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                  <text>Now You Know
The
Emancipation
Proclamation promulgated by
Abraham Lincoln Jan. 1, 1863,
applied only to those areas
under Confederate control and
not to slave states loyal to the
Union.

VOL XXVI

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 212

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1971

Weather
Snow likely east and south
and colder tonight. Lows m the
mid 20s southeast. Mostly
cloudy, colder Saturday, chance
of snow east and southeast.
Highs Saturday in the 20s and
lower 30s.

TEN CENTS

Copter Losses Soaring
20 Knocked Out of Sky by
Murderous Ground Firing
SAIGON (UPI) - Military
sources said today more than
20 American helicopters and at
least one jet fighter-bomber
have been shot down in Laos
and that the losses were
growing. The South Vietnamese
also lost helicopters to "murderous" ground fire but the
number was not disclosed.

•

The U.S. command officially
announced the loss of nine
helicopters and the fighterbomber to groundfire in Laos
and the northern part of South
Vietnam where Communist
resistance was increasing but it
reported only the loss of those
totally destroyed.
The official death toll was set

at 14 Americans killed in the
loss of the nine helicopters and
fighter bomber and in the loss
of a transport plane in South
Vietnam and a lOth helicopter
in Cambodia. The South Vietnamese reported the loss of 35
dead and 124 wounded in Laos
and said 205 Communists had
been killed.

Indochina at a Glance
By United Press International
SAIGON-U.S. Command reports loss of nine American helicopters in Laos and accompanying
fighting across border in South Vietnam. South Vietnamese forces reported near Communist supply
base of Sepone.
PHNOM PENH - Premier Lon No!, partially paralyzed from a stroke, turns command of
Cambodian Armed Forces over to Gen. Sisowath Sirak Matak, the deputy premier and cousin of
deposed Prince Sihanouk. Cambodian general killed in battle south of Phnom Penh.
VIENTIANA - Laos declares state of emergency because ''the new situation created by the
recent entry of South Vietnamese troops into southern Laos." Declaration follows meeting of Laotian
cabinet.
TOKYO- Prince Sinhanouk and Prince Souphanouvong, the Laotian Communist leader accused United States of sending troops into Laos. Both charge American infantry and tanks are ~side
Laotian border.

THIS DISPLAY featuring a Statue of Liberty and wall
plaque silhouettes of Washington and ~coin made by
members has been placed in the window of the Rutland
Branch of the Pomeroy National Bank by Cub Scout Pack
240. Dale Priddy is the cubmaster and den mothers are Mrs.
Bruce Davis and Mrs. Margaret Edwards assisted by Mrs.
Barbara Van Meter. This is Boy Scout Month.

(---------------------------,
! News •.. in Briefs !
I

I

By United Press International

•

Poficemen Reject Last Offer
COLUMBUS -CITY POUCEMEN VOTED Thursday night
to reject the city's latest pay hike proposals which range from 2.2
per cent for rookies to 6.1 per cent for officers with at least two
and one-half years on the force. An estimated 350 officers attending a meeting to discuss the city proposals agreed to stick to a
demand of either a 10 ner cent or $1,000 across-thf'-boarrl pay
increases.
Patrolmen salaries presently range from $8,060 to $9,729. City
and police negotiators are to meet Feb. 25 to again discuss a new
contract .

•

Vne Year to De-Pollute
WASHINGTON - THE ENVIRONMENTAL Protection
Agency has given eight industrial areas in Ohio one year to
submit plans on how they expect to clean up their air.
The eight Ohio regions are metropolitan Cincinnati,
metropolitan Cleveland which includes Akron and Canton,
Dayton which includes Springfield and Toledo.
The other regions are Steubenville and Weirton-Wheeling, W.
Va. and Parkersburg, W. Va.,-Marietta, Ohio and northwest
Pennsylvania ·Youngstown.

•

Moon Pilots Welcomed
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON -APOlLO 14's exuberant
moon pilots returned home to a boisterous welcome from their
families and friends today and gave a special thank you to the
flight controllers who helped the astronauts overcome a nagging
series of problems.
"It's especially good to be back because there were so many
little things that happened during the mission that weren't
serious, but they could have been serious," said Alan B. Shepard,
veteran commander of America's third successful lunar landing
mission. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell were
sealed in a quarantine van when their big jet transport landed at
nearby Ellington Air Force Base at 4:34a.m. EST, but the glass
and aluminum germ barrier didn't dampen the enthusiasm of the
welcome.

•

White House Concerned

••

KEY BISCAYNE, FLA. - THE WHITE HOUSE expressed
concern today about reports from Southeast Asia that American
advisors were accompanying South Vietnamese units in Laos.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said if the reports were true,
they represented a violation of U. S. policy. "H anybody is there,
they don't belong there," he said.
·
Although American helicopters and warplanes are supporting
the South Vietnamese thrust into Laos, President Nixon has put a
struct prohibition against participation by any ground groups.

I.

Auto Destroyed by Fire
A 1970 car owned by Charles
F. Wagner, 22, Racine, was
destroyed when it caught fire
about 8:45 p.m. Thursday on
Route 124 in Racine near the
new high school.
Wagner told Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach's Dept. smoke
began pouring out from under
the dash and his lights went off.
He left the car for help and by
the time the Racine Fire Dept.
arrived, the car was ruined.
Heavy damage was incurred
to the front ends of two vehicles
at 11:20 a.m. Thursday on the
Forest Run Road when a car
driven by Patricia D. Maurer,
Opalocka, Fla., headed west,
skidded into the front of a
parked truck owned by Charles
W. Cornell, Jr., Racine.
At 9: 13 a.m. Thursday, on
township road 236 northwest of
Burlingham, a car driven by
Donna L. Lee, Shade, and a
truck driven by Allen D. Bishop.
Pomeroy Route 4, collided on

the slippery road. There was
light damage to the truck and
medium damage to the car.
There were no injuries or
arrests resulting from any of
the accidents.

Lawsuit Filed
Three suits were filed Friday
in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court. One was a suit for
$3,515.72 filed by the Tri-County
Bank at Coolville against RiggsLincoln Mercury, Inc., at
Vienna, W. Va., allegedly due
on a promissory note.
Charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty,
Evelyn Blythe, Racine, filed
suit for divorce from William A.
Blythe, also of Racine.
In the third action, Carolyn
Rummel, Omaha, Neb., is
seeking support of three minor
children from Charles Schuler,
Middleport, under the States'
Reciprocal Support Agreement.

Dynamite Curbed
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
sale and use of explosives came
under strict control today with
new regulations aimed at
curbing terrorist bombings in
the United States.
Although aimed at the type of
explosions which have hit
federal and military installa:;om:,, the rules also cover even
the hrmer who wants to
dynamite a tree stump.
Rex R. Davis, director of the
Internal Revenue Service's
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm
Division, said up to now "you
could walk in and buy high
explosives almost any place. All
you had to have was money."
"The new law will make it
much more difficult for a
person who wants explosives
for criminal intent," he predicted in an interview.
Political Ties
More than 50 persons have
been killed in bomb incidents
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Weather
Outlook for Sunday through
Tuesday.
Cold Sunday with warming
trend Monday and Tuesday.
Chance of snow north and
rain or snow south Sunday
and chance of snow flurries
northeast Monday. Daytime
highs in the 30s north to low
40s south Sunday, warming to
mid 40s to mid 50s by
Tuesday. Overnight lows in
the teens and lows 20s Sunday, warming to 20s and low
30s Monday and Tuesday
mornings.

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

since Jan. 1, 1969. The bomb
data center established last
July by the International
Association of Chiefs of Police
said blasts continue to average
150 a month.
"Quite obviously the level of
bombings is related to political
events," Davis said. "When
political issues intensif), so do
bombings."
The IRS is recruiting up to
300 new special agents to
enforce the regulations which
were formulated to implement
a section of the 1970 organized
crime act that took effect last
Oct. 15.
As of today, any person
engaging in the manufacture,
import or sale of explosives
must be licensed. There are
about 10,000 persons in this
category.
Federal Permits
Any person wishing to purch-

ase explosives out of his state
of residence must buy a federal
permit to carry item in
interstate commerce:
Anyone wishing to buy
explosives for use in his home
state must fill out a form
stating his name and address
and swearing that he ts legally
•,...ermtltea w u· ... _ ..uch a
purchase.
All licensees, permittes or
purchasers must swear they
are over 21 and not narcotics
addicts, felons, fugitives or
mental defectives. The maximum penalty for making a
false statement is $10,000 and
10 years in prison.
Out&lt;loor storage facilities
must be bullet, fire and theft
resistant, weatherproof and a
safe distance from inhabited
buildings, passenger railways,
public highways and other
storage facilities.

BECKY WRIGHT, left, and Sheila Fohner display posters promoting a bake sale to be
staged Saturday by the 53 Candystripers of Veterans Memorial Hospital to raise funds for
hospital equipment. The sale will begin at 9 a.m. at the Warner Insurance Agency at the
corner of Court and Second in Pomeroy. Mrs. Donald Diener is advisor for the hospital
group.

Hair No Crisis
WASHINGTON ( UPI) -Jus- the only thing serious about the
tic~ Hugo L. Black says the youth's request "to me is the

length of a youth's hair is not a
national crisis and shouldn't be
tying up the Supreme Court
calendar.
Black said Thursday in
rejecting a request for review
that an El Paso, Tex. youth did
not suffer "harassment" and
"irreparable damages" as a 50page brief alleged.
The nearly bald justice, who
will be 85 in two weeks, said

idea that anyone should think
the federal constitution imposes
on the U.S. courts the burden of
supervising the length of hair
that public school students
should wear."
Chesley Karr, a Coronado
High School student, petitioned
from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals which upheld school
authorities who set standards
for hair length.

Miners Rest $75 Million Suit
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Attorneys for a group of coal
miners and widows Thursday
rested their $75 rnillior civil
suit charging conspiracy and
mismanagement of the United
Mine Workers Welfare andRetirement Fund.
The move followed a day of
testimony by UMWA President
W. A. "Tony" Boyle.
U.S. District Judge Gerhard
A. Gesell said he would not
rule on directed verdict motions against any of the defendants, except the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association

(BCOA). The motions are to be
filed later.
Other defendants include, the
fund and its trustees, the
UMWA, Boyle, and the National
Bank of Washington, which is
controlled by the union.
At the end of the day, Judge
Gesell indicated if the defendants are found guilty, the relief may be in the form of orders directed at future operations rather than penalties for
past management.
"For example, it might not
be a desireable thing tl·. at the
fund's money be interlocked

with the bank,'' the judge said.
A Primary Issue
One of the primary issues in
the case was the accumulation
of about $84 million of the
fund's money in non - interest
bearing accounts at the union's
bank.
The trial was expected to resume Tuesday, following the
Washington's birthday holiday.
During his testimony, Boyle
announced he would seek more
than a 10-cent raise in the per
ton royalty payment coal operators pay the fund when contract negotiations begin later

this year.
"We're not going to be satisfied with any 10 cents," Boyle
said. "We're going to get more
than 10 cents."
The operators currently pay
40 cents per ton to the fund to
finance its benefits.
The $50,000-a-year union chief
also defended his decision of
last June, to increase the fund's
pension benefits from $115 to
$150.
"I had continuously and repeatedly promised the coal miners that I was going to use my
(Continued on Page 12)

Student Safety Guided School Closings
By George Hargraves, Superintendent
Meigs Local School District
Old Man Winter really caught up with us this week.
We had to dismiss early on Monday and then cancel on
Tuesday and Wednesday. I simply want to state again
that all these decisions were based on the best information available and the safest procedure for our
students.
In last week's column I discussed the necessity of

Speaking of Schools-No. 175"
having a birth certificate for the chilrl at the time of
registration for kindergarten and-or grade one. If you
have not been able to locate this certificate, you can
obtain a copy by contacting the office of the Health
Department of the county in which the birth took place.
This is true for both Ohio and West Virginia.
AS I HAVE NOTED in previous columns, our Adult
Education classes are directed toward successful
passage of the G.E.D. Test. Success on this test earns
the adult student a Certificate of High School
Equivalency from the State Department of Education.
To date we have had three take the test and all three
have passed it successfully. They're happy. We're
bappy. Why not join up? The Learning Lab is open each
Tuesday and Thursday from 6:30 to 9 :30 in the evening.
The registration for grade one and kindergarten
that I have been writing about for a couple of weeks
will take place on Monday, May 3. Forgive me for

being so early in announcing this but, with all the snow
and cold of this week, it just felt good to write ''May.''
THREE MORE home basketball games will wrap
up our season. Tonight we have Wellston. Tomorrow
night it will be Waharna. The final game will be here
with Athens next Friday.
SCHOOL FINANCE is moving back into the
spotlight in Ohio news. The Governor's Tax Commission will be reporting soon. This report and the
response to it by governmental leaders and all other
interested individuals, groups and organizations will
shed some light on the future course of possible
legislation.
Let me just say one more time - schools in
Southeastern Ohio need much more State money. All
Ohio schools need it, but we need it most of all. Won't
you keep that in mind during the coming months of
confusion?
A DISCUSSION agreement involving Meigs Local
Board of Education and the Meigs Local Teachers
Association has been extended for an additional year
by mutual consent of both groups. Some legislation is
pending in Columbus in this area. The disposition of
this proposed legislation may cause a reconsideration
of our local agreement.
I want to mention again that we are contemplating
a questionntire survey of students in grades 7 through
12. Our purpose will be to gain information for use in
planning for the future. We will be interested in attitudes as well as just facts.

It is not our intent to publish or broadcast the
results of this study. I also want to emphasize that a
student may choose freely whether he or she wants to
answer any question in the survey.
There seems to be little doubt that the federal
education programs are in the process of change. All
indications point this way. To this point, however, it is
difficult to see what direction they will be taking. This
situation will bear serious attention.

DR. MECKSTROTH
Dr. Charles Meckstroth,
Columbus heart specialist,
will speak at a public meeting
to be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy. The
meeting is sponsored by the
Meigs County Heart Assn.
Hostesses will be Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority and the Mid·
dleport
Business
and
Professional Women's 'Club.
The meeting will be the
Bethany section of the
church, entrance for which is
on E. Second St.

91nducted
At Co}umhUS

What has the weather done to our school calendar?
Nothing -yet. We can miss five days without making
up lost time. Through Wednesday of this week we had
lost three days for the entire district and four days at
Rutland Elementary.
H we go over five days missed, we could make up
days on the Monday after Easter or, perhaps, on Good
Friday. We could also make up days by going beyond
May 28. Let's hope we don't have to do any of these.
However, if we do, it's better to do that than risk a bus
accident on a bad road.

Nine Meigs County men were
in Columbus Thursday where
they were inducted into the
armed forces at Fort Hayes, the
Meigs County selective service
reported.
The group included Donald L.
Lambert, Franklin Pope, Jr.,
Ronald S. Haggy, Carl E.
Demoskey, Chester L. Rou~,
Virgil Phillips, Timmy B. Wolf,
Harold L. Adams and Jeffrey D.
Howell.
Three other Meigs Countians
underwent pre-induction
physical examinations Thursday. It is the policy of the
board not to release the addresses of the inductees or the
names of those undergoing
physical examinations.

NEWS AND NOTES -We have accepted a plan to
"provide lights at the front entrance and sidewalk near
the cafeteria at the high school. Bids on the air conditioning of the center core at the high school are due in
soon - Our Board Policy book is in the final stages of
revision - I'd like to see a School Sportsmanship
Trophy become a vital part of SEOAL football and
basketball. We're working on it.

ONE IN BLACK
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Allegheny Airlines, one of the
nation's nine local atr line
carriers, was the only one to
finish 1970 in the black, a
Department of Transportation
(DOT) study shows.

�2 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 1971

What About Common Sense Power?

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

i Voice along Broadway i
I
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Bob Mitchum
resumed
his
" Ryan's
Daughter' ' promotion tour,
hi~hlighted by his raps at
dfrector David Lean .. Who may
get knighted one of these lists ...
Hello Young Lovers stuff:
Jimmy Doolittle and Lois
Nettleton; Tom Dewey and
Kitty Carlisle .... Wonder
who owns the yellow RollsRoyce in the garage next to
LaScala - bumper-to-bumper
with psychedelic tattoos ...
Producer Ray Stark wants Kate
Millett (the gal who admitted
bisexualism in her Fern-Lib
rantings) to write a screenplay
about her enthusiasms ... Ray
got pretty stark with his "Owl &amp;
the Pussycat" prostie-role for
La Streisand . .. Few hanger
pains ago Streisand begged and
scratched and fought for the
grubbiest show biz jobs: Now
her stated ambition is ''to quit
work" ... Bdwy. press agent got
a bill for $85.20 for a call he
allegedly made to Buenos
Aires; he doesn't know a soul
there ... Biggest hand at the
Baseball Writers' dinner here
the other night went to
basketball hero Willis Reed.
Cassius Clay bought a $100,000
Spanish hacienda in Cherry
Hill, N. J., on the promise of his
$2,500,000 Frazier-fight, take-

There Was Lincoln
By DON OAKLEY
We are uow separated from the end of Abraham Lin&lt;''&gt;ln's administration by a full generation more than he
was separated from the beginning of Washington's.
From 1789 to 1865 was 76 years; from 1865 to the present, 106. The difference, 30 years, is the span usually
considered to be the average difference between one generation and the next.
The years and decades go by. America approaches the
200th anniversary of its independence. Lincoln recedes
ever further into history, yet somehow looms ever larger
in history, casting a shadow from the horizon of the past
as far as we can see toward the horizon of the future.
There are some who, despairing of the present and
fearful of the future, predict that the nation will never
celebrate a third centennial. But whatever men may
finally record about the outcome of the American experiment in self-rule, one thing cannot be changed or igno:·ed :
There was Lincoln.
This man lived. He was not a king. born to rule, not a
philosopher, steeped in knowledge: he was not a demigod
but a human being, imbued with a profound love and understanding of humamty.
From the humblest of beginnings. with the most meager

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

!Helen Help Us i
I

:

•
•
•
•
•
·•

•
:
:
:
•
•

•

I

By Helen Bottel

SEVERAL KINDS
OF COWARDICE
Dear Helen:
There's a man in our office
who is a completely true
husband (maybe because he is
afraid to be otherwise), but to
hear him talk, he's the greatest
chaser since Don Juan.
He tries to give the impression he's a swinger when
really, the secretaries would
like him so much better if he'd
just admit he likes his wife and
kids. What do you say to a man
like this? - FRIEND
Dear Friend:
If you're friendly enough to be
frank, why not suggest that he
"show the courage of his conventions"? ... And go on from

'

1

religion, that's his business, but
does he think he's fooling God or the person sitting next to
him? I'll bet he reports a wad of
"church contributions" on his
income tax!
One wonders if his prayers
are answered in the same
proportion as are those of us
who put $2.00 in the collection
pouch every Sunday? - T.W.Y.
Dear T.:
Probably. God doesn't charge
for answering prayers, (though
He is not exactly partial to
hypocrites.) -H.

of educations , he rose by his own native ability and b y
virtue of the democratic system established by the Founding Fathers to the presidency of the United States in the
hour of its greatest ordeal, when truly the experiment
seemed near its end.
With power no king ever wielded, given him freely by
the people, with a wisdom no formal schooling could have
taught him, Lincoln led the nation to a new birth of freedom a nd a new resolve that this government of and by
and for the people should not perish from the earth.
There were to be new crises and ordeals after Lincoln.
undreamed of by the men of his time The descendants of
the slaves he freed still seek full realization of the equality and the right to pursue happiness promised by the
Declaration of Independence.
We live in the midst of crises today, and ordeals undreamed of by us surely lie ahead for our children . But
we can also look back on triumphs.
We need not wait for more generations for some historian of the next century or the century after that to pronounce the verdict on the American experiment. That
verdict is a lready in .
There was Lincoln.

take time. If a couple doesn't
feel it is building toward a
future, the two won't bother to
make them.
And what if one person wants
out but the other doesn't. Just
because there is no lasting
contract, does that make the
heartbreak any less? I won't
mention possibility of children,
for I imagine the "trial contract" would be different in
case of progeny.
After 17 years of marriage,
ours is more exciting than ever.
But if we had been given a
choice after a year, we might
have split. -S. H.

BARBS '
By PHIL PASTORET
A loan wolf is a guy who
goes in hock to keep his girl
friends happy.

We don't mind our coffee without sugar or
cream, but when the machine serves it without
cup . . .
;~

*

:!';

Pioneering, '71 style: having to walk two blocks for
the paper because your
jalopy has a dead battery.
:!:

::C

*

One way to get back on
your feet ~ to have teeners who dnve.

home pay ... We still pick
Frazier ... Robert Wilson's new
play "Deafman Glance," to be
staged at the Brooklyn
Academy of Music Feb. 25, calls
for a "cast of 60, including nine
apes, four turtles, seven babies
and as many pregnant women
as possible in addition to other
characters" ... Remember
when Girl Scouts learned to
make cookies and sew? Queens
County D. A. Tom Mackell just
announced
"a
narcotics
seminar for the Girl Scout
Council," and ain't that a kick
in the heart.

•

BERRY'S WORLO

Singer Mary Small's working
at Esquire, she said at the Pen
&amp; Pencil ... Max Kase tells us
Johnny Unitas Jr., like pop, is a
quarterback -at Calvert High
in Baltimore . .. Two million
dollars of Wall St. money
rumored has been assigned to a
Harlem-based
newspaper,
starting with the purchase of
The Courier, owned by Percy
Sutton ... Recently wed Diana
Ross had designer Bob Mackie
make her new show-gowns
several inches bigger aroWld
the baby-line.

