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                  <text>Ohio Lags

•

...•

Now You Know

VOL. XXVI

•

•
•

POMEROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

1

1 ~ews

By United Press International

NEW YORK - THEffi WILDCAT ~RIKE over, city police
patrolled their beats as usual today. But they were working
without a contract, their union was in a turmoil and the major
issues of parity and amnesty were unresolved. Amid shouts of
"sellout" and "strike, strike," delegates of the Patrolmen's
Benevolent Association (PBA) voted Tuesday to end the six-day
walkout despite the strong opposition of many rank-and-file
members.
PBA President Edward J. Kiernan, who was saved from
physical assault at the end of the meeting by a phalanx of guards,
had opposed the unprecedented wildcat action from its inception.

Oil slick Spreading

' r1

Becky

I
I

SAN FRANCISCO - BAY AREA volunteers - including
hippies - by the thousands today worked to help save their
beaches and wildlife from a huge oil spill of toxic fuel oil from a
damaged Standard Oil Co. tanker. "The phone never stops
ringing," said Jack Charles, a young volunteer working on an
"ecology switchboard" set up at a San Francisco radio station,
KSAN, to help coordinate volunteer efforts.
A spokesman for Standard Oil, which committed some 500
employes to the round-the-dock effort, said the company "deeply
appreciates" calls from volunteers but he requested that citizens
stop telephoning. "We've had so many calls," he said, "that our
(Continued on page 14)

ANNIE CHAPMAN was one of the members of Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority who braved freezing
weather Tuesday night to conduct a house-to-house drive in
Pomeroy and Middleport for the benefit of the annual March
of Dimes fund drive.

PITTSBURGH
(UPI) When city garbage truck driver James Fitzgerald got out of
bed Tuesday morning, he
should have thought twice and
just got back in.
Fitzgerald is probably having
a tough time telling his friends
about what happened to him
while on the job collecting leftover garbage from the 11-&lt;lay
citywide garbage collector's
strike.
At 2 p.m. Fitzgerald and his
two helpers were driving a city
Bureau of Refuse truck near the
Downtown section when his 12

1971 Legion Teant 'Assured

•
•

Commander Leonard Jewell
and Frank Vaughan reported on
the Jan. 10 Eighth district
winter conference at Wellston
Tuesday night to Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion.
Vaughan also reported on a
"Project Freedom" meeting he
attended in Athens on Jan . 14
where speakers were Col.
Norris Overly, one of the few
prisoners released by the North
Vietnamese, and Mrs. Jane
Smith, whose husband is either
a prisoner of war or lost in
action. The meeting was one of
a number in Ohio to enlist public
support of a campaign to secure
signatures protesting the
treatment
of
i\mcric;'n
prisoners
of
war
in
Hanoi. The door-to-&lt;loor can-

vass in Ohio will be held in May.
The membership chairman,
first vice-commander Raymond
Jewell, reported membership to
date at 308, 12 below the quota.
Don Hunnel announced the
Middleport and Pomeroy posts'
participation in the 1970
baseball program. The Drew
Webster and Feeney Bennett
Posts will again sponsor a
county team in 1971. Hunnel and
George Nesselroad were named
as
the
Pomeroy
post
representatives on the district
board .
Commander Jewell announced a meeting of the
birthday observance committee
for 7:30 p.m. on Jan . 28 at the
po:&gt;t home and a past commander meeting w:~s an -

e Down,(Many)to Go

With the Feb. 3 deadline for
the filing of petitions of candidacy in the May primary
elections just two weeks away,
only one petition has been filed.
Filing a petition of candidacy
for mayor of Middleport on
Monday, Jan. 11, "was John
Zerkle, Republican, who has
served as a councilman in
Middleport for 20 years but has
never sought another village or
county office. Since that time
there have been no petitions
filed with the Meigs County
Board of Elections in Pomeroy.
There has been some activity
reported in the circulation of
petitions, however. This appears to be primarily in Middleport. Little interest so far
has been noted in Pomeroy.
1~. •
!,.c..~ primaries, Middleport voters will nomirtate
candidates for mayor, clerktreasurer, two council seats,
and two seats on the board of
public affairs. C. 0. Fisher is

rze1 s :

Key issues unresolved

f

0

U.S. helicopter gunships, fighters, strategic bombers and
transport planes were supporting South Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian troops.
"Operations out of country
involve questions not only of
U.S. forces security but also the
broader requirements of national security of the United
States," military spokesmen
said today. Official American
sources interpreted that to
mean "the rules for release of
information on out of country
operations includes both military and political consideralions.l'
S uth Vi~tnamese troops reported killing 33 Viet Cong in
their drive tc recapture Highway 4 linking l&gt;hnom Penh and
the port of Kompong Som.
Cambodian troops approaching
Pich Nil Pass from the North
reported "a heavy engagement
with the enemy" shortly after
noon today. Military spokesmen
said less than nine miles
separated the two Allied units
approaching each other from
the North and South.

.•. zn

nounced for tonight at 7:30, also
at the post home. A new
members, Steve Eblin, World
War II veteran, was accepted.
The department Mid-Winter
Conference was announced for
Sunday, Jan. 31, in Columbus. A
Saturday night social for
members, wives and guests was
announced for Jan. 30 at the
post home . A veterans dance to
honor Vietnam veterans was
announced for Feb. 26 at the
Lancaster Post.
Joe Struble reported on the
annual Americanism test
conducted in the county by the
Pollleroy. Middleport and
Rutland Posts for high school
students. i\ rabbit dinner was
st&gt;rved by Paul C:~sci, assisted
by Hoy Reuter .

TEN CENTS

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

r---------------------------,
7\.T
•
B . ..f.

:

Cloudy, not as cold, chance of
snow flurries mainly northeast
today. Lows tonight to lower
20s. Cloudy, warmer Thursday,
chance of rain central and
south.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1971

Fights Rage
On 2 Fronts

feet high and eight feet wide
truck skidded on icy pavement
and smashed into a policeman
on his way to work.
After the collision, the huge
truck blocked traffic near the
Seventh St. Bridge and wreckers were dispatched to the
scene and succeeded in getting
the truck back on its wheels.
That's when it happened.
The workers started dragging
the rear end forward so the
truck, valued a: $14,000, could
be towed to the garage for repairs. But the engine was in
gear. No one knew it. And the
truck moved to.vard the nearby
Allegheny Riv(:r.
The truck snapped the wrecker's tow chain, broke through
a wooden brrrier and pushed
aside a parked station wagon
and kept gomg. And kept going.
Helpless b•standers watched
the yellow l;arbage truck become the ye low submarine as
the truck floc. ted slowly out in to
the river's deepest channel and
began to submerge . And sank .

SPOil SPORTS
FOLKESTONE, England
!UPI) - Custt ms officials have
put a damper on a plan by
divers to salv1ge 60,000 bottles
of champagn(: from a 15-yearold French wreck and sell them
at a cheap pri::e . They told the
men they wo11ld have to pay
duty on each bottle.

said Gilligan. "It will be the
thrust of our development program-and let me assure you
that even though you may not
hear about Gilligan's Guerillas
shanghai-ing industries from
other regions, and even though
we are not planning embassies
in Montevideo, or Moscow, New
Delhi, we will have an energetic, purposeful and-1 hopehighly successful developtneni
program."
"Our development program
will be predicated on the basic
theory that we must first establish logical priorities to promote
balanced growth," said Gilligan.
"We will continue to promote
industrial growth, although emphasis may be shifted to the
high growth and high technology
industries," said Gilligan. " But
we will not neglect the rapidly
growing service of agrobusiness."

Weather

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs- Mason Area

NO. 195

SAIGON (SPI) -The South
Vietnamese Command reported
heavy fighting on two fronts in
neighboring Cambodia today,
including a massive new
campaign against a Communist
border sanctuary and a drive
against a mountain pass on
vital Highway 4.
The new outbreak of heavy
action appeared to be shaping
up into a decisive dry-season
battle between South Vietnamese and Communist forces for
control of Cambodian infiltration routes the Communists
lneed ta. support theJr c.ampa1gn
in Vietnam.
Disclosure of the major
fighting coincided with the
arrival of Cambodian Premier
Lon Nol on his first state visit
to South Vietnam today.
In Bangkok, the Thai government said Prime Minister
Thanom Kittikachorn also
would go to Saigon Saturday for
talks on the military situation
in Vietnam and Cambodia.
Military sources disclosed
that in the past several days

Industrial Race

The Daily Sentinel

Mohair, the coat of the angora
goat prized as a fiber because it
is more lustrous and smoother
than wool, has those qualities
because the microscopically
small scales that cover each
hair are more spread out than
those of wool.

'

ID

race," said Gilligan. ''And even
Giliigan said a balanced, the state on the upswing.
more alarming, unless remedial state wide program of economic
"That, of course, is a major
action is taken, the state's posi- development is needed to put goal of this administration,"
tion in relation to the rest of
the nation will continue to worsen in the 1970's."
Gilligan said in per capita
Solid Guerrilla Front Cracked
income, Ohio ranked 13th
By United P ress International
among the states in 1960 and by
The semiofficial Cairo newspaper AI Ahram said today
1968 had slipped to 16th.
the central committee of the Palestinian Guerrilla
"By 1975, it is estimated Ohio
will rank 19th in per capita inmovement has reversed its stand and agreed to support a
come and will be only slightly
political settlement for the Middle East crisis.
above the national averages,"
Al Ahram said in a dispatch from Amman that the
said Gilligan.
decision to chart a ''new course" in guerrilla policy was
"In the growth of employm ade by the 27-man central committee at a recent meeting
ment-which the last administhat reviewed the entire status of the movement following the
tration considered its gr eatest
J ordanian civil war in September and renewed fighting there
triumph-Ohio has in fact fallen
earlier this month.
behind the national rate of
The newspaper said a number of guerrilla leaders adgrowth," said Gilligan. "Bemitted they were wrong in attacking Egypt's acceptance of
tween 1960 and 1968 employU.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers' peace initia tive
ment in the United States rose
tha t lead to the cease-fire involving Egypt, Jordan and Israel
2.2 per cent annually - but in
and Middle East talks at the United Nations .
Ohio it rose only 1.8 per cent
per year."

