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•

•

$16.3 Million zn Capital Projects Cut Back

COLUMBUS (UPI) -The state Finance Department reported today that $16.3 million worth of capital construction
projects already approved by the General Assembly will
have to be delayed or canceled because of a lack of money.
In addition, the department has had to delve into other
funds to come up with money to finance four other programs
worth $9.7 million.
A spokesman for state Finance Director Harold A. Hovey
said the shortage was due to a clampdown on federal
reimbursements and the exhaustion of state bond issue
money, mainly for higher education and natural resources
construction projects.
Former State Finance Director Howard L. Collier warned
of the impending shortage in a memorandum last month to
all legislative leaders, s':ate fiscal officers and elected state
officials, including Gov. John J. Gilligan.
AmOJ:l8 the projects to be temporarily shelved are $6 million worth of community water and sewer line extensions, a
$1.6
million
undergraduate library at Ohio State

Now You Know
Apollo, the name accorded
the American moon landing
project, was a Greek and
Roman God of major importance who was regarded an
averter of evil and was symbolic of law, order and moral
and mental excellence.

VOL. XXVI

University, $3.8 million worth of improvements at Mohican
State Forest in Ashland County, $777,300 for completion of
improvements at Deer Creek Reservoir in Fayette County
and $535,198 for construction of various county juvenile
facilities.
Must Find Money
The Finance Department spokesman said the projects
will be funded if money becomes available through state
surpluses or a loosening of strings on the federal purse.
Among the projects saved through a shuffling of state
funds were a pair of reservoirs worth $5.8 million in the
northeastern Ohio region.
The state Controlling Board, mindful of Collier's warning,
had refused to approve the transfer of funds at its Dec. 23
meeting for a $4 million reservoir in Fulton County and a $1.8
million storage reservoir near New London in Huron County.
House Speaker Charles F. Kurfess and Senate President
Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray replaced the recalcitrant
members of the Controlling Board at a secret meeting in

early January and approved the transfer of funds.
Other projects rescued through a shifting of funds include
$2.6 million worth of public school fa cilities, $1.2 million
worth of improvements at Shawnee State Forest and a
$95,000 project at Catawba State Park.
Many Projects Delayed
Lost until more money becomes available are these other
projects:
Rehabilitation of state buildings, $212,052; repairs and improvements at Central State University, $37,200; improvements on Central State University administration building,
$173,849;
improvements
at Wright State University,
$292,255; improvement:! at Miami University, $16,723; improvements at Ohio University, $89,680.
Also, agriculture research and development statistics
laboratory, $4,000; completion of prior year projects for Ohio
Youth Commission, $8,692; planning funds for Ohio Youth
Commission 200 bed institution for boys, $51,645; Rogers
Honor Farm, accommodations for 12 juvenile delinquents in

NO. 200

Devoted To The Interests

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Of The Meigs-Mason Area

PRE-TEEN COOKS - There were 15 pre-teeners,
members of Glrl Scout Troop 39, who prepared a spaghetti
dinner good to the final bite. Above, three of the girls, l tor,
Julie Byers, Patty Brown and Kim Payne baked cupcakes
and made "sunshine" punch. See Charlene Hoeflich's picture-story on page 7.

r---------------------------,
! News ... in Briefs l
By United Press International

Invasion from Tanzania Possible
KAMPALA, UGANDA- UGANDA'S new military leader
said today he had intelligence reports that troops from neighboring Tanzania, led by ousted President Milton Obote, were
preparing to attack Uganda. "I am not afraid," said Maj. Gen.
Ida Amin, who seized power from Obote in a coup Monday.
"I have just received intelligence reports that Tanzanian
troops· are preparing with modem Communist Chinese weapons
requested by Dr. Milton Obote to come to attack Uganda," Amin
said. "I received the messages this morning and I am now
preparing to welcome them here. I am not afraid," he said. Amin
made the statement as his troops steadily restored order to
Uganda. Earlier, he admitted opposition army elements were still
resisting his military takeover.

Poised with Brezhnev Doctrine
VIENNA - THE SOVIET UNION IS READY to invoke the
"Brezhnev doctrine" and invade Poland if the current labor
unrest there grows into new riots, East European sources said
today. The sources said any invasion would be justified on
grounds - which the Soviets take very seriously - that more
violence would threaten the Communist system in Poland. They
said the Soviets feel1ley cannot afford this risk in any Communist
nation, let alone Poland with its strategic position between
Germany and the Soviet Union.
The "Brezhnev doctrine" enunciated by Soviet party leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev, states that a threat to communism in one
country is a threat to all Communist countries, and therefore
demands military intervention in the "threatened" nation. It was
this "doctrine" that was used to justify the 1968 invasion of
Czechoslovakia.

Nun Jailed for 18 Months
HARRISBURG, PA. - A ROMAN CATHOLIC nun has been
jailed for the entire 18-month term of a Federal Grand jury
because she refused to answer, despite full immunity from any
prosecution, questions on an alleged plot to kidnap a Presidential
adviser. The lawyer for Sister Jogues Egan, 52, New York City
prepared appeal papers today, based on evidence the government
used wiretapping to get evidence for the indictments of six accused plotters, including the Rev. Phillip Berrigan.
U. S. District JudgeR. Nixon Herman offered full immunity
from any prosecution to three more witnesses, as the hearings
continued today. The grand jury has accused the six of conspiracy
to kidnap Henry A. Kissinger and to blow up heating plants of five
government buildings.

Lawlessness Seems Everywhere

._

TEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1971

damages.
Jack Welsh of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
said there was little trouble
caused by the winds in the
operations of the Power company. The Ohio Power Co. made
a similar report.
It was different elsewhere,
according to the United Press
International.
"It's cold and blowy!"
That description by an Ohio
Highway Patrol dispatcher in
Ashtabula County early today

just about sums up the weather
conditions in the Buckeye state.,
Bitterly cold winds continued
to belt Ohio today sending temperatures to near the zero mark
in many areas.
The winds piled up snow
drifts in northeastern Ohio,
causing numerous school closings, and gale warnings were
forecast for Lake Erie.
A frre, whipped by wind gusts
of more than 50 miles an hour,
~a used an estimated $1.5 million
damage at a boat building firm

in Grand River, Ohio.
The high winds began Tuesday and scores of injuries were
reported - at least 50 persons
were treated in the Cleveland
area. People were knocked to
the ground by the high winds,
cut by flying glass and other
objects, and blown into the
paths of passing automobiles.
Gusts High
Winds with gusts hitting es
high as 98 miles an hour were
reported Tuesday. The gusts
today ranged between 25 and 35

War's Tet Break Ended

~

Travelers warnings continued
northeast. Continued very cold
through Thursday with snow
squalls northeast and a chance
of snow flurries south and west.
Lows tonight zero to five below.

Damage Light in Storm
Meigs County was lucky
compared to Ohio generally
when high winds struck
Tuesday afternoon and evening.
In Middleport, village hall
had one report of a roof blowing
off a house at 494 Locust St. One
plate glass window in the former Bailey's Restaurant
quarters in Pomeroy was blown
out and the Eagles Lodge sign
was blown down. No damage
was reported to Pomeroy city
hall, nor did the sheriff's
~ department receive reports of

lit

Weather

The Daily Sentinel

•

I

Columbiana County, $35,989; parks along Auglaize-Maumee
rivers, $35,085; statewide land acquisition, $100,699.
Also, boat docks and campsites at Punderson Lake State
Park, $34,996; improvements at Salt Fork State Park,
$292,953; headquarters and residence facility, Jefferson
County reclamation area, $19,844; two boat launching ramps
at Buckeye Lake State Park, $60,000; engineering, planning,
design and land appraisal fees for Department of Natural
Resources, $287,542.
Also, contingency and project completion, Department of
Natural Resources, $712,259; mine drainage treatment
construction and headquarters and residence building at
Zaleski State Forest, Vinton County, $450,600; a net-work of
'statewide latrines, $323,027; a headquarters-services
building and sewage treatment plant at Shade River Forest
in Meigs County, $74,500.
Also, forest fire prevention and control, $56,379; state tree
and nursery facilities, $25,966; city of Fostoria airport,
$100,000 and other airport development, $50,000.

WASHINGTON - DESPITE A congressional ban on sending
U.S. advisers or ground combat troops to Cambodia, the Nixon
administration now acknowledges some types of military personnel soon may be dispatched to that nation. In the first instance,
military equipment delivery teams will be sent from Saigon to
Cambodia to turn over various types of weapons to the Cambodians.
Defense Department Press Officer Jerry Friedheim outlined
for newsmen Tuesday the functions of the delivery teams and said
they might also make sure Cambodian forces know how to
operate the equipment they are receiving . Military specialists,
however, in ri:;ted that this role was not that of an "adviser." In
the stm.:t definition of thallerm, an adviser actually accompanies
local troops into combat and might bt!come involved directly in
hostilities, they said.

SAIOO
(UPI)-U.S. and
South Vietnamese forces ended
a 24-hour Tet lunar new year
truce today. Military spokesmen said it was violated at
least 37 times by Communist
troops.
No major engagements were
reported during the truce and
relative calm also prevailed on
battlegrounds in Cambodia,
although no truce was in effect
there. The Cambodian High
Command said it was carrying
out large-scale operations to
drive Communists away from
the capital of Phnom Penh, hit
by terrorists for five days in a
row.
South Vietnamese military
spokesmen in Saigon said five
South Vietnamese soldiers and
civilians were killed and 21

Due to cold weather and
other circumstances, a
petition seeking better
telephone service has not
been circulated in the village
of Middleport. The petition is
located at the Swap Shop on
North Second Ave. and
residents wishing to sign it
may do so there. The petition
is part of a county-wide move
to secure better service and
to protest a rate increase
sought by General Telephone
Co. of Ohio.
TWO FINED
Fined in the court of Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher
Tuesday night were Stephen R.
Tatterson, 20, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, following too closely, and
Keith French, 20, Middleport,
$10 and costs, reckless
operation. Gary P. Mitch, 21,
Pomeroy, forfeited a $25 bond
posted on speeding charges.

wounded during the standdown
marred by 23 "enemyinitiated" actions. U. S.
spokesmen said three American
servicemen were wounded in 14
incidents involving U. S. units.
North Vietnamese and Viet
Cong troops have proclaimed a
four-&lt;lay holiday
ceasefire
which expires Saturday morning.
The U.S. Military Command
in Saigon said it had turned
over to the Cambodian navy
today the first eight river
patrol boats it is giving to the
Phnom Penh government under
its military aid program.
A turnover ceremony was
held at the U.S. Navy base at
Binh Tuy, 80 miles southwest of
Saigon.
U.S. air force spokesmen
reported American C130 Hercules cargoplanes since Nov. 12
had hauled more than 1,400 tons
of ammunition, 22,000 gallons of
fuel and 60 tons of equipment to
Phnom Penh.
Sources said most of the

Tag Long is Dead
Harold (Tag) Long, Middleport, died unexpectedly
Tuesday afternoon at a Lake
Wales, Florida hospital where
he had earlier undergone
surgery.
Among survivors are his wife,
Mildred; these sons and
daughters, Roger and Richard,
both of Middleport, and Roy, of
Columbus; Mary, a student at
the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing; Mr::;. Jane
Brown, Pomeroy; Mrs. Leona
Doman, Painted Post, N. Y.;
James, of South Point, Ohio,
and Charles of Edwardsville,
Pa., and eight grandchildren.

Practice,
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)Apollo 14's astronauts devoted
much of today to practicing for
the unexpected- the sudden
failure that Apollo 13 showed
can turn a routine flight into a
nightmare .
Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A.
Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell
are considered the best-trained
moon pilots the United States
has ever fielded. But they are
expected to continue practicing,
reviewing and studying right up
to Sunday's blastoff.
The countdown was proceeding smoothly toward the start
of the nine-day mission . The
astronauts' prime objective is
to la nd in a lunar valley and

flights have been made since
Dec. 1 after Communist troops
cut Highway 4 leading 150 miles
from Phnom Penh to Kompong
Som where Cambodia's only oil
refinery is located.
Cambodian High Command
spokesman Lt. Col. Am Rong
said more than 20 government
battalions were pushing west
and northwest of Phnom Penh
and had retaken a government
radar post and a railway
station nine miles from the
city, causing "heavy losses to
the enemy." He said "the
military situation has improved
and the enemy is being pushed
out."
Strict security precautions
were set up around Phnorr.
Penh to keep Communist
t.:rrorists from mov~g into the
c1ty where some residents were
celebrating the Tet lunar new
year. There was no holiday
cease-fire in Cambodia.
About 15 to 20 American;
soldiers dressed in civilian
clothes moved in Phnom Penh

Born at Cheshire, Ohio, the
son of the late Edward and Ruth
Coughenour Priode, he was a
member of the Middleport
Church of Christ and a charter
member of the Eagles Lodge of
Pomeroy. A mechanic by trade,
he worked several years for
Rawlings Sons garage .
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 10 a.m. from the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home,
with burial in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Thursday, 7-9 p.m. and Friday 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m . to 9
p .m .

Practice,

sample car-sized boulders that
may date back to the birth of
the solar system.
Shepard, Roosa and Mitchell
are confident things will go
well. But to be prepared for
whatever might happen, they
scheduled drills today on
malfunction procedures in
moonship trainers that can
simulate with the help of
computers virtually every imaginable kind of systems failure .
The spacecraft simulators are
the key to an astronauts'
expertise . Once he has been
confronted with as many as
1,000 diffHent types of problems in the trainer, he can

Airport Monday to' retrieve two
helicopters damaged in the
Communist raid, which destroyed some 35 planes at the
airport, the U.S. Command in
Saigon acknowledged today.
The command said the
Americans remained on Cambodian soil for about an hour
while rigging the damaged
choppers for recovery. They
arrived and left in three U.S.
Army helicopters.
In Phnom Penh, there were
fears of a Communist offensive
during the three-&lt;lay Tet
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
holiday which ends Friday. John J. Gilligan said today he
Roadblocks were numerous and intended to introduce milliontraffic was stopped as the strict dollar programs to "help the
security precautions hampered sick and the lame and the blind
movement.
and the elderly," but such reforms would only be successful
if Ohioans are willing to pay
'
for them.
Gilligan told members of the
Ohio Pastors' Convocation here
that his responsibilities as govThree calls were answered by ernor were in step with both
Middleport firemen and E-R Christian and democratic presquad members Tuesday af- cepts and principles.
ternoon and Wednesday morning.
"I intend to propose program
The fire department was which will help the sic and
called at 3:40 p.m. Tuesday to the lame and the blind and the
extinguish a grass fire near the elderly and the negl t child
Kyger Creek School. At 4:34 and the disposse s
and th
a.m. Wednesday the depart- poor," he said.
ment went to the Marvin Fife
"Whether or not
art&gt; willhome on former Route 7 near ing to pay for th - programs
the Silver Run Church where an will be decided b~ the people,"
·overheated stove threatened a he added' "through their electserious fire. Damages to the
chimney area were light.
At 8:26a.m. Wednesday, th
E-R squad answered a call to
131 Fourth Ave., where Mrs.
Leona Kennedy was having
WARREN, Ohio (UPI) - The
difficulty breathing. An amthree members of the Trumbull
bulance- was called which took
County Board of Commts ·1on r
her to the Holzer Medical
Center. So far this month the
Middleport firemen and E -R
men have answered 29 calls.

at the Coast Guard station at
Ashtabula, who is a native of
Wisconsin.
''It's pretty windy so far,"
said Johnson. "We're about a
quarter of a mile from the lake
and it's about six degrees. "But
I'm from Wisconsin and it gets
pretty cold up there," he said.
"In fact it's colder than it is
here."
The temperatures early today
ranged from three above at
Dayton to 10 above at Cleveland.
The blizzard conditions Tuesdaypiledup snowdrifts surrounding the Ashtabula County Joint
Vocational school and 71 persons- inclu.diJ:lg 37 students spent the n·ght in the b .,
Th rifts were as high a:... 15
.feet ana bUSt!s cotildn't make
it in to remove the students and
teachers..
The high :winds Tuesdlly blew
downapartiallJ completedbuilding in Colmnbus, causmg $75,000
damage:, one of hundreds of
accidents including one in To(Continued on Page 16)

'Iffy' Reforms

Fire Aidmen

In Three R uns

ed representatives. That is the
way our system works."
Gilligan asked for support to
his effort in solving causes of
social tension in Ohio and in
the nation.
''We can begin to solve our
problem only when we agree
that we must solve them together' for the truly are an
our problem ," he said.
The governor admitted the
co t of his programs would not
be "cheap" but would run into
"millions and million of dollars."
"In ·our ministrie , you are
called upon to brin solace to
the poor, the hungry, the less
fortunate," he sJud. "But now
you have a ecla• responsibility - a r
. 1 ility to e
them e · n more by reminding
the other in your congregations
of th ir r spon 1biliti a."ld their
obli.gatons."

