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                  <text>Youth Honored for Public Service
The first Outstanding Service
Award was presented to
Stephen Robert Harten bach, 19,
son of Sheriff and Mrs. Robert
Har tenbach, at a dinner
meeting of the Gallia-Meigs
Fraterna l Order of Police
Wednesday night at the FeeneyBennett Post No. 128, American
Legion, home in Middleport.

police departments of the area
through his radio work at the
office of his father. Only 19,
Steve Hartenbach has resided
in the sheriff's quar ters of
Meigs County the past 14 years.
He not only assists with duties
of the sheriff's department
through work on the radio but
has been active with the
Pomeroy Fire Department and
High tributes were paid to E-R Squad.
young Ha r tenbach in apSgt. Henry Werry of the
preciation of his service to Pomeroy Police Department,

who is also fire chief and active
in emergency-rescue work,
helped influence young Hartenbach to become interested in
police radio communications
and fire department and
emergency-rescue work.

emergency call was for a
youngster who had suffered a
similar accident.
Steve sustained serious injuries to both arms and only
through
a
widespread,
cooperative effort, and fast
action by deputies, emergency
personnel and doctors, was his
life saved. However, Steve was
returned home from the
hospital in exactly one week.
The first thing he did upon
entering his father's office on

It was last June 5 that Steve
ran to answer an emergency
call when a storm door at the
sheriff's office stuck and
Hartenbach fell through the
glass of the door. Ironically, the

the day of his return was to
receive a radio call.
Presenting a plaque to Steve
last night on behalf of the
Fraternal Order of Police of the
two-county area was Sgt. David
Proffitt of the Ohio State Patrol,
Gallia-Meigs Post, president of
the police organization.
His remarks were high praise
for Steve as were those of other
speakers including Gallipolis
City Manager Ken Morgan,

Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar,
Sgt. Henry Werry, Gallipolis
Police Chief John Taylor and
Middleport Police Chief J. J.
Cremeans.
Approximately 35 officers and
guests attended the dinner .
Among the guests were Steve's
parents, Sheriff and Mrs.
Harten bach and his sister ,
Debbie. Presentation of an
outstanding service award by
the FOP organization may
become an annual event.

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The lntere&amp;t. Of The Meig~-Mruon Area
FIRST AWARD- Sgt. David Proffitt, Ohio State P atrol,
President of the Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order of P olice,
presented Stephen Robert Hartenbach, Pomeroy, the first
Outstanding Service Plaque at a dinner meeting held in
Middleport Wednesday night. The award was in appreciation
of Hartenbach 's contributions to the operation of police
departments of the area through his radio work at the office
of his father, Meigs County Sheriff Robert Hartenbach.

VOL. XXI II

NO. 21 1

POM EROY-M :ODLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1971

Bailey Begins

Charge Denied

.
! New Job Frzday

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

! News ..• in Briefs
I

I

By United Press International

Another Slip of a Tongue
,

WASHINGTON- WOMEN'S LffiERATIONISTS are rattling
their swords at Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., a former twostar general who doesn't look kindly on sending women to war. In
a telegram to Goldwater Wednesday, four leaders of Washington
- area women's liberation groups demanded that the silverhaired senator apologize for joking at a hearing this week that
''we have enough trouble with women without giving them Ml6
rifles."
"It is an uncalled-for, insulting statement which alienates and
angers women who make up a large part of your constituency and
want to see an end to the draft just as you do," the women wired
Goldwater. "Daily we fight this kind of thoughtless stereotyping
of women. We do not expect such statements from a U.S. Senator.
We ask for an apology," they said.

1

Bureaucrat Admits Errors
WASHINGTON - IN AN UNUSUAL CONFESSION of
"errors," Secretary Elliot L. Richardson of Health, Education
and Welfare has admitted the government sent special
desegragation funds to school districts which have been charged
with using the money to perpetuate segregation. Richardson said
new investigators have confirmed at least some of the charges
leveled by six civil rights groups which looked into how 295
southern school districts were using the $75 million provided by
Congress last year to help them overcome the burdens of
desegregating.
After Richardson testified Wednesday before the ::.e. 1at~
education subcommittee, HEW identified 11 mostly rural school
districts in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina which
have been told they violated the law and will receive no more of
the special aid.

•

"a LA Still Having the Shakes
LOS ANGELES - THE LOS ANGELES AREA was plagued
Wednesday by hundreds of aftershocks, some of them measuring
as high as 4.5 on the Richter scale. Most of the aftershocks were
too small to be felt but some swayed buildings.

Flight to Suburbs Continues
WASHINGTON- DURING THE PAST DECADE the Negro
population ofthe United States' 67largest urban areas grew by an
estimated 2.82 million. The white population declined by 1.87
million.
The figures issued Wednesday by the Commerce Department
(Continued on Page 10)

1"-

•
·•

James Bailey, retired from committeeman for South
the U. S. Air Force, Long Chester, a post he r esigned
Bottom Route 1 (Bashan), will effective today. He was a
begin his duties as superin- Democrat candidate for county
last
fall
tendent of the Meigs County commissioner
State Highway Department receiving 2,693 votes in his
Friday.
unsuccessful bid for election.
Bailey's appointment is
Before being approved for the
reported to be the first of the post, Bailey underwent testing
superintendent changeovers in at the division office in Marietta
the nine county area making up and was interviewed by Max
Division 10 of the State Highway Farley, new division engineer.
Department.
Mrs. Bailey is a native of
A veteran of 20 years in the Britton, S. D. Mr. and Mrs.
air force, Bailey spent nine Bailey have a five-year-old son,
years as a supervisor and five Clinton James.
years as a superintendent in the
Born at Bashan, the son of
missile field. He was com- Thomas and Ruby Alice McKay
munication advisor to the Bailey, the new superintendent
Saudi, Arabia, Air Force in 1953 is a member of the vestry of the
and 1954 and inertial guidance Grace Episcopal Church. He is
advisor to the Italian Air Force secretary of Ken Amsbary
on a Jupitor Missile project, two Chapter, Izaak Walton League
.
years, 1960 and 1961. Bailey of Amenca,
an d be1ongs to
retired on Sept. 1, 1966.
Drew Webster Post 39
For the past 38 months he has American Legion, the Fraternal
operated Bailey's Sunoco Order of ~agles, the Bashan
Service Station on West Main Volunteer F1re Department and
St., Pomeroy. An active is judge advocate of the
Democrat, he is a central VetPrans of Foreign Wars.
,
at

Ho~ne

Rule Asked

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- In a move to cast the "power
to the people," a nepublican
senator today produced an antistrip mine bill that would let
each county decide if it wants to
outlaw the industry.
Author of the bill, Sen. J.
Frank Deem, a Pleasants
County auto dealer, is highly
critical of an earlier one by Sen.
Si Galperin, D-Kanawha, that
would bring a total ban on
surface industry.
Galperin's measure takes a

25% Cut Faces Burley Growers
The largest acreage allotment cut in history will face the
burley tobacco farmer in a few
weeks unless a change in the
present law can take effect in
time to stop the reduction.
According to Golden R .
Canaday, chairman of Ohio's
Farm Bureau Tobacco Committee, a United States
Department of Agriculture
(USDA) aide in Washington, D.
C. has confirmed that the cut
will at least be 25 per cent. A cut
of this magnitude would, in the
opinion of many tobaccomen,
wreck the industry and drive
many farmers out of business
and into bankruptcy.
Last year Congress extended
from Feb. 1 to March 1 the

USDA deadline for announcing
the burley allotment. And on
Feb. 1 USDA officials announced 1971 tobacco allotment
for all types except burley.
Burley tobacco growers have
known for quite some time that
the provisions of the formula in
the present acreage control law
would necessitate a substantial
cut in 1971. As a result of this
knowledge, a new tobacco
group was activated - Council
for Burley Tobacco- which has
been meeting since May of last
year.
It has come up with some of
the most practical program
changes possible. Many of these
changes were included in
Senate Bill 4613 introduced by

Senator John Sherman Cooper
in December of 1970. This bill
died when Congress adjourned.
However, new legislation by
Sen. Cooper is pending which is
the apparent reason for no
burley allotment announcement
Feb. 1 by Washington officials.
Burley producers have known
for some time that the industry
could not continue much longer
the trend toward ever increasing yields and mounting
surpluses
without
being
eventually called to account.
The price support program as
originally developed and
operated for the past 30 years is
based on the concept of
reasonable
controls
of
production. The time to im-

Big Quake Yet to Come
~;

sudden death approach by
shutting off coal stripping by
Jan. 1, 1973, although owners
would have about two years to
phase out.
Under the Deem plan:
Counties that lack active strip
mine operations could bar them
by voter approval; and those
that have full-time operations
could give them five years to
clear out.
"My reason for a five-year
time lag for these counties· is to
(Continued on Page 10)

PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)For two years, Californians
have heard predictions from
both soothsayers and experts
that a "great" earthquake was
due to hit the state.
An assortment of astrologers,
religious fanatics and hippies
predicted it would snap the
state like a stale cookie and
drop most of it into the Pacific.
The more sober earthquake
experts scoffed at that pictw·e
- but warned the the 600-mile
long San Andreas fault was due
for one of its periodic
movements similar to the one
that caused the San Francisco
quake of 1906.
'Not A Great Earthquake'
To the 10 miliion residents of
the Los Angeles area who were
jolted awake by Tue~day's

devastating temblor, the predictions seemed to have come true
as the quake killed more than
50 persons and caused damage
that will run into the billions of
dollars.
They 're wrong, according to
Dr . Clarence R. Allen, professor of geology and geophysics
at the Cahfornia Institute of
Technology.
"It is certainly. not a great
earthquake in the sense of the
San Francisco quake," he told
a news conference Wednesday .
Allen echoed the predictions
of other geologists that a great
quake-ane with a Richter
reading of 8 or higher- would
hit along the San Andreas fault
in Southern California some11!111' wit hill tilt• OPXI ('('Otury .
However, he said, knowledge

of quakes and their causes is
not sufficient to allow a
prediction any closer than that.
Allen said Tuesday 's quake,
which measured 6.5 on the
Richter scale, did not occur
along the San Andreas or any
known fault system.
"We don't understand entirely
what happened," he said. "It is
not an area that has had a
great deal of seismic activity
and there is no recognized
active fault."
Earth strain continues to
build up along the San Andreas
fault- the border between two
huge continent-sized blocks of
the Earth's surface which are
inchmg in opposite directions.
When the strain grows too
strong, the great quake will
occur.

prove the method of production
controls is now here. When a cut
of 10 per cent was imposed for
the 1970 season it was thought it
would yield approximately 560
million pounds of burley, but
that figure was exceeded by 580
million pounds and the beltwide yield per acre has gone to
2,585 lbs . against 2,488 in 1969.
In October, 1970, pooled
burley stood at 455 million
pounds, 114 million pounds
more than a year earlier. Since
then, the pool holdings have
topped 500 million pounds. Sen.
Cooper, in testimony before a
Senate committee, said a cut of
25-40 per cent, "Could force
many of our burley growers into
bankruptcy - as there is no
alternative crop to which they
can turn to make up the loss in
income."
So there is an aggravated
situation caused by overproduction which must be
remedied immediately if there
is to be a tobacco program.
By law, farmers will vote this
year in a referendum to decide
if they want to continue the
acreage contro l and price
support program. If less than
two-thirds of the burley farmers
vote for endorsement of the
program, the program loses
and will be eliminated. With it
will go the grower's market
parity, say tobaccomen.
One alternative is a new
program, based on poundage
allotment, rather than acreage.
Some burley leaders say it is the
only alternative if the grower is
to keep parity. But time is
running out, and action is
needed now on a revised
program,
according
to
Canaday.

TEN CENTS

By P ETER A. GASKELL
PARIS (UPI) - Communist
negotiators at the Vietnam
peace talks said today 10
American battalions were involved in current military
operations in Laos. U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce
immediately rejected the
charge.
In a rebuttal at today's 102nd
session, Bruce said, "I reject
your false allegations and your
gross distortions about our
activities and intentions in
regard to Laos ... "

Bruce told the Hanoi and Viet
Cong delegates, "I find it incomprehensible that you could
dwell today at such length on
Laos without once mentioning
the root cause of the conflict
there. I refer, of course, to the
longstanding and
illegal
presence of large numbers of
North Vietnamese troops in
Laos and your continued use of
Laotian territory to support
your aggression throughout
Indochina."
Both Hanoi's Xuan Thuy and
the Viet Cong's Madame

Nguyen Thi Binh had charged
that 10 U.S. infantry, artillery
and armored battalions took
part in the Laos action.
Bruce said the United States
was supplying whatever air
power was necessary to support
South Vietnamese forces
engaged in the Laos push, along
with artillery support from
inside South Vietnam.
"No
American
ground
combat forces or advisers will
cross into Laos," the veteran
diplomat said.

Benefits Recited
SUPT. BAILEY

T r oops Link

u

in L aos

SAIGON (UPI) _ South
Vietnamese paratroopers
linked up with armored
columns inside Laos today and
opened a ground s upply route to
the South Vietnamese border.
U. S. helicopters hauled heavy
artillery guns to the new
Laotian bases.
Military spokesmen in Saigon
and reports from the field said
there was as yet no indication
the South Vietnamese had
reached Tchepone, the primary
objective of the drive into Laos.
Tchepone is 27 miles inside Laos
and has long been a major
staging area for stockpiling of
Communist arms on the Ho Chi
Minh Trail complex.
Brig. Gen. Pham Van Phu,
commander of the 1st South
Vietnamese Infantry Division,
said the South Vietnamese
airborne units had Wlcovered a
quantity of 122rrun rockets,
mortars, six Soviet-built trucks
and other material.

·lz·

Over $% Mz wn
Put • (! M •
zn

0

e-,gs

By VA in 1970
The Veterans Administ.ration
today announced expenditures
in Ohio for fiscal 1970 were
$413,239,725, of which $551,269
was in Meigs County.
Michael L. Halloran, Director
of the Cleveland VA Office, said
that the bulk of the money was
$241,244,063 in disability
compensation and pension
payments for Ohio veterans of
which $398,053 went to Meigs
County veterans.
Other VA expenditures in
Meigs County for fiscal 1970
were for GI Bill and other VA
educational programs, $59,431
and insurance and indemnities,
$72,785.
Additional expenditures here
included direct loans of $21,000.
Halloran invited Meigs
County veterans to contact their
VA office at 1240 East Ninth in
the Federal Building in
Cleveland for information on
any program, including the GI
Bill.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Margaret
Allen,
Pomeroy;
Steven
Randolph, Pomeroy; Ralph
Shain, Racine.
DISCHARGED Floyd
Rupe, Gertrude Hall, Eddie
Casto, Mary Ginther, Bruce
Fisher, Zora Walker.

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
13-state Appalachian Regional
Commission (ARC) has helped
localities to set aside "provincia! jealousies" to tackle overwhelming common problems,
witnesses told a Senate subcommittee here Wednesday.
The commission, created by
Congress in 1965, channels federa! funds intP. multi - county
development agenctes into ceonomu:ally depressed areas covering the Appalachian region.
The Nixon Administration has
proposed extending the ARC
only one year, when it would
be absorbed by the federalstate revenus sharing plan.
The subcommittee on ceonomic development is conducting hearings on a bill by Sen.
Jennings Randolph, D - W.Va.

and Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., to extend the program for four years.
"The local (ARC) district
brought these communities together," Jack Strickland, director of a nine-county TennesseeVirginia development district,
told the senate subcommittee.
Stephen C. Mandes, executive
director of th~ six county turn-

pike district planning and development commission in southcentral Pennsylvania said ARC
offered leadership in his district
to attack common problems.
"What previously had been a
fragmented development of
each community pulling in its
own direction slowly became a
concerted effort to reach common goals," Mandes said.

Digging Goes On

LOS ANGELES (UPI)-The provided supplies for basic
possibility of a vicious after- needs and 200 portable toilets
shock kept 120,000 persons out were set up. Crews hoped to
of their homes today as rescue have the wells repaired by
workers dug for more victims Friday.
of the devastating Los Angeles
Two days after Tuesday's
earthquake.
quake smashed the northern
Residents evacuated from San Fernando Valley and shook
their suburban houses beneath the entire Los Angeles area, the
a cracked earthfill dam were death toll was still growing.
ordered to remain away until
The Search Goes On
Friday afternoon by Mayor
Rescuers used cranes,
Sam Yorty, who acted on the torches and jackhammers to
advice of quake experts.
probe the flattened rubble of a
In the city of San Fernando, veterans hospital where 35 of
BELPRE. Ohio (UPI)- The 17,000 residents were without the quake's 51 known victims
bodies of five members of a water because of damage to died. At least seven others were
Belpre family were found in wells. Nine tanker trucks missing in the ruins.
their home early today, the apparent victims of carbon manoxide poisoning, police said.
Belpre police said James A.
Butler Sr., 38, apparently went
to the garage, which was attached to the house, late Tuesday and started his car.
The door between the garage
and the house was open and the
carbon monoxide fumes crept
into the home, killing the wife
who was lying on a couch
Good news for Meigs Countians.
watching television and three
The "Singing Caldwells" who were such a hit in several apchildren who were in bed.
pearances in the county last spring, will be appearing here again
The victims were Butler, his this spring. Paul Casci is arranging the shows by the vocal and
wife, Jane, 32, and children, instrumental group at several high schools in the area as well as a
Jimmy 12, Christine 9 and Ce- public show in the evening at the new Meigs High School. The date
lestine 6.
is March 1 and sponsorship is again by Drew Webster Post 39,
Patrolman Daniel Hahn said
American Legion.
Butler's body was found behind
the wheel of the car, the batA CROWD OF 354 RESIDENTS turned out Sunday to t.ear a
tery was dead the gasoline tank
concert
by the Capital University Choir of Columbus at the St.
empty and igmtion still on.
Paul
Lutheran
Church. The crowd was standing room only and
"This apparently happened
Tuesday night," said Hahn. the concert was impressive.
''Some friends went over last
MONDAY WILL BE A NATIONAL HOLIDAY. Banks, post
night and saw the house all lit
offices and other public offices will be closed.
up and the television on.
In case you didn't know, the holiday is one of the new
"They tried to get somebody
to come to the door," Hahn said. "Monday deals" and is set for the observance of both Lincoln's
"They hollered and knocked on birthday on Feb. 12 and Washington's birthday, which is actually
·
the door but nothing. So they Feb. 22.
This strange arrangement is being brought to you through the
went to the police department."
courtesy of Congress which you might be encouraged to know has
time to take care of these "little details. "
AUTO DESTROYED
A 1963 automobile owned by
Bill Jacobs, Locust St.,
SYMPATHY TO THE DAUGHTERS of Mrs. Worley Howell
Pomeroy, was a total loss as the who died Wednesday at the Holzer Medical Center. Mrs. Howell
result of a fire at 3:16 p.m . was one of those "same every day" people whom everyone liked.
Wednesday at the Jacobs home. She'll be missed.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Henry
Werry said that fire was apREMEMBER WHEN -COMMUNITIES, following a heavy
parently caused when the horn snow, blocked off a hill or two to give the younger set protection
relay shorted out.
while they took to their sleds for some good winter fWl?

Family of
5 Is Killed

MEETING RESET
A postponed meeting of Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority has been reset for
Tuesday evening at 8:15 at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. social room in
Middleport.

NUMEROUS RESIDENTS will remember George Stace,
formerly of Minersville, who is a patient at Orange Memorial
Hospital, South Orange Ave., room 6521, Orlando, Fla. Stace will
undergo heart surgery at the hospital sometime next week. He is
the father of Mary Stace Powell of Pomeroy and the son of Mrs. S.
M. Olsen (Sophie Stace ), a former Meigs resident now living in
Rosemead, Galif.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 11, 1971

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

The Winner .

!Helen Help Usi
I
I
1

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 YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Helen Help US! this
newspaper.
DON'T LET HISTORY
REPEAT ITSELF
Dear Helen:
I'm 17, married, have a baby.
When he isn't stoned, my
husband beats me and calls me
a slut. Maybe I deserve this.
You see, I'm deathly afraid of
men, especially ones who hit,
and so I can't be a real wife.
But he's not helping. He won't
keep a job. He's devil-mean
when he drinks or takes pills.
I'd almost rather have him
stoned. He says it's my fault.
You see, Helen, my father
hardly worked at all, was
always high on something, and
gave me a rough time. He
molested a relative (I was
there) and I was deathly afraid
it would be me next. Later on,
when I started dating (I was a
"good" girl) I'd hear him
• telling my mother to get me
examined because he knew I'd
end up pregnant. That's just the
surface of my ugly, dark
memories. I lived in fear, and
not just of beatings. My mother
wouldn't leave "because of the
children."
I guess I married at 16 to get
away from that fear, but I was
scared of sex, and my husband
and I never hit it off. Or rather,
HE hit ....
I don't want my little girl to
have the life I led, but I'm
afraid to be on my own. Maybe I
know why my mother never
eft. We're both scared of our
shadows.
Helen, why did I do it, and
i · what can I do now?- BEATEN
•• DOWN
Dear Beaten:
Why is it that so often a young
•'t
girl marries into the very same
• situation she got married to
•• escape? Perhaps because
•. desperation makes her blind,
I,
but more likely because she
doesn't know any other kind of
man exists or, in some strange
maschoistic way, cruelty attracts her. The worst part about
a miserable childhood is that
you continue living it all your
life.
What can you do now? Take
charge of your future, finally!
Get some courage. Realize you
don't have to live with a
husband who "beats you when
he isn't stoned." Take a good
long look at your mother and
say, "I'll change the family
pattern!"
It isn't easy, being alone with
a small baby to care for at age

.

