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                  <text>Israeli Cabinet Caught
On Jarring's Dilemma

,.

By Umted Press International
The Israeli cabinet was
reported split today over how to
handle U.N. mediator Gunnar
V. Jarring's peace proposals.
The rift stemmed in part from
belief Egypt had gained the
diplomatic upper hand by
accepting his proposals while
Israel was ignoring them.
At the same time, a scandal
was blowing up in France over
Libya's announced intention to
use 100 French Mirage_je~ any;
way it wished-possibly against

Aroma.,,
OF

fr t&gt;:h~
BA'&lt; ~ [.)
l=ooo ~

Israel-despite a French pledge
they would not be used against
Israel. France refuses to
deliver 50 bought and paid for
Mirages to Israel.
The well-informed Tel Aviv
newspaper .Maariv said a
majority of cabinet members
led by Foreign Minister Abba
Eban wanted to continue to
ignore Jarring's proposals while
continuing to press for an
Egyptian declaration of its
readiness to sign a peace
treaty.

A minority led by Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan holds
that Israel should formally
reject the Jarring proposals
and declare that any proposal
which would call for Israeli
withdrawal to boundaries that
existed before the 1967 war
unacceptable. So far the
majority group is winning.
The Jarring proposals were
reported to ask Israel to
withdraw from most of the
Sinai Peninsula in return for
peace with Egypt and with a

U.N. force guaranteeing Israeli
passage through the Strait of
Tiran, guarded by the fortress
at Sharm El Sheikh. The Israeli
cabinet called another meeting
for Thursday to discuss them
and its belief Jarring is only a
messenger boy and not a
negotiator.
French Defense Minister
Michel Debre disclosed 14
months ago the Dassault
Aircraft Co., will deliver more
than 100 Mirages to Libya
between 1971 and 1974 under a

$90 million contract, the largest
single arms deal ever made by
France.
The contract sparked a major
controversy in France because
the
Fren
the French government in 1967
embargoed the delivery of 50
Mirage 5 fighter-bombers to
Israel although they were paid
for. They have been sitting on
French air force bases in
mothballs ever since.
Part of Israel's unhappiness
over the Jarring proposals was

that they ignored Israel's
demand that Egypt must
respond to its demands for
recognition of Israel as a nation
before there can be a specific
se ltlemen t.
"We see no reason to let any
other move divert us from
this," Foreign Minister Abba
Eban told a public meeting in
Jerusalem Monday night. "Let
Egypt say either yes to Israel's
peace question and thereby
open the door to the discussion
(Continued on Page 8)

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The lntere.u Of The Meig&amp;-Mtuon Area

THERE'S ALWAYS SOMETHING to do in a small town.
This sign at the Pomeroy Pastry Shop invites the public inside to enjoy the aroma of fresh baked goods. And, of course,
if this isn't enough, buy some!

VOL XXIII

NO. 214

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1971

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TEN CENTS

~aotian

Guerrillas
Working on Enetny
SAIGON (UPI) - Military
sources today reported the
arrival of 3,000-U .S.-trained
Laotian hill tribesmen led by
American Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) agents to harass
North Vietnamese troops in the
Ho Chi Minh Trail complex of
Laos.
The report comcided with a
U.S. command announcement
that at least 12 Americans were
killed Monday m helicopter
crashes including loss of a big
cargo chopper over Laos.
Military spokesmen also said a
U. S. j~t fir
• U
Vtetnamese ar:
the sec nd c
Mtbtary so
Lao Thung
moved into a r
Communist supply junction of
Sepone, 27 miles inside Laos
from the Pakse area, 110 miles
to the south. The guerrillas
have been recruited and armed
and led by CIA agents, the
sources said.
The guerrillas are being used
for attacks against North
Vietnamese units preparing to
face a South Vietnamese task
force pushing west along
Highway 9, the sources said.
UPI Correspondent Robert E.
Sullivan reported from Quang
Tri, South Vietnam, meanwhile,
that U.S. milif.9ry commander

a

Gen. Creighton W. Abrams and
Gen. Cao, South Vietnamese
army chief of staff, arrived for
secret meetings on the Laotian
campaign.
They were met in Quant Tri
by Lt. Gen. J. W. Sutherland
and Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam,
joint commanders of the
Laotian drive. They left by
helicopter for an undisclosed
location.
Five Gis were killed and a
sixth was missing in the crash
of a big CH47 Chinook cargo
helt p
l&gt;UPP " ting t Je South
Vtetnam
driv in Laos. It
w , t e ftrst Chml)ok lost in the
Lao an ffenstve.
It was the 15th American
helicopter reported destroyed in
the Laotian campaign although
American officers have said the
number of 'copters, shotdown
but later recovered totals
nearer 30.
Seven other Americans were
killed Monday with a UH1 Huey
helicopter on a medical evacuation mission crashed 12 miles
southeast of Hue. The crash
occurred outside the area of the
Laotian campaign.
Military spokesmen said an
F105 Wild Weasel fighterbomber carried out a ''protective reaction" strike against an
antiaircraft missile site 21

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:!:!!~:~:

T"'" ~nimal claims were
paid and routine business was
conducted by the Meigs
County Commissioners this
morning.
Lavern Jordan, Albany, Rt.
3, was paid $160 for the loss of
a heifer and steer and Mrs.
Willie Dyer, Bidwell, Rt. 1,
was paid $28 for the loss of 14
game chickens. Attending
were Commissioners Bob
Clark and Warden Ours and
Clerk Martha Chambers.
·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Search
Wl•d
l ens

Laos Thrust Hopefully
I

TWo Dividends
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The Nixon administration says the oneweek-old allied thrust into Laos has the makings of success-both
on the Indochina battlefront and the domestic political scene.
That was the word from two top White House officials who
briefed newsmen Monday on separate occasions.
One, abord Air Force One as President Nixon returned from
41,; Florida, said the military aspects of the Laotian drive were going
according to plan. He said it probably would continue until the
rainy season starts in May.
The cuts across the Ho Chi Minh Trail, he added, have forced
the Communists to resort to a timeo(!onsuming "end run" which is
disrupting their war supply line to the south.
The second official, speaking to newsmen inWashington on a
not-for-attribution basis, stressed the political assets of the
Laotian move. He said cabinet officers, White House aides and
other administration officials who have been making public
... appearances across the country believe the mood of the people is
behind the drive into the Laotian ?anhandle.
This official conceded that some students and members of antiwar groups are upset over the spread of war to Laos, but he said
the depth of their feelings does not compare to the anger triggered
by last spring's thrust into Cambodia.
And he said prominent Democrats, including potential
presidential contenders, will lose public support because they
jumped too soon to denounce the Laotian effort.
In particular he mentioned opposition from Sen. Hubert H.
• Humphrey, D-Minn.
The official said Nixon is being kept informed on what his aides
see as the public mood, and he added there are rising hopes that
the military operation may benefit both the South Vietnamese
elections of 1971, and the U.S. presidential election of 1972.
His reasoning here was that an interdicted Ho Chi Minh Trail,
plus discontinued use of the port of Sihan~ukv?le.
Will leave the Communists without a way to get supplies mto
South Vietnam-and lessen the chance they will be able to disrupt
the elections planned by the Saigon government this fall.

•

MARRIAGE LICENSES
Charles Arthur Dowell, 19, Pt.
Pleasant, and :vionta Sue
Manley, :lU, Middleport; Daniel
Reid Roush, 22, Portland, and
Patricia Anne Walker, 20,
Portland, Ht. I.

miles west of the North
Vietnamese panhandle city of
Dong Hoi Monday. U.S. military sources said the F105 fired a
Shrike missile when the plane's
electronic gear indicated the
North Vietnamese radar had
locked on nearby B52 bombers
and was preparing to fire.
The sources said it was not
known whether the U.S. missile
damaged the Communist antiaircraft. site. The strike was

MAN KILLED
NORWALK, Ohio IUPI) - A
1'\cw London man was killed
today in a car - truck collision
ncar here. The victim was
identified as Gerald Bena, 47.

Gallia County sheriff's
deputies were still looking for
additional clues today as they
widened their search for two
suspects in connection with the
alleged armed robbery and
grand larceny Monday morning
of approximately $4,565 from
two Bidwell men.
Residents of the Harrisburg
community, where the thieves
abandoned their stolen getaway vehicle, a 1968 Ford cattle
truck, are asked to notify the
sheriff's department if they saw
the truck at any time Monday
morning.
According
to
sheriff's
deputies, Virgil Fraley and
Paul Goodson, Rt. 1, Vinton,
now report a total of $4,565 was
taken at gunpoint Monday
morning . It was first reported
that $4,400 was missing.
Sgt. James E. Baldwin, investigating officer, said the
victims were in a barn at the
Fraley farm feeding stock when
accosted by an unidentified
man.
The intruder, wearing a
ladies stocking over his face,
forced Goodson to tie up Fraley.
He then tied Goodson before
· making his get-away.
The man was apparen.tly
joined by a compamon outstde
the barn. They jumped into
Fraley's true~ and .fled.
Sgt. Baldwm s~1d Goodson
m.anaged to cut htmself loose
wtth a kmfe. After gam.t~g thetr
freedom, the men notthed the
department
Sherl.ff's
.
·
Offtcers reported the truck
was found later abandoned on
the Harrisburg Bridge on Rt.

five miles north of where an
Fl05 carried out a similar
attack Sunday.
South Vietnamese troops
pushing through the Ho Chi
Minh complex Monday reported
a clash that killed eight
Communists and resulted in
four government troops killed
and 11 wounded.
The limited campaign in Laos
began Feb. 8 with South
Vietnamese troops crossing the
border in an effort to cut the
Ho Chi Minh trail and destroy
Communist arms and supplies
in bunkers 'that have escaped
six years of American bombing

PAST PRESIDENTS HONORED - The Middleport
P. .A. !Y:aged a buffet dinner Monday evening honormg past
presidents. Those attending, ! -: · · around the table, were
A

Ashley H s
Listing in

Frank L. Goebel
Dies on Monday
COOLVILLE - Frank Louis
Goebel, Coolville Route 2, area
banker and farm credit
specialist, died Monday at
Kimes Convalescent Center. He
was 61 years old and had been ill
with a brain tumor since 1964.
Mr. Goebel had been active in
banking and credit circles in
southeastern Ohio and West
Virginia since the early 1930s.
His first banking position was
with the old First National Bank
of Columbus. He later became
associated with the Ohio
Rehabilitation Corporation and
then the Rural Resettlement
Administration. The Resettlement Administration was a
federal agency organized
during the depression to extend
credit to needy farmers. Serving as district supervisor, with
headquarters in Pomeroy, he
made loans to many area
farmers who were unable to
qualify for bank or Farm Credit
Administration loans.

In 1938, he joined the Jackson
Production Credit Association,
an agency of the Farm Credit
Administration. Until late 1942,
he was the Association's field
man, making loans to farmers
in 11 southeastern Ohio counties,
including
Athens,
Washington, Meigs, Gahia,
Vinton, and Jackson counties.
During the remainder of the
war he farmed in eastern Meigs
County and worked at the West
Virginia Ordnance Works at
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
After the war he accepted a
position with the Cut Rate
Lumber Company IN Parkersburg and in 1948 he became
asso~iated with the Parkersburg National Bank. He was a
loan officer, specializing in
farm lending. He was interested
. th area's agricultural ac10
e
tivities and was a founder of the
Parkersburg Farmer's Market
and its first secretary.
In 1960 , he left the Parkers554.
.
burg National Bank to
Included tn th~ money taken organize the Tri-County Bank at
was three $100 btlls and several Coolville. He was that pank's
$5? btlls.
. .
ttl first chief executive officer and
fhe two vtcttms were ca e one of its directors. In 1962, he
buyers and were known to carry resigned his position to become
larg&lt;! sums of money wtth them.

Richard Vaughan, Mrs. Manning Kloes, Mrs. Karl Owen,
Thomas Kelly, Cash Ba:hr, Mrs. M. L. French, Mrs. David
Entsminger, Mrs. Nan MOOre, and Mrs. George Childs. See
Page 2 for arcount of meeting.

Who's Who

executive vice president of the
First State Bank at North Lima.
When that bank merged with
the Mahoning National Bank of
Youngstown several months
later he returned to Parkersburg to become vice president
of Wood County Bank where he
remained until late 1963.
After leaving Wood County
Bank, he became executive vice
president of The First Commercial Bank in Chicago. He
remained there until ill health
caused his early retirement in
1965.
He was born at Port Arthur,
Canada, Feb. 7, 1910, and spent
his very early childhood there.
His father, Frank A. Goebel, of
Marietta, had moved to Canada
to engage in the real estate and
insurance businesses. His
mother was the former Evelyn
Baldwin. Mr . Goebel's later
childhood was spent in Erie
County, New York.
Surviving are his sister, Mrs.
Madeline Kenny of Coolville;
two brothers, William H., of
Coolville and Frederick B., of
Tuppers Plains; a son, Frank
Lasher of Coolville, and five

FRANK GOEBEL
grandchildren. His wife was the
former Helen Lasher of
Rutland, who died in 1966.
The funeral will be Thursday
at St. Mary's Catholic Church,
500 Fourth Street, Marietta, at
11 a.m. Father Alvin Manni,
S.D.B., director of the Salesian
Boys Club in Columbus, will say
the requiem mass.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville, after 2
p.m. Wednesday. The Rosary
will be said at the funeral home
at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Burial will be in the family
cemetery near Coolville.

Keith Drew Ashley, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Ashley, Letart
Falls, a senior at Southern High
School, will be listed in the fifth
annual edition of Merit's Who's
Who Among American High
School Students, 1970-71.
This is the second year he has
been named for this honor.
Keith ranks first in his class of
82 students, his over-all average
being 96.12.
The listing in Who's Who also
makes him eligible for a
scholarship grant. Keith's
activities include:
All Ohio Youth Choir, Choir
and Glee Club Accompanist, 3rd
in 1970 Meigs County Historical
Society Speech Contest, 1st in
1971 Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation Essay
Contest,
Modern
Music
Masters, Scholastic Aptitude
Test, 594 Score in Math;
American
College
Test,
Composite Score of 93rd percentile; Band Librarian, Speech
Club.
Member of Subordinate and
Junior Grange, 1970 Meigs

KEITH ASHLEY
County Grange Prince, Meigs
County Historical Society, 1968
District Grange Talent Solo
Contest Winner and State
Finalist, 1970 District Grange
Talent Solo Contest Runner-up,
Maple Heights Historical
Society, Zirkle, Zerkle, Circle
Family Association, Veitch,
Veatch, Veach, Veech Family
Association, First Baptist
Church of Racine, Ohio, and
Baptist Youth Fellowship.
Keith ranks first in a class of
82 at Southern High School,
Racine. His overall average
based on 100 is 96.12.

r·~~,,p;,y~,;;'t~A;P-;:~~d-'-"1
A resolution to borrow $4,000
to pay for a tank and body for
the Pomeroy's tanker fire truck
was given its first reading by
Pomeroy Council Monday
night.
Total cost of the new tank is
$6,000. Council voted to pay
$2,000, the balance when the
resolution is given its third
reading.
The resolution stipulates that
$4,000 will be borrowed on a
short term note at six per cent
interest. The resolution also
directs that the clerk certify
that money to retire the note
will be received from a one mill
operating levy now in effect.
In other business, Pomeroy
Police Chief Jed Webster
reported that all parts have
arrived to change the meters
from five cents an hour to ten
cents an hour. Council an-

ticipates the change-over "very
soon." Webster noted that the
work probably will be done on a
weekend.
Council voted to transfer
$2,435 from the parking meter
·

Instrumentalists In
Several Meigs High School
instrumental students will go to
Athe&gt;~s Saturday, Feb. 27,
where they will take part in the
Ohio Music Education Assn.
solo and ensemble festival.
The group includes: (Flute
Trio), Becky Wright, Donna
Francis, Debbie Maples;
(Clarinet Quartet), Jo ...lien
Diehl, Irene Barnes, ~herrie
Turner,
Leanne
Sebo;
(Saxophone Quartet), Edith
Mees, Julia Hutchison, Sherrie
King, Marcy Owens; (Trumpet

dispatcher, will attend a school
of instruction on the use of the
breathalizer today and Wednesday at Marietta.
Legal'- also suggested that
council consider having all
existing ordinances codified. He
said approximately $3,500 has
been quoted as the cost of
Music Festival
having all ordinances ade upto-date, in an orderly listing and
Trio), Connie Gruesser, Connie indexed. Such a program would
Radford, Fred Rayburn; (Horn help newly -elected officials
Quartet),
Donna
Weber, learn what ordinances are "on
Melanie Hackett, Sandy Taylor, the books.·• Mayor Legar is not
Jennifer Goble; (Brass Sextet), a candidate for reelection.
Connie Gruesser, Connie Council took no action.
Radford,
Donna
Weber,
Council approved the report
Caralyn
Tracy,
Frank of the Ma or showing receipts
Girolami,
Duane
Will; of $579.80 m January.
(Trombone Trio), Caralyn
Attending were Mayor Legar,
Tracy, Mar;:~ lyn Tracy, Melanie Clerk Jane Walton, Treasurer
Burl; (Trumpet Solo) Connie Phyllis Hennessy, Councilmen
Gruesser; (Clarinet Solo l. Jo Franklin Rizer, Lucien Poulin,
Ellen Diehl, and (Saxophone Ralph Werr}, and CounSolul, Edith Mees.
cilwoman Ehna Russell.
fund to the general fund so that
payment may be made on the
new police cruiser delivered a
week ago.
Mayor Charles Legar observed that Edith Sisson, night

