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                  <text>Now You Know
In 1895, common public coin
telephones took silver dollars as
well as half dollars, quarters
and dimes.

•

The Daily Sentinel

Weather
Mostly clear south and west
partly cloudy with a chance of
snow flurries northeast through
Thursday and quite cold. High
today and Thursday in the teens
and low 20s. Low tonight 5 below
northwest to 10 above southeast.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXII NO. 185

f

. ..

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1971

TEN CENTS

Cambodian Front
Worrying Brass

•
•

POMEROY-M IDDLEPQRT, OHIO

SAIGON (UPI) - Military
sources said today the U.S.
Command is so concerned at
"recent deter ioration" in Cambodia that it has summoned the
U.S. Pacific naval commander
to Saigon for a meeting this
weekend
with
Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird.
JOE MYERS

The situation that most
concerns the U.S. Command is
along Highway 4 linking Phnom
Penh, with Cambodia's only
deepwater port of Kompong
Som, the sources said. The
Cambodian government has lost
a complete battalion and

substantial numbers of reinforcements in; the last two
weeks trying to recapture the
highway.
They said the U.S. Command
feels continued military stability in Cambodia is essential to
Vietnamization of the war in
Vietnam.
The sources said deep concern over the Cambodian
situation was the principal
reason for calling Adm. John S.
McCain to Saigon to meet with
Laird.
The Mekong River has been
the only land link to Phnom
Penh since the Communists

seized Highway 4 Nov. 21 and
even the armed supply ship
convoys on the Mekong have
been attacked by the VietCong.
The latest such attack Tuesday resulted in one Cambodian
seaman killed.
In South Vietnam, two
Americans were killed and nine
others wounded Tuesday and
today in a series of battles and
the shooting down of an OH58
observation helicopter by Communist groundfire.
U.S. B52 bombers struck
targets in South Vietnam today
for the second time in three
days.

BOAT BURNS- A fire apparently,starting in the engine
room of the river boat Luther Herdman, owned by the M&amp;G
Transport Co., operating from the 0-Kan Harbor, Kanauga,
burned out of control at 11 a.m. today on the Kanawha River
about 2lh miles from its confluence with the Ohio River.

Coast Guard spokesmen indicated the Herdman had a tow of
eight coal barges coming downriver to 0-Kan when the fire
forced evacuation of the boat onto barges. ?t. Pleasant
firemen, above, were trying unsuccessfully to get water into
burning areas. Captain of the boat was reported to be Ed
Burge.

Board Reelects Atkins
state. It shows receipts of a
little over $76,000 for 1971 for
county board operations.
Bowen accepted a five-year
contract in his present position
of superintendent. His current

contract will expire on July :n,
1971.
All board members and
Bowen were present for the
meeting at the county offices in
the infirmary.

i---------------------------,
7\. T
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By United Press International

Court Fines
By Mayor
•

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Eleven defendants were fined
- four upon conviction of
driving while intoxicated - in
hearings Tuesday night before
Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher.
Fined for DWI and given
three days jail sentences also
were Templeton C. Grueser, 20,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs; Nona
M. Winebrenner, 63, Middleport; Roy F. Burton, 67,
Pomeroy, and Mark A.
Yoacham, 19, Racine, each $100
and costs.
Hubert Van Meter, 44, Middleport, was fined $25 and costs
and was given a five day jail
sentence on charges of maintaining a disorderly house.
Harold L. Little, 35, Middleport,
was fined $5 and costs and was
given five days in jail on
charges of failing to obey a
zoning ordinance.
Others fined were Clyde
Bayles, 74, Middleport, intoxication, $10 and costs;
Templeton C. Grueser, 20,
Pomeroy, profanity to a police
officer, $10 and costs; John H.
Kane, 24, Parma, speeding, $10
and costs; Don M. Rose, 19,
Minersville, $10 and costs, too
fast for road conditions;
Chester L. Tannehill, 55,
Middleport, $5 and costs,
speeding; Bonnie J . Rife ,
Middleport, $5 and costs,
speeding.
James A. Goody, 18,
Cheshire, forfeited a $25 bond
posted on an assured clear
distance charge, and Wallace
E. Gilkey, 37, Albany, forfeited
an $18.70 bond posted on
charges of failing to yield right
of way.
The hearings, the first held
before Mayor Fisher since Dec.
15, were in part postponed until
after the holiday season. Seven
other hearings from charges
filed during the holiday period
remain.

,.

FINED $15, COSTS
Fined $15 and costs in the

Conference In Wellston Announced
The Eighth District Midwinter Conference was announced for this Sunday in
Wellston Tuesday night when
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, met at the
post home.
Commander Leonard Jewell
read a communication from Pat
Hone, department adjutant,
outlining the prisoner of war
situation in Vietnam and announcing the conference on Jan.

31 in Columbus.
A report was given on
memorial services held for
Fred Cadle and Fred Harper,
World War I veterans, who were
post members, and for Henry T.
Williams, a World War I
veteran who was not a member.
Several Christmas par ties
held for groups at the post home
were reported successful. First
Vice Commander Raymond
Jewell reported membership at

305, 15 below quota .
Joe Struble, Americanism cochairman, reported that the
annual Americanism test has
been given at Eastern and
Meigs High Schools. Results
will be announced later. Robert
Burnem, a World War I
veteran, was reported to be a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. A supper was served
by Paul Casci and Guy Guinther.

Attention on Alcoholism, Drug Abuse
Alcoholism Information Month, a national
educational and informational campaign emphasizing
that alcoholism is a treatable illness, is being observed
in Meigs County throughout January according to
P.anny Thompson, president of the Meigs County
Committee on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse.
The campaign in this county is part of a nationwide observance sponsored by the National Council on
Alcoholism, the national voluntary health agencv in
the field of alcoholism, and the Meigs County Committee on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse.
"The theme of the national campaign this year is,
'Protect Health, Home, Job - Detect Alcoholism
Early.' Alcoholism is one of America's four major
health problems ranking with mental illness, cancer
and heart disease. It is also a threat to the stability of
the home and family. In addition, alcoholism costs U.
S. industry an estimated four billion dollars each year
in absenteeism, sick leave, wasted time and materials,
and accidents," according to Thompson. "There is
help from the person suffering from alcoholism.
During Alcoholism Information Month the committee
hopes to call this fact to the public's attention ."
The Alcoholism Center in Meigs County is staffed
by Rev. Arthur C. Lund, who serves as director, and
can be reached through the Meigs County Health

COLUMBUS -FORMER U. S. REP. Donald E. "Buz"
Lukens R-Middletown, said today that being a member of the
state Senate was certainly "a stepping stone for any polit.ician"
but declined to say whether he would seek higher office in 1974.
Lukens was named by the Senate Republican Caucus to fill the
state senate seat of former Sen. Walter E. Powell, R-Fairfield,
who was elected to Lukens' congressiona l seat in November.
"My first priority is to see my party win totally in 1972," said
Lukens. "After the 1972 election, I'll talk about 1974." Lukens,
who made $42,500 a year as a congressman and will earn an annual salary of $12,750 as a state senator, said he saw "no reason"
why he would not run for re-election to the senate in two years
when his term expires.

Department, 114lh East Main, Pomeroy, 992-3723, or
St .. Paul Lutheran Church, 231 East Second Street,
Pomeroy, 992-2010. Rev. Lund is available to anyone
who is seeking help or information in this area or to
family individual members, employers and others who
might want assistance.
Meantime, both Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar
and Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher have coproclaimed January as Alcoholism Information
Month.
The proclamation emphasizes these points:
- Alcoholism has been recognized as a disease
which ranks among the four major health problems,
along with cancer, mental illness and heart disease.
- Alcoholism afflicts directly between five and
six-million Americans.
- The cost of alcoholism in human suffering, in
disintegration of family life, in economic burdens to
the individual and the community is incalculable.
The Alcoholism Program of the Ohio Department
of Health, in cooperation with the National Council on
Alcoholism, is joined with the Meigs County Committee on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse in a plan of
action dedicated to education for the prevention of
alcoholism and for the rehabilitation of alcoholics.

E~~~;~~~~f;~~~fo~. [~i~~~~:~~~~::~~~I~~~f:~l~I:~[~: :E~~~:~E~~~~~~:]

Lukens mum on political hopes

$13,229 Paid In Auto Taxes

DANNY THOMPSON

A total of $13,229.31 in sales
tax was paid by Meigs Countians on motor vehicles purchased during the month of
December, Mrs. Evelyn Lucke,
Meigs County Clerk of Courts,
reports.
In addition $2,224.60 was paid
in casual and use tax and $162
for inspection of autos brought
into the county from another
state.
In other automotive activities
for Mrs. Lucke's office during
the month 522 certificates of
title were issued; 185 notations

of lien; 79 memorandums; 333
applications, affidavits and
assignments and 16 certified
copies. Receipts for the activities totaled $1,051 with the
county's share being $781.75 and
the state's share, $269.25.
ATIEND MEETING
Attending
a
statewide
meeting of boards of election
officials in Columbus Sunday
through Tuesday were Edwin
Cozart and Ernest Wingett,
members of the local board, and
E. E. Follrod.

�r---~-----------------------

! Voice along Br~;d;;-y--l

Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow

EDITORIALS
·---~ill

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The Defoliation
Quandary

More than just havmg "to destroy the village in order
to save it," we have ruined vast areas of the South Vietnamese countryside in pursuit of the same goal.
So charges a commission set up by the American Association for the Advancement of Science to investigate the
effects of the herbicide spraying program the United
States has carried out in South Vietnam since 1962.
In a report to the 137th annual meeting of the association in Chicago, the Herbicide Assessment Commission
stated that over the last nine years U.S. forces have
sprayed more than 5.5 million acres, or about 8,600 square
miles, of forest and cropland in South Vietnam-an area
greater than that of Connecticut, Rhode Island and Delaware combined.
The spraying has resulted in the defoliation of nearly
five million acres of hardwood forests, or about 20 per
cent of the total in the country, destroying marketable
timber worth $500 million.
Half the country's mangrove forests, once a major
source of fuelwood and charcoal, have been sprayed, as
well as enough crops to feed some 600,000 people for a
year. The botanists and biologists on the commission estimate it may take decades for the affected lands to recover.
Still inconclusive is evidence that herbicide chemicals
have caused a rise in stillbirths and deformed babies
among inhabitants of the sprayed areas.
Army spokesmen answer that the spraying has saved
many American lives by removing cover for enemy troops
to hide in and crops to support them and by revealing
enemy base camps and supply routes in thick jungles.
There is no reason to doubt the military's claims. The
commission's own findings affirm the effectiveness of
defoliation.
The real question, however, is the same question that
is increasingly being asked about the war as a whole :
Was it worth it?
In anticipation of the report, the White House announced
that it was embarking on "an orderly, yet rapid phaseout
of the herbicide operations" in Vietnam. The same kind
of phaseout of American combat troops has been going on
for the past year and a half.
Once we have gone from South Vietnam and our works
there have ceased, onlv time will tell whether it has all
been worth it, whether the country has been "saved," and
for what.
Only then can the moral questions surrounding this brutal and difficult war begin to be answered.

•

Little-~nderstood

Facts

About Varicose Veins
By LAWRENCE E. lAMB, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-I have
varicose veins on my leg. It
looks a w f u I. What do you
think about having the veins
stripped? Are there certain
foods and d r in k s to stay
away from? As I get older,
will I have hardening of the
arteries? I am 49. My daughter is 28 but a 1 r e a d y has
varicose veins.
Dear Reader-Varicose
veins are common in
women. They don't always
cause difficulty even though
they may not look good. The
large vein s have small
valves in them that only permit blood to flow upward toward the heart. When the
veins are dilated in large
varicosities, frequently the
v a I v e s do not close completely, making it difficult
for the blood in the legs to
be moved upward to the
heart.
Not all varicose veins have
incompetent valves and even
if the veins are unsightly the
circulation works fine. The
doctor can do a test to find
out if the valves are incompetent or not. This involves
putting a tourniquet around
the leg and measuring the
filling and emptying characteristics of the veins during standing, lying and walking.
There are two sets of veins
that may have incompetent
valves- the veins deep inside
the leg muscle s that you
can't f"ee and those under
the skin. If the valves are
functioning adequately the
doctor may feel that treatment is unnecessary. If varicose v e i n s are associated
with faulty v a I v e s in the
veins, blood pools in the legs

and causes swelling of the
feet and ankles. As this gets
worse, poor circulation may
cause the skin to chan g e
color or even result in an
ulcer around the ankle.
Unless an operation is desired for cosmetic purposes,
many people can get along
very well using elastic bandages or support stockings.
If swelling and skin ulcers
c a n n o t be controlled this
way, then stripping of the
veins is in d i c a t e d. This
operation simp I y cuts the
veins out in short pieces. In
many i n s t a n c e s support
stockings or bandages are
required after such an operation.
There is a tendency for
varicose veins to occur in
families. These types of varicose veins tend to occur in
both legs and become apparent after a pregnancy or in
the presence of obesity or in
p eo pIe who have jobs requiring a lot of standing.
Any constriction, such as
garters, makes the problem
worse.
Varicose veins have nothing to do with hardening of
the arteries or fatty deposits
that develop in arteries with
age. Most people, including
women, do develop this problem though as they get older
but from other causes.
There are no special foods
that benefit varicose veins.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Please 5end your questions and
comments to Lawrence E. Lamb,
M.D., in care of this paper. While
Dr. Lamb cannot answer individual
letters, he will an5wer letters of
general interest in future columns.

..
·.

PRO···

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WHE~ l-lE'5 WA-TCH IN' A BALL.
6M-AE, BULL15TER 15 THE GL&gt;Y

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WIN AT BRIDGE

Expert Defense
Wins Blue Ribbon

.---------------------------,

!Helen Help Us!I
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By Helen Bottel

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By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH

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Opening lead-• 4

The 1970 blue ribbon pairs
was won by internationalist
Ira Rubin of New York playing with Charles Burger of
Detroit. The new partnership
obtained one of the many top
scores by setting South three
tricks at a one no-trump contract.
Chuck opened his fourth
best club. He decided that
his ace of spades would be
worth more if he held it
back and waited for someone to lead the suit to him.
It sure was!
Ira won the first trick
with the ace and returned
the suit. Chuck's 10 covered
declarer's nine and held the
trick. A third club knocked
out dummy's king. Ira discarded the four of spades.
South might well have
taken his other four top
tricks and conceded down
two, but he wanted to try
for more. He led a diamond
to his ace and a second diamond toward dummy's
queen. That queen lost to
Ira's king and Ira cashed
his jack.
South discarded the three
of spades and Chuck let the
deuce of hearts go. This
clearly told Ira to lead a
spade and he did just that.
Chuck won with the ace and
cashed his two good clubs.
Poor South had to make
two discards. The first was
easy. He jettisoned the six
of hearts. The last was a lot
harder. He couldn't afford
to unguard his queen of
spades so he had to throw
away one of his three top
hearts. Now it was simple
for Chuck to put South on
lead with a heart and let
Ira take the last two tricks
with his king and jack of

Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
I DID A. LITTLE
60XI~' MY5EL.F IN TI-lE
AMAC~- A. LOT OF
MA~f..I?JEPS WERE
AFTER ME TO TORN

~,.

CtGA12~'rr~

WEST

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

I ._
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Dear Helen :
Looking back over 40 years,
you can see the mistakes when it's too late to change
them .
I earned good wages. My wife
is a good manager, so I let her
take care of the money. As the
years went on, we went out less
and less. There was always an
excuse - the children needed
clothes, the trip "wasn't worth
it," but mainly - "We're
saving for retirement so we can
enjoy ourselves."
So we sat in front of the TV,
watched other people's travel
movies, and our bank account
grew. At first I tried to persuade
my wife that spending for
amusement wasn't a mort~l sin,
but the few vacations we took
were never "right." She'd get
tense and worried - like I was
robbing her of her old age.
After awhile, the virus took
hold of me, too. We'd have that
pot of gold when we got to the
end of the rainbow, and THEN
- we'd live!
Last year I retired. My wife
fought against it. "The money,"
she wailed. "What will we do
without your paycheck?" I have
an adequate retirement fundover $500 a month - plus a big
savings account, enough to see
us through until we're 110.
Inasmuch as we won't live that
long, I expected to go on the
trips we denied ourselves and
the children all those years.
Or did I really? If my wife
suddenly changed her tune and

spades.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Now available through this newspaper: "Win at Bridge with JACOBY
MODERN." For your copy, send
name, address, Zip code and $1 to :
"Win at Bridge," c/o (Nome Newspaper), P.O. Box 489, Dept. (first
three digits local Zip code), Radio
City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.

