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                  <text>Now You Know
The Romans who designed
the Julian calendar believed
February was an unlucky
month and assigned it the
fewest days of any month of the
year.

•

VOL XXVI

The D aily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

(---------------------------.

lI
I

News ... in Briefs !
By United Press InternaUonal

1

One Dead in Barrio Shootout

•

LOS ANGELES -ONE MAN WAS SHOT and killed and at
least 45 other persons were wounded or injured in violent skirmishes Sunday between sheriff's deputies and Mexican American youths following a window-breaking, looting rampage
in a business area in the East Los Angeles barrio.
A 1{}-square-mile area was declared in a state of emergency.
The county Board of Supervisors put a 6:20p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew
into effect. The violence erupted following a peaceful demonstration by 5,000 Chicanos at Belvedere Park to protest alleged
police brutality against Mexican - Americans.

Abortion Laws Opposed
CLEVELAND - DELEGATES TO THE ANNUAL convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio passed a resolution
Sunday asking the governor and the general assembly to act to
repeal Ohio's abortion laws. After long debate, delegates voted
240-84 for the repeal resolution.
The resolution asks that the abortion laws be repealed and
that guidelines governing abortions be included only in medical
practice laws. The action, which came at the end of a two-day
convention here, was the first time the whole diocese had backed
up Bishop John H. Burt's personal stands against the abortion
laws. In a related a&lt;;tion, the delegates passed a resolution
directing the diocese's department of Christian education to offer
more teaching and counseling on sex and contraception.

Ohio Scout to Visit President
NORTH BRUNSWICK, N.J. -AN OHIO youth will visit with
President Nixon Thursday to celebrate the 61st year of the Boy
Scouts of America. John M. Costine, 16, St. Clairsville, had
progressed to the semi-final competition of the national speaking
contest finals sponsored by the Reader's Digest Association and
the Boy Scouts. As part of his trip to New York City and
Washington for the competition, Costine will meet with the
President.
A $3,000 scholarship will be granted to the winner of the
contest.

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UPI)-The Apollo 14 astronauts probed and jiggled the
docking mechanism of thetr
lunar lander today searching
for what caused its malfunction, while experts on the
ground huddled to decide
whether the problems were
serious enough to abort the
moonwalk.
As Alan Shepard, Stuart A.
Roosa and Ed~ar D. Mitchell
hurtled toward the moon, space
agency officials in Houston said
they might wait right until the
last minute -2:40 a.m. EST
Thursday -to decide whether
to let the team explore the hilly
Fra Mauro sector of the lunar
surface.
The trouble developed Sunday
night, when for a tense hour
and 44 minutes the astronauts
struggled to lock the Kitty
Hawk command ship and the
Antares moon lander.
On the sixth try the space
pilots gave an extra hard shove
with their steering rockets and
linked the two craft. But the

tricky latching procedure raised
questions about risking Friday's
scheduled moon landing. The
two ships would have to link up
again Sunday for the return to
earth, and a recurrence of the
docking problem could endanger moonwalkers Shepard and
Mitchell.
The astronauts asked Mission
Control if they could go to sleep
20 minutes early -and settled
down at 7:45 a.m. for a
scheduled 10-hour rest period.
Before that, they exchanged
information with ground control
about the oxygen flow in the
command module. Authorities
said the oxygen flow was
"higher than normal but not
excessively high." An open
valve in the waste management
system was blamed for the flow
and was fixed before the
astronauts bedded down.
Although the space pilots
were hounded by some problems, their course was so true
that an early morning correction was canceled.
Shepard, America's pioneer

astronaut, and rookies Roosa
and Mitchell blasted off at 4:03
p.m. EST Sunday after black
storm clouds over Cape Kennedy forced a 40-minute delay in
the countdown. The next
difficulty was the docking, an
event handled routinely on six
previous Apollo missions.
Bob Gordon, a space agency
spokesman, said a final decision must be made on whether
to scrub the moon landing
sometime before the maneuver
Thursday that puts Apollo 14
intn orbit around the moon.
Space agency officials said they
weren' t rushing themselves.
Roosa clambered into the
tunnel connecting the Kitty
Hawk and the Antares just
after 3 a.m. EST today. After
65 minutes of probing, twisting,
jiggling and pushing, he told
ground controllers he could not
find what caused the docking
problem.
"We!ve cycled it four or five
times and it just goes in so
easily," Roosa said.
Although the latches worked

manually when Roosa fiddled
with them, there was no
guarantee the docking problem
would not recur at the critical
penod the astronauts were
trying to link up again for the
return flight to earth Sunday.
Ground experts weighed the
danger of a repeat malfunction
against the importance of the
mission's success.
Although Rooosa could not
pinpoint the problem with the
lunar lander latches, he discovered six scratches on the
docking mechanisms, ranging
in length from 3 4 of an inch to
two inches. "They are very
definite scratches, very rough
to the touch," he said.
The astronauts telecast their
jiggling of the mechanisms
back to Houston, where the
ground experts tried unsuccessfully to spot the reason for the
malfunction.
" We've cycled it four or five
times and it just goes in so
easily," Roosa said. "It holds
it."
The astronaut did find some

CANEEL BAY, ST. JOHN, V.I. - PRESIDENT Nixon
relaxed in the warm Caribbean sun today, winding up a long
weekend of swims in the blue green waters and strolls on white
sanded beaches.
The President originally had planned to return to Washington
Sunday, but decided to extend his stay by another day to enjoy the
quiet of his lagoon--side villa.

I!:::::::::;:::;:~~:;:;:;::::~:::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::;:;::::::::

I

•

•

E-R Unit
Goes Out Couples
4 Times

small scratches on the lunar
landing part of the docking
mechanisms. The six scratches
ranged from 3/.a of an inch to
two inches long.
"They are very definite
scratches, very rough to the
touch," Roosa said.
The astronauts telecast shots
of the mechanisms back to
Houston on live television.
Authorities on the ground
examined the pictures to see if
they could spot the malfunction.
" We've exhausted our imagination for right now on the
troubleshooting," Mission Control finally said. " We'll work on
it some more over night and
get back to you in the
morning."
There was no immediate
indication after the efforts by
Roosa to pinpoint the trouble
whether the moon landing
would be scrubbed. Ground
experts appeared to be willing
to give the matter plenty of
thought, since manual operation
of the mechanism would be
impossible after liftoff from the
moon when the critical second
docking between the command
module and the lunar lander
takes place.
Despite the delays and the
docking problems, the Apollo 14
was moving so accurately
toward the moon that its first

mid-course correction, scheduled for 3:40 a.m. EST, was
canceled.
"We'll give it a good ride,"
Shepard, 47, America's first
man in space, said shortly after
blastoff.
" Everybody's in great shape,
having a ball !" reported
Mitchell as the astronauts
entered the weightlessness of
space.
On the sixth docking try,
three hours after launch, the
astronauts used a tiny nitrogen
bottle to apply the pressure
which allowed 12 "docking
latches" to link the two vessels.
Normally, the docking latches
snap into place after three
"capture latches" pull the
spacecraft close together. But
the capture latches failed to
function.
Cheers Ring Out
Cheers rang out in the
Houston control room when
Shepard announced there had
been "a good hard dock." The
two vessels had sped 20,000
miles through space during the
futile attempts at link-up.
The 40-minute delay in
launching will be made up
during the flight to the moon.
The speed of the Apollo 14 will
be increased slightly during a
mid-course maneuver tonight to
(Continued on Page 8)

Auto Split

• Juvenile Tried
and speeding, which constitutes
reckless operation of a motor
vehtcle under Ohio law, according to the court.
The court suspended his
driving rights three years, or
until he graduates from high
school. He was ordered to attend juvenile court school every
Saturday and every vacation
while attending high school.
The adult who purchased the
intoxicating beverages for the
minors was ordered arrested by
the court to be charged with
contributing to the delinquency
of four minors.

TEN CENTS

Moon Strolls Doubt ul

Relaxing. . .in the Sun

Paul
VanCooney,
16,
Pomeroy Rt. 4, driver of the
motor vehicle in which Jerry
Napper, also of Pomeroy Rt. 4,
was fatally injured in Rutland
recently, was tried li1 the Meigs
County Juvenile Court.
Charged with reckless
operation, VanCooney was
found guilty of driving under the
influence of an intoxicating
beverage, driving left of center,

Fair south, chance of snow
flurries in the extreme north.
Little change in temperatures
tonight, lows five above to five
below zero. Highs Tuesday in
the low and middle teens.

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 203

Weather

I

JAMES SOULSBY AND BOB BEEGLE of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. check the back portion of a car that
crashed in Minersville today at 1:55 a.m. Driver of the car

was Harold W. Brinker, 21, Racine, Rt. 2. Brinker was
seriously injured.

A car was split in half and the
driver
was
hospitalized
following a one car accident
today at 1:55 a.m. on SR 124 in
Minersville.
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach's dept. said
H11rolq W. Brinker, 21, Racine.
. .r.t. 2, who was being pursued by
Pomeroy policeman George
Hicks and Deputy Sheriff Bob
Beegle, was traveling east on
124 at a high r&lt;\te of speed. As
Brinker's car passed another
vehicle, it began to fishtail.
Brinker's car struck and broke
off two utility poles, the back
portion of the car wrapping
itself around a tree. The front
hall of the car hurtled approximately 120 feet from the
tree upriver_
Brinker, who sustained

lacerations, abrasions, broken
ribs, puncture wound in the
shoulder and possible internal
injuries, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy emergency squad and
later was transferred to Holzer
Medical C&lt;&gt;n ter. th hospital
said.
The Meigs county Sheriff's
Dept. reported that the accident
is still under investigation .
Pomeroy police, however, have
cited Brinker on charges of
reckless operation and willfully
eluding a police officer.
Brinker's condition was listed
fair today at noon.
One of the poles broken off
struck a house owned by Tom
Wesson, causing considerable
damage, police said.

I Baptized

Four calls were answered on
the weekend by the Pomeroy ER squad.
At 10:14 p.m. Saturday, the
unit went to the William Jacobs
home on Locust St. Mrs. Jacobs,
who had received a back injury
in a fall , was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.
At 10:07 a.m. Sunday, Ben
Kesterson was removed by the
squad from his Minersville
residence to a Foglesong ambulance which took him to
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt.
Pleasant.
At 12:57 a .m. today Harold
Brinker, Racine Route 2,
seriously injured in an auto
accident, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and then
transferred to the Holzer
Medical Center. His condition is
fair .
At 9:35 a.m. today the squad
went to Meigs High School
. where a student, Sharon McDaniel, had fainted. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment.

In River

" Shall we gather at the river ;
the beautiful, the beautiful
river."
The lyrics of this aged hymn
sung by a group of relatives and
friends - accompanied only by
a piercing wind from the water
- was the background music
Sunday afternoon for the
baptismal of five Chester area
couples in the icy, Ohio River.
Men from the Chester Church
of the Nazarene, using clubs,
broke ice along the banks of the
"Old Ohio" at the Racine levee
to provide a walkway for the
five couples who walked into the
f&lt;eezing water to receive the
rites of baptism from the Rev.
Herbert Grate, pastor, and the
Rev. Roy Rose, pastor of the
Coolville Methodist Charge.
Before entering the frigid
water, the five couples again
expressed their faith during
ceremonies conducted by the
Rev. Mr. Rose. Then , they
Two Calls Taken
moved one at a time - the
Two calls were answered over ladies first - to receive the
the weekend by the Middleport
E-R squad. At 11:15 p.m.
Saturday it went to the Cecil
Evans home, 441 Broadway,
where Mr. Evans was dead
The Meigs County Sheriff's
upon the squad's arrival, and at Dept. reported heavy damage
9:56a.m. Sunday, to the home of in a one car accident Saturday
Mrs. Verna Davis, 87, County at 8:15p.m. on Township Road
Road 4, near Harrisonville. 53, two miles south of Route 681.
Mrs. Davis had apparently
Gregory Bryan Parks, 20,
fallen and was found by a neigh- Zanesville, driving down a steep
bor on the floor of her home. She hill, hit a rut, lost control, and
was taken to Veterans slid sideways over an emMemorial Hospital where she bankment. There were no inwas admitted.
juries or arrest.

Auto Wrecked

CHARLES BISSELL, whose four son8 and their wives, received rites of baptism in the
icy Ohio River Sunday and another member of the Chester Church of the Nazarene clear
away ice along the bank to make,a walkway for those taking part in the service.
rites. Leavmg the water, each
was greeted by friends and
relatives and given a wrap to
provide some kind of warmth
against the 10 above zero
weather which seemed even
colder punctuated by wind
across the turbulent water.
Some of the baptized went
into a small van at the levee
foll!&gt;wing the rites . Others
walked a distance up the river
bank to a heated van where they
changed into dry clothing.
Of the total 10 receiving the
baptismal rites in the freezing
ceremonies Sunday, four were
sons of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bissell, Chester. Their sons'
wives all received the rites . The
group included Glen and Naomi
Bissell, Dwight and carolyn
Bissell, Douglas and Carolyn
Bissell, Roger and Sue Bissell
and Gilbert and Vicky Pooler
Woods.
When the final baptismal had
taken place, the onlooking
friends and relatives joined to
sing "0, Happy Day ."
Yes, it was a happy - but a
cold, cold clay.

FRIENDS AND RELATIVES, bundled up for a baptismal service in the Ohio River Sunday at the Racine levee,
sang as five couples were baptized in the freezing river.

•
RECEIVE RITES -Rites of Baptism were administered Sunday in the Ohio River to
nine members of the Chester Nazarene Church. Above are four scenes during the senice.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Feb. 1, 1971

The Hand that Feeds Him

EDITORIALS

WIN AT BRIDGE

Good Fa lse-cords
Can Be for Real

Think Now About
Next Earthquake

Cambodians Vow
Liberty or Death

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH

In a disaster, people do first the things they are trai':led
to do rather than the things that are most urgent: Firemen look for fires, policemen direct traff1c a_nd . guard
against Jaw violations, utility workers restore utilities and
administrators hold meetings.
Only later do they organize to perform the unusual
tasks, such as search and rescue.
This is one of a number of observations made by a team
of social scientists who studied human reactions to the
Alaska earthquake of 1964, both imme~iately after t~e
event and in the long term. The r~port IS the secon~ m
an eight-volume series being comp1Ied by the Committee
on the Alaska Earthquake of the National Research
Council in an investigation originally commissioned by
President Johnson.
Under normal conditions, says the report, if a child is
lost or a person is trapped in a bu_ilding ~hat has &lt;;ollapsed, massive efforts are started Immediately to fmd
or rescue the victim.
But in Anchorage, systematic search and rescue was
delayed until the next morning, more than 12 hours after
the 5:36 p.m. quake. Manpower that could hav~ been
used in search and rescue efforts was devoted mstead
to the prevention of looting.
The danger of looting after a natural disaster is greatly
exaggerated in the public mind, says the report. In
Kodiak, for example, charges were brought in only orfe
instance, and these were dismissed when the goods were
returned. Many items that people reported stolen had
been washed out to sea.
The behavior of Alaskans was typical of behavior in
similar situations elsewhere, the investigators found.
Large numbers of people worked heroically for long
periods without much food or rest. They shared their
homes, clothing and food with others less fortunate, without regard to class or status. Local heroes emerged who
exercised leadership at crucial points.
But as soon as the first emergency problems were under control, attitudes changed. People expected or even
demanded outside help. Firms that had offered supplies
"free for the duration" asked for reimbursement and
workmen demanded pay for overtime.
Actually, because of fortunate location and timing, the
earthquake-even though it was the greatest shock ever
recorded on the continent-caused relatively little damage in terms of lives lost ( 131) and property destroyed
(about $300 million). The influx of federal funds made up
most of the losses.
But we may not be so lucky another time, the scientists
warn. A national policy aimed at reducing earthquake
losses, especially in regard to the design and location of
buildings, is needed, they say, "because before the end of
this century it is virtually certain that one or more major
earthquakes will occur on the North American continent."

Day of Romantic Wanes
It's getting harder and harder to be a romantic in the
20th century.
In the course of renovating its castles to attract more
tourists, the state of Hesse in West Germany has turned
Frankenstein's castle into a hotel. The old castle , near
Darmstadt, dates back to 1252 and is where Baron Frankenstein, an early pioneer in transplant surgery, created
his scary monster-at least in the novel by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley.
Now, at a cost of $1 million, a restaurant, hotel rooms
and conference rooms have been transplanted into the
place where once mysterious bubblings ~nd blood-c.urdlin~
screams echoed through dark arui eene corridors.
Another castle famed in literature has been dealt with
less kindly by the modern age.
The walls of the castle at Elsinore, Denmark, where
Hamlet ponde_red whether to be or not to be, are reported
to be crumblmg from the effects of sulfur dioxide and
other industrial pollutants in the air.
So much for romanticism.

• 53

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Voice along Broadway

I

!
!