3 Commissioners

P ractice

better cope with the real thing
in space.
The oxygen tank explosion in
Apollo 13's command ship in
April showed such training pays
off. James A. Lovell, John L.
Swigert and Fred W. Haise
knew what to do, when to do it
and how to do it to overcome
the odds and get safely back to
earth.
"I think 13 really showed
what capability we have here in
NASA to handle a situation and
to recover from it," Lovell said
in an interview.
"Most of our flight.s are
canned. But once something
happens that is so catastrophic,
you throw away all your

miles per hour today.
Mary Godwin, the patrol dispatcher in Ashtabula County,
said 31 accidents were reported
Tuesday but none so far today.
"It's cold and blowy," she
said. "The snow is drifting but
the roads are open. Ohio 46 and
State Route 7 are the only ones
closed.
"The thermometer says it's 8
above but I think it's off," she
said.
The low readings, plus the
gusty winds, sent the chill factor
in most areas of the state to
well below the zero reading,
some as low as 40 to 50 below.
The Youngstown area also had
problems with drifting snow today and at least 22 school distric.ts in that are~ reported
schools r .o.,-ed.
•
Turnpike Covered
The Ohio Turnpike was reported snow c-overed and the
speed limit for the entire length
was 30 miles per hour.
One person who is used to the
cold weather was Seaman Donald Johnson on duty overnight

checklists and all your books
and start from scratch again
nd utilize systems and configurations and techniques to get
home again .
"I think really 1t shows the
versatility of what we 'n• tt· •mg
to do and what we really lwd.
It gave us a very good t •st of
our capability."
The faulty el clncal switch • ·
that led to the Apollo 13 failure
have been elilninat d und the
tanks have been modifi&lt;'d to
mak!' sure such a think won't
happen again. And tlw Apollo 14
crewmen arc l'onvmcetl lht•u·
spaeecraft ts considt•ral&gt;l~ s.th'r
than Apollo 13.

Driver Cited,
Passenger Hurt
In Ac ident

A pa ··en r ' a' h -pitalized
and th • driv 'I" arre ·ted
following a onc-&lt;:ar accid nt
Tu 'sda. at 3:30p.m. on Rutland
Township Ho:Jd 41, about .9 of
mil' north of SR 124.
Shcnff Robert
. Hartcnbach ·s departnwnt n•port 'd
Michael Dyer Adkins, 17,
'Lcveland, ::;kidth•d h1to n lwid &lt;
raihng causm • ' onwll , llllhn~&gt;,
33,

Erbat•on. W V.l • ll
to cat,tpnll through
lht• \\ mtlslndd.
lull 1: '
t.ak~n tn \' tel .til
:\ l'llh ttal
Ho~&gt;plt,\1 b~ pt'l\ .11 c.'· II 1
hstt•d 111 ~mlt~&gt;[.td•ll'' ,. ''"htu n

pa~&gt;se ngcr .

f\dktn:-- ''"'

dt,ngt·~

.tnt

ted

nt Fll'hl11111 Jl.llt•

rt•t•k.kss llfll'l .. ltun

n
Ill

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. '1:1, 1971

"There Must Be Another Choice

EDITORIALS

Cut~"

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

1

Voice along Broad-;-;y-l

.I

I

The. Odds Sheet
On Nixon s Goals
1

•.

The "six great goals" outlined by President Nixon in
his State of the Union message are like the six characters
in the Pirandello play-searching for an author (in this
case the Congress) to bring life into them and remove
them from the shadow world of imagination or theory.
And as with the play, the bemused audience (the American people) may watch as the ideas take over the stage
and perform quite independently of their author or
authors.
Of at least one of the six goals, there is no doubt that
Congress will take the steps the President believes will
achieve it. This is the goal of bringing prosperity through
a massive injection of federal money into the economy.
Whether it is called an "expansionary budget," a "full
employment budget" or simply deficit financing, the
Nixon administration is going to be deeply in the red
whether it wants to be or not. It remains to be seen
whether "by spending as if we were at full emr.loyment
we will help to bring about full employment, ' as the
President predicts, and yet be able to keep from restoking
the fires of inftation.
Of at least three other goals-restoration and enhancement of the environment, reform of the welfare system
and improving the nation's health care-the argument in
Congress will not be over ends but only over means.
Concern about the environment is something everyone
shares. Everyone agrees that the welfare system needs
fundamental revamping. Several different plans to afford
better health care to the poor and near-poor have already
been introduced in Congress.
As to the remaining two goals, however-reform of the
federal government by reducing the present 12 cabinet
departments to eight and sharing federal revenues with
the states-the prospect is that these will either not be
enacted or, if enacted, will bear little resemblance to the
plans as initially submitted by the administration.
As the President noted, over the years the practice of
g;,vernment has been to add departments and create
agencies, each to serve a new constituency or to handle
a particular task. That practice is not easily to be reversed.
Rep. Chet Holifield, D-Calif., chairman of the House
Operations Committee, is not alone in contending that if
government departments are already too large and unwieldy, merging seven departments into four will make
them all the larger and more unwieldy.
In addition, as one observer has noted, the proposal
runs headlong into the congressional power structure,
since congressional committees are organized closely
along the lines of the existing executive departments.
But by far the most controversial proposal, the one
which will fill pages of newsprint in the coming months.
is revenue sharing.
The President proposes that Congress make a "$16billion investment in renewing state and local government." Of this, $10 billion would in be in ''old" money,
gained by abolishing some 100 existing federal grant-inaid programs, plus $1 billion in an added appropriation.
The other $5 billion would be in "new and unrestricted
funds."
Even if the $11 billion were earmarked for broad cate·
gories as the President recommends, such as for education, urban development, transportation or law enforcement, and even with safeguards to prevent discrimination
against minorities, the President faces a battle in per'suading Congress to 40bandon the principle that federal
control should follow federal financin~
As for the no-strings funds, spread among 50 states, let
alone hundreds of hard-pressed communities, $5 billion
would vanish like a drop of water on a hot griddle.
Nevertheless, taken together, the "six great goals"
constitute bold innovations in government. The executivt&gt;
branch has thrown the challenge up to the legislative, and
every member of the 92nd Congress is aware that that
body's action or inaction on these goals will help construct
the platform on which Richard Nixon will run m the election year of 1972.

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

Light Up, Smokers,
But NOT in Hospital
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

..•
..
,.
.
~.

:·
.:·

.•
~

·.:·

;:·:

....
·:

..·:

·.'•
'•
'·
•.

.:~.
::
...·

Dear Dr. Lamb - I am
recuperating from losing
two lobes of my lungs. My
questions and co m me n t s
concern the permission
granted in hospitals today
to smokers who pollute the
air we breathe. WHY?
WHY? WHY on earth is it
allowed in the patients'
rooms, corridors and waiting rooms?
With my bronchiectasis,
I've had troubles with
fumes of smoking, bus and
~ar fumes all pollution,
tn fact. My husband paid extra for a private room so
that I could avoid a smoking r o o m m a t e and her
visitors.
I am forced to stay in
seclusion here recuperating
because of all the smoking
visitors and patients in the
sitting room and at the sofa
outside my door. Why are
nonsmokers FORCED to put
up with this in light of to·
day's evidence about smok·
ing and its effects?
Please don't feel I am a
crusading fanatic against
&amp;mokers-l'm not. It's just
that I feel smokers are
completely innocent or ig·
norant of nons m o k ~ ;· s·
problems like mine and 1
feel that it's unfair in today's polluted world and it's
time for a change.
Dear Reader - You have
reason to be annoyed. Our
bastions of health are reallv
not the place for cigJrettes.
J don't think smokers really
recognize that man\' nonsmokers with asthma. c&gt;llergies and lung problems real·
ly c a n not tolerate the
fumes from their tobacco .
This is a problem for
patients forced to ~it nl'xt !()
a smokt•r - as in airpla:ws.
Since less than half thl'
population now .smokl'. 11
would st'&lt;'lll lllllt' to giv&lt;• ltw
nonsmok&lt;·r a hrt•ak .
l&gt;t•ar Dr. Lamb
WJII
to

SCIV

(

;till

IIOf

First I
fll;l~l'd . 1 ~

infl'~~ ration
In r.,&lt;t
OWII l'lllidl'l'll ilff&lt;•ndl'cJ llil(•·
graf('(~ :-d11111b
Tl11s ' l.r st

year the schools where I
live now were integrated
and the children got along
very well, but the little
black children kept running
their hands through the
long blond straight hair of
the white children. There
was a rash of incidents of
lice eggs found in the blond
heads, much to the alarm
of parents. Believe me, the
affected children all came
from homes where heads
were shampooed regularly.
The school at first admitted
the blond hair attracted lhe
little black children. Suddenly, it was proclaimed in
the school that ''black people never got lice ever.'' I
am most interested. Could
you please tell me if this is
so? J have no intentions of
making any pronouncements
about it - I'm just interested in knowing. - An old
grandmother.
Dear Reader - I d o n ' t

BRUCE BIDSSAT
.,«" ~

~

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

~E

5PA.CE
A
BOIL.DIN6

~BOVE

CAN BE
B00614T

A.ND SOLD!

WIN AT B RIDGE

!Helen Help Us! Misplay May Go
I

:

I
I
1

By Helen Bottel

A BEAUTIFUL
PUT-DOWN
Dear Helen:
You know the type: The
woman who has everything and
calls attention to it by
"worrying" about her perfection. She spends more time
on her face than I do on my
whole family. Her skin is
flawless, every eyelash perfect.
She's entirely in love with
berself.
And she's always making less
endowed girl friends aware by
"seeing" a tiny blemish in the
mirror, then we're supposed to
respond with lavish praise.
Please tell me a good putdown, next time she ogles
herself witll those gorgeous orLs
and asks, "What do you DO for
bags under your eyes?" when
she expects me to exclaim,
"What bags?" - TIRED OF
BEING MRS. STOOGE
Dear Tired:
Tell her to wear an "eyebra," says my husband, Bob.-

I

Tony I "snooped," he may hate
me. Either way, will we have to
get married again? And will he
want to? - NOT QUITE A
WIFE
Dear Not:
Tell Tony the truth and expect
the same from him. A "perfect
husband" (almost) won't let
you down, though it may
require another ceremony to
make him perfectly legal. - H.
Dear Helen:
Why is it that my wonderful,
strong, handsome husband isn't
normal?
I mean any normal male of 24
would be satisfied with looking
at baseball and football games
on TV, playing golf or tennis.
But my man is some kind of nut
who flirts with danger. He skis
on impossible trails, plays La
Crosse, surfs, skin dives -and
his last announcement of sky
diving is the final blow.

How can he do this to me? I'm
all worried out after only six
months of marriage. Will he
H.
ever become that non-athletic
Dear Helen:
guy I want for a husband and
Five months ago, Tony and I father of our children, or should
were married after knowing I join him and we can at least
each other three weeks.
die together? -SUSAN
Today a letter came in the Dear Susan:
mail and I opened it by mistake.
Is your husband really a
It was from a lawyer in Ohio, danger freak, or are you a
and it contained a legal paper chicken?
for Tony to sign so that he may
I'd guess there's a little of
obtain his final divorce decree.
both in your family and the
I'm afraid to show it to him, only solution is compromise.
as this means we aren't Get involved in his sports and
married, and maybe he wants it perhaps some of your caution
that way. He is a perfect will rub off on him- especially
husband, but do I really know after he becomes a father. _ H.
him? I knew there was a former Dear Helen :
wife, but assumed he was free .
Joining the battle to stop
Maybe he thought so, too - I polluting our streams with
hope!!
detergent and enzyme foam I
If I seal the letter up I may tried " reading" the labels to see
never know the truth. If I tell which was the least objectionable.
Completely
think any cause- no matter frustrated, I picked up a box of
how just - is best served soap granules - and lo, I
~Y ignorance, particularly discovered the true washday
m our halls of learning. miracle : SOAP!
Germs, most diseases, :md
Now,justasmymotherdid,I
pests cannot tell the differ·
f
hi
ence in the color of a per· am usmg soap or my was ng,
sons' skin - brown, black. reveling in the whiteness and
yellow, red or white. Under softness of the clothes and
the r i g h t circumstances. enjoying the good clean odor so
anyone can get lice from reminiscent of my childhood.
anyone else who has lice .
This is an ecology comI hcpe the day will come mercia!! _ M. I.
when all our people will
TITLE CHANGE
have enough of the advantHOLLYWOOD (UPI)
ages of our advanced society
that problems such as these Universal has retitled "S.P.F.will not arise in any group. C." to "Taking Off," a film
They can be prevented.
dealing with fugitive children.

