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                  <text>Masked Pair Beat Up,
Rob
Elderly
Brothers
•
Sheriffs'
deputies
are
pressmg a search for two
masked marauders who beat up
and robbed twin elderly
brothers of Good Hope Ridge
Rd. in Guyan Twp., Rt. 1, Crown
City, early today.
Admitted to the Holzer
Medical Center with multiple
facial contusions, head and eye
injuries was Orie Rossiter, 72,
Rt. 1, Crown City. He is listed in

fair condition. His twin brother,
Emmett Rossiter, 72, was
treated for lacerations of the
nose and mouth and an abrasion
of the head and released. Their
older sister was not harmed.
According to the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department,
Orie Rossiter awakened about 5
o'clock this morning to go to the
outdoor toilet near his home.
Enroute, he was attacked by

two man wearing masks, who
beat him severely outside, then
took him inside where his
brother and sister were
awakened. The pair then
manhandled Orie's brother, tied
up all three victims, then
ransacked the house. They took
a .22 caliber pistol, an old
fashioned $5 bill and three $100
bills.
Some time later, Orie

Rossiter managed to untie
himself and was able to walk to
neighbor's home
for
a
assistance. They were brought
to the hospital by another neighbor, James Caldwell.
Deputies, who got the call at
6:01a.m.,saidtheywereunable
to obtain a description of the
robbers. Investigation is continuing.

Sheriff's deputies also are
assisting Gallipolis Chief of
Police John Taylor in an investigation of a burglary late
Saturday night or early Sunday
morning at the Columbia Gas of
Ohio Office, 459 Second Ave.
Accordmg to Chief Taylor
someone entered the building
by going through the garage
door in the rear.
Missing was a safe containing

$157 and numerous papers. The
safe was recovered Sunday
morning on 'the Lige Berry Rd.,
in Addison Twp. It had been cut
open with an acetylene torch.
Sheriff's
deputies
investigated a theft at the
residence
of
Raymond
Brumfield located on the
Bulaville-Porter Rd. Missing
was a 12-gauge shotgun and a
.22 calibre rifle.

The Daily Sentinel

•

Devoled To The Interest&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXIII NO. 243

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

fEN CENTS

· 33 Americans Die
In Enemy Attack
SAIGON (UPI)-Communist
sappers inLltrated a U.S.
artillery base below Da Nang
Sunday and killed 33 Americans
and wounded 76 in the heaviest
one day casualty toll for
Americans smce February,
1969, military spokesmen reported today Other sources
told of an abortive South
Vietnamese strike into Laos.
The sources said 40 U.S.
helicopters were loaded with a
South Vietnamese Black Panther commando group for a
strike 20 miles inside Laos but
that the strik
It d when

-

fighter-bombers sent in to bomb
the Communist positions ran
into extremely heavy ground
fire . B52s had hit the area
earlter.
South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thieu said on
Fnday the Laotian operation
"continues" but did not say
what further action was
planned. Military sources disclosed today that the elite Hac
Bao (Black Panther) troops of
the 1st South Vietnamese
Ifantry Division had boarded
helicopters for the planned
strike when it was aborted.
The sources said the 40 UH1
,: , the 300
Ba qutck rt&gt;acbon force
aboard v. ere halted at Ftre
Support Base Vandergrift in
Quang Tri province.
Capt. Doan Co, commander
of the Hac Bao unit, told a UPI
correspondent the raid had

been planned to last three days
and that the operation originated at the "highest levels" of
the U.S. and South Vietnamese
governments in hopes of
capturing high-ranking Communist officers.
Report of the abortive
mission came as 1,000 demonstrators converged on city hall
in Saigon Sunday to urge an
invasion of l'&lt;orth Vietnam.
Informed U.S. sources said any
thought about an attack into
North Vietnam had ended with
the abrupt conclusion of the
Laos incursion.
Communist sappers infiltrated the American a tillery base
about 50 miles southwest of Da
Nang under cover of a heavy
Cloudy, co
t H.tgh
mortar attack and low lying
today in the 4
rth and 50s
fog. They hurled explosives into
south. Low tomght in the upper
the GI bunkers before being
20s and 30s. Mostly sunny and
dnven off in a fight in which 12
cool Tuesday. High in the 30s
attackers were killed.
north, 40s south.
It was the heaviest U.S. loss
since Feb. 24, 1969, when 36
I
7\.T
•
~~
I U.S. Marines were killed and 97
:
1 ..
1 wounded in coordinated assaults on twin bases near the
I
I Demilitarized Zone. It also was
the first heavy fighting reportBy United Press International
ed in South Vietnam in weeks.
Military sources said eleTHE 'OLE FISHING HOLE -Men and women lined the banks of Forest Acres Lake on the
Pope, Tito Trade Greetings
ments of the America! Division
New Uma Road near Rutland Saturday and Sunday to participate in a rainbow trout derby
sponsored by the Leading Creek Conservancy District and the Leading Creek Watershed Assn.
VATICAN CITY- POPE PAUL VI GREETED President were rushed to the base to
Jack Crisp, president of the conservancy district, said comments on the derby were excellent
Tito of Yugoslavia today with a call for mutual cooperation in the "secure" it after the Communist attack. At the same time,
and that similar event will be held at the park this weekend.
search for international peace. Titi was the first Communist head
America! Division investigators
of state to make an official visit to the Vatican.
began a probe to determine
Tito spent one hour and 10 minutes in private conversation
Cited to Court
how the Communists managed
The Racine .garbage dump
with the Pope before exchanging speeches in a hall outside the to get into the base without
will be kept locked, to be
Pope's private library before assembled Yugoslav and Vatican warning.
Charles Bennett, 82, Midopened one day per week only
officials. The 73-year-{)ld pontiff told Tito he was closely following
The undetermined number of
to Racine residents in the dleport, was cited for making
Yugoslavia's efforts to extend its influence in the non-aligned
North Vietnamese moved up to
future, Mrs. Mae Cleland, an improper turn following a
world and said he blessed any action aimed at establishing peace the perimeter under cover of a
collision at 3:48p.m. Sunday at
Five defendants were fined village clerk said today.
the
junction of county road five
or closer relations between nations.
fog and then broke through and three others forfeited bonds
The dump will be opened
behind a 50 to 60 round mortar in Pomeroy Mayor Charles each Tuesday to residents and Rt. 124 in Meigs County.
Deal Made with Hardhats
State patrol officers said
barrage.
Legar's court Saturday night. who wish to haul their own
Bennett
turned into the path of a
SAN CELEMENTE, CALIF.- PRESIDENT Nixon, moving
garbage
to
the
dump.
It
is
not
Fined were James Rhodes,
(Continued on Page 8)
car driven by Paul Brown, 43,
to curb inflation with the tacit consent of the "hard hats," was set
49, Ripley, $10 and costs, no to be used any other day.
Middleport. No one was injured.
today to announce establishment of government guidelines for
operator's license; Gary ArMinor damage resulted.
wage and price increases in the construction industry.
nold, 20, Mason, $5 and costs,
Following a 1:15 p.m. EST huddle with Secretary of Labor
improper
backing;
Bert
James D. Hodgson, the Chief Executive was scheduled to sign an
Schrimsher, 20, Long Bottom,
$5 and costs, left of center;
executive order creating labor-management boards to rule on
Daniel Abbott, 19, Pomeroy, $5
wage settlements reached by plumbers, electricians, carpenters
A car parked at Whispering and costs, assured clear
and other building crafts. In return for voluntary cooperation
Virgil Campbell, widely services are set for 10 a.m.
from labor and contractors, Nixon is expected to reinstate the Pi_nes , nite club had its rear distance, and Rodney Hysell, known Pomeroy resident, Wednesday at the funeral home
wmdow broken out Sunday 23, Pomeroy, $100 and costs and
Davis-Bacon Act, suspended Feb. 23, which requires workers on
between 12 and 12:15 a.m. by three days in jail, driving while collapsed and died while on a with the body to be taken to
federal building projects be paid prevailing union wages.
Columbus following the serwalk Sunday night.
persons unknown, the Meigs intoxicated.
vices
here.
Mr.
Campbell
collapsed
while
County sheriff's department
Forfeiting bonds were BarNew Wage Offers Approved
walking
along
Mulberry
Ave.
reported.
bara Schoonover, Rutland,
across from the home of Mrs.
TWO RUNS MADE
The 1969 Vista Cruiser station
COLUMBUS - CITY POLICE AND firemen overwhelmingly wagon was owned by Judy shoplifting at Kroger's, $25 bond Henry Ewing. The Pomeroy E The
Middleport Fire Dept.
approved new wage offers from the city Sunday that will up McKickles, Middleport. Sheriff posted; Mark Moyer, 18, R squad took Mr. Campbell to answered two fire calls Sunday
Middleport, $33.70, and Marlin
salaries by as much as $1,065 per year . Policemen accepted the Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. is
Moyer, 21, Roseville, $33.70 Veterans Memorial Hospital four minutes apart, at 12:13
new package by a 9-1 margin and the firemen approved it 4-1. City investigating.
where he was pronounced dead. p.m. to Cheshire for a grass fire
each, speeding.
Council was to act on it tonight.
Preceded in death by his wife, across from the Ashland SerThe department also said a
The package includes annual salaries of $10,789 for officers deer was killed Sunday at 7:10
Jane, Virgil Campbell is sur- vice Station, and at 12:17 p.m. to
LOCAL TEMPS
with more than 30 months service. Those with less than six p.m. on SR 124 by an unidenvived by two daughters. the old coal yard in Cheshire
The temperature in downtown
Funeral arrangements are where a pile of railroad ties had
months will receive $8,060 per year; those with between six and 18 tified car.
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. :v.Ionday
being completed by the Ewing caught fire and started a second
months will earn $9,132 annually and those between 18 and 30
was 47 degrees, under clearing
Funeral Home . Tentative grass fire.
months will get $9,800. Police sergeants and fire lieutenants will
skies.
earn a top of $12,241; police lieutenants and fire captains $14,035;
police captains and fire battalion chiefs $16,063.

