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                  <text>Joan Wolfe n·es of Sntoke, Monoxide

·•

TRAGEDY STRUCK HERE -The new brick home of
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Wolfe, outside Racine, where Mrs.

Now You Know

•

The presidential campaign of
1852 was the last one in which
the Whig party participated.

Wolfe died apparently of carbon monoxide poisoning and
smoke inhalation Saturday night.

Local and state officials have
concluded the death of Mrs.
Joan Wolfe, 40, Racine,
Saturday night was accidental.
This was indicated in a report
issued by Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's department following
an intensive investigation into
the circumstances of a fire in
her one floor, modern brick
home on Route 338 just outside
of the Racine corporation
limits. Mrs. Wolfe was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was pronounced dead
on arrival Saturday night.
However, it was believed
Mrs. Wolfe was dead when she
was taken from the residence.
The body was taken to Dr.
Frank Cleveland, a Cincinnati
pathologist, and Hamilton
County coroner. A preliminary

autopsy report indicated that
death was due to carbon
mo,noxide poisoning and smoke
inhalation. The body will be
returned to Pomeroy today.
The Racine Fire department
was called to the residence of
Mrs. Wolfe about 8:05 p.m.
Saturday by a neighbor who had
discovered the Wolfe home to be
on fire. Other officials - Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach, Coroner
and Dr. R. R. Pickens, and
Prosecutor Bernard Fultz, also
responded to calls to the scene.
They were joined by Eugene
Jewell, chief of the Ohio State
Arson Bureau, Frank Eisnaugle
and Robert Greenwalt, state
arson investigators, and Herman Henry and Ross Tipton,
agents for the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and

Investigation at London.
A rope was stretched around
the Wolfe home all day Sunday
and officials were on duty to
prevent anyone from entering
the home while the investigation was underway.
Racine firemen, arriving at
the scene Saturday night,
believed someone to be in the
home. Looking in a window, it
appeared that someone was in
bed in a bedroom. An air conditioner was removed from the
window and fir~man Walter
Cleland entered the bedroom
but found no one in the bed.
Meantime, John T. Wolfe,
husband of Mrs. Wolfe, arrived
at the home and entered the
residence by way of the front
door. He found Mrs. Wolfe on a
couch and carried her from the

Weather

The Daily Sentinel

Rain diminishing to showers
later this afternoon and showers
likely tonight. Low tonight
mostly in the 30s. Tuesday,
chance of showers, turning
colder, snow flurries in afternoon or night. High Tuesday
from mid 30s to low 40s.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

NO. 218

VOL XXVI

smoke filled home.
Authorities have concluded
that Mrs. Wolfe was alive
during the fire. It is believed
that she was overcome by the
smoke and carbvn monoxide
when she opened a door into the
combination kitchen and family
room at the rear of the home. A
state
arson
investigator
theorized that the fire started in
a couch in the family room. .
Dr. Pickens said that Mrs.
Wolfe sometime during the
afternoon somehow - possibly
in a fall or rising up under a
cabinet - had received a
laceration at the back of the
skull. The wound would have
required about two stitches to
close, the coroner said. Mrs.
Wolfe apparently had bled from
(Continued on Page 8)

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1971

TEN CENTS

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

Rivers on Rise

•

•
•
R

iiORS presented a native dance of ~'weden for their part on the Thinking Day program.

he
Custollls
Shown
•

IJ

~

About 150 Meigs County Girl
Scouts got a glimpse of cultures
of other countries Sunday afternoon in an observance which
marked International Thinking
Day.
The girls, many in native
costumes of the countries they
represented, provided an international flavor to the event
with dances, songs, recitations,
and "finger" foods served at the
conclusion of the program.
Mexican bean dip, Japanese
tea, fortune cookies, pizza
spins, Chinese cabbage and rice
balls, Israeli cheese blintzes,
Swiss Cheese,
Hawaiian
pineapple tidbits, French poin
de modane, Gouda cheese were
among the foods sampled by the
girls.
One of the serving tables was
centered with a scroll from
China and flanked by Chinese
(Continued on Page 8)

Car Recovered
In Charleston

er, was to have crest of 25 feet,
eight feet above flood stage, at
the same time.
Hamilton, located on the
Great Miami River, was expected to see water rise to 18
feet, the same as the official
flood stage, by tonight. Miamitown, also on the Great Miami,
was to have water crest at
nine feet above flood level.
Flood warnings were also
posted today for the Scioto River and its tributaries.
Flood forecasters said small
streams feeding the Scioto were
to overflow their banks today
and would continue to flood extensive lowland areas during
the next two days.
The main stem of the Scioto
was to rise two to four feet
above flood stage in Prospect
;tiMld Laurel.
A tentative flood crest of 20
feet, six feet above flood level,
was predicted for Circleville.

Chillicothe was expected to
see the river crest three feet
above the 16 flood stage and,
at Piketon, the river was to
crest 10 feet above flood levels.
Paint Creek, Salt Creek, and
other small streams were to
overflow their banks today and
continue to flood for the next
few days.
Despite the flood warnings,
no major evacuations of
persons living near the rivers
was reported.
The rain causing the flooding
began in southwestern Ohio

$16,000 Loss Set
Property loss was estimated
at $16,000 following a fire that
destroyed the two-story frame
home of Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Payne in Harrisonville at 8:10
a .m . Sunday.
The blaze was completely out
of control when the Rutland fire
dept. arrived on the scene. The
structure, already gutted, was
allowed to burn to the ground as
a s~fety factor . Two outbuildings were saved.
Fireman Tom Martin said the
cause of the blaze is un-

Deputy Bob Beegle of the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
reported the recovery of a 1964
Chevrolet Corvair stolen from
the Pomeroy Motor Company
parking lot in January.
The car was recovered
Sunday by West Virginia State
Police in Charleston. William
Grueser, manager of the motor
company, filed an affidavit with
the . Meigs County Sheriff's
office on Jan . 16.
A suit for money has been
Condition of the car is unfiled in Meigs County Common
determined. Investigation of the
Pleas Court by P. E. Hapincident is continuing.
tonstall, Middleport, vs Dave
Smith Ford, Inc., Pataskala,
Ohio and the Ford Division,
ROAD BID WANTED
Ford Motor Co., Cincinnati.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Con·
The plaintiff is suing for $2,000
struction of a new access road f0r breach of express warranty
to the beach parking area at and $4,000 for the 1970 Ford
Burr Oak State Park in Morgan Torino that he purchased from
County is up for bids March 2. Dave Smith Ford, Inc. The
The project, estimated to cost plaintiff states that the car he
$200,000, is to be completed by purchased did not run property
July 31.
from the date of purchase.

$6,000 Lawsuit

determined. The family was
gone for the day, having left
about 7 a .m. to spend the day in
West Virginia. Loss of the house
was set at $10,000 and $6,000 in
contents. There was insurance.
The Rutland department had
two trucks and 15 men on the
fire for about four hours.

Tanker Called

WEATHER FUTURE
Extended Outlook Wednesday through Friday.
Variable cloudiness
Wednesday and Thursday
with chance of snow flurries
northeast.
Chance of rain south and
snow or rain north Friday.
Daytime highs in upper 30s
or low 40s north and in the 40s
south. Lows in the early
morning mostly in the 20s.

Stops
Laos Push

Gen.
SAIGON (UPI)
Creighton W. Abrams, the U.S.
I
1\.T
•
I commander in South Vietnam,
:
1 ..
met tonight with high U.S. and
I
I South Vietnamese officials to
study the South Vietnamese
By United Press International
drive into Laos. The incursion
is bogged down in heavy
Killer Tornadoes Rip Dixie
opposition and is a week behind
schedule.
1'0RNADOES RIPPED THROUGH the mid-South Sunday,
Communist forces surrounded
claiming scores of lives. Parts of Texas were "completely a force of about 1,000 South
paralyzed" by a massive snowstorm and hundreds of persons Vietnamese troops on a hilltop
were forced from their homes in Nebraska and lllinois as rivers five miles inside Laos after all
flowed far over their banks. Mississippi Civil Defense but wiping out a nearby ranger
Headquarters in Jackson said at least 47 persons were killed, battalion, and opening fire on a
many were missing and feared dead and injuries might number in second base nine miles inside
Laos. Pilots pouring heavy fire
the hundreds in the tornadoes.
In Louisiana, six persons died in a tornado near Delhi. into the Communist positions
National Guardsman were called to the storm-stricken areas of said they saw at least 500 North
Mississippi, mostly rural and small-city areas with names like Vietnamese bodies.
There were indications the
little Yazoo, Onward and Rolling Fork. The worst damage was in
an area north of Jackson and west of the Mississippi River town of drive had failed to halt traffic
on the Ho Chi Minh Trail since
Greenville.
The Mjssissippi Civil Defense office in Jackson listed victims the North Vietnamese were
in at least eight communities in the delta. The confirmed dead using truck routes further west.
were 11 in Inverness, Bin Cary, 7 in Delta City, 7 at little Yazoo, 5 U.S. and South Vietnamese
spokesmen would not confirm
in Lefor~ County, 5 in Humphreys County, 2 at Rome and 2 near
reports truck traffic had
Bovina.
doubled but the Air Force said
it was destroying more than 100
Rescued Driver Steals Cruiser
a day.
ELYRIA, OHIO -A MOO'ORIST RESCUED from a wrecked
The hardest hit South Vietnacar on the Ohio Turnpike by Ohio Highway Patrolman J. A. mese unit in Laos was the 39th
Johnson stole the patrolman's cruiser and plunged it into the Ranger Battalion. U.S. military
flood-swollen Vermilion River. Johnson said he came upon the sources said it lost at least 50
crash near here Saturday, pulled Marshall C. Mason, 46, In- dead, more than 100 wounded
dianapolis, Ind. from the wreckage and put the man in the and 250 unaccounted for from
cruiser. He was starting back for the wreck when he saw his car its original force of 450.
disappear down the turnpike.
Survivors made it to another
Johnson joined another officer in a second squad car and they ranger base a quarter of a mile
pursued Mason, who crashed through a bridge spanning the away to make a stand against
Vermilion and sank in the water. His body was recovered
Saturday night.

The Middleport fire departFINED $10, COSTS
ment received a call at 8:16
George W. Young, 22,
p.m. Saturday to send a tanker
truck to the John T. Wolfe fire at Pomeroy, was fined $10 and
costs on conviction of having a
Racine.
At 10:16 p.m. the E-R unit defective vehicle by Mayor
went to the home of Orland Charles Legar Saturday night.
Laudermilt of near Pomeroy.
Having difficulty breathing, he
LOCAL TEMPS
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and adTemperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
mitted.
was 54 degrees under cloudy
skies.
SENDS TEAM
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rep.
William H. Harsha, R-Ohio, and
five other representatives of the
House Subcommittee on Public
Works will go to Los Angeles
Tuesday to gather information
on the Southern California
earthquake.

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E -R squad was
called Saturday at 8:45p.m. to
the Harold Evans residence on
Rainbow Ridge for Mary Lou
Evans who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted.

Dr. Buff Attacks Rocky IV
BUCKHANNON - CHARLESTON HEART specialist Dr. I.
E. Buff charged here Saturday that Secretary of State John D.
Rockefeller IV is using his anti-strip mine crusade as a stepping~
stone to the governorship and called on him to "have your companies stop mining."
The coal health and safety crusader told disabled miners and
widows that Rockefeller has contributed very little to those
working to ban surface mining adding, "He contributed 40 times
more for the State Senate race in Mingo County."
;:(=·
·:· ,.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon renewed today
his plea to Congress for a $1.9 billion highe~ education
program including loan guarantee to college students in aU
income levels. It would:
..:_ Provide a combination of grants, work-6tudy
payments and subsidized loans for full-time undergraduate
students with low to middle incomes attending all public, and
nonprofit colleges and universities.
- Create a national student loan association to raise
money privately and make It available for college students at
all income levels.

Ohio, on the warm ..1de of the
storm system· producing ·precipitation, received showers as
compared to heavy snow and
blizzard conditions west of the
storm in Nebraska and Kansas
early today. Colder air, to move
into Ohio Tuesday, was to produce scattered snow flurries.

e

. .+.s :
ews ••. zn B rze
1

COLORFUL AND ATTRACTIVE were the costumes of these girls, left to right, Maria
Legar, representing Italy; Teresa Longenette, Germany; Pam Nottingham, Mexico; Susan
Hannum, Sweden, and Ruth Ann Blake, Japan.

early Sunday evening and
spread throughout Ohio by midnight. The rain, however, was
expected to taper off the showers in southwestern counties by
noon today and across the remainder of the state by tonight.

H ano1

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

Ford Firms in

•

By United Press International
National Weather Service
forecasters today issued flash
flood warnings for several rivers, including the Ohio, Hocking, Great Miami, Little Miami
and Whitewater rivers.
Weather experts said the Ohio
River in the Cincinnati area
was expected to rise rapidly following more than two and onehalf inches of rain overnight
and was expected to crest at
or near the flood stage by 52
feet by tonight.
Locally heavy rainfall along
the Hocking River basin in
Ohio during the night, with additionalprecipitation today, was
expected to produce flooding
along the Hocking River and
il« tributaries.
1VIilford, along the Little Miat~li River, was expected to have
a crest of 20 feet by tonight,
eight feet above the flood level.
Kings Mills, on the same riv-

2 Accidents
On Sunday

The Meigs County sheriff's
department investigated two
single car accidents Sunday.
At 2:45a.m. on SR 143, about
2.3 of a mile west of junction 692
in Columbia Township, Jeffery
K. Snowden, Rutland, hit a buck
deer. Ther were no injuries
and only medium damage to the
car.
At 5 p.m. on SR 124, about lh
mile west of County Road 16,
Clark W. Kinzel, 26, Cottageville, W. Va., was traveling
west on 124. As the car came
over a slight rise the driver
apparently lost control, veered
across the highway, and back,
stopping in a ditch. There were
no injuries or arrests, and
medium damage to the car.

the North Vietnamese attackers.
At tonight's strategy session
in Independence Palace in
Saigon Abrams met with U.S.
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker
and President Nguyen Van
Thieu for more than an hour. A
spokesman would say only that
they discussed "Cambodia,
Laos and an update on the
overall Indochina program."
They would not elaborate but
military observers said it was
unusual for Abrams to attend
such a session.
~e South Vietnamese are
reported up to 22 miles inside
Laos but the main columns are
only 17 miles or so inside the
border and no progress has
been reported for nearly a
week. There has been intense
artillery and antiaircraft f1re
which has taken a heavy toll of
lives and U.S. and South
Vietnamese helicopters.
The U.S. Command reported
today that two more U.S.
helicopters had been shot down
in Laos with four crewmen
missing and two wounded. It
said 26 helicopters had been
destroyed in the support
mission. Front dispatches said
the number of helicopters lost
and put out of action was
perhaps double that figure.
New Communist activities
were reported in Cambodia. A
Phnom Penh dispatch said
heavy American air support
was called in to bomb
Communist gunners 10 miles
southeast of the Cambodian
capital when the Communists
opened an attack on a convoy
on the Mekong River, sinking
an ammunition barge and
wounding nine persons including three Americans.
Military sources said ti&amp;e
river convoy included American
military assistance program
war material and that the three
wounded Americans were civilians.
CHARGES FILED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Mrs.
Bettlilee Beaudry, 32 has been
charged with three counts of
first-degree murder in last
week's stabbing of her husband
and two sons. Joseph Beaudry,
34, ill with multiple sclerosis,
and sons, John, 8, and Joseph, 6,
were found dead in their
suburban Greenhills home
Thursday.

r

-

��Tornadoes Clipped 63-47

the Sports Desk

•

by Chet Tannehill
The battle lines are drawn for the sectional basketball
tournaments in which Meigs, Eastern and Southern will campaign beginning Feb. 26 (Meigs) and Feb. 27 (Southern). Eastern,
seeded first in the A tourney at Meigs drew a first round bye on its
· 15-3 record, best in the top bracket.
North Gallla, 14-3, meets Southwestern, 0-18, in the first round
at 7 pm. Feb. Tl. Galloping off into one of the real long shots of the
year, I'll pick North Gallia to knock off Southwestern and be in the
finals.
Basketball fans of Meigs and Gallia Counties (predicting
another long shot! ) will see another classic when the sectional
finals at Meigs High gym is played. North Gallia's opposition
certainly should be Eastern, which has only to defeat the winner
of the Southern (8-10) vs Kyger Creek (3-15) game, to get in the
ring with North Gallia, the club the Eagles walloped once and
were clipped by once in regular season play.
Whichever team comes out of the Meigs A sectional, the
Eagles or Pirates, has its work cut out in the district tourney at
Oilllicothe the following weekend. Coming there from
downriver, on the form charts will be Fairland with a 16-1 record
to this point. That sectional at Ironton provides Hannan Trace 9-9,
Green 2-15, St. Joe (3-14) and Symmes Valley 11-7, who altogether
probably couldn't whip Fairland with its pair of fine six-fivers,
Willie Mays and Andy Russell. Fairland lost only to Double A
Olesapeake, 57-56, in the regular season.
And if our North Gallia or Eastern doesn't get Fairland at
Chillicothe, it'll likely be either Skyvue, Western Pike, or Ross
Southeastern, among the teams favored to win their sectionals.

