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                  <text>Lost
'Copters
Six
•
. SAIGON (UPI)-South Vietnamese troops with American
helicopters and air support
struck into Laos today in an
etfort to cut Communist supply
lines. Heavy Communist ground
fire brought down six U.S.
helicopters and killed two
American crewmen, field reports said.
U.S. jet fighter-bombers
struck in waves over the border
in advance of the South
Vietnamese drive, military
sources said.
"We took so much fire. I
couldn't believe it," said Capt.
Jasper Sander, 31, of Shrewsbury, Mass., one of the downed

•

•

helicopter pilots who made it
back to Khe Sanh in South
Vietnam. "There were a lot of
Communists, all over the
place."
American ground personnel
moved up to the border, but
stepped aside to let the South
Vietnamese make the actual
move into Laos. The U.S.
Command in Saigon emphasized that no American ~round
troops or advisers would take
part in the operation, although
the South Vietnamese will get
massive air support and
backing from U.S. artillery
firing across the border.
The Laotian government

Earth Takes
Over APo ll0
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)- Apollo 14's moon pilots
sped into the welcome gravity of the "shimmering crescent" of
their planet today with a bonus that could hasten the day when
men in space work for men on earth.
Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa, and Edgar D. Mitchell
passed the imaginary point 161,512 miles in space at 5:26 a.m.
EST where earth's gravity outpulls the moon's. They began accelerating toward a South Pacific splashdown about 4 p.m. EST
Tuesday. En route the crew issued a plea for world peace and
tmderstanding and voiced the hope their space mission could
contribute toward the "solving of the problems of the world."
They brought with them a
record haul of 109 pounds of
rocks and soil collected from
the moon's Fra Mauro Valley
Friday and-Saturday. Scientists
hope some of the samples are
fossil chunks of the primitive
lunar crust.
With the moon shrinking
behind them, Shephard and his
crew turned their attention to
earth Monday night. They
demonstrated on television
ways to use space to manufacture exotic materials and
Shepard said they hoped
spaceflight would "go a long
way toward solving the problems of the world, problems of
understanding between people
of different nations."
Shepard Speaks for Crew
Saying he spoke for the whole
crew, America's space pioneer
added:
"It is our wish ton g t tfult
we can in some way contribute
through our effort through the
space program to promote a
better understanding and peace
throughout the world and help

to rectify the situations which
still exist."
The astronauts, now returning to normal work schedules
for the first time since the
launch Jan. 31, began a 10-hour
sleep period early today. Before
turning in, the spacemen
broadcast some music on tapes
in their cabin.
"Sounds like you're having a
party up there," said ground
communicator Gordon Fullerton.
"That the only ingredient we:
have for a party," Mitchell
replied.
Today was one of rest for the
pilots before the start of final
earth-entry preparations early
Tuesday. One event on their
schedule was a televised
question and answer session
with newsmen at 6:30p.m. EST.
During Monday night's telecast, the pilots carried out four
experiments to test processes
and technioues that could lead
to the production of such exotic·
materials as foam steel and·
(Continueu on Page 11)

protested the move and demanded that "all foreign troops
immediately withdraw from
royal Laotian terri tory."
Field reports said the six
helicopters shot down were hit
while bringing troops into "hot"
landing zones in Laos -landing
zones under fire. Pilots returning to the Khe Sanh outpost in
South Vietnam five miles from
the border said all of the
crewmen were "extracted" but
that five of the six downed
choppers had to be abandoned.
The Laotian government
protested the invasion, blaming
the North Vietnamese as
primarily responsible since they
already had troops in Laos but
stating "this does not constitute
justification" for sending in the
South Vietnamese troops.
"The Royal Lao government
demands that all foreign troops
immediately withdraw from
royal Laotian territory," a
stateme~t issued by the government satd.
Some of the 9,000 American
troops in the area stood
watching beside at sign at the

border saying "No U.S. personnel past this point" as armored
personnel carriers with the
South Vietnamese· troops rumbled past. Several of the Gls
flashed peace signs to the
grinning South Vietnamese
troops, who waved back at
them, Braddick reported from
the scene.
Exactly how many of the
20,000 South Vietnamese troops
in the area were to take part in
the actual move into Laos was

not known. Col. Dui Le Duong,
commander of the South
Vietnamese armored units, said
a major target of the push
would be the town of Tchepone,
27 miles across the frontier and
a major staging area and
junction of the Ho Chi Minh
Trail.
Duong said the government
troops planned to cut the trail
in as many places as possible.
ShortlL_ after the invasion
(Continued on Page 8)

Attack Approved
PHNOM PENH (UPI) Cambodian government
newspapers published
editorials today strongly supporting the South Vietnamese
campaign against Communist
bases in Laos.
The editorials attacked critics
of the move as having failed to
protest when North Vietnamese
troops first began operating in
Laos.
There was no official Cambodian government reaction to

the Laos offensive. But
government and military
sources said they supported the
move as beneficial to Cambodia
because of its effect on North
Vietnamese troop and supply
movements into Cambodia via
Laos.
Earlier today, Premier Lon
Nol said Cambodian tmits had
lost 3,888 men killed, 6,065
missing and 7,895 wounded in
the 11-month war in Cambodia
against Communist forces.

The Daily. Sentinel
Devoted To The lntere&amp;lll Of The Meig8- MOIJOn Area

·voL.

XXI II NO. 208

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

1

Yfews ••• zn

I

By United Press International
The usual pattern of heavy
snow in northeast counties and
little or no snowfall in southern
areas of Ohio was reversed today with weathermen predicting
heavy snow in southeastern
counties and only light snow in
the northeast.
Travelers' warnings were in
effect for all but the northwestern counties of Ohio early today
as a series of low pressure systems moved up the Atlantic
coast, producing snow in Ohio
Snow accumulations between
one and three inches were predicted in nearly all parts of the
state today with a snowfall of
four inches or more forecast
for southeastern Ohio.
Northeast Ohio, which usually
bears the brunt of snow in

rze1 s :I

Bird Got

I

By United Press International

•
•

Two Deputies Killed
TWO LAWRENCE COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPUTIES
hurrying to a fire were among the 19 persons killed in weekend
traffic accidents in snowy Ohio. David LeRoy Ford, 32, and Edward K. Henry, 25, both of Ironton, had the emergency lights on
their cruiser on when it slammed into the rear of a loaded steelhauling truck Sunday on U. S. 52. The accident remained under
investigation.
Two other accidents Sunday also took the lives of two persons.
Two Akron residents, James H. Kindall, 38, and Rosetta
Ferguson, 43, died in a heado()n crash at the intersection of Ohio
532 and 8 in Cuyahoga Falls. Daniel Jaick, 19, and Deborah C.
Wallace, 16, werestruckandkilled by a car on Toledo's west side.

Sheep, Lamb Population Down
I'

•

WASHINGTON -AN ANNUAL Agriculture Department
livestock poultry inventory report shows an increase in the
number of cattle, calves, hogs, pigs, chickens and turkeys over a
year ago. But sheep and lamb numbers declined again.
The Jan. 1, 1971, inventory reports included 114.6 million
cattle and calves, up 2 per cent from a year earlier; 19.6 million
sheep and lambs, down 4per cent; 442.8 million chickens, up 2 per
cent; and 7.5million turkeys, up 10percent .
Hog and pig inventories, calculated as of Dec. 1, reached 67.5
million in the latest count, up 19 per cent from a year ago.

Man's Search

to

Know God

VATICAN CITY- POPE PAUL VI, one of the most vocal
fans of the astronauts, sees the Apollo 14 moon mission as part of
man's search to know himself and to know God. The pontiff has
received all the astronauts who have visited the Vatican. He has
praised them, blessed them, given them medals and discussed all
their flights during his public appearances.
Sunday he devoted most of his speech during his traditional
noontime blessing to pilgrims and tourists to the latest lunar
landing which he said "once again fills us with astonislunent and
'adnllration" for the achievements of man. "Honor to man, king of
the earth and now prince of the sky," who is today progressing in
the discovery of himself and his world, the pontiff said.

CENTS

called for variable cloudiness
with moderating temperatures
across the state Thursday and
Friday with a chance of snow
in northern and eastern counties. Highs Thursday and Friday were to be in the 30s in
northern sections to the upper
30s and low 40s in the southern
The change to much colder areas.
weather was to begin late today or early Tuesday with temSnowfall late Sunday and earperatures dropping to about zero ly Monday was reported in
in northwestern counties to nearly all counties in Ohio. At
'&gt;.round 11 'I ''t' i"\ .hi' c;oath~rn 7 ;. m
t&lt;&gt;dllv '&lt;now &lt;ict&gt;t.hs
portion o~ v•uo by Tuesday ranged from tl.ree met s at
morning.
Akron-Canton and Cincim1· ti to
Low rc~dings were to contin- a trace at Findla}' and Tol~do.
ue through at least Wednesday
Snow depth in other cities mwith temperatures from five cluded one inch at Mansfield,
below in Ohio by Wednesday Zanesville and Cleveland and
morning.
two inches in Columbus and
The extended weather forecast Youngstown.
Ohio, was expected to get between one and three inches of
snow.
At the same time, National
Weather Service experts were
forecasting a return to bitter
winter cold temperatures for
the state.

l·!·f"'''''''''':4;:=;;~,,,,,M~,~::=,,,,,,,,,,,·I\.II
:;: : To Splashdown

Too Hot? .·\! l

Area of Violence Cordoned off
Wll..MINGTON, N.C. -A THREE-BWCK AREA of the
black ghetto, including a church where blacks were holed up, was
cordoned off today in this city where two persons died in weekend
racial violence. At the heart of the area was Gregory
Congregational Church on Nun Street, a rallying point for blacks
seeking. changes in Wilmington's desegregated schools. Police
reported that there were still many persons inside the church
when the area was sealed off.
Police Chief H. E. Wllliamson vowed Sunday night, "We're
going to stop the trouble, whatever it takes- whether it means
we go into a church, home or business. We expect to stop it." It
was near the church Sunday morning that a white man was shot
and killed by a sniper's bullet and three other white men were
injured. Gov. Bob Scott ordered in the troops following the death
of 57-yearo()ld Harvey Edward Cumber, the second fatality of
racial violence in less than 24 hours, and city officials called a
_!llghttime curfew.

TEN

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1971

5'' Snow Coming

r---------------------------,·
1\.T
•
B . .+.

I
1

MRS. PEARL (HELEN) WILLIAMS, A TEACHER at the Pomeroy Elementary
School, was presented with Meigs County's annual wildlife conservation award Sunday by
Gary Swope, county game protector. The award was presented for Mrs. Williams' contributions in the field of wildlife management and in providing outdoor recreational opportunity on some 314 acres located in both Salisbury and Rutland Townships. The citation
reads that the Williams cropland is in grass and mowing is controlled to provide habitate for
wildlife. Wildlife plantings have been made on the farm for food and cover. The land also
has farm ponds. Fishing and hunting is allowed with permission. Mrs. Williams received
both a framed certificate and an engraved plaque.

FDA Charges 'Farmers
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Hit
by charges of laxity, the Food
and Drug Administration
(FDA) has for the first time
initiated criminal prosecution of
farmers who ship livestock
containing illegal drug and
hormone residues, it was
learned today.
In addition, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA),
whose meat inspections provide
the basis for FDA enforcement,
told UPI it plans a sharp
increase this year in1 random
tests for residues, particularly
of a widely used cattle growth
hormone, DES, which has
caused cancer in mice.
Coupled with an industry selfregulation system scheduled to

begin March 1, the actions
signal a significant escalation
of enforcement in an area
which has traditionally received
little attention from federal
regulators.
Although USDA inspectors
checked 31 million cattle
carcasses last year for freshness and cleanliness, only 250 one of every 124,000 -were
randomly tested for residues of
DES, which stands for diethylstilbersterol.
"Our statisticians should
shudder at calling it a
statistically valid sample," Dr.
Joseh S. Stein, special assistant
to the director of USDA's meat
and poultry inspection program,
said in an interview.

E-R Unit Makes 5 Runs
The Middleport emergencyrescue unit answered five calls
over the weekend, two Saturday
night, three Sunday. They
were :
At 7:48p.m. Saturday to the
residence of Alfred Sexton on N.
Second Ave. from where Mr.
Sexton, who had become ill, was
removed to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.and admitted.
At 9:09 p.m. to the home of
Mrs. Jack Good in Rutland who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated,
and released.
Sunday at 6:25 p.m. to the

apartment of Blanche Spade,
213 North Second Ave., Middleport, who was dead upon the
squad's arrival.
At 8:44 p.m. Sunday to the
home of Ora Halfhill on Little
Kyger Road near Cheshire,
having
difficulty
who,
breathing, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted.
At 10:53 p.m. David E.
Hendricks, Jr., age 2, was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
suffering a reaction from
medication. He was released
following treatment.

Stein's boss, Assistant Agriculture Secretary Richard E.
Lyng, told UPI he has ordered
"a substantial increase in the
tests this year, particularly for
DES."
When USDA inspectors find
an illegal residue in cattle, hogs
or poultry, whether DES or any
of a dozen regulated drugs and
pesticides, it gives the findings
to FDA. That agency has
enforcement authority but has
never given offending farmers
more than a warning.
Now, however, FDA has
served notice it will prosecute
transgressors under the Food,
Drug and Cosmetic Act, which
carries penalties up to a $10,000
fine and three years in jail.
"Whenever we find a situation where we can document
the fact that residues are
present in the edible parts of a
slaughtered animal we are
prepared to prosecute the
person that shipped that animal
for causing food to be
adulterated," FDA Commissioner Charles C. Edwards said in
a private letter last Oct. 8 to
W. D. Farr, a Greeley, Colo.,
cattle feeder who heads the
American National Cattlemen's Association.
Dr. C. D. Van Houweling,
director of FDA's Bureau of
Veterinary Medicine, told UPI
two or three cases were in the
preliminary stages of prosecution.

\!\[:[

::t

Be Made

:;:;:: 7:23 a.TUESDAY
m.-Astronauts ::::::
awaken and eat first meal, ::m:
.
.
.
. .
MASON - A fire in Mason :{:54,961 miles from earth.
tl . Investlg~twn IS continumg
Sunday morning, believed to f! 12:49 p. m. -Seventh :::::: mto the Circumstances of the
have started in a bird's nest, :::::course correction if needed. !{: death of Mrs. Blanche Spade,
55, found d~ad _about 6:25 p .m.
resulted in minor damages but / :This will be last chance
could have been one of a serious correct the course for proper J: S~nday evenmg when the
nature had it not been for the @entry into earth's at- fl Middleport E-R squad anquick action of a passerby.
:fmosphere.
t~ swered a call to her apartment
:;:;: 3.. 34 P . m .-Co mman d :;:;::
Mason's fire chief George A· ·:·~:
...... at 213 North Second Ave.
Carson explained that the fire @module separates from !i} ~oroner Dr. R. R. Pickens
;:J satd that cause.of death had not
broke out under the eaves on the t; service module.
Charles Jeffers home on it 3:47 p.m.-Apollo 14 enters ii been determmed .and that
Pomeroy Street. An uniden- ~!!earth's atmosphere and 18 @. further tests are bemg ~de.
tified passerby noticed the fire :::::seconds later loses radio }1. Mrs.. Spade _ _was f~und m a
and stopped to notifY Jeffers' :::::,contact with Mission Control. f ~eeling posttion bestde .the bed
neighbor, Mrs. Sawyers, since ifi 3: 58 p. m.-Apollo 1(@ m her b~room. It was ~closed
he thought no one was living in j!deolovs main parachutes.
@ that while no autopsy 1s planthe large frame house. Mrs. :::::: 4:03.53 p.m.-Apollo 14 :::;: ned, furt~er tests of blood at the
Sawyers summoned the Mason }!:splashes down in the Pacific scene wtll be ~ade by a
Firemen and alerted the Jeffers ::::::ocean.
::::? Columbus pathologiSt.
family.
if
tf Mrs. Spade had a small
Carson said the fire confined ''''''~'''*~:=~:~::~~:m:::~$!:~::3;:,~::::::::::~:::~~:':':!:';':';:::&lt;:::::::~:l::&gt;::;, Iacera tion on the shin, the
to the roof area, wa~ quickly
report said. It i!l believed,
extinguished. Twelve seniors
however, at this time, that Mrs.
and six juniors answered the
,
Spade died of natural causes.
Born Oct. 9, 1915 in West
call around 7:30a.m.
Virginia, Mrs_ Spade was the
daughter of the late Edward
and Myrtle Cremeans Nelson.
SUIT FILED
She was also preceded in death
Pomeroy
emergency-rescue
Suit for support of three
by her husband, Luther.
minor children under the squad and fire department men
Surviving are two daughters,
States' Reciprocal Support put in a busy weekend.
Mrs. Robert (Lena) Turner of
At
6:10
p.
m
.
Saturday,
Agreement has been filed in the
Bucyrus, and Mrs. Earl
Meigs County Common Pleas firemen were called to Crow's
(Barbara Jean) Linn, Broken
Steak
House
where
a
car
was
Court by Dora Z. Pettit, Fort
Sword,
Ohio; two sons, Lindy
Wayne, Ind., against William B. reported on fire. The blaze was
Harris of Mansfield, and Paul
extinguished
before
the
Pettit, Pomeroy.
department arrived and the call Harris of Arnett, Okla.; four
sisters,
Mrs.
Woodrow
was cancelled.
(Virginia) Hill, Bucyrus; Mrs.
Saturday
evening
firemen
FINED $5, COSTS
Castella (Glid) Hill of Galiou;
William Stump, 43, Mid- spent about five hours fighting a Mrs. Ludeski Hildreth, Iberia,
at
the
Bessie
Graham
home
fire
dleport, was fined $5 and costs
Ohio, and Mrs. Alfred (Donna)
by Pomeroy Mayor Charles on Route 143 near Harrisonville. Ford of Manon, and 13 grandat
11:52
theESaturday
night
Legar Saturday night on conR squad was called for Lewis children.
viction of squealing tires.
Funeral arrangements are
Smith, 54, Pomeroy Route 2,
being
completed at the
who had become ill at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home.
county jail. He was taken to
DAMAGE LIGHT
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Light damages were reported where he was treated and
to a car driven by Larry H. released.
Heavy
snow
warning
Farrar, 27, Columbus, at 2:45
Firemen went to the Fay Will southeast, accumulating 5 inp.m. Sunday on Route 33 near home on Kerr St. at 11:47 a.m . ches qc more by late this
Darwin. Farrar hit an icy spot Sunday where a car was on fire . ' evening. Colder tonight and
on the highway and skidded, At 8:13 p. m. Sunday the squad Tuesday with chance of snow
going off the highway. There went to the Alva Sinclair home flurries, mainly in northeast.
were no injuries and no arrests, on Bearwallow Ridge, where Lows tonight near 15 above
the department of Sheriff the patient for whom the squad southeast. Highs Tuesday in the
Robert Hartenbach said.
was called refused treatment. teens.
•

RUTLAND AND POMEROY FIREMEN were at the two story farm home of Mrs.
Bessie Graham, a mile south of Harrisonville on Route 143 Saturday night for five hours,
battling a fire which left the home practically worthless besides destroying the contents.
Losses were set at $15,000 on the structure and $8,000 on the contents. The home was being
remodeled. There was insurance. Cause of the blaze has not been determined. No one was at
home when the blaze, discovered by the sheriff's department, was first seen. The property
is owned by Mrs. Graham's son, Darold. James Sisson of the Pomeroy company is on the
ladder above.