eth

•

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

. s
ews••• zn B rze
1

•

Five Fined
By Mayor

Rear Window

Is Smashed

•

Mr. Campbell Died

Two Emergency

•

Republic of New Africa Launched

Runs are Math

Volunteers Need ed Urgently

BOLTON, MASS. - ARMED SENTRIES patrolled 20 acres of
pasture in western Mississippi Sunday while 150 members of a
black separatist group established what they said was the capital
of the Republic of New Africa . State troopers and sheriff's
deputies watched the group move onto the land located in Hinds
County between Jackson and Vicksburg, but made no attempt to
interfere.
"Our whole plan is to establi~h our own nation. The U. S.
government can continue to exist," said Amari Obadele of New
Orleans, the group's leader . He said the group was nonviolent and
operates within the laws of the United States. The rolling land was
reported to have been purcha.scd or leased from I .oft in Mason, a
Negro.

The Pomeroy E-R squad
answering two calls over the
weekend, went at 4:15p.m. to
Racine for Terry Lee, 11, who
had fallen down a flight of
stairs. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted
At 7:35p.m. Sunday the unit
went to Mulberry Ave., where
Virgil Campbell ..., as lying on
the Sidewalk. He was dead on
arrival at Veterans Memorial
Hospttal.

"People really believe health
is beautiful and that's why we
urgently need volunteers for the
American Cancer Society's 1971
educational and fund raising
Crusade." This, according to
Wendell Hoover, chairman of
the crusade in :Y.Ieigs County, is
the key to people-to-people
contact, folks alerting their
relatives, neighbors and friends
to cancer's warning signals and
helping to raise fighting funds,

which is a part of the combination that will increasingly
turn the tide against these
dreaded diseases called cancer.
"The other part is the
dedication and skill of
thousands of physicians and
researchers searching for
causes and better trt&gt;atments."
1e said in a statement Saturday.

Americans must reach out to
the people never contacted
before. Every house and
apartment in Meigs Count)
must be visited m Crusade 1971,
beginning April 1. Everyone
with even a few hours to spare
can help. Families must get the
facts about cancer. A key part
of the CrusJde 1s distributmg
hfe·S&lt;Iving leaflt•ts tPlhng how
There is an even greater you can protect yourself against
challenge this year, because e&lt;JilC't'l', Hoover e.:plaint•d.

RAINBOW TROUT DERBY - Ten-year~ld Keith
Lynch, son of Mrs. Delores Lynch of Middleport, wasn't a
winner at the weekend rainbow trout derby at Forest Acres
Park but he was happy with his catch. One of these four trout
was caught by Keith about 4 p.m. Saturday. He had been at
the park since 7 in the morning. The other three trout on his
string were caught by his uncle, Harold Meadows, Mason.
Winners in the derby were Douglas Lambert, Rutland Route
1, a $15 cash prize for a 23-inch trout; Jules R. Biron, Middleport, $10 for a 22lh-inch trout, and Dan Cremeans,
Rutland, third a trout slightly over 17 inches, and fourth,
Harold Meadows, Mason, with two 17-inch trout. Cremeans
and Meadows will receive year-long permits to fish at the
lake.