•

·•

AND WHAT ABOUT MEIGS?
Right off, the Marauders get another shot at Athens, top seed
in Triple A sectional action at Rio Grande College. Last Friday
night at Rock Springs they missed upsetting Athens by one point
(5(}.49). The Athens-Meigs game at Rio Grande leads off the card
in that sectional Feb. 26at 7pm. (see brackets on this page.)
Two teams will go to the district out of the Rio Grande sectional. Athens, top seed, and Portsmouth (13-5) second seed, llre
favorites at this point. But you never know for sure how the ball
will boWtce.
YES, THERE ARE UPSETS in basketball; there are close
games decided by strategy from the bench, by sudden and
inexplainable coldness at the wrong time near the end; even by
what must be called unlucky breaks in the officiating which in
basketball is almost entirely an exercise of human judgement
often Wlder most tense conditions. It's no wonder partisan fans
take exceptions at times. So that's what makes sports a sporting
thing. Right?
Since early in December, Sports Desk has estimated the
scores of, and the winners of 131local games. Including the past
weekend (8 of 13), the record shows 105 of 131 went the way the
Desk saw them. There is this to consider, that of the 25 bobbles, at
least half involved teams for which the season won-lost records
were not readily available at the time the selections were made.
So those predictions were always in the realm of guesses, and in
some cases contrary to the choice had the record been known.
There have been upsets, but not nearly as many as seem
apparent in high school football. There are great reversals in
form: take North Gallia. The Pirates were expected to be strong
going into the season but didn't really gather steam Wltil they
knocked off Kyger Creek the fir.st time aroWld. Eastern put it to
the Pirates r eal good the first time.Then the Pirates came back to
defeat Easte
d have been a solid club since. (Tomorrow:
wrap up on
predictions.)

•
•

Oh i Cage Standings

•

..
'

By United Press lnternationa I
Independents
Won Lost
Ashland
22
2
Akron
17
4
Youngstown State
17
6
16
6
Da yton
Central State
17
7
17
7
Urbana
11
6
Ohio Domini can
Cincinnati
12
11
Steubenville
12
12
Xavier
9
13
Western Reserve
6
9
Rio Grande
10
16
John Carroll
5
9
Walsh
7
13
Wright State
7
115
Ohio Northern
5
17
Cleveland State
5
18
Case Tech
2
11
Mid-American Conference
League Overall
W L

8
Miami
Western Mic h. 5
Ohio University 3
Toledo
3
Rent State
3
Bowling Green 1

1
2

16
14
14

L

4

6

10
10

2

7

2
6

6
6

6
7

4
4
4
4

9
9
9
9

3
3
3

8
9

10

g :
11 7
13 9
9 14

~

U

7
8
:
6

12
13

~~

15

Mid-Ohio Conference
League Overa II
W

Findlay
Defiance
Wilmington
Bluffton
Cedarville
Malone

L

9

1

6

4

6

4

5
3

5

1

9

7

W

21
17
10
11
10
3

L

3

6

10
11
15
14

Big Ten
League Overall

6 Michigan
4 T2
9 Ohio State
5
11 9 Indiana
7
5 15 Purdue
Illinois
Ohio Conference
Iowa
League Overa II Mi ch. State
W L W L Minnesota
Wooster
12 0 23 1 Wisconsin
Otterbein
11 2 17 3 Northwestern

1

4

W

Capital
Wi ttenberg
Mount Union
Marietta
Bald .-Wa llace
Heidelberg
Kenyon
Denison
Hiram
Ohio Wesleyan
Oberlin
Muskingum

W

L

8

0

8
6
6

1
2
3

4 . 4
5

3
3

6

2

7

1
1

7
7

W

14
14
14
13
10

L

4

5
4
6
7

8 10
9 10
8 11

6 12
5 13

• : Reds, Orioles Favored
Boston 8-1, New York 12-1,
The Baltimore Orioles and Washington 20-1 and Cleveland
Cincinnati Reds, who met in the 20-1.
In the American League
World Series last fall, were
heavy favorites today to cap- West, Minnesota was favored at
ture their divisional races in 7-5, followed by California 8-5,
odds posted by Jinuny "The Oakland 4-1, Chicago 10-1,
Greek" Snyder, nationally- Kansas City 50-1 and Milwaukee
100-1.
known pricemaker .
In the National League West
Snyder made the world
champion Orioles an odds~n Cincinnati was a 2-1 choice with
choice at 2-6 to win the Los Angeles 5-2, Atlanta 5-1, San
American League East crown. Francisco 6-1, Houston 15-1 and
In that race he had Detroit 6-1, San Diego 100-1.
Pittsburgh, New York,
Chicago and St. Louis were all
THE DAILY SENTINEL listed as 7-2 in the National
DEVOTED TO
League East with Philadelphia
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
15-1 and Montreal 35-1.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -

"'
1

u

.•

"'
..
•.
.,.
"
"

""'

.

r

-

.;HESTER L . TANNEHILL.
Exec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City E ditor

Publi s hed daily e1&lt;c ep1
~atilrday by The Ohio Vall ey
~ublishing
Company , 111
court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio,
5769. Business Office Phone
92-2156, Editorial Phone 992157.
1 Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio
Nation a l adv e rti s ing
epres ent ativ.e B.ott inelli..:..
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st., New York City, New York.
r at es:
S ub sc ription
Deliver ed by carrier wh ere
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route wh ere carri er
service _jlOt available : One
morith -n :75. By mail inO hTO'
and W . Va ., On e year $14.00.
Six month s $7 .25. ~hree
months $4. 50. Subsc ription !
l&gt;rlce in clud es Sunday Times .
;.sPntillel.

i

COLLIER FOR GRAHAM
CHICAGO (UPI) - Otto
Graham, who has coached the
College All-Stars the last nine
years will turn the job over to
Blanton Collier, who retired as
head coach of the Cleveland
Browns after the 1970 season.
Collier compiled a record of
76 wins, 34losses and two ties in
~ight years as the Browns'
mentor.

Everywhere in life the true
question is not what we have
gaine d but what we do.Tiiornas Carlyle, essayi st.

WATERFORD
The
Southern Local Tornadoes
completed their regular cage
season on a losing note to the
Waterford Wildcats here
Saturday night, 63-47, in a nonleague battle.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tornadoes finished with an 8-10
mark overall while playing at 55 in the Southern Valley Con-

ference. Waterford, which plays
a very tough schedule including
Skyvue,
Frontier,
and
Shenandoah, won only its
second time against 17 losses.
Southern won the first meeting
of the two, 57-52.
Waterford's Warren led all
scorers as he popped in 18
markers. Schaad followed with
12 for the Wildcats. Art Hill, 5-6

AAA Brackets
Top Bracket

Soeda:
Ath&amp;ns ...-1

A

Ports .. --~

7 pll

ConT.

Center

7:30

Marlett
7 pill

senior guard, led the Tornadoes
with 15 while Sam Shain, 6-1
senior forward, added nine.
Waterford edged out to a 17-15
lead after one quarter and built
up a comfortable 33-21 margin
in the first half, outscoring the
Tornadoes.
Southern outscored the
Wildcats in the third quarter,
15-12, but the Wildcats opened
things up in the final eight
minutes to coast to their second
· win.
The Tornadoes, who shot 17 of
55 from the field for 31 per cent,
pulled down 32 rebounds with
Bruce Hart, 5-10 junior guard,
leading with seven. Roger
Wilford, 6-2 jWtior center, added
six retrieves. The Wildcats hit
for 23 free throws while the
Tornadoes made only 13. Coach
Wolfe stated that the Wildcats
were very hot from the foul line
where they missed but only a
couple.
Southern will play next
Saturday in the sectional "A"

LoMr :!racket

Conv.

tournament at Meigs High
School against the Kyger Creek
Bobcats, who own a 3-15 record.
The Tornadoes defeated Coach
John Sang's five both times this
year.
In the preliminary reserve
game, Coach Duane Wolfe's
little Tornadoes improved their
mark to 12-6, finishing the
season. They wiped up the
Wildkittens, 33-27. Norman
Curfman led Southern with 11
points.
SOUTHERN, (47)- Hill 6-315, Ihle 1-0-2, Nease 1-0-2, Barry
Hart 0-3-3, Wilford 2-2-6, Jim
Hubbard 2-0-4, Snider 0-1-1,
Shain ~1-0, Bruce Hart 1-3-5.
Totals 17-13-47.
WATERFORD,
( 63)
Gilliand 4-0-8, Skinner 1-4-6,
Warren 8-2-18, Schaad 1-10-12,
Kiggens 1-4-6, Rutter 3-2-8,
Hilliss 1-0-2, Deem 1-1-3. Totals
20-23-63.
BY QUARTERS
15 21 36- 47
Southern
Waterford
17 33 45-63

Play Resumes
In Tucson Open

Center

Mar.6
Chillieotae(ll-7) 7:3

Tourney
Pairings
AT MEIGS
Feb. 1.7- Sout~ern (8-10) vs.
Kyger Creek (3-15), 7 p. m.
Southwestern (0-18) vs. North
Gallia (14-3), 8:15p.m.
March 4- Easkrn (15-3) vs.
winner of Kyger CreekSouthern game, 7:30 p. m .
AT IRONTON
Feb. 27- Hannan Trace ( 9-9)
vs. Green (2-15), 7 p.m. Ironton
St. Joe (3-14) vs. Symmes
Valley (11-7),t 8H5 p. m.
March 4 -.Fairland ( 16-1) vs.
winner of Hann'lm Trace-Green
game , 7:30 p. m. Winner to
Chillicothe district.
(At Symmes Valley)
Feb. 26 - Oak Hill ( 0-18) vs.
Ironton (7-11) 7 pm. Rock Hill
(8-9) vs. Gallipolis (4-14) 8:15
p .m.
Feb. 27 - Coal Grove (G-10)
vs. Chesapeake (14-4) 7:30p.m.
March 3 - South Point (12-6)
vs. Oak Hill-Ironton winner,
7:30p.m.
March 4 - Rock Hill Gallipolis winner vs. Coal
Grove - Chesapeake winner,
7:30.
March 6 - Finals. Winner to
Class AA District at Rio
Grande.
Here 's other pairings involving Southeastern Ohio
League teams:
(At Beaver)
Feb. 26 - Alexander (14-4)
vs. Minford (11-7) 7:30p.m.
Feb. 27 - Northwest (1-15)
vs. Wheelersburg (14-4) 7:30
p.m.
March 3 - Waverly (17-1) vs.
winner
of
Northwest
Wheelersburg game, 7:30p.m.
March 4 - Alexander Minford winner vs. Portsmouth
VVest (11-7) 7:30p.m.
(At Alexander)
Feb. 26 - Vinton County ( 414) vs. Nelsonville-York (7-11) 7
p.m. New Lexington (2-16) vs.
Belpre (5-13) 8:15p.m.
Feb. 27 - Wellston ( 4-14) vs.
Warren Local (12-6) 8:15 p.m .
March 5 - Federal Hocking
( 16-2) vs. winner of Vinton
County - Nelsonville-York
game,
7
p.m.
New
Lexington:-Belpre winner vs .
Wellston-Warren Local winner,
8:15p.m.
CLASS AAA
(At Rio Grande)
Feb. 26 - Marietta ( 5-13) vs.
Logan (3-15) 7 p.m. Chillicothe
( 11-7) vs. Portsmouth ( 13-5)
8:15p.m.
March 5-6 - Two winners to
Class AAA District at Athens.
OHIO COLLEGE
SPORTS RESULTS
By United Press International
Basketball
Ohio State 84 Northwestern 72
Toledo 79 Bowling Green 70
Miami 75 Marshall (W. Va .l 74
Ohio U. 84 Ball State (Ind.) 82
Dayton 92 De Paul (Ill.) 60
Wes tern Michigan 70 Kent State
65

Georg e Wa s hington 95 Cin cinnati 89
Canisius 98 Xavier 87
Akron 56 Kentucky Wesleyan 55
Ashland 54 Steubenville 47
Oberlin 80 Ohio Wesleyan 76
Wooster 87 Capital 81
Wittenberg 80 Marietta 66
Otterbein 116 Waterloo (Ont.,
Can.) 77
Mus kingum 88 Baldwin-Wallace
73

SEO Dream
Team To
Be Selected
Members of the Southeastern
Ohio
Sportswriters
and
Broadcasters Association will
meet Sunday, Feb. 28 in
Jackson to select the 1971 AllSEOAL Basketball Team . •
Lee Hamilton,
WLGN,
Logan, president of the
association, extends an invitation to all of the league's
eight head basketball coaches
to attend the meeting and aid in
the selection of the "dream
team."
Hamilton stated that the
meeting will be held at Jolly
Lanes Bowling Center starting
at 1 p.m.
Each head coach will be given
an opportWtity to discuss the
players from his team and from
the opponents' teams whom he
feels should be placed on the

team.
The sportswriters and playby-play announcers will name a
five player first team, second
team, and third team along with
one honorable mention player
from each of the eight schools.
Also selected will be the
league's coach of the year, most
valuable player, and the best
foul shooter in league competition.
All of the 23 players picked for
the squad will be honored at the
All-League Banquet to be
staged in Waverly in April.

TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI)-Seventy pro golfers get a double
dose of their favorite pastime
today with 36 holes crammed
between dawn and dusk and
J.C. Snead and Dale Douglass
tied for the lead in the $110,000
Tucson Open.
Two days of play were rained
out, causing the sponsors to
realign the format in order to
complete the 72-hole tournament.
Many of the pros want to get
to Florida as quickly as
possible to practice for the
National PGA tournament a1
Palm Beach Gardens, starting
Thursday.
Snead, 29, nephew of the
celebrated Sam, shot a oneunder-par 71 in the second
round Sunday and that gave
him a 36-hole total of 137, seven
under par, with his initial 66.
Best Finish 51st
Douglass, who has missed the
cut in three of six tournaments
this year , put together rounds
of 69-68 for his 137 total. He
won about $70,000 dollars last
year and took the Phoenix Open
but this year his best finish was
51st in the Bob Hope Desert
Classic.
Dewit Weaver, the chunky
former Southern Methodist

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. l. Pet. GB
44 21 .677 ...
Virginia
35 31 .530 9112
Kentucky
31 35 .470 13112
New York
28 37 .431 16
Carolina
Floridians
28 40 .412 17112
27 39 .409 17112
Pittsburgh
West
W. l. Pet. GB
44 20 .688 ...
Utah
41 21 .661 2
tndiana
36 29 .554 8112
Memphis
23 40 .365 20112
Denver
20 44 .313 24
Texas
Sunday's Results
Kentucky 125 New York 121
Utah 120 Denver 107
Virginia 129 Carolina 119
Indiana 121 Flor idians lOB
(only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
Indiana at Memphia
(only game scheduled)
NHL Standings

By United Press International

East

Boston
New York
Montreal
Toronto
Detroit
Buffalo
Vancouver

West

W. L. T Pfs.

41
36
29
31
18
16
18

10 7 89
14 10 82
17 11 69
25 4 66
32 8 44
33 11 43
34 5 41

W. L. T. Pfs.

Chicago
39 15
St. Louis
25 18
Philadelphia
22 27
Minnesota
29 27
Pittsburgh
19 27
Los Angeles
17 29
California
17 40
Sunday's Results
New York 4 Detroit 1
Toronto 4 Minnesota 1
St. Louis 3 Buffalo 1
Chicago 7 Los Angeles 5
Monday's Games
Montreal at Vancouver
Conly games scheduled)

6
15
10
13
14

the Chicago Bulls. Sub John
By JOE CARNICELLI
Baum scored 13 of his 14 points
UPI Sports Writer
It isn 't often that a player in the last quarter as the Bulls
scores 54 points, breaks a club surged to their fifth consecutive
scoring record and winds up victory, 115-112.
" As far as I'm concerned and
sulking in a dressing room
corner, but that's how Dave as far as the coaches are
Bing ended his Sunday after- concerned ," said Bing, "I've
had bette.. games. My shooting
noon.
Bing's 54-point performance and scoring so much took a
erased the Detroit mark of 52 couple of guys out of the game,
set by George Yardley in 1957- but the first thing is that we've
58 but it wasn 't enough to stop got to win. I can accept a bad
personal game when we win."
Bing, held to only 11 points
the night before in New York,
credited the Bulls' victory to
Baum, the second-year player
Sparky
Lyle
have
yet from Temple.
to show at the Boston
"Bawn played a fantastic
R ed Sox camp and the quarter for them," said Bing.
Chicago White Sox list Mike "He took some bad shots but
Andrews, Tommie McCraw, they were good shots for him."
Rick Reichardt and Wilbur
Baum Ignites Spurt
Wood as holdouts.
The Bulls led, 99-96, when
Fred Patek, Cookie Rojas, Bawn ignited a 9-3 spurt that
Aurelio Monteagudo and Bob put the game out of reach. It
Floyd are unsigned by the was the third loss in three days
Kansas City Royals.
for the Pistons, who not only
On the spring training circuit, slipped from second to last in
pitcher Denny McLain of the the Natinal Basketball AssociaWashington Senators has sweat- tion's Midwest Division but also
ed off 13 pounds since camp were handed a severe blow with
opened last Wednesday. McLain the loss of forward Terry
is down to 207, about three Dischinger. Dischinger tore
pounds under hisnormal pitch- ligaments in his knee and is
ing weight ...
finished for the season.
Pitching is the big factor in
In other NBA action Sunday,
pennant plans for the St. Louis Baltimore squeezed past AtlanCardinals and the New York ta, 121-119, Portland ripped
Mets, both in the National Cleveland, 123-105, Milwaukee
League East. Manager Red blasted Phoenix, 125-97, Los
Schoendienst of the Cards is Angeles downed Boston, 124-116,
hoping veteran Moe Drabowsky and Seattle whipped Philadelcan lend some stability to his phia , 135-128.
bullpen while Gil Hodges of the
Earl Monroe's twisting 15-foot
Mets anxiously is awaiting this jwn9 shot with 36 seconds left
spring's test of Jerry Koos- gave Baltimore its victory over
man's arm. The ace left- the Hawks. Pete Maravich's
bander, a big factor in the shot at the final buzzer rimmed
Mets ' World Series victory two the basket and fell off.
years ago, was plagued by arm
Jack Marin had 34 points for
miseries last season.
the Bullets and Monroe finished
with 24, 19 of them in the
Hi ram 78 Kenyon 72
Mt. Union 94 Heidelberg 89
Ohio Northern 101 Wayne State
(Mich) 79
Bluffton 85 Cedarvill e 74
In 1931 in Miami 100 women
Findlay 80 Malone 66
organized a "Carrie Nation"
Defiance 89 Wilm ington 75
Ohio Dominican 122 Urbana 118 brigade to fight bootleggers,
Youngstown State 107 All iance speakeasies and gamblers.
(Pa .) 63

84
65

54
53
52
11 45
3 37

Weekend Summary
By United Press International
Saturday
HIALEAH, Fla. (UPI )-C. V.
Whitney's True North outfuelled
Twogundan by three-quarters of
a length to win the $149,000
Widener Handicap at Hialeah.

final of an international tennis
tournament.

DETROIT (UPI )-An imposter who claimed to be Houston
football star Jerry I...evias when
he joined the Detroit Tigers'
baseball training camp at
ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI )-New Lakeland, Fla., was tentatively
Zealand-bred Daryl's Joy regis- identified as William D. Street
tered his third consecutive of Detroit.
stakes victory by capturing the
$6S,300 San Luis Obispo HandiPORT ST. LUCIE, Fla.
(UPI) - Ruth Jessen captured
cap at Santa Anita.
the $60,000 Sears women's golf
KINGFIELD, Maine (UPI)- classic, the richest tourney in
Michele Jacot of France won the history of the LPGA, by two
the women's giant slalom event strokes over Sandra Palmer.
in the Tall Timber Classic,
KINGFIELD, Maine (UPI)edging Anne Marie Proell of
Gustavo
Thoeni of Italy won the
Austria by a quarter of a
men's
giant
slalom in the Ta ll
second.
Timber Classic to take a 15point lead over France's
Sunday
Patrick Russel in the World
LIGHTHOUSE POINT, Fla. Cup stand4lgs.
( UPI) - Francoise Durr of
France upset Billie Jean King
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (UPn
of Long Beach, Calif., in the -The United States team,
which took the lead Saturday,
was declared the winner of the
world four-man bobsled championships when thawing weather caused cancellation of the
second day's competition.
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI)- Dale
Douglass and J . C. Snead were
second half. Walt Bellamy had tied after 36 holes of the Tucson
29 points to lead the Hasks Open golf championship
while Maravich added 28.
Petrie Scores 38 Points
Geoff Petrie. scored 19 of his

Bing Nets 54

Name Stars Unhappy
By United Press International
While the Florida training
camps buzzed with the weekend's Jerry I...eVias hoax, major
league owners buckled down to
the task of signing the few
remaining holdouts.
With the disturbance caused
by William Street, Jr., a
Detroit newlywed who claimed
he was Jerry LeVias, the star
flanker of the Houston Oilers,
quelled for the time being,
some of the bigger names were
reported unhappy with contract
proposals.
The Chicago Cubs, one of t.he
Arizona training clubs, signed
Ferguson Jenkins, their ace
right-hander for "ielow the
$100,000 mark," but still were
unable to reach terms with lefthander Ken Holtzman and
outfielder Billy Williams.
The San Diego Padres opened
camp without Clarence Gaston,
their top hitter who posted a
.318 batting average last season
with 29 home runs and 93 RBis.
Other Padres still unsigned
included Ed Spiezo, Jerry
Morales, Jose Arcia, Fred
Kendall and pitchers Denny
Coombs and Darcy Fast.
Catcher Thurman Munson,
the American League rookie of
the Year, and pitcher Fritz
Peterson were the big holdouts
in the New York Yankees'
camp. Also unsigned are Bobby
Murcer, Jerry Kenney, Danny
Cater and Ron Hansen.
Pitchers Vicente Rorpo and

quarterback, tied Snead in the
first round with a 66 but slipped
a bit to even par and had a 36hole total of 138, one back of
the leaders.
Larry Mowry, 34-year-{)ld Las
Vegas, Nev., pro who has never
won a major PGA event, was
all alone in fourth place at the
halfway mark with 71-68-139.
Defending champion e Trevino said on this long coursemore than 7,000 yards-it would
be like playing 54 holes instead
of 36.
Trevino Shoots 141
Trevino, seeking his third
straight title here, shot 69-72141, three under.
"Putting will turn the tide,"
he predicted. "If you get it
going real good you can make
up a lot of ground."
At 140, a stroke ahead of
Trevino, who was only four off
the leaders, were five prosDon Bies 69-71; Frank Beard
72-68 ; and Bob Lunn, Steve
Spray and Bobby Greenwood,
all with 7o-70.
The 36-hole cut was a 148,
leaving exactly 70 pros in the
field with sc'ores of 147 or
better.
Greens were soggy from the
foul weather which forced
cancellation af Saturday's play.

~a A Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
43 25 .632
Philadelphia 39 29 .574 4
36 33 .522 7112
Boston
Buffalo
19 50 .275 24112
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
37 29 .561
Cincinnati
26 41 .388 11112
Atlan ta
25 42 .373 12112
Cleveland
12 58 .171 27
Midwest Division
W. l. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
56 11 .836 ...
Chicago
42 25 .627 14
Phoenix
41 27 .603 15112
Detroit
39 26 .600 16
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles
40 25 .615 ...
San Francisco 34 34 .500 7112
San Diego
31 38 .449 11
Seattle
30. 37 .448 11
Portland
23 43 .348 17112
Sunday's Results
Chicago 125 Detroit 112
Baltimore 121 Atlanta 119
Portland 123 Cleveland 105
Milwaukee 125 Phoenix 97
Los Angeles 124 Boston 116
Seattle 135 Philadelphia 128
(onlv g~mes scheduled)
Monday's Games
San Francfsco at Buffalo
(only game scheduled)
AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pfs.
21 22 12 54
Quebec
21 25 10 52
Montreal
19 23 9 47
Providence
20 29 6 46
Springfield
West
w. L. T. Pfs.
Baltimore
34 13 5 73
Cleveland
28 19 6 62
Hershey
20 24 8 48
Rochester
19 27 8 46
Sunday's Results
Baltimore 14 Springfield 0
Cle :eland 2 Rochester 1
Providence 4 Hershey 3
Quebec 1 Montreal 1 tie

38 points in the fourth quarter
as Portland surged past Cleveland. Petrie, a rookie from
Princeton, hit 17 of 25 shots and
helped ignite an 11-point spurt
that boosted the Trail Blazers
into the lead. Walt Wesley led
the Cavaliers with 30 points.
Lew Alcindor scored 36 points
and Oscar Robertson had 20 as
the Bucks toyed with Phoenix.
The victory was the 56th in 67
games for Milwaukee, top mark
in the NBA.
Jerry West had 34 points and
Wilt Chamberlain tossed in 25
as the Lakers broke open a
close game in the fourth
quarter to stop the Celtics. The
score was tied at 92-92 going
into the fourth quarter when
the Lakers outscored Boston,
18-9. John Havlicek was high
man for Boston with 32 points.
Player-coach Lenny Wilkens
scored 28 points, surpassing the
13,000-point career mark, to
lead Seattle over the 76ers .
Billy Cunningham had 34 points
to lead Philadelphia, which fell
four games behind first-place
New York in the Eastern
Division, the closest race
remaining in the NBA.

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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 22, 1971

Overnight Wire

Today's Sport Parade

McLain Always on Wrong Foot
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer
POMPANO BEACH, Fla.
(UPI)-His cap is still rumpled
on top of his head, he still
pumps the ball with that big
steam shovellike motion and
the kids still cluster around for
his autograph when he finishes
his work and leaves the
ballpark for the day.
The only thing really different about Denny McLain now is
the uniform he wears. It is the
blood red and slate gray of the
Washington Senators. Other
than that there is little or no
change in baseball's most
controversial personality.
"Dennis McLain still has got
to be Dennis McLain," he says
with the attitude of a man who
somehow knows his own destiny
and is pledged irrevocably to
see it through to the very end.
This is a brand new start for
Denny McLain, his second one
in eight months. He is with a
new ball club he says he likes
and a new manager it is
apparent he does.
"Ted Williams is the way all
men would like to be," McLain
says. "I see so many qualities
of his I'd like to have. He
generates excitement on the
ball club. He excites me, too."
McLain will be 27 in five
weeks and as far as the past is

concerned, meaning his two
suspensions in connection with
gambling and carrying a gun,
that is completely all over with
--he says.
Mentally Excited
"Mentally I'm excited about
the game again as I was in 1968
and 1969," Denny McLain says.
"In 1970 I felt like pitching only
once. That was on July 1st and
it was impossible to pitch that
day."
The day McLain referred to
was the one on which he
returned to the Detroit Tigers
following his original suspension
from baseball by Bowie Kuhn,
the commissioner.
In no time at all McLain was
in more hot water, or cold
water if you like, when he
doused two Detroit sportswriters and subsequently was set
down for displaying a gun in a
public place ..
"I'll say this," Denny McLain
says, "my life is not dull. I
think Casey Cox (a Washington
pitcher) says it best. He says I
can be standing out there at
second base all by myself and
I'd get in trouble somehow.
Like the day I was playing golf
and the head of my putter fell
off and hit a guy in the mouth."
' McLain shook his head with
the futility of it all.
"And only the other day on

the field some of the guys were
kidding around with one of the
photographers. I was standing
behind the photographer·
minding my own business and
there was almost another incident."
What kind of incident?
"Never mind," said McLain.
"I shouldn't have even brought
it up."
McLain feels most of his
troubles stem from his being
originally in Detroit. It's not an
uncommon
feeling
with
ballplayers to get that way
about certain cities. Richie
Allen has this thing about
Philadelphia and Roger Maris
never will get over New York.
Image Created
"The image of my being a
hardnose came out of Detroit,"
McLain says. "I came to
Detroit at a dull time. They had
nobody. So they created an
image. I think the Washington
people already have found that
out.
"Look, I'm not looking for any
more trouble. I've had enough
lifetime. There
to last me
were times last year I really
thought I was going nuts.
Honestly. But that's all finished.
I love life now. When I go to bed
at night I'm excited about the
next day. I'm so excited I don't
want to sleep too long. I want to

do good for this club."
McLain had finished his day's
work with the Senators. Before
leaving the ballpark he sat on a
bench out in leftfield and had a
soft drink.
A guy came over to him for
his autograph and handed him a
program for the Hialeah Race
Track on which there were
signatures of other Washington
players.
McLain looked at the
program and shook his head.
"Uh-uh, I'm not gonna sign
that," he said. "I'll get in
trouble."
"Please," the guy said.
McLain frowned, reached for
the program and signed it.
"With my luck," he said after
the guy had left, "he'll send it to
Bowie Kuhn."

This Week's
Games

Ohio College
Basketba II Schedule
By United Press International
Monday
Ohio University at Virginia
Tech
Loyola (Ill.) at Bowling Green
Bellarmine at Wright State
Heidelberg at Defiance
Tuesday
Iowa at Ohio State
Akron at Western Illinois
Otterbein at Central State
Ohio Northern at Cedarville
Walsh at BaldwinWallace
Wednesday
Tampa at Dayton
Louisville at Cincinnati
Xavier at Miami
Kent State at Bowling Green
Midway in the second half, Rio Northern University.
Western Michigan at Toledo
Box score:
pulled within four- 67-63- but
Akron at Illinois State
RIO GRANDE (89)- Bass, 3- Thiel at John Carroll
the Oaks managed to hold on
during the final minutes of play. 5-11; Williams, 4-6-14; Hairston, Urbana at Northwood (Ind.)

a

Rio Eliminated
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen were
ousted from further play in the
Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference tournament Saturday night as the
host Oakland City Oaks
defeated the Gallia County
quintet, 99-89.
Joe Trueblood led th~ Oaks
with 23 points. Larry Harris
pumped in 21 and Jim Fleming
finished with 18.
For the Redmen, now 10-16 on
the year, Harry Hairston was
high with 17. Charles Baker and
Bernie Williams added 14,
Roger Bentley 12, Tony Bass 11
and Ed Jacobs 10.
Oakland City will play Union
at Umon tonight
cond round
play while P
s at
Campbellsville
action Saturday
defeated Cumlx
Pikeville, and
pbellsville,
the regular season champion,
defeated Berea 87-70 at Campbellsville.
Saturday night, Rio led the
Oaks only once - 13-12 - early
in the first half. The Redmen
trailed 49-43 at halftime.

m

Rio hit 36 of 84 shots from the
field for 42.8 per cent, and sank
17 of 27 rebounds for 62.9 per
cent. The Redmen had 47
rebounds. Oakland hit 40 of 77
field goal attempts, and 19 of 24
free throws. The Oaks hauled
down 59 rebounds.
Rio will be idle until Saturday
night. The Redmen will end
their 1970-71 campaign at Ohio

8-1-17; Bentley, 6-0-12; Baker, 70-14; Lambert, 3-4-10; Pulley, 01-1; Jacobs, 5-0-10. TOTALS 3617-89.
OAKLAND CITY (99) Trueblood, 8-7-23; Benson, 4-3)1; Fleming, 8-2-18; Harris, 9-321; Roller, 6-0-12; Newsome, 10-2; Smith, 1-0-2; Davis, 0-4-4;
!Cundiff, 3-0-6. TOTALS 40-19-99.

