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                  <text>8 Copters Downed

•

•
VISIT SHERIFF'S OFFICE -These boys of Den 3
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245, got a look at the inside of th~
Meigs County jail Saturday afternoon as a part of their
"know your community" program. Sheriff's Deputy Pete
Simpson showed the boys around. He is pictured here with
Keith Black, Gregory Knapp, David Vance, Max Geary,

•

Jamie Scally, David Schuler, James Gheen, Mark Tyree, and
Mark Hood. The group, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Francis and Mrs. Donna Ghee. , also visited the
Pomeroy Water Works where water treatment was explained by Edwin Neutzling. Tte boys had a treat at McClure's Dairy Isle before returning home.

SAIGON (UPI)-Eight American helicopters were shot down
over Laos today in the worst
• aircraft losses suffered in a
single day of the 24-&lt;lay-old
South Vietnamese drive across
the fr ontier , the U.S. command
reported.
All eight of the planes lost
were troop-carrying UHl Huey
helicopters but there was no
immediate word whether there
were South Vietnamese troops
aboard. The helicopters have
been flying in South Vietnamese
marine reinforcements.
The U.S. command reported
earlier that North Vietnamese
antiaircraft batteries for the
first time had fir ed surface-toair missiles across the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) at U.S.
planes flying over South Vietnam, but a spokesman said the
eight helicopers were br ought
down by conventional antiaircraft fire.
Spokesmen said one American crewman was killed, seven

wounded and eight missing.
The eight losses brought to 45
the total of American planes
officially reported lost in
supporting the Laos incursion
against the Ho Chi Minh Trail
supply routes used by the
Communists to bring down
supplies from North Vietnam.
Unofficial reports said more
than twice that number have
been damaged.
Official figures show the
campaign in Laos has cost 41
American lives and that 42
have been wounded and 26 are
missing. The losses include one
crewman killed in the downing
of two U.S. Air Force Phantom
fighter-bombers.
The 37-foot, radar-controlled
missiles were aimed at U.S.
aircraft supporting the South
Vietnamese drive into Laos to
cut the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The
incidents, involving two Navy
A7 Intruder jets and an Army
OV10 Bronco, took place
Tuesday, the spokesmen said.

None of the planes was
damaged by the missiles which
have a range of 30 miles, travel
at 2,600 miles an hour, and can
bring down an aircraft at 40,000
feet.
Although there ha ve been

reports of the Nor th Vietnamese
moving missile sites into Laos,
U.S. military spokesmen said
the SAMS, which pilots call
"flying telephone poles," w~re
fired from inside North Vtetnam.

Ultimatum Given Hanoi
SAIGON &lt;UP() - President Nguyen
Van Thieu tonight threatened an invasion of
North Vietnam unless the Communists
"stop immediately their aggression in the
S-..ut h and withdraw their troops ba,~ k to the
North."
The South Vietnamese president said
the possibility of attacking the North was
based on " legitimate self-defense."
" If the Communist North Vietnamese
want t o avoid that course of action, then
they had better stop being stubborn, they
had better stop immediately t heir
aggression in the South and withdraw their
troops back to the north," Thieu said in a
press statem ent.

T he Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interest&amp; Of The Meig3-MOMJn Area

• VOL. XXIII N0~-~22~5 ~~~~P_O_M_ER_OY_-M_I_DD_L_EP_O_RT~._OH_IO~~~~~~~W_E_L~.L~SD~AY, MARCH 3, 1971

TEN CENTS

H ard H at Cutback Order Disputed
•

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The supersedes an order by Presi- tion agency and renders it inefOhio Contractors Association dent Nixon designed to cut back fective in Ohio.
said today state law apparently spiraling costs in the construeCharles Rinehard, industrial
relations manager for the association, called on Gov. John J.
Gilligan to seek an opinion
I
7\.T
•
~~
I from state attorney general
1 ~ews
William Brown to see which
I
I law prevails.
By Unitffi Press International

f---------------------------,

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••• zn B rze
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Farm Economists Hedging
WASHINGTON - GOVERNMENT FARM economists are
predicting for the record that net farm income will slip agam this
year. But some of them privately feel the forecast could be too
pessimistic. The current official forecast, d livered at the
Agnculture De
annual ou k co fere
td
10n expenses probably will
ro f rm income. Thus, a
1net mcome ts now indicated for 1971,
even though the f
r s mcome sttuatwn probably will improve
as tile year progresses."

Ignored Report of Corruption

1'"'

•
•

WASHINGTON - A RETffiED brigadier general has told
Senate investigators he was ignored when he tried to alert the
Army's top brass to "illegal activities" in the operation of post
exchanges in Vietnam. Brig. Gen. Robert L. Ashworth told of his
efforts in a sworn affidavit submitted Tuesday to the Senate Investigations Subcommittee. The panel continued its probe of
alleged corruption in PXs and service clubs today by calling a
man described as an important witness - Maj. Clement St.
Martin, former club and mess officer at Army headquarters,
Long Binh, Vietnam.
·
Ashworth said Tuesday he detailed charges agamst
businessman William J. Crum in a letter to the Long Binh
headquarters in August, 1967. Crum has been accused in previous
testimony of heaping favors on military and civilian leaders to
win preferred treatment for his dealership in liquor and other
items.

For ·One Reason or Another
WASHINGTON - THE PENTAGON SAYS it has ordered a
halt to widespread spying on civilians - not because it is illegal
but because it is inefficient. Defense witnesses told the Senate
Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights Tuesday that a controversial program begun in 1967 to collect information on
civilians to prepare the Army for civil insurrections has been
ended for good.
"The Army is out of it," Assistant Defense Secretary Robert
F. Froehlke told tile subcommittee. But he refused to concede that
the Army practice of collecting information on civilians and filing
it in thousands of personal dossiers was illegal.

Governor is Saving Sort

t

COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN said today in his
first 40 days in office he has introduced numerous money saving
programs including an end to the personal use of state cars by
state employes. Gilligan told a news conference he had also
disco~· ;: 1ued the use of first class air travel for cabinet officers
and ended the practice of using cover license plates.
Gilligan said the cover license plates concealed "from the
public the true identity of state owned automobiles. " We have
refrained from displaying pictures of the new governor in state
offices - and quite frankly we haven't heard any complaints on
that score yet," cracked the governor.
Gilligan also said his administration had saved $5 million by
scrapping a plan to purchase land for a National Guard training
site in Ohio and would continue to use Camp Grayling in
Michigan.

Gas Co
•
Tx 1te

en

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...... ·· .. ·::::::.:::.:.:: _.::
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
JERUSALEM (UPI) and its associate companies Greek archaeologists have
the Ohio Fuel Gas Co. and the discovered the remains of a
Ohio Valley Gas Co. - spent basilica built in the fourth
more than $23.6 million to pay century on grounds venerated
state and local tax bills during by Christendom as the site
1970, according to C. T. Cassell, where Jesus Christ was
Middleport manager for crucified and buried.
Columbia Gas of Ohio.
Archaeologist
Athanasio
Cassell said this is $2.7 million Economopoulas said Tuesday
more than $20.9 million in state the remains were uncovered
and local taxes paid by the Feb. 18 under the Church of
companies in 1969.
the Holy Sepulchre, erected
He pointed out that "except during the time of the
for money spent to purchase Crusades. The church is in
gas, taxes (including federal the old city of Jerusalem that
taxes) are the companies' contains the Moslem, Jewish
largest single expenditure."
and Armenian quarters.
In Meigs County, Cassell said . .-··;·;:;:;: :·:
.;.,
the three companies paid a total
of $76,828 in property taxes.
Statewide the three com- 1
panics paid more than $11.7
million in property taxes in 70
counties in 1970. These taxes
were distributed to tax districts
for school operations and
county, township, city and
village government purposes.
Some 408 school districts
received about 78 per cent of
this amount.
The companies ;1lso paid
more than $11.5 million in state
excise taxes. More than $331,000
was paid to the state under the
Ohio sales and use tax and
Public Utilities Commission
maintenance tax.
In addition to state and local
taxes, Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Ohio Fuel Gas and Ohio Valley
Gas paid more than $21 million
in federal income taxes and $1.6
million in other federal taxes.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Robert
Deeter, Racine ; Kathryn
Pierce, Letart, W. Va. ; Molly
Guinther, Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - Beatrice
Stewart, Helen Harris, Sally
Clark, Lutchie Riggs .

Otild Dies In Deep Water Well

.

Tragedy struck the Mary
Kasee family, (Paxton Rd. ) Rt.
2, Gallipolis, Tuesday afternoon
the second time in the past 14
months.
Amy Maria Kasee, 19-month
old daughter of Mary Paxon
Kasee and the late Frederick
Kasee, drowned in a well
located near the family home.
Dr . Donald R . Warehime,
Gallia County Coroner, ruled
his monring dea th was due to
ccidental drowning.
According to the GallJa

County Sheriff's Department,
the child had been playing in the
yard at her home while her
mother was working inside the
hous e . Mrs . Kasee began
looking for her daughter but
was unable to find her. After her
other children arrived from
school, a more thorough search
began .
The tot was found a short time
lat er m the well which officers
swd was approximately 20 foot
deep. It was reported to have
been left uncovered. This was

Rinehard said the state law
requires competitive bidding for
all public projects, including
those being financed by federal
funds
Nixon suspended the DavisBacon Act which required the
federal government to pay the
prevailing wage to workers on
federal projects.
"We believe the state law
would cover these construction
projects and make the su~pen­
sion of the Da,.is-Bacon law ineffect.vf'," said Hinehard.
' We ask the governo to get
a rulmg from h ~ttorn~y gt:nt:!ral on whether the sta~e law

the second tragedy to strike the
family. Mr. Kasee, a selfemployed window washer, died
last January from cancer.
In addition to her mother, she
is survived by four brothers,
Charles, John, Robert and
David, and four sisters, Debbie,
Donna, Kimberly and Lisa, all
at home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Hazelbaker of Gallipolis are the
maternal grandparents. Final
arran gements will be an nounced by Miller's Home For
Funerals.

does supersede the federal
law," Rinehard said.
Rinehard said although the
contractors favor the suspension of the Davis - Bacon law
they will continue to pay union
wages until the situation is
clarified.
" We favor suspension of the
DaviS-Bacon law and other labor reforms that would have a
great impact in the industry
over a period of time," said
Rinehard . " don't think the industry can justify paying $10 to
~ 5 an hour (to workers). "
'"'~
contractors liound by
the !.li!lon contract cannot sud-

denly go non - union," said
Rinehard. "It will make both
parties aware of the fact that
they must negotiate reasonably
or a non-union party could bargain more effectively."
Gilligan Tuesday night told
the Ohio State Building and
Construction Trades Council
that they would receive the prevailing wage scales on state and
local building projects .
Gilligan, addressing the legislative conference of the trades
council, criticized Nixon's move
to suspend prevailing "age
rates on federal construction
projec's.

