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                  <text>Now You Know

•

The first known system of
shorthand was developed about
60 B.C. by Marcus Tullius Tiro
to record the speeches of the
well-known Roman orator,
Cicero.

VOL. XXVI

'

•

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

POMEROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 238

Weather
Mostly cloudy, windy and
colder with chance of snow
flurries today, tonight and
Tuesday. High today from the
middle 30s north to the middle
or upper 40s south. Lows tonight
in the 20s and highs Tuesday
from the upper 20s.

TfN CFNTS

MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1971

Troops Continue Withdrawal
SAIGON ( UPI)-Communist
tanks pursued South Vietnamese troops withdrawing from
Laos today toward the Vietnam
border where American forces
waited to protect them.
U.S. fighter-bombers attacked
a column of 10 to 20 North
Vietnamese tanks on Route 9

six or seven miles inside Laos,
destroying at least four of
them, military sources said.
American tanks and armored
vehicles massed at the border
to cover the South Vietnamese
withdrawal were receiving heavy rocket and mortar fire from
the Communists across the

border, the sources said.
The sources described action
during the weekend as "continual enemy harassment" but
said there was no major
fighting.
Heavy Raids
U.S. bombers pounded missile
sites, antiaircraft positions and

"related support facilities"
inside North Vietnam today for
the second consecutive day, tile
U.S. Command said.
Military sources said the
raids were the heaviest since
last September when the
abortive attempt was made to
free American war prisoners

from the Son Tay prisoner of
war camps in North Vietnam .
In Vientiane, a Laotian
government spokesman said six
N?rth Vietnamese battalions
have launched heavy attacks on
government positions near the
royal capital of Luang Prabang
and the security of the town

was "directly threatened."
An American embassy
spokesman in Vientiane said 610
dependents of American,
French, Swiss and Filipino
officials and workers were
evacuated from Luang Prabang
to Vientiane Sunday.

Quit Two Bases
The South Vietnamese abandoned two bases in Laos
Sunday and moved across the
border in what military sources
said was the "withdrawal
phase" of their operation to cut
the Communist Ho Chi .Minh
supply trail.

The sources said only 8,000 to
10,000 South Vietnamese troops
were left in Laos-fewer than
half the number at the height '
of the operation that began
Feb. 8.
The remaining troops in Laos
will be pulled out as quickly as
possible, the sources said.

r---------------------------,
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•
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•

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I

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - ROBERT CECILE, aide to Gov. John J.
Gilligan, said the controversial Ohio Plan was still in the "drafting stages" and would not be introduced in the legislature "until
we work out all the details."
The plan, which was introduced by the governor last week,
would require a student who attends a state university or college
to repay the state its subsidy to that school for one person. Under
the plan, then, college tuitions and fees would be held down, but
students would be responsible for a $3,000 debt after attending
four years of school.

•

KHE SANH, VIETNAM - AN AMERICAN armored unit
commander "lacking a little in experience" was relieved of his
command after his troops refused orders to face Communist fire
a fourth time near the Laotian border, a commanding general
said today.
Capt. Carlos Proveda was replaced by a "more experienced"
officer after a series of events Saturday which his commanding
general described as stemming from a "tactical et - - "

•

MIAMI - THREE GUNMEN OVERPOWERED a guard
early today and stole an antique silver display from the museum
at the palatial Biscayne bay-front " Vizcaya" estate.
Police said the silver display, worth up to $1.5 million, included irreplaceable colonial items and several pieces reportedly
used by Napoleon.
The silver display was on loan to the Dade County owned
musuem from Sam Kirk and Sons of Baltimore. It was inside an
antique breakfront.

•

•
•

•

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND -Development Minister
Brian Faulkner appeared today the clear front.rllJYler to succ ed
James Chiche
"k as premier of Northern Ireland.
On the ev
'~e ruling Umonist Party, political
sources said i
tually certain Faulkner, defeated for
the post by au
ark b} a ingle vote in 1969, would be the
only nominate&lt;dictate.
WASHINGTON - ALMOST 700 MILITANT American Jews
were arrested Sunday in a mass protest sit-down near the Soviet
Embassy. They went North today $10 poorer and with police
records, but confident they had hastened the day when Jews may
lea• ~ the Soviet Union.
A~out 2,500 Jews, many of them from New York, northern
New Jersey and Philadelphia, took part in the protest led by
Rabbi Meir Kahane, head of the Jewish Defense League (JDL).

FT. BENNING, GA.- THE SIX COMBAT veterans trying
Lt. William L. Calley Jr. receive a refresher course in My Lai
massacre and mayhem today, presented by the prosecution.
A full day of rehearing key government testimony that was
given two to nearly four months ago was scheduled for the sixth
deliberation day, leading off with a tape recorded replay of the
final and star witness of the direct prosecution case, Paul David
Meadlo.

Three Mishaps Are Investigated
inMiddleport
P olice
vestigated three minor accidents over the weekend.
At 5:45 p.m. Sunday a car
driven by Linda Betz, Gallipolis
Route 1, pulled into the Dairy
Isle, struck a s torm door on the
establislunent breaking out the
glass. Brakes on the Betz car
gave way, police said.
At 12:30 a.m. Saturday, a car
owned by Mildred E. Roush,
Racine, backed into a parked

THE REV. CHARLES SIMONS will conduct a series of
Evangelistic services at the Middleport First Baptist Church
Wednesday through Sunday. Services will start at 7:30 each
evening and will also be held at 10:15 a.m. on Sunday. There
will be no offering taken. Rev. Simons has been pastor at the
Middleport Baptist Church for nearly four years. He received
his BS in education from Temple University in Philadelphia
and his Bachelor of Divinity Degree at the Reformed
Episcopal Seminary in Philadelphia. He is president of the
Pomeroy-Middleport Rotary Club, Secretary of the
Ext._t. ...v- vvur....JJ :or t..~t' G~llia-M..::;;s C ~r..m.Lih.ity ..".ctict.
Program, Director of Youth Work for the Rio Grande Baptist
Association, is treasurer of the Middleport Ministerial
Association and has been active with the county ministerial
group having served as president.

Farmers Eligible

ROGER WILFORD, third from left, who was named to
the first SVAC all league team, was presented the leading
scorer and rebounder trophy at the annual basketball
banquet held Saturday night at Southern High School in

Southern Cagers
~Honored Saturday

Stolen

For Grain Base
WASHINGTON - The U. S.
Agriculture Department today
informed Congressman
Clarence E. Miller that states
where there was significant
corn blight infestation in 1970
and where blight-resistant seed
is presently in short supply can
qualify for historic feed grain
base acreage preservation,
even though planting of the 1971
corn crop may not be feasible.
Miller was told by USDA
officials that all 13 counties in
the Tenth Congressional
District have been approved by
the Agriculture Department for
prevented planting credit.
Altogether, counties in 15
Eastern and Southern states
have been approved to date for
the planting credit.

vehicle owned by Herman A.
Taylor of Middleport. Light
damages were reported. The
accident is still under investigation.
At 2:45 p.m. Friday, a car
driven by Hugh E. Lodin, 79,
Cheshire, attempted to park on
LOCAL TEMPS
North Second and struck a
Temperature in downtown
parked car owned by the
Jaymar Coal Co., of Cheshire. Pomeroy :vionday at 11 a.m.
No charges were filed in any was 44 degrees unde:r;- partly
cloudy skies.
of the three accidents.

Auto Is
Recovered
A stolen car was recovered
and three single car accidents
were reported by Meigs County
Shenff Robert C. Hartenbach's
Department over the weekend.
A 1961 Buick owned by George
Capehart, Zanesville, was
reported stolen in Pomeroy by
the Pomeroy City Police at
12:45 a .m . Sunday. The car was
recovered by Deputy Sheriff
Robert Beegle at 1:15 a.m. In
Racine at the intersection of SR
338 and Vine Street. The incident is still under investigation.
Saturday, at 11 p.m. on SR
143, Michael B. Toney, 21,
Cleveland, was traveling north
on 143 when he came around a
blind curve and met an
unidentified vehicle traveling
south on his side of the highway.
The driver cut to the right to
avoid a collision which caused
him to lose control of the auto.
The car went left of center and
struck an embankment, then
came b2 ~k across the highway
and struck an embankment on
the right. There &gt;Vere no injuries or arrests. Heavy
damage was reported to the
car.
Sunday at 12:20 a.m., on SR
325 Johnny Pope, Vinton, Rt. 1,
came over a slight rise and met
a car backing out of a driveway
onto the highway. Pope hit his
brakes and the car slid 55 feet
into a ditch. The auto turned
over on its top. There was heavy
damage to the car. No injuries
or arrests were reported.

•
REPRESENTATIVE RALPH WELKER, Ohio's 27th District, was a guest at the new
members reception at Riverby in Gallipolis Sunday afternoon. Riverby, the historic old Holzer
Home has been renovated by the French Art Colony for use as a cultural center for
Southeastern Ohio. Rep. Welker assisted with the activities for prize paintings to be awarded
for membership sales. Left to right are Mrs. Oscar Bastiani Jr. and Mrs. James Coonen,
chairman of membership drive .

Racine. Left to right are John Tipps and guest speaker Jim
McKenzie, head coach of Symmes Valley High School; Coach
Hilton Wolfe, Jr., and Bill Hill, president of the Southern
.Athletic Boosters Association.

Sunday at 7:40p.m . on SR 124
near Langsville, Flem Meade,
22, Vinton, was traveling east
when a deer ran onto the highway. While trying to avoid
hitting the deer, the driver
applied his brakes, causing the
car to go to the left of the highway into a ditch.
Brenda Kemper, 17, sustained
an abrasion to her leg but was
not immediately treated. There
was heavy damage to the car.
No citations were issued.

"Are You A Player or a
Spectator" was the topic used
by guest speaker
Jim
McKenzie, head basketball
coach of Symmes Valley High
School, during the annual
basketball banquet held at
Southern High School in Racine
Saturday night.
McKenzie directed his speech
to the members of Southern's
basketball teams. McKenzie
explained that a player is unselfish with his teammates,
does everything to keep harmony, makes a weak team into
a strong team and takes pride in
his school and community.
"A player gains recognition
by going beyond what a spectator hesitates to do. He never
misses practice, never worries

about getting hurt and has a
desire far beyond what we can
comprehend," McKenzie noted .
Herb White served as master
of ceremonies and introduced
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr., who
introduced varsity members.
Coach Dwaine Wolfe introduced
members of the reserve and
freshman squads, and Bruce
Wallace introduced members of
the seventh and eighth grade
teams.
Mrs.
Connie
Andrews,
physical education instructor,
introduced the cheerleading
squads.
Special recognition was given
to officers of the Southern
Athletic Boosters Association,
Bill Hill, president; Herb White,
(Continued on page IIJ

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The state's drug education
program, launched in 1968 for pupils in the sixth, seventh and
eighth grades, will be expanded to all students after the first
grade through high school.
School Superintendent Martin Essex said the high school
curriculum would start this fall, while the material for the
second through fifth grades will be field tested in September,
delaying its introduction.
"Our objective is to teach youngsters to recognize and
deal constructively with the elements in their lives that may
tempt them to take the escape route of drug abuse," Essex
said.
"The 'scare' approch, as used in the past, has not proven
effective. H a child can understand his own behavior, his
capacity is enhanced for solving his own potentially
destructive problems."

May Visit l S r8 e l
By United Press International
U.S. Secretary of State
William P . Rogers may visit
Israel and other Middle East
countries in April or early May
for a firsthand assessment of
the situation, an Israeli foreign
ministry spokesman said today
in Tel Aviv.
The spokesman said final
plans had not been made for
Rogers' first visit to Israel as
secretary of state, but that
Assistant Secretary of State
Joseph J. Sisco was expected to
accompany him .
Rogers and Sisco are expected to tour the Middle East
capitals after attending a
meeting of American ambassadors in turkey, the spokesman
said.
Diplomatic sources in Jerusalem said Rogers recommended
in talks with Israeli Foreign
Minister Abba Eban in Washington last week that Israel

submit a tentative map of its
territorial demands as a
method of breaking the deadlock in Middle East peace
negotiations.
Rogers suggested the map
show the future boundaries that
Israel would find acceptable,
the sources said.
Palestinian guerrilla leader
Yasser Arafat predicted today
the Arabs would reach no
peaceful settlement with Israel
and that fighting would resume
in the Middle East. He made
the comment in an interview
with the Beirut magazine AI
Usbu Al Arabi.
Syrian President Hafez Assad
told the French weekly magazine Nouvel Observateur that
an Israeli withdrawal from
occupied territories would not
solve the Middle East crisis. He
said the crisis would not be
resolved until the rights of the
Palestinian Arabs were fulfilled.

PRESENTED GIFT - Head basketball coach, Hilton
Wolfe, Jr ., left, was presented a gift by team member Frank
Ihle at the annual basketball banquet held at Racine
Saturday night.

Urges All To
Work Together
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Rt. Rev. John McGill Krumm,
the new sixth bishop of the
Episcopal Church's Southern
Ohio Diocese, has urged the
parishioners to work together
to "make the community even
stronger and more united than
it already is."
After his consecration ceremonies at Christ Church here
Saturday, Bishop Krumm said,
"We need everyone in the diocese to work as representatives
of Christ here and everywhere."
Krumm, elected to the post
of Bishop in December, was
chaplain at Columbia University 13 years and rector at the
Church of the Ascension in New
York City since 1965.
The two-hour ceremony was
attended by many Episcopal
bishops and the Most Rev. Paul
F. Leibold, archbishop of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of
Cincinnati, who extended greetings to Bishop Krumm from
the Catholic community.
Krumm takes over one of the

nation's most important arms
of the Episcopal ~hurch. The
45,000-member diocese has been
a model for "activist" Chtistiani ty, as many of the programs adopted by the national
church originated here.

SALES REPORTED
Sales for new and used
vehicles in Meigs County in one
week totaled $172,783.58, Nellie
Brown, deputy of Meigs County
Clerk of Courts reported. Sales
tax totaled $6,910.55 with the
state's share totaling $6,841.44
and the county's share $69.11.

FEDERAL CHARGE FILED
FLORENCE, Ky. (UPI) Chet Ingram, 26, Cincinnati,
was arrested by FBI agents on
charges of giving false information about an alleged attempt to
hijack a plane at the nearby
Greater Cincinnati Airport.
The FBI office at Lomsville
refused to disclose any details
about the arrest.

REV. J. M. KRUMM

.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 22, 1971

EDITORIALS

r---------------------------------------~-1

"You Are Learning to Appreciate
the Deeper Meaning of Life!"

i Voice along Broadway i•
I

Nonprofit Funds
See Bleak Future

.

'

,

•,
•
.
.·
.

Private, nonprofit institutions serving the public good
are heading into deep trouble.
So warns Alan Pfifer, president of the Carnegie Corporation in the 1970 annual report of the foundation.
Among the private, tax-exempt organizations in America he says are · 'threatel}ed by powerful social and economic forces" are an estimated 1.450 colleges and universities, 4,600 secondarv schools, 3,650 voluntary hospitals,
6,000 museums, 1,100 symphony orchestras, 5,500 libraries
and 29,000 welfare agencies supported by United Funds.
These institutions form a highly important strand in
the fabric of American society by providing needed serv·
ices to the public which might otherwise have to be provided by the government out of tax revenues.
For the first time, says Pfifer, doubts are being raised
about the continued viability of our traditional ~ystem of
shared responsibility between public and prtvate endeavor.
Yet ·'the American people and most of their political
leaders seem either unaware of the Situation or unconcerned. In an age notable for the gravity an~ complexity
of its problems, this problem has simply fa1led to make
its mark on the national consciousness."
Other sources support Pfifer's pessimism.
The latest annual survey of the National Association of
Independent Schools states that of 653 private schools
reporting, more than half were operating in the red. Ten
years ago approximately three out of four schools were
breaking even or were in the black.
Total enrollment increase was 1.1 per cent, the lowest
in five years as more and more parents find tuition and
other costs beyond their means and as, for a number of
other reasons, private schools lose favor.
A commission of prominent citizens studying the outlook
for private philanthropy during the 1970s found that many
cl aritable organizations are running in the red and are
eating up their reserves.
The basic difficulty is that giving is not keeping pace
with rising costs, says Peter G. Peterson. board chairman
of Bell &amp; Howell and head of the commission.
He notes that year after year, Americans consistently
give to charitable organizations a sum equivalent to about
two per cent of the gross national product. In 1969. for
example, GNP was $932 billion an6 giving totaled $17.6
billion.
But the costs of philanthropic institutions have been
rising at a rate about 15 per cent greater than the annual
growth of the GNP.
"Unless something is done to substantially accelerate
private giving," says Peterson, "there will be a multibillion-dollar deficit in private giving by 1975 . .. . Without
important new sources of funds . . . we will soon feel the
full force of a charitable crisis."
What new sources are there? The American Association
of Fund-Raising Counsel points to one possibility. Federal
tax laws permit corporations to deduct up to five per cent
of their incomes in gifts to philanthropies. Yet the average corporation gives less than one per cent of its income.
Pfifer, however. sees a deeper question involved: "The
issue is whether the majority of our citizens still see special merit in the retention of a combined public-private
system or whether substantial numbers would now, for
varying reasons, be quite content to see private institutions handed over to public control."