BY JACK O'BRIAN

NEW YORK - Ex-Yankees'
owner Dan Topping did well
after his long illness at Lake
Tahoe but took a savage fall and
is back in Miami, seriously
ailing again .... National
Maritime Union boss Joe
Curran has his own yacht
(where are the seamen's
.yachts?), but does it have a
union crew? ... . The " Doctors'
Wives" flick would make us
mad if we were a medico ...
Henry Fonda and Roger Vadim
agree on daughter-wife Jane
Fonda's current life style : they
abhor it .... Mrs. Jules Feiffer
and her cartoonist husband
went sorrowfully to Andrew
Anspach, manager of the
Algonquin Hotel, to announce
s9meone hqd heisted her fur
coat, but the boss tut-tutted and
located it right where she'd
stashed it .... Prettiest gals in
the Algonk at teatime were
glamorpuss Alexandra Mayes
of Glamour mag and new-whiz
among young designers Carol

Horne .... Ex-bandleader Henry
Jerome's divorce is from
United Artists Records, not his
wife.
Richard Ottinger, who
thought he could become an
instant statesman by spending
$6,000,000 limping for office last
fall, paid off $4,000,000 but still
owes two mill .... Joe Frazier
prefers training in a hot climate
for his heavyweight defenses
but chose the Concord in the
Sour Cream Alps (Catskills )
because the Concord booked his
jazz group The Knockouts for
$2,000 a week .... A mere bag-ofshells to Joe, soon to pull down
$2,500,000 for his Cassius Clay
fight (we pick Frazier) .
Bob Straile went all the way
to Manero 's in Greenwich,
Conn ., tq a~k Nick Manero if he
should wed Zsa Zsa Gabor,
assuring Nick that Zsa wants to
.... The Algerians who shelter
our bomb-tossers and drug
pushers now find it necessary to
clamp down on their own
university students, many of

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Deforming Rheumatoid Arthritis

Effects Extend Beyond Joints
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.
motion of the bones involved
in the inflamed joint may be
limited. causing an individual to be disabled.
Rheumatoid arthritis
should not be confused with
degenerative arthritis which
is usually related to wear
and tear associated with increasing age . Rheumatoid
arthritis is fairly common
and occurs often in y.:JUng
adults. The average age at
onset is 35 years. It is three
times as common in women
as in men. About five million
people in the United States
have this problem and it
occurs throughout the world.
Rheumatoid arthritis affects the whole body. not just
the joints. Often it begins
subtly as mild attacks of
fatigue and stiffness and
soreness. These episodes
may go away and then recur, gradually becoming
more severe. The swelling
becomes more persistent

By RAY CROMLEY
N EA Washing ton Correspondent

+ AJ3

~=:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;!;:::;::::::::::::~:;:;::::::~::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::·::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::·::::::;::::::::::;:::;:::::·:::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;::::;;;::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::~:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::

Dear Dr. Lam b-I am a
30-year-old female who has
just been told I have rheumatoid arthritis in my feet
and hands. Would you explain what rheumatoid arthritis is and what help is
available?
Dear Reader- Rheumatoid
arthritis is an inflammation
of the joints that causes
swelling.
A joint isn't just a junction
of two bones. The ends of
the bones are enclosed in a
membrane or capsule filled
with fluid. We call this the
joint space. Tips of the bones
within the joint space are
covered with cartilage. Rheumatoid arthritis causes inflammation of the entire
joint space, causing pain and
swelling of the joint. As the
inflammation progresses it
damages the cartilage and
destroys the normal joint
structure, leading to major
deformities. The range of

RAY CROMLEY

There may be nodules near
the joints. Fever is common
and an anemia may occur.
The disease often has remissions for long periods of
time. This makes it difficult
to be certain that any treatment was useful or if the
remission would have occurred spontaneously.
Your doctor can use special tests to confirm the
presence of the rheumatoij
activity
We really don't know what
causes the disease but the
best bets are that it is a reaction to a virus or a complex allergic reaction of the
bodv to an infection and its
own immune mechanism .
I'll discuss another day a
lot of important aspects 'lf
treatment . One of the most
important is the correct use
of simple aspirin. In most
people aspirin is as effective
as or better than any other

Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
HOW COULD SHE TELL EVERYTHING
WA.S DUMPEDONTHEROOR? DID
YOU EVER SEE HER PLA.CE? .......--:?:~'9

medicine. It takes a lot more
than required to relieve a
simple headache. The goal is
not jl!St to relieve pain. The
large doses of aspirin diminish or control the inflammation. This is very important
since the inflammation is
what causes destruction of
the joint. A person being
treated with large doses of
aspirin must continue the
doctor's recommendation
even after the pain is relieved. ONLY YOUR DOCTOR can determine how
much aspirin you should
take if you are going to be
treated with it or a related
medicine .

them pro-Westerns fed up with
the drab uniformity of socialism
.... Paris' Crazy Horse Saloon
was the last of the world's
famed strip joints to go allnekkid .... Celebrity fanciers at
Du Midi snubbed several busty
starlets to beg autographs from
a brace of real glamor gals:
Helen Hayes and Anita Loos ....
Naughty. - an Eastside auction
house peddled a Somali leopard
last week and that's busting the
N.Y. State law.
One of Johnny Carson's new
hobbies is a well-known
socialite, separated legally but
not divorced .... ABC newshen
Marlene Sanders is a fern-lib
type - wants AFTRA (radioTV union ) to list her under some
other classification than
"newsman" even if it has to
invent one .... Ko, l(roadcaster
mightn't do.
Helen Gallagher's been so
busy rehearsing to be a wbw-hit
in " No, No, Nanette" that she
doesn't even know handsome
residuals from TV commercials
are waiting at the AFTRA office
.... Ditto Julie Wilson, Eddie
Cantor's daughter Marilyn
Baker and Dirk Bogarde away
over in ' London .... Howard
Hughes' all-fired Robert
Maheu, once busy getting
authors stopped from writing
Hughes biogs, is writing one of
his own .... U. S. union TV crews
are irked at playwright Arthur
Miller whose "The Price" was
TV-taped in London where the
cost is a fraction; Miller's a
self-appointed sympathizer
with little labor people but
apparently not lately .... Didja
know Christmas was abolished
in the USA for 22 years? Yep, by
the Mass. General Court, 16591681 .... The Puritans did it.
A thought for today: American Writer Robert Ingersoll
said, "Every cradle asks us
'whence?' and every coffin
'whither?" The poor barbarian,
weeping above his dead, can
answer these questions as
intelligently as the robed priest
of the most authentic creed."

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

TIMELY B UCTES
The "under 30" generation are the first world people-the first group of human beings born into and
accepting as their natural
milieu that the world is one,
man is one, that men are
brothers by virture of membership in the species.
-Donald F. Keys, a world

chances of surviving an airplane ride with a f em_ a I e
driver are about three hmes
as good as they are with a
man at the controls.
-Federal Aviation Administration r e p o r t on the
safety r e co r d of wome11
pilots.

organization's representa·
tit•e to tile United Nations .

We began three years ago
to learn to live in a democracy. Your experience beIt's a little bit like selling gan 200 years ago and even
heroin. You say everybody's now your system is not perselling it. so we might as fect.
well get in on it ourselves.
-Vice President N guy e It
-Chest er A. Bowles, former
Cao Ky of South Vietnam.
llllriersecretary of state .
on U.S. weapons sal es to
foreigll 11ations.

Fashion be c a m e a charade, a masquerade, a giant
put-on. No wonder women
of good taste are confused.
-Vi 11 cent Monte-SnanaoSano, president of the
Couture Business CouncU,
on tile 1970 fashion year.

Private colleges and universities are apprehensive
and they have reason to be.
Most colleges are in the red
and many are getting redder, while colleges in the
black are generally growing
grayer.
It would a p p c a r you r

-A report of the Associa·
tio11 of Amencan CoUeges.

WASHINGTON I NEA J
Many Americans were concerned when Russians
marched into Czechoslovakia and the United States did.._
nothing. Maybe there was nothing that could be done. But
we felt uneasy all the same.
We felt queasy when a Lithuanian sailor jumped from
a Soviet ship to what he thought was freedom , and U.S.
Coast Guard officers allowed the Russians to come
aboard, beat the man until he could no longer resist and
take him away.
Today, some Americans are concerned when green,
poorly-armed Cambodians defend themselves against
seasoned North Vietnamese, and strong voices are raised
in the Congress that U.S. airpower should not be used to
slow down the Commun ist forces in order to give these
Cambodians the chance they have earned to figh t for their
freedom.
It is easy to understand t he worry on Capitol Hill. This
country slipped deeply into the Vietnam war somewhat
haphazardly and without adequate discussion.
Congressional worry has intensified because on Cambodia, as on Vietnam, there has not been that frank giveand-take on the issues and on intent that would make for
confidence and understanding. There has indeed been an
attempt to ignore discussion in the hope that the issue
would go away.
But that is not the .q uestion at hand.
. Consider the Cambodian. Knowing the odds against
him. he has volunteered for military service in overwhelming numbers. He has been willing to go forward in
battle so poorly armed and against an enemy so wellsecured that to advance was suicidal. He has frequently
be~n weak i':l tactic~ because his officers are also poorly
tramed and mexpenenced. But no one has questioned his
will.
For the Cambodian fights with a deep intensity (often
belied by his outward manner) that no man who has not
known him as an accepted friend will understand. The •
North Vietnamese did not begin their invasion of Cambodia last year. For more than two decades North Vietnamese forces and arrogant North Vietnamese colonials
have controlled much of the local trade in wide sections
of Cambodia and have treated the Cambodians as racial
inferiors. In areas they have controlled these two decades, they have been free with force and terrorism.
Sit down and talk with rural Cambodians from the
" North Vietnamese" sections of Cambodia as this reporter did in the mid-1960s , long before today\ battles. In
1966, the leader of a group of elderly Cambodians told
this reporter " We will not run any more; we will stand
and fight. " For a man has a right to live in his village
in peace and to till his small plot of land.
This is no argument for U.S. ground combat troops in
Cambodia. For the issue is freedom- and U.S. troops
would cloud that issue.
Besides, weak as they are militarily, the Cambodians
have one great strength. You cannot conquer a people
who will not be conquered.
Hanoi's troops can take Phnom Penh. They can topple
the Lon Nol government. But they cannot rule Cambodia
so long as the Cambodian people resist.

Jim: "The false-card play
is the play of a high card
when you can just as well
play a lower one. Most falsecards are useless, but there
are occasions when it's your
only chance."
Oswald: "There are a few
situations w h e r e a falsecard can win and can't lose
for you. We might call those
plays a u tom at i c falsecards."
Jim: " South lets West
hold the first two spades but
has to win the third one. He
discards a club from dummy and East drops a heart.
In spite of 27 high-card
points in the two hands,
things don't look promising.
South can count only seven
top-card tricks. He can get
to nine by playing clubs,
provided East holds both
honors, but South decides to
go after diamonds. He leads
a diamond toward dummy
and finesses the jack. When
it holds, South is up to eight
tricks. He cashes dummy 's
ace of diamonds."
Oswald: " Here is the spot
for the automatic false-card.
If West plays the 10 of diamonds, South will make his
contract. South knows West
has the queen. If West falsecards with the queen, South
will have a real problem.
He won't know whether to
play East for both missing
diamonds or play that the
suit will divide 3-3."
Jim : ' 'He will probably
play out three rounds of
hearts. West will shed a r- - -------------------------~
spade on that third heart
and South will know that
West started with six
spades. two hearts and five I
I
minor-suit cards."
Oswald: ··He will probBy Helen Bottel
I
ably try to drop the 10 but
he may not. West's false- HE'S SCOTCH
.... Not even a speck !
card has given him a prob- ABOUT HIS SCOTCH
Nor is it true about mandrake
lem and no one solves all
root, sea foods, ground up tiger
Dear
Helen
:
bridge probloms."
You think you kn ow claws, or snail heads in spic
everything about the girl you sauce.
·~Wi!UD married and then ... . I came (Ah , sex educa tion classeshome last night to find my they DO make life interesting
The bidding ha5 been:
West
North
East
South wife's wedding and engagement for parents.) -H.
1 'I
Dble
Pass
?
rings soaking in almost a half- Dear Helen:
You, South, hold:
I have been married to a
.874 3 2 '17 + Q 9 8 ... K 10 4 3 jigger of my best Scotch !
sweet,
Christian wife for 20
Whisky,
she
says,
is
a
great
What do you do?
A-Bid one spade. You should cleaner for diamonds , and years. This has left me kind of
like your hand, but it is not Scotch being most expensive alone because I am not saved.
good enough for a jump.
well nothing but the best for the So I went out a lot, though it waM
never serious. That is, until r"
rings I gave my bride.
The Almanac
met
this 24-year-old girl two
do
you
call
this,
Helen?
What
By United Press International
years
ago.
-DENNIS
Today is Monday, Feb. 1, the
I found out she had three
Dear
Dennis:
32nd day of 1971.
Scotch on the rocks, what children , but only one of them
The moon is between its new
was her husband's. You see,
else?
phase and first quarter.
she'd
been separated several
Be
glad
your
bride
hasn
't
The morning stars are
Mercury , Venus, Mars and read somewhere that booze is times, and each time some guy
superior for washing down came along , fooled her and left
Jupiter.
,
her with a baby.
The evening star is Saturn. walls.
I made up my mind I woul
.... And tell her diluted amThose born on this day are
prove to her that all men were
monia
is
less
risky
than
whisky
,
under the sign of Aquarius.
not alike, so I bought her clothes
husbandwise. - H.
On this day in history :
and treated her like a princess.
Dear
Helen
:
In 1790 the U.S. Supreme
Our daughter says it's going Also paid her rent when she
Court held its first session ,
around
school that peanut couldn't manage it.
convening in New York City.
Then she got a call from her
butter
and
butter sandwiches
In 1898 Dr. Trwnan Martin of
sister in Cleveland: Sickness in
are
aphrodisiac.
(Something
Buffalo, N.Y., was issued the
the family. I paid for her plane
first insurance policy covering about mixing the two. ) She
ticket and got new luggage for
heard
it
in
her
sex
education
an automobile driver.
class, though not from the her. Soon she wrote that she'd
teacher . Could this have a grain cashed in the other half of her4t
In 1970, 141 persons were of truth? - ALL THOSE ticket and spent the money to
killed when two trains crashed YEARS OF PEANUT BUTTER live on, and " Please help, as I
near Buenos Aires.
have no one else to turn to. " I
Dear All:
sent her all the money I had and
she wrote back saying she must
be falling in love with me.
So I sent her fare to come
home the nex t week, and
everything went fine- until she
announced she was going hac~
to her husband, who now had a
good job.
That didn 't last long, and •
since I was still crazy about her,
I went back to supporting two
families. I should say here that
this girl is the helpless, dreamy,
kind of withdrawn type that
worries you when she isn't
happy. So I sent her to
Cleveland to help her morale.
gave her $400 and she swore
she 'd always be true to me. Her
next le tter said she was tired of
her old life and it was all over
between us . I now haven 't heard
from her in two months . Her
children are farmed out to
relatives here and they won't or
can 't tell me anything.
Helen, please tell a fool in lov.
wha t to do? - F.P.
Dear F .:
.. .. Get smart! Look, friend,
you were took, and took plenty.
"Well, that's progress! We changed the office dress
If your sweet. patient wife will
regulations for pantsuits-now, we'll hoYf.' to face-up to
have you, crawl back to her and
' Hot Pants'."
try to make up for all those
years of FOOLing around. -H.

!H elen Help Us !
I

a: en:1

BERRY'S WORlD

I

I

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.1, 1971
P LAY APRIL 5

Disaster Hits Again in Second Quarter

•

•
•
TOP SCORER, TOP REBOUNDER - Jeff Morris ( 42) about to grab the ball, junior
center of the Meigs Marauders, topped his team in rebounds ( 21) and scoring ( 23) Saturday
night with Waverly in town. Bill Hensler ( 40) is close to the action, and Steve Dunfee (22) is
at right.

~'

Pro Standings

the Sports Desk
by Chet Tannehill
Meigs County basketball muscle didn't ring any bells the past
weekend, excepting Southern which perpetrated a very mild
• upset by further deflating Kyger Creek Friday night 73 to 59. The
Marauders dropped a pair, to Jackson Friday night 75-59 and to
Waverly Saturday night 79-53. Eastern's Friday night match at
Miller was delayed until tomorrow night (weather) and Saturdar
mght the Eagles took a thorough pasting by Federal Hocking, 79-

58.