I

Russia Lagging

On MIRV Threat
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Washington Correspondent

~
&lt;£, 1971 by NEA,Inc

WASHINGTON &lt;NEAl
Arms experts say flatly the Soviet Union does not yet
have any nuclear missiles with multiple warheads capable of being fired to a variety of targets to confuse
and flood the defenses.
Herbert Scoville Jr., director of the arms control program for the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, writes in the January issue of Scientific American
that the Russians at this stage do not have "any MIRV
systems tested." MIRV is the technical shorthand for independently targeted multiple warheads.
He says the Kremlin's powerful, land-based SS-9 missile has been tested for two years with three MIRVs,
which means three nuclear warheads bunched to go to
the same rather than different targets .
But Scoville adds that the Soviets have done no testing of either MRVs or MIRVs for their Polaris-type submarines bearing nuclear missiles fired from beneath the
ocean s urface.
In this critical weapons area, therefore, the United
States is far ahead of Russia, since we soon will deploy
the first two of an eventual total of 31 submarines
equipped with Poseidon MIRV missiles. These can have
up to 10 warheads and cover distances up to 3,500 miles.
Range is not an unimportant part of our margin of sophistication over the Soviet Union in the underwater
missile field. That is why experiments are going forward
for 9- still newer U.S. missile with a range that conceivably migl!t get beyond 4,000 miles. Says one expert:
·'When you add substantially to range, you don't make
the problem of detection (of our submarines) just twice
as hard for the enemy. You make it a million times as
hard."
Notwithstanding our strong advantage with Poseidon
and 50 already-deployed. land-based MIRVs (Minuteman
Ills near Minot, N.D.), U.S. m ilitary men worry a lot
about the Russians installing MIRV .
The guessing here in arms a nd arms control circles is
that the Russians might, as a counterstroke to our advances, try in time to fit the potent SS-9 with MIRV. Considering the unmatched ·•payload'' capacity of this
weapon. the experts think the Soviets might want to put
at least 10 independ ently targeted warheads on each
S&lt;:-9. The total destructive power of such a missile would
awarf anything we have in sight .
Even though we are plunging along the MIRV course.
our representatives at the arms limitation talks (SALT l
offered last April to include a MIRV ban in an overall
package. But we attached the condition that on-site inspection within both nations be allowed.
No surprise. the Kremlin quickly said "no" to that .
Hecentlv. President Nixon r easserted the condition.
thrustin g aside th e recommendataion of his ad viso ry
committee on arms control that the requirement be discarded.
The advisory panel argued that the Soviets could not
make headway with MIR\' Without open testing wh1ch
our spy satellites can observe. At least a few military
men contend. however. that the Russians· rocket skills.
though presently not eq ual to ours. are sufficient to permit them to develop MIRV tor the SS-9 or other missiles
witho ut open tests.
If the ar gument t hat the Russians must do visible
testing has holes in it, so does the case for on-site inspection . Even if they permitted it. they could always switch
to single warheads in advance of inspectors· visits. There
is no foolproof check.
For this reason. and because Kremlin leaders surel~
must wish to narrow if not close the MIRV gap, a halt
to this race seems unlikely.

Dear Helen:
I certainly agree with the We 're two individuals who care
father who wanted trial but don't lean, and we don't take
marriages, in ONE respect: without giving. - MODERNS
There should be an end to
Dear Helen:
elaborate weddings that cost
You asked for opinions about $2500.00! But perhaps if he had
trial marriages, and you've instilled more faith, hope, and
heard a few in favor from the charity into his children's lives
young
generation. Here's what they might not have insisted on
By LEE MUELLER
there. - H.
a parent thinks:
lavish weddings that would end
NEW YORK (NEA)
~othing important or lasting
in divorce a year later.
Dear Helen:
MEMO :
At our church, we pass happens without commitment. ANOTHER FATHER
To every adult in the United States who has ever come
around a little pouch for A short term contract of
out on the short end of the stick; who has ever suffered
collections, so that people who marriage by its nature excludes Dear Helen:
from the nickname, "Shorty;" who has ever been deWe
had
a
six-year
scribed by friends as a "cute little person;" who has ever
can't afford to match the bills any real commitment. If there
been unable to put his feet on the floor while in a sitting
already there can put in what is an easy way out of problems, "engagement" which might be
position :
there is no motivation to work considered a "trial marriage"
they wish, sight unseen.
Have Courage, Shortlegs \Shrimp, Squirt, Old Short
But there is one person who toward a lasting solution. How for we lived together three
Stuff, Pee Wee, P unk, Small One, etc.), things are lookalways p1.1ts his closed fist into many people would stay years before deciding we were
ing up for you.
the bag, pretends to drop together if they could leave with ready to make it for a lifetime.
The man responsible is (you'll like this) a little guy
something - and never does . a snap of their fingers? What We've never regretted this.
in Washington named Vincente T. Ximenes &lt;pronounced
would
that
do
to
the
home
and
During the "trial" we were
He even goes through the
HE-me-nes). Mr. Ximenes, 51, IS only 5-foot-5 and has
more at ease, for we weren't
motion of reaching into his the family?
trouble reaching the top shelf of his supply cabinet- but
Besides, the first five years being forced to stay together .
he happens to head the Equal Employment Opportumty
pocket first, but I know there's
even of a good marriage are We didn't depend wholly on
Commission.
nothing in his hand.
For months now he has been trying without success to
Now if a man wants free never the best. Adjustments each other, nor do we now.
convince Michiga~ Gov. Will1~ m G. Milliken to .ab&lt;:JliSh
the 5-9 minimum height requirement for the Mtch1gan
state police department. "It ~ill be the first step," he
®
Hatlo's
It
said, " in wiping out one 9f th1s country's more flagrant
forms of discrimination.
THEY COULD N'T" BE
IF= 'YOO ~INK.
Certainly discrimination against short people is not a
BOT~ ERED WITH .JL&gt;ST
TilEY'RE lN HIGH
new c o n c' e pt. Long before other forms of prejudice
GEAR. ~. .JU6T
ORDINARY ATHLET"E5"'
existed women were writing off short s uitors with a flip
THEY ONLY PALI..ED
MENTIOO A. FEW
of the hand . Something about a little man's size inspires
WITH ~E CHAMPS!
HOLLYWOOD
a monstro us amount of neglect m women.
GLA.N\DOR
GA.L6····
The United States is "big'' oriented. If a guy has power.
he is ··a big m a n." He makes it big. He's a big success.
Any s hort man who makes it big a lways does so " d espite
his height."
Small wond er X1menes got sick of it "to the point of
frustration and anger.·· 1Or should that read, ''big wonder ?" l
Ximenes is starting his erusade with an attack on the
minimum height restriction for law enforcement officers.
he said, "because they di scriminate against certain
ethnic groups in our country "
The highest ranking Mexican-American in the Nixon
administration (he was installed by Lyndon B. Johnson
m 19671. Ximenes says the common minimum height
standard for state police officers (5-9 l a utomatically elim inates "85 to 90 per cent of Mexican-Americans and almost 99 per cent of Orientals and Indians .. ,
Quotmg the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Ximenes said the average height of a Mexican American male is 5-6 while that ot the Or iental male is
5-51'2 On the other hand. fhe average white American
stands 5-8 1 2 and the average black American 5-7 1 2
Ximenes' campa1gn has had explosive response. mosth
from short peop le A women's libera tion group. for in-

"Here's a movie that' s so bad, adults are not admitted
unless accompanied by a 17-year-o/d!"

•

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Best Margarines: Least
Amount of Saturated Fat
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-Since my
wife and I are both cholesterol-conscious, your article
"Unsaturated Fat Has Less
Hydrogen," was of great interest to us. We checked 24
brands at the supermarket
and ALL were p a r t i a 11 y
hydrogenated. Just where do
we find polyunsaturated
margarine? I am sure many
of your readers would like
your further help in solving
this problem.
Dear Reader-The best
you can do is select a margarine with the least amount
of saturated fat. Since foods
are poorly labeled, it is
somewhat of a g u e s sing
game. The margarines containing the most unsaturated
fat and therefore the most
desirable are made of corn
oil or safflower oil. Other
oils are not as desirable. The
ones with the least amount
of hydrogen added are the
softest at the same temperature. They are us u a 11 y
packed in a small tub as
opposed to the traditional
quarter-pound cubes. If foods
were clearly labeled, this
problem could be solved
more accurately.

·:{ *

~

Dear Dr. Lamb-I read an
article that said lecithin was
an absolute must for everyone as a nerve tonic. Do you
recommend taking lecithin
a nd if so how can a person
get it.
Dear Reader- There is
very little factual information on lecithin. The word
eomes from Greek meaning
egg yolk and the substance
is found in egg yolk and

We Have a Little Problem Here

They'll Do

(J.,JAf)~ -

,

~r..-•-r

brain. It is a form of unsaturated fat. Large amounts of
either egg yolk or brain are
not desirable if one wants to
limit his intake of cholesterol.
There is no evidence that
lecithin must be added to a
norm a 1 diet nor that it
causes any ill effects if taken
in reasonable amounts. My
advice is to forget about it
and eat a reasonable diet.
Tnat will be a lot better
nerve tonic than any lecithin
pills.

*

:iC

•

*

Dear Dr. Lamb-A lot of •
people seem to be taking
vitamin E these days and
some claim it is good for aim o s t everything. Do you
recommend it and how much
should a persQn take?
Dear R e a de r- This is a
\ ery controversial subject.
Vitamin E deficiencies in
animals (chiefly caged rats)
do prod u c e a variety of
changes, particularly those
r e l a ted to reproduction.
Even muscle destruction is
observed. People are not
rats.
Man requires vitamin E
but he can hardly escape
getting It while eating a normal diet. Vitamin E is in unmilled cereals, hence wheat
germ is a good source for it.
Corn oil c on t a in s large
amounts of it. Most people •
get far more than any apparent requirement just from
their daily diet. There is no
evidence of toxic reactions
in man even from taking
1ather larger doses.
I am suspicious that for the
average person eating a reasonable diet taking vitamin
E does nothing more than
enrich the manufacturer's .
pocketbook. If you are interested in rat fertility, that is
another matter.

WORLD ALMANAC

•
Lincoln University, formerly Ashmun Institute, in
Chester Co., Pa., was the e
first Negro university in the
United States. The World
Almanac notes that it was
chartered by act of the
legislature of Pennsylvania,
April 29, 1854, and opened
Jan. 1, 1857. The school's
curriculum gave Negro students scientific, classical
and theological training.

Every Time

Thoughts

•

What has a man from alL
the toil and strain with

which lie toils beneath the

stance has indicated an interest 1"Women. as a general
r ule. are shorter'" he said) as have several short con
gressmen and senato rs.
There are opponents to the EEOC official's proposals.
naturally. One of them is Michigan . State Pollee Capt
Forrest Jacob, in charge of hiring officers.
The move by Ximenes. he sa1d. "displa! S ~n absurd
lack of knowledge of the dulles . . of a pollee patrol
. . . There is verv strong evidence that our shorter
officers are more (requentl)· challeng~:d than our tallt•r
ones and must resort to force more freq11ent1~· beeau~e
of it."
Ximenes shakes h is !wad sad!~ tlt th1~ . "That.· lw ~a1&lt;1.
"Is the same old. tall s tory.'

sun? for all his days are
(ull of pai11. and llis work is
a vexation: even in the night

!lis mind does 110t rest. This
nlso is l'aHitu.-.-Eccl 2:22.
2.1.

,.

There is no real wealth
hut till' labor of man Wen•
the moun I a ins of gold and
tile \ a II e Y s of silver. the
world w o I d not be one
~nun of corn nc hcr: not one
l'Oinfort would tw added to
the h u 111 a n ntl'P. i'&lt;'n·~·
B~·sslw Slwlll'.\ , pot'l.

u

�.. - 'l1le Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 1971

•
•

•

•
•

•

Dayton Finally Defeats Cincinnati, 70-69
By United Press International
Until the last second of the
game Thursday night, 6-foot-1
junior guard Al Bertke had
amassed no points at all .
But in the time it takes to
bat an eyelash, Bertke tried a
15-foot jumper and scored, giving the University of Dayton its
first victory over the Unversity
of Cincinnati in the last 15
games of their series.
The Bearcats had held a 6966 lead with 1:01 left, but Tom
Crosswhite hit on a jump shot
to move the Flyers to within
one point.
With seven seconds left officials called a jump ball. When
Dayton's George Jackson and
Cincinnati's Charlie Snow both
came down with it, they called
for a second one, setting the
stage for Bertke's heroics and
Dayton's 70-69 win.
Crosswhite was high for Dayton with 23 points, and Ken
May added 22 points. Steve
Wenderfer led Cincinnati with
19 points.
In the only other games played, Kenyon beat John Carroll
90-60 and Allegheny ( Pa.)
downed Western Reserve 8~9.
Kenyon led all the way to its
ninth victory in 19 games. Tim
Delaney paced the win with 14
points.
Ted Heinstachel was high for
John Carroll, now 5-7, with 10
points.
Allegheny broke a close game
wide open by outscoring Western Reserve 12-2 in the last
Thursda.y's College Basketball
Results
By United Press International
East
Vllnva 99 Notre Dame 81
St. John's (NY) 82 Niagara 71
Fordham 109 Rhode Island 87
Rutgers 109 W. Va. 83
Slip. Rock 122 Geneva 90
Susquehnna 77 Juniata 75
Boston U 85 Brandeis 75
Boston 51. 99 Brdgwtr St 63
Midwest
Dayton 70 Cinci 69
Louisville 94 Wichita St 85
South
Florida St. 113 Ga. Southern 81
Richmond 105 Furman 87
Tenn. (Chat) 72 Tenn . Wslyn 59
Norfolk St 88 Morgan St 80
Cmpblsvle 79 Georgetwn ( Ky)
78
Geo. Wash 83 Miami (Fla .) 81
Jacksnvl 100 Wm .&amp;Mary 69
La. Tech 94 SE La. 72
Kentucky St 124 Lane 74
Southwest
Tulsa 89 No. Tex St 84
E.N.M. 81 Houston Bapt. 67
West
BYU 75 UTEL 48
Utah 69 New Mex . 62
Nevada (Las veg . ) 74 Loyola 68
Portland St. 81 Ath. in Act. 79
Warn. Pac. 77 Geo. Fox 71 (at)

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

•

Home of

two minutes of their contest.
Allegheny had been ahead by
only one point, 68-67, before the

scoring burst.
in the President's Athletic Con- points for Western Reserve, 5-8 overall.
(W.Va.) game was the only
Chuck Rosenthal scored 20 ference and 6-5 overall . Don now 3-4 in the conference and
The Case Tech at Bethany Ohio contest scheduled tonight.
points for Allegheny, now 6-1 Goodfellow was high with 16

the Sports Desk
by Chef 'l'annehill
Jackson's Fabulous Frosh, the pride and joy- and subject of
many colunms of type in the local press- took it on the nose, 4231, Thursday in the finals of the SEOAL freshman basketball
tournament. And guess who from? Logan, of course, the school
which annually produces strong freshmen and reserve teams, but
has all kinds of trouble getting its varsity cagers in the first
dhision.
Logan freshmen have won the league championship three of
the last six seasons and were in the finals a fourth time in that
span. It's no wonder basketball fans in Logan are asking
somewhat louder each year, Why?

Drawings for sectional high
school basketball tournaments
involving 71 southern Ohio
teams in three classes will be
conducted at 11 different sites
on Sunday, Feb. 21.
Southern Ohio has 38 Class A
teams, 25 Class AA teams and
eight Class AAA teams.
The 38 Class A teams will
battle it out for district honors
IT WAS THE WEATIIER that delayed Metters' Tables, not in at six different sites. The 25
their distribution by mail, but in their compilation. Reports from Class AA teams will play at four
reporters covering games to Tom Metters were delayed by one different locations, and Rio
thing or another -let's blame the snow- so Tom was delayed . Grande College will host all of
the Triple A teams.
Anyhow, the complete stats are published today.
Sectional play will begin on
TIIE MARAUDERS ARE ONE of eight Southeast District Friday, Feb. 26. Remaining
Class AAA teams that will draw Feb. 21 for places in the first games will be played on Feb. 27,
round of tourney action that reaches a climax in Columbus in mid- and March 5 and 6.
District action will be held on
March with 12 teams matching shooting eyes. Play will be in Rio
Grande College's new gym. (See story, "Drawings," in this March 12 and 13.
Class A Sectional Toursection.)
naments
will be held at
Next year the Marauders will be in Class AA, based on school
boy population this year which was just over the divider line last Nelsonville-York High School at
Buchtel; Meigs High School,
year, and just under this year.
Rock Springs; Chillicothe High
The AAA teams are Athens, Chillicothe, Jackson, Lancaster,
School; Lucasville Valley High
Logan, Marietta, Meigs and Portsmouth.
School and Portsmouth High
School.
Our next-to-the-last crystal ball exercise follows for games
AA contests will be played at
tonight and tomorrow night. To Date Sports Desk's field goal Alexander High School, Albany,
percentage is 85 of 102for 83.3 per cent.
Beaver Eastern High School,
FRIDAY
Paint Valley High School,
Logan 45 at Athens 69
Bainbridge and Symmes Valley
Gallipolis 48 at Ironton 62
High School, Willow Wood.
Waverly 75 at Jackson 62
Rio Grande College will host
Wellston 55 at Meigs 70
the lone Class AAA Sectional
Glouster 48 at Alexander 66
tournament.
Vmton Coilllty 60 at Warren Local 68
Here's the complete tournament schedule for 1971. This
Miller 58 at Nelsonville-York 55
is the first time in the history of
Hannan (W.Va.) 55 at Southern 57
the Ohio High School basketball
Starr-Wash 58 Columbus St. Charles 68
that teams in three classes will
SATURDAY
Gallipolis 54 at Coal Grove 64
Federal Hocking 72 at Logan 56
Circleville 69 at Waverly 75
Alexander 59 at Nelsonville-York 52
NHL Standings
Southern 48 at Eastern 68
By United Press International
Crooksville 49 at Miller 57
East
w. L. T. Pts
Wahama 50 at Meigs 60
39 1~ 1~
Boston
New York
33 17
11 63
26
Montreal
27 24 4 58
Toronto
14 30 10 38
Buffalo
15 ~~ ~ ~~
Detroit
16
Vancouver
West
W. L. T. Pfs
Chicago
36 13 6 78
St. Louis
22 16 15 59
Philadelphia
20 25 9 49
Pittsburgh
18 24 13 49
Minnesota
18 25 12 48
Los Angeles
16 25 11 43
California
16 35 3 35
Thursday's Results
Boston 5 St. Louis 3
Montreal 6 Minnesota 2
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Detroit at Vancouver
California at Buffalo
(Only games scheduled)

MOONMAN AWARD
NEW YORK (UPI)-Astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr., the
first man to play golf on the
moon, has won a special
"Mulligan Award" from the
Metropolitan Golf Writers Association for "opening up an
entirely new sphere of the
game."
A "Mulligan" is the term
applied when a golfer, who
doesn't like his drive off the
first tee, elects to play a second
tee shot. Capt. Shepard missed
the first shot he attempted on
the moon and then took a
second.

•
SANDWICH

...

Order By Phone
And Take Em Home

992-5432

D DAY is not about to slip up on Britons unannounced.
The switch to a decimal currenc;y system from the old
pounds, shillings and pence is being explained via biiiboards and every other means of public information.

Complete line of
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TAFT SPONSORS BILL
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
bill to provide $4.32 million over
three years for Opportunity
Industrilization Centers in the
nation's urban areas has been
co-sponsored by U. S. Sen.
Robert A. Taft Jr., R-Ohio.

Snap.on
Seat
Covers,
assorted colors. Nylon with
foam rubber backing.
Scotch treated for no
staining . Fits all cars.
$8.95 Set

992-2238

Middleport, 0.

Starr-Washington
School
officials at Union Furnace
are seeking eight teams for a
Seventh Grade Basketball
Tournament.
Interested
schools should contact Jim
Bowser at 385-5393, by noon
Monday, Feb. 15. The event
will be held the week of Feb.

22.

DEVOTED TO
INTEREST
OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Published
daily except

winners oC two Canton,
Regionals and a Cincinnati
Regional; First-round pairings
are Canton Auditorium winner
vs. Columbus winner, Friday,
March 26, 5:30p.m. and Canton
Fieldhouse winner vs. Cin.cinnati winner, Friday, March
26, 9:30 p.m. Finals Saturday,
March 27, 7:30p.m.
CLASS AA
Sectional Tournament
Sectional Tournament at
Alexander High School, Albany
(7 teams) - Nelsonville-York,
Federal-Hocking, Belpre,
Warren Local, New Lexington,
Vinton County, Wellston;
Winner to Rio Grande District.
Sectional Tournament at
Beaver Eastern High School,
Beaver (6 teams) - Waverly,
Northwest, Portsmouth West,
Minford,
Wheelersburg,
Alexander; Winner to Rio
Grande District.
Sectional Tournament at
Paint Valley High School,
Bainbridge (5 teams)
Greenfield, Ross Southeastern,
Hillsboro,
Miami
Trace,
Sheridan; Winner to Rio
Grande District.
Sectional Tournament at
Symmes Valley High School,
Willow Wood (7 teams) -Coal
Grove, Chesapeake, Gallipolis,
Ironton, Rock Hill, South Point,
Oak Hill; Winner to Rio Grande
District.
District Tournament
District Tournament at Rio
Grande College, Rio Grande ( 4
teams) - Winners of sectional
tournaments at Alexander.
Beaver Eastern, Bainbridge
Paint Valley, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley.
Regional Tournament
Regional Tournament at Ohio
University, Athens (4 teams) Winner of Rio Grande District
will be joined by winners of the
New Concord and Marietta
Districts and the Columbus
upper bracket winner; Firstrotuld pairings are New Concord winner vs. Marietta
winner and Rio Grande winner
vs. Columbus upper bracket
winner.
State Tournament
State Tournament at St. John
Arena, Columbus (4 teams) Winner of the Athens Regional
'll b e JOine
· · d by the wmners
.
Wl
of
Dayton, Bowling Green and
Copley Regionals; First-round
pairings are Dayton Winner VS.
Bow1·mg G reen w·mner, F n'day,

Saturday
by The
Ohio Valley
111
Publishing
Company,
Court St., Pomeroy, Oh io,
45769 . Business Office Phone
992·2156, Editorial Phone 992 ·
2157.
, Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertising
representative
Bottinelli ·
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42 nd
St., New York City, New York.
subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
available so cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available: One
month $1.75. By mail in Ohio
and w. v a ., One year $14.00.
six months $7 · 25 . Three
months $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times .
. sentinel.
-

March
at 11:30
and
Copley 26,
Winner
vs.a.m.
Athens
Winner. Friday, March 26, 1:30
p.m.·, Finals Saturday, March
27, 3 p.m.
CLASS A
Sectional Tournament
Sectional Tournament at
Nelsonville-York High School,
B htel ( 5 te
)
Sta
uc
ams rrWashington, Laurelville,
M'll
1 er, Glous t er, Crook sville;
Winner to Chillicothe District.
Sectional Tournament at
Meigs High School, Rock
Springs (5 teams) - Southern

ROSE WALL AWARDED
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Australian Ken Rosewall, surprize winner of the U.S. Open
at Forest Hills last year,
Thursday was awarded the
Martini-Rossi gold racquet as
the tennis play~r of the year.
Rod Laver, wmner of the gold
racquet in 1968 and 1969 and
runnerup to his countryman in
the 1970 voting, made the
presentation. Two other Australians, John Newcombe and
Tony Roche, were third and
fourth in the voting while
American Cliff Richey was
fifth.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

About The New

AUTOMATIC HOMELITE
Stop!
Look!
For All
The
Facts .

