected analysts are insisting that confusion is indeed general and that it is producing some
grossly illogical behavior among Americans. On the basis
of judgments like these, I marked it down as a hallmark
feature of the 1970 eleetions, and subsequent conversations with politicians and analysts have reinforced that
conclusion.
The most interesting consequence of Americans' evident puzzlement is the way they have chosen, for the
moment at least, to deal with their unhappiness over the
country's sagging economy.
Talks with many governors, defeated or continuing
show their conviction that they, above all other politica1
figures, were this year made the object of the voters'
eeonomic resentments.
Gov. Ronald Reagan of California told me he is
thoroughly persuaded that the stiff rise in his state's unemployment accounted in considerable part for the
slicing of more than 400,000 votes off his winning margin
in 1970 as compared with 1966.
Colorado's Gov. John love, who came through for a
third term pretty much unscathed, nevertheless agrees
with those who argue that the economy was a key factor
in the Republicans' net loss of 11 governorships. Gov.
Milliken of Michigan, who won by a squeeze, believes the
rocky economy almost did him in. The list, as suggested.
is long.
Of course, we have to hold the door open to the possibility that these men are wrong, that they either lost .
or had their margins cut for other reasons. But if there
is any substantial measure of truth in their judgments.
then they signify a striking new phenomenon of the American scene.
Where a particular governor has seen a declining
economy eat into state revenues and has therefore been
forced to raise taxes, a voters' hard blow at the governor
is understandable- if not wholly reasonable.
But where well-remembered new taxes do not enter in.
it simply tears logic to target governors for economic
woes.
When thousands lose their jobs at North American
Rockwell in California's Orange County, in what way is
Reagan really to blame? He does not control defense and
aerospace spending . Those decisions are made by the
President and Congress.
How is Milliken responsible if consumer outlays drop
in a tightening economy a nd the market for Detroit's
cars diminishes?
Reagan, for one, agrees that s uch voting behavior
makes no sense at all. He has no explanation other
than the ott-heard argument that governors , being highly
visible and close to home. are an obvious target.
It may be that simple. And the idea does not confound
that western governor's poll findings . Voters unable to
fix blame still may lash out at the nearest tall figure.
Yet i1 is important to record that this is new . In severe
economic dips like 1958, governors have gone down with
senators. congressmen and legislators in a general sweep.
It IS something else to hammer them for economic ills
and IPt Congress go free.

will try a flick about Carrie
Nation (we'll drink to that) ....
When did Jerry Lewis last have
a hit picture?
Andre Previn (Mia's hubby)
has a shorty brother like
himself who also is quite the
lothario: Jean Seberg is Steve's
latest ... . Gig Young brought
Harriet Douglas in on The
Ground Floor; that's a
restaurant .. .. Sugar Ray
Robinson walked 24 floors to a
radio interview (won't ride
elevators) but couldn't get out
the door which opens only
stairway - wards and had to
trudge down again; more
training than for some of his
fights .. .. Everyone thought
stars had run out of diseases to
work for but Tony Randall is
chairman of the National '71
campaign
to
combat
Myasthenia Gravis; it's a
mysterious, non-&lt;:ommunicable
neuro -muscular disease.
We're always amazed at the
anti - everything slant CBS
newsham Dan Rather injects
into the videozone: On the
annual klatch of top CBS-TV
newshands, Rather emptily
opined the all-white panel
shouldn't even be discussing the
"black problem," that it made
him uneasy; Walter Cronkite,
that journalistic Gibraltar,
nicely returned the little league philosopher to his proper
place with just a raisedeyebrow and a few asterely
ironic words; Rather's performance is like most apprentice critics - bat lefty and
knoek everything.
Eastern Airlines' commercials plugging its money saving food-foregoing "after
dinner" flights are spieled by
the world's champion gourmetstomach - Orson Welles' ....
Marcello Mastroianni dined at
the Ground Floor - sans Faye
Dunaway from whom he's gone
thataway .... It's Nun City
around St. Patrick's Cathedral
these Yule holidays -escorting
kids to that reverent showplace
.... Bennett Cerf's abandoning
Pun City for Barbados for a
sunny quickie .... Fun City's
skyscrapers
make
new
pedestrians shiver even more
these cold windy days - they're
all set considerably back from
the sidewalks which lets gusts
bust right through your
chilblains .. .. There are three
daily papers only on Manhattan
newsstands at a dime and 15c alongside 17 weekly porno
sheets which peddle at 40c to a
dollar .... There's even one from
the Filth Estate in 3-D.
Another famed Bdwy.-area
eatery will burp into a memory
its 2nd time around .... Dorothy
Lamour's discussing a chain of
franchised
restaurants;
someone tell her about Joe
Namath's, Minnie Pearl's and
Zsa Zsa 's fiscal flops .... Hit
singer Julie Budd, at 16, earned
more than $100,000 in '70 - and
her weekly allowance stays at
$10 .... Mahalia Jackson won't
sing in a saloon for any price, so
Las Vegas keeps upping the
lure : to $100,000.
Recession: once packed
movie publicity departments
are pared to the bone - several
of the biggest have only three on
the staff including secretaries
.... One major flickerie even cut
its advertising to near-nothing;
good advice was Arthur
Bris':lane's when a businessman
told him his firm wasn 't worth
advertising: "Then advertise it
for sale," Brisbane retorted.

Oswald: "It was nice to
see Caroline (Mrs. Camp)
Flounoy of Shreveport and
George Dawkins of Houston
win the Master's Mixed
Pairs at the r e c en t Nationals."
Jim: "V was indeed. I
must be getting old because
they, both appeared in tournaments after I started.''
Oswald: "Here is a hand
that helped him. George
sat North and, as frequently
h a p p e n s in mixed pair
games, took control of the
bidding."
Jim: "However, he took
control in a rather unusual
manner. After checking for
aces he gave up his fine sixcard heart suit and let Caroline play the slam in one of
her suits."
Oswald: "If he had insisted on hearts the y
wouldn't have won. You
can't make a slam when you
lose one ace and a trump
trick."
Jim: "East won the spade
lead with his ace and led the
suit back in the hope that his
partner had led a singleton.
Caroline won and proceeded
to play ace and another club,
which she ruffed in dummy.
She started after trumps and
when they broke 3-2 she was
home. She could enter dummy with the last high spade
and discard her last three
clubs on the ace, k;ng and
queen of hearts."
Oswald: "It wasn't difficult to play and it doesn't
look difficult to bid but six
diamonds bid and made was
worth 10 match-points out of
a possible 12."
Jim: "Other pairs stopped
at game or bid the impossible heart slam, thus their
accurate bidding gave them
a good· score."

r--------- -- -~ - - - -----------1

!Helen Help Us:
I

:

I

II

By Helen Bottel

S.I.S. OFFERS LATEST
WORD ON COMPUTER
DATING; OTHER
"SINGLES" HELP
Dear Helen:
There are so many departments for all kinds of problems .
Why isn't there a national
organization for singles without - children? "Parents
Without Partners," while a
wonderful thing for those who
qualify, leaves out the growing
number of people who find
themselves alone and childless
- or with children grown, or
with the other partner.
Some of us women in our 30s
and 40s tried a computer dating
service. No luck - and we
didn't get our money back
either! We don't like to haunt
"singles" bars. You make no
lasting attachments there. We
aren't panting for marriage, but
we'd like to mingle in a slightly
less female society.
Why don't Singles Clubs all
over the country have a
registry, put out a bulletin, or
newspaper or something, so
that unattached people won't
feel so alone? - C.M.
Dear C. and all You Other
Singles:
A start in this direction is
being made in the San Francisco Bay Area where SINGLES
INFORMATION SERVICE
(S.I.S.) offers bulletins aimed
at helping the unattached.
Just off the press is an S.I.S.
report on "Commercial Matching Programs - Including
Computer Dating and Introductions Services." It is free
to anyone who sends a stamped,
self-addressed envelope to
SINGLES INFORMATION
SERVICE,
217 Garces Drive,
San Francisco, California,
94132.
This bulletin is a must for
those who consider computer
dating.
Also, if you live in Central
California, SIS has a list of nonprofit social organizations for
singl6 people - names, addresses and descriptions.
Would you believe: There are
over 40 in all!

The list is yours for a stamped
self-addressed envelope to the
same address as above.
Says an SIS Director: "We
are also preparing bulletins on
tax reform (for singles) and
problems of housing. Once
gets going, we hope it will have
branches throughout the
country. The singles remain an
exploited and unorganized
minority group
fast
becoming a majority group!"
If you Single Persons out
there are interested in making
SIS a national organization write to 217 Garces Drive, Sa].
Francisco, and say so. It ct8J
only grow with your help! - H.

s•

Dear Helen :
I don't want to sound hardhearted but when I read in a
UPI release that the Federal
Government is paying up to
$181,000 of the cost of a $747,000
permanent gravesite for Robert '
F. Kennedy, I wonder - WHY t
And I think Bobby Kennedy
himself would echo my
question . He who worked
tirelessly for integration and an
end to poverty would never
want nearly one million dollars
spent on a useless memorial
when the money could be used
as a LIVING memorial to help
the oppressed. Even if this wer.
all private funds and not parWJ
tially our Government's, it
seems unbelievable - when so
many are almost literally
starving in the ghettos.
More and more, I understand
what the young mean by the
hypoerisy of "The Establishment." Examples of "our"
failures are all around us. We
commit sins against God al'J'i.
man that our younger, longW
haired generation would never
think of doing. I see why they
want to be "different" from
their well-groomed elder~ . MIDDLE-AGED REBEL
Dear MAR:
That kind of money could
provide adequate housing for
over 100 farm workers - or
build a school where "unerr. .
ployables" might learn a trade.
Just sign me "Another
Middle-aged Rebel." - H.

Age No Barrier
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

The bidding has been:

Dear Dr. Lamb-My hus- your husband loves you that.
much.
ried for nearly 50 years but
I am thinking very seriously
Dear Dr. Lamb-I am in
of leaving him. He takes no my 50s. Do you know of any
interest in anything except kind of cream or powder that
sex. He will not play cards, I can get to cover up my
golf, go fishing or any of the wrinkles. Boy, I got them
other things that men of his and I sure would be qappy.
age seem to enjoy. He takes if you could help me
no interest in local affairs or
Dear Reader-Other than
in politics or in his neighbors. I a m miserable for make-up to cover up wrinkles
hours after love-making. Is I am afraid you won't have
this obsession an indication too much success. You can
spend a fortune on lotions
of approaching senility?
and creams billed to cure
Dear Reader- No, I doubt wrinkles
. The oily ones often
that his problem is senility.
cause other problems. In this
Perhaps he just doesn't care age of wigs, false eyelashes,
for cards, golf or fishing. straightening of the teeth f
Some men don't. Incidental- and many other cosmetic
ly, there are a lot of women procedures there is really no
your age who would love to
reason to hesitate about havhave that kind of a husband .
cosmetic plastic surgery
I get many letters from ing
womenwithjusttheopposite if you need it. The only problem is to stay out of the
COmplaint.
hands of the quacks. You can
Sex is not to be ashamed avoid this by getting from
of or hidden. It is part of your county medical society
normal life and function . the name of one or more
Perhaps you really need reputable plastic surgeons
' 1 a tten t'Ion, not an ew who do eosmetic surgery. It
med 1ca
husband. Your doctor or is expensive but in the long.
· gynecologist could help you. run it may be cheaper than
Perhaps some local treat- creams.
d f
1 h
ment an . ema e ormone
Of course, some people
would reheve the problem wear
their wrinkles proudly
for both of you.
as badges of experience.
Age is not a barrier to sex
and it is one way of ex,PressThe name Panama comes
ing love for another person. from
old Indian word
I think it is wonderful that which anmeans
"fisherman"
after 50 years of marriage
or ·'plenty of fish."

West

North

East

South band and I have been mar-

1•

Pass

Pass

1""
?

You, South, hold:

. K6 . A97 + KQ4 ofoAQJ32

What do you do now?
A-Bid one no-trump. This
bid shows 18-19 points. Don't
double because you don't want
your partner to bid a suit unless he has a good one.

