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                  <text>Sentinel-Land Merchants Observe Traditional

,,

~

******

WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY
Now You Know
William F. "Buffalo Bill"
Cody got his nickname for
killing, 5,000 buffalo in 18
months under a contract to
provide meat for workers on the
Kansas Pacific Railroad.

VOL. XXVI

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

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 216

Weather
Increasing cloudiness and
warmer tonight with a chance
of showers north near morning.
Lows in the upper 30s north to
the low 50s south. Showers
likely Friday. Highs in the 50s
north and 60s south.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1971

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

TEN CENTS

U.S. Asks
Immediate
Negotiation
By GEORGE SmERA
PARIS (UPI)- The Commu·nists accused the United States
today of planning new North
Vietnamese military adventures
which would threaten Red
China. The United States
rejected the charges and
offered immediate negotiations
on the withdrawal of all foreign
troops from invaded areas of
Indochina.
··'u.s. Ambassador David K. E.
Bruce reminded the Commu• nists of President Nixon's state
resolve to withdraw all U.S.
forces from South Vietnam as
part of an over-all settlement
and told Hanoi' Xuan Thuy

"everyone knows" North Vietnamese troops are in Cambodia, Laos and South Vietnam.
(In London, the South Vietnamese ambassador and a
military attache just returned
from Saigon told a news
conference the South Vietnamese hoped to withdraw their
forces from Laos by May and
repeated assurances no U.S.
ground troops or advisers were
in Laos).
South Vietnam's Pham Dang
Lam warned Hanoi not to
"embark on a new military
adventure" in Laos. He failed
to make any mention of moving
the :paris conference elsewhere

------------------,
Ne ... in Briefs

r-----1I
I

U ted Press International

65c Per Hour increase wanted
COLUMBUS- HERSCHEL M. SIGALL, executive director
of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employes, says a bill providing a 65-cents-per-hour across-theboard pay increase for state workers will be introduced in the
state legislature.
Sigall said the wage package would cost about $100 million for
the biennium. He said state Sen, Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, would
introduce the bill.

Two. Columbus men killed
OSHAWA. ONT.- DONALD C. BRUNTON, president of
Brun-Sensor Systems, Inc., and Jack S. Hickman, both of
Columbus, Ohio, an employe of the finn, were killed Wednesday
in the crash of a private plane near here. A company spokesman
said the men took off from Don Scott field at Ohio State early
Wednesday enroute to Ottawa on a business trip.
Brunton was also a professor of nuclear energey at Ohio
State. The plane crashed in a field and burst into flames about
. ) four miles from Oshawa airport. Icing of the wings was the apparent cause of the crash. Hickman was piloting the plane at the
time.

H-eavy snow moves eastward
A STORM MOVED OUT OF the southern Rockies early
today, producing heavy snows in the mountains of Colorado,
southern Wyoming, Arizona and New Mexico. The National
Weather Service issued heavy snow and travelers warnings for
the areas.
On the warm side of the storm, thundershowers were ex. . pected today from the Gulf of Mexico to the Plains and Mississippi
Valley.

Reuther altimeter was faulty

•

,.,r

WASHINGTON- LABOR LEADER WALTER REUTHER
died when the pilot of his plane was lured below a safe altitude by
a freak illusion and a faulty altimeter in which parts were
missing and one part was installed upside down, safety investigators said today.
Reuther, 62, head of the United Auto Workers union, his wife,
her nephew, and a friend of Reuther's died along with the pilot
and copilot when their small chartered jet crashed May 9 while
attempting a night landing at Pellston, Mich.

Hanky panky in EM clubs

WASHINGTON - THE U. S. ARMY'S former highest
ranking enlisted man and seven other persons have been ind~cted
for conspiring through bribery and kickbacks to defraud enliSted
men's clubs in Vietnam. A special federal grand jury returned
the indictments Wednesday at Los Angeles against Sgt. Maj.
~ William 0. Wooldridge, who once held the title of sergeant major
'IIIII":
of the Army, and the others.
The indictment came as the Senate Permanent Investigations
Subconunittee opened hearings in Washington into allegations
American businessmen had plied military and civilian post exchange officials in Vietnam with favors. to w_in contrac~s f_or
furnishing supplies. The favors, Senate mveshgators, srud, mcluded a rent-free Saigon villa and heavy Chinese silks.

although South Vietnamese
Foreign Minister Pham Van
Lam said earlier this week
Saigon may make such a
demand.
Both Thuy and Madame
Nguyen Thi Binh launched
virulent attacks on President
Nixon's remarks at an impromptu White House news
conference Wednesday that he
would place no restrictions on
the use of U.S. air power in
Indochina .
The two delegations to the
Paris peace talks, in statements made as the 103rd
session got underway, attacked
President Nixon's remarks at a
Wednesday press conference
that America is "not going to
make any more concessions" at
the talks. The President said
"the time is for them (the
Communists) to act on the
pnnciples we have laid down."
Xuan Thuy, chief North
Vietnamese delegate, said
"Nixon does not seek peace but
a military victory. He is
preparing new military adventures against North Vietnam.
His acts threaten Peoples China
and other countries."
It was the first time since the
start of the American-backed
move into Laos by South
Vietnamese troops that the
Vietnamese Communist have
said Red China also was being
threatened.
Thuy added that despite
claims of success in the move
into Laos to cut the Ho Chi
Minh Trail, "in fact the United
States and South Vietnamese
forces have met with big losses
on all fronts."
Madame Nguyen Thi Binh,
the chief Viet Cong delegate,
said Nixon's press conference
remarks are a "challenge to
the Vietnamese people. The
Indochinese peoples will not
allow Nixon to do in Indochina
as he pleases."
An earlier statement from
the North Vietnamese delegation was along the same line.
Nixon's comments, the North
Vietnamese delegation said,
"Constitute a new proof that the
Nixon administration is extremely warlike, extremely
obstinate, that it does not seek a
peaceful solution of the Vietnamese problem, and to the
contrary that it persists in its
hysterical illusion of a military
victory."

5 Copters Downed
SAIGON (UPI)'-Communist
gunners today shot down five
more U.S. helicopters in
fighting in Laos and across the
border in South Vietnam, where
fighting subsided around the
encircled American Fire Support Base Scotch.
American military spokesmen
did not give the locations where
three helicopter gunships were
shot down in Laos but said two
crewmen were wounded. Two
others were shot up in Quang
Tri province across the border
but managed to land with two
crewmen wounded.
Unofficial figures showed at
least 19 American helicopters
have been destroyed in support
of the South Vietnamese
campaign in Laos in the past 11
days. U.S. casualties in the
support role were 31 killed, 79
wounded and six missing in
action. The casualties do not
include Gls wounded in Communist shelling attacks, milita-

Autos Collide
At Junction
Light property damage was
reported in a two car accident
Wednesday at 3:26p.m. on SR
33 at the intersection of county
road 25, Meigs County Sheriff
Robert
C. Hartenbach's
Department reported.
Daniel Lee Earich, 18,
Columbus, driving south,
collided with John T. Rue, 16,
Middleport, who drove from
county road 25 onto 33 into the
path of the Earich vehicle.
There were no arrests or injuries.

ry spokesmen said.
Military spokesmen said
South Vietnamese forces killed
25 Viet Cong and North
Vietnamese troops at dusk
Wednesday in Laos and were
meeting only sporadic resis·
tance in the drive.
The U.S. command reported
the loss of an Air Force F4
Phantom jet in the lower
panhandle of Laos Tuesday. It
was the 100th U.S. plane lost
over Laos since last March 10.

Both crewmen were missmg .
U.S. spokesmen gave few
details of the situation near
Fire Base Scotch, 10 miles
from the Laotian border. other
than to say the fighting had
subsided. Reports earlier said
more than a company of
reinforcements had been rushed
to the battleground to the aid of
an outnumbered platoon of Gls
fighting a reinforced company
of Communist troops attacking
from all sides.

Nixon Threatens
Hanoi Invasion
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Nixon said Wednesday he
will not limit use of U.S. air
power in Indoohina and refused
to rule out the possibility South
Vietnam may invade North
Vietnam.
The President also said the
South Vietnamese continue to
shoulder more of the fighting,
so successfully in fact that the
withdrawal of U.S. soldiers may
be accelerated and Hanoi soon
may wind up dealing with
Saigon, not Washington, in any
peace talks.
Nixon's assessment came in
an unscheduled 40-minute news
conference at the White House.
While he talked in optimistic
terms about Vietnamization, he
warned Hanoi that "as long as
the North Vietnamese have any
Americans as prisoners of war,
there will be Americans in
South Vietnam-and enough
Americans to give them an
~ncentive
to release the

prisoners."
No Nuclear Weapons
Nixon said the limits on use
of U.S. ground combat troops
outside Vietnam, as he has
outlined them before, still hold;
but "I am not going to place
any limitation upon the use of
air power except, of course, to
rule out a rather ridiculous
suggestion that is made from
time to time ... that our air
power might include the use of
tactical nuclear weapons."
Anked whether Saigon might
decide to launch an invasion of
North Vietnam, he replied:
"I won't speculate on what
South Vietnam may decide to
do with regard to a possible
incursion into North Vietnam in
order to defend their national
security."
His response seemed to
indicate that such an invasion
was an option available to
Saigon, at least.
(Continued on Page 12)

New Health Strategy Proposed

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon today proposed
strategy
a comprehensive
for national health care that
would require all employers t9
provide minimum health insurance to workers and their
families.
The plan, presented to
Schools remain open
Congress in a special message,
MARIE'ITA, Ohio -SCHOOLS IN THE Warren Local School also would scrap portions of the
. . District in Washington County remained open today, despite a Medicaid program of health
work stoppage by some 80 non-academic employes which began insurance for the poor, and
substitute a federally financed
Wednesday.
The employes, including bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria and administered poor-family
workers, maintenance men and secretaries, walked off the job health insurance plan .
when contract negotiations broke down with the board of
The federal portion of the
education. The employes, represented by the Ohio Association of program would provide free
Public School Employes, demanded better salaries.

nizations in which persons could
vol~ntarily enroll for medical
are at a fixed prepaid fee.
-Provide $545 million for the
health profession's scholarship
program for
low-income
students and provide additional
The two proposals were the funds for developing area
main features of a "national health education centers.
health insurance partnership"
-Create a health education
which Nixon said would carry
out his pledge to prevent any foundation which would "be·
American family from going come a national focus for exwithout medical care because of panded citizen health education."
inability to pay.
- Provide additional funds for
The President's low 'budget
research into the causes and
proposals also would:
- Foster development of pri- cure of cancer and sickle cell
vate health maintainance orga- anemia, the latter an enherited

health insurance to families of
four with incomes of less than
$3,000 per year, and provide a
graduated schedule of premium
charges up to income levels of
$5,000.

blood disease found almost
exclusively in Negroes.
Nixon said his program was
"one in which the public and the
privati'! sectors would join in a
new partnership to provide
adequate health insurance for
the American people."
Under the Nixon proposal, all
employers would be required to
guarantee that all workers and
their families received health
insurance that would cover
hospital services, physician
services both in and out of the
hospital, full maternity care,
baby care including immunizations, laboratory services and
certain other medical expenses.

TWISTED METAL AND WOOD- Part of the 16 cars of a
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad train that derailed stacked up
here close to Point Pleasant last night. No one was injured.
Wreckage is expected to be cleared by midnight tonight.
There were 59 C'?1'S in the train.

16 B&amp;O Cars
Leave Tracks
cars of a 5 -&lt;:ar
Ohio railroad train
the north~rn
Pleasant at 3 a.m. today
twisted wreckage ~h-ewn
the tracks and O\er an
bankment.
J. E. Sell, Supt. of the railroad
at Grafton, said the cause of the
wreck was unknown but officials were investigating.
There were no injuries.
The train, No. 103, enroute
from Parkersburg to Huntington, apparently got into
trouble just south of the trestle
bridge over a private roadway
which leads into the Roseberry
Farm. Several cars piled up
over an embankment and were
clearly visible from Lincoln
Ave. in Pt. Pleasant. Mter the
first cars left the tracks, others
continued south on the tracks

Bernard Glaze
Dies Thursday
Bernard Ray Glaze, 50, of 117
Peacock Ave., Pomeroy,
scoutmaster of Pomeroy Boy
Scout Troop 249, died Thursday
morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. Glaze had been active in
the scouting program for a
number of years. He was a
veteran of World War 2 and was
a member of the local Carpenters' Union 1050.
Surviving are his mother,
Mrs. Grace Glaze, of Mid·
dleport; his wife, Belva; four
children, Timothy, Dennis,
Crystal and Gregory, all at
home; seven brothers, Donald,
of Cleveland; Virgil, Carl,
Harry and George, all of
Columbus; Homer Jr., in
California, and Glen, of Middleport; three sisters, Mrs.
Anna Pullins and Mrs. Bessie
Byers, both of Columbus, and
Mrs . Louise Radford of
Pomeroy, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Bill Perrin officiating . Burial
will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may·call at
the funeral home anytime.

but finall}· ended up in a heap of
wreckage beyond the first
pileup. Tht long, main string of
the train remained intctct north
of the trestle.
Sell said 35 loaded cars and 24
empties made up the 59 car
train. Six loaded cad and 10
empties were derailed, he said.
The engineer was W. R. Akers
and the conductor, G. D.
Harper, both of Parkersburg.
Sell and work crews were
summoned from Huntington
and Parkersburg to clear the
tracks from both directions.
Service is expected to be
resumed around midnight.

ElderIy
wontan
Injured
Mrs. Evelyn A. Jordan, 74,
Rutland, is listed in fair condition at the Holzer Medical
Center, where she was admitted
following a traffic accident at
11:33 a.m. Wednesday at the
intersection of Second Ave. and
Cedar St. in Gallipolis .
Mrs. Jordan, a passenger in a
Volkswagen driven by Charles
Rell Jordan, 80, Rutland, suffered a skull fracture, multiple
bruises and lacerations.
According to city police,
Jordan made a left turn into the
path of an auto operated by
Charles S. Fulks, 66, Proctorville. Jordan also sustained
minor injuries of the head, back
and legs but was not
hospitalized . He wa charged
with failing to yield the right of
way . Damage was heavy.

OHIO INCLUDED
WASHINGTON (UPI)
International Walk
headquarters said Cleveland
and Cincinnati would be amq
the 23 cities in which younc
people will stage walks May M
to raise at least $5 million for
self-help projects around the
world.

�r------------------------------------------

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 18, 1971

The Meeting Comes to Order Again

i Voice along Broadway i
I

,

CLAY-FRAZIER FIGHT
ISA
$25-MILLION DREAM

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~---------------------------1

WIN AT BRIDGE

!Helen Help US ! Old Timers Bid
'1
1

By Helen Bottel

TOO GOOD TO
LAST WITH HER
Dear Helen:
I went with this girl for a year
and four months and saw her
almost every day. For ten of
those months we really loved
and understood one another,
and then she started to step all
over me.
She said I was being too good
to her and it was my fault that
she took advantage of me. Then
she said she wanted to have a
good time and not get serious,
so she flirts with all the other
guys and hardly gives me a
second look.
I haven't taken her out in
three weeks and it's about
killing me. I've tried dating
other girls, but I only have one
on my mind. AI'I
ting
other boys.
Should I crawl
for a date, or let
me? - CONFli
WAITING
Dear C and W:
Don't crawl back unless you
enjoy being stepped on. Really,
you can do better - and you
may even agree with me in six
months. - H.
Dear Helen:
I am faced with two choices:
1. Write to you, or 2. Go
bananas.
I am jealous! That's an underestimation. I have been
going steadily with my boy
friend for two years and we've
fought over this stupidity of
mine so much I'm almost afraid
to go out in public with him.
My jealousy is an unreasonable, close-minded
and hateful thing that is usually
unfounded. If Joe even looks at
any other girl, I get pains in my
stomach and clam up. Then I
cry and threaten -and later 1',
so-o-o ashamed!
We're so deeply in love and in
friendship that we couldn't
stand to break up . I don't think I
need a headshrinker, just some
sound advice. Please help. - G.

1
I

I

E.
Dear G.:
What you need is a good hard
look at yourself. Somewhere
along the line you've either been
spoiled into possessiveness or
deprived of pride. Either way,
you feel secure only when
you're not sharing Joe with
anyone else.
.... And that's a form of
selfishness. You can conquer it
if you analyze the reasons. I'd
guess you feel inadequate
because you've never learned
your own worth. Get proud! -

H.
Dear Helen:
Nowadays more and more
kids are beginning to believe
God is where it's at- but where
IS that? Not.J.n church, it seems.
I'd like to go to church to hear
about ove and goodness, and
that things will be all right if I
believe in Him. But instead For three Sundays now we've
been getting sex education. I
think it's up to the parents who
put us in this world to tell us how
they did it. It's not the church's
job. Especially when it's made
to sound kind of awful.
th&lt;~t we discussed
B
!!rugs and pollution
gre~ation and porhy - everything but the
Helen I'd like to attend
churcu to find some peace, and
instead I come away more
scared than ever. I'd like to sing
the good old songs and feel
happy being with happy people
who don'tfind fault with half the
other people in the congregation.
Would it be a sin to go look for
God on a hilltop instead · of
where He often isn't at - in
church? - STILL SEARCHING, AGE 15
Dear S.S.:
It's no sin to look for God
wherever He's at - and a
hilltop is one of the best places.
You might ask Him to come and
visit your church. - H.

Jacoby Modern

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
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Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- ¥ A

Z is back. Our older readers will remember that he
ijSe.:l to sit South and play
all the hands in the auction
bridge columns. His regular
partner was Y, while the defense was h a n d 1 e d by A
and B.
Y and Z weren't very good
bidders. They didn't have to
be.
If Z held the North hand,
he would probably have
opened one no-trump in
spite of having only 14 highcard points but Y only bid
no-trump when his hand
cried for that bid. Y just
wanted to be dummy so that
Z could operate.
Actually, the Y, Z bidding
was perfect today. Y's club
opening was\. c orr e c t in
either JACOBY MODERN
or standard American, as
were the subsequent bids.
West continued hearts
after his ace held the first
trick . Z was careful to play
low from dummy. He ruffed
in his own hand, cashed the
JACOBY MODERN, in an 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.

ace of trumps and led a second trump to dummy's
queen.
Then he remarked, "If
West holds the king of dia_
- - - - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - monds and queen of clubs, I
can make an overtrick with
a club finesse and a diamond lead to d u m m y's
queen. However, it looks as
if East will hold both those
cards for his overcall and
rebid. When I played this
hand for R. F. Foster
around 1923, it seems to me
that the proper line of play
was to make sure of 10
tricks."
After that remark, Z
called for dummy's queen
of hearts. East covered with
the king. Z discarded a club
and showed his hand. A dia mond would ride around to
dummy's queen, a club
would ride into the jaws of
death and a heart lead
would allow a ruff and dis card.