.·
..

.
..,.

17. But other girls have done it.
Welfare will see you through
until you can get a job. Above
all, don't go home, or you and
your child may never break out
of this vicious circle.- H.
Dear Helen:
I went with a girl and she got
too possessive, so we broke up.
Before that, I didn't have much
trouble getting dates, but since
then, no luck!
See, every time I ask a new
girl out, she either refuses on
the spot or else she'll break the
date a day later. Always some
good excuse. I can't dig for
reasons, naturally, but I'm
beginning to think there's an
invisible sign on me that says
"Poisin" or something.
I'm not repulsive. Why do I
always strike out?
It isn't B.B. or B.O. so- HOW
COME?
Dear H.C.:
If it isn't what the advertisers
warn against, then maybe you
are "N.O. - G.O." with girls
because your possessive "ex" is
still " P.O.ed" and spreading
rumors - or threats.
Ask a friend to do some
sleuthing for you. - H.
Dear Helen :
I read this in our local paper .
It applies to some older people I
know. Wish it applied to more:
"Youth is not a time of life it is a state of mind. It is a
temper of the will, a quality of
the imagination, a vigor of the
emotions. It is a freshness of the
deep springs of life. Youth
means a predominance of
courage over timidity, of the
appetite for adventure over love
of ease. This often exists in a
man of 50 more than in a boy of
20. Nobody grows old by merely
living a number of years.
People grow old by deserting
their ideals."- ANONYMOUS

..·:
.•
f

·:
:·

.·::.
..::..
.·;..
•'

Dorothea Dix was an
American social reformer
who helped initiate specialized treatment for the mentally ill. The World Almanac recalls that in 1841 she
began visiting prisons and
asylums, which she found
almost medieval in their
methods. Her crusade led
many s t a t e s to establish
asylums for the insane.

..!·.·,.••
~

....
.
..·:.·

Dodge City News
Nobody here by the name
of Jesse James; just 4
wh1te hat "good guys" to
help you pick your own
personal bargain. Here
are some examples; park
your horse and ride with
the "Good Guys".

1966 Chevrolet Malibu
4 Door sedan, V-8, p. steering, automatic,
factory air, very, very nice and ready to go.

1966 Dod2e Coronet
4 Door sedan, V-8, p. steering, t-flite, 2 to
choose from, both ready to roll .

1966 Mercury Comet
4 Door sedan, 6 cylinder, automatic, economy
is foremost on this one .
#

1966 Plymouth VIP

,•
,•
:-

2 Door h-top ., V-8, p. steering, t-flite, sharp as
a tack and much easier to find.

..
.

:::·: 1966 Pontiac Tern oest
::
:
All Are One Owner Trades - - ~=::
Pick Your Choice and Call Us
....

4 Door sedan, V-8, automatic, p. steering, you
won't find a nicer one in town.

::

..:
~.

:~

·:
~·
·:

..•·

·J

,l.-.... : '

I, H·~ · ,

WIN AT BRIDGE

'Tis 4 o'clock,
MacDuff Plays On
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH (D)

11

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WEST

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Both vulnerable
West North East
1""
Pass
4 N.T. Pass
Pass
Pass
5 N.T. Pass
Pass
6¥
Pass
Pass
Opening lead-+ 2

South
1•
5+
6""
Pass

In the last act of MacBeth
the thane of Glamis and of
Cawdor is supposed to have
said, "Lay on, MacDuff!"
Voluminous research on
our part has unearthed the
startling fact that MacBeth
was an avid bridge player
and he actually said, "Play
on, MacDuff," whan Mac-

Duff was trying to break up
the castle bridge game at
the hour of four in the morning.
MacDuff agreed to one last
rubber and with both sides
vulnerable MacBeth opened
the North hand with a club.
M a c D u f f responded one
heart and MacBeth who
liked to open with one and
then take full charge Blackwooded his way to six hearts.
Actually he had full confi·
dence that MacDuff would
make the slam.
MacDuff played dummy's
queen of diamonds at trick
one. Donalbain who sat West
was perfectly capable of
leading from a king. Besides
it would be difficult to eliminate the diamond loser if he
rose with the ace . Malcolm
sitting East took his king
and shifted to the 10 of
spades.
At this point MacDuff
5howe::l how he had won the
reputation of being the best
bridge player in all of Scotland .
He hopped up with his ace
of spades. This was essential
s.ince MacDuff needed an entry to his hand for the trump
finesse.
The finesse worked nicely
and t h r e e I e a d s of the
suit exhaused Donalbain's
trumps . After that it was a
simple matter to ruff two
clubs with his last two
trumps . make the slam and

.

get off to bed.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn. )
11

0: R; 1:1 •'rki!UXJ
The bidding has been:
West
North
East
1¥
Dble
Pass
2¥
Pass
Pass
Pass
3+
Pass
Pass
4•
Pass
You, South, hold:
.87432 ¥7 +Q98 ""K1043
What do you do now?
A-You can't be sure what
your partner's hand is. A slam
should be made somewhere. Bid
five hearts and let him tell you
something-more about his hand.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Ye:;, Gwendolyn, we can
almost assure you that
karate chops would upset
your digestion .
Smile and the w o r l d
s mile s with your laugh
an d you'll find someone
··else to ld tlw joke first.

Voice along Broadway !
I

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK- Gov. Ronald
Reagan's 60 .... Dean Martin's
age-fear isn't helped by
daughter Gail (Mrs. Paul
Polena) scheduling the Stork
for June .... N.Y. Council Pres.
Garelik is making like his old
detective days: investigating
welfare hotels overpayments and maybe ki'c kbacks .... Neil
Simon's getting only a percentage of any profits for the
film of his "Last of the Red Hot
Lovers" .. .. Corinthian TV
group bought Frank &amp; Wagnalls
(Look that up in your Rowan &amp;
Martin ! ) ... . The hoary old
" Frank Merriwell" fantasies
become a Bdwy. musical this
spring . . . . One of our oldest
show biz friends , a close one,
Jay C. Flippen died at 70 .... A
fiercely menacing face hid a
heart of great softness and
decency and we'll miss one of
our favorite old midnight
drinking pals.
Leland Hayward ' s
hospitalized, no one including
the doctors yet know for what
.... The high-British sex scandal
we stated months ago would
break into print now is due any
deadline, pictures n'everything
. . .. New face in the TV "Dan
August" series is Jared Martin,
the gals call him "a young Paul
Newman," and ain't that
putting old Blue Eyes out to
pasture . ... John MacArthur
now is by far the biggest real
estate owner in Florida - and

owns it all personally .... He's
Helen Hayes' brother-in-law,
and his wealth is estimated
right up there with Jean Paul
Getty &amp; the Rockefellers .. ..
Roseland owner Lou Brecker's
enthusiasm for the Mills
Brothers' Dot record " No
Turning Back" seemed a
mystery until we learned Lou's
daughter Nancy Leeds wrote
the words.
N.Y. nightclubs are hollering
moider at the recession, but
Hassan Berrada , a rich
Moroccan , is pouring one
million into his new Al Mounia
restaurant at Madison &amp; 38th ....
The Pen &amp; Pencil's aftertheater comestibles are cooked
on portable stoves a t your
table: Fondue and all that intimate
jazz ,
omele ttes
" created" right in front of you
etc . .. . Marvelous Mildred
Natwick makes her singing

BEARY'S WORLD

'

~Gb ~
I
~ I

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
!.:HESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFL ICH ,
City Editor
Published da il y
el!cept
Sat urday by The Oh io Val l ey
Pub li shing Company , 111
Court St ., Pomeroy, Oh i o ,
45769. Bus i n~s Office Phone
992-2156, Ed itor i a l Phone 9922157 .
, Second c l ass postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Nat i ona l
advert i s i ng
representative
Bott i ne l liGallagher, Inc. , 12 East 42nd
St ., New York City , New York.
Subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available: One
monrh $1 .75. By mail in Ohio
and W . Va., One year $14.00 .
Si x mon t hs $7.25. Three
months $4.50. Subscr i ption
pr ice includes Sunday T i mes .
,sentinel.

.
(

@ 1m

by HEA,

I~

"You're just jealous, because Connally was pulling down
more in legal fees for one· client than you got from six!"

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

No Simple Solution
To 'Simple Anemia'

SEE THE GOOD GUYS ON THESE
SPECIALS - E. Jones, R. Bra1ton, W. Amberger, D. Rawlings.
992-2151 '
992-2152

RAWLINGS
DODGE CITY
M1DOLEPORT 0.

Dear Dr. Lamb- Please
comment on the question of
simple anemia, iron deficiency, as it pertains to taking
various pills to "build up"
to a normal blood test. A difference of opinion exists· it
is claimed that once a blood
test is normal again pills
should be discontinued until
the blood count again gets
down to below normal, then
" build it up again." It is also
claimed that once a normal
blood count is reached a reduced dose of pills should be
continued at all times to
maintain normalcy.
Dear Reader-Anemia is
only one manifestation of the
body's lack of iron. To replenish the body's store of
iron, medicine must be continued for several months
a f t e r the anemia is corrected.
Of course, if the cause of
the iron deficiency can be
corrected, that should be
done, too. In many parts of
the world intestinal parasites
and poor nutrition are at
fault. More often iron deficiency anemia o c c u r s in
childbearing-age w o m e n.
The only satisfactory way to
manage this problem is by
continuous iron replacement .
The amount will varv with
the individual.
·
Dear Dr. Lamb-1 wonder
if you could give me some
information on thyroid conditions. I have been told I
have low thyroid and have
been given pills. The doctor
says I must take this medicine indefinitely. Is this condition common, and does it
lead to anything more serious, or will it activate unwanted hormones?
Dear Reader-The thyroid
gland is a remarkable organ .
Within limits. when you give
a normal person thyroid
pills, the gland just quits
putting out as much thyro1d
hormone. The end rE-sult is
that the pill. plus the decreased secretion of thyroid
hormone, JUSt meets bodv
requirements . T h i s meCJn·s

that small doses of thyroid
h o r m o n e usually do not
cause any harm. They can
do a lot of good .
Decreased thyroid function
leads to a large number of
symptoms, including o i l y
hair and skin, constipation.
intolerance to cold and " inward nervousness." It is
often blamed for obesity but.
in fact, overweight problems
are usually caused by overeating and insufficient activity or both . Nevertheless, decreased thyroid function can
contribute to, or cause obe·
sity in some cases. Low thyrold function can cause mild
anemia s and seriously affect
function of the reproductive
organs in b o t h men and
women .
Low thyroid function can
be caused by a problem in
the thyroid gland or sometimes by a failure of the
small master gland under
the brain, the pituitary
gland, that tends to regulate
all the endocrine glands. In
a few cases there is an ab·
normality in the body cells
that makes it impossible for
them to use thyroid hormone
efficiently in metabolism .
These different causes often
require different kinds of
treatment.
It is usually true that a
person who really needs additional thyroid hormone will
continue to need it the rest
of his life. Failure to continue to take the medicine
the doctor prescnbes results
in a return of the original
problems.
:;;

·~

The simultaneous use of
tranquilizers and alcohol can
be dangerous. True, tranquil·
izers are sometimes used in
t rPating alcoholics , but they
are to be used in place of alcohol-not with!
!Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Please send your questions and
comments to Lawrence E. Lamb,
M.D., in core of this paper. While
Dr. Lomb cannot answer individual
letters, he will answer letters of
general interest in future columns.

W

debut in " 70 Girls 70" tho' she
was in another musical, "Stars
in Your Eyes," 32 years ago and
d idn't sing a syllable.
" Butter flies Are Free"
manager David Wyler adopted
a year-Old Korean girl named
Park Yung Rai to go with his
own two children and re-named
her Jennifer .... Leslie Uggams' 4
next recordings will be for
Dionne Warwick, who owns her
own record label, " Sonday" ....
Age of Vulgarity: Madison Ave.
haberdashery peddles dirty
cravats, decorated with explicit
Japanese and Victorian filth .
Playboy's producing a nude
" Macbeth " (MacBuff ?) ....
Jackie Kennedy's pet Italian
designer Valentina bought
himself a pet schnauzer for a
mere $750 (cheaper than some
of his threads ) at Le Chien,
First Ave. &amp; 76th.

By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D .

•'
,·

~:

/ '!.•,
'

• QJ1097

FACTS

'\~Y$TEM

(

• 73

WORLD ALMANAC

'"c5ENtDf2tTy

I

.A743

~

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1-\0~E.

1

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I
I

By Helen Bottel

r------------------------------------------

. and Sti II Champion

February 11 - 12 - 13
Thursday - Friday - Saturday

MILLER &amp; SONS
LOCATED AT CROSSROADS

Junction 124 and ~ounty Road No.5

Phon'9

99~-3213

LETTUCE CRISPER
(Retail value 98c)
FOR ONLY

5¢

with a $3.00 purchase
of Ashland gasoline
ExclusiYe container design eOectiYely
freshens and preserYes Lettuce and
Leafy Vegetables.

HURRY! HURRYI LIMITED TIME TO
ENJOY THIS VERY SPECIAL OFFERI

�,;@J;;~N~~(~[d~eilltmx•j;~~t~~i'ii[:,~j~,:~ot~·;:· .:J:m:f:;;
Feb. 11, 1971
;;}[{tt~f':!:~~1

lt

the Sports Desk

i Waverly Back In
;·Iii!~

by ·che( Tannehill

Times are so unsettled little more apparently is believed
anymore than the hard, cold statistics of sporting events. The
shooting average, total points, the rebound count of a Willis Reed
or a Wilt Chamberlain is accepted truth. But nothing coming out
of Washington seems to escape discounting.
The most shocking example is a recent poll taken of a large
and scientifically sound sample of the general population on the
question, "Do you believe American ground troops are participating in the offensive in Laos?"
In spite of the plain statements of the President, Defense
Chief Laird, even Mr. Fullbright himseH that no U. S. ground
forces are involved in the operation, nearly 50 per cent of the
American public believe our troops are fighting in Laos !
Which suggests the fellows in Washington - of all stations,
treeds and stripes -had better put on a shift in priorities. Topping the list now should be a drive to regain credibility. It's
frightening to contemplate where OW' country is heading if the
government of the people is not believeable.

•

THE SOUTHEASTERN Ohio League basketball standings,
leaders, records, etc., etc., usually published on Thursdays may
not make it this week. At this writing (Wednesday afternoon)
Tom Metters' weekly production usually has been received and
already composed by our computer printers, ready for Thursday.
As Bill Buckley, one of my favorite commentators would put
it, our Metters Tables may have been delayed by (1) The snow,
(2) An ailing Metters, (3) A breakdown in the newly reorganized
Postal Department.
Therefore today readers may, (1) See Metters Tables after
all, providing they arrived by first light Thursday, (2) Not see
Metters Tables because they didn't arrive at all, (3) Not see
Metters Tables because although they did arrive a computer
skipped a digit and failed thereby to get them set up in time for
today's paper.
WELLSTON, IN SIXTH PLACE of the SEOAL standings,
(victories over Gallipolis and Logan) comes into Rock Springs
tomorrow night for a second joust with the Marauders. It is the
next to the last league game for Meigs High this season before
entering Triple A tournament play.
Meigs, now !Hi in conference action and 9-S overall, tied for
fourth with Ironton, needs this one badly to retain a shot at a first
division finish. Saturday night the Marauders get non-league
Wahama, also at Rock Springs, then complete conference action
Feb. 19 with Athens coming here.
Ironton has what must be regarded as a breather at home
tonight against the Blue Devils, then goes to Jackson next Friday
night. Meigs and Ironton both should win tomorrow night and both
will be underdogs a week hence. So it would appear chances are
that's how they'll finish, at a dead heat in fourth place, both
owning a first division finish.
Meanwhile, Waverly, the SEOAL's odds-()n favorite to win the
championship, retook No.1 ranking this week among the state's
AA schools. Waverly is at Jackson tomorrow night where there
could be an upset. Don't expect to see that game unless you
already have tickets. It's a sellout as of today.

Cage Statistics

•
•

SVAC SCORING (TOP 10)
ALL GAMES
G-PLAYERSTEAM
FG FT PTS. AVG.
13 - Ciark, NG
118 68 304 23.4
16 - Caldwell, E
118 82 318 19.8
16 - Eichinger, E
125 57 307 19.1
13 - White, KC
97 45 239 18.4
15- Brown, KC
101 73 275 18.3
13 - Pelfrey, NG
85
45
215 16.7
15 - Swain, HT
95
48
238 15.8
15 - Daniels, HT
78 48 204 13.3
16 - Ehman, SW
67 66 200 12.5
14 - Wilford, S
65
42
172 12.2
SVAC ONLY
G- PLAYERS TEAM
FT FT PTS. AVG.
9- Ciark, NG
86
52 224 24.9
8- White, KC
62 32 156 19.5
9 - Brown, KC
67 39 173 19.2
9 - Pelfrey, NG
64 35 163 18.1
9 - Eichinger, E
66 25 157 17.4
9 - Caldwell, E
49 48 146 16.1
10 - Swain, HT
64
32 160 16
10 - Daniels, HT
53 38 144 14.4
10 - Cremeens, HT
60 18 138 13.8
10 - Ehman, SW
39 36 114 13.7

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
COLUMBUS (UPI)- ColumUnited Press International Ohio
high school Board of Coaches' bus Walnut Ridge, with only
ratings with first place votes former state champion Columand won-lost records in bus East standing in the way of
parentheses:
a perfedt season, remained No.
1 in the United Press InternaClass AAA
Team
Points tional Ohio high school Board
1. Columbus Walnut Ridge (10) of Coaches' ratings today for
241 the sixth straight week.
(16-0)
2. Boardman (6) ( 14-0)
220
The Scots, 16..() on the season,
3. Findlay (3) (16-0)
194
4. Dayton Dunbar (l) (13-1) 141 held a 241-220 lead over Board5. Steubenville (1) (13-1)
109 man, runnerup for the sixth
6. Columbus Eastmoor (13·2)85 consecutive time, and added to
7. Lakewood St. Edward (15·
1)
72 their lustre with a convincing
B. Oak Hills (4) (14-0)
67
9. Middletown ( 1) 03-2)
40
10. Cleveland East Tech (14-2)38
Second 10: 11. Cincinnati
Hughes 31; 12. Beavercreek 30;
13. Celina 29; 14. Zanesville 28;
15. Cincinnati St. Savier 27; 16.
Cleveland St. Ignatius ( l) and
Princelon 22 each; 18. Hamilton
Tafl 17; 19. Cincinnati Purcell
By United Press International
16; 20. Canton McKinley and
Mansfield Senior 14 each.
The Utah Stars played a key
Others with eight or more
points: Warren Howland and game without the services of
their leading scorer and rebounColumbus Hartley 9 each.
der Wednesday night-and virtually chased the Kentucky
Class AA
Team
Points Colonels off the Salt Lake City
1. Waverly (10) (13-1)
202 court.
2. Columbus Ready (6) ( 14·
Zelmo Beaty was sidelined
1)
188
3. Youngstown Liberty (3) (15· with a leg injury suffered last
0)
130 Friday night but the Stars hit
4. (lie) Delphos St. John (2) on 59.4 per cent of their field
(13-2)
129
goal tries and held a 62-58
(lie) Canton Lehman (2) (15·
1)
129 rebounding lead as they wal6. Lima Central Catholic (2) loped the Colonels, 149-127. The
( 14-1}
111
7. Wellsville (3) (14-0)
110 victory enabled the Stars to
8. Southeastern (Ross) ( 18-0) 76 retain their P12-game lead over
9. Licking Valley (14-1)
59 Indiana
in the American
10. Napoleon (1) (15-0)
54 Basketball Association's West
Second 10: 11 . Steubenville
Cenlral (1) 42; 12. Wynford (1) Division.
33; 13. Federal Hocking 30; 14.
Merv Jackson hit on 16 of 22
Lexington 28; 15. Rossford 27; from the field and scored 40
16. Garaway 25; 17. Elyria
Catholic 23; 18. Dayton Jef. points for Utah while George
ferson 20; 19. Lima Bath 19; 20. Stone, starting for the first
Bellefontaine 17.
time this season, made 13 of 18
Others with eight or more
points: Garrelsville Garfield, from the field and tallied 29
Akron St. Vincent and Granville points. The 149 points set a
16 each; Castalia Margaretta
and Delta 15; Youngstown
North 13; Claymont 11; Akron
South 10; Poland, Buckeye
Valley, Shadyside, Tipp City
and Lorain Clearview 8 each.