THE DAllY SENTINEL

1

~~~ORTls~ 1~

ME IGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TAN NEHilL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Published daily except
Saturday by The Oli io Vall ey
Publishing Company, 111
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Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
CHEDCJARr..YQU Kl-lOW ABOUT
BOILERS AND T HAT STUFF"·
WILL YOLl TAKE A LOOK AT OOR
FURNACE? WE DON'T GET
ENOUGH .HOT WATER ··

®

THIS 15 A DEI'-0 HEAT-.. Ct-IEDDAR
15 ABOUr TO F'I ND OUT' THE BAR 15

CLOSED... THE PARTY'S OVER.'

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 4, 1971

Marauders W in
••
••
'

..
'"

The Meigs Marauders stayed
alive in the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League title picture by
defeating the Ironton Tigers
here Saturday night, 7~ .
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders, looking as sharp as
anytime all season, are now 3-2
in league play behind leagueleaders Waverly, Athens and
Jackson. Ironton dropped to 3-5
on the year and to 2-3 in league
action. Meigs is 4-2 for the
season overall.
Jeff Tyo, 6-2 senior, regained
his form of last year, pumping
in 30 points , an apparent
Marauder record. Hitting on
only six field goals, the allleaguer of a year ago cashed in
on 16 of 20 attempts from the
charity stripe and gathered in
nine rebounds.
Mickey Childs, ~ senior,
starting only the second time
this year, played as though he
wants in the starting five the
remainder of the season. The
quick little guard had 18 points,
more than his previous season
output.
Another Marauder eye-lifter
was Tony Vaughan, 6-3 junior
forward. Vaughan came off the
bench late in the first quarter
and let his presence be known in
a hurry as he scored six points
in the final minute of the
opening period. Vaughan got
nine altogether and had 13
rebounds, tied for team-high
with 6-3 senior center, Bill
Hensler.
Charlie Kitchen, 6-3 senior
center, and Bud Christian, 6-0
guard, paced Coach Dick
Myers' Tigers with 14 apiece.
Before the game, Kitchen was
second in league scoring at a 24
per game clip and Christian
seventh at 17.3. Meigs had no
one in the top 11.
The Marauders won the game
at the free throw line where
they made 33 of 44 tries for a 75
per cent average. Ironton made
only 10 of 19 from the line for 53
per cent.
From
the field,
the
Marauders hit on 20 of 51 for 39
per cent. Ironton made good 27
of 73 for 37 per cent. The percentages shot from the field
were the exact league average
for both squads prior to the
game.
Meigs took 49 rebounds off the
boards compared to 38 for the
Tigers. The key factor in the
game was that the Marauders
had but 15 personals called on
them while the Tigers were
whistled down 28 times. Meigs
was in the bonus situation with
only three minutes gone in the
first quarter.
The Tigers, upset winners
over Athens earlier, 72-66, were
never in the lead. The score was
tied once at 39-39 in the early
moments of the third quarter,
but the Marauders slowly increased the margin from that
point.
With 17 seconds gone, Tyo
dropped in two to put the
Marauders up, 2-{}, After a twinpainter by Kitchen, who scored
eight of his 14 points in the first
quarter, Tyo and Jeff Morris, 63 junior forward, each dropped
in a free throw to put Meigs on
top, 4-2.
Three foul shots by Tyo and
one by Kitchen made the score,
7-3. With the score, 9-7, Childs
dropped in four straight free
throws while the Tigers
managed just one, hiking the
Meigs lead to 13-8.
After three points by Kitchen,

·...

'

'·
L

.,

•

•

•
•

-

,,

IRONTON
Christian, 21
Ford, 43
Kitchen, 45
Spears, 15
Myers, 13
Boykin, 55
Banks, 35
Fletcher, 25
Hughes, 23
Schuyler, 11
Turner, 41
TOTALS

FG·A FT-A PF
5-12
2-4
6-19
0-2
6-19
0-1
4-6
3-9
1-1
0-0
0-0
27-73

BY QUARTERS

Ironton Tigers
Meigs Marauders
Officials - Schwarze! and Milhoan.

4-8
2-2
2·2
0-0
0-1
0-0
1-1
1-5
0-0
0-0

o.o

10-19

5
2
5
4
4
2
2
2
0
2
0
28

Ironton
Meigs

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. l. Pet. GB
New York
31 12 .721 ...
Boston
24 17 .585 6
Philadelphia 24 19 .558 7
Buffalo
11 32 .256 20
Central Division
W. l. Pet. GB
Baltimore
23 16 .590 .. .
Cincinnati
17 21 .447 5112
Atlanta
14 28 .333 10112
Cleveland
5 41 .109 211/z
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
30
7 .811
Detroit
26 15 .634 6
Chicago
24 16 .600 7112
Phoenix
25 19 .568 8112
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 22 17 .564
San Diego
23 20 .535 1
San Francisco 23 21 .523 W2
Seattle
19 22 .463 4
Portland
12 30 .286 111/z
Sunday's Results
Boston 140 Atlanta 128
Phoenix 102 San Francisco 81
Monday's Games
Seattle at Milwaukee
Portland at Cleveland
(On ly games scheduled)
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. L. Pet. GB
30 12 .714 ...
Virginia
25 16 .610 41!2
Kentucky
16 22 .421 12
New York
16 23 .410 12112
Floridians
17 26 .395 13112
Pittsburgh
16 25 .390 13112
Carolina
West
W. L. Pet. GB
25 12 .676 ...
Utah
23 15 .605 21!2
Indiana
Memphis
21 18 .538 5
Denver
15 23 .395 101!2
Texas
14 26 .350 121!2
Sunday's Results
Pittsburgh 115 New York 109
Kentucky 124 Floridians 119
Virginia 135 Carolina 124
Denver 129 Texas 124
Monday's Games
New York vs . Kentucky
a t Indiana
Floridians at Indiana
(Only games scheduled)
NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
Boston
New York
Montreal
Toronto
Vancouver
Detroit
Buffalo

L. T. Pfs.
6 5 59
7 6 58
12 B 42
19 1 35
21 3 31
21 4 28
7 23 6 20

W.
27
26
17
17
14
12

West

W. L. T. Pfs.

Chicago
26
6 5
St. Louis
18
8 11
Minnesota
13 17 7
Pittsburgh
10 18 11
Philadelphia
12 19 5
Los Angeles
10 19 6
11 24 2
TP California
Sunday's Results
14
6 New York 6 Montreal 5
Boston 5 Pittsburgh 1
14 Detroit 3 California 2
0 Chicago 5 Buffalo 3
12 St. Louis 7 Los Angeles 3
0
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled)
9
7
2
0
0
64

BY QUARTERS
10 10 13 8-41
6 12 12 10-40

57
47
33
31
29
26
24

AHL Standings
By United Press International
East

Quebec
Spr ingfield
15 20 10 19-64 Providence
23 16 17 17 - 73 Montreal

Little Marauders
Edged in Thriller

The Meigs Marauder reserve
squad dropped its first game of
the season Saturday night,
41-40, to the once-beaten Ironton
reserves.
Coach
Bill
Wickline's
reserves are now 5-1 overall and
4-1 in league play. The Tiger
Cubs remained the leagueleader with a 5-0 mark and are
7-1 overall, losing to Portsmouth last week.
A year ago, when the Meigs
reserves were freshmen, they
dropped only one game and that
was to the same group of
Ironton boys.
Rich Bailey, 5-8 sophomore
forward, again led the little
Marauders with 18 points.
Jimmy Boggs, 5-10 sophomore
forward, added eight. Kriebel
led Ironton with 13 while Spence
added 11.
By United Press International
The little Marauders tied the
Saturday
score
at 38-38 with two minutes
East
left. But 40 seconds later, an
Rutgers 97 Pitt 87
Fordham 81 Princeton 71
Ironton twin-pointer made it 40Pace 81 Queens 73
38.
Marshall 107 East Car. 79
With 24 seconds left, the Cubs
Delaware 77 Drexel 69
South
hiked their lead to 41-38 on a
Dvdsn 66 Wm . &amp; Mary 49
free throw. Boggs hit a long
So. Car 81 Clemson 53
jumper with 14 seconds left to
Vndrblt 76 Georgia 69
Wake Frst 92 Vir . Tech 81
make it 41-40. With nine seconds
No. Car. 101 Tulane 79
left, Bill Vaughan, 5-9
Murray 81 East. Ky. 74
sophomore
guard, stole the ball
Georgia Tech 82 Rice 72
and called time-&lt;&gt;ut. With seven
West. Kv. 86 East Tenn . 83
Miami (F la.) 90 Ok City 87
seconds left,
the little
Mmphs St. 69 No. Tex. St. 57 Marauders had their chance to
Brown 72 Geo. Wash . 70
take the lead but a one-and-&lt;&gt;ne
Kentucky 103 Miss. 95
Miss. St. 69 Tenn. 67
situation was missed on the first
Midwest
try . Ironton had inadvertently
Notre Dame 97 Minn. 73
fouled to set up the free throw.
Ohio U. 97 Ill. St. 73
Ohio St. 95 Yale 75
Meigs didn't give up, though,
Xavier (0) 80 Air Force 65
as they tied up an Ironton
Marquette 70 Del. U. 61
player for a jump ball with
Cincinnati 60 Drake 59
Iowa 87 Wyoming 84
three seconds left. The ball was
West. Mich: 90 L.;ia (Ill.) 66
knocked out by the Cubs on the ·
Bradley 87 Wichita St. 81
jump. With one second l~ft,
Kent St. 82 Cleve. St. 64
Boggs attempted a desperation
Ashland 71 Brckpt St. 40
De Paul 88 Ill. Wslyn 71
shot from 40 feet away that
Southwest
bounded off the rim.
TCU 115 Lamar Tech 94
MEIGS, (40) - Boggs 4-0-8,
Louisvl 86 Tulsa 74
West
A. Vaughan 0-0-0, Werry 2-3-7,
Los Ang . St. 77 Colo. St. 75
Bailey 7-4-18, B. Vaughan 3-1-7,
Seattle 86 Wash . 81
Sayre 0-0-0 . Totals 14-12-40.
Stanford 85 Columbia 76
IRONTON, (41) - Hannon 3
UCLA 106 Dayton 82
0-6, Kriebel 5 -3-13, Markin 2-3-7,
USC 80 LSU 76
Spence 5 1 11, Rann 1 2 4 ,
Long Bch St. 84 Colo. 62
"'eimann 0-0·0. Totals 16-9-41.
Ariz. St . 124 DePauw 73
Mont . St. 85 No. Ariz 67
The three figures on Mi·
Nev .-Reno 65 S.J . St. 63
chelangelo's tomb in Flor·
Sunday
encP Italy. reprc&lt;;ent sculpGeotwn (DC) 80 Brown 76
tun• , painting a nd a rchitcc·
Tenn St. 85 Phila . Tex. 68
St. Jos. (Pa.) 78 Bos. Coli. 70 fill'( '

College Scores

••

the Marauders upped their lead Meigs a 43-39 lead, which they
to eight points. Later, Childs never lost.
made two more from the line,
A little over the three minute
then Coach Wolfe inserted his mark of the third quarter
secret weapon . Vaughan came spelled defeat for the Tigers as
in for Morris, and in the final the Marauders made a four
minute of the first quarter point advantage into a 54-43lead
dropped in two buckets and two in the next two minutes. At the
free throws while cooling off end of the third quarter, Meigs
Kitchen on the defense. With the led 56-45.
score 23-13 in favor of Meigs,
Ironton didn't give up without
Christian made a jump shot a struggle. The Tigers scored
from 20 feet at the buzzer to seven quickies at the beginning
make it 23-15 after one quarter. of the fourth quarter and at the
After two-pointers by Childs seven-minute mark had closed
and Bob Werry, 5-11 guard, the gap to 56-52.
Ironton came back with six
Three by the Marauders
straight baskets, making use of widened it to 59-52 and the
a full-court press. The spree teams then traded baskets till
the 65-58 mark. Again the Tigers
made it 27-all.
A free throw and a three-point came knocking on the door as
play by Tyo widened it to 31-27. they scored two quick buckets
But four free throws by the and with two minutes left in the
Tigers tied it up again, 31-31.
game, the gap was closed to 65With a little over a minute left 62.
in the first half, Steve Dtmfee, 5Meigs then polished off the
11 junior guard, hit on a 15 foot game at the foul line as they hit
jumper after Tyo made two free on all eight of their final atthrows to up the score to 35-31. tempts. First, Hensler made
With 40 seconds left, Christian two crucial ones with 1:41left.
hit for two points. But the · That gave Meigs a 67-62 lead.
Marauders' Tyo and Childs
After a bucket by Ironton with
came back with twin-pointers of 50 seconds left, Tyo made six
their own. The score was 39-33, straight from the line. The first
but Christian hit a mid-court two came with 44 seconds
desperation shot at the buzzer to remaining, the second couple
make it 39-35 at the half.
with 25 seconds, and the final
Images began recurring of two with four seconds left.
the Jackson game when the
Meigs played without 6-0
Marauders blew a third period senior Rick VanMatre, out with
lead. Ironton wiped out the lead a leg injury.
in a hurry as they scored four
The Marauders will hit the
points and held Meigs scoreless road for two consecutive league
in the first three minutes of the games, first next Friday,
second half, to knot it up, 39-39. January 8 at Wellston and the
Tyo scored a bucket and was Friday following at Athens. On
fouled. After he missed the foul the Saturday after the Athens
shot, Vaughan grabbed the game, the Marauders will face
rebound and put it in to give Logan, a team they beat in the
first round of play, 74-58.
F~A
F~A
RB PF TP
MEIGS
7-17
16-20
9
0
30
Tyo, 20
1-5
3-4
13
4
5
Hensler, 40
0-4
1-1
8
4
1
Morris, 42
8-9
2
2
18
5 -11
Childs, 4
2-3
4
2
8
3-6
Werry, 14
0-0
0-0
0
0
0
Haggerty, 10
3-5
3-6
13
2
9
T. Vaughan, 44
0-1
0
1
2
1-3
Dunfee, 22
20-51
33-44
49
15
73
TOTALS

Pro Standings

W.
16
15
12
12

West

L. T. Pfs.
14 5 37
18 2 32
17 5 29
19 5 29

W. L. T. Pts.
5 43
5 39
5 33
6 32

19
9
Baltimore
Cleveland
17 12
Rochester
14 14
Hershey
13 15
Sunday's Results
Hershey 3 Cleveland 2
Montreal 3 Providence 2
Quebec 1 Bait 1, tie
Rchster 3 Sprngfld 3, tie
Monday's Oames
(No games scheduled)

Unitas Hot In
Colts Victory
BALTIMORE (UPI) -The
Baltimore Colts, the first
National Football League team
to be embarrassed by a Super
Bowl defeat, get another
chance.
The man who made the trip
possible is the same one the
New York Jets embarrassed in
Baltimore's last Super Bowl
visit two years ago.
Johnny Unitas.
Unitas guided the Colts to the
American Football Conference
championship Sunday, beating
the Oakland Raiders, 27-17.
"He's smart, he's been
around a long time," said
cornerback Willie Brown of the
Raiders. "He just sat back and
did what he had to."
What Unitas had to do was
make the Oakland defense
respect the Colt's weak running
game, which he did with
another productive day by
rookie Norm Bulaich, who
scored two touchdowns and
gained 71 yards.
Unitas Lowers the Boom
Then, just when it looked like
miracle worker George Blanda
might rally the Raiders in the
second half, Unitas lowered the
boom with a clinching, 68-yard
touchdown pass to Ray Perkins.
The victory, worth $8,500 to
each Baltimore player, puts
them into the Super Bowl Jan.
17 atainst the Dallas Cowboys
at Miami. It's something the
Colts didn't expect to happen.
Unitas completed only 11 of
29 passes for 245 yards,
including the touchdown, compared to Blanda's 17 of 31 for
271 yards and two touchdowns
but Blanda was inttlrcepted
three times and he knew who
won the battle.
"We lost to a better team,"

Blanda said. "You can't say
enough about Johnny Unitas.
He's still the best. He was
great, absolutely great."
Blanda, 43, who came off the
bench to rescue five games in a
row for the Raiders during the
regular season, played all the
way after quarterback Daryle
Lamonica, the AFC passing
leader, went out in the second
quarter with a pulled muscle.
Colts Shoot Ahead
The Colts shot ahead, 10-0, on
a 16-yard field goal by Jim
O'Brien and Bulaich'$ 2-yard
r un before Blanda went to
work.
He kicked a 48-yard field goal
in the second quarter, then tied
the game early in the third
with a 38-yard touchdown pass
to Fred Biletnikoff when
defender Charlie Stukes fell
down .
Unitas brought the Colts right
back for O'Brien's second field
goal, a 23-yarder, and Bulaich's
second touchdown run, an 11yarder, within five minutes to
give them a 20-10 lead.
It was then, w~th the Colts
seriously challenged for the
first time in the game, that
Unitas' passes were consistently on target.
He completed a 30-yarder and
a 17-yarder to Eddie Hinton on
the drive leading to the field
goal, then hit Hinton for 13 and
Roy Jefferson for 11 and 13
yards before Bulaich's TD.
Perkins Wraps it Up
Blanda hit Warren Wells with
a 15-yard touchdown pass early
in the final quarter but three
plays later Vnitas dropped the
bomb to Perkins to wrap it up.
Unitas directed an error-free
offense. The Colts d1dn 't turn
the ball over, and the Raiders
did.

UCLA Rips Dayton
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The team making the loudest
noise in majur college basketball circles these days is having
trouble being heard by the
coaches ~ho determine the
weekly ratmgs.
. The surprise tea~ of the year
IS . Fordham, wh1ch defeated
Prmceton, 81-71 Saturday night
for its 11th victory without a
loss. However, the Rams have
yet to dent the United Press
International's weekly list of
top 20 ranked teams.
Fordham boasts a blue chip
performer in 6-2 Charlie
Yelverton, who despite his size,
plays at forward and constantly
outrebounds taller men. Against
Princeton, Yelverton was held
to four points in the first half
but tallied 20 in the second half
and also pulled down 16
rebounds to spark the victory.
Eight of the nation's top 10
ranked teams saw action
Saturday night and only ninthranked Drake failed to win. The
Bulldogs were edged 60-59 by
Cincinnati on two free throws
by Dave Johnson with 20
seconds left.
Top-ranked UCLA won its
ninth in a row by routing
Dayton, 106-82; second-ranked
South Carolina whipped Clemson, 8.-53, for its ninth
consecutive triumph; thirdranked Marquette boosted its
record to 9-0 by beating Detroit,
70-61; fourth-ranked Southern
California nipped Louisiana

State, 80-76, for its lOth straight
triumph.
Other Scores
Also fifth-ranked Western
Kentucky edged East Tennessee
State, 86-83; seventh-ranked
Kentucky defeated Mississippi,
103-95; and eighth-ranked Jacksonville beat the University of
the Virgin Islands, 105-95, in
other games involving the top
10.
UCLA employed its famed
full court zone press to
perfection in turning back
Dayton. Sidney Wicks led the
Bruins with 28 points while Ken
May led Dayton with 34.
South Carolina also used a
full court press to topple
Clemson. Guard John Roche led
the Gamecocks with 18 points
and guard Dave Thomas paced
Clemson with 16.
Dean Meminger scored 25
points to spark Marquette's
victory. Marquette got some
trouble from Detroit early in
the game but rattled off eight
straight points midway through
the first half to gain control of
the contest.
Paul Westphal sank four free
throws in the final 21 seconds
of an overtime period to spark
Southern California's triumph .
The undefeated Trojans overcame a 10-point deficit in the
final 4:58 of regulation play to
force the game into overtime.
Western Kentucky, paced by
Jim McDaniels' 29 points, came
from behind in the second half
to defeat East Tennessee State.

Cowboys Trip
49ers, 17-10
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Some time today it will begin to
sink in. The Dallas Cowboys
really have won a championship
and now are headed for the
Super Bowl.
" It's all so fantastic, . so
unbelievable," said Cowboys'
quarterback Craig Morton Sunday after he had helped pilot
Dallas to a 17-10 victory over
the San Francisco Forty
Niners, a victory which capped
an amazing comeback and put
the Cowboys into the Jan. 17
Super Bowl opposite the Baltimore Colts.
Famed oddsmaker Jimmy
"The Greek" Snyder has
tabbed the Baltimore-Dallas
Super Bowl matchup as a "pick
'em" affair, but from the way
the Cowboys are playing of late
(won seven in a row) they
should be favored by .a wide
margin.
They played their "usual"
game against San Francisco
Sunday, run, run, run on
offense, and shut the other guys
off on defense.
Gain 214 Yards Running
Rookie running back Duane
Thomas and his running
companion, Walt Garrison,
drove the San Francisco
defense crazy with their
alternate rushes through the
line and sweeps around the
right side.
Between them they gained

SW Five
Defeated
100 To 43
South Webster handed Southwestern a 100-43 hardwood
setback Saturday night at
Southwestern.
The visitors led 25-8, 50-26 and
72-35 at the quartermarks.
Mike Rose was high for the
winners with 32 points. Richard
Gill paced the Highlanders with
11 points.
Southwestern, now 0-9 on the
year, will travel to Eastern
Saturday night to battle the
league-leading and undefeated
Eagles who are 7-0 on the year.
. Box score of Saturday's
game:
SOUTH WEBSTER (100) Rose, 15-2-32; Phipps, 4-0-8;
Basham, 9-1-19; Williams, 4-311; Faulkner, 7-4-18; Hanes, 3-06; Hamilton, 3-0-6; TOTALS 4510-100.
SOUTHWESTERN ( 43 ) Smith, 2-4-8; Stevens, 3-2-8; Ehman, 2-4-8; L. Dillon, 2-0-4; Gill,
5-1-11; Potter, 2-0-4; TOTALS
16-11-43.
By Quarters:
South Webster
25 50 72 100
Southwestern
8 26 35 43
Reserve Score - South
Webster won.
SINAPORE ACTS
SINGAPORE (UPI) - The
government has engaged experts to study air pollution
problems " before we suffer
from suffocation," said Finance
Minister Dr. Goh Keng Swee.

214 yards running, Thomas
picking up 143 in 27 carries and
Garrison 71 in 17. That enabled
the Cowboys to play their ballcontrol game and they made it
pay off, but it took interceptions by Lee Roy Jordan and
Mel Renfro to give them the
breaks they needed.
Thomas galloped 13 yards for
Dallas' first touchdown after
Jordan's interception, going
through and around the San
Francisco defense and breaking
four tackles en route.
Renfro intercepted Brodie at
the Dallas 19 on a "bomb"
attempt to Gene Washington
and ran it to the 38. Morton,
bothered by a sore pitching
elbow since mid-season, then
took the Cowboys 62 yards in
eight plays, flipping five yards
to Garrison all alone in the end
