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                  <text>. Solid Waste Decision Expected TOday
•

Pomeroy council Monday night in special session voted to
establish and regulate garbage collections. Who will make
collections and when, was not decided, however.
Council in a long session discussed the problem facing the
village -garbage collection - and canvassed possible ways to
solve the most immediate issue.
Pomeroy ran into the solid waste problem when Walter
Bentz stopped collections Friday. Bentz, who has serviced
Pomeroy the past 22 years, appeared in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Frank W. Porter Friday to face a charge of disposal of
solid waste material in an area which was unlicensed. There
was no fine levied against Bentz, but he was ordered to
discontinue use of what is known as the Dark Hollow site and to
cover garbage and trash that already has been dumped there.

On Monday, Lee Drenner, another independent hauler,
made his final pickup on an additional 80 customer route in
Pomeroy.

Now You Know
Mathew Brady took more
than 7,000 photographs of the
American Civil War, but he was
able to sell only a few of them
and died penniless.

Bentz has also been servicing residents in Minersville and
Syracuse. This service stopped as of Saturday.
Frank W. Porter, the judge sitting in Bentz's case, speaking
as a citizen of Pomeroy, suggested that council adopt a
municipal garbage service that would make garbage collection
compulsory whether residents use the service or not.
Porter made these other points:
- The immediate situation must be taken care of, and
suggested Bentz be contacted to see if council could purchase
Bentz's packer truck, and even perhaps hire Bentz.
- The village could use the Middleport dump or the dump in
Mason City; however, Porter said dumping at Middleport would
not be the answer, only a stop gap, as "It is not a question, will
the Middleport dump be closed, it is a question of when.''
-"It is time for Pomeroy, the county seat, to take the lead.
"We need an immediate solution to the problem."
-A sanitary landfill is a county problem, collections are the
problem of each village.

. Council discussed at length the possibility of purchasing a
packer truck and collecting. Mayor Charles Legar noted that
Bentz would submit his list of customers as did Lee Drenner.
Councilman Franklin Rizer held that the village could not
operate a garbage collection service profitably. " If we had a
city manager, this would be a different situation," Rizer observed.
Bentz, contacted by Legar before council recessed, told the

mayor he was not interested in renting or leasing his truck or
working for the village. However, his packer truck was for sale.
Council decided to contact Griffith, who had left the
meeting, and see if he would be interested in a franchise for
collecting waste in Pomeroy. Named to contact Griffith were
Rizer and Don Collins. Their recommendation will be made to
council this evening when the special meeting is reconvened at 5
p.m.
Vic Brown, owner of a trailer court in Minersville, said he
had 25 stops .that needed servicing.
It was noted that other towns such as Minersville and
Syracuse could be included in the proposed plan on a volunteer
basis. Cost of pickups would be in line with what is presently
being charged it was thought.
Attending were Legar, Councilmen Rizer, Collins, Bob Hysell,
Ralph Werry, and Lucien Poulin; councilwoman Elma Russell,
and Jane Walton, clerk.

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

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVI NO. 229

-This is a municipal problem and it is the county commissioners responsibility to establish a county landfill .
OFFER MADE
Also appearing before council was Earl Griffith of
Hockingport who operates a state approved sanitary landfill.
Griffith offered the use of the landfill and also to take over
collections. He said he had the first state approved landfill in
Washington County •
"We bury everything and burn nothing," Griffith said.

TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1971

Weather
Increasing cloudiness tonight
followed by a chance of snow
north Wednesday and likely
beginning south before Wednesday morning. Low tonight in
the upper teens and 20s. Highs
Wednesday in the 30s.

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

TEN CENTS

Street Repair Expected
•

If financing can be arranged, agreement with the firm getting Southeastern Ohio Council of class, it was reported.
Maintenance
Supervisor
resurfacing of the major streets the bid that the entire amount Governments asking that
in Middleport will occur this not be paid until the end of 1971. Middleport submit a three year Harold Chase reported the need
It was decided that Gene plan for 1971, 1972 and 1973 of for guard rail replacement on
spring.
This was determined Monday Grate, clerk-treasurer, should what is planned for its police Middleport Hill and attempts
night by Middleport Village confer with Solicitor Bernard department. The council assists will be made to secure
Council which heard estimates Fultz on the steps that can be with the purchase of police materials for that project. He
also
that
from two road resurfacing taken to finance the project. A cruisers, radios and other suggested
arrangements
be
made
to
rent
equipment.
The
matter
was
special
session
of
council
is
firms read by Council President
planned if easier financing referred to Chief of Police J. J. camp sites at the Marina during
John Zerkle.
The Shelly Co. of Thornville arrangements can be obtained. Cremeans and the council's the summer months. That
rna tter will be referred to the
Council had encouraging traffic committee.
submitted an estimate of $34,737
Council discussed higher planning commission.
and the Tri-County Asphalt and news from Cong. Clarence
Chase also reported that
Paving Co. of Gallipolis Miller, who stated in a letter insurance rates that have gone
that he is sponsoring a $5 billion into effect in the community. It business at the village dump is
'estimated $29,665.
Zerkle said the streets in- general share the revenue bill. was explained that an error was on the increase. Two Pomeroy
cluded on the project are those If the bill becomes law, Mid- made in the flow of water for haulers recently stopped
most in need of resurfacing. dleport would receive $13,896 in fire protection 10 years ago and collection service in that
Included are about two and one- new, unrestricted funds during that residents have benefitted community and that is believed
half miles of the 10 miles of hard the first year of its par- from a lower rate made by a to have caused the increased
surfaced streets in town. It was ticipation. There would be no state inspector at that time. An hauling to the Middleportpointed out that the above cutback of any present expenditure of thousands would owned location.
A letter was read from
estimates might be even higher programs of aid, the letter be required to put Middleport
(Continued on Page 8)
into a lower fire insurance rate
than formal bids on the project. stated.
A letter was read from the
the Rev. ArthUr C. Lund, director, with one of two display
DANNY THOMPSON, Pomeroy, left, chainnan of the
While the consensus appeared
boards to be placed in business houses to publicize the
to be that council should adMeigs County Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Committee, and
committee's program.
vertise the project for bids at
once, there was the matter of
All ABM Sites Needed-- Lairll
how to finance it. Council has
appropriated l!'20,WO nis year to
&gt;hwHMG fON ( UPI) - Defense Seer ~ary
---------~~--~
street repair by contract.
Melvin R. Laird today unveiled evidence Red China
~
I
However, it was suggested by
1
may bave already fired its first ICBM and said an
Zirkle that the project perhaps
1
apparent pause last year in Russian missile
I
could
be
financed
by
borrowing
I
A two-thrust program is being will be placed in the show
Dr.
John
Ridgway,
DO,
development
could have heralded the birth of a new
By United Press International
launched by the Meigs County windows of Dudley Florists in a part of the money and also by Pomeroy physician, was apSoviet ICBM system. In his annual report to Congress
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Middleport, the other in the
Great Comic Dies of Cancer
pointed to fill the unexpired
on the world military situation, Laird also predicted
Committee.
New York Clothing House in
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF.- HAROLD lloyd, one of the
term of the late Charles Mullen,
that between 1973 and 1975 China could develop an
The program will provide Pomeroy.
M.D., on the Meigs County
world's great comcis who epitomized the meek loser but who
initial
force of operation intercontinental ballistic
information leading to the
The program is funded
Board of Health Monday night
aiways escaped from terrifying predicaments, died of cancer
missiles.
prevention and early detection through The Ohio Department
by the Meigs County Health
Monday He was 77. A pair of lenseless celluloid spectacles that
"The Soviet and Chinese tbrea ts to the U. S. call for
of alcoholism and drug abuse, of Health, alcohol program, and
Department's
advisory board.
cost 10 cents and a boater straw hat were Lloyd's trademarks as
moving
ahead toward the full safeguard anti-ballistic
and offer counseling to the is channeled through the county
he rose to stardom in silent pictures and appeared in nearly 500 person having problems with health department. Anyone
missile deployment," he said. The complete safeguard
A program designed to inform The term will expire at the end
of 1972.
films.
system would include 12 ABM sites in the United
alcohol or drugs, and to seeking help or more in- Meigs residents, particularly
The advisory board, comHis bumbling antics in silent and later in talkies won Lloyd
of
the
prisoner
of
war
students,
States.
At present only three sites have been approved.,
members of the victim's family formation may reach the Rev.
posed of representatives of the
millions of fans and a vast fortune. He became one of the
Laird announced plans to start surveys for a fourth
who also may want help and Mr. Lund at 992-2010 or 992-3723. problem in Vietnam, will be villages and townships of Meigs
wealthiest men in movie history. He is best remembered for
site ill the safeguard system. He also outlined military
The next committee meeting rescheduled, Mrs . Donald County, also reelected member
advice.
terrifying feats while dangling from the side of tall buildings and
threats to the free world and potential hot spots,
Two large display boards has been set on Tuesday, March Diener, local American Red Dale Dutton of Middleport to
for uproarious chases. One famed scene found him clutching the
detailed plans for a top-level Pentagon reorganization
have been prepared to inform 23, at 7:30p.m. at the St. Paul Cross chairman, said today.
Last Thursday, Commander another five year term.
hand of a giant clock high above the ground. Each minute brought
and traced a long-range program to hand over more
the public of the program. One Lutheran Church, 231 E. Second
Elected as officers of the
Frank
Poyet, U.S. Navy active
him closer to disaster as the minute hand edged toward the botdefense responsibility to U. S. allies by substituting
St., Pomeroy.
year
were
Charles
board
this
,:;:;:;:::::::::::;;:;:;:;;::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::;.
·
"The success of the program in the "Project Freedom" Williams, Bedford Township,
tom of the dial.
increased military aid for the presence of American
depends upon public support. If program, was to have spoken at president; Charles Bissell,
soldiers.
Rocky Waiting on you are concerned about these two Meigs County schools. A
Korean Troops to Leave Vietnam
Chester
Township,
vice
problems in our county please large bamboo cage made under president, and Raymond CotSEOUL- PRESIDENT PARK CHUNG-HEE of South Korea
Mr.
Nixon
Exit
plan now to attend," the Rev. sponsorship of the American trill,
says his government is studying a timetable for eventual withScipio
Township,
Red Cross here, was also to
ALBANY,
N.Y.
(UPI)
Mr.
Lund said.
drawal of the 50,000 South Korean troops in Vietnam but that no
have been displayed. The cage,
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller
immediate withdrawal is planned. The United States will be fully
reviewed t h e E x p a n d e d
made to specifications, is a
he
would
seek
hinted
Monday
informed of any decision, he said.
department's annual report for
sample
of
the
way
North
the presidency if President
He also said in an interview with UPI Monday that South
.
Vietnam
has
confined 1970 of the health department
Nixon does not seek reelecKorean plans to increase its defense forces at home to offset the
American
prisoners
of
war.
tion. He promised to support
withdrawal of 20,000 American troops from Korea before the end
Veterans Memorial Hospital'
Schools closed last Thursday,
Nixon if he runs.
of June. That would leave 43,000 U. S. servicemen in South Korea.
ADMITTED
Sharon however , and Commander
Rockefeller has made
Present in addition to
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. Monday that the state spend for
himself available for the Russell, Middleport; Charles Poyet, who was also scheduled Williams, Bissell and Cottrill
Semites Trade·Mostly Words
Riggs,
Letart,
W.
Va.;
Etta
in
the
afternoon
for
an
"on
the
John J. Gilligan today proposed the 1972-73 biennium, a total of
Republican
presidential
presentation
in were Herman London, Syracuse an increase of $22.5 million in $36.5 million to fight drug
ISRAEL REPORTED CLASHES on its borders with Jordan
nomination three previous Custer, Racine; Norman Will, street"
Rutland;
Marvin
Darst,
and Lebanon today in a surge of Arab guerrilla activity. The Suez
Pomeroy, was unable to come. Village; Ernest Nicholson, state funds to fight "the fright- abuse, up by $22.5 million from
times. He pulled out of the
Pomeroy;
Salem
Yates,
It is expected the presen- Rutland Village; Roy Pearson, ening and growing problem of the$13.9spentduring the last two
Canal front with Egypt remained quiet despite tension described
1960 race early, lost a conRacine.
can be rescheduled next Letart Township; 0. J. Pen- drug abuse" with a program of years of the Rhodes administratations
as so thick it could be cut "with a knife." In Cairo, a government
vention battle with Barry
DISCHARGED
Robert
week
which
may be named by nington, Orange Township; education, treatment and en- tion.
spokesmen denied Israel's charge that the Soviet Union was
Goldwater in 1964 and
Brewer,
Lebanon torcement.
Southern,
Sarah
Smith,
Erma
President
Richard
Nixon as a Ralph
determining Egyptian policy. The spokesman said Israeli
challenged Nixon and lost in
"We have learned in the past
Township,
and
Charles
Pyles,
Haymes,
Mary
Yost,
Perry
"Week of Concern" for
Gilligan said he would propose few years that drug addition
Foreign Minister Abba Eban, who made the charge, "has lost his
1968.
Racine Village.
Payne.
prisoners of war.
in his budget message next is not confined to our urban
balance."
"Eban knows very well, as well as the whole world knows,
ghettos," said Gilligan. "We
have learned that drug abuse
that the policy of Egypt is made in Cario alone," the spokesman
and drug addiction run throughsaid. Eben said Sunday Egypt refused at the direction of the
out our society, ignoring social
Soviets to renew the Middle East cease-fire which expired Sunand economic barriers."
day. There was no shooting along the Suez Canal but the Israeli
A breaking and entering and a the floor. Exit apparently was
"And we have learned, too,
newspaper Ma-Aviv said "one can cut the tension with a knife."
single-car accident were made through a side door acthat the use of drugs is becomreported Monday by the Meigs cording to tire marks and foot
ing more and more prevalent
Haley Steps Up at BG
County Sheriff's Department. prints left in snow.
our young people," Gilligan
BOWLING GREEN, OHIO - PAT HALEY, assistant
A breaking and entering of
Merchandise reported
said. "As the use of drugs
the Miller and Son Grocery, missing included 20 jars of six
basketball coach for Bowling Green State University, today was
among youngsters increases, innamed head basketball coach at BGSU, Athletic Director Bob located at the Crossroads, in- ounce Nescafe coffee, 16 jars of
stances of tragic addition - ofttersection of SR 124 and County 10 ounce Maxwell coffee, a
Bell announced.
·
en leading to serious illness or
Haley, who earned three letters as a guard for the Falcons in Road 5, was discovered by Jim clock radio. Also called in on the
even death - also increases."
Souls by, deputy sheriff, on investigation was Herman
the early 1960's, succeeds Bob Conibear, who resigned this season
Gilligan said his program inroutine patrol Monday morning. Henry of the Bureau of Criminal
after three years as head coach. The appointment was effective
cluded education, treatment and
Souls by reported that the Investigation at London is
enforcement.
immediately.
building, which was entered by assisting local officers.
"Through a program of edubreaking the glass out of the
at
8:42a.m.
on
SR
124
Monday
cation,
we must warn our chilGridiron Peace Assured
fr'o nt door and unlocking the near Maplewood Lake, Joyce
dren of the dangers they face
CLEVELAND - BALTIMORE COLTS tight end John
night latch, occurred sometime Pauline Sisson, 22, Racine, was
when they become involved in
Mackey, president of the National Football League Player's between 12:30 and 1:50 a.m. traveling east when she lost
the so~alled drug culture," said
Association, said here Monday a formal peace settlement with
Monday .
control of her car coming over
Gilligan.
NFL owners is almost completed.
Souls by contacted Sheriff crest in highway . Her auto went
"For those already caught in
''We've agreed on all the langu ;tge and we're all set,'' Mackey Robert Hartenbach and Donald off the highway and into the
the web of narcotics, we must
said. "All that's needed is the signature of myself and (Dallas Miller, owner of the store. fence on the Clyde Stokes
establish a program of treatMiller determined that the property.
Cowboys general manager) Tex Scramm representing the
ment with the goal of returning
owners." Mackey, here to testify before a federal grand jury office had been ransacked,
There were no injuries and
addicts to a normal life as
WINNER
Miss
Rosalie
Story,
left,
was
the
recipient
of
an
original
oil
painting
given~~
which is probing the NFL for possible anti-trust violations, said refrigerated meat and pop only medium damage to the
qUickly as possible,'' said the
an attendance prize at the annual art show held at the Pomeroy National Bank. Making the
the new agreement will continue through 1974, eliminating the cases were unplugged, a nd car. No citation was issued.
governor.
presentation
is
Mrs
.
Maxine
Griffith,
bank
employe.
merchandise was sca ttered on
threat of another players strike.

