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                  <text>Now You Know

The Daily Sentinel

Hematite is the most important iron ore because of its
high iron content, 70 per cent,
and its great abundance.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXVI

NO. 233

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Weather
Mostly cloudy and cooler
tonight and Tuesday. Chance of
showers and snow flurries
northeast tonight. Low tonight
35 to 40. High Tuesday in the 40s
north and the upper 40s to lower
~Os south.

TEN CENTS

MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1971

Enemy Tanks Bombed
SAIGON (UPI)-U.S. air
strikes knocked out 12 North
Vietnamese tanks in Laos,
seven of them near the key Hb
Chi Minh trail junction of
Sepone, military spokesmen
said today.
The spokesmen said South
Vietnamese troops destroyed a
Communist base camp 15 miles
southeast of Sepone today and
seized 2,000 torpedoes. Sepone,
27 miles inside Laos, was
reoccupied by the North Vietnamese Friday after the South
Vietnamese withdrew.

STUDENT SENIORS- Senior members of Southern's
marching band were honored Saturday night at the annual
band banquet sponsored by the Band Boosters. Front row, 1-r
are, Barbara Richards, Mary Smith, Linda Hollon, Garcia

~

McGraw, Debbie Cross, Susie Biggs; second row, Sharon
Ervin, Patti Ihle, Pam Buck, Sandy Sayre, Pam Codner,
Cary Morris; third row, Billi Beggle, Keith Ashley, Dennis
Hart, Ollie Sayre, and Mrs. Connie Romine, director.

Me1llbers

:;:::~t:;:::;:: .::: ::~: :;:; ::::;;:~ :;}~. ;:; :;~_.;;;, ·: ;;~ .;;."):\ ,:;: :;:;.;:;.:::::::::;:; ;:;:;:;.; ;:;.,:=:~:;::::::"::;:::::::;:~::}:~:~:;:~:;:~{:};:;:~:~:;:~:)::::::~:~:~:~::t

Another Appeal

Honored

... I

Approximately 75 persons
attended the annual band
banquet Saturday night at
Sduthern High School sponsored
by the Southern Band Boosters.
Mrs.
Virgmia
Burke,
president of th boosters, mtroduced Principal James
Adams, school board members
Charles Pyles, Clarence
Lawrence and David Nease,
and board clerk Charles Norris.
Mrs. Burke gave the
w lcommg ad
d
trod ced each
thanks were ex
Hart for being
of Booster spon
The Boosters a e purchasing
new uniforms for all band
members.
Renee Burke, senior band
member, wrote and presented a
poem to the senior class entitled, "Beautiful Notes."
Mrs. Donnie Romine, band
director, presented letters to all
new band members. Billy I
Beegle,
band
president, :
presented Mrs. Romine a desk
I
clock as a gift.

Made for POWs

AWARD GIFT TO DffiECTOR-MRS. CONNIE ROMINE, third from left, band directv•
at Southern High School, was presented a gift from Billy Beegle, second from left at the annual
band banquet Saturday night at Southern High School. Charles Minelli, left, public relations,
School of Music, Ohio University, was the guest speaker. Extreme right is Mrs. Virginia Burke,
president of the Southern Band Boosters. Featured this year at the banquet was a smorgasbord
served by the boosters.

i---------------------------,
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I

By United Press International

CountyWide
Canvass Set
A county-wide house-to-house
canvass for the George
Thompson Kidney Fund will be
conducted by the Meigs County
American Legion Auxiliaries.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Eighth
District president, met with
representatives of the local
units last week to organize the
fund drive.
She emphasizes that solicitors
need not be members of the
American Legion Auxiliary.
Workers in Chester township
are needed, she notes, and asks
that anyone willing to assist
contact her.
Middleport and the surrounding area will be canvassed by Auxiliary members
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128 and
Lewis Manley Post 263.
Pomeroy and outlying areas
will be handled by Drew
Webster Post 39 Auxiliary and
Racine Unit 602 will solicit in
that village. Workers have also
been secured in Letart, East
Letart, and Portland. Rutland
village will be handled by the
Auxiliary of the Rutland
American Legion Post 467.

Autos Collide
Medium damages were
reported in a two car accident
Sunday at 1:45p.m. on SR 124 at
the intersection of County Road
50, Meigs County Sheriff Robert
c. Hartenbach's department
reported.
Larry Ed(4.ard Millhone, 18,
Tuppers Plains, was turning off
124 onto County Road 50 when a
car traveling south driven by
Randall Sloter, 20, Marietta,
came over a rise and struck
Millhone 's vehicle. There were
no injuries or arrests.

,
t

VIENNA &lt;UP[) - Russia and the United
States opened the fourth round of their Strategic
Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) today with
smiles and handshakes, but with the prospect of
hard bargaining ahead.
SALT opened with a ceremonial greeting
from Austrian President Franz Jonas. The first
substative meeting will be held Tuesday at the
Soviet Embassy.
·.·:·: ·=·=·:· ·:·: :· ·:·: .·:· ·: ,•; ·:·.·:· .·.· ·:· •:-..·. ·:·· .·.·.•:· -:·.••· •. :·.•,•,•: .;.·: :·: ;.•..•·: .~..;: :·:·.; ;:-.·.·. ;•.. ·.·.;;&gt;.;.· ;.·.·.·.·.·••·.·.·,. :·.·.·.•.;.;.;.;.

Of Band

•

The U.S. Command reported
four Americans were killed
today when an Army UH1 Huey
helicopter crashed from unknown causes at Tan Son Nhut
Air Base in Saigon.
Seven of the Communist
tanks were destroyed by Air
Force AC130 Specter gunships
based in Thailand which spotted
them with electronic gear in
the darkness early today four
miles east-southeast of Sepone.
Air Force F4 Phantom jets
knocked out three tanks Sunday
12 miles east of the border and

An Iffy Thing, Of Course
TIFFIN, OHIO - PHILLIP Wll..LKIE, SON of 1940
Republican presidential candidate Wendell Willkie, claims if
farmers had received fair prices in the early part of the century
the problems of the cities wouldn't be what they are now.
Willkie, president of the Rushville (Ind.) National Bank, told
the National Farmers Organization here during the weekend
farmers may have to take over the American Farm Bureau,
Farmers Union and Granges "to get the prices you want." "U the
American farmer had fair prices for products in the 1920's, 30's
and right after the (second world) war," he said, "the cities
wouldn't be m the shape they are in right now and the welfare
rolls would be cut by one-third."

New Study of Crops Planned
WASHINGTON - THE NATIONAL Research Council plans
to launch a study to determine whether entii. e U. S. food crops,
such as corn, wheat and price, might be vulnerable to new
diseases that could wipe them out.
"It is likely that a number of major food crops rest on a
dangerously narrow genetic base," the council said. "There is
urgent need for a cricial assessment of plant breeding and seed
production programs to examine the genetic base of crops, to
identify those that are genetically vulnerable, and to recommend
actions to minimize any likely outbreaks of diastrous disease in
the future."

Midwest Raked by Tornadoes
TORNADOES AND SEVERAL THUNDERSTORMS swept
the Midwest today and and Sunday, while unseasonably warm
temperatures, including a 101-degree reading at McAllen, Tex.,
prevailed over much of the rest of the nation.
Tornado and severe thunderstorm watches were posted early
in the night for portions of Missouri, Illinois and Indiana . A tornado near Kirkland, Ill., destroyed five buildings and downed
power lines. No injuries were reported. Another tornado was
reported near Gorham, ill., about 70 miles southeast of St. Louis.
There was no report of damage or injuries.

Snoopers may be Charged
WASHINGTON - THE ARMY HAS INDICATED for the first
time that it is considering filing formal charges against highranking officers and men involved in the military surveillance
system that spied on millions of Americans. The information
came in an exchange of letters disclosed Sunday between Sen.
Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C., who is heading a Senate investigation into
the Army's domestic intelligence network, and Defense Department General Counsel J. Fred Buzhardt.
Ervin said he asked the Pentagon to allow three generals to
testify how they were involved in collecting information on such
well known citizens as Illinois Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson III, the late
civil rights leader Whitney Young and an estimated 7.8 million
(Continued on Page 8)

Two Charges
Facing Man

Of Middleport
William Wesley McHaffie, 45,
Middleport, will be charged in
Syracuse Mayor's court with
leaving the scene of an accident, Syracuse Marshal
Hilton Varian said today.
l\1cHaffie backed into a
garage owned by Earl Custer on
Cherry St. and left the scene
without
reporting.
Also
Saturday afternoon, McHaffie
struck a utility pole driving
near Syracuse.
He did not stop after either
incident but was arrested later
in Middleport by Middleport
police.
Meanwhile, Dana Covert,
confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, owner of the cab
which MrHaffie was driving at
the time of the accidents,
reported Monday McHaffie was
not and is not a cab driver, and
that he had stolen the vehicle.
The department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenbac h, which
investigated the accident near
Syracuse where McHaffie
struck the utility pole, said that
McHaffie will be charged with
driving while intoxicated.

Driver Charged
Heavy damage was caused to
one car and the driver of
another car was arrested on a
charge of driving while intoxicated as the result of an
accident on Middleport's Locust
St. at 5:03 p.m. Saturday.
Police said a northbound car
driven by Rush A. Krodel, Point
Pleasant, crossed over the
centerline and struck the left
side of a southbound car driven
by Joseph D. Wills of Napoleon,
Ohio. Heavy damage was
reported to the Wills car. Krodel
was arrested on a charge of
driving while intoxicated.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Nixon has appealed again
for Amerians to continue
support of efforts to secure
a release of U. S. prisoners - of war held captive in Indochina.
Nixon made the remarks in a
message read by Secretary of
State William P. Rogers at the
86th annual dinner of the
Gridiron Club, an all-male
social organization of 50 Washmgton correspondents.
The club's guests of honor
were three former POWs, Air
Force Col. Norris N. Overly,
Navy Lt. Robert F. Frishman
and Army M. Sgt. Daniel L.
Pitzer.
The Gridiron Club, whose
lampooning of public figures
has become a Washington
tradition, poked fun in song and
skit Saturday at targets ranging from FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover to the "pink latrines" of

LOCAL TEMP
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Monday
was 56 degrees under partially
cloudy skies.
TWO FINED
Fined in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar Saturday
night were Clara Rowan,
Athens, $5 and costs, charged
with leaving the scene of an
accident, and William Reeves,
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, on
intoxication charges.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy emergency
squad answered a call to the
David Grueser home, 105 Plum
St., at 4:30 p.m. Sunday. Mr.
Grueser was transferred to an
ambulance and taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.
LABOR OUTPOLLS
LONDON (UPI) -The Labor
Party has an 8 per cent lead
over the Conservative government of Prime Minister Edward
Heath in the latest Louis Harris
poll published today in the Daily
Express. The poll, conducted
between Feb. 13 and 22, gives
the Labor Party one percentage
point more than it had in a
similar January survey.
WIFE FACES CHARGE
PIQUA, Ohio (UPI) - Mrs.
Barbara Branson, 26, Piqua,
was charged with first degree
murder in the shooting of her
husband, Creed, 34, during a
domestic quarrel.
Police said the shooting occurred Saturday night.
CONGRESSMAN ROBBED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S.
Rep. Thomas L. Ashley, DOhio, was robbed of $40, his
watch and ring early Sunday
Sunday near Scott Circle here.
P.&gt;lice said the congressman
from Waterville was roughed
up, but did not require hospital
treatment.

the Army's new look policy.
The club stuck to its tradition
of excluding women, as members or as guests, despite a
protest from a group of
Washington journalists of both
sexes who picketed the dinner.
The President, who attended
the dinners during his first two
years in office, missed Saturday's affai . He was cationing at Key Biscayne, Fla.

air strikes southwest of the
border outpost of Lao Bao
destroyed two others, bringing
to 120 the number of Sovietbuilt tanks destroyed in the 36day-old Laotian campaign.
American aircraft have destroyed 59 Communist tanks
and South Vietnamese have
accounted for 61 during the
drive to cut the Ho Chi Minh
Trail the main Communist
suppiy route to South Vietnam
and Cambodia.
Command spokesmen reported the U.S. troop level dropped
by 5,000 last week, leaving

317,300 Americans in the war
zone. This is the lowest figure
since Oct. 1, 1966, when there
were 316,400. President Nixon's
announced plans call for a
reduction to 284,000 by May 1.
Allied military sources reported South Vietnamese .nilitiamen killed about 100 Cornmunist trJops Sunday at the start
of the Amekong Delta campaign in South Vietnam aimed
at destroying Viet Cong units
that are short on supplies
because of the government
operations in Laos and Cambodia.

Graham Ignores

Medical Order
CLEVELAND
(UPI)
Evangelist Billy Graham ignored doctor's orders Sunday in
order to appear here to accept
the International Brotherhood
Award from the National
Conference of Christians and
Jews.
Graham, who is recuperatin~
from a throat operation and
was told to rest for two months,
is only the second person in the
last eight years to receive the
award, Lester B. Pearson,
former prime minister of Canada, receiving it in 1963.
Graham said at the award
banquet he believes parents who
send their children to parochial
schools should not be forced to
support public schools through
tax payments.
"Protestant, Catholic and
Jewish Americans are helping
to pay for materialistic,
atheistic teaching in some

places they do not believe in,"
the 52-year-old Graham said.
He suggested dual enrollment
systems, tax rebates or tuition
grants to students for use as
they please might solve the
problem.
Graham also said prayer
should not be forbidden in the
public schools.
"I am totally against the
state imposing set forms of
prayer or demanding that all
pray," Graham said, "but students should have the right to
pray silently on a voluntary
basis."
Graham said he is making
plans to hold a second Honor
American Day in Washington
D. C. July 4.
He said the celebration this
year might be a religious one,
since Independence Day falls on
a Sunday.

SST Sum .Voted
NEW YORK (UPI)
Austin Carr of Notre Dame, a
high-scoring guard whom the
pro scouts compare favorably
with Oscar Robertson, today
was named college basketball's player of the year for
1970-71 by United Press International.
Carr, the nation's second
leading scorer this past
season, was an easy winner in
the ballotting of 394 sports
writers and sportscasters
across the nation. He
received 221 votes to easily
beat out Sidney Wicks of
UCLA who finished second
with 109.

Damages Heavy
Damages were heavy and one
driver was arrested in an accident on Nye Ave. in Pomeroy
at 7:31p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
police said.
A car driven by David Hindy,
32, Middleport, struck a vehicle
driven by David Acree, 24, Long
Bottom. Details of the accident
were not reported. Hindy is
being charged with driving
while intoxicated, police said.

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
House Appropriations Committee today voted $34 million to
continue development of two
supersonic
jet transport
prototypes, but for the first time
it stipulated no government
money may be used to finance
commercial production of the
SST.
Rep. Sidney R. Yates, D-Ill.
said in a minority report
however it was "wishful

thinking in the extreme" to
believe that private industry
ever will be able t(} invest $2.5 to
$4 billion to produce the planes.
The committee's approval
cleared the way for House
debate during which opponents
were expected to argue tbe
1,800-mile per hour SST endangers the environment and is
a drain on finances needed for
domestic problems.

Hanna Story To be Told
Ralph Hatch, president of the Gallipolis on Monday, March 22;
Hanna Coal Co., will be in to address Gallia County
Commissioners and area
leaders on strip mine operations
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
according to Joe Hickle, the
Ohio Extended Outlook company's chief engineer.
Wednesday through Friday:
President Hatch's address
Cool Wednesday through will follow a noon luncheon at
Friday with the highs in the Oscar's. He will use color
40s and the lows in the 20s and picture slides to illustrate his
lower 30s. A chance of talk on reclamation.
showers or snow flurries
The Hanna Coal Co. is
northeast and fair south and currently engaged in operations
west.
in the Rocky Fork area, west of
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:;:::;:::;;::::;:::::;:::::;:::: ;:::::;:;·;:::;::::·::;:;:;. Crown City.

Dog Foods Questioned
By WU..LIAM B. MEAD
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Clinical tests have shown adverse
effects from exclusive feeding
of all-meat dog food, and
veterinarians also have raised
questions about fortified meat
dog foods promoted as a
"complete" or "balanced" diet,
it was learned today.
Two federal agencies, the
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) and Federal Trade
Commission (FTC), are investigating labeling and advertising
claims for canned dog foods
made exclusively of meat and
meat byproducts, or of meat
and its byproducts fortified
with vitamins and minerals.
Heavily promoted, these products have seized a growing
share of the pet food market,
which itself soared to $1.16
billion last year.
"The public has been d7ceived," Dr. Mark L. Morns
Jr., Topeka, Kan., said of
advertisements claiming that
dogs thrive on exclusive feeding
of all-meat products.

"Some fellows sitting up on
Madison Avenue dreamed up
the all-meat dog food," said
Morris, a doctor of veterinary
medicine with a doctorate in
animal nutrition. "It's a good
way to sell a product because
people think of the dog as a
meat eater. But it doesn't
happen to be scientifically true.
"Dozens of veterinarians
have told me they were
treating many dogs for conditions resulting from exclusive
all meat diets," he said.
Morris and two other veterianarians conducted a 12-week
study comparing the health of
five puppies fed exclusively on
an all-meat dog food with four
littermates fed a dog food
containing grains and other
ingredients as well as meat.
The results were published in
the Feb. 15 issue of the
prestigious journal of the
American Veterinary Medical
Association (JAVMA).
"A syndrome was produced
in the experimental dogs
(those fed the all - meat
product l that included loose

reduced
food
stools,
intake, reduced weight gain,
pain, lameness, abnormal
body postures, behavioral changes, anorexia and death," the
scientists concluded. Anorexia
is loss of appetite.
In a telephone interview,
Morris emphasized that the allmeat product he tested was not
fortified with vitamins and
minerals, as are many of the
''meat and meat byproduct..;"
dog foods now marketed.
However, in a March 2 letter
to the FTC, Dr. Don-ald A.
Price, a veterinarian who edits
JAVMA, said this about meat
and meat byproducts dog foods
fortified with vitamins and
minerals:
"There are unresolved questions about the advisability of
feeding such a diet exclusively
because of its high protein
content, particularly for mature
dogs who often have some
degree of kidney impairment
and for pregnant and lactating
bitches. Controlled investigations are needed to settle these
questions.· ·

�2- The Dall}' Sentinel, MidcUeport-Pomeroy, 0., March 15, 1971

!V~i~~--~~~g-B;~~~I~~Y-l

A Measure of Greatness

EDITORIALS

Right Tools Vital
In Pollution Fight

·.

