<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="918" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/918?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T07:25:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="10818">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3612caff59135006de332965355fb1ff.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8bc73be342b1d61f272a248417d23ee8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1976">
                  <text>Bolllb Opens Crack in Capitol Front

•

Extensive Damage
In Ground Floor
Of Senate Side

The Daily Sentinel
•

VOL. XXIII

Devoted To 'The lntere.t&amp; Of '1'lie Meig$-MOMJn Area

NO. 223

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

MONDAY, MARCH 1, 1971

TEN CENTS

.•Rural Sharing Offer Raised
DES MOINES Iowa (UPI)- sal by $100 million in an effort
President Nixon today sweet- to win farm state support for
ened his $1 billion rural his " new American revolution. "
community development pr opoNixon said the $1.1 billion he

•

now advocates for rural deve- increase in federal funds for
lopment under his " special rural communities.
In a prepared speech to a
revenue sharing " concept represented a 24 per cent, joint session of the Iowa
legislature, the President said:
"The direct dollar benefit to
rural America is obvious. In
addition, rural America will
share substantially in general
revenue sharing funds and in
special sharing for manpower,
transportation, education and
law enforcement."
Nixon flew to Des Moines for
the first of a series of
grassroots appearance aimed
at developing support for his
revenue sharing and government reorganization proposals.
They face heavy opposition in
Congress.
Nixon also sought to counter
farm block criticism of his
executive reorganization plan
which would eliminate the

Department of Agriculture as a
separate agency and scatter its
functions among four proposed
new agencies.
"It comes to a question of
whether farmers and others in
rural America want an Agriculture Department for its own
sake or whether they really
want things like better farm
prices, better technical assistance for agricultural problems,
wider development opportunities in rural • communities,
better schools, better roads and
so on," Nixon said.
"I think they want the latter
-the tangible results," he said.
Nixon's text was solely to
domestic matters.
"If the lessons of the past
decade mean anything, they
mean as power has been
concentrated more and more in
Washington, as decisions have

been increasingly been made by
remote control, the special
needs of our rural communities
and of the great heartland of
America, more and more have
been either neglected or even
gone unrecognized,'' Nixon said.
He said changes he proposed
in his State of the Union speech
Jan. 22 would bring about a
peaceful American revolution to
return "power to the people."
They would "refresh and
renew" government, he said.
"These changes can give us
better government throughout
all America - but they have
special meaning for rural
America," Nixon said.
" I want those decisions that
affect rural America made by
people who know rural America. And the people who know a
place best are the people who
live there."

Another Base Given Up

•

SAIGON (UPI)-South Vietnamese troops have abandoned
LAST WEEK a storage building, today a pile of old brick and rubble to be removed, is
another base in their boggedwhat's left of the building above on North Second Ave. , Middleport, adjacent to the one-time
down effort to cut the Ho Chi
Meigs Motors Sales Rooms. Now owned by the Royal Crown Bottling Co. of Middleport, the
Minh supply trail in Laos,
building has been razed for two main reasons, because it was a possible hazard, and because it
military sources said today.
The sources said the South
was an eyesore. The bottling firm used the space for storage and to prepare promotional signs
Vietnamese infantrymen left
and advertising.
the base, called Hotel 2,
because heavy antiaircraft fire
THE LONG FORECAST
prevented U.S. helicopters from
Ohio Extended Outlook
dropping supplies or.evacuating
Wednesday through Friday:
wounded. It is the fourth base
I
By United Press International
I
Chance of rain south and
the South Vietnamese have
snow or rain north WedLawmen P atrol School halls
abandoned under heavy Comuesday, becoming mostly fair
munist fire in a week.
COLUMBUS - AT LEAST FOUR SPECIAL DUTY plainThursday
and Friday. Ratherl
Official spokesmen s~ trl ~'W
clothes police officers were assigned to patrol hallways today at
Central High Sch
ar the city's downtown ection following cold with highs in the 30s South Vietnamese sold1ets have
north and 35 to 40 south
been killed in the three-weekracial disturbar
nday Officials ordered the school
portion. Lows early Wed- old Laotian operation, with 1,002
closed Friday af
of black students roamed through the
nesday morning from the mid wounded and 99 missing in
school setting
extinguishers, breaking windows and
20s north to the mid 30s south, action. They said 3,118 Comdestroying other
y.
dropping to between 15 and 25 munist troops had been slain in
..
Personal conferences between students, their parents and
Thursday and Friday morthe campaign.
school officials were also scheduled today. The trouble a pparently
nings.
The U. S. command put
was sparked by a Thursday night shooting of two black students
American losses at 40 dead, 35
from the school by white students.
wounder and 18 missing in
action. The command said an
Snows Hit Across Midsection

r---------------------------,
• ! News ... in Briefs l

1/1

SNOW SWIRLED IN A BAND FROM western Kansas and
southern Nebraska across Missouri to southwestern Illinois early
today. Other snow was scattered throughout the mountains of the
West and rain fell in the Southeast.
Hays and Salina, both in Kansas, had at least four inches of
new snow early today from the weatJier disturbance in the
nation's midlands. Snow and sleet fell further north. Travelers'
warnings were in effect for Kansas and parts of Missouri and
stockmen's warnings were issued for western Kansas.

Returns to Attackinf! Hoover

•

WASHINGTON -SEN. GEORGE S. McGOVERN, D-S.D:,
says he has new proof of the need for a congressional investigation of FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover. It is in the form of an
anonymous letter purportedly from 10 FBI agents charging the
agency is slipping as a crime fighter because too much time is
spent on polishing Hoover's public image.
" We write ... because we believe that the FBI could be a vital
force within our system of government for good if allowed to do
the job that needs doing," said the letter, on FBI stationery. " If
we could for only a few moments forget about the director's
image and the preservation thereof. At the present that is all we
exist for." An FBI spokesman said there would be no comment
"on an anonymous letter, the authenticity of which has not been
established."

• Farm Prices Up but. ..
WASIDNGTON -THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
says farm prices increased 5 per cent in the current survey, but
were partially offset by record high costs. Higher prices for hogs,
beef cattle, calves, oranges and sweet corn attributed heavily to
the increase in the month ending Feb. 15, the department said.
Farm costs rose three-quarters of 1 per cent. The gains exceeded costs, however, to bring farm returns to 70 per cent of the
" fair earning power" parity ratio compared with 68 per cent last
month and 75 per cent last February, the department said in a
report.

3,000 Hoover Workers Walk Out

•

NORTH CANTON, OHIO - ABOUT 31000 workers at the
Hoover Co. plant here walked off their jobs early today when
their contract with the company expired.
The strikers, members of the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, turned down a last-minute offer by the
company for a three-year co'1 :ract with a 25-cent wage boost the
first year, followed by 22-cent salary hikes each of the next two
years.

Nostalgic Mementos Go High
HOLLYWOOD - THOUSANDS OF PIECES of movie
memorabilia going back 43 years and ranging from a stagecoach
to a bicycle brought a total of $364,480 at the conclusion Sunday of
the 20th Century Fox studios auction. The highest price paid
during the four-day sale was $11,000 for a horse-drawn fire engine
used in the motion pictures "Old Chicago" and "Hello Dolly."
A stagecoach used in the film "The Silver Whip" was purchased by Dr. G . W. Mead of the Los Angeles County Museum of
Natural History for $8,000. The bi.·ycle Paul Newman rode in
"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" was sold for $3,100 to
Winters-Rosen Productions, which will produce the actor's first
television special. A spokesman for the firm said it was bought as
a present for Newman's wife, Joanne Woodward, whose birthday
was Saturday.

Two Women

Are Injured
Two women were hospitalized
and an Albany man was
arrested following a car-truck
accident Saturday at 8:20 p.m.
on SR 143, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Hospitalized were Golda
Jones, 56, Zanesville, driver of
the car, and Minnie Foit of
Harrisonville, a passenger of
Mrs. Jones'. Mrs . Jones
sustained a laceration of the
scalp and finger and possible
internal injuries. Mrs. Foit had
chest injuries. Both are listed in
satisfactory condition at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Arrested on charges of
driving while intoxicated was
the driver of the truck, James
Lewis Trader, 21, Albany, Rt. 2,
who was going north on 143.
Trader's truck was 18 inches
left of center when the accident
occurred, officers said.
Harry Red Jackson, 57,
Rutland, a passenger in the
truck, sustained a laceration to
his head and cheek. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, treated and released.
The injured were transported to
the hospital by the Middleport
and Pomeroy E-R squads.
The
Jones
car
was
demolished and the Trader
vehicle had heavy damage.

Army UH1 Huey helicopter was
shot down over Laos Sunday,
wounding a crewman. Spokesmen said it was the 38th
American chopper destroyed in
support of the Laotian operation
in addition to two U. S. jets.
Hotel 2 was evacuated
Sunday by two battalions of 1st
Infantry Division troops, who
walked out carrying their
wounded. The artillery base
was located above base overrun Thursday by North Vietnamese troops and tanks and the
scene of bitter fighti,."g ("'er the
weekend.
South Vietnamese military
spokesmen in Saigon said only
" light, sporadic contact" was

reported over the past 24 hours
on all Laotian fronts, including
the Hill 31 outpost 12 miles
from the South Vietnamese
border. Field reports indicated
today that Communist tanks
and ground forces had moved
out of the immediate area of
Hill 31 and that some South
Vietnamese paratooper and
armored units were in the
region.
South Vietnam was rushing
10,000 men into Laos to
reinforce the 16,000-man task
force that moved into the
country with American air
support Feb. 8 to cut the Ho
Chi Minh Trail, the Communists' vital supply line to
Cambodia and South Vietnam.

Drenner to End
Service Monday

Some 80 Pomeroy homes and
businesses were notified today
that pickup service by Lee
Drenner, Pomeroy garbage
collector, was being discontinued today.
Earlier, another collector,
Walter Bentz, Pomeroy, said
that he is discontinuing service
to some 500 Pomeroy businesses
and homes as of next Friday.
Drenner has been using the
Dark Hollow property near
Pomeroy owned by Bentz as a
dumping area.
Bentz purchased the plot
of over 100 acres known
as the Dark Hollow property and began
dumping there in December.
However, he has been cited to
$1,000 RICHER - Sue
county court on a charge of
Seelig, mother of three
dumping without a permit.
children, Rt. 3, Pomero-y, was
With service tliscontinued by
$1,000 richer last week
two of the collectors in
because Bill Radford, who
Pomeroy, residents are faced
has a sharp memory for
with the problem of disposing
license tag numbers, noticed
their own garbage and trash.
hers recently in the weekly
The matter, however, is being
Sohio's Instant Jackpot and
left to the individual since no
alerted her to that fact. Mrs.
action to relieve the situation
Seelig filled out the necessary
has been reported on the part of
forms and in two weeks had
the village or of the county.
her check.
Bentz said he had become

weary of trying to cope with the
dump problem although he had
been notified that a representative from the Ohio Department of Health would come here
to look over the Dark Hollow
site.
A spokesman at Pomeroy
village hall indicated today that
the garbage collection problem
is to be up for discussion tonight
when Pomeroy Village council
meets in regular session.
The
Middleport dump,
located just off the Route 7
bypass, is available to the
public and to all haulers
whether or not they reside in the
community, Council President
John Zerkle reported today.
Haulers can use the dump for a
flat fee of $100 a month
regardless of the number of
trips made per day, Zerkle said.
Others are charged on a rate
schedule set up by council. An
attendant is on hand daily.
SERVICES NOTED
Union services will be held at
the Grace Episcopal Church in
Pomeroy Wednesday at 8 p.m.
with the Rev. Arthur Lund as
guest speaker.

Springer
Moves to

Linta Job

rmY WILLIAMS, Meigs
High junior wrestler, who
doubles in the autumn as one
of southeastern Ohio's top
football players (fullback and
linebacker) has advanced to
the district wrestling tournament following victories
last week in the Lancaster
sectional tournament.

NOW YOU KNOW
The State of Washington has
the smallest percentage of
persons failing the selective
service mental exams- 3.2 per
cent, according to the New York
Times Encyclopedia Almanac
for 1970.

February school foundation
subsidy payments to the three
Meigs County school districts
will total $139,764.38, according to State Auditor
Joseph T. Ferguson.
Amounts to be received by
each district are: Eastern
Local, $22,645.78, Meigs Local
$94,556.01 and Southern Local
$22,562.59. In addition, the
county board of education
wiJl receive $4,238.16.

Ohio Power Company Lima
and Findlay divisions Will be
consolidated effective April 1
and will be headed by Ronald L.
Springer, formerly of Pomeroy,
Joe P. Gills, Canton, OPCO
Executive Vice President, said
today. The merger occurs ir.
conjunction with the early
retirement on April 1 of .Joseph
W. Jones, Lima division
manager. Springer, now Findlay division manager, will
move to Lima to head the
enlarged Lima division.
A factor in the decision to
merge the two divisions, Gills
said, is Interstate 75 which links
Lima an1 Findlay. "This highway has made it feasible at this
time to consolidate many of our
functions and to further Ohio
Power's long-standing policy of
doing everything we can to
provide our customers with
quality service at low cost," he
said.
Springer began his service
with Ohio Power in 1936 at
Crooksville. He has since
served at Newark, Portsmouth,
Ironton, Pomeroy, Mount
Vernon and has been manager
of the Findlay Division since
1963. He and his wife, Lavina,
live at 1700 Imperial Lane in
Findlay.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call at 11:37 p.m.
Sunday to the Waffle Shop
where an employe, Martha
Southern, had become ill. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was treated and released.

Holding Pat Hand

Weather
Snow likely tonight, becoming
mixed with rain south again on
Tuesday. Lows tonight in the
low 30s and the highs Tuesday
from the mid 30s to the lower
40s.
ROCK FLIPPED
Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway Patrol officers investigated
a minor traffic mishap at noon
Saturday on Rt. 124, one and one
tenths miles east of Rutland
where an auto driven by Amos
Cross, 37, Rutland , flipped a
stone into the windshield of a
car operated by Clara M. Ellis,
30, Rutl&lt;jnd. No one was injured
or cited.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -A bomb was set off on the ground floor
of the U.S. Capitol early today, causing extensive -damage and
opening what Capitol Police Chief James Powell said appeared to
be a "serious crack" in the already weakened west front.
There were no injuries in the explosion. It took place on the
Senate side of the building, in an unmarked men's washroom
usually used by senators, about 60 feet from an exhibit area immediately below the well of the Great Rotunda of the Capitol.
FBI agents, Washington and Capitol police and an Army bomb
squad swarmed into the building. The area of the explosion was
sealed off. Only persons with proper credentials were allowed into
parts of the building.
Powell said the explosion occurred at about 1:30 a.m. EST. He
said the Capitol switchboard received an anonymous call at 12:59
a.m. EST saying a bomb would go off in 30 minutes. Authorities
refused to give details of the call.
The Capitol is normally open to visitors until 4:30 p.m. EST
seven days a week. Anyone entering the building after that must
show proper credentials and also must sign in or out. Authorities
refused to speculate on how the bomber planted the explosives.
The effects of the blast were not visible outside the building, and
apparently there was no damage to either the Senate or House
chamber.
The rest room where the blast took place is located next to a
Senate wing barbershop and near several small offices including
an appropriations subcommittee room.
Immediately above the rest room on the main floor is the Senate
disbursing office. On the other side of the floor above is the old
Supreme Court chamber.
The Senate chamber, also on the floor above, is about 100 feet
from damaged disbursing office.
The west wing of the Capitol, braced by huge beams because of
its weakened condition, was damaged according to Powell. He
said there "appeared to be aserious crack in the wall" of the west
front.
Reporters were not allowed into the damaged area until about
six hours after the explosion as FBI agents and other experts
sifted through ankle-deep debris with wire screens in hopes of
finding clues to the identity of the bomber and the type of bomb
used.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said that the blast
would not affect today's Senate schedule, with the day's session
beginning at 10 o'clock.

JEFF TYO

JEFF MORRIS

RICK VANMATRE

MEIGS MARAUDER basketball player Jeff Tyo, a 6-2 senior forward, was named to the
•second All-Southeastern Ohio tasketball team Sunday at Jackson by the SEO Sportswriters
and Broadcasters Asn. Jeff Morris, 6-3 junior center, was placed on the third team. Rick Van
Matre, senior forward, was recognized for honorable mention. See account of Honor Team
selections on page 3.

By United Press International
The Israeli cabinet bas voted to resist U. S. pressure and
refuse to submit ma~ showing how much Arab territory it is
willing to abandon, Israeli newspapers said today.
The newspapers said Prime Minister Golda Meir's cabinet
voted 14-4 in Jerusalem Sunday against outlining possible
defensible boundaries in a map at this stage of the Middle East
peace negotiations.
The newspapers Ma 'Ariv and Yedioth Aharonoth said the Big
Four powers would meet soon to exert more pressure for IsraeU
flexibilio/ and to increase _prospects for extension of the Middle
East cease-fire that expires March 7.
Ma'Ariv said most cabinet members were in favor of a tough
stance in contacts with the United States, whatever the costs.
Diplomatic sources said President Niion's speech Thursday
calling for only minor changes in Israeli's pre-1967 war borden
was "disappointing" to Israel.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud RJad &lt;'alled Ia
representatives of the Big Four - the United States, BritaiD,
France and the Soviet Union -for ronsultations today in Cairo.
Egypt said SWlday Israel's refusal to withdraw from all Arab
territory has closed the door to pea&lt;'e, but Israel insisted there II
still room for negotiation.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 1, 1971

r------------------------------------------

How High Is Up?

EDITORIALS

1

Decisions of Young
But No Solutions
The ~tory IS told in academic circles of the college
marketmg professor who asked one of his students how
he would price a new brand of toothpaste.
"I wouldn't," replied the .student. "The world doesn't
need another damn toothpaste!''
The class agreed and refused to discuss the matter
further.
~Vh~ther true or not, the story is illustrative of the
thmkmg of a great many young people who will be to·
morrow's l.eaders. Raised in a society of abundance
pocketed w1th poverty, they have decided that the world
doesn't .need another toothpaste, another car capable of
developmg 300 horsepower, another billion people, more
pollution and more waste of natural resources.
Having decided this, however, they have yet to tell
us how they propose stopping the machinery or redirecting it toward "life-enhancing" goals.
Thus far in America, the real test of whether the country needed another toothpaste or anything else has been
whether it would sell. High-pressure advertising, planned
obsolescence and the creation of phony needs notwithstanding, the free marketplace has proven to be the best
regulator of production and consumption.
There is no lack of examples of countries where some
central planning authority decrees what people can buy
or not buy, what should be produced or not produced.
In some of them, the people are lucky to have toothpaste
at all, let alone an array of competing brands.
The much-talked-about "greening" of America can
only be achieved through education and persuasion. But
while they are educating and persuading the rest of us,
concerned youth should also bear in mind that it is the
very wealth generated by having too many toothpastes
that will make it possible to have the other things they
desire-a pollution-free environment, the wise use of resources and the human possibilities in a society free of
material want.
And while they are condemning industrialized nations
for building their technologies on wealth "stolen" from
undeveloped nations, they might pause to consider that
without this technology there would be no hope of raising
the living standards of the poor nations to the point where
they, too, can begin worrying about having too many
toothpastes.