Five Nontinated
Five
members
were
nomina ted for the Legionnaire
of the Year Award Tuesday
night by Drew Webster Post 39.
Nominated were Paul Casci,
Leonard Jewell, Joe Struble,
Charles Swatzel and Bob
Vaughan. Winner of the award
will be announced at the annual
post birthday party at 7:30p.m.
on March 16 at the post home.
Raymond Jewell is chairman of
the selection committee.
At the request of James
Roach, Middleport, the post

~~~~::~.;,;~~$112 307 Asked
F or H ead start

Membership was reported at
313 for the year, seven below
quota, and a report was given
on services held for the late Ray
Glaze on Feb. 20.
Paul Casci reported the appearance of the Caldwell
singing group here Monday
under post sponsorship was
successful, and thanked
members who helped.

I

FIVE MEMBERS of the nursing staff of Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy have
completed an extensive 20-week course in coronary care nursing held at the Holzer Medical
Center. Completing the course from the left were Emma Adams, RN; Larry May, LPN;
Henrietta Ruttencutter, RN; Naomi London, LPN, and Jean Wright, RN.

Nurses Complete Special Studies
Five members of the nursing
staff of Veterans Memorial
Hospital have completed a 20
week course on coronary care
nursing given at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. George Hobstetter,
director of nursing at Veterans
Memorial, announced today
that during the 20-week course,
the five members of the local
hospital's nursing staff attended three hour sessions held
each Thursday evening and
instructed by Mrs. Sharon
Michaels, formerly of Meigs

County. There were lectures by
heart specia lists and the
students worked in the coronary
care unit for one evening
session. They were required to
write case histories as a result
of the actual in-service training .

THAT GRAY-HAIRED OLD LADY issuing a parking
ticket above isn't somebody's grandmother, rather, Byrne
Vaughan, Ohio State Patrol, Gallipolis Post dispatcher, who
moonlights as an extra policeman for the Pomeroy Police
Dept. When Diane King, Pomer oy metermaid, restgned last
week Vaughan was pressed into service. Young Mrs. King's
brilliant, silvery hair-do wasn't too much for Vaughan to
duplicate with the wig he wore this day.

reading EKG tests, constant
monitoring of the heart patient
and how to establish quickly a
routine for the heart attack
patient.
The five were presented
certificates upon completion of
the course which included the
Sponsored by the Central Ohio preparation of papers on the
Heart Association, the program various avenues of study.
stressed the importance of the
Mrs. Hobstetter said the
first few minutes following a
hedrt attack in saving the life of training is invaluable in view of
the patient. The students long range plans for an instudied the anatomy of the tensive care center for coro.,ary
heart, diseases of the heart, patients at Veterans Memorial.

'

Richard Sayre, executive
director of the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Program
Tuesday announced the submission of a $112,307 Head Start
budget for 420 children in the
two county area. The budget
was submitted Feb. 22 to the
Chicago office.
In other new business
presented at the monthly board
of directors meeting, Loren
Huffman, director , reported a
revision had been requested for
$14,000 in additional funds for
the Out of School Neighborhood
Youth Corps program. The
revision is necessary to increase the wages of employees
from $1.45 per hour to the
federal minimt.iin of $1.60 '!n
hour. Approximately $12,000 is
needed to add 12 more employees.
Sayre also announced official
approval on the organization's
new fiscal budget has been

received from Gov. John J.
Gilligan.
Other reports were given by
David Cox, director of the NYC
project; Mrs. Barbara Sites,
home, health nurse in community services and head of the
food and medical program;
Edna Russell, RN, head of
project Assist, and Loren
Huffman,
on
Operation
Mainstream.

Dog Gets
Bla~ned
A single truck accident occurred Tuesday at 1:45 p.m. on
county road 20, the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Edward Ernest White, Bidwell, driving a truck belonging
to Nelson's Drug Store was
traveling north on county road
20. A dog ran in its fron t.
White's brakes failed and the
truck went off the highway on
the right and into a fence post on
the B. Napper property.
There was damage to the
front end of the vehicle. No
injuries were reported.

EXTENDED WEATHER
Extended Ohio Weather
Outlook Friday thro ugh
Sunday.
A chance of rain or snow
Saturday and Sunday and
warmer. Highs in the upper
20s and 30s Friday, warming
LOCAL TEMPS
into the 30s and 40s Saturday
Temperature in downtown
and Sunday. Overnight lows Pomeroy Wednesday was 30
mostly in the 20s.
degrees at 11 a .m. under snowy
skies.

Two Committees Manned
Rutland Council Tuesday
night named six persons to
serve on two committees (water
and street) and set April 6 and 7
as Clean-Up Days in Rutland,
according to Vernon Weber,
clerk.
Names to the street committee were Harvey Erlewine,
Ernest Nicholson and Bill
Brown, and Jim Fry , Bill Brown
and Bob Snowden on thr \l"ntrr
committee.

On the two clean-up days the
village will pick up trash free of
charge. Council also discussed
the upcoming street resurfacing
and repair project and set
March 26 as the date to open
bids.
Attending were Mayor Gene
Thompson, councilmen Jim
Fry, Ernest Nicholson, Bill
Brown, and Harvey Erlewine,
and Weber.

�r------~-----------------------------------

"Go Out and Beat the Day Iights
Out of Him~"

1
I
I

Some Who Made Good
The Meigs County Easter Seal Society's annual campaign for
funds will be held from March 1 to April 11 in support of the
2,500 facilities in the United States that annually care for more
than 250,000 handicapped children and adults.
The subject of physical handicaps and their effect on the afflicted is interesting. Severely handicapped people do "make
good" in many fields of human endeavor .
Here are a few famous historical figures whose handicaps
ranged from blindness to epilepsy: Michelangelo, Galileo,
Ludwig von Beethoven, George Handel, Elizabeth B. Browning,
Lord Byron, Cardinal Richelieu, .Julius Ceasar, Napoleon
Bonaparte, Sir Walter Scott and Robert Louis Stevenson.
More recently those who achieved great things despite
overwhelming disabilities included Thomas A. Edison, Charles P.
Steinmetz, Joseph Pulitzer, Sarah Bernhardt, Helen Keller and
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The list would be much longer if it included those who overcame
serious war injuries. Some of these men were Presidents
Rutherford B. Hayes, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, John F.
Kennedy, and such other political and military leaders as Oliver
Cromwell, Sir Walter Raleigh, Stephen Decatur, David Farragut
and Lord Horatio Nelson.
In the entertainment field alone, many current stars perform
expertly, with no dependence on public sympathy because of their
handicaps. Among them are Actress Patricia Neal, who has
suffered severe strokes; Comedienne Nanette Fabray, partially
deaf; Pianist George Shearing, blind; singer and pianist Ray
Charles, blind; singer Vicki Valentine, disabled from polio.
Also, on any such list ought to appear that great sports entrepreneur Bill Veeck, an amputee.
We're bandying big names here, of course, to stress the
obvious, that physical handicaps needn't stop anyone from
making good. But those so handicapped do need help before they
can make it on their own. Think about that and do something
about it with your contribution during this Easter Seal Campgian.
The Meigs County Easter Seal drive is being sponsored, as it
is traditionally, by the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club, with
Mrs. Charles Simons as chairman.

..

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!Helen Help Us!
I

I
Gls Over the JUMPS
Under a new Army pay system called JUMPS, Gis will
have the choice of being paid either once a month or twice
a month. Not only that but they will have other hitherto
unheard of options. such as:
• The option of being paid by cash or check.
• The option of specifying where the check is to be
sent, including automatic payment to the serviceman's
bank regardless of where he is stationed.
• ProvisiOn of a monthly leave and earnings statement.
JUMPS is currently being phased in and is scheduled
for completion by the end of the year. According to Army
Finance Journal, the improved pay system will help
save the government money by reducing errors through
the use of electronic computers and by eliminating the
loss of pay records. A master military pay record will be
maintained at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind.
It's a small step for mankind but a big jump(s) by the
Army toward the goal of making the military both more
efficient and more attractive to potential enlistees.

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By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some players seem to go
out of their way to make
mistakes. Others make the
right play automatically .
Nevertheless 1f you give
your opponents as many
c hances to make mistakes
as you can, they might.
South's four-heart contract
s tart ed out badly. West
opened a spade and the opponents took two spades
before South could ruff.
Now, South goes over to
dummy with either a diamond or a club and leads a
trump . East plays the 10 (it
would make no difference if
he played the jack l and
South's king loses to West' s
ace. A fourth soade is led
and ruffed and South can
onl\ play hi s q u e e n of

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEV-OTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HO EF LICH,
City Editor
Published daily e-Kcept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court SL Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Busin&amp;Ss Office Phone
992·2156, Editoria l Phone 992 2157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National
advertising
r ep r esentative
Bottinelli .
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
St ., N ew York City, New York.
S ub scription
rates :
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service pot available : One
month $1 .75. By mail in Ohio
and W. Va ., One year $14.00.
Six months $7 25
Three
month s $4 . 50 . Subscr~ption
\ price includes Sunday Times ,..:;entinel.
_

trumps and ho;:Je for the
best.
If you look at the East·
West cards you will note the
missing honor will drop and
South will make his contract.
Now, suppose you were
South and West didn't put
his ace of trumps on your
king. You could still lead
out your queen and pickle
the jack, but you might decide to lead low. In that
case the jack and ace would
make separately a nd you
would be down one trick .
There is something called
the principle of restricted
choice that would m ake the
queen play correct against
an opponent capable of holding back his ace, but there is
also a principle of play that
most players put an ace on
a king any time they can .
Any West player who holds
back his ace gives South a
chance to err; anyone who
plays the aces makes success
sure for South .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN .)

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The bidding has been:

West
1¥
Pass

North
Dble
3+

East
Pass
Pass

South
2¥
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I

By Helen Bartel

MARRIAGE MEANS
"FORSAKING"
Dear Helen:
My mother and I are both
widows. We share an apartment. She works, and has
enough money to get along. I'm
a softie, so I put up with her
bossy, tactless ways.
Ever since Dad died 18 years
ago, Mama has lived with me.
She interfered with the
children's discipline so much
that my first marriage broke
up. (Not the whole reason, but
her presence increased our
problems.)
Now I am getting married
again, to a wonderful man who
loves my three kids. I know
Mama expects to be part of this
new life. My fiance has a
widowed mother too, but she's
happily independent.
How do you get it across that
you don't want history to repeat
itself? I can't just tell her to
leave. - T. Q.
Dear T.:
Have you thought about
telling her to STAY - while
you, your new husband and the
children move to a real home?
Houses often rent for less than
comparable apartments, and
they're so much better for the
kids.
Marriage vows don't read
"forsaking all mothers," but
sometimes they almost should.
- H.
Dear Helen:
For five years my man
couldn't marry me because "his
wife was getting a divorce."
Well, she finally got one.
Eighteen months ago! ! !
I thought we'd be married
right away but instead he seems
to have got used to things the
way they are. There's always a
good putoff, like he (now) wants
to save enough money for a
wedding trip. Since I've been
living with him six years, is that
really a reason? Honeymoons
I've already had. "Legal" is
what I want! Is there a half-way
- HOPE?
Dear Hope :
. .... Nope!
Siging a contract six years
after he got the goods? Well, I
wouldn't give this "hope" more

II

than a 10 percent chance, even
if you moved out and made him
come a-wooing. - H.
Dear Helen:
I'm an adult with something
to say about youth. It seems
that they already have one
strike against them. Because
they are "those teen-agers"
they face a world that considers
them guilty until proved innocent - and it takes a lot of
proof.
My oldest son has been
driving for a year. He bought
his car, as he has worked since
he was 12. But he has been
stopped by traffic officers more
unt, not
times than I can
because he 's a wise guy or bad
driver - just because he looks
yotmg, wears his hair fairly
long, and drives a sharp-looking
car. He has never received a
ticket, but his car has been
searched, his license checked with never an apology when the
find him "clean."
My three sons and their
friends have been treated
miserably in restaurants for no
reason - except being teenagers.
Recently one of their friends
was in an auto accident. It was
the other driver's fault - he
was forced off the road by a
reckless adult. Do you know the
last words the boy heard before
he went out? Someone saying,
"Look at that long-haired
hippie. I bet he was on dope!"
And adults want respect from
the yotmg ?
I'm not the mother-hen type.
Have never spoken out before.
But I want to say that 99 percent
of our sons' friends (and that
means average teens) are great
kids. I don 't always agree with
their viewpoints, but I LISTEN,
and learn so very much.
My yotmg sons not only
worked and bought their own
cars, they bought ME one for
my birthday. - MRS. J . B.
This column is dedicated to
family living, so if you're
having kid trouble or just plain
trouble, let Helen help YOU.
She will also welcome your own
amusing experiences. Address
Helen Bottel in care of this
newspaper .

W i 11 i a m Ladd was an
American advocate of int e r n a t i on a l peace who
founded the A mer i c an
Peace Society in 1828. The
World Almanac notes that
in 1840 Ladd wrote "Essay
on a C?ngress of Nations,"
proi?osmg a world organt~atlon to . formulate prinCiples of mternational law
and a court of arbitration to
settle disputes by judicial
decision . ·

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Nothing gives a fellow a
warmer feeling than a form
letter signed "Bestest."
:::

:::·

:::

Give some people
enough rope and they'Ll
only charge you double
for pulling you out of the
ditch .
:;:

Want to really confuse a
kid these days? Give him a

top, a piece of string, and no
explanation.
::1

:::

1)

Anyone sending "occupant" mail to us will
find no one home.

BY JACK O'BRIEN
UMOUSINE LIBERALS
CONSERVATIVE WITH CASH
NEW YORK
Some
celebrities who bigshot by
limdusining arotmd the tonier
spots (where they also sign bills
they seldom pay) seem to take
advantage of the little-limo
operators ... The big ones
(Carey, etc.) are wise to the
cheats but the lesser limo-lads
are suffering: One star famous
by relativity owes a privatelimo owner $12,000 ... A TV
clown owes an owner-driver
named "Ike," $1,200 while
playing the hotshot on TV ... A
deejay owes $1,500 ... Jinuny
Durante is described by smallowner Harvey as "a doll," and
Frank Sinatra "always pays,"
Harvey tells us, even tries to get
his midnight pals to pay off the
limo-lads who are hurting more
than millionaires in this