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 16, 1971

Genetic Problems Pointed Out
Mrs. 0. A. Martin of
Pomeroy, first demi chapeau
premiere of Ohio Departemental Eight and Forty, and
Mrs. Virgil Walker of Meigs
Salon 702, took part in 1971
Regional Conference of the
National Cystic Fibrosis
Research Foundation held in
Columbus over the weekend.
Both Mrs. Martin and Mrs .
Walker have been active locally
in raismg funds for cystic
fibrosis treatment and research
through the Meigs County
Salon.
Approximately 200 persons
from an eight-state area attended the regional conference
which had as its theme
''Learning to live." It was
announced that Hugh O'Brien
will be the national chairman
again this year and Kathy
Frazier of Michigan has been
selected the 1971 poster child.
Mrs. Martin spoke at the conference on the role of the Eight

Surprise Party
Given Dick Owen
A surprise party was held
Saturday afternoon at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owen
honoring their son, Dick, on his
12th birthday.
Sloppy Joes, potato chips, soft
drinks, cake and ice cream
were served to the guests, Tim
Thomas, Mick Davenport,
Steve Bachner, Bruce Fisher,
Mitchell Meadows, Jeff Beaver,
Crenson Pratt, Bob Powers,
Don Stivers, and Kenny Roush.
Games were played with
prizes going to the winners, and
gifts were presented to the
honored guest.

and Forty in fund raising and in
assistance with community
cystic fibrosis children.
Keynote speaker for the
conference was Robert McCreery, president of the
National Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation, who stressed the
importance of research to
pinpoint the cause of the genetic
problem and eventually prevent

Nazarene
Group Met
Music, meditations and
scripture highlighted a recent
meeting of the Nazarene World
Missionary Society of the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene.
Group singing of My Jesus I
Love You, He Keeps Me
Singing, and Shelter in the Time
of Storm, opened the meeting
conducted by Mrs. Marjorie
Taylor. The offeratory prayer
was given by Mrs. Taylor with
Timmy Miller accepting the
offering. Mrs. Lewis Ellis read
the scripture and there was
prayer by Mrs. Lucille
Harrison.
Mrs. Harrison and Mrs.
Taylor gave readings . It was
noted that the alabaster boxes
will be opened at the Sunday
morning service. Attending
besides those named were the
Rev. and Mrs. Audrey Miller,
Lewis Ellis, Teresa Ellis, Mrs.
Mildred Nash and Trent and
Lisa, Patricia, Michael, Bill,
Bonnie and Lorene Braham,
Joe Posey, Ann Fridley, John
Harrison, Paul, David, Danny,
and Timmy Miller.

New Haven Social Events
GARDEN CLUB
The Nehaclima Garden Club
met at the Alex-Quillen
Memorial Building for \'ts
regular monthly meeting with
]ilrs. Donald Bumgardner,
president, presiding. They
opened with the singing of the
club song, the pledge to the flag
and the club collect
Mrs . Haro d Bumgarner
mtroduced th
speaker,
U S Soil
Mr. John Coo
Conservatior:,
In Mason
County. Mr. Cooper showed
slides of various farm land,
types of plowing, the crops, etc.
in Mason County. Also slides of
wandering streams and how the
department has corrected this,
of strip mining and how they are
trying to get vegetation to grow
on this land. It was a very interesting program on the use of
our land here in Mason County.
The roll call was answered
with "Your Suggestion for ·
Conservation . " Follqwing
regular reports the State
Convention to be held at the
Greenbrier Hotel at White
Sulphur Springs in March was
announced.
Mrs. Bumgardner appointed
Mrs. John Thorne to provide the
table arrangement for the New
Haven PTA meeting for
February. The club provides an
arrangement each month.
Mrs . E . A. Schaekel's
resignation from the membership of the club was accepted.
Mrs.
Harold
Bumgarner and Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner will attend a
meeting at Hartford Grade
School on Sunday to help select
officers for the Mason County
Council of Garden Clubs and to
help make the Flower Show
schedule for the Mason County
Fair, this is a project of the
County Council. Clubs in the
Council along with the
Nehaclima are The New Haven
Garden Club, The Tu-Endie-Wei
Garden Club, and the Henderson Garden Club.
:viembers voted to sponsor the
canvass of door to door for the
Heart Fund for New Haven.
The hostesses, Mrs. George
Burns and Mrs Lloyd Hoffman,
served refreshments to Mrs.
Carroll Adams, Jr., :virs. Phil
Batey, Mrs. Don Bumgardner,
Mrs. Harold Bumgarner, Mrs.
David Fields, Jr., Mrs . William
Gibbs, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs.
James N. Roush, and Mrs . John
Thorne .
BAND BOOSTERS
The Wa hama Band Boosters
met for their regular monthly
meeting in the new Band Room
at Wah am a. •Those attending
toured the buildmg prior to the
meeting .
James Hart, president,
pres1ded at the meeting at
which time members voted to
purchase office equipment for
the Band Houm, desk file
cabinets and other furnishmgs.
They also vo ted to purchase
sl]('lvmg for the storing of the
instruments in the outer room,
anddrapesfortllt'W!fld!JWS. Mr.

/

Gerald
Simmons,
Band
Director, Robert Gilmore,
treasurer, and James Hart
were appointed to purchase the
office furnishings and shelves.
Application was made to
secure the franchise for the
Junior Miss Pageant next year.
It was announced that from the
winners of the County Pageant
competing in the State Pageant
that Chetty Hayes had won the
second runnerup and the Talent
Award and Teresa Lanh~m won
the Scholarship Award. The
organizatiOn wishes to thank all
whe helped to make this year's
pageant a success, the Band
Boosters and many who are not
Boosters and the many members of the Jaycees from
Pomeroy who spent many hours
helping.
Application was made for a
stand at the Arts and Craft Fair
at Cedar Lakes in July and for a
stand at the Mason County Fair.
The organization voted to
purchase a new oboe horn for
the band. The annual spaghetti
dinner will be held on Friday,
February 19th.
LUTHERAN WOMEN
The Esther and Rebecca
Circles met for their regular
monthly meetings. They will
hold ajointmeetingonSunday,
February 21, at the church with
the Esther Circle as hostess.
The program for this will be
slides of the Rocky Boy Indian
Mission.
The Esther Circle met on
Tuesday evening with Mrs.
John F. Roush as hostess. Mrs.
Douglas Singer presented the
program "Jehovah's Witnesses" taken from the study
book , "Lutherans and Other
Denominations." Others attending were Mrs. Harry
Layne, Mrs. David Roush, Mrs.
John Thorne, Mrs. James Moy.
The Rebecca Circle met on
Wednesday afternoon with Mrs.
William Powell as hostess . The
program was presented by Mrs .
John Fry on the first chapter of
the study book on the Ministry
of Paul. Scripture lessons were
read by Mrs . B. R. Vance .
Others attending were Mrs . J.
V. McGrew, Mrs . Otto Grimm,
Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr. and
Mrs . F:dna Burris.
BIBLE STUDY
The New Haven First Church
of God Missionary Society is
holding a Bible Study. They
have started the meeting with
the study of the Book of J ames.
They are also discussing the
book "A Functioning Faith ."
Orpha Fields served as the
leader.
The purpose of this is to
promote more Bible readings
among their members. The first
meeting was held at the home of
Mrs . David Fields, Jr . Those
&lt;lllending were Iva Capehart,
Sue F:rwin, Freda Turley ,
Bcmme Fields, Alma Luicart,
Nelhe Dudding, Faye Carpenter
and Orpha Fields.
('JTIZENS MF:ET
TIH·
St nior
Citrzens
/\s~oc 1&lt;111.,n c,f l{cllred Persons

its appearance.
He described cystic fibrosis
as a hereditary disease in which
the body produces excessive
mucous together with the
growth of fibroid tissue usually
in the lungs or pancreas. He
said it used to be that most of its
victims were dead before they
reached five years old but that
through research of the foundation and subsequent treatment, life expectancy is now in
the 20s.
The main job of the Foundation, McCreery said, is to
eliminate the disease through
control of the defective genes
which cause it. One out of every
20 persons today is a c~rrier of
the gene which causes the
disease and when two carriers
marry and reproduce, the child
is a victim.
McCreery predicted a genetic
plague unless more research is
done to eliminate the hereditary
diseases. He referred to results
of the December meeting of the
National Institute of Health,
indicating that about 25 per cent
of people in hospitals today are
there because of genetic
diseases.
It is happening, the national
president said, because
medical science is keeping
people with genetic diseases
alive
and
they
are
reproducing children with the
same diseases.
Among the many speakers at
the conference were three
young people, all victims of
cystic fibrosis. Willard Bernbaum, a student at Ohio State
University, discussed his
problems when he left home
where his parents did the
necessary "chest clapping" to
bring the mucous up; Miss
Becky Pettit, employed in an

DINNER FRIDAY
MASON - The Wahama
Band Boosters will sponsor a
Spaghetti Dinner on Friday,
Feb. 19, at the Wahama High
School Cafeteria beginning at
5 p.m. until 8 p.m. Cost is
$1.25 for adults and 75 cents
for children. The menu is
spaghetti with meat sauce.
cole slaw, homemade hot
rolls. snowball cake, coffee or
iced tea. You may purchase
your tickets in advance from
any band student or at the
door.
of the Bend Area met at the New
Haven Library Building for a
covered dish dinner on
February 3 at 11 : 30 a.m.
Twenty-nine members and
guests attended.
George Hester presided at the
meeting. He thanked the group
and wanted to thank all who
helped with the publicity of the
group and their activities. It
was voted to change the
business m eeting from the first
Wednesd ay to the second
Wednesday of each month.
The men of the group are
making plans to repair furniture and small appliances.
Later these items will be offered for sale.
Mrs. Lawrence Gerlach, Jr.,
chairman of the Heart Fund
Association, spoke to the group
about the high death rate from
heart disease and about the
work the Heart Association is
trying to accomplish. She
stressed the great need for
volunteer help. Mrs . Gerlach
said that films were available
through the Heart Fund
Association and could be shown
to the group on request. The
members stuffed envelopes for
the Heart Fund Association.
Mrs . Edith Fox announced
that another effort was being
made to secure volunteer help
for Lakin State Hospital.
The remainder of the afternoon was spent in sewing
quilt blocks, other sewing
projects, working on valentines
and Easter baskets for
hospitals.

MOTHER VISITED
Mr. and Mrs . Ivan Watson of
Sterling Heights, Mich . enroute
home from Camp Lee, Va .,
stopped here to visit her
mother, Mrs. Reed Eynon,
Morning Star , a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center. They
also visited his parents, Mr . and
Mrs. Owen Watson of Racine.

advertising
agency
in
Columbus, talked on, "So I'm
Working;" and Robert Moore, a
senior at the Columbus Art
Design School, used "So I Am
Married," as his topic,
discussing the effects of his
disease on marriage.
Dr. Gordon Young, Columbus
Children's Hospital, spoke on
clinical
observation
and
procedures; Dr. Joseph Todd,
director of the Department of
Special Education in Ohio,
talked on child behavior and the
mental outlook of the cystic
fibrosis child, and Dr. Joseph
Pomasheski, medical director
at the Batelle Institute, commented on air pollution and the
contribution of cigarettes.
Another speaker was Dr.
Virginia Vivian, Ohio State
University economics department, who commented on
children and food.
Displayed at the meeting
were electric nebulizers, mist
tents, and the newly developed
"precussion pac," a jacket type
piece of equipment which
functions as a chest clapper.
Fund raising was discussed
by Mrs. Phoebe Fickert and a
film on progress in research
was shown by Dr. Guilo
Beroera, chairman of the
Department of Pediatrics,
Hahneman Medical College and
Hospital at Philadelphia. It was
reported that funds for research
has grown 14 per cent over the
past five years and that last
year reached $2,403,000.
August Simmons of Columbus, field representative for the
foundation, who has appeared
as speaker at several Meigs
County meetings, and Don
Heffner, president of the
Central Ohio Chapter, arranged
the convention.

Mrs. Darby
is Honored
Mrs. Donna Darby, 54, a
Lakin State Hospital resident
was honored Sunday with a
birthday dinner party by the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
Following the dinner held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Weeks, a decorated cake and
gifts were presented to Mrs.
Darby who has been "adopted"
by the Society.
The
program
included
scripture from I Corinthians
and a meditation "Good News
for Modern Men" by Mrs.
Claude Husted, a duet, ''Love Is
Why" by Mrs. Don Hunnel and
Mrs. William Airson, and a
poem entitled "Love" by Mrs.
Arthur Evans. Group singing of
"Love Lifted Me" and prayer
by Mrs. Thomas Bentz in a
friendship circle concluded the
program.
Attending were Mrs. Thomas
Bowen and Mrs. William
Pullins, guests, Mrs. Selim
Blazewicz, Mrs. Airson and
Dollie, Mrs. Beulah utterbach,
Mrs. Frieda Leiving, Patty
Edwards, Mrs. Evans, Mrs.
Hunnel, Mrs. Ed Bowen, Mrs.
Herbert Dixon, Mrs. Husted,
Mrs. Bentz, Laura Ohlinger,
and Mrs. Weeks.

Winners of Contest
Rewarded by Church
Prizes in the "race around
space" attendance contest of
the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene Sunday School were
awarded Sunday morning by
the Rev. Audrey Miller, pastor.
Receiving awards were the
Rev . and Mrs. Miller, Paul,
Danny, and Timmy, Mrs .
Mildred Nash, Lisa and Trent,
Mark Davis, Don Geary, Jeff
Laudermilt, Teresa Ellis, Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Ellis, Max
Geary, Gregg Laudermilt,
Tammy and Terry McDaniel,
and Ann Fridley.