zone to cap the drive. That
score stood up as the margin of
victory.
Finally Gives Up TD
Dallas' famed "doomsday
defense," which held San
Francisco to 61 yards rushing,
finally gave up a touchdown.
Brodie got it by throwing 26

The Hilltoppers trailed for most
of the game but got the lead
with 6:13 remammg and
controlled the game the rest of
the way.
Kentucky Overcomes Effort
Kentucky placed five men in
double figures to overcome a
46-point effort by the Rebels'
Johnny Neumann . Mike Casey
paced Kentucky with 23 points.
Jacksonville got more trouble
than expected from the Virgin
Islands and led by just one
point, 88-87, midway through
the second half. But the
Dolphins finally pulled away
behind the shooting of 7-2 Artis
Gilmore, who tallied 29 points.
In other games involving the
top 20 teams, 12th-ranked
Tennessee lost to Mississippi
State, 69-67; 14th-ranked Louisville beat Tulsa, 86-74; 15thranked Colorado State lost to
Los Angeles State, 77-75 ; and
New Mexico, also ranked No.
15, lost to New Mexico State,

76-65.
In a doubleheader at the
Palestra in Philadelphia Sunda y, St. Joseph's (Pa .) beat
Boston College, 73-70, and lOthranked small college Tennessee
State upse t second-ranked small
college Philadelphia Textile, 8568.

Plunked
By Bottles
B eer
Cans
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Bottles and beer cans flew
through the air Sunday as 20
persons were arrested and 12
injured in fights among spectators following the San Francisco Forty Niner-Dallas Cowboys
football game.
"I don't know if it was
camaraderie or disgust with the
result of the game that started
it," said Police Sergeant Dan
Howard.
Trouble began when a group
of 20 young men rampaged
throughout the stands, touching
off the barrage of full cans and
whisky bottles.
Of the 12 persons treated at
Park Emergency Hospital for
cuts and bruises, three were
policemen and two women.
Those arrested were held for
investigations of disturbing the
peace or resisting arrest.
The Niners lost, 17-10, and it
was the last professional game
for Kezar Stadium, where the
drinking has been hea~ for a
quarter of a century. Next year
the Niners are to play at
Candlestick Park.
Nearly 100 policemen put
down the fighting.
U.S. WINS CUP
MIAMI BEACH (UPI )-The
United States won the Sunshine
Junior Cup tennis title Sunday,
defeating South Africa . Harold
Solomon of Silver Springs, Md. ,
and Brian Gottfried of F ort
!:.auderdale, Fla., won straightset singles victories over
opponents Byron Bertram and
Ruan Kruger·

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Cowboys had taken a 17-3lead. '~
~J
A 16-yard field goal by Bruce
Gossett and a 21-yarder by /? ·
Mike Clark, both coming in the ~
~.....
first half, accounted for the
game's other points.
Brodie, the NFC's Player of
the Year, completed 19 of 40
passes for 246 yards, but the
Dallas defense shut him off
whenever the Forty Niners got
close.
"I don't think anyone is going
to shut Brodie off," said
Landry. "Our plan was to keep
him from burning us. We did it
by keeping him under pressure
all the time.
Morton hit on only seven of 22
passes for 101 yards but he said
"the figures don't mean a
thing."

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�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 4, 1971

-.

.•'

Tigers Held To
Only 60 Points
A scrappy Gallipolis quintet
fought with all its might here
Saturday night but Coach C. D.
Hawhee's veteran and talented
Waverly Tigers had too much
height and experience and the
result was a 60-30 Southeastern
Ohio
League
basketball
triumph over Coach Jim
Osborne's lads.
Although the Gallians failed
to defeat the rampaging Tigers,
the Blue Devils, by playing
controlled discipline ball, held
the Hawheemen to their lowest
point output of the 1971)..71
campaign. Waverly entered the
game averaging more than 80
points a game.
Had not the Osbornemen
played that way, the socre
would have been 104-48. In the
final period, after GAHS guard
Larry Snowden left the game
with an injury, and after all
chances of a GAHS victory were

gone, the Gallians let up, and
the Tigers outscored the Blue
Devils 26-12 during the final
eight minutes of play.
Waverly's big horses failed to
buckle under the controlled
tactics by the Gallians, and
chalked up victory number six
against one setback.
Inside the SEOAL, the rangy
Tigers remained in a three-way
tie for first place with Jackson
and Athens with a 4-1 record.
The loss left Coach Osborne's
lads with a 2-5 season record.
Inside the SEOAL, the Gallians
are tied for last place with
Logan and Wellston with a 1-4
loop record.
It should be pointed out here
that the combined won-lost
record of the five opponents that
have defeated GAHS thus far is
30 and 6, thus the Osbornemen
have faced some mighty stiff
competition and the season

Bobcats To Face
Falcons Saturday
r ..

..

r

.-,.

By United Press International
Ohio University, picked torepeat as Mid-American Conference basketball champion,
opens defense of its title Saturday against Bowling Green.
The Bobcats finished the preconference portion of their
schedule with a 97-73 victory
over illinois State Saturday,
their sixth win against two
losses.
The Bobcats were led by
their 6-foot-8 center, Craig
Love, who had 32 points and
Ken Kowall with 21.
Another MAC team, Kent
State, takes a 6-2 mark into its
conference opener Wednesday
against Miami after an 82-64 victory over Cleveland State.
Reuben Vance, a junior college transfer and a big addition
to Coach Frank Truitt's Flashes,
tallied 19 points, while Tom
Hintz had 18.
Hot Floor Shooting
Toledo upped its mark to 5-3
with a 6()-49 victory over the
University of North Carolina at
Charlotte.
The Rockets broke a 13-13 tie
and pulled away to a 35-27 intermission lead as they hit 50 per
cent of their shots from the
field.
Tom Kozelko led the Toledo
scoring with 16 points.
At Los Angeles, the University
of Dayton gave it the big effort,
leading for much of the first half
but fell 106-82 to top ranked
UCLA.
Kenny May led the Flyers and
the game in scoring with 34
points, but the Bruins' deadly
zone press and balanced scoring proved too much for the
Flyer~.

Dayton led 23-19 with 8:20 remaining in the half, but UCLA's
famed pressure defense began
forcing turnovers and the Bruins
outscored the Flyers 23-6 in the
next five and a half minutes.
UCLA led 44-34 at halftime.
At Cincinnati, the Bearcats
upset ninth-ranked Drake as
sophomore Dave Johnson sank
a pair of free throws with 20
seconds remaining.
Johnson's two charity tosses
gave Cincinnati a 60-57lead and

Bobby Jones' 15-foot jumper at
the buzzer merely cut the margin of victory to a single point.
Cincinnati's Steve Wenderfer
led all scorers with 19 points.
Tom Bush was high for Drake
with 17.
The win evened Cincinnati's
season mark at 5-5.
Musketeers Win Sixth
Xavier's Jerry Helmers
tossed in 24 points to lead the
Musketeers to an 80-65 win over
the Air Force Academy. It was
thesixth win in 10 games for
Xavier.
Xavier broke a 9-9 tie early in
the contest and held a 41-27lead
at half time. The Musketeers
increased to as much as 21
points in the first 10 minutes of
the second half.
Youngstown won its seventh
game in as many games with a
65-5.!Lvictory over Baldwin-Wallace~ but it wasn't easy.
The Penguins, who trailed 3228 at half time, took the lead
for good on a basket by Bill
Johnson with 6:52 remaining.
Johnson led the scoring with 20.
Baldwin-Wallace, now 3-6,
was paced by AI Lane with 17
and Larry McElfresh with 15.
Ashland's Jones Boys, Bubba
and David, tallied 37 points between them and had 19 rebounds
to lead the Eagles to a 71-40
win over Brockport State of
New York.
Bubba finished with 20 points
and David with 17 as the Eagles
jumped out to a 7-Q lead and
were never headed. The win
was the ninth in 11 games for
Ashland.
Danny Young poured in 31
points, including 12 straight free
throws in the second half, to
lead Central State to an 87-82
win over Wittenberg at
Springfield.
The win was the seventh
against one loss for the Marauders, who trailed 42-36 at half
time. Larry Baker led all scorers with 37 points as the Tigers
record fell to 5-2.
In other games, Heidelberg
beat Ohio D.-Portsmouth 84-83,
Ohio Dominican took Calvin
(Mich.) 77-75, and Otterbein
downed Wright State 105-79.

Weekend Sports Summary
By United Press International
Saturday
NEW YORK (UPI)- Rod
Laver defeated fellow Australian Ken Rosewall, 6-3, 6-2, 7-5,
in the opening match of the
$210,000 tennis Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)
- Pat Sullivan, the nation's
total offense leader, outduelled
Archie Manning to spark
Auburn to a 35-28 victory over
Mississippi in the Gator Bowl.

Florida State.
Sunday
BALTIMORE (UPI) - The
Baltimore Colts, behind the
passing and field generalship of
quarterback John Unitas, defeated the Oakland Raiders, 2717, to win the American
Football Conference title.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Duane Thomas scored on a 13yard run and sore-armed
quarterback Craig Morton
tossed five yards to Walt
Garrison for another TD as the
OAKLAND (UPI) Mel Gray Dallas Cowboys beat the San
of Mi:::souri ran the opening Francisco Forty-Niners, 17-10,
kickoff for a touchdown and to win the National Football
scored another TD on a 45-yard Conference championship.
pass from Dan Pastorini of
Santa Clara to lead the West to
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
a 17-13 triumph over the East Tennessee State, ranked No. 10
in the 46th Shrine Game.
among the nation's small
college basketball teams, upset
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) second-ranked
Philadelphia
- Larry B. Jones, an assistant Textile, 78-70, behind the 29coach at Tennessee last season, point performance of Len
was named head coach of Robinson .

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

poin~.

Jeff Hopkins, 6-4 senior center
hauled down 10 rebounds fo~ the
winners, and added 11 points.
Rick Eblin finished wi~ 12
points and seven rebounds and
the lone underlcassman on
Waverly's starting five, Mike
Oyer, 6-2 sophomore forward,
scored 10 points and collected
seven rebounds.
As a team, Waverly hit 28 of
53 shots from the field for a
sizzling 52.8 per cent. The
Tigers hit four of five free
throws, committed only 10
personal fouls, had 33 rebounds
and committed only five turnovers.
GAHS took only 28 shots from
the field and sank 10 for 35.7 per
cent. The Devils made 10 of 14
free throws, and committed
only five personal fouls. GAHS
had 17 rebounds, and committed 13 turnovers.
Larry Snowden's nine points
led the Blue Devils' attack.
Mike Noe finished with eight,
and Rod Ferguson had seven.
Waverly was never headed.
Miller hit a long jumper seconds
following the opening tip, and
Jeff Hopkins a short jumper
with 7:07 left in the first period
to give the visitors a quick 4-Q
lead.
Snowden's crip cut the Tiger
lead to 4-2 with 6: 56 left, then
the visitors pulled away to a 15-7
first period lead. Miller had
eight of the Tiger points in the
opening canto.
Waverly increased its lead to
28-13 at the halftime intermission.
Snowden and Noe combined
efforts to reduce Waverly's lead
to 28-18with 6:18left in the third
period, but the Gallians failed to
score after that, and fell behind
34-18 after three periods.
After Snowden left the game
early in the final period, the
Gallians began running with the
Tigers, and the visitors outscored the home club 26-12 to
win going away, 60-30.
Friday, GAHS will battle
Ironton on the Blue Devil
planks. Waverly will host
Jackson in a battle for first
place in the SEOAL.

by Chet Tannehill
What a clobbering we Monday morning quarterbacks took
from Thursday through Sunday in the Big Bowl matches and the
Super Bowl Prelims! I know a guy who two weeks ago picked five
right for $38 on the cards and on the catastrophic long weekend
just completed went 0 for 5!
There were a few scattered hardnosed descendants of old
Ireland around the Bend Area who liked Notre Dame over Texas,
so their blarney stone took on a special glow Thursday about 4:30
p.m. EST. But who among us were prepared for the magnificent
Mexican? Or for the entire squad of Stanford Indians who pulled
off the upset of the year by taking our Bucks 27-17?
The Sunday Pro Super Bowl Preliminaries went contrary to
my first sentiments. But when the game had ended, the Colts
beating the Raiders and tne Cowboys the Forty-Niners, both in
solid fashion, I conceded in both cases. Baltimore and Dallas are
fit to represent their conferences.
One interesting aspect of Sunday is that the old American
League was shut out of the Super Bowl, Baltimore having eloped
into the American League upon the merger last year, and ousting
Oakland, the single representative of that league in the playoffs.
In retrospect, the long weekend of football emphasized again
the importance of the quarterback. The 1969 season had been
called "the year of the quarterback."
You have to figure Johlllly Unitas the key difference in the
Colt-Raider game. This guy who broke in as a regular in the 1956
season for Baltimore practically off sandlot football has to be the
greatest. Stanford's Jim Plunkett more than any single opponent
beat Ohio State. Notre Dame's Joe Theismann inspired that
dedicated Notre Dame offense (and defense by the way the offense played).
As for the Dallas-Forty-Niner result, let's admit that Craig
Morton was enough added to the Cowboys' stupendous defense to
win.
As talented and experienced as Forty-Niner quarterback
John Brodie is, he wasn't that much greater than Morton to swing
the outcome.
Then we all must accept a simple fact:
The guys up front, offense and defense, made possible the
heroics of Unitas, Morton, Lamonica, Blanda and Brodie.

l

TIRE JUNGLE - A continuously moving line of auto tires weaves through one of
several inspection areas at Goodyear's huge tire plant in Union City, Tenn. The $73-million
facility began production in November, 1968 and is now reaching its planned capacity of
38,000 tires a day.

Saturday Night's Scores
Ohio High School
Basketba II Scores
By United Press International
Cleve. St. Joseph 77 Cleve. Holy
Name 55
Conneaut 46 Pymatuning Valley
40 (OT)
Bay Village 73 Berea 44
Cleve. University School 84
Newbury 47
Solon 66 Warrensvi lle 63
Bedford 58 Independence 51
Ashtabula 60 Ashtabula St. John
38
Cleve. St. Ignatius 71 Padua 53
Columbia 66 Parma Byzantine
64
Millersport 81 Liberty Union 47
Coshocton 55 Zanesville 54
Athens 92 Wellston 54
Waverly 60 Gallipolis 30
Jackson 85 Logan 44
Meigs 73 Ironton 64
Alexander 84 Miller 71
Laurelville 72 Starr-Washington
71

This Week'S
College Tilts

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
By United Press International
Monday
Dayton at Houston
North Carolina at Xavier
Wittenberg at Akron
Rice at Cincinnati
Ohio Northern at Findlay
Tuesday
Denison at Capital
Rio Grande at Cedarville
Wednesday
San Diego at Toledo
Miami at Kent State
Akron at Youngstown State
Cent. St. at Ky. Wesleyan
Cleve. St. at W. Mich.
Muskingum at Mt. Union
Wooster at Hiram
Otterbein at Bald-Wal.
Heidelberg at Ohio No.
Wilmington at Bluffton
Findlay at Defiance
Ohio Dominican at Malone
Rio Grande at Urbana.
Thursday
Ind. St. at Steubenville
Western Res. at Oberlin
Friday
Cincinnati at St. Louis
San Diego at Cleveland St.
Kenyon at Grove City ( Pa .)
Saturday
Ohio State at Iowa
Ken t St. at St. Bonaventure
Bowling Green at Ohio U.
Toledo at Miami
Xavier at Marquette
Loyola, La. at Dayton
ALL GAMES
Westminster, Pa. at Akron
TEAM
W L POP Ashland at Oakland, Mich.
Chesapeake
6 0 447 337 San Diego at Youngstown St.
7 1 660 426 Bald.-Wal. at Wittenberg
Jackson
6 l 542 377 Capita l at Oberlin
Waverly
7 2 652 506 Muskingum at Heide1berg
Athe11s
Meigs
4 2 409 388 Hiram at Marietta
Ironton
3 5 500 567 Kenyon at Wash. &amp; Jeff.
2 4 402 451 Wooster at Ohio Wesleyan
Coal Grove
2 5 366 438 W. Va . Tech at Otterbein
Gallipolis
Logan
2 5 394 479 Denison at Mount Union
1 6 410 608 Cent. Mich. at Cent. State
Wellston
Oak Hill
0 7 333 560 Allegheny at Case Tech
Rio Grande at Berea , Ky.
SEOAL VARSITY
Steubenville at Bellarmine, Ky.
TEAM
W L P OP Urbana at Indiana Northern
Waverly
4 1 409 269 West. Res. at Pitts .-Johnstown
Athens
4 1 379 298 Bluffton at Malone
Jackson
4 1 396 278 Defiance at Cedarville
Meigs
3 2 328 341 Wilmington at Findlay
Ironton
2 3 316 339
Gallipolis
1 4 211 329
Logan
1 4 299 337
Wellston
1 4 283 440
Tri-County League
TOTALS
20 20 2621 2621
Week of 12-22-70
Points
Name
SEOAL RESERVES
90
TEAM
W L P OP Davis Warner Ins.
70
Ironton
5 0 212 181 H&amp;R Firestone
66
Meigs
4 1 227 202 Mason Furn.
48
Athens
4 1 192 144 Eagles
44
Jackson
2 3 212 187 Rawling's Dodge
42
Waverly
2 3 205 176 Holsum Sales
Team High Series - Mason
Gallipolis
1 4 168 192
Wellston
1 4 138 238 Furn. 2509
Team High Game - Mason
Logan
1 4 173 207
TOTALS
20 20 1527 1!27 Furn. 910
Ind . high series
Bert
SATURDAY'S
RESULTS:
Bodimer 591
(Varsity)
Bert
Ind . high game
Waverly 60 Gallipolis 30
Bodimer 222
Jackson 85 Logan 44
Season High Series - Ed Voss
M eigs 73 I renton 64
636
Athens 92 Wellston 54
Season High Game - Paul
South Point 84 Oak Hill 49
Harris 267
Chesaoeake 80 Rock Hill 60
Coal Grove 84 Ironton St. Joe 73
FRIDAY'S GAMES :
Pomeroy Early Bird
Athens at Logan
Dec. 30, 1970
Ironton at Gallipolis
Team Standings:
Jackson at Waverly
Won
M eigs at Wellston
Team No.2
6
Mark V
6
Rawlings Dodge
6
E velyn's Grocery
2
RICE AWARD
Team No. 6
2
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI)- D. D. Pinnettes
2
Fi rst High Ind. - Betty Batey
Undefeated Nebraska, a 17-12
winner over LSU in the Orange 183
Second H igh Ind. Betty
Bowl on New Year's night, has Batey 177
First High Ind. Series - Betty
been chosen as the winner of
the Grantland Rice Award Batey 534
Second High Ind. Series given by the Football Writers M ary Voss 470
First High Team Ind . - Mark
Association of America to the
outstanding college football v 716
First High Team Series team.
Team No. 2 2046

SEOAL Standings

L&gt;cal Bowling

By United Press International
LEXINGTON, MASS.- AN ECONOMIC adviser to former
President Johnson Sunday predicted a sharp rise in the nation's
unemployment rate this year together with a marked slowdown in
rising prices. In a detailed, five-year economic forecast, Otto
Eckstein, a former member of the President's Council of
Economic Advisers, predicted the number of jobless workers
would rise from 5 per cent in 1970 to 5.7 per cent over the next 12
months.
The rate is not expected to fall below 5 per cent again until
1973 when it will dip to 4.9 he said, predicting the yearly average
would be down to 4.4 per cent by 1976. At the same time, Eckstein,
now a Harvard University economist and president of an
economic analysis firm, said 1970's 5.3 per cent inflation rate
would dip to 3.1 per cent by 1976.
COLUMBUS - REl&gt;RESENTATIVES OF 20 of Ohio's largest
cities feel the Ferguson Act should be repealed and legislation
enacted to give public employes the right to organize and bargain.
Two economists, writing in the Business and Economic Review
published by Akron University, said 32 of the state's largest cities
presently recognize and bargain with employe organizations.
MIAMI -THE FIRST HIJACKING of 1971 came three days
into the new year. The script has changed very little since the first
hijacking almost 10 years ago. In each instance, the craft was a
National Airlines plane, the hijacker was armed and quickly took
control of the flight. Sunday's occurred as a flight from Los
Angeles prepared to land at Tampa.
"This man walked into the cockpit with a big caMon and said
we're going to Havana -and that's what we did," said Capt. Carl
Weiss, the pilot. The DC8 jet carried 97 persons, considerably
more than the National airliner with 11 persons aboard that was

Warren Loca l 78
Parkersburg (W.Va.) Catholic
57
Zanesville
Rosecrans
44
Caldwell 31
Zane Trace 53 Skyvue 49
Barnesville 88 Cadiz 44
Meadowbrook 68 Shenandoah 53
Canton Lincoln 54 Akron North
45

Canton McKinley 74 Cleve. East
Tech 73
Central Catholic 60 Alliance 48
Lake 83 Tusky Valley 80
Claymont 71 Indian Valley 61
Kenson 57 Mentor 51
Cleve. St. Edward 99 Elyria
Cath . 61
Waynesv ille 67 East Clinton 46
Bellefontaine 72 Greenvi lle 60
Sidney 69 Lima Shawnee 56
Coldwater 90 St. Henry 78
East Liverpool 54 Streetsboro 33
Youngstown Nortti · 92 ··Youngstown South 37
Columbus Walnut Ridge 97
Salem 73
Stanton Local 66 Adena 64
Weirton (W. Va.) Madonna 70
Mingo 53
Lancaster Fisher 85 Amanda
Clearcreek 77
Canal Winchester 85 Fairfield
Union 53
Bloom Carroll 86 Pickerington
84
Springfield South 75
Columbus Brookhaven 43