BY JACK O'BRIAN

·-~~1" ..... , -.~-·-r· , . .,,.

·~· ,·

.. ,

..

Obstruction May Be Problem

If· Swallowing Is Painful

IT'S TAPS FOR WINCHELL
-THE DANCE KIND
NEW YORK- Ruby Keeler and Patsy Kelly
of "No, No, Nanette," the greatest Bdwy. hit
since "The Sound of Music" and " Dolly," are
preparing an "act" for the Damon Runyon Fund
salute to Walter Winchell in May: "We're
working up a tap dance," the gals said .... The
whole show-bang at the Waldorf Ballroom will be
a vaudeville bill in the old Palace tradition of
WW's earliest Bdwy. memories .... Alan King
insisted on delivering a eulogy at the Jack Entratter funeral services in Las Vegas, tho Jack's
doctor, Bill Hitzig, summoned to his bedside,
was the choice as official eulogist .... Alan entertained a group of sidewalk fans while
everyone else went to the cemetery, assuring
them he superseded Joey Bishop as eulogist: and
that's shc-;v biz.
The 5th Ave. building housing Ari Onassis'
Olympic Airline office is coming down, so his
new H.Q. are on 7th Ave. in the 50s .... And his
neighborhood bar may shift from "21" and La
Grenouilles to the Russian Tea Room, where his
aides have settled in already .... The Russian Tea
Room, which collects a cell of show biz liberals,
advertises itself as ''a little to the left of Carnegie
Hall." .... "21" co-owner Sheldon Tarmen's
mother is in Beth Israel Hospital,
recovering nicely from a heart attack.
"The Philanthropist," at the Ethel
Barrymore Theater, is another feather in Alec
McCowen's acting cap, and bells; and while
often delightful as a comedy, it also takes random excursions into bathos, and needless fourletter filth. (This practice doesn't even utilize the
ultimate impact of a four-letter emphasis
properly; they are written into the wrong places
for the attempted rough dialogic accents; the
actors and actresses utter them somewhat less
than as if used to them- warily, wrongly toned
and nervously placed; as Art Buchwald said
about the practice of flinging obscenities
everywhere, it does ruin them for special occasions.)
The play is an involution of "The Misanthrope" but doesn't challenge its inspiration :
Moliere ... It's also about a man unable to tell a
lie, who is dull but droll about it; McCowen extracts fun far beyond the script's roots .... Jane
Asher, once famous as a girl friend of the
Beattie, herein again asserts she'll be around
long after the rock has rolled away .... Victor
Spinetti, as an especially offensive novelist,
attained his target, we suppose, although he's

touched that base in more positive roles in the
past ... . It's full of offhand tragedies such as the
British Prime Minister and virtually his whole
cabinet slain by an assassin in drag, casual
swapping of girl friends, an opening scene with a
comedy killing that's funny, if you can believe it;
and it all runs too raggedly at too many momentsf
.... But Alec McCowen is worth the admission,
with Jane Asher a splendid bonus.
It was a dressy First Night: One of the
grubby autograph gang, which congregates
wherever "names" gather , was heard complaining as the curtain-time horde swept along
elegantly in chic attire: "Nobody famous- just
rich."
When Dick Cavett brought on Muhammad
Ali the other midnight, bandleader Bobby
Rosengarden's comic processional was "Pick
Yourself Up, Brush Yourself Off, and Start All
Over Again" .... Norman Mailer got hyperthyroid about Alan Shepard's cheerful in- •
terplanetary golf game and tried to establish it
as something sacrilegious, paralleling it to
playing golf in St. Patrick's Cathedral, but he
couldn't convince Dick Cavett; it was just plain
nonsense.
The defeated ex-ehamp (that's not quite a
redundancy) was a pleasantly disgruntled ..
Cavett guest, interesting and well mannered
even in his small exceptions to Dick's sallies ....
The whole affair of Johrmy Carson getting so
emotional about Ali's leave-taking back to his
training camp before the fight instead of appearing as scheduled on a Carsoncast seems
much ado about little: It was just this sort of
lordly edict (that Ali is barred from Carson's
cameras forever) that came just before Arthur
Godfrey's fall.
•
William Holden already has tried to win
State Dep't permission to visit Red China ... .
Adam West got 30,000 letters a week when he
starred in "Batman," but not a soul seemed to
recognize him at The Sugar Man .... The World
Trade Center said our statistic that nine have
died in constructing its 110-story towers so far
was wrong : only eight, so far .... Glad we could
save that one life.
John Mills, under whose management El •
Morocco lost $750,000 in one year for his backers,
the London Danziger Brothers, still spreads the
cash around: at the Pierre's La Foret, John
bestowed expensive bubbly on every member of
Phil Wayne's Orchestra after only one short
dance .... Joan Frouge, bt!autiful widow oi 5th
Ave. builder Tom Frouge, and Canada Dry veep
Allen Walz hid away from gossip columnists,
they thought, at the Steak Casino.

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. all p e r s on s should try to using more vegetables, fruit,
Dear Dr. Lamb-I am 72 regulate their diet in such uncreamej cottage cheese,
years old and have pain in a way as to prevent heart nonfat dry milk powder and
my chest when I swallow my disease. This means limiting avoiling large amounts of
food. It doesn't want to go the amount of fat intake, cholesterol which are found
down. I had an X ray a few particularly saturated fats in egg y o k e s and organ
years ago and was told I like those found in meats. meats like the brain.
have enlarging of the heart.
My doctor said not to worry
because as you get older the
heart tends to get a little
larger. My doctor has passed
away and I can't get a doctor, so I need an answer. I I
I
I
would like to know what that
pain is if possible.
:
By Helen Bottel
1
I
Dear Reader- The d i f f iculty you are having in
swallowing food is probably POLLUTION, RELIGION GET
not related to your heart in BIGGEST RESPONSE
I
any way. It is more likely Dear Helen:
until you did in 1955."
caused by some mechanical
I'm always introgued by your columns that name the most
Jim: "My raise to four
ORTH
22
spades was a gamble, but I
obstruction in the esophagus, popular letters, discussionwise. And I'm amused to note that sex
. 64
the digestive tube passing is never at the head of the list. (NOTE FROM H. Perhaps my
• 72
had seen Mr. Rau play some
from the back of the throat
• 86 43
tough dummys. He sure justo the stomach.
readers agree with me that written sex is like steak: Great when a
oToAKQJ 7
tified my optimism."
Sometimes mechanic a 1 little rare, but if overdone, it becomes unpalatable.)
WEST
EAST
Oswald: '· How did it go?"
pro b I em s are caused by
So what are the big issues this season?- MIKE
• 93
• J 10 7 5
Jim: "Hearts were opened
spasm or cramping of the Dear Mike :
¥A Q 10 9 54 ,
¥ K J 86
and continued. John ruffed
+ K 10 7
+J 5
muscles in the esophagus.
Would you believe: religion; .... with pollution a rurmer-up.
the second heart a n d
... 8 3
oTo 10 54
promptly led a low trump
Muscle c r a m P s can close The teenager who asked whether she was wrong to seek God on a
the opening and cause food
SOUTH (D)
from his hand. East won
to lodge in the middle of the hilltop because she couldn't find Him in church received hundreds
.AKQ8 2
and led a diamond. John
chest. Other times a mech- of answers, as did "Long Time Member" who deplored un¥3
rose with the ace, played
+ AQ92
anical obstruction is caused conventional dress at Sunday services.
out his ace-·king.queen of
oT-96 2
by a growth. This last reaHappily (and amazingly) not one writer disagreed with my
trumps ond wound up runBoth vulnerable
son is why I would urge you answers!
nin~ my club suit."
to see a doctor as soon as
West North East South
Oswald: "A nice safety
possible and have a .careful
play By submarining the
X-ray examination made Samples:
3 ...
2¥
3¥
3.
trump suit he left a trump
during swallowing.
Dear Helen:
Pass
Pass Pass
in dummy so that the de·
;Ja~~.
fenders could not force him
I was touched at reading the letter from "Searching" as I too
Do not put this off. Anyone
Opening lead-¥ A
to ruff another heart in his
who has the sensation of am a teenager who is searching for real religion. Kids today seek
hand . If he had banged out
food l o d gin g in his chest something in God they don't find in the world - and when they
ace-king-queen of trumps
should see a doctor as soon
By
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
as possible.
look in church, they often don't find it there either.
and then tackled clubs East
Jim: "One of the most encould have ruffed the fourth
Dear Dr. Lamb- My docWe'd go to church if we could find love and people who really
joyable things about playing
club and cost Johnny his
tor tells me that hormone care about us and aren't ashamed to say they believe. I'm sure
at New York's Regency
contract''
' shots are good for arthritis. there ARE such churches, but until I find one, I'll keep on Whist Club is the chance I
He has been giving me one PRAYING ON MY HILLTOP
get to play with some of the
a month. Is it possible they Dear Helen:
great players of the '30's."
will cause me to have a
The bidding has been .
Oswald: "Sounds like a
heart attack? This has been
"Searching" would search no longer if she visited OUR
West
North
East
South
hand
is
coming
up.
Which
on my mind and I would like church .... (These from aU over the country, predictably from
1¥
one
of
the
old-timers
played
an honest answer.
fundamentalist "back to the Bible" denominations.)
Pass
2~
Pass
3+
this one?''
Pass
3¥
Pass
4¥
Dear Reader- Pro b a b I y Dear Helen:
Jim: ".John Rau. I believe
Pass
4•
Pass
5 ...
not. If your doctor is giving
I and a lot of others won't go to church because there are too
he won the Open Teams in
Pass
Pass
?
you estrogen, the female hor- many "worshipers" like "Long Time Member" who look at the
1930 and had several other
You. South, hold:
mone, actually it offers some
firsts and seconds before he
¥K 10 7 6 5 +A K Q 9 4 ~A 2
protection against having a clothes or how much you put in the collection and crowd God out.
got involved in business."
What do you do now?
heart attack. Heart and
Pants suits (girls), head bands, even slacks and sandals,
Oswald: "He won it with
A- Bid six diamonds. This
artery disease develop in what's the difference : you come to church to get away from
Ely Culbertson, John Carshows very good diamonds and
women after the change in worldly things, not for a fashion show. As you said, Helen, "Jesus
penter and Billy Barrett. He
implies weak hearts. This hand
life because of the absence never won an award for best-dressed man." The Lord can see
was just 23 then and was
may produce seven dubs, but
of the female hormone. This
not hearts.
the youngest man to win it
is one of the reasons why through any facade. That goes for long hair too.- Band B
men are more prone to heart Dear Helen:
disease.
That poor fellow who pretended to put money in the church
The male hormone appears collection bag: Maybe he's broke or has doctor bills. Maybe he
to increase the probability needs sympathy, not a neighbor's censure. Many times I haven't
of vascular disease to some gone to church when I truly needed the reassurance it gives
extent. It does make a dlf- I
.
,
ference which hormone your because. I d1dn t have a .dollar for the plate, and I knew someone
doctor is giving you. Then, would g1ve me a mearungful stare. - PAT
By United Press International
of course, there are the horSecond most burning issue was pollution. Rebuttals to Mrs. H.
Today is Monday, March 22,
mones fr~m the a d r e. n a l s. of Texas are still pouring in. Mainly they suggest that the the 81st day of 1971.
gland~ which. ~re sometlmes American people get off their duffs and stop expecting the
The moon is between its last
used m arthntts, but us ually
.
.
quarter and new phase.
these are not given just once government to overrun us w1th laws. As m:
The morning stars are
a month, so I ass ume this is Dear Helen :
not what you are taking.
I read with considerable disquietude the letter from Mrs. H. Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
The next time you see your S. concerning the need for government to lead in the fight against
doctor why don't you ask poUution.
under the sign of Aries.
him to test your blood for
Do we really want to go to another system of government?
On this day in history :
In 1794 Congress enacted
cholesterol content? If your This is what rigid controls on manufacturers would mean. Even if
legislation forbidding slave
cholesterol
is high •itto may
the we did, wouldn't private industry still search for new ingredients
have no relationship
hormones but it would indi- to do the job of the prohibited ones? Who would pay for all this trading with foreign nations.
In 1874 the Young Men's
cate that you should be a policing and the many investigations?
Hebrew
Association (YMHA)
little more care f u I about
I agree that packaging has gotten out of hand in this country.
your diet. Frankly, 1 think But with enough private outcry, companies will soon be ad- was founded in New York City.
In 1941 the Grand Coulee
vertising "ecology wrapping," just as the soft drink people are
When he comes to now pushing their glass recycle process, and can companies their Dam on the Columbia River
began producing electrical powyou for help used can collections.
To me , the example of several private institutions loudest in er in the Pacific Northwest.
~v
Give to the support of saving the environment is interesting. Their In 1968 President Lyndon
literature (including magazines) is often beautifully printed on Johnson recalled Gen. William
EASTER coated
~·
Westmoreland as commander
paper. In both manufacture and disposal, such paper and
SEALS ink are among the most dangerous of pollutants, I'm told. Are we of U.S . troops in Vietnam and
made him Army Chief of Staff.
willing to have the government deprive us of the pleasure of slick Gen. Creighton Abrams took
paper publications?
over in Vietnam.
I am afraid Pogo was right, "We have met the enemy and it is
us." We aren't children who mwt have "No-No's" removed from
A thought for today : British
March 1- our reach . We're adults who can make our own decisions- and novelist Cleghorn Gaskell said,
" Well, Emilv- thr-re gue~ the ne.ghborhood!"
April 11 by our boycotts, force voluntary standards of manufacturers and "A man is so in the way m the
the public. Let's grow up! - G.E.S.
house."

.---------------------------1

!Helen Help Us!

Old Timer Turns the Trick

CE BIOSSAT

The Presidency--And Paths to War

•

•
,
"
..
...

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Take a look at a couple of quotations:
"I do the very best I know how ... and I do mean to
keep doing so to the end. If the end brings me out all
right, what is said against me won't amount to an.ything.:•
" ... we can debate as to whether or not my v1ew of 1t
1s right or the rest. I hope for the good of the country
mine is, and if it is right, what you say now doesn't make
any difference."
Is this President Nixon responding to criticism of the
Laotian incursion and his general conduct of the Indochina war? Yes and no.
The second comment is indeed Nixon's, made in his
March 4 press conference. The first is Abraham Lincoln's,
uttered as he struggled with an earlier bitter war.
How many other U.S. presidents have said or might
have said something similar? No thorough research has
been done. We are sure only of Harry Truman, who kept
Lincoln's remark in a leather profile on his White House
desk and once told a scholar: ''That's the way I feel,
too."
What is the point here? That presidents are sensitive to
criticism and react defensively? This is surely true, but
the matter is a great deal subtler than that.
The evidence of history is that American presidents in
crisis circumstances-most particularly war situationsconsistently have believed themselves possessed of wide·
ranging power. At the same time, they have felt an awesome loneliness in its exercise, and have looked wistfully
for assurance that their big decisions are right.
Historian Henry Steele Commager has just told some

~· ~~~~~O::d 0;n \~~&amp;~;ef;~e~~~a~~0a~s p~~~d~~\~e:.o~r;\nt~~~

.,. last 20 years or so" have, on their own without concurrent
• support from Congress, thrust the country into military
operations in places near and far.
The view is unbelievably myopic. More experienced
constitutional experts than Commager accept no such
, limited time frame. The celebrated Edward S. Corwin, in
•, his book "Total War and the Constitution ," wrote :
1

:' w~~~rw ~;~~ :::: a1f t~~t~\~~~~n;ut~~~o:~p~~efi~~~ti~~
, policies in the making of which Congress had but a minor
• part "
.
As for World War II, Corwin hsted- with no s uggestion
:· the tally was complete- some 14 actions by President
• • Franklin D . Roosevelt in 1941 before Pearl Harbor, which
· were either virtual acts of war or provocative to the bel·
:- ligerent Nazis.
:
These included orders to "sink on sight" foreign s ub·
marines discovered in our " defensive waters, .. to provide
naval escort for convoyed Lend-Lease s upplies bound for
Britain , to U.S. warsh~ps to drop depth charges in "self.
defense'' against Nazi submanpes a nywhere~ to those
same warships to destroy any German or I~allan sea or
air forces encountered. U.S. vessels sometimes moved
•. under British command
Many of these FDR orders were not learned. of by
Congress or public until well a fter they had been ISs ued.
The escort of Lend·Lease s upplies by the Navy flatly co~ ­
travened a ban on s uch support composed by Congress 1n
the Lend Lease act.
Again, the evidence over more than a century has been
that U.S. president s exercise the compelling initiatives in
foreign and rntlitary policy. And they have been con·
sistently hold abo ut it.
The facts simply crush Commager's argument that only
in the era of Korea . the 1962 Cttba n mi s~i l e crisis and
Vietnam havp pn•sidents "thrown ca ution and even con·
stitutional scr uples to the wind· in military ventures.
Moreover, the real constitutional experts contend that
• this wide prPsidt-nlial dis1:rPtion is f1rmly established.
Till'\ "'.t' fh;;t thr• Supn:rn&lt;' Co urt ha s not curbed it It
wotl!d ! H• a &lt;.; ttrpri ~r if th" f'ourt susta1ned a ny C'onceivahle
TJI'W l.OT!grl'SS I'lll:Jl I lH•r

k

I!JlfHl

fhvf

fHlWI'I

4.