JOHN
RIDENOUR

E
z
HOMELITE" •

Sports Vacation and Travel Show
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(Meigs), Eastern (Meigs),
Southwestern (Gallia), Kyger
Creek, North Gallia; Winner to
Chillicothe District.
Sectional Tournament at
Chillicothe
High
School,
Chillicothe (7 teams) - Paint
Valley, Chillicothe Bishop
Flaget, Lynchburg, Leesburg,
Adena, Unioto, Zane Trace
(Ross); Winner to Chillicothe
District.
Sectional Tournament at
Lucasville Valley High School,
Lucasville ( 8 teams) - Pike
Eastern, Pike Western, Huntington
Local,
Peebles,
Seaman, White Oak, Jefferson,
Piketon; Winner to Chillicothe
District.
Sectional Tournament at
Portsmouth High School,
Portsmouth (8 teams) Lucasville Valley,
South
Webster, Portsmouth Clay,
West Union, Manchester,
Portsmouth Notre Dame1
Portsmouth East, New Boston;
Winner to Chillicothe District.
Sectional Tournament at
Ironton High School, Ironton (5
teams) - Green, Ironton St.
Joseph, Symmes Valley,
Fairland, Hannan-Trace;
Winner to Chillicothe District.
District Tournament
District Tournament at
Chillicothe
High
School,
Chillicothe ( 6 teams) - Winners of the sectional tournaments at Nelsonville-York,
Meigs, Chillicothe, Lucasville
Valley,
Portsmouth
and
Ironton.
Regional Tournament
Regional Tournament at Ohio
University, Athens (4 teams)Two
co-winners of
the
Chillicothe District wm be
joined by winners of the New
Concord and Steubenville
Districts; First-round pairings
will be New Concord Winner vs.
Chillicothe Winner No. 1 and
Steubenville
Winner
vs.
Chillicothe Winner No. 2.
State Tournament
State Tournament at St. John
Arena, Columbus (4 teams)Winner of the Athens Regional
will be joined by the winners of
Columbus, Bowling Green and
Dayton Regionals; First-rotuld
pairings are Athens winner vs.
Columbus winner, Thursday,
March 25, March 25, 7:30p.m.
and Bowling Green winner vs.
Dayton winner, Thursday,
March 25, 9:30 p.m.; Finals,
Saturday, March 27, 12 noon.

ABA Standings
By United Press lntern&lt;~tional
East
w. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
41 19 .683 ...
Kentucky
33 28 .541 81!2
Carolina
27 34 .443 ]4112
New York
26 33 .441 J4112
Pittsburgh
26 37 .413 16112
Floridians
26 39 .406 17112
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
39 19 .672 ...
Indiana
37 30 .649 Jl/2
Memphis
35 26 .574 5l!z
Denver
22 37 .373 17l!z
Texas
19 39 .328 20
Thursday's Results
Pittsburgh 114 New York 110
Virginia 125 Floridians 119
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Pittsburgh at Indiana
Kentucky at Denver
Floridians vs. Texas
at Lubbock, Tex.
Memphis at Utah
NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
40 23 .635
Philadelphia 37 25 .597 2112
Boston
33 29 .532 61fz
Buffalo
17 46 .270 23
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
34 25 .576 ...
Cincinnati
24 36 .400 10112
Atlanta
23 39 .371 121; 2
Cleveland
11 53 .172 251fz
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
49 11 .817 ...
37 22 .627 1Jl/2
Detroit
Chicago
36 24 .600 13
Phoenix
36 25 .590 13111
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 36 23 .610 .. .
San Francisco 33 30 .524 5
Seattle
27 35 .435 10112
San Diego
28 37 .431 11
Portland
21 39 .350 151/2
Thursday's Results
Milwaukee 122 Los Angeles 88
San Diego 119 San Francisco
111
Sea111e 119 Cincinnati 101
(On Iy games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Boston at Baltimore
Philadelphia at Detroit
New York at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Chicago
Cincinnati at San Francisco
Phoenix at Cleveland
Seattle at Portland
(Only games scheduled)

67

THE

COLUMBUS

'14.95

H&amp;R Firestone
N. 2nd Ave.

be battling it out for state
championships.
CLASS AAA
Sectional Tournament Sectional Tournament at Rio
Grande College, Rio Grande (8
teams) - Athens, Chillicothe,
Jackson, Lancaster, Logan,
Marietta, Meigs, Portsmouth.
Two co-winners (separate
brackets) advance to District at
Ohio University.
District Tournament __ ..
District Tournament at Ohio
University, Athens (4 teams)Two
co-winners
from
Southeastern District sectional
at Rio Grande and winners from
Steubenville and Coshocton
sections in the Eastern District;
First-round pairings will be a
Southeastern winner vs. the
Steubenville winner and the
other Southeastern winner vs.
the Coshocton winner.
Regional Tournament
Regional Tournament at the
Exposition Center Coliseum,
Columbus ( 4 teams) - Winner
of the Athens District will be
joined by two co-winners from
Columbus District and the
winner of the Bowling Green
District. First-round pairings
will be Columbus winner No. 2
vs. the Bowling Green winner
and Columbus winner No. 1 vs.
the Athens winner.
State Tournament
State Tournament at St. John
Arena, Columbus (4 teams) Winner of the Columbus
Regional will be joined by

n

the Fabulous

•

Drawings For Sectional
Tournaments Feb. 21

Pro Standings

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�4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 1971

Notre Dame Upset 99-81
,

...

I ll

College Basketball Roundup
By United Press International
The matchup between Villanova's Howard Porter and Notre
Dame's Austin Carr, two of the
nation's top All-America candidates, came off as pretty much
of a stalemate. The deciding
factor was Hank Siemiontkowski.
Porter, Villanova's 6-foot-8
center, poured in 35 points and
had 15 rebounds, while. Carr,
Notre Dame's productive 6-3
guard, had 37 points for the
Fighting Irish.
But it was Siemiontkowski,
turning in the finest game in
his career, who lifted the
Wildcats to a 99-81 upset of

lOth-ranked Notre Dame.
Wildcats' Early Lead
Siemiontkowski, combining with Porter to dominate
the rebounding, scored 17 of his
29 points in the first half as
Villanova opened a big lead.
Porter hit 1!k&gt;f-16 shots in the
first half for 24 of his 35-point
total.
Villanova opened a 38-18 lead
near the end of the first half
and widened that to 73-47 in the
second half. Only Carr's allaround performance kept the
Irish anywhere near contention.
The victory was Villanova's
18th against five losses while
Notre Dame's record dropped
to 12-6.

surged past Rhode Island for
its 17th victory in 18 games.
Yelverton hit 12-of-18 field goal
attempts and had 16 rebounds
for the Rams.
Al Vilcheck, held to 10 points
in the first half, poured in 21
more in the second half and
took down 21 rebounds to help
Louisville beat Wichita State in
a Missouri Valley Conference
game. Louisville's victory was
its lOth against only four losses.
In other action, St. Johns
(N.Y.) beat Niagara 8-271,
Drake ripped Bradley 113-78,
Dayton nipped Cincinnati 70-69,
Florida State clobbered Georgia
Southern 113-81, Georgetown
downed New Yor}\ University
91-80, Rutgers stopped West
Virginia 109-85, Utah defeated
New Mexico 69-62 and Brigham
Young walloped Texas-El Paso
75-48.
Also, Richmond ripped FurShimp of Arlington (Va.) Wash- man 105-87, Tulsa beat North
ington &amp; Lee High Srhool.
Texas State 89-84 and Kentucky
The 1971 schedule announced State, the No. 1 ranked small
by Ed Starling, assistant ath- college team, routed Lane 124letic director:
74.
Sept. 18-Morehead State A-N
Sept. 28-Xavier H
Oct. 2-Miami A
Oct. 9-Northern lllinois A-N
Oct. 16---University of Dayton
H
Oct. 23-Western Michigan A
Oct. 30--Bowling Green H
Nov. 6---Kent State A
Nov. 13-Toledo H
Nov 20-Dhio University H
Logan captured its third
Southeastern Ohio League
Freshman Basketball Tourmiment in six years at Logan
Thursday evening by downing
visiting Jackson 42-31 in the
1970-71 championship games.
Logan, a finalist in the
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. tournament for the third
(UPI)-Arnold Palmer still is straight year, upped its season
searching for his lost touch on mark to 10-2. Jackson dropped
the greens and he may find it to 12-2 on the year.
today with a new putter in the
The future Chiefs led 10-8, 19third round of the marathon 14 and 26-21 at the quarBob Hope Desert Classic.
termarks.
The 41-year-old Palmer, who
Jackson, using a fullcourt
attributes his inability to win a press, led 21-19 early in the third
tourney title in 14 months to a period, but the Little Ironmen
."guessing game" putting touch, couldn't hold the lead.
shot a one-under 71 at windy
John Corby paced the winners
and hot Tamarisk Country Club with 18 points Jerry Gregory
Thursday to tie with Bob added 11. Tim Conroy was high
Murphy, Bert Yancey and for Jackson with 13.
George Hixon for the second
Logan hit 14 of 51 shots from
round lead.
the field for a7.5 per cent.
The former king of the Jackson hit 13 of 29 for 44.8 per
fairways missed five birdie cent. LHS had 14 of 34 free
putts on 10 feet or less during throws, Jackson sank five of 10
the round and almost threw up attempts. Logan had 23
his hands in disgust.
rebounds, led by Jedd Campbell
"I'm still searching for the who had eight.
kind of putting stroke that will
Box score:
restore my confidence," said
JACKSON - Conroy, 5-3-13;
Palmer of the roun&lt;l. "It's kind DeStephen, 4-0-8; Rice, 2-0-4;
of a guessing game every time Stevenson, 2-0-4; Jenkins, 0-1-1;
I get on the green."
Keller, 0-1-1. TOTALS 13-5-31.
The 71 in the second round
LOGAN - Pierce, 1-1-3;
left Palmer, Murphy, Yancey Corby, 7-4-18; Krebs, 3-2-8;
and Hixon with 36-hold scores Harwell, 0-2-2; Gregory, 3-5-11;
of six under par 138, a stroke in TOTALS ·- 14-14-42.
front of six others, including
By Quarters:
improving Billy Casper.
8 14 21 31
Jackson Frosh
Murphy shot a second round LoganFrosh
10 19 26 42
four under 68 at Bermuda
Dunes to get a share of the
lead while Yancey had a three
under 69 and Hixon, playing in
his first event of the year, shot
-a 70. Yancey and Hixon also NEW SUCCESSOR
OCEANPORT, N.J. (UPI)played Bermuda Dunes.
Indian Wells and La Quinta Ray Haight, a veteran raceare the other courses being caller at Maryland tracks for
used in the Hope Classic, where the last 20 years, has been
the cut won't be made until named to succeed the late G.
after Saturday's fourth round to Barker Seeley as the director of
the low 70s and ties, who will public relations and publicity at
the Monmouth Park Jockey
finish up at Bermuda Dunes.
There was no room to Club.
Haight, 45, will handle
maneuver for the leaders
publicity
for the track on a
because only a stroke behind
them were Dick Rhyan, Ray year-round basis, according to
Floyd, Casper, Italian cham- Philip H. Iselin, president and
pion Roberto Bernardini, Bob chairman of the Board of
Rosburg and Bobby Greenwood. Monmouth.

Three other ranked teams
were in action Thursday night
and all won. iacksonville,
ranked sixth, routed William
and Mary 100-69, Fordham (No.
14) romped past Rhode Island
109-87 and Louisville (No. 20)
beat Wichita State 94-85.
William and Mary's collapsing zone defense held 7-2 Artis
Gilmore to only two points but
Ernie Fleming picked up the
slack with a 30-point effort as
Jacksonville overcome the Indians' stall tactics in the second
half.
Fordham Wins Again
Charlie Yelverton scored 27
points and sophomore Kenny
Charles added 19 as Fordham

Herd Gets .2 New Opponents
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
-Marshall Aniversity will face
two new opponents in its first
football season since that crash
of a chartered airplane last
Nov. 14 killed 37 players and
eight athletic department members.
The signing of six more high
school seniors to letters of intent was announced Thursday
by Red Dawson, the acting head
coach, bringing to 20 the number of prospective freshmen .
The freshmen will be eligible to
play for the Thundering Herd
varsity.
The Herd will play Northern
lllinois at DeKalb, lll., in a
night game Oct. 9, and will
face Dayton in Huntington Oct.
16. They replace Louisville and

bl

Ill!"

•...
•
•
t
t

East Carolina.
Marshall's season opener will
be a night game at Morehead
(Ky.) Sept. 18.
The naming of a head coach
and completion of the coaching
staff were expected within a
week. Joe McMullen, hired as
the athletic director, was to arrive in Huntington Thursday
night and hold a news conference today.
The latest recruits were 205pound fullback Joe Wade and
200 - pound guard Mike Harris,
both of Columbus (Ohio) West;
220-pound tackle Tressie Dunlap and 182 - pound linebacker
Charles Henry, both of Conway,
S. C.; 185-pound running back
David Hickenbothan of Clifton
Forge, Va.; and 210-pound John

Squires Up Lead In ABA
By United Press International
The Virginia Squires have
.noved into a position where
they soon should clinch first
place in the American Basketball Association 's East Division.
The Squires moved 8lh games
ahead of idle Kentucky Thursday night when they scored
eight points in the closing 59
seconds to defeat the Floridians, 125-119. The Squires have
a 41-19 season record; Ken- .tucky has a 33-28 mark.
- With the score tied 117-117, 59
seconds remaining, Ray Scott
scored a hook shot and Mike
Barrett connected a field goal
for a 121-117 lead. The Squires
added four more points to
clinch the victory.
The Floridians led by as

many as 11 points in the first
quarter but had only one-point
leads at halftime and at the end
of the third period. Charlie
Scott led the Squires with 27
points. Larry Jones had 29 for
the Floridians.
John Brisker scored 29 points
to lead the Pittsburgh Condors
to a 114-110 triumph over the
New York Nets in the only
other ABA game.
The Condors won the game
by holding high-scoring Rick
Barry to 16 points' and by
outscoring the Nets 31-18 in the
fourth period. The Condors outrebounded the Nets 53-45 with
Brusker pulling down 17
rebounds.
Joe DePre scored 24 points
and Bill Melchionni, 23, for the
·
Nets.

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SEOAL Standings

Lakers, Knicks

MID OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE SCORING
NAME
FG FT
Pts G
Howie Caldwell. Eastern
26
12
64
3
Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
27
7
61
3
Jerry Bankes, Miller
33
5
71
4
Sam Hern, Miller
25
16
66
4
Gary Risley, Alexander
19
8
46
3
Rich White, Alexander
18
9
45
3
Greg Brooks, Alexander
19
4
42
3
Steve Brown, Alexander
10
21
i1
3
Jim Wright, Glouster
23
17
63
5
Pete Kiener, Miller
24
14
62
5
Bruce Steiner. Miller
23
16
62
5

Avg
21.3
20.3
17.8
16.5
15.3
15.0
14.0
13.7
12.6
12.4
12.4

TRI VALLEY CONFERENCE SCORING
TEAM
FG FT Pts
Chuck Robinson, Fed-Hocking
62
60
184
Phil McGraw, Warren Local
44
12
100
Gary Barber, Vinton County
32
13
77
Ernie Driggs, Federal-Hocking
38 . 27
103
Hoy Sec;ltinger, Nelsonville· York
39
24
102
Joe Park. ~elpre
26
20
72
Brll Lower, Nelsonville- York
36
5
77
Joe Mitchem, Warren Loca I
27
12
66
Jerry Meeley, Belpre
15
25
55
Ron Prater, Vinton County
14
19
47

Avg
26.3
20.0
15.4
14.7
14.6
14.4
11.0
11.0
11.0
9.4

G
7
5
5
7

z

5
7
6

5
5

1970-71 BASKETBALL- STANDINGS AND SCORING
(Includes games through Feb. 6)
OVERALL SCORING
TEAM
W L Pet Pts OP Off
Federal· Hocking
15
1 .938 1266
904
79.1
Waverly
13
1 .929 1116 738
79.7
Starr· Washington
14
3
.824 1355
910
79.7
Eastern
13
3
.813 1222
921
76.3
Athens
13
3
.813 1153
910
72.1
Alexander
12
4
.750 1203 1093
75.1
Jackson
12
4
.750 1241
935
77.5
Miller
10
5
.625 1004
947
66.9
Meigs
9.
6
.600 971
970
64.7
Wahama
7
7
.500 920
899
65.7
Southern
7
7
.500
757
785
54.1
Ironton
7
9
.438
994 1098
62.1
Nelsonville· York
5
9
.357
788
826
56.3
Vinton County
4
11
.267
899 1071
59.9
Gallipolis
3
12
.200
781
959
52.1
Wellston
3
13
.188
837 1257
52.3
Point Pleasant
2
12
.143
873 1072
62.4
Logan
2
13
.133
822 1053
58.7
Glouster
1
13
.071
708 1203
50.6
OVERALL SCORING
NAME
F.G FT Pts G
Mark Shaw, Logan
133
118
384
15
Chuck Robinson, Fed.-Hocking
137
403
129
16
Dave Poling, Starr-Washington
176
67
419
17
Rick Eblin, Waverly
126
61
313
14
Randy Sinnott, Starr-Washington
116
132
364
17
Mike Rouse. Jackson
132
67
331
16
Gary Martin, Jackson
116
86
318
16
Howie Caldwell, Eastern
81
117
315
16
Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
126
57
309
16
Alex Couladis, Athens
108
82
298
16

Def

56.5
52 .7
53.5
57.6
56 .9
68 .3
58.4
63 .1
64.7
64.2
56.1
68.6
59.0
71.3
63.9
78.6
76.5
75.1
85.9
Avg
25.6
25.2
24.7
22.4
21.4
20.7
19.9
19.7
19.3
18.7

SEOAL SCORING
NAME
FG
FT
Pts G Avg
Mark Shaw, Logan
118
108
344
12
28.7
Rick Eblin, Waverly
110
50
270
12
22.5
Charlie Kitchen, Ironton
84
23
181
9
20.1
Mike Rouse, Jackson
95
50
240
12
20.0
Gary Martin, Jackson
87
57
12
231
19.3
Alex Couladis, Athens
80
61
221
12
18.4
Randy Ratcliff, Wellston
74
51
209
12
17.4
Phil Miller, Waverly
74
39
187
17.0
11
Mark Swart, Athens
76
47
199
12
16.6
Larry Snowden, Gallipolis
61
48
170
11
15.5
MOVC VARSITY
TEAM
W
L
Pts OP D. Sm ith, Athens 66-108
.611
Miller
4
1 373
329 Couladis, Athens
80·138
.588
Alexander
2
1 255
216 Eblin, Waverly
.564
110·195
Eastern
2
1 240
182 Swart, Athens
76-149
.510
Glouster
0
5
289
430
Free Throw Percentage
MOVC RESERVES
NAME
FT-A
Pet
TEAM
W
L
Pts OP M. Shaw, Logan 108·137
.788
Alexander
3
0
211
125 Miller, Waverly
39·52
.750
Eastern
2
1 146
147 Swart, Athens
47·63
.746
Miller
3
2
271
249 Martin, Jackson
57·77
.740
Glouster
0
5
194
301 Eblin, Waverly
50·70
.714
TRI VALLEY
TEAM
W
Feder a 1- Hock.
7
Warren Local
4
Nelsonville-York
2
Belpre
1
Vinton County
1

VARSITY
L . Pts OP
0

495

373

2

447

412

5

4

389
277

423
313

4

263

350

TRI VALLEY RESERVES
TEAM
W
L
Pts OP
Belpre
5
0
239
189
Federa 1- Hock.
4
3 289
251
Warren Local
3
3
241
248
Vinton County
2
3
178
215
Nelsonville· York
1
6 255 299
SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W L
Pts
Waverly
11
1
983
Athens
10
2
880
Jackson
9
3
919
Meigs
6
6
747
Ironton
6
6
743
Wellston
3
9
665
Gallipolis
2
10
586
Logan
1 11
687

OP
621
702
727
804
781
920
808
847

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L
Pfs
Athens
11
1
523
Waverly
8
4
551
Ironton
8
4
537
Meigs
7
5
516
Jackson
5
7
473
Gallipolis
4
8
407
Logan
3
9
432
Wellston
2
10
344

OP
385
434
491
504
459
458
495
557

SEOAL
TEAM STATISTICS
Field Goal Percentage
TEAM
FG·A Pet
Athens
340-703
.484
Jackson
364·791
.460
Waverly
396-887
.446
Ironton
314-772
.407
Meigs
252·641
.393
Gallipolis
209·596
.351
Wellston
253.770
.329
Logan
254-783
.324
Free Throw Precentage
TEAM
FT·A
Pet
Waverly
189·274
.690
Gallipolis
168-260
.646
Jackson
191·298
.641
Athens
200·318
.629
Logan
189·306
.618
Meigs
243·412
.598
Ironton
113·196
.577
Wellston
161·303
.531
REBOUNDS
TEAM
No G Avg
547
12
Logan
45.6
545 12 45.4
Jackson
Waverly
519
43.3
12
485
40.4
Meigs
12
Athens
485 12 40.4
442
36.8
Ironton
12
34.6
Wellston
415
12
27.7
332
12
Gallipolis
PERSONAL FOULS
TEAM
No. G Avg
Athens
164
12
13.7
Wellston
189
12
15.8
Waverly
206
12
17.2
Gallipolis
218
12
18.2
Meigs
225
12
18.8
•Logan
232
12
19 .3
Jackson
232
12
19.3
Ironton
235
12
19.6
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Field Goal Percentage
Martin, Jackson
NAME

87·140
FG·A

.621
Pet

REBOUNDS
NAME
No.
M. Shaw. Logan 238
Martin, Jackson 186
Rouse, Jackson 185
Eblin, Waverly 163
Kitchen, Ironton 122

G
12
12
12
12
9

Avg
19.8
15.5
15.4
13.6
13.6

THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Logan at Athens
Gallipolis at Ironton
Waverly at Jackson
Wellston at Meigs
MOVC
Glouster at Alexander
TRIVALLEY
Vinton Co. at Warren Local
OTHERS
Miller at Nelsonville-York
Hannan at Southern
Starr-Washington at Columbus
St. Charles
SATURDAY
Gallipolis at Coa l Grove
Federal-Hocking at Logan
Circleville at Waverly
Alexander at Nelsonville- York
Southern at Eastern
St. Joseph's Prep at Glouster
Crooksville at Miller
Wahama at Meigs
Lore City at Starr.washington

•

Stay Unbeaten
NBA Roundup
By United Press International
Lew Alcindor doesn't forget
easily.
The young Milwaukee center
was given a rugged workout a
couple of weeks ago by Los
Angeles' Wilt Chamberlain as
the Lakers beat the Bucks. But
Thursday night was a different
story.
Alcindor, playing one of his
best games of the year in the
battle of the National Basketball Association's premier seven-footers, scored 31 points and
dominated the rebounding as
the Bucks clobbered Los
Angeles 122-88.
Lakers' Rough Start
Alcindor scored 22 points in
22 minutes in the first half and
outrebounded the entire Los
Angeles team 17-15:An aggressive Milwaukee defense enabled
the Lakers to hit on only 34 per
cent of their shots in the early
going.
Bobby Dandridge had 20
points and Oscar Robertson 19
for the Buc!Cs ' while Chamberlain led the Lakers with 25. Los
Angeles' Jerry West was held
to only six points.
In the only other NBA action,
San Diego downed San Francisco 119-111 and Seattle routed
Cincinnati 119-101.
Lantz Totals 31
Calvin Murphy, the smallest
player in the leage at 5-foot-10,
scored 10 of his 26 points in the

last quarter to power the
Rockets past San Francisco.
Stu Lantz had 31 points to lead
the rejuvenated Rockets, who
now have won three straight
games after a lengthy losing
streak.
Nate Thurmond had 29 poira
and Jeff Mullins 27 to lead tlre
Warriors' attack. Mullins finished the game despite a cut
over his right eye.
Dick Snyder scored 31 points
and Spencer Haywood contributed 31 points and 19 rebounds
as the Sonics romped past
Cincinnati. The Sonics trailed
by six points in the fir~
quarter but Haywood hit for •
points in the second period to
rally Seattle ahead at the half.
•

•
.w rap your love
in a "LoveBundle."TM
And put a LoveBug
next to her heart.

t

. Thi s FTD Valent ine's bouquet
comes w ith a lift-out corsage
called the loveBug. She
wears i t on Valentine's Day.
Order the loveBundle early.
Delivered almost anywhere
in the country.