College Results
Midwest
Mich1gan 108 Minn. 90
Kan. St~ 84 Colorado 72
Indiana 88 Illinois 86
West. Mich 70 Kent St. 65
Purdue 87 Iowa 85
Oh o St 84 Northwstrn 72
M1cl'&gt; St. 97 WISconsin 78
Dayton 92 DePaul 60
Ohio U 84 Ball St. 82
Oklahoma 86 Iowa St. 75
Loyola (Ill.) 67 LIU 61
No. Tex. St. 89 Bradley 66
Kansas 85 Missouri 66
Miami (Ohio) 75 Marshall 74
Cent. Mich. 98 Illinois St. 90
Akron 56 Ky . Wesleyan 55
Ashland 54 Stubnvl 47
Oberlin 80 Ohio Wslyn 76
No. Colo. 62 Washburn 49

Southwest
Drake 87 Tulsa 84
TCU 102 Rice 86
Arizona St. 95 Ariz. 80
Baylor 112 SMU 79
Arkansas 88 Texas 87
UTEP 68 New Mexico 67
Trinity 74 Pan Am. 58
Lamar Tech 82 Ark . St. 78
Texas A&amp;M 66 Tex. Tech 64
West
Seattle 77 N.M. St. 71
Marquette 77 Air Force 62
Wash. St. 89 Stanford 79
Byj 98 Colo. St. 92
Utah 83 Wyoming 79
Washington 82 Calif. 80
Sou. Cal. 91 Oregon St. 75
UCLA 74 Oregon 67
Idaho 75 No. Ariz. 71

Thursday
Ashland at Thomas More
Cleveland State at Marshall
Ohio Dominican at Findlay
Allegheny at Western Reserve
Wright State at Earlham
Bluffton at Anderson (Ind.)
Defiance at Goshen
Wilmington at Central State
Friday
Bethany at Case Tech
Ohio Conference Tournament,
Northern Division at Wooster,
Southern Division at Denison.
Saturday
Ohio State at Michigan
Western Michigan at Miami
Toledo at Ohio University
Dayton at Xavier
Cincinnati
vs.
Davidson
(Charlotte l
Bowling Green at Detroit
Kent State at Virginia Tech
Youngstown State at St. Vincent
(Pa.)
Gannon at Akron
Ashland at Bellarmine
Bethany at John Carroll
Malone at Ohio Dominican
Rio Grande at Ohio Northern
Steubenville at Alliance (Pa.)
Urbana at Marion (Ind.)
Western Reserve at Thiel
Cedarville at Grace
Ohio Conference Tournament

By United Press International
DELAWARE, OHIO - SEVENTEEN cars of a 139-&lt;!ar
Norfolk &amp; Western Railroad freight left the tracks about five
miles north of here late Sunday, apparently after a rail snapped.
Both north and southbound tracks were ripped up but no one was
injured.
The train was enroute from Columbus to Bellevue when it
halted on a siding to inspect a hotbox, officials said. It then started
up again and after 84 cars had passed the spot, the derailment
occurred.
CINCINNATI -POLICE USED diversionary tactics Sunday
night to get Army Chief of Staff William Westmoreland safely out
ofa University of Cincinnati auditorium ringed by rock and mud
slinging anti-war demonstrators. Westmoreland had been
whisked into Wilson Auditorium through the rear door to talk with
a group of Boy Scouts and their parents.
Westmoreland, former commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam
and an Eagle Scout, was keynote speaker at the Eagle Scout Court
of Honor. There were no arrests.
COLUMBUS- GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN said he has instructed members of his cabinet and other key appointed officials
to file personal financial statements with the secretary of state's
office by March 15. During his successful gubernatorial campaign, Gilligan had said he would annually file such a report and
would require the same of his top appointees.
Gilligan had wanted all the reports to be filed by Inauguration
Day, Jan. 11, but said many found it impossible in the confusion of
taking office.
COLUMBUS -THE 109TH GENERAL Assembly members
will spend most of their time this week on committee hearings
while awaiting the arrival of the new state administration's
programs. A few minor measures may be received this week
from the governor's office, but the major ones will not be subrnitted until Gov. John J. Gilligan gives his State of the State
address at a joint session next Monday.
NEW YORK - THE UNITED Steelworkers - National Can
Co. wage agreement augurs a big wage hike in the steel industry
this summer and two rounds of steel price hikes in 1971, Iron Age
said over the weekend.
The three-year, 30 per cent plus wage pact between the USW
and National Can "was especially unsettling to steel executives,"
the national metalworking weekly said.
College Basketba II Results
By United Press International
East
Penn St. 84 Geotwn (DC) 75
Notre Dame 107 West Vir. 98
Navy 65 Manhattan 60
Duquesne 104 St. Peter's 98
Pitt 104 Crngie-MIIn 59
Springfld 87 Boston U. 84
Wesleyan 97 Tufts 87
New Hamp. 116 Brandeis 89
Mass. 85 Maine 57
Army 83 NYU 51
Lafytte 82 Gttysbg 68
St. Jno. (NY) 74 Temple 67
Princeton 76 Harvard 74
Penn. 102 Dartmouth 75
Lehigh 73 Delaware 66
Columbia 92 Yale 71
Phila. Tex. 87 Juniata 62
Detroit 80 Boston Coli 76
St. Vicent 89 Geneva 79
Cal. (Pa.) 87 Slippery Rck 80
Fordham 78 Rutgers 75
Brown 75 Cornell 62
Villanova 63 St. Jos. ( Pa.) 55
South
South Car. 72 North Car. 66
Jcksnvll 124 Vldsta St. 90
Kentucky 110 LSU 73
Geo. Wash. 95 Cinci. 89
Clemson 56 Vir. Tech 53
Tennessee 89 Ala. 77
Wake Forest 89 N.C. St. 85
Lusvl 98 Wchta St. 97 OT
Duke 101 Virginia 69
LSU N.O. 119 Ga. St. 88
Hous. 99 Miami (Fla.) 93
West. Ky. 89 Morhed St. 70
Richmond 93 Vmi 77
East. Ky . 65 Mid. Tenn. 60
Memphis 51. 60 St. Louis 56
Stetson 78 Mercer 64
Davidson 71 Furman 61

High

Sc~ool

Scort:s

•

on Pg. 6
CARPET
Prayer Resolve

BUY I

Offered by Miller
WASHINGTON
lOth
District Representative
Clarence E. Miller has introduced in the House of
Represen ta ti ves legislation
proposing a Constitutional
amendment that would permit
voluntary prayer or meditation
in public schools or other public
buildings.
Miller said that this resolution
strengthens and improves the
language of similar prayer
resolutions offered in previous
Congresses,
including
a
measure he sponsored in the
91st Congress.

•

501 NYLON

CARPET

6.99
SQUARE YARD
With foam rubber pad
and completely installed. Gold, green,
blu~ and red.

INGELS

SALISBURY, Md. (UPI)Clark Graebner of New York
required five sets and two
sudden death tie-breakers before beating top-seeded Cliff
Richey of San Angelo, Tex., in
the final of the U.S. Men's
Indoor Open tennis tournament.

FURNITURE
MIDDL~PORT

PH. 992-2635

A national
sales
leader

today·s FUMMY

•

ugene Riggs

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

2'16 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

Mr. Riggs has qualified for the John
Hancock Agency Leaders' Meeting. To
him this means a special honor
reserved for our most successful
associates throughout the country. To
you it means he is a professional life
underwriter
with
outstanding
qualifications to give you sound advice
when you're planning your financial
independence. An associate of the
William B. Hoyer General Agency,
Mr. Riggs will be honored at the
Leaders' Meeting May 9·12, Lake
Ozark, Missouri. ·

MUTUAL

LIFE

•

•

INSURANCE

Local Office
Middleport, Ohio

150 N. Second Avenue

992-5869

Our National Parks in Trouble

Too Crowded and too Littered
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the
first of four articles providing a
detailed look at America's
National Parks and how, in the
1970s, they are imperiled by
overcrowding, overuse and
man-made pollution.
By JOHN LEIGHTY
United Press International
From sea to shining sea,
millions of Americans will be
swarming again this year to the
country's national parks to
enjoy the "outdoor experience,"
to get back for a little while to
mother nature.
For many, having fought
waves of traffic only to find
wall-to-wall campers, jammed
roads and litter - strewn
fort!st grounds, it may be a
mixed joy.
Today, the 35 national parks
and 243 recreational and
htstorical areas administered
by the National Park Service
(NPS) are facing an unprecedented era of popularity and
pressure.
Men who run them and
people who visit them have
basically the same goals- to
preserve the beauty of natural
areas for future generations
while providing a camping,
vacation and recreational retreat for the travelers of today.
Too Many People
But the population explosion
and the 20th century are fast
closing in on these last islands
of the once vast American
wilderness. Crowds, smog, pollution, litter and crime strain
the park system, which is
responding with higher entrance fees, restrictive camping
measure, more traffic control,
alternate transportation systems and law enforcement
traimng for rangers.
More than 175 million visits
were recorded in 1970 to the 30
million acres of national park
servJCeland, most of it during
the summer months, and

officials predict 400 million
visits will be reached by 1980,
only nine years away.
Many camping grounds have
in fact become "just wall to
wall tents," said an Interior
Department spokesman in
Washington. This holds especially true for the older, more
publicized parks such as
Yosemite, Yellowstone, the
Grand Canyon and the Great
Smoky Mountains.
Pressure on the national
parks could be relieved, many
experts agree, by the development of more recreational
areas near the big urban
centers- a plan endorsed heartily by former Interior Secretary
Walter Hickel-and by expansion of state park systems and
outdoor facilities.
New Use
"There are going to have to
be new and innovative ways to
use the parks," Daniel J. Tobin
Jr., associate director of the
NPS western region, told UPI.
"The conflict of more users and
absolute physical limitation on
how much wilderness exists will
result in a collision."
Tobin said certain sections of
parks will ultimately have to be
designated as wilderness by
Congress and these areas set
aside to insure there will be no
"major man-made intrusions."
In these specific areas man
will still "be able to use the
wilderness on its own terms,"
Tobin said. Hiking on trails or
sleeping on the ground would be
permitted, but "you'd have to
carry out what is carried in ."
The real collision comes in
opening parks to recreational
use such as boating, water
skiing, tennis and other physical activities, Tobin said .
"These are going to have to
be taken closer to where the
people are," he said, adding
that undeveloped lands near
cities will have to be opened to
the spill of people in the urban

environment for precisely this
type of "pouring off the steam"
recreation.
Relief Valve
"We hope this will serve as
the relief valve and keep people
near their homes to expend this
energy and that they will do a
1i ttle more careful planning and
make that trip to national
parks a special one," said
Tobin.
A national study is currently
underway by the NPS into the
practicality of shifting concessions, lodges and parking lots
outside of park boundaries.
Some parks either have or are
planning a campsite reservation
system.
Despite the gloomy picture,
the nation's parks still offer the

outdoor enthusiast enough wilderness country where there is
a chance to get away from it
all.
Hiking into the back country,
back-packing along little used
trails, visiting the remoter, less
accessible park and recreational areas, one can find solitude
in nature .
But, for the majority of
travelers, the "outdoor experience" is little more than a
drive to swarming campsites,
an occasional stop at an
overlook, a picnic at designated
areas jammed to capacity and
the slow, slow movement of
traffic.
(Next: Yellowstone and the
Grand Tetons.)

r---------------------------,
!
HOSPITAL NEWS I
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m . Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Roger D.
Randolph,
Coolville,
a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas H. Kearns, Clifton, W.
Va., a son; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
C. Rawlings, Middleport, a son;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold T.
Preston, Wellston, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Little,
Middleport, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell W. Vaughan, Pt.
Pleasant, a daughter; and Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
E.
Blakeman, Jackson, a son.
Discharges

Debra Lee Bailey, John H.
Bailey, Mrs. Sara F. Betz, Mrs.
James E. Blair, Mrs. Emma
Bovie, Mrs. Willard F. Boyer,
Mrs. Elbert L. Christian, Mrs.
Witchel F. Cline, Mrs. Robert J.
Crush ,
Miss
Laverna
Eisnaugle, Mrs. Flossie Fulks,
Mrs. James W. Higginbotham
and infant son, James William
Holley, Donald R. Housteau,
Mrs. Isaac E. Jones, Mrs.
Lester Kerns, Anthony Louks,
Mrs. Harold E. May, Mrs.
James 0. Miller, Mrs. Michael
L. McGee, Herschell Norman;
Lee Rudisill, Mrs. H. Richard
Sims, Mrs. Zelma Stone, Donald
D. Walters, Mrs. Ronald G.
Webb, Mrs . Russell Wilson,
Mrs. Kathryn Sprouse, and
Mrs. George R. Dabney.

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 "!"0 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.

•
-

Is our future in the bag?
Some scientists g 1ve ou r planet thirty more years
Then population zero.
No mushroom cloud to nng down the curtain . Just
pollution . Silent and simple- minded. L1ke people
scattering trash. Paper Glass . Plastic Deadly tnv1a.
That's our dest1ny Unless we change our ways
Government and Industry are spendmg millions to
do away w1th pollut1on. But there·s one sou rce of
pollut1on they can't control . People . We have to do
that job ourselves.
Your automobile IS a good place to sta rt. Don't
throw trash from your car And above all don I forget

•

the fundamentals . keep your engine m tune You'll
cut harmful emiSSions decisively Change your oil
and filter on schedule. Try the new improved gasolmes. Serv1ce your car's pollution control dev1ce
regularly II you don't have one. in....-:: -~

'""0"
All these steps

take a littl.e effort.
But they must be done Now
We have a thirty-year deadlme.

~

I; . .
=
~:~ I · :
t' I

t

fl'

~ ••••••

National Automobile Dealers Association

One in a series presented by N.A.O.A., The Da1ly Sentinel and The Tri-Counfy Automobile Dealers Assoc.

.
I

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1971

~------1

Social l
Calendar !

Your Pet Peeve
Now W~orth Cash
By POLLY CR!\MER
DEAR READERS-It has come to our attention that
many manufacturers, etc., read this column. In the spirit
of mutual cooperation, we propose to use one reader's
"Pet Peeve" each week. For it we will pay our usual
Polly Dollar.
"Pet Peeves" do not necessarily have to be fault-finders
but can be suggestions for manufacturers, such as the
following that was included with a Pointer from Peggy,
one of our readers: ''How about suggesting to the manufacturer of that wonderful adhesive-backed washable
paper that they include in their line a holly pattern or
other suitable design to use for covering coffee cans,
shortening cans, etc., that we use for storing cookies and
candies l!iven as Christmas gifts or sold at our holiday
bazaars?"
My own Pet Peeve for today has to do with the frequent
changes in color names for some cosmetics. Many months
elapse before most items have to be purchased again. Recently, I needed both nail polish and blushing powder and
learned the colors asked for had been changed. The new
purchases were pure guesswork. It was a question of trying to select one that looked the most like what I had
liked. Dear cosmetic manufacturers, please give us a bit
more time before making such changes.
Let us hear the peeves you readers would like to get off
your chests.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY-My girl,
3, loves to play records on
her own phonograph but
cannot read the labels on the
records. I have drawn pictures to help her identify
them. On "Jingle Bells" I
drew a bell and a snowman
identifies Frosty, the Snowman. Now she knows which
record is which.-MRS.

•

J. M.
DEAR POLLY-When wrapping gifts I turn a little bit
of the cellophane tape under to make a tab on the end.
The package can be unwrapped more easily.-MARGARET
=~n..::nHl:&amp;XlKt::.g;;:_,m,;oz

,

Polly's Problem

~

DEAR POLLY-I recently bought a crocheted

~ dress that is too long but I do not know how to

: shorten it. I do not want to unthread the yarn. I
hope someone can help me.-SHIRLEY

•

~·

..