BERRY'S WORLD

l
"Hey, buddy, if you really wa:~t to get with the fad of
wearing Army ciothes w'&gt;y not go all the way-;"

Type-casting: Martha Mitchell on TV's "Tell the Truth"
panel .. . . N. Y. Scene: nicelooking young lass eagerly
thrusting handbills at Lexington
and 57th St. pedestrians shilling for ·a "watch the nude
photographic models working"
The new filthy-flick
""Doctors' Wives" quickcritic ism: Producer, Heal
Thyself .... Gay Nineties hotspot
co-founder Bill Hardy fell over a
telephone wire and fractured
his shoulder and wrist .... Gloria
de Haven quietly was axed in
ABC-TV's panic-wave.
All that unrest and Israel's
tourism still lifted 7 per cent
last year . . . . In reply to many
queries: Louise Groody, star of
the original "No, No, Nanette,"
died in '61 in Philly .... The
Frazier-Clay fight will draw
between $25 million and $30
million, fight experts tell us ....
The afternoon of the second Joe
Louis-Billy Conn fight, we went
to Yankee Stadium and sat with
then venerable Mike Jacobs, a
wildly daring and imaginative
promoter .... Uncle Mike said:
"Jack, and l won't see it in my
time, but you will in yours- a
$10,000,000
gate
for
a
heavyweight championship ....
Mike's vision proved true way beyond his hopes.
Bdwy. musical star John
Raitt's daughter Bonnie makes
her national TV debut on the
David Frostcast .... Chevaliers
du Tastevin, the ultra gourmet
society, never honored a
Chinese restaurant, but the
elegant gluttons will hold their
next banquet at Irene Kuo's
Gingko Tree near Lincoln
Center .... Like an Oscar to a
film star, or a new joke to
Renny Youngman .... Biggest
interracial romance in showbiz
would be altarized - if not for
his mater.
Betty Buckley of the
delightful "1776" hit musical
and Peter Flood of the Sabinson.Solters' tub thumperie
celebrated their engagement at
the Kitty Hawk .... Bob Preston
and the Alec Cohens were
planning the Tony Awardscast
at Thursday's 24 ....
Rod McKuen promised half
the income from his next album
to start a save-the-wildlife
magazine ... . "Miss Reardon
Drinks a Little" playwright
Paul Zindel told the Library
restaurant crowd he'll try to
enter medical school next fall
.... Dick Cavett in Playboy: "If
the TV cameras really showed
up phonies, this business would
fold up in three weeks" ....
Rodney Dangerfield's can'tquit-cigarets problem now has
him trying a hypnotist ....
Playboy bunnies here look like
schoolmarms next to the club's
singing star Gail Kantor - in
leer-through blouse and pants.
Off cruised Joan Crawford,
the Supremes, Dionne Warwick
and Helen Gurley Brown on the
S. S. Queen El\Zabeth .... Top
Teamsters
seem
either
resigned or have camouflaged
their relief that word is out Jimmy Hoffa's parole will be
denied .. .. Fine artist Dong
Kingman
postponed
his
European trip three days to be a
judge and then sketch the
winners of the mentally
retarded children's Valentine's
Day art contest then
presented his rare sketches to
the spunky youngsters ....
Dong's work sells as high as
$15,000 these prosperous days
.... Only one horse-drawn
carriage-for-hire is left in Paris.

THOUGHTS
"And it has often cast him
into the fire and into the
water, to destroy him ; but
if you can do anything, have
pity on us and help us." And
Jesus said to him, "If you
can! All things are possible
to him who believes."-Mark
9:22. 23.

There is no problem of
human nature which is insoluble.- Ralph J . Bunche .
1 call upon thee. 0 Lord;
make haste to me' Give ear
to my voice. when 1 call to
thee.'-Psalm s 141: I.

Recommended:
The
sparkling spice of "Los Vegas,"
the Mexican group opening at
Shepheards in the Drake Hotel
- we can't wait .... Try the
Benihana (we enjoyed the one
at 120 E. 56th St. in N. Y. City
and the one in the International
Hotel in Las Vegas). There are
16 around the country, half a
doz~n in N. Y., and they have

shifted all our old negative
notions about Japanese food ....
The dinner is its own floor
show: Chef works right at your
specially constructed table, top
of which is his stove, as he flips
and slices meat, vegetables etc.
with the precision and flair of
the greatest old Oriental
opening acts in vaudeville ....
Tastiest showmanship in town.

Mail Boosts Now~
Efficiency Later
Everyone, including editorial writers, yapped so long
and so well about the perennial deficits of the U.S. Post
Office Department that the government finally did something about it.
The politically independent, corporation-type U.S. Postal
Service officially takes over delivery of the mail in a few
months.
Already it has recommended to the Postal Rate Commission, another new body, that rates for first-class mail
be raised from six to eight cents, air mail from 10 to 11
cents and post cards from five to seven cents. Postage
for newspapers and magazines would also go up, and bulk
mail (or "junk mail," if you will) would be socked for
substantial amounts.
Only parcel post rates would not be changed-not right
now-since these were raised last November.
Even if the commission were to deny the requests,
which it won't, the Postal Service has the authority to
boost rates up to one-third over present levels.
What gives pause is the fact that the new rates will
not do anything to improve efficiency. They are catch-up
increases, designed to put the system on a self-supporting
basis. Investments in new equipment and processing
methods will come later.
It is a good question whether the public, especially that
part of it to whom pennies are very important, will be
better off now that it will have to pay for postal service
directly out of its pocket rather than indirectly through
subsidies from general tax revenues.
Businesses which use the mails heavily will, of course,
pass on the added costs to their customers.
But we asked for reform, and we're going to get it.

Youth ISNIT Taking Over
Claims that youth is taking over the country by sheer
force of numbers don't bear up under the statistics.
True enough, the latest census found that the median
age of Americans had dropped from 29.6 in 1960 to 27.6 in
1970, largely as a result of the continuing effects of the
post-World War II baby boom.
(The median is a statistical dividing line. Exactly half
the population is older than 27.6 years; half the population is younger. l
There have been other dips throughout the country's
history, but generally the trend has definitely been toward
a higher and higher median age.
In 1820, for example, when the birth rate was far higher
and life expectancy was far lower than it is today, the
median age was 16.7 years.
In 1870 the median was up to 20.1, and in 1920 it as

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

Best Oils to .Use
In Your Cooking
By LAWRENCE LAMB, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-! enjoyed
your article about saturated
and unsaturated fats. Since
you did not list soybean and
cottonseed oils as unsaturated, am I right to assume
t h a t they are saturated?
What are hardened oils?
What does whipping do to
shortening? What s h o u I d
i g n or ant people like me
think about things that are
O.K. and used for years and
then suddenly, they're no
good? For instance, oral diabetic tablets and cyclamate.
And now cereals aren't as
healthful as we've been told
all these years. How do we
innocent people know which
foods and medicines are all
right and which are not? It
seems we cannot trust a
thing because it's on the
market or our doctor, in
good faith, prescribes it.
Dear Reader- The common cooking oils all contain
some saturated and some
unsaturated fats. Safflower
oil has the most polyunsaturated fat (linoleic acid) and
the least saturated fat. Perhaps listing the common oils
in the order of most to the
I e a s t polyunsaturated fat
will help you. They are: Safflower, corn, soybean, cottonseed, sesame, pea n u t,
and olive oil. Olive oil has
less than one-tenth as much
polyunsaturated fat a safflower oil. Now let's look at
the oils in terms of the most
saturated fats. They are:
Cottonseed, peanut, soybean,
sesame, olive, corn, and safflower oil. From this listing
and the actual values, in
terms of large amounts of
polyunsaturated fats and
least amount of saturated
fats, the three best oils in

order are safflower, corn
and soybean oil.
Hardened oils are those
made more solid by adding
hydrogen or making them
into saturated fat.
Whipping shortening only
adds air and does nothin~ to u '
the i m p o r t a n t chem1cal
structure of the fat.
What and whom can you
trust? You can trust that ,.
whatever we believe today
will change tomorrow. That
is the nature of life and
progress. When we I earn
more we h a v e to sometimes modify our previous
opinions, if we still have
flexible minds. In every field
we make mistakes but the
trend is for constant improvement. Both in terms of
nutrition and medicine we
are far ahead of where we
were a century ago. There
has always been change. The
rapid news media and wellinformed public just learns
more about it sooner these
days.
Not everyone agrees that
cereals are not so good. Certainly, the cooked cereals
like oatmeal have a lot of
nutrition in them, as do most
of the whole grain cereals. A
bowl of commercial cereal,
with fresh fruit, sugar and
low·fat milk fortified with
extra proteins has a lot of
good food value in it.
Here is an interesting note
from a Yale researcher, Dr.
M. Harvey Brenner. He
studied the relation of recessions and unemployment
to heart attacks and found
convincing evidence that
heart attacks inc r eased
w h e n unemployment went
up.

RAY CROMLEY

Enemy Build-ups
Forced Laos Push

WASHINGTON (NEA)
It can now be reported that President Nixon approved
the drive into Laos only after a long agonizing period of
backing and filling, delay and soul-searching.
25.3.
What finally decided Nixon on action were the increasingly pessimistic reports from Cambodia and Leos and a
As the baby boom passes, the median again will start
supply build-up on the South Vietnam border.
upward, reaching an estimated 30 years by the 1980s, A
A series of maps showing the battle situations faced by
sharp decrease in the birth rate, coupled with breakLon Nol's men in the areas surrounding Phnom Penh and
throughs in extending life span, could boost it even higher.
the equally serious plight of Prince Souvannah Phouma's
armies in northern Laos may have been especially convincing. At least this is the impression a reporter gets
from sources close to the President.
Combine this cloudy and disturbing knowledge with endFACTS
less reports of extraordinarily heavy traffic on the Ho Chi
Minh trails, where in one week the U.S. Air Force deWe're fighting the same stroyed 1,000 North Vietnamese trucks moving south.
enemy, whether it's in Cam- Even so, the trucks still came on with no letup.
bodia or South V i e t n a m.
Especially worrisome here were reports that a great
Who are we kidding? What's deal of the materiel that did get through the air strikes
the difference between a (some of the most intensive bombing of the war) was not
man in an airplane and a being used. The Cambodian operations were being run on
man on the ground with a a shoestring. Activity continued low in Vietnam.
gun? If we're really support.
To the American and Vietnamese strategists this could
ing.Cambodia, why don't we mean only one thing: Ho's successors were stockpiling
do It? If we don't, we might great amounts of arms, ammunition and supplies in the
as well come out.
south.
-Herbert Ray Rainwater
A great deal of this materiel reportedly was being
national commander of the stored in the Cambodian sanctuary areas. Supplies were
The Erie Canal's success
yFw
..
urging a U.S. troop growing in depots in Laos near the South Vietnamese
in t r a n s p o r t i n g goods
mvaswn of Cambodia and border.
cheaply and quickly helped
a South Vietnamese invaAn analysis of this data, as the South Vietnamese and
initiate an e a of canal
sion of North Vietnam.
Americans read it, pointed to major drives in South Vietb u i l d in g in the United
nam and Cambodia sometime after May 1. (The rains
States. The World Almanac
In a recession people will would assure that the supply build-up had to be completed
notes that on Oct. 26, 1825.
the first boat left Buffalo, stop buying a second car or by that date.)
on the Erie Canal, reaching a new television set but they
The South Vietnamese grew increasingly impatient as
New York City Nov. 4. The will continue to buy books. ·
the facts filtered in. President Thieu's top advisersc a n a I was ardently sup· - William Jovanovich
political, economic and military~onsider the next 10
ported by Governor DeWitt
c h a irma n of Harcourt months crucial for Vietnam's future.
Clinton of New York.
Brace Jovanovich Publish·
Village elections are scheduled for this summer, coning Co.
gressional elections in August and presidential elections
in November.
The Almanac
the
age
of
62
at
Princeton,
N.J.
A number of men in high places in Vietnam and the
By United Press International
United.
States ~e~ieve that if these el~ctions are orderly
In
1969
Arab
terrorists
Today is Thursday, Feb. 18,
attacked an Israeli airliner at and fairly admm1stered, the result will be a major step
the 49th day of 1971.
forward in national political strength, which will in turn
The moon is in its last the airport in Zurich, Switzer- make possible major improvements in civil, military and
land. Six persons were wound- economic administration.
quarter.
The morning stars are ed.
Sizable North Vietnamese military offensives or staged
A thought for today: Henry uprisings could endanger this progress.
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Wadsworth Longfellow said,
A shaky political and economic situation-with continJupiter.
"Give what you ·have. To ued U.S. withdrawals-was something neither the VietThe evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this day are someone, it may be better than namese nor American officials liked to think about.
you dare think."
Therefore military action had to be taken now.
under the sign of Aquarius.
On this day in history :
In 1861 Jefferson Davis was
Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time

WORLD ALMANAC

TIMELY
QUOTES

sw~nin~offi~~~e~~nt : ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

of the Confederate States of r:
America at Montgomery, Ala.
In 1930 the planet Pluto was
observed by astronomer Clyde
Tombaugh at the Lovell Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz.
In 1967 nuclear physicist
Robert Oppenheimer died at

There IS a divmity that QUICK QUIZ
s
hapes
our ends - but we
ThE' bidding has been .
Q- Do toads cause warts?
South can help by listening for Its
We~t
North
East
A- No scientist believes
vo1ce. - Kathleen Norris. that the handling of toads or
24
1•
Dble
2¥
author .
'!
Pass
3 N.T.
Pass
frogs produces warts on the
You, South, hold:
hand, despite this popular
487432 ¥7 .Q98 ""K 1043
Who is wise and uuder· belief to the contrary.
What do you do now?
8tanding among you? By Ilis
A- Pass. Your partner has qood life let him show his
Q- Which is the shortest
made a decisive bid. Respect his works ill the meek11e.ss of of the four Gospels?
jud"mcnt.
A- The Gospel of Mark.
wi.sdom .- James .3:13.
Saint Mark wrote it for
Christians in Rome. It is beQ- How tall do giraffes lieved to be the earliest of
Never Analyzed
the Gospels.
Chartreuse, a liqueur made grow?
A- They are the tallest
by French monhs under a
Q-Does the light
the
secret form u I a that has animals in the world. A bull moon form a rambow?
me
a
s
u
r
i
n
g
19
feet
three
never been successfully ana A- Yes, but its rainbow
lyzed , is said to contain over inches in height has been re· differs from the sun's in in·
torded.
130 differPnt herbs
tensity of color.

. . ..

ot

...

•

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 18, 1971

.. r~"Wtif-~"%')1&amp;¥\t.WtF%1\t\litf ':tt ...

~%j

I

N

• •

:;j R

the Sports Desk :}))

I

by Che( Tannehill

J.&lt;'nday rugm about 9:30 or so the 1970-71 basketball season for
Meigs County's teams will have ended. Meigs, Eastern and
Southern together have won 33, lost 18 in all competition, a record
that has to be regarded as good, if not excellent. The Marauders
f are 11-6, the Eagles 14-3 and the Tornadoes 8-9 going into the
wrap-up matches. From here, Eastern appears to have the best
chance of winning another although Miller - which took a hotly
disputed game on its own floor -will have all cylinders firing
coming into the Eagles' nest expecting the worst. Our guess is
Miller will get it, the worst, that is.
Coach Charles McAfee's boys of Athens working on a 14-3
record ( 11-2 in the league) won't be letting down at Rock Springs
against Meigs. A win or a loss means nothing to Athens as to its
standing as third place Jackson at 9-4, entertaining Ironton, can't
catch up. But a victory by Meigs over Athens- not inconceivable
by any means -would lock up fourth place no matter what
Ironton (6-7) does at Jackson. If Meigs drops another and Ironton
beats Jackson the fourth place finish will be shared.
Last year Meigs tied for second on a 9-5 record without
Waverly in the league. Meigs, in its first campaign, 1967-68, was
1-13, and repeated that record in 1963-69.
Should a thunderbolt strike the Waverly High School dressing
room, where Coach Hawhee 's boys dress, that is, Logan might
win. But I doubt it. So let's concede Waverly the 1970-71 SEOAL
title in its first run for it. And Athens to finish second, a positively
revolting development, no doubt, in Athens.
Athens is in strange country, having won outright or shared
the championship in the last nine seasons. This fall from grace is
good for the league.
Gallipolis, by beating Wellston at Gallipolis can finish in sixth
place, a copy of last year. Wellston would drop to seventh with a
3-11 record, and Logan ( 1-12) will be in eighth place whether or not
the thunderbolt strikes at Waverly.
Last autumn when the league's scribes and broadcasters put
their minds to foreseeing how the league would be stacked in late
• February they saw Waverly, Athens, Meigs, Jackson, Ironton,
Logan, Gallipolis and Wellston. Close, isn't it? It likely will be
Waverly, Athens, Jackson, Meigs, Ironton, Gallipolis, Wellston,
Logan.
The last hurrah :
FRIDAY NIGHT
Athens 70 at Meigs 59
Wellston 60 at Gallipolis 62
Logan 41 at Waverly 90
Ironton 58 at Jackson 68
Miller 64 at Eastern 70
Nels.-York 62 at Vinton .Co. 60
Spencer 70 at Wahama 60
Pl. Pleasant 58 at Chapmansville 70
SATURDAY NIGHT
Federal-Hocking 70 at Belpre 61
Dayton Roosevelt 69 at Waverly 74
Glouster 48 a t Nels.-York 57
Southern 51 a t Waterford 48
Pl. Pleasant -t7 at Logan (W. Va.) 66
Going into a bove : 96 of 118 for 81.4 per cent.

The Rio Grande College
Redmen, after finishing the
regular
Kentucky
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference season on a positive
note by defeating Union College
85-80, will travel to Oakland
City, Ind., Saturday for a firstround game with the Oakland
City Oaks in the KIAC Tournament.
According to Rio Grande
Athletic Director Arthur W.
Lanham,
Campbellsville

•

•

By United Pres Interna tional
Maybe the Seattle SuperSonics really don't need Spencer
Haywood that much.
J Haywood, the controversial
s tar who caused a storm of
protest when he jumped the
Denver Rockets of the rival
American Basketball Association to sign with the NBA
Sonics, was benched Wednesday by a court ruling. NBA
teams protested Haywood's
signing since his class a t the
University of Detroit has not yet
graduated.
Dick Snyder picked up the
slack Wednesday night, however, scoring 25 points to rally the
Sones to a 130-126 victory over
the Portland Trail Blazers.
Portland, which won five of its
six previous games, led 120-119
la te in the game when Snyder
hit a free throw and a field goal
to put Seattle ahead to stay.
Don Kojis added 22 points for

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
LaSalle is beaten but un·
convinced.
The Explorers, ranked 11th in
the nation, dropped a 95-86
decision to No. 12 Duquesne
Wednesday night in a battle of
two of the East's top college
basektball powers. Jarrett Durham scored 26 points and 6-foot10 Garry Nelson ripped off 10
straight points in the second
half to put the game out of
reach .
But LaSalle remains unconvinced and the big reason is 6-7
Ken Durrett, the Explorers'
star performer . Durrett, averaging better than 30 points a
game, played for only 16
minutes. Hobbling around with
torn ligaments in his right
knee. Durrett wore a brace on
the injured knee but it didn't
help.
Hot Shooting
Nelson , one of 6-10 twins on
the Duquesne squad, finished
with 23 points and helped the
Dukes open a 79-64 lead with
his 10-point burst. Both teams
entered the game with 17-2
records.
The Dukes hit a sizzling 69.2

per cent of their shots in the
first half to open a 44-34 lead.
Jim Crawford's 24 points were
high for LaSalle .
In the first game of the
doubleheader at the Palestra,
Villanova romped to an 82-59
victory over Canisius.
In other action involving
ranked teams Wednesday night,
South Carolina (No. 9) bombed
North Carolina State 79-63, lOthranked North Carolina walloped
Maryland 100-76 and Louisville
(No. 17) crushed Drake 94-52.
John Roche scored 41 points
and South Carolina held North
Carolina State scoreless for a
nine-minute stretch of the first

BONAVENA HURT
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)Heavyweight Oscar Bonavena
was reported to be "recovering
slowly" from a hand injury
suffered in training for a
scheduled bout with former
champion Floyd Patterson.
" Bonavena should wait another 60 days before returning to
training," his physician said.