SPARMA SOLD
MONTREAL (UPI) -Joe
Sparma, who lost all four of his
decisions with Montreal last
year before being shipped to Send the FTD "LoveBlindle''
the minors, has been sold by for Valentine's week.
the Expos to the Detroit Tigers.
Sparma, a 29-year-ald righthander, was acquired by
Montreal from the Tigers in
992-5560
December, 1969. His contract
59 N. 2nd
Middleport, 0.
was sold Thursday by the
Expos' farm at Winnipeg to
Detroit's affiliate at Toledo.

•

DUDLEY'S A.ORIST

best bloomi~~~Wn! •
We Kid You Not •••

68 CHRYSLER VB
Newport 2 dr. hardtop, factory air condi t ioned, fully equipped.
Extra sharp. We' II gladly refer you to local owner.

70 BONNEVILLE PONTIAC

$11-*
W

67 PONTIAC SPRINT

$1595

Save As
Much As
Demonstrators. Save as much as $1,100.00 and more because
71's have gone up over 6 per cent, and have 12 months
guarantee while these have full 5 year guarantee. Low mileage.
Factory Air Conditioners.

2 Dr. hardtop, famous over-head Cam Sprint, 6 cyl., white with
black all vinyl seats. Shows best of care.

67 PONTIAC CATALl NA
4 Dr. sedan , one local owner, low mileage, extra good tires.
Sharp car. Auto. trans ., power steering, power brakes.

67 GTO 2 DR.

$1595

Hardtop, famous His-Hers shift Exceptional in every way.

both automatic and std.

· ~95

65 DODGE 6 CYL
Cornet 4 dr., 6 cyl., std. shift, low mileage. Like new car.

65 CHEVROLET SUPER SPORT

$}195

V-8 2 dr. hardtop, one loca I owner, air conditioned. Shows best of
care, full consoles. vinyl bucket seats.

63 ELECTRA BUICK
4 Dr. hardtop, factory air conditioned. This is top of line in Buick
and this one is tops. A one owner low mileage car.

BREWERS SIGNED
MILWAUKEE (UPI) -Outfielder Bernie Smith and
outfielder-catcher Pete Koegel
have signed their 1971 contracts
with the Milwaukee Brewers.
Smith hit .276 for Milwaukee
after being called up at midseason last year.

Many more

BLAETTNARS
BUICK

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
116 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE 992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

The newDatsun 1200s are reallysomethin
We took the ugly out of economy
and put the performance in.
Each 1200 has the new high-cam
69 HP engine. Quick acceleration.

Up to 30 MPG.
Sure-stopping front disc brakes.

All-synchromesh 4-speed stick shift.
Steel unibody construction for solid
protection.
Plus, many other features and no,f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....... cost extras. Like locking gas
•
cap and wh itewall tires.
The value is really
something.
Drive a Datsun,
then decide.

The Something Specia l

•

DATSU~

SMITH AUTO SALES
KANAUGA, OHIO

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 1971

Nixon's Impeachment Proposed=7:~~~;;"~;::*'::, Advisor Staff Reduced

•

SAN MATEO, Calif. (UPI)Republican circles were stirred
up today by maverick GOP
congressman Paul N. "Pete"
McCloskey's call for a "national dialogue" on whether President
Nixon
might
be
impeached.
The San Mateo legislator told
150 students at Stanford Wednesday night that such a move
might force the president to
change his mind about the
offensive in Laos.
"The American people fail to
realize the constitution is being
breached through arrogant use

,...

....
'

,.,

...

of power by both Presidents
Johnson and Nixon," McCloskey
said.
A White House spokesman
said that there would be no
comment on the statement for
now, while a spokesman for
House GOP Leader Gerald
Ford said "I don't believe the
congressman has seen the
statement, and if he had, I
don't believe he would dignify it
with a comment."
Putnam Livermore, San
Francisco attorney just elected

is that if the North Vietnamese
demands for withdrawal of
every American military man
in Vietnam are granted, the
South Vietnamese government
McCloskey told the students will fall which no one in
that the possibilities of an Washington is prepared to
impeachment are almost none, admit."
McCloskey, a Korean war
but he said "if we started a
national dialogue to discuss his hero who first gained national
impeachment," Nixon 's policy prominence by beating former
in southeast asia might change. movie star Shirley Temple
"Nixon's plan to end the war Black in a GOP primary, called
on students to pressure "Hawhas failed," McCloskey said.
"The government's dilemma kish" congressmen to support
the McGovern-Hatfield propo:~:~:~:;;;:~:~:~:~:;;;:~:~:~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;&gt;:::::::::::::::
sal.
head of the state GOP central
committee, commented "either
Pete was misquoted or he's not
serious about it."

Buried Worker
t A THOUGHT:
FOR TODAY t Felt He'd Died

il None of my inventions :

~ came by accident; they 4C
il came by ~ork.
4C
il.
- Thomas Edison il

...

~-

~

~

t
t
-t

~
It's Quick! Easy

il

:
~

t
-DRIVE-IN t
it
BANKING t

~

:

..."'

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

t

t

iC

3:·.

....

:

other Banking Hours 9 to
~ and 5 to 7 as usual on il
~ Fridays.
~
~

il

t FARMERS BANK t

tt and SAVINGS CU. t:!
~

til

•

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

~

t

~

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

By JOHN WILLIAMS
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-A
bulldozer took a giant scoop of
rubble from the earthquakeflattened San Fernando Veterans Hospital and workers
momentarily froze.
Two feet protruded into the
cleared area and rescuers
thought it was a workman who
had fallen into the debris.
Then Frank Carbonara, 68,
scrambled from a tiny space
beneath a metal sink where he
had been trapped for two and
one-half days.
"We found a live one,"
shouted one of the rescue
workers.
Carbonara, a chef at the
hospital, was fortunate. He had
suffered only broken bones in
his hands and a bruised chest
and physicians pronounced him
in good condition.
Saved By Sink
"I felt I was dead. I didn't
sleep for 58 hours," Carbonara
said later at the hospital where

Always Vour Best Buy

• • •

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-

••

S

pend your feed dollars wisely ••. get
more

from

your

money, and

more

profits, too. Our feeds ... for every need ...
are scientifically compounded, fortified with
vitamins and minerals and enriched with
protein to protect health, encourage growth

•

•

and boost gains. Plan your feeding program

SUGAR RUN MILLS

•

992-2115

he was being treated.
Forty of the 59 known victims
of Tuesday's devastating Los
Angeles earthquake died at the
hospital in San Fernando
Valley, 10 miles from the
epicenter of the tremblor. Two
bodies were pulled out only
three hours after Carbonara
was found.
"I ran and then I crawled
underneath the basin," Carbonara told a doctor. The act
probably saved his life.
An air pocket formed under
the large sink as the three-story
building crumbled into a 10-foot
high mound of debris. There
was enough air in the pocket to
keep Carbonara alive.
"I didn't expect to find
anything," said the driver of
the bulldozer, Slim Ingerson of
Inglewood, Calif. "But then I
saw this metal sink with the legs
still straight and I thought
something was funny.
"Then I saw him and he
came scrambling out - feet
first."
Jenny Ketcham, chief nurse
at the hospital, told Carbonara
as he was brought out, "You
look damn beautiful."
"Thank you, Honey. Thank
you, honey," Carbonara smiled.
Damage caused by the 6.5
magnitude quake was still
being reported but county
officials said it would top $1
billion. Buildings in a 40-mile
area sustained some sort of
damage.
Dam Danger Ebbs
About four miles away from
the hospital, the lake behind
quake-cracked Van Norman
Dam was being lowered three
inches an hour, steadily easing
the threat of another catastrophe should an aftershock
jolt the earthen levee.
Some 120,000 residents of an
18-square mile area below the
dam prepared to return to their
homes this afternoon as the

By United Press International
BERKELEY, CALIF.-POLICE FIRED A NEW WEAPON called "richochet rounds" Thursday to break u~ a crowd of antiwar demonstrators hurling rocks and bottles into their ranks. About
400 youths earlier attended a rally at Provo Park to protest the City Council's refusal to put a peace
initiative on the ballot. They marched later to the City Hall but foWld the doors locked and then went
to the Air Force recruiting center.
Three rounds of a putty-like substance designed to stun rioters were fired from shotguns at the
protesters feet. Police said the "bullets" are supposed to bounce off the pavement and hit the
demonstrators' legs. At least three persons were arrested but no injuries were reported.
SAN FRANCISCO-NINE BIG-CITY MAYORS THURSDAY called President Nixon's new
budget "a setback for the cities" and his revenue-sharing proposal misleading. They said the administration was sitting on more than a billion dollars already available for urban needs, and
demanded it be released.
Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York, chairman of the legislative action committee of the U.S.
conference of mayors, said there was more than $1.3 billion in the current budget for urban renewal,
water and sewer construction, public housing and model cities. But it has been held up by the administration, Lindsay said. The New York mayor released a detailed analysis of the President's
budget for the fiscal year 1972 and called it "a severe setback for the cities."
WASHINGTON- ''THROW THEM OUT. KICK THEM OUT." That's the treatment Martha
Mitchell favors for Americans who advocate violent revolution. "A Democratic country should not
tolerate people who want drastic overthrow," of the government, said the wife of the Attorney
General John N. Mitchell Thursday in a taped television interview (Today-NBC).
Mrs. Mitchell questioned whether President Nixon should have named a Democrat, Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally, to his cabinet. She also expressed distaste for two Republicans- former
New York Sen. Charles Goodell and New York City Mayor John Lindsay. Mrs. Mitchell said she
would continue to speak out on controversial issues and said her husband "gets a big bang out of what.
I do."
.
COLUMBUS -GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN HAS ASKED Ohio bankers to take a more active role
to upgrade Ohio's economic situation. Gilligan, in remarks to the Ohio Bankers Association here
Thursday, said the state's economic problems were divided into three categories, including the
"simply and clearly unacceptable" persistance of substandard living conditions.
"We want your help in building the kind of society we all want ourselves and our children to live
in," Gilligan said. "I've come to extend my hand as the elected representative of the citizens of Ohio
to ask you to join with us in shaping a just, open and compassionate society."

r---------------------------,
!
HOSPITAL NEWS i

•

Mrs. Woodford L. Greene,
Gallipolis, a son.

Pomeroy

...
Only The Best For Your Valentine

WHITMAN'S
CHOCOLATES

Hallmark
Vale nt1n es &amp; Wraps

Cocoa trees
age of one to
cured beans
cording to
Britannica.

yield an avertwo pounds of
per year, ac.
Encyclopaedia

Ir--~-----------------~
·t

1
I

1
I
I

I
I
1

It's A Real Pleasure
To Tell You About .

I

NEW

I

!

I

I

~

F HA
Financing Program

I

I

!

I!
I

I MAKES
I
I

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1
I

1
I
I

I
I
I
II

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RENTING
RIDICULOUS

I

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Put Rent Money

1

Into Home Ownersh ip
CALL GREEN HILL HOMES
FOR INFORMATION

I
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II

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

•

Discharges
Pamela Kay Banks, Cheryl
W. Brinker, Mrs. Chester L.
Cochran, Crystal R. Fowler,
Kelly D. Gibbs, Mrs. William P.
Good h m R 0 b t E J ki
er a •
er : .en ns,
F~ank F · Jone_s, Wtlham H.
Mtller, Mrs. Dwtght A. Napper,

danger of the dam bursting
subsided.
The residents were ordered to
leave their homes, most in the
$25,000 to $50,000 class, after it
was determined that the dam
holding more than three billion
gallons of water would not be
safe until it was lowered.
Most Los Angeles schools '
reopened Thursday but 148 in
the San Fernando Valley 'P
T r,
1
remained closed while en- J. 0
gineers checked structural damage.
BURBANK, Calif. (UPI) About 6,500 employes for
Lockheed Aircraft plants in
Burbank and Palmdale, Calif.,
are being laid off due to delays
in engine delivery for the L1011
Tristar jetliner.
Most of the layoffs become
effective Friday and involve
about 4,000 persons at the
Burbank plant and more than
2,000 at the Lockheed plant in
Palmdale .
Lockheed employs 27,000
persons with about 15,000
assigned to the wide bodied
Tristar jetliner. The delay in
engine delivery by Rolls-Royce
was announced when the British
firm was placed into receivership.

...

A Full Line of

SERVICE HELD
APPLE GROVE, Ohio
Funeral services for William A.
Heiney were held Sunday at the
Hadley Funeral Home at New
Matamoras with interment in
the New Matamoras Cemetery.
Attending from here were Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Farra, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Heiney, Mrs. Gregg
Theodore, Ross Norris, Carl
Wolfe, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and
Mrs. Ruth Donohew.

There has been no dissatisfaction with Chotiner's role as
strategist of the 1970 campaign
but his departure will mean the
White House sheds a symbol.
The president is reported to
be ready to move all but
minimal political activity from
the White House to the newly
revamped GOP National Committee and its new chairman,
Sen. Robert J. Dole of Kansas.
Dent is to remain as one of
two special counsels to the
president, with Dent handling
all liaison with politicians and
political organizations and
handling special political tasks.
The other remaining special
counsel is to be Charles ColsWl,
who will handle the liaison with
all special interest groups, such
as organized labor and farm
organizations.

Howard C. Neekamp, Mrs.
Office Phone 992-7129
Hugo J . Pierotti, James C.
NO ANSWER CAlL
Robert, John P. Scott, Patricia
A. Stanley, Mrs. Lowell W.
DALE DUTTON
TOM cROW
Vaughn, Clarence J . Waugh,
Mrs. James E. Yates and infant
992-3106
Night 992-2580
daughter, Mrs . Claude W.
I N.
LARRY SPENCER 1
Slagle, Mrs. Albert A. Swartz,
I
lght 992·2534
Night 992-3433
I
Bevard, Hamden, a daughter; and Mrs. Rex A. Unroe.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Bowyer,
Crown City, a son; and Mr. and~------------------------------------------,----­
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-a p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4 = 30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J.

1971 MAVERICK
2-DOOR SEDAN

Maverick. Right price for a simple compact car.

vnemptoyed

Torino. Right in the middle on size and price.

We'll Wrap Your Heart FREE

,..

--...

Overnight Wire Dispatches

former aide to Sen. Strom
Thurmond, R-S.C., who has
been the president's off-and~n
southern strategist.
Symbolically, according to
sources, Nixon is discarding his
partisan political hat in hopes
of being more of a non-partisan
president.
Chotiner was brought in to
head a White House involvement in the 1970 campaigning
that went far beyond the
publicized campaign tours and
speeches of the President and
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew.
The president's crew heavily
usurped normal functions of
congressional campaign committees and of the Republican
National Committee in handling
finances, recruiting candidates
and managing campaigns, according to GOP sources.
The presidents' main goal
was to capture an ideological if
not a party majority in the
Senate, to gain GOP votes in
the House and to gain control of
state legislatures and state
houses.

6 500 Added

here ... you'll be glad you did.

180 Mulberry Ave.

•..

WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's former southern
strategist will become the
White House's only purely
political adviser in a shakeup
intended to "depolitize" the
Executive Mansion, it was
learned today.
This, it was reported, is
expected to become a fact when
Murray Chotiner, a Nixon
special counsel who led the
heavy White House involvement
in the 1970 campaigns, quits at
the end of this month.
After that the only politicaladviser the President will have
on hand will be Harry Dent,

:...• • • • • • • • • • • •JI.1f::_

~

•

Icenhower, 56, formerly of
Meigs County, died unexpectedly Friday morning at
his home in East Liverpool.
Surviving besides his wife
and children are his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Icenhower of Portland; a
sister, Mrs. Robert Jeffers,
Syracuse; four brothers,
Clifford of Pomeroy, and
Lewis, Ralph and Roy, all of
East Liverpool.
Funeral arrangements are
incomplete. The funeral will
be in East Liverpool.

1971 FORO GALAXIE 500 2-000R HARDTOP
WHITE SALE SPECIAL

FORD--

PROGRAM SET
Mrs. Corrine Lund and Mrs.
Nancy Reed, representing the
Meigs County Cancer Society,
will present the program and a
film when the Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club meets at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the offices of
the Columbia Gas in Middleport. The Civic Participation
committee will be in charge of
the program and a coffee hour
will be held .

ENROLLED IN GBC
Miss Sandra Taylor, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Taylor,
Middleport Route 1, has been
accepted at Gallipolis Business
College for the summer quarter
beginning in June. Miss Taylor,
a member of the 1971 senior
class at Meigs High School, will
be enrolled in the executive
secretarial course.

Fonl. Right price for a quiet full-Siiecar.··~"· .
The prices are right at your Ford Dealer's. And the sizes are right
on, too. Import-size, compact-size, mid-size or full-size. Better
ideas make them better buys. Try one.
Compact, Simple Machine: Maverick. The low price makes it
simple to buy and the small size makes it simple to drive. Three
models with a choice of three Sixes and a new V-8. Gas bills are
low. Servicing is simple.
Mid-priced, mid-sized Torino. Gives you the easy handling of a
small car, plus the ride and room of a big car. Responds with
precision, yet seats up to six people comfortably. You get bigcar choice. too. Fourteen models. With options like power front
d1sc brakes and three-speed automatic transmission.
Big, Luxurious Ford. Inside th e ~e·s a world ot quiet. born ot
strength, that you might not find in cars cost ing hundreds more.
A world of luxury, too. Where vibrations aren't allowed in. Where
bumps are smoothed over. This year come to where the streng th
•s. Take a quiet break in the 1971 Ford.

NOW! BIG WHITE SALE SAVINGS
ON FORD GALAXIE SOO's AND TORINO 500'•1

Free Power Steering . . . when you buy a Ford
Galaxie 500 or Torino 500 2-Door Hardtop White
Sale Special equipped with wheel covers, white
Sidewall tires, vinyl roof, luxury seat trim, special
colors, and special exterior trim.
Free Power Disc Brakes and Free Power Steering
. .. if the Torino 500 or Ford Galaxie 500 is also
equipped with air conditioning, tinted glass, the
Visibility Group, automatic seat-back release, and
deluxe seat belts (Torino only).