•

.
r

It was one thing for Preside nt Ke n nedy to proclaim
the goal of landing men on the moon by fhe end of the
decade of the '60s. and quite another for science and
technology to devise the means of gett ing them thereand back.
Equally. it was one thing for President Nixon last Jan·
uary. as Ins ftrst official act as t he decade of the '70s be·
gan. to establish a White House Council on Environmental Quality. stating that "it is literally now or never"
for the nation to reclaim the purity of its air and water
and living environment.
·
And quite another thing for science and technology to
devise the means for reaching t hat goal.
The primary need. of course, is for methods of preventing or controlling pollution. But a companion need is
for instruments to monitor the effectiveness of that con·
trol.
Already in some areas. says Chemical &amp; Engineering
News, suitable instrumentation is just not available for
standards that either have been set or are expected to be
set very soon.
Too many analyses still require expensive and compli·
cated instrumentation that can be run only by highly
trained personnel. The critical need is for automat ed,
simplified "black box" methods that can be handled by
technicians. An example is a satisfactory and low-cost
method of measuring the gaseous pollutants in automobile exhaust that a garage mechanic can operate.
Just as companies must now keep financial records t hat
are credible to the Internal Revenue Service, plants will
eventually have to keep pollution records that are cred·
ible to regulating agencies, the magazine says.
It predicts that the total market for pollution instrumentation will grow rapidly- about 15 per cent a yearduring the 1970s. It will total at least $1 billion for the
decade.
·
The market for auto emission instruments will peak at
about $30 million per year in 1976, and the market for
instruments to me as ur e pollutants from stationary
sources will grow from about $4 million this year to close
to $40 million a year by 1980.
In the 1960s we geared up to land life on the moon. In
the coming decade we will have to gear up again-this
time to preserve life on earth.

I
BY J ACK O'BRIAN

Exercise .

• •

but Don't Set Records

Walk or Slow Jog Best
Lawrence E . Lamb, M.D. people can do when they first
start a program and how
Dear Dr. Lamb-About they can build up to a very
three years ago I started a high level of activity I am
joggmg program. At first I sure that your exercise procould jog only one-sixth of a gram has done a lot to help
mile. I was almost unable to your overall health. If you
walk at times b e c a u s e of average six miles a day m
shin splints. Today, I have one year this uses the same
very little trouble with shin amount of calories found in
~plints. However. occasion- about 50 pounds of fat.
Any regular exercise, parally my knees hurt. My question IS : Am I h u r t i n g my ticularly if it causes weightbody ? I now jog between bearing or jarring, contribfo ur and nine miles, nonstop, utes to wear and tear of the
depending on how I feel. I joints. Ballet dancers get
cover each mile in approxi- wear-and - t e a r arthritis of
mately nine minutes. Today the ankles, baseball pitchers
I jogged eight miles in 72 of the elbow. You can miniminutes 15 seconds . I jog on mize this problem by elimia hard wood floor . It is not nating the j a r r i n g. A soft
canted on the curves . I wear track IS much better than a
heel cushions in my shoes hard one. I think you should
and two pairs of wool socks have your knee X-rayed and
I am 43 years old and in- let yo11r doctor see if you arE'
clined to be fat- five feet showing any signs of weareight and 16!) pounds.
and-tear arthritis.
Dear Reader- It is amazWalking six miles a day
ing how little exercise som e

B~

Auto Safety Devices Pay Off

.·'

..

In 1970, for the first time in 25 years, the nation's economic loss from highway accidents took a downturn.
The reduction was nearly $375 million from 1969, reports the Insurance Information Institute. The total economic loss, however, was still a staggering $16.2 billion
in such categories as lost wages. medical expenses and
property damage.
A drop in deaths and injuries, the first in a decade,
was the key fac tor. Final traffic figures for 1970 show
t hat although t here were 91,000 more accidents than in
1969, the number of deaths ( 55,300) declined by 1, 100,
or 2 per cent, and injuries (nearly 5 million) were down
by 26,872, or 5 per cent.
The good news ts tempered by the fact that the death
and accident toll recorded an increase in December
1970 as compar ed with December 1969. reversing the
downtrend. at least temporarily.
But an overall decrease in deaths and injuries in 1970
in the face of an mcreasing number of accidents indicates that while driving habits have not improved. improved a utonlC'b ilf' o;afet y featur~ are having an effect.
These includ
p ble steering wheels. ballooning
h elds
• 'Jn of protrudm e: knobs and
l
nc;1
ours . seat belts

•'

-··

DAVID

OLING

Most Loyal Followers of Jesus

Faith of Women Is Steadfast
The Christia n Church has been taking its lumps from
Women's Liberation lately. Much of it is deserved when
you c onsider the iron hand that has been ruling the fatthful over the centuries. Yes , some women are ordained .
Right, some have been given top jobs in teaching or
administering hos pitals and nursmg homes . But the long ,
long story has been that the Christian Church (and any
other r eligious group for that matter) is run with the control a nd precision of West Point.
The Bible has plenty to say about thts and Women 's Lib
has not been slow to quote from the put-down phrases of
St. Paul or the a s s u m p t i on s made by the writer of
Genesis.
But then you c ome to the New Testament account of the
crucifixion and r esurrection of J es us Christ. What a fascinating story awaits you Just for an immediate surprise
and an entirely new viewpoint, read the closing portions,
the last chapters of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John . Remember, this is essentially a narrative of the last hours
of J esus, written almost in newspaper style. Here are
some obvious conclusions:
1-Women were the most loyal followers of Jesus . During the arrest and tnal , the disciples fade away, Peter
vanishes , and t he r est avoid implication. The women,
however . are prominent at the Crucifixion, ignoring guilt
by association , worry a nd determined to stay until the
end.
2-Women took the tough jobs. The Cross may be a
romantic art symbol but death and burial was certainly a
trying, arduous experience in the First century _ We are
talking about premortuary days, when the preparing of
bodies for burial was an unplea sant task, even for devoted
loved ones. The women faced thi s assignment t often r e-

..

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lated to disease or infection ) with a n ea rly rising devotion.
They took the job because no one else would do it.
3-Women announced the resurrection of Jesus . Al though the accounts vary in the Four Gospels (and John
has Joseph of Arimathaea in charge of burial ), the women
followers of Jesus became the heralds of good news And
even this was poorly received at first, if we are to believe
St. Luke, who probably had the first-hand account from
Mary , the m other of J esus- Luke 24:11:
But the story appeared to them to be nonsense.

will also do a lot of the same
things for you and is less
likely to jar the joints or
contribute to arthritis in
later years. Exercise bicycles also are useful in eliminating the jarring effects of
jogging.
Many men in particular
seem to like to set records
for themselves. It is that old
competitive drive again. I
am against it. Physics
teaches us that to move a
given weight a mile requires
just as much energy whether
it is moved fast or slow. Now
the body is a little different
but still the advantages you
get from setting time records are far outweighed by
the dangers it imposes, particularly as a person gets
older. A number of joggers
have died from heart attacks
by pushing the m s e l v e s
against a time factor.
A slow jog or walking will
allow a per s o n to e n j o y
pleasant surroundings. Individuals who are overweight

STAGGERING STEPS LEAD TO
SI'RAIGHT AND NARROW
NEW YORK - Liz Taylor just bought Mike
Todd Jr .'s half of his dad's estate and is sole
owner. Liz wants the Chicago theater bearing the
senior Mike's name to r emain his memorial ....
There's also "Around the World," which networks have offered $5,000,000 for four or five
showings .... The Jets' Jim Hudson injured his
back .... Have a small shock: The Port Authority
hasn't announced that during its construction of
the two 110-story controversial downtown
towers, nine workmen have been killed so far ....
Plus about 5,000 injuries, ranging from painful to
ser ious.
Doll of a tale: In nearby Pater son, N.J., the
Mt. Carmel Center for Treatment of Alcoholics is
on Straight Street; so the center got the city to
change the name of the cross street where it
stands - to "Narrow" Street, so the alkytreatment center could be at Straight &amp; Narrow.
Jack Dempsey didn't see the Frazier-Ali
fight at Madison Square Garden: at 75, Jack's
ducking mob-scenes .... While Desi Arnaz Sr. and
Jr . were aboard the Merv Griffincast, Lucille
Ball and Lucy Jr . wer e on Dick Cavett's ....
Henny Youngman can't wait until Pres. Nixon's
top White House aide quits so he can ask: "I
wonder who's Kissinger now."
Joe Louis and Billy Conn will be partners in a
business .... Calling the closed-circuit FrazierAli fight, Don Dunphy's for-Ali description belied
the fight being shown .. .. Burt Lancaster's
amateurish chatter was a disaster; he verbally
buried Archie Moore, who knew what he was
talking about .... The films-plays of the current
moment prove there isn't anything unspeakable
anymore.
"Love Story" looms as the biggest moneymaking flick of all time: Cost $2,000,000, may
take in $100,000,000 .... London School of
Economics' Dr. James Douglas claims successful, intelligent men are mostly tall: Tell that
to Picasso, Casals, Onassis and Cavett .... Gal of
1,000 commercials, Louisa Moritz, now stars
with a Playboy revue, but she doesn 't use her
correct Cuban surname: Castro.
Carol Burnett's shook-up about the Calif.
earthquakes and might return to Manhattan ....
Sammy Davis at the Miami Beach Deauville
wise-guyed to the audience: "I've been Jewish 15
years, black for about four. Before that, I was
colored." .... Top Bdwy.-H'wood agent Lester
Shurr passed away without one N.Y. obit; just a
paid family announcement in one paper ....
Carol Channing of the limping "Four on a
Garden" must expect it won't last until summer:
or middle-aged in particular
should start exercising with
w a 1 kin g and some should
stay at that level. Enthusiastic joggers remmd me of
the old fable of the t ortoise
and the hare. Most v1g orous
older people are walkers.
some are more enthusiastic
tort o i s e s than others but
they are tortoises, not hares .

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

!Helen Help Us iI
I

I

By Helen Bottel

1

PUSHED AROUND OR PUSHER?
Dear Helen:
We live in a small town, so whatever happens becomes a big
thing. My husband was caught, convicted and sentenced for
selling marijuana. Actually, he only handled a very small
amount, and he gave some to a "friend," who turned him in. He
isn't even a real smoker , just an experimenter, and a very foolish
one.
But the D. A. made headlines by announcing he'd caught a
and th ey wou ld not believe it.-N ew English Bible
principal
supplier of marijuana in this area. The word is around
4-The women were mature and established , yet filled
that my husband was a big-time narcotics pusher. What chance
with the concerns of others. Interestingly, they were all
do I have of bringing out the truth when everyone is already
over 30. Two were probably grandmothers Mary Magdalene must have been in her mid-30s. It is correct that the
convinced ? - VERY MUCH ALONE (FOR AT LEAST FIVE
disciples were young and mostly unattached. Yet the
YEARS)
women, the personalities who form so much of the gospel
Dear VMA:
account of life, death and resurrection, were adults of
Your only hope is to prove that your husband was simply "in
respect and honor This was their story and they were
not disappointed.
possession," not "selling." If a good lawyer can do this, his
On this last point, too ofte n we have heard that only
sen tence might be reduced, but unless proof is absolute, chances
young people give a damn for the trials of the world or
are very slim. And the going may be expensive.
the heartaches of m a nkind . Yet a recent study conducted
When you feel you have a case, contact the legal a id society.
by Paul Cameron and Associates (and published by the
H.
Kentucky Psychology Assn.) reveals that women between
Dear Helen:
the ages of 56-64 think more about the needs of other people than any other segm ent of the pop ulation . A sampling
I am in the Army, stationed in Vietnam. Today I received a
of some 3,400 adults, teen -a gers and older adults demonletter from my wife in Oklahoma, saying that she suspects I have
strated a vast outreach and compassion by these older
a girl friend over here because I "haven't written in so long."
women. The New TestamPnt is right ; they are at the cen·
Helen, I have written every other day and sometimes oftener.
ter of the Chnstian faith and probably responsible for
most of its gain.
Is there some kind of mail strike going on in the U. S.?
( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
My wife (she's expecting our baby soon) thinks that every
(The Reverend Poling is president of the Christian Herold Assn )
night I go to nearby towns and have a ball. If she only knew how it
is over here, she'd stop worrying about THAT, and start worrying
about whether I 'll get home alive. We're so tired after our days in
the jungle, all we think of is sleep. There are no nearby towns, and
Hatlo\ They'll Do It Every T ime
The Almanac
believe me, nothing to attract us .
By United Press International
Maybe if you put this in the paper, my wife will read it and
GEE .1 I LIKE 'tOUR
WI-1AT's 50 NEW ABOUT
Today is Monday, March 15, realize that it isn't me, but the mail service, and I miss her very
PANT5·5UIT, -=LOTIL LA
DAM.E5 WEA RIN' PANT'S?
the 74th day of 1971.
much. - SHORT, FOUR MONTHS TO GO
I Tf.liNK I'LL NEAR
ROSIE TH E RIVETER
MINE
DID IT T HI RTY YEARS
The moon is between its full Dear Short's Wife:
AGo .. ..
TOMORROW .'
-:;:;::::::::=.....c...d___
phase and last quarter.
Keep writing and stop suspecting. Your husband has it rough
The morning stars are Venus, enough. Don't make it worse! - H .
Mars and Jupiter.
Dear Helen :
I have a leopard skin coat that I dearly love. It dates back 10
The evening stars are Mereury and Saturn.
Those born on this day are years - before people got upset about killing off the wild animals .
I've had it remade, and I enjoy wearing it.
under the sign of Pisces.
On this day in history:
But now, every time I appear in it, someone is bound to look
In 1916 Gen. John J . Pershing me up and down and imply I'm "one of those," a cruel, selfish,
was given command of 12,000 heartless dame who would murder natural fa una into extinction
U.S. troops and ordered to to put fur on her back.
proceed to Mexico and capture
Must I give out the age of my coat in order not to be
revolutionary leader Pancho ostracized? - FURTIVE
Villa .
Why not? Ecology - conscious people will be glad to hear it
In 1953 Russian Premier and your friends already know. - H .
Malenkov, successor to Josef Dear Helen:
Stalin, claimed international
May I share an item that came from the Adairville, Ky.,
disputes could be settled by · Enterprise? The writer says, "I used to think 1 was poor. Then
peaceful means.
they told me I wasn't poor, I was needy. Then they told me it was
ln 1969 doctors at Walter self-defeating to think of myself as needy, that I was culturally
Reed Hospital reported formet deprived. Then they told me deprived was a bad image, that I was
President Dwight D. Eisenhow underprivileged. Then they !old me underprivileged was overer was suffering from conges- used, that I was disadvantaged . I still don't have a dime, but I
hvc h&lt;.'art fa tlure.
have a great vocabulary!" - READER

She signed for a summer-tent tour ... . David
Eisenhower gets his Navy ensign commission
this week, and the whole First Family may attend . Eight more weeks of air warfare training,
and then sea' duty .... "Batman " creator Bob
Kane said at Teddy's he's opening a school for
cartoonists .... Britain's Prince Charles is up
there taking flight training all right - but the
future king does his rolls, spins and turns irfr
aerial solitude - all other planes are warned to
keep 50 miles distant at least .... George Gershwin's stockbroker nephew, Marc George
Gershwin, and his Andrea are bouncing a newborn son, Adam.
Unquestioned champ Joe Frazier takes his
"Knockouts" group into a London cabaret later
this year .... Tammy Grimes said sure, she'd
love to ride the lead elephant in the Ringling ·
Bros. animal march from the train to Madiso4l
Square Garden Mar. 30 - if they'd let he~ j
daughter Amanda, 13, ride the baby elephant
behind her; done and done .... "Laugh-In " has
cheapened out to a shrug-in .... There 's an international monetary unit called a "Fleurin" :
It's the unminted currency used by FTD
(Florists Transworld Delivery) by 50,000
members in 90 countries, each unit equal to a
quarter .... Alaska pays its teachers and cops
better than N. Y. City.
•
Elliott Gould's even fired the press agency
that stole all tha t space for him .... Walter
Matthau joined the late Fred Allen in his attitude
toward Southern California: "It's fine if you're
an orange," Fred said; Matthau 's crack at the
announcement ceremonies about the new
Shubert Theatre in L.A. was , "Four months and
your brain looks like a soft, warm noodle" .... No
one ever said such nasties about San Francis~
tho .... The Jolly Sizpense spot had a short, bi~­
vogue, tried to stem the recession with topless
terpers, and shuttered; its mate, the Jolly
Shilling, also departed.
Overseas servicemen's clubs banned
quarter slot machines - took too much of the
enlisted men's money- but kept the nickel and
dime one-arm bandits .... Alice Playten (the
marshmallowed-meatball dumpling) celebrated
at the Angry Squire spot after moving from her
old Greenwich Village walkup to a plush fla
elsehwere in the Village .... The lino cubs used in
Joy Adamson's "Living Free" film were shipped
to Kenya - from Palm Beach. Seems Kenya
doesn't permit private ownership of wild
animals .. .. P rincess Grace's daughter
Caroline's learning to train wild animals in pop's
zoo .... Talk about flair: the Acapulco Princess
Hotel, opening this summer, will have 6D-foot
palm trees and a lagoon -in the lobby!

