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                  <text>Now You Know
George Washington's first
cabinet had four members:
Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of
State; Alexander Hamilton
Secretary of Treasury; Henr;
Knox, Secretary of War, and
Edmund Randolph, Attorney
General.

•

VOL. XXVI

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

NO. 213

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TENCENTS

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1971

---=-----------------------------------------------------------------------

•

Weather
Cloudy and not as cold today
with light snow or freezing
drizzle likely. High in the 30s.
Partly cloudy tonight. I..&lt;'
the 20s. Partly cloudy and
warmer Tuesday. High in the
30S north to 40s south .

Candidates Stay In
Nothing changed in the field
of candidates for the primary
election in May Saturday at 4
p.m., deadline for withdrawing.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections said therefore there
will be a Republican primary in
Pomeroy and a Republican
primary
in
Middleport.
Democrats will not have a
primary in either town.
In Pomeroy, the Republican
primary is made necessary by
the fact that three candidates
are seeking the nomination to
run for two seats on council. The
trio includes Mrs. Bertha
Canaday, Franklin M. Rizer,
incumbent, and James Mees.
There is no Republican can-

•

dictate for mayor in Pomeroy. Long-time council member
Jane Walton, a Republican, has John Zerkle will be seeking
filed for nomination as clerk, a nomination for the mayor's post
and will be opposed by Kim
position she now holds.
On the Democratic side of the Neal, a teacher and a newcomer
picture .11 Pomeroy, William to the political scene.
Baronick h:ts filed for mayor.
Charles Paul Gerard is the
There is one Democrat candidate for council. He is William Democrat candidate for mayor
Snouffer who will run against of Middleport. Until last week
Republican nominees in the fall. he was opposing H. Joe
An independent- Delmar A. Denison, but the Denison
Canaday - has filed for mayor petition was declared invalid by
and will oppose Baronick in the the board of elections. The
fall plus any Republican write- Democrats have only two
in candidate that might appear ouncil candidates now .since
between now and election.
• cne petition of Donovan D.
Middleport will have several Roush also was declared inraces for voters to settle in the valid. The two petitions valid
May Republican primary. are those of Mary E. Searls and

Donald H. Pearch, Jr. Two will
be running so no primary for
the party is needed.
Republican council candidates, with two to be
nominated, are Jacob Turner,
Donald E . Kelly, Carl H.
Platter, Fred Hoffman and
William Walters. Adding to the
intert-st in Middleport is the
independent candidate for
mayor, Allen Lee King, who will
face both the Democrat and
Republican nominees in the fall
in a three way race.
Middleport also has a
Republican race for the clerktreasurer post. Candidates are
incumbent Gene Grate and Mrs.
Patricia Groves.

•

•
•

Rhea Mora; back row, from the left, Richard Liter, Howard
Bahr, Howie Caldwell, Jim Young, Dave Smith, Ray Watson,
Rick Buckley, Mike Boring, Susan Teaford. Absent was Jean
Whitehead. Direction is by Larry Ritchie, faculty member.

A THREE-ACT COMEDY, "Hold the Phone," will be
presented by Eastern High School seniors at 8:08 p. m.
tonight in the high school auditorium. Cast member pictured
include front row, from the left, Joy Kautz, Brenda Boring,
Patti Holsinger, Jackie Bise, Debbie Wood, Cathy Smith,

Ho's

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-'- · •

z·l____C
____u___t__

Burglars rn
$2,000 Jleist

:_l_:=:-: =:-:~-: : _;_: ~-: -: =-=~-: ~-:~-=:- ;-;n-:=:=-:~-: : -=-~ -= =-,i ~r.;:~:~~t~;J;;~~;~

1:&amp;

:;:; ministration is con- :l:; Sunday morning by an alert
!~ ~ ::::::i~~ i!~:~:;;gwa~~~: [!!! ~~~~~. officer on a routine

SAIGON &lt;UPI&gt;- The commander of South Vietnamese troops in Laos said ~.l .l ieraicrensedatnoddapyr.opfitrse,si'dUePnlt :__;t_; Mason City Police Chief
. today they had cut the main portion of the Ho Chi Minh supply route and halted
Richard Ohlinger was checking
~;;; Nixon is expected to ~;~; the B &amp; B Market here at 10:45
all traffic on that porition of it.
U. S. spokesmen in Saigon said a U. S. Air Force F105 Wild Weasel made a ;::: make a decision by :::: a.m. Sunday when he found a
"protective reaction" strike against a Communist missile site in 1'\orth Vietnam. :l:l midweek on whether a :l:; safe had been broken into and
wage, price and profit
its contents amounting to apLt. Gen. hoang Xuan Lam told newsmen his 16,000 troops were as far as 18
proximately $2,000 in cash and
freeze is the best way to
miles inside Laos. Referring to Communist traffic on the Mo Chi Minh Trail, he
halt spiralling inflation in
checks were missing.
said "I have cut their road, their main supply road," but added that he expected
construction costs.
Chief Ohlinger said that he
further fighting as the Communists try to regain control of the trail.
was starting to drive out Horton
The plan under con-

ld
• !(---------------------------,
News ..• in Briefi ! Ho up
I

~·

• ted Press International

'

A dd u
OOLU
ATE CORRECTIONS Conunissioner
Bennet J . C
told the Citizens Task Force investigating
prison conditions that the Ohio Penitentiary guards are underpaid
and "if you can't pay much, you can't ask much." Cooper, in a
"State of the System" report to the task force Saturday, pointed
out that OP guards start at $5,762 while federal corrections officers start at $8,200.
"You may getwhatyoupayfor," Cooper said. " We are going to
have to offer close to that."

25 Cars leave railroad track

•
•

TWENTY-FIVE CARS OF A NORFOLK &amp; WESTERN
freight derailed in Stark County Sunday and two empty Penn
Central cars jumped from icy siding tracks near London and
plunged into a building. A flagman riding in the caboose of the
N&amp;W train suffered minor injuries when four diesel units and the
cars jumped the track just north of Bolivar. One-half mile of track
was ripped up.
Cause of the derailment was being investigating. Penn
Central officials said the cars in the Madison County accident
were being "spotted" on the siding at Lilly Chapel from the 10-car
freight when they left the tracks and plunged into the empty office
of the Pillsbury Co. elevator.

Another astronaut work day
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON - MOST space workers
celebrated George Washington's birthday today but it was work
as usual for the Apollo 14 Astronauts, with much of the day
devoted to a review of more than 1,000 photographs snapped at the
moon. Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell
must spend 12 more days in quarantine with 14 medical and
support personnel. They have been isolated in the $15 million
lunar receiving laboratory on the slim chance they might have
picked up alien germs on the moon.
Because of that possibility, their health is being monitored
carefully in the laboratory and doctors planned to draw more of
the astronauts' blood today to look for possible changes as a result
of their nine days in space.
BONDS FORFEITED
two defenda nts forfeited $15
bonds ea ch Sa turda y mght in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Charles Legar. Th ey wer e
Kenne th Lee, Clifton , W. Va.,
bond posted on a defective
exha ust charge, and Ronald
Brinker , 53, Racine , $15 posted
on a r eckless oper ation charge.

HERBERT FOR JUDGE
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Supreme Court Justice Thomas
M. Herbert has been mentioned
as a possible candidate for the
federal judgeship in southern
Ohio by s tate Republican
Cha irman J ohn S. Andrews.
Andrews forwa rded Herbert's
name to Sens. William Saxbe
and Robert Taft Jr.

St. in his routine coverage when
sideration would apply
he noticed a car parked nearby
only to the construction
industry and not to other
and the front door of the B &amp; B
Market open. Thinking the
sectors of the economy.
Wage settlements by
owners inside, he stopped his
cruiser, got out, and went into
building trade uniom; last
·:·: year provide'
-'" .•ge .·~ ..,, st re. 'Vvhen he didn't find
;;:; wage increases of nearly :~:l anyone around, he said he
Gallia County Sheriff Denver :~~~ 16 per cent a year, or :;:; began to look further and
A. Walker's department was :;:; about twice that of other ;:; discovered the safe, located in
investigating an alleged armed
unions.
:~lj the back of the building, had
robbery and grand larceny
:;~;:::!:;;;:::=:!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:
~~:~l~~~~en into, and its door on
incident late this morning in the
Bidwell area.
Ohlinger theorized a sharp
ccording to Sheriff Walker,
object had been used to gain
two persons were being sought
entrance through the front door
in connection with the theft of
$4,400, taken at gunpoint early
ome Hmdy, •o. ,,••
today from Virgil Fraley and
Paul Goodson, Rt. 1, Vinton.
owner and operator of the
Sgt. James E. Baldwin, in- Liberty Theater in Middleport
vestigating officer, reported the for many years , died late
robbery victims were in a barn Sunday at Veterans Memorial
By United Press International
at the Fraley farm feeding Hospital.
Israel has ignored a peace
stock when accosted by two
Mr. Hindy came to the United
unidentified men. They tied States alone from Syria when he initiative by United Nations
Fraley and Goodson after was only 13 years old. He was a envoy Gunnar V. Jarring and
accept
Egyptian
taking their money, then took member of the Middleport First cannot
Fraley's 1968 Ford cattle truck . Baptist Church and of Mid- President Anwar Sadat's latest
Sgt. Baldwin said Goodson dleport Masonic Lodge 363, proposals for reopening the
Suez Canal, Israel officials said
managed to cut himself loose F&amp;AM.
with a knife. After gaining their
Surviving are four daughters, privately today in Jerusalem.
Premier Golda Meir's cabinet
freedom, the men notified the Mrs. Opal McClure, P oint
sheriff's department.
Pleasant; Mrs. Emma Crum, issued a statement after a
Delbarton, W. Va . ; Mrs . meeting in Jerusalem Sunday
Elizabeth Stumbo, Middleport, saying Israel would continue
and Mrs. Kadizia Varney, In- talks only in line with its own
dian Springs, Nevada ; three proposals. The statement made
sons, Kalad, Seneca Falls, N. no reference to Jarring's
Y.; Cassam, Middleport, and suggestions, indicating Israel
Joe of Chillicothe; a sister, Mrs. thinks he is authorized only as a
An Ohio labor leader told the Emma Ollie, Logan, W. Va.; 19 go-between and not as a
UPI today the nation's major grandchildren and 14 great- mediator. The United States has
steel companies are " putting grandchildren. His parents, his approved the Jarring mediator
pressure" on can companies not wife, Mary, and a daughter role.
to accept a cost-Of-living for- preceded him in death.
There was no official Israeli
mula in contract talks with the
Funeral arrangements are reaction to Sadat's Suez Canal
United Steelworkers Union. The being made at the Rawlings- pr oposals but officials said
USW struck three of the firms Coats Funeral Home.
privately Israel could not acearly today.
cept them because they meant
LOCAL TEMPS
About 400 workers struck a
total withdrawal from the Sinai
The temperature in downtown Desert and the fortress at
Continental Can Co. plant in
Cincinnati, 60 walked off the job Pomeroy at 11 a .m . Monday Sharm el Shkeikh which guards
at an American Can Co. plant in was 30 degrees under cloudy the entrance to the Tiran Strait.
Delaware while 125 were off the skies.
job at two Continental plants in
BANQUET SET
Columbus.
Racine Cub Scout Pack 243
G_OES TO AID
John Hodges, head of USW will hold its annual Blue and The Middle~ort E-~ squad
went to the aid of Hilda MetT d , F b
area 5 in Columbus, said union Gold ban
que ues a}' e · 16' D · 1 H b
t 10 59
leaders are "not as optimistic" at the First Baptist Church ames, o son, a.
: p.m.
as they were originally about an social rooms in Racine at 7:30 Sunday' who was I~l. She was
p.m .
taken to Holzer Medical Center.
early settlement.

Prohetl.

ll

Ollie Hmdy
Died Sunda
,.,.!,Israeli Not
Responding

Pressure on
Can Firms

of the building and that entry
was made into the safe by the
combination dial being knocked
off and then a sharp object,
perhaps a chisel and a hammer,
were used to pry off rivets to get
the safe door open. Police
believed it was the work of
professionals.
The store is operated by Mrs.
Mary L. Berry and her mother,
Mrs. B. F. Board. However, ·
contents of the safe also
belonged to B. F. Board.
The owners, who were
notified, disclosed that a considerable amount of cash as
well as endorsed checks were
missing, as well as several
valuable papers.
The theft included approximately $200 in silver 50
cent pieces dated in 1964 and
older $Z:o m $20 currency;
checks made out to B. F. Board
and already endorsed in
preparation for depositing
included the following: on
Citizens National Bank in
Middleport, Ohio, by Winfield
VanMeter, $50; Lucy Roush on
Mason County Bank, $50 and
$15; identified only as Keefer on
By United Press International
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday through Friday:
A chance of showers and
much warmer with highs in
the upper 40s north to the
upper 50s south and lows from
the mid 30s north to the mid
40s south.

STATE INCOME RISES
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Ohio
State University's Center for
Business and Economic Research reports the state's annual personal income rate was 4
per cent higher in 1970 than in
1969.
Among Ohio's major cities,
Columbus was up 5 per cent,
Cincinnati 3 and Toledo 1, while
Akron was down 4 per cent,
Canton, Cleveland and Dayton 3
and Youngstown 1.

SAIGON (UPI) - U. S.
warplanes accidentally bombed
the headquarters of a "clandestine army" organized by the
Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) in Northern Laos.
American sources in Vientiane
said today 10 persons were
killed and 20 wounded.
Several clusters of antipersonnel bombs were dropped
on the base at Long Cheng,
about 80 miles north of Vientiarice, the capital of Laos, on
Sunday by two U. S. Air Force

Senator Cook Warns Nixon of Folly
1972, the same monies are earmarked for the rura l development portion of the President's
special r evenue sharing proposal.
' 'Certa inly it must be possible to include the Appalachian
Regional Commission in a revenue s haring sys tem, " Cook
said 1n a speech prepar ed for
a Pike County chamber of commerce ga ther ing. "The two are
not tncompatible ."
Tht Kentucky Republican
nott&gt;d that the n s tates

have shared common funds
"and
have
used
them
for the true betterment of
all the people of Appalachia ."
He also noted that Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., sponsor of
the revenue sharing bill in the
Senate, has also expressed the
opinion that the ARC could
comfortably exis t within the
framework of a revenue sharing system.
"To me, it would · be sheer
full:r to see this program deemphasized," Cook said, "when

it has just begun to revitalize
an area that has been too long
neglected."
Among the many Improvements to the Appalachian area
which have been accomplished
through the ARC, Cook noted :
-Over 850 miles of Appalachian development highways tave
been completed or are under
construction.
-Over 300 vocational and
technical training centers have
been funded, providing educational facilities for 210,000 Ap-

palachian students.
-In 1970 aone, 51 new health
services were inaugurated providing health service networks
for thousands of Appalachian
residents in need of medical
care.
- The Appalachian housing
fund has helped to initiate construction of over 7,000 units of
low and moderate income housing.
- In Appalachia, 28 mine reclamation projects have been
conpleted.

Jackson County of a Point
Pleasant bank for three checks,
$154.50, $8.24, $25.75, by Margie
Swisher to Roy Brinker on
Citizens National Bank, $45; E.
C. Teeters for $20; a social
security check to B. F . Board in
the amount bf $88 .and bank
uouk~ ilc:on
g
. "31):lrd.
In addition to the silver and
cash previously mentioned,
Mrs. Berry and Mrs. Board also
lost checks written from $50 to
$100 totaling $880, one by Lora
VanMeter for $150, Henry Estep
for $15, Elmo Cundiff for $27.50,
and by Gerald Gibbs and Eulah

Oldaker
for
undisclosed
amounts. Also missing were
several insurance policies, a
gray metal box and several
nylon bank bags.
Mason County deputy sheriff
Jack Pyles is assisting Mason
poli~ with the investigation.
P r n
w1th tnforml=l 10n
concerning the c~ .or other
missing articles 'are, ,. ,ad to
con tact officers at tfllUin m
Mason, or the sheriff eftlc:e at
phone 675-3Sl0.
Police said tbe b glary
apparently occurred some lim¢
between 3:30 a. . and 10·45
a.m. Sunday.

Crossed Wires
LONDON (UPI)-President
Nixon did not watch the Apollo
14 splashdown live on television
and agreed only reluctantly to
telephone his personal congratulations to the three l:lstronauts, according to a British
journa list.
Peregrine Worsthorne, in a
copyr ighted article in the
Sunday Telegraph, said he was
interviewing the President at
the White House last Tuesday
when the three Apollo 14
astronauts returned safely to
earth.
An aide interrupted their
conversation with word of the
splashdown, he said. "Great
news," Worsthorne quoted Nix-

on as saying. He said the
President then started to
resume their discussion.
Once again the aide interrupted and said the astronauts were
waiting to talk to Nixon on the
telephone, the journalist said.
"Who arranged that? " Worsthorne quoted Nixon as saying.
"I was told of no such plan."
"No sir," the aide reportedly
replied. ''But the admiral has
just announced it on the
television that you were on the
line."
Worsthorne said Nixon "conceded defeat, but only reluctantly, almost sulkily and on his
own terms" and, after a
lengthy farewell to him he
finally spoke to the astronauts.

10 Die in. Accidental Drop

t

PIKEVILLE , Ky . ( UPI )-Sen .
Marlow W. Cook , R-Ky., today
called the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) a prime
exa mple of revenue sha ring,
and said it would be "sheer
folly " for the Nixon administration to elimina te the 13-state
body coincident with adoption
of the revenue-sharing plan .
CongressiOnal authorization
for the fi ve-year-old comrnisswn runs out this .June ~0, and
while fund s arc budgeted by
the adnnm s lt atiun f&lt;n· fi scal

BURGLARY- Remains of a safe are stewn about after
a breaking and entering was discovered at the B &amp; B Market
in Mason Sunday morning. Contents amounted to approximately $2,000 in cash and checks.

"The value of the Appalachian Regional Commission extends past the people of Appalachia," Cook said. "It serves
as a model for the nation, for
it indicates what progress can
be made through the cooperation of areas facing common
problems and common needs."
Cook called on his Senate colleagues to join him in supporting the bill offered b:t Sens.
Jennings Randolph, D-W. Va ..
and John Sherman Cooper, RKy.

Phantom jets. The jets apparently dropped their bombs
too early because of the accidental misfiring of a signal
flare by an American on the
ground at the base, the sources
said.
The air strikes were being
flown a few hours after North
Vietnamese troops attacked the
base, headquarters for the
guerrilla army commanded by
Meo Hill tribe leader Maj. Gen.

Yang Pao and sponsored by the
CIA. The American sources in
Vientiane said all of the killed
and wounded were Meo
tribesmen. There had been
earlier reports one of tbe
wounded was American.
There are CIA advisers, U S.
Air Force personnel and
Americans who supervise U .S,
military assistance operaq
on the base.

Passenger Injured
A Racine woman was
hospitalized following a one-car
accident on SR 124 near
Maplewood Lake Saturday at
6:50p.m., Meigs County Sheriff
Robert
C.
Hartenbach's
department reported.
Helen Arnott, Racine, a
passenger in a car driven by her
husband, William R. Arnott 49,
Racine, suffered pamful but
apparently not critical injuries
when the car slid on the icy
highwa) and hit a power pole.
Arnott was traveling southeast.
Then• was heavy damage to
the car. Mrs. Arnott was takt&gt;n

to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Syracuse E-R squad. Her
condition was listed a1
sa tisfactor) today.
Saturda~ at 5:15p.m. on SR 7
bypass a two-car accident was
reported to the Sheriff's n.pt.
George Nicinsky, 39,
dleport, driving north when his
car was struck in the left tear
b" a car dn ven b\ John L
(ilazt&gt;, 21. Hillsboro·. NiciOIIQ'
had slowed to make a left hand
turn . There \\as heat' damage
to the Gl.!Zl' c-ar and onl~ light to
tlw Nlcwsky \chicle. There
\H'I't&gt; nu mjuries 11r arrests.