DEAR POLLY-A different way to use badly fitting
socks is to make easy care, washable gloves or mittens
out of them for children or someone with a skin problem.
Place the thumb in the heel and spread out the fingers
into the foot and draw an outline of the entire hand.
Quickly stitch along the outline and have a pair of gloves
that cost nothing. As the socks are washable the gloves
can be kept clean without special care worries.-JUNE
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

You will receive a dolJar if Polly uses your favorite
homemaking idea, Polly's Problem or solution to a problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.

• Junior Group Has Workshop
Favors and table decorations
for a meeting oi the American
Legion Auxtl
of Drew
Webster Post
ight
were made
recent
workshop of th
auxiliary
members.

junior activities committee, to
go to Wilkesville this week to
complete conference
arrangements.
At the 6 p.m. March 4 meeting
of the juniors, a Little Miss
Poppy and a Junior Miss Poppy
will be selected to compete in
The Wilkesville junior con- district competition.
ference to be held this spring
Thank you notes were read
was discussed and plans were from Maureen Hennesy for
made for Miss Diane Carsey, flowers during illness, from the
eighth district junior president; Chillicothe Hospital for mint
Mrs. Charles Kessinger, junior cups and Christmas stockings
activities chairman for the containing candy canes, and
district, and Mrs. Harry Davis, from the Community School at
Jr., department third member Rutland for Christmas favors.

•

· r---- -------- ---~--------------

How to have
a college man's career
without 4 years of college.
I

MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8
p.m. Monday at high school.
SOUTHERN
ATHLETIC
Boosters Monday at the high
school at 7:30 p.m. All interested persons urged to attend.
TUESDAY
SOUP SUPPER, Tuesday,
Racine Senior High School,
starting 4:30p.m. sponsored by
Racine PTA. Soup, hotdogs, pie,
coffee, soft drinks. This
precedes Harlem Road Kings
basketball game.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, 6:30 p.m. dinner
Tuesday at the United
Methodist Church. Joe Hanning, Nelsonville, Lions International zone chairman of l
District 13 K, will be present. l
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at hall.
Frank Vaughan will speak on
Americanism and Girls' State
representative to be chosen.
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
post home.
JUNIOR
AUXILIARY,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday night at the hall.
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, horne 0 f
Mrs. Paul Taylor.
WEDNESDAY
AUXILIARY, Feeney Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, 7:30 p.m. meeting
preceded by dinner at 6 p.m.
Speaker on drug abuse and use
in our society today. Mrs. o. A.
Martin will present 50 hour pins
for hospital work.
RUTLAND Friendly Gardeners, 7:30, Wednesday, home
of Mrs . .Joe Bolin.
WILi.&gt;WOOD GARDEN Club,
7:30 Wednesd?y night at the
home of Mrs. Ken Harris with
Mrs. Karl Grueser as assisting
hostess.
WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN
Temperance Union, annual
Francis Willard Tea, 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes,
Thursday, 7 p.m., home of Mrs.
Harry Moore and then go to
ceramic workshop of Mrs .
Russell Mills. Take yearly
reports.
BLUE AND GOLD Banquet,
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245,
6 p.m. Thursday, American
Legion hall, Middleport.
WOMEN'S Assn. 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church;
devotions by Mrs. Dwight
Wallace; book study by Mrs.
Walter Waddell, Mrs. Marcus
Chambers, Mrs. R. M. Sherman, Mrs. Wallace, Mrs.
Michael Zirkle, hostesses.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Degrees of past master and
most excellent master to be
conferred.

Breakfast Planned
The annual Lenten breakfast
and quiet hour of Trinity Church
will be held at 7:45 p.m. Ash
Wednesday at the church.
Mrs. Pearl Mora will present
the meditation, "Lord, Is It I?"
and a quartet to present special
music will be Mrs. Marvin Burt,
Miss Joy Kautz, Mrs. Arthur
Skinner and Mrs. Don Thomas.
All women of the community
are invited to attend the breakfast which is sponsored by the
Women's Guild of Trinity
Church.

Daughter is Born

••

•
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

• II

Just get into
a technical
field. Any technical
field. From computers to
medicine to engineering to ecology.
This guide from the government tells
you how to train for these jobs in two years
or less. It even gives pointers on financing
a technical education.
Technicians earn twice as much as the
average high school graduate. As much as
many college men. So what are you waiting
·for? For your free guide, just fill out and
mail this coupon.
TO: Careers, Washington, D.C. 20202
Name ____________________________________
Address _______ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City ___ _ __ _ _ _ State _____ Zip _ __

0

I
II
i''\.e·~
'f;.-4'I
THE CONfERfNCf BOlRD
1
I
~;~~
J1
L - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - -- - -- - -- -- -Adverto song cont,buted too the public good in cooperation with
The Advertising Council ar ~ the to•crnatoonal flewspaper Advertisin&amp; EKecutives

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hysell of
Pomeroy Rt. 4, are announcing
the birth of an eight pound, two
ounce daughter, Janelle Marie.
The baby was born Feb. 19 at
the Holzer Hospital. Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Bush, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Hysell,
Route 4, Pomeroy, are the
grandparents, and Mr. and Mrs.
Dewey Hudson, Minersville, are
the great-grandparents . Mr .
and Mrs. Hysell have a son,
Dennis Ray .
VISITED HERE
Mr . and Mrs . Allen Johnson
and daughter, Joy, Winston
Salem, N.C., were the weekend
guests of the Rev. and Mrs.
Raymond Butcher, Pomeroy
area.

Past Presidents Honored

Pink roses were presented to
the nine past presidents of the
Philathea Society of the Middleport Church of Christ
honored Thursday night.
Mrs. Paul Winn gave an
original
poem
entitled
"Reflections of a Past
President" in tributes to Mrs.
Audrey Forst, Mrs. William
Reynolds, Mrs. David Farmer,
Mrs. E. L. Lallance, Mrs. L. E.
Reynolds, Mrs. Oscar Roush,
Mrs. Martha Childs, Mrs. Clyda
Allensworth, and Miss Mildred
Hawley. She concluded with a
poem, "Compensation," and a
solo, "May the Good Lord Bless

You", accompanied by Mrs.
Hazel Thomson. Mrs. Childs
sang "I Belong to a King."
During the business meeting
conducted by Mrs. Grace Pratt,
it was reported that $110 was
made on a recent rummage sale
and plans were made for
another one this spring. Mrs.
Louise McElhinny noted that
five baptismal robes have been
·completed.
Mrs. L. E. Reynolds and Miss
Hawley were appointed to the
church carpet selection committee, and Miss Hawley, Mrs.
Chester Erwin and Mrs. Frost
were named to the nominating

committee. It was agreed to
serve the wedding reception for
the daughter of Mrs. John
Elardo on Aug. 14 and Mrs. L.
E. Reynolds and Mrs. Guy
Reynolds were named chairmen. Plans were made for
serving the Eight and Forty
dinner on May. 3.
Miss Hawley commented on
the courses which will be offered by the Churches of Christ
thts spring. Mrs. Reynolds
asked for blood for her brother,
George Stace, who will undergo
heart surgery Thursday.
Reported ill were Leo Childs,
Homer Rice, Reva Beach, Mrs.

Food ·for Americans

Pork Chop Exotic Dish
With a Cou pie Sauces

P. J. Pauley

Nettie Boyer, Mrs. Horace
McElhinny, Mrs. Ella Hannam,
Homer Jones, Mrs. Vernita
McClung, Mrs. Leo Searls, Miss
Darla Ebersbach, Lewis
Triplett, and Betty Cline. The
deaths of Ray Glaze and the
brother of Audrey Theobald
were noted.
Mrs. David Farmer led in the
Philathea song to open the
meeting. Devotions by Miss
Mabel Hysell included scripture
I'm now located at
from John, a meditation "An
Authority on Valentines", and a
reading by Mrs. George
Meinhart entitled "Take Time
for 10 Things."
Mrs. Allensworth thanked the
Phone 992-2318
group for help with the choir
bake sale. Thank you cards
AUTO
were read from Mrs. Beach,
F 1R E . Ll FE
Norman Yeauger, Mrs. Harold
HEALTH
Wolfe, and the Mabel Vance
MUTUAL FUNDS
family.
The valentine theme was I ~~
carried out in the table
NATIONWIDE
decorations with refreshments
INSURANCE
• COLUMBUS OHIO
being served by Mrs. Elizabeth • _··_,?
_ HOM!
_ _O&lt;.,r.E
__
_ _ __.
Roush, Mrs. Cline, Miss Hysell,
and Mrs. Meinhart.

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY

By AILEEN CLAIRE, NEA Food Editor
Pork remains a good meat
buy. Make a pork chop into
a more exotic dish by adding
a prune and orange sauce.
The tartness of the fruit is a
perfect complement for the
meat. Serve with rice and
green beans.
According to the National
Livestock and Meat Board,
the new breed of pork yields
22 per cent more protein and
has 57 per cent less fat and
36 per cent fewer calories
than pork marketed in previous years.
The board's home economists still recommend all
pork be cooked thoroughly
and the simmering in pineapple juice in this recipe
does the job tastily.
PRUNE AND ORANGE
PORK CHOPS
6 pork chops
Salt, pepper, crumbled
sage
Flour
1/.t. cup butter or margarine
llh cups pineapple juice
12 pitted California prunes
lh cup chopped celery
1 can (12 ounces)
mandarin oranges,
drained
4 cups hot cooked rice

WINTER
SALE
Shop The Friendly

'ii'

(Hwoi=1·1:Qt-.

\;,.11~ ,

BEDROOM/HALL FIXTURE

®~

Prune and orange pork chops with rice help stretch
the dollar.

15~

S-LIGHT CHANDELIER

REG. 2.19

Glistening swirl·optic chimneys compliment the dark walnut center stem.
21" spread. Reg 30.98

2049

Sprinkle pork chops on
both sides with salt, pepper
and sage. Dip chops into
flour, coating them completely. In a large skillet
heat butter and brown chops
on both sides. Pour in pineapple juice. Add prunes and
celery. Cover tightly and
simmer 45 minutes or until
chops are tender. Add or-

Miss Supersex - Who Needs Her?
By BETIY CANARY

"Dear Betty: Don't you thing the girls who have noth·
ing better to do than squawk about women's rights are
Nutsos? Let's be honest!"
What I think is that some of the most vicious womenhaters are women.
Why else would we hear so many women say, "My
best friends are men." Or, "I don't trust women," or,
"Frankly, women simply bore me to death."
A woman who makes such remarks obviously thinks
of herself as belonging to a third sex. Unwilling to identify
with females, barred by accident of birth from the male
group, she seems to imply she's a member of a supersex.
Only someone completely indifferent to the humiliations and degradations many women have sufferej and
still suffer, can brush off women in lib groups as nutsos
or freaks .
Supersex is equally severe when making condescending
remarks about her more reserve:! sisters. She usually
has a battery of jibes ready for any- woman who prefers
a talk about child-rearing to a heated discussion of the
Gross National Pro::luct.
Supersex is seemingly blind to advertis:ng campaigns
designed to depict women as unkempt, loud-mouthed
cretins- especially those women who list themselves
"housewife" on income tax forms.

ang-es and reheat 10 minutes.
Spoon rice on a platter. Top
with chops and sauce with
prunes and oranges. Garnish
with parsley. Serve with
pitted prunes, some stuffed
with almonds and some with
tiny pieces of fresh or-anges.
Makes 6 servings.
(Newspo{H!t Enterprise Assn.)

VISIT IN AREA
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
children of St. Albans, W. Va.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jess Arnold
and Jimmy Joe of Lancaster
were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Kessinger,
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Roush
also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Roush and family,
Middleport.
RUDISILL HOME
Lee Rudisill of Pomeroy was
returned home Saturday after
two weeks at the Holzer Medical
Center.

It doesn't take long to make
that thought a reality when
you stop in at

@

Annual Blue, Gold Banquet Planned
webelos leader, Jeanne Cart,
den leader oach, Marshall
McMillion, committee member,
Norma Wilcox, treasurer, Mrs.
Eulah Francis, den mother and
publicity chairman, and Albert
Roush , institutional
representative .

square.

!

·. HEAT I

j:

.· LAMP(!

I. ~:?.;,' ;~~,.l~~ ,.
reflector. 250-watt.
ADDITIONAL OR

.

HEAT LAMP HOLDER
10· 1/2" aluminum reflector with built·
in UL-approved 660-watl socket. Hang·
up hook. Reg. 4.10

•

~OUT, COU~ON ~

339

HOUSE-0 -LITE

-:;; -- ~~;;&gt;
~

3-3/4" X 18" lONG

FLUORESCENT
UNDER-CABINET LIGHT
ldeol over desks, mirrors. in closets.
Comp lete with 15·watt tube. 6-ft. cord.
Reg. 7. 19

ELECTRICAL TAPE
Minimum dielectric strength of I 0,000
volts. Ul-listed. Handy dispenser.
Reg. 1.49

99~

·. :·-·~-·.:_·-_.~r·f_~I.c- _.~: -~-:·I sHow8ERBMA:T~:,~~~;~~~::~~:

l

· -

23

_

. .].

· · · · .. - ·

~

rene plastic encl6sure. aluminum

trim, 2 easy-grip towel bors. Fits
openings 57" to 59" wide. 58-1/8"
high.

REG. 29.95

MOBLE
HOME

Supersex blandly assures herself that these problems
belong to "those women." And, fortunately, they aren't
quite her type.
I wonder if perhaps she is merely afraid of being a
complete woman.

Danity stem and leaf pattern
on while bent glass. Big 12"

1 .·

Thinking About A

Meigs Co. Branch

I wouldn't go so far as to brand her. a turncoat.

~PENE;RAY ~ROSTED

.

She's deaf to any suggestion that women should collectively demand equal wages for equal jobs.

Plans for the annual Blue and
Gold banquet of Middleport Cub
Scout Pack 245 were finalized at
a meeting Thursday night of
pack committee members at
the home of Mrs. Larry Spencer.
The banquet will be held at 6
p. m. Thursday night at the
American Legion Hall. Projects
of the SOAR (Save Our
American Resources) program
were noted. New boys were
placed in dens.
Attending were Selwin Smith,
cubmaster; Milford Hysell,

One~

1

1--- - -.
li•

We can supply the cash {or
your home needs.

241NCH
MEDICINE CABINET

Styrene light shield; incandescent
lighting . Stainless steel I rim. 2 shelves ,
Reg. 24.65

WilliAMS

TOP AND
BOWl
INCLUDED

20 INCH
PROVINCIAL VANITY
Waterproof while linish with gold trim,
solid brass hardware. 18" x 20" x 31"
high. Reg. 91 .90

6998

20 INCH
MEDITERRANEAN VANITY
Waterproof dark wood-grain finish with
solid brass hardware. 18" x 20" x 31"
high. Reg. 96.90

.,/198

l"ttN WI.

INCTN.

for REALLY
CLEAN
TILE &amp;

GROUT
TILE'N GROUT MAGIC

FURNITURE

Disinfecls while remov ing stubborn between-the·tile dirt, stains, mildew.

$349.95

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

WilliAMS

1577

NEW

Ten:ns.

]

'

361NCH
MEDICINE CABINET

3 ROOMS

$35.00 DownBalance On
Convenient

I

~-

Meigs County
Branch of
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

"GAlAXIE"

F- -

Gleam ing

enamel

finish

on

PINT. Reg. 1.98

wood. Rust resistant hinges.

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.

J79

______., ____.

._

The Department Store
Of Building Sin ce 1915

.._

.