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
39 18 .684
Phi Iadelphia 34 24 .586 5112
Boston
30 26 .536 8112
Buffalo
16 44 .267 24112
Genera I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Bal timore
32 22 .593 ...
23 31 .426 9
Cincinnati
19 37 .339 14
Atlanta
Cleveland
10 48 .172 24
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
44 9 .830 ...
Detroit
35 20 .636 10
Phoenix
34 23 .596 1llh
Chicago
32 22 .593 12
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 31 22 .585
San Francisco 30 26 .536 2112
Seattle
25 30 .455 7
San Diego
24 34 .41 4 9112
Portland
17 39 .304 15'12
Sunday's Results
New York 125 Baltimore 95
Chicago 131 Cincinnati 99
Boston 132 Philadelphia 128
Milwaukee 131 Detroit 104
Atlanta 131 San Diego 120
Los Angeles 133 Portland 120
Cleveland 117 Buffalo 108
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled)

Southern, playing like No. 1 ranked USC Friday against
Kyger Creek, went cold Saturday night to allow Glouster to win its
... first game of the season, 48-46, on a jumper at the buzzer. In
Coach Hilton Wolfe's own words: "They played their best of the
season Friday night and their worst Saturday night." Wolfe has
been around basketball long enough not to be surprised at such an
unpleasant turn of events.
And I'd guess he also knows how to wipe the slate clean and
pick up a new piece of chalk for the next game.
The crystal ball business, what with several certain toughies
and even two or three that somehow- much as one tries to avoid
... it - become swayed by home county loyalty - didn't prove
bullish. It was Southern which did me in. Of five bobbles in 15
chances those Tornadoes put it to me twice! My favorite
telephone girl friend, Miss Patti Ihle, Southern's scorekeeper,
.... couldn't resist taunting Sports Desk: "You sure missed that one
ALL GAMES
Friday night." She was reporting the Tornadoes' victory over
W L P OP
TEAM
Kyger Creek at Kyger Creek which I saw as a 54-49 win for the Waverly
12 1 1030 684
Bobcats. To even things up with Patti, I had picked, naturally, her Chesapeake
12 1 949 753
Athens
12 3 1071 842
,. boys to whip Gouster 52-47 but it went the other way, 48-46.
11 4 1160 869
Jackson
The other stumbles were Meigs at Jackson, Logan at Meigs
8 5 823 833
" Wellston, and Eastern at Federal Hocking.
Ironton
6 9 911 1028
4 8 775 879
There was a twinge of emotion coloring the Eastern and Coal Grove
3 ll 726 896
Gallipolis
Meigs games but Wellston beating Logan was unadulterated Wellston
3 11 799 1104
error.
Logan
2 12 766 972
0 12 606 916
Here's how they went, the score following the name of the Oak Hill
team being the actual score, those in parenthesis the predicted
SEOAL VARSITY
W L P OP
... score and at right, the first figure is the actual spread, the second TEAM
10 1 897 576
the predicted spread (please note the near similarity of the Waverly
Athens
9 2 798 n&lt;~
, spread averages!):
Jackson
8 3 838 661
Meigs
6 5 677 729
FRIDAY
Ironton
5 6 668 711
Athens 65 (60) Waverly 69 (64)
4-4 Wellston
3 8 597 848
• Gallipolis 57 (55) Logan 56 (51)
1- 4 Gallipolis
2 9 541 722
1 10 631 766
&amp;. Wellston 59 ( 48) Ironton 63 ( 61)
4-13 Logan
TOTALS
44 44 5647 5647
Heck
oo Meigs 59 (64) Jackson 75 (62)
SEOAL RESERVES
"' Eastern (69) Miller (61)
Ppd.
W L P OP
.,, Nel-York 46 (48) Fed-Hock 63 (72)
17-24 TEAM
10 1 477 362
Athens
Ppd. Ironton
Vinton Co. (51) Belpre (60)
7 4 481 451
7 4 496 397
Alexander77 (62) Starr-Wash 93 (64)
16- 2 Waverly
Meigs
7 4 476 448
.• Southern 73 ( 49) Kyger Cr. 59 (54)
Pow! Gallipolis
4 7 370 403
- Wahama ( 48) Wirt (61)
Ppd. Ja ckson
4 7 432 427
Logan
3 8 400 454
SATURDAY
Wellston
2 9 321 511
Ironton 50 (58) Athens 60 ( 74)
10-16 TOTALS
44 44 34~3 3453
18-10
... Jackson 68 ( 75) Gallipolis 57 (57)
Saturday's Results :
(Varsity)
ZAP!
Logan 88 (75) Wellston 78 (60)
Jackson 85 Gallipolis 57
Waverly 79 (73) Meigs 53 ( 68)
26-15 Athens 60 Ironton 50
Too Bad Waverly 79 Meigs 53
Eastern 58 (71) Fed-Hock 79 (70)
Logan 68
GAM! We ll ston 78(Reserves)
~· Southern 46 (52) Glouster 48 ( 47)
Nel-York 67 (60) Kyger Cr. 51 (54)
16- 6 Jackson 36 Gallipolis 31
Pksbg S. 72 ( 68) Pt. Pleasant 64 ( 47)
8-21 Athens 52 Ironton 36
Waver ly 39 Meigs 36
7.9-7.6 Logan 47 Wellston 27
Average
"
Hitting 10 of 15, to date,
Feb. 5 Games :
73 of 85 for 78.5 per cent. Athens at Well ston
Ga llipolis at Waverly
Meigs at Iron ton
Jackson at Logan
Feb. 6 Games:
Wellston at Vinton County
The
Meigs
Marauder 29 per cent while dropping in 11 Pt. Pleasant at MeiQS
r eserves
were
all
but of 16 from the charity stripe.
, "' eliminated from the title race
MEIGS (36) - Boggs 2-1-5,
• upon their fourth defeat in Werry 3-1-7, Bailey 7-1-15, A.
THE
SENTINEL
league play and fifth of the Vaughan 1-l-3, B. Vaughan 1-4DEVOTED TO
season by Waverly here 6, George 0-0-0. Totals 14-8-36.
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
• Saturday night, 39-36.
WAVERLY (39) - Young 3-0CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Coach
Bill
Wicklin e's 6, C. J enkins 5-4-14, Shoemaker
Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
4. reserves fell behind in the first 3-4-10, Swindler 1-3-5, D. J enkins
City Editor
... half, went ahead in the third and 0-0-0, Steger 0-0-0, Acord 2-0-4.
Pub I ished daily e)(cept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
.. most of the fourth quarter, and Totals 14-11-39.
P ubli sh ing Compa ny , 111
., lost the game in the final
BY QUARTERS
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769.
Business Office Phone
moments . Meigs is now 8-5 Waverly
10 10 7 12- 39 992-2156,
Editoria l Phone 992overall and 7-4 in league play. t1eigs
11 5 13 7 36 2157.
,
Second
class
, f • Waverly is also 7-4 in league Officials, McKelvey and Pomeroy, Ohio.postage paid at
action. In their first meeting, McCoy .
National advertising
representative Bottinelli ·
Meigs won, 50-46.
Ga
llagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
Rich Bailey led all scorers
St., New York City, New York .
Official
Title
Subscription
rates :
with 15 points. Mark Werry
Delivered by carr ier where
Nuncio is the official title available
added seven for the Marauders .
50 cents per week ;
C. Jenkins topped Waverly with of the envoy of the Pope in B'f Motor Route where carrier
ce
not avai lable . One
• 14 while Shoemaker added 10. foretgn countries. Nuncios s·~rvi
are sent by the church to .Tlonrh $1 .75 By mail in OhiO
Meigs made 14 of 39 for 35 per many countries which are and w . va., One year $14.00.
months $7 .25. Three
cent from the field and sank lnrgely Catholic ThPy are Six
months $4 .50 . Subs cription
price includes Sunday Times .
~ only 8 of 21 from the line . :H·&lt;·rcdited as lf'rnpr&gt;ra l am Sen tonel.
, Waverly made 14 of 48 for
''I h ; l s ~wlors .
Q·

i

SEO Standings

~ Reserves Qipped

r

DAI~Y

BY KEITH WISECUP
For the second straight nigh t
a bad second quarter spelled
defeat for the Meigs Marauders
as they dropped a 79-53 decision
to the title-bo und Waverly
Tigers at Rock Springs
Saturday.
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders battled the state's
number two ranked· (AA)
Tigers to a 21-21 deadlock after
one quarter, then were outscored 29-8 in the second period.
The previous night, against
Jackson, Meigs was tied after
one quarter, then fell behind in
the second eight minutes.
Rick Eblin, the 6-4 senior
center who was a standout on
last year 's state tournament
Tiger squad, racked up 27
points. T. Gullion added 17,
Hopkins, also a starter for the
Tigers last year, chipped in 14,
and Phil Miller, the r unning
mate last year at guard to
Denny Thompson (the leading
scorer for the Ohio University
freshmen this year) was held to
13.
Jeff Morris, improving with
almost every outing, chalked up
23 for the Marauders and the 6-3
junior worked the boards for 21
rebounds. Jeff Tyo, 6-2 senior,
added 11. Bill Hensler, 6-3
senior, scored nine points and
had 13 rebounds.
Coach C. D. Hawhee's leagueleading Tigers are now 12-1 for
the year and 10-1 in
Southeastern Ohio League play.
The Marauders dropped to 6-5 in
league action and to 8-5 for the
season.
The Tigers were unstoppable
in the second quarter when thev
put the ball in the hoop on 12 of
16 attempts from all ranges and
angles. In the first quarter, they
shot a much colder 8 of 16. That
totaled to a sizzling 63 per cent
in the first half.

For the entire game, Waverly
shot 43 per cent, the reser ves
bringing down the percentage in
a cold fourth period, making all
told 34 of 78. The Tigers made 11
of 14 from the foul line for 79 per
cent.
The Marauders connected on
19 of 45 from the field for 42 per
cent and made but 15 of 29 from
the charity stripe for 52 per
cent.
Meigs did, however, have a
slight edge on the boards. Their
52 bettered the Tigers' 44. The
Marauders had only 10 personal
fouls called to 20 for Waverly.
In the action-packed first
quarter, the fired-up Marauders
fell behind 3-0 in the first minute
of play. After Morris, who
scored 12 points in the first eight
minutes, dropped in a twinpointer, the Waverly advantage
shot to 7-2 with 5:43 left.
Morris canned two m ore,
added a free throw, and Hensler
also dropped in a free toss to
make it 7-fi. Two free throws by
Eblin made it 9-6, a two-pointer
by Tyo narrowed it to 9-8, and
Hopkins' bucket made it 11-8.
The Marauders came back to
take the lead as Morris sank a
five-footer and Tyo drove the
lane for two to give Meigs the
lead at 12-11 with 3:01
remaining.
After the lead seesawed back
and forth to 17-16, Waverly on
top, Rick Van Matre re-injured
his foot and was removed from
the game, not to return.
Two free throws by Eblin
upped it to 19-16 with 54 seconds
left. But a three-point play by
Morris with 37 seconds
remaining tied it up at 19-all.
With 19 seconds left, Eblin
dropped in a 10-footer, but with
only two seconds left, Tyo
knotted it up again with a short
jumper.
The second quarter of

Tyo
Hensler
Morris
VanMatre
Childs
Werry
Haggerty
T.Vaughan
Dunfee
Miller
Ash
Becker
M. Vaugha n
TOTALS
Eblin
Oyer
Hopkins
Miller
T. Gullion
Worman
Fairch ild
Maloy
Allen
Hobbs
D. Gullion
Varney
Helton
Breitenbach
TOTALS

SAN FRANCISCO (UPIJ __
Cincinnati and Houston will be
the two host teams on the
opening day of the National
League baseball season, AprilS.
League President Charles S.
Feeney said during the weekend
FT-FTA RB PF TP the opening date is the earliest
1-4
7
2
11
in the league's 96-year history.
1-3 13
1
9
7-8 21
2
23
1
0
0·0
2
0-0
0
2
0
0-1
3
0
2
4-7
4
4
2
0-1
1
0
0
0-3
1
0
0

MEIGS
FG- FGA
5-11
4- 7

8-16
0· 1
o. 2
1- 3

o.
o.
o.
o.
1o.
o.

2
0
1

0
1
1

0

19-45
WAVER LY
10-15

basketball displayed by the
Tigers will long be remembered
by Marauder fans. Most agreed
that surely there are few teams,
if any, that could have stuck
with them in that eight minute
span of brilliant shooting.
The Tigers applied a full court
press that threw the Meigs
offense completely off stride.
While the Marauders couldn't
get set up, the Tigers fastbr~aked and burned the nets
from outside.
With the score tied at 23-23,
the Tigers drilled in seven
straight baskets to make it 3723. Two field goals by the
Marauders made it 37-27. Four
consecutive Tiger buckets
added with four free throws
made it 48-27 and that was all
she wrote. At the half, the
Tigers were in complete control

0-0
0-0
2·2
0-0
15-29

7-8

1· 5

0-0

7-16
5-14
8-17

0-0

1- 3

o.

0
0
0
0
52

0
0

0
2

0

2

0
10

0
53

3
3
3

27

3-5

1

1·1
0-0

4
2

2

14
13
17
2
0

0

o·o

1- 2

0·0

0

2

3

0-0

0

0

0· 0

0-0
0-0
0-0
0·0
0-0

1

0

0
2
0
0
0

20

79

o.

1- 2

o.

0
0· 1
o. 0

11-14

34-78

1

1

0

1

44

at 50-29 and playing the game
their way.
Waverly had its biggest lead
- 32 points- of the night at the
end of the third quarter at 71-39.
The Tigers finally turned cold in
the final eight minutes, scoring
only eight points , but the
shooters were from the bench.
Meigs will make its final road
trip of the season next Friday,
traveling to the "snake pit" in
Ironton where it is very tough to
win. On Saturday they host the
hapless Pt. Pleasant Big
Blacks. In the first meetings
with the two teams, the
Marauders defeated Ironton, 7364, and Pt. Pleasant, 81-47.
By Quarters:
21 29 21 8-79
Waverly
21 8 10 14-53
Meigs
Officials. Griesheimer and
Atkins

Tornadoes Quieted by TomCats
GLOUSTER - T. Seevers, a
6-4 freshman center, dropped in
an eight foot jumper at the
buzzer to give the Glouster
Tomcats their first win of the
season here Saturday night and
upset the Southern Local
Tornadoes, 48-46.
Glouster is now 1-12 for the
season while Coach Hilton
Wolfe's Tornadoes dropped to 76 in the non-league battle. Terry
Everett led the Tomcats with 21
points, good for game-high
honors. L. Graham and Seevers
added nine each.
Frank Ihle, 6-2 senior centerforward, paced the Tornadoes
with 14 points and 14 rebounds.
Rick Snyder, 5-10 junior guard,
added 12 points and Roger
Wilford, 6-3 junior center, had

ten markers while adding nine
rebounds.
The Tomcats, who scrapped
and scratched for their first
win , were on top after eight
minutes, 13-9, one of the few
times they have led any game
this season. The score was tied
up at 22-22 at the half.
In the third period, a good
defensive effort by th~ Tomcats
limited the Tornadoes to just
three points and Glouster led
after three periods, 31-25. In the
final quarter, Southern piled up
a nine point lead but couldn't
hold it. With only a few seconds
remaining, Seevers drove to
within eight feet, went up, and
dropped in the winning twopointer.
The Tornadoes, who had 39

total rebounds, shot a very cold
26 per cent from the field. Coach
Wolfe said his Tornadoes didn't
play well. He added that the
previous night, when they
whipped the Kyger Creek
Bobcats at Kyger Creek 63-49
his Tornadoes played their best
of the entire campaign.
Both teams made 18 field
goals, but the Tomcats added
two more free throws than the
Meigs Countians. In the first
meeting of the two, Southern
walked away with an easy 68-39
win.
Next Friday, the Tornadoes
will play Southern Valley

Conference rival, North Gallia
at Racine. The Pirates, led by
big Arthur Clark, have improved tremendously over the
past few weeks and will provide
a very stiff test for Southern.
The So•1thern reserves
defeated the Glouster reserves
in the preliminsry game, 53-34.
Southern
9 22 25 46
Glouster
13 22 31 48
SOUTHERN - A. Hill 3·1-7,
R. Nease o.o.o, F. Ihie 7-0-14, B.
Hart 0-2-2, R. Wilford 5-0-10, J.
Hubbard 0-1·1, R. Snyder 3-6-12.
Totals 18-10-46.
GLOUSTE R - J. Wright 1-13, L. Graham 3-3·9, T. Seevers 41-9, T. EverettS-5-21 , J . Kovach
o.o.o, Meade 2-2-6. Totals 18-1248.
Reserves, Southern 53,
Glouster 34.

George A rcher
Sets New Mark
By JOE SARGIS
UPI Sports Writer
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI)George Archer is a tournament
champion again, and he makes
no bones about how it feels .
"It feels good. What more
can I say than that," said the
man who Sunday won the
$150,000 Andy Williams-San
Diego Open golf tournament
with a tourney record score of
16 under par 272.
"For a time there last year, I
was beginning to have my
doubts," said the lanky, horseless cowboy from Gilroy, Calif.
Archer's last victory before
San Diego was in the 1969
Masters. He suffered with
elbow miseries last year but
played on anyway, one week
taking cortisone, another some
other pain killer, and so on.
Sunday, Archer made seven
birds in all for a 34-31-65,
seven under par. He chipped in
from 25 feet for his first bird
on the seventh and tapped in
from three feet for his second
on nine. On the backside, he
was murder on the field ,
sinking birdie putts of 18 feet,
six feet and five feet on the
lOth, 11th and 12th.
That pushed him into the lead
and he never looked back. Just
to make sure, he sank a birdie
putt of four feet on 14 and
another of 18 feet on 17 to close
it out.
Young Dave Echelberger
picked up the biggest check of
his pro career-one for $17,100
compared to Archer's $30,000for finishing second, three
strokes farther back at 275, 13
under .
Jack Nicklaus closed with a
six-under 66 to finish in a tie
for third place with Phoenix
Open champ Miller Barber,
Paul Harney and Bob Stone.
Echelberger shot a 68 in the

final round, Harney had 69 and
Barber and Stone had 70s.
John Schlee and Dick Lotz
finished at nine-under 278, while
Frank Beard, Dow F insterwald,
Art Wall and Lee Elder were at
279. The 280 group, eight under
par, was made up of Bobby
Nichols, Gene Littler, Lionel
Hebert, Charles Coody, Terry
Dill and Joel Goldstrand.
Bobby Lunn, the Los Angeles
Open winner, was at 282; 1970
Player of the Year Billy Casper
was at 283; PGA champ Dave
Stockton was at 284 and
defending champ Pete Brown
was at 286.
From here, the tour moves
on to Honolulu for the Hawaiian
Open, and leading the way will
be Archer, once again healthy,
and better still, a winner.