75.7

SVAC Standings
SVAC STATISTICS
SVACONLY (FINAL)
TOP OFFENSIVE TEAMS
G-TEAM
TP Avg
fo- -North Gallia
807 80.7
1(}-Easlern
779 77.9
1(}-Hannan Trace
668 66.8
1Q-Kyger Creek
665 66.5
10- Sou thern
536 53.6
1Q-Southwestem
436 43.6
TOP DEFENSIVE TEAMS ,
G-TEAM
TP Avg
1Q-Eastern
551 55.1
1Q-North Gallia
595
59.5
1Q-Southern
596 59.6
1Q10- Hannan
Kyger Creek
Trace
1Q-Southwestem

689
703
757

Suns' Season IDgh

FDR

Blackwall.&amp;.70·15 tubo·typo, 7.00·14 tuboloso;plus S2.42
52.45 F. E.T. per tire and 2 tires off your ve hi c le.

111 113 Ball St 90

w Texas sts~:W~e~merican 64
West
Air Force 68 Regis 54

.

Prices Slashed Again!

MEN'S SWEATERS
'4- '5 - '6
4.00

Values To 10.98
Values To 12.98
To 16.98

5.00
6.00

Down Go Prices!

MEN'S PAJAMAS
'12 PRICE

Y2 PRICE

•

An excellent name in Ladies
mer chandise. You will want
sever al of these.

Both cotton broadcloth &amp; flannel.
Reg.4.98to6.98
·
Now Just 2.49 to 3.49

.

Meigs Marauder V Neck

Odd Lot Mens

SWEAT SHIRTS

or:

Y2

•

SPORT SHIRTS

PRICE

2 FOR 5.00

Both Gold &amp; Maroon
Reg. 5.98
Now Only 2.99

SPORT SUIT
20.00

2fiJ~ $68

Reg . $60.00. Remember there is
only 1. so be here early!

MEN'S HANDKERCHIEFS

Blackwell. tubo ·type; plu s S3 40 Fe deral ExciSe Tax

ac each

aaO.P~~~:;.n~~~i·~i~~~.v.o.u~::~~c~:aa•••••••••••••:

low-Priced Firestone Quality Truck Tir~s
featuring MilEAGE! STRENGTH! SMOOTH RIDE~
:··························································
: FR E E TV Given Avvay Mar. 31. Come in &amp;
!

Limit 12 per customer. Haven't
you had a cold before and wished
you had some of these.

.

Home &amp; Auto

W. L. T. Pts
Chicago
38 14 6 82
St. Louis
24 17 15 63
Minnesota
20 25 13 53
Philadelphia
21 26 10 52
Pittsburgh
19 26 13 51
Los Angeles
16 28 11 43
California
16 39 3 35
Wednesday's Results
Montreal 3 New York 0
Toronto 4 Pittsburgh 3
Chicago 5 Buffalo 1
Minnesota 3 Califo..-nia 2
Philadelphia 4 Los Angeles 0
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Minnesota at Det..-oit
Pittsburgh at Buffalo
(Only games scheduled)

Sizes are broken. Most of these
are washable. A small charge for
alterations.

Slacks, Skirts, Blouses &amp; Dresses

SIZE 7.50-16

~ Pomeroy

West

DRESS AND CASUAL SLACKS
1f2 PRICE

Values to 6.98
Sizes are Broken

Men's Suits and Sport Coats lh Price
These are all from our regular stock of top
quality suits and spo..-t coats. Sizes are
broken. Now is the time to get them. They
will not be any cheaper until our next sate
in July.
Spo..-1 Coats from 39.50 to 55.00Now 19.75 to27
Suits From 65.00to90.00 Now Just 32

Mans

No purcha se necessary .

78
67
62
42
41
40

Odd Lot Mens

Rack Ladies

Sizes a..-e broken, but Wow! Is
this a Buy?Reg. 6.98 to 22.50
Now Just 3.49 to 11.25.

Regi ster!

10
11
4
10
5
8

Cannot Tell A lie! It was I who
chopped the prices down for this Sale!
Come in and see if .I am not telling the
truth.

lf2 PRICE

:

14
17
25
31
33
31

Old Honest Kerm. ..

HEAVY OUTERWEAR

.

34
28
29
16
18
16

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FEB. 19-20

Men's and Boys

EKe c. Ed .

W. L. T. P1s
40 9 7 87

•

···········································:

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor
Publi s hed daily eKcept
Saturd ay by Th e Ohio Vattey
Publi s hin g Comp a ny, 111
Court St. , Porn eroy , Ohio,
45769 . Bu sin ess Office Phone
992 ·2156, Editoria l Phon e 992·
2157.
Second cla ss posta ge paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National a dv e rti s ing
r e pr e s entativ e
Bollin e tti ,
Ga ll agh er , Inc. , 12 East 42nd
St ., New York City , New York .
S ub sc ription
rate s :
Delivered by carri er where
availabl e 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route wh ere carrier
se rvice not availa ble : One
month $1 .75. By mail in Ohio
and w . Va ., One year $14 .00.
Six month s $7 .25. Thr e e
month s $4 .50. Subs c ription
price
in cludes
Sunday Times _..
Sent incl
.

2 *4 8

SIZE 6 70 15

,...,...,

fn~a~~v~~eA~~~nDifauw

s

PACKERS ADD STAFF
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)Green Bay Packers head coach
Dan Devine added a fifth
assistant to his staff Wednesday when he named Burt
Gustafson as linebacker coach.
Gustafson was a defensive
backfield coach at Wyoming for
nine years.

Boston
New York
Montreal
Toronto
Buffalo
Vancouve..Detroit

•

.........·-····.....................................

:• 2-stripl
sid11w1111whit•
1t slight

South
S Car 79 N Ca..- St. 63
Louisville 94 Drake 52
Tuskegee 99 Fla. A&amp;M 93
'
-E Mich 104M3!~~~d u 75
w Mich 78 Bowling G..-een 64
Miami (Ohio) 65 Kent St 63
Xavier .!Ohio) 66 Cincinnati 65
74

BOBSLED TRIALS
LAKE ,PLACID, N.Y. (UPI)
-James Hickey, an Air Force
sergeant from Keene Valley,
N.Y., piloted a four-man
bobsled to a one minute, 04.99
second clocking Wednesday in
trials for
this weekend's
Kennedy games. The record for
the mile-long run is 1:04.62.

NHL Standings
By United P..-ess lntemational
East

WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY SALE

3o.&amp;

Clem Haskins' 29 points
helped Phoenix record its
biggest scoring output of the
season in the Suns' triumph
over Cincinnati. Charlie Paulk
led the Royals with 27 points.
Tom Boerwinkle and Chet
Walker scored all nine Chicago
points over the last 3lh minutes
a s the Bulls beat Cleveland to
move within a half-game of
second place Detroit in the
Midwest Division. Bob Love's 30
points were high for Chicago.
John Johnson had 30 for the
cavaliers.
Bob Kauffma n scored 24
points and Mike Davis had 22,
including a pair of free throws
with two seconds left, to help the
Braves stop Baltimore.

Cothige Basketball Results
By United P..-ess lnte..-national
East
Villanova 82 Canisius 59
Providence 81 R I 64
Navy 83 Ame..-ican U 66
Assumption 94 Amer lnt 62
Rutge..-s 76 Army 40
West Vi..-ginia 93 Va. Tech 82
Duquesne 95 LaSalle 86
Sy..-acuse 78 St. John's (N.Y.)
73
Seton Hall 82 lana 57
St. Bona 104 Creighton 84
Juniata 78 Elizabethtown 69
Colgate 101 Lehigh 74
Pi ttsbu..-gh 88 Lafayette 72

AHL Standings
By United Press lntemational
East
W. l. T. Pts
21 21 10 52
Quebec
20 25 9 49
Montreal
20 26 6 46
Sp..-i ngfield
18 22 9 45
Providence
West
W. L. T. Pts
Baltimore
31 13 5 67
Cleveland
26 18 6 58
Hershey
20 23 7 47
Rocheste..18 26 8 44
Wednesday's Results
Montreal 3 Hershey 1
(Only game scheduled)
(No games today)

NBA Standmgs
By United P..-ess lnte..-nation:o1
Atlantic Division
W. l. Pet. GB
New York
41 25 .621
Philadelphia 27 28 .569 3112
Boston
36 30 .545 5
Buffalo
19 48 .284 22112
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimo..-e
35 28 .556 ...
Cincinnati
25 40 .385 11
Atlanta
24 41 .369 12
Cleveland
11 57 .162 26 112
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
53 11 .828 ...
Milwaukee
Detroi I
39 23 .629 13
Chicago
40 25 .615 13112
Phoenix
40 26 .606 14
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 38 24 .613 ...
San F..-ancisco 34 32 .515 6
Seattle
29 36 .446 10112
San Diego
29 37 .439 11
Por !land
22 41 .349 16112
Wednesday's Results
Buffalo 118 Baltimore 114
,:hicago 109 Cleveland 104
Milwaukee 119 Philadelphia 114
Phoenix 133 Cincinnati 117
Boston 129 San F..-ancisco 99
Seattle 130 Podland 126
(Only ~ames scheduled)
Thursday's Games
New Yo..-k at San Diego
Los Angeles at Portland
(Only games scheduled)

Kermit (The Hatchet Man) Is At It Again!

SVAC STANDINGS
SVAC ONLY (Final)
TEAM
W L P OP
Eastern
9 1 779 551
North Gatlia
9 1 807 595
Hannan Trace 5 5 668 689
Southern
5 5 536 596
Kyger Creek
2 8 665 703
Southweste..-n 0 10 436 757
Totals
30 30 3891 3891
ALL GAMES
W L P OP
TEAM
Eastern
13 3 1293 973
North Gallia
12 3 1133 907
Hannan Trace a 8 995 1038
Southem
8 9 925 961
Kyge..- Creek
2 14 1021 1154
Southwestern 0 16 704 1273
FRIDAY'S GAMES
.North Gallia vs. Southwes tern
Kyger Cree k vs. Hannan Trace,
Gallia County Tournament
Miller at Eastern
SATURDAY'S GAMES
Finals of Gallia Co. Toumey
Southern at VVate..-ford

*

..

Coil
Sc
ege Ores

ABA Standmgs
By United P..-ess lnte..-national
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
43 20 .683 ..
Kentucky
34 30 .531 9'12
New York
29 34 .. 460 14
Carolina
28 35 .444 15
Flo..-idians
28 39 .418 17
Pi tlsbu..-gh
26 39 .400 18
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
42 20 .677 ...
Indiana
39 21 .650 2
Memph1s
36 29 .554 7112
Denver
23 39 .371 19
Texas
20 42 .323 22
Wednesday's Results
New Yo..-k 128 Vi..-ginia 120
Carolina 116 Texas 111
(Only games scheduled)
(No Games Today)

68.9
70.3 • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

.

DEVOTED TO
INT E REST OF
MEIGS· MA SON AREA
CH E ST E R L. TANNEHILL,

•

half as the Gamecocks won
easily . Dan Wells was high man
for North Carolina State with 16
points.
Maryland Stalled
George Karl had 24 points
and Dennis Wuycik added 23 to
hold North carolina breeze past
Maryland. A North Carolina
press held Maryland, which
started five sophomores, to only
a 29.6 shooting percentage.
Henry Bacon's 23-point performance helped Louisville
swamp Drake and strengthen
the Cardinals' first-place lead
in the Missouri Valley Conference. The 42-point margin of
victory was the largest in
· ·11 •
f
hi t
Lomsvl e s con erence s ory.
Elsewhere, St. Bonaventure
ripped Creighton 104-84, Rutgers hu~i~i~ted Army . 7~.0,
West Vtrgmta beat V1rgm1a
Tech 93-82, Syracuse whipped
St. John's (N.Y.) 78-73, Western
Michigan beat Bowling Green
78-64, Miami of Ohio edged
Kent State 65-63, Xavier of Ohio
downed Cincinnati 66-65 and
Assumption, the No. 1 small
college team, trimmed American International 94-62.

YACHT RACE
RIO DE JANEIRO ( UPI )Albatros II, a South African
sloop, will be officially declared
the winner today of the Cape
Town to Rio De Janeiro yacht
race . The sloop finished ahead
Seattle while rookie Geoff of the class III armada with a
Pe trie led the Blazers with 26.
corrected time of 22 days, one
Other NBA Games
hour and 33 minutes.
In other NBA action, Milwaukee downed Philadelphia ~·························································
119,114, Boston crushed San
Francisco 129-99, Phoenix
BIRTHDAY
swamped Cincinnati 133-117,
Chicago beat Cleveland 109-104
and Buffalo edged past Baltimore 118-114.
Lew Alcindor scored 41 points
as the Bucks rallied to beat
Philadelphia. The 76ers led 108106 with four minutes remaining
when Jon McGlocklin hit on a
layup and Bobby Dandridge
converted a three-point play to
boost the Bucks in front.
John Havlicek had 28 points
and Jo Jo ~te added 24 as
Boston stormed past the
Warriors. The Celtics held a 44point lead at one point in the
: Ar~illlbl•in
: rub1/1ss
•
•
fourth quarter.

r-THE DAILY SENTINEL

SAY , \HE:\'T \'Ol' .. .'!
Thtn· i-; o;nmcthing familiar
hen· , "'ith a n ·ason . Carica ture sc·ulr1lun· is of Frank
Sinatra, fr11m l'arlier. obviously I c a n ,. r da ys. It is
among thousands nf props
bein~ auctiun(•cJ nff a s 20th
Centurv-Fox gu('S tl11• "a~
of other major s ludi1:s in
disp11sing of thl' II'HuV!'rs
from hundn•ds of films

22, the Campbellsville - Berea
winner plays the Pikeville Cumberland winner. The
Oak-land City-Rio Grande
winner plays Union . The
tournament championship will
be determined Feb. 25.
Last season, Rio Grande won
the regular season title in the
KIAC with an 11-1 mark, but
were eliminated by Cumberland in the second round.
This season Rio Grande finished
the regular conference season
with a 4-8 mark, beating
Oakland City at home and
Berea on the road, and dumping
Union twice.

ranked sixth on the basis of the
drawing and Cumberland
ranked seventh.
In
first-round
games
Saturday, Campbellsville hosts
Berea, Oakland City hosts Rio
Grande,
Pikeville
hosts
Cumberland and Union draws a
bye. All KIAC tournament
games are played on the home
court of the team with the best
season mark or higher ranking
in the tourney.
In the second round on Feb.

College won the KIAC regularseason crown and is ranked
number one for the tourney.
Oakland City and Union College
tied for second with 7-5 records,
but Oakland City was ranked
second on the basis of a dr·awing
with Union.
Pikeville College and Berea
College ended the season with
identical records, although
Pikeville took the fourth spot
and Berea the fifth on the basis
of the drawing. Rio Grande

Dukes Trip LaSalle, 95-86

Haywood Benched,
,·untph
on1•

•

io AtOakland Saturday

Pro Standings

1 RACK MEN'S TIES
10C EA.
Values to 1.50. Kerm cannot tell a tie, he is
just ti..-ed of looking at them. There isn't
anything wrong with them. I assure you.
These don' t have any gravy spots on them.

KNIT SHIRTS 1.00
For both boys &amp; girls in grey with
imprint on front.
Reg . 1.98. Sizes S-M -LX XL

New York Clothing House
OPEN FRI. AND

Kerm The Hatchet Man

Pomeroy

:
606 E. Main
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeroy
SAT. NIGHTS
:•. •• •••••• •• ••••. •. • • •• •• •••••••••••••• •• ••• •. • • • • •. • . . . . .: . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb.18, 1971

Clark Captures
Scoring Crown
North Gallia's Arthur Clark,
6-5 junior center, captured the
scoring honors in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference for
the 1970-71 season with a total of
254 points, an average of 25.4
points per game.
Eastern's Howie Caldwell, 510 senior guard, finished second
with 198 points. His final
average was 19.8 points per
game. KC's Ken Brown, 6-1
forward, came in third with 191
points, an average of 19.1.
Roger Pelfrey, 6-&lt;i senior
RACER RECOVERING
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
( UPI )-Rookie racing driver
Maynard Troyer was released
from the intensive car unit at
Halifix Hospital Wednesday
when his condition improved
after last Sunday's accident in
the Daytona 500.
Troyer, of Spencerport, N.Y.,
suffered a fractured skull and a
broken hand in the crash.

~o1•dic Crown·

Dinoerlor 8

GOESSLER
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

guard for the Pirates was fourth
with an average of 18.6 points
per game. Dave White, 5-10
junior guard from Kyger Creek
was the league's fifth best
scorer with an average of 17.3.
Dennis Eichinger, 6-3 junior
center from Eastern also
finished with a 17.3 average.
Eichinger played in all 10 of his
team 's games . White missed
one SVAC tilt due to a leg injury.

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Richard J . Jacks , Freda
Jacks to Milo i3. Hutchison ,
Betty A. Hutchison, 17 acres,
Rutland.
Lewis C. Johnston, Erma S.
Johnston to Ralph E. Turssell,
Martha J. Trussell, parcel,
Chester .
Warren E. Campbell, Thelma
0. Campbell to Ohio Power Co.,
easement, Salem.
Roland Searles, Veva Searles
to Pat E. Mitchell, Marcella S.
Mitchell, 65.28 acres, Rutland.
James B. Crockarell, Donna
J. Crockarell to K. G. Anderson,
Sr., Geraldine Ander son, K.
Gordon Anderson, J r ., Susan E.
Anderson, 203.25 acres, Orange.
Linionel W. Johnson, Ermalean Johnson to United
States of America, easement,
Lebanon.
Harold
L.
Ander son,
Margaret Anderson to Danny R.
Tillis, Saundra Tillis, lot,
Rutland.
Richard Chambers, Exec.,
Ethel Thompson, dec., to Earl
A. Smith, Edna A. Smith, lot,
Pomeroy.
Claude Randolph, to Therill S.
Randolph, Joan C. Randolph, 20
acres, Olive.
Millard Van Meter, Vera Van
Meter to Eber Ira Pickens,
Helen J. Pickens, 6 foot strip,
Racine.

The white-b reaste d nuthatch can hop h e a d fi rst
down tree trunks with ease.