ALCOHOLISM

IT CAN BE

SAN ILLNESS

t

?REATED

R 1•d gway

r------

1

Ne

. B rze
.. s Program Begun
1

Elected

••• ln

POW Talk
Expected

f

:S

se~r;etar~~ard

~:~..:;:·h:~:.dhe/h~ :~On

Store Ransacked

F I• ght

Drugs Asked

�Meeting in Logan

Personality Profile
By Charlene Hoeflich
Margaret Sheridan's love for working
with young girls has kept her involved in
the Meigs County Girl Scout program off
and on for the past 22 years.
Volunteer leader of Pomeroy Brownie
Troop 171 for the past three years, the
dedicated Mrs. Sheridan meets with 17
energetic and enthusiastic second and
third graders each Monday after school at
the Pomeroy First Baptist Church. Her
able assistant is Mrs. Orval Wiles.
Mrs. Sheridan first started to work in
scouting in 1948 when a troop without a
leader was about to be disbanded. With the
encouragement and assistance of Mrs.
Evelyn Knight, long-time scout leader and
advisor, Mrs. Sheridan assumed
leadership of the troop.
From that time on she has never
gotten completely away from the scout
program although there have been times
when she has taken a leave from leadership.
"There have been big troops and little
troops, Brownies and juniors," Mrs.

Sheridan remarked, and then expressed
her preference for Brownies "because at
that age they are interested in everything
and so cooperative."
She recalled that at one time she and
Mrs. Edna Hunnel had 37 Brownies at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
For about 10 summers, Mrs. Sheridan
has been a unit leader in the annual day
camp program and this year is looking
forward to going to Camp Kiashuta with
the Brownies.
Through the years she has participated in numerous training sessions on
crafts, camping and outdoor skills, offered
in the Big Bend Neighborhood as well as
the Four Rivers Girl Scout Couuncil.
Both of her daughters, Bernice Ann,
now married and living in Galion, and
Darla of Middleport, enjoyed scouting, and
she now has two granddaughters active in
troops at Rio Grande. They are the
children of Bill and Rachel Sheridan.
Mrs. Sheridan and her husband,
William, Sr., an employe of Kaiser, live on
Spring St. in Pomeroy.

r---------------------------1

!Helen Help Us!I
I

I

By Helen Bottel

By HELEN HOTTEL
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young
people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and
fun. As with the rest of Helen
Help Us!, it welcomes laughs
but won't dodge a serious
question with a brush~ff.
Send your teen-age questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Helen Help Us! this
newspaper.
FEMALE JOHN ALDEN
Dear Helen:
A friend who has trouble
getting guys got a thing going on
this fella, so she asked me to
call him and try to fix her up. I
did, but instead of him getting
interested in her (he's seen her
around and says she isn't his
type), he said my voice really
sent him . So he got my phone
number and started calling.
I knew my girl friend would
·be furious so I wouldn't let him
come to see me. Then he called
HER and told her the
Sure en ugh, shew
11d dou cro
started bad rum
school.
Well, I figured if
as gorng
to be blamed, I might as well
enjoy it, so I made a date With
my unknown admirer. It turned
out ''Jim" (we'll call him) is the
greatest guy in the world - and
he likes me too.
But my former friend is
making it tough. To hear her, I
am a sneaky man-stealer. And
you know how kids love to
believe gossip.
How do I lose this false
reputation and still keep the
fellow I love? - LAURA
Dear Laura:
It takes a while, but truth
usually wins over false gossip.
Tell a few key people (good
talkers) the real facts, and let
the word spread.
Meanwhile, don't let it get you
down. After all, you won a great
boy friend: You're still ahead of
: the game. - H.
: Dear Helen :
I'm 18, what older people
would call the hippie type, but
I've had it with that scene. I've
tried dope, sex and the rest and
I don't want any more!
I almost lost my mind thanks
to a bad tab of LSD. Not
counting all the times I almost
drove my parents crazy
because they knew I was on
drugs. They are the kind who
don't want others to know our
problems so they wouldn't call
for help. Maybe if they had, I
wouldn't be writing this letter.
Everywhere I go I hear kids
talking about love but I wonder
if they think their sexploits are
love? Ha! I oughta know. I
started when I was 15, and
learned my first lesson in love
the hard way: I fell. He

A district W.S.C.S. meeting to
be held at Logan on April14 was
announced when the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the Syracuse United Methodist
Church met recently at the
home
of Mrs.
William
Winebrenner.
Mrs. Karl Kloes, vicepresident, had charge of the
meeting during which time the
district evaluation report was
discussed along with the World

1

laughed. Since then I've just
drifted from one dude to
another, not really caring just a physical thing.
And then I found out a month
ago that when you meet
someone who really cares, you
feel you can't love in return
because you're cheap and dirty.
So you just walk away from the
best thing you'll ever find.
That's what free sex and
drugs do for you! I'm writing
this so maybe it will help other
girls who are tempted: Please
don't. It only leads to heartache
and lots of regrets. - WAYOUT, NOW ON HER WAY
BACK.
Dear Way:
Don't walk away from a boy
who really cares! He knows
where you've been. He'll help
you come back. Punishing
yourself for things past can put
you down again.
Forget the last three years
and with his trust and·
strength, you CAN reach the
highroad. (Natural High I
m
) - H.
ThlS column is dedicated to
family living, so if you're
having kid trouble or just plain
trouble, let Helen help YOU.
She will also welcome your own
amusing experiences. Address
·Helen Bottel in care of this
newspaper.

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. John E. Armstrong, Gallipolis, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. David R. Stout,
Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Karl T. Brandau, Wellston, a
daughter and Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon L. Sauters, Pomeroy, a
daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. William Lee Bradshaw
and infant son, Arthur C.
Brooks, Ed F. Gaudill, Mrs.
Gene M. Eaton and infant son,
Amy Jo Fulks, Mrs. Morgan
Ray Hammond and infant son,
Mrs. Eugene E. Hornsby, Mrs.
Paul F. Kuhn, Mrs. Hugh
Leach, Mrs. Ivan G. McGuire
and infant son, Mrs. James E .
Morse, Mrs. James L.
Singleton, Jerry L. Smith, Mrs.
Mollie Talbott, Joseph T. Wall,
Sara Jean Anderson, Sylvester
Napper, Mrs. Ruby L. Snyder,
Mrs. Charles Coleman, Mrs.
Arnold Taylor and Harvey
Roof.

Inspection Will
Be on Thursday

Donations are
Acknowledged

Donations for use of hospital
equipment were acknowledged
by the Better Health Club of
Laurel Cliff at a meeting
Thursday night at the home of
Mrs. Bertha Parker.
MARGARET SHERIDAN
The club received donations
from Miss Genevieve Stobart
and the Howett family for use of
equipment. Mrs.
Parker
.,-W..,....-I:-:N~_,A....,.'T-B--,R=-I-D_G_E_ reported on the equipment and
""'
voted to purchase new mattress
covers for the beds.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
opened the meeting with Mrs.
Lloyd Wright reading scripture
and giving a meditation. Mrs.
Ernest Powell read an article
on glucoma.
TUESDAY
9
NORTH
Games were played with
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
.853
prizes being won by Mrs.
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
¥K9632
Lawrence Eblin, Mrs. Thomas
• QJ2
Tuesday,
Columbus
and
Parker, a guest, and Mrs.
"'7
5
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Wright. The next meeting will
EAST
social room. "Do your own WEST
be held at the home of Mrs.
• Q94
.106
thing" sale following the
• J5
• Q108
Curtis with Mrs. Paul
meeting. Members to con- + 9 7 53
+ A K 10 6 4 Clarence
Frick
as
the assistant hostess.
tribute homemade item or "' J 10 9 4
"' K 8 2
Refreshments
were served to
baked goods for the sale.
SOUTH (D)
those named and Mrs. Lou
.AKJ72
W.S.C.S., POMEROY United
Diehl and Mrs. Marvin Spencer,
¥A74
Methodist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
+8
and
Mrs. Frances Hewetson,
at the church. Mrs. Robert
"'AQ63
the
treasurer.
card, program chairman.
Both vulnerable
AMERICAN
Legion West North East South
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday Pass 2 •
Pass
Pass
at the home of Mrs. Oscar Pass Pass
Opening lead-oft J
Hardaway.
HARRISONVILLE
OES,
regular meeting Tuesday, 8 By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby Two
family
parties
p.m.
Let's see how an expert celebrated the first birthday of
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday plans his play with today's Danny Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs.
7:30 p.m. Ralph Sayre, hand. He notes that while his Carl R. Hall of Pomeroy Route
superintendent, guest speaker. hand warranted a jump to 4.
game and his partner had a
At the parties held Thursday
Variety show to be presented by proper raise, the contract is
Syracuse Girl Scouts. Everyo:~e not a very good one because and Friday were Mr. and Mrs.
welcome.
dummy's queen and jack of Carl Hall, Kathy and Donna,
EASTERN BAND Boosters diamonds are no help.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hall, son, Joe,
Tuesday at High Scllool, 7:30
He is. ~elighted with the Mr. and Mr~. Paul Frick, Mr.
p.m. Work to be done on club lead. This takes away and Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Mr.
Christmas list. Members asked the problem of the king of and Mrs. Bill Pullins and
to send or bring list.
c1ubs. He can .try to ruff a
couple of clubs m dummy but children, Rodney, Lori, Steven,
EASTERN BAND Boosters, cne of those is sure to be and Kevin, and Mrs. Charles
Eastern High School, 7:30p.m. overruffed. If it is ruffed by Ball, Charles, Billy, and Davis.
WEDNESDAy
a h~nd with three trump~ it Danny received gifts from his
MIDDLEPORT
Amateur ~OJ! t r.eally hurt. Otherwise, aunt, Miss Carol Hall, Asbury
1t IS hkely to leave South College, Ky., and his great1
·Gardeners, home of Mrs. Guy with two trump losers plus
Reynolds. 8 p.m. Wednesday. one heart and one diamond. grandmother, Mrs. Robert
Jones of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Mrs. Joe Bolin of the Rutland both trumps and clubs break
Friendly Gardeners to be the as evenly as possible and if
guest demonstrator.
the finesse works. Possible,
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30 but not probable . .
Wednesday American Legion
How . about puttmg dum. '
my's flve hearts to work?
Hall, Mtddleport.
The last two will become
POMEROY - Middleport Li- tricks if hearts break 3-2 and
ons Club, Wednesday noon, the suit can be established if
Pomeroy United Methodist trumps also break 3-2. This
Church.
represents the best chance.
South leads his four of
1 POMEROY CHAPTER 80, hearts at trick two and plays
Royal Arch Masons, stated low from dummy. East will
meeting, 7:30p.m. Wednesday, probably win the trick and
,Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
lead a trump and South will
AMERICAN
LEGION rise with the ace. All he
Auxiliary presidents and wants is to break trumps 3-2.
South cashes his king of
community service chairmen, 1 trumps. Both opponents folp.m. Wednesday at Trinity low and he is now ready to
Church to discuss participation put that heart suit to work.
in George Thompson Kidney He plays his ace of hearts
Fund program.
and continues. West should
THURSDAy
take his queen of trumps immediately and lead a diaELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath mond. This will hold South to
United Methodist Church, 7:30 10 tricks while any other dep.m. Thursday at the church. fense will give South 11.

Social
Calendar

Expert Plans
Today's Play

1.4.

Danny Hall's First

Birthday Observed

PHILATHEA Society,
Middleport Church of Christ,
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the
church.
PAST COUNCILORS Club,
Theodorus
Council
17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Thursday, home of Miss Erna
Jesse.
AFTERNOON Circle, WSCS,
Heath
United
Methodist
Church. 2 p.m. Thursday. Mrs.
Frances Wilson, devotions;
Mrs. James Jividen, lesson.
Mrs. B. E . Zeigler and Mrs.
Rose McDade, hostesses.
INSPECTION of Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday; Wilma Styer, deputy
grand matron, inspecting officer.
MEIGS DAV Chapter, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, at hall on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Lunch following meeting;
Jacob Turner, adjutant.
WSCS, RACINE Wesleyan
United Methodist Church, will
sponsor a soup supper Thursday
in Church annex beginning at
4. 30 p m
. OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,

Plans for inspection to be held
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. were
_ , made during last week's
meeting of Evangeline Chapter
THE DAILY SENTINEL
172, Order of the Eastern Star.
DEV-OTED TO
Wilma Styer, deputy grand
INTEREST OF
matron, will be the inspecting
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL,
officer. Maryln and Raymond
Exec. Ed.
Wilcox, worthy matron and
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
' worthy patron, presided at the
Published daily ~n&lt;cept
meeting with the chapter voting
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
to send a donation to the O.E.S.
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Busin!Mis Office Phone
Hospital Circle in Columbus to
t92-2156, Editorial Phone 992·
support visitation, cards, and
~157 .
second class postage paid at
flowers to members of the
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Order who are hospitalized.
National
advertising
representative
Bottinelll~.
Mrs. Evelyn Lewis reported
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
on cards and flowers sent Letart Falls, Thursday, home of
St., New York City, New York.
S ubscription
rates :
during the past month and Mrs. Mrs . Barbara Dugan, 7:30p.m.
Delivered by carrier where
Members to bring sandwiches
Bessie King said the soup sale or
pie.
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
was successful. A rummage
service pot available : One_
sale was held Friday and
month'$1 .15. By mail in Ohio
Saturday and cleanup day at the meeting was held for the pw·and W Va , One year $14.00.
Six months $7.25 . Three
Masonic Temple was scheduled pose of initiation. Refreshments
months S4 . 5C. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times · ' for today.
were served by Mrs. Lena
, Sf'ntinel.
Friday night a special Bunce and Mrs . Helen Milhoan.

"Jatf;J:)IJr#i!f.itD
The bidding has been:
West
North
East

South

1¥
Pass
1•
Pass
?
You, South, hold:
• 8 ¥K 10 7 6 5 +A K Q 9 4 .A 2
What do you do now?
A-Bid two diamonds only.
Your hand is not quite strong
enough to jump in a new suit.

How about ruffing one club
and trying the trump finesse? That will succeed if
REVIVAL PLANNED
A weekend revival will be
held at the Church of Christ in
Christian Union on Pearl St. in
Middleport. The Rev . Donald
Wells will speak at 7:30p.m. on
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
nights.
TRI-CO TECH BOUND
Keith Usle, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Ltsle, Syracuse,
has been accepted for training
in recreation and wildlife
technology at t.he Tr~-County
Technical Instttute m September. Keith is a senior at
Meigs High School.

MARY RUSCHEL
Mary Rusche!, 12-year old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred E. Rusche!, Sr.,
Ebenezer St., Pomeroy, is a
carrier for The Daily Sentinel. Mary's route is in
Monkey Run. A seventh
grade atudent at Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport, Mary loves to read
and bake. She likes her paper
route because she gets to
know everyone in Monkey
Run and her earnings come in
handy.

ANNS TO HELP
Rotary Anns will be guests at
a dinner of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club Friday
night at the Heath United
Methodist Church. The annual
stuffing bee in preparation for
the March 13 mailing of 5,700
Easter
seal letters will be held,
CALL ANSWERED
Mrs. Charles Simons, chairThe Racine Emergency
man, reports.
Squad answered a call to the
Uoyd Nice home, Route 2,
SUPPER PLANNED
Sunday at 4:35 p.m. Beatrice
The W.S.C.S. of the Racine
Nice was taken to Veterans Wesleyan United Methodist
Memorial Hospital where she Church will sponsor a soup
was admitted as a medical supper Thursday in the Church
patient.
annex beginning at 4:30 p.m.

---------

....,......_.......................,..............

- _.....,...

