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es Ire.

ant

aVID

•

e

NEW PLANT LOCATION- Cheshire's $488 million coal
burning power plant will be constructed in this immediate
vicinity behind the old Pilot Wheel Tavern, located between
the Kyger Creek Power Plant and the village of Cheshire.
This aerial view was taken this morning above the plant site
facing north.

Coal Reserves
In Salem Twp.
To Be Tapped
Ohio Power Co. today announced plans to build a
2.6 million killowatt, coal-burning power plant on the
Ohio River at Cheshire at an estimated cost of $488
million. Ohio Power is the largest utility subsidiary
of the seven-state American Electric Power System.
The new facility will be named the General
James M. Gavin Plant, honoring a veteran director
of American Electric Power Company and one of the
nation's popular heroes of World War II.
Joe P. Gills, executive vice president of Ohio
Power, said that the plant would be one of the
nation's most efficient steam-electric generating
stations.

•
•

•

The Daily Sentinel

•

Devoled To The Inter~~$ Of The Meig$-MtuOn Area
VOL. XXIII NO:_:_._23:._0_ _ _ _P_OM_E_R_OY_·M_ID_D_LE_P_OR_T.:_,O_H_IO_ _ _ _ _ _
W_ED_N_ES_D_AY_:__,_M_AR
_C_H_10_:__,_19_7_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
TE_N_C_EN_TS

•

W. ste Problems Solved
Residenm of Pomeroy Village
should worry no more about
garba e collecti
as Pomeroy
ion

..
•

p

Jane Walto
d Ea I
Grlffm, of H
begin collect o
Griffin owns and operates a
state approved sanitary landfill
in Washington County. Griffin
will serv1ce all customers
serviced by Walter Bentz and
Lee Drenner.
Council agreed to give Griffin
an 18-month contract which will
expire in 1972. An ordinance to

one to three containers. Griffin
will contact local businesses, it
was reported.
Don Griffin, engineer, who
~rks ,lth Earl Griffin, will ':le
in Pomeroy today interviewing
customers serviced by Bentz
and Drenner.
Monthly billing will be made
by Griffin. Customers will pay
one month in advance. The first
billing after the first month will
be for two months service, with
following bills for one months
Cost for the garbage service.
Council and Griffin agreed
collection service will be $1 a
month for hardship cases and that if at the end of the contract
$2.50 for a normal family with period in 1972 things were not
this effect will be passed next
Monday. Council will require
$50 a year fee from garbage
collectors wttll thee licenses to
be ued, on to Grlffm, one to
Lightning ,Boyd of Middleport
and the other to be named.
Council further ~tated that if at
anytime one of the licensed
collectors quits no new licenses
would be issued. '!'hose licensed
would automatically absorb the
customers left without service.

satisfactory, new arrangements
would be made. Griffin also
noted that if Meigs County
establishes a county landfill and
,.· "elJI fnr dumrnng arf!
reasonable he would use th
Meigs County facility. Otherwise, he would continue to dump
at Hockingport.
The service being offered by
Griffin is not compulsory.
Griffin said he will meet with
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London to establish a collection
service there. Minersville will
also be considered, it was
reported.

Hair, Dress Rules Aired
•
•

reported.
Porter stated that he had
received an oral request for use
of the Rutland High School
building from a firm which
would use it as a location for
making
souvenir
items.
However, no action was taken
ber.ause there was no written
request on the matter. The
board did grant the request
of the Meigs County Civil
Defense Unit to use the
Pomeroy Junior High School or
senior high building for storing
a portable hospital unit.
However, it is with the understanding that the hospital
equipment must be moved at
once should the building be
needed.
Supt. Hargraves reported
that water testing will be held
each week at the Salem Center
School to insure that there is no
contamination which has occurred in the past. Four tests
last week revealed no problem,
he said.
It was reported that three new
school buses have been received
and are being used. Board
members, Virgil King and Don
Edward Morri son, Sabra Morrison,
Teaching and non-certified Year Contracts) Bartels, John Bentley, Joy Linda Peterson, Mary Powell, Mullen, were named to meeting
contracts for the 1971-72 school Bentley, Roger Birch, Daisy Emalene Pratt, Linda Reed,
(Continued on page 2)
years were approved Tuesday Blakeslee, Jeanne Bowen, Carl Ann Riepenhoff, Terri Riley,
night when the Meigs Local Brannan, James Brewington, Paulette Russell, Kathleen
Loui se Brown, Thelma Camp· Scott, Lewis Shie ld s, Rita Sealed Bids for
School District Board of bell,
Dorothy Chaney, Sherley Slavin , Ben Sl awter, Don
Education met in Middleport. Chapman, William Coffman, Stivers, Richard Swackhamer,
Besides approving the cer- Richard Coleman, Gladys Cox, Mitchell Szopa, Jeannie Taylor, Aggregates Asked
Id a Diehl, Donald Dixon, John Teaford, Anna Turner,
tified and non-certified per- Charles
Downie, Kenneth Eb lin, Ann W ebster, Anna Welsh,
The Meigs County Comsonnel for contracts, the board Kaye F i ck, Bonnie Fisher, James
Wickline,
Helen missioners Tuesday agreed to
approved the salary schedule Betty Fulh, Marjorie Gibbs, Williams, Carl Wolfe, Dolores accept sealed bids for ap·
Gibbs, Marjorie Goett, Wolfe, Suzanne Wolfe.
for the new year with few William
Christine Guthrie, Robert
Recommended
Teacher proximately 60,000 tons of all
changes from the current year. Hamm, Donald Hanning, Dale Appointments
(Continuing aggregates for the Meigs
Harrison,
Cecelia
Hart,
Bernice
Contracts)
Phyllis
Hackett,
Reports were also presented
County Highway Department.
Hoffman, Everette Holcomb, Alice Nease, Fenton Taylor.
by Supt. George Hargraves and Martha
The bids must be submitted to
Hoover, Betsy Horky,
Recommended Appointments
Asst. Supt. Larry Morrison on Nellie Hughes, Mary Hysell, For Extra Assignments For the commissioners by 10 a.m.
personnel in the district now on Pauline Hyse ll, Katherine 1971 72 (One Year Contracts)
Junior High on March 30. Attending the
cobs, Leo Kennedy, Jr ., Dana Administrative
continuing contracts. The board Ja
Pr1ncipa l ,
Russell Tuesday meeting were Bob
Kessinger, Brent Lambiotte, School
approved all of the recom- John Lisle. Gregory McCall, Moore ; Principal Pomeroy, Clark and Warden Ours,
Linda
McManu s,
Marvin Middleport, Bradbury, Robert
mendations listed below:
Commissioners, and Martha
Recomm e nded
Teacher McK'!Ivey , Robert Meier,
(Continued on page 2)
Mnurita
Miller,
Donna
Chambers, Clerk.
Appc&gt;jntments For 1971 -72 (One

Several Meigs High School
students attended a meeting of
the Meigs Local School Board in
Middleport Tuesday night,
apparently to hear aspects of
the school's dress code aired.
One student who did most of
the talking for the group of
students, who were commended
for
appearing
before the board, charged that there are double
standards of enforcement of the
dress code at the high school.
Some students are permitted to
violate the code of dress andl
hair while others are ordered to
abide by it, the student stated.
Board President Frank W.
Porter assured the students that
their comments would be investigated. He stated that there
should be no exceptions to the
rules and that equality should
exist for all students.
The student further commented that he saw no reason
for the dress code in the first

place, since appearance did not
handicap the learning ability of
the student. However, Porter
pointed out that some lines must
be drawn, and that some
students cannot be permitted to
dress as they wish since they
could be a distraction to other
members of the student body.
A member of the student
council reported that the
council had studied the admission of the pants suit to the
dress code and that the council
felt that the suits would be too
expensive, as such. The council
had decided that female
students should be permitted to
wear pants, including jeans, the
year around rather than just the
pants suits.
Girls are now permitted to
wear slacks only during the
months of December, January
and February. The rule has
been voided this month,
however, due to the cold
weather.

board
appointed
The
Marianne Daniszewski as a
teacher in the district for the
next school year. Miss
Daniszewski has completed her
student teaching at the Bradbury School. She is attending
Ohio University. The name of
Virginia Milliken was added to
the substitute teaching list in
the field of English.
A delegation from the
Salisbury PTA was present to
discuss the condition of the
playground at the Salisbury
Elementary School. The
playground is not draining
properly and will need some
drainage corrections made. The
matter will be studied.
Supt. George Hargraves was
instructed to investigate a
request from the Middleport
PTA that a secretary be employed for the Middleport
Elementary School. Teachers
must leave classrooms now to
answer the phone, it was

School Contracts Approved

He also announced that the
company contemplated that the
plant's annual coal requirement
of approximately 7-million tons
would be supplier! from existing
Ohio Power or other AEP
System reousrces. In this
connection, he added, the
company plans the development of deep coal reserves in
nearby Meigs County to supply
a part of the plant's needs.
"The design of this new plant
will embody the very latest
teclmology and equipment for
safeguarding
the
environment," Mr. Gills emphasized. He pointed out that its
air quality control facilities
would include a single stack
over 1,000 feet high and electrostatic precipitators designed
to remove 99.5 per cent of the
stack's particulate emissions.
For preservation of the water
quality of the Ohio River, two
cooling towers will be built to
create a closed-cycle cooling
system for the plant's
operation. Under this system,
no heated water is returned to
the river.
"This magnificent new power
station is being built at this
time, and at this place," he
said, "as an integral part of our
&lt;;ontinuing
expansion
to
gu ..antee that all of ti:Je AEP
System's more than 1.6-million
customers m seven states will
have all of the electric energy
that they will require in the
years ahead."
He pointed out that the AEP
System's current expansion
program, which with the new
plant here now includes four
major power plant construction
projects simultaneously in
progress in three states (including 4.7-million kw being
built by Ohio Power alone), will
increase its total power supply
by over 60 per cent by 1975 - to
approximately 19 .5-million

Four Stranded

Lt. Gen. ]ames Gavin (Ret.)

Gen. Gavin Was
Hero of War II
Ohio's newest power plant,
announced today, will be named
for one of the nation's popular
heroes of World War II.
Ohio Power Co.'s new 2.6million-kilowatt generating
station, to be built along the
Ohio River at Cheshire , will be
known as the General James M.
Gavin Plant.
Lt. General Gavin, U.S. Army
(ret.), has been a director of
Ohio Power's parent, American
Electric Power Company, for
the past 10 years und is a
member of the AEP executive
committee.
He has been an executive of
Arthur D. Little, Inc., of
Cambridge, Mass., an internationally known industrial
research, engineerir
and
mana gem e n t consulting
company, since 1958, and its
board chairman since 1964. He
joined the company as a vice
president, and was elected
executive vice president in 1959,
president in 1960, and chairman
four years later.
In World War II , then Major
General Gavin was commanding general of the 82nd
Airborne Division and led his
pratroopers on their historymaking drop behind the German lines in Normandy on D·
Day 1944. Throughout his 33-

year military career, he also
se rved at numerous other
stations in the United States and
abroad, including service as
chief of
research
and
development of the Department
of the Army. He retired as a
lieutenant general in 1958.
During 1961-62, he served in
Paris as U.S. Ambassador to
France in the Kennedy Administration.
General Gavin is the author of
four books: "War and Peace in
the Spage Age," "Airborne
Warfare," "France and the
Civil War in America," and
"Crisis Now."
He has been a member of the
American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, the Council on
Foreign Relations, the National
Council of the Atlantic Union
Committee, th e American
Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics, and the British
Ins titute for Strategic Studies.
He has served on visiting
committees
at
Harvard
University, where he is a Fellow
of the Harvard Center of International Affairs, and at Tufts
University, where he is a life
trusteP.
General Gavin is a member of
the National Export Expansion
Council. He serves as a memb(!r
(Continued on page 2)

A 1964 auto was a total loss
when it caught fire at 9:42
p.m. Tuesday on the Route 7
bypass near the exit onto Rt•
143. The Pomeroy Fire Dept.
was on the scene.
The driver, Carl Eldred,
Huntington, W. Va., told
firemen a fire broke out
under the hood as he drove
along.
Eldred, his wife, and
another couple in the car
were stranded as a result of
the fire. However, they were
taken to Mason, W. Va., by
Meigs Sheriff's Department
personnel from where Mason
and Cabell County Pollee
were to assist them to Huntington last night. Cause of
the fire was not known.

Middleport Unit
Goes Out Twice

kilowatts.
Gills said the excavation and
earth-moving will start at once.
First of the plant's two 1.3million-kw generating unit:; is
scheduled for commercial
operation in late 1974, the
second in 1975.
He explained that the site
here, 12 miles north of
Gallipolis, had been chosen for
a nwnber of reasons. These
include its proximity to large
deep coal deposits owned by
Ohio Power and a major water
supply, its location at the center
of the AEP System extending
from Michigan to Virginia, and
the area's good record in labor
relations. Mr. Gills said that
Ohio Power had entered into a
memorandum of understanding
with the South Central Ohio
Building and Construction
Trades Council, under which
the Council pledged that no
work stoppages would result
from jurisdictional disputes
during the plant's construction. ·
For its part, Ohio Power
promised that contractors
would be required to hold prework assignment conferences
and to make such assignments
in accordance with rules of the
National Joint Board for settlement of jurisdictional
disputes.
Each of the plant's two turbine-generators will be a crosscompound m~... hine, with its
generating capacity equally
divided between its two shafts.
They will be supplied by Brown,
Boveri &amp; Company, Ltd., of
Baden, Switzerland.
The plant's two boilers, to be
fabricated by Tl e Babcock &amp;
Wilcox Company in Barberton,
Ohio, will each furnish 9,775,000
pounds of steam per hour at a
peak temperature of 1,010
degrees F. and pressure of 3,500
pounds per square inch.

Seals
Story
old
Mrs.
Charles
Simons
presented information on the
annual Easter Seal fund drive
for handicapped children and
adults when the Meigs County
Ministerial Association met
Tuesday at the Middleport First
Baptist Church.
Mrs. Simon's husband, the
Rev. Charles Simons, pastor Of
the Baptist Church, was host
pastor. He is president of the
Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary
Club and his wife automatically
is head of the Easter Seal fund
drive which is sponsored by the
club.
Mrs. Simons pointed out that
the first organized voluntary
health agency for the handicapped was the Ohio Society
for Crippled Children in 1919 at
Elyria. From this organization
grew the National Easter Seal
Society. A pioneer in its field,
the Easter Seal Society stood'
alone at that time as the only
(Continued on page 6)

Two E-R calls were answered
Tuesday by the Middleport
squad. At 2:39 p.m. it went
to the home of Charles A.
Thomas, Route 554, near
Cheshire in Gallia County
where Mr. Thomas was dead
upon the squad's arrival.
At 3:33p.m. the unit went to Two Forfeit BQnd
the James Fry home on Depot
Two defendants forfeited
St., Rutland. A doctor was bonds and two others were fined
called to treat Mr. Fry, after Tuesday night in the court of
first aid was given.
Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher.
Forfeiting bonds of $18.70
each were Marvin Oiler, 43,
FINED BY MAYOR
Fined in the court of Pomeroy Middleport, charged with
Mayor Charles Legar Wed- misconduct, and David M.
nesday night were Bill Reeves, Hindy, Middleport, charged
Pomeroy, intoxication, $10 and with fighting in public. Fined
costs,
James
Andrews were Noma M. Winebrenner,
Pomeroy, reckless operation: Middleport, $10 and costs,
$15 and costs, and Don Rose, reckless operation, and Wesley
Minersville, $10 and costs, L. Wise, 28, Cheshire, $5 and
costs, speeding.
speeding.