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
Saturday's
High School
Scores
By United Press International
Federal Hocking 79 Belpre 50
Waverly 76 Dayton Roosevelt 72
Nelsonville York 82 Glouster 39
Starr-Washington 87 Lore City
57
Toledo St. Francis 67 Massillon
62
St. Thomas Aquinas 62 Alliance
57
East Canton 77 Canton Central
Catholic 64
North Canton Hoover 67 Sandy
Valley 54
Canton South 50 Fairless 43
Jackson 66 Marl ington 59
Oakwood 69 Louisville 52
Minerva 69 East Palestine 63

(0Tl

Northwest 69 Brunnerdale
Seminary 49
Calymont 61 Dover 50
Norton 57 Barberton 53
Malvern 79 South Range 69
Utica 61 River View 58
Hiland 83 Waynedale 71
Indian Valley South 86 Jewett 53
Warwood
(W.
Va.)
112
Bridgeport 107 (OT)
Weirton (W. Va.l 75 East
Liverpool 62
Euclid 73 Garfield Heights 66
Lakewood 66 Valley Forge 51
Normandy 68 Shaker Heights 60
Cleve. Hawken School 71
MilllmPP VniiPv 70
Cleve. Heights 81 Parma 78
Cleve . Cathedral Latin 70
Brunswick 57
Twinsburg 81 Orange 54
Elyria Catholic 55 Clearview 48
Lorain Admiral King 96 Southview 75
Rittman 83 Orrville 79
Martins Ferry 73 St. Clairsville
69
Wintersville 81 Bellaire 74
Bellaire St. Johns 71 Shadyside
68
River 67 Frontier 57
Mt. Pleasant 81 Yorkville 76
Woodsfield 90 Lafferty Seton 82
Stanton Local 65 Adena 54
Wellsville 67 Steubenville
Catholic 58
Cambridge 81 Barnesville 57
Mingo 61 Tiltonsville 57
Shenandoah 67 Meadowbrook 58
Continental 90 Hilltop 83
North Central 80 Antwerp 68
Napoleon 66 Defiance 46
Fayette 104 Morenci {Mich.) 83
Patrick Henry 101 Ayersville 67
Kalida 82 Holgate 80
Marion Franklin 76 Lancaster
Reemelin 66
Lancaster 56 Worthington 59
New Albany 72 Columbus St.
Charles 65
Miami Trace 69 Franklin
Heights 62
Licking Valley 84 Pickerington
63
Columbus Ready 68 Cincinnati
Purcell 61
Rii:lgedale 64 Mar
Pleasant

57

Marfton Catl•o
Western Res
P1ttsbu
Howland 66 N
Boardman 8
gstown
Ursuline 56
Dayton Belmar 64 Fatrmont
East 57
Dayton Dunbar 64 Youngstown
North 57
Fairborn Park Hills 81 Dayton
Kiser 69
Dayton Wright 94 Franklin 61
Dayton Stebbins 53 Dayton
Alter 51
Miamisburg 82 Fairmont West
62
Vandalia Butler 63 Springfield
South 56
Middletown Madison 69 Preble
Shawnee 66
National Trail 77 Greenville 75
Northridge 64 Valley View 55
Bellefontaine 69 Graham Local
49
Union City 71 Antonia 54
Versailles 64 Ft. Recovery 60
Mechanicsburg 67 Bethel 58
Carl isle 61 Eaton 57
Southeastern 70 West Liberty
Salem 57
College Corner 96 White Water
(Ind.) 86
Youngstown South 62 Newton
Falls 60
Youngstown Mooney 73 Girard
67
Lowellville 49 Crestview 39
Western Reserve 54 Jackson
Milton 48
Springfield Local 43 McDonald
40
Maplewood 62 Mineral Ridge 30
Columbiana 93 Leetonia 40
Minerva 69 East Palestine 63
Sebring 54 Lisbon 51
Poland 74 United Local 57
Warren Kennedy 78
Leavittsburgh La Brae 65
Lakeview 71 Matthews 54
Champions 44 Youngstown
Liberty 41
Southington 58 Br,istol 47
Akro'l South 66 Akron Firestone
45
South Euclid Brus 75
East Cleveland Shaw 73 (3 ot)
Kenston 58 Solon 53
Chagrin Falls 55 Aurora 43
Milan Edison 74 Mapleton 73
Norwalk St. Paul62 Monroeville
56
Bedford Chane! 74 Cleveland
Gilmour 35
Chardon 66 West Geauga 65 (ot)
Cleveland University 51
Buffalo (N .Y. ) Nichols47
Mansfield Christian 65
Lake Ridge Academy 60
Windham 64 Waterloo 50
1 Middletown 70 Lima Senior 59
! New Knoxville 68 Mendon Union
I
67
• Middletown 70 Lima Senior 59
! Marion Local 67 Botkins 45
Sidney 79 Troy 66

'I
I

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

:~
L

'
,
•

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

WMP0/1390

LEGAL NOTICE

2 SIGNS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BOARD OF
LIBRARY TRUSTEES
For Fiscal Year Ending
December 31st, 1970
Meigs Local School
Library District,
Meigs county
Pomeroy, Ohio
January 25,1971
1967 FORD
$1495
I certify the following report
Mustang, 6 cyl., auto. trans., console, maroon finish, all
to be correct
Wanda L Eblen
good w -w tires, radio. Real Nice.
Clerk Treasurer of the
Board of Library Trustees
66 PONTIAC
$1295
CASH RECONCILIATION
Total Fund Balances,
GTO Cpe., white finish, vinyl interior, 4 speed trans., good
Dec. 31, 1970
$12,875.65
w-w tires, radio &amp; heater.
Depository Balances:
Farmers Bank
189.24
66 FORD
$995
Pomeroy National Bank 1,289.46
Citizens National Bank 7,372.43
Falcon 2 dr ., 6 cyl. std. trans., a II good tires, smart looking
Total Depository
copper finish, radio. Real economy in this car.
Balances
8,851 13
Investments:
Certificates of Deposit 5,000.00
Total Investments
5,000 00
Total
13,851 . 13
Outstanding Checks, Dec.
31' 1970
97 5 48
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
Total- Clerk Treasurer's Bal.,
Dec. 31, 1970
12,875.65
POMEROY I OHIO
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1,1970
WANT AD'
General Fund
3,919.71
INFORMATION
Total
3,919.71
FINANCIAL REPORT
DEADLINES
Total Receipts
OF TOWNSHIPS
5 P .f\il. Day Before Publication
General Fund
32,592.26
For Fiscal Year Ending
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Total
32,592 26
December 31st, 1970
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
Letart Township,
Will
be accepted until9 a.m. for
General Fund
36,511 97
Meigs County
Day of Pub I ication
Total
36,511 97
Rt. 2 Racine, Ohio
REGULATIONS
Total Expenditures
February 17,1971
The Publisher reserves the
General Fund
23,636.32
I certify the following report right to edit or reject any ads
Total
23,636 32 to be correct
deemed
objectional.
The
Balance Dec. 31, 1970
Floyd Norris publisher will not be responsible
General Fund
12,875.65
Township Clerk for more than one incorrect
Tot a 1
12,875.65
CASH BALANCE SHEET
insertion.
CASH BALANCE,
DEC. 31,1970
RATES
RECEIPTS AND
Assets:
For Want Ad Service
EXPENDITURES
Depository Balances $12,057.89
5
cents
per
Word
one insertion
BY FUND
Less : Checks
M1nimum Charge 75c
General Fund:
Outstanding
1.492.07
12 cents per word three
Bat , Jan. 1, 1970
3,919.71 Net Funds on Deposit 10,565.82
insertions.
Receipts- Revenue
Total Assets
10,565.82 consecutive
18 cents per word six con.
Intangible Personal Property
Liabilities:
secutive
insertions
Tax
27,336.00 Fund Balances
1,739 14
25 Per cent Discount on paid·
State of Oh•o Subsidy
4,800.50 Gen. Fund
1,783.06
ads paid with in 10 days.
Fines and
Cemetery Fund
3,816.53 ads and
CARD OF THANKS
Reimbursements
455.76 Gasoline Fund
2.854 9:l
&amp; OBITUARY
Total Revenue
M.V .L
372.16
$1.50 for 50 word' minimum.
Receipts
32,592.26 Total Liabilities
10,565 82 Each
additional word 2c.
Total Receipts
SUMMARY OF CASH
BLIND ADS
(Revenue)
32,592.26
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
Additional
25c Charge per
Total- Beginn ing Balance
AND EXPENDITURES
Advertisement.
Plus Receipts
36,511.97
Balance Jan. 1,1.970
OFFICE HOURS
Expenditures
General Fund
2,102 83
8:30a.m. to 5:00p .m. Daily,
Total Expenditures Motor Vehicle License
8:30
a.m.
to 12;00 Noon
Administration
1,476.82
Tax Fund
1,746 20 Saturday.
- Personal Services 9,728.72 Gasoline Tax Fund
6,992 78
- Library Service
Cemetery Fund
2,550 70
Materials
2,343.42 Cemetery Bequest
- Operation of Library
Fund
239 04
7,738. 90 Totals
13,631 55 IN MEMORY of Roberta M.
- Maintenance of
Total Receipts
Lee who passed away Feb. 22,
Library
2,181.06 General Fund
3,449 32
1968:
-Capita l Outlay
167.40 Motor Vehic e License
Grand Total
Tax Fund
3,369 89 Loving memories never die
Ex pend itures
23,636.22 Gasoline Tax Fund
12,098 35 As years roll on and days go by.
Bal ., Dec. 31,1970
12,875.65 Cemetery Fund
4,753 93 In our hearts a memory is kept
Total Expenditures Plus
Of the wife and mother we loved
Cemetery Bequest
Bal., Dec. 31, 1970
36,511.97
Fund
133 12
and will never forget.
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
Totals
23,804.61
Ralph E. Lee and family.
DECEMBER 31,1970
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
2·21 -Jtc
Assets :
GeneraiFund
5,552.15
Depository Balances (Active Motor Vehicle License
and
5,116.09
Tax Fund
Inactive, Deduct Outstanding Gasoline
19,091 13
Tax Fund
Checks
12,875.65 Cemetery Fund
7,304.63
Lands
9,230.00 Cemetery Bequest
INCOME TAX service, daily
Buildings
23,470 00
except Sunday. Evenings by
372.16
Fund
Equipment
3,000.00 Totals
appointment only. Phone 992·
37' 236. 16
Inventory - Books
30,000.00
Expenditures
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
Total Assets
78,575 65 General Fund
3,813 01
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
Total
78,575.65 Motor Vehicle License Tax
mile south of fairgrounds .
Fund
2,261.16
(2) 22 ltc
2-7-30tc
Gasoline Tax Fund
15,274 60
Cemetery Fund
5,521 57
Totals
26,870.34
Balance Dec. 31,1970
NOTICE OF
General Fund
1,739 14
APPOINTMENT
Vehicle License
case No. 20452 Motor
2,854 93
Tax Fund
£" t te of ROY VAN COONEY, Gasoline Tax Fund
3,816.53
Deceased.
Cemetery Fund
1,783.06
Notice is 11ereby given that C:emetery
Bequest
Ralph Van Cooney of MidF
und
372.16
At Landmark
deport, Ohto, has been duly Totals
10,565.82
appointed Administrator of the
Town &amp; Country Store
CASH BALANCE,
Estate of Ralph Van Cooney,
E. Main St.
RECEIPTS AND
deceased, late of Meigs County,
Pomeroy, Ohio
EX PEN DIT'URES
Ohio.
BY FUND
Speaker: Chuck Mitchell,
Creditors are required to file
General Fund
Chemical Specialist
their claims with said fiduciary Balance,
Jan
1,
within four months .
ALL ARE INVITED!
2,102.83
1970
Dated th is 17th day of
Refreshments
Door Prizes
Receipts
February 1971 .
Property Tax Information
F H. O'Brien Genera'
Real Estate
1,697 03
Progate Judge Tangible Personal Property
of said County
Tax
764.81 DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
(2) 22 (3) 1, 8, 3tc
Inheritance Tax
65.58
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
Permissive Sales Tax
277.20
10-18-tfc
Cigarette .License Fees
and
Fines
37.12
NOTICE OF
Other
607.58 WILL PICK up merchandise
APPOINTMENT
and take to auction on d
Receipts
3,449.32
Case No. 20450 Total
Total Beginning Balance
percentage basis. Call Jim
Estate of LEONIDAS R. BARR,
Plus Rece ipts
5,552.15
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
Deceased.
Expenditures
Phone 742-4461.
Notice is hereby given that Total Expenditures 9-23-tfc
Dale Barr of Reedsville, Ohio,
Administrative
3,297.01
has been duly appointed
Town Halls , Memorial
Executor of the Estate of
WHEN? Each
and Grounds
116.00 AUCTION Leonidas R. Barr, deceased, Bldgs.
Friday night, 7 p .m . Where?
F ire Protection
400.00
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
Hayman's Auction House,
Motor Vehicle License
Creditors are required to file
Tax Fund
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
their claims with said fi duciary Balance, Jan . 1. 1970
1,746.20
Pomeroy·Middleport
Bywithin four month s.
Receipts
pass.
Dated this 17th day of Motor Vehicle
2 7-tfc
February, 1971.
License Tax
3,369.89
F. H . O'Brien Total
Receipts
Probate Judge Total Beginning Balance3,369.89 RUBBER STAMPS made to
of said County
Plus Receipts
5,116.09
order . 24 hour service. Dwain
(2) 22 (3) 1, 8, 3tc
Expenditures
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Total Expenditures Ohio.
Miscellaneous
720.00
2-12·90tc
Maintenan
ce
1,541.
16
NOTICE OF
Grand Total Expenditures APPOINTMENT
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
Motor Vehicle License
No . 20451
Tax F und
2,261.16
like to try a wig on in the
Estate Of ALICE
BARR, Bat
Dec . 31, 1970
2,854.93
privacy of your own home?
Deceased .
Tot a I Expenditures Plus
You can . Just call us. We a l so
Notice is hereby given that
Bal. Dec . 31, 1970
5,116.09
Dale Barr of Reedsville, Ohio,
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Gasoline
Tax
Fund
has been duly appointed Balance, Jan . 1,1970
Kosco!, of course.
Dis 6,992.78
Executor of the Estate of Alice
tributor s, Brown's. Phon~
Receipts
Barr, deceased, late of Meigs Gasoline Tax
Middleport 992-5113.
12,000.00
County, Ohio.
98.35
12-31 -tfc
Creditors are r equired to file Other
Total
Receipts
12,098.35
their claims with said fiduciary Total Beginning Balance
within four months .
P lus Receipts
19,091.13 WILL GIVE piano and organ
Dated thi s 17th day of
lessons in my home. Phone
Expenditures
February, 1971.
992-3666.
Expenditures F 'i . O'Brien Total
Miscellaneou s
7,914.32
8-16-tfc
Probate Judge
Maintenance
7,360.28
of said County Grand
Total Expenditures (2) 22 (3) 1, 8, 3tc
Gasoline Tax Fund
15,274.60
Bal., Dec. 31,1970
3, 816.53
YOUNG Hereford c ow. George
Total Expenditures P lu s
Cooper, Racine, Ohiv. Phone
Bal. Dec . 31, 1970
19,091 . 13
Cemetery Fund
247-2161.
MY THANKS to all my friends
Balance, Jan . I, 1970
2,550.70
2-21 ·3tc
and relatives for the many
Receipts
beautiful cards I received for General Property Tax
my 85th birthday . Special
Rea l Estate
1,131.35 LADY'S gold wedding ring with
sets, vicinity of G and J Auto
thanks Ia Mrs. Bob Hoeflich Tangible Personal
Parts
and
Kroger's,
Property Tax
509.88
for being so nice. Mrs. Ruth
Pomeroy, last
Tuesday.
1,045.00
Par sons, 1916 Woodward Sate of Lots
Other
2,067.70
Reward.
Contact
Ruby
Ave ., Poland, Ohio.
Total Receipts
4,753.93
Brewer, Long Bottom, phone
2·22-ltp Total Beginning Balance
Chester 985·3554.
Plus Receipts
7,304.63
2-21 -6tp
Expenditures
Salaries
4,217.88
Employer's Retir ement
Contribution
368.98
Imp . of Sites
100.00 DRIVERS NEEDED. We train
Too ts and Equ p.
183.7 1
you to be a semi -driver, local
Supplies
256.53
and
city
training
now
Repairs
141 .53
available . Earn over $4.50 an
Contracts
174,20
hour
after
short
training
.
For
Other Expenses
78.74
application and interview,
To tal Expenditures
5,52 1.57
call 513·863·6404, or write
Bal ., Dec. 31.1970
1,783.06
Total Expenditures Plu s
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
Bat Dec . 31, 1970
7,304.63
Corwin Ave., Hamilton, Ohio .
Cemetery Bequest Fund
2-22-2tc
Balance, Jan . 1. 1970
239.04
Receipts
Interest
133. 12
Total Rece1pts
133.12
Tota l Beginning Balance
MAN OR woman experienced in
Plus Receipts
37 2. 16
upholstery and furniture
for /I,, ; 1 r•rtt rr•o .\ otl mukr• Bal ., Dec . 31,1970
372. 16
repair , Pomeroy or Mid r'l'&lt;'l!l e}Jotl io supplr•merll
Total Expenditures Plus
dleporl area. Phone 843·2194.
Bat, Dec 31, 1970
372.'6
uot/1" }uil II !1'11/1 t•irt "". o111/
2 21 Jtc
( 2J 22, lie
t•trllt£' 1rill• ktullr!eri!Je . onrl
lr twll'/ r'ri!JC' tnllr sf'! J·r·o11 I ml
!Iliff \ !'1/ -f ' lllllnJ/ trillt s/1'11(/
In 1963 some 250 persons
/•t.~III!'SS
fl //(/
;-; I !'fiCL/IIsl 11!'.~ .~
were killed In an earthquake in

OF
QUAliTY

Po~neroy

llotor Co.