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To: Careers, Washington, D.C. 20202

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Advertosing coNrobuted for the public good 1n roope •dtoon woth
The Advertosing Council and the Internal or .
Ne.vsp,tpro Adve rlosong Executives

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 1, 1971

Lancers Pull Away for 79-58 Win
By KEITH WISECUP
STEWART - The Eastern
Eagles played the FederalHocking Lancers on nearly even
terms for two quarters here
Saturday night, then gradually
fell behind to suffer only their
second defeat of the season, 79-

58.
The Lancers, whose only
previous defeat was to the
Eagles, 74-58, in their season
opener, got revenge and won
their 13th game agajnst the lone
defeat. Eastern dropped to 11-2

on the season.
Chuck Robinson, 5-11 senior
guard;ripped in 27 points for
game honors. The tremendous
Lancer athlete has been hitting
at a 26.0 points per game clip.
Ernie Driggs, 6-2 senior forward, and Danny Hall, 6-0
junior forward, each connected
for 16 while Mayle added 10.
Dennis Eichinger, the Eagles
top scorer with a 19-1 per game
average, connected for 21.
Howie Caldwell, 5-11 senior
guard and second leading

scorer for the Eagle five, added
Eastern canned only 33 per
16.
cent of their shots, making 19 of
Fed~ral-Hocking, who handed 57 attempts. This is far below
the Eagles their only two the usually hot-shooting Eagles'
regular season defeats last average. They connected on 20
year, jumped out to a 19-13lead of 28 from the line for 71 per
at the end of one period. cent.
The Lancers dropped in only
Eastern closed the gap to 37-34
at the end of the first half. The 13 of 25 from the charity stripe
Lancers warmed up in the third for 52 per cent.
This week, the Eagles will be
eight minutes and outscored the
Green and White 25-17. Coach pretty busy. They have three
Bill Phillips' Eagles were games scheduled, one on
outscored in the final quarter, Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday
nights.
17-7.
On Tuesday, they travel to

Season's Biggest
Baule Saturday
By United Press International
Coach Bob Boyd has had less
than a week to savor the No. 1
ranking of his Southern California basketball team, and it
comes as no surprise when he
admits "personally, I enjoy the
high ranking."
However, the top of the
rankings and even those 16
consecutive victories are merely appetizers, and the main
course doesn't come until
Saturday night when the
Trojans take on UCLA.
Bouncing back from its loss to
Notre Dame last weekend, the
Bruins turned on a 10-1 surge
midway through the second half
to defeat Santa Barbara, 74-61,
for their 135th victory of their

last 140 games. Curtis Rowe
scored 28 and Sidney• Wicks
added 19.
Dennis Layton led the attack
with 20 points as every starter
scored in double figures for
Southern Cal's 92-73 victory
over Loyola. Loyola was held
without a basket for the first 8lh
minutes as the Trojans jumped
off to a 43-36 halftime margin.
Boyd says, "There is no way,
except in head to head competition, for today's collegiate
basketball teams to be accurately rated." He also
remains confident that the
Trojans will emerge from their
meeting with their claim to the
No. 1 ranking intact.
The team considered a threat

to take the top spot away from
both Southern Cal and UCLA is
Marquette, which has games
this week with Wisconsin on
Tuesday and DePaul on Saturday. Third-i'anked Marquette
also is unbeaten this season
after leading Loyola, 87-52,
Friday.
In other games involving the
top ten over the weekend,
fourth-ranked
Penn beat
Princeton, 66-62, fifth-i'anked
Kansas beat Iowa State, 95-72,
seventh-ranked Notre Dame
lost to illinois, 69-66, eighthrated Tennessee beat Auburn,
90-68, ninth-ranked Soutlt
Carolina defeated Virginia, 9270, and No. 10 Western Kentucky beat Middle Tennessee.

'Skins, 'Cats On Road
By United Press International
By the time this week ends,
the Mid-American Conference
basketball race could either be
a lot clearer or even more
jumbled than it is now.
Both first place Miami and
runnerup Ohio University take
to the road this week for what
must be considered tough road
contests, Miami at Toledo and
the Bobcats at Western Michigan.
"By the end of the week we
ought to really know something," said Ohio Coach Jim
Snyder.
Snyder's Bobcats won a battle
of survival Saturday, trimming
Kent State 86-76 in a "must"
game for both teams.
Snyder got balanced scoring
from four of his starters in
Saturday's televised victory
over Kent State, offsetting another 30-point output by the
Flashes' Ruben Vance the
league's leading scorer.
Love Is First
Six-foot-S center Craig Love
led the Bobcats with 22 points,
but Todd Lalich contributed 19,
Bob Howell 18 and Kent Kowall
16.
"Lalich did a good job in the
first half and when he slacked
off in the second, Howell came
on pretty good," Snyder said.
"When we get scoring out of
our forwards like that, it really
helps."
Vance, a junior from Canton
McKinley High School who came
to Kent from Indian River
Junior College in Florida, drew
praise from Snyder, who credits
his success to his "high shot
trajectory."
"He (Vance) has this tremendously high shot rajec-

tory," Snyder said. "A lot of
shooters, if you can make them
change trajectory, you can cool
them off. But when you can put
it up in the air like he does and
control that rascal, it's hard to
stop."
At Toledo, the Rockets' sophomore Tom Kozelko scored 20
points to lead them to an 86-78
victory over Detroit.
Titans Cut Deficit
Toledo held a 69-50 margin at
one time, but the Titans narrowed it to four points, 78-74.
The Rockets, playing cautiously, took only 11 shots from the
field in the final 8:30 of the
game.
Western Michigan, with Chuck
Washington and Earl Jenkins
dominating the boards and scoring 52 points between them,
handed Bowling Green another
staggering loss, 93-75.
Washington poured in 29points
and pulled down 18 rebounds
and Jenkins had 23 points and
a like number of rebounds.
The Falcons, who dropped to
1-4 in the MAC and 4-10 on the
year, were paced by Jim Connally with 26 points and 18 rebounds and Rich Walker
with 24 points. Western is now
2-2 and 10-4.
Miami's Mike Wren hit two
clutch free throws with 13 seconds remaining to cap a Redskin comeback as they edged
Dayton 60-59.
Spurt Wins Game
The Redskins, now 11-4 for
the season, trailed 57-52 with
2: 30 remaining, but tallied
eight straight points with
Wren's two free throws providing the clinchers.
Tom Roberts 12 points paced
the Redskins with Wren and

Larry Garloch hitting 10 each.
Dayton, which dropped to 1~
for the year, was paced by
George Jackson's 17 points and
21 Iebounds.
Cincinnati saw its record fall
to 9-8 on the year as the Bearcats dropped a 94-83 decision to
West Texas State.
The Buffaloes, paced by Steve
Davidson with 27 and Ray Golson with 26, exploded for 10
straight points at the end of
the first half to take a 45-35
lead and the Bearcats never
got closer than six after that.
Steve Wenderfer paced Cincinnati with 24 points and had
support from Dave Johnson with
19 and Derrek Dickey with 18.
Rally Cut Off
Xavier rallied in the closing
minutes to tie St. Joseph of
Philadelphia 70-70, but dr!&gt;pped
a 76-75 decision to the Hawks,
the Musketeers' fifth consecutive loss, leaving them 7-9 on
the year.
In the Ohio Conference, front
running Capital and Wooster
stayed unbeaten although the
Scots were hard pressed to
gain a 78-74 decision over Kenyon. Wooster is now 17-1 overall.
Capital hit a sizzling 59.5 per
cent from the floor to bury
Mount Union 107-81, its 21st
straight conference victory, and
13th win in 15 games this season.
In other games, Akron won
its lOth in a row with an 85-71
victory over Philadelphia Textile, Findlay won its 15th in 17
games, 106-65 over Cedarville,
Wittenberg blasted Muskingum
77-55, Marietta downed BaldwinWallace 96-89, Michigan State
upended Ohio State 82-70, and
Denison beat Heidelberg 76-73.

Porsche Car Wins Daytona
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI)- The obviously more
durable Porsche is now two up
on the faster Ferrari.
Porsche ran 1-2 in the first
race of 1971, at Buenos Aires,
Jan. 10-then made it two
straight Sunday in the 24 hours
of Daytona .
Mexico's Pedro Rodriguez,
who drove a s imilar car to
victory here last year, brought
his Porsche 917 from behind
with 44 minutes left to run
Sunday after the car had been
delayed for more than an hour
and a half by gear trouble and
beat the leading Ferrari by a
full lap .
It was a different race from
that which the John Wyer
Porsche team won at Daytona
last year. Then, the Porsche
experienced no trouble worth
talking about and finished 48
laps, 183 miles, ahead of
Ferrari's best.
However, it looked like the
same sort of race until three
and a half hours from the end .
At that point, Rodriguez and codriver Jackie Oliver of England
were cruising along 44 laps, 168
miles, ahead of the fragile
Ferraris, which were making
frequent pit stops.
Disaster Strikes
Twenty hours, 34 minutes into
the race, near disaster s truck .

"I shifted into top when I
went around the back and when
I tried to shift back to third, it
stayed in top," Oliver explained. "Even though we had a
huge lead at that time, there
was no way we could run the
last three and a half hours in
top gear. We had to get it
fixed. "
If the Wyer team, which
earlier lost its other entry
because of a blown engine,
could have just changed transmissions, the problem would
have been simplified .
But race rules forbid this and
they had to rebuild the gear
box instead.
While the Porsche was being
repaired, a North American
racing team Ferrari 512 driven
by Ronnie Bucknum of PlayaDel-Ray, Calif., and Tony
Adamowicz of Wilton, Conn.,
forged into the lead with
roughly two hours left.
Fortunately, so far
as
Porsche was concerned, tha
Ferrari was less than three
laps ahead when the 917 got
back on the track.
Bucknum Explains
A disappointed Bucknum expl&lt;Jined that engine trouble
prevented him from hanging on
to his lead.
··we made a run for it until
llw porsche regained the lead,"

he said. "Then things started
getting progressively worse in
the engine. At the end of the
race we could barely keep up
with a good-running Corvette,
which was frustrating."
Everyone agreed that the
fastest car in the 48-&lt;:ar
starting field was a Ferrari 512
entered by Roger Penske and
co-&lt;lriven by 1969 champion
Mark Donohoe of Media, Pa.,
and David Hobbs of England .
But that car, which finished
third, 14 laps (53 miles) behind
the winner, ran into one
problem after another after
taking the early lead. It was in
the pit 33 times for a total of
more than two and a half
hours .
In U .S. Supreme Court rulings, the youngest judge in
point of service votes first
followed by the next young:
est and so on, with the chief
justice voting last.

College Results
By United Press International
East
Lafayette 84 Del. 62
Navy 57 NYU 50
West Vir. 105 Geo. Wash. 96
Manhattan 49 Army 38
Princeton 66 Rutgers 58
LaSalle 79 Hofstra 62
Columbia 56 Cornell 48
Wilkes 80 Juniata 75, ot
M. Harvey 66 W.Va. Tech 45
Crngie-MIIn 86 Case 77
Penn St. 68 Gettysburg 54
Bos. Coli. 73 Seton Hall 70
Temple 71 Syracuse 70
St. Bnvntre 89 Niagara 73
Pitt 68 Bucknel l 54
Vermon 63 Boston U. 59
Yale 102 Colgate 86
South
No. Car. 105 Maryland 79
Mississippi 113 LSU 90
Florida 88 Georgia 79
Tennessee 90 Auburn 68
Kentucky 102 Vanderbilt 92
South Car. 92 Virginia 70
Louisville 86 Bradley 75
Wake Frst 64 Davidson 60
Clemson 91 Ind. St. (Ind.) 87
West. Ky. 80 Mid. Tenn. 66
Wm. &amp; Mary 78 Furman 71
Midwest
Sou. Cal. 97 Loyola (Ill.) 73
Duquesne 72 Creighton 69
Iowa 87 Nrthwstrn 85
Sou . Ill. 89 Ga. Tech 69
Ohio U. 86 Kent St. 76
Purdue 79 Marshall 74
Mich. St. 82 Ohio St. 70
W. Tex. St. 94 Cincinnati 83
Ill. 69 Notre Dame 66, ot
Kansas 95 Iowa St. 72
Drake 93 Mmphs St. 70
Nebraska 80 Okla. St. 59
Akron 85 Phila. Tex. 71
Ashland 44 Cleve. 38
Michioan 97 Minn 7Q
Southwest
Arizona 81 BYU 76
Tulsa 89 Wichita St. 86
vKia. 92 Missouri 63
SMU 90 Arkansas 88
TCU 76 Texas 70
Utah 95 Ariz. St. 90
Baylor 119 Rice 96

This Week's
Ohio Games
By United Press International
Monday
Wheeling at Ashland
Tuesday
Richmond at Cincinnati
Eastern Kentucky at Dayton
Ball State at Kent State
Berea (Ky .) at Rio Grande
Cedarville at Urbana
Kenyon at Den ison
Heidelberg at Otterbein
Mount Union at Hiram
Oberlin at Wooster
Wilmington at Centre (Ky.)
Wednesday
Marshall at Ohio Universi ty
Miami at Toledo
St. Joseph's (Pa.) at Bowling
Green
St. Bonaventure at Xavier
Central State at Tennesee State
Baldwin-Wallace at Akron
Ashland a t Calvin (Mich.)
Case Tech at Thiel
Cleveland State at Youngstown
State
St . Vincent (Pa . ) at John
Carrol l
Ohio Northern at Bluffton
Western New England at
Steubenvi lie
Western Reserve at Carnegie
Mellon
Marietta at Capital
Ohio Wesleyan at Wittenberg
Defiance at Findlay
Thur-sday
Kentucky Christian at Urbana
Berea (Ky .) at Wilmington
Friday
Central State at Kentucky State
Wilberforce at Ohio Dominican
Satur-day
Ohio State at Michigan State
Bowling Green at Miami
Ohio University at Western
Michigan
Xavier at Detroit
Dayton at Loyola (Ill.)
Cincinnati at Kent State
Akron at Toledo
Wooster at Muskingum
Wittenberg at Mount Union
Mariet ta at Otterbein
Hiram at Ohio Wesleyan
Heidelberg at Kenyon
Oberlin at Baldwin-Wallace
Capital at Urbana
Hillsdale a t Ashland
John Carrol l at Case Tech
Central State at Bluffton
Cleveland State at Wayne State
Defiance at Ohio Northern
Geo rgetown (Ky .) at Rio
Grande
Bethany at Western Reserve
Marian at Wright State
Malone al Cedarville.

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

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Miller to battle the Mid-Ohio
Valley Conference rival. The
game was originally scheduled
for last Friday night, but
postponed due to bad weather.
On Friday night, the Eagles
return to Southern Valley
Conference action as they play
the Kyger Creek Bobcats at
Eastern. Saturday finds the
Eagles playing the Glouster
Tomcats at Glouster in another
MOVC game.
The Eagles now are tuning up
in preparation for sectional
tournament play, which they

won last year.
The
Eastern
reserves,
coached by Bob Ord, edged the
tough
Federal-Hocking
reserves, 42-40.
Eastern
13 34 51 58
Fed. Hock.
19 37 62 79
Eastern Smith 2-1-5,
Eichinger 7-7-21, W. Caldwell 5·
6-16, Karr 0-2-2, Boring 3-0·6,
Amsbary 0-1·1. D. Caldwel l 2-3·
7. Totals 19-(20-28)-58.
Lancers - Robinson 10-7-27,
Driggs 7-2-16, Schloss 3-0-6, Hall
6-4-16, Mayle 5-0-10, Smith 1-0-2,
Russell 1-0-2. Totals 33-(13-25)·
79.
Reserves: Eastern 42, Fed.
Hocking 40.

Celtics Level
76ers 132-126
By United Press International
The Boston Celtics, who
wrote the National Basketball
Association playoff record book
with 11 championships in 13
years, are determined to avoid
back-to-hack shutouts in the
post-season games.
Only once before, 1948-49 and
1949-50, were the Celts put
down.
Boston moved to within three
games of Philadelphia in the
vital second-place playoff battle
by defeating the 76ers, 132-126,
Sunday night with the help of
old Celtic pro John Havlicek's
31 points.
Dave Cowens' pair of foul
shots tied the score at 124-all
and after four more free throws
by Jo Jo White, Cowens netted
another pair from the charity
stripe to kill Philadelphia's
hopes of survival. Archie Clark
of the 76ers scored a game high
32 points.
Milwaukee, reaching for the
bonus money accorded to the
team with the best winning
perc.entage in the NBA,
trounced Detroit, 131-104, for its
44th win in 53 games; Los
Angeles dropped Portland, 133120; New York rapped Baltimore, 125-95; Cleveland beat
Buffalo for the fifth straight
time, 117-108; Chicago romped
over Cincinnati, 131-99, and
Atlanta trounced San Diego,
131-120.
Lew Alcindor scored a gamehigh 28 points for Milwaukee,
Jon McGlocklin added 24 and
Bob Dandridge netted 23 in the

Bucks' rout of Detroit, which
featured Dave Bing's 26 points.
Los Angeles won its fifth
straight home game as Wilt
Chamberlain meshed with 33
points and 27 rebounds against
Portland. The Lakers increased
their lead to 2V2 games over
San Francisco in the Pacific
Division as Happy Hairston
came through with 26 points
and Jerry West added 24. Leroy
Ellis and Jim Barnett scored 24
apiece for the Trailblazers.
The Knicks, their five-game
winning string interrupted by
Philadelphia Saturday night,
rebounded with a nicely balanced attack to beat Baltimore. Walt Frazier's 29 points
and Dick Barnett's 22 did most
of the damage. Earl Monroe's
25 points were high for the
Bullets.
Cleveland, winner in only 10
of 58 games, captured its fifth
contest in the last nine starts
with the help of Bobby Smith's
24 points and Walt Wesley's 20.
Emmett Bryant posted a high
of 19 points for Buffalo.
Chicago beat Cincinnati for
the third time this season. Bob
Love was the leading scorer
with 25 points and Jim Fox
tallied 22. Flynn Robinson, a
substitute guard, netted 20
points for the losing Royals.
Elvin Hayes' 39 points
couldn't match the more potent
Atlanta attack as San Diego
lost additional ground in its
playoff bid. Walt Hazzard's 26
points and Jerry Chamber's 24
paced the Hawks.

