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                  <text>Now You Know
Copernicus, an average-sized
crater on the moon, is eight
times as wide as the Grand
canyon and more than twice as
deep.

VOL. XXVI

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 209

TUESDAY, FEBR_UARY 9, 1971

Weather
Excepting Northeast, mostly
sunny and colder today and
tonight. Lows from five above to
10 below zero. Wednesday
continued cold, fair central and
south portions, highs mainly in
the teens.

TEN CENTS

Ohio Socked In
By United Press International
A near blizzard that swept
across Ohio Monday sent temperatures to near the zero
mark early today, closed hundreds of schools and created
both traffic and telephone emergencies in several majo~ cities.
The quick hitting storm
dumped up to 11 inches of snow
in some ereas caught motorists
by surprise. City streets were
lined with abandoned and snow
covered autos.
The snow also caused a telephone emergency as many
workers were late getting home
and service stations were flooded with calls for help.
The Cincinnati and Suburban
Bell Telephone Co. declared a
"telephone crisis" and went on
television and radio to ask customers to stop using telephones
except in case of emergency ..
A spokesman said the utility
normally handles about 700,000
calls in an afternoon but handled about 2 million calls late
Tuesday.
The Ohio Bell Telephone Co
said some stations in Columbus

HEAVIEST OF WINTER- Monday afternoon and night brought the season's heaviest
snowfall of about five inches. By mid-afternoon it had made streets extremely hazardous.
Above, a motorist is getting help to get his vehicle moving along Court St. in Pomeroy. Schools

had an increase of about 75 per
cent in telephone calls but no
crisis was declared.
Addi tiona! snow depths reported today ranged from four inches at Chesapeake to 11 inches
at Youngstown .
The National Weather Service
said unofficial reports showed
an additional foot of snow in
Summit, Stark, Wayne, Holmes
and Portage Counties.
Exception Reported
The Weather Service said one
notable exception to the general
snowfall was Northwestern Ohio
with only one to two inches reported from that section.
Central Ohio got a total of
about nine inches on the ground
in a 24-hour period ending early today, the heaviest snowfall
in nine years.
Youngstown and Cincinnati
were among cities to declare a
snow emergency which meant
the closing of certain streets, to
facilitate the flow of traffic.
The night shift at radio station WHOT in Youngstown was
snowbound and remained in the
station overnight.

Cincinnati got about nine inches of snow and two persons
died of heart attacks as they attempted to shovel snow from
sidewalks at their home.
"We've got some drifting,"
said Hamilton County deputy
sheriff David Fitzmuller. "the
salt crews and snow plows are
out. I followed one in to work.
"Most of the schools are
closed," he said. "Very few are
open."
Stop Truck Traffic
Interstate 75 in Kentucky was
closed to all tractor-trailer truck
traffic Tuesday, causing a backup of trucks in the. Cincinnati
area.
In a weather related development, city police in Athens were
called to break up a snowball
fight that started on the Ohio
University campus but moved
into the downtown area.
In Steubenville, city patrolman Donald Starliper had to
leave his cruiser to carry an
injured 10-year-old boy up a
nearly mile-long grade before
flagging down a car to take
him to the hospital.

Starliper said his car could
could not make it up the snow
covered grade so he had to
walk.
Warnings Changed
Blizzard warnings that were
in effect Tuesday were changed
to travelers warning for most
of the state.
The National Weather Service
said considerable drifting is expected and one to three inches
of snow is forecast for the snow
belt area of northeastern Ohio.
Forecasters said much colder
arctic air continued to flow into Ohio today and Dayton had
a low of one above at 6 a .m.
while Mansfield had a reading
of four above and Cincinnati
and Columbus six above.
Readings today were expected
to range from around 10 above
in the northwest to near 15 in
the extreme southeastern portion of the state.
Tonight's lows under mostly
clear skies will vary from five
above in the extreme northeast
to from zero to 10 below elsewhere in Ohio.

Middleport Council Seat

.A;;;[i;;oo·p;;h~.YTrue G:?.~~'!~. .~~.~~~'!.~d~d ~!!?rgan
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By AL ROSSITER Jr.
_UPI Space Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UPI)-Apollo 14's astronauts
accelerated down a precision
course to a landing in the South
Pacific today with "a wealth of
information" from the moon
and new proof of man's ability
to explore the unknown.
With earth pulhng Apollo 14
faster and faster to its 24,660
miles an hour entry into the
atmosphere, ground control told
the spacemen their path on the
imaginary space corridor leading to earth was so accurate a
steering correction was not
needed.
The helicopter carrier New
Orleans was waiting in ideal
weather 900 miles south of
Samoa to retrieve Alan B.
Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and
Edgar D. Mitchell minutes
after their 4:04 p.m. EST
splashdown.
They were targeted for a
landing 10 miles west of the
international dateline where it

will be Wednesday when they
splash down .
Seven hours before splashdown, mission control reported
that the earthquake that rocked
California interrupted ground
communications for one to five
minutes. But officials switched
to backup links and reported
they were never without flight
c~. ttrol capao1lty.
The astronauts awakened
after four to six hours of sleep
and immedi-ately began final
preparations for the end of the
mission Shepard called "a
smashing success."
On the ~·j00 million, 1.2
million mile voyage the astronauts spent a record 33 11! hours
on the moon and walked longer
ar 1 ·arther than their four
pn _essors. Their mission
w, cientifically more rewardin .han the Apollo 11 and 12
landings in 1969.
Final Assessment to Come
But Shepard said during a 30minute, televised question and
answer session with newsmen

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By United Press International

Guerrilla War Stepped Up

•

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND -THE underground
Irish Republican Army (ffiA) stepped up its guerrilla war
Monday night and early today with bomb and machine gun attacks on British troops. Four Protestant teenagers came under
fire from a sniper in what one army officer said may have been a
deliberate attempt to whip up more trouble by inflaming crowds.
They were hospitalized with leg wounds.
One soldier suffered serious head wounds when his patrol
came under machine gun attack on a dark side street in the
Roman catholic Ardoyne area, an army spokesman said. A
second soldier was nicked . The incidents were part of about half a
dozen similar hit and run attacks by lone gunmen lying in wait
along alleyways whose street lighting had been extinguished in
advance .

Everybody in Hole Together
COLUMBUS -AN OFFICIAL OF THE Federal Air Pollution
Control office told Ohio authorities "we're all in the hole
together" and the only way to get out is to have cooperation
between federal and state agencies. Doyle J . Borchers, assistant
commissioner of the office, explained a federal plan to have all of
Ohio covered by 14 air quality control regions to be adopted by the
end of next month.
"We're all in the hole together," Borchers said Monday . "The
only way we're going to get out of it is to work together." Ohio
Health Department Engineer Jack Wunderle said the state would
prefer to have areas in the state which are not already classified
into an area to be included as a single new region. He said that
would simplify administration. Borchers, however, assured
Wunderle "we'll make it work" if the federal plan for six new
regions is adopted.

Some New Customers Wanted
•

COLUMBUS - NATIONWIDE MUTUAL Insurance Co.
announced today it will resume the sale of auto insurance policies
to new c~stomers on a limited basis. Dean W. Jeffers, president of
the firm, said the return to accepting new customers was
prompted by impt·oved operating results in the latter part of 1970.
"While we can accept some new customers, we will be
proceeding with some caution," said J effers. "Our first obligation
is to present customers, and we must be in a position to handle
their requests for added coverages." The firm temporarily
discontinued sales to new customers last September.

Monday night that he would
withhold final assessment on
the mission until after Apollo 14
plowed its way into the
atmosphere and descended softly by parachute into the sea.
"I think the big emotion for
me is yet to come- that is
getting both feet on the deck of
the carrier," he said during the
long-distance news conference
21 hours before re-entry.
They went to sleep for the
last time during the nine-day
WISS!On at midnight after
Shepard told flight director
Gerald Griffin "It's been a hell
of a th1ill for us to have
worked with you, Ger."
The astronauts are scheduled
to fly by helicopter to Samoa
Thursday morning, switch to a
big jet transport and fly
directly to Houston, arriving
here at 12:30 a.m. Friday.
Crew Faces Quarantine
Like the two moon landing
crews before them, Apollo 14's
astronauts face 17 days of
quarantine to make certain
they didn't pick up moon
organisms during their two
hikes up and down the hills at
Fra Mauro Valley.
Dayton's George Jackson
isn't exactly one of the nation's
most publicized centers but he
showed enough Monday night to
push Western Kentucky's Jim
McDaniels out of the limelight.
Jackson, a rugged rebounder
who's never been known as a
big offensive threat, scored
seven of Dayton's last 11 points
as the Flyers upset seventhranked Western Kentucky 63-60 .
Jackson, a 6-foot-7, 230pounder, fmished with 16 points
and helped hold McDaniels, a
seven-footer making a strong
bid for All-America honors, to
19, only two in the second half.
The Hilltoppers moved out to
a three-point lead midway
through the second half before
Jackson began finding the
range. Tom Crosswhite had 14
points and Rex Gardecki tossed
in 12 for the Flyers, now 13-6.
The loss was Western's fourth in
19 games.
Six Ranked Teams Play
Shepard and Mitchell were
the first men to explore the
(Continued on page 8)

named to serve on Middleport Village
Council.
Mrs. Morgan, active in Middleport
republican politics, and in Heath United
Methodist Church, is believed to be the
first woman to ever serve on the council.
She was appointed Monday night when the
council met in regular session. She
replaces Charles Byer who resigned
recently effective Feb. 1. His unexpired
term ends on Dec. 31, 1971.
Roger Morgan, construction contractor, the new councilwoman's husband,
served a term on Middleport council about
a decade ago. He and Mrs. Morgan reside
at 577 S. Third Ave., Middleport.
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
Grate
presented a letter from Paul Crabtree and
Assoc., Pt. Pleasant, the firm which holds
the franchise to install cable television in
the Bend communities.
The letter explained that free trial
cable service will be provided for residents
of Middleport an average of 60 days. There
will be free installation and service

due to staggered billing, some residents
who want the service at the time of its
initiation will receive service, perhaps, for
only 45 days free of charge while others
might receive it for as much as 75 days.
The average per home, however, will be 60
days free of charge.
There will be a charge of $1 for each
set over the initial first set and the company will be given the right to make individual agn&gt;ements with prablem cases
where underground installation might be
required. The costs would have to be
adequate to help defray expenses involved
in problem cases .
Residents asking to be disconnected
from the service must give the company a
reasonable time effect the disconnection.
They will not be charged for the period
between their request for discontinuance
of service and the actual time the
disconnection is taken care of. The company is also not obligated to provide free
i~tallation and service for the initial
period for anyone moving from one home

Council approved the report of Mayor

·c. 0. Fisher showing receipts of $895.90 in

fees and fines during January and $192 in
merchant police collections for a total of
$1,087.90.
A letter from Ralph Werry, chairman
of the heart fund drive, asked permission
to have a balloon sale in the community on
Saturday, Feb. 13, and a house-to-house
canvass on Heart Sunday, Feb. 21. Permission was given for both events.
The report of fires curing January
submitted by Fire Chief Tom Darst
showed four calls, three being out of town.
Chief of Police J. J. Cremeans
requested an increased clothing allowance
but no action was taken l:lecause the increase could not be fitted into the appropriations already approved for the
year.
Attending the meeting were Mayor
Fisher, Clerk-Treasurer Grate, Maintenance Supervisor Harold Chase, and
Councilmen John Zerkle, Dick Vaughan,
Clifford Stumbo and David Ohlinger.

Two Killed in LA Quake
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - At
least two persons were killed
today in the collapse of a
downtown building when a
sharp rolling earthquake shook
Southern California at 6 a.m.
The victims died when a
downtown . building partially
collapsed.
At least 36 persons were
hospitalized with injuries and
homeowners report ed
widespread damage to homes,
toppled chimneys and cup boards emptied by the shock.
Cracks appeared in roadways
and emergency detours were
arranged.
The quake was felt 200 miles
to the north at Fresno in the San

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UPI)- The Apollo astronauts
are so good at aiming at &lt;m
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::: imaginary bullseye in the
Pacific Ocean that space
WHAT'S TO COME
agency officials have moved
Extended Ohio Weather their recovery ship out of the
Outlook Thursday through immediate splashdown target
Saturday
area.
Partly cloudy and not as
In the past the recovery
cold Thursday, highs in mid carrier was stationed almost on
20s north to the low 30s south. the target point. The Navy then
Warmer Friday and Saturday would stand by and wait for the
with a chance of rain south spacecraft to splash somewhere
and rain or snow north. Highs in the vicinity .
Saturday from the 30s north
On the last four Apollo
and central to the low 40s missions, however, the carrier
south. Lows at night in the has been moved from the
teens early Thursday mor- bullseye because officials
ning and ranging from mid feared the spacecraft might
20s north to mid 30s south smash into the ship.
Saturday morning.
"In the last few missions
:;:f.::::;::::!::;:;::::::::·:::::~:::j;;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::~:;~:::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::;::::
we've been positioning the

Joaquin Valley and 130 miles
south to the Mexico border.
Power blackouts were
reported in adjoining Ventura
and Orange Counties and some
radio stations in Hollywood and
Los Angeles went off the air
briefly.
The UPI bureau in the Civic
Center was shaken for more
than a minute with calendars
swaying on the walls and loose
equipment dropping to the
floor .
A 25-yard panel on the upper
two stories of a six-story brick
building sprayed over 50 yards
of a mostly unoccupied parking
lot. Street lights also blinked off
downtown and burglar alarms

were set off.
The shock tripped power
switches sending some radio
stations off the air temporarily.
Some structural damage was
done to downtown buildings.
Dr. Charles Richter, retired
director of the Cal Tech
seismological laboratory, said
the tremor was strong enough
to "throw things around in my
house.
The inventor of the scale used
to measure force of earthquakes said it was the strongest
shock he had felt since the
disastrous tremor in 1952 near
Bakersfield that registered 6.5
on the Richter Scale. Today's
tremor also was felt strongly in

the same area and farther
north.
The original tremor was
followed by continuing rolling
but smaller aftershocks.
A housewife in Venice, 18
miles from the Civic Center
said, "My God, I've never felt
anything like that."

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Ollie Hindy,
Edith Rice ,
Middleport;
Pomeroy; Molly Guinther ,
Syracuse; Minnie Bengel,
Pomeroy; Gary Ginther,
Chester; Bruce Fisher, Racine;
Diane Barber, Reedsville.
DISCHARGED - Nancy
Pope.

PICKS CARSWELL
WASHINGTON (UPI)
President Nixon has appointed
G. Harrold Carswell, his onetime choice for the Supreme
Court, to the Council of the
Administration Conference of
the United States.
carrier 5 miles off the target
point. We have the carrier
steaming toward the target
point in motion at a path
perpendicular to the track so if
it's uprange or downrange it
can turn and generally it can
be there by the time of splash,"
Jerome B. Hammack, chief of
the space agency's landing and
recovery office, said today .
Hammack said all the Apollo
spacecraft have landed within
two or three miles of the
recovery ship and several have
been so close the descending
spaces hip was visible from the
carrier.
"It's always a real fine thing
to l.~::ar the sonic boom and
then later you see the
parachutes." Hammack said.
Hammack sa1d helicopters

are in the area and have the
capability of getting to the
command ship within minutes
a fter a landing. "That way the
helicopter is there pretty much
at the time of splash, so it's a
pretty good technique," Hammack said.
The astronauts, then their
spaceship, are taken aboard the
recovery ship and then back to
the United States. The astronauts are flown back and the
spaceship is brought back
aboard the carrier.
In this case, , the astronauts
will go intQ a three-week
quarantine at the Manned
Spacecraft Center to make sure
they did not bring back from
the moon any organisms that
might be harmful on earth.