82-61 victory over sixth-ranked
Columbus Eastmoor Tuesday
night.
Both of the leaders in las:
week's Class AA and• A ratings
lost over the weekend, but only
one of them was tumbled from
its No. 1 post.
Columbus Bishop Ready,
which went down 64-59 to Columbus Bishop Hartley Friday
night, was replaced by Waverly,
which held the Class AA lead the
first three weeks of the voting.

Utah Romps, Retains

Lead Over Indiana Five

Class A

Ready fell to second.
In Class A, Fort Loramie was
a 64-63 upset victim of Russia,
but saw its lead over second
place Sidney Lehman slip only
slightly.
The first three times in the
Class AAA standings remained
identical for the first six weeks
of the poll, with Findlay's unbeaten Trojans (16-0) in their
familiar third place spot.
Dayton Dunbar remained in
fourth, Steubenville, despite a
58-57 loss to Steubenville Central, remained fifth, followed by
Eastmoor, Lakewood St. Ed-

CLEVELAND (UPI) Because of the Cleveland
Indians, baseball and football
fans this year will pay $1
more to park at the Municipal
Stadium.
Tbe Board of Control voted
Wednesday to double the fee
- from $1 to $2 - to com·
pensate for the low revenue
made off last season's Indians baseball games.
City officials estimated the
increase would bring in an
additional $50,000 a year.

single-game club record for the
Stars.
Mel Daniels scored 11 of
Indiana's final 16 points to
spark the Pacers to a 115-104
win over the Texas Chaps.
Daniels scored 24 points while
Gene Moore led the Chaps with
24.
Steve Jones scored 27 points,
Jim Jones 25 and Wilbert Jones
15 as the Memphis Pros
defeated the Denver Rockets
123-106 at Denver. The loss
snapped the Rockets' threegame winning streak. Julius
Keye led Denver with 19 points.
Larry Jones scored 27 points
and rookie Ron Nelson added 24
to lead the Floridians to a 115AWAIT CASH PRIZE
104 triumph over the Pittsburgh
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
Condors in the only other ABA
(UPI) - A top prize of $1,200
game. The win lifted the
awaited each winner today in a
Floridians out of the East
pair of 125-mile qualifying races
Division cellar. George Thompto determine who will start
son led the Condors with 24
behind A. J . Foyt and Bobby
points.
Isaac in Sunday's Daytl)na 500.
Foyt - selected as the
favorite by his fellow drivers has already nailed down the
inside pole position for the 500
with a speed of 182.744 miles per
hour in his 1971 Mercury at the
Daytona
International
Speedway. He will compete in
won only $12,053 and finished the first qualifying race today.
120th on the money zinning list.
So the youngster from Port
Arthur, Tex., turned to Byron
Nelson and the former star
worked on Marty's swing.
"I had gotten into some bad
habits," said Fleckman, "and I
wasn't consistent enough off the
tee. Now I'm thinking better
and my play seems to have
improved ."
Fleckman 's play in the
opening round of the Hope was
almost impeccable as he made
his way around the La Quinta
Country Club course Wednesday
in six under 33-33-66. Along the
way he bagged seven birds and
nary a bogey .
"I don 't recall ever shooting
a 66 on the tour before," said
Fleckman.
Palmer, putting better over
the fla t desert courses than he
did at Hawaii last week, also
played La Quinta, one of four
courses used in the 9()..hole
Hope classic. He used a new
center-shafted putter.
Palmer, who hasn't had a
tour victory since late 1969,
eagled two par five holes and
that seemed to perk him up a
bit. But he missed two putts of
three feet for bogeys and that
depressed him.
After Palmer and the other
four at 67, Ted Hayes, Ray
Floyd and George Hixon were
at four under 68, nine players
were at 69, 13 at 70 and 18 at
one under 71.
Indian Wells, Bermuda Dunes
and Tamarisk are the other
Hope courses. The format calls
for a round over each course
before the cut is made to the
A Full Line of
low 70 and ties for the windup
Hallmark
round on Sunday-at Bermuda
Valentines &amp; Wraps
Dunes, which this year is the
host course .

Fleck~nan

Team
Points
1. Fort Loramie (5) (17·1) 212
2. Sidney Lehman (7) (15.1) 167
3. Fori Recovery (2) (15-1) 152
4. Ridgedale (1) (13-2)
124
5 . Lorain Catholic (4) (14-1} 121
6. Continental (14-1)
120
7. Sebring (12-3)
96
8. Zane Trace (Guernsey (5)
(15-0)
82
9. Convoy Crestview (14-1) 80
10. Zanesville Rosecrans ( 1)
(13-)
55
Second 10: 11. New Athens 50;
12. East Canton (2) 39; 13. Indian Valley South 37; 14. Collins
Western Reserve ( 1) 28; 15.
New Madison (1) 27 ; 16. Oak·
wood (Paulding) 22; 17
Proctorville Fairland (1) 19; 18.
Zane Trace (Ross) 16; 19.
Mechanicsburg ( 1) Kent State,
Waren Consolidated and New
Knoxville 13 each .
Others with eight or more
poinls : Old Fort, Western Pike
and MI. Sterling The Plains 9
each ; Ayersville and Yorkville
8 each.

Top Spot
ward, Oak Hills, Middletown
and Cleveland East Tech. Canton McKinley, loser to Massillon, 70-66, dropped to 20th.
Waverly's margin over Ready
was 14 points, 202-188, and the
Tigers garnered 10 first place
votes to 6 for the Silver Knights
Ready's loss was a tough one
to take for Coach Pat Penn,
for it came with leading scorer
and playmaker Alan Walter
sitting on the bench following
surgery on his fractured cheek
bone.
Youngstown Liberty made the
biggest jump of any of the
teams th1s week, going from
eighth a week ago in AA to
third this week with 130 points.
Delphos St. John and Canton
Lehman, tied for fourth place,

Cold Weather Special!

ASS Standings
By United Press International
East
w. L. Pet. GB
AHL Standings
40 19 .678 ...
Virginia
By United Press International
Kentucky
33 28 .541 8
East W. L
26 32 .448 131/2
New York
. T. Pts.
27 34 .443 14
Carolina
21 21 8 50
Quebec
Floridians
26 38 .406 16lf2 Springfield
20 24 s 45
Pi llsburgh
25 37 .403 16112 Providence
43
17 22
West
Montreal
17
24 89 42
W. L. Pet. GB
West
Utah
39 19 .672 ...
SVAC STATS
SVAC STANDINGS
W. L. T. Pts.
Indiana
37 20 .649 11/2 Baltimore
TOP OFFENSIVE
SVAC ONLY
29
13 5 63
35 26 .574 51:2 Cleveland
TEAM
25 17 5 55
TEAMS
W L POP Memphis
22 37 .373 171!2 He shey
20 21 7 47
Eastern
SVAC ONLY
8 1 708 499 Denver
19 39 .328 20
G - TEAM
TP AVG. North Gallia
B 1 717 534 Texas
Rochester
18 25 7 43
Wednesday's Results
9 - NorthGallia
717.79.9 Southern
5 4 484 525
Wednesday's Results
708 78.6 Hannan Trace
5 5 668 689 Floridians 115 Pitts burgh 104
9 - Eastern
Cleveland 4 Quebec 2
Utah 149 Kentuc ky 127
604 67.1 Kyger Creek
9 - Kyger Creek
~ 7 604 613
Hershey 5 Montreal 1
Providence 3 Rochester 1
10 - Hannan Trace
668 66.8 Southwestern
0 10 436 757 Memphis 123 Denver 106
Indiana
115
Texas
104
9 - Southern
484 53.8 Tota ls
28 28 3617 3617
&lt;Only games scheduled)
(Only
games
scheduled)
10 - Southwestern
436 43.6
ALL GAMES
No Games Today
Thursday's
Games
TOP DEFENSIVE
W L POP
TEAM
NHL Standings
TEAMS
Eastern
13 3 1222 921 New York at Pittsburgh
By United Press lnternationa I
TP AVG. North Gallia
G - TEAM
10 3 986 793 Virginia al Floridians
East
(Only games scheduled)
499 55.4 Southern
9 - Easte rn
7 7 757 788
W. L. T. Pis.
525
58.3
9 - Southern
Hannan Trace
7 8 948 1005
Bos ton
38 8 7 83
9- North Gallia
534 59.6
Kyger Creek
2 13 960 1064
'NBA Standings
New
York
33 12 10 76
9 - Kyger Creek
613 68.1 Southwestern
0 16 704 1273 By United Press International
Montreal
25
17 11 61
10 - Hannan Trace
689 68.9
FRIDAY'S GAMES:
Atlantic Division
Toronlo
27
24
4 58
10 - Southwestern
757 75.7
North Gallia at Kyger Creek
W. L. Pet. GB Buffalo
14 30 10 38
Hannan, W. Va., at Southern
New York
40 23 .635 ...
Detroit
15 30 8 38
SATURDAY'S SCHEDULE: Philadelphia 37 25 .597 21/2 Vancouver
16 32 5 37
Southern at Eastern
Boslon
33 29 .532 61/2
West
The giraffe is the tallest Hannan Trace at Hannan, W. Buffalo
17 46 .270 23
W. L. T. Pts.
mammal.
Va.
Central Division
W, L. Pte. GB St.
Chi cago
36
78
Loui s
22 13
15 156 59
Baltimore
34. 25 .576 ...
Philadelphia
20 25 9 49
24 35 .407 10
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
18 24 13 49
Allan Ia
23 39 .371 12 1/2 Minnes
ota
18 24 12 48
Cleveland
11 53 .172 25 1/2 Los Angeles
16 25 11 43
Midwest Division
California
16 35 3 35
W. L. Pet. GB
Wednesday's Results
Milwaukee
48 11 .814 ...
Toronto 3 Chicago 2
IJ N IVERS AL
Delroit
37 22 .627 11
New York 4 Minnesota 3
Chicago
36 24 .600 12112 Pillsburgh 5 Philadelphia 3
Phoenix
36 25 .590 13
California 5 Buffalo 1
Pacific Division
Los Ange les 5 Detroit 2
W, L. Pet. GB
(Only games scheduled)
Los Ange les 36 22 .621 ...
Thursday's Games
San Franc isco 33 29 .532 5
Minnesota
at Montreal
Seattl e
26 35 .426 11 1:2 Bos ton at St. Louis
San Di ego
27 37 .422 12
(Only games scheduled)
Por tland
21 39 .350 16
Wednesday's Results
Buffalo 106 New York 99
Danes Earn More
Atlanla 114 Boston 102
COPENHAGEN
(UPI)
San Franc isco 133 Seattle 122
1
Economic experts count on an
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
eight per cent increase in
Los Angeles at Milwaukee
average earnings for Danes in
San Francisco at San Diego
1971. The increase in prices is
Cincinnati a I Seattle
&lt;Only gam es schuled)
estimated at five per cent.
Super Hush (r) .Model 8000. One of the two best disposers
made Theonlyonebetter Im pe rial Hush. FEATUR ES See Us
Exclus ive patented Hush Cushion Mount. Thick Silicon
Sweet Taste of Success
Sound Sponge. Hardened turbme-qua lity stainless steel
swive l impelle rs anchored to a dyna mi cally balanced
BACOLOD CITY, Philippines
turntable. Surgical Steel under c utter blade cuts fibres
( UPI) - Sug ar production
short. Lifetime Gr ind Size Control.
reached a record of 2,110,000
STAINLESS STEEL where it counts .
short tons for the crop year 1969Turntable Sink F la nge Impelle r Rivet s
Impell e rs Sink Closure . Underc utter Blade
70, the Sugar Quota Adminis tration announced. The
crop topped the 1963-64
production of 1,855,084 short
tons. Predictions for the next
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
crop year are for 2,300,000 short
Middleport
992-17M
tons of sugar.

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In H ope Classic
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UPI)- Marty Fleckman has
few illusions but a lot of hope.
As play goes into the second
round of the $140,000 Bob Hope
Desert Classic today, Fleckman, 26, is the leader by a
stroke over Arnold Palmer,
Robert Bernardini, Bill Brask,
Joe Carr and Larry Wood .
Fleckman burst into the pro
secene in late 1967 by winning
the Cajun Classic, hortly after
he had starred on the Walker
Cup team and had led the U.S.
Open for two rounds.
"I was riding pretty high
then," Fleckman recalled, "but
I knew I had to plug along if I
expected to win any money as
a pro."
But the harder he played the
worse his came became. He hit
the bottom last year when he

rounded out the top five.
Lima Central Catholic, Wellsville, Southeastern (Ross), Licking Valley and Napoleon round
out the top ten as for the second
straight week, no newcomes
were aboe to crack the list.
Fort Recovery's margin over
Sidney Lehman slid from 67 a
week ago to 45 this week, 212167. Fort Recovery, jumping up
a notch, also got into contenl!on with 152 points and third
place.
The remainder of the Class A
top 10 consisted of Ridgedale,
Lorain Catholic, Continental, Sebring, Zane Trace (Guernsey),
Convoy Crestview and Zanesville Rosecrans.
Zane Trace, with a 15-0 mark,
is the only perfect record team
in the top ten Class A and
could be the only small division
school in the state yet to suffer
a loss. The Warriors have a
tough task Friday, however,
visiting lOth ranked Rosecrans.

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�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 11, 1971

Appaloosa Horses Get Tentative OK
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The August. Three nights of stanOhio Racing Commission has dard-bred racing are also
given tentative approval to a scheduled for the Warren fair.
plan for the racing of Appaloosa The commission's formal
horses in Ohio.
The proposal is for Appaloosas to compete in from one
to four pari-mutuel events
during the three days of quarter
horse racing at the Trumbull
County Fair at Warren in

Skorich

Adds Two
Helpers

Gifts by

has everybod)'
on its gift list
-l\oMUNOA:Bordered in:
Gold Filled ... $8.95
Stainless Steel ... $6.50

Petti Point

approval of the racing program West from stock of Spanish
awaits the filing of an ap- origin.
plication for a permit. Ap- They have a mottled skin and
paloosas were developed in the a patch of white hair over the
rump and loins.
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Hiram 70 Denison 67
Bluffton 85 Malone 67
Wooster 71 Marietta 65
Urbana 109 Walsh 106 (otl
Capital 114 Rio Grande 79
Xavier 104 Cleveland State 75
Ashland 75 Gannon ( Pa. ) 53
Steubenville 92 St. Vincent
(Pa.J 68
Marshall 88 Toledo 66
Oberlin 97 Mt. Union 91
Eastern Michigan 81 Wit·
tenberg 59

CLEVELAND (UPI) -Cleveland Browns head coach Nick
Skorich has added two veterans
to his coaching staff in hopes of
College Basketba II Results
By United Press International
strengthening the team's ofEast
fense and defense.
LaSalle 92 Canisius 55
Skorich said Ray Prochaska, Syracuse 57 Army 46
who guided the Los Angeles Duquesne 85 Providence 80
Rams' offense last year, will Navy 65 Va. Military 47
Marshall 88 Toledo 66
take over offensive line coach- St. Bona 64 LIU 60
ing duties here and will help St. Peter's 87 Manhattan 85
coordinate the team's running Conn 94 Colgate 76
Temple 61 Penn St 58
attack.
Pitt 62 Westminister (Pa.J 41
Prochaska has 24 seasons of
South
coaching experience. He was a
78 Maryland 63
member of the St. Louis Card- Virginia
Duke 83 Wake Forest 78
inals staff 1958-1965, then joined S Carolina 70 Davidson 62
the Rams in 1966 as offensive LSU 86 Florida 74
Tenn St 95 Kentucky St 94
line coach.
Miss 94 Vanderbilt 88
Skorich said Richard "Richie" McCabe, an assistant coach
Midwest
with the Oakland Raiders last E Mich 81 Wittenberg 59
Steubenville 92 St. Vincent 68
season, will take over defensive Oberlin 97 Mt Union 91
backfield coaching duties under
Southwest
the overall defensive tutelage of
Pan American 76 Middle Tenn
Howard Brinker.
75
McCabe played for the PittsWest
burgh Steelers, Washington
Mines 93 Regis 91
Redskins and Buffalo Bills, then Colo
Denver 58 Air Force 52
turned to coaching at Carnegie
Tech in 1964.
He joined the Buffalo coaching staff in 1966, then went to
Scouting's main purpose is
Oakland in 1969.
development,
"Both have fine football character
minds and will strengthen our citizenship training, and mental
and physical fitness for all boys.
staff," Skorich said.

Drawings Held
For Tournament
watchband ... that
looks like leather and
feels like leather. just what his
watch is waiting for. Adorna® ...
the new ladies watchband that's
beautiful enough to double as a
bracelet. Speidel is the quality
metal watchband most people
wear. And give.

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Court St.

Pomeroy

Southwestern will meet host
North Gallia and Kyger Creek
tangles with Hannan Trace in
the 47th Annual Gallia County
Cage Tournament slated Feb.
19 and 20 at North Gallia.
This was determined Wednesday afternoon during a
tournament drawing conducted
at the office of Gallia County
School Superintendent Clarence
E. Thompson.
Drawings were conducted by
Dennis Murdock of Hannan
Trace; Dave Campbell, North
Gallia; Comer Bradbury of
Kyger Creek and Uoyd L.
Myers, principal at South-

Round the
clock service
Deposit checks or
cash in our

24 HOUR DEPOSITORY

SAFE AND
CONVENIENT

western.
The event will begin at 7 p.m.
Feb. 19. The consolation game
and championship will be
played on Saturday, Feb. 20.
Trophies will be presented to
the first two teams. The third
place club will receive the
tournament ball donated by Bob
Saunders Quaker State Service
Center.
An all tournament team will
be chosen by three anonymous
observers. Cliff Wilson, North
Gallia principal, will serve as
tournament director.
Referees will be Dick Hyland,
Lowell Shope, George Heller,
Gary Duzan, Gary Douthat,
Ron Chapman, Gary Goodman
and Pat Bennett, all members
of the Portsmouth Chapter.
Admission will be 50 cents for
students and $1 for adults.
North Gallia is the 1969-70
defending champion.

Neumann
Gets 461n
Victory
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Mississippi hasn't been winning too often lately but the
Rebels like to make it sting
when they do.
Sophomore Johnny Neumann,
the nation's leading scorer with
a 43.1 average, poured in 46
points Wednesday night to
power Ole Miss to a 94-88 upset
of Vanderbilt.
The victory was only the third
in the last 14 games for the
Rebels but it virtually wiped out
Vanderbilt's chances for catching Kentucky in the
Southeastern Conference race
and dimmed the Commodores'
hopes for a National Invitation
Tournament bid next month.
Three of the nation's top 20
teams were in action Wednesday night and all won. South
Carolina (No. 9) held off
Davidson 7~2, Duquesne (No.
13) downed Providence 85-80
and LaSalle (No. 15) routed
Canisius 92-55.
Small College Battle
In a battle of small college
powerhouses, Termessee State,
the No. 4 small college, upset
top-ranked Kentucky State 9594.
John Roche and Kevin Joyce
converted 12 free throws in the
last five minutes to help South
Carolina beat Davidson. Davidson trinuned the lead to ~0
with 3:37 remaining in the game
but Joyce, who finished with 14
points, tossed in four foul shots
and Roche, who had 22, dropped
in two to pull the Gamecocks
ahead .
Garry Nelson scored 25 points
and Jarrett Durham added 20 as
Duquesne pulled away in the
last two minutes to defeat
Providence.
Bobby Fields scored 27 points
and Ken Durrett, who sat out
much of the game with a knee
injury, had 15 as LaSalle ripped
Canisius.
Uoyd Neal's short jump shot
with 17 seconds left gave
Tennessee State its upset of
Kentucky State. Ted McClain
had 24 points to lead Tennessee
State while Travis Grant had 38
and Elmore Smith 23 for
Kentucky State. Both teams are
now 17-2. ·
Elsewhere, St. Bonaventure
edged Long Island University
~0, Duke beat Wake Forest
83-78, Virginia downed Maryland 78-63, Louisiana State
defeated
Florida
86-74,
Syracuse beat Army 57-46,
Marshall ripped Toledo 83-66,
Temple nipped Penn State 61-58
and Denver stopped Air Force

Topper Begins Work on Budget
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Jerry Wolman, who was forced
to sell the Philadelphia Eagles last May because of financial
difficulties, says he was "treated more than fairly" by the
National Football League.
Wolman told newsmen after testifying beofre a federal
grand jury here Wednesday he does not believe the NFL Is
guilty of violating anti-trust laws.
'lbe grand jury, which has been taking testimony from
players and officials of the league off and on since last
November recessed its bearings after Wolman's appearance
until next month.