6

tta 8:1:1 •!tfUNn
The bidding has been:
West
North
East
South
1 ...
1¥
Pass
Pass
1N.T.
Pass
2
Pass
You, South, hold:
.K6 ¥A97 +KQ4 ...AQJ32
What do you do now?
A- Bid three diamonds. Your
partner doesn't have much of a
hand, but he may have enough
for game. In any event three
diamonds should be safe.

+

ALL THE BIG-LEAGUE SCOUTS
WERE WAVtfJG BONUSES AT-· ·

ifHE DAILY SENTINEL

"DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily except
Saturday by Th e Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, l l l
Co urt St ., Pomeroy, Ohio ,
457'69 . Business •Office PhonH
992· 2156, Ed itorial Pi!hone 992
2157.
Second c lass postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National. advertising
representative
Bottinelli Ga llagher, Inc ., 12 East 42st
c:t . New York Citv . New York

suggested a 'round -the -world
cruise, I must be truthful and
say I'd find excuses to stay
home. The habit of years is too
great. I no longer yearn for the
travelling and enjoyment that I
once thought would be great.
It's too much trouble, making
plans - and hearing her
shudder at every check we
write.
Advice won't help, Helen. I'm
writing this only as a warning to
young couples. Spend as you go!
Don't save it for that
"someday" or you'll get into
such a rut that someday will
never come.
MISER
AGAINST MY WILL
Dear Miser:
Advice might help - if your
wife were advised by the
children, her doctor, pastor,
friends - and YOU asked the
advice of a travel agency who
would take the "planning"
hassle off your hands.
Rise up and assert yourself,
man! You might be surprised
how fast a woman changes,
when her husband takes the
reins. - H.
Dear Helen:
We moved here last spring
and the neighbors helped a lot. I
got a job and, when vacation
came, the lady next door
started looking out for our
children, aged 14 and 15. She
has a teenage girl and boy. They
also have a swimming pool with
a high fence around it.
One day last summer I got
sick and came home from work
early. I stopped at my neighbor's to let the children know,
and was I shocked! Our two
girls were swimming with the
other two teenagers, all nude.
Just as I got to the pool, the
mother came out of the house,
also nude.
Naturally, I found another
place for our children to stay
while I worked. Now we're
thinking about selling our
house, as we can't condone this
depraved kind of goings-on.
What bothers me is our
children thought so little of it
that they didn't mention this socalled "skinny dipping." And
the woman had the nerve to ask
my husband and me to swim. I
thought they were such great
people - before. I've said
nothing to them - but:
Are we right in leaving? S.F.
DearS.:
Nudists aren't depraved they simply have different
attitudes about clothing. If you
don't like skinny-dipping, stay
out of their back yard, but don't
feel threatened. Their moral
values are probably as strong
as yours. - H.

I

The prefix Mach is used tc.
describe supersonic so und .
When a plane moves at the
speed of sound. it is Mach L
when twice the speed of
sound. it is Mach 2.

QUICK QUIZ
Q-Under the new "Monday Holiday" law, which
month wiU have two holiday
weekends?

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Big new
London club's called "The
Maggie Jones," and the real
Maggie Jones (Princess Meg) is
doing a royal burn .... Brassy
millionaire Herb Alpert switched to Lanie Hall, and if you
don't know the famed separatee
he's switched from, we aren't
about to pigeon .... Tom Jones
has an important date with the
U. S. tax snoops: Not because
he did anything overt - just
coined fees beyond his and their
expectations via huge concerts
and so many varied show biz
points that a March hearing will
try and settle the claim difference .... "No, No, Nanette"
players Patsy Kelly and Harry
Rigby dined together, and
someone's trying to suggest a
romance, which is pretty giggly
all considered .... If you hear of
a desk clerk at the Playboy
Plaza Club in Miami Beach
flattening somebody, it could be
the next guest who takes one
glimpse at the LF J-look-alike (a
dead ringer) and intones
sorrowfully: "1 come to you
with a heavy heart."
Former Mets' pitcher Jack
Fisher's okay after an appendectomy at Flushing Hosp
.... Teddy's West End spot in
Atlantic City sported the
painting of a topless dancer, so
the N. J. Alcoholic Beverage
Con trot ordered the owner to
have some local Rembrandt
paint in a top; they should see
some N. Y. saloon art .... East
Side N. Y. joint which hosted a
shoot-out months ago just lost
its liquor license, but it's still
operating, ostensibly with fruit
juice and hamburgers ... Film
critic Joe Morgenstern and his
wife, Piper Laurie, enjoyed the
ambiance at Pyewacket;
Piper's a gifted gal who has had
a run of bad casting luck - she
created the star role in "The
Days of Wine and Roses" TV
original, but the fihn went to
Lee Remick who won prizes ....
We thought Piper's alky-beset
performance far superior. .
Jimmy
Webb
wrote
"MacArthur Park," and actor
Richard Harris recorded the
71;2-minute monotony which
both loved; and now they no
longer talk .... A nice New Year
pat on the escutcheon of Queens
D.~. Tom Ma&lt;;kell, an ex-cop

President James A. Garfield was shot on July 2,
1881, and died two months
later. His assassin, Charles
G u it e a u, was an unbalanced office seeker, The
World Almanac r e c a II s.
Garfield had been harassed
by office seekers until his
tragic assassination, which
brought about a reform of
the U.S. civil service system.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET

Two types of people don't
say much: the quiet types
and the gabbers.
~:

;.t:

*

Ornithologists say the
eagle flies fastest when
going away from its nest.
Apparently, its home life
is for the birds.

* * :::

The 92nd Congress is sitting, but there are some

who played a cops-robbers
Santa Claus by retrieving more
than $100,000 in blue chip
securities, treasury bonds and
bank deposits- a large slice of
the $200,000 in assets swindled
from 82-year-old Metella
Richter (two men and a woman
were grabbed); the D.A. expects to retrieve at least
$150,000 .... Comic Joey Faye's
sneezing bit in the TV cornmercia! is right out of Joey's
burlesque routines 35 years ago.
Apartment house tenants
across from the new skyscraper
going up at 3rd &amp; 57th are
angry: The new building has
mirror-image outside, the huge
panes of glass just like
sunglasses for the folks inside,
but tenants across the street
get sunny-day glare enough to
drive them goggly .... No-Cal
weathered the gov't's anticyclamate FDA edict, went
panicky at first but developed a
new non-sweetener, and they're
bigger than before; once
strictly East Coast, it's now
national .... Joe Namath's
opinion of his "Last Rebel"
emoting including (in Playboy)
the hope his role plays better
via editing: "It couldn't get
much worse" is Bdwy. Joe's
own estimate .... Phony ten
buck bills are plaguing exurban
Long Island .... Leslie Uggams'
manager, AI Wilde, passed

away in his sleep; he once
thumped the tubs for Met opera
star Bob Merrill and the Ink
Spots when they first roarshocked into stardom. ·
Recession note: Eva Gabor
and George Hamilton's brother
Bill ended their Pahn Beach l
antiques partnership ... . Oy6'
Vey! Israel got its first "sex
boutique," but not one item is
displayed: Everything must be
ordered via catalogue, and the
decent Israelis say there oughta
be a law .... Award - winning
actor Jack Nicholson's date at
Du Midi several nights running
(and wooing) was Candace
Clark .... Lionel Hampton's next.
benificence, after raising
$20,000 personally for Harlem
Hospital and then Christmas
entertaining there without fee,
will be a Far East tour for the
U. S. State Dep't; Ramp's 4th.
Eloise Laws jumped at the
chance to tape a TV show in
London with Tom Jones; not for
the money - her artist boy
friend John Hoyland's there ....•
Mel Torme and Bob Wells
teamed a decade or two ago on
one of the loveliest Yule tunes,
"The Christmas Song" (it starts
out, "Chestnuts roasting on an
open fire") and at last they're
re-teamed to create TV specials
.... Happy with each other at the
Copacabana: Joe Pepitone and
his hairdo.

RAY CROMLEY

Use N. Viet People
To Free POWs
By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON (NEA)
There just possibly may be one way to get Hanoi and
the Viet Cong to free 459 American and several thousand
South Vietnamese prisoners.
The odds are long, but the cost would be cheap and
there would be no risk.
The point to rem~mb~r. is that even i!' totalitarian
North Vietnam, public opmwn does count-m the crunch. t
The 100,000 parents, wives, .children, unc~es, aun~s and
cousins of the 8 000 North VIetnamese pnsoners m the
south must be b;ought into the action. Individually, they
have no power. But together . . .
They're kep~ in ign~rance n.ow. Suppose they knew that
their leaders, m refusmg a pnso~er exchange, were .keeping their loved ones from commg home.
The pressure of these heartbroken pecple could be
strong indeed. Especially the woman pressure.
Conditions are not ~ood ~n the north. Mo~ale is low.
Loneliness and dissatisfaction are endangermg production People are tired-and hungry for their missing men. II
Their love for those sons and husbands is in~ense. y~et­
namese are not used to living away from their families.
Most men want to live out their lives in the village where
their parents lived- and die in th~ir own homes. We k~ow
from their diaries that the lonelmess of the men gomg
south ferments in their stomachs.
(In the early days in the south the Communist~ were
able to recruit young men with the argumen~ that if t?ey
joined the VC as guerrillas they would stay m the neJf!hborhood and be with their families at night. If drafted by
the government they would go away to fight and die in a •
"foreign" place.)
In Hanoi rival camps of leaders vie for power. Strong
men look f~r weapons to use in ousting rivals. The frustrations of these families with missing men could be a
tool in the hands of one rival group o~ another- as. Cambodia was a tool in the hands of antiwar groups m the
United States.
How then mobilize this North Vietnamese opinionwhen Hanoi has total censorship?
Perhaps by this simple plan, the id~a J.or which c~mes
from men outside the government with long experien~e
in dealing with the North Vietnamese and steeped m •
Asian psychology.
Drop leaflets throughout North Vietna~ from the D~­
militarized Zone in the south to the Chmese border m
the north. Millions of leaflets.
In these, tell every mother, father, husband and child
in North Vietnam we are willing. without reservation, to
exchange 36,000 prisoner~ for 3,600-that this. ~ill ~e.an
8,000 North Vietnamese will return home to their families
- that only the stubborness of their leaders prevents this
exchange from taking place-that this exchang~ will be
carried out if they bring enough pressure on their rulers.
Then wait to see what happens.
C.

BERRY'S WORLD

,.
signs it may up and get
moving one of these months.

:::

...

*

If you can see the
handwriting on the wall,
it's time you crack down
on the kids .

GUDTES
Political history is far too
criminal a subject to be a fit
thing to teach children. Art
history, literary history, yes
- but not political history.
- W. H. Auden, American

A-0 c to be r. Columbus
poet.
Day will be celebrated on
the second Monday in October; V e t e r a n s Day the
With so much independfourth Monday in October.
ent study and so many semiQ- When was the length nars these days, it wasn't
of a base/iall game standard- hard. He kind of lived a
double life.
ized?
A- In 1857, a new base- - Bill Edwards, athletic diball rule fixed the length of
rector at Witten b e: r g
a game at nine innings and
(Ohio) Uuiversity. corn·
provide d that an interm e n t i 11 g 011 a fa&lt;&gt;; balT
rupted game would be legal
player wllo ll'Jd rzev • utafter five innings.
telldecl classes.

•
,cl

l'i71 by NEA,

In~

" / think I've got the bowl game blahs!"

�....----------

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

------------------------------------------.

3 -:-_The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 6,1971

•

Waverly Ranked Top Class AA Team In State
Class AAA

f

•
•

•

COLUMBUS (UPIJ The
United Press Internati onal Ohio
high school Board of Coaches'
basketball ratings (with first
place vot es and won -lost
records in parentheses):
Class AAA
Teams
Points
1. Columbus Walnut Ridge
(12 (8-0) 254
2. Boardman
(10) (7-0) 213
3. Findlay
(3) (8-0l 133
4. Dayton Dunbar
(3) (6-0) 104
5. Cleveland East Tech
(6-2) 89
6. Steubenville
(6-0) 73
?.Zanesville
(7-1) 69
8. Columbus Eastmoor
{7-0) 59
8. (tiel Hamilton Taft
(1) (7-1) 59
10. Lakewood St. Edward
(9-0) 52
Second 10: 11. Middletown 44 ;
12. Canton McKinley 41; 13.
Cincinnati Withrow 38 ; 14.
Toledo Scott 31 ; 15. Columbus
South and Canton Lincoln 26
each; 17. Beavercreek 24; 18.
Dayton Chaminade (1) 22 ; 19.
Ashland
21 ;
20 .
Dayton
Roosevelt 20.
Others with eight or more
points : Cleveland St. Ignatius
(1) 17; Cincinnat i Oak Hil ls 15 ;
Cincinnati Elder and Cincinnati
Hughes 14 each ; Grove City 11;
Barberton 10; Dayton Belmont
and Warren Howland 9 each ;
Celina, Columbus Watterson
and Toledo Macomber 8 each.

Class AA

•

Team
Points
1. Waverly
(2) (6-1} 114
2. Columbus Ready
(5) ( 10-0) 68
(7-0) 59
3. Lima Central
4. Delphos St. Johns
(2) {7-0) 58
5. Licki ng Valley
(1) {7-0) 57
6. Canton Lehman
(4) (8-0) 55
7. Southeastern (Ross)
( 10-0) 47
(2) (9-0) 44
8. Napoleon
9. Bellefontaine
(2) (7-0)

36

(7-1)

34

10. Maysville
10. (tie) Wynford
•

•

(1) (8-1) 34
Second nine : 12. Columbus
Mohawk
( 1), Youngstown
Liberty and Rossford 33 each;
15. Tipp City 32; 16. Youngstown
North 31; 17. Coshocton 29; 18.
Steubenville Central 26; 19.
Buckeye
Valley
24;
20 .
Garaway 21 .
Others with eight or more
points: Casta I ia Margaretta
and Wellsville 16 each ; Newton
Falls 15; Bryan and Lima Bath
14 each; Shadyside 13; Federal
Hocking 12; Cl aymont and
Willard
10 each ;
Elyria
Catha I i c,
Gran vi lie
and
Lexington 9 each; C.lmpbel l
Memorial and Clearview 8
each.

COLUMBUS(UPI)-Unbeaten
Columbus Walnut Ridge jumped
into the top spot in the first
United Press International
Board of Coaches' Class AAA
basketball ratings in what could
be the beginning of a red hot
battle between the Scots and
unbeaten Boardman.
Walnut Ridge, 8-0 on the season, polled 12 first place votes
and 254 points to 10 first place

nods and 213 poll points for the
Spartans of suburban Youngstown, who are 7-0.
Unbeaten Findlay ( 8-0) with
133 points, Dayton Dunbar and
Cleveland East Tech round out
the top five.
In the Class AA balloting,
Waverly, which reached the
semi finals of the then big
school state tournament last
year under coach Carroll Haw-

11

•

~

•

a

Southern Valley Athletic
Conference cage teams will
resume action Friday and
Saturday after the long
Christmas holiday break.
Eastern, the 1969-70 defending
champion, will be seeking its
sixth straight lea~ue victory
this season and 23rd straight
over a three year span.
The Eagles have not lost a
league contest since Dec. 8, 1968
when the Hannan Trace
Wildcats edged the Meigs
Countians, 53-52.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
will be playing the same upsetminded Wildcats . Eastern
rolled over Hannan Trace 73-53
in their first meeting.
The Eagles have shown a
well-balanced scoring attack,
anchored by Howie Caldwell, 510 senior guard. Caldwell is the
league's third best scorer with
an average of 20.7 points in five
SVAC games and 20.1 points per
game in seven tilts thus far.
Eastern's top rebounder is
Dennis Eichinger, 6-3 junior
center. Eichinger is avera~ing

13.4 points per game in the
SVAC and 16 points in all
games.
Hannan Trace's top offensive
threat is Keith Swain, 5-10
junior guard who is averaging
15.4 points against league foes
and 17.8 points in all games.
Another potential -scorer and
top rebounder is 6-2 senior
center Steve Daniels. Daniels is
averaging 14.8 points in five
league outings and 14.2 points in
all games.
Second place North Gallia
will host the Kyger Creek
Bobcats.
Coach Paul Aikman 's Pirates
are 3-1 in the SVAC and 4-2
overall.
Coach John Sang's Bobcats
are 1-6 overall and 1-3 in the
SVAC. Kyger Creek will be
trying to snap a four-game
losing streak.
This game will feature the
league's top two scoring
leaders. Arthur Clark, 6-5 junior
center, is the top league scorer
with 143 points. He is averaging
23.8 points in all games and 25

'a

;a
.,..