WILLIAM BIRD
Through the Meigs County
American Red Cross, William
Harold Bird, pictured above
on station in Vietnam with the
U.S. Army, is home on a 30day emergency leave du~ to
the serious illness of his
father, Harold W. Bird, a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Through Mrs. Kenneth Braun, the National Red
Cross Headquarters in
Washington was contacted
and arrangements made for
the leave. The Red Cross
provides the only official
communication which is
recognized by the Armed
Services between a serviceman, his family and the
military. The annual fund
drive of the chapter will begin
in March. The photograph of
Bird was taken in Vietnam.

Highways

In Bad
Shape
Employes of the county highway department and of the
State Department of Highways.
here worked around the clock
using all available equipment •
ease effects of Monday's
snowfall.
A spokesman at the county
department said that it was
impossible for workmen, on
duty all night Monday, to keep
up with the fa st falling snow.
Cinders used early were quickly
covered. Roads were and are
hazardous, he said.
Drifting also occurred as fast
as roads were cleared. Drifts
were particularly high in the
west end of the county, workmen reported.
The state highway department had 12 trucks out Tuesday
clearing roads. Primary roads
reported in pretty good shape
were Routes 33, 7 and parts of
143 and 124. A spokesman said
other sections of the latter two
roads would be worked today
and other routes also tackled.
The department used 261 tons of
salt overnight Monday trying to
cope with the snow.
Meanwhile, schools were
closed today due to weather
conditions. Administrators
were making no guesses as to
wh ether classes could be
resumed tomorrow.
An extreme drop in the
temperature predicted in the
zero range tonight is expected
to keep most county roads
hazardous.
Spokesmen of both the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. and the Ohio Power
Co. said they had encountered
no major problems in their
operations.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Templeton Carl Grueser, 20,
Pomeroy, and Sharon Lee
Buckley, 18, Middleport; James
Sauer Buchanan, 54, and
Margaret Virginia Neutzling,
51, both of Middleport.

Farmers are Last Hope
COLUMBUS (UPI) A
Rutgers University professor
told agri - businessmen today
farmers are "the last great
hope on earth for the survival
of mankind."
Dr. Robert White - Stevens,
chairman of the Bureau of Conservatiorf and Environmental
Science at Rutgers, said the
farmer was a "self - appointed
cusdodian of the public welfare ."
"The only hope on earth are
the farmers of the world and it
will be the western world farmer that must lead the way ··
said White-Stevens. "He has, ul

course already done so in this
century and has provided abundance beyond the wildest optimistic predictions of but sixty
years ago."
"Twice this century he has
won wars and after each stifled
the famines that threatened the
vanquished, " he added. "Now
he confronts his severest challenge and he remains •he last
hope on earth for the survival
of mankind.'.
White-Stevens also said accusations that the farmer denigrates the environment were
"ungrateful and unfair."

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-Aiii~w H~rd Sells Nixon Plan : Of the Bend

2-TheDaily
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By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
and local officials here have
been asked by Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew to jump on the
bandwagon for President
Nixon's revenue - sharing plan
now and worry later about distribution details and the size of
federal reimbursements.
Agnew spent three hours
Monday trying to sell Ohio
government leaders at all levels
on the President's proposed $16
billion federal - state revenuesharing plan.
From all indications, the vice
president did not dispel all the
doubts harbored by a skeptical
Democratic
state
administration and local officials
jealous of any attempts to
diminish the flow of federal aid
into their areas.
But he emphasized that he
feels Nixon's plan is the best
one in sight and should be
GRADUATION GARB in
Buenos Aires where new
dent is t s are initiated by
being smeared with eggs,
flour, water, wine, lipstick
and paint to show the public they are patient and
tolerant professionals.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
E. Hillard Adkins, Catherine
A. Bennett, Harold Bird,
Kenneth H. Delong, Mrs. Harry
W. Downard and infant son,
Dencil Higginbotham, Mrs.
Robert P. Meier and infant
daughter, Morgan O'Neil, Joe
H. Russell, Mrs. Ethel Sayre,
Mrs. L. A. Schmidt, Mrs .
Kenneth L. Tomlinson, Mrs. J.
Fred Stanley, Mrs. John R.
Banks and infant son, Joyce
Evans, Charles Fouts, Mrs.
Hazel Harman, Mrs. Vaughan
Huffman, Mrs. Forrest Johnson, Mrs. Clarence J. Mattox
and infant son, Mrs. Freda
McGuire, Douglas Mitchell,
Deloris J. Pearson, Otis E .
Rice, George R. Sheets, II, Mrs.
Herbert E. Thompson, Homer
C. Willard, Mrs. Thomas
Ferguson, Mrs. Joseph Skunza,
and Mrs. Floyd Shinn.

swiftly carried out as an alternative to nothing.
"There has not been proposed
in the last 50 years a program
of such scope and magnitude,"
Agnew told a gathering of
about 250 local and state
government representatives assembled in the chamber of the
Ohio House of Representatives.
Could Get NothiBg
"Let's not get hung . up on
why it isn't bigger or why we
can't use tax credits," he said.
"If we waste our time arguing,
it's not going to get done and
the result for Ohio is going to
be a big, fat goose egg."
Lt. Gov. John W. Brown, one
of two Republican state elected
officials left after a Democratic
November,
take over last
praised Agnew's presentation
as "magnificent."
But Democrats were less
enthusiastic. Gov. John J Gilligan, who favors a tax credit

Grandpa Buys it,
Father Junks it,
Son Buys it Back
ASHLAND, Ohio (UPI)- An
antique is something Grandmother called modern.
That is the definition of an
antique given by Dick Leidy, a
professor of radio and television
at Ashland College who has
been collecting antiques for 25
years.
Leidy defined an antique as
"something one generation
buys, the next generation discards and the third generation
buys back."
"Really, an antique is something Grandmother called modern," he said, "and what we're
calling modern today is tomorrow's antique."
Leidy classifies antiques into
four divisions: Early attic, preHalloween, battered basement
and treasured trash. •
. "Early attic is what mother
discarded and carried to the attic," he said. "This may even
be those old Valentines which
are nice to paper the walls
with."
The pre-Halloween items he

Overnight Wire
By United Press International
CHICAGO - NEARLY 561,000 LOW-INCOME Ohioans
received food assistance from federal and state governments
during the month of November, it was announced Monday.
The Midwest Regional office of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture said Ohio food stamp participants received over $12
million worth of coupons during that month.
- TUSCANIA, ITALy _ SURVIVORS HUDDLED in army
tents thrown up in pastures around this medieval hilltop town
Monday and surveyed the destruction of a killer earthquake that
rolled across the countryside like an ocean wave. It took just six
seconds Saturday night to destroy the work of centuries and kill at
least 18 people. As many as 270 persons were hurt and under
treatment in hospitals around the region.
"There is the death of people, certainly," said Marion
Moretti, superintendent of the Etruscan Museum in Rome. "But
there also is the death of priceless things." He said art experts
would probably be able to restore much of the ton-~bs, temples and
other priceless gems of antiquity which suffered in the disaster·
The town had stood since the times of the Etruscans, the preRoman civilization that made it their capital for a time.
WASHU..JG'l'ON - TliE SENATE CONFIRMED Monday
without opposition the nomination of John B. Connally to be new
secretary of the Treasury. Connally, 54, will become the first
Democrat in President Nixon's cabinet and will succeed David M.
Kennedy, who is becoming an ambassador at large.
ATHENS, OHIO - A SNOWBALL FIGHT that started on the
college green at Ohio University moved into the streets near the
campus Monday night. A dozen city police in riot gear broke up
the fracas and arrested three students. The crowd of students
grew to about 300 as many gathered to play in year's first big·
snowfall here, but police said several threw snowballs at cars and
partially obstructed traffic .
The police, led by Police Chief Charles Cochran, ordered tht:
students to disperse and swept the crowd back onto the campus.
Charged with disorderly conduct were Daniel S. Williams of
Youngstown; Gary Wilson, 19, a resident of Bromley Hall, and
Steve Vartoluccio, 20, a resident of Washington Hall.

listed included the face-carved
furniture with the bright red
upholstery, or the gifts from
carnivals, or the dolls with
clocks in their stomachs.
Jars And Bottles
Leidy likened tte battered
basement category to the early
attic.
"Only it never got to the attic," he said. "This is usually
the jars and bottles."
His treasured trash was listed as "what mother had when
she was a kid, or what her
first boyfriend gave her."
"This is what our grandkids
will call early attic," he mused.
"But on a serious note," he
said, "an antique is anything
that is 100 years old or older."
He explained that antiqueing
started around 1925.
"At that time it was a past
time of the wealthy," he said.
"It started with the collection
of the Chippendale high boys
and the Queen Anne tables."
He went on to explain that antiques tell a lot about history.
"Many items we consider antiques were first made for practical use," he said. "Later came
the artistic items, and then
full- time occupations."
Pewter Is Rare
The practical items he listed
as dishes and table ware artistic as the samplers, and fulltime occupations as paintings
and weavings.
One item he said which
is hard to find today is pewter.
"It was melted down to make
ammunition for the troops," he
said.
"Antiques also reveal the etiquette of the era," he said.
"Handleless cups reveal that
the coffee was poured from the
cup into the saucer and drunk
from that. The cup was then
placed on a cup plate."
Leidy said the items sought
today are those that are "not
huge and can be used in many
places around the home."
Advice he gives to people
wishing to start collecting antiques is to study before buying.
He suggests the person know
the history of the item, consider whether the manufacture of
that item has been d~scontinued,
how many of t~e Items were
made and what IS the current
demand or fad·

Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time

®

F================::;-r================='t
FoTELE55, TI1E 'HAM RADIO BUG,
Sur I-llS OLD FOLKS BACK 1-lOM-E
5PEND5 'HOURS EVERY 1-JIGIJ.T TALKING

TO OTHER. AAMS ALL OVER. TI4E GLOBE···

ON TIJ.E ~ARM .. ·'HOW OFIEN DO T'HEY
GET A WORD FROM HIM?

approach to aiding state and
local governments, listened with
interest as Agnew outlined the
President's plan in a 25-minute
speech before entertaining
questions from the state legislators, mayors, county commissioners and township trustees
on hand.
Gilligan and his cabinet members had met privately with
Agnew for about 1% hours
earlier in the afternoon.
Robert Tenenbaum, the
governor's press secretary,
said the governor "offered no
particular criticism" of the
Nixon plan but when pressed by
the vice president, conceded it
was better than nothing.
"Given that, I send you back
with my vote," Gilligan was
quoted as saying when asked
by the vice president his choice
if faced with the Nixon proposal or nothing.
Would Get $212 Million
Gilligan had said last Friday
he would question Agnew closely
about details of the plan, which
the Ohio governor referred to
as a "billion dollar shell game."
During the public phase of
the vice president's visit, Agnew
explained Ohio would receive
$212 million in the first year
under revenue - sharing, and
that it would be available immediately upon enactment of
the proposal by Congress.
"Nobody's going to get anything less than they did before,
said Agnew in denying claims
that redistribution of existing
grants would leave some areas,
notably Appalachia, at the
mercy of their state governments for a slice of the pie.
The vice president politely
criticized Gilligan's tax credit
alternative. He pointed out
Congress would have to enact
it, the states would have to

The piranha is a deadly
fish native to South American rivers. The piranha has
powerful jaws and razorsharp, triangular teeth that
are capable of killing men
and cattle, The World Almanac notes. A school of
piranha can reduce an animal to a skeleton in a few
minutes.

beef up their own tax programs
to obtain maximum benefits
and then would have to devise
ways to distribute the money.
"This would be a long process
and would take time," Agnew
said. "The money is needed now.
Let's stick together and get
the reform done."
Agnew conceded he had no
details on the $11 billion special
phase of the revenue - sharing
proposal which combines $1 billion in new federal money with
$10 billion in consolidated existing grants.
Problems Remain
"We don't have the answer to
every problem that's going to
arise," he said. "I'm not going
to stand here and tell you
there's not going to be any
problems or disappointments."
Agnew also ~aid during the

l

Antibiotics Drugs
R aise Questions
WASHINGTON (UPI) Food and Drug Administration
officials are planning further
studies this year to help settle
some of the vexing un-

the Farm Front
certainties surrounding the
widespread use of antibiotic
drugs in raising the nation's
cattle, hogs and poultry.
In April, Food and Drug
Commissioner Charles C.
Edwards is scheduled to get a
report from an antibiotics task
force, a group set up in April,
1970 to make "an in-depth
reivew of the usage of antibiotics in food animals."
Just getting underway now,
however ,.is a new FDA study of
one of the key factors involved
in the issue - the critical
question of whether wide use of
antibiotics in food animals can
produce a transfer of drug
resistance to humans. Some
critics fear that resistance to
specific antibiotic drugs, if
transferred to humans on a
significant scale, could make
these drugs less effective when
doctors use them to combat
human disease.
The new FDA study, an official reported recently, will
examine the question of what
level of resistance can be
transmitted directly from
animals to humans; how much
can be transmitted indirectly
through food; and whether
drug-resistant bacteria·
developed in animals affect the
"total environmental pool of
organi'sms."
The study now in progress of
people who live on farms and
handle livestock should provide
a clue as to whether resistance

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Don't Ig nore Signal of
Repeated Dizzy Spells
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB/ M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb--I have
been suffering from dizzy
spells for a year and a half.
Blood tests and X rays show
n o thin g. But I still have
these dizzy spells where I almost completely black out.
What could cause this problem and what can I do to get
some help?
Dear Reader- Dizzy spells
are caused by many different things. Children get
dizzy from whirling around
and around in a circle, then
stopping suddenly. The
small balance m echanism
inside the ear is not accustomed to the circular movement and sends out confused
signals to the brain. The balance mechanism called the
s~micircular canals or labyrmth may also become inflamed Clabyrinthitis) in a
yariet.y of infections, includmg Simple respiratory illnesses, and cause dizziness
for a limited period of time.
In other people the small
ear canals undergo degenerative changes for no apparent r e a so n. This may
cause recurring attacks.
Treatment is often difficult.
A common cause for diz~iness of this type is changes
m the small arteries to the
b a 1an c e mechanism. This
also . c au s e s buzzing and
nngmg m the ears and little
can be done a bout this
when it develops.
D.i ~ziness. with ''blacking
out, often means fainting
or near fainting episodes.
This is a symptom and almost everyone has one or
more of these episodes in
his life. They can occur
from the sight of blood a
needle prick. acute illn~ss,
as a result of certain drugs
- not a b 1 y tranquilizers-and a host of other factors.

course of his visit that:
I
I
- The revenue - sharing proBy Bo.b Hoeflich
:
posal will furnish 10 times the
I
I
amount proposed for local and I
I
state governments last year and
Area fire departments and emergency squads really seem to
will double by 1980.
-No strings will be attached be getting worked out so far this year. The Middleport group, for
except with regard to discrim- instance, had made 38 emergency runs and four fire calls, so far,
ination on racial or religious as of Sunday night.
\
grounds.
- Two - thirds of the current
JOHN HUNNELL, 16, SON of Mr. and Mrs. John Hunnell,
categorical federal grants will Pomeroy, and a student at Meigs High School, has been tranbe untouched, and state and sferred from Veterans Memorial Hospital to the Holzer Medical
local matching requirements Center. His room number is 361.
will be abandoned.
~The methods by which the
MRS. DOROTHY EDMUNDSON, Meigs Health Department
funds are ultimately distributed employe, is confined to her home in the Salem Center area. Dottie
are still subject to debate.
suffered a heart attack in November and was confined to the
-Administrative costs would
intensive care ward at Gallipolis. She is, of course, still unable totP
be reduced by the program.
return to her duties with the department.
- The sharing plan is based
primarily on population and to
SCIENCE MARCHES on and there's a new device that can
a lesser degree, tax effort at
save your life by warning of a heart attack weeks in advance
the local and state level.
according to the Feb.lO edition of The National Enquirer.
Heart specialist Dr. John W. Gofman says there are probably
between five and 10 million potential heart victims in the nation
who could be helped by a pocket-sized heart attack alarm he invented. He calls the device "VIDA."
VIDA is worn on the chest and buzzes when the heart shows~
signs of impending trouble. He says the warning can come hours
or even weeks before a heart attack, giving the wearer time to get
is being transmitted directly to a doctor or a hospital.
The concept for VIDA was worked as far back as 1961 but
from animals to man.
Any moves to cut back on the only recently has the medical data been established and the
use of antibiotics in livestock circuitry design perfected. VIDA is expected to be available for
and poultry feeds could have the public late this year at a cost of from $200 to $300.
substantial
impact
on
MRS. URAL THOMAS, FORMERLY of Syracuse, writes of
production. At present, some
2,500 different products con- her interest in the recent articles pertaining to the Great Bend
taining low levels of antibiotics history and the Bicknell family. She is a niece of William Bicknell •
are added to feeds to promote Cross, 91, who lives in Racine. Incidentally, Mrs. Thomas' adgrowth and control diseases.
dress is 802 Joyful St., Columbus, 43204, for friends here who may
have lost contact with her.