--~1 Past Presidents are Honored
~

Calendar

l

Recogmtion of past presidents highlighted the Founder 's Day program of the
Middleport PTA Monday night.
As Mrs. Larry Spencer,
president, introduced the nine
past presidents present for the
observance, a musical salute to
the time they served was given
by a chorus of third and fourth
graders.
The past presidents were
feted at a buffet dinner in the
Meigs Junior High School
cafeteria
preceding
the
meeting. In the group were Mrs.
M. L. French, 1936-37; Mrs.
David Entsminger, 1938-40;
Mrs. Nan Moore, 1940-41; Mrs.
Karl Owen, 1942-43; Mrs.
George Childs, 1945-46; Cash
Bahr,
1955-56Richard
Vaughan' 1963-64 and 196869; Thomas Kelly , 1966-67;

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,
6:30 p.m. dinner at the church
Tuesday.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday at Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport.
SALISBURY P.T.A. Tuesday,
Feb. 16, 7:30p.m. at the school;
Mrs. Wendell Hoover to give
devotions; Founder's Day to be
observed, past presidents to be
honored. Refreshments.
A St. Valentine's Day dinner
PUBLIC MEETING at
party with husbands and
Trinity Church, Pomeroy, by
members of the men's class as
Meigs Heart Assn ., with Dr. guests, was given Friday night
Charles Meckstroth, Columbus
by the Happy Hustler's Class at
heart specialist, speaking, 7:30 the Wesleyan United Methodist
p.m.
Church in Racine.
AUXILIARY of Rutland Fire
The valentine motif was
Department, 7:30 tonight at fire
carried out in the social room
house.
decorations by Mrs. Ruth Wolfe
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
and the table centerpiece was
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, special
two heart-shaped cakes served
session, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.;
following the dinner in obwork in EA Degree.
servance of the birthdays of
RACINE Cub Scout Pack 243
Curtis Johnson , Ora Hill, and
annual blue and gold banquet,
7:30 tonight at Racine First
Baptist Church social rooms.
AUXILIARY, Rutland
Vol un leer Firemen, 7:30
Tuesday night at the hall.
WEDNESDAY
WASHINGTON- Saying that
MIDDLEPORT
Literary expanded flexibility would be in
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home the best national interest, lOth
of Mrs. C. M. Hennessy; Mrs. District Representative
Rodney Downing to review Clarence E. Miller today urged
"Leonard
Bernstein"; the Senate Public Works
response, an opera.
Conunittee to grant the ApWSCS,
FOREST
Run palachian Regional ComMethodist Church, 7:30 p .m. mission broader authority to
Wednesday, home of Mrs. Rose deal directly with the social,
Genheimer.
economical and physical
ADULT FARMER meeting, problems characteristic of
Southern High School, Racine, 8 Appalachia America.
p.m. Wednesday. Speakers,
In testimony submitted
Dick Sterrett, Production before the Senate Conunittee,
Credit Assn., and Clyde Walker Miller said that "there is no
of Federal Land Bank.
disputing the fact that in all too
PAST
PRESIDENTS , many instances the mountain
American Leg~11n Auxiliary, counties ... have been orphans.''
Drew Webster Post 39, home of
"The one great virtu of the
Mrs. J. M. Thornton, Wed- Appalachian Regional
nesday, 7:30p.m.
Development Program has
SYRACUSE THIRD Wed- been that through the unique
nesday Homemakers Club, political partnership of the
Wednesday, 10 a.m. regular federal government, the states,
meeting place. Potluck at noon. and the localities, these
Each to take something to paint grievances of the past have
with textile paints.
been remedied and we are now
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter 17, making headway in meeting our
Ohio Association of Public needs
and solving our
School Employes, 7:30 p.m. problems," Miller continued.
Wednesday night at the Mid- In his testimony, Miller said
dleport Junior .t:Iigh School. that the Appalachian Highway
OAPSE field man will be which cuts across the lOth
present. Refreshments will be District should prove to be a
served and a door prize will be springboard for moving Apawarded.
palachia Ohio out of economic
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, isolation.
Royal and Select Masters,
"Wear: getting r~ady for the
stated meeting, Wednesday, e~pectedun~actwhiCh the new
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic highw~y w1ll have by atTemple· following it Pomeroy temptmg to upgrade the
Chapter' 80 Royal Ar~h Masons abilities of our work force
mark ma~ter degree to b~ throug~ ~pr~ved, heal~ and
conferred in full form.
educatiOn, Miller s testunony
THURSDAY
said.
PUBLIC STEAK dinner
Miller cited the positive
Thursday, beginning 5:30 p.m.: educational progress realized in
Chester Grade School spon- Southeastern Ohio as the result
sored by Chester Fire Depart- of federal-state-local copment; prepared and served by peration mad~ possible under
firemen's auxiliary.
the Appalachian Development
ROCK SPRINGS Better concept.
Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Ttiurs~ Miller said that enrollment at
day, home of Mrs. William
Folmer.

and Mrs. Manning Kloes, 196970.
Tables for the dinner were
decorated with daisy floral
pieces flanked by gold tapers. A
large cake was inscnbed
"Congratulations to the Past
Pr.esidents, 1920-1971." The
dinner was prepared by the
PTA executive commmittee
with the assist of Mrs. Grace
Abbott, and served by Judy
Owen, Beth Vaughan, Janet
Neal, and Venita Gibbs of the
Middleport Cadette Troop.
Besides the past presidents
others at the dinner were
executive board members, Mrs.
Spencer, president; Mrs. Max
Donahue, first vice president;
Mrs. Stanley Doss, second vice
president;
Mrs.
Robert
Richardson, treasurer; Mrs.
Donald Reuter, Mrs. Richard

•

Vaughan, Mrs. Charles Russell,
Mrs. Selwyn Smith, Mrs.
Dwight Wallace, and Mrs.
Hobert Thomas . Also attending
were husbands and wives of
executive board members and
past presidents, Selwyn Smith,
Larry Spencer, Charles Russell,
Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mrs. Tom
Kelly, and Karl Owen.
The PTA meeting was opened
with the pledge to the flag by
Brownie Troop 174 and their
leaders, Mrs. Bobby Payne and
Mrs. David Zirkle. Devotions
were given by the Rev. Audrey
Miller, pastor of the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene . Mrs.
Charles Russell's fourth grade
won the attendance awar
First grade room mothers
served Kool-Aid and cookies.

I

Church Class is Party Host
Mrs. Mattie Circle. Grace for
the dinner attended by 26 was
given by the Rev. Dale McClurg.,
Mrs. Bertha Spencer was
program chairman. Prayer was
by Clifford Morris, scripture
from Second Chronicles and St.
Matthew was read by Mrs.
Laura Watson, president, and
Mrs. Circle and Mrs. Harry
Willford sang a duet. A skit,
"Valentines of Long Ago" was
presented by Mr . and Mrs.
Ernest Wingett.
Readings included "Tales of

February" by Mrs. Lavinia
Simpson, "Lincoln When r
Boy" by Mrs. Circle and "The
Bread of Life," by Mrs. Bertha
Johnson. Mrs. Spencer mentioned several famous persons
born in February including
Edison, McCormick, Buffalo
Bill, Susan B. Anthony. A team
relay between the men and
women was held with the men
losing. A reading, "Close the
Ledger" by Mrs. Hill, andlt
prayer by Mrs. Johnson, concluded the meeting.

AR C Supported by Miller

CLASS 12, HEATH United
Methodist Church, 7:30p.m. at
the church . Program by Mrs.
John Bechtle, devotions by Miss
Nellie Zerkle.
PHILATHEA
SOCIETY,
Middleport Church of Christ at
the church, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
Mrs. Paul Winn to give program
honoring past presidents. Those
attending to take a kitchen
towel for the new kit&lt;:hen.
MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday American Legion
hall, Pomeroy. Husbands' Night
to be observed with "A Night at
Herald's Club" as theme . Mrs.
Eugene Houdashelt, Mrs. Don
Mullen to handle decorations;
hostesses, Mrs. Louis Osborne,
Mrs Susie Blaker, Mrs. Kenne th Scites, Mrs. Don Thomas.
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, home of Mrs. William
Airs on, 7:30 Thursday night.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club of
Meigs County, Thursday, 7: 30
p.m. club house in Racine .
Refreshments .
FRIDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30p.m. Friday at the
home of Mrs. Robert Lewis.

PARTY ENJOYED
Mr . and Mrs . George
Meinhart, Mr. and Mrs . E. F .
Robinson, Mr . and Mrs. Aaron
Za hl, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar A.
Canaday, and Dr . and Mrs.
Raymond Boice enjoyed a St.
Valentine's Day dinner party
Sunday evening at the Martin
Restaurant. The valentine motif
was carried out in the table
decorations. Organ music was
SON VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. George Horak of provided by Armond Turley.
Pomeroy visited their son, the
Rev. Fr. Donald Horak at the
IN PAGEANT
St. Joseph Preparatory School,
Velvet Swisher and Paula
Vienna. W Va. on his birthday Kloes partic1pated as •·youth of
anniversary Sunday . Mrs. today·• in the pageant, Our
Horak is recuperating from Precious American Heritage,
The Inte1
national Cnmmal
s urgery at the Riverside presented at the Bradbury PTA Police
Organization
( nter1
Mctlwd1s l Hospital on Dec. 14 meeting Thursday night. Their pol 1 t•onsists of 98 nat ions
but will remain in a leg cast for Tli;imes were unintentionally joirwJ together m a fi g ht
t·cgllt more weeks.
omilled from the repor·t .
&lt;~gains! crime

GRANDSON HONORED
A slumber party was held
Saturday night in the recreation
room of Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Canaday
honoring
their
grandson, Mitchell, on his 13th
birthday
anniversary.
Preceding the party, the boys
went to the Skate-a-way Rink.
Pizza and pop were served by
Mrs. Canaday and Mrs. Paul
Chapman. Guests were Kevin
Betzing and Matthew Dillard.

the two major vocational and
teclmical education centers in
Southeastern Ohio has been so
enthusiastic that the nearly-new
facilities are now not large
NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven United Methodist
Church held a family covered
dish dinner in Scott Memorial
Hall
Sunday
evening,
followed by a meeting in the
sanctuary when families
were informed of the part
that each member could have
in the forthcoming Lenten
programs . After special
mu ic by t e adult choir, a
movie, "Conversion Plus,"
was shown by the pastor, J.
William DeMoss. The church
will be holding evangelistic
services from March 21
through March 28.

IN PORTSMOUTH
Richard Duckworth, Mrs.
Michael Zirkle, Mrs. Dwight
Wallace and the Rev. Russell
Lester, pas tor of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church, are in Portsmouth
today attending the Scioto
Presbytery meeting.

REVIVAL SET
A revival will be held at the
Faith Tabernacle on Bailey Run
Road beginning Monday, March
1. Services will be held at 7:30
each evening for an indefinite
period, Clair R. Rubble, elder,
announced.

Patented Cement
Portland cement . was pat·
ented by Joseph Aspdin in
1824. Aspdin envisioned that
the cement products would
r e s e m b 1 e s t o n e from a
quarry at Portland, England.

enough to accommodate all
those desiring to attend the
schools.
"The
Tri-County Joint
Vocational High School and
Technical
Institute
at
Nelsonville has been in
operation for two years. The
school was planned for 300
~leventh and twelfth grade
students. The first year, 450
enrolled and the second year,
600."
Miller said that the courseoffered to both young people
and adults at the area
vocational
schools
were
practical and relevant.
"These centers are playmg a
key role in our development
plans for the area," he said.
Miller told the Public Works
Conunittee that emphasis on
improving health care in Ap
palachia has been just as great
as that placed on upgrading
highway
arteries
and
educational levels.
· To reverse a serious trend in
the loss of area doctors by
improving regional health care
programs and facilities, the
Ohio Valley Health Foundation,
which is supported with Appalachian funds, has quar. .
terbacked dynamic new approaches to the Appalachian
medical crisis.
Miller said that "eight
hospitals have been constructed
in Southeastern Ohio or are
nearing completion along with
facilities for extended care and
outreach."
In addition, Miller outlined
ARC assistance to construction, \
industrial and recreational
projects in the Ohio Valley
saying that such projects
greatly increase the economic
growth potential for the entire
Appalachia region.
"It would be tragic to stop
these efforts just as they are
getting started," Miller said.
"If anything, they should be ....
encouraged and expanded."

BERRY'S WORlD

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
P u oI ish e d d a i I y except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publi shing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone
992 -2156, Editorial Phone 9922157 .
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National
advertising
representative
Bottinelli ,
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st , New York Ci ty , New York .
Subscription
rates :
Delivered by carrrer where
availab le 50 cents per week ;
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Six months $7 . 25 . Three
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- --- -- -

•
"This isn't my ball, but I'm go111g t~ play it anyway.'"

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

�:J- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.16, 1971

the Sports Desk

•

Pirates Defeat Big Blacks

u ..

.,

•

by Chet Tannehill
·'~·~·~

Gene Caddes of the UPI did an attractive sketch today of
Darrell Hedric, Miami University's first year head basketball
coach. Hedric, whose athletic director is Dick Shrider, well known
in southeastern Ohio as a banquet speaker and one-time coach of
strong Gallia Academy basketball and baseball teams, deserves
extra lineage in sports columns. His Redskins all but have
wrapped up (Western Michigan has an arithmetic chance at a
piece of it) the Mid-American title.
According to Caddes, Hedric refuses to take more than a

"',,

~

-·
•
\11 1

-

...

, ,,

'""

•

small share of the credit for the Redskins' success. Hedric took
over the Miami job 'when Tates Locke went to Clemson, inheriting
the job of rebuilding his entire front line. But he has molded a 14-4
record so far.
"We lost our first team pivot and our top three forwards,"
Hedric said. "But our returnees came through and so have all our
question marks. It's very seldom you get all your questions answered.
"It's those guys out there on the floor who have really done
the job. They know their limitations. They get all they can out of
their size and they don't care who scores." Hedric's question
marks included Tom Roberts and Steve Handy, who share the
pivot position.
"They make us two good pivot men," Hedric said, "and we
don't lose anything no matter which one plays." Roberts, a 6-7
junior, was one of two players tabbed by Hedric as the most
surprising, the other being sophomore forward Larry Garloch.
Handy, the biggest man on the squad at 6-10, started the first
three games, but Hedric believes he is more valuable coming off
the bench.
Returning from last year's team were guards Tim Meyer,
Mike Wren, Gerry Sears and Darrel Dunlap, and Hedric said
"they have really done the job."
Dunlap, at 6-2, was moved to forward by Hedric, who said,
"he's just been super. He held Ken Kowall to five points in the
second half Saturday and Kowall's one of the finest in the league . "
Hedriccredited Dunlap's high school coach, Ben Waterman, witll
teaching him his defensive skills and also being at Miami.
He said Waterman, now freshman coach at Ohio State, ''felt
we play the type of ball here that best suits Dunlap." But Hedric
said his team's style of play will change in the coming years.
"We're not fastbreaking as much as we would like to or as
much as we will in the future," Hedric said, "but you have to
remember these kids were recruited for this type of game.
"I believe in the fast break and we'll open up our game a lot
more in the future, but you still have to play defense. I think
defense is the most consistent phase of the game. There will be
those nights when the ball won't go in the basket for you, but if you
keep playing defense, you can hang in there."
Hedric, whose squad is 7-1 in the Mid-American Conference
with two games remaining at home, believes his biggest contribution has been in keeping a good player-coach relationship.
"They have to want to play for you," he said, "and we've had a
good effort every night. Anything less and we have problems. 1\ny
team sport is a psychological game and you've got to get the kids
up. I think that's pretty much been the story of our team this

year."

Tony Glassburn's two field
goals and two crucial free
throws by substitute Pat Stout,
5-8 junior guard in the closing
minutes of the fourth period led
the North Gallia Pirates to a 5753 victory over Coach Jimmy
Joe Wedge's host Big Blacks
Monday night.

Following Stout 's charity
tosses, Coach Paul Aikman's
powerful Pirates stalled the ball
the rest of the contest.
The win, North Gallia 's sixth
straight, upped the Pirates
season record at 12-3. North
Gallia, co-champs with the
Eastern Eagles in the Southern

Valley Athletic Conference, will
meet Southwestern Friday
night in the op,ening round of the
47th annual Gallia County Cage
Tournament on their home
court.
Host Pt. Pleasant jumped into
a 15-10 advantage after the
initial mainly due to the

shooting of Allen Underwood.
The Pir ates, however, came on
strong in the secoJld period with
a 19 point effort to take a 29-27
lead at ha lftime.
Arthur Clark , 6-5 junior
center, canned 10 of his 22 points
during the se c ond period
uprising .

The Big Blacks, behind the
scor ing punch provided by Rody
Harden and Brad Painter
former Pirate, outscored th~
visitors, 19-16 in the third period
for a 46-45 lead going into the
final eight minutes of action.
Larry Justus was the Pirates'
top rebounder with 15 and

Gators Upset Vols, 56-55
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
The Florida Gators have
learned to bite and apparently
they like the taste.
Florida got its first taste of
upset Saturday night with an
victory over Kentucky and
Monday night the Gators
victimized 15th-ranked Tennessee, 56-55.
Earl Findley tipped in a

rebound with one second left to
give Florida its upset over the
Volunteers. Tennessee pulled
ahead 55-54 before Findley
tipped in a shot by Tony Miller'
the Gators' leading scorer with
14 points.
Jimmy England , Tennessee's
high-scoring guard, was held to
only eight points by Florida's
Jerry Hoover. Gary Waddell
and Findley had 12 points each

Nolan 12th Red
To Sign Contract
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds announced today Gary Nolan, the baseball
team's second winningest pitcher last season, has signed his
contract, bringing to 12 the
number under contract.
Terms of the contract were
not disclosed.
Cincinnati pitchers and
catchers are to report to the
Tampa, Fla., spring training
camp Friday with the first
workout schedule Saturday.
The rest of the Reds are to
report Feb. 24.
SIL

C

N~~~OORAKC(HUPI)-N

t·
I
a wna
~asketball Association Commisswner Walter Kennedy announced Monday .that a poll will
be taken to select one man as
the silver anniversary coach of
the previously selected Silver
Anniversary team.

The 22-year-old righthanded
Nolan posted an 18-7 record and
a .326 earned run average in
1970. His 18 wins last year
followed arm trouble in 1968 and
1969. He worked 250 innings in
the regular 1970 season and 18
more in Pennant and World
Series play.
Manager Sparky Anderson
describes Nolan's changeup as
"the best in baseball."
ROD IN OPEN
SYDNEY (UPI)- Rod Laver
will be one of 32 contract
professionals participating in
the Australian tennis open, to
be held at White City Stadium,
March 7-14.
COACH DIES
PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) Wallace Ford Johnson, former
nationally-ranked tennis star
and coach at the University of
Pennsylvania, died Monday at
the age of 81.