CLEVELAND (UPIJ- Gov.
John J . Gilligan said today
most economic indicators show
that Ohio has "fallen behind in
the industrial race" and it will
get worse unless remedial action is taken.
"All of yo:.t know that the
previous administration spent a
great deal of time and money
looking for new industry for
Ohio and that it spent as much
time and effort telling Ohioans
of the success of that effort,"
said Gilligan in remarks prepared for delivery to the Cleveland Growth Association.
"Plant investment is good and
has been, and that's fine as far
as it goes ...but it is far from
the whole picture," said Gilligan. "The plain truth is quite
different and quite disturbing.
"By most economic indicators, Ohio has fallen behind in
the industrial development

LAST DAY- Dick Vaughan of Pomeroy beat the deadline on obtaining dog licenses
by one day Tuesday when he bought four-at $2 each- from Mrs. Jane Warner of the
Meigs County Auditor's office. After today a $1 penalty is charged. Last year 3,129 tags were
purchased, compared to 2,256 as of Tuesday. The fee for tags is $2. A $1 penalty is assessed if
purchased after the deadline .

•

currently mayor; Gene Grate is
clerk-treasurer and the two
seats on council are now filled
by Charles i3yer and Lawrence
Stewart. Richard Gress and
Jack Hawley are incumbents on
the board of public aff&amp;irs
whose terms will expire this
year.
In Pomeroy voters will name
candidates for the mahor's post,
filled now by Charles Legar; the
clerk's position, held by Jane
Walton; two council seats, filled
now . by Robert Hysell and
Franklin Rizer, and one seat on
the board of public affairs now
held by E. F. Robinson.
Candidates have until 4 p.m.
on Feb. a to file their petitions.
The board of elections offic~ is
ope. /-pm 1 t~ 4 p.m., Mo rL')f·
through Friday, for the cor.
venience of candidates. Independent candidates as well as
Republicans and Democrats
must file by the Feb. 3 deadline.

Gil~nore

MASON - Mason County's
Fair Queen, Miss Becky
Gilmore will be in Clarksburg
Friday with other queens of
West Virginia to participate in
the 1971 Miss West Virginia
State Fair Pageant at the UpTowner Inn.
Miss Gilmore, a head
majorette and a senior at
Wahama High School, is the

EXTENDED WEATHER
Extended Ohio weather
outlook Friday through
Sunday:
Chance of rain Friday with
highs ranging from the upper
30s north to 40s south. A little
colder Saturday and Sunday
with chance of snow flurries
northeast Sunday. Highs
Saturday and Sunday h1 the
30s north to the lower 40s
south. Lows at night in the
upper 20s and the lower 30s.

B erth a cana d ay
ln Council Race
The wife of former Pomeroy
Mayor D. A. Canaday declared
her candidacy for a seat on
Pomeroy council in the May
primaries. Also today, incumbent mayor Charles Legar
said he will not seek reelection.
Announcing her candidacy for
council was Mrs. Bertha
Canaday, Lincoln Drive, a
lifelong resident of Pomeroy
and wife of Delmar A. Canaday,
twi~ mayor of Pomero during
Mrs.
the 1950s, -. R~publi ..
Car,.aday 1'- the daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. 'Vill Blebman, both of High~t., Pomeroy.
Charles Lega , who has
served as mayor 1f Pomeroy

in Pageant
t

daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Gilmore of New Haven.
She will appear with other
contestants Friday evening at 6
p.m. on television station
WBOY and will take part in a
style show later the same
evening.
Saturday will be filled with
one activity after another,
highlighted with crowning of the
state queen during the evening
·
banquet.
Becky will be accompanied
by her parents. Others from
here going include Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Otis
FitzRandolph, and Junior Fair
members, David Smith of
Mason, and Randy Jackson of
Southside
BECKY GILMORE

the past 14 years, said that "at
this time" he does not intend to
file for nomination and
reelection to the mayor's job.
One woman, Mrs. Elma
Russell, Union Ave., is
presently on council.

Gallia-Meigs
~haring in

CAP Grant
COLUMBUS (UPI) - More
than $2.2 million was-~llocated
to organiZations in O~o for the
training of 1,955 unemployed
and underemployed Ohioans.
The U. S. Department of
Labor awarded the largest
contract, $1.7 million, to the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services to arrange on -the -job
training for 1,725 persons.
Gallia-Meigs Corporation for
Community Action, HockingAthens-Perry Tri-County CAP.
and Ironton-Lawrence County
Area CAO were awarded $95,000
each to help train 50 persons in
each area.
The
CAP
Corp.
o~
Washington-Morgan Counties
was allocated $95,270 to train 25
p~rsons and another $104,500
went to the Leading Creek
Conservancy District in Meigs
County to help 55 workers.

Park Cabins '
Fees up For
New Increases.

DINNER SET
Knights of Pythias and Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pyth~an Sisters family potluck
ADMITTED- None.
dinner will be Saturday at the K
DISCHARGED - Vanessa
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Public
of P Hall in Gallipolis. Serving Folmer, Garth Smith, David
hearings were scheduled here
will be at 6:30 p.m. Meat and Hendricks, Michelle McDaniel,
today on proposed rule changes
drinks are furnished.
Carol Wolfe, Robert Cummins. and increases in fees for
camping and the use of cabins
at state parks. The Ohio
Division
of Parks and
Recreation proposes to increase
daily camping fees 25 to 50
cents, depending on ac-.
commodations.
Ralph Vanzant, assistant
chief of the division, said fees
for state cabins would u·-~
$20 a week for del~
if
the proposal is ad
Pd $10
a week for sleepbljtabins.

Museum Purchase
To be Considered

1933 FOOTBALL TEAM (5-2-1)- Front row, 1 tor. George Hobstetter, Mgr., Jed Mees,
Howard Seidenabel, Roland Spencer, Charles Schorn, Charles Blackwell, Charles Murray,
Leo Vaughan; second row, John McKenzie, Ed Baer~ George Kindle, Robert Blackwell,
Albert Russell, Chester Roush, Shirley Guinther, George Jenkins. Back row, Coach Farnham, Paul (Levio) Cacsi, Clarence Andrews, Chauncey Shumaker, Karl Kloes, Lloyd
(Dinty) Moore, George Joachim, Maurice Thornton, Charles Kaiser, Carl House, Asst
coach.
"The 1933 football team also had a soot at the SEOAL title, but a 0-0 tie with Middleport
in the climactic Thanksgiving-Day 'super game' also denied this Panther team," writes
Paul Clifford. See Page 4 today for another in Clifford's series on the Golden Era and Ray
Farnham in PHS athletic history.

The quarterly meeting of the
trustees of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
will be held at the EpiscopaJ
Church Parish House ui
Pomeroy, Thursday, Jan.. 21,
1:30 to 3 p.m.
Major items of business
include consideration of
option and purchase of
property and the
speech contest.
money is needed by
for the operation
Everyone u .........,....
CQunty,

�St
l Autopsy Reveals Boxer
Haywood Shines In First ar Had Lung Congestion
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 20,1971

too ... perhaps a bit more than
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
Haywood, who returned to his
United Press International
"It's good to come back and adopted hometown Tuesday
night and made his most
, play," Spencer Haywood said.
The Detroit Pistons enjoyed it impressive performance as a

Ouers Thump
Big Red 76-57
By United Press International
Otterbein kept its Ohio Conference slate clean Tuesday
night by stopping Denison 7frfJ7.
• The Otters took a 33-25 lead
into the second half and withstood a brief Big Red rally to
post their ninth season win in
ten games, including four in
the OC.
Denison fell to a 4-7 and 2-5
mark.
In other Ohio college basketball action, Hiram downed
Baldwin-Wallace in another OC
game 75-67, Kenyon captured
tts first OC win of the season
against Muskingum 97-81, Ohio
Dominican beat Wilberforce 9382, Oberlin edged Allegheny
(Pa.) 73-ti9 and Marietta stop-

ped Bethany (W.Va.) 110-84.
Thirteen games were scheduled tonight.
Tom Brewer came up with
26 big points to push Marietta's
record to 10-3. The Pioneers
had no trouble, steadily increasing their lead.
,
Marty Hunt poured in 27
points, 19 in the first half, as
Kenyon took its initial OC win
and bettered the record to 5-8.
The Muskies are now 5-7 and

defeated Portland, 123-111; Los
Angeles tripped Philadelphia,
134-114; and San Francisco beat
Cincinnati, 116-108.
"Things are going a little
better on the court," Haywood
said. "Two weeks ago when I
came into the league I wasn't
in shape. As far as shooting
and rebounding is concerned
I'm probably at my best right
now."
Dave Bing scored eight of his
game-high 27 points in the last
3: 58 and Bob Lanier tallied si.x
of his 19 in that stretch to bring
Detroit from a 94-92 deficit to its
win. Len Wilkens backed
Haywood with 22 points.
The Cavaliers scored their
fifth victory in eight games
with the Braves as Cleveland
has captured only seven wins
all season. John Johnson led the
way with 24 points and Bobby
Smith had 22.
Mike Riordan netted all six of
his points in the e.xtra session

member of the National Basketball Association with 24 points
and 20 rebounds. It was his
first start and he played 46
minutes.
The Pistons beat Haywood
and the rest of the Seattle
SuperSonics, 106-102, for their
fifth straight win.
In other NBA games Cleveland topped Buffalo, 111-79;
New York edged San Diego,
117-113, in overtime; Chicago

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press lnternationa I
Parkersburg (W. Va.) 62
Marietta 52
Licking Valley 57 Johnstown 46
Granville 85 Lakewood 5:,
Johnston Northridge 73 Licking
Heights 48
Utica 63 Watkins Memorial 34
McMechen (W. Va.) Bishop
Donahue 64 Seton Central 59
Bellaire78Wheeling (W. Vii':) 52
Skyvue 65 Woodsfield 62
Adena 77 Jewett 56
Brilliant 81 Mt. Pleasant 68
Lakeland 62 Cadiz 61

for the Knicks as New York
snapped a four-game losing
streak. Bill Bradley had 27
points, Walt Frazier 24 and
Willis Reed 21 to offset 29
points from Rockets' Elvin
Hayes, 27 by Stu Lantz and 23
by Calvin Murphy.
Chet Walker's 32 points and
27 by Jerry Sloan enabled the
Bulls to stampede by the Trail
Blazers. Leroy Ellis and rookie
Geoff Petrie put in 27 and 26
for the losers.
Jerry West scored 33 points
and teammate Keith Erickson
tallied a season high of 29 to
pace Los Angeles. Archie Clark
of the 76ers led all scorers with

38.
Nate Thurmond's 28 points
led a balanced attack for San
Francisco a!&gt; the Warriors
streaked to their fourth straight
victory. Thurmond also pulled
down a game-high 23 rebounds.
Tom Van Arsdale paced the
Royals with 30 points.

wife, Geraldine, when she
returned home from a trip. The
coroner's office said he probably had been dead five days.
Herman said tests also
showed that Liston suffered
from a hardening of the heart

SAVE •1.00
TANK FULL

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

Certified Gas Stations

CERTIFIED OIL CO.
992-9981

538 W. MAIN

POMEROY

(We honor BankAmericard and Master
Charqe)

Tom Lubert paced Hiram
with 27 points as a Baldwin
Wallace comeback attempt in
the second half fell short.
Oberlin won its fourth in nine
games as Vic Guerrieri scored
21 points.