1.

tl:Rn :1 •MriL!flll

•s

Today'•
Almanac

a

1C

6...

'

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 22,1971

•

'

Stage Set For Ohio Prep Finals
COLl ',fBUS (UPI)- Dayton
Dunbar Coach George Galloway
in summing up his team's
chances of winning the Class
AAA state basketball title, pretty much hit the nail on the
head for all 12 of the finalists.
"I think when you get this
far," Galloway said at Sunday's
coaches meeting, "It just de-

pends on which way the ball
bounces and which team can
adjust to certain situations."
The first-year coach's team
enters its Friday night semifinal game against Cleveland
East Tech with a 23-1 record,
the only loss coming at the
hands of Cincinnati Hughes, 10192.

·r-------------~~·----------------------·~·""1

"We just got offensive minded," said Galloway, an advocate
of a strong defense. "But I
think the Hughes game was the
best thing which could have
happened, because from then on
we went back to fundamentals."
Dunbar later avenged the loss
to Hughes by an 88-56 score.
East Tech, 21-2 on the year,
is a run and shoot type club.
Shooting Duel Seen
"I know East Tech is a very
good ball team," Galloway said,
"and we certainly don't want

to get into a shooting match going against giant killer
with them."
Akron Central - Hower, which
eliminated second - ranked
East Tech Coach John Chav- Boardman 60-59 Saturday night
ers said the two teams match at Canton.
Ridge enters the semi-finals
up fairly even, although Dunbar, with 6-foot-9 Bill Howard with a 23-0 record, while Cenand 6-foot-7 Corneius Cash has tral-Hower brings a 17-6 mark,
worst in the tournament, into
a little more height.
"I think we're comparable," the 5:30 p.m. contest.
Chavers said. "It'll be a matTop Team Starts
ter of desire in this game."
The opening Class AA game,
The other AAA contest has
Columbus Walnut Ridge, the at 11:30 Friday morning, will
No. 1 rated team in the state, send Canton Lehman, the only

I
• L~~~~~t_:~~~!-~_J Bruins
· the Sports Desk

.

•
•
•

•

•

Don (better known as Pizzle) Wolfe asked me Friday night at
the Convocation Center how many installments his "total
statistical picture" of the Meigs Marauders would require. He
thought it a marvel of modern printing technology that only two
would be required.
Following is that second installment, namely, the career
(graduated) records and they stand in the Marauder camp after
the fourth year of their history.
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Most points scored 1 game- 30 by J. Myers vs Point Pleasant
in 1969; 30 by J. Tyo vs Ironton in 1971 (tie).
Most points scored 1 season- 299 by J. Tyo in 1970.
Most points scored 1 game by opponent - 46 by Gregory of
Vinton in 1968.
Most field goal attempts 1 game- 27 by J. Tyo vs Wellston in
1970.
Most field goal attempts 1 game by opponent - 29 by Kitchen
of Ironton in 1970.
Most field goal attempts 1 season- 307 by J. Tyo in 1970.
Most field goals made 1 game -13 by J. Tyo vs Gallipolis in
1970.
~
Most field goals made 1 game by opponent - 16 by Gregory of
Vmton in 1968.
Most field goals made 1 season -119 by J. Tyo in 1970.
. Best field goal shooting average 1 game -100 per cent (7-7)
by J. Myers in 1969.
Best field goal shooting average 1 game by opponent - 85 per
cent (12-14) by Rapp of Athens in 1968; 85 per cent (6-7) by Smith
of Athens in 1971 (tie).
Best field goal shooting average 1 season - 53 per cent by R.
Van Matre in 1971 x.
Most free throws attempted 1 game-21 by C. Haggerty vs
Logan in 1970.
Most free throws attempted 1 game by opponent - 18 by
Gregory of Vinton in 1968.
Most free throws attempted 1 season - 158 by J. Myers in
1969.
Most free throws made 1 game - 16 by J. Tyo vs Ironton in
1971 X.
Most free throws made 1 game by opponent - 14 by Gregory
of Vinton in 1968.
Most free throws made 1 season- 94 by C. Haggerty in 1970.
Best free throw average 1 game - 100 per cent (8-8) by J.
Conde in 1968; 100percent (8-8) by R. VanMatre in 1971 (tie).
Best freea 1 game by opponent - 100 per cent
!9-9J by Jeff
o in 1968.
Best fre
er ge 1 season -72 per cent by J. Tyo in
1971 X.
Most COilS('ct;_.ve free throws made - 26 by J. Tyo in several
games x.
Highest game point average 1 season- 15 by J. Tyo in 1970
and 1971.
Most personal fouls committed 1 season - 67 by J . Morris in
1971 'IC.
Least personal fouls committed 1 season - 5 by B. Werry in
1969.
Most times fouled out 1 season - 5 by J. Myers in 1968; 5 by
R. VanMatre in 1970 (tie).
Least times fouled out 1 season- 0 by J. Werry in 1968.
Most rebounds 1 game - 21 by D. Walters vs Wahama in 1970;
21 by J. Morris vs Waverly in 1971 (tie).
Most consecutive field shots made - 7 by J. Myers vs
Nelsonville-York in 1969.
Most games played 1 season - 20 by 5 players in 1969.
Most quarters played 1 season - 79 by J. Morris in 1971 x.
Most periods played 1 game - 8 by J. Tyo, R. VanMatre, J.
Morris vs Gallipolis in 1971 x.
x - Indicates new record set in 1971.
CAREER (GRADUATED) RECORDS
Most total points - 814 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Most field goal attempts -791 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Most field goals made - 302 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Best field goal shooting average - 48 per cent by J . Myers in
1968-Q9.
Most free throws attempted - 304 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Most free throws made - 210 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Best free throw average - 69 per cent by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Highest point average per game - 14 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Most personal fouls committed -132 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Most rebounds - 380 by D. Walters in 1968-69-70.
Most games played- 58 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.
Most quarters played - 226 by J. Tyo in 1969-70-71.

•

UNDERINSURED
a horribl e com bination of words. Let
us take away those
fir st five letters.
Insure -- be sure!

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992-2966
114 CPurt St.
Pomeroy

By United Press International
"This year's NCAA Tournament, thus far, has been one
of upsets."
The words were those of
Johnny Wooden, coach of
defending NCAA basketball
champion UCLA and the
veteran mentor had reason to
add, "I'm glad we didn't
contribute to the trend."
The top-ranked Bruins had to
come from as much as 11
points down to eke out a 57-55
victory over Long Beach State
Saturday and advance to the
semifinals of the tournament
scheduled for Thursday night at
the Houston Astrodome.
Villanova, Kansas, and Western Kentucky also advanced to
the semifinals. Villanova
stunned third-ranked Pennsylvania 90-47, Kansas nipped
Drake 73-71 and Western
Kentucky subdued stubborn
Ohio State 81-78 in overtime.
"I never expected to be down
as far as we were, but we
ended up where we wanted to

team rated among the top 10 contests after going 19.7 for the
(9th) to make it to the semi- season.
finals, against Tipp City ( 19-5).
Champion Coach Roger Rogos
Lehman has a 22-2 record.
said his team, with five returning lettermen, "peaked early
The second AA encounter and then hit a flat spell."
"But we have a lot of momfinds Warren Champion, 21-3,
entum
going now," Rogos said,
going against Maysville, one of
the surprises of the tournament. "and we are well pleased."
Ends Win Streak
The Panthers, who had a 13Champion
handed second5 regular season Mark, are now
19-5, due mostly to the improv- ranked Youngstown Liberty its
ed scoring of senior Dean Wolfe, only loss of the regular season
who has averaged 32.8 points and stopped Garrettsville Garper game in six tournament field's 21-game winning streak
in tournament play.
The Class A teams open the
tournament, first under the
three- classification system, on
Thursday night.
Zanesville Rosecrans, led by

Do It Again

be at the end of the game,"
Wooden said.
Four consecutive free throws
by All America forward Sidney
Wicks in the final 25 seconds
clinched UCLA's 26th consecutive victory in NCAA tournamentcompetition and vaulted
the Bruins into their semi-final
match with the Midwest
champs Kansas.
The fourth-ranked, Jayhawks,
who have won their last six
games by a total of 13 points,
had to rely on a 27-point
performance from 6-10 Senior
Dave Robisch to up their
record to 27-1 by eliminating
Missouri Valley Conference
champion Drake.
"Any coach with a fairly good
team always wonders how he
would do against UCLA,"
Kansas Coach Ted Owens
commented after the win over
Drake. "Anytime you win a
close ball game, you gain
confidence. If we're in another
one against UCLA it should
help."

Villanova ended three years
of frustration by crushing the
previously unbeaten (28-0)
Quakers. Howard Porter poured
in 35 points for the wildcats,
who had previously lost to Penn
every time the two teams met
over the past three seasons.
"It was the biggest victory
I've ever had," said Villanova
Coach Jack Kraft. "I can't give
the words I feel." The win
lifted Villanova's record to 26-6
and the Wildcats will now meet
Mideast champ Western Kentucky.
"I haven't scouted Villanova
personally," said Hilltopper
Coach John Oldham, "but one
of my assistants tells me
they're one of the quickest
teams in the nation."
Western Kentucky, which also
likes to run, overcame a 14point deficit to get by Ohio
State and up its record to 23-5.
Previously, the Hilltoppers had
to come from behind to nip
Jacksonville in a Mideast
regional playoff game before

trouncing Kentucky 107-83 last
Thursday.
"We keep having to work our
way out of trouble," Oldham
commented. "I guess you might
say we're kind of a sandlot ball
club."
Big Jim McDaniels, the
Hill toppers' 7-foot center,
scored four quick baskets to
narrow Ohio State's lead to 4034 at halftime and then
Clarence Glover sank a free
throw with 8:57 left to play in
the game to tie it at 53-53.
Glover, who led Western
Kentucky in rebounds with 22,
put the game away in the
overtime period with a tip in
and a pair of free throws
Spread around Jim Rose's short
jumper.
In the consolation games,
Fordham upset South Carolina
100-90 in the East, Marquette
clubbed Kentucky 91-74 in the
Mideast, Houston outpointed
Notre Dame 119-106 in the
Midwest and Pacific beat
Brigham Young 84-81 in the
West.

Phils Jab Pirates, 5-3
By United Press International
No rookie ever had it easier
than Roger Freed who was
named the Philadelphia Phillies' regular right fielder before
he even reported to camp this
spring.
"We felt --we had no choice
because we're staking so much
on him," says Manager Frank

Lucchesi. "But we're not sorry.
He's more than living up to
what we expected of him."
Freed, 24, who had .334-24-130
credentials for Rochester in the
International League last sea-

Pro Standings

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
x New York 52 30 .634 ...
Philadelphia 47 35 .573 5
Boston
44 38 .537 8
Buffalo
22 60 .268 30
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
42 40 .512 ...
By United Press International x-Baltimore
Atlanta
36 46 .439 6
(Class AAAJ
33 49 .402 9
Cincinnati
!At Canton Fieldhouse)
15 66 .185 271!2
Cleveland East Tech 81 Euclid Cleveland
Midwest Division
60
W. L. Pet. GB
(At Canton Auditorium)
x-Milwaukee 66 16 .805 ...
Akron Centrai -Hower 60
51 31 .672 15
Youngstown Boardman 59 Chicago
Phoenix
48 34 .585 18
!At Cincinnati)
45 37 .549 21
Dayton Dunbar 73 Hamilton Detroit Pacific Division
Taft 72
W. L. Pet. GB
(At Columbus)
x Los Angeles 48 34 .585 ...
Columbus Walnut Ridge 71 San
Francisco 41 41 .500 7
Celina 60
40 42 .488 8
San Diego
(Class AAJ
Seattle
38 44 .463 10
(At Copley)
28 53 .346 19112
Champion 76 Youngstown North Portland
x - Clinched Div. Title
61
Sunday's Results
! t Bowling Green)
Boston 135 Cine. 110
Can , ~ .. Lehman 67
116 Chicago 111
Lima Centra l Catholic 50 Detroit
Phil. 120 Bait. 108
(At Athens)
L.A. 101 New York 98
Maysville 66 Waverly 62
Seattle 119 San Fran. 106
!At Dayton)
Scm Diego 132 Phoenix 114
Tipp City 55 London 53
Portland 113 Cleveland 110
(Class A)
(Only games scheduled)
(At Dayton)
Monday's Games
Fort Recovery 63 Sidney Leh(No
games
schedu led)
man 55
(At Columbus)
ABA Standings
Marion Pleasant 59 East Canton
By United Press International
58
East
(At Bowling Green)
W. L. Pet. GB
Convoy Cr&lt;Jstview 56 Vanlue 47
51 27 .654 ...
x-Virginia
(At Athens)
42 37 .532 91h
Zanesville
Rosecrans
68 Kentucky
39 39 .500 12
New York
Western Pike 54
34 46 .425 18
Floridians
33 46 .418 18112
Pittsburgh
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
30 48 .385 21
Carolina
Pairings for the 1971 state high
West
THE DAILY SENTINEL school basketball tournament,
W. L. Pet. GB
DEVOTED TO
with won -lost records in Utah
54 23 .701 ...
INTEREST OF
parentheses:
Indiana
54 24 .692 112
MEIGS·MASON AREA
Thursday Night
Memphis
38 40 .487 Wh
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
(Class A)
Texas
28 50 .359 261h
Exec. Ed .
Zanes ille Rosecrans (21 -3) vs. Denver
27 50 .351 26112
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Marion Pleasant (20-4) 7: 30 x-Ciinched Division Title
City Editor .
Sunday's Results
Pub li s hed daily except p.m.
Saturday by The Ohio Valley Convoy Crestview (21 2) vs. Carolina 143 Pitt. 136
Publishing Company, 111 Fort Recovery (24-2) 9: 30p.m. Texas 129 Virginia 115
Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, (Winners meet Saturday at 12 Floridians 109 Memph~s 103
45769. Business Office Phone noon)
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992.
Friday
Saturday's College Basketball
2157 ·
(Class AAJ
Tournament Results
Second class postage paid at Tipp City (19·5) vs. Canton Leh By United Press International
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertising man (22-2) 11 : 30 a .m.
NCAA Quarterfinals
epresentative
B.ottinelJi , Champion (21 3) vs. Maysville
At Salt Lake City, Utah
Ga llagher, Inc., 12 East 42n.d (19-5) 1:30 p.m.
(Far west regionalsl
SL .. New York City, New York. (Winners meet 3 p.m. Satur- UCLA 57 L.B.S. U. of Pac. 84
rates : day)
S u b scription
Brigham Young (cons.)
F ·d
N'1 ht
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week;
rt ay
9
At Wichita, Kan
By Motor Route where carrier
Class AAA)
service _110t avqilat?le : __Qne Columbus Walnut Ridge (23-0)
(Midwest regionalsl
.monlh'·Slf5. By mail in OhiO' vs. Akron Centrai -Hower (17-6) Kansas 73 Drake 71
and W . Va ., One year $14.00. 5:30p.m.
Houston 119 Notre Dame 106
Six months $7 .25 . 1'hree Dayton Dunbar (23· 1) vs. (Consolation)
months $4.50. Subscription Cleveland East Tech (21 -2) 9:30
price inclucjes Sunday Times · p.m.
At Athens, Ga.
;.sent1nel.
" 1 (Winners meet 7. 30 p .m .
(Mideast regionals)
Saturday)
Ky. 81 Ohio St. 78 (otl
Mrque. 91 Ky 74 (cons)

Tourney
Results

son, was acquired from the
Baltimore Orioles during the
winter. His power made him
especially attractive to the
Phillies who didn't have an
outfielder who hit more than 10
homers in 1970.
Freed had a homer and two
singles for a 3-for-3 day and
raised his spring average to
.400 Sunday as the Phillies beat
the Pittsburgh Pirates, 5-3.
Greg Luzinski, another rookie,
also homered for the Phillies,
who raised their spring record
to 5-11. Willie Stargell, batting
.529 this spring, homered for
the Pirates.
On other fronts: John Strohmayer allowed one hit in seven
innings as the Montreal Expos
beat the Washington Senators,
5-3. Coco Laboy and John
Boccabella homered for the
Expos .. . Bobby Brooks hit two
homers and drove in seven runs
to lead the Oakland Athletics to
a 10-6 triumph over the

Cleveland Indians . . . Roberto
Pena and Bill McNulty singled
home ninth-inning runs for the
Milwaukee Brewers in a 4-2
triumph over the Chicago Cubs.
Billy Williams homered for the
Cubs and Bill Voss connected
'
for the Brewers.
The New York Yankees
snapped a 12-game losing
streak when Johnny Ellis'
ninth-inning double drove in
Danny Cater for a 3-2 win over
the Detroit Tigers. Joe Niekro
pitched one-hit ball for the
Tigers for six innings ....
Orlando Cepeda hit a two-run
double and Jesus Alou a solo
homer as the All...Stars of the
Braves, Expos ajld Astros beat
the Los Angeles Dodgers, 6-1 ...
Shigeki Ikeda's bases-fulled
walk to Dick Dietz with one out
in the 14th inning gave the San
Francisco Giants a 5-4 decision
over the Lotte Orions of Tokyo.
Willie Mays and Alan Gallagher
hit triples for the Giants.