Tests to

r::

:t

tot::

f

Volunteers

Kept Busy

Weather

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., l''eb.l!, 1971

Dateline: 1991

EDITORIALS

;:;~:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;~:~;:;:::::;::::::::~::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::;i:;:;:

Word to TV: News
And Not /Theater/

.•
,•

One of the great promises of television that has fallen
short of realization is in the area of news reporting, of
serving as a sort of living, visual history book in our
homes.
Many of us expected that television ~ould be s.howing
us the news instead of talking about 1t, complam.s. one
Nick Kalivoda. director of media serv1ces at Lou1s1ana
State University.
But this has not happened, he says. "Instead of wat~h­
ing the XYZ Evening News, we find o~rselves watchu'!g
the XYZ Evening News Theater, starrmg Walter, Dav1d
and. others . . .
"A television newscast is still pri.marily a man in a
studio reading us the news, and too often when he says,
'We go to Rome for t~at ~tory,' we see ~nother..actor telling us what's happenmg mstead of showmg us.
Television news is stagnated by a personality cult, says
Kalivoda . If newspaper editors had the same attitude toward news handling as television newsmen, we would see
a generous sprinkling of photographs of the reporter
accompanying each story convincing us "that reporter
Dick Smith is just as important as the news he writes."
Kalivoda's criticism is accurate, but it seems unduly
harsh . He may be talking less about a failure than about
an inherent limitation of television, less about a difference
in the " attitudes" of television and newspaper editors
than about fundamental differences in the two media.
Just as it is impossible for a newspaper to bring motion
pictures to its readers, it is well nigh impossible for a
television station (some of which are owned by newspapers ) to escape creating a "personality cult" around its
newscasters-simply because they are seen and heard.
No sooner was television born than that process began
as a matter of survival. News is pretty much the same
on any network or channel. Given a choice, people will
turn to the one that has the most attractive newscasters,
the liveliest format, the most dazzling weather displays.
And , to capture the widest possible audience for their
spiels, so will the sponsors who make it possible for a
channel to be on the air in the first place.
This has led to certain annoying practices, such as a
~ulcet-v oiced announcer giving a few tantalizing headlines-the "top of the news"-to tempt us to stay with the
channel pending a half-dozen intervening commercial
messages.
But iJ?. the final analysis, it is extremely expensive and
many hmes impractical for television to "show" us the
news rather than "tell" us the news-that is, to send
crews of cameramen to cover every story. Thus someone
has to sit there in the studio and read most of it.
Neverth~less, t~e famous new~casters ought to get out
of the actmg busmess, says Kalivoda. "Their role in the
newscasts should be negligible, and if a network loses its
audience because it loses a prime personality this is evidence it has offered theater instead of news.''
.Bu~ if a network, or a channel, loses its audience, what
will 1t_ matter how much news it presents if nobody is
watchmg?
We need both media, the printed and the visual.
•
For the complete, current news free of personalities
and "theater," newspapers are es~ential.
On the other hand, television by its very nature is "theater," an ~ntertainment. ~edium. And no newspaper can
compe_te With what televlSlon does best in the field of news
rep_ortmg- the background documentaries, many of
which, regrettably, do not get the audience support they
deserve.

Apollo 14 the Turning Point
(EDITOR'S NOTE: Gordon R. Dickson, author of
more than 26 science fiction novels and president
of the S c i e n c e Fiction
Writers of America, regards himself as a futurist. This dispatch, written
for NEA and this newspaper from Cape Kennedy,
carries a dateline two decades in the future.)
By GORDON R. DICKSON
CAPE KENNEDY, H'la.(NEA l-Feb. 5, 1991-Today, looking back 20 years
on the flight of the Apollo
14 spacecraft with astronauts Alan Shepard, Stuart
Roosa and Edgar Mitchell,
it is easier to understand
the public confusion about
the space program which
seemed to threaten to make
this flight one of the last of
the United States' manned
research p r o g r a m s into
space.
If Apollo 14 had turned
out to be one of the last such
flights, it is hard to see how
the present firm balance of
power in the world could
have been achieved so
quickly and harder yet to
guess how our country's social and economic ills could
be so far along the road to
being cured as they are.
Almost certainly, with thP
closing down of the space
program that was advocated
by some people in the early
1970s, the space research
programs of the Russians,

the Chinese and others
would have forged ahead .
Other countries would have
gained an advantage of information from basic sciPntific research too large for
this country to overcome.
The result cou ld have been
a lagging of U.S. technology, a loss of profits from
1 n tern at ion a I trade and
sharp devaluation of the
dollar.
Inflation, poverty and resultant trouble would have
intensified those very ills
that opponents of the space
program dreamed of mending by diverting funds from
it to the attacks even then
beginning to be made on our
social problems.
Luckily, none of this was
allowed to happen.
Jt is easy, nowadays in
1991. to forget how it was
back t h e n. The A p o ll o
launch drew over a million
watchers mto Cape Kennedy, the I a r g est attended
launch in history.
But in spite of the numbers of the watchers and
their visible enthusiasm for
the space program, many of
them had much less understanding of the benefits of
what they were observing
than we do in 1991.
In those days, much necessarv technical information
had few channels by which
to reach the general public
swiftly and in interesting,
easily understood language.

Probably not one person in
a hundred watching the liftoff of the three-stage Saturn
with its white capsule on top
was aware that a lready, even
then, the laser, that coherPnt beam of light we all
make use of daily in 1991,
had already b e com e not
only a practical weapon but
an industrial tool of so many
applications that it was to
revolutionize not only manufacturing but the simp I e
process of living.
Like her immediate predecessor, Apollo 14 carried a
laser experiment as part of
her experiment package.
Full appreciation of what
res e a r c h like this could
mean to problems outside
the space p r o g r a m itself
only began to be felt by the
public with the recognition
of the achievements of the
research in electronics carried on by research stations
later established in orbit
and on the moon to take advantage of the natural hard
vacuum of space.
It was achievements like
this that gave the U.S. its
later overwhelming superiority in electr.onics that led
to the present new era in
world trade and a standard
of living for all our citizens
that a 11 0 w s the least-in- .
corned of us more in the
way of comfort and conven·
iences than the richest of us
could dream of back in 1971
·

,,,,,,:,::;:~::::~:;::~~''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''~''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''·'''''''''''''''::::::::::::''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''':::::::::::''''''''''''''''''''''''''':::;:,::::::::':'::::::::::~:::':::':':::::':::::::':':::':::''':':':::':::::::mf::::;:;:~;:;:;

Old Favorite

WIMMIN! - WILL MEN
EVER UNDERSTAND
'EM (CONTINUED)
+ear Helen:
My wife says I have an
anxiety complex because I
would rather be early than late.
She even wrote to you about it.
Remember the letter concerning the husband who got
ready half an hour ahead of
time and paced until his family
"went up the wall"?
Well, I took the hint. The other
night I made sure she knew
when we were supposed to meet
our friends. Then, after I was
dressed, I quietly read a book. I
did not pace. I did not point to
the clock. I did not go out and
start the car while she was
getting on her girdle. I was
calm and patient - and we
were half an hour late!
But instead of learning her
lesson, do you know what she
told our friends? It was all my
fault, she said, because she
depended on me to prod her and
there I was sitting relaxed and
easy so she figures she had
plenty of time.
Moreover, my change of
character :larn near did me in.
A born pacer does not take
easily to the "sit and be late"
role.
Tell me, Helen, in the battle of
the sexes, does the male ever
win? - BACK TO ANXIETY
Dear B to A:
.. . Not unless the wife is
suddenly struck dumb.
Moral :
Don't
change
character in mid-life, if your
family has come to depend on
prodding. Those dawdlers
NEED you. Actually, this is a
good combination (and I speak
from experience) : Mr. Early
married to Mrs. Late means
they hit a compromise and
arrive on time. - H.
P.S. Read on :
Dear Helen :
My husband is a Worrier Capital "W"! Or was. That's
what bothers me . Do you
suppose he has found someone
else?
H I was maybe three hours
late from shopping (you know
how times flies) I'd come home
to find him frantic, thinking I'd
been in a wreck or something.
Should an evening club meeting
last longer than expected, I'd
better call or he'd be calling the
hospitals. When I'm out of town,
he has to know when I'll be
back , or he imagines me kidnapped and ravished by the

A- It is believed to have
been first used in 1877 by
Mary Clemmer Ames, in an
artJCle describing the inauguration of President Rutherford B . Hayes.
Q- Tlow many of the planet.~ cannot be see ll w1 1h the
111/ki•&lt;l

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A Thrf'P

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tune and Pluto.

a n u s. :'\ep·

EAST
• 7 543

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West North East South
Pass 1 '1
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2+
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Pass
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Opening lead- + K

I

Q- Who first used the
term "first lady" as a syno·
nym for the wife of a U.S.
president ?
·

Of the $21.75 billion that
had been spent up through
the flight of Apollo 14 by
the space pro gram, fully
three-quarters, or more
than $15 billion, had been
spent in basic research that
was to help make possible
cures for the very ills the
program's critics would have
taken program funds to attack by more primitive 1971
methods.
Similarly., we do not think
It was that these critics
were wrong, as much as that
WIN AT BRIDGE they suffered from a lack
of information about the application of space program
research to the very areas
with which they themselves
were concerned.
Curiously, it was Apollo
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
14 itself which marked the
t u r n in g point. It was the
NORTH
8
greatest attendance ever at
. KQJ9
'I AK105

SOUTH

1

roadside. (Or did! )
Well this fretting _ gets one
down, so we had words. Capital
"W"?
Now suddenly he has stopped
worrying. I called one night last
week two hours after I was
supposed to be home, and
Helen, he was actually irked
because "I waked him out of a
sound sleep." Another time I
telephoned and didn't even get
an answer. I rushed right home
and there he was in front of the
TV, but his hands were cold.
Had he just come in?
Moreover , he smiles and
called me "fussbudget" when
be was late from work
yesterday. (He's NEVER late
getting home).
Could it be my husband
doesn't love me any more ? NOW WORRIED
Dear Now :
More likely : Could be your
husband is teaching you a
lesson.
So now you know : It's great
when someone cares enough to
worry about you .... And a phone
call home when you're late is a
wonderful way to say, "I care
enough to get in touch." - H.
Dear Helen :
Thank you for printing the
address of "Singles Information
Service." I received the
organization's useful bulletin on
computer dating, and want to
add my vote to that of many
others: Let's make S.I.S. a
national group, so that the evergrowing number of single
people can find assistance for
their special problems - i.e.
where singles clubs are located,
which are on the square;
housing information; tax hints,
etc. - MR. T.T.
Dear Readers :
Again, Singles Information
Service address is 217 Garces
Dr., San Francisco, California,
94132. H you want it to go
national - WRITE! - H.

of the fact that the Apollo's
water consumption measurement test was one of the
steps in bringing us a technology of life-support systems that e nab l e d us to
mend and control a planetwide ecology that had been
ravaged and allowed to fall
into disarray.

a space launching, 1,700 men
and women at the press site,
7,000 at the VIP site, and
more than a million others
~atching, in boats, on land,
lined up e 1 b ow to elbow
a 1 o n g c a u s e w a y s and
beaches to observe the massive white tower spurt
orange flames the distance
of its own height along the
ground, then lift brilliantly
from the pad and v a n is h
into the cloud cover.
After the launch, the word
began to s pre a d. No one
knew how. Word about the
real values of man's reaching into the hard vacuum of
space for new laboratory
tools to carve out the answers to problems that had
already threatened to grow
too big to be solved on earth •
itself. That was the word
that spread; and with it information of what the work
of the astronauts and others
meant or promised. So t;1at
today in 1991, we are at
least not only all well-fed
housed and finally at peac~
with each other, but also
face to face with the grea~est future ever envisioned
by man.

+J

I
I

By Helen Bottel

When we go away for
four- and five-day weekends,
we assume that our house·
hold computer will oversee
the mechanical housekeep·
ing, shopping maintenance
and even repair tasks to be
c a r r i e d on while we are
gone.
We do not ordinarily stop
to think that we and the
spaced,-based elec~ronic lab·
oratones that dt:s1gn~d such
eqlllpmer:t owe It_ ultimately
to expenments hke that of
th.e A P 0 ll 0 14 astrona~ts
With the suprathermal 10n
detector and cold cathode
ion gauge for measuring ion
flux density and charge in
the lunar environment that
was part of their e x p e r iment package.

... AQ109
WEST (D)
. 1086
., 7 3
+ AKQ74
... K82

! elen Help ~ Us 1
I

.

Cue Bid Proves
Useful Device

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

I
I

•

4.

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

1

Voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Joe Namath's
big eatery folded at Bdwy. &amp;
56th St .. .. Dick Cavett's
braintrust hasn't coaxed a
definite renewal from ABC ....
Milton Berle's TV Friars-Roast
routine seem very short to you?
It was - the network chopped
12 minutes from the tape ....
Marlon Branda's back in court
trying to get custody of his 12year-old son from an ex-wife ....
Sophia Loren and Carlo Ponti
are a couple of young cowhands
- now in the cattle business in
northern Italy .... Gifted beauty
Genevieve Bujold and director
husband Paul Among cooled it
.... Former Met diva Josephine
Tumminia wed songsmith Jack
Sharpe (be wrote "So Rare"),
they said at Tony Berns' tony
Unilorn .... The Colony's now

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROB ERT HOEFLICH ,
City E ditor
Published deily except
Sa turdey by The Ohio Velley
Publishing Compeny, 111
Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Offi ce Phone
992 -2156, Editorie l Phone 992
2157 .
, Second c le ss postege peid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
Netion e l
edvertising
representative
Bottinell i
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
St., N ew York Ci ty , New York.
Subscription
rates :
Delivered by c arrier where
aveilable 50 ce nts per week ;
By Motor Rout e where carrier
service not availabl e
One
.nonth S1 .75 By mail in Ohio
and W . Va., One year $14.00.
S i x month s $7 . 25 . Three
months $4 50 . Sub scription
pri ce includes Sunday Times .
Sen tinel.

opened for after-theatre supper: Mter the Carol ChanningSid Caesar "Four on a Garden"
disaster ten parties supped at
the Colony.
"Four on a Garden" is a
dreadful, tasteless, trivial little
quartet of vulgar playlets by
Abe Burrows: One about a
delicatessen owner who killed
her husband to concentrate
sexually on the men who served
at her fish counter; a second
exercise in nausea concerns an
aging man about to wed a very
young girl until he fmds out she
might be his daughter; the third
is queasy nonsense about a rich
woman who buys young men
and winds up dallying with a
house painter; and last is a
sickly stupidity about a 76-yearold attempting to seduce a 71year-old woman . .. . Miss
Channing tried four accents
unconvinc ingly, Sid Caesar
managed unusually well with
deporable material, and Abe
Burrows wrote this witless
mess, and directed it - into
')bscurity.
It was Gloria Safier who took
over Ruby Keeler's amazingly
innocent "No, No, Nanette"
contract and renegotiated it to
star size: "Quite frankly,"
Gloria told me, "Ruby had to be
convinced of her worth - a very
modest and wonderful lady."
Hildegarde celebrated her
65th birthday at the Rainbow
Grill - wearing a $3,500 pinkfeathered gown - and A. S.
Beck shoes .... Liberty Mag 's
revival will use the old stories
as printed originally - with the
famed old "reading time" atop
each article.

!

Perry Com o long ago admitted he once sang along with
Bing Crosby. recordings before
he found his own style; Jerry
Vale at the Copa now reveals he
first learned by singing along
with Perry's records .... Fact is,
he was billed briefly as "Jerry
Como" .... The electronic ribbon
of headlines on the Times
Square Allied Chemical Tower
won't quit' after all: Life Mag's
dropping its sponsorship, but
new angels are negotiating ....
More films are being made
annually in South Africa than in
H'wood. More in Hong Kong,

too.
The Almanac
By United P ress International
Today is Monday, Feb. 8, the

39th day of 1971.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Aquarius.
On this day in his tory :
In 1587 Mary, Queen of Scots,
was beheaded after being
charged with plotting the
mw·der of Britain's Queen
Elizabeth I.
In 1940 every lOth person in
two villages near Warsaw,
Poland , was shot in reprisal for
the deaths of two German
soldiers.
lr 1963 Premier Karim
Kassin of Iraq was overthrown
by a military coup. He was
executed the next day.