*"

�2- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 15, 1971

GLOBAL VIEW

·\·.\

~ '.

The Free Press
Is the Bogeyman

.

,
""

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

··.

I

\ ... .,\

/

I

I I

'\

By LEON DENNI&lt;:N

NEW YOH.K lNEA l
The life of a foretgn correspondent in Moscow, never
easy, has become increasingly precarious since the Kremlin leaders inaugurated their new campaign of terror.
From the first davs of his rule in Russia, Lenin
warned that a free pt:ess was a greater danger to com·
n.unism "than bombs or machine guns ...
Nevertheless, his successors had to tolerate "cap·
italisf' journalists as long as they did not dig for facts
too deeply. They even courted- as they stt!l do- timid
souls resigned to report merely the contents of Pravda
editorials or official Kremlin propaganda.
But the new breed of American reporters worrie::.
the Soviet rulers. Most are young, fearless and speak
Russian. Despite threats and harassment by thugs of
the secret police- the notorious KGB- they have the
courage to speak to Soviet dissidents and search for
facts in the secretive totalitarian state.
Thus, as in the darkest days of Stalin's rule, Russians
are again warned to avoid contact with capitalist journalists
''The Soviet people are increasing their political
vigilance and their irreconciliability towar~s _rotten
bourgeois ideology.·· said a recent Pravda edttonal.
The Kremlin's mouthpiece was particularly vitri_olic
in its attacks on dissident intellectuals who ·ostensibly
"haunt the doorways" of the Moscow residences of
Am.erican correspondents.
Such intellectuals were castigated as ·'mercenary ignoramuses" who "lurk behind the masks of scientists
and men of letters." Pravda's targets were unmistakable. Its attack on "mercenary ignoramuses" applied
to Prof. A. D. Sakharoy l the "father of the Russian
H-bomb" ). the eminent biologist Jaures Medvedev and
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, author of "The First Ctrcle,"
who was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature.
Another newspaper, "Trud," printed an article by
Col. F. Kikitin emphasizing that it is "the duty of ev~ry
Soviet citizen" to be vigilant "in the face of subversiOn
and espionage" carried out by Western agencies, cotrespondents and even tourists.
"There is no sector, post or any sphere of a~tivity
where complacency and gullibility can be permitted.''
the top KGB officer said.
His warning was followed by an article i~ "Sove~s­
kaya Rossiva" which singled out for praise Sov1et
citizens who took prompt action and reported anything
suspicious to the KGB.
The revival of the spy scare is no accident. It is intended to poison the minds of ordiJ?ary Russians_ against
dissident intellectuals and to stimulate suspicton of
foreigners and Western thinking.
It aims to frighten Russians - especially dissidentsand isolate Western journalists from any sources of
opinion and information other than those approved
bv the KGB.
·Only people who refuse to learn fn?m history will
believe that the harassment of Amencan correspondents by the KGB's thugs has anything. to do w~th
protests in the United States by Jews.. Latvians,. Ukramians and others against the persecution of the1r people
in Russia.
.
The Kremlin rulers, despite their shrill propaganda,
know only too well that President Nixon did not inspire
or "organize" the anti-Soviet protests.
In the view of specialists on Russia, the current
"vigilance" campaign aims at wo~king up a lather of
anti-American feeling in preparation for the congress
f J.he B,ussian Communist Party due March 30.
Party b_oss Leonid ~;e~h!le.~. who is fighting for his
political hf
eds a cns1s.

I'll Think of Something~"

"Patience,

\

·:.

..._ •.

WIN AT BRIDGE

RAY CROMLEY

A New Attack on
Old Bureaucracy

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2.

Colds More Likely 1n Dry Air
Dear Dr. Lamb-Our home
is heated and air-conditioned
with an excellent central sys. tern. My husband and I disagree over what temperature to set the thermostat.
This is very important to us .
Isn 't it easy to catch colds
leaving an overheated home
and going out into the cold
air?
Dear Reader-This is a
constant battle, not only in
homes but also in large offices . Some large buildings
have dum my thermostats
that have nothing to do with
regulating heat for the express purpose of Jetting people set and reset the thermostat without interfering with
the over-all heating of the
building.
There is a lot more to feeling wan.1 than just temper~ture. Humidity has a lot to
o with how you feel. In the
· mmer if there is too much
llumidity you feel hot even
at reasonable temperatures.
The same is true in the winter. A dry house feels cold

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Oswald: " In auction bridge
players open ·very light in
first or second seat, but required more for third hand
openings, and a lot more for
fourth hand bids. This car'/
ried over into c o n t r a c t.
l
Thus the first Culbertson
syste~ opened in first II(
second seat with 2% quii!R
tricks, but 3 were required
in third seat and 3-plus in
fourth. In today's hand Sou~h
has 2% Culbertson tricks
and as dealer he would open.
If North or West had dealt
the hand, it would be passed
out.''
Jim: "Some people might
r---~--~----------------------------------pass today's hand. South has
14 high-card points and t
JACOBY MODERN rule
j
to open all 14 HCP hands irrespective of vulnerability,
1
BY JACK O'BRIAN
RR car: that end of the business Lights Ge On" in India and
position at the table, or the
signs of the zodiac."
is highly prosperous
"The Boy Who Loved His
Oswald: " The old ide a
BERRIGAN BROTHERS
$50,000,000 last year .... ''No, Mother" in Japan.
about strong third and fourth
ARE OFFERED
No, Nanette" has a marvelously
Brilliant illegitimate son of a
hand bids has fallen entirely
LEGAL AID
unbilled nostalgic sound in the famed acting couple sees his
by the wayside and some
NEW YORK Famed pit band - a two-piano team, psychiatrist five days a week
splinter systems go the other
Federal prosecutor will face a popularized during Nanette- and sometimes six. His dad and
way and establish higher reprobe into a $400,000 fee while in time musicals by Ohman &amp; mother - friendly but not
quirements for first and secgov't service .. .. Producer Arden.
ond seat."
together-urged him to quit the
Jim: "You were the first
Leland Hayward's misery was
The long-hair styles have shrink and go to work, and the
to propose that the requiretraced to a neck vein - which caused some 3,000 barbershops son refused. Pop asked what
ments be the same in all
has been replaced by a to fail in New York State alone was so crucial, and the lad
seats
and in JACOBY MODmiraculous plastic gizmo .... .... And the long-hem styles replied: "Your very lives
ERN we open all hands with
Roy Cohn's next book will be have helped 265 N.Y. City dress depend on it." .... The Regency
14 high-card points; almost
titled "A Fool for a Client" .... businesses to fold .... Women Hotel dining room joined the
Clll hands with 13; most with
He rejected the title-suggestion almost made it into the male- stay- open- for- after -theater 12 and some with 11. We
don't open 10-pointers except
"Now It's My Turn" .... Ex-Sen. only N. Y. Financial Writers supper list since the early
with preempts of some sort."
Charles Goodell, perennial Assn - lost out by only nine Bdwy. stage curtains.
Oswald: " South plays at
candidate (for anything), Paul votes .... Famed vacation mag,
"The Trial of the Catonsville
one no-trump and has za
O'Dwyer, and Ramsey Clark all a fine one, is deciding this week Nine," by Daniel Berrigan S. J., r---------------------------1 trouble making it. He a"roffered to defend the Berrigan whether to toss in the guest convicted anti-war priest, is a I
I tacks diamonds after winbrothers; lefty lawyer Kunstler towel .... Fabian and his wife surprisingly well crafted and I
I ning the spade. If East ducks
was rejected because of his too- expect their second .... Mer- written play, slanted, naturally, I
·
I twice he shifts to hearts and
is sure of seven tricks. North
violent "image" .... Do not couri's "Promise at Dawn" gets to the Berrigan's philosophy• ~:
make~* three diamonds
mistake the Rolls-Royce "First Love, Last&lt;~ as its' but a fascinatingly talky play 1
B H1 B 1
,,. can
and West might make two
bankruptcy as doomsday for the German title; "Love Me Till the nonetheless .... It's part of the 1
Y e en otte
1 spades if he could get there.
theater
of
Advocacy MOST POPULAR
discussions, reached no un- Any plus score should be
,,,,,.,,,,:,:::._:,::::'":'·,.,:: ·:' ,;, ..· ..,. :: represented by prior plays LETTERS, WINTER
derstanding of individual needs, very satisfactory with these
attacking Pope Pius, Winston SEASON
the "golden years" will surely cards."
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) j.,
Churchill and defending the Dear Helen:
have no glitter.
It's always interesting to
The husband must recognize
Rosenbergs (the latter was the
limpest array of lies ever of- know which of your letters that the wive never retires, and
fered as factual drama); the brought most response from therefore he should assume
The bidding has been:
Berrigan play suffers its one readers. Who, or what problem, some of her household ac- West
North
East
South
defeating flaw in its almost won for the winter season? - T. tivities. "Man's work" and 1¥
Dble
2•
"woman's work" is out - it's Pass
?
poetically beautiful length by R.
3•
Pass
You, South, hold:
parroting all the radical Dear T.:
"our work."
.7 +Q98 4oK1043
brothers' cliches- anti-Pope, "ElFin," the lost little girl
Thewifernustrealizethather .87432
What do you do now?
anti-€stablishment, repeating who wondered if anyone really husband is suddenly freed from
A-Bid four spades. 5-4-3-1
Daniel Berrigan's naive cares, inspired the greatest his obligation to the time clock, distribution is mighty good
nauts. Whenever the control answer, but there are some propagandistic memories of his flood of mail I've had in recent and he'll have difficulty when you know you hold
did not work properly, which good principles you can fol- trip to Hanoi where he was fork- years.
properly organizing his new right singleton.
did happen, the astronauts low to keep everyone more fed the anti-American slant.
And yes, you Readers Who type of life.
were hot with too much hu- comfortable and healthier.
Nowhere
does
Father Care, I finally heard from El
And both must care enough
midity and too cool without
Berrigan note any of the Hanoi- Fin again. She asked that her about each other so that ''living every day. Mostly under my
it. A proper level of humid·
inflicted terrorism, the Hanoi- letter not be published, but she close" won't stifle them. They feet. The main problem is that
ity can save on fuel bills.
murders of South Vietnamese ends, "I promise to think I have also need "apart activities," women retain their energy
The s e n s a t i on of body
civilians and attacks on non- something to live for. I believe outside friendships, hobbies, (even though they've worked
warmth is also affected by
military targets and personnel you when you say that you and shared excursions - all those just as hard as men), while the
how much heat the body generates or its metabolism . A
right in Saigon; nor does he others care and I'm not alone things they should have planned retired man just plain quits. p e r s on with low thyroid
touch upon the very real fact .... I feel much better now. Like for before retirement.
BEAT DOWN TOO
function feels colder than a
that 1,500,000 North Vietnamese I've reached a safe level .... "
My wife and I have a mobile Dear Helen:
person with increased thyCatholics had to flee to the
Her letter made my day a horne which eliminates much
Maybe "Slowly Dying's" ·
roid function or a feve r. A
South - with their priests and great deal brighter!
work. We take inexpensive trips husband needs a physical
common factor is the level
bishops - after more than
Youth tied with age on the several times a year. We share. checkup and something for
of physical activity. The ac100,000 teachers, priests, key next two most popular subjects. we talk. We're friends. And tired blood. Anyway, the home
tive person will generate
more heat and will want a
"Must a teenage girl put out we're _ STll..L UVING
is just as much his as hers, so
civil servants were murdered
for their opposition to the to stay popular?" brought Dear Helen:
she should let him enjoy his
&lt;:ooler temperature while a
sedentary person, s itting
IZI Communist regime. The play hundreds of replies, mainly I'm another "Slowly Dying." well-€arned rest. She's been
watch i n g television, will ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _....;;;;;.;._. attacks the church as if it were "Heck No!" (This from boys as My husband has had "dropsy" slowly dying of loneliness
want a warmer temperature.
The anteater is a mam- a cynically detached fat-cat well as girls.) Times haven't eversinceheretired-hedrops withouthim.Iknow!-WIOOW
A happy solution is for the mal native of Centra 1 wallowing in wealth and luxury, changed as much as we here and drops there all day,
•
America
and n o r the r n
11
inactive person to do a little
South
America
.
The
World
with
no
mention
of
the
litera
y
sometimes
imagine.
exercise or work requiring
Almost an equal number of
A I m a n a c says it has a hundreds of American Catholic
some phy~ical exertion.
sticky tongue about a foot groups sending uncounted letters came from retirees.
There are other factors long which it uses to catch millions of dollars and trained They either related to or
which influence heat, :oo. ants, termites and other in- people into poor countries disagreed with "Slowly Dying"
Radiant heat through the
glass may make one room sects which comprise its abroad .... One such group we whose stay-at-home husband
feel warmer at lower tem- diet. It has no teeth b1,1t has know about, the Catholic was driving her up the wall.
Here are samples:
peratures than one witnout long, sharp claws with MedicalMissions, lastyearsent
it tears open ant and $17,000,000inmedicinesalone to Dear Helen:
windows. So there is no one which
termite nests.
poor countries.
"Slowly Dying" has had her
This beautifully composed marriage slowly dying for
Time
®
play attacks its theological and years, but did not recognize the
political targets from the far symptoms. You don't suddenly
BARBS
left, setting up, however per- realize you're stuck with a lost
suasively to the innocent cause, just because he retires.
By PHIL PASTORET
Happy retirement takes
onlooker, straw men to be at"Economic indicators" are
tacked
verbally
with
a
planning.
A couple usually has
scientific measures by which
you can determine the de- propaganda poise all atilt .. .. approximately 40 years of
The sadness over the war is true pre para tory time. If they had no
gree of your brokeness.
not just of the Berrigans and the
The dij]erellcc b etwee n
other Catonsville seven; it is exposition, but the splendidly
diplomats and little boys
right here in this typewriter .... drama tic words and the best
w ho tell fibs is that the
But it's also true that, for the acting we've ever seen off"boys" practtcmg tile ([rt
first
time since Eisenhower, Broadway turned this into a
are too olcl to have thezr
Kennedy and Johnson days, our fascinating evening .... The play
mont11:~ wasliecl·out wit11
Vietnam engagement is being is being performed in the Good
laundru soap .
withdrawn with Pres. Nixon Shepherd-Faith Church in
Engineers arc working to ahead of his calm promise to get Lincoln Center, another canny
take the ha z ards out of us the hell out of there com- use of surroundings to add
pletely .... But these would be holiness to the arguments; the
facts to cripple the play's most play's setting is supposed to be
· a Federal court, but the
literate false arguments.
For the forgetful, the nine reverence of the premises - the
pacifists Jed by the Berrigans audience of course sits in the
burned the records of a church pews - adds to what the
autos. but we expect a lot Catonsville, Md., draft board in author visualizes as its holy
"/ say, if people don't like tne way things are going,
of n•sistanct&gt; from tlw ladi('s. a symbolic purification by fire
ambiance .. .. A very interesting
they ought to get on their l'ac hts and sail away!"
('J 1enp 11elp is lll!'ill'l ·
of what they claim is the play which we recommend even
obly tlte m(lst &lt;'.rpe 11 sire
bureau&lt;:racy of murder .... The for those who don't agree with
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS!:'
play could have been a static the Berrigan brothers.

•

The body is cooled by evaporation of moisture from the
skin which goes on all the
time. The evaporation is increased in dry air, thus dry
air makes you feel cooler in
summer or winter. Humidity
interferes with evaporation,
causing the body to build up
heat.
As to your questwn, ex·
cessively dry air dries the
normal nasal mucus . The
protective lining loses its
normal function and one is
more likely to develop colds .
In the winter most homes
are drier than the desert un less there is a humidifier.
Nature's air contains moisture even in the desert.
The humidity shou ld be
between 35 and 40 per cent
&amp;nd if someone has a respiratory illness as high as 60
to 70 per cent. The usual
home in the winter has a humidity of 10 to 15 per cent.
H u midi t y was carefully
controlled in the space caps ules to ensure the proper env i ron m e n t for the astro-

Up for Grabs

WASHINGTON (NEAJ
The last five U.S. presidents have complamed, publicly
or privately, they could not control the bureaucracy.
Once entrenched, continuing from ad.ministration to administration, senior officials are sometimes more the g~v­
ernment than the president or Congress. Worse yet, Incompetents become frozen in place.
No official this reporter has talked to i~ the past 25
years has suggested Civil Service be abolished or that
we resurrect "To the victor belong the spotls" as practiced in earlier days of this Republic.
But if elections have any meaning, and if a president
is to be president, then whoever is in the White H.ouse
-not holdovers from the past-must be the boss of the
executive branch.
And if there is to be efficiency, the president must have
wide !attitude in shifting his top men from job to job. Administrators must not be locked in place.
This is the importance of the Federal Executive Service Nixon has proposed to Congress, a proposal that
would encompass 7,000 supergrade (GS-16 to GS-18) government employes making $28,000 to $36,000 a year.
Nixon's proposal may not be the best solution. Congre~s
should study it through a microscope. But the concept IS
right.
The president's Federal Executive Service would put
the government's supergrade career employes under
three-year contracts, renewable at the. option of the government. These top men could be shtfted from post to
post and from agency to agency.
Career officials whose contracts were not renewed
would have options. They could revert to grade GS-15 (at
$24,250 to $31,500 a year). They could retire with an annuity, if eligible, or with severance pay. They would continue to have Civil Service protection and appeal rights.
Their selection would be passed on by a Civil Service
qualification board.
Congress would be wise not to .reject .this pr?posal as
partisan . For the next Democratic president will surely
face the same problems as Nixon .
This reporter has spent a great deal of time over the
past two decades listening to Democratic and. Repu~lican
political appointees who had the problem of elimmatmg or
transferring senior officials who were not performmg up
to standard or who refused to alter their approaches to
meet the requirements of a new administration.
Actually, Nixon wi benefit less from the proposed I&lt;'ES
than his successors. The plan, if adopted, will go into effect one year after Nixon's signature, and all supergrade
career employes on the job will then be offered three-year
contracts. Assuming that it takes Congress nine to 10
months to pass this legislation, it will thus be almost five
years before appreciable changes are possible.
The Nixon proposal, in theory, would not open new jobs
for political hacks. Though the departm~n.ts and. agencie.s
nominate men for the superposts, the C1vil Service qualification boards mentioned above must pass on their
qualifications.
Under the new system, as at present, the President has
the option of filling about 1,750 of the supergrade posts
with political appointees. That's about one-fourth of the
men and women in t~e super grades.

Humidify Home in Winter

By LAWRENCE LAMB, M.D. even at higher temperatures.