'tCO'RE TALKit-lG

ESPECIALLY

Sniff '72 Victory

Democrats Rev Up
~J~ To Topple Nixon

Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
lt.l 81GCITIE5.1

BY JACK O'BRIAN
.. . Conversely, lyricist Otto his 210 different costumes are
NEW YORK - "No, No, Harbach wrote some 1,000 comical comments in themNanette" was a smash hit in lyrics in 43 of Bdwy.'s most selves, tasteful horrors as they
1925 when it ran 325 per- resplendent musicals before cartoon an age of wonderful
formances at the Globe leaving us all richer at age 89 in nonsense .. . He has been a
Theater: It opened here at the 1963, a man of dignity and rich serious painter in Paris since
46th St. Theater this week and deep skill, whose words were his sets-costumes for "Gypsy,"
should run for years ... It is not merely expedient jingles but and herein gets his kicks on
marvelous, wonderful
could be separated from the several visual levels: Apart t
produced, staged, performed music and remain poetry from the enchanting, broad
with a delightful spirit and (Yesterday's, The Touch of Your scenic strokes, his show curtain
mood which do not patronize the Hand, Smoke Gets in Your represents his confessed
45-year-old Vincent Youmans Eyes, for just a clutch of reflection of Matisse's fauve
musical in the slightest but brilliant examples) ... Irving period, while his wallpaper in
bathes it in an affectionate Caesar fashioned words to the third act bears frank adpurity, respectfully, as The Youmans' "Tea for Two" ...
miration for Dufy ... The entire
Metropolitan might hang a
Dona Id
S a d 1 e r ' s show is lit, lilted and loved by an
Rembrandt, knowing its ex- choreography is perfect period ensemble of on-stage and
trinsic values.
prancing, Raoul Pene du Bois' backstage creators who have
Ruby Keeler is its nominal scenery is gorgeously flam- labored and brought forth a
star, and her very presence sets boyant and totally right ... And mountainous hit.
stage and mood; and the
audience was so firmly ready '
for this nostalgic wallow, that
Ruby received a show-stopping
roar upon her first appearance,
descending a stairway.
The honest attention to period
and place lets the audience in on
the fun without the cast camping nor ridiculing its book,
music, and lyrics: Like all
musicals, then, before and
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
since, "No, No, Nanette" has
NEA
Washington
Correspondent
some marvelous songs ( I Want
to Be Happy, Tea for Two) and
WASHINGTON (NEA)
an old neglected Youmans
Leading Democrats are so thoroughly convinced that
melody (the lyric is pure 1925 President Nixon is going to be vulnerable in 1972 that
and not the best, but it's not they are bubbling over with activity aimed at positionabused) that stands sturdily ing themselves for the tests ahead.
At the national level, they've still got the shorts on
tall: "Where-Has-My-HubbyGone Blues" ... It is sung by money. They haven't made a nick in that stubborn $9.3
million debt and probably won't make more than token
Helen Gallagher, a Bdwy.
inroads this year. Yet this doesn't dampen the presidenveteran who herein is receiving
tial candidates' spirits a bit.
her deserved most enthusiastic
The front-runner, Sen. Edmund Muskie, of course, is
attention.
rustling up sizable sums of his own, as all candidates
Bobby Van, a lithe song-and- must before nomination. Sen. George McGovern, who
dance lad familiar to early TV broke Harold Stassen's old record by six months when
he declared candidacy on Jan. 18, says people in South
and nightclubs, also has his
finest hours ... Susan Watson as Dakota handed him $100,000 that day for starters.
Farther back on the track, Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana,
the ingenue is perfect,
an eager type, hasn't uttered one peep publicly about
ingenuous, pert, adorable ... the sums he might muster in 1971. But sources keeping 41
Jack Gilford as Ruby Keeler's tabs on him say he has been "hitting the big money
spouse is broadly hokey and markets in New York and California like crazy."
steadily efficient ... And Patsy
Tentative plans are shaping for a second meeting of
the flock of new Democratic governors chosen last fall.
Kelly, a veteran of the old films
They met in North Carolina in late November and may
and musicals of this very era,
is uproariously, gloriously, meet here in late February at the time of the interim
national governors' conference.
galvanically splendid.
Mostly they want to talk some more about their own
Miss Keeler shows some of
problems. But some leaders think they and their more
her mileage but hardly her full
senior counterparts (adding to 29 Democratic govt!r62: She dances with grace and
nors) may after awhile put something together that will '
old-fashioned,
tapping • help their party in the big thrust at Nixon. No one is
yet saying they might try to coalesce their strength
spryness, and her personality is
around a single potent candidate, but that idea simmers
warm, friendly, unpretentiously
below the surface.
fleeing the scene when her
Since NEA's first limited, 15-state survey in early
fellow performers need the
January showed Muskie's obvious big lead hardening,
spotlight,
a
modestly
supporting evidence has drifted in from two large states
ingratiating First Lady of then not included-Illinois and Massachusetts.
Nostalgia ... Helen Gallagher,
McGovern is nowhere today and he knows it. Hence
who loves the theatre so much the early leap. The present gauge observers put on his
prospects ranges from guessing he will serve as a useshe even married a stage
electrician, is a real artist: Not ful whetstone for Muskie's commanding candidacy, to -1
just good, but marvelous, an bets he will surprise many and give the man a real
chase.
intelligently disciplined,
Bayh, Sen. Harold Hughes of Iowa, Ramsey Clark and
delightful young lady herein the others are still largely unknown to voters and barefinally enjoying something akin ly visible if at all on the poll-takers' eye charts.
to cheerful perfection
We
Up to the opening of Congress, party men who get about
trust you understand - we were saying the only name that stirred politicians other
loved it.
than Muskie's was that of Sen. Edward Kennedy. His
surprising defeat as Senate whip, however, probably dims
+++
a little more a prospect which suffered most at ChappaYes, Yes, Nanette- we even
in 1969. His colleagues' appraisal of his Senate
witnessed a first string drama quiddick
usefulness is bound to hurt.
critic applauding Tom
The Democrats' current euphoria over 1972 could be
Prideaux of Life .. . Producer shattered if the stuttering economy improves and thus
Max Gordon, columnist Sidney diminishes Nixon's biggest weakness.
Fields and a Bdwy. columnist
His opposition has other potential problems ahead.
fought for a couple of tissues, Veteran Democrats around town know the new Conhaving doused their own winter gress, still under their firm control, can't hope to impress the 1972 voters unless the party's legislators go
flu-supplies in the first act ...
well beyond assailing Nixon's coming flood of 1971
Even what might have been one
proposals and offer salable, workable alternatives of
brief lapse of action for old· the1r
own. This may prove especially true in fields like
fashioned exposition in the first health, welfare, revenue sharing, schools.
act was a fascinating look back
Farther ahead, too, the Democrats have some sticky
at the manner in which 1925 intra-party difficulties. Their standard factional tangles
musicals set their plots and in New York and California may or may not be critical.
A fuss over their next convention could easily be.
characterizations in gear for
After 1968 and Chicago, the jokes about holding the
the imminent carbonated pace
next one in American Samoa or in mid-Atlantic aboard
and mood.
Patsy Kelly, on the wave of the Queen Elizabeth II aren't so funny. McGovern has
suggested that the convention be returned to Chicago.
final-curtain uproar, marched Reform leaders have lost the battle to make really signioff-stage to haul along the
ficant cuts in the party's absurd total of 2,622 delegate
gentleman responsible for the
votes. At the most, 200 may be sliced off, and maybe less .
magnificent froth - Busby Unmanageable chaos, surely damaging, seems predictable
Berkeley of the marvelously for the 1972 show.
1. •
impossible early-talkies' maxiproduction numbers . .. Otto
Harbach's and Frank Mandel's
original and typically complicated book for "No, No,
Nanette" was given shrewdly
fond adaptation and restructuring and a smart, stylishly
brisk pace by Burt Shevelove,
who heretofore had dipped into
all manner of entertainment
from early TV and even
marionette shows, and herein
sets a new personal peak of
esthetic effectiveness as the
show's director.
The Vincent Youmans music
is welcome indeed, and it is with
a regretful sign to note again
that here is an admitted master
of musical comedy melody who
composed fewer than 100 songs
during a 13-year career before
his death in 1946 at the age of 47

A.BOOT "AIR RI~TS'~ •.
A. REAL ESTATE
61MMICK-· ~ MA.IJY

PEOPLE KJ-..ICM/ A.BOOT
IT-.. I'LL EXPL.A.IN IT
TO YOU .. • SUPPOSE
YOU OWN A TENSTORY 6L&gt;II..DING.1

01-t·OI-1--·~E

A!IIS\\IER

MMJ STRIKES ~11-1· ..
~E .JOST LIES I~ WAIT
TILL f..IE CA.t-1 STICK
J..llSOARit-1···

Unpunished
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
27

NORTH
• 9632
¥J 10
+ A65
,foAKJ9
WEST
• A 104
¥87543
+KQ

EAST
• QJ8
¥Q62
tJ94
ofo762
... 8543
SOUTH (D) •
• K 75
¥AK9
• 10 8 7 3 2
... QlO
No rth-South vulnerable
West
North
East South
Pass
Pass
1 .,.
Pass 2 N.T.
Pass
3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead-¥ 4

A bad bridge player should
be able to win p 1en t y of
friends. Every time he misplays a hand he delights two
opponents and only angers
one partner. But somehow
the opponents forget their
pleasure the fir st time our
hero goes wrong when' he's
their part ner and the partner never forgets.
Of course. all bad play
doesn 't get punished. South
co ve r P. d East 's queen of
hear ts with the king, led a
diamond to dummy' s ace
and returned a diamond .
West was in with the king
and pI a y e d the three of
hearts which was won in
dummy.
The last diamond was led
f1 om d ummy and East was
on lead with the jack. He
considered leading the queen
of spades , but eventually de(' ided to keep on with partner 's s uit. West had shown
five hearts; he might well
have led from the ace twice.
South smiled happily and
cashed two diamonds and
lour clubs to make his contract with an overtrick.
North and South were
happy, but they would not
have been if East had Jed
that s pade queen. South
could ,a nd should h a v c
guarded against that contingency by lettin g West's
CJ ueen and king hold the first
and second diamond trick .
What about East's play of
the third heart'' West didn't
like it at all but we feel it
was his fault. West should
.have led the eight of hearts,
not the three when he was
with the king of diamonds .
East would see that only one
higher heart would be left
and would assume that West
was trying to tell him to lead
some other suit. if and when
he should get on lead.
I Newspaper

Enterprise Assn.)

®
JACOBY M 0 DE R N, 128-page
book, is available through this newspaper. Send name, address and Zip
code, plus $1 lor each book, to:
"Win at Bridge," c/ o (Name Newspaper). P 0 . Box 489, Dept. (first
three digits local Zip code), Radio
City Stotion, New York, N.Y , 10019.

27

1.

Th e b1dding ha~ bet&gt;n:
West
Nmth
East
South
1¥
Db!e
Pass
Pass
1 N.T .
Pass
2,fo
.,
Pass
2•
Pa~s
You, South, hold :
•x743 ¥7 tJ9X6 ofoKJn43
What do you d o now '!
A-Pa~~ . You wi~h \ 'UU had
pa~scd fliU' nu-trump a'nd don't
want lu go an,\ ful'lhcl'

B A R B S
By PHIL PASTORET

BEARY'S WORlD

mortgage .
Tile /oH!/esl ccmv er sa·
I io11s r1 r e held l&gt; y those
ll'i lil II o lir i II !/ to ta lk

atwut.

SotT\'. You'll han• to wait
t til Atlgust to hlanH' ill· for·
tune on Frida~· tlw I:Hh this
.l'ear .
0 1/ e u J Ill &lt;' /)('s l r eusu ll-'
/or &lt;/ CJIII &lt;/ l o /Jed ca r l u 1s
1l1e ·I u 1. &lt;' I u 1 e 111 cr i· 1 &lt;'
.~1'11&lt;'&lt;111/ ( •

&gt;1911

~r NLA, lnt~~

"Now, watch thi&lt; on&lt;&gt; lor 'protectiye reaction'!"

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 27, 1971

. Columbus Schools Dominate UPI Cage Ratings
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Columbus Bishop Ready, unbeaten in
13 games, has joined Columbus
Walnut Ridge to give the Capital City domination of the
United Press International Ohio
high school Board of Coaches'
basketball ratings.
The Silver Knights of Coach
Pat Penn jumped into first
piece in the Class AA ratings,
displacing once-beaten Waverly
which had been top dog the
first three weeks of the poll.
W~verly fell to second.

Class AAA

••

Walnut Ridge, like Ready 13-0
on the year, retained its No. 1
roll in the AAA list, hiking its
lead over second place Boardman from 11 to 20 points.
In the small school race, unbeaten J:&lt;'ort Loramie (16-0)
stepped up to the top rung of
the ladder thanks to a 55-54
overtime loss suffered by
Ridgedale to Elgin Saturday
night.
First By Far
Fort Loramie, of Shelby
County, was a solid choice for