•

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press lnternationa 1
Capital 78 Denison 65
Rio Grande 114 Cedarvi l le 80
Malone 81 Ohi o Dominican 78

Frye and the most experienced
player back from last year's
state semifinalists, has missed
five games with a broken hand,
two of which the Spartans lost.
The No . 2 team in Class A,
26 points behind St. Pete, is
Morral Ridgedale, with Lorain
Catholic, Sebring and Zanesville Rosecrans rounding out
the first five.
Sidney Lehman, a consolidation of the old Sidney Holy Angels and Piqua Catholic, was in
sixth place and then an almost
unbelievable tie for seventh occurred between Zane Trace of
Ross County and Zane Trace of
Guernsey County. Both teams

had one first place vote and
both amassed 43 points in the
balloting.
Was Semifinalist
The Ross County team, located just north of Chillicothe , is
coached by Ron Hall and was
one of the four Class A semifinalists in last year's state
tournament. The Guernsey
County team is coached by
Dave Heady and is located at
Old Washington, east of Cambridge.
Walnut Ridge, which reached
the Athens Regional tournament last year before being
eliminated by Waverly, is led
by 6-foot-11 Ed Stahl, 6-foot-4

Greg Olson, and 6-foot Brad
Hoffman , all of whom are averaging over 20 points.
The Scots playing in the
tough Columbus City League,
have averaged 93 points per
game to their opponents' 64,
the same 29-point per game
spread which Boardman averages over its opponents.
Boardman, led by 6-foot-6
Greg Dunn and several other
six-and-a-half-footers, includes
among its victims this year
Farrell, Pa., the top team in
the Keystone State at the time
the Spartans thumped them 7352. Boardman made it to the
state semi finals last year.

points in four league tilts.
Dave White, 5-10 junior guard
from Kyger Creek is second in
both categories. White is
averaging 21.8 points in all
games and 21.7 points against
league competition.
North Gallia has beaten
Southwestern, Hannan Trace
and Southern but lost to
Eastern.
Kyger Creek's only victory
has been at the hands of Southwestern. The Bobcats have lost
to Eastern, Southern and
Hannan Trace.
Saturday night, Coach Hilton
Wolfe Jr., takes his surprising
Southern Tornadoes to Mason
County for a battle with Coach
Bill Adams' Hannan Wildcats.
Southern is 3-2 in the SVAC and
5-3 overall.
The Tornadoes have a wellbalanced scoring attack which
has led to their five victories.
Southwestern will be seeking
its first victory of the year
against Eastern. Coach Mel
Carter's Highlanders have lost
nine straight games.

By United Press International
Marquette Coach AI McGuire
has found the big man for a big
season.
The big man is sophomore
Jim Chones, and on Tuesday
night he scored 27 points to
lead Marquette to a school
record-tying 22nd consecutive

a 44-24 halftime lead. On Jan.
12, the Warriors face their
biggest hurdle so far against
No. 10 Notre Dame, and the
game might show how far they
can go.
In other major action Tuesday night, 12th-ranked Villano-

va beat North Dakota State, 9491, as Clarence Smith scored 21
points, Tom Ingelsby 19, and
Hank Siemiontkowski 18, but
another unbeaten team, Hawaii,
fell to Loyola of New Orleans,
111-104, for its first loss after
seven straight victories.

Elsewhere, Minnesota beat
Niagara, 92-87, Northwestern
edged the Australian National
team, 74-71, Oklahoma defeated
Arkansas, 115-100, East Carolina beat Richmond, 79-63, and
Furman defeated Davidson, 8475.

::~~:;;~:;:,;;~:Rockets Bounced By Utah

the 6-11 center. "Offensively,
he's very tough. He's probably
our best shooter from inside the
key. That's the advantage of
having a big man. Teams have
been cheating on us for years
because I never had a center
who could shoot."
Chones has shot Marquette
into fourth place in the national
rankings with a 10-0 record and
established the Warriors as the
possible heir to UCLA, which
has taken the NCAA title six of
the last seven years.
Dean Meminger and Gary
Erell also came through against
Loyola , following Chones in the
scoring with 17 and 12 points
respectively. The last time the
Warriors won 22 straight was in
the 1954-55 season, but No. 22
was easy as they jumped off to

Boston
Have you - provided you intended - told Fred Crow, Paul
Casci or Mrs. Ralph Graves that you will be at the Ray Farnham
dinner the evening of Jan. 23? The phone numbers are, in order,
992-5132, 992-5131 and 992-3175. All the guys and dolls who came
into maturity during the 30s on the crest of that glorious Farnham
era in Pomeroy High School athletics should think again if they've
written off being there.
THE SILENT TYPE, IN CONTRAST to the much-heralded
Vince Lombardi, may have a legend started in the pro football
coaching ranks. Don McCafferty, coach of the Baltimore Colts, is
on the threshold of a Super Bowl victory and if he pulls it off may
be among the few non rah-rah coaches to reach such a pinnacle of
success.
Lombardi (rest his soul) was legend for histrionics in the
locker room and on the sidelines.
McCafferty, who learned football from Paul Brown at Ohio
State, and who took over from the colorful Don Shula (Miami
Dolphins), is the strong silent type. He and his quarterback,
Johnny Unitas, approach the game of football the same way. Like
a computer. Making a play work is a problem in probabilities, and
geometric figures. There is the human equation to McCafferty
and Unitas, but it is assumed to remain constant; that is, full-go
from whistle to whistle.
Come the Super Bowl I'm riding along with McCafferty and
Unitas.

THE MARAUDERS RUN INTO oft-whipped Wellston at
Wellston Friday night, which could be an excellent warmup for
the affair of the following Friday, ATIIENS at Athens!
Wellston surprised some folks early in the season (but the
shock has diminished since) when Ironton was clipped 71-70 in the
Rockets' third outing of the season. Since that upset, Ironton has
played like a second division club, and Wellston has steadily
progressed, downward (1-6 overall).
If Jeff Tyo has regained his shooting eye, as suggested by his
NBA Standings
30 points last week, and if the Marauder bench continues to
By United Press International
produce as it did last week (Childs and Vaughan), Wellston should
Atlantic Division
be
an easy problem.
W. L. Pet. GB

New York
31 12 .721 ...
Boston
24 18 .571 61f2
Philadelphia 25 19 .568 61f2
Buffalo
11 32 .256 20
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
24 16 .600 ...
Cincinnati
18 21 .462 5lf2
Atlanta
14 29 .326 1Jl/2
Cleveland
5 42 .106 22lf2
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
31
7 .816
Detroit
27 15 .643 6
Chicago
25 16 .610 7112
Phoenix
25 19 .568 9
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles
22 18 .550
San Diego
23 21 .523 1
San Francisco 23 22 .511 1112
Seattle
19 24 .442 4lf2
Portland
14 30 .318 10
Tuesday's Results
Baltimore 109 Seattle 101
Portland 124 Boston 120
Phila 97 San Fran 92
Detroi t 98 Atlanta 90
Chicago116San Diego103
Cincinnati 146 Los Angeles 112
Wednesday's Games
Seattle at Boston
Portland at Ci ncinnati
San Diego at Detroit
San Francisc o at Buffa lo
New York at Cleveland
Chicago vs . Milwaukee
at Madison

holds down third place in the
Class AA ratings, with Delphos
St. Johns, Licking Valley and
Canton Lehman rounding a
closely grouped first six.
In Class A, the magic name
of Mansfield St. Peter's heads
the list of small schools, even
though the Spartans have lost
three of their 10 games.
Coach Bob Frye's St. Pete
team, which lists four Class A,
12 AA and 4 AAA teams on its
20-game schedule, has suffered
losses to Lorain Clearview,
Dayton Alter and Mansfield
Madison.
Misses Five
Mick Frye, the son of coach

SVAC Cage Play
Marquette
Ties
Record
Resumes Friday

Class A
Team
Points
1. Mansfield St. Peter's
(4) (7-3) 104
2. Ridgedale
(2) (6-0) 78
3. Lorain Catholic
.
(3) (7-0) 63
4. Sebring
(4-ll 55
5. Zanesville Rosecrans
(1) (7-2) 50
6. Sidney Lehman
(2) (6-ll 45
7. Zane Trace (Ross)
(1) (8-1} 43
7. (tie) Zane T r ace Guernsey
(1) (6-0) 43
9. Fort Recovery
(2) (8-1} 38
10.MillerCity
(1) (8-ll 34
Second 10: 11. East Canton (1)
and Yorkvi lle (3), and Fort
Loramie 32 each ; 14. Strasburg
29 ; 15. Pettisvi lle (1) 27; 16.
Vanlue 26; 17. Colonel Crawford
and New Madi son 25 each; 19.
Lordstown and Hillsdale 23
each.
Others with eight or more
points :
Maplewood
and
Frontier Local 22 each; Marion
Pleasant
21 ;
Cl eveland
Lutheran East 20; Continental
18; Arcanum and Peebles 17
each; Columbus Academy 16;
New Knoxvi lle 15; Oakwood,
Seneca East, Lowellville and
Proctorville Fairland 14 each;
Warren
Consolidated and
Monroeville 13 each ; Skyvue 12;
Convoy Crestview, Eastern
Meigs and Indian Valley South
11 each; Old Fort and The
Plains and Salem Northwestern
10 each ; Crooksville, West
Jefferson, Johnstown Monroe,
Collins Western Reserve and
Starr-Washington 9 each; St.
Henry, New Athens and
Pickerington 8 each.

hee, has a comfortable 114-68
edge over runnerup Columbus
Bishop Ready.
Three Back
The Tigers, with three starters back from last year's
squad, are 6-1 on the season,
with only a 63-62 loss to triple
A Athens marring a perfect
season.
Lima Central Catholic, led by
6-foot-8 all..Ohioan Joe Fisher,

HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
Linsley (W. Va. ) Institute 63
Bellaire St. John' s 54
Bridgeport 83 Warwood (W. Va .
54
Licking Heights 63 Heath 61 (2

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Wheelersburg 74 Northwestern
60
South Webster 77 Peebles 74
Marietta 64 Parkersburg (W.
Va. ) So. 54
Lakewood 68 Utica 59
Licking Valley 91 Watkins
Memorial 50

ot )

Shadyside 84 New Martinsville
(W. Va.l 72
Wheeling (W. Va .) 129 Mart ins
Ferry 92
Jewett 78 Madison 77
Zane Trace 81 Lafferty Seton 59
Beallsville 63 Skyvue 62

-

•1.00
TANK FULL

Certified Gas Stations

CERTIFIED OIL CO.

PLUMBING
992·2550

Utah
26 12 .684 ...
Indiana
25 15 .625 21J2
Memphis
21 19 .525 6
Denver
15 24 .385 11 112
Texas
15 26 .366 12112
Tuesday's Results
Utah 114 Denver 99
Texas 142 Pi ttsburgh 133
Indiana 92 Memphis 88
Wednesday's Games
Virgin ia at Kentucky
Florida vs. Carolina
at Charlotte
Memphis at New York
Utah at Indi ana
(Only games scheduled)

Under Major Oil Prices
XE-110 Ethyl - over 100 octane

Your Dependable
Dealer For

Phone

NEW YORK (UPI) -After
three flips of a coin Tuesday,
the only remaining question
about the order of choosing in
the National Football League's
player draft later this month is
who 'will select last.
The 26th and final pick goes
to the winner of the Jan. 17
Super Bowl game between
Baltimore and Dallas. The loser
in that game will make the 25th
selection.
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle used his trusty coin
Tuesday to break ties for the
third, lOth and 21st picks.
Houston won the right to select
third while Washington will
choose lOth and Detroit will
have the 21st pick.
Boston , by virtue of having
the worst record in the NFL
this past season, will make the
first choice, followed by New
Orleans, Houston, Buffalo, Philadelphia, New York Jets,
Atlanta, Pittsburgh Denver,
ABA Standings
Washington, Chicago, Green
By United Press International
Bay, San Diego, Cleveland,
East
w. L. Pet. GB Cincinnati, Kansas City, St.
Virg in ia
30 12 .714 .. .
Louis, New York Giants,
Kentucky
25 16 .610 4112 Oakland, Los Angeles, Detroit,
New York
16 22 .421 12
Miami, San Francisco, MinneFloridians
16 24 .400 13
Carol ina
16 25 .390 13112 sota, Super Bowl loser and
Pittsburgh
17 27 .386 14
Super Bowl winner.
West
W. L. Pet. GB

SAVE

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

HEATING

operation on his fragile knees
and club owner Art Modell said
he considers it a good omen.
Dr. Donald H. O'Donoghue,
an Oklahoma orthopedic surgeon, recommended the corrective surgery after examining
Nelsen.
" If Dr. O'Donoghue had said
nothing could be done then it
would be a gloomy report,"
Modell said. "But he gave no
indication that Bill's career is
finished by any means."
Nelsen's knees have undergone two operations already
and the 29-year-old quarterback
hobbled through the 1970 season
with both cartileges missing.
He had been in intense pain
since being tackled Sept. 27
during the San Francisco game.
Former athlete-patients of
O'Donoghue's include Frank
Ryan, Paul Warfield and Frank
Parker.

-

Lions often hunt in parties
called " pr ides," of four or'
five , or even up to a scor e
or more .

AND

To Get
CLEVELAND ( UPI ) -Cleveland Browns quarterback Bill Top
Pick
Nelsen will undergo a third

992-9981

-~.

1

POMEROY
538 W. MAIN
and
Master
( We honor BankAmericard

J. Charc:~e&gt;

~,~

By Snited Press International
Won't you come home,
Spencer Haywood?
That must be the question
bothering the Denver Rockets,
and they will get their answer
on Friday when a ruling is
made on whether Haywood
belongs to Denver of the
American Basketball Association or Seattle of the rival
National Basketball Association.

Haywood led the Rockets to a
Cinderella title in the ABA's
West last year, but he quit this
season over a contract dispute.
For the past week he has been
in a Seattle uniform, making an
impression on the NBA teams.
Without Haywood, all that
Cinderella magic is gone from
Denver. The Rockets are
floundering around near the
bottom of the standings with

ABA Stars To
Meet Jan. 23
NEW YORK (UPI) -Utah
and Indiana each placed three
players on the West squad
named today to compete
against the East in the
American Basketball Association All-star game at Greensboro, N. C., on Jan. 23.
Forward Red Robbins, center
Zelmo Beaty and guard Donnie
Freeman of Utah were picked
for the West along with forward
Bob Netolicky and Roger

Small College
Cage Ratings
NEW
YORK
(UPI)-The
United Press International top
20 small college basketbal l
teams with won-lost record and
first p lace votes in parentheses.
(Fifth week, including games
played through Sunday, Jan. 3) .
Team
Points
1. Ky . St. (22) (8-0)
293
2. S.W. La. (3) (9-0)
229
3. S. F. Austin (9-2)
172
4. Tenn. St. (l) ( 6-1)
158
5. Assumption (2) (9-0)
133
7. Phila. Tex. (2) (3-2)
81
8. Louisiana Tech (7-1)
71
9. Ashland (9-2)
67
10. Ora l Roberts ( 11-3)
63
11 . La. St. ( NO) (10-0)
44
12. Cen t St. (Ohi o) (7-1)
23
13. Cheyney St. (6-3)
19
14. Howard Payne (8-4)
17
15. Puget Sound (8-2)
15
16. (Tie) Capital {7-0)
12
(Tie) Buff. St. (4-ll
12
18. (Tie) East . New Mex. (6-3)
11
(Tie) Sam Hous. St. (8-5)11
20. (Tie) Cen t. Wash. ( 7-1)
10
(Tie) Gannon (5-2 )
10
Others receiving f ive or more
po ints : Delt a State, Youngstown, o :d Dom inion, Jackson
State,
Evansville,
U.
CalR iverside, Stetson, North Dakota State.