WIN AT BRIDGE

Stayman a Ia Jacoby Modern
15

~ORTH

. KJ76
¥ 32
. AQ9
oTo J8 7 5
WEST
. 83
¥ Q J 10 7
. 875
oTo AQ63

SOUTH

EAST
. 942
¥ K 964
. J642
oTo 92
(D)

• AQ105
¥ A85
• K103
... K104
Both vulnerable
West North East South
lN.T.
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- ¥ Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Jim: "Tell our readers
something about the development of the modern notrump? "
Oswald: "It started when
I married the tennis champion of Texas back in 1932.
She wanted to learn bridge
in a hurry. Everyone used
honor tricks but I decided
to teach your mother with
the use of point count. There
was little difference between
my 1932 no·trump and standard American of 1971. We
played all responses except
two no-trump as one round
forces j u s t as standard
American does. The Stayman
convention arrived some 10
years later."
Jim : "Anyone who doesn't

use some form of Stayman
today is not getting good
value out of his no-trump
openings. We use a non-forcing form in JACOBY MODERN because it's simple ."
Oswald: " The basis of..,
Stayman is that t he two-club
response to a one no-trump
opening is artificial and forcing. In .JACOBY MODERN
the force is for one round
only. Partner rebids two of
a four-card major suit; with
no four-card major he rebids
two diamonds and responder
takes it from there on."
Jim: •'This hand shows
two advantages of Stayman.
Three no-trump goes down
one trick since the defense
takes three hearts and two
clubs . If North plays at four
spades a club lead by East
will give the defense two
club tricks and a ruff to start
with and a heart trick later .
When S o u t h p 1 a y s four
spades he makes it since defenders can't ruff that club.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI~E ASSN .)

i

15

C: B; l:H!riUtitXl
The bidding has been:
West
North
East

Sou th

3.

1¥
Pass
2 ...
Pass
Pass
4¥
Pass
You, South, hold:

?

. 8 ¥ K 10765 . AK Q 94 ... A
What do you do now ?

A-Bid four n o-trump. Make
sure your pa rtner h olds at least
one ace before bidding slam.

BERRY'SWORLD

" Tricio , it' s always hnrd to leave the nest- PA RTICULARLY this nest'"

___._
I

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 15,1971

Eagles Fall 64-56 to Crooksville
.•.

"
Ill

...

·•

BY KEITH WISECuP
CHILLICOTHE
The
Eastern District were ousted
from the Chillicothe "A"
district Saturday night, falling
to the Crooksville Ceramics 6456 before a near capacity crowd
at Ellis B. Hatton Memorial
Gym in Chillicothe High School.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
ended their brilliant season with
a 17-4 record while the
Ceramics upped their slate to
15-3 and will get a chance to
improve on that next Thursday
in Athens at the Convocation
Center at 7:15 against the New
Concord district winner. Also in
that tournament will be Pike
Western, (21-2) which blew
Proctorville Fairland off the
court here Friday night, 62-48.
That Chillicothe gym seems
to be a jinx to the Eagles as they
were knocked out of the tour-

namen t last season here against
Portsmouth Clay, also in
district play.
Dennis Eichinger topped the
Eagles in both rebounding and
scoring as the fine 6-3 junior
center accounted for 18 points
and 17 rebounds. Eichinger also
played a good defensive game
as he blocked several shots by
the Ceramics under the basket.
Howie Caldwell, 5-11 senior
guard, collected 13 markers for
the "Green and White" while
Tom Karr, 5-10 senior guard,
added 10 points and eight
rebounds. Besides Caldwell and
Karr, the Eagles will also lose
by graduation Mike Boring, 6-1
forward, and Dave Smith, (H)
forward, all starters.
Gary Swinehart paced the
Ceramics with 23 points and 16
rebounds. The 6-4 senior center
was "Mr. Everything" for

Crooksville as he brought the
ball up court, played a strong
defense, and scored and
rebounded well. Bob Storts
added 12 with Curtis Houk and
Edsel Sims having 11 each for
the Ceramics.
The Ceramics won it at the
free throw line where they hit on
22 of 30 while the Eagles made
only 2 of 10. Eastern had only
oneattemptfrom the foul line in
the first half as the officials saw
only one Ceramic infraction and
failed to make a free throw until
2: 35 remained in the third
quarter.

compared to 42 for Eastern.
The Eagles shot o\1t to a 4-0
lead in the first minute of play.
Three field goals gave the
Ceramics a 6-4 lead that they
never relinquished other than a
6-6 tie moments later. After
eight minutes, the Ceramics
were on top, 20-16.

Crooksville widened the gap
to 24-16 early in the second
quarter. The Eagles failed to
score in the first four minutes of
the second period, experiencing
probably their coldest shooting
of the season. Eastern scored
only six points in the period, all
Eastern had 27 field goals coming within a minute. After
compared to 21 for Crooksville. they narrowed it to 26-22 with
The Eagles took 81 shots for a three minutes left, the
very coolish 33 per cent while Ceramics took advantage with
the Ceramics attempted only 54 three field goals to make it 32-22
shots for 39 per cent. at the half.
Crooksville had 46 rebounds
The Eagles flew strong in the

third quarter however. Two (He scored 17 of his 23 in the
By United Press International
quick two-pointers and it was second half.)
Wednesday
With 5·.20 left, it was 55-47 and
32-26. With 4:21 remaining,
Class AAA
Howie Caldwell's twisting at the 3:09 mark, Eastern was
(At Columbus)
Whitehall (16·61 vs. Celina (21·
jumper made it 36-32. Two almost hopelessly trailing .at 58- 1)
straight field goals by 49. Crooksville then went mto a
&lt;At Canton Fieldhouse)
Eichinger reduced it to 38-36 stall that killed any Eagle last Cleveland St. Ignatius (21 -1) vs
Cleveland East Tech (19-2)
with 3:09 left in the quarter. hopes.
· ill
D
· 1
(At Canton Auditorium)
Caldwell added a free throw to
Wrut
t next year, enms. Youngstown Boardman (22-0l
make it 38-37 with 2:35
EASTERN, (56)- Eichinger vs
Canton McKinley (17-5)
remaining.
9-0-18, Smith 0-0-0, Karr 5-0-10,
Class AA
After a Ceramic timeout, the H. Caldwell6-1-13, Boring 244,
(At Copley)
eventual winners stretched out
Williams 1..()..2, B. Caldwell~. Champion ( 19·3) vs Elyria
their lead once again, this time Amsbary 1-1-3, Benedum 0-0-0. Catholic (17-5)
Thursday
to 47-41. Eichinger tapped in a
Totals 27-2-56.
Class AAA
long jumper by Caldwell at the
(At Columbus)
CROOKSVILLE, (64)
vs
buzzer to make it 47-43 after Swinehart 8-7-23, Storts 5-2-12, Walnut Ridge (21-0)
Steubenville (21 -1 )
three quarters.
Houk 4-3-11, Dalrymple 1-5-7,
(At Canton Fieldhouse)
Euclid (19-3) vs Bay Village (19Sims 3-5-11. Totals 21-22-64.
At the 7: 09 mark of the final
3)
(At Canton Auditorium)
eight
minutes,
Eastern
BY QUARTERS
Akron Centrai-Hower (15-6) vs
managed to cut the margin to Crooksville
20 32 47 64
Toledo Woodward (18-3)
47-45, only to see Crooksville Eastern
16 22 43 56
Class AA
(At Cople.y)
pull away again with some
Officials, Newman and
Youngstown North ( 19-2) vs
great shooting by Swinehart. Hyland.
Twinsburg (16-6)
Class A
(At Bowling Green)
Ayres ville ( 17-6) vs
Convoy Crestview (19-2)
Old Ford (20-4) vs Vanlue ( 17-4)
(At Athens)
Zanesville Rosecrans (19-3) vs

Fighting Irish Outlast TCU Five
"
.,

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Perhaps Johnny Dee, the
Notre·Dame coach, summed it
up best.
"We played 26 exhibition
games and this was the first
regular season game," said
Dee. "It doesn't make any
difference if you were 26-0 or
19-7. The season starts now."
Dee's Notre Dame club was
one of the teams which
successfully advanced through
Sa~day's first round of NCAA
tournament play. The Fighting
Irish ousted Texas Christian
102-94 and Houston upended
New Mexico State 72-69 in
Midwest regional play.
Elsewhere, in the East,
Fordham routed Furman 105-74,
Pennsylvania stopped Duquesne

7~5 and Villanova whipped St.
Joseph's 93-75. In the Mideast
regionals, Marquette trounced
Miami (Ohio) 62-47 and Western Kentucky edged Jacksonville 74-72 while in Western
play, Long Beach State beat
Weber State 77-66 and Brigham
Young eliminated Utah State
90-82.
Marquette's Meninger Stars
Two playoff games and an
inter-city rivalry helped decide
three more slots. South Carolina edged North Carolina 52-51
to move into the Eastern
regionals, Drake ripped Louisville 86-71 to advance into
Midwest competition and
UCLA, NCAA champion the
past four years, qualified for
the Western regional by walloping Southern California 7~2.

Top-ranked UCLA, playing
what Coach John Wooden
called, "our best first half of
basketball this year" soared to
a 19-point lead at the intermission and coasted past thirdranked Southern Cal. Curtis
Rowe had 15 points and Sidney
Wicks added 13 for the Bruins,
who finished the regular season
with a 25-1 record.
"Almost every part of our
game in the first half but our
shooting was very good," said
Wooden. "Defense, ball handling, rebounding. We got them
forcing shots and hurrying and
making mi~takes because of
it.,
Marquette, with Dean Meminger leading the way, erupted
for 11 consecutive points
midway through the second half

to break open its game with
Miami. Meminger and Sophomore center Jim Chones
finished with 21 points each to
highlight the Warriors' attack.
Glover Scores
"When Dean the Dream
started doing his thing, it was
all over," said Marquette Coach
Al McGuire, who rejected an
NCAA bid last season when he
felt his club was being put into
the wrong regional.
The second game was the
closest in opening round play
and saw Western Kentucky
rally from an 18-point deficit to
win finally on Clarence Glover's
layup with four seconds left.
Jacksonville tied the score at
72-72 with 20 seconds left but a
double dribble violation gave
the Hilltoppers the ball. Glover

Tigers Repeat In District, Face
..
,.,

(

Ready In OU Regionals
Coach C.
Waverly Tige:
25-24 halftime
Coach
Larr)
Jordan's
previously undefeated Ross
Southeastern Panthers 63-59 for
the Class AA District high
school basketball championship
at the Paul R. Lyne Center in
Rio Grande Satw·day night.
It was the Tigers' second
consecutive Class AA District
championship.
The 1971 Southeastern Ohio
League champions will now
play Columbus Ready in the

Saturday's game at Rio,
Class AA Regionals at Ohio
University in Athens on Friday, played before another capacity
crowd, saw the Tigers run their
beginning at 8:15 p. m.
winning streak to 19 by ousting
seventh-ranked
Southeastern.
Columbus Ready, 20-2 on the
The Panthers outscored
year, was ranked fourth in the
final UPI poll on Feb. 25. At one Waverly 25-22 from the field,
time, Ready led the UPI ratings but lost it at the foul circles.
during the regular campaign. Ross hit nine of 17 charity
Waverly was named UPI poll tosses, WHS hit a sizzling 19 of
champion for the regular 24.
season.
Two Waverly players, Rick
In Friday's initial regional
Eblin and Mike Oyer fouled out
game, Maysville (17-5) will
in the final stanza.
tackle Steubenville Catholic ( 19The lead changed hands nine
3) at 7 p.m.
times, and the score was tied

Tourney Results

,
..

Ohio H. S. Basketball
Tournament Scores
By United Press International
Class AAA
(At Dayton)
Dayton Dunbar 70 Beavercreek
63 (ot)
At Youngstown
Youngs . North 66 Youngs.
Liberty 60
At Oxford
Harrii~ton Taft 68 Middletown 64
At Bowling Green
Celina 77 Ashland 50
At Athens
Steubenville 72 Cambridge 68
At Canton
Canton McKinley 85 Massillon
73
At Parma
Cleveland St. Ignatius 67
Brecksville 65

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
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At Lorain
Bay Village 78 Lorain 72
At Eastlake
Euclid 76 Painesville Harvey 44
At Cleveland
Cleveland E. Tech 95 Cleveland
J . Adams 79
At Troy
Springfield North 60 Sidney 50
At Columbus
Walnut Ridge 59 Columbus
South 57
Whitehall 80 Columbus Northland 69
At Toledo
Toledo Woodward 83 Toledo
Start 69
At Cincinnati
Cincinnati Withrow 63 Cin. St.
Xavier 56
At Copley
Akron Centrai· Hower 63 Barberton 60
Class AA
(At Warren)
Cham pion 68 Gar retts vi lie
Garfield 59
At Cincinnati
Love land 57 Mariemont 40
At Berea
Elyria Catholic 45 North
Ridgeville 38
At New Concord
Mays ville 74 Coshocton 62
At Marietta
Steubenville Centra l 67 Martins
Ferry 58
At Canton
Canton Lehman 59 Fairless 51
At Troy
Tipp City 73 Bellefontaine 52
At Rio Grande
Waver ly 63 Southeastern 59
At Ottawa Glandorf
Lima Cen. Cath. 61 Lima Bath
56
At Galion
Lexington 49 Wynford 46
At Toledo
Rossford 87 Delta 61
At Dayton
Dayton Oakwood 57 Dayton
Jeffe rson 53
Class A
At Lima
Convoy Crestview 66 Grover
Hill 64 Cotl
At Findlay
Vanlue 53 Cory Rawson 52
At Steubenville
Indian Valley South 30
1\lewcomerstown 27
At Norwalk
Old Fort 82 Seneca East 68
At Chillicothe
Crooksvi lle 64 Eastern Meigs 56
At Celina
Fort Recovery 72 St. Henry 64
At Napoleon
Ayresville 53 Edgerton 40

r.....

'
1

t
~

.l

.. ..........~~..................~•....,......,...._,...,.,_.__

the Sports Desk ~~
by Chet Tannehill

right now this is the biggest
thrill of my life. It's a bigger
win than 1957." That year
McGuire, coaching North
Carolina, won the NCAA title
with a 32-0 record.
Fordham (No. 10) with Charlie
Yelverton tossing in 30 points
and Sophs Bart Woytowich and
Ken Charles adding 18 each,
coasted past Furman.
"Yelverton is easily one of
the top players in the country,"
said Joe Williams, the Furman
coach who led Jacksonville to
the NCAA finals last season. "I
think Fordham is terribly
underrated physically. Everyone thinks it should be easy to
out-rebound
them because
they're small. But they're one
of the better rebounding teams
I've seen. They all jump so
well.
Austin Carr's 52-point performance led Notre Dame past
Texas Christian and Dwight
Davis and Poo Welch hit for
five points in the last two
minutes to power Houston past
New Mexico State.

Don Eskey Quits

seven times. Waverly took the
lead for keeps with 5:30 left in
the third period on a goal by Jeff
Hopkins. That put the Tigers on
top 29-27.
Waverly led 43-34 after three
periods, and was on top 59-48
with
1: 56
left
when
Southeastern staged a lastminute rally to reduce the final
count to four points.
The Panthers bowed out with
a 24-1 mark. Wavely upped its
record to 21-1.
John Skaggs led the losers
with 17points. Phil Miller paced
Waverly with 22 points.

._.,......,.......,.....,..~...,... ~

broke loose alone under the
basket and scored uncontested.
Bob Morse had 20 points in
the first half and Dave Wohl hit
for 13 in the second as unbeaten
Penn, the No. 4 team in the
nation, ousted Duquesne.
"Penn has an extremely
smart team," said Red Manning, coach of the losing Dukes.
"They handle the ball well and
constantly look to the individual
with the hot hand. When we
cooled Morse off, they went to
Wohl and the took up the slack."
Tom Owens' layup with two
seconds left brought South
Carolina (No. 7) its triumph
over North Crolina. Owens'
basket, which came after 6-foot3 Kevin Joyce beat 6-10 Lee
Dedmon on a jump ball, gave
South Carolina its first Atlantic
Coast Conference championship
in 18 years.
McGuire's Biggest Thrill
"The good Lord has to be on
your side when you win like
this," said Frank McGuire,
South Carolina's coach. "I
know it's silly in a way, but

~

~

,._.......,..__~, ........................... ~...,...."-""·......... ~~....,..•....,..~•.._.,.._.,..........,....,.....j

There are 46 high school basketball teams left in the running
for state titles in triple A, double A and A classes. The days'
pairing and places of battle are elsewhere on this page .
Southeastern Ohio - counting Steubenville as SE Ohio - has six
teams in the running at this point: Waverly, of the Southeastern
Ohio League, in double A; Crooksville, Pike Western, Zanesville
Rosecrans and Steubenville Catholic in class A, and Steubenville
in triple A.
Our ret,ion has an excellent shot at the Class AA title with
Waverly doing the honors.
We have at least three strong contenders, based on their wonlost records, in Class A; Pike Western 22-2, Steubenville Catholic
19-3, and Zanesville Rosecrans 19-3. Zanesville Rosecrans runs
into Crooksville (15-7) Thursday at Athens.
Triple A Steubenville, at 21-1, ranked 11th in the state, runs in
No. 1 Walnut Ridge Thursday night at Columbus. Goodbye
Steubenville (probably).
Waverly drew Columbus Ready, 20-2, on Friday night at
Athens, which is a game a lot of us will want to see. There's plenty
of seats (14,000) in the Convocation center so don't worry about
getting in. If you can't wangle a free pasteboard, the admission
should be $1.25. It would brighten up the image of the SEOAL to
have Waverly go all the way. We can help by hollering it up for the
Tigers Friday night at Athens.
TOURNAMENT DAYS always forces me, against my will, to
reconsider a problem that the basketball officiating fraternity
surely recognized and is doing what it can to solve.
Batmdaries of the problem are best indicated by the situation
Eastern ran into at Chillicothe playing qrooksville. The Ceramics
defensed Eastern the first half with only one foul called against
them. Not so Eastern, which was whistled down plenty. The
second half evened up a bit, Eastern going to the line for a total
(game) of 10 chances. But Crooksville won the game at the free
line, not from the field.
Thus the problem - it arises year after year - is that
frequently our teams in Meigs and Gallia counties appear, repeat
appear, unprepared for the "refereeing situation," if that is a
proper term. Fouls are called on a move that got home unscathed
under season-long referreeing . Or is it no more than home
prejudice? I don't know.
Thus, I would invite a letter from Ron Smith of Pomeroy
whom many fans regard as the premier referee produced in this
area in recent years on the subject of season versus tournament
refereeing.
How about it, Ron?