The basic problem often is
inadequate circulation to the
brain. The mechanisms are
complex. A single episode
with good spontaneous recovery usually can be ignore d. Repeated episodes
should be investigated.
In young, healthy people
~his can be caused by poolmg of too much blood in the
legs during p r o 1 o n g e d
standing. S o m e tim e s because of anxiety the normal
heart will actually stop for
a few seconds-just long
enough for the person to
faint. In some cases anxiety
causes a person to breathe
too fast and too deep. We
call this hyperventilation,
meaning overbreathing. This
causes the body to lose too
much carbon dioxide, which
in turn changes the entire
body chemistry and results
in dizziness or faintness.
Recognizing the problem and
training the person not to
over breathe - but to take
slow, shallow breaths- often
helps control the symptoms.
Cause of the anxiety, however, needs study.
Low b 1 o o d sugar can
cause faintness or dizziness
but this is actually not a
common cause, although it
is a popular idea. Many people seem to like to talk
about their low blood sugar.
The problem with tests
and X rays in many of these
problems is that the episodes a nd their cause may
be transitory and between
episodes they show nothing.

By PHIL PASTORET
Most of us never think
about gossiping-and that's
the main objection to the
practice.
,,
One mark of success is
beating the other fellow
to the paunch.
:;:

The real geniuses of industry are the men who

engineer the guarantees so
that they run out before the
product goes on the fritz.

German Shepherd Wins
EUCLID, Ohio (UPI) - Duke, a young German
shepherd, won a battle against burglars at a local service
station even though they shot him three times. Ray Carbotta,
owner of the Wash-n-Fill Gulf station, bought Duke a year
ago after being robbed several times. Sunday night the dcg
met some thieves who had burrowed through a cement block
wall into the station.
Police believe the men shot Duke to quiet him, but he
refused to quit and they fled without taking anything. A
passing motorist heard the dog howling and called police, but
until Carbotta arrived, Duke would not allow anyone near
him.
After being operated on for his wounds, Duke was in good
condition Monday. "I'm proud of him," said Carbotta. ''He's
a good watchdog. Even I have to be careful with him and
properly identify myseH when I enter the buUding."

•

:;:

It's easy to know all
the answers if you don't
listen to the questions.

Storys Run
BY GLENNA SHULER
Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt
Saunders of Cleveland were
here a recent weekend to attend
the funeral of his sister, Mrs.
Lema Lynch.
Mrs. Catherine Russell of
Mason, Roscoe Fife of Middleport, Mrs. Evelyn Matthews,
local, Mr . and Mrs. Jack Riggs
and children of Letart, W. Va.,
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Fife, Jr.
and Linda of Turkey Run, Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe E. Fife and
Cristi of Little Kyger were
recent visitors of Rev. and Mrs.
Raymond Fife and Bessie Fife.
Mr. and Mrs. James Haffey,
Linda and Carla, of Grove City
spent a recent weekend with
Mrs. Frances Conkle and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Leach,
Marcia, Johnny, and Roger
spent an evening recently with
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Veith and
sons of Turkey Run.
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Leonard
were recent callers in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. James Conkle.
Mrs. Danny Young of Kyger
spent two days recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife.
Rev. Raymond Fife called
recently on Mr. and Mrs. John
Veith.
Mrs. Ross Shuler and
Michael, Rt. 1 Langsville,
called on Mr. and Mrs. Alex
Shuler recently.

Holman Leads Southern
RACINE - Southern High
School's reserves defeated the
reserve team of North Gallia
High School 63-28 on the
Southern court in Racine
Friday with Rodney Holman
leading the winners with 12
points.
Points by other players were
Greg Donahew, 10; Bruce Hart,
11; Nick Ihle, nine; Mike Nease,
six; Jeff Hill, six; Norman
Curfman, five and Ronnie Hill,.

four.
Owen Garnes was top scorer
for North Gallia with 10. So the
reserves now have 10 wins and
four los·s es. They will meet
Hannan, W. Va., Friday at
Southern and Eastern on
Saturday night at Eastern.
13 31 47 63
Southern
North Gallia
8 12 17 28

NAME OMITIED
Mrs. Ruth Evans, stepmother, was unintentionally
omitted from the recent death
notice of Cecil Evans, Middleport.

DEMOCRATS TO MEET
E. A. Wingett, Racine,
president, has announced that a
meeting of the lOth District
Democrat Action Club will b
held at 7:30p.m. Wednesday a
the Elks Club on Front St.,
Marietta, as scheduled. Dinner
will be served.

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of Ohio Eta Phi
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
The Meigs County American
Sorority scheduled tonight at
the Columbia Gas Co. offices Red Cross Chapter will meet at
will not be held due to weather 7:30 Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
conditions.

BERRY'S WORLO

0

QUICK Q U I Z
Q- How many U.S. presi·
dents served in Congress
subsequent to leaving the
White House?
A-Two-John Quincy
Adams in the House of Representatives and Andrew
Johnson in the Senate.
Q-How did the horse
chestnut get its name?
A- The shape of the leaf
scar left on the twig, where
a leaf stem has fallen off.
resembles a horse's hoof.

(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Please send your questions and
comments to Lawrence E. Lomb,
M.D., in care of this paper. While
Dr. Lamb cannot answer individual
letters, he will answer letters of
general interest in future columns.

..

Q- What kind of blood do
horseshoe crabs have?
A- Blue blood, like that of
crustaceans and most mollusks. with the same copper
base.

&lt;iiJ

1971 by NEA,

Inc~

" I hate to tell you this now, Alan, but only a few of the
pictures I took at Christmastime came out!"

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Mld&lt;Deport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 9, 1971

Only One Ga1ne Postponed

UCLA Returned -To
Top By UPI Voters

· H illtoppers Upset
t

By United Press International
Tons of snow and blustery
winds divided the real basketball fan from the fake Monday
night in Ohio.
Despite the hazardous weather, all but one of the eight
games on the college schedule
was played. The exception was
the Walsh-Wheeling game in
West Virginia . The game was
rescheduled for Thursday night.
For Dayton fans, the trip to
the arena was well worth it as
the Flyers upset seventh-ranked
Western Kentucky 63-60.
George Jackson, a rugged rebounder, finished with 16 points
and helped hold Western's Jim
McDaniels to 19 to give the
Flyers their 13th win in 19
games.

The Hilltoppers, now 15-4,
moved out to a three-point lead
midway through the second half
before Jackson began finding
the range . Jackson scored seven of Dayton's final 11 points.
Ohio University came from a
halftime deficit to put down
Loyola of Chicago 77-72 in the
Windy City. The Bobcats, headed by Ken Kowall with 25
points and Craig Love with 22,
are now 12-5.
In other games, Northern Illinois, playing at horne in DeKalb, downed Bowling Green
84-78; Steubenville beat Alliance
(Pa.) 89-78 ; Youngstown State
whipped Hillsdale (Mich .) 76-53;
Baldwin-Wallace
outpointed
Point Park (Pa.) 96-84 and Ohio
Northern upset Findlay 87-85.

Northern Illinois was ahead win, their fourth in 19 tries
by 15 points at the half and in- Jack Mellinger and Steve Davis
creased its lead to 22 before each contributed 23 points to
Bowling Green started whittling the effort.
The Oilers, now 16-3, were
it away. Paced by Rich Walker's 21 points, the Ohio school led by Marty Arft with 24
got no closer than six (loints. _ points.
Larry McElfresh netted 26
Steubenville won its 11th
game as 268 fans braved eight points for Baldwin-Wallace as
inches of snow to come see the 207 fans cheered the team to its
win over Alliance. AI Eling seventh win in 20 games.
scored 19 points to pace the 'Teammate AI Lane connected
for 24.
Barons.
Tonight Ohio State goes to Big
Billy Johnson tossed in 25
points and Ron Smith added 24 Ten rival Purdue's horne court,
as Youngstown got its 16th win Cleveland State visits Central
State, Cumberland (Ky.) is at
in 20 games.
Ohio Northern guard Rick Rio Grande, Wilberforce is at
Scalette stole the ball and Bluefield (W.Va.) State, Wright
scored from midcourt with five State at St. Joseph's (Ind.),
seconds left to give the aptly Denison at Hiram, Otterbein at
named Polar Bears an upset Muskingum and Cedarville at
Defiance.

T eruns ::t:mr:~~:m~~~;~~:;m:~!;:~r~:~~;rm:r:~::~::~;;~~~;r~:;::::~;;!::;:::u::.
Post Court Wins
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Six other ranked teams were
in action Monday night and all
• emerged as winners.
Kansas (No. 5) routed
Colorado 91-67, sixth-ranked
Jacksonville downed Loyola of
Louisiana 111-93, Kentucky (No.
8) romped past Mississippi
State 102-83, Notre Dame (No.
10) blasted Butler 93-81, 11thranked North Carolina edged
North Carolina State 65-63 and
Tennessee, tied for 15th
.. defeated Mississippi 80-74.
Dave Robisch had 24 points
and Mark Williams carne off the
bench to score 22 as Kansas ran
its record to 17-1 with a victory
over Colorado. Williams,
Kansas' smallest player at 5-11,
hit five long shots in the first
half to open Colorado's zone and
enable the 6-10 Robisch to work
inside.
•
Artis Gilmore had 24 points
and blocked 11 shots to help
Jacksonville beat Loyola. Gilmore, the Dolphins' 7-2 center
grabbed 27 rebounds in his
battle with Tyrone Marioneaux,
Loyola's seven-foot center. Marioneaux finished with 22 points.
Tom Parker scorea a career
high 32 points, 23 in the second
half, as Kentucky beat Missis• sippi State. Kentucky held only
a five-point lead in the second
half before Parker's shooting
put the game out of reach .
36-Point Performance
Austin Carr turned in a 36point performance to lead Notre
Dame over Butler. Carr and
John Pleick, who finished with
17, combined for 33 of the
Fighting Irish'sfirst 35 points in
the second half to rally Notre
Dame from a two-point halftime
deficit.
Lee Dedmon's two foul shots
in the last 28 seconds helped
North Carolina beat North
Carolina State. Dedmon was
fouled with 28 seconds to go and
dropped in a foul shot. He was
fouled again grabbing the
lfj' rebound of his missed foul and
converted one-&lt;&gt;f-two.
State's Ed Leftwich had 24
points to take game-scoring
honors.

La . Tech 89 N.'E. La. 79
Colorado 91 Kansas 67
Vnrblt ~2 Florida 81
Georgia Sou. 87 Tampa U. 69
Tex Sou. 104 Jcksn St. 102
/4 F la. A&amp;M 103 Svnnh St. 97

•

Don Johnson scored 26 points
and Tennessee's rugged defense
held Johnny Neumann, the
nation's leading scorer, to 22 in
the Vols' triwnph over Mississippi.
Elsewhere, Florida State
rallied to beat Georgia Tech 8176, Ohio University downed
Loyola of illinois 77-72, St. Louis
beat Wichita State 76-71
Vanderbilt topped Florida 92-81,
Georgia nipped Alabama 71-70,
St. Francis (Pa.) beat Niagar~
7fXJ7, Utah State routed Tulane
103-81 and Oklahoma State
edged Kansas State 51-50.

Coach, Six
Assistants
Quit At WTS
CANYON, Tex. (UPI)-Winning is not everything, or
perhaps Joe Kerbel, the man
who has won more football
games for West Texas State
than any other, might still have
his job today.
Kerbel, who built a 68-42-1
record in 11 seasons, was fired
three days ago with a year's
notice . Monday he ,and six of his
assistants, quit.
The WTSU Board of Regents
made the decision to fire the 49year-old head coach, athletic
director and professor of health
and physical education and
Kerbel said they made a
mistake.
"This is a decision that has
been made by an inexperienced
board of regents with whom I've
never even had the opportunity
to confer to explain our present
program or future plans," he
said when he quit.
Jack Donavan, director of
public information, said the
board thought a new coach
might spark interest in the
football program.
"The members of the board of
regents are· mindful of and
grateful for the great development of the West Texas State
athletic program under Mr.
Kerbel's leadership, but we feel
that recent declining interests
in the program, especially
football, indicate the change
would promote the continued
development of the program,"
said President Dr. James P.
Cornette.

ABRAHAM ·
LINCOLN
OVERPAID
HIS

INCOME TAX
Abe Lincoln, who signed
America's first income tax
into law, overpaid his own
taxes! After Abe's death,
his estate filed to recover
the overpayment- $1 ,279.
Don't take the chance of
overpaying YOUR income
tax. let H &amp; R BLOCK prepare, check and guarantee
your return for accuracy.

BOTH
FEDERAL
AND
STATE

83.

I

UK Athletic Director Harry Lancaster said Rupp attended Monday night's game against doctor's orders. He said
Rupp's left foot, which bothered him much of last season, had
become seriously infected in the past 48 hours. He entered the
school's medical center.
Lancaster said Rupp would miss Saturday night's road
game with F1orida and his return would depend on the
progress of the foot infection.
Assistant Coach Joe Hall will direct the team in Rupp's
absence, with Assistant Coach T. L. Plain taking over Hall's
duties on the freshman team.