1971 Class A
All-Ohio Team

COLUMBUS (UP I) - The
1971 United Press International
Class A All-Ohio high school
basketball team, with heig ht,
grade and scoring average :
First Team
Dan Weston, Ridgedale, 6-5,
Sr., 27 .1.
Dan Bollinger, Za nesvi lie
Rosecrans, 6-5, Sr., 23.0.
John Freytag, Sidney Leh·
man , 6-5, Sr., 23.0.
Joe Mitock, Lorain Catholic,
5-11, Sr., 22.6.
Bob Huggins, Indian Valley
South, 6-3, Jr ., 29.1.
Second Team
Dick Selgo, Pettisville, 6-0,
Sr., 30.2.
Steve Sonnenberg, Holgate, 6·
5, Sr., 32.6.
Monty Kerr, Zane Trace
(Gue rnsey), 6-7, Sr .. 32.6.
Mark Flint, Warren Consolidated, 6-4, Sr., 17.9.
Frank Cheadle, Arcanum, 6-2,
Sr., 32.4.
Third Team
Don Campbell. Sebring, 5-11,
Sr., 23.0.
Ru ss Willis , Mississinawa
Valley, 5-11, Sr., 26.3.
Dan Dabbelt, Wapakoneta St.
Joseph, 6-4, Sr., 26.0.
Gary Swinehart, Crooksville,
6-3, Sr., 23.4.
Mark Warner, Newcomerstown, 6-5, Sr., 24.4.
Specia I Mention
Rick Baldwin, Ayersville;
Steve Clark, East Canton; Tom
Dunn, Covington; Joe Ersek,
Fairport Harbor; Rod Goddard,
Western Reserve ; Dan Hagan,
Columbia Station; Jon Mvers.
Hillsdale; Dwight Pike, KirtAt Raleiqh, .N.C.
land ; Ron Ridqe, Norwalk St.
(Eastern reg1onalsl
"'au I; Randy Schafer, Fort
VIllanova 90 Pennsy lvania 47 Loram ie; Ed Snyder, Fort
Fordham 100 South Carolina 90Recovery; Chuck Sa us, York·
vi ll e; Mike Schm idt, Con
NIT at New York
tinenta l; Jim Shuck, Co lonel
(First round l
Craw; Dave Winland, Brilliant.
Tenn . 84 St. (N.Y. 83) (ot)
Honorable Mention
Barry Andriko, Lords town;
Ga. Tech 70 Lasall e 67
N.C. 90 Mass. 49
Steve Beller, Canal Winchester ;
Bernie Brown, Strasburg: Duvr.
Prov. 64 Louisv. 58
Clapp, Maplewood; John Cox,
Duke 68 Dayton 60

Proctorville Fairland; John
Conley, Plymouth; Arthur
Clark, North Ga Ilia; Tony
Cannella, Lowel lvill e; Jim
Clark, Grover Hill; Ron Davish,
New Miami; John DPLona .
Sidney Lehman; Jon Diller,
Lonvoy
Crestview;
John
Eskridge, Rootstown; Dave
Evans, Lincolnview; Kim
Ear ly, South Central.
Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
Meigs ; Gary Early, Skyvue ;
Mike Frye, Mansfield St.
Peters; Tim Furbee, Stanton
Local; Rick Ferri. New Athens;
Brad Fisher, Sebring; Rod
Geier, Cincinnati Country Day;
Roger Hermiller, Pandora Gilboa; Bruce Hackathorn,
East Canton; Ed Hartley,
Covington ;
Steve
Hill,
Borromeo Seminary ; Darrell
Harris, Cleve la nd Lutheran
East; Rex Hummel, Hiland;
Joe Hoover, Hillsdale; Mike
Jenkins, Sidney Lehman; Bill
Jackson, Kent State; Bob
Kruse, New Knoxville.
Terry King, Marion Pleasant;
Dean King, Bluffton; Bill
Kunkle, McDonald ; Kevin
Kurgis, Columbus Academy ;
Daryl Lammers, Miller City ;
Mark Murray, Old Fort ; Dave
Mesenburg, Co llins We stern
Reserve ;
Eric
Pearson,
Arlington;
Craig
Payne,
Danville; Nick Puskarich ,
Lak e land ;
Ray
Rogers,
Riverside; Stan Redd, Loardstown ;
Steve
Ringler,
Mapleton;
Roger Smi th ,
Western Pike.
Rick Smith, Seneca East;
Dave Sensibaugh, Lockland ;
Doyle Sheets, Convoy Crestview; Bob Shrecengost, New
Riegel;
Will
Starkey,
Ledge111ont; Doug Terry, Old
Fort;
Dennis
Travis,
Mechanicsbu- g; Jim Timmons,
Grand Valley; Joe Ward,
Piketon ; Bob Walden, Hardin
Northern ; Tony Winner, Fort
Loramie; Dave Zar lingto,
Lowe ll vi lle .

all-Ohio Dan Bollinger, takes on
Marion Pleasant in the first
game at 7:30 and Convoy
Crestivew and Fort Recovery
meet in the 9:30 game.
Rosecrans, 21-3, and lOth ranked in the final balloting, has
won 15 games in a row, while
Pleasant will bring a 20-4 mark
into the game.
Fort Recovery is the highest
rated of three top 10 A teams,
winding up fourth. The Indians
have a 24-2 mark to throw at
Cresview, which is 22-2 and fin.ished ninth in the final Class A
balloting.
Fort Recovery advanced to
the finals by beating No. ranked Sidney Lehman 63-55 in the
finals of the Dayton Regional.

Bridgedale Ace

Top 'A' Player
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPIL- Dan
Weston, for most a thorn
in the side for three years
but for his coach Dan
Wendell,
"a
pleasure to work with and be
around," is the 1971 United
Press International Class A
basketball player of the year.
The 6-foot-5 Weston, a third
team choice last year, earned
the honor by leading this year's
all - Ohio balloting by a landslide margin.
Weston has been a regular for
the Bridgedale Rockets since he
was a sophomore when he
averaged 16.4 and 10.8 rebounds
per game.
He Improved his marks to :w.l
and 15.2 last season and topped
his career by leading Ridgedale
to a 15-2 record and the No. 6
ranking in the Class A ratings.
His statistics show 453 points
for a 27.1 average for the regular season and 262 rebounds
for a 15.6 mark.
"Dan is an outstanding young
man who gives more than 100
per cent in all that he does,"
Wendell said. "He has generated much interest in Ridgedale
basketball, and consequently,
there are many people interested in him."
Also Hits Books
Weston's scholastic marks are
just as impressive as his oncourt feats. His 3.759 average
out of a possible 4.0 ranks him
third in his class of 80. He
also serves as president of his
senior class.
A distant second in the voting
to Weston was Zanesville Rosecrans's 6-foot-5 tower of strength
Dan Bollinger. The husky Bollinger, who really came on
strong towards the end of the
year, averaged 23 points per
contest and also led the Bishops
in rebounds.
In Rosecrans' winning effort
in the Athens Class A Regional,
Bollinger poured in 37 points to
lead the Bishops to a 68 - 54
decision of Western (Pike) and
a berth in the state semi-finals.
Another 6-foot-5 strongboy on
the first team is Sidney Lehman's John Freytag, the biggestreason the Cavaliers finished No. 1 in the small school
ratings this year.
Like Bollinger, Freytag was a
23-point per game scorer during
the year and also helped himself to 16 rebounds per game.
Junior Gets Berth
Rounding out the first five
are Bob Huggins of Indian
Valley South, the only junior on
the all-state teams, and Lorain
Catholic's Joe Mitock.
The 6-foot-3 Huggins, who is
coached by his father, Charles,
has already played three years
of varsity ball and scored more
than 1,500 points. He averaged
just under 30 points per game
this season, leading the Rebels
to a regional tournament berth.
Mitock, the floor leader and
top scorer of No. 2 rated Lorain
Catholic, averaged 22.6 for his
final year of competition, giv-

ing him a 21.0 average for his
junior and senior years, during
which he was held to less than
10 points only once.
"He is without a doubt, the
most dedicated and most unselfish player I've ever had the
privilege to coach"' said Lorain
Catholic Jim Lawhead of the 5foot-11 Mitock.
Heading the second team was
Dick Selgo of Pettisville, who
missed by a whisker of landing
a first team berth. Selgo, one
of the top backcourt men in the
state, hit 30.2 points per game,
and two other second team
members also averaged over
30.
Better Scorers
Monty Kerr, a 6-foot-7 Zane
Trace (Guernsey) star, poured
in poin~ at a 32.6 per game
clip, and Holgate's Steve Sonn,_iJerg, who at 6-foot-5 averaged 31.5 per game, made the
second team an ever higher
scoring unit than the first.
Mark Flint of Warren Consolidated, at 6-foot-4, and Arcanum's 6-foot-1 Frank Cheadle
round out the second team.
Flint, who made the team despite being serious injured in a
last summer traffic accident,
hit 17.9 points per game and
was a tower of strength on the
boards for Coach Henry Lazsaz.
Cheadles, who was a second
team all-Ohio rick last season,
averaged 23.4 points per game
this year.
Named to the third team
were Don Campbell, a 5-foot-11
guard from Sebring, and Russ
Willis, also 5-foot-11 from Mississinawa Valley, 6-foot-4 Dan
Debbelt, of Wapakoneta St.
Joseph, 6-foot-3 Gary Swinehart
of Crooksville and Mark Warner, 6-foot-5, from Newcomerstown.

P. J. Pauley

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY
Phone 992-2318

AUTO
FIRE- LIFE
HEALTH
MUTUAL FUNDS

.:«!I NATIONWIDE
'5 ,!~~.~~~~~!:

For loans
over$2000
and up to

$5000
125 E . Main St.

992-2171
Pomeroy, 0.

1

�-----~-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 22, 1971

Kingsbury

Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Tin1e
~ONA.i-\'6 CAR.. GET5 STUCK. AND HIS

New~

5NOOTY NEIGHBORS .JV5T DON'T SEEM.
TO SEE HIM IN DISTRESS···

Notes

W!Jaii!VI!t You Nt!t!lAny Tl!nl!... •

Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and
family and Harold White spent
Sunday in Columbus where they
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Leo
King who were celebrating their
~~~~~~S]r,;~~~~C~7~~-;._~ 25th wedding anniversary.

,

~iiiii~~g~~~~~~~~;v~i~;~~~~~~~~

Mary Lou King and Harold
While in Columbus Grace and
~~~§]White visited Mr. and Mrs.
- - - - - - - - -- - Charles Mash also.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Murray
and family of Clarksburg, Va.,
1-lE TRUDGES
spent the weekend with his
ALONG ON FOOT,
mother,
Mrs.
Elizabeth
AND A MILE OR
Murray.
50 LATER, LOOK
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean,
WHds FRIENDLY
John Walter and Richard ,
NOW···
Bridget Ross, Pam Garren and
Peggy Imboden and Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Markins spent
~:=:::::======~ Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
~==;;-~~: Robert Reid, Bruce, Virginia,
~~:ii~jli:~~~~~U~~~~~~~~~~~~~l..~~~Ufllll!l!ll ~~~~[§: Rodney
and David, and Mr. and
L.:
Mrs. Walter Terrell and Vickie
and Billy Kendell, all of
Pataskala, where they all
celebrated Mrs. Markins' birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Early Wednesday
Mixed League
Rodney visited with her
March 3, 1971
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Standings
Team
Points Harrison at Middleport.
Zide's Sport Shop
78-10
Miss Carol Sue Hall of Asbury
Porter-Smith
53·35 College at Wilmore, Ky., spent a
in reconciling them to their Ashland Oil
By DELOS SMITH
45-43
36-52 weekend with her parents, Mr.
biological sex. Since all efforts Lou's Ashland
NEW YORK (UPI)-Surgeons
Sohio
32-56 and Mrs. Carl Hall, Kathy and
to ''adjust the mind to the Oiler's
Nelson's Drug
20-68 Donna.
are newly advised to exercise
body" have failed, "a justificaHigh Individual Game - Bill
''the utmost caution" before
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sewar,
tion exists to try to adjust the Porter 222.
converting men into women.
Alibon,
N.Y., visited recently
High
Ind.
Game
Linda
body to the mind," Block and Winebrenner 190.
Once it is done there is no
with Mr. and Mrs. Eddie King
Tessler said.
High Series-Bill Porter 562
and sons and Charles and Susie
High
Series
Linda
Surgical sex changes have
Science Today
King.
Winebrenner
534.
had both successes and failures.
Team High Game - Oiler's
Mrs. Hazel Arnold and Walter
turning back and some of the They ,.cited "the best known
Sohio 671.
accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
converted have had regrets.
Team High Series - Zide's
example, Christine Jorgensen.
Patrick Williams and family of
Cited examples included men Twelve years after her opera- Sport Shop 1949.
Chester to Columbus where
who persuaded surgeons to tion, she appeared to be in good
they visited Mr. and Mrs.
operate while their minds wP.re physical and mental health,
City League
Lester
Arnold and Billy, Miss
poisoned by amphetamine or living the life of a normal and Team
Points
72-16 Evaline Arnold and celebrated
"speed," a favorite mind drug reasonably happy and success- Lou's Ash land
SwisherLohse
50-38 Billy's first birthday. In the
of youthful drug cultists.
ful woman."
46-42
H-R Firestone
The advice results from an
40-48 afternoon they visited Burdell
On the other hand, "some Cement Block
and family at
36-52 Brofford
exhaustive search, at the patients have undergone psy- Quality Print
Buckeye Potato Chips
20-68 Westerville.
behest of the American College chologic deterioration post operFirst High team 3 games 2616
Miss Linda Beal visited
of Surgeons, for everything atively, and others have de- Cement Block; second, 2475
Swisher-Lohse;
third, 2374 H-R recently with Miss Linda Young
science !mows about men with manded reversal of the procetone.
at Mansfield.
an overwhelmmg desire to be dure and have threatened legal Fires
First high Ind. 3 games- 567
Mrs. Virginia Smith who was
women.
Dugan;
second,
553
Klees;
action when this was shown to
injured in an auto acc1dent and
third, 544 Davis.
Thetr opportun1bes have be- be impossible."
First high team game come a vexing problem for
Before operation, a surgeon Cement Block 884; second, hospitalized has returned home
surgeons no\\ that it is should be completely certain Cement Block 870; third, and is recuperating.
Visiting recently with Mr. and
generally known that surgery his patient is a true transsexual Cement Block 867.
First high Ind. game Mrs. Homer Bailey were Mr.
has the conversiOn capability. whose desire to surgery "repreMcElhinny 213; second, Davis and Mrs. Avery St. Clair and
Before this news was spread sents a permanent, deep 209; Dugan 195.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young.
"such
:ople would r•
conviction of a reasonably
Visiting recently with Mr. and
contai1 •..,u themselves, as
intelligent and mentally mature
Tri-County League
Mrs.
Nev White and sons were
less people cer
individual," Block and Tessler
March 9, 1971
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
So 1d the
Team
Points
said.
Mason Furn.
61 Swearington and Bobby of
I u ..r L. bl
Rawlings Dodge
53 Dayton.
Te er of
Davis Warner Ins.
47
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Urmerstty Me
Eagles
35
H&amp;R Firestone
32 Mrs. Leroy Wyant were Mr. and
their report t&lt;.
Holsum Sales
12 Mrs. Stanley Beal and Patty
technical journal, "Surgery,
Team 3 H&amp;R Firestone and Stanley Jr. of Cleveland.
Gynecology and ObsU:trics."
2549; Team 1 Mason Furn. 909.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Smart
Ind. High 3 - Radford 609;
The purpose was to provide a
second, Paul Harris 586; third, and daughter were Sunday
factual background to help
Bill Willford 564. Ind. 1 dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
individual surgeons decide wheMr. and Mrs. Carl Circle and Radford 252.
Roger Young. In the afternoon
ther to operate and on what daughter, Patrice, of Columbus
they visited with Mrs. Roma
Thursday Afternoon
applicants.
spent a weekend with their
March 11, 1971
Beal at Syracuse.
These physical normal men parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Standings:
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Morris
suffer from "transsexualism," Circle of Carmel and Mr. and Team '
143
had
as recent visitors Mr. and
a condition recognized "in Mrs. Gene Yost of Oak Grove. Simons Market
140 Mrs. Carl Cone of Athens and
M &amp; R Foodliner
ancient Rome, particularly at
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle New York Clothing
1~~ Clifton Morris and family of
the time of the decline," and in and family and Mr. and Mrs. Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
77 Columbus.
even more ancient times. James Circle all of New Haven, Racine Food Market
75
Transsexuals are relatively few W. Va., visited Mrs. Mary Moores
High Individual Game
in number but Block and Circle on Sunday.
Maxine Dugan, 232.
Tessler documented that they
Second High Ind. Game
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
"are among the most miserable Johnson and son, Patrick, spent Betty Smith, 210.
High Series
Maxine Dugan,
of people."
Friday evening with Mr. and 625.
No medical treatment, includ- Mrs. Junior Johnson and family
Second High Series - Pandora Collins, 532.
ing psychiatry, has succeeded in Racine.
Team High Game New
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wilson York Clothing, 817 .
AT ASC&amp;l
Team High Series - Pomeroy
Mrs. Howard Thoma and
of Belpre visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Johnson were
Mrs. Allan Taylor on a Friday Bowling Lanes, 2392.
business visitors in Parkersevening.
burg recently and returning
Larry Circle and friends,
In 1735, freedom of the home visited Mrs. Lena Wells at
Chuck Wagner and Charles
Mathew, are spending some press was recognized in Elmwood Rest Home .
Mrs. Caddy Carl, Mrs. Mary
time in Florida as guests of New York when John Peter
Zenger was acquitted of
Larry's aunt, Mrs. Mabel Lax of libel charges for criticizing Diehl, Ruby Diehl and Mrs.
Ft. Lauderdale.
British Gov. Cosby's con- Stella Adkins were recent
Betty Van Meter and Patrick duct of office, The World visitors of Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Per year on 1 year cer.
Miss Jo Smith of Concord
Johnson and Eunie Brinker Almanac recalls. The jury
ti fi ca t es
of
deposit.
visited with Mrs. Erma! found Zenger not guilty, as College, in West Virginia and
Minimum Deposit $10,000.
Schreckengost of Parkersburg his statements were true Miss Sandy McGhee of
Interest payable semi and, therefore not libelous. Columbu s arrived Friday
annually (Pre sent cer
Sunday.
tificates MUST be ex
evening to visit Mr. and Mrs.
changed to receive this
Charley
Smith. Miss Jo Smith is
rate) .
spending spring vacation with
90 Days interest withheld if
her parents .
withdrawn
before
maturity.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Glenna Milhoan was Conroy. They will be gone two Mrs. Charley Smith and Jo were
Meigs Co. Branch
guest at a birthday dinner at the weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson,
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Mr. and Mrs. William Rose Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Milhoan on March 7. It was also came Sunday from Columbus Kail, Kevin, and Charles, Sandy
in honor of her grand- and took her mother, Mrs. McGhee, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
daugher, Heidi, whose birthday Milhoan, out to dinner to A. McGhee, Leigh Ann of
celebrate her birthday. After Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs \..O~o •• ty tHd"'·" ot 1 ne was March 8th.
Mrs. Edith Osborne visited an lunch the group went to Rutland Harley Smith of Kanauga.
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan Co.
afternoon with Mrs. Alice to call on Mrs. Milhoan's
Mr . Carl McElroy of
296 Second St.
Dodson. Friday Mrs. Dodson brother -in -law, Lawrence Columbus was a weekend
Pomeroy, Ohio
received word that her son, Milhoan, who is recuperating visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Errol Conroy and wife and son, from a broken hip. Mr. Milhoan McElroy and Bill.
Hugh, of Akron had gone to is getting along fine and is
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Warren of
'...,, ·~
Florida to attend the funeral of walking with a walker.
w."\:'u..,':mlm~
· ---~·
Buchtel were recent visitors of
George Stace, brother of Mrs.
Mr. Bill McElroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Chaney
called on Mrs. W. E. Milhoan at of Miamisburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Shade Monday afternoon.
Lawrence Scarberry, Susie,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bahr of Kathy, Denise, Larry and
Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs. Cash Karen of Henderson, Mr. and
Bahr and Mr. and Mrs. David Mrs. Wallace Hatfield, Angelia
Darst of Middleport visited with and Barbara, and Mr. and Mrs.
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jeffers, Valoria and
Maynard Bahr, Sunday.
~35.00 DownShawn of Willow Creek.
' Balance On
Conve'nient