recession .. . By simple coincidence, the foregoing smalllimo-business owner-drivers
happen to be black; by equal
coincidence, those who've
struck them are vocal-liberals
... Very liberal with struggling
mini-capitalists' payments due.
The "No, No, Nanette"
producers greet each other with
shrugs ... And its great hoofers
Helen Gallagher and Bobby Van
(riding waves of the greatest
reviews in their considerable
combined showbiz experience)
won't be interviewed together ...
Have a guffaw: A computerdating service paired up a gal
with a wooden leg - with a
ditto-guy ... Midtown cops are
ordered to shag street peddlers
dispensing food from open carts
(smog-filth-etc. makes their
products dangerous - not the
neatly covered hotdog carts)
but when they get to court the
cops following intelligent orders
get attacked from the judge's
bench: One judge gave a
bluecoat sheer hell and when
the cop presented 400 separate
subpoenas (which the street
peddler merely ignored but kept
in rubber bands in his cart) the
judge got even madder.
At the premier of "And Miss
Reardon Drinks a Little," Ed
Sullivan was accosted between
acts by a woman who advised
him her son would be in the next
act "an~e's wonderful, you'll
love him ... After the act, e
woman cornered Ed agam and
demanded, "Did you like him?"
... We're certain Ed did, for the
fellow was quite good .. As the
play was not: It has the skeleton
of a superior black-comicdrama, the plot fascinating, the
writing pretentiously florid, like
a self~ducated alderman trying
to impress his listeners with his
new-word-a-day Susskind-style
vocabulary - but it wasn't
dialogue.
The story of three schoolteacher sisters, one a successful
executive, the others variously
htmg up neurotically, is treated
as a valid topic but the
characters didn't talk like
humans, more like pretentiously programmed computers
tended by someone with a new
and insufficiently precise
vocabulary ... Paul Zindel inflicted the words as well as the
fascinating plot and relationships: It was like a very fat man
inside of whom is a thin and

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Pain from Heart
Can Stab into Jaw

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-Would it
be a h eart pain in my jaw or
.KQ7 32 ¥7 +K98 .K1043
What do you do now?
upper gums? &lt;I wear denA- Bid three spades. Your
tures .) It gets very severe
partner won't pass.
and it seem s to get worse
with exertion. Walking in a
T- .- - - - - - ---......, cold wind makes it worse . I
' Th 'll D 1 E
H at10 S
ey
o t very tme
®
h e h ad three heart atav
tacks.
in
Dear Reader- Yes, pa.
ONE TI-liNG TEACI-lER6 I-lAVE
from heart t~ouble can radlIN COMMON! Tl-lEY'RE VERY
ate into the JaW. Pam, such
SIRICT ABOUT TALKING IN
as you describe, brought on
CLASS·-·
by either exercise or walking in a cold wind often
means heart pain. A go~d
tes t is to take a nitroglycerm
tablet- the heart tablet that
melts under the tongue- befor e walking and see if that
prevents the pain. Of course.
your doctor wil~ ~eed to prescribe the med!Cme for :(OU
if you are not already takmg
h.m:r;r:::::::;;:~----~~~~~--:;:::=~:-=;;:==;:,::;:=:::::;;::::::----:-;--:-:i-=-=:il it. If you are going .to be
"
walking against the wmd be
s ure and usc a warm scarf
and protect the throat and
chest from the wind. If you
are ?verweig.ht, you could
benefit by los mg pounds and
it you use tobacco or much
coffee, you should stop th1s.
A person who ~as. heart
pain while ex e r c 1s ing or
walking can often. do a .great
deal more exerc1se after a
significant weight loss.
Dear Dr. Lamb- I have a
ltght case of diabetes for
You. South, hold :

Voice along Broadway i

which I am taking medication orally. My blood sugar
is remaining stable, but I'm
s till having nervous tremors
when getting up from a sitting position or arising in the
morning. My doctor said it
was due to blood sugar. Do
y~u agree and, if not .. what
m1ght be the cause? Is 1t passible to have diabetes and
still not show any sugar in
the urine?
·
Dear Reader- A low blo.od
sugar from treatment of diahetes can ca~se nervous
tremor~ or famtness. It may
be poss1ble to regulate a person's diet and medicine i.n
s uch a way as to preve nt this
problem.
Diabetes involves more
than just the blood s ~ga r. It
can affect the artenes and
the nerves . When the nerves
are involved the normal reflex actions to control the
circulation may be affected
in s uch a way as to cause
faintness
Yes, it is possible to have
diabetes and not have sugar
m the urine. even if the diabetes is not controlled bv
medicine. This us u a II)
means the kidneys are not
runctioning properly and the
excess sugar in the blood
that would normally be til tered out remain s m tht'
blood stream.

I.
.

more essentially credible body.
Estelle Parsons frequently
was excellent as the morehuman sister, Julie Harris
hyper-thyroid in a role written
that emotionally excessive way,
Nancy Marchand austerely
reluctant to become as common
as he~ demented sisters, Rae
Allen seeringly selfish and
chillingly comic as the teacher
blackmailing her way toward a
license to teach children, and
Billy Macy was almost as good
as his mother announced to Ed
Sullivan ... It is a most interesting play but more a
manuscript that needs advice
and surgical editing of the
useless alliteration and florid
adjectival embellishments ...
Paul Zindel, who wrote the offBroadway hit "Man in the Moon
Marigolds" still shows onBdwy. promise, and somewhat
less than fulfillment ... It's at
the Moresco.
This is another play in which
every obscenity and scatology

is flung into the smog; and not
to any consistent advantage;
these cheap vulgarities are
commonplace on the Bdwy.
stage these days and the motorword here certainly is "commonplace,'' where a real need is
for the uncommon, soaring,
searchingly enlightening
phrase, word, sentence.
C
Octogenarian
Serge
Obolensky was in "21" three
nights running, sauntering
anyway, with three different
young
ladies
alike
in
pulchritude and their HotPants;
his banquette companion the
night of the "Miss Reardon" •
opening differed from th~
others in that she was muCIIP
older- she had to be at least 30
... Other after-theater "21 "-ites
included the Ed Sullivans, the
banker Frank Ryans with the
Lynn Phillipses (Mary P. is a
status-thimble at Harper's
Bazaar), the social Cliff and
Babette Brokaw.

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Cash Will Choose
1
72 Dem Nominee
WASHINGTON (NEA)
The Democrats' proudly adopted reforms widening
participation in the 1972 presidential nominating process tl
may boom candidates' campaign costs to new heights.
Money could be the great eliminator next year. The
party will have more choosers (delegates to the national
convention), but their choices for the presidency could
be narrower than ever.
Reasonably authoritative minimum figures soon to be
published indicate that President Nixon and Democratic contender Eugene McCarthy each spent at least
$10 million in their 1968 preconvention campaigns.
Those estimates suggest that recently printed guesses
of $10 million for each major contender in 1971-72 are
probably much too conservative. It could be that $12 million a is better minimum estimate. Why? First off, the
"reform" which enlarged the 1972 convention delegate
vote total to 3,016 from 2,622 in 1968 has sharply hiked the
stakes for presidential bidders in key primaries, especially since the big states will have a higher proportioa of
the total.
California will have 271 agrinst 174 in 1968, New York
278 against 190, Massachusetts 102 against 72, Wisconsin
67 against 59.
These rich prizes inevitably must be quested after l&gt;y
any serious candidate. Sen. George McGovern, declared
contender, says no bidder will have enough money for
the costly June tests in California and New York unless •
he has done well in earlier primaries.
Another dimension of the money matter is the addition
of Rhode Island, Maryland and New Mexico to the 1972
primary roster. The total of 19 states may be further
~nlarged by possible new primaries in Arkansas, North
~_:arolina and one or two others.
The fresh burdens mount still further. Among the nonprimary states where delegate selection is most often by
state convention, Michigan's vote total has soared to
132 from a previous 96, the Texas total to 130 from 104,
Missouri's to 73 from 60, Minnesota's to 64 from 52.
There are many other healthy gains.
•
Candidates' foraging for delegates in these states is
bound t? be more expensive than ever, partly because
of the higher numbers, partly because delegate selection
processes- assuming reforms are widely adopted- will
be more open and hence far chancier.
Primaries are an unavoidable lure not simply in consequence of the fatter numbers, but because delegates
are bound to support the winners in California, Indiana,
Maryland, Massachusetts , New Mexico, Oregon and
Wisconsin. The statewide winner takes the whole bag of
votes ~n California, Massachusetts and Oregon.
A wmner who swept everything in the seven binding r ,
primaries could lock up 621 votes, not much less than '
half the 1,509 he will need for nomination in 1972.
Moreover, in primaries with a total of 416 votes- Pennsylvania (182), Ohio (153), Nebraska (24), Rhode Island
(22), New Hampshire (18) and South Dakota (17)-delegates can legally bind themselves to a particular candidate if they wish. If they win, he has them.
There are also big advisory primaries in Illinois (170
yates), New Jersey (109) and West Virginia (35), wherem delegates are not bound but may be influenced by
presidential preference results.
With so much voting strength thus on the block from
late winter to late June next year, it seems a reasonable
guess the Democrats' presidential nominee will be chosen
bef?re the convent~on ever assembles in early July.
Smce predetermmed results have been common in
~oth parties for years, this would not be new. The thing
iS, the Democrats' heralded reforms, however admirable. are not likely to change the pattern.
Wha~ will change is cost. Reform is going to be very
expenstve. And the party today appears only dimly
aware of that crusher.

BERRY'S WORLD

"Maybe we're rushing the hot pants season!"

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

•

New York City To Buy Yankee Stadiutn
the Sports Desk

..

I •

nv

•
•

IJy

Chet Tannehill

Class A sectional play here goes into its second round
tomorrow night at Meigs High School gym at Rock Springs with
the old Meigs rivals, Eastern and Southern, tipping off at 7:30
p.m. for the honor of meeting Nort)1 Gallia in the finals Saturday
at 7:30p.m.
The Eagles go into the game Thursday, heavy favorites to
put a damper on Southern a third time this season, having done it
handily twice during the regular season.
Eastern, co-champs of the Southern Valley Conference with
North Gallia, drew a bye in the first round, having been seeded
first. The Eagles and the Gallia County Pirates finished season
play in a stand-&lt;&gt;ff, each winning one. Oddly enough, Eastern won
at North Gallia, then lost to the Gallians on its home boards.
Southern squeezed out a 67-66 victory over Kyger Creek in its
first sectional round at Meigs last weekend. North Gallia went
wild beating cross-county rival Southwestern 82-34.
If Eastern runs true to form by defeating Southern Thursday,
la affaire of Saturday night will be something to see when the
Eagles go after the Pirates in the rubber game and the right to
play in the district tournament. There is plenty of seating in the
new Meigs gym. Everybody that wants to see this one can.
What a change from the "old days," really not so long ago.
Which reminds many, many fans of Meigs County of the
miniscule gymnasiums and seating capacities at old Racine High
School, now the junior high, and at Chester High and Tuppers
Plains High, now consolidated into Eastern High School. Although
tournament games were not conducted in any of them in modern
times getting in to see a regular season game often was an adventure of major proportions.
Fans sat along the sideline boundaries so close to the actwn
they often got into the game willy nilly. Fans at Racine also
stacked themselves into openings on the second floor looking into
the gym. At the half, reporters, visiting coaches on a scouting
prowl and anybody else who happened to be a good friend of
Principal Donald (Fizzle) Wolfe, fought through the packed
bodies into Wolfe's private furnace room (surely no more than
6'x6') for a smoke. People can become real convivial under such
conditions (or perish). Maybe that's a little bit of what's wrong
today in our ghettoized cities.
MRS. JOY BENTLEY, physical education instructor at
Meigs High, and wife of assistant football Coach John Bentley,
has arrangements completed for the 1971 Meigs Invitational Girls
basketball tournament beginning March 10 at 4 p.m. with the
Meigs gals meeting Kyger Creek. She has prepared a bracket
showing playing tin1es for Athens, Federal Hocking, Nelsonville,
Kyger Creek, Meigs, Gallipolis, and Belpre, which we will
prepare for tomorrow's edition. Meanwhile, mark this one on
your calendar. You'll want to see it.

NEW YORK (UPI)-Yankee
Stadium, once the jewel of
Major League Baseball stadia
but now one of the last of the
old-time parks, will be purchased by the City of New York
in a move to keep the New
York Yankees and Football
Giants from deserting "The Big
Town."
Mayor John Lindsay announced Tuesday that the city
plans to purchase the stadium
for $24-million and will make
extensive improvements in
parking facilities, auto approaches and lighting in the
surrounding area. The overall
plan is to give the Yankees and
Giants the same physical
advantages as are enjoyed by

the Mets and Jets in Shea
Stadium.
Yankee Stadium, the last
Major League park built
entirely by private finances,
was constructed by Jacob
Ruppert, owner of the Yankees,
in 1923 at the cost of $2-million.
"The House That Ruth Built"
became the most famous
baseball stadium in the United
States and was generally
acknowledged to be the best in
its field until baseball expansian in the 1960s led to the
construction of many new
stadia.
In its heyday, Yankee Stadium was as big a tourist
attraction in New York City as
the Empire State Building, the

•
•

•

in 26 games. The 49ers will play
in the Western regionals.
Ohio State, the only other
ranked team in action Tuesday
night, moved closer to clinching
the Big Ten title with an 84-70
victory over Minnesota. In
other Big Ten play, Michigan
edged illinois 75-74, Wisconsin
upset Indiana 94-87 in double
overtime, Iowa downed Northwestern 78-64 and Purdue beat
Michigan State 65~0.
Elsewhere, Drake stopped
North Texas State 65~0. Wake
Forest beat Maryland 72~6,
Duke swept past Clemson 70-60
and Nebraska walloped Kansas
State 87-71.

By United Press International
The NAJA District 22 championship will be decided when
Ohio Dominican takes on Central State at Wilberforce tonight while other tournamentbound teams see action in Ohio.
The Dominican-Central clash
will decide who represents the
state in the NAJA finals at
Kansas City.
Meanwhile NCAA pick Mar-

quette takes on Bowling Green,
while Miami of Ohio, paired
against Marquette in the first
round of the NCAA Mideast Regional, goes against Dayton.
Dayton was chosen Tuesday
·to compete in the NIT for the
12th time.
In Tuesday night basketball
action, Ohio State took another
step toward the Big Ten crown
and an NCAA tourney bid by

BEST TIRE BUY
IN ITS PRICE RANGE

By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
The New York jinx struck
Baltimore again.
Baltimore, needing a victory
to clinch the National Basketball Association's Central Division title, lost both ends of a
home-and-home set to the
Knicks. Despite the Bullets' 12game lead in their division, the
title clinching remains elusive.
New York, led by Willis
Reed's 21 points and Dick
Barnett's 20, defeated Baltimore 109-95 Tuesday night after
stopping the Bullets 110-104 on
Sunday. The Knicks' magic
number for clinching the
Eastern Division Title has

dropped to four.
Coach Gene Shue, whose
Bullets lost to the Knicks in
last season's opening playoff
round, figured he had enough of
a division lead to experiment.
He used pivotman Wes Unseld
at forward and for a while it
worked.
"Wes really bore down on