Oswald: "Back in the
early days of contract a few
enterprising ·bidders might
get to six hearts with the
North-South cards. N o r t h
would double one diamond
just as North did today and
South would make the same
one-heart response. The old
time North would follow up
with a jump directly to the
heart game and it would be
a most unusual South player
who would find another bid."
Jim : "Today's North players follow their double with
a cue bid of West's bid suit.
This is an all-purpose forcing
bid to s h o w a very good
hand . South continues to two
hearts to see what is coming
next and North jumps to the
heart game. This tells South
that North is interested in
further bidding."
Oswald: "South doesn't
h a v e much but he has
enough to show his spade
ace, whereupon North goes
right to six. The slam depends on a club finesse, but
the bidding has indicated
that the c I u b finesse will
work ."
Jim : "There is still some
confusion at the average
player level about the meaning of this bid but there is
none in JACOBY MODERN
where the cue bid that follows a double is used as a
forcing bid. "
Oswald : "W he n you do
hold the enemy suit you can
jump in it if your holding is
overwhelming; pass and bid
it later or just pass and keep
on passing."
Jim : "Sometimes this pass
pays very nice dividends . ·
Once in awhile your opponents will get into real trouble if you just sit b ack and
let them bid. As we have
mentioned before in this
column, you don't have to
wear a fur hat to be a trapper."

The bidding has been.
West
North
East
1¥
Dblt!
Pass

South

1•
Pass
2¥
Pass
You, South. hold:
.87432 ¥ 7 + Q98 ... Kl043
What do you do now ?
A- Bid three dubs. Your
partner is showing a big hantl
bu t he might ha\'c ' "er:v guorl
clubs anrl poor ~pades.

RAY CROMLEY

laos Strategy: Rip·
Foe's Supply Line
By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON (NEA)
The explanation for what is happening in Laos is
simple.
In this war we have learned the hard way that the only
sure method for stopping North Vietnam's armies is to
rip their line of supply. And it must be done on the
ground .
. Se?rch-and-destroy .missions. _a gainst enemy guerrilla s
d1dn t work. The aenal bombmg of North Vietnam and
the Ho Chi Minh trails was only partially effective.
The Allied forces began to win in South Vietnam onlv
after we systematically began to seek out and destroy
rice, ammunition and weapons caches and underground
repair stations.
Startling declines in North Vietnamese military effectiveness in sections of South Vietnam followed U.S. anj
South Vietnamese army sweeps which systematicallj
destroyed the ~nemy's ma~or underground quartermaster
supply depots m key provmces near Saigon.
But t~e heaviest blow to the battle readiness of the
Nor~h V1etna~ese southern invasion army was dealt by
the systematic blockade of South Vietnam's coast then
its rivers and finally the blockade of Cambodia c~rried
out in conjunction with the destruction of som'e of the
major North Vietnamese army posts and supply depots
along the Cambodian-South Vietnamese border.
This l_ast COit]-bined action saved the inexperienced
Cambodian a_rm1es from d~struction. That is, it crippled
t~e North \:'Ietnamese umts so effectively the Cambodians had time to get on their feet.
If. North Vietnam's major depots and military way
statwns along the Ho Chi Minh trails in southern Laos
can. ~e destroyed , more time will be bought for Cambodia s hard-pressed forces . And a serious threat to the
northern provinces of South Vietnam will be defused
thus making the steady withdrawal of U.S. forces possible:
And if the North Vietnamese find themselves hardpressed along the Ho Chi Minh trails, they may find
it difficult this year to carry out their ann ual full-scale
rice and opium forays in Laos. This would be a bitter
blow in food and in revenue. Its effects could last the
better part of a year.
One series of battles in southern Laos won't do the
trick. of course. For Hanoi's armies will build their.
supply lines again, if given the chance. As in Cambodia.
~aigon's .armi~s will have to raid and raid again, from
tlme to time, m order to keep the North Vietnamese off
balance.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Put five dollars away
every week, and the wife
will find it every time.

Yes. Gwendolyn, you
might say that an "overseer" is a foreman for
fortune tellers.

Be sure the salesman has
a strong heart before you
The present boundaries
of the United States are
partially due to the efforts
of expansion ists who be·
lieved that the n at i o n
~ hould spread democracy
I rom the Atlantic to the
Pacific. The Worltl Almanac notes that the term
"manifest d es tiny" was
used by expansionists to
justify new territoria I acquigitions 111 thP W(•st

offer to pay hard cash for
a new car.
People who say they
don't believe in prayer
haven't drii'C II tl1e free -

way ill ru s/1 /zcmr.

•

�3- 'l1le Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 8,1971

~t~~mi~~~~~\\~~*~~w~~~l~~~~~~~~~!tlli!~~~~J~~m~i~~Jmm~tl~~~fitt~~1Th~w:m~mi~~lmK~~1l@lt~~~~~1

•

•

•

PLAYER
Tyo
Hensler
Morris
VanMatre
Childs
Werry
Haggerty
T. Vaughan
Dunfee
Miller
Ash
Becker
M. Vaughan
TOl'ALS

MEIGSMARAUDERS
FG-A FT-A RB
8-15
6-8
9
5-5
1-2
10
2-2
4-5
6
3-5
2-2
-4
0-3
1-1
1
3-7
2-2
3
2-4 7-11
3
2-5
1--4
2
1-3
1-3
3
0-1
0-0
0
0-0
0-1
0
0-0
1-2
1
0-0
0-0
0
42
26·50 26-41

p
PF T_
1 22
1 11
5
8
5
8
0
1
1
8
1 11
2
5
1
3
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
19 78

PT. PLEASANT BIG BLACKS
FG-A FT-A PF TP
PLAYER
2-16
1-3
5
Underwood
4-11
7-9
5
15
Smith
3-6
4-8
5 10
Painter
6
2-5
2-2
3
Miller
6
3-9
0-1
4
Simmons
14
4-4
6-7
3
Rawson
4
2-3
0-2
5
Neville
0
0-0
0-0
0
Chulkshank
0
0-0
0-0
0
Darst
0
0-0
0-0
0
Littledale
0
0-2
0-0
0
Hardin
2
1-2
0-0
0
fhomas
21-58 20-31 26 62
TOTALS
Rebounds - 33
Bv Quarters:
14 1-4 25 25-78
Meigs' Marauders
18 13 10 21-62
Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks
Officials: Wallis and Craft.

• Weekend Su1n1nary
By United Press International
Saturday
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Second-ranked UCLA defeated
No. 1 Southern California, 6~0.
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - The St.
Louis Blues traded Red
Berenson and Tim Ecclestone
to the Detroit Red Wings for
Garry Unger and Wayne
Connelly.
QUINCY, Mass. (UPI)
Larry Hinson, who overcame
polio that withered his left arm
and went on to win over $100,000
on the pro golf tour last year,
was named winner of the Ben
Hogan Trophy.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Rod
Laver defeated Tom Okker, 6-1,
6-4, 6-3, in the Champions
Tennis Classic to run his earnings since Jan. 2 to $90,000.
ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI) Favored Ack Ack won the
$55,800 San Pasqual Handicap
at Santa Anita.
Sunday
HELSINKI (UPI)- Russia's
Nina Statkevich won the
women's world speedskating
championship while Americans
Diane Holum and Anne Hening
won gold medals in two events.

became ~he first gold medal
winner in the pre-Olympic
Winter Games by clocking
1:42.2 in the women's downhill.

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - AI Arbour, coach of the St. Louis
Blues, said he will resume
playing in the National Hockey
League stretch drive.

-

Marauders Jlally for 78-62 Victory
BY KEITH WISECUP
The Meigs Marauders broke
their three game losing string
with a great second half
comeback here Saturday night,
defeating the Pt. Pleasant Big
Blacks, 7~2.
Coach Carl Wolfe's quintet
raised its overall record to 9~ in
the non-league victory. The
Marauders
are
6-6
in
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League. Pt. Pleasant dropped to
2-12 for the year.
The Marauders, trailing by
three at the half, rallied strong
behind the scoring of Jeff Tyo,
playmaking of Chip Haggerty,
and rebounding of Bill Hensler.
Tyo, 6-3 senior guard, who
had game-high 22 points, played

ONTARIO, Calif. (UPI) Fred Marti breezed to a fourstroke victory over John Jacobs
SAPPORO, Japan (UPI) - in the United Air Lines-Ontario
Annie Famose of France Open golf championship.

•

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
UCLA won the "Big One" but
whether the Bruins or Marquette will profit most remains
to be seen.
UCLA made a strong bid to
retain its No. 1 status in college
basketball by beating firstranked and previously undefea ted Southern California, 64~0,
Saturday night. The victory

SEO Standings
TEAM
W L P OP
Chesapeake
14 1 1087 871
Waverly
13 1 1116 719
Athens
13 3 1153 910
Jackson
12 4 1241 935
Meigs
9 6 971 970
Ironton
7 9 986 1098
Coal Grove
6 9 975 1040
Gallipolis
3 12 771 982
Wellston
3 13 877 1267
Logan
2 13 832 1053
Oak Hill
0 14 688 1078
SATURDAY'S
RESULTS:
Meigs 78 Pt. Pleasant 62
Chesapeake 79 Rock Hill 60
Coal Grove 74 Ironton St.
Joe 52
South Point 88 Oak Hill 31
Vinton County 81 Wellston 70

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

College Results

WHAT'S HE DOING
WITH HIS TIME?

f

•

These days, parents are more and more concerned with
what their teen-age sons are doing in their spare time.
Where are they? With whom? What are they doing? What
habits are they developing?
There's no need for such worry when the lad is a newspaperboy. With the responsibility of his own business, he
has something really constructive to do. He's gaining
valuable business experience and he's making money
while learning. With a double-barreled opportunity such
as this. he's not going to waste time, he's going to make
it work for him.
What's more, he's in good company. Seeing what a fine
young man he is, his customers take an active interest in
him and are eager to help him. As he talks with them and
serves them he learns how to get along with people. Last·
ing, worthwhile friendships often are formed.
There's no question about it: What a newspaperboy
does with his time is of great benefit to him and to
society.

with a NEWSPAPER BUSINESS ot his own
and his parents behind him
he

LEARNS while he EARNS

The
Marauders
never
regained the lead in the first
half after they held a 7~ edge
with 3: SO left in the first
quarter. Pt. Pleasant led by as
much as five, 18-13, in the first
eight minutes, and was on top
18-14 after one quarter.
The Marauders were obviously bothered by a tight
press applied by the West
Virginians and couldn't quite
set up the way they wanted
against the Big Black zone that
forced the Marauders to gun
from out~de where they
weren't hitting.
Pt. Pleasant moved out to a
seven point lead midway in the
second eight minutes 27-20. But
two quick buckets near the end

lifted UCLA into the Pacific
Eight Conference lead with a 50 record compared to USC's 4-1
mark.
With both UCLA and USC
having suffered a loss, however, Marquette's 18-0 record may
take on new significance for the
35 coaches who participate in
the UPI weekly major college
basketball ratings. Marquette
also made a bid for the No. 1

ahead. Wicks scored 24 points
and had 14 rebounds and
Booker scored 14 points to lead
UCLA.
"I thought Sidney had his
best game of the season and I
also thought we had our best
team play," commented UCLA
Coach John Wooden. " Booker's
steal and subsequent basket
was the crucial point of the
game."
Mo Layton scored 23 points
for Southern Cal, which connected on only 24 of 63 field
goal attempts during the game.
UCLA and Southern Cal meet
Southern next Saturday night at for the second time this season
Eastern and finish MOVC play on March 13.
the following week against
Miller, also, at Eastern.
Eastern lost to the Falcons this
week, 59-58, in a much disputed
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
game. The meeting week after
1
SCORES
next should prove interesting. By BASKETBALL
United Press International
GLOUSTER, (64)- Wright 5- Cols. Linden McKinley 83 Lima
Senior 70
10:.20, Graham 1-2-4, Seevers 2-0Dover 53 Coshocton 52
4, Everett 7-3-17, Kouich 1-4~, Riverview
96 Ridgewood 71
Meade 3-2-8, Locke 0-3-3, Newcomerstown 73 Lakeland 51
Richards 1-0-2, Totals 22-20-64. Garaway 112 Danvi lle 49
Hiland 59 Dalton 58
EASTERN, ( 85) - Smith 5-3- Tri
Valley 78 West Musklngum
13, Eichinger 3-4-10, H. Caldwell
50
14-3-30, Karr 3-7-13, Boring 1-0-2, Martins Ferry 76 Wintersville
66
Amsbary 2-5-9, B. Caldwell 4-0Bellaire St. Johns 77 Bridgeport
8. Totals 32-21-85.
76
BY QUARTERS
Claymont 62 St. Clairsville 61
Eastern
17 15 19 34-85 River 71 Skyvue 58
Paden City (W. Va. 88 WoodsGlouster
11 8 21 24---64
field 65
ranking Saturday when it
crushed DePaul, 84-55. The
Warriors were ranked third in
last week's ratings.
UCLA held Southern Cal to
one free throw and outscored
the Trojans, 14-1, during the
last nine and a half minutes.
Sidney Wicks' free throw tied
the score at 59-59 with 5:53 to
go and Ken Booker's layup 14
seconds later put the Bruins

Eagles Get 13th Victim

More Sports
On Page 8

•

cent. Coach Jimmy Joe
Wedge's Big Blacks connected
on 21 of 58 for 36 per cent from
the field and made 20 of 32 from
the charity stripe for 63 per
cent.
The Marauders commanded
the boards as they came down
with 42 compared to 33 for the
shorter West Virginians.
Besides Hensler's 10, Tyo had
nine, and Jeff Morris, who was
silenced with foul trouble most
of the night, had six.
Meigs, which easily won the
first meeting of the two, 81-47,
got out to a quick 4-0 lead with
less than a minute gone. But the
Big Blacks shot into the lead
two minutes later, 6-4, on two
fielders and two free tosses.

of the first half by Meigs made
it 31-28 at the half.
SECOND HALF
In the second half, the difference was that the Big Black
press was broken by Haggerty
and the Meigs offense while the
big guns underneath, Tyo and
Hensler, began to hit. Morris,
who sat out most of the second
half with four personals, fouled
out in the late going.
With 5 :03 left in the third
quarter, Pt. Pleasant held the
lead the final time, at 37-36.
Three two-pointers and a free
throw raised the Meigs advantage to 43-37 and from there
on it slowly swelled .
The Marauders had built up a
51-41 lead with a few seconds
remaining when Tyo tipped in a

shot at the buzzer to give Meigs
a 12 point spread heading into
the final eight minutes.
The Big Blacks narrowed the
gap to 60-52 with 5: 18 remaining
but a bucket by Hensler and six
straight points by Tyo made it
6~2 with 3:37 left. The largest
Meigs lead was 76-56 with 42
seconds remaining.
Next week, the Marauders
will battle the Wellston Golden
Rockets at home and also play
the Wahama White Falcons on
the Marauder home boards on
Saturday night. The week
following, Meigs will complete
its season with the Athens
Bulldogs. In previous meetings
with the teams, Meigs whipped
Wellston, 67-47, and Wahama,
65-57, but fell to Athens, 78-56.

Bruins Rally, Trip Southern Cal

MUERREN, Switzerland
(UPI) - Jean-Noel Augert of
BY KEITH WISECUP
France won the men's World
GLOUSTERThe Eastern
Cup slalom race of the ArlbergKandahar Classic by edging out Eagles won their second in a
American Tyler Palmer by less row and raised their record to
13-3 here Saturday night by
than a half second.
thumping the Glouster Tomcats,
85~4, in a Mid-Ohio Valley
HONOLULU (UPI) - Tom
Shaw won the Hawaiian Open Conference game.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
golf tournament by a single
are
2-1 in MOVC play while the
stroke over Miller Barber.
~Tomcats, 1-13 overall, dropped
CARACAS (UPI) - Sudyt- to 0-5 in league play.
Dennis Eichinger, 6-2 junior
slia's David Graham shot an
center,
and Howie Caldwell, 5eight-under-par 272 to edge
Tommy Bolt by a stroke in the 10 senior guard, led the Eagles
Caracas Open golf tournament. as Eichinger dropped in 10
points and had 21 rebounds with
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Caldwell pouring in 30 poil)ts.
Colo. (UPI)- Craig Shanholzer
and Karen Budge, both of
Jackson, Wyo., won the men's
and women's races in the Mt.
Werner Ski Classic.

his best ball of the year in the
final half as he dropped in 20.
The 5-7 senior Haggerty was
inserted in the lineup in the
second half and came through
with 11 points and moved the
Marauder offense. Hensler, 6-3
senior forward-center, took 10
rebounds off the boards and put
in 11 points, eight in the second
half.
Frank Smith, 6-2 forward,
banged in 15 markers to top the
Big Blacks while Mike Rawson
contributed 14 and Painter
added 10.
Meigs shot over 50 per cent
from the field the first time this
season, making 26 of 50 for 52
per cent. They cashin in 26 of
41 from the foul line for 63 per

By United Press International
East
Syracuse 75 LaSalle 68
Pitt 118 Crngie-MIIn 84
Holy Cross 92 Columbia 79
Prvdnce 72 Niagara 64
Mass. 86 Vermont 51
Princeton 76 CornPII l.'l
West Va. 83 Davidson 79
Colgate 84 Lafayette 83
Assmption 99 LeMoyne 78
Phila. Tex. 70 Del. Va l. 60
Rutgers 105 Lehigh 77
NYU 63 Bucknell 52
Dartmouth 88 Yale 65
Harvard 95 Brown 80
PMC Coil. 83 Havrfrd 60
St. Jos. (Pa.}- 71 Temple 64
St. Bon. 69 Fairfield 48
Beckley 61 Bluefld 60
Del. 62 Gttysbg 61
Fordham 84 Bost. Coli. 80
Penn St. 94 Geo. Wash. 61
South
Virginia 79 NC. St. 53
Auburn 86 Florida 70
'Tenn. 88 Miss. St. 65
Wake Forest 103 Fla. Sou. 68
Kenlucky 121 Miss. 86
So. Car. 47 Clemson 44.
Wm. &amp; Mary 77 Navy 71
Ga. Sou. 86 Mercer 66
Lyla (La.) 107 Miami (Fla.) 88
Ga. Tech 83 Air Force 53
Maryland 88 Duke 79
Vanderbilt 74 Georgia 60
LSU 107 Alabama 78
E. Ky. 90 Mrehed St. 62
Furman 91 Citadel 86
Ala. St. 105 So. Car. St. 87
W. Ky. 87 Mid. Tenn. 73
Ind. St. 62 Ky. Wesleyan 60
Midwest
Noire Dame 102 Crghton 91
Purdue 85 Indiana 81
Mich. 82 Northwestern 81
llltnois 93 Minn. 78
Kansas 81 Nebraska 67
Iowa 93 Wisconsin 91
Ohio St. 87 Mich. St. 76
Kan. St. 96 Iowa St. 81
Rro'\nlpv 86 Tulda 80
Ashlnd 74 Hllsdle (Mich.) 55
Marquette 84 DePaul 55
Akron 72 Toledo 71
Western Mich. 89 Ohio U. 79
Southwest
Texas A&amp;M 87 Arkansas 82
UTEP 80 Arizona 66
TCU 102 Baylor 87
Ok1ahoma 69 Okla. St. 53
N.M. St. 93 Utah St. 90
Ariz. St. 92 New Mexico 80
Ark. St. 81 Ab. Chris. 75
Rice 80 Texas Tech 64
Texas 8-4 SMU 83