Saturday's High
School Cage Scores
By United Pr-ess Inter-national
Steubenville 69 Wheeling, W.
Va. 55
Warwood, W. Va. 90 Cadiz 71
Wheeling, W. Va . Central 62
Bellaire St. Johns 58
Claymont 70 Coshocton 66
West Holmes 62 Riverview 52
Newcomerstown 70
Drunerdale Seminarv 61
Huntington (W. Va.) 55 Portsmouth 53
Wheeling (W. Va.) Oinsly 82
Mingo 69
Canton Lincoln 75 Youngstown
Ray en 57
Canton McKinley 63 Lakewood
St. Ed. 58
Canton Timken 92 Western
Reserve 84
Canton Lehman 73 Glenwood 60
Akron Buchtel 69 Massillon 66
Lorain Admiral King 95 Lora in
Senior 80
Mansfield Senior 78 Marion
Harding 68
Sandusky 80 Elyria 74
Euclid 78 Bruch 47
West Geauga 80 Aurora 58
Conneaut 59 Ashtabula Harbor
58 (ot)
Jefferson 70 Ashtabula St. John
62
Clearview 88 Vermilion 56
Midview 63 Oberlin 61
Federal Hocking 79 Eastern
(Meigs) 58
Athens 60 Ironton 50
Waverly 79 Meigs 53
Glouster 48 Southern 46
Jackson 85 Gallipolis 57
Wellston 77 Logan 58
Columbus Miffli11 82 Grove City
73
Marysville 62 Groveport 57
Bexley 62 Hilliard 47
Grandview 57 London 51
Columbus Academy 100 Dan·
ville 80
Lucas 53 New Albany 49
Centerburg 55 Newark Catholic
51
Lick ing Valley 70 Lakewood 44
Granville
109
Watkins
Memorial 86
Carroll 65 Fairfield Union 57
Lancaster Fisher 88 Millersport
70
Amanda 73 Canal Winchester 62
Warren Consolidated 80 Smith·
field 48
Adena Jefferson 78 Dillonvale

Norwalk 81 Huron 64
Margaretta
61
Sandusky
Perkins 60
Day ton Dunbar 68 Dayton Roth
66
Marion Local 55 Ansonia 43
Field 89 Southeast 66
Slreetsboro 56 Crestwood .4.~
Stow 78 Wa lsh Jesuit 62
Cleveland Lat in 66 Gilmour
Academy 55
Ledgement 54 Grand Valley 52
(ot)
Woodridge 95 Mogadore 84
Cuyahoga Fa ll s 75 Dayton
Roosevelt 72
Bettsville 69 Fostoria St.
Wendelin 58

May We
Help You?
We can open a
Savings Account
Certificate of Deposi
Christmas Club
Vacation Club
Travelers Checks
Money Orders
Home Loans
Construction Loans
Home
Improvement
Loans

•

Meigs Co. Branch

_@

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Stop in today to see if we can
Help You.

55

New Athens 105 Madison 85
Spr ingfield 67 Akron Hoban 46
Perry 60 Fairport Harbor 57
Cloverlead 59 Wadsworth 46

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE

$349.95
$35.00 DownBalance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

FIVE MEN MAKE
.F.IVE MISTAKES •

• ••

ONE MAN STRUCK A MATCH TO SEE IF THE GASOLINE
TANK IN HIS CAR WAS EMPTY. IT WASN'T.
ONE MAN PATTED A STRANGE BULLDOG ON THE HEAD
TO SEE IF IT WAS AFFECTIONATE. IT WASN'T.
ONE MAN SPEEDED UP TO SEE IF HE COULD BEAT THE
TRAIN TO THE CROSSING. HE COULDN'T.
ONE MAN TOUCHED AN ELECTRIC WIRE TO SEE IF IT
WAS CHARGED. IT WAS.
ONE MAN CUT OUT HIS ADVERTISING TO SEE IF HE
COULD SAVE MONEY. HE COULDN'T.

I Good Advertising Doesn't Cost••• IT PAYS I
The Daily Sentinel
Phone 992-2156 For A (,'lurteous Representative

111 Court St.

...

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

I

�5 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 1, 1971

Nature Trails Described to Students

Green Thumb
Notes ....

...

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

Effects of Pollution on
Plant and Animal Life

BY MRS. JAMES CARPENTER
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
"Man has lost the capacity to foresee and to forestall. He will
end by destroying the Earth." - Dr. Albert Schweitzer.

1

IN AMERICAM MORE and more lakes and rivers are no
longer safe to swim or fish in. Throughout the country, trees,
plants and flowers have become stunted or are disappearing, fruit
and vegetable farms have been wiped out. In the cities and miles
into the country, the very air we breathe is bad- not only unpleasant, but dangerously toxic.
The by-products of industry are discharged into the air, water
and land, killing wildlife, destroying commercial crops and
threatening the well being, even the survival of man.
One out of two Americans is served by a water supply that
• does not meet Federal standards, or is unknown quality. The
rivers, lakes, bays and streams are used as dumping grounds for
human and industrial wastes that contaminate our wells and the
ground surrounding them. Fertilizers developed to increase crop
yields have been washed into the rivers and contaminate them
and the river banks.
Many fish are killed by a few degrees increase of the water
temperature caused by chemicals, and even a smaller rise of
temperature causes the fish eggs to hatch prematurely, or cause
the fish to spawn at a season when there is no food available. Not
even seaweed would flourish in the oil-befouled waters of Santa
Barbara Chennel in california, the site of numerous oil leaks.
Insecticides such as DDT is not only toxic to the insects that
eat them, but some of it is washed off into underground streams,
spreading it widely about the land. DDT permeates the algae in
rivers, fish feed on the algae and are poisoned; birds feed on the
fish and die. DDT contaminated fish is held responsible for the
destruction of the great bald eagle in areas around Lake
Michigan.
Today, only one nest is left and a single pair of surviving
eagles have produced no young in the past five years.
Just two weeks ago, one of the eagles was found shot in the
wing. The mate had evidently been bringing it food for three
weeks to keep it alive. It was necessary for the wing to be amputated. Since these birds mate only on the wing, this couple will
never have any offspring.
Elm trees being sprayed with DDT have caused us to lose
many of our robins. Although not directly effected by the
spraying, they ate earthworms which had eaten the DDT sprayed
elm leaves. Some of the remaining ones laid few eggs and of these
none hatched to produce any young.
Apart from the toxic effects, curious indirect results follow
the use of certain herbicides. Animals and livestock, both wild
plant eaters are som~times strangely attracted to a plant that has
been sprayed, even though it isn't one of their natural foods. H
ar5!!nic has been used, tbis intensive desire to reach the wilting
vegetation has disastrous effects. Fatal results may follow, if the
plant happens to be poisonous or possess thorns or burrs. Apparently this wilting caused by the spraying makes the plant
attractive.
The explanation of this strange behaviour appears to lie in the
changes the chemical brings about in the metabolism of the plant
itself. There is a temporary marked increase in sugar content.
Another curious affect of 2,4,D has important effects for livestock,
wildlife and man as well. Mter treatment with 2,4,D, crops such
as corn, sugar beets, sorghwn, sunflower, and other plants, there
is a sharp increase in the nitrate content.
A nwnber of cattle deaths has been traced to sprayed weeds.
The danger lies in the increase of nitrates due to the type of
digestive system of such animals. They have a stomach divided
into four chambers and the digestion of cellulose, or plant
materials, is accomplished through the action of bacteria. When
the animal feeds on vegetation containing an abnormally high
level of nitrates, the bacteria turns them into highly toxic
nitrates. Thereafter, a fatal chain of events ensues; the nitrites
act on the blood pigment to form a chocolate-brown substance in
which the oxygen is held; there is no oxygen for respiration, so the
animal dies. The same danger exists for wild animals such as
deer, antelope, sheep and goats.
Many of our plant and insect pests could be dealth with effectively and without the use of deadly and polluting poisons if we
•
would concentrate on using natural enemies of the pest to fight it
with.
Nature has kept most species of plants, animals, and insects
in check by employing a system of natural balances. This balance
is not steady, but one that is constantly changing and readjusting.
Until recently, changes were very slow and happened over
thousands of years, but now, with rapid change being forced on
the world of nature, there aren't thousands of years left in which
to adjust.
This is why the termination of pollution and the remedying of
its adverse affects on nature is imperative. Given time, time not
in years, but in millennia, life adjusts, a balance is reached.
Now is the time for positive action.
(Reference material: "We Must Stop Pollution Now" from
Parent's Magazine; and the book, "The Silent Spring."

a

.t

Program Topic Wolfpen
• Is about Birds

.f

1
\

A program on birds was
presented at a recent meeting of
the Rose Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Frederick Goebel.
Members responded to roll
call by telling how they feed
wild birds, and Mrs. R. V.
Weatherman presented an
article entitled "How to Win
Feathered Friends." Slides of
birds were shown by Mrs. Glen
Stout.
Mrs. Oscar Pennington gave
devotions and the members
gave the L&lt;lrd's Prayer in
unison. Several members were
reported ill and several were
reported vacationing in Florida.
Mrs. Nadine Goebel was a
guest at the meeting. Mrs.
Kenneth Griffith won the door
prize and Mrs. Howard Caldwell was awarded the traveling
prize . Refreshments were
served by the hostess assisted
by her granddaughters, Susan
and Sarah Goetlel.

News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
of Columbus were weekend
visitors of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Russell.
Mrs. Ge neva Shumate is
spending several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Leon Shumate and
family of Parkersburg.
Mrs. Harley Johnson was a
Saturday afternoon visitor of
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Also visiting were Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey and Karen of Albany.
Sunday visitors of Mr . and
Mrs. Eugene Haning, Rhonda
an&lt;.l Ronald, were Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Knotts and son of King
Hill. Evening visitors were Miss
Lmda Reeves, Bill McElroy and
Robert Shaffer.
Jamie Sue Johnson of
P 1 JIIIl'l'fiY was a Saturday visitor
I ..liT) .[11/ins1111,

t,f !\11

it IIll \ li'!-&gt;

Ui~a.

'I a1111n: and Rradj .

An armchair tour of nature
trails through an Ohio
Association of Garden Club
slide series was enjoyed by the
special education class of the
Rutland Elementary School
Thursday.
The program was presented
by members of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners, Mrs. Fred
Williamson and Mrs. Jim
Carpenter, garden therapy
chairmen,
Mrs.
Robert
Snowden and Mrs. Bruce May.
Scenes from several different
state parks and nature
preserves in Ohio showed the
natural beauty of the lakes and
plant life, including many rare
flowers, such as fringe tree,
mountain ash, Showy Lady's
Tresses and Showy Ladies'
Slippers. Also noted were
Douglas Firs, butterfly plant,
flowering crabtrees, and wild
columbine.

. _. . ._. . -. . . ------l
Social
CaIend ar

Among sites viewed were
Punderson State Park, Lake.
Hope, Yellow Springs, Buzzards
Roost Rock, Lynx Prairie,
Wahkeena, and Leesville and
Atwood Lakes. Scenes of
splendor from Glacier and
Grand Teton National Parks,
and rare flowers native there
were also enjoyed.
A discussion on rare and
disappearing flowers arid plants
noted the importance of not
disturbing
some native,
roadside materials. Those wild
flowers which are permitted for
picking were discussed and
described. The slides had been
secured for club use by Mrs.
Bruce Davis, in conjunction
with the club's regular meeting.
Mrs. Snowden presented an
informative demonstration on
flower arranging to the
students, stressing the importance of choosing harmonizing plant materials and

CbS t · p

l ~o~ion
1

MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA,
Monday, 7:30 p.m.; Founder's
Day program by Mrs. Olive
Page; talk on drugs by Mrs.
Nellie Vale; panel on safety.
POMEROY GARDEN Club, 1
p.m. Monday, home of Mrs. J.
W. McMurray, Mason, W.Va.;
Mrs. Harold Brown assisting
hostess.
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710, 8
and 40, Monday, 7:30p.m. home
of Eileen Searls.
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
OES, Monday, 8 p.m. School of
instruction, visitation of deputy
grand matron. All officers
especially attend.
YOUNG ADULT Class,
Bradford Church of Christ,
Monday night at 7 p.m. at the
church.
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Dc:ughters of America, 7:30
Monday, IOOF hall; important
business, members asked to
attend.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, Middleport Masonic
Temple, 7:30 p.m. Monday;
Advisory Council meeting, 7
p.m.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
regular session at temple.
BIG BEND Girl Scout service
team meeting, 9 a.m. Tuesday
at the home of Mrs. William
Ohlinger.
WEDNESDAY
REORGANIZE youth
fellowship and organize youth
choir for Reedsville and Long
Bottom Methodist Churches,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
Reedsville Church; all youths
invited.

Bashan
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ballard
took their daughter, Brenda
Lee, lo the clinic at Athens
where Dr. Tipton ran allergy
tests on her. She is now taking
allergy shots from Dr. Jones at
Parkersburg. She is home now
and improving.
Miss Sharon Holter, a nurse
at camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, is visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arvil
Holter and Gordon.
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Fortney of Pennsboro, W.Va.,
spent a weekend with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Junior White and
daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell
and children, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Griffith, Mr. and Mrs.
Glen Tuttle and Johnny and
Archie Tuttle spent last
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Griffith and
daughters and celebrated Mrs.
Griffith's birthday. The
evening was spent playing
music. Refreshments of ice
cream and cake were served.
Several from Bashan attended the basketball game at
Eastern on Friday night and
also the talent show at Chester
school on Saturday evening.
Mrs. Jean Trussell held a
Beeline party at the home of
Carey Roush at Racine on
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Hollon
visited Mrs. Dorma Morrison
on Saturday.
Mrs. Mary Holter and Mrs.
Sadie Trussell spent Wednesday in Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Oris Smith
spent Saturday at Canton.

suitable containers of good
proportions.
She showed the placement of
the main lines of the
arrangement, then the focal
point and filler materials,
creating a design attractive
from all sides. Flowers in
orange and green were used in a
green footed container and the
arrangement was presented to
Mrs. Campbell for use in the
classroom.
Following the demonstration,
each student was provided with
a low, gold container filled with
styrofoam and an assortment of
permanent flowers and foliage,
with which to make individual
arrangements. Each student,
guided by the club members,
experimented
with
the
placement of the materials in
his container until he was
satisfied with the arrangement
he designed. A variety of styles
of design were exhibited in the

td

y~?~ Spence~.~ citl,.nshl~~~c~tend~eat

of Kovm
from the Webelo den into Boy
Scout Troop 245 in a candlelight
ceremony was a feature of the
Cub Scout Pack 245 meeting
Thursday night at the American
Legion hall in Middleport.
Prior to his promotion, Kevin
received his three year pin,
sportsman and activity badge.
Larry Spencer, scoutmaster,
had charge of the candlelight
ceremony with Dean Spencer
and David Wilcox removing the
Webelos cap and scarf and
Larry Spencer placing the boy
scout cap on Kevin's head. As
the candles were lighted the 12
boy scout laws were receited.
Selwyn Smith, cubmaster,
presented awards to Kevin
Angel, four silver arrow points
and a bear book; Larry Robert
Fox, Gregory Knapp and Ray
Stewart, Jr ., bobcat pins; John
Stewart, a bear patch; Ricky
Hovatter, Joe McCloud, two
year service stars; David
Wilcox, a sportsman badge and

badge.
A den mother's patch and a
three year pin were presented
to Mrs. Larry Spencer, and
Mrs. Jean Cart received the den
leader's coach patch after being
elected to that position.
During the meeting final
plans were made for the blue
and gold banquet to be held on
Feb. 25. A window display
pointing up the national project,
"Save
Our
American
Resources," will be prepared
for February, Boy Scout Month,
and the cubs will assist with the
heart fund drive through a
balloon sale.
Read at the meeting was a
letter from Mrs. Judy Crooks
thanking- the pack for holiday
favors for the community
school for retarded children.
Mrs. Norma Wilcox accepted
the position as pack treasurer.
The "cubie" award was
received by Den 2, Mrs. Francis
Whittington and Mrs. Gene

Obligations Accepted
The Loyal Women's Class of
the Middleport Church of Christ
voted to pay $900 on the debt for
the new church addition at a
meeting Thursday night at the
home of Mrs. Oscar Roush .
In addition to that they will
assist with the expense of new
carpeting for the church, a
project sponsored by the
Homebuilders Class.
It was noted that acknowledgements have been
received from the Mount
Healthy Home at Cincinnati and
the Grundy School for gifts sent

Darwin Camp
Schedule Set
The summer camp schedule
at the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly grounds near Darwin
has been announced.
Sessions will begin June 27
with a week for eight year olds
under the direction of Lewis
King. The remainder of the
schedule is as follows: July 4-10,
Junior Week, Fred Albrecht,
dean, Bill carter, assistant
dean; July 11-17, Intermediate
Week, Elden Devore, dean,
Richard Boroff, assistant dean ;
July 18-24, Senior Week, Dean
Mills, dean, Charles Russell,
assistant dean ; July 25-31,
Junior Week, Tony Maple ,
dean, Keith Boyer, assistant;
and Aug . 1-7, Intermediate
Week, Raullin Moyer, dean,
Danny Nunn, assistant.
Each camp session will open
at 3 p.m. on Sundays and close
at 10 a.m. on Saturdays.
MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club scheduled
for Thursday night has been
cancelled. The group will meet
at the home of Mrs. Bertha
Parker in March.
EVANS OMITrED
Bobby Evans was a guest at a
birthday party held for Jon
Perrin, son of the Rev. and Mrs.
W. H. Perrin. His name was
tmintentionally omitted.
The famous ride of Gen.
Philip Sheridan, immortalized in Thomas Read's stir ·
ring poem , from Winchester
to Cedar Creek, was a dis·
tance of 20 miles.

at Christmas time. A report was
given by Mrs. Herman Lohse on
the holiday shut-in boxes. Mrs.
Roush, president, appointed
Mrs. William Reynolds flower
chairman for the class to fill a
vacancy created by the
resignation of Mrs. William
Swett.
Reported ill were Mrs.
Blanche Gilkey, Norman
Yeauger, Homer Rice, Homer
Jones, Art'Hess, Sr., Ray Darst,
and Marie Mills. The meeting
opened with prayer by Mrs.
Martha Childs. Readings were
"Thanks God for the Little
Things" by Mrs. Roush;
"Tapestry God Planned' by
Mrs. Swett; "Life" by Mrs.
Reynolds, and "A Matter of
Importance" by Mrs. Childs.
Each member then quoted a
favorite scripture.
The 86th birthday anniversary of Mrs. David Farmer was observed. The group
sang "Happy Birthday" and
then cake with candles was
served with coffee by Mrs.
Roush and Mrs. E. L. Lallance.