Any Plus Score •

1

BERRY'S WORLD

•

I

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 15, 1971

Eagles
Win
Share
of
.
Title
SVAC
Basketball
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The best news of the weekend in local sports is Eastern
locking up a piece of the Southern Valley Athletic Conference
championship with its 71-52 victory over Southern (not good news
at all for Southern, of course), and the Marauders putting it on
Wahama the second time this season, Saturday night 75-65.
The Marauders are 11-6, with all the losses occurring in the
league which, with the addition of Waverly this year, is a stronger
collection of basketball teams than the SEOAL customarily
mounts. Waverly's 81-57 demolition of Circleville suggests the
Southeastern is improving its image.
The weekend seance on scores was just so-so. Eleven of 16
chances made good is very poor baseball fielding, excellent
completions for a quarterback, fine shooting from the field in
basketball, but no great shucks with the crystal ball.
Here's how it went, the first score following the team listed is
the actual score, the predicted score in parenthesis, and at right
first the spread of the actual score, then the spread of the
predicted score.
FRIDAY GAMES
Logan 41 ( 45) at Athens 76 (69)
35-24
Gallipolis 59 ( 48) at Ironton 54 (54)
Ummm
Waverly 93 (75) at Jackson 72 (62)
21-13
Wellston 69 (55) at Meigs 71 (70)
2-15
Glouster 50 ( 48) at Alexander 97 ( 68)
47-20
Vinton Co. 50 (60) at Warren Local76 (68)
26-18
Oh-{)
Miller 63 (58) atNels-York 75 (55)
Hannan, W.Va . 38 (55) at Southern 53 (57)
15-2
Starr-Wash. 73 (58) at Col. St. Ch. 66 (68)
Boom!
SATURDAY GAMES
Gallipolis 57 (54) at Coal Grove 67 (64)
1~10
Fed. Hocking 54 (72) at Logan 55 (56)
Yilii!
Circleville 57 (69) at Waverly 81 (75)
21-6
Alexander 56 (59) at Nels.-York 54 (52)
2-7
Southern 52 ( 48) at Eastern 71 (68)
19-20
Crooksville 78 ( 49) at Miller 66 (57)
OhWell
Wahama 65 (50) at Meigs 75 (60
1~10
Weekend : 11 of 16
19-1-13-1
Season Shooting Avg. 96 of 118 for 81.4 per cent.

~:~ Bucks
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Humble
Hawks 124-88

By United Press International
The Milwaakee Bucks merely
were coasting while the Seattle
Supersonics were driving all the
way in their National Basketball Association games Sunday
- with disastrous r esults for

their rivals.
The Bucks, runaway leaders
in the Midwest Division of the
• NBA, walloped the Atlanta
Hawks-; 124-88 in Atlanta, Ga.,
despite the
'hat Uw
Alcmdor pia
minutes. The S
while, ripped
Warriors , 146with newlyac quired star Spencer Haywood
scoring 25 points.
The Bucks stormed to a 19point lead at the end of the firs t
period and led by 23 a t the half
as they scored their 51st v ictory
in 62 games. Alcindor led both
teams in scoring with 23 points
and 19 rebounds · while Bob
Dandridge added 22 for the
Buc ks. Pete Ma ra vich had 15
for the Ha wks.
The Sonics surged to a 16point lead at the end of the first
period, had a 26-point lead at the
half and jus t kept pouring it on.
Lee Winfield was second to

.....

uJn

BONUS
SPECIAL!

•
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•

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

•

r ebounds.
The Celtics pulled out their
victory over the Pistons at
Detroit when John Havlicek
made two free throws with
seven seconds left. Havlicek
scored 11 of his game-high 36
points in the fourth period as the
Celtics rallied from an 83-79
deficit. Dave Bing had 27 points
for the Pistons .
Jerry Sloan scored 26 points
and Chet Walker 21 to lead he
Bulls over the Cavs, who suffered their 56th loss in 67 games .
The Bulls led by only one point
2:22 into the second quarter but
had a 51-42lead at intermission.
John Johnson scored 26 points
for the Cavs.
The Lakers placed eight men
in double figures in rolling to
their lOth straight home court
vic tory and handing Cincinnati
its seventh consecutive loss .
Je rry West paced Los Angeles
with 22 points while Norm Va n
Lier led the Royals with 25.

The BERING • B4707W
Vinyl c lad meta l cabinet in
grained Kas hmir Walnut color.

Specially
developed value!

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sc.88

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• Titan 100 Handcrafted Chass is
• Chromacolor 100' Picture Tube
• Supe r GVG Tuning System
• Automatic Tint Guard
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~/1/TN The quahty goes m

4!l before the name goes on •

INGELS
FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Night
MIDDLEPORT

D E V-OT E D TO
INTER E ST OF
M E IGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANN E HILL,
E xec. Ed .
ROB E RT HO E FLICH ,
City E ditor

Publi s hed d a ily el&lt;ce pt
Sa turday by Th e Ohio Va lley
P ubli s hiny Co mpany , 111
Court St ., Pom eroy , Ohio ,
457 69. Busi ness Offi ce Phone
992 21 56, Edi to ri a l Phone 992
2157.
Second c lass postage paid at
Porn eroy, Ohio .
Na tio na l adv e rt isi n g
Bottin e lli
r ep r esen ta ti ve
Gallag her , Inc ., 12 East 42nd
~ t. , Ne w York City, New Yor k.
S ub sc ript i on
r a t es ·
De liver ed by ca rr ier where
ava ilabl e 50 cents per wee k;
By Motor Rout e wher e car r ier
ser v ice not ava ilable: One
,nonrh $1.75. By mail in Oh io
a nd W V a , One yea r $1 4.00.
Si x month s $7 .25. Thr ee
m onth s $4 .50. Sub sc ription
pr ice on c ludes Sunda y Tim es
Se n t:n~ l

season and to 5-5 in SVAC play.
Tom Karr led the Eagles with
19 points. The 5-11 senior guard
is the third leading scorer for
the Eagles. Howie Caldwell, 510 senior guard, added 18 and
Dennis Eichinger, 6-3 junior
center, was held to 16, but
completely dominated board
play with 30 rebounds.
Barry Hart, 6-1 senior forward, Jed the Tornadoes with 13
while Roger Wilford, Roger
Nease, and Frank Ihle added
eight apiece. Jim Hubbard
paced the Tornadoes on the
boards with seven rebounds.

Marau~ers

On the boards is where the
Eagles dominated the game as
they got 56 compared to 38 for
the smaller Tornadoes. The
Eagles had only eight turnovers
the entire night while Southern
was guilty of 15 errors.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tornadoes made 36 per cent of
their shots, making 21 of 59.
Southern dropped in 10 of 17
from. the foul line. Eastern
. made 30 of 79 from the field for
38 per cent and 11 of 17 from the
charity stripe.
The Eagles jumped out to a
19-12 advantage at the end of the

BY KEITH WISECUP
rebounds while Jeff Tyo, 6-2
The Meigs Marauders again senior gorward, had 16 points
came through in the second and 10 retrieves.
half, this time Saturday night at
Randy Crawford led the
Rock Springs against the Falcons with 20, hitting on 10 of
Wahama
White
Falcons, 15 from the field. Most were
winning 75-65.
from far outside. Tim Howard
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's added 13and Keith Sayre had 10
Marauders now have won three for Wahama .
in a row, in none of which were
The Falcons connected on 28
they ahead at halftime. With the of 59 from the field for 47 per
win, Wolfe's crew is 11-6 cent, slightly better than the
overall, assuring it of the best Marauders who hit on 24 of 52
season ever for a Meigs team. for 46 per cent. Meigs won the
Last season's team had 10 game at the free throw line
victories. In the non-league where they hit on 27 of 38 for 71
battle, Meigs remained at 7-6.
Coach Don Upton's Falcons
are 7-8 for the year. They were
defeated by the Marauders in
The Meigs Marauder reserve Vaughan added 13 and Jimmy
their first meeting, 65-57.
Rick Van Matre, 6-0 senior squad handed the Wahama Boggs had 10. Lambert led the
forward who seems to be just reserves their first loss 50-41, Falcon reserves with 15.
Meigs hi on 17 of 36 from the
now rounding into shape after a Saturday night at Rock Springs .
Assistant
varsity
coach
Roger
field
for 47 per cent and 16 of 35
fool injury that had sidelined
him earlier in the season, Birch took over the helm for from the line. Wahama made 18
pumped in 20 points to lead the regular reserve coach Bill of 51 from the field for 35 per
Wickline, who was unable to cent and only 5 of 16 from the
Marauders.
Jeff Morris, 6-3 junior center, coach. With the win, Meigs charity stripe.
Meigs - (50), Boggs 4-2-10, A.
added 16 and g rabbed 11 raised its record to 11-6 overall,
remaining at 8-5 in league play. Vaughan 3-7-13, Werry 3-0-6,
College Basketball Results
The little Falcons, coached by Bailey 6-6-18, B. Vaughan 1-1-3,
By United Press International Don Van Meter, were 14-0 going Sayre 0-0-0. Totals 17-16-50.
West
Wahama - ( 41 ), Samsel2-1-5,
into the game. In their earlier
USC 93 Oregon 78
Stanford 77 Wash . St . 70
meeting
with
the little White 1-1-3, Mitchell 1-2-4,
UCLA 67 Ore. St. 65
Marauders , they handily Roush 1-0-2, Lambert 7-1-15,
Calif. 92 Wash . 90
Dingey 2-0-4, Hardin 4-0-8.
¥\hipped the Ohioans .
Gonzaga 111 No . Ari z. 83
Rich Bailey, the reserve Totals 18-5-41.
Montana 98 Boise St. 74
Ari z. St. 81 Wyoming 76
leading scorer, had 18 to top the
Officials, R. Swackhamer and
Utah 69 UTEP 64
G.
Nesselroad.
little
Marauders
while
Andy
Utah St. 99 Sea ttle 85
Idaho St . 91 Montana St. 81
Idaho 69 Weber St . 54
BYU 70 New Mexico 68
Air Force 77 So. Colo. 63
Southwest
Loyola (La.) 92 HQ.uston A9
MEIGS
Oral Roberts 139 Pat Am. 108
FG- FGA FT-FTA RB PF TP
6-8 10
1 16
5-9
Tyo
Rice 73 Tex A&amp;M 71
4
1
0-0
7
2-7
Hensler
Nebras ka 81 Missouri 72
4 16
6-13 4-5 11
Morris
Tex . Tech 72 TCU 65
"t-8
4 20
6-8
7
Colo. 99 Okl a homa 69
VanMatre
Ka ns as 63 Okl a . St. 50
2
2
2-4
2
0-1
Haggerty
Mic higan 81 Purdue 74
9
3
5-6
2-7
1
Childs
Notre Dame 107 De Paul 76 •
4
3
0-0
3
2-3
T. Vaughan
Oh io St. 92 Illinois 72
4
1
4-7
6
0-3
Dunfee
Mia mi (Ohio) 74 Ohio U. 73
0
0
0-0
0
0-0
Ash
India na 86 Iowa 84
0
0
0-0
0
0-1
Becker
Minnesota 91 Mi ch. St. 86
24-52 27-38 47 19 75
TOTALS
Nor thwstrn 101 Wise. 91
Kent St . 72 Toledo 67
WAHAMA
Dayton 70 Xavier (Ohio) 50
4
13
39
5-14
T. Howard
Iowa St . 89 Kansas St. 66
20
00
3
10-15
Crawford
Murra y 89 Morehead 78
4
2
2-2
1- 1
M. Howard
Miss . St. 75 Miss 67
2
5
00
1- 6
R. Sayre
LSU 121 Sa mford 99
10
4
01
5-11
K.Sayre
South
4
2-3
5
1- 5
Duke 70 Maryland 67
Smith
6
22
2
2- 3
Auburn 92 Ala bama 76
R. Clark
6
0-1
0
Davidson 80 Richmond 70
3- 4
B. Clark
Ga . Tech. 73 No. Car. St. 66
28-59 9-18 42 25 65
TOTALS
Te nn . 64 Ge orgia 61
By quarters:
Wa ke Forest 95 Virginia 71
16 65
20 18 11
Wahama
Florida 74 Kentucky 65
18 19 75
20
18
Me
igs
North Car . (Chile) 60 W. Ga 53
Officials, Bates and Newman .
No. Car. 86 Cle mson 48

Reserves Win Big One!

Meigs-Box Score

l
a mer Captures
B b Hope Classic;
0

PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UPI)- For one bright moment
at least Arnold Palmer again is
the king of golf.
At age 41, the man who was
king of all he could survey in the
60s finally has won a tournament in the 70s. How long he
can keep it up no one knows but
the moment is beautiful and
Arnie, the one man responsible
for making golf the big spectator sport it is today, plans to
make the most of it.
He e nded 14 months of bitter
frustration Sunday with a
pressure packed 25-foot birdie
putt on the first hole of a sudden
dea th playoff with 28-year-{)ld
Ray Floyd to win the $140,000
Bob Hope Desert Classic.
Playing in an area where
being 60 and retired is beautiful,
Palmer was the big attraction
all week long as he plodded up
one course a nd down another in
the 90-hole marathon Hope
Classic. Wherever he went the
crowds were there and to
achieve his long sought victory
Palmer shot a five under 67 at
La Quinta , a one under 71 at
Ta marisk, a six under 66 at
India n We lls and 68-70 at
Bermuda Dunes in the final two
r ounds .
Whe n it was all over Sunday
P a lmer waved to an appreciative a udience, collected his
$28,000 winner's check, and
headed to the press tent to tell
how he did it.
" I was willing to do anything
to get a victory again," said
Palmer, who ended the longest

first quarter. The Tornadoes
played the eventual victors on
even terms in the second eight
minutes, each scoring eight
points. Coach Wolfe called this
the best quarter his Tornadoes
played any time during the
game.
In the second half, Eastern
who had pressed with little
effectiveness in the first half,
stiffened up and bothered the
Southern offense. Eastern
turned a seven-point lead into a
17 point spread, 47-30 after three
quarters.
The fourth period saw some

Rally, Win 75-65
per cent while the Falcons could
make only 9 of 18 for 50 per cent.
The Marauders brought down
47 rebounds compared to 42 for
the Falcons.
The game was as even as
could be in the first 16 minutes.
At the end of the first quarter, it
was tied at 20-20 and at the half
it was 38-38.
LED EARLY
Meigs jumped off to a quick 30 lead in that first half on a three
point play by Tyo, who scored
the first seven points of the
game for the Marauders. The

Haywood in scoring with 19
points and Pete Cross and Don
Kojis added 18 each for Seattle .
Nick Jones led the Warriors
with 16 points.
The Baltimore Bullets defeated the Philadelphia 76ers, 112103, the Phoenix Suns beat the
Buffalo Braves, 108-97, the
Boston Celtics edged the Detroit
Pistons, 11~108, the Chicago
Bulls downed the Cleveland
Cavs, 108-83, a nd the Los
Angeles Lakers downed the
Cincinnati R oyals 125-113, in
Sunday's other NBA games.
Earl Monroe scored 33 points
for the Bullets, who led by only
three points with two minutes
left after having a 92-70 lead
early in the fourth period. The
Bullets staved off the Philadelphia rally when Moneor and
Jack Marin hit a pair of free
throws each sandwiched around
a basket by Wes Unseld. Bill
Cunningham led the 76ers with
35 points.
_
Dick Van Arsdale scored 29
points and Clem Haskins added
22 for the Suns at Buffalo.
Baskets by Haskins and John
Wetzel finally put the game out ~
of reach of the Braves, who
rallied to within four points with
5:10 left. Don May led the
Bra ves with 32 points and 13

THE DAILY SENTINEL

IT

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles clinched
a slice of the Southern Valley
Conference championship with
North Gallia by defeating the
Southern Local Tornadoes at
Eastern Saturday night, 71-52.
Both the Pirates and the
Eagles finished with 9-1 records
in league play. Eastern
defeated the Pirates 70-49 at
North Gallia while the Pirates
turned the tables at Eastern,
winning 82-78.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
are now 14-3 overall. The
Tornadoes dropped to 8-8 for the

drought of his career when he
won the Hope Classic, a tourney
he had taken three times in 11
previous years.
Now that he finally has won
one, Palmer said he plans to let
up a little. He should because he
has played in six tourneys since
January.

"I thought I got off a good putt
on the extra hole," said Floyd,
"but I'm glad Arnie won it. He's
some guy."
Lost in the shuffle of the
Palmer-Floyd duel was what
happened to the rest of the field.
Bert Yancey wound up at 14
under 346. Billy Casper, the 1970
player of the year, was at 348
and Jim Wiechers and Bob
Rosburg tied at 349.
Tom Shaw, winner of the
Crosby and Hawaiian Open,
finished down the list at 352 and
defe nding champion Bruce
Devlin was at 355.

lead switched hands until it was
tied at 12-12. Then the Falcons
dropped in two quick buckets to
go ahead, 16-12.
The
Marauders
rallied
however as Van Matre made
two free throws with four
seconds left in the quarter to tie
it at 20.
First the Falcons were on top
at 22-20, then a bucket by Van
Matre and one by Mick Childs,
5-6 senior guard, made it 24-22,
Meigs. Three consecutive
baskets by the Falcons, two by
Crawford and one by K. Sayre,
gave Wahama the advantage at
28-24.
It was Meigs' turn again as
they came back with seven in a
row, five by VanMatre, to forge
into the lead again, 31-28. The
Marauders held the edge until
30 seconds remained when a
twin-pointer by the Falcons
gave the lead to them, 38-37.
Steve Dunfee, 5-11 junior guard,
made one of two from the line to
tie it up with seven seconds to go
in the first half.
Two quick buckets by Tyo and
Hensler gave Meigs a 42-38 lead
at the start of the third quarter.
The Marauders never trailed
after that.
With 3:30 remaining in the
third period, the Falcons
deadlocked it at 48-48, the final
time Wahama was even with
the Marauders. The Marauders
drilled in eight straight after
that with the Falcons converting a free throw to make it
56-49 after three quarters.
The Marauder lead slowly
rose at lh~ outset of the final
etght minutes.
With 4: 19left it was 66-53. The
last six points made by the
Marauders were from the free
throw line .
The Marauders will try to
secure their hold on fourth place
next Friday against the tough
Athens Bulldogs at Meigs High
School. Meigs is Hi, Ironton is 67, the only tea m with a shot at
tieing the "Maroon and Gold."
The Tigers pla y Jackson next
Friday.

Saturday

&amp;x Scores
FEDERAL-HOCKING (54) Robinson 7-7-21; Driggs 5-1-11;
H a ll 6-3-15, Russell 3-1-7.
TOTAL 21-12-54.
LOGAN (55) - Krebs 4-0-8;
M. Shaw 10-7-27; Norris 2-0-4;
Angle 3-6-12; Whitcraft 2-0-4;
TOTAL 21-13-55.
SCORE BY QUARTERS:
F -H
9 21 38 54
Logan
12 27 41 55
RESERVE SCORE : FederalHoc king 39, Logan 38.

CIRCLEVILLE
(51)
Bower s 2-2-6; Morrison 7-~14;
Hunt 5-2-12; Truex 3-5-11; Wolf
3-0-4 ; Hamrich 1-~2; TOTAL 219-51.
WAVERLY (81) - Eblin 14-028; Oyer 6-~12; Hopkins 2-1-5;
Miller 9-2-20; Gullion 6-0-12;
Fairchild 1-0-2; Hobbs 1-0-2;
TOTAL 39-3-81.
SCORE BY QUARTERS:
Circleville
12 29 39 51
Waverly
13 43 63 81

Sunday's
victory
gave
Palmer a total of 57 triumphs on
the U .S. tour since heturned pro
in 1955. No one ever has won
that many but one of the elusive
ones for Palmer has been the
PGA.
On the extra hole with Floyd ..::.::..:..:=-.:..:..=::...::::.:....::..~---------------Sunday, Palmer stood over the
ball a long time and said later a
lot of things crossed his mind. • • • "1 thought a bout how long it
!!!!!lll!!!!!llllll!llllllll!lllll~lllllll!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!llllll!!!!!!!!l!!
had been since I won anything, "
he said. "I also thought of all the
chances I had this year, the
playoffs I had lost. Maybe I
psyched myself because I hit a
real good putt, maybe a s good
as I could possibly make."
Floyd, who last won when he
took the 1969 PGA title , took
home a check for $16,000 for his
trouble. He didn't seem too
upset.
Ha rva rd 80 Corne ll 60
Dic kinson 83 J . Hpkn s 73
Bra nde is 83 Bk/yn Col. 76
Fordham 76 St. Joyn's (NY) 72
Penn St. 73 Navy 62
Temple 90 NYU 65
Mass. 89 Conn 67
Columbia 84 Dartmouth 83
Rutg ers 58 George town (DC) 53
Princeton 74 Brown 56
Colgate 78 Rochester 73
Juniata 121 Lycoming 94
Syrac use 102 W. Va. 90
Penn 91 Yal e 77
St. Bona 81 Seton Hall 74

Need a
TV repairman
who gets the
picture?