Keith Goble Ford Inca, 461 s. Third st. Middleport, o.
•

•

•

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 12, 1 Q71

~

~

--------------·--.--.-------------l FOOD FOR AMERICANS

Girl Scout
Diary

the Muffinburger:
thrifty, nutritious

I

By Charlene Hoeflich

Plans for "Thinking Day" to be held on Feb. 21 at the Middleport Elementary School will be finalized at a meeting of the
Big Bend Neighborhood of the Four Rivers Girl Scout Council to
be held Thursday at 9:30 in the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Mrs. Philip Fisher of Racine is general chairman for the
observance and is asking that each troop leader contact her about
the country to be represented so that program material can be
completed and that duplications will not occur. Mrs. Fisher's
telephone number is 949-4411.
The plan is for each troop to do a native dance or game, to
have at least one girl in costume of the country, and supply a
quantity of finger foods for the girls to taste.
At the observance, the Juliette LDw World Friendship Fund
contributions will be taken. This fund was established as a
memorial to the founder of Girl Scouting in the United States and
its purpose is to promote friendship among the people of the
world. Gifts vary from pennies to dollars and all contributions are
voluntary.
The fund finances international events for girls at the World
Association centers in India, Mexico, Switzerland, it pays for
annual exchange visits, and it helps provide new girl scout
associations with specific materials, equipment and training
facilities.
Leaders or other troop representatives attending the meeting
are to take one long stick and four short ones for instruction on
lashing, one of the camp crafts.
Mrs. Donna Ohlinger, neighborhood chairman, advises that
she has not heard from anyone eligible for a five, 10, or 15 year
scout pin. These pins will be awarded at the leaders luncheon to be
held on April 7 at the University Inn. Mrs. Ohlinger is to advise the
Parkersburg headquarters of those who qualify for the pins within
the next week .
SALISBURY BROWNIES 220
Valentine handkerchief folders were made for their mothers
Thursday at a meeting of the Salisbury Brownies at the school.
The red heart-shaped folders were laced with white and pretty
handkerchiefs were inserted.
Mrs. Walter Morris, leader, announced that arrangements
have been made for the girls to take cooking lessons from Miss
Joanna Distler at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
beginning on Feb. 24.
Selected as the Thinking Day country by the troop was the
United States with Hawaii as the state the girls will represent.
I'heir contribution to refreshments will be pineapple and
Hawaiian punch, and they will be in costume for a dance.
MIDDLEPORT BROWNIES
Betty Crocker coupons are being collected by Brownie Troops
87 and 174 of Middleport. A container for coupons will be placed at
the Middleport Elementary School and parents are being asked to
contribute. They will be given on the project to secure a kidney
machine for the Holzer Medical Center. Coupons can be mailed to
either Mrs. Iris Payne or Mrs. Larry Spencer, Middleport.
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 61
New patrols were organized at a meeting of Troop 61 Thursday night at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Elected leader of
the "Wallabys" was Mandy Sisson. Paige Smith was named
patrol leader of the " Horny Toads".
Discussed at the meeting was work on ' 'my own" challenge
and members were asked to present an idea relating to the badge
at next week's meeting.
A valentine party was held at the conclusion of the meeting
with Mrs. April Smith and Mrs. Linda Guinther, leaders, serving
cookies, candy, and Kool-Aid. Others present were Cathy
Blaettnar, Melinda Barnett, Judy Hall, Tammy Guinther, Jane
Sisson, Anna McKinney, Cindy McKinney, Kim Taylor, Sherri
Mitch, Sherri Osborne, and Debbie Harbrecht, senior aide.

COEDS GET KEYS
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)
Coeds at Ohio University,
starting in the fall session, will
be given keys to their dormitory

Ground beef proves a phenomenal favorite with young
and old. It is surprising, the
hundreds of ways it is prepared.
Here is a combination
'burger mixed with sausage
meat, apple sauce and seasonings baked in a muffin
tin for a more arty looking
item. Although meat prices
are generally up, the muffinburger costs realtively little
per serving. Serve with individual boiled potatoes in

skins, buttered fresh carrots
and a hearty salad for a
completely nutritious and
pleasing meal.

1

,':!

1

1
1

lf.a
1

QUICK AND EASY
MUFFINBURGERS
pound ground beef
pound sausage meat
cup seasoned prepared
bread stuffing mix
cup canned apple sauce
cup sweet pickle relish
tablespoon instant
minced onion

POLLY'S POINTERS

Fumbling Is Gone Now
For Right Credit Card
By POLLY CRAMER
~c, -~ :·&lt;,.,. ,,, :;: ;}&amp;Jtn~;:~

Polly's Problem

.:•'·D~.;;:mmK~'~»

DEAR POLLY-1 scrubbed some . potatoes and
then boiled them in their jackets in my aluminum
boiler. ~ used some of the cooked potatoes, left the ....
o!hers m the pan of water. Because of company I ''
d1~ not remove them for several hours. My pan is
rumed. It has a black ring about two inches wide
that I cannot get off. Hope someone can tell me what
to do.-MRS. 0. H. D.
~··.·

.·: ...·:}.

. DEAR POL!: Y--:-I use a carrying case with many plastic envelopes m 1t for my credit cards but always had
trouble locating the correct
card quickly. Now I have
cut a plain white card to
fit in each envelope and
listed on each one of the
cards in that particular
envelope. I classify them
as to department stores,
hospitalization and insurance, auto club and gas
companies and so on. I now
take one look as I flip the
envelopes and find the corre~t one quickly and easily. No more exasperated fumblmg.-MILDRED
DEAR POL~Y-~ias tape easily can be made out of
the Sa!f!e fabnc bemg used to make a garment. Pin the
mater~al t~ a paper and use a yardstick to mark the
~atenal d1ago~ally across the grain. Cut along these
lmes and the width of the tape will be very accurate.MRS. J . L.A.
DEAR POLLY-I recently made a wet-looking vinyl
coat for my granddaughter and had a terrible time when
sewi_n g o~ the slick side. The pattern I used suggested
pl~cmg tissue p~per under the pressure foot of the machme but that did not work for me so I tried spreading
a small amount of talcum powder with my finger along
the places ~ ~ould be sewing and it worked beautifully.
N~ more s~Ickmg and, of course, the powder was easy to
Wipe off with a damp cloth.-MABEL
DEAR POLLY-When teaching my young children to
dust I first point out that most dust collects on the flat
surfaces and show them these places on each piece of
furniture hoping they will remember most of them. I also
lJ?press on my young helpers the idea of working in a
circle ~round t~e room as they dust so no piece of furniture wlll be missed. Mother can designate the starting
point if she wishes.- MRS. J . E. Z.

DEAR POLLY-With the cold weat~er here hands get
chapped and rough. I have found a s1mple cost-nothing
way to make mittens out of old sweater sleeves. Just cut
the sleeves o~f at the elbows and ' turn them inside out.
Place an outlme of the hand on the sleeve trace it and
~hen se~ on the sewing machine along the~e lines. This
rooms and can set their own 1s ~ractlc.al for youngsters for football games, ice skating
hours. The move was in line or JUSt wmter fun .- SUE
with policies at other Ohio
schools, OU Vice President
Richard G. Dorf said.

Sew-Rite Club Meeting Held

McCLURE'S
Soft Ice Cream
Sandwiches Of All Kinds
Soft Drinks - French Fries
Specializing In Foot Long Hot Dogs
Chicke n Basket
Carry Out Service

NEW HOURS
10til10 :00
10til11:30
12 tilll :00

Monday thru 1 nursday
Friday and Saturday
Sunday

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
992-5248

4th &amp; Locust

B1 AILEEN CLAIRE, NEA Food Editor

Middleport, 0.

STAINLESS
STEEL SINK
WITH

Thank you notes from servicemen for holiday gifts were
read during a meeting Wednesday night of the Sew-Rite
Sewing Club held at the home of
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr. Mrs.
Don McKnight was the cohostess.
Mrs. Larry Wehrung presided

at the meeting. Mrs. James
Neutzling, chairman of ways
and means, announced a
committee meeting for 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Flo Strickland.
A valentine theme was
carried out in refreshments
served by the hostesses to those
named and Mrs. Edward Wells,
Mrs. Don Collins, Mrs.
Raymond Baity, Mrs. Don
Mullen, Mrs. Willard Boyer,
Mrs. Ronald Browning, and
Mrs. Marshall King . Mrs.
Wehrung and Mrs. Wells will be
Mrs. Frank (Reva) Beach is hostesses for the next meeting
confined to the Holzer Medical at the Wehrung home.
Center for treatment of injuries
suffered in a fall last week. Mrs.
Beach has a fracture of her left
arm and is currently in traction.
Her room number is 322.
TALK TIME PAST
Also confined to the hospital l.S
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)- The
Mrs. Beach's son-m -taw, time for rhetoric concerning
Norman Yeauger of Mid- pollution in the United States
dleport. He is undergoing has passed and the time for
therapy and treatment for a solutions "is at hand," U. S.
back ailment and is confined to Sen. Robert A. Taft Jr., R-Ohio,
room 224.
said here. Taft, speaking Thursday night to a dinner meeting of
Miami
Conservancy
New York City began oper- the
ating the first streetcar in District, said the nation must
the world on Nov. 26, 1832. It extend its concern beyond air
was a horse-drawn car.
and water pollution.

Mrs. Frank Beach

In Medical Center

SINGLE LEVER FAUCET
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e

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deadeni '1g under coating . Self r im si m plifies insta llat ion .
Tw in basins and ae r at or faucet . Size is 33" x 22" ( fits a 32"
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992

'/ U,jO

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Pomeroy

•

Muffinburgers include ground beef, sausage, apple sauce and seasonings.

Homemakers --s~cial-l
~
Club Meets Calendar 1
NEW HAVEN - The Haven
Homemakers
Club
met
Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. Sadie Warth with all 15
members present. The meeting
was called to order by the
president, Mrs. AI Sprouse.
The scripture was read by
Mrs. Jim Wise, followed by
prayer. Mrs. Harry Vickers, Jr.
gave the Secretary's report and
read the roll call.
The treasurer's report was
read by Mrs. David Zirkle.
The homemakers discussed
going to Lakin the fourth week
in March to give a party for the
patients. Final details will be
discussed at next month's
meeting.
Each member is contributing
toward the prizes to be given
away. Plans were also made to
hold a white elephant sale in
March at the home of Mrs.
William Fields in Pomeroy.
E~ch member is to bring
something to sell.
The club members voted to
change the meeting night from
the first Tuesday of the month
to the third Tuesday. Mrs.
Russell Maynard, chairman of
the health committee, gave a
report.
Mrs. Iva Capehart distributed
the project sheets and Mrs.
Harry Vickers, Jr. passed out
the new club books and garden
calendars for 1971.
This month's lesson (Drugs
and You) was given by Mrs.
Harry Vickers, Jr. and
discussed. The meeting was
adjourned and refreshments
were served followed by games
with prizes going to lV.rs. Jesse
Maynard, Mrs. Iva Capehart
and Mrs. Lewis Johnson. Mrs.
Harry Vickers, Jr. won the door
prize.
Secret Sisters exchanged
gifts.'
Also present were Mrs.
Dennis Briles, Mrs. Aubrey
Newell, Mrs. Hilda Warth, Mrs.
William Grinstead and Mrs.
Emory Hart.

Discussion Group
Met at Athens Inn

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F &amp;AM, master mason degree;
Inspection, 7:30 p.m. Friday.
SATURDAY
JITNEY SUPPER, Saturday,
4:30 to 7 p.m. at Eastern High
School sponsored by band
boosters.

SALE

Y4- Y2
'MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

99 Mi II Street
Middleport, Ohio

MOTOROLA.@
Cassette Player Recorder
With Youthful
Styling
Comes in black
and
walnutgrained
polystyrene
case
with
white trim.

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 Chure-h, 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.
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday night, IOOF hall;
refreshments, all members
urged to attend.
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 8 and
40, 7:30p.m . Monday, home of
Eileen Searles.
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday at Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport.
SALISBURY P.T.A. Tuesday,
Feb. 16, 7:30p.m. at the school;
Mrs. Wendell Hoover to give
devotions; Founder's Day to be
observed, past presidents to be
honored. Refreshments.
THURSDAY
CLASS 12, HEATH United
Methodist Church, 7:30p.m. at
the church. Program by Mrs.
John Bechtle, devotions by Miss
Nellie Zerkle.

YOUR OLD BILLS•••
call for

~~=£PhC.~!~
125 E. Main
Pomeroy , 0 .

..

JEWELIIY
REDUCED

SUNDAY
YOUTH REVIVAL, Syracuse
Radio sets were advertised
Church of the Nazarene , Friday for the first time in 1906.
through Sunday, 7:30 each
evening, Rev. 0. G. McKinney
speaking. Special music.
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.

•

MRS. AMON DIES
Mrs. Bertha Wetzel has
received word of the recent
death of Mrs. Matilda Amon of
Beaver, Pa. Mrs. Amon who
Airman 1-c and Mrs. died on Feb. 11 is the former
Raymond Zirkle left Thursday "Tillie" Shoemaker of Pornmorning for Tampa, Fla. where eroy.
Airman Zirkle will be stationed
at the McDill Air Force Base.
,.
For ~e past 12 weeks, Airman Zrrkle has been stationed
at Fort Mammouth, N. J.
Enroute to Florida the couple
came here to visit their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duckworth and Mrs. Norma Zirkle.

Cou pie Leaves for
His Duty Station

Records and plays on 4 '
batteries, or AC cu rren
Adapter. Dynamic micro
remote control switch.

Celf

A. C.
with

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Hang on

to Your
Money!

LET BLOCK

FIGURE
YOUR

The school and community
relations was the topic of the
winter meeting of the
Southeastern Ohio District
supervisors' discussion group
held Monday at Ohio University
Inn at Athens. Mrs. Gretta
Suttle, a Meigs County school
Many times we can save
supervisor, chairman of the
BOTH
the
average
taxpayer
district group, attended as did
FEDERAL
more than the small cost
Mrs. Nellie Vale, also a county
AND
of our service. Bring your
supervisor.
STATE
tax
problems
to
us.
You'
ll
The group heard talks by Dr.
save time, worry a nd often
Hugh M. Culbertson, associate
money! Don' t delay. See
professor at Ohio University,
BLOCK today. You'll be
George C. Joachim of radio
glad we got together.
0
WOUB and Jerry Izor of radio
Balloons to benefit the heart
~~:S:S:S:S:S:S
GUARANTEE
:=~=s:=:=:S:S=ffi
WATH, Athens, dealing with fund drive will be sold on the
We guarantee accurate preporation of every tax return.
public relations and com- streets of Middleport by boys of
If we make any errors that cost you any penalty or
interest, we will pay that penalty or interest.
munications.
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
Saturday.
304 E. Main Street
Ph. 992-3795
The boys will be stationed in
downtown Middleport from 9:30
Pomeroy, Ohio
a.m . to 3:30 p.m. and on the
corner of Pearl and Locust from
The annual valentine project 10 a.m. to 5 p .m . Members of
of the Afternoon Circle of Heath Boy Scout Troop 245 have
AMERICA'S LARGEST TAX SERVICE WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES
United Methodist Church was assisted the cubs in inflating the
·
- - - · N O APPOINTMENT NECESSARY·---·
postponed Thursday due to the balloons for the sale.
slick condition of Middleport
streets.
The trays of cookies and
candies will be prepared at 1
p.m. Tuesday at the church and
delivered that afternoon to shutins. Members of Heath church
1. Save money on gas.
are asked to contribute to the
project.
2. High quality oil, anti-freeze, and accessories.

INCOME AX
$

Balloons for Sale
By Cub Pack 245

M .. Ill e t.,O( I!. 1 0 71

Valentine Project
Of Circle Delayed

IF YOU WANT TO SAVE MONEY
SEE RUSS AND MIKE MILLER

OUR NEW BILLS

SPECIAL

1 teaspoon salt
h teaspoon pepper
1 egg, beaten
Combine all ingredients in
large mixing bowl, mixing
well. Let stand half hour.
Spoon meat mixture into 12
lightly greased muffin tins.
Bake at 350 degrees for 20
to 25 minutes. Serve hot with
buttered fresh carrots and
boiled potatoes. Accompany
with a tossed salad. Makes 6
servings.
1

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

.ROBINSON'S
" .... ijs
CL..J:'nl1tl\

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

-

3. Master Charge, BankAmericard, and Certified credit
cards.
4. We sell for less because we buy directly from the refinery,
and are one of the largest independent companies in the
U.S.A.
5. We never let a car out of the station with a dirty windshield .
6 . All products sold with a money-back guarantee.

:CERTIFIED OIL COMPANY
538 W. MAIN

(at the bridge)

POMEROY, OHIO

4
'

�' t - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

0., Feb. 12, 1971

Non -Happerting: Massive Popular Revolt
•

BY WILLIAM S. WHITE

WASHINGTON
The
greatest non-happening since
the massive popular revolt that
was supposed to sweep the
country when President Nixon
intervened in Cambodia is now
being seen as to the South
Vietnamese invasion of Laos
under American air cover.
For weeks the more extreme
antiwar senators predicted that

the White Paper

•
)
(

if the President dared thus to
"widen" the conflict, the public
would be in transports of rage
and only the good Lord knew
what dreadful things would
ensue. Some of these "warnings," parenthetically and
sadly, were accompanied by an
anticipatory gleam of pleasure
ill masked as concerned pain.
Instead, as in Cambodia, the
people are unaccountably
refusing to follow the scenario
prepared by the doom-sayers.
Again, they are waiting to see
what develops in Laos before
bringing in a verdict that the
President and his bipartisan
advisers were all wrong there.
A certain national calm
persists in breaking through in
spite of such efforts of those of
Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine,
the front-runner for the
Democratic presidential
nomination, to blow this thing
up into an unforgettable
"outrage."
More interestingly, even the
United States Senate, so long
the home of doveism in its most
vehement form, is not really
utterly wracked with horror at
this impertinent effort by the
President to close off the old,
old highway of North Viet-

•

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FU.RNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Night
MIDDLEPORT

namese communist aggression
that is the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Even such professional adversaries of the war policy as
Sens. William Fulbr ight of
Arkansas a nd Ted Kennedy of
Massachusetts have seemed not
prepared
to
bet quite
everything on the failure of this
mission.
Way out in front, indeed, is
Senator Muskie, whose instant
reaction was that we must
"negotiate" an end to the war
and the rescue of American
prisoners by first promising a
"total withdrawal" of all our
forces.
Somewhat tending to isolate
Muskie is not merely the fact
that such an approach would
inescapably destroy, in advance,
any
conceivable

I

Claren ce
Miller

I

A booklet published by the
Defense Supply Agency says
that the Defense Department
retains only "usable supplies
for which there is a current or
foreseeable requirement."
Military
The
House
Operations Subcommittee says
just the opposite.
In each of the past three
years, the Military Operations
Subcommittee has conducted
extensive hearings on military
supply systems and the logistics
operation of the Defense
Department. The findings of the
Committee have essentially
always been the same: There
exists a costly oversupply of
items on the defense supply
shelf.
Another concurring report
submitted by the General Accounting Office (the auditing
check and balance arm of the
federal government) accused
the Marine Corps of costly stock
duplication and recommended
prompt action by the Defense
Department to end inefficient
and uneconomical maintenance
of supplies which are doing little
more than gathering dust in
federal warehouses. All at the
taxpayer's expense.
The GAO reported that the
Marine Corps supply activity
had 265,000 items valued at
$280.5 million on hand or on
order. Of these items, 185,000
items- or 70 per cent- valued
at $148 million were already
stocked by the ·Defense Supply
Agency, the Army Tank
Automotive Command, or the
General
Services
Administration.
This is $148 million that could
be better used.
For this $148 million lost due
to stock duplication, no less
than 98 communities equal in
population
to
Jackson
(population 6843) could construct complete, new water
systems inside their city limits.
More than 95 miles of new,
economically important Appalachian Highway could be
constructed for the same
amount. At least 113 new
vocational institutions like the
Tri-County Vocational School at
Nelsonville could be constructed for $148 million and 33
hospitals comparable in size,
quality and service to the
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens could be erected with
the money involved in this one
case of federal financial

Insulated Dog Houses
Rawhide Chews
Cat Bells
Pens &amp; Carrying
Cases For Pets

TRAVEL SEATS
Dog &amp; Cat Collars &amp; Harness
Red Cedar Kennel Bedding
Tropical Fish &amp; Supplies
Uve Hamsters, Cages &amp; Supplies

Know &amp; Enjoy Your Peis
Consult Our Pet Library

MODERN SUPPLY
W. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
TheStoreWith"ALL K I NDS OF STUFF"
For Pets Stables Large &amp; Small Animals - Lawns Gardens.

I

mismanagement.
The federal government says
that a surplus exists when
"property becomes excess
because of changes in defense
needs or unsuitable because of
wepr and tear," or "when that
particular item cannot be used
by any other federal agency or
activity."
To have an effective and
economical system of military
supply, it is necessary to build
an equally efficient system of
management and control. It
means checking cost overruns
and preventing the duplication
of materials. It means that
positive
and
aggressive
measures must be maintained
to catalog and standardize
items and parts. When taxpayer's dollars are not being
put into programs where they
will be most useful, then we
should reexamine our financial
logbook and weed out unnecessary spending. Domestic
p r o b I em s , m i 1 i t a r y
preparedness,
and
our
economic stability demand it.

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Nixon administration announced Thursday final plans
for 1971 planting controls on
grains and cotton. Included was
a 20 per cent acreage set-aside
requirement for feed grains.
The announcement made
final a tentative ruling issued
Dec. 8 and ended speculation
the acreage retirement level
might be set lower because of
the possibility this year of a new
corn blight attack.
Minimum price support
payments to corn and sorghum
growers are tied by law to the
acreage set-aside figure. The

ISSUES ARE CITED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Senate Republican Whip, Sen.
Michael J. Maloney, RCincinnati, says taxation and
government finance will be the
major issues facing the current
session of the General
Assembly. Maloney, in a speech
to the Ohio Bankers Association
here Thursday, said the GOP
dominated legislature must
compromise if the session is to
be productive.

MONEY CliPS
by Mort Reed
After almost five years,
Congress has finally passed
a bill authorizing the sale of
nearly 3 million silver dollars on a bid-sale basis. Congressional legislation for
this action and similar approval of the new Eisenhower dollar was signed into
law by President Nixon Dec.
31, 1970.
Of the 2.94 million presumably "rare" silver dollars soon to be sold by the
General Services Administration. 2.83 million bear

the "CC" Carson City mint
mark. The remaining 110,050 consist of pieces carrying the ''0" mint mark for
New Orleans; the "S" for
San Francisco and no mint
mark at all for the Philadelphia facility.
Just what effect the distribution of these dollars
will have on t he market
value of those already held
bv collectors and investors
is not certain, but most experts agree it can only be
of a positive nature.
With very few exceptions
the silver dollar collector/
investor market has inclined
at a reasonably steady pace.
And if the appearance of
some scarce, if not rare,
coins has had no visible ef-

feet on this particular denomination, the coin market in general looks good.
For example: The discovery of the Carson City silver dollars was announced
in mid-1964 and Coin World
carried a complete inventory of the "find" in its Dec.
16, 1964, issue. Among the
rarest of the pieces uncovered were some 147,000
1881 Carson City dollars.
Slightly less than 50 per
cent of the total mintage
for that year of 296,000.
This sudden appearance
had little or no effect on th€
retail value of those held by
collectors/ investors. In 1961
the 1881-CC dollar was valued at $15 for an uncirculated specimen. In 1966 the
Red Book gave it an average
value of $55 and today the
same coin is being offered
at $80--an increase of 433
per cent over a 10-year period.
With the issuance of the
Eisenhower dollar, interest
in the market is expected to
expand even farther. For
just as the Kennedy halfdollar e n c o u r a g e d the
holder to surround it with
representative specimens of
other half-dollar types, the
new "Ike" dollar will have
considerable influence on
the d e m a n d for various
types of our earlier dollars.
And if this were not

recent State of the Union
message as one of his six "great
goals."
"There is no doubt that this is
the top priority legislation in the
92nd Congress," Miller stated.
"Our states and local governments are facing a serious
financial crisis."
"Local taxpayers have
reached the limit of their ability

to pay. Revenue sharing will
provide immediate relief to this
situation and help ease the local
tax burden," Miller added.
Miller, a sponsor of revenue
sharing plans in the 90th and
9lst Congresses, pointed out
that under this legislation the
state of Ohio will receive $212
million in the first full year of
funding.