So

Caution Flag Up
To Changing Sex

•
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�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 22, 1971

•

l

Green Thumb
flotes ....
A weekly feature of Meigs
C01mty Garden Club members.

•
'

••

BY MRS. HARLIS FRANK
Riverview Garden Club
Of all the flowering evergreen shrubs, the rhododendron has
held first place in the affection of gardeners since it became
generally available for cultivation in the miiklle of the nineteenth
century. In the fint:: old gardens of England, specimens planted
125 years ago are national treasures. Others sent to America in
1876 for the great Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia are today
the most colorful horticultural spectacles of the eastern seaboard.
In the early years of the twentieth century the bravery and
endurance of such famous plant hunters as Ernest Wilson and
George Forrest made possible the introduction from the
Himalayas of an astounding 600 new species previously unknown
in cultivation. In a single decade 312 different wild rhododendrons
from southeastern Asia were sent back to the delighted sponsors
of the expeditions.
Our garden rhododendrons grow as well at sea level as at
mountain top because of their hybrid adaptability, a blending of
diverse climatic heritages that gives them tolerance to a wide
range of conditions. In the East, the sorts that are hardy grow
easily and will in the rectangle bounded by Cleveland, Montreal,
Portland and Washington, with an extension southward down
through North Carolina along the elevations of the Appalaclnan
Mountains. In the South, summer heat is the enemy. More shade,
extra care and the selection of kinds known to be heat resistant
are required.
What is a rhododendron? Azaleas are rhododendrons, one of
forty-three groups, each with its own traits. There are both
deciduous rhododendrons and evergreen azaleas, as there are
evergreen rhododendrons and deciduous azaleas. But to define a
rhododendron would require a tedious parade of botanical terms.
Nurserymen know a rhododendron when they see one and gardeners can safely assume that rhododendrons sold in nurseries
are not impersonators.
In most gardens rhododendrons can be planted any time in
the spring before they start into growth, even when they are in full
flower. A second transplanting season begins in early August and
should end about the latter part of September.
The larger the leaves of a rhododendron, the more shelter is
takes to make it thrive. For most of the conventional rhododendrons of familiar appearance, about one-third shade is ideal for
the developm nt of handsome foliage and longer lasting flowers.
The ideal is a rrity, of course, and millions of them flourish with
much more and much less sun. Windswept sites should be
avoided. Most foliage damage is due to the drying of winter winds,
not from the cold.
Rhododendrons must, of course, have an acid soil. But the
texture of the oil is equally important. These plants have an
extraordinari
quirement for aeration at the roots, and
there can be
or 1t. The soil must be porous, loose and
open to the
d 1t must contain abundant humus.
shortly become anemic liabilities if they are
Rhododendro
put into heaV}
y or thin sand.
For a deep, medium loam and 4 inches of coarse fibrous
peatmoss to the surface and mix thoroughly into the top 12 inches
of soil. For a very sandy soil, 6 inches of peatmoss should be used.
Hoeing is damaging to the roots, which lie just beneath the
sur.ace of the soil. Any weeds that penetrate the mulch should be
pulled by hand. It might be thought that groundcovers would offer
competition for food and moisture, but no undesirable effect has
been observed when they have been planted around rhododendrons that were well established.
Gardeners worry too much about their rhododendrons wilting
in time of summer drought. Any wilting during the day should be
ignored, but if the leaves do not maintain their normal horizontal
posture in early morning, that is the signal for watering. Late
autumn moisture may be much more important. If there is a
prolonged fall drought, rhododendrons ought to have a good
soaking in November, before the earth freezes, lest drying winter
winds extract more moisture than the plants can replace from the
frozen ground.
Remove flower clusters when faded or the rhododendrons will
tend to bloom heavily only in alternate years. In any competition
between the formation of flower buds and seeds, the latter invariably wins. The stem of the flower stalk should be snapped off
where it issues from the terminal rosette of leaves, being careful
not to injure the extending buds in the leaf axils which will
eventually bear the flower buds for the n ext year's bloom.
Gangling or overgrown mature rhododendron 10 or 12 feet
high that are in normally good health can be cut back almost to
the ground and regrown, but it should not be done all at once.
Reduce the height of the plant by one-third each year for three
years. This will stimulate the production of many new branches
from the trunk stubs (8 or 10 inches high) remaining. If cutback
rhododendrons that were grafted should sprout, noticeably different foliage may develop from the trash 11hderstock. This
growth should be removed.
For pruning, fall is the best time, because the dormant growth
buds will mature to some extent and start to develop sooner with
the advent of the next growing season, but spring pruning up to
the end of April is usually satisfactory.
Source of information: Home Garden.
~

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'

S~cial--l How to Stay Alive Longer
Calendar

3 New Members Join
Rock Springs Grange
Mr. and Mrs. Darwin
Enevoldson and daughter,
Leigh Ann, were welcomed into
the membership of the Rock
Springs Grange Thursday
night.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
W. A. Morgan, the Enevoldson
family was accepted by demit
from the New Concord Grange
in Muskingum County.
Communications from the
national and state granges were
presented and a letter from the
state leg islative agent was
read. Sympathy· cards were
sent to Mrs. Louise Radford and
Joe Weyersmiller.
"Spring and Easter" was the
program topic of the lecturer,
Mrs. Morgan. Readings in-

eluded "The Easter Season" by
Miss Enevoldson, "Familiar
SoW1ds of Spring" by Darwin
Enevoldson, "Beyond" by Mrs.
William Grueser; "When It's
Spring" by Mrs. Enevoldson;
"Plowin g Time" bv Fred
Goeglein, "At Easter Time" by
Mrs. Amos Leonard, "At
Easter" by William Grueser,
"Promise of Spring" by Mrs.
James Conkle, ~'Alon g the
Way" by Mr s. Frances
Joeglein, and an Easter prayer
by Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.
The meeting time was
changed from 7:30 to 8 p.m. for
lhe spring and summer mon ths.

MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8
p.m. high school cafeteria.
TUESDAY
PUBLIC MEETING, Racine
Junior High, 8 p.m. Tuesday,
representative
of
Commonwealth System Corp. to be
· present to discuss sewerage
system for Racine. All residents
invited.
MEIGS County Committee on
HOMES '71, SPONSORED by the Ohio State University
Alcohol and Drug Abuse,
and the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, was held Tuesday, WedTuesday, 7:30p.m. at St. Paul
nesday and Thursday at Rio Grande College. The event was
Lutheran Church, 231 E.
offered through the cooperation of the cooperative extension
Second, Pomeroy. Public inservices of Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
. :ted.
Meigs, Pike, Scioto and Vinton CoW1ties. Meigs Countians,
SOUTHERN Local Band
Mrs. Harold Spencer and Mrs. Denver Well of Rt. 3 Pomeroy,
Br'&gt;sters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
to the left rear in the picture above were among the 321
hi&amp;h school, Racine. Parents of
homemakers attending classes. Sharon Myers, instructor, is
band members urged to attend.
standing at left. Mrs. Myers is the Hocking County Extension
RACINE American Legion
Post Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Agent, Home Economics.
Tuesday at post home.
POMEROY Eastern Star
Club Tuesday, Bowers Drive-In
Restaurant, 7:30 p.m. Nellie
Tracy, hostess.
COMMUNITY service
Spring activities of the Auxiliary will be held at program when Drew Webster
American Legion Auxiliary Pomeroy. Unit 39 will host the Post 39, American Legion,
have been announced by Mrs. convention to be held at Trinity meets at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
Ben Neutzling, Eighth District Church with registration at post home. Corrine Lund and
Lillian Moore, representing
president.
12:30.
On April 24, the district junior
The Buckeye Girls State tea cancer society, will speak and
conference will be held at this year will be held at Mid- show cancer film. Red Cross
Wilkesville with a luncheon to dleport. Mrs. Lester Merritt, workers turn in collections at
be served from 11:30 to 12:30 p. Department parliamentarian Tuesday meeting.
MEIGS
RIDING
Club
m. The luncheon fee is $1 and and director of Buckeye Girls
p.m. at Salisbury
the registration fee is $1. State will be the speaker. Girls Tuesday,
Judging in the various areas of State is scheduled for June 13-20 Township building on Rock
competition will be h ld from 10 at Capital University in Springs Fairgrounds. All
persons interested in horseback
a. m. to 11 a. m.
Columbus.
The Department convention riding invited to attend.
The Department Junior
WEDNESDAY
Conference will be held on June will be held at the Pick-Carter
POMEROY Community
5 in Columbus with the Bexley Hotel in Cleveland, June 16-18.
Poppy Day will be observed in Lenten services, 7:30 p.m.
Unit 430 to be host.
Meigs
County on May 28-29, Wednesday, at Pomeroy United
On June 3, the summer
Methodist Church, Rev. W. H.
convention of the Eight District Mrs. Neutzling announces.
Perrin, Envoy Ray Wining in
charge.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245, 7 p.m. Thursday,
American Legion hall.
WILLING Workers, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs.
James Will.

Auxiliary Spring Activities

Lenton Evangelistic
'Kick-off' Dinner

Ministers, committee
members and friends met at the
New Haven United Methodist
Church Saturday night for a
"kick-off" dinner for the Lenton
evangelistic effort of the Mason
Pansh consisting of 15 churches.
The Rev. Parker Hinzman,
coordinator of the Mason
Parish, introduced the Rev.
Billie Scott Mick, Weston
District superintendent; the
Rev. Connie Dickens, Huntington District superintendent;
the Rev. Clifford Schell,
Kenova; the Rev. Paul
Morrison, Silverton; the Rev.
Charles Thompson, Point

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
IV t.err i ty visiting hours 2: 30 to
4:3lJ .,.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C.
Hawk, Gallipolis, a daughter.
Discharges
Erma P. Barnett, James M.
Carpenter, Robin L. Donnet,
Michael Shawn Gay, Mrs. Della
R. Hall, Allen W. Hartley,
Henry E. Hudson, William F.
Johnson, Brenda Lou Martin,
Mrs. Paul F. McNealey, Jennie
L. Miller, Oscar Poetker, Mrs.
William R. Rhodes, Douglas
Rouse, Mrs. Doris M. Rudy,
Mrs. Ronald G. Webb and infant
daughter, Mrs. Fern F. Elliott.

Wolfpen
News-&gt; Notes
Mr. and Mrs . Everett Ray
Johnson and family
of
Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mrs. Helen Johnson .
Mrs. Kenneth J ohnson and
children, Annette and Duane
Alan, were recent visitors of
Mrs . Larry Johnson, Gina,
Tahnee and Brady.
Mr . and Mrs . Paul McElroy
and Mr . and Mrs. Leo Davidson
attended funeral of a friend at
Wilkesville recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs . Guy Sargent.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
were Sunday afternoon visitors
of Mr . and Mrs . J . R. Murphy
and family .
Miss Naomi Jo Smith visited
~unuay e\ 'ling to Tuesday with
Miss Sandy McGl1ee and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles McGhee and
daughter of Columbus .

Pleasant; Dr. W. H. Morrison,
HW1tington, and the Parish
pastors, the Rev. Mrs. Bernice
Winkler, the Rev. Mrs. Achsah
Miller, and the Rev. Gerald
Sayre.
It was noted that the Rev.
William DeMoss, host pastor, is
confined to the Veterans
Memorial Hospital at Pomeroy.
In speaking to the group the
Rev. Mr. Mick said: "We must
demonstrate and prove unity.
The church should be sensitized
and equipped for missionary
work. Christ should be
promoted, and each of us should
give our best and be a member
of the team." "General Concerns of Evangelism" will be
the Rev. Mr . Mick's topic each
morning at the Mason Church at
10 a.m.
The Rev. Connie Dickens
congratulated the pastors and
members of each church in
their cooperation in the
evangelistic effort. Recognition
was given to the "dependable
group of Marthas" who
prepared the food.
In the group were Mrs.

THURSDAY
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
Thursday, at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Claremont
Harris; co-hostess, Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle; members
are to make and wear an Easter
bonnet.
SOUTHERN
LOCAL
Education Assn., 7:30 p.m.,
Thursday at Southern High
School, Racine, with Dr. Acie C.
Waldron, extension specialist,
Ohio State University, speaking
on "Pollution and Our Environment". Public invited.
Refreshments by high school
teachers.