Dave DeBusschere, didn't he,"
Shue grinned. "I wish I could
keep him at forward. For a big
guy he has quick feet."
Unseld's 245 pounds effectively kept DeBusschere from
driving in and held the Knick
forward to eight points. Unseld
scored 12 and grabbed 19
rebounds. Earl Monroe led

CORD

"ALL-WEATHER :Dr'
BLACKWALL TIRE
ANY OF THESE SIZES

x 13 tu beless plus
~P~. 1 E:e Tax $1.79 and

6 .50

14

8.25

•

The newest signers were first
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - Three
more Cincinnati Reds players baseman Lee May, pitcher Jim
have come to terms on con- Merritt and utilityman Jim
tracts, reducing the number of Stewart.
Merritt was the Reds' first
holdouts to five.
lefthander to win 20 games in
the last 45 years. May hit 34
homers and drove in 92 runs last
AHL Standings
By United Press International
year. They arrived here from
East
Cincinnati late Tuesday, while
W. L. T. Pts
Stewart
was already in camp.
23 22 12 58
Quebec

Cleveland
28 21 6 62
Hershey
21 26 9 51
Rochester
20 28 9 49
Tuesday's Results
Baltimore 3 Providence 3 (tie)
Wednesday's Game
Hershey at Quebec
(Only game scheduled)

Tuesday Night's Fight Results
By United Press International
SCRANTON, Pa. (UPI)- Bob
Foster, 174, Silver Spring, Md.,
knocked out Hal "TNT" Carroll, 171112, Syracuse, N. Y . (4).
(defended I ight heavyweight
title).
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UPI)Jimmy Ellis, 1981/4, Loui sville,
knocked out Irish Tony Doyle,
207, Salt Lake City, Utah (10).

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Senior
center Jim Connally. llth
ranking sc6rer in Bowling
Green
State
University
basketball history, was named
today the Mid-American
Conference Player of the Week.
The 6-foot-7 native of Detroit
netted 60 points in three games
last week to push his career
total to 1,007 points.
Connally also pulled down a
career high 24 rebounds in the
contest against Kent State and a
total of 43 rebounds against
Kent, Detroit and Loyola.
Other nominees for the
weekly honor were Craig Love

00

XE-110 Ethyl-over 100 octane

RIZER OIL CO.
992-2101

700 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

Certified Gas Stations
538 W. Main
(We honor
Charqe)

Still unsigned are two-time
batting champion Pete Rose,
third baseman Tony Perez,
relief ace Wayne Granger and
outfielders Bernie Carbo and
Bobby Tolan.
Tolan, however, is recuperating from a ruptured
achilles tendon suffered while
playing basketball during the
winter.

Connally Named Player Of Week

X

FREE MOUNTING

ranked Bucks and soph Allan
Hornyak added another 22
points. Captain Jim Cleamons,
the only senior on the squad,
played 35 minutes with a hand
injury that has been diagnosed
as a spring.
After leading 44-33 at intermission, Ohio State opened

Three More Reds Come To Terms

Under Maior Oil Prices

7. 7 5 X 15
14
Plus $2 17 to $2 33 Fed Ex Tax and old lire
X

Baltimore with 22 points.
"If Unseld had just two more
inches over his 6-7%, he'd be
the greatest center in NBA
history," said Shue. "As a
forward, he's more the Bill
Bridges (Atlanta) type."
Shue didn't have the figures,
but NBA statistics show Unseld
scoring at a 14.5 pace and
Bridges at 12.0 and Unseld's
rebounding average 17.1 and
Bridges' 15.2.
In other NBA action, Detroit
defeated Portland, 128-122; San
Diego stopped Philadelphia, 111103; Los Angeles whipped
Buffalo, 131-118, and Atlanta
trounced Seattle, 128-116.

OSU T, .7•zctory

NCAA post-season tournament.
The Bucks won their 11th
conference game of the season
Tuesday night by routing
Minnesota 84-70, the second win
over the Gophers this season.
Sophomore Luke Witte scored
26 points, 21 coming in the
second half, to lead the 13th

$}

NYLON
7 75

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State needs only one more win
to assure a tie for the Big Ten
basketball title and a sweep of
the Buckeyes' last two games
would give them all the cookies.
The crown also carries with it
automatic inclusion in the

5 A v ETAN~FULL

~PLY

State scoring record when his
29 points boosted him to 509 in
his career.
Kent had managed a 40-35
halftime lead, but the stubborn
Nittany Lions roared back to
tie it four times, finally at 77all when regulation time ran
out.
Roger Evans hit a three-point
play in the closing seconds of
the overtime period to ice the
win for Kent, now 12-11.
At Cincinnati, Derek Dickey
scored 23 points to become the
second highest scoring sophomore in UC basketball history.
The Bearcats, who were never endangered by Buffalo, ended their season at 14-12, for the
18th consecutive winning season.
Ken Kowall passed the 1,000
point milestone in his Ohio U.
career by pouring in 30 points
for the Bobcats, now assured of
a tie for second place in the
Mid-American Conference.
Kowall now has 1,016 points
to his credit and he has a
chance to run it even higher
when Ohio U. finishes its season at Bowling Green Saturday.
The Bobcats are 16-7 overall
and 5-4 in the MAC. Western
Michigan is 5-5 in the conference and 14-9 overall.

dumping Minnesota 84-70; Cincinnati closed its season with
an 86-59 win over Buffalo; Ohio
U. beat Western Michigan 10070; and Kent State edged Penn
State in overtime 86-85.
The Ohio State win, paced by
sophomore Luke Witte's 26
points, gave the Buckeyes an
11-1 Big Ten mark and 17-5
overall record.
Ruben Vance set a new Kent

Bullets Walloped

TALBERT'S NEW JOB
NEW YORK (UPI)-Bill Talbert, former well-known tennis
player, was appointed Tuesday
as chairman and tournament
director of the 1971 United
23 25 11 57
Montreal
States Open Tennis Champion- Providence
20 24 11 51
20 30 7 47
ships to be held Sept. 1-12 at the Springfield
West
West Side Tennis Club in
W. L. T. Pts.
Forrest Hills, N. Y.
Baltimore
35 14 7 77
Afghanistan's 227-foot Minaret of Jam, built eight centuries ago, leans at about
half the an g 1 e of Italy's
fumed Tower of Pisa.

of the bullpen in the seventh
inning of the seventh game of
the 1926 World Series to strike
out Tony Lazzeri and give the
St. Louis Cardinals the first
world championship in their
history ... it was there that
Ruth hit his 60th homer in 1927
off Tom Zachary and established a record that stood until
Roger Maris of the Yankees hit
No. 61.
A total of 21 heavyweight title
fights and other big fights were
fought there, including both of
Joe Louis' bouts with Max
Schmeling.
But time began to catch up
with the old stadium in the late
1940s and even extensive
renovations by the Yankees

failed to keep it on a par with
the gleaming new parks being
built in other cities.
That fact, plus brutal parking
accomodations and a deteriorating neighborhood, led to speculation that the Yankees and
Giants might desert New York
for better facilities in a
proposed sports complex in
New Jersey.
That possibility disappeared,
of course, with the announcement by Mayor Lindsay on
Tuesday. To sports fans, the
action means that Yankee
Stadium is no longer a house of
memories but a place where
the action is going to be for
many years to come.

Dominican, Central State Oash

• Tourney Bound
Tea
Triumph W7,•
n
~~·~~~,h~~r~~~d~~~~:~ w ztte races
•
By JOE
!CELLI
UPI Sport Writer
It was celebration time
Tuesday night for Jacksonville,
Duquesne and Long Beach
State.
The three schools were
handed NCAA at-large berths
Tuesday afternoon and marked
it by rolling to easy victories at
night.
Jacksonville, ranked eighth in
the nation, got strong performances from Harold Fox, Artis
Gilmore and Ernie Fleming in
a 94-75 romp past Miami (Fla.)
Duquesne (No. 12), sparked by
Barry Nelson and Mickey
Davis, surged past Detroit 93-73
and Long Beach State, led by
George Trapp, whipped Centenary 66-50.
Fox scored 20 of his 26 points
in. the second half and Gilmore
and Fleming combined for 41
more as Jacksonville ripped
Miami: It was the 22nd victory
against three losses for the
Dolphins, who'll compete in the
Mideast regionals.
The game also marked the
farewell of Miami coach Ron
Godfrey, who resigned Monday.
Nelson scored 25 points and
Davis hit for 24 as Duquesne
boosted its record to 21-3. The
Dukes will play in the Eastern
regionals.

catapulted baseball into its
golden era of the 1920s and
1930s.
Ruth hit a home run to win
the first game ever played in
Yankee Stadium and his
tremendous home run output
made it the mecca of the sport .
A gigantic pile of stone and
iron with three tiers, it defied
the greatest power hitters of
the game, including Ruth, to
clear its outermost fences. No
player in baseball history ever
hit a fair ball out of it.
For some 40 years Yankee
Stadium was "The Big Ball
Park"-where the big events
happened.
It was there that Grover
Cleveland Alexander came out

Statute of Liberty and the
United Nations.
The man who made Yankee
stadium possible was Babe
Ruth, who was purchased by
the Yankees from the Boston
Red Sox after the 1919 season
for $100,000. Ruth's introduction
of "long ball"-home runschanged the history of baseball
and persuaded Ruppert to
desert the Polo Grounds, home
of the New York Giants, and
build his own stadium.
By the time Yankee Stadium
was opened in 1923, Ruth had
become one of the most
sensational athletes in U.S.
sports history. His ur.precedented home run power attracted
new fans in droves and

Pomeroy, 0.
BankAmericard and Master

of Ohio University, Gerry Sears
of Miami, Tom Kozelko of
Toledo and Jim Patterson of
Western Michigan.

Calls
accepted
9to 9

the second half by outscoring
the Gophers 18-7 and forging to
a 62-40 lead.
After Minnesota battled back,
cutting the deficit to 77-68 with
2:32left, Ohio State put the ball
into a deep freeze, forcing the
visitors into numerous fouls.
Cleamons, who scored 14
points, admitted his wrist hurt
"a little" after the game and
blamed himself for some of the
rugged play the Buckeyes
displayed.
"We didn't play as well
together as we should, but then I
haven't practiced enough lately
either," Cleamons said. "We 'II
be better."
Coach Fred Taylor had praise
for Cleamons, however, saying
"Jimmy really got things
started when he went in."
"He got a little tired at the
end and we're going to have that
wrist x-rayed again Wednesday, just to make sure,"
Taylor added.
Ollie Shannon had 15 points
for Minnesota, now 4-8 in the
Big Ten and 10-12 overall.
Ohio State will play at
Northwestern Saturday and
then end its season next
Tuesday against Indiana here.

COLOR

Repairmen

Jim Durbin
Chuck Inscore

~

SAVE $2.00

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Is Fun
For Awhile!
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@
Meigs County Branch of The
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296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Passbook Interest
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t·.

NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pts
Boston
45 10 7 97
New York
39 14 10 88
Montreal
32 17 12 76
Toronto
32 26 5 69
Detroit
19 34 8 46
Buffalo
17 36 11 45
Vancouver
18 37 6 42
West
W. L. T. Pts
Chicago
41 15 6 88
St. Louis
26 19 16 68
Minnesota
22 29 14 58
Philadelphia
24 28 10 58
Los Angeles
18 32 11 47
California
17 43 3 37
Tuesday's Results
Boston 6 Minnesota 0
Wednesday's Games
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Vancouver at Toronto
Oakland at New York
Buffalo at Los Angeles
Chicago at St. Louis
(Only games scheduled)

26" English
Boys or Girls '59.95

l!il I !A 44•!1•=•1 a, · ,.."',-.,.~

~ADDRESS

~

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
46 24 .657
Kentucky
37 32 .536 8112
New York
33 36 .478 121!2
Pittsburgh
31 40 .437 15112
Carolina
29 39 .426 16
Floridians
30 41 .423 161/2
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
47 20 .701
Indiana
43 23 .652 3'h
Memphis
36 34 .514 121!2
Denver
25 43 .368 22112
Texas
22 47 .319 261!2
Tuesday's Results
Texas 130 New York 127
Wednesday's Games
Carolina at Kentucky
Denver at Utah
Memphis at Indiana
(Only games scheduled)

SPRING
SPECIALS
BICYCLES

9 to_9

MASON. COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE CO.
pr,....,,..-~V...-"'tflt

Ohio H.S. Basketball
Tournament Scores
By United Press International
Class AAA
At Cleveland
Cleve. East 75 Cleve. John Hay
40
At Eastlake
Wickliffe 58 Willoughby South 48
Euclid 102 Madison 41
At Columbus
Grove City 68 Delaware 54
Columbus Central 73 Columbus
North 69
Whitehall 108 Groveport 70
At Troy
Vandalia Butler 79 Fairborn
Park Hills 75
Dayton Stebbins 85 Springfield
South 70
Class AA
At Coshocton
Garaway 63 Claymont 58
Tri-Valley 78 Riverview 76
At Berea
Clearview 87 Highland 55
Elyria Catholic 54 Oberling 53
At Chagrin Falls
Kenston 58 Cleve . Cardinal 28
At Urbana
Bellefontaine 71 Urbana 44
Indian Lake 66 Jamestown
Greeneview 64
At New Concord
Shadyside 74 Bellaire St. Johns
72
New Concord John Glenn 62
St. Clai rsville 53
At Steubenville
Toronto 79 Carrol lton 68
Steubenville
Catholic
62
Bridgeport 50
Class A
At Mt. Vernon
Pleasant 63 Newark Catholic 54
Columbus Academy 56 Marion
Cath. 40
At Lancaster
The Plains 80 West Jefferson 63
Lancaster Fisher 83 Madison
South 69
At Dover
Hiland 63 Tuscarawas Valley 60
At Martins Ferry
Adena 68 New Athens 54
Tiltonsville 72 Mt. Pleasant 54

~Calls

Serving
Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area

~NAME

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. l. Pet. GB
New York
47 26 .644
Philadelphia
41 32 .562 6
Boston
38 34 .528 81/2
Buffalo
19 54 .260 28
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
38 32 .543
Atlanta
28 44 .389 11
Cincinnati
26 45 .366 121/2
Cleveland
12 60 .167 28
Midwest Division
W. l. Pet. GB
x Milwaukee 61 11 .847
Chicago
44 25 .638 151!2
Phoenix
43 27 .614 17
Detroit
42 28 .600 18
X-Ciinched div title
Pacific Dvision
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles
45 26 .634
San Francisco 36 36 .500 9112
San Diego
33 39 .458 12 112
Seattle
31 40 .437 14
Portland
23 48 .324 21112
Tuesday's Results
Detroit 128 Portland 122
New York 109 Baltimore 95
San Diego 111 Philadelphia 103
Atlanta 128 Seattle 116
Los .Angeles 131 Buffalo 118
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati at Baltimore
Portland vs Philadelphia at
Boston
San Diego at Boston
Los Angeles at Milwaukee
Chicago at Phoenix
Atlanta vs San Fracisco at
Oakland
(Only games scheduled)

accepted

TELEVISION
REPAIR I

Ph. 675-2241
or
773-5196

Pro Standings

H&amp;R Firestone
992-2238
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3 1971

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�5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0., March 3,1971

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3,1971

Pascual Working With TwinsHigh-P owered Transmission
Line One of Seven Wonders
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Old pitchers, like soldiers,
may fade away, but if Camilo
Pascual has his choice, it'll be
with his old club the Minnesota
Twins.
Pascual, now 37 and nearing

the end of his career, is
working out with the Twins in
hopes of landing a spot on
Manager Bill Rigney's ten-man
staff that will head north.
"I must get a job somewhere," said Pascual Tuesday,
"but I would prefer to pitch

Marquette Heads Field
Of NCAA Independents
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)Unbeaten Marquette, boasting
the nation's longest winning
streak, heads the field of 10
independent powers accepting
bids to bolster the National
Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) 1971 basketball championships.
The 15 other tournament
berths are reserved for conference champions.
Seven of the 10 at-large bids
extended Tuesday went to
teams ranked among the
nation's top 20 and one of the
three unranked schools assured
of an NCAA playoff spot is
Notre Dame, the only team to
defeat defending national champion and top-ranked UCLA this
season.
But the NCAA's prize pick
Tuesday was Marquette, which
rejected an invitation last year
and went on to win the National
Invitational Trounament (NIT).
The Warriors have won 36
straight, including 24 this
season, and rank No. 2
nationally.
Marquette landed a berth in

College Ratings
NEW . YORK (UPI)-The
United Press International top
20 college basketball teams
with number of first place
votes and won-lost records in
parentheses: (thirteenth and
final week, includes games
played through Sunday, Feb.
28).
Team
Points
1 Assumption (14) (22-ll 267
2. Tennessee St. (7) (22-2)251
3. Kentucky St. (5) (24-2) 249