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
United Press International Ohio
high school Board of Coaches'
ratings (with first place votes
and won-lost records in
parentheses):
Class AAA
Team
Points
1. Columbus Walnut Ridge
(12) (13-0) 241
2. Boardman
(6) ( 11-0) 220
3. Findlay
(1) (12-0) 178
4. Dayton Dunbar
(1) (9-1) 122
5. Lakewood St. Edward
(14-0) 110
6. Steubenville (1) (10-0) 96
7. Columbus Eastmoor
(l0-1: 60
8. Oak Hills
(3) ( 10-0) 51
'1. Zanesville
( 11-2) 4'1
10. Barberton
(10-1) 45
Second 10: 11. Cleveland East
Tech 43; 12. Middletown 34; 13.
Cincinnati Hughes 25; 14.
Cincinnati St. Xavier 24; 15.
Beavercreek 23; 16. Canton
McKinley 21; 17. Cincinnati
by Che{ Tannehill
Withrow and Cleveland St.
Ignatius 15 each; 19. Hamilton
Taft 13; 20. Toledo Central
Catholic 12.
The upcoming transfer of the Columbus Jets' International
Others with eight or more
points: Princeton 9; Toledo League franchise to Charleston, while bringing good minor-class
Woodward, Grove City, Newark baseball to within 65 miles of us, has its drawback. There'll be
and Toledo Macomber 8 each. times when the Cincinnati Reds games are being televised but
ihstead we'll get Charleston's game instead. This happened
frequently when Charleston last had its shot at supporting a
Class AA
professional baseball team. And I don't ever recall knowing
Team
Points
anybody
in this area made happy about that TV baseball fare.
1. Columbus Ready
(9) ( 13-0) 211
2 . Waverly
(8) ( 10-1} 1'16
NOSTALGIA FLOWED like the River Jordan Saturday night
3. Delphos St. John
in the Orchid Room of Pomeroy. It was the night when Ray
(1) (10-2) 121
4. Canton Lehman
Farnham came hom to relive, with many of his former players,
(1) (11-ll 109
the exciting athletic seasons of old Pomeroy High School in the
5. Licking Valley
(2) (12-0) 102 Golden Era years of 1928 through 1935.
6. Lima Central Catholic
I don't know which of the two, Paul Casci or Fred Crow,
(2) (11-1) 98
"thought up" the idea of doing this for Mr. Farnham. Both extend
7. Southeastern (Ross)
(1) {14-0) 96 1the credit to the other. Let's say it was a simoultaneous flash, a
8. Youngstown Liberty
(2) (11 -0) 87 team idea, which was the way both of those guys played their
8. Wellsville
(1) {11-0) 85 games some 35 to 40 years ago, and the way winning teams go at it
10. Napoleon
(2) ( 12-0) 75 yet today.
Second 10: 11. Steuben vi lie
We here at The Daily Sentinel added something nice, we
Centra I 38; 12. Gar away 37; 13.
Rossford 30; 14. Dayton Jef- think, to the occasion. Mr. Farnham, according to Fred, "was
ferson 29; 15. Wynford (1) 28; tickled pink with it."
16. Bellefontaine and Coshocton
That something was a reprint in tabloid format of most of
24 each; 18. Youngstown North
21; 19. Garrettsville Garfield Paul (Moonbeam) Clifford's articles bringing together for the
20; 20. River and Fremont St. first time a history of those fine years in athletics under Farn
Joseph 19 each.
Others with eight or more ham, together with the pictures collected and published from the
points: Castalia Margaretta 17; old annuals. This souvenir printing was distributed free to
Champion 15; Shadyside and everyone at the stag smoker Saturday afternoon and the banquet
Lima Bath 13 each; Lexington
and Federal Hocking 12 each; Saturday night.
Delta and Buckeye Valley 11
There is a limited number of these tabloids available to the
each; Claymont 10; Elyria
public at a nominal charge at our Court St. offices in Pomeroy.
Catholic and Poland 8 each .
These copies, in time, will become collectors' items, as Clifford
performed
a magnificent service in compiling and composing the
Class A
material.
Team
Poinb
1. Fort Loramie
MARAUDER NOTES - Marauder Football - a hitherto
(8) (16-0) 180
2. Ridgedale
(1) (9-2) 121 overlooked item in all-time Marauder football records: after
(9-1) 112 previous Marauder quarterbacks had established good passing
3. Sebring
4. Lorain Catholic
(4) (11-1) 102 records of approximately 600 yards per season in successful
5. Sidney Lehman
passes, Bob Werry, in 1970, passed for a total of 1046 yards.
(2) (11-1) 98 There's one to shoot at in the future!
6. Fort Recovery
MARAUDER BASKETBALL- When Jeff Tyo missed a free
(1) (13-1} 88
7. New Athens
(2) ( 12-ll 78 throw during the last quarter Saturday night at Wahama, quite a
8.Continental
(12-ll 73 streak of successful free throwing came to an end. He had hit on
9. Convoy Crestview
{11-0) 54 his previous 26 tries in a row! These included (working back10. Zane Trace (Guernsey)
ward) Wahama (8-8), Gallipolis (2-2), Logan (0-0), Athens (4-4),
(1) (12-0) 40
Second 10: 11. Zanesville Wellston ( 4-4), and Ironton (8-8). Another one to shoot at!
Rosecrans (1) 37; 12. East
Canton 31; 13. Yorkville (1) 25;
14. McDonald (1) 24; 15. Indian
Valley
South
19;
16.
Mechanicsburg (1) and Man.sfleld St. Peter's 18 each; 18.
Cleveland Lutheran East and
Hillsdale 15 each; 20. Proctorville Fairland and Zane
Trace (Ross) 14 each.
By United Press International University downed Cincinnati,
Others with eight or more
Things are going so well for 92-83; and Texas beat Southern
points: Columbia Station 13;
New Madison 12; Ottoville, the Marquette Warriors that Dlinois, 89-81.
Sandusky St. Marys, Miller City
Austin Carr's 36 points
and Warren Consolidated 11 nobody wants to play them.
The Warriors, who defeated sparked Notre Dame to its first
each; Maplewood, Oakwood
(Paulding) and Kent State 10 Northern Michigan, 106-57, victory over Michigan State in
each; Brilliant and North Gallia Tuesday night for their 26th
six years. Collis Jones edded 29
'1 each; Lowellville, Bloom
Carroll and Lancaster Fisher 8 straight victory, so far have points for the Irish, who
each.
been unable to get an opponent boosted their record to 10-4.
to play them at New York's Rudy Benjamin scored 31
Madison Square Garden next points for Michigan State.
Bastille Day, July 14, is a season and it's been causing
Howard Porter scored 18
French holiday correspond- Coach Al McGuire a few points and grabbed 20 rebounds
ing to our Fourth of July. It worries.
to pace Villanova to its 15th
commemorates the storming
"I don't want to be ranked victory against four losses.
of the Bastille prison in 1789.
No. 1 right now," McGuire said Villanova led by only six points
the other day. "I'm having with 7:45 left to play but
enough trouble getting someone outscored the Pirates, 11-1, in
THE DAILY SENTINEl
DEV-OTED TO
to play us at the Garden next the next six minutes to wrap up
INTEREST OF
year."
the contest.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
The Warriors, who are
CHESTER L. TANNEHI'LL,
Sophomore Joe Sutter's jump
Exec. Ed.
ranked
third
in
the
nation,
shot
with two seconds left
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
made it 53 consecutive victories enabled Davidson to upend St.
City Editor
Published daily except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley at the Milwaukee Arena Tues- John's. The lead changed hands
Publishing Company, 111 day night by crushing Northern 19 times during the contest and
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, Michigan. Marquette raced to a neither team could manage
45769. Business Office Phone
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992- 60-27 halftime lead and coasted more than a three-point lead.
2157 .
. Second class postage paid at to its 15th victory in a row this Eric Mink paced Davidson.
season. Dean Meminger paced with 24 points while Bill Phillips
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National adverti;;ing the Warriors' attack with 20 led St. John's with 16.
representative
Bott inelliGallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd points and Jim Chones added
St., New York City, New York. 18. Northern Michigan's Mike
Subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where Duehning led all scorers with 21
available 50 cents per week; points.
By Motor Route where carrier
In other games, seventhservice not available : One
.nonth S1 .75. By mail in Ohio ranked Notre Dame beat
and W. Va ., One year 514.00.
Six months S7.25. Three Michigan State, 104-80; 17thmonths $4.50 . Subscription ranked Villanova downed Seton
price Includes Sunday Times .
Hall, 72-52; Davidson upset St.
.sentinel.
John's (NY) 56-54; Ohio

the top position, polling 180
points and eight first place
votes to 121 for Ridgedale which
was second.
Findlay looks like a fixture in
third place in AAA as for the
fourth straight week the
Trojans held that position.
Columbus Eastmoor, a twopoint loser to Columbus Linden,
dropped from fourth to seventh
with its first Joss. Dayton Dunbar took over fourth after a big
win over Dayton Roosevelt and
Lakewood St. Edward dropped

a notch to fifth.
Steubenville was sixth and
was followed by Eastmoor, Oak
Hills, Zanesville and Barberton.
Oak Hills, of the Cincinnati
area, made its first top ten
appearance as Cleveland East
Tech dipped to 11th.
Top Ten Reshuffled
The top ten in the AA ratings
consisted of the same teams as
last week only in a little different order.
Delphos St. John, an 84-72
loser to Dunbar over the

weekend,
nevertheless
remained in thir 1d spot, with
Canton Lehman and Licking
Valley rounding the top five.
Lima Central Catholic moved
up from eighth t sixth, followed
by Southea!_stern
(Ross),
Youngstown l,iberty, Wellsville
and Napoleor .
Ready's victory over Columbus Watter~ on over the weekend was a costly one for the
Knights, Cl s Al Walter, their
leading sc•()rer, suffered a facial
injury wh1ich may idle him for

Only One SVAC C;ame
the Sports Desk
On Tap This Wetekend

.

••

G

•

••

Marquette Warri.o rs In
26th Straight Victory

One league game and five
non-league encounters are
scheduled this week in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference.
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr. will
take his Southern Local Tornadoes to Cheshire for a
rematch with the Kyger Creek
Bobcats in the only league tilt
Friday night. Eastern will meet
Miller in a non-league affair.
Four games are on tap for
Saturday night. Eastern will
travel to Federal-Hocking for
an important engagement; Coal
Grove visits Hannah Trace;
Southern plays at Glouster and
Kyger Creek
will
host
Nelsonville-York.
Southern enters Friday's
contest holding third place of
the SVAC with a 4-3 record. The
Tornadoes have an overall 6-5
mark.
Kyger Creek, having its
defensive woes this season .is 210 overall and 2-5 against
league opponents. Southern ' won the first meetin_~
between the . two squads t~ls
season, 53-49 m a cold shootmg,
exhibition played at Racine.
The Tornadoes have scored a
total of 372 points in league play

Bribery,
Extortion
Charged
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)Three top Erie County officials
are scheduled to appear Friday
before a federal grand jury
investigating alleged bribery,
extortion and conspiracy charges in connection with the
county's proposed $50 million
domed stadium project.
County Attorney Robert E.
Casey, Jr., and Democratic
legislators Frank C. Ludera and
Frederick F. Pordum confirmed they would testify
voluntarily before the federal
panel.
Ludera and Pordum have
admitted certain "overtures"
had been made to them in
attempts to influence their
voting on the project. They did
not disclosec who made the
attempts.
Both legislators said last
Thursday they had informed
the county attorney of the
alleged bribe attempts and all
three have since offered to
make the information available
to both the federal and county
grand juries.
The county grand jury will
resume Monday as it probes
alleged bribery, larceny, conspiracy and official misconduct
charges.
J. Lloyd Walker, the stadium's project engineer, is
scheduled to appear before the
panel to continue testimony he:
began Monday, the first day of
the panel's investigation.

More Sports On Page 6

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Snyder
Captures

No. 300
By United Press International
Ohio University basketball
coach Jim Snyder chalked up
win No. 300 of his long career
Tuesday night as his Bobcats
clawed the University of Cincinnati Bearcats.
OU held a 45-32 halftime lead
and later ran it to 60-40 in
flattening uc 92-83.
Snyder has now won 300 of
the 513 he has coached over 22
years.
Ken Kowall tallied 24 points
and Bob Howell added 17 to
give the Bobcats their ninth win
in 13 games this season.
Steve Wenderfer of Cincinnati, however, was game high
with 30 points as the Bearcats
fell to 9-7.
Wooster remained un$1efeated
in Ohio Conference play, downing Baldwin-Wallace 78-62 as
once-beaten Otterbein beat
Oberlin 94-83, Kenyon downed
Ohio Wesleyan BlHl6 and Denison edged Muskingum 78-77.
In other college games, Steubenville stomped West Liberty
(W. Va.) 87-65, Youngstown
whipped
Defiance
89-72,
Bethany (W. Va.) ran over
Western Reserve 105-73 and
Detroit crushed Cleveland State
85-70.
Undefeated in OC
Tom Dinger accounted for 28
of Wooster's points as the OC
leader ran its overall season
record to 16-1. It was the fifth
win in the league. BaldwinWallace is 3-5 and 5-11.
Dudley Brown sank a layup
with two seconds left to pull
Denison's win out of the fire.
Brown contributed 27 points to
the Big Red's fifth win in 13
games and third in eight OC
games.
The Muskies, now 5-10 and
2-5, were led by Jim Vejsicky's
25 points.
Otterbein took its lOth win in
12 starts by leading all the
way. Oberlin is 4-7 overall but
hasn't gained a win in six OC
contests.
Dwight Miller was the pacer

av£1rage of 20.1 points in seven
lef1gue games. Ken Brown, 6-1
semior forward, is averaging
up points.
Coach Bill Phillips' oncelpeaten Eastern Eagles will
meet Miller on its home floor.·
Eastern, 11-1 has scored 947
points in those 12 games while
holding its foes to 658 points.
North Gallia's Arthur Clark is
·leading the league in scoring
with 180 points for a 25.7 points
per game.

RICHMOND, Ky. (UPI) Defensive tackle Mike
Shannon and offensive tackle
Tim Owen, both Lancaster,
Ohio, High School products,
have signed letters of intent
with Eastern Kentucky
University.
Shannon was on the United
Press International All-Ohio
first team and Owen was a
second team selection.

and Sidney Lehman stayed in
fifth.
Fort Recovery was sixth, New
Athens seventh, Continental
eighth, Convoy Crestview ninth,
and then came Zane Trace of
Guernsey County, returning to
the top ten after an absence of
two weeks.

Pro Standings
NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
36 17 .679
Philadelphia 33 22 .600 4
Boston
29 24 .547 7
16 .41 .281 22
Buffalo
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
31 20 .608
Cincinnati
21 29 .420 9112
Atlanla
17 36 .321 15
Cleveland
8 47 .145 25
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
41 9 .820 ...
Detroit
34 18 .654 8
Chicago
30 22 .577 12
Phoenix
31 23 .574 12
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 29 20 .592
San Francisco 27 26 .509 4
Seatlle
24 28 .462 61/2
San Diego
24 30 .444 7112
Portland
17 36 .321 14
Tuesday's Results
New York 107 Milwaukee 98
Baltimore 103 San Fran. 98
Philadelphia 129 Atlanta 122
Phoenix 114 Buffalo 82
Los Angeles 136 Chicago 111Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee at Boston
Ballimore at Cincinnati

College Ratings

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
United Press International top
20 small college basketball
teams with first place votes and
won-lost records in parentheses. (Eighth week includes
games played through Jan. 24) .
Team
Points
1. Ky. St.
(20) (14-l) 297
2. Assumption (7) {12-0) 222
3. S.W. La.
(3) (12-2) 212
4. Tennessee St.
(11-2) 170
5. La. Tech
(2) (12-3) 136
6. La. St. (N.O.)
{12-0) 131
7. Ky. Wesleyan (12-3) 104
8.S.F.Austin
(12-4) 95
9. Ashland
(13-2) 83
10. Phila Tex.
(11-2) 70
1l.PugetSound
(13-2) 58
12. Howard Payne
(15-5) 36
13. Capital
(11-2) 19
14.0ral Roberts
(14-5) 17
15. Central (0.) St.
(13-3) 16
16. Old Dim inion
(10-4) 15
17. Eau Claire
(15-1) 13
(13-6) 11
18. Sam Hous St.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
19. Jackson St.
(15-2) 10
01-3) 9
Spencer Haywood can keep lO. Youngstown
Others receivi,lg f'v~ 'or more
playing with the Seattle superpoints: Evansvi II~, North
Sonics - at least for a while. Dakota State, Springfield,
The 9th U. S. Circuit Court of Stetson, Wooster.
Appeals Tuesday denied a
motion by the National
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
Basketball Association for a
By United Press lnternationa I
stay of a lower court injunction Bellaire
St. John 71 Shadyside
permitting the 21-year-old 67 (of)
Haywood to stay with Seattle. St. Clairsville 72 Bridgeport 69
A Los Angeles judge last week Adena 91 Hopedale 51
Zane Trace Guernsey 89
issued the injunction and set a Woodsfield 59
Southern
Local 60 Stanton Local
March 2 trial date for the case
of Haywood, the 6-3 Olympic 53
Barnesville 75 Union Local 54
and Detroit University star who Fairland 50 Huntington (W.
jumped to Seattle from Denver Va.) Vinson 48
of
the
rival
American Wellsville 117 Oak Glen (W.
Va.) 58
Basketball Association.
Cols. Eastmoor 85 Cols. Centra I
46

Court Denies

NBA Motion

College Basketba II Results
By United Press lnternationa I
Davidson 56 St. John (NY) 54
for the Otters with 30 points.
TCU 93 SMU 85
Kenyon, led by Marty Hunt's Detroit 85 Cleve. St. 70
26 points controlled the game Villanova 72 Seton Hall 52
,1 th
1 tt' W · Phila . Tex. 83 Kings Coli. 67
nearIY a 1 e way, e mg es Assumption 114 Colby 75
leyan get as close as 54-47 in Hofstra 60 Boston u. 59
the second half before shutting Allegheny 79 Thiel _57
the lid Kenyon is 3-4 in the Notre Dame 104 M1ch. St. 80
·
Ind. Cen. 90 Hanover 78
OC and 7-8 overall. Wesleyan is Mo. Harvey 105 Salem 73
7-8 and 1-6.
Bluefield St. 72 Beckley 59
Cleveland Loses Again
Ohio U. 92 Cincinnati 83
Marquette 106 No. Ill. 81
Cleveland State sank to 5-11 Texas A&amp;M 74 Rice 73
despite having the game's lead- Ark . St. 59 Trinity 51
ing scorer in 6-foot-5 senior
center Matt Taylor, who tallied
20 points.
Detroit, playing at home, encountered no trouble in leading
at halftime 46-29 enroute to a
9-7 record.
Youngstown, now 12-3, rolled
992-2238
over Defiance as Billy Johnson
notched 23 points. Marv Retcher was high with 16 for Defiance, now 12-5.

