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Tense, Difficult Times Ahead

President Hopeful Mideast
~$~ Combatants Will Exercise
!:~::.~

I Restraint, Reach Accord
•

•

By HELEN THOMAS
situation restrained.
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Pres"The situation in my view is
ident Nixon says there are days somewhat different than in 1967
due to the fact that there is
::::::::::::::::::~:::::::;=;:;:;:;~:::::;::·;:,,.;.::; .::;:;:;:-::::::::::::·::::;::::;::::::::::::::
closer communication between
the (big) powers and both sides
An Exclusive
have been through a war," the
President said in an interview
of tension and difficulty ahead with UPI.
now that the Middle East
"Neither side will gain and
cease-fire has expired, but he is both will lose" if hostilities are
optimistic the United States and resumed he said, adding that he
the Soviet Union can exert could not see either side
enough influence to keep the determining to deliberately

break the calm.
"Breaking up the peace
would not be in the interest of
either. We can expect some
days of tension and difficulty,
but there are great forces at
work for a live-and-let-live
attitude," he said.
"We're trying to get a ceasefire. We're very much on top of
it. We have our eyes open. We
don't intend to escalate the
rhetoric with inflammatory
statements which could only
have a detrimental effect ...
"We're approaching this in a
very measured, very realistic
way. We're under no illusions

how difficult it will be . We're
not predicting something might
not happen. But there are great
forces that will be restraints ...
"I'm optimistic in the long
run," he added. "Insofar as
getting an agreement soonthat is tough going."
He said there will be "ups
and downs" in the coming
weeks but "both of the major
powers will exert a restraining
effort."
The President telephoned a
UPI reporter shortly after 3
p.m. EST Sunday primarily to
discuss the worship service

which was held Sunday morning
in the East Room of the White
House. The service drew
criticism from some Jewish
quarters because it featured a
sermon by a rabbi plus the
doxology-a Christian hymn
which ends with the line
"Praise Father, son and Holy
Gh(lst."
"I considered it really a
brilliant sermon," Nixon said of
remarks made at the service
by Rabbi Joshua 0. Haberman
of the Washington Hebrew
Congregation.
He talked at length on the
Middle East situation and

cautioned members of the news
media: "Don't go overboard in
terms of optimism on peace in
the Middle East. We don't
intend to react to the day-today events, the headlines.
You're going to get a lot on
that score (headlines)."
He mentioned the situation in
Laos, apparently as an example
of day-to-{!ay changes, adding
"there are some troubles. But
if you read the history of wars
and quasi-wars, you do not view
them in the context of the dayto-{!ay so-called victories and
defeats, but in the long run."

The Daily Sentinel
•

Devoted To 'I7ae lnlere&amp;b Of The Meigs-Mawn Area

'VOl XXIII

NO. 228

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1971

Nice Boy
Riddles

Lines Alert
· Along Canal
f

•

By United Press International
The Egyptian Interior Ministry ordered a partial blackout
in Cairo today following expiration of the Middle East ceasefire at midnight. Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat warned
Sunday of the possibility of
Israeli reprisal raids against
Egypt.
Both Arab and Israeli troops
were on full aler the length of
the 103-mile Su~ Canal, but
hours after the 11ce expired
there • were no reports that
hostilities had been resumed.
Sadat refused to extend the
cease-fire but diplomats believed a truce would continue
on an hour-to-hour baSIS.
Official sourc
e
pa
1 ckout
lnte
Mmtste
maa, underlinl.n
ness wtth which
government views the sttuation. He
also issued "urgent orders on
civil defense measures" after a
meeting with his top aides.
A similar blackout order has
been nominally in effect since
the 1967 Arab-Israeli war but
many people paid little attention to it.

18 Autos

Both Israeli Foreign Minister
Abba Eban and Egyptian
Foreign Minister Mahmoud
Riad were reported beginning
new initiatives to ease the
Mideast situation.
The Israeli afternoon newspapers Maariv and Yedioth
Aharonoth said Eban would
leave for the United States
within eight days for talks in
New York with U.N. mediator
Gunnar V. Jarring and in
Washington with President Nixon. Both forecast increased
U.S. pressure on Israel to ease
its hardline stand.
Cairo reports said Riad would
call in the Big Four envoys in
Cairo to discuss developments
deast si • tior- and
ur e them to have their
countries shoulder responsibilities during this critical stage.
Military analysts of the two
Israeli newspapers said the real
danger on the canal now is how
local Egytian commanders
react to the new situation. They
said one mistake by a hotheaded local commander could
well start a fourth Middle East
War.

• · r---------------------------,
7\.T
•
B . ~+.

WORKSHOP HELD - Southeastern Ohio's Special Education Instructional Material
-center sponsored a Cardboard Carpentry Workshop at Gallipolis Saturday. Attending were
representatives from Vinton, Jackson, Meigs and Gallia Co\Ulties. Above, I to r, are Mrs.
Rachael Downie, Special Education Teacher of Pomeroy Elementary School; Richard
P&lt;linter, Lancaster High School t cher and leader of the work&lt;;hiJ!l· '~&lt;'annie ~ones of the
Guiding Hand School, Gallipolis, and Mrs. Kate Jarrell, Special Educat on teacher at Pomero&gt;Elementary School.

Poor Americans Will
Send Extra Income Tax

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Millions of Americans, many of
I
I them very poor, will discover
by April 15 that they owe the
: 1 ~ews
1 government money because not
I
By United Press International
enough taxes were withheld
from
their paychecks.
500 Blacks Demonstrate
The Internal Revenue Service
COLUMBUS -ABOUT 500 BLACK persons demonstrated in (IRS) said that although a
front of the Columbus Board of Education building today to majority of all taxpayers will
demand "equal rights" in the public school system. Superin- qualify for a refund this year
tendent Harold Eibling said a special task force would be created as every year, some persons
who normally expect to get
to investigate "racial prejudice" in the city schools.
money
back will have to send a
Les Brown a local radio anno\Ulcer and co-&lt;&gt;rdinator of the
check
along
with their returns
group, said the '"March of Concerns" was a proest to racism in the
schools which was highlighted last week during several incidents this year.
The problem is a fallout from
at Central High School. More than 30 youths were suspended from
the Tax Reform Act of 1969.
that school because of violence which stemmed from racial.
As often seems the case in
conflicts in the student body.
income tax matters, the rea-

.•• zn

rze1 s :

sons for the problem are
complex. But they all stem
from the fact that withholding
rates and actual tax rates start
from different assumptions.
There are about 25 bracketsranging from 14 to 70 per cent
of taxable income-&lt;~n the
government's income tax rate
schedule. This determines the
amount each taxpayer owes.
But there are only six
brackets- ranging from 16 to 31
per cent-on the withholding
schedule which determines how
much money actually will be
de&lt;lucted from paychecks.
In addition, there is a
difference in the income base
for withholding and actual

taxes. The final tax is applied
against "taxable income"earnings minus deductions and
the $625 personal exemption for
each member of the family.
Withholding rates are applied
against earnings minus exemptions although the rate structure is adjusted to account for
the 10 per cent standard
deduction.
All this, of course, has been
the situation for years. The
difference this year is the low
income allowance which Congress super-imposed on the tax
system as part of the Tax
Reform . Act. The provision
removes from the tax rolls
(Continued on Page 8)

Sudden Sam Cut Down
TUCSON, ARIZ. -CLEVELAND INDIANS pitching ace Sam
McDowell was arrested on charges of drtmken driving here early
Sunday morning, less than 48 hours after he arrived to join the
Indians in spring training.
McDowell was arrested after police stopped his car on East
Speedway Boulevard, in the area of many of this city's night
spots. He was stopped shortly after 3 a.m.

Hijack Gets Off to Montreal
MOBILE, ALA. - A YOUNG BLOND GUNMAN forced his
:way into the cockpit of a National Airlines jetliner while it was on
the ground during a scheduled stop here today and ordered the
pilot to fly him to Montreal.
The 17 passengers and four stewardesses were allowed to
leave the plane, which was on the ground for about two hours
before taking off for Canada at 9:30 a.m. EST. The flight to
Montreal normally takes about two hours and 45 minutes.

•

Now You Know

GREENWATER,
Wash.
(UPI)-A 16-year-old boy who
had "never been in any
trouble" was found lying face
down in the snow, killed by one
of two rifles he had used
Sunday to riddle passing
automobiles.
"I can't see any reason for
it," said William H. Egnew Sr.,
the father of the sniper and an
inspector for the Seattle Fire
Department "he was too good
humored ... too stable. "
William Herbert Egnew Jr.
perched in a "foxhole-type"
crevice atop a 100-foot cliff and
began spraying .22 caliber rifle
bullets at passing automobiles
on U.S. 410. At least 18 vehicles
were nit, including an ambulance which had come to take
away one of the four persons
wounded.
The unsuspecting targets of
the barrage said after they
never heard a word from the
youth, who only returned their
shouted pleas to stop shooting
with more bUllets.
"We were riding along just
talking about things, teen-agers,
drugs, things like that," said
Mrs. Mary C. Pluewnarz, 31,
Buckley, one of the victims.
"Then I heard something hit
the window ... and I saw a little
hole in the glass. I felt
something on my arm, like a
blow. I remember thinking that
a rock hit the window. I put my
hand on my sleeve and there
was blood."
Mrs. Pluewnarz, like the
others who were shot, was not
seriously wounded. The bullet
was removed at a hospital in
Enumclaw, about 14 miles west
of here.
"At first, I thought my
engine blew up," said Jaques
M. Lescan, 24, a ski instructor
wounded in the foot by a bullet
which pierced a vent window.
The other two wounded by
bullets were Eugene H. Terrien,
of Steilacoom, and his son,
Douglas, 12, who were on their
way to a skiing holiday.
Two deputy sheriffs and a
state trooper worked their way
up a logging road behind the
youth and approached him from
the rear.
When they could not gain
young Egnew's attention, "they
threw a snowball down at him,
but there was no movement,"
police said. "They inched up
and found him dead."

No formal announcemPnt
had been received by noon
today from the American
Electric Power Co. of its
plans to build a huge steam
electric power plant at
Cheshire and a deep coal
mine near Salem Center.
Sources close to the New
York Headquarters of AEP
had said over the weekend the
announcement should be
made today.

Attended Her Last Ball
NEW YORK - AN EX-SHOWGIRL, known as the Cinderella
of the Ozarks before she married one financier who fled to Brazil
to escape fraud charges and who later became secretary to
another, was found stabbed to death in her littered hotel room
Sunday, her face bashed in.
"It's a vicious murder and it seems as if it was done for
revenge," Deputy Police Inspector William Conneli~ said today.
The medica] examiner's office was trying to determme how long
she had been dead. The victim was Sarah Naomi Wallman Belle,
36 who had been married to Earl Belle and currently was
se~etary to Lowell Birrell. Both men had constructed financial
empires in the 1950s and both fled to Brazil when charged with
fraud .
GRANGE TO MEET
The Ohio Valley Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, will meet ThurJack Dempsey, the first boxer sday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
to draw a million-{!ollar gate, Mrs. Barbara Dugan, Adams
fought for purses as low as $2.50 Road. Members are to bring
early in his career.
sandwiches or pie.

rEN CENTS

PELFREY SCOR.t!:S - Roger Pelfrey ( 23) pumps in two points for the North Gallia
Pirates during action in Saturday's Class A Sectional Tourna'11ent game against Eastern.
Others shown are Eastern's Dennis Eichinger, Bob Caldwell, Mike Boring, Dave Smith (34)
and Howie Caldwell, far right. North Gallia players are Arthur Clark (31) and Dave Justus
(33).

KLEIN SPEECH SET
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Herbert Klein, director of communications for President
Nixon, will speak to the joint
annual meeting of the local
Rotary and Kiwanis clubs h~re
March 15.

DOWN WITH THE NETS - Assistant Eastern Coach
and High School Principal Bob Ord, right, issues instructions
to Bob Caldwell (32) who is cutting off the net after the
Eagles defeated North Gallia, 81-64 Saturday night to advance to the Class A District Tournament at Chillicothe.
Holding Caldwell for the traditional ceremony are Dave
Smith (34) and an unidentified player.

Objectors Must
Hate All Wars
participation m a particular
war are not within the purview
of the exempting section,"
Marshall ruled, "even though
the latter objection may have
such roots in a claimant's
conscience and personality that
it is religious in character."
The court's 8-1 judgment
affirmed lower court decisions
against two draft registrants.
Guy Porter Gillette of New
York City was sentenced to two
years in prison for refusing to
report for induction. Louis A.
Negre of Bakersfield, Calif.,
sought to get out of the service
after he was drafted but his bid
was rejected by a lower court.
In recent years the Supreme
Court has broadened the right of
draftees to conscientious objector status on general grounds
of opposition to war but the two
cases decided today were the
first to deal with specific obIt cost Rodney C. Hysell, 22, jections to a specific war . Pomeroy, an estimated $700 to Vietnam.
. drop a lighted cigarette early
Sunday while driving on County
Road 5, two miles north of State Accident Victim
Route 7.
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. said Hysell lost Is Satisfactory
control when he dropped a
cigarette, ran off the highway
The Middleport E-R squad
and through a fence on the answered a call to Middleport
Homer Forrest property, Hill at 8:05a.m. Monday where
Middleport, Rt. 1.
cars driven by Mrs. Sharon
Damage to the vehicle was Russell, Bradbury, and Mrs.
estimated at $700. There were Anna Welsh, Middleport,
no arrests or injuries.
collided.
The department is also inMrs. Russell was taken to
vestigating the alleged theft of Veterans Memorial Hospital
two wheels from a parked car where she was admitted for
Sunday between 10 and 12 p. m . treatment of injuries. She was
belonging to Virginia Bum- reported in satisfactory congarner, Letart, W. Va., Rt. 1. dition at 11 a.m . today. Details
The 1970 Chevy Malibu was of the accident were not
parked on the Forest Run Road available today from the
by the Don Grueser residence Middleport Police Dept.
when the theft occurred.
Charles Knapp , Portland,
reported a dusk to dawn light at
BONDS FORFEITED
the Methodist Church in PortForfeiting bonds in the court
land was destr oyed by a
shotgun
blast sometime of Pomeroy Mayor Charlt::s
Legar Saturday night when they
Saturday morning.
failed
to appear for hearings
Knapp , who lives across from
the church, said someone drove were James Harmon, Jefpast the church, shot at the light fersonville, Ind., $18.70, posted
and missed. Five minutes later for speeding; Okey Kiser,
the car returned. This time the Letart Falls, $25, intoxication,
and Nolan Thornton, Patriot,
shot hit its mark.
$25, assured clear distance.