4. Southwest Louisiana (21-3)
167
5. Fairmont St. (3) (25-0)
160
6. Louisiana St. ( N. 0.) (23-ll
113
7. Ashland (24-2)
102
8. Louisiana Tech ( 1) (22-4)95
9. Wooster (23-1)
83
10. Kentucky Wesleyan (20-6) 74
11. Oral Roberts (I) (22 5)
46
12 Puget Sound
33
13 Eau Claire
27
14 C W Post
4
15 Ev sville
9
16. ( el Akron
(•le) North
St. 1l
( 17-8)

17

18. S. F. Austin (20 6)
16
19. Howard Payne (22-6)
12
20. Jackson St. (20-6)
7
Others receiving five or more
points - Philadelphia Textile,
Stetson, Old Dominion, San
Francisco St.

College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Hartwick 92 Bridgeport 60
Duke 70 Clemson 60
Ohio St. 84 Minnesota 70
Wakeforest 72 Mryland 66
Iowa 78 Northwestern 64
Rutgers 92 Lfayette 68
Cincinnati 86 Buffalo 59
Texas Christian 76 Texas A&amp;M
63
Nebraska 87 Kansas St. 71
Purdue 65 Michigan St. 60
Texas 96 Southern Mthodist 88
Michigan 75 Illinois 74
Baylor 111 Arkansas 110 (OT)
Wisconsin 94 Indiana 84
Salem St. 89 Castleton 68
Worcester Tech 91 Brandeis 90
(OT)
Texas Tech 99 Rice 87
Ohio U. 100 Western Michigan
70
Kent St. 86 Pennsylvania St. 85
Duquesne 93 Detroit 73
St. Johns (NY) 89 Holy Cross
74
Kentucky St. 81 Bethel 71
Western Carolina 69 Newberry
68
Jacksonvi lie 94 Miami 75
Nebraska 87 Kansas St. 71
Drake 65 North Texas 60
Earlham 99 Tri -State 82
Wsst
Long Beach St. 66 Centenary 50
Nevada Las Vegas 81 Nevada
Reno 70
NAJA District 1
Central Washington 81 Pacific
Lutheran 71
NAtA District 2
Lewis and Clark 103 Witlamette
84
NAtA District 3
Whittier 73 Azusa 66
FUND FOR BLACKS
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
promoters of the coming
heavyweight title fight between
Joe Frazier and Muhammad
Ali, billed as the "Fight of the
Champions," Tuesday donated
four full-time college scholarships to be distributed through
the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro
Students.
The grants, to be known as
the "Fight of the Champions"
scholarships, are to be given to

Few Things Say
Get Well
As Well As A

Baseball
Squabble
Averted
By BOB Dl PIETRO
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-Baseball
launched its drug abuse offensive and apparently averted a
family squabble Tuesday.
Representatives of the Baltimore Orioles, New York
Yankees, Washington Senators,
Los Angeles Dodgers, Milwaukee Braves, Montreal Expos,
New York Mets and Houston
Astros attended Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn's first drug abuse
seminar at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Those attending included player
representatives, as well as the
general managers, field managers, team physicians, trainers
and road secretaries of the
eight teams.
The seminar was addressed
by Drs. Garret O'Connor of the
Johns Hopkins Drug Abuse
Center and Leonard Wallenstein
of the Greater Baltimore
Medical Center and the Baltimore Orioles' team physician.
Henry Fitzgibbons, in charge of
eball security, talked of the
al aspects of drugs. Wes
Parker, Gold Glove-Winning
first baseman for the Dodgers,
who's mvolved in a drug
education program with Los
Angeles youngsters, was the
only player representative to
speak.
The major accomplishment of
the seminar, the first of three
that have been scheduled,
seemed to be a lessening of the
resentment felt by the players
when the first announcement of
a drug campaign came out of
the commissioner's office on
Feb. 18. Many players felt at
the time that the public would
misread the intent of the
program and the players'
image would be hurt as a
result.
It was stressed at Tuesday's
session that the main purpose
of the commissioner's drug
abuse program was not aimed
at Major League ball players
but at youngsters just starting
out in baseball. Kuhn said he
hopes to launch a preventive
program aimed at aiding and
educating youngsters in how to
avoid the drug scene.

SCRANTON, Pa. (UPI)-Bob
Foster had just finished demolishing Hal "TNT" Carroll in
four rounds to defend his light
heavyweight title for the fifth
time, but he wasn't satisfied.
"Did you think I looked
good?" he asked one of the
camp followers. The man
nodded yes but Foster said,
"Well, I didn't. I was as rusty
as a sack on ten-penny nails left
out in the rain."
Foster knocked Carroll down
three times in the secoP-1
round, slashed open a deep
gash over his left eye in the
third round and finally ended
the fight with a right-hand
knockout punch at 2:32 of the
fourth.
It was the first fight for the
32-year-old champion from Silver Spring, Md., since he was
knocked out in two rounds by
Joe Frazier last November
when he tried to move up to the
heavyweight division. The victory was his 42nd, including 35
kayoes, against five losses. The

loss dropped Carroll's record to
30-3.
However, Foster also was
upset that the fight was not
recognized as a championship
fight by the World Boxing
Association. His title was
stripped away by the WBA and
Vicente Rondon won WBA
recognition as champion in an
elimination bout with Jimmy
Dupree last Saturday night.
"I'd like to fight that guy
(Rondon) tomorrow night,"
Foster said. "That S.O.B. is
going around pretending he's
the champion and I'm going to
break him in two. I'm going to
fight once a month through the
spring and part of the summer
until I get $100,000 in the bank
again, and anytime he wants to
fight me is O.K."
For the victory over the 28year-old Carroll, Foster didn't
make much of a dent in his
goal of building his bank
account to $100,000. A crowd of
4,029 paid $34,640, and Foster
gets only 40 per cent of the ne~.
Carroll gets 20 per cent.

170feet for conventional steel or
aluminum towers and up to 260
feet for the Ohio River crossing.
In all, some 17,000 miles of
conductor will be utilized, since
each "phase" of the line consists of four "bundled" conductors in an 18-inch-square
configuration, and three phases
make up the line.
The project also calls for
some 77,000 tons of tower and
station steel and 13,500 tons of
tower aluminum. Over onemillion suspension insulators,
each string measuring 16 feet in
length, will be used to insulate
the lines fr om the towers.
Ohio Power officials say they
know of no other single facility
in the nation that will make a
more meaningful contribution
to the overall r eliability of
electric service than this
765,000-volt transmission network.
RAIDERS HIRE MALAVASI
OAKLAND (UPI )-The Oakland Raiders of the National
Football League Tuesday hired
Ray Malavasi as an assistant
coach. Malavasi comes to the
Raiders from Buffalo where he
served for the last two years as
the Bills' line coach.

128 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT

WEEKEND
VALUES!
FOR MARCH
4-5-6

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Fridays
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according to Encyclopaedia
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FURNITURE

992-5560

Foster Unhappy After
Victory Over Carroll

represent an investment of
about $250-billion. Now under
construction is a section of the
line which will extend from the
Ohio River south of Wheeling,
W. Va., for a distance of 230
miles northwesterly across
Ohio to the Indiana border.
Ohio Power officials state
that this is another example of
the·company's awareness of its
responsibility and concern for
the conservation and utilization
of land used for transmission
lines. One 765,000-volt line, with
200-foot right-{)f-way, transmits
as much electricity as five
conventional 345,000-volt lines
requiring rights-{)f-way totaling
750 feet in width. Thus, by
utilizing this higher voltage
line, the company not only gets
far greater amounts of power to
where it is needed, but it uses
only 27 per cent of the land
which would have been required
had Ohio Power built additional
345,000-volt lines.
The 765,000-volt line carries 30
times as much energy as one
138,000-volt line, which was the
standard transmission voltage
for the industry from World
War I until Ohio Power
pioneered 345,000-volt transmission in the early 1950s.
Right-of-way width for 30 lines
carrying 138,000 volts would
total· 3,000 feet.
More than 4,200 towers will be
required to carry the conductors for the entire network.
These range in height from 80 to

PANTY HOSE

INGELS

N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, o.

The nation's first 765,000-volt
electric power transmission line
has been proclaimed one of the
"Seven Engineering Wonders of
Ohio" and one of the top 10
engineering achievements in
the United States.
The Ohio award was
presented to Ohio Power Co.
and its sister organization, the
American Electric Power
Service Corp., as a result of
competition sponsored annually
by the Ohio Society of
Professional Engineers. The
project was selected for
nationwide recognition by the
National Society of Professional
Engineers.
This extra-high-voltage
network will make it possible
for Ohio Power and the other
operating companies in the
American Electric Power
System to ship larger blocks of
electric energy over greater
distances at lower unit cost and
to operate with greater
flexibility than ever before,
company officials say.
The first section of this line to
be placed in service joins a
power plant near U&gt;uisa, Ky.,
with an Ohio Power substation
near Piketon, Ohio. This 66-mile
section crosses the Ohio River
near Ironton and continues
northward through Lawrence,
Scioto and Pike Counties.
It is the first link in a network
which, when completed in 1973,
will cover approximately 1,150
miles in six states. The line will

those young men and women
who come from the lowest
economic backgrounds and who
combine the highest qualities of
athletic and scholastic ability.

Foliage Garden

DUDLEY FLORIST
59

the Mideast bracket, Notre
Dame in the Midwest.
Other independents headed
for the NCAA playoffs are
ninth-ranked Fordham (21-2),
12th-ranked Duquesne ( 20-3)
and 18th-rated Villanova (22-6)
in the East; eighth-ranked
Jacksonville (22-3) in the
Mideast; 14th-ranked Houston
(20-6) and New Me~co State
(19-7) in the Midwest, and 17thranked Utah State (20-6) and
Long Beach state (19-7) in the
West.

again for the Twins.
Pascual, who began his
career 20 years ago with Calvin
Griffith's team-then based in
Washington, is expected to ask
the Twins' owner for a $40,000
contract which may eventually
be the deciding factor in the
veteran hurler's comeback bid.
Elsewhere, Pittsburgh Pirates' Manager Danny Murtaugh staged an intra-squad
game which had all the
makings of a "second-guesser's
delight." Murtaugh turned the
mangerial reigns over to a pair
of sportwriters-Al Abrams and
Charlie Feeney and, in the end,
it was the Abramses, capitalizing on four errors and homers
by Willie Stargell and Al Oliver,
winning out 6-4.
The Atlanta Braves' preseason pennant hopes got an
early shot in the arm from
Cecil Upshaw, the relief ace
who missed the entire 1970
season with a finger injury.
Upshaw pitched three scoreless
innings in an intra-squad game
and allowed only one hit in the
stint.
"I was very happy with the
way I threw," Upshaw said
later. "My finger didn't bother
me at all."
Little Fred Patek showed a
bit of muscle to his new
employers, the Kansas City
Royals when he delivered a 390foot homer as the George
Stricklands defeated the Harry
Dunlops, 11-5, in an intra squad
game. Amos Otis contributed
two more homers to the
winning cause.

Polyester - Non Skid - Solid Colors

SHAG RUGS
2lx36 ·1·~.

An important part of his company training started when he was just a little boy.

PH. 992 -2635
._____________

M I DDLEPORT

~,

.

W'rJen a man comes to work for us as a,.,
insta'ler-repairman, we can teach him JUSt
about everythrng he has to know about his
new JOb . (How to be an msta lat1ons expert
and a crackerjack repairman. How to
IT'emome a catalog ot 1mportant parts in·
form&lt;Jtion. and even a little something
abo~.ot nterior decoratmg )

But t'rJere's an mportant part of his job
that we just ca n't teach any man: How to
get along w1th a I kinds of people, in all
walks of life.
You see, that's someth1ng that a man
has to come to us witn. Because it's part
of his personality It's something that
starts developing long before a man 1s

ever a man.
So we look for bright people with JUSt
a little extra wa rmth With a little more un
derstand1ng and consideration for their
fellow man. The kind of people that aren't
too easy to f1nd anymore
We're proud to have more than our fair
share at General Telephone.

24x48
•

$28~.

,,

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3, 1971

•
•
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•

•

Pension Increases Supported
COLUMBUS (UPI) - House
Republicans and Democrats
have joined in offering heavilysponsored
emergency
legislation to .furnish healthy
pension . increases to 79,000
former state teachers, school
employes and public employes,
including state legislators.
The proposal, introduced
Tuesday, highlighted brief
House and Senate sessions as
the Republican - controlled
legislature continued to wait for
programs from the administration of Gov. John J.
Gilligan.
The author of the pension bill,
R ep . Mack Pemberton, RColumbus, said the increased
benefits would average about
$20 a month and would cost the
state about $1.5 million a year.
State Rep. Robert E . Netzley,
R-Laura, chairman of the

House Insurance Committee,
said he believed Pemberton was
"way off base" in his cost
estimate. Netzley said it would
cost more and would be "impossible" to finance through
employer-employe contributions.
Pemberton's bill would cover
all members of the Public
Employes Retirement System,
the
School
Employes
Retirement System and the
State Teachers Retirement
System who retired before July
1, 1968.
He emphasized it would not
apply to lawmakers now serving in the General Assembly.
Beneficiaries would receive a
$2 per month increase for each
year of service for a maximum
of 20 years. The minimum increase would be $10 and the
maximum $40.

· ---------------------------y
I
I
I

I
I
I

Beat....

! Of the Bend

!

I B y Bob Hoeflich

:

I

I

I

I

I

•
•
•

•

I

Easter Seal posters ~re turning up all over Meigs County
these days.
Mrs. Charles Simons, chairman of the seal fund drive on
behalf of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club, reports the
posters are being placed about well ahead of the mailing of Easter
seals so that families can look ahead a bit and plan the contribution they wish to make.
Mailing of the seals will not take place until about the middle
of the month. The seal fund drive goes from March 1 until Aprilll.
Between 5,000 and 6,000 mailings will be sent to homes in the
county.

THE MEIGS COUNTY American Red Cross fund drive is
underway also and in Middleport Sunday a house-to-house canvass will be conducted begiruling at 1 p.m.
Mrs. Albert Roush is chairman for the auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, which is taking an active role in the Middleport
drive along with other volunteers. Following the canvass Sunday
all workers a re invited to go to the Middleport Legion Home at 4
p .m . where refreshments will be served.
SPEAKING OF THE MEIGS Red Cross, an interesting
prisoner of war cage such as used in Vietnam for American POWs
has been made and will be shown for the first time in several
locations Thursday .
The cage is made from bamboo according to U. S. Navy
specifications Getting enough bamboo poles collected for the
project was quite a chore and Donald Diener , local Red Cross
chairman, ex1 ends thanks to the many who helped.
At any rate th cage will be exhibited Thursday at 10:15 a .m.
at Southern
hool in Racine when Commander Frank
Poyet, ColtnL
coordinator of the Project Freedom
program d
1d American prisoners of war in Vietnam,
der Poyet will speak at the Meigs Junior High
will speak.
School in Middleport at 1 p.m. Thursday and following this he will
be conducting a sidewa lk pr ogram at 2:30 nea r the Trinity Church
in Pomeroy to answer any questions pertaining to the program.
The programs at the schools are open to the public - in fact, the
local Red Cross urges the public to attend.
Incidentally, Vernon Weber is providing the truck which will
be used to haul the cage to the various locations. The cage will be
m the sidewalk near the Trinity Church during Commander
Po yet's visit Thursday and also at the Meigs Junior High.

LegislatitJe Summary

.

COLUMBUS (UPI) A