San Francisco at Detroit
New York at Atlanta
Chicago at San Diego
Portland at Cleveland
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. l. Pet. GB
Virginia
34 17 .667 ...
Kentucky
30 23 .566 5
New York
22 27 .449 11
Pittsburgh
23 31 .426 12112
Carolina
22 31 .415 13
Floridians
21 33 .389 14112
West
W. l. Pet. GB
Indiana
32 18 .640
Utah
32 18 .640
Memphis
31 23 .574 3
19 31 .380 13
Denver
Texas
18 32 .360 14
Tuesday's Results
Floridians 121 New York 97
Kentucky 125 Texas 122
Utah 145 Pittsburgh 127
Memphis 108 Indiana 102
Wesnesday's Games
New York at Indian"
Floridians vs. Virginia
-at Hampton
Denver at Utah
(Only games scheduled)
NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. l. T. Pfs.
8 5 71
9 8 68

Boston
New York
Montreal
Toronto
Vancouver
Detroit
Buffalo
West

33
30
21
22
15
14
11

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992-2101
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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Chicago
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St. Louis
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Philadelphia
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Minnesota
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Pittsburgh
14 23 8
Los Angeles
14 23 8
California
14 30 3
Tuesday's Result
Vancouver 3 Chicago 3, tie
Wednesday's Games
St. Louis at Montreal
Toronto at Pittsburgh
Boston at New York
Buffalo at Los Angeles
Minnesota al Oakland
(Only games scheduled)

Seein ' is believin '

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while permitting their opposition 388 points. Kyger Creek
is · averaging 69.1 points for
seven league games. The
Bobcat defense has allowed an
average of 66.7 points a game.
Roger Wilfred, 6-1 senior
center, leads the Tornado attack with ;m average of 12.6
points in all games and 10 points
in the SVAC.
Dave White, 5-10 junior
guard, is the Bobcats' leading
offensive threat with an

up to three weeks.
Following Ridgedale and in
third place in the Class A rankings was Sebring with a 9-1
record. Lorain Catholic, which
lost 84-75 to Parma Byzantine for its first defeat of the
year, remained in fourth spot

$229 -~

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 27, 1971

Winning Makes

At11los~phere

WOOSTER, Ohio \UP!) - For teor" of the Wooster Scots, has
the first time in his basketball seen his scoring average drop
career, Tom Dinger is playing from 30.7 a year ago to 25.1
on a real winner, and he likes this season but says, "I kind of
like it r1gh t where I'm at. "
H.
The Scots, who share the Ohio
Dinger, th;. "Mansfield Me-

E ntirely Different-Dinger
"I'm enJoying this season
mor·e than a ny of the others ,"
Dinger said. "When you're winninJ.l, people are a lways smiling
at you ."
Dinger satd it was not b) acdde n t that he is averaging

Conferenc'e lead with Capttal,
arc 15-1 Olvet·a ll , the first big
winning se&lt;l son in Dinger's four
years a t W1~oste r. In his freshman yea r t.bey were 14-8, following that " ith 11-12 and 14-11.

Football Policy Explained
The Ohio Athletic Assn. this
week outlined 1971-72 policy
pertaining to delayed school
openings and certain other
changes.
In cases of delayed openings
of school, football practice may
start on Wednesday of the third
week prior to the opening of
school and contests will not be
permitted until the first Friday
after school opens.
After school has opened, and

schools are closed because of
lack of finances, athletic contests may not be played until
schools are in session.
Goal Posts For 1971
Rule 1, Section 2, Article 7,
National Alliance Edition ,
reads in part, "the top edge of
the crossbar shall be ten feet
above the ground and 23' 4"
between the goal posts above
the crossbar. The goal posts
shall extend at least ten feet

~:;;:--:;:1

Constructive Letters of OpinJon,
welcomed. 'lbe editor reserves the right to shorten letters. ~
All letters must be signed, with a full address, although ~
initials may be used upon request.
~

•.
•.• E~..t.!.f=
?Jtt. u.u.tVL:

&amp;

have a teaching and coaching
career with maybe a littll• radio
work thr own m.
He said if he doesn't get a
job offer this summer which he
considers good enough, he will
sl&lt;:ty at Wooster and begin work
on his m a ster 's degree.
Although Dinger chose
Wooster over any bigger schools
which ma y ha ve been interested in him, Tom sometimes
wonders if he would have made
it in the big time.
"I wonder a bout that when I
wa tch them on television,".he

contact. (Junior and Senior
High Schools).
High school practice a nd
conditioning scheduled:
Start Classes, Aug. :Jo or 31;
conditioning starts August 16;
first physical contact, August
20.
Start, Sept. 1 or 2; conditiomng starts August 17; first
physical contact, August 21.
Start, Sept. 3 or later; conditioning starts August 18; first
physical contact, August 23.
This revised football preseason mandatory physical
conditioning program was
adopted at the recommendation
of the Joint Advisory Committee of Sports Medicine at
The Ohio State Medical
Association.

above the crossblar."
To comply w1th this rule,
present goal po. ts may be
m odifie d by wi dening the
uprights at the eros: bar 2' 5" on
each side or new goals may be
erected. Goals may be standard
two pedes tal goals or they may
be single pedestal of ;•m y form.
The s ingle pedestal goal is not
required .
PRACTICE SCHED ULE
All football ca ndidate'S must
par ticipa te in four days of preseason physical conditioning
prior to a ny physical co.ntact.
Boys r eporting late must have
four days of physical conditioning prior to any phys:ical

about five shots less per game
this season.
"I planned on not shooting as
m uch just to see if m y teammates could do it," he sa id.
"So far they haven't le t me
down.''
Overshadowed By Rinka
Dinger , whose ca reer a t
Ma nsfield Senior High School
was marr ed by frequent injur ies, caus ing him to be
overlook ed
by
college
recruiters, played in the shadow
of Ke nyon's high-scorcng John
Rinka his first three years a t
Wooster .
The 6 - foo t, 170 pounder held
the Wooster car eer scoring
mark going into this season,
topping the 2,000 point m ark
several games ago.
Dinger said playing on a winner makes for an "entirely diffe r ent atmosphere, both on the
campus a nd in the locker room.
"The spirit these guys have
this year has been tremendous,
getting up for every game . You
can usually sense it in the locke r room. They come in rah,

rah, rah . Before they would
come in talking other things .
" It irks me when they take a
game lightly," said Dmger , who
believes tha t's why the Scots
dropped their only ga me of the
year to Geneva 98-84 .
" We were just not mentally
prepared for Geneva, " he said .
" We were 4-0 a t the time and
· they were 1-5 or something like
tha t and we just weren't up
for the game ."
Doubts Pro Possibility
Is a try at pro ball in Dinge r 's future ?
"I really don't think so," he
said. " I think I'm a little too
small and besides , I wouldn't
like to travel that much. If I
was g oing to be single, I might
consider it, but by then I'll be
married ."
Dinger plans to marry Jenny
Rudolf, his high sc hool sweetheart, next m onth.
Dinger had his own radio
program on the college's station
last year and did play-by-play
of the Scots' football games last
fall. He said he will probably

s;.ud . " But l'rn happy where
l'n at, getting a good educatum and playmg a lot of ba ll."

a

A Floral Tribute
Sent to the Home or the
Chapel.
Always A

Wel comed &amp;
App r eciated
Gest ure

DUDLEY'S A.ORIST

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Middleport, 0 .
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MASON

FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

l~

Bad Impression of Both
Gallipolis, Ohio
January 25, 1971

Dear Sir:
I am a student at GAHS and in regard to Miss Mary Bradbury's letter, I would like to say that I think the "Bleacher Bums"
and our so-called ''Mafia" are the worst things that could have
happened to our schools! They give a very bad impression of what
the majority of the young people of Gallipolis and Meigs are like.
I know what' our little group which call themselves the
"Mafia" is like and they don't care about anyone or anything.
They're always trying to find someone to pick on or something to
tear up. (Like our school!) Our school is in bad enough shape
without them doing any more damage to it! We could probably get
some new freedoms and nicer things for our school if they'd quit
thinking of a little fun for themselves by throwing paint on the
school or other things. These boys really don't have anything
going for them because all they ever do is drink, smoke or try to
hurt someone and they aren't quite as " tuff" as they think!
They've got the idea that people look up to them for what they do ;
well they're mistaken! I know of very few people who respect
them.
As for Friday night I think it was both schools' fault because
of the fight. I sat on Meigs's side and I know for a fact that the
"Bleacher Bums" were using vulgar language. What I saw
Friday night at Pennyfare parking lot was not pretty! How
anyone could intentionally beat up someone or tear up someone's
car is meaningless and inhuman. Now I'd like to ask the so-called
"Mafia" and "Bleacher Bums,'' what did you get out of it all?
(Name withheld by request.)

Girls Hope
:. For 1st Win
•
'

weal Bowling
MORNING GLORIES
Jan. 19, 1971

Te~t~ndings :

Newell Sunoco

Points
96

Gibbs Grocery
87
Fraley &amp; Schill ing
74
Lou's Ashland
69
Bailey's Sunoco
68
Domigan Sohio
62
.
.
High Team (3 games )
The Meigs G1rls' Basketball Bailey's Sunoco, 2280; Newell
team, coached by Mrs. Joy Sunoco, 2261 ; Domigan Soh io,
22
Bentley, will seek its first win of
~i.gh Team game_ Bailey's
the season against Kyger Creek Sunoco, 773 ; Newell Sunoco,
Saturday at 10 a .m. at Kyger 772 ;_ Fraley &amp; Schilling, 77~.
Creek Nelsonville-York will
.H!gh Ind . (3 g.ames)-:- V1cky
·
.
Gillilan , 536; Sh1rley Ba1ty, 451;
play Federal Hocking in the Margaret Fullrod, 444.
second game Saturday starting
.H!gh Ind .. Ga'!le - _Y_icky
at 11 a.m.
Gillilan, 199 ; V1cky Gillilan ,
179; Barbara F1elds, 177.
Ba Iance of the Sou theast ern
Ohio Girls Athletic League
CITY LEAGUE
schedule is as follows:
Jan. 19, 1971
Feb. 2Meigs at Gallipolis 5:30
Won Lost
28
4
Lou's Ashland
p.m.
22
10
Feb. 6 Federal Hocking vs H· R Firestone
Cement Block
14
18
Eastern at Belpre 10 a.m.; Swisher Lohse
12
20
12
20
Athens vs Belpre at Belpre 11 Quality Print
8 24
a.m.;
Kyger
Creek vs Buckeye Potato Chips
First High Team (3 games) Nelsonville 11 a.m.
Lou's Ashland, 2523; Qua lity
Feb. 11 Kyger Creek at Print, 2496 ; Cement Block, 2493 .
First High Team Game - HFederal Hocking 6 p.m.
R Firestone, 910 ; Quality Print,
Feb. 13 Nelsonville at Athens 899; Lou's Ashland, 861 .
10 a .m.; Federal Hocking vs
First High Ind. ( 3 games) Meigs at Meigs 10 a.m . ; Bowen, 575 ; Riebel, 573 ;
Willford, 556.
Eastern vs Pt. Pleasant at
First High Ind. Game- Van
Meigs 11 a.m.
lnwagen, 211; Willford, 210;
Feb. 20 Meigs at Belpre 10 Bowen, 204.
a.m. ; Nelsonville at Eastern 10
a.m.; Athens vs Kyger Creek at GIANT SLALOM WINNER
ABELBODEN , SwitzerEastern 11 a.m.
Feb. 27, Coaches meeting at land (UPI) - Helene Sonof
Switzerland
Meigs High School at 10 a.m. to deregger
arrange tournament to be held defeated Tamara Marcinuk of
Fitchburg, Mass. , Tuesday by
irr March.
more than three seconds to win
the women's giant slalom in the
seventh World Winter Games
TWO MATCHES
for the Deaf.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
world light heavyweight title
matches are scheduled for next JOIN WSU STAFF
PULLMAN, Wash. (UPI )month, with Bob Foster
defending his crown against Hal Keith Lincoln, former Washing"TNT" Carroll in Houston on ton State University and
Feb. 16 and Jimmy Dupree American Football League star ,
meeting Vincente Rondon in and Leon Burtnett, an assistant
Caracas, Venezuela on Feb. 27 at Montana State University,
for the vacant World Boxing have joined WSU as assistants
to hea d football Coac h Jim
Association title .
gweeney.
Association title.

Prices Good Thru Saturday, January 30th.

A LL GOOD BRAND SLICED

BACO
~~::

s gc

2-lb. pk9.

$ J 17

Sliced Bacon~~~w~rG~: .....
Bacon End Slices
5

~··:.
~·~~-

75c
ggc

RESH
Ground Chuck 'LEAN
Fresh Fryer Legs wHoLE •
Fresh Fryer Breasts
Fresh Chicken Livers •
Roasting Chickens ~L~? •

•

3

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

On Saturday

REGAN SIGNS
CHICAGO r UPI )- Phil ReWOODY SIGNS
gan , the hard-working relief
CINCINNATI fUPI)
pitr~ her of the Ch1cago Cubs,
Shortstop Woody Woodward, 28, who made 54 appeara nces last
has signed his 1971 contrac t :.;ca son a nd 71 in 1969, has
with the Natwnal Le ag ue sigJ•cd !us 1971 baseball conchampion Cincinna ti Reds.
tract
Woodward, an eig ht-year
veteran who came to the Reds ~EW CONTRACTS
SAN DIEGO 1 UP! 1-Start1ng
in 1968 from Atlanta , i!&gt; the third
Heds' player to sign a contract. pitC:h(• r Clay Kirb) and utili ty.Sc('rmd br~ se ma n TC!lll!II J' lllan 1\on Slo('ufll s1gned their
He lms ~&lt;111d pll thcr Tfln y
CJr,lllllf..:t•r prl'Vtous ly 111k'·d

Semi-Boneless Ham ~~~Reri~s
Center Ham Steaks ~ta'!sT ~
p Ork Ch0pS CEN~UARTERED
LOIN
ER CHOPS INCLUDED •
IC
STYLE
Fresh Pork Roast PICN
•
Smoked Pork Chops cEmER •

Ib. 89c
Ib.59c
Ib.69c
th.69c
lb.4Sc
~

JANE PARKER

89c
4 lkz.
lve.

White Bread

•

•

•
•

lb. 79t
Ib.99c
lb.79c
lb.39c
lb.79c

1-lb. 69c
Swift's Premium Wieners • • pkc.
Buddig Chipped Beef • • • • ::;. 69c
MEAT
Oscar Mayer Bologna ALL
OR BEEF
• ~4sc•
Al l
Oscar Mayer BoloCJna MEAT • • pkl-Ib.•. 89c
Sultana Meat Pies
• • 5 ~$100

~

"Super Right" Qualify Steaks

Delmonico Steaks • • • lb.$198
New Y-o rk Strip Steaks lb.S21'
Chuck Steaks 8~~E • • • Jb·6SC
Swiss Steaks R~~~~L~~~E. • Jb.89C
C harcoal Steaks • • • lb.$129

~

SULTANA BRAND

....