(HOSPITAL NEWS

J

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity hours 2:30-4:30 p.m.
Parents only on Pediatrics
Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell E.
Smith, Gallipolis, a daughter;
Mr . and Mrs. Dennis E.
McKinney, Rutland, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence D. Glenn,
Jr ., Southside, a son; Mr. and
Mrs. Calvin B. Simpson,
Pomeroy, a son; and Mr. and
Mrs. Howard A. Peck, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, a daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Richard E. Condee and
infant son, Thomas E . Fife,
Robin E . Gilpin, Mrs. Alene E.
Head, William L. Howe, Mrs.
Arnold R. Jividen, Mrs. Harry
F. Johnson and infant daughter,
Charles N. Kuhn, Mrs. Jerry
Dale Raines and infant son,
Mrs. Jerry D. Schoolcraft and
infant son, Mrs. Ronald E.
Sears, Mrs. Edgar A. Vaughan,
Mrs. Earl Walton, Raymond M.
Watts, John M. Williams, Mrs.
Blanche Frazier, Mrs. Delbert
Carter, Mrs. Lester Robbins,
Victoria S. Penn, Marlene
James, and Mrs. Clarence
Jayjohn.

('anada's Size
Ca n ad a is 6.5 per cent
1a r g e r than the U n it e d
States. 17.2 per cent larger

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

than Braztl and is second in
size to the l! S.S.R .. accord·
In ~ to l•: nc~C'lopaedia Britan·

OFFICE HOUR S 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.

n l&lt;"a.

students' arrangements.
During this year's garden
therapy, the students have
carried out a continuing project
on the study and feeding of
birds. This month two types of
bird feeders were made. A pine
cone, the large opened type,
was rolled in a mixture of
peanut butter and wild bird
seed, and tied with heavy twine
so that the feeder can be hung
from a tree, or other such place.
Each child made one of these to
take home.
The other type of feeder was a
mesh bag filled with beef suet
and tied for hanging. Several of
these were made to hang on
trees in the schoolyard, so that
the students may watch the
birds from their windows. Mrs.
Snowden provided each child
with a bag of bird seed to use
with the milk jug feeders that
each child made in the
November session. While

fue
Pack meetmg. Mrs. . Manon
Francis introduced three new
boys, Gregory Knapp , Ray
Stewart, Jr., and Larry Robert
Fox, and their parents, and the
new assistant Den 3 mother,
Mrs. Larry Fox. A cracker
chewing contest staged by the
den for the boys and their
parents was won by Gregory
Knapp's father. Other boys of
the den participating were
David Shuler, Jamie Scally,
Ray Mowrey, and Max Geary.
The opening by Den 5
featured a flag origin study.
Danny Smith, Roger Carson,
Mitchell Cart, Billy McMillion,
John Stewart and Kevin Smith
held cards depicting flag origin
and the adding of states to the
United States.
A puppet show, "Ha-Ha," a
take-off on television's "HeeHaw" was presented by Milford
Hysell's webelos den. Kenny
Roush and Jeff Gilkey gave the
commercials, David Wilcox
was the announcer, Dean
Spencer, Ricky Hovatter and
Mike Hindy were in the r9les of
the "three ears of corn," Don
Geary
portrayed
Junior
Samples, the crow was played
by Ricky Blevins, and Joe
McCloud was Grandpa Jones.
Mrs. Milford Hysell's Den 4
gave the closing. Taking part
were Jeff Laudermilt, Ivan
Lane, Robbie Parker, Kevin
Angel, and Dale Spencer, den
chief. Mrs. Whittington and
Mrs. Thomas' den 2 mothers
served refreshments.

working, the students talked
about their success in feeding
wild birds this winter.
During the October garden
therapy session, the students
potted hyacinth bulbs for forcing. These were returned to the
classroom during this session
and the pots were wrapped in
foil. The children will care for
the plants at school until
Valentine's Day, the expected
time of blooming, when they
will take them and their flower
arrangements made during the
session home, to give as gifts.
Mrs. Carpenter had made red
and white heart nametags,
which were fashioned into gift
cards by the students.
Following the work session,
pictures were taken and the
children enjoyed refreshments
of ice cream drumsticks and
Valentine candies, provided by
Mrs. May.
A large floral arrangement
done in hues of orange and
yellow, in a hogarth curve
design featuring grapes, was
presented for classroom use by
another club member, Mrs.
Joe Bolin, who also provided
some of the materials used for
making the arrangements. Mrs.
Tom Stewart, club member,
secured a donation of permanent materials and styrofoam
for
the
arrangements
from
Decor
Corporation, Middleport, and
containers and seed mixture

were provided by Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. Homer Parker.
Suet for feeders was donated by
the Rutland Department Store
and Kroger's in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Snowden donated birdseed and
some artificial material.

f••···········~
tA
THOUGHTi
tFOR TODAYt.

•-tc-tc

t

tiC

- Bertrand Russell •tc

A man who has learned iC ,
not to feel fear will find
iC the fatigue of daily life iC
iC enormously diminished. iC

•t~

* * * :•
It's Quick! Easy

~

DRIVE-IN

:

Frid ays Only

-tc The Drive-In Window

t

:
iC

is Open

-tc

9 A.M. to 7 P.M.

iC

t
t
:

BANKING~

-tc
(Continuously)
:Other Banking Hours 9 to
iC 3 and s fo 7 as usual on
iC Frid ays.

iC
iC
iC
:

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve Systerr.

:

iC

iC

ic

i(-

iC

··············&gt;~

ANOTHER GOOD
BUY FROM
BAKER'S

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

No Need for
Continuous
Advertising
MIN ISTERS- should preach only one sermon or so a year.
People are against sin anyway, so why harp on it?
TRAFF IC LIGHTS - should ~e turned off at dangerous
intersections to save electricity. Everybody knows it's a
dangerous spot and that is sufficient.
TEAC H E RS - shouldn't review lessons. Tell chi ldren just
once and t hey'll never forget it.
HIGHWAY POLICE- should stop driving up and down the
highways. No need to caution drivers by patrolling highways.
Drivers know the law and obey it.
OUT-OF-TOWNERS - that advertise in the "big City"
papers and Mail Order Firms that send out catalogs are
wasting their money. Everybody knows what is sold in the
stores in the Meigs-Mason Area and they'll a II stop here!
BUT IF YOU are one of the foolish kind - like the Notre
Dame Cathedra l that has stood for six centuries but continues to ring the bel l every day to let people know it is still
there - believe in continuous, profitable advertising, then
your advertising belongs in ...

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-21 56

Court St.

:
iC

! FARMERS BANK !
•t and SAVINGS CO. •t

If There Really •IS

OPTOMETP.IST

iC

Pomeroy, Ohio

�---

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

6 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 1, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
I '

....

....
~

.,.
...".

Carpenter News,· Event
Mrs. Victor Perry has been
staying at the homes of
relatives in the Dayton area to
be close to her husband, Victor
Perry, who underwent major
surgery at the veterans hospital
there. Mr. Perry is reportedly
convalescing satisfactorily.
Others who have visited him at
the hospital include Hazel
Dunigan, Amy Lowther and
daughter, Kathryn, and Webster Facernyre.
David, small son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Gillogly, spent some
time at Holier Medical Center
for observation and treatment
for croup.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
Whittington were Jenny and
Ronda Whittington, Athens, and
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Dailey, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Swett
were supper guests of their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Reedy and family
in Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry McComas, Ashton, W. Va., visited
his uncle, Elza McComas, and
other relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Lawson, Glen and Cheryl, were
guests on Sunday of friends, Mr.
and Mrs . Paul Wood and
children in Charleston, W. Va.
Friends and relatives here
have learned of the marriage on
New Year's Day in Charleston,
W. Va., of Stephen Wood
Spencer, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Chester Spencer, Charleston,
W.Va., and Katherine Johnson,

Tuppers Plains
Society News

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By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Attendance for Sunday School
at the United Methodist Church
was 60 and the offering was
$18.71. Worship service attendance was 44 and offering
was $27.15.
The WSCS of Tuppers Plains,
South Bethel and Alfred put on a
program at the Alfred Church
Sunday afternoon. There was a
good attendance and the
program was enjoyed by all.
Mrs. Ronnie Barnett spent
several days in Texas with
relatives and attended a
wedding while there.
Mr . and Mrs. Donald Koenig
of Coolville, Mr. and Mrs . Ralph
Keller of Chester were Wednesday supper guests of Mrs.
Doris Koenig and son Rickie.
They were celebrating the
birthdays of Mrs Keller and
Rickie Koenig.
Mr. and Mrs . Wayne Brickles
visited Sunday with their
nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Spencer and family of Chester.
Mrs. Spencer just returned
horne from Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was a
surgical patient. She is
recovering satisfactorily.
Mr. and Mrs. Verle Tuttle
spent a few days visiting their
son, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuttle
and family of Fairborn , Ohio,
and they also visited their other
son, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Tuttle
and family of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker
and daughter, Ruthie, spent the
weekend at Dayton with
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will
and son Duane of Rutland spent
Sunday afternoon as guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Newell.
Mrs. Effie Watson returned
horne after spending a few days
with her daughter-in-law, Mrs.
Orvil Watson while she was ill.
Mrs. Eulah Swan spent the
weekend at Parkersburg with
her granddaughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Hasbargen and
son.

SIDE GLANCES

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ellard
Lemmon, Portland, Oregon, in
the St. Mark's United Methodist
Church. The young couple, who
have been employed in
Charlotte, N. C., have been
transferred to Sarasota, Fla.,
where they plan to make their
home. Stephen Spencer is a
grandson of A. R. Caster, former resident of this community,
and the late Cassie Wood
Caster.
The Youth Group of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
at the horne of Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadle on Sunday evening.
Joann and Paula McWhorter
were guests of their greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Con Ator in Albany.
Mrs. William Miller is a
patient in Mercy Hospital in
Columbus where she is
scheduled for a series of tests
prior to special treatment. She
is a vic tim of rn ultiple
scherlosis.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
called on Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan on Saturday evening
and also visited with their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lavern Jordan and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Tackett,
Flatwoods, Ky., and John
Culwell, Columbus, were guests
of their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Culwell and other
relatives here during the
weekend.
David McComas is a patient
at Holzer Medical Center where
he is undergoing treatment for a
virus infection. He is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Scott McComas.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
and Walter, along with Miss
Kathy Gilkey of Albany, joined
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan,
Bryan and Keith, at their home
to celebrate Dwaine Jordan's
birthday.

Racine
Social Events

1

Classified Ads

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bring you
extra cash
for

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Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Charles Lawson gave a
birthday party Friday, evening
in honor of her daughter, Cindy's, 14th birthday. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Lawson and Charles of Letart,
and Charles Lawson Sr., Wilda
and Edward Lawson.
Mrs. Anna Wines, Karen and
Jackie, of Racine, Mrs. Steve
Cleland and boys of Marietta
called on Mrs. Kate Rowe and
Ada Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rowe
returned to their horne in
Trenton, Mich., Wednesday
after a visit with the former's
mother, Mrs. Kate Rowe and
Ada.
Mrs.
Katie
Young
of
Minersville entertained with a
dinner Sunday at her horne in
honor of her grandson, Tim
Manuel, local, whose birthday
was Monday. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Tim
and Sid, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Roush of Middleport and Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Hudson of
Minersville Route.
Max Manuel Sr. received
word of the death of his brother,
Pearl Manuel, at Cleveland on
January 8.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
called on Mr. and Mrs.
Diamond Lawson at Mt. Moriah
Sui'lday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel,
Tim and Sid, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Young and Linda
a t Minersville Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
David and Edward, visited Mrs.
Arnold Anderson and daughters
at Keno Ridge Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and Roger and Jeff Miller
visited Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at
Clifton, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Marvin
McGuire and Regina of
Pomeroy spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel, Tim and Sid .
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
were dinner guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shields.
Mrs. Herbert Roush and Mrs.
Dana Lewis were shopping in
Pt. Pleasant Friday.
Mrs. Lettie Spencer, Mrs. Iva
Orr, Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Foster, Mrs.
Marshall Adams, Mrs. Larry
O'Brien and Mrs. Herbert
Roush attended funeral services for Mrs. Lucy Justice at
Ewing Funeral Home Sunday
afternoon.
Wallie Stover and daughter,
Mrs. Irene Johnson, of
Mamouth, W. Va., visited
Sunday evening with Mrs.
Bertha Robinson.
Ronnie Russell and Nancy
Roush were dinner guests
Sunday evening of Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis at Clifton, W. Va .

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Happy Hustlers Sunday
School Class of the United
Metbodist Church enjoyed a
covered dish dinner Friday
evening, Jan. 22, a t the church.
Following the dinner, a business
session was conducted by the
president, after which Mrs.
Bertha Spencer presented a
program with various members
assisting.
·
Sgt.
John
McClintock,
stationed in Saigon, is spending
a two-weeks furlough with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otis
McClintock and other relatives
and friends. His sister, Mrs.
Ann Wiles of Laura, Ohio, is
also there visiting.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher of
Akron spent the weekend with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Roush, and attended the
dinner Saturday night at the
Orchid Room in Pomeroy,
honoring Coach Ray Farnham.
Rev. Paul Sellers is attending
the Pastors Convocation in
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland
and sons of Reno were guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleland and Mrs. Anna Wines.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
of Patriot were guests of his
mother, Mrs. Frances Roberts,
Saturday.
Mrs. Paul Salser of Albany
visited his brother-in-law, and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton
By Bertha Parker
Wolfe Sunday evening.
Sabbath School attendance
Mr. and Mrs. Woods of January 24 at the Free
Jacksonville were recent guests Methodist Church was 143. The
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland. offering was $33.33.
Indoor camp meeting will be
by Gill Fox
held at the local church Feb. 1
through Feb. 7. Everyone is
invited to attend. Time is 7:30 p .

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

m.
Several persons from this
community
attended
the
funeral of Emmett Tracy at the
Ewing Funeral Horne Sunday.
Fred Buck of Zanesville
called on his aunt, Mrs. Georgia
Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fisher of
Minersville recently called on
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gene
Parker.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs remains on
the sick list. Lawrence A. Smith
has also been reported ill.
Mr. Charles Karr Sr. is a
patient in Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Stahl of
New Marshfield visited Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Howell
returned Sunday to their home
in Canton after spending the
week with Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Howell and family.

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"Okay, you saw a woman cook it on TV, but did
you see her husband actually eat the
production?!''

The mark is the monetary
•mit of Wt&gt;st Germany.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUAliTY

~-------------I•

Business ·Services
.
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

EXPERT

1967 FORD

$1765

4 Door sedan L. T. D., power steering, power brakes, air-

conditioning. Vinyl interior, blk. vinyl roof, maroon finish ,
radio, new w-w tires.
1967 PLYMOUTH
$1395
Belvedere 2 dr. hardtop, V-8 motor, power steering, std. 3speed trans., blk . top, cream body, radio.
1967 FORD
$1495
Mustang, 6 cyi., auto. trans., console, maroon finish, al i
good w-w tires, radio. Real Nice.

ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO(1) Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
(2) own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OF$4,000to$9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are pay ing now. In most
cases pay less.
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We wi ll furn ish lot or erect on your lot.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
DALE DUTTON
TOM CROW
OR
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone992-3106 Day
_ 992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

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

~eroy

llotor Co.

For Sale

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY OHIO
I

j

• WANT AD .
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

5 P.M. Day Before Publ ication
Monday Deadline9a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Correct ions
Will be·eccepted until 9 a .m . for
Dcly of Publication
REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
ob jectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect

.

. -

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'ti G£1' YOUR MAN wrm A ',

I Want Ad
Wanted To Buy

SET OF cui tlva tors for Al lisChalmers B tractor. Frank
Dodderer, Box 162, Coolville,
Ohio.
1-31-31p

inserti~n.

ONE 12 foot meat case. One 10
foot vegetable case. One 6x6
wa lk- in. Inqu ire M and G
Food Marke l, Rt. 7, south of
Middleport.
1-26-6tp

------------------NEW 1970 z1g -zag sew ing

BOOKKEEPING serv ice, Mrs.
Marvin King, lf2.m ile nort h on
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Weekdays 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon.
Even ings by appointment.
12-15-tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered right to your pro ject.
Fast and
easy.
Free
estima tes. Phone 992-3284.
Goeg lein Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Oh io.
6-30-tfc

machine in origina l fac tory
car lon. Zig-zag to make
button holes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the twist of a
s ingle d ia l, Left in lay-away
a nd never been used. Wi ll sel l
for only $47 cash, or E-Z SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
terms available. Phone 992San itation, Stewart , Ohio. Ph.
5641.
662-3035.
1-26-6tc
2-12-tfc

EXPERIE_N~D

Radiator Service

-·--·-,.. . .,;:

'~·-·-~-.
;;;,, .'11•:1':
j,j.; ;;; ' .
,-,'
i : ::
!
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I! •

1:1 h,

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

From the Largest Truck or
Bu lldozer Rad iator to the
Smal lest Heater Core.