AHS Football Job
Tom
Metters,
Athens school but also in the SEOAL.
Messenger
staff
writer, Harry Lackey served a total of
reported Sunday that the dean 13 years over a 16-year span,
of Southeastern Ohio League which was tops until Eskey
football coaches, Athens' Don surpassed it this year. Lackey
Eskey, has submitted his coached at the school from 1938
resignation as head Bulldog to 1953 except for a three-year
mentor.
span during World War II (the
Metters reported in addition 1943, 1944 and 1945 seasons).
to having served as grid mentor
Eskey is also the winningest
for the Bulldogs, Eskey was coach in Athens grid history,
head track coach for nine years, having compiled a 14-year
but relinquished those duties · record of 78-45-3. Included in
following the 1966 season.
that is a 59-36-2 record in the
"I want to be free to be able to SEOAL. Eskey passed Lackey
devote more time to my family in total victories at Athens
and to do some of the things that during the 1968 season, his 12th
I've always wanted to do," campaign with the Bulldogs
Eskey noted.
(Lackey was 69-39-4).
"I wish to express my apA graduate of Ohio Univerpreciation to the many people in sity, where he played football,
the area who have been helpful Eskey held head coaching jobs
during my coaching career at Anderson Township High
here, especially the athletes School in Hamilton County (one
that have been so dedicated year) and Springfield Local
through the years," he added. High School in Jefferson County
Action on the resignation is (three years) prior to coming to
expected to be taken by the Athens. His 18-year coaching
Athens Board of Education at record, including the latter
the group's regular meeting positions, 97-61-3.
Monday night.
His success at Athens has not
Eskey produced cham- gone unnoticed. Eskey has been
pionship teams in both football the recipient of the Coach of the
and track. Three of his grid Year honor in the SEOAL four
teams won SEOAL titles, while times (1962,1965, 1966 and 1968),
two others were runners-up and and was picked as Class AA
two finished third. In track, four Southeastern District Coach of
of his teams won the league the Year three times (1965, 1966
meet in addition to three and 1968). In addition, he was
seconds, a third and a fourth. selected as a member of the
With his 14-year tenure as South coaching staff in the 1963
grid coach at Athens, Eskey not North-south all-star game.

Crooksville ( 15·7l
Indian Valley South (20-2) vs
Pike Western (22 2)
(At Dayton)
Clinton Massie (21-2) vs
Fort Recovery (22·2)
Franklin Monroe (15-9) vs
Sidney Lehman (22 1)
Friday
Class AAA
(At Cincinnati)
Hamilton Taft (17-3) vs
Springfield North (20·3)
Dayton Dunbar (21·1) vs
Cincinnati St. Xavier (16·4)
Class AA
(At Bowling Green)
Rossford (20·2) vs Canton Lehman (20-2)
Lexington (20-2) vs
Lima Central Catholic (18-3)
(At Athens)
Maysville (17-5) vs
Steubenville Catholic (19-3)
Columbus Ready (20-~) vs
Waverly (21·1)
At Dayton)
Tipp City (17-5) VS
Cincinnati Loveland (21 2)
Oakwood (16-3) vs London (14·
8)

Class A
(At Columbus)
Ridgedale (19-2) vs East Canton
(21-2)
Pleasant (18·4) vs Hillsdale (21·
3)

NCAA Pairings
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
pairings for the regional semifinals in the NCAA Basketball
Tournament Thursday, March
18:
East (Raleigh, N.C.)
Fordham (25·2) vs. Villa. (24-6)
S. Car. (23-4) vs. Penn. (27-0)
Mideast &lt;Athens, Ga.)
Marq. (27-0) vs. Ohio St. (19-5)
W. Ky. (21·5) vs. Ky (22-4}
Midwest (Wich. Kan.)
Dame (20·7&gt; vs. Drake (20-7}

Kan. (25-1) vs . Hous. (21-6}.
West (Salt Lake City)
UCLA (25-1} vs. Brig. Young
(19-9)
L. Bea. St. (23-4) './3. of the
Pacific. (21-5)
The winners will meet in
regional finals on March 20,
and the four regional champions advance to Houston on
Thursday, March 25, for the
nationally televised semifinals.

Si~npson

Hurls One
Inning For Cincy

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) Sparky Anderson is starting
Wayne Simpson off slowly.
Simpson, who had a 14-3
record as a rookie last season
but developed arm troubles
toward the end, pitched only the
first inning Sunday as the
Cincinnati Reds fell to a
collection of National League

NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pts
51 10 7 109
Boston
44 14 11 99
New York
35 20 13 83
Montreal
34 29 6 74
Toronto
19 37 13 51
Buffalo
20 37 10 50
Detroit
19 41 7 45
Vancouver
West
W. L. T. Pts
Chicago
43 16 9 95
St. Louis
28 23 17 73
Minnesota
25 30 15 65
Philadelphia
25 30 13 63
Pittsburgh
20 31 18 58
Los Angeles
29 35 12 52
California
17 47 5 39
Sunday's Results
New York 1 Toronto 0
Detroit 8 Calif. 5
Chi. 4 St. Lou. 4 (tie)
Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 1
Buffalo 5 Minn. 0
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
(No game scheduled)

players 6-4.
It was Simpson's first appearance of the spring, as
planned by Anderson, the club
manager.
On Saturday the Reds beat St.
Louis 5-0 as doubles by Pat
Corales and Tommy Helms
highlighted a five-run fourth
inning.
On Sunday Ed Kranepool of
the New York Mets hit a homer
in the first inning after Simpson
had walked Jose Cardenal and
hit another batsman.
Playing the National League
champions were players from
the Mets, Philadelphia Phillies
and Cardinals.
Angel Bravo had three of the
Reds' eight hits, one of them a
double.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO
INTERE!iT OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

Exec. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor
Published daily except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, n1
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ABA Standings ,
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
49 26 .653 ...
Kentucky
41 34 .554 8
38 36 .514 10112
New York
32 44 .421 17112
Pitts burgh
32 46 .410 181/2
Floridians
29 46 .387 20
Carolina
West
W. L. Pet. GB
51 22 .699 ...
Utah
51 24 .680 1
Indiana
37 38 .493 15
Memphis
27 48 .360 25
Denver
26 49 .347 26
Texas
Sunday's Results
Florians 117 Pitts. 114
Va. 139 Kentucky 121
Texas 132 Memphis 123
Indiana 131 Denver 121
Utah 126 Carolina 103
(Only games schedu led)
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled J
NW 85 Mich. St. 67
UCLA 73 S. Calif. 62
Purdue 110 Iowa 84
Kansas 59 Nebras ka 54
Oreg. 71 Oreg. St. 65

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The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Marrh 15, 1971

::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::;::·:;:-:::::::

Prof. Garsee to Speak

Tom Grueser, president,
announced today there will be
a meeting Thursday at 7 p.m.
at Pomeroy city hall for all
managers and concerned
persons to set up the Pee Wee,
Little League and Pony
League in Pomeroy.

In Middleport Revival
Jarrell W. Garsee, faculty
member at the Mount Vernon
Nazarene College, will be
speaker for revival services to
be held at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene
beginning tomorrow night.
The services will be held at
7:30p.m. each evening through
Sunday. The Gospel-Aires of
this area will be providing
special music at every service
except Tuesday when the Rev.
Morris Wolfe of Racine will
provide the music and on
Thursday when music will be
furnished by the church choir.
The Rev. Audry Miller, host
pastor, invites the public to the
services.
Mr. and Mrs. Garsee and
their two children, Jan, who is
six, and John, five, moved to
Mount Vernon from the Samoan
Islands in the summer of 1968.
Garsee, a graduate of
Bethany Nazarene College in
Bethany, Oklahoma, also
graduated from Nazarene
Theological Seminary with a
BD in Theology in 1954. He
received his MS from Oklahoma
University in 1964 in Psychology.
From 1954 to 1960 Rev. Garsee
was pastor of Trinity Church of
the Nazarene in Corpus Christi,
Texas, but then was asked by
the Church of the Nazarene to
go to Samoa as Overseas
Mission Representative to

Rose Gets Small Pay Increase

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

College Results
By United Press International
Tournaments
Atlantic Coast
Final Round
Caro. 52 Car. 51
Missouri Valley Playoff
Drake 86 Louisville 71

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Pete
Rose, the highest paid player
in Cincinnati Reds history, has
signed his 1971 contract for a
reported $107,500, accepting half
the raise he had wanted.
No figures were released by
the club Sunday but it was
learned the two-time batting
champion picked up a $2,500
cost of living salary increase.
Rose, who arrived in the
Reds' spring camp at Tampa,
Fla. Saturday, said he was not
fully satisfied but decided to

give in rather than fight the
club any longer.
"I've gotten a lot of mail and
fans seem to be on me," Rose
said. "Rather than taking this
fight any longer for a couple of
thousand dollars, I figured it
was time to sign and get in
shape."
Rose, who officially held out
for 14 days and was the last
Reds' player to sign, said he
will be "115 per cent player"
on the field despite his differences with the front office.

"I have no time to worry
about this anymor~," he said.
"I owe it to the players and
fans to get myself in shape and
get out there."
Rose had rankled especially
at how the cost of living percentage was calculated. It was
taken on the aventge professional ballplayer's salary figured at $26,000.
"I asked them if they
couldn't arrange to have me
pay taxes on the average salary since that's what my sal-

Keller's Skating Record
INZELL, Germany 'UPI)West Germany's Erha. ,. Keller
broke the world 500 meters
speed
skating record Sunday •
ary is being based on," Rose
with a time of 38.42 seconds
said half-jokingly.
before going on to win the
Rose is the only $100,000 sprmt combined competition of
bracket player on the National the "Golden Skates" meet on
the Inzell artificial ice rink.
League champion club.

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

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

NAIA (Final Round)
Ky. St. 102 E. Mich. 82
Eliz. City St. 88 Fair. St. 87
(Consolation)
NCAA Coli. Div.
Puget Sound 85 Sea. Pac. 78
Cheyney St. 60 Phil. Text. 58
Akron 77 Wooster 68
(Consolation)
Cal Poly (SLO) 70san Fran. St.
68
(Consolation)

JARRELL GARSEE
organize the work of the church
in those islands. Besides his
duties for the church, Garsee
was a teacher and test
specialist for the Department of
Education in Samoa from 19621968.
Gar see is the author of Samoa
Diary which was published by
the Nazarene Publishing House
in 1963. In 1967 he had a
publication in the Journal of
Social Psychology ''Samoan
Interpersonal Values." He has
completed all course work at
OSU for the Ph.D. degree in
Developmental Psychology.

NCAA Univ. Oiv. Regionals
First Round
East Regional
Fordham 105 Furman 74
Penn 70 Duquesne 65
Viii. 93 St. Jos. (Pa.) 75
Mideast Reaional
Marq. 62 Miami (Ohio) 47
W. Ky 74 Jacksonville 72
Midwest Regiona I
Notre Dame 102 TCU 94
Houston 72 Mex. St. 69
West Regiona I
L. Bea . St. 77 Weber St. 66
Brig. Young 91 Utah St. 82
Other Games
Illinois 103 Indiana 87
Michig. 93 Wisconsin 73

Pirates' Giusti Sharp
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Dave Giusti's earned run
average in spring training a
year ago was 38.60. His ERA
this spring is 0.00. If you think
that tells you something, think
of what it tells the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
What lt means is that the
Pirates are confident they will
go into the 1971 National
League East pennant race with
the relief ace who decided the
1970 race : the best short relief
plk'her in the division.
Giasti, whose · Par record

Buc

not included in manager Danny
Murtaugh's plans for starting
pitchers and feared he was
headed for the Minors.
But Giusti's position as the
Pirates' No. 1 relief pitcher is
so secure this spring that he
was left behind Sunday to pitch
for their B team against the
Los Angeles Dodgers while
Pittsbw·gh's A team was
gamboling in Panama City
against a Panamanian all-star
team.
Giusti- went four innings -a
lot for him -against the
Dodgers and left with the score
tied 2-2. Both runs off him were
unearned. Pirate starters had
only 36 complete games last
season compared to 47 for the
Mets and 59 for the Cubs which
illustrates the importance of
Giusti's late-inning relief work.
Pittsburgh won 5-3.
On other fronts: Harmon
Killebrew hit his fourth homer
of the spring as the Minnesota
Twins beat the Boston Red Sox,
10-7. Killebrew is batting .529
and has driven in 10 runs in
exhibition games .
McLain yielded two runs on
seven hits, walked one and hit a
batter in six innings in the
Washington Senators' 7-4 win
over the New York Yankees. It
was the Yankees' sixth straight
loss.

in the majors was 5()..60 at the
start of the 1970 season,
emerged as the decisive factor
in the Pirates' victory over the
Chicago Cubs and New York
Mets. He gave the Pirates lateinning relief pitching which
neither rival could match and
wound up the season with a 0-3
record in 66 appearances.
A 30-year old native of
Seneca Falls, N.Y., Giusti was
a confused man at about this
time last spring. He was being
clouted all over the field in
exhibition games, knew he was

Lose3rd

Straight Tilt
By United Press International
The Milwaukee Bucks have
not been accustomed to losing
during the Lew Alcindor era.
For the first time since
Alcindor joined the Bucks, they
dropped their third consecutive
game 125-113 Sunday night to
the Phoenix Suns. The Suns got
Alcindor into foul trouble to
become the only team besides
the New York Knicks to beat
Milwaukee twice this season.
New York has won four-offive from the Bucks.
With six minutes left in the
third quarter, Alcindor got his
fifth personal foul, and he was
forced to ride the bench during
part of the fourth quarter.
However, he still led both
teams in scoring with 38 points.
New York did not play on

Sunday but clinched the Atlantic Division title when Atlanta
defeated the Philadelphia 76ers
108-101. Lou Hudson and Walt
Hazzard led a second-half surge
to give Atlanta its seventh
victory in eight games and keep
the Hawks a game and a half
ahead of Cincinnati in the race
for the second-place playoff
berth in the Central Division.
Pete Maravich led Atlanta
with 25 points while Hazzard
added 20, including 16 in the
second half, and Hudson
finished with 19.
In other National Basketball
Association games, Portland
beat Buffalo 122-112, Los
Angeles defeated Detroit 110100, Boston crushed Chicago
117-104, Cincinnati downed Cleveland 115-103 and Seattle
stopped Baltimore 124-121.

No Matter How Small,
We'll. ..

Make It Grow
4%%
Interest per year, com pounded
quarterly
on
regular passbook savings
.accounts. No minimum or
maximum amount. Interest
is paid from date of deposit
to date of withdrawa I as long
as you maintain an open
account.

Athens Takes on Belpre
Athens will battle Belpre for
the championship of the Meigs
Girls Invitational Basketball
tournament this evening at 6
p.m. at Meigs High School.
In the consolation game,
Kyger Creek will go against
Gallipolis.
Gallipolis defeated Federal
Hocking Saturday night 37 to 18
while Kyger Creek, in a closer
contest, ousted Nelsonville
York 39 to 24.
Federal Hocking was no
match for Gallipolis as the
winners took the lead 9-2 in the
first quarter only to lead by 8
points at the end of the second
quarter.
.
Scoring in double figures for
the winners was Folden with 16
points followed by Swain and
King with 9 each and Akers 2.
For Federal Hocking Farrell

had G, Cole 9, Nelson 2, and
Ococneru 1.
In
the
Kyger
CreekNelsonville game Kyger Creek
took advantage of turnovers
and used the fast break to win.
For Kyger, Cornelius had 8
points and was 6 for 7 at the foul
line. C. Hall led all scorers with
18, Nunn had 3 and Gardner 2.
For Nelsonville-York, Hannas
and Coffman had 6 each.
11 16 26 39
Kyger Creek
Nelsonville
9 17 21 24
Gallipolis
Fed. Hocking

Meigs Co. Branch

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Loan Co.
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Pomeroy, Ohio
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have to keep up with them day by day. And it's only through your
newspaper that you can get all the news, while it's still news . If you
haven't made the daily paper a habit already, now's the tine tc
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Zilioli Wins Race
SAN BENEDETTO DEL
TRONTO , Italy (UPI)- Italo
Zilioli, leading since the second
day of the five-day event,
Sunday won the sixth annual
Tyrrhenian-to-the Adriatic cycling race .

''FIND OUT 'WHAT'S HAPPENING' •••
READ YOUR DAILY NEWSPAPER!''

Balance On
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�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 15,1971

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...,.,.,.,..,..,.,~

•

$200 to Carpet Fund

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

Spring Garden Fever
BY MRS. TOM STEWART
For, lo! the winter is past, the rain is over and gone; the
flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of birds is
come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land. Song of
Solomon 2: 11, 12.