Crousel Coffee Cake

Ann Page Cake Mixes Ex~iHA~~5~~oo • • 4pkgs$100
Pancake Mix su~~rU:'~L§u~'g~o • • • • • 2~~sse
49c
Mashed Potatoes rlllS~;~F~~~~~:
•
Hunts Tomato Sauce • • • • • •
Hunts Manwich Sauce • • • • • • 3 15~·0Z. $1 00
French Fries A~~g~~~D • • • • • • .2 !~39c
pq.10c
CharmCake Ml•xes
• •

SULTANA BRA ND

Salad Dressing
ANN PAGE

Soup

•

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•

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2~3,

SULTANA BRAND

JANE PARKER DANISH

TU RKEY NOODLE
CH IC KEN N O ODLE
CHIC KEN RICE

Fruit Cocktail

•

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JACK •

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1&amp;-oz.
pkr;•

Purple Plums

•

KRAFT - 3c OFF LABEL

Parkay Margarine
CHOCOLATE MARSHMALLOW

Marvel Ice Cream

•

•

~·6C)c:

eana

ALSO FROSTING M IX
POWNIE MIX-ETC.

•

•

Martha White Bix Mix, Corn Muffins or Spud Flakes
1~-oz. 39c
Heinz Chili Sauce
pkJt. 49c
Jeno's Cheese Pizzas • U.%-oz.
pkr;. 4Sc
•

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btl.

of 12

~J UMBO

TEMPLE

pk,.

JUMBO SIZE 64's

IOc
~

ORANGES • • • 12 79f;
for

Iceberg Lettuce ... a~:st.oo
Cello Carrots . . ... 3 !~ St.OO
Pascal Celery .... 3 ~f~St.OO
Green Cabbage ... 3 ~=::st.OO

Emperor Grapes . . . 3 lbo. st .00
Delicious Apples
4 .....st .00
Navel Orangesc-';~~~~'...12 ,., SI.OO
D'Anjou Pears . . . . . 3 .....st .00

!:1;::

;

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tp;;::a::zx::a::a:::~

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72 ~ 3~

W ITH THIS
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Good Thr11 S&lt;tttmf11y, J &lt;11 nuary 30th fn Afl

Col~mbus !'&gt;:vision A&amp;P's - One P•r family
4f.a J.a ' i •.a I ·* •. a 11.1 ; .w a.g ;.p • ·M ' ·4 ;.g ; .g ; .a ' ·" g.u ~

69¢

Fresh
Strawberries lb.

Brussel
Sprouts . . .

lb.39¢...

f'iCD:::IIliCiii::U:IJ VALUABLE C 0 UPON :;;a::::a:::a:ctE:I;,a

':@

Ana Page Gake Mixes
EXCEPT
ANGEl,

FOOD

4

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$100

WITH THIS

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X

Ai A~l- You
Save Two Ways
Lo141, Low Pr.ices
~LUS

Pla.d t ps
~a.'E;a::::l!Elt VALUABLE C 0 UPON E:liJI:IIE:U::u;:::l~

:iPJ P·~~~:;./~!b~Nr Mashed Potatoes
4ft.!
7Sc OttLABEl

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WITH THIS

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r.:,,H,d Tl"•l S.:~t:1rday, Jo~n u.!i"Y 30th In All
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�•

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ONLY

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BACON

HAM
SANDWICHES

J

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VIENNA
·SAUSAGE

LBS.99~

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PICNICS

Save 72e on 3 lb•

Whole

:J

39~
LB.

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5 oz.

-·

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cans

SUGAR

VAN CAMP'S

STOKELY'S

BEEF STEW TOMATO
JUICE 3
24 Ol CAN

46 Ol CAN

tor

VAN CAMPS

PORK &amp; BEANS

3

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79e

. f4w"'6II
.• STOKELY'S

KRAUT

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INSTANT
IDAHO
POTATOES

STOKELY'S
lib. box

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14 oz.

bottles

�A_ ThP Oailv Sf&gt;ntinel. Middleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Jan. 'Z7.1971

North Gallia Tops Eastern of Pike
Visiting North Gallia, behind
the hot-shooting of Roger
Pelfrey, 6-0 senior guard and
the rebounding provided by
Dave Justus, 6-3 senior forward,
outscored Eastern of Pike
County, 25-12 in the first period
of action Tuesday night enroute
to 78-69 victory.
The win extended North
Gallia 's season record to 8-3 and
avenged an earlier, 79-69 defeat
at the hands of the Pike

Countians.
Coach Paul Aikman 's Pirates
were paced by 6-5 junior center,
Arthur Clark. Clark canned
nine baskets and six free
throws. He also grabbed 19 of
North Gallia 's 46 rebounds .

SOUTHERN'S EIGHTH grade basketball team coached by Bruce Wallace was 3-5 last
week. Left to right, front, Jeff Circle, Dave Nease, Buddy Ervin, Dave Jenkins, Tim Hill and
Glen Simpson; back row, Bobby Johnson, manager, David Huddleston, Tim Maurer, Terry
Sayre, Mitch Nease, Donald Shaffer, Monty Hart and Coach Wallace.

Host Symmes Valley jwnped
into an 18-9 advantage at the
end of the first quarter Tuesday
night enroute to a 74-49 victory
over the Hannan Trace Wild,
cats.
The loss dropped the SVAC
Wildcats to 6-7 on the season.
Hannan Trace holds down
fourth place in the league
standings with a 4-5 mark.
Roach was the leading scorer

Dave Justus with 10.
Dave Davis led the losers with
23 points on nine field goals and
five charity tosses. Eastern
with a 24 point third period
effort, pulled into a 58-54 lead
going into the last period of
action . North Gallia outscored
its opponent, 24-13 for its
margin of victory.
Shooting-wise, the Pirates
sank 29 of 67 from the floor for
45 per cent. NG also hit on 20 of

Pelfrey had eight of his 18
points during the first canto.
Two other Pirates in double
figures were Larry Justus, 6-4
junior forward, with 16 and

Wildcats Drop

SOUTHERN'S SEVENTH grade basketball team was 6-2last week. Left to right, front,
are Tim Curfman, J. F. Young, Tim Jenkins, Mike Roberts and Brady Huffman; second
row, Paul Cross, Paul Schultz, Greg Dunning, Danny Brown, Greg Circle and Coach Bruce
Wallace.
the third-&lt;~.uarter surge with 17
of his 26 points. Atlanta, paced
by Pete Maravich 's 34 points
~and Lou Hudson's 31, closed to
within 123-120 with 52 seconds
left, but Greer 's two foul shots
put the game out of reach.
By GARY KALE
Jack Marin's three-point play
gave New York its third victory
UPI Sports Writer
with 8:50 left put Baltimore in
over the Bucks this season.
Earlier this month Milwaukee
Alcindor credited the Knicks' front for good and the Bullets
defeated New York for the only defense , tops in the league, went on to beat San Francisco,
time this season while the with stopping the Bucks' stretching their Central DiviKnicks team captain Willis offense, also tops in the league. sion lead over Cincinnati to 91h
Reed was 3uffering from one of
"They pressed so hard and games. Marin scored 21 points
his nwnerous ailments. Reed caused so many turnovers we for the Bullets, who received a
made up for that painful just couldn't get back" Al- 26-point game from Earl
engagement Tuesday night cindor said.
Monroe. Nate Thurmond led the
when he led New York to a 107Frazier scored 22 points for Warriors with 23 points.
98 victory over the Bucks with New York and Bill Bradley and
The Suns placed six players
a 35-point scoring spree.
Dave DeBusschere each netted in double figures in turning
What's more, Reed held Lew 18. Robertson scored 20 for back Buffalo. Dick VanArsdale
Alcindor, who tallied 29 points, Milwaukee and Jon McGlocklin, paced the Phoenix attack with
scoreless in the last 6:22 of the the Bucks' other starting guard, 23 points and Paul Silas
game, just when Milwaukee had 15.
grabbed 19 rebounds. Paul Long
needed Big Lew 's scoring
In other NBA action, Phi- scored 19 points for Buffalo.
Jerry West, although hampunch. Oscar Robertson picked ladelphia downed Atlanta, 129up the slack with six points in a 122, Baltimore topped San pered by a sore toe, scored 33
10-point Buck outburst that Francisco, 103-98, Phoenix beat points in pacing the Lakers to
whittled a fourth-&lt;J.uarter 13- Buffalo, 114-82, and Los Angeles their fourth victory in a row.
West played only 33 minutes
point Knick lead to one at 95-94. routed Chicago, 136-111.
But Reed's final field goal,
Hal Greer scored 36 points as and sat out the last quarter as
two key baskets by Dick Philadelphia erased an 11-point the Lakers' subs protected a 25Barnett and five points by Bill third-period deficit to beat the point lead. Chet Walker paced
Bradley in the last 52 seconds Hawks. Jim Washington led the Bulls with 21 points.

NEW YORK (UPI)- Time is
running out on the Boston
Patriots.
The Patriots, who finished
with the worst record in the
National Football League last
season and thus earned the No.
1 choice in the college draft,
aren't sure what to do with it.
The draft opens Thursday at
10 a.m. EST at New York's
Belmont Plaza Hotel and the
Boston front office must decide
whether to exercise the choice
and take Stanford's Jim
Plunkett, the Reisman Trophy
winning quarterback, or trade
the rights for established

Symmes Valley led 32-18 at
the half and 56-32 going into the
final quarter of play. Coach Jim
McKenzie's crew hit 30 of 77
shots from the field. HT sank
only 17 of 65 shots.
The Little Vikings captured
the reserve tilt, 45-32. Laufman
paced the winners with eight.

on the evening with seven
baskets and five free throws for
19 points. Myers was the only
other Viking in double figures
with 13. Mike Caldwell, 6-2
sophomore forward, paced the
Wildcat attack with 12 points.
Larry Cremeens, 6-1 senior
forward, added 11. Keith Swain,
5-10 junior guard, was held to
only six points, well below his
season average.

Roger Merb Named
Back Coach At TU

veterans.
"We haven't made any
decision yet," said a Patriots'
spokesman Tuesday. "We're
still thinking it over . We may
still trade the choice. If that
happens, it could be anytime up
to Thursday morniJlg."
Representatives from close to
20 pro teams have been on the
Patriots doorstep ever since the
season ended. At least eight
teams are in dire need of a
quarterback and Plunkett, who
set NCAA career and single
season passing records, seems
to fit the bill perfectly.

TOLEDO (UPI) - Roger
Merb, who rang up a 30-6 record
in his four years as head football coach at Defiance College,
has been hired by Toledo coach
Jack Murphy as offensive backfield coach.
Merb, 29, a native of Portsmouth, quarterbacked Ohio
University teams 1960-62 when
the Bobcats compiled a 23-5-1
record. His Defiance teams won
three straight Mid-Ohio Conference titles.
Murphy also named Chet
Fair, 47, former head coach at
Canton Lehman High School
and father of star Toledo pass
receiver Don Fair, as freshman
coach.

GROUP OF
2 OR 3 PC.

BOXED
GIFT SETS

T!•xas Chi!ps. Tilt' Cha p-; hl'ld a
114-!1 11 ]!• ;HI

11 1

llw fou lh p !•tJCJCI

bu l IJ;m ·l ( 'atTI!~ r SCt&gt;J!·d 12 t&gt; l

ld '"

Soften the Sorrow
Comfort the Living

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WOMEN'S WINTER COATS
VALUES TO 17.99
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SIZE 9-11

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WOMEN'S

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HOPE BLEACHED MUSLIN

The Rev. Roy Ankrim of Coshocton, Ohio and Arnold.
(Doc) and Garnett Sexton of Ashland, Kentucky, will be ·
the evangelistic team for A MEIGS AREA HOLINESS
ASSOCIATION INDOOR CAMP MEETING at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church, February 1-7, at 7:30p.m.
nightly.
Rev . Ankrim, District Superintendent of the Eastern
Ohio District of the Wesleyan Church will speak each
evening . He has served the church as an evangelist,
pastor, and district superintendent for a total of 32 years.
The Sextons have been active in church work for the
past 30 years. Mr. Sexton directs congregational and choir
singing, plays the piano, and presents solos and _in duets
wi th his wife. Mrs. Sexton is an ordained elder in· the
Church of the Nazarene who began her ministry as a teenager.
The Associa tion extends a hearty welcome to you and
vour friends . Each service will be filled with spiritual
;,.. rws, choruses , special music, a dynamic gospel
nH.:ssace . and, best of all. 1he presence of God. Be sure to
tx· wl' h us tn our opl'ntng ser vice .

priced.

SIZE 3·14

DISH CLOTHS
se EACH

REV. ANKRIM

Four-Week Shipment

SMALL GROUP

COnAGE SETS

so~ pkg.

Arnold (Doc) and
Garnett Sexton
Evangelists-Musicians

created by
John Roberts

GIRLS FLANNEL GOWNS

72e

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$5.00 ea.

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

Indoor Camp Meeting Planned!

MEIGS HIGH
CLASS RING

Where Shoes are sensibly .

•a.oo

99'm

Let Us Send
Your Message of
Love and Concern
992-5560
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

Personalize~

THE SHOE BOX

GE
ELECTRIC KNIFE

BATH MAT
SETS

REG. '1.29

Sympathy Flowers

Your

JUMBO SAVINGS
- for only Peanuts! I

DURALON PANEL CURTAIN

lead the comeback. Joe Hamilton had 27 points and Wayne
Hightower 25 for the Chaps.
Larry Jones scored 25 points
and Mack Calvin 22, offsetting
a 30-point effort by Rick Barry
and carrying the Floridians to a
121-97 win over the New York
Nets in the only other ABA
game. The Floridians, who led
all the way, had a 63-44
advantage at halftime .

Shu-Shine
English Style
Saddle Soap

with

128 MILL ST.- MIDDLEPORT

107-98 Win Over Bucks

By United Press International
The Indiana Pacers have the
Utah Stars as company atop
the American Basketball Association 's Western Division today
and the Memphis Pros may
soon make it a crowd.
The Stars tied the Pacers for
first place in the West when
they beat the Pittsburgh
Condors, 145-127, Tuesday night
and the Pros moved to within
three games of the two leaders
by downing Indiana, 108-102.
George Stone scored seven
points during a key 14-point
second-period burst and Zelmo
Beaty scored a game-high 32
points for the Stars in their
game at Pittsburgh. The 14point drive carried the Stars
into a 55-51 lead and they added
an eight-point burst for a 69-59
halftime lead. The Stars never
trailed again.
Beaty led in rebounds with 15
in addition to his 32 points
while George Thompson had 26
points for the Condors.
The Pros scored their fifth
straight victory as Steve Jones
and Jimmy Jones combined for
54 points at Memphis . The Pros
held comfortable leads during
most of the game but needed
five quick points by Steve Jones
in the closing minutes after the
Pacers cut their deficit to 95-94.
Mel Daniels had 23 points for
Indiana .
The Pacers and Stars each
have :32-18 records while the
Pros have a 31-23 mark.
Rookie Dan Issei scored 39
points and had 13 r ebounds as
the Kentucky Colonels rallied
for a 125-122 tnumph r1ver till'

Don Wells had 16 for Hannan
Trace.
The Wildcats will host Coal
Grove Saturday night.
Box Score:
HANNAN TRACE - Daniels,
2-5-9; Cremeens, 4-3-11; Swain,
2-2-6; Waugh, 1-3-5; Queen, 2-04; Caldwell, 5-2-12; and Ours, 10-2. TOTALS 17-15-49.
SYMMES
VALLEY
Saunders, 3-2-8 ; Roach, 7-5-19;
Taylor, 1-0-2; Myers, 6-1-13;
Wilson, 2-3-7; Willis, 4-1-9;
Laufman, 5-0-10; Robinson, 1-24; and Risley, 1-0-2. TOTALS 3014-74.
By Quarters:
sv
18 32 56 74
HT
9 18 32 49

Open 9-5 Mon. Thru Thurs. - 9-8 Fr~day - 9-9 Sat.