WASHINGtON (UPI ) - The
Supreme Court ruled today that
a draft registrant may not
claim conscientious objections
to a specific war such as
Vietnam.
Speaking for the court,
Justice Thurgood Marshall said
Congress in passing the
Selective Service Act intended
to exempt persons "who oppose
participation in all war participation in war in any
form."
"Persons who object solely to

Da~nage

Is Heavy

Weather
Snow flurries and squalls
today northeast, a?ditional
accumulation of 2 to 4 inches in
the Snow Belt. Partly cloudy
south tonight and Tuesday .
High today iu the upper 20s and
low 30s. Low tonight in the
teens. High Tuesday upper 20s
north, 30s south.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R unit
answered a call to the Guy Bing
home at 60 1 -z Coal St., Middleport, at 12; 08 Sunday afternoon. Mr. Bing, who was ill,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

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

What Every '(oung Girl Should Know

Helen Help Us

Capital Wallops •
Mt. Union, 123-94

By Helen Bottel
SWEETS FOR THE
SWEET SHOULD CEASE
FOR THE OBESE
Dear Helen:
For 15 years, my husband has
given me candy on Valentine's
Day. This February, he gave
me an exerciser - one of those
machines for firming up and
losing weight. Is he trying to tell
me something? - HALF
GAINER
Dear Gainer:
If the machine fits -use it.
Maybe your husband figures,
"Candy is dandy, but an
exerciser is wiser."- H.
Dear Helen:
My wife goes for a different
kind of women's lib, the Jackie
type -as in "liberating" Ari's
money ! She spends like there
was no tomorrow. And she
thinks credit cards have no
ceiling.
See, she was raised rich.
What she wanted, she got. And,
after we were married, she
could still run to Daddy every
time my paycheck wouldn't
stretch, and can't understand
why I'm so stubborn about it.
I insist on paying my own bills
and living on MY money, not
his. - RIGHT OR WRONG?
Dear R. or W:
Right!
Credit cards and joint
checking accounts are for
mature adults who can use
them sensibly. Your wife is still
a pampered little Daddy's girl.
Maybe an outside job would
help her grow up. - H.
Dear Helen:
What good is it to rate a movie
"X" then show it at a drive-in
where kids can gather on a hill
above and watch the whole
thing free?
A favorite teenage parking
spot today overlooks our town's
bluest open air theater. Sure,
they can't hear the words, but
actions speak louder than ....
What can be done? - MAD
DAD
Dear Mad:
A legislator has already introduced a bill, hoping to ban Xrated outdoor movies.
... You might write a letter to
your City Council. - H.
Dear Helen:
I'm expecting
first child
in a few weeks. :r..
ha
had three by a fo
d
I have two by m)
so we aren't ne
So why is it that my husband
has refused to come near me in
bed since I was four months
pregnant? He says it might hurt
the baby, but I fear it's because
he no longer loves me. He goes
out a lot, although he's very
sweet to me when he's home much nicer than before when
we fought constantly. You see,
he wasn't very true to me. I

found him with several cheapies
before he calmed down.
One more thing: He had a
stubborn infection and, after
four doctors, one finally found
this gonorrhea. What do you
think? - REJECTED
Dear Rejected:
I think your last paragr;mh
tells the taie and I hope
YOU
have
been
thoroughly checked and treated. Until your husband is
sure he is cured, it's essential
that he continue to keep his
distance. - H.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
An old-timer is a fellow
who recalls when "going to
pot" meant a fellow was getting a little
,, paunchy.
,, ('

If she's not interested
in a new wrinkle, she's
over 30.
If you don't think they
play post office any more,
you haven't waited for a let·
ter recently.
r---~--------------------------------------

WIN AT BRIDGE

Voice along Broadway

R1•g ht T•Ime to
Draw T rump

1
I

j
'

BY JACK O'BRIAN
ffiiSH EYES WILL
SMILE AT THE
WHITE HOUSE
NEW YORK- Pat Nixon will
be 59 Mar. 16 and will note the
eve of her patron Saint Pat's
Day entertaining Ireland's
Prime Minister and Mrs. Lynch
.. .. Famed daily will blast the
coffee industry (but takes the
ads) .... Top composer Dick
Rodgers and Dorothy will move
into a chic hotel after all those
apartment years .... Tokyo Rose
still owes Uncle Sam a $10,000
fine and has been summoned to
a Federal court to see if she can
pay half ... . Rocky Graziano
introduced us to a most
amusing gent in P. J. Clarke's
and in a minute he'd quietly
heisted our wristwatch -on the
1r1rm away from him: Turned
out he's Ralph Corsel, author of
"Up There the Stars," who told
us in his tragic younger years
he really was a pickpocket ....
The Rock was irked because the
Madison Square Garden fight
gang had let the fast-cash fellas
steal most of the Frazier-Ali
fight away ... Thursday's 24
lists 13 different kinds of
hamburgers, and somehow Mel
Brooks came away with one not
on the menu.
Harry Belafonte and Sidney

Poitier's "Buck &amp; the
Preacher'' flick filming in
Mexico keeps prone to petty
disasters: Hired a gang of black
natives who don't speak
English, and they refused to
work Saturdays - they're
Orthodox Jews (Maze! tov).
One of Pres. Nixon's speech
writers, Pat Buchanan, wrote
some brilliantly romantic
billets-&lt;l.oux to White House
receptionist Shelley Scarney,
and now they'll wed in May ....
Walter Cronkite's secretary,
Susan Robinson, was in Teddy's
with much decorated Vietnamveteran Army Lieut. Michael
King, who gave Susan his own
and his Purple Heart, and so
they will marry next month ....
Dina Merrill wanted to play '\
madam in hubby Cliff Robertson's "Great Northfield Raid,"
but Cliff thought a wife's place
was not in a house. He cast her
in his next, "The Red Baron" as a princess.
Shelley Winters told pals at
the Toledo she'd love to play the
Godmother in "The Godfather"
because: "Mter all I'm more
Italian than Brando. I was
married to Tony Franciosa and
Vittorio Gassman" .... Let's
take a bow: Months ago we
wrote that Joan (Mrs. Teddy)
Kennedy would play piano on
friend Andy Wms. TV show: It's

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
No Link to Birth Defects

just been announced .... Angela
Lansbury's
"Prettybelle"
folded in Boston, a $500,000
disaster. We heard good things
about Jule Styne's music, tho.
Herman Wouk checks into the
Sherry- Netherland this week to
finish his new novel: Neighbors
won't squawk at typewriter
noise - Herman's a pen-writer
.... Vic Gotbaum's Civil Service
Union will build a $10 million
office building . .. . Sophia
Loren's won an Oscar, she's
been in lots of crossword puzzles, the answer on TV quizzes
galore - now she's had a
racehorse named after her. We
presume a filly.
Hotel rooms, like hospital
rooms, now at an all-time high,
will skyrocket in a few years,
like $50 single and $100 a day for
small suites . ... Loretta Young
says she just doesn't care to
work; Claudette Colbert ditto;
Cary Grant double ditto ....
Stokowsky, downfront at "No,
No, Nanette," saluted the pit
band when he got up to leave.
Ex-Fla. Gov. Claude Kirk's
book will be a sizzler .... The
White House is arranging a
Zubin Mehta-L.A. Philharmonic
concert at the Prez' San
Clemete pad .... "Cooking With
Flowers" (dandelion wine,
sauteed chrysanthemums etc.)
is a soon-&lt;l.ue book, by Zack
Hanle, who edits Hairdo
Magazine, whatever that is ....
Actress Diana Sands started a
babysitting service six months
ago, now has 205 tot-calmers
available.

Calm Fears About Cyclamates
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb--About a
year ago, before the governm ent banned cyclamates, I
received a report from the
FDA stating that among
other things the use of cyclamates caused chromosome
damage in mice. This has
bothered me ever since. I
have had one child, three
years ago and am pregnant
with the second. So I am
bothered even more now. I
have talked to three doctors
a b o u t this and they just
laughed it off. Well, I am
wondering if all this worry is
unfounded. I would appreciate it if you could answer
this since I am having such

a hard time g e tt in g a
straight answer.
Dear R e ad e r-1 understand your concern but you
can relax. The experiments
were based on injections of
large doses. You couldn't
absorb an amount from the
digestive tract to equal the
injection given the mice.
There has been NO EVIDENCE of birth defects in
humans caused by cyclamates despite the consumption of tons of it by million!&gt;
of people. No one can guarantee a baby will be absolutely normal even if the
mother had never heard of
any artificial sweetener, but
you can be confident that

Hatlo's They11 Do It Every
TI-lE GaYS

1J.M0 FLOPPED

WCJN'T COME 1!.!·· - WHICH
MEA!.!S TJ.4E. -JOI!.!T WILL
BE DESERTED··~·---....

your previous use of cycla- your uncle did-eat a large
mates will have no effects well-washed but not scraped
on your children.
carrot?" She did and it
• • *
cleared her face. I used it on
Dear Dr. Lamb-In read· two of my children and it
in~ your articles I was re- stopped their pimples and
mmded the medical profes- they never developed any
sion hasn't found a cure for more.
acne. Years ago my brother,
Another thing I had to
now in law, was on the street learn for myself is what
and an old woman stopped causes bad breath. Too much
him and said, "Say, sonny, fat and rich food makes the
if you will eat a big raw car- liver sick, no more than
rot, your face will clear up." three eggs in a week in my
Then a few years later his case. Also a sick liver made
niece said to this m&lt;tn's me have bilious attacks.
Dear Reader- If a person
wife, "What am I going to
do about my face? I have has a vitamin A deficiency,
gone to doctor after doctor carrots will help the skin.
and no one can help me."
The richest source of vita"Well, why don't you do as mins in all vegetables is under the skin. Peeling them
often w a s t e s this good
Time
®
source. Perhaps some of the
other readers will try your
THEM. GOYS
suggestion and let us know
WHO A~E SAYI~
how well it works for them.
IT WPO 6REA.T
About bad breath, it is
WEREN'T EVEN
true that digestive upsets
COt-ISCIOOS WHf:~
can cause it. Fats may
THE OMEL.ET
cause anyone with liver or
gall bladder disease to have
WA'5 BEING
indigestion. The American
I..A.ID-- ·
Heart Association would be
pleased with your comment
on limiting eggs to three a
week- -but the egg industry
gets downright hostile about
that.

A thought for the day:
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
said, "Certamty generally is
~~2iJIF-~~?1~~-~.~ illusion, and repose is not the
destiny of men."

In 1944 French authorities in
Algiers adopted an ordinance
giving French Moslems in
Algeria the same rights as
French non-Moslems.

NORTH

8

• J743

¥J
+A97
... KQJ96
~T

EAST(D)

.85
¥ Q963
• 643
... A752

.A2
¥ A K 10 8 4
• QJ 105
... 84

SOUTH
• KQ1096
¥752
+K82
... 103

1.

East-West vulnerable
West North East South
1¥
2¥
Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead-¥ 3
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "The rule to determine w h e n declarer
should try to draw trumps is
a simple one. He draws them
as soon as he can afford to
do so."
Jim: "The rule is simple
enough. Knowing when you
can afford to draw trumps
isn't so simple. Take today's
hand. Declarer doesn't really
need dummy's trumps to ruff
hearts. He can set up dummy's club su·t for discards."
Oswald: "That would be
correct procedure if he were
given time to go about his
business, but when the hand
was played East put up an
annoying defense. He won
the first heart and shifted to
a diamond."
Jim: "This created a problem of timing. Should declarer play a trump right
away East would lead a second diamond to establish a
trick in that suit. South could
knock out the ace of clubs,
but it would be too late since
East would get the diamond
trick."
Oswald: "South saw this
danger and went after clubs
first in order to get one discard if he could. He won the
diamond lead with his king
and led the club 10. West
ducked; won the second club
and led another diamond to
dummy's ace. A third club
was led. East ruffed with the
deuce of trumps and South
overruffed. Then South got
back to dummy with a heart
ruff and led a fourth club.
East could only ruff with the
ace of trumps this time so
South was able to get rid of
his diamond loser."
Jim: "If West had been
able to see all the cards he
might have opened a diamond and left South with no
way to score 10 tricks."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

8

tz: ill ;J :1• ~r#J!UXJ
The bidding has been:
West North
East
y
s th h 1d
•8

College

•

°

L~gu~ o~rar

Findaly
Defiance
Wilmington
Bluffton
Cedarville
Malone

~

21
19

6
7

Wl~

7
9

10
3

16
15

9
6

1
4

3
1

~

Big Ten
League Overall

W L
Ohio State
12
1
Michigan
10
2
Indiana
9
3
9
3
Purdue
Minnesota
5 8
Illinois
4
8
Iowa
4
8
X;;l~~~~!~"State ~ ~
Northwestern
1 11
Independents