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

Meigs Local Schools
A8signments for Year
Morris; Principal Salisbury,
John Lisle; Principal RutlandHarrisonville, James Vennari;
Principal
Salem
Center,
Roberta Wi Ison; Assistant
Principal
Pomeroy, Mae
Young; Assistant Principal
Bradbury, Phyllis Hackett;
Assistant Principal Rutland,
Eric Hart; Assistant Principal
Harrisonville, Gregory McCall;
Assistant Principal
High
School, Earl Young; Title I
Coordinator (l/2 time), Terry
Ohlinger.
Athletic
Football
Assistant Varsity Coach,
Fenton Taylor; Assistant
Varsity Coach, Donald Dixon;
Assistant Varsity Coach, John
Bentley; Assistant Varsity
Coach, Ben Slawter; Reserve
Coach, John Bentley; Reserve
Coach, Ben Slawter; Head
Freshman Coach, Charles
Downie; Assistant Freshman
Coach, Ed Bartels; Junior High
School Coach, Robert Meier;
Junior High School Coach, John
Arnott; Trainer, Fenton Taylor.
Basketball - Assistant Varsity
Coach, Roger Birch; Reserve
Coach,
William
Wickline;
Freshman
Coach.
Robert Meier; Grade 8 Coach,
Marvin McKelvev: Grade 7
Coach, John Arnott; Elementary
lntramurals,
Charles
Chancey;
Other
Athletic Assignments, Head
Track Coach, John Bentley;
Assistant Track Coach, Donald
Dixon; Head Baseball Coach,
'Ed Bartels; Assistant Baseball
Coach,
Terry
Ohlinger;
Westling Coach, Fenton Taylor;
Golf Coach, N. P. Swackhamer;
Adult
Physical
Fitness
Program, Charles Chancey;
Athletic Director, Charles
Chancey; Assistant Athletic
Director, N. P. Swackhamer;
Athletic Secretary-Treasurer,
Donald Wolfe; Girls Coach, Joy
Bentley; Athletic Facilities
Care &amp; Preparation, Charles
Chancey.
Other
Assignments
Yearbook, Bernice Hoffman;
High School Newspaper, Donald
Wolfe; Cheerleader Coach High School, Joy Bentley_;_
Guidance
Full
Time,
Harold Sauer; Guidance- 112
Time, Martha Vennari; Drama
Coach,
Jeanne
Bowen;
Librarian, Helen Smith; Band
Director,
David
Bowen;
Assistant Band Director, Lewis
Shields.
Report of certificated staff
members who have continuing
teaching contracts as of the
1970-71 school year - Mildred
Bailey, David Bowen, Bernice
Carpenter, Helen Carper,
Charles
Chancey,
Mary
Chapman, Helen Dais, James
Diehl, Wheeler Drake, Muriel
Foley, Theodosia Frecker,
Margaret Goodwin, George
Hargraves, Eric Hart, Martha
Husted, Thomas Kelly, Leda
Kraeuter, Margaret Lewis,
Helen Maag, Gladys Major,
Julia McComas, Ina Meadows,
Russell Moor
I hn Mora,
Robert Morn!S
Terry OhlinQ
Pag
Maxm
Redov1an, M
Frances
Rc
Roberts, Sara

Yrs_
Exp
0 .
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8

Sauer, Helen Smith, Emily
Sprague, Rosalie Story, Lucille
Swackhamer,
Nolan
P.
Swackhamer,
Jeanette
Thomas, James Vennari,
Martha Vennari, Mary C.
Wiley, Norma Wilson, Roberta
Wilson, Donald Wolfe, Dorothy
Woodward, Earl Young, Mae
Young.
Report
of
Certificated
Staff Members with Contracts
extending
beyond
this School Year- George Hargraves, Superintendent,
1,
1971
July
Aug.
31, 1975; Larry Morrison,
Assistant Superintendent, Aug.
1, 1971-July 31, 1975; James
Diehl, High School Principal,
Sept. 1970 - Aug. 1973; Charles
Chancey, Head Football Coach,
Aug. 1, 1969- July 31, 1974; Carl
Wolfe, Head Basketball Coach,
Sept., 1970 - June, 1973Recommended Appointments
of Non-Certificated Staff
Members, One Year Contracts,
Custodians, David Jacks, Paul
McDaniel; Two Year Contracts,
Custodians, John Bailey, Lyle
Sinclair; Bus Drivers, Alice
Globokar, Linda Jett, June
Yost; Cooks, Louise Radford,
Mary Hysell, Sadie Carl.
Continuing Contracts, Bus
Drivers, John T. Fischer,
Supervfsor; Dwight Carl,
Mechanic; Letha Cotterill,
Pauline Darst, Mary King,
Amos Tillis, Beatrice Wood;
Cooks, Bernice Garnes, Mildred
Humphreys, Frances Triplett,
Mildred Hysell; Secretaries,
Lela Curtis, Becky Stivers.
Report of Contract Status of
Non Certificated
Employees,
Employees who will be on the
second year of a two year
contract during the 1971-72
school ye;~r, Bus Drivers, Virgil
Carl, Hiel French, Faye
Manley, Linda Morris, Rosalie
Sayre; Cooks, Maxine Phillips;
Employees who have continuin~
contract
status,
Custod1ans, Harold Hubbard,
Lloyd Moore, Carol Pierce, Bill
Grueser, Wilkie Holman, Elber
Johnson, Austin Phillips, Joe
Shavorinsky, Dwight Parker,
Clair Swan; Bus Drivers,
Junior Darst, Nick Grueser,
Worley Haley, Denver Hysell,
Annette
Knight,
Ralph
Macomber, Austin Phillips, Bill
Ratliff, Bill Smith, Mont Vance,
Vernon Weber, Marvin Wilson,
Ernest Wood, Norman Wood;
Cooks, Mildred Arnold, Avice
Bailey,
Nellie
Borgan,
Margaret Butcher, Velma
Douglas, Thelma Grueser,
Mildred Jeffers, Ethel Lowery,
Helen Quivey, May Romine,
Coda Slawter, Alma Smith,
Zelma Stewart, Melva Turner,
Joyce Vance, Margaret Werner; Secretaries, Donna Carr,
Grace Drake, Marilyn Meier,
Katherine Swanson; Clerk, Mr.
McComas (Dates of present
contract) are January 1, 1968 December 31, 1971).
The salary schedule approved
for next year includes compensation outlines for college
trained teachers, specia I
assignment
teachers,
vooat1onal teachers plus
amounts to be paid to nonce,.flfied personnel and substitute teachers:

COLLEGE TRAINING
NonBach.
Deg.
Deg_
4500
5200
4680
5400
4860
5600
5040
5800
5220
6000
5400
6200
5580
6400
5760
6600
5940
6800
6120
7000
6300
7200
7400

Mas.
Degree
5700
5950
6200
6450
6700
6950
7200
7450
7700
9
7950
10
8200
11
8450
12
8700
Note: Credit on this schedule will be given for teaching and
military experience as recognized by the state foundation
program.
Salary ScheduleExtra Assignments

PRINCIPALS
Elementary, General. Base+
$50 per classroom unit + $300
for full certification (Minimum
- $400); Additional, Salem
Center, $100 travel allowance;
Bradbury,
$100
travel
allowance; Sa li sbury, $100
travel allowance; Harrisonville, Rutland, $200 travel
allowance;
Pomeroy Middleport- one-ninth + $200
travel allowance; Assistant
Principal Pomeroy E lementary, $400; Assistant Principal
Middleport Elementary, $300;
Assistant
Principal
Harrisonville, $200; Assistant
Principal
Rutland
$200 ;
Assistant Principal Bradbury,
$400.
Junior High School, Base +
one-ninth + $50 per classroom
unit + $300 for full certification
+ $100 travel allowance.
Assistant
Hiah
School
Principal, $600.
ATHLETICS
Football Head Varsity,
$1000; Assistant Varsity (4),
$400; Reserve (2), $100; Head
Freshman, $325; Assistant
Freshman, $300; Junior High
School (2), $250. Basketball Head Varsity, $1000; Assistant
Varsity, $400; Reserve, $400;
Freshman, $325; Junior High
School (2), $250. Other SportsHead Track, $400; Assistant
Track, $200; Head Baseba II,
$400; Assistant Baseball. $200;
Wrestling, $400; Golf, $100.
Others - Athletic Director,
$500;
Assistant
Athletic
Director $300; Secy.-Treas.,
Histori~n. $300; Trainer,
Football.
$100;
Trainer.
Basketball, $100; Adult Winter
Fitness Program, $250; In -

FiveYear
5400
5625
5850
6075
6300
6525
6750
6975
7200
7425
7650
7875

tramural Program, $250;
Summer Care &amp; Preparation of
Football Facilities, one-ninth of
Base_
Vocational Assignments Diversified Job Training, Base
+ one-ninth; Occupational
Work Adjustment, Base + oneninth; Occupational Work
Experience, Base + twoninths; Trade &amp; Industry
Teacher, Base + one-ninth;
Vocational Home Economics,
Base + one-ninth; Vocational
Agriculture, Base + threeninths; OTHERS - Yearbook,
$300 (Total); Dramatics, $100;
High School Newspaper, $100;
Junior High School Newspaper,
$100; High School Cheerleader
Coach, $100; Junior High School
Cheer leader Coach, $100;
Guidance (1/2 time), $400 ;
Guidance (full time), $600;
Instrumental Music Director,
Base + two-ninths + $500;
Assistant Instrumenta l Music
Director, Base + one-ninth +
$300; High School Librarian,
Base + one-ninth; Travel ,
Between any of the following :
Pomeroy Elementary, Middleport Elementary, Junior
High School, Senior High
School, Salisbury Elementary,
Bradbury Elementary, $100;
Between - any
of
the
following,
Salem -Center
Harrisonville, t&lt;utlano. :s:wu f
Cafeteria Supervisor, $75 per
month; Home Instruction, $5
per hour; Substitute Teacher,
$16 per day; $18 per day
beginning with the 11th day, in
the same assignment ; Regular
salary schedule beginning with
the 21st day in the same
assignment; Regular sa lary
schedule beginning with the
first day when it is certain that
the assignment will remain the
same for at least 20 days.

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL
DISTRICT SALARY SCHEDULE
TRADES &amp; INDUSTRY TEACHERS
x-T-Exp
Base
1-9
Total
0
$5777.77
$5200
$577.77
1
5400
600.00
6000.00
2
5600
622.22
6222.22
3
5800
644.44
6444.44
4
6000
666.66
6666.66
5
6200
688.88
6888 .88
6
6400
711.11
7111.11
7
6600
733.33
7333.33
8
tS800
755.55
7555.55
9
7000
777.77
7777.77
10
7200
800.00
8000.00
11
7400
722.22
8222.22
x - Teach1ng experience in public schools.
Note: Credit on this schedule will be given for teaching and
military experience as recog ni1ed by the state foundation
program .

w1N AT BRIDGE

Ely's Defense
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NORTH

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SOUTH (D)

-

Gen. Gavin
(Continued from page 1)
of the Research Management
Advisory Panel of the House of
Representatives Committee on
Science and Astronautics. He is
a member of the Committee for
National Health Insurance.
General Gavin was born in
New York City and r!lceived a
bachelor of science degree at
the U.S. Military Academy in
1929. He also holds honorary
degrees from Dartmouth
College, the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, New York
University, and Babson College.

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East-West vulnerable
West North East South

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34
Pass 4+
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Opening lead-¥ Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The late Harold Vanderbilt
invented contract bridge in
1925_ Six years later Ely
Culbertson came out with his
first book, "The Culbertson
System of 1931."
This book was so advanced
that even today you will find
many of its principles as
basic parts of every sound
system including JACOBY
MODERN, standard American, British Acol, Roth-Stone
and Kaplan-Sheinwold.

Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Sunday School attendance at
the United Methodist Church
was 72 and offering was $23.48.,
Worship attendance was 65 and
the offering was $49_13.
Lea Jean Hawkins of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Arbaugh of Chauncey, Mrs.
Harold Parker and family of,
Coal Grove, 0., were weekend
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs_ John Arbaugh and helped
Lea Jean Hawkins celebrate
her birthday.
Mrs. Ethel Rife left Monday
for a visit with her sons in Indiana.
Mrs. Maxine Chapman is

ALREADY ARRIVING - Supplies for the $488 million
coal-burning power plant announced today at Cheshire began
arriving earlier this week_ Three employees ~f the Ohio

Ely was the first to suggest the use of four notrump to ask for aces, the. recuperating at the home of her
grand-slam force and asking sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Dean
bids which are used today.
of Washington Court House
He was a great player. His after suffering a heart attack
bidding was sound. His play while visiting them there.
distinguished by brilliance.
Ralph Parker was taken to
Today's hand finds Ely Veterans Memorial Hospital,
making one mild overcall
with the West hand and then Pomeroy, after he became
opening the queen of hearts seriously ill at the home of his
a gains t South's five-club son, Mr. and Mrs. Leland
contract. A sound bid and a Parker of Flatwoods.
normal lead_
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor
South won in dummy and
h
led a diamond to his queen_ and family of Tore , 0., were
FIRST PIPE - The first supply of pipe designated for
Ely was on lead with the Sunday dinner guests here of
at Cheshire for the Gallia County Rural Water
installation
king. The game was rubber their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Association arrived Monday_ The pipe will be installed by
bridge. Most ordinary play- Blain Taylor_
Nardei Contracting, Bridgeville, Pa. Approximately 30 miles
ers would simply lead an- . Clarence Brown visited Oscar
of water lines have been installed thus far for the county-wide
other heart and force de- Babcock Monday_
clarer to use. up a trump.
Mr and Mrs. Marion Riggs
Ely saw th1s play would be
· .
hopeless. South surely had and fam1ly of Logan called on
seven trumps. Then how Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
coul~ South be hurt? Ely Mrs. Riggs visited Dorothy
found the way. He played his Dodder and helped her
king of trumps _ Without this celebrate her birthday.
play. South would have ruffed
Mrs. Harold Watson and son
a d1amond and eventually
f th
d Mr 0
Ruth Manning-Sanders.
Mr. Eddy's new books:
lost just one trump trick. Roger, o A ens an
s. rvl
Apollo, Retold, Katherine E.
Favorite Christmas Stories,
After Ely's play he had to Watso? .a?d son of So~th Bethel
Miller_
Frances
Cavanah.
lose a diamond and a trump was v1s1bng Mrs. Eff1e Watson
What is Sym,metry; Mindel
The book of G~gles, ,William
and was down one.
ov r the weekefjli ......
Sitomer.
Cole.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Wild Horses of the Red
Seeds, Embryos, and Sex,
10
Margaret Cosgrove.
Desert,
Glen
Rounds.
OHIOAN IS KILLED
Wild Cats, Michael Boorer.
The Adventures of Snowshoe
MONROE, Mich. (UPI) -An
t~n
Atomic Energy, Matthew
W.
Casewit.
Thompson,
Curtis
elderly Ohio man was killed
The bidding has been:
Gaines_
John
Fuller.
Whaling
World,
late Tuesday when the car he
North
East
West
Young people and Religion,
Wild Pets, Robert Franklin
was a passenger in was hit by
Leslie.
Pass
1•
Pass
another auto three miles west Arthur H. Cain.
The Diligent Destroyers,
Porcelain, Eileen Aldridge.
Pass
2¥
Pass
of here_
Strange but True Hockey
You, South, hold:
George
Laycock.
Police said the victim,
.8 ¥Kl0765 +AKQ94 .A2
Sailing Ships and Sailing Stories, Stan Fischler.
George Sievert, 74, Maumee,
What do you do now?
Craft, George Goldsmith
Discovery of Mrica, Richard
A-Bid three no-trump. There was riding in the car when it
Seymour Hall.
should be a good play for this was smacked broadside at an Carter.
A Book of Devils and Demons,· Handel and the Messiah
contract Your partner may intersection.
only have two hearts.

New Books on Eddy Educator

·i

ua

:l•!tt;Wn

r
Hair Issue Raised
(Continued from page 1)

with represen~atives of the
Meigs
Local
Teachers
Association on March 16_
The board approved the
recent
dismissals
made
necessary due to weather
conditions.
Attending the meeting were
board members,
Porter,
Mullen, King, Hiram Slawter
and Joseph Sayre, Supt.
Hargraves and his assistant,
Larry Morrison, Clerk L. W.

SALARY SCHEDULE NON - CERTIFICATED
EMPLOYEES
Custodians
Minimum
hourly rate, $1 .75 per hour;
Supervising custodian at high
school building, $2.25 per hour ;
Substitute hourly rate, $1.75 per
hour; Outside activities, $2-10
per hour, minimum of $5 ; $7.50
for each dance after an athletic
contest ; $10 for all other dances.
Bus Drivers - Base salary,
$1800 per year for three hours
per day driving time ; Extra
salary, $100 per year for each 15
minutes per day beyond three
hours driving time (maximum
of $400); Substitute salary, $8.50
per day; Extra trips, $10 for all
band trips to and from Meigs
High athletic contest; $10 for all
athletic trips ; Field trips and a II
other extra-curricu lar trips,
$2.10 per hour for driving time;
$1.60 per hour for waiting time ;
$5 minimum.
Cooks - Base salary, $1730;
Extra salary for breakfast
preparation, $10 pe r week ;
Substitute sa lary, $9.60 per day ;
Outside activities, $2.10 per
hour for supervision, food
preparation , and clean up; $5
minimum.
Secretaries - Base sa lary,
Super intendent's Office, $4100;
High School Office, $3250;
Junior High School Office,
$3250 ; Clerk's Office, $3250;
Elementary School Office,
$3250; Substitute salary, $1.60
per hour ; Substitute salary for
over 20 days, regular salary (to
be paid from first day when it is
known that the employment will
be at least 20 days ).
Maintenance Superin tendent of Buildings and
Grounds, $6285; Maintenance
man, $4448.
Mechanics - Head mechanic,
$6337.60; Assistant mechanic,
$4800.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
George
Nesselroad, Jr., Pomeroy;
Michael Nesselroad, Pomeroy;
Clyde Cramlett, Racine.
DISCHARGED - Frances
Boston, Clara Roney, Eunice
Sprague, Esther Kissell.