WOMEN'S Assn. of the
Middleport
First United
Presbyterian Church will meet
at 7:30 Thursday night at the
church. Mrs. Tom Rue is to
present the book study; Mrs.
Michael Zirkle, the devotions.
Hostesses are to be Mrs.
Richard Karr, Mrs. Jessie
Shumaker, Mrs. J. E. Harley,
and Mrs. Helen Lewis.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
cooking demonstration at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. 7:30 Thursday
Thelma Capehart, Mrs. Harold night.
Bumgardner, Mrs. Ara Jewell,
Mrs. Bernard Lieving, Mrs.
Lc weva Kent, Mrs. Paul
Hesson, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Long Bottom
Mrs. Ronald Thompson, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard YoW1g,
Eddie K. Bumgarner, Mrs. Paden City, W. Va. spent
Clara Burris, Mrs. Jean several days with Mr. and Mrs.
Grinstead, Mrs. Jack Flesher Garth Smith.
and Mrs. Roland Lidel.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Sisson and
daughters, Vienna, W. Va. and
Bud and Serena Sisson were
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bissell.
-Violet Smith

Apple Grove

By PATRICIA McCORMACK
NEW YORK (UPI) - Most
men get a complete physical
examination twice in their
lifetime- once for the military
and once for life insurance.
And women? Though they go
to the doctors more than men do
in their lifetime, they may go
through life without getting a
really thorough physical once,
says Dr. E . Lovell Becker, head
of the National Institute of
Health Clinical Research
Center in Cornell University's
Medical School.
Dr. Becker, an internist,
made that point in an interview
on "How to Stay Alive," the
subject of a television special in
preparation for broadcast in
May. The professor of internal
medicine is participating in the
special.
Dr. Becker said most women

Stress is another stumbling
block along the road to
longevity, according to the
authority. And deadlines, those
most stressful of all episodes?
Why, they're deadly.
Dr. Becker maintains that
deadlines have killed more
people than wars. He feels that
heavy pressure associated with
deadlines puts undue demands
on the heart.

Magnolia Club Meets
With Miss· Erna Jesse
Easter. She opened with a
"Recipe for a New Year" using
I Corinthians 13, the chap~r on
love, and verses from Esther on
Ash Wednesday. The American
Indian version of the 23rd
Psalm, called the Rope of Love,
was also read by Miss Jesse
who gave a prayer "The Portals
of Prayer for April."
''Teach Me to be Patient'' was
the topic precented by Mrs.
Ellen Killinger, and other
readings were "March Winter"
by Mrs. Dale Smith, "The
Dogwood Tree" by Mrs. Bertrum Smith, and "The Easter
Prayer" by Mrs. Georgia
Watson.
Pie and coffee were served
during a concluding social hour.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Clara Heines, hostess
for the April meeting, Mrs.
House-to-house
solicitation
Henry Reibel, Mrs. Gladys
for the George Thompson
Cuckler, and Mrs. Karl
Kidney Fund is underway in
Grueser.
Meigs CoW1 ty by the Meigs
County units of the American
Legion Auxiliary and volunteers.
The drive has been organized
by Mrs. Ben Neutzling. Eighth
District president, who has
Several donations were made
received permission to solicit
from Middleport Mayor C. 0. including $25 to the George
Fisher,
Pomeroy Mayor Thompson Kidney Fund at a
Charles Legar, Syracuse Mayor recent meeting of the Rutland
Herman London, Racine Mayor American Legion Post 467.
The post also gave $10 each to
Charles Pyle, and Rutland
the
Meigs County Chapter of the
Mayor, E. A. Thompson.
American
Red Cross and the
Working in Middleport are
Sandra and Patricia Might, Salvation Army. In addition, it
Mrs. Charles Kessinger, Cheryl was voted to sponsor a student
Barnhart, Mrs. Erma Hen- at the Drug and Acloholism
dricks, Trudy Hendricks, Mrs. Seminar at Wittenberg College
Etta Will, Mrs. Albert Roush, this summer.
James Roach spoke to the
Becky Roush, Mrs. Norman
group
on drug abuse. The
Wayland, Mrs. Rosa Searles,
Mrs. Helen Kennedy, Mrs. meeting was held at the Legion
Ernest Bowles, Mrs. Virginia farm on the Beech Grove Road.
A
dinner
at
Bowers
Restaurant preceded a meeting
of the Magnolia Club Thursday
night at the home of Miss Erna
Jesse.
Mrs. Ethel Stewart presided
at the meeting which opened
with the Lord's Prayer in
unison. Plans were made to
remember a member this
month with a birthday card
shower.
Miss Jesse gave devotions
using readings and poetry on
things from the New ¥ear to

Thompson Fund
Drive Planned

Donations Made

DeLe gar,
Mrs.
Dorothy
McGuffin, and Mrs. Golda
Mourning.
In Pomeroy the workers are
Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Paul
Taylor, Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, Mrs. J. M. Thornton,
Mrs. Roy Reuter, Mrs. George
Wright, Miss Janice Couch,
Mrs. Jay Warner, Mrs. Leonard
Jewell, Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.,
Mrs. Jack Carsey, Mrs. Robert
F. Morris, and Mrs. William
Nelson.
Chairmen of solicitation in
other communities are Mrs.
Danny Brown, Minersville;
Mrs. James Thomas, Rutland;
Mrs. Andrew Cross, Letart;
Mrs. David Yost, Great Bend;
Tamara Roush, East Letart;
Mrs. Robert Beegle and Mrs .
Kenneth Theiss, Dorcas; Mrs.
Dixie Smith, Portland; Mrs.
Eunie Brinker, Bashan; and
Mrs. John Boyd and Mrs. Virgil
Walker, Racine.

News"&gt; Events
Mr . and Mrs. Orville Harpold
of Belpre spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Fox and David.
Mrs. Hazel Taylor accompanied her daughter, Polly,
to Columbus Thursday and
visited till Saturday. Mr. and
Mrs. David Taylor and Sandra
Taylor brought her home and
spent the weekend. On Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor and
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stone and
Missy of Leon, W. Va . visited
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Taylor at
Jackson, Ohio.
Mrs. Erma Wilson was
hostess to the W.S.C.S. of the
Letart Falls Methodist Church
at her home Friday evening.
Attending were Gladys Shields
of Racine; Judy Rober ts, Vashti
Grimm, Lois Bell, Orpha Hill,
Margie Hunt, Maggie Roush,
Inez Hill, Nora Cross and the
hostess.
Sgt. Edward Moran of
Philadelphia, Pa. spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Gloeckner and David.
Mrs. Ada Norris spent Sunday
afternov11 with Mrs . Ruth
Donohue.

check their health only on a
parts basis - a gynecologist
here, a urologist there.
For men and women, Dr.
Becker said cigarettes are the
most important pr oblem in
preventing heart disease. They
damage the blood vessels and
can cause per ipheral vascular
disease. "Further," he said,
"excessive smoking damages
sex performance in males.

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

3 \j)lA\'\.t'tt
\\OOtltS

~\.\. t't~
fU\\t'\1U\\t

()"\.~ $r:,~'J
FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

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__,_

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~""'1

Pomeroy....

Personal Notes

~
1

Mrs. Wilma Stobart entered
the Holzer Medical Center
Friday and is confined to Room
231.
Mrs. Alma Thompson of
Columbus is here visiting her
brother, Edward Hoeflich, and
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Lochary left Sunday for Florida
where they will spend two
weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Henry at Lakeland. They were
joined in Dayton by Mrs .
Elizabeth Chase. Miss Helen
Lochary who has spent the past
five months in Florida with
relatives and friends, will
return to Pomeroy with her
brother and sister-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. George
Meinhart, Middleport, Dr. and
Mrs. Raymond Boice, Mr. and
Mrs. E. F. Robinson, Mr. and
Mrs. Delmar A. Canaday, Mrs.
Paul Chapman, Jennifer and
Mitchell, were in Charleston
Sunday to attend the Ringling
Bros. and B.Jnum and Bailey
Circus.

2-HOUR

CLEANING
lUpon Request)

ROBINSON'S

CLEANERS

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

THE
PAKISTAN
FLOOD.
IT WILL BE
AGREATER
DISASTER
IF WE
DO 'TCARE.
,-----------,

The two million survivors of the
I
flood need our help.
I Pakistan
One dollar feeds ten Pakistan i
1
a day.
I1children
Please send what you can.
1
Save the Survivors.Pak1stan Re lief Fund I
I Box 1670, Wash ngton, D.C. 20013
I
I

I

BAKER

Dr. Becker said that people
should start thinking of how to
live a long life when reaching
the 20th birthday. He recommended slowing down from that
point on and especially avoiding
the tendency to becoming a
weekend athlete. He opts for
rapid walking daily as the
exercise of choice .
And on weight? He recommends doing more than just
trying to hold one's weight at
the ideal level, achieved for
many in the mid-twenties . He
advises losing a little weight
each year as you grow older.
Otherwise , because the body is
shrinking, the ratio of fat increases .
If your problem is drinking,
smoking or eating to excess or
even stress from deadlines, Dr.
Becker said there's a good
chance you won't live as long as
you could- "If we're to believe
statistics."
"You can either change your
lifestyle or live with it as long as
you can," he said.

NAME _ _ _

ADDRESS .

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L--------Ct'Y.

-

STATE

liP

Ad~ertts.1ng .:ontributed for tile public i,.:.~d
•
10 coope_ra!lon w•tfl The A«ht!ftt1•.,i Covnc!I _Jnd the"•"- • lntern~horal ..,t'YI\PaPI"f ~d.. t:!lh\·"11: becur, ... e~

'ID···\

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�6- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 22, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1969 CHEVROLET
S249S
Townsman Station Wagon, low mileage local owned with
auto. trans., power steering, new tires, radio. Pleasing
blue finish See this before you buy.
1968CHEVYII
$1595
Nova 2 dr., white finish, blue interior, 6 cyl. eng.,
automatic trans ., new tires, radio &amp; heater.

GIVE TO EASTER SEALS

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. Harry Pickens has
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Mabel Roush has
returned
home
from
Charleston, W. Va., after being
at the bedside of her daughter,
Mrs. Calvert (Iva Mae) Allen in
the hospital after suffering a
back injury.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Yost of
New Galilee, Pa., were overnight guests of his mother, Mrs.
Mattie Yost. They spent the
e· ening with Mrs. Hattie
Paynter. They left Saturday
morning for Nashville, Tenn. to
visit Mr. and Mrs. Don Landon
and family. (Mrs. Landon is an
aunt of Mrs. Yost.) They will
visit Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hanby and family at White
Sands, New Mexico. Mrs.
Hanby is the former June
Buckley and will visit other
places of interest in the west
before returning home.
Mrs. Carl Circle of Columbus
came Friday night for Mrs.
Circle and baby, who had spent
a week with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Yost. They spent
the weekend with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence
Grimm and family of Pataskala
spent the weekend with his

parents, Mr. ~d Mrs. Roderick
Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Taylor and
family of Gallipolis were guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith and
Jeff of Dayton were guests
Saturday of Miss Edith
Hayman.
Mrs. Clark Jividen is visiting
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Jividen
and Ellen at Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
and son of Baltimore spent the
weekend with his mother, Mrs.
Don Nease.
Miss Mildred Roush spent the
weekend in Akron with Mr. and
Mrs. John Fisher.
Mrs. J. Edwin Foster of
Pomeroy ,.and Judy Cottrill of
Carol, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Circle and baby, Patrece,
of Columbus were Sunday afternoon and evening guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Yost, Susan
and Charles.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross,
Lynn and Ray, of Columbus,
spent the weekend with Mrs.
Howard Neigler and other
relatives.
Mr. John Bentz is visiting in
Marietta with his son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Rhoades.

Carpenter News, Event
Overnight guests of Mr. and
Bar
.l
Jordan, !vf
Mrs. Ney Carpenter and
Jeffers and Mike Lawsc
daughter, Martha .Mays, were
Club membe r
Mr. and Mrs. Sidne)' Parker
c mmuruty,
Robt&gt;rta Carpenter), Bolivar,
un p ople f
a nd Mr. and Mrs . Albert ~ey
a ttend10g a 4
QUivey, Dover. Other callers at
Round-Up a
the Carpenter home included
College on Ma
was sponsored b) the Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker,
Cooperative Extension Service Ney, Robbie and Cindy, Midas a part of Ohio State dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert
Cox, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
University.
Friends and relatives from Woodrow Bowen and Sandy,
the area attended funeral Vales Mill; Kenneth Erickson
services for Mrs. Edna Keefer, and Helen Queen, local. These
wife of 0 . R . Keefer, which was guests came especially at this
held at the Albany Baptist time to wish Mr. Carpenter a
Church with Rev. Paul Williams happy 93rd birthday which he
officiating. Burial was in celebrated on Monday, March
15. Mrs. Carpenter celebrated
Athens Memorial Gardens.
Columbia Grange No. 2435 her 86th birthday in February.
held its March meeting on Both are members of Columbia
Friday evening . The all-county Grange.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Swett
Grange banquet on April16 was
discussed. Walter Jordan called on A. R. Caster and Mr.
showed slides and gave a and Mrs. Chester Spencer at the
resume of activities and ex- Spencer home in Charleston, W.
periences of the American Va . on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Burke
Institute of Cooperatives which
he attended as a delegate from and daughters, Charleston, W.
Meigs County in 1970. The In- Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Ollie B.
stitute, which was sponsored by Burke, Cincinnati, were guests
Cooperatives of outstanding 4-H of their mother, Mrs. Hazel
youth from the United States Burke and other relatives in the
and several foreign countries, area over the weekend.
Sunday dinner guests at the
was held in Columbus in 1970.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey home of Mr. and Mrs. William
called on their daughter, Mrs. Culwell were their daughters
Donald Jones and family in and families, Mr. and Mrs.
Nelsonville; her sister, Mrs . Alfred Rice, Columbus, and Mr.
Elma Vernon, New Lexington, and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan
and then journeyed on to and Keith, local. Mrs. T. H.
Timber Run Grange in Blanton, Jackson, was an afMuskingum County where they ternoon caller at the Culwell
attended the District Lecturer's home.
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Starkey
Conference on Saturday afternoon. Saturday evening, the called on Mrs. Ora Proffitt, who
Starkeys were among State is now home from the hospital,
Grange officers who were Mrs. Anderson, mother of Paul
present at a banquet honoring Anderson, who also was
25-50 and 60 year members at hospitalized recently, and
Violet
Grange
near stopped by ~o see Jarrot Bobo,
Pickerington, Fairfield County. 95, whose wife passed away
Special guesl&lt;&gt; included the recently . On Sunday the
High Priest of Demeter from Starkeys attended the 50th
anniversary
the National Grange, C. Jerome wedding
Davis, along with Mrs. Davis, celebration for Mr. and Mrs.
and State Master and Mrs. Waid Smith at Darwin.
James Ross and several other
state grange officers . A large Wanted To Buy
crowd of approximately 300 SMA LL farm and house,
buildings, Meigs County area.
persons enjoyed the meeting.
Contact Oris Frederick, 3221
Mrs. Elba McKnight, Mr. and
Georgetown
Rd. ,
In·
Mrs . Roger McKnight and sons,
dianapoli s, Ind . 46224. Phone
317-291 -9130.
Danny, Randy and Darin,
3 9-12tc
Columbus, were guests of Mr.
---------------and Mrs. D. 0. McKnight, Mrs.
Goldie Gillogly and other
relatives in the area on Sunday.
The Busy Bee Society of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
at the home of Mrs. Lewis Smith
on Tuesday evening . Mrs .
Ronald
Whittington
led
devotions for the evening.
Mr and Mrs. Harley Haning
of Pomeroy vis1ted with Mrs.
Haning's brother-in -law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Gillogly and family on Sunday.