Columbus North 70 Columbus
DeSales 66
Upper Arlington 90 Washington
C. H. 72
Columbus
Watterson
74
Columbus West 71
Columbus Wehr le 73 Hamilton
Township 61
Columbus Eastmoor 89 Triway
77
Kent State 64 Western Reserve
60
Akron St. Vincent 71
Warren Western Reserve 68
Kent Roosevel t 69 Cuyahoga
Falls 66
Hillsdale 49 Northwestern 39
Norwayne 61 Waynesdale 55
Waterloo 80 West Branch 71
Rittman 76 Doylestown 57
West Holmes 65 Highland 63
Zane Trace (Ross) 57 Logan
Elm 39
Brookville 76 Preble Shawnee 66
West Carrollton 63
Dayton Patterson 61 (ot)
Dayton Oakwood 73
Kettering Fairmont East 53
Franklin 70 Valley View 69
Wyoming 78 Carr Creek (Ky.)
56
Cincinnati Purcell 59
Mason County (Ky.) 50
Cincinnati Country Day 90
Fayetteville 41
Covington ( Ky.) Catholic 72
Cincinnati Roger Bacon 41
.--~-------

Oak Hills 74 Cincinnati LaSalle

•

59

Cincinnati Walnut Hil ls 71
Hami lton Garfield 67
Wilmington 74 Dayton Carroll
52
Hamersville 77 Mount Orab 66
Ridgedale 78 Marion Cathol ic 41
Dan vi lie 87 Olen tangy 71
Big Walnut 88 Centerburg 49
'
Ashtabula Harbor 51 Geneva
Jefferson
92
Ashtabula
Edgewood 84
Cleveland St. Edward 99 Elyria
Catholic 61
Kenston 57 Mentor 51
Cardinal 68 Grand Valley 52
Jefferson
92
Ashtabula
edgewood 84
Garrettsville 69 Berkshire 57
Patrick Henry 84 Ottawa
Glandorf 64
Tinora 92 Bluecreek 85
Fort Jennings 72 New Riegel 69
Continental 130 Lima Perry 91 l
Bryan 70 Archbold 63
Napoleon 70 Fairview 64 (OT)
Medina 58 Cloverleaf 56
Akron South 77 Mansfield 65

48.

Saturday's
Ohio College
Basketball Results
•
By United Press International

•

Ohio State 95 Yale 75
UCLA 106 Dayton 82
Cincinnati 60 Drake 59
Toledo 60 Nor1h Carol in a·
Charlotte 49
Ohio University 97 Illinois State
73
Kent State 82 Cleveland State 64
X.1Vier 80 Air Force 65
Youngstown State 65 BaldwinWal lace 59
Central State 87 Wittenberg 81
Ashland 71 Brockport Stale
(N.Y .) 40
Ohio Dominican 77 Ca l vin .
(Mich.) 75
Heidelberg
85
Oh i o
u.
Portsmouth 83
Otterbein 105 Wright State 79

•
~

Here

MARY JUNE'S
BEAUTY SHOP
992-3667

Middleport

- - - - - - - ---'-- - - -.

How to make tw.·ce

diverted to Cuba by an armed Cuban during a flight from Miami
to Key West on May 1, 1961 - the first hijacking.

I

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!

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Kelley, Oak Hill, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Danny W.
Gilliland, Jackson, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Terry L. Farley,
Vinton, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph L. Van Cooney,
Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce B. Epling, Pt. Pleasant, a

BARRING THE BEAR
PROSPECT, Alaska (UPI) Custodial crews at camps along
the route of the Alyeska pipeline are electrifying fences
around huge pillow fuel tanks to
keep bears away.
Recently a bear chewed and
clawed his way into the corner
of one of the tanks which are set
in earth depressions lined with
heavy vinyl. Fortunately, it had
been raining the night of the big
bear bite and escaping fuel
floated on top of the water and
was easily salvaged.

l as much as a typical

daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Keith M. Dillinger, Jackson, a
daughter.
Discharges
Amos Blanton, Mrs. Conrad
L. Bowen and infant son, Mary
Beth Carr, Mrs. David Lester
Castor and infant son, Mrs. Roy
Crawford, Evan D. Davis, Mrs.
Ben Eachus, Mrs. Gugene B.
Fisher, Mrs. Gregory P. Howell
and infant son, Mrs. Cora E.
McWhorter, Mrs. Walter L.
Myers, James E. Nelson, Mrs.
Samuel W. Perkins, Lawrence
Saunders, Linda E. Seth, Randy
R. Shamblin, Brady C. Shaw,
Raymond R. Simmons, Mary
Ann Smith, Mrs. Delbert L.
Truman, Mrs. Nora E. Wallis,
and David D. Wears.

high school graduate~
without going to •
college for 4 years.
Get a year or two
of technical training.
There are thousands of jobs for
technicians in every
scientific field from
engineering to
medicine to computers to ecology. Jobs that pay as much as
some college graduates earn. But don't take
four years to prepare for.

SHOE STRETCH
SPRAY
For Tight Shoes

•

For more information about technical
schools and technical careers, write for this
free guide from the government. Fill out
this ad and mail it today.

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are
Sensibly Priced

Middleport, 0.

···~

3 ROOMS
NEW
FURNITURE

$349.95
$35.00 Down-

Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON

OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9·30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST ., POMEROY

won't reach the halfway point
until Jan. 15.
Phil Miller, 6-3 senior guard,
was the big gun for Waverly
Saturday night although the
Tigers displayed a wellbalanced scoring attack. Miller
hit eight of 18 field goal attempts and one free throw for 17

the Sports Desk

FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

' " ' TH£CONf£RENC£80A1tD

(

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t.)

·~,.

r------------------------~

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To: Careers. Washington, D.C. 20202

I

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I

N!!~.e

AQdr~ss

:

C•ty

:

S tatr

I

Zip

I

L- ------ -----------------j
Adverlr sinR cont,butcd for the public ROOd in coope r.11&gt;0' wrth
The MvcriiS&gt;ng Council and the lntrrnationat NcNspapcr Advert"'"R l~trutl ...

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 4, 1971

-~ Installation Held

Why Did ]esw Not Marry?

~

• The Sernionette
•

•

•
•

•

•

•
•

BY HOYT AlLEN, PASTOR
Pomeroy Church of Christ
Philippians 2:7, "But made himseH of no reputation, and took
upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of
men."
Since Jesus came into the world as a man, to partake of the
experiences of mankind, we are justified in asking, "Why did not
Jesus marry?"
Certainly, it was not because He regarded marriage as
dishonorable and immoral. Because it is a holy and honorable
estate. It constitutes a respectful and scriptural relationship.
"Marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled: but
whoremongers and adulterers God will judge." (Hebrews 13:4).
Husbands and wives will neither be judged nor condemned on the
basis of their relations with each other; but rather men and
women, whether married or single, who are guilty of the illicit
relations of fornication and adultery are the ones to be judged.
"For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and
shall be joined Wlto his wife, and they two shall be one flesh."
(Ephesians 5:31).
Jesus even worked His first miracle at a wedding feast in
Cana of Galilee.
Why then, did Jesus not take unto HimseH some virtuous
yoWlg woman for his bride?
Many have thought that any being a servant fulltime for
Jesus, must follow Jesus' example and be a celibate.
A local council at Elviva in 305 declared all clergy to be
celibate. Then again in 604 Pope Gregory I declared all of the
clergy to be celibate. Recently in a council held by the Roman
Catholic Church in 1962-1965, the deacons and sub-deacons were
given permission to marry before their ordinations.
This binding of God's ministers to do something (be
celibates), that God has not commanded, has created a great deal
of controversy for those engaged in such practices. In fact, it
seems to even go against the scriptures. "Nevertheless, to avoid
fornication, let every man have his own wife, and let every
woman have her own husband." (I Corinthians 7:2).
One thing we can be confident of: Jesus had that perfect
Wlderstanding of human nature which made Him realize that
man without woman is incomplete.
"And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be
alone; I will make him an help meetfor him." (Genesis 2: 18).
"For the man is not of the woman; but the woman of the man.
Neither was the man created for the woman; but the woman for
the man ... Nevertheless neither is the man without the woman,
neither the woman without the man, in the Lord." (I Corinthians
1:8f).
Where shall one find a mate for Him who came to be both, the
Son of man and the Son of God?
In taking a bride, how could Jesus best serve the purposes of
heaven.
"For the Son of man has come to save that which was lost."
(Matthew 18:11).
The bride of Jesus would have to be as he is: faithful, good,
honest, and serious.
We are told in Hebrews 4:15 that Jesus was tempted like as we
are yet, without sin did He go through life ... In other words Jesus
made it through this life and set an example for all mankind. The
person who says that the young man is only sowing his wild oats
does not get his backing from the Scriptures ..... Therefore, just as
Jesus was virtuous, yet tempted as others, His bride must also be
virtuous. The fact that the Old Testament speaks of Jehovah as
having a wife leads us to conclude that His son will find for
himseH a bride.
The nation of Israel frequently is alluded to as the wife of
Jehovah.
"Turn, 0 backsliding children, saith the Lord; for I am
married to you:" (Jeremiah 3:14).
"And I will be betroth thee Wlto forever; yea I will betroth
thee unto me in righteousness, and in judgment, and in loving
kindness, and in mercies." (Hosea 2: 19).
Now if God, figuratively speaking, was married unto His
chosen people, Israel, to whom is Jesus to be married?
... The Old Testament makes us acquainted with the bride of
the first Adam, and the New Testament introduces us to the Bride
of the second Adam. The side of the first Adam was opened and
his bride was formed from it ... "And the Lord God caused a deep
sleep to fall upon Adam and he slept: and he took one of his ribs,
and closed up the flesh instead thereof; and the rib, which the
Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought
her unto the man." (Genesis 2:21, 22)
Jesus died on the cross. His side was opened, and from His
side came the blood that was to cleanse men and women and
fashion them into the church, and the church was to be His bride.
The church came into being on the day of Pentecost following
Jesus' resurrection. The Lord added three thousand to the church.
Those who believed, repented and were baptized. (Acts 2). Even
today those following the teachings of God's word are still being
added to the church and thus becoming a part of the bride of
Jesus.
If Jesus had a physical bride, it seems as though she would
have been named along with His mother, sisters, and His
brothers, who were James, Joses, Simon, Judas. (Matthew
13:55). . .. The Apostle Paul told the Christians a~ Rome "Ye
should be married to another, even to him who was raised from
the dead, that we might bring forth fruit unto God." (Romans
7:4) . ... One day Jesus is coming to receive His bride and take her
to an eternal home. (I Thessalonians : 13-18).
Why did not Jesus marry? ... . Because the period of
preparation has not ended.
The bride is getting herseH in readiness, and the divine groom
is preparing a place for His bride, just as Jehovan prepared
Canaan for Israel.
The Apostle John speaks of the great day of Jesus claiming
His bride, "The marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath
made herseH ready." (Revelation 19+ 7).
Jesus did not marry while on earth, but He is married today.
His bride is His church .

Tuppers Plains Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Sunday School attendance
was 51, offering $19.59. Worship
attendance was 41, offering
$35.90.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dorst
and family of Long Bottom and
her mother, Mrs. Ethel Stout of
Tuppers Plains spent Christmas
with their daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Ferrell of near
Washington Court House.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman
and Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Betzing spent Christmas with
their children, Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Hoffman, Jr., of Rutland.
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman ,
Mrs. Terry Kaylor and
daughter, local ; Mr . and Mrs .
Kenneth Klem, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Barber and children of
Coolville , 0., wer e Christmas
Day guests of Mr . and Mrs .
Elmer Kaylor.
Mr. and Mrs . Richard Smith
of Columbus were Thursday
guests of their uncle, Mr. and

Calendar

l

MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p.m. Monday at school.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
2 p.m. Monday, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
Middleport Masonic Temple;
DeMolay Council at 7 p.m.
OBLIGATION NIGHT by
Racine Chapter 134, OES, 8 p.m.
Monday at temple. Plans made
to attend district meeting and
school of instruction Jan. 13.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, regular
meeting, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
ENTERPRISE W.S.C.S.,
Tuesday night at the parsonage.
Miss Freda Leiving will be the
leader.
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, Wednesday, 10
a.m. home of Mrs. Myrtle
Walker, Racine; members to
take a dessert.

Chester East
News Notes

Attendance at the Nazarene
Church Sunday School on Dec.
27 was 55. The offering was
$10.58.
Mr . Richard Barton and
family spent Christmas with
her mother, Jane Smith of
Silver Ridge.
John Lodwick and wife of
Westerville, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Lodwick and wife and Harry
Lodwick and family spent
Christmas with their mother,
Mrs. Harry Lodwick Sr.
Among those
spending
Christmas holidays with Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Hoffman and
Steve were Sue Chaffin and
family of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Nat Carpenter and family,
local. Other callers were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Mankin of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Betzing of Hemlock Grove and
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hoffman of
Kentucky.
Lowell Beaver of Middleport
called on his father, Henry
Beaver.
Mr. and Mrs. Denny Sherman
and family of Columbus spent
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Hoffman.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Linsey
of Mt. Hermon called on Mrs.
Erma Heilman Monday.
Those spending Christmas
with the Robert Wood family
were Mrs. Letha Wood, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Christy, Freda Miller
and Lenore Betzing, local, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Hawk and
family of Albany. Evening
callers were Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Wood of Springfield and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sayre of
Portland.
Sandra Wood, local, spent
Sunday with Vickie Spencer of
the Baum addition.
Jim Caruthers and family of
. Canton spent Christmas with
Mrs. Caruthers mother, Mrs.
Doris Marks.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood
spent Saturday evening at Pt.
Pleasant with her mother,
Margaret Col and brothers and
families.
Mrs. Moon and Mrs. Freda
Miller spent Monday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dilling
of South Cannan
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Woode,
local, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Hines, Gallipolis, and Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Hines of Athens
Road spent Christmas with the
Ray Hines family at Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. George
Genheimer spent Christmas
with Earl Dean family.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wolfe of
Columbus called on Mr. and
Mrs.
Georg e
Genheimer
The Saturday.

Mrs . Jess ie Newell.
Newells' son, Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Newell of Columbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Frecker of
Pine Grove visited the Newells
on Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cole and
son, Billie, and granddaughter ,
Robin Ritchie, are visiting
r elatives in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs . Jerry Carter
and son of Rocky.Mount, North
Carolina, are s pending the
holidays here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Caldwell and
son, Kenneth.
Major and Mrs. Harley Rice
and family of Virginia and ~r.
and Mrs. John Rice and family
of Frazysburg, 0. , spent the
Christmas weekend here with
their parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Wilmer Rice.
Debra Connelly, youn g
daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
Theodore Connelly, is a surgical
patient a t O'Bleness Hospital,
Athens.

Lois Ebersbach of Chester
was calling on her aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Brickles.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker
and daughter, Ruthie, visited
their nephew, Sgt. Ronnie
Howard, who was wounded in
Vietnam and is spending some
time with his parents, in Cincinnati, 0.

Sixteen Junior American
Legion Auxiliary members
from the Middleport, Racine
and Rutland units were initiated
in a joint ceremony recently at
the hall in Middleport.
The initiatory work was
combined with a holiday party
for the junior members.
Initiated were Christina
Smith, Kimberly, Lois Ann and
Sherrie Roush, Pamela and
Melinda Morris, Lisa Lemley,
Sandra Might, Sheryl Barnhart,
Alice Lemley, and Trudy
Hendricks, of Unit 128, Middleport; Teresa Mitchell of
Rutland Pnit 467; and Cheryl
Simpson, Kathy Boyd, Irene
Knighting, and Bea Jay
Autherson of Racine Unit 602.
The initiatory team was
composed of Mrs. Charles

Pomeroy....

~

Personal Notes

~

l

Kessinger, Mrs. Albert Roush,
~
Judy Gilkey, Mrs. Beulah
Autherson, Patricia Might,
Becky Roush, Debra McGuffin,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson
Mrs. John Boyd, and Mrs. Etta and children, Doug, Cindy and
Will.
Lisa, of Columbus were New
Year's weekend guests of Mr.
Following the party the and Mrs. William Folmer.
Miss Lucy Amsbary, who has
Auxiliary and juniors of the
Middleport unit carried out been teaching in an adult
their
annual
Christmas education program which
projects. They delivered 28 fruit concluded last month in
trays to charter members, gold Columbus, is visiting here with
star mothers, and the sick and her mother, Mrs. Clinton
shut-in of the post and the Fisher.
Mrs. Mildred Fisher is
auxiliary. Seventeen trays were
taken to the Meigs County In- recuperating at home after
firmary and gifts were several days' hospitalization at
delivered to Max Blake, the the Gallipolis Clinic.
Mrs. Maxine Arnold of
"adopted" handicapped child of
the junior group, and Mrs. Lena Kankakee, Ill., was the Friday
Wolfe, the "adopted" senior guest of Mrs. A. 0. Lee.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
citizen.
Fugate on New Year's Day
were Mr. and Mrs. James
Fugate and Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Young, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Margaret Danhardt,
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bowen
after 20 years in the U.S. Navy.
Present were Mr. and Mrs. returned Tuesday from a visit
Jack Miller, Jackie and Becky, at Bradenton, Fla., with Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Davis and and Mrs. John Bowen, and St.
son, John, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Simons Island, Ga., with Mr.
Smith, Rose Mary, Sam, and and Mrs. John Rollinson and
Jim, Mr. and Mrs. John Ab- son.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Landers
shire, all of Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Miller, rv,ike, Tina of Columbus were Wednesday
and Tim, Middleport; Mr. and overnight guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald E. Miller, Carma, Mrs. Eldon Weeks.
Sgt. and Mrs. Eddie Frick and
Tracy and Eugena, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roach, son, Tommy, of Lockbourne Air
Raymond, Trudy, Randy and Force Base, were holiday
Darin, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. guests of his parents, Mr. and
Elmer Miller, Connie and Shari, Mrs. Paul Frick.
Miss Olive Newman of
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Miller and
Lorraine, Wooster; Mr. and Rutland was the recent guest of
Mrs. Ronald K. Miller, Miss Genevieve Stobart.
Holiday visitors of Mr. and
Rebecca, Angela, and Rhonda,
Northfield, Minn.; Dale Miller, Mrs. Claude Husted were Mrs.
Huntington; Ruth and Ricky Edrie Tomlinson and Miss
Rhinebolt, and Jim Golomb, Fannie Needs of Columbus.
Mrs. Frances Scholl and Mr.
Columbus.
and Mrs. Eldon Weeks spent
Christmas
weekend
in
Reynoldsburg with Mr. and
Mrs. John Weeks and children.

Family Reunion Held
The children of Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Middleport, her grandchildren and great - grandchildren gathered at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Smith,
