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                  <text>The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The lntereJJII Of The Meigs-Mown Area

VOL XXIII NO. 198

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, JANUARY 25, 1971

TEN CENTS

CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The countdown began today for
Sunday's launch of the three Apollo 14 astronauts on the most
difficult and costly lunar landing mission yet.
The long cotmtdown started promptly at 9 a.m. EST while
Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell were in
the doctor's office seeking medical clearance on their final major
preflight physical examinations.
"We're in good shape," reported a space agency offlciaJ as
engineers began work at the oceanside launch pad. Much of
today's activity was devoted to electrical checks of the lunar
landing craft and installation of starters for the booster rocket's
engines.
The countdown includes 102 hours of scheduled tasks and five
rest periods totaling 48 hours.

Budget on
Red Side by
•
$10 Billion

Patrols Watch

In his State of the Union
address Friday, Nixon said the
new budget would call for the
government to spend as though
the nation had full employment,
in a move designed to attack
the highest unemployment in
nine years.
The White House also said
Sunday the President would hit
the road, possibly within the
next few weeks, to try to "sell"
to the public on two of the
RAY FARNHAM recalled the "old days" away back
major goals unveiled in the
( 1928-1936) when he coached football, basketball and baseball
Friday address U revenue
teams at Pomeroy High School to the best all-time winning
sharing and reorganization of
records in the school's history Saturday night at the Orchid
thefederalbureaucracy.
No specific plans were
announced but it was understood Nixon is planning to
attend four regional Republican
meetings, the first one of them
in February. It was also
expected Vice President Spiro
Coach Ray Farnham, 65, was teammateofCrow'sandCasci's
T. Agnew and other top White welcomed home Saturday night on PHS teams of the early
House officials would take the by an estimated 200 former thirties.
trail to promote Nixon's plans. players, friends and their wives
Farnham, moved by a
at the Orchid Room in standing
ovation,
obserPomeroy.
ved that "the boys who
The testimonial dinner, played for me" made it possible
preceded by a stag get-together for Pomeroy High School to
in the afternoon, was arranged achieve the great heights of the
by Fred Crow and Paul Casci, late 20s and early 30s.
two one-time athletic greats on
Farnham recalled a number
Farnham teams of the thirties. of events related to the teams
Also a special guest was and team members. He inTippy Dye, Athletic Director of troduced his wife, the former
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - dent's Commission on Campus Northwestern University, a Dorothy Russell, of Pomeroy,
Former Permsylvania Gov. Wil- Unrest, told the predominately
liam W. Scranton Sunday crit- black audience Kent State and
j~;:ized ' ' e Pres1dent Spiro T
Jackson State "marked a polAgnew's positive polarization arization of views and expresproposal.
sions of opinions unprecedented
"What particularly should in the history of the United
WASHit-;GTON (UPI) -Sen.
In an address prepared for
concern us !lOw," Scranton told States since the days of the
Claiborne
Pell,
D-R.I.,
said
annual meeting of the
the
126 graduates at Cheyney State Civil War.
today he would propose a bill American Hospital Association,
College, "is a rapid tr~nd
Four students were shot to under which employers would Pell said his proposal would
toward the extreme."
''The Vice President of the death at Kent State by National be required to provide health make health care available to
care to their workers just as all Americans without imposing
United States called for 'a new Guardsmen last year and two
realignment' based on 'positive students suffered fatal gunshot they are now required to pay new taxes of the kind that
them the minimum wage.
would be required under a
polarization'" Scranton said. wounds at Jackson State when
national
health insurance propo"Carried to its logical conclu- gunfire erupted after state posal.
lice
were
called
to
the
campus.
sion, this leads to a country
The insurance approach,
"The great unfinished work
governed by a permanent rathsponsored
by Sen. Edward M.
to which each generation of
er than a shifting majority."
Kennedy, D-Mass., and support"And those who are left out of Americans must be dedicated
ed by about a quarter of the
such a majority become alien- is to work for freedom, especSenate
membership, would inated and radicalized," he said. ially within our own country,"
volve
about
$40 billion a year in
A car was demolished and the
Scranton, head of the Presi- Scranton said.
tax
expenditures.
It has the
driver was cited to County
Court following a two-car ac- backing of the AFL-CIO.
Pell's plan foresees creation
cident Sunday at 11:55 a.m.
I
7\.T
•
I
The Meigs County Sheriff's of federally chartered corpora~ews
Department said Roger B. Hill,
I
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
I 19, Racine, Rt. 1, was cited to
County Court on charges of
passing at an intersection.
Israel will hold door open
Hill and a passenger Ronnie
ISRAEL PLANS TO ACCUSE EGYPI' and Jordan of dodging Hill, 15, Racine, Rt. 1, suffered
PHNOM PENH (UPI)--South
the fundamental issues at the Middle East peace talks but will lacerations and were taken to
and American forVietnamese
hold the door open to further negotiations, Israeli political sources Veterans Memorial Hospital by
ces
ended
their
operation along
the Racine E-R squad where
said today.
Cambodia's vital Highway 4
treated
and
released.
they
were
The sources in Jerusalem said this will be the guiding theme
Hill, traveling east on SR 124, linking Phnom Penh to the sea
of the message the Israeli cabinet authorized Sunday for trancollided
with a car driven b)' today, ~eclared the _road open
smission to U. N. negotiator Gunnar V. Jarring in New York. The
an~ . withdrew thetr forces,
message will be drafted by Prime Minister Golda Meir and Irene Weese, 33, Racine, then military spokesmen said.
hit and broke off a utility pole
Foreign Mit11ster Abba Eban.
Phnom Penh, a city unnerved
and stopped against a street
by
three nights of terrorist
light pole. There was medium
90 Pen Guards Don't Show
attacks, was in a state of full
damage to the Weese car.
COLUMBUS- ABOUT 90 GUARDS at the Ohio Penitentiary
Saturday at 5 p. m . on SR 143 alert, with fighting continuing
here early today refused to report for duty and began picketing in
about .9 of a mile north of in the surrounding countryside .
front of the 135-year-&lt;&gt;ld prison in a dispute on overtime pay. The
junctions 692 and 143, a single Communist troops fired a pair
guards reportedly were upset over prison officials alleged failure car accident was reported.
of 122mm Soviet-built rockets
to assign overtime work to guards with any record of being away
Deborah Jean Lesuer Dwyer, at Pochenton Airport, blasted
from work because of illness.
22, Athens, was traveling south by the Communists Friday. The
Warden Harold Cardwell was meeting with representatives of of 143, lost control in a curve missiles fell short and wounded
the guards today in an effort to settle the work stoppage. when her car swayed. The two villagers.
Teamsters Union drivers of four coal trucks loaded with coal for vehicle went to the left, cut back
the prison refused to enter the penitentiary today after seeing the to the right, then went off the
guards picketing.
roadway, rolled over twice and
stopped right side up.
Test Comes on Morton
The driver and a passenger,
Walker, suffered
WASHINGTON - SENATE HEARINGS beginning today on Wendy
the nomination of Rep. Rogers C. B. Morton, R-Md., as secretary abrasions and contusions but
of the interior, provide Congress with its first chance to test the were not immediately treated.
The driver was cited to court
depth of the Nixon administration's pledge to revitalize the enon
charges of no operator's
PT. PLEASANT - Twentyvirorunent. Several conservation - minded senators on the Interior Committee planned to question Morton extensively on a license. There was heavy two charges against I . Brooks
wide range of natural resource problems. Their concerns ranged damage to the car.
Smith, Mason Co unty SuUnder investigation is an perintendent of Schools, were
from the advisability of permitting oil companies to proceed with
accident that was reported presented to him in writing in a
building a pipeline across the Alaskan tundra to stripping the
Saturday at 9 p. m. at Five special Board of Education
national forests for commercial timber .
Points Grill. Ray W. Smith, 18,
President Nixon named Morton to the Cabinet post after Portland, was parked on the meeting Saturday night.
A hearing is to follow .
dismissing Walter J . Hickel in November. Nixon said he had lost parking lot at Five Points when
It is requested that the
confidence in the former governor of Alaska. Hickel's com- his car was struck by another
charges, which were not made
mitment to conservation was at first suspect but he became a car which has not been iden- public, will be revealed in the
champion of conservation causes.
tified. There was light damage hearing scheduled at 9:30 a.m .
to the Smith car.
l&lt;'eb. 6 in the Mason County
Courthouse courtroom. Smith
BOOSTERS TO MEET
MARRIAGE LICENSE
was directed to bring all
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
The p•1rple martin, about
Thomas Howard Fine, 22, minutes since he became
meet at 7:30 p. m . Tuesday at
eight inches in length, is the Albany, Hl. 3, and Nancy Marie superintendent to the hearing.
the high school to elect officers.
large~l of American swallows. Creel, 19, Albany, Rt. 3.
All records are to be made
All are urged to attend.
WASHINGTON. (UPI)-The
budget President Nixon will
send to Congress Friday will
total a record $229.2 billion including a deficit of more than
$10 billion, White House sources
said today. The $229.2 billion
figure compares with a $200.8
billion budget the President
proposed one year ago for the
current fiscal year. That budget
was to have produced a $1.3
billion surplus, but economic
conditions worsened and anticipated revenue failed to
materialize, forcing Nixon to
change his figures in May to
about $215 billion, with an expected deficit of $15 billion.
Nixon already nas saiU 111::.
budget for the business year
beginning July 1 would be an
expansionary one -"Or,e that
will help stimulate the economy
and thereby open up new job
opportunities fo;· millions of
Americ2 ns."

For Oil Slick
Room in Pomeroy. From the left, Paul Clifford, Mayor
Charles Legar, Fred Crow (masked by), Mrs. Crow, Mr.
Farnham, Mrs. Farnham, her sister, Mrs. Tippy Dye, and
Mr. Dye, Athletic Director of Northwestern University.

Ray Farnham Honored

•
zn
Evils Seen
new Policy

sister of Mrs. Dye (Mary
Russell).
Mayor
Charles
Legar
presented Farnham a key to the
city followed by a special gift to
Farnham by Paul Casci.
Crow, Pomeroy attorney, who
starred at Ohio State in football
and basketball, was the master
of ceremonies. Crow recalledin his inimitable style - a
number of incidents in his
football career under Farnham
that proved humorous and
complimentary.

Crow introduced Mr. Dye,
former all-time great of
Pomeroy High School in three
sports. Dye in his reminiscing,
also recalled the "old days"
playing for Farnham.
Paul (Moonbeam) Clifford
reviewed records achieved by
Farnham in the eight years he
was at Pomeroy. Also present
was Dr. Ralston Russell,
brother of Mrs. Dye and Mrs.
Farnham. The Russells and
Dyes were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Hobstetter.

Pell Health Plan 'On Employers

Driver
Is Cited

i---------------------------1

:

•

•

1

. .+.s :
... zn B rze
1

tions, able to float governmentbacked tax-exempt bonds,
which would provide health
care on a prepaid basis. An
annual fee, paid by a worker's
employer, would guarantee him.
a year's health care, no matter
how much medical attention he
required in the course of that
year.
For poor people out of the
work force, the government
would pay the fee, Pell said.
Even with this, he said, the
government would wind up
spending less for health care
than it does now.
"I am proposing making a
minimum level of health care
services a direct cost of doing

Weather
Mostly cloudy, colder tonight,
chance of snow flurries north,
lows in mid 30s southeast.
Cloudy, colder, chance of snow
flurries Tuesday.

Highway 4 Open
In Saigon, the South Vietnamese announced they had
completed repairs on two
bridges south of the Pich Nil
Pass on Highway 4 and the
road was open. They turned
over security to the Cambodians at 7 ,a.m. and almost
immediately the 5,300 South
Vietnamese troops were pulled
out of the area.
The spokesman said 1,500
Marines returned to their
permanent base inside Cambodia at the Mekong River ferry
town of Neak Luong, 35 miles
southeast of Phnom Penh, and
3,800 rangers and armored
cavalrymen drove back to

Now You Know

available to the board's attorney as well as to Smith's. The
superintendent was also asked
to instruct his employes to
cooperate with both attorneys.
Ted Stevens, board president,
at Saturday's meeting read the
call which said the meeting was
"to consider and discuss
charges against Supt. of Schools
of Mason County, I. Brooks
Smith."

By United Press International
Volunteers and Coast Guardsmen patrolled the Connecticut
coastline this morning watching
for a 12-mile long oil slick that
headed for the shore, threatening some of the state's finest
beaches.
The slick, a yellow-blue film
of light heating fuel and
kerosene, has been curling
along the deeply contoured
Atlantic Coast on Long Island
Sound since Saturday, when the
tanker Esso Gettysburg slashed
a 600-foot gash in its hull on a
rock ledge at the entrance to
New Haven Harbor. The spill,
estimated at nearly 400,000
gallons, has smudged some
beaches and prompted many
complaints about foul odors,
but no serious damage has
resulted yet, according to state
officials.
An investigation was begun to
see if a misplaced buoy may
have caused the grounding.
On the other side of the
continent, the Coast Guard
convened its formal probe
today of a much more serious
oil accident, the collision of two

Saturday's meeting had been
Following the reading, in session only nine minutes
Stevens called for the charges when Stevens called for an
and Ray Fields, board member, executive session which lasted
presented these in written form until 8: 13 p.m. The meeting
to each board member. Bill adjourned shortly afterwards.

Military
Controls
Uganda

·')~THE\\ ~

Extended Chio outlook for
Wednesday through Friday:
Quite cold through the
period with a chance of snow
flurries mainly northeast.
Daytime highs from the teens
north to the low and mid 20s
south. Overnight lows mostly
zero to 10 above.
•

C
• JOnes
Dies on Monday

Harry C. Jones, 84, Syracuse,
died Monday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Surviving
are a son, Vernon, Bridgeport,
Conn.; a sister, Mrs. Annie
Fereday, Pittsburgh, Pa.; a
niece, Delores Schwartz, and a
nephew, Chester Turnbull,
Huntington, W. Va.
Preceding Mr. Jones in death
were his wife, Nellie; a
daughter, Thelma Irene Jones;
three brothers, Thomas, Lewis
and Dan, and three sisters,
Nellie, Mary and Mattie.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home where
friends may call anytime.
Burial will be in Syracuse Hill
Cemetery.

South Vietnamese territory on
Highway 3 along the seacoast.
U.S. spokesmen in Saigon
said two helicopter carriers
which had supported U.S. Army
AH1 Cobra rocket-firing helicopters making air strikes in
·direct support of the South
Vietnamese and Cambodians
during the battle ended their
operations today and sailed
DAMAGE MINOR
away from their off-shore
Minor damage was reported
stations in the Gulf of Thailand. to two vehicles at 9:15 p. m.
Friday on the parking lot of the
It was not kntwn exactly Columbus and Southern Ohio
when the American air support Electric Co. in Middleport when
began, although officials first a truck owned by the company
acknowledged presence of the coasted into a car owned by
I Roger E. Leifheit of Pomeroy
two carriers Jan. 17.
parked on the lot.

Withers made a motion that
charges be given to Mr. Smith
which brought a second from
Charles Eshenaur. In the
voting, Stevens, Withers,
Eshenaur and Fields voted in
favor of presenting these to the
superintendent. Harry Siders
voted no, saying that the
charges are "completely unfounded."

tankers a week ago beneath the
Golden Gate Bridge. A threeman marine board of investigation has been impaneled to
determine the cause of the
collision, but conservationists
have asked for a broadened
inquiry to examine the "underlying causes" of oil spills.
Thp remainder of the 84_,009
gallons of heavy bunket oil
spilled on the West Coast was
being dispersed by Pacific
Ocean currents, but volunteers
and Standard Oil Co. workers
still were cleaning beaches and
looking for oil-coated birds.

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

business," the senator said.
The health care corporations
also would provide medical
education to meet the manpower shortage; would operate
neighborhood health centers
and would provide care to
Medicaid and Medicare benefi- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ciaries. They would be able to
U
T.
borrow money from the govern.1.~arry
ment to s~rt operations.
•

Hearing Set on 22 Charges
Against Supt. of Schools

•

Countdown
Underway

SERVICES SET
Special services will be held
at the Hartford Christian Union
Church, Thursday through
Sunday at 7:30 p. m. nightly.
The Rev. O'Dell Manley,
pastor, will speak each evening.
Music will be provided by
members of the Pomeroy
Lower Light Church. The public
is invited.
SUIT FILED
A suit for judgment on a note
has been filed in Meigs County
0. 1mmon Pleas Court by the
American Sales, Inc., Dayton,
against Harry A. Miller,
Pomeroy, ~or $1,973.68.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Bernice Darst was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
7:31 a. m . Monday by the
Pomeroy E-R squad after
becoming ill at his home on
Spring Ave. He was admitted.

KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI)Heavy fighting involving tanks
and armored carl!! broke out in
Kampala before dawn today,
and Gen. Idi Amin, the British
trained aruiy cl\ ...r••ander. said
he and E. W. Ory~::ma, chief of
the country's policl force, had
seized power "in the interest of
the people."
President Milton Obote was
out of the country at the time
and was due in Nairbi, Kenya,
today on his way home from
the British Commonwealth
Prime Ministers' Conference in
Singapore. Members of his
government urged him to
remain there until the situation
is ''clarified."
Thousands of jubilant Africans paraded through the
streets of Kampala, celebrating
Obote's downfall. A radio
broadcast said the new government would "cement" friendly
ties with all foreign governments.
News of the coup was
broadcast by
the
official
Kampala radio.
Seven persons were reported
killed in the predawn fighting in
the capital, and a report from
Entebbe Airport said a shell
exploded at the airport terminal, killing several Africans.
Fighting also was reported on
the 21-mile stretch of road from
Kampala to Entebbe and
witnesses said they saw bodies
there.
Obote was the second African
leader to be overthrown while
out of his country. The Ghana
army overthrew President
KwameN.NkrumahonFeb.
24, 1966, while he was paying an
official visit to Moscow.
Troops with armored cars
surrounded Parliament and
Obote's residence and fired
shots into the air to warn
people away.

CALLED OUT TWICE
The Middleport E-R unit
answered a call at 4:09 p. m.
Sunday to the William Smith
residence on the Route 7 bypass
below Middleport. Mr. Smith,
having difficulty in breathing,
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 7:24a.m. SUnday the
squad went to Cheshire but was
unable to locate the party ap,parently summoning the squad.
SUFFERS INJURY
Richard P. Nease, 25, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, sustained
injuries in a single car acc::ide!lit
at 9:23 p.m. Sunday on
one mile south of nu•..::ua.· '~!II'.•;
State Highway Patrol odl~lthl
said Nease lost
auto, ran off the right
highway and
Damage was heavy
WaS-UIIIiiW!II!II'

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan . 25, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

One Good Turn Deserves Another

EDITORIALS
- - - -- --L

Attock Suits

No-Fault Insurance!

In Proper Order

Telling Blow for
Religious Liberty

Debate Revs Up

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH

Speaking of "repression" in America. wh1ch is a popular pastime in some circles today. an embarrassing thing
has happened in Wisconsin.
By a 6-to-1 majority, the Wisconsin Supreme Court has
reversed the lower-court convictions of three Amish
fathers who had refused to enroll their children in public
high school.
Instead of ruling that the religious beliefs of the Amish
must bow to the higher good of the state. as any decent!)
repressive court ought to rule, the court found those beliefs sufficient grounds for exempting the Amish from the
state's compulsory school attendance law .
Although education is a subject within the constitutional
power of the state to regulate . wrote Chief Justice E.
Harold Hallow, there is not such a compelling state interest in two years of compulsory high school education to
justify the burden it places upon the First Amendment
right of the Amish to the free exercise of their religion.
One need not agree with the particular beliefs of the
Amish-one may even lament their denying their children
an education beyond the eighth grade lest they be "contaminated" by the outside world-and still appreciate the
decision as wholly in keeping with America's tradition of
religious liberty, in search of which the ancestors of tens
of millions of Americans, Amish or otherwise. came to
this country.
The Amish way of life is not for most of us . In fact, it
would be impossible, unless some plague devastated the
population and left no more survivors than could support
themselves on the available farmland .
But Amish kids aren't found in juvenile courts. Amishmen don't line up at the welfare office. Amish old folks
aren't left for the state to care for.
America will have lost something precious if the day
should ever come when there was no more room for the
Amish and others like them.
The defense attorney for the Amishmen hailed the decision as a "landmark.'' It may well be that, especially
if the state appeals to the U .S. Supreme Court and the
Wisconsin court is upheld .
And it may be more.
The Amish are one thing; less acceptable religious
groups, whose numbers seem to be proliferating, may be
quite another.
Suppose some father were to argue on the basis of the
Wisconsin decision for the right to educate his children
himself, or not educate them at all . in keeping with his
personal religious beliefs.
Suppose the same question were to arise with regard to
the children of one of these new multiple-marriage, communal, antiestablishment. hippie-type, drug- or sexoriented cults?
Who is to say that one man's religious beliefs are not
as valid as another 's ?
The courts can say, of course, and they may have to .
The decision, however, would not be so easy to m a ke as
it was in the m a tter of the admirable Amish .

Pilfering of Plastic Wealth
Shakespeare to the contrary, who steals thy purse in
this modern day steals not trash but verily pilfers thy
good name and may use it to divest thee of a goodly portion of thy wordly wealth to boot.
The foregoing poetry(?) is occasioned by a recent survey which found that it takes 10 telegrams. 12 letters
&lt;three of which must be notarized) and eight special
form. to reconstruct the credit ~d s, licen9eS and other
items contained in the a verage ld~t or stolen wallet.