W L

18
16
17
16
11

10
9

5
6
5

6
12
11

13

~

l~

5

17

W l

~~~annd
~~ ;
Youngstown State
18
6
9
7
Urbana
Ohio Dominican
15
6
18
8
Dayton
Central state
18
9
Cincinnati
14 12
Steubenvil le
13 12
Rio Grande
10 17
Wright State
9 16
9 17
Xavier
John Carroll
6 12
67 1125
Western Reserve
Walsh
Case Tech
5 11
Ohio Northern
7 17
Cleveland State
5 20
Mid-American Conference
Final
League overa 11
W L W L
Miami
9
1
20
4
7
Ohio University 65 4s 17
14 1o
West. Mich.
5
4

~

5
6

14
13

~

~

1

10
11

l~

?

·

-

·

~~u~u16's ·~KQ94,..A2' THE DAILY SENTINEL

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, March 8,
the 67th day of 1971.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars, and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
On this day in history:
In 1894 New York became the
first state to pass a law
requiring dogs to be licensed.

NEW YORK (UPI) -Joe
Frazier and Cassius Clay battle
tonight in Madison Square
Garden for more than a
heavyweight
championship,
$2.5-million apie~e or even their
personal reputatwns.
With 300 million people
watching around the world,
each will be seeking that niche
among the hall of immortals
~hich only one out of millions
ever attains. The winner will
become a legend; the loser will
become another man who
failed.
Frazier doesn't know, or
pretends not to know, what is
at stake, saying that all the
bout means to him "is security
for my family and myself," but
Clay, also known as Muhammad Ali, understands.
"I will not be doing any
talking this time," Clay says.
"this fight is too important for
that. I must look my best
because this fight will be seen
by aU the future generations. I
must be the greatest."
The two men, so different in
their styles both in and out of
the ring, were kept apart
throughout preparations for the
bout, avoiding any face-to-face
confrontation until they are
nose-to-nose in the center of the
ring to hear final instructions
before the tolling of the bell at
10:30 p.m. tonight.
Separate Weigh-ins
Even the weigh-ins were held
separately for the two. Frazier
was to emerge from his secret
headquarters where he was
hidden away on Sunday after a
threat on his life to weigh in
first, and he was to be followed
by Clay to the scales in the
same 20-foot square where they
will fight tonight.
Mter threats were received
that Frazier should "lose or
else," the 27-year-old champion's headquarters were shifted to another hotel and the
security force that has followed
him throughout the last weeks
of the growing drama was
strengthened even more.
It has been an emotional
confrontation since that day in
January when the contracts
were finally signed after 3%
years of waiting.
Both fighters are black, but
clay has called his opponent
the "white hope" and an
"Uncle Tom" because Frazier
more closely meets that ethic
of white, middle class America
as the b0 Y who came ou t of the
scratch-out-an-t!xistence farm1and Of sou th c aroma
1·
tO ga1·n
fame and money for fighting
his way to the top. It is the
story that Joe Louis wrote the
first chapter to a generation
ago.
Frazier retaliates by calling
his opponent "a phony and a
f ·1· t 1·
t
c1own" for a1 mg O 1ve up o
the Black Muslim principles
Clay preaches. "He has misled
a lot of people," the squat
Ph'l
d 1 h'
b t
f
I a e P 1an says," u, as or
me, this is just another fight for myself and nobody else."

Stand ID.gs
Ohio Conference
Final
League Overall
Wooster
1: ' ~ 23 \
11
2
19
4
Otterbein
Caoital
10
2 21
4
7
1
2
17
•Wittenberg
13
9
7
6
Mount Union
Marietta
6
6
13 10
Baldwin-Wallace 6 7 10 15
Heidelberg
4
9
7 15
Kenyon
4
9
8 15
Denison
4
9
8 13
Hiram
4
9
9 14
Ohio Wesleyan 3 8
9 13
3 9 10 11
Oberlin
Muskingum
3 10
6 16
Mid-Ohio Conference
Final

DEVOTED TO
INTERE!iiT OF
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
CHESTER L· TANNEHILL•
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City
Published Editor
daily ~n&lt;cet.-t
Saturday by The Ohio valley
Publishing
Company, Ohio,
111
Court
St., Pomeroy,,
..\5769. Business Office Phone
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992·
2157.
Second class postage paid at
PoNmaeff6 ~ ~~ io~ d vert is in 9
representative B.ottinell~
Inc.,
12 East 42n
Gallagher,
St
., New York
City,
New York.
subs c r i p t ion
r a 1e s :
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service JlOt available : One
.month Sf.75 . By mail in OhiO'
and w. Va ., One year $14.00.
Six
months
$7.25. l'hree
$4.50. Subscription
months
price inc ludes Sunday Times .
,::entinel. ·
-- - i ,

streak decided the issue.
At Bowling Green, Ohio
University took second place in
the MAC with a 97-82 victory
over Bowling Green and kept its
hopes alive for an NIT bid.
The Bobcats, who finished 177 overall and 6-4 in the conference, broke a 21-21 with 11
straight points and held a
comfortable margin the rest of
the game.
Ken Kowall led the Bobcats
with 26 points, giving him 502
for the season, to be OU's alltime single-season scoring
leader. He finished with a 20.9
average, the first time an Ohio
U. player ever averaged at least
20 points a game.
Kent State rallied in the
second half to nip Toledo 65-59, •
as both teams finished 13-11
overall and 4-6 in the Mid-Am.
The Flashes broke a 32-32
halftime tie, winning on
superior free throw shooting.
Kent hit on 19 of 24 from the
charity line to only 11 of 24 for
the Rockets. Toledo's Tom
Kozelko had 23 points, while
Ruben Vance led Kent with 17. •
In other games, Ohio State
edged Northwestern ~7 to
clinch at least a tie for the Big
Ten title, Thiel beat John
Carroll 77-57, Creighton downed
Cleveland State 97-79, and Case
Tech topped Western Reserve

I

Tonight's Loser •
Another Failure

Ohio

Kent State
Toledo
South Bowling Green

What do you bid?
A- 0 ne h eart. WI'th two f'Jvecard suits, Open the higher
ranking irrespective of strength.

Hedric's Redskins.
Miami's little Mike Wren,
who led the Redskins in scoring
with 21 points, hit four free
throws in the final minute to
keep them ahead of Marshall,
after the Herd had cut a 65-53
Miami lead with 9:04 remaining
to 76-74 with 1:05 left.
Tom Roberts scored 16, Larry
Garloch and Gerry Sears 15
each, and Darrel Dunlap 11 for
Miami.
Capital, with Scott Weakley,
Bob Arnold and Don Kalb
scoring 20 points each, pulled
away to a 59-45 halftime lead
and never led the Purple
Raiders closer than 12 points
early in the second half.
Mount Union, which finished
with a 14-9 mark, was led by
Jim Howell with 25 points and
Doug Mason with 17.
Marquette, Miami's first
round NCAA opponent, trailed
Xavier for 30 minutes in their
battle at Cincinnati Saturday
afternoon, but a 20-3 splurge in a
six-minute period gave the
Warriors a 76-58 victory.
The Musketeers held a 35-26
lead at halftime, and Marquette
didn't lead in the game until
Dean Meminger dropped in a
pair of free throws for a 47-45
margin.
Xavier still led 50-49 with 8:39
remaining, but Marquette's

By United Press International
You couldn't blame Capital
Coach Vince Chickerella if he
changed his mind about which
Ohio Conference team should
get the NCAA Tournament
berth.
Chickerella, whose team won
the conference tournament
Saturday night with a
resounding 123-94 victory over
Mount -Union, has maintained
the league champion should be
the representative.
But his Crusaders, probably
playing their best ball of the
season, go to the sidelines now
as league champion Wooster
moves into the tournament.
Wooster, who finished 12-0 in
the conference and 23-1 for the
year, was ineligible to appear in
the OC tournament because it
had been put on probation for ,
holding a summer basketball
camp.
Saturday's win gave Capital a
21-4 mark, the best in the
school's history.
Ironically, the Crusaders won
the league last year, but lost in
the tournament finals to Wittenberg, and got the NCAA bid.
Redskins Represent MAC
Miami, which also closed the
best-ever season at ~ with an
81-78 win over Marshall, goes
into NCAA play Saturday as the
Mid-American
Conference
champion against the nation's
second
ranked
team,
Marquette. The victory was the
13th in a row for Coach Darrell

Even the odds reflect the
emotional pitch of the bout.
Frazier is a slight favorite in
the United States, but the r'lst
of the world has established •
Clay as the choice wherever
there is betting.
Physically, the advantages
appear to lie with Clay. He is
one of the largest men ever to
reign as heavyweight champion,
and Frazier is one of the
smallest. The 29-year-old Clay
is nearly four inches taller at 6foot-3, has a 6lh inch reach
advantage at 80 inches and also t
is heavier.
Not only that, but Clay also is
faster, and his punching power,
often underrated, can be
testified to by his 25 knockouts
in 31 consecutive victories.
Frazier, whose biggest assets
are his power, non-stop determination and ability to weather
the firestorm of the ring, has 23 •
knockouts in 26 fights.
"No short-armed, slow-thinking, flat-footed fighter is gonna
beat me," Clay boasts. "It'll be
pop, pop, pop, and he'll know
the masquerade is over. The
press has turned him into a
giant, and that's good. Bec@Se
think how great that makes me
when I beat him. Then you'll
know who the champion really •
is.,
Never Recognized Joe
Clay has never recognized
Frazier as heavyweight champion, and neither has the cult
that has grown up around Clay.
Clay was at the height of his
ability in 1967 when he was
stripped of the championship
and banned from boxing for 'refusing to go into the Army.
Not until Oct. 26 last year,
after a lengthy court battle,
was Clay permitted to fight
again, and he made his return
in eloquent style, stopping
Jerry Quarry in three rounds.
On Dec. 7, he became the first
man ever to stop the hulking
Argentine, Oscar Bonavena, in
15 rounds, and the stage was
set for a meeting with Frazier.
Frazier had won his title on
Feb. 16 last year by knocking
out Jimmy Ellis, one of Clay's
former sparring partners, in
five rounds, and he followed
with a two-round knockout over
Bob Foster on Nov. 18. But his
claim to the title was tarnished
by Clay's return, and only a
showdown could erase the
stains.
Highest Paid Performers
The showdown will be seen in
35 foreign countries as well as
350 closed circuit television
sites around the United States,
and 19,500 fans, paying up to
$800 on the scalpers' market for
their $150 ringside seats, will be
at the Garden. The live gate will amount to $1.25-million, the
only live million dollar gate
except for the days of Jack
Dempsey and Joe Louis, and
the total revenue for the bout is
estimated to be $18-million.
Each man will receive $2.5million for a maximum of 60
minutes inside the ring.

.I

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

·Eagles Get Bye In District
F.._._....,....,...,.~~·-·~~~~----·...,...,...,....,.~.--·,

Eastern Wallops
• North Gallia In
Sectional, 81-64

Pro Standings

BY DALE ROTHGEB

•
•

•

'
•

Eastern exploded for a 26-point second quarter
,Saturday night at Meigs High School enroute to an
81-64 victory over North Gallia.
The win gave Eastern a berth in this weekend's
Class A District Tournament at Chillicothe.
Eastern, now 17-3, will play the winner of the
.Paint Valley (8-13) and Crooksville (13-8) game at
7:30p.m. Saturday. Fairland of Lawrence County
will play the winner of the Western-Pike (20-2) and
Portsmouth Clay (13-10) encounter.
The winners advance to the
regionals at Athens.
Saturday's loss ousted North
Gallia· from further post-aeason
competition. Coach Paul Aikman's Pirates finished their
outstanding 1970-71 campaign
with a 15-4 record. North Gallia
had won 11 out of its last 12
games prior to Saturday night.
It was a torrid first period.
Both teams matched baskets as
the stanza ended with the score
tied 14-14.
Tom Karr, 5-10 senior guard,
-Howie Caldwell, 5-10 senior
guard and Dennis Eichinger, 6-3
junior center, paced Eastern
during its second quarter
outburst.
Caldwell canned six of his
first 10 period points; Eichinger
had 14during the rally and Karr
pumped in four.
North Gallia's usually hotshooting attack hit a sudden
snag coupled with some costly
turnovers and personal fouls.
Roger Pelfrey, 6-0 senior
guard and Arthur Clark, 6-5
junior center, were both
stymied during the first half.
They were each held to five
points, well below their normal
outputs.
Clark was forced to sit out the
final three minutes of the
second period and the entire
third quarter after collecting

Tou
•

•

his fourth personal with 3:05
remaining before the half.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
continued to build a substantial
lead until North Gallia rallied
late in the third quarter.
With
2:24
remammg,
Eastern's lead was cut to four
points, 47-43. A basket by
Caldwell and a jumper by
Eichinger extended that lead to
51-45. The canto ended with
Eastern enjoying a 61-48 lead.
The final eight minutes of
action seemed almost like a
carbon copy of the third period.
Eichinger scored 13 points on
three field goals and seven foul
shots. Karr had four charity
tosses and Caldwell added four
points. Gary Crosswhite, 6-2
sophomore forward, paced
North Gallia's fourth period
scoring with three baskets.
NORTH GALLIA (64)
Brown, 0-0-0; Clark, 4-5-13;
Crosswhite, 3-1-7; Glassburn, 02-2; Howell, 3-0-6; Dave Justus,
3-0-6; Don Justis, 0-0-0 ; Larry
Justus, 3~5-11; Pelfrey, 4-3-11;
Stout, 3-2-8; Saunders, 0-0-0;
Smith, 0-0-0. TOTALS 23-18-64.
EASTERN (81)- Smith, 2-37; Eichinger, 81531; H.
Caldwell, 7-5-19; Karr, 3-3-9; B.
Caldwell, 3-4-10; Williams, 0-33; Amsbary, 0-2-2. TOTALS 2335-81.
By Quarters:
North Gallia
14 27 48 64
14 40 61 81
Eastern

1nentR esults

Ohio H. S. Basketball
Tournament Scores
By United Press International
Columbus South 82 Columbus
West71
Columbus Walnut Ridge 105
Columbus East 70
Celina 81 Tiffin Columbian 68
Chillicothe 70 Jackson 57
Canton Lincoln 69 Jackson 57
Vandalia Butler 71 Greenville 53
Dayton Stebbins 63 Piqua 55
Columbus
Northland
73
Gahanna 53
Akron Centrai-Hower 68 Copley
50
Lorain Senior 69 Medina 64
Class AA
Cleveland
Byzantine
64
Buckeye 52
North Ridgevill e 60
Cleveland Holy Name5
Ross Southeastern 69 Miami
Trace 46
Norwalk 100 Edison 66
Dayton Jefferson 70 Die 57
Bellefontaine 60 Indian Lake 44
Delta 64 Toledo Stritch 60
Rossford 72 Evergreen 47
Waverly 82 Portsmouth West 53
Fairview 86 Patrick Henry 78
Canton Lehman 80 Rittman 55
New Concord John Glenn 78
Shadyside 62

Canal Winchester 53 Carroll 58
Lancaster Fisher 86 The Plains
76
Federal Hocking 66 New
Lexington 50
Morgan County 54 Caldwell 46
South Point 49 Chesapeake 48
Class A
Portsmouth Clay 67 South
Webster 58
East Canton 78 Lordstown 53
Newcomerstown 59 Tuscarawas
c.c. 46
Edgerton 49 Tinora 48
Pettisville 61 Holgate 57
Crooksville 59 Laurelville 58
Fairland 82 Symmes Valley 57
Pleasant80 Columbus Academy
54

Franklin
Monroe 55
Ft .
Loramie 48
Mississinawa Valley 58 Newton
51
Fort Recovery 73 Ohio City 57
Wapakoneta St. Joseph 71 New
Bremen 63
New Madison 60 New Miami 59
Pandora-Gilboa 73 Leipsic 64
Convoy Crestview 55
Delphos Jefferson 50 (otl
Eastern 81 North Gallia 64
Paint Valley 75 Frankfort
Adena 63
Western Pike 78 Peebles 45

College Cage Results

•

East
St. Johns (NYl 79 Prov. 6.~
Fair! Dick 55 Montclair 50
St. Jos (Pal 81 LaSalle 76
R. I. 116 Maine 78
Penn 70 Col urn bia 58
Dartmouth 98 Brown 91
Temple 92 Covenant 81
Messiah 79 Nyack Miss 65
Fordham 75 Fairfield 59
Alfred 82 Harpur 71

-

•

LOVE

With Interest
Is A
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
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that earns a top return with
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Rate ... It's

Meigs Co. Branch

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

St John Fish ' 93 Hobart 78
Niagara 85 Canisius 69
Leb Vall 100 Johns Hop. 68
Rutgers 84 Penn St. 70
Lehigh 78 NYA 72
Army 81 Colgate 66
Sienna 77 LeMoyne 72
Boston St. 86 Salem St. 80
Harvard 93 Yale 87
Wesleyan 89 Amherst 64
LIU 73 lona 71
Midwest
St. Louis 69 Bradley 59
Ohio St. 68 NW 67
Kent St. 65 Toledo 59
Capital 123 Mt Union 94
Case 75 West Reserve ~?
Purdue 99 Illinois 93
r&lt;.ansas ::.t. 77 Missouri 69
Kan sas 54 Oklahoma 52
Indiana 104 Iowa 88
St. Olaf 78 Cornell (Iowa) 76
Carleton 91 Grinell 72
Marquette 76 Xavier (0) 58
Ohio U 97 Bowl Green 82
Mich 88 Mich St 63
South
Kentucky 84 Tennessee 78
Duke 92 N. Carolina 83
Louisv . 102 Memph St 73
Miss St 81 Vanderb 73
Ripon 84 Knox 61
W. Va. 104 Va. Tech 95
Loui siana 69 Georgia 66
Furman 68 Ric hmond 61
GA Tech 78 Pitts. 61
Auburn 86 Miss 85
Maryland 89 Virginia 84
Lee 88 Bryan 80
S.C. 88 Wake For. 73
Fl orida 79 A la. 66
Miami 81 Marshall 78
Theil 77 John Carroll 57
Southwest
Tex El Paso 83 Ariz. St 81
Baylor 79 Tex Tech 78

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
tNew York
49 27 .645
Philadelphia
44 32 .579 5
Boston
39 36 .520 9112
Buffalo
20 55 .267 28112
Central Division
W. L Pet. GB
Baltimore
39 34 .534
Atlanta
Cincinnati
28 46 .378 11112
Cleveland
13 61 .176 26112
Midwest Division
W. L Pet. GB
;x-Milwaukee 64 11 .853
Chicago
46 27 .630 17
Phoenix
44 28 .611 l81l2
Detroit
42 31 .575 21
XCiinched Div. Title
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GBI
I nc;Anoeles
46 29 .613 ...
San Francisco 37 38 .493 9
Seattle
33 40 .452 12
San Diego
34 42 .447 12112
Portland
23 51 .311 22112
Sunday's Results
New York 116 Boston 110
Cleveland 104 Detroit 100
Atlanta 122 Cincinnati 112
Los Angeles 117 ChicaQo 108
Baltimore 117 Phoenix 108
San Diego 135 Portland 121
Monday's Garnes
Seattle at Milwaukee
Buffalo at Portland
(Only games scheduled)