•

,~

SPRING WILL have arrived SWlday, March 21.
Seems a little hard to believe, doesn't it?
But, it's a calendar fact! Spring brings the robin, thoughts of
an Easter bonnet and the newest fashions form' lady. And yet,
"Old Man Winter" insists we wear his worn snowy coat of white.
As the March winter winds subside; and the warm, balmy breezes
of spring begin to blow, we start thinking of planting a garden.
Before the spring garden fever hits you, I would like to offer these
gardening tips.
The month of March brings the big flower shows indoors and
the first sign of spring in the northern part of the United States is
the wild SkWlk cabbage and pussy willow.
H you haven't already done so, fruit and ornamental trees,
fall blooming shrubs, roses and grapes should be pruned. It is
important to get it done so dormant sprays can be applied just
before the buds begin to swell. Dormant sprays will control overwintering insects such as scale and spider mites. Sprays should be
applied when the temperature is below 40 degrees, and do be
careful to follow label directions.
H not done last fall, spade garden and leave rough. Vegetable
seeds of broccoli, brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower,
eggplants, peppers and tomatoes and flower seeds of hybrid
dahlias, snapdragons and verbena can be sown in a hotbed.
March 16 to 31 is a good time to apply fertilizer to your lawn.
Pre-emergent herbicides should be applied by late March for best
results. Old spray materials should be discarded but caution
should be used in putting them where they can cause no harm.
As soon as soil can be worked, prepare and seed a new lawn or
make repairs to yours, if needed. Mixtures of better strains of
Kentucky bluegrasses, and fine fescues should be used. Water in
well and keep moist until grass is growing vigorously.
Shade and fruit trees, shrubs, evergreens, small bush fruits,
and grape vines, strawberry plants and roses may be planted the
latter part of the month. Water in well. Remove winter protection
from roses while buds are still dormant. Prune roses. Remove all
dead growth, and cut back canes to live wood. A slanting cut
should be made about three-eighths inch above an outside bud.
Spreading type varieties such as Crimson Glory and Aztec should
be prW1ed to th inside buds. Seal cut ends with a sealant. The
first application of fertilizer should be stirred in and watered well.
· Place somo birdhouses about your property and continue
feeding the birds until they can find natural foods for themselves.
You will be well rewarded by the birds' cheery song, and he will
be of help to you in ridding your garden and lawn of insect pests.
Another benefit is the sight of the bird's colorful feathers as he
darts from tree to feeder, brightening up the dreary winter landscape.
well on the way plant peas, asparagus and
Assponas
annuals flowers can be planted also.
rhubarb. Seed
ornia poppies, sweet peas, petWiias,
These mclude 1
calendulas, an
Do not be
too great a hurry to remove protestion from
perennials and biennials. Spring weather can be treacherous;
early warm days can be followed by cold nights, windy and sunny
days, a combination that is hard on newly uncovered plants. As
soon as perennials are 2 inches tall spread a dressing of fertilizer
over the soil and fork in shallowly. H the plants are crowded, thin
out, and replant.
Why not bring a little spring indoors with you? Try forcing
branches of spring flowering shrubs and trees into bloom indoors.
Quince, bridal wreath, forsythia and crab apples are equally good
for forced bloom.
"Nature supplies the living material, and this is the best part
of a garden; craft can vary its growth, art can accentuate and
frame its charm, but its ever changing beauty is the gift of God ."
- Rose Standish Nichols.

District Rally is In May at Chester
SYRACUSE - A letter was
read from District Deputy
Esther Ridenour stating the
District 13 rally will be held at
the Chester Grade school May
14, when Guiding Star Council
124 convened in ritualistic form
at their hall on Cherry St.
Thursday, March 11.
Councilor Janice Lawson
conducted the meeting in which
other correspondence was read
and reports were read and
approved.
The George Thompson fWld
was voted a $10 donation .
Practice for initiation will be
Tuesday, March 16, at 10 a.m.

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The carpet fund of the Middleport Church of Christ has
been boosted by $200 by the
Philathea Society.
Meeting Thursday night at
the church, the Society voted to
give the entire proceeds from
the sale of their cookbook to the
carpet fund. The purchase of
new tables for the dining room
was discussed and linens for the
new kitchen, including 44
towels, were presented. A
rummage sale was set for
Thursday and Friday of this
week as another fWld raising
project toward equipping the
new addition to the church.
Miss
Mildred
Hawley
reported that current officers
have agreed to serve another
year and will be installed at the

POLLY~S

By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY-Thrifty Mother wanted to know how
to make a piggy bank out of a plastic bleach bottle. Lay
the bottle on its side with the handle up. Glue on four
spools for legs. Cover the lid with a large button or round
circle of pink felt and two little black felt circles for the
pig's nose. Cut two triangles for ears and glue on. Glue on
two colorful buttons for eyes. Curl a pipe cleaner around
your finger to make the tail and attach it. Cut a slit for
the money to slip through.-JANE, an 8th grader.
DEAR POLLY- I want to tell Thrifty Mother how to
make Easter baskets from
lfz -gallon plastic bleach bottles. Measure the height
you prefer for the basket
and cut part way round,
leaving one-inch strips opposite each other for handles. Cut these strips all
the way up to form the handles and fasten together at
NEA
the top with a ribbon bow.
The basket part could be
scalloped around the top
and then eyelet holes made with a hot nail to perforate
each scallop. Small colorful detergent bottles can be used
to make cute May baskets or favors for guests in nursing
homes.-MARIE

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY- I am a young housewife with two
children and another on the way. I am interested
in taking up sewing as a hobby. I feel it will be of
great benefit to my family and our budget. too. I am
unable to locate beginner' s instructions that will not
put a hole in that budget. I hope someone can tell
me how I can pursue this without a big investment.
- MRS. L. M.

Layette Shower Given by Club
A
decorated
bassinet
surroWlded by yellow and blue
streamers was used for the gifts
for Mrs. George Hoffman,
honored Wednesday night at a
layette shower by the Sew-RiteSewing Club.
The shower was held at the
home of Mrs. Flo Strickland
with Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mrs.
Edward Wells, and Mrs. Don
Collins serving as club
hostesses.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Bill McDaniel, Mrs. Don McKnight,
Mrs. Raymond Baity, and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, Jr.
Fancy sandwiches, salad
treats, cupcakes, punch and
coffee were served. The table

Birthday Occasion

Was Surprise Party

FI-NISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At!'
Use'Our Free Parking lot

R0b'lnSOn rS Cl eane~
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

POINTERS

Bleach Bottle
To Piggy Bani~

All members are asked to be
present. Inspection date has
been set tentatively for April 22.
Birthdays will be observed at
the March 25 meeting.
Present were Esther Harden,
Margaret Cottrill,
Sadie
Thuener, Janice Lawson,
Wilma Davidson, Myla Hudson,
Thelma Grueser, Ada Slack,
Pauline Morarity, Kath[!yn
Johnson, Agnes White, Jean
Hall, Eileen Clark, Edith Hood,
Mrs. Ross Stewart, Sr. and
and Florence Potts, CoWlcil Mrs. Harolj Davis entertained
Deputy.
Friday night with a surprise
party honoring Joseph White,
Jr. on his birthday anniversary.
MOVE TO MIDDLEPORT
Sandwiches, ice cream, cake,
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Sayre
soft drinks and coffee were
and four ch~ldren have moved
from Cheshire to the former served. The party was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Bing property on South Second
Ave ., Middleport, now owned by Harold Davis and son, Richard.
Others there were Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore.
Ross Stewart, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. Sayre is employed at
G00 d
Gene Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
year.
William (Pete) Hedricks and
daughter of Kentucky, Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Stewart, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Rudy Stewart and son,
DINNER PLANNED
A chicken dinner - public Mount Vernon, and Mrs. Alice
invited - will be held at the White.
Mount Moriah Baptist Church
Thursday night from 5 to 7 p.m.
The dinners are $1.50 per person
VISITED SISTER
and will be delivered anywhere
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis,
in Middleport from 4 to 5 p.m.
Pomeroy, spent the weekend in
Orders are to be placed by
Springfield with her sister, Mrs.
telephoning 992-5389.
Harold Johnson.

SHIRT

April 15 meeting following a
potluck supper. They are Mrs.
Grace Pratt, president; Mrs.
Norman
Yeauger,
vice
president; Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
secretary;
Mrs.
0. E.
McKinley, assistant secretary;
and Miss Frances Roush,
treasurer.
Mrs. Runell Moyer and Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth will be in
charge of the installation service.
Read at the meeting was an
invitation from Mrs. Danny
Thompson of the Middleport
Baptist
Church
inviting
members to a revival service
there, March 24-28.
The death of the son of Mrs.
Grace Glaze was noted along
with the illness of Mrs. Minerva

SOLICITATIONS SET
Mrs. Ernest Bowles and Mrs.
Charles Kessinger of the
American Legion Auxiliary will
solicit business places in
Middleport Tuesday for contributions to the George
Thompson Kidney Fund. A
house-to-house canvass will be
carried out by the auxiliary
members within the next two
weeks.

was centered with a doll replica
flanked by tapers.
Others attending were Mrs.
Howard Van Matre, Mrs.
George Van Matre, Mrs. Ross
Roush, Mrs. Larry Wehrung,
Mrs. Don Mullen, Mrs. James
Neutzling, and Lisa Hoffman .
The next club meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs.
Neutzling with Mrs. McDaniels
as co-hostess.

Auxiliary Will
Sponsor Lunch,
Supper Mar. 27
SYRACUSE - There will be a
chicken plate lWich and supper
on March 27 and bake sale at the
same time sponsored by the
Ladies Auxiliary of the
VolWiteer Firemen.
Both were planned at a
meeting conducted by the
president, at the headquarters
March 9 with Myla Hudson
reading Ezekiel 6: 1-5 for
devotions.
The menu for the dinner and
supper will be baked chicken,
mashed potatoes, noodles,
green beans, slaw, rolls, coffee
and tea, all for $1. This may be
eaten at the house or carried
out.
Easter
baskets
and
homemade eggs should be
ordered early. Orders may be
phoned to 992-2015, 992-2569 or
992-2841.
A sack lunch was enjoyed at
noon with Ada Slack, and Doris
Friend serving dessert after the
meeting .
Attending were Jean Hall,
Mabel Pickens, Doras Friend,
Agnes White, Janice Lawson,
Myla Hudson, Ada Slack, Edith
Hood, Thelma Grueser, Marie
Rizer, Elva Dailey, and Eleanor
Bohram.

Childers,
Mrs.
Norman
Yeauger, Mrs. Reva Beech,
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, Effie
Montgomery, Mrs. Larry
Morrison, Mr. and Mrs. L. E.
Reynolds, Vernita McClung,
Wendy Wolfe, Mrs. Leota
Hawley, Claude Washington,
and Barbie Moyer.
Devotions by Mrs. Martha
Childs were on the 121st Psalm.
Miss Roush read a poem,
"Sunset for Sale." Mrs. Robert
Reibel was a guest. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Childs, Miss Roush, Mrs. Pratt.
Mrs. Neva Pratt and Mrs.
Reynolds were the contributing
hostesses.

Two Welcomed

By Garden Club
Mrs. Nina Bland and -Mrs.
Larry D. Spencer were
welcomed into membership of
the Amateur Gardeners Club at
a recent meeting at the home of
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
Mrs. Harry Moore, presiding,
announced the Region 11 spring
conference to be held at Rutland
in April, and the lOth Annual
Clara B. Ford Garden Forum at
the Henry Ford Museum at
Dearborn, April 21-23.
Correspondence
regarding
the Green Thumb Notes column
in The Daily Sentinel was read
and Mrs. Roger Morgan was
appointed to prepare the March
26 column and Mrs. Betty Cline
the one for June 25.
It was decided to place a two
year subscription to the Flower
Grower in the Middleport
Library. Mrs. L. E. Reynolds'
absence due to an injury was
noted.
Mrs. Joe Bolin of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners gave a
demonstration on making corn
husk roses and mums. She was
presented with a gift by Mrs.
Harold Lohse.
The club collect opened the
meeting. Mrs. Lohse gave the
treasurer's
report.
The
traveling prize was won by Mrs.
Wesley Fry, and Mrs. Lohse
received the door prize. Mrs.
Reynolds and Mrs. Grace Pratt
served a dessert course. JVtrs.
Dallas Sayre was a guest.

. . . . . .._.._..

~·._,...,.........,......_..

si

_____
1

~ Meigs Social Calendar

Parents e
L~-·~-·-~·-·~~~·-~·-·~~-·-·-·J $1,000 Goal
I

MONDAy
MIDDLEPORT P.T.A., 7:30
p.m. Monday; Soul Inspirations
to provide program of music.
CHESTER PTA Monday
night at 8 p.m. Family Night to
be observed.
RACINE PTA Monday, 7:30

Royal and Select Masons
stated assembly, Wednesday:
7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple.
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, special meeting
to follow Bosworth Council.
Royal Arch degree to be conferred on four candidates.
Refreshments.
p.m. with Rev. Arthur Lund
SYRACUSE THIRD Wed-

~h~~/~: ~~r:.ru~r~;~!~ a~~

nesday Homemakers, Wednesday, 10 a.m. at headquarters
with "Chair Caning" topic of
program. Hostesses, Eleanor
Bohram, Agnes White, Mabel
Pickens, potluck at noon.
POMEROY Community
Lenten service, 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
Wednesday at Pomeroy United
SALISBURY P.T.A., 7:30 Methodist Church, the Rev. Bill
p.m. Tuesday, Fathers Night to Perrin and Envoy Ray Wining
be observed with fathers to in charge.
count double toward room
WINDING TRAIL Garden
award. Refreshments.
Club, 7:30 Wednesday at the
MEIGS LOCAL Athletic home of Mrs. Lloyd Moore.
Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
high school. Program on
THURSDAY
wrestling by Fenton Taylor,
CLASS 12, Heath United
Tracy Whaley, Refreshments. Methodist Church 7:30 ThursSPECIAL MEETING, Shade day. Devotions by Mrs. Carroll
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, Swanson; program by Mrs.
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., Chester. James Euler; hostesses, Mrs.
Work in Master Mason degree, Earl Knight, Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel, and Mrs. E. M. Wood.
all Masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT
CHILD
WOMEN'S
AUXILIARY,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Conservation League, 7:30
Guest
night.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, hospital Thursday.
Program, "Press the Button
cafeteria, program.
MIDDLEPORT WDGE 363, and Be Seated." Names for
F&amp;AM, Tuesday 7:30p.m. Work membership to be submitted.
JITNEY SUPPER, Rutland
in Fellow Craft degree.
THIRD TUESDAY Club, 7:30 Firemen's Auxiliary, Rutland
Tuesday night at the home of Grade School, Thursday with
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe, W. Main St. serving to begin at 4:30 p.m.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE, 8 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Tuesday at Trinity Church. Health Club, 1:15 p.m. ThursMiss Mary V. Reibel to have the day at the home of Mrs. Fred
program.
Goeglein.
GROUP II, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
FRIDAY
7: 30 Tuesday. Mrs. Don
SOUP SUPPER, 4:30 p.m.
Lowery, devotional leader;
Friday at the Syracuse Asbury
Mrs. Myron Miller, book study.
Methodist Church. Soup, pie,
sandwiches. Containers to be
WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, provided for take-out orders.
Racine Girl Scout Troop 137.
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, Monday 7 : 30 p.m.
Masonic Temple, Middleport.
Mothers Club 7 : 30 p.m. in
basement.

An effort to raise $1,000 by
April20 will be made by parents
of the Pomeroy Elementary
School safety patrol students so
that the annual patrol trip to
Washington, D. C. won't have to
be cancelled.
Meeting Friday afternoon at
the school, parents planned
several fund raising activities.
A rummage sale will be held
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
in the Stark building, Second
St., Pomeroy, and residents
with items to contribute are
asked to take them to the
building or call the school to
arrange pickup. The rummage
sale will be continued on the
following weekend.
A house-to-house bread sale is
being planned, as are a bake
sale on April 3, bottle cap
collection, and a tag day.
To date the safety committee
has $456 on hand. For the 29
sixth graders to go to
Washington, $1,450 is needed. It
was decided during the meeting
that parents will supplement if
the amount from the various
activities come anywhere near
the $1,000 needed.

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Albert Roush was admitted to the Veterans
Memorial Hospital iate Friday
night. Her room number is 114.

SPENT WEEKEND HERE
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs, Pomeroy,
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Jacobs of Columbus.

P. J. Pauley

Mrs. Fry Hostess at Shower

Mrs. Barbara Fry entertained Saturday evening
with a shower honoring Miss
Vicki Roop of Marietta, brideelect of Roger Stiles of Middleport, at her Rock Springs
Road home.
A pink and whtte color
scheme was carried out and
cake, ice cream, punch, coffee
and mints were served.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Julia
Norris, Mrs. Rose Ginther, Mrs.
Mabel Moore, and the honored
guest.
The guest list included those
named, Mrs. Mabel Tracy and
Sue, Mrs. Phyllis Spencer, Mrs.
Mildred DeWeese, Mrs. Nancy
Holzer Medical Center, First Walker, Mrs. Ruth Gosney,
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. James H.
Hensley, Jr., Kenton, a
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
E. Bush, Gallipolis Ferry, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Jubal Canter, Homer
Casto,
M s.
Paul
E.
Charrington, Mrs. Douglas A.
Clark and infant son, Mrs.
Helen B. Davis, Mrs. Paul F .
Denney, Jr., Thomas R. Farley,
Smith Henderson, Mrs. Kenneth
C. Keefer and infant son,
Charles B. Lewis, Aaron W.
Loney, Mrs. James E. Morse,
Mrs. Jonah Parks, Mrs. Larry
D. Petrie and infant son, James
Today's FUNNY will pay $1.00 for
each original"funny" used. Send gags
M. Pierce, Michael B. Rake,
to: Todoy's FUNNY, 1200 West Third
Mrs. Hernane C. Res tar,
St., Cleveland, Ohio 44113.
Harland G. Sanders, John D.
Stanley, Mrs. D. R. Stout and
infant son, Mrs. John K.
Thomas, Mrs . Carolyn S.
Accountant-Infielder
Withrow, Mrs. Elsie L.
SAN
DIEGO, Calif. (UPI)Graham, and James M. Coe.
Ed Spezio, San D,ego Padres
third baseman, holds a degree
in accounting from Lewis
VISIT PARENTS
College, Lockport, Ill .
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Darst and
family, Middleport, were
weekend guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore,
RD, Pomeroy. Deanna, who had
visited several days with her
grandparents, returned to
Columbus with her parents
Sunday.