Suez Concessions Could
Speed Mideast Peace
By LEON DENNEN

Voice along Broadway

I

,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
PASSE LABEL COULD
ROCK SINATRA,
BENNETI AND
WILLIAMS
NEW YORK
Lord
Snowdon's next U. S. assignment is to photograph Lauren
Bacall, due to duplicate her
"Applause" stardom in London
.. .. Old Bdwy. nightclub and
restaurant owner Nicky Blair
had a heart attack .... Patsy
Kelly of "No, No, Nanette" has
triumphed over a lifelong
illness,
marvelously
"Butterflies Are Free" star
Keir Dullea expects his own
freedom soon .. .. Mickey
Spillane enjoyed himself in
Louise's E. 58th St. spot,
showing off his two guns: The
Mick has a license .. .. Several
involved in the Lammot du Pont
Copeland Jr. financial debacle
- millions - are part of the
story involving Pat Boone millions and Vic Damone .... Deejay Jim Lowe,
one of the best, opine~ Sinatra, Tony B_enne~~
and Andy Wms. are a trifle
passe - aren't even being
played on his and other nonrock, up-to-moment shows.
About Jack Barry's whine to

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Another Hearsay Bites the Dust

Buttermilk Will Not kill Germs

ing large meals. A number
Dear Reader - One would
There may be tingling sen·
of smaller ones throughout need more information to be sations around the mouth or
Dear Dr. Lamb - I have the day are better.
certain what your difficulty in the hands. The next time
heard that buttermilk would
is. A frequent cause of this
Dear Dr. Lamb - Would sensation in people when you notice this feeling try to
kill germs. 1 also have been
learn if you are breathing
you
please
explain
a
peculiar
told honey would build up the
they are distressed is over- faster or deeper than usual.
blood. I would like an answer lightheaded feeling t h a t breathing. Normally, a limit· You can also try a simple
comes over me, especially
to both these questions .
when I become nervous or ed amount of carbon dioxide test on yourself by taking
Dear Reader - O.K .. here upset.
is expired from the lungs. small breaths more slowly.
it is: Neither statement is
When too much is expired it This may cause the sensacorrect
affects the body chemistry. tion to clear more quickly.
WIN AT BRIDGE The
acid base balance is up- Do not hold your breath,
set. This leads to changes in h o w e v e r, since that may
Dear Dr. Lamb
You
the circulation.
cause other difficulties.
suggest walking as a good
exercise. That might be O.K.
·--------------------------~,
for some people but what
about people like me. I've
got trouble maintaining my
balance and I am sure the:-e
1
NORTH
are lots of people my age
I
· • 632
that have the same prob·
¥KQ 3
l "'
By Helen Bottel
1
iem.
+ AQ 1095
4o84
Dear Reader - This is a
sitting here depressed, after
EMOTIONALLY
problem When there is disWEST
EAST
cancelling the reception hall,
DISTURBED?
ease of the arteries, 1t can
.KJ8754
.Q9
and all the arrangements.
YOU BETCHA!
¥AS
¥9842
affect the balance mecha·
Mike is 30. He's a gambler. He
+63
+ K72
Dear Helen:
msm. A stationary bicycle
4o10 52
... 9 7 6 3
or exercycle might be all
This man is a big wheel in a owes over $2,000, most of it in
SOUTH (D)
right if you don't have too
big company, but he came from gambling debts. I thought I
• AlO
much trouble getting on or
the slums. His wife helped him could take this, as he wins a lot,
•
J
10
7
6
off it. Some folks pedal while
through
the university. She too. Besides, I had the dumb
• J84
watching television If you
gave him three beautiful idea that he might change.
4oAKQJ
have lots of trouble you may
But he insisted we go to Las
children. She encouraged him to
East-West vulnct·ablc
need a walker - a sort of
succeed. He would not have Vegas on our honeymoon ,
East Suuth
three dimensional c r u t c h
West North
l N.T.
that you can take in front of
taking the money we received
made it without her.
Pass
3 N.T. Pass Pass
you If you have a friend
Up until a year ago he was a for wedding gifts to "make a
Pass
without this problem, perpillar of his church, a good comeback." Suddenly my eyes
haps you could walk with
Opening lead-• 7
husband
and father, a civic were opened to the other times:
your friend and use an arm
leader.
The lies I forgave, the standups
for balance .
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Then, after 19 years of because he got involved in a
Dear Dr. Lamb - Aftel' a
Jim: "Who invented the marriage, he walked out on his game.
light lunch and while taking suit-preference signal?"
Now I've got the ''Maybe I
still-lovely wife, his children
a nap on a couch, I some·
Oswald: "It was probably and his church. Being im- was wrong" blues. Mike is ::~hm
times am awakened by a invented by several different
rush of warm acidlike fluid people, but the most likely portant went to his head. He felt the most fascinatin!; §UY !.~ !!t~
from my throat into my candidate is Hy Lavinthal of he had outgrown his family, world. Should I have gambled
mouth. What causes this Trenton, N.J . It is a good said he was tired of all his on a good future, or should I
action and how can tt be convention provided it's not money going to them (it didn't! ) stay - HURT AND LONELY
counteracted'?
abused."
•
with nothing left for him to have Dear H and L.:
Jim : "Let's see if we can a good time on.
marry
Women
who
Dear Reader - The ac1d
secretions normally present give specific rules for its
You see, Helen, he has fallen professional gamblers stay hurt
in the stomach, combined liSe."
for a young thiny; of 24, a and lonely most of their lives Oswald : "Here is a hand
with your meal have leaked
"swinger."
What do you think of or until divorce do them part.
back into your esophagus. to illustrate the convention.
Often this means that a short South lets East's queen of a man like this? Is he Fascination notwithstanding,
you were smart! - H.
portion of the stomach is her· spades hold the first trick. emotionally disturbed?
Dear Helen :
niated or pulled through the but he must win the second FRIEND OF A FRIEND
My daughter called me up
diaphram . making the norm - s p ad e lead. At this point Dear Friend :
al closure mechanism of the West wants to tell his part·
Certainly is !
last night in a terrible state. She
ner to put him on lead with
stomach ineffective
Young swingers often hit pay said she was on drugs and
heart. provided that his
a
There are two things you
dirt
"disturbing the emotions" wanted to get off. She's 23. It's
can do. First, don't take a partner can gain the lead. of middle-aged businessmen an awful thing to say, Helen, but
He
signals
by
playing
his
nap immediately after eatwho figure life is too short.
I can't face trying to help her
ing Allow at least two hours king of s p a d e s. Had he
alone.
What if she drifted into
You
didn't
ask
me,
but
I'd
wanted
a
club
lead,
he
would
to pass before lying down .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
Second. prop yourself up have played his l o w e s t suggest the wife wait a while the same crowd here? We never
before she sees a lawyer. got along well. Where can she
while taking a nap. P&lt;..ople spade."
Jim : "Note it's quite obvi- Basically, good husbands turn? - ASHAMED MOTHER,
with this problem a t night
are often advised to elevate ous that West w o u l d not sometimes only swing far NEW YORK
Q- Why do ~tars seem to that makes the stars seem the head of the bed
want a diamond lead."
enough to scoot back thoroughly Dear Mother :
twinkle?
to twinkle. In space, starYou should also avoid eatOswald: "It is also note·
Have her contact Odyssey
A- It is the motwn ol air light does not twinkle.
worthy that without guidance repentant. - H.
House, 309-311 East Sixth
East would s urely try to get Dear Helen :
West in with a club."
I am not getting married Street, New York City. If there
Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
®
Jim. "Thus the suit pref. because of a light disagreement is a waiting list at this famed
erence is that a high card about the honeymoon. Am rehabilitation center, she can
asks for the higher of two
find other drug help clinics and
~E NEW SCENIC CALENDAR GOES
SuT THE GIRLIE CALENDAR.S· .. WI-0
suits ; a low card for the
groups near your city. For
OPAND THE OLD YEARS 15
CARES WHAT YEAR. IT 15? THEY
lower."
DISCARDED RIGHT ON THE BUTTON···
NEVER COME DOWN···
addresses, call the Mental
0 s w a l d : •'Unfortuna tely
Health Association, or your
many players get to be suitpreference h a p p y. They
local newspaper. - H.
FACTS
should realize that the s uit
preference is only a secondPrevented Crime
&lt;try convention and does not
In
1861,
conspirators
take away the standard sig.
planned to blow up Lincoln's
nals of high cards to show
inaugural train, bound for
' strength and low cards to
Washington, at Baltimore.
show weakness "
The plot was discovered and
Jim : "Also the lead of a
the crime prevented by Allan
deuce or trey is primarily to
Pinkerton, a detective as·
show fourth best; not tha t
signed to guard Lincoln.
r~r=-::.:o=--::,., the leader wants his partner
to ret urn the lowest s uit."
Shell Holes
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
The holes along the edge
The photoelectric cell was of an abalone shell are for
first publicly demonstrated the escape of water disin the United States, Oct. 21, charged by the gills. so that
The hidding has bl•en
1925, at an electrical show the animal can breathe whitt•
West
North
East
Soulh in New York City, The holding closely to tlw sur·
1¥
Dble
Pass
?
World Almanac recalls. The face of a rock.
You. South. hold :
light-sensitive photoelectric
.KQ 732 ¥ 7 +K98 ... K1043 cells o p e n e d doors and
Since the diamond is the
What do you do now'!
counted objects whenever harde s t substance known .
A-Bid iwo hcat·ts. You are
the li ght beam was inter· the only thing that will cut
on ·' ou r way to l{ame or hil{hcr.
rupted
it is another diamon~.
This i' ·'our urtl~· fm·ci nl{ hid.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y (NEAl
The Arab-Israeli peace talks continue in the United
Nations at a snail's pace.
There would be little hope for the "indirect negotia·
tions" if their success depended solely on the expressed
positions of the antagonists.
But the public rhetoric and the warlike statements of
Egypt's President Anwar el-Sadat are misleading. Gun·
nar Jarring, the patient mediator of the U.N., is en·
couraged by the fact that Egypt and Israel are eager
to go on with the diplomatic bargaining
According to Yugoslavs in close contact with the Arabs.
Egypt is even ready to take serious steps toward a peace
settlement.
The United States. Russia, Britain and France have
also resumed discussions about ways in which a Mideast
peace could be guaranteed, including the possibility of a
Big Four peace-keeping force
To be sure, the Arabs are still trying to gain through
ne~otiation
t thev were unable to achieve militarily
They se
nd tional withdrawal of troops from
all th ter
cup1ed as a result of the SIX·
day war 1
Presiden
has l arned from h1s Russ1an
patrons an
tors +c ask for substantial concessions
without ~1vmg anything in return Thus, he proposed to
reopen the Suez Canal- blocked by sunken ships and
mmes since the 1967 six-day war-after a "partial withdrawal" of Israeli troops from the eastern bank.
This would give Egypt a strategic advantage since it
would deprive Israel of a trump bargaining card-its
presence on the canal.
But what d1d el-Sadat offer m return'! He hinted
strongly that Israel's right to the international waterway
might be subJect to negotiations.
Israel's Premier Golda Meir endorsed the idea of clearing the canal and expressed willingness to discuss mili·
tary de-escalation along its banks. "But the canal should
be open to all nations , including Israel," she said.
Premier Meir insi&lt;&gt;ted yet again that any withdrawal
of troops could only happen as part of a contractual
peace agreement.
An open canal is attractive to the oil-dependent eco·
nomies of Europe and Japan. But there is no doubt that
it is the Russians who will benefit most.
It will allow them to link their Mediterranean and
Inrlian Ocean navies and save Soviet trade the long way
around the Cape of Good Hope or Vladivostok.
Prior to June 1967 some 1.800 Russian merchantmenmore than one-tenth of the Soviet's maritime trade-used
the Suez route
Reopening the waterway would also represent a direct
financial gain for Moscow since Egypt's economy. which
Russia is now supporting, would once more benefit from
the canal tolls.
East European diplomats therefore attach great signifi ..
cance to the Arab-Israeli exchange over the canal.
They are convinced that Moscow urged President el·
Sadat to put forward the proposal that was originally
suggested by Israel in 1968 and again by Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan several months ago.
In the diplomats' view. an Arab-Israeli agreement on
clearing the canal could be the first step toward a peace
settlement.

By Lawrence Lamb. M.D.

Use It---Don't
Abuse It

iHelen Help Us!I

1

'

i•

Dick Cavett about losing network employment for 13 years;
we already noted his radio
station and that he worked in
L.A. TV the while - but be
apprised that before the quiz
scandal he and partner Dan
Enright peddled their quiz
empire to NBC for $2,200,000 the $200,000 agent - commission
went to MCA, which handled the
deal via Sonny Werblin, now
partner with Johnny Carson and
adviser to Joe Namath .... NBC
didn't sue to get the bread back
because it didn't want t~ open a
deeper can of cash - other
shows which might have been
unearthed.
Conglomerateur Meshulam
Riklis (Schenley, BVD, Lerners, Playtex, Rapid American
and other fiscal fonts) admits
his annual income has been
more than a million the last five
years .... which is why he's now
building huge shopping centers
(one's a $40,000,000 sprawl) and
skyscrapers - with his own
personal cash and credit.
First hotpants we've seen in
an elegant premises wiggled
into "21" the other midnight;
her companions gave her the
exaggerated eyebrow - lift as a
rib as she looked at a patron
who proved to be a gentlemanly
heterosexual: "I feel like applauding," he told her .... Every
Italian waiter on the spot indulged his Neapolitan instinct
and serving stopped for a
monent of appreciative silence.
We dropped by former
Journal - American sports
editor Max Kase's "Briefkase
Pub" in NY's West Side Bus
Terminal with sports cartoonist
Bill Gallo for a spot of city room

BAR B S
By PHIL PASTORET

gossip, and we recommend it as
a smart, tasteful, sports decorated place awash with
authentic memorabilia .... Such
as Joe DiMaggio's first Yankee
contract - $8,500 a year!
Max Kase told us of his most
accidental scoop: He had what
he considered the true insidea
few years ago as to the identity
of the next N. Y. State boxing
commissioner, and he printed
the initials: "J .H." would be the
appointee, definitely, Max
wrote ......:. and al]other gent entirely was appointed by the
governor: Julius Helfand.
N. Y. gets another daily '
paper, the N. Y. AmericlJtla
starting (about April 1, W
claims) with a promised 100
employees . .. . The dreadful
strikes that closed the old
Journal - American, Mirror,
World-Telegram and Herald
Tribune flung more than 8,000
out of work .... Dina Merrill's
reason for her cosmetics sponsorship: $100,000 a year ....
Dina already was one of tla
world's wealthiest actresses vra
her
mother
Marjorie
Merriweather Post's almost-abillion.
Julie Andrews will return to
Bdwy. soon as she gets the right
show: David Merrick and David
Black are racing each other ....
Marcello Mastroianni rented a
Manhattan Eastside flat; go-gogo, girls .... Passengers on P4
Am will get French lessons
flying to Europe via taped
Charles Aznavour tutelage ....
Jane Fonda's big noise about
taking a VIP troupe to Vietnam
is sheer showboating: She
knows the USO, State Dep't and
the military won't even answer
her.

QUICK QUIZ •

Q-Which is the only U.S.
At today's prices, people
who like steak done rarely state seal bearing the like·
ness of a king?
are fortunate.
A-The State Sea 1 of
• * *
Some men are like new, Hawaii, on the left of which
high-priced autos-shift· is King Kamehameha I, and
less.
on the right the Goddess of
:~
* •
Liberty.
If you wonder what some
Q-What is sterling silstores do with all the fat ver?
a
A-The term is now th~
standard of quality for articles containing 92.5 per cent
silver and 7.5 per cent copper.
Q-In baseball, how many
sides has home plate?
that's trimmed from the
A-Home plate is a fivemeat, you might look in the sided white rubber slab.
bottom of the packages.

"' * *

The other guy couldn't
possibly be so stupid if
he hadn't relied on the
work you passed to him.

Q- What American indus·
trialist said "History •
bunk"?
'
A-Henry Ford.

What Price Cop-out?
Vanetta Molson started out studying marine biology in
a community college in Seattle.
"But I soon found that wouldn't do a damn thing for my
people,' she is quoted in a wire service story on the
rllack Panthers. "I almost became a data processor b4
realized it was so irrelevant to the needs of our people."
Now she spends most of her time running a free clinic
and free breakfast program for the Panthers in Seattle
while working "to remove our oppressors- the capitalist
and imperiahst pig government."
It is fortunate that early "Uncle Toms" like George
Washington Carver were not so politically sophisticated
in the old days.
Had Carver decided that the study of chemistry was
·'irrelevant" . at a time when black men were being
lynched regularly and Negroes had far fewer opportun•
ties than they have today, he would never have discorered 300 uses for the lowly peanut, have given the South
its second most important cash crop and have saved
thousands of farmers, including black farmers. from
ruination by the boll weevil.
Apparently, Miss Molson has decided that the nation
will need no marine biologists or data processors or
chemists when the great day comes that the pig oppressors are overthrown. Not black ones, anyway.
Either that , or they will be miraculously created over·
night.

BERRY'S WORLD

WORLD ALMANAC

•

I

,r 1,71 by HEA.

Inc~~

" You'll eith~r have to forget about having long nails, or
stop watchtng those Sunday afternoo" hockey games!''

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome1 oy, 0., March 1, 1971

Waverly
Dominates
'71
•
.. All-SEOAL Dream Squad

Pro Standings
NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
46 26 .639
Philadelphia 41 30 .577 4112
Boston
38 34 .528 8
Buffalo
19 53 .264 27
Central Division
W. L. Pet. qb
Baltimore
38 31 .551
Atlanta
27 44 .380 12
Cincinnati
26 44 .371 121!2
Cleveland
12 60 .167 281!2
Midwest w~it_onPd. G!)

Nicklaus Wins
By Two Strokes

RACINE - The Racine
Summer
Baseball
organization met at the home
of Mrs. Evelyn Young here
with Herb White, chairman of
the baseball diamond improvement
committee,
speaking of improvements to
be made on the diamond.
There will be new dugouts
and a concession stand. Plans
are being made for a talent
show to be held April17 at the
high school. Next meeting
wJU be March 10 at the Racine
Jr_ High School. Anyone
wishing to sponsor a PeeWee
team, Little League team, or
Pony team may contact
Dennie Hill, Racine, 949-4584.