Skills-Building Program
Underway At Rio College ·

I

I
I

WASHINGTON- Ohio Tenth
District Congressman Clarence
E. Miller announced that he is a
sponsor of the President's
general revenue sharing
proposal introduced in the
House of Representatives.
The $5 billion proposal
covering new and unrestricted
funds to be shared with state
and local governments was
outlined in the President's

Finally, piteous complaints
that "the Senate" - meaning
the Foreign Relations Committee - should have been
given all the details of this
military operation in advance
are not even impressing the
bulk of the Senate itself. The
reason is simple: The Foreign
Relations
Committee
is
notoriously the most leaky sieve
in all Congress, not out of
disloyalty but out of a com"Deficiences in the basic
pulsive flapjawness, and communicative skills affect a
everybody knows it.
student's performance both in
college and after college.
Communication is the basis of
our society and of a significant
college experience.
"Because communication
skills are so important," said
Dr. Herman L. Koby, vice
president for academic affairs,
"Rio Grande College has
structured a skills-building
announcement meant-therefore
program, utilizing the college's
the administration had avoided learning center, for students
a potentially sensitive move of with deficiencies."
setting minimum corn support
The new program, currently
payments below the expected separate from the college's
figure of 32 cents a bushel.
Remedial English program, is
Because the set-aside is
retained at the 20 per cent level,
mtmmum
corn
support
payments this year will be 32
cents.
Farmers who grow corn and
grain sorghums must idle crop
land equal to 20 per cent of their
farm base acreage of these
crops if they want price support
LIVERPOOL (UPI) - The
loans and direct support Liverpool chapter of Women's
payments.
Lib turned its wrath today on
Agriculture Secretary Clif- Snow White and the Seven
ford M. Hardin also announced Dwarfs. No self-respecting girl
final 1971 acreage set-aside should have to wash dishes for
requirements for wheat and seven men, it said.
cotton. In order to earn supAnd not only that, it said, no
ports, wheat growers must idle self-respecting girl would have
acreage equal to 75 per cent of let herself get carted off by a
their allotment.
fairy prince on a charger to
Officials said eight· alternate decorate his palace boudoir as
crops may be grown on the set- a sex object the rest of her
aside acres idled by farmers in days.
the new controlled programs.
So in protest, the Liverpool
chapter announced it had
rewritten the Snow White story
as pilot for a project which will
totally refashion the familiar
childhood fairy tales-the timehonored indoctrinators of the
young.
The wicked queen is still
ihere, of course. But now she
hates Snow White not just for
her beauty, but because she's a
lively, talented, happy girl.
Snow White still bites the
poisoned apple and ·passes out.
enough to spur the market, But this time the hunter saves
consider the coming event her because he hates to see all
of our bicentennial in 1976. that intellectual potential go
Tourist and foreign visitors down the drain. Along comes
to the United States for that
Prince Charming and- poof! celebration will p 1 a c e a
strain on most of the avail- the happy couple spend the rest
able coin combinations that of their days toiling shoulder-to.
will be offered for sale, es- shoulder with the dwarfs down
pecially the silver dollar in their mine.
sets.
Fairy tales, say the ladies,
A limited edition of only have always stereotyped femi150,000,000 s i 1 v e r Eisen- nine virtues and vices. Selfhower dollars will be determining women are always
minted. Like Kennedy, Eisenhower belonged to the represented as ugly and evil. A
free world. And like the pretty girl can always trade on
Kennedy silver half-dollar, her beauty to win riches, smart
the " Ike" silver dollar will clothes and other superficials.
quickly find its way to west- Nary a thought goes to such
ern Europe, Africa and the allegedly male virtues as ideas,
La t i n-Americon countries
unless t he Treasury com- creativity or moral and ethical
mits the buyer to a holding values.
Men, by contrast, are always
period of three to five years
in which he agrees not to
sell, trade or give away his
allotted pieces.
This would e 1 i m in a t e
hoarding, speculation and
scalping long enough for the
actual value of the silver
dollar to find a logical level.
Far too much of our silver and gold coinage has
found its way out of the
country and when the Eisenhower dollar program is
concluded it will be all over
insofar as prestige coinage
is concerned. So think twice
before disposing of any silver coin for any reason.

:I Report By

Dog Coat &amp; Sweaters

399

as a former supporter of
resistance in Vietnam, he began
to debate himself so unsuccessfully as to wind up as a
kind of _dove and a selfproclaimed victim of "brainwashing."

20% Set-Aside
I For Feed Grain
I

I
I

Dog &amp; Cat Beds

'

When the Speaker of the
House of Representatives, Carl
Albert of Okla homa, backs the
President, as he is doing, he is
quietly exercising more real
muscle than all the Muskies can
put together. He is also
speaking as the prospective
permanent chairman of the
next Democratic National
Convention - and permanent
chairmen, when of a mind, have
a great deal of influence upon
what conventions do and upon
whom they nominate.

In brief, the old dove bloc is,
for a variety of reasons, far
from monolithic this time. Not
the least of these reasons is the
among
m any
suspicion
Democrats, including some of
his rivals for the presidential
nomination, that Ed Muskie is
steadily painting himself into a
corner. Suppose the Laotian
venture works pretty well after
all - as did the Cambodia
venture? If so, those doves who
have been able to restrain their
attacks to some degree will be
in a reasonably good position.
Muskie, to the contrary, is
leaving himself no option; And
it is not inconceivable that he
m ight become the George
Romney of 1972. Romney did
well in the 1968 Republican
presidential sweepstakes until,

r--------------------------,
! Washington !

Everything For Your
Pets - - -

PET

"negotiating" position on our
side except that of surr ender .
There is also the circumstance
that in Congress the President
ha s far m or e Democratic
support than Democratic opposition here.

Miller Joins Sponsors of Bill

under the direction of John
Graham, associate professor of
speech, and uses a series of
programmed texts in the areas
of spelling, grammar and
reading. Students at the college
took a battery of tests to
determine their skill-level in
each area.
Students whose skills fell
below the level considered
necessary for college work were
assigned to the learning center.
The students spend a minimum
of two hours weekly in the
Center until they complete the
texts. Mter completing the
texts, the students are re-tested
and those with satisfactory
scores are excused from the

program.
The program, according to
Koby, "is an experimental one
that Rio Grande College hopes
to move into gradually. The
objective of the program is to
help students build their basic
communicative skills."
The skilis-building program is
one way electronic teaching
aids are utilized in the Learning
Center at Rio Grande College.
The Center offers a complete
set of programmed materials in
the areas of voice and diction
improvement, basic foreign
language development,
phonetic analysis and reading
and composition improvement,
as well as the skills-building
materials.

Even Snow White
Getting New Face

WE
SP EC IALIZE
.........,..... ,, IN WEDDINGS

brave, rich, active and handsome. What's more they
always, but always, win out in
the end.
No more. In fairy tales,
women's Lib style, the princess
sometimes uses brains and wits
to bail a floundering he-man out
of trouble-usually of his own
making, a group statement
said.
Marriage is mentioned only
when it is crucial to mention it.
The group said it planned to
approach a publisher when it
had revamped a sufficient
quantity of material.

someone~

Everything but the Ring and
the Groom.
Invitations
Napkins
Decorations
Books
Engraved Cake Knives,
Servers, Punch Bowls by
Starlight.
Great selection of Albums to
choose from.

THE

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

992-3345

Middleport, 0

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PH. 992-2039
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Pomeroy

Mrs. Millard Van Meter

�a- The Di! ·ly &amp; ntmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 12, 1971

POMEROY
POMEt&lt;UY
TRINITY
UnitedChurch of Christ -Rev.
Perrin, pastor'. Fred Blaettnar,
supt. Sunday School, 9:15a . m. ;
• Worship, 10:25 a. m .; youth
choir rehearsal, Monday, 6:30
p. m., Mr!. Marvin Burt,
director.
Senior
choir
rehearsal, 7:30p. m. Thursday,,
Mlfs. Paul Nease, director.
Thursday, all day Busy Bee
quilting party in church social

SEVENTH DAY ADVEN~
TIST Pomeroy , Mulberry
Hgts. Herbert Morgan, pastor. ·
Sabbath S~hool, Saturday, 2 p.
m. ; worshrp, 3:15 p, m. Dorcas
Society, lOa. m. each Thursday.

MIDDLEPORT

FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN, Middleport-Rev.
Russell Lester, pastor. Sunday
School9:30a. m., Lewis Sauer,.
supt.; worship service 10:30
a.m .
room
M I DOLE PORT
HEATH
POMEROY CHURCH OF UNITED METHODIST-Rev.
THE •NAZARENE Corner Max E. Donahue, minister;
Union and Mulberry. Rev. Eric Chambers, Sunday School
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor. superintendent. Church School
Sunday School 9:30 a. m. ; 9:30 a. m.; morning worship,
Raymond
Walburn,
supt. 10: 30a. m . ; youth meeting, 7_p.
Morning worship 10: 30 a. 0:-i m . ; Choir rehearsal , Wed-·
E~~~eningser'v;ice7: 30p. m. Mrd- nesday 7-7:30 p. m.; Mrs. E.
week service, W.ednesday, 7:30 Robert Hamm, director.
p. m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSESGRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. Larry Carnahan presiding
Stanley Plattenbur9, minister. , minister. Sunday, Bible lecture,
Morning prayer and sermon, 9: 30 a. m. ; Watchtower st~dy,
10: 30 a. m. Holy communion 10: 30 a. m.; Tuesday, Brble
and sermon, first Sundays, study, 7:30 p. m.; Thursday,
10:30 a. m . Church school, ministry school 7:30 p. m.,
kindergarten through eighth service meeting 8:30 p. m .
grade, 10:30 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
POMEROY CHURCH OF of Christ in Christian UnionCHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr., Lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs.
pastor. Bible School, 9:30a.m.; Russell Young, Sunday School
worship, 10: 30; adult worship Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
service - and .. YOUIJQ _peo_ples Evening worship 7:30. Wedmeeting, both' 7:30 p . m. Sun- nesday prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
day-Wednesday,
combined m .
•
Bible study
and
prayer
CHURCH OF THE NAZAmeeting, 7:30 p. m.
RE...NT MiddleDort. Re.y~
THE SALVATION ARMY- Audry Miller, pastor ; Floyu
Envoy Ray S. Wining, officer in Carson, supt. Sunday school,
a.m .;
Morning
war(:Jlarge. Suncjay, _ 10 a . m ., 9:30
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a . m. ship,
10: 30
a.m.;
junior
Sun?ay School. Young People's §Qciety, 6: 30p.m .; NYPS 6;45
Legron, 7 p._m.; Thursday, 1 to 3 p.m . Sunday evangelistic
p. m ., Ladres Home League; 7 meeting, 7:30 p .m . Prayer
p. m . Pr~ classe"'
meeting Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m .
SACR~D HEART Rev._
Father Bernard Krajcovic,
MIDDLEPO_RT
PENpastor,
Phone
992-2825 ,- TECOSTAL - Thrrd Ave., the
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30 Rev· B. . L. Barrett. pastor.
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 Ralph Prrddy, Sunday school
a.m. Confessions, Saturday 7- supt. Classes for all ages,
Sund&lt;;~Y school, _10 a.m.; Sunday
7. 30 P m.
• ·
·
.
evenrng servrce, 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Wednesday evening young
-~obert Kuhn, pastor. George people's meeting and Bible
Skrnner, Sunday School supt. S!udy. Saturday evening serSunday School, 9:30 a . m. ; vrce, 7:30p.m.
morning worship, 1~: 30 a . m . ;
MIDDLt:.~ORT
FIRSTI
BYF, 6 P- m.; Brble Stu~y BAPTIST -Charles W. Simons.
Wednesday 7 p. m .; chorr pastor. Danny Thompson, Sun_practr~...W~., _8 : 30 P- m .
day School Supt. Sunday
FIRST SOUTH.ERN BAP- Church School, 9:15 a. m . ;
Tl~":- 220 E_. Marn, Pomeroy, Morning worship, 10:15 a. m.
af!rlrated wrth S. B . C. Rev. Sunday Bible study hour 7:30 p.,
Clrfford Coleman , pastor. ,m. Sunday, 4:30 p. m., game
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., time for youth. WeClnesday
-~e.rshel M~Ciure, ~upt.; wor: even_ing prayer service, 7:30.
~hrp. servrce, . 10. 30 a .m.,
MT. MORIAH BAPTISTevenrng worshrp, 7:3~ p.m. Corner Fourth and Main ,
~ednesday prayer meetrng and- Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
_Brble study, 7: 30p.m.
_ Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9:30
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN a. m., Arnold Richards, supt.;
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, pastor. Morning worship 10:30 a. m.
Sunday School, 9: 15 a . ":·• • CHl.l RCH OF CHRIST; MidChar!es Evans, Supt.; worshrp dleport, 5th and Main. Raullin
s_ervrc_e, 10:30 a. m. Con- Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,
frrmatron class, Saturday, 9:45 Sunday School supt. Bible
a. m .
School , 9: 30 a. m .; morning
POMEROY-CHESTER
worship, 10:30 a. m .; evening
UNITED
METHODIST - worship, 7:30 p. m. ; orilvPr
Robert R. · Card, pastor. service 7 p. m . Wednesday . .
' Pomeroy - Worship, 10:30 a.
m.; Church School, 9: 15a.m.; MASON COUNTY
Frank
Vaughan, superinCHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
tendent. Chester worship, 9 a. Services, 315 Main St., Pt.
m.; Church School, 10 a. m.; Pleasant Sunda'f ser.yices, 11
Roger Eppler supt. •
a.m:- WedriesCiay Testim&lt;mfar
meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST- John Steele, pastor.
Middleport 1970 population Worshi p, 10 a.m.; Bible study,
11 : 15 a.m.; evening worship,
- 2,784.
7: 30 p.m . Mid-week service,
Attending church in Mid- Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
dleport Sunday - 546.
GRAHAM UNITED METHMiddleport Ministerial ODIST CHURCH- Preaching
9:30 a . m, first and second
Assn.
Sundays of each month; third
and fourth Sundays each month,
worship service at 7: 30 p. m.
Wednesday evenings at 7: 30,
Anything Goes
Prayer and Bible Study .

With the exception of biting, anything goes during a
boxing match in Thailand.
Elbows, feet, fists and knees
The first department store
fly as each fighter strives to
wear out or drop his op- was the Bon Marche, which
ponent within five three- opened in Paris, France,
about 1860.
minute rounds.

the SerrnoneUe
By Paul A. Sellers, Pastor,
Syracuse-Sutton United Methodist Circuit .
THE PRAYER THAT BROUGHT THE RAIN
IIGngs 18:41-46andJames 5:17
Let us note some things about the prayer that brought the
rain:
I. ELIJAH WENT AWNE TO TALK WITH GOD. One the
privilege and power of secret prayer! When God's servants
commune with Him face to face, undisturbed by the presence of
others, prayer reaches its highest plane. The men of might in all
the church's history have been men who spent much time in the
secret place. There they have heard God's voice. There the
spiritual vision has been made clear. There they have received
the royal commission for the lost. Their lips have been touched
with flame. There the enduement of power has come down. There
hearts have been surcharged with boundless compassion for the
lost. There the Church's thirst has been revealed, and the promise
has been given of an abundance of rain.
IT. mE PROPHET'S PRAYER WAS DEFINITE. Many
things were needed. Many things he could have asked for. But he
had one supreme desire. Upon that his petitions and faith were
focused. He wanted rain. He wanted it with all his soul. He could
think of nothing else, He could ask for nothing else. Rain, Rain,
RAIN! He must have rain. And he got it. Many incidental things
there are of which our churches have need. But there is one
supreme want- a want which spiritual rain for the thirsty landa revival of religion that will mightily arouse the churches, and
shake the nation in a moral earthquake.
m. ELIJAH HAD FAITH. While he prayed he sent the young
man to watch for the answer. He fully expected the sign of the
coming storm. If it had been withheld he would have been amazed
and bewildered. Look again! Look again! That was the triumph of
faith.
IV. ELUAH HELD ON UNTIL mE ANSWER CAME. Six
times the servant reported nothing.
The prophet knew better. There must be something something for the land parched and cracked by the terrible
drouth; something for suffering Israel. So in a token of humility
he bowed his head between his knees in entreaty, he resolutely
holds on. God must hear.
Oh, pastors, officers, Sunday School workers, let us get down
where Elijah was. Let us pray as we have never prayed before.
Let us plead because of the unmeasured need. Let us plead with.a
sense of sorrow because of past unfaithfulness.
Elijah's praying brought the rain. So can our prayers bring the
church from its awful peril. Take sleep from our eyes. Take joy
from our hearts. Give us an agony of desire. May we wrestle,
wrestle, wrestle, until the cloud of promise appears in the sky.
And the heavens pour out a blessing upon the church. For the
glory of God.

MASON
ASSEMBLY
OF
GOD -Second St., Mason, W.
Va. Chester Tennant, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 a. m.;
morning worship, 11 a. m.;
evangelistic service, 7:30 p. m.
Bible study and prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Phone
773-5133.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Christ in Christian Union · Rev.O'Dell Manley, pastor.
Sunday School, 9:30a.m ., Rev.
Guy Sayre, supt.; evening
service, 7:30. Tuesday Bible
study, 7:30 p. m. Thursday
evening prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
m. Sunday evening youth
services, 6:30 with Roger
.Manle.Y!_Y.outh lea_d..e.r_.
MASON FIRST BAPTISTSecond and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; worship service, 11
a.m.; training union, 6:30"p.m.;
evening worship service, 7:30
p.m . Mid-week prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Services at 315 Main St., Pt.
Pleasant, Sunday School 9: 15
a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m.; Wednesday, tesiimonial me&lt;!ling 8
p.m. All welcome.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
-Letart Route 1, the Rev. Stan
Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
9: 30 a.m.; prayer and Bible
study, 7:30p.m . Cottage prayer
service, Tuesday, 10 a.m.;
worship service, Friday, 7:30
p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY
ALFRED
UNITED
METHODIST Rev. Randy
Lavender , pastor. Sunday
School 9:45 a. m. Lloyd
Dillinger, supt. ; worship service, 11 a.m. with the Rev. Mr.
Lavender in charge. Tuesday, 8
p. m. Women's Society meeting
at home of Clara Follrod and
Nina Robinson with Osie Mae
Follrod,
program
leader.
Wednesday evening service,
7: 45p.m.
UNITED FAITH- Robert E.
Smith, pastor. Worship service
and Sunday school, 9: 30 a.m.,
Fred Samsel, supt.; evening
worship, 7:30 p.m.; youth
meeting, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
KENO CH-URCH OF CHRIST
Hobart Newell, supt. Services weekly, 9: 30a.m . Sunday.
Preaching first and third
Sundays of month by Charles
Russell, 9:30a.m.
SILVER RUN FREE WILL
METHODIST - Rev. Howard
Kimble, pastor. Sunday School,
10 a. m., Henry Davis, supt.;
evening service, 7:30 p. m .
Prayer meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m .
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION _
Darrel Doddrill,
pas t or. Sunday Sc hool, 9:30 a.
m., Annie Mohler, supt.;
Leonard Gilmore, first elder;
evening service, 7: 30 P· m.
Wednesday prayer meeting,
7:30 D. m .
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Racine Route 2. The
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor.
Sunday school,. 9:45 a.m.;
morn_rng w~rshrp, 11 a.m.
Evenrng servrces, Tuesday and
Frirl&lt;J'f• 7:30.
_
- T u ·p PER s
pLAINsU N I T E 0
C H A R G E
METHODIST. Sunday worship
St. Paul's 9 a.m.; South
Bethel 9:55a.m.; Alfred 11 a.m.
(First and third Sundays) 7:45
p.m. ; (Second and 4th Sundays) . Lottridge -7:45 p.m.
(First and third Sundays). 11
a.m. Second and 4th Sundays.
·
T
M
0
L 0 N G
B 0 T
MET_HODIST- Rev. Freeland
Norrrs, pastor. Sunday_ School.
10 a.m.; church servrces, 11
a.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST- John
Rockhold, pastor. Bible study,
9:30 a.m.; morning worship,
10: 30; evening worship, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday Bible study,
7: 30p.m.

RACINE FIRS r CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
Morning Worship, 10:30 a. m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, Sunday ' School
Superintendent, Pauline McCI intock, pastor. Rev, Morris
M. Wolfe.
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTCharlesNorris, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning
worship, 10:45 a. m.; Sunday
evening worship, 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday evening
Bible
Study, 7:30 p. m.
SOUTH BETHEL UNITED
METHODIST Rev. Randy
Lavender, pastor. Sunday
school, 9 a.m., Mrs. Wilma
Bahr, Supt. Youth Fellowship 6
p.m. each Sunday at Tuppers
Plains
United
Methodist
Church.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J.
A. Curry, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a . m.; Youth and
junior youth service, 6: 45p. m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Prayer and praise Wed., 7:30 p,
m.

HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN- David Stauffer,
pastor; Stanford Stockton, supt.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.;
church school, 10: 30 a. m , ;
young peoples meeting, 6:30
p.m.; evening worship, 7:30.
Bible study, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.
; SILV-ER RUN FREE WILL
BAPTIST
Rev. Caudill
Atkins, pastor, Carroll Mat·
thews, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday Schoool, 10 a. m.;
Worship, 7:30 p. m. Prayer
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets,
pastor. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m . ; Worship service, 11 a. m.;
Evening service, 7:30. Prayer
service and youth service,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
__
FOREST RUN METHODIST
-Rev. Forrest Donley, pastor;
Mrs. Fread Nease, supt.
Worship service 9 a.m.; Sunday
School, 10 a. m .
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
Robert Eugene Musser,
pastor, Sunday school, 9: 30
a.m.; morning worship, 10: 30;
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
supt. Sunday evening service,
7;30 p.m.; youth meetina.
Monday, 7 p.m. Midweek
service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE- Rev. M. C.
Larimore, pastor. Bob Moore,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School, classes for all ages, 9: 30
a.m.; mor9ing worship, 10:45,
NYPS Sunday, 6: 30 p. m.;
evangelistic service, Sunday,
7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer.
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Mssionary meeting, second
Wednesday, 7:30 D. m.
- ROCK
SPRINGS
METHODIST - Rev. Richard
Pumphrey, pastor; Harold
Blackston,
superintendent.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.;
church school, 10:15 a.m.;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m.;
MYF, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting
and Bible Study, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. A ministrative
Council first Monday, 7:30p.m.
-EDEN UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST- Elden R. Blake,
pastor. Sunday School, lOa. m.;
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Morning sermon, 11 a.m . ; Evening
service Christian Endeavor,
7:30 p. m.;
Mrs . Lyda
Chevalier, president. Song
service and sermon, 8:20. MidWeek prayer meeting We?nesday, 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Mazre
Holsinaer, class leader.
_
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT
CHURCH-Harrisonville Road,
t&lt;ev. Roy Taylor, pastor; Henry
Eblrn, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9: 30 a. m. ;_
.evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Prayer and prasie service
Thursday, 7:30 D. m
'
RACINE-LETART
WESLEVAN UNITED METHODIST
D I
M Cl
Racine, W.
a e
c urg,
pastor· Sunday School, 9 : 30 a.
m.; Worship service, 10:30 a.
m.; UMYF, 7 p. m. each Sunday; Senior Choir practice,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m.; Service
Guild, fourth Menday, 7:30 p.
m.; Happy Hustlers Sunday
School Class meeting, fourth
Friday, 6 p. m.; WSCS second
Friday, 7:30 p. m.; Official
Board, second Monday, 7:30 p.

STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY CHURCH Rev.
Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
morning worship service, 10 m.
.
a.m. , Dell Talbot, superinCOMMUNITY
CHURCH,
tendent. Prayer meeting, each Dexter- Rev. Basil DeWeese,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Sunday pastor. Sunday morning worevening service, 7:30.
ship, 10 a. m.; Worship services, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday and
ZION CHURCH o·F CHRIST Sunday evenings.
Pomeroy-Harrisonville
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED
Road . John Webster, pastor;
Paul McElroy, Sunday School METHODIST CHURCH Supt. Sunday School, 9: 30 a. m.; Tuppers Plains. Rev. Randy
Mdrning Worship and com- Lavender, pastor. Sunday
munion, 10:30 a. m.; Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; youth
evening youth Christian En- fellowship, 6 p. m.; Sunday
deavor, 6 p, m.; Worship ser- evening worship, 7:30p.m.
LETART
UNITED
vices, 7 p. m.; Wednesday
evening prayer meeting and METHODIST CHURCH -First
and second Sundays, preaching
Bible study, 7:30 p. m.
SYRACUSE
BAPTIST at 8 p, m.; Third and fourth
TABERNACLE Raymond Sundays, Sunday School, 10 a.
Butcher, pastor. Sunday school, m.; worship service at 11 a.m.;
9:30 a.m.; worship service, Tuesday evenings at 8 p . m.,
prayer and Bible Study.
10:30 a.m.
FLATWOODS
UNITED
METHODIST, Rev . William
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN
Airson, pastor, Robert Eason,
Pine Grove, Rev. Gerald supt. Sunday School at 10 a. m.,
Herbener, pastor. Sund3y Worship service at 11 a. m.
school, 9 a.m.; Church service, Prayer meeting Thursday, 8 p.
10 a . m.
m.
SYRACUSE
UNITED
MT. UNION BAPTIST METHODIST
Paul A. Rev.
Cecil Cox, pastor. Sunday
Sellers, pastor; Ben Quisen- school supt ., Joe Sayre . Sunday
berry, Sunday School Supt. schoo l , 9:45 a.m.; Sunday
worship service, 9:30a.m. first
evening worship, 7:30. Wed
and third Sunday. Evening nesday
prayer and Bible study,
service, 8 p. m. fourth Sunday. 7:30p.m.
.
LANGSVILLE MIDWAY TUPPERS
PLAINS
services each Sunday at 10 a . m. CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Mr.
and 7:30p. m. Tuesday evening John Wyatt, pastor; J. S. Davis,
worship, 7:30.
Sunday School supt.; Sunday
SUTTON
UNITED school. 9:30 a. m., Morning
METHODIST
Paul A. Sermon, 10:30 a. m. Evening
Sellers, pastor; Martha Lee, sermon, 7 p. m.
Sunday School Supt. Worship EAST
LETART
FALLS
service, 10:45 a. m.;second and UNITED
METHODIST
fourth
Sundays;
evening CHURCH -W. Dale McClurg,
worhsip, 8 p. m. third Sunday. pastor. Worship services,
ENTERPRISE
UNITED second and fourth Sundays of
METHODIST -Rev. William each month at 9 a.m.; Sunday
Airson, pastor . Ralph Spencer, School , first and third Sundays
Supt.; Carl Jennings, asst. supt. of each monthat 9 a. m.; second
Worship services, 9:30 a. m.; and fourth Sundays of each
Sunday School, 10: 30 a. m.; month at 10 a. m.; Bible study,
Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m.; Wednesday.
Wednesday, choir, 6:15 p. m.
LETART FALLS UNITED
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Rev. Robert
Norman McCain, supt. BRETHREN Services weekly at 9:30 a. m. Shook, pastor; Herschel Norris,
Preaching first and third supt. Sunday school, 9:30a.m.;
Sundays of month by Charles morning sermon, 10:30 a.m.;
evening sermon, 7:30 alter~ussell, 9:30 a . m .
nating each Sunday. Prayer
BRADBURY CHURCH OF service, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
CHIRST Roy Bill Carter, Prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m.
evangelist; Thurman Carsey, alternating Sundays.
Bible School sup!. ; Bible School
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
9:30 a. m.; morning worship,
Roy W. Carter,
10.30a. m.; youth meeting, 6 p . CHRIST m. ; evening service, 7 p. m . pastor; Jerry Davis, Sunday
Christian
Workers
Class, School superintendent. Sunday
Tuesday, 7· 30 p, m.; prayer School, 9: 30 a. m.; Morning
worship, 10:30 a. m.; Youth
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p . m.

meeting, 6:30 p. m.; Evening
worship, 7:30 p. m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH - W.
Date McClurg, pastor. Worship
service, first and third Sundays
of each month at 8 p. m .;
Sunday School every Sunday at
9:30 a. m.; WSCS, second
Tuesday of each month at 7: 30
p.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday,
8 p.m.
CARME:.L· UNITED METHODIST Paul A. Sellers,
pastor; Wayne Roush, supt.
Worship service, 10:45 a. m.,
first and third Sundays;
evening worship, 8 p. m. second
Sunday.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev. Herbert
Grate, pastor. Worship service,
11 a.m. and 7:30p.m. Sunday.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
r:peeting, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.
HARRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN Mrs. Norma
Lee, Sunday Schoop Superin-tendent. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m. Sunday Service 8 p. m. Rev.
Max Donahue, Middleport.
pastor.
BETHANY
UNITED
METHODIST -Paul A. Sellers,
pastor; Blythe Theiss, Sunday
School supt. Worship service,
9:30 a. m. second and fourth
Sundays;- Evening worship, 8 p.
m. first Sunday.
LOTTRIDGE
UNITED
METHODIST - Worship, first
and third Sundays, 10:45 a.m.;
second and fourth Sundays,
7: JOp. m. Sunday School, 9:45 a.
m. Christian Endeavor, third
Saturday of each month.
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST - Rev. Eugene
Gill, pastor. William Bailey,
supt. Sunday School, 9: 30a.m.;
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, Christian Youth
Crusade, 6:30 p. · m.; Prayer
meeting 7:30 p. m. Thursday,
choir practice, 7 p. m.
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST -Danny
Evans,
pastor. Norman C. Will, supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.;
Worship service, 10:30 a. m .
Christian Endeavor Sunday
evenif!9.
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS- PortlandRacine Road. Ralph Johnson,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.
m.; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m . ; Sunday evening service, 7
p . m. Wednesday evening
prayer services, 7:30 p. m.

:~~~~~~~:~:;:m:~=~;~;~;~;;~;;~~;~~;~im;~;~;~;~;;;~;~;m;~;;;~;~;~;~;~~~;~~~;~;:;~;~;;;~;~:~:~:;:~~~~;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~?:;~;~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~;~~~i~~:~=~=~=~:~=~:~:~;~:;:~=~=;=~=~:~:m:~:~:~:~=~=~=~=~=~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~;

Putting
Things
In
Order

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a.
m. ; Sunday School, 10:30 a.m.
MORNING STAR UNITED
METHODIST- Rev. William
Airson, pastor; Roy Van Meter,
supt.; Sunday School, 9:30 ~­
m . ; Morning worship, 10:15 a.
m .; Youth Fellowship and Bible
Study, Thursday, 8 p. m. Fred
Smith, lay leader.
CARLETON CHURCH Kingsbury
Road.
Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m., Ralph Carl,
supt. Worship service, 10:30 a.
m. and 7:30 p. m. alternately.
Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
7:30 p. m. Rev. Jay Stiles,
pastor.
OLD
DEXTER
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. Willard Dutcher, pastor.
Mrs. Worley Francis, Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School,
9:45 a, m. Church Services first
and third Sundays following
Sunday School, Second and
fourth Saturday evenings, 8 p.
m. services.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
- Mr. Robert Wyatt, pastor;
Sunday School supt., Ronald
Osborne. Bible School, 9:30 a.
m.; preaching 10:45 a. m.;
Evenjng services, 7:30 p. m.
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST Cecil Wise,
Pastor. Sunday School, 9:30
M
·
h'
0
a.m.:
ornrng wors, rp, 1_:30
a.m., Young Peop_le ~ serv!ce,
6:45p.m., Evangelrstrc ser~rce,
· 7 -30 p.m. Prayer meetrng,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev.
L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor.
Roger Wi Ifred, · Sr., Sunday
School Supt . Sunday School,
9:30 a. m. ; Sunday evening
worship 7:30. Prayer meeting,
Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Ernest
Deeter, class leader . Yough
Meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m.,
Ernest Deeter, leader.

Sunday
Mark
10:17-27

In this age of medicare, social security and homes
for the aged, sometimes people forr,et an important
part of growing old-tranquility!

Ycs, tranquility and peace are just as importa.
in growing old xracefulty as is sufficient insurance
or all the other means with which we show our con.
cern for the elderly.
Have you ever noticed that old people have a
knack of putting things in order? In fact, they need
everything tidy, neat and sure. Certainly their greatest need is for peace and security-but this can
come only when they are at peace with God!
If we want to reap the harvest of friendshf/!!
with God in our old age, then we must cultivate
our relation with Him-when we are young and able.
Regular church attendance and worship is your assurance of peace and tranquility during your own
gentle lengthening years. It will be a heaven-sent
reward and one which you cannot, will not, want
to miss.

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
Mark
Luke
Matthew
Matthew
13:9-13 10:25-28
13:1-8
16:24-28

Scriptures selected by the American Bible Society

Friday Saturday
Matthew Matthew ~·
18:1-6 18:11-14 ,

Copyright 1971 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Virginia

With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustain that which is
good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the business
firms and organizations whose names appear below.

WILLIS ANTHONY

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

PLUMBING AND HEATING

992-2550
240 Lincoln St.

Phone 992-3284

Middleport

Middleport

:HEINER'S BAKERY

M &amp; R FOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington, W. Va.

Middleport, Ohio

· --------------------------+-------------------------9~

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

MARK V STORE

Sales· Allis Chalmers- Service
Farm· Industrial- Lawn- Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

Middleport, Ohio

OOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

RACINE FOOD MARKEl

Athens Road
Pomeroy
A Family That Worships Together
Stays Together

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

The Store with

A

Heart

•

949-3342

Racine

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0.

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

LYONS MARKET

GAUL'S MARKET

Member of the Big 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plains
667-3280

MT. HERMON UNITED
BRETHREN Rev. Robert
Shook pastor. Sunday school,
9:30a.m.; Alfred Wolfe, supt.;
Roy Pooler, assistant. Morning
worship, 11 a.m.; evening
sermon, 7:30 p.m. alternating
each Sunday. Class meeting, 11
a . m.
alternating
Sunday
mornings, David Holter, class
Pomeroy-Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
leader. Christian Endeavor,
7:30 p.m. every other Sunday 1------F_e_d_e_r_a_I_R_e_s_e_rv_e
__
S_y_st_e_m
______
evening,
Roger
Buckley,
president. Prayer meeting, 7:30
p.m. each Wednesday. Board
meeting first Monday of month,
Rexall Drugs
7:30p.m.
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
-Rev.
Russell Lester, pastor. Worship
service, 9 a.m.; Sunday School,
10 a.m.
LINCOLN-MERCURY
AMERICAN MOTORS
··R
· UTLAN 0
Phone 593-6601
RUTLAND FIRST BAP85
N.
Court
St.
Athens
TIST- Rev. Samuel Jackson,
pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m . ;
Mrs, Gertrude Butler, supt.
Prayer S.ervice, 1:30 p. m.;
preachina service, 2 p. m.
Take Someone with You to Church
THE
RUTLAND
METHIn Pomeroy Over 90 Years
ODIST Rev. Richard C.
Pumphery,
pastor.
Church
Kermit Walton, Mgr.
School 9:30 a.m.; Worship
service 10:30 a.m.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

Chester, Ohio

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

-+--------------------------_-----il·'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RAYBUCK MOTOR SALES Inc.

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Sunday school, 9:30
a.m., V. H. Braley, supt.;
communion and devotions,
10:30 a.m. Regular board
meeting 7:30, third Saturday
;..,.ch month.
.
THE
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY CHURCH -Rev.
Amos Tillis, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; Worship
service, 11 a. m.; Wednesday
prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m.
Sunday night worship, 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF

6~~r~~~~;-~~~~r~vsuL~~~~
School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning
.vorship, 10: 30 a. m.; Young
people's service, 6:45 p. m.;
Evangelistic services, 7:30 P,
m.Wednesdayeveningservice,
7: 30 p. m.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Church and Office Supplies-Gifts
Middleport

992-2641

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES .
Comfortable LivingReasonably Priced

667-3891

Tuppers Plains

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE
Electric Motor Repair

810 W. Main

•.

992-5750

SADIE'S MARKET
Meats and Groceries
Syracuse
992-3986

~!

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
Furniture and Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,

0.

1-------------------------------------+------------------------------------l~

F. J. WALLACE, JEWELER
Bulova Watches-Sales &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

Attend the Church of Yn11r l.hnir.e

BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-3498
.