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Jay 0.
Tepper, 33, was appointed state
budget director Wednesday and
inunediately instructed to get to
work on a budget to be
presented to the General
Assembly March 15.
Tepper has been budget
director of Nassau County, New
York, for the past three years.
Nassau County, with a
population of 1.5 million per-

Crusaders Make Rio
16th Victim 114-79
Bob Arnold recorded 21 points
as fired up Capital won its sixth
straight of the season in a 114-79
romp over Rio Grande in
Columbus Wednesday night.
The Crusaders, now 16-2,
raced to a quick 13-0 lead and
paced themselves to a 54-35
intermission advantage. Six
Capital players were in double
figures and all but one of the 12
varsity players were able to
score.
Capital held a 41-point spread,
106-65. with 3:56left when all of

Cap's reserves went in.
Tony Bass scored 24 points to
pace the Redmen, now B-15.
The Redmen will attempt to
snap a six-game losing streak at
the expense of KIAC leader
Union at the Paul R. Lyne
Center in Rio Grande Saturday
night.
At Huntington Wednesday
night, the Rio Grande Frosh
suffered an 82-69 setback at the
hands of the Marshall Frosh.
Mike Bates and Calvin Car-

Assassination
Controversy to
. ~e

Explored

An
Abraham
Lincoln
television special in observance
of his birthday anniversary will
be broadcast at 7:30 p. m.
Friday night.
Emphasis of the special will
be on details of President
Lincoln's assassination and the
controversy among Lincoln
scholars on exactly what
happened and the motives of
John Wilkes Booth 3 t the Ford
Theater on the night of April14,
1865.
The
special,
entitled,
"They've Killed President
Lincoln," which should appeal
to both young and old, will
explore this controversy in
depth, pinpointing the facts
which support various sides in
the continuing dispute.
Among the topic areas to be
discussed in the special will be a
coded message found in an old
English military journal in 1961

58-52.
No Longer A Snap
WATERBURY, Conn. (UPI)
-The dictates of fashion have
Whisky Capital
just about done in what once
GLASGOW
(UPI)
which again kindled the conwas a barometer of the nation's
Distillers Co. Ltd. (DCL), the troversy over the role of Edwin
economy.
"Sales of snap fasteners for scotch whisky and gin group, is M. Stanton, Lincoln's Secretary
work clothing used to be a sure the biggest public company of War, and a letter written by
portent of business ups and registered in Scotland with a Mrs. Lincoln in which she
capital employed of 308 million assembled a circumstantial
downs," says Roger W. Hall,
pounds ($739.2 million) . The case against Andrew Johnson,
Scovill vice president and
United States is its largest Lincoln's vice president.
general manager of its Closure
overseas market.
division. "Larger - than - usual
orders were the first signs of a
Island Insurance
slump because many people,
HONG KONG (UPI)- There Kingdom, 54 from local
fearing the pinch, began to buy
practical jeans instead of are now 207 insurance com- businessmen and 32 from the
higher - cost fashion items. panies operating here, in- United States, according to
Conversely a drop in snap cluding 64 from the United official reports.
factories sales often was a
harbinger of better times
ahead."
However, according to Hall,
the popularity of Western look
and gaucho clothing, with their
metal trim, and with styled-up
snap fasteners now in common
use on sportswear and leisure
Ladies and
wear in general, the sales
curves of these closure devices
Mens
seem to have lost their
significance as business
prognosticators.

Union 5-5 in the OC and 10-7
overall.
In other games, Hiram got by
Denison 70-67; Bluffton whipped
Malone 85-67 ; Wooster downed
Marietta 71-65; Urbana outpointed Walsh 109-106; Capital
beat Rio Grande 114-79, and
Xavier swept past Cleveland
State 104-75.
Also As.lJland downed Gannon
(Pa.) 75-53, Steubenville
downed St. Vincent (Pa. ) 92-68;
Marshall swept over Toledo 8866; and Eastern Michigan beat
Wittenberg 81-59.
Foul Shots Win
Three free throws in the last
seconds pushed Hiram over
Denison. Andy Weiland scored
27 points for Denison while
Larry McCall was high for Hiram with 22.
Wittenberg absorbed its sixth
defeat against 12 wins as Eastern Michigan's senior center
Ken Mcintosh set a new season
scoring record with his 31
points. Larry Baker was high
for the visiting Tigers with 24
points.
Marshall forced Toledo into 20
turnover.s in the first half as the
ThU?dermg H~rd avenged an
earlier two-pomt loss. Toledo,
11-8, shot only 36.7 per cent from
the floor. Tom Kozelko tallied 15
points for the Rockets.
Jim Garrigan tallied 26 points
to. le~d Steub~nville to its 12th
wm m 20 outmgs. Urbana got
past Walsh in an overtime peri~d as Mark Todd tallied 38
pomts.
Ashland recorded its 13th
straight win, leading all the way
to a 19-2 record. Rob Spivery
was high with 18 points.
Losing Streaks Ends
Xavier broke a seven-game
losing streak by handing Cleveland State its lOth straight loss.
Jerry Helmers paced the winning a ttack with 28 points.
Capital picked up its sixth
straight win. The Crusaders

Mason Area
News, Notes

michael paced the losers with 15
and 14 points. Marshall led 44-26
during the halftime intermission.
Box score of the varsity tilt:
RIO GRANDE - Bass 24,
Hairston 5, Bentley 6, Persin 2,
Williams 11, Lambert 15,
Jacobs 5, Bartram 6, Harris 5.
CAPITAL - Arnold 21, Kalb
10, Stump 14, Dafter 15, Weekley
20, Merrin 2, Jacobs 8, Dreeling
4, Longbreke 10, Gaskill 6, Lech
2, Johnston 2.

Oberlin Outlasts Mt. Union
United Press International
Vic Guerrieri has yet another
year to continue breaking Oberlin school records.
The 6-foot-2 junior guard from
Lorain scored 43 points Wednesday night, breaking the record
he set last year by one point, as
Oberlin beat Mt. Union 97-91.
Despite a 50-45 Mt. Union lead
at the half, Guerrieri led his
teanunates back into the thick
of things. With the score tied 91all with 2: 13 left, Oberlin made
goo~ on six foul shots for the
win.
.
It hasn't been a record-breaking year for the Yeomen, now 69 overall and 1-8 in the Ohio
Conference. The loss made Mt.

sons, is the largest suburban
flf
county in the United States.
State Finance Director
Harold Hovey said Tepper will
completely
review
all
procedures involved in the
development of the state budget
and will attempt to offer a
document "understandable to
the taxpayers."

now 16-2, held a 41-point spread,
106-65, with 3:56 left when all
the reserves were put in. Tony
Bass scored 24 for Rio and Bob
Arnold tallied 21 points for
Capital.
Wooster got win No. 20 of the
season against one loss after
regaining its composure. Marietta had opened with a 9-4l lead,
but Wooster went ahead 38-37 in
the second half and never trailed after that.
Tom Dinger scored 22 points
for Wooster, now 9-4l in the OC.
Gary Popplewell scored 16
points for Marietta, now 5-5.
John Brown popped in 28
points as Bluffton downed Malone in Mid-Ohio Conference action. Bluffton is now 5-3 in the
league to Malone's 1-8.

Mrs. Lester Zerkle, Mason,
spent ten days in Huntington
with her daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Reginald
Hart and infant.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McDermitt and son, Kenny, of
Carrollton, Ga., visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Williams at Clifton and with
other relatives.
Mrs. Rupert Rice, Mr. and
Mrs. Emil Hart and Lynn
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Billy E. Smith at Clifton.
Mrs. Kenny Ault of New
Albany, Ohio, has been visiting
her mother, Mrs. Willie.
Holland, at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel"'
visited recently with their
daughtersandfamilies,Mr.and
Mrs. Stanley Saunders and Mr.
and Mrs. James Lloyd in
Columbus.

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Washington's Birthday.

The Farmers Bank
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�5.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 11,1971
f}: ::
~:\/;~;/:'::: ~~~·
r

~;t:t

~

I

•
•

••

By United Press International
COLUMBUS -111E HOUSE INSURANCE COMMITTEE plans to draft some sort of "no-fault"
automobile insurance legislation for formal hearings when the General Assembly returns later this
month. "We are going to try to get a consensus and draft some type of bill to hold hearings on," said
~ep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura, chairman of the committee which held another in a series of
meetings on the insurance proposal Wednesday. "What will happen, I don't know," he continued.
"But I think we owe it to the people of Ohio to consider something on this order."
The ''no-fault" plan, now operating in Massachusetts, provides that a motorist's own insurance
company pays for his losses regardless of whether he is to blame for the accident. Proponents say it
would speed payments by eliminating lengthy claims investigations and court action. Opponents
charge it would also eliminate responsib~ty by drivers: At~orneys, w~ose work would be reduced by
the plan, claim it has some side effects which pose conshtutlonal questions.
One such attorney, Rep. Richard G. Reichel, R-Massillon told the Insurance Committee of which
he is a member that ''no-fault" would not reduce premiums and was nothing more than ''automobile
welfare." He also complained it would unconstitutionally forbid him to sue for loss of consortium (his
spouse's affections) if his wife were injured in an auto accident.
CLEVELAND -AMERICANS COULD LEARN FROM Israel's example of "love of God, of
neighbor, of truth and peace," Sen. EdmundS. Muskie, D-Me., who recently completed a five-&lt;iay
trip to the Mideast says. Muskie said Wednesday night he found a sense of sharing for the common
good in the Jewish homeland.
"The people of Israel share a comn;on purpose- to build a whole society where every person has
the opportunity to grow, to become all that he or she is capable of being," Muskie said at a
·
· dinner
·
here for philanthr opiS
· t LeonardRat ner on th e occaswn
· of h IS
' 75th b'rr thday. No
test1momal
matter what their origins or their beliefs, they respect each other, they care about each other- and
, M ki
'd
us e sal ·
we should too,
~e presidential aspirant said ~ericans se_em to have lo,~t the~ s~?se ~f _directio~ and are
suspiCIOUS and fearful of each other. We know this need not be, he said. To VISit IsraeliS to know
this need not be."
.
AKRON, OHIO- POLICE D~ED A ~E dynamite bomb found on the porch of the
home of Akron Beacon-Journal publisher Ben Mrudenburg Wednesday, more than seven months
after the news executive's home garage was bombed. Mrs. Maiden burg discovered the device lying
on the porch when she returned home in the afternoon and immediately called police. The bomb
consisted of four and one-half sticks of dynamite wired to a clock.
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT NIXON HAS NAMED .. Donald W. Whitehead as the federal cochairman of the Appalachian Regional Commission, a 13-state group with responsibility for
promoting economic and social development in impoverished regions of Appalachia. Whitehead, 41,
succeeds John B. Waters Jr., who resigned because of family business affairs.
Whitehead has served as general eounsel to the commission since last March and prior to this
practiced law in Boston. From 1963 to 1964 he was the assistant attorney general for Massachusetts.
WASHINGTON - DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CHAIRMAN Lawrence F. O'Brien says his
party's potential presidential candidates have agreed to campaign between now and 1972 against the
Nixon administration -not against each other. O'Brien said the major candidates, announced and
WJannounced, joined him and House Speaker Carl Albert and Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield at a secret dinner earlier this week.
They reached an agreement, he said, under which the contenders "will concentrate on emphasizing Democratic alternatives to the Nixon administration, and not against each other." Attending the meeting were Sens. George S. McGovern of South Dakota, Hubert H. Humphrey of
Minnesota, EdmundS. Muskie of Maine, Henry M. Jackson of Washington, Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts, Harold E. Hughes of Iowa and Fred R. Harris of Oklahoma. Sen. Birch D. Bayh of
Indiana was unable to make the meeting, O'Brien said, but he agreed earlier to the moratorium on
intraparty scraps.

News Notes

•

By Alma Marshall

enrollments for the fall quarter.
Several of the larger state
WJiversities have also reported
drops in freshman enrollment
but none are even close to Kent
State.
Ohio State University reported
a drop of about 20 per cent
while Miami University is down

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Kent
State University - where four
students were shot to death by
National Guardsmen and a
special grand jury said the
"permissiveness" of the administration contributed to the disturbance - has reported a 45
per cent decline in freshman

about 10 per cent. Both were
closed by spring disturbances.
However, Ohio University,
which was also closed, reports
an increase of 3 to 5 per cent
and Bowling Green State University, which remained open
and was free of disruption, said
freshman enrollment is up by
about 500 potential students.

M urd e r .L'velt Good
j

By KATHLEEN NEUMEYER
LOS/~.NGELES (UPI)--Susan
Atkins said Wednesday she felt
no remorse for killing Sharon
T~~e because it felt ~oo? .
It was death and hfe m one
~otion," the 22-year-old ~on~lcted murderess told the Jury
1
Tn tthLae penalty tp_halse "Iof fthle
a ed H Blancald na
't · t b t . ehtt
?f~t; dow cou t If nlo ~ .~Ig
1 I s one ou o ove.
The willowy brWJette said she
and other "Manson family"
women conceived the death plot
because they wanted to convince police to free "family"
member Robert Beausoleil, who
had been jailed for the earlier
slaying of musician Gary
Hinman.
Miss Atkins said it was she
who fatally stabbed Hinman.
She said she had once seen a
television movie where police
realized they had the wrong
man after eight more murders

weal &amp;wling
POMEROY LANES
TRI COUNTY LEAGUE
FEBRUARY 2, 1971
Pts.
Raw I i ngs Dodge
28
Mason Furniture
27
Davis-Warner Ins.
26
Eagles
17
H&amp;R Firestone
14
Holsum Sales Dept.
8
High
Team
Series
Rawlings Dodge 2689. High
team game - H&amp;R Firestone,
940.
Individual high series Junior Phelps 619 ; Individual
high game - Bob Hysell 234.
Season High series and game
- Paul Harris, 663 and 279.

BUSH IS U.N. ENVOY
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Senate has unanimously confirmed President Nixon's
nomination of George Bush as
U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations. Bush, a former
member of the House from
Texas, was defeated last year
as a GOP Senate candidate
from that state.

Mason County

on the grand jury report," said
a Kent State spokesman who
did not wish to be iden~ified.
John Millett, chancellor of the
State Board of Regents, said,
"I suppose there could be concern about the events of a year
ago" but said there may be
other factors involved.
Millett said in connection with
the grand jury report:
"It may well be some
parents under those circumstances simply would prefer to
have their sons and daughters
go elsewhere."
Millett also cited the general
condition of the economy as the
reason for the lag in admissions
at most colleges.

Ohio College Enrollment Down

••

Overnight Wire Dispatches

:·.· :··
~·= .
:-:-:

i

..

were comm1tted, so the "Manson family" decided to commit
"copycat" murders.
"I did it because I believed it
was the right thing to do," Miss
Atkins said.
"I would do anyth;ng to get
my brother out of jail, and I
still believe it was right."
"Did you feel remorse,
Susan?" defense attorney Paul
Fitzgerald asked.
"Remorse? Why would I feel
remorse about doing something
out of love?"
" Did you feel sorry?"
"Sorry for doing something
out of love? The only time I felt
remorse was when I lied," she
replied.
Miss Atkins said the only
motive for the seven savage
slayings "was to release my
brother from your system.
"My excuses, which I played
aroWJd with in my mind to
justify it were revolution, which
seemed like a good idea, and
another excu.,~ was Charlie. I
used Charlie Manson as an
excuse because I wanted
everyone to know about him."
She said Manson knew
nothing of the slayings.
"You could say I saturated
myself in acid," she said.

Revenue Sharing
Bill Introduced
WASHINGTON (UPI)
President Nixon's revenue
sharing plan was introduced in
the House Wednesday with 138
sponsors, mostly Republican.
The bill for sharing $5 billion
with the states and cities with
no strings attached was introduced formally in the Senate
Tuesday. Rep. Jackson Betts,
R.Ohio, a member of the House
Ways and Means Committee
which must pass on the bill, was
the principal House sponsor.

~l· SPRINGWEAR
'for

CHILDREN
ARRIVING DAILY
All the fashion news to
ntake ch ildren bloom in spring

GIRLS' SPRING DRESSES,
COATS, BLOUSES
BOYS' SUITS,
CRIB SETS

;~

w.M.1 uJUitM W6UI .

CALL 992-2057
Pickup &amp; Delivery

laundry &amp;
Dry Cleaning
Hebrew is the oldest living
language. It is also the only
one in the modern world to
retain an alphabet uniquely
its own.

Infant Thru Size 12

THE SHOE BOX

The KIDDIE SHOPPE

HOME LAUNDRY
2nd Ave.

A soft moe with
stacked heel.

easy-care

TOPCOATS RENEWED ·qt~
iJcY&lt;

Cincinnati, which was also
closed, also reported a "slight"
increase.
Waiting Longer
Kent State officials cite the
condition of the economy and
say potential students are waiting longer before they enroll.
"Since enrollments last fall
and this quarter showed slight
increases we do not attribute
the decline in admissions to the
events of last May," said Rex
Simonds, Kent State admissions
director.
"While they may have had
some influence we feel the
problem can be traced more
directly to the national economy along with moWJting college
costs ... ," said Simonds.
Simonds refused to discuss
the grand jury report which also blamed the "overindulgence"
of the administration as a
major contributing factor to the
spring disturbances.
Perhaps Other Factors
"I cannot draw conclusions

Middleport

Where Shoes are sensibly
priced.

MIDDLEPORT

ON THE "T"

Middleport

i

I

i.

•

Bill Hockenberry, pharmacist with Cohen Drug, spoke on use
and misuse of drugs when the New Haven Rotary met Thursday
evening at Hartford United Methodist Church.
VISitors were Gene Riggs of Middleport Rotary and two
Wahama High School youths of Interact, Randy Roush and
Ronnie Zerkle, both of New Haven.
Jim Roush was appointed to represent the Rotary Club at the
citizens meeting on school affairs which is being organized. The
nominating committee is composed of Joann Sommer of
Southside, John Hoffman and Donald Roush, both of New Haven,
Herschel Shank of Ashton, and William Strickland of Pt.
Pleasant.
The guest speaker at Rotary tonight will be Ted Stevens,
president of the Mason County Board of Education.
DON'T FORGET TO FEED the birds - they are hungry I've been feeding blue jays, orioles, sparrows, snow birds, as
many as 50 at one time, in my back yard. It is a beautiful picture.
We put an ear of corn on a coat hanger (laced the wire
through the cob), and even this disappeared (the corn that is).
Cracked hickory nuts also disappeared.
The love peanut butter on bread, and just plain bread. In fact,
I believe, they'll eat most anything they are so hungry.
HARTFORD'S UNITED METHODIST CHURCH has
weathered many a storm during its 100-year existence, but more
was to come.
During the recent storm, a corner of the roof blew off, and
then came the rains. Plastic was used to cover the carpeting in the
church to prevent it from becoming damaged.
Well, water covered the plastic and workers Ed Kell and Emil
Knight palled the water from the plastic several times. But even
with all the work, there is water damage to the ceiling and
plaster.
After the water damage, then came the snow and more
damage.
The Rev. Mrs. Bernice Winkler is pastor of the church. Emil
Knight, one of the workers, was taken to the Holzer Medical
Center on Monday evening by ambulance apparently suffering
from a heart attack.

Mister Bubble
BUBBLE BATH
52C value

33¢
Famous AVOS
Reducing Candy

in Assorted flavors
Reg. $3.50
Super Savings priced at

WESTCLOX
ALARM CLOCK

89¢

Reg.
1.69

Reg.$3.50
/

FABERGE
SPRAY COLOGNE

Ivory Case, Luminous D•al
$3.49
Super Sav1 ngs
priced at

Now

$2 50

$199

~·I

I

FOI.I)ti'o:C SYRINGE

Faultless Spectra Feminine
Syringe

$279

$4 79 value
-save another
dollar with coupon
available 1n your Super Savings Store

plus MORE FebRUARY supER sAviNGS

I'm only going to take
If you don't know how to
roles that will bring accept· lose, you don't deserve to
ance of the Indian. There's wm
no room for any kind of bad - Sen. Edward Ke1111edy. Dwill. We're all human being!'
Mass., on his defeat for
on this earth.
assistant ma]orzty Leader
-Chief Dan Gem·ge who
by Sen. Robnl C Burri.
stars zu "Little Ri!J Mrw"
D-W. Va .
with Dustin llof[man

L . Sl ei11 fr•ld

a g~'f

foR vALENTiNE
• •
GIVING

Timely Quotes

.Je.~.H·

7oz.

lO's

THE REV. BUD HATFIELD of Gallipolis Ferry is holding
revival services at the Association of Christian Brethren Church
in Mason (former EUB Church) each evening at 7:30. Everyone is
welcome.