Rescue Pressed
NEMACOLIN, Pa (UPI)Cow pastures bisected by a
court... d
road s &gt;ed up a
gentle hillside near thts mining
community three days ago.
Today, where cows grazed on
green grass Friday, five drill
rigs tower high over the rolling hills. Bulldozers, flattening
the ground for drilling platforms, have cut away half the
hillside, leaving a sea of mud.
Deep ruts cut by the wheels of
heavy trucks have torn up the
dirt road.

those two men."
Late Sunday came the f1rst
resuJ.t ot all the u .llt ,'
Air and temperature readings
taken from the section of mine
where Richard Randolph and
Charles Gibson were trapped
showed they could have survived since Friday.
The discovery heightened optimism of those directing the
rescue effort. llut the optimism
was not shared in the nearby
town of Carmichaels, where
many of the BOO res~dents knew
the two miners.
The transformation came
"I don't see how they could
about as officials of state and have stayed alive down there,"
federal mining agencies and said Joseph Guerra, 74, who
the Buckeye Coal Co. stretched was disabled in a mining accievery resource to rescue two dent 43 years ago.
coal miners trapped by an un"There's little hope the men
derground fire Friday, 350 feet are still alive,'' said Albert
below the surface.
Darney, who worked nine
The three biggest rigs, tower- years in the mines.
ing 100 feet high, were trucked
Darney, clerk of courts for
here from Charleston, W. Va. Greene County, said the stillTheir crews flew from Mid- uncontrolled mine fire has
land, Tex.
aroused secondary fears the
One of the Texans looked up mine may be shut down, throwat the rig Sunday night. Flood ing out of work a "significant
lights illuminated the steel percentage" of the townspeocross bars and the huge orange ple.
hook which raises and lowers
Charles Gibson Jr., 36, son of
the drill .
one of the trapped miners,
"You think that looks like a said: "We've been waiting a
lot up there'!" he said. "It
long time without any news.
ain't nothing until we look at But we still have hope."
[f::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-':!~1

Buff Sees Mafia ~~
I
I
I Tactics in South I
iili

Coal mine watchdog Dr. I. E.
Buff took a southern foray into
Virginia over the weekend,
accusing the United Mine
Workers Union of Mafia-like
tactics on one hand, and
heaping criticism on the police
department of Big Stone Gap
with the other.
Cheered by more than 400
miners at a schoolhouse in ~o­
ra, the Charleston heart specialIst charged the UMW has
threatened to cut oft pensions
and hospital privileges to miners who go to his "black lung"
rallies .
"Union representatn es are
actmg like members of the :\1a·
fia," Buff said. ·Telling miners
if they attend an) black lung
meetmJS. the) \\ill be luokcd
upon \\ ith disfa\ or b) th,· union
as finks ."
"They'n' told th.1t if tht&gt;y do
not beh,l\ e, tLe} \\ 1ll n t be
ablt ttl kN•p their hosp1t&lt;il
C&lt;Jrcls. They llla) al o make 11
llllpo~:-ilhle fw tht·se Olllll'ls to

get a pension at 55.
Buff said those of pension
age have been warned that the
UMW can alter its policy any
time and deny them their money.
Buff
d1 w1th police
at Big Stone Gap, a problem
he blamed on a con ptracy between the UMW and the coal
O\\ners.
'They're in bed together,"
Buff said.
Atmed with loc.ded nfles and
shotguns, the police muscled
through his audwnce inside the
B1g Stone Gap armun, Buff
said, turning up walkie talkies
to an ear-sphttmg pitch, and
S\\ it dung thl' lights off and on.
Fem·w~ budil~ harm, Buff
~aid, about t alf of his atl1ermg
got up and left.
But \\hen Um ted Pres Internat!Unnl asked Pollee Chief
Clwl on Stewart about be inciden1, Ius slew} \\as altogether
&lt;hffel'&lt; nt .
i Ct~ntinUt·d on Pagt• 8)

�1
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29, 1971

"I Thought We Got Rid of Him
Some Time Back~"

EDITORIALS

I

Big Lift in Search
For Human Dignity

How ya gonna beat the Establishment?
A New Jersey company has brought out a product called
DWR, designed to erase graffiti and other defacements
from walls .
DWR stands for "Dirty Word Remover. "
Speaking of ne w pr oducts. for the family that has everything, and any family with its own swimming pool would
seem to qualify, the Wall Street Journal reports that a
company in F a rmingdale, N.Y , has developed an electronic buoy that sounds an alarm when unauthorized persons try to sneak in for a midnight dip.
Dirty People R e mover?

THERE'S A WINTER GARDEN FOR
ALL SEASONS IN PALM BEACH
NEW YORK - The Probably Beautiful
People: Greg Sherwood was a Winter Garden
showgirl some decades back, and we heard her
promise: "I'll get to the top somehow- watch"
and she did: married auto heir Horace Dodge,
collected her post-marital millions, and married
an ex-&lt;:op, Daniel Moran, once hired by her late
husband, and they live happier ever after in their
party-full life in plush Palm Beach .... A famed
TV-&lt;:afe-screen-stage entertainer next may take
the Eddie Fisher-bankruptcy road .. .. "Odd
Couple" star Tony Randall told us on unchic 6th
Ave. the pretty, pale-spotted fur coat he was
wearing "unfortunately is baby seal - the ones
they club to death, I'm ashamed to say."
"The Me Nobody Knows" musical at the
Helen Hayes Theatre, praised for its "innocent"
charm, is a miscall if we've ever heard one. It
has great jobs of charm - interrupted and
erased by four-letter obscenities and scatologies
which hardly rate the pressurized publicity that
brings in kids from three and four years up; it's a
filthy trick to deploy what once was unspeakable
to jolt its essential tenderness.
Maestro Sammy Kaye's ulcers and general
miseries finally have been pronounced A-0-Kaye
.. . . H'wood director Jack Garfein, who was
getting alimony from Carroll Baker, had it cut
off via a court-reversal and now needs a job (he's
a good meg-man) .... Ali MacGraw and hubby
Bob Evans are back in the Sherry-Netherland
after curtsying to the Queen in London, and
didn't dear Robert have a set-to with a tophand
on "The Godfather" film? .... Odd Couple: The