Tom Karr, 5-11 senior guard,
had 13 points and 12 rebounds
and Dave Smith, 6-2 senior
forward, added 13 points and 13
rebounds. Wright led the
Tomcats with 20 points, Everett
adding 17.
The Eagles jumped out to a
17-lllead after one quarter and
were never really threatened.
They had leads of 32-19 at the
half and 51-40 at the end of three
quarters before cracking it wide
open in the final eight minutes,
outscoring the Tomcats, 34-24.
Eastern made 32 of 64 from
the field for a warm 50 per cent
and pulled down 58 rebounds,
completely dominating that
category over the smaller
Tomcats. The Eagles had 21
turnovers while stealing the ball
20 times from the Tomcats.
The Eagles are tied for the
lead in the Southern Valley
Conference with North Gallia,
each showing 8-1 slates. Both
have one game remaining. The
Eagles' SVAC opponent is
Southern, whom they defeated
in their first meeting, 72-35.
Both the Pirates and Eagles
defeats were to each other, each
winning on the other's home
floor.
In the preliminary reserve
game, the little Eagles won over
the Tomkittens 50-48 in triple
overtime. Randy Boring led the
little Eagles with 21 points while
Alan D~vall added 11. Cardens
led Glouster with 12 while Crow
had 10. The Eagles play

COLUMBUS (UPI)
George E. Hill, defensive
coordinator for the Duke
University football team, will
join the Ohio State staff Feb.
15 as defensive line coach.
Hill, a former Bay Village
High School athlete and
Denison University fullbacktackle, replaces Dave McClainL who accepted a job at
Ball State in Indiana.
Hill, 37, was a freshman
coach at Bowling Green State
1958-59, line coach at Findlay
College 1959-60, defensive
cqordinator at Denison 196065 and assistant at Cornell

"Bob Siekmann came in and
got seven big rebounds and 12
points and Dave Merchant really kept things going."
Rebounding Improves
Although Ohio State was still
outrebounded 43-39, it was a
big improvement from the
pounding the Spartans dished

·

The Meigs Marauder reserves swept past the Pt.
Pleasant little Blacks, 47-30 at
Rock Springs Saturday night.
Meigs is now 9~, keeping pace
with the varsity, overall.
Rich Bailey topped the little
Marauders with 12 points with
big Mark Werry dropping in
nine. Richmond led P t .
Pleasant with nine.
Meigs made 19 of 52 from the
field for 36 per cent and dropped
in 9 of 20 from the foul line. The
little Blacks made 11 of 37 from
the field for 30 per cent and hit
on only 8 of 21 from the free
throw line.
BY QUARTERS
Toronto 86 Springfield Local 55 Pt. Pleasant
5 9 3 13--30
Lafferty Seton 59 Smithfield 45
14 &amp; 15 10-47
Yorkville 99 Stanton Local 70 Meigs
Tiltonville 101 Dillonvale 59
POINT (30) - Hatdin 2-0-4,
Mingo 74 Cadiz 46
Thomas 1-2-4, Richmond 4-1-9,
Steubenville
Central
58
Chambers 1-4~. Miller 2-0-4,
Steubenville 57
Federal Hocking 78 Frontier Beckner 0-0-tl, Harbrecht 0-0-tl,
Local 58
Moore 1-1-3, Nickols, 0-0-0.
Guernsey Centra I Catholic 68
Totals
11-3-30.
Shenandoah 65 (2 ot)

Fort Frye 66
Parkersburg (W.Va. Catholic
59
Eastern 85 Glouster 64
Morgan 102 Ph ilo 98
Parkersburg (W. Va.l St.
Joseph 69
Columbus St. Charles 65
Portsmouth 80 Williamson (W.
Va.) 53
Nelsonville-York 56 Belpre 54
Vinton County 81 Wellston 70
Meigs 78 Point Pleasant (W.
Va.) 62
Starr-Washington 80 Waterford
38
196~6.
Massillon 69 Canton Timken 66
Canton Lehman 69 Jackson 68
Canton South 54 Glenwood 48
Oakwood 56 North Canton
Hoover 49
Perry -84 Marlington 75
Poland 65 Minerva 53
East Canton 54 Tuslaw 50
Lake 82 Tuscarawas Valley 78
Strasburg 68 Northwest 54
Hilltop 106 Evergreen 7-4
Stryker 61 Montpelier 54
Pettisville 80 Edgarton 67
out a week ago when they North
Central 63 Fremont
dominated the boards 58-41.
(Ind.) 61
·
"We had a lot more activity Van Wert 74 Defiance 67
69 Fayette 54
in the corners," Taylor said, Eaton
Napoleon 74 Springfield Twp. 67
"and more activity under the Euclid 66 Valley Forge 55
Beachwood 5-4 Fairport 52
boards.
Lutheran East 64 Rich"In last week's game, in vir- Cleve.
mond Hts. 62
tually every case, every Michi- Cleve. University School 89
Detroit Cranbrook 43
gan State player played better
68 Nordonia 55
than his seasonal average indi- Woodridge
Garf ield Heights 70 Shaker
cated he should or even could."
Heights 57
This week, the Buckeyes take Lakewood 67 Normandy 57
Cleve.
Shaw 81 Parma 68
on the two teams who are tied Bay Village
53 Fairview 39
with them in the standings behind Berkshire -46 Newbury 38
Michigan, going to Purdue on Kirtland 66 Cardinal 61
Tuesday night and entertaining Buckeye 66 Avon 64
Amherst 103 Keystone 66
Illinois Saturday afternoon in South
West Geuaga 61 Mayfield 57
the weekly televised Big Ten Brecksville 54 Wickliffe 29
Padua 71 Strongsville -49
game.

ranked Western Kentucky outscored Middle Tennessee, 87-73,
ninth-ranked Tennessee ripped
Mississippi State, ~. and
lOth-ranked Kentucky walloped
Mississippi, 121-86.
In other games involving the
top 20 teams, it was Illinois 93
Minnesota 78, Syracuse 75 La
Salle 68, Notre Dame 102
Creighton 91, Fordham 84
Boston College 80, New Mexico
State 93 Utah State 90,
Michigan 82 Northwestern 81
and Duquesne 87 Villanova 78.

Reserves Have Easy One

Cage Scores

OSU Guards Sharp
In 87-76 TriUillph
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Take it
from Ohio State Coach Fred
Taylor, it wasn't the uniforms
but the people in them that
made the difference in Saturday
night's victory over Michigan
State at East Lansing.
Just one week after losing to
the Spartans at home in their
worst performance of the year,
the Buckeyes, wearing the red
road uniforms loaned to MSU
in Columbus, put it to the green
and white 87-76.
"Our kids were a heck of a
lot more active than they were
a week ago," Taylor said. "They
took the play to Michigan State.
We got into our patterns a lot
better in this game."
Led By Guards
Ohio's guards, Capt. Jirr.
Cleamons and sophomore Allan
Hornyak, set the pace for the
win, which kept the Bucks tied
for second in the Big Ten with a
4-1 mark.
Hornyak, who had only 12
points in the first game between
the two and hit only 5 of 20
from the floor, led the Bucks
in scoring with 25 points on 11
of 22 and Cleamons added 21
points and 10 rebounds.
"We had excellent play from
our guards," Taylor said. "But
the most significant thing was
the play of our bench.

Marquette had too much
muscle for DePaul, outrebounding the Demons, 63-33: and
controlling the game all the
way. All five Marquette starters scored in double figures,
topped by Gary Brell's 26
points.
Fourth-ranked Pennsylvania
defeated Columbia, 92-79, fifthranked Kansas beat Nebraska,
81~7, sixth-ranked Jacksonville
downed Oklahoma City, 103-77,
seventh-ranked South Carolina
topperl Clemson, 47-44, eighth-

Lorain Catholic 85 Brookside 61
Ashtabula Harbor 89 Madison 63
Cleve. Borromeo 55 Legemont
45
Medina 90 Avon Lake 88 (2 ot)
North Olmsted 82 Olmsted Falls
37
Westlake69 Rocky River63 (ot)
Highland 48 Cleve. Lutheran
West 46
Eastlake North 69 Pa inesvil le
Harvey 67
Cleve. Cathedral Latin 93
Cleve. Central Catholic 64
Elyria Catholic 68 Midview 67
Jefferson
66
Pa inesvi lie
Riverside 60
Grand Valley 66 Ashtabula
Edgewood 63
Amherst 72 Brunswick 50
Perry 67 Grand Valley 58
Toledo Scott 76 Southview 62
Culver Military Academy 66
Cleveland Hawken 52

MEIGS ( 47) -Boggs 4-0-8, A.
0-2-2, Werry 4-1-9,
Bailey 5-2-12, Sayre 0-0-0, B.
Vaughan 3-1-7, Burney 1-0-2,
Chaney 1-3-5, Birchfield 0-0-tl,
Chafin 1-0-2, George 0-0-0.
Totals 19-9-47.
Officials, McDaniel and
Smith.
Vau~han

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It's our business to ''bring
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Phone 992-2966

~

Pomeroy

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IN POMEROY

�Pioneer, Industrious, Honest
Ed. Note: The following is
another in a series of
historical articles by Mrs.
Agnes C. Hill, Box 58,
Coolville. Mrs. Hill is deeply
interested in pioneer history,
particularly
of
Meigs
County's Olive and Orange
Townships. She welcomes
factual material, all of which
is filed and preserved.
BY AGNES HILL
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
newspaper clipping found in an
old scrapbook owned by Mr. and
Mrs. Thurm Babcock, Tuppers
Plains, who have lived in the
Olive township area all their
lives, tells the story of an early
settler. No notations are to be
found on the clipping; no note as
to the author, nor is there any
date of publication. But it must
have been printed about 1905,
presumably in a Pomeroy, Ohio
paper. Its title :
LOG CABIN
Subtitle: At the Age of 90,
Pioneer · Daniel Keller Still in
Possession of Good Health and
Right Use of all His Faculties.
Your correspondent spent a
pleasant day with Daniel Keller
of Orange Township a few days
ago. He found Mr. Keller enjoying the best of health (as he
has) the last few years of his life
withhisdaughter,Mrs. Mary A.
Baker, and his grandson, Albert
Keller, both of whom were
present, as were two other
grandsons - Squire Keller of
Success and Charles A. Fox, the
Sumner merchant.
Mr. Keller is one of the
pioneers of Meigs County,
having lived here 67 years. He
was born at Easton, Northhampton
County,
Pennsylvania, November 7, 1815. He

lived at Easton until 1834 when
he moved to Geauga County,
Ohio, where he resided until the
spring of 1839, when he moved
to Meigs County, moving in with
Josiah Smith, father of Josiah
L. Smith of Sumner, and near
the same spot where Josiah L.
now ( 1905) lives. Mrs. Keller
has done the household work for
the whole family for several
years.
A devoted friendship was
established which lasted as long
as Mr. Smith lived. After a few
years Mr. Keller moved to
Alexander township, Athens
County, stayed until he "got
sick of home" as he expressed
it, and he moved back to
another farm owned by Mr.
Smith near Sumner. Here he
resided until January 1845,
when ·he moved to the farm on
which he now resides, about two
and one-half miles south of
Tuppers Plains.
His farm then consisted of 108
acres, but several additions
have been made until he now
owns 469 acres.
Mr. Keller has seen many
changes since his residence in
Orange township. First, the
township trustees threatened to
order him to leave because of
his poverty; but he has long
been known as one of its best,
most honored, and wealthiest
citizens.
When he arrived there were
some large game, such as deer
and wildcats, and plenty of
small game. He has seen a
township of an almost unbroken
wilderness change into many
pleasant homes and beautiful
farms. He has seen modes of
conveyance from mere cowpaths winding over the hills,
change to many public roads
(such as they are) leading in
every direction; and he can sit

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loan of two newspapers that
fairly well complete the story of
Daniel Keller.
From
The
Democrat,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Nov. 11, 1915:
Daniel Keller lives to
celebrate his 100th birthday on
November 7, 1915. He was born
November 7, 1815.
Mr. Keller was born when
James Madison was president,
and the same year that Andrew
Jackson fought and won the
battle of New Orleans. He began
life when the nation was but 39
years old, and he was 10 years
of age when Jefferson, who
wrote the Declaration of
American Independence, and
John Adams who defended it,
both died.
Contemporaneous with his
boyhood and young manhood
are the lives of Jackson, Benton, Calhoon, Webster, Lincoln,
Douglas, and many other
distinguished statesmen. While
they were commanding the
"applause
of
listening
senates"; Daniel, lured by
neither pomp nor power;
pursued an industrious, honest,
upright life so as to command
the respect of all who has come
within the circle of his
acquaintance.
In 1836, Daniel cast his first
vote, for Martin VanBuren, for
President. He has voted for
every democratic president
since. On Nov. 2, 1915, he went
.to the polls and voted for the
prohibition of the open saloon in
Ohio. May it not be possible that
the banishment of the open
saloon is conducive
to
longevity? When Daniel first
voted, the word "democrat"
~as not synonymous with the
word "prohibition". One of the
ON NOVEMBER 25, 1969, marvelous developments
Mrs. Faye (Kincade) Bailey during his life that these words
was kind enough to grant the are coming to mean the same.

at home and talk to several
thousand people in Meigs
County over the Citizen's
Telephone line, with good
prospects of seeing a steam
railroad and an electric car line
running close by in the near
future.
(Note by ACH: Citizens of
Coolville were swindled of a
large sum of money about
the years 1905-1906, by a
"railroad" company promising
a line into their village in return
for money invested in the
company.)
Mr. Keller was married to
Miss Julia Ann Garis in 1836, at
Geauga County, Ohio. She had
been his schoolmate back in
Pennsylvania. To this union
were born five children:
Lenora, wife of Edward Fox, of
Sumner; J. R. Keller, of near
Tuppers Plains; Mary A.,
widow of the late Wallace G.
Baker, of the 3rd W. Va.
Cavalry; Jackson Keller, who
resided near him until his death
in 1901, and Albert Keller, who
died in childhood.
After almost a half century of
constant,
devoted
companionship, his wife was called
to her reward in 1884.
Mr. Keller is only reaping the
harvest of an industrious,
honest youth. He has, without a
doubt, done the most hard work
of any man in Orange Township; has lived an honest,
spotless life and it can truly be
said that he hasn't an enemy in
the world. He is the 1ast survivor of a family of six children
- five brothers and one sister,
all whom lived happy,
prosperous, useful lives. Long
live grand old Daniel Keller!

(Ed. Note: Just 17 years later music. Editors S. F . Smith of
this trend was reversed.)
"The Leader ", and C. E.
His children (five generations Peoples of "The Democrat",
of offspring) who were present each made short talks apto help celebrate his 100th birth- propriate to the occasion. It was
day were: J. R. Keller, aged 75; a great day to the hundreds who
Mrs. Lenora Fox, 78, and Mrs . were there and none seemed to
Mary A. Baker, who resides enjoy it more than Centenarian
with her father. Grandchildren Daniel Keller.
present were C. E. Keller, Anna
(In this newspaper are many
Smith, L. L. Keller, E. M. Keller items about the prohibition
and C. F. Keller, children of J. cause. Much bitterness against
R. Keller; C. A. Fox and Laura liquor and its evils are spread in
Bowen, children of Mrs. Lenora it. It was a major issue of the
Fox; D. M. Keller and Lenora day.)
M. Koehler, children of Jackson
AND THE FINAL paper is
Keller, deceased.
The Democrat, Pomeroy ,
Great-grandchildren, most of

~.95

He was a lifelong democra t
and lived in all the national
administra t ions excep t
Washington, Jefferson, and
'Adams. When he arrived in

M u llen Gets MU rost
n

Meigs County at Coleman's
Landing, he owned one yoke of
spotted oxen, one axe, one
rna ttock, and 15 cents in money.
He did anything his hands
could find to get along; learned
the lesson of economy and
tactful management and for
years has been the largest
taxpayer in Orange Township ~
The funeral services were
held at the Keller home
yesterday afternoon at 2:30,
conducted by Rev. Bristor;
burial followed in the cemetery ;,
near Tuppers Plains.
( Several paragraphs are
omitted here repetitous of the
clippings above. )

whom were ·present are: it4'
Everett, Bertha, Norma and lr.l.C
Helen, children of C. E. Keller;
NOTE: In checking a histor~
Eth_el Smith, daughter of Anna
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
" Marshall is fortunate to gain book to see how many men were
Sm1 t~; Ha~old, Freda and _ Joseph H. McMullen, head the services of one who has had President during Daniel
Bermce, children of E. M. football coach at San Jose State, extensive experience in college Keller's lifetime , I have
Ke_ller; Garth and Mabel, was named Sunday night as the athletics," Dr . John Barker, discovered that every President
we've had except washington,
children of C. F. Keller; new a thletic director at Mar- Marshall president, said.
Frances, H. D., and Gladys, shall University.
McMullen has served as a lived sometime during his life
children of D. M. Keller;
McMullen
46
replaces . coach at Stetson University , the span, including Richard Nixon !,
C~rence and Pearl Koehler' Charles Kautz, wh~ was among University of Toledo and Penn and 23 of them held office
during his lifetime.
children of Lenora Koehler; 75 Marshall football players, State before San Jose State.
Myrtle Green, Edna Exl~y ' coaches, fans and crewmen
Successful Cable
Everett, R_oy and Gold!Ce killed in a plane crash last Nov.
Laying
of the first successBowen, chlldren of Laura 14 a t the Tri-State Air ort. The
ful transatlantic telegraph
Bowen. Great
Great. .
p
G
d plane was brmgmg the&gt; football cable was completed on July
'ldr
Grandc h1 en are eorge an
h
'ld
f team orne after a ga n1e. None 27, 1866, from Heart's Con.
L es t er G reen, c h1 ren o
. d of the passengecs surviVed.
tent, Newfoundland, to ValMyr tle G reen, and V1rg11 an
A
d t
f B
·
1
h'l
gra ua e o
rown entia, Ireland, by the steamDons Ex ey, c 1 dren of Edna Umvers1
-t y an d Wes t mms
· t er ,ship Great Eastern, accordE
1
to Encyclopaedia Britan~-ost 550 people attended (Pa. ) Coll~ge, McMullen will ing
nica .
the celebration . .The day was take ov~r hts new duties as soon
-ideal. The sunshine was as ~oss1ble. He was expected to
~~
Bef ore you get envious
mellowed by the softening haze arn ve on campus Thursday ·
2)6 E . 211d
Pomeroy
of the boss, consider: he
of Indian summer and the air
Phone 992-5428
has you working for him.
was very balmy. Long tables
TEAM WINS TROPHY
spread with spotless linen fairly
LAKE PLACID, N. Y. (UPI)
groaned under the weight of - The four-man team led by Air
every thing good to eat; and to F orce Sgt. Jim Hickey of
OPTOMETRIST
which all were welcomed with Plattsburgh, N. Y., won the
true Daniel Keller hospitality. Billy Fiske Memorial Trophy
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 ( CLOSE'
The Chester and Tuppers Sunday in the National AAU
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Plains brass bands enlivened four-man bob sled ra ces on the
POMEROY.
the occasion with their splendid Mt. Van Hoevenberg run .