Sunday 10: 30 AM
t o 12:30 P M and
5: 00 to 9:00PM
Wayne Swisher, Har ol d Lohse, Kenneth
McCullough, and Char les Riffle are your
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
Rexall Drugs . The y
have low prescription
prices and
prompt
service and discount
drug prices seven days
a week. Let us serve you
for all your prescription
and drug needs.

Let us supply your
vitamin needs

Findlay Finally Wins BC Title

Cage Statistics
1970-71 BASKETBALL

STANDINGS AND SCORING
(Includes games through Feb. 13)
OVERALL SCORING
L PCT.
PTS OPP OFF
TEAM
15
1 .938 . . 1289 862
Waverly
80.6
15
2 .882
1320
959 77 .6'
~ederai - Hocking
15
3 .833
1423
Starr-Washington
976 79.1
14
3 .824 1293
Eastern
973 76.0
14
3 .824 1229
951
Athen"
72.3
14
4
Alexander
.778
1356
1197 75.4
12
Jackson
5 .706
1314 1027 77.3
11
6
.647
Mei9s
1117 1104 65 .7
Miller
10
7 .588
1133 1100 66.6
Soufhern
8
8 .500
862
894 53.9
WahaJT1a
7
9
.438 1054 1052 65.9
Ironton
7 10 .412
1048 1157 61.6
Nelsonville-York
6
10 .375
917
945
57 .3
Vinton County
13 .235 1022 1225 60.1
4
Gallipolis
4
13 .235
897
1080 52.8
Logan
3 14 .176
918 1183 54.0
Wellston
3 14 .176
906 1328 53.3
Point Pleasant
2 12
.143
873 1072 62.4
Glouster
1357 51.8
2 14 .125
828
OVERALL SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT PTS !G)
(17)
Mark Shaw, Logan
151
135 437
(17)
C. Robinson, Fed.-Hocking
144 136 424
D. Poling, Starr-Wash .
443 (18)
187 69
(16)
R. Eblin, Waverly
147 64 358
( 18)
R. Sinnott, Starr-Wash.
123 139 385
(17)
145 70 360
M. Rouse, Jackson
( 17)
333
H. Caldwell, E.
123 87
( 17)
332
120 92
G. Martin, Jackson
(17)
D. Eichinger, Eastern
133 59 325
(17)
112 . 84 308
A. Couladis, Athens
SEOAL SCORING
FG FT PTS (G)
NAME, TEAM
( 13)
126 118 370
M . Shaw, Logan
(13)
117 53 287
R. Eblin, Waverly
(10)
97
26 220
C. Kitchen, Ironton
(13)
108 53 269
M. Rouse, Jackson
(13)
91
61
2A5
G. Martin, Jackson
(12)
84 48
216
P. Miller , Waverly
( 13)
A. Couladis, Athens
84 63 231
(13)
86
50 222
M. Swart, Athens
(13)
83
56
222
R. Ratcliff, WelfSton
( 12)
75 53
203
L. Snowden, Gallipolis
MOVC SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT PTS (G)
(3)
H. Caldwell, Eastern
26
12 64
(3)
27
D. Ei chinger, Eastern
7 61
(4)
R. White, Alexander
32
12 76
(4)
J. Bankes, Miller
33
5 71
(4)
16 66
S. Hern, Miller
25
(4)
27
8 62
G. Risley, Alexander
(4)
27
4
58
G. Brooks, Alexander
(5)
P. Kiener, Miller
24 14 62
(5)
B. Steiner, Miller
23
16 62
(6)
J. Wright, Glouster
18 74
28
(4)
S. Brown, Alexander
23 45
11
TRI-VALLEY SCORING
NAME, TEAM
FG FT PTS (G)
(7)
C. Robinson, Fed-Hocking
62
60
184
(6)
14
124
P. McGraw, Warren Local
55
(6)
29
J. Parks, Belpre
36
101
(7)
19
111
G. Barber, Vinton County
46
(7)
103
38 27
E. Driggs, Fed.- Hocking
(7)
39 24
102
H. Seckinger, Nels- York
(7)
34 18
86
J. Mitchem, Warren Local
(7)
36
5
77
B. Lower, Nelsonvi lle-York
(6)
19 27
65
J. Meeley, Belpre
(6)
21
20
62
T. Osborne, Nels-York

w

SVAC
G-Piayer, Team
15-Ciark, NG
17-Caldwel l, E
17-Eichinger, E
16-Brown, KC
14-White, KC
15-Pelfrey , NG
16-Swain, HT
16- Daniels, HT
16-Ehman, SW
16-Wilford, S
G-Piayer, Team
1D-Ciark, NG
1D-Caldwell, E!
1D- Brown, KC
1D- Pelfrey, NG
9- White, KC
1D-E ichinger , E
1D-Swain, HT
1D- Daniels, HT
1D-Crem eens, HT
1D- Dillon, SW

DEF.
53.9
56.4

54.2
57 .2
55.9
66.5

60.4
64.9
64.7
55.9

65.8
68 .0
59.1
72.0
63.5
69 .6
78.2
76.5
84.7
AVG.
25.7

24.9
24.6

22.4
21.4
21.2
19.6
19.5
19.1
18.1
AVG.
28.5
22.1
22.0
20.7
18.8
18.0
17.8
17.1
17.1
16.9
AVG.
21 .3
20.3
19.0
17.8
16.5
15.5
14.5
12.4
12.4
12.3
11.3
AVG.
26.3
20.7
16.8
15.9
14.7
14.6
12.3
11.0
10.8
10.3

SCO~ING (TOP 10)
ALL GAMES
FG FT PTS. AVG.
138 80 356 23.7
124 88 336 19.7
132 59 323
19.
109 75 293
18.3
97
45
239
17.7
98 45 245 16.3
99
48 246
15.3
83 48 214 13.3
67 66 200
12.5
78 43
199 12.4
SVAC ONLY
FG FT PTS. AVG.
97 80 254 25.4
198 19.8
54
72
191
19.1
41
75
186
18.6
75
36
156 17.3
62 62
73 27 173 17.3
160 16.
64
32
144 14.4
53 38
18 138 13.8
60
48 24 120 12.

(VARSITY
SEOAL STANDINGS
TEAM
W L PTS OPP
Waverly
12 1 1075 694
Athens
11
2 956 743
Ja ck son
9 4 992 819
M eigs
7 6 818 873
Ironton
6 7 797 840
Wellst on
3 10 734 991
Galli polis
3 10 645 862
Logan
1 12 728 923
MOVC STANDINGS
T E AM
W L PTS OPP
M il ler
4 1 373 329
Alexander
3 1 352 266
East ern
2 1 240 182
Glouster
0 6 339 527
TRI-VALLEY STANDINGS
TEAM
W L PTS OPP
Federal-Hocking 7 0 495 373
War ren Local
5 2 523 462
Belpr e
2 4 355 386
Nelsonvill e-York 2 5 389 423
Vinton County
1 6 386 504

Ironton
9 4 572 522
Meigs
8 5 576 541
Jackson
5
8 499 501
Gallipolis
4
9 438 493
Logan
3 10 462 541
Wellston
2 11 381 61 7
MOVC STANDINGS
TEAMS
W l PTS OPP
Alexander
4 0 292 141
Eastern
2 1 146 147
Miller
3 2 271 249
Glouster
0 6 210 382
TRI-VALLEY STANDINGS
TEAM
W L PTS OPP
Belpre
6 0 288 224
Federal-Hocking 4 3 289 251
Warren Local
4 3 278 278
Vinton County
2 5 243 301
Nelsonville-York 1 6 255 299
TEAM STATISTI CS
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
FGM-F GA PCT.
TEAM
372-761 .489
Athens
392-864
.454
Jackson
(RESERVE)
430-956
.450
Waverly
SEOAL STANDINGS
338-823 .411
Ironton
TEAM
W L PTS OPP Meigs
278-706
.394
Athens
12 1 569 415 Gallipol is
231-646
.358
Waverly
9 4 593 460 Wellston
278-831
.335
268-840
.319
Logan
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
FTM-FTA PCT.
TEAM
215-307 .700
Waverly
208-317 .656
Jackson
183-283 .647
Gallipol is
212-344 .616
Athens
202-331 .610
Logan
259-441 .587
M eigs
119-207 .575
Ironton
180-334 .539
Wellston
REBOUNDS
TEAM
NO. G AVG.
591
13 45.5
Jack son
Logan
573 13 44.1
Waverly
565
13 43.5
M eigs
541
13 41.6
Athens
529 13 40 .7
Ironton
484 13 37.2
Wellston
450
13 34.6
Galli pol is
370 13 28.5
PE RSONAL FOULS
T EAM
NO. G AVG.
Athens
183 13 14.1
Wellst on
209
13 16.1
Waverly
216 13 16.6
Galli pol is
229 13 17.6

A DOLLAR
SAVED IS

4%%

Whether you' re a youngs te r or a
Senior Citizen, you ca n count on us
to stock t he fi nest in vitamin products
to help keep you in the best of health!
If you're a ne w comer to our community, come in and ge t acquainted
with us!

INTEREST EARNED
AT THE.••

The Athens County
Sa vings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy , Ohio

WE MAK E YOUR
MON E Y GROW!

SHIRl
FiniSHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Ohio
high school basketball notes
from around the state :
Findlay's unbeaten (17-0) and
third-ranked Trojans clinched
·their first Buckeye ·Conference
basketball title since 1957 with
a 74-55 decision over Mansfield
Senior Friday night. Findlay's
6-foot-6 Steve Wenner scored 28
points and had 14 rebounds as
the Trojans snapped an eightgame winning streak for Mansfield, now 13-4.
Zanesville Rosecrans closed
out its regular season ( 15-3)
with a pair of impressive victories over the weekend. The
Bishops of Coach Dave Ewart
handed Zane Trace (Guernsey )
its first loss of the campaign,
65-56 Friday night, and took
Skyvue 61-50 the following evening. Rosecrans won 14 of its
last 15 games, losing only to
AA Licking Valley in triple
overtime during that span.
Columbus Hartley ( 11-7 ),
which handed Columbus Bishop
Ready, ranked No. 1 in AA at
the time, its first loss a couple
weeks ago, will get a chance to
do it to the big boys now. The
Hawks, coached by Dick Geyer,
have the unenviable task of
meeting top-rated Columbus
Walnut Ridge (16-0) in its first
Central District Tournament
game.
Celina Captures Title
Tenth-ranked Celina captured

its firs t Wes tern Buckeye
League championship since 1952
with its 79-32 victory over Kenton Friday nig ht and came
back Saturday night with an
impressive 81-69 win over sixthranked Delphos St. John. The
Bulldogs, coached by former
Muskingum College star Dean
White, are 16-1 on the season.
Four of the starters are juniors.
Gary Deidrick of Lorain Admiral King poured in 44 points
in King's 91-85 victory over
Sandusky Friday night. Deidrick, who's scoring at a 28.8
points per game clip, hit on 20
of 31 shots from the floor. The
6-foot-4 senior moved to thir d
on King's career scoring list
behind Jim (Bubbles ) Harris
and Pa t Biber .
Castalia Margaretta's Dave
Bailey canned 36 points Friday
night in his team's 74-63 victory over Sandusky St. Marys ,
which snapped a 14-game losing
streak the Polars had against

DON'T BE FAT
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Drug St ore - Middleport. Mail Orders Filled.

FEB. 19 &amp; 20
Meigs
249
13
19.2
253
13
19.5
Logan
Jackson
255
13
19.6
Ironton
256
13
19.7
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Name, Team
FGM-FGA Pet.
Mart in, Jack son
91 -151 .603
D. Smith , Athens
73-121 .595
Couladis, Athens
84-145 .579
Ebli n, Waver ly
117-212 .552
Swart, Athens
86-163 .528
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
Name, Team
FTM-FTA Pet.
M . Shaw, Logan
118-151 .781
M i ller, Waverly
48- 62 .774
Marti n, Jack son
63- 83 .759
Swart, Athens
50- 69 .725
Eblin, Wav erly
53- 74 .716
REBOUNDS
Name, Team
NO. G Avg.
M . Shaw, Logan
249 13 19.2
Martin, Jackson 204 18 15.7
Rouse, Jackson
199 13 15.3
Eblin, Waverly
179 13 13.8
Kitchen, Ironton 138 10 13 .8
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Athens at Meigs
Wellston at Gallipolis
Ir ont on at Jackson
Loga n at Waverly
MOVC
M iller at Eastern
Tri-Valley
Nelsonv i lle-York at
V inton County
War r en Loca l at Bel pre
Others
Spence r at Wahama
Point Pleasant at
Chapmansvi lie
SATURDAY
Tri-Valley
Federal-Hocking at Belpre
Others
Dayton Roosevelt

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for a ll teams except Point
Pleasant and Wahama .

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over all four of the top-seeded
teams in the AA Sectional at
Baldwin-Wallace College. The
wins were 82-53 over Parma
Byzantine, 64-55 over Lorain
Clearview, 66-52 over Elyria
Catholic, and 71-58 over Avon.
John Kantner of Toledo Whitmer, a 6-foot-2 guard, has continued his torrid scoring pace t
through 16 games. Kantner has
589 points for a 36.8 average.
One of the top games in the
final full weekend of action will
find eighth-ranked (AA) Steubenville Central Ca tholicvisiting
four th-ranked Wellsville Saturday night.

FRI • SAT.

In At 9- 0ut At 5

Robinson's Cleaner.,

St. Marys. Bailey, a 6-foot-3
senior , hit on 16 of his 18 shots
fr om the floor for 89 per cent
and was perfect in four free
throw a ttempts. Castalia is now
14-3 this season.
Best in Seven
West Holmes , under Coach
J ack Van Reeth, has posted the
best season (14-3 ) in the
s chool's seven-ye ar his tory
while allowing opponents only
44.5 points per game. Van
Reeth coached Dresden Jefferson to the state Class A title
several years ago.
Fourth-ranked (A) Lorain
Ca tholic has posted victories

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�.i- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 18, 1971

Boston Ace Signs, today·s FUNNY Junior's Calorie Needs Exceed Pop's
-...Highest Ptiid In AL ..h

every bit as nutritious as a
By Deborah M. Conklin
Ext. Agent, Home Econ.
serving of sirloin steak or any
Which member of the family type of meat, for that matter.
needs the most to eat? You Americans are "meatmight be surprised to realize eaters;" there's no doubt about
it's Junior instead of pop! Boys it. Because of habit we tend to
between the ages of 15-18 need feel that meat is needed at
about 3,400 calories daily, while every meal and this just isn't so.
men 35-55 years need only 2,600. You can substitute any of the
The last six months of above for a serving of meat and
pregnancy a woman will need to remain very healthy, at a lower
add 200 calories daily. The ·cost too!
nursing mother needs to add Is your oven on the "blink?"
1,000caloriesdaily; much of the Are there times when you just
extra comes from milk added to don't want to heat it for a small
her diet.
dish or when you already have
If you're trying to cut down on so much in it that nothing else
the food bill here are few tips: can fit?
The "Top -Of- The - Stove four tablespoons of peanut
butter, two eggs, or one cup Oven" is an answer to your
cooked dried beans or peas are

~~---r-r•''MO

'" •
.....

By United Press International
Boston's Carl Yastrzemski
became the highest paid player
• • in the American League and
possibly all of baseball Wednes"" day and Mel Stottlemyre
""' retained his status as the
\ "" highest paid New York Yankee.
,...; Yastrzemski signed a threeyear contract for an estimated
::: $150,000 per year and Stottle•:- myre followed suit by accepting
""' a slight raise to an estimated
~,, $70,000 from the Yanks despite
• "' a disappointing 15-13 record last
year.
"I'm very happy with the
contract and wouldn't have
•
signed for three years unless I
'"'"got what I wanted," said
Yasttzemski, who missed his
... ~ bid for a fourth American
•.-v ·League batting championship
... . last year when California's Alex
_"'~ Johnson edged him by .0003.
Other Signings
un
In other signings, the Los
Angeles Dodgers announced
•
that outfielder Manny Mota and

pitcher Jim Flynn agreed to
terms leaving only four players
includmg shortstop Maury Wills
among the u11signed .
The Kansas City Royals
announced that veteran pitchers
Dave Morehead and Wally
Bunker had come to terms and
pitcher Casey Cox signed with
the Washington Senators.
In a minor trade, the San
Diego Padres sent infielder Van
© 1971 by NEJ., foe.
Kelly to the Atlanta Braves'
Richmond, Va., farm club for r-------------------~~ 1
Today'• FUNNY will p~f' $1.00 for
pitcher Chuck Westerhouse.
each original "funny" used. Send gags
A pair of familiar pitching
to: Today's FUNNY, 1200 West Third
St., Cleveland, Ohio 4&lt;4113.
names were also in the news
from the spring training
headquarters.
Pedro And Denny
Ted Williams of the Washington
Veteran Pedro Ramos, the 35- Senators.
year old right-hander who
McLain was the first Senator
pitched with five major league to pitch batting practice .
clubs in 15 seasons, signed a Williams commented, "No one
contract with Atlanta and will asked him to pitch but he's
report to the Richmond affi- anxious to get started and
liate.
that's good. I just hope he
Plans for
the
Post's
And Denny McLain, drew doesn't get carried away and do
celebration of the 52nd Anpraise from his new manager too much too soon."
niversary of the founding of The
American Legion were announced by
Commander
Leonard Jewell at the regular
meeting of Drew Webster Post
39 of Pomeroy, Tuesday night.
This year's party will be held
at the Post home on West Main
Street on Tuesday, March 16.
The program will begin at 7:30
p.m. Entertainment this year
will be provided by the ladies
auxiliary and a social hour,
hosted by the ladies auxiliary
players what they earn, but the highest paid player in the will follow the program.
we're not going to be pushed majors came up somehow. I
Paul Casci, chairman, aninto an unsound position by any told him with his ability, he nounced final plans for the
player with regard to his should be. He said 'I hope I can Post's sponsorship of the apcontract. After all, we have a be. '"
pearance of the "Singing
Yastrzemski and O'Connell Caldwells." The Caldwells
whole organization to think of."
talked for an hour or so feature an Americanism and
Quick Settlement
Not so far from where Tuesday and Wednesday's ses- Patriotism Program in Song.
Howsam was talking about sion was rather anti-climactic. The "Sil)ging Caldwells" will
Bench in Tampa, Dick O'Con- It went easier than some other make five appearances in the
nell, the Boston general mana- negotiations will in the next few Bend area on March 1.
ger, was talking about Carl weeks.
The Caldwells will give
Don't be shocked if some morning performances at
Yastrzemski in Winter Haven.
O'Connell had just signed ballplayers decide to stay out Wahama High School and Meigs
Yastrzemski to a three-year maybe a month or more into Junior High, with afternoon
contract and although no the season. Don't be shocked performances being given at
figures were given $140,000 a either if the general managers Southern and Meigs High
decide to let 'em. Times have Schools.
year is a good guess.
'
"We think he's probably the changed. Everybody's much
The Caldwells will climax
highest paid in the American more permissive. That is the their visit with an evening
proper word isn't it?
League," O'Connell said.
performance at the new Meigs
Not the majors though?
High School beginning at 8 p.m.
"I don't know about the
The public is cordially invited to
Natwnal League," said the Red
x general manager. "Yaz and
I were talking a couple of
[HosPITAL NEws
weeks ago and the subject of