PALM BEACH GARDENS
"The word hadn't reached the
Fla. (UPI)-A pulse-pounding: 17th tee, and I thought I still
two-stroke victory in the PGA had a two-stroke lead," Nickchampionship
put blond Jack laus related.
Jt".U
BY ODIE O'DONNELL
Nicklaus today within sight of
Because his putt after a drive
breaking ballot to Jeff Tyo of ~r:o.o;::::::;;;;::;:;;::~:::_~~:;:;:;::::~-,:;::::8::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;~J
Completing their first season
the goal of his whole career - to six feet from the pin went
Meigs for second team
:~~
1971 ALL-SEOAL BASKETBALL TEAM
1:11 X-Milwaukee
ever as a member of the tough
and he has a shot at reaching it "into the grain" of the hard-tohonors.
~-··
•••,
60 11 . 845
~··
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
read Bermuda grass, Nicklaus
FIRST TEAM
(::;: Chicago
43 25 .632 15112 this year.
A total of 20 players from the :;:;:
~ague the 1970-71 Waverly eight league schools were ~~ PLAYER-SCHOOL
"My goal has always been to said he lined it up to the left
HT. YR~iii: Phoenix
43 27 .614 1~1/ry
. Detroit
41 28 __.5~1 . . ._ win more major championships edge of the cup --and it faded
Tigers dominated the All- nominated by the members ~~ Mark Swart Athens
6_3 Sr. ::;:;
.
,
::::: X-clinched div. title
SEOAL
basketball
team following a brief reswne by ~
than anyone else ever has," slightly right and went right
~ Mike Rouse, Jackson
6-5 Sr.1:1:
Pacific Division
selected Sunday in Jackson by each head coach.
said
Nicklaus after his 7-under- into the middle.
.;;: Mark Shaw • Logan
6-5 Sr · ::::
w. L Pet. GB
•··· Los Angeles 44 26 629
members of the SEO Sportpar 281 gave him the PGA
"That made the 18th simple,"
The 15 players named to the ;.:.
6-3 SrJ! San Francisco 36 36
9
swriters and Broadcasters three teams and the eight 11~ Phil Miller, Waverly
Sunday in a close battle with he said. "I could have taken
:::: Rick Eblin Waverly
San Diego
32 39 .451 12112
6_5 Sr :;::
Association.
Billy Casper.
three more and still won, but I
honorable mention players will
~=: Seattle
31 39 .443 13
SECOND TEAM
:;~ Portland
23 47 .329 20112
The all-time record for major took two and got my par
Coach Carroll D. Hawhee be honored at the All..SEOAL :;::
Alex Couladis Athens
;:;:
. Sunday's R~s~lts .
was the unanimous choice as Basketball Banquet to be held
championships is 13, held by anyway."
6_2 Sr· ·:::
·:·: Ch ·
·
'
Phllaoelphla 131 C1ncmnat1 121
Casper Shoots 34-34
the league's coach of the year at the Lake White Club in ;:;:
the immortal Bobby Jones.
arhe Kitchen, Ironton
6-3 Sr.!;:: New York 110 Baltimore 104
Casper, playing for the first
while his All-Ohio guard
Jones, who never turned
April.
Waverly
in
:1:~
Gary
Martin
Jackson
6-5
Sr
~::
~troit
106
Atlanta
105
J lJ • •
!
• ;.;. Mtlwaukee 111 Boston 99
professional, compiled his total time in Florida which he has
candidate, Phil Miller, bested
This year's coach of the year, ~···
•.uu
:~ Jeff Tyo, Meigs
6-2 Sr ::::: Los Angeles 107 Cleveland 90
Logan's Mark Shaw in C. D. Hawhee, is completing his
exclusively on U.S. and British avoided because he says the
!:~ Jeff Hopkins Waverly
6-4 Sr.:?.:
. Mond~y'~ Gaf!les
balloting for most valuable 25th year at Waverly where his ·:~
National Amateur and Open weather here affects his
•
· ~:-: Chtcago vs Cmcmnat1
THIRD TEAM
~?;
at las Cruces, N.M. titles.
player honors.
allergies, started the day seven Minn. 80 Illinois 64
n .. u
teams have posted a 375-164 won ~::!
~:: Eric Coon, Athens
6-1 Sr :~3 Philadelphia at Milwaukee
strokes
behind Nicklaus and Wisconsin 89 Iowa 83
Also
four
of
the
five
Tiger
at
the
brilliant
Nicklaus,
now
record.
lost
I&gt; I
~·: Larry S
· ;.:~ (Only games scheduled)
.
starters are accorded berths on
peak of his game at the age of shot a brilliant 34-34. Tommy Lyla (Ill.) 61 Denver 59
nowden, Ga II'Ipo1IS
5-9 Jr.:::::
Prior to joining the SEOAL ::·=:
DePaul 87 Mankato 74
this year's all-league team this season Hawhee guided the ~ Bud Chris.tian, I.ronton
31, has won two U.S. Amateurs, Bolt, age 52, tore a page out of Marquette 90 Tulane 76
5-10 Jr. ~
.
ABA Standinas
while runner-up Athens placed Tigers to nine Southern Ohio ~ Jeff Morris, Metgs
three Masters, two British the past with a 3-under-par 69 Cent. Mich. 84 Wstern Ill. 70
6-3 Jr. :~~ By United PressW.International
L. Pet. GB Opens, two U.S. opens and now for third place at 284.
Drake 89 St. Louis 85
three players on the team.
~ Randy Ratcliff, Wellston
6-1 Sr.! ' VIrginia
46 24 .657
Akron 74 Gannon 69
two
PGA's.
Gary
Player
of
South
Africa,
The first team and second Conference titles, including the
37 32 .536 8V2
Kansas 66 Colorado 65
HONORABLE MENTION
~§ Kentucky
house guest at Nicklaus' home Kansas St. 69 Okla. St. 58
team are composed of big last six in a row, and last year ~~
New York
33 35 .485 12
TQugh Battle
saw
his
Tigers
make
it
all
the
§: ATHENS -Dave Smith; GALLIPOLIS - Rod @ Pittsburqh
31 40 .437 15112
Southwest
strong forwards while the third
Nicklaus won the PGA in a in nearby Lost Tree Village,
Carolina
29 39 .426 16
Houston 83 Jcksnvl 82
Fla.,
started
out
Sunday
four
tough
unit is dominated by junior way to the Class AA State ~ Ferguson; IRONTON- John Myers; JACKSON~:~ Floridians
battle
when
he
had
30 41 .423 26112
Okla. City 74 Air Force 71
Tournament semi-finals before ?.:-- Tony DeStephen; LOGAN - Rick Krebs·:~
guards.
seemed headed for an easy strokes behind Nicklaus and Rice 97 Arkansas 93
West
state
champion
Dayton
losing
to
W. L. Pd. GB victory at the start of the final matched his 73, finishing at 285 TCU 74 Texas 71
Three players won positions
~ ME~GS- Rick VanMatre; WAVERLY- Tony~ Utah
Chaminade.
47 20 .701
along with Miller Barber, who UTEP 77 Colo. St. 74
on the team for the third time
Gullion;
WELLSTON
Danny
Settles.
~
metana
43 23 .652 3112 round. He began the day SWyom ing 91 New Mexico 80
Phil Miller, the 6-3 guard on
had
a 70.
and include Mark Swart of
under-par
and
four
strokes
Memphis
36 34 .514 121!2
Bay lor 78 Texas A&amp;M 71
MOSTVALUABLEPLAYER
Wave:ly's
SEOAL
champs,
is
25 43 .368 221!2 ahead. But he bogeyed three of
Denver
The victory made Nicklaus AB Chrs. 76 South Ala. 61
Athens, Mark Shaw of Logan,
described by his coach "as the :::!
Phil Miller- Waverly
21 47 .309 261!2 the first five holes.
Texas
the only man ever to win the HoBs. Bapt. 76 Hrdn.Smmns 64
and Charlie Kitchen of Ironton.
Sunday's Results
Texas Tech 103 SMU 92
BESTFOULSHOOTER
But
the
critical
point
of
the
big
four pro titles -the U.S. Rice 97 Arkansas 93
Also six players were most complete ball player he ~
Kentucky 122 Carol ina 112
has ever coached."
~::
Mark
ShawLogan
~
Floridians 136 Virginia 128
tournament was ahead of him. and British opens, the Masters,
West
unanimous choices and include
Miller tallied 312 points this ~:
Utah 125 Texas 123
Ore. 80 Stanford 75
COACH OF THE YEAR
As he stepped onto the 17th tee, and the PGA -twice each.
first team members Shaw Phil
Pittsburgh 113 Indiana 110
UCLA 57 Wash. St. 53
he was 6-under-par and, unIt also marked the first time Calif. 99 Oregon St. 74
Miller of Waverly, and 'Mike season and is being sought by 13 ~1li
Carroll Hawhee- Waverly
~S, Denver 118 Memp~is 111
major
colleges
ranging
from
known to him, Casper had just in his 11 major charppionship Sou . Calif. 81 Wash . 80
....... Rouse of Jackson.
~!:!~~8!::::::::&amp;:::::~;::::-~:::::::::::&gt;::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::!8!:~:!:!:!:!:~:!:!:!:!:!:?.!:!:!!?.~:~:::::!:!~
coast-to-coast .
birdied the final hole to go 5- wins that he was in first place Scrmn to St. 70 Chico St. 64
Unanimous picks to the
Shaw
will
receive
the
best
foul
Sunday's meeting at Jolly
Utah St. 77 New Mex. St. 67
Logan's "one man gang,"
under-par.
at the end of every round.
second team are Alex
Nev. L.V. 80 Santa Clara 63
shooter trophy for his out- Lanes included Charlie McMee,
It
Mark Shaw, was most
Couladis of Athens and Gary
Hmbldt St. 85 Hywrd St. 78
standing ability at the charity Athens;
Jim
Osborne,
valuable player last year but
Utah 102 Arizona 91
"" Martin of Jackson while
stripe
where
he
converted
123
of
Gallipolis;
Dick
Myers,
IronBYU 83 Arizona St. 74
lost to Miller this year despite
Randy Ratcliff of Wellston
U.S. Inti 97 Pasadena 76
157 attempts for a .783 average ton; Dave Fisher, Jackson; Ken
leading the league in scoring,
was unanimous for third
Weber St. 83 Montana 57
in 14 league contests.
Insani,
Logan;
Carl
Wolfe,
rebounding,
and
foul
Mont. St. 94 Northern Ariz. 86
team honors after losing a tieHead coaches attending Meigs; C. D. Hawhee, Waverly;
shooting.
Centenary 67 Hawaii 66
and Tom Evans, Wellston.
OHIOAN BOUND OVER
WGAN , W. Va. (UPI) Richard Edwards, 27 Kenton
representatives.
· Oh'10, was bound over
' to the'
Six of the eight teams in the By FRED MCMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The other at-large berth is in Logan County grand jury on
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Five berths in the NCAA doubt, but it could go to either charges of murder in the deaths
League survived first round
action in the Class AA and Class Basketball Tournament have New Mexico State or Hawaii. of his parents here. Edwards is
AAA Sectional Basketball been filled and 12 others are
Pennsylvania, ranked No~ 4 in charged in the deaths of Rethel
Tournaments over the weekend. virtually settled as a result of the nation, clinched its second and Ima Jean Edwards, who
Only Class AAA Meigs and last weekend's play.
straight Ivy League title were found dead at their home
Bids to the NCAA Tour- Saturday night by thrashing in nearby McConnell last week.
Logan fell by the wayside.
Athens eliminated Meigs 67-55 nament do not officially go out Yale, 93-63, and remained
Friday night at Rio Grande. until Tuesday morning, but unbeaten in 24 games this
••
Marietta ran over Logan 80-51 there are five clubs which have season. Steve Bilksky ~ced the
automatically clinched spots by well-balanced Quakers attack
unexpected 99-72 loss to Green still fell one point short.
Saturday
night.
Walnut Ridge, scored 17 points
winning their conference titles with 16 points.
Three Sou
)' Twp. of Lawrence County.
Gallipolis,-Jackson
and
Ironits
in
pacing
North
Gallia
to
Gary Saunders and Wade
Eight-ranked Western KenKC- Southern
Athletic Conf
Henson, 6-1 senior center, kept easy victory over Southwestern. ton posted Friday night and three other teams are just
Brett Hart, S-5 guard, the KC in the game. Henson Dave Justus, 6-3 senior forward, wins, and
.,_, Kyger Creek, Sc.
Wellston
up one victory away from a con- tucky locked up its second
consecutive Ohio Valley Confersmallest player on the floor, finished his high school cage had 11 points. Larry Justus, 6-4 set Warren Local 70-68 ference championship.
Hannan Trace
Pennsylvania
(Ivy
League),
ence
championship by defeating
•
Saturday night
canned the first end of a one career with 23 points on 11 junior forward, and Larry Saturday night. Waverly, the
competition in the Class A plus one situation Saturday baskets and one free throw. Howell, 5-8 senior guard, added 1970-71 SEOAL champion, drew Western Kentucky (Ohio Val- Murray State, 73-59; Weber
ley), Miami of Ohio (Mid- State walloped Montana, 82-57;
Sectional Tournaments at night to give the Southern Saunders had 21 points on eight 10 points each.
a first round bye .
American),
Weber State (Big to clinch the Big Sky Conference
Meigs High School and Ironton. Tornadoes a three point lead, field goals and five free throws.
Second-seeded North Gallia
Here's this week's games for
Coach John Sang's Bobcats 67-64 with just seconds Big Sam Shain, 6-1 senior for- advanced to the championship the remaining SEOAL teams: Sky) and Pacific (West Coast aild Pacific defeated Loyola
Athletic) are the teams which (Calif.) to sew up the West
finished 3-16 on the year by remaining in the contest against ward, led the Tornadoes with 20 game slated Saturday night.
CLASS AAA
clinched conference titles this Coast Athletic Conference.
dropping a 67-66 battle to Kyger Creek. KC's Gary points. Shain was particularly The Pirates will play the winner
(At Rio Grande)
Fifth-ranked Kansas downed
past week. Kansas (Big Eight),
Southern. Coach Mel Carter's Saunders, 5-7 senior guard, rough in the first period, scoring of the Southern- Eastern game.
Friday -7:30p.m. - Athens
Colorado, 61Hl5, to clinch a tie
Kentucky
(Southeastern)
and
Southwestern
Highlanders pwnped in a 30 foot shot with nine of his 20 points. Southern
Southwestern was paced by ( 16-3) vs. Marietta (7-12).
Texas Christian (Southwest) for the Big Eight crown;
completed their disappointing just one second remaining as will now play first seeded Mike Dillon's nine points. John
Saturday - 7:30 p.m. could
have things locked up by Kentucky routed Vanderbilt,
•
campaign, 0-19, with an 82-34 Southern nipped the Bobcats, Eastern Thursday night.
Ehman, 6-3 senior center, was Jackson (14-5) vs. Chillicothe
119-90, to tie for the SEC
Tuesday night.
loss to North Gallia.
67-66.
forced to sit out the contest due ( 12-7). (Two winners to
championship
and TCU beat
Additionally,
there
are
nine
Coach Paul Dillon's Hannan
to a fractured hand.
District.)
Trailing, 53-44 going into the
SW. NG
independents who are prac- Texas, 74-71, to earn at least a
.... Trace Wildcats dropped below final quarter the Bobcats
Sets Records for
HT- Green Twp.
CLASS AA
Gary
Crosswhite,
6-2
tically guaranteed of being share of the Southwest Conferthe .500 mark 9-10 with an outscored Southern 22-14 but sophomore transfer from
Fast Service
Despite placing four players
(At Albany)
invited to participate as at- ence title.
in double figures, Hannan Trace
Friday - 7 p.m. - Federallarge teams in this year's
As insurance agents
,,.,
was defeated 99-72 by Green HockinB ( 16-2) vs. Nelsonvilletournament. They include
BOATERS RESCUED
we plan your progra
Twp. Steve Daniels, 6-2 senior York (8-11).
Marquette, Fordham,
LOGAN, Ohio (UPI ) - Two
of protection wit
center, and Larry Cremeens, 68:15 p.m . - New Lexington Duquesne,
Jacksonville,
Lancaster men were rescued
painstaking care.
By FRED DOWN
sidelined with a shoulder injury, come to terms Monday ... third 1 senior forward, paced the (3-16) vs. Wellston (5-14).
when it comes
Saturday Championship Houston, Notre Dame, Utah Sunday after they became
UPI Sports Writer
probably signed for about baseman Clete Boyer signed Wildcats with 17 points each.
State, Villanova and Long stranded on rocks in the
Keith
Swain,
5-10
junior
guard,
game,
7:30p.m.
The Cincinnati Reds feel $30,000.
processing
claims, we
with the Atlanta Braves for a
Beach State.
Hocking River while trying to
move fa~t!
" they're in business because
(At Beaver)
On other fronts: Vice Pres- cut estimated at $2,500 ... pit- added 14 points and Mike
That leaves the NCAA with shoot the rapids in a rowboat.
':~ Johnny Bench is in the fold and ident Stu Holcomb of the cher Ray Culp pulled a muscle Caldwell, 6-2 sophomore, had 13
Wednesday 8 7:30 p.m. Consult Us Soon
Waverl~ (17-1) vs. Wheelers- only eight spots to fill and seven Ropes were flung from the Falls
Wayne Simpson is in the pink. Chicago White Sox said that in his right shoulder pitching points.
of those will result from con- Mill Bridge to Gerald A. Wright,
Carl Holtzapelled the winners burg (15-4).
.,.. The National League cham- second baseman Mike Andrews batting practice and will be lost
pions' spring training site at will be fined daily if he fails to by the Boston Red Sox for two or with 31 points on 12 baskets and
Thursday - 7:30 p.m. - ference champions. Conference 53, and Jack Redmond, 42. The
seven charity tosses . Rick Minford. ( 12-7) vs. Portsmouth races still undecided, and Logan Fire Department efPhone 992-2966
-" Tampa, Fla., had been an
three days.
114 Court St.
Pomeroy
unlikely to be for a while, are fected the rescue.
Williams canned 26 points on 10 West ( 11-7).
unhappy place until Sunday
the Pacific Eight, Big Ten,
field goals and six free throws.
when Bench and Simpson
Saturday 7:30 p.m.
Missouri Valley, Middle AtlanHannan Trace led 23-17 at the Championship game.
agreed to 1971 contract terms.
tic and Western Athletic. Both
(At Willow Wood)
end of the first quarter and 47-42
•
There were two problems
the Atlantic Coast Conference
confronting manager Sprky
Wednesday - 7:30 p.m.
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)-Johnny
Bench said he ended his at halftime. Green forged ahead
Anderson : (1) worries about Bench figures it will take him holdout hoping it would lead for good with a 22 point third South Point ( 12-6) vs. Ironton and the Southern Conference
hold a post-season tournament
sore-armed pitchers, especially only another year or two to some of Cincinnati's nine other period. The Beavers were (8-11).
Simpson, and (2) contract convince the Cincinnati Reds he unsigned players to do the unstoppable in the fourth
Thursday - 7:30 p.m . - to determine their NCAA
negotiations with stars which should be the club's highest paid same. They include Pete Rose stanza.
Gallipolis (5-14) vs. Chesapeake
(15-4) .
seemed stalled.
player.
Tony Perez and Lee May.
'
The signing by Bench and
Bench tried for the distinction
Saturday - 7:3o p.m. Simpson and a strong workout this season , asking for a
Championship game.
Saturday's Ohio
by the latter changed matters. $500,000, three year contract,
College Basketball Scores
College Basketball Results
By United Press lnternationa I
Bench, the National League's but Sunday he settled for $80,000
By United Press International
State 91 Michigan 85
.. , most valuable player in 1970 for one year, saying he still had Ohio
East
Ohio University 93 Toledo 78
when he hit 45 homers and lots of time to reach his goal.
Boston Coli. 69 Hoi y Cross 59
Davidson 70 Cincinnati 67
drove in 148 runs, signed for an
"There's a lot of guys making Miami 80 Western Michigan 69 By United Press International Army 64 Navy 50
Fordham 102 NYA 87
MONDAY
estimated $80,000 while Simp- a lot of money out of this Dayton 82 Xavier 76
Mass. 70 Geo. Wash. 65
Detroit 92 Bowling Green 85
Dayton at Notre Dame
son, who had a 14-3 record when game," said Bench, the Nation- Virginia Tech 73 Kent State 52 Central State at Defiance, NAIA Duke 89 Seton Hall 61
Penn St. 71 Pitt 65
Tourney
al League's most valuable Youngstown State 86
St. Vincent ( Pa .) 72 Ohio Dominican at Find lay , Fairmnt 88 Bluefld St. 80
player in 1970.
Penn 93 Yale 63
Thiel 86 Western Reserve 51
NAIA Tourney
r THE DAILY SENTINEL
"My demands might have Bethany 71 J ohn Carroll 61
Ntre Dme 92 St. Jon. (NY) 79
TUESDAY
DEVOTED TO
Gttysbg 88 Dickinson 69
tNTE REST OF
been out of line to a lot of them Ohio Northern 118 Rio Grande Minnesota at Ohio State
91
Princeton 72 Brown 52
Penn State at Kent State
~EtGS · MASON AREA
because
they've
been
around
a
' CH., STER L. TANNEHILL,
(Ind. l 109 Cedarvi lle 93 Wes tern Michigan at Ohio Kings (Pa.) 87 Siena 66
long time, and I've only been Grace
West
Vir . 83 Md. 81
Ash land 62 Bellarmine (Ky.) 60
Universi ty
Exec. Ed.
here three years.
Wright State 92 Walsh 83
Prvdnce 105 Assmption 91
. ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Buffalo at Cincinnati
Alabama 79 Miss . St. 78
City Editor
ll
d
f
Dominican 116 Malone 78
WEDNESDAY
SQUARE YARD
Published daily e")(cept
"I' have my goo years. I I Ohio
No. Tex . St. 79 Louisvl 73
Urbana 104 Marion ( Ind .) 83
NAIA Finals
Saturday by The Ohio Vall ey do , it'll work out the same."
Ashlnd
62
Bellrmne
60
Akron
75 Gannon 69
Marquette at Bowling Green
Publishing Co mpany , 111
With foam rubber pad
Miami (Fla. ) 100 Fla. St. 94
lle 95 Alliance ( Pa .) Miami at Dayton
Court s t ., Pomeroy, Ohio,
Bench, 23,led the majors iast Steubenvi
~?
Ga. Tech 81 Furman 64
Case Tec h at John Carroll
and complete ly in 45769. Business Office Phone
'
th
45
h
d
148
992. 2156, Editorial Phon e 992.
year WI
omers an
LSU-N.O. 78 Biscayne 66
OHIO CONFERENCE
THURSDAY
sta lled . Gold, green ,
2157 .
RBI's while hitting .293 as the
Wes t. Ky. 73 Murray St. 59
TOURNEY
No games scheduled
blue and red.
East. Ky 85 East Tenn 78
Second class postage paid at Reds won the National League
Northern Division
FR IDAY
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mount Union 108 Hiram 89
Ohio Conference Tourney .:.t South Car. 82 N.C. St. 69
Nation a I advertising pennant.
Mississippi 62 LSU 54
Granville and Berea
84 Ba ldwin Wallace 77
repr ese nt a tiv e
Bottinelli
"l'm a very optunistic guy, OberlinSouthern
Va Tech 73 Kent St. 52
SATURDAY
Division
Gallagher, In c .. 12 East 42 nd but I have to think that a year Capi tal 67 Wittenberg
East Car. 81 citadel 67
Ohio State a t Northwestern
61
St ., New York City, New York.
Tenn. 76 Auburn 71
Marquette al Xavier
!").
s ub sc ription
rat es : liJre that can't be expected Otterbein 80 Denison 74
~ Delivered by carrier where
" B
Ohio Univers ity at Bowling Austin Peay 81 Mid. Tenn . 75
availab le so cents per week; every season,
ench said.
Green
Tenn. St. 7'7 Ky. Wslyn 75
By Motor Route where ca rrier "Only one guy in the last 30
Kent State at Toledo
Midwest
service rot avai lab le: O ne years in the National League
Miami at Marshall
Ind . 97 Northwestern 74
month $1 75 By mail in Ohio'
Balsa is the lightest wood Wester n Reserve at Case Tech Ferris St. 85 Wayne St. 79
and w. va., One year $14.00 . drove in more runs.
in commercial use. It is so Cleveland State at Creighton 'Jhio U. 93 Toledo 78
Six
. 25. Three
BU1 I've JUS
· t
monthmonth
s $4 .5s0 . $7Sub
scrip tion
go 1 to h ave light that a man can carry John Carroll at Thiel
MIDDLEPORT
Ohio St. 91 Michigan 85
price includes Sunday Times _ another good year, and the Reds a bundle as big as a tree Ohio Conference Tourney finals Missouri 77 Nebraska 65
PH. 992-2635
Purdue 100 Mich . St. 70
at Granvil le
trunk.
. Sentinel.
- , have to have a good year."