GET
ATJENTION

1967 PLYMOUTH
$1395
Belvedere2 dr. hardtop, V-8 motor, power steering, std. 3
speed trans., blk. top, cream body, radio.

~eroy

ftlotor Co.

l

For Rent
UNFURNISHED 3 · room
apartment in Coats Bldg.,
Middleport.
Inquire
at
apartment 16 or phone 9923641
3-1812tc
60X12 TRAILER, Cheshire. No
children. Phone 367-7512.
3-16-6tp

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

TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
1/2-mile north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
3-5 tfc

------------------FURNISHED and unfurnished

- WANT AD
Wanted To Buy
INFORMATION
For Sale
DEADLINES
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any WALNUT STEREO radio
5 P .M. Oay Before Publication
condition, as long as have not
combination. Four speed
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
been wet. Paying $10 each.
intermixed
changer.
4
Cance.llation &amp; Corrections
First floor only. Mondays will
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. f
speaker sound system, dual
be pick-up day. Write, giving
Day of Publication
volume control. Balance
REGULATIONS
good directions. Witten Piano
$66.15. Use our budget terms.
The Publisher reserves the
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Call 992 -3352.
right to edit or reject any ads
Ohio 43946.
3-18-6tc
deemed
objectional.
The
8-20 tfc
pub Iis her will not be responsible
BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
for more than one incorrect
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
insertion.
Slereo, AM&amp;FM radio, four
beds, etc. Write M.D. Miller,
RATES
speakers, 4 speed automatic
For Want Ad Service
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
changer, separate controls.
-~~e.ntS,P$r::_y.'ord one ir,sertion
992-6271.
Balance $79.35. Use our time
/V\In1mum Cliarge 75c
9·1-tfc
payment plan. Call 992·3352.
12 cents per word three
3-18-6tc
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word s~x con- Wanted
secutive insertions.
.
SINGER Cabinet Model Sewing
25 Per cent Discount on paid ·
Machine, equipped with dial
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
control for zig-zag, buttonhole
CARD OF THANKS
and fancy design work as well
&amp; OBITUARY
as beautiful straight sewing.
$1.50 for 50 word• minimum .
Will sacrifice for $51.60 cash
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
or terms available. Phone 992·
Additiona I 25c Charge per
5641.
Advertisement.
3 16-6tc
OFFICE HOURS
Will Buy Yours8:30 il.m. to 5:00 p m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noor
Whole House Or
COAL, limestone. Excelsio:
Saturrl'lv.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Separate Pieces
Pomeroy. Phone 992-389f.
742-4211
Ph.
Notice
4-9-tf&lt;:
SPECIAL
for
you
Evangelistic services at First
KILL TERMITES and yard
Baptist Churc:h, 6th &amp;
insects with Arab "You-DoRutland,
Ohio
Palmer, Middleport, from
lt." King Builders Supply
Wednesday, Mar. 24 thru
Company, Middleport.
Sunday, March 28. Plan to Business Opportunities
2-21-60tc
attend, you'll be glad you did.
RIGHT
PERSON
to
manage
or
Rev.
Charles
Simons,
buy dry cleaning route or USED automatic washer, used
speaker. Special music.
wringer type washer, used
truck. Will sell plant and
3-22-6tc
range, used dryer. Phone 992building. ABC Cleaners,
2094, Pomeroy Home and
Mason, W. Va .
NEW BATON classes starting
Auto, Pomeroy.
3-10-tfc
immediately at Syracuse
3-21-3tc
Grade School, taught by Judy
Riggs. Enrollment will be
HOME OF W. M. Sinclair, Rt. 7.
taken Thursday, March 25, Help Wanted
Lovely three bedroom home,
4:30 p.m. at Syracuse Grade MATURE woman for com·
bath and half. two garages,
panion for elderly lady. Live
School or by phoning Daisy
full basement, storm windows
in. References required.
Patterson, 992-2088. Everyone
and doors, 1112 acres, call 992·
Phone Chester 985-3301.
welcome.
2441 daytime, Chester 985-3840
3-17-tfc
3·22-3tc
after 5: 30 p.m.
3-17-tfc
WEDNESDAY night special at LADY TO live in with elderly
lady,
light
housekeeping.
the Skate-A-Way. Oldest
Phone 949-4904 or 667-3319.
COLUMBUS 30" gas range,
skater receives a free pass.
3-21-3tc
avocado. Phone 992-5709.
Open Wednesday, Friday and
3-21 -3tc
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 - - - - - - -- -p.m. Also private parties. WE'RE NOT firing - we're
CLEANER
Phone 985-3929 or 985 3585.
hiring, all the men, women, or ELECTROLUX
large deluxe model. Complete
3-21 -3tc
college students we can train
with all cleaning tools and
to work full or part time
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
paper bags. Used but cleans
collecting past due accounts
2-23-30tc
like new . Will sell for $28 cash
by phone or soliciting past due
or terms available. Phone 992·
accounts. If you are in 5641.
RUBBER STAMPS made to
terested in applying yourself
3-16-6tc
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
to a rewarding future- apply
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
in person only. Credit Bureau
Ohio.
of Point Pleasant, 312 Matn RECONDITIONED TV sets,
2-12-90tc
St., Point Pleasant, W. Va .
For informatior or service
3-17-61c
call Sparkie's TV Service,
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
phone Mason 773-5933.
like to try a wig on in the RESPONSIBLE person to work
3-12-12tc
privacy of your own home?
established route. Good
You can . Just call us. We also
commission. ABC Cleaners,
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Mason .
Koscot,
of
course.
3-5-tfc
Distributors, Brown's. Phone
Middleport 992-5113.
All FLOOR SAMPLES
12-31 -tfc

WANTED!

Used Furniture
and Appliances

Rutland Furniture

CLOSE OUT!

WANTED

AUCTION WH E N? Each
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy
Middleport Bypass.
2·7-tfc

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

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

Lost
BLACK and white English
Setter and a brown and white
Brittainy Spanie l, lost at the
Isaak Walton Farm. Reward.
Art Skinner, phone 992-2500.
3-21 3tp

For Sale or Rent

OF OUR APPLIANCES
Every One
Marked Down
Get the Big Discount!
22 cu. ft. side by side
Frostless Combination, 19
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
Up. Freezer, 2- 11 cu. ft.
Chest Freezers and Elec.
Dryer. Must make room.
Priced for fast sale!
POMEROY
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.

DISCOUNT still on: Con Phone 992-2181
tinental. Skamper, Go-Tag-AAlong, and Champion campers, trailers and motor
BEDROOM
hou se
in
homes . Some here - more 2 Pomeroy .
Recently
com ing; Don't walk, start
remodeled, larg e lawn.
running to Gaul Trailer Sales,
Inquire of owner. Phone 992Inc ., Chester, Ohio. Phone
2619.
985-3832. P. S. - Reserve your
3 16-6fp
rental unit for the coming
season NOW.
3 7 13tc

Auto Sales

tEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE ON F ILING
OF INV ENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Probate Court.
To th e Admini strator of the
estate; to such of the fo llowing
a s are resid e nts of the State of
Ohio, v z :
the surviving
spouse, the next of kin, the
beneficiaries under the will ;
and to the attorney or attorneys,
representing any of the
a for em en tioned persons :
Floyd E . Well, Deceased,
Pomeroy, Ohio, RD . 3, No.
20463
You ar e hereby notified that
the
In ve ntory
and
Ap ·
praisem ent of the estate of the
aforement ,oned, deceased, late
of said County, was filed in this
court . Said Inv entory and
Apprai s em e nt will be for
hearing before this Court on the
7th day of Apri l, 1971, at 10 : 00
o'clock A.M
Any per son desiring to file
exception s thereto must file
them at lea st five day s prior to
the date set for hearing
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 17th day
of March 1971 .
John C Bacon
Judge and ex offic:o Clerk
of said Cour t
By Ann B. Watson
Deputy Clerk
(3) 22, 29, 2tc

Radiator Service

1964 CHEVELLE convertible,
Wanted To Rent
good condition . Phone 9923917 .
$20.00 REWARD to the person
3-21 -6tp
who finds me a 2 - 3 bedroom
house for rent. Phone Athens 1969 DATSUN, 4 door standard
collect 592-4757.
s hift. Phone 992 6995.
3·22-3tc
3 21 -6tc

For Rent

1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000
miles Excellent conditron.
Phone 992-2288.
11 -10-tfc

HOBSTETTER
George Hobsfetter, Broker
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
Phone 949-3211
79 ACRES, 5-room house, 40,000
toot of timber . Plenty ot good
water . Good spri ng on place.
Located 2 miles out of town on
good road. $16,000.
3 19 31C

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

ieWINSOR
«BUDDY

.. CHAMPION
*VAN DYKE

i'

~ALSO

DOUBLE-WI DES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .

Bl.AETTNARS
Pomeroy

Ph, 992c2143

PAINTING,
roofing
and
spouting service. Richard
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
3-11-30tc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
Phone
John
RusselL
Gallipolis 446·4782.
4·7-tfc
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

TELEVISIOr~

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

•

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

MASON COUNTY
J.V. SERVICE
J. Durbin- C.. Inscore
Service Personnel
BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29 tfc

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.
DEXTER, 0. 45726
PHONE 742-3945
1nsured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service. HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
Commercial, residential and
992-2522.
industrial wiring. Phone 2476-10-tfc
2113.
3-12-12tp
-GUARANTEEDNEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
Phone 992-2094
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
home, Call Guy Neigler,
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
Racine, Ohio.
&amp;
7-31-tfc
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.
CARPET
tronically.
All
work RALPH'S
Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
guaranteed.
Rease able
Free estimates.
Phone SEWING MACHINES. Repair
rates.
service, all makes. 992-2284
3-17-30tc
Gallipolis 446-0294.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
3-12-tfc
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors_.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Real Estate For Sale
3-29-tfcy
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc Insurance

$5.55

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

.Pomeroy Home

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Sf.
Pqmeroy, Ohio
POMEROY - 6 room house,
gas heat, basement, large lot,
out of high water. $4,000.00.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, 11/2
baths, nice k1tchen, TV room.
Full basement, steam heat.
Double garage. $20,000.00
BETTER BUY TODAY
15 ACRES - 4 bedrooms with
closets, ba h ~"ICe modern
kitchen, stainless s
I sink.
Gas forced air furnace Full
basement with recreation
room. Double garage. All
minerals. $22,000.00
FEEL FREE,OWN
RUTLAND - 2 nice bedrooms,
bath, uti lily . Large living and
ki !chen. Large lot. $9,500.00

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crift Bradford

Cleland Realty

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
fOUr
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-ffc

ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
hold - up. Southeastern
Security Systems. Call Ray
Adams 247-2055
Mike
O'Brien 247-2113.
3-17-tfc

LEGAL NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received
by the Meigs Loca I School
District Board of Education a\A,
their office In the Meigs Junio~
High School Building, Mid·
dleport, Ohio, for passenger
school buses until 12 o'clock on
March 29, 1971, according to
specifications of said Board of
Education. Separate and independent bids will be received
with respect to the chassis and
'body type, and will state that
the buses when assembled and
prior to delivery, comply with
all
school
district
specifications, all
safety
regulations and current Ohio
Minimum Standards for Schoo
Bus Construction of th
Department of Education
adopted by and with the consent
of the Director of Highway
Safety pursuant to Section
4511.76 of the Revised Code and
all other pertinent provisions of
law.
Specifications
and
in·
structions to bidders may be
obtained
from
Assistant
Superintendent Morrison,
Middleport, Ohio.
The Board of Education
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids.
By orrler of th
Board of; ~ucation
L.W.MCComas
Clerk-Greasurer
(3) 1, 8, 15, 22, 4tc
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20463
Estate of. F Io y d E . We II
Deceased.
Noti ce is hereby given that
Doris E. Well of RD 3, Pomeroy,
Ohio, has been duly appointed
Administrator of the Estate o.ia
Floyd E. Well, deceased, late •
Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months.
Dated this 4th day of March
1971.
John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said county
(3) a, 15, 22, 3tc
- FOR SALE The Homer Lovett real estate
located in Lebanon Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, containinii&amp;
approximately 40 acres more o~
less, will be so ld to the highest
bidder on Saturday, Maret+
27th, 1971, at 10 :30 A.M. at the
office of Crow, Crow &amp; Pr. •r,
Attorneys, Pomeroy, Ohio. Rt .. l
Estate is appraised at $3,000.00,
and cannot be sold for less than
this amount. Sale subject to the
approval of the Probate Court,
Meigs County, Ohio
Clara Belle Yinger
Administratrix of the Estate of
Homer Lovett, Deceased
(3) 21, 22, 23

7 ROOM house, bath, good
condition, on one acre land.
Tuppers
Plains,
phone
Coolville 667-3347.
3 18-6tp

people. Double dismal
for others. Jim Mees
somehow gets us all
together every day.

WMP0/1390

'Auto

5· 1-tfc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20473
Estate of Lewis E. Triplett
Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that
Franklin Triplett of Middleport
has
been duly appointed
Executor of the Estate of Lewis
E Triplett, deceased, late of
Middleport, Meigs County,
Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
ACREAGE NEEDED
their claims with sa d fiduciary
ANYWHERE
four months.
50 ACRES - Modern 6 room within
Dated this 18th day of March
home, balh, gas furnace. Full 1971.
basement. Double garage. All
minerals. Large stocked farm
John C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
pond. Bargain.
of said County
TO BUY, SELL or
TRADE CALL US
(3) 22, 29, (4) 5, 3tc
992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD
ASSOCIATE 992 2378
NOTICE OF
3-19-6fc
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20469
Estate of Sadie Wolfe Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that
Frank Gilkey Sr of RD 4,
Jackson, has been duly appointed Executor of the Estate
608 East Main
of Sadie Wolfe, deceased, late of
POMEROY
Middleport, Meigs County,
RACINE RT. 2 ACROSS Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
FROM KAISER PLANT Located on the river, out of their claims with said fiduciary
within
four months.
floods, 1 story, 2 bedrooms,
Dated this 17th day of March
bath, nice kitchen, part 1971
basement, drilled well, 1.37
John C. Bacon
ACRES GROUND. $7,500.
Acting Probate Judge
of said County
MINERSVILLE
GOOD
(3) 22, 29 (4) 5, 3tc
VIEW OF THE RIVER EXCELLENT CONDITION
1112
story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, basement,
NOTICE OF
panelling, aluminum siding,
APPOINTMENT
large yard. $10,000.
Case No. 20471
POMEROY - BEAUTIFUL Estate of Everette Shoemaker
BRICK, ALMOST NEW - 1 Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that
story, 3 large bedrooms,
Grueser of Pomeroy,
double closets, built-in kit- Geraldine
Ohio, has been duly appointed
chen, dining bar and area, Administratrix of the Estate of
carpeting, bath, basement Everette Shoemaker, deceased,
with recreation room, utility late of Pomeroy, Meigs County,
room, 1 acre. ALL FOR Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
$27,500.
their claims with said fiduciary
TO BUY OR SELL
within four months .
CONTACT US
Dated this 17th day of
HENRY CLELAND
March 1971.
REALTOR
John C. Bacon
Office 992-2259
Acting Probate Judge
of said County
Residence 992-2568
3-18-6tc
(3) 22, 29 (4) 5, 3tc

---------------HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, garage,
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy . Also,
3-room, bath, semi -furnished
CONVENIENT but seclud ed
apartment and 2-room, bath,
building lots on T79 at Rock
furnished
apartme nt,
Springs. Within walking
Mulberry Ave. References Real Estate For Sale
distance of Meig s High
required. Phone 992-6698.
School, a 5 minute drive from
3-10-tfc 200 ACRE farm near Mt. Union
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Church, Carpenter. Available
Witte weekends, or after 5
soon. George CaldwelL Rt. 4,
2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
p.m . weekdays Phone 992·
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Hts., Pomeroy . Phone 9926887.
3·18-12tp
5127 after 4 p.m .
2-3-tfc
3-2-tfc
HOU SE, 1640 Lincoln Hts. ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
5 ROOM house, furnished,
phone 992-2433. Mrs. A. R.
10-25-tfc
ITEM: Morning. A
Knight, Pomeroy, Ohio.
zestful time for some
3-16-6tc
2 BEDROOM trailer. Adults
only . Phone 992-5592.
3-17-lfc

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

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

apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

SENTINEL
CARRIER

EXPERIENCED

UNFURNISHED 3 - room
apartment. Phone 992-2288
1-31 tfc

OPEN EVES. 8:00p.M.
POMEROY. OHIO

WILL PICK up merchandise
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc

Business Service_s_--Uf

Home

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

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

�r

~EK AY') ~.~~EK

HOWDY, LONZO -MAW's OFF VISITIN'-HOW'S ABOUT EATIN'
SUPPER WIF ME?

"THE E:OJE.R"-JME.IJT HA'S
tiJSTITLJTED A CRAsH PRO;RAM
TO HE.lf o ll-\E ECOIVOMY •

CORN,

DON'T
MIND IF

IAJOUL[J YOv MI~D

CHOOSI~ 6

A~€~
-n-\P-..T?~

IJJP.'-f'

OF SAYII0G

r-

~

1

•
I TWIN!&lt; I

C~SE

THE

WRONG TOPIC FOR MV
RESEARCI-I PAPER,
PROF!:&gt;SSO~

TO BE 'YOUR.

WRITING ABOUT
MEDIEVAL..

MY BOY. MONEY ISN·T
/MfOJ21Ar-..~T TO

~

WI-IAT SSEMS

I'M HAVING TROIJBL.E

THAI

ME I HERE; SIT DOWN---

3-22

PROSI.EiM'~

• !-(AVe A CHAIR!

FRENCI-.f

POETS

•
'
Norman Crockwell 's
"Mr. Perf'ect.''

®

A composite of the specifications voted

by 15 million iJeen-aQe girls!! He has a

flawless physique, a

lu')(..uriant mane of hair--

•

yOU WERE RIGHT, WINNIE ...
THI5 15N'T THE MINI 1
MIDI OR NAXI LOOK 1
AND YET IN A WAY;

/P6 ALL THI?EE!

•
Onlt.J he'6 qettinq
kic~-&lt;;ed out of the
place he'6 in now'

•

Anct if he come~ up
Nith a clunker, as
seems li\&lt;ielL) ... ver4
bad pub\icit4!

Can't pa~ the
rent ... Go he
want6 free t;;pace
here! Nice deal
...for him!

•

THE BORN LOSER
LET~ 5~E,, 5%

a= $t.r.,:; \S--

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-

SY-4-¢ ...
UKELIHOOO 0'
ME SHAR IH' THE
WEALTH'S GOT THE
SAME OIANCE AS
A SNOWBALL ON
SATAN'S FRYIN' PAN'

·--A MIRROR SO THAT THIS BRAVE WARRIOR
MIGHT~ HIS OWH AGONIES!

.l.fut SfFMS LOST

•

AS THE FEARLESS
GOlD5WJifGHR AHD
HIS DAVHTLESS

Mltf!Mfl'i LIE
CRUSHED BY

THE BRS'l'I.AL
A'I'T.ACK OF CAP){
.AHAB AtiD 'l'Ht;:
ABOMIHA.BLf;

KROGS!

DAILY CROSSWORD

•

DICK TRACY

®

A TW\G PIERCED ONE

AND THE RING FLEW
OUT! ~EV ALL MUST
CONTAit.l OIAMOioJDS.