Brown and center Mel Daniels
of Indiana. Selections were
made by sportswriters and
sportscasters from each of the
league cities and announced by
ABA Commissioner Jack Dolph.
Also named to the squad
were forward Wendell Ladner
of Memphis and guards Steve
Jones of Memphis, Larry
Cannon of Denver and Glen
Combs of Texas.
Two more players will be
selected next week to round out
the 12-member squad which will
be coached by Bill Sharman of
Utah.
College Basketba II Results
By United Press International
Okl a. 115 Arkansas 100
East Care. 79 Richmond 63
Hofstra 90 Wstchstr St. 67
Marquette 78 Lyla (Chi) 63
Minn. 92 Niagara 87
Villanova 94 N.Dak. St. 61
Lyla ( N.E.) lll Hawaii 104
Sou. Ala. 74 Pepperd ine 68
Prvdnce 98 Rhode Is. 92
Furman 84 Davidson 75
Nrthwstrn 74 Austra lia 71
Trnty Tex. 95 VMI 70
Baylor 119 Sui Ross 77
Pan Am. 95 Lamar Tech 93
Ark St. 116 S.W. Mo. St. 77

only 15 victories and 24 losses,
the latest to the Utah Stars,
114-99, Tuesday night.
And this year, it seems to be
the Stars' turn to slip into the
glass slippers of the Western
Division title . Utah holds a
three-game lead in the Western
race over Indiana.
Don Freeman and Marv
Jackson scored 21 points each
and Wayne Hightower got 21
rebounds to lead the Stars over
Denver. Utah hit 44.2 per cent
from the field while Denver
managed only 34.5 per cent,
and to make matters worse
Denver Coach Stan Albeck was
ejected midway through the
third period for arguing with
the officials.
Indiana matched Utah's victory by beating Memphis, 92-88,
as Fred Lewis with 26 points
and Mel Daniels with 22 led a
comeback effort, and Texas
scored 46 points in the last
quarter to defeat Pittsburgh,
142-133, in the only ABA games.

N H L Standings
Press International
East
W. L. T. Pfs
Boston
27
6 5 59
New York
26 7 6 58
Montreal
17 12 8 42
Toronto
18 19 1 37
Vancouver
14 21 3 31
12 21 4 28
Det roit
Buffalo
7 23 6 20
West
W. LT. Pfs
Chicago
26 6 5 57
Minnesota
18 8 11 47
M innesota
13 18 7 33
Pittsburgh
10 18 11 31
12 19 5 29
Phi ladelphia
Los Ange les
10 19 6 26
Ca lifor nia
11 24 2 24
Tuesday's Results
Toronto 2 M innesota 0
( Onl y game schedul ed )
Wednesday's Games
Vancouver at Mon trea l
M innesota at Toronto
Los Angel es at Chi ca!l_o
St. Louis at Ca lifornia
By

Uni~ed

( Onl y aames scheduled)

Only G.E. Has It!
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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. .Tan. 6. 1971

Royals Stop Wilt, Lakers
By United Press International
It was a night for milestones
in the National Basketball
Association.
Wilt Chamberlain became the
second man in league history to
get a care~r total of 20,000

rebounds as he grabbed 23 and
added 40 points for Los Angeles
Tuesday night, but despite his
efforts the Lakers lost to the
Cincinnati Royals, 146-112.
Chamberlain, who went past

Red~nen

Win 11480 Over Cedarville

MEIGS EIGHTH GRADE BASKETBALL squad with a 31record at the time here, front row, 1-r, are John Riley, Joe
Wisecup, Jim McClure, Dave Tyree, and Woody Call; second
row, Chris MWer, Mike Nesselroad, Tim Colburn, Perk Ault,

By United Press International
Capital disposed of Denison
Tuesday night and continued on
in its quest of another Ohio
Conference title.
The Crusaders, now 7-1
overall and ~ in the league,
downed Denison 68-65 at
Columbus . Th e loss was
Denison's second straight in the
conference and dropped the Big
Red's overall mark to 2-5.
In other college games, Rio
Grande whipped Cedarville 11480 and Malone slipped past Ohio
Dominican 81-78. Thirteen

Greg Walburn and Rick Coach, mgr.; third row, Kenny
Hoffman, mgr., Phil Ohlinger, Mike Haley, Danny Dodson,
Greg Donahue, Gary Grueser, and Marvin McKelvey coach.
Absent were Lonnie Coats and Steve Walburn.

Sha w Named Ton R ookie
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) -Quarterback Dennis Shaw, whose
strong passing arm and field
leadership made the Buffalo
Bills a potent offensive threat
for the first time in several
seasons, has been named
Rookie of the Year in the
American Football Conference
by the United Press International.
Shaw, who amassed 2,507
yards through the air this past
season, was named the AFC's
top rookie in a balloting of 30
sportswriters, at least two from
each AFC city. The Bills'
quarterback won in a close race
with tight end Ray Chester of
the Oakland Raiders. Shaw
received 12 votes to nine for
Chester, a second team All-Pro
selection.
Wide receiver Ronnie Shanklin of Pittsburgh, running-back
Bob Anderson of Denver and
linebacker Bob Babich of San
Diego each received two votes,
and running-back Norm Bulaich
of Baltimore, defensive back
Jake Scott of Miami, cornerback Earlie Thomas- of New
York, defensive end Tony Cline
of Oakland and cornerback
Lemar Parrish of Cincinnati
got one vote apiece.
Shaw, a graduate of San
Diego State, was the last of the
1970 draftees to sign a pro
1

..

...

1

Ex-Champ Liston Is
Found Dead At Home

1111

••

•

•

••••••

•

Phebe Says:
"Want A Delicious
/
(

/
I

I

:·/ \

.

/

I

·~ ,'

·
M 1- B ·
"Th
receiVer ar_m
nscoe.
en
when h~ got m that huddle, he
wa~telhngguystoshut,upand
ta~mg over completely.
.
He showed us one thmg
.
d'1a te 1~; " , a dded 0 . J ·
u:une
Slffipson.
He s a helluva
leader."

contract and he missed most of anything else," he said.
s
the Bills' pre-season training really amazing that I've come
camp. He did not become the this far."
team's No. 1 quarterback until
Shaw's amazing self-conthe third game of the regular fidence was his strong suit,
season, and the 6-foot-3, 198- however. From the moment he
pound signal-caller was rather stepped into the huddle in his
surprised to learn that he had starting debut against the New
been selected as the AFC's top York Jets, the Bills knew they
rookie.
had a leader·
"I missed so much of training
"He seemed so humble when
Ea'J~:~~:;~~.Y ~~xed
camp that I was more set on he first came to us," said
standings:
winning a job with Buffalo than Shaw's favorite target, wide Team
Zide's Sport Shop
14
Porter-Sm ith
10
Lou's Ashland
8
Ashland Oil
8
Nelson's Drug
6
Oiler's Sohio
2
High Individual Game - Bill
Porter, 194; Pat Carson , 200;
High Series - Bill Porter,
555; Betty Smith, 528.
Team High Game - Zide's
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) robbing a gas station in St. Sport Shop, 662.
Team High Series - Zide's
Sonny Liston, a bull-shouldered Louis at the age of 18 and
brooding fighter who developed sentenced to concurrent five- Sport Shop, 1922.
his boxing skills in a prison ring year prison terms, also kayoed
NFL PLAYER
and later won the world Patterson in their title rematch
WASHINGTON (UPI)- New
heavyweight championship, in July 1963 in the first round. York Giant quarterback Fran
was found dead in his home late He had been released from Tarkenton was named National
Tuesday. He was 36.
prison after serving 29 months Football League Player of the
Deputy Coroner Dick Main and had immediately turned
Year
Tuesday
by
the
srud Liston had been dead about pro.
Washington Touchdown Club.
a week. No cause of death was
He lost the championship to
immediately available.
Cassius Clay Feb. 25, 1964. He
SERVICES AT 7
After being released from also lost a rematch to Clay May
Evangelistic services are
prison at the age of 21, he beat 25, 1965.
33 of 34 opponents before winShortly after his defeat he being conducted at 7 each
ning the championship from moved here and won 14 straight evening this week at the Plants
Floyd Patterson Sept. 25, 1972, fights before being knocked out Church with a different speaker
on a first-round knockout.
by Leotis Martin December of each night. The pastor, James
Liston, who was arrested for 1969. He continued his career Queen, extends an invitation to
the public.
sporadically after that.

p

Beef Treat.

••

, I
-1 ..

"

USDA

CHOICE

--

u

••••

us

u

Ron Lamber t, IN freshman,
scored 27 points for Rio Grande
as the Redmen outclassed
Cedarville in shooting (S&amp; per
centto45)andrebounding(50 to
3S). Cedarville wa s led by Curt
La
,
. ,.n
20 pom....
rson sStephenson
Bob
poured 30
points into the Malone scoring
column-to guarantee the team's
second win in seven games.
Malone and Ohio Dominican
were tied 37-37 at intermission
and Malone held a slim lead
until the final 43 seconds when
six charity shots put the team
out of danger.
Tonight, Coach Art Lanham's
Rio Grande squad, now 4-5 on
the year, will battle the alwaystough Urbana quintet of Coach
Jerry Walke at Urbana.
Box score of Rio Grande's
victory over the Yellow
Jackets:
RIO GRANDE (53-61-114):
Bass 16, Harris 2, Bentley 4,
Hairston 15, Jordon 9, Lambert
27, Pulley 8, Williams 10,
Bartram 9, Baker 4, Bail 2,

~~,~~uftlN~(),~ii~~~u

NM ENT
NEWS OF YOUR
MERCHANDISE OR
ICE TO READERS. THIS
ATMOSPHERE OF IMMED IANCY
OF THE NEWSPAPER CARR IE S
OVER TO THE ADVERTI S ING.
THIS IS NOT TRUE OF ANY
OTHER MEDIUM.

TO PLAN C-D
MASON - Plans for the 1971
civil defense program will be
made at a meeting of the Mason
County Civil Defense unit at
7:30p.m. Thursday at the unit
headquarters, Richard Grinstead, director, announces. All
available members are asked to
be present.

•• •

• •

•••

••••

•

•••

• •••••

uuu

Frozen Feature!

Dairy Special!

Bakery Buy!

MORTON'S

FAIRMONT

HOLSUM 59'

TV Dinners

2

FOR

89~

HORMEL

Inspected

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Large
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Pkg.

a

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24

oz6 5

CAN

TOMATo JUICE 3

46 oz.

GEORGIAN

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PKG:

TOILET TISSUE 10

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Prices Effective Jan. 6-12 •
Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 1·
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SU NDAYS

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CANS

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Right reserved to limrt quantities'
We Gladly ~ccept Fed. ~ooa :sta'!'ps

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Choice.~:der 99~ BALLARD'S OVEN-READY
STEAK •••••••••••••••
BISCUITS ........................~A~.
STEW M EAT
FORMULA 409
Beef
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lb. 79~
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BEEF STEW.....................

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Assorted Pies

59~

30

V A N CAMP'S

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1
00
VIENNA SAUSAGE .....•

U. S. Government

•

the contention that Haywood is
not eligible to play under NBA
rules. The case on whether he
belongs to Seattle or Denver
comes up in court on Friday.
"I don't want to talk about
legal difficulties," Haywood
said. " I just want to play •
basketball and make a livint
yet. I do admit all this legal
stuff has got me down, but once l
it gets straightened out my
concentration should come
back."
In a doubleheader at Philadelphia, Archie Clark scored
22 points and Jim Washington
21, as the Philadelphia 76ers
beat the San Francisco Warriors, 97-92, and Geoff Petri
got 27 points to spark Portland
over Boston, 124-120. Chicago
beat San Diego, 116-103, in the
only other game.

:::~~:~~~i;t.thebasketball

.,1:'

"It'

Jacobs 8.
CEDARVILLE (38-42---80):
Atherton 11, Howard 6,
Harrison 5, Holbrook 8,
Williams 4, Larson 20, Parker 6,
Branham 4, Whims 2, Henson 2,
Lukutiz 12.
C5fficia ls: Kaefer and Gynes.

the 20,000 mark with 1: 32left in
the first half, is second in
career rebounds only to retired
Bill Russell, who had more than
21,700.
Detroit's Dave Bing also
passed a milestone as he got
his 2,000th career assist, setting
up Otto Moore and giving the
Pistons a lead they never lost
as they beat the Atlanta
Hawks, 98-90. Moore hit 12 of
his 22 points in the third
quarter as Detroit overcame a
12-point deficit for the victory.
Baltimore got 24 points from
Earl Monroe and Gus Johnson
for a 109-101 victory over
Seattle. Spencer Haywood, who
jumped to Seattle from Denver
of the ABA recently, got 14
points in 33 minutes.
Once again, Seattle 's opponent played under protest on

1b. 59c

Southern Yams .............. 2 lb. 29~

NEW CABBA E•••••••.•• lb. gc

GRAP

U IT•••• ••••• t••• ••• 5
Pink or White

lb.
bag

49~

\\

�s- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 6,1971

r

Mason County

• , News Notes
I
~

•

•
•
•

~

'
to

was a poor catch. ·
In the near future they are
planning on filming a segment
of the Johnny Cash show on this
shrimp boat. The filming was
set for last month but this
segment was cancelled because
Cash was scheduled for a
recording session.
WE WENT TO Kennedy
Space Center to take pictures of
Apollo 14 which is scheduled for
blast off on January 31.
We climaxed our Florida
vacation by picking oranges,
tangerines and grapefruit, and
you can bet we won't be purchasing the Vitamin C ascorbic
acid in tablet or powder form, to
protect from colds. We have a
lot of fruit to eat even though it
is not the best solU'ce of Vitamin
C.
MRS. EDGAR (JEAN)
Lyons, Mason has been a faithful employee of Superior
Porcelain, later called New
Haven Porcelain, for 40 years.
Until last month when the plant
was destroyed by fire, she
had been a glazer, or dipper.
She
reportedly
worked under managers
Pickering and Anderson, and at
the time of the fire, Bob Staats,
of New Haven.
When she started working in
1930 she earned 10 cents an
hour. Much later, wages were
increased to $1.28, then to $1.60
an hour.
Another faithful employee
was Mrs. J. Cliff (Anna) Roush,
New Haven, who started
working for the company in
1932. Mrs. Roush spent 38 years
as a glazer, or dipper. It is not
known at this time whether the
plant will be re-built.
VICKI L. KEEFER, County
Extension
Agent,
Home
Demonstration, in Mason
County
reminds
the
Homemakers of County Council
meeting on January 12 in the
Courthouse
Annex,
Pt.
Pleasant. The meeting starts at
10 a.m.
A Lesson Leader's Training
meeting is scheduled for
January 26 at 10 a.m. in
Courthouse
Annex.
The
February lesson is on drugs.

New Haven Social Events

•

...