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North

F-ast

South
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Opening lead -'# J

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

1

Voice along Broadway i

I

I

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - "The French
Connection" film (about the
true knockoff of a French-Mafia
mob grabbed by N. Y. cops with
$32 million in narcotics) is
shooting in N. Y. City - and its
producer Phil D'Antoni's being
pressured to abandon it or "tone
it down" .... The new "Ari"
musical had a great chance to
put fascinating drama on theN.
Y. stage, but bad writing, ordinary music and drab lyrics
emptied the rich story of interest for anyone .... Joey
Bishop, who competed with
Johnny Carson for a couple of
TV seasons, will sub for Carson
three weeks in April and June
.... Michael Caine is holed up in
an E. 51st St. flat he's sublet for
six months.
Mary McCarty's friends all
tell her to melt off the fat, but

she can't: producer Hal Prince
wants her to hang onto the suet
while she plays an old Ziegfeld
Girl in his upcoming "Follies"
musical .. .. Sorry, the new
Simenon novel "November" is
way off his usual high level of
interest .... Glenda Jackson, on
being handed the N. Y. Film
Critics award by Bette Davis as
the year's Best Actress (for
"Women in Love"), thanked La
Davis with a brief gracious
speech concluding with: "This
award should be given to Miss
Davis in perpetnity" .... Constance Towers was a beautiful
plus in "Ari," but her role was
listless, a cliche.
Joe Levine, the rolypoly film
philanthropist, gave a second
$100,000 to Yale's drama school
.... A TV and nightclub impressionist is flippill'ig his lid,
telling anyone who'll listen how

Women Need Not Be Bald

Save Your 'Crowning Clory'
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.
than you might think,
although it usually occurs in
later years. Of course, you
are not bald YET. There are
a lot of causes for baldness.
Sometimes it is the result of
a glandular disturbance.
The small gland at the base
of the brain sometimes is
injured in childbirth and
leads to mutliple gland
proble ms. The thyroid gland
function is important. too.
N e r v o u s n e s s sometimes causes a loss of hair
- even in patches. This may
be a contributing factor in
your case
Another ca use for loss of
ha ir is freque nt use of harsh
chemicals in beauty treat
ments. That trip to the
beauty parlor every SaturDear R e a d e r- Baldness
may be costing you
in women is more common day
more than money. Consid-

ering some of the thin gs
that are done to hair it is a
wonder that any of it survives.
I think you r eally ought
to go se e a skin specialist
cdermatologist). He can tell
you if you also need some
studies for endocrine gland
function or if you just neP.d
to stop all those hair treatme nts.
If your loss of hair is
c a u s e d by ne rvousness,
pe rhaps knowing this is the
cause will help you to relax
and nature will solve vour
problem.
·
Since you don't have
much money, why don't you
drop the beauty parlor off
your list of expenses fur
awhile and merely shamt)uo
your hair at hom e (not too
often l for a few weeks and
see what happens? Don't
- - - - -- - -- -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - use bleach or tint or other
beauty prepar.a tions
Dear Dr. Lam b- I am
scared a nd don't know
where to turn. rm 28 and
have three children. Other
than an operation for appendicitis I have never been
ill. Four years ago m y hair
started falling out and it
falls out by the fistful. I go
to the beauty shop e ver y
Saturday. A young ope rator
told me I'd be bald in two
years. I can't sleep or eat
and just the thought starts
me to cry. My husband says
it is all foolishness, but I
would rather be dead than
bald. Would you please te ll
me who 1 should see or
what to do to help me? We
don't have much money, but
I'd gladly go to work if
necessary.

that the1r hvmg habits mclude the r e g u I a r use of
drugs . Coffee or colas contain caffeine, which is a
drug. If you need a tranquilIzer , you don't need a stimulant The two drugs would
counte ract each other.
Do you know anyone who
has viole nt reactions after
drinkin g a lcohol'? Usually,
these people have brain dama ge , according to Dr. George
Thompson , a Los Angeles
psyc hi atris t. Dr. Thompson
found that these people had
abnormalities in their brain
wave (EEGJ s imilar to those
reported in certain types of
(•pilepsy c psychomotor) . As
little as two drinks can precipitate the reaction in some
p eo p I e and they may not
even r emember the incident
afterward .

he's "ruining Nixon"
Bricktop gets irate at her soul
brothers and sisters who insist
on being called "black";
Bricktop insists there is more
dignity in "Negro"; they meaJ,
the same thing .... Candy Jones
suddenly cancelled her airlift of
models to Vietnam; Stephanie
Clark, "Miss Black America
1970-71" jetted to VietnamThailand with her court:
Brenda (Miss Black Alabama)
Duff, Sylvia (Miss Black No.
Carolina) Smith, Inas (Miss B.
Utah) Slade, plus "Psychedelic
Frankie &amp; the Rock Theatre"
whatever that is.
N. Y. Times TV critic Jack
Gould is ailing . .. . Hedy
Lamarr's
once-shocking
"Ecstasy" flick is so tame now,
it's just a fleeting filler in
"Hollywood Blue" in a Bdwy _
porno-dive .... Jason Robards is
havmg a splendid run of Fun
Films : "Tora Tora," "Julius
Caesar" and "Murders in the
Rue Morgue" . .. . Zsa Zsa used
to get all worked up when we
mentioned anything about her
"age," and when someone
started to introduce her to Bob
Ritchie, she laughed: "I know
him 110 years"; to which we
only could counter: "See? Now
you're admitting it." Zsa Zsa
fled. .
Mutual pal told the author of
Danny Kaye's "Two by Two"
musical he didn't much like the
show; the author shrugged:
"Neither do I" .... Stage
manager of "Four on a Garden" now trying out here
must be more careful where he
leaves his notebook - an actor
found it with one comment
about Sid Caesar and Carol
Channing: ''They sacrificed
acting for lyrics - little
audience reaction - but less
than the night before."
Jack Dempsey, 75, is okay
except for arthritis .... The city
may get rid of some $500,000
worth of official limousines and
have many municipal bigshots
use a dial-a-cab service .... The
AMA
figured
Mike
Frankovich's "Doctors Wives"
might be an ideal lull-chaser at
its annual convention, but Mike
told them it's not ready yet; it is
and it's a sizzler the docs won't
want shown.
James Darren got nudged by
a bus into the hospital with a
fractured shoulder . .. . The Cy

Pass

Jim: "Declarer's first consideration in no-trump play
is to look around for ways
h(' can develop tricks to add
to the sure ones he started
with.''
Oswald· "If he can develop enough tricks to guarantee his contract by going
after one specific suit he
should go after that suit. If
he can attack two or even
three su1ts he should start
with the suit that will allow
him to go after the others
later on."
Jim: "South has seven top
tricks to start with He &lt;;rln
s u r e l y get one more in
spades and two m o r e if
West holds the king He will
get one extra trick in hearts
if the suit breaks 3-3, onP
extra trick in clubs if the
finesse is on: two e x" l r a
tricks in diamonds if the suit
behaves very nicely r one
extra trick if the suit behaves fairly well. The prospects are pleasing, but a
careless declarer might ·Nell
get himself set."
Oswald: "If he attacks
spades at trick two Ea.&gt;t will
get on lead with the king
and shift to a club. so~tth
will play the queen. West
will take his king and clear
the suit before South has a
chance to develop a diamond
trick and another game will
have disappeared."
Jim: "If South attacks dia monds at trick two he will
be able to keep the dan~~er ­
ous hand out of the lead. The
winning play is to take the
first trick with dummy's ace
of hearts. lead a diamond
and play the eight or 10. This
will lose to West's jack, but
he can't hurt vou in dubs.
South will hav'e set up his
third diamond trick and wili
be left with time to 1\llOek
out the king of spades. ·
Oswald : "S h o u 1 d West
hold four diamonds to the
queen-jack South won't be
able to set up a third diamond trick. but he will still
have time for other suits."

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS- MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Publi s h e d daily
ex ce pt
Saturd a y by Th e Ohio Vall e y
Publi s hin g Company , 111
Court St, Pomer oy, Ohio,
45769 Bu s in ess Office Pho n e
992 2 156, E ditoria l Ph o ne 992 2 157 .
Second c la ss po s tag e paid a t
Pom er o y , Oh10 .
Nat i on a l
adverti s in g
repr esent a tiv e
Bottin e lli
Gallagher , In c ., 12 E a st 42nd
!; t, New York C ity, N e w York
S ubscri p tion
r a t es :
Deliv er ed by c arri er wh ere
availabl e 50 ce nt~ p er we ek ;
By Motor Route wh er e carri er
serv1 ce not a vailabl e: On e
.T1onth $1,7 5 . By mail in Ohio
and W . Va . , One y ea r $ 14 .00
Six month s $7 25 . Three
month s $4.50 . Sub sc ription
pri c e includes SunrJay Times
St:onli! .c_i._

_

OF A. RELI EF TO COME TO A FRONT
LAWt-..1 THAT'S POOCH L ESS· · -

If anyone is looking for a fresh issue to rank right up
there with the environment, health care and the economy
as a focus ot concern and controversy during the '70s, i~
surance is certainly a prime candidate.
•
Specifically, auto insurance, which as an institution is
already displaying those symptoms of crisis and political
and social complexity which can kee!) public debate going,
1
usually bitterly and inconclusively, for years.
Superficially, the problem is financial, one of' profit and
loss for the insurance companies who find they are not
taking in sufficient money in premiums to balance rapidly
escalating payments on claims. But inevitably, it is the
individual motorist who is paying, either through repeated
hikes in insurance rates or by having policies cancelled
outright for little or no reason.
t
The way the insurance industry puts it, companies over
the past 10 years have had to pay out something like $2
billion more in claims than they have received in policy
premiums. Since they haven't been able to make up the
difference with income from investments in an uncertain
stock market, and since state regulatory agencies have
been resistant to catch-up premium increases, their only
out is to cut back in policies, a trend that has had some
bizarre manifestations.
Cancellation as a result of an accident is understandable enough, but increasingly being over a certain age60 or 65-or living in high-risk states such as New Yo.
or New Jersey is all the reason necessary or given fo.
withdrawing coverage. Many companies are stopping all
sales of new policies and not a few are moving to get out
of the auto game altogether.
The situation has everyone concerned and discussing
solutions, with the "no-fault" plan which went into effect
in Massachusetts the first of this year, over almost literally the dead bodies of major insurers, currently t he
prime topic of conversation.
Well, not quiet everyone. Curiously enough . .a poll on
the subject by the University of Michigan's Survey Research Center showed that the great majority of tho
mDst immediately affected, the car owners themselve ,
was either satisfied with (65 per cent) or indifferent to
the present insurance sy.;tem. Only 22 per cent were
openly dissatisfied. Howe~ er, when the significant features of the present insurance structure, and possible
alternatives, were discussed with interviewees at length,
some 44 per cent ended up favorable in some degree to
"no fault."
Most simply put, unde "no fault" an insurer pays off a
client involved in an accident immediately-at least up to
a certain amount-no matter who is at fault. Theoretical
advantages include immediate compensation of injured~
parties, avoiding the lengthy delay in taking a contes~
case to court; administrative savmgs, which would be
passed on to the policyholder as reduced premiums, and,
by taking claim adjustment out of the courts relieving
pressure on the jammed court system.
Other than numerous dissidents within the insurance
industry, major organized and outspoken opposition co:nes
from the legal profession, which has a very direct and
obvious interest in the issue. Some spokesmen have
termed "no fault" delusive as a way out of the bind for
insurers and motorists, contending that up to 98 per cent
of accident cases are already settled out of court that a'best savings on the average policy would amount to onlf
a few dollars per year and that a major deterrent to accidents-the threat of raised rates or cancelled policies~ould be removed. (The. Michigan survey's respondents
disagree on the latter pomt, less than one-third believing
that a driver's legal liability for damage or injury has
any great influence on his care in driving.)
All of this is only the beginning of a long and involved
d~bate. Through it all, one point hopefully will be recogmzed: The eventual solution, whatever its details must
be tailored not to the convenience or profit of the courts
the legal profession or even the insurance industry but tQ..
the needs for American motorists in their millions wh~
have become, thanks in part to virtual abandonment of
public transportation, the major and absolutely essential
element in the national transportation system.

r---------------------------1

1. iHelen Help Us!

The bidding has been:
West
North
East
South
1 '#
Dble
Pass
?
Pass
2•
Pass
You, South, hold:
.8743 '#7 tJ986 4oK1043 I:
What do you do now?
A- Pass. At best the play for FROM BOTH SIDES
game will be doubtful.
OF THE FENCE

A thought for today: Philosopher William Jemes said, "Be
not afraid of life. Believe that
life is worth living and your
belief will help create that
fact."
Coleman - Dorothy Fields
musical "Eleanor" was postponed again .... Harry Goz of
"Two by Two" thinks the W.
Coast will be as big with legit
shows as Bdwy. in a short while
so he's asked his agent to get
him work in Calif . . .. Rudolf
Nureyev looked like Ingrid
Bergman as Joan of Arc while
TV-taping a tribute to Burt
Bacharach in exotic Brooklyn:
His friend and hostess, Monique
Van Vooren refereed, when
Rudy stamped his facile feet
and fussed away several hours
of expensive TV time to make
certain cameras were catching
his profile to his liking.

The A g e of Aquarius
Abo u t one -third of dia- smells a little fishy.
betics can be treated with -California G o v. Ronald
Reagan, complaining that
die tary management alone .
we lfare progmms are subThe figure m ight be I'Ven
sidizing hippie communes.
higher if all those who are
overweight r e a II y lost all
their excess fat. I have personally seen m a ny people
Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
®
who had dia betic blood reacF==================;-r=-=================:!,
tions become completely norm a l att er sig nifiC'ant weight
DoGS It-.~ EVERY Y~R.D, so IT's SORT
So T~E DOOR OPENS ~ND T~E
loss.
Many people fail to r ealize

"Frankly, Richard, I'm refieved your budget shows a big
deficit- f want lo talk tn F''' aho•Jf my hudget!"

EAST

SOUTH (D)

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

BERRY'S .WORlD

WEST

.854
'#Jl097
tJ2
4oKJfi3

West

By DON GRAFF

25

• A 102
'# A63
• 965:l
4-874

PURP H,li.S BEEt-..! WAITING FOR
HIM-- INSIDE!

By Helen Bottel

Dear Helen:
My wife is 70. I am 71. We
have been married six years
and there is no love in our
house. She thinks I have a
fortune. The truth (which she
knows) is my pension and social
security come to less than $400.
She gets $100 a month social
security, but refuses to spend it.
She runs up $30 phone bills
every month, and buys clothes
she doesn't need. I got a camper
for trips but, because of the
weather, haven't taken any yet.
So she sleeps in the camper and
threatens to take it off on her
own, as it is "community
property" and half hers.
She nags and squawls and
won't let my children come in
the house. She had her son
arrested because he didn't pay
back money ·'she" loaned him
- except it was my money.
Hers is all socked away in a
place I can't find.
She thinks I am crazy and I
think she is off her rocker. I
married to have a peaceful old
age. It's only peaceful around
here when she is sulking.
If she leaves, half of my
property goes with her. Help me

of this
BARGAIN
r-~~~:=:==-~=~i=~~~~J out
Dear Helen :

mess. -

freezer and forgot to hook it in
again. When the food spoiled, he
suggested I boil it 20 minutes
and use it anyway. Why did he
unplug the freezer? To save
electricity overnight!
If you met this man you'd be
impressed, as he puts on a go~
show but even our pastor has
given up on him.
I have moved to the camper
outdoors and am having a nonsupport charge opened against
him. Do you blame me?- GOT
THE WORST OF IT
Dear Readers:
These two letters have been
changed to protect the guilty
(and I suspect both write._.
share equally here). What can I
say except:
"Look, you scrappy septegenarians: life is too short tO
spend it fighting over money.
Your combined $500 a month
isn'ta fortune, but it's ample for
a comfortable home life and
occasional trips. Forget 'mine
and thine' and work out a
budget. This won't solve •
your problems but it may prove
the foolishness of feuding over
something you can't take with
'
you. - H.

BAD

My husband of six years sent
you a letter earlier today. I saw
him sneaking it to the mailbox.
He no doubt told you I had a
mental condition, but he is the
one. I am 70, he is 71, and thinks
he is very sexy. He prefers his
family and the ladies in church
over me . He won't support me.
If I want clothes or money for
telephone calls to my sister, he
says "Pay for them yourself."
But he had enough money to
buy an expensive house-car that
just sits there because he is too
cheap to buy gas for a trip.
I tried giving a sack of
dropped apples to the mail
carrier, but he took them aw~-y
· ·'"''~SM,r.VIIQ saying they belonged to hi .
Then he pulled the ping to ~ e

'1

The "Memphis Blues"
made musical history in
the United States when it
became the first blues son.
published. It was written
in 1912 by the Negro com poser, William C. Handy,
"the father of the blues,"
The World A I man a c recalls. Handy also wrote
many other popular pieces,
among them being the "St.
Louis Blues" and ''Beale
Stn•t•t Bhrl's ."

�_. il:~:~:~~;!:::~,:~:::~~~~rNFC Stars Pop AFC 27-6
I

BY PAOC

(MOONU~)

CUITORD

11!11

There's quite a bit that is good about Meigs County. That John
Will, manager of Mr. Gilligan's spirits dispensary on Mulberry
Ave. in Pomeroy will attest.
On six-weeks furlough to sunny Fort Launderdale
(bivouacking with the James Webers) John expected to enjoy one
of his favorite hobbies which is cheering for his favorite pro
football team in the Super Bowl. But guess what? The game was
blacked out in Fort Lauderdale!
Furthermore, it was so cold in Lauderdale that its famous
beaches were as bare of bathers as an ice cake off Greenland's
shores is of Trader Vic's topless dancers.

•

LOS ANGELES (UP!) -The
National Football Conference
drew a measure of revenge
Sunday for the loss its
champion suffered in the Super
Bowl by defeating the American Conference Ali..Stars, 27-6,
in the 21st annual Pro Bowl.
And it was Mel Renfro, a

member of the Dallas team
that went down to defeat in the
Super Bowl, who crushed the
AFC with punt returns of 82
and 56 yards for touchdowns in
the final quarter.
The excellent passing of San
Francisco's John Brodie climaxed by a 23-yard touchdown

Meigs Wins

THE PREDICTION Business was positively bearish last
weekend. Of 16 games, 14 showed up in the crystal ball going the
right way, one score was seen exactly the way it happened, and
the score of another had a 45-point spread which was precisely
how Sports Desk saw it? One is inclined to boast a bit about this
• achievement as in this business one does not expect perfection. It
wouldn't do to become frustrated over failing to hit all scoresand spreads -exactly as fortune (or misfortune) decrees.
Sports Desk's Federal Hocking 68 and Warren Local 59 was
how it actually happened. Waverly clipped Wellston 78-33 for a 45
point spread which was the spread in the expected score of 99-54!
That fella who said you can't win 'em all knew what he was
~ • talking about. But you can win some of 'em some of the time.
A slipup in composing (really to be blamed on a certain fourth
estater's illegible handwriting) in Friday's prediction that had
Southwestern defeating Kyger Creek 92-54 is corrected in the
table below. The "t" in Southwestern's "52" looked like a "9". In
the table below that is corrected. The first score following the
teams listed is the actual score, that in parenthesis was the
predicted score, and at the right is the actual spread followed by
the predicted spread.
FRIDAY
Meigs 61 (59) Gallipolis 59 (51)
8-2
3-13
Jackson63 (55)Athens66(73)
29-15
Ironton 78 ( 68) Logan 49 (53)
Waverly 78 (99) Wellston 33 (54)
4&amp;-45!
32-10
Hannan Trace 59 (64) North Gallia 91 (74)
38-15
Glouster 59 ( 44) Eastern 97 (59)
31- 2
Kyger Creek 82 (54) Southwestern 51 (52)
9- 9!
Federal Hock 68 (68!) Warren Local 59 (59!)
Alexander 77 (63) Vinton County 60 (50)
17-13
Miller 53 (63) Crooksville 59 (51)
Bong!!
SATRUDAY
25-27
Gallipolis 40 ( 45) Chesapeake 65 (72)
Meigs 65 (69) Wahama 57 (60)
8-9
Wellston 75 (51) Pike Eastern 88 (74)
13-23
20-18
Alexander 91 (71) Kyger Creek 71 (53)
Oops
Miller 52 ( 68) Starr-Wash 60 ( 61)
10-21
Southern 49 ( 64) Southwestern 39 ( 43)
Average 20.1-16.1
14 of 16 Right
To Date 630f 78for 80.8percent

The Meigs Mauraders invaded Mason Saturday night and left
with a hard-fought 65-57 victory over Wahama.
The ball game was close all the way but after the four-avertime Meigs victory over Gallipolis, the ward exciting must have
seemed pretty dull to the eventual winners.
The Wahama gym was packed to capactiy as the crowd watched what has become a major rivilary between the Falcons and
the Marauders.
The next clash between these two teams will be February 13
at the Meigs High School gymnasium where Wahama will try to
average their loss while Meigs will have the task of trying to
shoot down the Falcons again.
The White Falcons managed to gain a 4.point lead as the
quarter ended with the Falcons edge, 14-10. In the second
quarter Meigs managed to pull within one as they outscored the
hosts 17-14 in the period.
In the third quarter, Meigs tookadvantageofthe sharpshooting of Jeff Tyo and Jeff Morris and managed to outscore the
Falcons 19-16 in the canto.
Again in the fourth quarter, Meigs demonstrated the rebounding department and turned in an accurate shooting performance
to outscore the Falcons this time by a 19-13 mark.
Once again the White Falcons scored more field goals than
their opponent but again they were done in at the foul line. Wahama shot 23 free throws, making 13, for 65 percent. While
Meigs attempted 35 foul shots, making 25 for a respectable 71
percent. Wahama committed a total of 24 fouls. Two Falcon
players Coded out.
Tyo led all point-getters with 21. Meigs scoring was followed by Morris with 19 and Childs 18.
Wahama was led by Tim Howard with 17 points followed
closely by Keith Sayre with 14 points.
As Meigs controlled the rebounding department Wahama
managed only 26 rebounds with Tim Howard totaling 9.
In the preliminary game, the White Falcons team reached
the mid-Season mark with a still unbeaten record of 10...0 under
Coach Don Van Meter. Contributing greatly to their success
are Tom Samsel, Roger Dingey, Mark Mitchell, Chester Roush,
Rob Lambert, Mike White and Barry Harris. Samsel led Wahama's 63..52 victory over Meigs with 15 points followed by
Chester Roush with 14.
The Wahama Varsity with an even 5..5 record. will host the
Milton Greyhounds Tuesday night with the first ~me beginning
at 6:30.
BY QUARTERS:
WAHAMA
14 14 16 13 57
MEIGS
10 17 19 19 65

' Knicks' Reed
Back In Form

WAHAMA
T. Howard, 7, 3-7, 17; R. Smith, 0, 0-0, 0; K. Sayre, 6, 2~,
14; B. Clark, 3, 1-2, 7; R. Clark, 1, 5-7, 7; M. Howard, 2, 3-4,
7; R. Crawford, 2, 1-1, 5.
MEIGS
J. Tyo, 5, 11-13, 21; B. Hensler, 1~~. 4; J. Morris, 8, 3-6,
19; R. Van ~1etre, 1, 1-1, 3; M. Childs, 5, 8-11, 18; C. Haggerty,
0, 0-1, 0; Ash, 0, 0-1, 0.

f.

•

•

•

...
"'
""
'"
• "''
•

•

"
,
,
~r

-•
"
"
•
~
~

"
.- "
•

By United Press International
There wasn't anything wrong
with the New York Knicktrbockers that a healthy Willis
Reed couldn't cure.
On Saturday night the 6-foot-9
center poured in 30 points and
grabbed 17 rebounds as the
Knicks routed the Boston
Celtics, 128-107, and Sunday he
collected 24 points to spark
New York to a 117-105 triumph
over the Detroit Pistons.
In the process Reed became
the highest scorer in Knicks'
history.
Reed, who was sidelined for a
few games a couple of weeks
ago with the flu, was slow to
recover and during his convalescing period the Knicks
dropped six of eight games.
"It sure feels good to get
going again," said Reed after
Sunday's effort pushed him
past Carl Braun and into first
place on the Knicks' all-time
scoring list with 10,511 points.
"A lot of people have been
thinking that I'm washed up."
Scoring Support
Reed got scoring support
from Bill Bradley with 22 points
and Mike Riordan with 19 as
the Knicks snapped a five-game
losing streak on the road with a
victory at Detroit. Dave Bing
paced the Pistons with 26
points.
In other Sunday action,
Milwaukee routed Atlanta 142120; Los Angeles topped Cincinnati,
142-131;
Philadelphia
crushed Seattle, 145-119; Boston
beat Cleveland, 121-100; Phoe-

."Weekend
...