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
40 21 .656 ...
Philadelphia 37 25 .597 31.;2
Boston
32 28 .533 1112
Buffalo
16 46 .258 241;2
Central Division
W. L. Pct.6 GB
Baltimore
34 24 .586 ...
Cincinnati
24 35 .407 10112
Atlanta
21 39 .350 14
Cleveland
11 52 .175 251/2
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
47 11 .810 ...
37 21 .638 10
Delroit
Chicago
36 23 .610 11112
Phoenix
35 25 .583 121,2
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 351 22 .614 ,.,
San Francisco 32 29 .525 5
Sea ltle
26 33 .413 10
San Diego
26 37 .413 12
Portland
21 39 .350 J5112
Monday's Result
Milwaukee 118 Phoenix 94
Tuesday's Games
Phoenix at Baltimore
Milwaukee at Detroit
Atlanta at New York
Sear tie at San Diego
Los Angeles at Cleveland
Boston at Chicago
(Only games schedu led)
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L Pet. GB
Virginia
40 19 .678 ...
Kentucky
33 27 .550 7112
New York
26 32 .448 13112
Carolina
27 34 .443 14
Pittsburgh
25 36 .410 16
Floridians
25 38 .397 17
West
W. L Pet. GB
Utah
38 19 .667
Indiana
36 20 .643 Ph
Memphis
34 26 .567 5112
Denver
22 36 .379 16112
Texas
19 38 .333 19
Monday's Result
Floridians 106 Pittsbgh 97
Tuesday's Games
(No games scheduled)
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Tennessee 80 Miss 74
Clemson 77 Rollins 52
Bald. Wa ll . 96 Pts. Park 84
Vir. Tech 91 WM. Mary 63
VMI 73 Richmond 63
St. Louis 76 Wchta St. 71
Notre Dame 93 Butler 81
Ohio 77 Lyla (Chi) 72
Okla. St. 51 Kan. St. 50
Stah 103Tulane 1
St. Anslms 86 Plymth St. 67
W. Tex. St. 97 Seatt le 84
Srtsn 91 Miami, Fla. 76
Prvdnce 73 Crghtn 76
Georgia 71 Ala. 70
Ill . 84 Bwlng Green 76
Te nn . Chat. 81 Citade l 70
No. Car. 65 N .C. St. 63
Clemson 77 Rollins 52
Dayton 63 Wes tern Ky . 60
Stbnvl 89 Allnce, Pa 78
Yngstn St. 76 Hllsdle 53
Ohio No. 87 Findlay 85
Air Force B1 Portlnd 62
Bishop 95 Wayland 88

66 CHEVROLET
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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AND THE SNOW SUGGESTS that astronauts Shepard, Roosa
and Mitchell, if they were to have landed in the Midwest today at 4
p.m., likely would have taken one good look just before touchdown·
and chorused:
"Turn this thing arotmd. We'd like to go back to the moon."
SOMEBODY PERFORMED A SPORTING deed recently.
Exactly who, A. R. Knight, Pomeroy, who deals in
automobiles in three tri-eounty communities, would like to know
so he could thank him or her.
One night recently "A. R." left a magnificent Masonic ring in
Craw's Steak House restroom given him about 25 years ago by his
employes. Discovering his error sometime later he wrote the ring
off as gone for good, but he surmised where he'd left it. Perhaps a
week later he casually inquired of Craw's staff if a Masonic ring
had been turned in, never expecting to learn that it had been.
But it had. To whomever, thanks, from Mr. Knight.
Look for improved play by the Gallipolis Blue Devil baseball
team this spring. Tommy Spencer, one of the Cincinnati Reds'
bright young prospects, will be going to spring training soon but in
the meantime he is getting in some good licks for his exteammates. Skull sessions with Tommy presiding are being held
regularly with up to 20 players attending. They are seeing and
hearing a lot of what Tommy has learned in a summer and winter
of professional baseball.
It can't hurt, and oughtta help.

•vu.,,:~~,~~:~~:~:~~~~·~, Bucks
Quebec
Springfield
Montreal
Providence

Impala 4 dr ., white with
turquoise top, V-8, auto.,
P.S., radio, w-s-w.

$1195
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You ' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC F INANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til6:00
Til5 P.M. Sat.

---------.1

while Tennessee, ninth last
week, fell out of the top ten.
Five coaches from each of
the seven geographical areas of
the nations comprise the UPI
ratings board. Each week they
selected the top 10 major
college teams in the nation,
with points awarded on a 10-9-37-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis on votes from
first through lOth.

College Ratings
NEW YORK (UPil-The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball
tea ms with first-place votes and
won-lost records in parentheses.
(Tenth week, includes games
played through Sunday, Feb. 7).
l. UCLA (21) (16-l)
332
2. Marquette (10) (18-0)
305
3. Sou. Cal. (1) (16-1 )
278
4. Pennsylvania (18-0)
231
5. Kansas (2) (16-1)
203
6. Jacksonville ( 16-2)
156
7. Western Ky. (1 5-3)
81
8. Ken tucky ( 15-3)
61
9. South Carolina {13-4)
55
10. Notre Dame (11-5)
36
11. North Carolina (13-3)
32
12. Michigan (1) (12-4)
27
13. Duquesne (15-2)
17
14. Fordham ( 16-ll
16
15. (Tie) LaSalle {15-2)
14
&lt;Tiel Tenn {14-4)
14
17. (Tie) Houston (17-3)
9
(Tie) Oregon (12-4)
9
(Tiel Illinois (10-4)
9
20. Louisville {15-4)
7
Also receiving five or more
poin ts- Utah State.

IN TODAY , LET U !o ST AR T
YOU A HIGH RETURN

SAVINGS ACCOU
4%%

20
24
23
22

8 50
45
8 42
9 41

W. L.
Baltimore
19 13
Cleveland
24 17
Hershey
19 21
Rochester
18 24
Monday's Results
Hershey 8 Montreal 6
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
(No games scheduled)

T. Pts
5 63
5 53
7 45
7 43

West

21
20
17
16

5

Mackey Will
Testify Today
CLEVELAND (UPI)-Baltirnore Colts tight end John
Mackey, who fs president of
the National Football League
Players Association, was
expected to testify today in a
continuing federal antitrust
grand jury probe on the NFL.
Former San Diego Chargers
quarterback Jack Kemp, now a
U.S. congressman from the
Buffalo area, testified for two
hours Monday. Prior to his
appearance he said the league
can take care of itself.
"Any problem can be resolved within the collective
bargaining framework,"
Kernpt said. "Any legislation
should be a last resort.
"I don't believe you should
burn down the ship to get rid of
the cockroaches," added Kemp,
a former president of the
players association.
Various active players and
former players who have
testified before the jury since
the U.S. Justice Department's
Antitrust Division began its
probe last November have
charged t~e league with "blacklisting" some players.
The player association's general counsel, Alan R. Miller of
Detroit, testified before the jury
during its afternoon session. He
later said he does not believe
there has been any blacklisting.
The grand jury resumed its
hearing Monday after a 25-day
recess.
Among those expected to
testify some time this week is
Cleveland Browns' owner Art
Modell.

This Week's Special

USED CARS
0

Don 's pole stuck in the snow, his chin and mouth carne down
hard on the end of it. But this didn't throw him. He went on to the
end of the without falling, then got medical assistance.
That's Don Swisher all right. Never big (155 lbs.), I don't
recall his ever having been injured in three seasons of Panther
football or two years more at Marshall University where he is a
senior.

Pro Standings

$

GUARANTEE ;:¥='::=::=::==i::~~

•

verteran basketball Coach Adolph Rupp, suffering with a
recurrent foot infectio~, was hospitalized Monday night
immediately after his team defeated Mississippi State, 102-

Anybody for skiing today? According to Charlene Hoeflich
today (Community Corner), Don Swisher, not so long ago the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League's most valuable football
player (PHS quarterback) tied the tricky sticks after a couple
hours of intensive instruction. The result: catastrophe (fractured
jaw and sundry other malfunctioning parts)

By Unitea .Press International
NEW YORK (UPI)-UCLA is
No. 1 again but the Bruins
know they're not going to have
an easy time staying there.
The Bruins, who have won
136 of their last 141 games,
moved back into the top spot
Monday in the United Press
International major college
basketball ratings after last
Sijl.turday night's victory over
arch-rival Southern California.
The loss dropped the Trojans
to third and Marquette jumped
into second place in the
balloting of the 35-rnember UPI
Board of Coaches. UCLA
received 21 first-plae votes and
332 points while Marquette was
second with 10 first-place votes
and 305 points.
Southern California received
only one first-place vote and is
third with 278 points.
The Bruins, seeking an
unprecedented fifth straight
NCAA title, are going to have a
difficult time protecting their
No. 1 rating since they must
face Southern California a
second time this season. And if
the Bruins make it to the
tournament, they can expect a
strong challenge from Marquette.
Unbeaten Pennsylvania, heading towards the Ivy League
crown, is in fourth place and
once-beaten Kansas, which received two first-place votes, is
fifth. Michigan received the
other first-place vote.
Rounding out the top ten are
Jacksonville, Western Kentucky, Kentucky, South Carolina and Notre Dame. South
Carolina was seventh last week
and dropped two spots to ninth

RIO WILL PLAY
Coach Art Lanham announced this morning that Rio
Grande College will play
Cumberland College at the Paul
R. Lyne Center at 8 o'clock
tonight as scheduled. The Indians left Cumberland around
8:30 this morning.
EVANS SIGNS
NEW YORK (UPI )-Jim
Evans, the New York Mets' No.
1 selection in the secondary
phase of last month 's winter
draft, was signed to a contract
Monday. Evans, a 21-year-old
righthanded pitcher from Memphis, Tenn ., was previously
selected by Houston in 1967 but
did not sign with the Astros.

Cop 47th Victory

By United Press International
With 24 regular season games
remaining, the Milwaukee
Bucks can just about count the
bonus money they'll receive for
finishing with the best won-lost
record in the National Basketball Assiciation for 1970-71.
Milwaukee, led by Lew
Alcindor's 39 points, romped
past the Phoenix Suns, 118-94,
Monday night for the club's 47th
victory against only 11 defeats.
The New York Knicks earned
the extra cash last season for
finishing with a 60-22 mark. The
Bucks' current pace will easily
beat that percentage.
Phoenix took a 27-26 lead late
in the opening period of the only
league action. But baskets by
Bob Dandridge and Jon
McGlocklin put Milwaukee in
front for good.
Mack Calvin's 29 points lifted
the Floridians to a 106-97
triumph over Pittsburgh in the
only American Basketball

TOO MUCH SNOW
BLAKE KIAMES~, N ·Y·
(UPI)-Seventeen mches of
newfallen_ snow pro_mpted world
heav yweight boxmg champ-ion_ ~oe Frazier to desert his
trauung headquarters at the
Concord Hotel ~onday and
re~urn to his nativ~ Philadelph!a where he will resume
tra~g for his title_ match
agamst M_uharnrnad Ali March
8 at Madison Square Garden.

Association game Monday
night.
Despite the season being four
months old, this was only the
second time the Bucks and Suns
have met. Milwaukee won the
earlier encounter and led this
one, 63-54, at halftime as
Alcindor scored 26 points before
the intermission.
Oscar Robertson, No. 2 in the
all-time NBA scoring list, added
20 points and Dandridge netted
16 for Milwaukee. Connie
Hawkins tallied 23 points for the
Suns and Neal Walk 17.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATION
NEW YORK (UPI)- Dr. Max
Novich of South Orange, N.J.,
U.S. Olympic team physician
and orthopedic specialist, annotmced Monday the formation
of the Association of Ringside
Physicians for the purpose of
study and research in the field
of boxing .
The organizing committee of
the new association, which has
Dr. Novich as its acting
chairman, is composed of Dr.
Robert Bennett of Detroit, Dr.
Ira McCown of New York, Drs.
Bernard Caplan and Elliot
Feldman of Columbus, Ohio,
Dr. Nicholas Teresi of Albany,
N.Y., and Dr. Ronald Romeo of
Las Vegas, Nev., among o~hers.

KNEE SURGERY
BALTIMORE (UPI)- Baltimore Colts running back Jerry
Hill, used sparingly last season
because of knee troubles, will
undergo knee surgery Tuesday .

"Meigs Co. Branch

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

TIRE CUSTOMERS

WAN
D
check these

rewarding values
at

nt
Strato·Streall®
2 nd
Tire

OHIO SOLDIER DIES
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Spec. 4 Terrence W. Weldon,
husband of Mrs. Phyllis A.
Weldon, Cincinnati, has been
killed in the southeast Asian
conflict, the Defense Department announced Monday.

FOUR WINNERS
HAWTHORNE, N.J. (UPI)Manuel Santana, Thornaz Koch
and Torn Edlefsen won firstround matches Monday in the
Clean Air Tennis Classic at the
National Indoor Tennis Center.

The Floridians moved within
a game of fifth-place Pittsburgh
in the ABA's East Division as
six players scored in double
figures. John Brisker, Pittsburgh's leading scorer with a
28.5 average, was sidelined with
a pulled groin and hamstring
muscle. George Thompson was
equal to the task as he scored 26
points for the Condors.
Trailing third-place New
York by only 31h games, the
Floridians were forced to hang
on after Pittsburgh closed the
gap to 91-90 in the fourth
quarter.

Interest per year, compounded
quarterly
on
regular passbook sa vings
accounts. No minimum or
maximum amount. Interest
is paid from date of deposit
to date of withdrawa I as long
as you !llaintain an open
account.

1/2·PRICE

when you boy the 1st tire at our regular
e:~change price (plus Fed. Excise tu:).
"My fur coat
-STOLEN!"
' All -risk' insurance to
cover furs, jewelry,
cameras, etc . against
th eft. lo ss, or accidental damage is
available from the
Downing-Childs
Agency.

Downing·
Childs
Agency, Inc.
220 N. 2nd

MIDDLE

RT

SAVE

•14 t o •23 -... ,,~_
. . ,.
Per Pair

H78-1-1 (8.55· 1-lt
H 78-15 {8.55·151
J 78-15 (8.85-15)
L78-15 (9. 15-151

16.37
r/.8'1
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44.75
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22.37

2.96

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~.19

All prices PLUS taxes and tires off your car.
FREE TV Given Away Mar. 31. Come in &amp;
Register!
No purchase necessary .

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Main

Ph. 992-2094

Pomeroy

�.·
..

l Tin Can Craft is

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. !!,1!!71

Community
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

\ ~~~ ~~' Jh~d"'~~ec~,~~,~~'~'v'ng,

Don Swisher has a long haul ahead but he's making good
progress from the chin and mouth injuries he suffered in his first
try at skiing.
The accident happened at Wheeling just after Don had
completed two hours of lessons. Extensive oral surgery was
required at a Wheeling hospital. His mouth is wired shut and will
be for another five or six weeks. Liquids are all he can eat. So far,
he's lost seven pounds, although he's foun~ that !!bout anything
can be turned into liquid with a blender. Pie for mstance! Ever
hear of liquid strawberry pie!
Despite his inability to communicate much, Don returned to
his studies at Marshall University a week ago. He's a senior.
JIM BIRCHFIELD COULDN'T be happier. Three days after
he got his Meigs class ring, he lost it. Then began a search that
lasted a week without success. But this weekend as his father
walked across the yard, there was the ring. Seems that when the
snow was on Jim had a fall in the yard. Presumably the ring
slipped off and disappeared under the snow.

HEARTLINE PROJECT of the Afternoon Circle of Heath
United Methodist Church will be carried out this Thursday afternoon and all women of the church are asked to contribute
cookies and candies for the trays.
The trays will be prepared at the church at 1 p.m. and then
delivered to shut-ins around town.
KATHRYN MilLER had such a nice surprise Sunday
evening. A group of her friends slipped in the door with cake and
gifts to celebrate Kathryn's birthday anniversary.
Louis Sauer had baked the cake complete with candle, and
there were nice gifts and funny ones. At the party were Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haptonstall, Mrs. Charles
Sauer, Mrs. Dwight Wallace and daughter, Nancy, Mrs. William
Morris and Krista, and, of course, the honored guest's husband,
Myron.
The Millers had been invited to the Sauers on Saturday
evening and Kathryn suspected that a surprise party was being
planned for that night. Nothing happened, however, and she was
completely surprised when the group came Sunday night.
Anyways, Kathryn, hope you have a hundred or so more and
they're all so gala.

Meigs

Property
Transfers

•'

BEADED ELEGANCE was
the fashion motif shared by
Princess Sophie of Spain
and Mrs. Richard Nixon at
a White House state dinner
during the U.S. visit of the
princess and her husband,
Prince Juan Carlos, future
Spanish king.