The · New -Haven - Parent
Teachers Association met in
regular session at the
Elementary School with
President
James
Moy,
presiding. Devotions were led
by Rev. Bob Goldsberry,
reading the "Birth Qf Christ"
according to the Gospel of Saint
Matthew.
Following the Pledge to the
Flag regular reports were read
and approved.
The meeting was turned over
for the school Christmas
program. All members enjoyed
Mrs. Joann Thomas' second
grade reciting the poem
"Christmas Cookies" and the
play "The Bell That Couldn't
Ring" by Mrs. Carolyn Hesson
and Mrs. Amy Humphreys'
third grade.
Donna Thompson gave a
report on the Fund Raising
Committee. She stated that
$570.47 was cleared on the
school carnival. She also stated
that a quilt was to be given
away as another project.
The room count was won by
the third grade room. Refreshments were served to those
attending.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young,
Jr., are announcing the birth of
a son, Christopher Shawn, at
Holzer Medical Hospital. Mr.
and Mrs. Young have six other
children. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Guy McWilliams of
Point Pleasant and Mrs.
Juanita Rayblll'n of Mason, W.
Va.
GOOD WILL CLUB
The Good Will Club met for
their Christmas party at the
home of Mrs. Thelma Capehart,
assisted with the serving by
Mrs. John Fry. Games were
played during the evening and
members enjoyed a grab bag.
Members and guests attending
were Mrs. Helen Knapp, Mrs.
William McFarland, Mrs. Cliff
Roush, Mrs. Ray Weaver, Mrs.
Willie Grinstead, Mrs. Pansy
Fry, Mrs. Fry and Mrs.
Capehart.
PERSONALS
MT. and Mrs. James N.
Roush, Linda and Jeff, spent the
Christmas holidays with her
mother and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Fields of Lincoln
Park, Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs.
Larry

Personal Notes

r

By Alma Marshall

MASON - I've just returned
from a Florida vacation with
my husband, our daughter,
Judy Persinger and two
children where we had a
wonderful time.
We visited Mrs. Barbara Van
Vranken at Titusville, and her
two children. She is the former
Barbara Wilson of Mason.
Barbara is a private nurse for a
lady who has been handicapped
since birth. They both take
vacations and go to Miami,
Nassau and other resorts.
Although handicapped and
unable to speak, use her hands,
or legs, this gallant lady, called
Ruthie throughout Titusville, is
writing a book. Confined to a
wheel chair, she manages to
type by means of a contraption
that fits over her head, and with
one implement attached to this
headpiece, has typed 20
chapters.
We went to Tampa to visit
Busch Gardens; my second
visit there; each time it looks
better. My small granddaughter, Carlene, whispered in
her mother's ear, "This is the
bestest vacation."
It poured down rain on
Thlll'sday at the Gardens. The
fellow parking the many, many
cars shook his head, said, "I
can't believe all these people
are coming here in all this
rain." We got slightly damp, but
not OW' spirits. We enjoyed
every minute of the tour,
especially the bird show.
From Titusville, we went to
New Port Richey to visit Mr.
and Mrs. L. W. (Bill) Riffle and
Paula and Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Moodey and son. The Riffles
once resided in Mason.
Bill Riffle, also formerly of
Gallipolis, is captain of Johnny
Cash's shrimp boat. The boat,
42 ft. long, is being equipped for
commercial shrimp fishing. At
present all they catch is bait
shrimp. The boat was named
for Cash's son, "Mister JC."
We were planning ln1 taking
the trip out on the Gulf of
Mexico on Thursday afternoon
but the 37-mile wind changed
our minds. On Wednesday, the
catch was 4,000 shrimp. That
seemed like a lot, but according

-Middi;p~

LeMasters and Stephen of
Cleveland, Ohio, visited over
the holidays with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Howard and
Mike.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rose
and sons visited relatives in
Pennsylvania during the
holidays.
Gail Miller, a student at St.
Joseph Hospital, Parkersblll'g,
and Leah Ann Miller, a
graduate student at Pittsburgh,
Pa., visited their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Miller over the
holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cooke
and family Of Wintersville,
Ohio, visited her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. George Jewell and
other relatives during the
holidays.
Mr. Carl Sullivan and sons,
RolHe, Michael and Peter of
Alaska visited in town on
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Thompson and sons visited
relatives in Huntington during
the holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cundiff
and Timmy and Mikie of
Columbus, Ohio, visited here
with Mrs. Sadie Warth. They all
visited Mrs. lola Conner who is
a surgical patient at Charleston
General Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hall and
family and Elizabeth Hudnall of
Columbus, Ohio, visited during
the holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hudnall. Mr. and Mrs.
Hudnall and Elizabeth visited
Mrs. Alice Shaw, a patient at
Ohio Masonic Hospital at
Springfield, Ohio.
Rev. and Mrs. James Moy
and sons visited relatives in
Michigan over the weekend.
Nancy Hill, who is employed
in Huntington, W. Va., spent
Christmas holidays with Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Layne.
Charlene Dodd, a student at
Marshall U., Huntington ,
visited over the holidays with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Dodd.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert GW'tis
and family visited dlU'ing the
holidays with her parents at
Charleston, W. Va.
Members of the Couples Club
motored to Parkersblll'g on New
Year's Eve for dinner at the UpTowner Inn. Those enjoying the
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
George Burns, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Zerkle, Mr. and Mrs.

JOHNNY CASH'S SHRIMP BOAT, commanded by L. W. (Bill)
Riffle, formerly of Mason and Gallipolis.

FASHION IN THE NEWS

Fashion's Perennial

Sandals-Ever New
By HELEN HENNESSY
NEA Women's Editor

Time to
Rejuvenate

Your

M • 18 R I NG SETT I N G

Have your diamond reset in .a
modern style designed to make
your gem look larger, lovelier, in
t une wi th tod ay' s fashion.

News, Notes

Among ancient people it
was almost as important to
preserve their shoes as it
was to protect their feet. The
picture shows some sandals
from the doctor ' s world·
famous collection.

James Diehl, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Miller, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Clark and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Cooke.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Yost of
Charleston visited during the
holidays with the latter's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Batey.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F.
Roush and Sheryl visited during
the weekend with Rev. and Mrs.
Vinson Pomeroy at Greenville,
Pa., and Mr. and Mrs. Joe
McComb and family at Pittsburgh.
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Roush
of Dearborn, Michigan and Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Pomeroy and
children of LasVagas, New
Mexico, spent the holiday
season with Mr. and Mrs.
Donald F. Roush, parents of
Mrs. Pomeroy and Sheldon
Roush.
Myra Roush, who is employed
in Huntington, and Jane Roush,
who is employed in Charleston,
spent Christmas wit~ their
mother, Mrs. Velma Roush.
Mrs. Leslie Alexander of
Sarasota, Florida, is visiting
Mrs. T. Bert Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gerlach
and family of Cuyahoga Falls,
Ohio, spent Christmas with Mr.
and Mrs. William Dye.
Mrs. Harry L. Dyer returned
home Saturday after being a
patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. John Fry were Mr. and
Mrs. Max Eichinger and
children and Mr. and Mrs.
James Fry and daughters, all of
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. William Garfield and Carole Ann returned to
their home in Pittsburgh on
Sunday after visiting the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Chisler.
Wi,lliam Dye is a patient at

Mr. and Mrs. Alan Wallace of
Ashville were holiday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
Nancy and Bruce. Sunday Mr.
and Mrs. Wallace and Nancy
went to McConnelsville to visit
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Knox.
Mrs. Alice Fink and her
granddaughter, Teresa Ervin,
of Racine were New Year's
weekend guests of Mrs. Fink 's
son, Owen, and his family.
Chris Hubbard has returned
to Lancaster after spending the
holidays here with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Stover.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin
accompanied their daughter,
Rhonda, to Ohio State
University Sunday. She had
spent the holidays with her
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Nelson
and sons, Columbus, spent New
Year's weekend here with his
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Denver
Nelson. Other holiday visitors of
the Denver Nelsons were Mr.
PLAN BELLING
and Mrs. Don Nelson and Jeff,
An old-fashioned belling and
Albany. They also visited Mr.
and Mrs. Maurice Durst, shower will honor Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Midkiff at the Hemlock
Pomeroy.
Grove Grange hall Saturday
night at 8 p.m. All friends and
relatives of the newlyweds are
invited to a ttend.

shoW ddu l . Tr.de--Mark

The history of the sandal
is as old as civilization. Dr.
William M. Scholl, who was
known as " foot doctor to the
world," found the structure
of the human foot a fascinating subject. His travels allowed him to search for ad·
ditions to his most unusual
avocation-collecting antique
sandals.

Second row (left to right).
By the end of the fourth
century B.C. structure of the
s a n d a 1 was changing. A
tongue with straps appeared

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hoW's 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. James R.
Roush, Hartford, a son.
Discharges
Rose E. Barnhouse, Mrs.
Wendell E. Craig and infant
son, Omar S. Drennen, Mrs.
Hazel L. Drummond, Mrs.
Joseph W. Eggers, Michael T.
Escue, Mrs. Dora Gilliland,
Mrs. Florence L. Gleason,
Roscoe C. Grayman, Mrs.
Walter Haskins, Mrs. Myrtle V.
Hayner, Mrs. Fred A. Houck,
Mrs. Charles E. Kay and infant
son, Earl W. Knick, Jamie Sue
Neal, Mrs. Velma M. Neal, Mrs .
Albert L. Smith and infant son,
Mrs. Jack H. Stafford, Mrs.
Herbert E. Thompson, Mrs.
Donald Lee Walker, Raymond
M. Watts, Clarence Massar, and
Mrs. Anna Blll'ris.

COMMITTEE TO MF~T
A meeting of the committee of
Pomeroy Cub Scout Pack 249
has been set for 7:30 ThlU'sday
night at the IOOF hall. All
committee members are urged
to attend.

Mason Area

NEW YORK-(N E A)-As
his tory repeats itself, so
does fashion. And one item
turns up with more regularity than any other item in
the wardrobe- the sandal.
By no means a modern-day
miracle , it has claimed a
high place in the annals of
fashion and is still going
strong.

Top row (left to right).
First is an example of how
early upper class Japanese
women shod their feet. They
liked the thick sole for height
and protection and preferred
the sandal open to avoid confinement. The next primitive
Indian sandal, which could
easily be the forerunner of
our modern-day thing, was
held to the foot by a knob
passing between the toes. In
1400 the Babylonians gave
new dimension to sandal design by combining colors to
produce a geometric chain
design-it also seems that
they ushered in the square
toe.

I

[HOSPITAL NEws]

At top, sandals t hrough the ages from the unique
antique collection of the late Dr. W illiam M. Scholl .
These sanda ls, from a ll over the wor19, provided
inspirati on for the modern sanda l. At bottom, 20th
century headl iners, Scholl Exercise Sandals pe rm it
your feet to keep that born-free feeling at all times.
over the instep as in this
Roman soldier sandal. Next,
a look at how the natives of
central Africa added inches
to their height by fastening
m o u n t s underneath their
sandals. Actors of classic
drama used variations of the
same idea. This was a forerunner to the high heel.

gripped quite naturally and
comfortably while walking.
It is said to be beneficial to
foot muscles as well as foot
beauty.

Today's kids have taken to
decorating these s and a I s
with jewelry, funny buttons
and other dime store props
that t urn the sand a 1s
Today sandals have be- psychedelic.
come the go-anywhere , doeverything shoes. And the
And so the sandal remains
Exercise Sandal, new on the on the fashion hit parade of
scene is made of beechwood. the 1970s.
It is d e s i g n e d w i t h a
patented raised bar which is

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
where he was taken Sunday.
Word has been received here
that
Ronald
Roush of
Steubenville, Ohio is a patient at
the Ohio Valley Hospital in that
city, where he is seriously ill
with a heart attack.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Johnson,
former residents of New Haven,
but who are now residing in
Newark, Ohio, were involved in
a car accident on Christmas
day. Mrs. Johnson was badly
injured and is a patient at
University
Hospital
in
Columb~s: Mr . Johnson
escaped !llJW'Y ·
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd ~oush
spent the Christmas holidays
with Rev. and Mrs. John E .
Barringer and Stephen a t
Burtonsville, Maryland.

NAME OMITTED
The name of Teresa Brown,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Brown, was unintentionally omitted from a
listing of guests at a party
Sunday honoring Mrs. Iva
Stewart on her birthday.

PARTY GIVEN
A post-Christmas party was
staged at the Meigs County
Infirmary recently by the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian ChlU'ch deacons
and deaconesses and members
of other chlU'ch boards. Cake
and ice cream were served.

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wilson
and family of Atlanta, Georgia,
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bliss Wilson dlll'ing the
holidays.
Mrs. Thurma Love of Gulf
Port, Florida and her son and
family, Staff Sgt. and Mrs . .
James Love and two children of
Omaha, Nebraska visited ~~
New Year's with Mrs. T. J .
Ryan. Mrs . Thurma Love
remained for a longer visit with
Mrs. Ryan.
Mr. Curtis McDaniel of Turtle
Creek, Michigan is visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
McDaniel.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Russell
returned to Mason from a visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Russell
and family; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Russell and family at
Sauk Village, Illinois; Mr. and
Mrs. James Weaver and family
at Dyer, Indiana and with Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Russell and
family at Skokie, Illinois. They
retlU'ned their youngest son,
Robert Russell of Akron, Ohio,
to their home to recuperate
from a heart attack.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Futzgerald
and son, Jason; Mrs. Maxine
Arnold of Bourbonnais, Illinois
spent the New Year's weekend
visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Reuben Stewart, Mason, and
with Mrs. Mary Aumiller at
Hartford.
and Mrs. Delmar
Mr
Alexander and sons attended
the funeral of her uncle, Mark
Fuller, at McConnellsville, Ohio
on SatlU'day.
Mr. Gary Gregory of Shinnston, W. Va. visited dlll'ing the
holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
George Carson and family.
Beverly Carson of Potomac
State and Eddie Carson of West
Virginia University spent the
holidays visiting their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. George Carson.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Cliff Roush,
New Haven, visited over the
holidays with Dr. and Mrs.
Barry Montgomery and two
daughters at Greeley, Colorado.

MEETING SET
The annual congregational
meeting of the Middleport First
Uni ted Presbyterian Church
will be held on Jan. 13. It will be
preceded a t 6:30 p.m. by a
potluck dinner. The Rev.
Russell Lester will moderate
the meeting.

2)6 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428
'

$3S.OO Down-

Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON _
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

MISS AMERICA &amp; SMARTAIRE
Latest Fashions in Sport &amp; Dress Shoes
REG. 14.99

8 11

SOME HOUSE
SLIPPERS
Ladies &amp; Children's

liz PRICE

REG. 11.99

7 aa

I

GIRLS' and BOYS' BUSTER BROWN and
ROBIN HOOD DRESS &amp; SCHOOL SHOES
REGULAR 10.00
TO 12.00 VALUES

6.88

,I
J

SELECTED SALE GROUPS
ON DISPLAY
·,,,, CHECK THE BARGAIN PRICES
l\t

Shoes On Display For Quick Selection!

Some
Handbags
Marked
Down!

Chapman's
SHOES
Pomeroy

Main Sl

RACINE
DEPARTMENT STORE
RACINE

OHIO

CANNON SPECIALS
Towels 22x44 solid color or printed
94c
SSe
28c

Hand Towels 1Sx25
Wash Cloths 12x12

Terry Dish Towels
Reg. 49c

Assorted Patterns

3 ROOMS
NEW
FURNITURE
$349.95

NOW IN PROGRESS

JANUARY

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

IIi

In our

WOO~if~
~A\L~

POMERov. o.

TWICE YEARLY.

·.· pile up eavfnge

1"1•-..iiiii-••iiiil••-. •··~&gt;+~t

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Chapman's

Rugs 24x40

Flat or Fitted 72x10B
Muslin Sheets
$1.87
Flat or Fitted Blx108
Muslin Sheets
$1.97
42xJ6
Pillow Cases
2 for 97c

No Iron Cameo

Rose Sheets $2.97 !twinl
No Iron Cameo

Rose Sheets $3.97

(fulll

Wash Cloths

Plastic Drapes

8 for $1.00

2 pr. $1.00

Reg. $2.98

Cha1r Throws

Now $1.97
Carpet

72x90

nners
$2.97
$4.49
$5.97

~.97

Couch Throws

126

~.97

Bed Spreads
(Reg. 6.9S) $4.99
(Reg. 12.95) $9.99

Thermal Blankets
(Reg. $5.95)

$3.99
Toss Pillows
(Reg. 1.39)

99~

�6-TheDailySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,Jan.6,1971

Fairgrounds
Is Taxable
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Board of Tax Appeals, in
a precedent setting decision,
has ordered $275,000 worth of
real estate owned by the Darke
County Agricultural Society be
taxed. The ruling was expected
to be appealed.
The board made its decision
after Greenville industrialist
Arthur Dearing filed suit charging the society's land, used as
the Darke County fairgrounds,
was also used for commercial
ventures.
State officials were uncertain
how far-reaching the decision
would be on similar situations
in other counties.
Edward Kirwan, attorneyexaminer for the board, said
county officials would be responsible for filing suits to put
similar real estate on the tax
duplicate.