Columbus, on New Year's Day
for a family reunion.
The reunion marked the first
time in over 10 years that the six
sons and two daughters of Mrs.
Miller have been together.
Twenty-one grandchildren and
four great-grandchildren were
present. Only one grandson was
missing from the family group.
For the past 28 years at least
one of Mrs. Miller's sons has
been in service and unable to
attend a family gathering. This
year Ronald Keith Miller,
stationed with the U.S. Army in
Minnesota, and his family came
home for the holidays. Another
son, Eugene, recently retired

-

Anniversary 0bserved
An
anniversary
party
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Jacobs of Rutland was a feature
of holiday celebrations at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Jacobs, Middleport.
On
Saturday
evening
following Christmas, the eighth
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Jacobs was celebrated
with a family party. Attending
were the honored couple's
children, Crystal and Gene,
Miss Carol Jacobs and Mr. and
Mrs. John Jacobs, John and
Mary, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Jacobs, Terry and
Jeff, home from Mississippi
where he has been stationed
with the U. S. Air Force, and
Mrs. Ernie Fraser, April and
Scott.
The family was also together
for the observance of Christmas. Steve Jacobs left today for

Bashiqt
News Notes
MR. and Mrs. Arvil Holter
had as guests on Christmas Day
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Worley Davis of Dexter and his
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. William Fenton of
Columbus, and Mrs. Linnie
Taylor of Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell
and children spent Sunday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Robinson of Gallipolis.
Brenda Lee Ballard is very ill
at St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Trussell,
Mike and Ricky, and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Taylor of Newport
News, Va., Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Trussell and Sandy and Mr. and
Mrs. John Ridenour of Chester,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Trpssell
and Dawn of Mt. Vernon and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell,
Peggy Sue, Stevie, Renee and
Scotty, local, spent Christmas
with their parents and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Trussell.
PICKENS HOST PARTY
Mr. and Mrs . Warren
Pickens, Reedsville, hosted a
New Year's dinner party .
Guests were Mr . and Mrs.
William Meredith of Beverly,
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Sauer,
Mary Ruth and Joy, Middleport, Route 1; Mr. and Mrs.
Ernes t Whitehead, Jean, Jane
and Juli, and Mr . and Mrs.
Denver Weber, David and
Mark, Reedsville .

I WILL BE ABSENT FROM MY OFFICE
FROM JANUARY 10, 1971 TO
FEBRUARY 25, 1971.
A nurse will be present in the office until
January 16, 1971 . The office will be closed
thereafter until my return.

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.
306 N. Second Ave .

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

~

Lockbourne Air Force Base
where he will be stationed for a
year. His family will join him
there sometime later this
month.

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibson
of Columbus called on his
grandm'other, Lana Gibson,
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Whaley
and daughter, Erin Alyss, of
New York visited the Robert
Clarks, the Robert Alkires and
Ava Gilkey a recent Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. F. 0. Whaley
and Ann and Chip of Columbus
spent Saturday night with the
Robert Alkires.
Mrs. Arthur Goodwin is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital for gall bladder
surgery.
Mrs. Clarence Eastman, who
underwent surgery at Holzer
Medical Center, suffered a
slight stroke.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McMurray
have purchased the Nellie Clay
property.
Ava Gilkey returned home
from Veterans Memorial
Hospital and is much improved.
Friends here have learned of
the death of Clarence Hatfield,
a former resident.
Raleigh Gregory is now
mayor of the town in which he
lives in West Virginia.
Mrs . May Mason and Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Jordan had Christmas
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Lee at Racine.
Mrs. Mamie Newlun and
Frances Alkire visited Ava
Gilkey at the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
were supper guests of the Glen
Jewells on Sunday evening.
Howard Gilkey of Columbus
spent a day with his mother,
Ava Gilkey, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Rodney and Dennis Gilkey of
Pomeroy spent Christmas with
their parents, the H. D. Gilkeys,
in Columbus .

Mrs. Wi II Host

Of Youth Party
The Youth Fellowship of the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church had a holiday party
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. James Will.
The yOWlg people exchanged
gifts, played games and had
refreshments. A gift was
presented by the youth to Mrs.
Ed Bowen, director. Brian Will
had grace preceding refreshments.
Attending were Roger Dixon,
Rodney Pullins, Dollie and Pat
Airson, Shelly Clark, Becky,
Brenda, Beverly and Brian
Will. At the Christmas Eve
program by the young people at
the Enterprise Church, Alisa
Harris participated. Her name
was unintentionally omitted
from a list of participants.
CHRISTMAS GUESTS
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Wilbur Bailey
were Mr. and Mrs. F. E.
Shaeffer, Columbus; Mrs.
Lenora Spencer, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. David Wiley,
Ravenswood, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Blackston, Sherrie,
Bob and Bruce, Rock Springs.
Sherrie has returned to Ohio
University after spending the
holidays at her home. Afternoon
callers were Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Bailey, Lois Marie, Racine, and
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Levacy,
Syracuse.

Racine Grange Met

"He Still Knocks at Your
Door," a story by Dr. L. Nelson
Bell, father-in-law of Billy
Graham, was a feature of the
program at the holiday meeting
of Racine Grange held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Stearns.
The story read by Mrs.
Garrett Circle, Earl Cross, and
Mrs. Letha Morris presented
people too busy to be bothered
by the problems of others, and
concluded with the thought that
when Christ does appear men
fail to recognize him. "Verily I
say unto you, inasmuch as ye
did it not to one of the least of
these, ye did it not to me," was
the scripture reference.
Mrs. Circle opened the

program with a piano solo.
There was group singing and a
poem, "The World Is Mine" by
Mrs. Cleo Adams. Mrs. Morris
read "Ned's Legacy" and a
candlelight service using white
green and red tapers with the
song, "Star of the East" concluded the program.
A quiz was conducted on tti
Bible
and
Christma
Discussions were held on th
corn blight and women's
liberation. Others attendin
were Della Cross, Geraldine
Cross, Mary Easterday, C. $";
Morris, Carl C. Morris, Mary K.
Yost and Mattie Yost. The Jan.
13 meeting will be held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Adams.

Services Held at Leon
Funeral services for Mrs.
Alta Miller of Leon, W.Va., who
visited in Middleport frequently
with her daughter, Mrs. Albert
Roush, were conducted Sunday
at the Pine Grove Church at
Leon with burial at the
cemetery there.
Out-of-town relatives and

Canadays Hosts

at

December 31 Party
Mr . and Mrs. De 1mar A.
. d N
Cana d ay en t er t ame
ew
Year's Eve with a party at their
. 1 H"ll
·d
Lmco
n 1 resl ence.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron Zahl, Dr. and Mrs. R. E.
Boice, Mr. and Mrs. A. R.
Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Graves, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich and Jayne, Mrs.
Clinton Fisher, Mrs. Arthur
Fick, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Olan
Booth, Mitchell Chapman,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Kelton, Aberdeen, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs. Furman Moore of
Middleport and Mrs. Moore's
brother, Armand Turley,
visiting here from California;
Mrs. Neiss Powell, and Mrs.
Ruth Ann Dowler, Middleport.
BEGINS TEACHING
Mrs. Debbie (Grueser)
Gerlach, December granduate
of Rio Grande College, began
teaching the third grade today
at the Mason Elementary
School. She replaces Miss
Mildred Hawley who'bas taught
the class sine.; September.

friends here for the services
were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Johnson and grandchildren,
Grand Rapids, Ohio; Mrs.
Reatha Jaques, Toledo; Cecil
Jaques, Ashland, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Adkins, Punta
Gorda, Fla.; Carl Cossin, Mrs.
Dolly Nickles, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Hall, Vernon Young, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Miller and family,
Mrs. Mildred Meade and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Flowers, all of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ray Miller
and sons, Evansville, Ind.; Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Roush,
Reynoldsburg; Mr . and .ms
...._
D 1 R h St Alb
WV .
a e ous • ·
ans, · a .,
Sgt. and Mrs. Don Matheney
and children Jacksonvill N
C
'
e, ·
·

Stop In Today To
Start Earning

4~%

Interest Per Year on
Passbook Savings. Com .
pounded quarterly from date
of deposit to date of withdrawal as long as you
maintain an open account.
No minimum or maximum
amount to qualify. Withdrawals can be made at any
time.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County

Savings &amp; loan Co.
FAMILY RETURNS
296 Second St.
Sgt. and Mrs. Donald
Pomeroy, Ohio
Matheney and children have
All Accounts Insured To
returned to Jacksonville, N. C., $20,000.00 by FSLIC.
after being called here by the
death of her grandmother, Mrs.
Alta Miller. The family stayed
here with Mrs. Matheney's
parents,
Roush. Mr. and Mrs. Albert . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Frigidaire
Skinny
Mini.
Fttsalmost
~here

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use·our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Any florist with
a lot of scents

BAKER
FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Middleport, 0.

'

'

�6- The D:tilv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 4, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
CARNIVAL

by Dick Turner·

"To give you an example of how over:crow~ed we
are just today your Johnny got f1ve different

'

answers to the same question!"

Syracuse News, Society
BYADASLACK
SYRACUSE
Holiday
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Huston and family were
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Beegle
of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. John
Fisher and daughter, Julia, of
Hebron; Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Beegle and son Toby of Worthington; Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Huston and Mr. and Mrs. John
Huston, Paul and Louise of
Murray City, Mr. and Mrs.
William Board and Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Young of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Hal
Moore of Kentucky and Robert
Flanagan, local.
Christmas weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Krider
were Mr. and Mrs. Bernest
Bruch and children, Elizabeth
and Delbert, of Mt. Vernon, Mr.
and Mrs. Tim Colburn and son,
Vince, of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. John Krider and Joetta
and John, of New Matamoras,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Krider
and grandchildren, Jeannen
and Bobby Searls of Findlay.
Spending Christmas with Mr.
and Mrs. Carson Hayes were
their children, Mr. and Mrs.
Max Bowers and son, Todd of
Etna and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Rusche!
and
family
of
Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Stewart of
Mt. Vernon, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Brown of Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. James Cline and family of
Beverly were holiday weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Bass and children. Their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. John Bass of Elyria who
were unable to be present,
phoned on Christmas Day.
Their 25th wedding anniversary
was also observed.
Mrs. Pauline McClintock
spent two weeks with her
daughter,
Mrs.
Michael
Vournazos and children of
Wilmington. Mr. Vounazos, is
serving with the U.S. Air Force
in Germany.
Mrs. Mildred Frank and Greg
of Nelsonville visited Mrs. Holly
Friend, Darrin and Carrin.
Christmas Day guests of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Eichinger, were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Gibbs, Doyle and Randy,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Boyd of
Parkersburg, and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Hubbard, Roger Lee and
Tracey, local.
Lisa Ferrell of Hartford spent
Christmas eve with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Dilford
Ferrell and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A.
Harden and Eric of Marion
were Christmas weekend guests
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Harden and Debbie.
Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Deem and family
Christmas Day were Mr. and
Mrs. Charles (Whitey) Beegle
of Racine, Mrs. Gladys Deem of
Portland. Evening guests were
Mr. and Mrs. James Price of
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Dilcher
and children of Detroit were
holiday weekend visitors of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Secoy and other relatives.
Spending the holiday vacation
with their parents, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Fred Morrow, were their son,
Mark, from the University of
Chincinnati, and daughter,
Robin, from Mountain State
University a t Parkersburg.
Spending Christmas with Mr.
and Mrs. Herschel Manual were
their children, Mr. and Mrs.
John Lisle and son, Todd, of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Allen and Brian and Mr.
Henry Johnson, local.
Kenneth Guinther spent
Wednesday night with his

brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Willie Guinther,
Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Potts
spent Christmas Day with his
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Rizer and
family of Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman London
were weekend guests of their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Koeller and son,
Toby, West Alexandria.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Davis and
daughter, Lisa, of Columbus
spent the holiday weekend with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Neigler and family.
SYRACUSE Spending
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
Challie Greer were Mr. and
Mrs . Sherman Johnson of
Marietta, Mr. and Mrs. Ernie
Johnson of Covington, Va., and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burke of
Middleport.
Holiday weekend guests of
Mr. lind Mrs. Oris Hubbard
were their daughter, Peggy
Hubbard, son Mike Hubbard,
and Diana Knotts of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. James Quillen,
Jimmy Jr., lind Steven of
Cleveland, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Lee Quillen of Addison
were Christmas guests of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Quillen.
Holiday weekend visitors at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Roush were Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Diddle, and
Steven, of Marion; Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Stobart, Kimberly, and Mrs. Ben Stobart, of
Racine Route; Mrs. Joe
Stobart, and Joy Beth, of
Plants; Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Diddle, of New Matamoras ;
George Diddle, of Columbus;
Bob Diddle, of Fort Knox, Ky.,
and Andy Vaughn and Rick
Miller of Pomer.oy.
Christmas weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Radcliffe
were Mr. and Mrs. Ira Hill, son
Dale, of New Waterford.
Spending the holiday weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
Williams and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Sisson and family were
Mr. and Mrs. Hulbert Williams,
of Akron; Mr. and Mrs. T. H.
Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Jones, of Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Keith Williams, of Akron.
They were joined for the
Christmas dinner by Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Sisson and Cherri.
Christmas Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Arnold were their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Sarruny Arnold of
Belpre, and daughter and sonin-law, Mr. and Mrs. William
Fisher and Billy of Torch.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Arnott's
sons, Paul, of Portland, Oregon,
and Norman of Monaco, Pa.,
talked to them by phone on
Christmas Day.
Miss Terri Ferrell is spending
her Ohio State University
Christmas vacation with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Damon
Ferrell. At the end of the
vacation she will go to
Cleveland for the U.T.A. Inter
City School for the winter
quarter. They were joined on
Christmas Day by Mr . and Mrs.
Kenneth Holbrook and children
of Mason, W. va.
Mr . and Mrs. William
Eichinger visited Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sayre of Wolf Pen
Road. Mrs. Eichinger was also
in Huntington on a Monday for
an appointment with her doctor.
Birthdays of Steven, Dec. 4,
and David, Dec. 5, and Brenda,
Dec. 12, children of Mr. and
Mrs . William Hayes, were
celebrated with a decorated
cake and ice cream by the

Langsville
News, Notes
Attendance at the Langsville
Church on Dec. 27 was 64 and
the collection was $79.99.
Ron Gorby of Parkersburg,
W. Va., spent Christmas with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Gorby.
Mr. and Mrs. Blair Cadwallader of Winchester, Ohio
are announcing the birth of ·a
baby boy at Adams County
hospital on Dec. 17. The baby
weighed 7 lbs. and has been
named Brent Allen. The Cadwalladers have two other sons,
Brian, age 7, and Chris age 4
years.
Mrs. Alpha Barr has returned
home after spending a week
with her daughter and son-inlaw, while Mrs. Cadwallader
was in the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Parkerson
spent Christmas with their
daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Wycinsky of Corning, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Fetty and
Shelia spent the weekend with
their son, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Fetty of Bucyrus, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr and
son, Mike, were Christmas Day
guests of their son, Duane Barr,
and family of Oak Hill.
Jim Crisp is home from
Veterans hospital and is doing
fine.
Mr. and Mrs. John Lloyd and
boys, David and Chris, of
Tampa, Fla., are spending the
Christmas holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Morris.
Mr. Md Mrs. Larry Barr and
David and Michelle spent a day
recently with his sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Blair Cadwallader of
Winchester, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
and Patricia spent Christmas
Day with their daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Barr and children.
Michael Barr is spending his
Christmas vacation from
Glenville State College with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alpha
Barr.
David Wright of pt, Pleasant.
W. Va., spent Christmas with
his mother, Mrs. Hazel Wright.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
case No. 20,427
Estate of David C. M iller
Deceased .
Noti ce is hereby given that
Eleanor L. Miller of Middleport,
Me igs Co unty , Ohio, has been
duly appointed Executrix of the
Estate of David C. Miller,
deceased , late of Middleport,
Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their c laims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated this 30th day of
December 1970.
F. H. O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
(1) 4, 11 , 18, 3tc
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Morrow
and family spent the preChristmas weekend with their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Morrow, and son
Michael, of Columbus.
Mrs. Pauline Morarity spent
Tuesday to Saturday with her
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Morarity and
children of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Icenhower of PorUand spent