The mother who smoke~
subjects the unborn ehild to
the adverse effects of tobacco and as a result we arc
losing babies and poss1hl~
handicapping babies.
- l! S. Slti'!Jc'oll r;r'llr•rol

Gillette RIGHT GUARD
reg. $1.59

SIUDENTS ON THE DEAN'S LIST at Marshall University
are Becky Burris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Burris, Cinda
Foglesong, daughter of Donald Foglesong and the late Ellen
Foglesong, both with a 4 point average; Cheryl Burns, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George Burns, 3.84, and Rebecca Roush, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush, 3.13.
The above students are all freshmen and graduates of
Wahama High School.
Mike Harbour, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Harbour, a senior
at Marshall, had a 3.17 average.

•

$2 29

CEPACOL LlQUID
14 oz Reg. S 1.29
CEPACOL LOZENGES
24, Reg. 69~

KLEENEX
.. ...... . .

NEO SYNEPHRINE
$1.06 value

lwmg.

1U uZ. VC' liAIR SPRAY
11egular or Hard-to-Hold, $1.50 value

u,,,

(I

militmzt.

36 CONGESPIRIN TABLETS
79C value
10 CONTAC TABLETS
reg. $1.69

200 Box

S ./.,ill

reg. 69C

CLAIROL INSTANT CONDITIONER$1
Professoonal Jar. $1.87 value
o

1 hope your I i v e s are
worth more than sabotage
No prmciple IS worth the
sacriftce of a single human
f)tl/llel Ht•rrir/1111 ,
Tllt'S!itt!l" to
\\!t•al/11'1111('11

79¢
44¢
25
29¢
92¢
89¢

COLGATE TOOTH BRUSH

PH ISO HEX
$1 60 5·oz size . . ..... .

11• 0 •

SCHICK BAND BLADES
$1.00 value
WILKINSON BLADES
89C value •

23¢
57¢
89¢
69¢
59¢
39¢

Quality prescrip·
tion service and
savings go hand·
in -hand at your
Family lndependent Pharmacy. Rely on us to
fill your doctor's prescriptions
accurately, promptly with the
best quality, freshest pharma·
ceuticals.

~

VALENTINE'S DAY IS SUNDAY,
FEB. 14TH

A RED

FOIL HEARTS ouorted chocolates , , 51/2
'

8 RED FOIL

•

0

0

0

0

•

0

••••

oz. $1.00

1 lb. $2.45

HEARTS chocolotes ond butter bons

. . . • • . . . . 13/. lbs. $4 15

CASSORTED

CHOCOLATES • . . . • . . • 1 lb. box $f.95
•

0

'

•

'

2 lb nov $3.85

DUTTON DRUGS
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�_ . .-- ---------- -1 Three Attended

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 11, 1971

Community
Corner By

Class Meeting

Charlene Hoeflich

\

The patient-adoption program of the Lakin State Hospital is
an effective one giving the people there that vital link with
society.
For the past year the Enterprise United Methodist Church
Women's Society of Christian Service has participated in the
program. Their adopted patient is Mrs. Donna Darby, a native of
Athens ColUlty.
Mrs. Darby will observe her 54th birthday Monday and on
Sunday will be the guest of the Enterprise women for a potluck
dinner party at the home of Mrs. Eldon Weeks. A birthday cake
will be served and gifts will be presented to Mrs. Darby.
To make it even a nicer occasion, the Society has planned a
card shower. Perhaps you'd like to join them by sending a card to
Mrs. Darby at the Lakin State Hospital.
SPEAKING OF BIRTHDAYS, our belated best wishes to
Wesley Belles of East Letart. He was 96 Monday.
His daughter, Ferne B. Hayman, with whom he makes his
home had a dinner party and then served cake and ice cream in
the evening. Stopping here enroute to Florida especially to be with
Mr. Belles on his birthday were cousins of Mrs. Hayman, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Hepler of Wampum, Pa. The couple fought snow all
the way, but made it to East Letart about 4 just in time for the
dinner. JlUle Wickersham and sons, the fourth generation, were
also on hand for the celebration.
MRS. GLADYS MOWREY received a welcome call from her

three grandchildren in Monrovia, Calif., Tuesday night telling her
that they were alright. Monrovia, about an hour's drive from Los
Angeles, got some of the earthquake tremors. The children told
their grandmother that they were awakened about 6 a.m. by the
shaking of the house. They said it lasted about a minute, and there
was no damage .
COMMUNICATIONS SPECIALIST Rodney C. Karr with the
U. S. Navy is now in Tokyo and from there will go to Taiwan,
Okinawa and Thailand aboard the U. S. S. Iwo Jima. He has a
year and a half of his four year enlistment remaining.
Rodney's address if you'd like to send a note is R. M. 2 R. C.
Karr, B-435305, C.R. Division, U.S.S. Iwo Jima (LPH-2); FPO San
Francisco, Calif. 96601.
MARY RADFORD was "capped" by her Big Sister in a candlelight ceremony last month at the Riverside Methodist
Hospital. She is a freshman student in the School of Nursing there.
Mary is convinced that the best preparation for nurses
training is candystriper work. She's found that her work at
Veterans Memorial was really invaluable, and perhaps the very
thing that influenced her in her career decision. Incidentally,
\iary turned 19last Thursday. Her mother surprised her with a
visit taking along, cake, ice cream and soft drinks for a party.

Social
Calendar

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.
m. Monday night at the Middleport Elementary School;
Founders' Day, recognition of
past presidents; 3rd and 4th
grade students in musical
salute to the PTA; a film, "Who
Says You Can't." Preceding at 6
p. m. in the junior high
cafeteria, past presidents and
their husbands and wives
honored at a buffet supper.

I

THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m. Thursday, preceded by
Mass and Rosary at 7:15 p.m.
Hostesses, Mrs. Phyllis Hennesy, Mrs. Janet Duffy, Sandy
Korn, Mrs. Peg Rudolph, Mrs.
Barbara Mullen.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.;
work in EA degree.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, 6 p.m. Thursday at
the hall ; conference contest
rules to be distributed; conference is April 25 at
Wilkesville, District 8.
MEIGS CHAPTER, DAV 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
Church, 1 p.m. Thursday to
prepare trays for shut-ins; 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.
PHILATHEA
SOCIETY,
Middleport Church of Christ,
7:30 Thursday at the church
instead of at the home of Mrs.
Alfred Roush as previously
announceu.
LEGION
AMERICAN
Auxiliary juniors, Racine unit
602, valentine party, 7 p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs. 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.
SOUP SUPPER, Southern
High School beginning 4:30p.m .
preceding Hannan, W. Va.Southern High baske tball
game; sponsored by band
boosters.
SATURDAY
JITNEY SUPPER, Saturday,
4:30 to 7 p.m. at Eastern High
School sponsored by band
boosters.
SuNDAY
YOUTH REVIVAL, Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene, Friday
through Sunday, 7:30 each
evening, Rev . 0 . G. McKinney
speaking. Special music.

Returns to Capital

POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Pomeroy Elementary
School;
Founder's
Day,
recognition of past presidents;
program to feature a talk by
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, art
instructor, Meigs High School.
JOF CLASS, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, 7:30 Monday
night at the church; Mrs. Leona
Smith, Mrs. Marie Chapman,
hostesses.
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, 7:30 Monday
night at the home of Mrs. Eileen
Searles, Minersville.

SYRACUSE - The 23rd
Psalm was read by President
Frankie Mumaw opening the
meeting of the Star Class of the
First United Presbyterian
SlUlday School on Jan. 26,
followed by prayer. The
members answered roll call
with a New Year's resolution .
Minutes of the last meeting
were read and treasurer's
report given and accepted.
Dues of $4 were paid and $8.20
was received from a sale of
cards. The meeting date was
changed from the fourth
Tuesday to the third Tuesday of
each month at 1:30 p.m.
A rolUld-robin card was sent
to Mrs. Daisy Roush, a member
confined at home by illness.
Readings as follows were
given for the program, A New
Life for the New Year, by
Rachel McBride; A New Year's
Meditation, Susie Fischer, and
The New Year by Frankie
Mumaw. The February roll call
word will be "Heart." Mrs.
Fischer, the hostess, served
refreshments.

Devotions Based
On Peale Article

Miss
Sabra
Canaday,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Canaday, Rutland, has
returned to Capital University
after spending 10 days here with
her parents.
Miss Canaday, a piano major
at Capital, will graduate in
May. She spent January in
Hawaii on a four-week interim
course in religion with emphasis on Buddism, Shintoism,
and Christianity. Miss Canaday
was one of 36 taking the trip to
Hawaii. They stayed at the
YMCA on the campus of the
University of Hawaii.

CANASTA PLAYED
Mrs. Myron Miller was
hostess for a meeting of the
Second Tuesday Canasta Club
at her home Tuesday night.
Prizes went to Mrs. David
Ohlinger, Mrs. William Slater,
and Mrs. William Morris. Mrs.
Don Lowery and Miss Hallie
Zerkle were guests and the
other players were Mrs. Louis
Sauer and Mrs. Paul Scott. Mrs.
Miller served sandwiches and
relishes from a table centered
with an arrangement of red and
yellow roses, a birthday gift to
her.

Council Told Lodge Insurance

FEBRUARY 14th

Will End on June 30 this Year
SYRACUSE - Guiding Star
Council No. 124, Daughters of
America Lodge met in regular
session in their hall Jan. 28 with
Councilor Janice Lawson
conducting the meeting in
ritualistic form.
The sick report listed Daisy
Roush about the same, Mabel
Winebrenner as usual, and
William Thuener home from
hospital.
An application for membership was received and
Eileen Clark, Kathryn Johnson
and Esther Harden were named
to an investigating committee.
State Councilor Mary Jane
Smith's letter was read, stating

VISITS MOTHER
Eugene Norris of Kingston
was the weekend guest of his
mother, Mrs. Alvin Norris,
Pomeroy.
MEETING CANCELLED
The February meeting of the
Third Tuesday Club of Pomeroy
has been cancelled, Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe announced today.

"How to Live with Pressure"
by Norman Vincent Peale was
read by Edison Baker for
devotions at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Hearthstone
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church held at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. David Darst.
Milton Hood had charge of the
meeting and distributed new
yearbooks. A letter was read
from Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Hughes who are spending the
winter at New Port Ritchie, Fla.
The Rev. Charles Simons had
prayer.
Refreshments were served by
the hosts to Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Anthony, Mr. and Mrs. Hood,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hubbard,
Mr. and Mrs. John Werner,
Baker and the Rev. Mr. Simons.
Mr. and Mrs. John McNeil of
Marietta will be hosts for the
April meeting at the church.

•• • • • • riJ ,....,)

.·.... ·........·

that Esther Ridenour of the
Chester Council had been appointed as District 13 Council
Deputy. Pamphlets were
distributed concerning the
present condition of the Benefit
Department. Myrtle H. Norden,
national councilor, stated that
unless some plan can be found
to prevent it, the Benefit
Department will dissolve on
June 30, 1971. All beneficial
members will be covered by the
insurance until June 30, if their
dues are paid to that time.
Councilor Mrs. Lawson
named these upcoming janitors,
in February, Esther Harden;
March, Myla Hudson, and
April, Ada Slack. The next
meeting will be Feb. 11 when a
valentine party will be held
following the meeting. Each
member is to bring a comic
valentine.
The birthdays of Edith Hood,
Wilma Davidson and Ada Slack
were observed, with refreshments being served to Eileen
Clark, Thelma Grueser, Edith
Hood, Esther Harden, Margaret
Cottrill, Jean Hall, Ada Slack,
Janice
Lawson,
Wilma
Davidson, Kathryn Johnson,
and Sadie Thuener.

: STEAL HER
:.
HEART
••••• WITH

..

&lt;!) ... ::::·

c.. 'f ·····

BY
FANNIE FARMER
ALSO

llillugr Jqurmary
"THE CREATOR OF
REASONA BLE DRUG PRICES"
271 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Fri., Fe~.12 thru Sat., Feb. 20th.
"
SEAMLESS NUDE

SO EASY TO KNIT OR CROCHET

677

•

~
HE~

NYLON PANTY HOSE

LOVELY AFGHAN KIT

GLAZE CONFINED
Homer Glaze, son of Mrs.
Grace Glaze of Middleport,
suffered a heart attack
Saturday and is confined to the
Community Hospital at Chula
Vista, Calif. His condition is
reported as critical.

...':?

ManagerS

~&amp;~

REG.
$8.47

......,

Assistant

. ..

SAVE
$1.70

'·: k::.·····

REG.
$1.00

KIT

Kit of enough I ooo;., 4 ply virgin wool
to make an afghan about 45"x60".

64~8.

Stretch nylon. Lovely colors. Small,
aver., tall, ex. tall. 5' to 5' 10"
(100 to 155 lbs.)

EASY TO MAKE
SOMETHING TO

CHERISH
•

•

FOR YEARS

_Wrap your love
in a "LoveBundle.'~M
And put a LoveBug
next to her heart.

This FTD Valentine's bouquet
comes with a lift·out corsage
cal led the LoveBug. She
wears it on Valentine's Day.
Order the LoveBundle early.
Delivered almost anywhere
in the country
·

OUII OWN

~ !ilk-nit'
OUI OWN

LASTING WEAR AND CO M FORT!

MEN'S UNDERWEAR

BOYS' JEANS
REG.

$3.98
SAVE
$1.24

''Wear me on

/Valentine's Day··

Committee Named
By Pomeroy Lions

'!j)~

z~A~

PERFECT
COMFORT

Ralph Graves, Karl Krautter
and Richard Chambers were
appointed to a nominating
committee to report at the
March meeting when the Send the FTD "LoveBtindle"
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions for Valentine's week.
Club met for a noon luncheon
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
There was no speaker for the
992-5560
meeting presided over by Tom 59 N. 2nd
Middleport, 0 .
Cassell, president. Plans were
made for being hosts at a zone
13-K meeting on Feb. 23. Other
club members were discussed.

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

•

• Blue denim.
• Flare bottom.
• Four patch
pockets.
• Sizes 8-18.
• Buy two pairs
now-save!

.

a
OUI OWN IIIAND

J:l'lli,I,.«&lt;WQt•

OUII OWN llANO

88C

WOOL KNITTING YARN
Mothproofed virgin wool.
4 or. skeins. Many colors.

SK.

SHAGGY TWEED IN 100% POLYESTER

SELECTIONS FOR All OCCASIONS

.../Jnolker (fooJ Bu'J

COLORFUL ACCENT RUGS

BOX OF 18 LOVELY CARDS
Parchment cards in
attractive designs.

=::·47c

Non-s~id I a t e x
back. Fringed.

10)(

REG.

237

$2.99

/rom BaLer'3 ...
1~\n S\te

"o\\~ooO
~t\)

tott\\l\e\e

$(,')

OUII OWN UAND

Regal

REGULAR
$1.99

59c

DOWHY FACIAL TISSUES
Big box ofREG
200. Soft, a b. 260 ·
sorbent.
BOX

3

BOXES

Upper Store Only
FRE~I_ I

GOLDFISH

'

12 With Parent

To Visit Our

-----------•LI
Pet Department

I 00% nylon, t w 0 ·
way stretch. Sleeve·
less. Zipper b a c k.

SUNDAY IS VALENTINE'S DAY I I
------------------------------------

W~N.:s~!~!ARi SHAPED BOX

BAKER

Tailored floral
print in pi n k, REG .
9
gold, blue. 60" $~E~
wide, 3b" long.

z

SETS

1.51 SET

! '50°o-~:~;.~:;E---~
Just Register Any Time In The Store.

Name
Address_ _
ADDRESS - Phone
Drawing Feb. 2Q-Winner Notified
-~e~~·_:~~-E~t~~~~!:_e_!~~~~------------------ l --~2.r:_~-~x at Lamp Dept . Either Store.
NAME

s3

NOTHING TO BUY

OF ASSORTED CHOCOLATES J

Nothing To Buy
Winner Notified
Drawing Sat.
At 4 :oo P.M.

BOTH STORES IN GALLIPOLIS -

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

NO· IRON TAILOR ED COTTON

TIER/ VALANCE SET

S, M, L.

To First 100 Children
Under

Jll

I
J
I
I

I
I

J
I
1

OPEN FRIDAYS AND MONDAYS-tli:i:9 _________ _

•

�7 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 11,1971

ta::-~:1

•

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

~a
... s~Jh'=·?Jtt.,~=~
They Had Fun, until ...

•

,

•
•

Pomeroy, Ohio
February 10, 1971
Dear Sir:
With the coming of the heavy snow, the opportunity arose to
witness and participate in an almost lost form of entertainment to
the younger people (high school age and under) of the area, old
fashioned sledding and bobsledding.
The scene was Prospect Hill (off Union Avenue) and it
provided a tremendously "fast track" to the 75 (give or take a
few) young folks who trooped (some came by Jeep or ~ar) .from
various parts of Middleport and Pomeroy to try therr skill at
negotiating the two sharp turns on the track. Starting somewhere
near the top, they came past Ebersbachs' (the first turn) down
the steep grade to the Union Avenue intersection (the second
turn), where, if all was clear, they were flagged out by Guy
Guinther and myself to continue down Union past Bill Nelson's
house. Some not so skillful went across Union and over the hill and
one hit a stop sign.
Surprisingly enough there were few mishaps. One involved
four lads on a bobsled which ran amok and hit a small, stone
bridge. They limped down the avenue toward home like Confederate troops returning from battle. Another involved a y01mg
lady who had a rather nasty cut on her leg.
Then after the second night when all were contemplating
another evening of fun, disaster struck, in the form of the village
cinder truck! Of all places in town that were in need of cinders
they chose, in what manner I know not, to cinder the "track." But
undaunted by this, the participants started to work immediately
covering the cinders in hopes of restoring their "run."
Now, I do not advocate rebellion or disregard for public safety
or government; nor do I go along with this ''we do not have
anything to do" complaint at all times. But I do feel that this place
might have been left for them to enjoy for the time they did not
have to attend school. I say this form of entertainment is far more
beneficial to these youth than some others that are offered.
So why not let them enjoy themselves on some little traveled
street or road when the opportunity presents itself in the form of
an eight inch snowfall? Let's make a little effort to park the
"flivver" down the street and walk a block or two for a change. It
might help get us in physical condition to try "the track" when
another big snow comes along.
.Tun Soulsby

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

10 Seniors Earn All A
Pickens, Alan Duval, Robert
Grossnickle, Greg Hackney,
Melinda Amsbary, Steve
Millhone, Debbie Millhone,
Jane Ann Karr and Byron
McCoy .
Julia Holter was the only
junior with an A average for the
semester. Others on the roll
were Jenny Lawson, Marcella
Wyers, Kathy Sanders, Mary Jo
Wolfe, Jeanie Newlun, Rick
Martin, Debbie Pierce, Roger
Karr, Dennis Eichinger and
Kathy Dill.

Ten Eastern High School
seniors have been named to the
semester honor roll with "A"
averages for all three six weeks
periods.
Making "A" averages from
the class were Rhea Mora, Jean
Whitehead, Kim Fick, Carolyn
Griffin, Brenda Boring, Nancy
Baum, Debbie Fitch, Tom Karr,
Michael Boring and Howard
Bahr. Other seniors listed on the
semester honor roll with A's
and B's were David Smith,
Susie Teaford, Dary1 Pooler,
Richard Liter, Robyn Mills, Joy
Kautz, Debbie Wood, Cathy
Smith , Vickie Cole, Patty
Holsinger and Dale Boston.
Tim Baum and Cheryl Kimes
were the only two freshmen
with A averages for the
semester. Other freshmen on
the roll were Virginia Cline,
Martie Caldwell, Bernice
Boggs, Teresa Chichester,
Larry Atherton, Nancy Miller,
Iris Pigott, Kathy Pierce, Jane
Whitehead, Sheila Sampson,
Paula Hauber, Diana Larkins,
Jan Holter, Steve Follrod, Patty
Grossnickle, Steve Goebel,
Cheryl Kuhn, Bill Hayes and
Herb Mcintyre.
Sophomores with A averages
in all their subjects for the
semester were Dick Stettler,
Richard Cross, Robin Humphrey and Lucy Holter. Other
sophomores
making
the
semester honor roll were Nancy
Sexson, Vicki Spencer, Cathy

INTO BILLIONS
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Damage from Tuesday's
disastrous Southern
California earthquake may
mount into the billions of
dollars, county engineer John
A. Lambie estimated today.
"A quick estimate would be
that it will be in the billions,"
he said. "The figures just
keep creeping up. I would say
about $125 million worth of
damage to county buildings
alone - hospitals, jails,
courts, and that sort of
thing."