"We just don't have the personnel needed to check out
each county," Kirwan said.
"That should be the duty of
the county auditor."
Royal R. Cox, assistant to
state Agricultural Director John
Stackhouse, said all county fairgrounds in the state use part
of the facilities during the entire year.
"Basically, these county societies operate as non-profit organizations," Cox said. "A
large number of them operate
on a year-round basis. They
have not been taxed in the
past.
"A lot of the money collected
is used for the promoting of the
county fair which is a nonprofit enterprise," he added.
"Although I am not familiar
with the Darke County case, I
imagine it will be appealed."

Lukens Getting
Seat in Senate
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
Former U. S. Rep. Donald E.
"Buz" Lukens, R-Middletown,
was to be sworn in today to an
interim two -year term in the
state Senate, just two days after
his other 19 GOP colleagues.
The cermony was scheduled
for 11 a.m. in the Senate
chamber.
Lukens, whose congressional
term just ended, was not jobless for long. The Senate Republicans caucus chose him
Tuesday to fill the seat of former Sen. Walter E. Powell, RFairfield, who was elected to
Lukens' congressional seat in
November.
Lukens won out at a closeddoor meeting over former state
Rep. Barry Levey, R-Middletown. Senate President Pro
Tempore Theodore M. Gray, RPiqau, refused to disclose the
vote, but another Republican
senator answered the question.
"We stopped counting when
Lukens got to 10," he said.
"Levey had six or seven at the
time. Lukens probably got 11 or
12 in all."
Lukens, who left Congress to
run unsuccessfully for the Republican gubernatorial nomination last May, had been given
only an even chance to capture
Powell's seat, provided outside
forces kept hands off.
Looking to 1974
Although Lukens had the endorsement of all four Republican county chairmen in the
Senate district, some GOP senators opposed him on grounds
he might become a "prima
donna" and use the Senate as a
springboard for higher office in
1974.
Gray said the county endorsements were the main reason
Lukens won, and he insisted he
did not ask members to vote
one way or the other.
"1 told them I did not have a
personal preference, but that I
felt it incumbent that as a Republican leader I cast my ballot
for Lukens," Gray said. "I said
this was not binding on anyone
else."
Gray declined to say who called for the secret ballot, although it •vas later learned Sen.
Max H. Dennis, R-Wilmington,

made that move.
A secret ballot had been
interpreted earlier as g1vmg
Levey a better chance, since
senators who wished to
vote for him would not have to
account for their choice to
leaders.
Gray said the vote on whether
to make the ballot secret was
"close."
The filling of the vacant Senate seat was taken immediately
to the floor, where it cleared by
a 15-0 vote of the Republicans.
Not voting were GOP Sens.
Howard C. Cook of Toledo,
James K. Leedy of Wooster,
Paul R. Matia of Fairview
Park and Robert J. Carts of
Elyria.
Barry Injected
The roll had no sooner been
called than Sen. Bishop Kilpatrick D-Warren, sounded the first
partisan note of the year in the
Senate.
"I wish to congratulate you,"
he told the Republicans on the
floor, "upon bringing a Mr.
Goldwater into the Ohio Senate."
Gray bristled back that Kilpatrick's remarks were "completely out of order" and he
hoped this would not set the
tone for the Democrats in 1971.
Kilpatrick, who has been a
lawmaker since 1935, retorted he
was speaking for himself and
not for the party.
Senate Minority Leader Anthony 0. Calabrese, D-Cleveland,
agreed, saying he asked Kilpatrick beforehand not to make the
statement.
Other early legislative action
was scant and routine as the
chambers awaited next week's
inauguration of Governor-elect
John J. Gilligan
The Senate acted on a number of appointments by Gov.
James A. Rhodes, while the
House received 56 new bills,
some of them warmed over
from last year.
Among those bills back for
another try are measure creating a state planning office, setting up collective bargaining
for public employes and requiring safety glazing materials in
hazardous locations.

Meigs

Property

Discount
FABRICS
Mill
Specials

The
Cotton
Gin
Phone 367-7677

Addison, Ohio
Right On Rt. 7

Transfers
Vena V. Marcinko to Ralph B.
Wells, Int., Diana K. Wells,
Parcel, Olive - Long Bottom.
Vena V. Marcinko, Gdn.,
Charlotte Marcinko, et a! to
Ralph B. Wells, Diana K. Wells,
Parcel, Olive - Long Bottom.
John H. Busch, Irene Louise
Busch to Sybil Ebersbach, 26¥.!
Acres, Lebanon.
Sybil Ebersbach to John
Henry Busch, Irene Louise
Bush, 26¥.! Acres, Lebanon.
John Henry Busch, Irene
Louise Busch to Milo Nugent,
Ruth Nugent, 10 Acres,
Lebanon.
Kenneth A. Johnson, Anna
Darlene Johnson to James W.
Johnson, Larry G. Johnson,
Jacob W. Johnson, .50 Acre,
Salisbury.
Chancy E. Staneart, dec. to
Florence 0. Staneart, Mary E.
Patterson, Maxine Leeds, Cert.
for trans., Columbia.
Wesley L. Grounds, Linda
Grounds to Herbert L. Grounds,
34 Acres, Columbia.
Robert Molden , Gladys

,----------------------------•

Stevens New Board Pre,s ident

Beat .•••

Of the Bend
By Bob Hoeflich
Congratulations to Mrs. George (Bertha) Hobstetter, Sr., who
will be marking her 90th birthday Friday with a family dinner at
her residence on Rose Hill near Pomeroy.
MR. AND MRS. E. J. HILL who generally find themselves
surrounded by children and grandchildren galore were without
either on Christmas Day.
In the lull, Mrs. Hill, always an avid camera fan, broke out
several of her albums of family photos taken through the years
and the couple had a wonderful day reminiscing.
AND BEFORE CHRISTMAS gets too far into the
background, do ask Walter Grueser about his experiences with
his new artificial tree this year. They sound as though the tree,
when finally decorated, must have looked a sight. However, close
friends of the Gruesers say it was beautiful,
ATTENDANCE AT A MEETING Monday on actions to
secure better treatment for prisoners of war in South Asia was
disappointing. Only about a dozen residents were on the scene.
However, Meigs Countians always come through in such worthy
causes and they'll be on their toes by May when a door-to-door
canvass will be held to secure signatures urging Hanoi to abide by
the Geneva Convention provisions.
TO TAKE VITAMIN COR NOT to take Vitamin Cis the
question of the hour with many.
Dr. Linus Pauling, twice a Nobel prize winner, has recommended Vitamin C for combatting the common cold -large doses
in some instances. On the other hand, a Medical Letter on Drugs
and Therapeutics, distributed to some 50,000 persons, warns that
large doses of Vitamin C can cause other problems.
Drug stores are swamped with the demand for Vitamin C
however, and several we know swear that it is working for them in
fighting colds.
Testing is to be conducted on Dr. Pauling's recommendations
and it's high time. Let's hope he does have some answers on
fighting the common cold.

CERTAINLY A CHANCE for area residents to see a good
musical on Friday evening when "George M." by a New York
cast plays at Memorial Auditorium in Athens.
The story is based on the life of show biz talent, George M.
Cohan, and included in the play, which ran for 13 months on
Broadway, are some of the best of the Cohan tunes which still
have an appeal at least to those of us who just never have seemed
to get the ''beat" with the new music. Tony Tanner, brought from
England to play the Broadway role, will be in the lead with the
company in Athens.
Curtain time is 8 p.m. and tickets are for sale at the Memorial
Auditorium box office.

Brutish Prisoner
Handling Charged
by Medical Interns
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
mass resignation of Ohio State
University medical students
working part-time at the Ohio
Penitentiary was diverted two
weeks ago only by the upcoming
change in Ohio's statehouse
administration, it was learned
Tuesday.
Two of the senior medical
students who obtained parttime jobs in the prison's
hospital, Jonathan Moulton,
Lima, and Thomas Kappeler,
Dover, did, however, resign
from their duties at the prison.
" The reason we quit," said
Moulton, " was mainly centered
on interference by administrative-type persons with
what we believe should be done
in the way of medical treatment
for the prisoners.
"We were the only medical
people there overnight, but the
security people tended to want
to run the medical treatment
program the way they V(anted it
done," he said.
While Moulton declined to say
overall treatment of prisoners
was bad, "we were only there
overnight," he said he felt there
were numerous incidents where
better medical care could have
been delivered.
Moulton, who said he was
hesitant to give details because
he did not want to have his
opinions reflect upon the
university, said there were
needless delays because of
interference in handling inmates.
"For example," he said, "one
night I was called to C &amp; D
Block (the prison's maximum
security area) to see a prisoner
who had slashed his arm with a
piece of metal.
"The inmate was quite
agitated," he said. "He was in
an open cell with about eight
prison guards standing around.
My inmate nurse went into the
cell to see the prisoner and try
to calm him down.
"The prisoner, when I entered
the cell, tried to get out and was
shoved back in. I told the

Molden
to
Douglas
J.
Wetherholt,
Janet
B.
Wetherholt, 138.50 Acres, Salem .
Rodney Pierce, Dora Pierce
to Paul Basim, Jr., .6 Acre,
Olive.
Eugene T. German to Willard
Pigott, 1 Acre, Olive.
Union Carbide Corp . to
Franklin Real Estate Corp.,
Parcels, Sutton - Letart Lebanon.

Ted Stevens was unanimoulsy
elected to serve as president of
the Mason County Board of Education for a two year term during a brief statutory meeting
Monday night in the board office.
The meeting, however, was
called to a close shortly after
it was opened when Stevens announced that there was a death
in the Withers family.
Word was received of the
death of Mrs. Mary Lilly, sister of Bill Withers.
Due to this, Stevens asked
that the board dispense with

E-R Unit
Studied
In Mason

Use of B-B guns, air rifles
and other such fire arms inside the Mason corporation
limits have prompted law enforcement of an ordinance
that was passed by council in
1950.
Police Chief Richard Ohlinger cited misuse of these
guns and said in the past few
weeks pets have been the
targets of those firing them,
especially cats.
The officer warns that parents will be held responsible
for acts committed by their
children.

The possibility of the forthcoming need for ambulance service in the area has prompted
officials to take action to acquire a volunteer emergency
unit service.
This was brought out Monday
night during a regular Mason ::;';:;;:;:;:;:;:::;::~:;:;:,:,:,:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;::;::::=:;:::::;:;:::::::::::=:::::
Council meeting when acting
WEDS DEC. 19
Mayor Charlotte Jenks read a
letter from the newly formed
Miss Mary Burris, Columbus,
Mason Emergency Ambulance 0., daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
and Rescue Squad announcing Lawrence Burris, Mason, was
plans for a meeting next Mon- united in marriage on
day night at 7:30 in the Wahama December 19, to Mr. William R.
Junior High.
Remmes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Remmes
of
Interested persons are asked Frederick
to attend this special meeting
Belleville, Illinois.
when Don Oay of Charleston, a
Dr. Edge Dixon performed
representative of the Gover- the double ring ceremony at the
nor's program on Highway Safe- United Methodist Church in
d
ty will be there to discuss pro- W thin t0 Ohi F · d
cedures for acquiring this ser~\ g t~ d ~-th ne~~
vice and to enlighten those pre-. reGa. lves ~ n e . e wb hg.
..
.
1ven m marr1age y er
W 1
B ·
th
sent on what such a fac1hty will b th
ff
ro er,
es ey
urns,
e
0
::~resentatives from area bride wore a blue dress a~d coat
. ·ted ensemble. .She earned a
p Ia nts have a 1so been mv1
t 0 ttend.
nosegay of pmk flowers.
aMayor Jenks read a letter
Mrs. April Gates was matron
from Paul Crabtree in answer of honor. Mr. Ron Larabee
to her letter asking for con- served as best man.
The groom is a graduate of
sideration for providing the town
of Mason with the same free Purdue University and is
wiring for TV cable service employed as an Industrial
which has been agreed to for Engineer at Anheuser Busch in
Columbus, Ohio.
Point Pleasant.
Crabtree in the correspon- Miss Burris graduated from
dence said the proposal is under Wahama High School and IBM
consideration and that he is in School, Charleston, W. Va.
hopes of working out a similar
plan for Mason. Crabtree disclosed that as soon as there is
anything definite it is his request to meet with the Mason
Council to discuss this matter.
Council was informed by
Morning Glories
Mayor Jenks that a letter had
Week of Dec. 15, 1970
been received from the West
Standings:
Points
Virginia Council of Towns and Team
Newell Sunoco
82
Cities asking that council sup- Gibbs
Grocery
79
port their proposals for amend- Fraley &amp; Schilling
66
59
ing certain sections of the state Lou's Ashland
52
code. Through this
change Brailey's Sunoco
Team No. 2
46
Mayor Jenks explained smaller
High Team 3 games - 1st,
communities are toderivegrea- Team No.2 2248; 2nd, Fraley &amp;
Schilling 2173; Jrd , Gibbs
,ter benefits.
2165
Gary Gibbs was present for Grocery
High Team game-1st, Team
the regular council session No. 2 784; 2nd, Gibbs Grocery,
while he observed the governor- 771; Jrd, Fraley &amp; Schilling 763
High Ind. 3-games - 1st, Peg
ing body conduct official busi- Houdashelt
457; 2nd, Phyllis
ness.
Grooms 445; Jrd, Jan Jenkins
·In addition to Mayor Jenks 415
High Ind. game - 1st, Phyllis
others present were 'Councilmen Grooms
169; 2nd,
Peg
George carson, Roger Hysell, Houdashelt 167; 3rd, Phyllis
Grooms 166
and Walter Werry.

lieutenant in charge of the
guards we would have to take
the prisoner back to the hospital
to treat him.
"The lieutenant said he would
have to have the guards knock
out the inmate with their night
sticks," Moulton said. "I told
him that it was not necessary to
knock a man unconscious to
treat his arm.
"When I said I would not
condone knocking the prisoner
out, the guard finally agreed to
let us take the inmate to the
hospital without violence.
"But," said Moulton, "we
received many prisoners who
guards have knocked out rather
than calling us first."
Moulton said the six students
who worked at the prison had
decided to quit as a group, but
then reconsidered.
"We decided that since the
penitentiary is scheduled to be
moved within a year or so and
since the state is sort of between
governors and a new correc'
tions director is to be appointed,
we should
he said. .
Moulton sa1d he talked w1th ...
representatives of Governor- ·
elect John J. Gilligan and they
Harry Hoffman was elected
promised to look into the
President and Cecil D.mcan reallegations.
elected Fire Chief during a
Gilligan officials today ad- meeting of the New Haven Fire
mitted they had received Department Monday night.
" numerous" complaints about
Other officers elected to serthe penitentiary and other state ve in 1971 included vice-Presicorrectional institutions " all dent, Richard Grinstead; Treaduring the campaign and up to surer, Tom Grinstead; Secretoday." The incoming governor tary, Charles Wea~ assistwas to appoint a new director of ant Fire Chief, Charles Roush;
corrections this week.
Captain Tommy Parsons and Lt.
Penitentiary Warden Harold Clyde Weaver.
Cardwell had no immediate
Two new members, Robert
statement to make on Moulton's Cunningham and Dave Frye,
allegations. He said he did not were received in the departknow Moulton or any of fr,e
other interns.
"No intern contacted me
concerning anything of this
nature," said Cardwell. "I don't
even know who resigned. They
come and go here all the time.
"I certainly wouldn't make
any statement until I knew who
was involved and when it
happened and so forth," said
Where Shoes Are
Cardwell.
Sensibly Priced
Middleport, 0.

w~it,"

any other business and requested that the next meeting be
held January 12 at 7:30 p. m.
which met with unanimous approval.
At the meeting, which lasted
only 15 minutes, RayFieldswas
officially seated as a member
of the five member group. He
replaces Earl Keefer who completed twelve years on the board
at the end of the 1970 year.
Keefer did not seek re-election
after
serving two six-year
terms. During this time he
served six years as president.