. OSU Five At Wisconsin Tonight

to help the Florida attack while
soph Lloyd Richardson was
high man for the Vols with 20.
In other action involving top
20 teams, fifth-ranked Kansas
edged Oklahoma 71-68, Jacksonville (No . 6) ripped Florida
State 90-79, Western Kentucky
(No.7) blasted East Tennessee ·
83-65, 14th-ranked Kentucky
downed Georgia 107-95, Denver
upset 16th-ranked Utah State.

Coaches at Meigs Junior
High School are interested in
sponsoring an eighth grade
basketball tournament, but
they need teams.
Interested school officials
are invited to call either
Russell Moore or Marvin
McKelvey at 614-992-3058 or at
the junior high school.
The tournament would be
either a six or eighth-team
event and held Feb. 23, 24, 25
and 27 ..

96-74 and Notre Dame (No . 20)
clobbered Valparaiso 100-75.
Dave Robisch's 18-point performan helped Kansas beat
Oklahoma, the Jayhawks' 19th
victory in 20 games and Artis
Gilmore had 22 points and
sparked a second-half rally that
helped Jacksonville beat Florida State. The Seminoles pulled

CHANGES MADE
Two changes have been made
in the Southern District fifth
and sixth grade basketball
schedule. Wednesday Racine
will play Syracuse and Wednesday, Feb. 24, Letart will play
Syracuse. All games are played
a t Southern Junior High School
in Racine beginning at 7 p.m.

College Ratings

NEW
YORK
( UPIJ- T he
United Press In ternati onal top
20 college basketball teams
with num ber of fi rst place
v otes and won -lost r ecords in
par en theses. (el event
week ,
i ncludes gam es played t hrough
ABA Standings
Sunday, F eb. 14) .
By United Press International
. . . Team
Points
East
l.UCLA ( 17) ( 18 l)
318
w. L. Pet. GB 2. Mar q uette ( 13) (20-0 ) 298
Virginia
43 19 .694 ...
3. Souther n Ca l (3) ( 18-ll 276
Kentucky
34 30 .531 10
227
4. Pennsy lvania ( 20-0)
New York
28 34 .452 15
5. Kansas ( 1) (18-1)
214
Carolina
27 35 .435 16
6. Jacksonv il le ( 19·2 )
151
Floridians
28 39 .418 17112
7. Weste r n Kentuck y ( 16-4) 58
Pittsburgh
26 39 .400 181/2
8. Michigan ( 13-4)
51
West
49
9. South Ca r olina (14·4)
W. L. Pet. GB 10. Nor th Carol ina (16-3)
45
Utah
42 20 .677 ...
11. LaSalle (1 7-2)
41
Indiana
39 21 .650 2
12. Duquesne ( 172)
31
Memphis
36 28 .563 7
13. For d ham (18-1)
29
1
Denver
22 39 .36 1 19 /2 14. Ken tucky (16-4)
14
Texas
20 41 .328 21'12 15. Te nnessee ( 16-4 )
12
Monday's Results
10
16. U tah St. ( 19-4)
Texas 119 I nd iana 118
17. Louisville ( 15-4)
9
New York 98 Utah 89
18. ( tie) Villanova (18-6)
8
(Only games sc hedu led )
8
( ti e) Houston (17-4)
Tuesday's Games
20. Notre Dame ( 13 6)
7
M emph is at Denver
Others receiv ing fi ve or more
(Only game scheduled)
poi n t s- Brigha m Y o u r g .

to within a point of Jacksonville
at 74-73 with six minutes to go
before Gilmore scored 10 of his
team's next 14 points.
Jim McDaniels had 26 points
and 23 rebounds as Western
Kentucky romp~d past East
Tennessee and Kentucky, led by
Tom Payne's 34 points, held off
a late Georgia rally to stop the
bulldogs.
Willie Cherry fied in 32 points
as ·Denver stunned Utah State
and racked up its
nth
consecutive victory, a school
record, while Austin Carr had
46 points and Collis Jones hit
for 25 as Notre Dame
outclassed Valparaiso.
Elsewhere, Alabama edged
Vanderbilt 75-74 , Louisiana
State beat Auburn 114-94,
Missouri ripped Iowa State 8066 and Kentucky State, the No.
1 small college team, shelled
Bellarmine 108-78.
Alan House's free throw after
the final buzzer gave Alabama
its upset victory over Vanderbilt and LSU, behind a 29-point
effort by Gary Simpson,
stopped Auburn. John Brown
and Henry Smith combined for
45 points as Missouri beat Iowa
State and Travis Grant scored
40 points to lift Kentucky State
past Bellarmine.

SHIRT

.,.

....

The Bucks' 6-1 in the conference, will play home games
against Northwestern on Saturday and Iowa next Tuesday,
then go to Michigan Feb. 27 and
finish up the season with
Minnesota March 2, Northwest-

College Results Market Report

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By United Press International
East
Buffalo St. 87 Buffalo 85
W Liberty 76 W . Va . Wslyan 74
Be lkna p 110 Ed William s 88
Worces ter St. 99 Salem St. 88
Frmn t St. 92 Aldrson - Brdds 67
American U. 94 Getty sburgh 82
Rider 98 L ehigh 83
Linc oln 110 NY T ech 84
C.W . Post 67 Southa mpton 61,
(of)
Hartwick 94 Cl a rk son 63
Holy Cross 103 Connecticut 78
St. J sph's (Pa. ) 89W Chs tr74
Wilkes 92 Susque hanna 78
South
Kentuc ky St. 108 Betl a r m ine 78
W. Md . 83 Mt . St . M a ry's 80
N E l a. 100 SW La. 98
La. Tech 102 Nic holl s St . 76
M t Neese 75 So. Al a bam a 60
Loyola (La.) 116 Samford 98
L SU 11 4 Auburn 94
T hom as More 99 Whee ling 79
J ack sonville 90 F lorida St. 79
N .W . La . 72 S.E. La . 65
Ken tuc ky 107 Georgia 95
Flr oi da 56 T ennessee 554
Mrhd St . 103 A . Pea y 77
E-. Ky. 82 Murray St. 81
W . Ky 83 E . Tennessee 65
Ala ba m a 75 Va nde rbilt 74
Huntingdon 94 LaGr a nge 82
St. Leo 98 Bethne-Ckmn 74
G r a mbling 83 J ack son St. 79
L SU-N .Or . 84 L ouisiana Coli 74
T ula ne 97 Ste tson 85
Southwest
Ka nsas 71 Okl a hom a 68
N . M ex . St. 89 A rizona St . 82
Pan A m 87 So. Miss. 85
Sui Ross 90 T r ltn St . 87
Pr airi e Vw 92 X a vier (La. ) 86
Sam Hous ton 110 M cMur ry 83
Tex. Lthrn 83 Nrthwd (Te x . ) 701
Tex-Arlington 94
T rinity (Tex. ) 56
SE. Miss our i 97 Ark. St. 88
Orl Rbr ts 128 U . South 74
E . New M ex 76 Wylnd Bptst 70
We st
Denver 96 Uta h St. 72
Midwest
Akron 86 Centra l Mi c h 85
Hira m 63 J ohn Carroll 58
Mi ssouri 80 Iow a St . 66
Notre Da m e 100 Va lparaiso 75
S Colorado 76 For t Ha y s St . 69
Neb. (Oma ha ) 8 Rckhrst 66 . . .

PT. PLEASANT LIVESTOCK
SALES CO.
Pt. pleasant, W.Va.
Saturday, Feb. 13, 1971
HOGS - Receipts 175 to 220,
19.25 to 21.50; Heavies 18 to
19.50, Lights 16 to 19, Fat Sows
16 to 17.50, Boars 14 to 16.10,
Pigs 2 to 8, Stock Shoats 10 to 20.
CATTLE - Steers 27.50 to
29.25, Heifers 20 to 24.75, Fat
Cows 16.75 to 22.40, Canners 13
to 18, Bulls 23.25 to 24.75, Milk
Cows 140 to 200, Stock Cows and
Calves 160 to 265, Stock Steers 24
to 28.75, Stock Heifers 21 to
23.50, Stock Steer Calves 23.50 to
31.25, Stock Heifer Calves 22 to
28.25.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 51.50,
Seconds 49.25, Medium 38 to 42,
Common &amp; Heavies 36 to 47.50.

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
February 12, 1971
HOGS: 200-230, 19.85; No. 1,
20.10; 230-240, 19.60; 240-260,
19.10; 260-280, 18.60 ; 180-200, 19;
160-180, 17 ; Sows: 17-19 .20;
Boar s: 16.70.
CATTLE : Choice Steers 32.4035.10 ; Good, 29.50-31; Holstein,
27.50 - 29; Choice Heifers, 31.40;
Good, 26.50-28; Good Cows, 2224 ; Utility, 20.75-21.50; Canner
and Cutter, 18.35 down ; Bulls,
25.10-30.25; F eede r Calves,
Steer s, 27 .60-35; Hols tein
F eeders , 23.75-30.25.
VE AL CALVES: Choice,
52 .50-55 .25;
Good,
45.00;
Medium, 40 ; Commer cial, 38;
Baby Calves by Head, 16.50-70.
Ewes and Lambs by Head, 27.

...

•

EDGERTON NAMED HEAD
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Art J .
Edgerton , blind a dministrative
a ide to the president of the
University of Toledo, has been
elected p resident of the Ohio
Citizens Committee for Specia l
Education.
Edgerton, who in 1966 received the Handicaped America n of the Year award a nd in
1970 was named Outstanding
Citizen of Ohio, succeeds Robert Cars on, former director of
pupil personnel services. ""- ' .
do Board of Education .

REACHES GOAL
NEW YORK (UPI)-Gilles
Villemure , a 30-year-Old rookie
goaltender with the New York
Rangers, Monday was presented with the Harry " Ha p"
Holmes trophy as the American
Hockey League 's outstanding
goalie las t season.
Benjamin f&lt;' r a n k I in proposed the turke y a s the national cmhlem of the United
~ latcs inst&lt;•ad of the bald
ea gle

ern March 6 and Indiana March
9.
Wisconsin is 1-6 this season.
Michigan is leading the Big Ten
with a 7-0 record.
In Monday night games, Akron edged Central Michigan 8685 for the Zips' 14th straight
win, Hiram downed John Carroll 63-58 and Rio Grande
slipped by Wilberforce 83-82.
Larry Jenkins tossed in a free
throw with 12 seconds left to
give Akron the win, its 16th of
the season in 19 games.
Akron had taken an early 2312 lead, but a double technical
foul on the coaching staff for
protesting a play seemed to
take the wind out of their sails.
Central Michigan outscored
them 19-5 and close the gap. The
Zips led 45-43 at halftime and
the lead chan ged hands
right up to the foul shot clincher.
Jenkins shot a one-and-One
with the score tied at 85-85. He
made good on the first shot, but
missed the second and both
teams scrambled to the buzzer.
Larry Quarles was high for
the Zips with 25 pains. Paul
Botts was tops for the game

r---~------,

:A LITTLE BECOMES
A LOT, WHEN
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WITH US!
Meigs Co. Brancn

Tho~ty II

Savings &amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

:,AME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

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Interest per year, compounded
quarterly
on 1
regular passbook savings 1
acco~nts. No minimum or 1
max1_mum amount. Interest
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to date of withdrawal as long :
as you maintain an open I
account.

I
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"""'"'5v.,~..r .,.,1
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216_
_d_
, P ~rneroy
_ _ _.,. ' lI __________
Use'Our Free Parking lot

Robinson's Cleaners
'I

with 28 points for Ce ntral
Michigan, now 14-8.
Larry McCall scored 21
points to lead Hiram to its
eighth win in 22 games. Pat
Jenkins collected 19 points for
John Carroll, now 5-8.
Also on tonight's schedule,
Ohio University visits Marshall,
a long-time rival.
The Bobcats, 12-5, seek to
become the first visiting team
to win at Memorial Fieldhouse
in Charleston, W.Va, this season .
Steubenville visits Ce ntral
State, Youngstown State is at
Gannon (Pa.), Muskingum goes
to Capital, Wooster is at Denison, Kenyon is at Oberlin, Malone at Marietta and Findlay at
Cedarville.

Help us put some zip
into the midwinter
sales slowdo~n.
We'll reward you
with fat savings!
Specially equipped
Ford Galaxie SOO's
with free
power steeringfree power brakes.

Worried About

FALSE TEETH
Coming Loose?
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teeth will come loos e or drop just at
the wrong time. For more security
and comfort, sprinkle FASTEETHiiD
Denture Adhesive P owder on your
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firmer longer . Makes eating easter.
FASTEETH Is n ot acid . No gummy,
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den t ist regularly . Get easy -to-use
FASTEETH at an d rug counters.

PISCES

Pinto $1919 . .. America's hottest-selling little newcomer!
You get 75 eager hp (100, optional). Ave raged over 25 mpg
in simul ated city / suburban driving. More overall inside
room than the leading import. Muc h, much more.

(Feb. 20-March 20)

HOROSCOPE
FOR YOUR

INCOME-TAX
Do you f eel like a fish out
BOTH
of water whe n Income tax
time ro lls a round ? let
FEDERAL
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If we make any errors that cost you any penalty or
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FINISH~NG

.,,

United Press t
onal
Ohto
State
meets
Wisconsin tom
at Madison
for what he Buckeyes hope will
be their seven th Big Ten win as
the title fight goes into its final
stages .

second best scorer with 10
points. Roger Pelfrey, North
Galli a ' s
all-around
field
general, scored only seven
points.
Harden paced the Big Blacks
with 11 points. Painter finished
with 9.
According to the charts, Pt.
Pleasant sank 19 of 49 field goal
attempts for 39 per cent. North
Gallia hit 20 of 55 for 36 per cent.
Box Score:
NORTH GALLIA - Clark, 94-22;
Crosswhite,
2-1-5;
Glassburn, 3-0-6; D. Justus, 1-35; L. Justus, 3-4-10; Pelfrey, 2-37; and Stout, 0-2-2. TOTALS 2017-57.
PT. PLEASANT
- Underwood, 2-1-5; Smith, 1-3-5;
Painter, 2-5-9; Miller, 1-0-2;
Rawson, 3-0-6; Simmons, 2-2-6;
Neville, 1-1-3; Cruckshank, 3-06; and Harden, 4-3-11. TOTALS
19-15-53.
By Quarters:
North Gallia
10 19 16 12-57
Pt. Pleasant
15 12 19 7-53

~

•ManufacJurer's suggested retail price . White sidewal ls $~9 . ae&lt;.:enl opt 1on $60, dealer preparahon c"larges 1f any. l rar ,bpvrtat•on char(;les. state &lt;Jrtd local taxes not tnc luded

KEITH GOBLE FORD INC.,

461 South Third St, Middleport, 0.

�4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 16, 1971

RedmenNip
Wilberforce

( HoSPITAL NEWS

Harry Hairston's short jump shot with four
seconds remaining gave Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen a thrilling 83-82 basketball
triumph over host Wilberforce Monday night.

Kc and SW
Advance rJ"'O
Cage Finals
~ I

Kyger Creek, the defending
Gallia County junior high
champs, will battle Southwestern at 6:30 this evening in
the championship game of the
annual Gallia County Junior
High Tournament at Kyger
Creek.
The Bobkittens advanced by
defeating Hannan Trace, 39-29.
Southwestern ousted Rio
Grande, 39-21. A 19-point performance by Dave Wise paced
the defending champs to thetr
victory over Hannan Trace.
Dave Rife was KC's second top
scorer with six points. Mark
Swain scored 14 points in a
losing effort.
A well-balanced scoring attack paced by Uoyd Wood led
the Highlanders to their win
over Rio Grande. Wood pumped
in 14 points on four baskets and
four free throws. Terry Carter
and David Whitt canned eight
points each. Rio's swift-moving
Jim Merry had 14 of his team's
21 points.
During the regular season,
Kyger Creek and Southwestern
split their two games. KC won
on its home court, 38-23. Southwestern won at home, 21-20.
Hannan Trace and Rio Grande
will meet in the consolation
game a t 5: 30p.m.
Box Score :
HANNAN TRACE- Wells , 02-2; Hesson, 3-3-9 ; Barnes, 2-04; Holley, 0-0-0 ; Swain, 5-4-14.
TOTALS 10-9-29.
KYGER CREEK - Wise , 9-119; Rife, 2-2-6 ; Preston, 1-0-2;
Stidham, 2-0-4 ; Terry Lucas, 20-4; Tim Lucas, 1-0-2; and
Humphries, 1-0-2 TOTALS 18-339.
By Quarter

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. James W.
Hutchinson, Grimms Landing,
a son; Mr. and Mrs. Roger D.
Garrett, Gallipolis, a son and
Mr. and Mrs. Danny A.
Brickles, Pomeroy, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Elizabeth Allman, Ralph
H. Harbour, Jeffrey E.
Basham, Mrs. Samuel J.
Bevard and infant daughter,
Mrs. Jerry W. Bradley and
infant son, Mrs. James B.
Cowen, Mrs. Thomas H.
Cummons and infant son,
Handlin Farley, Mrs. Clarence
W. Hesson and infant son, Seth
Huntley, Roger Hutton, Mrs.
Dean 0. Jones, Mrs. Charles W.
Lamm, Mrs. Mod jeska M.
Love, Homer E. Rice, Mrs.
James Lee Shaver, Mrs. Jerry
L. ·Taylor and infant son, Mrs.
William Blair Thomas and
infant daughter, William
Homer Wells, Charles J. Werry,
Mrs. Harry L. Woyan and infant
daughter, Keith A. Wright, Mrs.
Warren J. Yerian and infant
son, Mrs. Dewey C. Hughes, and
Kenneth F. Ferrell.