glance at a ctivity Tuesday in
the Ohio General Assembly :
Senate
Bills Introduced
SB 91, Holcomb - Ocasek,
Provides $10,000 life insurance
policy for all state employes.
SB 92, Matia - Nova k, Authorizes coWlty acquisition of garbage and r efuse disposal sites.
SB 93, Lukens, Creates commission to establish a public
mediation and prayer room in
the Ohio Capitol.

fj

SB 94, Mottl, Establishes
murder by explosives as firstdegree murder pWlishable by
death.
House
Bill Passed
Am. HB 27, Fry, Authorizes
m e tropolitan authorities to cooperate for the purpose of
financing housing. Vote : 88-2.
Bills Introduced
HB 277, McLin, Increases
number of signatures needed on
certain nominating petitions.
HB 278, Norris , Requires all
vehicles including trailers to
ha ve safety taillight.
HB 279, DelBane - Nader ,
Limits use of rotating blue or
blue and white lights to cars
used by law enforcement agencies .
HB 280, Knight, Increases
workmen's compensation benefits.
HB 281, R. Hughes, Creates
a state Department of Transportation.
HB 282, Ba tchelder -Riffe, Liberalizes capital requirements
and lending a uthority of building and loan associations.
HB 282, Mallory - Rankin,
Prohibits turning off utilities
without notice to tenants.
HB 284, Pemberton, Increases
retirem ent benefits to teacher s,
school and public employes who
re tired before July 1, 1968.

3 ROOMS

NEW
FURNITURE
$349.95
$35.00 Down-

Balance On
Convenient
Terl)'ls.

•
S 0 T I R E I&gt; they s I e c p
where thev d r o p, t h r t• e
American 'so I die r s catch
naps when they can at Khc
Sanh, advan.ce ba se• fur t h•·
L aus operatum.

MASON
FURNITURE
M ason, W. Va.

Pemberton said he had not
discussed the pension increase
with the Gilligan administration
but "I feel they would support
it."
He said the increase would
not take effect unless the
legislature appropriated money
for it, but the bill contains this
language : "The General
Assembly shall annually appropriate such amoWlts which
are necessary to fWld these
benefits."
House leaders were generally
reluctant to discuss the bill.
Pemberton said he had not
talked with the leadership about
the measure, although he noted
one of the 40 sponsors was
House Majority Leader Robert
E. Levitt, R-Canton.
Pemberton said he could have
obtained 60 sponsors, main-

taining there was heavy
pressure for the increase from
retired teachers and other
public employes.
" This measure will provide
help for many people who have
been by-passed by increased
benefits which have affected
persons still employed and who
retire in the future," Pemberton said.
"Reports from retirees indicate that many would have to
seek welfare payments in order
to subsist if they did not receive
additional retirement pay."
Pemberton said payments by
the state would drop during
subsequent years as the retirees
collecting benefits eventually
died. He noted, however, there
was nothing to prevent future
legislatures from encumbering
future retired employes Wlder

· Overnight Wire
Hy United Press International
COLUMBUS - REPUBLICANS HAVE beaten the administration of Gov. John J. Gilligan to the punch again on a pair
of bills to raise workmen's compensation and create a state
Department of Transportation. The GOP introduced the bills in
the House Tuesday to get them in ahead of the administration,
which probably will offer similar measures when Gilligan
releases his program.
Last week, Senate Republicans offered a bill raising unemployment compensation benefits - another proposal anticipated
from the administration. Rep. Howard A. Knight, R-Fremont,
submitted the proposal increasing maximum workmen's compensation benefits from $63 to $79 for the first 12 weeks of
disability and from $56 to $72 a week thereafter.
Knight's bill, sponsored by 10 other Republicans, would raise
from $25 to $30 the minimum weekly benefits for the temporarily
disabled.
GEORGETOWN, OHIO -SEVENTEEN of the 40 persons
foWld betting on an illegal cockfight in a secluded area of southwestern Ohio last weekend have been fined $25 and court costs.
The rest of persons, who could hardly believe that Brown County
Sheriff William Utter had found them out last Saturday night, will
appear in Brown County Court next Monday night.
Ora Wilder, 83, owner of the barn where the fights were held,
was among those fined. Judge William Stapleton also ordered the
30 chickens confiscated during the raid to be returned to their
owners. " There is nothing illegal about owning chickens,"
commented the judge. "It's what you do with them."
WASHINGTON- WILLIAM J. CASEY, reversing his earlier
position, has agreed to give up control and knowledge of his extensive stock holdings if he wins Senate confirmation as Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) . Casey's
concession came, Capitol Hill sources said, after Sen. William
Proxmire, D-Wis., bluntly warned Casey in private that he would
fight the nomination on the Senate floor unless he put his holdings
into a ' 'blind" trust while holding the SEC post.
Casey's stocks are said to be worth at least several million
dollars. Casey, 58, is a nationally prominent tax lawyer and a law
partner of former GOP National Chairman Leonard Hall. At
another Senate hearing today on the subject of campaign contributions, Joseph Galifano, the Democratic Party's lawyer,
asserted that Casey's appointment to the SEC resulted from his
contribution of $17,500 to President Nixon's election campaign in
1968.
MONTIVIDEO, URUGUAY
- Tupamaro terrorists freed
kidnaped U . S . a g ric ulture
expert Claude L. Fly Tuesday
night and left him on a hospital
doorstep for treatment of a
heart a ttack. Fly said he was
"excited at finding myself
among free m en a gain."
Fly, 65, of Fort Collins, Colo.,
wrote from c aptivity in
December that he had been kept
for months in a four-by-six foot
chicken coop " suspended in
time and space."
JEFFERSON, OHIO
Taking their cue from employes
of the Ashtabula County
treasurer's office, now all but
three worker s in the auditor's
office a re playing sick, and the
bags of property tax payments
continue to pile up.
County Treasurer Howard
Fortney remained the only
employe in the treasurer's
office for the second straight
day Tuesday as eight employes
continued a "sick-out" protest
of wages , working conditions
and staff cutbacks. And in the
auditor's office, only three of
the 21 employes showed up
Tuesday in the first day of a
protest of their wages .
WASHINGTON - ARMY Sgt.
Gordon R. Roberts, 20, of
Middletown, Ohio, was given
the Medal of Honor Tuesday in
ceremonies at the White House
for his action during a firefight
in Vietnam July 11, 1969.
The citation said Roberts was
leading a platoon a gainst fortified enemy bunker positions
which had pinned down an
adjoining company. Despite
enemy fire , he crawled to a
bunker , silenced it and con-

tinued his one-man assault on a
second bunker. He then assisted
in moving WOWlded Gls from
exposed positions on a hilltop.
Roberts' mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. Al Rusell,
and their son, Lee, live in
Lebanon, Ohio.

the increase.
Netzley said he favored increasing benefits to persons
retired at least 10 years to allow
for cost-of-living increase, but
that for those retired less than
10 years, state pensions are
"very generous. "
He said he would favor
building a cost-of-living factor
into the pension formula for
those retired 10 years or more.
· State retirement benefits are
calculated on a formula taking
into consideration the employe's length of service and
pay scales. The money is taken
from fWlds built up through
contributions by the employe
and the public employer.
Pemberton
added
an
emergency clause to the bill so
benefits could be increased by
June 1.

Three K illed
In Shack Fire
Near Marietta
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI)
Three per sons were killed early
today when a fire swept through
a one-story tar-paper shack
several miles north of here.
The victims were identified as
Bertha Ferus, 80, and her two
daughters, Louise and Dorothy,
both believed to be in their 40s.
Officials from the nearby
Lowell Fire Department said a
neighbor reported the blaze
about 5:30a.m. after she heard
the screams of the women.
Authorities believe the blaze
started after one of the women
poured kerosene in a coal stove.
The structure was leveled.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Gleo
Smith, Apple Grove; Mrs.
William Stone, Ravenswood ;
Mrs. Haskell Gillispie, New
Haven; Mark Allen Doss, Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Rosetta
Young, West Columbia.
DISCHARGES- Mrs. Gerald
Higginbotham, Billie Joe
Harrington, Grethel Wright,
Mrs. Charles Turner and
daughter, Robert Darst, Mrs.
George Arrington and Mrs. Don
Hutchinson .
BIRTHS - Mar. 3, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rardin,
Sherman, W.Va .; Mar . 2 a son
to Mr. and Mrs. Don Becker of
Middleport, and Mar. 2, a
daughter to Mr . and Mrs.
Haskell Gillispie of New Haven.

Brighten Your Home
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A DISCOUNT
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SPE CIAL SALE!

FINE, SOFT, PLIABLE -VINYL

MEN'S RAINCOATS

BATH MAT SETS

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Buy one for
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auto,
one
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If
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you' d pay up to
$2 .98 set ...
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4 DAYS OF BIG SAVINGS! !
1st Quality - 131 Thread Ct

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FITIED - FOUR ELASTIC CORNERS
FU LL BED SIZE ONLY

SIZE 872 TO 11

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4

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SIZE 24x60

PLASTIC DRAPES

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IRREGULARS!
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3

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SIZE 0 TO 18 MO.

FRAMED
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WOMEN'S
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INFANTS
DRESSES

Pretty
florals
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Full color or new black
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2

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992 -5560
59 N. 2nd Ave. M iddleport, 0 .

MASON, W. VA.
STARTS
THURSDAY
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.I

your home a new look with several of these
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colors. Imperfects.

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Made with
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STORAGE CHESTS
Wood grain or f loral desi gn. Big 24
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Pacesetter, 4x8 sheet, White &amp; Medium·- 3.65
Fawn Chestnut, 4x8 sheet _________ 4.70
Autumn Plank, 4x8 sheet--------- 4.70
Sandstone, 4x8 .s heet------------ 4.98
White Glacier, 4x8 sheet. __________ 4.98
N.Y. Birch, 4x8 sheet_ ___ _ _______ 6.99
Sunset Birch, 4x8 sheet. _____ __ _ __ 10.50
Pre-Finished Moldings to Match
Nails and Glue :
Furring Strip~- ____________ 6( per ft
Ceiling Tile·"------ --------1r sq. ft.

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MASON

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WOMEN'S BILLFOLDS
With 32 to 100 Vues - Several Colors!

I

I

THEY'RE '1.00 VALUES!
ON SALE THURSDAY MORN ING

~----------------~
If Perfect - You Would Pay $1.00 Pair!
MENS NYLON SOCKS
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Light or Dark Colors
Stretches To rrt Size 10

~
~

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NYLON AREA RUG
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SIZE 2lx34

�8

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3, 1971

l'f)J..J. .\.""'S Pf)INTEIIS

'lake a Swag Lantp
Fa·on1 Egg Carton~
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAH POLLY-and Mrs. I. M S.-1 made a swag lamp
from styrofoam egg cartons. Use eight matching cartons
remove lids but lea\'e flaps on the ends where they arc
attached to the bottoms. Cut out the indentations where

American Heritage Was
Scout Banquet Theme
"Your American Heritage"
was the theme carried out at the
annual blue and gold banquet of
the Rutland Cub Scout Pack 240
held recently in the basement of
th~ Rutland United Methodist
Cl:iurch.
.Awards were presented to the
cubs and certificates of appreciation went to Harvey
Eitewine and Vernon Weber for
special service to the pack. Mrs.
B2rbara Van l\leter received a
t.1tee year service, pin, Purl H.
Van Meter was awarded a five
y • r pm and Mrs. Margaret
E~wards, den mother, received
a ..one year pin. Van Meter
r~ently resigned as cubmaster
of,..U1e pack and Dale Priddy.
a¢cepted the position.
;cubs receiving awards were
B'ent Bolin, Larry Tucker,
Oilane McDaniels and Andy
closs, bobcat pins; David
~vis, Timmy Fry, Andy
c:ross,
Tod
Snowden,
q~orge Ellis, Buddy Elh:~. John ::vtitchell, Gary
f1"iddy, Danny Edwards and
~ichael Gore,
wolf pat-

,f~: --Pomeroy....
-----~
~
f

~·

~:

y_

Personal Notes

~lumbus.
te~rs. Eulah Swan and Lamar

ltVons of Tuppers Plains and
tiJ-. and Mrs. Lindsey Lyons III
~d Lynette of Parkersburg,
\ !re Sunday afternoon guests
of- Mrs. Geneva Yates, Mid• port.
.Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hudson
and daughter, Lori Lynn, and
Mr. and Mrs. David Grueser,
Melanic Kay, Misty Dawn and
Glenn \'&lt;ere in Darlington, Pa.
over the weekend to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hogue and
Wendy Kay.
Mrs. Dilford Ferrell and
Teresa Ann, Mrs. Basic
Brickey, Michael and Randy,
were visitors with relatives and
friends in Sandy Hook, Ky. over
the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Estf Moore
were in Huntington, W. Va.
:&gt;aturday to visit his mother,
Mrs Fannie Moore, a patient at
the St. Mary's Hospital there.
Miss Marie Houdashelt of
thens was the weekend guest
f her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
ll!am Houdashelt.
.. Mrs. Damon Ferrell is ill at
'er home in Syracuse.

4 HOSPITAL NEWS
; Holzer Medical Center, First
ve. and Cedar St. General
isiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
ternity visittf'g hours 2·30 to
:30 p m Parents only on
&gt;ediatrics Ward.
'!o
DISC barges
~ Mrs. David A. Acree and
~ant daugrter, David M .
radshaw, Mrs. Chester L.
'ochran, Mrs. Cecil B. Deweese
nd infant son, Mrs. May
owler, Mrs. Dale A. Hysell,
~ s. ~ora M. Jones, Mrs.
...~regg E. Kennedy, Doris
lone, Mrs. Charles G. Mc1Comas and infant son, Mrs .
;;-Nellie Melvin, Mrs. Clarence
f3tanley ard Green W. Vance .

.....

-

Ill

I

t l
n~ ~.: dl
I ro •re.,:si\C
• · ·anp-r s ear r'y peat through
:- Jw 'iiH"&lt;:I· ,s VP st agP" of true
::·oal l1gnrt1'. IJituminou ~

~

and on llrltll
IH' milll'J"dl "r:1philt' i ~ pro

~&lt;.:l'd

thP eggs were. Start with two carton bottoms, place glue
heavily on the two flaps that will hold them together. Be
sure they are lined up, then staple together so they dry
in the proper position. Continue until all eight cartons
are glued together. (Polly's note-Our reader did not say
so but I am sure the cartons were arranged so there
are two on each side of thl' four-sided shade.) When glue
is thoroughly dry set cartons up and carefully draw a
pattern on plywood for the top of your lamp. Cut out like
the pattern. Mark center of top and make a small hole
in center for the light chain to go through. Spray paint
gold, black or any desired color. After I inserted my top
inside the shade I placed a few small tacks to hold it
firmly in place even though it was glued. Spray paint
the cartons, top and all, with at least two coats of paint
and then apply spray varnish on the outside and top.
Then it is time to add the stained glass windows which
are glued on the inside to back each hole that has been
cut out. I used real glass which my husband cut from
factory scraps. A swag lamp kit can be purchased at a
hobby shop to hang this from the ceiling.-CARMELTA

F.·nets Are
Semi-Boneless Chuck Roast
Glorifried Swiss Steak R~~~3L~~~e

BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND
The Emma
Smith Circle of the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints met at the home of
Ruth Bradford Thursday
evening, the second meeting