Brisker paced the Pittsburgh
attack with a game high 30
points, while George Lehmann
led Carolina with 29.
The Floridians beat New
York, 112-107, in the opener at
Pittsburgh. Dennis Stewart's
layup with 3:11 to go put the
Floridians in front for good at
103-101. Mack Calvin led the
winner's second half rally with
20 of his 38 points. Rick Barry
was New York's high man with
25 points.
Dan Issei, leading scorer in
the ABA, shared game honors
with teammate Louie Dampier
as they each tallied 26 points in
Kent:ucky's 117-110 triumph
over Memphis.
Darel Carrier's hook shot
with 2:22 left in the third
quarter p~ the Coloqels a.~ead,
84-8:1, aM left Mem}&gt;.his playing
catchup ball the rest of the
game. Jimmy Jones led the
losers with 21 points.
Texas walloped Denver, 148127, in the only other league
action as John Beasley netted
27 points and Wayne Hightower
added 26. Larry Cannon scored
27 for Denver.

•
ABA Standings6
· By United Press International
THE DAILY SENTINEL
•
East
DEVOTED TO
w. L. Pet. GB
INTEREST OF
Virginia
33 16 .673 ...
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Kentucky
29 22 .569 5
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed .
20 26 . 435 1Jl/2
New York
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Pittsburgh
22 30 .423 12112
City Editor
Carolina
21 29 .420 121/2
Published daily except
20 30 .400 131/2 Saturday
Floridians
by The Ohio Valley
West
Publishing Company, 111
•
W. L. Pet. GB Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Indiana
31 16 .660 ...
45769. Business Office Phone
31 17 .646 112 992·2156, Editorial Phone 992.
Utah
2157.
Memphis
26 23 .531 6
Second class postage paid at
Denver
18 29 .383 13
Pomeroy , Ohio.
Texas
18 31 .367 14
National advertising
Tuesday's Results
reoresentatiye
Bottinelli ·
Floridians 112 New York 107
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
Pittsburgh 136 Carolina 125
St ., New York City , New York.
Subscription
rates :
Kentucky 117 Memphis 110
Delivered by carrier where
Texas 148 Denver 127
available
50
cents
per
week;
Utah 116 Indiana 106
By Motor Route where carrier
, (Only games scheduled)
service not available : One
•
Wednesday's Games
.nonth $1.75. By mail in Ohio
Virginia vs. Carolina
and W. Va .• One year $14.00.
at Charlotte Six months $7.25 . Three
Floridians at New York
months $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times .
Denver at Memphis
•Sentinel.
(Only games scheduled)

·New Shipment!

.. Super- Right'• Quality -

No Bone, Less Waste

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST

Prices Good Thru Saturday, January 23rd.
"Super- Right" Qualify

c

Chuck Steaks
B~~~E
lb.

68¢

lb.
/

Pork Steaks

:T~TL~

•

•

Fresh Pork Liver

..... age
5gc:
79c:

•

Pork Loin Roast
•
QUARTERED LOIN
Pork Chops 9 to II CHOPS

59c:

'"·59c

•

•

H~~F

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2-4.

Promotion Pays
Off For Utah 5
By United Press International
Willie Wise's promotion has
paid off for the Utah Stars.
Wise, promoted to starting
forward when Wayne Hightower
was traded two weeks ago,
scored 23 points and helped the
Stars pull within a half game of
first place in the American
Basketball Association's Western Division Tuesday night
with a 116-106 victory over the
Indiana Pacers.
Wise held Indiana's Roger
Brown to only eight points and
blocked si.x of his shots. Two
other players acquired in the
deals also helped, Glen Combs
with 18 points and Ron Boone
with 12.
Utah's Red Robbins played
one of his best games of the
season with 18 points and 20
rebounds, .and Merv Jackson
contributed 14 points for the
Stars.
The Pittsburgh Condors ralUed from a 14-point &lt;\eficit
before hometown fans in the
nightcap of a doubleheader to
defeat Carolina, 136-125, and
take over fourth place in the
ABA's Eastern Division. John

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI ) Former heavyweight champion
Sonny Liston died of lung
congestion brought on by a poor
oxygen and nutrient blood
supply to the heart muscles,
Clark County Coroner Mark
Herman ruled Tuesday.
"The autopsy and microscopic and toxicologic examinations filed to provide an exact
cause of the shortage of
nutrient blood and oxygen to
heart muscles," said Herman.
He said traces of morphine
and codeine were found in the
body tissues but "not in
sufficient amounts which could
be considered as causing
death."
Herman said the amounts of
morphine and codeine found in
tissues corresponded to the
amounts which would normally
result from a breakdown of
heroin in the body.
Liston's body was found in
his plush home Jan. 5 by his

muscle and pulmonary emphysema, a disease involging
enlarged air sacs in the lungs.
Dr. James Clarke, a Las
Vegas pathologist, conducted
the gross pathologic and
microscopic examinations. The
California Toxicology Service in
Los Angeles conducted extensive examinations of body
tissues and used various tests
to rule out 30 to 40 drugs as
possible causes of death.

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�------ ---~--------------------...----------------......- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....- - -.......11""11......

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 20, 1971

•

Scots, Tigers Remain On Top In UPI Ratings
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The unbeaten Scots of Colwnbus Walnut Ridge held fort today for
the third straight week at the
Points top of the United Press Inter-

COLUMBUS (UPil The
United Press International Ohio
high school Board of Coaches
ratings, (with first place votes
and won-lost records
in
parentheses).

Class AAA

•

Team
1. Columbus Walnut Ridge
( 17) ( 11-0) 305
2. Boardman
(B) {10-0) 294
3. Findlay
(3) (1 1-0) 225
4. Columbus Eastmoor
(10-0) 148
5. Lakewood St. Edward
(12-0) 128
6. Dayton Dunbar
( 1) (7-ll 115
7. Steubenville {1) {9-0) 106
B. (tie) Zanesville
(10-2) 49
8.(tie)Barberton
(9-1) 49
10. Cleveland East Tech
{1) {10-2) 46
Second 10: 11. Middletown 39;
12. Oak Hills 38; 13. Cincinnati
Withrow 34;
14.
Canton
McKinley 32; 15. Beavercreek
25; 16. Dayton Roosevelt 21; 17.
Hamilton Taft 19; 18. Columbus
South 16; 19. Toledo Central
Catholic and Toledo Woodward
15 each.
Others with eight or more
points: Cleveland St. Ignatius
(1) 14; Cincinnati Hughes and
Cincinnati St. Xavier 13 each;
Celina 12; Colerain 9; Toledo
Macomber 8.

Class AA
Team
Points
1. Waverly
(10) (9-1) 189
2. Columbus Ready
{6) {12-0) 156
3. Delphos St. John's
{ 1 ) ( 9-ll 123
4. Canton Lehman
(2) (10-1) 106
5. Licking Valley
{ 1) ( 10-0) 99
6. (tie) Southeastern {Ross)
{13-0) 88
6. (tie) Youngstown Liberty
(3) ( 10-0) BB
8. Lima Central Catholic
(9-1) 84
9. Wellsville
(1) {10-0) 47
10. Napoleon
{2) {11-0) 45
Second 10: 11. Dayton Jefferson 41; 12. Rossford 33. 13.
Wynford 29; 14. Bellefontaine
28; 15. Steubenville Central 26;
16. Garaway 22; 17. Tipp City
(1) 17; 18. Youngstown North
16; 19. Buckeye Valley, Castalia
Margaretta, Elyria Catholic
and Champion 15 each.
Others with eight or more
points:
Lima
Bath
and
Shadyside 14 each; Delta and
Akron St. Vincent 13 each;
Coshocton 10; Lexington 9;
River, Poland and Federal
Hocking 8 each.

Class A

•••

-..

....••
"'
•••

"'

ll

-

••

•••

Team
l. Ridgedale
{6)
2. Fort Loramie

Points
(8-ll 133

{2) {14-0) 129
3. Sebring

{ 1l

(8-1) 110

4. Lorain Catholic
{3) {10-0) 104

5. Sidney Lehman
{3)

6. Continental

{9-l)
(11 -1)

93
88
79

7. New Athens
(1) {11-1)
8. Fort Recovery
{1) {12-1) 65
9. Convoy Crestview
{1) {10-0) 45
10. Zanesville Rosecrans
(I) (9·3) 43
Second 10: 11 . Yorkville 41;
12. Zane Grace ( Guer!lsey) {2)
39; 13. Miller City 37; 14.
Mansfield St. Peter's ( 1) 34; 15.
East Canton {1) 33 ; 16. Indian
Valley South and Maplewood 28
each; 18. Zane Trace (Ross) 27;
19. Warren Consolidated 26; 20.
Oakwood {Paulding) 25.
Others with eight or more
points : Mechanicsburg {1) and
New Knoxville 17 each;
Cleveland Lutheran East {1) 15;
New Madison 14; Lancaster
Fisher 13; McDonald {1) 12;
Columbus Academy and Marion
Pleasant 10 each; Windham,
Bloom Carroll; Arlington and
Strasburg 9 each; Lincolnview,
Collins Western Reserve and
Hillsdale B each .