11111111111.

•

•

0

@

0

wild and exciting action as the
Eagles poured in 24 points and
Southern had 22.
The little Eagles of coach Bob
Ord defeated Duane Wolfe's
little Tornadoes, 38-35 in the
preliminary reserve game.
Eastern also won the Southern
Valley Conference reserve
championship.
Next Friday, the Eagles will
play the Miller Falcons to
complete their season at
Eastern. Southern plays the
Wahama White Falcons at
Racine this Tuesday and will

battle Waterford next Friday to
complete their regular season.
BY QUARTERS
Southern
12 8 10 22-52
Eastern
19 8 20 24 ~71
Southern (52) - Hill 1-0-2,
Nease 3-2-8, Ihle 4-0-8, B. Hart 53-13, Wilford 4-0-8, J. Hubbard 10-2, Snider 3-1-7, Shain 2-0-4.
Totals 21-1~52.
Eastern, (71) -Smith 2-0-4,
Eichinger 7-2-16, H. Caldwell 66-18, Karr 8-3-19, Boring 3-0-6,
Amsbary 142, B. Caldwell 3-&lt;J6. Totals 30-11-71.

High School Scores
By United Press International
Steubenville Central 70 Brooke
(W. Va.J 68
Yorkville 86 Brilliant 68
Union Local 67 W,oodsfield 64
Beaver Local 52 Jefferson
Union 38
Youngstown Ursuline 69 Niles
55
Carrollton St. Edwards 63
Tuscarawas C. C. 58
Steubenville 92 Bellaire 57
St. Clairsville 61 Shadyside 57
Toronto 70 Mingo 50
Scio 69 Dillonvale 55
Wellsville 84 Springfield Local
48
Salem 74 Youngstown South 63
Alliance 63 West Branch 47
Boardman 88 Girard 63
Clavmont 72 Orrville 65
Williamstown (W. Va.) 60
Belpre 52
River 64 Paden City (W.Va .) 46
C/earview 79 Brookside 32
North Ridgeville 58 Midview 51
Cleve. St. Edward 81 Cleve.
Benedictine 62
Cleveland Chane! 59 Brooklyn
56

Painesville Harvey 91
Ashtabula Edgewood 65
Ashtabula St. John 71 Perry 66
Cleveland Holy Name 59
Cleveland Central Cat hoi ic 53
Beachwood 58
Cleveland Gilmour Academy 46
Cleveland Hawken School 59
Kirtland 53
Lorain Catholic 71 Avon 58
Marion 74 Kenton 46
Indian
Valley
South
82
Ridgewood 42
Newcomerstown 67 Concord 42
Canton McKinley 77 Akron
South 72
Canton Lehman 69 Akron
Buchtel 67
Barberton 66 Canton Lincoln 51
Canton Timken 76 Wooster 71
Massillon 83 Akron Garfield 77
Alliance 63 West Branch 47
Canton Central Catholic 61
Stowe 52
Jacks on 61 North Canton
Hoover 52
Fairless 76 Perry 64
Louisville 65 Glenwood 64 (ot)
Canton South 69 Oakwood 55
Ravenna 70 Canton St. Thomas
Acquinas 68
Minerva 79 Leetonia 49
Tuslaw 53 Northwest 45
Tuscarawas Valley 68 Sandy
Valley 55
East Conotton 92 Lake 79
Coal Grove 67 Gallipolis 57
Logan 55 Federal Hocking 54
Alexander 56 Nelsonville-York
54
Eastern (Meigs) 71 Southern
(Meigs) 52
Glouster 70 St. Joseph's (W.
Va.J 57
Crooksville 78 Miller 66
Meigs 75 Wahama (W. Va.) 65
Madison at Starr-Washington,
ppd.
Waverly 81 Circleville 51
Fort Frye 66 Morgan 60
Eastern 71 Southern 52
Brunnerdale 71 Kidron Central
49
Kenston 68 West Geauga 51
Solon 93 Orange 50
Amherst 63 Vermilion 51 (ot)
Chardon 55 Aurora 47
Cleveland Lutheran West 73
Cleveland Lutheran East 66
Conneaut 68 Madison 57
Ledgemonl 80 Grand River 71
Revere 56 Nordonia 41
Amanda
C/ear c re ek
86
Pickerington 70
Lancaster 87 Fairfield Union 79
Columbus
Northland
60
Springfield South 59
Toledo Sc ott 60 Columbus
Mohawk 56
Reynoldsburg 84 Teays Valley
74
Newark Ca tho/ ic 70 Lancas ter
Reemelin 63
Dublin 96 Ohio Deaf 49
Olentangy 58 Columbus St.
Charles 51
Marion Harding 74 Kenton t6
Fort Recovery 83 Pennvillt
(Ind .) 57

Convoy Crestview 82 Ottoville
55
Lima Perry 116 Ohio City 98
Fostoria St. Wendelin 58 MeCarr. b 41
Dayton Dunbar 88 Cincinnati
Hughes 56
Dayton Fairview 66
Kettering Fairmont West 60
Dayton Meadowdale 63 Centervill 56
Dayton Colonel White 73 Dayton
Alter 70
Dayton Jefferson 77
Trotwood Madison 75 (ot)
Miamisburg 80 Dayton Stebbins
41
Springfield North 81 Tecumseh
53
Middletown
Fenwick
99
Springboro 47
Clinton Massie 60
Washington C. H. 52
Anna 75 Mississinawa Valley 74
Arcanum 77 Twin Valley North
76
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 88
Spencerville 54
Lincolnview 80 Minster 72
Fort Jennings 68 Delphos
Jefferson 53
Toledo Lake 62 Toledo Start 54
Toledo Whitmer 76 Toledo
Central 63
Parma Padua 71 Toledo Libbey
61
Toledo Woodward 71
Lima Central Catholic 59
Carding Stritch 52 Oregon Clay
45
Rossford 62 Perrysburg 60
Maumee Valley 58 Deerfield 51
Cincinnati Roger Bacon 74
Greenhills 60
Bryan 95 Defiance 50
Montpelier 76 Hilltop 74
Fairfiew 75 Holgate 63
Edgarton 82 Antwerp 81
Anthony Wayne 51 Swanton 41
Oakwood 56 Paulding 54
Tinora 88 Patrick Henry 87
Woodlan (Ind.) 64 Hicksville 49
Ayresville 73 Van Wert 70
Portsmouth 69 Cincinnati
Courter Tech 63
Dayton Dunbar 88 Cincinnati
Hughes 56
Princeton 98 Mount Healthy 55
Cincinnati Country Day 54
Bethel Tate 48 (2 ot)
Anderson 60 Glen Este 55

P. J. Pauley

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PO~EROY
Phone 992 - 2~ 18

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Pro Standings

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 15, 1971

UCLA Hard-Pressed In Oregon
By JOE CARNICELU

UPI Sports Writer
After his weekend in Oregon,
Coach John Wooden of topranked UCLA may be glad to
get back to the tremors of Los
Angeles.
The Bruins travelled to
Eugene Friday night and

needed a steal to go by Henry
Bibby to escape with a 69-68
victory over Oregon.
Saturday night in Corcallis
proved to be another nighbnare
for the No.1 ranked Bruins, who
beat Oregon State 67..()5 on
Sidney Wicks' five-foot jumper
with four seconds remaining.

Wooden had been openly
fearful of his team's performance in Oregon all last
week, anticipating a letdown
after the Bruins' crucial victory
over Southern California last
Saturday night. The triumph
ousted USC from the No. 1 slot
and enabled UCLA to regain

possession.
Hot Competition
The Bruins now are feeling
heat from the other top contenders for national honors. No.
2 Marquette ran its record to 200 with an 81..()7 victory over
Detroit Saturday night and
third-ranked
Southern

OU Finally Defeated Ai Home
By United Press International

The way things have been
going for Coach Darrell Hedric 's
Miami team this year, it figures that Mike Wren, son of
Ohio University baseball Coach
Bob Wren, would provide the
winning margin in the Redskins
74-73 victory over the Bobcats
Saturday.
Wren, a 5-foot-9 senior, playing on a sprained ankle, hit
four clutch free throws in the
late stages of the game, including the winning points with 36
seconds to go.
The loss was the first at
home for OU in 27 games and
dropped the defending champion
Bobcats to a 3-4 in the conference, eliminating them from any
chance to repeat.
Hedric was happy that Wren
was the one who came up with
the winning points for the Redskins.
"It couldn't have happened to
a nicer guy," Hedric said.
"Mike has never played well
against Ohio University because
he's always been so excited.
Only Two Chasing
The win gives Miami a 7-1
MAC mark and leaves only
Western Michigan ( 3-2) and
Kent State (3-3) with a mathematical chance to catch the Redskins and both must still play
at Oxford.
Capital, co-leader in the Ohio
Conference before Saturday's
games, was not as fortunate as
Miami.
Capital's troubles came most-

ly from Baldwin - Wallace's
6-foot-5
Dean
Martin, who scored 33
points to pace the Yellow Jackets to a 75-72 victory over the
Crusaders, snapping Cap's 22game Ohio Conference streak
and dropping them out of a tie
with Wooster.
Cap, trailing 47-37 at halftime,
rallied to cut the margin to 6865 with nearly seven minutes to
go, but didn't get another field
goal the rest of the game.
Meanwhile, Wooster took over
sole possession of the OC lead
with a close 8~ win over Otterbein, thanks to 34 points by
the Scots Tom Dinger.
Key Points By Dinger
Dinger, who was married only
Friday night, scored his team's
first 13 points and 12 in the
final five minutes after the Scots
had fallen behind 72-70. Jack
Mehl scored 27 points and Don
Manly 25 for Otterbein.
At Kent, the Flashes stayed
alive in the MAC race as sophomore Bob McEvoy and junior
Ruben Vance scored 21 points
each to pace a 72..()7 win over
Toledo.
Bowling Green snapped a seven game losing streak by nailing Marshall 112-99 with four
Falcons hitting 20 points or
more.
Center Jim Connally paced
Bowling Green's barrage with
27 points and 10 rebounds and
Rick Walker had 23, Le Henson 24 and Dalynn Badenhop 20.
Bowling Green is now 5-13 on

the year.
Cincinnati's Derrek Dickey
poured in a career high 35
points to pace the Bearcats past
Old Dominion 108-96, their 12th
victory against 9 losses. Cincinnati led 54-45 at halftime and
the Monarchs never got closer
than eight points. Steve Wenderfer also had 23 points for Cincinnati.
Ken May and George Jackson
scored 19 and 17 points respectively to pace Dayton to a 70-50
win over Xavier, outscoring the
Musketeers 40-24 in the second
half. Jerry Helmers led Xavier
with 16.
Zips To 13th Win
Akron continued on the
winning way, taking its
13th straight with a 9477 decision over Cleveland State. Len Paul and Larry

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Virgmia
43 19 .694 ...
Kentucky
34 30 .531 10
New York
37 34 .443 15'12
Carolina
27 35 .435 16
Floridians
28 39 .418 17 1/2
Pittsburgh
26 39 .400 18112
West
W. L. Pet. GB
42 19 .689 ...
Utah
Indiana
39 20 .661 2
36 28 .563 7 112
Memphis
22 39 .361 20
Denver
Texas
19 41 .317 22'12
Sunday's Results
Indiana 116 Memphis 111 , ot
New York 118 Denver 117
Virginia 144 Kentucky 140
Floridians 109 Carolina 106
Utah 128 Pittsburqh 118

Michigan On Top
I

1

CHICAGO (UPI)- Michigan
and Ohio State, the Big Ten's
two top-ranked basketball
teams, retai
ir status in
conference
the
weekend by
and Purdue,
ly third and
Michigan pulled 1tself up to a
7-0 top-spot rating with its 81-74
victory over the Baoilermakers
Saturday. Purdue lost to Ohio
State Tuesday in the final minute, 69..()7.
Ohio State had a more substantial victory over Illinois
Saturday, 92-72, upping the

Buckeye record to 6-1. Luke
Wttte, Ohio's seven-footer, poured m 27 points in that game,
despite sitting out nine minutes
in the second half.
IndJana has a share of the
fourth place spot in league ratings after its 86-84 wm over
Iowa Saturday, which boosted
the Hoosier record to 4-3 in the
conference.
Iowa, which had led Indiana
at the half by five points in the
Saturday game, evened the
Hawk's conference record at 3-3
with the loss.
Minnesota scored its first

conference victory Saturday, 9786 over Michigan State, which
has the 7th conference spot.
The Gophers were led by guard
Ollie Shannon who scored 26
points.
Michigan State also lost to
Indiana, 71-70, in a Tuesday
game
Northwestern, sharing ninth
spot in the conference with
Minnesota, won its first victory
of the season Saturday against
Wisconsin, which stands eighth
in the conference. Ron Shoger
scored 22 points to lead the
Wildcats to the 101-91 victory.
The Badgers also were defeated Tuesday night 86 75
in
a
non
conference game with Southern
Illinois University.

r-----------------------------l
25 ways to make money
you may never
This Week~
have heard of before.
College Tilts

I

I

I I
I'
1 I

'I

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By United Press International
Monday
Cen tral Michigan at Akron
Hiram at John Carroll
Rio Grande at Wilberforce
Juesday
Ohio State af Wisconsin
Ohio University at Marshall
Steubenville at Central State
Youngstown State at Gannon
(Pa .)
Muskingum at Capital
·Wooster at Denison
Kenyon at Oberlin
Malone at Marietta
Findlay at Cedarville
Wednesday
Kent State at Miami
Bowling Green at Western
Michigan
Akron at Indiana State
Ohio Northern at Ashland
Xavier vs. Cincinnati at Cin.
You've probGardens
Wash . &amp; Jeff. at John Carroll
ably heard about
Ohio Dominican at Urbana
Wilberforce at Wright State
"technological unemBaldwin -Wallace at Ohio
Wesleyan
ployment"- people thrown
Wittenberg at Heidelberg
Mount Union at Otterbein
out of work by machines. The
Defian ce at Bluffton
Thursday
truth is, technology is creating more jobs
Bluefield State (W. Va.) at
Wilberforce
than it's taking away.
Friday
No games scheduled
This guide from the government tells
Saturday
Northwestern at Ohio State
the story. About new technical careers in
Ohio University at Ball State
every field of science from computers to
Marshall at Miami
Western Michigan at Kent State
medicine to engineering to ecology.
Bowling Green at Toledo
Cincinnati
at
George
Technicians earn as much as many
Washington
DePaul at Dayton
college graduates. Yet you can become a
Xavier at Canisius
Kentucky Wesleyan at Akron
technician in half the time it takes to get
Alliance (Pa .) at Youngstown
State
a college B.A.
Ashland at Steubenville
Case Tech at Allegheny
For a copy of the guide, free, just mail
Tennessee State at Central
State
the coupon below.
Urbana at Ohio Dominican
Wayne State at Ohio Northern
TO : Careers, Washington, D.C. 20202
Wash. and Jeff. at Western
Reserve
Wright State at Transylvania
Name ____________~~-------------------at Muskingum
Baldwin-Wallace
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Capi tal at Wooster
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Address ____
Chi cago at Denison
Heidelberg a t Mount Union
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Kenyon at Hiram
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I'
!
Tli[ CONf£R£NC[ BOARD
Oberlin at Ohio Wesleyan
I
"\.,. •'"' .f
ter loo (Ont.) at Otterbein
L -- ---- --~ ---- --------- -- --- --J Wa
Bluffton at Cedarville
Adverti!;.lng tontqLuiJ!~ fer u.e p.;bll(. eood '" tDOp~ra tiOn With
Wilmington at Defiance
The Advcrt&gt;;lng Counul an1the lnlcrnaloonal Ncn~paper Adver to ;ong Exe cutives
Findlay at Malone

0

'@'

Jenkins each had 23 points as
the Zips upped their mark to
15-3. Bruce Hagins' 22 points
paced the Vikings, now 5-18.
In other games, Central State
stopped Youngstown State 60-48,
Wittenberg downed Deni
Ohio
Wesson
83-60,
leyan beat Muskingum 8069, Mount Union defeated
Kenyon 102-83, Ohio State blasted illinois 92-72, Findlay beat
Bluffton 59-55, Ashland romped
over Northwood (Mich.) 11~3.
Marietta took Heidelberg 8778 and Defiance beat Wright
State 105-93.
Wilmington won over Cedarville 94-89, Rio Grande edged
Union (Ky.) 85-80, Western Reserve beat Thiel (Pa.) 85-73,
Gannon (Pa.) defeated Steubenville 94-81, and Washington and
Jefferson took Case Tech 96-79.

California made UCLA's two
narrow victories more embarrassing by routing Oregon
State 82-63 Friday night and
ripping Oregon 93-78 the
following night.
Penn (No. 4) also ran its
record to 2!Hl by beating Yale

91-77 and fifth-ranked Kansas
stopped Oklahoma State 63-50.
Jacksonville No. 6 defeated
Bradley 89-79 and seventhranked Western Kentucky
downed Tennessee Tech 67-57.
Florida upset eighth-ranked
Kentucky 74..()5 and lOth-ranked

Ohio Cage Standings
By United Press International
W
20
15
15
16
16
15
10
12
12

L
2
3

Ashland
Akron
Youngstown State
5
Central State
6
Urbana
6
Dayton
6
Ohio Dominican
5
Cincinnati
9
Steubenville
9
Western Reserve
6
8
John Carroll
5
7
Xavier
8
12
Rio Grande
9
15
Walsh
7 13
Wright State
6
14
Cleveland Stale
5
18
Ohio Northern
4
16
Case Tech
2
10
Mid-American Conference
League Overall
W

L

W L

Otterbein
10 2
15 3
Wittenberg
8 2
13 6
Marietta
6 5
12 8
Mount Union
6 5
10 6
Baldwin Wallace 5 6
8 13
Heidelberg
4 7
7 11
Kenyon
4 7
8 12
Denison
4 8
7 11
Ohio Wesleyan
3 6
9 10
Muskingum
2 9
5 14
Hiram
2 9
5 13
Oberlin
1 8
6 9
Mid-Ohio Conference
League Overall
Findlay
Wilm ington
Defiance
Blufflon
Cedarville
Malone

W L
7

6 3
4
4

W L
19
3
10 9
15 6
10 10
10 13
3 12

l
4
4

3 5
l 8

Big Ten
League Overall

Miami
7 1
14 4
Western Michigan 3 2 12 6 Michigan
Kent State
3 3
11 7 Ohio State
Ohio University
3 4
12 6 Illinois
Toledo
2 4
11 9 Indiana
Bowling Green
1 5
5 13 Purdue
Ohio Conference
Iowa
League Overall Michigan State
W L W L Wisconsin
10 0 21 1 Minnesota
wooster
9 1
16 3 Northwes tern
Capital

W
7
6
4
4

0
l
2
2

L

4

3

3

3
2 5
l 5
l 6
l

W L
13
4
12
5
10
5
12
4
11
6
8
8

6

8
6
7

5

DEMOLAY TO MEET
Meigs Chapter Order of
DeMolay will meet at 7:30 this
evening at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. The Mother's
Club will meet at the same time
in the basement of the dining
room.
Sandy Koufax has won the
Cy Young Award three times
more than any other maJOr league pitcher

to ask Saul, 'why in hell don't
you start the count at 3-and-2
and just concentrate on getting
the next ball over?' He'd say
that was just the way he
pitched.
"Pitchers waste anywhere
from 40 to 60 to 80 pitches a
game and reducing the number
of balls required for a walk
from four to three would
eliminate a lot of periods of
inactivity. It would also cut
down the duration of the
game."
What it also would do is
produce a lot more walks. Lane
doesn't mention that. He does
say back in 1879 the full count
used to be nine balls and four
strikes and the present fourand-three count originally was
set in 1889.
"My God, that's 82 years':'
without a change," says Frank
Lane, who already has made

,.