. Reed Paces Knicks To

Memphis Ooses. In On Leaders

•

Decision

74-49

Pro Grid Draft To Start
Thursday Morning

,.•

78.
EASTEHN - D. Davts, 9-52:3; Nance, 1-2·4; Dca~
Salisbury, 6-1-U; Ruark, 0-0-0;
:n foul shots for 66 per cent.
Eastern sank 28 of 74 from the Denny Salishury, :3-3-9; E.
field and 13 of 19 free throws. Salisbury, 4-0-!l; (~ . Davis, 5-2The Pirates are now idle until 12; and Ison , 0-0-0. TOTALS 28Tuesday, Feb. 2 when they host 13-69.
By Quarters:
Southwestern.
NG
25 18 11 24 78
E
12 22 24 13-69
Box score:
Reserve score: Eastern 69
NORTH GALLIA - Clark, 96-24; Glassburn, 3-2-8; Howell, North Gallia 46.
1-0-2; D. Justus, 4-2-10; L.
Justus, 5-6-16; Pelfrey, 7-4-18;
and Stout, 0-0-0. TOTALS 29-20-

12

PONCHOS

ONLY

•3.00

VALUES

ODDS AND ENDS

INFANTS
SLEEPERS
AND
GIRLS
PAJAMAS

TO
'5.99

KITCHEN GADGET ASSORTMENT

4

FOR

•1 00

FAMOUS NAME

FRAMED
PICTURES

PORTABLE
MIXERS

'5.00

GET
JUMBO
SAVINGS
AT
SHOPPER'S
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CHARM STEP
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-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. '1:1, 1971

Never too Many
Pre-Teen Cooks

•

Pictures and Report
By Charlene Hoeflich
"Too many cooks spoil the broth."
Not necessarily so.
That old adage just didn't hold true for a group of 15 preteen cooks - scouts of Middleport Junior Troop 39 - who
prepared a spaghetti dinner which was good to the last bite.
While the girls didn't exactly present a picture of competence in the kitchen, what they lacked in skill was more
than compensated for in interest and enthusiasm.
Miss Joanna Distler, home economist for the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co., issued instructions to the
various work groups as they made meatballs, mixed
spaghetti sauce, cut vegetables for a salad, stirred up punch,
baked cupcakes, and served it all in a little over an hour.
It was their third lesson in a four-part cooking course
offered by the Electric Co. Next Monday night the girls will
entertain their mothers at a tea in the Electric Co. social
rooms.

•
•

Robert Mabry and Richard
Pierce, both Rio Grande College
students from Gallia County,
have been selected to appear in
the 1970 edition of Who's Who
Among Students in American
Universities and Colleges. They
are among 15 students from Rio
Grande College selected to
appear in the 1970 edition.
The Rio Grande College
students honored this year were
selected by campus nominating
TOP CHOICE
OAKLAND (UPI) - Charles
0. Finley Tuesday introduced
his new choice to run his
baseball team, Dick Williams.
"My job is to win ball
games," said Williams, a 41year-old who coached for
Montreal last season.
He is the fo,u rth manager for
the Oakland A's in the four
years the team has been here.

•

Youth Week is Being Observed
Special activities are being
held at the Rutland Church of
the Nazarene in observance of
Youth Week.
On Sunday evening approximately 160 young people
attended a service conducted by
personnel of the Exodus Center
in Columbus. The program

dealt with drugs and the influence of Christ in helping fight
drug temptation.
On Monday evening a party
was held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Grate. Movies
were shown and refreshments
served. Attending were Donna
Grate, Wanda Vining, Mrs.

LHOSPITAL NEWS

Rio Students Honored

PAM POWERS, JUDY GILKEY, and Tracy Burdette cleaned and cut the vegetables
and prepared a homemade dressing for the tossed salad.

ANN PEARCH, VELVET SWISHER, Cathy Meadows, and Mary Boggs did the cleanup
work after preparing the spaghetti. In the background is Miss Joanna Distler, home
economist for the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., cooking teacher for the girls.

TERRI FOX, ANGELA MARTIN, Terri McDaniel, and Terri Zirkle made the meatballs for the spaghetti dinner.

committees and the editors of
the directory on the basis of
their academic achievement,
service to the community,
leadership in educational and
extra-curricular activities,
citizenship, and future potential.
Mabry, currently assistant
basketball coach at Rio Grande,
led the nation in rebounding for
three consecutive years, the
first player in the history of the
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics to do so,
and was named to the NAIA AllAmerican First Team. Last
season he was drafted by both
the ABA and the NBA, but chose
to return to the campus and
complete
his
degree
requirements for graduation.
Pierce, currently a resident of
Rio Grande, is a 1962 graduate
of Chillicothe High School. He is
a senior majoring in English,
with a minor in economics, and
has an accumulative average of
better than 3.8 on a 4.0 scale.

SERVICE SET
Funeral services for Roy Van
Cooney, 58, who died Tuesday
morning at the home of a sister,
\ Miss Hazel Van Cooney, 522
Grant St., Middleport, will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral home
with the Rev. Bill Perrin officiating. Burial will be in the
Middleport Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
and home at any time.
Mrs.

Sonia Parsons, Larry
Mildred; Della Cleland,
Hattie Woodard, Billie Hill,
Mrs. Edna Davidson, Rita and
Sherri Vining, Beverly Grate,
the Rev. and Mrs. Lloyd
Grimm, Loretta Tackett, Bob
Grimm, Debbie Jewett, Mike
Grate, Vickie Grate, Don
Hysell, Deanna Denny, Teresa

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar st. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry D.
Schoolcraft, Vinton, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Merrill E. Geer,
Wellston, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard R. Condee, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, a son; and Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Sears, Jackson , a
son.
Discharges
Wilbert N. Busler, Mrs. Ola
E . Craig, Teddy J . Dillard, Mrs.

CELERY

-

bch.

% lb.
pkg.

19C

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating
Your Dependable
Dealer For

PLUMBING
AND

HEATING
Phone 992·2550

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

.'9.95

only

With Exchange
Casing

BANKAMERICARD.

BAKER

GENERAL TIRE SALES
Middleport

BOILED
HAM

SPARE RIBS

couraged to submit their a pplication materials as soon as
possible.
. .- - - - - - - -...

Jessie Horton , Loretta J . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Johnson, Mrs. Claude Mason,
Harley McFann, Jefferson
Miller, Mrs. Bobby E. Molden
and infant son, Francis L.
Shaver, Mrs. James N.
Shumate, Mrs. Stella L. Smith,
Miss Bertie M. Staley, Helen
Marie Toland, Mrs. Clifford W.
Ward, Mrs. Sarah E. Yaggi,
Melissa Robie, Winfred M.
Cardwell,
Miss
Mildred
Gilman, and Jill M. Houdashelt.

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
JAN. 28
THRU 30

Large Size Fresh

COLUMBUS - High school
seniors and
other
undergraduate students planning
to begin classes next autumn at
Ohio
State
University's
Columbus campus must submit
their applications for admission
no later than May 1, Acting
Admissions Director Edward E.
Rhine said Tuesday.
At the university's regional
campuses in Lima, Mansfield,
Marion and Newark, the application deadline will be Aug.
13.
For
graduate
and
professional students, the final
application date will be Sept. 1.
Prospective students are en-

Regular Retreads

Mitchell, Edith Woodard,
Jennifer Grate, Georgene
Grate, Wendell Grate, Melvin
Cremeans, Randy Haynes,
Denise Garnes, Terry Vining,
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Grate and
Debbie Black.

Produce Features!

J OSU Applicants Deadline May 1

59t

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

l,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,~:,r=='R'Acl~·~·=·:,:;,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,,t:

\~~~~::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;::;.:;:
l\ WAID CROSS
SONS \ \
::;t;~=::;:::;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::;:~~:~
HOLSUM

BAKE

&amp;SERVE

BREAD

.

:~:::::::;:;:::···:·•.,;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::-:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~*

::·:

:~:~

AT TUPPERS PLAINS

LYONS MARKET

!~i·

i.:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::·:·:;:·:·:·~=·:;:;:::;:::;:;:;::::::::::;:~:

Right
Reserved

3 : 1.00

To
Limit

Quantities

GOLDEN CARROTS

2 lb. plcg.

25~

COLONIAL PURE CANE

FRENCH FRIES
21b.
bags

2

69~

ORANGE JUICE
Frosty
Acres

•

3

!!~z.

$}.00

Dairy Features!

ICE MILK

ORANGE JUICE

2

46 Ol
CANS

69~

CHOCOLATE MILK

quart

33~

NO. 2
SIZE

PUFFS
FACIAL
TISSUES

Assorted Flavors

%gal.
carton

LUNCH
MEAT

BLUE BONNETT

MARGARINE

12 oz.
CANS
NESTLES

QUIK

BOXES

LB. CAN

MY-T-FINE

ASSORTED FLAVORS

89¢ PUDDINGS 8

3·J~r 79¢ 3 99¢ 2 79¢
LB.

SUGAR ~~·$1.29
BOXES

gg~

PALMOLIVE LIOUID
DISH
39~
DETERGENT With Coupon
(SAVE 20c )

Exp1res 1-30·71
Good At Big 3 Mkts.

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy

Mason County

Friday, Saturday and Monday

News Notes

Save 1h

By Ahna Marshall

JANUARY 29 AND 30
AND FEBRUARY 1

~

TO

ON MOST ITEMS IN THE STORE
I received a letter from the West Virginia Artists and Craftsmen's Guild, full of humor, which marked it having been written
by 0. L. (Tubby) FitzRandolph, Ohio River Road, near Pt.
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. FitzRandolph shared their booth with us last year
at Mason County Fair and my husband and I thoroughly enjoyed
their company. They have a lot in common. They both whittle!
A couple of weeks before Christmas, Mrs. FitzRandolph
received a call from a fellow in Maryland who wanted to know if
Tubby could whittle an eagle. The West Virginia Dept. of Commerce had told him that Mr. FitzRandolph might be able to do it.
The fellow wanted something purely American, by an American,
even of American wood. Tubby told him he had an eagle in basrelief, with about a four-foot wing spread, which he had carved of
sassafras wood which made it pure American.
The caller said, "Send it, but I think they also want a full-bodied
standing eagle about two foot high."
The fellow told Tubby he would check and let him know the
next day. The next day he called back to say they wanted the
standing eagle carved and painted in natural colors. And by
Christmas!
Tubby said he would try, and according to him, you should
have seen the chips fly. He got it whittled, painted and sent it off
by the deadline. FitzRandolph concluded, "When you've lived,
slept and eaten with a bald eagle for nine days, you're glad to see
him go, even in an airplane."
And I want you to know that both eagles were presented to U.
S. Secretary of State Rogers as Christmas gifts.
THIS GIVES YOU AN IDEA of the realistic carvings this
talented man turns out - I saw carvings of male and female Bob
whites so realistic that from a short distance they looked like the
real birds-even the feet looked so real. I still don't know how he
does it. Inspiration from his wife, Helen, I know helps a lot.
Many of you, I am sure, have seen the sign on Rt. 62 on the
road to Pt. Pleasant which reads, "My Wife and 1," which is an
example of his talent.
FitzRandolph in his letter went on to say that he received a
letter from Colleen Anderson of Cabin Creek Quilts. He said,
"You know that is the group of girls up the creek who pieced some
quilts that were taken to Boston and sold. They got orders for
more and now there are 50 in that community in stitches. Their
quilts are selling in large stores in Boston and Chicago.
FOGLESONG'S AMBULANCE in Mason has been rushing
expectant mothers to hospitals in the area for over 45 years,
always managing to get there in time. But not New Year's eve.
They missed the race with the stork when Allyson Maxine Wom
was born enroute to St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, on the
new Memorial Bridge, delivered by her grandmother, Mrs.
Maxine Grimm of Letart, W.Va. Allyson weighed 7 pounds and 14
ounces.
The proud parents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul (Claudia) Wolfe of
Mason. They are also the parents of the twins, Paul and Amy, 14
months. Other grandparents are Harry Grimm, Letart, W.Va.;
Mrs. Virginia Wolfe, Syracuse, 0., and a great-grandmother,
Mrs. Mae Reitmire, New Haven. Red Tucker, the ambulance
driver, bla'lled the delay on icy roads.
That's quite a record, the first infant born in the ambulance in
all those years.

Birthday
is Celebrated
Mrs. Ralph Keller, Pomeroy,
Since Mrs. Keller's hobby is
Route 3, was honored guest at a
birthday celebration Sunday at
the home of her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Keller.

making quilts, the large cake
centering the dinner table was a
replica of a quilt. The afternoon
was spent Playing games,
music and viewing movies.
Those enjoying the hospitality
of the Keller family were Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Keller, Ernest
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Orr
and Randy, Rodney and Russell
Keller.
Telephoning greetings to Mrs.
Keller during the weekend were
her sister, Mrs. Hilda Weber,
and her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Williams and family, Columbus.

Visit i·n Florida

BELINDA FRIEND
Belinda Friend, 13-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Friend, Route 3,
Pomeroy, has been selected
Christian Youth Crusader of the
Month. Belinda, In the
Crusaders Qass of the CYC,
was selected for the honor on
the basis of achievements in
Christian
work
during
December. The CYC program is
sponsored by the Laurel aiff
Free Methodist Church and
Mrs. Madeline Haggy is
director. The Heralds, Cadets
and Crusaders are the three
divisions of the CYC program
which is open to all yotmg
people.

Reeds are Hosts of
C. B. C. Recently
REEDSVILLE
The
C.B.C.'s met with the Dohrman
Reed family for their January
meeting with the new officers,
Dohrman Reed president·
' president;'
Donald Myers, vice
Margaret Brown, secretary,
and
Ernest
Whitehead,
treasurer, serving.
The group voted to send a
. .
.
contnbutwn to the Coolvtlle E-R
squad, and committee reporb
were gtvcn and disC"ussrd.
H&lt;:frcshruenL'i were served to
the Donald Myers, Walter
Brown, Denver Weber, Ernest
Whitehead,
and
Warren
Pickens f&lt;illllli(·'· Thf'

Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Mora
have returned from Bradenton,
Fla. where they visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Purley
Karr. Their visit was a surprise
for Mr. Karr, who observed his
birthday on Jan. 19. Sixteen
couples joined the Karrs for a
celebration.
Before returning to Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. Mora toured
Southern Florida and visited
various points of interest including a shell factory at Fort
Myer.

.....................iC

iC

t

~

A THOUGHT:
FOR TODAY ~

iC Great eaters and great -+c
iC sleepers are incapable of iC
iC anything else that is it
-+c
it great .
~
- Henry IV of France ~

~

••
•

!it

!it

it
it
.it
i'
iC

!

••• !

~
i'

t

it
it
:

-+c

DRIVE-IN !
it
BANKING !

.
-+c
Fn_days On!y
1e
The Dnve-1 n Wmdow iC
. 0 pen
•i'
IS
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
-+c
(Continuously)
~

~ Other Banking Hours 9
and 5 to 7 as usual
iC Fridays.

!