______

Girl Scout
Diary

Day of Prayer service held at
the Syracuse Presbyterian
Church.
Newsletters from Mrs.
Beulah Bower and Mrs. 0. J.
Pennington regarding prayers
By Charlene Hoeflich
for missionaries were read.
Five shut-in calls during the
month were reported, and an
offering was taken. The birth"Girl scouts everywhere" is the scene locally as the almost
day of Mrs. William Wine- 400 Meigs County scouts join in the observance of Girl Scout
brenner was observed.
Week.
Mrs. Winebrenner read an
To know, to care, to be involved with others is the comarticle from Guideposts for mitment being carried out by the girls of the Big Bend Neighdevotions. A Lenten meditation
borhood of Meigs County.
was given by Miss Marcia Karr
In observance of the 59th birthday of the Girl Scouts of the
at the conclusion of the meeting.
U.S.A.
on Friday, numerous activities are taking place.
Mrs. William Winebrenner
and Mrs. Dana Winebrenner
Sunday troops across the county in trim uniform attended
served refreshments to those
churches
of their choice. Visits to the post offices, village halls,
named and Mrs. Carl Weese,
Mrs. Herbert Barker, Mrs. and the Meigs County courthouse have been scheduled for today,
Anne Hilldore, Mrs. John "Citizenship Day," according to the girl scout calendar.
Wednesday junior troops in Middleport will observe "Health
Sauvage,
Mrs.
William
Eichinger, and Mrs. Virgil and Safety Day" with a campaign to clean up the Middleport
school grounds (weather permitting).
Teaford.
Window displays on the scouting program have been
prepared by the Middleport Junior Troop 5 in the Columbia Gas
Co. of Ohio window, and Senior Troop 198 in the window of the
former Downie-Gross Store, Pomeroy.

•
,

..
·',;

90th Birthday
Is Celebrated

A family celebration was held
Sunday in observance of the
90th birthday anniversary of
Robert W. Harris, Middleport.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest and cake, ice
cream and mints were served
during the afternoon.
At the celebration were Miss
Marjorie Harris, Alexandria,
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Harris, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Harris, Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Roby and
daughter, Christi, Napoleon;
Gordon Harris, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. James Harris and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
and Miss Nancy Harris,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. John
Blake, Patty, Rob and Kathy
Harris, Middleport.
Mrs. Mayme Gardner of
Charleston and Mrs. Max Dye
anddaughter,BetsyofBelle, W.
Va. called during the day.

And courses in cooking, ceramics, crocheting, and knitting, (
as well as instruction in outdoor skills and craft projects are
underway as a part of the program offered through scouting to
help girls seven through 17 develop physically, socially, intellectually, and emotionally.
Thousands of hours each day are devoted by the 87 leaders,
assistant leaders and committee members active in the Meigs
County scouting program. Twenty-four troops - Brownie,
juniors, cadettes and seniors - are registered in the county
program which falls under the jurisdiction of Mrs. William
Ohlinger, Neighborhood chairman, and the Four Rivers Girl
Scout Council.
Volunteer leaders of the troops are Mrs. Marjorie Benedum,
Tuppers Plains; Mrs. Dorothy Napper, Pomeroy; Mrs. Donno
Grate, Rutland; Mrs. Nancy Morris, Salisbury; Mrs. Mary Wise,
Middleport; Mrs. Ruby Vaughan, Middleport; Mrs. Iris Payne,
Middleport; Mrs. Ruth Ann Balderson, Reedsville; Mrs. Daisy
Patterson, Syracuse.
Mrs. Margaret Sheridan, Mrs. Jackie Zirkle, Mrs. April
Smith, Pomeroy; Mrs. Mary Wise, Mrs. Judy Spencer, Mrs.
Janice Gibbs, Middleport; Mrs. Linda Hubbard, Syracuse; Mrs.
Thelma Airson, Mrs. Mary Nottingham, Salisbury; Mrs. Carol
Ohlinger, Meigs senior troop; Mrs. Doris Fisher, Racine; Mrs.
Mary Hunter, Chester; Mrs. Flo Martin, Rutland; Mrs. Kathryn
Johnson, Wolf Pen; and Mrs. Keitha Whitlatch, Pomeroy.

Good, Oldfashion Fun
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -NBCTV Monday night offered the
first half of a four-hour, $2
million television adaptation of
the bestseller "Vanished,"
about the disappearance of the
top adviser to the President of

TV . . . in Review
the United States. The final half
will be presented tonight.
On the significant side, this
production is the first in NBCTV's plans to "novelize''
popular works on the home
screen according to the length
they need to be effective, rather
than trying to squeeze them into
pre~rdained, arbitrary lengths.

Marine Couple on
Tube 3 Thursday

And if the Federal Communications Commission's ruling
cutting back network prime
time next season doesn't
discourage similar works in the
future, they should be attractive
audience-pleasers of unpretentious mass appeal.
That's what "Vanished" isan unpretentious, old-fashioned
mystery tale about people
operating under strain at the
highest levels of government. It
is done briskly, professionally
and has a wealth of plot and
vignettes of the kind sure to hold
audience interest. It is, in short,
just a lot of fun-a sort of glossy
high-powered detective tale of
the type you might read before
going to bed.
Although NBC-TV's "Vanished" is hardly classic
drama, and is a straight plotaction-plot piece without much
deep delving into characters, I
frankly enjoyed it as a relaxing
example of what old time movie
people like to call "pure entertainment." That's just what

LETART, W. Va.
Mrs.
Michael L. Rodgers (Sharon
Rollins) and her Marine
husband, Cpl. Michael L. Meigs
Rodgers can be seen this
Thursday, March 11, on
Channel 3 at 9:30 a.m. on Truth
or Consequences. Cpl. Rodgers
is presently stationed on
Okinawa and his wife is living
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Rollins, Letart.
The reunion of the couple was
Alma Nelson, Ruth Hubber,
taped in California in May of Waid Gorby, Mina M. Gorby,
last year. He expects to be Roy Gorby to Franklin Real
discharged from the Marines in Estate Co. 11.854 Acre, Salem.
October of this year.
Robert R. Hersman, Ruth E .
Hersman to Franklin Real
Estate Co., .977 Acre, Salem.
ON DEAN'S LIST
Robert C. Hartenbach,
Marta
Kay
Hubbard, Sheriff, Harold Rose, Christina
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rose to Bernard J. Diddle, Opal
Harold E. Hubbard, 412 South E. Diddle, 181h Acres, Sutton.
Fourth Ave., Middleport, has
Judith Kay Moore to Kathy
been named to the dean's list of Jeanette Moore, Parcels,
Bob
Jones
University, Salisbury.
Greenville, S. C., for the first
Herbert V. Dixon, Mary
semester. Miss Hubbard is a Agnes Dixon, Thomas W.
freshman in the school of Bowen, Mary E. Bowen to
education.
Columbia Gas of Ohio, right of
way, Salisbury.
Howard E. Pontius, Catherine
IN HOSPITAL
A. Pontius to Robert C. Hysell,
Mrs.
Robert
Grueser Lots, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was admitted
Eldon R. Kraeuter to Bernard
Monday to Cabell Huntington V. Fultz, Sec. 16, Sutton.
Hospital for observation and
Bernard F. Fultz, Betty J.
treatment. Mrs .. Grueser was Fultz to Eldon R. Kraeuter,
taken to Huntington by Mrs. Leda Mae Kraeuter, Sec. 16,
Kathryn Mora. While in Hun- Sutton.
tington Mrs. Mora visited and
Dorothy M. Cowdery, dec. to
had lunch with Mrs. Howard P. M. Cowdery, Marilyn M.
Cloke.
Trussell, Ronnie M. Cowdery,
Robert K. Cowdery, Tarilynn R.
Cowdery, Deidra K. Cowdery,
MEETING CHANGED
The regular meeting of the Xi Aff. for Trans., Chester.
E. Geraldine Smith, E .
Gamma Mu sorority of the Beta
Sigma Phi will be held Saturday Geraldine Smith, gdn., Robert
instead of Thursday at the K. Cowdery, by gdn ., Tarilynn
Club's St. Patrick Day party at R . Cowdery, Deidra K.
the home of Eleanor Thomas, Cowdery, toP. M. Cowdery, 1.5
Acre, Chester
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.

Property

Transfers

it is.
Richard Widmark makes his
television debut as the President, and I can't remember
him ever giving a bad performance, so it's no surprise
he's solid in the part, although,
for a chief executive, he seems
remarkably free of any family
ties. We know nothing of him
personally.
As for the plot, it suddenly
poses a number of questions
aimed at intriguing us. Why did
the adviser disappear? Was he
kidnaped? Amnesia? Moral
turpitude? Did he defect to the
Chinese Reds? Some of us
whizbangs at this sort of fiction
may have suspected he was
really on a wonderful, secret
government mission. The answer is revealed in tonight's
finale.
There are plenty of solid
performances besides Widmark's. James Farentino is
good as the presidential news
secretary; and Robert Young
virtually steals the film as an
old scalawag of a senator who
has not lost his taste for whiskey
or girls, and tries to torpedo the
President.

I

In the real Washington,
meanwhile, it is no secret that
the White House is not exactly
thrilled with network television
coverage of the Vietnam War.
And, needless to say, the people
at the networks have an entirely
different view of the quality of
the job they are doing.
At any rate, an administra~
tion source said Monday that
President Nixon is unhappy
with network coverage of the
Vietnam issue in general,
especially in the last 10 days or
so. The source said the administration feels it is telling
what it wants to do, and is doing
it, but that the networks aren't
listening.

PTA Sponsoring
3 Basketball Games
MASON - The Mason Parent
Teachers Association will
sponsor three grade school
basketball games at Wahama
Gymnasium on Thursday,
March 11. Participants will be
Mason, West Columbia and New
Haven Graded Schools.
The first game at 6 p.m. will
be Mason Fourth Grade versus
West Columbia Grade School. ~
The second game at 7 p.m. will
be Mason Fifth Grade against
New Haven Fifth Grade.
The third game at 8 p.m. will
be between Mason Sixth Grade
and Ne\\ Haven Sixth Grade.
Proceeds will go towards
completing Mason Grade
School Basketball Court.

�..

NEW YORK (UPI)-Joe Frazier may have had a few songs in
his heart, but he wasn't singing any for his own victory party after
demolishing Cassius Clay.
The 27-year-()ld Philadelphian's right jaw was badly swollen
and his left eye was nearly closed and he simply didn't feel like
singing with his band for the people who had paid $35 a head to
attend the party.
Although Frazier had just scored the greatest victory of his
lifetime, llie talk was of retirement.
Everyone, including Joe's wife, Jo Netta, and his manager

Yank Durham, agreed that Joe's victory over Clay should be his
last fight.
"I'll just go back to Philadelphia, wait a few months, think
things over and then decide what to do next," Frazier said. "I'm
not tired now but it's just all the pressure is relieved and it makes
me feel weak."
He slumped on a chair in the kitchen in the Statler Hilton Hotel.
trying to escape the crowd that had pressed around him. He
sipped on a glass of water through his swollen jaw and peered
from behind dark glasses that helped hide the swelling around his

Cha111pion Wants
Clay To Apologize
X-Rays

:-Jaw I

•

•

sn

Show Clay'sgun~,w:'regoingtosettraps."
't Brok

NEW YORK (UPI)-Cassius
Clay's . battered, swollen face
wasn't' •·pretty" today but at
least he had one consolation
after losing his world heavyweight championship.
His jaw, which was badly
bruised when Joe Frazier
decked him in the 15th round,
apparently isn't broken.
Ali was rushed to a hospital
immediately after the fight for
a 40-minute examination and
the flamboyant showman
skipped the mass press conference that was set up after the
fight.
Although Ali, who's always
had the first and last word
throughout his career, was
making no statements, a
spokesman in his camp said
that X-Rays taken of the jaw
pr-oved negative.
"He'll be up and ready to go
again tomorrow," the spokesman said. "He went back to his
hotel room from the hospital
and went to sleep after having
some orange juice and ice
cream."
Clay, who's always bragged
that his face has been unmarked
and
"pretty"
throughout his career, was
obviously marked this time and
be seemed
af r suff ring his fJ.rS
nn

en

at the hospital said, "For a man
of his size, he was very badly
shaken."
But Ali, who had predicted
himself a winner in the sixth
round on the closed circuit TV
before the fight, still hadn't
completely lost his showmanship_ He winked and smiled to
the crowd as he got into the car
en route to the hospital.
And when Drew "Bundini"
Brown, the handler who wept in
Clay's corner even before the
decision was announced, asked
Clay about a re-match, Brown
claimed Clay replied, "Get your

Ali sa1d. "I'm glad I wasn't
knocked out. I'm satisfied with
the fight even though I lost. I
knowllosttoagreatchampion
but maybe at another time
when both of us had been
fighting regularly, the result
would have been different. I
don't know. but mavbe."
Brown, who substituted for
Clay at the post-fight press
conference, was convinced that
better days are still ahead for
Ali.
Layoff Rusted Ali
"We ain't through yet,"he
said, "the car's been in the
garage for three years and the
next time it won't be." He was
referring to Clay's 3lh-year
layoff from the ring.
The layoff has obviously

rusted Ali's great skills and he's
lost some of the speed and flair
that were his trademark before
his exile from the ring.
But it's questionable whether
at age 29, he can ever regain
those skills that were eroded
during his absence from the
ring.
Of course, there's also one
more thing that has to be
considered before Ali's future in
the ring is clear-his draft
evasion conviction.
The case is now up before the
Supreme Court and if the High
Court upholds the conviction,
he'll go to prison.
But for the time being, the
silence from Ali was deafening.
In another day, though, his
vocal cords should be back in
shape.

F~~-~~--·~..-...-.~.._.---._..._..._..._..~.--·l

i

I

the Sports Desk
by Chet Tannehill

I
I

L._._..~~~-------------~..-.~~·~~._..._..j

The letter below needs no explanation or apology. But for a
smidgeon of background: Sports Desk had no part in the selection
of the most valuable player award in the basketball season just
completed. But we likely would have gone along without much
fuss on the selection made. Two players were nominated, Miller
of Waverly and Shaw of Logan. Shaw lost. Period. (Shaw was not
ignored, as the letter suggests.)
Over the years, this same problem has recurred more than
once: (1) A really fine athlete on a losing club. (2) A really fine
thlete on a winning, say a championship, club. Which should it
AI
be?
A security rn
There was the year that Pomeroy's fine offensive fullback
said that Ali
say a
and
defensive linebacker Junior Hawthorne came up in the MVP
word, not a sound.' And a nurse
contest against Lynn Strait of Logan, an outstanding ball carrier
who later played briefly at OSU. But wait, there was a third
candidate in the field, thrown in largely to appease his hometown
fans. And you older fellas know what happened. Junior lost. Lynn
lost. The also ran, a real nice boy but no Hawthorne or Strait, got
the honor! Nobody to this day has quite figured out how it happened.
From observing some 20 years what makes scribes' and
sportscasters' minds tick in this annual exercise of choosing the
MVP, the tendency has been to look more favorably upon the
outstanding player of a winning team. Right or wrong my hunch is
it would be hard to change their thinking.
The Shaw-Miller vote was 12-3 for Miller. It was taken
following a long discussion of the relative merits of both boys,
based generally on coaches' comments. The vote appeared to turn
on the fact that Miller has received 13 major college bids and is
considered by college scouts the only player on the All-SEOAL
.. nsure my
squad capable of playing Big Ten, Big Eight, or Pacific Coast
French Poodle?" Conference basketball. Also considered was a CO-MVP award,
Why, yes- show dogs and
the impetus for which came in part from the Waverly contingent.
hunting dogs, as well as
The writer of the letter below, Ted Dane of Buchtel, we do not
farm animals, can be insured against death or
know. Buchtel is Logan-Nelsonville territory and Dave's strong
necessary des truction.
partisanship is understandable, if not entirely persuasive. To
This is one of many unique
Dane's letter:
insuran ce .cov e rage s
Buchtel, Ohio
availabl e
from
th e
March 2, 1971
Downing-Childs Agency.
GENTLEMEN:
"I have just finished reading the selection for basketball Most
Valuable Player of the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League. To say
I was shocked that last year's M.V.P. Mark Shaw was not a
unanimous repeater is the understatement of the year. In saying
this I mean no disrespect for the player chosen or his ability as a
- 220 N. 2nd
basketball player. Please understand this
~IOOLEPO~T
"Last year Mark was chosen
on his ability as the top scorer
and rebounder in the league for
the M.V.P. award. What I am
unable to understand is how
these coaches, writers and
broadcasters who should be
tops as honest and impartial
judges of athletic ability, could
be so completely uninterested in
the very impressive league
statistics of Mark Shaw of
Logan, Ohio.
"From the first game of this
season Shaw was leading the
league in scoring and

""'

DownlnqChilds
Agency, Inc.