-......

9

10
10
12

P roposes Walk On 3 Balls
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-Frank
Lane, that young radical, has a
revolutionary idea he thinks
would pump new life into
baseball .
"Give a batter a walk on
three balls instead of four," he
says. "It would cut down a lot
of waste time and make the
game much more exciting."
The Milwaukee Brewers' new
director of baseball operations,
who at 74 can give a lot of 24's
lessons in departments they
haven't even dreamed of, is a
rules innovator from way back.
He helped put a number of the
current ones in the book but
this proposal of three balls
take-your-base is something he
tried pushing more than a
decade ago.
"I suggested it a dozen years
ago but you know how it was
then, some baseball people said
'there goes Loudmouth Lane
popping off again,"' he says.
"Well, times change. I see
where Charlie Finley is all for
changing the rule to three balls
now and anytime you get Lane
and Finley agreeing on anything that's a story in itself,
isn't it?"
Gentlemen's Agreement
About the only think these
two ever agreed on before was
that New Year's generally falls
on January 1st and left alone
long enough they might even
work up a fairly good argument
about that.
Lane once had an arrangement where he was supposed to
work eight years for Finley as
Kansas City general manager.
After eight months the two
wound up in court with Finley
having to pay the balance of
Lane's contract.
Now they see eye-to-eye.
a rule changed so a batsman
would take first base after
three balls instead of four.
Three strikes would still
prevail.
Finley feels so strongly about
it that he already has requested
permission for his Oakland A's
to begin experimenting with the
three balls proposal next month
during their home games at
their Mesa, Ariz., spring
training site. Permission will be
denied him because baseball
has passed a rule of its own to
the effect that any proposed
major rule change, such as this
one, be tried at the minor
league level first if it is tried at
all.
That isn't discouraging Lane
however.
"What made me think about
this originally was a pitcher we
used to have with the White Sox
in the '50's by the name of Saul
Rogovin," he says.
Three and Two
"He'd always start by getting
two strikes on the batter and
then I could close my eyes and
say hurry up throw the next
three pitches and get the count
to 3-and-2, and that's what
invariably would happen. I used

Notre Dame clobbered DePaul
107-76. North Carolina (No. 11)
thrashed Clemson 86-48, 12thranked Michigan beat Purdue
81-74 and, in a Sunday game,
13th-ranked Duquesne tripped
Rhode Island 116-95.
Fordham (No. 14) edged St.
John's 76-72 while both teams
tied for 15th, Tennessee and
LaSalle were victorious.
Tennessee nipped Georgia 64-61
and LaSalle stopped Villanova
73..()9.
Led Until End
Oregon State led all the way
until Curtis Rowe tied the game
for UCLA with 26 seconds
remaining on a pair of free
throws. Wicks, who had 18
points, held the ball after an
Oregon State turnover before
hitting the key shot.
Dean Meminger's 27-point
performance helped Marquette
record its 32nd consecutive
triumph over a two-season
span. Ron Riley's 23-point
performance overshadowec;l a
34-point show by Oregon's Stan
Love in USC's victory over the
Ducks and Penn, behind
sophomore Phil Hankinson's 21
points outclassed Yale.

NBA Sta ndings
..,
By United Press lnternation.
Atlantic Division
W. L Pet. Ga
New York
41 24 .631 ....
Phil adelphia 37 27 .578 311•
Boston
35 29 .547 51/1'
Buffalo
18 47 .277 23
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
balTimore
35 26 .574 ...
Cincinnati
24 39 .381 12
Atlanta
24 40 .375 12 1h
Cleveland
ll 56 .164 261h
Midwest Div ision
W. L. Pet. •
Milwaukee
51 11 .823 ...
Detroit
38 23 .623 121/r.~
Ch icago
38 25 .603 131h
Phoenix
38 26 .594 14
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 37 24 .607 ...
San Francisco 34 31 .523 5 Jl
San Diego
29 37 .439 101/;l;
Seattle
28 36 .438 10'h
Portland
22 39 .361 15
Sunday's Results
Phila
103
Baltimore 112
tjoston 110 O'etroit 108
Mil waukee 124 Atlanta 88
Phoenix 108 Buffalo 97
,,
Ch icago 108 Cleveland 83
Seattle 146 San Fran 101
Los Angeles 125 Cincinnati 1T3
!Only games scheduled)
Monda y's Games
(No games scheduled)

more changes than that in the
three weeks he has been with
the Brewers.
Lane, who has engineered
four deals for Milwaukee
already, likes to tell the story
about how a man came to him
one day at Comiskey Park
looking for his lost 12-year-{)ld
son between games of a White
Sox-Red Sox doubleheader. This
was in 1950 and Lane, then
general manager of the White
Sox, told the father it wasn't
club policy to page anybody
over the public address system
except in the case of extreme
emergency.
Nonetheless, he consented to
do it. The boy found that day
now is Lane's boss, Allan (Bud)
Selig, president and owner of
the Brewers. ,
Butl's father, Beli lig, tells
me that's exactl) the way it
happened.

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Basketball
Ohio State 92 Illinois 72
Miami 74 Ohio U. 73
Cincinnati 108 Old Dominion 96
Bowling Green 112 Marshall 99
Dayton 70 Xavier 50
Kent State 72 Toledo 67
Cen tral Stale 60 Youngstown
Sta te 48
Wooster 86 Otterbein 83
Western Reserve 85 Thiel (Pa. )
73

Baldwin Wallace 75 Capitol 72
Ohio Valley 86 Sinclair 71
Gannon ( Pa.) 94 Steubenville 81
Akron 94 Cleveland State 77
Wittenberg 83 Denison 60
Ohio Wesleyan 80 Muskingum
69

Rio Grande 85 Union (Ky.) 80
Wash. &amp; Jeff. 96 Case Tech 79
Wilm ington 94 Cedarville 89
Findlay 59 Bluffton 55
Ashland 116 Northwood (Mich.)

SAVINGS ACCOUNT
434%

Interest per year, c
pounded quarterly on
regular passbook savings
accounts. No minimum or
maximum amount. Interest
is paid from date of deposit
to date of wit hdrawa I as long
as you maintain an open
account.

Meigs Co. Branch

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

63

Def iance 105 Wright State 93
Marietta 87 Heidelberg 78
Mount Union 102 Kenyon 83

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST ,

,,

OFFICE HOURS 9:3p TO 12,2 T.Q.S (C60SE
AT NOON ON THUR~.)- E'AST ~bURT ST. ,

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

[ Good Advertising Doesn't Cost... IT PAYS I

The Daily Sentinel·
Ph one 992-2156 For A Courteous Representative

111 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

�r

5- Tht' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 15, 1971

•

Lenten Breakfast, Banquet 1n May Pl?nned

•

Green Thumb
Notes . ...
A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

•
I

Q
(

•
.

Hybridizing Iris
By Margaret Ella Lewis
Rutland Garden Club
One of the joys of growing tall bearded Iris is the fascination
of watching the seeds that God and you have produced grow into
seedlings and then bloom - never exactly like either parent and
no two exactly alike from the same seed pod. Hybridizing is
surprisingly easy, although to the inexperienced it may not seem

so.

sTtoM

-----

StPii VrEW51}'Lf·CU$f

4

•

-

The pistil and stamen and pollen of most flowers are readily
visible. No so, the Iris. The stamen is a small paddle-like structure beneath the style-crest, and carries the pollen on itself, a
fine, yellow dust.· (There are 3 style-crests, stamen, and pistils in
every perfect Iris flower).
The pistil consists of the stigma, style, and ovary. Within the
ovary, located beneath the actual flower, there are numerous
ovules, each containing one egg cell, which must be fertilj.zed with
a grain of the pollen dust from the stamen, to form a new seed.
The stigma, just below the style crest, must receive the
pollen, either from deliberate pollination by a human hand, or by
accidental pollination from the wings or body of a bee.

-

•

uteoreUcally, the stigma and stamen are so placed that a bee
crawling in .o the throat of a flower would brush against the
stigma and pollinate the flower. Actually, in the highly hybridized
flowers, the parts of the flowers may be so compactly placed that
a bee cannot cause pollination of the flower. Not many accidentally pollinated seed pods are seen among the Iris as compared to other plants. Some varieties of hybrid Iris will set seeds,
but have no pollen; some have pollen but will not set seeds; others
do both.
1f you' Wtlht 6:&gt; make sure the cross you make is not "con~·
taminated"
pollen frorli an unknown variety by the bees,
over your flowers just before they open,
place a p
secured at
&lt;1. the flower so that a bee cannot get into the
bag. After
er is in full bloom, remove the bag, pollinate
r with pollen from the same flower, or another of
the stigma
your choice, and replace the plastic bag, leaving it in place until
the flower withers and the seed pod has started to enlarge.
Keep a record of both parents plants so you will know which
plants produced the seedlings when they bloom.
Seed pods are harvested when they turn brown, and before
they burst open to scatter their seed on the ground.
Care of the seeds, treatment, and planting will be discussed in
a Iater column.
~eference - The American Iris Society Bulletin.

Meigs Social Events
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.
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Pomeroy Elementary
School;
Founder's
Day,
recognition of past presidents;
program to feature a talk by
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, art
instructor, Meigs High School.
JOF CLASS, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, 7:30 Monday
night at the church; Mrs. Leona
Smith, Mrs. Marie Chapman,
hostesses.
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, 7:30 Monday
night at the home of Mrs. Eileen
Searles , Minersville.
MIDDLEPORT Business and
Professional Women's Club,
7:30p.m. Monday at Columbia
Gas Co ., Middleport, with
program on cancer by Mrs.
Corrine Lund and Mrs. Nancy
Reed. Refreshments.
THEOOORUS 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.
LETART FALLS PTA, 7:30
Monday, Founqer's Day to be
observed .
TUESDAY
WOMEN'S
AUXILIARY,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
cafeteria, 7:30 p .m . Tuesday;
John Epling, Gallipolis , guest
speaker, refreshments .
MEIGS ATHLETIC Boosters ,
Tuesday, 7 :30 p.m. at high

school; Ronnie Smith in charge
of program on athletic officiating.
GROUP II, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
6:30p.m. dinner at the church
Tuesday.
OIDO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday at Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport.
SAlJSBURY 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.
PUBLIC MEETING at
Trinity Church, Pomeroy, by
Meigs Heart Assn., with Dr.
Charles Meckstroth, Columbus
heart specialist, speaking, 7:30
p.m.
WEDNESDAY
PAST
PRESIDENTS,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, home of
Mrs . J. M. Thornton, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE THIRD Wed nesday Homemakers Club,
Wednesday, 10 a.m. regular
meeting place . Potluck at noon.
E:ach to take something to paint
with textile paints.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter 17,
Ohio Association of Public
School Employes, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday night at the Middleport Junior High School.
OAPSE field man will be
present. Refreshments will be
served and a door prize will be
awarded .

The traditional Lenten breakfast of Trinity Church was
announced and plans were
made to sponsor a mother daughter banquet in May at
Friday night's meeting of the
Happy Harvesters Class at the
church.
The breakfast will be held on
Feb. 24 at 7:45 a.m. and invitations have gone out to the
various churches of the community. It was decided that at
the mother - daughter banquet
the pageant of the American
Legion
Auxiliary,
"Our
Precious American Heritage"
will be presented. The pageant
is a tribute to mothers through
the ages .
Mrs. Oris Ginther reported on
the repair . and cleaning of
several of the church chairs
used in the social room noting
that this had been taken care of
by the Busy Bee group.
Arrangements were made for
several more chairs to be
repaired under sponsorship of
the Happy Harvesters Class.

Fund raising dinners were set
for April 8, 17 and June 3 and
committee chairmen were
appointed. Mrs. Clarence
Headley and Mrs. Phil
Meinhart were reported home
from the hospital and improving and cards were signed
for them along with Charles
Werry, a surgical patient at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs.
Roy Seyfried were appointed to
purchase material for several
new tablecloths. A gift was
presented to Miss Erma Smith
for preparing the yearbooks,
and a thank you note was read
from Miss Thelma Grueser for
gifts at Christmas. Mrs. Louis
Reibel thanked the group for
cards and visits during her
recent confinement.
A valentine party was held in
conjunction with the meeting.
Several of the members were in
costuming with Mrs. Max
Meinhart, Mrs. Homer Holter,
Mrs. Ginther, and Mrs. Fred

TRIE Supported
By Bradbury PTA
Tax Reform for Improved
Education (TRIE), sponsored
by the Ohio Education
Association, has been given a
vote of support by the Bradbury
PTA.
Meeting Thursday night at
the school, the PTA unit went on
record as supporting TRIE and
its objective of providing a tax
basis which can enable school
systems to provide better
education for children today.
Mrs.
Maxine
Philson,
legislative committee chairman, a teacher at the Bradbury
school, reported on the program
and its need for support on the
local level.
A $25 contribution was made
to the scholarship fund of the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers. Named
to a nominating committee
were Mrs. Paul Casci, Mrs.
Arthur Arnold, and Mrs.
Margaret Sheets.
A report on the recent County
Council meeting was made by
Mrs. William Swisher. It was
reported that the Bradbury unit
will have charge of the cultural
arts display at the District 16
conference slated for May 1 in
Pomeroy. Art exhibits from the
seven county area will be
displayed and judged and first
and second places in the ten
categories will be submitted for
exhibit at the state convention.
It was noted that teacher PTA
membership is 100 per cent.
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett suggested
the possibility of the March
meeting being held in the afternoon. Mrs. Philson's room
got the attendance award.
A pageant, "Our Precious
American Heritage," was
presented by Mrs. Ben Neutzling and members of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39.
Taking the roles in costume
were Mrs. Neutzling, "Spirit of
HOME RECUPERATING
Mrs.
r.ena
Ebersbach ,
Pomeroy, was released from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
after seven weeks there. She is
recuperating at the home of her
nephew, Albert Smith, and his
wife.
IN HOSPITAL
William Fred Smith, Sr., of
Middleport, Route 1, was admitted to the Holzer Medical
Center Sunday morning for
medical treatment. His room
number is 102.

History";
Mrs.
Gerald
Wildermuth, "America"; Miss
Janice Couch, "Uncle Sam";
Mrs. George Mowrey, the Indian mother; Mrs. Harry Davis,
the pilgrim mother; Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, the Colonial
mother; Mrs. David Cummings, the pioneer mother;
Mrs. Grace Pratt, the Civil War
mother; Mrs. Charles Sauer,
the Suffragette mother.
Gold Star Mothers, Mrs. J. M.
Thornton,
Mrs.
Olin
Genheimer, Mrs. Norbert
Neutzling had roles, along with
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr., who
pbyed one of the parts. Mrs. M.
D. Miller represented the
mother of today, Mrs. Russell
Watson, the spirit of love, and
Pam Powers, the youth of
today.

Party Given ·
20 Veterans
A St. Valentine's Day party
was staged Thursday afternoon
at the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens, for 20
veterans there by the American
Legion Auxiliary.
Mrs. 0. A. Martin, hospital
represen ta ti ve
for
the
Auxiliary, Mrs. Harry Davis,
deputy representative, both of
Drew Webster Post 39, and Mrs.
Virgil Walker, Racine 602, had
charge of the party. Contributing financially were
Vinton and Gallipolis units.
Games were played with
prizes of coin purses, candy
bars, gum, cards, stationery,
stamps, neckties, jewelry,
mints, tobacco, and cigarettes
being awarded.
Refreshments of cake,
valentine candies, and coffee
were served. A valentine was
given to each patient. Next
party will be on March 11.
VISITED HERE
Mrs. Anna Stacy and Mrs.
Wilbur Holter of Akron were
Friday and Saturday guests of
their brother and sister-in-law ,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duckworth and family, Middleport.

Dessauer winning prizes for the
best costumed.
Mrs. Dale Smith opened the
meeting with a prayer for
fellowship given in unison. Mrs.
Lawrence Lanning presented
devotions with scripture from
John 11 relating to the raising of
Lazarus from the dead, a poem,
"Wouldn't This Old World Be
Better If We Did Unto Others As

,·· ·

A St. Patrick's Day card
party was one of several fund
raising projects planned by the
Catholic Women's Club of the
Sacred Heart Church Thursday
night.
The card party has been set
for March 11 and women of the
parish are asked to donate
cookies, sandwiches, and a
prize valued at $2. Card tables
and snack tables are also
needed for use that night.
The Club also planned bake
sales in the church basement
following both Masses on March
28, and a rummage sale in the
basement on March 4 and 5.
Mrs. Peg Rudolph and Mrs. Don
Mullen are chairmen of the
sale. A Deanery meeting to be
held at the St. Paul Catholic
Church, Athens, on March 7 at 2
p.m. was announced.
Arrangements were made
during the meeting for the Club
to serve the bloodmobile on
Feb. 22 Cookies and sandwiches are to be donated.
Winners of an afghan and a
tapestry in recent drawings
were Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.
and Mrs. Robert Lewis.
Proceeds will be used to purchase shrubs for an exterior
beautification project at the
church.
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
Krajcovic reported that the
Pomeroy
Ministerial
Association has arranged
Lenten services in Uie community. Other than the Ash
Wednesday services to be held
in each individual church, the
services will rotate in the
Pomeroy churches.
A report on progress over the
past two yP.ars in community
affairs was given by the commission chairman. It was noted

Maj. and Mrs. Robert Danner
of Leavenworth, Kan. announce
the birth of a daughter Fe!;?. 14
at 11:05 a.m. The baby weighed
eight pounds and four ounces
and has been named Amy Ruth.
Amy is being welcomed by
two brothers, David and Nathan
and one sister, Maribeth.
Maternal grandmother is
Mrs. Mary Ballard, Wellsville,
N. Y. and paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Danner, Gallipolis.

t

~
-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc

Mrs. Seyfried, the program,
and Mrs. Dessauer, Mrs. Lillie
Houck and Mrs. Holter, will be
hostesses.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SJ.\ME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At S
Use"Our Free ""rkin,. Lot

•Robinson's tleaners
~,Pomeroy

WINTER

SALE!

@HWI

12" X 12"

JERROLD STEPHAN

WHIRLAWAY

FOR SUSPENDED CEILINGS

ENCYCLOPEDIA
BOOKCASE

1/3 H.P. DISPOSER
Chrome plated lurnloble and stainless
steel grind ring. QOo swivel stainless
steel impellers give iom·free perform·
once. Non·corrosiv e ports. Reg. 39.95

Tough PERMANEER finish looks and
feels like hardwood, Contemporary
design. 2 ·shelves. 23" x 9" x 28"high.

JJ66

1288INCTN.