RECOVERY THWARTED
CELINA, Ohio (UPI) - High
winds and ice on nearby Lake
St. Marys have prevented efforts to find the body of Dale
Morelock, 17, Wayne Lake near
Greenville.
He and his father, William J.
Morelock, 45, Dayton, drowned
Sunday when their 15-foot boat
capsized in high swells but
three other men escaped injury.
The father's body was recovered soon after the mishap.

water system. Plans for a water system first originated in n
the Village of Cheshire five years ago. This was about the
same time that officials from the Ohio Power Company
began optioning land for the huge power plant which was
announced today.

Story, Hertha Pauli.
Pipkin, S. Forst.
Jacob and the Robbers,
Marlene Reidel.
Fidelia, Ruth Joyce Adams.
Uncle Davy Lane, Mighty
Hunter, Adela L. DeLeeuw.
Baseball, Franklin Folsom_
Hattie the Backstage Bat,
Don Freeman.
My Old Tree, Patricia Gauch.
Alexander and the Windup
Mouse, Leo Lionni.
Red Hawk's Account of
Custer's Last Battle, Paul
Goble.
A New Day, Don B?lognese:
One . Monday Mormng, Un
Shulev1tz.

Simon and the Game '
Chance, Robert Burch.
Night Judgement at ·Sinos,
Jack Higgins_
The Gilt-Edged cJckpit,
James Douglas McConnelL
Submersibles and Ufldersea
Labs of the World, Mi,chael
Chester.
...., :
Still More Answers, Mary
~
Elting.
The Random House Book of
Birds, Elizabeth S. Austin.
L

In the sky, the Beehive _is
the open cluster of stars m
the constellation of Cancer.

--;;:-

7e;;; ~=. ·~~~

~l

-co-;stru;i;
welcomed. The editor reserves the right to shorten letters.
All letters must be signed, with a full address, although
initials may be used upon request.
~

»~-'H=·-

McComas and Mrs. David
Bowen, representative of the
teachers' association.
PLEASANT VALLEY
William
ADMISSIONS Given, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Tommy Grubbe, Gallipolis;
James O'Neil, Point Pleasant;
William Montgomery, Crown
City, 0.; Donna Wooten, Point
Pleasant; Mr_ and Mrs_
Clarence Emerick, Point
Pleasant, and Danny Ray
Stanley, Southside.
DISCHARGES
Karen
Rose, Vickie Putney, Une
Friend, Sharon Flora, John
King, Pattie Stover, Charles
William Redman, Mary Denny,
Paul Maynard, Mrs. Don
Becker and son; Frank Dotson,
George Baker, Mrs_ Richard
Thomas, Mrs. William Stone,
Oden Pearson, Mrs. James
Smith.
BIRTH : March 9, a son to Mr_
and Mrs. Howard Bechtle, Point
Pleasant.

Power Company were busy Tuesday afternoon erecting poles ..
for electricity. This photo was taken near the old Ohio
Collieries Company coal hauling road behind the Swisher
property.

&lt;'\a

••• ~- UUU/'L:~
Right Eating, Right Living
Minersville, Ohio
March 2, 1971
Dear Sir:
In regard to your paragraph about vitamin C and colds in
your paper of Feb. 18 (Beat of the Bend, Bob Hoeflich), I wish to
say I have taken Vitamin C, as well as the other vitamins and
minerals and I very seldom have a cold.
In desperation one day, because of colitis, I took 3,000 mg. of
it, and I found out it was good for that too. Dr. Fred Klenner,
Reidsville, N. C., gives massive doses of it by injection when his
patients are too ill to swallow it
If you use natural vitamins from food, you don't have to be
concerned about how much you take, except "A" and "E." If you
have high blood pressure, you have to increase the amount of
Vitamin E. gradually. It is good for circulation, heart, blood clots,

etc.
Since they have been taking the bran and wheat germ out of
flour, heart deaths have increased.
Vitamin A keeps me from having corns and callouses, and
bone meal tablets, hemorrhoids.
Dr_ Weston A. Price travelled the world over examining
people untouched by so-called civilization, and the statistics
concerning cancer, ulcers, high blood pressure, tuberculosis,
heart and kidney diseases, muscular dystrophy, multiple
sclerosis and cerebral palsy were zero, zero, zero in every case.
Dr_ Robert McLearrison found the same thing when he investigated the health of another aboriginal people.
It looks like the above proves that the U.S. is not the best-fed
nation on earth. We see illnesses on every hand, because of the
way people are eating and because our soils are depleted.
I have even read of cases of cancer patients, some having had
two or three operations, that started to eat food raised
organically, and there was no sign of cancer when an autopsy was
performed.
We don't have to spend millions for a cancer cure_ There is
plenty of information about curing it and heart trouble if we would
follow it. White flour and white sugar products also are causing
part of trouble_
I believe the way young people are eating is the cause of the
increase in crime; that, and the fact people don't have the right
attitude toward the Lord Jesus Christ and His word.
If the young people want a project that will help, now and
eternally, why don't they study nutrition and become Christians?
They will find nothing more fascinating, besides helping everyone
physically and spiritually.
Very truly yours,
Edna Edwards_

The George Thompson Kidney Fund is off to a good st311l
through the efforts of the Winding Trail Garden Club.
Contributors so far include Wilma Sargent, John and Nanc:t•
David, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shenefield, Mrs. M.D. Webster, Mr. and
Mrs. U.S_ Nease, Mr. and Mrs. Charles White, Ethel Nelson, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy C. Hermann, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomas and
family and Theresa, Roy, Dwight and Jon Thompson. Another
contribution received was marked from Box 253, Racine, but no
name listed.
'
George, only 18, has had both kidneys removed at the
Cleveland Clinic and will be given a transplant. Contributions ii
the fund may be sent to the George Thompson Kidney Fund 11
care of the postmaster, Pomeroy.
The address for those wishing to send cards is George
Thompson, Cleveland Clinic, Room 555, 2020 K 93rd SL,
Cleveland, Ohio 44106.
FORMER MEIGS COUNTY residents, Mr_ and Mrs. Frank
Landaker of Woodrow, Colo., will celebrate their 70th wedding
anniversary March 15.
Mrs. Landaker is the former Bertha Schrieber of Ball Rl¥Ja.
Mr. Landaker was reared near Snowville. The couple left Mei~
County more than 60 years ago but have thoroughly enjoyed their
many trips back "home." The couple has two sons, James an~
Oscar.
Mr. Landaker observed his 91st birthday on Feb. 26. He is•
quite active, drives his own car, has a flower and vegetable
garden, mows his lawn and drives a pickup truck around to in,spect fences on his vast farm. Mrs. Landaker will be 88 on Nov. 4
and does her own housework including the laundry_ She makes
jellies and jams also. The Landakers are regular in their churc
attendance. Local relatives report that they would enjoy hear·
from Meigs County_ The address is Woodrow, Colorado, 80757_
THE SKATE-A-WAY Roller Rink on Route 7 towards Chester
is marking its 15th anniversary Saturday. In observance of the
occasion there will be free cakes for everyone, including nonskaters. In addition there will be races with prizes and free
balloons.
"Those 15 years rolled by fast," comments Mrs.
Trussell, associated with the rink's operations.
THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY, College of Arts, School of
Music presented the Buckeye Scarlet and Grey Bands in concert.,
Sunday afternoon at Mershon Auditorium. Karen Griffith, a
freshman at the school, plays first trumpet with the Buckeye
Scarlet Band_
Attending the concert were Karen's parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Griffith and her grandmother, Mrs. Kearney Ogdin, all
local, a nd Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Jones, Connie and Keith of
Dublin.

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

.waverlyFavored To
Repeat In District
~op-Ranked

Ohio
T eruns Playing In
Rio Grande Event

R 0Ster s
ClaSS AA rp
~ 0Urney

Three of Ohio's top Class AA high school
• basketball teams (United Press International
ratings) will participate in the 1971 Rio Grande
College Class AA District basketball tournament at
the Paul R. Lyne Center Friday night.

e

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

Waverly, defending Southern
Ohio District champion, and
champion of the Southeastern
Ohio League heads the fourteam field. The Tigers were
named regular season AA
division champions by UPI.
Southeastern of Ross County
finished seventh in the final UPI
ratings on Feb. 25. Federal
Hocking wound up 18th in the
final poll. South Point of
Lawrence County was not
ranked in this year's poll.
The combined won-lost record
of the eight sectional tournament winners is 74-9.
Southeastern, coached by
Larry Jordan, is the only undefeated quintet in the tournament.
The Blue and White Panthers
own a sparkling 23-0 record.
However, most of the Panthers'
wins were recorded over Class
A schools. Southeastern was in
the Class A division until this
year. The Panthers captured
the Ross County League with a
12-0 mark.
Waverly has the second best
record (19-1). The Tigers,
however, are favored to win
their second consecutive
district championship. Last
year, the charges of Coach C. D.
Hawhee made it all the way to
St. John Arena in Columbus
against the big boys (now AAA
schools). Waverly's only loss
this year was to AAA Athens, 6361. Since that loss, the Tigers
have knocked over 16 consecutive foes.
Fed ral Hocki
coached by Mark
outstandmg 18--2
Lancers are cham
Tri-Valley League.
After getting off to a slow
start, the Lancers recorded 15
consecutive wins before lowly
Logan upset them 55-54 in midFebruary.
South Point, runnerup (to
Class A Fairland) in the Ohio
Valley Conference, may be a
dark horse in this year's
tournament.
The Pointers, in the district
tournament for the third time in
four years, started out slow (33) before finishing with a 12-6
season record. Inside the OVC,
the Pointers wound up with a 113 mark, losing twice to
Fairland, and once to Symmes
Valley.
The Pointers have only three
seniors. They are coached by
Mike Hughes.
All tickets for Friday night's

games are sold out sccording to
Art Lanham, tournament
director. Seating capacity at the
Paul R. Lyne Center is 2,500,
thus an all-time record crowd is
assured for a high school
basketball game in Gallia
County.
Doors will open at 6 p.m.,
Friday.
In Friday's first game,
scheduled for 7 p.m., South
Point will take on Southeastern.
The nightcap, scheduled for
8:15p.m., pits Waverly against
Federal Hocking.
Friday's winners will collide
for the district championship at
7:30 p.m., Saturday. The
district winner will play in the
Ohio Class AA Regional
Tournament, to be held at Ohio
University in Athens on March
19 and 20.

FEDE RAL HOCK ING
PLAYE R
HT. YR.
Ernie Driggs
6·0 12
Tim Mayle
6-0 12
Chuck Robinson
6-0 12
Randy Rasmussen
5-10 11
Dave Russell
5-10 11
Mitch Daugherty
5-11 10
Ron Dunfee
5-9 10
Danny Hall
5-11 10
Mike Meek
5-10 10
Jim Schloss
6-3 10
Rob Smith
5-11 10
Tony Stanley
5-9 10

SOUTHEASTERN
PLAYER
HT. YR.
John Skaggs
6-2 12
Dwight Hi ll
5-11 12
Mike Wade
6-3 12
Jeff Ragland
6-0 12
Steve Gray
5-7 12
Greg Prater
6-0 11
Randy Bolte
5-7 11
Jim Alexander
5-11 11
Randy DuBois
5-11 11
Steve Eldridge
6-2 11
Mack Barbee
6-0 10
,Tom Ramey
6-2 10

SOUTH POINT
PLAYER
HT. YR
Kenny Hurst
6-0 10
Lance Redman
5-11 11
Gary Morris
5-10 12
Vince Chapman
6-1 12
Terry Evans
5-11 11
Joe Kouns
6-0 12
Dick Richards
6-0 11
Ron Montgomery
5-11 l1
Kevin Morris
58 10
Marty Patrick
5-11 10
Robert Winters
6-2 10
Phil Johnson
5-9 10
Rick Sharp
6-0 10

WAVERLY
PLAYER
HT. YR.
Rick Eblin
6-5 12
Don Fairchild
6-2 11
Jeff Hopkins
6-4 12
Phil Miller
6-3 12
Tony Gullion
5-9 12
Butch Workman
6-0 11
Mike Oyer
6-2 10
Bill Maloy
6-1 10
Doug Pfeifer
6-2 10
Jim Allen
6-2 12
Willy Hobbs
5-10 12
Don Gullion
5-8 11
Tom Varney
5-11 11
Toby Helton
5-8 11

Rio AA District R ecords

SOUTH POINT
South Point 88 Rock Hill 68
South Point 66 Portsmouth 83
South Point 70 Fairland 89
South Point 71 Coal Grove 61
South Point 65 Symmes Valley
60
South Point 52 Chillicothe 74
South Point 84 Oak Hill 49
South Point 95 Ironton St. Joe 54
South Point 85 Chesapeake 64
South Point 71 Rock Hill 47
South Point 89 Northwest 51
South Point 47 Fairland 66
South Point 75 Coal Grove 63
Ohio H. S. Basketball
South Point 64 Symmes Valley
Tournament Scores
By United Press International 67
South Point 88 Oak Hill 31
Class AAA
South Point 92 Ironton St. Joe 40
At Columbus
Cols. Walnut Ridge 72 Cols. South Point 58 Mason , Ky., 70
South Point 73 Chesapeake 54
Whetstone 49
Symmes Valley Sectional
Columbus South 69 Newark 62
South Point 77 Ironton 72
At Cleveland
Cleve. John Adams 75 Shaker South Point 49 Chesapeake 48
Heights 39
SOUTHEASTERN
S E 91 Lone Jack, Ky. 77
Class AA
SE 66 Eastern (Pike) 60
At Austintown
Liberty 71 Campbell Memorial SE 79 Laurelville 62
SE 92 Huntington 44
55
SE 75 Zane Trace 64
At New Concord
SE 84 Laurelville 73
Maysville 75 Garaway 67
SE 77 Bishop Flaget 54
At Urbana
Tipp City 87 Benjamin Logan 51 SE 79 Alexander 68
SE 74 Eastern (Pike) 53
At Chagrin Falls
Solon 86 Warrensville Heights SE 81 New Boston 58
SE 90 Unioto 77
67
SE 109 Paint Valley 75
SE 95 Piketon 67
Class A
SW 73 Adena 57
At Canton
SE 118 Bishop Flaget 64
H llsdale 68 Windham 44
Maplewood 68 Lorain Catholic SE 109 Huntington 67
SE 105 Unioto 72
52
SE 70 Paint Valley 49
SE 90 Adena 79
(Bainbridge Sectiona I)
SE 63 Greenfield 60
SE 70 Thornville-Sheridan 68
Jennings Wins Trophy
NEW YORK ( UPI )- Bill Kennings, 50-year old president of
the New York Rangers of the
National Hockey League, was
presented with the Lester
Patrick Memorial Trophy for
By United Press International
1971 Tuesday night "for outOhio State now has captured
standing service to hockey in both the Big Ten football and
basketball titles.
the United States."
The Buckeyes, with Jim
. Jennings is credited with
being most ·esponsible for the Cleamons back in harness after
expansion of the NHL to seven a wrist injury, whipped Indiana
additional U.S. cities in the last 91-75 Tuesday night, wrapping
up the Big Ten title and an
five years.
NCAA bid.
Illinois, in the midst of one of
Howsam's Contract Renewed
its worst losing streaks ever,
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Bob dropped an 85-70 decision to
Howsam's contract as execu- Northwestern. Michigan State
tive vice president and general came from behind to beat
College pasketball Results
manager of the Cincinnati Reds Minnesota, 73-71, Purdue
NAIA Tourn. at Kans City
was renewed Tuesday for downed Wisconsin, 81-77, and
1st Round
Cent. Wash 98 Doane, Neb. 73 another two years.
Michigan virtually sewed up a
Grambling 75 Mans. St. 78
Francis L. Dale was re- bid to the National Invitation
Great Falls 75 Augusta 71
Jack. St., Miss 96 NW Iowa 91 elected president of the club 'Tourament with an 116-82 victory
and Warren Giles, retired over Iowa in other action.
Michigan 86 Iowa 82
Colgate 85 NYU 77
National League president, was
Cleamons poured in 30 points
Brown 95 R.I. 78
named
an
honorary
member
of
as
he said goodbye to Columbus,
Fair. St. 79 Tex . Sou 78
the board of directors.
Ohio St 91 Indiana 7!J
Ohio. A senior, Cleamons was
thought to be out for the season
with a broken wrist just two
weeks ago. Twenty of his points
came in the second half and
helped his younger teammates
rally to hold a fading lead.
The victory left the Buckeyes
with a 19-5 season mark and a
FOR PICKUPS
13-1 Big Ten record. Their next
game will be against the winner
of the Marquette-Miami (Ohio)
• Triple-tempered nylon cord body
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Michigan's Wolverines took a
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SE 69 Miami Trace 46
WAVERLY
Waverly 73 Ironton 51
Waverly 117 Wellston 54
Waverly 61 Washington C. H. 52
Waverly 61 Athens 63
Waverly 98 Meigs 71
Waverly 72 Miami Trace 56
Waverly 60 Gallipolis 30
Waverly 110 Jackson 61
Waverly 78 Logan 54
Waverly 74 Ironton 41
Waverly 78 Wellston 33
Waverly 69 Athens 65
Waverly 79 Meigs 53
Waverly 86 Gallipolis 45
Waverly 92 Jackson 73
Waverly 81 Circleville 51
Waverly 101 Logan 60
Waverly 76 Dayton Roosevelt 72
(Beaver Sectional)
Waverly 78 Wheelersburg 49
Waverly 82 Portsmouth West 53
FEDERAL-HOCKING
F-H 58 Eastern (Meigs) 74
F-H 68 Sheridan 67
F-H 50 Nelsonville-York 48
F H 76 Miller 51
F-H 69 Vinton County 31
F-H 90 Logan 34
F H 75 Frontier Local 62
F-H 90 Warren Local 72
F-H 75 Belpre 58
F H 80 Alexander 69
F-H 67 Sheridan 57
F-H 68 Warren Local 59
F-H 63 Nelsonville-York 46
F-H 79 Eastern (Meigs) 58
f-H 80 Vinton County 59
F-H 78 Frontier Local 58
F-H 54 Logan 55
F-H 79 Belpre 50
(Albany Sectional)
F-H 73 Nelsonville-York 53
F-H 66 New Lexington 50