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MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
PHIL MILLER
rebounding and was never
topped, finishing the season
first in both categories averaging 29.1 points per game
and 19.3 rebounds per game.
Both averages even higher than
last year. In addition he finished
first in free throws sinking 123
of 157 for a 78.3 per cent
average. How much more could
be expected of a young man?
"If Mark isn't M.V.P .
material why did opposing
coaches including the ones to
be named later, double and
triple team him during every
ball game. NOW HEAR
THIS! ! ! WITH THIS KIND OF
DEFENSIVE HARASSMENT
EVERY GAME-ALL SEASON
AND STILL COME UP FIRST
IN
THREE
MAJOR
CA"'EGORIES HAS TO BE
SOME KIND OF BASKETBALL PLAYER.
"Mark has shown the fans,
opposing coaches and players of
Southeastern Ohio what kind of
man he is in the only ways that
he knows; Fierce competition,
unquestionable conduct on and
off the Basketball floor, and a
constant determination to
improve.
"When it came time for the
coaches, writers and broadcasters to show what kind of
men they are, they closed their
eyes, turned their backs and
completely
ignored
the
S.E.O.A.L. s tatistics accumulated by this fine athlete.
This is an award made to an
individual player not to the
player on the number 1 team.
"The selection made resulted
in one of the most sincere and

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•

Ex-Champ In Terrible Mess
NEW YORK (UPI)-Cassius Clay was, in his own words, a
terrible mess.
His face, always a source of pride and joy, looked like the underside of a footbaU. Not only that but it ached unbelievably every
time he so much as moved it.
Yet he shook his head vigorously as soon as he saw them
wheeling the stretcher into his dressing room.
"Uh-uh, I ain't goin' on that thing," he said.
"They've got an ambulance outside," one of his handlers said.
"We can go to the hospital in that."
"I'm not goin' in that either," Cassius Clay insisted. "We'll take
the car."
Clay Badly Hurt
Slowly, because his swollen jaw hurt, his bruised stomach hurt
and both his weary arms hurt from the pounding Joe Frazier had
inflicted for 15 rounds, Clay put on his shirt and trousers and then
his brown leather jacket.
"Let's go," he said.
He tried being cavalier about the whole thing when he noticed a
couple of people watching him leaving the dressing room, winking
at them and trying to make a joke, but it didn't come off. Besides,
the anguished look on his face and the hand he held inside his
jacket flat against his belly gave him away.
Cassius Clay was hurting.
It was his own fault. As soon as he gets his voice back today he's
going to tell the whole world that. He made the same mistake with
Joe Frazier Monday night he made with Oscar Bonavena in the
same Madison Square Garden ring three months ago.

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
47 25 .653 ·-·
40 33 .548 71/2
Ken tucky
New York
36 36 .500 11
Pittsburgh
32 42 .432 151!2
Carolina
29 43 .403 18
Floridians
30 46 .395 181/2
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
49 21 .700 .. .
Indiana
48 23 .676 11f2
Memphis
37 36 .507 13112
Denver
26 45 .366 23112
23 48 .324 261;2
Texas
Monday's Result
Indiana 118 Carolina 105
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
N.Y. vs Va a• Hampton
Floridians at Utah
Denver at Texas

He underestimated him.
Clay got away with it against Bonavena with a straight-()Ut-()fleftfield knockout in the 15th. Against the tougher, more durable
Frazier it was the other way around. Only divine Providence,
Allah or the inexhaustible supply of rubber he has in his legs kept
Clay from being knocked out for the first time in his career.
For once he had clowned too much. For once he had coasted too
long. He tried mightily to reach back and come in with that little
extra that would take care of this terrible demon "Joe Frazah"
but that 3lh year layoff he always talks about so much had taken
its toll. Clay could make "Joe Fra:r.ah" paw the air at times and he
could even make him look like an amateur occassionally. But one
thing he couldn't rtr was keep away from that lethal left hand all
night. Cassius Clay simply could not dance all night.
"He underestimated me," said Joe Frazier, who had a lot of
lumps on his face also after it was all over. "Believe me, he's a
good man and he can take punishment but he underestimated me.
He thought I was slow...flatfooted ... and that I couldn't move."
Clay found out differently 21 seconds after the final round
started. A whistling left hand by way of Beaufort, South Carolina
- "some of the shots I hit him with I went back home and got"sent Clay ears over teakettle to the canvas. He flipped over like a
cartwheel, his feet going up in the air while his back and buttocks
hit the canvas.
He was up in no time at all, before the count of 4 in fact, but
when he got back up he somehow looked unlike the "The
Greatest" anymore. The back of his royal crimson trunks were
(Continued on page. 4)

Ace In Comeback

By BOB D1 PIETRO
UPI Sports Writer
Bill Singer hopes to point a
scornful finger at hard luck
today-the same finger he
broke last August.
The hard-throwing, 26-yearold righthander of the Los
Angeles Dodgers suffered
through injury and illness in
1970. He became a casualty last
spring when stricken with
hepatitis and subsequently
missed 52 games of the regular
monumental injustices in the season.
history of the S.E.O.A.L.
He came back long enough to
Some of the perpetrators of
this misconduct in the line of pitch a no-hitter against the
duty are:
Philadelphia Phillies on July 20
Coach C. McAfee, Athens and compile an 8-5 record
High School; Tom Metters, before a pitch in August broke
Athens Messenger Sports the index finger of his throwing
Writer.
hand and finished him for the
Coach Carroll Hawhee, year.
Waverly High School and Area
Sports writers and broadThe resident of Diamond Bar,
casters.
Calif. managed to stay healthy
Coach Dave Fisher, Jackson
in 1969, when he won 20 and
High School and area Sports
lost 12.
writers and broadcasters.
Coach Jim Osborne, Gallia
Singer hopes to take the first
High School and area Sports
step
back to his 20-gamewriters and broadcasters.
Coach Dick Meyers, Ironton winning form when he faces the
High School and area Sports New York Yankees in a threeinning stint at Vero Beach, Fla.
writers and broadcasters.
Coach Tom Evans, Wellston Singer reported the finger felt
High School, and area Sports fine after pitching batting
practice last week.
writers and broadcasters.
Don Pavletich got back at his
Coach Carl Wolfe, Meigs High
School and area Sports writers old ball club Monday when he
lofted a bases-loaded sacrifice
and broadcasters.
RALLY UP ! ! ! Sports fans of fly in the eighth inning to give
Southeastern Ohio. Let's not the Boston Red Sox a 3-2
permit this sellout to go un- victory over the Cincinnati
noticed. Let these men hear Reds. It was the third straight
Grapefruit League loss for the
from us.
YOURS FOR BETTER National League champions.
Art Shamsky touched rookie
SPORTS,
TED DANE left-bander Phil Meyer for a

two-run home run in the eighth
inning to lift the New York
Mets to a 3-1 win over the
Phillies. Jim McAndrew, Charlie Williams and Tug McGraw
worked for the Mets and held
Philadelphia to eight hits.
Fine fielding by centerfielder
Bobby Murcer and third
baseman John Ellis helped the
Yankees preserve a 2-1 triumph
over the Atlanta Braves.
Murcer robbed Hank Aaron of
an extra-base hit with a runner
on second base in the first
inning and Ellis made a backhanded stab of a shot by Felix
Millan with the bases loaded
and two out in the second.
Joe Hague hammered home
four runs with a homer and
single as the St. Louis
Cardinals swamped the Kansas

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City Royals, 11-7.
Ken Henderson banged a
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San Francisco Giants a 7-5
come-from-behind victory over
the Lotte Orions of Tokyo at
Phoenix, Ariz.
The win squared the Giants'
Cactus League record at 2-2
and left the touring Orions with
their fourth straight loss of a
winless spring.
In otber games, San Diego
edged Oakland, ~.Milwaukee
tipped California, 4-3, the
Chicago Cubs whipped Cleveland, 6-3, Houston nipped
Montreal, 2-1, Pittsburgh
trounced Detroit, 9-3, Washington squeked by Baltimore, 4-3,
and the Chicago White Sox
clubbed Minnesota, 6-2.

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1.59 :~~ 3.49

for 12 years and that's enough for any man. But if he doesn't want
to quit, I'll be with him the next time he fights."
Even Joe's sparring partners, Billy Williams and Ken Norton,
and some of his close friends also said they wanted to see him
retire.
"He took more punches out there than Clay did," said Williams,
who has been Frazier's sparring partner for four years. "I really
think that should be his last fight."
However, Frazier said he will take his time in making a
decision and didn't even like discussing the topic of retirement.
After a few minutes at the eart:y, he returned to his motel.

POSSE!

COCOA MATS
REG
2.59

eyes.
In the other room, Duke Ellington's band blared out another
tune and Joe's friends danced. However, Mrs. Frazier sat at a
table signing autographs and hoped her husband would quit.
She has never liked him fighting, and she likes it even less when
he is on the road with his band "because, it takes him away so
long. I'd rather have him fight because at least he's home when
he's not training."
Durham also said he would like to see Frazier quit. "He's done
enough," Durham said. "He's been monkeying around this game

992-2171
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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 9, 1971

Six Spots Left

Mason County

OSU Seeks Undisputed Title

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Ohio already snared at least a tie
State meets Indiana here to- for the title.
To win it they need to defeat
night in the season finale that
the Buckeyes must win if they the Hoosiers or hope Michigan
are to capture the Big Ten title loses one of its last games, eiand post-season benefits single- ther tonight against Iowa or
Saturday against Wisconsin.
handedly.
The Big Ten champion auto. With a 12-1 conference record
and rating of 11th in the nation matically goes into the NCAA
WEsr COLUMBIA- When John S. King left this town in going into the sellout contest at tournament.
Ohio State was beaten by In1873, it began to decline. He was succeeded in the management of St. John Arena, Ohio State has
the salt furnace by Col. John W. Clarkson of Charleston who
opera ted the works for several years. Col. Clarkson was a t;pical
southerner, a polished, dignified gentleman of the old school- a
diamond in the rough.
He was very deliberate and precise in his manner and conversation, but dangerous as "edged tools" when arounsed to
anger.
By United Press International added 10 more to break open a
When he operated the salt works instead of maintaining a
The Milwaukee victory ex- close game. Seattle held a 53-48
company store as was the usual custom, he kept a kind of comhalftime lead before Alcindor
press keeps rolling along.
missary for the accommodation of his workmen. This comand
Robertson rallied the
.The Bucks extended their
missary was opened once or twice a week and supplies were National Basketball Association Bucks.
issued - only so much to each person, according to the size of his record winning streak to 2(}
Lenny Wilkens, the Seattle
family.
games Monday night with a 104- player-coach, had 11 assists in
Most of the workmen were negro men from Middleport and 99 victory over the Seattle the game to become only the
fourth player in NBA history to
Charleston, many of whom had been owned by Clarkson before SuperSonics.
the war. These men rarelY,, if ever, received any money- they
Lew Alcindor scored 10 of his record 5,000 assists. The others
took their pay out of his commissary, at his prices, or lost. The game high 32 points in the third are Robertson, Bob Cousy and
doubty colonel was continually in litigation with somebody over quarter and Oscar Robertson Guy Rodgers.
Spencer Haywood scored 30
something. He was not satisfied unless involved in a big lawsuit.
points
for the Sonics and Don
Col. Clarkson was ably assisted in conducting the business by
NBA Standmgs
Smith
had 28. Robertson
Nick Clarkson, his son; Will Clarkson, his nephew, and Frank By United Press International
finished with 24 for the Bucks.
Atlantic Division
Williams.
In the only other NBA game
W. L Pet. GB
One day the old Cincinnati and Pomeroy steamer
New York
49 27 .645 ...
Monday night, Don May scored
"Telegraph" landed at the furnace to take on some salt. As usual, Philadelphia 44 32 .579 5
39 36 .520 91f2 31 points to boost the Buffalo
Col. Clarkson and Frank Williams were on hand to count the Boston
Braves to a 114-98 victory over
Buffalo
21 25 .276 28
barrels as the deck hands rolled them on the car. During the
Central Division
the Portland Trail Blazers.
course of the loading, an altercation arose between Col. Clarkson.
W. L Pet. GB Cornell Warner also had 15
and one of the negro deck hands which resulted in Frank X-Baltimore 39 34 .534 ...
points to help the Buffalo attack
Atlanta
31 44 .413 9
Williams shooting the negro. Williams immediately left town and Cincinnati
2B 46 .378 11 112 while rookie Geoff Petrie led
Cleveland
13 61 .175 26112 Portland with 20 points.
never returned.
X-CI
inched
div.
title
Will Clarkson was a nice young fellow and made many friends
The game was played in late
Midwest Division
during the few years he resided in West Columbia .
W. L. Pet. GB afternoon to avoid conflict with
Col. Clarkson's whole life was full of adventure. He had X-Milwaukee 65 11 .B55 ...
the Joe Frazier-Cassius Clay
46 27 .630 17112
served in the Confederate Army from Kanawha County, always Chicago
heavyweight
title bout which
Phoenix
44 2B .611 19
as fearless as a lion. When the war broke out, Col. Clarkson left a Detroit
42 31 .575 21112 was telecast into the Portland
fine estate in Kanawha County, which was confiscated. When he X-clinched div. title
Memorial Coliseum at night.
Pacific Division
returned home after the Civil War he attempted to recover his
W. L Pet. GB
property by process of law. One day during the trial that ensued in X-Los Angeles
46 29 .613 ...
the cold courthouse in Charleston, Col. Clarkson disputed the
Francisco 37 3B .493 9
evidence being given by the witness, especially the evidence of an San
Seattle
33 41 .446 12112
Basketball Results
old gentleman named Slack which resulted in Hedge Slack, a San Diego
34 42 .447 121f2 ByCollege
United Press International
23 52 .307 23
nephew of the witness, shooting Clarkson seven times in various Portland
NAIA Tourn. At Kansas City
X-clinched div. title
1st Round
parts of the arms, legs and body.
Monday's Resu Its
Earlham 105 Lew. &amp; Clark B3
Notwithstanding the fact that Col. Clarkson had nine leaden Milwaukee 104 Seattle 99
Eliz . City 90 W. New Eng 76
114 Portland 98
pellets in his body, he lived to a ripe old age. He was often racked Buffalo
NAIA Tourn
(Only games scheduled)
Whit. 63 Sac. Heart 59
with pain for two or three weeks at intervals, but was always
Thursay's Games
Steph. Aus. 91 Asheville 73
Phoenix at Detroit
pleasant and affable to his friends.
Ky . St. 100 St. Thom. 65
Seattle
at
New
York
Col. Clarkson was succeeded in the management of the salt Milwaukee at Chicago
EAU Claire 66 Southern (Ark)
St. 50
works by Col. Iaeger, who was the last man to operate the famous BalI. at L.A.
old furnace. Col. Iaeger was a man with unlimited means at his Buffalo at San Diego
Boston vs San Fran. at Oklnd. Colordo 77 loa St. 73
Kansas 71 Mo. 69 (ot)
command and every man, woman and child who worked for him Philadelphia at Cleveland
Okla. BO Okla. St. 74
(Only games scheduled)
and earned a penny got the money without hesitation. He maintained a large store of dry goods, groceries, etc., for his workmen
at all times and under all circtL'11Stances - charitable to a faultand book-lovers will sometimes produce a poet. Sandra began in
he was generous and kind.
1958 to write poetry while sweeping the floor of a church. Having
He operated his business with marked success several years.
no pencil at hand she took down her first efforts with crayons
When Iaeger gave up the old furnace, it soon went into decay.
Today there is scarcely a trace left of the once magnificent borrowed from Primary Class supplies.
Sandra, a Sunday School teacher at the Fairview Bible
plant.
Church, Letart, W.Va., has been teaching the Bible to children
John L. ::viason in 1909 tells about the old Sam Pullins Spring,
and teenagers from her 14th year until now.
in West Columbia, which was located below the Cinder Bridge a
In addition to many, many poems she has written she has also
short distance . The spring, now entirely obliterated, was a large,
written three books, "David of Judah," "Prince of God," and
walled up with rock; the water was always cool and palatable.
Many a thirsty wayfarer sat down in that old spring house to "Bow Song."
rest and refresh the inner man 50 years ago. According to the late
:::::=:::::::::;;:::::.:·::::::;:;:;:::;:::::::::~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:::;:;::::::::::::.
Jotm Mason, the long rows of houses known as Rat Row and Irish
Hollow are gone; only two or three remaining where once hunOXFORD, Ohio (UPI) dreds of families resided in peace and happiness.
Larry Garlocb, starting
forward for the NCAA-bound
West Columbia was the birthplace of Georgiana Goodard
Miami of Ohio basketball
King on August 5,1871. She went to New York to live while she was
team, suffered a double neck
quite young. (She perhaps was the daughter of John S. King who
fracture Monday when he
came from New York and operated the King Furnace at West
slipped during a gymnastics
Columbia until 1873.)
class.
Miss King contributed articles to The Journal of the
The 6-foot-4 sophomore
American Institute of Architects, The Journal of American Ar- from Freetown, Ind. will be in
chaeological Association, etc. She is the author of an allegorical
traction for three weeks and
poem, "The Way of Perfect Love," and a number of other works.
will wear a neck brace for
Another outstanding young lady from West Columbia is Miss
three months.
A Miami spokesman said a
Sandra Fowler. She is listed in the second and third editions of the
decision will be made this
"International Who's Who in Poetry" which is published in
week
on
Garloch's
London, England, by the Dartmouth Chronicle Group and is the
replacement on the team,
only listing of its kind for poets in the world. She is a member of
which meets second-ranked
the Avalon World Arts Academy, The American Poets Fellowship
Marquette in the opening
Society, the World Poetry Society and the Centro Studi E Scambi
round of the Mid-East
Internazionali of Rome, Italy.
Regional Saturday at South
Sandra is a graduate of Wahama High School, and the
Bend,. Ind.
·
daughter of Okey Fowler and Jean Roach Fowler of West