Delbert F. Mitchell, Julia K.
Mitchell to Ohio Fuel Gas Co.,
Right of Way, Rutland.
· Jesse G. Swan, Mabel L.
Swan to Ohio Power Co. ,
Easement, Salem.
James Nicholson, Neva
Nicholson to Ohio Power Co.,
Easement, Rutland.
Herbert E . Rose to Mabel
Rose, .62 Acre, Letart.
R. D. Hill, Edna G. Hill to
Ohio Power Co., Easement,
Salem.
Anderson Wooten, Minnie
Wooten to Ohio Power Co.,
Easement, Columbia.
Mary Amos Riley, Russell W.
Riley to Ohio · Power Co.,
Easement, Rutland.
Hazel Wooten , Clifford
Wooten to Ohio Power Co.,
Easement, Columbia.
C. R. Brown, Auta E. Brown
to Ohio Power Co., Easement,
Columbia .
Robert C. Hartenbach,
Sheriff, Kathy Jean Francis,
eta!, to Kathleen Francis,
Parcels, Syracuse-Sutton.
Maxine Price, Comm., Cleo
Oiler, dec'd., to James Oiler , lf4
Acre, Rutland.
James Oiler to John J . Fry ,
Donna J . Fry, 1!4 Acre, Rutland.
Pearl Young, Helen Ray
Young, Raymon Young to Mary
Wright, 80 Acres, Bedford.

WEEKEND VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flowers
of Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush and son,
Reynoldsburg, were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Roush and family, Middleport.

Social

SUPPER FRIDAY
A soup supper will be held at
the Southern Local High School
in Racine Friday preceding the
Hannan-Southern
basketball
game. Serving of vegetable
soup, chili, sandwiches, pie,
coffee, tea and soft drinks will
start at 4:30p.m. The event is
Oregon grows most of the being sponsored by the
nation's ryegrass.
Southern Band Boosters.

learning to make something
useful or decorative from odds
and ends with a minimum of
cost involved.
The
handicraft
books,
available to any interested
adult, include Christmas the
World Over, The Family
Christmas Book, America's
Homemaking
Book,
The
Storybook Cookbook, Cookie
Cookery, New Trends in Table
Settings and Period Designs,
Felt Dolls to Make and Dress,
More Plywood Projects for the
Home Craftsman, Folk Arts and
Crafts, Fun With Your Fingers.
Also, Tin Can Crafting,
Plastics Book, The Shuttle Craft
Book of American Hand
Weaving, Mary Martin's
Needlepoint, Creative Embroidery, Stitches in Time,
'Rags, Rugs and Wool Pictures,
and A Paper zoo.

Laurel Oiff

Class Planned

News Notes

For Teachers

BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Feb. 7 at the Free Methodist
Church was 130. Offering was
$37.62.
Mr. and Mrs. Phill Wise,
McConnelsville, attended
morning services Sunday at the
local church.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Jacobs, Columbus, visited
Saturday with Mr. Jacobs'
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs.
Rev. and Mrs. Lewis Diehl,
Kentucky, visited Saturday
with Mr. Diehl's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Diehl and
grandmother, Mrs. Georgia
Diehl and brother, Charles
Diehl.
Mr. William Carman is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A special meeting was held
Sunday morning at the local
church for veterans and parents
who have sons serving in tlre
armed forces at the present
time.

Today's
Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 9, the
40th day of 1971.
The moon is between the 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 history:
In 1825 the U.S. House of
Representatives elected John
Quincy Adams president after
no candidate in the December,
1824, election received the
necessary majority.
In 1900 some 7,000 construction workers in Chicago voted
to strike for an eight-hour day.
In 1950 Wisconsin Sen. Joseph
McCarthy charged the U.S.
State Department was infested
with Communists.
In 1968 President Johnson
sent Cyrus Vance to South
Korea as a special representative in the Pueblo crisis arising
from seizure by North Korea of
the • U.S. intelligence ship
Pueblo.
A thought for the day:
American Poet Jaquin Miller
said, "That man who lives for
self alone lives for the meanest
mortal known."

VISIT PARENTS
Jim and Linda Miller of
Nelsonville visited over the
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Myron Miller and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Kauff, Middleport. Jim is a junior at Ohio
University .

Ca ~~E~~va r

and

compiled by the Meigs Extension . Library . Service has
been made avatlable to the
Holiday Gift Club which will
meet monthly at the bookmobile
headquarters.
Mrs. Howard Nolan is advisor
of the group which in February
will study "tin can" craft. A
book on the subject is included
in the handicraft listing and is
available to persons interested
in getting a preview prior to the
February 26 meeting.
Those attending that meeting
are to bring a tin can, needle
point pliers, tin snippers and
gloves. The March 26 meeting
will feature string pictures with
a piece of plywood, small nails
and thread te be provided. In
April Christmas tapestry will be
featured
and
in
May,
homemade toys will be made.
The entire program is aimed at

At Vo-Center
PT. PLEASANT- Marshall
University will offer a class
especially for teachers, VTE
410-VTE 510 , "Developing Instructional Materials" at the
.
Mason County vocational center

he;~~ first meeting will be Feb.

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.
'
RACINE
FIRE
Dept.
Auxiliary, 7:30 tonight. All
members urged to attend.
Legion to make presentation of
flag.
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, Wednesday noon,
United Methodist Church.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, state
convocation Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT
Amateur
Gardeners, 8 ~.m. Wednesday'
at the cer~mtc shop of Mrs .
Russell Mtlls. Co-hostesses,
Mrs. Ferman Moore, Mrs. Ed
Burkett, and Mrs. Wesley Fry.
THURSDAy
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8

. th p.m. Thursday, preceded by
11's tar t'mg a t 7 ·.30 p.m. m
e Mass and Rosary at 7:15p.m.

conference room at the center.
Dates and times for the class
will be made at that time,
d'
th
h dul
f
d
epen mg upon e sc e. es o
the students. The class wtll offer
three hours credit and can be
applied to either undergraduate
work or to graduate work,
depending on the needs of the
student.

The class will be taught b!'
Dr. Charles Jones and credtt
can be transferred to other.
institutions of higher learning,
·r d d T ·t· f the three
1 nee e . m ton or
hours credit will be $48 .
The class will be concerned
with development of materials
relating to a teacher's particular curriculum. This class is
open to anyone wishing to enroll
at Marshall, who is already
enrolled, or any teachers in the
county who wish to enroll.
Additional information may
be obtained from Lowell N.
Cook at the vocational center,
phone 675-3039.

IN COLUMBUS
Mrs. Kathern Smith and
children, Christi and Kevin,
Middleport, visited relatives in
Columbus over the weekend.

MEETING POSTPONED
A meeting of the Chester
P.T.A. scheduled for Feb. 15 has
been postponed until Feb. 16 at
the school at 8 p.m.

H te
M
Ph n· H
os sses, rs.
y IS ennesy, Mrs. Janet Duffy, Sandy
Korn, Mrs. Peg Rudolph, Mrs.
Barbara Mullen.
MEIGS CHAPTER, DAY and
·
its auxiliary, Thursday evening
at hall, Butternut Ave. ,
Pomeroy; refreshments at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting at
7:30; all veterans welcome.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Heath
United
Methodist
Ch h 1
Th d
t
p.m.
urs a~ 0
urc •
prepare trays for shut-ms, all
women of church asked to
contribute cookies .
BRADBURY P.T.A., 7:30
p.m. Thursday , skit by
American Legion Auxiliary,
Our
Precious
American
Heritage.
PHI LA THEA
SOCIETY,

Americanism Display in Bank Window
In observance of Boy Scout
Month, a display depicting
Americanism has been placed
by the Rutland Cub Scout Pack
240 in the window of the Rutland

Mrs. Wolfe at Surprise Party
Mrs. Richard Peyton and
Mrs. Roger Jeffers entertained
with a surprise birthday party
Sunday honoring Mrs. Thomas
Wolfe at the Wolfe home in the
Letart Falls area.
Mrs. Wolfe received a
number of gifts and refreshments of ice cream, cake and

Den 3 Cubs Attend
Service Together
Den 3 cubs of Pack 245 attended services at the Middleport Church of Christ in a
group Sunday morning.
Gene Hood of Troop 245, den
chief of Den 3, read scripture,
and Kevin Yeauger, also of
Troop 245, commented on the
meaning of scout work. Attending in uniform were Ray
Stewart, David Shuler, Larry
Robert Fox, Mark , Hood, and
Ray Mowrey. They were accompanied by Mrs. Marion
Francis, den mother, and Mrs.
Larry Fox .. Keith Black was
unable to join the group because
of illness. Danny Hysell of Den 4
is confined to the Holzer
Medical Center.
Other cubs of Pack 245 attended their own churches in
observance of Boy Scout Sunday.

PARENTS VISITED
Ronnie Wagner and Bob
Smith, students at the Nashville
Auto Diesel College in Nashville, Tenn. spent the weekend
here with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Ed Wagner and Mr. and
Mrs . J. A. Smith and Mary of
near Racine. They were accompanied here for the
weekend by Keith Gamblim of
North Carolina, also a student
at the Nashville school, who was
a guest of the Wagners.
...............................

tt, .

.t FOR TODAYt
~

•

~

Good humor i s the
health of the soul ;
sadness is its poison.

it

First Son is Born
To James Gruesers

~

THOUGH'f;~
~
~A

il

Mr. and Mrs. James Robert
Grueser of Pomeroy, Route 3
are announcing the birth on
Jan. 20 of their first son, James
Robert, Jr., at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis,
weighing eight pounds, four
ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Grueser of Pomeroy, Route 3,
and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Williams, Pomeroy, Route 4,
are grandparents. Paternal
great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. George Grueser, Minersville, and Mrs. Elva Davis of
Mason. The maternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Williams, Buffalo, W.Va.
Middleport Church of Christ, Mrs. Mollie Ginther of Syracuse
7:30 Thursday at the church is a great-great-grandmother.
instead of at the home of Mrs .
Alfred Roush as previously
announced.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary juniors, Racine unit
602, valentine party, 7 p.m .
Thursday, home of ivirs. Gerald
Simpson; each member may
bring a guest.
FRIDAY
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution , 2 p.m.
Friday, Mrs. C. M. Hennesy
home; co-hostesses , Mrs.
Everett Hayes and Miss Lucille
Smith, who will also have the
program; valentine verses to be
given in response to roll call.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F&amp;AM, master mason degree;
Inspection, 7:30 p.m. Friday.

ON HONOR ROLL
The name of Mary Ferrell, a
senior and daughter of Mr . and
MEETS TONIGHT
Mrs. Dilford Ferrell, Syracuse,
Harrisonville Chapter, Order
was omitted from the honor roll of Eastern Star, will hold its
of the Meigs High School for the regular meeting at 8 tonight.
third six weeks grading period. Instruction night will be observed.

Branch of the Pomeroy Statute of Liberty made by tbl:l..
boys of the pack. The annuaT'
National Bank.
Among the items included are blue and gold banquet has been
plaques of Abraham Lincoln planned for Feb. 25, and will
and George Washington and a probably be held in the
basement of the Rutland United
Methodist Church,)
pack
sponsors.
Dale Priddy is the cubmaster
and Bruce Davis is his
Kool-Aid were served.
assistant. Den mothers are Mrs.
Attending were Mrs. Arthur Bruce Davis and Mrs. I...arrf
Hart and daughter, New Edwards.
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
As a fund raising project, the
Aleshire and son, Mr. and Mrs. boys will conduct a scrap and
Robert Jeffers and Patty, all of junk drive in March. Residents
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. with items to contribute may '
Richard Peyton, Jeff Howell, telephone Mrs. Davis at 742Mr. and Mrs. Roger Jeffers and 4944, or Mrs. Edwards at 742children, and Nancy Lawrence, 3781.
all 9f Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Icenhower of Portland,
and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wolfe
and daughter, Tara.

~

- L.

~•..fl

* * *

•
-tc

~

•-tc
~

til
~

iC
"tC
~

Stanislaus~

It's Quick! Ea~1

•

•~
-tc

ooks like a million
.. costs only

~

-tc

DRIVE-JN ~
BANKING •-tc

BIG BOYBEST GIRL

Fridays Only
•il
The Drive-In Window~
is Open
-tc
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
il
(Continuously)
~

-tc
-tc
~Other Banking Hours 9 to
-tc 3 and s to 7 as usual on
.~ridays.

Give each other a gift for a life·
time • • . one that looks like a
million, yet costs so little.

t

~

~

~ FARMERS BANK ~

-tc

~and

Goessler
Jewelry

•

SAVINGS 00. ~

~

POMEROY, OHIO

~
-tc

Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

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

•4915

il

ir:

it
it

Court St.

Pomeroy

~

ELECTRIC
HEATING
FEATS
CLEANLINESS: Clean as e\ectric light.

CONVEN\ENCE:
Gone are storage tanks, ourners, Pilot
light adiustments, and regular servicing.

COMFORl:
Chilly spots, drafts and
overheat\n9 eliminated.

ECONOMY:

Regular $88

No waste. '\ 00 percent heating e1ficiency.

OUIET OPERATION:

THE DAILY SENTINEL

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily e~cept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone
992. 2156, Editorial Phone 992·
2157.
1 Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National advertising
representative
Bottinellj~.
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
St., New York City, New York.
Subscr i ption
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
ava i lable so cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available: One
month $1.75. By mail in
and w. Va., One year $14.00.
Six months $7 . 25. Three
months $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times .
• Sentin81.

ohio

On-ott roar and rumble gone.
Fashion Mate zig-zag portaple sewing machine
by Singer in a carrying case. Sews straight, zig·
zag. Mends, darns. buttonholes, too!
We have
budget.

a credit plan designed to fit your

See your "Good Comfort Guys"
Get more facts from the representative in your local Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company office. Ask about budget billing and the special low
electric heating rate.
COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

115 W. Second

992-2284

Pomeroy, 0.

�5 The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 9, 1971

I
Taste-Tempting Delicious
Meats by French City
U. S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED CHOICE

•

SLICED BACON
FRENCH CITY
BRAND

•

Vacuum Packed

SMOKED

69~ lb.

Our Home Made Recipe

PICNIC HAMS

Pork Cutlets ...~.~~.~~......... ~~: .. 79~
Cube Steak ..!.~~~~.~.~-~~~... 1~:.1.09
Ground Chuck ..............~~: .. 79~

Tender &amp; Meaty
6 to 8 lb.
Average

79
69~

LINK
FRENCH CITY
lb.
SAUSAGE .............. .
PIECE
FRENCH CITY
()
lb.
BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••
SKIN L_ESS FRENCH CITY
WIENERS ••••••••••2~.c! !~~
LIVER
FRENCH CITY
• _P UDDIN G •••••••••••·•••••
lb.6

Pork Sausage.................!~: ... 59~

~

tltt

GROUND BEEF

99 ~
9~

HOME MADE OiEESE SPREAD lb. 79~

From USDA Choice
Tender Beef

c

lb.

HOME MADE HAM SALAD lb. 79~

.t• • • • • • • • • ~· • • • • • • • • •a• • • • • • •.• • ·~ tt• • • • • • • • • ~· • • • • • • • • •A• • • • • • • • • ·~ tt• • • • • • • • •
YOU'LL LOVE AT
MARKV
.

•
~

SEALTEST GRADE A

Low, Low Price!