15th Coin Collectors' Show,
Convention on Feb. 27-28
The Ohio Valley Coin
Association's 15th Coin Convention and Show will take
place Saturday and Sunday,
Feb. 27-28 at the C.I.O. Hall in
Steubenville with William
Warner, Lloyd Wilson and Louis
Matello the general chairmen.

STAN THE BOARD MAN
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Stan "The
Man" Musial, who collected
3,630 hits, more than any man
in the history of baseball save
Ty Cobb, has been elected to
Clarence C. Barcus, Timothy R. the board of directors of the St.
Barr, Andrew Bennett, Amy'M. Louis Cardinals, the club for
Brewer, Mrs. Odessa A. which he starred for 23 years.
Cellucci, Mrs. James Coleman,
Mrs. Sarah Compton, Judy
Coyan, Mrs. Grace L. Fannon, MIDDLEWEIGHT TITLE
Richard Fitch, James A.
ROME (UPI) -Argentina's
Goody, Mrs. William F. Carlos Monzon will defend his
Gregory, Mrs. Gerald E. world middleweight title in
Haffelt, Mrs. Walter Haskins, April against former titleholder
Mrs. John N. Hill, Mrs. John W. Nino Benvenuti, whom Monzon
Houck, Mrs. Paul E. Jenkins, dethroned via a 12th-round
Harry F. Johnson, Mrs. Myung knockout last November.
C. Kim, Mrs. Glenn L. Lawson,
Mrs. Charles B. Long, Jr., Mrs.
Vivian G. Love, Clemence R. Mrs. Arthur Stockmeister, Mrs.
Moore, Clarence C. Murnahan, Warren Sturgeon, Jr., Mrs.
Mrs. Lillie M. Oxyer, James M. Arnold Taylor, Mrs. David
Pierce, Mrs. Eddie Price, Mrs. Rice, Wymond Barcus, Beth
George A. Rardin, Earl Sayre, Knight, Mrs. Emanual H. Mace
Jr., Mrs. William G. Smith, and Mrs. Ada Pierce.

r---------------------------,
!
HOSPITAL NEWS l

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. 1
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Walter J.
Haggy, Rutland, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Woyan,
Southside, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas H. Cummons,
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry L. Taylor, Gallipolis, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Bobby J.
Thomas, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry W. Bradley, Gallipolis, a
son.
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Robert F. Adkins,

•
•

7:30p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. Burial will be in
the Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 5 p.m. and from
7 to 9 p. m. both Thursday and
Friday.

r----------·
1
GROW
I
1
I

YOUR MONEY HERE
WHERE IT CAN

I
FASTEST
I
I
4%%
I
I Interest perquarterly
year, com ·
a pounded
on
regular passbook savings
1 accounts, no minimum or
maximum amount. Interest
I is paid from date of depos1t
to date of withdrawal as long

•

WRIGHT REPAffiED
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)Elmo Wright, the Kansas City
Chiefs' No. 1 draft choice,
underwent surgery Wednesday
to repair torn cartilage in his
left knee .

I as you maintain
1 account.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

an open

Meigs Co. Branch

(hewd:&gt;le Cold Tablets
for Children

Va~~!ifie

•

Reg . $8.66 Mattei Barbie Mattei· O- Phone
Reg. $11.77 Mattei Super Cartoon Maker Set
Reg. $8.77 Mattei Dolly Maker Set
ALL MATTEL TOG'L TOYS MARKED

Special S6.66 .
Special $7.99
Special SS.99
DOWN

Reg. $22.88 Johnny Lightning 500 Cyclone Set
Specia I $15.88
Reg. $8 .44 Johnny Lightning Jet Power Compressor Specia I
$6.44
Reg. S7 .99 Grippidee Gravidee
Special $5.99

~.~t

INTENSIVE CARE®1s oz.
LOTION

With Pump

for dry hands and skin

99¢

SINUTAB®
30's

relieves
cold and
sinus
discomforts

Reg.

2 59¢

98~

FOR

EW

$1.50

a pain reliever
that also
helps you sleep

lOO's

lOO's

Reg. 3.29

WITH IRON
Reg. 3.69

..
Excedrin P.M.
"""""",.,.-;

30's

THE NtGK1' 1Ut1[ fYdf'l R[U[VUt

1.99$2.2

Reg. 1.03

59~

lOO's

lOO's

Reg. 2.98

Reg. 3.39

1.88

$1.99
WITH IRON
100's
Reg. 2.10

$1.33

:--=-~::=.F
?....::: .,;.;:::...::.:-....::. --.

VITAMINS

Reg . 3 ·39

$}

•

BEN,FRANKLIN~
PHONE

202 East Main St.

992-3498

Pomeroy, Ohio

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

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY HIGHTS TJL·9

~~-------~~~------·

ROLL-ON
DEODORANT

VAlENTINE

66¢

Reg.

4 OZ
COLD
CREAM
Cleanses
and
cond1tions
dry &amp; normal (

79~

3.5
\__OZ.

skm.

Reg. 1.00

•

Reg. 1.49

WITH

87~

Polish Remover

SPRAY

REMEMBER

Reg. $2.00

CUTEX 4 OZ.

7 oz.

5¢

•••••

Reg. 1.19

===:

~ lim1t 1 coupon par family no substitutions SAVE
gg~ With Coupon
1
Reg. 1.79
1.14 Without Coupon I
Good Only Feb. 11 -12-13-14, 1971

'!!}!)

Cream

-

Without Coupon _
With Coupon~

~ 30's

WATCH THIS NEWSPAPER
For Our Annual Bif.( 9 Sale
Coming Soon!

24~

:=:;

;

99

.ldrl

8R's
eg. 53 c

-

GROOMS WITHOUT GREASE

77¢

FLINTSTONE~lOO's

=

§

39c

VITALIS

Reg. 1.11

GELU~_I!~

tan1pons

c++++»

5o's

REPLACES HEARTBURN FAST!

p'EiYtei ~

§
'----='

Shaving

STORE

~II: ~~f!'.J!fl.l.{ P!i!fl'.'!.ll ~

~

EDGE

SI"((IAI.. f0.-.. ATI()flr

GELUSI[~~r~

-------N-ELSON'S-DRUG

200's

Reg. 2.50

BARGAINS GALORE WHILE THEY LAST

Specia I $6.88
Specia I $9.88
Specia I 52.99

"""''•lo..a:S·•:l~

Reg. 79'

ORANGE FlAVORED

The Athen s County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Reg. $9.88 Sizzler Laguna Ova I Race Set
-Reg. 512.88 Sizzler Newport Pacer Set
Reg. $3.88 Sizzler Dua I Speed Brake and Esses

ear-

ANALGESIC NASAL DECONGESTANT

Anolljlesic Ncuol Oecongesronl

WHILE THEY LAST

•

aae

~~CUBES

Chewable
Cold Tablets
for Children

congespirin

SPECIAL SALE ON MATTEL TOYS

•

Reg. 1.85

$1.19

@

Reg. $3.88 Hot Wheels Indy Team-4 cars
Special$2.88
Reg.$2.44 Hot Wheels Rod Runner
SpeciaiS1.99
Reg.S3.88 Hot Wheels Dual Lane Rod Runner Special $2.99
Reg. $4.99 Hot Wheels Stunt Action Set
Special S3.33
Reg . $5.97 Hot Wheels Super Charger
Special 53.99
Reg. $6 .99 Hot Wheels Double Dare Race Set
Special $3.99
Reg. $4.44 Hot Wheels Dual Lane Speedometer Special $2.99
Reg. 58.99 Hot Wheels Hot Curve 3 Race Action Set
Specia 1
$5.99
Reg. S11.88 Hot Wheels Dual Lane Rod Runner Set
Specia 1
$8.88
Reg. $15.88 Hot Wheels Road Trial Set with Tune-up
Tower
Special $11 .88
Reg. $24.88 Hot Wheels High Performance Set with Tune-Up
Tower and Two-Way Super Charger
Special $18.88
Reg. 511.88 Hot Wheels Super Charger Speed Set Special $8.88
Reg. $10.44 Hot Wheels Super Charger Sprint Jet Special $7.44
Reg. S10.44 Hot Wheels Super Charger Sprint Jet Special $7.44
Reg. $17.88 Hot Wheels Hot Wheel Factory
Special $12.88

FLASH
CUBES

Reg. 2.35

~

RAMS' CHOICE
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-The
Los Angeles Rams Wednesday
signed Jack Youngblood, a 6foot-4, 248-pound defensive end
from the University of Florida,
to a multi-year contract.

DON'T BE FAT

MAGI CUBES

GROW

exhibits of any show, whether
on a local or a regional level.
At least 35 prominent U. S.
and Canadian dealers will be on
hand to fill the needs of the tristate area collectors. Maximum
security measures will be in
effect for the protection of
materials as well as individuals
involved. For information write
to Ohio Valley Coin Association,
P. 0. Box 451, Steubenville,
Ohio 43952.
Other committee chairmen
include: Lloyd Wilson, bourse;
James Green and Edward
Kotora, exhibits; Louis Matello,
special awards; Ernest Darmo,
security; Margaret Warner,
registration; Norman Warner,
signs; Joseph E. Flowers and
Gene Barney, arrangements;
William
Holmes,
transportation, and Regina Alex,
publicity.

MONAD EX will help you lose weight. MONAD EX is a tiny tablet
and easily swallowed. Start losing weight now. Contains no
dangerous drugs and does not make you nervous. MONADEX
reduces your desire for excess food. Helps you eat less- so you
weigh less. For your health's sake -get rid of excess fat. You
must lose ugly fat or your money will be refunded by your
druggist with no questions asked. MONADEX costs $3.00 and is
sold with this guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohse-Pomeroy &amp; Dutton
Drug Store • Middleport. Mail Orders Filled.

SYLVANIA

Mrs. Worley Howell Dies
Mrs. Worley (Eleanor)
Howell, 80, of 570 Grant St.,
Middleport, died Wednesday
morning at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Preceded in death by her
husband, Worley F., Mrs.
Howell is survived by three
daughters, Miss
Martha
Howell, at home ; Mrs. Lloyd
(Ann) Blackwood, Chester, and
Mrs. Howard (Roberta) Dailey,
Middleport; two grandchildren,
Kevin and Bronwyn Dailey,
Middleport, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a . m. Saturday at the
Sacred Heart Church in
r&gt;omeroy with the Rev. Father
Bernard Krajcovic officiating.
Rosary services will be held at

The convention will feature
the Franklin Mint Display with
a representative on hand to
answer inquiries regarding the
Franklin Mint and its pr.oducts.
The Franklin Mint is the world's
largest not affiliated with any
governmental agency. Also
featured will be the rare U. S.
Type Coins dated 1793 to 1799
from the Liberty Coin Shop,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Exhibitors will compete for
over 30 trophies and an
educational award to be
awarded the winning displays.
These will include five master
trophies, one junior master
trophy, 10 superior trophies,
and 15 excellent trophies.
The educational award will be
given to the display that conveys the most numismatic
information to the viewer. The
annual event boasts the finest in

.....,

MODESS
12's

37¢

L

49e

REV LON

INTIMATE TEAR DROP

Toilet Water
SPRAY

$3.85

FEB.
14th

a woman
never forgeta
the man who
remembers.

�~----------------------------------------

--

-~---

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0-, Feb. 11, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, an d More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel , Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Bush called on
their grandmother, Mrs. Fannie
Beaver who is ill Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
called on Mr. and Mrs .
Diamond Lawson at Mt. Moriah
Sunday.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and family
were Mr. and Mrs. Butch
Wilson and family of Mt.
Moriah ; Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis of Clifton, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll White,
Darla, Deanna and Keith, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Wells, Mandy
and Amy , of Syracuse were
dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Hupp and sons.
Dave and Larry Hupp spent
the weekend with their aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hutton at
Marietta .
Mrs. Bessie Stitt is a medical
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Don Hupp called on Mrs.
Kate Rowe and A da T uesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
and family spent Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis at Clifton, W. Va.
Mrs. Herbert Sayre and
David are visiting their son and
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Sayre in Pennsylvania for an
indefinite visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Ott Boston at
Racine.
Charles Boggess is ill with the

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
ROAD VACATION
The Meigs county Commissioners having prev iously
resolved to vacate and relocate
portio·ns of county and township
roads located on proposed State
Route 7, construction Section
6.34, and in Salisbury Township ,
Meigs county, Ohio, ~nd more
particularly
descr1bed
as
follows:
FIRST PROPOSED
RELOCATION

Card. of Thanks

Help Wanted

2-11-ltp

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

DRIVERS needed. Train now to
drive semi-lruck, local and
over the road. Diesel or gas,
experience helpful but not
necessary. You can earn over
$4.50 per hour after short
training. For appl i cati on and
interview call 513-241-5572, or
write Safety Dept., United
Systems, Inc., C-0 Motor
RATES
Freight Terminal Bldg., 3101
For want Ad Service
Gano
Rd.,
Sharonville,
5 cents Rer Word one insertion
Cincinnati, Ohio 45241.
Minimum Charge75c·
2-11-2tc
12 cents per word three
.:onsecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
• 25 Per cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days. OLD furniture, dishes, bras~
CARD OF THANKS
beds, etc. Wr i te M. D. Miller,
&amp; OBITUARY
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
$1.50 for 50 word' minimum .
992-6271.
Each additional word 2c.
9-1 -tf.c
BLIND ADS
-------------Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
ALL U. S. gold coins, $1 to $50.
OFFICE HOURS
Top prices paid. Phone 9928:30a.m. to 5:00p .m. Daily,
3476 after 6 P- rn.
8 : 30a . m. to 12:00 Noon
2-5-6t p
Saturday_

1~.=----8_- _u _s1._·n_e_s_s_ S____:_e..;_,_rv_I·_c__e_s__]
EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
$5.55