In NIT Tourney ~::a~~~:~
NEW YORK (UPI) - St. Explorers lost Kenny Durrett
Jotm's university is like the with a knee injury several
man who came to dinner-and weeks ago. Paul Westhead, like
stayed.
Mulzoff a first year coach,
The redmen were invited to remains uncertain about Ourcompete in the 16-team National rett's playing status. LaSalle
Invitation Tournament for the won the NIT in 1952 and is
20th time Monday, along with making its first appearance in
four other teams, to bring the the NIT since 1965.
total number of guests to 10 for
Georgia Tech, beaten in last
the March 20-27 post-season year's NIT quarterfinals by St.
basketball classic. Six spots Jotm's, counts on 6-9 center
remain open.
Rich Yunkus for its potent ofAlso chosen with St. Jotm's, a fense that reeled in a 20-8 record
four-time winner of the NIT in this season. Yunkus averages 26
1943-44-59-65, were LaSalle, points a game after finishing
Hawaii, Georgia Tech and 1970with a 30.1 mark. Syracuse
Syracuse. Previously elected has a one-two scoring punch in
were Dayton, St.Bonaventure, 6-11 center Bill Smith (23 point
Tennessee, Massachusetts and average) and 6-1 guard Greg
Providence.
Kohls (22 points a game). The
The remaining berths most Orangemen make their fifth
likely will be filled by the appearance in the NIT. They
runner-up teams in the Big Ten, have never reached a semifinal
Missouri Valley, Atlantic Coast, berth in NIT play.
Big Eight and MidAmerican
Conference.
Not to be discounted, however, are such independents as
Rutgers, West Texas State and
Denver.
Ben Carnevale, head of the
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
NIT Selection Committee, said United Press International top
additional bids could be expect- 20 major college basketba II
teams with number of first
ed later this week.
place voles and won-lost
St. Jotm's, which joined an records in parentheses: (fourtelite group of three other teams eenth week, includes games
played through Sunday, March
by winning its 1,000th game last 7)
Saturday, posted a 17-a record . . Team
Points
341
for the season by whipping l. UCLA (26) (24-l}
2. Marquette (6) (27-0)
301
Providence, 79-65. Kentucky, 3. Southern Cal (2) (241) 2B2
Kansas and Oregon State are 4. Pennsylvania (26-0)
221
219
the other schools with 1,000 5. Kansas ( 1) (23-1)
6. Jacksonville (22-3)
120
victories.
7. South Carolina (20-4)
113
Mel Davis, a 6-foot-6 sopho- B. Western Kentucky (20-5) 72
66
more, leads the redmen with a 9. Kentucky (22-4)
49
near 20-point game average. 10. Fordham (23-2)
11 . Ohio Stale (lB-5)
40
coach Frank Mulzoff is counting 12. Duquesne (21 -3)
21
on the big forward to link Davis' 13. Brigham Young (1B-9)
17
11
name with such St. John's MVP 14. North Carolina (20-5)
15. !tiel Hawaii (22-4)
6
winners as Har ry Boykoff
(tie) Hous ton (20-6)
6
(1943), Bill Kotsores (1944),
(tie) Drake ( 19-7}
6
5
Tony Jackson (1959) and Ken lB. (tie)NotreDame(l97)
5
(tiel LaSalle (20-6
Mcintyre (1965).
(tie) Weber St. (21 -5)
5
Hawaii made the grade in its
5
(tiel Utah St. (20-6)
(tie) Louisville (19-7}
5
first season as a major college.
The Rainbows , coached by
Ohio H.S. Basketball
formr NBA star Red Rocha,
Tournament Scores
compiled a 22-4 record and are By United
Press lnternationa I
currently ranked among the
Class AAA
(At Boardman
nation's top teams.
The Rainbows average 91.4 Roardman B2 Youngstown
Ursul ine 43
points a game and rank third in
Class AA
leads the
(At Columbus)
rebounds. Al D
team' scor('l"f
19 5 Columbus Ready 67 Bexley 65
Gran ,IIJie&gt; 75 Buckeye Va lley 65
average and J
Columbus Mohawk 60 Big
is the lOth best
Wal.-ut 58 (ot)
591 per- London 6B Washington C.H. 49
in the nation w
Class A
centage.
(At Bellefontaine)
LaSalle finish d the season Anna 77 West Liberty Sale m 63
with a 20-6 record after the Mechanicsburg 6B Bethel 63

College
Ratings

Ex-Cha1np

• • •

(Continued from Page 3)
soiled from where they had rubbed against the floor and what's
more, they were slipping.
Dad Encouraged Clay
It was really all over then, although Clay somehow hung on for
the remainder of the round.
Maybe there was some omen of what was to come earlier in the
evening when Clay's younger brother, Ramathan Ali, lost his first
professional fight to Don McAlinden, a charging straight-ahead
rhino-like heavyweight from Coventry, England. Papa Cassius
Marcellus Clay was at the ringside hollering at his son to "stick
and move, stick and move," but it didn't do any good.
The record crowd of 20,455 at the Garden who watched Frazier
put the first blemish on Clay's record generally agreed it was a
pretty good fight. They agreed unanimously it wasn't worth $5million, which is what the two contestants split between them.
Clay Wants Comeback
After the decision was announced for Frazier, Clay was led'
back to his dressing room where Drew Budini Brown, assistant to
trainer Angelo Dundee, applied an ice bag to some of the loser's
red bruises.
"We ain't through yet, are we?" Brown asked Clay.
It hurt him to talk but Cassius Clay still wouldn't say die.
"Get the gun," he mumbled through his swollen features .
"We're gonna set the traps."

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Milwaukee Makes It
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Columbia. She has taken correspondence courses in poetry and
authorship.
Miss Fowler first saw her work in print in 1962 when Lilith
Lorraine, famed Texas poet, selected three of her poems for the
Poetry Day Anthology, "Sing Loud For Loveliness."
Since 1962 her poems have appeared in the following anthologies: Spring Anthology, 1967, '69 and '71; Mitre Press,
London, Flame Annual 1964, '65, '66; First Poetry of 1966;
American Poets, 1966, '68, '69, and '70; Today's Poets, Vol. 5, Year
of the Poet; 66 Poets, Warriors of Eternity, and Yearbook of
Modern Poetry.
Her work has appeared in the following journals of poetry:
Cyclo-Flame, Cyclotron, American Bard, The Muse, Writer's
Voice, American Poet, Caravan, Bay Shore Breeze, Creative
Review, Goliards, Hoosier Challenger, Voices, Quaderni Di
Poesia, and Poet, Voice of the World Poetry Society.
Honors and awards she has received since 1962 are as follows :
Citations of merit from the Avalon International Poetry contests·
The North American Mentor Poetry contests The Leonardo D~
Vinci Acade~y of Rome, Italy, and the Per~nal Poetry Radio
Program whtch originates in Winchester, Va.; from The Central
Adu~ ~- Scambi Internazionali of Rome, Italy, the Diploma of
Ment, ~onorary Representative Diploma," and the Medal of
Honor whtch was presented to her for the contributions to world
peace which she had made by promoting understanding between
the various poets of the world.
Sandra reports that she is a direct descendant of the fiery
reform preacher Jonathan Edwards on her mother's side and a
host of lesser readers and thinkers on every side notable among
these . bein_g her great-grandfather Roach who ~t up at night
teachmg himself to read by the light of an oil lamp.
It has been said that several generations of thinkers, teachers

:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,t;~U''iJ&amp;~'E's'"'ti~'·''':':&gt;:·

:,,,,,,

NEW YORK (UPI) - Ohio
State moved up to 11th in this
week's UPI top 20 major college
basketball team ratings.
The Buckeyes received 40
points in the 14th week of the
poll, which included games
played through March 7.

t·············~
:A
THOUGH'rt
.~FOR TODA

Yt

iC
iC
iC
-tt

Tomorrow is the day
when idlers work and
fools reform. Don't
wait. Do your work and
~ reforming today.
'fC
- Anonymous

~~ *It's Quick!
* Easy*
~

~
~

2093.

First Ind. High Game - J.
Boyles and M. Voss 191.
Second Ind. High Game- B.
Batey 190.
First Ind. High Series - B.
Batey 51B.
Second Ind. High Series- M.
Dugan 507.
This Week's S-pecial

USED CARS
~dr.

H.T. dark blue fin., blue
mt., V-8 auto., P.S., radio, ws-w, only 3B,OOO mi. One
owner, new Olds trade.

$1595
Karr &amp; Van· Zandt

MONTEITH REASSIGNED
DETROIT (UPI)-The Detroit Red Wings Monday
reassigned left wing Hank
Monteith to their Fort Worth,
Tex., farm club of the Central
Hockey League.

BAKER

66 FORD LID

"You'll Like Our Quality"
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til6:00
Til S p.M. Sat.

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ELECTRIC
HEATING
FEATS
CLEANLINESS: Clean as electric light.
CONVEN\ENCE:

Gone are storage tanks, b\.uners, Pilot
light adiustments, and regu\ar servicing.
COMFOR'T~

Chilly spots, drafts and
overheating eliminated.
ECONOMY~

il
~'
iC

No waste. 100 percent heating efficiency.

iC
iC

OUIET OPERA'TION:

i'

:
il

On-ott roar and rumble gone.

~

DRIVE-JN ~
BANKING~

iC
iC
iC
Fridays Only
iC
iC The Drive- In Window~
~
is Open
iC
iC
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
iC
iC
(Continuously)
:
~Other Banking Hours 9 to iC
iC 3 ~nd s to 7 as usual on ~
iC Fndays.
iC

! FARMERS BANK !
~and SAVINGS CO. ~
iC
iC

EARLY BIRD LEAGUE
March 3, 1971
Standings
w L
Team
66 14
Mark V
D. D. Pinnetfes
52 28
40 40
Evelyn's Grocery
Welker's Maplelawn
Poultry
3B 42
Rawlings Dodge
24 56
Coca-Cola Dropouts
20 60
Team High Game- Evelyn's
Grocery 722.
Team High Series- Mark V

GARLOCH'S NECK INJURED
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)-Larry
Garloch, starting forward for
the Miami of Ohio baseball
team, slipped on the gymnastics class bars Monday and
suffered a double neck fracture.
the Redskins meet secondranked Marquette Saturday in
the opening round of the
Mideast NCAA regionals.

r

tiC
AMERICA'S LARGEST TAX SERVIG: WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES
· - - - - N O APPOINTMENT NECESSARY:!·----·

diana 85-77 in the Far West
Classic in Portland, Ore. in De
cember but the game did not
count in the records. Michigan
State is the only conference
team with a bone fide season
win over the Bucks.
OSU Coach Fred Taylor said
it was possible sophomore substitute Bob Siekmann, recovering from influenza, and starting cornerman Mark Wagar
may not see action tonight. Wagar has a sprained instep.
However, captain Jim Cleamons, the only senior on the
soph-dominated squad, was expected to be at full strength after suffering a left wrist injury
several weeks ago.

Bowling

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

iC

~

iC

-tc
il.ll-¥¥¥¥¥:1f-:1f¥:1f¥¥¥~

See your "Good Comfort Guys"
Ge~ more facts from the representative in your local Columbus and Southern
OhiO Electric Company office. Ask about budget billing and the special low
electric heating rate.
COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

I

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

1971

EXTRA SPECIAL! DEBBIE

•

PINK

3 qts. for

DETERGENT

__..__

1.00

1 _.

Cube Steak..~~-~~-~-~~-~~~~:.1~:.1. 29
Jowl Bacon .....~~~~~~---····~~·....29¢
Neck Bones ... ~~~-~......5 $1
Pork liver.. ~~. ~~:~.~~~:~......~~:.. 39¢

From USDA Choice Beef

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN

PORK
ROAST

lb.

lb.89~

ROGER BUSH, THE MEAT MGR.

Choice Quality
lean and
Meaty

SPECIAL! SCOT LAD

SANDWICH COOKIES
Chocolate
Vanilla
"

1%lb.
pkg.

Assorted

49e

SCOT LAD ASSORTED

•

CANNED POP
10
1.00
cans

SCOT LAD

ICE CREAM
NESTLE'S

•

1h gal.
carton

CA DY
BARS

BANQUET

TV Dinners

Reg. 5e Size

SCOT LAD

•

3

$}

cans
for

Green Beans...~~~.~~·-·~·····5
Shellie Beans ..~~~~-~~........ 5

Salt.~~~--~~.3 ~:~

39¢

Waffles

Orange Juice
l!:L 49¢

MILK

5

$}

~:~s

OYSTER STEW
White Self-Rising

FAVORITE
BREAD

6

Serve A Delicious Spring Salad!

Firm, Red Ripe

·TOMATOES
3 lb.
basket

69¢

loaves
for

$1

39C

DANISH SANDWICH
LOAF

CORN MEAL

12 oz. can

Sat.
Only!!

1.00

HilTON'S FAMOUS

IOlh oz.
can

BIRDS EYE

p~

SUNSHINE
IKRISPY
CRACKERS

Jerzee Canned

$}

cans
for

So inach ...~~~-~~-···················· 5
Maple Syrup..~~-~~---~!n~ 49¢

BIRD EYE

10 O~~ 1.00

39¢

Corn &amp; Peas

SCOT LAD

$}

cans
for

cans
for

.f

only

3 ~~: 1.00

•

,,

each

Strawberries

EA.

•

sge

49~

AO

©

EDON
TOILET
TISSUE
SCOT LAD
PAPER
TOWELS
CAMELLIA
FACIAL
TISSUES

89¢
39¢
l-Ib. box

12 rolls for

1.00
3 jumbo rolls

1.00
1.00

(4) 200 ct bxs.

large Yellow Cooking

ONIONS
3 lb.

bag

29~

POTATOES
Unclassified

1Q

lb.

4 9e

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
,.
..
.
Corner .~Ill anu Second Sts.