Reg. 18.95

I

HOUS E-O-LITE

FLUORESCENT FIXTURE
Ready to install. Complete with cord
and plug. Uses 2 fluorescent lubes.
iNot included). Adjusts from 6" to 9"
in height. 48" fong. 2-YEAR GUARANTEE. Reg. 2 2 .59

JERROLD STEPHAN

CABINET MAGIC
F1ne for pointed wood and natural
wood gra;n cabinets, woodwork, baseboard, s ills . PINT.
Reg. 1.98

~

It's Quick! Easy ~

DRIVE-IN ~
BANKING •
~

t and SAVINGS CO.~

:t

REG.
594

44~

BURLAP
BULLETIN BOARDS
2 SIZES. 12 ATTRACTIVE COLORS

PAIR

WELLS LAMONT

17" x 2S"

FLANNEL REG.
GLOVES
854

REG. 4.99

2S"x33"

59~

PAIR

REG.
6.99

JERROLD STEPHAN

597

RECORD CABINET
Tough PERMANEER finish lool&lt;s and
feels like real hardwood. but needs no
special core or polishing 2 sliding
doors. chrome legs . 23" x 16" x 24"
high. Reg. 16. 95

WELLS LAMONT

11!~1N

•

• FARMERS BANK •

••••••••••••••••

Tough PERMANEER finish looks and
feels like real hardwood; stain resistant. Double sliding gloss doors with
lock 24" x 12" x 63" high. Reg 39.95

J79

Animals
are
such~
agreeable
friends~
because they as k no ~
questions and they pass ~
no criticisms.
-tc
-- Geo. Eliot -tc

~

PANEL MAGIC
Not o wax or polish; restores original
beauty Ia wood paneling. Hides
scratches. PINT.
Reg. 1.98

GUN CABINET

A THOUGHT:
FOR TODAY ~

.......
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~

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INSULATED GLOVES
Foam insulation wi th vinyl coating that

stays soft when cold Knit wrists . Men's
size. Reg. 3 .2 5

MARTIN HOUSE &amp; POLE
G enuine Redwood with removable
roof for c leonmg . w.•h adjustable
steel pole, hardware.
Reg. 42.00

2995

..

REG.
654

WILSON

REDWOOD BIRD FEEDER
fdl ng Holds 2· 1/2 •bs . seed and rwo
suet cokes . Reg . 5 98

433

WilD BIRD FOOD

J7r;

~
Roof slides up on hanging rod lor easy

(fffi!)I:I·':s,
5 LB. BAG

~- ~

$349.95

A reo/ treat for birds 1 Contains pure
sunflower se ed Ideal fo r all size b.rds
Reg 69C

47~

Complete your win ter ~lock to-

day wi th this 5 lb bog conloin•og nn oppetizong blend of
whea t, sunflower seed, buck
wheat, hulled oars.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

$35.00 Down-

Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

i~:~:\

that there will be hostesses
the March and April meetings,
but that in May, Mrs. David
Ohlinger, Mrs. George Miller,
Mrs. Anna McGee, Helen
Waddell and Mabel Waddell will
be hostesses.
Games were played and
refreshments served by the
executive committee. Mrs. Tom
Hennesy, new president, gave a
demonstration on bridge at the
conclusion of the meeting.

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

•

FURNITURE

?&amp;

WORK IN DEGREE
Work in the EA degree will be
held when Middleport Masonic
Lodge meets in special session
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
temple.

TIME CHANGED
••
A meeting of the Letart Falls
~ Other Banking Hours 9 to 3~.
EXHIBITS MADE
PTA to be held this evening at
iC and 5 to 7 as usual on -tc
Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr., Mrs. -tc Fridays.
-tc
the school has been changed
Joe Bolin and Mrs. William
from 7:30 to 8 p.m.
Willford, Rutland, supplied
~
floral arrangements in January ~
ON DEAN'S LIST
for the Rutland branch of the
Frances
Dee
Slaven, Pomeroy National Bank. The
POMEROY, OHIO
'f
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. H. M. arrangements, varied in design, 'f
~
Member FD IC
~
Slaven,
Middleport,
has for the most part were used in -iC
Member Federal
iC
achieved academic excellence ceramic containers made by the
Reserve System
~
for the fall quarter and has been members.
placed on the Dean's list of the
College of Education at Ohio
University, Athens. Miss
Slaven, a junior, received a four
point average for the quarter .

sored by Chester Fire DepartBOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, ment; prepared and served by
Royal and Select Masters,
firemen's auxiliary.
stated meeting, Wednesday,
ROCK SPRINGS Better
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic
Health
Club, 1: 15 p .m . Thurs~
Temple; following it, Pomeroy
Cl)apter 80, Royal Arch Masons, day, home of Mrs . William
Folmer .
mark master degree to be
conferred in full form.
CLASS 12, HEATH United
Methodist Church, 7:30p.m . at
THL'RSDAY
PUBLIC STI&lt;:AK dJnner, the church. Program by Mrs.
Thursda y, be~tnmng 5::lO p.m., John Bechtle, devotions by Miss
C:lil'SIPr Gradl' School spon- Nellie Zerkle

·.

and God's response.
The program by Mrs. Smit!.
included a story, "Walk, T ~Jl
Woman," a poem, "How Sweet
to Get a Valentine, ' and a
meditation, "For .1 Natii),J's
Health" by Abraha;n Linr-:ln.
concluding with prayer.
Refreshments were !:"~ve, '.:
Mrs. Lafe Williamson, N'l".
Clal'ence Massar, Mrs. N0rman
Kloes from a table decorate .l lTJ
the valentine motif vtitl a
centerpiece of red and w..;~e
carnations flanked by red
tapers.
For the March meeting Mrs.
Ginther will have dev Jtions,

Daughter Born

BECOMES PATIENT
Miss Darla Ebersbach, ~
Middleport, LPH at the
Fridays Only
~
Marietta Memorial Hospital, is ~
-iC
The
DriveIn
Window
-iC
a patient there and expects to be
is Open
~
confined about two weeks. Her ~
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
--tc
room number is 241, A Division. --tc
-tc
(Continuously)
-tc.

NEW

. '··-:

Ladies Plan Party

~

3 ROOMS

We Would Have Them Do Unto
Us."
"Prayer Changes Things"
was Mrs. Lanning's main topic .
Taking her scripture from Acts
4-31, she spoke of living in an
"attitude of prayer" and raising
our voices to God for help and
direction in the everyday
problems of life. She spoke of
the prayer of a humble person

The Department Store of Building Since 1915

: .;:"

,

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 15, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More BID-gains In Sentinel Classifieds
Chester East
News Notes
Lenore Betzing of Middleport
spent Saturday with her sister,
Letha Wood.
\fr. and Mrs. George
Genheimer spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Woode.
Tommy Joe Rose and sons of
Untion Town called on Mr. and
Mrs. George Genheimer.
Mrs. Glen Bissell and
daughter of Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, called on Mrs. Freda
Miller.
Mrs. David Koblentz returned
home from the hospital
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
of Reedsville and relatives of
Akron spent a day recently with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Genheimer.
Earl Thoma of Pomeroy
called on his mother, Mrs.
Georgie Thoma,
Sunday
evening.
Herbie Smith and family of
Columbus spent a Sunday with
his mother, Mrs. Jane Smith, at
the home of his sister, Mrs.
Richard Barton and family.
Rick Hollon has been ill with
tonsillitis.
Mr. and Mrs. Scartiger called
on Freda Miller Monday
morning.
Mrs. Elizabeth Wickham
spent a week with her daughter,
Mrs. Erma Heilman.
Beckie Carruthers was in
Parkersburg Tuesday.

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BASHAN
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell
have purchased the Bashan
~rocery store from Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Johnston and took
over the business last Monday.
Spending a recent weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Clint Pitzer
and family were his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Pitzer of Beckley,
W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Earnie Deeter
and family spent the weekend in
Columbus with relatives.
Mary K. Holter, Sadie
Trussell, Margaret Tuttle,
Thelma White and Dorothy
Lawson attended D Of A services at the
Funeral
Home on Tues
g for
Mrs Luc1lle Kf
Mrs. Arvil H
parents, Mr. an
Davis of Dexter.
The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Feb. 15,
the 46th day of 1971.
Today is the legal holiday
marking Washington's Birthday, a! though it actually falls
on Feb. 22.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
On this day in history :
In 1898 the U.S. battleship
Maine exploded in Havana
Harbor, killing 260 crew members and leading to a U.S.
declara lion of war against
Spain.
In 1933 President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt narrowly
escaped assassination in Miami.
Shots fired by fanatic Giuseppe
Zangara fatally wounded
Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak.
In 1965 singer Nat "King"
Cole, 45, died of cancer.
In 1970 102 persons were
killed when a Dominican jet
?
iner crashed into the
l
ibbean.

SIDE GLANCES

LEGAL NOTICE
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year
Ending Dec. 31st, 1970
Scipio Township
Meigs County
Albany, Ohio
Feb. 10,1971
I certify the following report
to be correct
Ethel Clark
Township Clerk
CASH BALANCE SHEET
DEC. 31, 1970
Assets:
Depository Balances
3,745.06
Less: Checks Outstanding
1,520.50
Total Assets
5,265.56
Total Liabilities
3,777.35
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1. 1970
General Fund
$1.221.37
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
477.82
Gasoline Tax Fund
4,457.20
Fire District Fund
154.27
Totals
6,156.79
Total Receipts
General Fund
1,044.38
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
5,613.18
Gasoline Tax Fund
12,000.00
Fire District Fund
1, 197.97
Totals
15,855.53
Tot a 1 Receipts &amp; Balances
General Fund
2,265.75
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
6,141.00
Gasoline Tax Fund
16,457.60
Fire District Fund
1,352 24
Totals
3,216.59
Expenditures
General Fund
1.796.38
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
3,845.60
Gasoline Tax Fund
9,030.22
fire District Fund
1,347.04
Totals
16,019.24
Balance Dec. 31,1970
General Fund
469.37
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
2,295.40
Gasoline Tax Fund
5,427.38
Fire District Fund
5.20
CASH BALANCE,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES BY
FUND
General Fund
Balance, Jan. 1, 1970
1,221.37
Receipts
Genera I Property Tax Real Estate
398.54
Tangible Personal Property
Tax
571.74
Permissive Sales Tax
450.90
Cigarette License Fees
and Fines
74.25
Fire Protection
1197.97
Total Receipts
2,693.40
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
3,914.77
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
-Administrative
2,192.41
-To wn Halls, Memorial
Buildings and Grounds 124.98
-Fire Protection
1,347.04
- Cern eteries
433.00
- Lighting
36.00
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
Balance, Jan 1,1970
477.82
Receipts
Motor Vehicle License
Tax
5,613.18
Total Receipts
5,613.18
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
6,141.00
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
-Miscellaneous
367.50
- Ma 1ntenance
1,376.80
- Improvement
2,111 30
Gra11,1, 1Tot a I Expenditures Moror Vehicle License
Ta- Fund
3,845.60
Balance, Dec 31, 1970
2,295 .40
Total
Expenditures
Plus
Balance
Dec 31, 1970
6,141.00
Bal. Jan 1, 1970
4,457.60
Gasoline Tax Fund
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
120.00
Total Receipts
120.00
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
16,437.60
Expenditures
Total Expenditures Miscellaneous
7008.70
- Maintenance
1.747.47
-Improvement
4,788.40
Grand Total Expenditures Gasoline Tax Fund
9030 .22
(2) 15, 1tc
ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR BIDS
Sea l ed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Eastern Local
Schoo l District of Reedsville,
Ohio, at the office of the clerk,
Reedsville, Ohio, until 12:00
o'clock noon eastern standard
time, March 9, 1971. and at that
time opened by the clerk of said
board, as provided by law, for
1 truck chassis suitable for a
60 passenger school bus body
1 truck chassis suitable for a
66 passenger school bus body
1 - 60 passenger schoo l bus
body
1
66 passenger school bus
body
Specifica tion s
for
this
equipment is on file at the office
of the c l erk of the board .
I . 0 . McCoy , Pres.
C 0 . Newland, Cler k
(2)

15, 22

(3)

1. 8, 41c

Wanted
EXPERIENCED
t e lephone
so li citor. Call from your
home. For information ca ll
co llect 1-614-374-9357.
2-15-ltc

by Gill Fox

~·

·-;.._
1

..j

-

.

~

"What's unco ntamin a ted &lt;tnd wh&lt;tt' s ABSOLUTELY uncontamin&lt;!ted?!''

'

LEGAL NOTICE
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BOARD
OF EDUCATION
For Fiscal Year Ending
December 31st, 1970
Southern loca I School District
Meigs County
Racine, Ohio
February 1, 1971
I certify the following report
to be correct.
Charles S Norris
Clerk, Treasurer of the
Board of Education
CASH RECONCILIATION
Total Fund Balances,
Dec . 31, 1970
91,185.39
Depository Balances:
The Racine Home National
Bank
91,804.05
Total Depository
Balances
91 ,804.05
Outstanding Warrants,
Dec. 31, 1970
18.66
Total- Clerk-Treasurer's
Balance, Dec. 31, 1970
91.185 .39
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1,1970
General
55,894.33
Bond Retirement
28,813.35
Lunchroom
3,050.06
N.D.E.A. Title Ill
- 44.69
N.D.E.A.TitleV
492.68
E.S.E.A. Title I
6,282 .66
E.S.E.A. Title II
-129.58
Total
88,259.69
Total Receipts
General
536,624.48
Bond Retirement
38,306.32
Lunchroom
64,294.85
N .O.E.A.Titlelll
44.69
N .D .E. A . TitleV
6,859.50
E.S.E.A. Title I
55,975.58
E.S.E.A. Title II
948.60
Total
703.054.02
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
General
592,5 18.81
Bond Retirement
67,119.67
Lunchroom
61,244.79
7,352.18
N .D.E.A.TitleV
E.S.E.A. Title I
62,258.24
E.S.E.A. Title II
819.02
Total
791,312.71
Expenditures
General
549,563.81
Bond Retirement
30,163.73
Lunchroom
61 ,025 .43
N.D.E.A. Title V
7,489.25
E.S E.A. Title I
50,946.48
E.S.E.A. Title II
938.62
Total
700,127.32
Balance Dec. 31,1970
General
42,955.00
Bond Retirement
36,955 .94
Lunchroom
219.36
N.D.E.A. Title V
-137.07
E.S .E.A. Title I
11,311.76
E.S.E .A. Title II
. 119.60
Total
91,185.39
CASH BALANCE, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund:
Balance, Jan. 1.1970
55,894.33
Receipts - Revenue
General Property Tax Real Estate
125,832.09
Foundation Fund
368,629.62
Federal Subsidy
8,623.00
State of Ohio - Vocational
Education
3,061.98
State of Ohio-Other
27,256.61
Other - Revenue
2,731.03
Total Revenue
Receipts
536,134.33
Receipts- Transfers
From N.D.E.A. Title
V Fund
490.15
Total Transfers
490.15
Total Receipts (Revenue,
Nonrevenue and
Transfers)
536,624.00
Total - Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
592,518.00
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Administration
25,888. 17
-Instruction
324,298.35
- Libraries
7,310.14
-Transportation of
Pupils
51,661.81
- Auxiliary Agencies
69,879 .02
- Operation of School
Plant
48,085.76
-School Plant
Maintenance
8,813.42
- Capital Outlay
3,939.07
- Transfers
9,688.07
Grand Total Expenditures General Fund
549,563.81
Balance, Dec. 31 , 1970 42,955.00
Total Expenditures Plus
Balance Dec. 31, 1970
592,518.81
Bond Reitrement Fund :
Balance, Jan. 1, 1970
28,813 . ~5
Receipts - Revenue
General Property Tax Real Estate
33,832.59
Other- Revenue
4,473 .73
Tot a I Revenue
Receipts
38,306.32
Total Receipts (Revenue,
Non revenue and
Transfers J
38,306.32
Total Beginning Elalance
Plus Receipts
67, 119.67
Expenditures
Bonds Maturing
16,000.00
Interest on Bonds
9,690.00
Other - Bond Retirement
Fund
4,473.73
Tota I Expenditures - Bond
Retirement F und
30, 163.73
Balance , Dec . 31, 1970 36,955.94
Total
Exppen diture s Plus
Balance
December 31,1970
67,119.67
Lunchroom Fund:
Balance, Jan. 1.1970
. 3050.06
Receipts- Incom e
26,106.90
Sale of Lunches
Federal Subsidy - Lunches
32,448.09
Federal Subsidy - Milk
2,615.98
Other- Re venu e
150.00
Total Recei pts In come
61.320.97
Receipts - Transfers
From General Fu nd
2,973. 88
Total Receipts Transfers
2,973.88
Total Receil)ts (Income
and Transfers)
64,294 .85
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
61.244.79
Expenditures
Personal Servi ce - Manager Sa laries and Wages 17,462.46
Personal Service - Cooks Sa laries and Wages
150.00
Other Personal Service
Sa laries and Wages 40,652 66
Supplies and Food
1,344 .15
Equipme nt
641.46
Repairs to Equipmen t
774.70
Total Expenditures Lunchroom Fund
61 ,025.43
Balance, Dec . 31, 1970
219.36
Tota l Expenditur es Plus
Balance Dec. 31, 1970 61 ,244 .79
N .D.E.A . Title Ill Fund: (Include Appalachia)
Balance, Jan. 1, 1970
44.69
Receipts - Transfers
From General Fund
44.69
Total Receipts
44.69
N . D.E.A. Title V Fund :
Balance. Jan . 1,1970
492.68
Receipts
Coordina tor - Title V
190.00
Tota l
190.00
Receipts - Transfers
From Genera l
6,669 .50
Tota l Transfers
6,669 .50
Total Receipts (Receipts
PI us Transfers)
6,859.50
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Rec eipts
7,352. 18
Expenditures
Guidance Counsellor
Salary
6,959.00
Testing and Materials
40.10
Total Expenditures
6,999.10
Transf ers
490. 15
Total Transfers
490.15
Total Expenditures Inc lu ding
Transfers
7,489 25
Balance , De c . 31.1970
137.07
Total E xpenditures Plus
Balance Dec . 31 , 1970 7,352 18
E.S E.A . Title I F und :
Balance , Jan . 1. 1970
6,282 66
Receipts
F ederal Subsidy Fund 55,975 58
Total
55,975.58
Total Receipts
55,975.58
lola! Begtnning Balance

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

1966 CAPRICE
$1795
4 dr., black vinyl top &amp; cream body, black nylon interior &amp;
astra seat, factory Comfortron air conditioning,
automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes, &amp; all the accessories of a luxury car. Low mileage &amp; sharp as they
come.

•
_B_u_·s_i_n_e_s_s_S___:e__r,---v----=-ic~e_s~~·}

I

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

...

_, ,., ._""~!:",

1966 PONTIAC
$1295
GTO Cpe., white finish, vinyl interior, 4 speed trans., good
w -w tires, radio &amp; heater.

1966 FORD
$995
Falcon 2 dr ., 6 cyl. std . trans., a II good tires, smart looking
copper finish, radio. Real economy in this car.

~eroy

IAotor Co.