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March 20, 1919.
OBITUARY
The death of Uncle Daniel
Keller at his home near Tuppers
Plains Monday morning at 10
o'clock will be learned with
greatest sorrow, by all who
knew him.
At the time of his death he
was 103 years, 4 months, and 10
days old.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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

POLLY~S

POINTERS

Tip fro1n Golden Ager

•

On How to Pop Corn
By POLLY CRAMER

~-~"&amp;'mi~'~'"""'~''''*y··--·~t
Polly's Problem .. .• ~.. .
'
DEAR POLLY-How can I clean an indoor-outdoor carpet that resists vacuuming or sweeping?
Ours is cemented to the breakfast room floor where
~ ~~::~:e~_!_~R§_ tJ~t!J~ ~~d has me in despair as an
~u

~

&gt;);

::;;,:;:;:xw.~:-:,..

i;

1\~
r ·:-.s....~l.:-.

~

\

\

DEAR POLLY-and Mrs. C. H. W.-I find that if I do
\ not add salt to the corn while it is in the popper it does
not stick. Add the salt after pouring the popped corn
' in a bowL-MRS. D. R.

•

•
•

DEAR POLLY-I think Mrs. C. H. W.'s sticking problem
will be solved after her corn popper is "seasoned." She
could use a little excess oil in her popcorn popper and
wait until it is hot before she adds the corn.-MRS. J. H.

\ DEAR POLLY-I hope Mrs. C. H. W. will listen to an
oid corn popper from way back (male, 67). First thing,
thz.:ow that store-bought popper in the trash can. Get a
good three- or four-quart aluminum stew pan with a lid,
pour in a generous amount of cooking oil so the bottom
is weil covered, dump in a handful or so of popcorn,
put on high heat with the lid on and let it pop. Shake
occasionally as the corn pops. If the lid begins to raise
up, pour off the surplus into a separate pan. Continue
to shake and pop until all the corn is popped and pour
out the rest. Too little oil will cause burning and sticking. Do not wash this pan but leave as it is for the next
popping. Salt corn to taste.
Been doing this way for 40 years and every other
night. Did •you ever hear
of anyone getting sick on
popcorn? No! And you
never will!-H. A. M.
DEAR POLLY-For
rea 11 y dirty, grimy or
g r e a s y h a n d s the best
treatment I have ever found
is a couple of drops of any
of the popular dishwashing
liquids plus a light sprinkle of any good scratchless
scouring powder. Rub
briskly until almost dry and then rinse off with warm
water, dry and follow with a few drops 'Of hand lotion.
I hope this strikes a blow for the "Equal Rights for Men"
movement by winning a Polly Dollar.-DICK
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite
homemaking idea, Polly's Problem or solution to a problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.

Cubmaster Installed
Jack Lyons was installed as
cubmaster of Racine Pack 243
in ceremonies at a recent
meeting.
Taking part in the installation
ceremony were Robert Hart,
Lillie Hart, Rose Grindstaff,
Gene Lyons, Patty Pape,
Dennis
Manuel,
Phyllis
Knighting and Linda HalL
Prayer by Manuel and the
pledge to the flag opened the
meeting. Dens 1 and 2 displayed
pinhole planetariums they had
made.
Lyons awarded bobcat pins to
Randy Smith, Greg Deel, Jerry
Don Grooms, Jerry Michael
Grooms, Jackie Lyons, Jr.,
Troy Manuel, John Pape,
Douglas Raines, Lonnie Mayes,
with the parents making the
presentations to the boys.

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

Asbury WSCS
Meeting Held
The Family Cluster, a Reality
or Illusion? was the theme of
the program presented by Mrs.
William Winebrenner at a
meeting of the Women's Society
of Christian Service of the
Asbury United Methodist
Church in Syracuse at the home
of Mrs. John Sauvage recently.
Taking part in the program
were Mrs. Karl Kloes and Mrs.
Carl Weese. Purpose was to
examine the trends affecting
family life in America today
and determine whether they are
strengthening or weakening,
and to look at the Biblical
concept of family in an effort to
encourage women to strengthen
their families through love.
Mrs. Sauvage gave devotions
using scripture from Second

iktttiN~==~:::\;:iE!tmii. [£~~~~~~~~!:b?J:~~

•

•

•
•

f

•

By United Press International
NEW YORK - VOLTAGE RErr&gt;UCTIONS CAUSED by an
explosion in a large generator, dinuned lights, snarled subway
service, knocked television stations off the air and halted elevator
service in New York City Sunday night.
A complete blackout hit a 10-block area including the Daily
News Building, which houses United Press International, shortly
after 9:15p.m. EST. The rest of the area struggled in a dim-&lt;&gt;ut
which began shortly after 7 p.m. when an explosion in Consolidated Edison's waterwide generating station on the East
River near the United Nations.
PORT CLINTON, OHIO- Written testimony by Nobel Prize
winning scientist Dr. Linus Pauling was to be submitted today
when the Atomic Energy Conunission (AEC) safety and licensing
board resumed hearings on a proposed nuclear power plant to be
located here. The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. and Toledo
Edison Co. seek approval of a license to build a huge nuclear
power plant to serve northern Ohio. They are opposed by conservationists.
The hearing was recessed on Jan. 29 after an AEC scientist
testified federal standards for allowable radiation emissions from
nuclear power plants should be ten times more stringent. Dr.
Arthur Tamplin, a scientist at the AEC laboratory in Livermore,
Calif., said cancer and leukemia cases have been found to be ten
times more frequent near nuclear power plants since 1966.
MIDDLETOWN, OHIO - BETH SIMMONS, a 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Danville High School senior, will represent Ohio in the national
Junior Miss pageant at Mobille, Ala. in May. The 5-foot-5lass was
selected Ohio Junior Miss Saturday night after wowing judges
with her drum solo and d;mce routine.
Runnersup were Barrie Jo Matusoff of Fairview High School
in Dayton, Sharon Eicknell of Fairfield High School, Becky Peters
of Middletown High School, and Karen Sue Green of Springfield
South High SchooL
CLEVELAND -TWO MEN AND A WOMAN were shot to
death in an apartment house shootout and two other persons also
died violently here during the weekend to raise the homicide total
in Ohio's largest city to 20 this year. Raymond Stoves, 34, Mrs.
Clara Winston, 42, and James J. Williams, 47, were shot to death
Saturday night.
Police said Williams picked up Mrs. Winston at her apartment to drive her to a nearby hospital to visit a relative. As they
walked down the apartment building hallway, Stoves, a former
boyfriend of Mrs. Winston, opened fire with a pistoL Both were
wounded by the blasts, but Williams managed to pull a gun and
kill Stoves. Williams and Mrs. Winston died at Mt. Sinai Hospital
shortly after the shooting.
WASHINGTON -GOVERNMENT FORECASTS indicate
retail food prices will edge up only slightly during the next few
months because farm supplies are heavy. And for 1971 as a whole,
retail prices may average only 2 to 3 per cent above a year earlier
compared with last year's 5.5 per cent jump.
The forecasts came in a "demand and price situation" report
by Agriculture Department economists, who also said net farm
income would decline this year. The report said the forecast for
slight price increases in the next few months was based on
predictions that heavy supplies will keep many farm prices below
year~arlier levels. Later in the year, however, meat supplies
may decline and farm-level prices will probably strengthen.
Poisonous Relatives
Cashew plants are related
to poison ivy and poison
sumac and can cause serious skin irritations on persons susceptible to exposure,
according t'&gt; Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE

$349.95
$35.00 Down-

Balance On
Convenient

Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va_

were reported and the birthday
of Mrs. Damon Ferrell was
observed.
To conclude the meeting Miss
Marcia Karr gave excerpts
from a book by Billy Graham.
Mrs. Weese was the co-hostess.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Forrest Donley, Mrs.
Don Lisle, Mrs. Ted Hilldore
and Mrs. Virgil Teaford.

LHOSPITAL NEWS

Wolf patches went to Jerry
Don Grooms, who also received
a gold arrow point, and George
Knighting, Mike Wilson, Jerry
M. Grooms, and Yancy Roush,
also awarded one gold and one
silver arrow points. James
Brent Patterson received a bear
patch.
Webelos leader, Robert Hart,
presented webelos John West,
Brice Hart, Mike Wilson and
Eddie Smith with scholar pins.
Two experiments were
conducted by the webelos as a
requirement for their scientist
activity badge. Advanced into
the webelos den this month
were George Knighting, Jerry
M. Grooms and Lonnie Mayes.
Boys attending besides those
named were Brian Grindstaff,
Andy Wilson and Seth HilL

J

'iolzer Medical Center, First
A. · c and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Mrs. Michael H. Bailey and
twins, James S. Blevins, Mrs.
G. Richard Campbell, Ray
Darst, Ogle R. Dillon, Mrs.
Stephen E. Elberfeld, Mrs.
Lowell C. Evans, Donnie Allen
Freeman, Armit A. Gee, Brian
T. Grube, Catherine L. Hafer,
Mrs. Pius E. Hyrne, Mrs. Leona
M. Kennedy, Mrs. Russell E.
Kennedy, Anthony Howard
Kincaid, Mrs. Earl D. Leach,
Cynthia L. Moore, Larry D.
Patrick, Mrs. Arnold H.
Perry, Mrs. Raleigh Shaver,
Steven D. Swann, Augustus C.
Underwood, Mrs. Robert A.
Waugh and infant daughter, and
Miss Brenda Bush.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Sylvia Wolfe, Racine; Charles
Klein, Pomeroy; Alfred Sexton,
Middleport; Sheila Childress,
Racine.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Nondis Fields, Geneva Jones,
William Pooler, Rodney King,
Mary Roush, Ray Alkire.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Joann Clark, Pomeroy; Horace
McElhinney, Middleport;
Juanita Frederick, Minersville;
Jackie Elam, Pomeroy; Robert
Steel, Middleport; Eddie Casto,
Mason; Ora Halfhill, Cheshire.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Clarence Hayman, Hugh Bush,
Chaplin's Career
Claude Roy, Mary Roush, Janie
Charlie Chaplin began his Snider, Mary Burkett, Louise
professional career at the Green, Clarence Spurrier.
age of seven as a member of
a dancing act and never returned to the stage after beSERVICES SET
ginning his film career at the
WOOSTER, Ohio (UPI)
age of 24 in 1913.
Services will be held here on
Tuesday for Dr. Nels F. S.
Ferre, 69, one of the nation 's
leading philosophers and
teachers, who had been a
philosophy professor at the
College of Wooster since 1965.
KLEIN IS SPEAKER
(UPI)
COLUMBUS
Herbert Klein, director of
communications for President
Nixon, was expected to discuss
the
recently
announced
domestic proposals in a talk at a
Feb. 13 session of the Ohio
Newspaper Association convention here.

Valentine tray favors for
Veterans Memorial Hospital
were made Sunday afternoon
by the junior auxiliary
members of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion.
The girls also signed a
round-robin card for Pvt.
Joseph E. Martin, stationed
with the U. S. Army at Fort
Dix, N. J. and practiced for
the skit which will be
presented at the spring
district confere~ce of the
American Legion Auxiliary
juniors. District contest
materials were distributed
and the next meeting was
announced for Feb. 23.

Birthday Party
Being Planned
A birthday dinner party for a
patient at the Lakin State
Hospital remembered
throughout the year by the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church has
been planned for Sunday at the
home of Mrs. Eldon Weeks.
Plans for the observance
were made during a recent
: 'leeting of the society at the
home of Mrs. Ed Bowen. It was
noted that the Psalm study
books are here and that the
course will begin on Feb. 24 and
continue through the Lenten
season.
Devotions ' by Miss Frieda
Lieving were on ''Religious
Training in the Home for
Children." Prayer was by Mrs.
Don Hunnel and the group sang
"Yield Not to Temptation."
Mrs. Thomas Bentz gave
scripture from Mark 10 and the
readings were "One Solitary
Life" by Mrs. William Airson;
"A Child's Prayer" by Miss
Elizabeth Davis; "Family
Worship Works for Us" by Mrs.
Martha Husted. Mrs. Bentz
gave the closing prayer.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Delores
Will, Mrs. Beulah Utterback,
Dorothy Long, Mrs. Bernice
Evans, and Patty Edwards.

Parents, relatives and friends
there were Linda Hill, Rose
Grindstaff, Patty Pape, Donald
Smith, Dennis Manuel, Mary
Wilson, Faye Wilson, Don
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Lyons, Sr., Mrs. James Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hart, Linda Dee!, Phyllis
Knighting, Phyllis McMillin,
Mrs. Glen Mayes, Mike
Weshinsky, and Glen Roush .
Cookies and Kool-aid were
served.
Committee members for the
pack are Frank Cleland, Dennis
Manuel, Patty Pape, Russell
Cwnmins, Boy Roy and Bob
Warden. Robert Hart is webelos
leader and the den ml)thers are
Rose Grindstaff, Linda Hill,
Gene Lyons and Tillie Hart.

Heritage Will
Highlight Skit
A skit, Our Precious
American Heritage, will be
presented by the American
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, at the Bradbury PTA meeting, 7:30
Thursday night at the schooL
Narrator will be Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, Eighth District
American Legiona Auxiliary
president, who will also be in
the role of the Spirit of History.
Others taking part will be
Pam Powers as the youth of
America;
Mrs.
Gerald
Wildermuth as the American;
Janice Couch as Uncle Sam;
Mrs. Roy Reuter as the Indian
mother; Mrs. Harry Davis, the
Pilgrim
mother;
Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, the Colonial
mother; Mrs. David Cummings, the pioneer mother;
Mrs. 0. A. Martin, the Civil War
mother; Mrs. Charles Sauer,
the Suffragette mother; and
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr., Mrs.
J. M. · Thornton, Mrs. Rose
Genheimer and Mrs. Norbert
Neutzling, as the gold star
mothers.
Mrs. Robert Couch will
represent the mother of today
and Mrs. Russell Watson the
spirit of love.

foday·s FUNNY

Than• to
Joseph Salak
Deland, Fla .

(~

1971 by NEA, Inc.

Today's FUNNY will pay $1.00 for
ea'h original 0 funny 11 used. Send gags
to: Today's FUNNY, 1200 West Third
St., Cleveland, Ohio -4-4113.

P. J. Pauley

WINS TWO MEDALS
HAMAR, Norway (UPI)
Norway's Sten Stensen won two
gold medals and set a Norwegian record of 4:21.2 minutes
for 3,000 meters in Sunday's
international speed skating
meet.
Stensen followed with a
victory in the 5,000-meters with
a time of 7:31.3.

·MONDAY
SYRACUSE P.T.A., Monday,
7:30 p.m. Founder's Day
program.
WSCS at Middleport Heath
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Monday.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
Tuesday, 2 p.m. social room
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. ; Mrs. James Titus
to conduct workshop on how to
make velvet roses; Mrs. M. C.
Wilson, Mrs. David Entsminger, Miss Lucille Smith,
hostesses.
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
Tuesday, at the high school.
Everyone urged to attend;
important business.
SPECIAL
MEETING,
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at temple.
Work in Master Mason degree.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Columbia Gas Co. of
Ohio, Betty Newton demonstration, "Why Weight? Think
Thin."
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Weanesday noon,
United Methodist Church.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, s tate
convocation Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT
Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
at the ceramic shop of Mrs.
Russell Mills. Co-hostesses,
Mrs. Ferman Moore, Mrs. Ed
Burkett, and Mrs. Wesley Fry.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m . Thursday, preceded by
Mass and Rosary at 7:15p.m.
Hostesses, Mrs. Phyllis Hennesy , Mrs. Janet Duffy, Sandy
Korn, Mrs. Peg Rudolph, Mrs.
Barbara Mullen.
RJJLE MODIFIED
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)
Miami University trustees have
modified the six-month-old rule
prohibiting students on conduct
probation from getting jobs and
other financial aid. They now
may obtain campus employment. Trustees, however,
said further offenses might
result in loss of financial
assistance.
TRIAL IS SET
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)
Brenda Campbell, 20, Dayton, a
student at Ohio University, will
be tried April 15 for seconddegree murder in the apparent
asphyxiation death of her son
born last month at a dormitory.