PHONE: 992-3480
" We Rese rve The Right To L imit Ouantlt ie s "

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�f\- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 9,1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
•
2 SIGNS
Voice
Pomeroy
NOTICE
OF
[_·_B_u_s_i_il_e_s--l....:-:-,s_·S_ _ ,. . ,e=- -=- r~p,~-:- r~ -~ -&lt;1.'-=-Jr~ ~ . . .....
.
:
"
~
--~]
Motor
Co.
QUALITY
along
TELEVISION
REPAIR
Br'Way
Starting Thursday, March 11
Dr. Richard Slack will be back
In his Middleport oHice.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
DUKE ELLINGTON
SWINGS WITH THE
LONGHAIRS
NEW YORK - The Morton
Downeys will be guests at the
White House St. Patrick's Dayeve state dinner for Ireland's
Prime Minister Lynch - also
Pat Nixon's 59th birthday .... Ed
Sullivan 's CBS press agent
squeezed out in the personnel
panic, Mike Harris, also is the
loyal lad who wrote Smiley's
biography .... The N. Y. taxihike suddenly lets cabbies hail
customers for a pleasant if
inflated change .... Nice new
resistant-rule among many
constant cab-riders: No tips for
cabs whose drivers are rude or
if the cab is filthy .... Orson
Bean accused one of the big ad
agencies of blacklisting him
because
of
his
archconservative politics; 15 years
ago, Bean strung along with the
lefties and claimed he was
being blacklisted then, too.
The American Toy Fair
featured a Spiro Agnew game
and a Spiro Agnew puzzle, but
the valuable and voluble Veep
shared equal political-toy time
with other pols via a Model
Products Corp. car-kit called
"The Hard Hat Hauler." which
sported likenesses of Senators
Kennedy, Muskie and Gov.
Reagan.
Our old friend, songwriter
Jack Yellen, sends along the
actors-cardplayers' Friars Club
promotion flyer alerting
members to the ''Friars
Famous Shore Dinner" every
Friday - attached to a blithe
come-on for "The Friars Club
Scenic
and
Inexpensive
Cemetery Plots at Valhalla,
Kensico Cemetery," graves
available to all Friars and their
families, costs $175 and $200,
with toe coaxer, "Reserve Now,
Pay Later" .... Jack's comment
on the juxtaposition: "Not
inappropriate
've
seen the ea tm'
those dinners.'
The only you
n the
Merv Griffin
dsingers'
show will be a star -watch for
him: Name's Dax Xenos .... Joe
Namath's unbandaged mitt
looked highly passable as he
sliced steak at Christo's .... One
H'wood movie union reports 85
per cent unemployment ....
Some airlines contemplate
unloading in-flight movies.
Duke Ellington signed with
Doubleday for a book of his
personal observations; and the
Duke now is a member of the
prestigious Royal Swedish
Academy of Music, first time a
musician from the popular field
has been welcomed into that
200-year-old institution, joining
Igor
Stravinsky,
Artur
,Rubinstein, Toscanini, Bruno
Walter; and such other artistic
cats as Beethoven, Haydn,
Puccini, Wagner, Verdi,
Benjamin Britten, Milhaud,
Segovia, Casals, Goran Gentele
(the newly appointed successor
to R. Bing as Metopera boss) ;
rather a distinguished gig for
the Duke to Love Madly as he
says to everyone. Football's
most valuable antique, George
Blanda, has high standards:
Refused a flock of big-money
TV commercials and endorsements he feels would
make him "look silly" .... Scary
sights: Midtown Madison Ave.
buildings with lobby guards who
insist on ID cards or confirmedin-writing appointments before
you get into the buildings .... It's
sad but necessary .. .. One
Bdwy. show biz building is
called "The Zoo" by its tenants
.... Rome's cat population is
800,000. At Least .... Have a City
Hall whisper: That a city
schools chief slammed down on
a data processing service
compiling family info extracted
from kids about their parents.
One of the reasons Columbia
Pictures is the most successful
major film firm in the world
(copped 10 Oscar nominations
this year in addition to the big
profits) surely must be its
absolute resistance to produce
or release an X-rated film. And
won't ever .... Its pres., Abe
Schneider, is convinced X-filth
drives family audiences away
and he's right.
Melvyn Douglas, up for the
best--acting Oscar (we feel he's
a cinch) for "I Never Sang for
My Father," snooted the stage
original .... Out on a prophetic
limb with Douglas , let's add our
opinion the supporting-Oscar
will go to Chief George .... Here
it is early March, blizzards
whooshing by them and the 5t"

Office Hours: 3 to 6 MONDAY ·
3to6 THURSDAY
lOto 1 SATURDAY

271 N. 2nd Ave.

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.

Middleport, 0.

Wanted To Buy
SMALL farm and house,
buildings, Meigs County area.
Contact Oris Frederir.k, 3221
Georgetown
Rd.,
ln.
dianapolis, Ind. 46224. Phone
317-291-9130.
3-9-12tc

ll.

!

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

1968 FORD 'h TON
$1895
8' Styleside Pickup, V-8 engine, std. trans .: custo~ cab. R·
step bumper, chrome int. bumper, rad1o, wh1te &amp; red
finish. Good tires.

1966CHEVROLET2TON
.
$1695
..cab-Chassis, 84"-cab to axle. Good 825x20 tires, 2·speed
rear axle, clean cab, 292-cu. in. 6 cyl. engine.
1969 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR.
$3495
Factory air cond., auto. trans., P S., P. B., vi_nyl roof. Like
new tires. Local owner with only 14,000 m1.

~eroy

ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO(1) -Rent Homes:Mobile Homes, or Apartments
(2) Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3) Live in Sub.Standard Housing
INCOMES OFS4,000to$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 HOM~S ON Dl::&gt;t'LAY tor your ~SPECTic;lN
1. No money down
2. We will furnish lot or erect_En 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

All Makes &amp; Models
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
675·2241 or 773·5196

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

J. Durbin- C. Inscore
Service Personnel

ftlotor Co.

THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
SAVINGS COMPANY,
OP-EM EVES. 8:00 l.M.
An Ohio Corporation,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
POMEROY I OHIO
Gl LOANS available to buy or build your new
Plaintiff.
OLD furniture, dishes, bras~'
home.
Contact us for more information.
vs.
beds, etc. Write M.D. Miller,
Russell E. Lewis, et al.
Rt..
4,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Call
Defendants.
- WANT AD'
992-6271.
No. 14,817
INFORMATION
9·1·th;;
NOTICE
OFFICE PHONE 992-7129
DEADLINES
Russell E. Lewis, whose place
5 P.M_ Oay Before Publication. UNFURNISHED 3-room
of residence is unknown, will OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
.V.Onday Deadline 9 a.m.
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
. NO ANSWER CALL
TOM CROW
taKe notice that on the 13th day
conditio.,, as long as have not
.cance.llatlon &amp; co~rections .
1-31·tfc
of February 1971, the un·
Night 992-2580
been wet- Payi~ $10 each Wrll be accepted ut;t119 a.m. for
dersigned, The Farmers Bank
·
.·
Day of Pu bl1catlon
-------------------&amp; Savings company, filed its
Firstfloor only. ondays Will
REGULATIONS ·
·
·,
petition against you in the
be pick·up day. Write, giving
The Publisher reserves th~ SMALL ONE-Bedroom trailer,
LARRY SPENCER
From the Largest Truck or
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
good directions . Witten Piano ' 'right to edit or reject any ads
forced air heat and air conBulldozer Radiator to the
Night 992-3433
County, Ohio, praying for a
Company, Box 188, Sardis,' deemed
ob(ectlonal.
The
ditioning. Phone 992-6452.
Smallest Heater Core.
judgment on a promissory note
Ohio
43946
publisher
will
not
be
responsible
3-4-tfc
in the amount of $3,253.94, with
·
8·20-tfc for more than one incorrect! - - - - - - - - - - - - - interest at 1112 per cent per
insertion.
annum from September 25,
'FURNISHED and unfurnished
RATES
1970, and for foreclosure of CASH for ~s'ed steel traps, any
apartments. Close to school.
For Want Ad Service
Pomeroy
Ph. 992,--2143
mortgage upon the following
make, any size, phone 985- 5 CPnts per Word one insertior
Phone 992·5~34;
described real property:
3376 after 5 p.m. Richard L. •
M1l11mOm Charge75c10·18·tfc
Situated in the Village of
,.BAc;K HUE and end·loader
12 cents per word three
Coleman, Long Bottom.
Pomeroy , County of Meigs, and
work. Septic tanks Installed.
consecutive. insertions.
3-5-4tp
'2
BEDROOM
house,
Lincoln
State of Ohio: Being Lot No . 502
George (Bill l Pullins. Phone
18 cents ·per word s~x con.
Car ~ompletely Mitted &amp;
Hts.,
Pomeroy.
Available
in the Village of Pomeroy,
secutive insertions.
•
•
992-2478.
County of Meigs and State of
after
March
10.
Phone
992Thoroughly
Rinsed.
25 Per cent Discount on paid·
11-29-tfcf1
Ohio, and there is also conveyed
5127 after 4 p.m.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
LEGAL NOTICE
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
herewith, all rights with respect
3-2-tfc
Jack
M.
Matich,
whose
CARD'
OF
THANKS
Sat. 9 tn S-Sun. 11 to 5
to the use of the sidewalk bet·
AIR CONUITIONING. Re.residence is unknown; Irene M.
&amp; OBITUARY
-GUARANTEEDween lots Nos. 502 and 503 as Matich,
. ·frigeration service. Jack's ·
TWO
OR
three
bedroom
home,
whose
residence
is
$1.50
for
50
word•
minimum
was transferred to the Grantor unknown to the plaintiff, and Each additional word 2c.
Phone 992-2094 , 1
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
herein.
Unknown Heirs of Jacob
BLIND ADS
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
-_, • Phone 882!2Q79.
'
Reference Deeds: Vol. 227, The
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Additional
25c
Charge
pef"
3·2·tfC
page 987, and Vol. 168, page 371,
DoltYourselfOpen
.t:6.ttc".
:~omeroy
Unknown
Heirs
of
Edward
Advertisement.
Deed Records, Meigs County,
[
------------------24 Hrs. Daily. 25c
- - - - - - -...........,..-----~
Schaefer ,
deceased;
The
OFFICE HOURS
Ohio.
606 E. MeAn, Pomeroy, o.·
~I.L~~~~~~~~~~
C. BRADFURU, Auctioneer
8:30 -a·.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally, TRAILER SPACE on old Rr. :J3,
L
You are required to answer Unknown Heirs of Emma
112-mile north of new Meigs
Complete Service
the said complaint within 28 Schaefer Ashworth, deceased; 8:30 a· m · to 12:00 Noon
CUSTOM
MEAT
cutting.
Phone949-3821
High School. Phone 992-2941.
days after the last publication The Unknown Heirs of Florence Saturday.
' I
3·5-tfc
Contact Richard Vaughan,
Racine, Ohio
namely on the 28th. day of ApriL Schaefer Radford, deceased, ~
phone 992-3374 or Dale Little,
Critt Bradford
1971, or judgment by default also known as Flora Schaefer
will be rendered against you. Radford; T)le Unknown Heirs of ME-IGS County F'lsh and Game
phone 992-6346.
..........,...._
a 5- l-tfs..
THE FARMERS BANK Edward Schaefer, deceased,
3 -3-12k. SEP nc tanks cleaned'. Mine;DRIFTWOOD camping trailer,
Association will meet Friday,
&amp; SAVINGS COMPANY, grandson of Jacob Schaefer,
March 12, 7:30 p.m., at DISCOUNT still on: Con 18-foot, self-contained. New READ-Y--M-I_X_C_O_N_C
__
R_E_T_E- .de-'
Sani~tion, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Plaintiff. deceased; The Unknown Heirs
of Ethel s . Archer, deceased;
Coon hunters Club, Snowball
CROW, CROW &amp; PORTER,
awning. Phone 992-2859.
tinental, Skamper, Go·Tag·A_ .tf
' livered right to your project.
662·3 35.
•
The Unknown Heirs of Gus
H'll
S
El t'
f
Attorneys for Plaintiff
3-4-6tc
1
2 12 c
Aiong, and Champion cam'
deceased;
The
yracuse.
ec 10n o
Fast
and
easy.
Free ,
(2) 16, 23, (3) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 7tc Schaefer,
pers , trailers and motor
Unknown Heirs of Elmer
officers will be held.
estimates. Phone 992·3284.
3-9 tf
homes. Some here - more GROCERY store and gas
Schaefer,
deceased;
The
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co., SEPTIC 1 ~rtKS \.Lt:ANEU.
station,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
Good
coming ; Don't walk, start
Unknown Heirs of Elza AshMiddleport, Ohio.
&lt; . "Ditching. Electric sewer
location.
Write
P.
0.
Box
406.
worth , deceased ; The Unknown SPECIAL at Harman's Auction
running to Gaul Trailer Sales,
6-30-hc
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
Ave. bride windows are in dep't Heirs of Elmer Ashworth,
House, Laure Cliff, Friday.
Syracuse,
Ohio.
Inc., Chester, Oh io. Phone
Phone
John
Russell,
346tc
Two truck loads of rugs,
stores already .... Collegiate deceased; The Unknown Heirs
985-3832. P. S. - Reserve your
G~llipolis 446-4782.
of Mabel Ashworth, deceased;
appliances,
glassware,
rental unit for the coming
4-7-tfc
School is an old conservative The Unknown Heirs of Dayton
radios, dishes, naugahyde
season NOW.
COAL, limestone. Excel~io:
academy, but the kids there Ashworth , deceased; The
and
many
other
items
too
3-7-1
3tc
4
ROOM
house,
bath,
2
lots,
Unknown Heirs of Otho Ash ·
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
'ifEWIN.G MACHINES. Repair
really dig English teacher worth, deceased; The Unknown
numerous to mention. Sale - - - - - - - - - - good location. Phone 992-2806.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-38'9f;
service, all makes. 992-2284.~'
starts
at
7
p.m.
Heirs
of
Amanda
Schaefer
3·9·3tc
Eugene Dea - who's writing a Goeglein, deceased; The
4-9-tfc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
3-9-3tc
rock musical for off-Bdwy.
Authorized Singer Sales and,
Unknown Heirs of Louise
-1969
BUICK
LeSabre,
2-dr.
Goeglein Matich, deceased; ANNUAL St. Patrick's Day
KILL TERMITt::S and yard
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Life Photog Art Shay, The
hardtop, power steering,
Unknown Heirs of Mike
3-29·tfc
insects with Arab "You-Docard party, Thursday, March
power brakes, air , 1~ •.000
threatened by the Mafia for Matich, also known as Michael
lt. " King Builders Supply
11,
7:
30
p.m.,
Sacred
Heart
miles. Excellent cond1fron.
•HARRISON'S TV ~ND AN·
deceased;
The
taking pies, is a gentle soul who Matich,
Company, Middleport.
auditorium. Donation of $1.25.
Unknown Heirs of Dorothy
Phone 992-2288.
2 21·60tC
TEJ-.INA SERVICE. Phone '
writes children's books .... Joan Radford Croy, deceased, will
Table prizes and a door prize.
11-10-tf&lt;;
take notice that they have been
992-2522.
\
3·9-3tc
Ri ers turned out her three- sued
1967 GTO, 400 cu. ln. with .060 FLUFFY, SOFT and bright are
by the Director of High· ~----------------'.·10.tfc
year-old's light and Melissa ways of the State of Ohio, who -AUCTION - · wHEN? Each
overbore brand new engine
carpets cleaned with Blue
Broker
' I
has
instituted
a
proceeding
in
with
many
extras,
including
Lustre.
Rent
electric
begged, ''Mommie, please don't the Common Pleas Court of 1 Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
NEIGLER Construction. For i
110 Mechanic St.
JANS,
CRANE,
HOLLEY,
shampooer,
$1.
Baker
Furbuilding or remodeling your '
Hayman's Auction House,
Pqmernv Ohio
turn off my sunshine! " .... Anne Meigs County, Ohio, to ap.
ELDEBROCK, HOOKER,
niture, Middleport.
home, Call Guy Neigler
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
certain property
Meara's cousins, two Josephite propriate
3·3-6tc
OLD
HOUSE.
7
r0vms,
floor
ZOOM
rod
shop
heads.
1968
Pomeroy-Middleport
By Racine, Ohio.
'
described hereafter for high furnace,
3
porches,·
cellar.
Muncie
220.1
transmission
priests, felt at home at Anne's way purposes, namely the
7·31-tfc
pass.
,· .
1969
PONTIAC
Grand
Prix.
Large
lot
on
Route
7.
TUP·
and
much
more.
$1,900
with
making,
construction
or
im
·
2· 7·tfc
play, "The House of Blue
PERS PLAINS. Make offer.
M. T. aluminum wheels. Call
Excellent condition, power
provement of State Route No.7,
Leaves": It's set on the day the Section 6.34, Meigs County,
steering -brakes , air , vinyl
992-3453 or 992-3381. 583 S.
WILL
PICK
up
merchandise'
Ohio, and to fix the value of said
Second St., Middleport, Ohio.
top. Phone Pomeroy 992-3588. MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
Pope visited N.Y. City .... The property.
and take to auction on a
The property sought
bath , forced air heat. Modern, AUTOMOBILE insurance Deen·
3-7·6tp
3-9-3tc
tales of N. Y. City buying to be appropriated rs more
percentage basis. Call Jim
paneled kitchen with tea
cancelled?
Lost
your!
specifically
described
as
Adams,
auctioneer.
Rutland.
Yankee Stadium stressed the follows :
room. Full basement. Double
operator's license? Call '9921968 MERCURY Montego MX,
Phone
742·4461.
garage. Only $14,500.00.
2966.
j
biggest crowd in the stadium's
DESCRIPTION OF THE
automatic
trc1nsmission,
9-23-tfc
6·15·tfc
PARCEL OF LAND
power steering and brakes.
history was there when Pope
2 YEARS OLD 3 nice
AND ESTATE, INTEREST
Air conditioned. See Leo L.
SPIRITUAL-Aires of Columbus
Paul said Mass.
OR RIGHT THEREIN
bedrooms, closets, 1112 baths.
Vaughan or call 992·2588 after
will be singing at the Rutland
APPROPRIATED
Beautiful kitchen with stove
We don't understand the
5:30p.m.
Free-Will Baptist Church
The following parcel, located
and
refrigerator.
Full
stranglehold the N. Y. Mets in Town 2, Range 13, Section
3-7·3tp
Sunday, March 14, 2 p.m.
basement. Forced air heat.
Fraction 6, Salisbury Township,
Come and worship with us. ------------------have on Shea Stadium: When Meigs
Garage_
$26,500.00.
County, Ohio, lying on the
3-7-7tc
Every One
the baseball Giants played in left and right side of the cen80 ACRES all minerals, 6
of a survey made by the
Marked Down
the Polo Grounds, the schedules terline
MINIATURE S ._
d
Department of Highways, and HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
room house, barn, drilled
2-23-30tc
.c~
......
..,zers
~,,
of both leagues were angled so recorded in the records of Meigs
well. Other buildings. $25,000.
22 cu. ft. side by side
Poodle pupp1es. Permanent
their home games never County, Ohio, and being more ===----------BEFORE YOU BUY,
Frostless
Combination,
19
DOZER
WORK..
:,epr1c
tanks,
injections
and
groo~ed.
fully described as follows :
SELL OR BUILD
coincided .... And in these days
leach beds. Phone 949•4761.
Barkaroo Kenn.els. Turn nght
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
PARCEL NO. 1l70·WL
CALL 992·3325
(HIGHWAY).
10·18-tft
at Torch, Oh1o, 5th house
Up. Freezer, 15 cu. ft.
of computers, it would be
-Home Improvement Loans
HELEN
L. TEAFORD,
ALL RIGHT, TITLE AND ------=,....---:--~ '
right. Phone Coolville 667·
Refrigerator, 12 cu. ft.
relatively simple to draw up INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE, ' WILL GIVE piano and organ 3654.
- Christmas Club
ASSOCIATE 992·2378
Refrigerator, 4-11 cu. ft.
-Home Financing Loans
such a schedule; ditto for the INCLUDING LIMITATION OF
2·11 -30tc
lessons
in
my
home.
Phone
Chest Freezers and Elec.
ACCESS,
IN
THE
-Vacation Club
992-3666.
----------o;r--------.,-grid Giants and the Jets - and FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
Dryer. Must make room.
-Home Construction Loans
_8·16·tlc.
Priced for fast sale!
maybe Shea Stadium would not PROPERTY
-Money Orders
Commencing at the northwest
lose the annual $300,000 it now corner of Fraction Section 6, RUBBER STAMPS made to ELECTROLUX cleaner with ;
- Passbook Savings at 4¥4
POMEROY
·
608
East
Main
point also being the true
percent
regularly deficits. The city said
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
attachments. Singer sewing ·
POMEROY
place of beginning of the
-Certificates of Deposit
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
machine. Pint canning jars.
J. W. Carsey,Mgr.
could save the $24 million it's following described tract of
17
ACRES,
NEW
DRILLED
Ohio .
Call 742-5641.
Phone 992-2181
from 5 percent to 6 percent
.
WELL AND PUMP, SCHULT
supposed to pay for the property land
2-12-90tc
depending on the a mount
3·4·6tp
Thence along the North line of
mobile
home
6
months
old,
.... And that sum's a cinch to said fraction section bearing
and
length
of
time
close to POMEROY.
South 87 degrees 11 minutes 49 ATTEN'TIONiadies! Would you HOUSE,
HOUSEHOLD
deposited.
inflate. Why not. Do The Jets seconds
East a distance of
like to try a wig on in the
FURNITURE, HOUSEHOLD CONVENIEN.I bu t secluded 1.27 ACRES, near Rutland, 7
run City Hall?
393.36 feet to a point, said point
privacy at your own home?
GOODS.
DEPOT
ST.,
room house, dri lied well,
building lots on T79 at Rock
being 126.47 feet right of Station
You can. Just call us. We also
RUTLAND. SALE SIGNS UP.
441 plus 14.30; thence South 3
natural
gas,
part
basement.
Springs.
Within
walking
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
3-7-3tc
degrees 41 minutes 24 seconds
$4,295.
distance of Meigs High
Koscot, of course. Dis· - - - - - - - - - - - - - West a distance of 155.40 feet to
School, a 5 minute drive from
a point on the southerly limited - tr.ibutors, .Brown's~ Ph9.i:l~ GUITAR amplifier, twin 12-inch
FARM - about 170 acres, all
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
access right of way of Meigs 7Middleport 992·5113.
Jensen speakers. Reverb and
fenced, about so acres for
Witte weekends, or after 5
6.15, said point being 270.42 feet
- 12-31 -tfc
tremolo, $100. Phone 949·3941 .
cultivation, 2 wells, pond, 3
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992right of Station 440 plus 48.89 ;
= A=-1R
-S
--rec_a_n_ed
=~Ca-11~99
-2-·67-71 .
3-9-3tc
barns, shed, silo, milk house,
6887.
thence along said right of way C:=H
bearing South 66 degrees 04
good 8 room house with bath,
2-3·tfc
2-28-12tp
minutes 32 seconds West a
STEREO. Walnut solid state
PART MINERALS. $20,000.
distance of 443 .87 feet to a point
stereo, 4 speed changer, 4 -HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
on the west line of Fraction
speaker sound system. Pay
TO BUY OR SELL
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Section 6, said point being 265 .00
The Almanac
balance $68.10 cash or easy
CONTACT US
10·25·tfc
feet right of Station 435 plus WILL DO babysitting in my
terms. Call 992-3352.
home in Chester. Write c-o
HENRY CLELAND
By United Press International 71 .09; thence along said fraction
The Daily Sentinel, Box 729-R,
REALTOR
3·4·6tc OHIO RIVER lot. Boat lovers!
Today is Tuesday, March 9, line bearing North 3 degrees 41
minutes 24 seconds East a
Office 992·2259
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Approximately 21!2-acres, 200the 68th day of 1971.
distance of 355.06 feet to the true
3-9-6tc MAPLE STEREO - Radio
Residence 992-2568
foot r iver frontage, septic
of beginning , containing
Combination . This stereo
The moon is between its first place
tank,
city
water ,
gas
_O
__
M_A__
N___
a_
v_
a~
ila7
b7
1e
--~to-. do
2.304 acres, more or less, of _W
equipped with Am ·FM radio,
availabl e. Also, 1970 trailer,
quarter and full phase .
which the present road occupies
housework in Pomeroy area.
4 speakers, 4 speed changer.
12x63, 3-bedroom, bath and
of an acre .
The morning stars are Venus, 0.002
Call
Chester
985-3900.
Pay balance $81.30 cash or
This description prepared by
half. Property could be used
3-7·3tc
Mars and Jupiter.
terms. Call 992 3352.
HAPPINESS IS
Theodore W . Sushka, P. E.
as small trailer park or
34792, for the Ohio Depar tment
3-4-6tc
retirement home. Samuel
The evening stars are Mercu- of
Owning Your Own Home
Highways in 1970, and is
Barnhart, across from Racine
ry and Saturn.
based on a survey made by
Planing Mill, Rt. 124, above
C.
Glasgow, RESPONSIBLE! person to work FIREWOOD, Gerald King,
Those born on this day are Richard
Syracuse.
Registered Surveyor No. 5161 .
Shade, Ohio. Phone 696-1287.
established route. Good
under the sign of Pisces.
3-9-6tc
Owners claim title by in 3-5-6tp
commission. ABC Cleaners,
strument of record in Deed
On this day in history:
Mason.
Book 50, Page 99, County
3-5-tfc
In 1822 Charles Graham of Recorder's Office.
Big Capacity
Together with all rights or
New York City received the
Maytag
DRIVERS NEEDED
easements of access or or from
first patent for artificial teeth. said limited access highway, WE TRAIN you to be a semi
Automatics
2 speed operation.
or to the land of said
driver, local and city training
In 1947 one of the longest from
Choice of water
persons abutting upon that
now available. Earn over
temps .
Auto .
strikes in American history portion of said I im ited access
DAVID &amp; DIANE ASHLEY
$4.50 an hour after short
water
level
, between the following
ended after 440 days when the highway
175 Beech St.
Middleport
training
.
For
application
and
control .
Lin t
points :
" Words cannot describe the
interview, call 513-863·6404, or
Filter or Power
F rom a point 265 feet right of
United Auto Workers came to
Fin Agitator
write Sheridan Truck Lines,
Station 435 plus 71.09
feeling one gets to get up in the
terms with the Case Manufac- centerline
to a point 270.42 feet right of
Perm a· Press
Corwin
Avenue,
1255
morning and walk barefooted
Maytag
centerline Station 440 plus 48.89
turing Co. in Racine, Wis.
Hamilton, Ohio 45015.
through the house on wall -to-wall
Halo of Heat
as shown by the plans of said
3·8-2tc
In 1962 a coal mine explosion improvement
carpeting without being cold. We
Dryers
herein referred
Surround c lothes
urge everyone we know to see
in West Germany killed 31 men. to . Said stations being the
w ith gentle, even
Station numbers as stipulated in
about buying a home from Jemo
In 1967 Russian Communist the
heat . No hot spots,
hereinbefore mentioned
Associates. "
WORKING man wants two or
no overdrying.
dictator Josef Stalin's daughter survey .
lhree bedroom country house
Fine Mesh Lint
Said
persons
nam
ed
or
noted
Svetlana defected to the United above shall further take notice
F ilter .
in Meigs County . Phone
we Specialize in
States.
that unless they answer on or
Alhens 592-4757 .
MAYTAG
before Sa turday , th e 17th day of
Sites Available
3-9-6tc
Red Carpet
April, 1971, they will be deem ed
f''C&lt;"""·~o« '''''*'~ool?&amp;.'o:i&amp;%~oo'?.•W.'*'-''''';;~:
Service
A thought for today: Pres- to have waiv ed their right to
and the Petition will be
ident Calvin Coolidge said, answer,
~ G£T YOUR MAN Winl A ~,
taken as true and Judgment will
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
"there is no right to strike be rendered accordingly.
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
P
E.
Masheter
against the public safety by
Phone 992-7034
742-4211
Arnold Grate
Director of Highways
Rutland, 0.
li-:::;~:·-: - ::~-·=::::;:;::·.::~;;·;:::::;-~:}:-._-;.:~:--;·-~:.:;;;·:-·;:~;:;:;:~~::.;· .:~
anybody, anywhere, anytime."
(2) 23 (3) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 6tc