It was Rio's second straight
win and the victory left the
Redmen with a 10-15 season
record.
Rio Grande will battle
Oakland City, Ind., in the first
round of the KIAC tournament
at Oakland on Feb. 20.
Should Rio defeat Oakland,
the Redmen would play again
on Feb. 22, and if the Redmen
reach the finals, they would
play again on Feb. 25. Campbellsville won the regular
season KIAC title with an 8-4
record.
The Redmen will complete
their 1970-71 regular season
schedule at Ada on Feb. 27
against
Ohio
Northern
University.
At Wilberforce last night, it
was a see-saw battle all the
way. Wilberforce held a slim 3936 halftime lead.
It was nip-and-tuck down to
the wire. After Hairston's
game-winning shot, Wilberforce
tried a desperation shot from
mid-court. It was on target, but
the ball hit the rim and bounced Bernie Williams had 14
rebounds, Hairston 13.
away.
Box Score :
Three Redmen scored in
RIO GRANDE (83) - Bass, 7double figures . Hairston led the
7-21
; Hairston, 11-2-24; Bentley,
visitor's attack with 24 points.
Eddie Jacobs pumped in 23 and 2-0-4; Williams, 3-3-9; Pulley, 0Tony Bass added 21. Payton and 1-1; Jacobs, 9-5-23; Baker, 0-1-1
Hamerick each had 22 for the - TOTALS - 32-19-83.
WILBERFORCE (82)
losers.
Rio hit 32 of 66 field goal at- Payton, 11-0-22; Mask, 4-1-9;
tempts for 48.4 per cent. The Hamerick, 8-6-22; Mann, 2-1-5;
Redmen sank 19 of 31 free throw Pace , 3-1-7; Brykin, 1-1-3;
attempts for 61.2 per cent, and Foster, 5-1-11; Marshall, 0-1-1;
hauled down 49 rebounds. Bowe, 1-0-2- TOTALS 35-12-82.

t·············~
tA THOUGHfi
tFOR TODAY!

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It's Quick! Easy

DRIVE~IN

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COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan's tax reform
task force has set the stage for
the opening one month from
now of what promises to be the
biggest battle of all between the
governor and the Republican
controlled legislature- raising
money for state programs.
The 34 - member task force
issued a report on its five-week
study Monday, recommending
among other things enactment
of individual and corporate income taxes coupled with
property
tax relief
and
a broadening of the sales tax
base to include personal services.
Gilligan accepted without
comment the report from Jacob
E. Davis, Cincinnati, chairman
of the task force. The governor
will study the report and prepare his own tax proposals to
be submitted to the General
Assembly with his budget message March 15.
The seven-page report, which
is not binding on the governor
or the legistature, was adopted
unanimously by 22 of the 34
task force members.
Eight other members of the
multi - sided task force agreed
with all but a few portions of
the report, indicating it could
carry considerable weight with
both the governor and the legislature if the lobby groups represented on the task force continue to support it.
Income Tax Criticized
Only organized labor and the
Ohio
M nufacturers
Association issued separate
non-concurring reports, each
criticizing the income tax
proposals for their own reasons.
Opposition from these two
powerful lobbying forces could
cause modification of the plan
by the governor or the General
Assembly.
The report, requested by Gil-

ligan, contained few specific
dollar fig ures. Davis said this
made the recommendations
more flexible and allowed the
governor and the legislature to
set tax rates to fit the fiscal
needs of the state.
He said the recommendations
would fulfill revenue needs
ranging from $250 million to $1
billion per year, and would
"serve as a useful guide" for
any amounts outside those
limits.
The majority report recommended a state personal income
tax with "moderately graduated
rates" keyed to an individual's adjusted gross income as
reported to the federal government.
It said the tax should be subject to withholding at the
source, and would raise between $440 million and $500
million if levied at a rate below
the average of states with an
income tax.
Organized labor's dissenting
report opposed consideration of
a personal income tax until a
corporation income tax is enacted and loopholes in the sales
tax are closed to corporations.
Task force members endorsing this approach were Frank
W. King, president of the Ohio
AFL- CIO; Fay Ross, regional
director of the United Auto
Workers, and Mrs. Marguerite
Holmes, president of the Ohio
Federation of Teachers (AFLCIO ).
The labor representatives
listed eight other objections to
the majority report, and King
and Ross pledged to continue
to seek enactment of their own
$500 million tax package
through initiative petition.
The majority report recommended repeal of the intangible
personal property tax upon enactment of an income tax, as
well as tax credits for home-

owners and renters, and even
more generous property tax relief for homeowners and renters 65 or over.
Replacing Franchise Tax
The proposed corporate net
income tax, worth about $50
million a year for each per
cent of rate, would replace the
existing corporation franchise
tax, which yields about $110
million a year.
The report proposed the corporate tax be levied at a flat
rate and that real and personal
property tax credits be granted
to businesses as an offsetting
feature .
Also recommended was an
excise tax on unincorporated
businesses, affecting mainly
professionals such as doctors
and lawyers.
The task force recommended
no change in the taxation of
public utilities, insurance companies and financial institutions
and no change in the sales tax
loopholes objected to by organized labor.
However, the task force
recommended a broadening of
the sales tax base to include
personal services, raising an
estimated $100 million a year.
No increase in the sales tax
rate was recommended.
To Share Revenue
Other recommendations contained in the majority report
were:
-Uniform formulea for shar-

ing income tax revenues with
localgovernment'unites throughout the state .
-An increase in the rate of
income tax municipalities may
levy without advance referendum.
- State admimstration of local " piggyback" income taxes .
- No change in local sales
or other permissive taxes .
- Uniform assessment percentage for real estate throughout the state.
-Streamlined procedures for
collecting delinquent property
taxes.
- Greatly strengthened enforcement of all existing state
taxes.
- An extension of the real
estate tax to mobile homes,
allowing for depreciation.

a

MOHAWK POSTS RECORD
AKRON (UPI) - Mohawk
Rubber Co., which finished 1970
with the best sales quarter in
more than two years, posted
record sales of $87.3 million
last year, up from $86.9 million
in 1969.
President Henry M. Fawcett
said while sales rose, net income dropped 16 per cent to
$1.37 million in 1970.
" It is very encouraging to
see to the rapid comeback from
the difficulties experienced earlier in the year," he said. " The
outlook for 1971 seems therefore
to be most favorable. "

•

Making Ohio cleaner
will take much
more electricity

"Remembered
everything but
insurance!"
Taking a trip? Stop for
Trip·Accident and Luggage
insurance at the Downing·
Childs Agency. Ask for
Credit Card insurance to
cover use of your credit
card if lost or stolen.

Downing·

Childs
Agency, Inc.
220 N. 2nd
MIOOLEPO~ T

ANOTHER GOOD
BUY FROM
BAKER'S

USED CARS

• At this very second electricity is
doing vital work that keeps Ohio livable. It takes electric power to operate sewage treatment plants . . . water
pumping and purification stations ...
incinerators. Electricity is vital to the
function of all health services, all communications, every police and fire dep a rtment. Without electricity the
essential services that keep Ohio livable would stop.
And electricity will h elp make Ohio
a n even better place to live. Electricity
is essential in new processes to turn
g arbage and trash into a usable resource. Electricity operates the air
pollution control units installed by industry. Electricity will power "aerators" to churn our rivers and put
needed oxygen back into the water.

Electricity will help re-cycle old autos.
It's vital to almost every effort that
will help clean up Ohio.
To supply electricity for the "clean
up" , plus the great er amounts needed
in factories, hospitals and homes, we
must incr ease our capacity. Along
with other industries, the electric ,
com panies of Ohio are well aware of
t he pollution problem. We are hard at
work on a nswers to help solve our part
in this problem.
The answers will take time. And
they will cost millions. All of us industry and consumers - will have
t o share the cost.
You want Ohio t o be b(;tter. We
want it to be better. Accomplishing
t his will not be easy - but the r esult
will be wor t h it!

'67 FIAT
4 door, six cyl., 4 speed. Rea l
economy ca r.

Your Ohio Electric C&lt;lmpanies

$495

~

t FARMERS BANK ~
:and SAVINGS CO. t
t POM
EROY, OHIO
Member FDI C
-fC
Member Federal
Reserve System

If a farm produces more than
110 per cent of quota, it may
market the 110 per cent and hold
the remainder to be marketed
the following year. The price
support for the year in which
the tobacco is sold rather than
the year produced would be
applied.
Penalties are provided for
false reporting, selling on other
marketin g cards, and for
violations of other rules.

~

t

:

A farm's quota for 1971 would
be determined by multiplying
the 1970 acreage allotment by
the average yield for the fou:highest years of the last five
crop years, beginning with the
1966 crop. The secretary could
cut this quota by no more than 5
per cent in 1971.
The bill further provides that
no farm quota would exceed
3,500 pounds per acre. Farms
with no burley production (soil
bank farms, etc.) but considered as having produced
burley tobacco during the
immediately preceding five
years would be granted yields
based on similar farms in the
area . Yields for farms
producing tobacco only a
portion of the last five years
would be determined by using
the specific years for which a
production record is available.
The bill provide s for
marketing up to 10 per cent in
excess of quota which would be
deducted from the quota the
following year. It also provides
that the following year 's farm
marketing quota will be increased by the number of
pounds by which marketings
from the farm during the immediately preceding year were
less than the farm marketing
quota.
The bill provides for leasing
quotas on a pound-for-pound
basis within counties, but with a
leased-in limit of 5,000 pounds.
Any adjustment as a result of
under marketings or over
marketings shall apply to the
farm to which the pounds are
transferred.
There is no provision for the
sale of burley quotas .

~

Fridays Only
it
it The Drive- In Window~
is Open
it
-fC
9 A.M. to7 P. M.
:
it
(Continuously)
~
~Other Banking Hours 9 to ~
~ 3 and S to 7 as usual on ~

~

Notes

By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
Debbie, Tammy, Robin and
Vicky Morton of Belpre and Mr.
and Mrs. John Riebel and
family of Pomeroy R. D. were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
D. C. Riebel.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sams
and sons of Weston, W. Va.,
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Reed of
Tuppers Plains are announcing
the birth of a daughter at St.
Joseph Hospital, Jan. 23. The
infant weighed five pounds and
13 ounces and has been named
Lea Ann. The couple have
another daughter, Brenda Kay,
21 months old. Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Chevalier of Reedsville
and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Reed
of Pennsboro, W. Va., are the
grandparents . Mrs. Rosella
Mosser of Pennsboro is a greatgrandmother .
Jodi Smith is a patient at the
Center,
Holzer
Medical
Gallipolis.
Tammy Ruth of Vienna, W.
Va., visited on Sunday afternoon with Juli Whitehead.
Robin Humphrey spent Little
Sisters weekend at Ohio State
University with her sister,
Karen . Jean Whitehead was a
guest of Bev Thompson for the
special weekend at Columbus.
Members of the Riverview
Garden Club entertained the
children at the county home
with a Valentine Party Wednesday evening. Games were
conducted and prizes awarded.
Refreshments of ice cream,
homemade cookies, pota to
chips, pop, candy and valentine
favors were served to the
children. Attending were Mrs.
Ernest
Whitehead
and
daughter , Juli, Mrs. Gene
Wilson, Mrs. Donald Putman,
Mrs. Frank Bise, Mrs. Lyle
Balderson and Mr. and Mrs.
Harliss Frank.

t

BANKING~

~Fridays .

News~

Stiff Assembly Battle Looms ,

Far1n Bureau is Supporting
Sen. Cooper 's Burley Bill

The state board of trustees of
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation
has voted approval of the
principal program changes in
Senate Bill 4613 introduced by
Sena tor Cooper of Kentueky, an
action recommended by Golden
R. dl aday, a member of the
board and chairman of Ohio's
HT
1 29 Farm Burea u Tobacco AdKC
~1 31 39 visory Committee. The proRIO GRANDE
Rees, 1-3-5; posed legislation, "Burley
Smith, 0-2-2; Hale, 0-0-0; Merry, Toba cco Poundage Bill,"
4-6-14; Maynard, 0-0-0. TOTALS provides for the following
5-11-21.
changes in the Burley Tobacco
SOUTHWESTERN - Carter , Program :
4-0-8; Wood, 4-4-12; Walker, 1-2Applying to burley tobacco
4; Miller , 1-0-2; Fallon, 2-1-5; only, it provides for straight
and Whitt, 4-0-8. TOTALS 16-7- poundage controls if approved
39.
by two-thirds majority in a
By Quarters :
referendum of producers.
8 15 21 21
Rio
The Secretary of Agriculture
10 22 30 39 could determine that to consw
tinue on the acreage program
would require greater than a 15
per cent cut, and that acreage
controls would not be effective,
KYES RITES SET
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Funeral then the secr etary shall
services were scheduled at proclaim poundage quotas and
Bloomfield Hills , Mich., for call for a referendum within 30
Robert M. Kyes , 64, native of days .
Farmers would be notified as
East Palestine, Ohio, and a reto
their poundage quota for the
tired General Motors vice presfirst
year prior to the
ident.
KyesJ who served one year referendum.
If this bill passes in time to be
as secretary, died Sunday while
attending the local wedding of applied to the 1971 crop but fails
in the referendum, there will be
his niece, Roberta Jacoby.
no quotas or price supports for
burley tobacco in 1971. The
secretary would call for another
referendum in 1972.
MOTORIST KILLED
The program , if approved by
AKRON (UPI ) - James W.
Williams, 36, Akron, WllS killed referendum, would be in effect
Monday when the auto he was three years .
The national marketing quota
operatinh collided head-on with
a tractor-trailer on the city's for any year would be the
amount which the secretary
east side.
estimates will be utilized and
exported during that year; after
the first year, adjusted upward
or downward in such amount as
the secretary determines is
desirable. Any downward adjustment could be no greater
: An
investm ent
in~~ than
10 per cent of the
~· knowledge alwa ys pa ys
estimate
of
~ interest .
· ~ secretary 's
it
it domestic utilization plus exBenjamin Franklin fC ports.
it .
fC
This Week's Special
it
it

t

J Reedsville

Protirlinu low ('OSf . rclia/1/C' JIOIN'I' to 8 million fi! O}J/('

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Li ke Our Quality
Way of Doi ng Business."
GMAC FINA NCING

Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Ti l 6:00
Ti l S P.M. Sat.

992·5342

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0•

• The Cincmna ti Gas &amp; E l(!Cl r ic Company • T lw C l.c v plan d I&lt;:kcl ri c Il luminating Company
• Columbus a nd Sou t h e rn Oh io F:lccl ri c Com pany · The Dayton Pm\'l'l' and Light Company
• !IIonongnhcla Power Compa ny · O h io l&lt;~ d i~on Compan.v
·Ohio Power Company · T he T ok d n E d i;;,,n Com pa ny

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.

•

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds .
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy .J Business Services ] •
1 Voice along Broadway i
OF
r---~--------------------------------------

BY JACK O'BRIAN
ALL THE WORLD' A
ASTAGEFOR
CONSUMER SNOOPS
NEW YORK - Politicians
are looking at the city - state federal gals bossing the consumers
headlines with
amusement: N. Y. City's Bess
Myerson Grant's winning the
headlines-battle; Betty Furness, Gov. Rocky's supermarket snoop, is trying hard but
running well in the rear; Jinx
Falkenburg was all set to join
the limelight - search as shelf sleuth for Nassau County until
her experience was questioned,
and she said the heck with it;
and national consumer shamus
Virginia Knauer seems the
most rudderless .... The show
biz gals instinctively know
where the TV cameras are which makes the pols snort that
they're all Little League Ralph
Naders, _and they're not too
happy with Ralphie's running

0

WIN AT BRIDGE

Opening the Bid
Could Save Set
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH
• Q982
¥10984

:.
·:..