....

•

1

.soo

,

;:;:

'

·

!*

College

Results

.... .

...

1

i

J

1
I

t'

i

.-

•

·:~ Southern,

~Green

North Gallia,
Township Win

Six SEOAL
Teams Still
In Running

Five NCAA
Berths Filled

......

Reds Are Happy With Signings

a•

Davis-Wamer Ins.

Maybe Next Year-Bench

This Week's
Cage Games

MONEY PROBLEMS?
... not any more !

CARPET

BUY I
501 NYLON

CARPET

~

••

6.99

~~casli
{ithe answer

INGELS

PHONE 992-2171

FURNITURE

125 E. MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 1,1971

Pistons Nip Hawks Broad R un
News Notes
By 106-105 Count

the Sports Desk
by Chet Tannehill
Jeff Tyo, Jeff Morris, and Rick Van Matre, second team,
third team, and honorable mention respectively is how Meigs
finished Sunday in the annual selections for the All-Southeastern
Ohio basketball squad. An outsider looking into the team and
individual records of all the players represented on the three
squads and honorable mention list likely would conclude the
format is mighty close to what it should be.
For example, how could you deny first team recognition to
Mark Swart of Athens, Mike Rouse of Jackson, Mark Shaw of
Logan, and Phil Miller and ~ck Eblin of Waverly? To keep any
one of them off you'd have to do your selecting with your head in a
pile of sand.
Fortunately, picking three teams in basketball is not nearly
as difficult as naming 22 good football players. For two reasons:
there roughly are four times more boys playing football than
basketball, in perhaps four times more positions, taking into
account football platooning. Selection of a basketball all-league
team is like fun compared to spreading around honors in football
which gets downright vexing altogether too often.
ALL LEAGUE SELECTIONS in the Class A Southern Valley
Conference will not be made until the league is unrepresented in
tournament play. Let us all hope therefore, the selections will not
be made until after March 25-26-27, which is when the Big Show is
put on in Columbus. Don't laugh (but don't hold your breath,
either), because either or both Eastern or North Gallia could get
hot.
Coaches, not much-maligned sportswriters and sportscasters
select the All-SVAC football and basketball all-league teams.
Fine. But fellas, be advised not to repeat what happened last
autumn when the football squad was named, namely, placing the
area's second highest and the SVAC's leading scorer on the
defensive team!
From the Rule Book :
Did you know that, under Ohio High School Athletic
Association rules, pupils below the ninth grade are not eligible for
scholastic athletics on any -repeat any (repeat, any) high school
team? If they be permitted to play on the high school teams, the
participation shall be counted as a season in the sport and the
school may be suspended.
We don't ever recall an instance of this happening in
southeastern Ohio but apparently it has arisen in other areas.
Else why the explicit rule, and the penalty provided?
A HUNDRED THOUSAND or so Cincinnati Reds' fans
breathed a sigh of relief Sunday when it was announced that
Johnny Bench had signed his contract for an estimated $75,000 per
annum. It was such big news in Cincinnati that the Enquirer
headlined it on page 1 of their street edition Sunday night (dated
Monday). Bench was quoted: "He (Chief Bender) carne up a
little, I cam down a little. I'm happy." Bench also soliloquized:
" ... Guess that's not bad for a 23-year old ball player."
SWINGING PARTY- This morning in my news package out
of Pomeroy-Middleport (among the products of the weekend
labors) there was this opening lead:
"Pizza, potato chips and pot were served to ..."
Now do you understand why there has to be people called copy
readers? The accidental switch of t and p when a typewriter's
keys are struck makes a swinging party out of an otherwise ordinary social hour

gs
By United Press I
Independents

f1onal

Ohio Conference
League Overall
W L
W L W L
24
2 Wooster
12
0
23
1
19
5 Otterbein
11
2
19
3
18
6
Capital
10
2
19
4
18
6 Wittenberg
10
2
17
7
19
7 Mount Union
7 6
12
8
13
6
Marietta
6
6
13 10
17
8 Bald.-Wallace
6
7
10 15
13
12 Heidelberg
4
9
7 15
13
12 Kenyon
4
9
8 15
fo 17 Denison
4 9
8 13
9
15 Ohio Wesleyan
3 8
9 13
6
10 Oberlin
3
9
10 10

Ashland
Akron
Youngstown State
Dayton
Urbana
Ohio Dominican
Central State
Cincinnati
Steubenville
Rio Grande
Xavier
John Carroll
Wright State
9
16
Western Reserve
6
11
Walsh
7 15
Ohio Northern
7
17
Case Tach
3
11
Cleveland
State
5
19
Mid-American Conference
League Overa II
W L
W L
Miami
9
1 18
4
Western Michigan
5

Ohio University
Toledo
Kent State
Bowling Green

4
4

4
4

5

3

6

2

7

14
15
13
11
7

8
7
10
11
16

Your First Apartment
Is Fun
For Awhile!
But it doesn't take long to
outgrow That's why we
suggest you start saving for
a home of your own. If you
haven't decided yet how best
to spend your wedding gift
mone y, what better way than
to own a downpaymenl
savings account. Stop in
now, before that money just
dribbles away

Meigs Co. Branch

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

Passbook Interest
At

4 3~%

Muskin~um

3

Findlay
Defiance
Wilmington
Bluffton
Cedarville
Malone

W
9
6
6
5
3
1

10

6

16

L

W

L

1
4
4
5
7
9

21
19
10
11
10
3

M1d-Ohio Conference
League Overall
5

6
10
12
16
15

Big Ten
League Overall
W L W L

Ohio State
10
Indiana
8
Michigan
8
Purdue
7
Illinois
4
Minnesota
4
Iowa
3
Wisconsin
3
Michigan State 3
Northwestern
1

1
2

2
3

6
7
7

16
16
16
14
10
8
8

7

8

7
9

9
5

5
4
4

6

9
11
12
12

11
15

Del. Val. 106 Wagner 85
Thiel 86 West. Reserve 51
Ws tmnstr ( Pa.) Geneva 71
Wesl Lib. 83 M. Harvey 80
R IU 96 Connecticut 78
Sl. Bon. 94 Canisius 68
Upsala 72 Juniata 67
Chyny St. 90 Clrion St. 65
Drew 64 Haverford 59
Syracuse 81 Colgate 72
Sl. Jos. (Pa .) 66 LaSalle 56
Hofstra 90 Kgs Point 60
USCG 75 Brandeis 72
Harvard 104 Cornell 90
Lycoming 94 Scranton 93
Dartmouth 78 Columbia 73
South
No. Car. 75 Virginia 74
Memphis St. 85 Wchta St. 77
Dvdsn 70 Cncnnti 67
Kntcky 119 Vndrblt 90
Georgia 62 Florida 61

A- When completed, it will
measure approximately 42. 500 miles .
Q- W hat does the word
Kremlzn mea11 in Russian?
A - Kremlin is the fortified
part of a H11ssian &lt;:ity. The

name comes from the Russian word .. kreml· .·· which
means .. fortress .··

Bob Lanier has a winning
method for drawing rookie of
the year votes.
Lanier, a $1 million dollar
contract signer, overshadowed
Atlanta's $2 million dollar
Freshman Pete Maravich Sunday night by converting a
three-point play with 40 seconds
remaining to lift the Detroit
Pistons to a 106-105 victory over
the Hawks.
With the season ebbing,
Detroit is valiantly determined
to avoid being washed out of
the National Basketball Association playoffs. The Pistons'
triumph moved them within 2%
games of Chicago in the
Midwest Division. A Bulls loss
to Cincinnati in Las Cruces,
N.M., tonight would cut the
margin to two games.
Detroit, in fourth place,
received the help desperately

needed from the 6-11 Lanier, an
assist the former St. Bonaventure All America failed to come
through with in mid season.
As the pivotrnan against
Atlanta, Lanier was perfection
plus. He scored a team high 28
points to take the pressure off
Detroit's brilliant backcourt
tandem of Dave Bing, who
scored 27 points, and Jimmy
Walker, who netted 22.
Maravich, like Lanier a
leading candidate for rookie
honors, tallied 30 points for the
Hawks, who still lead third
place Cincinnati by a half-game
in the Central Division.
New York knocked off
Central's leading Baltimore
Bullets, 110-104; Philadelphia
clipped Cincinnati, 131-121; Milwaukee beat Boston, 111-99, and
Los Angeles routed Cleveland,
107-90, in other NBA action.

Recent guests of Mrs. Ethel
Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Reitrnire and family were Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Hulette and
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Johnson,
Gene, Shiela, and Laura
Kathern of Pontiac, Michigan.
Mrs. Moore has had word from
there that her niece Mrs.
Hulette is in the hospital very
ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Clark,
Rusty and Regina of Jeffersonville, Indiana were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
and Venus over the weekend.
Mrs. Goldie Reitrnire, Carrie
and Paul and Mrs. Lucille
Laudermilt were at the horne of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reitmire,
Yvonna and Torn on Saturday.
They were also at St. Albans
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Adkins, Pam, Shiela, Ellen and
Henry and Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Reitmire, Joey and Mark.
Mr. and Mrs. John Stout and
Kevin and Dale Grimm all of
Huntington were guests of Mrs.
Ethel Grimm on Sunday.
Guests on Sunday at the horne
of Mrs. Ethel Moore were Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Scott and
Renee of Juneau, Alaska. They
were managers
of
the
Chickarnaw Motel in Juneau.
Mrs. Lillie Kaylor of
Kirkersville, Ohio is visiting
with her son and family Mr. and
Mrs. Elroy Kaylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Scott and
Pam of Belpre, Ohio, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Eves, Mrs. Charles
Staley, Frances and Mary and
Mr. Emery Perry all of Huntington, W. Va. were visitors at
the horne of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Reitmire and family.
Jeff Lathey, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Lathey was ill and
out of school 3 days last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Phillips,
Pam and Eddie, recently of
Fort Lewis, Washington visited
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reitrnire,
Yvonna and Torn and Mrs.
Ethel Moore last weekend. They
are on their way to Beinlach,
Germany where they will stay
for threee years. Beinlach is on
the Czechoslovakian border.
A birthday party was held at
the horne of Mr. and Mrs. Ernie
Roush for their son Jerome on
Valentines Day. Guests were
Mrs. June Wilkinson, Jay,
Renita, Rhona and Rhea, Mrs.
Neva Clark and Venus, and
Cheryl, Dawn, Lee and Eric
Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Finch and
Larry visited Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Reitrnire, Yvonna and
Torn on Sunday.

I,., Saturday's
Ohio I
Tournalllent
I Scores I
:~~:;:;:!:!:!:!:~:~:~:!:~~:!:!:::~~s:&amp;-~~~-:~~::::s;:!:~~-s::::::~~:!:::r~;

N

By United Press International
Class AAA
At Parma .... u• ... a
Parma Valley Forge 76
Cleveland South 65
Cleveland West Tech 67
Cleveland Rhodes 49
Revere 56 Midpark 48
Cleveland St. Ignatius 93
Cleveland Max Hayes 52
At Columbus
Columbus Walnut Ridge 85
Columbus Hartley 63
Columbus South 90
Columbus Brookhaven 52
Columbus East 78 Upper
Arlington 58
Columbus
Linden
69
Reynoldsburg 57
Columbus West 71 Hilliard 49
Newark 62 Westerville 59
At Cleveland
Cleveland John Adams 78
Maple Heights 41
Cleveland East 94 Orange 34
Cleveland Cathedral Latin 83
Cleveland J F K 82 (ot)
At Eastlake
East Cleveland Shaw 63 Brush
55

Painesville Harvey 27
Painesville Riverside 18
Mayfield 43 West Geauga 42 (ot)
At Lorain
Bay Village 67 Rocky River 42
Westlake 73 Southview 64
At Canton
Canton Lincoln 71 Louisville 60
Jackson 64 Coventry 42
At Lima
Celina 68 Van Wert 62
At Bluffton
Lima Shawnee 72 Marion
Harding 48
At Rio Grande
Marietta 80 Logan 51
Chillicothe 60 Portsmouth 57
At Ashland
Bellevue 69 Galion 68
Ashland 66 Fremont Ross 56
At Copley
Akron Centrai·Hower 52
Akron Firestone 43
Copley 80 Walsh Jesuit 72
CLASSAA
At Chagrin Falls
Warrensville 85 Ashtabula
Harbor 67
Chagrin Falls 64 Ashtabula St.
John 63
Solon 81 Cleveland Gilmour 51
Chardon
68
Ashtabula
Edgewood 62
At Bowling Green
Evergreen 66 Swanton 65
Rossford 52 Otsego 41

At Westerville
Dublin 62 Mt. Gilead 56
Columbus
Mohawk
75
Marysville 37
Big Walnut 62 Watkins
Memorial 51
Lakewood 78 River Valley 67
At Canton
Smithville 60 Doylestown 32
Fairless 65 Triway 58
At Marietta
Fort Frye 57 Philo 56
Morgan 71 Shenandoah 64
At Symmes Valley
Chesapeake 88 Coal Grove 71
atWarren
Hudson 65 Mathews 46
Girard 79 Waterloo 51
At Defiance
Fairview 96 Ottawa Glandorf 76
Patrick Henry 67 Archbold 66
At Albany
Wellston 70 Warren Local 68
At Beaver
WheelersburQ 72 Northwest 'i'i
At Bainbridge
Southeastern (Ross) 63
Greenfield McClain 60
Miami Trace 82 Hillsboro 61
CLASS A
At Bryan
Tlnora 68 North Central 42
Edgerton 62 Hicksville 58
At Buchtel
Crooksville 86 Glouster 36
Laurelville 62 Miller 53
At Rock Springs
Southern (Meigs) 67 Kyger
Creek 66
North Gallia 82 Southwestern
(Gallia) 34
At Chillicothe
Paint Valley 84 Lynchburq Clay
73

Frankfort Adena 71 Unioto 63
(ot)
At Lucasville
Piketon 77 Jefferson 51
Whiteoaks 78 Huntington Ross
72

.

At Portsmouth
West Union 76 Valley 68
Portsmouth Clay 57 New Boston
44

At Ironton
Green Township 99 HannanTrace 61
Symmes Valley 88 Ironton St.
Joseph 82
At Lancaster
Logan Elm 58 Pickerington 56
Canal Winchester 82 Ohio Deaf
54

At Mt. Vernon
Johnstown 47 Highland Sparta
43 (2 ot)

•

.,

•
EXTENSIVE REMODEUNG is underway at the Hotel Martin in Pomeroy which has been
purchased by a group of Middleport and Pomeroy businessmen. The photo was taken in the bar
which is being completely rejuvenated. A square type bar has been installed and paneling has
been used lavishly. On the floor are rolls of red carpeting to be laid as progress continues. The
hotel will undergo complete remodeling and refurnishing with the first floor to be centrally air
conditioned. New heating and plumbing already have been installed.

Year's Activities
Reviewed by Club
Fund raising projects of this
year were outlined during a
meeting of the Sew-Rite-Sewing
Club at the horne of Mrs. Larry
Wehrung with Mrs. Edward,
Wells as co-hostess.
Plans were made for ala ette
shower honoring Mrs. George
Hoffman, a member, at the
March meeting to be held at the
horne of Mrs. Flo Strickland. A
silent auction will also be held
at that time.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs.
Raymond Baity, Mrs. Don
Mullen, Mrs. Willard Boyer,
Mrs. Charles Hoffman, Mrs.
Ronald Browning, Mrs. Don
McKnight, Mrs. Bill McDaniel,
and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, ·Jr.