VERVCUNNING!
'IOU LET Tl-IE
E\IIOEioJCE FLDAT
AWAV, I!~.
POUCI-I?

'"'"''"''"",I'D CLAIM A
FRAME- UP. AND WI-IO'O
BELIEVE I-IER STORV ABOUT

DIAM..ONDS IN A
BALLOON?'• GLOATS POUCH.

•
TERRY

ON THE GROUNI? EKPLOl7111G OOMBS, FUEL AN!l AM/r\0

•

RETURNING TO THE
AIRMSE OUTSIDE THE
CAPITAL em; TERRY llfll!l":....-•11.~
CATCHES CABALLO'S
TEll - PlANE STRIKE
FORCE, ~S-LAVEN,
ON THE GROUN~
ABOUT TO TAKE OFF
FOR AN ATIACK ON
THE PRESIDENTIAL

COMPLETE THE 1/ESTRUCTION OF THE LINE OF
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TERMI"'AL, A NERVOUS, BUT LC»'AL,
POLICEM '\N COMES OUT OF
HIDING TO ANSWER AA INSISTENT
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HE LEFT A KN IFE , ·TOm ... IF THAi
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WELL ? POT Hl5 BO~T!

Fl..Y 01&lt;: :;.WIM OUT HERE!

41. Bowler's
ACROSS
milieu
1. Genuine
42. Nuisance
5. Symbol of
DOWN
strength
1. Indian VIP
10. Dancer
2.Cheer
of Egypt
3 . .Jordan's
11. Throb
,capital
12. Alias Matt
-i.Actor, - Dillon
VanCleef
(2wds.)
5. Carousal
15.--loss
6. Large cask
16. Bind
7. Factor
17.My (Fr.)
8. Perfume
18. Repeat
9. Renter
perfor13. Milburn
mance
- -,Doc
20. Opposite
Adams in
of WSW
"Gun21. Some
smoke"
22."- - in
14. Ethereal
Love With
Amy"
23. Contend
(with)
25. Attractive
26. Prehistoric
housing
27. Suffers
from
28.Familiar
verb form
29. Ken-- ,
Festus in
"Gunsmoke"
32.Near
(Scot.)
33. Mohammedan
name
34. Ghostly
sound
36. Alias Kitty
Russell
(2wds.)
39. Crossed
out
40. Concept

19. Garment
22. Throw
out
23. Chewy
candy
2-i.Asa
whole
25. Lesser
Antilles
Yt-sterday's Anev.·~ r
Indian
29. Tea
26. Where
receptacle
to
30. Sultan's
find
decree
Vic31. - - alive!
toria
35. Tul'f
and·
37. By birth
Regina.
38 . Back talk
27. Hawaiian
(slang)
dance

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

NAllEN

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WHAT THE
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&amp;OL.FER PLA'YE17.

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A Cryptogram Quotation

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Saturday'~ ('ryptoquot~:

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UPTURN

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tlo two "right•" nwke? - AN AIRPLANE

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is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply s t ands 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.

WO

A

(An.wen tomorrow)

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Jumble•: LITHE

Saturday'•

arrJ rnxn

DAR.Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

WJ

to form the surprise answer, aa

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DPG
DPG

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LUB

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WHEN PEOPLE ARF.- FREE TO
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�8-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 22, 1971

DAVID STARTS SCHOOL
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va.
(UPI)-School begins today for
Navy Ens. David Eisenhower
while his wife, Julie, made
plans to commute to her
graduate studies at Catholic
University in Washington, D.C.
Eisenhower, commissioned
earlier this month at Newport,
R.I., began an eight-week
course in naval navigation at
the fleet antiair warfare
training center at the Dam
Neck Navy Base here.

Mrs. Barrett, 62, Succumbs
Mrs. Bertha Clara Barrett,
62, a resident of Langsville, died
at the Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy, around 5
p.m., Saturday.
She was born Jan. 21, 1909, at
Langsville, daughter of the late
·fiOward and Ida Smith
~Williams.
She married William Barrett
on Dec. 7, 1929, at Pomeroy. He
survives, along with the
following children:
Bruce Barrett, Georgetown,
Ohio; Wesley Barrett, Rt. 1,
Langsville; Bob Barrett,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Carl (Mae)
Nelson, Middleport; Mrs.
Charles (Helen) Metheny, Lake
City, Tenn. Fourteen grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren survive.
One brother and one sister
preceded her in death. She was
a member of the Church of
Christ in Danville.

Mrs. Fick,
81, Claimed

Funeral services will be held
2p.m., Tuesday at the Wesleyan
Church at Danville with Rev.
Okey Cart officiating.
Burial will be in Coy Hill
Cemetery.
The body will lie in state at
the church one hour prior to the
services.
Friends may call at the
McCoy Funeral Home today 2-4
and 7-9 p.m.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans MemorJal Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Virginia Hubbard, Middleport;
Millard Swartz, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
Bobbie
Winebrenner,
Veatrice Nice, Steven Riffle,
Brian Riffle, Kevin Lute,
George Hall, William Blythe.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Helen Jeffers, Syracuse; Bessie
Vaughn, Chester; Margaret
Sauer,
Pomeroy;
Roger
Pullins, Coolville and Bryan
Darwell, Mason.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Arthur Nease, Helen Capehart
and Sharon Taylor.

Mrs. Dana (Bonnie) Fick, 81,
Long Bottom Route 1, died
Sunday at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Born April 1, 1889, Mrs. Fick
was a member of the St. John
Lu1..1eran Church at Pine Grove.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Dana, in 1965, and
a daughter, Martha Fick.
Surviving are four sons, John,
Charles and Richard, all of the
Chester area; Roy, of Columbus; a daughter, Mrs. Henry
(Kathleen) Wells, Pomeroy
Route 2; 12 grandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Arthur C. Lund officiating.
Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time.

: A THO TGHT i
~::············Jtl.·~·
iC

ic

FOR TODAy :!
~

iC The three great essentials iC
-tc to achieve anything iC
iC worthwhile are, first , iC
~ hard work; second, stick iC
--~to- itivenes s
thi r d, ::
iC rommon s~n ·
iC
iC
Thorr.
iC

Pleasant Valley Hospital
James
Admissions
Morrow, John McDermitt, Mrs.
R. L. Given, Steve Newsome,
Mrs. Robert Baker, Christine
Vance, Jack Fruth, all Point
Pleasant; Rose Hayman, Leon;
Mrs. Eber Pickens, Syracuse,
Ohio; Mrs. Clarence Barnett,
Rock Castle; Mrs. B. H. Wyant,
Henderson; Shirley Nibert,
Gallipolis Ferry; Isaac Wallis,
Apple Grove.
-Dis.c harges - Edith Dent,
Gerald Rice, Jr., Mrs. Gerald
Rice, Sr., Mrs. Robert Van
Matre, James Love, Mildred
Woomer, Ronnie Allen, Hilda
Bradshaw, Mrs. Clarence
Emerick, Clifton Bowles, Bobby
Phillips, John Craig, Mrs. Virgil
Smith, Nellie Swartz, Elizabeth
Smith, Ann Wary, Rosetta
Young, Helen Harmon, George
Wamsley, Theresa Ohlinger,
Lora Bain and Floyd Gordon.

;::~:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::
By United Press International
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday through Friday
Cold Wednesday through
Friday, although moderating
a little each day. Chance of
s now flurries northeast
We dnesday. Rain south
Friday and mixed rain and
snow north. Highs Wednesday from the upper 20s

1-tt

Jl..

;

It's Qui

:

•
!...

' no~~ t~:!:;P~:~~~r:~::~
,.
DANKING
~ should rise to near 40 extreme
111

~

:

..,.

DRIV -IN

~

Fridays Only

-tc The Drive-In Window..,.

t

Is Op~~

~

.-tc
-tc

9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

il

north to the lower 50s south
portion. Lows in the teens
early Wednesday, rising into

-tc J~~~:~::!~::~:~~~~!!!~:f~:~;!:::::::::::::::
iC
it
LANDSLIDE KILLS 20
:Other Banking Hours 9 to J!
iC and S to
iC Fridays.
iC

7

as usual

on~

iC
..

t .fARMERS BANK · t

tiC andPOMEROY,
SAVINGS
CO.:iC
OHIO
:

iC

Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

~
-tc
-tc
~••••••••••••""'

iC

IT'S INGELS FOR BEST

CARPETING

ELBERFELD$

Sale! Magic Chef
Gas and Electric Ranges
SENIOR members of Southern's basketball team were
presented individual trophies at the annual basketball
banquet held at Southern High School Saturday night. Front·

$399
SQUARE YARD

§PiC.iAL!
9x12 RUG---------48.00
12xl5 RUG·-------· 79.00
INGELS FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Saf. Nights

Middleport

Benefit

vice president; Betty Theiss,
treasurer, and Dortha Salser,
secretary.
Recognition was also given to
Patti Ihle, scorekeeper for
home games, Charles Norris,
announcer, Charles Pyles,
timekeeper and Jim Adams,
principal of Southern High
School.
Invocation and benediction
was given by the Rev. Forrest
R. Donley.

Barn Is
Destroyed
By Blaze
NEW HAVEN - Fire of
undetermined origin destroyed
a barn and its contents of 300
bales of hay Sunday afternoon
on property belonging to Mrs.
Emma Boswell on Peniel Road.
New Haven Fire Chief Cecil
Duncan estimated damages at
$4,000.
Duncan said the New Haven
Volunteer Fire Department was
summoned at 2:10p. m. but by
the ttme firemen could reach
the scene, some nine miles
away from the station, the fire
was already bw-ning out of
control.
However, the fire chief said
firemen fought the blaze for
approximately one and a half
hours trying to keep the fire
from catching brush. He said
they were also able to save two
nearby sheds by keeping the
fire "wetted down" .
Duncan said the fire started
in the top section of the two
story wooden barn where the
hay was stored. There were no
contents in the lower section he
said.
Nine firemen answered the
call with two trucks.

't

PA'ITI IHLE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Ihle,
Racine, and a senior at Southern High School, was crowned
Miss Rio Grande Baptist Association at an association
meeting held Sunday afternoon at the Middleport First
Baptist Church Each contestant presented a talent segment
and was required to answer four personal questions during
an interview. Serving as interviewer and emcee was David
Wickline, Rio Grande, pictured above with Miss Ihle.

AT LEAST 16 PERSONS were killed in traffic accidents
around Ohio during the weekend, more than half of them on
Sunday.
Two double-fatality accidents were reported late Sunday,
near Canton and in Youngstown.
A Canton couple, Charles Beavers, 52, and his wife,
Catherine, 49, were killed when their car crashed on Mt. Pleasant
Rd. James Funkhouser, 24, and William Moncrief Jr. , 29, both of
Girard died in the crash of their car in Youngstown.
WASHINGTON - THE JUSTICE Department says the
question of whether a federal grand jury should be convened to
investigate the shooting of four Kent State students last spring is
still under "top level consideration" and a decision on the matter
could come within two weeks.
Such a grand jury would investigate the role of Ohio National
Guardsmen in the shooting and whether indictments should be
sought against students for attempting to burn down an ROTC
building on the campus.

WASHINGTON - YOUNG MEN CLAIMING they are not
physically fit to be drafted are taking their appeals to members of
Congress in increasing numbers - and a substantial number of
them are successfully avoiding the draft as a result.
Some congressmen think the practice should be halted. With
the end of some deferments and the advent of the lottery system,
physical disability claims are one of the few avenues left for
INCOMES RISE
avoiding the draft. And if the claimed disability fails to turn up at
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio's
the some times harried induction center examination,
annual personal income rate incongressional appeal is about the only recourse.
creased 3 per cent in January
COLUMBUS- THE PRESIDENT of the United Hard Hats of
over a year earlier to $42.7
billion while January payrolls America said the United States has lost "all prestige" for its nodropped 1 per cent, according win policy in Indochina.
"We're for victory all the way," said Willie Murphree of
to Ohio State University's Center for Business and Economic Cleveland Saturday at a March for Fictory Rally in front of the
statehouse here.
Research.
"We feel that we've had too many appeasement policies now.
We lost Korea and we haven't had a winner since World War II.
This country has lost all prestige," he said.
TO MEET THURSDAY
COLUMBUS - THE AMERICAN CIVll.. Liberties Union has
The regular meeting of the Xi
Gamma Mu will be held charged the administration of Gov. John J. Gilligan is attempting
Thursday at 8 p. m. at the home to increase taxes "for the purpose of subsidizing the salaries of
teachers in parochial schools."
of Mrs. Karl Krautter .
In a telegram Sunday to Ohio House Speaker Charles F .
Kurfess, ACLU Executive Director Benson A. Wohnan said the
state budget proposes the state salary subsidy for tea,..l-)ers in
church-operated schools be increased 250 per cent.
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Wolman pointed out both the constitutions of Ohio and the
March 22-23
United States require strict separation of church and state,
SUPPOSE THEY GAVE
A WAR AND
"which means that tax dollars not be used tc support sectarian
NOBODY CAME
institutions."
(Technicolor)
WASHINGTON - A DELEGATION OF 21 Ohio Farm Bureau
Brian Keith
members planned a two-day stay in the nation's capital to talk
Ernest Borgn ine
with congressmen about the need for new farm labor legislation
GP
Colorcartoons :
and stronger marketing-bargaining laws.
Oil Thru the Day
Robert Summer, president of the farm bureau, said the group
Spilt Level
planned to lunch today with Sens. William B. Saxbe and Robert
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
Taft and visit several officials in the Agriculture and Labor
COMING:
departments.
"WOODSTOCK"
They were to join the Ohio congressional delegation for
'--·A-pr•i•l2•t•h•ru•6•t•h---• breakfast on Tuesday.

MEIGS THEATRE

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Better health care would be provided for nearly two million
Ohioans who are 65 years or
older under Gov. John J. Gilhgan 's proposed welfare budget,
state Welfare Director John E.
Hansan said today.
Hansan said the governor's
proposal for $110.9 million in
state funds for the Medical
Needy Program would make
health care available for Ohio's
older citizens.
"Too often these aged citizens, as are the very young, a
forgotten voiceless society,"
said Hansan. " Due to illness
and physical impairment, they,
like the young, generally do not
vote nor are they able to participate in our governmental
process."
Hansan made his remarks before various groups of elderly
nursing home associations during a tour of Saint Augustine
Manor Nursing Home here.
"The extension of the medical
assistance program to include
these people not on the welfare
rolls will go a long way to prevent closings of these institutions and a cutback in service
to all Ohioans," Hansar. said.

White . Avocado ·
Coppertone
colors. 30 inch, 36
inch and Chateau
Ranges
with
regular and self·
cleaning ovens.

SALE $176.00
SALE $192.00
SALE $208.00
SALE $239.00
SALE $288.00
SALE $296.00
SALE $384.00

$219.00
$239.95
$259.00
$298.00
$359.00
$369.00
$479.00

Prompt Delivery to your home.
Continuous Service Sensible Credit

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

"IT'S TJIE GREATEST }'ET!"

By United Press International

'

0

Elderly Would

(Continued from Page 1)

PORT MORESBY, New Guinea (UPI)-Officials in the
West Sepik district of New
Guinea today put the death toll
in Sunday's landslide at 20.
It was first feared that the
entire village population of 100
had been buried. The village of
Tefelmin was covered by 10
feet of mud Sunday when a TUITION GOES UP
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) - Tuihillside collapsed.
tion at Miami University's main
and branch campuses will be
increased in compliance with
Gov. John J. Gilligan's request
that state - supported colleges
and universities help the legislature cover rising operating
costs.
Ohio residents would pay $90
more a year at the main campus and $150 more at the Middletown and Hamilton campuses
while out-of-state students would
be charged an extra $900 annually.

501 NYLON

row, 1-r, are Roger Nease, Gary Hart, Artie Hill, and Coach
Hilton Wolfe, Jr.; back row, Frank Ihle, Sam Shain and
Barry Hart.

Southern .. .

BUY
~S:...._____....,---,

992-2635

MOST TO CITIES
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Cleveland and Cincinnati would •
get four-fifths of the money
Ohio would receive under President Nixon's transportation
revenue-sharing plan.
The two cities would get $20.3
million out of the $25.4 million
allocation because of the President's requirement that 80 per
cent of the state allocation go
to cities whose standard metropolitan statistical areas exceed
one million population.

MYSTERY

AT

M&amp;R

SHOPPING CENTER
407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

M&amp;R
FOODLINER

M&amp;R
BARGA INLAND

'

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

DEPOSIT THIS ENTRY BLANK DURING OUR MYSTERY MOONLIGHT
SALE. DRAWING WILL BE EVERY 10 MINUTES DURING SALE.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

NAME __ -----------------------ADDRESS------------------------

rowN _________________________ _
PHONE. ____________ AGE·---------MUST BE 16 't£ARS Of AGE
MUST BE DEPOSITED DURING THE MYSTERY
M&amp;R MOONLIGHT SALE

ENTRY BLANK r.AN BE CLIPPED FROM YOUR PAPER:
Sunday 21st, Monday 22nd, Tuesday 23rd, Wednesday 24th

�</text>
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