•

'

nix defeated Chicago, 113-112;
and Buffalo whipped Portland,
123-111.
Bob Dandridge connected on
15 of 20 shots from the floor
and scored 33 points to spark
the Bucks' to their 41st victory
in 49 games. Oscar Robertson
chipped in with 29 points and 15
assists while Pete Maravich led
the Hawks with 30 points.
Wilt Chamberlain scored 35
points and collected 29 rebounds
to pa.::e the Lakers' victory.
Jerry West supported Chamberlain with 32 points and Happy
Hairston and Keith Erickson
chipped in with 28 and 25 points
respectively. Tom Van Arsdale
led Cincinnati with 25 points.
Philly Trims Seattle
~illy Cunningham scored 33
points and Archie Clark added
32 as Philadelphia trimmed
Seattle. Spencer Haywood led
the SuperSonics with 30 points.
John Havlicek collected 36
points and Jo Jo White added
28 as the Celtics handed the
Cavaliers their 47th loss in 54
games. Johnny Johnson topped
Cleveland with 29 points.
The Suns rallied from 11
points down in the last nine and
one-half minutes to nip Chicago.
Phoenix momed ahead to stay
with 1: 31 left as they overcame
a 34-point effort by Chicago's
Bob Love. Mel Counts and Paul
Silas paced the Suns with 18
points each.
Bob Kauffman's 30 points
paced Buffalo to its third
rtraight victory. Geoff Petrie
topped Portland with 28 points.

Sports Summary

France took the lead in the
Sunday
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Mel World Cup standings with a
Renfro's two long punt returns spectacular victory in the Inter
for touchdowns sparked the national Hahnenkamm slalom.
National Conference to a 27-0
CERVINIA, Italy (UPI)
victory over the American
Conference in the National Heavy snow forced cancellation
Football League Pro Bowl of the final heats in the World
Two-Man Bobsled Championgame.
ships and officials proclaimed
the Italian No. team the winners
PHOENIX, Ariz. ( UPIJ Miller Barber fired a closmg- on the basis of Saturday's first
round six-under-par 65 to win two heats.
the $125,000 Phoenix Open golf
tournament by two strokes with KELLER WINS
I['I;ZELL, Germany (UPI) a four-round total of 23-underErhard Keller, West Germany's
par 261.
Olympic gold medalist, won a
KITZBUEHEL, Austria 500-ntetcr race at an invitation
!UPI)
World slalom chal- sp&lt;·ed skating mee t Sunday in
pion .Jean-Noel i\ugert • f I IH• IIIIIC of 40.12 SPCOnds.

"

pass in the third period to
Minnesota's Dave Osborn had
been the margin for the NFC
until Renfro electrified the
crowd of 48,222 in the Coliseum
with his punt returns for
touchdowns.
As had been expected, the
game was a defensive struggle
most of the way.
"There's no conclusions about
the conferences to be drawn
from the game," said losing
Coach John Madden of Oakland. "Neither team controlled
the ball and both defenses were
hitting and tackling well."
Madden thought his team was
the victim of an adverse ruling
when Oakland end Fred Biletnikoff caught what appeared to
be a touchdown pass from
Daryle Lamonica in the end
zone in the third period. But

College Scores
By United Press International
East
Princeton 81 Dvdsn 71
Navy 85 Ba lti more 73
West Virginia 107 Riu 90
Duquesne 89 St. Bonnie 68
Pittsburgh 89 No. Car. St. 75
Albright 87 Scranton 71
Wilkes 71 Del. Val. 69
Penn St. 65 Army 48
LaSalle 93 Lafytte 82
Phi Ia. Tex. 70 Trntn St. 54
Dartmouth 68 Bos Univ. 65
Marshall 80 Bwlng Gr 64
West Chester 84 Del 74
Penn 78 Villanova 70
South
Georgia 88 Miss. 80
Vir. Tech 76 Clemson 66
Tenn. Wslyn 82 Millkn 71
Ala . St. 82Ft. Valley 80
Ga. Tech 85 Fla. St. 67
Vanderbilt 107 Auburn 86
Kentucky 82 LSU 79
Tennessee 79 Ala. 62
Murray St. 73 West. Ky. 71
Midwest
Drake 81 Louisville 78
Ohio St. 68 Minnesota 66
Toledo 66 West . Mich. 60
Notre Dame 89 UCLA 82
Houston 73 Kan. St. 71
Akron 77 Yngstwn 71
Kansas 90 Okla. St. 55
Marquette 73 DePaul 51
Mich. 97 Nrthwstrn 87
Ashland 80 Shaw (Michl. 58
Miami (0.) 75 Ohio U. 70
DePauw 90 Ind. Cent. 89 ot
Southwest
TCU 64 Texas A&amp;M 59
SMU 96 Baylor 86
Texas Tech 68 Texas 62
Wes t Tex . 108 Sou. Miss . 65
UTEP 66 New Mex. St. 52
Air Force 70 Trnty (Tex.) 63
West
Wash . 93 Ore St. 85 ot
Calif. 81 San Fran. 70
Oregon 95 Wash . St. 68
Utah 99 Stanford 91
Utah St. 72 BYU 70
Weber St 100 Portland 72
Ida. St. 88 Boise St. 74
Ariz. St. 117 No. Ariz. 77
Denver 67 Sou. Colo. 54
Colo. 95 Iowa St. 82

Royals Rally Falls Short
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI )Wilt Chamberlain stuffed in 35
points and brought down 29
rebounds and Jerry West added
32 points Sunday night as the
Los Angeles Lakers staved off
a late rally to defeat the
Cincinnati Royals 142-131.
The Royals had trimmed the
Laker advantage to three points
with a 1:37left but Los Angeles
scored 11 of the last 14 points
to chalk up their third straight
victory.

Four of the Lakers hit 25
points or more. Joining West
and Chambedain were Happy
Hairston with 28 markers and
Keith Erickson with 25. A total
of seven Royals managed to hit
in double figures with Tom Van
Arsdale showing the way with
25 points.
After Cincinnati had pulled to
within three points, West made
good on three straight free
throws including a technical

·
e r Capt ures
Phoenix T itle

B ar b

·

PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI)-Put
perfect golfing weather together with a friendly, flat and fairly
!ihort course and a bunch of
hungry pros and you're going to
have a lot of low scores.
That's what happened during
the weekend at the Arizona
Country Club where par was
shattered repeatedly and most
often by Miller Barber, an usual
Texan in that he is a taciturn
chap who does not flap his
mouth but concentrates on his
game.
Barber, 39, who was only a
few dollars short of $100,000 in
earnings last year, ran away
with the $25,000 first prize in the
Phoenix Open with his 72-hole
total of 261, 23 under par. His
rounds were 65-64-67-05. Par is
35-36--71.
"I didn't realize I was
shooting that good," said
Barber when he was told he was
a record breaker.
Two strokes back at the hectic
finish were Masters champion
Billy Casper and the Florida
barrister Dan Sikes. Casper
shot a final 62, nine under, tying
the course record held by Gene
Littler. Sikes shot 64.
Their total, 263, was 21 under
par, equalling the tournament
record also set by Littler when
he won here in 1969.
The tie for second Sunday was
good for $11,575.
Three pros tied for fourth at
264, good for $5,158. They were
Rod Uri. a 28-vear-old Indian
from Redding, Calif., who got
hi5 biggest check so far ; Dave

Hill, who had the first hole-inone of the PGA year, and
Homero Blancas, who shot a 63
Saturday but tailed off to 67
Sunday.
Paul Tarney, who led after
three rounds by one stroke over
Littler, did an el foldo, you
might say. He took a par-11
when he four-putted on the last
green. His tie for seventh was
good for $3,280. Also in this
bracket were Howie Johnson
(65), George Archer (67), Don
Massengale ( 66), Hale Irwin
(66) and Kermit Zarley (6y) .
Littler, the 40-year-old La
Jolla ,
Calif.,
smooth
swinger, slumped to a one-over
72 in the last round. He ended at
267, not bad but good only for a
tie for 16th place. Also in that tie
were Arnold Palmer ( 66),
Frank Beard (68) and Bob Lunn
( 69). Lunn shared the firstround lead with a 64.
Fred Marti, who also had a
first day 64 with Lunn, and
Massengale took a lukewarm
par the last round and landed in
the 272 bracket, good for only
$400.
FORDS REINSTATE!)
INDIANAPOLIS , Ind . (UP!)
The Ford :l55-cubic-inch dual
overhead cam engine and the
30T-cubic-inch max1mum size
for stock block engines were
reinstated for competition in
the road course division for
championship cars at the
United States Auto Club's
annual board meeting Sunday.

foul shot when the Royals
Norm Van Lier disputed a call.
Van Lier incurred another
technical with 53 seconds to go
and was ejected from the
game.
The Lakers led 61-56 at the
half when Hairston took charge
to score 16 points in the third
quarter. The Laker forward
had made good on only two of
12 field goal attempts in the
first half, but he pumped in
seven in a row to put Los
Angeles ahead 103-92 going into
the final period.
It was a night when both
teams were shooting well.
N BA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
35 17 .673
Philadelphia 32 22 .593 4
Boston
29 23 .558 6
Buffalo
16 39 .291 20112
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
30 20 .600 ...
Cinci nnati
21 29 .420 9
Atlanta
17 35 .327 14
Cleveland
7 47 .130 25
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
41 8 .837 ...
Detroit
34 18 .654 8112
Chicago
30 21 .588 12
Phoenix
30 23 .566 13
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
LosAngeles 28 20 .583 ...
San Francisco 27 25 .519 3
24 28 .462 6
Seat tie
San Diego
23 30 .434 71!2
Portland
17 36 .321 13112
Sunday's Results
New York 117 Detroit 105
Boston 121 Cleveland 110
Milwaukee 142 Atlanta 120
Buffalo 123 Portland 111
Phoenix 113 Chicago 112
Los Ang 142 Cincinnati 131
Phi !adelphia 145 Seattle 119
Monday's Games
Boston at Cleveland
Buffalo at San Diego
(Only games scheduled)

Cage Standings

Biletnikoff was ruled to have
stepped out before he had
possession.
The AFC got on the
scoreboard first in the second
period on a 37-yard field goal
by Jan Stenerud of Kansas
City. But Fred Cox made it a 33 halftime he when the
M,innesota kicker booted a 13yard field goal.
Brodie then took over in the
third _period and guided the
NFC on the only sustained
touchdown drive of the game,
marching his team 84 yards in
six plays climaxed by the 23yard touchdown pass to Osborn.
Cox then kicked a 35-yard field
goal but Stenerud matched his
performance with a 16-yarder
through the uprights.
The fourth period was just
one minute old when Renfro
took a punt by Jerrel Wilson of
the Chiefs on the 18 for his first
touchdown retirn. At 8:54 later,
he fielded another punt before
his 56-yard jaunt.
Statistically, the edge belonged to the NFC, which ran
up 337 total yards to 146.
Osborn was the leading rusher
with 45 yards on 10 carries
while Larry Csonka of Miami
led the AFC with 44 yards on
six carries.
Brodie completed 10 of 26
passes for 156 yards and Fran
Tarkenton made good on eight
of 13 for 69 yards. Lamonica
completed only four of 21
passes for 50 yards while Bob
Griese of Miami hit 9 of 14 for
86 yards. Griese was sacked
five times for 56 yards.
Fred Carr of Green Bay
caught the eye of press box
voters and was named lineman
of the game.

Ohio College
Basketball Records
By United Press International
Independents
Won Lost
Ashland
13
2
Central State
12
3
11
3
Youngstown State
10
3
Akron
Urbana
12
5
Ohio Dominican
8
4
Dayton
9
5
Steubenville
9
5
Cincinnati
9
6
Xavier
7
7
Rio Grande
8
9
Walsh
6
8
John Carroll
3
4
6
9
Wright Sta te
Cleveland State
5
10
Case Tech
2
5
Wastern Reserve
2
5
Ohio Northern
3
11
Mid-American Conference
League Overall
W

L

W L

Miami
4 1
8 4
Ohio Univers ity 2 2
8 4
Toledo
2 2
9 5
West . Michigan 1 2
8 4
Ken t Sta te
1 2
8 5
Bowling Green 1 2
4 8
Ohio Conference
League Overall
Capital
Wooster
Otterbein

W L

W

9 4
Wi ttenberg
4 1
10 4
Martella
4 2
Mn11n I I Jninn
4 7
7
3
7 6
Heidelberg
4 3
Baldw1n Wallace
3 4
5 10
Muskingum
2 4
5 9
Kenyon
2 4
5 9
Denison
2 5
4 8
Ohio Wesleyan 1 3
7 7
H,ram
1 6
4 9
Oberlin
0 5
4 6
Mid-Ohio Conference
League Overall

Findlay
Wilm ington
Bluffton
Defiance
Cedarville
Malone

6

0

11

4

0

15

2

1

4

1

9

2

This

Ohio College
Basketball Scores
By United Press Internationa l
Ohio State 68 Minnesota 66
Toledo 66 Western Michigan 60
Dayton 88 Detroit 77
Ken t Sta te 105 St. Joseph's
(Ind.) 84
Marsha ll 80 Bowling Green 64
Ca pital 86 Otterbein 84
Mount Union 97 Ohio Wesleyan
94
Heidelberg 83 Hiram 74
Florida
Presbyter ian
91
Muskingum 85
Wooster 108 Case Tech 67
Defiance 109 Malone 75
Rio Grande 71 Wright State 69
Urbana 130 Indiana Northern 93
Central State 82 Bellarm ine
(Ky.) 58
Wi ttenberg 57 Oberlin 56
Ke nyon 84 Marietta 83
Akron 77 Youngstown State 71
Ba ldwin-Wallace 93 Denison 84
Ashland 80 Shaw (Mich.) 58
Thomas More (Ky.) 109 Ohio
Dominican 73

FMason,
URNITU
RE
W. Va.

2
3
3

5
7

11

8
8
4

2

2

8

8

W

L

3
3
3
3

0
0
0
0

W L
8
9
9
9

2
3
4
4

2
1

1
2

9
7

3
5

6

1

3

6

0
0

2
4

5 6
4 10

0

4

6

8

Week~s

By United Press Interna tiona l
Monday
Mrami at Xavier
St. Louis at Dayton
Cedarville at Central State
Defiance at Allinace (Pa.)
Tuesday
Cincinnati at Ohio University
Cleveland State at Detroit
West Liberty at Steubenville
Western Reserve at Bethany
Defiance at Youngstown
Woos ter at Baldwin-Wallace
Denison at Muskingum
Ohio Wesleyan at Kenyon
Oberl in at Otterbein
Wednesday
Bowling Green at Kent State
Toledo at Butler
Hiram at Akron
Ashland at Point Park ( Pa .)
Cleveland Sta te at Indiana State
(Pa .)
John Carroll at Mount Union
Ohio Dominican a t Marietta
Earlharr. at Ohio Northern
Rio Grande at Findlay
Wes tern Reserve at Wash. &amp; '
Jeff.
Wright State at Wilmington
Wittenberg at Capital
Bluffton at Heidelberg
By United Press International Mentor 54 Midpark 45
Thursday
Cols. Walnut Ridge 97 Cols. Fairview 72 Olmsted Falls 63
Tulane at Miami
South 72
Brecksv ille 57 Brooklyn 48
Madison South 71 West Jef- Independence 52 Cuyahoga Alliance (Pa.) at Youngstown
State
ferson 69
Heights 47
Garaway 108 Riverview 75
Strongsville 68 North Royalton Otterbein a t Ohio Wesleyan
Marion at Cedarville
Tuscarawas
Valley
73
50
Walsh at Malone
Ridgewood 63
Lakewood St. Edward 68
Friday
74
Newcomerstown
Cleveland Cathedral Latin 40
at
Textile
Meadowbrook 58
Elyria Catholic 48 Vermillion 38 Philadelphia
Steubenville
Steubenville Central 75 Win- Painesville Harvey 56 Kent
Saturday
tersville 69
Roosevel t 51
Stanton Local 76 Smithfield 74 Geneva 55 Painesville River- Michigan State al Ohio State
Kent State at Ohio University
Martins Ferry 74 Bellaire 71
side 39
Bridgeport 94 Cadiz 48
Wickliffe 74 Cleve. University 57 Wes tern Michigan at Bowling
Green
Beallsville 91 Bishop Donahue Ashtabula Harbor 93 Grand
Dayton a t Miami
(W. Va.l 73
Valley 41
,
t Texas State at Cirtcinnati
Adena 86 Yorkville 83
South Amherst 81 Ami:J~rst 70 Wes
St. Joseph's ( Pa.) at Xavier
Massillon 73 Youngstown East Avon 76 Brookside 44
Detroit a t Toledo
67
Southview 82 Lorain 73
Youngstown State at Buffalo
Boardman 98 Salem 55
Chardon 69 Ledgemont 47
Springfield Loca l 79 Beaver Willoughby South 64 Mayfield 62 Central State at Eastern
Michigan
Local 59
Aurora 52 Central Catholic 50
Phil adelphia Textile at Akron
Mingo 59 Wei rton (W. Va .) Westlake 63 Medina 60
Ashland at Cleveland State
Madonna 52
Jefferson 76 Madison 58
Case Tech at Car11egie-Mellon
Scio 78 Dillonva le 76
Aurora 52 Cleveland Central Ohio
Dom inican at Wilmington
Warwood (W. Va.) 89 Warren
Catholic 50
Consolidated 76
Cleveland Urbana at Ohio Northern
Wickliffe
74
Pikeville (Ky.) at Rio Grande
River (W. Va.) 81 Bellaire St.
University 57
Johns 73
Elyria Catholic 48 Vermilion 38 Walsh at Ind iana Northern
Wright
State at Northwood
Youngstown Woodrow Wilson 56 Castalia Margaretta 85 Edison
( Ind .)
Niles 53
46
Canton McKinley 73 Warren Fremont St. Joseph 98 Clyde 38 Baldwin-Wallace at Marietta
Harding 57
Toledo Star 70 Toledo Scott 64 Capita l at Mount Union
Akron East 61 Alliance 58
Toledo Woodward 78 Toledo Heidelberg at Denison
Otterbein at Hiram
Claymont 70 Dover 43
Central 66
Indian Valley South 78 Conotton Toledo Stritch 66 Toledo Wooster a~ Kenyon
Muskingum at Wittenberg
Valley 44
Bowsher 58
Carroll ton St. Edwards 65 Toledo Macomber 57 Sylvania Chicago at Oberlin
Cedarville at Findlay
Bunnerdale 60
54
Cleve.
East
70
Cleve. Rossford 63 Toledo Waite 57
Toledo Whitmer 95 Bedford 68
Benedictine 56
Cleve. Glenville 52 Cleve. John Bowling Green 72 Perrysburg 68
Huron 77 Port Clinton 64
Hay 46
Cleve. J.F.K. 56 Cleve. John Maumee 68 Toledo Anthony
Wayne 60
Adams 55
Cleve. Holy Name 74 Cleve. J. Nor thwood 65 Woodmere 64
Maumee Valley 74 Cleveland
Marshall 40
Cleve. South 79 Cleve. Max Hawkin 70
Hayes 65
Ottawa Hills 65 Fostoria St.
Cleve. St. Ignatius 76 Cleve. W.
Wendelin 62
Tech 67
Lima Bath 79 Fostoria 58
Avon Lake 63 Rocky River 53 E Iida 75 Kenton 65
Bay Village 6/ North Olmsted 61 Crestview 77 Van Wert 48
Lorain Catholic 81 Cleve. Arlington 73 Delphos Jefferson
Gilmour 56
67
Mau mee Valley 74 Cleve. Carey 67 Ada 61
Hawken 70
Upper Scioto Valley 65 BenSt. Clairsville 55 Union Local 53
jamin Logan 54
(ot)
Ohio City 68 Spencerville 56
Woodsfield 75 Seton Central 48 Mir~mi&lt;;huro 74 Dr~vtnn White 54
Frontier 76 St. Marys (W. Va .) Dayton Dunbar 84 Delphos St.
49
Joh n 72
Louisville 83 Marlington 44
Dayton Stivers 81 Xenia Wilson
Canton Lehman 71 Akron South
45
68
Dayton Chaminade 82 Dayton
Canton Tim ken 88 War ren
Wright 57
J.F . K. 54
Vandalia Butler 65 Fairborn
Lorain Admiral King 84 Canton
Baker 57
Lincoln 70
Dayton Alter 76 Xenia 74
Arkon Buchtel 69 Central Dayton Oakwood 88 Twin Val ley
about Insurance
Catholic 63
South 53
of any kind?
North Canton Hoover 54 Perry Dayton Meadowdale 74 Trot49
wood 67
Glenwood 75 Fairless 68
Preble Shawnee 81 New Miami
It's our business to ''bring
Can ton South 71 Jackson 52
74
Canton Aquinas 74 Rootstown 66 Twin Valley North 774 College
the light" without the
Minerva 64 East Palestine 55
Corner 66
slightest obligation on your
Lake 85 Feild 59
Dixie 74 Franklin Monroe 68
part.
East Canton 75 Indian Valley Springfield North 59 Belle
Nort h 66
fontaine 37
Sandy Valley 48 Carrollton 47 I ipp City 84 Yellow Springs 73
Oakwood 84 Malvern 67
Dayton Roth 87 Cincinnati Taft
Tiffin Columbian 86 Bellevue 64
53
Shelby 59 Upper Sandusky 52 Bethel 78 Northwestern 75 (ot)
Phone 992-2966
Willard 64 Bucyrus 56
Adena 69 Paint Valley 51
114 Court St.
Pomeroy
Elgin 55 Ridgedale 54 (ot)
Fort Loramie 88 Mississnawa
Lakota 75 Old Fort 68
Valley 81
Colonel Crawford 51 Seneca
East 46
Arcadia 84 Hopewell -Loudon 65
Bedford 77 Maple Heights 57
Eastlake North 52 Berea 41 (ot

High

Scho~l

Results

IN THE DARK?

Davis-Warner Ins.

PUT OUR

YOUR BILLS ARE.•.

MASON .

2

5
3
3

Games

FURNITURE
$349.95
Convenient
Terms.