Slumber Party is
Held Friday Night

A Banana Splits theme was
carried in decorations for a
slumber party Friday night
honoring Michael Scott Miller,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Miller of Middleport, on his
eighth birthday.
Pizza, potato chips, and pop
Ridgedale 79 Licking Heights 49
At Van Wert
were served with ice cream and
Crestview 54 Lincolnview 44
Delphos Jefferson 65 Payne 56 a cake designed like a baseball
diamond. Favors were birthday
At Celina
Ohio City 99 Spencerville 59
balloons, blowouts, and candies.
Ft. Recovery 65 Marion Local 54 Gifts were presented to the
At St. Marys
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 120 honored guests. Attending the
Lima Perry 99
party were Bobby Duckworth,
At New Concord
Larry Byer, Rusty Bolin, and
Zanesville Rosecrans 67
Lore City-Madison 43 Terry Whalen.
Skyvue 70 Waterford 56
At Ottawa.Giandorf
Kalida 70 Leipsic 57
At Wooster
Kenl State 75 Northwestern 50
Hillsdale 73 Black River 40

r---------------------------,
! HOSPITAL NEWS \ •
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. Carl L. Randolph, Crown City, a son; Mr.
and Mn
·&gt;·hard Duhl,
Jackson, a 1n; Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Mel .mn, Oak Hill, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Childers, Jackson, a son; and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard E.
Elliott, Gallipolis, a daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. William R. Davis, Brent
D. Adkins, Mrs. Arthur 0.
Bethel, Mrs. Vernon E. Boggs,
Harold R. Brown, Mrs. Joseph
F. Caldwell, Mrs. Glenna T.
Cochran, Burl L. Duncan II,
Mrs. Stephan R. Elberfield,
Evelyn Marie Grady, Mrs.
David R. Hall nd infant
daughter, Carl Jones, Jr., Mrs.
Gregg E. Kennedy, Albert A.
Kuhn, Mrs. Walter W. Mayo and
infant daughter, Francis E.
McMackin, Jeffrey Edwin
Melvin, Wayne R. Neal, Mrs.
Emmett Nibert, John B.
Q-A re any races ex·
duded from naturalization
in the United States?
A-The Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1952 removed all r a cia 1 bars to
naturalization in the United
States.

Palmer, Mrs. Gerald J. Pope,
Mrs. Guy T. Rawlins, Mrs.
David E. Sharp, Tebatha M.
Swisher, and Tammie L.
Williams.

P. J. PauleJ.

•
•

307 SPRING AVE.'"

l

POMEROY
Phone 992-2318

AUTO
FIRE- LIFE
HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

~~ NATIONWIDE
~JI!~~.~~~~~~

Overnigh t Wire
By United Press International
COLUMBUS-GOV. John J. Gilligan will deliver his State of
the State message to a joint session of the Ohio Senate and House
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
of Representatives tonight, giving the Republican-dominated Grande College
Redrnen
legislature a glimpse at what he has in mind for the state in the completed their 1970-71 hardnext four years. Since Gilligan is scheduled to present his budget wood campaign with a 118-91
and tax plans in a March 15 message, the message tonight may setback to Ohio Northern
University at Ada Saturday
lack details.
Some lawmakers anticipate little new in the address, since night.
The Redrnen compiled a 10-17
the colorful Democratic figure painted broad pictures of the
directions he hoped to take in campaign speeches and in his season record. Ohio Northern
inaugural address. But the speech should trigger more legislative finished with a 7-17 mark.
The Polar Bears held a slim
activity because he is expected to follow it this week with in48-47 halftime lead over Rio,
troduction of bills which would need no new financing.
NEWARK, N.J.- MEMBERS OF THE Newark Teachers then outscored the visitors 70-44
in the final half.
Union (NTU) voted Sunday to continue their strike into its fifth
Rio hit 37-7 from the field, and
week, despite heavy fines against the union treasury and a
71.8 from the foul circles. The
judge's threat to jail union leaders for six months if the strike Redrnen collected 52 rebounds.
went on.
Hundreds of teachers, raising clenched fists and chanting
Patterson was high for the
"Strike, strike, strike," shouted their determination to stay out of
classes until a contract settlement is reached in a near unanimous •
voice vote in the ballroom of the Robert Treat Hotel.
WASHINGTON-THE NATIONAL HEAD Start Program for
needy children plans to launch a major new health care program
this summer called Health Start, it was learned today. "The
emphasis will be on providing effective health services to large
numbers of children not presently served by Head Start," said Dr.
Edward F. Zigler, director of the Office of Child Development,
which includes Head Start.
The pilot project will initially involve about 10,000 needy
children under 6 years old in 20 to 30 yet unchosen communities,
according to Dr. Gertrude T. Hunter, director of Head Start
Health Services.
EGYPT SAID SUNDAY Israel's refusal to withdraw from all
Arab territory has closed the door to peace, but Israel insisted
there still is room for negotiation. The two largest Israeli
newspapers reported the United States and the United Nations
were pressuring Israel to make withdrawal concessions before
the Middle East cease-fire expires March 7.
An Egyptian government spokesman said in Cairo Sunday
that the Israeli statement relayed to Egyptian Ambassador
Mohamed Hassan El-Zayyat at the United Nations indicated an
intention to keep the land captured in the 1967 Middle East war.
"This insistence on the part of Israel closes the door to all peace
attempts because the United Arab Republic is not ready to
discuss or bargain over the liberation of lands, the spokesman
said.

•
winners with 32.
Box Score:
RIO GRANDE (91) -Baker 14-6; Bass 10-2-22; Hairston 0-1-1;
Williams 1-5-7; Bentley 6-2-14;
Lambert 6-4-16; Jordan 0-2-2;
Jacobs 5-0-10; Bartram 1-0-2;
Ball 0-0-0; Pulley 3-3-9; Harris
1-0-2. TOTALS - 34-29-91.
OHIO NORTHERN (118) Hall 3-0-6; Davis 6-7-19;
Nellinger 5-5-15; Gassere 1-2-4;
Scaleta 4-6-10; Hoersten 2-0-4;
Patterson 12-3-32; Merchant 8-622; Simon 1-0-2; Kapper 1-0-2;
Thompson 1-0-2. TOTALS 44-30118.
Score at Half - ONU 48, Rio
47.

Need a banker
whdll look out
for your interest?

•
It's about
new technical
careers that are opening
up in every field of science.
From computers to medicine to
engineering to ecology.
Careers that often pay college men's
salaries. But only take a year or two to
learn.
It describes the things technicians do.
And the schools that train them. There's
even a section on financing a technical
education.
To get a copy free, mail this coupon.

•

TO: Careers, Washington, D.C. 20202
Name_____________________________________

I

Address __________________________________

I
I
I
I

City _ _ _ __
;

~·...
t. :

\;

-~-'..-'

.#-~._'( · ...

Yellow
Pages

l •

State_ _ _ _ Zip _ __

0

TlfE CUNHRENCI SQllll

I

I
1
1

L--- -----~~-------------------J
·~

..~
. , ....-.

AdvertiSing contflbuted for the public good in cooperation with
The Advertising Council a1 d the International Ncwsp.1per Mverlis~ng Executives

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 1, 1971

•

Auxiliary To
Sponsor
Junior Girl

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

Prayer for Earth

•
•

•
•

BY CHWRUS GRIMM
Bend 0' the River Garden Club
In the beginning, Lord, you gave us this garden Earth. Out of
its deep waters came life. Then you provided air, and life pushed
upward. It crept upon the wet land and then the dry land.
You made man in your image, Lord, to stand up and to have
dominion. To watch plants grow and birds fly and streams flow .
To feet upon the life-giving goodness which you put here for our
sustenance.
You plaCed us here to plant, cultivate, and harvest- to rule
and manage. What a trust you put into our hands! We managed,
we built, we used what was here.
Yes, we wasted. But everything seemed so limitless, Lord.
Air without bounds, water clear and everflowing, forests
primeval, richness in Earth's bowels to be exploited for our
comfort and our progress.
With what you put into our hands, Lord, we have built
skyscrapers, and monuments and automobiles - And TOMBSTONES. We fly in the skies, even thrust to the moon and beyond
to satisfy curiosity and prove what man can do.
We thought there always would be enough for future
generations. What little thought we gave it as we mined and
manufactured and engineered!
Wastes ooze into precious waters: Why do your rains not wash
the rivers clean?
Murky clouds hover over our cities, obscuring skylines: Are
your winds not strong enough to take away the jet exhaust, the
auto fumes, the stack smoke?
We scrape mountainsides away: Will not the lush green
return next spring?
Your prophets told us to be fruitful and multiply, to fill the
earth and have dominion. But now there are so many of us ! And
getting to be more.
What shall we do now, Lord?
(Taken from TOGETHER MAGAZINE published for families
of the United Methodist Churches.)
LET IT BEGIN WITH ME

All of us are able to do something about protecting our en•

•
•

vironment from further pollution. We can avoid being a polluter
ourselves.
Here are some suggestions to begin with :
- Make compost of leaves, and other organic wastes for
gardening.
- Put all litter in receptacles for transfer to disposal areas.
- Complain to store managers about excessive packaging
materials.
- Talk with school administrators about putting environmental education courses in your school systems.
- Encourage all organizations to get involved, especially
your local garden clubs.
-Vote for boo.d iddues that support pollution control.
- Encourage state, local, and national legislators to sponsor
~gher-legislatioo to cut down on all forms of pollution.
- Keep informed about environmental problems.
- Cut do
pesticides as m uch as possible.
Write
ty Action for Environmental Quality,
Government
1ce Washington, D. C. 20402 for more
infanna tion.
ELEMENTS, by henry gibson
I used to like fresh air - when it was there !
And Water - I enjoyed it.
Till we destroyed it!
Each day the lands diminished.
I think - I'm finished.

Project Approved

•

•

•

A new sign will be er ected at
the Gilmore Ceme tery by the
Wildwood Garden Club.
Meeting recently at the new
home of Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
the club decided to take care of
the sign as a community service
project. Arrangem ents were
made for a cooking demonstration at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. on
March 25.
Plants that are poison were
discussed in de tail by Mrs.
Da vid Nease. She said caster
beans are extremely poison as
are the seeds of sweetpeas,
along with the berries on
mistletoe and yew. Mrs. Karl
Grueser told of healing aloe,
used back in Bible times a s
medicine for cuts and burns.
How to Combat Insects Found
on House Plants was the topic of
a paper presented by Mrs.
Cliffor d Phillips. She advised
spraying the plants with
nicotine sulphate at three day
interva ls, washing away the
scale with soap a nd water, and
killing m ealy bugs with alcohol
swabs.
Mrs. Paul Fisher used ,

Mrs. Scites Speaks
To Homemaker Club

(

•

'l

Mrs. Kenneth Scites, R. ~" .,
talked on " Drugs and You" at a
mee ting of the Cherokee
Homemakers Club recently at
the home of Mrs. June Litchfield. Mrs . Scites was introduced by her mother-in-law ,
Mrs . Willa Scites . A contribution of $5 was made to the
heart fund. Yearbooks wer e
distributed to the members.
Mrs . Sally Smjth presided at the
mee ting.
Refreshments were served by
the hos tess to those named and
Mrs . Velma Luckeydoo, Mrs .
Kate Stone , Mrs. Ollie
Browning, Mrs . Ann Bird, Mrs .
Nellie Cas to, members, and
Mrs . Alma Marshall, Shelley
and Kimberly Casto, guests.

Winter House Plant Care as her
topic and listed light, temperature and humidity as
necessary for growth and appearance.
Several plants grown from
vegetables were shown by Mrs.
Fred Nease. On display she had
plants grown from sweet
potatoes, beets, carrots, turnips, and lemons, orange and
grapefruit seeds.
Arrangements of the month
were judged with Mrs. Edison
Hollon and Mrs. Homer Holter
receiving blue ribbons. Thank
you notes for holiday remembrances were read from Stanley
Nease, Christy and Helen Baer,
Lena Baer, Jean Nease and the
Gallipolis State Institute.
Mrs. Denver Holter gave
devotions using scripture from
Psalms and a poem on Lincoln.
Mrs . Edis on Hollon presided at
the meeting with members
exchanging houseplants for roll
call. Gardening tips given by
Mrs. Denver Holter included
dormant spraying, fertilizing_
und seeding the lawn, starting
flowers and vegetable seeds
indoors. Mrs. Holter won the
door prize. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Harris and Mrs.
Grueser.
Coined Word
Raphael Lemkin , a U S.
scholar of Polish origin.
c oined the word " g enocide"
from the Greek "genos"
m eaning race , nation or
tribe and the Latin s uffix
" cide" meaning killing .
New York enacted the first
a uto s peed law in 1904. The
speed was 10 .miles ~er ~our
in closely built-up dJstP&lt;:ts ;
15 tn village s: 20 in open
country.

Sponsorship of a girl to the
American Legion Auxiliary
Buckeye Girls State was approved and several contributions were approved in a
recent meeting of the Auxiliary
of Racine Post 602.
Selection of a junior girl at
Southern High School to attend
Girls State will be made in
March. The unit voted contributions to the Heart Fund and
the American Red Cross and set
aside $10 for the Easter basket
project at the Xenia Home for
Orphans.
Several members agreed to
assist with the Red Cross fund
drive in the Racine area.
Bronze markers of the
American Legion Auxiliary to
be used for marking the graves
of desceased members were on
display.
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle
noted that the pamphlets "How
A Thought Becomes a Bill and
How a Bill Becomes a Law" and
"A Lift" have arrived and will
be distributed to Southern High
School students.
A communication was read
from Mrs. Charles Kessinger,
Eighth District junior activities
chairman, announcing a district
junior community service party
to be held at the Athens Mental
Health Center on March 11. It
also noted the junior district
conference to be held at
Wilkesville, April 24, and the
judging of contests. The
Department junior conference
will be held on June 10 at the
Bexley Post. It was reported
during the meeting presided
over by Mrs. John Boyd that the
dolls to be costumed for competition in the contest to be
judged at the district conference have arrived.
The annual American Legion
birthday party was set for
March 20 with the covered dish
event to be held at 6:30 p. m.
Meat will be furnished.
A resume of the midwinter
conference prepared by Mrs.
Myrtle Walker, ill and unable to
attend the meeting, was read by
Mrs. Mary Roush. A note of
thanks from Mrs. Mary Everett
for a Christmas remembrance
was also presented.
Mrs.
Leora
Young,
Ameri c anism
chairman,
discussed ways of displaying
the fla g as a feature of the unit's
observance of Americanism
Month. She concluded with a
" Prayer for Americans." It was
reported that additional flags
have been ordered and are for
sale.
Cards were signed for Mrs.
Walker and Mrs. Florence Hill.
Mrs. Frances Roberts was
acting chaplain for the meeting.
Mrs. Boyd served refreshments. Hostess for March will
be Mrs. Beegle.

S~ciaT-l
Calendar

Garden Club to Sponsor r:·;;~';~~:;1
•
l ECo IOgy pOSter c0ntest :
FOR TODAY :

RIVERV~o:D:TYA Monday,
7:30 p.m. at school; demonstration audio-visual equipment The Bend 0' the River Garden
by teachers; musical number Club has voted to sponsor the
by fourth and fifth graders; poster contest on ecology
Swedish dance by Riverview currently underway at the
Girl Scout Troop 67. Refresh- Letart Falls Elementary School
ments.
and to award prizes for the best
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter, posters.
OAPSE, Monday, 7:30 p.m., Meeting Thursday night at
Meigs Jr. High, Middleport; the home of Mrs. Gretta SimpCharles Grant, Gallipolis, son the club discussed the
speaker; members and non- poster contest a nd noted that
members invited.
they will be displayed in various
MEIGS CHAPTER DeMolay business places.
Monday 7:30 p.m. Masonic Mrs. Wilson Carpenter
Temple; council meets at 7 p.m. reported that contributions are
RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES still being accepted from
Monday 8 p.m. Masonic Temple persons interested in assisting
in Racine; initiation practice; the club with the shrubbery
all officers asked to attend.
project for the beautification of
SALEM CENTER PTA the entrance to the Letart Falls
Monday 7:30 p.m.; potluck Cemetery. Contributions may
dinner at 6 p.m.; Grate family be sent to Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs.
to furnish entertainment, and Gretta Simpson or any other
special guests to attend. Open

h:~I~~l bee~~~;~·

presidents

and

PTA
legislative

chairmen to meet with Robert
Bowen,
Meigs
County
Superintenden t of Schools,
cafeteria of the Meigs County
Home, 1 p.m. Monday.
REVIVAL, Faith Tabernacle
on Bailey Run Road, 7:30 each
evening beginning Monday,
Clair R. Rubble, elder.
POMEROY Garden Club, 1
p.m., Monday, home of Mrs.
Fred Blaettnar with Mrs. E. W.
Coates, assisting hostess.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
2 p.m. Monday, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Demonstration on velvet roses
by Mrs.
James
Titus .
Hostesses, Mrs. B. B. Zeigler,
Mrs. Titus and Mrs. Homer
Russell.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363
F&amp;AM 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY CHAPTER 100
OES Tuesday, Masonic Temple
7:45 p.m.; Deputy Grand
Matron Wilma Styer will be
present for a pre-inspection
visit. All members urged to
lttend.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Tuesday night at the hall.
Charter to be draped for two
deceased members. Members
asked to wear white .
MEIGS
TEMPLE
153,
Pythtan Sisters, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. Middleport American
Legion hall.
WEDNESDAY
AUXILIARY OF the Middleport Firemen, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the firemen's
hall. Hostesses, Mrs. John
Vroman, Mrs. Everett Bachner .
POMEROY Lodge
164,
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in E A Degree. All master
masons invited.

THURSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
O.E.S., March 4, 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
SALE PLANNED
A rummage sale will be held Practice for inspection to be
Friday and Saturday in the held.
DISTRICT 16, Ohio PTA
Middleport Masonic Temple,
planning
session for chairmen,
Second and Walnut, by
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order PTA presidents, and cultural
of the Eastern Star. The sale arts chairmen, 1 p .m. Thursday
will begin at 9 a.m. on both at the Pomeroy Elementary
days. Those contribu ting School.
rummage are asked to have it
at the Masonic Temple Thirrs.
day morning . For pickup of
TO SELL RUMMAGE
items residents may call 992The Poplar Ridge Church
5178 or 992-3748.
youth fellowship will hold a
rummage sale Thursday and
James, a Hebrew name, is Friday, at the Fry building in
Middleport.
a variant form of Jacob.

Shrinettes Visit
Ceramic Workshop
Members of the Twin City
Shrinettes visited the ceramic
workshop of Mrs. Russell Mills
following a meeting Thursday
evening a t the home of Mrs.
~
Harry Moore , president.
Mrs. Moore opened the ,
meeting with the collect for club
women. Reports for the year
were given to Mrs . Cora Beegle ,
county representative to Thea
Court. The traveling prize
donated by Mrs. Ruth Swisher
was won by Miss Shirley
Beegle . Refres hments were
served by Mrs . Moore and Mrs .
Gertrude Mitchell.

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFF ICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 ( CLOS E'
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.

Thursday night at the home of
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
Miss
Mildred
Hawley
presented the film, noting that it
is available and can be secured
from her. During the business
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Oscar Roush, it was noted that
money has been receiveci from
the Mrs. C. E . Vance memorial
fund. Pennies and small change
collected by 97-year-old Mrs.
Mine rva
Childers
was
presented to the class.
Reported ill were Mrs.
Lawre nce Stewart, Dallas
Lightfoot, Mrs. Edgar Roush,

most

reputation and character. -tc
-John D. Rockefeller _.

_.