Hughes: Backup If
Muskie Falters?
WASHINGTON (NEAJ
Barrel-chested Sen. Harold Hughes of Iowa is the outsider among Democratic presidential prospects who ought
to be mos t feared by other outsiders . And there are signs
that at least one , Sen. B1rch Bayh of Indiana, recognizes
the threat.
Hughes should be feared by the second-liners because
several influential Democrats get quickly to him when
they wonder where to go should front-running Sen. Ed·
mund Muskie falte r. They don't put the knock on Sen.
George McGove rn. but not many think he is going far.
Hughes has to be reckoned with. first off, because he
has the tough look and the booming voice that make him
a commanding " presidential" pres ence. His profile is
r e ady now for a new dime.
Given this equipme nt, he makes a pretty good dent on
any kind of audience , including the self-styled political
&lt;;(Jphis tica les he addressed in Boston at an Americans for
Democratic Action dinner.
In that speech, religious fundamentals were a stout
thread. He invoked the-Creator, and called for the "spiritual unity of our country." If Muskie or Sen. Hub~rt
Humphrey or Pres ident Nixon spoke thus, one eas1Jy
could expect s norts of derision.
Hughes got away with it. By a curious process of transference , his evangelistic politics strikes many liberals as
the New Politics. He throws out enough ADA-grabbers on
the war. the blacks , the students and even the hard hats
to keep his liberal credentials burnished.
Yet a careful look at his comment turns up nuggets of
ncmconservatis m. Example from Boston :
··we n eed to rid ourselves of our own hostilities and
resentment s and to qult seeking scapegoats, whatever
group it might be , on whom to blame the inaction of our
soci ety . .. "
1\'ot much solace the re for students, blacks or others
who thi1•k thCJt voicing outra ge and pinnin g blame should
be the bi g 1971 melody . Moreove r . the reli gious tone must
have its pull on the middle . And , beyond doubt, Harold
Hu (!hes jus t looks central.
,\]1 this gives the frets to Birch Bayh, another prominent
outs ider, who is traveling the nation on a schedule any
professional basketball team would find hard to match.
Ba yh talked to a g roup of amuent Jewish lawyers in a
Boston s uburb the morning after Hughes did his ADA
thing. Rolling a wa y from the Jewish meeting, Bayh
mused .
"I'm wondering if Birch Bayh competes whe n he talks
to a group like that while Harold Hughes is talking to a
thousand people at an ADA dinner. ··
.
His concern is undertsandable. He would not be trymg
if he didn't think there was a good chance Mus ki.e mig ht
s lip. He di smisses McGovern a s a probable nonwmner It
is disconcertin g to hear Hu~hes to.u ted ~ s the best bac.k up
prospect . a s the man with som.ethmg different who m1ght
s uit a nation said to be vergmg toward a strong ly untraditional oohtiCal mood.
Obviously. Bavh has persuaded some 1~fluential ~nd
moneyed people that he does have po~enll a l. O~e nval
pnvatel:v says he thmk s Bayh in 1971 Is better fmanced
than any candidate A prominent Democrat rales the
senator's organization better than Muskie' s and nearly
a s big
.
lie is riding on his reputation as en!.!m eer of the defeats
of .Judge Clement I laynsworth and Harold Carswel_I for
the Supr&lt;'me Court . though in Boston h&lt;' s hyl :v claimed
only ,-;mall cr&lt;•di1.
That lit hi s present low · kl'~- 'iJH•akin g approach. r.lis
talks show mtPI!igl'nl g ra ~ p ol 1111' JSSll!'.-i . wh1c:h he dr11l s
out ealrnlv . onh lo wind up 111 r·n1otion:1l appeals dc liven·d wilh d1amalic und(')'sf;ilc•nwnt . Ill s call is for
in ~ pircd ll·adPrhip to lift ·\nwri!'ans out of if&gt;ars and
hafr('(l ~. and lop tlwir c·ap:IC'if.' · to ht• "bi1-(g!'r than thenJ sPlvc•s
nil: II i ... j 'I• P pr•·;H I ('I ' IIH'IIJO' ; 11)&lt;1 (\;o,·h· , probll'nl
1 ~ th :tl ![ ,,, id !! :!• l •
t
llfo •; lf lir• r '':h•1 Jon~ \ IJkf' a
p•·p·,1dr•r 1

Joe Louis celebrity-jammed salute at Caesars
Palace with both Spiro Agnew and George
Wallace honorary chairmen.
Jean Davis Cook (Managing Ed. of Town &amp;
f'.A&gt;untry mag) and Henry Barkhorn of Mutual of
N. Y. are conspiring merger . . .. Lester David, •
who just finished an Ethel Kennedy biog, irnmejutly starts another on Sen. Teddy .... Van
Johnson at Teddy's downtown pasta palace took
a moment away from Pat McHardy to say he's
off in a couple of weeks for an Italian film. Pat's
beautiful Chicago model also ticketed for
flickers.
Merv Griffin's "Pip's" W. 48th St. restaurant
folded after losing steadily -up to $5,000 a week 1'"'
.... His celebrity- stacked list of backers (Ethel ....
Merman, D. Susskind, J. Susann etc.) will have a ·
1971 tax loss .... Lady Bird Johnson's a dedicated ,
water skier since she learned recently in
Acapulco ... James A. Michener's endless world
prowlings convinced him America has a great "
record of racial tolerance and puts his ,
typewriter where his opLr1ion is in the April Sepia '
mag; worst in the world are Japan and India, he
says; horribly discriminated-against minorities.
Diana Sands will play Billie Holiday in the •
film about the heartbreak Lady Day but wouldn't ''
presume to duplicate her rich sad voice: Billie's ~·
own songs will be dubbed in via electronically
cleaned recordings and tapes .... Neat little silly
at the Museum of Natural History's exterior
refurbishing- the sign that states: "Digging for
Dinosaurs" .... Athletes are the newest hamswhat-am now that film stars are fading into
grubby, sloppy-hairy hobo-style: Pete Maravich
of the Atlanta Hawks has "Pistol Pete" sewn into
his bed sheets.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
WIN AT BRIDGE

Causes Oxygen Starvation

Carbon Monoxide Poisons Air
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb -We are
members of the sheet metal
local and would like to ask
some questions We all work
in an enclosed shop where a
fork lift causes fumes and

smoke comes from the spray
and paint booth. These fumes
are causing the men to
become nauseated, sleepy.
have headaches and also
eve-burning. The fork lift
u'ses regular gas and is used

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

!Helen Help Us!
I
I

I

CE BIOSSAT

,
BY JACK O'BRIAN

Last fall. Sharon Decker. a lOth-grade student at Cameron County High School in Emporium, Pa., read her history class a newspaper article about the work of the
International Rescue Committee.
After discussing the worldwide refugee problem, the
class decided to stop talking and try to do somethingto sponsor bringing a refugee family to Emporium. They
asked their teacher. Max Narby, to call IRC headquarters
111 New York for information. and the IRC immediately
alt&gt;rted its caseworkers in Europe.
In January. Stefan Nowak (not his real name), his wife
and 10-year-old son arrived in New York en route to the
little community in the heart of the Allegheny Mountains.
They had gone from Communist Poland to Yugoslavia
as tourists and from there escaped to Italy where they
were sent to a refugee camp.
Emporium high school students found an apartment for
the Nowak family, furnished it, arranged for English
lessons and found Nowak, a metal worker and auto
mechanic, a job with a local automobile agency. A townwide fund-raising campaign was started to obtain funds
for the final resettlement and integration of the family
into the community until they become self-supporting.
The Nowaks were only three of more than 8,000 refugees
who fled Communist East Europe last year. Close to 3,000
of these were resettled overseas, 1.900 in the United
States. But some 5.100 were still on the IRC caseload at
the beginning of 1971.
Unlike most organizations making annual reports at
this time of year, the International Rescue Committee regrets to say that it had more customers than ever in 1970
-more, in fact. than in any other year since it was
established in 193~ . Even the crisis following the 1956
Hungarian revolution did not equal 1970 in terms of the
massive number of refugees assisted.
In addition to those in Europe, it aided more than 11,000
C'uban refugees entering the United States through Miami
and elsewhere. Many of them were children sent away by
their parents before they reached 15-the draft age in
Cuba.
Despite intense surveillance by Red Chinese authorities,
more than 10,000 refugees managed to escape mainland
China to Hong Kong. IRC gave material assistance to
1.300 of them. During a single three-week period last
October, 300 Chinese attempted to swim the three-milewide bay separating the mainland from Hong Kong. Many
of them drowned.
In all, about 125,000 refugees on every continent benefited directly from IRC programs in 1970.
Business promises to be just as good-and as badin 1971.