ABA Standings
By United Press lnternaional
East
W. L. -Pet. GB
47 25 .653 ...
Virginia
40 33 .548 7112
Kentucky
36 36 .500 11
New York
32 42 .432 15112
Pittsburgh
29 42 .408 17112
Carolina
30 46 .395 18112
Floridans
West
W. L Pet. GB
49 21 .700 ...
Utah
47 23 .671 2
Indiana
37 36 .507 13112
Memphis
26 45 .366 23112
Denver
23 48 .324 26112
Texas
Sunday's Results
New York 123 Virginia 121
Ulah 108 Memphis 106
Indiana 127 Kentucky 122
Denver 142 Floridians 141

RUSSIAN SKI VICTORY
LAHTI, Finland (UPI)-Russia finished one-two Sunday in
the 10 kilometers cross-country
race at the international Lahti
ski games. Nina Shebalina
finished first in 36 minutes and
50 seconds. Galina Piljushenko
was clocked in 37 minues, four
seconds.

J. Tyo
l. Morris
R. VanMatre
B. Hensler
B. Werry
M. Childs
C. Haggerty
T.Vaughan
S. Dunfee
J. Wildermuth
R. Ash
R. Becker
B. Miller
M. Vaughan
TOTALS
Opponents

[

l

by Chet Tannehill

I
~
~

.

L . . . . . . _. . . . . . . . ..,..~. . . . . . ~-..-:,._,..,.. . . . . . . ._. . . . . . . __..._..~.. .-. . .;. ,._. . . . . . . J
The pre-flight histrionics to the Muhanuned Ali-Joe Frazier
fracas tonight - largely programmed in a Madison Ave. Advertising Agency office, I'm sure - has much of the country
watching and listening. The fight promoters start making money,
they say, when the lO,OOO,OOlst dollar is taken in. Theater seats in
New York for closed TV, offered at $150 are scalping at $700 to
$750. But in Huntington and Charleston seats are still going at
from $8 to $11J, the original offer. The fight will not be televised
over the open air in this country. It will be televised to U. S. servicemen overseas in southeast Asia and in Europe. Closed TV is
offered in a number of foreign countries. More people will shell
out more money tonight to see a professional boxing match than
any time in history.
You dislike Clay (Muhanunad) for many reasons- his draft
"dodging" act, his cockiness, or his race, or a little of each of
these- but we have to admit he can fight. He stirs controversy.
He makes men take sides. Therefore, like him or not, he is a vital,
polarizing force in America, even the world.
THERE PROBABLY hasn't been such interest in a fight since
the second Tunney-Dempsey battle in 1927, the first heavyweight
title fight I believe ever broadcast to the nation by radio. Few
people of the general population percentagewise had home radios
at that time. Most towns and cities set up radios in some public
area. Everybody who ever threw a clenched fist congregated to
hear Tunney win, which was about everybody. (The Tunney name
continues in the nation's ears: fighter Gene's son won a senate
seat in California in the recent elections.)
A lot of 8 oz. leather has landed since that first mediaenlarged fight of 1927. Scandal upon scandal has smeared the
fight "racket." One dollar will get you two that the whole
kaboodle is crooked. But still we cannot help but be consumed by
the color and the passion of a big fight.
So who do I like tonight? Who will be holding up his arm in the
victory gesture? In this corner it's an even money bet, but I'll go
with Frazier in 15.

BELOW ARE THE COMPLETE 1970-71 Marauder basketball
team statistics as prepared by Donald Wolfe of Meigs High. When
he made his final calculation one result was all but unbelievable!
It was that the Marauders and their opponents had made the
same number of points and the same field shooting percentage for
the entire season. This probably never happened to any team
before, and is not likely to again. The winning season by Meigs is
accredited to the fact the Marauders committed fewer personal
fouls received more three throw chances, and had a better free
throw shooting percentage.
The mathematical odds of identical field goal percentages
and total field goal points occurring must be something like 100,000,000,000,000,000 to 1.

AV.
15
12
9
6
5
5
5
3
3
3
1,2
1.'2

0
0
61
61

Hawks Near Playoff Berth
By United Press International
The Atlanta Hawks are trying
to reverse a trend.
In the past seasons, the
Hawks have fared well during
the regular season before
fading in the National Basketball Association playoffs. This
season, after a miserable start,
the Hawks are muddling their
way to a playoff berth and hope
for a better fate in poskeason
play.
Atlanta moved a step closer
to securing a playoff berth
Sunday with a 122-112 victory
over the Cincinnati Royals. The
victory gave the Hawks, second
in the Central Division behind
Baltimore, a 2% game edge
over the third-place Royals.
Atlanta has seven games
remaining while the Royals
must play eight.
Lou Hudson and Pete Maravich scored 30 points each as
the Hawks scored their fourth
straight victory and seventh fn
the last 10 games. The Hawks
have made up 10 games on
Cincinnati in the last month.
Elsewhere in NBA play
Sunday, Los Angeles downed
Chicago 117-108, New York
trinuned Boston 116-110 and San
Diegowhipped Portland 135-121.
Wilt Chamberlain had 20
points and 32 rebounds and Gail
Goodrich had 23 points and 13
assists as the Lakers beat
Chicago. Los Angeles went on a
16-5 spurt in the third period to
take the lead.
Bobby Smith's basket with 29
seconds left boosted Cleveland
past the Pistons, the Cavaliers'
first road victory since Nov. 11.
The Cavaliers outscored the
Pistons 35-16 in the last period
to come fr.om behind.

N W COMPTON 0 D
•

the Sports Desk

MEIGS MARAUDER BASKETBALL,
1970-71
G Q FGA-M Pet. FTA-M Pet. RB PF TP
19 78 266-100 37 123-89 72 133
42 289
19 79 193- 90
46
82- 52
63 230 67 232
59 164
99
17 68
81-43
53 117- 78 66
40 121
43- 27 62 144
19 71
96- 47
48
42
38- 24 63
58
22
96
84- 36
18 55
95
55- 37
67
10
35
52
90- 29
32
17
41
94
28
72- 25
34 82- 44 53
19 55
38- 16 42
60
30 60
44
41 - 22
53
18
54
45- 24 53
23
21
16
35
45- 15
33
9
5- 5 100
8
5
3 10
6- 2 33
4- 0
0
0
2
4
9
9
5- 2 40
1
2
3
4- 3 75
0
8
2- 0
8
5
2
0
0
1 0
0
7
8
2- 0
o. 0 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
5
5
41 637-399 62 799 368 1221
19
83 983-411
19 83 1099-459 41 504-303 60 716 419 1221

·. -•••••••••••••••---•••11
•

1

'

OPTOMETRIST

•

•

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

Baltimore held off a lastminute Phoenix rally to beat
the Suns. Phoenix had cut the
Baltimore lead to 107-106 with
less than two minutes to go
when the Bullets outscored the
Suns 10-2 to put the game out of

reach.
The losses by Chicago,
Phoenix and Detroit left the
heated midwest division runnerup race unchanged. Four
games separate second-place
Chicago and' last-place Detroit.

SEO Champs
Face Lancers
Drawings for the 1971 Class
AA Southeastern Ohio District
Basketball Tournament were
held Sunday at the Paul R. Lyne
Center at Rio Grande College.
Southeastern Ohio League
champion Waverly (19-1) drew
Federal-Hocking ( 18-2) and
Ohio Valley Conference runnerup South Point (14-6) drew
undefeated Southeastern of
Ross County (23-0).
Action will begin Friday at
Lyne Center with the South
Point-Southeastern contest at 7
p.m. Waverly will tackle
Federal-Hocking at 8:15 p.m.
Winners of Friday's contests
will collide for the district
championship at Rio Grande

._111PiiOiiiiMiiE
iiiiRiiOiiiY-..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - • fall when he was on the 18th.

sectional crown.
Art Lanham, district tournament director, announced
this morning that there will be
no advance ticket sales for this
weekend's games. Each participating school was allotted
600 tickets. Seating capacity at
Lyne Center is 2,500.
Doors will open at 6 p.m., for
Friday's first round games.
Waverly is the defending
Class AA District champion.
The Tigers, who walked off with
top honors their first year in the
SEOAL, reached the state
tournament finals in 1970 before
bowing to AA champion Dayton
Chaminade.

Buckeyes Clinch Tie
For Big 10 Cage Title
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State, with a share of the Big
Ten basketball title already in
its back pocket, goes for the
whole ball of wax Tuesday ni~ht
against Indiana's rug~ed
Hoosiers.
The Buckeyes assured
themselves of no worse than a
tie for the title by edging Northwestern 68-67 Saturday night,
their 18th victory in 23 games
overall and 12th in 13 conference contests.
But in Indiana, the Buckeyes
will be up against one of the
strongest rebounding teams in
the nation, led by big George
McGinnis, Steve Downmg and
Joby Wright.
"This Indiana club has
tremendous size and rebounding power," said Buckeye
Coach Fred Taylor. "When they
go up for a rebound, they just
play with it until they get it back
in the hole. That's going to be a
problem for us."
Hold On To Win
The Bucks had enough
problems Saturday night
against the last place Wildcats,
but had enough to hold on at the
end after a 12-point lead with six
minutes to go dwindled to only
two.
"I really think winning the
conference championship is the
reason we play basketball,"
Taylor said. "Anything that
happens outside the league is
gravy.
"This has been a most enjoyable year. We were 5-4 when
we started the conference
schedule, and it didn't look like

Snead Claims Dora[ Title
MIAMI (UPI) -"You hit it,
go find it and hit it again."
That's golf, accordmg w
Jesse Carlyle Snead, who shot a
steady 69 Sunday to win the
$30,000 first prize in the Doral
Eastern Open Golf tournament.
It boosted his 1971 winnings to
$57,000, compared with a total
take of $11,500 all of last year.
Snead, who won the Tucson
open for $22,000 two weeks ago,
shot a four-round total of 275 to
nick second place finisher
Gardner Dickinson by a stroke.
Although he never trailed
after taking a one-stroke lead
into the round, it got a little
tense on the 18th hole.
Dickinson holed a seven-footer
in the rain for a birdy three to
pull within a stroke as Snead
watched from down the fairway.
"That tightened down the nut
a little, " Snead said. The
former baseball player with the
Washington Senators farm systern -and nephew of Sam
Snead -also said as he was
lining up for his second shot on
the hole, one of the spectators
hollered, "miss it."
Snead wasn't at all happy
about the distraction, apparently from a Dickinson fan. "You
don't expect that on a golf
course," he said.
Snead matched three birdies
on the front nine with only one
bogey, then holed a three-foot
birdy putt on the par five toth
and parred the rest of the
way in, with the rain starting to

7:30 p.m., Saturday. The
district champion will represent
southeastern Ohio in the Class
AA Regional Tournament, to be
held at Ohio University's
Convocation Center at Athens
on March 19 and 20.
Waverly captured the Beaver
Sectional Tournament Saturday
night with an easy 82-53 victory
over
Portsmouth
West.
Federal-Hocking advanced to
the district by bouncing New
Lexington 66-50 at Alexander.
South Point eliminated
Chesapeake 49-48 at Synunes
Valley for top honors in that
sectional Saturday night.
Southeastern om·ted Miami
Trace 69-46 for the Bainbridge

much was going to happen at
Ohio State."
Taylor
minimized
the
Buckeyes'
troubles
at
Northwestern.
"A champion usually wins
some games when it doesn't
play exceptionally well," he
said. "And you can't hide the
fact we beat Northwestern here
pretty bad."
The Buckeyes downed the
Wildcats 84-72, but led them 8458 with less than a minute to
play.
Big Three Lead
Dave Merchant hit the second
of a pair of free throws with 12
seconds remaining to give the
Buckeyes a 68-65 lead. Barry
Moran scored with two seconds
to go for the final score.
Once again it was the Bucks'
big three, Allan Hornyak, Luke
Witte and Jim Cleamons, who
led the way. Hornyak, hounded
all evening by 5-foot-9 Paul
Douglas, finished with 22 points,

Chisox Top
Reds Again
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds have lost their
first two games in Grapefruit
League exhibition play.
The Reds lost both games to
the Chicago White Sox, 4-1 in
Sarasota Saturday and 5-1 here
Sunday.
The
National
League
champions, playing without any
of their top stars, collected only
five hits off five White Sox
pitchers Saturday. The lone run
off Floyd Weaver in the fourth
was unearned.
The White Sox came back to
tie it in their half of the fourth,
scored twice in the sixth and
Bill Robinson homered in the
seventh.

were Bruce Devlin, Brice
Fleisher and Terry Dill.
Jack Nicklaus shot a bogey
six on the first hole and
finished at one-over par 73 and
282. Arnold Palmer fired his
second straight 70 for 287 and
Gary Player shot a 70 for even
par 288 over the 7,028-yard
Doral blue moonster Course.
Sam Snead shot a 73 for 291.
Dickinson said he was
pleased with his game and said
before the tournament started
he would have thought his
rounds
of 12 under par would
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Darrell
be
enough
to win.
Hedric, the rookie head coach
who guided Miami to a 9-1
record and the Mid-American
Conference championship in
basketball, has been named
Ohio college basketball coach of
the year in the annual poll
conducted by the Columbus
Dispatch.
Hedric, 37, is the first Miami
graduate to be head basketball
coach at the Redskin school. He
edged Wooster's coach AI Van
Wie and Akron's Wyatt Webb
for the coach of the year honor.
Hedric received 16 first place
votes of the 44 cast by Ohio
college coaches and was
mentioned on 29 of the ballots
for a total of 68 points. VanWie
was second with 51.
Miami makes its NCAA
Tournament debut against No. 2
ranked Marquette in the first
ALSO OTHER
round of the Mid-East Regional
C. L CO. LOANS OF
at Notre Dame.
Hedric, a native of Franklin,
$
AND MORE
succeeds Jim Snyder of Ohio
University for the honor.

In third place two strokes
behind Dickinson was Miller
Barber, who shot a 68. Gibby
Gilbert shot a 71 for fourth
place at 279 and bunched at 280

his average, while Witte had 15
and Cleamons 14.
Michigan, resting in second
place in the conference with a
10-2 mark, could tie for the title
if the Buckeyes lose to Indiana.
All other teams have been
eliminated.
In the case of a tie, a playoff
for the NCAA Tournament
berth would be held at Purdue
University, either Monday,
March 15 or the following night.
The Buckeyes were involved
in the conference's only other
playoff, in 1968, beating Iowa 8581 at Purdue.

uale Warner
Sets Records for
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Pomeroy, 0.

�4- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 8, 1971

Expanded Public Health
Services Marked in 1970

•

•

Meigs County Public Health Commissioner's Message:
t.l. J.J

.:-t

1.1

29 30 31 •

Dr. Selim Blazewicz, Health Commissioner

During the year 1970 several
new programs were offered to
the people of Meigs County
through their health department. These programs have
been made possible through
federal funding under Section
202 of the Appalachian
Development Act of 1965, the
funds being secured through the
Ohio Valley Health Services,
Inc. to the Ohio Department of
Health.
During the school year of
1969-1970 every child in the
county schools was offered a
hearing screening. If serious
problems were found, the child
was seen at the PediatricOtological-Diagnostic
Clinics
held here periodically. Vision
screening was made possible
for every child in the county
schools and hearing screening
was again offered to certain
grades this school year.
Children having an abnormal
vision screening were referred
to the health department.
Parents are being advised of
their children's problem, and it
is being suggested that the
children be seen by the eye
specialist of their choice . This
project will not be completed
until late in the spring of 1971.
In order that children having
a serious eye problem may be
referred for further guidance,
and possible remedial care, a

periodic diagnostic-ocularpediatric clinic will be held in
the county.
Lucille Mosser, RN, is the
field supervisor; Gene Lyons,
Racine, is the technician
working in the schools, and the
comprehensive nurse is Doris
Sayre, LPN, Portland. The
nurse makes home visits to the
parents of children with a
hearing or vision problem and
counsels with them. The nurse
and technician work at the
clinics.
Another new service is
conducting a county-wide
survey of all private water
supply systems in the county.
Participation in this water
supply improvement project is
strictly voluntary.
A water sample will be taken
at each home and sent to the
Ohio Department of Health
Laboratory at Nelsonville for
bacteriological testing. In
addition to the sample, certain
information pertaining to the
water system is needed for a
proper evaluation of each
supply. Each resident is notified
of the results of the test and
information on the proper
development of the water
system.
A speech and hearing clinic
held each Saturday morning is
staffed by the school of hearing

and speech science from Ohio
University. The county coordinator is Pauline Atkins, and
Nancy Jo Mayer is secretary.
Speech diagnostic
and
therapy services are available
to any child or adult with a
speech or hearing problem.
These services will be provided
for such problems as articulation
errors,
voice
problems, stuttering, speech
problems resulting from brain
damage or strokes, speech
problems resulting from
organic disorders such as cleft
palate or cerebral palsy or
problems resulting from
hearing loss.
If the proper therapy or
service cannot be provided,
counseling and referrals to the
appropriate agency will be
made when possible.
A new screening program has
been started. This makes
available a test for children
from 18 to 36 months of age. The
Denver
Developmental
Screening test is used in this