LEGAL NOTICE

In Memory

Notice

MAJOR

CHEMICAL MEETING
TUES., FEB. 23

7:30P.M.

Lost

Card cf Thanks

------------------Help Wanted

GET

ARENTION

"11 ,,

(i

''"d/1"''~ ~

.

II

l'f'lr•t

J·5

Wanted

rwrthc&lt;Jst Libya.

j

Wa~ed To Buy
OLD furniture, dishes, bras~
beds, etc. Write M . D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-6271.

Business Services

j_..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,.J.

9-1-tfc
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
condition, .~s 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

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

For Rent
UNFURNISHED 3-room
apartment. Phone 992-2288.

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

1·31-tfc
TRAILER, adults only. Phone
992-5592. Middleport.
2-21-lfc

BLAETTNARS
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

---------------------For Sale
2 BEDROOM trailer, furnished,
utilities paid. Phone 992-7384
or 992-7133.
2-21 3tc

5 ROOM and bath furnished
apartment, Chester. Inquire
at Newell's Sunoco Station.
Phone Chester 985-3350.
2·7-tfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

MAPLE stereo-radio, beautiful
Colonial style, featuring 4
speed automatic changer, 4
speakers, AM-FM radio.
Balance $81.60. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
2-18-61c
ANTIQUE Honeymoon sewing
machine. Phone 742-5735.
2-19-3tc
BOY'S ALL weather coat, size
12. Two formals, like new,
size 9-10. lronrite automatic
ironer with chair. Phone 9923933.
2-21 6tp

3 ROOM apartment, all electric,
wall oven, table top range,
slain less s tee I double sink,
food disposal. Nice clean 21-INCH Zenith color television,
apartment. See to appreciate.
console model. Hi-fi sound.
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
Touch tuning, new picture
Gallipolis 446-9539.
tube, one year warranty.
2-2-tfc
Phone Mason 773-5933.
2·21-6tc
HOUSE,
4 rooms,
bath,
basement and attic storage.
Nice yard and driveway.
Available March 1. Phone 9922780 or 992·3432.
BUY YOUR
2-18-ffc

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

WHY WAIT

FURNISHED apartment, 217 112
N. Third St., Middleport; 3
rooms, bath, nice yard and
porch. Phone 992 2780 or 992·
3432.
2-18-tfc
TRAILER. Brown's Trailer
Park, Minersville. Phone 9923324.
2-17-6tc

For Sale or Rent
TRAVEL
TRAILERS and
campers. Rentals by day,
week, month. Complete line of
supplies. Reese hitches, truck
or travel trailer mirrors,
brake controls, awning accessories, jacks, pie irons.
One used 1970 truck camper .
A terrtfic discount on any new
travel trailer or camper
ordered in February for
delivery at your convenience.
Ask about our Mini-Motor
Homecoming in March. Gaul
Trailer Sales, Inc. Chester,
Ohio. Phone 985-3832.
2-18-9tc
--~---------------

For Sale
USED 3-piece living room
sectional, $40. Phone 992-7378.
2-21 -2tp

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

IT'S TERRIFIC the way
we're selling Blue Lustre to
clean rugs and L•pholstery.
Rent shampooer, $1. Baker
Furniture, Middleport.
2-17-6tc

1970 DIAL N SEW zig-zag
sewing machine left 1n
layaway . Beautiful pastel
color, full size model. All
built in to buttonhole, over cast and fancy stitch. Pay just
$48.75
cash
or
terms
available. Trade · ins ac cepted. Phone 992-5641.
2-17-6tc
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
water pills. Nelson's Drugs.
1-22-30tp
MODERN WALNUT stereoradio combination. Four
speed intermixed changer.
Dual volume control, 4
speaker
sound
system.
Balance $72.20. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
2-18-6tc
COAL, limestone. Excelsio:
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4-9-tfc
USED HEATING
EQUIPMENT
Coal furnaces, $35. Blowers,
$25. Oil Burners, $50. Gas
F loor Furnaces, $25. Coal
Stoker, $50. Arnold Brothers,
E. Main St., Pomeroy.
. 2-18-tfc
GENTLE Shetland pony with
saddle, bridle, hay. Rea
sonable. Phone 742-5243.
2·21 ·3tp

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

1969 GMC ~,. . Ton wide side
pickup truck, 292, 6-cylinder,
4 speed transmission, power
brakes, radio gauges, cab
lights, overload springs, extra
gas lank, air horns, no.volt
power unit and grill guard,
emergency light on fop, with
extras, $2450; without, $2300.
Also, Tandem flat trailer, 15·
foot long, 750x16 8 ply fires,
elec I ric brakes, $350. 15-foot
fiberglass boat, 40 HP
Evinrude motor, 2 gas tanks,
lilt trailer-V, $450. C. L.
Wya II, phone 992.3792 or 304·
882 3792.
2 19 31p
KILL TERMITES and yard
insec ts with arab "You -Do lt." King Builders Supply
Company, Middleport.
2-11·601c
VACUUM Cleaner brand new
1970 model. Complete with all
cl eaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Will fake
$27 cash or budget p lan
available. Phone 992 5641.
2-17 61c

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO( 1) Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OFS4,000toS9,000 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 wi II furnish lot or erect on your lot.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

FERTILIZER

Now and get the early
Discount
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertilizer, all available now.
Take delivery now from our
area warehouse at Pomeroy.

b

POMEROY

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

Auto Sales
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2·dr.
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000
miles. Excellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-tfc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. '/92-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-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 AN.
TI;NNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc

------------------NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.
·
7-31 -tfc

------------------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
Phone
John
Russell,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc

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

1967 VALIANT, 4 DOOR, R &amp; H,
STANDARDA-1 CONDITION
28,000 MILES, PHONE 992
3860.
17 6tp

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

1963 PONTIAC Cata, na 389
cubic inch, tri-power, 4-speed
with Hurst shifter; tach,
gauges .
4: 56
Posi-Doug
headers, Goodyear slicks,
engine just rebuilt. Nice
throughout. Phone 742 4852.
2-21-6tp

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5- 1-tfc

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

------------------Pets For Sale

MINIATURE Schnauzers arld
Poodle puppies. Permanent
injections and groomed .
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
right. Phone Coolville 667.3654.
2 ll -30tc

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

Real Estate For Sale
FOR SALE- 2 story brick, full
basement, 3 bedroom, corner
5th and Lincoln, appointment
only. PHone 992-3892 .
2-17-6tc

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.
Broker

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
RUTLAND - Few years old. 2
bedrooms, bath, larg e kitchen
and living. Hardwood floors,
utility room. Carport A REAL
BUY $6,500.00
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, nice kitchen with stove,
dishwasher, and refrigerator .
Hot water heal. Double
garage. $20,000.00

SEPT!(: tanKs cteaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662·3035.
•
2-12-tfc
INTERIOR carpenter wor~. by
the hour or contract. Phone
992·3511.
1-31 -30tp

Real Estate For Sale

Cleland Realty
608 East Main Street
Pomeroy
RUTLAND ROUTE 1 - FARM
about 170 acres, all fenced,
about 50 acres for cultivation,
2 deep wells, 2 ponds, 3 barns,
shed, silo, milk house, a good
8 room house with bath,
PART MINERALS. Going at
$20,000.
POMEROY- good 2 bedrooms
home, full basement, NEW
BATH,
FORCED
AIR
FURNACE,
AND
HOT
WATER TANK,
FULLY
FURNISHED. $4,600.

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

PRICE $1.25

II

Do It Yourself Open
24 Hrs. Daily- 25c

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.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2804.
2-18-3tc

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992
2966.
6-15-tfc
LEGAL NOTICE
ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR BIDS
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Eastern Local
School District of Reedsville, •
Ohio, at the office of the clerk,
Reedsville, Ohio, until 12:00
o'clock noon eastern standard
time, March 9, 1971, and at that
time opened by the clerk of said
board, as provided by law, ~or
1 truck chassis suitable for a
60 passenger school bus body
o truck chassis suitable for a
66 passenger school bus body
1 - 60 passenger school bus
body
1 - 66 passenger school bu ..
body
Specifications
for
this
equipment is on file at the office •
of the clerk of the board.
I. o. McCoy, Pres.
C. 0. Newland, Clerk

(2) 15,22 (3) 1,8,4tc

WELCOME
TO THE
10 HOUR
WORK WEEK!
If you would like to work 10 hours

a week at your own pace, in your
own car, and build your own business ...
If you would like to invest as little
as $600 to $1500 in spare cash to
start a business that can give· you a
nice return per year, then we'd better have a little talk!
We'll show you how to make your
spare time pay handsome dividends
with Ull Snack Shop Vendinl! Ma·
chines. A proven business opportunity in a growing $5 billion
market where 80% of the business
is done by the small independent
operator.
No experience necessary! No personal sales calls necessary! We will
train you, counsel you, secure your
locations. All you need is your car,
a small investment, and be willing
to worl\ hard to become a success.
Your conscientious effort will deter·
mine your income.
Are you ready to start improving
your income? Then write.

POMEROY- 1 story' frame, 2
bedrooms, bath, 5 rooms, nice
porch. $4,250.
MIDDLEPORT South 4th
Street - 2 story, 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, lots of remodeling,
nice location . $7,950.
TO BUY OR SELL
CONTACT HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR·
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
2-21 -6tc
HOUS~,

16.40 Lincoln Hts.,.
Pomeroy. Phone .992-2293.
'
10-~ffc

division of U/1

1275 PROFIT DRIVE• DAllAS, TEXAS 75247
1 am interested in more Information
about makinc money in the vondinc
business. I have a ear and 10 hours
per week spare time.
0 I ean invest $600 in a route.
0 I can in..st $1500 in a route.
Name•- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Address'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City•________ Stato____.llp__
Phone (

Dept. _

4049 B

2 HOUSES Live in three
bedrooms, 11 12 baths, gas
furnace,
garage .
Other
rented, with 2 bedrooms,
bath .
6
ACRES .
Only
$18,000.00
MIDDLEPORT - Old house, 7
rooms, in need of repair. but
nice lot next to M and R.
Asking
$3,500.00
NEW
LISTING
MIDDLEPORT 5 rooms,
bath, furnace. Nice lot near
school.
$4,500.00
NEW
LISTING.
LIST WITH US,
IF NO SALE,
NO COST TO YOU .
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3325-992-2378
2· 19 6fc
CONVEN I ENT but secluded
building lots on T79 at Rock
Springs . Within walking
di s tance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy . Call or see BUI
Wi 11e weekends, or afler 5
p m weekdays . Phone 992·
6887.
2 J .tfc

_1

Home

11

JEMO 8.ASSOCIATES
DAVID DIANE- ASHLEY
175 Beech St.
Middleport
"Words cannot describe the
feeling one gets to get up in the
morning and walk barefooted
through the house on wall ·tO·
wall carpet1ng without being
cold . We urge everyone we
to see about buying a
from Jemo Associates."

Sites Available
Don't Dtday! Contact AI Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 912 7034

IJM:I

�•

LANCEWT

BUGS BUNNY
I .JUST OON'T UNDERSTAND WHY THEY
PLANT THOSE TREES
SO CL.OSE 10 THE
STREET••• BL.A-SL.A...
WILL YA QUITYAKKIN

SO'S I Cr.J CONCENT~ATE ON M'f
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ALLEY OOP
WHOEVER FINDS "THE

GASOLINE ALLEY

BIGGEST EGG GETS

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F=0R A WHOUi DAY!

•
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DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWN
1. Alias the
Cowardly
Lion
2. Great
Lake
3. Hartebeest
4.Legendary
bird
5. Shore
6. - - nous

AOROSS
1. Shake-

•

DICK TRACY
HOW CAN I RETURN

HIS FIRE Wln4 TWOSE
PEOPLE STANDING
THERE?

TERRY
MR. PRESII.7ENT. COLONEL RICO! I CAN'T
OPEN OTHER PEOPL E'S CORRESPONDENCE.
I HAVEN'T A CLUE TO THIS "COlONEL
TERENCE LEE.N

M i=ANWHII-f', DlJCE:Y
FA~T TO

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? IJATCH UP THI! (3UN
RAiNE:R OROPPf:P !

spearean
king
5. Dexterous
9. Incendiarism
11. Old Irish
gannent
12. See 16
Across
7. Distant
(2 wds.)
8. Give it a go
1-'. Caddoan
10. Cash
Indian
register
15. Play at
sign
fisticuffs
(2 wds.)
16, With 12
13. Able
Across,
(2 wds.)
another
16. London
name for
weather
36Across
word
(2 wds.)
20. Ladies' man 17. Whale oil
cask
23.Hawallan
baking pit
2-'. Indian of
Oklahoma
25. Vow
27. Bullfight
cry
28. Tree
associated
with
36 Across
29. River
associated
with
36 Across
32. Spanish
dining hall
33. School subj.
36. See 16
Across
39. Butter's
rival
-'0. Australian
marsupial
·U. German king
-'2. Title for
36 Across
(abbr.)

18. General
Bradley
19. Rage
20. Valid
21. - - of
Pines
22. Highlander
z.-&amp;0
25. Re'Yf'sterday's Answer
coiled
26. Lilliputian
33. Headliner
28. ColomM. Broadway's
bian
Porter
city
35. Miss Clalre
3G. Valuand others
able
36. Serenade
37. Height
quality
(abbr.)
38. Initials
31. Cowboy's
exuberant
from
shout
1880

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IF NOT PEF«Y\I'TTeD
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Now arranre the circled letten
to rorm the surprise answer, u
suggested by the above cartoon.

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STRONG CLIENT

Anower: Where foreitfn ~ntal patient• ...,.,

_ ___ _

l'o-TO AN " ALIEN-IST"

~------------------~
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(Amrwen 1o1110rrow)

A Cryptogram Quotation

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Jumbleo: NEWLY

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CUMSI

:::I~__=Prid=·="-~SUR=PRISE~ANSW~~Efl~here~=l [ I I I I I I ]

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words arc all
hints. Each day the code letters are di!!erent .

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

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•

&lt;C 1971 King Features Syndicate. Inc.)