Christmas Day with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Jeffers Md
family.
Mrs. Dorothy Jeffers of
Gallipolis, Mrs. Viola Jeffers of
Thomas Fork spent Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Jeffers.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jenkins
and children of Columbus were
weekend guests of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jenkins, Sr.,
and her mother, Mr. and l\1rs.
William Hubbard and family .

SIDE GLANCES

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

1969 CH EVRO LET
$2495
Town_sman Sta. W?gon, 327 V-8 engine, power
st~ermg, _Powergl~de Trans., electric power
tailgate wmdow, a1r deflector, rad io, like new
w-w tires, blk. vinyl interior with beautiful
med. blue in color.
1967 F O RD
$1795
4 Door Sedan L. T. D., power steering, power
brakes, air-conditioning. Vinyl interior, blk.
v i nyl roof, maroon finish, radio, new w-w
tires.

Patneroy llotor Co.
OP-EN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be'eccepted until 9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
inserti6n.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
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Minimum Charge 75c
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consecutive insertions.
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Additional 25c Charge per
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OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday .

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our
husband, father and grand father, Thomas Ratliff , who
departed this life on January
4, 1964:
We m iss you now, our hearts
are sore,
As lime goes by, we miss you
more.
Your loving smile, your gentle
face,
No one else can fill your place.
Sadly missed by wife and
children.
1-4-ltp

------------------Card of Thanks

WE WISH to express our sincere thanks to all our friends
and relatives for their visits
and gifts of flowers, food , and
cards we received during the
loss of our father and
husband, Fred A. Cad le. Your
thoughtful ness is greatly
appreciated.
The Fred Cadle Family
1-4- ltc

For Rent
3

ROOM apartment. Would
prefer elderly man or woman.
Utilities furnished. Call after
5 p.m ., phone 992-7135.
1-4-3tc
LEGAL NOTICE

NOT ICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON·
CERN:
Notice is hereby given that on
January 12, 1971, at 9:00A.M . a
public sale will be held at
Blaettnar Auto Co. , Pomeroy,
Ohio to sell for cash the
following collateral, to wit: 1965
Volkswagen Sta. Wgn ., Ser. No.
225084887, said collateral being
held to secure an obligation
arising under a retail in stalment security agreement
held by General Motors Ac ~
ceptan ce
Corporation
as
secured party. Said public sale
is to be conducted according to
the laws of th e State of Ohio .
General Motors Acceptance
Corporation reserves th e right
to bid at this sale.
The collateral is presently
sto red and may be seen at
Blaettnar Auto Co. , Pomeroy
Ohio.
GE NERAL MOTOR S
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATIO N
(l)4,ltc

Notice
DELMAR HAWLEY'S cab
number has changed from
phone 992-7116 to new number
phone 992-7338.
12-31 -Jtc
-----------INCOME TAX service, daily
except Sunday. Evenings by
appointment only. Phone 9922272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
mile south of fairgrounds .

Business Services__ \
EXPERT

JOHNSON
MASONRY

Wheel Alignment

COMM E RCI A L OR
R ESI D ENTIA L
R E MOD E LING

$5.55
·- G UARA NTEEDP hone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Main, Po.meroy, 0.

Real Estate For Sale
B-ROOM house, bath, in
Pomeroy ; two acres, more or
less, Ann St. Phone Ga llipolis
446-3467.
12-30-3tc
OUT-OF-TOWN owner must
sell B-room, vacant modern
house with extra lot in
Pomeroy, $2,750. For information phone 949-2165.
1-3-13tc

Auto Sa les
1969 BU ICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000
miles . Excellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-tfc

Free Estimates
Jim- Larry
Jake
992-5932, 992-7044
or 742-4902
DON'T WAIT

POWER-VAC

Ceaning System
All The Dirt In
One Simple Operation
Homes · Trailers - Public
Buildings, etc. No muss, no
fuss - have your furnace
cleaned today .

CHASE HARDWARE
Locust St.
Middleport, 0.

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

Wanted To Buy
SMALL FARM with house and
buildings in southeastern
Meigs County area. Contact
Oris
Frederick,
3221
Georgetown
Rd. ,
In·
dianapolis, Indiana , 46224.
Phone 291 -9130.
12-30-10tc
- ---------OLD furniture, dishes, brass
beds, etc. Write M.D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-6271.
9-1-tfc

------------------APPLES AND cider. Fitz.

patrick orchard, State R.t. 689.
Phone Wilkesville 669-4785.
12·22-1otp
Ray Hummel
Says:

GET
'EM NOW
Country Squire
MUD&amp; SNOW TIRES
All sizes in stock. Lowest
prices . Free installation . We
do studding .

FU RNISH ED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc
MOD ER N first floor apart.
ment, 4 rooms, bath, furnished. Big yard. Reynolds
F lower Shop, Mason, W. Va.
Phone 773-5147.
12·29-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

3 and 4 Bedrooms
Built to your specifications.
Sites available now.

Wo Down Payment
Monthly Payments
Lower Than Rent
Contact: Mr . Moody, Ph. 992·
7034 at our field office at
Park &amp; Sycamore in Mid·
dleport.
JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
Formerly Kissell Associates,
, Inc.
Ph. 1-262·1 531

LOTS WI T H all utilities.
Restricted subdivision. lf2 to
2-acre lots. Phone Chester
985-3301 , night 985-3302.
COLONIAL Maple Stereo ·
1 -6 ~ tfc
Radio combination, AM &amp; FM
radio, four speakers, 4 speed
intermixed changer, separate HOUS E, 1640 Lincoln Hts. ,
con trols. Balance $78.60. Use
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
our budget terms. Call 99210-25-tfc
3352.
12-29-6tc

Pets For Sale
POODLE puppies, silver, 9weeks old. Also, tropical fish.
Phone 992-5443.
12-16-tfc
AKC REGISTERED fe mal e
pug puppy, $50. Call Charles
Gloeckner, Pomeroy. Phone
992-7055.
12·29-6tp

4 ROOMS and bath unfurni shed For Rent or Sale
house, 1650 Lin co ln Hts. 4 ROOMS and bath, utility
Phone 992-3874.
room , all modern, gas fur11-15-tfc
nace, carport, 2 lots . Also,
trailer space for rent. Also for
4 ROOM house on Laurel St.,
rent. 4 room furnished
Pomeroy. Call Frank Fugate,
apartment, gas heated. Call
992-5293.
Albert Hill, Racine, 949-2261.
11 -6-tfc
1 3-61c
WANT TO GO to a warmer
climate? Rent a camper or Employment W
anted
lrwe l trailer from Gaul's
Trailer Sa les, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, ANY T'VPE work. Experienced
1112 miles north of Chester,
as nurses aide and other
Ohio, on Rt . 7. Watch for sign .
work . Phone 742-5735.
1-3 12tc
12·29-6tc

BLAETTNARS
••• 9?2-2143

Pomeroy

SEPT IC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Phone
John Russell, Gallipolis 446·
4782 after 5:30 p. rn.
4-7-tfc

-----------------SEWING MACHINES. Repair

service, a ll makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Author ized Singer Sa les and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

~---------------3-·29-tfc .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
AI
case No. 2039!JIII'j
Estate of Thomas L. WeberDeceased.
Notice is hereby given that
Jessie M. Weber of R. D. No.1,
Long Bottom, Ohio, has been
duly appo inted Executrix of the
Estate of Thomas L. Weber,
deceased, late of R. D. No.1 ,
Long Bottom , Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
with in four months.
Dated this 21st. day of Dec.
1970.
F. H. O'Brien
Probate Judge
of sa id County
(12) 30 (1) 4, ll , 3tc
LEGAL NOTICE
The unknown heirs, devisees,
leg atees,
executors.
ad .
min istr ators and ass rgns ot
Edwin Con dee, deceased ; the
unknown heirs, devisees,
leg atees ,
executors,
ad ministrators and ass igns of
George P. Wolf, deceased ; the
unknown heirs, devisees.
leg atees ,
executors,
ad ministrators and assigns of
Martha Wolf, deceased , all of
whose names and places of
residence are unknown , wi ll
take notice that on the 25th day
of November , 1970, the plain·
tiffs, Paul S. Sayre, Wilma K.
Styer , Howard S. Sayre,
Douglas D. Sa yre a'ld Orville B.
Sayre, as plaintiffs, filed their
com plaint aga inst them in the
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, being cause No.
14,772 in said Court, to qu iet tit le.
to the real estate herinafte
described; and plaintiffs allege
that they are the owners in fee
simple and in actual possession
of the following real estate :
Situated in 100 Acre Lot No . 275,
Town 2, Range 12, Sutton
Townsh ip, Meigs County, Ohio,
and in the Ohio Company 's
Purchase, and being Lots No . 4
and 16, in the Village of Condeevil le. For a more particular
descr iption of said lots ,
reference is had to the plat as
recorde d in the Recorder's
Office , Pomeroy , Ohio Being.
the same real estate conveyed
to Bertha M. Sayre, by deed
recorded in Deed Book 206,
Page 351 , Meigs County Deed
~ecords.

NEW HOME?

POMEROY
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Fox

From the Largest TruckloF 1
Bu lldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Insurance
INCOME TAX service, Mrs.
Marvin King, 1f2.m ile north on AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Weekcancelled?
Lost
your
days 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.,
operator's license? Call 992Saturdays 9 a. m. to noon.
2966.
Even ings by appointment.
6-15-tfc
12-15-tfc

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

Alexander the Great was OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
born in Mace donia (Europe).
condition, as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
died in Babylon (Asia) a~d
First floor only . Mondays will
is buried in Alexandna,
be pick-up day. Write, giving
Egypt (Africa), the city
good directions. Witten Piano
named in his honor.
Company, Box 188, Sardis, MODERN Walnut Stereo ·
Ohio 43946.
Radio combination, dual
by Gill
8-20-tfc
volume control, 4 speakers, 4
speed changer, separate
controls. Balance $63.79. Use
For Rent
our time payment plan . Call
992-3352.
3 ROOM unfurnished apart12-29-6tc
ment. Phone 992-2288.
7·1 -tfc
LEGHORN hens, 25c each. Mrs .
Denver Holter, Phone 949·
TRA ILER , Brown' s Trailer
4983.
Park, Minersville. Phone 9921-3-Jtp
3324.
9-9-lfc

"Sarah, this mirror is out of order! ..

BACK HO E WO RK

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

Lost

Radiator Service

Brick, Block, Stone,
Cement Work, Garages

1958 FORD, 6-cylinder, excellent
running
con. READY-MIX CONCRETE deATTENTION ladies! Would you
dition.$125. Call 949-2755.
livered right to your project.
like to try a wig on in the
1·3-Jtc
Fast and easy.
Free
privacy of your own home?
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
You can . Just call us. We also 1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner,
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co. ,
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
A.T., P.S.• 12,000actual miles.
Middleport, Ohio.
Koscot. of course. DisExcellent condition. Standard
6·30-tfc
tributors, Brown ' s. Phone
rate
insurance
to
qualified
---------------Middleport 992-5113.
person.
Assume
balance.
BACK HOE and end-loader
12-31-tfc
Phone Rutland 742-4745.
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pul lins. Phone
1-4-2tc
992-2478.
WILL PICK up merchandise
11-29 tfc
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim For Sale
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland. SINGER 1969 Model sewing
Phone 742-4461.
machine, nice cabinet. Just
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
9-23-tfc
set dial for design stitches,
Complete Service
zig-zag, buttonholes , blind
Phone 949-3821
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
hems, etc. Only $74. Nothing
Racine, Oh io
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
down, $6.50 monthly, or $69
Critt Bradford
10-18-tfc
cash. Phone Ravenswood 273·
:;. 1-tfc
9893 after 3 p. m.
WILL GIVE piano and organ
12-4-tfc
AIR
COND
IT
ION
ING,
Relessons in my home. Phone - - -- - - - - - - frigeration service. Jack 's
992-3666.
limestone. Excelsior
Refrigeration. New Haven.
8 16-tfc COAL,
Salt Works, E. Ma in St. ,
Phone 882-2079.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4·6-tfc
4-9-tfc
Female Help Wanted
SAW FILING, a ll kinds of
WOMEN Need work but LIME SPREADER, Set of
sharpening. Lawn mower
unable to devote full time?
harrows, brush hog , hog
repair. Briggs and Stratton
Watkins has a splendid in·
feeder. Phone 247-2161.
engine serv ice. Low cost
come opportunity for you .
12-31-5tc
pickup and del ivery. Colmer's
Write Ruth Bergaus, Watkins
Saw Shop, Mechan ic St .,
Products , Inc., Winona, WELL KEPT carpets show the
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2804.
Minnesota 55987.
results of regular Blue Lustre
12·30-3tc
l-4-ltc
spot cleaning. Rent electric
shampooer, $1. Baker Fur- HARRISON' S TV AND AN.
niture, Middleport.
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
Salesman Wanted
12-31-6tc
992-2522.
GOOD MAN over 40 for short
6-10-tfc
trips surround ing Pomeroy. THREE consecutive lots in
Beech Grove, lots No. 9, 10, NEIGLER Construction. For
Contact customers. We train.
and 11 in row 5. R. C. Jones, 37
build ing or remodeling your
Air Mail A. M. Dickerson,
Riverside Dr., Dayton, Ohio
home, Call Guy Neig ler,
Pres .. Southwestern
45405.
Racine, Ohio.
Petroleum Corp., F t. Worth,
12·29-10fc
7-31-tfc
Texas.
12-30-4tc
MUST SELL, 1970 mobile home, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
60x12, 3 bedroom , fully carSanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
peted, washer and dryer,
Help Wanted
662-3035.
$4,590, or take over ayments
2-12-tfc
WIDOWER wants housekeeper,
of $88.95 per month. Phone
pensioner preferred . One
Mason 773-5122.
WHEEL Horse Sa les and
child 10 years old. Write Box
l-3-30tc
Service. Baum Lumber
729-R, c-o The Daily Sentinel, - - - - -- - -- - Company , Chester, Ohio.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
1961 FORD F100 pickup. Also,
Phone 985-3301.
l-3-6tc
1968 Honda 125 scrambler.
5-20-tfc
Phone 742-4423.
- -----------------1-3-3tp
LOST, brown and white, small
miniature collie. Name ,
" Johnny," Reward. Contact
Albert Zahl, Racine. Phone
247-2168.
12-29-6tp

EXPERIENCED

LEGAL NOTICE
TOY ROOSEVELT HULSE ,
whose last known place of
residence is 1212 Southwest 26th
St., Oklahoma City , Oklahoma
73100, and whose prese~t
whereabouts is unknown , os
hereby not ified that on the 24th
day of Nove mber , 1 9~0 , _Eva l ~na
L. Hulse being plarntrH, fried
her petition against hrm as
defendant in the Court of
Common Pleas Meigs County ,
Ohio , Case No . 14,771 , prayrng
for divorce from sa rd Toy
Roosevelt Hulse on the grounds
of gross neglect of duty and
willful absence, restoration of
her prior married name, and
other proper relief ; sa id cause
will be fo r hearing on or after
the llth day of January , 1971.
Eva lena L Hulse,
Plaintiff
J. B. O' Brien ,
Attorney for Plaint iff .
(11) 30 (12) 7, 14, 21, 28 (1) 4, 6tc
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20 ,409
Estate of
Delilah Mays
Deceased.
No t ice is hereby given that
Joyce A . Dav is of Pomeroy ,
Ohio, has been duly appointed
Administ ratrix of the Estate of
Delilah Mays , deceased. late of
Olive Township, Meigs County ,
Ohio.
.
Creditors are required 10 tole
their claims with saod fiduciary
with in four months .
Dated thi5 14th day of
December 1970.
F. H. O' Br ien
Probate J udge of said
County
(12) 21, 28 (1) 4. etc

Plaintiffs further allege that
they and their predecessors in
t itle have held said real estate
adverse !y,
open I y
and
notoriously as against each and
every one of the defendants
herein for a period in excess of
twenty -one years, so as to
preclude any claim of owner ·
ship of anyone else in said real
estate , or any nart thereof. ~
Plaintiffs further allege tha.,..
the unknown heirs, devisees,
legatees,
executors,
ad·
ministrato rs and assigns of
EdwTn Condee , deceased, may
cla im some r ight in sa id real
estate by rea so n of an
unrecorded conveyance of said
rea l estate ; that the unknown
he irs, devisees, legatee s ,
executors, administrators and
assigns of George P. Wolf,
deceased, may claim some
interest in sa id real estate by
reason of a defective guardian's
deed ; and that the unknown
he irs, devisees , legatees
executors, administrators and
ass igns of Martha Wolfe ,
deceased, may claim some
interest in sa id real estate by
reason of a defective deed.
The prayer of said compla int
is that each and every one of the
defendants be compelled to
assert any claims which they
may have in said real esta te,
that said claims be declared
invalid , and that plaintiffs' title
in and to said real estate be
quieted as against all defen
dants, and that defendants be...,
forever barred from asserting,..
any right, title or interest in
said real estate , and fo r other
rel ief .
Sa id defendants are required
to answer saod complaint V · it~in
twen ty -eight days from the date
of the last publication of this
notice , the answer day being
February 8th , 1971, or judgmen t
will be taken ageinst them, as
prayed for .
PAUL S. SAYRE ,
et al .. Plaintiffs
Manning D. Webster
Attorney fo r Plaintiffs
Webste r and Ful tz
Pomeroy, Oh io
( 11 ) 30, ( 12 ( 7, 14. 21. 28, ( l)
11 , 7tc

~.

ITEM : Jack Kane.
You somehow get the
feeling he has thought
about
what
he's
sharing with you. Your
feeling is right.

WMP0/1390

�THAR'S \/ORE
SUPPER, OL' BULLET-UH-- GLORY BE!~
'(ONDER COME.S

•

TH' PARSON

•

LANCELOT
®

•

TnAGEDY

DISASTER

Mr. and Mrs. Dan' I

The Bluebird
Mattress Factory
laid off its
ent·t re mattress
testing force
th.ts morn tn~.
rneanin~ Li'l Abner
tsnow
unemployed.
t-4-

Dawgmeat. were
evicted from their
home today, for
fatlure to pay a
$4-3.75 mortgage.
The elderly couple
have lived in this
same house since

YOU LOOK GREA?;
WINNIE ..• EVEN BETTER
THAN WHEN YOU WERE
WITI-1 BONNAZ !

WINNIE

THRIVES ON
HAROMJRK
AT lOP

-WANT ADS-

A FAIR WEEK'S PAY, FOR A
FAIR WEEK'S WORK
WEWILLPAY
ONE MILLION
DOLLARS FOR
ONE WEEK'S
WORK . APPLY
IN PERSON,AT

YES,IM- EACH
DAY I&amp; PACKED
WrTH REAL
DECISIONS AND
SATISFACTIONS.

BUGS BUNNY
/HIS IS M'l OLD
WINNIE ... A GIRL
WITI-1 IH.i:: COURA6E
TO FIGHT FOR
WHAT SHE
BELIEVES.

FLIGHT
AND TRIES

?VIVRGET
HOW LITTLE
PAYSHE

RECBV.ES.

GASOLINE ALLEY
What'~

I

~uppoGe '

t' p\uq it intomL! ear? Or do

•

it run on coal
oi l?

THE BORN LOSER

v 1-\ELLO,MR.

•

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

8L&gt;T 'IOL&gt; WIL-L. Be

PLEAseD 1J KNOW
ll4,b..l H~ IS A.
STRAibHT- ~A1

T~~APPL.E ..

\f.lll.BEI&lt;fa&lt;a
WIU...~OT

66

eRl~~~ A

"' HE'S BECOME WHI\T THEY CI\ LL "~&lt; HOT
PROPERTY"! AND HIS FANS HAVE PROVEN
THEM5ELVES NOT ONLY NUMEROUS, ~T
EAGER FOR HIS RETURN!

STU!/CtJT!

R6FORT CPJ&lt;-r:&gt;
HOME lHIS

SEMESTER

•

~0%~
AAalTWI~(..,

t:..AN'{ OVT, ·~·...j...J,i---...lill~_.:..;~__,

.JAil Y CROSSWORD
v N
DOWN
21. Stringed SA GO
S AV R
1. Aspect
instru- AM ISS
PO Ll CE ST A[ E
and
2. Dwelling
ment
EA T
L
3. Allude
22. - drink
AK
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
Ml
ER
re:
5. - - Brava, 4. Sprite
Dietw AL. DO one letter to each square, to
IN
region
5 . Sturdy
rich
A GA form four ordinary words.
of Spain
rope
23. InteriE
I&lt;E ov El?
10. Biblical
6. Boston
minIL L
A~~
S
TE PO L l CE
able
brother
Bruins star
I
ED N l NON
24. Film
11. Valuable fur 7. Ocean
ENNA
R TE
&gt;
direc12. Leisure
liner
Saturday's Answer
8. British
time at
tor,
Frank
the office
afternoon
(2wds.)
ritual
29.Stage
EMA.JIR
9. Turkish
25. Get
whis14. Nigerian
city
city
lost!
per
(2
30. Scorch
15. - - demer 11. Signified
13. Correct a
wds.)
31. Athirst
16. - - Ioss
faulty text
26. Freshet
36. For
(2wds.)
17. Earthly,
18.
28.
37.
old style
THE RADIO OPERATOP::,
19. Russian
village
0 NOA~ '5 SHIP.
-----l..::[:-.LJ..]
20. Busy insect
b--4----+-+-~
21. Golf great,
Tony - INDOJ"r'$±
Now arrange the circled letters
22. Repair
to
form the surprise answer, as 24. Heal
25. Keep an
by the above cartoon.
account
26. Perched
Print the SURPRISE ANSWER here
27. Earth,
(Anowera t omorrow)
old style
28. Pacify
Jumbl•·" SOGGY BROOD KIMONO SLEIGH
32. Every
Sutu rda'.~ "
bit
·
An·,. ~r: The artist's model worked only when this hap33. Deface
pPned-HER BOSS WAS LOOKING
34. New
Mexican
Indian
35. A voiding
ACROSS

1. Food

DICK TRACY

I'LL GIVE TWE VARMINT

A DOSE OF ~OT LEAD

IF I SEE'IM!

-AND NOW BACK TO
GOLLY! D INNER AND
•'CONNIE's CONFI,.ICT." TELEV ISION R IGHT ON
THE SAME STOVE.

·-

~~ i~

JIWJWIDib~® ::#~:.=

(J