program. This is not an I.Q.
test, but one to evaluate how
well a child is using his large
and small muscles, and speech.
This screening is to alert
parents to the possibility of
delays in some areas so the
child can be helped.
All of these services are free
to the people of Meigs County.

•
THIS TEAM WORKS at pediatric-otological and diagnostic clinics held in Pomeroy. Left to
right are Dr. James Beiber, Richard Bunner and Dr. Richard Simons.

'

}:: ;i, ·;: ;: : i;;; ::~J::m:,;;::rrrw:rr::::::::ttt:r::::::rtU:\'' }@ trt ttJt:trt : : ::\:rt :t(:~· f[:i:,::j {\: :::':["':[(:~ ,:' ):::' : · :· ·.-:: :· ·: .,::.: : .: : : : ;:.::..:

"
BEULAH STRAUSS

CATHERINELOWERY RN

~f{i

Health Service

t~~r.

JANE BROWN RN

REV. ARTIIUR LUND

HILTON WOLFE

- KENNETH COlliNS

:·...

BEULAH STRAUSS: Administrative Assistant,
secretary to the board of health,
and county registrar of vital
statistics; she works directly
under the board of health and
health commissioner; acts as
fiscal officer of all department
funds , county, state and
federal ; acts as a liaison between the state and public for
the board and commissioner;
maintains the budget; is
secretary to the commissioner
and board; attends county and
state meetings at the request of
the commissioner and board,
and is county registrar of vital
statistics.
R.N.:
BROWN
JANE
Tuberculosis nurse, works out
of the health department
although she is paid from the
Tuberculosis Levy Fund. She
does the tuberculin skin testing,
provides therapy and guidance
to victims , contacts, and
sus pected cases ; visits the
homes, nursing homes, and
infirmary whenever necessary;
works with Roy Donnerberg,
M.D., Chest Clinician out of
Columbus , on the periodic chest
clinics; works with the Ohio
Department of Health during
the skin testing program conducted each year; maintains
the countywide tuberculosis
register.
TERRY SHAIN: tuberculosis
secr etary; works as secretary
to the tuberculosis nurse;
maintains files ; assis ts setting

DOROTHY EDMUNDSON

I

Staff of 7 in

(j{ Public

up and assisting at the chest
clinics ; performs many and
varied duties, especially when
the skin testing units are in the
county; her headquarters are in
the health department, but she
is paid from the Tuberculosis
Levy Fund.
HILTON WOLFE: Meigs
County sanitarian, collects
public and private water
samples, provides guidance to
persons needing assistance on
sanitary problems; inspects
food service operations, inspects school buildings, investigates animal bites, investigates and seeks to rectify
nuisance complaints; works
with state personnel on dumps;
lays out and inspects septic
tanks and leaching fields;
makes inspections requested by
the State Liquor Control Board;
checks fair booths, takes
periodic samples of water at
Middleport Municipal Swimming pool, and inspects
privately owned parks and
campsites as well as trailer
parks.
DOROTHY EDMUNDSON:
Deputy Clerk
Deputy
Registrar; clerical duties in the
Health Department are varied
and numerous; she prepares
reports, assists with the
licensing, correspondence,
works with the public, offers
non-professional advice, helps
other staff members, and. as
deputy registrar works on vttal
statistics.

KENNETH COLLINS: as
water supply improvement
inspector, has headquarters in
the Meigs County Health
Department but is paid by the
Ohio Department of Health; his
job is to take water samples of
private water supplies to
determine whether or not the
water is safe; guides and
counsels
persons
with
problems; he finds a large
percentage of private water
supplies unsafe; approximately
66.6 per cent of the samples
taken have been unsafe. His is a
free service offered to Meigs
Countians who do not have
access to municipal water
supplies.

REV. ARTHUR LUND:
director-counselor of the
alcoholism program in Meigs
County sponsored by the Health
Department, and funded
through the Ohio Department of
Health, concerning itself with
alcoholism and drug abuse.

THE COMPREHENSIVE hearing and vision program is carried out by this team. Left to
right, Doris Sayre, LPN, comprehensive nurse ; Gene Lyons, technician working in schools, • ·
and Lucille Mosser, RN, fiel':! supervisor.

Health Department
Financial Statement
Budget - Salaries, $18,100; travel,
$3,780; other expenses, $5,004.42.
Source of Funds - State Subsidy,
$1,490; Licenses fees from food service,
$976; trailer parks, $60; solid waste, $3;
local taxes, $24,355.42.
Expenditures - Salaries, $17,887.33;
travel, $1,328.09 and other, $5,145.66.

CATHERINE E. LOWERY,
R.N.: public health nurse, who ''''''''''
visits the homes of the ill where : : ~.: :
she carries out the recom- {}:::
Vital Statistics
mendations
of
private
physicians; guides the family
Three emergency births, no maternity
on the care of the patient,
conducts the immunization
ward.
Deaths, 167, 73 feamles, 94 males.
program in the schools,
counsels with school officials,
·carries out the directives of the
state agencies, and offers
services in nursing and rest
homes.

The Tuberculosis Nurse and secretary
are paid from the Tuberculosis Levy Fund.
The comprehensive hearing, vision and
speech program; the water supply improvement and the alcoholism programs
are financed completely from other than
county funds.

Cardiac Complex, 66; Cerebral _:;,, ::
vascular accident, 44; cancer, 11; Uremia, ·:'•.··: ·:::
1; Accidents, 3; Suicides, 1; Pneumonia, 5; ::::)
Shock, 23; Other, 13, and stillborn, 1.
·:·· ·::

1.11 l'1 \Q .l l

,

Dale Dutton, Board of Health

Robert Beegle, Board of Health

t:-

Causes of Death

TERRY SHAIN

Virgil Atki•·'·· Hoard of llt·alth

•

/

Dr. Charles Mullen (dec.) Board of Health

:·: ·::·

�---·----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
5-Th... Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 8, 1971

• Class Donates $75
To Thompson Fund
a

•

•

The Happy Harvesters Class
of Trinity Church, Pomeroy,
voted to contribute $75 to the
George Thompson Kidney Fund
at a meeting Friday night at the
church.
The . class took the action
following a report by Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, president of Church
Women United of Meigs County
which has pledged support
through member churches to
the fund to aid the 18-year-old
Pomeroy youth. George had
both kidneys removed at the
Cleveland Clinic last Wednesday and will undergo a
transplant sometime in the near
future.
Mrs. Dale Smith presided at
the meeting. It was voted to
purchase two new tables for the
church dining room with Mrs .
Neutzling and Mrs. Roy
Seyfried being appointed to
handle this, and to proceed with
having the chairs caned. Mrs.
Oris Ginther noted that two
more chairs have been repaired
and are now back at the church,
that six are at the shop, and
Mrs. Fred Fauber will have
four more done.
A potluck was planned for the
April meeting with Mrs.
Neutzling, Mrs. Everett Dailey,
and Mrs. Ruby Erb to be the
hostesses and provide the
dessert and game prizes. A
luncheon to be served at the
church Tuesday was discussed.

CARPET

'

BUY I
501 NYLON

CARPET

6.99
SQUARE YARD
With foa m rubber pad
and com
ly in
tailed
blue and

,.,,

•

INGELS
'
FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-2635

Mrs. Neutzling is chairman and
other members to assist are
Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Ginther, Mrs.
Homer Holter, Mrs. Clara Karr,
Mrs. Lawrence Lanning, and
Mrs. Seyfried. Mrs. Dessauer
reported on a dinner served at
the time of the death in her
family.
Read at the meeting were
thank you notes from Miss
Erma Smith for a gift, and Mrs.
Phil Meinhart for cards, flowers
and visits during her recent
hospitalization. Mrs. Ginther
conveyed
Mrs.
Clarence
Headley 's thanks to the class
for remembrances during her
illness. Both Mrs. Headley and
Mrs. Meinhart are progressing
satisfactorily. It was also noted
that Mrs. Amanda Kaspar is
home from the hospital. The
treasurer reported a balance of
$506.64 in the treasury.
" Mutual Love" was the topic
of devotions given by Mrs.
Ginther. She read scripture
from St. John 15, speaking of
God's revelation through the
beauty of nature, and of Christ
as the portrait of God quoting
the scripture " He that hath seen
me hath seen the Father."
Mrs. Ginther commented on
God's concern for mankind and
concluded with the comment:
"Where there is love, there is
concern, and where there is
Christ there is love." She read a
poem, " No Exchange ."
A cake recipe using verses of
scripture for the ingredients
was given by Mrs. Seyfried,
program chairman. She also
r ead a meditation entitled
"Don' t Be Discouraged, "
pertaining to advancing age and
the need for tranquility and
peace attainable through
r egular attendance at church
and prayer services.
T he bir thda ys of Mrs.
Neutzling,
Miss
Thelma
Grue se r , and Mrs . Gladys
Cuckler were observed. Games
were played with Mrs. Guinther
and Miss Sybil Ebersbach
winning the prizes . Mrs .
Dessauer , Mrs. Holter, and
Mrs . Lillie Houck served
sandwiche s and a dessert
course. The table arrangement
of fer and Easter lilies was
u ed m carrying out the
Patrick's Day theme.

''And whether the land is
rich or poor, and whether
there is wood in it or not.
Be of good courage, and
bring some of the fruit of
the land." Now the tim e
was t he season of the first
ripe grapes. - Numbers
13·20.

•
•

THE PAKISTAN FLOOD
IS THE GREATEST
NATURAL DISASTER OF
THIS CENTURY.
IT WILL BE
A GREATER DISASTER IF
WE DON'T CARE.

Silver Anniversary Surprise Event
Green Thumb
Notes . ...
A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

To Say,

~,

Grew Them'

By MRS. EDWARD BAER
Pomeroy Garden Club
"Half the fun is in the growing."
That is the fact that one discovers when he or she plants seeds
in the winter for their own plants in the spring.
Any area of your home, basement, hall, den, living or utility
room can become a growing area. A light fixture with flourescent
gro-lamp tubes is needed and the seeds are planted and grown to
garden size on a shelf or table from one to two feet below the
lamp. Seedlings actually grow faster and sturdie: under grolights than in a green house.
There are many containers that are available, but any
shallow container with holes in the bottom will do nicely . A milk
carton cut lengthwise makes a suitable planter. The growing
medium- part sand, part peat moss, and part vermiculite should
be sifted, thus making it easy for the plants to be removed at
transplating time. Potting soil purchased at your garden store
may be used instead of the above mixture.
The seeds are planted in the latter part of February or the
first of March. They germinate very quickly under the lights. If
the seeds are not planted too close together the plants can remain
in the container until they are transplanted in the garden. If they
are sown thickly they will have to be thinned and planted into
other containers to make room for the plants to grow sturdy.
Depending on the variety of the plant, it takes from six to nine
weeks for them to mature.
To me this is one of the most rewarding and economical
phases of gardening. One has the satisfaction each day of being
able to watch the plants develop and grow, and knowing that these
dozens of plants can be lanted in your garden for a fraction of the
cost of plants purchasea from your garden store.
It is with pride that you can look at the blooms in your garden
and say, "I grew them."

MONDAY
W.S.C.S., Heath United
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Monday night at the church.
EASTERN LOCAL School
District OAPSE meeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday at Eastern High
School.
POMEROY Elementary
P.T.A., 7:30 Monday night.
Father's Night to be observed.
Special program by Mrs.
Luc!lle Swackhamer, music
teacher. Refreshments will be
ser.ved by the parents of third
grade students.
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday,
Columbus
and
Southern Ohio Electric Co .
social room . "Do your own
thing" sale following the
meeting . Members to contribute homemade item or
baked goods for the sale.
W.S.C.S., POMEROY United

•

Mrs. Evans
Is Honored
Mrs . Linda Evans was
honored recently with a layette
shower at the Forest Run
Methodist Church with Mrs.
Sharon Russell, Mrs. Faye
Hamilton, and Mrs . Carolyn
Evans the hosts.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Amateur
Gardeners, home of Mrs. Guy
Reynolds. 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Mrs. Joe Bolin of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners to be the
guest demonstrator .
POMEROY - Middleport Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
meeting, 7:30p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary pre sidents and
community service chairmen, 1
p.m. Wednesday at Trinity
Church to discuss participation
in George Thompson Kidney
Fund program.
THURSDAY
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Me thodist Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the church.

Gifts were placed on a table
decorated with gree n and
yellow streamers and a small
cradle. Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs.
Marcia Arnold, Mrs . Ann
Watson, and Mrs. Mae Holter.
Mrs. Virginia Davis won the
door prize. Refreshments of
PHILATHEA Society,
cake , punch and coffee were Middleport Church of Christ,
served.
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the
church.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Lucy Taylor, . .......................lf................
~
Mrs . Eula Profitt, Mrs. Ila -tc
THOUGHT~
Roush, Mrs . Pearl Profitt,
Candy Profitt, Mrs. Nancy
~FOR
~
Adams, Mrs. Ma xine Diddle,
-tc
~
Mrs. Freda Ferguson, Mrs.
~ All we can do is to ma ke ~
Linda Diddle, Mrs. Pat White, ~ the best of each day.
~
Mrs. Irene Parker , Mrs. Jane
Johnson, Mrs. Pearl Adams, ~
- Eddie Cantor
~
Mrs. Virginia Deavers, Mrs.
Dorothy Karr, Mrs. Kathryn ~
~
Mora , Mrs. Betty Milhoan, Mrs. -tc
Mary K. Roush, Mrs. Clara ~
It's Quick! Easy ~
Baer,Mrs. Hilda Yeauger, Mrs.
Ma ry Belle Warner, Mrs . Susie
~.
Grueser, Mrs . Jonetta Davis, ~
~
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, Mrs. Janet
Nease , Mrs. Judy Flagg, Mrs. :
Fridays Only
:
Mary Nease, Lee Ann Nease, -tc The Drive- In Window~
Mrs. Leah Nease, Mrs . Jean ~
is Open
-tc
Nea se, Mrs . Doris Grueser, ~
A
-tc
~
9 .M.to7 P.M.
-tc .,
Mrs. Helen Nease , Mrs. Mary ~
(Continuously)
-tc•.
Russell, Mary Amber Warner , ~
~ -.
Sandy Hamilton , Lori Adams , : Other Banking Hours 9 to 3 ~ .
~ and S to 7 as usual on~
and Sherri Russell.

A

~

rontr1 tJU tNl for l hP pub ir good 1n 1 oopf!'r i:i tl on w 1th
fhe Advf!r ll~ nJ! Coun 11 ·nd t i"J,. l nt &lt;:.r"'&lt;Jt lon "~"'~''cp.J P"'r Ad~Jt• rtl ) ln g Exec utives

DRIVE-IN :.
BANKING :

Fridays.

POMEROY

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Phone 992-2318
AUTO
FIRE-LIFE
HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
ClEANERS

~~NATIONWIDE
~5 J!~~.~~~!!~~

2)6 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428
'\

BIG SAVINGS ON TOOLS!
e
'7100

•7020

1/4" VAR. SPEED DRILL
Tri gger locks at selected speed from
0 to 2250 RPM. Rugged Man-Grip
handle. 1/7 H.P.

1499

•7250

1/2" REVERSING DRILL

3/8 INCH DRILL
Handles bigger, to ugher jobs. Well
balanced. Drills 3/ 4" in hardwood,
3/ 8" in steel.
1000 RPM.

Reve rs ing switch pe rmits easy removal
of jammed b its. Top mounted auxilia r y
hand le . 1/3 H.P.
500 RPM.

e
e

1499

2206
L'-

A1C/H

~A~&lt;h

('

C/H
1 7545

UTILITY JIG SAW

3-SPEED JIG SAW
Multi-speed to s uit material. Quickchange ti lting shoe. Blade, wrench a nd
holder included.
1/ 4 H.P.

1288

69~

U-1509

o&lt;;od;oo, b"*;oo whool&lt;, w;,.

7-1/4" CIRCULAR SAW

69~

~

';

C/N

SOLDERING GUN

16' TAPE RULE

Two trigge r pos itio ns permit instant
switching from 10 0 to 140 -wott heats.
Reg. 6.95

Rubber bumper at mouth of chrome
p late d case cushions blade retu r n, red uces end breakage .
Reg .6.50

~ROP~NE .TOR~
0

1

I
0

.

JIGSAW
BLADE
ASSORTMENT

129

111111

REG. 2.29

PARKER

3988

Includes a ratch et wrench, so cke ts, screwdrivers, pliers, adjustable w renches, punches and
ch isels. All pocked in a metal
hip-roof tool box and all fu lly
warr an ted.

-~..··"::. -

C/N

10" ADJUSTABLE
WRENCH
Tape red ha ndle g ives better g rip to
tu rn stubborn nuts, bolts . 1-1 / B" jaw
opening. Reg . 5.1 9

J87

(Hwl)

REG. 1.59

ADDITIONAL OR

.

PROPANE TORCH
Lig hts instantly with no p re·heoting o r
p ri ming . Bu rns a t 1950° . up Ia 15
hours . Reg . 7.49

LIGHT

7J 129
WITH
COUPON
ADDITIONAL OR

26" HAND SAW

BIT BRACE

BuiiHn quality with s pecial steel conslr uc tion. S ha rp, set tee th. Hardwood
ha nd le. Reg. 3.89

12·point ratchet easily rev erses fo r
close quarter work. Hardwood oeod.
ha nd le. I0" sweep.
Reg. 4 .49

J44

F25' ~RO~BLE ~

0

(Hwi)J:{e):(if..

0

~OUT• COU~ON ~

I

C/H

0

0

.

I
I
I

4

44

U-1750

2.49
6-1 /~" 2.69
6-1 / 2"

Fast, s mooth culs for g onero ipurpose rippi ng, cross-&lt;:u tling.

Heavy-duty Staple r shoots staples
wherever yo u'd d rive o naiL F REE l
All-purpose Staple-Tacker, PLUS 1,000
stap les!

S.K. WAYNE

U-1650

._;[~:_-

Stirs up to a gallon can. Self-cleaning.
Fits a ll s ize d rills.

ARROW

FUEL CYLINDER

CIRCULAR SAW

-·-,~
- /_.
0 - •

C/H

STAPLE GUN WITH
FREE STAPLE TACKER

I
I
I 99&lt;:

1999

~ ...L~ BLADES

65 pc. TOOL SET

REG.1097
13.95

Bevel and rip ad justments. 7-1/ 4 "
blade included. Culling depth: 90• ,
2-3/ B" . 1 H.P.

3495

PAINT MIXER

b r ushes to 1/ 4 " &amp; 1/2" drills.

-

~l:J2&amp;

Cuts wood, metal, plastic, composition.