W L

14

L

MONEY WHERE

$35.00 DownBalance On

L

1

1 6
2 10
Big Ten
League Overall

Illinois
Purdue
Michigan
Ohio Sta te
Indiana
Michigan State
Wisconsin
Iowa
Northwestern
Minnesota

3 ROOMS

NEW

W

3

�TV. .. in $95 Million Moonship
Review TY/
, E
G
A
JIY on t
ver et way
ByRICKDUBROW

JOHN HALIJDAY of Gallipolis, left was an interested
guest Saturday night at the Ray Farnham dinner in the
Orchid Room, Pomeroy. Halliday was one of an estimated
200 former players and their wives of the 1928-1936 era in
Pomeroy High School athletics when Farnham, now retired

. . . - ------l

r -- -- -

~--~Constructive Letters of Opinion, in good taste, are
welcomed. Tbe editor reserves the right to shorten letters.
All letters must be signed, with a full address, although
Initials may be used upon request.
~

i

,9~

••• ?Jtt. ~=

~

t!k

~
I

Middleport, Ohio
Jan. 24, 1971
Dear Sir:
As President of the Student Body and captain of cheerleaders at
Meigs High School, I can honestly say that the Meigs "Bleacher
Bums" are the best thing that ever happened in regard to
basketball at Meigs High School.
They are an organized, respectable group of men who,
through the supervision of Principal James Diehl, have added
tremendous spirit and l&lt;1terest to the game of basketball in this
1970-71 season of the Meigs Marauders. I want to say this in
connection with last Friday's game in which these students were
blamed for the riot which occurred following the four-overtime,
61-59 Meigs victory at the GAHS gym. In an article in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel an assumption was made that the fight stemmed
from chants, shouted by the "Bleacher Bums"; these chants
reportedly to have contained vulgar words. These "Bleacher
Bums" have never in any way or at any time slandered any school
by the use of vulgar words in their chants. It is believed that no
one makes assumptions until they have their facts straight. The
truth is that Gallia Academy's so called "MAFIA," as a group,
yelled several degrading chants to Meigs fans and spelled out
wlgar words, before and during the game, some of which were
directed toward the Meigs crowd.
Also before the game, when speaking of their "MAFIA," a
GAHS cheerleader reported to me that there would most likely be
a fight at scme time during the evening. I cannot sit back and
allow the "Bleacher Bums" to be blamed for any fighting,
damages, or injuries which may have occurred following last
Friday's game. The proof 1s all there that this "MAF1A," as
everyone knows is a name given only to notorious gangsters, had
apparently planned this fight well-beforehand. You don't just
happen to run onto chains, pieces of lumber, and four by fours.
Our Meigs students, girls ar::l boys alike, came home with
evidence of being beaten by these weapons. I suggest you
Gallipolis people clean up your own backyard before you cast any
insinuations toward other groups!
Mary Bradbury
244 South Third Avenue
Middleport, Ohio 45760

$2 Bill Was Not Enough
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - Rev.
Charles McKoy, pastor of St.
Edward Catholic Church here,
said the three thieves who stole
two television sets and a radio
from his church during the
weekend were "really very nice
about the whole thing. "
The priest was watching the
All-Star pro football game
Sunday night when the three
bandits, one armed with a
shotgun, entered the rectory
and demanded money.
The priest told the bandits all
he had was a souvenir $2 bill.
SLOTER ASSIGNED
RACINE - Airwoman Amy
F. Slater, daughter of Mrs.
Shirley M. Thompson of Racine,
Ohio, has completed basic
training at Lackland AFB, Tex.
She has been assigned to Lowry
AFB, Colo., for training in the
supply field. Airwoman Sloter is
a 1970 graduate of Lakewood
High School, Hebron, Ohio.

The men said they didn't want
the bill, but took the television
set the priest was watching, his
housekeeper's television set and
a transistor radio.
"I'm sorry," one of the
thieves told the priest, "but we
need the money."
CHILD DIES
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Carlene Davis, 4, died during
the weekend after she ate six
pain-killing pills left by her
mother on a kitchen table.

OPERATION FOUNDED
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)Two Milwaukee men, one a
Vietnam veteran, have founded
Wisconsin Operation Airlift
Inc., and hope by March to be
able to provide trips home for
Vietnam servicemen on leave.
The group planned to solicit
funds from the public to finance
the $502 round trip air tickets.

and residing in Cincinnati, was honored on the occasion of his
65th birthday. An attorney, Halliday officiated many of the
football and basketball games in southeastern Ohio in which
Farnham-coached teams participated.

Overnight Wire
By United Press International
COLUMBUS - THREE HUNDRED OHIO Penitentiary
inmates have signed petitions asking for the dismissal of Warden
Harold J. Cardwell "in the name of human relations and justice."
The prisoners addressed the petitions to Gov. John J. Gilligan and
state Corrections O:lmmissioner Bennett J. Cooper and in an
accompanying letter said they did not agree with recent petitions
signed by prison employes supporting Cardwell.
The petitions said Cardwell in his nearly two and a half years
as warden had changed a ''very bad situation to a deplorable,
apathetic, despairing one."
COLUMBUS- THE INTERNATIONAL Harvester Co. here
remained strikebound today despite tentative agreement during
the weekend on a new contract at the national level. The United
Auto Workers and International Harvester reached agreement
Saturday on a three-year contract containing salary increases
and a dental care program. Members of UAW Local 969 here,
however, rejected it Sunday.
Local President Charles Meeks said the rejection centered
about the transfer of a worker at the local parts depot. As a result,
picket lines were re-established here. Negotiations were to
resume today.
MOSCOW- THE COMMUNITY PARTY newspaper Pravda
thinks the United Nations should be removed from New York if
"hostile holligans" there continue attacks against Soviet
diplomats and offices. A Pravda story Sunday from New York
correspondent Omas Kolesnichenko implied that U. S. authorities
intentionally encouraged attacks on Soviet and Arab mis'&gt;ions to
the United Nations.
"Indeed, what else can explain the fact that American
authorities have not taken effective measures to cut short and
prevent hostile holligan actions? Now, as the question of construction of new United Nations buildings in New York is being
discussed, it is necessary ... to give serious thought to the question
of whether the United Nations can count on normal functioning in
that city."
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Martha Anderson, Racine;
Hallie Cross, Syracuse; Clifford
Jenkins, Pomeroy; Allen Sayre,
Mason; Pauline Gallagher,
Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Floyd Rupe, Darrell Hanning, Wanda Sprague, William
Russell.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS John Jones, Vinton; Geneva
Jones, Bidwell; Janie Snyder,
Pomeroy;
Alice
Kautz,
Pomeroy; Wilbur Leifheit,
Pomeroy; Esta Ellis, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Angela Harmon, Clayton
Tippie, Mark Brogan, Michael
McDaniel, General Hall,
Thomas Klein, Steve Eblin,
Joseph Hood, Marjorie Grimm,
Evelyn Landers.

HOLLYWOOD ( UPI )-Pearl
Bailey arrived during the
weekend with the debut of her
new, one-hour ABC-TV variety
series, and the only question is
what in the world took the
networks so long to give her a
weekly show of her own.
The lady. is simply. terrific.
And so was her Saturday night
premiere, except for one minor
bit with Andy Williams, who
joined with Bing Crosby and
Louis Armstrong to help get
her off flying.
Television is a fickle medium,
of course, and one never knows
how a new show will do against
competition, but this is a
performer that ABC-TV should
value and protect. Pearlie Mae
is pure sunshine.
You can always tell when a
real heavyweight arrives on the
home screen. The lightweights
work and work and fuss and go
through their material and yet
never give the feeling of being
able to handle an hour. The
heavyweights fill the hour
before you know it.
Miss Bailey is such a 100 per
cent, fully accredited heavyweight that you had the
feeling she could have gone
another hour easily on Saturday
night without even powdering
her nose.
Saturday night, producer Bob
Finkel and director Dean
Whitmore gav Miss Bailey a
chance to take command with a
variety of her talents. She did a
showstopping dance number,
she clowned throughout the
hour in her inimitable regal
con-woman manner, and among
her songs were two that were
just plain lovely in their
·g a
"Make Me a
POI n nee:
Rainbow" and "Didn't We"
(with Armstrong).
Sateh mo an d Crosb Y no
longer have the voices they
once did, but each is such a
consummate showman _ and
Miss Bailey was so delightfulthat her numbers with them
were rich in the very special
professionalism that many singers with better natural voices
never achieve.,
It's been said that likability is
perhaps the most important
single quality in determining
what makes successful video
performers, and that is probably true. If ABC-TV does right
by Miss Bailey, it will profit,
for there are few performers in
show business as likable as
Pearlie Mae, who let the sunshine in a long time ago.

BAD GUY NOW HERO
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Long-time villain Claude Akins
will turn hero when he stars
with Michele Nichols in
VETERANS ORGANIZE
"Greenyard
&amp;
Stebbins,
COLUMBUS (UPI)- A stateU.S.A.", a half-hour comedy wide veterans peace coalition
was formed here by the Ohio
western for ABC-TV.
State University chapter of
NO SMOKING
Veterans Against the War at its
SINGAPORE (UPI) -A law wE'ekend convention attended
prohibiting smoking in motion by veterans from Dayton,
picture or legitimate theaters is Cincinnati, Kent, Cleveland and
in effect after a six-week grace other Ohio cities. The state
allowed before strict en- coalition reportedly is the first
forcement of the ban. Offenders to be organized nationally,
can be arrested without a although groups in several
warrant and are liable to a fine other states also are organizing.
of up to $500.

CONNELLY GETS PRIZE
HOLLYWOOD ( UPI)
Christopher Connelly, completing MGM's "Going All Out"
in Atlanta, Ga., visited the state
capitol
where
Governor
Lester Maddox presented him
BANKER APPOINTED
w1th an autographed axe
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Louis handle.
A. Kastelic of Solon, a
Cleveland bank executive, has
LENNONS MAY RETURN
been picked as the new state
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The
bank superintendent by Gov.
John F. Gilligan. The 35-year- Lennon Sisters may return to
old Cleveland native was E-m- television in a show titled
ployed by the Maple Heights "Living with the Lennons," a
city administration before half-hour daytime strip series
joining the Union Commerce starring Dtanne, Janet, Kathy
and Peggy.
Bank in 1962.

CHAIRMAN
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Elmer Bernstein, Oscarwinning composer, was voted
chairman of the movie
Academy Awards Policy
Committee for 1970-71.
LAYOFFS IMMINENT
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI) Some 280 Westinghouse employes are to be furloughed
Friday because of reduced sales
of range and laundry equipment. It would be the company's second work force
reduction in two months.
Westinghouse laid off 85 persons
last month.

Tax Credit System Urged by Gilligan
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Gov.
John J . Gilligan told a congressional committee today he
doubted that President Nixon's
revenue-sharing plan would
pass Congress and proposed instead a tax credit program that
could even better benefit the
states.
Gilligan, in testimony prepared for delivery before the
Joint Economic Committee,
said the administration's plan
held shm chance of congressional approval because it
forced Congress to raise taxes,
while governors and mayors
receive credit for spending the
new funds.
''An altogether different approach must be used," Gilligan
said, "one that I believe will
be acceptable to Congress hecause it assigns the responsibility frw both reusing n·vcnues
and spr·nrhng lhr,~t· rr·vPtHH•s tr,

the same level of government."
He noted that the President's
proposed $16 billion revenue
sharing program actually calls
for only $5 billlon in new revenues -an increase of less than
3 per cent in the amount now
spent by slate and local ~ov­
ernments. Gilligan said Ohio
would get less than $300 million
a year of the total.
Gilligan suggested instead
that some level of state income
taxes be allowed as a credit
against the liability of federal
income taxes
"Such an approach would
prov1de an incentive for states
to use income tax more extenSively and rely less on property
taxes then they have tn the
past," he sa1d.
It should be more feasiable
pulltwally to enac·t, would put
''"'fl'"'" IJihl\ at the stall' and
lrw&lt;d IPn·ls ;u1d would n·sult in

about $700 million more for
Ohio a year, Gilligan said.
"If the Congress were to
amend the present Internal
Revenue Code to allow full
credit of up to 10 per cent of
federal corporate and personal
income tax liability for taxes
paid at the state and local
level, and if Ohio were to enact appropriate tax reform legislation, we could have available over $700 million in additiOnal resources ... without increa:;ing by one penny the
present tax burden borne by
our citizens," he said.
Ohio's new governor of three
weeks urged Congress to "act
rapidly to nationalize standards
for welfare and to assume the
full cost of the program."
"The vehicle for reform is
the Fannly Assistance Program, offered by President
l"txon, or something closely

flight hardware have joined the
growing ranks of the aerospace
unemployed.
Spacecraft Manager James
A. McDivitt said he was in one

CAPE KENNEDY (UPIJ-A
complete, $95 mtllion Apollo
moonship awaits a lunar launch
that will never come.
Three command ships worth
$165 million and two lunar
landing craft that cost $80
million sit nearly con1pleted
and useless in their factories.
The stages of two $185 million
Saturn 5 rockets and four $45
million Saturn lB rockets rest
in storage with no jobs in sight.
In all, $890 million worth of
flightworthy spacecraft and
rockets has been idled by
budget cutbacks that resulted
in the cancelation of three
Apollo moon landing missionsApollos 18, 19 and 20.
The two Saturn 5 rockets
may be used for earth orbital
launchings of space stations or
other extra heavy objects, but
there are no plans now to even
build such payloads and some
officials wonder privately if the
big Saturns ever will fly.
The Apollo spacecraft and
rocket production lines have
been shut down and many of
the people who built the moon

Weekend Sports Summary
By United Press International
Saturday
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)Austin Carr's 46 poinl&lt;; helped
Notre Dame upset top-ranked
and previously unbeaten UCLA,
89-82, as the Bruins' basketball
team suffered its first nonconference defeat in three
years.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)Rex Maddaford of New Zealand
who competes for Eastern New
Mexico, clipped more than five
seconds off the NAIA Indoor
record for the two-mile run
with a time of etght minutes,
47.7 seconds.
DETROIT ( UPI) -Australian
Rod Laver rallied from a twoset deficit to beat Tom Okke1
of the Netherlands, 537, 5-7, 6-2,
6-2, 6-2, for his fifth straight
$10,000 victory in the $210,000
Tennis Champions Classic.

High

ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI)
Cougar II galloped to a sixlength victory in the 19th
Sidney Lehman 61 Celina ICHS running of the $43,100 San
49
Marcos Handicap at Santa
Findlay 74 Fremont Ross 35
Laurelville 101 Glouster 38
Anita.
Circleville 85 Westfall 51
Pike Eastern 88 Wellston 75
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) Piketon 80 Portsmouth East 75
Cincinnati Hughes 78 Cincinnati The Russian national team built
Withrow 76
up an early lead and then held
Anderson 60 Colerain 57
on to beat a United States
Harrison 82 st. Bernard 68
New Richmond 58 Goshen 56
amateur squad, 6-5, in the third
Middletown 101 Dayton Jef- dual boxing match between the
ferson Fires
86
Akron
tone 86 Akron two countries.
Hoban 59
Cuyahoga Falls 94 Youngstown
GREENSBORO, N.C. CUPI)
South 46
-The
East wiped out an 18Akron North 66 Stow 44
Akron Ellet 60 Akron Kenmore point deficit and edged the
43
West, 126-122, in the fourth
Akron East 61 Alliance 58
Annual American Basketball
Hudson 78 Coventry 46
Association All-Star game.
West Branch 61 Southeast 52
Western Reserve 75
Kidron Central Chrisrian 47
Copley 71 Revere 57
Springfield 79 Walsh Jesuit 52
41 MILLION SEE ROCKS
Garrettsville 98 Bloomfield 36
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Green 64 Woodridge 61
space agency says 41 million
Smithville 84 Highland 47
Minster 65 Parkway 40
persons
got a glimpse of moon
Sidney 91 Lemon•Monroe 73
rocks from the Apollo 11 and 12
Newark 82 Lima Senior 69
missions during exhibits around
Piqua 55 Troy 5-l
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 126
the world last year.
Jackson Center 94
Columbus Linden 67 Columbus
coT~~~b~~ West 95
Columbus Brookhaven 60
Columbus North 71 Columbus
Northland 69
Columbus Whetstone 59 Marion
Franklin 57
Centerburg 80 New Albany 63
Newark Catholic 74 Danville 64
Canal Winchester 90 Millersport

4 314%
Start Your
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TODAY
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Meigs Co. Branch

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296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured
to $20,000.00
by FSLIC

62

Lancaster Fisher 109 Berne
Union 71
Amanda Clearcreek 55 Bloom
Carroll 53
Fairfield Union 67 Pickerington
65 (ot)
Gahanna Lincoln 106 Columbus
Hartley 74
Madison South 71 West Jef·
ferson 74
Marysville 45 Buckeye Valley 40
Jonathan Alder 77 London 59
Southeastern (Ross) 118
Chillicothe Flaget 64
Paint Valley 69 Adena 51
Unioto 78 Hillsboro 62
Lima Central Catholic 73 Lima
Shawnee 60
Anna 104 New Knoxville 88
Arcanum 69 Covington 65
Oak Hills 87 Lockland 43
Mount Healthy 58 Norwood 49
Finneytown 75 Wyoming 60
Greenhills 58 Taylor 41
Hamilton Taft 97 Oxford
Talawanda 63
Hamilton Garfield 46 Hamilton
Badin 41
Lakota 56 Fairfield 55
National Trail 76 Edgewood 67
Bethel 70 Clermont Northeastern 55
Clinton Massie 77 Blanchester
58

Eastern Local 81 Georgetown 42
Waynesville 58 Kings 54
Springfield South 63 Ports.
mouth 62
Mason n. Spnngboro 62
Marion Catholic 82 New Riegel
58

SQUASH CHAMPION
TORONTO (UPl) -Top-seeded professional Sharif Khan,
representing the Dixie Squash
Club in suburban Cooksville,
Sunday won the 1971 North
American Squash Singles
championship 15-11, 15-9 and 1510 over Australian Ken Bins,
representing the Skyline Club of
Toronto.

The FARLEY· B2981W
Contemporary styled compact
console 1n gra ned Walnut color.
VHF/UHF Spotlitc Dials.
Gyro-Drive UHF Channel Selector.

(Upon Request)

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School Scores

akin to it, which recognizes the meet its responsibilities, to bear
basic national responsibilities its full share of the problems, to
involved," the governor said.
do the job that only state
Gilligan said he was disap- government can do, in
pointed by the absence of pro- cooperation with government at
posals for new economic devel- the local and federal level,"
opment legislation in Nixon's Gilligan said.
State of the Union address.
"We will do the best we can
"'l'o accomplish many of the in Ohio, but our prospects rest
goals the President has outlined in large part in national hands
we will need new measures to ... I can sympathize with your
encourage economic develop- problems in trying to get somement in our currently depressed thing done about the national
inner city and rural areas," he economic situation.
said, adding he planned to rec"At the same time, I cannot
ommend to the Ohio General stress too strongly the urgent
Assembly legislation to improve necessity to get this country's
2)6 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Ohio's unemployment benefits. economy moving."
Phone 992-5428
Gilligan also said he plans to
streamline Ohio's executive
.....
..
branch of government "to more
effectively tackle our economic
•
•
•
•
•
problems."
OPTOMETRIST
"The new admnistration of
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
the state of Ohio asks for nothAT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.
1ng more than the opportunity to ' .__.PIIIiiOiiMiiiiEilliRiiOil.iYilli._______________
, -.1

.---~-~~-~-~

of the Apollo plants a couple of
months ago and talked to some
women who were working on
moonship wire bundles.
"
· I sat there and talked to
them for about 15 or 20 minutes
and they were telling me how
they liked their job and all that
kind of stuff. When I got ready
to go, I said 'Keep up the good
work."'
"They said, 'Well, we can't
keep up the good work for very
long because we're being laid
off tomorrow. They don't have
any need for us."'
McDivitt said in an interview
in Houston that the women told
him they had 11 years of
experience-all in the wiring
business.
"Now they're just laying
those women off," he said. "It's
really a shame to see talented
people like that leave.
"A wire harness doesn't
sound very exotic, but it carries
all the signals around the
spacecraft. If you don't have a
good wire harness you don't
have anything."

OPEN FRI. ' SAT. NIGHTSMIDDLEPO

'

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 25, l!l71

booooooooooooooooooooooo~~

/~iJ

•

)

§

One Nurse's Family

8

Green Thuntb

Husbands Are Included

(..• or, By J?lu. Possesst~ll)

Notes ....
A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

•
t

Gardening for Winter Effects
BY MRS. MASON FISHER
Wildwood Garden Club
We must recognize that not only is it impossible to maintain
the garden in winter as in summer, but also undesirable.
Winter brings complete changes into the picture and we must
plan to emphasize the changes between active and rest periods in
the year's cycle. Don't overplant evergreens or you may end up
with a gardener's worst fault - namely, monotony.
Garden design must be for the best effects in the winter as
well as in the summer. Have broad spaces and rich masses of
vegetation. Have warmth in planting, a sense of snugness and
shelter and protection.
It is most rewarding to look out our windows and see the many
beautiful birds flitting in and out of sheltering masses of growth.
Such masses should have one evergreen at least, but it is the
ruddy stems of deciduous growth richly interwoven to form a
barrier to snow and wind that gives the best effect.
The valuable characteristics of deciduous trees and shrubs
are in the golden or bright red bark of some, in the more or less
persistent fruits or berries of others and the branches from which
the leaves have fallen.
And with an eye towards spring planting, now is the time to
order new seed catalogs.

•
'

•

Workshop Planned
By BETTY CANARY
Lives there a woman with heart so true, when her
family's all down in bed with the flu, hasn't said at least
once, "What's a lovely girl like me doing in this pesthouse?"
Naturally, she doesn't ask this until the crisis is about
over. Or, in plain words, until they all stop verging on
pneumonia and scaring her to death three times a day.
The thought never occurred to me until temperatures
had been normal for 24 hours straight and they were sitting up pale and weak. but heartily devouring bowls of
fruit.
Then. as I sullenly emptied the 40th paper bag filled
with used tissues, I thought of telephoning the nearest
women's lib organization to see if they'd stake me to a
one-way ticket to Jamaica.

--s~ciall Leaflet Wi II
~
Calendar Be Distributed

•

l

A leaflet, "Alcohol and
School," will be distributed by
the Middleport Women's
Christian Temperance Union in
the schools.
Plans for distribution of the
leaflet, read by Mrs. Beulah
White, were made during a
meeting of the Union Friday
night at the home of Mrs. Betty
Cline, new president.
other officers of the Union
are Mrs. Audrey Miller, vice
president; Mrs. White, secretary; Mrs. Lena McKinley,
assistant
secretary;
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin, treasurer; Mrs. Joe Turner, assistant treasurer; and Mrs.
Jacob Turner, card chairman.
The next meeting was set for
April at the Middleport Baptist
Church. Mrs. Cline gave
devotions using, "Call for
Rejoicing" as her theme.
Readings were given by Mrs.
McKinley, Mrs. White and Mrs.
Cline.
Mrs. Cline and Mrs. McKinley
served a salad course. Others
present were Mrs. Victoria
Stacy, and Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner.

MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters,
Monday at 8 p.m. at Meigs High
School.
STAFF AND Officers Club,
Meigs Temple, Pythian Sisters,
6:30 potluck dinner Monday,
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.; white elephant
sale.
TUESDAY
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, 7:30, Tuesday,
Legion hall.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8: 15 p.m.
Tuesday night, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
office.
JUNIOR
AUXILIARY,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 6:30 to 8: 30
p.m. at the hall; Mrs. Ben
Neutzling to assist with a skit to
be presented at the district
conference.
WEDNESDAY
FEENEY-BENNETT
Post
128, American Legion, 7:30p.m.
Dinner preceding at 6:30 p.m.
for legionnaires and auxiliary
members.
WILDWOOD Garden Club, 8
p.m. Wednesday, Ohio Power
Co., open meeting, Mrs. Homer
Holter to show slides of Expo '70
and the International Flower
Show in Japan.
RUTLAND Friendly Gardeners, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.,
home of Mrs. Tom Martin;
program on ecology by Mrs.
James Carpenter; OAGC slide
set, "Nature Trails," by Mrs.
Bruce Davis.
POMEROY WOMEN'S
Christian Temperance Union, 2
p.m. Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.

r----------------,

!