Cavs Triumph
SYRACUSE,N.Y.(UPI)- The
Cleveland Cavaliers had another big win Tuesday night, but.
if a team has won only seven
all season every win is big.
John Johnson scored 24 points
to lead the fledgling Cavaliers
to their 111-79 win over the
Buffalo Braves, who also are
new this season in the National
Basketball Association.
The Cavs took a 34-17 lead at
the end of the first period and
were never in trouble. Bobby
Smith added 22 points to the
winning effort.
The victory put Cleveland's
record at 7-46.
The Cavs were idle tonight.

national Ohio high school Board
of ·coaches Class AAA ratings.
Waverly, 9-1 this season,
maintained its No. 1 spot in
the Class AA ratings, also for
the third straight week, and
Ridgedale of Marion County
was the top Class A team, although
by a slim margin, for
Benjamin F r a n k 1in proposed the idea of daylight the second consecutive week.
Walnut Ridge, which set a
saving time as far back as
Colwnbus City League scoring
1785.

record by beating Colwnbus
North 115-74, increased its lead
over runnerup Boardman to 11
points from the seven-point
margin it held last week, 305294.
Findlay remained in third
place, 69 points behind Boardman and 77 points ahead of
fourth place Colwnbus Eastmoor.
Lakewood St. Edward moved

up to fifth, followed by Dayton
Dunbar, Steubenville, Zanesville and Barberton tied for
eighth, and Cleveland East
Tech.
Waverly, the only member
of the top 10 AA teams to have
a loss before last weekend,
picked company when three
other teams suffered defeats.
Delphos St. John's dropped
from second to third after its

first loss of the season, with
Colwnbus Ready slipping back
into the runnerup spot which it
held the first week.
Lima Central Catholic, which
beat Delphos Sunday night after a loss to Lima Bath Saturday night, fell from fifth to
eighth. Canton Lehman, soundly beaten by Canton McKinley,
for its first loss, dropped from
third to fourth.

Pirates Host Wildcats Friday
Five games, including three
league affairs, are on tap this
week in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference.
Action begins Friday night
with the North Gallia Pirates
hosting Hannan Trace, Kyger
Creek traveling to Southwestern and Glouster playing at
Eastern.
Coach Paul Aikman's Pirates
are tied with Eastern for first
place in the league standings
after last week's 82-78 upset
victory at Eastern.
North Gallia has four league
encounters remaining with
Hannan Trace, Southwestern,
Southern and Kyger Creek.
Eastern has only Southern and

Kyger Creek left in league
competition.
Should both teams win their
remaining league games, the
league championship will end in
a tie, the first time since 1968,
when the league season ended
with a triple tie with Eastern,
North Gallia and Kyger Creek
sharing the crown.
The Pirates won their first
outing with Coach Paul Dillon's
Wildcats, 84-61 at Hannan
Trace.
Although somewhat stymied
in his last two outings, Arthur
Clark, North Gallia's 6-5 center,
continues to lead the SVAC in
scoring with a 22.3 average in
six league games.

Clark scored 13 points in the
Eastern victory and 13 points
the following evening in a losing
cause against Symmes Valley.
His scoring void has been taken
by the rapid development of
Roger Pelfrey, 6' senior guard,
and the Justus brothers, Dave,
6-3 senior forward and Larry, 64 junior forward.
Hannan Trace, holder of third
place in the league standings,
posted league victories over
Kyger Creek and Southern last
weekend.
Keith Swain and Larry
Cremeens were big offensive
stars in the KC victory.
Cremeens and Jerry Waugh, 6-1

senior forward, paced the attack against Southern.
The Wildcats are 6-5 overall
and 4-4 in the SVAC.
Two streaks will be on the line
at Southwestern when the
Kyger Creek Bobcats meet the
Southwestern Highlanders.
Kyger Creek has lost its last
seven straight games while
Coach Mel Carter's Highlanders have dropped 11 in a row.
Coach John Sang's Bobcats
have scored 402 points in six
league games, an average of 67
points per game, however, their
defense has permitted 69.1
points per league game.
Offensively, the Bobcats are
.

led by Dave White, 5-10 junior
guard, second leading scorer in
the conference, with a 21.3
average.
Ken Brown, 6-1 senior forward, has scored 118 points for a
19.7 average in SVAC competition.
Southwestern's leading offensive players are John Ehman, 6-3 senior center and
Larry Dillon, 6' senior guard.
KC won their previous
engagement this fall, 80-30.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eastern
Eagles will seek their 11th win
in 12 starts against the Glouster
Tomcats.
Eastern, paced by the outside

shooting of Howie Caldwell, 5-10
senior guard and the inside
scoring provided by 6-3 Dennis
Eichinger, junior center,
racked up seven straight league
wins this season and 24 in a row
over a three year span, before
1ast week's loss to North Gallia.
Eastern has scored 850 points
for an average of 77.2. On
defense, the Eagles have held
their opponents to 599 points or
an average of 54.4 points.
In Saturday games, Southern,
coached by Hilton Wolfe, Jr.,
travels to Southwestern and
Kyger Creek hosts Alexander.
Southern is 5-5 on the year and
3-3 in the SVAC.

0 k R d R. 'Have To Manage Now '-Sparky
a s an
lO
106-94 Def eat
High-scoring Oakland City College, paced by
Larry Harris' 29-point effort, outlasted Coach Art
Lanham's Rio Grande College Redmen 106-94 in a
Kentucky Intercollegiate Conference basketball
contest in Wood Memorial Gym at Oakland City
Ind., Tuesday night.
'
The triumph left the Oaks with a 12-5 season
record. Inside the KIAC, the Indiana quintet upped
its record to 5-2.
The Redmen dropped to 6-9
overall, and 3-5 in conference
play.
Tonight, Rio Grande will
battle Ohio Northern University
(2-10) at Ada.
Last night's contest was much
closer than the final score indicates. The visiting Redmen
jwnped out in front 4-0 on early
goals by Roger Bentley and
Harry Hairston, and maintained a lead over the Oaks until
Joe Trueblood put the home
club in front 12-11 with 17: 10 left
in the first half.
After that, it was a nip and
tuck affair. Rio built up a 25-21
lead (10:39) behind Tony Bass'
hot hand. However, after Larry
Harris put the Oaks on top 30-29
(7:55) the Indiana five built up a
10-point halftime lead, 53-43.
Rio came storming back
early in the second half to
overtake the Oaks 6~2 on
Bentley's two-pointer with 14:20
left in the game. Ron Lambert
upped Rio's lead to 67-63 with
13:30 remaining. Lovelass tied
it up 71-71 with 12:01 remaining,
then put the Oaks ahead for
keeps with a free throw.
Oakland never led more than
13 points until 35 seconds
remained ( 105-90). By that
time, three Rio players had
fouled out - Harry Hairston,
Sam Pulley and Wray Jordan.
The Redmen hit 40 of 78
shots from the field for 51.3 per
cent, and sank 14 of 25 free
throws for 56 per cent. Rio
collected 40 rebounds, eight by
Hairston, and conunitted 19
turnovers.
The Oaks hit 39 of 62 shots
from the field for a blistering 62

SAVE WITH GOBLE'S

STOP'N' SAVE
Seein ' is believin '

NEW YORK (UPI) -Bobby
Tolan, who'll be out until June,
wasn't too long removed from
surgery when they told him he
had a long distance call.
He picked up the phone alongside his hospital bed in Cincinnati and Sparky Anderson was
on the line from his home in
Thousand Oaks, Calif.
"Besides hurting yourself
you've also caused me a lot of
grief," the Reds' manager said
to his centerfielder.
"What's that?" Tolan asked.
"I have to manage now," Anderson told him.
Both laughed. Not for long
though. Both realize the enormity of Tolan's recent freak accident in which he tore the
Achilles tendon in his right
heel during a basketball game.
The accident was a freak one
because Tolan wasn't even
touched. Playing on the same
team with such other Cincinnati
base bailers as Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, Lee May, Jim Stewart and recently-traded Jim
Maloney, Tolan was going aftera loose ball when he suddenly felt as if somebody had
stepped on his foot or kicked
him. Pop! Just like that the
Reds were minus a .316 hitting

per cent, and sank 28 of 43 free
throws. The Oaks controlled the
boards with 61 rebounds.
Tony Bass was the game's top
scorer with 34 points. Ron
Lambert had 20 for the losers,
Roger Bentley 16 and Harry
Hairston 11.
Besides' Harris' 29 points,
Trueblood had 21, Fleming 20
and Benson 11 for the winners.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (94) -Bass,
14-6-34; Lambert, 7-6-20;
Bentley, 8-0-16; Jordan, 2-0-4;
Jacobs, 2-0-4; Williams, 0-0-0;
Pulley, 1-1-3; Hairston, 5-1-11;
Bartram, 1-0-2; Baker, 0-0-0. TOTALS - 40-14-94.
OAKLAND CITY (106) Harris, 11-7-29; Trueblood, 7-721; Fleming, 9-2-20; Davis, 1-13; Benson, 4-3-11; Lovelass, 1-46; Newsome, 1-4-6; Roller, 3-0-6.
BOSTON (UPI) -Holding a
- TOTALS -39-28-106.
National Hockey League AllHALFTIME SCORE
Star game in the wild and
Oakland 53 Rio 43.
woolly confines of Boston
Garden is a little like staging
ballet in a saloon.
It wasn't enough that the
players, mindful of heavy
upcoming schedules, passed up
the body check in favor of an
occasional hug. But when the
NEW. YORK
{UPil - The upstart West Division beat the
United Press International top
20 small college basketball East, 2-1, the customers popped
teams with first place votes their corks.
and won -lost records in paren"It was a good, clean hockey
theses. (Seventh week, includgame,
just what All-Star games
ing games played through
should be," East Coach Harry
Sunday, Jan. 17)
Team
Points Sinden and West Coach Scotty
1. Kentucky St. {13) {12-1) 268
2. Louisiana Tech {5) { 11 -1)220 Bowman said in almost perfect
3. Tennessee St. {2) (9-ll 212 unison afterward.
4. S.W. Louisiana (6) {11 -2)208
Another thing that bugged the
5. Assumption (4) {10-0)
139
locals
was that all three goals
6. Ky. Wesleyan (11 -2)
127
7. LSU -New Orlns {12-0)
92 in the game came in the first
B. S.F. Austin (12-3)
74 6: 19 of play. The last 53
9. Ashland {12-2)
61 minutes and 41 seconds were
10. Phila. Tex {8-2)
60
11. Puget Sound (12-2)
59 scoreless.
12. Howard Payne ( l) {12-5)33
Bobby Jokes
13. Ora l Roberts {13-5)
32
"It was a 40-foot, 1 3-8 inches
14. Capital { 10-0)
18
15. Eau Clair (15-1)
16 shot," Bobby Hull joked of his
16. Youngstown {11-1)
15 clincher and fourth goal in All17. Evansville {8-5)
14 Star competition. Bobby was
18. Bunfa lo St. {7-1)
10
19. Sam Houston St. ( 12-5)
9 hurrying off to join his brother,
20. Old Dominion {9-4)
8 All-Star Dennis, and their
Others receiving five or more parents who had flown in for
points : Central State, Seattle
Pacific, Springfield, Stetson, the 24th annual mid-season
Centra l Washington, Jackson showpiece.
State .
The strangest aspect was_that