16

• Q 8 62

•••'

"-

2

WEST
EAST
• 63
• KJ1075
¥ A QJ 65
¥ 73
• A9
• K J 10 4
"'Q 10 8 6
"'A 5
SOUTH (D)
• A 4
2
53
"'K J 9 7 4 3
Both vulnerable
West North East South
Pass
1¥
Pass
1•
Dble Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead-• 6

~

..~

:f

2.

One reason why we favor
reasonably light opening bids
is that all else being equal
the side that opens the bidding has a distinct advantage. The opening bidder seldom gets into trouble when
his partner has a very bad
hand. The man who a c t s
against an op 1 g hid may
find himself
ml:'at
grinder when
lls
South was
those
players who
hated to
open the bidding vulnerable.
He liked to back in after
passing and sure got his
wish fulfilled today.
He wouldn't open with one
club, but he did try two clubs
after West's opening heart
bid and East's s p ad e response.
West doubled and South
had no place to go except
down. Actually, he played
the hand rather w e 11 and
managed to collect t h r e e
trumps as well as his ace of
s p a d e s, but somehow or
other his partner was not im-

(,

•
••
f

...

JACOBY MODERN, in on illustrated, 128-page book, is available
through this newspaper. Send name,
address and Zip code, plus $1 for
each book, to: "Win at Bridge," c/o
(Name Newspaper) P.O. Box 489,
Dept. (First three digits local Zip
code), Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y., 10019.
pressed with 1 0 s i n g 1100
points.
South wasn't upset at all.
It could happen to anyone,
he pointed out and anyway
East and West would have
scored game and rubber so
it wasn't a total loss.
South's r e m ark that it
could happen to anyone was
not com;:&gt;letely acc urate. It
couldn't happen to anyone
who opened the South hand
with one cl ub. West would
overcall and East and West
might work their way up to
three no-trump or they might
stop at a part score, but the
one thing sure is that they
wouldn't collect 1100 points .
Of course, we don't claim
a monopoly on opening the
South hand. Most bidders
would open it just as we
would.

.--..

The b1dd ing has bt,en ·
West
North
East
1¥
Dble
2¥
Pass
3 ¥
Pass
You, South, hold :

South
24
?

487432 ¥7 .Q98 ... Kl04!1

What do you do now"!
A- Bid thrct• spades. You
don't want to cnt·ourage your
partner too much.

.•. •.
I

•'

ITEM : Tom Hill. He plays
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
Mama Cass. But he plays
Moonlight Sere nad e and
Andy Williams too . Vanety
is the s p1ce of our mus ic.

~

..........
I

•

•

'
I

.......
r

~t

·~­
,,.

WMP0/1390

off in all directions at once,
either .... They all now have
roots deep in show biz. which
politics-on-TV has become, and
who can say for the better.
Dick Cavett's ABC pact was
renewed through October ....
Our last-Oct. 13 item that David
Frost would go public just was
corroborated by Variety .... The
marvelous "1776" musical's
cast got a real shot in the arm:
Producer Stuart Ostrow spent
$1,000 to have the whole cast
immunized against hepatitis ....
Gloria Swanson's beef against
Johnny Carson is: He didn't
bother to say howdy when introduced, never a good-morning
or goodnight, never bothered
"with anyone" - on a recent
Carson special Gloria appeared
on, she said.
Sonny Bono (Sonny &amp; Cher)
just had kidney surgery .... The
Arab states plague Israel all the
time but U Thant's successor
may be Jewish: Dr. Max
Jakobson of Finland .... Huntington ·Hartford en]· oys talking
about his Show Magazine to
pretty girls - but it hasn't
published in months
Onetime U. S. Open champ
(1936) Tony Manero came out of
retirement to join his kin Nick
Manero as host of Nick's
splendid Greenwich, Conn.,
steakerie.
Ali MacGraw's husband, Bob
·Evans, wears his hair down his
backalmostinponytail .... Ali's
"Love Story" flick paid
negative and print costs in just
three weeks .... Maybe because
star Ali got $24,000 and Ryan
O'Neal $25,000 (although O'Neal
will get a bonus) .... Ali gets to
keep her husband, Evans ....
Mario Puzo gets more from
Paramount for his screenplay
of "The Godfather" than for his
original novel : $25,000 .... Las
Vegas multimillionaire Beldon
Katelman and Suzy Kendall are
gambling on each other.
The gov't seems awfully silly
not letting airlines make a
profit; maybe they want

another Penn-Central debacle
Rita Hayworth spins
Creedence Clearwater Revival
records on the set of her
comeback flick, " Road to
Salina"; thought she was a
Jerry Kern "Cover Girl" type.
Baseball Hall-of-Farner Hank
Greenberg and lovely Jo gave
the Steak Casino a celebrityshot .... Bobby Van was just as
gifted a hoofer 20 years before
"No, No, Nanette" catapulted
him to heady notices, but
suddenly there was Bobby,
being hosted by zillionaire
Serge Semenenko at the
Pierre's stylish. La Foret and
signing autographs like sane,
man.
Lou Wills Jr. had enough drab
luck with the undeserved
demise of his "Lovely Ladies"
musical without flopping in the
kitchen and busting an arm ....
Nat'! Lampoon has the fern-Jibs
at bay: Since their issue
burlesquing the lib-babes it's
hired a femme managing
e d.1t or, M ary Mar t e llo ....
Charlie Brown's return of the
Red Baron to pop-culture
means the resuscitated Liberty
magazine (which will run just
its old stories from the 20s &amp;
30s) has a timely tale: Canadian
pilot
(who
shot
Baron
Richthofen down in WW I) A.
Roy Brown's personal story of
how he did it.
Lou Brecker's jetting to L.A.
(Feb. 25) to offer Lawrence
Welk a wild deal to perform at
Lou's Roseland: 100 pe cent of
the profits .... Martin Balsam in
"The Anderson Tapes" plays a
flaming swish: And Marty's a
card-carrying heterosexual,
and a good actor .... This one
deserves retelling about the late
Rube Goldberg: F. o. Opper,
who created the " Happy
Hooligan" cartoons, had a glass
eye and a sour disposition.
Someone asked Rube which eye
was glass: "The one with the
kindly expression," Rube
replied .... Here's togetherness
on a Conn. license plate:
"THEM. "

r---------------------------1
Helen Help Us !I
I

l
I

't

t

By Helen Bottel

YOGTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young
people, their' problems and
pleasures, their troubles and
fun. As with the rest of Helen
Help Us! it welcomes laughs but
won't dodge a serious question
with a brush-off.
Send your teenage questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Helen Help Us! this
newspaper.
MOTHER, I'D RATHER
DO IT MYSELF
Dear Helen:
I know I'm not the only one
who has this problem, so if I
change the details a little,
maybe my new mother-in-law
will read it and get the hint,
while not suspecting that I
wrote it.
She is a good person. Too
good. She doesn't realize that
I'd like to muddle through
without all that help. The way
things are going, she'll probably
somehow even have my baby
for me.
Ollie and I both work. When
we get home , ther e's dinner
waiting to be served and the
house spotless. His Mom has
popped over (in her "spare
time") because "she knows how
tired we'll be."
She finds my mending and
"surprises me" by doing it. We
bought our Christmas tree
thinking we'd have fun
decorating it together. You
g uessed it: She'd made a
beautiful creation out of the tree
we wanted to fix "homey" with
popcorn and cranberry chains.
While we were a t work, she used
her key as usual.
If we invite her and Dad for
dinner, she brings enough food
to last a week.
This gives you a small idea.
Ollie a nd I are grateful, but ....
without hurting her feelings,
what do you do with a " do-for"
mother when you'd rather do it
yourself? - BIG KIDS NOW
Dear BKN:
The best way to reform an
overdoing mother is via her
husband. Ollie and his father
should have a little man-to-man
talk .
If this doesn't work, how
a bout te lling her you want to
become as efficient as she is,
whtch means being free to learn
from your own mis takes.
And if all diplomacy fa ils,
then try, "Please, Morn, let us·
grow up 1" - or a move to the
far side of the city . - H.
D&lt;·&lt;tr He len :
I 111 J!J, and hetvc heen dating
tllis fellow for ten months . He

1968 CHEVY II
$1595
Nova 2 dr., white finish, blue interior, 6 cyl. eng.,
automatic trans., new tires, radio &amp; heater.

. EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

•

1967 PLYMOUTH
S1395
Belvedere2 dr. hardtop, V-8 motor, power steering, std. 3speed trans. , blk. top, cream body, radio.
1967 FORD
$1495
Mustang, 6 cyl., auto. trans., console, maroon finish, all
good w-w tires, radio. Real Nice.

Pomeroy Motor .Co.
·

BLAffiNARS

L------------------------'
... WANT AD .
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
Cance.llation &amp; Corrections
Will bt&gt; accepted until9 a.m. for
Oay of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Min.imum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
25 Per cent Discount on paid·
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00pm. Daily,
8 :30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

In Memory
IN MEMORY of our beloved
husband and father, Pearl W.
Williams, who passed from
this life four years ago, Feb.
16, 1967.
Sadly missed by wife,
children and grandchildren.
2-16-ltp

Notice
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks •.
leach beds. Phone 949-4761 .
10-18-tfc
INCOME TAX service, daily
except Sunday. Evenings by
appointment only. Phone 992·
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin ,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
mile south of fairgrounds.
2-7·30tc

EVERYBODY

Shops the

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE.
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
Accounts and vou chers of the
following named fiduciaries
have been filed in the Probate
Court. Meigs County, Ohio, for
approval and settlement :
CASE NO. 20,314 First and
Final Account of James Oiler,
Admi n istrator of the Estate of
Cleo Oiler, Deceased.
CASE NO . 20,241 First and
Final Account of Marguerite E.
Karr, Executrix of the Estate of
Clair Karr, Deceased.
CASE NO. 20,085 First and
Fin al Account of Sybil Eber sbach, Administratrix of the
Estate of Lena F. Ratcliffe,
Deceased.
CASE NO . 19,620 First and
F inal Account of Bernard V.
Fultz, Administrator of the
Estate of Cora B. Kersey,
Deceased.
Unless exceptions are filed
thereto , said accou nts will be
for hearing before said Court on
the 19th day of March , 1971 , at
whi ch time said a ccounts will be
cons idered and continued from
day to day until finally disposed
of .
Any person interested may
t ile written except ions to said
accounts or to matters perta ining to the exec ution of the
trust. no t less than five days
prior to th e date set for hearing .
.
FH . O'Brien
PROBATE JUDGE
MEIGS CO UN TY, OHIO.
( 2)

16, lie

IN TH E COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
SAVINGS COMPANY,
An Ohio Corporation,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
Pta in tiff.
vs .
Russell E. Lewis , et al.
Defendants .
No. 14,817
NOTICE
Russell E. Lewis , whose place
of res idence is unknown , will
take notice that on the 13th day
of February 1971, the un dersigned, The Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Company , filed its
petition against you in the
Common Pleas Court of Meig s
County, Ohio , praying tor a
judgment on a promissory note
in the amount of $3,253.94, with
interest at 71 "2 per cen t per
annum from September 25,
1971 , and for foreclosure of
mortgage upon thP. following
des cr ibed rea l property :
Situated in the Village of
Pomeroy , County of Meigs, and
state of Ohio . Being Lot No . 502
in the Village of Pomeroy ,
Coun ty of Meig s and State of
Ohio, and there is a lso· conveyed
herewith , a ll rights with respect
to the use of the sidewalk bet.
ween lots Nos . 502 and 503 as
was tra nsferred to th e Grantor
herein .
Reference Deeds : Vol . 227,
page 987, and Vol 168, page 371 ,
Deed Records, Meigs County,
Ohio .
You are required to answer
the said complaint within 28
days after the last publication
namely on the 28th . day of April ,
1971, or judgment by default
will be rendered against you.
THE FARMERS BANK
&amp; SAVINGS COMPA NY .
Plaintiff .
CROW. CRO W &amp; PORTER,
Attorneys for Plaint iff
(2) 16, 23, (3) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 7tc

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

Ph. 992-2143

OP-EN EVES. 8:00P.M.
-oMEROY. OHIO

! WANT AD WAY

insists that I go only with him.
Even if I'm out with my girl
friends, he sulks.
He says if I'm not a virgin, he
wouldn't marry me, and if I
have lied about it, the wedding
is off. We can't marry for
another two years. I love him,
but I keep thinking: For the rest
of my life, no other boy friends
.... when he is sometimes so
dull.
He's really considerate - if
he gets his own way. And he has
a great future. I keep telling
myself I could never do as well
again. Is this what they call the
long-e ngagement blues? NEEDS ADVICE
Dear N.A. :
This is more likely the " I've
got the wrong man" jitters. If
you choose a dull, rigid, sulky
guy because he has "a great
future," you'll no doubt settle
for some unpleasant presents.
- H.
Dear Helen:
You're fair, so how about
equal time? And no argument!
This is an answer from one who
rea lly knows to one who thinks
he knows all about pot:
What is smoking weed? It's
s i tting around with friends
without drooling and saying,
"Man, I 'm drunk!" It's getting
high without making an idiot of
yourself, or having to choke
down another beer to convince
people you're having a good
time.
What is a parent who gets his
kid busted for doing drugs?
Someone who would put his
child in prison where he can
associate with robbers and
murderers and learn a better
way of life.
I believe, as do many others,
that persons who condone the
use of liquor, the number one
cause of crime and family
troubles, and cigarettes which
have bee n proved dangerous,
shouldn' t be the ones to say,
"Don' t mess with pot."
They should remove the beam
from their own eye first. - A
KNOWER
Dear Knower :
Equal time a nd no argument
it is . But how about a couple of
comments ?
I don ' t buy the idea that to
enjoy life one must be either
stoned or "drooling drunk ."
You know, marijuana has
been around for some 2000
year s. If it were all that great
&lt;and harmless) how come it
never really got popular before
the 1960s? - H.

Motor Co.

QUALITY

Pomeroy

Wanted To Buy

OLD furniture, dishes, brasl&gt;
beds, etc. Write M.D. Miller,
Notice
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
AUCTION WHEN? Each
992-6271.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
9·1-tfc
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy-Middleport
By- Auto Sales
pass.
1966 MERCURY Monterey,
2-7-tfc
automatic, power steering,
new battery, new exhaust
RUBBER STAMPS made to
system. $795. Phone 843-2211.
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
2-l2-6tp
or Velma Casto, Portland,
Ohio.
1965 CHEVROLET, one ton
2·12-90tc
truck, good condition. Priced
for quick sa le. Carroll
Johnson, 430 Head ley St. ,
Middlepor t.
Now Open
2-14-3tc

CHUCK'S T.V.
Bring them in &amp; save up to
half on labor.

CHUCK'S T.V.
151 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1969 BUICK LeSabre , 2-dr .
hardtop, power steering ,
power brakes, air, 1~,.000
miles. Excellent cond1t1on.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-tfc
1967 VALIANT, standard sh ift,
radio and heater, 28,000 miles.
$900. Phone 992-3860.
2·10-6tp

1960 RAMBLER, re-built motor,
good body. $250. Chuck's TV
Shop, lSi Butternut :ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
WILL PICK up merchandise
2-16-3tc
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland. 1967 VALIANT, 4 door, radio
and heater, standard, A-1
Phone 742-4461.
condition. 28,000 mi les. Phone
9-23-tfc
992-3860.
SKATE ~A -WAY is open Wed·
2·19-6tp
nesday, Friday and Saturday
nights, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Available for private ,1arlies For Sale or Rent
on Monday , Tuesday and THEY
ARE
here:
The
Thursday nights or Saturday
SKAMPER line from A to Z.
and Sunday afternoons.
Wha 1 a surprise to see:
Phone Chester 985-3929 or 985·
Travel trailers, campers are
3585.
all on display. What isn't here
2·2·12tc
is o n the way. GAUL
TRAILER SALES, INC., 1112
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
miles north of Chester, Ohio.
like to try a wig on in the
Wa tch for sign. Phone 985privacy of your own home?
3832. CONTINENTAL and
You can. Just call us. We also
GO TAG -A- LONG
travel
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
trailers for sale. Ren tals by
Koscot. of course . Dis· day, week, month.
tributors, Brown 's_. Phpn_e
?.
12tc
Middleport 992-5113.
12-31-tfc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Ma;n, Pomeroy, 0.