Plans have been made to
finish the Cathedral Church
of St. Peter and St. Paul,
RUNNERS FEATURED
NEW YORK (UPI) -Cheryl known as Washington Cathedral, in Washington, D.C., in
Toussant of Brooklyn, N. Y., 1986. The cathedra I was
and Ludmila Bragina, Russia, opened in 1912.
clash in the Madeline Manning
800 Feb. 19 as one of the feature
attractions of the U.S. Olympic
Invitational track and field
meet at Madison Square
Garden.
Miss Toussant was the 800·meter winner in the U. S.Russia track meet last summer
while Miss Bragina emerged as
the 1,500-meter champion.
TIES RECORD
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI)
Tim Denisson of St. Paul tied a
hill record Sunday with a jump
of 197 feet while winning the .St.
Paul Winter Carnival ski
jumping championships at
Battle Creek Park.
Denisson's jump tied the
record set in 1939.

Calendar

Ways of increasing membership and interest in the
church school were discussed at
a meeting of the Commission of
Education of Heath United
Methodist Church Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. L.
W. McComas, chairman.
Prayer and a reading, Thank
You, God, by Mrs. McComas
opened the meeting. Areas
discussed were possibilities of
team teaching, rearrangement
of the classes, using the youth
more in opening exercises, and

MRS. PETERS DIES
Mrs. Mary Lyons, Middleport, learned Friday of the
death by asphyxiation of her
niece, Mrs. Glenn (Carolyn )
Peters of Oley, W. Va.,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bethel
Richards, also of Oley. Mrs.
Peters' sons, five and six, are
reportedly hospitalized. Mr.
Peters was not at home at the
time of the incident.

MARTIN AT DIX
Pvt. Joseph E. Martin is
stationed atFortDix, N.J. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Martin of Middleport and the
husband for the former Clara
Roush, Beach St. His address
is Pvt. Joseph E. Martin,
295500435, 3rd Platoon, A-Co.,
6th Baln., 2 BCT, BDE, Fort
Dix, N. J. 08640.

examining
literature
to
determine if it is meeting the
needs of the young people.
Recommendations of the
group will be presented at the
next Commission meeting.
Mrs. McComas entertained
with a tea following the
meeting. Nutbread sandwiches,
assorted cookies, punch and
coffee were served. Mrs. Alma
Miller presided at the coffee
service and Miss April Fraser
at the punch bowL Mrs. Robert
Rinehart also assisted Mrs.
McComas with the serving.
Others attending were Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Mrs. Roscoe
Wise, Mr. and Mrs. James
Euler, the Rev. and Mrs. Max
Donahue and Kim , Eric
Chambers, Mrs. C. E . Young,
Mrs. Nan Moore and Lydia
Johnson.

swivel·base
consolette
at the price of
giant· screen
table tv featuring

SAVINGS ACCOUNT
4~%
Interest per year, compounded
quarterly
on
regular passbook savings
accounts. No minimum or
maximum amount. Interest
is paid from date of deposit
to date of withdrawal as long
as you maintain an ·open
account.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
2941 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

IT

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INGELS
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Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Night
MIDDLEPORT

If The re Rea lly •IS

N o Nee d f r
Continuous
A dvertising
MINISTERS-should preach only one sermon or so a year.
People are against sin anyway, so why harp on it?
TRAFFIC LIGHTS - should be turned off at dangerous
intersections to save electricity. Everybody knows it's a
dangerous spot and that is sufficient.
TEACHERS- shouldn't review lessons_ Tell children just
once and they'll never forget it.

I'm now located at

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY
Phone 992-2318
AUTO
FIRE- L1 FE
HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

nNATIONWIDE

J,l&gt; !~~.~~~~~~

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 all stop here!

'F

BUT
YOU are one of the foolish kind- like the Notre
Dame Cathedral that has stood for six centuries but continues to ring the bell every day to let people know it is still
there - believe in continuous, profitable advertising, then
your advertising belongs in ...

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
Court St.

Pomeroy,
Ohio
,.

�--

-·-

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

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

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
SIDE GLANCES

by Gill Fox

QUALITY

News Notes

z-8

"I'm afraid Estelle isn't quite with it!"

Syracuse News, Society
By ADA SLACK
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Hoback have returned
home after visiting their sons,
Paul and Ed and their families
in Jacksonville, Fla . Ed
recently returned to his work
after being off for a month
recuperating from a serious
head injury received during a
"freak" accident while working
on his truck.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debbie were in Ironton to
attend funeral services for Mr.
Howard Kress, a former Ohio
Power employee. Debbie was
theSaturdaynightguestof Jane
Ellen Keiser. She was accompanied home on Sunday by
her uncle, Thurman Keiser and
Jane Ellen.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Milton Roush and family
were Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush
of Apple Creek.
Mrs. J . B. Shockey of
Ravenswood was a recent guest
of her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Enoch
and Doug.
Mrs. Pauline Morarity visited
with her aunt, Mrs. Allie Carmen, of Addison recently.
Mrs. Mary Sheets has
returned to her home in Dayton
after an extended visit here
with her sisters, Mrs. Maud
Johnson, Josie Pickens, and
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Titus Pickens.
Mrs. Ada Slack went to
Sandyville, Ohio, where she
assisted in the care of her three
grandchildren while her
daughter-in-law, Mrs. John
Slack, was in a Massillon
hospital for two days. She also
visited with her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Slack, in Sandyville and
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Slack and
children in Richville where she
attended the Pinewood Derby of
Pack 14 Richville Cub Scouts

held at the community park on
Jan. 25. This Derby was the
racing of small model cars built
from a block of wood from a
Derby kit by the father-son
team. Her
nine-year-old
grandson, David, won the first
place plaque for his Den 2.
Mr . and Mrs. Malcolm
Guinther and children and his
mother, Mrs. Wanda Guinther,
visited in Athens with Mrs.
Ellen Newland.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Ross of Las
Vegas, Nev. visited Mrs. Mabel
Winebrenner.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pickens
spent a week in Columbus with
their daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith and
family. They also visited with
,Mr. and Mrs. William Shirtzinger and family .
Mr. and Mrs. John Dudding
and family of Springfield spent
a recent weekend with her
mother, Mrs. Evelyn Stowe.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Duckworth of Rittman were recent
weekend guests of his mother,
Mrs. Daisy Roush and Mr. and
Mrs. George Schneider.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grinstead of Albany visited her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Grimm.
Roderick Grimm also called on
his cousin, Mr. Grimm.
Mrs. Larry Lavender and
daughter, Melissa, are visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Carlson in Indiana.
Robert Grimm, Floyd Grimm
and son, Don, and Reese Grimm
of Columbus visited their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Grimm on Sunday.
Sandra Roush sp€nt a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs .
Burnell Dawson of New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Laughlin of
Ravenswood visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Freeman
Enoch.
Debbie Arnott of Racine was
an overnight guest of Debbie
Harden.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Teaford and Kathy of Minersville Route visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Grimm.
Mr. Grimm has been ill.
Mrs. Melvin Grimm visited
Attendance at Nazarene Mrs. Roy Grimm and Mr. and
Sunday School Jan. 31 was 47. Mrs. Gene Hudnell of New
Haven.
Collection was $6.55.
Several from here attended
the baptizing at Racine Sunday
afternoon.
Hoban Newell, wife and
daughter spent Sunday evening
with Mary Reed, the occasion
being her birthday and Enzy
baked her a cake.
Those visiting the family of
Mrs. Weber Thoma spent Mr. and Mrs . Dan Smith on
Monday with Mrs. Erma Sunday were Paul Moore, Mary
Hielman.
Wilson, Carey Varner, Susie,
Mr. and Mrs. Ricll:&gt;rd Barton, Kay Jones, Carl Morris and
Mrs. Margaret Bissel, Mrs. sons, all of the R. D. community
Freda Miller attended the in- and Roy Van Meter of Morning
door camp at Laurel Cliff Star.
Monday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
Mr. and Mrs. George and Toni of Racine called on
Genheimer, Mr. and Mrs . Mr. and Mrs . Allan Taylor on
Arthur Orr visited relatives in Sunday.
Nelsonville Sunday.
Due to sickness and bad
Gary Wolfe and wife of weather only 19 were present at
Columbus spent a weekend Sunday School last Sunday.
recently with their parents, Mr .
Mr . and Mrs . Hayman
and Mrs. David Koblentz. Mr. Barnitz of Pomeroy called on
and Mrs. George Wolfe called Eunie Brinker Sunday evening.
on their grandparents, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce
Mrs. George Genheimer.
of Athens called on Mary Circle
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cogaran Sunday and attended the
family spent Sunday with her funeral of Wilmer Circle in
grandmother, Mrs. Erma Gallipolis. Mrs. James Circle of
Hielman.
New Haven called on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Scartizar enMr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
tertained their daughter and Johnson and Patrick called on
family from West Virginia and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle of
another daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Racine Sunday afternoon.
Raymond Boa trite and family,
local.
What did the cherry pie
Mr. and Mrs . Willard Hines of and
cherr y r.andy people
Athens Rd. spent Sunday with ever do beforP they invented
her parents, Mr. and Mrs . Washington's Birthday to
Charley Woodie.
push thrir proljuds'!

Chester East
News Notes

Carmel News,

By the Day

1966 PONTIAC
$1295
G TO Cpe., wh ite finish, vinyl interior, 4 speed trans., good
w -w tires, rad io &amp; heater.

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice and
Ricky of Columbus visited with
Mrs. Rice's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William Culwell and other
relatives here.
Leon WoDdrum and children
of McArthur called on his
mother-in-law, Mrs . Murl
Galaway on Sunday afternoon .
William Miller and daughter,
Connie, spent Saturday night
and Sunday with relativeJ in the
Columbus area and visited Mrs.
Miller at Mercy Hospital where
she is undergoing treatment.
Debbie and Lori Miller visited
the Dwaine Jordan family while
their father was gone .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers
took their daughter, Margie
Jeffers, to Middletown on
Saturday where she will spend
the week. She will represent the
district as a participant in the
Junior Miss Contest. She will.
join 22 other girls for practice
sessions and other activities
prior to the finals which will be

1966 CHEVROLET
$1495
S.S. Impala, H .T. Cpe., power steering, automatic trans.,
blk. vinyl bucket seat &amp; console, 327 V-8 engine, good tires,
beautiful gold finish.
1966 FORD
$995
Falcon 2 dr., 6 cyl. std. trans., a ll good tires, smart looking
copper finish, radio. Real economy in this car.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
WANT AD '
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

Harrisonville
Society News
Mrs. Alta Eastman was
brought to her home here by
ambulance last Sunday. She is
able to walk with the use of her
walker.
Mrs. Earl Foit was a dinner
guest of the M. A. Epples
Sunday and helped Mr. Epple
celebrate his birthday. He
shared his decorated cake with
the neighbors.
Ray Alkire is a patient of
Veterans Hospital. He entered
the hospital at midnight Sunday .
Mrs. Jane Gilkey of Middleport spent a couple of days
with Ava Gilkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
were dinner guests Sunday at
the Halliday-Atkins home.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Alkire
have purchased the property of
Freda Foley.
Mrs. Susie Heitger 1s helping
to care for Mrs. Clarence
Eastman.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey,
Karen , Kathy and Tad visited
Ava Gilkey Sunday afternoon .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
were dinner guests of Ray
Alkire at his trailer home in
Athens Sunday and spent the
aftern oon with the Dale

Wanted

IV\onday Deadline9a .m .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m . for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads,
deemed
objectional .
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect OLD furniture, dishes, bras~
beds, etc. Write M . D. Miller,
inserti!ln.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
RATES
For want Ad Service
992-6271.
5 cents per Word one insertion
9-1-tfc
Minimum Charge 75c ·
12 cents per word three - - - - - - - - - - - ·
consecutive insertions. .
ALL u. s. gold coins $1 to $50.
18 cents per word stx con - T
·
·
'
secutive insertions.
op pnces patd. Phone 99225 Per cent D iscount on paid· 3476 after 6 p. m.
ads and ads pa i d with in 10 days.
2-5-6tp

Wanted

·

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

to

Buy

----------

$1.50 for 50 word m inimum . OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
condition, as long as have not
Each additional word 2c .
been wet. Paying $10 each.
BLIND ADS
Add itiona I 25c Charge per
F irst floor only . Mondays will
Advertisement.
be pick-up day. Write, giving
QFFICE HOURS
good directions. Witten Piano
8:30' a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
8:30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Ohio
43946.
Saturday.
8-20-tfc

Notice

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
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 $4,000 to $9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less .
.
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We wil l furn ish lot or erect on your lot.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

1969 BUtCK LeSabre, 2-dr .
hardtop, power steering ,
power brakes , a i r, 18,000
miles . Excellent cond ition.
Phone 992-2288.
11 -10-tfc

ELIGIBLE
male
com·
panionship, age 50 to 65. Wrile
Box 729-C, The Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy , Ohio .
3-3-6tc

5 P.M. Day Before Publication

Business Services_

I

Auto Sales

OP-EH EVES. 8:00P.M.
~EROY, OHIO

he~r ~h~~;e~~~~dEarl

Starkey
were in Columbus on Friday
and Saturday where. he attended the monthly meetings of
his insurance company and
called on his sister, Mrs. Jessie
Jewel, and his nephew and wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell of
Columbus. They visited with
their son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jones and
son, at Nelsonville, enroute.
Delores Hoyd of Columbus
spent a few days here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Hoyd and family.
Mrs. Katherine Lawson and
Mrs. Mendal Jordan visited
Mrs. Lawson's mother, Mrs.
Bert Withrow at a nursing home
i1l Charleston, W. Va., Wednesday .
Mr . and Mrs. Thad Dye were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Smith and Nancy
and the group celebrated
Thad's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Blanton
and Greg of Jackson called or:
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Culwell and other relatives
here.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Stansbury were their children,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stansbury
of Reynoldsburg, and Mr. and
Mrs . Jerry Stansbury and
children, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier
of Gallipolis visited with her
mother, Mrs. Goldie Gillogly
and other relatives here and in
Albany .
Mr. and Mrs. William Lawson
and Cheryl were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Daniels of Ferndale, Mich.
Mr . and Mrs. Frank Shiltz
entertained with a birthday
party honoring their son,
Johnnie, on his seventh birthday. Those attending the
party included John Coen, Mark
Gillogly, Debbie, Karen and
Dale Markin, Billy Holcomb,
Betty and Jerrie Sue Jordan,
Lisa and Kathy Mullens, Shelia
Houdasheldt, Todd Byrd, Ricky
Reeves and the host family, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Shiltz, Keith,
Everett, Cecile and Sherry
Shiltz, and Johnnie's greatgrandmother, Mrs . Cecile
McClanahan. Games were
played with prizes awarded .
Many gifts were received by the
honored guest. Refreshments
were enjoyed by all.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

Carpenter

JOHNSON MASONRY, Commercia l
or
residential
remode l ing . Br ick, block,
stone, cement work, garages,
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
Free estimates. J im , Larry,
Jake. 992-7044.
1-7-JOtc

1968 L_T_D FORD, factory air
condtt10ned , stereo, v inyl top. BACK HOE and end-loader
Phone 742-3806.
work. Septic tanks installed.
2-7-5tc
George (Bi ll) Pullins. Phone
---------992-2478.
11-29-tfc
1968 OLDS 442, automa t ic
transmission, power steering , SAW FILING, a ll k i nds of
v inyl lop. Excellent condi t ion.
sharpen i ng , lawn mower
Phone 742-4873, Salem St. ,
repair, Briggs and Stra tton
Ru t land.
engine service. Low cos t p ick
2-7-6tc
up and delivery. Phone 9922804. Co l mers Saw Shop,
Mechan ic St., Pomeroy .
2-4-3tc
FABRIC SHOP, owner retiring
after eleven years, wonderful
business,
all
material,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
equipment, etc . Lease on
Complete Service
building with rent a t $90 per
Phone 949-3821
month. Wi l l show by apRacine, Ohio
poinlment. Ca ll or see J. H.
Critt Bradford
Somervil le, Real Estate, 212
5- 1-tfc
- 5th St., Poin t Pleasant, W.
Va . Phone 675-3030 or 675-4232.
2-7-3tc

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

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

Real Estate For Sale

Home

For Rent

nesday , Friday and Sa turday
nigh ts, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Available for priva te parties
on Monday , Tuesday and
Thursday nights or Saturday
and Sunday af ternoons.
Phone Ches ler 985-3929 or 9853585.
2-2-12tc

WILL GIVE piano and organ
lessons in my home. Phone
992-3666 .
8-16-tfc

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

INCOME TAX service, dai ly
except Sunday. Evenings by
appointment only. Phone 9922272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
mile south of fa irgrounds.
2-7-30tc

UNFURNISHED apartment
close to Pomeroy . Phone 9923962 after 4 p.m .
2-4-tfc

For Sale

Help Wanted

SEMI DRIVERS. Experience
MAPLE STEREO beautiful
not necessary. Can earn $4.50
colon ial style, Am-FM rad io,
per hour and up after short
four speakers , 4 speed
training for local and overau toma tic changer, separate
the-road hauling. For apcon lrols. Balance $83.60. Use
plication write, Nationwide
our time payment plan. Call
Semi Division, 171 New Circle
992-3352 .
Rd ., N . E ., Lexington, Ky.
2-4-6tc
40505 or call 606-299-6912, after
5 p.m. 252-3484.
2·8· 3tp COAL , limestone . Excelsior
----------Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4-9-tfc
THEY
ARE
here :
The
SKAMPER line from A to Z. REDUCE SAFE and fast with
Wha 1 a surprise to see:
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Tra vel trailers, campers are
water pil ls. Nelson's Drugs.
all on display. What isn't here
1-22-30tp
i s on the way . GAUL
TRAILER SALES, INC., 1112
miles north of Chester, Ohio. IT'S inexpensive to clean rugs
and upholstery with Blue
Watch for sign. Phone 985Lus l re.
Rent
electric
3832 . CONTINENTAL and
shampooer, $1. Baker FurGO- TAG - A - LONG
travel
niture, M iddleport.
tra i lers for sale. Renla ls by
2-3-6tc
day , week, mon th.
2-4·12tc FIREWOOD, Hampshire pigs,

For Rent or Sale

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

12 weeks old. Gerald K ing,
Shade. Phone 696-1287.
2-5-6tp

------------------23 CHANNEL Cobra Cam 88 CB
transceiver and super-MAAG
and antenna. Good condition,
$75. Phone 992-3718.
2-7-3tc

You' I I
tract it down
much faster
with a

I
I
I
I

___ j

I_ ___ ~!~_T_!_D

MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL HARRIS
192 Beech St.
Middleport

SINGER Cabinet model sewing
machine, equipped wi th dial
c ont rol for zig-zag , bultonhole, and fancy design
work as well as beau tiful
s traig h t sew ing. Wi ll sacrifice
for $5 1.60 or E - Z terms
arranged . Phone 992-5641 .
2-2 6tc

Whaleys of Albany, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Bishop attended
the funeral of his step-father at
Sugar Grove.
Dennis Gilkey and his girl ELECTROLUX CLEANER
friend, Miss Sauer and Rodney
large del uxe model. Complete
wi th all cleaning tools and
Gilkey and Debbie Crow were
pJper bags. Used but cleans
dinner guests of the Howard
l ike new. Will sell for $28 cash
Gilkeys in Columbus.
or terms avai lable. Phone 9925641.
Mrs. Sharon Jewell has been
-61c
serving on the jury.