Mrs. Kate Wildermuth, Mrs.
Betty Spencer, Mrs. Jenny
Well, Mrs. Wilma Ginther, Miss
Emma Lou Davis, Miss Helen
Davis, Miss Elizabeth Davis,
Miss Joyce Davis. Mrs. Faye
Wallace, Mrs. Sally Will\ Mrs.
Charldene Hanning, Mrs.
Shelby Davis, Mrs. Virginia
Owen, Mrs. Lucille King.
Mrs. Susan Pullins, Mrs.
Agnes Dixon, Mrs. Wilma
Stobart, Mrs. Delores Lynch,
Miss Elizabeth Duffy, Mrs.
Juanita Roop, Mrs. Carolyn
Haley, Mrs. Goldie Gilmore,
Mrs. Gladys Cummings, Mrs.
Martha King, Mrs. Dorothy
Long, Mrs. Nancy Neutzling,
Mrs. Mildred Fry, Mrs Marilyn
Bishop, Mrs. Yvonne Moore.
Mrs. Kay Platter, Mrs. Edna
Stiles, Mrs. Eloise Stiles, Miss
Nina Stiles, and Miss Ruth .Ann
Fry.

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY
Phone ~92-2318

AUTO
FIRE- LIFE
HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

~~NATIONWIDE
~.J ~~~.~~~~7~~

Need a printer
who's your type?

Yellow
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Grand Slam Record
NEW YORK ( UPI) - The
Yankees' Lou Gehrig holds the
major league career record for
grand slam home runs. The
Yankee slugger crashed 23
homers with the bases filled.

AS SHOWN
$
0~1."·································

1900

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 15,1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
Notice

2 SIGNS

Stivers ville

SKATE A-WAY,
Wednesday
night, Family Special. Free
family pass to family having
most skaters presen1. Open
Wednesday, Friday and
Saturday. Private parties
available. Phone Chester 985·
3929 or 985-2585.
3·14-3tc
Recent visitors of Clint and
Leota Birch were Mr. and Mrs.
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
Thomas Birch and children,
leach beds. Phone 949•476 1,
10-18-t(c'
Waterford, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence
Lipps,
Little
NEW SHIPMENT women's and
Hocking, 0.; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
children's
clothing
has
arrived at Jeffers Clothing
Lips and family; and Mr. Bruce
Store. Plenty of men's work
Enlow, Vincent, 0.
clothes also. Jeffers Clothing
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Holter,
Store, Rt. 33 going toward
fairgrounds
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van
3-126tc
Meter and Missy, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Evans and GUN SHOOT, Sunday, March
daughters, local, were recent
21, at Racine G'un Club.
Hams, bacon, steaks, pork
callers at the home of Mrs. Ada
chops.
Van Meter.
3 15 6tc
Mrs. Elva Dailey, Syracuse,
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Autherson Sunday.
1
Mr. Autherson is much im- 1
b .
I
proved
since
a
recent II
rIng you
I
hospitalization.
I
extra Cash
I
Mrs. Bill Middleswart and I
II
for
I
Mrs. Russell Van Meter were
I
recent guests of Mrs. Mary I
shopping sprees
I
1
______________
1
Pierce, Long Bottom, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lawson
have moved their mobile home
into this community.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst
and Scotty, Athens, were
weekend guests of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst and
Tom.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lisle, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va. and Freda
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Carpenter attended the Clay Johnson and Patrick spent
and Frazier fight at the Field Friday evening with Mr. and
House in Huntington, W. Va. Mrs. Douglas Johnson of
Monday night.
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Lawson
There were 28 persons at
and son, Minersville, were Sunday School March 7. The
recent guests of his parents, Mr. birthday of Claudia Roush was
and Mrs. J. W. Lawson.
noted. Calling at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mid- Mary Circle over the weekend
dleswart and family called on were Mr. and Mrs. James
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Circle, New Haven, Ricky
Bush, Racine, Sunday af- Circle of Charleston, W. Va.,
ternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brewer, daughters, New Haven, and Mr.
Long Bottom, were guests of his and Mrs. Melvin Circle and
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen family of Columbus.
Brewer and David, Saturday.
Tim and Tom Barnitz of
1v1r. and Mrs Larry Fitch and Kingston, Ohio, were guests of
family were guests of his Patrick Johnson on Wednesday
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl and Thursday of last week.
Fitch, Long Bottom, Sunday.
Enjoying the day with Mr.
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mr. and and Mrs. Allan Taylor on
Mrs. Larry Gluesencamp, Mr. Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Ted Bailey and family Bennie Bickers and son, Scottie,
were recent guests of Mr. and Ralph Rose, all of Oak Grove,
Mrs. L. R. Gh.;
ncamp and
. and Mrs. Frank Hudson and
N1kk1
Toni of Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr andMrs
Shelby Pickens and family of
Xema, visited
Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Del
Warren Rose and son, Paul of
recent weekend
Racine R. D.
Recent visitors of E. H.
Junior Johnson and daughter,
Carpenter family were Mrs. Brenda of Racine called on the
George Souders, Mrs. Olive Arthur Earl Johnson family and
Talbott, S. W . Durst, Bill Betty Van Meter on Saturday.
Bryant, Clint Donovan, Clint
Cochran, Mrs. Sylvia Allen,
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Michele
Van Meter, Virgil Bogard, Mrs.
Roy Donohue, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Holter and
Robert Lisle.
sons of Duncanville, Pa. spent a
weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Arvil Holter.
Mrs. Dorma Morrison spent
several days visiting Mr. and
Mrs . William Clonch at
Harrisonville and Mrs. Victor
Diehl of Middleport.
Miss Peggy Sue Trussell
entertained several of her girl
friends from school with a
Mr. and Mrs. Don Russell
slumber party Friday night at
were Friday evening visitors of her home.
Mrs. John Murphy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior White
Carmel Murphy was a Friday and daughters spent a weekend
overnight guest of Debbie with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Bailey of Minersville.
Woodrow Fortney, of PennsMr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma boro, W . Va.
Jr. were Sunday evening
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Parsons
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. and family of Beckley, W. Va.
Murphy.
spent last weekend with Mr. and
Bill McElroy was a Thursday Mrs. Clint Pitzer and family.
afternoon visitor of Mrs. J. R.
Miss Amber McCain spent a
Murphy and family.
night with her schoolmate, Miss
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce Brenda Lee Ballard.
of Columbus were weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ballard
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard were visiting relatives at
Russell.
Harrisonville recently.

OF
QUALITY

News Notes

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1969 CHEV . TOWNSMAN
S2495
Station Wagon. Low mileage local owned with auto.
trans., power steering, new tires, radio. Pleasing blue
finish. See this before you buy.
1967 FORD MUSTANG
$1495
6 Cyl., auto. trans .. console, maroon finish, all good w-w
tires, radio. Real Nice.
67 FORD LTD 4 DOOR
$1795
Factory air conditioning, auto. trans., P .S., P . B., like new
tires, nice maroon finish with black vinyl roof. Now only
$1795.

'Po-:~~~!s. ~!r Co.

@)

I
POMEROY, OHIO
:-ct;s~iti;d-Ad~~~ .L-------------------------------~

Carmel News,

By the Day

Bashan

Wolfpen

News, Notes ·

CARNIVAL

by Dick

Turner

~N~tRN~A~?oN
DEADLINES

EXPERIENCE_D
Radiator Service

WILL GIVE piano and organ
lessons in my home. Phone
992-3666.
8-16-tfc

GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR DRAFTSMAN
This position is at the local '.,&gt;lant of a multiplant corporation. The position requires the
applicant to have a minimum of three years of
experience in general plant drafting.
Position offers a good salary, company
paid fringe benefits including a liberal life and
hospitalization coverage.
Interested persons please submit resume
to Box 218, New Haven, West Virginia 25265.

For Rent

ATTENTION ladles! Would you
like to try a wig on in the
privacy of your own home?
You can. Just ca ll us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics.
Koscot, of course. Dis·
tributors, Brown's. Phone
Middleport 992-5113.
12-31 -tfc

UNFURNISHED 3 - room
apartment. Phone 992-2288.

OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
condition, as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
be pick-up day. Write, giving
good directions. Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
8-:10-tfc
OLD furniture, dishes, bras::.
beds, etc. Write M. D. Mille;·,
Rt, 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Ca ll
992-6271 .
9-1-tfc

1-31-tfc
TWO OR three bedroom home,
Cottage Road, Syracuse .
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
3-2-tfc

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

. BLAETTNARS
Pomeroy

RADIO, TV,
SOUND SYSTEMS

Real Estate For Sale

Cleland Realty

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots on T79 at Rock
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
Broker
School, a 5 minute drive from
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
Pomeroy, Ohio
Wi lte weekends, or after 5
FURNISHED and unfurnished
p .m. weekdays . Phone 992- RURAL - NEW 3 bedrooms,
apartments. Close to school.
1112 baths, gas furnace , nice
6887.
Phone 992-5434.
2-3-tfc
kitchen with dining area.
10-18-tfc
Utility room, cook and bake
units. Carport. 112 Acre. On
OHIO RIVER lot. Boat lovers!
HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, garage,
124. $19,500.00.
Approximately 21/2 -acres, 200Spring Ave., Pomeroy . Also,
RENTING IS WASTEFUL.
foot river frontage , septic
3-room , bath, semi -furnished
4 bedrooms,
tank,
city
water, gas SYRACUSE apartment and 2-room, bath,
bath, nice paneled kitchen.
available. Also, 1970 trailer,
f ur nished
apartment.
Furnace heat. Basement.
12x63, 3-bedroom, bath and
Mulberry Ave . References
Large garden , $12,000.00.
half. Property could be used
required. Phone 992-6698.
SAVE MONEY,
as small trailer park or
3-10-tfc
BUY PROPERTY NOW.
retirement home. Samuel
SUBBarnhart, across from Racine ROCK SPRINGS DIVISION - NEW electric 3
2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
Planing Mill , Rt. 124, above
bedrooms , 2 full baths.
HIs., Pomeroy. Phone 992Syracuse.
beautiful kitchen with d ining
5127 after 4 p . m.
3-9-6tc
area . Therm -o-pane windows .
3-2-lfc
Full basement, 2 car garage.
HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
Lot 100 X 145. Have key , will
Pomeroy
.
Phone
992-2293.
For Sale or ·Rent
show. $23,500.00.
10-25-tfc
WE NEED VACANT
DISCOUNT still on : Con LAND NEAR CHESHIRE
tinental, Skamper, Go-Tag -A75 ACRES - 20 tractor tillable,
Along, and Champion cam30 in pasture. 4 bedroom farm
pers , trailers and motor
house. Implement shed, small
homes. Some here - more
barn.
MINERALS.
coming; Don't walk, start
$13,500.00.
George S. Hobstetter. Jr.
running lo Gaul Trailer Sales,
MAY WE HELP YOU
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Inc ., Chester, Ohio. Phone
SELL, BUY, OR TRADE.
Phone 985-4186
985-3832. P. S. -Reserve your
992-3325
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
renlal unit for the coming
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Phone 949-3211
season NOW.
ASSOCIATE 992-2378
3-7-13tc FOR ALL your real estate
3 12 6tc
needs. contact us.

SR.

HOBSTETTER

For Sale
LIME spreader Phone 247 2161.
3113tc

ACREAGE wanled between
Middleport.
Ohio
and
Cheshire, 0.
3-12 -61c

.. ALSO
DOUBLE~WIDES

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

TELEVISIOr~

REPAIR

1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop. power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000
608 East Main
miles. E!xcellent condition.
POMEROY
Phone 992-2288.
FARM- about 170 acres, 45 for
11-10-tfc
cultivation, 2 wells, pond, 3
barns, shed, silo, milk house,
1964 CORVAIR Monza , good
corn crib, good 8 room home
condition,
$300.
Lowell
with bath, part minerals.
Wingett, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
$20,000.
phone 992-2922.
3-14-etc
SYRACUSE - JUST 8 YEARS
OLD, 1 story frame, 3
1963 DODGE 4-door, $300.
bedrooms, bath , utility room,
Phone 992 3070.
carport, level lot. $15,950.
3-14-3tc
POMEROY NEW ROOF ,
SIDING and CARPORT,
Real Estate For Sale
bath, 3 bedrooms, small yard.
$3,900.
TO BUY OR SELL
CALL US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
GEO. HOBSTETTER,
Office 992-2259
REAL ESTATE
Residence 992-2568
45 ACRES land, plenty of
3-10-6tc
timber , $4,000. 100 acres land,
all timber, $9,000.
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Phone 949-3211
3-12-3tc

TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
112-mile north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
3-5-tfc

.. CHAMPION
.VAN DYKE

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

HOBSTETTER

Notice

RUBBER STAMPS made to
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
or Wi Im a Casto, Portland,
Ohio.
2-12-90tc

Auto Sales

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

.WINSOR
-tcBUDDY

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

SENTINEL
CARRIER
FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES

SMALL SCALES to weigh up to
60 pounds. Dale Kautz , phone
Chester 985 3831.
3-12-3tp

"Be &lt;'ardul of your lanr:t• agP. around young Sen.
Smith. He do f!sll' t lik&lt;&gt; dirty words . . . such as
•s.r- . . iority' ',

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

'COLONIAL MAPLE stereoradio
beautiful
Early
American style, with AM-FM
radio, four speakers, 4 speed
automatic changer. Balance
$82.30. Use our time payment
plan. Call 992-3352.
3·1l-6tc

-----------:*:lo,

CLOSE OUT!

Wanted To Buy

3· JS

MODERN WALNUT stereoradio combination. Four
speed intermixed changer.
Four speaker sound system,
separate controls. Balance
$69.40. Use our budget terms.
Call 992 3352.
'
3-11-61c

Business Services

CHUCKS TV

SMALL farm and house,
buildings, Meigs County area.
Contacl Oris Frederick, 3221
Georgetown
Rd.,
Indianapolis, Ind . 46224. Phone
317 291 -9130 .
3-9-12'c

i

REGISTERED quarter-horses.
Pleasure, contest, racing,
year Iings, bred mares, $200 to
$300. Phone 992-5883.
3-14-6tc

[-

WORKING man wants two or
three bedroom country house FOR LONGER wear keep
N\IJndayDeadline9a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
in Meigs County. Phone
carpets clean with Blue
Bring them in and Save
Willbeaccepteduntil9a.m.for
Lustre.
Rent
electric
Athens 592-4757.
Day of Publication
3-9-6tc
shampooer, $1. Baker FurIf it cost you $28.00 to have
REGULATIONS
niture, Middleport.
your TV set repaired you lost
The Publisher reserves the
3-10-6tc
money. If you had brought it
'right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The Employment Wanted
to Chuck's TV it probably
publisher will not be responsible
would have cost you $19.00
COAL, limestone. Excelslo:
for more than one incorrect WILL DO babysitting in my
S It W k
E ••-·
St
for the same repairs. I have
home in Chester. Write c-o
a
or s,
· mam
·•
insertion.
no overhead to pay out so the
he
Daily
Sentinel,
Box
729-R,
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-3991'.
RATES
T
4-9-tfc.
savinqs is yours.
For Want Ad Service
Pomeroy, Ohio.
'i r~ntc:. n,::~or Wnr"ri n.,,:~~ inc::ertion
Your service men are
3-9-6tc
Minimum Charge 7':&gt;&lt;.
1963 3!..-ton G.M.C. pickup, V-6 ,
Chuck Humphreys &amp;
12 cents per word three
4-speed, power steering,
Scott Smith
consecutive insertions.
radio, heavy duty springs.
18 cents per word six con- Business Opportunities
Dale Kautz, phone Chester
secutive insertions.
'.
25 Per cent Discount on paid· RIGHT PERSON to manage or
985-3831.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
buy dry cleaning route or
3-12-3tp
152 Butternut
Pomeroy, 0.
CARD OF THANKS
truck. Will sell plant and
&amp; OBITUARY
building. ABC Cleaners,
Open
9 Till 5-Six ~ays
$1.50 for 50 word• minimum.
KILL TERMITES and yard
Mason, W. Va.
Each additional word 2c.
3-10-tfc
insects with Arab "You-DoBLIND ADS
lt." King Builders Supply SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Additional 25c Charge per
Company, Middleport.
Advertisement.
·
"Ditchin g. Electric sewer2-21-60tc
OFFICE HOURS
Help Wanted
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Phone
John
Russell,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon MATURE WOMEN- Your age
Gallipolis 446-4782.
is not a handicap. If you have
Saturday
:.t-7-tfc
3 hours a day and are able and
willing to work we have a
Notice
RALPH'S
CARPET
wonderful
earning
op·
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
portunity for you. Write
Free
estimates.
Phone
2-23-301c
Personal Shopper Dept., Box
Gallipolis 446-0294.
10, Watkins Products, Inc.,
3-12-tfc
WILL PICK up merchandise
Winona, Minn. 55987.
------------------Every One
3-15-ltc
and take to auction on a
CUSTOM MEAT
cutting.
percentage basis. Call Jim
Marked Down
Contact Richard Vaughan,
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
phone 992-3374 or Dale Little,
CAR HOP and waitress wanted.
Phone 742-4461.
Get the Big Discount!
phone 992-6346.
Apply in person, Crew's Steak
9-23-tfc
3-3-12tc
House.
22 cu. ft . side by side
3-11-6tc
MEIGS County Fish and Game
Frostless Combination, 19
AIR CONDITIONING. ReAssociation will meet Friday,
cu. ff. side by side, 18 cu. ff.
frigeration service. Jack's
March 12, 7:30 p.m ., at RESPONSIBLE person to work
Up. Freezer, 2-11 cu. ft.
Refrigeration, New Haven.
established route. Good
Cooni:llnters Club, Snowball
Chest
Freezers
and
Elec.
Phone 882-2079.
commission. ABC Cleaners.
Hill, Syracuse. Election of
Dryer.
Must
make
room.
4-6-tfc
Mason.
officers will be held.
Priced for fast sale!
3-5-tfc
3-9-tf
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
24TH ANNUAL Hereford Sal.:, NEEDED immediately:
POMEROY
25 bulls and 24 females,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Mature, experienced woman
Authorized Singer Sales and
Southeastern Ohio Hereford
Phone 992-2181
to babysit two small children,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors ..
Assocoation .
All
clean
2'12 years and 4 months, in my
3·29-tfc
pedigrees, both horned and
home, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. May
polled. Saturday, March 20,
live in. Reference preferred. RECONDITIONED TV sets,
1971. Show 10a.m., Sale 1 p.m.
For information or service SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Call 949-4663 after 6 p.m.
Rock Springs Fairgrounds,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
call Sparkie's TV Service,
312 3tc
R t . 33, three miles north of
phone Mason 773-5933.
662-3035.
Pomeroy, Ohio. For catalogs,
2-12-tfc
3-12-12tc
write to Lloyd Blackwood,
WANTED
Sales Manager , Rt. 3,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Complete Service
Pets For Sale
3-14-3tc
Phone 949-3821
MINIATURE Schnauzers ~,,d
Racine, Ohio
AUCTION WHEN? Each
Poodle puppies. Permanent
C::ritt Bradford
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
injections and groomed.
5- 1-tfc
Hayman's Auction House,
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
roofing
and
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house PAINTING,
Pomeroy-Middleport
Byright. Phone Coolville 667spouting service. Richarc
pass.
3654.
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
2·7-tfc
2-11-30tc
3-1l-30tc

BOY'S GLASSES, lost at Dairy
Valley,
Pomeroy .
Call
Chesh ire col lect 367-7285.
3-12-3tp

TM '"'" 1! '1: to.t IHf

GOOD USED New Holland hay
conditioner. Harry Holter,
Minersville, phone 949-4983.
3-14-3tp

5 P.M. Oay Before Publication

Lost

I

Wanted To Rent

For Sale
MIXED HAY. clover, alfalfa
and timothy. Lester Keaton,
phone Chester 985-3809.
3-14-6tc

4 ROOM house, bath , 2 lots,
good location. Phone 992-2806.
3 14 6tc

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

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

J. Durbin- C. Inscore
Service Personnel
HARRISON'S Tv ~ND AN
TE.NNA SERVICl:. Phon~o
992-2522.
6-10-tfc
_N_E_I_G_L_E
__
R__C_o_n_s-tr_u_c_t-io_n_.-For
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neig ler,
Racine, Ohio.
'
7-31-tfc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

:Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancel led?
Lost
your
operator's license? call "992
2966 ·
6-15-tfc!