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

Salisbury Township
Road No. 207
Situated
in
Salisbury
--GUARANTEEDLEGAL NOTICE
Township, Fraction 32 Town 2
Phone 992-2094
North, Range 13 wes t. Meigs
IN THE COMMON PLEAS.
County, Ohio.
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY,
And
being
more
fully
OHIO
described as fo l lows :
Beginning at a point on the JESSE MORRIS,
606 E. Man, Pomeroy, 0.
northerly side of exisling State R. D. 2,
Route No. 7 and No . 124, said Pomeroy, Ohio,
PIa intiff,
point being 0.10 mile, more or
SEPTI0 t anks cleaned . M i ller
vs.
less, as measured easterly
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. SAW FIL ING, a ll kinds of
MEDA
ELOISE MORRI!:,
along existing State Route No. 7
662-3035.
sharpening, l awn mower
and No . 124 from the in- Address Unknown,
2-12-tfc:'
Defendant.
repair, Briggs and Stratton
tersection of State Route No. 7
No.
14,791
and State Route No. 124 and
engine service. Low cost pick
NOTICE BY
existing Salisbury Township
up and del ivery . Phone 992PUBLICATION
.
Road No. 207; thence, northerly
2804. Colrners Saw Shop,
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
Meda Eloise Morris, whose
along relocatell
Salisbury
Mechanic St. , Pomeroy.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Township Road No. 207 and place of residence is unknown
2-11-3tc
~nt
crossing proposed Sta-te Route will take notice that on the 6th.
10-25-tfc
No. 7 at a point 0.06 mile, more day of January, 1971, the un or less, as measured easter l y dersigned filed his Complaint BAND, THE SUNS, Friday and 5 ROOM house, bath . Racine CONVENIENT but secluded HARR ISON'S TV AND ANSaturday nights, 9 p.m . to 2
area. Phone 992-6329.
along relocated State Route No . against her in the Common
TI;NNA SERVICE . Phone
building lois on T79 at Rock
7 from existing Salisbury Pleas Court of Meigs County,
a .m. Hi-7 Club.
2-5-6tc
992-2522.
Springs. W ithin walking
Township Road No. 207 and Ohio, praying for a divorce,
2-11-2tc
6-10-tfc
distance of Meigs High
5 ROOM and bath, apartment,
passing through the lands of custody of minor child, and
School, a 5 minute drive from
Manning D. Webster , Iva Ebliri other relief on the grounds of
Chester. Inquire at Newell's
Pomeroy. Ca ll or see Bil l NEIGLER Construction. For
et. at. , Betty Russel and gross neglect of duty and ex Sunoco
Station.
Phone
building or remodeli ng your
Thurston Stone, Jr., et. al. A treme cruelty. The Complaint
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
Chester 985-3350.
distance of 0.27 mile, more or also prays that the following
home , Call Guy Neigler,
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9922-7-tfc
tess, to a point in existing real estate be awarded to the
Racine, Ohio.
•
6887.
Salisbury Township Road No. Plaintiff:
7-31-tfc
2-3-lfc
207 and there terminate.
UNFURNISHED 3-roorn
Situate in Bedford Township ,
FIRST PROPOSED
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
..,t:PTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Meigs County, Ohio, in Section
VACATION
Reasonable rates. Phone
7,
Town
3,
Range
13,
beginning
Salisbury Township
1-31
-tfc
John Russell , Ga llipolis 446at the Southeast corner of ArRoad No. 207
Beginning at the intersection thur Story's land; thence south
4782 after 5: 30 p. m.
of existing Salisbury Township on said line to the road leading
4-7-tfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
Fn.
Feb.
12
thru
from
Harrisonville
to
Pomeroy;
Road No. 207 and existing State
apartments. Close to school.
-------------------Route No . 1 and No . 124; thence, thence East along said road to
Sun. Feb. 14
SEW IN G MACHINES. Repa ir
Phone 992-5434.
northerly
along
existing the Porn eroy and Athens Road;
10-18-tfc
service, al l makes. 992-2284.
7:30p.m. Nightly
Salisbury Township Road No. thence North along said road to
Broker
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
207 a distance of 0.10 mile, more the East I ine of Arthur Story's
Rev.
0.
G.
McKinney,
110
Mechanic
St.
Authorized Singer Sales and
3 ROOM apartmen t, all electric,
or less, to the proposed Limi ted land; containing three acres,
Speaker
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Servi ce. We Sharpen Scissors.
Access Right-otWay line on t he more or less, and being all of the
wall oven, table top range,
tract
lying
west
of
the
road.
3-29-lfc
northerly side of proposed State
Special Music
sla1nless steel double sink
NEAR KROGERS
Route No. 7 and there ter food
disposal.
Nice
clea~
WARMNEAT3
bedrooms
This cause may be heard on 28
minate.
apart ment. See to appreciate.
with c losets and lots of
days after the last publication of
SECOND PROPOSED
Located in Pomeroy_ Phone
storage. Modern bath with BACK HOE and end-loader
this notice, which date is the WE WILL accept estimates and
RELOCATION
work . Septic tanks insta lled.
pay cash for a living room
Gallipolis 446-9539.
shower. Gas forced air fur19th. day of March, 1971 .
Salisbury Township
George ( Bill) Pul lins. Phone
suite, 3 cushion davenport and
2-2-tfc
Road No. 79
nace. Living 15 x 17. Paneling,
992-2478.
Jesse Morris,
Situated
in
Sa li sbury
chair, a coppertone electric
new walks, new carport. 2
Plaintiff
Township, Section 16 and
stove with top oven not over 32 UNFURNISHED apartrnenl
blocks of store. Asking ONLY
Fraction 12, Town 2, North Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
close to Pomeroy. Phone 992inches wide, a coppertone
$8,500.00
Attorneys
for
Plaintiff
Range 13 West, Meigs County,
refr
igerator
not
over
32
in3962
after
4
p
.m.
(1) 7, 14, 21,28 (2) 4, 11, 18, 7tc
Ohio.
BRAD FoRo,
2-4- tfc INVEST
flu.
ches wide, also various end
SAVE
NOW
And
being
more
fully
Complete Service
tables, lamps, etc. Mu!i,t trade - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - LATER.
Mrs. Steve Cleland and boys described as follows:
Phone 949-3821
LEGAL NOTICE
in Kenmore gas stove 30 in- FURN ISH ED apartment, three
Beginning at a point in the
of Marietta; Karen and Jackie proposed
Clyde E. Wells, whose place
Racine, Ohio
large rooms and ba th, newly 75 ACRES - 20 TRACTOR, 30
ches wide and Kelvinator
intersection
of
Wines, Sandra Wolfe of Racine relocated Meigs County Road of residence is unknown and
Cri tt Bradford
redecoraled , all utilities paid.
refri gerator 30 inches wide,
pasture. 8 room older house,
cannot
by
reasonable
diligence
No. 20 and a relocated Salisbury
both white, good condition.
Adu lts only. See at 256 So.
runni ng well w ater. 3 bay --~==--~~~~~5~-~1-~tf~c
spent Sunday afternoon with Township
Road No. 79, said be ascertained, will take notice
Pourth Ave. in M iddleport.
Changing
to
match ing
implement shed , garage,
Mrs. Kate Rowe and Ada.
point being 0.08 mile, more or that on the 6th day of January,
2-11 -tfc
cabinets. Send estimates to
u1111ty bui lding , ce llar , hen A I R COND I T I ON IN G. Re'less, as measured northerly 1971, the undersigned plint iff,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel along
Box 729-W, c-o The Daily
house, small barn. School bus
relocated Meigs County Florence Carol Wells, filed her
frigeration service . Jack's
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
spent Friday with Mrs. Katie Road No. 20 from the in- complaint against him in the
and mail routes by door. ALL
Refr igeration , New Haven.
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
2-9-3tc
tersection
of
relocated
Meigs
MINERALS.
$13,500.00
Phone 882-2079.
Young at Minersville Rte.
County Road No. 20 and County, Ohio, Case No . 14,794
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manuel relocated Meigs County Road for d ivorce on the grounds of DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,, MODERN walnut stereo-radio LET
_____
4-6-tfc
US
SELL
YOUR
gross neglect of duty and exleach beds. Phone 949-4761.
combinatipn, 4 speaker sound
of Racine visited recently with No. 25 ; thence, in a nor- treme cruelty, and praying for
PROPERTY AND SAVE READY-MIX CONCRETE detheasterly direct i on along
10-18-tfc · system , 4 speed changer.
YOU FROM THE LOOKERS.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel.
relocated Salisbury Township divorce and other relief. The
livered righ t to your project.
Balance $69.10. Use our
Road No . 79 and passing said Clyde E. Wells is required
Fas t
and
easy.
Free
budget
terms.
Call
992-3352.
WILL
PICK
up
rnerchana~se
BUYING FROM US, SAVES
through the lands of Carl Fred to answer said complaint within
es timates. Phone 992-3284.
2-11-6tc
and take to auction on d
Goeglein el . al., a distance of twenty eight days after the last
YOU TIME AND MONEY.
The Almanac
Goeg
l
ein
Ready-Mix
Co .,
percentage basis. Call Jim
0.08 mile , more or less, to a publication of this notice , which
CALL 992-3325
M iddleport, Ohio.
By United Press International
point in existing Salisbury date is the 25th day of March,
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland. AUTHENTIC Early American
992-2378
1971. This cause will be tor
6-30-tfc
Slereo-radio, AM-FM radio, 4
Phone 742-4461.
Today is Thursday, Feb. 11, Township Road No. 79 and there hearing on the 25th day of
2-5-6tc
terminate.
9-23-tfc
speakers,
4
speed
automatic
March, 1971, or as soon
the 42nd day of 1971.
SECOND PROPOSED
changer. Ba l ance $82.60. Use
thereafter as the Court can
VACATION
The moon is between its full
conveniently hear the sa~, •. Sl\ATE-A-WAY .. is open Wedour budget terms. Call 992Salisbury Township
~ _..,~~scley, Frid~~~and ,Saturday
3352.
jpnase and last quarter.
Road No. 79
FLORENCE
CARO~
ntgh
ts,
7:30
ro
10:30
p.m.
2-11-6tc
Home
Beginning at a point in the
The
morning
stars
are i ntersection
WELLS
Available for private parties
of
existing
Mercury, Venus, Mars and Salisbury Township Road No. 79
Plaintiff
on .Monday, Tu'e sday and
and existing Meigs County Road Manning D . Webster
Thursday n ights or Saturday PAINT DAMAGE 1971 Zig-Zag
Jupiter.
Sewmg Machines. Still in
and Fultz
No . 25; thence, in a norther l y Webster
and
Sunday afternoons.
The evening star is Saturn.
original cartons. No atdirection
along
existing Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attorney for Plaintiff
Phone Ches ter 985-3929 or 985tachments needed, as our
Those born on this day are Salisbury Township Road No. 79
l 1) 24, 28, (2) 4, 11, 18, 25, 7tc
3585.
a distance of 0.10 mile, more or
con trols are built-in. Sews
2-2
-12tc
under the sign of Aquarius.
less, to the proposed limited
wi lh 1 or 2 needles, makes
American inventor Thomas access right-of-way line on the
bu lion holes, sew on butlons,
ATTENTION ladies! WOuld you
northerly side of proposed State
monograms and bl ind hem
Edison was born Feb. 11, 1847. Route No. 7 and there terlike
to
try
a
wig
on
in
the
NOTICE ON FILING
st itch. Full cash price, $38.50
minate.
privacy of your own horne?
On this day in history:
OF INVENTORY
or budget plan avai lable.
THIRD PROPOSED
You can . Just call us. We also
AND
APPRAISEMENT
In
1937 General Motors
RELOCATION
Phone 992-5641.
have the Mink Oil Kosrnetics,
The State of Ohio, Meigs
Meigs County
Koscot, of course. Dis2-9-61c
agreed to recognize the CIO
MR. &amp; MRS. HAROLD STEWART
County. Probate Court.
Road No. 20
To the Executor or Ad·
tributors, Brown's_. Ph9_r:1_e ------.--------------260 Sycamore
Middleport
United Auto Workers Union as
Situated
in
Salisbury ministrator
of the estate; to
Middleport 992-5113.
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Townsh
rp,
Sect
i
on
16
and
"We
never
thoug
ht
we
could
bargaining agent for GM
of the following as are
Cleaner complete with at12-31-tfc
Fraction 6, Town 2, North such
afford a new home. Not only are
residents of the State of Ohio,
lachments , cordwinder and
workers.
Range 13 West, Meigs County, viz: - the surviving spouse, the
our payments less than rent, but
paint spray . Used but in like
In 1945 President Franklin D. Ohio.
next of kin, the beneficiaries WILL GIVE piano and organ
we are now building for
And
being
more
fully under the will ; and to lhe atlessons in my home. Phone
new condit ion. Pay $37.45
Roosevelt, British Prime Min- described as follows:
future i nstead of collecting
cash
or
credit
terms
992-3666.
torney
or
attorneys
Beginning at a point in the representing
8-16-tfc
receipts."
available. Phone 992-5641.
ster Winston Churchill and center
any
of
the
of ex isting Meigs County
persons:
2-9-6tc
Soviet dictator Josef Stalin Road No. 20, said po int be1ng aforementioned
Ruth
Louella
Flory,
MidINCOME
TAX
service,
daily
mile, more or less, as
closed a weeklong World War II 0.15
Meigs County , Ohio ,
except Sunday. Evenings by
measured norlherly along dleport,
20,425.
appointment only. Phone 992conference at Yalta in the existing Mei gs County Road No. No.
You
are
hereby
notified
that
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
20 from the existing intersection the
lnvenlory
and
Ap Crimea.
Sites Available
of Meigs County Road No. 20 praisement of the estate of the
located on Rl . 7 bypass, one
BUY YO UR
In 1965 American and South and State Route No. U.S. 33, No. aforementioned, deceased, late
mile sout h of fairgrounds .
and
No.
124;
thence,
southerly,
Don't
Delay!
Contact
AI
Moody
Today!
7
2-7-30tc
Vietnamese planes staged the
of sa id County, was f i led in this
easterly and southerly along Court. Said Inventory and
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
first bombing raids on North relocated Meigs County Road Appraisement
AUCTION
WHEN?
Each
will be for
Phone 992-7034
Now and get t he early
Vietnam in retaliation for a No. 20 and crossing proposed hearing before this Court on the
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
State Route No . 7 at a point 0.02 1st day of March, 1971, at 10:00
Discount
Hayman's
Auct
i
on
House,
VietCong attack.
mile, more or less, wester l y o'cl ock A.M.
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Ferexisting
Salisbury
In 1968 New York City from
Any person desiring to file
Pomeroy -M iddleport
Bytilizer, all available now.
Township Road No. 79 and exceptions thereto must file
garbage workers ended their passing through the lands of them at least five days prior to
pass.
Take delivery now from our
Carl Fred Goegle in , et. al., a the date set tor hearing.
2-7-tfc
area warehouse at Pomeroy .
1968 L TO FORD, factory a ir
eigh t-&lt;iay strike.
distance of 0.41 mile , more or
608 East Main
Given under my hand and
conditioned , stereo, vinyl top.
less, to the intersec tion of seal of said Court. this 8th day of ;:::G"U"N:-;-"s'H;-;;0:;-:;0~T;=-,--s-p_o_n-so-r:-::ce..,-d by
POME ROY
POMEROY
Phone 742-3806.
relocated
Meigs
County
Road
Syracuse
Fire
Dept.
Assorted
A thought for today: Thomas
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
2-7-Stc RUTLAND-AL MOST NEWNo. 20 and relocated Meigs February 1971.
meats, half hog. Every
F. H. O'Brien
3 bedrooms, bath, about 2
Phone 992-2161
Edison said, ''There is no County Road No. 25 and there
Judge and ex-offic io
Saturday nighl, 6 p.m., near
acres, large I iving room, nice
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
term in ate .
Clerk of said Court
substitute for hard work."
Racine
Planing
Mill.
kitchen. $8,900.
THIRD PROPOSED
hardtop , power steer ing ,
REDUCE SAFE and fast wi t h
2-10-Jtc
VACATION
power brakes , a ir, 18,000
By Janet E . Morris
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Meigs County
POMEROY
JUST
REDeputy Clerk
miles. Excel lent cond ition.
waler pills. Nelson's Drugs .
BAND AT Red's Club, Mason,
Road No. 29
MOD EL E D
5 rooms,
Phone
992-2288.
1-22-30tp
Beginning at a point in the
W. Va., Gail and T-C
ba t h, 2 bedrooms , full
(2) 11, 18, 2tc
11-10-tfc
intersection of existing Meigs
Playmates. Dance Friday 9
basement. garage, ALL IN
County Road No. 20 and existing
By PHIL PASTORET
1968
OLDS
442,
automatic
p.m. t o 2 a.m. and Saturday 9 1970 SHUL T mobile home, 17
GOOD CONDITION. $13,500.
State Route No. U. S. 33, No . 7
t
~ansrn
i
ss
i
on
,
power
steering,
acres of l and, good well.
NOTICE OF
p.m. to 1:30a.rn. All members
Something to look forward and No. 124; thence, northerly
APPOINTMENT
vmyl
top.
Excellent
condition.
Phone 742-5222.
and guests welcome.
POMEROY- 2 STORY HOME
existing Meigs County
Case No. 20447
to: they won't be wearing along
Phone 742-4873, Salem St.,
2-10-3tc
2-10-6tc
Road No. 20 a distance of 0.08 Estate of WAID D . WINDON ,
WITH
APARTMENT,
3
Rutland.
maxicoats on the beaches mile, more or less , to the
bedrooms, 2 baths, garden
Deceased
.
2-7-6tc
proposed limited access rightMEN'S WORK uniforms and
next summer.
spot, garage. IN GOOD
Notice is hereby given that
of -way line on the northerly side Virgi l K. Windon of R . D. 3,
coveralls. Jeffers Cloth i ng
CONDITION. $10,000.
Beeline
of proposed State Route No. 7 Pomeroy, Ohio, has been duly HOUSEWIVES :
1967
VALIANT,
standard
sh
ift,
Store, R t. 33 going toward
Fashions will supplement
A f o o l p r o o f a Ubi is
and I here terminate.
radio and heater, 28,000 miles.
appointed Administrator of the
fairground,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY A LOT OF
your family's income and
FOURTH PROPOSED
never fool-proof.
$900. Phone 992-3860.
Estate of Waid D . Windon,
2-10-6tc
REMODELING DONE, 2
RELOCATION
wardrobe. Hig hest corn2-10-6tp
deceased , late of Meigs County ,
Meigs County
sl ory frame, 2 bedrooms,
mission. Up to $300 samples.
Ohio.
Road No. 25
The first sign of spring
bath, basement, NEW hot
Call 949-3703 or Gal l ipolis 446- BRACE yourse lf for a thri ll the
Creditor s are required to file
Situated
in
Salisbury
first
time
you
use
Blue
Lustre
around these parts is the sap
water l ank, forced ai r furtheir claims with said fiduciary
4146.
Township, Section 16, Fraction 6 within four months.
to clean rugs. Rent electric
nace.
COMPLETELY
2-11-3tc
and 12, Town 2 North , Range 13
sharnpooer, $1. Baker FurDated this 8th day of
FURNISHED. $4,600.
M INIATU RE Schnauzers and
west , Meigs County, Ohio.
niture, Middleport.
February
1971
.
And
being
more
tully
Poodle puppies. Permanent
F. H. O'Brien
2-10-6tc
TO BUY OR SELL
described as follows:
injections and groomed.
Probate Judge
Beginning at a point in the
CONTACT US
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
of said County EMPLOYMENT offered in
center of existing Slale Route
retail sales and record SPINET-console piano. Wanted
HENRY CLELAND
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
No. U . S. 33, No. 7 and No. 124,
keeping
by
Pomeroy
responsible par ty to take over
REALTOR
(2) 11, 18, 25, 3tc
right. Phone Cool ville 667said poinl being 0.1 0 mile, more
business. Wr ite Box 534,
payments on spinet pi ano .
Office 992-2259
3654.
or less, as measured soJJtherly
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Easy
terms,
can
be
seen
Residence
992-2568
2-11-JOtc
beginning to rise to the lure along existing State Rou te No.
locally.
Write
Credit
2-7-6tc
2-10-3tc
U.S. 33, No.7, and No. 124 from township roads until the
of prices on used convert- the intersection of State Route
Manager, P. 0. Box 276,
completion of Meigs State ~--~---------Big Capacity
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176.
No u.s. 33, No.7 and No . 124 Reule 7, Construction Section
ibles.
Maytag
with existing Meigs Counly 6.34.
2-7-12tp
THEY
ARE
here·
The
Automatics
Road No . 25; thence, in a nor
Mr. Ours moved for public
Any man who has lost
SKAMPER line from A to Z.
2 speed operation.
therly, easterly, and southerly convenience and welfare and in
Choice of water
his shirt over a romance
What a surprise to see: FIREWOOD, Hampshire pigs,
direction along relocaled Meigs accordance with Section 5553 of
12 weeks old. Gerald King,
tern ps.
Auto.
Travel tra i lers, campers are
County Road No. 25 and passing the Ohio Revised Code, that the
can appreciate the symwater
l evel
Shade.
Ph
one
696-1287.
through the lands of Carl Fred commissioners
all on display . What isn't here
view
sa i d
bolism of cupid in the
control.
Lint
Goeglein, el. al., Fannie L. Oi ler proposed
2-5-6tp
is on
the way. GAUL
vacalions
and
fancy valentines.
F!lter or Power
and the Meigs Local School relocations as hereinbefo~e set
TRAILER SALES, INC., 1112 ------------------Fm
Ag
itator.
Dislricl, a distance of 0.34 mile, forth on the 23rd day of
miles north of Chester, Ohio. 1964 CHEVROLET, 327 engine,
Perm a-Press
more or tess, to a point in February, 1971 , at 8:30 o'clock
$150; 1968 Honda SS 125
Wa tch for sign. Phone 985Maytag
existing Meigs County Road No . A .M
at the f irst proposed
motorcycle,
excel
I
ent
conHalo of Heat
3832 . CONTINENTAL and
25 and there terminate.
relocation and vacation , and
dit
i
on
,
$200.
Jim
Heaton
,
Dryers
GO TAG-A- LONG
trave l
FOURTH PROPOSED
ITEM: Tom Hill. He plays
each succeeding road will be
Surround clothes
Chester, Phone 985-4118.
VACATION
trailers for sale. Rentals by
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
viewed in the order as listed
with gen tle, even
Meigs county
2-9-3tc
day, week, month.
above as soon as time permils,
Mama Cass. But he plays
heat. No hot spots,
Road No. 25
2-4-12tc
and that final hearing be held on
Moonlight Serenade and
no
ove rdrying.
Beg inning at a poin 1 in the the 23rd day of February, 1971.
1966 CHEVELLE SS 396, 4Fine Mesh L int
Andy Williams too. Variety
inlerseclion of Meigs Coun ty at 9 :30 o'clock A.M. in lhe
speed
,
good
tires,
low
Filter.
Road No. 25 and State Route No commissioner's room at the
is the spir~ of our music.
mileage, $1,895. Will take 1964
We Specialize in
U.S. 33, No . 7 and No. 124; Courthouse, Me igs County,
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
or 1965 model car on trade.
MAYTAG
lhence, in an easterly direction Pomeroy, Ohio.
condition, ~s long as have not
Red carpet
Call after 4:30, phone 742-3631.
along exisling Meigs County
Service
been wet. Paying $10 each.
Road No 25, a dislance of 0 26
2-9-4tc
By order of the
mile, more or less , lo lhe in
First floor only . Mondays will
Board of Meigs Counly
terseclion of exislmg Meigs Commissioners, Pomeroy, OHio
be pick-up day . Write, giving COAL, I i rnes tone. Excelsior
Counly Road No . 25 and
good directions. Witten Piano
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Salisbury Townsh1p Road No . 79
Clerk
Martha
Chambers
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
742-4211
and there terminate.
Arnold Grate
Rutland,
Ohi
o
43946.
Traffic will be maintained on
4-9-tfc
(2) 4, 11. 2tc
6-20-tfc
lhe above descr1bed county and

LEGAL NOTIC_E

Wanted To Buy

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

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

•
....
-_,_
-·,_.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

Real Estate For Sale

,_.,

For

Notice

'

li ' ' 111 :1' 1

'

SR.

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

111.·1:...
I~

I

I •

... .._.

For Sale

......

1
!

1
'

Bl.AETTNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

INT ER IOR carpenter work, by
I he hour or contract. Phone
992-3511.
1-31-30tp

,,W~~nce
AUTOMOBILE insurance tJeen
cance ll ed?
Lost
your,
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc

G'~~(is-'

Aucti:~::~ttc t11

c.

, ..

From the Largest Truck or '
Bul ldozer Radi ator to the
Sma llest Heater Core.

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

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

r

I' ! ' '

Youth Revival

Church of Nazarene

.-.,;::::.

I ;; :.i i.i., ;;;;. _:.

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

Syracuse

•

1

1

~

151---.--

1

ECIA

1-y-

1THESE PRICES SAY!
BUY

I

11

I
II

I

11

I

NOW :-

11

1

.----------------------.111968 CHEVY II $15951I
JEMO ASSOCIATES

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

W HY W A IT

~

FERTILIZER

Auto Sales

L

BARBS

Cleland Realty

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

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

Female Help Wanted

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

I

motor, power steering, std.
top,

I 3-speed trans., blk.
I cream body, radio.

II 1967 Ford

I

$1495:
I

Mustang , 6 cyl. , auto. trans.,
conso le, maroon finish, a li i
g~od w-w tires, r ad io. Rea l i
N1ce.

1
I

b 9SS CAP-RICP1795l•
14 d r.,

black vinyl top &amp;
body, b lack nylon
interior &amp; astro seat, factory
Comfortron a ir cond itioning ,
automa tic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes, &amp; a ll the
1 accessories of a luxury car.
Low mileage &amp; sharp as they
come.

I cream
1
I
I

I
I
1

I
I
1
I

I
I
t
1 66 Pontiac $1295 1
II GTO Cpe., white fini sh, vinyl II
interior, 4 speed trans., good
• w-w tires, radio &amp; heater. I

Iss Ford

~95 1

166 Ford

$1095

I Falcon

2 dr., 6 cyl. std.
ltrans., all good tires, smart
looking copper finish, radio.
• Real economy in this car.

I
I
I

r

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

1 65 Pontiac $1095 I
I Tempest St. Wagon, local 1 I
I owner, low mileage car, V-8 1

For Rent or Sale

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

Wanted To Buy

WMP0/1390.

1 Belvedere 2 dr. hardtop, V-8 1

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

Male Help Wanted

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

11967 P~mouth$1395 ~

1 Galaxi HT Cpe. , 6 cyl . l
engine, std. trans. , air
I cond itioning , good tires . l
I clean interior, dark green I
1 f inish.
1

Pets For Sale

,,

1!'Jova_2 dr ., white finish, blu e 1
•n ter•or,
6
cyl .
eng .,
l autom a tic trans., new ti res, I
I rad io &amp; heater.
I

RUTLAND FURNITURE

o.

1eng in e, automat i c trans.,
power steering, non-slip rear
I ax le, vinyl interior like new,

I light blue finish, radio. Save l

1 Today.
1 65 Corvair

I
~95 I

lsoo 2 Dr., loca l low mileageJ
interior extra cl ean,
medium green finish , a li i
good w-w tires, radio. Pl enty
of go in the snow. Just nicer
than the average car.

1car,

I

I
I
1

I
I

1 S4

I

I

1

I

I

Pontiac

$495 1

,I t

H. T. Sed., spotless interior
good tires, radio, heater
automati c &amp; p. steering j
Priced to move.

.J

I•

1962 CHEV·ROLE~
$495

I
1
1

I
I

8' Fleetslde, 6 cy l. good tires.
Runs extra good

I

POM EROY ~·
MOTOR CO~: I

I
I
'I
I

I

I

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Ti l 8
1992-2126
Pomeroy l

!