BLAETTNARS

EXPERl
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhon' 992-209'4

.Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto·
606 ..E. MJ.n, Pomeroy,

o.

AIR CONDITIONING. Re'f r i ge r a t ion serv i ce. Jack ' s
Refrigerat ion, New Haven .
Phone 882"2079.
4-6-tfc

-------------------READY-MIX CONCRETE de..t\
livered right to your pro ject.'llftJ
Fast
and
easy.
Free
esti mates. Phone 992-3284. ·
Goeglein Ready-Mi x Co. , 1
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sani tati on, Stewart , Oh io . Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

Don't Delay! Conta~t AI Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992-7034

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

LET
US
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY AND SAVE
YOU FROM THE LOOKERS.
BUYING FROM US, SAVES
YOU TIME AND MONEY .
CALL 992-3325
992-2378
2-5-6tc
CONVENIENT but. secluded
bui lding lots on T79 at Rock
Spr i ngs . W it hin walking
dis tance o f Meigs High
School. a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy . Call or see Bil l
Wi tte weekends, or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9926887.
2-3-lfc

------------------NE IGLER Construction. For

... tPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonab l e ra t es. Phone
John Russell , Gallipol is 4464782 af ter 5: 30 p. nn.
4-7-tfc

IJ).t!:l

Cleland Realty
608 East Main
POMEROY
RUTLAND-ALMOST NEW3 bedrooms, bat h, about 2
acres, large living room , nice
k i tchen . $8,900.
POMEROY
JUST
RE-'
MODELED 5 rooms,
bath , 2 bedrooms, fu l l
basemen t, garage, ALL IN
GOOD CONDITION. $13,500.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
POMEROY- 2 STORY HOME
NEAR KROGERS
WITH
APARTMENT,
3
WARM- NEAT- 3 bedrooms
bedrooms, 2 baths , garden
with closets and lots of
spo t, garage. IN GOOD
storage. Modern bath wi th
CONDITION. $10,000.
shower. Gas forced air f urnace. Living 15 x 17. Paneling, POMEROY A LOT OF
new walks, new carport . 2
REMODELING DONE, 2
blocks of store. Ask ing ONLY
story frame, 2 bedroom s,
$8,500.00
bath, basemen t, NEW hot
water tank, forced a ir furSAVE
INVEST NOW
nace.
COMPLETELY
LATER.
FURNISHED. $4,600.
75 ACRES- 20 TRACTOR, 30
pasture. 8 room older house,
running well water. 3 bay
implement shed, garage,
utiliTy bulld tng, cellar, hen
house, small barn . School bus
and mai l routes by door . All
MINERALS. $13,500.00

HARRISON'S TV AND ANTE.NNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc

-----~-- · ·

Sites Available

TO BUY OR SELL
CONTACT US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
2-7-6tc

SEVERAL houses in Rutland.
See Carl Hysell , Rutland ,
Ohio.
2-5-3tc

------------------SEWING MACHINES. Rep,air

service, all makes. 992-2:!84.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

WHY WAIT

•

ll}surance

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20438

Esta t e of R ebecca Hudna l l
Deceased .
Notice i s her eby g iv en that
M y r tl e Han ing of Pomeroy,.
Ohi o, has been duly appo inted
A dm inist ra tri x of the Estate of
Rebecca H udna l l, deceased ,
tate of Mei gs Coun ty , Oh io.
Cr ed itors are required to fi le
t he ir c laims wit h said f iduc iary
w ithin four months.
Da t ed t h i s 19th day of
January 1971.
F. H. O'Brien
PROBATE JUDGE OF

said County

(1) 25, ( 2 ) 1, 8 , 3tc
•

ITEM: Tom Hill. He plays
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
Mama Cass. But he plays
Moonlight Serenade and
Andy Williams too. Variety
is the spice of our music.

WMP0/1390
by Dick Turner

CARNIVAL

1
J

For Sale
------------------HOME ORGAN to be p icked up
in area. Can be seen locally.
Wri te for deta ils, Graves
Piano and Organ Co .• Credit
Manager, 383 E. Broad St. ,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
2-2-6tc

}
I
From the Largest Truck Qr
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neig ler,
-Racine, Ohio.
'
7-31-tfc

" The se'1se of pride one has in
owning their own home cannot
be measured in dol lars and
cen ts. We will be eternally
gratefu l to Jerno Associa tes for
th is oppor tunity."

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

MODERN Walnut stereo-radio
combinat i on , four speaker
sound sys tem, 4 speed
changer, separate controls.
Balance $73.50. Use our
budge t terms . Call 992-3352.
2-4-6tc

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

JEMO ASSOCIATES

1-31 -tfc

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

Radiator Service

INTERIOR carpen ter work, by
lhe hour or con tract. PhoneS
992-3511.
~
1-31-30tp

UNFURNISHED 3-room
apartment. Phone 992-2288.

ATTENTION ladies! Would you 3 ROOM apartmen t, all electric,
, like to try a wig on in the
wall oven , table lop range,
privacy of your own home?
s ta in less steel double sink,
You can. Just call us. We also
fo od disposal. Nice clean
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
apar tment. See to apprecia te.
Koscot. of course. Di sLocated i n Pomeroy. Phone
tributors, Brown ' s.. Phpo_e
Ga l lipolis 446-9539.
Middleport 992-5113.
2-2-tfc
12-31-tfc
10X50, 2-BEDROOM mobile
AUCTION WHEN? Each
home. Call 992-3954.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
2-3-6tc
Hayman's Auction House·,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7 6 ROOM house, bath, 255 W.
Pomeroy -Middleport
ByMa in St. Phone daytime 992pass .
2668 ,or nights 992-2961.
2-7-tfc
2-4-6tp

EXPERIE_N~Q

For Sale

DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949-4761. 5 ROOM house, bath. Racine
10-18-tfc
area . Phone 992-6329.
2-5-6tc
WILL PICK up merchandi se
and take to auction on d 5 ROOM and bath, apartment,
percentage basi s. Call Jim
Chester. Inquire at Newell's
Adams, auctioneer . Rutland.
Sunoco
Station.
Phone
Phone 742-4461 .
Chester 985-3350.
9-23-tfc
2-7-lfc

------------------SKATE-A-WAY is open Wed-

___,.·!

I

I~
j

BUY YOUR

FERTILIZER
Now and get the early
Discount
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertilizer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
area warehouse at Pomeroy .

L

POMEROY

J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

SPINET-console piano. Wan ted
responsib le party to take over
payments on spinet p iano.
Easy terms, can be seen
locally.
Write
Cred i t
Manager, P. 0. Box 276,
Shelbyvi lle, Indiana 46176.
2-7-12tp

" 'What's H20?' Uncle Harvey told me that one,
Pop . . . that's a chaser!"

•

�A~ OUIVCE OF WISDOM
15; IAJCRTii A R:XJI-JD OF

AN' I GOT
SOME JUICY
GOSSIP FER "'E.
TOO, LOWEEZ.'f

WIT!

2-&amp;

AW, COME. ON,
PROFJ T~6RS'S
ALWAYS ROOM
FOR ONe.

TO 8E. ~ONESi,
TH6RS IS ROOM
FOR JUST ONE

WHeN A NEW
FAMILY MOVES
IN NE)(TDCO!&lt;!..,
HE SEEMS To

MORE··MEJ

MORE.J

Bf INTfRESTED
IN ONLY ONE

Ti-ltN6!

'

•
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LANCE LOT
EiV~NONE KNO/&lt;F..

GOPHIA LOReN ANP
J"ACGUEL.INE. BISSET

At&lt;f:: ~H 8RUNfTTf,f

BUGS BUNNY
IT1G NOON, S'YLVESTER!
TIME T' kNOCK OFF AN'

BUT, MR. GALLAN

EAT!

YOU HAVE NO

CONFIDENTIAL;

LY, HOWEVER,

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

I ' LL HAVE
TO ADMIT
ONE THING!

EVIDENCE THAT

Ml55 WINKLES
IN DANGER!

•
ALLEY OOP
GASOLINE ALLEY

1 think we can
6oal4inc; it
in ~liqhtll.l warmer
water now!

~tart

f.
A

FREAl( ACCIDENT
IN THE llME·MACHINE
lAB HAS SENT CARL,
A SMALL-TIME 20TH
CENTURY HOOD, BACK IN·
10 PREHISTORIC TIMES

I

- ~==========~--~
THE BORN LOSER

t

1 It&amp;t... i'=UtJt.JV

nus NDRIJI~...

DEADER'!'\ A BEACHED
MACKEREL, HE IS ·-AN'·--CA\1/K! CAI&lt;/K 1 --·

GOOD RIDDANCE'!

'if.HaT MYSTERl·
OUS FLYIHG
TREETOP CREATURE,

PSS'OT! PUNJAB!
COVER FOR ME! AH'
DON'T WORRY ' BOOT
ME! S AND'!' 'LL LEAD
ME BACK IF I
LOSE THE 1RAIL!

GOLOSWIHGI!R;HAS
BEE!'! STRUCK

•

BY" A HARPOON
FIRED FROM TFU;
CUNNINGLY
CONSTRUCTED
CRUTCH OF
CflP'N AHA.B·--

DAILY CROSSWORD
.,.. DICK TRACY

TERRY

WHILE, ~EYONP THE
FRINGES OF THE NOW
CONFUSED C I?OWCJ••.

•

•

CAPTAIN EASY
WHSN KERCH GET7 HOME: , YOU'L.!.ACCU$E: HIM OF DOI~C. AWAY WITH
f!C&gt;PIS RATNE,:Z.- AND WE:'LL 7 SE:-

HOW HE:

~E:ACT7l

UNAWARE THAi OKO WA7 IN THE DINER,
DUCE:Y 7TART5. BACK TO BIWNO KE~CH'5
MAN510~ ...

.-----,.-----KERCH WilL BE
LEAVIN6 AT 7:00...
?EE YOU TONIGHT!

•

5. "Agnus
ACROSS
l. Easter
- -"
6."Quodspectacle
demon7. Shoo!
strandwn"
11. Chalk's
7. Narrative
partner
8. Stanley
12. Adhesive
Steamer
material
9. Jungle
13. Italian
denizen
film star
10. Little
(2 wds.)
Indians,
15. Craggy hill
by count
16. Pierced
H
.
Destiny
by tusk
16.Entire
21. Alpine
series
region
17. Speechify
26. Ascended
27. Mllk!ish
18. Stairway
28. Italian
part
film star
19."C'-31. Colorado
SiBon"
Indian
32. Sharpshooter's
objective
33. Succinct
36. Impoverished
37. Building
extension
39.Italian
film star
(2 wds.)
41. Appear as
a threat
48. Boarding
house
dweller
49. Irritable
50. Contribute
DOWN
1. Foot (Lat.)
2. Nigerian
tribesman
3.Crimlnal
charge
(slang)
4.Powdered
lava

20..._
Rosenkavaller"
22. Scope
23. Possessed
24.. Those
not of a
profession
l- ~ste rday's An1we r
26.Negatlve
4.0. Doze orr
U. Wooden peg
29.-4.2. Sticky
Fleming
substance
30.. Metric
4.3. Negative
land
prefix
measure
H. Candlenut
34. Sordid
t ree
35. Stately tree
45. Final
38.Fat
39. Sudsy brew 4.6. Wrath

KF

QFSRK

l.lBNM

R

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HUHC

HASRIG

SRK

JHNNHC

NMRK

MH

W

0

I Prill die SURPRISE ANSWBIIIn

ZRXXW

DKXHWW
FOBKBFK

BK
WMH
FZ

GHWHCUHW . - HG

MRW

MBS
MFQH

Mr. Fatwallet isn't in, but I'll
let you speak to ""r (HA HA)
Mr. Whifflepoaf

L-.:::;;:.:..::.:..,.::;;....rl,_;;;;.;~:r;;~

I [] !'

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

ENOU6H WHEN r

JJ&amp;MID~;-:::;4~=-=

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

II

A Cryptogram Quotation

MENTION LE?NOY
ANO THE A\08 ~

((!;) 1971 King Features l"yndlcate, Inc.)

SCENIK

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

RI GHT Oi'Jo DUCE.Y...
HE'l-L. 51'-!6 FAST

Saturday's Cryptoquote: THE TRAGEDY OF OLD AGE IS
NOT THAT ONE IS OLD, BUT THAT ONE IS NOT YOUNG.
- OSCAR WILDE

I-JOT M UCH GrANDIN&amp;
IN THIS IOND
OF Jo&amp;.
Now arrange the circled letten
to fonn the surprise answer, aa
suuested by the above cartoon.

�---------------~-----------------

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

Mrs. Kraeuter Dies on Monday

~!!i&amp;WlibMiW&gt;ij{~ This Week's
Ohio Games

I

the Sports Desk

II

!!!l

by Chet TannehUl

11

So what else is new other than USC Head Coach Bob Boyd
finding a way to cool off his hot shooting Trojans late in the fourth
period, and losing to UCLA? Boyd's club got out to a 59-50 lead
with about nine minutes left in the game Saturday night in the
climactic battle for a shot at the No. 1 national ranking. USC had
been hot, hi~~ spectacularly from outside and getting in close
effectively when the Bruins came out.
Coach Boyd used up a time out leading 59-50. A couple
minutes later he called another. And with 5:30 left in the game
UCLA went ahead 61-60, then held on beautifully using slow-down
tactics. The Bruins had scored 11 consecutive points! USC had ·
gone cold, stone cold. The ball just wouldn't go through the
basket.
If USC had won, Boyd would be an acclaimed genius. But he
lost. There will have to be some fans wonder if the momentwn his
boys had going at the nine minute point would have continued had
they not gone to the sidelines for neither of those coach-player
conferences.
TWELVE OF 17 OVER the weekend was not up to par. The
Meigs-Ironton game hit me for one. Laurelville, which I believe is
where Nolan Swackhamer played his high school basketball,
rolled over a good Starr-Washington team, and Alexander barely
got past Zane Trace 64-63, all on Friday night. Saturday
Nelsonville-York beat Belpre 56-M and Vinton County leveled
Wellston of the SEOAL 81-70 which didn't help the league's image
one bit.
The point spread - 21 points - was exactly how the Federal
Hocking vs. Vinton County game turned out. And Eastern's
spread over Kyger Creek was predicted at 14 points but proved to
be 13! Furthermore, the actual Eastern-Kyger Creek score was
bobbled only by one point, seen as 74-60, and emerging as 7Hl.
Unusual, too, perhaps is the average spread of actual scores
compared to the average spread of predicted scores. These came
· out 22.5 to 22.3!
How they went (first score is actual score, in parenthesis
predicted score) and at right, the comparative spread:
FRIDAY
14-10
Athens 82 ( 78) Wellston 68 (51)
41-29
Gallipolis 45 ( 43) Waverly 86 (72)
Low Blow
Meigs 70 ( 62) Ironton 75 (58)
15-48
Jackson 81 (97) Logan 66 ( 49)
21-21
Fed-Hocking 80 (78) Vinton Co. 59(57)
14-8
Warren Local 75 (68) Nel-York 71 (60)
Oh-o
Zane Trace 63 (70) Alexander 64 (58)
13-14
Kyger Creek 61.(60) Easter~ 74 (74)
39-33
North Gallia 78 (87) Southern 39 (54)
23-15
Southwestern 49 ( 46) Wahama 72 (61)
Gr-r-r
Starr-Wash. 58 (68) Laurelville 76 (60)
Spread Average 22.~22.3
SATURDAY
21-26
Eastern 85 (81) Glouster 64 (55)
16-22
Pt. Pleasant 62 (54) Meigs 78 (76)
2~10
Frontier Local 58 (62) Fed-Hock 78 (72)
Ouch
Belpre 54 (67) Nel-York 56 (58)
42-33
Waterford 38 ( 40) Starr-Wash 80 (73)
Bong!
Wellston 70 (67) Vinton Co. 81 (62)
12 of 17for 70.1 per cent
85 of 102 overall for 83.3 per cent
HIALEAH, Fla. (UPI) North won the $65,700
Serrunole Handicap at Hialeah.
Tru~