Includes blade, hex wrench and ho lder.
1/7 H P.

WHEEL ARBOR

/)

f;r.:.

0)

'7510
P&lt;&gt;rfect fo r fine fi nishing of wood, m etal
and plastic. 25 sq. in. sand ing a rea .
One-hand contro l.

--~~

(Hw•JI:I•l:(lt-.

I
0

•

~OUT' COU~ON ~

REG. 894

2' x 4' PERFORATED HARDBOARD

10

I

257

HIGH SPEED DRILL SET
Contains 13 h gh-spe ed steel d ril ls in
sites 1/ 16" to 1/ 4 " in 64ths Hi nged
cas e Reg. 8.20

LIMIT 4 PER
CUSTOMER AT
THIS SALE PRICE

471';

Tu r n w a sted w all :,p ace into o w orki ng
co nv eni ence. Ha ng pictu r es, shelv es;
sto re gard e n to o ls und equipm ent

-tc

Other s presenting gifts to ~
~
Mrs. Evans were Mrs. Mary
~
Hamm, Mrs. Shtrley Hamm ,
Mrs. Ruth Karr, Mrs. Barbara
Beegle , Mrs. Sherri Deavers ,
~
POMEROY, OHIO
~
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Jane Sisson, -tc
M ember FDI C
~
Mrs. Rose Genheimer, Mrs . ~
Mem ber Federal
-tc
Llllian Napper, and Mrs. -tc
Reserve System
~
............................................
Ramona Roush .

t

Ad 'lf~ ' I I \I O P,

307 SPRING AVE.

WINTER SALE!

Methodist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
at the church. Mrs. Robert
Card, program chairman.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary , Lewis Manley Post
263, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at the home of Mrs. Oscar
Hardaway.
HARRISONVILLE
OES,
regular meeting Tuesday, 8
p.m.
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday
7:30 p .m . Ralph Sayre,
superintendent, guest speaker.
Variety show to be presented by
Syracuse Girl Scouts. Everyone
welcome.·
EASTERN BAND Boosters
Tuesday at High School, 7:30
p.m. Work to be done on
Christmas list. Members asked
to send or bring list.
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
Eastern High School, 7:30p.m.

~

Save th e Survivors.
Pak1stan Re lief Fund .
Box 1670, Washington, D.C. 200 13

A Bible discussion and quiz
period was featured at the
Sunday night meeting of the
Junior
Methodist
Youth
Fellowship of the Forest Run
Methodist Church. Refreshments were served by Chris
Forbes to Michael Warner,
Mary Amber Warner, Brent
Arnold, Randy Arnold, Kim
Grueser, Jody Grueser, Brian
Hamilton, Sandy H::~milton, and
the leaders, Doro~hy Forbes
and Fay Hamilton.

P. J~_ Pauley

Morristown; Mr. and Mrs.
William Kitchen, Debbie and
Denise, Chillicothe; Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Wright, Circleville,
the hosts and their families, and
Pat O'Brien.
Others presenting gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. William Childs,
Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Boggs, Mr.
and Mrs. Millard Wildermuth,
Mr. and Mrs. James Simpson,
Mr. and Mrs. John Krawsczyn,
Mr. and Mrs. John Compton,
Mrs. Laura Bradbury, and Mrs.
Esther Edwards.
During the evening Mr. and
Mrs. C. P. Bradbury, James
Arnold, and Mrs. Edwards
telephoned congratulations to

~ Meigs Social Calendar ~

...... :

The Pak1stan fl ood left two million people
homeless and starvmg.
Please he lp them. Every dollar you give will
feed ten Pakistani ch ild re n a day.
(All money goes d rectl y to independent
A~encan relief organizati ons in Pakistan.)
Send what you can to Save the Survivors.

Discussion Held

Wedding bells accented with
the silver numerals "25" were
featured in the gift table
decorations. The. refreshment
table featured an anniversary
cake inscribed with the names
of the honored couple, and a
floral arrangement, the gift of
Mr. and Mrs. Asa Bradbury.
Mrs. Cash Bahr and Mrs. Gene
Harris assisted with the
arrangements for the surprise
party.
Among the numerous gifts
presented to the couple was a
silver coffee service.
Attending the party were Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Morgan, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Davenport, Mr.
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mrs. Jean
Cooke, Mr:;. James Arnold,
Miss Judy Arnold, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Mills, Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Jenkinson, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Stivers, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Gress, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Schmoll, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Sauer, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Harrts, Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Hannahs, and Mrs.
Evelyn Lewis, all of Middleport; Mrs. Robert Reibel,

L. . . . . .-~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,. .. . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..-.. ._.. . . . . . . . . . . . ...--.. . . . . . . ,.;

TODAY

•

Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Bradbury of Middleport were
honored at a surprise silver
wedding anniversary party
Saturday night. Hosting the
event were their daughters,
Mary Bradbury and Mrs. Carl
Wolfe, and their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Asa Bradbury.
The celebration followed a
family dinner party at Oscar's
Restaurant in Gallipolis at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. C. P.
Bradbury, 272 So. Third Ave.,
Middleport.

,_._............. ..._...._ _ _ •_ _ _ _,.______ .__...__.....__....__.......,........,...1

t

•

the couple ft'rJm the Edwards '
home in :vliami Beach, Fla .

I"ARMERS BANK !
and SAVINli~ CU.~

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store Of Building Since 1915
L...................________________________________________________________..

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

.

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds •
LEGAL NOTICE
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
~--~_B_·u__si_ri_e_s~_s_Servi_c~.e_s~~·:,'\·
OF

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Probate Court.
To the Administratrix of the
estate; to ~uch of the following
as are resit:tents of the State of
Ohio,
viz:
the
surviving spouse, the next of kin,
Tne oenet1c1ar1es unaer the will;
and to the attorney or attorneys
representing
any
of
the
a for em entioned persons:
Rebecca Hudnall, No. 20438,
Scipio Township; Meigs County,
Ohio.
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Appraisement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased, late
of said county, was filed in this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Court on the
25th day of March, 1971, at 10:00
o'clock, A.M.
Any person desiring to file
exceptions thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing.
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 4th day of
March 1971.
John C. Bacon
Judge and ex-officio
Clerk of said Court
By Ann B. Watson
Deputy Clerk
(3) 8, 15, 2tc

\ For Sale

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Period Ending
December 31,1970
Salisbury Township
Meigs County
Middleport, Ohio

Motor Co.

QUALITY

1969 CHEV. TOWNSMAN

$2495
Station Wagon . Low mileage local owned with auto.
trans., power steering, new tires, radio. Pleasing blue
finish. See this before you buy.

I certify the following report
to be correct
Richard Bailey
Township Clerk
SUMMARY OF
1967 FORD MUSTANG
$1495
CASH BALANCES,
6 Cyl., auto . trans., console, maroon finish, all good w-w
RECEIPTS AND
tires, radio. Real Nice.
EXPENDITURES
Balance, Jan. 1. 1970
Genera 1 Fun&lt;!
7,968.53
67 FORD L TO 4 DOOR
$1795
Motor Vehicle License
Factory air conditioning, auto. trans., P.S., P. B., like new
1,144.42
Tax Fund
tires, nice maroon finish with black vinyl roof. Now only
807.51
Gasoline Tax Fund
$1795.
Road and Bridge Fund 2,846.83
253.29
Cemetery Fund
13,020.58
Totals
Total Receipts
General Fund
12,176.88
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
-4,190.34
OP-EN EVES. 8:00P.M.
Gasoline Tax Fund
12,000.0"
r ~EROY, OHIO
'
Road &amp; Bridge Fund
2,70-4.28
Cemetery Fund
1,015.00
Totals
32,086.50
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
.... WANT AD .
General Fund
20,145.41
INFORMATION
Motor Vehicle License
DEADLINES
Tax Fund
5,334.76 5 P.M. {)ay Before Publication
CASH for used steel traps, any
Road and Bridge Fund 12,807.51
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
make, any size, phone 985Cemetery Fund
5,551.11
Cance.llation &amp; Corrections
Cemetery Fund
1,268.29 Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
3376 after 5 p.m. Richard L.
Totals
45,107.08
Day of Publication
Coleman, Long Bottom.
Expenditures
REGULATIONS
3-5-4tp
General Fund
12,854.13
The Publisher reserves the ------------------Motor Vehicle License
right to edit or reject any ads
Tax Fund
3,910.55 deemed
objectiot'lal.
The OLD furniture, dishes, bras~
Gasoline Tax Fund
11,487.55 pub I isher will not be responsible
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
Road .,nd Bridge Fund 4,617.23 for more than one incorrect
Rt.. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
Tot a Is
32,869.46 insertion.
992-6271.
Balance Dec. 31, 1970
RATES
9-1-lfc;
General Fund
7,291.28
For Want A&lt;l Service
Motor Vehicle License
5 cents per Word one insertion
Tax Fund
1,424.21
Minimum Cfiarge 75c Attendance at the Nazarene Gasoline
Tax Fund
1,319.96
12 cents per word three OLD UPRfuHT pianos, any
933.88 consecutive. insertions.
Sunday School on Feb. 28 was Road and Bridge Fund
condition. i!S long as have not
Cemetery Fund
1,268.29
18 cents per word Si'X conbeen wet. Paying $10 each.
74. Offering was $10.17.
Tota Is
12,237.62 secutive insertions.
First floor only. Mondays will
CASH BALANCES,
Mrs. Jane Smith spent a few
25 Per cent Discount on paid·
be pick-up day. Write, giving
RECEIPTS AND
ads
and
ads
paid
within
10
days.
days with her daughter and sonood directions. Witten Piano
EXPENDITURES
CARD OF THANKS
B
188 Sa d . •
BY FUND
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
&amp; OBITUARY
O~~p~~~.
ox
'
r IS,
General Fund
$1.50
for
50
word·'
minimum.
Clark, Hemlock Grove.
8-20-tfc
Balance, Jan. 1,
Each additional word 2c.
7,968.53
Mrs. Edith Osborn called on
1970
BLIND ADS
Receipts
Additional 25c Charge per
Freda Miller Friday afternoon. General Property
Tax Advertisement.
Real Estate (Gross) 3,500.61
Mrs. Edith King and daughter
OFFICE HOURS
Personal Property
8:30 a·.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
spent Saturday afternoon with Tangible
UNFURNISH~::D
3-room
Tax (Gross)
902.63 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
her brother and wife, Mr. and Inheritance Tax
Saturday.
(Gross)
199.76
Mrs. John Hoffman.
Local Govermment
1-31-lfc
Mr. and Mrs. Schartiger
Distribution
1,008.00
Permit Fees
6,172.61 AUCTION - · wHEN? Each
spent some time with their Liquor
Cigarette License Fees
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where? SMALL ONE-Bedroom trailer,
and Fines (Gross)
220.94
daughter and family in West
forced air heat and air conHayman's Auction House,
Other
172.33
ditioning. Phone 992-6452.
Laurel
Cliff
on
new
Rt.
7
Virginia.
Total Receipts
12,176.88
3-4-lfc
Pomeroy -Middleport
By
Jane Smith, Mrs. Macel Total Beginning Balance
pass.
Plus
Receipts
20,145.41
Barton and daughters spent a
2-7-tfc FURNISHED and unfurnished
Expenditures
day with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Total Expenditures
apartments. Close to school.
Administrative
11,640.10
Phone 992-5f34,
Dillinger of South Canaan Rd.
WILL PICK up mercnano1Sf
-Town Hall, Memorial
10-18-tfc
and take to auction on a
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Smith of
Buildings and
percentage basis. ' Call Jim
Grounds
34.73
Glenbunie, Ind., are visiting
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland. 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
-Fire Protection
740.00
Mrs. Jane Smith and Mr. and
- Cemeteries
392.90
Phone 742-4461.
Hts., Pomeroy . Available
-Lighting
46.40
9-23-tfc
after March 10. Phone 992·
Mrs . Richard Barton and Grand
Tot a I Expenditures 5127 after 4 p.m.
family and other relatives.
General Fund
12,854.13 SPIRITUAL-Aires of Columbus
3-2-lfc
Dec.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Woode Balance,
will
be
singing
at
the
Rutland
31 , 1970
7,291.28
Free-Will
Baptist
Church
TWO
OR
three
bedroom
home,
and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines Total Expenditures Plus Bal.
Sunday, March 14, 2 p.m.
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
Dec. 31, 1970
20,045 .41
of Athens Road spent Sunday MOTOR
VEHICLE LICENSE
Come and worship with us.
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
with Roger Hines and family in
TAX FUND
3 7-7tc
3-2-tfc
Balance,
Jan
.
1,
Gallipolis.
1970
1,144.46
HOME sewing . Phone 992-5327. TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
rs. Moon
Mrs
Receipts
2-23-30tc
'h·mile north of new Meigs
Motor Vehicle License
Vtr
Price M
Tax
4, 190.34 --=-- -- - - - - - High School. Phone 992-2941.
T otal Receipts
4,190.34 INCOME TAX service, daily
3-5-tfc
.Irs. Freda
Total Beginning Balance
except Sunday. Evenings by
Mrs. Georga T
Plus Receipts
5,334.76
appointment only. Phone 992Expenditures
evening.
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
Total
Expenditures
Mrs. Elsie Hines of Athens
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
Miscellaneous
1.088.68
DISCOUNT still on: Con mile south of fairgrounds.
Maintenance
2,821.87
Road, spent Thursday with her
tinental, Skamper, Go-Tag -A2-7-301c
Total
Expenditures
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Along, and Champion cam Motor Vehicle License
pers, trailers and motor
Tax Fund
3,910.55 DUZER WORt&lt;.... Sep1ac ranks,
Woode. Also spending Thursday
homes. Some here more
Bal. Dec . 31, 1970
1,424.21
with the Woodes was Mrs. Total
leach
beds.
Phone
949·4761,
Expenditures Plus
coming; Don't walk, start
10-18-tfc
Bal. Dec . 31, 1970
5,334.76
Mildred Frank of Pomeroy.
running to Gaut Trailer Sales,
TAX FUND
Inc., Chester, Ohio. Phone
Guy Thoma and family of Bal.,GASOLINE
Jan. 1, 1970
807.51 ' WILL GIVE piano and organ
985-3832. P. S. -Reserve your
lessons in my home. Phone
Receipts
Flatwoods Rd. spent Sunday
rental unit for the coming
Tax
12,000.00
992-3666.
afternoon with his mother. Gasoline
season NOW.
Total Receipts
12,000.00
8-16-llc
3-7-13tc
Evening callers were Earl Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
12,807.51
Thoma and family of Pomeroy.
RUBt:H:
R
STAMPS
made
to
Expenditures
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
Total Expenditures or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Miscellaneous
1,378.31
-Maintenance
10,109.24
Ohio.
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
Grand Total Expenditures 2-12-9otc
hardtop, power steering,
Gasoline Tax Fund
11,487.55
power brakes, air, 18,000
Bal. Dec . 31,1970
1,319.96 A i ,- ENTION ladies! Would you
miles. E!xcellent condition.
Total Expenditures Plus
like to try a wig on in the
Phone 992-2288.
Dec. 31,1970
12,807.51
privacy of your own home?
ROAD AND BRIDGE FUND
11-10-tfc
You
can.
Just
call
us.
We
also
Balance, Jan . 1,
1967
GTO,
400
cu.
in.
with
.060
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
1970
2,846.83
Koscot, of course. Dis ·
overbore brand new engine
Receipts
General Property Tax tributors, Brown's. Phone
with many extras, including
Real Estate (Gross) 1,495.36
Middleport 992 -5113. - · .. _ ·JANS, CRANE, HOLLEY,
Miss Dixie Circle of Cleveland Tangible Personal Property
ELDEBROCK, HOOKER,
12-31 -ffc
Tax (Gross)
1,159.50
ZOOM rod shop heads. 1968
spent the weekend with her Other
49.42
Muncie 220.1 transmission
2,704.28 CHAIRS recaned. Call 992-6771.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Total Receipts
and much more. $1,900 with
2-28-12tp
Total Beginning Balance
Circle. Christine Shaw of
M. T. aluminum wheels. Call
Plus Receipts
5,551.11
Expenditures
992-3453 or 992-3381. 583 S.
Cleveland was a guest on
Total Expenditures
Second St., Middleport, Ohio.
Friday night.
- Miscellaneous
4,595.0:L WOMAN available to do
3-7-61p
Maintenance
22.20
Recent visitors of Mrs. Mary
housework in Pomeroy area.
Grand Total Expenditures Circle were Mrs. Hattie Powell
Call Chester 985-3900.
K-5 INTERNATIONAL l'/2-ton
Road and Bridge
3-7-3tc
Fund
4,617.23
truck, 2-speed axle, 4-speed
and daughter, Addie of Racine
Bal., Dec. 31, 1970
933.88
transmission , $200. Phone 992R. D., Mr. and Mrs. James
Total Expenditures Plus
6048.
Circle of New Haven, Mr. and
Balance December
3-4-41p
31,1970
5,551.11 YOUNG MAN, are you wanting ---------------------Mrs. Donald Pierce of Athens,
lo
learn
electronics,
radio,
1962 CHEVROLET, 2-lon, 2CEMETERY FUND
George Circle and daughter,
television repair? I'll teach
Bal. Jan. 1,1970
253.29
speed axle, new tires. Good
Cheryl, of New Haven.
Receipts
you el ectronics and you will
condition. $600. Phone 992Sale of Lots
325.00
gel a good commission to
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle, Other
6048.
690.00
starl. After one year you take
3-4-4tp
Dixie and Wavie Circle spent Total Receipts
1,015.00
over shop and run it. This is a
Beginning Balance
Saturday evening with Mr. and Total
future
trade.
Write
in
own
Plus Receipts
1,268.29
1968 MERCURY Montego MX,
hand writing to: C. V.
Mrs. Harold Circle and family,
TOWNSHIP DEBT automatic
transmission ,
Humphrey,
152
Butternut,
NOTES
power steering and brakes.
Racine R. D.
Purpose for Which Note
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Air conditioned. See Leo L.
William Carleton and Eunie
Debt Was Created 3·4-4tc
Vaughan or cal l 992-2588 after
Truck
Purchase
Brinker visited Hayman Outstanding Jan. 1,
5: 30p.m.
RESPONSIBLI! person to work