r-;h,~·-s;;;;:;;Jk;J:l Twins

Counting
l----·-~-~~!~~~-----J On Old Veterans
Hmmm. After picking one like Monday night, Frazier in 15, I

oughtta stop while I'm ahead. A confession is due, however. My
sentimental leaning was to Frazier (hopefully), but three round
silver ones went on Ali because like many Americans his Big
Mouth was hard to disbelieve.
It was the first big fight spectacle I have seen on closed TV
(Charleston Civic Center). Upwards of 5,000 men, women, boys
and girls pretty much filled the better seats in the Center to see
this truly historic battle by the two biggest and fastest mi:m ever to
fight in a public forum.
PROBABLY never before have Meigs or Gallia County
basketball fans had such an attractive district tournament come
their way. As for that, Rio Grande College's District AA tourney
Friday and Saturday nights must be only the second time a
district level playoff has been run off in either county. Last year
Rio Grande's new Lyne Center gym was host to the Class A
District tourney.
Three of Ohio's top 20 teams in Class AA will be dressing at
Rio Friday and Saturday nights. They are Waverly, No.1; Southeastern of Ross, No.7, and Federal-Hocking, No. 18. So if you like
your basketball in Grade A ser vings, be there.
But if you don't have your ticket for Friday night, don't
bother. It already was a sellout (3,500 seats) at the beginning of
the week. The "seats gone" sign hasn't been posted yet for
Saturday night.
SOUTHERN VALLEY Conference coaches will meet the
evening of Mar. 10 at 7 p.m. to name the all-star squad for the
1970-71 season. The meeting is at Oscar's, and naturally dinner
will precede deliberations.
HOSPITAL NOTE: David White, Kyger Creek High's allaround athlete, had his knee opera ted on in Parkersburg Monday.
First damaged during football season, it was reinjured late in the
cage season. White missed the last five games of the Bobcats'
schedule. He is recovering satisfactorily. David is the son of Mrs.
Jennie White and of the late Kyger Creek Coach Jim White.

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
49 2Jl .636 ...
Philadelphia 45 32 .584 4
Boston
40 36 .526 8112
Buffalo
21 56 .277 28
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
X-Baltimore 40 34 .541 ...
Atlanta
31 44 .413 9112
Cincinnat i
28 46 .378 12
Cleveland
13 62 .173 27112
X Cl inched Div T;tle
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
X-Milwaukee 65 12 .844 .. .
47 27 .635 16112
Chicago
Phoenix
45 28 .616 18
Detroit
42 32 .568 2J112
X-CI inched Div. Ttile
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
X-Los Angeles
46 30 .605 ...
San Francisco 37 39 .487 9
San Diego
35 42 .455 11 V2
Seattle
34 41 .453 11112
Portland
23 52 .307 22112
X-Ciinched Div. Ttile
Tuesday's Results
Phoenix 114 Detroit 108
Sattle 114 New York 99
Chicago 110 Milw. 103 (OT)
Bait. 107 L.A. 95
•
San Diego 106 Buffalo 96
Boston 134 San Fran. 112

B uck s Claim
long step toward the NIT with a
hard-fought triumph over Iowa.
The teams were tied several
times, the last with only 2:45
left, before Michigan grabbed a
four-point lead and iced the
game on two free throws by Dan
Fife.
Iowa's Fred Brown and
Michigan's Henry Wilmore, the
second and third-leading
scorers in the conference, tied
for scoring honors with 35 each.
Leon Howard led Wisconsin to
a 42-35 halftime edge over

FIGHT MOVIES
NEW YORK (UPI)-Motion
Pictures of the Joe FrazierMuhammad Ali title fight will
be seen in theaters in the
United States and Canada,
beginning on March 12, it was
announced Tuesday by Joseph
M. Sugar, president of Cinerama Releases.
A spokesman for the distributors said that a record 700
prints of the bout are being
made and that 300 more may
be ordered. He said the original
order of prints is the biggest
ever made for a sporting event.

Ph il. 124 Clevel. 115
Wednesday's Games
New York at Cincinnati
Phoenix at Atlanta
(Only games scheduled)
ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
47 26 .644 ...
Kentucky
40 33 .548 7
New York
37 36 .507 10
Pittsburgh
32 42 .432 15
Carolina
29 43 .403 17112
Floridians
30 47 .390 18112
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
50 21 .704 ...
Indiana
48 23 .676 2
37 36 .507 14
Memphis
Denver
27 45 .375 231h
Texas
23 49 .319 27112
Tuesday's Results
New York 132 Va. 120
Denver 146 Texas 127
Utah 122 Floridians 112
Wednesday's Games
Floridians at Denver
Memphis at Indiana
(Only games schedu led)
NHL Standings
By United Press International
East

l
•
T l t e ~~c~~ver

W. L. T. Pfs

Boston
New York
Montreal
Toronto
Buffalo

0

Purdue. But the Boilermakers'
Larry Weatherford pumped in
21 points in the second half and
crushed a late Wisconsin rally.
Illinois, figured to play a
dominant role in the Big Ten
this year, sank to a dismal 5-9
League record. The loss to
Northwestern was the eighth
consecutive loss for the Illini in
Big Ten competition.
The Minnesota Gophers
ended their season on a dismal
note as Ollie Shannon's 15-foot
jump shot rattled off the rim at
the
buzzer,
preserving
Michigan's State's two-point
lead.

Local Bowling
Morning Glories
March 3, 1971
Standings

West

48 10 7
41 14 11
34 18 13
33 27 6
18 36 13
29 35 10
18 40 7

103
93
81
72

49
48
43

W. L. T. Pts.

Chicago
42 15 B
St. Louis
27 22 16
Minnesota
24 29 14
Ph il adelphia
24 29 12
Pittsburgh
20 30 16
Los Angeles
19 34 12
California
17 44 5
Tuesday's Results
L.A. 4 St. Louis 0
Montreal 3 Vane. 3 (tie)
Wednesday's Games
Montreal at Toronto
New York at Chicago
Boston at Cal ifornia
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
St. Louis at Minnesota
(Only games scheduled)

92
70
62
60
56
50
39

AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pts
Montreal
24 26 12 60
Quebec
23 23 13 59
Providence
20 27 11 53
Springfield
22 30 8 52
West

w.

L. T. Pfs

Baltimore
35 15 7
Cleveland
29 22 7
Hershey
22 27 10
Rochester
21 28 10
Tuesday's Results
Prov idence 5 Montrea l 3
Wednesday's Ga mes
Baltimore at Cleveland
Quebec at Hershey
(Only games scheduled)

77
65
54

52

Team
Points
Newell Sunoco
128
Fraley &amp; Schilling
109
Gibbs Grocery
99
Lou's Ashland
83
Domigan Sohio
83
Bailey's Sunoco
74
High Team 3-games - First,
Football Clinic Speakers
Newell Sunoco 2252; second ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI)
Fraley &amp; Schi lling 2237; third - Vince Gibson of Kansas State,
Bailey's Sunoco 2142.
High Team Game - Newell Frank Kush of Arizona State
Sunoco 799; Fraley &amp; Schil ling and Lou McCullough of Ohio
763; Bailey's Sunoco 752.
High Ind. 3 games - Jackie State will be the featured
Guinther 465 ; Vicky Gillilan speakers at the 24th annual
447; Pat White 440.
High Ind . games - Pat White National Football Clinic, openMasters Radio Coverage
173 ; Kathryn Wildermuth 172 ; ing at Convention Hall, March
AUGUST, Ga. (UPI)-Daily Sandy Korn and Jan Jenkins 22, and continuing through
'radio coverage of the 35th 161.
March 24.
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Masters Golf tournament will
DEVOTED TO
be carried by the CBS Radio
I NTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Network, it was announced
CHESTER L. TANNEH ILL
Tuesday by Martin E. Pinsker,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
director of network programs.
City Editor
This will be the 16th
Published dai ly A&lt;cept
consecutive year the Masters
Sa turday by The Ohio Valley
Pub lishing Company, 11 1 has been a CBS Radio Network
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
sports special.
45769 . Business Office Phone
992·2156, Editorial Phone 9922157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
XE-110 Ethyl- over 100 octane
Nat io nal advertising
epresentative Bottinell~.
BRUINS FACE USC
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
St., New York City, New York.
The Bruins face USC SaturSubscription
rates : !
Delivered by carrier where day and a Trojan victory would
available 50 cents per week ;
make a Monday playoff necesBy Motor Route where carrier
service pot avai lab le : One
sary, since both teams would
538 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
month "$1.75. By mail in On1"] be tied for the Pac-8 crown.
and w. va ., One year S14.00.
Only
the
conference
winner
is
Six mo nt hs $7 .25. l' hree
(We honor BankAmericard a n d M aster
months $4 . 50. Subscription
Charqe)
price inc ludes Sunday Times - allowed to participate in postseason tourney play.
, SenJj:let.

By United P r ess International
Rookies are big news in most
spring training camps but at
Orlando, Fla ., where the
Minnesota Twins are working
out, the emphasis is on the "old
folks."
No rookie is being counted
upon to make a significant
contribution to the Twins' bid
for a third straight West
Division title in the American
League this year so Manager
Bill Rigney's primary concern
is that his veter an r egulars
work themselves into shape.
Harmon Killebrew and Jim
Perry, each 34, are two of the
Twins' key "old folks" and both
starred Tuesday as the Twins
unleashed an 11-hit attack and
downed the Kansas City Royals,
6-1.
Killebrew, who hit 41 Homers
and drove in 113 runs last
season, hit a homer and two
singles while Perry, whose 24-12
record won him the AL Pitcher
of the Year award, allowed one
hit in three innings. Killebrew's
homer was off Bruce Dal
Canton while the only hit off
Perry was a leadoff single by
George Spriggs. Perry retired
the next nine batters in
succession.
On other fronts: Bill Singer
allowed one hit in three shutout
innings as the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the New York
Yankees, 4-3, for their third
straight exhibition win ... Joe
Hague's three hits and three
errors by Boston helped the St.
Louis Cardinals down the Red
Sox, 9-5. The Red Sox' sloppy
play was disappointing to
Manager Eddie Kasko, who
sacrificed power in winter
trades in hopes of improving
Boston's defense and pitching.
Veteran Chris Short was
hammered for four runs in the
first inning as the Chicago
White Sox beat the Philadelphia
Phillies, 7-2. Bill Robinson's
two-run single was the key blow

Bulls Snap Bucks
Win String At 20
By JOE CARNICELLL.
UPI Sports Writer
Contrary to rumor, the
Milwaukee Bucks really are
human.
The Bucks have been playing
the superhuman role the last
month, setting a National
Basketball Association record
with 20 consecutive victories.
But the Chicago Bulls brought
them back to earth Tuesday
night, outscoring Milwaukee 114 in an overtime session to
record a 110-103 victory.
After regulation time had
elapsed with the score tied at
99-99, Bob Weiss of the Bulls
scored the first four points of
the overtime and Chet Walker
dropped in a basket before
Milwaukee scored. Weiss added
another field goal and the
Chicago defense held the Bucks
to only one field goal and a pair
of free throws in insure the
victory.
Bob Love was high man for
Chicago with 23 points and
Jerry Sloan and Tom Boerwinkle had 21 each. Lew Alcindor's
39 points were high for
Milwaukee, which suffered only
its 12th loss of the season
against 65 triumphs.
In oth.er NBA action Tuesday,
Phoenix edged Detroit 114-108,
Philadelphia ripped Cleveland
124-113, Seattle whipped New
York 114-99, San Diego beat
Buffalo 106-96, Boston walloped
San Francisco 134-112 and
Baltimore surged past Los

~/..;----*

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Clem Haskins scored eight of
15 points during a fourth
quarter spurt that carried
Phoenix past Detroit and
saddled the Pistons with their
fourth consecutive defeat.

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of the White Sox' ra lly ... Al
Kaline's ninth-inning sacrifice
fly drove in the winning run for
the Detroit Tigers in an 8--7
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds, who lost their fourth
straight game. Lee Ma y hit two
homers for the Na tional League
champions.
Frank Robinson's two-run
homer was the big blow for the
Baltimore Orioles in a 5-4
triumph over the Montreal
E xpos. Center-fielder Paul
Blair saved the decision for the
world champions with a spectacular catch of a drive by Bob
Bailey with two out and the
bases filled in the ninth inning
... Marty Martinez' bases-filled
single drove in the winning run
in a five-run ninth as the
Houston Astros r allied for a 7-6
victory over the Atlanta
Braves.
Tim Foli, making a strong
bid to win a regular third base
job, drove in two runs with a
pair of singles to lead the New
York Mets to a 3-0 triumph
which snapped the Pittsburgh
Pirates four -game winning
streak. Roberto Clemente
played for the Pirates for the
first time this spring and was
hitless in two at bats.
Hal Lanier, battling to retain
his regular shortstop job, went
4-for-4 in the San Francisco
Giants' 7-3 win over the San
Diego Padres. Willie Mays had
a single, double and triple and
Ken Henderson homered for the
Giants ... Ted Savage's 425-foot
homer and Pete Koegel's three
hits led the Milwaukee Brewers
to a 6-4 victory over the
Jim
Cleveland Indians
Spencer singled home the tying
run and Chico Ruiz' fielder's
choice drove in hhe decisive
tally as the California Angels
scored two runs in the ninth to
beat the Tokyo Orions, 2-1. It
was the fifth straight loss for
the Oriom

H&amp;R Firestone
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992-2238

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Middleport , 0 .

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

YCC Campers to Make $300

Ver-r-r-ry Interesting
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-Arte
Johnson, the German soldier,
the Russian loser and the dirty
old man of "Rowan and
Martin's Laugh-In," will star in
his own television special titled
"Ver-r-ry Interesting."
One of the original zanies of
the "Laugh-in," Johnson may
follow Judy Carne, Goldie
Hawn, Joanne Worley and
others who have left the highly
rated show.
"I don't know if I'll be with
the series next year," the little
comedian said.
"I've fulfilled my four-year
contract and my obligations to
the producers. This special I'm
doing is a pilot. If it's sold as a
series of its own, naturally I'll
do it.
"But I can't walk away from
'Laugh-In' blindly."
· Johnson, as in the case of all
"Laugh-In" performers, is featured in black-outs, quick hits,
one-liners and visual gags.
The pace of the show
precludes long sketches.
"The special gives me an
opportunity to say something
beyond one or two lines," he
said. "I have a chance to give
my characters some depth and
also to show audiences the real
Arte Johnson.

"I'll be doing sketches with
Elke Sommer and Bing Crosby
using Rosmenko (the half-baked
Russian), Tyrone (the dirty old
man) and Wolfgang (the
helmeted German yardbird)
along with the professor.
"These characters are at
least 20 years old. I was using
them long before I came to
'Laugh-ln.'"
Johnson has a quick wit and
a sharp tongue in the give and
take of reparte. He also is
possessed of a paternal pride in
such diverse idiots as Tyrone,
Rosmenko and Wolfgang.
He talks of new facets of

their personalities surfacing on
his special.
Joyfully he announced that
Wolfgang would sing on the
show. He speaks of Rosmenko
using the character's first
name, Pyotr.
"Every character I play is an
underdog," he said. "That's
why audiences have taken to
them. The public will get to
know them better on my
special which is a return to the
old form of variety show.
"The audience won't have to
sit on the edge of its seat
(presumably as they do to keep
up with 'Laugh-In'). It's more
like the old Sid Caesar show."