OP-EN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

II.,I

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111:1' ,. ,,

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

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO( 1 l Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OF$4,000to$9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less.
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We will furnish lot or erect on your lot.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone304-485-6725 Day
Phone992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

BI.AETTNARS
Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

For Sale

PIANO-ORGAN repossessions.
WANT AD'
We have just closed our books
INFORMATION
for the fiscal year and have
DEADLINES
several pianos and organs in
5 P .M. Day Before Publication WILL GIVE piano and organ
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
this area to be p icked up. If
lessons in my home. Phone
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
you are interested in one,
992-3666.
Will be accepted untfl9a.m.for
write
Credi t
Manager ,
8-16-tfc
Day of Publication
Graves Piano and Organ
REGULATIONS
Company , 383 E. Broad St. ,
The Publisher reserves the
Columbus, Ohio.
right to edit or reject any ads
2-14-2tc
deemed
objectional.
The
pub! is her will not be responsible WOMEN to do housework in the
for more than one incorrect
Pomeroy area. Write Fran , FIREWOOD . Gerald King,
insertion.
Box 23, Pomeroy , Ohio.
Shade. Ph one 696-1287.
RATES
2-14-61c
2-14-6tp
For Want Ad Service
S,.cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
DRIVERS NEEDED. We lrain BALE STRAW, also, one small
12 cents per word three
c losed truck bed, one grader
you to be a semi-driver, local
consecutive insertions .
b lade. P. M. Cowdrey, Long
and
city
training
now
18 cents per word six conBo ttom , Oh io.
available. Earn over $4.50 an
secutive insertions.
hour after short training. For
2-14-3tc
25 Per cent Discount on paid
application and interview,
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
call 513-863-6404, or write 1970 SHUL T mobile home, 17
acres of land, good we ll.
&amp; OBITUARY
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Phone 742-5222.
Corwin Ave., Hamilton , Ohio.
Each additional word 2c.
2-10-6tc
2-15-2tc
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
MEN'S WORK uniforms and
Advertisement.
coveralls. Jeffers Clothing
OFFICE HOURS
Store, Rt. 33 going toward
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
OLD
UPRIGHT
pianos,
any
f airground , Pomeroy.
8 : 30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday.
condition, as long as have not
2-l0-6tc
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will BRACE yourself for a thrill the
be pick -up day. Write, giving
first time you use Blue Lustre
good directions. Witten Piano
to clean rugs. Rent electr ic
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks •.
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
shampooer,
$1. Baker Furleach beds. Phone 949-4761.
Ohio
43946.
niture,
Middleport.
10-18-tfc
8-20-tfc
2-10-6tc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Notice

Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy

Notice

INCOME TAX service, daily
except Sunday. Evenings by OLD furniture, dishes, bras~
beds, etc. Write M. D . Mi l ler,
appointment only. Phone 992·
Rt. 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

19
CUBIC
foot
Philco
refrigerator, double door,
side by side. 3 years old, ice
maker. Harold E. Hysell,
Mai n St., Rutland , phone 7423154.
2-12-3tc

$5.55
--GUARANTEED-

MASON CAR WASH
..AUTOMATIC"
Car Completely Mitted &amp;
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONlY
Sat. 9 to 5-Sun. 11 to 5

PRICE '1.25

Phone 9'12-2094

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

0.

If

Do It Yourself Open
24 Hrs. Daily- 2Sc

AIR CONDITIONING, Ret
frigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-lfc

INTERIOR carpenter work, by
!he hour or contract. Phone
992-3511.
1-31-JOtp

SEPT IC: tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed .
George (Bill) Pu llins. Phone .
992-2478.
11-29-tfc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5- 1-tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goegle i n Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

HARRISON'S TV AND ANTE,NNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc
NEIGLER Construction. For
b uilding or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler ,
Rac ine, Ohio.
·
7-31-tfc
_,t:PTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Phone
John Russell, Ga llipolis 4464782 after 5:30 p. rn.
4-7-tfc
SEWING MACHINES. Repai r
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen ScissOl"£.
3-29-tfc

""A...,.U.,..,C""T""I""O""N.,----:W
::-:-:-H-:-:E::-:N-:'::-:·--::Each
Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
SPINET-console p iano. Wanted
Hayman's Auction House, THEY
ARE
here:
The
responsible party to take over
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
SKAMPER line from A to Z.
payments on spinet piano.
Broker
Pomeroy-Middleport
ByWhal· a surprise lo see:
Easy terms, can be seen
110 Mechanic St.
pass.
Trave l !railers, campers are
locally.
Write
Credit
Pomeroy, Ohio
2-7 -tfc
all on display. What isn' t here
Ma nager, P. 0. Box 276,
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
is on
the way.
GAUL
NEW
LISTING3 bedrooms,
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176.
cancelled?
Lost
your
TRAILER SALES, INC. , H '2
RUBBER STAMPS made to
modern
kitchen,
bath,
2 7-121p
operator's license? Call 992miles norlh of Chesler, Ohio.
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
basement. New gas forced air
2966.
Walch for sign. Phone 985or Velma Casto, Portland,
furnace. Storm doors and
6-15-tfc
3832. CONTINENTAL and
Ohio.
windows. LARGE GARDEN.
GO TAG-A-LONG
travel
2-12-90tc
Only $13,000.00 SYRACUSE.
!railers for sale. Rentals by
BUY YOUR
day , week, monlh.
WILL PICK up merchandise
BUY NOW NEXT WEEK MAY
2-4-12tc
and take to auction on a
BE TOO LATE.
percentage basis. Call Jim
NEW ALL ELECTRIC 3
Now and get the early
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
bedrooms , 2 baths, spacious
Phone 742-4461.
basement. Beautiful kitchen,
Discount
9-23-tfc 5 ROOM and bath furnished
dining area with scenic view.
Bag
,
Bulk
and
liquid
Fer----------- -- -- apartment. Chester. Inquire
Double
garage.
Asking
tilizer, all available now .
SKATE -A-WAY is open Wedat Newell's Sunoco Station.
$23,900.00 OR WILL BUILD
... you might already be well on
Take
delivery
now
from
our
nesday, Friday and Saturday
Ph one Chester 985-3350.
TO SUIT.
your way towards earning extra
area warehouse at Pomeroy.
nigh1s, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
2-7-tfc
income.
Available for private parties
WE
ARE
LOCATED
NEAR
We're proud to talk about our
POMEROY
on Monday, Tuesday and UNFURNISHED 3-room
KROGERS.
business. It's fascinating. DynamJ. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Thursday nigh Is or Saturday
apartment. Phone 992 -2288.
ic. Ideal for the small investor.
Phone 992-2181
and
Sunday
afternoons.
NEW 3 BEDROOMS Near
No experience necessary. With
Phone Chesler 985-3929 or 985Rutland
on
124.
Gas
furnace
,
1-31-tfc
very little money you can achieve
3585.
ANTIQUE bookcase. Phone 992baths, utility room ,
11h
financial satisfaction-as quickly
2683 weekdays after 5 p.m. or
2-2 12tc
bea utiful k i tchen , cook and
as you wish. It's yours to decide.
FURNISHED and unfurnished
a II day Sunday.
bake units. Dining area. Only
Ours is a vending machine proATTE NTION ladies! Would you
apartments. Close to school.
2-14-Jtc
$19, 500.00.
gram. The best. We sell you Us·
like to try a wig on in the
Phone 992-5434.
992-3325 992-2378
sery machines, establish route
privacy of your own home?
10-18-tfc
2-12-6tc
locations. Provide finest line of
You can. Just call us. We also
snack items. We train, counsel,
have the Mink Oil Kosmelics,
guide, hold your hand until you're
Koscot, of course. Dis- 3 ROOM furnis hed apartment.
170''
2
M
ulberry
Ave.
Contact
MINIATURE
Schnauzers
and
firmly entrenched . No experience
tributors, Brown's. Phpn_e
Rose Sisson, phone 992-2049 or
Poodle pupp ies . Permanent
necessary. Just honesty, integrity,
Middleport 992-51 13.
992-2431.
in jections and groomed.
willingness to listen, work and
12-31 -lfc
2 14 tfc
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right GROUND TO SPARE - 2 story
give good service.
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath, full
at Torch , Ohio, 5th house
You need a car and at least
basemen! , gas forced air
r ight. Phone Coolville 6672
BEDROOM
trailer
in
$600 to $1500 as a minimum
furnace , CLOSE TO SHOP3654.
Syracuse. No children, prefer
investment strictly for equipment
PING. $9,500.
e lderly couple. Phone 992-5249
2-11 -30tc
and inventory. No fee or extra of
afler 5:30 p.m .
any kind required. Be ambitious
COTTAGE
1
STORY
2-14-3tc
and willing to expand. Cash busiFRAME, 2 bedrooms, bath,
ness. Original investment can be
enc losed
porch ,
fenced ,
5 ROOM house, bath, Racine 1966 MERCURY Monterey,
returned in short time.
garden space. $4,500.
area. Phone 992-6329.
Requires only 6 to 8 hours per
automatic, power steering,
2-14-3tc
week of serious attention. like
new battery, new exhaust LESS THAN 4 YEARS OLD - 9
system. $795. Phone 843-2211 .
getting retirement pay, annuity
ACRES, 3 bedrooms, bath ,
2-12-6tp
or pension-only better because
I 3 ROOMapartmenl, all electric,
c
ity
water,
floor
furnace,
wall
You'll
it grows!
I wall oven, table lop range,
to wa ll carpet. $12,500.
slee l double sink, 1965 OLDS cutlass, 2 door,
I slainless
tract it down
disposal. Ni ce clean
automatic. $550. Phone 742I food
PROPERTY IS SELLING
apartment. See to appreciate.
5361.
FAST NOW, LET US
much faster
I Located in Pomeroy. Phone
2-12-31c
SELL YOURS TODAY
divisi on of Ull
Ga llipolis 446-9539.
with a
HENRY CLELAND
1275 PROFIT DRIVE•DALLAS, TEXAS 75247
2-2-tfc 1965 CHEVROLET, one ton
REALTOR
I am interested in more information
truck , good condition. Priced
Office 992-2259
l ___
about making money in the vend i ng
for quick sale.
Carroll
Residence 992-2568
business I have a car and 6-8 hours
per week spare t ime.
Johnson, 430 Headley St.,
(2) 14-6tc
0 I can tnvest $600 in a route.
Middleport.
COA L , limestone. Exce ls ior
0 I can tnvest $1500 tn a roule.
Plus Receipts
62,258.24
2-14-31c HOUSE , 1640 lincoln His. ,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Total Expend itures
50,946.48
- ------------------ Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Name
Tota l Expenditures
50,946.48
10-25-tfc
4-9-tfc 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
Balance, Dec. 31,1970 11.311.76
Address
Total
Expenditures
Plus
hardto p , power steering ,
City
Zip _
State
Balance
One-third of the U n i ted
power brakes, air , 18,000
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
P~one (
Dec. 31. 1970
62,258.24
m iles. Excellent condition. States is forest land, includGobese tablets and E -Vap
E.S.E . A . Title II Fund:
Phone 992-2288.
waler pills . Nelson's Drugs.
ing over 1.000 different kinds
Dept_ 4049 _ _ A
Balance, Jan . 1,1970
. 129.58
11 -10-tfc of trees.
1-22 30tp
Receipts
Federa l Subsidy Fund
948 60
Tota l
948 60 PA INT DAMAGE 1971 Zig -Zag 1967 VAL I ANT, standard shift.
radio and heater , 28,000 miles.
Tota l Receipts
948 60
Sewing Machines. St ill in
HAPPINESS IS
Tota l Beginning Balance
$900. Phone 992-3860.
original carton s. No at
Plus Receipts
819 .02
Home
2-10-6tp
lachments needed, as our
Expendit ures
938 .62
conlro ls are buill-in. Sews
Total E xpendilures
938.62
Balance, Dec. 31, 1970
119 .60
wi lh 1 or 2 needles, makes
Tota l Expend itures Plus
bu lion holes, se w on bullons,
Balance Dec . 31, l970
819 .02
monograms and blind hem CONVENIENT but secluded
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
slilch. Full cash price, $38.50
building lots on T79 at Rock
DEC E MB E R 31,1970
or budget plan available.
Springs. Within walking
.. Assets :
Phone
992-5641.
dista nce of Meigs High
91,185.39
Cash on Hand
2-9 61c
School, a 5 minute drive from
L ands (Cost) (Building Sites,
Playgrounds, etc . )
36,900 .00
Pomeroy . Call or see BiJI
Buildings (Cost( (ALL School E LE CTRO LUX
Vacuum
Wi lie weekends , or after 5
Buildings)
944,200.73
Cleaner complete with al p.m. weekdays. Phone 992
Equipment (Cost) (ALL School
lachments, cordwinder and
6887.
Bldg . Eqpmt . )
125,000.00
PAUL and ALICE GLEASON
pain! spray . Used bul in like
2-3-tfc
Tota l Assels
1, 197,286 . 12
181 Beech St.
Middleport
new condi ti on. Pay $37.45
Liabilities:
cash
or
credit
terms
Accounts Payable
270,393 .52
"
When
we
bought
our
new
home
available. Phone 992 5641.
Bond Indebtedness
212,000.00
from J.A., our friends said,
Total Liabilities
482,393 .52
2-9-61c
ITEM: Tom Hill. He plays
Excess or Deficiency
' You get all the breaks.' We told
Blood , Sweat &amp; Tears and
ot Assets
714,892.60 MODERN walnul stereorad1o
them to see AI Moody and they
Mama Cass. But he plays
Total
1,197 ,286.12
corpbina li on, 4 speaker sound
could get a break, too! Why not
SCHOOL DEBTMoonlight Serenade and
syslem, 4 speed changer.
BONDS AND NOTES
Andy Williams too . Variety
Balance $69.10. Use our
Purpose for Which Bond
is the spice of our music.
Debt Was Created budge! terms. Call 992 3352.
Southern Lo ca l School Dist.
2 11 -6tc
Outstanding Jan . 1.
1970
228,000.00 AUTi I E NTi C Ear ly American
Redeemed Dur ing Year
........._~
Building Sites Available
Slereo radio , AM-F M ra dio, 4
1970
16,000.00
speakers, 4 speed automatic
Balance Outstanding Dec .
Don't Delay! Conlact AI Moody Today!
changer. Balance $82.60. Use
31, 1970
212,000.00
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Rate of Int .
4.25 Percent
our budge! terms. Ca ll 992
Phone 992-7034
DateofFtna!Mat .
1983
33~2 .
(2) 15, ltc
2 11 61c

For Sale or Rent

SR.

Insurance

-·

WHY WAIT

IIF YOU HAD

FERTILIZER

MAILED THIS
A MONTH AGO

For Rent

L

•

Pets For Sale

Cleland Realty

EVERYBODY
Shops the

Auto Sales

WANT AD WAY

l

___ j

~!'~!_!_D

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

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

JEMO ASSOCIATES

~"'"-

WMP0/1390

~

I:MI

•)

�~
~

AMERICA USCD TO Be

~IJ

/45 A GReAT MeLTI~
Ftrr cr AlC.. ~~DS Of'
PEOPLE!

DOC PRITCHART
TOLD PAW TO GIT
SOME EXERCISE,
SO HE WENT OFF
JU661N' IN
TH' WOODS
FUST THING
THIS MORNIN'

AS A CONCESSION TO
WOMENS L/81 I'M GOING TO

TOW~OM

MAY CONCEJ&lt;; ~ ~
HEAl(. TH!5 I
HEAl&lt;! I r!IS :'

L..ET 'IOU PA'i il-1 E
WHOL.!; SHOT~

U'LABNER

F!ZECI"LES ALWAYS

tr

SGUEf:ZES A Tu6E"

01= TOOTf4P,ASTe
INTHE 1

M\DDLE-1

LANCELOT
I HAVe= TO eo
SHOPPING, L.ANCe=.
CAN
HAVS 50M5

:r:

E&lt;XTRA /t\CNG'f ~

•

Would LlOU \ike to put
time in the office?
Get acquainted with the
bu:;ine.,;:; end a little?

~ome

Are

•

ljOU

happ4

workinq
here

in the

qarc:lqe,
Chipper?

THE BORN LOSER

1WEIJT'( FNE '{E).RS

~

~1/&gt;U€ ~D WH~HAVE

'IOU ~e; ~ J~e?

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE."

@AP'H .AHA8 IS
SUR!i! H£ HAS

KILLED GOLDSW!liG£R~
ANNIE KNOWS
H£ HI1SH'T·--AS

'I'HE MARCH
TOWARDS THE:

GOLDEH CI'l'Y
OF ElDORADO

COHTHiUES ...

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS

•

DICK TRACY
AND l-IE MUST I-lAVE ESCAPED
BY RUNNING ALONG TI-lE
LEDGE TO THAT SI).ME ROPE.

•
TERRY

LEAVING A RECEPTION

AT THE PI?ESIDENTJAL
PALACE OFA CENTJ?AL
AMERICAN REPUBLIC,
COHGJ?E$5 WOMAN
DOlORES DEEPSIX

IS A80!JCTEI7 BY
A BAN 17 OF ARMEl/
MEN .

fl

24. Pal-

6. Moham medan
name
· 7. Actress
- - Louise
8. Balanced
9. All that's
left
13. Original
17. Think
18. Came
In
first
19. Faraway
20. Sheep
talk
21. Danube
trib&lt;.J·
tary
22. Young
pig

myra
leaf
25. Prey
upon
26. "All
About
-~;·

~L

i~ ~~ ER

c

R
A

~

(I!) 1971 King Features Syndicate. Inc.)

DOT N ED

••~~
DE

LISI

1'1.

IWIA

A

A

FR E E HAT

AS

~ ~ ~~

•

H ELEN

MA A ~
N OIR.
0 NOINI
SE
A
10 vvo ~

ED

~~ t

R

'N

EE

m¥1
....

1950
film
27. Incar\'Htuday'o Ane,.·er
nadine
39. Tidy the
29. Immovlawn
able
40."- - Go
33. Powdered
Bragh"
lava
41 . Sicilian
34. Norwegian
volcano
metropolis
43. Summer
35. Pitcher
(Fr.)
36 Break into
44. Anderson's
pieces
play, "High
38. Sound of
thunder

_ ..

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

I

ti

f

INC.RtFl

(J (XJ

I IIEHFIE I
I [J [)

HE'S ON HIS WAY
OUI A5 I=A~ AS
HIS C.OUN'TRY IS
CONCERNED.

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, u
suggested by the above cartoon.

IPrint !he SURPRISE ANSWER llere I AN r X I I X I I I ]

(Anowrro tomorrow)
Jun~bl.. • : VALUE

!"'aturdll) •,

I

FAIRY

CHERUB

TEACUP

\n•w .. r: H4&gt; alway~ play4&gt;d rhi~- THE " HEAVY"

2. Eliot'~

"-

,

5 . Destiny

1. Free ticket
5. After a
while
10. Mine
entrance
11.42 Across,
toPopeye
12. Seasonal
greeting
cards
14. Ham it up
15. Small
"industrialist"
16. Golly!
19 . Hautboy
23. More
i mpecunious
28. Is victim
to Cupid's
a rrows
(3 wds.l
30. Make obese
31. Still
snoozing
32. Tsia or
darjeeling
34 . Anthem
preposition
37. Binge
42 . Candidate
for 12
Across
45. Slowly
(music)
46 Similar
47. Command
48. Singing
Horne
DOWN
1 Prepare
a path

Saturday's Oryptoquote: THE TRUE USE OF SPEECH IS
NOT SO MUCH TO EXPRESS OUR WANTS AS TO CONCEAL THEM.-OLIVER GOLDSMITH

Bcde"

3. Farm

CAPTAIN EASY
f\ERCH ,TAYS OUT OF 5 1GHT WHILE DUCE'/
~01-A IIVTO THE- MA~710t-I ... BUT NOLA 1;7t-I'T

structure
ANYHOW, TH~ J&lt;:E.7T WAS T~ UE: ENOUtiH.,,
A MY7TEF:IOU7 "MR. X" OIP Hlr&lt;:E: E.Dr'l&amp;
TO HEIST THAT E&gt;OLD!:N HAND~

4. Proof-

reading
direction

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
is

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One lettet· stmply stands fot· another In thts sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. etc. S ingle letters.
apostrophes , tht• length anct fo t·mation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letter~ are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation

FOR A ME:A7L" TE:IJ 6RANC'- AtJr.
PUTT!N' TWO At-JC' TWO TO.;.&amp;T~ER.­
I.GOT A HUN CH M'/ SA?HFLIL MA7KE:P
E:MPLOYE:R WA'? Br&lt;:UNO Kt:r&lt;:CH:

\

FHFKR
WLP

L

BJWF
OJFDF

L
SZ

CSQFQ

L

OJFDF

VFCFP

KSICLPY

\1

ISWLP
VFK
S Z

VJQ

UJHFQ
WJPY

L

QVF

VFLKB

FIFTEE~Tii OF FEBRUARI/
15 ..\:..WAYS'' GLOAT ~If '' !