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bids will be rece ived
by the Meigs Local Schoql,•
READY-MIX CONCRETE de- District Board of Educa tion a1
off ice in the Meigs Jun ior
livered right to yoUf' pro ject. their
High Schoo l Bu ilding, M idFast
and
easy.
Free . dleport,
Ohio, for passenger
estimates. Phone 992-3284. school buses unt il 12 o'clock on
Goeglein Ready-M ix Co., March 29, 1971, according to
Middleport, Ohio.
spec if ications of sa id Board of
6-3o-tfc Education. Separate and independent b ids will be received
respect to the chassis and
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service . with
body type, and will state that
Commercial, residential and the buses when assemb led and
industrial wiring. Phone 247- pr ior to del ivery, comply with
2113.
a ll
schoo l
d istric t
a II
safety
3-12-6tc specif ications,
regulations and current Ohiil
Minimum
Standards
for
Schoo.,.
BA~K HOE and end-loader
Bus Construction of the
work. Septic tanks installed. Department
of Education
George (Bill) Pu ll ins. Phon&amp; adopted by and with
the consent
992-2478.
of the Director of H ig&gt;tway
11-29-tfc. Safety pursuant to Sect ion
4511.76 of the Revised Code and
all other pertinent provisions of
law.
LEGAL NOTICE
Specifications
and
inSTATE OF OHIO
structions to bidders may be
DEPARTMENT OF
obtained
from
Assistant
HIGHWAYS
Superintendent Morrison,
" NOTICE OF REQUEST
Middleport , Ohio.
FOR LOCATION AND
The Board of Educat ion
DESIGN APPROVAL."
reserves the r igh t to reject a'*
CONTRACT SALES LEGAL
and all bids.
COPY NO. 71-155
By order of the
COLUMBUS, OHIO,
Board of Education
MARCH 8, 1971
L.W.MCComas
The Meigs County ComClerk-Greasurer
missioners have requested
(3) 1, 8, 15, 22, 4tc
Location and Design Approval
from tile Director of the Ohio
Department of Highways in
NOTICE ON FILING
Co tum ous, Ohio for County
OF INVENTORY
Road No. 20 in Meigs County.
AND APPRAISEMENT
The proposed project begins on The State of Ohio, Meigs
County Road No . 20 , 1.5 miles County. Probate Court.
north of State Route No . U.s. 33
To the Administratr ix of the
and continues for a distance of estate ; to such of the fo ll owin~ .
0.1 mile.
as are residents of the State Oil l
Maps or sketches , as well as Oh io, viz:
the
sur.
all other information con- viving spouse, the next of kin ,
cerning this project, will be the benetic1ar 1es unoer the will ;
available to the public for and to the attorney or attorneys
viewing at the Meigs County representing any of the
Board of Commissioners Office, aforementioned pe"sons:
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Hudnall, No. 20438,
J . PHILLIP RICHLEY ScRebecca
ipio Township / Meigs County,
DIRECTOR OF Ohio.
HIGHWAYS
You are hereby notif ied that
(3) 15, ltc the
Inventory
and
Appraisement of the estate of the
NOTICE OF
aforementioned, deceased , late
APPOINTMENT
of said County, was filed In this
case No . 20463 Court. Sa id In ventory anQ.
Estate of Floyd E. Wel l Appraisement will be fo •
Deceased .
hearing before this Court on the
Notice is hereby given that 25th day of March , 1971, at 10:00
Doris E. Well of RD 3, Pomeroy , o'clock , A.M.
Oh io, has been duly appointed
Any person desiring to fi le
Administrator of the Estate of exceptions thereto must fi le
Floyd E. Well , deceased , late of them at least five days prior to
Meigs County, Oh io.
the date set for hearing.
Creditors are required to file
Given under my hand and
their claims with said fiduciary seal of sa id Court, til is 4th day of
within four months.
March 1971.
Dated this 4th day of March
John C. Bacon
1971.
Judge and ex-offic io
John c. Bacon
Clerk of sa id Court
Acting Probate Judge
By Ann B. Watson
of sa id County
Deputy Clerla
(3) 8, 15, 22, 3tc
(3) 8, 15, 2tt9

TOWEL CLOSE OUT
50 BRAND NEW TOWELS-$5.95
NOT SECONDS BUT NEW UNWOVEN COTTON AND RAYON.
DELUXE QUALITY - PASTEL COLORS.

100 TOWELS only $10.95 - 200 for $20.95
-----OR----24 TURKISH BATH TOWELS-$8.95
REGULAR RETAIL PRICE OVER $30.00. BEAUTIFUL ASSORTED
COLORS. FULLY GUARANTEED DELUXE QUALITY.

48 TOWELS $16.95- 96 TOWELS $32.95
Enclose 25c for Postage With Each Order-No C. 0. D.'s
Samples Sent on Request. Please Send SOc for Each Sample.
Corers Cost and Postage.

TEMPLE TOWEL CO.,

TEMPLE, GA. 30179 ~

Home

JEMO ASSOCIATES
MR. &amp; MRS. HAROLD STEWART
260 Sycamore
Middleport
" We never thought we could
afford a new home. Not only are
ou r payments less than rent, but
we a re now building for our
future instead of collecting rent
receipts."

Sites Available
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992-7034

�EEK A!-'T) "·H~EK

BARNEY

•

'lORE MAN SNUFFY'S
BEEN BEHAVIN' HISSELF
RIGHT GOOD WHILE '-IE
WUZ OFF \JISITIN' '-/ORE
SISTER, LOWEEZ'·{

I SHORE
AM TICKLED
TO HEAR
THAT,
SHERIFF
TATE

AS A MATTER 0' FACT··
HE AIN'T TETCHED
A DRAP OF CORN·
SQUEEZIN'S IN
THREE DAVS

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

VISITIN' HOURS
IS FROM
2. TO 4

VJI-\HJ BOTH LOVE:RS LEAP
fROM 11-\IS CLIFF T()GET14ER.
'rOO MIC-1-lT 'SAY 11-\EIR LOVE ST1:RY
HA~ cr.:tllt. TO A &amp;Al)nFUL WD!

YOU MIGHT SAY

!HAT

CXJ~'S

JUST

TAPERED OFF!

--

•

I

I
I
I

I
I

.
i

t

.
L

I

•
WHAT IS ''IT•
THAT KEEPS
''BOILII\JG
POINT
ACADEMY"
(FOR £XC17ABI..E
GIRLS) IN
TOUCH WITH
THE WORLD
OUTSIDE?

I'M SICK OF THE ''PLOWB0'/5
OF THE. MONTH'' THAT MONA
MANMADTHE
EDITOR PICKS.'.'

BUT, HEY-WOW!! WE GET
TO PICK N~T MONTH'S!!
ALL READERS, FROM 15 TO
Fl LL OUT THIS

.. IT" IS/ OF

/(
COURSE _ - / .

1 ma4 not be
accepted .. and if
1 am 1 won't
~tart till fall!

•

-='

ro AI-lEAD,
\PDRN,t..PPLE,
'-/OJ CAtJ CDNFI~

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE-

.'

•

@LIT'I'!:RIHG
TOWERS OJ.' GOLD
ARE THE MJ!GHU
THAT It\SP1RES
PIRATICAL THIEVES
LIKE Ci!P'N AHAB
TO THE EVIL
HE IS ABOUT
TO PERPE1RA1£ ...

DAILY CROSSWORD

l

TERRY

TERRY'S RESEARCH

/ '

I~ /oi'E!

MY HAND ITCHES TO GRASP A
WEAPOii AND JOIN IN THE
BATTLE THAT, AlAS, COULD
BRIKG UTTER DISASTER TO
OUR. BRAVE FRIEND'S!

.··.

1..;

~ THE BORN LOSER

CONVINCf5 HIM THAT
THE CU6AN· TI?AJNEI7 t.::J!:;;:p:~IT\
GUERRILLAS ARE
HOlDING DOLORES
PEEPSIX AT
GENEI?AL CABALLO'S
COUNTRY ESTATE
- - - THEN . . . .

CAPTAIN E_ASY

I HAVE .MARI&lt;ED ON THE IMP THE SPOT
WHERE .MY PILOT SIGHTED THE I&lt;IDNAP·
PERS. lt-1 THIS AR~A, HERE, YOU Will
FIND THE SECOND INFANTRY REGIMENT
MOVING THROUGH THE JUNGLE
TO THE RESCUE .

DOWN
ACROSS
1. Part of a
1. "Black
caravel
- "of
2. Protruding
Calcutta
window
5. Picked
3. Howa
10. - - and
certain
Thummim
month
11. She has
arrives
pressing
4. Appear
problems
5 . Boast
12. Go for
6. So help me!
13. Contribute
7. " - - Siow
H. Unfriendly
Boat to
look
China"
15. Lamb
8. Immovable
16. Nigerian
9. Before
capital
11. Bad
18. Rebuff
C::~~-..::~~;1 22. Summer
day
for Caesar
shirting
(3wds.)
fabric
23. Current
L--JC..-...;.J......I..:...-..;:._---~ 24. Garcon's
••friend"
26. Out of
operation
28. Golfdom's
Venturi
29. Crucifix
31. Setin
motion
33. Prop for
Fred
Astaire
34. Opera
highlights
36. And
not
38. Mixture
40. Given to
caustic wit
43. Dillydallies
H. Sumptuous
45. Jane Austen
novel
46. Hire
47. Construction beam

17. Palestin ian
plain
19. How a
certain l¥l?~~~~~f?;!l
month
departs S
(3wds. c
20. Bev·
~All'.A-i-!.'.1.,;~~~
erage '-'T-"---"--'--"-'"~"-!.l.:::L:J=R
21. Sty
24 . Jeanne Yesterday'• Anawer

Saturday's Cryptoquote: THINK OF WHAT WOULD HAPPEN TO US IN AMERICA IF THERE WERE NO HUMORISTS: LIFE WOULD BE ONE LONG CONGRESSIONAL
RECORD. -MASSON
(:eJ 1971 King Features S&gt;·ndicate, Inc .)

~WJWID11rn® ~#~=..=
Cnscramhle these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

d' - -

25. Extinct
bird
27. Pro
30. Sandy
or Day
32. Shrinking

37. French
river
39. Glacial
ridge
40. Badly
41. Scottish
explorer
35. Greek letter 42. Eggs (Lat.)

t J."'il J HE

J

HOW THE WE16HT
LIFTER CRAS14ED
A P.Af{TY.

I

),,,,J\'-Y I
I
a'
,:=Pr: :in~l lie: :SU:RPRI::=SEAN=SW=!W=Hrt:::;--H..L.E~(~I XXI I XJm
__!__ ~ _!~

1

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
_ suggested by the above cartoon.

•

(Anewert tomorrow}

Jurnhl•·•: HELLO
~nturdu' ·..

·

ETUDE

I'"''"'r: H.

i(.rh t .•mw·k i11 tl11• mitltiiP
of u·trlpr! - THE LETTER T

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 X G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
is

A
JHS
ITVF

TQF'

ITWVW

M :&lt;' ATKWF
HJUQ

Crypto~ram

ZW

IPTI

IPFX

IJ

XJKIP
NJKHS

WJCFLWFI

t

Quotation

LFTSX

KUSFLWPZLVFS
ITVF

AUTHOR

IJJ

CTKQPTC

--.-::

TREATY

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 15, 1971

Gov. Gilligan's Message Begins at 8 Tonight
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan goes before
the Ohio General Assembly tonight to outline his long-awaited budget and tax plans,
expected to require in the neighborhood of $1 billion in new
taxes each year. ~
The governor's budget - tax
message is scheduled to begin
at 8 p.m., with newsmen receiving an advanced briefing at
2 p.m.
Budget information thus far
has been kept under tight
wraps. The governor has "leaked" minor portions of his spend-

ing plans, but the major areas
of basic education and welfare,
which make up a large part of
the anticipated $6 billion biennial budget have not been
publicly dealt with.
Gilligan is expected to ask for
enactment of a graduated personal income tax in the range
of 2 to 8 per cent and a
corporate net income tax in the
area of 6 per cent.
Hints from insiders and the
governor himself have produced a rough sketch of his proposals to the Repulbicancontrolled General Assemblya picture boiling down to
adequate, but not extravagant

Guardrail Hit Below Hobson
David M. Hindy, 32, Middleport, who was charged with
DWI and leaving the scene of an
accident by Pomeroy police
after a minor mishap Saturday
night in Pomeroy, had been
involved in a single car accident
earlier in the evening.
According to state highway
patrol officers , Hindy lost
control of his auto on Rt. 7 one
mile north of Pomeroy,
ran off the right side of the
Highway, and struck a guardrail. No charge was filed in
that accident.
Hindy was charged by the
state patrol on Feb. 17 with
DWI, to which he has pleaded
not guilty in Gallipolis

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturday, March 13,1971
SALES REPORT of
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 17 to
17.80; 220 to 250 lbs. 15.50 to
16.85; Light 15 to 16.10; Fat
Sows 14.50 to 15 60; Boars 11 to
13.60 ; Pigs 4 to 12; Shoats 12 to
17.
CATILE - Steers 26 to 34.35 ;
Heifer Calves 27 to 33.25; Baby
Beef 30 to 37; Fat Cows 16 to
19.40; Canners 17 to 22.50; Bulls
21 to 27.50; Milk Cows 145 to 325.
VEAL CALVES - Top 10
Calves 44.50; Seconds 41 to 43 ;
&amp;Hvs. 34
Medium 38to40; C

tc 39. ; Culls

?

BABY CAU
L \1BS
Seconds 23.50

SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
March 12, 1971
Hogs : 200-230, 17.25; No. 1,
17.50; 230-240, 17; 240-260, 16.50;
260-280, 16; 280-300, 15.50; 300350, 14.75; Sows, 13-15.50 ;
Boars, 14.40; Stock Hogs, 10.5011.35; Pigs By Head , 7:50-16.50.
Cattle: Choice Steers, 3133.25;
Good,
28.50-30.50 ;
Holstein Steers, 23-29.10; Choice
Heifer s, 29.50-30.90; Good, 27.5028.50; Good Cows, 21.60-24.90;
Utility 19.50-21; Canner and
Cutter, 18 down; Bulls, 26-27.50;
Cows a nd Calves By Head, 1927.50; Stock Cattle Steers, 26.5035; Stock Cattle Heifers, 2431.25.
Veal Calves: Choice 53-55Good , 50.50; Medium, 43;
Commer cia l , 36.50 ; Baby
Ca lves By Head, 28-55.
Ewes and Lambs By Head,
25.50-28.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Marc h 15-16
SINATRA is
DIRT Y DINGUSS
MAGEE
(Technicolor)

Fr a nk Sinatra

George Ke nnedy
-:olorcartoons :
Mozambique
Summer Encounter
Super sonic Age
SHOW STARTS 7 P . M.

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

Municipal Court. No trial date
has been set.
A Gallia County accident was
investigated at 12:05 a.m.
Sunday on Lincoln Pike Rd., one
and two tenths miles south of
Rt. 141. The patrol said William
L. Hoffman, 18, Gallipolis, lost
control of his car, ran off the
right side of the road and
through a fence. There was
moderate damage. No citation
was issued.

HOSPITAL NEWS

money over a two-year period.
On the tax side, the governor
is expected to follow for the
most part the recommendations
of his task force, which proposed a flat corporate net income tax to replace the corporation franchise tax, and a
graduated personal income tax
in line with the national average.
A corporation income tax
would furnish $50 million a year
for each per cent of rate, or
$300 million at 6 per cent. Re( Continued from Page 1)
peal of the corporate franchise
other Americans. The officers were Maj. Gen. Joseph A. Me- tax would reduce this by $110
Christian, Ma j. Gen. William H. Blakefield and Maj. Gen. William million a year·
P. Ya rborough.