Forty lucky boy and girl
teenagers between 15 and 18
years will work for thetr keep
and $300 this summer in the
Wayne National Forest near
Marietta.
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture
Clifford M. Hardin said this
Youth Conservation Corps
Camp will be one of 56 in 36
states to be operated this
summer by the Departments of
Agriculture and Interior.
The· conservation work experience camp will be operated
by the U. S. Forest Service.
Work projects will be located
northeast of Marietta on the
Athens Ranger District. The
camp will operate eight weeks,

EDWARD T. BAUER

opening June 13.
Total enrollment in all camps
will be about 2,200 boys and
girls, all 15 to 18 years of age.
This program is in accordance
with the YCC Act of the 91st
Congress to pilot test a program
to provide gainful employment
for American youth in the
healthful outdoor atmosphere of
the national forests and parks.
Forest Supervisor A. Claude
Ferguson explained the activtty
program this way:
"The YCC Campers will gain
work experience in a variety of
resource management and
environmental problem areas.
They will also participate in a
structured
conservation

education program with an
opportunity to associate with
professionals from many en
vironmental
resource
management fields.
Extracurricular activities
will include camping and exploration trips to broaden the
total experience."
Recruitment will be coordinated through the public
school system. Students interested in the program should
not write to the above agencies,
but should register their interest with their school counsellors or science teachers.
Details of the recruitment and
selection system are yet to be
completed.

NOW
We Have Our
Own New

TV
SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
If you need TV Service
in a hurry, call us in
the morning, we'll be
there in the afternoon.

CALL 992-2635
FOR INGELS
FAST SERVICE

~~~!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::f:~::

Mason Area

New~

Trooper and Mrs. Dick Young
and sons, Richard and Mike,
visited over the weekend with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Alburtice Young at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roach
and sons visited in New Haven
with Mr. and Mrs. Tom King on
Sunday.
Mike Harbour, a student at
Marshall University, visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Harbour over the weekend.
West Virginia University
students visiting their parents

Notes

during the spring break are
Eddie Carson, Tommy Roush,
Mike Jones, Dick Ord, Carla
Crookham and Mike Thompson.
Students from Potomac State
visiting their homes are Nora
Friend, Carolyn Roush, Sam
Scarberry
and
Bobby
Dewhurst.
Mrs. Diane Self and sons, Tod
and Chris; Dave, Danny and Jill
Crocket of Columbus visited
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Capehart and with
Mr. Christy Bletner.

Ed Bauer !l!l Veterans' Rights are Liberalized
Prornote d liber~lizes

Credibility Abyss Widening
By EUGENE V. RISHER

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The credibility of
official U.S. statements on its policies and
progress in Vietnam once again is coming under
heavy attack.
Recent polls showing that about seven out of 10

Washington Window
Americans doubt the government's candor when
it talks about Southeast Asia have highlighted a
problem that has plagued three presidents and
helped bring about the early retirement of one.
Not lost on the White House is the fact that the
survey, conducted by the respected Gallup
organization, shows a greater crisis of confidence now than in February, 1967, midway
through President Johnson's first full term in
office.
Several things have contributed to it:
The decision to use extensive American airpower and helicopter support in Cambodia after
ion such bombing raids
having given the irr.
would be r1gtdly
a 'protecbve
Use of such m
reaction str.kes"
bombing rmds
against supply bw
orth Vietnam and
"unarmed reconnaiSsance flights'' to mean
flights by intelligence-gathering planes escorted
by coveys of fighter-bombers.
The display of a pipe segment by Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird and one of his top

aides at a Pentagon briefing which gave the
incorrect impression that it was from the North
Vietnamese pipeline ruptured during the current
Laotian operations.
The central conflict of trying to convince Hanoi
it cannot gain by waiting while at the same time
responding to domestic pressure for an
American pull-out.
In fairness to the Nixon administration, it
should be pointed out that it inherited a vast
reservoir of skepticism about the war. The
history of the conflict is one of false hopes and
optimistic assessments substantiated by questionable statistics.
And, of course, President Nixon cannot be
entirely candid about what course he intends to
pursue in Southeast Asia because to do so would
be to close certain optious and to give the enemy
an invaluable advantage.
Not all the fault lies with the government.
Journalistic shorthand in which "winding down
U.S. involvement in the war" becomes "winding
dov.n the war" has helped fuel some of the
misconceptions.
Recognition of this widening credibility gap is
one of the reasons President Nixon held a news
conference last week unusually close on the heels
of a similar session just two weeks earlier. Aides
say he plans to continue holding news conferences more frequently than during his first
two years in office when the average was about
one every two months.

Recent

MARION - The husband of a
former Pomeroy area resident
has been promoted to an
executive position in General
Telephone Co. of Ohio's home
office here.
F. W. Hamper, operating vice
president, said Edward T.
Bauer is GT's new traffic
director of General's statewide
operation. Bauer is married to
the former Patricia Ann Karr,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. R.
Karr Sr. of Rt. 2, Karr Rd.,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Bauer is a 1946
graduate of Middleport High
School where she was a
cheerleader.
A native of Middletown,
Conn., Mr. Bauer started with
the company in 1953 at Waverly.
Four years later he was
promoted to traffic engineer in
Marion. Subsequent promotions
traffic
included general
engineer, general traffic
supervisor and general traffic
administrative manager.
He attended the Ohio State
University and completed
numerous management and
technical courses with the
company. He also served two
years with the United States
Marine Corps.
Bauer holds membership in
Masonic Lodge 363, Middleport,
and Elks Lodge 32 in Marion. He
is vice chairman of General's
employe benefit committee,
board member of the Ohio
Independent Telephone Pioneer
Association and past chairman
of the Ohio Independent
Telephone Association's traffic
committee. The couple resides
at 442 Carolyn Dr., Marion.
They have a married daughter
who lives in Columbus.

new legislation
veterans ri_ghts to
housmg loans, and mediCal and
survivors' benefits according to
Glen A. Johnson, Meigs County
Veterans Service Officer.
A summary of new laws that
are of importance to local
veterans follows:
Public Law 91-506, Veterans
Housing Act of 1970, eliminates
the old formula for determining
eligibility and termination date
and makes all loan guaranty
entitlement available until
used, whether entitlement is
derived from World War 2,
Korean Conflict or post Korean
service.
Public Law 91-500, effective
October 22, 1970, amended
existing
law
regarding
eligibility for certain VA
medical treatment as follows:
- Eliminates the oath of
inability to pay, if the applicant
is age 65 or older, for hospital
treatment.
- Authorizes admission of
veterans receiving disability
pension to VA hospitals without
executing the oath of inability to
pay.
Authorizes outpatient
treatment and other required
medical services to any veteran
receiving pension or compensation based on need of
regular aid and attendance, or
who
is
permanently
housebound.

- Authorizes drugs and
medication at VA expense to
veterans in receipt of the
housebound rate of compensation or pension on the
same basis as applicable to
veterans in receipt of additional
pension or compensation, based
on need of regular aid and attendance.
Another adjustment was
made by Public Law 91-376
which authorizes reinstatement
of death benefits to a remarried
widow following the termination of the second
marriage by death or divorce.
Prior to this new law, when a
widow, receiving death benefits
on the basis of the service of a
veteran remarried, it was
required that these benefits be
terminated. Effective January
1, 1971, most widows w)lo
previously gave up benefits in
order to remarry, and then
subsequently had a termination
of the marriage by death or
divorce, will now be eligible
under the new law to receive
these benefits once again upon
reapplication. Benefits for the

•

·!ll:

INGELS
.FURNITURE

children of the veteran may
continue, even though the
widow may lose her entitlement
to benefits during the duration
of her remarriage.

TV SERVICE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

&amp;Zuspan
Early Season
Hogg

SPECIAL
NEW SHIPMENT!

,.c&lt;/M

Latex Paint

-8rJ(Ir0

(fJ!J/)~/

For Interior and
Exterior Use

Ohio 1971 license plate sales
start March 16 and continue
through Aprill5. Plates must be
on the car no later than midnight, April 15. This message
from the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles.

WHITE

GAU.ON

399

•

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

We Deliver

MASON

•

THANKS TO ALL YOU NICE PEOPLE•••

For Attending Our Biggest 2nd Anniversary Sale!
Visit Again This Week! Always Glad to See You!
HOLSUM

PAN ROLLS

RADISHES

TEMPLE
each
ORANGES .............

Spaghetti Dinner....~i~~--~-~~~ ...•...•.•......•..•.•~?~.... 49~
rolls
for

1.00

lb.
for

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"

1.00

Right reserved to limit quantities

Kraft Miracle

1

oe

POTATOES... ~ ..~~:~~-.-~~~-- 49~

Chef-Boy-Ardee

Margarine ........................................... 3

39~

PENN. U.S. No. 1

NOT Stamps, Contests, Games, Gimmicks,
But Do GIVE Service, Quality and Lots Of
Old Fashioned Courtesy With Every Low Price!

Bounty Towels ... ·······-··· .................. 3

NEW RED BUTTON

bch.

WE SELL FOOD

Jumbo Size Rolls

Reg.

6¢

•

We Sell and Recommend
Our USDA Choice Meats

Morton House Sliced

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Lean and Tender

Beef and Gravy...~~~--~~~~-~-~-r~.:................. o~~ 49~

Prices Effective Mar. 10-16

PORK
STEAK

From the Jolly Green Giant

Green Giant Peas ..........................5 c!~! 1.00
Best Buy For Your Pets

For Best Cooking Results

Kraft 0iI...................................................
Kraft Quality

Blackberry Jelly.............................. 2
Jiffy Cake and

Frosting Mix .................................... 2

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

2S

Joy Dog Food ...................................... ... b!~ 2.49
24 oz.
bottle

lb.
jar
7% oz.
boxes

49~

69¢
25¢

•

lb.

DAIRY SPECIAL!

FAIRMONT 2%

Fresh and Meaty

Young and Tender

MILK

SHOULDER

FRESH

gal.

79e

sse
From USDA Beef
GROUND

PORK ROAST Boiling Beef Round Steak
lb.

39~

::· 1. 75

"

-

�~~ ~~~~~.

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

5 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 10, 1971

•

KRAFT
COOKING
~)· ~ OIL

'~ .~ ~
~~

~~~

24oz.

~~

:; ·;

...

:' ROYAL CROWN

COLA
Carton of 8 Bottles
16 oz.
...·

~

L~~~~OR tt

ol\\.'t .

c
Plus

HOLD-THE-LINE ,: ,· ;'!:_,_ ---1\P---i~SPECIALS ALL OVER ;~=i·_
.

, KRAFT
CHEESE

THE STORE

American
Ind.
Wrapped

Slices
16 oz. pkg.

Folger's Coffee

2

LB.CAN

$}

99C:

•

79

With Coupon
Without
Coupon

Good March 10 Til Sat. 13th

I.G.A. FOODLINER STORE

Whitney

PINK
SALMON
lib. can

79C:

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

Milk Subsidy Quite Alive
Despite White House Kill
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Nixon administration officials who
want to kill a $104 million milk
subsidy for school children find
themselves facing opposition
fr.om an unusual - and probably overwhelming- House coalition.
When conservatives like Rep.
Barry Goldwater, Jr., RCalif., team up against the administration with liberals like
Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N. Y.,
all signs indicate the White
House is playing a losing hand.
Goldwater and Mrs. Chisholm
were among 100 House members co-signing a letter by Rep.
Ogden Reid, R- N. Y., last
week. The letter urged Rep.
Jamie L. Whitten, D-Miss., to
save the milk program despite
an administration proposal to

Boston, Eastern High School; back row, Franklin Rizer and
John Sebo, Meigs High School; Rick Buckley, Eastern High
School and Robert Kinney, Ohio Board of Tax Appeals,
Division of County Affairs, Columbus, speaker.

STUDENTS AND SPEAKERS attending the Meigs
County Tax Structure Workshop Tuesday at the Trinity
Church were front row, 1-r, Tom Hanun, Southern High
School; Frederick Stocker, Professor, College of Administrative Sciences, Ohio State University, speaker; Dale

business inventories, livestock, morning and afternoon session
and business furniture and were Charles Blakeslee, Meigs
fixtures. Automobiles and County Extension Agent who
trucks, however, are exempt, as outlined the purpose of the
are household goods, Stocker Workshop; Bernard Fultz,
Prosecuting Attorney, who
noted.
The end result of the tax discussed the local tax strucstructure proves that real ture; William Shaw and Al
estate taxes in Meigs County Pugh, who compared county
are lower than in most counties taxes and examined the state
in Ohio; the costs of the total tax structure, Robert Kinney of
operation of the schools in the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals,
Meigs County represents about discussed reappraisals, how
74 per cent of the real estate taxes are determined and
tax; the real estate tax on a reappraisal guidelines and Dr.
property in Meigs County with a Stocker who spoke on principles
market value of $20,000 would and criteria for evaluating tax
be about $280; if this property structure and also the ills of the
were located in the lowest real present tax system together
estate tax district in Ohio the with alternatives for improving
tax would be about $130; if it.
The purpose of the workshop
located in the highest real
estate tax district, about $640; was to assist area residents in
state and local taxes in Ohio are understanding present taxes in
lower than other similar states; relation to present need and in
a family in Ohio with an income
of $2,000 to $3,000 pays about 14
per cent in state and local taxes,
those with incomes of $5,000 to
$6,000 pays about 10 per cent in
state ?nd local taxes, and those
of $ 0,000 and over p y about 6
per cent in state and local taxes
Other speakers during the

I

By Helen Bottel

lI

shared our poverties together,
but now we may have to part
because we only have $122.50 a
month to live on and it isn't
enough. We love each other too
much for that.
Bills have piled up because of
sickness and we can't work for
the same reason. I'm disabled. I
lost my church, and haven't
been able to support us for a
long time. But circumstances
don't break love.
How can we stay together and
not have to go into "homes"? REV. J.C.
Dear Rev. C. :
I've sent your letter to an
agency in your North Carolina
city. Let's hope enough odd jobs
can be found for you and your
wife so that you may stay
together! -H.
Dear Helen:
My husband insists that the
children go to bed right on the
Dear Helen:
dot of 10 p.m.; be in no later
I have written the script for a than 11 on date nights, even
sex movie - very "X." Where though a dance lasts until 12;
could I market it? - FLORRIE talk on the telephone seven
Dear Florrie:
minutes or less - any more and
Movie scripts generally sell it gets banged down by him.
through agents, and reputable
I try to show him that a little
agents seldom accept unknown "give" makes children easier to
writers .
manage, but he says "Give 'em
Moreover, ''very X'' sex an inch ... "
movies don't rely on "plot," and
Is it right to be so rigid? use more "strip" than script. SOFTIE, or ANYWAY SOFSorry I can't be more enTER.
couraging. - H.
DearS:
Your husband is so tied up in
"nots" that he's lost track of
Dear Helen:
I found a nickel in the road real discipline, which is:
and I used it for a stamp to send Teaching responsibility through
this letter. The extra penny was wise decisions. "Timeclock
about all we had in the house. parents" take the easy way My wife and I have been but it's definitely not the best!
H.
married 40 years and have

LOVE ME LOVE MY OOGOR SHOULD THE DOG GO?
Dear Helen :
I am a woman living alone. I
have a dog and a boy friend. I
like them both, but they don't
hke each other. When the three
of us are alone, all they do is
growl and bicker and this
makes me miserable.
One has got to go. Which
should I get rid of and which
should I keep? My dog was here
first. - H.A.P.
Dear H:
This relationship needn't "go
to the dog." Why not consign
him to the garage or back yard
and get on with your romance?
After all, a dog doesn't expect
the run of the house EVERY
minute, does he? (And .if you
answer "Yes" - goodbye boy
friend!) - H.

3 ROOMS ;
,NEW
FURNITURE
$349.95
$3:&gt;.00 Uown-

Balance On
Conve'nient
Terms.

MASON

FURNITURE
.Mason , W. Va .

AWARDS ARE GIVEN
NORMAN, Okla. (UPI)
Clifford Feldman of WEWS-TV
in Cleveland won second place
in the news documentary category of annual National Press
Photographers Association competition.
Felman was cited for his documentary, "Chris."

You have 30 days to purchase
your 1971 Ohio license plates.
Please don't wait until the last
hour of the 30th day to purchase
yours. This message from your
Bureau of Motor Vehicles.

Accept Height

!Helen Help Us!
l

judging possible alternatives.
There was no attempt to support any particular plan, only to
assist in determining the most
desirable reforms, if any.