MILK

BOB WHITE

49e

lf2 gal.

carton

U. S. Grade A Medium

POP

EGGS

SHORTENING

FACIAL TIS UES •.................................
CAMELLIA
~~~ct. 19¢
PAPER TOWELS.;...~-~~:..~~................ 3 j~~~~o $1
TOMATO JUICE-.....:~~.~.~.~ ................. 3 ~~"~L $}
FRUIT DRINK ..... ~.:~~-~~ .....................3 :a:~ $}
PIUA ....~~~~~~.-~~:.........................................3 ~:~ $}

Assorted Ravors

6-16 oz. bOts.
doz.

2

Cartons
for Only

4

I

GE

Low, Low Price

Produce
Bonus Buy!
HB" SIZE

· Austin's Anti-Freeze

POTATOES

• WINDSHIELD
WASHER

~.~ag

GAL

FAVORITE BREAD...... ~~~~~~~~···· 5 ~~~:es $1
~REECE CUPS ...~:.~~.~~..~~-~:~......_........ 3 l~~~k $1
• SCOT LAD BISCUITSJ9~~Y.~k.~~~..~~~.10~
LUNCH CAKES...~~~Lft~r~~:~~. . . . . 8 :~y 99~

.5

'

TOMATOES
Red Ripe
Quart
Container

49

e

COLA

!nee

16
bottles

SPECIALS!
THURS.
ONLY!
U. S. Grade A Small

EGGS

•

3 doz.
carton

89~

7

SATURDAY
ONLY!
Favorite Brand Large Size

BREAD
\

~wes 100

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal }ood Stamps

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

PHONE: 992-3480

.

''We Reserve The Right To Llmil Ouonlltles"

MIDDLEPORT, Q.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Mindleport-Pomer~, 0., Feb. !I, 1!!71

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
r---~-~~-----------------------------------

1

Voice along Broadway

I

!

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK
Jackie
Onassis will get a la~ letter
after "The Me Nobody Knows"
producers - A. photo. of Jackie
0. was taken after she saw the
show (and liked it), but she
didn'tgive permission to have it
printed on cards and distributed
among ticket brokers .... "The
Rochschilds" musical dropped
$27,000 on one TV commercial,
now will stick to print .... Como,
Presley &amp; Streisand are the only
current Las Vegas stars paid
more than $100,000 a week.
Dr. David Reuben who wrote
"Everything You Always
Wanted to Know about Sex" has
earned enough royalties to pay
for the imminent baby ....
Johnny Weissmuller's Ft.
Lauderdale flat was heisted
Tarzan-style - burglar swung
from one balcony onto Johnny's
to break in.
Barbara Jane
Mackie,
daughter of Fla. multimillionaire builder Robert
Mackie, who was kidnapped
and buried alive for 82 hours in
1968 before the $500,000 ransom
was paid now has a happy ending: She will wed Stewart
Woodward this spring. They
were co-eds at Emory U.,

WIN AT BRIDGE

Harvest Requires
Good Spade Work
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH (D)

9

.AK64

¥5
• 752
"-AK943

.8

WEST

EAST

• QlOS
¥ A J 10 3
+ J 10 9 8
"-106
SOUTH

¥ K 8 74
+K Q 4 3
... QJ87

¥Q962
+A6

... 52
Both vulnerable
West North East South
Pass
Pass 3 •
Pass 4 •
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead-+ J

1"'

Atlanta, Ga .... Great grub: The
Toledo restaurant .... Baltimore
Colt Mike Curtis weds
Washington, D. C. schoolmarm
Martha Boone, Mar. 20 ....
Nancy Seaver expects the little
ballplayer March 1 when Mets
swifty Tom will be away at
spring training .... When Carol
Channing chatters on the sitdown shows, she keeps looking
from host to the audience -and
looks amazingly fix-eyed like
Oliver J. Dragon, the TV
puppet.
Variety reports the Julie
Harris - Estelle Parsons "And
Miss Reardon Drinks a Little" a
"hilarious, devastating'!
comedy, good for a Bdwy. run
..... Sen. John Tunney's Dutchborn wife Mieke is a good
enough singer to now have a
recording offer; she and Mrs.
Teddy Kennedy on piano might
make a team for the Sullivan
show .... Dyan Cannon took a
swat in the ear from David
Hemmings on the "Love
Machine" set and may have a
busted eardrum .... Halcyon
( dontcha love the name)
Mueller of Greenville, Pa.,
sends us a German newspaper
(Wirtschaft) which carries the
story Howard Hughes quit
Vegas for the Bahamas because
"he couldn't break the hold on
gambling there." ... Could be;
we'd guess he just got tired of
that town.
Perry Como's "It's Impossible" single is among the
top selling records in the U. S.,
and his longplay album of the
same title already is shooting
up the charts .. .. Famed awardwinning young actress tried to

skip her Palm Springs tab, but
when they called the law,
ponied up . .. . The Donald
Sutherlands may work it out ....
One of the nation's hottest
young actors was excused from
Army duty when he explained
his sex hangups. And bragged
about it!
Nancy Wilson and Robert
Hooks are hooked .... 0. C.
Smith at the Copa is called "The
Black Perry Como" - not
because he sings like Perry,
just he's a family man .md is
nice to everybody . .. . The fella
around who looks like a young
Richard Arlen is the
perennially youthful old one ....
Linda
Christian
taught
daughter Romina how to attract
the boys so she married one
Linda didn't like, and now they
don't speak.
Grace Kelly's rowing-brother
Jack will play a quickie scene in
the "Philadelphia, Here I
Come" film .... Sir Larry
Olivier will be back to work
again after his illness, in a key
"Nicholas &amp; Alexandra" role
for Sam Spiegel.
Tiny Tim &amp; Miss Vicky expect
a tinier Tim; the parents new
duet record is " Why" (no
kiddin') and ads for it reply,
"Because" .... Elvis &amp; Col.
Parker are celebrating their
16th year together and more
than that many millions each
.... Ruby Keeler at Mykonos:
"People are warmer in
February than anywhere in the
country." .... Not for stars of
flop shows, Ruby honey .... Hal
Prince's "Follies" musical will
cost more than $700,000.

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

.J9732

1•

In our book on JACOBY
MODERN we stress working
points. They are points that
really work for you. North
has only 14 high-card points
but when South responds in
his four-card suit North's distribution becomes r e a 11 y
worth-while and he can afford to jump to three spades .
South's continuation to four
spades is automatic.
Unless South is right careful he won't make his contract. If he bangs out the ace
and king of trumps the 3-1
break will beat him provided
West waits until he gets in
with a heart before playing
his queen of trumps.
The winning line of play is
r a t h e r complicated but
guards against almost all accidents. South plays just one
round of trumps. Then he
plays the ace, king and another club from dummy and
discard his six of diamonds.
If he ruffs the third club,
West will overruff and put
his partner ou lead with a
JACOBY MODERN, in on illustrated, 128· page book, is ovoiloble
through this newspaper. Send nome,
address and Zip code, plus $1 for
each book, to: "Win at Bridge," c/o
(Name Newspaper) P.O. BoK 489,
Dept. (first three digits local Zip
code), Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y., 10019.
diamond to lead a fourth
c lub and give a second overruff.
After this start the hand
becomes easy. If East plays
his last club, South ruffs and
it doesn't matter what West
does. If he overruffs and
leads his last trump South
can set up the last club for
one heart discarL' and will
lose just one heart trick.
If East plays a diamond
South is able to ruff. Then he
leads a heart. If another diamond is played he ruffs that
also. Then he takes a second
round of trumps and uses his
last trump to ruff a lead of
dummy's fourth c lub. This
uses up his last trump, but
dummy is now good except
for West's queen of trumps.
We will leave the other variations to you to work out.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
9

The bidding has been:
West
North
East
1¥
Dble
Pass
Pass
2¥
Pass
Pass
Pass
4•
You, South, hold:
.87432 '17 tQ98 ... K1043

What do you do now?
A-Bid four no- trump. You

= ::~:n f~:d s:a~f~~lc~onki~~·ar~
1

!

You will bid a ~lam if your
partner shows three aces.

!Helen Help Us!I
I

l

By Helen Bottel

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young
people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and
fun. As with the rest of Helen
Help Us!, it welcomes laughs
but won't dodge a serious
question with a brush-off.
Send your teenage questions
to YdtiTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Helen Help US! this
newspaper.
WHERE DO OLD
MANIKINS GO
WHEN THEY DIE ?
Dear Helen:
I need a male manikin for a
school project (in connection
with an election campaign).
I've looked and asked in every
department store, but not one
has a manikin they want to get
rid of. I wouldn't mind a
damaged one I could repair.
I was told by a friend to ask
you because you have never
failed to help someone with a
problem. So will you please help
me find a male manikin?
MALE IN SEARCH OF A
MANIKIN
Dear Male:
I may have just struck out in
the
"help"
department
because, frankly, I don 't know
where old manikins go when
they die . You mig ht try
Salvation Army or other Thrift
Shop pick-up centers. Perhaps a
store in a neighboring big city
might have a discard. Or how
about the city dump?
P.S. I don't even know
whether
the
plural
is
"manikins" or "meniken."
Sorry. - H.
Dear Helen :
Your column on "Does a Girl
Have To" inspired this :
WHAT IS A PREGNANT
SCHOOLGffiL
It's hoping at first that you're
just "late" then deciding that
maybe you've skipped a period,
and finally facing the truth.
It's thinking about an abortion but knowing that God has
entrusted a new life to you a nd
you have no right to take its fate
into your own hands.
It's wanting "him" to respond
with, "I'm going to be a Daddy?
That's
wonderful!"
but
worrying that it might sound
more like, "Why'd you let this
happen?" "What are my
parents going to say?" "I guess
you know you've really shot my
college plans." Or even worse,
"Good luck, kid, you're on your
own."
It's the hours of worry about
whether or not to tell your
parents when you know all the
time you'll have to.
It's finally saying, " I have
bad news . .. . I think I'm
pregnant," to your best friend
after you've kept it to yourself
as long as you can ; and seeing
the shock all over her face,
hearing her respond, "You
can't be!"
It's examining yourself in the

l

mirror each morning to see if
you show yet and hoping no one
has guessed.
It's suffering the worry that
you'll start showing and won't
be able to stay in school till the
end of the semester.
It's finally telling "him" and
hearing him say, "Why'd it
have to happen to us?" but none
of the expected accusations.
It's telling your parents,
seeing their misery, and
wishing you could turn back the

.[

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 $1GNS
OF
QUALITY

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
What's in a name is about
10 years, if you happen to
forge it.

It's easy to lend a hand
when all that's wanted is
a handslwke.

a L-ao:. •

u_

GR EEN HILL HOM ES, I NC.

$1765
4 Door sedan L. T. D., power steering, power brakes, air·
conditioning. Vinyl interior, blk. vinyl roof, maroon finish,
radio, new w-w tires.
1967 PLYMOUTH
$1395
Belvedere2 dr. hardtop, V'8 motor, power steering, std. 3·
speed trans., blk. top, cream body, radio.
1967 FORD
$1495
Mustang, 6 cyl., auto. trans., console, maroon finish, all
good w-w tires, radio. Real Nice.

hllleroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00 f.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

l"jji)

~

.EXPERIENCED

ATTE NT ION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO{1) Rem tiomes, Mooue 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 ho.me and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less.
MODEL HUMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We will furnish 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 ·

1967 FORD

IF

For Sale

s"2·25ao Night

Radiator Service

BLAETTNARS

992-2534 Night

-------=---------=--------------' · FABRIC SHOP, owner

. WANT AD.
Notice
INFORMATION
AUCTION WHEN? Each
DEADLINES
5 p ,,.,.. Day Before Publication
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
.V.Onday Deadline 9 a.m.
Hayman's Auction House,
..:ance.t latlon &amp; Corrections
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for
Pomeroy .Middleport
By·
Day of Publication
pass.
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
2·7·tfc
right to edit or reject any ads, -----------------deemed
objectional . The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect. Help Wanted
inserti~n.
MAN OR woman to supply
RATES
consumers with Rawleigh
For Want Ad Service
Products . Can earn $60
5 centsm word one Insertion
- · · Mintmum Charge T~c
weekly part. time, $150 and up
12 cents per word three
full -lime. Write Charlie Penn,
consecutive . insertions.
W. T. Rawleigh Co., P . 0. Box
18 cents per word six con204, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601,
secutive insertions.
giving name, address and
• 25 Per cent Discount on paid
phone number.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
2·9·1tc
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word·' minimum. 5EMI DRIVERS. Experience
Each additional word 2c.
not necessary. Can earn $4.50
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per per hour and up after short
training for local and over·
Advertisement.
QFFICE HOURS
the.road hauling. For ap8:3(f'a.m . to 5:00p.m . Dally, plication write, Nationwide
8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon Semi Division, 171 New Circle
Saturday.
Rd., N. E., Lexington, Ky.
40505 or call 606·299·6912, after
Card· of Thanks
5 p.m . 252-3484.
WE WISH to express our sin- '
2·8·3tp
cere thanks to our friends and -----------------neighbors for the food,
flowers, and all other -ex- For Rent or Sale
pressions of sympathy at the
here :
The
death of our husband and THEY· ARE
SKAMPER line from A to Z.
father, Cecil Evans. Thanks
What a surprise to see:
also to the Middleport
Travel trailers, campers are
emergency squad, Rawlings·
all on display. What isn't here
Coats F unera I Home, Rev.
is on the way. GAUL
Simons and the pallbearers.
TRAILER SALES, INC., Jlh
Mrs. Cecil Evans and
miles north of Chester, Ohio.
Family .
Watch for sign . Phone 985·
2-9·ltC
3832 . CONTINENTAL and
GO. TAG· A· LONG
travel
Notice
trailers for sale. Rentals by
day, week. month.
WE WILL accept estimates and
2-4· 12tc
pay cash for a living room
suite, 3 cushion davenport and
chair, a coppertone electric W
anted
stove with top oven not over 32
inches wide, a coppertone ELIGIBLE
male
com panionship, age 50 to 65. Write
refrl·gerator not over 32 1·n·
ches wide, also various end
Box 729-C, The Daily Sentinel,
tables, lamps, etc. Must trade
Pomeroy, Ohio.
in Kenmore gas stove 30 in·
3·3·6tc
ches wide and Kelvinator
refrigerator 30 inches wide,
W nt d T B y
both white, good condition.
0 t.l
Changing
to
matching -OLD furniture, dishes, bras~·
cabinets. Send estimates to
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
Box 729·W, C·O The Daily
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·6271 .
2-9-3tc
9-1-tfc
"OZER WORK S t· tanks
-u
ep 1c
• ALL u s
ld ·
s t $SO· · •
leach beds. Phone 949·4761.
· : go c.01 ns, 1 0
10. 18.tfc Top Prt&lt;;ies patd. Phone 992·
· 3476 after 6 p. m.
2-5-6tp
VVtLL t-'IL" up merchandise· ---------------and take to auction on a
percentage basis . Call 'Jim OLD UPRIGHT ~.dnos, any
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
condition,~s long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each .
Phone 742·4461 ·
First floor only. Mondays will
9· 23-tfc
be pick-up day. Write, giving

Pomeroy

or ale ·

·

retiring
after eleven years, wonderful
business,
all
material,
equipment, etc. Lease on
bui lding with rent at $90 per
month. Will show by ap.
pointment. Call or see J. H.
Somerville, Real Estate, 212
-5th St., Point Pleasant, W.
Va. Phone 675·3030 or 675·4232.
2-7-3tc

SPINET-console piano. Wanted
responsible party to take over
payments on spinet piano.
Easy ·terms, can be seen
locally .
Write
Credit
Manager, P. 0. Box 276,
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176.
2·7·12tp

.Wheel Alignment

BUY YOUR

FERTILIZER

$5.55

Now anu ~"'~the early
Discount

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-209rl

~g, Bulk and Liquid t-erflllzer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
area war:ehouse at Pomeroy.

L

.Pomeroy Home &amp; ~to
606 E. Milin, PomeroY, 0.
All&lt; LUNUITIONING, R~­
. frigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882:2079.
4-6-ttc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

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

THOUGHTS
Then Abram said to Lot,
··Let there be no strife between you and me and between your herds:nen and
77l;Y herdsmen; for we are
kmsmen."-Genesis 13:8.

•

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

a e

Man o· War. Kentucky
race horse, was the most
renowned stallion in thoroughbred racing history.
The World Almanac notes
that he won 20 races and
set five world records in
1919-20. The large reddish
stallion, also known as "Big
Red,'' lost only one race, to
a horse named Upset, at
Saratoga in 1919.

"

:-.

Real Estate For Sale
PAINT DAMAGE 1971 Zig-Zag
Sewing Machines. Still in HOUSJ:, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
original cartons. No at.
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2m.
~ READY·MIX CONCRETE detachments needed, as our
1
10-25-tfc livered right to your project.
controls are built·in. Sews
Fast and
easy.
Free
with 1 or 2 needles, makes --------------------but secluded
estimates. Phone 992-3284. 1
buttonholes, sew on buttons, CONVENIENT
building lots on T79 at Rock
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
monograms and blind hem
Springs. Within walking
Middleport, Ohio.
stitch. Full cash price, $38.50
distance
of
Meigs
High
·
6-30-tfc
or budget plan available.
School, a 5 minute drive from
Phone 992-5641.
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI SEPTI~ tanks cleaned. Miller'
2-9-6tc
Witte weekends, or after 5
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
------------------p.m . weekdays. Phone 992·
662-3035.
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
6887.
2-12-tfc
Cleaner complete with at2·3·tfC
tachments, cordwinder and
INTERIOR carpenter work, by
painl spray. Used but in like
the hour or contract. Phone
new condition. Pay $37.45
992·3511.
cash or credit
terms
1·31·30tp
available. Phone 992·5641.
2·9·6tc
HARRISON'S TV AND ANTf:.NNA SERVICE. Phone
MODERN Walnur stereo-radio
992·2522.
combination, four speaker
6-10-tfc
sound system, 4 speed
Broker
changer, separate controls.
NEIGLER Construction. For
110 Mechanic St.
Balance $73.50. Use our
building or remodeling your
Pomeroy, Ohio
budget terms. Call 992·3352.
home, Call Guy Neigler,
2-4·6tc
NE~"' "ROGERS
Racine, Ohio.
'
WARM. NEAT- 3 bedrooms
7-31 -tfc
MAPLE STEREO beautiful
with closets and lots of
colonial style, Am-FM radio,
storage. Modern bath with ... ~PTIC TANKS CLEANED.
four speakers, 4 speed
shower. Gas forced air fur ·
Reasonab le rates. Phone
automatic changer, separate
nace. Living 15x 17. Paneling,
John Russell, Gallipolis 446-.
controls. Balance $83.60. Use
new walks, new carport. 2
4782 after 5:30 p. rn.
our time payment plan. Call
blocks of store. Asking ONLY
4-7-tfc
992·3352.
$8,500.00
2·4·6tc
'sEWIN~ MACHINES. Repair
SAVE
INVEST NOW
service, all makes. 992-2284.'
1964 CHEVROLET, 327 engme,
LATER.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
$150; 1968 Honda ss 125
Authorized Singer Sales and
75
ACRES20
TRACTOR,
30
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
motorcycle, excellent conpasture.
8
room
older
house,
3·29-tfc
dition, $200. Jim Heaton,
running well water. 3 bay
Chester, Phone 985·4118.
implement shed, garage, JVr1NSOn tv;A-;·v .NRY, Com .
2-9.3tc
UTiliTy bUilding, cellar, hen
- ----------------mercia I or
l'esidential
house, small barn. School bus
1968 CHEVELLE SS 396, 4rembdeling. Brick, block,
and mail routes by door. ALL
speed, good tires, low
stone, cement work, garages,
Ml N ERALS. $13,500.00
mileage, $1,895. Will take 1964
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
Free estimates. Jiro" Larry,
ocr 11196f5 model car on trade . LET
US
SELL
YOUR
a a ter 4:30, phone 742-3631.
Jake. 992·7044.
PROPERTY AND SAVE
2. 9. 4tc
1-7-JOtc
YOU FROM THE LOOKERS.
·COAL, limestone . Excelsior
BACK HOE and end-loader
Salt Works, E. Main St., BUYING FROM US, SAVES
work. Septic tanks installed.
YOU TIME AND MONEY.
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
George (Bill) Pull ins. Phone
CALL 992·3325
4-9-ttc
992-2478.
992-2378
11-29-tfc
2-5·6fc -------.,.------Real Estate For Sale
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
good directions. Witten Plano
Phone 949-3821
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
8-20-tfc
Home

6 ROOM house, bath, 255 W.
Main St. Phone daytime 992·
2668 or nights 992-2961.
2·4·6tp

•

EXPERT

WHY WAIT

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

•

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

Ph. 99~2143

' •

clock.
It's just leaving, with no fond
good-byes and knowing that it
will be even worse when you get
back
·
It's being sorry for yourself,
for those you've shamed and
hurt and, most of all, the
fatherless baby who didn't ask
to be born.- JOYCE
Dear Helen:
I disagree violently with your SKATE·A·WAY is open Wednesday Fr'da
d s t d
1
idea that the male should be
a urp.m.
ay
nights, ' 7:30 Y
toan10:30
behind the steerin g wheel,
Available for private parties
whether he or his girl friend
on Monday, Tuesday and
owns the car. You admitted this
Thursday nights or Saturday For Rent
and Sunday afternoons.
was a "super-unmodern atPhone Chester 985·3929 or 985· 5 ROOM house, bath. Racine
titude." It's also super dumb.
3585.
area . Phone 992·6329.
2-5·6tc
2·2·12tc
My boy friend doesn't own a
car so I drive us around most of ATTENTION ladies! Would you 5 ROOM and bath, apartment,
like to try a wig on in the
Chester. Inquire at Newell's
the time. Mter all, I pay the
privacy of your own home?
Sunoco
Station.
Phone
insurance and, while •mine
You can. Just call us. We also
Chester 985·3350.
covers another driver, some
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
2-7-tfc
Koscot, of course . Dis- ----------------insurances do!l't. In this age
tributors , Brown's. Phone UNFURN I SHED 3· room
group, statistics show the
Middleport 992-5113. ·
· apartment. Phone 992-2288.
female is less deadly than the
12·31·tfc
male when it comes to ac1·31-tfc
cidents. I pity people who still v• , L L "'1 • E piano and organ --- -- - -lessons in my home. Phone 1-URNI::&gt;HED and unfurnished
feel the need of sitting in the
· 992-3666.
apartments. Close to school.
appropriate seat to prove
. a· 16...tlc
Phone 992·5434.
masculinity or femininity. As _I_N_C_O_M
__
E__T_A_X__s_e_r_v_ic-e-, - -da iIy
10·18·tfc
for "snuggling up" I'm sure
except Sunday. Evenings by .
.
appointment only. Phone 992- 3 ROOM apartment, all electnc,
your male writer was being
2272.
Mrs
.
Wanda
Eblin,
wall
oven,
table
lop
range,
humorous, but driving with one
loca ted on Rt. 7 bypass, one s tainles.s steel do~ble sink,
hand, whether it's female or
mile south of fairgrounds.
food d1sposal. NKe c l.ean
2·7·30tc
apartment. See to apprec1ate.
male, is unsafe at any speed.
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
Life would be safer if there were -----------------Gallipolis 446·9539.
fewer lovers on the rvad.
2·2·tfc
Really, I'm
not super10X50, 2· BEDROOM mobile
unromantic, just a - WISE
home. Call 992-3954.
FEMALE DRIVER
2·3·6fc
Dear Wise: (All ten of you gals
who chided me about my
"unmodern advice.")
I take it all back. You girls
win the argument, hands down
(or I should say - on the
wheeL)
Actually,
my
male
correspondent WAS trying to be
funny, and so, heaven help m e,
was I! If you own the car and
pay the insurance - and enjoy
driving (which I don't) - then
your boy friend should be the
passenger, at proper distance.
- H.

Business Services

--------

•

Auto Sales
1968 L.T_D FORD, factory air
cond1t1oned, stereo, vinyl top.
Phone 742·38M.
2·7-Stc

- - - -- - -

JEMO ASSOCIATES

i969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr~
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000'
miles. Excellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.

MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL HARRIS
192 Beech St.
Middleport
"The sense of pride one has in
owning their own home cannot
be mea sured in dollars and
cents. We will be eternally
grateful to Jemo Associates for
this opportunity."

1968 OLDS 442, automatic
transmission, power steering,
vinyl top. Excellent condition.
Phone 742·4873, Salem St.,
Rutland.
2-7-6tc

Building Sites Available

I:M:I

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

Cleland Realty
608 East Main
POMEROY
RUTLAND - ALMOST NEW 3 bedrooms, bath, about 2
acres, large living room, ni ce
kitchen. $8,900.

UNFURNISH ED apartment
close to Pomeroy. Phone 992·
3962 after 4 p.m .
2·4-tfc POME'ROY
JUST REMODELED 5 rooms,
bath, 2 bedrooms, full
basement, garage, ALL IN
For Sale
GOOD CONDITION. $13,500.
REDUCE SAF c: and fast with
j:;obese tablets and E·Vap POMEROY - 2 STORY HOME
water pills. Nelson's Drugs.
WITH APARTMENT, 3
1·22-30fp
bedrooms, 2 ba ths, garden
spot. garage . IN GOOD
IT'S mexpensive to clean rugs
CONDITION. $10,000.
and upholstery with Blue
Lustre.
Rent
electric POMEROY A LOT OF
sha mpooer , $1. Baker Fur·
REMODELING DONE, 2
niture, Middleport.
s tory frame, 2 bedrooms,
2·3·6tc
bath, basement, NEW hot
wa ter tank, forced air fur·
FIREWOOD, Hampshire pigs,
nace.
COMPLETELY
12 wee ks old. Gerald King,
FURNISHED. $4.600.
Shade. Phone 696-1287.
2·5·6tp
TO BUY OR SELL
---------------- CONTACT US
HENRY CLELAND
23 CHANNEL Cobra Cam 88 CB
REALTOR
transceiver and super·MAAG
Office 992-2259
and antenna. Good condition,
Residence 992-2568
$75. Phone 992·3718.
2·7·6tc
2·7·31c

JASur~nce

1'1 t:.M: rom 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.

~UTOMOBILE

insurance bet
cancelled?
Lost
your,
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6·15·tfC

WMP0/139Q
Big Capac
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps.
Auto.
water
level
control .
Lint"
Fitter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat . No hot spots,
no overdrying.
Fine Mesh Lint
Filter.
We Specialize in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland, o.

•

�'BARNEY

•

VE CAN GO HOME NOW,
SNUFFY-- I JEST
FOUND 'OUT IT WUZN'T
YOU WHO STOLE THEM
THREE RHODE !SLANT
REDS FROM CALEB
LAST WEEK

WHAT DO 'IE AIM TO
DO ABOUT THEM FOUR
DADBURN DAYS I
ALREADY SPENT IN
TH I HOOSEGOW?

I'LL CREDIT IT

TO \.fORE
ACCOUNT

•
U'L AaNER
??-THAT NPE O'HAM
5ANGWI DGE. IS APT TO

•

mMEHIGH··

•

•

•

THE BORN LOSER
WH~t-.1 J

C.IWW UP, I WAtJT10 13€ ~'I.~TLY
t.l K£ 'IOU I M!&lt;."WORt.JAPPl.£."

•
DAilY CROSSWORD

•

TH 15 MATTRESS FROM
T~AT EXPENSIVE SUITE
15 50FT COTTON. IT'LL
5 TOP ANY BULLET.

AND THE OIAMELEON 6ECJINS
CI-IANGING HIS APPEARANCE F~M
FEMALE ro MALE ASHE GOES.

.,

MAXUS! PELF! HOW DREADFUL!
iOU llELISERATELi INCITE[;&gt;
YOUR FRIENI7S TO SENSELESS
THEN AM~roNE!7

YOU COUU7~'T CARE
LESS ABOUT WHAT
HAPPENS TO THE
PEOPlE YOU US_E.
roo~~ MtJOi

roo

DANGEROUS TO GO

FREE ...

MR. POliCEMAN, SEVERAL flAYS
AGO, THESE )OUNG MEN ADMITIED
TO .ME 1HAT THEY ARE RESPONSIBLE
FOR THE DESTRUCTION OF
MR. HAARI~E'S
MUSEUM . F~~z

CAPTAIN EASY
... AND TH5N 5NTE'R7 BRUNO KERCH'? 6f:DROOM!

NOW TO ?51:: HOW THAT
l-ITTLe GAD ocT OF IKE'?
WORK? ON THS ?AFE':!

•

ACROSS
2.Mapgiant.
I. European
3.Aleutian
river
island
5. Ipswich and 4.Ump's
cherrystone
relative
10. Daisyllke
5. Mild cigar
flower
6. Netherlands
12. Embankriver
ment
7. Athirst
13.Like
8. Gourmand's
grandma's
favorite
apple pie
readlng
(4 wds.)
9. - -lily
15. Water
11. Squirrel
(Fr.)
or beaver
16."-U. Ot a church
Rosendirector
kavalier"
18. Affairs
17. Couple
of
honor
18. Stage
scenery
19.Bind
again
20. Quantity
23. Fencing toll
21. Cooked to
perfection
(4 wds.)
29.SemJprecious
stone
30. Destroyed
31. Backbone
33. Exclamation
36. Cereal plant
37. Unclose
(poet.)
40. Shakespearean
play
(4 wds.)
43. Austere
44. Consumed
45. Pondered,
with "over"
46. Scarlett's
plantation

20. TurmoU

PA RA DE
ER AS E.R

so PH

,,.

s

Yesterday's Ceyptoquote: NO WOMAN EVER FALLS IN
LOVE WITH A MAN UNLESS SHE HAS A BETI'ER OPIN- ~
ION OF HIM THAN HE DESERVES.-ED HOWE
(ICJ 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

I&gt;T

TA PE

1.0 REN

JJ&amp;WIDM;-

TOR
21. HouseGO RED TV ROL
hold
Rl SEN
A A
tool
Ml&gt; ST RO lA NN I
22.Tierra
UTE
TA RG ET
TE RSE NE EDY Unscramble these four Jumbles,
del
EI.L
one letter to each square, to
Fuego
AN NA MA NA Nl
Indian
LO M RO MER form four ordinary words.
ED
0
NA TE
24.Low
wittiYeaterday'o
ADawer
cism
25.Before
35. Actress,
26.Purpose
Martha-37. Greek
28."-Mame"
mountain
32.Grind
chain
to powder
38. Breakwater
RIMON
33. Faste;ling
39. Spirit lamp
device
41. No. ot Calif.
34. Regarding
42. "Kr~~y
(2wds.)

I

I

I

b (]
D

IPRUINT±
I ( J I I
1..... SURPIISE ANSWBIIIIe 1A rxrr r r xx D

Now IU'l'8lt&amp;e the eireled letten
to form the surpriae answer. u
sunested by the above eartoon.

(AMwen to-rrow}
Jumble.:
Yeaterday'o

!

DECRY ADULT SICKEN GARISH

Anower: Not much •tanding in

DOWN

CRYPTOQUOTE-Here•s how to work it:

AXYDLBA.A.XB
l• 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.
A OJ'yptogram Quotation
S
8

GPNSJFLN
GPNSJFLN

I 'A V

GP N SJN

OSFKDSO

RJ

IJU. ldnd