~~~-

~,.,.._.,...,..

TERRY
OF COURSE HE'S A STRANGER, YOU
lli'IOT. IIIIi' YOU EXPECT A NEIGH~OR
TO PLANT A ~OM6 AN(;;&gt; PESTROY
MY LIFE'S WORK !! n..-?O&gt;T,.-,~

IRAHOITI
~~ ~[]Ll_j__

~~~e_-_

~~~e~

~

L
_
_ _

VX
"'!
I
:=:==:=:I~="':=~~::::=:::::::.1:==~-;;:~
· ;:su~g~g~ested

[XIJ ( I IJ [ I X)

I

John
Barleycorn
38. Underwrite
39. Brink
40. Irritable
41. Forest
creature

CAPTAIN ~ASY
HI~ED

TO

INVE$ T iGATE
BRUNO KSRCH,
Dt.ICE'-1 Wil-DE:
APPLIE!7 FOR.
A JOB A'f?
MAID AI HI?

MAf-.17 101-.J

, . - , - - - , - - --:-..,---

-

--:-:-:-:-:-:----,

IN THI6- ROOM YOU WIL-l- FIN (;;&gt;
5 0METHI"-l0 TO FIT 'iOI.J ... INFORM
Mf: WHEN 'IOU ARe READY!

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

-

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A 1.11 \.:.';;.;
- ~:;_,_ _ _ __ _
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation

•

·- ~

~-.-.....

AXYDLBAAXR
11 L 0 N 0 F E L L 0 W

KVB

BVFRTHGOW

BVOWR DT LG YKTHT
RMN

MGYTH! -

KVWLRMNE
BMEF'Y

YKT

MFVFNSVOE

Sa.turday'tt Cryptoquote: MANY A MAN WHO THINKS IT'S
SILLY TO MAKE NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTI ONS RESOLVES
NOT TO MAKE ANY.- ANONYMOUS
( C 1970, K ing Features Syndicate, Inc.)

---

1

WOODSTOCK 15 1l-IE ONLl( PERSON
I KNOW WHO CAN BLOW HIS

MIND ON BREAD CRUMBS...

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 4, 1971

News... in Briefs

Mine Du st Chain Reacted
Charles Finley, owner of the
mine, said he was surprised a
dust explosion had been
blamed, because precautions
had been taken against such an
eventuality.
"We had it well rock-dusted,"
he said, "right up to the face."
Rock dust normally is mixed
with the coal dust after mining
is concluded in a particular
spot to reduce the explosive
potential of the dust.
Westfield said the blast
happened 1,600 feet inside the
mine, but some of the bodies
were found as far as 1,000 feet
away from the explosion. He
declined to speculate whether
they were killed by the impact
of the blast or had suffocated.
The type and quantity of
explosives used was not disclosed. Westfield said they were
not black powder or dynamite,

HYDEN, Ky. ( UPI)-Explosives set off a "chain reaction"
dust explosion that killed 38
miners deep inside the Finley
Coal Co.'s Hillside Mine,
federal officials said Sunday.
"We believe the explosion
was initiated by blasting a
'boom hole' in the first left
(tunnel) of the main entry of
the No. 16 mine," said James
Westfield, assistant director of
the U.S. Bureau of Mines.
Westfield and H.N. Kirkpatrick, state commissioner of
mines and mineral resources,
issued a joint statement after
18 mine experts explored the
shafts where the miners died
Wednesday.
"After the initial blast it was
a chain reaction-a particle by
particle explosion of coal dust
ranging through the tunnel,"
Westfield said.

Robert R. Lee, 44, Dies
PT. PLEASANT- Robert R.
Lee, 44, Pt. Pleasant, suffered a
heart attack Sunday afternoon
and was pronounced dead on
arrival at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital around 3:45p.m.
Mr. Lee operated a barber
shop in Gallipolis for 12 years
until about three years ago. At
the time of his death, he was a
representative of Waddell &amp;
Reed Inc., of Pt. Pleasant,
associated with Mel Clark of
West Columbia.
He served in the merchant
marines 1944 through 1946, and
was a veteran of the Korean
Conflict, having served in the U.
s. Army.

Mr. Lee graduated from
Wahama High School in 1944.
He was member of the Clifton
Masonic Lodge, No. 23, and the
American Legion, New Haven
Post No. 140.
He was born Nov. 12, 1926, in
Mason County, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles R. Lee of Mason,
who survive.