A nENTION VOERANS

.EXPERIENCED .
Radiator Service

GREEN HILL HOMES

FOr Rent

---

DALE DUTTON 992-3106
Night 992-2534

EXPERT
.Wheel Alignment

LEGAL NOTICE

. MASON CAR WASH ,
"AUTOMATIC"

$5.55

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

BLAElTNARS

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

PRICE '1.25

Home &amp; Auto

Notice

For Sale

For Sale or 'Rent

Real Estate For Sale

Auto Sales

Vir~

B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Insurance

CLOSE OUT!

All FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES

WHAT

Pets For Sale

Services Do We
Have For You .•.

b

For Sale

Cleland Realty

Real Estate For Sale

Meigs Co. Branch

d.)

~

Today'3
Almanac

Employment Wanted

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

Help Wanted

.JEMO ASSOCIATES

Wanted To Rent

i WantAd -

RUTLAND FURNITURE

�'BARNEY

EEKAND MEEK
-----,

•

1./EP-- HE GOT SENT
UP TH' CREEK FER
WRITIN' HOT
CHECKS

I JEST GOT SOME
GOOD NEWS ABOUT
Ml.f BROTHER ARKI.f
OFF IN TH' FLATlANDS,
SNUFFY

Wrb SAID 'GIVE Me

WHAT'S SO

LIBERTi' OR GIVC M€ DEATH'?

GOOD NEWS
ABOUT
THAT?

•
•

PULL THAT 13URLAP
BAG OVER PAPP'/!.'
THE GIRLS FROM

•

-::;-~THINK'.:&gt; HE::~ WATCi:«NG \ )
a-ACQUE3$ COU9i'E:AU
ON 'ffi&lt;l...E'VIGION !

l

''BOILING POINT"
ARE COMING!!

/

.

WINNIE WINKLE

o0fLOAFING AGAIN 1

THIS IS A YOUNG/
STRUGGLI N6 COMPANY.
WEVE GOT TO V\.oORK
MUCH HARDER Tt-4AN
OTHER FASHION
HOUSES IF NERE
GOING TO
SURVIV£:.

•

EH? IT'S TOO EARLY

IN THE YEAR TO
HAVE SPRING
FEVER 1 WINNIE.

~~~~~~.@:~~~~~

Ju~t read it ... and
don't tell uour old man
I qave it to uou! He'd
~hoot me on ~iqht:-!

.

3·9

THE BORN WSER

n= 1. EI./'GR c.ArC.l-111-\€ ::lD\&lt;1::R
WHO lOOK lA'/ COATI I'l-L ..,
I'LL, ..

•

THE FOOLISH AMONGST THEM
FORGOT THAT ALL THEIR. HEARTS
TRULY DESIRED WAS SATISFIED
BY THE SltiEET PEACEFUL LIFE
THEY WERE ALREADY LfADING ...

ONCE THIS CITY TEEMED
WITH HAPPY PEOPLE WHO
PRACTICED WHAT THEY
PREACHED·-- lOVE OF
ONE'S FELlQ\1./MAN .1
THEN --·ONE BLACK DA'( ...
A SERPENT ~PPEARED
AND TEMPTED THE CITIZENS

... ANO THEY ARMED
THEMSELVES AND
'SLAUGHTfRED EACH
OTHER UNTil ALL lHAT
REMAINED'"' WA'S A
CITY ..·SILEriT _ _........,,.,.

AND DEAD

WITH THE PROMISE OF
OPULENCE ... LUXURY BE'rbHD
THEIR FONDEST DREAMS""

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Vidal
5 . Other
9 . Sun-dried

5. Common

21. Worlt

suffiX

6. Place for
milady's
brick
earring
''ITS POUCI-I, HlE FELLOW 11. Auctioneer's 7. Do in
8. Favorable
word
VVE JUST RELEASED!
Of no
margin
-WI-lAT's HE PUTT! NG ON
10. Create
interest or
CHAMELEON'S CASKET
13. Bard's
concern.
(slang)
even
(3wds.)
17. Gifted
18. "What
Fann
Loop
that?"
. Ending for
19. Be indiffer or
debted
insist
for
18. Eves
20. DisOpenfeature
~;;~~~~~~~~~
I=
27. mouthed
Citation

DICK TRACY

unit
23. School
of
whales
24. Favorable
vote
25. " - my
word!"
Yesterday'• All•"•er
26. Dis38. Freshwater
continue
fish
32. Hardwood
39. Sacred
33. The
picture
Pequod's
40. Gumbo
captain
(var.)
34. Long
35. Spirit lamp 42. Knockout
count
37. Consumer

... " (2wds.)

LEE, I'LL APMIT TliAT PilOT'S
REPORT SOUNDS FUNNY,
BUT MAYBE THE MAN HAG
EYES LIKE AN EAGLE, A

•
CAPrAIN EASY
/;AAPMAN'7

KIEY COME?
INTO VIEW...
7~T J,.ll&lt;f'i Ar4
eMeRALD IN
THe 15LUE:
T!&lt;OPIC
WATE'R?

THE~E'7

THE

CA?T~~

MENTICNt:f/- SUil..l

I

SY

THE' FO~Mf'R OWNI:Fl.
!!of'FORI= HS WENT
C.RAZ.Y!

WELCOME TO OUR LITTI.. E 17LAND!
I'M JAI&lt;VI5 , MR.!&lt;UPP'7 MAN... VOU'~l­
SE Ml75 Wll..DE, I EXPJ:;CT '?

I

tly HENRI ARNOLD .1nd BOD l f i

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

ORPOD

0

)fO/"VCE

Macduff

OF COURSE, THERE'S GENERAL
CABALLO'S AIRMEN ANI7 PLANES
AT A BASE RIGHT OUTSIDE OF
TOWN ...

JJ1!)7Mm~® lkJ .;;;;;;&amp;t.[~ ~-

I

28."- -,

TERRY

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SINCE OTHERS HAVE TO TOLERATE MY WEAKNESSES, IT IS ONLY FAIR THAT I
SHOULD TOLERATE THEIRS.- WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE
&lt;© 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

29. Suit
material
30. Revise
3I.Managed
33. Simian
36. Atelier
•1. Get some
shuteye
(3 wds.)
~3. Bancroft
•4. Orn.amentation
45. Frijole
46. "City of
Otherly
Love"
DOWN
1. Work crew
2. Fragrance
3. Church
court
• · Black, to
a poet

l I

I

D
YOU'D HAVE A JOBTO SE THI6!

tXJ

wAL\LOnF VJ
I

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, u
:==:::=~~====k=:::==~·uggested by the above cartoon.

l.-1_ Pri_·nt_lhe_su_RPII_ISE_ANSWER
__
- ____.11

r x r xr x x r J
(Anawen tomon-owl

Jumbleo: BORAX

Yeolerday'o

I

FETCH

ABSORB

MALICE

Anower: How many doe&amp; ir rake ro make a ..Wr?-A TRIO

THIS 15 THE OL ' PITCHER'5
MOUND, El-l? I'LL BET ~OU'VE
SPENT A LOT OF TIME UP HERE ••

3 9

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
Y G
D FL BAA
Is A
L 0X N
E L L 0XR
VV
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, ~ for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
HWQHOW
RTQEG

GUWZ'NW
QYWF. -

RNW

YWL

KWNZ

GUDYMF -

WIRPGOZ

PURNOWF

QHWY - ADYJWJ
RF

ODSW
C .

OQYM
GUW

RF
QOJ

SWGGWNDYM