Barnitz at Holzer Medical
3-7-3tp
1970
3,290.00
estab li shed route .
Good
Center in Gallipolis on Tuesday Redeemed During Year
commission.
ABC
Cleaners,
1970
1,6-45.00
Mason.
evening .
Balance Outstanding
FOR SALE by owner, 1968
Dec . 31,1970
1,645.00
3-5-tfc
Chevelle Malibu 4-door sedan.
Rateotlnt.
SPercent
Good shape, $1,595. Phone 378Loader- Backhoe
DAIRYMAN wanted: Must be
6349 Reedsville.
New Issues During
able to milk. House furnished.
3-2-6tc
Year 1970
7,000.00
Phone 949 3833.
Redeemed During Year
3-5-3tp
1965 CHEVROLET one-ton
1970
1'166.00
Balance Outstanding
truck, exce ll ent condition,
5,834.00
DRIVERS NEEDED
Dec. 31, 1970
$900. Phone 992-3380
6 Percent WE TRAIN you to be a semi
Rate of Int.
3-5-3tc
4-73
Date of F ina I Mat.
driver, l oca l and city training
now avai lable. Earn over
$4.50 an hour after short
The Bible Class monthly
training . For application and
NOTICE OF
interview, ca ll 513-863-6404, or MINIATURE Schnauzers ••1d
meeting was held at the home of
APPOINTMENT
write Sheridan Truck Lines,
Case No. 20463
Poodle puppies. Permanent
Ethel Stout. Nine attending.
1255
Corwin
Avenue ,
Estate of Floyd E . Well
in i ections and groomed.
Scripture, prayer, songs, and Deceased
Hamilton, Ohio 45015.
.
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
Notice is hereby given that
reading by Edith Betzing. "The
3·8-2tc
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
Dori
s
E
.
Well
of
RD
3,
Pomeroy,
right. Phone Coolville 667·
Old Man in the Stylish Church". Ohio, has been duly appointed
3654.
Business part consisted of Administrator of the Estate of
2-11-30tc
F loyd E . Well, deceased, l ate of
report by secretary Mae Meigs
LADIES You can hel p the
County, Ohio .
Vineyard of Jitney supper Feb.
family budget. Three or four
Creditors are required to file
eir claims with said fiduciary
hours a day will bring you a
20th at Annex. Cleared $143.55 th
within four months .
profitable income. Write ANTIQUE bookcase, $75. Phone
for the building fund of the new
Dated this 4th day of Marc h
Personal Shopper Dept., 10,
992-2683 after 5 weekdays or
St. Paul U. M. Church project. 1971.
Watkins
Products,
Inc .,
a ll day Sunday.
John C. Bacon
Winona, Minn. 55987 .
3-5-3tc
Acting Probate.Judge
of said County
3-8-ltc
An au wvol qwlt top "L;razy
(3) 8, 15, 22, 3tc
FIREWOOD, Ger ald K1ng ,
Patch Work Style". Many yards
Shade, Ohio. Phone 696-1287.
of crochet thread with various
3·5-6t p

Pomeroy Motor Co.

@}

Wanted To Buy

Chester East
News Notes

t

For Rent

Notice

ELECTROLUX cleaner with
attachments. Singer sewing
machine. Pint canning jars.
Call 742-5641.
3·4-61p

------------------HOUSE,
HOUSEHOLD
FURNITURE, HOUSEHOLD
GOODS.
DEPOT
ST.,
RUTLAND. SALE SIGNS UP.
3-7-3tc
VACUUM Cleaner brand new
1970 model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Will take
$27cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992-5641.
3-2-6tc
STEREO. Walnut solid state
stereo, 4 speed changer, 4
speaker sound system. Pay
balance $68.10 cash or easy
terms. Call 992-3352.
3-4-6tc
MAPLE STEREO - Radio
Combination. This stereo
equipped with Am-FM radio,
4 speakers, 4 speed changer.
Pay balance $81.30 cash or
terms. Call 992-3352.
3-4-6tc
DRIFTWOOD camping trailer,
18 foot, self-contained. New
awning. Phone 992-2859.
3-4-61c
GROCERY store and gas
station, Syracuse, Ohio. Good
location. Write P. 0. Box 406,
Syracuse, Ohio.
346tc
COAL. l imestone. Excelslo:
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-389'f.
4-9-lfc:
:..•- - - -- - - - - - Kl LL TERMITES and yard
insects with Arab "You-Do·
ft." King Builders Supply
Company, Middleport.
2-21-60tc

Carmel News,

By the Day

Employment Wanted

Help Wanted

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

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

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

Tuppers Plains
Society News

Pets For Sale

Female Help Wanted

For Sale

designs around pieces, date
made and embroid&lt;-ry ,1csigns when sold proceeds for building
with lovely bottom, was fund . Be on display at next
presented for sale and display . social likely in March at Annex.

GE Portable color TV, 3 months
old with instant co lor and
tuner . Phone 742 ·3334
3 5 Jtc

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

EXPERIE~CED

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES
Every One
Marked Down
22 cu. ft. side by side
Frostless Combination, 19
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
Up. Freezer, 15 cu. ft.
Refrigerator, 12 cu. ft.
Refrigerator, 4-11 cu. ft.
Chest Freezers and Elec.
Dryer. Must make room.
Priced for fast sale!

b

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

Real Estate For Sale
CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots on T79 at Rock
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
Witte weekends , or after 5
p.m. weekdays. Phone 9926887.
2-3-tfc
HOUSE 1640 Lincoln His.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc
------------------

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
OLD HOUSE - 7 rooms, floor
furnace, 3 porches, cellar .
Large lot on Route 7. TUPPERS PLAINS. Make offer .
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
bath, forced air heat. Modern ,
paneled kitchen with tea
room . Full basement. Double
garage. Only $14,500.00.

2

YEARS OLD 3 nice
bedrooms, closets, 1'12 baths.
Beautiful kitchen with stove
and
r efrigerator .
Ful l
basement. Forced air heat .
Garage. $26,500.00.

80 ACRES all minerals, 6
room house, barn, drilled
well. Other buildings. $25,000.
BEFORE YOU BUY,
SELL OR BUILD
CALL 992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE 992-2378

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE
$349.95
$35.00 DownBalance On

TELEVISION
REPAIR
All Makes &amp; Models
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
675-2241 or 773-5196

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE
J. Durbin- C. Inscore
Service Personnel

A nENTION VOERANS
GREEN HILL HOMES
OFFICE PHONE., 992:Z.l29
NO ANSWER CALL

BLAETTNARS
Ph. 992,-2143

EXPERT

PomeroY,

Wheel Alignment

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

INTER lOR and exterior carpentry, metal roofing and
shingle roofing ; 20 years
experience. Clinton Pierce,
Phone 992-2015.
.l-23·12tp

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt ~radfn.. -:1

.J. 1-tfc
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2·12-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

Cleland Realty
608 East Main
POMEROY
17 ACRES, NEW DRILLED
WELL AND PUMP, SCHULT
mobile home 6 months old,
close to POMEROY.
1.27 ACRES, near Rutland, 7
room house, drilled well,
natural gas, part basement.
$4,295.
FARM - about 170 acres, all
fenced, about 50 acres for
cultivation, 2 wells, pond, 3
barns, shed, silo, milk house,
good 8 room house with bath,
PART MINERALS. $20,000.
TO BUY OR SELL
CONTACT US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568

LEGAL NOTICE
ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR BIDS
sealed proposals will be
rece i ved by the Board of
Education of the Eastern Local
School District of Reedsville ,
Ohio, at the office of the clerk,
Reedsville, Ohio, until 12 : 00
o 'clock noon eastern standard
time, March 9, 1971. and at that
time opened by the clerk of said
board , as provided by law, for
1 truck chassis suitable for a
60 passenger school bus body
1 truck chassis suitable for a
66 passenger school bus body
1 - 60 passenger school bus
body
1 - 66 passenger school bus
body
Specifications
for
this
equipment is on file at the office
of the clerk of the board .
c.

TOM CROW
Night 992-2580

DAlE DUTTON 992-3106
Night 992-2534

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

SR.
Broker

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

..

Gl LOANS available to buy or build your new
home. Contact us for more information.

Radiator Service

AIR CONDITIONING , Refrigeration service. Jack's
1970 DIAL N SEW Zig-Zag
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Sewing Machine left in
Phone 882,2079.
layaway. Beautiful pastel
4-6-lfc
color, full size model. All
built-in to buttonhole, overcast and fancy stitch. Pay just SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
$48.75
cash
or
terms "Ditching. Electric sewer
available. Trade-ins ac cleaning ." Reasonable rates.
cepted. Phone 992-5641.
Phone
John
Russell,
3-2-6tc
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc

CLOSE OUT!

.

ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO (1) Rent Homes,- Mobiie Homes, or Apartments
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OF $4,000to$9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We wi II furnish lot or erect on your lot.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

CUSTOM
MEAT
cutting.
Contact Richard Vaughan,
phone 992-3374 or Dale Little,
phone 992-6346.
FLUFFY, SOFT and bright are
3-3-12tc
carpets cleaned with Blue
Lustre.
Rent
electric READY-MIX CONCRETE deshampooer, $1. Baker Furlivered right to your project.
niture, Middleport.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
3-3-6tc
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
FOUR and five foot brush hogs.
Middleport, Ohio.
Phone 992-6329.
6-30-tfc
3-2-6tc

For Sale or Rent

Auto Sales

.

$5.55
I

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

LARRY SPENCER
Night 992-3433

MASO" CAR WASH
••AUTOMATIC''
Car ~ompfetely Mitted
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
Sat. Uo 5--Sun. 11 to s

PRICE SI.25

.Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Do It Yourse If Open
24 Hrs. Daily- 25c

606 E. Milfn, Pomeroy, 0.

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.'
Authorized Singer Safes and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc
HARRISON'S TV ~NO ANTe_NNA SERVJC~. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc

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

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? call 9922966.
6-15-tfc
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20452
Estate of ROY VAN COONEY ,
Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that
Ralph Van Cooney of Middleport, Oh io, has been duly
appointed Admin istrator of the
Estate of Ralph Van Cooney,
deceased , late of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims w ith said f iduciary
with in four months.
Dated th i s 17th day of
February 1971 .
F. H.O'Brien
Progate Judge
of said County
(2) 22 (3) 1, 8 , 3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20450
Estate of LEONIDAS R . BARR ,
Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that
Dale Barr of Reedsville, Ohio,
has been duly appointed
Executor of the Estate of
Leonidas R . Barr , deceased ,
late of Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated this 17th day of
February , 1971.
F. H . O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
(2J 22 (3) 1, B, 3tc

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bids will be receive'
by the Meigs Local Schoo
District Board of Education at
their office in the Meigs Junior
High School Building, Middleport, Ohio, for passenger
school buses until 12 o'clock on
March 29, 1971, according to
specifications of said Board of
Education. Separate and ind~pendent bids will be received
with respect to the chassis and
body type, and will state that
the buses when assembled and
prior to delivery, comply with
all
school
district~
specifications,
all
safet*
regulations and current Ohio
Minimum Standards for School
Bus
Construction
of
the
Department of
Education
adopted by and with the consent
of the Director of Highway
Safety pursuant to Section
4511.76 of the Revised Code and
all other pertinent provisions of
law.
Specifications
and
instructions to bidders may be
obtained
from
A'ssistant
Super i ntendent Morrison ,
Middleport, Ohio.
The Board of Educatio.
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids
By order of the
Board of Education
L. W MCComas
Clerk Greasurer
(3) 1. 8, 15, 22, 4tc

OPENING
Vending is BIG BUSINESS- is
growing steadily every year- and
is RECESSION PROOF!
THIS COMPANY ...
• Is one of the top vending operations in the U.S.
• Sells only top-quality, nationally
advertised and accepted products.
• Secures vending locations for you.
You make NO PERSONAL SALES
CALLS! The machines do the selling.
• Has a program that allows YOU
to make money- part-time or
full-time- with investments as
little as $600 to $1500.
• Has liberal financing after initial
investment to operators who prove
themselves.

--..···••
• Investigate it NOW -

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
No. 20451
BARR,
Estate of ALICE
Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that
Dale Barr of Reedsville, Ohio,
has been duly appointed
Executor of the Estate of Alice
Barr , deceased , late of Meigs
county , Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their c laims with said fiduciary
within four months .
Dated this 17th day of
February, 1971 .
F . H . O' Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
(2) 22 (3) 1, 8, 3tc

E--4

NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS
d i vis1on of U/1

1275 PROFIT DRIVE• DAllAS. TEXAS 75247

1 am interested in moro Information
about makin&amp; money In tho vondin&amp;
business. I hovo a ear and 6·8 hours
per weok spare timo.
0 I can invest $600 in a route.
0 I can invest $1500 In a route.

NamiL------------------Md~•-----------------City_ _____State__Jip__
Phone (

)-------=~

Dept.-.4049 D

Home

I . 0 . McCoy , Pres .

o. Newland, Clerk

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

JEMO ASSOCIATES
DAVID &amp; DIANE ASHLEY
175 Beech St.
Middleport
" Words cannot describe the
feeling one gets to get up in the
morning and walk barefooted
through the house on wall to-wa ll
carpeting without being co ld. We
urge everyone we know to see
about buying a home from
Associates."

Conve'nient

Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

•
II"

S1tes Available
Don't Delay! Contact Af Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992·7034

�BARNEY
SHE'S STANDIN'
OUT 'IONDER BV
TH' CLOTHESLINE
WAITIN' FER
TH' WASH IN' TO
GIT DRV

•

WHAT IN THUNDER
IS SHE DOIN'
THAT FER?

I GOT HER A BRANDNEW IRONIN' BOARD
FOR HER BIRFDAV
AN' SHE'S JEST D'/IN'
TO TRV IT OUT

"Tl-\E. EMPlDYW\EMr PRoBLE.M

ltV AMERICA I'S TERRie:.LE.!
WEVE GOT TO GE-T 1'0 'THE:
BOTrOM ~\"He SrTUI\TtOtv!

~.~

-·

.a

FRECKLES AND IUS FRIENDS

COMME~CIALS

1 MAY 8E ENVIOUS,

HON'EYBE~:;, I Do

YEAH, MOM, SHE WO~S AI
AGENCY THAI MAKES W

BELl EV~ YOLYI:!c

f

6~EEN-fYED,

JEALOUS!

SPITEFUL.

Al'lD

BE6RUD61~,
~TI'M

l

Nor

JEALOUS/

•
•

.JUST TI{OUGI-IT
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A.OROSS

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seaport
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river
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as a tree
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measure
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State
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�8 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 8,1971

r---------------------------,

!

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert R.
McDonald, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. John
W. Dawson, Jackson, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Carl R. Muncy, Wellston, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Hester S. Ballard,
Clarence L. Bolton, Mrs. G.

Walkout
Delayed

l 16% Increase Asked Brutality of Big Time
Fighting
is
Forgotten
For State 's Workers

Raymond Eyer, Debra Lynn
Chapman, Mrs. Melvin Lee
Clagg and infant daughter, Mrs.
Daisy Drummond, David L.
Evans, Mrs. Dofard Howard
Fetty and infant daughter, Mrs.
Martha C. Fulton, Jasper R.
Griffith, Mrs. Austin D. Hawk,
Mrs. Jewell F. Hixon, Margaret
C. Lawless, Phillip E. Long,
Mrs. Maude C. Pemberton,
Mrs. Loretta J. Pushkar, Mrs.
George W. Rafferty and infant
son, Robert Wayne Roberts,
Mrs. Mary M. Rose, Mrs.
James Alvin Sims and infant
daughter, Mrs. Devern E.
Singer, Mrs. Keith E. Snyder,
Mrs. Ervin Tolliver, Henry W.
VanSickle, Tina Louise White,
Mrs. Ida H. Williams, Mrs.
Elwood I. Yoder, Charles W.
Boyles, and Mrs. C. Frederick
Polsley.

~

!

Pomeroy....
Personal Notes

be able to build in Ohio an even
larger corps of dedicated,
competent public servants,"
said total cost of the package
would be $75.8 million in fiscal
1972 and $75.8 million in fiscal
1972 and $91 million in fiscal
1973 with a maximum increase
of 5 per cent a year.
-Life insurance policies for
all state employes in the
amount of one and a half times
the worker's annual salary.
- A sick leave conversion
program that would permit
conversion of unused sick leave
at retirement to cash at 25 per
cent of the time accrued.
In addition, Gilligan urged the
200 job classes receive pay
increases.
The cost-of-living provision,

SAIGON ( UPI )-A South
Vietnamese general said today
his forces have destroyed
112,000 tons of Communist
munitions in Laos and cut
traffic on the Ho Chi Minh
supply trail "to a minimum."
Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam,
commander of the South
Vietnamese task force in Laos,
said in addition to the
munitions, the South Vietnamese had destroyed 1,341 tons
of food supplies in the monthold operation in Laos.
Lam told a news conference
at his Ham Nghi command post
near the Laotian border this
was enough food and armaments to supply three