this year, in charge of the
leader Goldie Clendenin who
gave the opening prayer.
Program chairman Lucy
Taylor was in charge of
devotions, and Secretary
Beulah Roush read her report.
Business discussed was the
"pledge fund" and a report of
rugs sold showing that from the
dozen rugs on hand Jan. 1 seven
have been sold. After the
weaving bill was paid $14
remained and 5 rugs are left.
There were 11 present, 9
members and two guests, those
mentioned, and Golda Gillilan,
Ilah Roush, Eula Proffitt, Jane
Johnson and two granddaughters, and Pearl Proffitt.
Refreshments serve~ by the

hostess were cake, ice cream,
mints, coffee and punch.
CIRCLE NOTES
The Bradfords have had a
busy winter, getting acquainted
with a new grandson, having
Brenda home from college for
the holidays and entertaining
her boy friend from California.
Last week they had both of
Terri's children for the
weekend.
Our theme last year was
"Women search for paths of
Peace."
The new one this year is,
"Some One Touched Me." It
starts like this:
Someone touched me I think;
I'm not sure, I was so busy then,
Was it that girl next door, who
was left alone too much?
Or that older friend who has
become so forgetful?
Perhaps the boy who sits alone
at church?
The touch was so soft -

!('

Could it be the little girl who is hit and miss, with colorful
striped borders.
never chosen?
Any one interested call any of
Oh, Lord, help me to be more the members.
aware.
Forgive my self-centeredness.
I want to understand others,
and yetKind thoughts are not enough,
Help me extend myself in love.
Keep my courage strong to take
me out of my easy doing good.
May my testimony of faith be as
the cup that runneth over and
is continually filled.
Oh, Lord, let thy light and
power go out from me.
Our next meeting will be at
Beulah Roush's when a silent
auction is planned.
The Circle plans to make
more rugs using only the best of
clean used clothing, curtains
and bed clothes torn into wide
enough strips to make good
thick rugs, usu.ally 29 x 48 to 56
in., or made to order lengths;

•

Than. Ia

Mrs. E. J. Munt.,
Canton, Ohio
3-/o

© 1971 by NEA, Inc.
Todoy's

FUNNY
FUNNY,

will pay $1.00 for
tach original "funny" used. Send gags
to: Today's
1200 West Third
St., Cle.eland, Ohio 44113.

Prices Good Thru Saturday, March 6th.

I

•

lb.

79c:

lb.

1.09

Beef Rib Roast , 4!~h :1has • lb. Sl 09
Ground Chuck Ft~~
lb. 89c:
Beef Strips for Braising • lb. S119
Pork Chops cEN~~A~~~~~ ~~~~~uoEo lb. 79c
Boneless Pork Chops c~Nurr lb. Sl49
Whole Hog Sausagec~~li\RY ~~~- 69c:
Swift's Premium Franks ~~·59c
Skinless Wieners Hs1~v~gr 2P~ir. Sl29
Sliced Bacon G~~o •
!t:·. 69c:
Sliced Bacon Ends
5 ~~~ ggc:
Corned Beef swci~~~ PRRJ~~M
lb. $119
Sultana Meat Pies
I

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
The de 1 i &lt;;ate flounder
bakes a mmst, tasty fish
dish when seasoned with
tomato sauce, horseradish
and dill.
Serve with asparagus, car·
rots and a fruit salad for a
well-balanced and attractive
meal.
GLORIFRIED FILLETS
2 pounds flounder fillets or
other fish fiJlets, fresh
or frozen
1 can (8 ounces) tomato
sauce
1 tnbhpoon horseradish
1
t aspoon t
weed,
crushed
1 cup flour
~ teaspoons salt
Dash pepper
Grated Parmesan cheese
Chopped parsle)'
Thaw frozen fillets Skm
fille:s and cut into servingsize portions. Combine tomato sauce, horseradish and dill
weed. Combine flour, salt
and pepper. Dip fish in tomato mixture and roll in seasoned flour. Fry in hot vegetable oil at moderate heat
for 4 to 5 minutes or until
brown. Turn carefully and
fry 4 to 5 minutes longer or
until fish is brown and flakes
easily when tested with a
fork . Drain on absorbent
paper. Sprinkle fish with
cheese and parsley.

I

,

I

I

I

lb.

I

$$$$ Look What One Dollar Will
Buy!
$$$$
0
0

Bush's Shellie Beans
Luck's Beans PI~~CV,.GJiARTE~~~~~:N.
Mason Area PfeifferDressings VARI1TJEs • •
A&amp;P Apple Sauce . . • •
News., Notes Libby's Cut Green Beans •
Mr. and Mrs. John M.
WHOLE KERNEL
Grueser, Mason, are an- A&amp;p Corn OR CREAM STYLE • • •
nouncing the birth of a son,
Kevin Jay, on February 18th, at A&amp; p Potatoes w~36~oOR • • •
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed seven pounds lona Tomatoes • • • • •
and ounces.
I

•

9

3:::· $1°° Freestone Peaches 0~!L~~~L • • 3 ~~- 51° Patrician BA~~~~~M
3 :-.:! $1°
3J:U':$100
• 4 ~~:· 51°0 Libby's Sweet Peas . . • • 4::· 51°0 Scott Towels . . . . •
• 3 t~!: s1oo lona Cut Green Beans . . . &amp;·~.:z· 5 1° 0 Me rico Biscuits RsEtf~i:~,&amp;R. • • 5~~~$100
.5 ~n:· 51°0 lona Sweet Peas . . . . • 6~~!· $100 Encore Margarine . • •
. 4 ~: s1oo A&amp;P Spinach • • • • • • 5~~ $100 White Bread p;,~~~R • • •
4 $1 oo
5 $1 00 Egg Noodles tANG~ • • • • • 3 ;ki~. 51°0 Rye Bread p~~~~R • • • • • 3 $100
. 6 51°0 Pork &amp; Beans :ANtE • • • • 3 ~ s1oo Jane Parker Donuts • • • . 3 $100
.·4 ~ 51°0 Red Beans WIT~~~~rt~iAvY • • • • 3 ~- s1oo Twin Rolls .R~AJ:~ ~:lR\~. • • . 3 $100
~----------------------------~
U
li/T
' COLLECT

•

I

3

6
2

the l.Hble, the bests P 1 I 1 n g nonfiction book is
·'The Common Sense Book
of Baby and ('hi ld Care." by
fil'njamin SpoLk, first pub
lisht·d in 1946.
1 '"

2

13-oz.

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7

pk-. ~
$cod Thnl Satur&lt;l•y;

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At!

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Oivtsfo'* A&amp;P'~
One P•r F~mily.

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In.

pkp.
pkp.

89c:
59c:
39c:
ggc
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_,._~ey 1r10m. AL~~.~r~JGs

FREE

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CH..R..CTEil

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MUGS

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Pogo Possum • Albert Alltgator • Howland Owl • Porky Pine
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Maxwell House

_

INSTANT COFFEE------1~~:._J:_r_l.89

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COUPON
M~r¢h 6tk, Itt

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17-oz.
cans

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in the Plaid .,
Stamp Ciltaloq!

Grapefruit Sections
• PAGE
ANN
Mayonna1se
Mrs. Filbert's
• FROZEN
0 range Ju1ce
Bl.rd's Eye INTERNATIONAL
VEGETABLES
Nescafe Instant Coffee
Geritol Tablets
Femiron Tablets
Sominex Tablets

•

20-oz.

Mr. and Mrs. Grueser are
also the parents of another son,
Scott, 3 years old.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Grueser, Mason; Mr.
and Mrs . James Tyree,
Syracuse,
0 .;
greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Eber Roush, Mason; Mrs. Lula
Bass, Syracuse, 0 .; Mrs. Ollie
Tyree, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
George Grueser, Minersville;
great-great-grandmother is
16-oz.
Mrs. Mollie Guinther, Syracuse,
e::~o I
1
cans
0.
~t.
I
1
J8r
Tommy Roush, a sophomore
l-Ib.
at West Virginia University,
FA~~;~~~z:,~~Fr 1
1 bowl
visited over the weekend with
A&amp;P
v ..•k
6-oz.
I
his parents, Mr. and :Ylrs.
t"an-.
Albert Roush, Letart, W. Va.
lO-oz.
1
pkgs.
I
Mr . and Mrs. Eber Roush
~z.$}89
entertained with a dinner in
honor of Miss Mary Dudding's
1
o~t~o$229
birthday on Sunday. Attending
btl.
1 of SO
were Miss Dudding, Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Ryan and family,
btl.
I Of 18
Mrs. Emma Ryan, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush, Kathy - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
Rizer, Robert Dudding, Mr. and
lb. ' $197
.\'Irs. Willie Davis, Middleport;
• • 1 CAD
Everette Roush, Racine; W i l l i s ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "
'1udd111g and Randy, New ~:a:;::::c·VALUABLE COUPON!il·:a:~
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, nd Vlr. and :vir~.
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CUT FROM CORN
FED BEEF FOR
A TENDER JUICY
ROAST

I

Orl uffiD •

=-

~n!llr&lt;lt'

Circle's Rug Project Showing Some Profits

DEAH POLLY-I would like to know how to clean
bed pillows filled with feathers and covered with
old-fashioned blue-and-white ticking.-MH.S. R. 0. ,J.

ches; and David Davis, Timmy
DEAR GIRLS-Real colored glass may not be obtainFry, Michael Gore, Mike
easily for all of you but use a lining of colored celloMusser, Gary Priddy and able
phane or colored marbles could be glued in the holes.
Danny Edwards, one year pins. Some think half marbles that can be bought at hobby
Den 1 presented a skit entitled shops look prettier than whole ones. Be sure to make the
"You Are There," pertaining to holes for any designs before starting to glue the carton
great men of history. Den 2 led halves tobether. The more holes, the more light and
in the pledge to the flag and sparkle.-POLLY
devotions were given by Van
Meter. Gary Swope, Meigs
County game protector, showed
a film, "The Gifts," on pollution
in conjunction with the scout
SOAR (Save Our American
Resoures) program.
A potluck dinner was held
preceding the meeting. Approximately 40 persons attended. The cake was provided
·by the Pomeroy National Bank,
Rutland Branch, and the
Rutland Furniture Store furnished the ice cream.
The cubs recently toured the
Meigs County jail, and during
the month had a display in the
bank window.

l

Mr. and Mrs. Terry 'ichols
and son, David, have returned
to their home in Medina after a
weekend visit here with Mr and
?vlrs. Raymond Butcher, Mrs.
Augusta Will, Mr. and Mrs.
James Autherson and Patricia,
Syracuse.
.Dr. and Mrs. Everett A.
Tracy of Columbus were the
week
ests of
cr,
Mrs
11 Trac)
Mel
1\nn
daughter of Mr and
Snyder VISited S
with her grandparen
~s. Frank Buddy Reynolds
atld daughter, Lisa, Mason, W.
'4. while her parents moved
ifilo their new home in
QOlumbus Mr. and Mrs.
: ynolds were Sunday dinner
g)lests of the Snyders in

Polly's Problem

GQQd Thru Satvra~v. M.,rch bitt. Jn
Alt C9lumiM Oivi1ion A&amp;P'"
One- Per Family,

•

�r

,____..._-------l
Social !

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3, 1971

PTA
Role
Discussed
•
•

..
•

•

School financing and the
PTA's role in secw-ing more
money for education was
discussed by Robert Bowen,
Meigs County Superintendent of
Schools, at a meeting of Meigs
PTA representatives Monday
afternoon.
Bowen, who serves as
legislation chairman for the
Meigs County Superintendents
Assn., led in a discussion of the
various aspects of school
financing, how funds are
provided for the three local
school districts, how they are
apportioned and the factors
governing the amount each
school district receives.
The superintendent praised
the Meigs County PTA units for
their efforts in the past toward
passage oflocal bond issues and
operating levies and w-ged their
continued support.
"Meigs County's record is
very good at a time when many
schools in Ohio are in serious
financial trouble," Bowen
commented.
He urged that PTA members
be in constant contact with their

Report. The report of the Task
Force w-ges "a total overhaul of
Ohio's present patch-work tax
system in favor of a more
streamlined system based on
ability to pay," it was pointed
out. Specific plans for
alleviating the school financial
crisis will be presented by Gov.
Gilligan to the Ohio General
Assembly on March 15.
A legislative bulletin is
mailed to every PTA unit
president and the County
Council president at frequent
intervals as a means of keeping
members alert to school
legislation.
On March 11 and 12 in
Columbus a seminar on
financing public elementary
and secondary education in
Ohio will be held. Attending the
seminar will be Mrs. Harold
Lohse, District 16 director, Ohio
PTA; Mrs. Richard Vaughan,
Meigs
County
Council
president; and Mrs. Joe Bolin,
County Council legislative
chairman.
Mrs. Lohse, Mrs. Vaughan,
and Mrs. Bolin along with
representatives from the
Middleport, Pomeroy, Rutland,
Salem Center, and Letart Falls
Mrs. Lewis Sauer, Mrs. Earl PTA units were present for the
Knight and Mrs. John Kircher Monday meeting with the
joined the 14 members of the county superintendent.
club for the workshop.
Mrs. Uoyd Blackwood, vice
First Wildlife Refuge
president, had charge of the
President Theodore Roosemeeting during which time a velt. by executive order,
letter was read from Charlene made Pelican Island in FlorHoeflich of The Daily Sentinel ida's Indian River a National Wildlife Refuge in 1903.
regarding participation in the This was the first national
weekly garden club column wildlife refuge established in
"Green Thumb Notes." Action the United States.
on participation was postponed
until the April meeting.
Gideons
Members responded to roll
The
Gideons
, an organizacall by naming their favorite
tion which places Bibles in
spring flowering tree. Coffee hotel rooms, hospitals, prisand assorted cookies were ons and schools, was organserved by the hostesses, Mrs. B. ized by three traveling men
B. Zeigler, Mrs. Titus and Mrs. at Janesville, Wis., on July
1, 1899.
Homer Russell.

legislators when bills are
pending pertaining to school
legislation, making particular
references to the tax reform
program which will go before
the current session of the Ohio'
Legislature.
Facets of the program
of the Ohio PTA legislative committee were
noted dw-ing the meeting where
representatives were w-ged to
take the information back to the
local units.
It was reported that Ohio PTA
officials meet regularly with
representatives of other
education groups in Ohio to
develop uniform efforts toward
achieving tax reform for more
adequate state financing for
public schools.
These include the Ohio
Education Association, the
Buckeye Association of School
Administrators and the Ohio
School Boards Association.
In January the Ohio PTA
"position paper" was submitted
to Gov. John J. Gilligan's
Citizens Task Force on Tax

Velvet Roses are Made

•

•

The art of making velvet
roses was demonstrated by
Mrs. John Kincaid and Mrs.
James Titus at a meeting
Monday of the Middleport
Garden Club in the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Members participated in a
workshop being assisted by the
two demonstrators in making
red velvet roses suitable for
floral arrangements. On display
at the meeting was an
arrangement of pink velvet
roses in a gold container made
by Mrs. Kincaid.
The flower arrangement of
the month displayed by Miss
Harrie Marie Smith was
wisteria with a shamrock accent in a Japanese container.

•

Calendar

Children's Exhibits Planned

I

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.
Practice for inspection to be
held.
DISTRICT 16, Ohio PTA
planning session for chairmen,
PTA presidents, and cultw-al
arts chairmen, 1 p.m. Thw-sday
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
Sacred Heart Church, 8 p.m.
Thursday, preceded by Mass
and Rosary, 7:15p.m.
SERVICE TEAM meeting,
Big Bend Neighborhood Girl
Scouts, 9 a.m. home of Mrs.
William Ohlinger.
JUNIOR
AUXILIARY,
Thursday, 6 p.m. at Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, home.
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. home of Mrs. Bertha
Parker.
RACINE AMERICAN Legion
Post 602, Racine, 8 p.m.
Thursday at post home with
James Roach speaking on drug
problems.
FRIDAY
WORLD DAY of Prayer
services, 7:45 p.m. Friday at
Alfred Methodist Church,
Thelma Henderson, leader,
sponsored by WSCS. Public
welcome.
SATURDAY
HIGH
SCHOOL
dance
Saturday Meigs Junior High in

A children's cultural arts
exhibit will be a highlight of the
District 16, Ohio Congress of
Parents and Teachers, Inc.
spring conference to be held on
May 1 at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Purpose of the exhibit is to
recognize the creative expressions of children and youth
and provide the means for them
to share their views and feelings
about the beauty in their world,
theme of the exhibit.
Judging will be done in three
age categories in fow- general
types of art work and the

Pastor to Speak
At World Service

winning entnes from the
district competition will be
entered in the state cultw-al arts
exhibit next fall. The state
winning entries will be
exhibited at the National PTA
Convention.
Each local PTA unit will be
permitted to make one entry in
each category and schools are
w-ged to plan their own art
shows now to select school
winners.
The age level categories,
according to criteria released
by Mrs. Harold Lohse, district
director, are primary (kindergarten
through third
grade); elementary (grades
fow- through six); junior high