Removing the 'Dirties'

!V;)i-~~--;f~;ig--B;;;~~I~-;y-~

I
t

By He:en Bottel

I

WHAT TO DO WHEN THE
PARTY GOES TO POT?
Dear Helen :
It's generally assumed in our town that better-&lt;:lass citizens
won't be bothered by the police if they smoke grass in their own
homes. Adults, that is.
However, my husband and I don't smoke and try to avoid pot
parties. Until the law is changed, we'd rather not take a chance .
So what do you do when a couple of guests in your home light
up? They even offered joints to other guests. We're quite new here
and didn't want to seem provincial.
That's a new etiquette question not yet in the books, Helen. TERRY
Dear Terry :
A host and hostess have a right to regulate the conduct of their
guests, especially if it may threaten their safety. You should have
told them quietly that you'd rather be un-hip than busted. If they
don't respect your wishes, don't invite them back. - H.
Dear Helen:
The guys I showed this letter to said you wouldn't print it
because I don't write so good. But I have to answer that lady who
thinks if veterans get five points preference for Civil Service jobs,
housewives should, too (because they are veterans of "battles").
I am a veteran and didn't a,sk to be one. Wives have a choice.
They can say "No" to the guy.
The way I see it, the government took my job away from me
andsentme to 'Nam, and then messed up my country while I was
gone, so I come back to inflation and no jobs. So why shouldn't I
get a five-point "break" when I take a test?
Dames want too much. Let them go to war, if they think it's so
easy. If more of them would stay home and take care of their
houses, maybe us vets could get work. - BILLY
Dear Helen :
"Friend of a Friend" described a "still lovely" wife whose
cruel husband abandoned her. The other side is quite different:
My "still lovely" wife has made our home a constant battleground. She has had one affair, and makes passes at anything
in pants. She is a constant nag and social snob, with the temper of
a shrew. She refuses to sleep with me .
I have not "discarded her for a younger woman." She can
have the money . All I want is my manhood and self-respect back
- a little happiness and love. - FREE AT LAST
Dear Free:
You and the "Friend of the Friend" come from different parts
of the country, but if the shrew fits .... - H.

Alert Defense Scores Big (
NORTH
29
• 93
• J 53
• Q 10 9 6 2
-" K 108
WEST
EAST ( D)
• K 1065 2 • 8
V8
V AKQ 10 64
+K J73
+A5
ofo954
-"A632
SOUTH
.AQJ74
• 972
• 84
""QJ7
None vulnerable
ast South
West 'liorth

able overcall and the defense
was bri l liant. What happened at the other table'!
Oswald: " South ended up
at two spades. He realiz:ed
the error of his ways when
West doubled, but had no
place t o go. However, the
defense wasn't perfect and
this South c o ll e c ted four
tricks to tie the board at
minus 700."

..,
tually collapse.
:
A common source for car·
bon monoxide is the gasoline
internal combustion engine ,
,
which I assume is what you
are describing as the fork
lift. How dangerous the carbon monoxide is depends on
:
both the size of the engine
•
~
and the closed space. The
11
important measurement is
the actual concentration of
1
carbon monoxide in the air .
If the air has 1 per cent carThe bidding has been:
J
West
North
East
South
bon monoxide, half of the
1¥
1.
1¥
I
hemoglobin in the body will
{
Dble Pass
Pas
Pass
PaiiOi.
3 'I
Pass
?
be bound withm 15 minutes
Pass • Pass
YOu, SQpth, hold:
In less t han half an hour 1t
AR VKlli765 +AKQ94-"A2
Openmg lead- 'I 8
can be fatal. Th1s is far be· What do you do now ?
low the fig ures you have
A-Bid [our no-•t·ump. Three
quoted, but they apply to the
heart bid shows 10-12 points in ....
room a i r that the men By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby JACOBY 1\IODERN. Plan to bid ~•
breathe and not the exhaust
Jim: "We haven't shown six if partner shows one ace.
from the engine.
any bad bids or plays lately.
The only way to check this We do see them on occasion. "
BARBS
problem is to measure the
Oswald: "Here 's a good
carbon monoxide content in one from a tea m g a m e
By PHIL PASTORET
the air. If 20 per cent or where the hand is played
A prudent wolf is one who
more of the blood is com- only twice. The bidding in
bined with carbon monoxide, the box shows what hap- looks before he whistles in
it will usually cause symp- pened at table one . West this day of shoulder-length
toms and 80 per cent is wanted to doub le for busi- hair.
usually fatal.
ness but he and his partner
A close friend is a per- I
Incidentally. those men were playing the new-fanson who won't lend you
gled negative double , so he
so much as the price of a
who smoke cigarettes could passed . East reopened wit h
cup of coffee.
significantly decrease the a takeout double and West
:;..
amount of carbon monoxide converted it to a penal ty by
If
you
have
an hour to
they are getting in their passing ."
spare, listen to the joker '
lungs if they stopped smokJim: ''Perfect defense
ing. A heavy c i g a r e t t e would set d e c I are r four
FACTS
smoker has 10 per cent of the tricks. Did it come off?"
he m o g 1 o b i n in his blood
0 s w aId : ''Yes. East
stream combined with car- cashed three hearts while
bon m on o xi d e from the
West got rid of two clubs.
cigarette.
The ace of clubs and a club
Regardin g the paint spray. ruff came next A diamond who says, ''Say, if you've got
it depends on what is in the back to the ace allowed West a minute .. .''
paint. Some people are al- to r uff another club He
lergic to certain fumes of cashed his king of diamonds
It takes two to make a
paint . If aniline dyes are a nd led another diamond
quarrel, unless you're
present in a ny of the work. East ruffed with the eight of
marr ied.
it can also combine with the spades and South had to use
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
hemoglobin in the b 1 o o d the jack to overruff. T his
In captivity an elephant
stream and contribute to the made it possible for West to
win two more trump tricks . may consume 500 pounds of
In 1961, President John problem .
South was held to j ust three hay and 60 gallons of. water ,
Kennedy began his "New
1
tr icks."
Frontier" p r o g r a m. The
in one day, accordmg to
World Almanac recalls that
Ji m : "South had a reason- Encyclopaedia Britannica.
in his inaugural speech he
The Almanac
urged all A m e r i c a n s to
By
United
Press International
show renewed devotion in
Today is Monday, March 29,
defense of America's ideals
by exclaiming: "My fellow the 88th day of 1971.
Americans, ask not what
The moon is between its new
your country can do for phase and first quarter.
you- ask what you can do
The morning stars are Venus,
for your country."
Mars and Jupiter.
( 'nJI)I' iJ;(ill ;(&gt; l!+ i 1.
' ' t · \\' :--IJIIIp t •l ' l·: utt· l' pri:-:;o· 'f\~:-:1\,
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn .
Those born on this day are
®
under the sign of Aries .
President John Tyler was
11-\E NEAREST HE EVER GOT
TO BEINe A LAWYER WI&gt;S
born March 29, 1790 .
BEING DIS B,A..RRED FROM
On this day in history:
A SUDS PARLOR"'
In 1812 the first wedding was
performed in the White House.
Mrs. Lucy Payne Washington,
sister -in-law of President
James Madison, was married
to Supreme Court Justice
Thomas Dodd.
In 1824 the Society for the
Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents was incorporated by
New York City.
In 1945 the U. S. Army made
a 55-mile advance which all but
cut off the Ruhr Basin from the
rest of Germany, in the waning
days of World War II in
Europe.
'
In 1967 France launched its
JQ I J ' ' NEA,
first nuclear submarine.