TAIGEY
V1
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
is

Saturday's Cryptoquote: THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE DISPLAY THEm INDIVIDUALITY IN THE KIND OF FOOL
THEY BECOME.- HOWE

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M I B J M M

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

Mrs. Wolfe
(Continued from page 1)
the wound and had placed her
undergarments into a basin of
cold water in the bathroom to
soak the blood from them.
She also had apparently lain
on a bed in the front bedroom
following the injury because
there was blood on a pillow.
This was the same bedroom
that firemen thought Mrs. Wolfe
was in when they reached the
house due to the position of the
bed clothing. Mrs. Wolfe had
changed into a robe and apparently then was overcome by
the smoke and carbon
monoxide.
The fire was contained to the
family room and kitchen which
was completely gutted.
Mr. Wolfe had been at his
cottage in Sutton Township
since about 3 p.m. Saturday
with Mike Huddleston until he
arrived at the home after being
notified of the fire. Young
Huddleston is the son of Mrs.
Wolfe's brother, David Huddleston.
Mrs. Wolfe was a member of
the Racine Baptist Church,
Racine Chapter 174, Order of
Eastern Star and was employed
by the Leading Creek Conservancy Water District. She
was a former clerk of the
Southern Local School Board.
Surviving are her husband,
John T.; a daughter, Michaela
C., Racine; her mother and
father, Mr. and Mrs. Carol and
Fannie Sayre, Racine, who are
in Florida; a brother, David
Huddleston, Racine, and
several aunts, uncles, nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Racine
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Charles Norris officiating.
Burial will be in the Letart
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home from 6
this evening until 9 p.m. and
untilll a.m. Tuesday when the
body will be taken to the church.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach
expressed appreciation to state
agencies, the Hamilton County
Coroner's office, John T. Wolfe,
husband of the deceased; the
sheriff's department and to
Jack and Alfred Lyons, Racine
Police, for extra hours, in their
work in carrying out the investigation of Mrs. Wolfe's
death.
SEMINAR DATE SET
LIMA, Ohio (UPIJ - The
Ohio Chamber
Commerce
will
h~d
I
management
Aug. 4-6 w1t

~~~~i::n::;~~~

•

COSTUMING REFLECI'ED the international theme of Thinking Day for Meigs CoWlty
Girl Scouts at the Sunday observance. Left to right are Valerie Lewis, Switzerland; Susan
Zirkle, Holland; Mary Blaettnar, China; Kathy Haley, Israel; Linda Fisher, France, and
Judy Will, Hawaii, U.S.A.

CLEVELAND (UPI) -The
bead of the Teamsters Union
in Ohio, William Presser,
today was fined a total of
$12,000 on eight counts of
financial conspiracy, but
escaped any prison sentence.
Presser received the
sentence from U. S. District
Judge Thomas D. Lambros
after he pleaded guilty Jan. 22
to eight counts of bribery. He
could have been sentenced to
a maximum of eight years in
prison and fined a maximum
of $80,000.

tend. 65

..._•••••••¥•••..,...,.~

: A THOUGHT :
•
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f }1'UR TODAY :

t

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iC
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~ than to despair.
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:

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-tc
lfs Quick! Easy -tc
Jt/1.

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

"l'

t-tc
t

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:
Fridays Only
:
iC The Drive- In Window -tc
-tc
Open
~
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9 A M t 7"P M
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-tc
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(ContinuouSly)
it·

is

Mr M K
Q
d
s. c ean, aime
.

it

-tc

(Continued from page 1)

3: Eiuht

:Other Banking Hours 9 to
-tc and 5 to 7 as usual on-tc
-tc Fridays.
iC

Morris; Middleport Juniors,
Mrs. Mary Jane Wise, Israel;
Middleport Brownies, Mrs.
Judy Spencer, Japan; Reedsville Juniors, Mrs. Lyle
Balderson, Sweden; Pomeroy
Juniors 247, Mrs. Harlan
Whitlatch and Mrs. Ivan Wood,
China; Middleport Juniors 5,
Mrs. Ruby Vaughan, Switzerland; and Salisbury Cadettes
208, Mrs. Thelma Airs on,
Mexico.
An offering was taken for the
Juliette Low World Friendship
Fund which is used to support
international
friendship
projects between scouts in the
United States and Girl Guides of
other member associations of
the World Association .

NAIA Pairings Are

Mrs. Della Belle McKean, 57,
died in the Miami Valley
Hospital, Dayton, around 10:30
a.m., Saturday following an
illness.
A resident of 5306 Hilgeford
Drive, Dayton, Mrs. McKean
was born in Gallipolis on Sept. 6,
1913, daughter of the late Austin
and Electa Notter Johnson.
Mrs. ivfcKean graduated from
Gallia Academy High School in
1931, and worked for the G. C.
Murphy Co., in Gallipolis. In
Dayton, she was a sales clerk
and typist for a clothing firm.
She
married
William
McKean, Gallipolis in January,
1934, in Greenup, Ky. He survives, along with one son, Major
John Stephen McKean, An-

~·

it
-tc
-tc

and SAVINGS

co. ..

POMEROY, OHIO
-tc
MemberFDIC
-iC
~
Member Federal
:
•
Reserve System
-tc
............................

j .::;.

.. .

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.

DAVIS-WARNER INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.
V. D. EDWARDS INSURANCE AGENCY
MULLEN INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
P. J. PAULEY NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
REUTER INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

.. .

The IDJurY rrushap occurred
at3:15p.m.SaturdayonRt.218
near Rt. 790. Officers said
Gerald L. Haffelt, 35, Eureka
Star Rt., Gallipolis, struck the
rear of an auto operated by
Elijah C. Short, 47, Rt.1, Crown
City. Short and a passenger, 19year-old Curtis Short, both
complained of minor injuries.
Haffelt was cited for failure to
stop within the assured clear
distance.
A tractor-trailer was involved
in an accident at 2:45 p. m .
Sunday on Rt. 7, three and sixtenths miles from Rt. 218. Investigating officers said Robert
H. Dalton, 40, South Point, cut
back to avoid striking a car
driven by Charles R. Ball, 26,
Huntington. Dalton's semi
struck a bridge railing causing
moderate damage. There was
no contact between vehicles.

By United Press Intematio~l
Israeli cabinet ministers are
angry with a U.S. State
Department official who they
feel tried to pressure Israel into
making concessions in Middle
East peace negotiations, Israeli
newspapers said today.
The newspapers Haaretz and
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - William C.
Woods, Poin.t Pleasant; .T~nia
. Meadows, Mtlton; Mrs. Wilham
White, Ashton; Frank Dotson,
~oint Plea~ant; Harold Whittmgton, Pomt Pleasant; Mrs.
James Leport; Mrs. Waldo
BlkF .
Btt
Mr
ac , raz1ers o om;
s.
Winifred Hoffman, Johnny
Donohue, both Letart; Floyd
Hoffman, Glenwood; Doug
Stewart, Letart; John Neal,
Clifton; Robert Darst, Charles
Eads, Michael Lutton, vernon
Stevens, Leon; Mrs. Clara
Hess, Syracuse; Michael
Badgley, Buffalo; Wayne
Martin, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Cecil Wamsley, Gallipolis.
DISCHARGES _ Carl Birchfield, James Flynn Goodwin,
Mrs. Larry Hill, Charles Blaine,
Ada Hyer, Meia Goodman, Jack
Rice, lnge Volden, Isaac Wallis,
Guy Wamsley, Mrs. Frannie
Franklin, James Roush, George
Jeffers, Mrs. James Roach,
Mrs. Walter Jones, John
Hoschar, Rev. Birtus Barrett,
Sandra Westmoreland, Malinda
Morris and Adriane Clarke.
BIRTH - Feb. 20, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. William White,
Clifton.

.•.
GETS CHANCE
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) Lt. William L. Calley Jr. gets
his chance today to tell a jury of
fellow officers that he was
following orders as a good
platoon commander when he
A three vehicle mishap was shot civilians including women
investigated on Rt. 35, five- and babies, at My Lai.
tenths miles east of Rt. 588 at
4:10p.m. Sunday.
BACK TO WORK
TWINSBURG, OhiO (UPI) According to the report,
Ernest Adair, 82, Jackson, cut Some 1,500workers at Chrystler
left of the center striking cars Corp.'s stamping plant here
driven by Gary W. Foose, 19, reported for work today after a
Gallipolis, and Earl McCowan, strike which could have shut off
48, Ragland, W.Va. Adair was the flow of vital parts to
charged with driving left of the Chrysler's 40 plants across the
center . Moderate damage country was narrowly averted
resulted and no one was injured. Sunday .

Frederick Snuffer, instructor
in sociology at Rio Grande
College, will address the
Faculty Women's Club at their
monthly meeting Wednesday,
at 7:30 p. m. in the College
Dining Hall. Snuffer's address,
on Appalachian culture and
heritage, is open to the public.
Snuffer, who received his
bachelor's degree at West
Virginia State College and his
master's degree at Marshall
University, taught a special •
course on Appalachia at Rio
Grande College last summer.
The course dealt with the region
of Appalachia as a sociological
and cultural area, rather than
as a political or economic
problem.
Following the talk, the
Faculty Women's Club will hold
their annual monthly business •
meeting.

ARE HEADQUARTERS
FOR

WRANm.ER.
JEAKS

TWO OF THE "CUTIES" attending Thinking Day
festivities were eight-year-()ld Jamie Sisson of Pomeroy
Brownie Troop 66, and her sister, Julie, two. They are the
children of Mr. and Mrs. James Sisson of Pomeroy.

Davar said the ministers feel
remarks by Joseph J. Sisco,
U.S. assistant secretary of
state, were an unwarranted
attempt "to exercise moral
pressure" on Israel to make
commitments.
The newspapers said Sisco
was criticized at a cabinet
meeting in Jerusalem Sunday
after which Israel reiterated its
rejection of Egyptian demands
for withdrawal from captured
territory.
Egypt called Israel's stand a
rejection of recent peace
moves, despite Israel's declared
willingness to negotiate.
The Israeli eabinet said in a
statement following its meeting
Sunday that it welcomed
Egypt's readiness to sign a
peace agreement, while rejecting the withdrawal demands . It
said Israel was ready to
negotiate on all aspects of a
peace agreement.
The cabinet added: "The
government of Israel reiterates
its position as confirmed by the
Knesset (parliament) that Israel will not withdraw to the
armistice lines of June 4, 1967."
This referred to Israeli borders
before the 1967 Middle East
War.
In Cairo, a government
spokesman said "The Israeli
statement is considered a clear
and categorical rejection of the
proposals advanced by Ambassador Gunnar ,Tarring who
asked Israel to pledge to
withdraw."
Egypt replied earlier to the
Jarring proposals that it would
sign a peace treaty if Israel
agreed to withdraw from the
occupied Sinai and Gaza Strip
and find a just settlement for
the Palestinian refugee problem. Jarring is serving as the
United Nations peace negotiator .

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Tuesday
February 22-23
WHAT EVER HAPPENED
TO AUNT ALICE?
(Technicolor)
Geraldine Page
Ruth Gordon
Co Iorca rtoons
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

After the Israeli cabinet
statement Sunday, Egyptian
Information Minister Mohamed
Fayek said "It has become
evident to world public opinion
that Israel does not seek peace
but wants to impose its
expansionist policy on the Arab
countries."
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban said he was "cautiously
optimistic" and felt the negotiations have entered a new phase.
"We will come to the test
within the next days and
weeks," Eban said. He said he
was waiting for "a positive
Egyptian response."
"In other words, if the U.A.R.
has reached the point of saying
there must be an agreed peace,
we think they ought to carry it
further," he said.
Israeli Ambassador Yitzak
Rubin flew back to Washington
today after a round of
consultations with government
officials amid diplomatic reports that the United States
was pressuring Israel to submit
a plan for withdrawal from
Arab territories.

•

In the mens and boys
department on the 1st floor
a complete selection of
Wrangler Jean!:&gt;. Mens
sizes in.the super lean from
28 to 38 waist and regular
cut Wrang lers from 29 to 46
waist. Long-wearing 14
ounce
blue
denim ,
proportioned fit reinforced
at all poilits of strain.

cdhauorghagteer,s, MrAlass.kJaamaesnd(Letahwo)
Abend, Enon, Ohio and Miss
Penny McKean, at home.
Two brothers and two sisters
survive: Steve Johnson, Rock
Hill, S. C.; Junior Johnson,
Middleport; Mrs. Adelaide
Waldenmaier of Chicago and
Mrs. William Cook, Circleville.
She was a member of Grace
United Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be held
2 p.m., Tuesday at Miller's
Home for Funerals with Rev.
Paul W. Hawks officiating.
Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 o'clock this
evening.

Name Speaker

ELBERFELD$

Meddlt.ng Charged

TY/.r,ncks
Probed,
W

Two persons were IDJured m
one of eight traffic accidents
investigated over the weekend
by the Gallipolis Post State
Highway Patrol.

~ormced

March 3 at whichever school
having the best record.
Findlay, 19-3, qualified for the
competition by virtue of winning the MOC title. Central
State, 17-7, is the independent
team in the district with the best
mark.
Defiance, 17~, a Mid-Ohio
member, and Ohio Dominican,
12~, were chosen as at-large
teams.
The national finals are held at
Kansas City, Mo.

..
n
l . d
t FARMERS BANK •:-tc T WO .rersons
RJUre
~

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSMargaret Lowery, Albany;
Janet McDaniel, New Haven;
Maty Evans, Long Bottom;
Orland Laudermilt, Pomeroy:
Theresa Russell, Mt. Alto, W.
Va.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Ora Halfhill, Jerry Jacks,
Everett Dailey, Joseph Quivey,
Jackie Lyons, Sr., Eunice
Sprague, Opal Cummins,
Richard Bearhs.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Rosalie Clark, New Haven;
Helen Harris, Syracuse; Esther
Kissell, Middleport; Dale
Proffitt, Portland; Beatrice
Stewart, Middleport; Salem
Yates, Racine; Alfred Lyons,
Racine;
Frances
Dray,
Gallipolis.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES George Adkins, Jr., John
Weatherby, Alice Phillips,
Rebecca Pooler.

Other Custo:rns

figurines, and the other with
huge paper flowers in vivid
colors.
The troops, their leaders and
the countries they represented
performing at the Sunday
program were Salisbury
Brownies 220, Mrs. Nancy
Morris and Mrs. Sharon
Swindell, the United States;
Tuppers Plains Juniors, Mrs.
Marge Benedum and Mrs.
Beverly Collins, Germany;
Pomeroy Brownies 171, Mrs.
Margaret Sheridan and Mrs.
Betty Wilkes, Italy; Pomeroy
Brownies 66, Mrs. Jacqueline
INJURED IN MISHAP
Robert Joseph Fisher, 22, Zirkle, Holland.
Racine Juniors 137, Mrs.
Cheshire, was ad.itted to the
Doris Fisher and Mrs. Carl
Holzer Medical Center Saturday afternoon following a
motorcycle accident in the TNT
area north of Pt. Pleasant.
Fisher sustained a shoulder
URBANA, Ohio (UPI)--Ceninjury which required surgery. tral State, Defiance, Findlay and Ohio Dominican will
compete in early March for the
NAIA District 22 title, with the
PREPARE CONCERT
MASON - Wahama High and winner advancing to the
Junior High School band national basketball tourstudents are preparing for their nament.
Central State, last year's
annual Mid-Winter Band
Concert this week. The concert, · district titlist, will play at
under direction of Gerald Defiance, and Mid-Ohio ConSimmons, will be presented ference champ Findlay will host
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Ohio Dominican March 1. The
survivor schools will meet
h1 h school gymnasium.

event. A bit of this, a taste of that, for these girls at the
Chinese-themed table.

"FINGER" FOODS native to the countries represented
by the troops topped off the ' International Thinking Day

Also a complete selection
of flare leg Wranglers.
Boys Wranglers in slim and
regular cut models, all
) sizes 6 to 18. And for little
fellows, you'll find sizes 2 to
6x. Stop in and select your
needs.

On The 2nd Fl~or
Wrangler Jeans For
Ladies, Girls and Little Tots.

Regular cut and flares. Blue
denim and a big selection of
new colors. Ask any of the
sales girls to help you find the
style, color and size you want.

ELBERFELDS - POMEROY

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

CHANNEL MASTEB

ONLY

••
~L•••:~::;.....,M~od~e~I62~5;2A~.~3~·B;a~nd.
BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

(30·50 MHl).
Hi PSB (147·174 MHZ), LeAMPSB
(540·1600
KHZ).
Three tuner circuit. Variable Squelch Control:
13 Transistor Radio, 2 Transistor Squelch .Circuit, 6 Diodes, 1 Thermistor, 2 Varistors, 2
Rectifiers. Telescaping PSB antenna. ferrite
AM Antenna. 4 IF Amplifiers. Separate RF
Stage for each PS Band. Built-in AFC. Vernier
Tuning.' Uses 6 "C" batteries or AC. 3lh" Dy·
namic Speaker. Earphone Jack. Padded Case.
Earphone, External Auto Antenna Connecting
Cable. 91/4" X 6;.'4" X 3¥4"

•

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