DR. LAWRENCE E~ LAMB

r---------------------------1
I

With this far - reaching base
of support, a dairy industry
spokesman predicted: "I don't
think there is any question
about our getting the appropriation this year."
"We have the votes," said

Patrick B. Healy, secretary of
the National Milk Producers
Federation, in an interview here.
Healy conceded the administration could refuse to spendthe school milk subsidy money
even if Congress appropriates
it. But he said congressional
and other pressures to continue
the program make it "almost
sure" the administration would
accept the predicted Capitol Hill
verdict.
The major impact of the administration drive to kill the
milk program, Healy said,
might turn out to be a blunting
of efforts to raise the appropriation. Lawmakers and lobbyists
fighting to prevent outright cancellation of the program would
have less leverage in trying to
boost the funding closer to the
legally authorized level of $125

FOR
TOGETHER
COUPLES

Easter Seal Fund Drive Explained

Ohio Tax Structure Explained
Ohio is more dependent on
locally collected taxes, with
property taxes making up 100
per cent of the local tax in Ohio,
Dr.
Frederick
Stacker,
Professor, College of Administrative Sciences at Ohio
State University, said at a Tax
Structure Workshop Tuesday at
the Trinity Church.
Dr. Stocker explained that the
problems today are a result of
decisions made in the 1930s. The
General Assembly is being
forced to do something, and
quickly, Stocker noted. One
solution to the tax problem
would be to increase sales tax
from the present rate of 4 cents
to 6 or 7 cents on the dollar.
Another avenue would be a
personal income tax, based on
income as defmed for federal
tax purposes, with half the
revenue to be returned to the
county of origin for distribution
among local governments
within the county according to
some equitable basis.
Stocker alsc
ta"&lt;&gt;Ible per
IS wt.at hits b
hard" Such
of machiner)

cut It out of the Agriculture
Department budget for the 197172 fiscal year. Whitten heads a
House appropriations subcommittee which voted to fund the
milk program for the current
year despite administration objections and probably will repeat the performance for the
1971 - 72 budget.
The list of co-signers on the
letter to Whitten underlined the
way backing for the milk program cuts across normal liberal - conservative, urban - rural
and Democratic - Republican
lines on Capitol hill.

million.
Under the milk program, the
federal government subsidizes
the sale of half-pint cartons o.
milk to children of all income
groups in schools, summer
camps and other non - profit
child care programs. The subsidies do not cover milk served
as an integral part of regular
school lunches, but concentrate
instead on promoting additional
milk sales either at lunchtime
or at recess "milk breaks." •
White House officials havC'!""'"
said they want to eliminate the
program because it provides
subsidies to the rich as well as
the poor. Government aid of ·
this kind should be reserved,
President Nixon said recently,
for the needy.

And 'Think Tall'

knuckles between the teeth.
Try this for several days and
Dear Dr. Lamb - For soon you may have enough
some time I have had a m o v e m e n t to open your
cracking in the jaw-hinge, mouth normally.
especially when eating. This
... * *
is not painful, but the crackDear Dr. Lamb - I have
ing noise is most embarras- a problem. I am 22 years old
sing and sometimes I find it and I'm only five feet tall.
somewhat difficult to open This is my problem - my
my mouth very wide. What hC'ight. I don't want to be
is the cause? Is there any five feet the rest of my life.
There must be something
remedy?
Dear Reader - The jaw- medicine can do. I am
hinge is a joint and like all ashamed of my height. I am
other joints it can become healthy but short. It is not
inflamed and it can even worth living this way.
develop arthritis.
Dear Reader - I am not
The limitation of motion of nearly as concerned about
your jaw you mention could your height as I am your atalso be caused by spasm of titude. There is some truth
the jaw muscle. A normal to the old saying that good
person with good mobility of things come in small packthe jaw should be able to ages. Napoleon was short,
open the mouth wide enough for one example. At your
to stick the knuckles of the age the long bones in the
first three fingers between legs and thighs that affect
the teeth. If the problem is height have matured and are
just muscular, exercises in not likely to grow. That
opening the mouth may help. limits what can be done.
I would suggest first that you
I understand and sympathize with your feeling but
should see your dentist.
If there are no changes in you are going to have to
the joint and the problem is learn to look on the positive
muscular, you might try a side of life. Why don't you
home remedy. Take a piece see your doctor and arrange
of ice and rub it gently over for some counseling with a
the jaw muscle on both sides psychiatrist. It won't help
of the face. Then try to open you grow taller physically
the mouth as wide as you but it can elevate your mood.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
can and force perhaps two
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

Calls

ails

COLOR

accepted
9 to 9

accepted
9t 9

TELEVISIO N
REPAIR I
Serving
Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE CO.
Ph. 675-2241
or

773-5196
Repairmen

Jim Durbir.