~

for
her ~
~
Tlit
Tlilt
Tlilt
...,.
~
blue
rl. bbon
arrangement of forced for- •
•
sythia and weathered wood. ~
It's Quick! Easy ~
Mrs. Robert Kuhn received a _.
red ribbon for her arrangement -tc
•
•
•
of forced shr ubs and greenery. _.
Welcom ed into membership -tc
_.
was Mrs. Andrew Cross.
•
Frida ys On ly
Mr~. Ca.rpenter opened the
T he Drive-I n Window_.
meetmgw1th a poem, Garden of _.
is Ope n
_.
Life. The devotional period was · ic
•
A M to p M
9
1
led. by Mrs. Kuh.n ":'ho. had
C~nt.inuous.l )
~
scnpture and an msptrabonal _.
Y
_.
reading. Members answered • other Banking Hours 9 to
roll call with a sentimental
and s to 7 as usua l on
thought.
_. Fridays.
_.
Mrs. Clifford Morris, the -tc
_.
hostess, serve~ refreshments.
She was asststed by Mrs. ~
Simpson and Mrs . William ic 30
• ._
Hayman. The March meeting ~
POMEROY, OH IO
•
will be at the home of Mrs. ~
Member FDIC
~
Grimm in Letart Falls with _.
Mel"'lber Federal
_.
Mrs. Ralph Webb as program _.
Reserve System
-Wt

DRIVE IN •
BANKING •
_.

•

:t

:t

:t (
:t

3_.

:t
:t fARMERS BANK :t
d SAVINGS 00 _.

Birthdays 0f ~k=~~;t= 11:~=8ili~~~::~]08:::iwt:~~::: ;.: =:m=~:~#j:~:;·: : . ·:&lt;,=:::.tt):::. \ ·rr:: :.}: ;=;r:,;:;;~::.~~:;:;:;,;,:~~i;.;,~
Famous
Men Noted

WINTER

"Happenings in February" from the observance of
Valentine's Day through the
lives of famous men whose
birthdays occur in the month was the program feature at a
recent mee ing of the Racine
United Methodist Church
Women's Society of Christian
·
Service.
Mrs. Dale McClurg gave
devotions from 2nd Chronicles
7-14, summarizing the scripture
lesson as a remedy for the ills of
today.
Mrs. Libby Wilford and Mrs.
Mattie Circle gave a playlet
entitled, Memories of Valentine, using the song, Love's Old
Sweet Song. Tributes were
given to George Washington,
inaugurated on the old balcony
of the Federal Hall in New
York; Abraham Lincoln,
who said, "I know that
the Lord is always on the
side of the right, but it is my
constant anxiety and prayer
that I, and this nation, should be
on the Lord's side;" Thomas A.
Edison, who patented the
phonograph in February, 1878,
with National Electric Week
now being observed during the
week of his birthday; Cyrus
McCormick, inventor of the
reaper, which changed the
crude methods of harvesting
wheat of Biblical times, and
William Cody (Buffalo Bill),
who provided thousands of
pounds of buffalo meat to
workers of the Kansas-Union
Pacific Railroad.
The program also included a
mention of the Feb. 25, 1913
amendment which set up the
federal income tax, and an
article entitled Concession to a
New Age of Leisure, pertaining
to the date changes of national
holidays. Participating in the
program were Mrs. Bertha
Spencer, Mrs. Frances Roberts,
Mrs . Ruth Ann Hill, and Mrs.
Grace Huffman.
Mrs. Arlene Rees welcomed
the members and presided at
the business meeting. A contribution was made to a
television broadcast and a soup
supper was planned for March.
A layette shower will be held for
Mrs. Henry Hill. An organ
prelude by Mrs. Circle opened
the meeting.

SALE!

@ HWI
Mr. Friendly

12" X 12"

JERROLD STEPHAN

W HIRLAWAY

1/3 H.P. DIS POSER

FOR SUSPEN DED CEILINGS

Ch rome plated tu rntable and stainless
steel grmd ring. oo• swivel stainless
steel impellers g lv e 1om-free perform·
once. Non-corrosive ports. Reg. 39.95

JJ66

ENCYCLOPEDIA
BOOKCASE
Toug h PERMANEER finish looks and
feels like hardwood, Conte mporary
design. 2·shelves. 2 3 " x 9 " x 28" high.

1288

Reg. 18 .95

IN CTN.

HOUSE-0-LITE

FLUORESCEN T FIXTU RE
Re ady to install. Complete with cord
and plug. Uses 2 f luorescent tubes.
(Not included). Ad justs from 6 " to 9"
in height. 48" long. 2-YEAR G UARANTEE. Reg. 22.59

1795

PANEL MAGIC
Not o wax o r poliSh; restores original
be auty to wood paneling. Hides
scratches. PINT.
Reg. 1.98

179

~ER H~MES ~GARD~
KITCHEN

PLFREG
EI
WITH
COUPO N
REG. 50~
VALU E

.

ADDITION A L OR

I
I
•

GU N CABINET
CABINET M AGIC
Fine for painted wood a nd natu ral
wood groin cabinets, woodwork, bose·
board, sills. PINT.
Reg . 1.98

To ugh PERMAN EER f inish looks and
feels like real hardwood; stain resist·
an t. Double slid ing gloss d oors with
lack. 24" x 12" x 63" hig h. Reg . 39.95

BURLAP
BULLETIN BOARDS

REG.
594

44~

JERROLD STEPHAN

f79

~OUT • COU~ON ~

2 SIZES- 12 ATTRACTIV E COLO RS

PA IR

REG. 4.99

447

2S" x33"

REG.
6.99

Religious Film Previewed by Class
A religious film for use in
Church of Christ work was
previewed at a meeting of the
Loyal Women's Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ

The

~

member of the club.
Several of the members
discussed plans for attending
the Dispatch Char ity Flower
and Ga r den Show to be held at
the Ohio State Fairgrounds
through Sunday.
How You Can Hang It All was
the progr am topic used by Mrs.
Bert Grimm. She explained the
many differ ent kinds of hanging
baskets, flower s to be used and
where they should be placed.
She said the best flowers or
plan ts are lantana, geraniums
and ivy, fuchsia, petunians, and
any other plant that vines.
"A hanging basket hung in a
breezeway or a patio is homey
and r elaxing," Mrs. Grimm
concluded.
Arrangemen ts
depicting
Winter Break thr ough were
diSplayed by several members.

im portant tc

~~~~h~i~~raa~~u~~er;]~~ ~~ :

:

JERROLD STEPHAN

597

RECORD CABIN ET

W ELLS LAMONT

HEATH
HO USE O N LY

Mrs. Lena Wolfe, Leo Childs,
Homer Jones, Reva Beach,
Miss Bess Sanborn, Lisa
Herald, Mrs. Leota Hawley, and
Mrs. Ella Hannum confined to a
Parkersburg Hospital.
Mrs. Nina Bland presented
devotions using scripture from
St. John 13 pertaining to the
humility of Christ. Mrs.
Reynolds read an article "Know
What I Have Done to You."
The March meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. Martha
Childs. A dessert course was
served by Mrs. Childers, Mrs.
Bland and Mrs. Reynolds.

~~~~

REG.

22.50

1777

To ugh PERMAN EER finish lo oks and
fe els like r eal hardwood, but needs no
special core o r p olishi~g ! 2 sliding
doors, chrome legs. 23" x 16 " x 24"
high. Reg 16.9 5

11!~TN.

POLE ONLY
REG.

19.50

INSULATED G LOV ES

1577

MARTIN HOUSE &amp; POLE

Foa m insula tion wtth vinyl coa ting that
slays soft wh e n cold. Knit wr sts. Men's
size. Reg. 3.25

G enuine Redwood with rer"lovoble
roof for clean ing. With adjustable
steel pole, hardware.
Reg. 42.00

2995

(Hw•JI:!•1:Qf..
WILD BIRD FOOD
5 LB. BAG

37~
REG.
654

_3 ROOMS

2· 1/ 2 LB. BAG

W ILSON

REDWOOD BIRD FEEDER SUNFLQ W ER SEED

NEW

Roof slides up on hang ing rod for e asy
filli ng . Holds 2· 1/ 2 lbs . seed a nd two
suet cokes. Reg . 5 98

FURNITURE

433

$349.95

A r eal l r eot for birds 1 Contoms pur e

sunflower seed. Ideal for all'"" birds.
Reg . 69C

47~

Comple te yo ur winter stock lo·
da y with this 5 lb. bog conto1n·
ing a n appetizing blend of
whea t, • urflowe r seed, b uck
wheat. hull ed oat&lt;

$35.00 Down-

Ba lance On
Convenient
Ter m s.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

MASON
.FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

The Department Store of Building Since 1915

--------~~~-----L--~-----4

I

::

..:::: · .. ,·.
::

.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 1,1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
Fairview
News Notes

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received
by the Meigs Loca 1 School
District Board of Education at
their office in the Meigs Junior
High School Building , Mid·
d leport, Ohio, for passenger
school buses until 12 o'clock on
March 29, 1971. according to
specifications of said Board of
Education. Separate and in·
dependent bids will be received
with respect to the chassis and
body type, and will state that
the buses when assembled and
prior to delivery, comply with
all
school
district
specifications, all
safety
regulations and current Ohio
Minimum Standards for School
Bus Construction of the
Department of Education
adopted by and with the consent
of the Director of Highway
Safety pursuant to Section
4511.76 of the Revised Code and
all other pertinent provisions of
law.
Specifications
and
in ·
structions to bidders may be
obtained
from
Assistant
Superintendent Morrison,
Middleport, Ohio.
The Board of Education
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids.
By order of the
Board of Education
L. w. MCComas
Clerk-Greasurer
(3) 1, 8, 15, 22, 4tc

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.·

For Sale
BEATEN down carpet paths go
when Blue Lustre arrives.
Rent electric shampooer, $1.
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
2-24-6tcp