52nd Birthday
Will Celebrated

Today's Sport Parade

Cannon to Right, to Left,
..,,

Of Reds' Manager Howsant

By MILTON RICHMAN
NEW YORK (UPI)-Bob
Howsam, Cincinnati's general
manager, reminds me of
Tennyson's famous 600.
You remember what they
saw when they rode into the
Valley of Death, don'tcha?
•
" ...Cannon to the right of
them ... Cannon to the left of
them ... Cannon in front of
them ... "
Howsam gets pretty .much
that same general panorama
now.
Johnny Bench, hts catcher, 1s
right over the horizon talking
about $500,000 for three years;
Pete Rose, his rtghtfielder,
wants $250,000 for two, and
Tony Perez, his third baseman,
is ready to settle cheap. He'll
take $100,000 for one year.
ryD~ma
ing
Bob Howsam
rattle
east!}. No rna
h
f
things get he
sm11ing throu
cool and adv
• league, half a eague, half a
league onward He doesn't
• panic. There's really no reason
to. Chief Bender, the Reds'
Player Personnel Director,
handles the contracts.
That doesn't mean Howsam
doesn't know about all those
• heavy cannon around him. He
• sat at his desk at AI Lopez
Field in Tampa, Fla., Wednesf'J day and talked about the same
thing all the other general
managers are talking about spiraling salary demands.
-;=: "The rule of the Cincinnati
• organization is not to discuss
contracts except with the
,_,. player, or with him and his
representative," Howsam said.
"We're going to do what we
think is fair. We'll even bend a
! little backwards to pay the

a:

Holzer Medical Cneter, First
Ave. and Cedar St. Maternity
visiting hours 2:30 to 4:30p.m.
Parents only on Pediatrics
Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby G. Fout,
Jackson, a son; and Mr. and
Mrs. Jennings Wayland,
Middleport, a daughter.
Discharges
Linden Allen, Or an Berry,
John Brewer, Landon Burnett,
Mrs.
Carl Clarkson and
daughter, Mary Daniels, Harold
Hall, Gilbert Hart, Harry Hill,
Mabel Houck, Mrs. Dewey
Hughes, Mrs. Charles Krebs,
Mrs. Raymond McDowell, Mrs.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Darrell McKinney, Donald
BASKETBALL SCORES
Miller, Mrs. Eva Miller, Frank
By United Press International
Columbus Ready 90 Columbus Mullins, Mrs. Robert Perkins,
Cecil Speck, Gary Tilley,
Academy 78
Licking Valley 64 Northridge 53 Gregory Wood, Daniel Workman, Charles Yeley, Mrs. Cleo
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Miami 65 Kent State 63
Wittenberg 91 Heidelberg 69
Ashland 95 Ohio Northern 63
Otterbein 113 Mount Union 90
Defiance 105 Bluffton 82
Urbana as' Ohio Dominican 78
Baldwin-Wallace 89 Ohio
Wesleyan 71
Xavier 66 Cincinnati 65
Wash. &amp; Jeff. 67 John Carroll 63
( ot)
Western Michigan 78 Bowling
Green 64
Indiana (Pa.) 89 Akron 71

WESTINGHOUSE - • •

Bob Lawson, a Rio Grande
College junior from Oak Hill,
took third place in the triple
jump and fifth place in the long
jump at the recent All-Ohio
University and College Indoor
Championships at Miami
University. He was the only
athlete to finish in the top five in
both events.
Lawson was one of two
members of the Rio Grande
College Redmen track team
entered in the competition. The
other, junior Phil Allen of
McConnellsville, was injured
during the meet and was
scratched. Allen, a 1967
graduate of Morgan High
School, was formerly a member
of the Ohio State University
track team.
The Most Valuable Player on
the 1968 Rio Grande track team,
Lawson set a new Rio Grande
record in the triple jump, with a
distance of 44 feet, 7;s inches.
Eric Munford from the
University of Cincinnati set a
new meet record in winning the
triple jump, with a distance of
46 feet, 9% inches.
The All-Ohio meet, according
to Redmen Coach Dean
Rinehart, "is one of the
roughest tests in the state. It is

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Deborah Conklln
nutrition principles.
If you have questions concerning the program or desire
to participate in the program,
contact the Extension Office,
Box 32, Pomeroy, 992-3895.

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Width

exists in 50 Ohio counties.
The aides work on a one-toone basis with homemakers so
that they can deal with the
spectfic problems or interests of
the family to improve nutrition.
Nutrition, food buying, meal
planning, food preparation,
storage, and preservation are
all areas the aides discuss. This
is a doing and showing process
rather than a telling. First there
are certain facts the aide needs
to explain to the homemaker
but the aide actually makes
trips to the grocery store with
the homemaker to do the
shopping, pointing out better
buys as they go along.
The aide may help the
homemaker prepare a new
recipe. Only simple and inexpensive recipes are demonstrated. The attempt here is to
be able to get more for the food
dollar.
In other cases the aide may
help the homemaker prepare a
week menu plan based on

J Rio's Lawson Places

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . Green,
Marshall,
Mrs.
George Harold
Williamson,
Mrs. John
Lewis, Mrs. Clifton Williams,
Mrs. Ronald Martin, Morris
Harden, Mrs. Paul Bragg,
The Multi-Speed Laundromat
Larry Canaday, Mrs. James
Hawley, Donna Borden, Miss
Washer With Weigh-To-~ve Loading Door
Anna Holley, Joseph Kerns,
Mrs. Arminda Anderson, Mrs.
Claude Sauders, Edward
lnsta II
Chapman, Mrs. Maude JohnAnywhereson, Brian Grube, Mrs. James
In A Mere
Porter and Dwayne Johnson.
27 Inches Of
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Height

the evening performance with
the admission being $1 for
adults and 50 cents for school
children and under.
All
proceeds from this project will
be used for the Meigs County
American Legion Baseball
Program.
Commander Jewell read
correspondence
on
the
Department Scholarship
Program and also
on the
Legion's hospitalization insurance. A petition was circulated among members
present against legalizing the
use of marijauna. This petition
will be forw'a rded to the State
Headquarters by James Roach
of the Middleport Post.
Two volumes of "World War
II in Picutres" were presented
to the Post by Paul Casci, on
behalf of Mrs. Don Robeson, to
be placed in the Post's library in
memory of her late husband
Don Robeson who was a life
member and outstanding
worker for Post 39.
Raymond Jewwll, membership chairman, reported the
post's membership at 310
members, 10 shy of the quota of
320. One new member, Donald
Whaley a Vietnam veteran was
present and
introduced.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting by Casci
and Guy Guinther.

dilemma. No, it's not a new
gadget with a high price tag. In
fact, each of you probably own
one and don't know it.
You simply pour the mixture
or place biscuits, rolls, etc. in a
metal baking pan. Set the pan
inside a slighly large heavy
metal frying pan and cover.
Place frying pan over low heat
and cook suggested time. (Do
not remove cover during
baking). The foods will brown
on sides and bottom, not on top.
Custards should be placed on
a rack (tin can covers will
serve) in one mch of water.
These and many other bits of
nutrition information are being
taught throughout Meigs
County by the Extension Services nutrition aides, Mrs. Ann
Boso, Mrs. Myrtle Clark, Mrs.
Virginia Fisher, Mrs. Pansy
Jordan, and Mrs. Annie Moon.
The Expanded Nutrition
Program under which this
information is spread is a
federally funded activity that

Wizard Three-Star 5-HP Tiller

competition against superior
athletes, and anyone who places
in the first five in an event has
made a great showing."
The top five places in the
triple jump went to Munford,
Rick Fuller (Miami), Lawson,
Doug Vine (Indiana U.), and
Ben Pumphrey (Cincinnati).
The top place in the long jump
went to Jesse Harris of West
Virginia State University, with
a jump of 23 feet, 3/4 inches.
Finishing behind him were
Louis Tabb (Central State),
John Schwan (Miami), Mike
Daniels (Central State) and
Lawson.
..----------""""'----------,

Off-Shore
I Drilling
Important
Natural Gas
Source
1

MARBLE CLIFF, OHIO
(CGS)-The Columbia Gas
System recently invested ten
million dollars in off-shore
leases, in hopes of tapping
new natural gas sources beneath the sea.
Off·shore drilling, a relative
newcomer to the drilling industry, is many times as expensive as dry-land drilling.
The averuge off-shore drill
I probes I I ,000 feet below the
sea's surface. An operation
like this could total more than
1
a half million dollars per well.
Special sea-going drilling
platforms-as high as an
eight-story building- can cost
over five million dollars each.
And miles of concrete-coated
pipeline are needed to move
the gas to dry land.
Apart from the high costs,
off-shore drilling involves a
high degree of risk. However,
the otT-shore shelves near the
I coast of Louisiana are credited
1 with having the largest oceanic
deposit of gas and oil in the
United States.
These rich gas deposits off
the Louisiana shores are the
prime target of Columbia Gas
System's drills.
Even though the risks and
I the costs of off-shore drilling
I arc high, Columbia Gas is
conudent these wells will soon
provide ~dditional gas for the
company s customers.
_

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

...
_,...._.
• •••••••• •

• • • t..

I

• •
• • • • • • • • • • • •• • •
• • • • • • • • • • •• • •
•• •• • • •• • •• ••
•••• •••••••••
• • • • • • •
• •• • •• • •• • •• • •• • •
••••• •••••••
•••• ••• • •• •
• • • • • •
• •

-

•

•

•

From

beaeatli
tbesea

•

Off the coasts of America, standing
spider-like in the sea, are hundreds
of tiny man-made islands. Islands
of steel and machmery. These are
drilling and producing platforms
that support a rugged breed of men
-sea-going prospectors- tapping
ttrTtl~"ll the vast deposits of natural gas
lying beneath the ocean .floor. It's
an expensi\·e operation to be surP.
'--""'---""'"'-='--' But then, clean natural g(IS energy

••
is well worth it. ] Drilling beneath the sea is just another of the
ways we will meet the ever-increas"'ing needs of homes and industry
for Yaluable natural gas. 'j For
heating and cooling, cooking, water
heating and rlothes drying . . .
Gas is right there.

�6-The Dally Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Feb. 18. 1971

Birthday Observed
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell
entertained recently with a
dinner party in observance of
the birthday of their daughter,
Mrs . William (Alita Lynn)
Burton, of Columbus.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Burton and daughter, Lisa Ann,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Chapman,
Shellie
and
Kimberly,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Hawk, New Marshfield, Mrs.
Estelle Saras, Grosse Point,
MICh.; Mrs. Dorothy Dandakis,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Parsons,
Athens; Mrs . Carol Jones,
Shade, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith,
Pomeroy; and Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Jones, Middleport.

Cub Given Party

I
Doris Jane Randolph Betrothed
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Randolph of Pomeroy, Route 3,
are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Doris
Jane, to Mr. Kenneth Dale Siders, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Siders, Reno, Ohio.
A graduate of Meigs High School, Miss Randolph is now
attending Ohio Valley Beauty School in Marietta. Her fiance
works with the Marietta Police Department. Wedding plans
are incomplete.

Past Councilors Club Meeting Held
CHESTER - The February
meeting of the Past Counci19rs
Club was held at the home of
Mrs. Letha Wood with Mrs.
E rma Cleland, co-hostess.
Games using the Valentine
theme were conducted by Ada
Morris and Jean Summerfield.
The door prize was won by
Barbara Sargent. Members
voted to send Valentines to the
sick and shut-in members and
relatives of the lodge members.

'Refreshments were served to
those named and Ada Neutzling, Mary Hayes, Betty
Roush, Esther Ridenour, Mary
Showalter, Pauline Ridenour,
Zona Biggs, Hattie Frederick,
Mae Spencer, Golda Frederick,
Inzy Newell, Dorothy Myers,
Opal Hollan, and one guest,
John Ridenour. Hostesses for
the next meeting will be Ada
Neutzling, and Inzy Newell.

The Mother's March of Dimes
in Pomeroy and Middleport
conducted by the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority brought in a total of
$587.32.
Meeting Tuesday night at the

Invited to Pomeroy
An invitation to the Lenten
breakfast at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, was read at a
meeting of the Love Joy Circle,
B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, Tuesday night
at the home of Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt.
Mrs. Richard Owen presented
devotions from the Secret
Place, and thank-you notes
were read from the scholarship
girl and Mrs. Genevieve Saxton.
The program by Mrs. Edison
Baker included two readings,
"The Christian World of
Missions" and "Facing Facts in
Modern Missions".
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Fred
Lewis, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
Mrs. Beulah White, Mrs. Robert
Richardson.

Mrs. Bertha Knapp, Mrs.
Eula Francis and Mrs. Martha
Fox entertained Friday with a
valentine party for members of
Den 3 of Middleport Cub Scout
Pack at the Francis Home.
Cupcakes decorated with
candy hearts, punch, potato
chips and coffee were served.
Favors were candy valentines
and suckers. Attending were
Keith Black, Jamie Scally, Ray
Stewart, Max Geary, Bobby
Fox, Mark Tyree, Greg Knapp,
and Ray Mowrey, cubs; and
Marjorie Harris, Mrs. Jean
Cart, Mitchell and Steve, David
Vance, Timmy Mowrey, Marion
City League
Francis, Flora Bailey, and
Feb. 9, 1971
Homer Gilkey, guests.
Lou's Ashland

Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. social room the
group completed plans for a
spaghetti dinner with husbands
as guests at the Orchid Room in
Pomeroy on Saturday, March
13. Next Tuesday night the
members will go to the
Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio for a
demonstration
by
Betty
Newton.
The March 9 meeting will
feature a "do your own thing"
sale with each member to take
something they have made.
Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger presided
at the meeting and Mrs.
Charlotte Hanning and Mrs.
Ruth Ann Riffle served refreshments.

"Blue Monday"
According to the lore of
the s e a, the exp~ssion,
"Blue Monday," had its origin in sailing ship days when
Monday was flogging dayand errant sailors were
flogged until they were black
and blue._
Longest Home Run
On April 18, 1952, Mickey
Mantle hit a home run in
Griffith Stadium, Washington, D.C., that traveled
about 565 feet. It is believed
to be the longest home run
ever measured in a regular
major league baseball game.

PH. 992-2848

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lsi high team game - Quality
Print 901; 2nd high team game
- Quality Print 892; 3rd high
team game - Swisher Lohse
889.
1st high Ind. 3 games Riebel 628; 2nd high Ind. 3
game, Bowen 568; 3rd high Ind.
3 game - Clatworthy 567.
1st high Ind. game - Reibel
227; 2nd high Ind. game Bowen 222; Jrd high Ind. game
- Klees 216.

The 33rd wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
John I. Beaver was observed
Sunday at their Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy, home.
Also celebrated during the
day were the February birthdays of four members of the
families. They were Dougie
Beaver, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John C. Beaver, Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy; Beverly,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John I. Beaver, and her
husband, Sgt. Dennis Smith,
and Gayla Lee Haning,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Curtis, Syracuse. A
decorated cake and ice cream
were served.

Notice To Residents

MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
Effective Feb. 25, 1971
The Ohio Inspection Bureau
changed the town class of Middleport from Class 6 to Class 7. All
fire policies written after this date
wi II reflect this price change.

New Officers Begin Service
New
officers
presided
Tuesday night when the Meigs
High School Athletic Boosters
met at the high school. They
were Kermit Walton, president;
the Rev. Bill Perrin, vice
president; Guy Morris, second
vice president; Mrs . Horace
Abbott, secretary, and Frank
Seth, treasurer.
Ronnie Smith, athletic official
of Pomeroy, conducted the

DAVIS-WARNER INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

program and showed a film on
football stressing the officiating
and explaining the rules and
penalties involved. John Werry
was named chairman of
membership with a membership drive to be held next
August. Wrestling will be the·
topic of the next meeting to be
held at 7:30p.m. on March 16 at
the high school.

V. D. EDWARDS INSURANCE AGENCY
MULLEN INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
P. J. PAULEY NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
REUTER INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

IT'S ARNOLD GRATE'S

Local Bowling

Friday and Saturday At

124 W. MAIN

March Produces $587

WASH IN

RTHDAY
For Fri. &amp; Sat. Only

Prices In This Ad

Grate Sale!
-ONE ONLY-

Tri-County League
Week of Feb. 9, 1971
Team
Points
Mason Furniture
35
Rawlings' Dodge
34
Davis-Warner Ins.
28
Eagles
25
H&amp;R Firestone
14
Holsum Sales Dept.
8
High Team Series - Eagles
2663.
High Team Game - DavisWarner Ins. 924.
Individual High Series John Grate 614.
Individual High Game - Paul
Harris 222.
Season High Series - Paul
Harris 663.
Season High Game - Paul
Harris 279.

Early American

LIVING ROOM
REG.$

349.95
VALUE

A Closeout

Group Projects

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY

Planned by
Cheshire Cats

-4 0NLYINDIANAPOLIS 500
SPEEDWAY

CUSHIONS
REG. 1.33

OIL PRESSURE GAUGE

•

and AMMETER GAUGE
No. 880 For AU Cars. REG. 9.47

3

PRESTONE
SPRAY &amp; GO
"GO IN SNOW"
REGULAR 1.29 EA.

ARVIN

~~EC~~!~ 0HE~!~~

Radiant heat. Regular
10.99. Save $2.00 now.

OUT

MEN'
INSULATED

THEY GO!

ICE SKATES

20

$89

%OFF

BOOTS

9

M e n' s
American
made rubber and
leather.

20 ~FF

The Cheshire Cat 4-H Club
held its February meeting
Monday afternoon with the
following officer s presiding:
President, Pam Misner ; Vice
President, Mary Stump;
Secretary, Pam McCarty;
Treasurer, Ramona Amos;
Recreation leaders, April
Moody and Ruth Athey, and
news reporter, Marie Grose.
Charlotte Queen was appointed safety chairman and
Carol Scruggs was appointed
health chairman.
The progr am for the year was
planned and individual and
group projects were selected.
Various activities for the
coming year were discussed.
Other members a ttending
were Sue Hughes, Stephanie
Minor, Diane Moles, Rosalie
Reese, Debra Fife , Susan
Scruggs and Susan Swisher.
Absent due to illness was Linda
Fife.
The next meeting will be at
the home of the advisor, Mrs.
Dan Swisher, March 15 at 3:30
p.m. to 5:30p.m.

Auxiliary Meets
CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Volunteer Fire
Department met at the
firehouse, Wednesday evening
with President Margaret
Christy presiding. Minutes of
the previous meeting were read
by Opal Hollan. Reports of
committees were given and
plans for the steak supper were
discussed. Greeting cards are
for sale by the members. Roll
call was answered by Marga-ret
Wickham,
Chris ty, Opal
Virginia Burke, Clarice Allen,
Betty Newell , Opal Hollan,
Erma Cleland and Inzy Newell.
The volunteer firemen enjoyed a spaghetti supper at the
f1re house Wednesday evening
preceding
their
regular
meetin g. The m eal was
prepared and served by Mrs.
Wickham.
Roy Christy and Mrs. John

Grate
Price Buster!