For Tight Shoes

THE SHOE BOX

Students
Get Cards
Fro~nAAAber
Certificates of Achievement
and Trained Driver Cards were
mailed this week to students in
three schools in Meigs County,
who completed their Driver
Training Course.
The Automobile Club of
Southern Ohio assists schools in
making arrangements for the
loan of a driver training car by
providing an agreement and
joint inspection form for schools
and car dealers, Driver
Education Decals for the car,
and publications for use of the
school.
A special "thank you" is
extended to R. H. Rawlings
Sons, Pomeroy Motors, Karr &amp;
Van Zandt Motor Sales, and
Keith Goble who provided
Driver Education cars in Meigs.
The traffic accident record of
youthful drivers seriously needs
improving. While those under 20
represent only ten per cent of all
drivers in this country, they are
involved in 17 per cent of all
accidents and in 15 per cent of
the fatal accidents, the AAA
said.
The AAA has pioneered since
the early 1930's in promoting
nation-wide high school driver
education - recommending
standards, preparing text
materials,
assisting
in
preparing teachers, outlining
methods, and cooperating in
making dual~ontrol practice
driving cars available to
schools.

4x8
SHEET

to serve in the term which
also expires December 31
1972.
,
Bill Withers and Harry Siders have completed two years
ot their six-year terms. It'is
the second term for Siders . •

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No Minimum or Maximum
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January. •

-

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ment.
Twenty..one of the 30 members of the department were
present. Tom Grinstead and
Charles Roush were hosts and
served refreshments.

•

TED STEVENS

Local Bowling

Duncan Hoffmall Head•Ing
F D
New Haven ire epartment

SHOE STRETCH
SPRAY

•

Bill Withers made the motion for Stevens to serve in
the capacity as president and
Fields gave the second. OthQrs
giving approval with '•aye" votes were Harry Siders and Charles Eshenaur.
Stevens is beginning his fifth
year on the Board of Education
with his present term to expire December 31, 1972. Eshenaur is filling the unexpired
term of Dr. C. L. Brown and
was elected this past Novem-

•

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WHILE QUANTITIES
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Plus Free Merchandise.
(ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE)

CARPET, FURNITURE, APPLIANCE BARGAINS

·INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

•

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 6, 1971

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8 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 6, 1971

Cow-Calf

awM!iluro~:wsv:_;;~:::f:~i!'i@»-im1'*'

Meetings
Arranged
A series of four Cow-Calf
Management meetings will be
held at the Tri-County
Vocational
School
near
Nelsonville the Thursday nights
of January 7, 14, 21 and 18 from
8 to 10 p.m.
Methods of developing a
sound, practical, cow-calf
management program for the
1970's will be presented. Ohio
State University personnel will
discuss the following subjects
during the four meetings: Costs
of Feeder Calf Production;
Heavier, More Saleable Calf
Crops; Developing A Herd
Improvement Program and
Developing
A
Herd
Management System.
Speakers for the four sessions
will include Dick Smith, Extension Specialist, Beef Cattle,
Ohio State University; Bill
Smith, Area Extension Agent,
Farm Management; John
Underwood, Area Extension
Agent, Agronomy and Jim
Little, Area Extension Agent,
Animal Industry.
Last year beef cattle accounted for more than 30 per
cent of the total agricultural
income in southeastern Ohio.
Cow numbers have increased
50-100 per cent in many counties
in southern Ohio in the past 10
years. Ohio imports over 300,000
head of feeder cattle each year.
Economists are predicting a 2-4
per cent increase yearly in beef
consumption for the next 10
years.
The future looks bright for
feeder calf producers. This
series of meetings will discuss
some of the key management
practices the feeder calf
producer can use to increase his
net income per cow.

Chester
News Notes
BY CLARICE ALLEN
Sgt. and Mrs. Jerry Cleland
and family, Fort Knox, Ky.,
spent Christmas week with Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Cleland. Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Cleland, Columbus, spent the weekend with the
Clelands.
Bill Allen, New Martinsville,
W.Va., spent a week's vacation
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Eichinger and daughter,
Suzannah, Columbus, spent the
holidays with Mrs. Opal
Eichinger and family.
Spending Christmas and New
Year's Day with Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen and Bill were Mr.
and Mrs. Denzel Cleland and
Vern Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wickham
were Christmas dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. 0. J. Gaul,
Dorcas.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knight,
Columbus, Miss Janet Knight,
Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Knight, New York, were
holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Knight.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen
and Bill visited Tuesday in
Ashland, Ky., with Mr. and Mrs.
D. B. Martin and Mr. and Mrs.
M. H. Allen.
Mrs. Cleo Smith spent
Christmas weekend with Sgt.
and Mrs. Daniel Toban and
daughter in Goldsboro, N. C.
Mrs. Ross Cleland and Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon Cleland visited
Sunday with Mrs. Ella Kimes at
a nursing home in Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell,
Elmer and Sheila, were
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. John Newell and sons,
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Parker
and family, Marietta, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Hollan, Columbus,
and Mr. and Mrs. James Hollan
and family, local, were holiday
guests of their mother, Mrs.
Opal Holan and Ricky.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes
were in Portsmouth Monday to
visit his father, Emerson
Hayes.
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Baum
and Tim spent a few days in
Canada.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Roush
and Jean Ann, Winter Haven,
Fla., spent a few days with Mrs.
Guy Summerfield and Mrs.
Nora Brown. They also attended the wedding of Mrs.
Summerfield's nephew, Lloyd
Lee Summerfield in Georgia on
Dec. 27. Mrs. Summerfield
returned home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Caruthers
and family, Canton, were
Christmas guests of Mrs. Doris
Marks.
South America lies much
far t h &lt;' 1 cast tl'l'~'l North
America.

BY WILLIAMS. WHITE
WASHINGTON- The self-serving silliness of the
long attack upon the supposed evils of the seniority
system in Congress has never been more plainly
illustrated than now.
It is precisely that system that will permit the
elevation in the new Congress of a genuinely competent

Although most adult Americans are capable of donating
blood, millions sby away from doing so. In America today,
only a very small percentage of the population is providing
the blood that could mean the difference between life and
death for the rest of us in case of a medical emergency.
Now, for the second year, President Nixon has
designated January as National Blood Donor Month in
tribute to the few to whom many of us owe a great deal.
"The voluntary blood donor system developed by the
American Red Cross and the American Association of Blood
Banks provides modem methods for safe and simple
donations of blood," stated Mr. Nixon in a proclamation.
"Contributions of the voluntary blood donor should be
recognized and encouraged to assure that our nation's
growing need is safely met." The President said the act of
donating blood "is a contribution to health and life for which
there is no substitute."
Meanwhile, the American Red Cross, which provides
nearly 50 per cent of the blood in the United State£, announced that for the fourth consecutive year the American
Legion and its auxiliary will undertake efforts to increase
blood donations.

Washington White Paper

r---------------------------r
1
I

I

l
l
I

Maligned Seniority System Defended

successor to the late and able Rep. Mendel Rivers as
chairman of the House Armed services Committee,
Rep. Edward Hebert of U&gt;uisiana.
Some other method of selection -say, by a kind of
intra-committee popularity poll - could throw away
the inunense, earned experience in the inunensely
complex field of national defense of Edward Hebert in
favor of whoever could do the most personal and
lickspittling log-rolling at the right time.
As to the Senate, it is and has been the persistent
refusal of junior members to accept the implications of
the seniority system - which, when all is said and
done, is the system of life itself- that has driven that
once great legislative body into snarling futility.
It is these, the junior members, who have been
pursuing a policy of all or nothing, of rule or ruin, that

Washington !
WP A
R ep0rt By
l
l

I

Oftentimes
administrators
and public servants at the
federal, state and local level of
government complain that they
are prevented from properly
serving their constituents by
out-dated laws and legal hurdles which stifle their authority.
And oftentimes their complaints are valid.
It is the responsibility of
Congress to enact laws not only
directly beneficial to the individual citizens in this country,
but also to the civic and community servants who work in
the public interest. Once these
laws have been approved and
worked into our system, an
evaluation period will quickly
determine their assets and
shortcomings.
Our law enforcement agencies across the country have
greatly
benefited
by
Congressional action over the
last two years. Under the
authority granted to the Justice
Department by Congress in
1968, the Attorney General has
used wiretaps only 133 times.
Although it is unfortunate that
wiretapping is used, our system
nevertheless has an obligation
to the law-abiding citizens of
this country to protect their
rights and use the most effective means available in
halting the swell of organized
crime. This authority has been
a definite factor in the Justice
Department's drive to curb

Normal Schools
Teachers' colleges were
once called normal schools.
The expression was derived
from the French phrase,
" ecole normale," a teachertraining ins tit uti on first
established in France. It was
intended to set a pattern, to
establish a "norm," after
which all o the r schools
would be modeled.

I

I

Clarence
Miller

I
I
crime in
America. Investigations
in
which
wiretapping was a vital part
have, to date, resulted in 419
arrests and 325 indictments of
persons accused of organized
criminal activity.
This is a good illustration, I
feel, of what can be done if the
proper authorities are given the
necessary tools to fight crime.
The addi tiona! authority
granted by the Crime Control
Act of 1970, which I supported,
along with appropriations of
$650 million for fiscal year '71 to
assist law enforcement agencies, will ultimately prove effective at every level of our
society. Extensive training
programs designed to meet the
problems of the seventies along
with laws which will strengthen
the campaign against organized
crime are all included in the
most recent anti-crime laws
approved by President Nixon.
Washington, D. C., one of the
worst crime centers in the
country, shows documente1
proof that better laws and
stricter enforcement does
produce results. Eleven months
ago the crime rate in the
nation's capital was appalling.
Crime rates are rape, murder
and armed robbery were
nearing an all-time high for this
area. However, with the addition of more officers, better
training programs and with the
enactment of laws such as the
Crime Control Act of 1970
Washington's crime rate has
declined by approximately 18
per cent since the first of the
year.
Communities,
it
can
generally be said, can only be as
good as the people who populate
them. But the public servants at
the federal, state and local level
can only be as beneficial to the
people they serve as our laws
will allow. The authority to
uphold the laws of our land must
be properly and wisely vested.

----

--- --

Commentary: Nixon veto recalls Depression flap over WPA
By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK
By United Press International
WPA worker: "I don't have a
shovel."
Foreman: "Then you don't
have to work."
WPA worker: "Yeah, but
what will I lean on."
Between 1935 and 1943, the
Works Progress Administration
employed 8.5 million Americans; paid out nearly $9 billion
in wages; built, repaired and
improved thousands of roads,
buildings and parks; supported
art, music, theater and writing;
operated schools and health
centers; wasted a lot of money;
kept a lot of people from
starving; and became the butt
of uncounted jokes, of which
the above is a memorable
example.
Although there were federally-subsidized work-relief programs before and after WPA, it
has come to symbolize for
many Americans the New Deal
at its experimental best or
boondoggling worst. And when
President Nixon vetoed the 1970
manpower bill on grounds that
it would provide "WPA-type
jobs," those of his generation
and political persuasion understood just what he meant.
Nixon objected to a provision
that would hflve granted states
and cities $200 million (rising to
$1.5 billion in 1974) to hire the
unemployed for sanitation,
health, conservation and a long
list of other public service jobs.
The President called such jobs
"dead end" and "a reversion to
the remedies that were tried 35
years ago." He meant WPA.
1 In 5 Unemployed
Actually, the premise of those
who inserted the big public
employment program in the
administration's
manpower
training bill was quite a bit
different from those who
created WPA.
Then, with one out of five
workers unemployed and business only slowly recovering

is leaving a litter of smashed legislation. They are not
wise enough - because not experienced enough - to
understand that politics in a free society must rest at
last upon civilized compromise. They are not industrious enough to work their way forward by merit;
they want to run the show before they even understand
the script.
Practically every office boy in today's newspaper
shop thinks it is really he who should be the editor. So it
is that senators unwilling to do their home work and in
too much of a hurry for advancement look about at the
shambles they themselves have created- and cry out
at that dreadful "seniority system."
Paraphrasing Winston Churchill on the subject of
democracy, the seniority system is clearly undesirable
- except for the fact that it is incomparably the best
system to be had. To take the House Armed Services
·Committee as an example, no man, however brilliant,
can learn in two years' or four years' service what he
must know about national defense to serve effectively
as its chairman.
Another term for seniority is "know-how." And
while undeniably the system occasionally produces a
chairman of limited ability, it could also fairly be said
that the seniority system in the professions occasionally produces a senior law partner who is no

•

Blackstone or a senior medical partner who is no
Lister.
On the whole, however, a man becomes senior -in
the professions and in Congress - mainly because he
knows more about the matter in hand because he has
studied and practiced it longer.
In any case, no man - anywhere - has ever
produced for the seniority system in Congress a "
practical alternative not patently full of holes. H lengl\
of service is not to prevail and only "ability" is to be
the criterion, then who is to decide who is abler than
whom, considering that the very term is wholly subjective?
And if seniority is to be abandoned, it requires little
common sense to see that Congressional committees
would instantly become the cockpits for savage
pressures from interest groups and ideological and
sectional blocs.
Introduced for the first time in history into t.
legislative mechanisms - and they are senseless
mechanisms -would be the brutal rock 'em and sock
'em powerhouse techniques of a national political
convention. These may be appropriate to the partisan
process of nominating somebody; nothing could be
more dangerous to the high responsibility of writing
the laws of this country.

•

Had Mixed Results
from the depths of Depression,
federal work projects were seen
as an alaternative to cash or
commodity relief, but not as a
permanent solution to unemployment.
Today, there are many who
believe private enterprise never
will be able, even in times of
high prosperity, to employ all
who want to work. The
advocates of the government as
"the employer of last resort"
argue that there are thousands
of public service jobs to be
filled-trash collectors, nonprofessional assistants for
teachers and nurses are examples-and hundreds of thousands of hard core unemployed
to fill them.
That is far different from the
situation ( 10.6 million unemployed) when President Franklin D. Roosevelt set up WPA
35 years ago, and gave it the
mission of putting 3.5 million
persons to work in constructive
jobs.
Many Weaknesses
Though WPA came to mean
make-work "leaf raking" jobs
to its critics, under Harry L.
Hopkins it produced a bewildering array of goods, services and
projects. From the Central
Park Zoo in New York to the
Aquatic Gardens in San Francisco, from an art program

that turned out 108,000 paintings
to a sewing project that
produced 383,000 articles of
clothing, WPA put men and
women to work.
Beginning only five years
after President Herbert Hoover
could say "under our political
system, government is not nor
should it be, a general
employer of labor," WPA
always provoked bitter objections from those who felt it was
an instrument of moral decay
for the working classes and a
harbinger of bolshevism. But it
lasted until the demand for
weapons to fight World War II
ended widespread unemployment in the United States.
Even among the political
successors of Roosevelt and
Hopkins, it is hard to find a
staunch defender of WPA
today. As with the war on
poverty of the mid-1960's, the
blunders and weaknesses of
WPA were so thoroughly
ventilated by its critics in the
1930's that it simply got a dirty
name.
Roosevelt himself fastened
the "leaf raking" tag on WPA.
In his 1935 State of the Union
message, asking for funds to
reform work-relief, he said, "I
am not willing that the vitality
of our people be further sapped
by the giving of cash or market

baskets, for a few hours of
weekly work cutting grass,
raking leaves or picking up
papers in public parks."
History Of Safey Pin
Then, because the program
was rushed into operation and
aimed primarily at putting the
jobless to work, there were
boondoggles. A project to
research the history of the
safety pin was obviously going
to arouse indignation, just as
did the roads that cracked and
the sewer lines built uphill.
Still, there are some with
fond memories of WPA. In a
recent article for the Urban
Coalition magazine, City, Lois
Craig noted that Orson Welles
got his start in the theater
project, Jackson Pollock, Stuart
Davis, Willem de Kooning and
Mark Rothko, all of whose
works command thousands of
dollars now, painted for WPA,
and Richard Wright, one of the
first black authors to tell white
America how it felt to be black
in the United States, got his
start with WPA.
Those were the big projects.
There were others. The repair
of 94 million books. The
preparation of 1.2 million hot
lunches for school children. The
literacy and naturalization classes for as many as 293,000
adults a month. These were

transitory programs. But those
they helped in those days of
seemingly unending poverty
understandably remember WPA
for something besides a worker
leaning on a shovel.