[_B_·u_s1._·n_e_s_s_·_S_:_e_rv_I_·c_e~s_

•

___.J
··\

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
FIREWOOD. Gerald King,
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
Shade. Phone 696-1287.
Miss Cindy Lawson spent
ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO1967 FORD
$1495
2 26-6tp
(1) Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
Friday night and Saturday with
Mustang, 6 cyl., auto. trans. , console, maroon finish, all
---------------(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
good W·w tires, radio. Real Nice.
Hope Bird at Antiquity.
NEW
4 GALLON
garden
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
sprayer. Clean bee hives.
Debbie
Lawson
spent
INCOMES OF S4,000to $9,000 PER EAR
Car Completely Miffed &amp;
Platform
scales.
Phone
New
1966
FORD
$1095
Saturday night with Cindy
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
Haven 882-2852.
Galaxi. HT Cpe., 6 cyl. engine, std. trans., air conditioning,
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
Lawson and attended the band
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
2-26-3tp
good t1res, clean interior, dark green finish .
cases pay less.
Sat. 9 to 5-Sun. 11 to s
concert at Southern Local High
ONE LARGE Ayrshire heifer
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1965 CORVAIR
$695
School Sunday Cindy plays
due to freshen soon. Also,
1. No money down
500 2 Dr., local low mileage car, interior extra clean
clarinet in the band.
700x18 truck tires. Phone 9492. We will furnish lot or erect on your lot.
medium green finish, all good w-w tires, radio. Just nice;
3073.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
than the average car.
Do It Yourself Open
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
2-26-5tc
and Bobby of Pomeroy spent
24 Hrs. Daily. 25c
DALE DUTTON
TOM CROW
OR
Phone 992-3106 Day
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
3 BEDROOM house, newly
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night
decorated, new bathroom,
Manuel, Sid and Tim. Afternoon
modern kitchen with new
callers in the Manuel home
cabinets, new gas furnace,
were Mrs. Katie Young and
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
large garden space. Priced
Mrs. Elva Hudson of Minersfor quick sale. Also, one
POMER9Y, OHIO
apartment size refrigerator.
ville Route.
Gl LOANS available to buy or build your new
Albert Hill , Racine, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Grimm
Phone 949-2261.
home. Contact us for more information.
WANT AD '
Not1ce
and Mark of Columbus, Mrs.
2-23·6fc
INFORMATION
Anna Wines and daughter,
WILL
GIVE piano and organ NEW 1970 Llg-Zag Sewing
DEADLINES
lessons in my home. Phone
; P.M. Day Before Publication
Karen, of Racine called Sunday
992-3666.
Machine in original factory
OFFICE PHONE 992-7129
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
8·16-tfc
car ton. Zig-Zag to make
afternoon with Mrs. Mrs. Kate
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
--------------.,..---'---buttonholes,
sew
on
buttons,
Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for
Rowe and Ada. Mrs. Gerald
NO ANSWER CALL
TOM CROW
monograms, and make fancy
Day of Publication
Wanted To Buy
Business Opportunities
Wells and Amy of Syracuse OLD furniture, dishes, bras~
designs with just the twist of a
REGULATIONS
Night 992-2580
The Publisher reserves the RIGHT PERSON to manage or
single dia l. Left in lay-away
called recently on Mrs. Rowe
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller, right
to edit or reject any ads
DALE DUTTON 992-3106 LARRY SPENCER
and never been used. Will sell
buy dry cleaning route or
and Ada.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call deemed objectional.
The
From the Largest T uck or
for only $47 cash, or credit
truck.
Will
sell
plant
and
992-6271.
publisher
will
not
be
responsible
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Radford
Bulldozer Radiator to the
terms available. Phone 992Night 992-3433
Night 992-2534
building. ABC Cleaners,
9-1-tfc for more than one incorrect
5641.
Smallest Heater Core.
and Stephanie of Pomeroy
Mason, W. Va .
insertion.
2-23·71
RATES
2-?.6.tfc
. Route, Rick Sargent and OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
For Want Ad Service
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
ARE YOU AFRAID OF BIG
fiancee, Jan Pecin, of Columcondition, .!Is long as have not ~5 cents per Word one insertior
for
Rent
Complete Service
CONTRACTOR PRICES?
KILL
TERMITES
and
yard
been wet. Paying $10 each.
MlnTm um CharQe']sc-bus, and Bertha Robinson were
Ph. 992:2143
Pomeroy.
You needn'l be with the
Phone 949-3821
insects
with
Arab
"You-DoFirst
floor
only.
Mondays
will
12 cents per word thre, u N FuR N 1 sHED 3
quality workmanship and
Racine, Ohio
dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and
· room
lt." King Builders Supply
be pick-up day. Write, giving consecutive insertions.
reasonable prices we now
Critt Bradford
18 cents per word six conapartment. Phone 992·2288.
Mrs. Jack Sargent at Racine.
Company, Middleport.
good directions. Witten Piano secut
offer on remodeling, plum.
ive insertions.
5- 1-tfc
Company,
Box
188,
Sardis,
2-21·60tc
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields,
bing and wiring in your home.
25 Per cent Discount on paid·
1·31-tfc
Ohio 43946.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
ads and ads paid within 10 days. -------------------Call Valley Lumber and
Brooks Sayre of Syracuse, Paul
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph.
8-20-tfr
Supply Company. Phone 992CARD OF THANKS
• 8x35 TRAILER with tip out. One
Sayre of Columbus spent
662-3035.
&amp; OBITUARY
D
2709 day or 742·3262 after 5
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
bedroom. arwin vicinity.
Saturday evening with Mr. and
2·12-tfc
p .m.
Each additional word 2c.
Adults only. Call 992-6452.
Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
2·23-30tc
BLIND ADS
2-26·tfc
ALL
FLOOR
SAMPLES
AIR CONDITIONING. Re Additional 25c Charge per
Mrs. Herbert Sayre and Mrs.
Advertisement.
frigerc:ition service. Jack's INTERIOR and exterior carHerbert Shields were in
5 ROOM and bath furnished
OF OUR APPLIANCES
OFFICE HOURS
Refrigeration, New Haven.
pentr y, metal roofing and
apartment, Chester. Inquire
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Gallipolis Tuesday. Mrs.
Phone 882-2979.
shingle roofing; 20 years
-GUARANTEE~
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
at Newell's Sunoco Station.
Every One
experience. Clinton Pierce,
4·6-tfc
Shields was at Holzer Medical
Saturday.
Phone 992-2094
Phone Chester 985·3350.
Phone 992·2015.
Marked Down
Center for a checkup.
2-7·tfc
2-23-12tp
BACK HOE and end-loader
Notice
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
work. Septic tanks installed.
22 cu. ft. side by side
By Mrs. Francis Morris
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone SEWIN(; MACHINES . Repair
: David and Edward , Roger
ATTENTION ladies! Would you FURNISHED and unfurnished
Frostless
Combination,
19
606 E. Main, Pomeroy,
service, all makes. 992-2284.
apartments. Close to school.
Mrs. Ralph Badgley was
992-2478.
like to try a wig on in the
Roush and Jeff Miller spent
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy.
992-5~34.
Phone
11-29-tfc
privacy of your own home?
Up. Freezer, 15 cu. ft.
' Sunday evening with Mr . and hostess Friday evening, Feb.
Authorized Singer Sales and
10-18·1fc
You can. Just call us. We also
Refrigerator, 12 cu. ft.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton, W. 19, when the Booster - Sunday
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics, HOUSE, 4 rooms , bath,
HARRISON'S
TV
AND
ANRefrigerator, 4-11 cu. ft.
3-29-tfc
School class met in her home.
Koscot, of course. Dis·
Va.
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
basement and attic storage.
Chest Freezers and Elec.
tributors, Brown's. Phone
992-2522.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Holsinger Mrs. Helen Simpson used
Ni
ce
yard
·and
driveway
.
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
de·
Dryer. Must make room.
ADVERTISEMENTS
Middleport 992-5113. · · · -··6-10.tfc
Available March I. Phone 992·
livered right to your project.
FOR BIDS
Priced
for
fast
sale!
' and children of Mt. Moriah "Faith" for her subject for
12-31-tfc
2780
or
992·3432.
Sealed proposals will be
Fast and
easy.
Free
called recently on Mr. and Mrs. devotions which opened with
NEIGLER
Construction.
For
received
by the Board of
estimates.
Phone
992-3284.
2·18-tfc
group singing "Faith of Our AUCTION WHEN? Each
POMEROY
Education of the Eastern Local
building or remodeling your
Joe Manuel, Sid and Tim.
Goeglein
Ready-Mix
Co.
,
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where? , - - - - - - - - ----1
School District of Reedsville,
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Middleport, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson Fathers", Scripture was James
Ohio, at the office of the cle~k,
Hayman's Auction House, ~--your phone will jin1Iel
Phone 992-2181
Racine, Ohio.
6·30-tfc
Reedsville, Ohio , until 12 :00
a nd Charles of Letart, W. Va., 2:18-22 and Marjorie Grimm
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7 I "c:aah reaulta "• too, when I
7-31.tfc
o'clock noon eastern standard
Pomeroy.Middleport
By Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson and had prayer. Readings included
youplace
an
action
Wantl
------------------~
time, March 9, 1971, and at that
pass.
INTER
IOR carpenter work, by
l Ad. You can sell furniture,
time opened by the clerk of said •
family were dinner guests "Faith Without Works" and "A
lhe hour or contract. Phone
2-7-tfc lappl ianc:es, clothe a ... do-l Real Estate For Sale
board, as provided by law, for
Stronger
Faith",
Other
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
992-3511.
Insurance
1 truck chassis suitable for a
l•ena of other unused but I
readings
on
"Thoughts
To
Be
1-31-30tp
Lawson.
RUBBER STAMPS made to 1u a • fu 1 1 t ••• !
1
AUTOMOBILE insurance been 60 passenger school bus body
truck chassis suitable for a
1
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
cancelled?
Lost
your 66 passenger
Mrs. Iva Orr and Mrs. Her- Pondered." After the business
school bus body
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
operator's
license?
Call
992session,
games
were
in
charge
1 -- 60 passepger school qus
bert Roush called on Mr. and
Ohio.
608
East
Main
Street
"Ditching.
Electric
sewer
2966.
For
Sale
or
Rent
body
Mrs. Harold Bird
Antiquity of Gretta Simpson and Marie
POMEROY
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
6-15-tfc
2·12-90tc
1 - 66 passenger school bus
5 ROOM HOUSE for rent in POMEROY - ONE-THIRD
Phone
John
Russell,
body
Sunday a fternoon
Mrs Rousfi: Mrs. Badgley served
Syracuse.
Two
lots
for
sale.
ACRE, walking distance to
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Specifications
fat
this
lovely refreshments in keeping WILL PICK up merchandise
Hopper Roy of
Call Jacob Turner, Mid - shopping, 7 rooms, basement,
equipment is on file at the office
.4-].tfc
and take to auction on a
wtth Washington's birthday.
dleport, Ohio. Phone 992·3681.
of
the
clerk
of
the
board.
called on the Bir
bath.
$6,500.
percentage basis. Call Jim
Mr. Larry Wolfe is a surgical
1·26-6tp
NOTICE OF
recov ring satisf
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
I. 0. McCoy , Pres.
APPOINTMENT
POMEROY
BEECH Real Estate For Sale
patient
in
St.
Joseph
Hospital.
Phone
742-4461.
c. 0. Newland, Clerk •
recent heart atU:
Case
No.
20452
STREET
LARGE
LOT,
2
9-23·tfc TRAVEL TRAILERS and
Estate of ROY VAN COONEY,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp and Mr. Roderick Grimm entered
bedrooms, NEW FURNACE
campers. Rentals by day,
(2) 15, 22 (3) 1, 8 , 4tc
Deceased.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
AND HOT WATER TANK,
CHAIRS recaned. Call 992-6771.
week, month. Complete line of
sons spent Sunday with Mr. and
Notice is hereby given that
property,
in
good
condition.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Arnott
2·28-12tp
supplies. Reese hitches, truck
Ralph Van Cooney of Mid ·
Mrs, Ralph Hutton at Marietta.
$5,300.
or travel trailer mirrors,
NICE HOME, 2 bedrooms, dleport, Ohio, has been duly
Mrs. Bessie Stitt was went to Grove City Sunday after I WILL discontinue my garbage
dinette and kitchen, bath, 112 appointed Administrator of the
brake controls, a wning acpick-up service for the village
basement,
furnace,
all Estate of Ralph Van Cooney,
returned to her home from getting word of the death of
cessor ies, jacks, pie irons. RUTLAND - ALMOST NEW, 2
their
aunt,
Mrs.
Delbert
Roush.
acres,
3
bedrooms,
bath,
of
Pomeroy
Friday,
March
utilities available and In deceased, late of Meigs County,
One used 1970 truck camper .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
drilled well, city water, nice
5th . I wish to thank all my
house. Also one small 3 room Ohio.
A terrific discount on any new
Mrs. Arnott and Mr. and Mrs.
Creditors are required to file
kitchen, $8,900.
customers for their patronage
house,
store building with their
travel
trailer
or
camper
claims with said fiduciary
Lawrence Bush went to
TO BUY OR SELL
for the past 22 years.
storage tanks in for gas within four months.
ordere d in February for
Rockland Cemetery for the
CONTACT US
station, four acres or better of
Walter Bentz
delivery at your convenience.
Dated this 17th day of
HENRY CLELAND
land with large frontage on February 1971 .
2·28-3tp
Ask about our Mini ·Motor
burial on Tuesday. The funeral
REALTOR
F. H. O'Brien
State
Route
7,
between
Home coming in March. Gaul
Would you like to retire, right now?
was held in Grove City.
Progate Judge
Office 992-2259
RUMMAGE SALE, March 3, 4,
Chester and Tuppers Plains,
Trailer Sales, Inc., Chester,
And work only 10 to 12 hours a
of said County
Mr . and Mrs. Pete Gould of
Residence 992-2568
Ohio, $9,000 down, balance in
5, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Stark
Ohio. Phone 985-3832.
week at your own pace? Then you're
(2) 22 (3) 1, 8, 3tc
2-28-3tc
monthly
payments.
Bldg.,
across
from
Pomeroy
ready to consider becoming a Ull
Marietta spent Sunday with her
2-18·9tc
PO. Sponsored by Syracuse
6 ROOM frame house, excellent
Distributor.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis
P.T.A.
condition, 3 bedrooms, bath ,
Morris.
Ull Snack Shop Vending Machines
gas furnace, carpeting, white
2-28·3tp Auto Sales
NOTICE OF
are a proven business opportunity
APPOINTMENT
picket fence around house, 3~.
Mrs. Lillian Jividen returned
61 PLYMOUTH, 4 door hardtop.
Case No. 20450
in a $5 billion m rket, a market in
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly, home after spending six weeks 24TH ANNUAL Hereford Sale;
acres of ground, garden, very
Henry Hartman, Chester.
Estate of LEONIDAS R. BARR,
which 80% of th business is done
25 bulls and 24 females,
good
buy
at
$8,000. Deceased.
Vicki and Bruce of Albany were in Athens with her son, Dr. and
Ca
ll
985·3839.
by the small independent operator.
Southeastern Ohio Hereford
Welshtown, Minersville, Ohio.
2·26-3tc
Notice is hereby given that
Saturday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jividen.
You can start your own business
Assn ., a ll clean pedigrees,
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr.
Dale Barr of Reedsville, Ohio,
Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
for as little as 10 hours a week
both horned and polled,
Broker
ha s been duly appointed
Mr.andMrs. WaidFoster and
Saturday, March 20, 1971. 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
and build profits . . . with hard
Phone 985-4186
Executor of the Estate of
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Cheryl and John Dean of
Broker
hardtop,
power
s
teer
ing,
work and good ~e ice.
Show 10 a.m., Sale 1 p.m .•
Leonidas R. Barr , decea sed,
or
Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr. Columbus were weekend guests
power brakes, air, 18,000
110 Mechanic St.
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
Rock Springs Fair Grounds,
Hilton wolfe Sr.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
miles.
Excellent
condition
.
You need no exper1ence, you make
Creditors
are
required
to
file
and Mrs. Franklin Russell of of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Rt. 33, three miles north of
Phone 949-3211
Phone 992-2288.
their claims with said fiduciary
no personal sales calls. We will
Pomeroy, Ohio. For catalogs
2-26-3tc
Middleport, Mrs. Clinton Albert Hill.
within four months .
ll-10·tfc COUNTRY HOME - 6 rooms,
train you, counsel you. and secure
write
to:
Lloyd
Blackwood,
bath, garage, small garden.
Dated this 17th day of
Gilkey, Karen, Kathy and Tod
your locations. Your $600 to $1500
Sa le Mgr. , Rt . 3, Pom. -----------------..:...:....:..::....:..:.::.
David Crow spent the
February, 1971.
Asking $7,000.00.
investment covers machine and
of Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Pete weekend with his brother, Rook
eroy, Ot:lio 45769.
Pets For Sale
CONV E NI E NT but secluded
F. H. O'Brien
product . . • no hidden costs or
2·28-3tc MIN IATU R E Schnauzers &lt; ,,d POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, with
Probate Judge
building lots on T79 at Rock
Earnheart of Columbus and Mr . Crow, a student at Ohio
fees.
of
said
County
Springs.
Within
walking
and Mrs. John Earnheart of University and attended the
closets, bath, large living,
Poodle puppies. Permanent
(2) 22 (3) 1, 8, 3tc
distance of Meigs High
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
PLAN YOUR PROFITABLE RETIRE·
in jectio ns and groomed.
modern kitchen. Ail paneled.
Logan.
School
,
a
5
minute
drive
from
Saturday evening concert.
2·23-30tc
MENT ••• WRITE TODAY!
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
Gas furnace. Only $12,000.00.
Pomeroy.
Call
or
·
see
BUI
Duane Alan Johnson, new son
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Simpat Torch, Ohio, 5th house
Wit
te
weekends,
or
after
5
INCOME
TAX
service,
daily
of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth son spent Sunday with Mr. and
right. Phone Coolville 667- SAVE YOUR RENT MON EY,
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992except Sunday. Evenings by
3654.
BUY A HOME .
Johnson has been returned Mrs. Ira White at Culloden, W.
6887.
appointment only. Phone 9922·11·30tc
home from hospital where he Va.
2-3-tfc Estate of
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eb lin ,
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
Deceased.
located
on
Rt.
7
bypass,
one
underwent surgery and is
closets, bath. Large living.
AKC REGISTERED miniature
Noti ce is hereby given that
Rev. Glenn Bate of Rinard
I am Interested in mort information
m
lie
south
of
fairgrounds.
Near
stores.
Garage HOUS E, 1640 Lincoln Hts., Dale Barr of Reedsville, Ohio,
Schnauzer, 10112 months old.
recuperating .
about makinc money In the vending
Mills visited friends on Monday
2·7-30tc
h as been duly appointed
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-2293.
$10,000.00.
Well
hou
se
broken.
Loves
business. I have a car and 6· 8 hours
Annett Johnson was a visitor and was an overnight guest of
of the Estate of Alice
per week spne time.
10·25-tfc Executor
c hildren. Phone 992·5709.
Barr, deceased, late of Meigs
with her grandmother Mrs. Mr. and Mrs . Francis Morris. DOZER WOR K. Septic tanks,
0 I con invest $600 in a route.
3 bedrooms,
2-23·6tp POMEROY County, Ohio.
0 I can invest $1500 In a route.
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
bath,
gas
furnace.
Modern
Helen Johnson during time jer
Creditors
are
required
to
file
Mrs. Isabel Simpson spent a
10-18-tfc
kitchen. Large living. 2 lots.
th
eir
cla
ims
with
said
fiduciary
parents Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth weekend in Parkersburg with
Name
____________,____
Lost
$21,000.00.
within four months .
Johnson were with Duane Alan her niece, Shelley Beckwith,
C''Yted this 17th day of
HELEN TEAFORD,
Female Help Wanted
For Sale
Md~u;------------~--LADY'S Bulova watc h, parking Fe ruary, 1971 .
at hospital.
ASSOCIATE
who observed her 16th birthday. FEMALE. Women interested in
Cityr_________State____.:__Zip_
lot,
Pomeroy.
Mrs.
Herbert
F.
H.
O'Brien
992-3325 992·2378
Mrs. Lee Roush and children
working in cable television. WALNU T STEREO rad io
Matheny, Rt. 2, Coolville.
Probate Judge
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roush,
2·26-6tc
Phone (
&gt;•-----------===of said County
of Logan were Sunday visitors Mildred and Dale, spent the
Con lact Dr. Harold D. Brown,
combination . Fo ur speed
2-28.3tp
(2)
22 (3) 1. 8, 3tc
Dept._ 4049 ____c
Phone 992·2878.
intermixed
c hanger.
4
of Mrs Helen Johnson .
weekend in Akron and helped
speaker sound system, dual
2·25·6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fouch of celebrate the 6th birthday of
volume con trol . Balance
Huntington were Friday and their great-granddaughter, Help Wanted
$66. 15. Use our budget terms.
Ca ll 992-3352.
Saturday visitors of Mr. and Marie Alice Fisher, on Sunday .
DRIVERS NEEDED
2-25·6tc
Home
Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill and Henry remained for a longer WE TRAIN
you to be a semi
Carolyn.
driver, local and city training BEAUT IFUL Colonia l maple
visit.
now avai lable. Earn over
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
Mr . and Mrs . Jack Elam and
Mrs. Amanda Tucker and
$4.50
un hour after short
speakers, 4 speed a utomatic
family and Mr. and Mrs. Fred son, Carl, of Lancaster visited
training. For appl ication and
changer, separate controls.
Tuckerman were recent visitors her sister, Mrs . Fred Cadle and
interview, ca ll 513·863·6404, or
Ba lance $79.35. Use o:;r lime
write
Sheridan
Truck
Lines,
payment plan . ca:l 992·3352.
of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bratton of Harold, Sunday.
Corwin
Aven ue,
AT THE ROCK SPRINGS FAIRGROUNDS,
1255
2-25·6tc
Radcliff.
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Orr of
Hamilton, Ohio, 45015.
POMEROY, OHIO
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma, Columbus spent the weekend
3-1·2tc
COAL furnace, $25. Phone 949·
SALE -- 7:00P.M. C EST&gt;
Patricia, Mr. and Mrs . Charley with her parents, Mr . and Mrs .
3656.
MATURE WOMEN - Your age
GRADING -2: 00P.M. (EST)
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. J . R. Chrisie Powell.
2·23-6tp
is not a handi cap . If you have
MR . &amp; MRS. HAROLD STEWART
SELLING 54 HEAD
Murphy, John, Elaine, Peggy,
3 hours a day and are able and
260 Sycamore
Middleport
Mr . and Mrs. Frank Cleland
willing to work we have a
16 Bulls
38 Females
Carmel, Barbara, Mr. and Mrs. were guests Sunday of Mr. and
"
We
never
thought
we
could
wonderful
earning
op . COAL, limestone . Exce lsio:
All cattle must grade 13 or better to sell. Sale
Harley E. Johnson, Tammy, Mrs. Steve Cleland and sons at
afford a new home. Not only are
portunity for yo u . Write
Sa
lt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
will be in heat ed barn.
our payments less than rent, but
Cheryl, and Terry, Mr. and Marietta .
Personal Shopper Dept., Box
Pomeroy . Phone 992 3891.
we are now building for our
10,
Watkins
Products,
Inc.,
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
This
sa
le
offering
will
be
represented
by
Top
4-9-tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hendricks
future instead of coll ecti ng rent
Winona, Minn. 55987.
Michelle of Rutland, Mr . and and children, Ronald and
Polled Hereford herds in Ohio, Kentucky and
receipts."
3-1-ltc E L ECTROLUX Vacuum
~rs . Doyle · Knapp, · Kail, Catherine spent the weekend
West
Virgini
a.
The
bulls
are
big,
rugged
and
Cleaner complete with at.
Charles and Kevin, Mr. and with Rev. and Mrs. Paul
ready for heavy service for either th e
tachments, cordwinder and
Mrs. Robert Murphy, Debbie Sellers. Ronald remained for
paint spray . Used but in like
registered or commercia l breeder. The
and nephew were Sunday af- several days.
new condi tion . Pay $34.45
female offering will consist of both bred and
cas h or budget plan available.
ternoon visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
open heifers.
Sites Available
Phone
992·5641
.
Harley Johnson . Home made Johns on. Others were Naomi
2-23·71
For ca talog write :
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
(ce cream and cake were en- Smith, Elaine Murphy, Sharon
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
RD 1
joyed in observance of birth- Barr, Peggy Murphy, Debbie
1950 FORD trac tor, good con.
Phone 992-7034
Freeport,
Ohio
43973
di
lion
.
Phone
992-5058.
~ays
especially
Harley Murphy .
2-23-6tc

MASON CAR WASH
"AUTOMATIC"

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

PRICE $1.25

Ponmeroy ilotor Co.

AnENTION VDERANS

.EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

GREEN HILL HOMES

•

BLAEITNARS

EXPERT
.Wheel Alignment

CLOSE OUT!

Racine

•

$5.55

Social Events

o:

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

'--------------~
·
LEGAL NOTICE

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

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

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

L--------------1 Cleland Realty

LEGAL NOTICE

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

HOBSTETTER

WHY WORK
FOR A

Wolfpen

LIVING?

•

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

News, Notes

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

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

•

•

•

POLLED HEREFORD SALE

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO POlliO HEREFORD
ASSOCIATION GRADED SALE
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1971 (night)

JEMO ASSOCIATES

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

Carl Birney, Sale Mgr.

l:ul

�BARNEY

•

I ALWAYS HEERED
HE WUl TH' FASTEST
BASKET IN TH'
HILLS

'rEP-- AN' AFORE I COULD
PICK UP FOUR OOLLERS
AN' A HALF CHANGE
TH' PARSON WUZ WORKIN'
TH' NEXT PEW---

SNUFFY --I PUT A
FIVE-DOLLER BILL IN
TH'COLLECTIOl\1 BASKET
"--ESTIDDV--

I

HE MUST LEARJ.J TO USE: IT

LA'JGUAGE IS MAJJ'S G\IEF
MEA!JS OF COMMUkJICATIOfV !

AS EXPLK:ITC..Y NJD :SUCCik.KTLY

1\"!:. FOSSIBLE !

-

AN'--

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
'lOLl CAN TAKE OFF
YOUR MASt&lt;, BtMO. OUR
I&gt;EMONSTRATI ON
IS OV~ft 1.

WHY DOES Yeo!&lt;.
FATt-iER GIVE" Me

SUCHA BAD
TtM.E, 1iBBY?

••

•
•
I

7KU6T YOU.IF

YOU HAVE A PLAN
FOR GETIIN6 U~
OUT OF HERE/
Ii.L HELP YOlJ.1

I 00 HAVE A PLAN !
BUT OUR CHANCE&amp;
DEPEND ON 'NHE"THER

THI&amp; BATTERY 15
DEAD OR ALIVE .

•
Ot&lt;AY, Y'AL.L KNOW TH' RULES ...

NO SHOVIN', BmNG,ORSTOMPING

can LJOU

ON TH' OTHER FELLAH'S EGGS!

~an't it ~aH;"

put it tr)l morn1ng.
back to- 1ve qo~ t11'='
qether valve JOb.
~0 1

~~ 11-IE VlEW-

can

SCREEIII OtCE AGAIN

drive

Of&gt;ERAllONAI.., DOCTOR

. it?

WONMUG IS ABLE
10 MONITOR nlE
MOVEMENTS OF

ALLEYOOP IN

ANO!:NT MOO •..

•

THE BORN LOSER

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIEWHEN YOU SAID

THEY ARE MORE Bf'AST
THAN THE LOWEST ANIMAL···
MORE EVIL THAN AN ADDER.

THAT WAS CAP'N
AtiAB CALLIN' ON

THE KROGS T'

'"MORE DANGEROUS l'I'IAH A
POiSONED ARROW TW ~ ]!i THE HEART!

GIVE HIM A HAND
"'YOUR MINIMEN

•

KINDA FOLDED UJ;
GOLDSWINGER!

Saturday's Cryptoquote: WHAT YOUR HEART THINKS IS
GREAT IS GREAT, THE SOUL'S EMPHASIS IS ALWAYS
RIGHT.-R. W. EMERSON

DAilY CROSSWORD
A&lt;JROSS

•

Tl-lAT'S TI-lE
LAST 1-lOTWIRE
YOU'LL RUN
INTO.

TO TELLT~E TRUTH,

I LEAPED OFF MY
..SNOW-GO'' Fl RST
-AND LOST MY
14AT. LETS

FINISI-liT.

a
-

TERRY
1

8UT WHY TWE PfVIL WOULI7 SHE

5E INTERESTI!D IN (ITTL E
GENERAL CABALLO- HE ANI7
HIS FANCY UNIFORM AHI7 HIS

.. .

•

MOTLEY FlOCK OF WORLI7 WAR
JI FlYING ANTIQUEs~•

CAPTAIN EASY
~.IWP£1 ~EEP7

A PRIVATE"

DE:TECTIVe.,.He Wi?He7 TO A7K
IF VOLl WOIJ~D UNDERTAKE A JOIJ

ON A 7MAI-L. CARit&gt;&amp;EAN 17LAND!