For Sale
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
wa ter pills . Nelson's Drugs.
22_·30tp
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1_-_
MODERN walnut stereo-radio
combination, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 speed changer.
Bala nce $69.10. Use our
budget terms. Ca ll 992-3352.
2-11-6tc
' American
AUTHENTIC Ear ly
Stereo·rad io, AM-FM radio, 4
speakers, 4 speed automa tic
changer . Balance $82.60. Use
our budget terms. Ca ll 992·
3352.
2-11-6tc

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.
Broker

11 o Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTING- 3 bedrooms,
modern
kitchen,
bath,
basement. New gas fo rced a ir
furnace. Storm doors and
windows. LARGE GARDEN.
Only $13,000.00 SYRACUSE.

MASON CAR WASH
"AUTOMATIC"

~,

Car Completely Mitted &amp;
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
Sat. 9to5-Sun. 11 tos

PRICE $1.25

I~

Do It Yourself Open
24 Hrs. Daily· 25c

,

AIR CONDITIONING . RE!'.
frigerat ion service . Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc
SEPTIC' tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
:....::==~-- ----'=-=5:...·.....:1·tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered righ t to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
Goeglein Ready-M ix Co .,
Middleport, Oh io .
6-30·tfc
IN TE R lOR carpenter work, by
the hour or contract. Phone •
992-3511.
1-31-30tp
BACK HOE and end-loi'der
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND A~­
TE,NNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _6_·10-tfc

a

NEIGLER Construction. For
bu ilding or remodel ing your
BUY NOW NEXT WEEK MAY
hom e , Call Guy Ne igler ,
BE TOO LATE.
Racine , Ohio.
·
NEW ALL ELECTRIC 3
7-31.tfc
bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious
basement. Beautiful k itchen,
dining area with scenic view. .... t::PTIC TAN~S CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Phone
Double garage.
Asking
John Russell , Ga lli polis 446For Sale
$23.900.00 OR WILL BUILD
478~ after 5: 30 p. m .
TO SUIT.
WILL GIVE piano and organ ANTIQUE bookcase. Phone 992·
4-7·ffc
lessons in my home. Phone
2683 weekdays after 5 p.m. or WE ARE LOCATED NEAR -----------------992-3666.
all. day Sunday.
KROGERS.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
__________
8-_1_6._tf_c
2·14-3tc
service, a ll makes. '192-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
NEW 3 BEDROOMS - Near
Authorized Sir1ger Sales and
Help Wanted
Rutland on 124. Gas fu rnace,
SPINET-console piano. Wanted
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Ph
baths , utility room ,
WOMEN to do housework in the
responsible party to take over
3-29-tfc
beautiful ki tchen , cook and
Pomeroy area. Write Fran,
payments on spinet piano.
bake units. Dining area . Only
Box 23, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Easy terms, can be seen
$19,500.00.
For Rent
.
2-14-6tc
locally.
Write
Credit
992-3325 992-2378
5 ROOM and bath furnished
Manager, P. 0 . Box 276,
2-12-6tc
apartment, Ches ter. Inquire
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176.
DRIVERS NEEDED. We train
at Newell's Sunoco Station.
2-7·12tp
you to be a semi-driver, local
Phone Chester 985-3350.
and city training now
2-7-tfc
available. Earn over $4.50 an
hour after short training. For
WHY WAIT
UNFURNISHEL&gt; 3·room
application and interview,
apartment. Phone 992-2288. ..
BUY YOUR
ca II 513-863-6404, or write
GROUND TO SPARE- 2 story
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath, ful l
l -31-tfc
FERTILIZER
Corwin Ave., Hamilton, Ohio.
basement, gas forced air
2-15-2tc
furnace,
CLOSE
TO
SHOPFURNISHED and unfurnished
Now and get the early
PING. $9,500.
apartments. Close to school.
Discount
MAN OR woman to supply
Phone 992-5434.
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fer- COTTAGE
customers with Rawleigh
1 STORY
10-18-tfc
tilizer, all available now.
Products. Can earn $60
FRAME, 2 bedrooms, bath,
Take delivery now from our
week ly part time, $150 and up
enclosed porch, fe nced, 3 ROOM furnished apartment,
area warehouse at Pomeroy.
full time. Write Charlie Penn,
170112 Mulberry Ave. Contact
garden space. $4,500.
W. T. Rawleigh Company, P.
Rose Sisson, phone 992-2049 or
0. Box 204, Chillicothe, Ohio
992-2431.
POMEROY
LESS THAN 4 YEARS OLD- 9
45601, giving name, address
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
ACRES, 3 bedrooms, bath,
2·14-tfc
and phone nl:lmber.
Phone 992-2181
city water, floor furnace, wall --------------2-16-ltc
2 BEDROOM trai ler
in
to wall carpet. $12,500.
Syracuse. No children, prefer
BALE STRAW, also, one small
elder ly couple. Phone 992-5249
PROPERTY IS SELLING
closed tr uck bed, one grader
after 5:30 p.m.
FAST NOW, LET US
Wanted
blade. P. M. Cowdrey, Long
SELL YOURS TODAY
2-14-3tc
EXPE Rl ENCE D t elep hon e
Bottom, Ohio.
HENRY CLELAND
solicitor. Cali from your
2-14-3tc
5 ROOM house, ba th, Racine
REALTOR
home. For information call
area. Phone 992-6329.
Office 992-2259
collect 1-614-374-9357.
Residence 992-2568
2-14-3tc
1970
SHUL
T
mobile
home,
17
2-15- ltc
(2) 14-3tc
acres of land, good well.
3 ROOM apartmen t, all electric,
Phone 742-5222 .
wall oven, table top range,
2-10-6tc HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts. ,
Pets For Sale
stain less steel double s ink,
_M_E_ N-'S_ W
_ O_R_K
-u-n i-f-or_m
_ s - and
Pomeroy. Phone 992·~~~gS·tfc
food d isposa l. Nice clean •
MIN IATU R E Schnauzers and
apartment. See to appreciate.
covera lls. Jeffers Clothing
Poodle puppies. Permanent
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
Store, Rt. 33 going toward CO NVENIENl bu t secluded
inj ections and groomed .
Gallipolis 446-9539.
fairgrou nd, Pomeroy.
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
build ing lots on T79 at Rock
2-2· tfc
2-10-6tc
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
Springs . Within walking
right. Phone Coolville 667distance
of
Me
igs
High
BRACE yourself for a thr ill the
3654.
School , a 5 minute drive from Insurance
first time you use Blue Lustre
2-11-30tc
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI AUTOMOBILE insurance !Seen
to clean rugs. Rent electric
Wi 1te weekends, or after 5
cancelled?
Lost
your
shampooer, $1. Baker Furp.m . weekdays . Phone 992operator's license? Call 992niture, Middleport.
Wanted To Buy
2966.
6887.
2-10-6tc
6-15-tfc
2-3-tfc
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
condition, as long as have not F IR E WOOD . Gerald King,
been wet. Paying $10 each.
Shade. Phone 696-1287.
First floor only. Mondays will
2-14-6tp
be pick-up day. Write, giving
good directions. Witten Piano
Home
Company, Box 188, Sardis, COAL limestone. Excelsio:
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
Ohio 43946.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
8-20-tfc
4-9-tfc

Cleland Realty

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

L

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

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

Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operat ion .
Choice of wate r
temps.
Auto .
water
IElvel
control.
Lint
F i Iter or Power
Fi n Agitator .
Perm a -Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat. No hot spots,
no overdrying .
Fine Mesh Lint
Fi lter .
We Specialize in
MAY TAG
Red Carpet
Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0.

JEMO ASSOCIATES
MR . &amp; MRS. CARL MOODISPAUGH
101 Park St.
Middleport
" I have worked as a union carpenter for most of my working
years. I am greatly impressed
with the qual ity materials that
J.A. puts into their homes. "

Sites Availab le
Don't Delay! Contact At Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992·7034

~

•

�. EEK AND ~EEK

MAW!! WHAT

IN
THUNDER ARE
VE DOIN'?

•

GIVIN' TATER
A RIDE IN HIS
"WHEE'' BARROW

ThU.. ME MDMQU£ HOW JX)
'rbU fEEL ABOUT t:oi-tTJCAL
CAkJDI ()P..TE..S SEC.UIJG. WE:MSElVES ON it&lt;..eVISI0"-1 D&lt;.JRIIJG
CAMPAIGtJ.S ?

,..------

•
You SURE PICKED A

C 1,71 br MEA, Inc., TM. l•t· U.S. rtt. Off,

THAT DOESJ-J.T MATfcr&lt;.!
THERe'S A
P~INCIPLE

BAD TiME! WE'Re
MOIJIN6 /1--l OUR FURNITURE AND WE NEeD
.ALL TriE 1-{ELP We

INVOLVED/

CAN. GEl/

•
:X: OILED TH'
ROLl..ER5 ON

THAT THI"--G
THIS MORN

GE:E MR.GALL.C.NTE ----TOO BAD WE '-lAD -:-o
BRIN0 11-!EM IN~O

THE

CA~E--

•
.AN' SO FAR, MY SCOUTS AIN'T
SEEN ABLE T'BACK IT UP
ONE WAY OR TH' OTHER!

GASOUNE AILEY

•

Could
40u look

i~ phone never
qive me nuthin'
but ''buzz-bu-zz" 1

at m' foot ----·----~;;\,
MiGter
Chipper?

It feel

middlin'
qood,but.

,.
~

THE BORN LOSER

·~

I
I

UTILE ORPHAN ANN1E

11

JfJ.T A COMMA.l'ID FROM GOLVSWINGER,
TH£ 'I'IliY JUNGLE DEl'IIZE:tiS BUS'{ THEM·
SELVES WITH THE CON5TRUC'l'lOH OF
WHAT LOOK LIKE MtrilATUR£ GOLDI1ti
TOWERS .... r.;;;;:::::====;;;;;;,;;a;;;;

f

I

I

•
DAILY CROSSWORD

•

DICK TRACY
THIS GENT WAS
TALKING TO CHAMELEON

FROM A CAR.

•

CAPTAIN EASY

rM

Bt:01~NI~6

TO GE-T THE PICTURE
AFTeR 5TEA ~IN6 THE

HAND FOR4*10o000
'iOLJ DI?COVEJ?EO IT
WA7 WORTH A
J...OT MORE:!

•

SUT FIRST We HAD TO FIND OUI
lF KERCH WM THE ''MK )(." WHO
HAD IT ... THAT'S WHERE YOLJ
cAME IN, DlJCE-Y~

I'LL MAKE YOU A BET WE
SELL OUT OUR STOCK
BEFORE SIX TONIGHT.

38. Over again
ACROSS
39. Musical
1. Gloomy
symbols
aura
40. Cistern
5. Picture
riddle
DOWN
10. South
L Glazier's
African
stock in
plant
trade
11. Fishing net
2. Warning
12. Russian
river
sounds
3. Phrase
13. Punctual
accom14. Before, to
panying
a poet
7Down
15."- 4. Grassland
victus"
5. Infrequen~
16. Former
Giants'
6. Conceit
7. Oft-written
quartet·February
back,
phrase
familiarly
8. Like a
17. Backed
forgotten
financially
bill
19. Iniquity
20. Harsh
sound
21. Put on
cargo
22. Dehydrate
23. Ott of
baseball
lore
24. John
Wayne's
nickname
26. Muscle
28. Amazon
cetacean
29. Earth. e.g.
31. Little lass
(colloq.)
32. Wire
measurement
33. Sailor ·
34. French
breed of dog
36. Italian city
37. Military
phrase
(2wds l

ASS. . L ATER

9. ColoAD I T . 0 L I V E
nize
ll."Malilii.!!l!l!
tese
OBOE ~~Of?E~
Falcon" I' A L L I N L 0 V E
sleuth
"iii~~ A A E o
15
18.Asian
~NTO.AKI~
penin·
0 R DE
L EZ~II.
sula
19. Actress Yesterday's Anawer

~~ ~·~~~~~ M~

i;.~~ely sl~ ~·· ~ ~ ~~ f

Verdugo
23. John
Stuart
24. Prevent
from
practicing
law

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one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

25. Ea.stern rite
Christian
26. Malice
27. Stool
pigeon
30. Fishing
net
32. Military
meal
35. Perched
36. Manhandle

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is L 0 N « F E L L 0 \\'
one letter simply stands for anoth&lt;'r. In this sample A is
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apostrophes, the lcngtl\ and formation of the words an' all
hints. Each day the codE' lettet·s nt·e chffL'rent
A

Yesl4&gt;rday's Cryptoquote: EVERY TIME A WOMAN GIVES
A MAN A PIECE OF HER MIND SHE LOSES A PIECE OF
HTS HEART. -HELEN ROWLAND

quotation

h X M

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OH, wELL! AND I 60T ONE FROM
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�.-------------------------------------~-- ----

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 16,1971

3 Sheriff's Deputies Murdered
By WILLIAM P. OPPEL
DALLAS (UPI)-Two brothers being sought on a burglary
warrant allegedly killed three
sheriff's deputies Monday in a
deserted river bottom. A fourth
officer was wounded and a fifth
rolled off a ledge and escaped.
Murder charges were filed
today against one of the
brothers. He was believed to be
heading for Edinburg in South
Texas where he has relatives
who might be able to help him
cross the Mexican border.
The other brother was in
custody and under interrogation
by Dallas County deputies. He
did not confess to the slayings
although deputies found his
fingerprints "all over" the car
which drove the officers to the
scene of their execution.
Dallas County deputies Samuel Garcia Infante, 32, and
William Don Reese, 31, and
Ellis County Deputy A.K.
Robertson were killed. Each of
the officers was shot several
times and Reese was shot with
two different weapons held by
the same gunman.
Ellis County Deputy Wendell
Dover, 49, was wounded and
A.D. McCurley, a Dallas county
deputy, escaped and provided
police with the first story of
what happened.
The brothers apparently burglarized a home in Bristol
Tex., Monday afternoon.
'
Robertson and Dover went to
the sospects' home with Infante, a Spanish translator for
the Dallas County Sheriff. Both
suspects were Mexican-Americans.
Infante later called his office
asking for a "consent-tosearch" warrant and McCurley
and Reese brought the warrant
to the home.
McCurley said he and Reese
knocked on the door and were
told to come inside. When they
entered the house they saw the
three other deputies tied up and
sitting on a living room couch
in the four-room ramshackle
home. The brothers took the
deputies' weapons.
The seven men entered one of
the cars, Infante at the wheel,
and drove into the nearby
bottomland of the Trinity
River.
"This is it," Infante
screamed. "They're going to
kill us now."
"There's n
loll
us," Reese s
our guns.''
But one of ti
replied that th
killed because,
identify us."
Reese, who had worked his

He reached a road and
flagged down a car and was
taken to a gas station where he
called Dallas police . A squad
car picked him up almost
immediately and drove back to
He later said he could hear the scene.
Officers found !)over first. He
the deputies screaming for
their lives and several shots was stumbling in a field several
hundred yards from the scene.
being fired.
hands free then took a swing at
one of the gunmen. He was
killed. The others scattered.
McCurley tumbled over the
ledge to the river bank and ran.

•

I

I
I
By United Press International
He had been shot in the chest
and arm. He was taken to
Too busy with her own
Parkland Hospital where he
COLLEGE PARK, Md. - BERNADETIE Devlin thinks the
was listed in fair conditon
after surgery.
gover~ent of. the United States should be overthrown, but not by
her. M1ss Devlm, a Member of Parliament and a militant Catholic
Infante's body was found face leader in Northern Ireland, spoke before overflow crowds of
down. Thirty feet away were students at the University of Maryland and the University of
the bodies of Robertson and Pittsburgh Monday.
Reese.
A Maryland student asked her if she stood for overthrow of the
American government. "Yes," she replied. "I think all
capitalistic goverrunents should be overthrown. But I'm too busy
overthrowing the government of Northern Ireland. That's your
job - to overthrow your government."