L.... ~------..

�NO,SIREE--I AIN'T 5QUANDERIN'
MV HARD-EAR!\H MONEV ON
THAT IDJIT CONTRAPTION

AFORE "'E 60,
LOWEEZY-WHY DON'T
"'ETRV OUT
MV NEW
ONE-PENNY
SCALES?

•

THAT'LL Be
s &amp;JCI&lt;.'S !

..2-1 1

•

•
•
.:l-1/

•

Mel• I.'M ONLY A
FA&amp;HION DESIGNER FOR
TOP FL1&lt;3HT•..•.VI91TING

OTHER DOGS

BARK WHEN

THEY'RE HUNGRY...
BUT YOU

NEW ORLEAN&amp; TO OPEN
A SHOP AT BOUTIQUE&amp;

GOTTA BE
D IFFERENT!

GALLANTE.

•

YOURE Rl6f!T; WINNIE. BuT FIRST YOUR
PARENTS MUST A~IVE F~ CENTR-'IL

I

mY

••-.1

"'~U~~'H.---.-~

You

•

~ure it~

okaL! t'
move
back in,
Mi~ter

Walt?

I ain't

•

THE BORN LOSE_R
.., ~L.L, lH~T'~ M~ 51'01&lt;.'1, ~5..•

"5a&lt;R'/, '5DMEOCXJY

I-I I-O'E YOU'LL UIJDERSTAND

GAME TO 1tlE OCVR!
~OJ WGRE' 'SA'I IIJ(p"!

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

I&gt;J.lD-- At-ID FDF-"1\/t; MS!
IT'S THE BEST I CIIN DO, MR. GOLDSWINGER
""~'~tl' IF YA TURN OUT T' BE HALF AS
BA~ AS CAP'rt AHA8 SAXS ~ ARE·--

!1:1 !!:i

TROUBLE""

HE'S COMIN' TO!! 'IOU SAVV'( ENGLISH,
MR. GOLDSWINGER? NO? GUESS NOT!
THE WAY HE'S LOOKIN' AT ME'" I COULD
SWEAR HE WOULDN'T HARM.[\

B:X·--·

.!
~

•

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g

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
3. Flour
23. Hear!.Famous
factory
lng
Chevalier
f. Unemployed
aid
song
5. Dramas
• 24. Wood5. Implore
6. Whip
en core
10. Put up
1. Great Lake 25. Funcwith
8. Italian river
tion
12. Consisting
9. Like some
27. Vacaof fat
blondes
tion
13. Beaut
11. Loophole
spot
or lulu
16. Vendor
30. Miller's
U. In reserve
18. Before tee
"
15. Lazybones
19. Wonderthe Fall
17."ment
31. Abject
Miserables" 20. Tumeric
32. "Go
18. Merited
21. Final
Bragh"
22. - ldeal
22. En33. Fender
treat
mishap
26. Bedtime
wish

•
•

hy H£NUI AUNOl 0

(2Wds.)

28.Doan
usher's job
29. Simon 30.Roman
bronze
31. Well-known
resting
place

TERRY
THANKS FOR THE U5E

TtiE C~GR~5 OF THE UNITE~:' STAT~
OF NORTH AMERICA J~ FORTUNATE TO
HAVE SUCH A ZEALOUS GUARI7JAN OF
PUBLIC PUR5E A'fi 'IOUR.5ELF, SENORA

(3wds.)

38."You
Glad You're
You?"
39. Bronco
riders• event
n . Subsequently
42. Detroit pro
.a. Register
4f. Stringed
Instrument

REPI?ESENTATIVE 17EEP51X.

•

Yeoterday'o

I

Jumbleo: PRINT

HASTY

DOWN
struck
2. Wading bird

CAPr AIN EASY
I 'THINK YOU KNOW WHAT I'M
l.OOKJfJ b FO~, M~. KERCH ... IT'5
CALLED THE: "HAND OF fATE:"!

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AND

OKO AND I HAVE Al.READY
?POTTED YOU~ ACCOMPI...iC!S
J..UR/&lt;IN6 OUT7117S- ?0 WHY

NOT

I~Vl TEO

HE:R.

IN ~

AXYDLBAAXR
I• LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In thb sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation o! the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptorram Quotation

MK

UDF

ATOMIC

&lt;"--... loaonww)

IUCKIT

Anower: Peopk tl)/ao clGim lo lwH ~ d.cu c-..e
ot&gt;er on til. MarfW-r ore undotduedl dWtlr.
intf of1/aU •hip -"KIN-SHIP"
y

1. Moon·

•

o~ncl BOll L 1 f

OK

MNSSNAB

GH

GKSS

D IGHZF GMNVK, OEG DZK AKQK Z
MNSSNAB GH JKDZ NG UHZK GJDA
HAVK . - JDYSKGG
7e~~~rda1"• ~t.e: NATURE IS AN INFIN1'I'E
SPHERE WHOSE CENTER IS JIM!lRYWHERE AND WHOSE
CIRCUMFERENCE IS NOWHERE. -PASCAL
&lt;O 1171 Kine Feature• S)'Jidk:ate, Inc.)

2-1/

AT FIRST I HAD A LITTLE
TROUBLE TRlfiN610 DECIDE WHAT
10 DO, BUT HERE IT IS ..... .

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.ll, 1971

Metals in th·e Air
O'ITAWA ( UPI )- A Canadian
government agency , which
started analyzing rain and snow
to see if phosphates and nitrates were getting into the
Great Lakes through precipitation, reported Wednesday it had
discovered a major new pollution problem -airborne lead
and cadmium.
The Canadian Center for Inland Waters in Burlington, Ont.,
revealed cadmium and lead
concentrations in rain and snow
were above the government's
safe drinking water standards
in some areas.
A. R . Kirby, a spokesman for
the center, said scientists had

"no idea" there was so much
heavy metal pollution suspended in rain and snow. They were
not looking for it and discovered it in the course of their
studies of how nitrates and
phosphates get into the Great
Lakes.
"It will be two or three years
before we can reach any definitive conclusions about the
source and extent of the problem, but this is a whole new
aspect of the pollution situation
that has just been opened up."
Kirby said that most of the
dead apparently came from the
exhausts of cars and trucks
which use leaded gasoline.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE AT ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9. SEE THE MANY NEW ARRIVALS All OVER THE STORE.

Friday and Saturday Sale!

OMEN'S DRESSES
Sale 10.00
Smart new spring styles at special
prices for this 2 DAY SALE. 150
Dresses in sizes for junior petites,
juniors, misses and half sizes.

First Senior Citizens
Night Slated Saturday
-

Rio Grande College will hold
its First Annual Senior Citizen's
Night Saturday, Feb. 13, with
Senior Citizens being admitted
without charge to the Rio
Grande-Union College game at
the Paul R. Lyne Center at 8 p.
m. Senior Citizens include meri
65 and over, and women 62 and
over.
Gerald A. Ramsay, assistant
to the president at the college,
requests that all Senior Citizens
who would like free tickets to
attend the game shoould contact his office at 245-5353, Ext.
79.

The Senior Citizens Night,

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

-

NEW SPRING DRESSES

~

" political hacks and muscle
men" to do the job.
The 1969 law creating the
committee states the 12 members must be "knowledgable in
the field of mine safety research," Hechler said Wednesday in a House speech.
Two weeks ago, Hechler
voiced objection to the appointment of Edward Failor of Iowa
to the U.S. Bureau of Mines to
supervise enforcement of the
mine safety law. He charged
Failor lacked professional qualifications for the job.

News ... in BriefS
(Continued from page 1)
illustrated an acceleration in the flight of whites to suburbs. Other
statistics for the period showed there was little suburban integration despite new federal and state open housing laws.

Laos Activity Protested
A 16-YEAR-OLD BOY was shot in the thigh. at Stanford
University, an American flag was burned at the Boston post office, 3,000 peace advocates clogged New York's Times Square
during rush hour, and the Ann Arbor, Mich., mayor joined a
community march Wednesday to protest military activity in
Laos.
The teen-ager, son of a Stanford professor, was shot as he
stood outside the headquarters of the Free Campus Movement.
Earlier three persons were injured during clashes between antiwar activists and the conservative FCM. A university
spokesman estimated $1,000 damage was done to a computer
after demonstrators occupied the school's computation center.

Home Rule
(Continued from page 1)
give people who have made
large capital expenditures on
special equipment an opportunity to amortize their
investment in this equipment,"
Deem said.
Just before it recessed
Wednesday,
the
Senate
disclosed a change in the date
for a public hearing Ofl "all"
strip mine bills to 7 p. m.
Monday, in the Senate chamber.
Galperin 's bill would call for a
two-year fizzle out, meaning
strip mining would be shut off in
West Virginia on Jan. 1, 1973.

Weather
Cloudy tonight and Friday,
chance of showers central and
south Friday. Warmer tonight,
lows in the 30s. Friday highs in
50s south.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - Robert J.
Sebrell, Orlan Burns, James
Roush, John H. Russell, Mrs.
Harry Berkley, Mrs. William
Neal, James Goodman, Mrs.
Capt. C. C. Stone, all Point
Pleasant, and Sherry Queen of
Henderson.
DISCHARGES- Mrs. John
W. Cook, Jr., Mrs. Alta Lucas,
Mrs. Jonah Stover, Mrs. David
Atkinson and daughter and
Shirley Likens.

ACTIONS DISMISSED
Two divorce actions and two
suits for money have been
STORY OF ESCAPE
dismissed in the Meigs County
Mrs.
Vilma
Pikkoja,
Common Pleas Court. Divorce
supervisor
of
the
Meigs
Booksuits dismissed were Rita
mobile
service,
will
tell
of
her
Boggess vs. Robert Boggess
escape
when
and Suzanne Beeler vs. Mark harrowing
Allen Beeler. Money actions Russians took over Latvia and
dismissed were Pomeroy Estonia before World War 2, at
National Bank vs. Melvin R. a public meeting at 7 p. m.
Duff et al and Carolyn Grubb Sunday at the Clifton United
Dailey vs. the Citizens National Methodist Church, sponsored by
the Friendship Class.
Bank, Middleport.

MEIGs-THEATRE.
Tonight, Feb. 11
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
February 12 13
TARZAN'S
JUNGLE REBELLION
( Technicolor)
R:&gt;n Ely as Tarzan
Sc: ·n Jaffe
THE WALKING STICK
(Technicolor)
David Hemmings
Samantha Eggar
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

KILLED ON SLED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Scott
Williams, 7, was killed late
Wednesday when his sled ran
into the path of a truck on a
heavily traveled road here.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a . m. Thursday
under partially sunny skies was
37 degrees.

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Charles William Craig, 23,
and Rhonda J. Proffitt, 16, both
of Portland.

New styles just received
; ', · ;- latest in fabrics and colors.
..__...-·· '
Misses and half sizes.

---------------------·
ANOTHER GROUP OF

WOMEN'S DRESSES

Sale 4.00
Many new spring styles to choose
from- all washable fabrics. Misses
and half sizes.

Violations O.arged
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Interior Secretary Fred J. Russell has "flagrantly violated"
the law by naming unqualified
people to an advisory committee on coal mine safety, a West
Virginia congressman says.
Rep. Hechler, D - W. Va.
charged the appointed committee members do not represent
the interests of the mine workers. Hechler urged President
Nixon to oversee strict adherence to the federal mine safety
laws "instead of allowing the
appointments of unqualified

Sale 8.00

~

~

Electric

Infants Department -

Quiet - accurate - dependable. Antique white.

3.69

r--------------~~~~-1

Completely insulated. Keeps food or formula hot
or cold. Doubly anchored strap.
Beautiful, washable plastic in solid colors and
patterns.

1.98
Save $8.46

2.98

4.98

6.98

16,x27" Cocoa Mats - - 20"x33" Cocoa Mats - - - - 16"x27" Fancy Cocoa Mats

MIRROR TILES

"Red Heart"

4.95
- 4.69

12 for 10.00
Housewares Dept.

TOY DEPARTMENT

Briar Rose

Knitting Worsted
YARN

Can be used singly or in
sets. Complete with doubleface tape.
89c sq_:_ft.

Solid,
Heather
and
Variegated. Big selection
of colors in stock.
Sale Price

$1.19

FRINGED AR_EA
ACCENT RUGS
Woven on axminster looms
- Beautiful floral designs.
Colors: Black, Green,
Rose, Ivory, Gold.

Size 27x51.----6.95
Size 54" Round 14.95

SKEIN

Kirbury 100 percent Dacron

on the 2nd floor
New shipment of Fisher
Price toys for boys and
girls. Many new Pre-School
toys. Mini Copter, Happy
Birth.day Pocket Radio,
Jack-m-box, Puppet, Peeka-boo block, Three Men in a
Tub, Play Family Farm,
Tool Box · Work Bench,
Play Family House, Music
Box Teaching Clock, Music
Box
Movie
Camera,
Ch_ubby
Cub,
Snoopy
Sn1ffer, Poly Poly Chime
Ball, Chatter Telephone,
Creative Blocks, Giant
Rock a Stack Creative
Blocks, Cookie Pig, Queen
Buzzy Bee. Also see the line
of games and jig saw
puzzles, coloring books,
cut-out books, story books
and educationa I toys.

2nd Floor

Enjoy the kind of firm healthful support doctors recommend
:m ~ mattress and matching box spring. Scientifically co-

ordmated t~ grve you a great night's sleep. A very special
mattress wrth a very special price.

NINON CURTAINS
~ai},ored Sheers- 80" wide- 1112" Double stitched side hems.

Bottom hems. These beautiful sheers are machine
washable- little or no ironing.
Colors: White, Eggshell, Aut. gold, Lt. blue, Pink, Moss
green.
412

36"
45"
54"
63"

3.69
3.89
4.19
4.59

Cone Bedspreads

72"
81"
90"

4.79
4.99
5.39

••PATCHWORK"
Night and Day Quilts

100% Cotton
No-iron
machine
washable and dryable. Preshrunk - Decorative Fringe
· Rounded Corners. Twin
and
Full.
Beautiful
selection of colors including
white
and
decorator colors.

76"x80"
Patchwork
pattern
reverses to solid color red.
all
around.
Ruffled
Charming for daytime use
- comfortable Iotty quilt
for nighttime use.
Wash'n use

8.95

10.95

CONTINUATION OF SALE!

Custom-Made Draperies
20% OFF
Due to popular demand, Eiberfelds in
are continuing the sale of Custom Made
through the month of February.

Serta Ortholux Classic- full or twin size.

69.95 each
-

$5.95 Sleepcraft "Super-Therm"

Free alarm clock with each set-

Serta Ortholux Capri- A great mattress value at a low, low
price.
Come in, stretch out and try it.

59.95 each piece
-

Full or Twin Size

Free Alarm Clock with each set -

THERMAL BLANKETS
72"x90"
percent Rayon- 45 percent Polyester. A cellular thermal
blanket provides comfort all year round. Washable Machine Dryable.
Colors: Gold, Moss Green, Pink, Blue.

55

Special 4.19
See our complete line of Fiberwoven and Tbermal Blankets

-

-All at sale prices on Elberfelds Second Floor.

CORNING WARE DUET SETS
Blue Cornflower design. Consists of l-21J2 quart
covered saucepan - 1-10" covered skillet.
Open stock Value 18.45

PRISCILLA
QUILTING

Special 9.99

SHEETING

-Reg. 1.59 2 quart utility dishes
- Reg. 1.39 1 quart covered casseroles
-Reg. 1.29 2 quart loaf dishes
-Reg. 1.29 2 quart square cake dishes
-Reg. 1.29 4 deep dish pie dish sets

99~

WASTE BASKET SPECIALS

Regular 12.00 - Sale 8.84
Visit the Music Department on the 2nd floor. See
the large selection of Albums in Country
Western, Popular and Sacred. Also 8 track tape
and tape head cleaner. Cassette tape in prerecorded and blank tape for recording your own.
Also cleaning tape. Banjo and Guitar strings and
other parts for guitars, banjos, viol ins and
mandolins. Drum sticks, Reeds for Clarinets,
Tenor Sax and Alto Sax, Valve oil, slide oil, bore
oil, Clarinet and Saxophone cleaners and music
stands.

10.95 .

4.99 yard
Visit the Baby Furniture Department on the 3rd
Floor and see the large selection of nursery
items - Cribs, Dresserobes, Play Pens, Car
Seats, Swings, Walkers, Porch Gates, Training
Seat~, Bassinettes, Strollers, Car Beds, Baby
Carriers, Mattresses, Bumpers, Bassinette Pads
and Liners.

COMPLETE U. S. FLAG KIT
3'x5' size American Flag.
Heavy weather resistant fabric.
Authentic fade-resistant colors.
2 Piece, 6'x3f4" staff w-pole ornament.
Halyard and mounting bracket.
Manuel of flag etiquette.
Use indoors or outdoors.

Heirloom Type
White- Antique White
Full- Twin

An all season fabric. Beautiful texturized polyester is
machine washable and no iron.
Solid Colors: Lavender, Pink, Lt. Beige, White, Yellow, Lt.
Green, Gold, Navy, Rose, Fr. Blue.

Handsome satin finish enhances any room of the
home - unbreakable - rustproof and noiseless.

New 50 Star Flag of the United States

BEDSPREADS

60" POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS

Rubbermaid

FLY THE AMERICAN FLAG

••PRIDE OF MYSTIC"

Just received

each

98c Waste Baskets - - - - - Sale 77c
1.79 Waste Baskets - - - - - - - - - Sale 1.33

Bates

We have this excellent
quality all cotton snow
white quilt backing in both
81" and 90" width.

PYREX OVENWARE SPECIALS

Your Choice

3.19

Decorative

SAVE 20.00 DURING THE
SERTA GREAT AWAKENING SALE.

2 PC. SNOW· SUITS

BABY BLISS DIAPER BAGS

COCOA MATS
All top quality-all handwoven, long wearing.

New shipment of Spring line in Buster Brown. Scooter Skirts,
boxer shorts, boxer bell bottom slacks, short sleeved shirts in
stripes and plain, short sleeved shirts snap shoulder ... snap
frong, long sleeve cotton sweaters.
A full line in seersucker and chino cloth, striped in red white
and blue and multi color.

2nd Floor

In fur fabric in pink, blue, tan and pastel plaids.
Months sizes.
Reg. 20.00 Snow Suits
Sale 11.88
Reg. 17.00 Snow Suits
- Sale 9.88
Reg. 15.00 Snow Suits - - - - - - - - Sale 8.88
Reg. 14.00 Snow Suits
- - - - Sale 7.88

Just received shipment

ALARM .
CLOCKS

Infants Dept.
Visit the busy Mens and Boys wear department
and see the many new arrivals - Mens short
sleeve sport shirts in regular and extra sizes. All
the most wanted new solid colors, plaids and
stripes - Mens water repellent jackets in solid
pastel colors, also gold and navy blue. Boys
sizes, too. Take advantage of the sale prices now
on Mens and Boys Sweaters, Jackets and Sport
Coats.

Room-

VISIT ELBERFELDS

A GROUP OF WOMEN'S

according to Ramsay, is an
effort by Rio Grande College to
offer a service to Senior Citizens
in the community. Rio Grande
College, he stated, "is for more
than just college students. It is
for the total community, and
that includes Senior Citizens.
We want them to know they are
welcome on campus."
Ramsay stated that this event
may be the first in a series of
events open to Senior Citizens
without charge. He added that a
great number of programs on
campus are now open to the
community without charge,
including the Artist and Lecture
Series performances.

General
Mate

•'NEVA PRESS" CAPE COD CURTAINS
Needs no ironing - machine washable. 50 percent Kodel
Polyeste,r · 50 percent Avril Rayon. Fast colors: Gold, Pink,
Turquoise, Green, White.

68" Wide per pair
24" length
36" length
45" lenqth

2.49
2.49
2.99

54" length
63" length

SLEEPCRAFT DACRON BED PILLOWS
-Cool sleeping
-Retains no heat
-Non allergic
-Odorless

-Non matting
-Always fluffy
-Mildew proof
-Moth proof

Covering of fine quality white ticking with blue
rose design.

4.49 each

r--~--~------~~~-~·~~~~~--~••
Baronet

3.29
3.59

Elberfelds are headquarters for Hoover Appliances Sales and Service. Hoover washers Dryers in the Furniture department . Hoover
Sweepers- Cleaners in the Drapery Department
·Hoover appliances in the Housewares on the 1st
floor.

AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC BLANKETS
Fully Automatic

45% Polyester · 35% Rayon · 20% Cotton
Washable- Mothproof- NonAIIergenic. Avocado. Gold. Blue
· Pink.

Twin Bed Size-Single Control Full Bed Size-Single Control
Full Bed Size-Dual Control - -

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

13.95
14.95
16.95

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