centerfielder. Until next June at
least.
Bobby Tolan already has begun his recuperative process in
the hospital and he's talking
about coming back before June
but he's going to find it's not
that easy. A torn Achilles tendon is not like a fracture. It
generally takes longer to heal.
Much longer. Ask Bill White
sometime.
Sparky Anderson originally
received the bad news about
what had happened to Tolan in
a phone call from Bob Howsam, the Reds' general manager. Anderson's first reaction
was "Oh, no!"
"I felt bad, especially for
Bobby," Anderson says. "I felt
bad for the ball club also."
It's rather typical of Sparky
Anderson that he thought of the
ballplayer first and then of the
ball club. He's an organization
man through and through but
before that he's a unique manager, the type who has a pronounced tendency to think of his
players before he thinks of himseH.
"I like basketball," Anderson
says, "but I was against our
players playing it because I
was afraid somebody would get

hurt. It was a freak accident.
He wasn't even touched A lot
of people say acciden will
happen and that it could've
happened crossing the street.
All I say is I hate to see somebody trying to do something
he's not professional at. Like
football or basketball players
trying to play softball. They
can hurt themselves so easily.
They slide, they don't know
how to do it properly and the
first thing you know happens."
If he had to start the season
today Anderson would move
Rose to center, Bernie Carbo
to right and Hal McRae to
left. That could change off
what happens in spring training. Or maybe a deal may be
made.
"I know one thing," Anderson says. "I feel we're a good
ball club, and if you're a good
ball club you can't let one person stop you from winning .
We'll never use Bobby Tolan
as an out. I don't think I'll
ever mention what happened to
him. This is no knock at Bobby. I consider him a fine young
player and I look for him to do
a great deal in the future.
"But you have to realistic.

TO FIT
YOUR BUDGET.

• KEITH GOBLE FORD
•

USED CAR LOT

Small College

Cage Ratings

Middleport, 0.

The future of the Reds' basketball team is in doubt right
now although the team has
said it will go through with two
charity games it had scheduled.
Up until Tolan's injury, Sparky
Anderson had been having a
good winter back home in
Thousand Oaks. Despite the
Reds' loss to the Orinll':!s in the
World Series, Anderson was
given the key to the ~ity by the
Chamber of Conunerce and he
was asked to address the Elks,
the Lions, the Kiwanis and
practically every other group in
town.
"People back home were so
nice that I had to tell 'em we
didn't really win," Sparky Anderson says.

the East players, who scored
310 goals among them over the
first haH of the current season,
managed only five shots on the
West net and reserve goalie
Ernie Wakely over the final
29:19 of play.
Chico Mak , who scored the
game's first goal just 39
seconds after the opening
faceoff but suffered a groin pull
and left the game minutes
later, was thoroughly delighted
with the victory.
"When you look at their
lineup and you look at our
lineup, I think they should win
the hockey game. But when you
look at the score, you know we
came up with a solid effort."
Lone East Goal
Montreal's Yvan Cournoyer
scored the lone East goal,
converting on a rebound
following a shot by Boston's
Dallas Smith and a pass by
New York's Dave Balon.
Chicago goalie Tony Esposito,
who stopped 21 of 22 East shots
during his period and one half
in the West nets, insisted the

mie 114-0) 133-129, with Sebring
McKinley, Lorain Catholic and
Sidney Lehman rounding out
the top five.
Continental, New Athens, Fort
Recovery, Convoy Crestview
and Zanesville Rosecrans round
out the top 10 in Class A. Fort
Loramie, Lorain Catholic (10-(}.)
and Crestview {1~) are the
only unbeaten teams in Class

A.

N BA Standmgs
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
33 16 .673 ...
Philadelphia 30 22 .577 4112
Boston
27 21 .563 51f2
Buffalo
13 39 .250 21112
Central Division
W. L. Pet . GB
Baltimore
28 19 .596 ...
Cincinnati
20 27 .426 8
Atlanta
16 33 .327 13
Cleveland
7 46 .132 24
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. G B
Milwaukee
38
7 .844 ...
Detroit
34 16 .680 61h
Chicago
28 20 .583 11112
Phoen i x
29 21 .580 1111~
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet .GB
Los Angeles
26 20 .565
San Francisco 27 23 .540 1
San Diego
23 27 .460 5
Seattle
22 27 .449 5112
Portland
16 33 .327 Jl1h
Tuesday's Results
New York 117 San Diego
113, ot
Detroit 106 Seattle- 102
Chicago 123 Portland 111
Cleveland 111 Buffalo 79
Los Ange les 134 Phila 114
San Fran 116 Cincinnati 108
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee at Baltimore
San Diego at Boston
Seattle at Atlanta
Cincinnati at Phoen ix
New York at Chicago
Portland at Buffalo
{Only games scheduled)

Babe Ruth, with a lifetime
record of .714, holds the alltime major league home run
record.
,.-----------•

-THAT

'NEW HOME
Starts With Us
and Ends Up With

YOU
Shop around for that
"Just Right" Home,
Then Stop in to See Us,
We'll Make time fo~

You.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured By

goal should never have been
"I concentrated on opening
scored if he had cleared the the gate right to let them in
puck properly.
and out," he joked.
Bowman was naturally elated
And, for a change, it worked
over his first win against the for him.
NHL's version of the "establishment," the East Division . . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ··
Pointing out that his St. Louis
teams had lost 12 straight
,.OOD}fYEA R
games in the Stanley Cup finals
and that his West squads had
lost and tied in earlier All-Star
competition, Bowman warned
FULL 4 PLY. TBLS.
his players they'd get little help
from him.
NA RROW WHITE WALL

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Joe DiMaggio came and went
... Mickey Mantle came and
went ...Ted Williams came and
went ... their ball clubs continued on. The Cincinnati club
must keep going the same way
and I believe it will.
"You remember Paul Blair
was hurt so bad last year. Haltimore kept winning. If you're
a good ball club you compensate for injury. I feel Cincinnati is that good a ball club."

West H ockey Stars Top East 2-1

ALL OUR CARS
ARE PRICED

Loc ust St.

Licking Valley was fifth,
Southeastern of Ross County
and Youngstown Liberty tied
for sixth, Wellsville, a newcomer to the top 10, ninth, and
Napoleon remained lOth. Bellefontaine, sixth last week, lost
for the first time in nine games
and skidded all the way to 14th.
Ridgedale, which moved into
the top spot in Class A last
week, led runnerup Fort Lora-

M iddleport

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�~-~~~~ms~t~~~·~
Much has already been recalled about the great Pomeroy
Panther football teams of 1931 and 1932 under coach Ray Farnham. Even though neither of these teams won a league championship I still feel that they were the greatest in Panther history.
Unfortunately, I do not have the complete roster of the 1931 team,
but Farnham had Tippy Dye, Eddie Guinther, Bill Grueser, Dick
Winebrenner and Bruno Pierotti in the backfield. Pierotti could
play any of the positions, and relieved each of the four when
needed.
Pomeroy's line was a good one. Big Fred Crow was at one end
with Ralph Sisson at the other. Bruno and Paul Casci were the
tackles with Ed Arnold and Charlie Keiser the guards. The great
Ted Scott was playing his fourth year as a starter at center. Few
can forget just how good this boy was. And remember, this was
100 per cent two way football for everybody.
Pomeroy opened the season with a scoreless tie against a
very good Marietta eleven. The following week the Panthers took
a hard fought 14-6 win over powerful Jackson, and then came a 260 win over Cheshire. This set the stage for the big battle with
Gallipolis. The Blue Devils, with Charlie Hamrick, Aaron Kelton,
Woody Brothers, Carroll Swanson, Tag Ball and Bob Sibley, were
favored to win the SEO championship. The two teams, playing on
Middleport's field (all Pomeroy home games were in Middleport)
battled to a scoreless tie in the first half . But in third period,
Carroll Swanson scored on a double reverse of 70 yards to defeat
the Panthers 7~.
Pomeroy came back with a 65-0 win over Nelsonville, a 64-0
victory over Wellston and beat Logan 3~ to set the action for the
big Thanksgiving classic with the Middleport Yellow Jackets. The
Panthers hadn't beaten the Jackets since football was resumed at
Pomeroy in 1925. It turned out to be a great defensive battle as the
two rivals battled to a scoreless tie. P omeroy fans thought they
had the game won when Tippy Dye tossed a pass to Fred Crow in
the end zone. Crow deflected the ball and Eddie Guinther came up
with it for an apparent touchdown, but the rules stated that the
ball had been touched by two offensive players, and the score did
not count !
THE 1934 TEAM
Pomeroy had great potential in 1932. In addition to Dye, Crow,
Grueser, Guinther , Paul Casci, Ed Arnold and Keiser , Farnham
had some fine lower classmen coming on the scene. Clarence
Andrews, Murrel Wolfe, Ed Baer, Bob Blackwell, Karl Kloes and
George Joachim all saw considerable service. Marvin Finlaw,
George Hobstetter and Philip Clifton were the managers, and
Carl House was assistant coach. (He will be on hand Saturday
night).

..