Communist divisions totaling
36,000 men for one month.
The capture Saturday of the
Ho Chi Minh Trail junction of
Sepone, 27 miles inside Laos,
has " decreased traffic to a
minimum," Lam said.
South Vietnemese spokesmen
in forward areas inside Quang
Tri province reported government Marines with support
from air strikes and artillery
killed at least 250 North
Vietnamese troops in an 18-hour
battle six miles inside Laos that
began Sunday night. Seventeen
government Marines were repor ted killed .
Officers said government
troops in bomb-shattered Sepone uncovered a cache of 2,000

122MM rockets near the
Communist supply point and
destroyed them by directing air
strikes on the site. Lam said
150 rocket launchers were found
in Sepone.
.
About 700 South Vietnamese
troops were in Sepone today,
with 700 others to the north and
about the same number to the
south, spokesmen in the field
said.
Lam said before the South
Vietnamese incursion the Communists were able to repair the
trail within hours after U.S. air
strikes. " Since we have ground
forces there, repair is not
possible," he said.
South Vietnamese military
spokesmen in Saigon said at
least 6,052 Communists have
been killed in the Laotian
campaign while South Vietnamese losses were put at 435

By RICK DU BROW
the governor said, would be
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Perbased on figures from the sonally, I am not going to one
federal Bureau of Labor of tonight's closed circuit
Statistics and would cost the
TV. . .in Review
state an estimated $12.5 million
in fiscal 1973.
telecasts of the Joe FrazierTotal cost of the sick leave Muhammad Ali fight. It's a
proposal would be $967,000 for small protest of my own. I just
the biennium. The life in- can't bring myself to go.
I have nothing against the
surance proposal would cost
fighters
involved wanting to
about $7.7 million for fiscal1973make a lot of money. That's
74.
The 16 per cent pay hike perfectly natural, and they are
figure, said Gilligan, was doing what any smart businessreached by studying public men would do-taking advan.
employe pay scales in eight tage of the market.
same
goes
for
the
The
neighboring states, six Ohio
metropolitan areas, limited promoters and all others
private sector figures and data connected with the fight-!
from the U. S. Civil Service have nothing against them for
wanting to make all that loot.
Commission.
The reason I am not going to
watch the fight, or contribute
my dollars to the take, is that I
would somehow feel ashamed
and humiliated to help out a
sport that the public, not too
dead, 1,495 wounded and 100 many years back, seemed
missing in action.
finally to be done with in a
The U.S. command lists 58 major way because of its
helicopters downed with 50 brutality.
Americans killed, 50 wounded
And I would somehow feel
and 16 missing.
cheapened to know I was
Lam said the 24,000-man willingly swept along by the
government force in Laos had tent show atmosphere that is
destroyed nearly 500,000 gallons part of the razzmatazz theatriof fuel and two truck refueling cal flavor surrounding the fight.
pipeline systems.
It may be a small bhing, but I
More than 1,000 American
planes pounded the Ho Chi
Minh Trail area Sunday in
Pleasant Valley Hospi
support of the South VietnaAdmissions - Kenneth Bush,
mese troops. The South Vietna- Jr., Bidwell, 0.; Joe Hammack,
mese reported the air strikes Point Pleasant; Ed Johnson,
killed at least 112 North Lakin; Mrs. Emmons Thomas,
Vietnamese soldiers.
Leon; Mrs. Merrill Clarke, Mrs.
William Neal, both Point
Veterans Memorial Hospital Pleasant; Shane Shields,
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS - Letart; David Harmon, Point
Ralph Parker, Pomeroy; Ethel Pleasant; Debbie Stover,
Elias, Mason; Shirley Baxter, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Abbie
Gerald
Athens; Earla Pickens, Racine; Chattin, Clifton;
Higginbotham,
Grimm's
Cossie Gorby, Langsville;
Landing; Cecil Wamsley ,
Veatrice Nice, Racine .
Gallipolis; Lonnie Meadows,
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Marvin Darst, Cleo Adams, Milton; Mrs. Revna King, New
Flossie Hysell, April King, Haven.
Discharges
Douglas
Lawrence Francis.
Carse!
Stone,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Stewart,
Rosemary
Meadows,
1\felvin
Nancy Hubbard, Syracuse;
James Fife, Cheshire; Thomas Bush , Mrs. Garnet Tooley,
Tucker, Pomeroy; Bertha Mark Doss, Mrs. Vivian Mayes,
Barrett, Langsville; Harry Lydia Long and Mrs. Carl
Graham, Pomeroy; Arthur Rairden and son, J ohn Neal,
Nease, Minersville; Bernice Timothy Jeffers, Mrs. Ruth
Levacy , Syracuse; Kathy Selby, Timmy Gillenwater,
Rager, Pomeroy; Opal Cum- Denice Franklin, Mrs. Haskell
mins, Racine; Gertrude Toban, Gillispie and daughter, Mrs.
Pomeroy; Irene Cross, Mid- Belle Shields, Joseph Barton,
dleport; Harry Cross, Mid- Mrs. James Riffle, Harold
dleport; Guy Bing, Middleport; Wallace, Mrs. Roscoe Greenlee,
Tamara Theiss, Bidwell; Bessie Mrs. Mary Bragg , Teresa
Arnold, Mrs. James Barnett,
Oliver, Middleport.
Kimberly Hughes and Richard
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Jeffers.
Robert Davis, Donald Deel,
Birth - March 6, a daughter
Horace McElhinney, Charles
Niemeyer, Mary Evans, Robert to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Casey,
Henderson.
Craig.

lLaos Success Claimed

~--...------~

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
United Transportation Union
called a strike against two
major railroads Sunday night
but then voluntarily postponed
it until Thursday when the lines
asked a federal judge to block
a walkout.
The strike was called without
advance notice for midnight
Sunday against the Burlington
Northern and the Seaboard
Coas t Line railroads.
The rapidity of the UTU in
calling it off mdicated the
action was a strategy move by
the union smce " selective
s trikes" have been ruled illegal
by federal judges in some
similar cases in the past.
Negotiations aimed at avoiding a nationwide strike were
recessedSaturday-withoutany
date for new talks- to allow
each side to study the other's
offers and to prepare for more
discussions.
Union officials postponed the
strike against Burlington and
Seaboard until 2 p.m. EST
Thursday to give U.S. District
Judge J ohn H. Pratt time to
arrange a hearing on the
railroads' request for a tempora ry restraining order against
the strike.
Selec tive _ or "whipsaw" _
strikes have been stopped on
three other occasions by federal
courts which rul that when a
umon bargains
with
ot
v ra com~
strtke s lecth·e
few of them.

COLUMBUS (UPI)- A pay
raise for state workers, including an across-the-board 16
per cent pay hike to take effect
July 1, was proposed today by
Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Gilligan said enacbnent of the
proposal would "be a major
stride toward bringing Ohio's
public employes onto an even
keel with workers in other
governmental jurisdiction and
even, in some cases, with
private industry."
State Sens. Robert D. Secrest,
D-Cambridge; Douglas Applegate, D..Steubenville; and
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, were
to introduce the proposed
legislation next week.
Gilligan, who called the pay
increase essential "if we are to

Hayman Barnitz, confined to
the Holzer Clinic for the past
week, is now at the Holzer
Medical Center, Room 378. His
condition is Unproved.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Neutzling
and Miss Sybil Ebersbach were
Sunday visitors of Elmer
Ebersbach, Point Pleasant, W.
Va.
Mrs. Leo Crew is spending the
week in Columbus with her
husband, a dental instructor at
the Columbus Technical Institute.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer,
Lou Ann and Kim, were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich and Jayne.
Mrs . Robert Kuhn has
returned from a several days'
visit at Devolsburg, Pa. with
her mother, Mrs. William
Miller.
James Lambert underwent
surgery Friday at the
University Hospital, Columbus.
Visiting with him there Sunday
were Mrs. Wesley Fry and Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Forrest.
Mr s . Robert Reibel will
return to Morristown today
following her visit here with her
son-in-law and daughter , Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Bradbury,
and other relatives.

Income Tax

(Continued from Page 1)
about 5 million poor people.
Returns no longer are required
for single persons with incomes
under $1,700 or from married
couples with incomes under
$2,300 a year.
The first new problem comes
when both husband and wife
work at low wages. Withholding
rates assume that each spouse
is
the only wage earner, so if
P ROGRAM FOR YOUTHS
wages are low enough to
A program on drug abuse for
qualify, nothing will have been
all youths in Middleport will be
withheld.
held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
But when the actual tax
Am er ican Legion Hall in
return
is filed, the couple will
Middleport. James Roach will
Mrs. Minnie L. Holman, 78,
be entitled to only one low
be the speaker. The program is Middleport, died Saturday at
income allowance. In addition,
sponsored by the Junior Veterans Memorial Hospital.
their combined income might
Auxiliary of F eeney-Benne tt
Mrs. Holman was born June
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The be too high to qualify for the
Legion Post 128.
8, 1892 at Racine, the daughter
Agriculture Department has allowance at all.
of the late John and Judy Wolf
eased controls to allow planting
Danielson. Her husband, John,
of several million additional
CLUB TO MEET
died in 1958.
acres this year out of concern
The Past Councilors Club of
Surviving are two daughters,
Theodorus
Council
17, Mrs. Charley Jewell, New over another possible attack of
Southern corn leaf blight.
Daughters of America, will Haven, W. Va. , and Mrs .
The blight cut into the nameet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at Virginia Napper, Racine; five
tion's corn production by more
the home of Erna Jesse.
sons, Jacob and Earl , of
than 10 per cent in 1970, forcing
Racine ; John of Inkster, Mich. ;
early slaughter of meat animals
Bill, of Wayne, Mich., and
and higher consumer prices.
Wilkie , of Middleport, 13
Increased corn acreage would
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
grandchildren, and six greathelp offset lower per acre proMarch 8·9
grandchildren.
duction caused by a new attack
Walt Disney 's
Funeral services will be at
by the blight. Agriculture and
" ARISTOCATS"
1:30 p .m . Tuesday at the
(Technicolor)
weather service officials have
Foglesong Funeral Home with
Phil Ha rris
been saying conditions that fosthe Rev. Charles Simons, pastor
Eva Gabor
tered
the blight last year - an
Plus
of the Middleport First Baptist
unusually moist and humid
Walt Disnev's
Church, officiating. Burial will
DAD CAN I
growing season - could recur.
be in the Letart Falls Cemetery.
BORROW THE CAR
The move to relax planting
For all small chairs
Friends may call at the funeral
controls would also encourage
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
home any time .
or boudoir chairs
more soybean acreage. Demand
for soybeans has been increasing steadily in recent years.
With no formal announcement
of the eased control move, the
department has issued new instructions to state and local ofSPll\l QUlltt
ficials to allow fa rmers to request cuts in their " conserving
base" acreage. The acreage is
set a~de frq_,m planting to qualify for federal support programs.

Minnie Holman

Died Saturday

Limits on

Corn Eased

don't like to feel I can be had
that easily.
This is one fight where the
true villain is the public-and
not one of the boxers. For, by
falling for the promotion of the
match, hook, line and sinker,
the public reminds us sadly
that we have not come as far
as we like to think from the
1930s and 1940s. And it reminds
us that televised brutality is
often easily forgotten.
For those may not remember, ABC-TV used to have a
fight-of-the-week years ago,
until finally the public got sick
and tired of the series. But
what really killed national
interest in televised boxing was
the fatal beating absorbed by
Benny (Kid ) Paret while
millions watched. A wave of
revulsion towards boxing swept
the nation at the time, but
apparently we have overcome
that enough to regress.
I am no bleeding heart when
it comes to rough sports. I am
a fan of tough , competitive
athletic action . But watching
the weekend television shows

•

that helped promote the bandwagon of the Frazier-Ali fight, I
felt again the revulsion that
was common after Paret died.«
By now, of course, almost
everyone has jumped on the 11
bandwagon for tonight's fight,
although the better sportswriters have drawn a proper bead ~1
on the goings-on. Nevertheless,
the paying public offers itself
up, almost begging to be taken
advantage of. On video, we see
a Vitalis commercial in which
both Frazier and Ali take par~
-and who can blame them for
laughing all the way' to the
bank?
There is one hopeful note,
however, amid all the hoopla
leading up to tonight's match:
according to various reports,
the fight is not selling tickets
as well as expected in
grassroots Middle America.
And I like to think that maype•
this is a sign that there is still
some old-fashioned down-toearth horse sense in areas not
yet desensitized by big town
sharpies, who are the easiS!st
marks of all.

.:. ·=·.·:=:::~; :~~: ~~: =:~=.~;i.: = ~:::::i:::::==: ~;~=~ ~ ~;~:: :~;:: :~~ ~ j~ ~~ ~:~~: ~~~~~ ~~: ~~~: ==r= ~f:~~~:~~;~rI~~[1~l~I~~~1f: ~::jjf~Jm~!!:=

Overnight Wire

:il il l~

By United Press International
CLEVELAND - THE KNIFE-AND-CHAIN battle between
two motorcycle gangs that left five dead and 21 others wounded
was expected to result in charges today against some of the 77
persons police were questioning about the "near riot." The deadly
battle Saturday night at the fourth annual Motorcycle Custom and
Trade Show in the Polish Women's Hall was believed to have been
touched off by a feud between the Akron Breed and the Violators,
·
a New York City branch of Hell 's Angels.
Police Prosecutor Everett Chandler said he was considering
first-degree riot and first-degree murder charges against some of
the suspects. "They came armed for trouble, " he said.
FAIRFIELD, VT.- MRS. DONALD REED, mother-in-law
of Staff Sgt. James J. Sexton, one of four American airmen kidnapped by guerrillas in Turkey, said Sunday she felt discouraged
by the U.S. government's position on the matter.
"President Nixon said in his speech that it is our policy not to
interfere," Mrs. Reed said. "To me, if it's their policy to sePd
them there, it seems it could be their policy to go there and help . .
them."
NEW YORK- THE AMERICAN Cancer Society (ACS)
announced Sunday it will launch a "concerted drive" to see that
every woman in the United States receives regular pap tests to
virtually eliminate deaths by uterine cancer.
Dr. H. Marvin Pollard, president of the society, and William
B. Lewis, chairman of the board, set a goal of the mid 1970s for
accomplishing this in their 1970 annual report.
A LATE WINTER storm continued to lash the Northeast with
strong winds and snow today, stranding weekend skiers in their
New England lodges and closing roads and schools in Michigan.
Alpena, Mich., piled up more than 16 inches of snow since noon
Saturday, the largest total for a single storm this season. The
season's accumulation in the area has exceeded 142 inches, a
record.
Schools in the Alpena area were ordered closed today and
U.S. 23 along Lake Huron was closed a t Cheboygan and barely
passable at Alpena. Plows were called off the roads in the Alpena
area early today to await the end of the snowfall. Snowfall continued in northern New England from a storm which dumped ~ix .,..
inches of new snow Sunday.
•

See The Many New Arrivals In Elherfelds Drapery Department On The 2nd Floor

MULTI-USE FOAMBACK THROW COVERS

MEIGS THEATRE

FOR ALL FURNITURE AND BEDS - MANY OTHER USES - INDOORS AND OUT

Check This Chart For The Size You Need.

70"x 90''

70"x 120"

70"x140"

For an aver~ge and larger
size chairs or bunk beds

For all smarr sofas
love seats or sectionals

For all averap
and larger size sofas.
Sofa-beds and hide-a-beds

60"x70"

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

BAKER'S

DRYER

:;::~~::::;::::;::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday Through Friday
A warming trend with a
chance of showers. Highs
Wednesday in the 30s north,
40s south and lows in the 20s.
Highs Thursday and Friday
in the upper 40s and 50s. Lows
in the 30s and the 40s.

' 158

Permacote Drum
3 Temp. Selection
long Life Heating Element

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

PLUNGES TO DEATH
LOGAN , Ohio ( UP I )
Walter Landers, 54, Dayton,
slipped on a wet trail while
visiting at Old Man's Cave in
the Hocking Hills Saturday
afternoon and plunged 60 feet
over the cliff to his dea th .
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a .m . was 23
degrees with s now falling .

If available, 70"x10!5" mcy also
be used for lareer size e~.alrs

60"x 70"

70"x120"

For auto seats, indoor and outdoor tables
picnics and TV viewing

For. single and twin beds,
co1.1ches, cots or itollywood bea"1·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="3841">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1997">
              <text>March 8, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1559">
      <name>holman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