Chuck Inscore

~~~t•z

~NAME

'!'' • '•MH-ii·;·&gt; "r'i:""tr-;~
l'J

, ADDRESS

~
SAVE 52.00
r. On serv1ce ca II.

~

~

;']
~Expires 3- 18-71. To be~
1.: returned with service ~

~. . . o,r~~~..... -- ~... ..,..... ...,.., ~ .... . .,. ... _,.. . . ~ ....~~

(Continued from page 1)
national voluntary agency
speaking and acting in behalf of
the crippled.
It was further reported that
Easter Seal societies at
national, state and local levels
are governed by volunteer
boards with a total membership
of 40,000 men and women who
represent professional fields
and businesses. In addition,
over a half million volunteers
assist the professional staff in
fund raising, transportation of
patients, counseling and other
tasks contributing to the
rehabilitation of the han-

dicapped.
The National Easter Seal
chairman is actor Robert
Young who says, "On my visits
to Easter Seal rehabilitation
centers, I was keenly aware
that because of the wonderful
work, most of these children
will grow up happy and self
confident, able to hold their own
in the world," Mrs. Simons
stated.
The Ohio Easter Seal
chairman is Danny Scholl, a
handicapped individual tilmself
who through a battle of injuries,
strokes and attacks that left
him with the promise that he

Taylors Honor Pte. Paul Rose
RACINE - A recent social
event of this area was a Sunday
dinner held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Taylor in honor
of their grandson, PFC Paul
Rose. Enjoying the day with
them were Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hudson and Toni, Mr. and Mrs.
Shelby Pickens, and Ronnie,
Kathy and Jay; Mr. and Mrs.
Benny Bickers and Scotty;
Ralph Rose, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Rose and the honored
guest, Paul.
Other Rose family activities
were when Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Rose were honored
Sunday with an anniversary
dinner at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus
Weaver and daughter, Juanita,
of Letart, Route 2, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Holter,
Morning Star, and Dan Earich,
Columbus, called at the home of

their uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Rose, Friday evening.
Warren Rose and son PFC Paul
Rose were in Coolville, Ohio and
Parkersburg, W. Va. on
business Monday after:1oon.
Supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Rose on Monday were
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Bickers
and Scotty of Oak Grove
community. Also calling on his
parents were Mr and Mrs.
Chester Rose.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rose
celebrated their first wedding
anniversary Monday.
Mrs. Martha Rose has been
quite ill with flu and possible
pneumonia.
Benny Bickers called at the
home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Bickers and daughter
Kim, one evening this week.
Paul Moore of Carmel called
on Warren Rose Monday.

would never walk or talk again
was aided through the Easter
Seals and has overcome the
handicaps.
Mrs. Simons brought to the
attention of ministers that the
churches' ministry to people
usually involves the spiritual
and physical needs of its constituency. This latter need could
be aided through funds and
services to the society she said
as she stressed the importance
of the ministers being aware of
the many agencies of concern in
Meigs County of which Easter
Seals are a part.
A booklet listing various
publications on how to understand and work with many
kinds of handicaps was shown
at the meeting and it was announced that the publications
are available for a few cents
each.
Each minister was given
Easter Seal posters for display
in his respective churches and
was given a preview of the
Easter Seal mailing. The
ministers were also the first to
receive their seals. The official
mailing will be Saturday,
March 13.

W I'IH HIS&amp;
HER BIR'IHS'IOIIIS.
Today' s couples get it together with
his and her synthetic birthsto•
on a 10 Karat yellow or white gOl'd
ring ... also matching pendant with
chain. YOUR
CHOICE

$1795

Immediate delivery.

A Aoral Tribute
Sent to the Home
Or the Chapel
Always A
Welcomed and
Appreciated Gesture

Dudley's Florist
992-5560

59 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, 0.

•
They don't have to be in school
to talk back to the.teacher.
We have a special school-to-home telephone so your budd1ng
gen ius doesn't have to miss a minute of school. It's easy to install
and use. Our Service Representative can g ve you details. Everyone we know thinks 1t's a great idea. Except for a few buddmg
geniuses.

General Telephone

•
•

�.----------------------------------~-----~-

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

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

J Washington
I
I

I
I
I

R

t
epor

I

The President recently
submitted his second annual
message on the environment to
• congress. This message builds
' upon the 37-point environmental
program set forth by the Ad, ministration one year ago and
expands upon the progress
• made during the past 12
months.
There can be no doubt about
our growing national concern
and commitment to find
. solutions to the problems of our
• environment. Ever increasing
• funds are being set aside at the
: state and local level to contend
with pollution and federal
spending for this purpose is at
an all-time high. ' •
:
The President's message
• requested $2.45 billion for
: programs of the newly formed
:" Environmental
Protection
: • Agency. This is more than
: double the amount appropriated
: in fiscal year 1971. Problems
: coming under the jurisdiction of
• the EPA include those of air and
• water pollution, disposal of solid
: waste and pesticide control
: programs.
:
The President also requested
::' that $6 billion be authorized and
.... appropriated by Congress over
~e next three years as the
federal share of a $12 billion
waste treatment facilities
program.
In addition, the executive
..... message called for increased
federal powers for the EPA with
the added provision that the
agency's powers could be expanded if polluters do not meet
a standards within a reasonable
'fl"period of time or if repeated
• pollution violations are in
evidence.
Some specific White House
proposals include:
;:- Leaded gasoline: the
• President proposed a special
tax to make the price of

!
I
I

By Clarence
Miller

I
I

I
I
unleaded gasoline lower than
the price of leaded gasoline.
- Oil spills: $25 million has
been provided in next year's
budget for development of
better techniques to prevent
and clean up oil spills and to
provide more effective surveillance. The Council on Environmental Quality in conjunction with the Department of
Transportation and the Environmental Protection Agency
will review what further
measures can be developed to
deal with the problem. The
Senate will be asked to consent
to the two new international
conventions on oil spills and the
pending amendments to the 1954
Oil Spills Convention for the
Prevention of Pollution of the
Sea by Oil.
-Waste recycle: much solid
waste, such as paper and scrap
can be recycled and used in new
products. To encourage the
recycling of materials, the
government is eliminating a
number of existing federal
hurdles which are unnecessary
and have, in the past, prevented
the reuse of valuable materials.
- Ocean dumping: proposal
of a national policy banning
unregulated ocean dumping of
all materials and placing strict
limits on ocean disposal of any
materials harmful to the environment. Proposed legislation
that will require a permit from
the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency
for any materials to be dumped
into the oceans, estuaries, or
Great Lakes and that will
authorize the Administrator to
ban dumping of wastes which
are dangerous to the marine
ecosystem.
- Land use: a national land
use policy is proposed to
preserve our wilderness
system, restore and maintain

;•Bryan to Address
Distri t Lions
Th 5t annual
Distr.d 13K Lions
be held at the Sou
Coh mbus, Satu a_y
unday, Mar. 13 and 14.
District Gov. Evan J. Davis,
Beverly, said the guest speaker
for the Sunday evening banquet
will be W. R. (Dick) Bryan,
immediate past president of
Lions International, who after a
year's leave of absence, has
_ returned to the Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Co. in a newly
created capacity as Executive
f Director of Community Services.
Lion Bryan is a native
Ohioan, having been educated
at Ohio State University,
College of Wooster, and Harvard Graduate School. During
the year 1969-1970 as president
of Lions International, he
traveled over 350,000 miles by

arr visited 86 nations, had
audiences with 52 heads of
state, and delivered more than
600 addresses.
Lion Bryan has been a past
national officer, American
Society for Training and
Development, member at large
National Council Boy Scouts of
America, past chairman of the
United Fund and YMCA
campaigns, and is a past
member of the board of
education and park board
council.
Bryan
was
in
Sales
Operations, Fiannce, and
Personnel prior to his present
assignment. As executive
director of community services
he travels mol'e than 70,000
miles each year, makes more
than 150 personal appearances
annually on the speakers
platform, television, and radio.

•$48,581 is Paid Already

our historic sites, and prevent
environmental degradation
from mining.
The President also called
upon foreign nations to join us in
con tending with ecological
problems common to more than
one nation and the establishment of the Environmental
Institute with the responsibility
of studying the entire environmental spectrum and its
effect on national welfare.
The President pointed out in
his message that winning the
war on pollution will require
adjustments at every level of
our society. It takes money to
meet such a major national
commitment.
It is important to remember,
however, that the cost we will
face if this commitment is not
met will ultimately be far
greater than the financial
commitments we must bring to
these endeavors now.
We must maintain the
initiatives we have begun. I'm
confident that we can have
clean air and water and that we
can assure ourselves of a
healthy environment without
economic restraints that would
seriously affect our free en-.
terprise system.

-----~

Junior 4-H Leaders Holding _
Fifth Round-Up at College
Junior Leaders of 4-H clubs
from the nine~ounty Jackson
Area will meet March 12 and 13
at Rio Grande College for the
fifth annual Junior Leader
Round-Up.
Theme of this year's conference is "Leadership the
Basis
for
Tomorrow.''
Keynoting the program for this
year will be Wayne Murphy,
Assistant State Leader, 4-H,
Ohio State University; Don
Fitzer from Armco Steel Corporation; Robert J. Fanning
from
Holzer
Hospital,
Gallipolis, the Rev. Jack
Beyerly, Pastor, Presbyterian
Church, Logan, and faculty
from Rio Grande College.
Discussion groups plus work
sessions for the Round-Up will
include such topics as "Understanding
Oneself'',
"Teenage
Dating
and
Marriage",
"Personal
Leadership Abilities," "Understanding Young People" and

SEATED SAM waits for one of his swift couriers and
watches the world go by along a roadside near Brodhead, Wis. In dressing up his address with the mailbox
figure, owner Donal~ Moore gave Sam a seat because
"I thought he was tired."

an indepth study of career
opportunities.
Junior Leader Round-Up is a
conference designed for older 4H youth in local 4-H clubs who
wish to increase their abilities
in individual leadership as well
as group leadership responsibilities. In addition to these
goals, there is a career opportunities session planned for
the conference on Saturday
morning and afternoon.
The program will conclude
Saturday afternoon with a tour
of Kyger Creek Power Company and a keynote speech by
Dr. Alphus Christensen,
President of Rio Grande
College.
Over 130 Junior Leaders are
expected to attend. Counties
participating are: Athens,
Gallia, Hocking, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Jackson, Scioto
and Vinton.
Junior leader representatives
on the Round-Up planning

Our Fryers Are All U.S. Gov't. Inspt.

committee are Joe Hawk, Steve
Short, Connie Davis, Maggi~
Taylor, Mitch Fields, Jeff
Schafer, Ed Wheeler, Lana
Barker, Vickie Melvin, Rick
Gampp and Marilyn Harper.
Sponsors of this educational
leadership development and
careers conference is the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service
as a part of the Ohio State
University.
BROTHERS CHARGED
CARO, Mich. (UPI)- Albert
Holman, 40, of Kingston, Mich.
and his brother, Kenneth Holman, 37, Akron, were being
held here in the slaying of RobertS. Albertson of Brown City,
Mich.
The Holmans were arraigned
in District Court Monday and
ordered held in lieu of $50,000
bond each.
Albertson was found severely
beaten and robbed lying along
a road about five miles west of
Marlette.

Special Low Price!- Clleclc and Compare!

Fresh Sausage
COUNTRY
TREAT
WHOLE
HOG

1-lb.

pkg.

69c

QTRS. - 3 LEG QTRS.
lb.]]e
Box of Chicken 3-BREAST
3-WINGS - 3 GIBlETS
Frylng Chicken Le9s • • • • • 1b.SCJc
Fresh Chicken Breasts • • • • ib.69c
4 Legged Fryers • • • • • • lb.49c
Double Breasted Fryer • • • lb. SSe
Pork Butt Steaks • • • • • • Jb.69c
Pork Chops si~L~IN. • • • • • • 1b.8CJc

Swiss Steak R~~~BL~~~E. •
Charcoal Steaks • • • •
Chicken Style Steaks • •
Beef Rib Steaks • • • •
Boneless Chuck Roast • •
Sausages sw1FT:s
PREMIUM
BROWN &amp; SERVE •
• •

sk·1n1ess

w·1eners

"SUPERRIGHT"

•

Jb.99c
• lb. $139
• lb. $149
• lb. Sl19
• lb.SCJc
• :;6sc
1-Jb. 69c
• p]q-.
•

•
•
•
•

•

• • •

IEEF
Oscar Mayer Bologna ORALLREGULAR
.:::.4tc
0 SCar M ayer ORCOTTO
SALAMI
LUNCH MEAT •
.
!:::SSe
•
Eckrich Franks :e'±r • • • • • !:.7fc
Sultana or Swanson Dinners • --~
Sliced Bacon ~o • • • • •- 2 ~. SJ19
Perch Fillets !~~~ . • • • • • !:. 6Sc
Dressed Whiting • • • • 5 :!: $)99

..

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sse

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Lady Scott

Zest

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TISSUE

DEODORANT
SOAP
•

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SIZE

•

ORANGE, GRAPE OR PUNCH

REGULAR

• •

2 25c Freshlike • • • • • • • 4 .... 79c
. 2 25c Tr icana Drinks . •

4

SWEET PEAS 14-oz.
CUT GREEN BEANS 12..q,
FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS 12.oz..

roll
pack

•

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Stock Up and Save Morel

MIXED VEGET ABL.ES

GIANT SIZE

Veg-AII

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,,~0~. - sgc

however, that black lung
benefits for a miner or his
widow are reduced by the
amount of State workmen's
cans
compensation, unemployment
compensation,
or
State
disability insurance payments, HUNT'S
if these benefits are based on
the miner's disability.
•
A number of claims have had
to be denied, Ermatinger said, HUNT'S
because one or more of the
requirements of the law are not HUNT'S
met. Persons whose claims are
not approved are notified in
•
writing of the reason and ad- LIBBY'S CUT GREEN BEANS OR
vised to get in touch with their
• •
local social security office - by
phone, if convenient - if they JANE PARKER
want more information or want
• •
reconsideration.

lb.

WITH COUPON BELOW!

WITH COUPON BELOW! - 6c OFF LABEL

In Black Lung Benefits
More than 43 miners, their
dependents and widows in the
. Meigs County area are
receiving monthly Federal
"black lung" benefits.
· Eugene Ermatinger, Social
Security manager in Marietta,
said payments totaling $48,581
have already been made to
these folks under the benefit
previous of the Federal Coal
Mine Health and Safety Act
signed by President Nixon in
• December, 1969.
Throughout the nation, Ermatinger said, more than
150,000 persons have already
received over $150 million in
benefits under this program.
About 250,000 claims nationwide
' have been filed since the law
started and the Social Security
Administration
IS
doing
t.tsverything it can to spee~ up
final action on the remammg
claims so that applicants can
have a decision.
Monthly benefits are paid to
miners who are totally disabled
by pneumoconiosis (black lung)
and to their ' dependents, or to
widows and children of miners
who were disabled by or died
.,.from the disease arising out of
~ mployment in underground
coal mines.
Monthly payments under an
• approved claim are retroactive
to the date of application and
can be made regardless of how
long ago the disability occurred
or when the miner died, Ermatinger said. He pointed out,

-~-~-~~---------~~-~----·---~

3-lbb~~·OI. 6

gc 4f
~~ -

j

·romato Paste • . 6 !: $100 Sweet Pickles
49c
•
•
Snack Pack Puddings 4~ 59C
6 1:..-::- .s1 oo
Tomato Sauce • .7 ~ $100 Golden Corn
.4 ·=$100
Libby's Peas
•
a4 f.!~ 89c
White Bread
•
WE PICK BRAND

"SUPER-RIGHT"

Beef Stew • • • • • .~&amp;5c
''SUPER-RIGHT"
Vienna Sausages • .3:: 79c
ENCORE
Margarine • • • • •5 1-lb. $100
MARVEL
Sherbet FJ'~6Rs • • • • %~~ &amp;9c
A&amp;P FROZEN
Orange Juice • • . 3 $100

32-u.
far

A&amp;P BRAND-WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE

GR;DE

pkp.

=

1

DEAN WILL TEACH
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) - Dr.
Karl E. Limper will resign as
dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences at Miami University
here at the end of the academic year and return to teaching.
Limper has held the dean's
post since 1959. He said he
would begin teaching geology at
Miami in the fall .
By today·s standards of -=:-=-r.:.CI YALUAILE COUPON EIIEIIC:.::.(I
judgment. had a rad1o and
Cold Power Detergent
televi'&gt;ion news crew been
around to cover the firing on
GIANT SIZE
WITH THIS
l·lb., 1-0L
fort Sumter, the networks
pkg.
COUPON
would have been blamed for
Good 111111 S.tvnlay, March 13th. In All
startin g the Civil War.

6CJc

Wollr!T !\ Scl11oor tz presi
1/11 '11/ f!JI' /\HC

llf'IWI!01'k .

Columbua Dlvltlon

A&amp;P'--c&gt;ne Per Family.

I e
Freshl ek

r-=-=-=,EA!.- 14ool. FlENCH STYLE
or CUT GldN IEAH!.-12.....

4 7fJc
am.

Zest Deodorant Soap

WITH THIS
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l&gt;c OFF
LABEL

Good llliV Setunlay. March 13th. In All
Columbut Dfvlalon A&amp;.P'--c&gt;ne Per Family.

2

l"fll'·
bar
pack

25C

WIT!:i
THI;,
COUPON

Good 'lbrv Seturdaoy. llforc:h 13th. In All
Columbus Division A&amp;r--c&gt;ne Per F~mlty.
.A Hi

;

I

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YALUAILE COUPON

Lady Scott BA~~

2;:! 25C

WITH THIS
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Good ThN Saturday, lbrc:h 13th. In AI
Columbus Division A&amp;P"~ Par Family.
HE

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

Shower Given Mrs. Tom Woods
Mrs. Harold Wolfe entertained recently at her
Rutland home with a layette
shower honoring her sister-inlaw, Mrs. Tom Woods (nee
Mary Wolfe). Mrs. Raymond
Blossers was a contributing
hostess.
The gift table was centered
with a stork replica loaned to
Mrs. Wolfe by the Rutland
Department Store. Accenting a
curtain behind the table were
large pink, blue and white tissue
paper flowers.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Sandy
Hanning, Miss Anna Hanson,

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
F&amp;AM Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Work in Master Mason Degree.
All Master Masons invited.
FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE of White
Shrine of Jerusalem Friday 8
p.m. I.O.O.F. Hall, Pomeroy.
Election of officers. Potluck
refreshments.
Add Saturday
BAND DANCE Saturday at
Southern High School 9:30 to 12 .
p.m. Music by "Quintet" from
Athens. Admission 75 cents.
Sponsored by Southern Band
Boosters.

Surprise Birthday
Party Given Sunday
A surprise birthday party was
held Sunday evening honoring
Giles Smith at his Rutland
home.
Guests were Mrs. Richard
Grueser and son, Charles, Mr.
and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Swan, their
daughter and her son, Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Grate and family,
Vicky Grate, John Grate, Don
Hysell, Miss Gloria Hesson,
Diana Denny; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Edwards, Mike, Danny
and Ricky.
He also received a telephone
call from
daughter,
Charlotte, a
Laura
and DaVId of
who were UllL
observance.

Mrs. Virginia Davis, Mrs. Betty
Denny, and Mrs. Dorothy
McGuffin.
Mrs. Wolfe served a dessert
course carrying out the pink
and blue color scheme.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Wendy
Stewart, Mrs. Margaret Rose,
Mrs. Tessie Evans, Mrs. Fannie
Phillips, Miss Clara Garland,
Mrs. Elizabeth Stewart, Mrs.
Helen Diddle, Miss Debbie
McGuffin, Mrs. Audry Haley,
Mrs. Lillian Demosky, Mrs.
Margaret Van Cooney, Mrs.

Serving Ohioans
SINCE 1923

A $10 contribution was made
to the George Thompson Kidney
Furrd at a recent meeting of the
Friendly Neighbors Club held at
the home of Mrs. Paul Taylor.
Plans were made for a visit to
the Meigs County Infirmary
with Easter boxes for each
resident. A dinner was set for
later this month at Oscar's
Restaurant in Gallipolis.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. Taylor was won by Mrs.
Emerson Well. Games were

The culture and care of
begonias was discussed by Mrs.
Anna Ogdin at a recent meeting
of the Wilkesville Garden Club
held at the Ogdin home.
Mrs. Jewell Strong gave a
presentation on the use of the
cold frame, and Mrs. Dorothy
Long read an article entitled
"Old Worlds Add to Our Garden's Charm".
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Erma Nelson with members
responding to roll call by
naming a new bulb they plan to
plant this spring.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Ogdin to those named and
Mrs. Jane Bowles, Mrs. Clara
Shenefield, Mrs. Jennie Maddie, Mrs. Marian Koenecke, and
Mrs. Ruby Lambert.

To Attend Seminar
Mrs.
Harold
Lohse,
director of District 13, Ohio
Congress of Parents and
Teachers; Mrs. Richard
Vaughan,
Ohio
PTA
publications chairman and
president ofthe Meigs County
Council of Parents and
Teachers; and Mrs. Larry
Spencer, Council delegate
and president of the Middleport PTA, will be in
Columbus Thursday and
Friday for the Ohio PTA
seminar on legislation.
Emphasis of the meeting
will be on working out ways of
getting local support for tax
reform and channeling more
money into education.

SATURDAY•
MARCH 11-12-13
LADIES' FiNE .

LADIES' NEW

Pant Suits

DRESSES

$1 199

Special Group

Adult Class
Election Held
Officers for the Adult Sunday
School Class of the First
Southern Baptist Chapel were
elected during a meeting
Sunday afternoon at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Herschel McClure, Pomeroy.
The meeting followed a
covered dish dmner. Elected
were Dale Coleburn, president;
Carolyn Dailey, vice president;
Mrs. Jane Snouffer, secretarytreasurer;
and
William
Snouffer, devotional chairman.
The group discussed cottage
prayer meetings prior to
revival services and also made
plans for beginning a boys
activity program known as
Royal Ambassadors. The next
meeting was set for April 8. For
devotions each member gave a
verse of scripture. Attending
besides those named were Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Coleman.

j

BY JACK O'BRIAN
LAINIE KAZAN CAN'T
AVOID THE ISSUE
NEW YORK - Last season,
the Big Interview for all
magazines was Katie Hepburn;
this year it's Ruby Keeler ....
Lainie Kazan's "marriage" to
Briton Peter Daniels turns out
not to be: Lainie now says the
ceremony with the father of her
rapidly approaching baby was
"symbolic" and not performed
by a clergyman after all . .. ..
They won'tlet the poor girl stay
dead: a play about Marilyn
Monroe's tragically shabby life
just opened in Germany ....
Lawrence Welk's little crew of
40 will one-night at Madison
Square Garden next September
for 60 per cent of the gross vs. a
$35,000 guarantee.
The Ringling Bros. Circus
was sold just a couple of years
ago by John Ringling North to
Irving and Israel Feld and Roy
Hofheinz for $5,500,000 (and
there was a pile of cash in the
corporation at selling time) and the Big Top just has agreed
on the deal to sell the shebang to
the rich Mattei Toy Co. for
$48,000,000.
The Paradise Cafe in Rego
Park, L. I., launched its own nosmoking campaign : Owner
Jack Farrell charges one dollar
a pack for the coffin nails,
which buck is deposited
elaborately right in front of the
purchaser in a cancer Care
canister; customers always
cringe a little and have
something to think about even if
they persist .... Uncle Sam's
sponsoring a college project the
junior bubbleheads won't
picket: The U. of Missouri is
researching something useful to
do with used glass containers
.. .. No problem when we were
kids - mom just washed and
sterilized the glass jars and we

Hairdresser Thomas Cramer
of the Beverly Hills hairarchy is
writing a book - but not about
hairdos - about bagels, their
history, variety, textures, taste,
calories, etc .... Which reminds
us:
The Stage Deily's
comestibles, notably bagels,
remain as tasty and splendid as
when Max and Hymie Asnas they sold out for a million
dollars - operated the world's
most
famous
Jewish
delicatessen .... Nudie Shelly
Plimpton of "Hair" swears on a
stack of goosebumps she wears
fewer clothes in her "Glen and
Randa" film than she does in
"Hair"; what's the pejorative
limit of nothing?
Big birthday here May 1: The
Empire State Building will be 40
years old .... Women's Lib attacks on Playboy must've got to
High Hefner: he just awarded
his mag's cartoon editor,
Michelle Urry, a raise to boost
her pay up to all other editors on
her level .... And Hef memoed
everyone that pay scales are no
longer to be a one-male-street
.... Noel Behn (Kremlin Letter)
is helping actor Patrick O'Neal
write an original screenplay ;
behind Noel's opaque beard
shines a kindly character.
Fred Waring tells us he's not
retiring tho his heart attack
over the holidays caused him to
send out his annual Pennsylvanians' concert-tours with
other conductors .... Fred's
swanking out his recovery in
Palm Springs and hopes to join,
or anyway visit, his troupe
!'Cmetime next month ....
"People have been coming to
see us for 54 years and I'm
grateful," Fred told us.
Here's more about Howard
Hughes to counter the sick-

comic japes flung at the eccentric but never mad HH:
Hospitals today use electrified
beds based on Howard's own
practical imagination .... When
recovering from his near-death
plane crash, he designed a bed
with six movable sections and
30 push-button controls .... And
they're now easing pain and
discomfort for the old and ill ....
We saw one in aN. Y. hospital
(its cost is astronomical
compared to old one-position
hand-crank hospital beds}
which virtually does the frug at
an operator's whim .... We sadly
also saw three little boys, not
much more than infants, being
treated for vicious parental
beatings .... One little type, arm
in a cast, hung around a
grownup whose child was in the
hospital for a week of tests, and
the lad attached himself to the
man; after a few days of
friendship, the tiny and
somehow seemingly constantly
cheerful little victim, as he
passed two of his similarly
afflicted friends, confided to
them : "This is my daddy." ....
Tears your heart out.
Joanne Woodward and Arlene
Francis confided to each other
at L'Aiglon they're on a slimkick: both have taken up ballet
.... What do Pat Nixon and
Ladybird Johnson have in
conunon apart from their First
Ladyships?
Both
were
proposed-to on their very first
dates with future Presidents ....
Age of Vulgarity: fan mag
cover-headline : "Flip Wilson:
'My mother Ran Out on Me for a
Lover.' "
Vernon and Irene Castle
weren't their real names:
Vernon Castle was born Vernon
Castle Blythe and his dancing
bride was Irene Foot Castle and weren't their original tags
s imply rolling in verisimilitude? Or onomatopoeia?
Oh, go look them up ; we did.

799

•

2 :nd

Each

3.99

Big Selection Of
SPRING DRESSES

Tapered , long tail, never iron,
permanent press. Famous Campus . •
Asst. styles , plain colors, stripes and
plaids, bright new spr ing colors.

Ch()(Hie now from a wide selection of new spring and
Easter styles. Juniors, misses and half sizes.

Choose from a wide choice of
tine quality fabrics in the best
spring shades.

Closeout Values to 3.99 &amp; 4.99
MEN 'S FALL &amp; WINTER

Ladies' Seamless Stretch
FINE QUALITY NYLON

SPORT SHIRTS

CHILDREN'S

PANTY HOS

50~

Final Closeout of famous
made mens sport and dress
shirts .
Plain
co l ors ,
stripes , p l a i ds. S-M-L .
Never need Ironing

BEITER
FOOTWEAR

First quality 100% ny
stretch panty hose in a
choice of pretty
shades - in sizes petite,
erage and tall.

Straps, sandle oxfords,
loafers . Brown and
black. Closeout Group
values to 3.99. Save
Now.

:J

eRugseMatselid Covers • ._..-.::
·: .tank Sets •contour Ma

~aster

: Complete selection of ")~
.: queen" accessories in your
cholc.e ot 15 popular colon.

r=

in popular heel heights

~;:~ ~ sh•r· Patents,
;nt eof~ ~~J:e!!~itesp a~

•

···:: black.

Removable

,...,

washable cover.
Solid foam rubber.
Will not bunch or
mat. 100 percent
foam. Odorless, dust
proof. Sleep and
relax in comfort.

}\if~

$699
''PEPPERELL" Fl NE COTTON

:;:::

==:~

: ·~·
;:_::.

\r

TO

$

M USLFt~!u~tlPepPerell
s~L~

1Q99

~ ~\~

1

Ne~~'~i 7e~~· r:
Permanent Press

:j{··

SPORTS .: :;
DENIMS ·~\[:
Plain colors, strlpes and :t

in a supply.

72x108-81x99
Or Twin Fitted

ooT~

DOTTED
SWISS

$1 Yard
00

REG. 2.79 · 2 PIECE CHENILLE

Chenille. Skid
Asst. colors.
100
percent
':·

174_
SET

' :

SPECIAL
SELECTION!
4~ inch Reg. $1.00

PR. ~:

~

!!1
:\!

24xJ4 Size
CHENILLE RUGS

~·

~

PILLOW 99~

CASES

Pr.

FRESH As sPRING

•

Skid Resistant, 100
percent Rayon. 24x34
Size. Asst. colors. Fancv
fringe trim . Reg . 1.79
Value.

Vinyl Coated
Washable
high . quality Willpapers. An wl
washable vinyl coat:

CLOSEOUT GROUP!

ing for long lastin(

wall beauty.

VALUES TO 1.00 ASSORTED
Single

CHENILLE RUGS

Roll

88~

Sports Fabrics
AND
BLENDED PRINTS

CLOSEOUT! VALUES TO 2.99
27x40, 24x34 SIZE ASSORTED

A big group of fine quality sports fabrics and fancy blended prints. 45 inches

CHENILLE RUGS

wide. Regular $1.00

value.

Now

YARD

•

Each

:· ·
{.

Sizes regrouped for final
clearance. Fancy f r inge
trim . Br ight colors . Out
they go. Only 88c each .

o' "

$199

New 1971 designs ~

BATH MAT SET
A Genuine
resistance.
Washable ,
Rayon.

81x108 PEPPERELL

1*41&amp;/iE~~ri;;~~~::'Ji~;j~W~:'t~J!ijjJf;j(\fi;:;;q; "''

45 INcH FLocK
Dotted

Each.:

$4

fancy printed patterns. 45 ;:;::

$dl ?a?d

$179

FOOTWEAR
Values to 10.99. Broken
sizes. Closeout No's. Asst.
styles. Regrouped for final
clearance. Be Here Early.

Lay

ton sheets by

}!t~:~~~i·~~:;'~~u~i~;:;::;;,,]sf%+W+Ji£MJl/ittl:tri;;;h~ .
. . FABRICS r;
c~~~~s~TF~~u:swi~T~~·99

..,.... ~-.,.,. :etty

1.87EA

ACCESSORIES

Ladies' Spring and

....

inohos

4t

"FUR QUEEN" BATHROOM·

FOOTWEAR
BED PILLOWS ¥ ...!~..~~~?..w
:r•5 00
REG. 3.99 POSTURE FOAM

I
used 'em to drink water or to
can next winter's vegetables
and fruit .... Especially Mason
Jars.

fabrics in newest
spring styles and

GREAT COLLECTION OF OTHER
SPRING PANT SUITS

In Nurnberg, Ger.

r---~--------------------------------------

· quality bonded

:colors.

Daughter is Born
First Lieutenant and Mrs.
Roger Luckeydoo of Illsheim,
Germany are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Amy
Kathryn.
The infant was born Sunday
at the Army Hospital in
Nuernberg. She weighed nine
pounds, one ounce. Mr. and
Mrs. James Brewington of
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Luckeydoo of New Haven
are the grandparents. Mrs.
Revna King of Henderson, W.
Va. and Mrs. Edward Greer, Sr.
of Greer, S. C. are the greatgrandparents.

SPORT
SHIRTS
9

: =~al_!':b!ase $

lb'*· ,_ -

New IPl'iDC
bonded fabrics
in new sprint
colon.

MEN'S NEW
SPRING

FOR SPRING
Special Group

FOR SPRING

Voice along Broadway

AND ·sATURDAY
NIGHTS

AND

played with prizes going to Mrs.
Charles Werry, Mrs. Leon
McKnight and Mrs. Henry
Werry. Mrs. George Buchanan
won the door prize.
Refreshments were served to
the above and Mrs. Elwood
Bowers, Mrs. Maurice Venoy,
and Mrs. Willard Hines.

Begonia Care
Is Discussed

OPEN FRIDAY

POMEROY I OHIO •
THURSDAY
FRIDAY

$10 Donated to Kidney Fund

TWO WOMEN KILLED
OWENSVILLE, Ohio (UPI)Two elderly Owensville women
were killed when the car they
were riding in collided with a
truck on Ohio 50 near here in
Clermont County.
Killed Monday were Alma
Young, 59, and Milfred Moermood, 67.

1

Famous Brands • . Budget Prices•

Margaret Butcher, Mrs.
Blanche Wolfe, Mrs. Dolly
Woods, Miss Brenda Woods,
Mrs. Mildred Wolfe, Miss Beth
Ann Wolfe.
Others presenting glfts were
Mrs. Margie Blake, Mrs. Susie
Baer, Mrs. Sandy Henderson,
Mrs. Kay King, Mrs. Stella
Thomas, Miss Diane Rose, Mrs.
Ruth Blosser, Mrs. Sadie Wolfe,
Mrs. Maggie Jones, Mrs. Grace
Wolfe, Mrs. Lizzie Geary, Mrs.
Eileen Kernya, Mrs. Bessie
Ashley and Mrs. Dorothy
Harton.

Big special purc hase of better
a ssorted shag rugs. B1g Group.
Bright new colors. Fancy fringe
tr m . 100 perc ent
rayon
mac hine was hable.

BASKETBALL SHOES
L ow cu 1 and h igh cu• Black
nnd Wh 1•e. 2 1 2 to 6, 41 2 to 10.
Mens 61 z to 12. Amen can
Made

-~-----~------------------------~------- ··----

l 9 ~R

�•

•

•
GENERAL ELECTRIC

Rival

FM-AM TABLE RADIO

Can

An e)lceptional ..-olue in good FM ond AM ~stening and deon·lined 5tyling. • Solid
state design e Big -4" front fired dynamic speaker • Built-in AFC for drift free FM •
Drif1 comi)On)Of+on circuit ort\'Cnh station fading • Automatic Volume Control on AM
e D•r&amp;d tune dialing &amp; B"'ilt-in AM and FM antennas.

Opener

,99

10-Speed
HECK'S REG.

$17.88

Heck's Reg. '9.96

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

• Super 8 drop-ir~ corirodge film looding e
Electr+c f1lm d rive • Precision f j2.8lens • film
wpply +ndicotor • Runjlock control • Picture
window viewfinder • Stop/ go exposure indt-coton • New slimline styling • Adjustable

S11 88

•

SUNSET CASSEnE
RECORDING TAPE
Electronic shutter ond electric eye
automatically set correct exposure,
moke llosh pictures os perfectly os
,----:=_--, pictures in daylight. Duol imoge,
non-folding coupled ronge ond
viev.•finder. Big 3 1.4 "x4 Y"" pictures

•

CAN OPENER

HECK;-5 REG.

$137.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

lfiUIIIU"''IilldD

•

HA

GENERAL ELECTRIC

m=..........

HECK'S
REG.

PRO STYLE HAIR DRYER

$10.96

,. f~ mtit tor compete sets
Spot Mht for touch·up
Mtts. Sott pen.-trot.ng mist o•...eslono·lou:nc;~ Jeh, more
kntr')uS colonng e Lorge hood tO'twl and Iowen. CO\dy
e 4 posaion controJ- low, medium and t,i~h hea1, pha
rn st e Sry~d .n off-wtute kl.wende• and gold color •
hghtwe.ght compact de)tgn
easy to store or toke-

DELUXE MIXER

e

Push-button beater ejes;tor. •
Large chrome-plated beaters. •
Two-position turntable. e Can be
detached from stand for portable
use. • White baked enamel finish. • l and 3 qt. Pryex bowls. •
Powerful governor controlled
motor.

• Features "Easy-Clean" removable cut ter and pierce lever assembly.
• Mognet prevents lid from falling into
food .
• Designed to open oil standard size
household cons.
• Handy Cord Storage in rear for neot
appearance, on counter or shelf.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

BEACH

$2488

TAPE PLAYER

$5488

~0

G.E. STEAM TRAVEL IRON
• Can be used anywhere in
the U.S. • See-thru plastic
bu" holds wat•r lor 20 minutes of' 'team ironing time. •
Handle fotds tor easy packing
in t ravel bog or ai*Qche case
•Usb_tweight-only 1 ~ llo.o.

JEWElRY DEH..

G. E.
PORTABLE
VACUUM
CLEANER

•

"- .:.&gt; ___.--:)
~-~~
- ;~····
;_...~- ~~- -,\

'--

-

...... -

G.E. MUSTANG

'

STEREO
• Solid Stole Performonte • 4·Speed Drop·
Do ..... n Record Changer a Holds Up To SiJ
Records e Positive Size Seled•on-- 12'', 10",
7'' Discs • Repeot Ploy Option • ~S RPM

•

......

tridge • Two O.tochab1e SJ&gt;*oker Enclowres
wit!, .4'' Oynocoustic Speoken • Speoken

P.nclosores ~porote Up To 12

fe~t

$2477 •19

PORTABlE RADIO
e B1.11h·in cord, two woy power •
~tote design • BoHery Jover
circuit • J1'1" dynamic speaker a
Shoulder strop included • Sw•tcho
Solid

VANWYCK

ELECTRIC ALARM CLOCK

ICE CRUSHER

MV-2

Now oil the crushed ice you need at the
flip of o switch. Ideal for mixed and parf)l
drinks, snow cones ond for that extro
touch Use with salads or shrimp cocktail.

G.E.