•'

:~:;:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

!ljl Signs of the Golden \lll

;:;:Era
in
football,;:;:
~l~lbasketball
andi~~~
~lljbaseball at Pomeroy ~l~l
~~l;High School appeared :l:l
::::first in the 1928-29 :;:;
~lllseason
upon
the~;~:
ljljarrival of Ray Farn)j
:;::ham,
a
young:::;
j~jlMa rietta
College llll
::::graduate, as coach in l!l:
ljljan three sports. This m;
:;::report by Paul Clif- :;:;
~lhord, who lived through llli
llllthose thrill-packedljlj
j;j:championship
andj;~;
~lllnear

championshipjlj~

:bears, deals especially :j:j
l!l!with the period 1931 ~;j;
llllthrough 1933 when twol~ll
:j:jof Pomeroy's greatest;l:l:
l:l!football teams were ::~:l
~jjjproduced
on
the ~lll~
:;!;hardpan practice field :~:l:
llllback of the Junior High::l::
l!l:;building along Easdll

·:·:· . s

.;.;.

l ~l\ M~~tu:day

at!~ ~!

night
:l!l6:30 a dinner will be:::;:
llll~given honoring Coacht\
:l:l:Ray Farnham, 65~:::
l!j::years old this week, by:j;~
~ljl~ hundreds of his ad-llll
:l:l:mirers of those daysl:l:
:jll~ whose grandsons now~~\~
~ll~play for Meigs Highl!l:l
;:;:School.
:l:l:

~~~~

~~;~~

:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:::!:::~:!:!:::!:!:::~:!:!::::::

1934 BASKETBALL TEAM (17-4) - Front, 1 to r, Charles Murray, Robert Stivers,
Albert Russell, lloyd (Dinty) Moore; second row, George Kindle, Paul (Levio) Casci, Ka rl
Kloes ; standing, Henry Joachim, Leo Vaughan, Donald Cottrill, Chauncey Shoemaker ,
Coach Farnham, George Jenkins, George Hobstetter, Jed Mees.

The Panthers opened the season with an easy 7~ win over
Cheshire. Thus, early in the season, the stage was set already for
another climactic battle with the Gallipolis Blue Devils. The
Devils had practically the same team as the one that had beaten
the Panthers 7~ in 1931 with the exception of Panzo Bastiani at
quarterback.
Early in the game the Pomeroy eleven moved the ball deep into
Gallipolis territory, but with the ball on about the three-yard line
Dye was tackled hard by Hamrick and had to leave the game with
a bad ankle injury. Pomeroy failed to score, and the Blue Devils
went on to take a 26~ decision.
The Panthers came back with a 20-6 win over New Boston,
and then upset the highly touted Marietta Tigers 13-7. The score
was tied 7-7late in that game whem Pomeroy moved to the Tiger
two yard line. Pomeroy called timeout and when play was
resumed, and the Panthers had lined up, Dye stopped and call~d
to Bob Blackwell to "get back." Bob was playing a blocking back.
Tip repeated this a second time, and a third time, which was when
the ball was snapped to Bill Grueser who went over standing up
for the TD as Marietta had been fooled into relaxation !
The Panthers followed with a 19-0 win over Logan, and then
trounced Nelsonville 7~. This set the curtain for another
Thanksgiving classic. The starting lineups for the game saw Crow
and Baer at ends for Pomeroy, Keiser and Casci at tackles, Andrews and Wolfe at guards and Arnold at center. Dye was at
quarterback, Guinther and Kloes at halfbacks (I believe Bob
Blackwell was injured) and Bill Grueser at fullback.
Middleport had Gardner and Tim Riley at ends, Kenny Entsminger and Abbot at tackles, John Lambert and H. Lambert at
guards and Tuff Lewis at center. Pat Gallagher was at quarter,
Arnold Bennett and Cub Allensworth at halves and Ike Neal was
at fullback.
Middleport mounted only one serious threat in the game,
when Tom Riley intercepted a Dye pass and seemed headed for a
sure TD. But Dye caught him and knocked him out of bounds,
ending the threat.
Pomeroy, with Dye's running and passing, the hard running of
Guinther and Grueser, and some fine line play led by Crow and
Casci went on to take a 26-0 decision and beat the Yellow Jackets
for the first time in modern times.
The 1933 baseball team went all the way to the State finals
before losing to Warren 4-2. No records are available of the
schedule throughout the season, but the Panthers won the SEO
crown and took the district tourney at Athens. In the opening
game at Columbus they beat Dayton Fairmont 5-2, then walloped
Ashland 16-4 in the semi-finals. Warren proved to be too tough in
the final game.
Farnham had quite a baseball team. Red Jenkins was the
number one pitcher backed up by Dye. Rollin Hawk was another
fing_er. Tom Parker was the catcher with Crow on first, Al
Russell and Red Thornton at second, Dinty Moore at short and
Dye at third. Willard Wilson (Bill's father) was in left field,
Guinther in center and Johnson and John McKenzie played in
right field.
1933 Football Team
The 1933 football team also had a shot at a championship, but
a scoreless tie with Middleport kept it from sharing the title with
Logan.
With Dye, Guinther, Grueser and company departed, Farnham had to turn mostly to new faces. Paul Casci was still around
and others who saw action were Clarence Andrews, Chauncey
Shumaker, Karl Kloes, Dinty Moore, George Joachim, Red
Thornton, Charlie Keiser, Ed Baer, Bennie Kindle, Bob Blackwell, Al Russell, Ches Roush, Shirley Guinther, Red Jenkins,
Howard Seidenabel, Roland Spencer, Charlie Schorn and Charlie
Blackwell. George Hobstetter, John McKenzie, Charlie Murray
and Leo Vaughan were managers.
Pomeroy lost its opener to Chesapeake 18-0, and then was
beaten 6-0 by Logan in their only league loss. The Panthers
rebounded with a 18-0 win over New Boston, a 2~ win over
Rutland, beat Wellston, 19-0, Gallipolis 2~ and took J ackson 12-0.
Victory over the Middleport Yellow Jackets would have given
the Panthers a tie for the league title. But they battled to a
scoreless deadlock!
The 1933-34 Panther basketball team came through with the

~

..
:;::
~

~m
~

v

I

I

~

I

I»

~

,

..

~:~:

.:

~:. ~-: .l

!Jll

1932FOOTBALLTEAM (6-1~) -Seated, front, 1tor, Charles Thornton, Hulbert
Williams, Howard Seidenabel, Albert Russell, Chester Roush, Maurice Thornton,
lloyd Moore, Philip Clifton, Mgr.; second row, Edison Guinther, Ed Baer, Robert
Blackwell, Murrel Wolfe, Clarence Andrews, George Kindle, George Jenkins, Karl
Kloes, Edgar Arnold, George Hobstetter, Mgr.; third row, James Ward, Mgr., Coach
Farnham, Milford (Bill) Grueser, Charles Keiser, Levio (Paul) Casci, William Dye,

:l:~:l,:~t

::t~ ~~~;h. George Joachim, William McQuigg, Marvin Finlaw, Mgr., Carl House,

illl

. 193~ FOOTBALL TEAM (5-1-2) -Backs, standing, I to 4, Edison Guinther, Bill Grueser,
D1Ck Wmebrenner, Bruno Pierotti, Tip Dye; set position, Fred Crow, Bruno Casci, Edgar
Arnold, Levio (Paul) Casci, Ted Scott, Charles Keiser, Ralph Sisson.

fourth straight SEO championship in a row for a Farnham
coached team ..
Overall, this team had a 17-4 record and just missed going all
the way to the state tourney. Chauncey Shumaker was at center
with Dinty Moore and Red Jenkins at forl'ards. Old reliable Paul
Casci, now a junior, was one of the guardS with Karl Kloes and AI
Russell sharing the other. Others on the team were Charlie
Murray, Bob Stivers, Bennie Kindle, and Don Cottrill. George
Hobstetter, Henry Joachim, and Leo Vaughan, along with little
Jed Mees, were the managers.
Pomeroy's only regular season losses were to Ashland, Ky.,
32-18; Lancaster St. Marys 18-14, and Portsmouth 29-18. The

j

I
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OF A FRIEND

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WITH A

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Right reserved to limit quantities

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Prices Effective Jan. 20.26 ~

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Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 7
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

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PUSS &amp; BOOTS CAT FOOD....... 7 1.00
ALL APPLE·BASE VARIETIES

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Panthers beat Washington C. H.
31-6 in the first game of the
Class A District tourney, then
took Hillsboro 21-15 and topped
Chillicothe in a thriller 21-19 &lt;Jt
a last second basket by Dinty
Moore on a fine assist by
Shumaker. Portsmouth, with
Howard Wedebrook, Monk,
Bender and company beat the
Panthers 19-15 in the finals in a
nard fought contest.

3 ROOMS

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meaning "light; bright one."

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-- - - - - - .

5 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan . 20, 1971

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1· PRICES, THE LOWEST 2: QUALI~ lHE

fiiGHEST 3· SERVICE, ntE BEsr

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Jan. 20, 1971

Progress Reviewed
Highlights of progress in the
county the past decade were
related by William C. Childs,
speaker at the Monday night
meeting of the Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club.
Introduced by Miss Freddie
Houdashelt chairman of the
public rel~tions committee,
Childs predicted industrial
expansion in this decade on the
basis of progress in community
development over the past 10
years. He spoke of his love for
the community and the
potential for progress in every
area if the people have faith and
are willing to work.
The speaker referred to the
religious element as providing
solid foundation for development. He referred to a Miami
University survey made about
10 years ago sponsored by the
Middleport and Pomeroy
Chambers of Commerce, noting
its significance in planning for
development. He described the
role of the Middleport Planning
Commission in developments of
the past 10 years.
Major developments, he felt,
included park development at
the Middleport pool, the marina
below Middleport, the boat dock
in Pomeroy, and Horace Karr's
Royal Oak Park, the new
hospital and its current expansion, the new Race St.
building of the Meigs County
Welfare Department in Middleport, school consolidation
and the introduction of
vocational programs into the
Meigs High School curriculum,
the new dam and the GalliaMeigs airport in Gallia County,
the sewage disposal plants that
are helping clean up the Ohio
River, the Tuppers Plains Chester water system, new
housing developments, and
commercial developments,
particularly in banking.
Following his talk, Miss
• Houdashelt presented a gift to
him on behalf of the club.

Also speaking at the meeting
was Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Eighth
District Pres~dent o~ . the
American ~eg10n Aux1hary.