The Daily Sentinel
WANl· ADS
Alwavc: Get Resulfsl

THE DAILY SENTINEL
and
~ · d
·.JUn ay T'1mes·Sent'1nef

~~~~~~~~v~~~~~~·~~~~~Se~r~v~in~g~T~h~e~B.ig~B~e~n~d•A~r~e~a~~~-

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8:30 TV Chapel
9:00 Singing Jubilee
9:30
10:00 This is the Life
10:30 Capt. Noah
11:00 Kartoon Karnival
11:30 Jambo
12:00 Mormon Choir
12:30 At Issue
1:00 Meet the Press
1:30 A Matter of Faith
2:00 Californians
2:30 Experiment in TV
3:00
3:30 Roller Derby
4:00
4:30 Pet Set
5:00 Perry Mason
5:30
6:00 Untamed World
6:30 News
7:00 Wild Kingdom
7:30 Wall Disney
8:00
8 :30 Bill Cosby
9 :00 Bonanza
9:30
10:00 News
10: 30 The Bold Ones
11:00
11:15
11:30 Tonight Show

6:00
6:30
6 :45
7:00
7:30 Faith for Today
8:00 Insight
8: 30 Day of Discovery
9:00 Tom &amp; Jerry
9:30 Penelope Pitstop
10:00 Oral Roberts
10:30 Facing Life
11:00 Camera Three
11:30 Face the Nation
12:00 Rex Hum bard
12:30
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1:30 TBA
2:00 Hockey
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
4:30 Children's F ilm Festival
5:00
5:30
6: 00 News
6:30 Viewpoint
7:00 Lassie
7:30 Hogan's Heroes
8:00 Ed Sullivan
8:30
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9:30
10:00 The Honeymooners
10:30
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6:00
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7:00 Today
7:30
8:00
8:15
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9:30 Truth or Consequences
10:00 D inah's Place
10:30 Concentration
11:00 Sale of Century
11:30 Hollywood Squares
12:00 Jeopardy
12:30 Who, What, Where
1:00 Mid-Day News
1: 30 Memory Game
2:00 Days of Our Lives
2:30 The Doctors
3:00 Another World
3:30 Bright Promise
4:00 Mr. Cartoon
4:30 Petticoat Junction
5:00 Wagon Train
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 NBC News
7:00 Movie
7:30
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9 : 30
10:00
10:30
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12:00

6:00
6:30
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7:00 Newsmaker '70
7:30 Gospel Hour
8:00 Mamre Church
8:30 Rex Humbard
9:00
9:30 Smokey Bear
10:00 Johnny Quest
10:30 Catanooga Cats
11:00 Bullwinkle
11: 30 Discovery
12:00 Living Manna
12:30 Revival Fires
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1: 30 Newsmaker
2:00 Basketball
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
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5:00 Movie
5:30
6 : 00
6:30
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7: 30 Wilburn Brothers
8:00 The FBI
8:30
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9 : 30
10:00
10:30
11:00 ABC News
11: 15
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....
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The Bible Answers
News
Sleepy Jeffers
Romper Room
Captain Kangaroo
Jackie Obi inger
Beverly Hillbillies
Family Affair
Love of Life
Galloping Gourmet
Search for Tomorrow
Divorce Court
As the World Turns
Love is Splendored
Guiding Light
Secret Storm
Edge of Night
Movie

Evening News
Walter Cronkite
Death Valley Days
Beverly Hillbillies
Green Acres
Hee-Haw
All in the Family
CBS News Hour
News
Merv Griffin

- -· n&gt;

6:30
7: 15
7:30
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9:30
10:00
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6:00
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Dinah's Place
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Sale of Century
Hollywood Squares
jeopardy
Who. What. Where
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Days of Our Lives
Doctors
Another World
Bright Promises
Mr. Cartoon
Petticoat Junction
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6~00

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7: 00 Red Skelton
7:30 Flip Wilson
8: 00
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3:30 Bright Promise
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10.30
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CHANNEL 13

I
6:00
6 : 30 Bible Answers
6:45
7: 00 News
7: 30 Sleepy Jeffers
8: 00
8: 30 Romper Room
9 : 00 Capt. Kangaroo
9:30
10:00 Jackie Oblinger
10:30 Beverly Hillbillies
11:00 Family Affair
11: 30 Love of Life
12:00 Galloping Gourmet
12:30 Search for Tomorrow
T: 00 Divorce Court
1: 30 As the World Turns
2:00 Love Is
2: 30 Guiding Light
3: 00 Secret Storm
3: 30 Edge of Night
4:00 Movie
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00 Evening News
6: 30 Walter Cronkite
7: 00 Death Valley Days
7: 30 Gunsmoke
8:00
8: 30 The Lucy Show
9:00 Mayberry R F D
9:30 Doris Day
10: 30 Carol Burnett
10:30
11:00 News
11:30 Merv Griffin
12:00

6 : 00
6:30
7: 15 Farm Report
7:30 Univ. of Mich.
8:00 World of Life
8: 30 Underdog
9:00 Rocky &amp; His Friends
9:30 Jack LaLanne
10: 00 Mike Douglas
10:30
11:00
11:30 That Girl
12:00 News
12:30
1:00 All My Children
1: 30 Make A Deal
2:00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3:00 General Hospital
3: 30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Family
4:30 Flintstones
5:00 Wild Wild West
5:30
6:00 Big Valley
6: 30
7:00 News
7: 30 Let's Make a Deal
8:00 Newlywed Game
8:30 Reel Game
9:00 Movie
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12:00
1:30 News

I 6:00
I 6:30
I 6:45 Corn Cob Report

I

7:00 Today
7:30
8:00
8:15
8:30
9:00 Movie Game
9 : 30 Truth or Consequences
10:00 Dinah's Place
10: 30 Concentration
11: 00 Sale of Century
11: 30 Hell ywood Squares
12:00 Jeopardy
12:30 Who, What, Where
1:00 News
1: 30 Memory Game
2:00 Days of Our Lives
2:30 Doctors
3: 00 Another World
3:30 Bright Promise
4: 00 Mr. Cartoon
4:30 Petticoat Junction
5:00 Wagon Train
5:30
6 : 00 News
6: 30 NBC News
7:00 Men from Shiloh
8:30
9:00 Kraft Music Halt
9 : 30
10: 00 Four In One
11:00 News
11:30 Tonight Show
12:00

6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11: 30
12:00
1: 00
1:30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3 : 30
4:00
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
8 : 00
8 : 30
9 : 00
9:30
10:00
11:00
11 : 30
12:00

Bible Answers
News
Sleepy Jeffers
Romper Room
Capt. Kangaroo
Jackie Oblinger
Hillbillies
Family Affair
Love of Life
Search for Tomorrow
Divorce Court
As the World Turns
Love Is
Guiding Light
Secret Storm
Edge of Night
Movie

Capital News
Cronkite
Death Valley Days
Storefront Lawyers
To Rome with Love
Medical Center
Hawaii Five-0
News
Merv Griffin

6:00
6: 30
7: 15
7:30
8:00
8: 30
9:00
9: 30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
12:00
12:30
1: 00
1:30
2:00
2: 30
3:00
3:30
4:00
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00
6: 30
7:00
7:30
8: 00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
12:00
1:30

Farm Report
Univ. of Mich.
Glory Road
Underdog
Rocky &amp; His Friends
Jack La La nne
Mike Douglas

That Girl
News
All My Children
Make A Deal
Newlywed Game
Dating Game
Gen. Hospital
Munsters
Addams Family
Flintstones
Wild Wild West
Big Valley
News
Eddie's Father
Room 222
Smith Family
Johnny Cash
Young Lawyers
News
Movie
News

6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:15
8:30
9: 00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11 : 30
12: 00
12:30
1:00
1: 30
2:00
2: 30
3:00
3:30
4:00
4: 30
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
12:00

Corn Cob Report
Today

Movie Game
Truth or Consequences
Dinah's Place
Concentration
Sale of Century
Hollywood Squares
Jeopardy
Who, What, Where
News
Memory Game
Days of Our Lives
Doctors
Another World
Bright Promises
Mr. Cartoon
Petticoat Junction
Wagon Train
News
NBC Evening News
Porter Wagoner
High Chaparral

Name of the Game

News
Tonight

Bible Answers
News
Sleepy Jeffers
Romper Room
Capt. Kangaroo
J. Oblinger
Beverly Hillbillies
Family Affair
Love of Life
Galloping Gourmet
Search for Tomorrow
Divorce Court
As the World Turns
Love Is Splendored
Guiding Light
Secret Storm
Edge of Night

News
Cronkite
Death Valley Days
Interns
Andy Griffith
Movie

News
Movie

Farm Report
Univ. of Michigan
The Christophers
Underdog
Rocky &amp; His Friends
Jack La La nne
Mike Douglas

That Girl
News
All My Children
Let's Make A Deal
Newlywed Game
Dating Game
General Hospital
Munsters
Addams Family
Wild Wild West
Big Valley
News
The Brady Bunch
Nanny and Professor
Partridge Family
That Girl
The Odd Couple
Love American Style
News
Movie
News

6:00
6:30
6:45
7 : 00 John's Almanac
7:30
8:00 Tom Foolery
8:15
8:30 Heckle and Jeckle
9 : 00 Woody Woodpecker
9:30 The Bugaloos
10:00 Dr. Doolittle
10:30 Pink Panther
11: 00 Pufns tuf
11: 30 Here Comes the Grump
12:00 Hot Dog
12:30 Pogo Special
1:00 Kartoon Karnival
1: 30 College Basketba II
2:00
2 : 30
3:00
3:30 College Basketball
4:00
4:30
5:00 Bill Anderson
5:30 Sports Challenge
6:00 News
6: 30 NBC News
7:00 Nashville Music
7:30 Andy Williams
8:00
8:30 Movie
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11:15 Late Movie
12:00
12:15

6:00
6:30 TV Classroom
6:45
7:00 Cartoons
7:30 Green Hornet
8: OQ Bugs Bunny
8 : 30 Roadrunner
9 : 00 Sabrina
9 : 30 Groovy Coolies
10: 00 Josie
10:30
Globetrotters
11:00 Archie's Fun House
11:30
12:00 Scooby-Do
12:30 The Monkees
1:00 Dastardly &amp; Muttley
1:30 Jetsons
2: 00 ACC Basketball
3:00
3:30
4:00 Golf
4:30
4:30
5:00 Wrestling
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 News
6: 30 Roger Mudd
7:00 Fan Tyson Show
7: 30 Mission Impossible
8:00
8:30 My Three Sons
9:00 "Arnie"
9: 30 Mary Tyler Moore
10:00 Mannix
11:00 News
11:30 Movie

6:00
6:30
6:45 Living Word
7:00 Neighbors
7: 15 Women's View
7:30 Wonder am a
8:30
9:00 Lancelot Link
9:30
10: 00 Jerry Lewis
10:30 The Double Deckers
11:00 Hot Wheels
11:30 Sky Hawks
12:00 Motor Mouse
12:30 Hardy Boys
1:00 American Bandstand
1:30
2:00 Visual Girl
2: 30 Kentucky Afield
3:00 Bonnie Lou &amp; Buster
3 : 30 Pro Bowler's Tour
4:00
4:30
5 : 00 Wide World of Sports
5:30
6:00
6:30 Fishing Show
7:00 Triangle Sports
7:30 Lawrence Welk
8:00
8:30 Pearl Bailey
9:00
9 : 30 Movie
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30 Chiller
12:30

�~-----------------------------------------~
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.l2, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
·• WANT AD'
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P./lll. Day Before Publication
111\onday Deadline9a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for
Day of Pub I ication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect,
insertion.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
_ 5. s:~nts P.er Word one insertion
Minimum Charge r:sc12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
• 25 Per cent Discount on paid·
ads and ads paid within 10 days
CARD- OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word·'minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p. m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday

by Gill Fox

SIDE GLANCES

L Business Services--

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

..

1966 FORD
$1095
Galaxi HT Cpe., 6 cyl. engine, std. trans., air conditioning,
good tires, clean intEtrior, dark green finish.

MASON CAR WASH
"AUTOMATIC"

1965 PONTIAC
$1095
Tempest St. Wagon, local 1 owner, low mileage car, V-8
engine, automatic trans., power steering, non-slip rear
axle, vinyl interior like new, light blue finish, radio. Save
Today.

Car 'ompletely Mitted &amp;
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
Sat. 9 to 5-Sun. 11 to 5

.,

ll

Pomeroy JAotor Co.

G:) 1911 .,. NO.. l~tc., T M l•t U.S '•' Off.

••Jf I make a hole-in-one, shouldn't I say 'Fore,'
or somethini'?!"

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

Power Tools are a. Must
By MR. FIX

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

Portable power tools have
become so common, so relatively inexpensive and so
versatile that they belong in
every home owner's collection of basic equipment.
One especially is the electric drill. It is generally the
first power tool anyone buys.
Not only is it good for drilling holes but with added: attachments can be used for
grinding. polishjng, sanding
and buffing.
The quarter-inch drill, one
that will take drill bits up to
a quarter-inch in diameter,
has been the most common
and popular. There has been
an increase in popularity of
the %-inch drill since advances in designing and new
electrical motors have gotten the larger drill to a size
and weight that makes it an
easier tool to handle.
arately . And if you buy them
The larger size m e an s all at once they are there
more versatility, the ability when you need them and
to handle larger jobs and you will find uses for them
more muscle on smaller very quickly.
The sanding d.i sc is perones.
haps the most popular atWhile you are at it, in- tachment for an electric
vestigate drills with added drill . If you do much furnifeatures.
More than one ture refinishing, however,
speed will make the tool you will find that the rotary
more useful since the slower motion of the disc can leave
speed combined with the cor- unattractive marks unless
rect drill bits or attachments you work very carefully.
allows you to drill in conIf you do much sanding,
crete, or be usee as a screw
driver. Some drills have con- consider the portable elecThese offer
tinuously variable speeds tric sander.
which makes them even sanding action in a straight
line and are quite a workmore versatile.
saver in smoothing and reYou may want to add at- finishing jobs . A variety of
tachments later but con- grits is available in the sandsider the efficiency af get- paper that is provided for
ting everything at once. them .
Most companies package
There are saw attachdrill and the most popular ments for electric drills but
attachments neatly in a again, if your cutting chores
metal box at a price that are more than once in a lifemay be more attractive than time , you may find the drill
purchasing attachments sep- and attachment a cumber-

INCOME TAX service, daily -OLD furniture, dishes, bras::.
except Sunday. Evenings by
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
appointment only. Phone 992Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
992-6271.
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
9-1-tfc
mile south of fairgrounds.
2-7-30tc

--=----

today·s FUNNY

1971

some affair and not very
efficient.
If you are going into heavy
duty cutting a portable electric saw with a circular
blade is the tool for you. If
you plan to do any remodeling or refinishing of a basement or an attic an electric
saw will pay for itself in
saved time.
For many, however, heavyduty cutting may not be a
problem . In this case consider the portable electric
jig saw. Such a saw is versatile , easy to use, will cut
metal and plastics as well
as wood and can be used
for sawing curves as well as
straight lines.
An assortment of blades
gives you the ability to go
through different materials.
These are easily changed.
You can even do a little
heavy - duty cutting since
most models will go through
a two-by-four.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

Quickie Quiz
Q-How many eggs can an
oyster spawn?
A~In one season a large
Virginia oyster may produce
as many as five hundred million eggs and during its lifetime it may liberate five billion.

Thanx to
Mrs. Tina Myers
Ogden, Utah
hy N£.4, lne,

Male Help Wanted

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

DO-IT- YOURSELF

Q- Can the election of a
U.S. pTesident be dispensed
with, even in time of war?
A-No. The Constitution
requires that a president
shall hold office "during tile
term of four years."

WHEN? Each
AUCTION Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy-Middleport
Bypass.
2-7-tfc

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

GUN SHOOT, sponsored by
Syracuse Fire Dept. Assorted
meals, half hog. Every
Saturday night, 6 p.m., near
Racine Planing Mill.
2-10-3tc

I

UNFURNISHED 3-room
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
1-31-tfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

AUTHENTIC Early American
Stereo-radio, AM-FM radio, 4
speakers, 4 speed automatic
changer. Balance $82.60. Use
our budgel lerms . Call 9923352.
2-11-6tc
PAINT DAMAGE 1971 Zig-Zag
Sewing Machines . Still in
original cartons. No at tachments needed, as our
controls are buill-in. Sews
wi lh 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms and blind hem
slilch . Full cash price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
2-9-6tc

pay' $1.00 for
each original "funny" used. Send gags
to: Todoy's FUNNY, 1200 West Third
St., Cltreland, Ohio -44113.

Term's Derivation
Chauvinism, a term for
excessive and unreasonable
patriotism, is derived from
the name of Nicolas Chauvin, a French soldier who retained devotion to Napoleon
long after the war.

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

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Cleaner complete with atlachmen Is, cordwinder and
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay $37.45
cash or
credit
terms
available . Phone 992-5641 .
2-9-6tc

WHY WAIT
BUY YOUR

DON SLATTERYL MGR.

FERTILIZER

For Selling Mobile Homes Too Cheap

Now and get the early
Discount
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertilizer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
area w;a ~ohouse at Pomeroy.

Mon. thru Friday. 9:00 to 8:00- Sat. 9 to 5- Sun. 1 to 5

WMP0/1390.

Chesler·. Inquire at Newell's
Sunoco
Station.
Phone
Chester 985-3350.
2-7-tfc

Q-What animal is pic- For Sale
tu?·ed on the State Seal of MODERN walnut stereo-radio
Califomia?
combination, 4 speaker sound
A-A grizzly bear. symbol
system, 4 speed changer.
of determination, stands near
Balance $69.10. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-3352
the seated figure of Minerva.
2-ll-6tc
Roman goddess of wisdom.

Todoy's FUNNY. .,.at

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

For Rent
5 ROOM and bath, apartment,

BAND AT Red's Club, Mason,
W. Va., Gail and T-C
Playmates. Dance Friday 9
p.m. to 2 a.m. and Saturday 9 3 ROOM apar lmenl, all electric,
p.m. to 1:30a.m. All members
wall oven, table top range,
and guests welcome.
stainless s teel double sink,
2-10-3tc . food disposal. Nice clean
apartment. See to appreciate.
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
Female Help Wanted
Gallipolis 446-9539.
HOUSEWIVES:
Beeline
2-2-tfc
Fashions will supplement
your family's income and
wardrobe. Highest com- FURNISHED apartment, three
large rooms and bath, newly
mission. Up to $300 samples.
redecorated, all utilities paid.
Call 949-3703 or Gallipolis 446Adults only . See at 256 So.
4146.
Fourth Ave. in Middleport.
2-11-3tc
2-11-tfc

3-S

Dannie's Mobile Homes
Ph. • 992-7195

"Service Is Our Byword"

PomerrN
0
1¥JJ

o

L

1

REDUCE SAFE and fast with
9obese tablets and E-Vap
water p1lls. Nelson's Drugs.
1-22-30tp

BAND, THE SUNS, Friday and
Saturday nights, 9 p.m. to 2 EMPLOYMENT offered in
a.m. Hi-7 Club.
retail sales and record
2-11 -2tc
keeping
by
Pomeroy
business. Write Box 534,
GUN
SHOOT, ,
Sunday,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
February 14, 1 p.m., Mile Hill
2-10-3tc
Road. Hams, bacons, beef,
half hog. Sponsored by Racine
Fire Department.
THEY
ARE
here:
The
2-12-2tc
SKAMPER line from A to Z.
Whal a surprise to see:
RUBBER STAMPS made to
Travel trailers, campers are
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
all on display. What isn't here
or Velma Casto, Portland,
is on the way. GAUL
Ohio.
TRAILER SALES, INC., 1112
2-12-90tc
miles north of Chester, Ohio.
Walch for sign. Phone 985DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,, 3832. CONTINENTAL and
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
GO-TAG-A-LONG
travel
10-18-tfc
trailers for sale. Rentals by
day, week, month.
WILL PICK up merchandise·
2-4-12tc
and take to auction on a - - - -- -- - - - percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
Help Wanted
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc DRIVERS needed . Train now to
drive semi-truck, local and
SKATE-A-WAY is open Wedover the road. Diesel or gas,
nesday, Friday and Saturday
experience helpful but not
nigh Is, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
necessary. You can earn over
Avai Iable for private parties
$4.50 per hour after short
on Monday, Tuesday and
training. For application and
Thursday nights or Saturday
interview call 513-241-5572, or
and Sunday afternoons.
wrile Safety Dept., United
Phone Chesler 985-3929 or 985Sy15tems, Inc., C-0 Motor
3585.
Freight Terminal Bldg., 3101
2-2-12tc
Gano
Rd.,
Sharonville,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45241.
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
2-11-2tc
like to try a wig on in t h e - - - - - - - - - - privacy of your own home?
You can. Just call us. We also Wanted To Buy
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Koscot, of course. Dis- OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
tributors, .Brown's_. Ph9Jl~e condition, as long as have not
Middleport 992-5113.
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
12-31-tfc
be pick-up day. Write, giving
WILL GIVE piano and organ
good directions. Witten Piano
lessons in my home. Phone
Company. Box 188, Sardis,
992-3666.
Ohio 43946.
, 8-16-tlc
8-20-tfc

Just to hear his voice and see
him smile,
To sit and talk with him awhile,
Just to be together in the same
old way,
Would be my dearest wish
today.
Sadly missed by wife,
Golda.
2-12-ltc

Do It Yourself Open
24 Hrs. Daily- 2Sc

For Sale

OP.EN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
i'PMEROY I OHIO

Notice

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

PRICE $1.25

1965 CORVAIR
$695
500 2 Dr., local low mileage car, interior extra clean,
medium green finish, all good w-w tires, radio. Plenty of
go in the snow. Just nicer thr~n the avo~age car.

In Memory
IN MEMORY of my loved one,
Charles H. Jones, who
departed this life February
13, 1969.

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

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

1970 SHULT mobile home, 17
acres of land, good well .
Phone 742-5222.
2-10-6tc

------------------MEN'S WORK uniforms and

coveralls. Jeffers Clothing
Store, Rt. 33 going toward
fairground, Pomeroy.
2-10-6tc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

_EXPERIENCED_
Radiator Service

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

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

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

INTERIOR carpenter work: by
BRACE yourself for a thrill the
lhe hour or contract. Phone
first time you use Blue Lustre
992-3511.
Ph. 992,-2143
to clean rugs: Rent electric
1-31-30tp
shampooer, $1. Baker Furniture, Middleport.
SAW FILl NG, all kinds Of
2-10-6tc
sharpening, lawn mower 1 ,Jl)$1,11'~nce _ _
_.
repair, Briggs and Stratton AUTOMOBILE insurance ~en
engine service. Low cost pick
SPINET-console piano. Wanted
cancelled?
Lost
your.
up and delivery. Phone 992responsible party to take over
operator's license? Call 992-·
2804. Colmers Saw Shop,
payments on spinet piano.
2966.
~
Mechanic St., Pomeroy.
Easy terms, can be seen
6-15-tt .·
2-11-3tc
locally.
Write
Credit
Manager, P. 0. Box 276,
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176.
HARRISON'S TV AND ANLEGAL NOTICE
TE.NNA SERVICE. Phone
2-7 -12tp
992-2522.
LEGAL NOTICE
6-10-tfc
19
CUBIC
fool
Philco
TO: BIDDERS
refr igeralor, double door,
SUBJECT: Purchase of
side by side. 3 years old, ice NEIGLER Construction. For School Buses
FOR: The Board of Education
building or remodeling your
maker. Harold E. Hysell,
the Southern Loca I School
home, Call Guy Neigler, of
Main St., Rutland, phone 742District,
Racine, Ohio
Racine, Ohio.
'
3154.
+++++
7-31-tfc
2-12-3tc
Sealed ttroposals will be
received by the Board o
DON'T pump your sluggish _,t:PTIC TANKS CLEANED. Education ol the Southern Loca
Reasonable rates. Phone School District of Racine, Ohio
septic tank. Get Klean-Emat the Clerk's office at 8:00p.m.
John Russell, Gallipolis 446- o'clock
AII septic tank cleaner.
on March 18, 1971 and at
4782 after 5:30 p. rn.
Landmark Farm Bureau,
that time opened by the clerk of
4-7-tfc said board as provided by law
Pomeroy.
2-12-ltc
for one ( 1 l Sixty-Six (66)
SEWING MACHINES. Repair passenger school bus, acservice,
all
makes.
'192-2284.
&lt;"Ording to specifications of said
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. board of education. Separate
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
and
independent bids will be
Authorized Singer Sales and
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
received with respect to the
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. chassis
4-9-tfc
and body type, and will
3-29-ttc state that the buses when
assembled and prior to
·-BACK HOE and end-loader delivery, comply with all school a,
Pets
Sale
work. Septic tanks installed. district specifications, all safety. ,
MiNIATURE Schnauzers and
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone regulations and current Ohio
Minimum Standards for School
Poodle puppies. Permanent
992-2478.
Construction of the
injections and groomed.
11-29-tfc Bus
Department of Education
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
adopted
by and with the consent
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
of the Pi rector of Highway
right. Phone Coolville 667Complete Service
Safety pursuant to Section
3654.
4511.76 of the Revised Code and
Phone 949-3821
all other pertinent provisions of
2-ll-30tc
Racine, Ohio
law .
Critt Bradford
Specifications
and
in..2:.J.:!!c structions
to bidders are on file
Real Estate For Sale
in the office of the ClerkHOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts., AIR CONDITIONING, REr- Treasurer, Racine, Ohio.
frigeration service. Jack's
The Board of Education
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Refrigeration, New Haven. reserves the right to reject any
10-25-tfc
Phone 882,2079.
and all bids.
By Order of the Board of
4-6-tfc
CONVENIENT but secluded
Education.
building lots on T79 at Rock READY-MIX CONCRETE deCharles S. Norris,
Clerk-Treasurer,
Springs. Within walking
livered right to your project.
Southern Local
distance of Meigs High
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Board
of Education
School, a 5 minute drive from
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
(2)
12,
19,
26 (3) 5, 4tc
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
Middleport, Ohio.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9926-30-tfc
6887.

BLAETTNARS

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

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

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

------~---

For

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

-----------------.:.2·.:.3· tfc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

Auto Sales
1966 MERCURY Monterey,
automatic, power steering,
new ba~tery, new exhaust
system. $795. Phone 843-2211 .
2-12-6tp

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTING- 3 bedrooms, 1965 OLDS cutlass, 2 door,
automatic. $550. Phone 742modern
kitchen,
bath,
5361.
basement. New gas forced air
2-12-3tc
furnace. Storm doors and
windows. LARGE GARDEN.
Only $13,000.00 SYRACUSE. 1968 CHEVELLE SS 396, 4speed, good tires, low
mileage, $1,895. Will take 1964
BUY NOW NEXT WEEK MAY
or 1965 model car on trade.
BE TOO LATE.
Call after 4:30, phone 742-3631.
NEW All ELECTRIC - 3
2-9-4tc
bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious
basement. Beautiful kitchen,
dining area with scenic view. 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
Double garage.
Asking
power brakes, air, 18,000
$23,900.00 OR WILL BUILD
miles. Excellent condition.
TO SUIT.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-tfc
WE ARE LOCATED NEAR
KROGERS.
1968 OLDS 442, automatic
transmission, power steering,
NEW 3 BEDROOMS - Near
vinyl top. Excellent condition.
Rutland on 124. Gas furnace,
Phone 742-4873, Salem St.,
1112 baths, utility room,
Rutland.
beautiful kitchen, cook and
2-7-6tc
bake units. Dining area. Only
$19,500.00.
1967 VALIANT, standard shift,
992-3325 992-2378
radio and heater, 28,000 miles.
2-12-6tc
$900. Phone 992-3860.
2-10-6tp

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

Cleland Realty

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

See Us At The ...

SWAP SHOP
Beat Inflation!
WE

BUY - SELL
OR

TRADE
NEW AND
USED FURNITURE
ALSO
APPLIANCES AND
HOUSEWARES

SWAP -SHOP
Open:
9 Til9 Mon., Tues.

Wed. &amp; Fri.
9 Til6 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
992-7261
305 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport

608 East Main
POMEROY
RUTLAND-ALMOST NEW3 bedrooms, bath, about 2
acres, large living room, nice
kitchen. $8,900.
POMEROY
JUST REMODELED
5 rooms,
bath, 2 bedrooms, full
basement, garage, ALL IN
GOOD CONDITION. $13,500.
POMEROY- 2 STORY HOME
WITH APARTMENT, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, garden
spol, garage. IN GOOD
CONDITION. $10,000.
POMEROY A LOT OF
REMODELING DONE, 2
story frame, 2 bedrooms,
bath, basement. NEW hot
water tank, forced air furnace.
COMPLETELY
FURNISHED. $4,600.
TOBUYORSELL
CONTACT US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
2-7-6tc

Home

JEMO ASSOCIATES
MR. &amp; MRS. HAROLD STEWART
260 Sycamore
Middleport
"We never thought we could
afford a new home. Not only are
our payments less than rent, but
we are now building for our r
future instead of collecting rent'
receipts."

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

~

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