By United Press International
Monday
Ohio University at Loyola (Ill.)
Western Kentucky at Dayton
Bowling Green at Northern
Illinois
Findlay at Ohio Northern
Alliance ( Pa.) at Steubenville
Walsh at Wheeling (W. Va.)
Hillsdale (Mich.) at Youngs.
town State
Point Park ( Pa.) at BaldwinWallace
Tuesday
Ohio State at Purdue
Cleveland State at Central State
Cumberland (Ky.) at Rio
Grande
Wilberforce at Bluefield (W.
Va.) State
Wright State at St. Joseph
(Ind.)
Denison at Hiram
Otterbein at Muskingum
Cedarville at Defiance
Wednesday
Toledo at Marshall
Cleveland State at Xavier
Gannon (Pa.) at Ashland
Ohio Northern at Hillsdale
(Mich.)
Rio Grande at Capital
St. Vincent (Pa .) at Steubenville
Urbana at Walsh
Wooster at Marietta
Mount Union at Oberlin
Wittenberg
at
Eastern
Michigan
Malone at Bluffton
Findlay at Wilmington
Thursday
Dayton at Cincinnati
John Carroll at Kenyon
Western Reserve at Allegheny
(Pa.)
Friday
Case Tech at Bethany (W. Va.)
Saturday
Illinois at Ohio State
Miami at Ohio University
Toledo at Kent State
Xavier at Dayton
Old Dominion at Cincinnati
Marshall at Bowling Green
Cleveland· State at Akron
Northwood (Mich.) at Ashland
Case Tech at Western Reserve
Central State at Youngstown
State
Union (Ky.) at Rio Grande
Steubenville at Gannon ( Pa.)
Clarion State ( Pa.) at Walsh
Thiel (Pa.) at Western Reserve
Wright State at Defiance
Capital at Baldwin-Wallace
Denison at Wittenberg
Marietta at Heidelberg
Oberlin at Hiram
Kenyon at Mount Union
Muskingum at Ohio Wesleyan
Otterbein at Wooster
Bluffton at Findlay
Cedarville a't Wilmington.
West
Calif. 100 Stanford 84
BYU 103 Utah 89
Colo. St. 88 Wyoming 78
Hawaii 63 U.S. Int. 61
Oregon 67 Ore. St 57
UCLA 64 USC 60
Wash. St. 90 Wash. 79
Pacific 85 Loyola 66
Weber St. 91 Boise St. 57
Duquesne 87 Vllanva 78

Ohio Cage Standings

By Unite-d Press International Muskingum
5 12
2 7
5 9
1 9
Independents
Hiram
W L
~
-tc Ashland
18
2
Mid-Ohio Conference
League Overall
A
THOUGHT
Akron
1154
43
W L
W L
~
.,.. Youngstown State
5
1
17
2
Findlay
FOR TODAY : g;~r~~state
~~ ~ Wilmington 5 2 9 8
3 3
9 9
·-tc Success is a matter not -tc Ohio Dominican
10
5 Bluffton
3 3
10 11
·• so much of talent or -tc Dayton
10
6 Cedarville
3
4
13 6
opportunity as of con- -tc Cincinnati
11
8 Defiance
1
7
3 11
.,.. centration and oer- -tc Steubenville
10
8 Malone
Bia
Ten
; , serverance. C. W. Wendtet ~oah~e;arroll
~ 1~
Leaaue Overa II
W L
W L
a.
_.
.._
Walsh
7
11
8
13 Michigan
...,..
r
"T"
"T"
~ RioGrande
6
0
12
4
-tc
-tc Western Reserve
4
7 Illinois
4
1
10 4
4
1
11
4
Purdue
12
It's Quick! Easy .,.. Cleveland
Wright state
6
15
5
~
State
4
1
10
5
Ohio State
3
2
8
7
-tc
..,c Case Tech
2
8 Iowa
2
2
10
4
iC
iC Ohio Northern
3
15 Indiana
8
7
Michigan State 2 3
iC
Mid-American Conference
1
4
6
8
•-tc
iC
League Overa II Wisconsin
0
6
6 10
Minnesota
-tc
iC
W L W L Northwestern 0 6
4 12
-tc
Fridays Only
:
Miami
6
1
13
4
iC The Drive-In Window iC
-tc Ohio
West.Univ.
Mich.
12
iC
33
32
11
54
. NBA Standings
-tc
. is Open
~ Toledo
2
3
11
7 By Umted Press International
iC
9-A.M. fo7 P.M.
• KentState
2
3
10 7
Atlantit- Oivi .. inn
~
( Continuou·sly)
iC "em
Bowling
Grn ., 1 J5 IV 4 12
N
Y
w.
L. Pet. GB
.,..
;:.TaTe
ew
ark
40 21 .656
1
iC
~
_
-ic Bowling Green 1 5
4
12 Philadelphia
37 25 .597
3112
iC Other Banking Hours 9 to 3-tc
Ohio Conference
Boston
32 28 .533
7112
iC and s to 7 as usual on~
League Overall Buffalo
16 46 .258 241!2
-tc Fridays.
~
W L
W L
Central Division
-tc
~ Capital
9 0
15
2
W. l. Pet. GB
.,.. Wooster
8
0
19
1 Baltimore
34 24 .586
~
~ Otterbein
9
1
14 2 Cincinnati
24 35 .407 10112
~
.,.. Wittenberg
7
2
12 5 Atlanta
21 39 .350 14
I...,..
Marietta
5
4
11
7 Cleveland
11 52 .175 251!2
.,.. Mount Union
5
4
9
5
Midwest Division
POMEROY, OHIO
~ Heidelberg
4
6
7 10
W. L. Pet. GB
?
Member FDIC
.,.. Kenyon
4
6
7 11 Milwaukee
46 11 .807
~
Member Federal
-tl Baldwin-Wallace
Detroit
37 21 .638
9112
.M
Reserve System
4
6
6 13 Chicago
36 23 .610 11
:::...
.,.. Denason
4 6
7
9 Phoenix
35 24 .593 12
Ohio Wesleyan 2 6
8 10
Pacific Division
Los Angeles
35 22 .614
•
32 29
5
. .- - - - - - - - - - - · · - - - - - - . . San Fran.
W.
L. .525
Pet. GB
Seattle
26 33 .441 10
San Diego
26 37 .413 12
Portland
21 39 .350 15112
Sunday's Results
Baltimore 108 Detroit 105
Boston 104 Chicago 96
Atlanta 121 Cincinnati 118
Phila 127 New York 99
Los Ang 119 San Fran. 104
San Diego 124 Seattle 107
Portland 112 Cleveland 103
Today's Games
Phoenix at Wilmaukee
(Only game scheduled)
:..
r;;1f1f..1fJtl-1f..

"f

¥¥...........
f

't

:f

.:f

t

:f

f

·DRIVE-IN
BANKING

:

L

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS
f

co.

:f

:f·

--T••••••••lf•••..._

.

~-

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
40 19 .678
Virginia
33 27 .550 71f2
Kentucky
I 26 32 .448 131/2
New York
27 34 .443 14
Carolina
25 35 .417 15112
Pittsburgh
24 38 .387 171/2
Floridians
West
W. L. Pet. GB
38 19 .667
Utah
36 20 .643
1112
Indiana
34 26 .567
5112
Memphis
22 36 .379 16112
Denver
19 38 .333 19
Texas

·MEIGS THfATRE
WHITE · COPPER · AVOCADO
HARVEST GOLD.

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

Tonight&amp; Tuesday
February B-9
THE
OUT-OF-TOWNERS
(Technicolorl
Jack Lemmon
Sandy Dennis
Technicolor Cartoons
Show Starts 7 P.M.

Mrs.
Eldon
(Lucille)
Kraeu ter, 58, died Monday
morning at her home in Racine.
Mrs. Kraeuter is survived by
her husband, Eldon; three
daugh ters, Miss Leda Mae
Kraeu ter, at home; Mrs.
Lawrence (Dolores' Wolfe,
Racine, and Mrs. Dale
(Roberta ) Maidens, Marion;
two grandchildren, Kent and
Laren Wolfe, Racine; a sister,
Mrs. Carrie Dickson, Columbus, and her stepmother, Mrs.
Anna Byers, Columbus. She was
a member of Chester Council
'
Daughters of America.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p. m. Thursday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. L. R. Carmichael of South
Webster officiating. Burial will
be in the Letart Falls Cemetery.

. JEFF MORRIS, 42, aboye, the only junior starter for the
Me1?s Marauders, uses his six foot-three inches to advantage
ge~mg off a shot Saturday night over the reaching arms of
Pomt Pleasant's Frank Smith. Morris sat out much of the
~econd half carrying four personal fouls, and after returning
m the fourth period drew his fifth before the game ended. The
Big Blacks held the high-scoring Morris to six points.

Gladys Russell Dies on SundlJy
Mrs. Gladys Elizabeth
Russell, 69, Columbus, formerly
of Middleport, died Sunday
afternoon at the St. Anthony
Hospital in Columbus.
Born April 17, 1901, Mrs.
Russell was the daughter of the
late Alpha and Edith Winkler
Russell. Besides her parents,

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Saturday, Feb. 6,1971
SALES REPORT of
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs: 20 to
20.75; 220 to 250 lbs. 19.35 to
19.85; Light 18.85 Down; Fat
Sows 16 to 18.75; Stags 12 to 13;
Bdars 14 to 15.25; Pigs 5 to 12;
Shoats 14 to 17.
CATILE -Steers 24 to 28.50;
Heifers 19 to 26.75; Baby Beef 29
to 35.40; Fat Cows 18 to 21·
Canners 18 to 22.50; Bulls 20 t~
25.40; Milk Cows 175 to 321.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 49.50;
Seconds 47 to 48.50; Medium 38
to 45; Com. &amp; Hvs. 38 to 42·
Culls 38 Down.
'
BABY CALVES- 35 to 56.
LAMBS Tops 24.50;
Seconds 22 to 22.60; Light Wts.
22 Down; Common 20 Down.
PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.
Saturday, Feb. 6, 1971
HOGS --175 to 220 20 to 23.50;
Heavies 15 to 20.75; Lights 17 to
19; Fat Sows 14 to 19.50; Boars
12 to 16; Pigs 3 to 10; Stock
Shoats 8 to 18.
CATTLE - Heifers 21 to
26.50; Fat- Cows 18.40 to 21.60;
Canners 16 to 18.25; Bulls 24.50
to 27.25; Stock Steers 21.50 to
28.75; Stock Heifers 17 to 24.25;
Stock Steer Calves 27 to 32.25.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 52.50;
Seconds 49.25; Medium 36 to
45.25; Common &amp; Heavies 36.75
to 47.75 .

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Oh io State 87 Michigan State 76
Miami 75 Bowling Green 63
Cincinnati 74 Kent State 63
Detroit 80 Xavier 71
Dayton 77 Loyola (Ill.) 63
Wester n Michigan 89 Ohio
University 79
Akron 72 Toledo 71
Youngstown State 90
Western New England 72
Ba ldwin-Wal lace 90 Oberlin 74
Western Reserve 88 Bethany
(W. Va.) 84
John Carroll 72 Case Tech 68
(otl
Ohio Wesleyan 101 Hiram 85
Wooster 90 Muskingum 80
Wittenberg 72 Mount Union 71
(at)
Kenvon 87 Heidelbera 77
Otterbein 88 Marietta 71
Capital 83 Urbana 78
Ashland 74 Hil lsda le (Mich.) 55
Defiance 91 Ohio Northern 86
Central State 37 Bluffton 27
Georgetown (Ky.) 89 Rio
Grande 88
Marian ( Ind.) 83 Wright State 82
Cedarville 96 Malone 83
Wayne State 102 Cleveland
State 90 (2 ot)

she was preceded in death by
her
husband,
William
McKinley Russell, and two
sons.
Surviving are a daughter
Mrs. Harold (Roberta) Mercer:
Columbus; seven sisters, Mrs.
William '(Floradell) Grueser
Mrs. Clyda Allensworth, Mrs:
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Carl
(Jessie Mae) Brannon, all of
Middleport; Mrs. Robert
(Edith ) Jay, Mrs . Robert
(Susan) Rawlings, both of
Columbus, and Mrs. Donald
(Bernice) Fox, Mansfield.
Funeral arrangements are
being completed by the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
in Middleport .
:::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::

"'ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) Dr. Roderick David Rightmire, a professor at Michigan
State University, has been
named director of the school
of radio-television at Ohio
University, it was announced
today.
Dr. John R. Wilhelm, dean
of the College of Communication, said the appointment was effective July
1st. Rightmire received his
bachelor's and master's
degrees
from
Boston
University and a doctor of
philosophy degree from
Micffigan State.

SPEAKS TUESDAY
A public meeting at which Dr.
Charles Meckstroth, Columbus
heart specialist, will be speaker
at the former Bethany building,
now a part of the Trinity :
Church, in Pomeroy at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday night. Entrance
to the building where the
meeting will be held is on
Second St. Hostesses will be Xi
Gamma Mu chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi sorority and the
Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club .
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
The same two women's groups
Feb. 5,1971
will conduct a house-to-house
Hogs: 200-220, 20.75; No.1, 21; canvass for funds on Heart
230-240, 20.50; 240-260, 20: 260- Sunday, Feb. 21.
280, 19.50; 180-200, 19.25-20j 160180, 18.50; Sows, 16.90-17.80;
INSPECTION SET
Boars, 15.40; Stock Hogs, 14Inspection of Pomeroy
16.50; Pigs By Head, 8.50-10.25. Masonic Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will
Cattle: Choice Steers, 30.80- be held at 7 : 30 this evening at
31.10; Good Steers, 28.75-30.50; the temple. Work will be in the
Holstein Steers, 27-27.50; Choice fellowship degree and all
Heifers, 29.90-30.60; Good master masons are invited.
Heifers, 27.75-28.50; Good Cows,
22.50-24.25 ; Utility, 18.75-20;
LOCAL TEMPS
Canner and Cutter, 17.85 down;
The
temperature
in downtown
Bulls, 25.50-27. 75; Stock Cattle,
Steers, 27.25-30; Stock Calves Pomeroy at 11 a.m. was 30
degrees, with snow falling.
Steers, 27.75-34.
Veal Calves: Choice, 49.50;
Good, 45; Medium 37; ComSCHOOLS CLOSED
mercial 33.75; Baby Calves By
Schools of the Meigs Local
Head, 18-51.
Ewes and Lambs, 29 per School District closed Monday
afternoon due to snow.
head.
WILL REFEREE
MARRIAGE LICENSE
COLUMBUS (UPI) - InPaul Phillips, 20, Pomeroy dianapolis attorney James J.
Route 4, and Diana Sue Stover, Willingham has been picked by
20, Dexter.
Gov. John J. Gilligan to referee
the contract dispute involving
Ohio University's non-academic
PARTY PLANNED
·employes. Both sides have
The Racine American Legion accepted binding arbitration to
Post auxiliary junior unit will end the remaining issues.
hold a valentine party at 7 p.rn.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Washington's farewell adGerald Simpson, their advisor.
Each member may bring a dress to his officers was rnade
Dec. 4, 1783 iri New York City.
guest.

Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

Apollo
(Continued from Page 1)
superpure
vaccines
in
weigh_tless space stations.
ExperimentsMade
" Hopefully, it's the beginning
of bigger and better things in
manufacturing processes from
outer space," Roosa said.
One experiment tested a way
to use the lack of gravity in
spaceflight to separate organic
compounds that cannot efficiently be separated in the
presence of earth's gravity.
Scientists hoped the experiment
would lead to large scale
processing of new ultrapure
·
bl
vaccmes, ood platelets and
similar biological preparations
in space.
Another experiment demonstrated how the lack of gravity
can produce unusual metal
castings that cannot be made
on earth. In weightlessness, for
example, reinforcing fibers can
be distributed evenly in a liquid
metal. On earth they would
float to the surface. Gas
bubbles also can be dispersed
in a melted metal to produce
light but strong alloys.
The experiments were added
to the mission as a bonus to be
done at the pilots' discretion.
While Shepard and his crew
were setting them up, they
discussed "the contribution this
could make immediately and
directly to the American lives
and the lives of people around
the world."

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS Johnny
Lynch, Linda Rogers, Roger
McCoy, Mrs. Virginia Rimmey,
Mrs. John Stewart, Mrs . •
Kenneth Stover, Mrs. David
Oldaker, Robert See, Mrs.
David Atkinson, and ·Patsy
McCarty, all Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Harold Young, Clifton;
Dell Tallbot, Portland; Mrs.
John Cogar, Albany, 0.;
Shannon Denny' Gallipolis
Ferry; Shirley Likens, Henderson; Ann Snyder' Middleport; Monte Davis, West
Columbus, 0.
DISCHARGES James
Smith, Mrs. Paul Bocook,
Charles Wheeler' Alice Bradshaw' Benjamin Kesterson, •
Maggie Roach, Mrs. David
Koblentz, Vinson Smith,
Raymond Ross, Mrs. Flora '
Williams, Tammy Salser'
James Hartley, Mrs. Ralph
Morse, Mrs. John little, Mrs .•
Charles Mayes and daughter,
Charles Redman, Shirley
Nibert, Mrs. Robert Bailes,
Mrs. Sheldon Morrison and
daughter.
BIRTH .ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
(Junior ) Mattox of P omeroy,.
formerly of Mason, announce
the birth of their third child, a
son on Feb. 2 at 10:35 p. m. at
Holzer Medical Center. The
baby has been named Keith
Allen. He is being welcomed by
a brother, Mark Bryant, 6, and
sister, Sandra Renee, 3.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Zurcher of
Pomeroy and paternal grand-~
parents are Mr. and Mrs. John
Frank Hoffman of Mason.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Copters
(Continued from Page 1)
began at 7 a.m. ( 7 p.m. EST
Sunday) , South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu
went on nationwide radio to say
"This is an operation limited in
time as well as space with the
clear and unique objective of
disrupting the supply and
infiltration networks of the
Communist North Vietnamese
troops lying in the Laotian
terri tory.''
He pledged that when the
operation was over ·the South
Vietnamese "will withdraw
completely from the Laotian
terri tory.''
MEETING CALLED
Officers and directors of the
Ken Amsbary Chapter of the
Izaak Walton League of
America will meet at 7 this
evening at the clubhouse.
MEETING CALLED
The Meigs Chapter, Disabled
American Veterans, and its
auxiliary will meet at the hall
on Butternut Ave. at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday. Refreshments at 6:30
p.m. will be followed by a
meeting of the two groups at
7:30. All veterans are welcome.

FLITE BAGS
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--------------------------Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Ashland

Special!

WITH
THE PURCHASE
OF

$3.00
WORTH OF

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SUPER COMFORT
HURRY! HURRY! LIMITED TIME TO
ENJOY THIS VERY SPECIAL OFFER!

HOURS: 7 Til 10 Monday thru Saturday - 8 Til 9 Sunday

ASHLAND SERVICE STATION
CORNER OF
BEECH&amp; LOCUST

992-7260

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

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