Mrs. Neutzling talked on the
"Project Freedom" movement
designed to pressure Hanoi into
abiding by pro~isio~s of ~e
Geneva Convent1on m deahng
with American prisoners of
war.
She told of plans for POWMIA Week set for May 10-16
when a door-to-door campaign
will be carried out securing
signatures of protest to be sent
to Hanoi. It was emphasized by
Mrs. Neutzling that letters do
help, that the officials in North
Vietnam do not want American
public opinion against them.
In conclusion she read an
original poem about the poppy
and urged the assistance of the
club with the "Pro ject
Freedom" movement.
Plans were announced during
the meeting for the observance
of Heart Sunday on Feb. 21.
Mrs. Wilma Sargent is the heart
drive chairman for the club
which annually conducts a
house-to-house drive.
Welcomed into the membership of the club were Miss
Kathy King of the Columbia Gas
Co., Miss Flora Simmons and
Miss Jo Hall, teachers of the
Mason Elementary School.
It was noted that letters
pertaining to the nursing
scholarship will go out to the
schools this month. Betsy
Cunningham, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Cunningham, who
is currently receiving the
scholarship will graduate in
June from the Holzer Hospital
School of Nursing.
Mrs . Sargent announced
plans for a program on the
heart to be held on Feb. 23. A
guest speaker will be featured
at the event to be co-sponsored
by the BPW and Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority. Mrs. Grace Pratt
presided at the meeting.

Mrs. Roush
Shower Host
Mrs. Mason Fisher and Miss
Carla Fisher entertained
Saturday night with a bridal
shower honoring Tom and
Sherry Vaughan at the home of
Mrs. Milton Roush.
The table was decorated with
a white lace cloth and centered
with a bride and groom replica
from which extended green and
yellow streamers. Games were
played with prizes eoing to
Cheryl Powell and Jean
Holstein.
The yellow and green color
scheme was carried out in the
refreshments.
Guests were Mrs. Nina
Vaughan and Chuck, Mrs. Ken
Nease, Barbara and Roland
Fisher, Mary and Lewis Harris,
Milton, Sandra and Randy
Roush, Mrs. Karl Grueser, Mr.
and Mrs. Burrell Davison, Mr.
FRESHMEN NURSES TO BE CAPPED FRIDAY - Thirty-two members of the Freshand Mrs. Paul Harris, Alise,
man Class of Holzer Medical Center School of Nursing will receive their caps Friday night
Gene and Eric, Mr. and Mrs.
during ceremonies at Grace United Methodist Church . Activities will ~gin at 8 o:clock. Mrs.
Don Roush and Daron, Mrs.
Hope Wolfe, instructor and class advisor, will present the class. M1ss Beremce Skeh~,
Jean Holstein, Mr. and Mrs.
Director of Nursing Education, will award the right to wear the cap. Mrs. Charlene McKe~z1e,
Gregg Roush and Becky, Vickie
instructor, will light the candle of the Florence Nightengale lamp that each freshman r~ce1ves.
Ables, Cheryl Powell, Mrs.
Pictured above front row left to right are Marilyn Elaine Jacobs, Mary Waugh, Bonn1e Long,
William Fisher and Mr. and
Joy Kimble, wilma Lath~y and Karen Heazlit. Second row- Janet Min~d, Dianne O'Linn,
Mrs. Orris Harris.
Rerni Nieri Lisa Thomas Carol Dayfield, Joy Bennett, Mary Hayes, Earline Spangler, Kathy
Others presenting gifts to the
Zuhars, Jo;ce Brabham :md Sharon Pyles. Third row- Debbi~ H:msworth, Vickie Cisco,
couple were Mrs. Harry Clark,
Cheryl Null, Donna Swartzel, Barbara Williams, Leona Conley, V1cki Kaufman, .Jean Spears,
Mrs. Ed Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
Suzanne Thompson, Rose Brown, Donna Shaner, Julia Sutton, Carolyn Baldwm, Mary Lee
Leo Vaughan and Roy, Denise
Snodgrass, Mr. and Mrs.
Middleton and Diane Lavender.
Clarence Frank, Mrs. William
Snouffer and Dana, Mr. and
~.._......_....__..---Mrs. Ernest Harris, Mrs.
Gladys Robson, Miss Eleanor
Robson, Mrs. Paul Kloes, Mrs.
cilor. A letter was read from Beverly Chapman, Mr. and
Edna
Runnel
was
initiated
~
in to Theodorus Council 17, Mary Jane Smith, state Mrs. Larry Brown, and Mrs.
Daughters of America Monday councilor, announcing the Edith Hood and Lillian Hood.
of
Esther
night at the IOOF hall. Edith appointment
Spencer, associate councilor, Ridenour of Chester Council
323, as the District 13 deputy from Etta Will who is
presided.
Installed by Edna Reibel, state councilor. Information on vacationing in Texas. The prize
council deputy, were Mary rallies and inspections will be package donated by Eva
Baldwin, councilor, and Cora received from Mrs. Ridenour. Dessauer was won by Winona
Beegle, associate vice coun- It was reported that Doris Cook.
Darst's son, Marvin, is a patient
at the Veterans Memorial
Hospital,
Kate
Goodwin
remains confined to Holzer, and
Faye Reibel, granddaughter of
Mrs. Reibel, and Becky Roush,
daughter of Valsia Roush are
both ill.
Nettie Hayes reported on a
card which she had received

.. l

Social
Calendar

~

Edna Hunnel Initiated

I

Seminar Planned
At Guard Armory

Electric Heaters
By M cGraw Edison, with 12"
aluminum ref lector for instant hea t.

Reg.

6.99

4 88

EACH

Boys' and Girls' Construction

~ Hardhat
~{[__ Helmets

ea.

1 Lot Ladies' Cotton Bras &amp;

GARTER BELTS
Your
Choice

lOteach
Girls' Warm
Blue Wool

Pea Coats
Sizes 4 to 6 in warm
Woolen M elton cloth pea
coats for gir ls. Reg. $7.99.

each

Mens' Acrylic
SWEATERS

$5

ea.

Boys' Acrylic
SWEATERS
Sizes 4 to 7 in boys' acrylic sweaters,
pu llover or cardigan styles.

India, was read. Mrs. John
Fultz presented the program
entitled, "Visiting the Elderly."
Devotions by Mrs. Darst concluded with a poem, "Finding
God."
A salad course and coffee
were served to those named and
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner,
Mrs. Bert
Bodimer, Mrs. Charles Edwards, Mrs. Milton Hood, Mrs.
Tony Fowler, Mrs . Fred
Hoffman ,
Miss
Freddie
Houdashelt, and Michl King.

STOP IN FOR
FREE ESTIMATE

CHILDREN$' REG. 2.99

FOOTWEAR
Lace, slipon or buckle styles, black or
brown, compo so les, sizes 4 to 12.

1 88

pair

Ladies' Warm
FLANNEL
SLEEPWEAR

The next meeting was tentatively scheduled for April 18
at the Athens Mount Zion
Baptist Church. The Rev. Mr.
Jackson used scripture from
2nd Timothy for his meditation.
Devotions to open the meeting
were given by Deacon Qualls.
Mrs. Gertrude Butler of
Rutland and Mrs. King of
Athens gave readings and Mrs.
Smith joined by the young
people sang "Yield Not to
Temptation". Mrs. Campbell
Harper was at the piano.
Women of the church served a
luncheon to the delegates attending the meeting.

Sizes S·M · L, gowns or pajamas in
warm printed cotton flanne lette.

$5,633,980 over 1969. Sunday

school enrollment reached
1,046,149, another record in
churches of the United States
and abroad.
The 11 Nazarene institutions
of higher learning had a fall
enrollment of 9,625 students, a
gain of 670 or 7.8 per cent over
1969. The denommation had
10,150 of its young men in the
armed forces in Southeast Asia
with 82 on the Vietnam
memorial roll.
There are 6,287 churches at

Tropic-Aire Focalipse

Pullover
or
cardigan sty les in
men's
w i nter
sweaters,
assorted patterns,
colors. Sizes S-M ·
L.

Nazarene Progress is Reviewed
The Rev . Audrey Mill er,
pastor of the Middleport
Nazarene Church, disclosed
today that the annual year-end
review from the world offices of
the denomination showed that
world membership climbed to
490,573 persons in 1970, a net
gain of 18,677 or 3.8 per cent.
Among other gains, per capita
giving was a record $221.35, or
$8.09 cents more than the
previous year . In giving for all
purposes the total was
$87,737,626, an increase of

Values

5°

Sub-District
Officers Elected
Election and installation of by the Rev. Mr. Jackson .
officers by the Rev. Samuel
Jackson featured the Hocking
Sub-District meeting Sunday at
the Forest Run Baptist Church.
Elected were Oscar Qualls ,
assistant supermtendent of the
district, and Donna Bunch,
assistant secretary of the
district for this area. They were
installed along with Mrs. Nellie
Winston,
Middleport,
treasurer ; Mrs. Mary King,
Athens, program c hairman ;
and Yvonne Preston, Corning,
president of the Baptist
Training Union.
Mrs. William Smith was
appointed publicity chairman

Weekend Clearance

0

Dorcas
Circle to Assist Tea
Plans to assist with the B. H. Frank Curray, missionaries to
Sanborn Missionary tea on Feb.
4 were made Tuesday night by
the Dorcas Circle of the Middleport First Baptist Church at
the home of Mrs. David Darst,
with Mrs . Martha King
presiding.
Plans were made
to
remember a shut-in on
valentine's day and to send a
gift of money to the scholarship
girl. The circle also will take
cookies and candies to the
February meeting to be used in
a box for David Sigman.
A letter from Dr. and Mrs.

128 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT

Saddle Soap
THE SHOE BOX

�OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9 -SUNDAY 1 TO 7- PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY. JAN. 24, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
....
..,...... ·:w~ .. :~···' ·

~: ~;~

.

i

'

CANNON

BATH TOWELS
A large selection of prints, solids
and stripes. All first quality.

DAN RIVER

27"x44"

PILLOW
CASES

2-PIECE

POLYESTER

1st quality percale print pillow cases. A great selection
of print designs.

72

MATCHING

HAND TOWELS
MATCHING

WASHCLOTHS

28(

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

90

Extra heavy 2 piece bath set with
latex non-skid backing. Choose
from 6 colors.

A large selection of solid colors;
olive, gold, lilac, pumpkin, siamise white, topaz, and royal.

CHATHAM

54(

HECK'S REG. $1.59

X

BATH SET

AREA RUGS

$299

2FOR

ssoo

BLANKETS

HECK'S REG. $3.99

HECK'S REG. $2.99 EACH

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

MEN'S

MEN'S

WORK GLOVES

WORK SOCKS

32;

Choose between
brown jersey or
duck.

HECK'S REG.

WHITE COTTON WORK
SOCKS IN SIZES 10 TO

HECK'S REG. $fi.99

"

13.

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

48~

12 PAIR IN
PACKAGE

$199

HECK'S REG. $2.49

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT•

PACKAGE

•
10-QUART
DISH PAN

'

•

7-CUP
PERCOLATOR

9" LOOK-N-SEE
CAKE PAN

3 PIECE
SAUCEPAN
SET

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM COOKWARE

~

CHOICE
THIS
3-PIECE
RANGE SET

4 QT. COVERED
SAUCE POT

3 QT. COVERED
SAUCE PAN

GROUP

~. ;;.. - - ( ·.
~..·. .~·
.W6.

]")

·..

.

·.

21

\

I ·· ~·. \
~~~
··
.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

I .. ·.· .. .~...;....:;,:)
'.·. -~ ·.
' , 1-·.