Middleport

l

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Personal Notes

~

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Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lowery
and son, Danny, spent the
weekend in Poca, W. Va.
visiting their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Stein and Donald Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
children of St. Albans are the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kessinger and Mr . and Mrs.
Albert Roush.
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel and
Miss Carol Bachtel left this
week on a Florida vacation.
Mrs. Harriet Davenport and
Mr. and Mrs. James Dale and
son, Jimmy of Beckley, W.Va .
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Davenport and
family and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245, Thursday, American
Legion hall, 7 p.m.; parents
urged to attend.
WOMEN'S ASSN., Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church, 7:30p.m.
Thursday, at the church; installation of officers by Mrs. J.
E. Harley.

r---------------------------,

!

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave . and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
only. Maternity visiting hours
2:30 to 4:30p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward .
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Moore,
Jr., Oak Hill, a son; Mr. and
Mrs
Michael V. Reese,
Cheshire, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul L. Wright, Rt. 2, Wellston,
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Warren G. Black, Rt . 1,

• Daughter Honored

.,

Mr and Mrs . Michael Zirkle
entertained recently with a
party honoring their daughter,
Michelle, on her second
birthday.
Guests were Mrs . Ruth
Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs. David
Zirkle and children, Terri and
Debbie, Mr . and Mrs. Sam
Plants and children, Ruthanna
Sammy, and I.e-anna, Mr. and
Mrs . Paul Haptons lall , C:lnd
HotJI'rt Shurp . 1\ ~ ift v. as ;d ~ t,
pn·st·nl&lt;·d to Midtl'll&lt;· h} Mrs.
Olii &lt;.J Hetgl1t(Jn
\

\

Rutland, a daughter ; Mr . and
Mrs. James M. Montgomery,
Gallipolis, a son ; Mr . and Mrs.
Lowell F . Fisher, Jr., Oak Hill,
a son; and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Triplett, Gallipolis Ferry, a son.
Discharges
Mrs . Marie H. Amos, Mrs.
Douglas Leroy Bugg and infant:
daughter, Mrs. Bobby Lee
Clary, Lawrence Craig, Mrs .
Bruce R. Curtis, Mrs. Elma R.
Dement, David W. Gillogly,
Mrs. Mary C. Goodwin, Mary E .
Hols tein, Edwin Hudson, Mrs .
Clyde J . Ingels, Albert A. Kuhn,
Mrs. Earl B. Morris, Charles H.
Murray, Mrs. Earl F. Noble,
James W. Ptckens, Mrs. Paul
W. Porter' Mrs. Arthur W.
Smith, Mrs. Gary L. Smith and
mfant son, Roger Lee Stumbo,
Lisa Ann Timmons, Mrs . Paul
Emil Tope and da ughter, Mrs.
Ro) F. VanMeter and daughter,
Jerry Lee Warner, Mrs . Darrell
Franklin White and daughter ,
Wiliiam R. Adkins, William E.
C:urflllan , .John F. Dutton, Mrs .
(;oldie M. Calbraitlt, Clarence
W. Hardo!'rf&lt;•r, Mrs . .John W.
S
·
,
Vl&lt;':llf&lt;,v. .• , ' ' " 1 ' 11s · ';llllttl' 1 1',
\11-K ttiiH ~ ·'· ·

\

A Val(•rdim·'s Uay party with
hushunds us guests was pl&lt;Jnncd
for Feb. 12 when the Happy
Hustlers Class met Friday night
at the Wesleyan United
Methodist Church .
A potluck supper preceded
the meeting. Mrs. Laura
Watson presided at the meeting
which opened with prayer by
Mrs. Mina Lewis. The birthday
anniversary of Mrs. Grace
Krider was observed with a

A waitress, nurse . cook, retriever of lost articles, that's
all you see in me!
Must be nice ha·1ing someone at your beck and calt. I
guess!
Sure is great knowing you don't have to wake yourself
up at three in the morning for medicine!
If I were completely free, who would change your bed

and wipe your forehead and fix your juice and feed you
soup, that's what I'd like to know?
I ' m rather glad now that I decided not to leave and
be completely liberated. Because right now I have a
touch of the flu .
My husband has doled out aspirin.
My children are rounding up the book I asked for and
they 'll be bringing in another glass of juice soon.

When I made my rounds with fresh pitchers of water
and two of my children started singing "Here Comes
Florence Nightingale." I decided Jamaica wasn't far
enough, but Hawaii sounded fine.

Not that I'll ever be completely happy about things as
they are, of course.

Then my husband came tottering into the kitchen
hoarsely complaining, "I guess I'll just have to fix my
own tea... and I seriously considered the South Pole.
Sure, it's cold there. but would I be surrounded by a
group of snivelers?

(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

As I washed sheets and crawled under beds retrieving
crayons. books and doll clothes, I grumbled.

POLLY~s

POINTERS

Their Views VarY
On Rug Cleaning
By POllY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-I want to tell Mrs. P . K. that I have
light gold wool carpet and have cleaned it several times
by making a very sudsy solution of detergent and water.
I just rub the suds (not the water l into the carpet with my
hand, then take old bath towels and rub in this suds.
which cleans and dries at the same time. I only do an
area about 2-by-2 feet at one time and it really looks
beautifuL - MRS. J . R. B
DEAR POLLY Tell Mrs. P. K. to put away her suJs
and back away from that wool carpet. My husband sells.
installs and cleans carpets and has had to replace mam·
because a woman tried to save money aod shrunk her
carpet. Also. some of the spray and foam cleaners hav e
grease bases and attract dirt. Call a professional service.
Back away from that carpet quickly and cautiously.ELIZABETH
DEAR GIRLS-I have used Mrs. J. R. B.'s method and
found it most satisfactory on large rugs. I do not have
wall-to-wall carpet. This freshens ani brightens the rug
but should not be used exclusively as professional cleaning is necess:1ry periodically. Eli7:abeth's letter should
serve as a caution to those who mav be inclined to saturate a rug or carpet. Too much "\vetness" could cause
shrinking. Using the suds only should not even moisten
the pad, which must not get wet. Thorough ly vacuum thl'
rug first, then use ONLY
the suds and keep whipping
them up if they die down.
An egg beater is goo!l for
this. The rag used for s uch
wiping will soon show how
much loose dirt is being
removed.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY- I, a nonsmoker, was faced with an
embarrassing sit u a t ion
when a child gave me u
cigarette case as a gift. I
did want to give her the satisfaction of seei n ~ me use her
gift so use it to hold lipsticks that I carry in ·m:v purse.
It is just the right size and keeps t:ie co·. ers from comin~
off the lipsticks. -KATHLS~!';

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY- We ordered our mobile home
special with double-insulation between the outside
walls. There does not seem to be c:ny insulation
between the inside walls . I would like to know an
inexpensive way to either put something on the
walls or , preferably. between the w&lt;:lls to make
them soundproof. Thank you for any help.- RlJTH
!New~p3per Enterpris~

At Bookmobile HQ
An arts and crafts workshop
will be held Thursday at the
Meigs
Bookmob ile
headquarters on Nye Ave.
The session will be held from
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and those attending are invited to take a
sack lunch. Mrs. Howard Nolan,
retired home extension agent,
will assist in organizing a
handicraft club. The workshop
is open to all area women.
Those attending are asked to
take an idea for some craft
project.

Betty Canary now comes in book form. Her "Surviving as a Woman"
is available at book and department stores and also by mail to readers
of this newspaper. Send check or money order for $5.95 to: Betty Canary
Book, Box 489 Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019. Please allow
three weeks for delivery.

•••••••• ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥..

~

~

i( No one is useless in this i(
-tc world who lightens the i(

-tc burden of it for someone -tc
~ else. - Charles Dickens

..
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~

.

t
••• t

•

It's Quick! Easy

:

DRIVE-IN ~
BANKING :

•~

:
Fridays Only
:
i( The Drive-In Windowi(
Further assistance to an :
is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
_.
underprivileged girl was _.
(Continuously)
i(
discussed during a recent :

meeting of Group II of the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church at the
home of Mrs. Lewis Sauer,
chairman.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace gave the
devotions. Mrs. Tom Rue
presented an article from the
Class 12.
"Presbyterian Life." RefreshParticipating in the program ments were served by the
titled "Using Your Talents" hostess to the eight members
were Eddie Johnson and Lydia attending.
Johnson, a vocal duet; Sara
Diddle and Marilee Cassell,
readings; Kim Donahue and
Vicki Slack, piano solos; and
Nancy Large, a vocal solo
accompanied by Miss Glenna
Sprague.
Presiding at the meeting in
the absence of Mrs. Glenn
Lambert who is ill was Mrs. B.
B. Zeigler. Miss Bess Sanborn
gave devotions and Mrs. Nan
Moore repor ted on holiday
projects including $2 given to
each child at the Meigs County
Children's home. Mrs. Perry
Mitch, Mrs. David Entsminger,
and Mrs. Kenneth Byer served
a dessert course during a
concluding social hour.

Youths Give Program

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onti(

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-tc

i( Other Banking Hours 9 to Ji'
i( and 5 to 7 as usual
i( Fridays.

: FARMERS BANK :
t and SAVINGS CO. t

t

~

-tc

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

Party Was Surprise
A surprise party was held
recently honoring William
Jones on his 52nd birthday
anniversary. The party hosted
by Barbara Sprouse and
William Hamm, was given at
the Park St. residence of Mr.
Jones.
Cake, ice cream and punch
were ser.ved and a gift was
presented to the honored guest.
Guests were Mrs. William
Jones, Linda Sprouse, Ricky
Jones , Gary Jones, and Kim
Jones.

GARDENERS WELCOME
Members of Meigs County
garden clubs are invited to
attend an open meeting of the
Wildwood Garden Club at 7:30
Wednesday night· at the Ohio
Power Co. The program will
fea ture Mrs. Homer Holter
showing slides of Expo '70 and
the International Flower Show
in Japan. Refreshments will be
served .

BAKER'S

DR. SCHOLL'S
FLEXO
FOAM ARCH

t&lt;·.

.

·.·~

'\-~

I

FOR MEN AN~ WOMEN

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are sensibly
priced.
Middleport

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

18-FOOT BUILT-IN KITCHEN
LONG-BELL PRE-FINISHED WOOD CABINETS AND FORMICAl1) COUNTERTOP

or

VISIT IN RACINE
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Roush of Apple Creek
spent the weekend here with
Mrs. Roush's uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson of
Racine.

Todoy' s FUNNY will pay $1.00 fo,

tach ong1nol "funny" used . Send gags
to; Today's fUNNY. 1200 West Th&gt;rd
St, C leveland, Ohio 44113

t

MATCHING

...,...... APPLIANCES AVAILABLE

Organi zed "L" shaped cabineb arrdnged to meet your demands
as a busy housewife. Modern styling, plus the beauty of walnut
tone cabinets comb1ned with easy-to-clea n Formica'' counter·
top. Special features include nylon glides on drawers tor smoother opening and combination l11nge-catct1 on all base and wall
cabinets. Uni t includes: roomy cabinets, countertop, colored
steel sink to match appliances, fau ce t w1th spray and baskf.'t
strainer.

(H\NI)

t

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i(

~
~
«¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ...

You will receive a dollar if Pollv n&gt;cs vour favorite
homemaking iiea, PoJiy's Problem
solutfon to a problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.

1971 b7 NEA1 Inc.

-tc

..

A:sn)

Thoroughbred Actor
NEW YORK 1UPI) - If
genetics is anywhere near the
exact science it is reputed to be,
Peter Sellers couldn't help
being a great entertainer. The
co-star- with Goldie Hawn of the film comedy, "There's A
Girl In My Soup" is the son of a
musician (father) and variety
entertainer (mother) and at one
time had seven uncles working
in various capacities in the
theater.

.
..
.•

..• A THOUGHT~
.. FOR TODAY

Group II Meets

After all, I had to fix my own cup of tea .

Youth of Heath United
Methodist Church under the
direction of Mrs. L. W. McComas presented a program at
the Thursday night meeting of

cake b(!Jrlg served at Ht(' dinner.
MPmbers signed a round-riJbin
eard for Mrs. Sybil Miles, a
patient &lt;Jt Grant Hospital,
Columbus, Room 640. Mrs.
Miles suffered a heart attack
while in Columbus with her
daughter, Mrs. Bonnie Jackson .
The Lord's Prayer in uniSon
closed the meeting.
At the dinner besides those
named were Mrs. Ora Hill, Mrs.
Hertha Johnson, Mrs. Bertha
Spencer, and Mrs. Mattie
Circle. Absent due to illness
were Mrs. Lavinia Simpson,
Mrs. Ann Coe, Mrs. Edith
Hayman,
Mrs.
Dorothy
McKenzie and Mrs. Harriett
Neigler.

APPLIANCES, RANG E HOOD , AND
INSTALLATION EXTRA

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

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Jan. 25, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel ClaSsifieds
Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

•14,893*BUYS THIS HOMEII

QUAliTY

Doubt If You Qualify?
rJ"J~;&gt;I~wtfl'f!ilfo.,

CHEVROLET
$1495
S.S. Impala, H.T. Cpe., power steering, automatic trans.,
blk. vinyl bucket seat &amp; console, 327 V Bengine, good tires,
beautiful gold finish.
66 FORD
$1095
Galaxi HT Cpe.. 6 cyl. engine, std. trans., air conditioning,
good tires, clean interior, dark green finish.
65 PONTIAC
$1 095
Tempest St. Wagon, local 1 owner, low mi leage car, V-B
engine, automatic trans., power steering, non -sl ip rear
axle, vinyl interior like new, light blue finish, radio. Save
Today.

66

EXAMPLE: With no money down and an adjusted income of $4,000 per year.
Payments would be approximately $50 per month on this home.
You don't have to own a lot.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Ca II Weber Construction Co. at 992-7136 Pomeroy, or 592-1240 tor appointment.
$14,893 does not inc Jude price of lot.

*

OP-EH EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY. OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline9a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
WiII be iccepted until 9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
inserti6n.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con secutive insertions.
25 Per cent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
QFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

MONEY CLIPS
by Mort Reed

@)

Notice
I WILL not be responsible for
any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself.
Ralph W. Shain, U.S. Army,
Vietnarn.
1-24-3tp
REWARD, $500, for arrest and
conviction of person or persons who took my female
Walker dog from Leading
Creek area and kept her
concealed for six weeks. This
dog was turned in for reward
by Mr. Floyd Barnhouse, Rt.
2, Pomeroy. Leslie Marcum,
Box 165, Delbarton, W. Va.
1-24-5tc
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-6271.
9-1-tfc

•

Business Services·
EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO (1 ) Rent Homes, Mob ile Homes, or Apar t ments
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOM ES OF$4,000 to $9,000 P E R Y EAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less.
CONTACT: GREEN HI LL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
P hone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

Bl.AffiNARS
Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

For Rent
NEW MOB ILE home. Adults
on Iy. Phone 992-5592.
1-7-tfc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55

For Sale
1970 TAG-A-LONG 20' self
contained travel trailer. Like
new. Call Virgil Walker,
Raci ne, Ohio. Phone 949-2599.
1-20-6tc
FRIGIDAIRE
3-cycle
automatic washer, white.
Phone 992-2500.
1-24-3tp
TWO USED 12x38 tractor tires,
$15 each or both $25. Phone
843-2436.
1-24-3tp
1970 DIAL 'N SEW Zig - Z~g
Sewing Mach in e left 1n
layaway . Beautiful pastel
color, full size model. All
built in to bultonhole, overcast and fancy stitch. Pay just
cash
or
terms
$48.75
arranged . Trade-ins ac cepled. Phone 992-5641 .
1-19-6tc

--GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606

E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

BOOKKEEPING service, Mrs.
Marvin King, 1f2.mile north on
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Weekdays 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon.
Evenings by appointment.
12-15-tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Fre·~
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

DON'T WAIT

..

•

POWER-VAC
Cleaning System
All The Dirt In
One Simple Operation
Homes . Trai lers . Public
Buildings, etc. No muss, no
fuss - have your furnace
cleaned today.

CHASE HARDWARE I
Locust St.
Midd leport, 0 .

AIR CONDITIO N ING. Refrigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Ha ven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

------------------JOHNSON MASONRY, Com-

mercial
or
residential
remodeling. Brick , block
stone, cement work, garage~
septic tanks . Backhoe work.
Free estimates. Jim, La rry,
Jake. 992-7044.
1-7-3otc