••

It's Quick! Easy

!
to 3

fARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS

k

on~

~

!

i'
it

Bargains galore for men, women and boys. Remember, we
have just 2 sales per year! This is the one you have awaited.
Come, see your friends, they will be here, too. Onors open
promptly at 9 a.m. Friday. All sales cash.

CLOSED ALL DAY
THURS., JAN. 28
PREPARING
FOR THIS SALE

[ .. ~ 1!1 ;1!1 ~ [ .. •·] fl;jl] i {1

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS 1h PRICE
All from our regular stock of fine quality slacks. Some are
washable. Sizes 28 to 48. You will want several of th ese. A small
charge for alterations. Reg. 10.98 to 19.98.

NOW 1f2 PRICE

Sale Price 5.49 to 9.99

Plaids, Plain colors and stripes. Both single and double breas1ed slyl(·s .
This is a must for you to see. Regular, shorts and longs. Reg. Price $65.00
to $100.00.
Sizes 35 to 48.
Our Price Now Just $32.50 to $50.00

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS 1h PRICE
Long sleeve, both plain colors and fancy patterns. Most of these
never need ironing. Sizes S, M, L &amp; XL. Some are tapered. Reg.
4.98 to 8.98.
Now Going At 2.49 to 4.49

Y2 PRICE

NOW

ODD LOT LUGGAGE 1h PRICE
Both Men's &amp; Womens Sty les . A very good name in luggage.

IBoth Single and Double breasted in all the latest styles &amp; Colors. Regular,
Short &amp; Long. Reg. 39.50 to 55.00.
Sale Price 19.75 to 27.50

Mens

Odd Lot Mens

Reg. Price 18.95 to 3S.OO

Mens Outerwear 1/z Price

Aannel Shirts 1h Price

Casual Slacks 1h Price

Not all colors in a ll styles but this is a real buy at 9.48 to 17.50.

Not all sizes in all colors. This is a real
buy. Reg. 7.98 to 12.98
Now Only 3. 99 tv 6.49
Small charge for alterations .

A very good name in sh irts. Just right
for those cold days ahead or you can get
them for next winter. Sizes 14112 to 19.
Reg. 3.49 to 5.98.
For 3 Days Only 2.33 to 3.99

Both Short and Long Styles in nylon,
wools &amp; Dacron-Cotton. Some of these
are belted. Sizes 36 to 50. You will
certainly recognize them as very good
names in Outerwear.
Reg. 18.98 to 60.00
Yours Now for Only 9.99 to 30.00

Mens Sleeveless
SWEATERS 1fz PRICE

Mens Sweaters 1h Price

SPECIAL!

Most are washable. A nice
assortment of colors. Some are
belled. Reg. 5. 98 to 14. 98.
Sale Price2.99to7.49

Cardigan &amp; Slipover styles in fancy and
plain colors. Our over-buying is your
gain. An excellent selection of sizes and
colors. Reg. 9.98 to 1.9.98. You will want
more than one of these at 4.99 to 9.99.

MEN'S HANKIES
Limit 12
Per Customer

~~

Boys Sweaters 1h Price

"His 'n Hers"
Matching .Sweater 1fz Price

Not every color in every size.
Reg. 3.98 to 5.98.
Now Only 1.99 to 2.99

Slipover and button up styles.
Sizes 8 to 18. Some are
washable. Reg. 6.98 to 8.98.
Sale Price 3.49 to 4.49

Slipover and Button
Front
sty"les. A fairly good run of
sizes.
Reg. 13.98 &amp; 14.98, Now 6.99 &amp;
7.49

Mens All Weather
Coats 1h Price

Odd Lot Ladies
Blouses 1/2 Price

Some are belied. Reg. 29.50 to
49.50. You must see these at
14.75 to 24.75.

Sizes are broken. Reg. 4.98 t o
6.98
Now Only 2.49 to 3.49

Sleeveless and Cardigan styles.
Most of these are washable .
Reg. 7.98 to 12.98
Sale Price 3.99 to 6.49

Big Rack of Ladies Slacks,
Sk1rts &amp; Dresses one-third off.

Mens Sweat Shirts Vz Price

Odd Lot Mens Short Sleeve
Sweat Shirts lfz Price

Ladies Blouses '13 off
You will certainly recognize
these as a very good name in
blouses . Sizes 10 to 18. Reg.
Price 5.98 to 10.98. You will
want more than one of these at
3.99 to 7.32.

Men's Pajamas

Nylon and Nylon Blends. Sizes S,
M, L &amp; XL. A nice c&gt;ssortment of
colors. Reg. 6.98 to 10.98.
Sale Price 4.32 to 7.32

Flannel and Broadcloth. Sizes AB-C &amp; D. Some never need
ironing. Reg. 4.98 to 7.98.
Now Only 3.32 to 5.32 .

Mens Dress Shoes
lfz PRICE

~off

Mens Dress Shirts
'13 OFF

1h PRICE

Meigs Marauder V-Ner.k
Sweaters '13 OFF

Mens &amp; Boys Winter
GLOVES 1h Price

Maroon and GoldS. M &amp;
L. Req . 5.98. These wash
like a dream now just
3.99.
.

Reg. 1.98 to 7.98
Keep your hands warm
for just 1.00 to 3.99.

Me•gs Marauder Nylon

Mens &amp; Boys Pile Lined

Warm Up Jackets

Western Jackets
1
/a oH

4.00
Reg. 9.98 Value. Kerm just
bought too many.

There is nothing wrong
with these but we are
tired of looking at them.

Boys Winter Jackets

Mens &amp; Boys
Winter Caps 1fz Price

Dork GrE·y with Imprint
on fron I. These are for
Girls and Boys.

Values to 80.00

Slipover and zipper styles. Grey,
Red, Orange, Green &amp; Navy
Blue. Sizes S, M, L &amp; XL. There is
no excuse for being cold. Reg.
5.98 to 7 .98.
Sale Price 3.99 to 5.32

Wools, Nylons and Corduroys.
Not as many as usual but this
is a real buy at 4.49 to 9.99.
Reg . Price 8.98 to 19.98.

1.00

EACH

Mens Hooded
Sweat Shirts ¥3 off

Button Cuff and French Cuff.
White and colored. Sizes are
broken. Reg. 5.98 to 9.00.
Now Only 3.99 to 6.00

KNIT SHIRTS

$20

Long sleeves in a n1ce selection of
colors. We just bought too many. Cotton
and Orion blends that are shrink
resistant.
Reg. Pr ice3.98to5.98
Now Only 1.99 to 2.99

A very good name in shoes, so
stop in and see for yourself.
Sizes are broken . Reg. 16.95 to
24.95.
Sale Price 8.48 to 12.48

Plaslics,
Wools
&amp;
Corduroy.
Reg. 2.98 to 6.98
Yours for 1.49 to 3.49

Topcoats

Sweateis 1h Price

You can certainly be a better dressed
wife ( or Girlfriend) after you buy
these. He will not believe what you paid
for these slacks from 7.98 to dresses at
22.50.
Now Going at 5.32 to 15.00

Mens Short Sleeve
Knit Shirts lh off

2 ONLY
MEN'S

Odd Lot Ladies

Reg. 7.98 to 8 .98
Sale Price 5.32 to 5.99

co. !

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
slem

Each

LOOK!

It's The ''Big Sale''
Starting Friday!

it

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE -

POMEROY

�9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. '1:1, 1971

•

•

•

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9 -SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, JAN. 31, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
LADIES'
ONE SIZE
MEN'S

PANTY HOSE ·oUU.!IJ.I!J

STRIPED

•

MIRACLE STRETCH panty hose.
Comes in colors: Pacific, cinn., •nrr.~Tfil
brown, coffee, black.

JEANS
Sizes 29-38
~ ~ripe

NYLON

jeans
and flare

HALF SLIPS

TODDLERS'

PAJAMAS

A great selection of short &amp; overage
length half-slips. Complete with tailored and lace trim . Sizes S-M-L

• Double roll grippers
• Assorted prints
• Sizes: 2 to 4

2 PAIR

•

92(

$299

bottoms.

$300
HECK'S REG. $2.96

HECK'S REG. $1.99 PAIR

Cl.DTHI/IG DEPT.

Cl.DTHI/IG DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$3.88

HECK'S
REG.
$1.28

Cl.DTHING
Dept•

Cl.DTH//IG
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$6.99

Cl.DTHI/IG
DEPT.

% -OFF

FRUIT OF THE LOOM

3 piece tank set is made of cotton and is
available in assorted colors.

ON ALL
MEN'S
MATCHED

WINTER CLOTHING

PERMANENT PRESS

WORK SETS

SIMILAR TO
ILLUSTPATION

PANTS

Made of heavy-weight service
twill in colors of navy,
charcoal, olivewood, spruce
green.

•

..

~-

MEN'S

CI.DfHING
., DEPT.

~

COVERALLS

BIRDSEYE
"LinLE TOTS"

DIAPERS

SIZE: 27x27

Blue denim coveralls
in sizes 36-46.

2

AREA RUGS

DOZEN

$300

S]66

HECK'S REG.
$2.00 Doz •

CI.DTHIIIG DEPT.

SHIRTS

,.__.• SELECTION OF AREA RUGS IN TOPAZ,
.......,.__. RED, WHITE, PLUM, AND TANGERINE .
~"'~~ CHOOSE FROM FOLLOWING SIZES.

$1 66
1'Tir.%&gt;J• 27"x45" ........... . . . . ...... $2 66
l'I'I":P.oo..-• 24"x65" ................. . . .. $3 66
36" x60" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5 66

LITTLE TOTS

Hit 'Em Hard Brand

CRIB SHEETS

24"x34" ........ . ... ...... .. .

•

HECK'S REG. $2.29

Available in white or prints.

HECK'S REG. $8.99

RETAIL
VALUES TO
$6.99

ClDTHI/IG DEPT.

$100

ClDTHIIIG DEPT

HECK'S REG. To $1.28

ClOTHIN' DEPT.

CI.DTHING DEPT.

•
••

MAGIC
SLATE

27~

PAINT BY
NUMBER SETS

12

BIG D
LOON IE

TOY HORNS

STRAW

Realistic looking toy horns
in three different models.

Styles
GIRL'S

HANDBAGS

HECK'S
REG. 34~
Pt Pleasant

CRAFTMASTER

CHOOSE FROM 2 STYLES

HECK'S
Heck's Reg. $1.88

Pt Pleasant Store Only

REG.

78~

Pl Pleasant
Store Only

64!CH

SELECTION INCLUDES: SAXA·
PHONE, CLARINET OR TRUM·
PIT.

ss~CH
HECK'S REG. 84•

HECK'S REG. 94•

TOY DEPT.

PAINT BY
NUMBER SETS

$1.47
HECK'S REG. S}.88
Pl Pleasant
Store Only

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 27,1971

•

SAFE-T-SALT

BAR BELL5

Melt Ice &amp; Snow

. ..
·-:
.

HARNELL

SPIN &amp; SPINCAST RODS

bag

Pt Pleasant Store Only

SHIRTS

77(

Clothing Dept

e

INSULATED

Heck's Reg. $1.28

Pt Pleasant Store Only

HARDWARE DEPT.

2-CELL

POCIET KNIFE

FLASHLIGHT

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
FLUID
-~ . .-;~~·----

-CHOICE

$166

c

HECK'S REG. $5.99

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

~

.
- ~...
}./-.

"

LOCK &amp;LUBE DE-ICER

• Thaws frozen locks instantly • No
more broken or bent keys • Spray
into doors, trunk, ignition, all outdoor
locks. To lubricate and prevent
freezing-up •
Ex·cel lent lock
lubrication all year 'round • ?revents
rusting • Use for all house locks.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

AUTO CLOTHES BAR
Ad justable rings keep clothes from sliding. Rod
extends to fit most cars.
HECK'S REG.

$ 1 •99

$122

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.
4 oz.

CLING

FAN BELT DRESSING

39(
HECK'S REG. 58'

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

7" TWIN PACK REFILLS

39&lt;
HECK'S REG. 59'

e

•

DELUXE

79(

and 6012.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

s:~li~

OUTDOOR- THERMOMETER

Temperature range from
-60°
to
120°.
Adjustable bracket.

numbe~:4001,4002,6006

HECK'S REGULAR
$1.57

'I&gt;

AUTOMOT:II'/I!Jiii'EIIillil

Available in the following

CHOICE

58#

HECK'S REG. 85 4

SEAL
BEAMS

.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

SYLVANIA

40-60-75-100 WAn

l\ .

HECK'S REG. 38'

-

, LIGHT BULBS

j~oo
~ 'J~· · ~· " .

19 .u&amp;1

mnhll
.

HECK'S
REG.
994

37(

•

QUART

SIZES

WRENCH

HECK'S REG.

SPORTS
DEPT.

SNOW SHOVELS

f
66#

•

PRECISE

STEEL

-

BOOTS
$588

Heck's Reg. $7.77

Hammer forged b lue polished blades • Mirror
polished nickel-silver bolsters • Bross lined • Stur·
dy construction • Mode in Germany • Bone handles• 2 or 3 Blade

HECK'S REG.
$6.99

.

DEPT.

Pt Pleasant Store Only

$4''

.

HARDWARE

$470 .

.

COLEMAN LANTERN

KIT

LEE
OIL FILTER

$J999

$21.97

COLEMAN STOVE
$167

BERNZ-0-MATIC

·

covered by utro-wide guard. e
k"P' .awdust away from cutting
line for b.tter visibility. • Aceeph
optional U·l9l~ Rip ftnu. e &amp;.vet
and depth odj•.atment1 quickly of'ld
easily mode. • 71H "' combmohon
btode h 'tondord equipment.

MEN'S

SPORTS DEPT.

HOUSE JACK

Sofety-opproved for 7%" ond 6 )IJ
" blades. Smaller blade i1 safely

finished ~inyl plates. Two 1.4"
dumbell bars w irl'l two
chrome·plotes
re'tol.,.ing
slee....s . Four dumbbell collars.
0 Billard lifetimer Barbell
Troinin9 Chart.

PLAID WOOL

66~

• 1 HP motor gins all the power
ne.ded to handle tou"hell jobs. 8

interlocking gold·

GENERATOR FOR NO. 425

STRAP
TIRE CHAINS

POWER SAW

Io rge outside collars with
handle bolt wrench, Four 1().
pound, four 5-pound, four 2

SPORTS
DEPT.

GENERATOR FOR
NO. 220 &amp; 228

59~

71/•"BLACK &amp; DECKER

HECK'S REG.

.

COLEMAN PARTS

19¢

• For homes, porches, cellars and
basements e Easily adjustable •
Heavy duty all steel construction •
Compact, trim • Costs little, lasts a
lifetime.

. "'

SPORTS DEPT.

PLAYING
CARDS

foot bor and one

$1499

RETAIL VALUES TO $50.00

Pt Pleasant Store Only

/

.-. :

SPICIAlPURCHASE$12~A!H

59~

Heck's Reg. 2 for

!oiJ.

~=:~~:~:~~:t...~··~::·r~~:~~
collars w1th ut screw _ Two
~·pound

10-lb. 44~
HECK'S REG.

One 5

DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES
DUPONT LUCITE FACTORY
DISCONTINUED COLORS
QUARTS AND GALLONS

Pt Pleasant Store Only
ITEMS AVAILABLE AT ALL CHARLESTON AREA STORES .
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED ••••• • • • • •

•

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