BLAETTNARS

OLD furniture, dishes, brass.
RATES
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call REDUCE SAFE and fasl wi th WHEEL Horse Sa les and
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2143
·
Minimum 1:narge 75c
992-6271.
Serv ice. Ba um
Lumber
Gobese tab le ts and E- Vap
12 cents per word three
9-1-tfc
Company , Chester, Ohio .
water pills. Nelson 's Drugs.
consecutive insertions.
AIR COND IT ION ING , RePhone 985-3301.
1-22-30tp
18 cents per word six confrigerat ion serv ice . Jack ' s
5-20-tfc
secutive insertions .
UPRIGHT pianos, any
Refr igeration , New Haven.
25 Per cent Discount on paid· OLD
condition, as long as have not
Phone 882-2079.
ads and ads paid with in 10 days .
been wet. Paying $10 each.
CARD OF THANKS
4-6-lfc
Real
.Estate
Sale
First
floor
on
ly.
Mondays
will
&amp; OBITUARY
I N-T~_-E_R_I_O_R__
ca_r_p_e_n-te_r_w
__
or--k, by
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
be pick-up day. Write, giving . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. Each add itional word 2c.
good directions. Witten Piano
the hour or contract. Phone
BLIND ADS
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
992-351 1.
Additiona l 25c Charge per
Ohio
43946.
1-31-30tp
Advertisement.
Home
8-20-tfc
QFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p .m. Daily,
JOHNSON MASONRY, Com8:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
merc ial
or
residen ti a l
Saturday.
Help Wanted
remodeli ng . Br ick , block ,
stone, cement wor k, ga rages,
HOUSEKEEPER needed. Live
In Memory
septi c tanks. Backhoe work.
in if desired. Good working
Free esti mates. Jim , Larry,
conditions. Phone 992-5251.
IN MEMORY of James P.
Ja ke . 992-7044.
1-19-tfc
Snider who passed away one
1-7-30tc
year ago today, February 1,
1970:
SAW FIL ING,- a ll kinds of
Rent
sharpening , la wn mower
KENNETH and DIANE KING
It doesn' t seem like a year has UNFURNISHED 3-room
repa ir , Br iggs and Stratton
108 Park St.
Middleport
passed since God ca lled you
ap~rtme~t. Phone 992-2288.
engine se rvice. Low cost pick
away,
up and delivery. Phone 992We were told we wou ld save
1-31-tfc
It seemed you walked out the
2804. Co lmers Saw Shop,
money on our ut ility bills
door and will walk in again
Mechanic
St , Pomeroy.
because of the hig tJ q ua lity
some day.
1-28-3tc
FURNISHED and unfurl'ished
co nstruc ti on and exce ll en t
We think and talk of you a lot,
apartments. Close to school.
insulat ion. Littl e d id we
many memories we have.
believe t hat our heat in g bills
Phone 992-5434.
SEPT IC TANKS CLEANED.
wou ld be cut by over $50 a
We loved you so very much and
Reaso nable ra tes . Phone
10-18-tfc
month.
knew i t was returned.
John Russell, Ga lli pol is 446You s howed it in so many ways.
4782 after 5: 30 p. rn.
ground floor furn ished
We' ll go on and live each day 3 ROOM.
4-7-tfc
apartmen
t.
Phone
742-5032.
and keep our faith in God,
1-27
-3tc
That one day soon we will meet
SEW ING MACHINES. Repair
again in Heaven upon high.
service, a ll makes. 992-2284.
· Building Sites Available
Deeply m issed by wife, NEW MOBILE home. Adults
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
c hildren and grandch ildren .
only. Phone 992-5592.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
2-1-71
1-7-tfc
Service. We Sharpen-Scissors.
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
t
3-29-tfc
Phone 992-7034

•

For

JEMO ASSOCIATES

For

Notice

I:M:I.

Auto Sales

UNABLE to accep t any more
customers for rags to be 1969 BU ICK LeSabre , 2-dr.
hardtop, power steer ing,
made into rugs until next fa ll.
power brakes, a ir , 18,000
Wi ll iam Rizer.
miles. Excellent condition.
l-3l-6tp
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-tfc
REFINISH ING of golf clubs for
use in March impossible atter
Feb. 5. Regular repairs 1966 MERCURY, A-1 condition ,
$795. Phone 843-2211.
available by arrangement .
1-31-6tp
John Teaford, golf pro.
1-31 -6tc
1946 ' CHRYSLER . good condi tion. Phone 742-3912.
WILL GIVE piano and organ
1-31-6tc
lessons in my home. Phone
992-3666.
8-16-tfc 1967 GTO, 400 cu. in. with .060
overbore brand new engine
wi th many extras , including
WILL PICK up merchandise
jans. crane , holley, eldeand take to auction on a
brock, hooker. zoom , rod
percentage basis. Call Jim
shOp heads. 1968 Muncie 220.1
Adams, auctioneer. Rut land.
transmissi on and much more.
Phone 742-4461.
$1,900 wi th M. T. aluminum
9-23-tfc
wheels. Cal l 992-3453 or 9923381 . 583 S. Second St., MidDOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
dlepor t, Ohio.
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
1-31-6tp
10-18-tfc
1965 CHEVROLET one- ton
ATTENT ION ladies! Would you
lruck. Carroll Johnson, 1258
like to try a wig on in the
Powel l St., Middleport. Ohio.
privacy of your own home?
1-31-3tc
You can. Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Koscot, of course. Dis- 1963 OLDSMOBILE Super 88, 4tributors. Brown's. Phon_e door hard top. Power s teering,
power brakes, back window
Middleport 992-5113.
def ros lers . New tires, new
12-31-tfc
ba ttery. new exhaust system.
Priced to sell. Phone Chester
INCOME TAX service. daily
985-3934.
except Sunday. Evenings by
1-31-3tp
appointment only. Phone 9922272. Mrs. Wanda Ebl in, 1962 CADILLAC Coupe Dev ile,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
good shape, $450, 1940 Olds,
mile south of fairgrounds .
$250. or trade for gun . Phone
12-31-30tc
773-5145 Mason .
1-31-3tc

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

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF

For Sale

Virgil B. Cleland Realty
TEAFORD

608 East Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
INVESTMENT PROPERTY1112 s tory fra me , ba th, coa l
furnace, porches, NEE OS A
LITTLE REPAIR. $3,500.00

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
NEAR KROGER'S

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C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5- 1-tfc
SACK HOE and ~nd- loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George ( Bil l) Pu lli ns. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc

NEW SIDING, NEW ROOF,
NEW CARPORT, SMALL HARR ISON'S TV AND ANYARD. 2 s lory fra me , 3
TENNA SER VI CE . Phone
Midd leport - 4 bedrooms, bath,
bed rooms, ba t h, GOOD
992-2522.
NEIGHBORHOOD. $3,900.00
modern k itchen , cook and
6-10-tfc
bake uni ts. Forced air gas
~---------------furnace with air cond it ion ing. ABOUT 50 YEARS OLD - 2 NEIGLER Construction. For
story frame, 8 rooms, 4
New double ga rage. Lot from
bui ld ing or remodel ing your
High to Page. On ly $14,500.00
bedrooms , bath. NEEDS
home, Ca ll Gu y Ne ig ler,
SOME REPAIR, CLOSE IN.
Racine, Ohio.
·
WARM 2 years old . 3
$4', 100.00
7-31-tfc
bedrooms, 1112 baths , gas
forced ai r furnace wi th air STORM DOORS, STORM
conditioning. Stove and
WINDOWS, basemen t, bath, 2
,li\Surance
refrigera tor. Heated garage.
bedrooms , 1 s tory frame,
Level lot. January's gas bill
GOOD CONDITION . $6,700.00 AUTOMOBILE insurance been
$18.60. Asking $26,500.00
TO BUY OR SELL
cancel led?
Lost
your
CONTACT US
operator's li cense? Call 992TUPPERS PLAINS - Large
HENRY CLELAND
2966.
old house, 7 large rooms, floor
REALTOR
6-15-tfc
furnace . Lo t 60 x 320. Asking
Offic~- 992-2259
$6,500.00. Offer welcomed .
Residence 992-2568
NOTICE OF
TEAFORDS HAVE
- - - - - - - -1-31-6tc
APPOINTMENT
GOOD BUYS
Case No. 20438
HOUSE , 1640 Linco ln H-ts. ,
HELEN TEAFORD,
Es t at e of Rebecca Hu dna ll
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
.
ASSOCIATE
10-25-tfc Deceased
Notice is hereby g iv en tha t
992-3325
Myrtl
e
Han
ing of Pomeroy,
992-2378
Ohio, has been du ly a ppo inted
1-29-6tc
Adm in ist ra t rix of the Estate of
Rebe c ca Hudna ll, deceased ,
Sale
la te of Meigs Coun ty, Ohio.
Cred itors a re req uired to file
ELECTROLUX v ac uu m th eir c lai ms with sa id fi duciar y
cleaner
comp
lete
with
a
twi
th in four month s .
GEORGE S.
tachments, cordwi nder , and
Da t ed thi s 19th da y of
HOBSTETTER, JR.,
Ja nuary 1971 .
pai
nt
spra
y.
Used,
but
in
like
Real Estate Broker
new condition. Pay $34.45, or
Phone 985-4186, Pomeroy
F. H. O' Br ien
terms if desi red. Phone 992HILTON WOLFE,
PROBATE JUDGE OF
5641.
sa id County
Salesman
1-26-6tc
Phone 949-3211 Racine
(l) 25, (2) 1, 8, 3tc
2 STORY frame house, 7 rooms,
ba th, fron t and back porch ,
storm doors, s torm windows,
383 N. 3rd St. , Middleporl. A
' by Dick Turner
CARNIVA~
good buy a t $13,500.00.

&amp;

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For

HOBSTETTER

PUBLIC SALE
walnu t f inished ,
TO WHOM IT MAY CON - STEREO,
contemporary cabinet, 4CERN :
speaker sound system , 4Not ice is hereby g iven that on
speed changer. Balance
February 11, 1971 , at 11: 00 a .m.
$69.57. Use our budget plan .
a public sale wil l be held at
Page Chev -Oids., Athens, Oh io
Cali 992-3352.
ROOM house, 50 acres land,
to sell for cash the following
1-28-6tc 6 free
gas. income from gas
col lateral , tp
wit :
1969
well and rent, $42.00 mon th .
Chevrolet Impala, Serial No . STEREO, ear ly American
l64699Ul61782, sa id collateral
This is a very good buy.
cabinet wi th AM-FM radio, 4be ing held to sec ure an
Priced $4,000.00.
speaker sound system . 4ob ligation arising under a retail
1-29-Jtc
speed changer. Balance
ins ta lment security agreement
held by Genera I Motors Ac$72.39. Use our budget plan .
ceptan ce
Corpora t ion
as
Call 992-3352.
For Sale
secured party. Said public sale
1-28-6tc
is to be conducted according to
the taws of the State of Ohio .
WHY WAIT
General Motors Ac ceptance HAY, ON C53 near Five Points.
Corporation reserv es the righ t
J oe Wippel , Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
BUY YOUR
to bid at this sa le.
Phone 992-6410.
1-31 -6tp
GE NERAL MOTORS
FERTILIZER
ACCEPTANCE
Now
and get the early
CORPORATION COAL , limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Discount
(2 ) 1, l tc
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
Bag , Bulk and Liquid Fer4-9-tfc
tilizer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
In Memory
1970 SCHULT mobile home. 17
area warehouse at Pomeroy .
acres land . Bailey Run Road.
IN REMEMBRANCE of Matt
Phone 742-5222.
Hendricks who passed away
POMEROY
1-27-6tc
February 1, 1969. Sadly
J. W. Carsey, Mgr .
missed by his family and
Phone 992-2181
CARPETS AND life, too, can be
friends .
beau ti ful if you use Blue
1-1-71
Lus lre .
Re n t
electric FIREWOOD,
a lso,
good
shampooer, $1. Baker FurHampsh ire pigs, 10 weeks old .
For Sale or Trade
niture, Middlepor t.
Gera ld King, phone Shade
1-27-6tc
1962 CADIL LAC Coupe Deville,
696-1287.
good shape. $450 ; 1940 Olds.
1-28-6tp
$250 , or wi ll trade for gun . 1957 OLIVER Dozer DC 3,
Phone Mason 773-5145.
nrw motor, new paint job, STAR kills rats quickly, surely.
2-1 -3tc
front end loader, fork lift, 6lf2.
2''2 pounds, $1.69. Ebersbach
foot blade, $1200. Phone 992Hardwa re, Sugar Run Mill s,
6048.
P ickens Hardware, Mason.
There are about 58,400
1-29-6tc
1-5-30tp
motels in the United States.

•

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�MV MAN SNUFFY' SHORE
EN.JOVED BEIN' IN TH'
JAILHOUSE LAST WEEK,
ELVINEY

•

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IN WIF ANOTHER
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~PICTURES

HUN(..t W)W W AWA.'{!
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DA•L Y CR O SSWORD
4. High school
dance
1. Jacob's
favorite wife 5. Epoch
6.Football
7. Castle ditch
star,-11. Off ship
Dawson
12. Bullets
7. Actress,
and such,
Virginia
informally
13. Survey
8. Ancient
closely
Hebrew
(4wds.)
measure
15. Attention
9. O.T. prophet
16. ScandiIO. Resiliency
navians
14. Purpose
17. "Art of
17.Leer
Love" poet
18. Solemn
20. Region of
pledge
Spain
19. Silly
23. Pain
20.Mature
27. Ogler of
21 . Sunder
a sort
(2wds.)
29. Fencing foil
30. " - for
Sergeants"
( 2 wds.)
31. Wagers
32. Houston
baseball
player
36. Romanian
monetary
unit
39. Having been
punched
(2wds.)
43. Pair of
horses
44. Excite
45. Unemployed
46. Kindling
DOWN
1. Remove,
as leaves
2. Cruising
3. Singers,
Sonny and

ACROSS

••

~ DICK

TRACY

OKIE MARRIES
FEMALE SLEUTH
LIZZ,OLD

OAL, HE'S
WORRIED!!
-AFRAID YOU'LL
GET KILLED!
1-!Al-1! WI-IERE'S TI-llS
ROOKIE
BEEN ALL

MY
LIFE'?

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PHONES A WARNING
10 THE TOWN

f'Ot.ICEMAN.
THEIL.

-

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COULDN'T
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24. Greek
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25. Haw's
part35. Frost
ner
36. Praise
26. Sooner
37. Gaelic
than
38. Consumer
28. Addup
31. - - vivant 40. Pistol
(slang)
32. Italian city
~1. Indian title
J3. Germ
42. Cargo
34. Shade
weight
of blue

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one letter to each square, to
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WHAT THE HOSPITAL
PATIENT SAID WHE N
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suggested by the above cartoon.

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apostrophes, the length and formation of the words arc all
hints. Each da~- the code letter~ are different
A
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THE WEEKEND 1

Quotation

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:-.aturday's ('ryptoquotf': A KILWOY IS A PERSON WHO
GETS HIS PLEASURE BY KEEPING OTHERS FROM GET·
TING THEIRS. -ANONYMOUS
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HAVIN6 '{OUR BLANKEr IN ~E
WASH 15 LIKE FINDING OUT '{OUR
P:&gt;'!OIIATRIS1 15 GONE FOR

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 1, 1971

Snow, Ice Blamed
Highway snow and ice contributed to four weekend accidents, none serious, investigated by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
A Pomeroy motorist was
involved in a minor traffic
accident at 12:20 p.m. Saturday
on Rt. 7, three and four-tenths
miles south of Rt. 218 in Gallia
County. According to the
Patrol, Hugh H. Roush, 48,
Pomeroy, lost control of his
auto in a curve, slid off the snow
covered highway and struck a

guardrail. There was moderate
damage J,!fJ his auto. No citation
was issued.
Another mishap occurred at 1
p. m . on Rt. 124 in Meigs
County, when Grace Reedy, 49,
Portsmouth, lost control of her
car, skidded off the right side of
the highway and struck an
embankment. Again, moderate
damage resulted and no citation
was issued.
Clarence D. Burris, 49, Pt.
Pleasant, was involved in a
minor accident at 4:10 p. m.
Saturday on Rt. 35 at the en-

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Ohio Weather
outlook Wednesday through
Friday:
Quite cold Wednesday
morning, moderating
gradually through Friday.
Partly cloudy to cloudy with
chance of rain south and rain
or snow central and north
Thursday night and Friday.
Daytime highs in the upper
teens north and 20s elsewhere
Wednesday rising to around
50 extreme south and mostly
40s elsewhere by F.-iday
afternoon. Overnight lows
zero to 10 above Wednesday
morning moderating in the
upper 20s and low 30s Friday
morning.

trance ramp to the Silver
Memorial Bridge. Burris lost
control of his car on an icy
curve. The auto veered off the
highway and struck a light pole
causing moderate damage.
An accident Sunday was
investigated at 1:35 p.m. on Big
Creek Rd., Gallia, three-tenths
of a mile west of Rt. 7. Officers
said cars driven by Marvin S.
Sheets, 33, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, and
Roscoe H. Brumfield, 17, Rt. 2,
Crown City, collided. There was
moderate damage, no injuries
or citations.