GRATE
PRICE BUSTER!

-ONE ONLY-

2 PIECE

Barrel Back

MODERN SUIT

MODERN
LIVING ROOM

Gold Color. Foam Cushions

Re~

$

Reg.
349.95
Value!

399.9sValue

$

GOLD COLOR
FOAM CUSHIONS

A FEW CARPET
REMNANTS_AT COST
-ONE ONLY-

HOOVer Washer ~~~R .•••••••••••'1 3 9 ~--Brand New! Just Received!

MAPLE
CHINA CABINETS

Rutland Furniture
Arnold Grate Gives The Bargain.ft

742-4211

RUTLAND, OHIO

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

�r

'

I

Surprise Given on Birthday

•

•
\

t

•

President Johnson tried to bring relief. President Nixon is
tcying, Congress is trying. Astronaut Frank Bonnan is trying.
The Meigs County Chapter of the American Red Cross is also
tcying says Jean Braun, executive secretary.
(The December 21st issue of Time Magazine carried an entire
page ad, plus one column on the facing page, concerning
PrisOners of War. Beneath was a dramatic photograph of an
empty parachute harness dangling from a tree with the headline:
"By God, believe it." The rest of the copy read:
"But right now, you offer the best hope. With letters. Since the
Write Hanoi campaign started a year ago, three times as much
mail has been received from U. S. prisoners. Hanoi does read its
mail. Hanoi does care what you think. Write the President of
North Vietnam. Ask him to release the names of the prisoners.
Ask him to let the International Red Cross inspect the prisons and
insure medical treatment. Remind him his country signed the
1949 Geneva Convention.
At a ceremony attended by Red Cross President George M.
Elsey and senior vice president Ramone S. Eaton, Postmaster
General Wmston M. Blount unveiled two new stamps, one in honor
of U. S. prisoners of war and servicemen missing or killed in
action and the other honoring disabled American Veterans."

' 50
years of service

HONORING

U.S. SERVICEMEN
PRISONERS

OF WAR

c

MISSING AND
KILLED IN ACflON •

A surprise observance of the
birthday of Mrs. Mabel Van
Meter was a feature of the
Tuesday night meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, held at the hall.
Mrs. Van Meter was escorted
to the altar where the group
sang, Happy Birthday, and Mrs.
Mary K. Holter on behalf of the
council presented her with a
birthday cake baked by Mrs.
Margaret Tuttle, a member of

Party Gl.ven for Youth. Chot·r

A Valentine's Day party for
the youth choir of the Middleport Firs.t Baptist Church
was held Monday night
following rehearsal.
The party was hosted by Fred
Russell. The Valentine motif
was carried out in the
decorations with Mrs. Beulah
White, director, being assisted
by Mrs. Charles Simons, M..rs.

IN VIETNAM
CLIFTON, W.Va.·- Marine
Sgt. Franklin H. Robinson, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
Robinson Jr. of Clifton is now
serving with Headquarters and
Maintenance Squadron 11, First
Marine Aircraft Wing in
Vietnam.

I

•

6
c

UH HD

•

silent auction_ at the conclusion
of the meetmg and refreshments were served by !he
Fred Gibbs, Mrs. Pearl Hoff- kitchen committee.
man. Sandwiches, potato chips,
Present besides those named
cupcakes and candy were
served. Mrs. Simons conducted
games.
Attending were Lynn and Lori
Kloes, Kimberly Glass, Craig
Darst, Carol and Wesley Odrinex can help you become
the trim slim person you want to
Simons, Trina and Venida be.
Odrinex is a tiny tablet and
Gibbs, Velvet and Paula easily swallowed. Contains no
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No special exercise. Get rid of
Parker, Tammy and David excess fat and live longer.
Odrinex has been used sucHoffman, Jill Walburn, Valerie cessfully
by thousands all over
Lewis, and Tammy Richardson . the country for over 12 years.

BEAUTY

STYLE SHOP

and

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POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE: 992-3557

Condition permanent. For
regular, tinted or bleached fine
hair. Stop in now!

WIG SALE

GROUP REG.
$29 WIGS, NOW

f

sandwiches are to be brought by
the members.
Mrs. Clarence Adams, Mrs.
Harriett Neigler and Mrs. Roy
Donohew were appointed on the
Women's Activities Committee;
the legislative and business
agent IS Andrew Cross; youth
and junior chairman is Mrs.
Barbara Dugan. Three new
members, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Smith and Mrs. Ira Orr, were
voted into membership and
may attend the next meeting.
Talks given by Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Atkins and Norman Will
discussed service as a delegate
to the State Grange.

"REAl GEORGE"

1Jreck
'Bastc®

6 oz
REG. 1.49

BATH OIL BEADS

COUGH SYRUP

13 oz.
REG. 2.25

49~

Reg. 1.54

31!2 oz.

SIN EX

1 33
•

1

oz.

t -

·-'

3.1

oz.

Reg. 1.19

1 oz.
REG. 1.59

77¢

Breck Fresh Hair

10
oz.
Regular
2.29

i

1•39

6 oz.
·

VICKSe

NyQUil. Re~ ~·;

R~~251.39

NIGHITIME COI.DS MEDICINE

1

ARTHRITIC PAIN LOTION
2

oz.

18

oz.

MICRIN

99e

Regular 1.59

FASTEETH

UNICAP
VITAMINS

77¢

100 with 24 Free

Oily- Dry · Normal

Reg.

3.11

SUCRETS
24's
Reg. 83~

59e

66'

Regular 98c

2 oz.
Reg. 98$

BRECK
SHAMPOO

26'

ABSORBJNE

NYQUIL

\

BRECK BASIC

FOR
Reg.
CHILDREN39c

VICKS

1.22

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NASAL
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VICKS
VAPORUB

'........ . .

Reg. 1.15

4-WAY

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and SlJPEH U!'\SCE:'\TED

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HAIR SPRAY

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Rect..

¢

Reg. &amp; Dry

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COLD

TABLETS24's

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BRI~GK

1.75

Listerine

1.15

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99e

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16 oz.

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your hair as you shampoo.

Today's FUNNY will pay $1.00 for
each original "funny" used. Send gags
to: Today'&lt; FUNNY, 1200 Wut Third
St., Cleveland, Ohio 44113.

ASPIRIN

CREOMULSION

with
protein

13 oz.
Reg. 1.03

BATH OIL BF.ADS

CALGON

Texturizing
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BAYER

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BAKER

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The regular price for Odrinex is
$3.25 and $5.25 for the large
economy size.
FREE OFFER : Buy either size
Odrinex and receive another
one FREE. You must lose ugly
fat or your money will be
refunded by your druggist. No
questions asked. Sold with this
guarantee by:
Dutton Drug
Store. Middleport. Mail Orders
Filled.

Donald Diener, chairman of the Meigs Chapter reported the
new POW-MIA issue is yet another move to keep the POW-MIA
problem in the public eye. The American Red Cross and other
organizations continue to urge all Americans to write directly to
Hanoi and urge that the U. S. servicemen held be treated
humanely and be allowed to communicate with their families.
Diener suggests using the special stamps for good exposure to
the North Vietnam government.
Write: Office of the President, Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Hanoi, North Vietnam. H you've already written, write
again. If you haven't do it now. Because if you don't care, who on
this earth will?

LETART FALLS Ohio
Valley Grange No. 2612 met at
the nome of Mr$. Elizabeth
Roush Thursda evening at 7:30
with Herber
, master,
presiding.
Deputy Vir
officers for
assisted b) Mrs. Pauline
Atkins, Norman Will and Duane
Will.
Installed were Master,
Herbert Shields; Overseer,
Erma Wilson, lecturer, Mabel
Shields; steward, Eula Wolfe;
asst. steward, Herbert Roush;
chaplain, Bertha Robinson;
treasurer, Early Roush;
secretary, Mrs. Herbert Roush;
gatekeeper, Nora Cross; Ceres,
Mabel
Roush;
Pomona,
Elizabeth Roush;
Flora,
Harriett Neigler; lady asst.
steward, Doris Sayre, and
executive committee, Barbara
Dugan, Andrew Cross and Bert
Hunt.
Members reported ill were
Clarence Adams and Bert Hunt.
The program was given by
Mabel Shields,
lecturer,
followed by the song, Battle
Hymn of the Republic, by the
group; a quiz about dates in
February; a reading, Ground
Hog bay, by Nora Corss; a
reading, The First Snow, by
Doris Sayre; each member
composed a Valentine poem,
and read it; and a word and
philosphy game.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Richard
Dugan on Adams Road, March
11, at 7:30 p. m.
Refreshments of pie and

Mrs. Tuttle, Mrs. Dorothy
Ritchie, Mrs. Doris Grueser,
Mrs. Esther Ridenour, Mrs.
Opal Hollon, Mrs. Mary Hayes.
Mrs. Inzy Newell, Mrs. rv,p;._.
Koenig, Mrs. Goldie FredencK;
and Mrs. Ferne Showalter.

Regular 17.50
PERMANENT

OVERWEIGHT?
FREE OFFER

Daylight Saving Time
Daylight saving time was
first established by Congress
in 1918 and 1919. and was removed until the enactment
of "wartime" from 1942
through 1945.

Mrs. Ada Van Meter, ·Mrs.
Mary Showalter, Mrs. Patricia
Thomas, Mrs. Thelma Call
Mrs. Dorothy Myers, Mrs:
Dorothy
Lawson,
Mrs.
Elizabeth Wickham, Mrs. Zona
Biggs, Mrs. Sadie Trussell,

S lAP S

Mrs. Roush Hostess
• of Ohio Valley Grange

•

were Mrs. Thelma White, Mrs.
Elizabeth Hayes, Mrs. Betty
Roush, Mrs. Goldie Wolf, Mrs.
Barbara Sargent, Mrs. Letha
the council. Mrs. Van Meter family was read by Mrs. Ada Woods, Mrs. Helen Wolf, Mrs.
responded with remarks of Neutzling, assistant recording Hattie Frederick, Mrs. Erma
secretary. Plans were made to Cleland, Mrs. Zelda Weber,
appreciation.
The death of long-time drape the charter for Mrs.
member, Mrs. Lucille Kraeuter Kraeuter at the March 2
was noted and it was reported meeting and members were
that the council had conducted asked to wear white.
services at the Ewing Funeral
The hospitalization of Ralph
Home on Feb. 9 and that Chevalier at the Camden Clark
members had attended funeral Hospital in Parkersburg was
services in a group. A card of reported. Mrs. Ada Morris was
thanks from the Kraeuter reported ill during the meeting
. presided over by Mrs. Jean
Summerfield. The ways and
means committee conducted a

1.88

59C

CORN HUSKERS LOTION

4 oz.

Regular79'

39e
Maybelline
Demi-Lashes
Reg . 2.25
1.92
Maybelline
Regular full lashes
Reg . 2.50
2.15

Tussy Wind &amp; Weather Lotion, Extra Rich for Dry Skin
Tussy Wind &amp; Weather Lotion
Regular Hand &amp; Body Lotion, Reg. 2.00
Lanvin My Sin Cologne

1.255
1.00
3.50

�8-The Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 18, 1971

Dance Company is 2nd Concert Group Offering
The First Chamber Dance
Company of New York- young
soloists from major American
ballet companies- is a favorite
with audiences and critics all
over America and literally
around the world.
The group, which will appear
at 8 p.m. Monday at the Gallia
Academy High School in
Gallipolis, will be the second
presentation on the current
~eries of the Tri:County Com-

munity Concert Association.
Since its New York debut as
the First Chamber Dance
Quartet in 1961, the company
has performed at festivals,
colleges and universities and in
concert halls and theaters in
practically every state in the
Union. The First Chamber
Dance Company has appeared
to great acclaim in Europe, and
has recently returned from a
four-month tour of the world for

Overnight Wire
By United Press International
WASHINGTON- IN 1967, CONGRESS passed a law directing the Conunerce Department to set standards preventing
distribution of dangerously flanunable rugs, carpets and other
: products. In 1970, with standards still not set, 32 patients were
· - killed in a Marietta, Ohio, nursing home fire. Officials said most
--::~ of them were asphyxiated by smoke from rubber backing on a
...
carpet.
.. •
This year, the Commerce Department set flammability
standards for rugs and carpets. Today, the FTC, which must
enforce the standards, proposed tests to be used by manufacturers so they can certify their carpeting is not dangerously
•. flanunable. The proposal is subject to a public hearing March 17.
The standards are scheduled to become effective April16.
COLUMBUS - STATE REP. ALAN E. NORRIS, R:. : Westerville, says all persons 65 or older should be granted
property tax relief because they are all faced with inflationary
pressures. Norris presented Wednesday his version of a
homestead amendment, which provides property tax relief to the
elderly, before the House Ways and Means Committee.
The measure would cost the state an estimated $54 million
•• and would provide a minimum relief of $1,000 from the assessed
:• valuation of one's property. Elderly persons earning $3,000 or less
annually would be granted a $3,000 reduction; those earning from
•• $5,000 to $7,500 would be granted a $2,000 reduction; and all others,
:. no matter how high their incomes, would be granted at least
1
::. $ ,ooo.
RS . h
b
••
BENJAMIN, UTAH - OLDTIME
rn t ese parts rag
"' ~: about winters so severe that gale winds emptied lakes by blowing
'· away the ice cover. To sheep farmer Glen Ludlow, that's mild.
• His barn, situated about 100 yards uphill from Utah Lake, was
• leveled by a sheet of lake ice 9 inches thick and 400 feet long
• pushed from the shoreline by winds up to 50 miles per hour.
The ice crunched through the side of the barn early Wed•• nesday and piled up inside to a depth of 12feet. Ludlow estimated
; damage at $15,000. "What happened," explained Deputy Sheriff
• ,fiarold Ockerman, ''was that the wind was just a-blowin' and a.• blowin' and it forced that ice right up to the barn and made
' matchwood of it."
•
FT. BENNING, GA.-LT. Wll.LIAM L. Calley shot villagers
'"'to death at My Lai but did not regard the victims as human
'~ beings, his defense attorney contends.
Calley's defense summoned further expert testimony today in
.an effort to show that the accused officer was ''psyched up" at the
.SOuth Vietnamese hamlet and therefore unable to premeditate
• tjle murders.
SAIGON- THE U.S. COMMAND SAID today 51 Americans
• were killed in Indochina last week, which included the first six
. days of the Allied
o Laos. It was more than double the
. death toll for the preVl
ee . The toll for the week ending last
::Saturday would
er still with addition of six deaths in
•· helicopter crashes
Laos.
•
The deaths so far were carried as "missing in action"
·: because of delays in body recovery and identification. The death
.. toll raised to 44,459 the number of Gis killed since Jan. 1, 1961 and
:: the year's toll to 251. Another 217 Americans were wounded last
'• week, a drop of 160 from the previous week.

...

..·.·..

GAP STILL ON
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI)
•• Helen Thomas, UPI's White
:: House correspondent, said

::::

...·

Wednesday there is just as
much of a "credibility gap"
surrounding President Nixon as
under his predecessor, Lyndon
B. Johnson.

.•

::
::

::
:·

::

the U. S. Department of State
Cultural Presentations
Program. Most recently they
performed for the distinguished
Bermuda Festival of the Arts
and the Jacob's Pillow Dance
Festival with resounding
success. Critic Arthur T. Andrewes stated "If one is considering a reason to be proud of
the dance in the United States, a
good look at the First Chamber
Dance Company will result in a
feeling of exultation, pride and
overwhelming joy.''
The idea of "chamber dance"
grew out of many hours of
discussion
and
experimentation.
The
dancers
wished to bring theatncalized
dance into a more personal and
immediate framework by
breaking with the old concept of
large, heavily produced works.
It was their hope to communicate with their audiences
in a manner similar to that of a
chamber music ensemble. The
response to the idea was immediate
and
immensely
popular. In just three years,
"chamber dance" ensembles
and festivals began to appear
world-wide, and the term
"chamber dance" entered the
critical vocabulary.
Charles Bennett, a charter
member of the First Chamber
Dance Company, hails from
Chicago and received his initial
training with Bentley Stone and
Walter Camryn. He joined the
American Ballet Theatre in the
1950's and worked his way up
through the ranks to position of
a leading dancer with the
company. During this time he with the handling of his comworked and performed leading pany, and the success of his
roles in ballets by Antony ballets such as "Nagare" and
Tudor, Agnes de Mille, Herbert "By Candle-Light."
Ross and nearly every other
Other members of the
leading choreographer in the company include Janice
ballet world today. Mr. Bennett Groman, Lisa Bradley, Sara de
was fortunate in meeting the Luis, Marjorie Mussman and
gifted concert-dancer Car- Michael Uthoff. Miss Groman
melita Maracci during a visit to joined the First Chamber Dance
the West Coast. Maracci, upon Company shortly after its inseeing some of Bennett's ception and has created inchoreography, was instru- numerable roles throughout the
mental in encouraging him past years. She has been
to form a company and to leading ballerina with the New
continue to develop his gifts as a York City Ballet, performing in
choreographer. The results of ballets by Balanchine, Robbins
her belief in his abilities have and Bolender. When the
been borne out in recent years American Ballet Theatre was

Marjorie Mussman comes to Uthoff is presently on the
the First Chamber Dance teaching staff of the Juilliard
Company via the Jose Limon School.
Dance Company and the Robert
Behind the scenes, and
Joffrey Ballet. She joined the responsible for nearly all of the
First Chamber Dance Company First Chamber Dance Comprior to their world-wide tour in pany's striking costuming, is
the spring of 1969 and enjoyed the young Dane Alan Madsen.
the cheers of both audiences Trained in both fashion and
and critics for her per- costume design in Denmark's
formances in "Nagare" and leading school for the arts,
"Poor C.irl" in "By Can- Madsen has had a remarkable
dlelight."
success in his work in the space
Michael Uthoff comes by his of two years.
dancing abilities naturally as
Michael
Judson,
First
his father is Ernst Uthoff, the Chamber Dance Company's
founder - director of the Chilean stage manager, has a most
ballet. When Mr. Ithoff's father impressive background despite
staged "The Green Table" for his youthfulness. He has stage
the Jeffrey Ballet, his son was managed at the Beumont
there performing the leading Theatre, Lincoln Center, for the
role. Mr. Uthoff rose quickly in 1969-70 season, and had kept the
the ranks of the Joffrey Ballet to company illuminated through
the position of leading male the most trying of cirdancer. In addition to his heavy cumstances during their tour of
performing schedule, Michael Asia.

DUTTON'S

•
CONTINU.ES

First Chamber Dance Company of New York
the first U. S. company to go
behind the Iron. Curtain, Miss
Groman was along to dance
leading roles. Between tours
and New York engagements she
found time for television appearances - five times on the
Bell Telephone Hour.
Lisa Bradley (Mrs. Michael
Uthoff in private life) comes to
the First Chamber Dance
Company by way of the Robert
Joffrey Ballet. Miss Bra&lt;tley
had the rare distinction during
the Jeffrey's tour of Russia to
be the only American dancer
chosen by Galina Ulanova to be
personally coached in Madame
Ulanova's roles.