12th Birthday •
Is Celebrated
Merri Christine Ault observed
her 12th birthday on Christmas
Day and a party was held in her
honor.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
William Ault for the occasi~
were Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ault,
Todd and Tobie, Springfield;
Mrs. Charles Bush, Greg, Nick,
and Jason, Middleport; Dennis
Ault of Ohio University, Perry
Ault, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Legan,
Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs. C.
H. Wise, Waverly. Refreshments included a cake
decorated in red and white.

•

TO HONOR COUPLE
The Rev. and Mrs. Richard
Pumphrey, married in early
December, will be honored at a
family night potluck dinner to
be held Saturday night at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, 6:30p.m. The Rev. Mr.
Pumphrey is pastor of the
"
church.

n 9-5 Mon. thru Thurs. ~ 9-8 Fri

9-9 Sat.

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�l l - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Jan. 6, 197~

INSTAMATIC
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SOCKS

DRESS
SHIRTS

THICK THIRSTY
TERRY 1

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SEAMLESS

17

Cof~

Sizes 6-S1~ And 9-11

57!

$}97

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White And

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Jumbo 108 Count Package !

77

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FRESH - DELICIOUS
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Values To 79c

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MUGS

WOMENS
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On Sole Thursday !

Marty Colors I

Values To 4.98 I

47~ 37~

-

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Size 5-6-7

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with old German designs .
Lt. Tan, with multi...color
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$387

$477

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BEER
STEINS

Solid color Thermals, poly
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Every sweater left in our store now

,:,. '•

CERAMIC

"BEACON"
BLANKETS

Prices Slashed On

A

WOMENS
TRICOT
PANTIES

lneyre 1.00 Values

Vofues To 5.44 !
Worm - Pretty

Pkg.
White And Colors !

CHOCOLATE
COVERED
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C

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\

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On Sole Thursday !

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One

Size

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! Val ues To 4.

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SOCKS

57~

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To
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/""

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--

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8

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37,.

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Assorted Color Handles

-174

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ase brush, large tease
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Solid Trims

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Clea ra nce I Me n And Boys

ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED !

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OR
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Billfolds or French Purses
Many Color s
And
Styfes !

7 7(

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 6,1971

Carla Jean Will
Given Shower
Miss Evelyn Fick entertained
Monday night with a bridal
shower honoring Miss Carla
Jean Will, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl E. Will, whose
wedding to Mr. Charles Michael
Werry will be an event of Jan. 16
at 7:30p.m. at Grace Episcopal
Church, Pomeroy.
Gifts for the bride were
placed on a tiered table topped
with a bride replica. The
refreshment table decorations
featured a crystal tray centered
with a bride and groom figurine
surrounded by miniature cakes
decorated with pink roses. The
tray arrangement was flanked
by tall tapers in crystal holders.
Prizes for entertainment
were awarded to Mrs. George
Korn, Jr., Mrs. Wes Gilkey, and
Mrs. Avery Goeglein.
The guest list included Mrs.
Will, mother of the bride-€lect,
Mrs. Charles Werry, mother of
the prospective bridegroom,
Mrs. Mildred Gaul, Mrs.
Dorothy Ritchie, Mrs. Betty
Spencer, Florence Ann Bearhs,
Mrs. Eldon Will, Mrs. Karl

Social
Calendar

Kloes, Mrs. Judy Spencer, Mrs.
Helen Sauer, Mrs. Margaret
Blaettnar, Mrs. Elmore Boice,
Mrs. Clayton Allen, Mrs. Mabel
Cleland, Mrs. Edythe Calvert,
Patty Goeglein, Mrs. Albert
Goeglein,
Mrs.
Charles
Goeglein, and Mrs. Avery
Goeglein.
Mrs. Louise Bearhs, Mrs.
June Kalatta, Miss Eleanor
Robson, Mrs. Dora Heaton,
Mrs. Roger Spencer, Mrs.
Ralph Spencer, Mrs. Sidney
Spencer, Mrs. Donald Covert,
Mrs. Viola Edwards, Mrs.
Kathryn Evans, Mrs. Frances
Hewetson, Miss Louisa Johnson, Mrs. Alice Mills, Lydia
Gilkey, Linda Rathburn, Miss
Elizabeth Fick, Mrs. Elsie
Cross, Mrs. Bessie Hudson,
Mrs. Jonnie Sue Kinny, Mrs.
Donna Morrison, Mrs. Jackie
Sisson, Mrs. Donna Houck Carr,
Mrs. Pam O'Brien McClanahan, Mary Dawn Sheets,
Mrs. Katie Well, Mrs. Eleanor
Crow, Miss Marie Bichman and
Mrs. Dorthea Fisher.

Workshop Planned
A workshop on the art of
making velvet roses was
planned for the Feb. 8 meeting
of the Middleport Garden Club
when members met Monday at
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. social room.
Mrs. James Titus will conduct
the workshop at 2 p.m. in the
social room. Her table
arrangement displayed at the
meeting featured cyprus and
boxwood with velvet roses in
red, yellow and pink. Named as
hostesses for the February
meeting were Mrs. M. C.
Wilson, Mrs. David Entsminger, and Miss Lucille
Smith. The arrangement of the
month will be made by Mrs.
Malcolm Roller using the theme
"Romantic."
Mrs. Uoyd Blackwood, vice
president, conducted the
meeting in the absence of Mrs.
Carl Horky who was called to
the Cleveland Clinic where her
husband was scheduled for
heart surgery. It was reported
that Miss Frieda Faehnle underwent surgery at the Holzer
Medical Center Monday.
Mrs. J. E. Harley presented a
program on the care of
amaryllis. Mrs. William Morris
exhibited an arrangement using

the theme "Ring Out the Old,
Ring in the New." Hostesses
were Mrs. William Hamm, Mrs.
J. E. Harley, and Mrs. John
Kincaid.

-

BEtTY CANARY

-------~

Pomeroy....

\

Personal Notes

i

Mr. and Mrs. Norman Weber
and daughter, Vida .Ann, of
Tuppers Plains and Mrs. Jane
Jacobs have returned from a
trip to Texas. The Weber family
visited with Sgt. and Mrs.
Raymond Larkins and family at
Fort Hood, and Mrs. Jacobs
went on to Lackland Air Force
Base to be with her husband,
Jack.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Darst
and children have returned to
Columbus after a holiday visit
here with Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jacobs
and daughter, Teri, of
Springfield spent the Christmas
holiday weekend here with Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs and
Mrs. Clifford Ebersbach.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY FIRST Baptist
Church, annual business
meeting, Wednesday at the
church beginning with a 6:30
dinner.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Club, home of Mrs. Nan Moore;
annual business meeting and
review of ''Mr. Sammlers
Planet" by Mrs. Dale Dutton.
Comment on the book to be
given in response to roll call.
MIDDLEPORT
Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 Wednesday at
the firemen's hall.
RED CROSS Wednesday 7:30
p.m. Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m. Thursday, Sacred Heart
Church, preceded at 7:15 by
Rosary and Mass; hostesses,
Emma Radford, Cecelia Mitch,
Isabelle Wehrung, and Martha
Gress.
EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple, Middleport;
Mrs. Maryln Wilcox, worthy
matron, asks officers arrive by
7 p.m.
BRICKLAYERS Local No. 32
Thursday 7:30 p.m. American
Legion Hall, Pomeroy; all
urged to attend; refreshments.
BIG BEND Neighborhood
service team meeting, Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council, 9
a.m. Thursday, home of Mrs.
William Ohlinger.
FRIDAY
WAHAMA HIGH School
cheerleaders dance Friday,
Wahama High auditorium, 9:30
p.m. to 12 midnight, following
the Wahama-Hannan basketball game; Jays will emcee.
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
.Alnerican Revolution, 2 p.m.
Friday at the home of Mrs. Nan
Moore. Co-hostesses will be
Mrs. 0. P. Klein and Mrs. J. E.
Harley. Mrs. Emerson Jones
will give a program on national
defense and delegates to the
state conference will be elected.
Members are to give New
Year's resolutions in response
to roll call.
SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party
Saturday, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. at
Meigs Junior High auditorium
in Middleport; Jays in charge.
JITNEY SUPPER, 5 to 7 p.m.
Saturday, Eastern High School
sponsored by sophomore class;
steak, chicken, homemade
noodles among main dishes;
public invited.

Mrs. Haggy is

A Shade Shallower Than Profound Given Surprise
I hadn't realized I could be heard that far when calling
a conference.
"Does anyone want to discuss the Paris peace talks?"
I asked.

"Does anyone want to delve into the topic of sex educa·
tion in the schools?" I suggested.
"You're wondering how we can save Lake Erie, right?"

"O.K.," I said desperately, " maybe you'd like to talk
about geography again. Did you ever find Alaska,
Cissy?"
"You said it was that pink blob at the top of the map,"
she replied petulantly, "and that's why I failed my test."
"I'm sorry," I apologized. "I wasn't wearing my
glasses when you asked and how did I know you had
spilled pudding on the book!"

"O.K., I'm ready," I declared. " Doesn't anybody have
a profound question?"
"Where's the bathroom ?" Harvey whimpered.

I called everyone within hearing to a conference. I
said "Mother wants you to know she is concerned about
you~ constant search for wisdom and that kind of stuff.
Ask me a searching question ."

"May I stay for supper?" a strange voice asked. It
was Harvey-a th~ee-year-old who lives two blocks away.

Pomeroy Area Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode and
daughter, Connie Sue, of Circleville were holiday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White,
Keno. Mr. and Mrs. White were
recently in New Vienna to visit
their daughter, Mrs. Henry
Penn and family.
The ninth birthday of Janelle
Kelly was observed with a
dinner party Monday evening at
the home of her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dabo,
Lincoln Heights. Also attending
were Janelle's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Kelly, and Tommy.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Glaze,
Mike, Sandy, and Robert of
Columbus were weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. William
Radford and family. Mary
Radford, home for the holidays,
returned to Columbus with the
Glaze family. Mary is in nurses
training at the Riverside
Methodist Hospital.
Mrs.
Charles
Warner,
Ebenezer St., has returned
home from a holiday visit with
her son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. John Sewell of
Marietta. Other guests for New
Year's at the Sewell home were
Mrs. Warner's granddaughter,
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. (Dixie)
Schiller and sons, Freddie and
Randy of York, Pa.
Mrs. Ray Warner and Dr.
Marvin Warner of London were
holiday visitors of Mrs. Jean
Warner and family. Miss Linda

Warner, who is employed in
Parkersburg, was home for the
holiday.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Werry,
Hundred, W. Va. were holiday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Werry and Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Hannahs. Other visitors of the
Hannahs family were Mr. and
Mrs. C. H. Wise, Jr., Waverly.
Bob Grueser has returned to
Glenville State College after
spending the holidays here with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Grueser. The family was joined
for a holiday visit by Miss
Sharon Fischer, Marietta.
Mrs. Hugh Bearhs has
returned from a 10 day visit in
Endicott, N.Y. with her son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Barrie Phillips and their
daughters, Jill, Michele, and
Heather.
Rose Ginther of Pomeroy,
Route 3, returned home
Saturday after visiting her son,
James Ginther, and his family
in Middletown. Mrs. Ginther's
grandson, George, telephoned
Christmas weekend fom
Lackland Air Force Base in
Texas where he is stationed.

u

MENT
NEWS OF YOUR
MERCHANDISE OR
VICE TO READERS_ THIS
ATMOSPHERE OF IMMEDIANCY
OF THE NEWSPAPER CARRIES
OVER TO THE ADVERTISING.
THIS IS NOT TRUE OF ANY
OTHER MEDIUM.

Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs
were holiday guests of their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. William Davis, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Davis were
home from California.

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
JANUARY 7-8-9

·BIG 3 NEW YEAR
SUPER SAVINGS

2 99¢
69¢
SYRUP
4::s89¢
CORN
22 oz.
btls.

LOG CABIN
PANCAKE AND WAFFLE

24 oz.
btl.

whole kernel

Carnival Brand

LYONS MARKET ?

:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:··:~;:O:;:·:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;::J;

Right
Reserved

To
Limit
~uantities

SUPERIORS BRAND

SLAB BACON
WHOLE OR HALF SLAB
SKINNER

NOODLES

2
16 oz. boxes

79~

f!?l:i'P11 Potatoes_____51

lb.

~,

Produce Buys

CARROTS
lib. pkg. 1

oe

lb

e

1

Fri~d
bag

1

REG. 45 4 HOLSUM

Cinnamon
ROLLS

39~

79

c

TURKEY CHICKEN BEEF

4

PIES

89~

Low Prices are yours at Big 3
Stores -

No Stamps. Games or Gimmicks
BIG 3

BUTTERMILK

¥zgai.49C

Crinkle Cut French

BANQUET
POT PIES

Dairy Specials

12 Ol. pkg.

AMERICAN£9C
CHEESE
U

:::: •

2~~1.19

MAXWELL HOUSE

KRAFT

.

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ONIONS------3 bag 25

REG., DRIP, ELEC. PERK

AT RACINE:.

.~~~~:;:::;·;:;:;:
[: W;AID
CROSS SONS 1.
:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;::+:::·.~:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;: .;:;:;:;.+·~!::;:;:::::;:::;:;:·:;..·/:~ ·:~"'lo.::-:.·:·x~-'-~

WIENERS

!ellow Globe

COFFEE 3lb.2.49

..

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

:::

-

GIANT
IVORY
LIQUID

A sw·prise layette shower for
Mrs. Nellie Haggy was held at
the recent Christmas party of
the Meigs TOPS Knotchers
staged in the parlor of the
Pomeroy United
United
Methodist Church.
Members exchanged gifts an
punch and low calorie cookies
were served. On the basis of
weight loss during the last
quarter of 1970, Mrs. Nina
Theiss was crowned quarterly
queen. First runner-up was
Mrs. Edith Gardner, and second
runner-up was Mrs. Jo
Stalnaker.
Mrs. Edith Gardner was
queen for December and twice
during the month was weekly
queen. Runners-up during the
month were Mrs. Stalnaker,
Dec. 22; Mrs. Theiss, Dec. 29.
Mrs. Joan Eads was runner-up
for the month.

By BETTY CANARY
A parent can't turn around any more without being
told his children are restlessly searching for the truth in
all things. They ask profound, searching questions, we
are told. They ask probing questions about the real meaning of life, liberty and the pursuit of relevance.
Now I don't know how this sort of rumor gets started.
It's ob~ious that today's youth are most interested in the
world around them. However, as anyone who has been a
parent longer than 10 minutes can tell you, children are
not always asking import~nt qu~stions. D~ys can go byweeks even-without their askmg anythmg other than,
"What's for supper?" and "Where's Alaska, anyway?"
If anything really bothers a parent, it's thinking that
children don't believe HE is relevant. Or at least up-todate.
I've been a bit worried about my children. Sure, they
had asked a couple of times for new shoestrings. And my
eldest even asked if he could make some long-distance
calls before running up another big bill. But not once in
the past week have any of them queried me about my
stand on air pollution or checked into my attitude toward
throwing myself in front of a tank in order to demonstrate my faith in democracy or anything important.

•

POST
TOASTIES 1!ox01.l9~
EXPIRES .:_ ________ l-9-71

�������</text>
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