~~~~~--~~o~o~b~-,SIDENT~A=R~Y~-----------------r

1. Unhurt
D~Y

lkJ ~&amp;t.l fiiiWl""""

lAIN

ENQSFJN
B AL N TN L .-

VDN
RV

PNJJ
UANJ

J A 0 N L J NV

I'M GOIN6 TO DO MINE ON 'THE
VARIOUS /:(IN OS OF METALS IN TI-lE
EARTH AND HOW EACH HAS AFFECTED
THE PROGRESS OF MANKIND...

�_________........................................---

.........

1 a~ The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

-~_....-__.............--~~~~··,

~ ·

0., Feb. 9,1971

Licavoli Confirmed Collector
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Thomas
"Vonnie" Licavoli, the 1930's
mobster and inmate of the
Ohio Penitentiary for the last 36
years, said he has found stamp
collecting to be one of the
greatest rehabilitative tools because it provides ·"mental re-

lief."
"During my more than 36
years in this institution and 35
years as a stamp collector, I
have never found anything to
interest me more and to help
me more in a time of stress
and despondency than my

stamp collection and the
collecting thereof," the former
head of the imfamous "Purple
Gang" wrote in a recent article
for trade papers.
"When all other consolation
has failed, I could get into my
stamps and become lost in the

The Albatross

•

- --····

---·-

OtL

.. ..