Sara de Luis, California born,
has a background in dance
highly varied and impressive.
In Europe she has danced with
the renowned Marquis de
Cuevas Ballet Company. A visit
to Spain brought the decision to
cast aside her pointe-shoes in
favor of the Spanish high heel,
and after intensive training
under greatest masters, she
was asked to join the world
famous Ximinez-Vargas Ballets
Espagnole. Her American
dance experience is equally
distinguished with featured
appearances at New York's
Lincoln Center and nation wide
television.

YOUR PHARMACIST FOLLOWS
YOUR DOCTOR'S ORDERS
In the

compoun~ing

scriptions, as

register~d

of pre-

pharma-

cists we are pledged to following
your doctor's orders. For yopr
health's sake, his word is miifaw~"

Tough Strip Mine Bill Asked

COLUMBUS (UPI) ...::..Biparti- or $1,000 per acre, whichever application for a permit would
san legislation has been intro- was greater.
cost an offender $100 to $1,000
Inspectors Visit
or six months in prison.
duced in the Ohio Senate setting
strict requirements for strip
A rotating team of inspectors
Bowers' bill would give mine
mining, detailed enforcement would visit each strip mine site operators six months to backfill
procedures and stiff penalties at least twice a month without stripped land, provide for "reafor coal operators who fail to notice.
sonable" extensions and set the
The strip mining and reclama- fine for mining without a license
properly reclaim stripped land.
Chief sponsor of the measure, tion board also could, after a at a minimum of $6,000 or $700
offered Wednesday, was Sen . public hearing called on its own per acre .
ClaraE. Weisenborn, R-Dayton. or by a citizen, designate any
Sen. Harry L. A~mstrong,
She was joined by two Re· area unsuitable for strip min- R-Logan, introduced a bill callpublicans and six Democrats, ing.
ing for appointment instead of
including two from the strip
Under the bill, a special rec- election of a state Board of
mine ravaged area of eastern lamation fund would be estab- Education.
Ohio-Sens. Robert T. Secrest lished from fees, fines and forUnder Armstrong's proposal,
of Cambridge and Douglas feitedbond.Themoneywouldbe the governor would name nine
Applegate of Steubenville.
used to reclaim stripped land. members to the board for
At the same time, Rep.
Coal operators would be re- three-year terms. The members
Arthur R. Bowers, D-Steuben- quired to backfill strip pits to would receive $5,000 a year plus
ville, offered a somewhat weak- the original contour of the land expenses.
er proposal in the House before moving their mining Currently, one board member
modeled on the Pennsylvania equipment to another site.
is elected from each congresstrip mine law.
They would have to terrace sional district in Ohio.
Submitted Bill
and drain the land to eliminate
House Minority Leader A. G. erosion and acid mine water.
.~
~
Lancione, D -Bellaire, has sub- All toxic material and refuse
TOPCOATSRENEWED mitted a bill similar to Mrs. would have to buried. The bill
boll.u.c.oll.f uk.UJ'tlt ~
1
Weisenborn's in the House, but also sets forth requirements for
it was expected the Republican- use of explosives and weight
CALL 992-2057
con trolled legislature would give limits for transporting coal over
Pickup &amp; Delivery
first priority to the Dayton law- highways.
maker's proposal.
Subject To Fine
Laundry &amp;
TheHouseandSenatereceived
Violators of the regulations
Dry
Cleaning
a flurry of bills but continued would be subject to a $1,000 to
to mark time on the floor, re- $10,000 fine or six months in jail.
striding themselves to brief Strip mining without a license
Middleport
sessions.
would be punishable by a $5,000 2nd Ave.
Mrs. Weisenborn's strip mine fine plus $1,000 an acre. Makbill would set up a bipartisan ing false statements on an

HERE'S TO
YOUR GOOD
HEALTH,
ALWAYS!

Rep. Anthony J. Russo, DCleveland, offered a three - bill
package to aid local governments with revenue collections.
His bills would allow cities to
tax the income of utilities,
banksandinsurancecompanies;
increase the amount of sales
tax going to the local government fund, and permit municipalities to tax up to 10 per cent
of an individual's federal income tax liability .
The Senate was to return at
11 a.m. today and the House at
1:30 p.m.

Your Regutered Pharmaciat •••
Family'., Bed Friend

JUST IN TIME TO CELEBRATE 1HE
REAL •••

t

MARTHA
LOVED TO GET.

:Ct;,;pe;s
For Winter and Summer
Comfort. ..
LINED CAPESKIN
RUBBER SOLE
TO WEAR . ..
INSIDE OR OUTSIDE

M-WWIDTH

a.----------•
--------------11111!-1111!111-----.
HOME LAUNDRY

fiveboard of strip
miningmember
and reclamation
with . .
members serving full time for
five years at an annual salary
of $16,000.
The board, serving at the
pleasure of the governor, could
set stnp mine regulations, conduct inspections and hearings,
Friday and Saturday·
issue cease and desist orders
and revoke licenses subject to
February 19-20
appeal by coal operators.
The strip permits, costing
$150 each and subject to annual
renewal, would be issued by
the division of strip mining in
the Department of Natural Resources. Licensees would have
Infant Thru Size
to present a plan for reclaiming stripped land, and would
have to furnish bond of $60,000

pring
LADIES: PURSES, COATS, BLOUSES,
DRESSES, PANT DRESSES, SHIFTS.
FROM!Hf~®~

BOYS: LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
GIRLS: WINTER DRESSES

~WOAlO

12

GIRLS TODDLER SHIRTS AND SLACKS

THE SHOE BOX

Wflif---~l£c~·AL~S~g
CERTIFIED WELDER

Portable Equipment

Where Shoes are Sens!bly Priced.

Middleport

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Ph. 992 -2511
. -

Chase Hardware
Locust St.

Middleport

Size 2 - 3 - 4

;3 OFF

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ALSO:
ALL SIZES OF WOMEN &amp; GIRLS

PRICE TABLE

On the T in Midd

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WRANGLER JEANS

JACKETS
'12 PRICE

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The look of a skirt...
The comfort of pants!
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New

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Aondaythru
Friday
9 til s
Saturday
9 til9

�9 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 18, 1971

•
•

•

Salisbury School Has Playground Problem .. . ,
A Salisbury PTA delegation
will request assistance from the

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
PUBLIC STEAK dinner,
Thursday, beginning 5:30p.m.,
Chester Grade School sponsored by Chester Fire Department; prepared and served by
firemen's auxiliary.
R OCK SPRINGS Better
Real'th Club, 1:15 p.m. Thurs:
day, home of Mrs. William
Folmer.
CLASS 12, HEATH United
Methodist Church, 7:30p.m. at
the church. Program by Mrs.
Jolm Bechtle, devotions by MiSs

Nellie Zerkle.

•
•

•

•

•

•

SOUTHERN Local Education
Assn., Thursday, 7:30 p. m .,
high school, Racine, with high
school teachers presenting the
program and committees for
year to be named.
SPECIAL meeting, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM
tonight, 7:30 p. m . at hall in
Chester; work in FC degree.
PHILATHEA
SOCIETY,
Middleport Chw·ch 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 kitchen.
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. Kenneth Scites, Mrs. Don Thomas.
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, home of Mrs. William
Airson, 7:30 Thursday night.
TWIN CIT Shrine Club of
Meigs Coun~. Thursday, 7:30
p.m . club house in Racine .
Refreshments.
NEIGHBORHOOD Girl Scout
meeting, 9: 30 Thursday ,
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Leaders to take one
wng stick and
short ones.
GRACE EF
AL churchin the
women, 12:3
parish house
sesswn to
begin a t 11 a
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, practice session, 6 p.m.
Thursday at hall. Plans for
junior
conference
at
Wilkesville, April 26.
FRIDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
home of Mrs. Robert Lewis.
PUBLIC Spaghetti supper,
5 to 8:30 p. m. Friday at
Wahama High School cafeteria ,
prepared and served by
Wahama Band Boosters.
TEEN DANCE, Friday,
Racine Junior High School, 8:30
to midnight. New band from Pt.
Pleasant, sponsored by junior
class.
DANCE FRIDAY following
basketball
Wahama-Spencer
game at Wahama High School
9:30 p.m. Jays will emcee .
SATURDAY
HIGH
SCHOOL
dance
Saturday Meigs Junior High,
Middleport, 8-11 p.m. Jays will
emcee .
JITNEY SUPPER, St. Paul's
United Methodist Church annex, Tuppers Plains, Saturday,
4 p.m . to 7 p.m.
SATURDAY
PUBLIC SQUARE dance ,
8:30p. m. to 1 a . m . Saturday, a t
Royal Oak Park archery
building. Music by Tuppers
Pla ins band, Jim Carnahan
calling. Cake walk during inte rmiss ion,
refreshments.
Sponsored by Tuppers Plains
Community Club.
SUNDAY
SOUTHERN High School
band concert, Sunday , 2:30 p .
m . a t high school, Racine. Intermedia te ba nd will play also.
Public welcome.
MEIGS County prayer service , 2 p. m. Sunday at Hiland
Chapel, Okey Ahart, leader.
Public invited.
REVIVAL starting Sunday,
Mt. Olive Church, Long Bottom,
services , 7:30 each evening
Special
through March 1.
singing each evening. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites public.

•

TUESDAY
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, 7:30p. m . Tuesday at
post home.
Bobby Jones , Franci s
Ouimet, Walter Hagen and
Gene Sarazen were the first
players to be selected for
mem bership in golf' s Hall of
Fame.

board of education of the Meigs Salisbury Elementary School. was discussed at length at the
The probelm of needed im- Tuesday night meeting of the
Local School District in solving
a playground problem at the provements to the playground P.T.A. and it was decided that a
delegation will attend the
regular March .meeting of the
board to ask help.
It was reported that the
children for the past several
"Christian Love is Kind ," group selected one particular
weeks have been unable to use
from the study book was situation which they then
the playground due to standing
presented by Mrs. Thomas reported to the entire group.
water and mud. Drain tile was
Young at the Tuesday night
Miss Elizabeth Fick presided
installed last year but this
meeting of Friendly Circle at at the business session with seems not to have solved the
thank you notes being read from
Trinity Church.
Mrs. Young's meditation was Miss Fick, Fred Dessauer, and
The
developed around the words Mrs. Theodore Mora.
from the gospel of St. John: Lenten breakfast and quiet hour
SPEAKER NOTED
"Beloved if God so loved us, we at Trinity Church Ash WedWEST COLUMBIA - Mrs.
ought also to love one another." nesday morning at 7:45 was Vilma Pikkoja, supervisor of
Assisting with the program announced.
the Meigs-Jackson-Vinton
Miss Mary Virginia Reibel
were Mrs. Leonard Jewell who
Bookmobile Services, will be
read scripture from Ephesians, and Miss Fick served a dessert
guest speaker at 7:30 a . m .
Mrs. Phil Globokar who gave a course from a table decorated Sunday at the West Columbia
poem, and Mrs. Carl Kautz at in red and white with a cherry
United Methodist Church. The
the piano for group singing of tree replica as the centerpiece.
public is invited to attend.
More Love to Thee and 0 Rain bonnets were given as
Master Let Me Walk With Thee. favors. Attending besides those
Mrs. Pearl Mora dedicated the named were Mrs. Roy Mayer,
Mrs. Donald Hauck, Mrs. W. H.
offering.
Members divided into two Perrin, Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.,
groups to recall situations of Mrs. James Fugate, Mrs.
good samaritan actions in their Albert Woodard and Miss Mary
respective communities. Each E. Chapman.

Circle Met Tuesday

12, ~ poem, The Liberty Bell, Lendance banner . Mrs. Edward
a nd the story of the American Kennedy presided.
flag. She then gave a prayer for
Cake, punch and nuts were
the flag . ¥rs. Rowland Dais' ser ved by the executive com'1111
second grade won the at- mittee .

Mrs.. Wilham Pullins, 1
fash10ns of ~he late 1800s,
presented a sktt. Mrs. Kennedy
on behalf of the .PTA presented
the. past presidents of the
Sahsbury and Bedford umts
with gifts.
Present wer.e . Mrs. ~ames
W1ll, Mrs. W1ll1am Ohlinger,
Mrs. Virgil King, and Mrs.
Rolland Eastman. Other past
presi~ents ~ho we:e not there
but w1ll rece1ve a g1ft wer~ ~rs.
Maxine Arnold , Mrs. W1lham
Bartels , Mrs. Hugh Bearhs,
Mrs. George Starcher, ~r.s.
Merlin Tracy , Mrs. Phthp
Radford, Mrs. Glen Taylor,
Mrs. Vern Well, Mrs. Doyle
Sargent, Mrs. H. Qu1vey, Mrs.
George Carper, Mrs. Guy
Morris, ~nd Mrs. Harry Swa~tz.
DevotiOns to open the meetmg
were by Mrs. Wendell Hoover.
She read scripture from Mark

problem.
The unit voted to contribute
$25 to the scholarship fund of the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers. The
spring conference at the
Pomeroy Elementary School on
May 1 was announced and it
was noted that Salisbury unit
will be responsible for
publications.
Teachers were urged to have
· their pupils enter the cultural
arts contest. The best entries in
each grade will be exhibited at
the May 6 County
Council
meeting at Letart Falls and the
spring district conference.
Miss Rosalie Story introduced
Richard Sweet, student teacher
at the school. She thanked the
P.T.A. for supplying funds for
indoor games.
In observance of Founder's
Day, Mrs. Phil Ohlinger and

TERmiTE PROD
YOUR HO-----//

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w. AND SAVE '100 OR MORE
$19.95 buys 1 gallon of Arab Termite Control Concentrate.
Add an Arab hose-end spr ay Applicator and you're ready
to comp lete ly termite-proof the a verage 3-bedroom home!
Saves you over $100 compared to the cost of calling in a
professiona l exterm inator. Buy Arab and do both you and
your home a favor .''Price may vary sl ightly.

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT

992-2709

2 DAYS ONLY- FR IDAY AND SATURDAY

Home to be Visited in March
A visit to the Elmwood Rest
Home was planned for March at
Tuesday night's meeting of the
Dorcas Circle of the B. H.
Sanborn Society of the Middleport First Baptist Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Bert Bodimer, a report was
given on a visit to the Meigs
County
Infirmary where
cookies and ice cream were
served. Mrs. Martha King,
chairman, thanked those who
assisted with the fellowship
tea. Thank you notes were read
from Connie Williamson,
Baptist scholarship recipient.

and Mrs. James Faulkner.
A gift of money will be sent to
the Traywick family. Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin read a poem
"My Dearest Valentine" and
gave prayer. The story of St.
Valentine was presented by
Mrs. Tony Fowler assisted by
Mrs. Bodimer and Mrs. Fred
Hoffman who read poems.
A salad course was served to
those named and Mrs. John
Fultz, Mrs. Harold Chase, Mrs.
Charles Edwards, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner and Michl King, a
guest .

/

'fORGE'
S
G. .
,C+tO~ ING- .

~·

(INGELS)

Mrs. Tompkins Buried Friday
Funeral services for Mrs.
Ernest (Valeria ) Tompkins, 83,
were conducted Friday at the
Wise Funeral Home at Bucyrus,
with burial in the Fairview
Cemetery at Galion.
Mrs. Tompkins, a long-time
resident of Middleport, died at
University Hospital, Columbus.
Since last August she has been
residing a t the Rosewood Manor
Nursing Hom e at Galion. Mr.
and Mrs Tompkins moved
from Middlepor t to Bucyrus in
1962. He died later that same
year.

While living in Middleport
Mrs. Tompkins was an active
member of Heath United
Me thodist Church, the Pythian
Sisters, and the Order of the
Eastern Satr.
She is survived by a son,
Robert, of Lutherville, Md., and
a grandson, James Hamer, who
was reared in the Tompkins
home . Besides her husband,
Mrs. Tompkins was preceded in
death by a daughter, a brother
and a sister. F our other
grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren also survive.

OLD CAR DRIVING

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everything
for
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come get your
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MIDDLEPORT

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 18,1971
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JESSE MORRIS,
R. D. 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
Plaintiff,

vs.

MEDA ELOISE MORRIS,
Address Unknown,
Defendant.
No. 14,791
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
.
Meda Eloise Morris, whose
place of residence is~unknown
will take notice that on the 6th.
day of January, 1971, the undersigned filed his Complaint
against her in the Common
Pleas Court of Meigs County,
Ohio, praying for a divorce,
custody of min or ch lid, and
other relief on the grol.lnds of
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty. The Complaint
also prays that the following
real estate be awarded to the
Plaintiff:
Situate in Bedford Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, in Section
7, Town 3, Range 13, beginning
at the Southeast corner of Arthur Story's land; thence south
on said line to the road leading
from Harrisonville to Pomeroy ;
thence East along said road to
the Pomeroy and Athens Road;
thence North along said road to
the East line of Arthur Story's
land; containing three acres,
more or less, and being all of the
tract lying west of the road .
This cause may be heard on 28
days after the last publication of
this notice, which date is the
19th . day of March, 1971.
Jesse Morris,
Plaintiff
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(1) 7, 14, 21,28 (2) 4, 11, 18, 7tc
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year Ending
December 31st, 1970
Bedford Township
Meigs County
Route 2, Porn eroy, Ohio 41769
Feb. 12, 1971
I certify the following report
to be correct
Glenn Lee
Township Clerk
CASH BALANCE SHEET
DECEMBER 31, 1970
Assets:
Depository Balances $10,733.84
Less: Checks
Outstanding
1.75
Net Funds on Deposit 10,732.09
Total Assets
10,732.09
Liabilities
Fund Balances
10,732.09
General Fund
1,753.78
M.V.L.Fund
2,336.46
Gas Tax Fund
6,641.85
Total Liabilities
10,732.09
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1. 1970
Genera I Fund
2,623.26
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
4,905.31
Gasoline Tax Fund
8,192.60
Tota Is
15,721.17
Total Receipts
General Fund
3, 132.11
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
5,687.87
Gasoline Tax Fund
12,206.14
Totals
21,026.12
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
General Fund
5,755.37
Motor Vehicle License
.. Tax Fund
5,687.87
Gasol:ne Tax Fund
12,206.l4Totals
21,026.12
Total Receipt$ &amp; Balances
General Fund
5,755 37
Motor Vehicle L c
0.593.18
Tax Fund
20,398.74
Gasoline Tax Fund
36,747 29
Totals
Expenditures
4,001.59
Genera I Fund
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
8,256.72
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,756.89
Totals
26,015.20
Balance Dec. 31, 1970
General Fund
1,753.78
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
2,336.46
Gasoline Tax Fund
6,641.85
Tot a Is
10,732.09
CASH BALANCE,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund
2,623.26
Balance, Jan . 1,1970
Receipts
Gen. Prop. Tax 2,068.98
Real Estate
Tangible Persona I
126.39
Property Tax
460.80
Permissive Sales Tax
Cigarette License Fees
18.56
and Fines
423.98
Intangible Tax
33.40
Trailer Tax
3,132.11
Total Receipts
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
5,755.37
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Administrative
3,614.33
- Town Halls, Memorial
Buildings and
Grounds
87.26
300.00
- Fire Protection
Grand Tota l Expenditures
-Genera I Fund
4,001 .59
Balance, Dec. 31,1970
1,753.78
Total Expenditures Plus
Bal. Dec . 31, 1970
5,755.37
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
Balance, Jan. 1,1970
4,905.31
Receipts
Motor Vehicle Li ce nse
Tax
5,687.87
Total Receipts
5,687.87
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
10,593.18
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Miscellaneous
2,990.03
- Maintenance
5,266.69
Grand Total Expenditures
- Motor Vehicle License
Tax F und
8,256.72
Bal. Dec. 31, 1970
2,336.46
Total Expenditures Plus
Bal. Dec . 31, 1970
10,593.18
Gasoline Tax Fund
Bal. Jan. 1, 1970
8,192.60
Receipts
12,000.00
Gasoline Tax
Refund for
Overpayment
206.14
Total Receipts
12,206.14
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
20,398.74
Expenditures
Total Ex penditures
- Miscellaneous
4,366.40
- Ma intenance
6,827 .00
- Improvement
2,563.49
Grand Total Expenditures Gasoline Tax Fund 13,756.89
Bal., Dec. 3 1. 1970
6,641.85
Total Expenditures Plus
20.398.74
Bal. Dec. 31,1970