ATTENTION ladies! Would you
likt! to try a wig on in the
BACK HOE and end-loa der
privacy of your own home?
work. Septic tanks insta lled.
You can. Just call us. We a lso
George (Bill) Pullins . Phone
Real Estate For Sale
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
992-2478.
Koscot, of course. Dis- VACUUM Cleaner brand new
11-29-tfc
tributors, Brown ' s. Phone , 1970 model. Complete with all
Notice
cleaning lools. Small pain!
Middleport 992-5113.
HARRISON'S TV AND ANdamage in shipping . Will take
INCOME TAX service, daily
12-31 -tfc
TEN NA SERVICE. Phon fla
$27 cash or lerms if desired.
except Sunday . Evenings by
992 2522
Phone 992-5641.
appointment only. Phone 992- WILL PICK up merchandise
.
6-10-tfc.
1-19-6tc
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
and take to auction on a
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
NEIGLER Construction. For
percentage basis . Call Jim
mile south of fairgrounds.
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland. FIREWOOD, Gerald King,
Broker
building or remodeling your
12-31 -30tc
Shade, Ohio. Phone Shade 696Phone 742-4461.
110 Mechanic st.
home, Call Guy Nei!:fler,
1287.
9-23-tfc
Pomeroy, Ohio
Racine , Ohio.
1-14-12tp
7-31-tfc
WORK. Sept1c tanks,
SMALL OLDER HOME - 3
1
I DOZER
leach beds. Phone 949-4761. FOR "A Job Well Done"
bedrooms, bath , gas heat. SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Notes bearing the Joseph W. for a blue or yellow back I
10-18-tfc
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
I
Near slores. $3,500.00
feeling, clean carpets with
bill to be a product of the
662-3035.
Barr signature.
Blue Lustre. Rent electric
1
bring
you
I
2-12-tfc
WILL GIVE piano and organ
shampooer, $1. Baker Fur- 4 BEDROOMS- Older home,
Although Barr did serve Bureau of Engraving and
bath, gas heat. Large living,
lessons in my home. Phone
niture, Middleport.
extra cash
1 992-3666.
only a few days as secretary Printing. The green ink used 1
Garage. Near stores. Asking WHEEL Horse Sales andf
1-21-6tc
I
of the Treasury, notes bear- in the p rod u c t i o n of our II
Service.
Baum
Lumber
$10,500.00
f0r
I
8-16-tfc
paper
currency
is
a
patented
ing his signature continued
Company, Chester, Ohio.
process
owned
solely
by
the
1 shopping sprees 1-H-el_p_W-an- t-ed_ __
COAL . limestone . Exce lsior ALL PANELED Phone 985-3301.
Cozy 3
to be printed until after the
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
5-20-tfc
bedrooms with closets , bath ,
appointment of Dorothy An- government and kept under
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
modern kitchen . Gas forced
HOUSEKEEPER needed. Live
drews Elston, treasurer, and strict security.
4-9-tfc
air furnace . Stores 3 blocks. SAW FILING,--·al kinds of
in if desired. Good working
D&lt;ij&lt;id M. Kennedv. secreOnly $12,000.00
sharpening , Ia n mower
conditions. Phone 992-5251.
tar.y, in May, 1969. •
repair, Briggs ahd Stratton
1-19-tfc H &amp; N 20 wk. old ready to lay
engine service. L0w cost pick
Unless one of these notes
floor grown pullets available 50 ACRES - Warm 6 room
home, modern kitchen, bath ,
up and delivery. Phone 992Feb. 4. Modern Poultry, 399
SEMI DRIVERS needed. Exis in perfect crisp-new condidry basement. Gas forced air
2804. Colmers Saw Shop,
W. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
perience he lpful but no t
tion. it is worth no more than
furnace. Double garage.
Mechanic St., Po~eroy.
Ph. 992-2164.
necessary, for loca l and over
face value and then only if
Minerals. Asking $25,000.00
1-22-3tc
lhe road hauling. You can
-1-22-Jk.
it contains one or more addiHELEN TEAFORD
earn $10,000 to $1S,OOO per
tional redeeming features,
ASSOCIATE
C. BRADFORD, ALlctioneer
year
if
you
are
willing
to
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
By ERNIE HOOD
plenty of jobs for keypunch992-3325
Complete Service
such as a noticeable printing
learn. For appl icatlon and
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
1-22-6tc
Phone 949-3821
defect.
interview, call 513-224-3071, or
Blanchard S., Boyce, La ., ers. True?"
water pills. Nelson's Drugs.
Racine, Ohip
Dear Diana: Very true. acwrite Advance D. T. Dept.,
writes: "I'd like to be a bar1-22-30tp 7 ROOM house, bath. New roof.
Cr itt Bradfotd
1100 Enoch Drive, Mid Blue- and Yellow-back Notes ber. How do I train for the cording to the Bureau of
. 5- 1-tfc
New porch. Garage. Paneled
dletown , Ohio 45042.
BURROUGHS adding machine,
Several r e ad e r s have job, and once I do, will there Labor Statistics. Office maliving room and din ing room.
1-25-2tc
seven
column,
$10.
Phone
992chine
operators.
including
be
many
jobs
open?"
asked about the appearance
Carpets. Excellent condition. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
5233.
keypunchers. are expected to
Phone 992-5900.
of blue or yellow backs on
Reasonable rates. Phone
Dear Blanchard: Turnover increase in n u m be r V('l'Y
1-22-3tc
1-24-3tc
pieces of our paper currency of barbers is expected to reFemale
Help
Wanted
John Russell, Gallipolis 446------------------rapidly
through
the
1970s
.
·
and if such bills have a spe- s ult in several thousand job
4782 after 5:30 p. m.
WOMEN Need wor k but UPRIGHT Piano, good conNew jobs will open as new
4-7-tfc
cial value.
dition, phone 992-2806.
unable to devote fu ll time?
openings per year in the Ilext
machines are introduced,
1-22-Jtc
Wa tkins has a splendid in_S _E_W_I_N_G__M_A
_C
_H
__
IN- E-S-.--R-epa ir ..
"Errors" that have been decade. Openings also will volume of paperwork grows
come opportunity for you.
artificially created have no o_ccur as a growing popula- and business itself expands.
service, a II makes. 992-2284.
6 ROO M
Write Ruth Bergaus, Watkins KENMORE Automatic Washer. POMERO Y
tiOn
demands
more
barberThe Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
collector's value whatever.
FRAME, 3 bedrooms, bath, 2
Products, Inc. , Winona ,
Reason for selling is that I
Labor
Department
U
.
S
.
ing
services
.
Authorized Singer Sales and
porches, GOOD N E IGHNotes with blue or yellow ink
Minnesota .
have 2 automatic wnshe:rs.
B
ulletins
are
sour
ces
of
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
BORHOOD. $3,750.
1-25- ltc
backs have been purposely
Evelyn Gibbons Sweet, 144
Almost all states require a depth information on cdt'et.~r
3-29-tfc
Hudson St., Midd leport, Ohio.
treated with a chemical to license obtained after grad fields. They can be obtatnerl
POMEROY - LITTLE BUT
Phone
992-2906.
create an unusual variety uation from a state-approved
NICE - 2 story frame, 2
from the Superintendeut ,,f Wanted To Buy
1-19-6tp
and collectors should avoid barber school. In addition,
bedrooms, bath, utility room,
Documents, U. S. Govern- OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
Insurance
these pieces at all costs.
barber applicants must m eet ment Printing Office, WashNEW forced air gas furnace.
condition, as long as have not STAR kills rats quickly, surely.
LARGE LOT. $5,300.
AUTOMOBILE
insurance t&gt;een
certain
health
requirements
It is absolutely ~mpossible
ington, D .C. 20402. For the
been wet. Paying $10 each.
2112 pounds, $1.69. Ebersbach
cancelled?
Lost
your
and have completed at lea~t b arb er category, ask for
First floor only. Mondays will
Hardware,
Sugar
Run
Mills,
SYRACUSE - ALMOST N EW
operator's license? Call 992the eig hth grade.
be pick-u p day. Write, giving
Bulletin 1650-61, priced at 10
2966.
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
- 5 room frame , 3 bedrooms,
good directions. Witten Piano
l-5-30tp
bath, gas forced air furnace,
After working one or two cents; for the office ma6-15-tfc
Company,
Box
188,
Sardis,
carport, hardwood floors. A
years as a licensed appren- chine operator and keyOhio
43946.
STEAL
AT
JUST
$15,950.
Ray Hummel
tice, a candidate takes an puncher category, B11lletin
8-20-tfc
LEGAL NOTICE
exam to qualify as a regis- 1650-50, lO cents .
Says:
POMEROY- BEAUTIFUL
tered barber.
If you have a qu~stion
NOT ICE OF
BRICK - 3 large bedrooms
APPO IN TME NT
GET
Earnings usua lly depend about another career field. For Rent
double closets, built in kitCase No. 20438
chen, wall to wall - carpet, Estate of Rebecca
upon crunmissions or com- write to SO YOU WANT TO
Hudnall
and unfurnished
bath, recreation room, utility Deceased .
'EM
NOW
bine d wages and tips. Week- BE in care of Newspaper FURNISHED
apartments. Close to school.
room,
full
basement,
carport,
Notice is hereby given that
ly earnings in 1968 ranged Enterprise Association, 230
Phone 992-5434.
1 acre of ground. $27,500.
Myrtle Haning of Pomeroy,
Country Squire
from $85 to $125 for appren- Park Ave., New York, NY .
10-18-tfc
Ohio
, has been duly appo inted
SELL
TO
BUY
OR
MUD&amp;SNOW TI RES
tices and from $125 to $160 10017.
Administratrix of the Estate of
CO NTACT US.
All
sizes
in
stock.
Lowest
Rebecca Hudnall , deceased , .
for experienced barbers.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
FARMS N EEDED.
prices . Free insta ll ation. We
FURNISHED apartment. 3
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
HE NRY CLE LAND
do. studding .
rooms and bath, private
Creditors are required to file
REALTO R
Diana C., Sherwood, Ore.,
(Ernie Hood is a public
their claims with said fiduciary
entrance, nice yard. 2171!2 N.
POMEROY
992-2259
Office
within four months.
3rd, Middleport, Ohio. Phone
says: ''Swce this is the com- information officer with the
Residence 992-2568
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Dated this 19th day of
992-2780 or 992-3432.
puter age, there ought to be U.S. Department of Labor. J
1-25-6tc
January 1971.
Phone
992-2181
1-21 -tfc
F. H. O'Brien
PROBATE JUDGE OF
WALNUT finish stereo, 4 speed
said count y
intermixed
c hanger,
4
speaker
sound system.
(1)
25,
(2) 1, 8 , 3tc
George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
Balance $63.79 . Use our
Rea I Estate Broker
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
1-21-6tc
NOTICE OF
--------------------6 ROOM house, bath, 3,~ acre
APPOINTME NT
"
ground, storm windows and
COLON IAL Maple Stereo-radio
Case No. 20,408
doors, gas furnace, carpeting , Estate of Homer
combination, AM, FM radio, 4
Lovett
all utilities, garage. Miners- Deceased .
speaker sound system, 4
ville, Ohio. $8,000.
Notice is hereby given that
speed changer, separate
Clara Belle Yinger of 216 West
controls. Ba lance $74.59. Use
"
B"
Street, Wellston , Ohio , has
8
ROOM
house,
168
Mulberry
our budget terms. Call 992Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio, close been duly appointed Ad 3352.
ministratrix of the Estate of
into town . Make an offer.
1-2 1-6ic.
Homer Lovett, deceased, late of
Lebanon
Township, Me igs
Phone-Chester 985-4186
Coun ty , Ohio.
1-24-3tc
Creditors are required to file
Auto Sales
their claims with said fiduciary
HOUSE
,
1640
Lincoln
Hts.
,
within
four months .
1969 BU ICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
Dated this 5th day of J anuary •
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
hardtop , power steering,
10-7.5-tfc 1971.
power brakes , air , 18,000
F t-1 O'Brien
miles. Excellent condition.
Probate Judge
AKC CAIRNS, 10 weeks old,
of said County
Phone 992-2288.
LOT IN Bradbury, Phone 992
male or fema le, $75. Beautiful
( 1J 11, 18, 25. 3tc
11-10-tfc
5404.
Bla ck Chinese pug. "proven
1-19-6tc
slud," 3 years old , $100.
Dunlap 's, 312 John St., 1960 FOR D pickup truck, 31:, ton,
heavy duty , new pamt job.
Belpre, Ohio Phone 423-7261.
Good
condilion.
1966
1-24 3tp
Volkswagen. Good condilion.
I TE M : Jack Ka n e.
Phone 7424211 days, 7425501
You somehow get t he
We sell
.,, For Rent or Sale
nigh Is.
anybody including com
fee ling he has thought
1-19-6tc
CAMPERS and travel trailers.
ple'e es1ates Sale
aoout
what
he's
Don't buy until you see our
Sa urday
evening,
shari ng with you. Your
new line Coming in February. 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2
.:·:
o'clock, corner of Third
door , with snow tires. Good
What a surpnse! You pick it
fee l ing is r ight.
Olive Sts For Picku
condilion. Doyle Sargenl,
out , we'll put it on sale. Gaul
Service
Call
..
Phone
992
6252.
Trailer Sates, tn c., One -hal f
1-24 6tp
mi le north of Chester, Ohio off
Rt . 7, watc h for sign. Yes , WE
KNOTTS
RENT ca mpers and travel 1964 OLDS Cutlass, 4 speed.
i\::\
fOM CROW
DALE DUTTON
AUCTION
trailers Phone 614 985 3832
1969 Chevy t!ngine, ma , sun
Phone Day 304 -485 6725, Night 992 -2580
Phone Day 992-3106, Nig ht 992-5234
{
for full information.
tach Phone 992 3571.
1 l7-12tc
.. ~;= =:· :·.-·=·= -~- .. :;:. ::·· ·-· 0:· ·:;~;;:::: :::::.:· :·· ·=· •.. ·-· ·: ::~ :· ;.· •... .. =-=-=-: . ::· ... =· :_: ·=·· ··:.:=: :::·=:.: ·:·~·==. :::·=·=:..::= ··=:: :=. ::;::_:··:: :=.- :·: .. ·=·· =·= ···: ..... ::-·.=~· =:·=·:=: ·=: ·.=: •• ·=: .:=· ·=;= =:==
____. .
, . . . .,.. . . . . . . . . . . . .
6tc

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

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD, --------------------SR .

Bits and Pieces About a Dollar
All signs point to a new
$1 coin for 1971. Coin book
publishers are making space
in their 1972 editions for it.
Statisticians are w o r k i n g
overtime compiling w h a tever statisticians compile
relative to minting records,
and coin accessory manufacturers are busy turning out
holders and protective devices for what has to be the
numismatic event of the decade-issuance of the Eisenhower dollar.
Congress hasn't passed the
bill yet but it will. It is just
a matter of getting all members of the committee to nod
their heads once they have
reconciled their differences
on the One Bank Holding
Company bill to which the
Eisenhower dollar legislation is attached.
The bill provides for the
issuance of 150 million 40
per cent silver and an unlimited number of cuproclad silverless Eisenhower
dollars.
This legislation also provides for the removal of all
silver from the current Kennedy half-dollar.
The Bureau of the Mint
has devised an equitable arrangement whereby everyone will have an opportunity
to buy at least one silver
specimen, but the director
warns that any orders rec e i v e d p r i o r to the announced ordering date will
be returned to the sender.
One of the problems with
gold and silver coins is their
inherent ability to tarnish in
spite of precautions taken to
avoid any discoloration. With
this dollar being the last of
our prestige coinage, the experts are working doubly
hard to find ways of improving various a n tit a r n i s h
processes.
To date none will offer an
absolute guarantee but some
of the new holders being
readied for the Eisenhower
dollar show a vast improvement over c o n v e n t i o n a I
holders.
One of these is the "Show
Off," a 3% -inch-square case
completely free of mounting
screws and fasteners normally associated with coin
holders . It is of clear, inert
plastic with the buyer's
choice of c o I o red center
p~nels in either clea~, deep
wme red or blue wtth the
name of the coin imprinted
below the receiving hole.
Once the coin has been e nclosed it is fairly airtight,
but the case can be opened
without damage. The Show
Off is not sold on the
premise that it is tarnis hproof but the Wadsworth
Testing Laboratories found
it to h&lt;&gt; highly resistant to
all Cltmospheric intrus ion!i .
A post card to Capital
P lastics. ln&lt;' .. :11~6 DPIIwood
Ave . N. W . Ca nton . Ohio
4470!l, will hrin g a d&lt;'s&lt;'riptivl' rold(•r.

Mail l·d'''P'- 1 • 'lf 111 ll
quirin1: ·'""'l' I Ito· prolt;tl II•
v:tl tlf' of I • "·ol f!,• r.·p r 'f'
1

,-------------Classified Ads

--------------'

So You Want to Be

You Can Cut Ahead

Cleland Realty

GET

AnENTION

HOBSTETTER

1

=

r·

~-----44-6--29_17

WMP0/ 1390
-~

�l

~· - -

HE1TV

•

Husbands Are Included

-~ANARY

One Nurse's Family

Green Thu1nb

(..• or, B y l .,lu. Possesst~tl)
1

Notes . ...
A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

•
t

•
•
'

.
•
•

Gardening f or Winter Effects
BY MRS. MASON FISHER
Wildwood Garden Club
We must recognize that not only is it impossible to m aintain
the gar den in winter as in summer, but also undesirable.
Winter brings complete changes into the picture and we m ust
plan to emphasize the changes between active and rest per iods in
the year's cycle. Don't overplant evergreens or you may end up
with a gardener's worst fault- namely, monotony.
Garden design must be for the best effects in the winter as
well as in the summer. Have br oad spaces and rich m asses of
vegetation. Have warmth in planting, a sense of snugness and
shelter a nd protection.
It is most rewarding to look out our windows and see the many
beautiful birds flitting in and out of sheltering masses of growth.
Such masses should have one evergreen at least, but it is the
ruddy stems of deciduous growth richly interwoven to form a
barrier to snow and wind that gives the best effect.
The valuable characteristics of deciduous trees and shrubs
are in the golden or bright red bark of some, in the more or less
persistent fruits or berries of others and the branches from which
the leaves have fallen.
And with an eye towards spring planting, now is the time to
order new seed catalogs.

-----Social-----l Leaflet Will
8
CaIend ar I ;,~.:~~r~.~~~.~=d

Workshop Planned
By BETIY CANARY
Lives the r e a woman with heart so true, when her
family's all down in bed with the fl u, hasn 't said at least
once, "What's a lovely girl like m e doing in this pesthouse?"
Nat urally, she doesn't ask this until the crisis is about
over. Or, in plain words, until they all stop verging on
pneumonia and scaring her to death t hree times a day.
The thought never occurred to me until temperatures
had been normal for 24 hours str aight and they were sitting up pale and weak. but heartily devouring bowls of
fruit.
Then. as I sullenly emptied the 40th paper bag filled
with used tissues, I thought of telephoning the nearest
women's lib organization to see if they'd stake me to a
one-way ticket to Jamaica.

and

School," will be distributed by
the Middleport Women's
Christian Temperance Union in
the schools.
Plans for distribution of the
leaflet, read by Mrs. Beulah
White, were made during a
meeting of the Union Friday
night at the home of Mrs. Betty
Cline, new president.
Other officers of the Union
are Mrs. Audrey Miller, vice
president; Mrs. White, secretary; Mrs. Lena McKinley,
assistant
secretary;
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin, treasurer; Mrs. Joe Turner, assistant treasurer; and Mrs.
Jacob Turner, card chairman .
The next meeting was set for
April at the Middleport Baptist
Church. Mrs. Cline gave
devotions using, "Call for
Rejoicing" as her theme.
Readings were given by Mrs.
McKinley, Mrs. White and Mrs.
Cline.
Mrs. Cline and Mrs. McKinley
served a salad course. Others
present were 1\-frs. Victoria
Stacy, and Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner.

MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters,
Monday at 8 p.m. at Meigs High
School.
STAFF AND Officers Club,
Meigs Temple, Pythian Sisters,
6:30 potluck dinner Monday,
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.; white elephant
sale.
TUESDAY
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, 7:30, Tuesday,
Legion hall.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday night, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
office.
JUNIOR
AUXILIARY,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 6:30 to 8: 30
p.m. at the hall; Mrs. Ben
Neutzling to assist with s skit to
be presented at the district
conference.
WEDNESDAY
Post
FEENEY-BENNETT
128, American Legion, 7:30p.m.
Dinner preceding at 6:30 p.m.
for legionnaires and auxiliary
members.
WILDWOOD Garden Club, 8
p.m. Wednesday, Ohio Power
Co., open meeting, Mrs. Homer
Holter to show slides of Expo '70
and the International Flower
Show in Japan.
RUTLAND Friendly Gardeners, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.,
home of Mrs. Tom Martin;
program on ecology by Mrs.
James Carpenter; OAGC slide
set, "Nature Trails," by Mrs.
Bruce Davis.
POMEROY WOMEN'S
Christian Temperance Union, 2
p.m. Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.

!Middie'p~
~

~

Personal Notes

r

~

~

~

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lowery
and son, Danny, spent the
weekend in Poca, W. Va.
visiting their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Stein and Donald Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
children of St. Albans are the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kessinger and Mr . and Mrs.
Albert Roush.
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel and
Miss Carol Bachtel left this
week on a F1orida vacation.
Mrs. Harriet Davenport and
Mr. and Mrs. James Dale and
son, Jimmy of Beckley, W. Va .
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Davenport and
family and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245, Thursday, American
Legion hall, 7 p.m .; parents
urged to attend.
WOMEN'S ASSN ., Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church, 7:30p.m.
Thursday, at the church; installation of officers by Mrs. J.
E. Harley.

r---------------------------,
! HOSPITAL NEWS \
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave . and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
only. Maternity visiting hours
2:30 to 4:30p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.

•

.,

Births
Mr . and Mrs. Floyd E. Moore,
Jr., Oak Hill, a son; Mr . and
Mrs. Michael V. Reese,
Cheshire, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul L. Wright, Rt. 2, Wellston,
a daughter ; Mr. and Mrs.
Warren G. Black, Rt . 1,

Daughter Honored
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zirkle
entertained recently with a
party honoring their da ughter,
Michelle, on her second
birthday.
Guests were Mrs . Ruth
Zirkle, Mr . and Mrs. David
Zirkle and children, Terri and
Debbie, Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Plants and children, Ruthanna
Sammy, and Lc-a nna, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall, and
Hotwrl Shurp. A gift \HIS ;ds''
preS('ff1(•d to Michc·lll' b} Mrs.
Olit a Hc:Jghlon
\

\

:--.:

A waitress, nurse. cook, retriever of lost articles, that's
all you see in me!
Must be nice ha•Jing someone at your beck and calt, I
guess!
Sure is great knowing you don't have to wake yourself
up at three in the morning for medicine!
If I were completely free , who would change your bed
a nd wipe your forehead and fix your juice and feed you
soup, that's what I'd like to know?

I'm rather glad now that I decided not to leave and
be completeli liberated. Because right now I have a
touch of the flu.
My husband has doled out aspirin.
My children are rounding up the book I asked for and
they'll be bringing in another glass of juice soon.

When I made my rounds with fresh pitchers of water
and two of my children started singing "Here Comes
Florence Nightingale." I decided Jamaica wasn't far
enough, but Hawaii sounded fine.

Not that I'll ever be completely happy about things as
they are, of course.

Then my husband came tottering into the kitchen
hoarsely complaining. "I guess I'll just have to fix my
own tea ... and I seriously considered the South Pole.
Sure. it's cold there. but wo uld I be surrounded by a
group of snivelers'?

(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

As I washed sheets and crawled under beds retrieving
crayons. books and doll clothes, I grumbled.

POLLY~s

POINTERS

Their Views Var Y
On Rug Cleaning
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- I want to tell Mrs P . K. that I have
light gold wool carpet and have cleaned it several times
by making a very sudsy solution of detergent and water .
I just rub the suds (not the water l into the carpet with m~
hand. then take old bath towels and rub in this suds.
which cleans and dries at the same time. I only do an
area about 2-by-2 feet at one time and it really looks
beautifuL - MRS . J. R. B
DEAR POLLY - Tell Mrs. P. K. to put away her suJs
and back away from that wool carpet. My husband sells.
installs and cleans carpets and has had to replace man~·
because a woman tried to save money and shrunk her
carpet. Also. some of the spray and foam cleaners have
grease bases and attract dirt Call a professional service .
Back away from that carpet quickly and cautious!:-. ELIZABETH
l&gt;EAR GIRLS-I have used Mrs. J. R. B.'s method and
found it most satisfactory on large rugs. I do not have
wall-to-wall carpet. This freshens an:l brightens the rug
but should not be used exclusively as professional cleaning is necess:1ry periodically. Elhabeth 's letter should
serve as a caution to those who may be inclined to satu·
rate a rug or carpet. Too m uch "wetness" could cause
shrinking. Using the suds only should not even moisten
the pad, which must not get wet. Thoroughly vacuum the
rug first, then use ONLY
the suds and keep whipping
them up if they die down.
An egg beater is good for
this. The rag used for s uch
wiping will soon show how
much loose dirt is being
removed.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY- I, a nonsmoker, was facej with an
embarrassing situation
when a child gave me a
cigarette case as a gift. I
did want to give her the satisfaction of seeing me use her
gift so use it to hold lipsticks that I carry in -my purse .
It is just the right size and keeps t:1e co·. ers from coming
off the lipsticks . -KATHL~.Sl'\

Polly's Prob!em
DEAR POLLY- We ordered our mobile home
special with double-insulation between the outside
walls. There does not seem to be e::ny insulation
between the inside walls. 1 would like to know an
inexpensive way to either put something on the
wall s or, preferably. between the w&lt;.lls to make
them soundproof. 1 hank you for any help.- RUTH
INew -p:~p~r Enterpris~

At Bookmobile HQ
An arts and crafts workshop

will be held Thursday at the
Meigs
Bookmobile
headquarters on Nye Ave.
The session will be held from
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and those attending are invited to take a
sack lunch . Mrs. Howard Nolan,
retired home extension agent,
will assist in organizing a
handicraft club. The workshop
is open to all area women.
Those attending are asked to
take an idea for some craft
project.

.

................
• A THOUGHT:
...
iC

.

:FOR TODAY :

iC No one is useless in this iC
iC world who lightens the iC

... :

-tc burden of it for someone -tc
: else. - Charles Dickens :
iC
iC

:
~

It's Quick! Easy

iC

~

Betty Canary now comes in book form. Her " Surviving as a Woman"
is availa ble a t book and department stores and a lso by mail to readers
of this newspaper. Send check or money order for $5.95 to: Betty Cana ry
Book, Box 489, Ra dio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019. Please allow
three weeks for delivery.

••

:
Fridays Only
~
iC The Drive-In Window iC
Further assistance to an :
is Open
-~
9 A.M . to 7 P.M.
-tc
underprivileged girl was -tc
( Continuous ly)
iC
discussed during a recent
meeting of Group II of the •
ic.
Middleport First
United iC Other Banking Hours 9 to 3ie

t

Presbyterian Church at the
home of Mrs. Lewis Sauer,
chairman.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace gave the
devotions. Mrs . Tom Rue
presented an article from the
Class 12.
"Presbyterian Life." RefreshParticipating in the program ments were served by the
titled "Using Your Talents" hostess to the eight members
were Eddie Johnson and Lydia attending .
Johnson, a vocal duet; Sara
Diddle and Marilee Cassell,
readings; Kim Donahue and
Vicki Slack, piano solos; and
Nancy Large, a vocal solo
accompanied by Miss Glenna
Sprague.
Presiding at the meeting in
the absence of Mrs. Glenn
Lambert who is ill was Mrs. B.
B. Zeigler. Miss Bess Sanborn
gave devotions and Mrs. Nan
Moore reported on holiday
projects including $2 given to
each child at the Meigs County
Children's home. Mrs. Perry
Mitch, Mrs. David Entsminger,
and Mrs. Kenneth Eyer served
a dessert course during a
concluding social hour .

Youths Give Program

-tc a nd

5 to 7 as usua l ont
iC Frida ys.
iC
•
iC

t FARMERS BANK t
t and SAVINGS CO. t
t

ir

"?'

ir

·············Jf···
:

A surprise party was held
recently honoring William
Jones on his 52nd birthday
anniversary. The party hosted
by Barbara Sprouse and
William Hamm, was given at
the Park St. residence of Mr.
Jones.
Cake, ice cream and punch
were served and a gi,ft was
presented to the honored guest.
Guests were Mrs. William
Jones, Linda Sprouse, Ricky
Jones , Gary Jones, and Kim
Jones.

:

GARDENERS WELCOME
Members of Meigs County
garden clubs are invited to
attend an open meeting of the
Wildwood Garden Club at 7:30
Wednesday night at the Ohio
Power Co. The program will
fea ture Mrs. Homer Holter
showing slides of Expo '70 and
the International Flower Show
in Japan. Refreshments will be
served.

BAKER'S

,

DR. SCHOLL'S
FLEXO

FOAM ARCH
FOR MEN AND WOME N

JHE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are sensibly
priced.
Middleport

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

18-FOOT BUILT -IN KITCHEN
LONG- BELL PRE-FINISHED WOOD CABINETS AND FORMICA IO COUNTERTOP

VISIT IN RACINE
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Roush of Apple Creek
spent the weekend here with
Mrs. Roush's uncle and aunt,
Mr . and Mrs. Owen Watson of
Racine.

,

~

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

Party Was Surprise

MATCHING

iC

DRIVE-IN :
iC
BANKING iC•

•

A ;sn I

Thoroughbred Actor
NEW YORK (UP! ) - If
genetics is anywhere near the
exact science it is reputed to be,
Peter Sellers couldn't help
being a grea t entertainer. The
co-star - with Goldie Hawn of the film comedy, "There's A
Girl In My Soup" is the son of a
m usician (father) and variety
entertainer (mother l and at one
time had seven uncles working
in various capacities in the
theater .