....................
:· A THOUGHT :
~ FOR TODAY ~

t

iC He who has conquered
~doubt and fear has
iC conquered failure. iC
James Allen
•

iC

iC
iC
iC

•••• *It's Quick!
* * •••
Easy

•~

•

•

DRIVE-IN :
BANKING •:

:iC

Fridays Only

iC

:

~ The Drive-In Window iC
iC
is Open
~

.
:
iC

9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

iC

iC

~

-.other Banking Hours 9 to J:
-.and S to 7 as usual on ;
i Fridays.
(

..._

~ FARMERS BANK ~

: and SAVINGS CO. ~
:

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

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O~e.r survtvors are hts wife, .

Patr1c1a Durst Lee, and two
daughters, Mala Ann and Kyla
Renee, both at home.
Friends may call at the CrowRussell Funeral Home this
evening after 7 o'clock. Funeral
arrangements are incomplete.

Leo M. Hysell
Died Saturday
Funeral services for Leo M.
Hysell, 79, Third Ave., Middleport, who died Saturday at
Mercy Hospital in Portsmouth,
were held at 2 p.m. today at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home.
Mr. Hysell was born May 19,
1891 in Middleport, the son of
the late Asel and Rosa Hysell.
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by a brother.
Surviving are his wife, Lydia; a
daughter, Miss Kathryn E.
Hysell, Middleport .
Mr. and Mrs. Hysell were
married in June, 1914 in Middleport. He had served as
custodian of Heath United
Methodist Church several
years.
Officiating at today's services
was the Rev. Charles Simons.
Burial was in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Mary Wingett, Pomeroy; Edith
Kauff, Coolville; John Baxter,
Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
Linda Baer, Gordon
Ridenour, Naomi London.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Augusta Will, Syracuse; Salem
Yates, Racine; Hollie Friend,
Syracuse; James Dale Warner,
Syracuse; John Ridgway, Jr.,
New Haven; Lena Snyder,
Pomeroy; Anna Wheeler,
Racine.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Lema Lynch, Wyatt South,
Shirley Richmond.
SALON TO MEET
Meigs County Salon 8 and 40
will meet all-&lt;lay Wednesday at
the home of Myrtle Walker in
Racine.

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POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

both banned by federal law.
The explosion blew dust and
debris out all eight portals of
the mine, according to the
federal official.
The mine, dug 2,600 feet into
the side of an Appalachian
hillside, may never be opened,
according to Finley.
A joint hearing into the

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Saturday, Jan. 2, 1971,
SALES REPORT of
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 16 to
16.10; 220 to 250 lbs. 15.50 to
15.85; Light 15.50 Down; Fat
Sows 12 to 13; Boars 10 to 11.50;
Sows &amp; Pigs 50 to 85; Shoats 16
to 18.50.
CA'ITLE- Steers 24 to 28.10;
Heifers 18 to 24.50; Baby Beef 28
to 32.75; Fat Cows 18 to 20;
Canners 18 to 21.90; Bulls 20 to
25.50; Milk Cows 175 to 285.
VEAL CALVES -Tops 48;
Seconds 42 to 47; Medium 38 to
42; Com. &amp; Hvs. 38 to 42; Culls
38 Down.
LAMBS Tops 22 35·
Seconds 21 to 21.85; Light wts'.
20 to 22.

PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
Saturday, Jan. 2, 1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 14.75 to
15.75; Heavies 12.50 to 14.85;
Lights 12 to 14.75; Fat Sows 11 to
13.75; Pigs 6 to 12.50; Stock
Shoats 10 to 17.
CA'ITLE - Fat Cows 18 to
21.85; Canners 13 to 17.50; Milk
Cows 130 to 185; Stock Cows and
Calves 165 to 235; Stock Steers
21.50 to 28.25; Stock Heifers
18.50 to 26.25; Stock Steer
Calves 25.50 to 31; Stock Heifer
Calves 22 to 27.25.
VEAL CALVES -Tops 45.50;
Seconds 44.25; Medium 36.25 to
39; Common &amp; Heavies 36.75 to
43.25.
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Hogs: 190-200, 15.90; No. 1,
16.15; 230-240, 15.40; 240-260,
14.90; 260-280, 13.90; 180-190,
14.75; 160-180, 13.25; Sows, 11.7012.40; Boars, 12.80; Stock Hogs,
11.25-15.10; Pigs by the Head,
8.75-11.
Cattle: Good to Choice Steers,
28.20-29; Good Steers, 26.8527 .80; Holstein Steers, 25.9026.85; Good Heifers, 24-25.60;
Good Cows 21.60-25.25; Utility
Cows, 18.85-20.50; Canner &amp;
Cutter, 16-17.85; Bulls, 24.75-26;
Stock Cattle Steers, 25-29; Stock
Cattle Heifers, 24.75-27; Heavy
Stock Calves Steers, 31.25-39.
Veal Calves: Choice, 44.25;
Good, 40.75; Medium, 36.75;
Commercial, 30.75; Baby
Calves by the Head, 20-53.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS- Mrs. James
Roach, Patrick Hill, Mrs.
Robert Spencer, Mrs. Azel
Brillhart II, Lee Renee Powell,
Mrs. Robert Cline, all Ft.
Pleasant; Mrs. Charles Halley,
Fraziers Bottom; Mrs. J. Ernest Tucker, Leon; Stephanie
Sprague, Circleville, Ohio;
Bruce Stewart, Letart.; John
Roush Sr., Proctorville, Ohio.
Carsel
DISCHARGES Stone, Ona Dyer, Lewis
Faugree, Debra Finley, Mrs.
James Bragg, Mrs. John
Beaver, Okey Jordan, Mrs.
Alma Osborne, Mrs. Robert
Gibbs, Andrew Kent II, Robert
McCrary, Mrs. Lawrence Davis
and daughter; Mrs. George
Arrington, Jimmie Tucker,
Cheryl Bledsoe, Charles Conley,
Robert Manion, Mrs. Katie
Crooks, Mrs. Lyle Sheets c.nd
son.
BIRTHS - Jan. 2 a daughter
to Mr. and Mrs. James Lee, Jr.,
Henderson; Jan. 3, a daughter
to Mr. and Mrs. George Swartz,
Pt. Pleasant.
PAPERS DOWN
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
city's two daily newspapers
failed to publish today after 230
pressmen walked off their jobs
in a contract dispute with the
Pittsburgh Press Co.
TO DRAPE CHARTER
Officers will be installed and
the charter draped when
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, meets at 7:30p.m .
Tuesday at the hall. Members
are to wear white.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Jan. 4.5
KELLY'S HEROES
(Technicolor)
Clint Eastwood
Don Rickles
GP
Admission : Adults Sl.OO
Children 60c
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
.__ _ _ _ __ _ _ __.

( Contmued from Page 1)

Wrong kind of grenade

explosion deaths by federal and
state mining officials was to
begin at 9 a.m. Wednesday at
the Leslie County Courthouse.
Sixty other miners employed at
the mine were asked to testify.

COLUMBUS- VICTOR FREDERICK Rieser 40 of Jackson
!ownship, lost his right hand and three youths w~re' slightly in·
JU.red Sunday when a grenade exploded in their midst. Police said
Rieser apparently believed the grenade, brought here by a sailor
on leave, was a smoke bomb and decided to detonate it outside his
home.
He pulled the pin and when he ignored the pleas of one of the
boys to t~ow it, the device exploded, knocking all four to the •
ground. Wmdows in Rieser's home and a parked car were shattered. Rieser's hand was amputated above the wrist at Mt
Cannel Hospital. His sons, Fred, 17, and Rick, 13, and a friend:
Gregory Dyer, 19, were treated and released for minor shrapnel
wounds.

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FIRST IN U.S.
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)- The
first baby born anywhere in
the United States in 1971 may
well be the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Drake of Akron.
Mrs. Drake gave birth to the
7-pound 8-ounce boy at
exactly one second past
midnight Jan. 1.

14 arrested by riot police
WHEELING, W. VA. - CLUB.SWINGING riot police
muscled through a unruly mob of blacks early Sunday and
arrested 14 persons who refused to disperse after police were •
attacked with rocks, bottles and garbage. A black man who tried
to ~aim down the crowd was beaten by other blacks but not
seriOusly.
'
. Police said the disorder was triggered by the arrival of two
pol.Ice prowl ~ars in a mainly - black neighborhood, where two
white men clauned their car had been stoned by a street gang. A
barrage of rocks, bottles, firecrackers, obscenities and full
garbage cans greeted the officers.

Long Bottom
Social Notes
The Olive Township tr~stees
have purchased a new dump
truck, cinder-spreader and
snow plow.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Stethem appreciated The
Seventh Day Advent Church of
Pomeroy and the Golden Rule
Sunday School Class remembering them with fruit baskets
at Christmas.
Pat Smith, OSU, Columbus,
spent the holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
Smith and left Dec. 27 for
California to attend the Rose
Bowl game.
Christmas Eve guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Larkins were
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hauber and
family, New Matamoras, 0.;
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larkins
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Weber and Jimmy,
Brenda Spencer, and Keith
Weber, Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hayman
spent Christmas in Columbus
with their daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis
and family spent several days
at Indiana with her brother.
Mr. and Mrs. I.Joyd McPeek,
Belleville, W. Va. were visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hensley.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Prince
spent Christmas with their
children at Columbus.
Joe Bissell has returned home
from Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith
spent Christmas with Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Young, Paden
City, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Stethem entertained with a
birthday dinner. Guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Stethem
and son, Belpre; Edith Osborn,
Keno, and Mr. and Mrs. Roland
Stethem and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Curtis
and family, Columbus, spent
Christmas with Mary Pierce,
enroute to Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Connolly and daughter spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs .
Kenny Connolly and other
relatives at Newark, 0.
Dinner guests of Leona Sisson
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Cline and sons, Moundsville, W.
Va.; Murl Taylor, Keno, and
Dorsel Bibbee.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Larkins, Portland.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis were
Mr . and Mrs. Denver Curtis and
family, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Walker and
Ruthie, Tuppers Plains, and
Mary Pierce.
Neva German and Lucille,
Atherton, who have been
patients in local hospitals, have
returned to their homes here.
Mr. and Mrs. Barney Burton
and son and Kirk See, Columbus, spent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Prince.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith
and family were dinner guests
of A. B. Kibble, Reedsville.
Mae McPeek, Belleville, W.
Va. and Leona Hensley were
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
Stalnaker, Long Run.
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Holter were Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Hayman and
family, Tom Gruenveld, Tom
Drake and Janet Bissell,
Columbus ; Nancy Baum,
Chester, 0., and Mr. and Mrs.
David Smith, Pat, David, and
Dee Dee.
Mike Bissell spent several
days 'at Columbus with his
sisters .
Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth Dill,
Pomeroy, were visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Connolly and
daughter and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Larkins and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wells
have moved to the home of Vena
Marcinko, who has moved to
Chester.
Christmas guests of Marie
Swan were Gordon Lawrence,
Warren, 0.; Kenneth Lawrence, East Liverpool, 0.;
Mrs. Paul Lawrence and son,

•

2,000 Teachers on strike
MICKY CHILDS, GUARD, of the Meigs Marauders who
got a starting assignment Saturday night against Iro~ton
responded with 18 points, second high for his club. Mick, wh~
towers up to 5-5, makes up for his brevity with hustle and
know-how.

PI'ITSBURGH - APPROXIMATELY 2,000 of the city's •
school teachers went on strike today, their second in three years
to support demands for higher pay, better discipline and smaller
classes. The teachers, members of the Pittsburgh Federation of
Teachers (PFT), set up picket lines at the city's 110 schools at 7
a.m. Negotiations were to continue today.
The PFTmembers voted 1,206to 57 Sunday night to reject the
school board's contract offer and strike. The union's 26-rnember
executive committee recommended rejection. Dr. Louis J.
Kishkunas, superintendent of schools said he would attempt to •
keep the city's some 110 schools open.

Truck Capsizes

CARLA KUHN, Meigs Marauder cheerleader, had
plenty to cheer about Saturday night at Meigs High School as
the home team clipped Ironton 73-64.

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Waid Windon, 73, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3, died at home Monday
morning. He was born June 24,
1897, a son of the late Joseph
and Ethel Johnson Windon. He
:;:;:=:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:=:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:=::::·:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::;:;:::::=:':':'=

FIVE-DAY OUTLOOK
Extended Ohio outlook for
Thursday and Friday:
Continued cold with a
chance of snow flurries both
days mainly north portions.
Daytime highs from the
middle 20s to the lower 30s
and lows at night mostly in
the teens.
:::;:;:;:;:::;:;::::;:::;:;.~::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

TOBEARRAIGNED
WASHINGTON, Pa. (UPI) Arraignment was scheduled
today for Claude E. Vealey, 26,
one of five persons charged with
murder in the slayings of United
Mine Workers Union (UMW)
leader Joseph A. Yablonski, his
wife and daughter.
WORST, ALMOST
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Some
7,000 airline passengers were
stranded at Cleveland Hopkins
International Airport Sunday
night because airports west of
here were snowed in. Airport
night manager William J. Otto
said it was the worst crowd he
had seen in 19 years.
JUDGE DIES
TOLEDO (UPI) - Services
will be held today for former
Wood County Judge Joseph L.
Culberts on . Culbertson, a
Democrat, retired in 1962 after
eight years on the bench. He
died Friday at the age of 75.

Racine , and Clyde Lawrence.
Marie Offutt, Parkersburg,
W. Va . was visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Bissell.
Mr . and Mrs. David Smith
were visi ting Mr . and Mrs.
Ronnie Clay a nd Todd, Chester.
Mr. and Mrs . Hank Holter
were visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Lloyd McPeek, Belleville , W.
Va.
- Violet Smith

was also preceded in death by
his first wife, Clara Leifheit
Windon and an infant son, one
brother, Ray, and two sisters,
Norma Will and Ada Windon.
Mr. Windon was an employe
of the State Highway Department of Meigs County 33 years.
He was a member of Masonic
Lodge 453 (Shade River).
He is survived by his wife,
Florence Leifheit Windon; one
daughter, Virginia Baylor,
Gallipolis, Rt. 1; a son, Virgil
Windon, Pomeroy, Rt. 3; one
sister, Edna Windon Morgan,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, and eight
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 1 p. m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. William
Airson officiating. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Masonic services will be held at
the funeral home Tuesday at
7:30 p. m . Friends may call
anytime.

Two persons were injured
Saturday in a traffic accident at
the junction of Rts. 7 and 35 near
the new Silver Memorial
Bridge.
According to the Gallipolis
Post State Highway Patrol,
Paul Hoffman, 50, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, lost control of his
cattle truck, ran off the roadway and struck several highway signs and a car operated by
William R. Mollohan, 44,
Huntington.
Hoffman's truck turned over,
throwing out several animals.
He and a passenger suffered
minor injuries. Hoffman was
charged
with
reckless
operation.
No one was injured in a
mishap at the junction of Lincoln Pike and Boggs Rd., where
Billy J. Marcum, 35, Rt. 1,
Vinton, lost control of his
tractor trailer on icy roadway
and struck an embankment.
There was moderate damage
and no citation was issued.
Another accident occurred on
the Bidwell-Porter Rd., two
miles north of Rt. 35 where Clell
Jerrell, 40, Rt. 2, Bidwell, lost
control of his auto on an icy
roadway and slid into the path
of a car driven by Lewis B.
Swisher, 38, Rt. 1, Vinton. Minor
damage resulted. No citation
was issued.
A final mishap occurred in the
same area a few minutes later
when Cynthia Gilmore, 21, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, stopped for the above

accident and was struck in the
rear by a car operated by Larry
Eagle, 26, Columbus. Moderate
damage resulted.
In all, nine traffic accidents 9
were investigated over the New
Year's holiday in which two
persons
were
injured.
Patrolmen arrested 32 persons,
issued 32 warnings and assisted
li' motorists.
TWO CALLS MADE
The Pomeroy E-R squad went
to the Philip Werry residence in
the Flatwoods area at 10:55 •
p.m. Saturday for Sue Ann
Seelig who had become ill there.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated and
released. At 9:18a.m. today, the
squad went to the Charles
Werry home on Pleasant Ridge.
Mr. Werry, who was ill, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. He was still confined
to the emergency room late this •
morning.

BONDS FORFEITED
Forfeiting bonds to Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar Saturday
night were Darrell Dugan,
Racine, $25, assured clear
distance,
and
Orland
Laudermilt, Pomeroy, $15,
disturbing the peace; fined was
Vincent Laudermilt, Pomeroy,
$5 and costs, resisting arrest,
and $25 and costs, disturbing the
peace.

I

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Shop Monday-Thursday 9:30 to 5 P.M.
Save Now In Our
Big Sto rewide January Sale
In A ll Depar t m ents

ELBERFELD$

Check Us Again Tomorrow!
All The
Items
In Our
January. • •

WILL BE ON SALE
WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST. DISCOUNT PRICES
Plus Free Merchandise.
(ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE)

CARPET, FURNITURE, APPLIANCE BARGAINS

INGELS FURNITURE
PHONE 992-2635

•

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