~~~:'e;~~~u:;t:,.~:h~~~ ~=~oern~!) 2~~.

$4277

88

$777

Electric alarm is sleek·
looking off-white case
~~ ~
,
molded in &gt;lyrene. leglt-"!!1 '• ••• '-· , • ~-,. ble nulnerals and hands.
t()
-~:,.
.'•_ '~!1!\i.,l.
··~-~, . . ·.! C~ntinuous alarm sig-,na •

····=-- ..
,

~

.... , .,,

Jt

l
W

..·· ,... . ...

,~

•

&lt;_.,2

•

f a_::_ . .-;:a'i~&gt;- _.

?i-.e -~~ .. H .t._,~1
$29.96
Pl Pleasant Store Only
JEWElRY DEPT.
'"'~ . d·. :_,;···f ", y
- ·
,·
J.'Eu"'l.RYD·~r'Pr..
~- '
• -"iii'/&amp;iiiiii'-/&amp;'_____. ._________...~--------. .11 '
ble AFC on FM lwo antennas: 28''
whip for FM, femte rod for AM •
Ploys up to 130 houn on 4 · AA"

Reg. $24·96

HECK's REG.

HECK's REG. $9.88

penlite bo«eries.

Retail value $54.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

D-2

G. E. 2-SLICE
TOASTER

G.E.

VACUUM
ACCESSORY
KIT
INFANTS'

e

HECK'S
REG.

f
1

JEWElRY
DEPT.

$7.96

HECK

5

REG.

$3.19
JEWELRY DEPT.

Two-Tone Electric Knife is classically styled with
fo111ous "hole in the handte" for better balance
ancl even carving. Comfortable recessed anjof.f
button . Attach eo cord. Striking color-play in
two-tone shades of avocado.·

• Heats automatically - no hot
water e 3 sections for baby's en tire meal. • Immersible in water
for eosy cleaning .

$27.88

,

.;jl

SLICING KNIFE

Con..,erh Your GE

A«ochment Cleaning.
• 6 Pieces Enable Vou
To Clean The Ent ire

RETAIL VALUE

r .·.

$222

HAMILTON BEACH

Uprig ht Cleane-r To

FEEDING DISH

•

Heck's
Reg. $1.49

Pt. Pleasant Store Only

f59.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

olono-

•

No.

• Unique Sliding Volume and Balance
Control • Lighted Program lnidcators •
Fully Automatic Tape Program Changing
• Extremely Compad Design • Smooth
Safety Styling • All Solid State Circuitry
• Alio includes two sp~

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. $29.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

LEAR JET
8-TRACK AUTO

'1088

JEWELRY DEPT.

SHOT "0" STEAM IRON
Touch o

b~o~t'on

lor e•ther

SLIDE
~proy

ot

1n\1ont elllro penetrol•fiQ ~t•om
it~sfOfll cot~centroted st~om for
stubborn
wrinkle~
Puu

profusionol · type cr eoie~ in
trousen, or pleated ikirts. 61 venh
for ell -over steam coverage
Concen1ro'ed water 'pray on ony

1'

.."'""$' d67"7
HECK'S REG.

150FT.

Heck's Reg.
,7.88

$19.96

JEWElRY
DEPT.

Pt Pleasant Store Only

3FOR

77(

IHCK'S REG.
39c EA.

VIEWER
Designed to provide t~
maximum value. A
handy item for viewing
your slides.

�---------

..........-----~~ ··

10 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 10, 1971

•

•

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, MARCH 14, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
LADIES'

COTTON
PAJAMAS
;~

.I·

~

Dacron-cotton
blend pajamas
with short
sleeves and long
legs. Solid colors
in pink, blue,
mint, and maize.
Sizes: 32-40.

GIRLS'

PANTIES
e
e

e
e

•

--J,_.I

ACETATE
FABRIC
DOUBlE CROTCH
COlORS: WHITE,
PINK, BLUE, MAIZE
SIZES: 4-14

HOSE

29(PR.

Wherever you go this year, toke along
several of these easy to care for roll
sleeve shirt blouses. Smart, you bet!
Choose from selection of collar styles,
regular or long toil styles •.. os.orted
solids, colors and printed patterns.
Sizes: 32 to 38.

.I

LADIES'
ONE-SIZE

One size fits all in these
miracle stretch hose. Many
shades to match your
wardrobe; Pacific, cinnamon, brown, toast, and off
black.

HECK'S
REGULAR
$3.44

HECK'S REG.
38•

ClOTHING
DEPT.

LADIES'

DENIM JEANS
Get with the "Now Thing" in ladies'
casual fashions. These flare leg jeans
feature 2 pockets and ore available in
navy, white, blue, and green. Sizes: 818.

For your son ... 2 piece single breasted, junior size suits. Slacks hove 2
front pockets and flare legs.
Sizes: 3-7

$599

HECK'S REG.
$3.96

ClOTHING
DEPT.

•

WESTERN FLARE JEANS
Get the western look with
pre-shrunk flare leg jeans.
The look is complete with
swing pocitet,; SPzes! ~·3&amp;.

$299
•.w.~tii.Wll

HECK'S REG. TO 8.99

ClOTHINC DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTIIINC DEPT.

•
PAMPERS
DAYTIME 30's

GIRLS'

$159

SKIRTS

BOYS'

Permanent press scooter
~kirts in assorted styles
and colors.

DAYTIME 1 S's

79(

BOYS'

PERMANENT PRESS
OVE

SPORT SHIRTS
A greot b.,.y o" t!o.eMo no 'On \port •harti. for

boy• A comb1,ahon of short site..,., ond Ol·
torted tnt o d deJ.gns. ~ze\ 6 16.

LADIES'

INFANTS'

SLEEP GOWNS

STRETCH

SETS

8eOIJftfloll 'WOltl lenQth lric:OI OOWI'I'&gt; Wolh lace

and embra•dery trim Soft po\tel colon ·n
blve pink, mint, &amp; maize . Sizes S·M·l Two
sty1e$ to choo~e from.

$177

$188

HECK'S REG. $2.49

HECK'S REG. $2.28

HECK'S REG. $2.28

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

$188

6-16.

•

SIZE: 3 T06X

$168

CLOTHING DEPT.

•

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

KNIT

SIZES 7-14

Swing pod.ets give
these pre -s hrunk jeans
the western look. Sizes:

HECK'S REG. $2.49

$188
ClOTHING DEPT.

FLARE JEANS

$188

2-piece stretch sets in assorted hot
shades. 12-18-24 months.

MEN'S

WESTERN

SHIRTS
7-PIECE

ALUMINUM SET_"'~·-Choose from attractive Avocado or
Flame. Dishwasher safe; this fabulous
Color-Crafted finish stoutly resists chip·
ping, scratching and crocking. The sunray
aluminum finish an the inside is easy to
keep immaculately clean. Set includes; 1
qt. covered sauce pan, 2 qt . covered
sauce pan, 5 qt. Dutch Oven . 10 inch
open fry pan, and cookbook. Cover to use
with fry pan &amp; Dutch Oven.

Get on early start on
the warm weather
with these knit shirts
for ri'l'e!'. . -A.new shipment for Spr~
brings you Assort•d
colors ond s tyle~ .
Sizes: S-M-L-Xl.

HECK'S REG. $2.77

ClOTHINC DEPT.

7 OZ. RENUZIT'S

AIR FRESHENER
CHOOSE FROM:

e

e
e

RENUZIT'S POWDER
ROOM
FRENCH BOUTIQUE
LAVENDER, FLORAL,
PINE &amp; BOUQUET

31

$699

12 OUNCE

HECK'S REG.
481 EACH

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

.

Tahiti glass set in gold
and avocado.

(EACH

$10.88

HECK'S REG.

8 PC. GLASS SET

66(
HECK'S REG. 99&lt;

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

27 oz.

VASE

COVERED

BRAVO

This beautiful vase will fit your
decor wonderfully. Available
in Avocado.

•

VENETIAN
JARS

$104

71/z" FOOTED CANDY

LUSTRO-WARE
HECK'S
REG.
$1.33
HECK'S REG.
33• EACH

HOUSEWARE
DEPT• .

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

BOWL

WASTE BASKETS

• Beautiful, modern decorator colors

and
88~

PICTURE FRAMES

40•
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

•

3 PIECE STAINLESS

DESIGNERS' DECORATIVE FRAME, NON-GLARE GLASS

MIXING BOWL SET

5"x7" and 8"xl0" frames
HECK'S REG. TO $1 .04

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

"

NhfCW"'kr"'~Snwtrn:G:,

itOUSEWARE DEPT.

SIMILAR TO IllUSTRATION

HECK'S REG.
99 1

;
29

• Extra-heavy deep cut

e 9 QUART ROUND
e 9 QUART RECTANGULAR
e OVAL WASTEBASKET
e 9 QUART RECTANGULAR

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$4.66

$299

•

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