Bargains, Bargains, and More
Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
... WANT AD'
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.~. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cance.llatlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for
Day 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 ~ervice
s cents~yvord one inser_tion
Mm1mum 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 so word' minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a·.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

In Memory
IN LOV(NG MEMORY of
Frieda Bates, who passed
away, six years ago, wife of
Everett, mother of four sons
and six daughters:
When we had followed her two
by two,
And lowered her down there
where she lies,
There was nothing left for us to
do,
But to hide it all from our
tearful eyes.
So we softly and tenderly
spread between
Our face and the face our love
regrets,
A covering woven of leafy green
And spotted over with violets.
Sadly Missed.
2-18-1tc

Card of Thanks
I WISH to express my sincere
appreciation to all my
relatives and friends, neighbors, Dr . Blazewicz, nurses,
all who sent flowers, beautiful
cards, and visited me in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Thanks to all who helped in
any way and for the prayers
that meant so much to me.
God bless all of you.
Martha Gilmore
8-18-ltp

FOR RENT
HOUSE,
4 rooms,
bath,
basement and attic storage.
Nice Y'ard and driveway.
Available March l. Phone 9922780 or 992-3432.
2-18-tfc
FURNISHED apartment, 211112
N. Th1rd St., Middleport; 3
rooms. bath, nice yard and
porch. Phone 992 -2780 or 9923432.
2-18-tfc
FOR SALE OR TRADE
RCA 21-inch color television.
Also, set of grocery scales.
Will trade for mini-bike.
Phone 949-3913.
2-18-6tc

Business Servic·es
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Pomeroy

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

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l

I

$5.55

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

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

Employment Wanted
WANTED- Housework by the
week or will care for elderly
persons or invalids. Wi ll live
in. Phone 992-6695.
2-17-3tc
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,,-- - - - -- - - leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
10-18-tfc
TRAVEL TRAILERS and
WILL PICK up merchandise
campers. Rentals by day,
week, month. Complete line of
and take to auction on d
supplies. Reese hitches, truck
percentage basis. Call Jim
or travel trailer mirrors,
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
brake controls, awning acPhone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc
cessories, jacks, pie Irons.
One used 1970 truck camper.
INCOME TAX service, daily
A terrific discount on any new
except Sunday. Evenings by
travel trailer or cam oer
ordered in February 'tor
appointment only. Phone 9922272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
delivery at your convenience.
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
Ask about our Mini-Motor
Homecoming in March. Gaul
mtle south of fairgrounds.
2-7-30tc
Trailer Sales, Inc. Chester,
Ohio. Phone 985-3832.
2-18-9tc
RUMMAGE
SALE ,
Fry
Building, Middleport, Friday
and Saturday, 9:30 a. m. to 5
p. m. All merchandise
NICE butchering hogs, 200 to
cleaned and pressed.
2-18-2tc
275 lbs. grain fed. "Bacon
type". Paul Sayre, Portland,
VFW GUN SHOOT, Sunday,
Ohio. Phone 843-2286. Rt. 338, ·
Feb. 21, noon. Broad Run Gun
one mile below Ravenswood
Club, New Haven, W. Va.
Ferry.
Sponsored
by
Stewart
2 18 3
Johnson Post 9926, Mason, W. - - - - - - - - ---- · tp
IT'S TERRIFIC
the way
Va.
we're selling Blue Lustre to
2-18-3tp
clean rugs and upholstery.
Rent shampooer, $1. Baker
SHOOTING match, Sunday,
Furniture, Middleport.
Rutland Gun Club, New Lima
2-l7-6tc
Road. Trap and still targets.
Begins at 12:30 p.m. Prizes hams, bacon and other HOLSTEIN springer heifer.
John Hayes, Chester. Phone
assorted meats.
985-3515.
2-17-3tc
2-17-3tp
GUN SHOOT, sponsored by - - - - -- - - - - Syracuse Fire Dept., near FIREWOOD. Gerald King ,
Shade. Phone 696-1287.
Racine Planing Mill, every
2-14-6tp
Saturday night at 6 p.m.
Assorted meats.
USED HEATING
2-17-3tc
EQUIPMENT
Coal furnaces, $35. Blowers,
BAND - Friday and Saturday
$25. Oil Burners, $50. Gas
nights, 9 p.m. to 2 p.m. THE
Floor Furnaces, $25. Coal
SUN'S, Hl-7 CLUB.
Stoker, $50. Arnold Brothers,
2-17-3tc
E. Main St., Pomeroy.
2-18-tfc
AUCTION WHEN? Each
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
MODERN WALNUT stereo Hayman's Auction House ,
radio combination. Four
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
speed intermixed changer.
Pomeroy -Middleport
By Dual volume control, 4
pass.
speaker
sound
system .
2-7-tfc
Balance $72.20. Use our
budget terms. Call 992 -3352.
2-18-6tc
RUBBER STAMPS made to
order . 24 hour service. Dwain
or Wi I rna Casto, Portland, MAPLE stereo-radio, beautiful
Colonial style, featuring 4
Ohio.
2-12-90tc
speed automatic changer, 4
speakers, AM- FM radio.
Balance . $81.60. Use our
ATTENTION ladies! Wouid yoL
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
like to try a wig on in the
2-18-6tc
privacy of your own home?
You can. Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics •. r - - - - - - - - -- -- .
Koscot, of course . Distributors, .Brown's.. Ph9.r:t~
Middleport 992-5113.
BUY YOUR
12-31 -lfc

Notice

For Sale or Rent

For Sale

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

WHY WAIT

WILL GIVE pidoov ana organ
lessons in my home. Phone
992-3666.
8-16-tlc

Wanted To Buy

S T A R D 0 M, F A M I L Y
style is what Mia Farrow
and Andre Previn are practicing in London. The actress has the part of Joan
of Arc and her composerpianist husband conducts In
staging the oratorio, "St.
Joan at the Stake,'' with the
London symphony orchestra and a chorus of 100.

PRICES!

1

1966 Malibu 4 door
$1395

1963 Corvair 4 door
$495

1963 Impala 4 door
'295

1964 Newport 2 door
$495

1961 Windsor 4 door
$295

EXPERT

1

On Used Car

ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO{1 l Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OFS4,000to$9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less.
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We will furnish lot or erect on your lot.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW .
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

OLD funiiture, dishes, bras~:.
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-627).
9-1-tfc
OLD UPRIGH I pianos, any
condition, as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
be pick -up day. Write, giving
good directions . Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
8-20-tfc

Auto Sales

"Young Hickory"
1967 VALIANT, 4 DOOR, R &amp; H,
STANDARD A-1 CONDITION
James Knox Polk, U.S.
{2)18,ltc
28,000 MIL ES, PHONE 992president from 1845 to 1949.
3860.
was caPed '·Young Hickory'"
2-17-61p
because of some resemblances to "Old Hickory"RAMBLER , re-built motor,
Andrew Jackson. 7th U.S. 1960
good body_. $250. Chuck's TV
president.
Shop, 152 Butternut Ave.,

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

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

Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy, UhiO.
2-16-3tc

--------------1969 BUICK LeSabre , 2-dr.
hardtop, power steer ing,
power brakes , air, 18,000
miles. Excellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-tfc

FERTILIZER
Now and get the early
Discount
Bag, Bulk and Liquid FertiliZer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
area war~house at Pomeroy.

L

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

MASON CAR WASH

1970 Coronet 4 door
$2295

"AUTOMATIC"

Car Completely Mitted &amp;
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
Sat. 9to s-Sun. 11 to 5
PRICE '1.25
Do It Yourself Open
24 Hrs. Daily- 2Sc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5- 1-tfc
SAW FILING, all kinds of
sharpening, Lawn mower
repair. Briggs and Stratton
Engine Service. Low cost pick
up and delivery. Colmer's
Saw Shop, Mechanic St.,
Porneroy. Phone 992-2804.
2-18-3tc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 'f92-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors
3-29-tfc
'sEPTIC -TANKS CLEANED.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning.'' Reasonable rates.
Phone
John
Russell ,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE delivered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
estimates. Phone 992 -3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND ANTE,NNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home , Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.
·
7-31-tfc
INTERIOR carpenter work, by
lhe hour or contract. Phone
992-3511.
1-31 -30tp
BACK HUt:: ana end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George {Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11 -29-tfc

------

---------

1969 Coronet Wagon
$2495

1968 Coronet R/T
$1795

1969 Biscayne 2 dr.
$1895

1968 Dart GT
$1695

1968 Coronet 2 dr.
'1695

1968 Coronet 4 dr.
$1695

1967 Dart GT conv.
$1495

1966 Coronet 4 dr.
$1395

1964 Dart 2 door
t695

1963 Coronet 4 dr.
1969 Torino 2 dr.
$2295

1968 Monterey 4 dr.
$1895

1968 Montego 4 dr.
$1695

1966 Comet 4 dr.
$1095

1969 Fury Ill 4 dr.

AIR- CONDITIONING . Reffrigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

1966 VIP 2 dr.

SEPTI~ tanks cleaned. Miller

$1495

Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

$2495

196 7 VW deluxe 2 dr.
$1295

Help Wanted
WOME N to do housework in the
Pomeroy area . Write Fran,
Box 23, Pomeroy, Ohio.
2-14-6tc
ALL- ROUND baker . Small
retail shop, good opportunity
for right person. Nestler
Ma rket,
1000 13th
St.,
Parkersburg, W. Va. Phone
422-0153.
2-17-3tp

Pets For Sale
MIN IATURE Schnauzers ;,,id
Poodle puppies. Permanent
injections and groomed.
Barkaroo Kennels . Turn right
at Torch , Ohio, 5th house
right. Phone Coolville 6673654.
2-11 -30tc

~----------------1

ONE TOY Manchester and
chihua hua male puppy, six
1970 DIAL N SEW zig-zag
months old , $:20. Phone
sewing machine left in
Coolville 667-3624.
layaway . Beautiful pastel
2-18-3tc
color, full size model. All
built -in to buttonhole, overcast and fancy stitch. Pay just
$48.75
cash
or
terms
available. T rade -ins ac UNFURNISHED 3-room
cepted. Phone 992-5641.
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
2-17-6tc

1963 VW deluxe 2 dr.

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

REDUCE SAFE and fast with FURNISHED and unfurnished
Gobese lablets and E-Vap apartments. Close to school.
waler pills. Nelson's Drugs.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc
1-22 30tp

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

COAL, 11mestone. E:xcelsio: 3 ROOM apartmenl, all electric,
wall oven, table top range,
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
slain less s reel double sink,
Por.1eroy . Phone 992-3891.
food disposal. Nice clean
4-9-tfc
apartment. See to appreciate.
Located in Pomeroy Phone
SP INET-consOle piano. Wanted
Ga llipolis 446-9539.
responsible party to take over
2-2-tfc
payments on spinet piano.
Easy terms, can be seen
locally.
Write
Credit TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
Park , Minersville. Phone 992Manager, P. 0. Box 276,
3324.
Shelbyvil le, Indiana 46176.
2-17-6tc
2-7-12tp

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

,·
--------~------~
(

BUY NOW NEXT WEEK MAY
BE TOO LATE.
NEW ALi ELECTRIC 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious
basement. Beautiful kitchen ,
dining area with scenic view.
Double
garage.
Asking
$23,900.00 OR WILL BUILD
TO SUIT.
WE ARE LOCATED
KROGERS.

$1295

1968 Charger 2 dr.
$1995

1966 Biscayne 4 dr.
$1095

1963 Classic 4 dr.
'595

1969 Fury I 4 dr.
$895

FLORENCE CAROL
WELLS
Pl aintiff
Manning D. Webster
Webster and Fultz
Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
Attorney for PIa in tiff
lll 24, 28, (2) 4 , ll, 18, 25, 7tc

NEAR

NEW 3 BEDROOMS - Near
Rutland on 124. Gas furnace,
Ph baths , utility room ,
beautiful kitchen, cook and
bake units. Dining area. Only
$19,500.00.
992-3325 992-2378
2-12-6tc
CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots on T79 at Rock
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
Witte weekends, or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9926887.
2-3-tfc

I

I

Cleland Realty

CHEV.

1969
$34951
Caprice 4 door. Factory airl
cond., auto. trans., P.S.,
P. B., vinyl roof. Like new
tires. Local owner with only
14,000 mi.

I
I

COTTAGE
STORY
FRAME, 2 bedrooms, bath,
enclosed porch, fenced,
garden space. $4,500.

1

CHEV.

LESS THAN 4 YEARS OLD- 9
ACRES, 3 bedrooms, bath,
city water, floor furnace, wall
to wall carpet. $12,500.
PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST NOW, LET US
SELL YOURS TOOAY
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
2-l4-6tc
HOUS.E, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc
FORSALE- 2 storybrick, full
basement, 3 bedroom , corner
5th and Lincoln , appointment
only. Phone 992-3892.
2-17-6tc

1969
$24951
Townsman Station Wagon.1
Low m ileage local owned1
with auto. trans., powerl
steering, new tires, radio .•
Pleasing lilac finish. See this
before you buy.

I

1-

11967

Plymouth$139~

1 Belvedere 2 dr. hardtop, V-8~
1 motor, power steering, std.
3-speed trans., blk. top, l
cream body, radio.

1

1

11967 Ford

$1495:

I Mustang, 6 cyl., auto. trans., 1 f
lconsole, maroon finish, alii
lg~od w-w tires, radio. Reali
Nice.

I -

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Probate Court.
To the Executor or Ad ministrator of the estate ; to
such of the following as are
residents of the State of Ohio,
viz:- the surviv ing ~pouse , the
next of kin, the beneficiar ies
under the w ill; and to the attorney
or
attorneys
r epresenting
any
of the
aforementioned persons:
Ruth Louella Flory , Middleport, Meigs County , Ohio,
No. 20,425.
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Ap praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned , deceased , late
of said County , was filed in this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be fo r
hearing before this Court on the
1St day of Ma rch, 1971, at 10:00
o'clock A.M.
Any person desiring to file
exceptions thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
t he date set for hearing.
Given under my hand and
sea I of said Court, this 8th day of
February 1971.
F- H. O' Brien
Judge and ex-officio
Clerk of said Court

(2) ll, 18, 2tc
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20447
Estate of WAID D . WINDON ,
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Virgil K. Windon of R . D. 3,
Pom~ roy , Ohio, has been duly
appomted Administrator of the
Estate of Wa id D. Windon ,
deceased, late of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated this 8th day of
February 1971 .
F. H. O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
(2)

11, 18, 25, 3tc

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

GREAT
BUYS I

GROUND TO SPARE- 2 story
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath. fu ll
basement, gas forced air
furnace, CLOSE TO SHOPPING. $9,500.

1967 Mustang 2 dr.

. I

'1295 "
I1 GTO
Cpe., ~hite finish, vinyl~
interior, 4 speed trans., goodl
1

66 Pontiac '

I w-w tires, radio &amp; heater. I

1 66 Ford
'9951
Falcon 2 dr., 6 cyl. std.
trans., all good tires, smart
11:-oking copper fin ish, radio.
Real economy in this car.

I
I

I
1
I

I

tt

1 66 Ford
$10951
1 Galaxi HT Cpe. , ·6 cyl.l
engine, std. trans. , air
conditioning , good tires .l
clean interior, dark greent
finish:

I
I
I
I
I 65 Pontiac $10951
I Tempest St. Wagon, local 11
I owner, low m ileage car, V-81
I engine, automati c trans. , I
power steering, non-slip rear
II axle,
vinyl interior like new, I
light blue finish, radio. Savel
I Toda'f. _
I
I 65 Corvair
t695 1
I 500 2 Dr., local low mileage)
I car, interior ext~a. clean, 1

•

1 medium g r een fm1sh , ali i
good w-w tires, radio. Plenty
of go in the snow. Just nicer
than the average car.

I
I

I
1

I

64 Pontiac
$4951
H. T. Sed., spotless interior,J
good tires, radio, heater-1
automatic &amp; p. steering1
1 Priced to move.

I

I

I

I

CHEVIRO

1962
8' Fleetside, 6 cyl. good tires.
$495
Runs extra good

1

I
I
I POMEROY
1 MOTOR CO

I

II
I
I
1
I

J

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Ti I 8
992-2126.
Pomeroyl

I

I.

L

---------J

1967 Coronet 4 dr.

Home

'595

1963 Custom 880 wag.
'695

1963 Falcon 4 dr.
$495

1965 Tempest 2 dr.
~95

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

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

992 -2152

RAWLINGS
WMP0/1390
GET
DODGE CITY
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
ATTENTION
________________________________________________
_._________________________________
1966 MERCURY Monterey,
aulomatic, power steering,
new battery, new exhausl
system. $795. Phone 843-22 11.
2-12-6tp

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
,NEW LISTiNG- 3 bedrooms,
modern
kitchen,
bath,
basement. New gas forced air
furnace. Storm doors and
windows. LARGE GARDEN.
Only $13,000.00 SYRACUSE.

By Janet E. Morris
Deputy Clerk

t695

For Rent

1-31-tfc
VACUUM Cleaner brand new
1970 model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint 5 ROOM and bath furnished
damage in shipping. Will take
apartment, Chester. Inquire
$27 cash or budget plan
at Newell 's· Sunoco Station .
available . Phone 992-5641.
Phone Chesler 985-3350.
2-17-6tc
2-7-tfc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

Insurance

'595

LEGAL NOTICE
Clyde E Wells, whose p lace
of residence is unknown and
cannot by reasonable d iligence
be ascertained , w ill take notice
that on the 6th day of January ,
1971 , the undersigned pi intiff,
Florence Carol Wells, filed her
complaint against him in the
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, Case No. 14,794
for divorce on t he grounds of
gross neglect of duty and ex
treme cruelty, and pray ing for
d ivorce and other re lief. The
said Clyde E. Wells is required
to answer said complaint w ith in
twenty eight days after the last
publicat ion of this notice, wh ich
date is the 25th day of March,
1971. Th is cause w ill be for I''
hearing on the 25th day of
March , 1971, or as soon
thereafter as the Cour t can
conveniently hear the same.

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

IJ)4:1

•

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