WE

o"'

-~....--....

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 15, 1971

-~~;mr:t:Jt:'!H:to
': ;=:tjvthe\"~~;h~r::,: t:.' '

~1~1

~I

,~-

': : ., z,:r... e,., . .D
... ,. z·stnatches,, _:· : : : :::::'t_._:· ._ ,r._':, .:',·

W
.,.:,:
i

:l..:i___,·.,j:'...:'-·:.,.,'.::
___..·'':::__

:r

By United Prt•ss International
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO AFL-CIO PROPOSES to increase the assessment on Ohio
manufacturers to double the state's unt•mployment insurance fund so it will meet the federal
recommended level. The union said the fund now only contains $726 million, while $1.34 billion is
"needed to protest workers."
The AFL~O said in its weekly newsletter that when Ohio's unemployment insurance system
started in 1937, employers paid 2.7 per cent of their total payrolls into the fund to cover laid off
workers but ''after years of intensive lobbying'' now contribute only one-half of 1 per cent to the fund.
"In addition, they've wheeled 'n' dealed to hold benefits down to below welfare levels and have
written harsh disqualification features into the law, which make over 40 per cent of those who apply
for benefits ineligible to receive them," the labor group said.
CLEVELAND- BUSINESS CORPORATIONS ARE increasingly becoming the targets of social
reformers, Industry Week magazine reported today. Mounting concern is being voiced about the
corporate role in minority hiring, pollution, overseas operations in countries with repressive social
and racial practices, war related business operations and consumerism, the magazine said.
Industry Week said companies which ignore the pressures and appear to make decisions on a
strictly economics basis are inviting trouble. The tnagazine added that the chances are good that
these companies will be dragged into the public spotlight for censure. However, the compary which
tries to break the status quo in an effort to achieve progress on social issues can also become a target
of militants, who feel the steps are inadequate, the magazine noted.
COLUMBUS -A SHOOTOUT PRECIPITATED BY a nickel lost in a vending machine at an
eastside bar left one man dead and three others injured. Police said Thomas Jervis, 35, and his
brother, John, were ejected from the bar late Saturday after starting an argument over the nickel. A
few minutes later they returned.
Police said Thomas Jervis fired a shotgun he was carrying at bartender Arnold Carter, 47,
wounding him in the hand. Carter than drew a pistol he kept behind the bar, killing Thomas Jervis
and wounding his brother. Another patron, Herbert Saxton, 47, was wounded in the crossfire. Carter
was charged with assault with a deadly weapon. Saxton and Jervis were in critical condition.
WASHINGTON -THE TIDRD OF FOUR UNIONS which had been threatening a nationwide
railroad strike March 1 has reached a tentative contract agreement, and the Nixon administration
said it hoped for a quick settlement of t!Je one remaining dispute. The latest agreement, reached
early Sunday, was between the carriers and the 180,000-member Brotherhood of Railway and Airline
Clerks, the largest of the four unions.
Still unresolved is a contract settlement involving the United Transportation Union, which
represents 90,000 workers. Settlements were previously reached with unions representing 60,000
maintenance of way employes and 3,000 dining car workers.
KEY BISCAYNE, FLA. -PRESIDENT NIXON winds up a low-key holiday weekend in chilly
Florida today and flies back to Washington for a busy week ahead. With Secretary of State William P.
Rogers and National Security Affairs Adviser Henry A. Kissinger on hand for huddles, Nixon has
concentrated on the final draft of his forthcoming "State of the World" report.
The document, to be delivered to Congress Feb. 25, runs 65,000 words. "Too long," Rogers admits. Yet, the message may contain the first definitive statement by Nixon on the U.S. air supported
South Vietnamese invasion of Laos.
THE LATEST IN A ~RING OF VICIOUS WINTER storms moved out of the northeast today,
leaving one to two feet of new snow. Six men died Sunday in the Pittsburgh area while shoveling inches of new snow. A Maryland man was killed in a two-car collision in upstate New York as visibility
dropped to zero because of blowing and drifting snow.
Syracuse, N.Y., Mayor Lee Alexander declared a snow emergency and continued it when icecoated tree limbs fell and cut major power lines, affecting 10,000 area residents. A 134-mile stretch of
the New York Thruway was closed Saturday night when the snowfall was at its peak. The Buffalo-toSyracuse route was not reopened until late Sunday morning and other highways in the western part of
the state remained closed most of the day.
WNDON -BRITAIN "WENT DECIMAL" TODAY. At midnight, amid widespread predictions
of near-chaos, it scrapped its 800-years-old pounds-shillings-pence money system. In its place went a
new dollar-and-cents style decimal money, similar to those in the United States and continental
Europe. When stores opened, British housewives found an estimated 80 per cent had switched price
tags and were dealing in decimal money. Banks, closed since Wednesday night while 20 million accounts were converted, reopened to deal only in decimals.
Despite a $3 million last minute publicity campaign by the decimal currency board, many
Britons confessed they were confused. In the new money the pound still was worth $2.40 abroad. But
at home it was divided from now on into 100 new pennies or pence, each worth 2.4 U. S. cents. Three
new bronze coins went into circulation - a newhalf penny ( 1.2 cents), new penny ( 2.4 cents) and t wv
new pence (4.8 cents).
New York
mto five bo
tan, The B
Brooklyn an

ns.

Sets Records for
Fast Service

As insurance agents,
we plan your program
of protection with
painstaking care. But
when it comes to
processing claims, we
move fast!

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992.2966
• 114 Court St.
Pomeroy

IT'S MINE," says Randy Crawford, Wahama White Falcon guard, as he wins a scr:ap
for a loose ball in the Mason Countians' cage tilt at Meigs Saturday night. Others attemptmg
to grab the ball are, from left, Meigs' Bill Hensler, Tim Howard of the Falcons and Rick Van
Matre,Marauder senior. In the background, from left, are Ralph Sayre, Wahama, and Chip
Haggerty and Jeff Tyo, Meigs. The host Marauders won the game with a strong second half
effort.

Papa's Error Corrected

r---------------------------,
! HOSPITAL NEWS I

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr . and Mrs. Don L. Russell ,
Bidwell, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Gary A. Carver, Racine, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Clair E.
Swan, Langsville, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Teddy Lamb, Pt.
Pleasant, a son; and Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Fetty, Pt.
Pleasant, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Laura J. Aldridge,
Marlin Amos, Ernest Bahr,
Randolph Blackburn, Mrs. John
L. Brammer, Mrs. Burton C.
Brunner, Mrs. Cornia Carey,
Clan B. Cox, Mrs. Lyndall E.
Dial, Sr., Sammie L. Doolittle,
Dr. Joseph Freidinger, Mrs.
Walter J. Baggy and infant
daughter, Mrs. Cass Hindy,
Mrs. Mayme Holmes, John R.
Hunnell, Mrs. Wendell Jennings
and infant son, Mrs. Edna
Mauck, Albert A. McCain,
Norman E. Rizer, Melvin
Sorrell, Mrs. James Albert
Taylor and infant son, Mrs .
John P. Wilson, Norman L.
Yeauger, Mrs. Roger W.
Hoover and Mrs. Edith Denny.

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
IA,KI:R'S

BAKERS

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

ByDAVIDNAGY
MOSCOW (UPI) - Leonid
Riggerman remembers "papa"
as an Idealist who brought his
American bride to the young
Soviet state in the late 1930s.
Today Riggerman led his
widowed mother on the road
back.
The Riggermans, Muscovite
Jews, learned Friday from
Soviet officials they would be
permitted to leave this week for
New York. The announcement
ended months of campaigning
by Riggerman for exit visas.
They will leave Wednesday for
New York and Los Angeles.
"Leonya made himself so
obnoxious to the authorities,"
Mrs. Esther Riggerman, 61,
said Sunday, beaming at her
son. "He was so obnoxious.
That's why we're getting off."
Riggerman, 30, was picked up
three times by security police
last November and December
as he attempted to visit the U. S.

embassy to establish his claim
to American citizenship based
upon that of his mother. He was
jailed once for seven days and
warned that persistence could
bring "serious consequences."
he said.
The U. S. State Department
protested to the Soviets and
issued passports for the
Riggermans. Riggerman applied through Soviet channels
for permission to leave, with
eventual success.
Riggerman, a computer
programmer, said he had lived
relatively well in the Soviet
Union in terms of material
things - food, education and

income.
"I would call it an incompatibility with the spirit of
this country," he said in an
interview in the two room
apartment he shared with his
mother. " Here, I don't fit in."
The bearded, bespectacled
Riggerman said "my father
was an idealist and one of many
persons influenced by Communist ideas in the 1920s and
30s. But my mother misses her
family deeply and .. . I see a
duty now to correct my father's
mistake and take her home."
Mrs. Riggerman said ''Thank
God, I am going home to my
family again."

the Farm Front

Miller Will By BERNARD
BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSWASHINGTON (UPI) _The
Tin:othy Casto, !dason; Eff~e
Nixon
administration
is
Wh1te, Langsvtlle; Jackte In
· ·ts h 1 ·
t' t·
·
M · · G
spect D am draggmg
1 ee s m ac 1va mg
tt

Lyons, Racme; arJOrte . 0~ •
Pomeroy· Clayton T1pp1e
.
'
.
. . '
Mtddleport; Allee Phtlhps,
Ree?svllle; Helen Arnott,
Racme·
James Hensley,
' Cleo Ad ams, R acme.
·
P omeroy;
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- D.tane Bar ber, Eff'te Wh'te
1 ,
Ral h Sh ·
. G' th
Moll te
m er,
P
am.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Ed
H
h
p · t
na
ump reys,
om
Pleasant; John Weatherby,
Middleport; Nettie Hen:sley,
Syracuse; Joseph Q~tvey,
Po.meroy;
Paula
Gilkey,
M ddl
t
DISCHARGES ·
·
Dam~l Lewts, Roscoe Fowl~r,
Jackte ~la~, Russell Lewts,
and Maqone Goett.

.

~rn:b~Y

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Wilma
Higginbotham, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Gerald Gibbs, Mason;
Mrs. Floyd Siders, Point
Pleasant; Charles Blain,
Southside; Mrs. Oris Lathey,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James
Roach, Point Pleasant; Cindy
Hall, Summitt Station, 0.;
Jennifer Gray and Guy
Wamsley, Letart; John Doss,
Crown City, 0.: Sherman
Kinder, Point Pleasant; Clyae
Hammack, Jr ., Point Pleasant;
Lawrence Mayes, Flat Rock;
Mrs. Joseph Forbes, Point
Pleasant.
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
Johnny Stewart, Roger McCoy,
John Russell, Mrs. Michael
Wamsley and son; Mrs. Nelson
Jones and son;
Robert
Higginbotham, Mrs. Noel
Stover and daughter ; Charles
Eads, Mrs. Virgil Endicott,
Mrs. Ann Hoffman, Mrs. Clodus
Buck, John Kay, Cherrie Queen,
Mrs. Clara Stevens, Nora
Robson.
BIRTH - Feb. 13, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gibbs,
Mason .

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Feb. 15. 16

THEY SHOOT HORS ES,
DON ' T THEY?
(Technicolor)
Jane Fonda
Mi chael Sarrazin
Technicolor Cartoon
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

On Saturday
Tenth District Congressman
ClarenceE.Millerwillreturnto
Ohio this Saturday, February
20th, for an on-site inspection
tour of the 79 million dollar
Willow Island Locks and Dam
presently under construction
near Reno, Ohio.
Miller, a member of the
House Public Works Committee, will be accompanied on
th t
b c1 1 M ·
e our Y o one
aunce
Roush, the District Engineer
from the Corps of Engineers'
Huntington District Office.
Saturday evening Miller will
be in Zanesville where he will
attend the annual Lincoln Day
Banquet sponsored by the
Muskingum County Republican
Executive Committee. The
banquet is to be held at 6:30 at
the
Muskingum
Area
Vocational and Technical Institute.
On Sunday, February 21st,
the lOth District lawmaker will
remain in Zanesville to participate in ribbon cutting
ceremonies at the new $365,000
coronary care unit at the Good
Samaritan Hospital. The
ceremony will be part of the
open house arrangemer.ts being
held by the hospital from 2 t9 5
p.m.

APPOINTMENTS MADE
COLUMBUS (UP I) - Richard
E. Lightner, former statehouse
reporter for United Press Internationa, has been appointed executive assistant to state Welfare Director John Hansan for
pubhc relations.
Lightner also formerly was
Capitol reporter for the Horvitz Newspapers and the Akron
Beacon Journal.
Han san also announced the appointmentofMrs. Karen B. Farkas as executive assistant for
special projects, and Vivian Witkind and Mrs. Kathleen Connelly as program planners.

AUXILIARY TO MEET
The Ladtes Auxiltary of the
Rutland Fire Dept will meet at
7:30 p.rn. Tuesday at the fire
house.

Two· Penn Central
Figures Attacked
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Battered by charges of
mismanagement and financial
chicanery, the Penn central
Railroad has come under attack
once again.
A congressional committee
Sunday accused two top officials of the railroad, which
declared bankruptcy last year,
of manipulating the company's
assets as collateral for a private
investment club.
Backed by the presumed
fiscal strength of the nation's
largest railroad, each member
of the Penhil investment club
was able to parlay a $16,500
cash investment into $83,500,
according to a staff report of the
House Banking Committee.
Behind the club, according to
the committee, were two senior
company figures - David C.
Bevan, Penn Central's chief

financial officer, and Charles J.
Hodge, a New York investment'
banker and financial adviser to
the railroad. Neither is st.
associated with Penn central.
The club was formed in 1962,
six years before the merger of
the Pennsylvania and New York
central Railroads, and grew
from 16 to 26 members, mostly
wealthy friends of Bevan and
Hodge.
The committee report said
the club purchased stocks wi~
a $1.8 million low interest lo•
from Chemical Bank New York
Trust Co., the same bank that
held Penn Central's deposits.
The committee staff concluded that it was "doubtful"
:hat the club members, could
have made the 500 per cent
profit in eight years without this
line of credit.
The house report found fa~
in several areas:
-It criticized the bank of
extending credit to Bevan
"without any regard for the fact
that the company's investments
placed David Bevan and other
Penn Central officials in basic
conflict-of-interest situations."
-In their dual role as Penn
Even after a determination on Central and Penphil officials,
handling large towns is made, the report said, Bevan an
a spokesman indicated there Hodge were involved in "the'
could be little lending in the manipulative tfSe of Penn
larger communities this fiscal Central pension funds on which
thousands of persons depend to
year.
themselves
in
Applications already on hand sustain
from residents of places under retirement."
-Instead of fitting Bevan's
5,500 are more than enough to
cover funds available in the cur- description of a "small, informal investment company,"
rent fiscal year, he said.
Not everyone who wants a committee investigators sa~~
housing loan from the FHA, Penphil's backers wanted ~
whose legal mission is to serve build the club into an
rural people unable to get credit aggressive, substantial
from other lenders, will be able conglomerate and holding
company of its own.
to get one.

Slow Sign Blo_cks Expanded
Insured Rural ontes Credit

Veterans Memorial Hospital

MEIGS THEATRE

S139

KEITH SAYRE, hardworking Wahama White Falcon
senior guard, attempts to dribble around Meigs' flashy Chip
Haggerty in the second quarter Saturday night.

housing loans insured by the
Agriculture
Department's
Farm Homes Administration
(FHA) could be made only for
homes in the open country or in
a new congressional policy of
rural towns of up to 5,500
.
.
expandmg
msured
rural population.
h ·
d't · t
d'um
ousmg ere 1 m o me 1 sized towns the Nutional Rural
Under the new amendment,
.
' ..
Housmg
· coahtlon charges.
D
t
t loans can now be made in rural
A~n.culture .
epa~ men towns of up to 10,000 population.
Farmers Home Administraoff t clals,
tnterviewed
t 1
th '
·
separa e Y, say eyre movmg tion officials have not, so far,
f ll b
th
d n't given their field offices authority
0
care u Y ecause
~Y
want to operate thetr rural to begin making loans in the esticredit program in towns which mated 700 towns falling in the
l'f b
ize but are
5,500 to 10,000 size class. In:a~rcair; tu~ba~ ~ ~haracter.
stead, they are trying first to
The broadened new credit
determine how many of these
authort'ty probably won't get
towns can really be classed as
much use
after July 1, a "rural" and thus eligible for
FHA operation.
spokesman satd.
The controversy revolves
Action on a new rule may
around a Housing Act amendcome by April or May.
ment which had not been
The FHA rural housing credit
requested
by
the
ad- program will amount in the curministration, but which won rent fiscal year to $1.420 billion,
congressional approval late last almost all in private funds backyear. Under previous law, rural ed by government guarantees.

unt~l

Task Force Plan
Contes Out Today
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The tions.
Governor's Task Force on Tax
The labor groups based most
reform was to present its rec- of their tax recommendations
ommendations to Gov. John . on a corporation tax and are
Gilligan today and they were opposed to a personal income
expected to include both a tax.
Gilligan said throughout the
personal and corporate state
income tax.
fall election campaign that the
The task force, headed by best way to raise new sources
Jacob Davis of Cincinnati, held of state revenues would be the
three weeks of public hearings use of the state personal inand then met privately for two come tax and the corporation
weeks before adopting the rec- tax.
ommendations.
Ohio AFL-CIO President CONTINUANCE SOUGHT
WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S.
Frank King and Ray Ross Regional director of the United Au- Rep. Clarence E . Miller, R-Ohio,
to Workers union called a news has asked the government to
conference for 1 p.m. today to continue the Appalachian Develoffer a "minority report'' to the opm~:on t Highway Program, the
recommendations of the task discontinuance of which would
be "tragic."
force.
Ohio has been allocated more
King was reported to have
left a private meeting of the than $86 million in federal and
task force last week when it state funds for roads under the
met at the Center of Tomorrow program. That funding would ·
at Ohio State and agreed on nut allow the roadway's complethe personal and corporate tn- tion, however, if President Nixon's re\'enue-sharing program
come taxes .
The Ohio AFL-CIO and the replaces tt after June 30.
UAW have outlined their own Miller said Appalachian a id
tax package and are attempting should be increased instead of
to get it through the legislature being withdrawn.
Miller's lOth District is in the
and possibly on the November
ballut through the use of peti- Appalachian area .

Pri ntzess Coats
Mr. Douglas Lang of the Printzess
Coat and Suit Company will be on the
2nd floor showing the new Spring
Printzess line of coats, suits and pant
suits.

Come in and let Mr. Lang help you with your
favorite style, correct si ze and fit on the 2nd
floor

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FEB. 19 AND 20
AT

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

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