:

Group II Meets

After all, I had to fix my own cup of tea .

Youth of Heath United
Methodist Church under the
direction of Mrs. L. W. McComas presented a program at
the Thursday night meeting of

cake being sc~ rved at the dinner.
Members signed a round-robin
c·ard fcJJ· Mrs. Sybil Miles, a
patient at Gran t Hospital,
Columbus, fl.oom fi40. Mrs.
Miles suffered a heart attack
while in Columbus with her
daughter, Mrs. Bonnie Jackson.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
closed the meeting.
At the dinner besides those
named were Mrs. Ora Hill, Mrs.
Bertha Johnson, Mrs. Bertha
Spencer, and Mrs. Mattie
Circle. Absent due to illness
were Mrs. Lavinia Simpson,
Mrs. Ann Coe, Mrs. Edith
Hayman,
Mrs.
Dorothy
McKenzie and Mrs. Harriett
Neigler.

Yo u will receive a dollar if Polly u&gt;es vom· favorite
hom emaking iiea, Polly's Problem or solutio n to a pr oblem . Wrile Polly in care of this newspaper.

Rutland, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs . James M. Montgomery,
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs .
Lowell F. Fisher, Jr ., Oak Hill,
a son; and Mr. and Mrs . Carl
Triplett, Gallipolis Ferry, a son .
Discharges
Mrs. Marie H. Amos, Mrs.
Douglas Leroy Bugg and infant
daughter, Mrs . Bobby Lee
Clary, Lawrence Craig, Mrs.
Bruce R. Curtis, Mrs. Elma R.
Dement, David w. Gillogly,
Mrs. Mary c. Goodwin, Mary E.
Holstein, Edwin Hudson, Mrs.
Clyde J. Ingels, Albert A. Kuhn,
Mrs . Earl B. Morris, Charles H.
Murray, Mrs. Earl F . Noble,
• 1971 b, NEA, 1.,
James w. Pickens, Mrs. Paul 1
Today'• FUNNY ••II par SIOO to,
W. Porter, Mrs. Arthur W.
ea&lt;h onginal "funny" u&gt;ed Send gog&gt;
Smith, Mrs . Gary L. Smith and
to: Today'• FUNNY, 1200 West Thud
Sr., C lnoland, Oh•o 44 113.
infant son, Roger Lee Stumbo,
Lisa Ann Timmons, Mrs . Paul
Ennl Tope and duughter. Mrs.
Roy F . VanMeter and daughter,
J erry Lee Wurner, Mrs. Darrell
Franklin White and daughter,
William R . Adkins, Wi lliam E.
Curfiii&lt;Hl . .John K Dutton, Mrs.
·(;oldie M. Galbraith, Clarence
W. Harclill'rf&lt;'r. Mrs . .John W.
Mc•;H i o~.' · &lt;•I 'I :,J, s. Sa II Ill(' I E .
:\-11-KiiiiH '~

A VaiPnLJrH''s IJay party with
husbunds us guesL-; was planned
for Feb. 12 wtH'n the Happy
Hustlers Class met Friday night
at the Wesleyan United
Methodist Church.
A potluck supper preceded
the meeting. Mrs. Laura
Watson presided at the meeting
which opened with prayer by
Mrs. Min a I .ewis. The birthday
anniversary of Mrs. Grace
Krider was observed with a

..

0

. . . .. . .

APPLIANCES AVAILABLE

Organized "L" shaped cabinet~ &lt;:mdnged to meet your demands
as a busy housewife . Modern styling, plus the beauty of walnut
tone cabinets comb1ned w1th easy-to-c lean Formica" countertop. Special features include nylon glides on drawers tor smootll·
er opening and combinat1on h1ngc-catcll on all base and wall
cabinets. Unit includes: roomy cabinets, countertop, colored
steel sink to match app ' iances, faucet with spray and bask&lt;'!
strainer.

APPLIA NCES, RANGE HOOD , AND
INSTALLATION EXTRA

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Depart m ent Store of Bu ildi ng Since 1915

f

.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Jan. 25, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
Po111eroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

'14,893*BUYS THIS HOMEII

QUALITY

Doubt If You Qualify?
·F

66 CHEVROLET
$1495
S.S. Impala, H.T. Cpe., power steering, automatic trans.,
blk. vinyl bucket seat &amp; console, 327 V-8engine, good tires,
beautiful gold finish .
66 FORD
$1095
Gala xi HT Cpe., 6 cyl. engine, std. trans., air conditioning,
good tires, clean interior, dark green finish.
65 PONTIAC
$1095
Tempest St. Wagon, local 1 owner, low mileage car, V 8
engine, automatic trans., power steering, non·slip rear
axle, vinyl interior like new, light blue finish, radio. Save
Today.

EXAMPLE: With no money down and an adjusted income of $4,000 per year.
Payments would be approximately $50 per month on this home.
You don't have to own a lot.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Ca II Weber Construction Co. at 992-7136 Pomeroy, or 592-1240 tor appointment.
$14,893 does not include price of lot.

*

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
WANT AD
Notice
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
WILL not be responsible for
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
any debts contracted by
Monday Deadline9a.m.
anyone other than myself.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Ralph W. Shain, U.S. Army,
Will be 1ccepted until 9 a.m . for
Day of Publication
Vietna•n.
REGULATIONS
1·24·3tp
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads REWARD, $500, for arrest and
deemed
objectional.
The
conviction of person or perpublisher will not be responsible
sons who took my female
for more than one incorrect
Walker dog from Leading
inserti6n.
Creek area and kept her
RATES
For Want Ad Service
concealed for six weeks. This
5 cents per Word one insertion
dog was turned in for reward
Minimum Charge 7Sc
by Mr. Floyd Barnhouse, Rt.
12 cents per word three
2, Pomeroy. Lesl ie Marcum,
consecutive insertions.
Box 165, Delbarton, W. Va.
18 cents per word six con.
1 24-Stc
secutive insertions.
25 Per cent Discount on paid
OLD
furniture,
dishes,
brass
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
beds, etc. Wri te M. D. Miller,
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
$1.50 for SO word minimum.
992-6271.
Each additional word 2c.
9 l-Ife
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per ATTENTION ladies! Would you
Advertisement .
likt: to try a wig on in the
QFFICE HOURS
privacy of your own home?
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
You can. Just call us. We also
8 . 30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Koscot, of course. Distributors, Brown's. Phone
Notice
Middleport 992-5113.
INCOME TAX service, daily
12-31-tfc
except Sunday. Evenings by
appointment only. Phone 992- W!LL PICK up merchandise
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
and take to auction on a
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
percentage basis . Call Jim
mile south of fairgrounds.
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
12-31-30tc
Phone 742·4461.
9·23-tfc

MONEY CLIPS
by Mort Reed

Bits and Pieces About a Dollar

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

11

All signs point to a new Notes bearing the Joseph W.
$1 coin for 1971. Coin book Barr signature.
publishers are making space
Although Barr did serve
in their 1972 editions for it. only a few days as secretary
Statisticians are w o r k i n g of the Treasury, notes bearovertime compiling what- ing his signature continued
ever statisticians c om pi 1 e to be printed until after the
relative 1o minting records, appointment of Dorothy Anand coin accessory manufac- drews Elston, treasurer, and
turers are busy turning out Dayid M. Kennedv, secreholders and protective de- taiUl, in May, 1969. •
vices for what has to be the
Unless one of these notes
numismatic event of the dec- is in perfect crisp-new condiade-issuance of the Eisen- tion, it is worth no more than
hower dollar.
face value and then only if
Congress hasn't passed the it contains one or more addibill yet but it will. It is just tional redeeming features,
a matter of getting all mem- such as a noticeable printing
bers of the committee to nod defect.
(.
their heads once they have
reconciled their differences Blue- and Yellow-back Notes
on the One Bank Holding
Several r e ad e r s have
Company bill to which the asked about the appearance
Eisenhower dollar legisla- of blue or yellow backs on
tion is attached.
pieces of our paper currency
The bill provides for the and if such bills have a speissuance of 150 million 40 cial value.
per cent silver and an un"Errors" that have been
limited number of cupro- artificially created have no
clad silverless Eisenhower collector's value whatever.
dollars.
Notes with blue or yellow ink
This legislation also pro- hacks have been purposely
vides for the removal of all treated with a chemical to
silver from the current Ken - create an unusual variety
nedy half-dollar.
and collectors should avoid
The Bureau of the Mint these pieces at all costs.
has devised an equitable arIt is absolutely ~mpossible
rangement whereby everyone will have an opportunity
to buy at least one silver
specimen, but the director
warns that any orders rec e i v e d prior to the announced ordering date will
be returned to the sender.
One of the problems with
gold and silver coins is their
inherent ability to tarnish in
spite of precautions taken to
avoid any discoloration. With
this dollar being the last of
our prestige coinage, the experts are working doubly
hard to find ways of improving various a n tit a r n i s h
processes.

GET

ATTENTION

I
I
I

Classified Ads

:
1I
I
1

b r i ng y0 u
extra Cash
for
shopping sprees

~ -H-elp_W_a-nt-ed-

______________ 1

HOUSEKEEPER needed. Live
in if desired. Good working
conditions. Phone 992~5251.
1-19-tfc

By ERNIE HOOD
Blanchard S., Boyce, La ..
wntes : "I'd like to be a barber How do I train for the
job, and once I do, will there
be many jobs open ? "
Dear Blanchard : Turnover
of barbers is expected to re
suit in several thousand job
openings per year in the 1~ext
decade . Openings also will
occur as a growing popula tion demands more barbering services .
Almost all states require a
license obtained after graduation from a state-approved
barber school. In addition,
barber applicants must meet
certain health requirements
and have completed at lea~t
the eighth grade .
After working one or two
years as a licensed apprentice, a candidate takes an
exam to qualify as a registered barber.
Earnings usually depend
upon commissions or combined wages and tips. Weekly earnings in 1968 ranged
from $85 to $125 for apprentices and from $125 to $160
for experienced barbers.
Diana C, Sherwood, Ore.,
says : "Since this is the computer age. there ought to he

1970 MODEL 12X60 trailer. Gas
heated, completely furnished,
:=:=:
like new. Large patio, nice
Ioca t ion . Phone 949-2261.
Albert Hill, Racine.
1-20-6tc

4471

Barr Sl,l!natun· :'lil'!t•s
Mail 1-;t•r•l•s 1 · "' 'l!' it' U!
quinn~~ ;d"'''' tlu· prnb:ll &gt;l•
va ll11•

of

I • •, • ;

l'n'.;l•J \{'

{~

=);

i

I:

1:1 ' '' '" .

I '. 1/

' I

I•

.. .
II

.................

1I
I

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

BLAffiNARS
Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

For Rent
NEW MOBILE home. Adults
only. Phone 992-5592.
1-7-tfc

For Sale
1970 TAG-A .LONG 20' self
contained travel trailer. Like
new. Call Virgil Walker,
Racine, Ohio. Phone 949-2599.
1-20·6tc
~~~~-------

FRIGIDAIRE
3 cycle
automatic washer, white.
Phone 992-2500.
1-24·3tp

TWO USED 12x38 tractor tires,
$15 each or both $25. Phone
843-2436.
1-24·3tp
1970 DIAL 'N SEW Zig-Z~g
Sewing Machine left 1n
layaway. Beautiful pastel
color, full size model. All
built-in lo buttonhole, over.
cas t and fancy stitch. Pay just
$48.75
cash
or
terms
arranged. Trade.ins ac·
cepled. Phone 992-5641.
1-19·61c

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.
BOOKKEEPING service, Mrs.
Marvin King, 112-mile north on
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Weekdays 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon .
Evenings by appointment.
12-15-tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Fre•!
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

Real Estate For Sale
---------VACUUM Cleaner brand new
, 1970 model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Will lake
$27 cash or terms if desired.
Phone 992·5641.
1-19.6tc
FIREWOOD, Gerald King,
Shade, Ohio. Phone Shade 6961287.
1-14-12tp

COAL , limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. PhoDe 992-3891.
4·9·tfc

::;:

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,.,.

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·

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)

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I
::::

DALE DUTTON

. Phone Day 304 485 6725, N1ght 992·2580

Phone Day 992 3106, Night 992·5234

:·=·~;: ·:·: =~= :::: ;::~:=:::::::-;:;::·::= r:·:·::::: ===~:;;···:· :;:::·::·_:;··~;::~:.::·;·=· :.:: ··== .

'

DON'T WAIT

POWER-VAC
Cleaning System
All The Dirt In
One Simple Operation
Homes - Trailers - Public
Build ings, etc. No muss, no
fuss - have your furnace
cleaned today.

OiASELocust
HARDWARE·
·
St.
Middleport, 0 .
AIR CONDITIONING , Refrigeration service. Jack 's
Refr igera tion , New Haven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

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

JOHNSON MASONRY, Commercial
or
re sidential
remodeling. Brick, block
stone, cement work, garage~
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
Free estimates. Jim, Larry,
Jake. 992-7044.
1-7-3otc
BACK HOE ;nd end- loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George ( Bi ll) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD' --------------

-HA_R_R_ISO-N-'S_T_V_A_ND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phon e.,
992-2522.
,
6-10-tfc

SR

Broker•
110 Mechanic st.
Pomeroy, Ohio

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remode ling your
home, Call Guy Nei!ller ,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc

SMALL OLDER HOME - 3
bedrooms, bath, gas heat. SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
Near stores. $3,500.00
662·3035.
2-12-tfc
4 BEDROOMS - Older home,
bath, gas heat. Large living ,
Garage. Near stores. Asking WHEEL Horse Sales an~
Service. Baum
Lumber
$10,500.00
Company, Chester , Ohio.
Phone 985-3301.
ALL PANELED Cozy 3
5·20-tfc
bedrooms with closets, bath,
modern kitchen. Gas forced
air furnace. Stores 3 blocks. SAW FILI-NG,...al~ kinds of
Only $12,000.00
sharpening, Ia n mower
repair, Briggs a d Stratton
50 ACRES - Warm 6 room
engine service. Ll)w cost pick
home, modern kitchen, bath,
up and delivery. Phone 992dry basement. Gas forced air
2804. Col mel's Saw Shop ,
furnace. Double garage.
Mechanic St., Port~eroy.
Minerals. Asking $25,000.00
1-22-3t.
- - - ' ' - - -HELEN TEAFORD
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
ASSOCIATE
992-3325
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
1·22-6tc
Racine, Ohip
Critt Bradfotd
7 ROOM house, bath. New roof
5- 1-tfc
New porch. Garage. Paneled
living room and dining room.
Carpets. Excellent condition. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Phone 992-5900.
Reasonable rates. Phone
l-24·3tc
John Russell , Gallipolis 4464782 after 5: 30 p. m.
4-7-tfc
_S_E_W_I_N_G_M_A_C_H_IN
-E-S-.-R-epair. .
serv ice, all makes. 992-2284.
POMEROY
6 ROOM
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
FRAME, 3 bedrooms, bath , 2
Authorized Singer Sales and
porches, GOOD NEIGHService. We Sharpen Scissors.
BORHOOD. $3,750.
3-29-tfc
POMEROY - LITTLE BUT
NICE - 2 story frame, 2
bedrooms , bath, utility room,
Insurance
NEW forced air gas furnace.
LARGE LOT. $5,300.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
SYRACUSE - ALMOST NEW
operator's license? Call 9922966.
- 5 room frame, 3 bedrooms,
bath , gas forced air furnace,
6-15-tfc
carport, hardwood floors. A
STEAL AT JUST $15,950.

WALNUT finish stereo, 4 speed
intermixed
changer,
4
speaker sound
system .
Balance $63.79. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
1·21-6tc

HOBSTETTER
George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
Real Estate Broker

':~-

.··: •..•.•. .••...:· •.. ·::· ..::·

Auto Sales

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

, 1640 Lincol n Hts. ,
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2 dr . HOUSE
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
hardtop, power s leering ,
10·25.tfc
power brakes, air , 18,000
miles . Excellent condition.
Phone 992·2288.
LOT IN Bradbury, Phone 992·
11 -10-tfc
5404.
1-19·6tc
1960 FORD pickup truck, 3,;, ton,
heavy duty, new paint job.
Belpre, Ohio . Phone 423 7261.
cond i lion .
1966
Good
1-24 .3tp
Volkswagen. Good condition .
Phone 742·4211 days, 742 5501
We sell anything
nigh is .
For Rent or Sale
anybody including com
CAMPERS and travel !railers.
p1e1e es•ates Sale ev
Don't buy until you see our
Sa urday
evening ,
new line Coming in February . 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2
u'clock, corner of Third
door , wilh snow tires. Good
What a surpnse! You pick it
Olive Sis For Picku
condition . Doyle Sa r gent ,
out, we' ll put it on sale. Gaul
Service Call ..
Phone 992 6252.
Trailer Sales, Inc .. One-half
1 24 6tp
mile no~th of Chesler , Ohio off
Rt. 7, watch for sign . Yes, WE
KNOTTS
RENT campers and travel 1964 OLDS Cutlass, 4 speed,
AUCTION
trailers . Phone 614 985 3832
1969 Chevy engine, ma , sun
446 2917
for full information
tach Phone 992 3571 .
1 17 121c
6tc

-A-f-~-;~-~-{-;-,-;~ -~-f-~-:;-~-~-~-~-~-~-s-~:r~~

i.,::.,

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walls ~. :,;.i;.·;

! TO~E~ROW
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TEK HQM'[s

I "\H~~:.o;.~;i~:r. ;.~·..=.·~

I

· r

6 ROOM house, bath, 3.;. acre
ground, storm windows and
COLONIAL Maple Stereo~ radio
doors, gas furnace, carpeting,
SOX12 MOBILE home, 2
combination, AM, FM radio, 4
bedroom , completely fur all utilities, garage. Minersspeaker sound system, 4
nished, Middleport. Phone
ville, Ohio. $8,000.
speed changer, separate
992-7004.
controls . Balance $74.59. Use
ROOM house, 168 Mulberry
1-19-tfc
our budget terms . Call 992- 8 Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, close
3352.
''''
into
town . Make an offer.
1·21-61c.
Phone-Chester 985-4186
1-24-3tc

holders.
One of these is the ·'Show
Off," a 3 1/4 -inch-square case
completely free of mounting
screws and fasteners normally associated with coin
holders. It is of c lear, inert

:':·. ¥Maintenance
f'
f
I
.J
ree pane ing
f:i:
and
vi n Y I
accent
/
f ¥Lots avai lable or
:":;
will erect on
::.
your lot

~ '•1·IH.
'~. ~~. · · , ~.'
' ' I ll ",, I'

(ll Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
(2) OWn Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OFS4,000toS9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

L

~!*1~~~x~~;1~~Iiv~ i OWN YOUR OWN HOME ·: :

premise that it is tarnishproof but the Wadsworth
Testing Laboratories found
it to h&lt;' highly resist ani lo
all atmospht•ric intrusions .
A post card to Capital
Plastics, In(' . :ll36 I&gt;PIIwood
A v c·l~ N.W.. c.ant o n • Ohio
"· w1 11 1H'llll! a c1('S&lt;'I'Iptiv1• folckr .

I

'

ATIENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO -

Cleland Realty

GREEN HILL HOMES SAYS:

con-

•

..

0

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

:=:=:

~~i~ :~;:f·.~~:~~;~J~{~ rs·:::;~;~s"

1

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

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

of the new holders

than

...- ·-.~·-·.........:
~,·--~
,

You Can Cut Ahead

-:::~(''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''':::,:::=:::&gt;.::=:,:,:::::=:::::=:::=:=:=:=::;~::':':':':':':':::;:::::::::::&gt;.:::: ::::::::::::::::::::::=:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::==:::=:=:::::::::=:;:;:;:,:;:;:::;:,:::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::=:::::;:;:=:::=:;:;:;:;:,:=:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::=::::

~~~~:~~~~:~t;~1~:~i i ~ ~t"'

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

H &amp; N 20 wk. old ready to lay
floor grown pullets available
Feb. 4. Modern Poultry , 399
SEMI DRIVERS needed. ExW. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
perience helpful but not
Ph. 992-2164.
necessary, for local and over
1·22·3tc
the road hauling. You can
earn $10,000 to $15,000 per
year if you are willing to REDUCE SAFE and fast with
plenty of jobs for keypunch learn. For application and
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
ers . True?"
interview, call513·224-3071 , or
water pills. Nelson's Drugs.
wrile
Advance
D.
T.
Dept.,
Dear Diana: Very true. ac1-22-30tp
1100 Enoch Drive, Mid ·
cording to the Bureau of
dletown , Ohio 45042.
Labor Statistics. Office rnaBURROUGHS adding mach ine ,
1-25.2tc
seven column, $10. Phone 992·
chine operators, inc! uding
5233.
keypunchers, are expected to
1-22·3tc
increase in n u m be r v~·rv Female Help Wanted
rapidly through the 1970s . ·
WOMEN Need work but UPRIGHT Piano, good con New jobs will open as JH~w
d i !jon , phone 992·2806.
unable to devote full time?
1-22·31c
machines are introduced.
Walkins has a splendid in ·
volume of paperwork grows
come opportunity for you.
Wri le Ruth Bergaus, Watkins KENMORE Automatic Washer.
and business itself expands.
Products , Inc. , Winona,
Reason for selling is that I
U. S. Labor Department
Minnesota.
have 2 automatic wnshers.
Bulletins are sources of
1-25-ltc
Evelyn Gibbons Sweel, 144
depth information on c.H'E'l:r
Hudson St. , Middleport. Ohio.
fields They can be obtained
Phone 992-2906.
from the Superintend~nt ,,f Wanted To Buy
1-19-61p
Documents, U . S. Govern- OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
ment Printing Office, Washcondition, as long as have not STAR kills rats quickly, surely.
ington , D .C. 20402. For the
been wet. Pay ing $10 each.
2112 pounds, $1.69. Ebersbach
barber category, ask tor
First floor o ly. Mondays will
Hardware, Sugar Run Mills,
be
pick-up
day.
Write,
giving
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
Bulletin 1650-61, priced at 10
directions.
Witten
Piano
good
1-5-30tp
cents ; for the office maCompany
,
Box
188,
Sardis,
chine operator and keyOhio
43946.
Ray Hummel
puncher category, B•Jlletin
8 20-tfc
1650-50, 10 cents.
Says:
POMEROY - BEAUTIFUL
If you have a qul'slie:n
BRICK - 3 large bedrooms
GET
double closets, built in kitab?ut another career field, For Rent
chen,
wall to wall carpet,
wnte to SO YOU WANT fO
and unfurnished
bath, recreation rooin, utility
'EM
NOW
BE in care of Newspaper FURNISHED
apartments. Close to school.
room , full basement, carport,
Enterprise Association , 230
Phone 992-5434.
1 acre of ground. $27,500.
Country Squire
Park Ave., New York, N .Y.
10-18·tfc
TO BUY OR SELL
MUD&amp;SNOW TIRES
10017.
CONTACT US.
All
s
izes
in
stock
.
Lowest
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
FARMS NEEDED.
prices . Free installation. We
FURNISHED apartment, 3
HENRY CLELAND
do studding .
rooms and bath , private
REALTOR
fErnie Hood is a public
entrance, nice yard. 211112 N.
Office 992-2259
POMEROY
3rd,
Middleport,
Ohio.
Phone
information officer with the
Residence 992-2568
J . W. Carsey, Mgr.
992 2780 or 992·3432.
U.S. Department of Labor. 1
1 25 6tc
Phone 992-2181
1-21 -tfc

So You Want to Be

ab~~~~:et~~~~aen;:~ 1b':fl~~~~

being

Business Services·

DOZER WORK. Sept1c tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949·4761. FOR "A Job Well Done"
10-18-tfc
feeling, clean carpets with
Blue Lustre. Rent electric
_W_I_L_L_G_IV_E_ p_i_a-no_a_n_d_o-rgan
shampooer, $1. Baker FurI lessons in my home. Phone niture, Middleport.
I 992 3666.
1-21·6tc
8-16-tfc
I

I

for a blue or yellow back
bill to be a product of the
Bureau of Engraving and
Printing. The green ink used
in the p r o d u c t i o n of our
paper currency is a patented
process owned solely by the
government and kept under
strict security.