By United Press International
. COLUMBUS- Sl'A~E ATIORNE~ GENERAL William J. Brown has assigned four lawyers to
rev1~w t~e legal proceedings of th.e spe.clal grand jury that indicted 25 persons for rioting during la~
May s disorders at ~ent State Uruvers1ty. A U. S. District Court judge at Cleveland has ordered the
report by the grand Jury destroyed because it might prejudice the trials of the 25.
"Once I receiv.e the report and recommendations from the lawyers, I will review the material
myself and determme what should be done," Brown said. The attorneys studying the proceedings are
Jack R. Alton of Columbus, John F. Hayward of Toledo, James D. Primm Jr. of Lisbon and Robert c.
Alexander of Dayton.
HAMILTON, OHIO- AN EMPLOYES GROUP HAS BID $6 million to purchase the Hamilton
Journal - News, an afternoon newspaper with a circulation of 30,000 in southwest Ohio, from the
estate of the lat~ Mrs. Homer Gard Gramm. The will of Mrs. Granun, who died several weeks ago,
expressed the wish the paper be sold to local interests if possible.
A week ago Harte Hanks Newspapers Inc. of San Antonio Tex. said it wanted to enter a ~~
million bid.
'
'
""'
. OTTAWA - THE UNITED STATES DUMPED 80 PER CENT of the garbage into Lake Erie
while Canada only added 20 per cent, but both countries are equally stuck with the hopelessly polluted
waterway, Canadian Fisheries Minister Jack Davis said Monday. Davis, the minister designated to
he~d the ne~ Depar~ent of ~e Environment, warned he would be taking a "hard line" in seeking
stncter national and mternational controls on pollution. He was addressing a conference on water
resources management here.
"I a~ going to take a hard line and ask you to take a hard line and be tough with industry," he
told engmeers at the conference. Already the assimilative capacity of many Canadian environments
is taxed, Davis said. He said Canadians should have closed the loops to Canadian factories on Lake
Erie years ago.
WASHINGTON -SEN. VANCE HARTKE SAYS COMMERCE Secretary Maurice Stans should
be called before a Senate committee to explain his ownership of stock in a Penn Central Railroad
subsidiary while his department was deeply involved in negotiations for a huge loan for the railroad.
Hartke, an Indiana Democrat, said Monday he would ask that the full Senate Commerce Committee be conv~ned "at the earliest possible date" to take ~tans' testimony on his ownership of 38,000
shares of stock m the Great Southwest Corp., a Penn Central subsidiary. Hartke said there appeared
to be ''a strong possibility of impropriety" in connection both with Stans' testimony at hearings which
confirmed his cabinet appointment in 1969 and his role in loan guarantee negotiations for the Penn
Central last year. A House banking committee report showed Stans owned stock worth about $300 000
in Great Southwest Corp. on June 12, 1970, when the Penn Central was seeking $200 million in l~an
guarantees to stave off bankruptcy.
SACRAMENTO, CALIF. - THE CALIFORNIA SENATE has commended Frank H. Barth.olomew, chairman of the board of United Press International, for 50 years "outstanding service"
wtth the news agency. In a resolution unanimously adopted Monday, Bartholomew also was commended for "his accomplishments as an historian of the Sonoma area," where he owns Buena Vista
vineyards.
The resolution was presented by Sen. Randolph Collier. Bartholomew celebrated his 50th anniversary with the news agency on Feb. 12. He joined United Press, which later became United Press
International, as bureau manager in Portland, Ore.
FT. BENNING, GA. -THE MUCH-INTERRUPTED MURDER court-martial of Lt. William L.
~!ley Jr. got back in business today with the promise of a double-climax of testimony. The stocky
little defendant was expected to take the stand later this week and tell his story.
Calley, 27, i~ ~ccused of murdering 102 women, children and old men in an American infantry
sweep of My Lru. village on March 16, 1968. The defense has announced Calley would tell his story of
obeying orders in a legal act of war . It was produced 19 members of the platoon Calley commanded to
testify that the company commander, Capt. Ernest L. Medina, in a briefing the night before ordered
every living thing in the village destroyed.
'
SAIGON -A GENERAL COURT MARTIAL today found Air Force Col. Gerald V. Kehrli guilty
on charges of marijuana abuse and sentenced him to three years in prison. Kehrli is the highestran~g offi~er ever tried on narcotics charges by the armed forces. In addition to the prison term,
Kehrli was fmed $15,000. But he was allowed to keep his rank, pay and pension benefits - doubly
important since he will be past the mandatory retirement date of 30 years service by the time he has
served his sentence.
·

Road Kings Will Play Exhihi.ti•On

The Harlem Road Kings of
Detroit will play the basketball
coaches of Southern Valley
Tonight, Feb. 16
Athletic Conference in an
exhibition match Tuesday, Feb.
THEY SHOOT HORSES,"
23, at Southern High school.
DON'T THEY?
Playing with the Harlem
( Technicolor)
Jane Fonda
group will be Murphy SumMichae l Sarrazin
mons, former dribbler with the
Technicolor Cartoon
Harlem Globe Trotters and
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Spike Wilkinson, a great
rebounder and showman.
Carl Wolfe, head basketball
Wednesday and Thursday
coach at Mei~s High School and
February 17-18
former Manetta College star,
NOT OPEN
w1ll be on the roster with the'
SVAC coach~s. .
rw-~~~~~~-----""T"h"'e.;;g;..,a.,m~e-Is...b~e~t;.ng:;_s;..po""n~s~o~re~d

J

ONEIDA

... th~ auto was a curiosity. Now,
with such a wide choice of new
Otnner for 8

cars, don't keep your curiosity.

•J gss

Tuesday, from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m . on Wednesday and
until time of services on
Thursday . Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery
·
CALLED TO RUTLAND
The Middleport E-R squad
went at 3:05 p.m. Monday to the
aid of Mrs. Linley Roush, Jr.,
who was ill at her home in
Rutland. She was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center by
Martin ambulance.
UNIT TO MEET
The Junior American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
39 will hold a practice session at
6 p.m. Thursday at the post
home. Plans will also be made
to attend the junior conference
at Wilksville on April 26.
Now you Know
Offa, king of Mercia, coined
E ngland's first silver penny
about the year 790.

Seat yourself in a new '71 with
low cost auto loan from us.

· WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURG~

Deposit Insurance Corporation

SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON THE APOLLO 14
astronauts, still "healthy and happy" in quarantine brief future
lunar pilots today on what to expect when they get the moon.
~e briefing by Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D.
Mitchell was expected to be particularly helpful to Apollo 15
astronauts David R. Scott, Alfred M. Worden and James B. Irwin.
They are scheduled for launch July 25 on an even more ambitious expedition to a northern lunar plain cut on one side by a
deep gorge and bordered on another side by tall mountains.

to

Jumping Joe moves 66 audits
COLUMBUS- Sl' ATE AUDITOR Joseph T. Ferguson today
released 66 audit reports completed last year and approved by the
Bureau of Inspection during October, November and December.
Ferguson complained that the previous auditors office under the
administration of Republican Roger Cloud had failed to release
the reports despite the fact they were ready for distribution since
mid-summer.
The auditor cited the delays between the time audit reports
were submitted by field examiners to the central office as
"examples of the incompetency in the Bureau of Inspection
under the previous auditor." Among the 66 reports were three
showing minor irregularities and findings against local officials.

Nipponese munch satellite
UCHINOURA, JAPAN- JAPAN LAUNCHED a 138.6 pound
satellite into orbit today in its second attempt in five months.
Scientists of Tokyo University's Aeronautics and Space
Research Institute fired the satellite, codenamed M8-TL, from
the Uchinoura Space Center on the southern coast of Kyushu
Japan's southern major island.
'

Peace Dilentnta
(Continued from Page 1)
on other issues, or say no.
"An affirmative reply would
open new horizons and fruitful
negotJa tions."
His statement underscored
the government's apparent

Gallipolis and Charles McCabe
serving with the u. s. Army in
Vietnam; five grandchildren;
two sisters, Mrs. Arnold
(Florence) Richards of Middleport and Mrs. James
(Kathryn) Phillips of Columbus; and a brother, Thomas
McCabe of Denver Colo
Funeral services'will b.e held
in Oakland. Mrs. Richards
plans to fly to California for the
services.

f STAINLESS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

No moon bugs on them yf}t

Clarence McCabe, 56, died
Monday mor~ing at hi.s home in
?akland, Calif. followmg a_ long
tllness.
Son of the late William F .
McCabe and Grace Boyer
McCabe of Pomeroy, he was a
graduate of Pomeroy High
School and served 25 years in
the U. S. Navy. His wife, Ella,
preced~d. him in death.
Survtvmg are two sons,
Clarence McCabe, Jr. of

C
larence McCabe Dies on Monday

Xordic Crown

CINCINNAT I

COLUMBUS -THE CHAIRMAN of the Ohio Farmers Union
who served as a member of the Citizens Task Force on Tax
Reform said today he did not regard the report as a final step
toward a solution. Joseph Fichter, Oxford, said the report does
not fully achieve the aim of correcting "existing inequities in the
Ohio tax system" even though it has taken a big first step in that
direction.
"I anticipate the dialogue that has been going on among
members of the task force and with those persons who presented
statements during public hearings will be continued in connection
with the legislation to be considered by the General Assembly "
he said.
'

by the Southern Athletic
Boosters. Admission is adults
$1.50 and students $1. Preceding
the game a supper will be

Funeral ~erv1ces for Ollie
Hmdy, 90, ~tddleport, who died
Sunday mght at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Charles Simons
officiating.
Masonic rites will be held at 8
Wednesday evening at the
funeral home where friends
may call from 7 to 9 v.m.

l.ilbens
~a~ioNll B hk
--c.

More steps to come

intentiontosetasideanypeace
plans proposed by Egypt or
served at the high school by the Jarring until Cairo replies.
Racine PTA offering soup,
No Exchange
sandwiches, pie, coffee and Israeli officials said privately
Kool-Aid.
Israel could not a.:!cept Egyptian proposals for a pullback of

Funeral Sf!rvice Will be Thursday

Fede~al

:

7\.T
1 ~ews

Overnight Wire Dispatches

ME1GS THEATRE

M ember

r---------------------------•
B
.
,-f.
••• zn rze1 s : Beat....

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

I

GOESSLER

Se
mester Honor
Stude
7\T.
d
Rts 1 "'18me

RACINE - The semester
honor roll of the Southern
Junior High School in Racine
has been announced.
Making an average of "B" or
above in all their subjects for
the first three ix weeks periods
making up the first semester
were:
Eighth grade: Rhonda Ash,
Jeff Circle, Stephanie Ord, all
A's; Paul Simpson, all A's, and
Vicki Wolfe.
Seventh grade: Bill Bush,
Keith Circle, all A's; Paul
Cross, all A's; Molly Fisher,
Denise Hendricks, Brady
Huffman, Tim Jenkins, Cheryl
Larkins, all A's; Sandra Norris,
Corena Rhodes, Becky Sayre, Services Set for
all A's; Rhonda West and Bob Mrs. Carrie Hobo
Roush. Huffman was also on the
Funeral services for Mrs.
third six weeks honor roll but
Carrie Bobo, 92, Point Rock,
was not listed.
Albany Route 2, who died at
home Saturday, have been set
for 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Columbia Chapel with the Rev .
Mostly cloudy and warmer Eugene Underwood officiating.
tonight and Wednesday with a
The daughter of the late
chance of showers late tonight Henry and Hannah Green Lytle,
and Wednesday. Low tonight in Mrs. Bobo is survived by her
the 30s. High Wednesday in the husband, Jarratt, 95; three
upper 40s north to the low 60s sons, Meryl, Lancaster; Henry,
south .
at home, and Wesley, at
Chillicothe; a daughter, Mrs.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Ru th Silver of Naper, Neb., and
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Tuesday two grandchildren. Besides her
was 34 degrees, under cloudy parents, she was preceded in
death by five sisters and two
skies.
· brothers.
Friends may call at the
Strong and Son Funeral Home
in Wilkesville until 9 tonight.
The body will be taken to the
residc •. ce where friends may
ca ll until noon Wednesday when
the body will be removed to the
chapel. Burial will be in the
Caster Cemetery.

Pomeroy

OHIO

i Of the Bend

Q l1

,:

I

r
I

l By Bob Hoeflich

I

I

I
I

I

What with 14 living children, there's always something
cooking with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Burns of Pomeroy.
For example, Mr. and Mrs. Burns have received word of their
22nd g~andchild on Jan. 12 at San Jose, Calif., born to Sgt. an.
Mrs. Richard Burns. The seven pound, 12 ounce new arrival has
bee~ named Gre~ory Allen. Sgt. Burns has been in the U. s. •
Marmes the past eight years and is currently on his second tour of
duty in Vietnam.
Then, a call came from son, Jerry, serving in the Seabees at
Rhode Island, that his wife and daughter, living in Reseda, Calif., •
with her parents -the heart of the earthquake area -were all
right. They were thrown from their beds and furniture was jolted
, a bit, but outside of that, no problem.
Telephone calls from friends in the area informed Mr. and.&amp;
Mrs. Burns that their son, Eddie, serving on the New Orleans_-.
the primary recovery ship for the astronauts- had been seen on
TV in good closeup shots performing his duties helping helicopters land on the deck of the New Orleans.
JOHN LEHEW IS MENTIONED in a feature story of
"Lakeland Boating" by a writer who cruised the Illinois
'
Mississippi and Ohio Rivers.
The writer stated in the January edition: "At marker 250 at
Po~eroy, Ohio, we tied up to the city ramp, the only facility
available. Be forewarned: stores are closed in Pomeroy on
Thursday. When we tied up, we were approached by young John
Lehew, who is 14 years old. He told us it would be all right for us to
dock for the night. John was changing the oil in the boat his father
had given him, a 1961 22-foot Owens cruiser, and had oil on 90
percent of his body. He was wearing only a pair of jeans. We
asked him to join us for dinner, and he pitched in and helped broil
th~ steaks. We enjoyed his company and his hearty appetite. On
Friday, July 10, we left Pomeroy and our new young friend."
John is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lehew of Pomeroy.
LETIERS WRITI'EN by a then 14-year-old girl in Estonia in
1938 and 1940 w~re pr~sented as a valentine to Mrs. Vihna Pikkoja
who formerly lived m the country. The communications really
brought a feeling of nostalgia to Mrs. Pikkoja.
Sending the letters to Mrs. Pikkoja was Ruth Spencer
Stearns, now a teacher, who corresponded with the girl in Estonia
long years ago.
IT'S TONIGHT OR NEVER for the public Heart Meeting at
which Dr. Charles Meckstroth, Columbus heart specialist, is •
scheduled to speak.
The meeting is to begin at 7:30p.m. in the Trinity Church
entrance on Second St., at what is known as the Bethany building:
The ~e~ting has underg~ne one postponement and promoters say
that if It doesn't matenalize tonight, it'll be called off _ ):Jermanently.

Dr. Meckstroth is highly regarded. Two local patients Thelma Smith of Reedsville and Sadie Brown of Reedsville speak well of him - credit him with saving their lives, in fact.

•

2 Suits for Money Filed
Two suits for money and two
actions for divorce have been
filed in Meigs County 'Common
Pleas Court.
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy, filed suit
against Russell E. Lewis, address unknown; Carolyn Z.
Lewis, Pomeroy, and Howard
E. Frank, treasurer, for
$3,253.94 plus interest, and
Charles Robert Allensworth,
Middleport, Nellie Barsotti,
Middleport, and Howard,
Frank, for $3,499.25 plus interest.
In divorce actions, Bruce E.
McKelvey, Portland, filed suit
against Donna Rae McKelvey,

Portland, and Lena Ruth
Dailey, Albany, against James
Edward Dailey, Stewart, each
charging gross neglect of dutya
and extreme cruelty.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Gertrude
Bass, Pomeroy; Charles Yost,
Portland; Marvin Darst,
Pomeroy;
Jerry
Jacks,
Rutland; Lucille Lambert
Rutland.
'tl
DISCHARGED
Lena
Ebersbach, Clifford Jenkinson,
Helen Arnott, Charles Klein,
Lacy Barton.

ELBERFELDS
invites you to try on 'this

Ruffled Beauty
with Matching
Printed Bodice

You 'll love the
colors of this
magnificent dress
of nylon organza.

•

Weather

JEWELRY
STORE
Court St.

Israeli troops from th Suez
Canal in exchange for reopening of the canal to international
shippmg.
Egyptian Foreign Under Secretary Salah Gohar announced
Egypt's acceptance of the
Jarring proposal in Cairo
Monday night.
The proposal has not been
made public but newspaper
reports have said it calls for
Israeli withdrawal from occupied Arab lands, with the
establishment of a U.N. force
at the fortress of Sharm El
Sheikh to guarantee free access
to the Strait of Tiran.
Egyptian President AnwarSadat resumed talks in Cairo
today on the Middle East
situation with president Tito of
Yugoslavia.
Fighting between Palestinian
guerrillas and Jordanian troops
continued today for the sixth
straight day in Amman. A
guerrilla spokesman in Beirut
said the government was
beefing up its positions in the
Jordanian capital.
There have been repeated
clashes between the guerrillas
and government forces over
Jordan's restrictions on guerrilla activities .

1
I

ELECTRIC CO MPANY

COUNCIL TO MEET
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America will
meet at 7:30 this evening'at the
hall . The ways and means
committee will hold a silent
auction.

SEVENTEEN

Come to our busy Ready-To- Wear Department
and see our beautiful selection of formals many styles and colors to choose from . All
styled by " Nadine" a top source for
beaultful formals.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

•

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