2.Harem
chamber
3. Site of
Expo67
4. Anecdotal
collection
5.Fat
6. Violin,
guitar and
piano
7. Smell
9. Singer,

1. A Jones boy
4. Countertenor
8. Turmoil
9. Comic, Jack

E. - 12. Pallid
13. See 39
across
14. Tantalize
16. Click
beetle
17. Market
wagon
19. Swiss river
21. French
author,
Claude - 22. Useless
plants
26. Step
28. - - Gide
29.Gennan
city
30. Asian river
31. Moslem
VIP
33. Two of
Hamlet's
words
34. Miss Lupino
37. Of an old
Peruvian
empire
39. Capital of
13 across
41. Tout's
suggestion
44. Board a
sleeper
45. Pay dirt
46. Food
47. Forty winks

Ce 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

~l!1JMID1brn;-::#=~.~=c
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.
Yuterday'a Aaawer

- -Rawls
10. Sicilian city
11. Capital
chewcity
an's
15. Well-known
capital
32. Opposed
Hun
17. "AI'!oy
to
Named Sue" 34. Columnist's
singer
tidbit

35. Accomplished
36. Ionian gulf
38. Take for a
sucker
40. Table scrap
42. George's
librettist
43. Vitality

I

J

I

LUBEBB

I

rJ D

t
t
1

WARTOD
~

Ll

I.

~
~

I I ~ow

arranre the circled letters

to form the 1urprise answer, aa

suggested by the above cartoon.

~,Prill~
. .==
a AIISWII
=====
..:;-',~
. r~I~I.....;TD

r I I r JHIM

(AnaweN tomorrow)

Jumbl..o: MAXIM

Saturday'•

I

Anow.-r:

DOUGH

HICCUP

PREACH

How to f{et the fact8 from a f{tll •Wtion
attendant - PUM,~P.....!H:.::I~M:;__ _ _ _ _ _ _____,

DOWN
1. Playing
marble

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
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 are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation

FYXHDXHR
DKTDXHR
DSK
DJ

DSK

QEYD

AKYDSKL
DSK

XN

YHO

YLD

JQ

NZLQYTKN

FLJ QLJG

KBFJNXHR DSKG

TLXDXTN . - UXKLTK

SOMETlh\ES IT'S EA5'{ TO GET

VOWN ON T!iESE REPORTS

�1
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 1, 1971

Willie Johnson
Dies Sunday

RETURN
IT ONA
DAT

APRIL SHOWERS may come your way and when they
do just stop in the Farmers Bank and Savings Company and
pick up one of the lovely rental wnbrellas they have on hand
for customers' use. The umbrella is yours for a rainy day and
return on a sunny day. Mrs. Richard (Patty) Young,
executive secretary, displays one of the attractive rental
wnbrellas. They come in blue and white and red and white
with a transparent panel.

Unti~nely

Crowing
Alerted the Law

SARDINIA, Ohio (UPI) Brown County Sheriff William
Utter and his deputy, Bud
Ernst, knew they were at the
right place when they heard a
rooster sound off.
'.'Cocks don't crow at 10
p.m.," Utter told Ernst. "That's
where the action is."
With those words the two
men, dressed in civilian clothing, entered a building in a
secluded area of southwestern
Ohio late Saturday, took seats
and waited until a fight started in the pit below them.
Then they stood up and ordered the 40 or so persons
there to surrender on charges
of illegal cockfighting. Some
thought it a joke until Utter
displayed his identification.
Utter confiscated the driver's
licE'nses of the 40 and commandeered a truck to haul the
30 fighting fowls into George-

Lucy F.

town, the seat of Brown CoWlty.
"We want all of you to follow
us back to Georgetown where
charges will be filed against
you and bonds will be set,"
Utter informed them.
Six of the men charged were
released on $100 bond and the
others on their recognizance because of lack of space at the
jail. They were to be arraigned
on the charges tonight in the
court of Judge William Stapleton.
Utter said he received a tip
that the sporting event, which
is nowhere legal in the state,
was being held.
Orie Wilder was released on
$200 bond. He was accused of
sponsoring the cockfights.
Utter said three women were
selling sandwiches at the cockfight. Four juveniles were also
taken into custody.

· er Died Sunday

s Lucy
• 72,
librarian at the
~ Public
Library 25 years, o resided at
234 Union Ave., died SWlday at
the Ohio Valley Nursing Home
in Parkersburg.
Mrs. Gainer was a teacher in
the Meigs CoWtty schools a
number of years before she
became head of the Pomeroy
Library. She was a member of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
Besides her parents, Andrew
M. and Hannah J . Bush Powell,
she was preceded in death by
three sisters, three brothers and
an infant daughter.
Surviving are her husband,
Jesse of Pomeroy; two
daughters, Mrs . Russell

MEIGS tHEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
March 1-2
Elvis Presley
in
THAT'S THE WAY
IT IS
(Technicolor)
Plus
Colorca rtoons:
Dr. Hal Hal

Gems from Gemini
Champ Chump
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

(Geraldine) T. Smith, Jr.,
Parkersburg, and Mrs. Eugene
( Rita Vee ) R. Buckley,
Cheshire Route 1; three sisters,
Mrs. Sylvia Poole, Ashley,
Ohio; Mrs. Eliza Foreman,
Portland, and Mrs. Frances
Larkins, Long Bottom, and
seven grandchildren, Sharon,
Sandra J ., Sarah R. and Sherla
G. Smith, of Parkersburg and
Morgantown, W. Va.; Mrs.
Joyce Richards of Columbus;
Mrs.
Suzanne
Thacker,
Gallipolis,
and
Kenneth
Buckley, Cheshire. Several
nieces and nephews also survive.
FWteral services will be at 2
p.m . Tuesday at the Ewing
FWleral Home with the Rev.
Robert Card officiating. Burial
will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the fWieral home any time.

LETART, W. Va. - Willie
Johnson, 70, Union CommWiity,
died SWlday night at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy
from an apparent heart attack.
A retired state road employee, he was born April 17,
1900 in the Union CommWtity,
the son of the late James and
Sarah Hart Johnson. He was a
member of the Union United
Methodist Church and had
served as a trustee of the
church and cemetery many
years.
Mrs. Johnson is survived by
his wife, Mina; one brother,
Henry, of New Haven; three
sisters, Mrs. Wilbert Weaver,
Mason, and Miss Anna Johnson
and Miss Lillie Johnson, both
local.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
Union United Methodist Church
with the Rev. Gerald Sayre
officiating. Burial will be in
Union Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Fogelsong FWleral
Home after 3 p.m. Tuesday. The
body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to services.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Vivian
Mayes, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Billy Spires, Langsville, 0.;
Garnet Tooley, Mrs. Don
Becker, Point Pleasant;
Charles Redman, New Haven;
Harold Wallace, Pliny; Melvin
Bush, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
James Smith, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. John Ross, Point
Pleasant; John Little, Leon;
Mrs. Bonnie Woyan, Southside;
Mrs. George Baer, Point
Pleasant; Vickie Putney,
Gallipolis Ferry; Joseph Boston
II, New Haven; Mrs. Glenn
Jones, Gallipolis Ferry; Tilnon
Bowles, Robertsburg; Don
Becker, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Rilla
Lewis, charles Fields, Beverley
Brown, Charles Furman,
Orland Burns, Mrs. Dell Plants,
James Trainer, Mrs. Herbert
Condee, Mrs. Vernon Stephens,
Raymond Hdffman, Charles
Harris, Mrs. Luther Price, Mrs.
Hoyt Jividen, Barbara Lucas,
Robert Wallace, Connie Zuspan,
Mrs. Dale Wamsley and son;
Mrs. Russell Newlon, Edward
Layton, Mrs. Sherman Kinder
and Dwight Matheny.

TWO BONDS LOST
Two defendants forfeited
bonds and two others were fined
Saturday night by Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar. Forfeiting $50 bonds each, posted on
assault and battery charges,
were Kenneth Lewis and Robert
Estep, no address recorded.
Fined $5 and costs on conviction
of having an open flask was Pat
Looman,
address
also
Wtrecorded. Fined $10 and costs
for intoxication was Coy Nitz,
Pomeroy.

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a. m. Monday
under sunny skies was 44
degrees.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Steve Franklin Booth, 21,
Middleport, and Karen Sue
Wilson, 20, Albany, Rt. 3.

Women~

View

•

•

•
THIS OIL PAINTING, in vivid colors, of a Gypsy camp
scene IS one of a nwnber of paintings being featured at the
annual art show this week at the Pomeroy National Bank.
WELFARE COSTS DOWN
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
paid $40,546,713 in welfare
benefits in January, down
$4,840,314 from the prior month,
according to state Auditor
Joseph T. Ferguson. For the
first seven months of the fiscal
period, Ohio spent $279,764,768
on welfare programs. The
largest share was $92,171,561 to
recipients of Aid for Dependent
Children.

R

Food Chains Blabbing
Editor's Note: The author
spends most of his time as a
UPI sports writer and editor,
but he also goes shopping with
his wife. And thereby hangs
this tale •..
By STEVE SNIDER
NEW YORK (UPI)- Food
chain supermarkets in the New
York area are trying to outdo
each other in blabbing their
trade secrets, perhaps hoping
to avoid being consumed in the
current wave of consumerism.
One operator published a set
of booklets to advise shoppers .
how to tell what's good, fair or
second rate in the meat, dairy
and vegetable showcases. A
rival countered with official
guide books from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
Most of them have some sort
of tell-all program and lately
our favorite store came out
with a doozie-a pamphlet
explaining those mysterious
codes on cans, bread wrappers,
cereal boxes, meat packages,
frozen foods and what not.
Those codes, presumably, tell
which products are fresh,
fading or have had it.
Private Code
The prospect of cracking
these secret codes is heady
stuff, particularly for any tiredblooded American male who
has padded aroWld crowded
store aisles for more than a
quarter century hoping just
once to head off one of his
wife's impulse-buying sprees.
Here, at last is an edge.

Right? Wrong.
letter of the alphabet and
Almost every canner, butch- August is the eighth month. The
er, baker or packer seems to last 0 stands for 1970, though
have his own private code. on one would (or could) explain
Constant reference to the code to me the 5 that brings up the
book is likely to increase ' rear nor the other letters in
shopping time by 24 hours per between.
week-20 if you're a fast
One packer, however, starts
reader.
his lettering in mid-year: A for
Some codes tell when a July, B for August, etc. Another
product was packaged. Some may have a B in his code and
tell the delivery date. Some tell in that case the second letter of
the store manager when it the alphabet denotes the second
should be pulled from the shelf. year of the decade- 1971.
Some are printed on a box
Even if you're merely the
inside the wrapper where no push-cart pilot and not the
one can see it. Some look like actual shopper, this hardly
cedes to codes that haven't provides an answer to beating
been invented yet.
the game. But there may be
So far, our only victories some relief in sight.
have been at the bread counter
Our supermarket concedes
and that's just dandy if you can the existing codes are slightly
live by bread alone.
confusing and is planning to
In the simple bread codes, install "open dating" on its own
the baker affixes a tiny lettered products while urging other
label to the wrapper showing packers to do the same. Thus:
the day it was baked-A for 61071 would be June 10, 1971.
Monday, B for Tuesday, etc.
Then all you'll need is a book
But one brand uses D for to tell you whether the code
Monday, L for Tuesday, 0 for marks the day the item was
Wednesday, N for Thursday, R packed, when it will go bad or
for Friday and A for Saturday. represents the birthday of the
That sequence represents the manufacturer's seventh son.
name of the baker, spelled
backwards.
Course Hazards
The bread shelf, nevertheless,
is simple compared to the
Fay J. Norris, 62, an Army
hazards on the rest of the
Master Sgt., died SWlday at
course.
One package code may read Beltsville, Md. He was assigned
"HOU05," which, according to to the University of Maryland.
the booklet, translates to He had served in the armed
August, 1970. H is the eighth forces 21 years and six months.
He is survived by his wife,
Mildred R. Norris; two sons
Franklin Robert and Charles
· Fay, all of Beltsville, Md.; three
grandchildren, three brothers,
He said the "4,000 strippers Floyd, Letart; Freeland, of
currently at work are a substi- Racine, and Fern, Racine; four
tute for 6,800 deep miners who sisters, Freda Evans, Racine;
should be working. Even more Flossie Church, Marion;
important, the 4,000 strip mine Florence Adams, Letart, and
workers presently employed are Frances Cady, Columbus.
He was preceded in death by
in a head-on collision with the
over 19,000 employed in West his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Virginia's tourist and recreation Samuel Norris and a brother,
Rev. Franklin Norris.
industry."
FWleral services will be held
Unless strip mining is
banned, he added, environment- Thursday at 10 a . m. at the
al damage will continue "Wltil Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
'Wils, Wonderful, West (By Robert Shoo officiating. Burial
Gosh) Virginia is reduced to the will be in the Letart Cemetery.
The body will arrive
eyesore of the east."
"To get a tourist into Boone sometime after Wednesday
CoWlty now, you would have to from the Donaldson FWleral
Home, Laurel, Md. Friends
blindfold him ."
may call at the fWleral home
here 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.

Fay ]. Norris
Dies Sunday

Strip Mine Ban Bill Still All•ve
WHEELING, W. Va. (UPI)Sen. Si Galperin, D-Kanawha,
assured members of the local
chapter of the "Citizens to Abolish Strip Mining" here SWlday,
that he stands firm on his conviction that stripping must be

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S S\'££O Q.U££!'

'158

Permacote Drum
3 Temp. Selection
Long Life Heating Element
FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

BAKER

••Ill••••••~•-••••••••••••
..

outlawed.
The freshman state senator
said the drive to abolish stripping is alive and well, and said
votes were expected in both
houses of the legislature this
week on the strip mine issue.
Galperin took the occasion to
lash out at the State Department of Natural Resources,
claiming it has ineffectively enforced powers given it Wider
West Virginia's tough strip
mine law passed in 1967.
Galpel'in said a new, tougher reclamation law wouldn't increase enforcement because the
DNR would continue to ignore
it, as he said it has done in
the past.
"There is no reason to believe that they would use new
powers any more than they
have used the powers already
given them," he said.
Galperin also said he "wanted to get the record straight"
about the surface mine industry's warnings that abolishing
stripping would mean a great
loss of jobs.
••lllllll!!!IIJ!!!!IIII_ _ _.__ . .
•

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At S
Use'Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners

Mrs. Ethel Moore has been
confined at her home for 2
weeks with the flu. She is employed as nurse for Mrs. Dewey
Gibbs of Hartford.
Mrs. Louise Wandling was an
overnight guest at the home of
Mrs. Ethel Moore on Wednesday.
A birthday dinner was held at
· the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Reitmire and family for Mr.
1
Edwin Phillips, of Washington,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Clark of
Clifton, and Miss Margie
Humphries of Huntington
recently. Other guests included
Mrs. Edwin Phillips, Pam and
Eddie of Fort Lewis, Wash.,
Mrs. Annie Phillips, Donald Lee
and Leo of Huntington, Les
l

,__________,.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Paintings are new works by students of the D' Artiste Gallery
at Middleport owned by Mrs. Ruth Gosney. The Gypsy scene
is one of her works.

h zn
•
the Washroom
0 ug

CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
student leader told Mayor Carl
B. Stokes and top police officials
here SWlday the shooting death
last week of a 15-year-old
student in the washroom of
room of Roosevelt JWtior High
came as ano surprise to anyone
in citv schools.
"Anytime you go to the john
you're. afraid of someone robbing you with a gWl in your
back," said John P. Nolan, 16,

were to decide if they were to
be tried as adults for the killing.
Nolan painted a grim picture
of the climate in city schools.
"We're learning how to get a
prostitute and smoke dope before we're learning American
and world history," he said. He
said dope and prostitution rings
are common in the schools.
Mayor Stokes said at the
meeting the most effective way
to curb the city's high homicide
rate is through gWl control leg-·
islation.
But he said legislation is "languishing" in City CoWlcil, and
said "so I cannot take the resassailants."
A charge of assault with in- ponsibility for the homicide rate
tent to kill was pending against . in Cleveland, and neither can
the police department."
Stengel, said Smith.
Belcher was treated for injurVeterans Memorial Hospital
ies he suffered when he was atSATURDAY ADMISSIONS-.
tacked and then released from
Sarah Bush, Hartford; Maryl'lllf
a local hospital.
Wingett, Pomeroy; Bessie
Jones, Rutland; Larry Baker,
SUGGESTION DEADLINE
Reedsville; Linda Harper,
Rutland;
Golda
Ja~:i!£1!:-'_e"-:,-COLUMBUS
(UPI)
Committee chairmen of the Zanesville;
Minnie Foi t,
governor's citizens task force Harrisonville.
on prisons are to make
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
recommendations by Wed- - Verna Davis, David Thomas,
nesday on staffing task force Cynthia
Coffman,
Edna
operations, so the in-depth Humphrey, Helen Baer, Christy .
study of conditions at Ohio's Matson, Kenneth Searls, Daisy
correctional institutions can Glassburn, Robert Taylor.
start within a week. The task
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS force's executive committee Sally Clark, West Columbia;
will meet here Saturday to Mary Yost, Racine.
complete plans for the inSUNDAY DISCHARGES vestigation. Chairman Judge Patricia Wood, Charles Withee,
Bernard Friedman said the full Margaret Lowery, Doris Haley,
task force is to meet here March Anna Wines, Joseph Rudolph,
13 to give a progress report.
Jr.

student coWtcil president at
John Hay High School.
Nolan spoke at a police-commWtity breakfast attended by
Stokes, Police Chief Lewis W.
Coffey and other top police officers, about the shooting death
of.Kenneth Wagner.
Wagner was foWld shot to
death in a washroom at Roosevelt with five bullets in the
head. Four fellow students were
arrested in connection with the
killing. Juvenile authorities

2 Killed In Brawl
COLUMBUS (UPI) - An
off - duty Columbus patrolman
shot and killed two persons
and woWlded another when a
brawl erupted in a northside
tavern here early today.
Police Capt. Francis Smith
said Patrolman Raymond Belcher was trying to call the police radio room to report a
fight in a tavern where he was
a patron when the policeman
was "jumped" by several men.
Shot and killed were Michael
Noe, 24, and Robert Ruff, 21,
both of Columbus. WoWlded and
admitted to a local hospital was
Casey Stengel, 22, Columbus.
''Patrolman Belcher, who was
off-duty and in civilian clothes,
was walking toward a telephone
to report a fight when several
men jumped him," said Smith.
''The officer sprayed the
men with chemical mace, but it
didn't do any good," added
Smith. "He then used his 32-caliber off-duty pistol and shot his

•

ELBERFELD$

Ouick~ Ouietl

L A WN-BOY
The Value leader

Broad Run

News Notes

Q- Can sponges live out
of water?

A- No . Their whole existence depends on a continual
stream of clean. aerated
water passing through their
tissues.
Paul, Charles and Yolanda
Clark of Clifton, Mrs. Ethel
Moore, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Reitmire, Yvnnna Jean and
Thomas.
Mike Grimm s pent the
weekend with his grandmother
Mrs. Ethel Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Turnbull of Mason visited with their
daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Buddy Flowers, Tracy,
O:ody and Michael.
Lee and Eric Roush have had
the mumps and confined at
home.

,,

Whether you have a little 2x4 lawn or acres of
grass, Lawn-Boy has the mower for your needs.
You'll like the finger tip starting . . . fingertip
handling ... fingertip height adjustment ... you'll
like Lawn Boy - "the quiet oneH! Stop in ... see
the entire line of Lawn-Boys - ther-e's a right
Lawn -Boy for you!

Never a better time to buy a LAWN-BOY!

-

SENSIBLE CREDIT

Elberfe lds In Pomeroy

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="74">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1732">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="3847">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1977">
              <text>March 1, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