•

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

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20438
Estate of Rebecca Hudnall
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Myrtle Haning of Pomeroy ,
Ohio, has been duly appointed
Administratrix of the Estate of
Rebecca Hudnall , deceased , ~
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
with in four months
Dated this 19th day of
January 1971.
F . H. O'Brien
PROBATE JUDGE OF
said County
(1) 25 , (2) 1, 8,

Jtc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
"
Case No . 20,408
Estate of Homer Lovett
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Clara Be lle Yinger of 216 West
" B" Street, Wellston, Ohio, has
been duly appointed Ad .
ministratrix of the Estate of
Homer Lovett, deceased, late of
Lebanon Town ship , Meigs
County , Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
the ir claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated this 5th day of January •
1971.
F. H . O'Brien
Probate J udgQ.
of said County
( 1l 11 , 18, 25, 3tc

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

WMP0/ 1390

f

�EEK AND MEEK

~----~

•

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

UH--THANKY
FER TH'
''COFF REMEDY':
SNUFFY

•
)(JlJ 5~ULD NEVER HAVe
U~T THEIR 90AT·-N!m.IRALI..Y1
THEY THOUGHT 'IOU WERE 50ME
FEI&lt;OCIOUS UNDERWATER
MONSTIOR··THAT'5 WHY
BATHLESS HARR:JONIOO
YOU!

•

1
' SUDDENLY,SYBIL

LOOKED
An-IJM AND SAID: JEFFERY.
WE C/WTGO ON MEEliN6
LIKE: TrliS. -~ ''

lEU.. ME-.WHAT
WOK Afi!F: YOU
I&lt;E,C.OIN6?

•
I

CANA

'I

ME~E

HUMAN
BEING
CONQUER A
BLOODTHIRSTY
FLOWER?

•

I THOUGHT YA

WERE OVER AT
ROSCOE'S F'RAC-

TICIN' WITH THAT
NEW ROCK 'N' ROLL
BAI&gt;JD YER
ORGANIZIN'!

Yer clothe6
i6 ell mu66ed!
You been
holed up in

'

a'alleL.J

~om'whar'5?

•
I Doti'T TRUST I'IONE
O' THEM S CUM,
CHILD 1 IT'S JUST
YOU, ME, THE

GIANT FELLER·--

•

·-- Ali' ME, YER·-. (~!

CB.li_K!J7.· Bl~RSTED

MIGHTIMESS!! THERE'S
tfO TR.EASURE T' BE HAD
WrTHOUT BOCA GRAt-jDE
LfADIN' YER EVERY

DEATH•DEFYtN' STEP
Q' THE WAY!!

DAILY CROSSWORD
"DICK TRACY
SUT EVEN

WI~

MACE IN

'lOUR COMB, YOU'RE A FOOL
TO TAKE THIS RISK, BABY.

•
-

I

TERRY

CAPTAIN EASY

19.Actor,
Macdonald
20. Canalboat
23.Akin
2-l.Proportlonately
(2wds.J
25. Biblical
story
26. Specimen
27. Barbecue rod

31. Calla
stop
32. Employed
34. Weary
37. "Oul,"
translated
38. Longing

30.In

front

FI~;T
CHA~C5 ~HIS

.YEB-lTE

[)

I

Is

~COK~ FO~A
1-liDD~N 5AFE

I&lt;E:J(CH'So

SE,DROOM ...

~utur,tu,. ~M

·

JOMPOWO.
JOMPOWO?

ADI

P

\

LACKEY

OPPOSE

Au•"•·r : Oue u·n~· to make a fa•t buck at tl1e
ract'track - PICK A POCKET

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SHAREDA LOVE FOR BEETHOVEN
COULD BEC~E VER'f CLCJ:;E ...

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MOPFAUDL

~aturday'• Cryptoquote: THE HUSBAND OF A POLICEWOMAN OFTEN TAKES THE LAW INTO HIS OWN
HANDS. --- ANONYMOUS

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KETCH

FOR IN5TANCE ...TWO PEOPLE Wi-10

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

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suggested by the above cartoon.

(Anewen tomorrow

A Cryptorrun Quotation
A DI

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, aa

I (X I]' D a I I) THEM

Jumhlo·.: PILOT

One letter simply stands tor another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc. Single letters,
apo11trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

11\l.BRUIIIO

b

PrideSUmtSIINSWIUert

AXYDLBAAXR

DUCEY

DORJIJB

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here•s how to work It:

TH!:

GeT~,

ACROSS
DOWN
1. Assail
1. Stupefy, as
8. Place of
with drink
worship
2. Wed"on
11. Imbue with
the run"
joy
3. Less risky
12. Garry or
4. Pilot's abVictor
breviation
18. Words of
5. With conencourageciseness
6. HLove" in
ment
15. Unclose
Spain
(poet.)
7. Ship's
record
18. Knightly
8. Untimely
title
(2wds.)
17. Mythical
founder of
9. Excites
London
10. Blush
18. Three lines H. Location
of verse
20.Abject
21. Fermented
potable
22. Solar disk
28. Brisk
25.Ch1ef
executive:
abbr.
26.Father
27.Droop
28. Chinese port
29. Sermonize
38. Russian
village
34. "Aunt" in
Tijuana
35. Hawaiian
game
36. Improvise:
slang
(4wds.)
39. Subsequently
40.Let
.U. Expunge
42. Terminated

(t) 1971 Kin« Features Syndicntc, Inc.)

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 25,1971

Sexy Rita Can Be Funny, Too
By JOAN CROSBY

BE\'EHLY HILLS tNE-\l
-You don't expect a Living
Legend-Sex Goddess to be
funny. buL Rita Hayworth is
funnv and that's whv you
figure she ·n be great on The
Carol Burnett Show.
It's well known bv now
that Carol recently spoofed
Rita's famous "Gilda" and
that Rita. who says she
didn't know Carol was doing
the spoof. just happened to
watch. She sent a congratulator~· telegram. That led to
Rita agreeing to make her
first television appearance
on the Feb. 1 CBS-TV Carol
Burnett Show.
Her only other appearance
on the tube, not counting
scads of old films, was an
interview she did for the first
First Tuesday. She wasn't
happy ,,·ith the result.
"That guy made me look
as if I live alone with only
my dogs for · company, that
I play golf alone. that I do
everything alone.·' she says.
"That's bad publicity. I don't
Jiye alone. I love people. I'm
a 1 w a y s going out. I love
be i n g a r o u n d people. A
celebrity like I am, sort of.
if she's not out every night.
people say she's a recluse."
Rita is sitting in the den of
her B e v e r I y Hills home.
She's wearing a long brown
crepe button-down-the-front
I but not all the way) dress,
with beige borders and
swinging. open panels from
the knees down. "It's fun."

0

she says. twirling around
and kicking up her booted
lt&gt;gs. "I love to do that."
ller appParancc with Carol
hadn't bt&gt;en taped yet, so she
eouldn't say whether or not
the experience will lead her
into more television.
"Let me break the ice
first." she says. "I'm getting
a little scared. Probably I'll
just stand there and Ia ugh
and look at the camera and
say. 'I forgot my line.'
"Carol and I are doing a
charwoman skit. I'm trying
to imitate Carol. I've got a
lot of nerve. She's a lovely
lady to work with and she's
so talented. I wouldn't be
doing this if it weren't for
Carol. She's fun to talk to. I
like her. in a word. She's the
only idol I have, I think."
Rita has a film presently
in release in Europe. "Road
to Salina. ·• In a review in
Paris' Le Figaro, a tough
critic said: "A greater actress in her second career
than she ever was in her
first."
She'd like to do more
films:
"Sure, I would, but it's
tough to get a job. There are
hardly any films for a woman my age. Someone always
gets all the parts I want.
That reminds me, I still
haven't gotten the money
from Joe Levine that I was
suoposed to get when the
film went into release. He
owes me $20,000, which I
could easily use. Levine saw
the film and bought it for the

RITA HAYWORTH AND CAROL BURNETT
the spoofed and the spoojet

l'nited States. Actually, I
think it's $15,000 he owes me.
"I was asked to do 'Applause' on Broadway but I
haven't seen it yet and I
don't want to accept something I haven't seen. After
I do Carol's show. I'll be able
to pay my way back to see
it."

With that, the Living Legend-Sex Goddess tossed back
her beautiful head ~nd
laughed and you looked twJCe
to. be sure that really was
R1ta Hay~ort_h. The laugh
was Phyllis Diller s.
Rita is a funny lady too.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

oo~©m m~rnm~rnoo

·~~ Historical Film with a History
He considers himself pri- ghetti milanese every day
marily a stage actor and still and drink a pint every other
works as often as possible in da~·. What the money means
the theater This doesn't pay is that I can take a taxi when
too well, so the fatter film I want to and go out and
checks are nice.
have a good dinner when
"Now that I have some I'm hungry.
··what I'm m ore conmoney," he says. "it feels
good, but it doesn't really cerned about is the work.
bother me. It's nice if one I'm 24 and r hope to be in
doesn't have to exist on spa- ~his business a long time.

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

RAVCRCMLEV
Practical and Humane

Army Acts to Help
Those on Drugs
KE.:\' HUGHES works out plans for filming of the Battle
of Edgehill during production of "Cromwell."
By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD - (NEA)''Cromwell" is a historical
movie that has an interesting
history itself.
Ken Hughes, who wrote
the screenplay and directed
it, came to town for the Hollywood premiere and told
about it. He is not a historian and , in fact, had only a
rudimentary knowledge of
Cromwell, the kind of knowledge every English schoolboy acquires.
Then he made "The Trial
of Oscar Wilde" and they
asked him to come up with
another idea for a historical
film . He had just read a
book on .Cromwell, so that
subject was uppermost in
his mind and he suggested
it. He went ahead and wrote
the screenplay.
"That was 10 years ago,"
Hughes says. ''And in those
days historical movies had
to have Errol Flynn climbing up a balcony with a secret message in his boot.
There is nothing like that in
'Cromwell.'"
For 10 years the screenplay languished on a shelf.

P. J. Pauley

1-

l'm now located at

307 SPRING AVE.

"Cromwell" stars Richard
Harris and Alec Guinness.
Both are superb. But in a
relatively small role-Prince
R u p e r t-a yo u n g actor
named Timothy Dalton is
equally as good. If you've
seen "Wuthering Heights"the new one- you've seen
Dalton, because he's Heathcliff.
Reviewers have called him
a young Laurence Olivier
and he may just have that
quality. He's handsome and,
as with most English actors,
well-trained and very proficient.
He comes from a family
with a theatrical tradition.
He says his grandfather was
England's first theatrical
agent and his great-grand·
fath~r was in the London
music halls . His gran dmother was in the music
halls. too. "and family tradition has it that she was
once Charlie Chaplin's partner."

POMEROY

MEIGS THEATRE

Phone 992-2318

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
January 25-26

AUTO
FIRE - LIFE

HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

41. NATIONWIDE

! IINSURANCE
•\

In the interim, Hughes made
a 1i v i n g-he d i r e c t e d
"C hit t y - Chitty - Bang Bang," among other classics
-and every once in awhile
he'd get out his "Cromwell"
script and sigh a little.
"Then came 'A Man for
All Seasons,' " he says, "and
suddenly history was in. So
I got a c h a n c e to make
'Cromwell' at last."
He says one good thing
about the picture is the
beneficial effect it is having
on British pride.
•·we British," he says,
"had come to think of ourselves as a third-rate people,
when actually- because of
Cromwell-we had est a blished the first close approach to democracy in the
Western world. I've seen
Londoners come out of the
theater, after seeing 'Cromwell,' and they seem to walk
with more pride than when
they went in."

J&gt;

•H Ml 1 111111

f 1 )lt1"-"11\ '-

(JI.Ur

HELLO, DOLLY!
&lt;Technicolor)
Barbara Streisand
Wa lter Matthau
G
Running time : 2 Hrs. 45 Min .
l\dmission:
Adults $1.50, Children 75c
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

By RAY CROMLEY

Slo-Pitch League Launched
The Meigs-Mason Men's SloP itch Softball League was
formed Sunday at a meeting at
the Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.
Names of the teams and
managers for the sanctioned
league are:
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Kenneth Wiggins;
Royal Crown, Harold Stewart or
Da'l(e Lyons; Hart's Used
Cards, Mason, Bill Davis, Jim's
Camper Sales, Mason, James
Johnson; Midwest Steel,
Freeman Aleshire; Lou's
Ashland, Lou Osborne; Meadow
Green
Gardens,
James
Chadwell; Foote Mineral,
Mason, Howard Johnson; West
Columbia Community, Mason,
Sonny Decker, and Citizens
National Bank, Middleport,
Jerry Hawley.
Officers elected were Kenneth Wiggins, president; Roger
Hysell, vice president; Gregg
Gibbs, secretary; John Wolfe,
treasurer, and Larry Grueser,
sports publicity.
There will be a committee
chosen at the next meeting to
set a date for the start of league
play, to schedule games and the
starting hours of games. Entry
fee was set at $26 with six
dollars for sanctioning. The
balance will go to the league.
The group extended thanks to
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
president of the Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., who has given
$100 to the league.
It was vot d to permit two
more teams to enter the league
with the deadline for entry
being Feb. 21. Fields to be used
for games are in Syracuse,
Bradbury, Mason, Minersville,
Eastern, Middleport and
possibly Salisbury. The games
will be played during the week
to allow the teams to participate

in tournaments. There will be
The next meeting of the
sanctioned umpires for all league will be held at 4 p.m. on
games. Anyone interested in Sunday, Feb. 21, at the Farmers
umpiring is to contact Wiggins Bank and Savings Co.
al 992-3344 or 992-5002.

Two Win Honors
MASON - Two of Mason
County's representatives at the
West Virginia Junior Miss
Pageant at Concord College in
Athens came home with honors.
They were Chetti Hayes of
Wahama High School and
Teresa (Terry) Lanham, Point
Pleasant High School.
Miss Hayes, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Hayes of New
Haven, was named second
runner-up in the finals Sunday
afternoon and on Saturday night
won a $100 Scholarship for her
talent in Creative and Performing Arts. Her talent was
"Spoon River Anthology."
Miss Lanham, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lanham
of 1003 Simpson Place, won the
Scholastic Achievement Award
which carries a $100 Scholarship and she was also named
one of tile ten semi-finalists.
West Virginia's Junior Miss
for 1971 is Katily Noble of
Bluefield who presented a piano
solo for her talent. Betsy
Swearingen of Chester was first
runner-up and Sue Martin of
Buffalo won the Personality
Award.
Libby Brown, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald C. Brown of
New Haven and a senior at
Wahama, was also a contestant
in the state event. Libby, who
has madP- unusual presentations
on her balance beam locally did
not fare so well during tile big
contest, but her returning

Things Aren't What they Seem
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Granny McGrath looks like a
sweet, defenseless little old lady. Appearances are deceiving.
Granny was walking down a North Philadelphia street
Saturday night when two youths started to follow. They
trailed her for about 45 minutes. Twice they asked Granny
for directions.
Granny walked on until they snatched her pocketbook.
Then Granny sprung into action and arrested the youths.
Patrolman James Porreca, his police dog VAtias," and
two officers from the stakeout squad assisted. Granny is a
policeman.
Patrolman James McGrath, sometimes decked out in a
grey wig, spectacles and blue housedress, has at least 30
purse snatch arrests to his credit.

friends said that the music used
to accompany her act was not in
the right timing. Neitiler was it
audible which they said hindered her talent presentation.
Miss Hayes had a worry
hanging over her during tile big
event. Her mother is a patient in
Pleasant Valley Hospital and
neither of her parents was able
to attend, but she did have the
support of family friends who
got tilere.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS Alonzo
Clark, William Perry, III,
Raymond Russell, Mrs. Homer
Preece, Mrs. Herman Baker,
Karen Long, Mrs. Walter Jones,
Georgia McCoy, Janet Rene
Higginbotham, all Point
Pleasant; Charles Harris,
Buffalo; Fred Brown, Apple
Grove; Mrs. Flora Williams,
New Haven; Charlotte Huffman, Letart; Mrs. Charles
Jeffers, Southside; Roxanne
Wallis, West Columbia; Mrs.
Vaughn Wallace, Plinty; Randy
Colgrove, Apple Grove; Randy
Litchfield, Southside, and Mrs.
James Bush, Chesapeake, Ohio.
DISCHARGES- John Fruth,
William Willis, Mrs. Myrtle
Massey, Alma Austin, Beverly
Carson, Lula Curtis, Woodrow
Kuhn, Russell Porter, Mrs.
Jack Hatfield, Diane Withers
and Morgan O'Neil.

Actor Down
To Last Set

Of Boots
LONDON (UPI )-The young
man who took Princess Anne to
the movies is now on relief, -he
•
said today.
"I am down to my last pail"' ,
of boots. That's how desperate
things are," said Sam Shepherd, 18.
Sam, son of Cockney stevedore, appeared in the title role
of the neighborhood-made movie "Bronco Bullfrog" last year
and escorted the queen's
daughter to the premier. It
made him a Cockney hero -fo.
a few days.
Now he has been drawing
$6.96 a week unemployment
money for two months .
"When I go for a job, people
think I just want work until tile
next film offer comes along.
I've thought of writing to the
princess to let her know, but
I'm not sure whether I should,''
Sam told newsmen.

Sitters Hooked

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UPI)
-While the babysitter and her
three friends were downstairs
her 10-year-old charge was
upstairs calling police.
"They are smoking marijua.
na up here,'' the boy told the
police switchboard operator.
Police went to the house
Saturday night and ar rested the
babysitter and three male
friends.
The boy, not identified by
police but described as "very
intelligent," said he smelled
marijuana in the first floor
bathroom. He said he learnectf
to recognize tile smell at a
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday,Jan.23,1971
state police exhibit last year
SALES REPORT of
and knew what the drug looked
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
like from public service anHOGS -175 to 220 lbs. 16.85 to nouncemnts on television.
17; 220 to 250 lbs. 16.50 to 16.75;
The babysitter and one of the
Fat Sows 11.50 to 12.35; Boars youths arrested were to be
12.50 to 13.75; Pigs 3 to 10.50; arraigned today in juvenile
Shoats 7 to 12.
court. Two other teen-agers CATI'LE- Steers 24 to 28.50; Richard W. Maynard, 17, an&lt;W
Heifers 19 to 24.25; Baby Beef 28 Gary R. Ellison, 18, facea
to 32.50; Fat Cows 17 to 20.50; arraignment in district court.
Canners 14.50 to 21.40; Bulls 20
to 26.50; Milk Cows 175 to 300.
GRANGE TO MEET
VEAL CALVES -Tops 46.75;
The Rock Springs Grange will
1
Sf:'conds 42 to 45.40; Medium 37 meet at 7:30 p. m . Thursday at
•
to 41.25; Com. &amp; Hvs. 32 to 38;
the home of William Grueser.
Culls 32 Down.
BABY CALVES- 27.50 to 42.
CLUB TO MEET
LAMBS-Tops 23.10; Seconds
The Friendly Neighbors Club
20 to 22.10; Light Wts. 18 to will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesda~
21.25; Common 18 Down.
at the home of Mrs. Roy Smith.

Market Report

N EA Washington Correspondent

WASHINGTON (NEAl
The military services by now have perhaps more experience on a large scale with men affected by drug abuse
-including marijuana-than any other institution in this
country.
So what they have discovered about enforcement, the
effects of manjuana use and the handling of users bears
serious consideration, regardless of an individual's personal attitude toward the military.
Far too little notice has been given the changing attitude of the Defense Department toward marijuana
users.
Whatever the regulations and whatever is said in policy
statements, months of interviews convince that it is now
U.S. Army policy at the highest levels to regard the use
of marijuana (and other drugs) as a medical rather
than as a legal problem.
In Vietnam, Europe and the United States, American
Gls physically or emotionally "hooked" on drugs are
being encouraged to report themselves in for treatment
with no penalty.
In a change in Army regulations last year, the use of
and possession of marijuana were separated from other
drug violations, and it was made mandatory to counsel
and "rehabilitate" marijuana users or possessors prior
to taking administrative action. The effect of this change
is to give a soldier a second chance and an opportunity to
obtain an honorable discharge if he is sufficiently motivated to accept the c halle nge.
Field commanders are being given the widest latitude
to deal "with specific drug problems in their own commands . . . " But Defense Secretary Melvin Laird's advisers on this subject (headed by a vice-admiral with considerable command experience) recommend that before
any field commander take action he be aided by "medical, legal and moral advke."
These advisers also recommend "that as a policy
matter, in determining appropriate disciplinary actions,
consideration always be given to whether a military person experimenting with marijuana .. . was or was not
incapacitated for duty, or was a drug user, addict or
supplier."
The new programs, at least as laid down at the Pentagon level. stress education. And that education stresses
that "all personnel should have the opportunity to develop a positive self-concept, a respect for his physical
being and an insight into the importance of his health to
his full self-realization. Every effort should be made to
create an atmosphere of knowledge, confidence a nd trust
that will encourage personnel to seek help in overcoming
problems."
. This new program is being put into effect despite the
hrm behef, by top men responsible for advising Laird on
drugs, that marij uana is very dangerous indeed, as are.
of course. heroin, LSD and a number of other drugs.
These advisers have in fact reported to Laird that
though marijuana has not yet been definitively re:
searched, "To date, research has indicated that the shortterm effects include an impairment of the full use of
physical and mental facilities in varying degrees for
periods from 12 to 36 hours to as long as 11 days and, by
reason of experiment with animals, the long-range effects
may include either permanent or semipermanent physiological and genetic damage.··
These same advisers have told Laird that "as a precautionary me~sure it is recommended that in general
for adm1mstrat1ve purposes persons may be considered
voluntarily incapacitated for duty up to 12 to 36 hours
after the use of marijuana, unless otherwise determined
by medical or other appropriate authorities that a different time frame should be used in a particular case."
The Army, Navy. Air Force and Marines have never
been know!" as institutions soft on those who break laws
or regulations. Therefore. the new military approach
r!eserves the m_ost .c?~·eful st udy b~· those dealing with
dr ug off(•nders 111 Civilian life.

•

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