to unload heavy trucks and
for other duties. Can carbon
monoxide and paint fumes
cause these symptoms? Is 25
per cent carbon monoxide
dangerous? And is 50 per
cent dangerous in an enclosed building? Can you
please tell us what per cent
carbon monoxide is dangerous where the ventilation is
very poor?
Dear Reader-Carbon monoxide is a dangerous poison.
lt combines with the iron
pigment. hemoglobin , in the
red blood cell. and prevents
t r ansport of life-giving oxygen to the body In many respects it has the effects of
very high altitude or advanced anemia. In ext reme
cases, a person dies from
lack of oxygen to his brain
and other vital tissues . This
is h ow carbon monoxide
causes loss of consciousness
and death.
A little bit of carbon mon ·
oxide in the blood does not
cause death and, like losing
a little bit of blood or a mild
anemia, may cause no symptoms Or , depriving the body
of oxygen, carbon monoxide
can cause vomiting. head ·
a ches, excessive sweating,
dizziness. faintness and even -

t24lii;J:l•!rki!&amp;D

•

:_'::;

:)

WORLD ALMANAC

BERRY'S WORLD

·Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time
WELL, YOO S EE, I'M

FF&lt;OI-A OUT OF TOWN!
HJ...VE"TD GO BACK
TONIGHT- .. I'LL .JUST
STAY ONE MINUTE· ..

l Kt-\OW HE WAN'TB
TO SEE ME ... I'M..l.JH ..
HIS LAWYI:R· · ·

EVEI&lt;YBODY WHOS
LATE !=OR V15!TING

I-lOURS TELL5 A
PULITZER PRIZE
TALL TAl-E!

/

.