0

_

:-,_

............ ·-·-· -

COMPAN\fS
-- ··· . ..

-:

. .,

;- ·--.-·~

_;:.s: \*:~,~~~r
..;~.~-

.....;;.....~- .ft"::'t:" '"~ ....~

4'1;'_ ...

Hoax Calls Have Begun

Sister-in -Law
Died Feb. 3rd

Local authorities have been
advised that numerous hoax
calls to relatives of personnel
serving in Vietnam have been
reported in recent weeks.
Such calls have caused the
families considerable grief who
are unaware of Department of
the
Defense
notification
procedures. The hoax calls are
malicious and relate primarily
to false reports of death,
missing, absence without leave,
desertion, or other related
matters concerning personnel
status. The advers e and
traumatic impact on the unwary is obvious.
Relatives should recognize
they may be the recipient of
such a contemptible call, and
that any such telephone call
concerning relatives status
should
be
immediately

Mrs. Lafe Williamson and
Mrs. Phil Williamson of
Pomeroy have received word of
the death of their sister-in-law,
Mrs. W. H. Speed on Wednesday, Feb. 3, at Charlotte, S.
C.
Mrs . Speed was preceded in
death by her husband and a son.
A daughter, Mrs. Donald
Strong, of Charlotte, survives.
Burial was at Bluefield, W. Va .

MEIGS THEATRE.
Tonight Feb. 9
THE
OUT-OF-TOWNERS
(Technicolor)

Jack Lemmon
Sandy Dennis
Technicolor Cartoons
Show Starts 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
February 10-11
NOT OPEN
February 10-11
NOT OPEN

recognized as a hoax.
If relatives' status requires
notification to their families,
the Department of Defense does
not use
the telephone .
Notification is made by a
personally delivered message
by Department of Defense
representative. Messages may
be delivered personally by the
branch of service representatives, where identity can be
verified with the nearest
milllllty branch of service post;
or, by a Western Union
telegram which can be verified
with the Western Union office
from which received, or by
correspondence. from the
Department of Defense office,
Washington, D. C. The purpose
of notifying the next of kin
determines the means used.

Monsoon Rain,
Fog Stops War
SAIGON (UPI) - Monsoon
rainstorms and fog today halted
U.S. helicopter support of the
South Vietnamese drive against
the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos.
The U.S. Command said four
Gls and six Vietnamese died in
a helicopter shot down over

• CHECKING ACCOUNTS
• SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
~

~

• SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES

~
~
~

~

~
~

I

FQr all your banking needs
you won't find a better bank.
Visit us today.

SIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

l.iibens ~a~ional
-A. CINCINNATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

Laos Monday.
Vice President Nguyen Cao
Ky urged caution lest his troops
get "bogged down" in a lengthy
military campaign in Laos.
Field reports showed at least
six U.S. helicopters were shot
down Monday in the first stages
of the cross-border operation.
The U.S. Command said 10 Gis
had been killed and 41 wounded
since the Jan. 30 opening of
"Operation Dewey Canyon II,"
the 29,000-man Allied sweep
into South Vietnam's northernmost provinces which was a
prelude to the South Vietnamese push into Laos.
The command then announced it was halting the use
of the name "Dewey Canyon"
immediately meaning milit:}ry
spokesmen will no longer be
obliged to come up with
cumulative American casualty
figures .
A delayed report today said
an Air Force F4 Phantom jet
had been shot down Feb. 3 over
the Laotian upper panhandle
and two crewmen were listed
as missing.
DIVORCE ASKED
Charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty, Mary
Ruth Lawrence, Pomeroy
Route 1, has filed suit for
divorce from Joseph Dale
Lawrence, address unknown, in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.

• AUTO LOANS
) •HOME LOANS
~ • PERSONAL LOANS
~ • TRAVELERS CHECKS
~
~
~

JITNEY SUPPER
The Eastern High School
Band Boosters will hold a jitney
supper at the high school
Saturday from 4:30 to 7:30p.m.
The main course will be ham or
chicken, with homemade
noodles. The public is invited.

r~

nk

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

2)6 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

..

'

.

They'll Move by Nuntbers

Apollo

maze of countries, types, color, (Continued from page 1)
etc., finding the mental relief I moon's uplands . They left
sought," he said.
behind a geophysical obLicavoli, who was sentenced servatory powered by a nuclear
to prison for four murders in generator, a plaque saying they
1934 and 'is still seeking his re- were there and more than two
lease, said there is honesty miles of footprints winding up a
among the members of the O.P. steep ridge and through a forest
Stamp Club.
of boulders as high as houses.
"For instance, he will not Besides their 96 pounds of
filch stamps from another in- lunar samples, including a rock
mate's cell," he said. "He will one foot wide, the astronauts
not cheat another club ·member returned with hundreds of
valuable photographs, a legacy
in a trade or purchase.
"And strange as it may of excellence, and proof that
seem, there has hardly ever man is invaluable in exploring
been any complaints from deal- an unknown land.
ers about inmate members of "All the major objectives that
our stamp club taking advan- we went after were actage of them in their mail complished, or certainly at
transactions and purchases," least were all backed up," said
Licavoli added. "This is what Mitchell, a test pilot who holds a
doctor's degree in astronautics.
we mean by rehabilitation."
A Resounding Success
Licavoli, 67, is vice chairman
of the club and won two tro- Shepard, first American in
phies for his exhibits presented space 10 years ago, said it was
in the prison's first show last too early to determine the
November. The club numbers results of the mission, "but I
45 members.
can intuitively tell from what
Stamp collecting, he said, we have done and what we have
gives a man "a new view of seen on the surface that we are
his dealings with others. He has bringing back a wealth of insomething to occupy his mind formation photographically and
other than a way or means of geologically.
mischief."
"It has been a resounding
Licavoli, through attorney F. success ... a smashing sueLee Baily, is still seeking his cess."
release from the prison. He There are three more
was the center of a widely pub- missions left in the $24 billion
licized Life magazine article in Apollo project. The next, Apollo
May 1969 which accused the 15, set for launch July 25, will be
Mafia of putting up money to far more ambitious than Apollo
gain his freedom.
14.
The article, entitled "The David R. Scott and James B.
Governor and the Mobster," Irwin will land between a gorge
also alluded to former Gov. and the base of steep mounJames A. Rhodes, who has tains . They will stay there 66
filed a $10 million libel suit hours, conduct three seven hour
against Life.
surface escursions and use an
electric car to explore 25 miles
of the terrain.
Apollo 16 is targed for launch
in March, 1972 with the final
mission, Apollo 17, set for
launch in December, 1972.

New H aven .
Count Up

NEW HAYEN - According to
the official count of the returns
of the Nineteenth Cenus of the
United States on file in the
Bureau of the Census, the
population of New Haven was
1,538 as of April 1, 1970.
This figure includes the area
annexed by the town prior to
January 1, 1970, but which were
not reported to the Bureau in
time for the inclusion in the
advance census reports.
This gives New Haven an
increase in population of 422
over the figure earlier reported
by the Bureau of Census.
The Census count reported in
the 1960 Bureau Report was
1,301, so the count for 1970 is an
18 per cent increase in the
population of New Haven.
This
information
was
received this week by New
Haven Recorder Jane Russell
after inquiries to the Bureau of
Census, concerning the complete report of 1970 had been
made.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS Martha
McDaniel, John Ross, Harry
Berkeley, all Point Pleasant;
Julia Gilland, New Haven, and
Richard Spears, Gallipolis.
DISCHARGES
Earl
Conard, Mrs. Jack Randolph,
Everett McDaniel, Schane
Shields, Bradford Massey and
Mrs. Clyde VanSickle.
Birth: Feb. 6, a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. John Cogar,
Athens; Feb. 8, a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. David Atkinson,
Point Pleasant.
SERVICE SET
Funeral services for Mrs.
Gladys Elizabeth Russell, 69,
formerly of Middleport, who
died in a Columbus hospital
Sunday, will be held at 1 p.m.
at Home.
the RawlingsWednesday
Coats
Funeral
The Rev.
Charles Rader of Columbus will
officiate. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Black and white youths fell to
fighting one another twice last
week at Roman Catholic High
School in Central Philadelphia.
The principal, the Rev.
Charles V. Gallen, called
parents of his students together

Monday, to offer his diagnosis
and his cure.
"It was not spontaneous. It
was racial. We have in our
student body both racists and
militants," he said.
"Our program from now on
will be the equivalent of

Suspended Aide
Back in Business
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Robert T. Carson, indicted by a
federal grand jury for allegedly
attempting to fix a securities
fraud case involving a Mafia
boss, is back in the office of
Sen. Hiram L. Fong, R-Hawaii.
Although still suspended from
his $33,000-a-year job as Fong's
administrative assistant, Carson .has been back at his desk
for five days. Reliable sources
said Fong told his staff before
he departed on an inspection
trip to Africa for the Senate
Appropriations Committee that
Carson would be "in and out"
and would be using his old office
regularly.
office regularly.
Carson also is still helping
run the Senate staff club from
behind the scenes, although
technically he has temporarily
relinquished his title as the
organization's president.
The tall, 64-year-old political
aide to Fong was indicted by a
federal grand jury in New York
Jan. 13 on charges of perjury
and conspiracy. The jury said
Carson offered a $100,000
political contribution to Deputy
Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst if the Justice Depart~
ment would head off an

indictment brought against
John "Johnny Dio" Dioguardia
-identified by federal officials
as captain of the Luchese
family of the Cosa Nostra in
New York --and 15 other men.
Fong immediately suspended
him pending trial.
Carson was unavailable for
questioning about what he is
now doing in Fang's office.
Other assistants to the senator
declined comment.
A reporter placing a phone
call to Carson was told by a
receptionist in Fang's office
that Carson had been in earlier
in the day but had stepped out.
Sources, who asked not to be
identified, said Carson had been
using his old office for the last
five days, occasionally strolling
through the senator's suite to
chat with other employes. It
was not clear whether Carson is running Fong's day-today affairs while the senator is
in Africa.
Carson was elected president
of the Senate staff club last
October. Since he is on
suspension, however, he cannot
serve in that job. The club's
constitution says only bona fida
Senate employes may hold
office.

martial law," said the priest. •
"In effect, we are saying that
if a faculty member tells a
student to jump, he will jump
and ask how far on the way
up," said the priest.
Father Gallen said he would
expel any student for fighting,
leaving school or provoking a
disruption.
"Situation ethics will not hav«
a place here," he said. "We
cannot make people like each
other, but it is imperative that
we get along together."

Two Collisions
Occur Monday
On US Rt. 33

•

NEW HAVEN - Sheriff's
deputies investigated two highway accidents Monday, neither
causing injuries.
Two vehicles were involved in
a collision on U. S. 33 at the
Philip Sporn plant driveway at
4:15p.m.
Chief
Deputy
Millard
Halstead identified the drivers
as Millard Swartz, 41, Pomeroy,
and Gary Dale Arnold, 19,
Mason. Swartz, driving south on
Broad Run road, had pulled
onto Route 33 and was headed
west when Arnold, also
traveling west, struck Swartz in
the right rear fender. Damages
were estimated at $750.
•
Monday morning, a onevehicle wreck was reported in
Hartford, also on U. S. 33.
Deputy Jack Pyles said the
driver was Ernie L. Roush, 31,
Route 1, Letart, who said his
vehicle went into a skid and out
of control, hitting guardrails
before stopping. Damages were
set at $275.

Student
Saved
Michael L. Bates, 18,
Columbus, a Rio Grande
College student, is alive today
thanks to the heroic efforts of
two alert residents of the Vinton
community.
Maxwell Barnes, 49, and
Sonny Hales, 27, Van Buren. Rd.,
Vinton, have been credited with
saving the life of the student
who all but drowned in the
swollen waters of Raccoon
Creek, after his borrowed auto
slid off the highway, struck a
power pole and skidded into the
creek, and began to sink.
The incident occurred at 7:40
p.m. Sunday while Bates was
returning to Rio Grande from
Athens. Bates, who does not
remember how he got out of his
auto that quickly submerged,
was found clinging to branches
from a tree in the middle of the
creek.
Barnes, an employee of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., and Hale were
checking lines after their
electricity had been knocked
out. They were aler.ted after
hearing Bates yell for help.
The men threw out a rope and
pulled Bates to safety. The
former Columbus resident was
taken to the Barnes home where
he was given dry clothes and
time to recuperate.
Bates reportedly had been in
the water approximately 10
minutes. When pulled to safety,
he was in shock and freezing.
The auto remained in the
creek topay.

WOME~ 'S LIB, CAMBODIAN STYLE, meant a ride on a tank for this lady soldier

during battles with Communists for contr·ol of the roads out of Phnom Penh.

CAN'T MAKE IT
Dr. Charles Meckstroth,
Columbus heart specialist, will
not be able to appear at a public
mee'ting scheduled for 7:30
tonight at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy sponsored by the
County Heart Assn . Dr.
Meckstroth's talk will be
rescheduled when weather
conditions improve.
Routine business was acted
on Tuesday morning by the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners, paying bills and
considering one animal claim.
Attending were Bob Clark and
Warden Ours, and Clerk Martha
Chambers.

Ann Faddis, 46, Died on Monday
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Ann
Faddis, 46, Coolville Route 2,
died Monday night at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital
following a brief illness.
Born in Portsmouth, Mrs.
Faddis was the daughter of the
late Charles and Millie
Millirons McNamara. She had
been a resident of the Coolville
area the past six years, moving
here from Oklahoma.
Surviving are her husband, E.
G. Faddis; a son, Jimmie, at
home; a daughter, Mrs. Joyce
Fisher, Rutland; four brothers,
Charles McNamara, Portsmouth; John McNamara,

Chicago, and James and David
McNamara, Columbus; two
sisters, Mrs. Mary Witzdam,
Port Townsend, Wash.; Mrs.
Iline Aldridge, Alexandria, Ky.,
and six grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by five
brothers and sisters.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev. Edsel Hart officiating:A
Burial will be in the Vanderhoff" •
cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time after
noon Wednesday.

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

~-------~=====~---------------

Capture the Warmth of
Early American with a
Lloyd "Plymouth House"

DINETTE SET
FUNERAL AT 5
Funeral services for Mrs.
Blanche Spade, 55, found dead
in her Middleport apartment
Sunday night, have been set for
5 p.m . Wednesday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev . Robert Smith
officiating. Burial will be in the
Oakwood Cemetery at Bucyrus.
Friends may call at the funeral
home .
SORORITY TO MEET
Xi Gammu Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet at 7:45p.m. Thursday at
the home of Nellie Brown, Rock
Springs Road.

Channing and chl·erful \.l'ay to
l'nhanu: the nwaltime hours . . .
11· it h the mellmr look of old
maple. I \(·aut ifully tapered leg·~
on tahlc and chairs in , a \\'arm
hr11nzc tinish . . . 11·ipe-cleau
plastic-laminate tahle l(ljl in a
111apk gTain . . . l·:arh · \mcriran 111111ii in .~·old 1111 the maplt'tini~lll'd hanl\\'nlld hack rail of
tht' chair~.

•

Visit the Furniture Department on the 3rd Floor and se~ the lar{(e selection
of Lloyd and Howell quality made dinettes, drop leaf, round, oval, and
rectangular tables with 4, 6 and 8 chairs:

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 :30 a.m. Tuesday
under partially cloudy skies
was 18degrees.
. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

Elberfeld$ In Pomero

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