~~~~~~~~~====~ t:~~~~~~~~==~~
r

�~:·;:::;-- :.::::: ;::·::··:::::::· :::::;: ::: .::..,., ::::::::::::· ::·::·,,:::::::::;.;;::::::::

. en Freed
I.d naped AIrm

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

By GERARD LOUGHRAN

ANKARA, Turkey ( UPI)An ti-government Turkish guerrillas freed four kidnaped U.S.
airmen Monday night, leaving
them in an unguarded apartment 700 yards from the U.S.
Embassy. The Gls walked to
freedom through a door their
captors left open.
The Americans said they had
been well-treated and adequate-

ly fed on cheese, bread and
olives in five days of captivity
at the hands of guerrillas who
called themsleves the Turkish
Liberation Army.
They thretened to kill the
Americans unless the Turkish
government paid $400,000 ransom.
"We did not pay a single
cent," said a Turkish government spokesman.
S. Sgt. Jimmie J. Sexton of

San Angelo, Tex., and Airmen
L.C. James Gholson of Alexandria, Va., Larry s. Heavner of
Denver, Colo. and Richard
Craszi of stamford, Conn., had
been seized Thursday as they
left a radar station outside
Ankara.

Extended Ohio Weather
Outlook Thursday through
Saturday
A
trend Thursday
and Friday, little cooler
Saturday and a chance of
showers Friday and Saturday. Highs in the 40s north
and 50s south and lows in the
30s.north to 40s south.
:::..:.::.:: .::.::.:.::: .:·::· ....:... ·:·.::,. :..'::::.:':.:::;:;:;:::;:::::

Gholson said the guerrillas
left the apartment about 11:30
p.m. Monday night without a
word.

George Stace
Dies in South

entonstration Turns Rough
COLUMBUS - A crowd of
blacks swollen by hundreds of
truant students broke windows
and damaged plumbing in a
state office building and later
vandalized several downtown
stores after a peaceful protest
demonstration over alleged
racism in the public schools.
The destruction was the outcropping of a confrontation
between about 500 blacks and
city Schools Superintendent
Harold Eibling at city school
offices. As many as 1,000
gathered later.
After EibLing released a fivepoint program that answered
the group's demands, a contingent left there for the Ohio
Departments Building five
blocks away.
Youth crowds roamed the
halls, vandalizing a snack bar
run by blind workers and
smashing fue glass door of state
Schools Suerpintendent Martin
Essex's office. The building was
closed by a group of state
patrolmen after a bomb threat
was received.
Gov. John J. Gilligan, in
ordering the building closed,

told the patrol to "take
whatever steps are necessary to
protect state property and to
insure the safety of state employes and members of the
general public in state facilities.
This type of wanton lawlessness
cannot and will not be
tolerated," Gilligan said. A
platoon of patrolmen was also
sent to the statehouse as a
protective measure.
Later across from the capitol
building in the heart of the
business distr1ct, gangs roamed
from store to store, breaking
windows, harassing customers
and taking some merchandise.
Three hundred riot-equipped
officers patrolled the area or
stationed themselves in front of
stores to deter further damage.
They took 68 juveniles into
custody for "safekeeping" and
later returned them to their
parents without filing charges.
Eight others were arrested,
mostly on disorderly conduct
charges.
City Safety Director James
Hughes estimated damage at

Chief's Report
Given Council
The Accutron tuning fork replaces
the outdated balance wheel that's
found in all watches. Stop by so
we can te II you more. Starting
W&lt;th the right time of day. Accu·
tron by Bulova. From $110.00.
ACCUTRON• by BULOVA

iJ'
GOESSLER

It goes hm·m m·m.

JEWELRY STORE

Pomeroy

Court St.

•when case, crown and

crystal are intact.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Leliah
Powell, New Haven; Mrs. Olin
Knight, Middleport; William
Grimm, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
George Darby, Charleston;
Kimberley Franklin, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Kimberley
Henbree, Hamilton, Ohio.
DISCHARGES - Charles
Daugherty, Mrs. Cleo Smith,
Mrs. Harold Hart, Mrs. Everett
Gillispie, Johnny Lynch,
Marvin Miller.

Sepone Exploding
SAIGON (UPI)-U.S. saturation bombing of the Ho Chi
Minh Trail junction near
Sepone has touched off a
massive series of secondary
explosions caused by the
blowing up of Communist
supplies, military spokesmen
said today.
Air Force foward air controllers said more than 1,600
secondary explosions were
touched off Monday by 3~~
hours of heavy air strikes one
mile northeast of Sepone.

ACCUTRON "425" Wale p ool • sweep
second hand, applied roma~ numeral
Sliver d1al.
$135.00

$10,000 and said another $10,000
would be paid for police overtime.
Some stores closed early
along with the Education
Center, where picketing continued throughout the day
without incident.
School officials reported
heavy absenteeism in secondary schools. linden-McKinley
High School reported 1,200 of its·
1,800 students were absent.
Eleven other schools said their
absenteeism was two to three
times above normal.

Middleport's parking meter
collections in February were
$782.50, according to the
monthly report of Police Chief
J. J. Cremeans to Middleport
Council Monday night.
Nineteen arrests made during
the month included five for
speeding, four intoxication,
three disturbing the peace, and
one each running a red light,
left of center, reckless
operation, driving while intoxicated, assured clear
distance, and one unlisted
charge later dropped.
There were six accidents
investigated. The police cruiser
was driven 4200 miles.

BZMBMBIR
WRII?

captured Saturday by South
Vietnamese forces. On Sunday,
spokesmen said B52 bombing
missions brought about 500
secondary explosions in the
same area.

Attorney Will
Petition PUC
The Meigs County Citizens for
Better Telephone Service hav~
retained a Columbus attorney,
Langdon Bell, to represent
them before the Public Utilities
Commission in the matter of
service rendered by the General
Telephone Co., it was reported
today.
Bell will file an amended
petition to include all of Meigs
County with the PUCO. A
county-wide meeting will be
scheduled as soon as a report is
received from Bell that the
petition has been filed.
GIRLS TO PLAY
The 1971 Meigs Invitational
Girls' Basketball Tournament
will get underway Wednesday
at 4 p.m. with the Meigs girls
meeting Kyger Creek. At 5:30,
Gallipolis will play Belpre. The
tourmament is under the
direction of Mrs. Joy Bentley,
physical education instructor.
ALUMNI TO MEET
Harrisonville School Alumni
Assn. President Dale Whaley
has called a meeting for 8 p.m.
Friday at the Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church. Officers
and members are urged to
attend. Plans for the annual
banquet will be made.
TICKETS ON SALE
Tickets to the annual
basketball banquet at Southern
High School March 20 at 6:30
p.m. are on sale at $1.50 per
plate from team members
coaches, the Racine C:lub
Restaurant
and
Racine
Department Store.

VETERANS TO MEET
World War I veterans are
asked to meet at the American
Legion hall in Middleport at
1:30 p.m. Sunday. Dinner will
be served following a meeting.

. money was kept in the sugar
bowl. It's still fine for small
change, but when it st~rts to add
up, the only safe place is a savings
account. Start one today.

:?
'i,WHEN
u ••

,YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

George H. Stace, Kissimme,
Fla., formerly of Meigs County,
died Monday at the Orange
Memorial Hospital in Orlando,
Fla.
Stace, 71, who underwent
heart surgery at the hospital
last week, was reported to be
recuperating satisfactorily.
However,
complications
developed unrelated to the
heart surgery and he died
following another operation.
Mr. Stace is survived by his
wife. Ruth: six children. Geor_ge
H., Findlay; Mrs. Mary Ruth
Powell,
Pomeroy;
Mrs.
Charlotte
Pullen,
Mrs.
Margaret Green, Mrs. Ella Dey
Peterson, and Lanny R. Stace,
all of Florida; his mother, Mrs.
Sophia M. Olsen, San Gabriel,
Calif.; a brother, E. H.
O'Holloran, San Gabriel; two
sisters, Mrs. Rose S. Reynolds,
Middleport, and Mrs. Clara
Conroy, Akron; 15 grandchildren, four great-greatgrandchildren, and a number of
nieces and nephews.
· Funeral services will be
Thursday at the Grissom
Funeral Home in Kissimme.
Burial will be there.

Lena M. Cray
Dies Monday

All Middleport Village funds
totaled $170,525.74 as of Feb. 28,
according to the monthly report
of Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
presented Middleport Council
Monday night.
Total receipts and disbursements of each fund respectively, and the balance as of the
end of the month include:
genel'al, $3,688.54, $4,102.83,
$33,887.30; cemetery, $736.88,
$681.51, $889.96; parking meter,
no receipts, no disbursements,
$60.33; fire equipment, no
receipts,
$99.85,
$82.28;
swimming pool, no receipts,
$6.50, $841.86; planning commission, no receipts, $45.53,
$1,629.86.
Street maintenance, $2,570.08,
$2,125.40, $3,983.38; state highway, $193.42, $27.90, $3,158.12;
sanitary sewer, $3,895.23,
$3,247.51, $26,363.45; water,
$6,012.95, $5,787.76, $22,913.82;
water meter deposit trusts,
$263, $169.21, $5,090.57; water
construction, no receipts, no
disbursement, $8,171.25; sewer
construction, no receipts, no
disbursements,
$54,034.90;
general bond retirement, no
receipts, no disbursements,
$9,418.66.
Receipts for the month
totaled
$27,360.10
while
disbursements amounted to
$16,294.

T~omas

Hospital.
Schroot, area
representahve of the Red Cross,
w1ll be a guest.

SHEETS SWORN IN
David Lloyd Sheets has been
appointed and sworn in as a
deputy sheriff of Meigs County.

Street Job

(Continued from Page 1)
Cheshire in regard to a bill owed
for fire department services.
The letter stated that a balance
of $120 is still due Middleport
and payment will be made as
soon as finances are available.
The report of Mayor C. 0.
Fisher showing receipts of
$650.20 in fines and fees and $168
in merchant police collections
for a total of $818.20 during
February was approved by
council.
It was agreed to enter into a
mutual aid contract with the
Pomeroy Fire Department.
Middleport Fire Chief Tom
Darst reported two fire calls
answered by Middleport during
February, one to Racine and
one to Cheshire. There were no
local fires.
Attending the meeting were
Councilmen Zerkle, Clarence
Stewart, David Ohlinger,
Council Woman Mrs. Roger
Morgan, Mayor Fisher, Chase
and Clerk-Treasurer Grate.

Lena M. Cray, 80, died
Monday morning at the home of
a son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Cray of near
Wilkesville.
Mrs. Cray was born Feb. 21,
1891 near Wilkesville the
daughter of Leonard and
Martha Strausbaugh
McLaughlin.
She is survived by three sons,
Charles of Wellston; Dale of
Westerville, and Earl of near
Wilkesville, 10 grandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren; a
brother, Max McLaughlin,
Greenville, Pa.; two sisters,
Mrs. Nancy Clark of Jackson
and Mrs. Blanche Slagle of Oak
Hill.
Mrs. Cray was a member of
the Wilkesville Presbyterian
Church, the Wilkesville Garden
Club, Wilkesville Chapter, •
Order of Eastern Star, and the
Wilkesville American Legion
Post Auxiliary.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 1 p.m. Wednesday
at the Wilkesville Presbyterian
Church with the Rev. Robert
Turner officiating. Burial will
be in the Wilkesville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Strong
and Son Funeral Home
anytime.

Complete selection of Hanes Underwear for Men and Boys in all sizesincluding T Shirts - Briefs · Athletic Shorts in all styles. Sleeveless Undershirts- light weight union suits· winter and extra heavy weight union
suits- In sui and thermal knit shirts- drawers and union suits. Stop in and
select your favorite style in your right size. Any of the salespeople will
help you. You'll like the fine quality of Hanes Underwear for men and
boys and you'll like the fine values.

-SE SIBLE CREDIT-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
•

Consumers shop more carefully today.
·Here's why they buy Fords.
•

Elmer Parsons
Dies Monday
Elmer B. Parsons, 65, Racine
Rt. 2, died Monday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Surviving are his wife,
Frances; a daughter, Mrs.
Ronald (Lena) Hopper, New
Madrid, Mo.; three sons,
Marion and Elmer, Jr., both at
home, and Dorsa, of Lebanon,
Ohio; four grandchildren, his
mother, Mrs. Ruth Parsons,
Racine; three brothers, Preston
and Dorsa, both of Racine, and
Everett, of Neigley, Ohio, and
two sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Mattson, Poland, Ohio, and Miss
Josephine Parsons, Delaware,
Ohio.
Funeral services will be at 1
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Charles Hand officiating. Burial
will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time.

Torino is sized and
Ford LTD, quiet
priced right in the
and strong, is the
luxury car without the middle.Room for six,
small car handling.
luxury car price.

Maverick, the simple
compact car,
offers 2 doors or 4;
6 orV·8 power.

Ford LTD is the car that can
match the luxury of cars costing
hundreds of dollars more. And
LTD's quiet ride is the standard
that those same more expensive
cars have to match themselves.
That quiet strength is one reason
for consumers choosing LTD over
all other luxury cars in its class.

Take Maverick. Consumers know
that the simple machine is simple
to own and simple to run. And
they learned recently that a leading independent survey found
Maverick has the best frequency
of repair record of any American
car. That might explain why it's
America's best-selling compact.

Consumers know the mid -size
Torino gives them the roominess
of a big car plus the easy handling
of a small car. For a price that's
right in the middle. As a result,
Torino has become the most popular 4-door in its class. Your Ford
Dealer has th1rteen other models
to choose from.

Tonight, March 9

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
March 10-11
NOT OPEN

e

Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Your Family Shopping Center

MEIGS THEATRE

SHOW STARTS? P . M.

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Town F rm.ds RedTheCross
Meigs County American
Chapter will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
At $170,526

cafeteria of Veterans Memorial

JUNIORS TO MEET
The Junior Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, will meet at 6 p.m.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Letcher Jarvis Wine, 30, Thursday at the post home,
Copen, W. Va., and Shirley West Main St.
Patricia Martin, 21, Pomeroy,
LOCAL TEMPS
Rt. 3.
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Tuesday
under sunny skies was 28
degrees.
Walt Disney's
"AR I STOCATS"
&lt;Technicolorl
Phil Harris
Eva Gabor
Plus
Walt Disnev 's
DAD CAN I
BORROW THE CAR

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

war~ing

MEETING CALLED

'

2-HOUR
CLEANING

1971 Ford LTD Brougham 2-Door I lard top

(Upon Request)

FORD

ED&gt;

Better idea for safety .•. buckle up.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.

2'16 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992·5428

.

461 S. Third Ave.

Middleport, 0.

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