~·

. .. . .

-_ -

j

...,.

-~

2-QUART
WHISTLING TEAKETTLE

HECK'S REG. TO $1.58

PHOTO
ALBUMS

•
.

•

FESCO PLASTIC
FESCO PLASTIC

FESCO PLASTIC

FESCO PLASTIC

13 QUART

36 QUART

13 QUART

FLORAL PAIL

FLORAL

WASTEBASKET

MINI BIN

99(

99(

16 QUART
FLORAL

99(

HECK'S REG. $1.42

HECK'S REG. $1 .69

HECK'S REG. $1 .69

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.,

DISHPAN

99(
HECK'S REG. $1.42

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

•

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

•

HECK'S
REG. s2.33

11(/)Jidk.abd,

ARROW

TOILET BOWL

DEODORANT

2 FOR

.66

24(
RETAIL VALUE
29cEACH

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

0

fJJ

SlvW.inrJ., ?joJL tBillbJt."

ITEMS AVAILABLE AT ALL CHARLESTON AREA STORES
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED ••••••••••

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport_-Pomeroy, O. L~an. 20,1971

7x35

EVEREADY "D" SIZE

FLASHLIGHT

BINOCULARS

&amp; TOY BATTERIES

Top quality, precision and superbly engineered, featuring
coated optics, center focus. Case included.

HECK'S REG. $18.88

110 POUND

BARBELLS

Olympic barbell set includes barbells, dumb bells, bars, sleeves, plates, cast iron outside
collars and instruction course.

HECK'S REG. 23•

HECK'S REG.
$21.97

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

6VOLT

COLEMAN

CAMP
LAMP

MANTLES

A modern beautifully designed
cordlen portable lamp , , , feotur ·
inv o d~orotive, fiberglas shade
ond coordinated power pole case
Lights up room, tent, troller, or
boot cabin. A ptJrfect substitute '"
em.rgency blackouts

PACK OF 6

HECK'S REG. $1 .39

BRIDGE
CARDS

8 OUNCE

5'x7' TARP
HEAVY DUCK COMPlETE WITH GROMMETS
ON EACH CORNER.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

HECK'S REG.
2 For 59•

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

.- . ..,. rw
.,

SPORTS /Jlt-1.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

DISPOSABLE
LIGHT
• Guaranteed for one year
• No batteries needed
• When it burns out ... throw away

e

B.B. RIFLE

SHORT STROKE, HIGH COMPRESSIO N PUMP ACTION- power determined by number of pumps • BB
RESERVOIR HOlDS 180 CROSSMAN BB's- with added featu re of 18 shot maga zi ne • HAND RUBBED
WAlNUT FINISH HARDWOOD STOCK- fully adjustable field sights e .177 CAL SUPER PEl® SHOOTING
CAPABILITY- quick easy bolt action e SIMUlATED
GO l D TRIGGER &amp; BOlT.

SPORTS DE!

Choose from: Comb 'N Cur l Set, Make -up
lips, Tips 'N Curls and Dr. &amp; Nu rse Kit.

e

AlSO: 4 STYLE TEA AND DINNER SET
ASSORTMENT

CHOICE

sac
HECK'S REG.

•

6VOLT

LANTERN

• Throws a bullet-like beam Ji2 mile • Unbreakable lens
• Pushbutton switch • Uses 6 volt lantern battery

COLEMAN

LANTERN

CASE

This carrying co~ provides fint don protection for

oil Coleman model220 lontern1. It combines hgAtweight design with except1onol strength for eo1y
ta rry ing and hand ling, maximum protection
oioinst dents, Kr otdles, dirt demo~• and broken
ports. Styling in eye·pleosing Coleman Green; fin·
ished in mor·nuistont, rust·resi:stont baked enamel.
Provides room for acceuory safe, extra mantles,
generator ond funnel. Boil Aondle. Sprin; action
end togglelotch to keep lantern in place

••

HECK'S REG. $8.99

SPORTS DEPT.

•

15

BOOTS

!- ·s·,••
HECK'S
REG. $888

99

PLAY SETS

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

CROSSMAN

PELLET RIFLE

HECK'S REG. $14.99

HECK'S REG. $15.99

INSULATED

• 177 CAL. CHEX

The hard-hitting rifle has a grooved barrel which gives
exceptional accuracy and extended effective range.
Stock is polished hardwood. The receiver is grooved to
take a scope with a tip-off mount. Open rear sight is
fully adjustable. Blade type front sight.

$1299

HECK'S REG.
$1.39

..

nr-•

STOVE

Hot meals in a minute! 2 burner model with exclusive stainless steel Band-A-Blue® burne r. Instant lighting. GO COlEMAN Q UAt ITY All THE
WAY AT HECK'S!

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG. 6 for 991

HECK'S REG. $5.99

COLEMAN

EVEREADY-6 VOLT

LANTERN
BATTERY

•

ASSORTED

COLORING BOOKS

12(

•

RETAIL VALUE 29c

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

PAINT-BY-NUMBER
Featured in each kit are two oval subjects on a pre-printed background Two oval frames and ornate metal picture hooks ore also
included to complete and enhance the finished pictures. This new series offers 12 subjects in matching pairs. Each package is shrink
wrapped and displays a full color subject tip·on. The back of the box
is o colorful ready reference to all the sets available in this series

84 4

HECK'S REG.
$1.88

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

CHILDREN'S
PICTURE

PUZZLES

Over 100 large Tuco tripl-thick interlocking
pieces. Picture size approximately 1Ox 14.

•
ADULT

PICTURE PUZZLES

Over 1, 000 Tuco tripl -th ick interlocking
pieces. Picture size 2 1 % x21 ~ .

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG.
441

TOY DEPT.

aa•

TOY DEPT.

•

..
•

�•

•

VANWYCK 5-SPEED

·.-

• MIXER

VW-5 5

.:IIEIIal .

G. E. OVEN

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

•

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

,.

'19·97
HECK'S REG. $21.96
No. RC.1089
Pt. Pieasant Store Only

~

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

G NERAL ELECTRIC

STEREO

$44·96

..

G. E. SWEEPER

HECK'S
REG. ~4.96

$9.88

JEWEI.RY
DEPT.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

CAN OPENER

Trim, talented, thrifty. Zips open all &gt;izes and shapes. Compact
tapered styling. Removable parts for easy cleaning

$11·88
1

j

HECK'S
REG. $14.96

• Red velvet lined. • Assorted
design. • Perfect for mi-ladies
earrings, necklaces, rings etc.

•

j

HECK'S REG. $1 • 19

CAN OPENER-CLOCK

•
.

•

•

I

SPARTUS

WALL CLOCK

$}4 .99 ' !_:~--~7~!
HECK'S
REG. $17.96

•

---~,

I ~, .

-!,____J
.

$9.96

PORTABLE VAC
• Carries like o camera (Only 4 I s.}-use it where you can't
use others
• 22 foot cord lets yc J use it in the garaged cor - even
workshop
• It's small, but powerful- sucks in over 4 gallons of air each
second
• ON-OFF switch ot your finger tip-just like a mixer
• Comes with 4 attachments- just like o standard model

JEWEI.RY
DEPT.

VANWYCK

•

HECK'S REG.

·

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

COMBINATION

~

j

i

Reg. 125.56

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

RIVAL

HAIR DRYER

Heck's

$21· J7

V-946

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

SCHICK

JEWEL BOXES

HECK'S
REG.
$13.96

U-8

HECK'S REG.

12103

ell...

HECK'S REG. $39.96

STEAM IRON·

Plenty of steam for easier ironing. Clear-view heel
for ironing in any direction ... lets you see as you
iron . Easy-to-see fabric dial. Leakproof. light·
weight. Black handle, chrome cover. 1200 watts,
120 volts. AC only. Underwriters' Laboratories, Inc.
listed .

easy cleaning , Cuthioned toost lift
9ently hands toast to you. Gleam·
ing chrom• finish. Stay cool hon·

er

PROCTOR SILEX

PANASONIC

RADIO

•

ness . Snap-do'tltn crumb troy for

HECK'S
REG.
$31.96

HECK'S REG. $8.96

Adiush itulf to all kinds of breod.
toads to desired shade of brown-

• Versatile cleaning
with 3 handle positions
• Full carpet cleaning pow·

$27 "88

SS''

2-SLICE TOASTER

VACUUM

T-93

lightweight, portable,
powerful motor with
automatic thumb-tip
beater ejector for easy
cleaning.
Whips,
Creams, Blends, Mixes,
Folds.

SUNBEAM

G.E. UPRIGHT

~-

~

$4.44

~

)

HECK'S
REG. ~.59

;-l

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

No. 696
Pt. Pleasant Store Only

ELECTRIC
PENCIL

'5·77
V-69-8
HECK'S REG. $fi.96

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

CONGESPIRIN

36's

48(
HECK'S REG.

66C

COSMETIC
DEPT•

9 OUNCE

14 OUNCE

10 OUNCE

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

GILLETTE'S

BABY OIL

FOAMY

BABY LOTION BABY POWDER

74(
HECK'S REG. $1 .08

COSMETIC DEPT.

SHAVE CREAM

\

74(
HECK'S REG. $1 .04

COSMETIC DEPT.

84(
HECK'S REG. $1.24

COSMETIC DEPT.

11

oz

Heck's Reg.

~

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

������</text>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <elementText elementTextId="3540">
            <text>newspaper</text>
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