(seven through ninth); and
senior high, (tenth through
twelfth).
The types of art work to be
accepted for display are in £owcategories as follows:
Art - graphics, oil, water
base, water colors, collages and
sculpture (no pottery).
Music - any original song or
music written by an individual
student.
Poetry - any former style of
poetry on the theme of the
beauty in their world.
Essays - Theme to be "The
Beauty in My World."
Entries will be judged on the
basis of originality, imagination
and perceptivity in depicting
the "Beauty of their world,"
and evidence of creativity and
talent, by a jw-y of specialists
selected by the conference

chairman.
All music, poetry and essays
are to be sent to Mrs. Leo Crew,
197 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy-:
pnor to April 20. Due to the
length of time involved in :
judging literature, these entries
will be judged prior to the
conference. No literature entries will be accepted on con- •
ference day, according to the
rules.
All entries in the art category
will be received during the 9: 30
to 10:30 conference registration
time, with judging to begin •
immediately at 10 p.m.
First, second and third place
ribbons will be awarded to
winners in all categories.
Participant ribbons will be
given to all other entries.
Winners will be announced
dw-ing the conference how-s.

SHIRT

YOUR BIRTHSTONE
HER BIRTHSTONE

Burn Though Green
Ash, because its wood contains inflammable oleic acid,
a fatty acid constituent of
olive oil, burns well when
green. The. ash tree belongs
to the olive family. Wood of
the pine family also burns
when green, due to resin in
the wood.

The Rev. Russell Lester will
speak on "Relating Ow- Vision
to Commitment and Action" at
the World Day of Prayer services to be held by Chw-ch
Women United of Meigs County
Friday at the Syracuse United
Presbyterian Chw-ch.
"New Life Awaits" is the
theme of the service to begin at
2 p.m. An offering committed to
helping others through the
In tercon tin en tal Mission
program on six continents will
be taken.
Meigs County women will be
joining with others in 25,000
communities in the United
States uniting prayers with
people in 155 countries on six
continents. The service will be
dedicated to affirming faith, . .- - - - - - - - - •
hope and love in facing issues
and needs of the world today
and tomorrow.

Middleport 8 to 11 p.m. spansored by Ohio Public School
Employees Association. Jays
will emcee.
NATIVITY
OF
Mary
Deanery, 2 p.m. Sunday, St.
Paul's Catholic Chw-ch, Athens.

MEETING DELAYED
A meeting of the Meigs
County American Red Cross
originally scheduled for this
Thw-sday will be held instead at
7:30p.m. on Thursday, March
11, at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

HAND -PAINTED Hand - painted colors on
white enamel pendant dangling from a white leather
thong matches the ring. The
set from Coro for spring '71.

FI~ISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5

svg£}~
12 KT. GOLD FILLED- STERUNG

Use'Our Free Parking lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

2nd

We Celebrate With Our

THIS SECOND ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
FEATURJ;S LOWER PRICES, FREE GIFTS
JVD PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWA

MARCH 3 TO 9

•

SECOND ANNIVERSARY
BIG "9" SPECIAL VALUES

BILTMORE

Luncheon Loaf............ 3 ~!::·1.00
Hart 'S C0 r "-~~-~~~~-~..~~:~~...... 8 1.00
1.0 0
Dog Food.~::.~.~--~~~~-~..........13
3
Coff ee...~:.~---~~-~~:..~~~~:.~~~~.............. ~~-n 2 .4 9
• t o Beans ......................4
P 1n
G rape J e II y ......................2

ROUND STEAK

•

Whole Kernel

303

cans

USDA
CHOICE
TENDER

f:rns

MAXWELL HOUSE

lb.

PEAK BRAND

•

bag

lb.

BY KRAFT

jar

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"
Right reserved to limit quantities

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective Mar. 3-9

1?;.:;··

Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 7
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

Our Own

Pork Sausage..~-~~?.t.~:. 2 :~~ 99~
e
99e
W 1e ne rs ..........................................?.~~... .
Jowl Bacon.~~~~.~.~.............. 2 !~~ 79e
20

FRENCH CITY'S BESl

ct.

Free Plastic Bag
Idaho SupreTne
Instant Potatoes

Florida Jumbo

CELERY
bch.
1 9~

(3 1A oz. bag)
Register For Free
Meat Items In
Meat Department

•

Cans

DURING 2ND ANNIVERSARY

TABLE ROYALE SOFT

DAIRY FAIR

ICE MILK
SEVERAL FLAVORS

12 gal.

1

49

lb. 9~

ROMES

4 lb. bag

YELLOW
ONIONS

3 lb. bag

e

•

• F•111•1ng.:.&lt;?~ ......~~-~:. 39~
Ch erry P 1e
,
e
e
39
M a rga r 1ne.~i!~..~~t.t:.~ .........................~~~~
THANK

FRUIT PIES
Special
Sale 39~

CABBAGE

..........................3 No. 2lh 1 00 APPLES 49e
P e a ch e s...DEL.....MONTE

No Purchase Necessary

HOLSUM REGULAR 59e

FRESH SOliD

Freel As Long As Supply Lasts!

can
lb.

Popcorn ......~--~~~-~.:~ ...................... 2 ~~g 2 5 ~
Fabric Softener.~~~--~-~~~.~.....~.~~~- 6 9 e

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

Potatoes

19e
10 lb. bag

99~

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 3, 1971

Four Fined By Mayor
Four defendants were fined
Tuesday night by Middleport
Mayor C. 0. Fisher.
Vernon Little, Middleport,
was fined $50 and costs and
sentenced to 30 days in jail on
conviction of disturbing the
peace. The fine and sentence
were suspended providing Little
maintains good behavior. He

was also fined $15 and costs on
charges of destruction of
property.
Others fined were Harold
Little, 35, Rutland, $10 and
costs, intoxication; John V.
Martin, 51, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, intoxication, and Dorthy
V. Schwab, 46, Mason, W. Va.,
$5 and costs, assured clear
distance.

Mildred Martin Died
Mrs. Mildred Martin: 62,
Painesville, former Meigs
County resident, died Tuesday
at the Cleveland Clinic
following a short illness.
Born at Langsville, Mrs.
Martin moved to Painesville in
1949 where she taught at the
Fairport Harbor School a
number of years. At the time of
her death she was the home
economist for the agricultural
agent at Painesville. She
graduated from Ohio University
in 1936.
Mrs. Martin was a member of
the
Painesville
United
Methodist Church and of the
WSCS of that church. She was a
past matron of Harrisonville
Chapter 255, Order of Eastern
Star, and a member and a past
president of the Altrusa Club in
Painesville. She was listed in
"Who's Who of American
Women," and belonged to both
the American and Ohio Home
Economists Associations. She

Shop Fri. &amp; Sal Til 9

I

Tuesday

was a member of the Ohio
Education Assn., the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Agents
Association, Delta Kappa
Gamma Sorority, and of the
American Association of
University Women.
Surviving are her husband,
Joseph; her mother, Mrs. Vona
McKnight, Rutland; an aunt,
Mrs. Fern Stansbury, also of
Rutland; two stepchildren,
Joseph G. of Fountain Valley,
Calif., and Mrs. Lorna Modic of
Brea, Calif., and five grandchildren. She was preceded in
death by her father, Everett E.
McKnight in 1960.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Friday at the Painesville United Methodist Church.
Graveside rites will be conducted at 10 a.m. Saturday at
the West Union St. Cemetery in
Athens with Dr. Clyde Pinnell
officiating. Friends may call at
the Hughes Funeral Home in
Athens from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

POMEROY
VALUES TO 1.00 YARD

STIFFLER'S FIRST!

45 INCH WIDE

Sport &amp; Dress FABRICS
Bi~ Asst. of High Quality Sewing Fabric. Fancy
prmts and sport fabric in scores of colors and
patterns.

50!

Spelling Bee
Date Set for
March Tenth
The annual Meigs County
Spelling Bee will be held March
16 at the Chester elementary
school under direction of Mrs.
Greta Suttle, a county schools
supervisor.
Robert
Bo
superintenden
announced arr
the Bee Tuesday
county board of education met.
Bowen said a representative
of the Division of Elementary
and Secondary Education, Ohio
Department of Education, will
visit Meigs County March 10 to
outline the newly established
elementary standards to
elementary school principals.
It was reported that Bowen
will attend an Educable Mentally Retarded Model Program
Seminar in Columbus this
Thursday and Friday.
Transfers of funds were
approved by the board. Attending were Bowen and board
members Virgil Atkins, George
Perry, Gordon Collins and
Harold Roush.

the railroad. He was a member
of the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene.
Surviving are his wife,
Goldie; three daughters, Mrs.
Wanda Vining, Rutland; Mrs.
Naomi Schoonover, Grove City;
Mrs. Bessie Bennett, Parkersburg, W.Va.; two sons, James
and Billy Joe, both of Columbus; two sisters, Mrs. Leafy
Chasteen, Felton, Delaware,
and Mrs. Lucille Hiett,
Zanesville; a brother, Dwight of
Florida, 13 grandchildren, and
three great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
with the Rev. Uoyd Grimm
officiating. Burial will be in the
Miles Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Martin Funeral
Home in Rutland any time on
Friday and until 12 noon on
Saturday when the body will be
taken to the church.

Whitehead
Confirmed

WASHINGTON, D. C. - The
Senate today unanimously
confirmed
Donald
W.
Whitehead as the fourth
Federal Cochairman of the
Appalachian Regional Commission. Whitehead, a Boston
attorney who has been the
Commission's General Counsel
for the past year, succeeds John
B. Waters, Jr. of Sevierville.
The 42-year old Whitehead
said today that, "I want to
strongly point out that I fully
support President Nixon and
the concept of Federal revenue
sharing, and I want to emSnow changing to flurries phasize that the Appalachian
tonight and colder with lows in Region Commission has been a
the mid 20s southeast. Cloudy vehicle for strengthening state
and continued cold Thursday and loc~l go~ernmen~."
with a chance of snow flurries' · Stressi~g his commitment ~o
east. Highs in the upper 20s to the social and economic
mid 30s
development of the Ap.
palachian Region, Whitehead
explained that "my first objective will be the continued
improvement of the quality of
life for the people of Appalachia."
"I intend to devote all of my
energies to this task," the 1951
graduate of Williams College
said.

Weather

Death
Blow

WASffiNGTON (UPI)- Senate Democratic Whip Robert C.
Byrd, D-W. Va., said today a
Nixon administration directive,
if implemented, could deal "a
death blow" to three coal research projects involving pollution and the nation's fuel shortage.
In a speech prepared for the
Senate, Byrd cited an unsigned
directive by the Office of Management and Budget dated Jan.
7 which he said apparently only
applies to the Office of Coal
Research.
The senator said the directive
requires that new coal research
projects, along with major modifications of existing projects,
receive about one-third funding
from sources other than federal government.
Byrd said he was not attacking the principle of the directive . "What is being questioned,
however, is the sudden application of this directive , with no
advance warning, to projects
either already funded or in the
negotiation stage," Byrd said.

BONDS FORFEITED
Marjorie Darst, Rutland,
forfeited bonds totaling $150
Tuesday night to the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar.
A $100 bond had been posted on
charges of resisting arrest and
a $50 bond posted for reckless
operation. Fined $10 and costs
for intoxication was William
Reeves, Pomeroy.

BEGIN TONIGHT
The first of the community
Lenten services being held each
Wednesday in Pomeroy by the
ministerial association will be
at 7:30 this evening at Grace
Episcopal Church with the Rev.
Arthur Lund, rector of St. Paul
Lutheran Church, speaking. All
the services will begin at 7:30
p.m .
NOW YOU KNOW
The official newspaper of the
Soviet Railroad Transport
Workers' Union is called Gudok,
which tran~lafPs into English as
"Toot."

LADIES FALL &amp; WINTER

DRESSES
ONE LARGE RACK
Large rack of
Ladies
Fall
and
Winter
Dresses.
Regrouped for
final sale.

1

REG. 14.99 - 81hxll h' ROOM SIZE TWIST VISCOSE

Visc!!c~~~ w~f~~~eg.
'1
0
-r----~~----------_.EA._4---------------------~.----------------------I

~illiann (;rahwocn I*ed VVe£Lnesdayi-1-4.9•5•V•a-lu_e_._ch·o-ic•e•o•f-Pa_«_e.rn_s_.__
William Gerald Graham, 63, a
retired New York Central
Railroad telegraph operator of
Rutland, died early today at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Graham was taken to the
hospital at 4: 20 a.m. by the
Middleport E-R squad. Death
was attributed to a heart condition.
He had retired in 1958 from

VALUES TO 14.99

VALUES TO 12.99
LADIES CORDUROY

COATS

•a

One small group.
Broken sizes. Out
they go at this low,
low price.

EA.

VALUES TO 10.99

~

VAk TO 4.99

VALUES TO 3.99

VALUES TO 12.99

MENS WINTER

SHIRTS

CHILDREN'S
SHOES

Now

•2

Asst. styles and bright color
plaids and plains. Small,
rnedium and large. Long
sleeves. Stock up now. Don't
miss this value.

EA.

BIG GROUP LADIES

LADIES SHOES FALL SHOES
44
7

One Big Group of
Famous Ladies Fait and
Winter Shoes. Good
roup of sizes and
styles. Heels and Flats.

4

One Big Group Flats Heels. Suedes - leather,
good group of sizes.
Asst. styles. Values to
6.99. Close Out Group.

PR.

2

PR.

VAL. TO 4.98

VA LUES TO 6.99

FALL &amp; WINTER STYLES

•2

One big table of closeout numbers. Oxfords
- Loafers - Straps. Big
saving here. Shop
Stifflers.

PR

•

JACKETS
Nylons
Mens
Corduroy
Sport
Coats. All regrouped
for quick sale. See
these for value plus.
Values to 12 .99.

'5
EA.

VALUES TO 11.99

BOYS
OXFORDS
and
LOAFERS

Mens Famous Campus

Fall Sweaters

3

One Big Table of Boys Better
Oxfords and Loafers Grouped
for Final Clearance Broken
sizes. Values to 4.98.

Asst. Coat and Cardigan
Styles. Famous Campus
Brand. Big group asst.
fabrics and styles. Values
to 11.99. You save big on
this group.

6

•

EA.

PR.

FAMOUS BOBBIE BROOKS
FALL AND WINTER

SPORTSWEAR
One of Famous Bobbie
Brooks Sportswear at 1f2
Price. Skirts - sweaters ponchos
slacks
sweaters . Close Out
Group.

1y:

Fine nylon tricot half
slips in white and pastel
colors. Beautiful lace
trim. S-M -L.

REGULAR 1.99 - 27 IN.
Fl RST QUALITY

EA.'

'1

YD.

100% Nylon

First qualify Ladies
Better Undies 5 6-7.
Asst. colors. Fancy
trims.

2 5e
Pep
BED SHEETS

White Muslin

72xl08, 8lx99

Plain colors and stripes.
45 pet. rayon - 45 pet.
polyester. First quality.
2112" nylon binding.
Asst. colors.

'5

REGULAR 59e VALUE
FANCY SPONGE

SHIRTS BATH MATS
~~i'~] 7

New Spring bright colors .
Short s l eeve, 100 percent
nylon. S-M L. Permanent
press. Stock up now.

GIRLS &amp; PRE-TEENS

REGULAR 3.99 - 72x90
FINE NEEDLEWOVEN

MENS REG. 1.99
Permanent Press

·.· ..

COTTON-NYLON-RAYON

EA.

Fancy Vinly F o a m 3
Back Bath Mats.
Fancy
patterns.
•A5~snr·fpt1 Colors.

Seamless stretch 100
per
cent
nylon
stretch. Asst. colors.
Broken sizes. This
sale now ---

$

1

PR.

Carpet Runner BLANKETS
2 for

Close Out Numbers.
Only two colors. Reg.
1.99 yd. First quality.
Good patterns. Save
now.

REGULAR 1.99

Fancy Panties PANTY TIGHTS

p riCe
•

2

VALUES TO 39e

3

PR.

VALUES TO 1.59

Ladies, Misses, Childrens

l :79e~ SPORT SNEAKERS
81x108 Famous
PEPPERELL

42x36 White
PEPPERELL

SHEETS

1.99

Pillow Cases

99~ PR.

EA.

REG. 89~ • 12x14"
PLASTIC FRAMED

finish. Big asst. of
subjects.

4

'1
PR.

VA LUES TO 98e
12x16" Natural Wood Framed

PICTURES

PICTURES

f'r~t:::~
fini~~c~~::~~
Beautiful
Oilette

Comfortable
Duck
fabric uppers. Moulded
sole. Sizes 12 to 4.
Womens 5 to 11. White,
blue and black.

7~
~~~~~~~~tio~ilet~~,
•
Fine Pictures, in
natural
finished
hardwood
frames.
Asst. Subjects.

0

•
·-----------------~----------------~------------------~----------------~
VALUES TO 4.98 MENS

WORK AND DRESS

EA.

EA.

Values To
3.99 &amp; 4.99

REG. 1.49 - 10 PIECE
Famous Anchor Hocking

1~·

Choose from two
popular
colors,
avocado or honey
gold . Madrid 10 pc.
set boxed, 13 oz. size.

'1
SET

VALUES TO 1.99
Assorted Wood Framed

PICTURES

RUBBERS BEVERAGE SETS
Values to 4.98 in this
roup. Mens heavy
Y work rubbers
nd dress closeouts.
Broken sizes .

EA.

rt~~woo~t;:;;re:~~

One Small Lot. Fina l
closeout Coat and Slipon styles. Broken sizes.
Asst. co lors. Save Big
Now.

Grouped for Final
Clearance on this
group.

88

~

ea.

-

EA.

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