J®

~J

~~~

A thought for today : Scottish
novelist Robert Louis Stevenson
said, "Ever} m a n IS his (IWn
doetor of divi nity. ir. the las I
resorl . ··

" Don' ! worry about it ' We'll simply tell 18-year olds it's
their RESPONSIBILITY and DUTY to vote. That should
kcC',.: them GWO)' from thC' polls in droves 1"

'

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29, 1971

·Walnut Ridge
Ia Easy Win
'

-.

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
Class AAA state high school
basketball championship was
returned to its "other home"
Saturday night by Columbus

Walnut Ridge, which handled
tall Dayton Dunbar in easy
fashion in posting a 76-63 victory in the title game.
The Walnut Ridge success

r---=~;:,;::::::-,,,w.,,,~"'''l

NBA Plyaoff Standings
ABA Standings
By United Press International
By United Press lnternationa I
(First Round Best of Seven)
East
Eastern Division
W. L. Pr.t. GB
Series "A"
x-Virginia
54 28 .659 ...
43 39 .524 11
w. L.
Kentucky
2 1
New York
40 42 .488 14
New York
1 2
Floridians
37 46 .446 171!2 Atlanta
35 48 .422 191/2
Pittsburgh
Series "B"
w. L.
Carolina
33 49 .402 21
2 1
Baltimore
West
1 2
M.
W. L. Pr.t. GB Philadelphia
Western Division
"W Indiana
58 24 .707 .. ,
Series "C"
56 27 .675 2112
Utah
W. L.
Memphis
40 41 .494 17112
1 0
Milwaukee
Texas
28 54 .341 30
0 1
San Francisco
Denver
28 54 .341 30
Series "D"
Sunday's Results
W. L
Indiana 146 Denver 126
2 1
Los Angeles
New York 133 Utah 120
1 2
Chicago
Virginia 141 Texas 131
Sunday's Results
Floridians 130 Pitts. 117
New York 110 Atlanta 95
Carolina 148 Kentucky 142
Bait. 111 Phila. 103
Monday's Game
Chicago 106 L.A. 98
Kentucky at Memphis
Monday's Game
•
(Only game scheduled)
San Fran. at Milwaukee
NHL Standings
By United Press lnternationa I RACE FAN KILLED
LINCOLN, England (UPI)East
W. L. T. Pfs Mrs. Betty Fletcher, 45, of
54 14 7 115 Grimsby, England, was killed
x-Boston
47 17 11 105
New York
41 21 13 95 Sunday and six other spectators
Montreal
36
32 7 79 at a stock car race were
Toronto
23 39 13 59 injured when a wheel ripped off
Buffalo
22 43 10 54
Detroit
22 45 7 51 a car and hurtled into the
Vancouver
West
crowd.
.,
W. L. T. Pts.
Y
x Chicago
48 18 9 105
St. Louis
32 25 17 81 ABC'S FOOTBALL SKED
Minnesota
28 31 16 72
CHICAGO (UPI)-The AmerPhiladelphia
27 33 15 69
Pittsburgh
21 35 18 60 ican Broadcasting Company
Los Angeles
23 38 12 58 announced Sunday a 36-game
California
19 51 5 43
broadcast schedule for 1971
Cli nched Div. Tttle
Sunday's Results
NCAA football games. Twelve
New York2 Bosto~ 1
will be broadcast nationally and
Montreal 2 Chicago 1
24 regionally_
Detroit 2 Toronto 1
Vancouver 11 Calf. 5
_. Buffalo 4 Minnesota 2
PAKISTAN LOSES GAMES
-. Phil. 3 Pitts. 1
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI)Monday's Games
(no games scheduled)
The International Hockey Federation decided at a two-day
AHL Standings
meeting
here that the World
By United Press International
Hockey Championships could
East
T Pfs not take place as scheduled in
Mor eal
Lahore, Pakistan, this year
Prov '"'Ce
because
of the political unrest
Spr1 gfteld
Qurbec
in that country _
We
~
L~ Pfs
Baltimore
38 20 9 85 THOEN! SLALOM VICTOR
CATANIA, Sicily (UPI)Cleveland
36 26 7 79
Hershey
27 30 10 66 World Cup Champion Gustavo
Roc hester
24 33 11 59
Thoeni of Italy swept to victory
Sunday's Results
in the Men's Giant Slalom
Rochester 5 Cleveland 1
Baltimore 6 Quebec 3
during the three-day Etna
, Providence 7 Hersey 2
Skiing
Contest which ended
·"
Monday's Games
Sunday.
(No games scheduled)
1'=:...__..._..._.._._••_..._._.._.._..._.... ..•.-._..._..._...._..._ .•_ . ,
~

• i the Sports Desk
~~L

.

I
'

h-y Chet
_ _.._, ________
,._..,._,Tannehill
__ _..._________,..._..._......,...._.J~

Sports Desk did not appear last week because its pilot was
getting a general tune-up of his old engine at Doc Pickens' efficiently run health hostelry on Mulberry Heights. The da · md
nights residing up there were pleasant, made so by the cheerful,
friendly relations with the staff, nurses, and aides, and two
successive ward-mates, first the Rev. J. William DeMoss, 29,
pastor of the New Haven United Methodist Church, and later, the
quite alert and interesting 77-year-old Carson Hayes of Syracuse.
Both are sports fans of considerable dedication. "Carse" and I
watched Western Kentucky lose that barnburner to Villanova
Thursday night. Then Saturday, back at my news desk, there was
time for brief glimpses of UCLA claiming its fifth straight and
Coach John Wooden's seventh overall NCAA championship. The
Bruins had it all the way, playing their kind of game, forcing
Villanova to play catchup.
And Saturday, too, Ohio scholastic basketball bowed out all
the way for the 1970-71 with crowning of three division
prep champions, Columbus Walnut Ridge (AAA), Canton Lehman
(AA) and Fort Recovery (A) . I have heard little or no criticism of
the new three-division arrangement t.his year. The general
reaction appears to be favorable . Obviously, participation in the
glitter and hoopla of district, regional and state level competition
is increased with the further divisional separation of our high
'

•

school teams.
A tear of two must be shed for Waverly, campaigning this
time in AA and losing in the regional finals to Maysville. Last
year, battling with the big fellas, Waverly made it to the state
finals . Wally Grueser, Bob Roberts and this reporter saw the first
night of the r egional contests in Athens a week ago Friday when
Waverly defeated Bishop Ready 66-57 and Maysville clipped
Steubenville CC 85-69. Mter that show, I thought Waverly would
take Maysville the next night (Saturday) in the finals. Friends
who saw the Tigers lose said Waverly's zip was gone. They went
flat. Thirty-seven per cent from the field, which was their
shooting record against Maysville Saturday night, was approximately eight points below their season average.
Looking ahead to next year in the SEOAL, my guess is that
Waverly, with only sophomore Mike Oyer returning from the
starting five of this season, will be among the also-rans.
Which brings us all to baseball!
Sunday it was heart thumping good to see Charley Hustle
(Pete Rose) lace a low, tight pitch into right field, and the Reds to
break a ninth-inning tie on Tony Perez's single to edge Pittsburgh
5-4 in an exhibition game in Tampa .
And Tuesday, if the rains hold off another couple of days, the
Marauders open their Northern Division SEOAL campaign with
Logan at the Middleport municipal park diamond. Coach Ed
Bartels has a veteran club on hand, which, of course, hasn't had
near enough work, to open a 17-game schedule.
Everyone of these boys has been a standout little leaguer and
pony leaguer, baseball players since age 8 and 9. Get out to watch
them perform. They can, and perhaps will, show us something
this spring.

Gallipolis' Tommy Spencer
is scheduled to report to
Indianapolis of the American
Association (Triple A ball)
later this week. Spencer, who
worked out with the Cin·
cinnati Reds in Tampa, Fla.,
during the past month, was
sidelined by a severe cold
Friday and Saturday according to his mother, Mrs.
James Spencer.

was the sixth in the last nine
years for Columbus schools,
with the other three championships going to Dayton. This is,
however, the first year for AAA
teams as the bigger schools
made up the AA division before
the Ohio High School Athletic
Association went to three classes at the beginning of this
school year.
In the other two championship
games earlier Saturday, Fort
Recovery posted an easy 70-57
victory over Marion Pleasant to
capture the Class A title, while
Canton Lehman handed that city
its first state championship with
a 68-63 triumph over Warren
Champion in AA.
Walnut Ridge carved its victory out of the scoring and rebounding of 6-foot-10 all-Ohio
Ed Stahl and a lightning fast
break, led by 5-foot-10 Brad
Hoffman.
Stahl, the UPI AAA player
of the year, lived up to all his
notices with a 25-point, 16 rebound performance in the final
game, while the tireless Hoffman rammed in 20.
The victory was a sweet one
for Ridge Coach Jack Moore,
who afterward took exception to
a Cleveland newspaper article
which said his tearr, was overrated and also quoted a Cleveland coach as saying the champion would come out of Friday
night's semi-final game between
Dunbar and Cleveland East
Tech.
. First Each Week
Walnut Ridge, which finished
its season with the only unbeaten
record among the state's more
than 800 schools, was rated No.
1 every week of the UPI Board
of Coaches' poll.
"How could we be overrated
when Columbus teams had won
four of the last six and five of
the last eight championships?"
Moore asked. "Now we give
them another one to stick in
their ear."
But Moore quickly changed
the subject, preferring to heap