·7 Die inAssault
SAIGON (UPI) - American
forces took their heaviest losses
in a Vietnam ground acriton in
more than six months early
today in a vicious Communist
assault on an Army position on
the northern coast, U.S. military spokesmen reported.
Seven men of the 198th
Brigade of the America!
Division were killed and seven
wounded in the fighting about
four miles west of division
headquarters at Chu Lai, 335
miles north-northeast of Saigon,
the spokesmen said.
One U.S. serviceman was
killed and 18 wounded in
Communist shelling attacks
elsewhere in South Vietnam,

the U.S. Command said. The
six shellings were the most
since Sept. 13, records showed,
and included a rocket attack on
the big American airbase at Da
Nang.
The Communists fired a
barrage of at least 50 rounds of
82mm mortar into the U.S.
position near Chu Lai, then
attacked on the ground with
heavy small arms and automatic weapons fire, the spokesmen
said. Communist losses could
not be determined.
American military spokesmen
meanwhile announced the withdrawal from the war zone of a
U.S. armored cavah'y outfit and

plans to give the South
Vietnamese air force deadly
AC119 shadow gunships as part
of the Vietnamization program.
About 1,140 men of the 1st
Squadron of the 11th Armored
Cavalry Regiment began
"standing down" today and will
be removed from Vietnam in
the "phase six" redeployment
plan of President Nixon.
Air Force officials said
American advisers began training Vietnamese airmen in
AC119 fixed-wing gunships at
the Phan Rang airbase 165
miles northeast of Saigon. The
gunships will be turned over to
the Vietnamese later this year.

Sets Sail to Fulfill Dream,
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)- A
San Francisco restaurant
owner set sail Sunday to fulfill
his dream in his lifetime.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Edna Darst,
Henderson; James Jeffers,
Southside; Benjamin Kesterson, Pomeroy; Mrs. Clara
Stephens, Daniel Connors, Mrs.
Albert Sauers, Jr., Sabrinda
Gillispie, Mrs. Irene Kelly, Mrs.
John Sayre, Honey Malesenski,
all Point Pleasant; Mrs. Hershel Cottrill, Hurricane; Mrs.
Lloyd Huffman, Glenwood;
Mark Absten, Leon; Mrs.
Darrell Everett, Gallipolis, 0.;
Mrs. Robert Bails, Leon.
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
Houston Brannon, Holley
Carder, Roger Chapman,
Randy Litchfield, Mrs. Pearl
McDermitt, Lois Hoffman, Mrs.
Leota Wamsley, Steve Shelton,
Mrs. Darrell Hawthorne, Mrs.
Clifford Hart and daughter;
Mrs. Virgil Mourning, Mrs.
Henry Pitman, Early Thornton.
Mrs. Eugene Clonch, Teddy
Cossin, Sheila Perry, Mrs.
Georgia McCoy.
BIRTHS - Jan. 31, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Hall, Pliny; Feb. 1, a daughter
to Mr. and Mrs. John Sayre,
Point Pleasant.

LOWEST
PRICE EVER!

The FARLEY
B2981W

Contemporary styled
console in grained Wain
color. VHF/UHF
Spotlite Dials.

$49995

H,ANDCRAFTED!
AFC Automatic Fine-tuning Control
• TITAN 80 Handcrafted Chassis
• Sunshine' Color Picture Tube
Super Video Range Tuner

'71/II(H

~ The quality goes in
before the name goes on"'

INGELS
FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
992-2635
Mlddleport

Charlie Peet, 38, and three other
persons cast off from the St.
Francis Yacht Club aboard the
55-foot sailboat Santana on an
18-month round-the-world
cruise.
"Don't let old age creep up on
you," Peet said. "No matter
what you think you can afford to
do your dream in your
lifetime."
Peet, his wife, Marty, 27, Jim
Leech Jr., 22, a student at San
Francisco State, and his
girlfriend, Ruthy Kiskaddon, 17,
were joined in a champagne
send off by about 150 well-

wishers at the club.
Mrs. Peet formerly lived at
Sandusky, Ohio.
Their first port-of-call is
Acapulco, Mexico. Then on to
Ecuador, Tahiti, Samoa,
Australia, New Zealand, Mrica
and the British West Indies. The
four head home after going
through the Panama Canal.
Peet has complete faith in the
vessel, once owned by the late
movie actor Humphrey Bogart.
The 27-ton boat has food for
three months, Peet said. On
board is two tons of food and 150
gallons of fresh water.

Loyal Barnhart
.
Dies on Sunday
MANEUVERING - Jeff Tyo, Meigs senior forward,
tries to maneuver around a body check by a Waverly player
Saturday night at Rock Springs. Waverly - -title favoritesopened a big gap in the second quarter and the Marauders
could not catch up, losing 79-53.

Hideout Struck
By United Press International
Helicopter-borne
Israeli
commandos struck twice into
Lebanon during the night and
attacked Arab guerrilla
hideouts, Israeli spokesman
reported in Tel Aviv. Guerrillas
struck twice in the occupied
Gaza Strip, wounding 61 Arabs
in an attack on a post office and
attacking an Israeli truck.
The cease-fire still held along
the Suez Canal and Jordanian
frontier but Syria joined Egypt
in calling up reserves as four
Arab nations went on a full war
footing. With the cease-fire
expiring on Friday, Egypt once
more emphasized its hard line
negotiating stand.
The target of the Israeli attacks were the town of El
Khiyam, four miles inside
Lebanon, and the nearby village
of Qila, due north of the Sea of
Galilee and about 25 miles
inland from the coast. It was the

first Israeli strike into Lebanon
since a raid Jan. 15 against a
guerrilla frogman base on the
coast.
Israel said the commandos
killed at least three guerrillas
but suffered one killed and three
wounded as they blew up three
houses. Lebanon reported
heavy fighting during the attack
and a duel between Lebanese
soldiers and an Israeli
helicopter.
An
Israeli
military
spokesman said the raids
Sunday night and early today
were in retaliation for 10 raids
against Israeli border villaged
by ·Palestinian guerrillas based
in Lebanon.
TRIAL BIKE ROUTES
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
So many people here are
abandoning their automobiles
to commute on bicycles that the
city plans to designate certain
streets as bike routes.

Connally's Integrity Attacked
NEW YORK (UPI)-John B.
Connally Jr., President Nixon's
nominee for secretary of the
treasury, was paid at least
$225,000 by a private foundation
with large oil and gas holdings
while he was governor of Texas,
The New York Times reported
today.
The Times said that public
records filed by the Sid W.
Richardson Foundation with the
Internal Revenue Service listed
a debt to Connally of $225,000 in
1966 which the foundation paid
at a rate of $75,000 a year
before Connally left the governorship in 1966 and joined a
Houston law firm .
The Texas Constitution prohibits the governor from receiving any "salary, reward or
compensation or the promise
thereof from any person or
corporation for any service
rendered or performed during
the time he is governor."
Connally could not be reached
for comment but had been
quoted in Texas newspapers
while he was governor as
denying he had performed any
such service or received any
compensation while in office.
Perry R. Bass, a director and
chief spokesman for the foundation and a former business
partner of Connally's, told the
Times the money was "executors' fees." He said he and
Connally were coexecutors of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Clarence Hayman, Racine;
Willie Jacobs, Pomeroy; Rita
Hughes, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Alice Kauff, Charles Werry,
Guy Neigler, Martha Anderson,
Homer Jones, Allen Sayre,
Mary Wallace, Veatrice Nice.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Mabel Gerlach, Vinton; Verna
Davis, Rutland; William
Pooler, Pomeroy; Freda
Mossman, Pomeroy; Louise
Green, Albany; Claude Roy,
Racine.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Pauline Miller, Bernice Darst,
Ollie Young, Pauline Gallagher,
Willie Jacobs, Cornell Mullins.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Tuesday
Feb. 1-2
DARLING Llll
Julie Andrews

Rock Hudson

Also Cartoon
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

the $105 million estate of Sid W.
Richardson, a Fort Worth oil
millionaire who died in 1969, the
Times said.
The Times said Connally was
secretary and director of the
foundation at the time of
Richardson's death and in
October 1959 he became executor of the estate. Records show
that he served as a foundation
officer until he became secretary of the Navy in 1961 but not
whether he also resigned as
executor when he entered

public life, the newspaper said.
He became governor of Texas
in 1963.
Connally, a close associate of
former President Lyndon B.
Johnson, was riding with
President Kennedy and was
wounded when the President
was assassinated in Dallas in
1964.
Associates of Connally told
the Times that President Nixon
has asked him not to grant

interviews until after the
Senate votes on his n,omination
as Treasury secretary.
Connally appeared before
Senate Finance Committee last
Thursday and was to testify at
a second hearing on his
nomination Tuesday.

Loyal ("Lod") Barnhart, 85,
Athens Route 3, died Sunday
morning at O'Blennis Hospital
in Athens following an extended
illness.
Born in Meigs County, the son
of the late Loyal and Jennie
Cramlett Barnhart, he was a
retired employe of the B&amp;O
Railroad and a farmer in the
Carthage area the greater part
of his life.
Survivors include his wife,
Argosia Cole Barnhart; three
sons, Forrest and Mitchell, both
of Fort Myers, Fla., and Roy, of
Guysville; a daughter, Mrs.
Rosa Justice, Athens; three
brothers, Ben, of Stewart;
Clarence of Logan, and Elza, of
Brice; two sisters, Mrs. Media
Linton, Perrysville, and Mrs.
Nettie Rallies of Brice; 11
grandchildren, 13 greatgrandchildren and one greatgreat-grandchild. He was
preceded in death by his
parents, four brothers and a
sister.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev. Roy Deeter officiating.
Burial will be in the Carthage
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.
WOULD CUT AID
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Sen.
Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn.,
says he will introduce
legislation designed to cut off U.
S. foreign aid to any country
which refuses to cut back its
opium production.

91 on Honor List

Of Meigs Jr. High
MIDDLEPORT - Ninety-one
students of the Meigs Junior
High School have been named to
the honor roll at the close of the
third six weeks grading period.
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
listed on the roll were:
SEVENTH • Patrick Airson,
Peggy Aleshire, Demaris Ash,
Rodney Bailey, Robert Ball,
Albert Banks, Bruce Beach,
Bruce Blackston, Cynthia
Blackwood, Brenda Bolin, Beth
Burns, Sandy Carleton, George
Carper, Jackie Carsey, David
Cole, Karen Coleman, Ginger
Cullums, Mick Davenport,
Patty Eblin, Elaine Fish,
Cherie Fry, Cindy Glaze,
Crystal Glaze, William Gloyd,
Tami Hoffman,
Andrew
Hoover, Laura Hoover, Debbie
Janey, Bonita Johnston, Mona
King, Sandra Landaker, Jeffrey
McKinney, Charles Marshall,
Mike Magnotta, Krista Morris,
Kim Ohlinger, Judy Radford,
Bruce Reed, Dottie Roush,
Rebecca Roush, Kathy Rupe,
Mary Ruschel, Autumn Sayre,
Angela Sisson, Dale Sisson,
Judy Smith, Tammy Snider,
Tamara Stanley, George
Stewart, Mike Swick, Melissa
Thomas, Mary Tiemeyer,
Tarri.my Tyree, Greg Van
Meter.
EIGHTH- - - Laura Arney,
Terry
Barrett,
Connie
Baumgardner, Evelyn Burnett,
Woody Call, Carla Crisp, Kenny
Davis, Larry Fridley, Barbara
Fultz, Gary Grueser, Billy Hall,
Donald Hysell, Debbie Kennedy, Dano King, Sonia Kiser,
Gary Lawson, Roberta Lee,
Virginia
McClure, Greg
McKinney, Debbie McLaughlin,
Ralph McMillan, Kenneth
Madden, James Mash, Jerry
Miller, Kenneth Mitchell,

Sharon Murray, Roger Nelson,
Annette Nitz, Debbie Priddy,
Rose Ramsburg, Tom Stevers,
John R. Thomas, Eugenia
Walburn, Mary Weyersmiller,
Joy White, Pam Wilson, Bah!'
Witte.

Cecil F. Evans
Dies Saturday

Cecil Frederick Evans, 56,
died Saturday night at his home
on Broadway St. in Middleport.
Mr. Evans was born Jan. 1,
19l5, in Rutland, the son of the
late Ross and Roma Bailey
Evans and was preceded in
death by his parents and one
brother.
Surviving are his wife,
Dorothy; a son, James
Frederick, of near Pomeroy;
two granddaughters, and a
grandson.
Mr. Evans was a member of
the Middleport First Baptist.
Church and was employed as a
cashier for the C&amp;O Railroad
the past 28 years.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Charles Simons
officiating. Burial will be in the
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
~
the funeral home anytime.

STAR KILLED
LITCHFIELD, Calif. (UPI)
- Oregon State University
basketball player sophomore
sparkplug Mike Keck, 21, has
been killed in a one-car accident'
that injured a teammate in a
remote section of Northern . .
California.

Make Elherfelds

In Ponteroy
Your

•

Shopping Center

'

BEGINS EMPLOYMENT
Lucy Amsbary of Pomeroy, a
former teacher, began work
today in the office of State
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey in
Columbus. She is a former
Meigs
County teacher.
Mike Barr, Kathy Abbott, of
Pomeroy, Cecila McCoy of
IN PALM BEACH
Bernadette Hennessy, Eastern and Jane Johnson of
Walter Grueser, a sales
Pomeroy, has been named Racine are spending a ten-day
1971
Betty
Crocker semester break from Glenville representative with the Midland
Mutual Life Insurance Co., and
Homemaker of Tomorrow of State at their homes.
his wife are attending the
Meigs High School.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bails of
She was chosen on the basis Hamden visited with her sister Company's 1971 national sales
convention at the Breakers
of her score in a written Saturday night.
Hotel in Palm Beach, Fla.
knowledge and attitude
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Molden
examination in which 650,000 of Langsville, RD are an- Grueser is associated with the
senior girls throughout the nouncing the birth of a baby boy Edward P . Tice Agency with
nation were enrolled. From at Holzer Hospital on Jan. 21. offices located at Riverview
General Mills, sponsor of the The baby weighed seven pounds Drive in Pomeroy.
annual education program,
and 14 ounces and has been
Miss Hennessy will receive a
IN HOSPITAL
named
Timothy Wayne.
specially designed award.
James
Pickens, six-year-old
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Additionally, her selection Robert Molden Sr. of Dexter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
makes her eligible for state 0., and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pickens, Letart Falls, has been
transferred from the Holzer
and national honors including
Davis of Langsville.
one of 102 college scholarDonna Morris worked in the Medical Center to Children's
ships totaling $110,000. She is
post office several days last Hospital in Columbus. Cards
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
week while Mrs. Faye Walker may be sent to Room A5-11 in
Tom Hennessy.
was called to the home of her care of the hospital.
sister, who is seriously ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kennedy
Damages Light
and Mrs. Willard Reeves of
Columbus, were called home by
Light damages were reported
the illness of their mother,
in a two car accident today at
Leona Kennedy.
8:35 a.m. on the Syracuse Post
Office parking lot, Marshall
Milton Varian reported.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
A car driven by James C. spent a recent Saturday with
Cottrill, 17, Syracuse, was Mr. and Mrs. Ray Byers of
pulling onto the lot and a car Tanners Run.
driven by George Freeland, 62,
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle of
Syracuse, was pulling from it. New Haven, W. Va., visited
The Freeland car scraped the Mary Circle on Sunday.
Cottrill vehicle when Freeland
Mrs . Doris Wilson of
was blinded by the sun. There Columbus spent a few days with
were no injuries or charges.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Taylor.
I'm now located at
Mrs. Douglas Circle, Mrs.
Jim Patterson and sons and
Florence Circle visited Mrs.
Dessie Patterson of Portland.
(Continued from Page 1)
Those calling on Eunie
put the lunar activities back on
Brinker
during the week were
Phone 992-2318
schedule.
The countdown hold was Dean Barnitz of Pomeroy.
AUTO
ordered because of the danger William and Cathy Carleton of
FIRE-LIFE
of lightning from storm clouds Racine, Arthur Earl, Margaret
HEALTH
above the launch pad. Tight- Ann Johnson and Patrick, and
ened launch restrictions were Betty Van Meter.
MUTUAL FUNDS
adopted after the Apollo 12
LOCAL TEMPS
spacecraft was struck by
The temperature in down
NATIONWIDE
lightning just after blastoff on Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Monday
America's last successful trip under partially sunny skies was
to the moon in november, 1969. 10 degrees.

Langsville

Electricity_VitlJJ to the
EnJ!ironmcnt

•

P. J. PauleJ

Carmel News

Apollo 14

•

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY

n

.J.';' !~~~~~~~~~

Upon completion, the 803-foot stack at Columbus and Southern's new w•nerating unit
at Conesville, Ohio, will stand almost 25
stories higher than the LeVeque-Lincoln
Tower, a familiar Central Ohio landmark.
Our 87 million environmental program at
Conesville includes construction nf the giant
stack equipped with electrostatic precipitator, designed to remove 99 .3 per cent of
particulate stack emission, and construction
of cooling towers to eliminate the discharge
of heated water to the river.
Electricity is vital in meeting new chal-

lenge!l to technology, plus the ever increasing electrical energy required by our
factories, hospitals and homes.
Electricity operates water pumping and
purification stations, as well as incinerators
and sewage treatment plants. Electricity is
essential in the operation of shredders to
process garbage and trash into usable
resources.
Columbus and Southern is well aware of
the importance of the environment and we
are hard at work to solve our part of the
pollution problem.

You see, we live here too.
COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

I&gt;

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