L. Collier a dded $600 million
with no new taxes required.
Additional expe nditures of
$400
million
a
year
for education and $300 mil;
lion for
welfare would
be "ball park" estimates
of Gilligan's plans, sources confided late last week, and would
require $1.4 billion in new

News... in Briefs

FAYETTE VILLE, N.Y.- JANE FONDA'S antiwar revue,
attended by military intelligence agents poorly disguised as
hippies, played to packed audiences at its premiere near Ft.
Bragg. Nearly 500 soldiers greeted the troupe's jibes at the
military and the Indochina War with cries of "right on" and peace
symbol gestures at each of the three performances Saturday and
Sunday.
The appearance by Miss Fonda, comedian Dick Gregory and
actors Peter Boyle and Donald Sutherland at the Haymarket
Square Cofeeehouse was the first of 20 engagements the troupe
plans near U. S. military installations.

Stripping Bill Barely Got In
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - WITII 14 MINUTES left in the
session, the West Virginia legislature Saturday night passed a
strip mine bill that bans coal stripping in 22 counties for a twoyear period. The Senate passed the measure earlier 24-9 after
some senators spoke in opposition to the bill.
One of the state's most prominent strip mine owners, Sen.
Tracy Hylton, D-Wyoming, did not vote. Sen. William A.
Moreland, D-Monongalia, said the bill was no better than the
present law on surface mining. Sen. Si Calperin, D-Kanawha, an
avowed abolitionist of the strip mine industry, said the legislature
"did as little as possible for the people of West Virginia, and as
much as possible for the strip miners."

MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
STARTING
TUESDAY, MAR. 16

SERVICES WILL BE HELD
THROUGH SUNDAY, MARCH 21st
TIME: 7:30 EACH NIGHT
SPECIAL MUSIC BY: GOSPEL-AIRES

The Public Is Invited

CLUB TO MEET
A meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club will be held at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs . Harold Uauec.
TAGS ON SALE
Sale of 1971 auto and truck
license plates will begin in
Meigs
County
Tuesday .
Registrars are Paul Simon,
whose office is in his shoe store
on West Main St., Pomeroy, and
Miss Martha Howell, whose
office is located at her home, 570
Grant St., Middleport.
PTA TO MEET
The Letart Falls PTA will
observe Dad's Night at a
meeting to be held a t 7: 30
tonight a t the school. Fathers
and grandfathers are asked to
attend and will be counted on
the tally for a special award to
be given the class with the most
fathers and grandfathers .

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UPI)
Logan
T.
Johnston,
who climbed through the
ranks to become board
chairman of Armco Steel
Corp., will retire April 15 in
line with a company policy that
directors retire when they
reach 70.
Johnston began working for
Armco in 1927 when the steel
company acquired Columbia
Ste~l Co. of Butler, Pa., at
whtch he was a salesman. In
1958 he was named executive
vice president and a director.
He served as president from
1960 to 1965, when he became
chairman.
Armco, in its annual report
issued Sunday, said it expects
to spend about $150 million during 1971 on capital improvements and revealed an aggressive cost reduction program.

Lawmen
Darlene Richards, Columbus,
located on Neighborhood Rd.
Entry was made by breaking a
window.
Dugan Adkins, Davis Rd.,
reported the theft of two
distributors, two carburetors,
and steel cables from his home.
Adkins also reported several
windows were broken out of his
house.
Vandals
struck
Arley
Wallace's home on Peter Cave
Rd. Wallace said someone
threw rocks through seven
windows and a storm door. Leo
McCombs, Rt. 775 said someone
threw a rock breaking the
windshield of his 1963 Ford
Thunderbird.
Three arrests recorded over
the weekend were Raymond N.
West, 24, Haumhill, Mass., and
Ronald M. Stewart, 32, St.
Mary's, W. Va., both charged
with disorderly conduct and
Robert A. Rybarik, Kittanning,
Pa., booked for intoxication.

Edith Russell
Dies Saturday
Mrs. Edith A. Russell, 83,
former
Middleport
area
resident, died Saturday at Bryn
Mawr Hospital in Bryn Mawr,
Pa.
Mrs. Russell was born July
15, 1887, at Bradbury, the
daughter of the late Thomas
and Jane Bates Anderson. She
was preceded in death by her
parents, her husband, Griff C.;
a daughter, three sisters and a
brother.
Mrs. Russell had resided in
the Middleport area until about
three years ago. She was a
member of the Bradbury
Church of Christ, the Martha
Class of the church and taught
Sunday School several years.
She was a member of the
Pythian Sisters Lodge, the
Philathea Society of the Middleport Church of Christ and a
past matron of the chapter.
Mrs. Russell was a member of
Mary Shrine 437, White Shrine
of Jerusalem .
She is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. K. Thomas (Virginia)
Wagner of Bryn Mawr, a son,
Dr. Delbert Russell, Elyria;
five grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a. m . Wednesday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Roy Carter officiating. Burial will be in the
Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call from 12 to 4
and from 7 to 9 on Tuesday at
the funeral home. Eastern Star
services by Evangeline Chapter
members will be held at 6 p.m .
Tuesday at the funeral home .
In lieu of flowers, friends may
contribute to the Bradbury
Church of Christ building fund.
f

Net sales were reported as
$1,583,673,000 for 1970 and
Armco President William Verity
said it amounted to a "disappointing year."
"The overwhelming effect of
inflation in the nation's
economy squeezed Armco earn-

Mrs. Delmar
Dies on Sunday

Mrs.
Catherine
Swink
Delmar, 57, former Meigs
County resident, of Brady Lake,
Ohio, died Sunday at the
Robinson Memorial Hospital at
Brady Lake.
Mrs. Delmar, who had been a
resident of Brady Lake the past
15 years, was preceded in death
by her husband, Richard. She is
survived by a son, Jack, Brady
Lake; a niece, Mrs. Kathryn
Fink of Rutland; a brother,
Harlow Swink, of Brady Lake.
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the
Martin Funeral Home where
Clyde Orner Cramlet, 82, Vine friends may call after noon
St., Racine, died Sunday Tuesday. Officiating will be the
evening at Veterans Memorial Rev. Uoyd Grimm. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery.
Hospital.
Mr. Cramlet was preceded in
death by his parents, Charles
and Minnie Spaun Cramlet; a
daughter, Hazel, and two
sisters, Bertha Adams and
Chloe Cramlet.
Surviving are his wife, Ada
Blanche; two daughters, Mrs.
Albert (Ora) Hill, Racine ; Mrs.
Kenneth
(Doris )
Wilt,
By LOUIS CASSELS
Pomeroy ; nine grandchildren,
UPI Religion Writer
19 great-grandchildren, and one
Formal religious education of
great-great-grandchild; three
sisters, Mrs. Mae Pearson, children before the age of
Racine; Mrs. Ray (Goldie) adolescence is worse than
Sayer, Rosa ville, and Mrs. useless. It may do permanent
Uoyd (Ola) Adams, Philo, and harm to their spiritual
development.
several nieces and nephews.
That startling assertion is
Mr. Cramlet was a member of
the Wesleyan UB Church at made by two Catholic educators, Dr. Robert O'Neil and Fr.
Racine.
Michael
Donovan. O'Neil is
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the assistant professor of psycholoRacine United Methodist gy at the University of Detroit.
Church with the Rev. Dale Donovan is chaplain to Catholic
McClurg officiating. Burial will students at the University of
be in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Michigan.
They are authors of a small
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home until 11 a .m. paperback book which ought to
Wednesday when the body will be read and pondered by
parents and pastors of all
be taken to the church.
denominations. The title is
"Children, Church &amp; God. " It
MEETING SET
can
be ordered from the Corpus
The Haven omemakers will
meet at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday at Books division of World Pubthe home of Mrs. William Fields lishing Co., (2231 West 110 St.)
in Pomeroy. Each member is to Cleveland, Ohio.
Wrong Concentration
take something for a white
What
O'Neil and Donovan are
elephant sale.
saying, in dead earnest, is that
virtually every church in
BOARD TO MEET
The Southern Local School America is going about reliBoard will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the high school in
Racine.

Clyde Cramlet

Five Weekend Incidents
Probed By

A personal income tax levied
at the national average, about 2
to 6 per cent, would raise an
estimated $500 million a year.
The two major taxes, plus
other tax recommendations of
the task force, would raise
more than the $2 billion the
governor would need to finance
his programs.
However, property tax relief
and other reforms needed to
sell the package would reduce
this figure.
Faces Tax Cuts
Gilligan no doubt has considered the fact the Republicancontrolled legislature will be out

to cut his requests down, and
that new taxes totaling $1 billion a year would bring back
the GOP charges of "tax-abillion" Gilligan.
Even if he surpasses the billion-dollar mark on an annual
basis, the governor is expected
to use bookkeeping devices to
reduce the figures, pr opose
spending reforms and recommend austerity programs to
make his overall program m or e
palatable.
He already has promotional
mateirals ready to make his
plans salable to the lawmakers

and the public, and will give
the General Assembly a
"choice" on whether to stand
still or go forward with him.
As promised in the "state of
the State" message , Gilligan
will lay his spending and tax
plans directly on the line to the
legislature rather than offer~
a series of alternatives, insiders
reported.
And a s pokesman for the
governor said there is no doubt
the program can be sold to the
gener al assembly. "If we didn't
think it would pass, we wouldn't
offer it," he s~id.

Armco in Disappointing Year

They Made Poor Hippies

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMITTED - Mrs. John
Hussell, Mrs. Earl Mayes,
Janet Neal, Mrs. Gordon Hall,
Roger Wallace, James Goodwin, Robert Wallace, Mrs. Eva
Miller, and J. C. Allinder, all
Point Pleasant; Floyd Goron,
Grimms Landing; Elmer Fife,
Gallipolis; Edmund Lieving,
New Haven; Elias Davis,
Buffalo ; Mrs. Donald Pierce,
Middleport; Bobby Phillips,
Nitro; Edith Dent, Springfield,
0.
DISCHARGES-Mrs. Joseph
Ellis, William Grimm, Mrs.
John P . Rose, Kimberley
Hambree , Shande Shields,
Donald Wooten, Kimberly
Gallia County law enFranklin, Danny Stanley, Lonie
forcement
agencies
inMeadows, Mrs. Kenna Bush,
vestigated a total of five
Mrs . Dale Hawthorne, Mrs.
burglaries and vandalis:n
Joseph Martin, Mrs. Edward
complaints over the weekend.
Hugart, Mrs. Howard Bechtle
Gallipolis City Police Sunday
a nd son ; Lilah Powell, Dell
afternoon investigated a
Barnett, Mrs. Raymond Taylor,
burglary at Jones Boys
Mrs. Henry Neal, Mrs. Robert
Discount Store on Pine St.
Swartz, Thomas Mc Ne eley,
Missing are two 410 shotguns;
Mrs. Joseph Stover, E arl
four .22 calibre rifles; one 30-30
Conrad, Joseph Saus.
rifle ; a 12 gauge shotgun, a
BIRTH- March 14, a son to
camera and an undetermined
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Martin,
amount of 30-30 shells and 22
Middleport, 0 .
shells.
Entry was made by going
Veterans Memorial Hospital
through the side of the structure
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS- which is under construction.
Clayton Tippie, Middleport;
Most unusual incident ocVelsim Roush, Middleport; curred early Sunday morning at
Charles Eads, Rutland; Leah the Bob Rees residence on Rt.
Rhodes, Middleport; Ray Pall, 141. Deputy sheriff Jack Owens
Mark Parsons, Racine; Daniel said someone entered the Rees
Livingston, Dunbar, W.Va.
home while Mr. Rees (local car
SATURDAY DISCHARGES dealer) was asleep in an up- Kim Morrow, Marvin White, stairs bedroom.
James Fife, Erla Pickens,
Owens said the intruder first
Salem Yates, Thomas Tucker, threw chunks of blacktop
Ross Kent, Shirley Baxter, through the front window and
Helen Capehart, Guy Bing, upper story window. He
Cathy Rager.
reportedly took an air conSUNDAY ADMISSIONS ditioner out of the window at the
Carol Hendrix, Syracuse; back of the house. Upon enChristine Robinson, Mid- tering the house, the thief took a
dleport; Leland Walters, tea serving set and antique
Gallipolis, Mary Still, Mid- clock. He attempted to enter
dleport; Helen Capehart, Rees' bedroom which was
Rutland; Miles Childress, locked.
Rac ine;
Krista!
White,
Awakened by the noise, Rees
Pomeroy; Pamela McLaughlin , began to investigate the
Pomeroy.
situation. He opened the door
SUNDAY DISCHARGES and saw the intruder. Rees
Golda Jones, Carol Hendrix, quickly grabbed a fun, fired but
Minnie Foit, Cathy Stone, did not strike the uninvited
Evelyn Holter.
guest who made a hasty exit.
Items taken were valued betREVIVAL SET
wee!'! $400 and $500.
A revival will be held at the
A Zenith stereo valued at $225,
Pomeroy Lower Light Church 30 or 40 record albums, bed
at 7:30 each evening from this clothing, a toaster, electric
Thursday through Sunday, skillet, coffee pot and dishes
March 28, with the Rev. were taken in a breaking and
Raymond Rice of Byesville entering at the residence of
evangelist.
The public is invited .

REVIVAL

Rev. Jarrell Garsee
Evangelist

or wasteful spending to bring
Ohio into line with other states,
especially in the critical areas
of education and welfare.
Budget Third Higher
The current general fund budget for a two-year period is
$4.1 billion. A "continuation"
budget prepared by former
state Finance Director Howard

•

Dies SundRy

ings to their lowest level since
1962," Verity said. "Earnings
fell to $1.64 per share of common stock from $3.01 per share
in 1969."
As a result, he said , work
forces are being reduced, salaried forces in the division and
headquarters staffs are being
cut back and some capital expenditures are being deferred or
eliminated.

"There was also a substantial
reduction in the total compensation of the executive and general management group for
1970," Verity said.
Armco is studying projects iDJ
Australia, New South WaleS;
Brazil, Mexico, Mrica and t~e
southwest United States with an
eye to becoming an international materials producer, the report also said.

P ractical Nurses Must
Be Licensed By April 1
COLUMBUS (UPI) - An
official of the State Board of
Nursing Education and Nurse
Registration said today Ohio's
practical nurses who are experienced in the field but lack
state accreditation must be
licensed by April 1.
Miss Dorothy B. Leupp,
executive secretary of the
board, said the three-year
license waiver period, provided
in a 1967licensing law passed by
the Ohio General Assembly,
expires on that date.

Mter April 1, Miss Leupp
said, qualified graduates of
approved schools of practical
nursing may be granted a sixmonth non-renewable interim
permit which will allow them to
practice. This would be in effect.
until their examination score1fl
are received, she said.
Pra ctical nurses in Ohio are
required to renew their state
licenses annually. Mandatory
Jcensing of professional nurses
took effect in January, 1968, in
Ohio.

Educators Buck Early •
Indoctrination Theory

LABOR AWARD GIVEN
COLUMBUS (UPI) J.
Ralph Riley, board chairman of
Suburban Motor Freight Inc.,
has been awarded the 12th annual George Meany Award for
"Uselfish devotion to the community in the areas of health,
welfare and recreation."
The award, named in honor
of the AFL-CIO president, os
labor's
highest
organized
award.
INDEUBLE MARK
BOURNEMOUTH, England
(UPI) - While sitting in class
Adele Farndon's pen slipped
while she was chewing on it,
leaving a blue mark mark on
her right check. At home, her
mother could not rub it off. So
Adele tried - and failed. And
they both are still trying - eight
years later. "It's very embarrassing," Adele, now 14 said
Sunday.
"NO-FAULT" INSURANCE
WASHINGTON - Trans-·
portation Secretary John A.
Volpe is expected this week to
lend the adminis tra tion's
support to the "no-fault" auto
insurance pla n - the concept
unaer which accident victims
are paid by their insurance
companies regardless of which
party was to blame.

gious education in the wrong
way.
With few exceptions, Catholic
and Protestant churches concentrate most of their religious
education effort on young
children between the ages of 5
and 13. Relatively few resources are invested in educational
programs for high school and
college students, and still less
is done about adult education.
This means, say O'Neil and
Donovan, that "a disproportionate amount of religious
education is aimed at those who
can least benefit from it."
They cite contemporary studies of learning psychology
which show that pre-adolescent
children simply are not a ble to
handle the kind of abstract or
analogical thought that is
necessary to attain any real
understanding of religious
concepts.
They can Jearn the right
words and definitions, and
parrot them back to their
pleased teachers and parents.
But the only way they can cope
with the ideas behind the words

is to reduce them to concrete,
oversimplified terms. And this
often leads to bizarre concepts
of God which are "worse th•
no understanding at all"
because they become roadblocks to mature religious
thought at an appropriate age.
O'Neil and Donovan contend
this is the real reason why so
many young people abandon
religion entirely soon after they
reach adolescence. Their growing minds recognize the superfi}t
ciality and untenability of their
childhood concepts of GOO, and
they have been encouraged to
regard those concepts as the
teaching of the church.
So "they reject a Christianity
which they never learned to
know at all."
O'Neil and Donovan are not
suggesting children should be
kept away from church un~
they're 13. They are speaking
solely of formal religious
education- the kind that attempts to impart conceptual
knowledge. This, they say,
should begin only at adolescence.

Just Arrived At Elberfelds In Pomeroy.
A Large Shipment Of

BERKLINE
CHAIRS
Rock-0-Loungers Rec l iners
and
Swivel
Rockers.
M any
styles
upholstered in the
latest fabrics Herculon,
Nylon,
Naugahyde ,
Duran .
Large
selection of colors.

These Chairs At

SPECIAL
SALE
PRICES
ON THE 2nd and 3rd FLOORS

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

j

1

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