praise on his team's unselfishness and explaining some of his
defensive strategy
"Everybody thinks we play
man-for-man all the time,"
Moore said. "But we don't. We
use match up zones some times.
"We like to trap man for
man. When you've got big Ed
Stahl you can gamble a little
more."
Surprising to most observers
and possibly even to Moore was
the Scots' 53-40 edge in rebounding against the bigger Dunbar
team.
Even with the 6-foot-10 Stahl,
Walnut Ridge's front line averages only 6-foot-4 1'2, while the
Wolverines started 6-foot-9 Bill
Howard, 6-foot-7 Cornelius Cash
and 6-foot-5 Lorenzo Cash.
The Scots jumped out to a
6-0 lead with the game only
two minutes gone and stayed on
top all the way, leading 21-14
at the first quarter stop and
38-30 at the half.
It was still an eight-point lead
51-43, at the end of three with
Dunbar still in the game, but it
was all over two and a half
minutes later as the Scots
scored the first 11 points of the
fourth period to balloon their
lead to 62-43.
Greg Olson, at 6-foot-4, the
only other Walnut Ridge starter
over the 6-foot mark, chipped in
with 13 points, and 6-foot Dave
Hanners added 12.
Cornelius Cash led the Dunbar scoring with 18 points, Howard had 16, Bill Higgins, who
had 28 Friday night, was checked with 13, and Rick Gates had
12.
Sat. Coli. Basketball Results
By United Press International
Nationa I Invitation at New
York
St. Bona. 92 Duke 88
NCAA at Houston, Tex.
W. Ky. 77 Kansas 75
UCLA 68 Villanova 62

THE

DAI~Y

SENTINtL

l

DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

Exec . Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

City Editor
Published daily el&lt;cept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publi s hing Company, 111
Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone
992-2156, Editorial Phone 9922157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertising
representative
Bottinelli Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42na
~t., New York City, New York
Subs c ription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service rot available : One
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S1x months $7 .25 . Three
month s $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Tim&lt;&gt;~
,..Sentinel.

:::::::::::::;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Weekend

Su

-wn ~ary
• • It • • It

By United Press International
Saturday
HOUSTON (UPI) - UCLA
used a semi-stall during the
second half but still edged
Villanova, 68-62, for its fifth
straight NCAA basketball title.
NEW YORK (UPI)-North
Carolina routed Georgia Tech,
84-66, to become the first
Atlantic Coast Conference team
to win the National Invitational
Tournament.
AMES, Iowa (UPI)-Indiana
won its fourth straight NCAA
swimming and diving title with
351 points.
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-John
Hadl of the San Diego Chargers
suffered a skull fracture in a
horse riding accident.
AUBURN, Ala. (UPI)-Oklahoma State won the NCAA
wrestling title by piling up 94
points .

Cards Rout Twins 13-2
By United Press International
Joe Torre may start a diet
epidemic in the major leagues.
Torre shed 25 pounds before
last season and had one of his
finest campaigns, batting .325
with 21 homers and 100 runs
batted in. The new streamlined
Torre, who has dropped from
235 two years ago to 195 this
st!ason, continued to show that
slim is beautiful as he hit three
home runs and drove in five
runs Sunday to lead the St.
Louis Cardinals to a 13-2 rout of
the Minnesota Twins.
Torre, who now has hit six
homerunsthisspring,hitapair
off Luis Tiant in the first and
third innings and added another
off Jim Kaat in the sixth.
Bob Gibson turned in five
scoreless inning for the Cardinals, allowing only four hits,
striking out five and walking
none.
Wes Parker's eighth-inning
double drove in Willie Davis
from first with the tie-breaking
run as the Los Angeles Dodgers
beat the Homrton Astros 3-1 and
Juan Marichal turned in five
scoreless innings as the San
Francisco Giants beat the
California Angels 2-0.
Mike Epstein hit a two-run
homer and shortstop Toby
Harrah started a triple play and
two double plays to help the
Washington Senators beat the

Cheshire &amp;ys
To Register
Aprill0-17

HALLANDALE, Fla. (UPI)Hallandale Farm's Eastern
Filet scored a front-running
victory in the $137,800 Florida
Derby at Gulfstream Park.

Officials of the Cheshire Boys
Baseball Ass'ociation have
announced that Saturday, April
10 and April 17, have been set
for signup day for the 1971
summer baseball programs in
ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI)-Try the Cheshire area.
Sheep, sent off at odds of 54-1,
outduelled Tampa Trouble by a
Players may register from 10
head to win the $82,000 San Luis a.m. to 12 noon on those two
Rey Handicap at Santa Anita. days at the Bradbury Building

PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI)- Al
Unser of Albuquerque, N.M.,
won the 150-mile Jimmy Bryan
U.S. Auto Club race for the
second year in a row.

m Cheshire. Players must pay
their insurance fees upon
registering. Pee Wee and Little
League insurance will cost $3.
Pony league players must pay a
$4 insurance fee.

Sunday
MIAMI (UPI)-Gary Player
of South Mrica fired a closing
round four-under-par 68 to win
the $200,000 National Airlines
Open golf tournament by two
strokes with a 72-hole score of
14-under-par 274.

Kansas City Royals 4-2 and
Ernie Banks' bases-loaded double and run-producing single
lifted the Chicago CUbs to a 15-4
romp past the Cleveland Indians.
Dave Robinson doubled in two
runs and scored another on Ollie
Brown's single in the eighth
inning to boost the San Diego
Padres to a 6-4 triumph over the
Oakland Athletics and Dave
May's double and two singles
helped the Milwaukee Brewers

By United Press International
The Baltimore Bullets are
holding their National Basketball Association Ttitle hopes
together today with a couple of
yards of tape, foam rubber,
pills and pain-killing injections.
But as long as there's life left
in Earl Monroe, he's a
dangerous man on a basketball
court. And that makes Baltimore dangerous.
Monroe was taken to the
dressing room in shock, not
even knowing who he was, from
the pain in his side Sunday, but
he came back to score 23 of his
29 points in the second half and
lead the Bullets to a 111-103
victory over the PhiladelJ2hia
76ers in the Eastern Division
playoffs.
In other games Sunday, the
Chicago Bulls, playing without
Coach Dick Motta and star
guard Jerry Sloan after they
were thrown out of the game,
rallied in the fourth quarter to
beat the Los Angeles Lakers
106-98, and Walt Frazier
finished with 29 points with a
wild second half splurge to lead
the New York Knicks to a 11095 win over Atlanta.
Baltimore, Los Angeles and
New York each has a 2-1 lead
in their best-of-seven series.
Milwaukee, holding a 1..{) lead,
hosts San Francisco tonight in
the only playoff action.
However, Baltimore appeared
headed for a setback that would

have left the Bullets trailing in
their series with Philadelphia
when Monroe was taken off the
court.
Monroe was hit by Archie
Clark's elbow on his already
damaged right side with 8:24
left in the second quarter and
the 76ers leading 33-29. He fell
to the floor in pain in a corner
of the court, and doctors
worked over him several
minutes before he was able to
get up and go to the dressing
room.
Nobody expected him back.
"It was unbelievable that he
could go back and score 23
points, said Baltimore trainer
Skip Feldman. "He was in
shock. He didn't know who he
was. He was ready to throw up
and his ribs were killing him.
"The doctors," Feldman continued, "were checking with a
stethoscope to see if a rib was
sticking into a lung. If they
hear a hissing, bubbling noise,
it means a rib is in a lung.
Once that was checked out and
cleared, I made a foam rubber
brace for him, taped it up and
gave him a codeine pill for the
pain."
Wearing the brace that he
will use for the rest of the
series, Monroe returned to hit
on 10 of 15 field goal tries,
three for three from the free
throw line, get three assists and
guard Hal Greer on defense. He
was then taken to a hospital for
X-rays.

BAC, QSSC In
Tourney Wins

Gary Player Cops
Tourney

CHICAGO (UPI)- A u s t r a l i a n A i r l i n e s
John Newcombe won the $50,000
Sportface International Tennis
MIAMI ( UPI)-Gary Player
tournament with a 4-6, 7-6, 6-2
- five feet, eight inches of wire
victtry over Arthur Ashe.
dressed in black - has a chance
to become the first golfer to win
three tournaments in a row
since Arnold Palmer did it way
back in 1962.
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon Reed
Player charged through the
and family of Waldo, were middle holes in the final round
recently visiting with his of the $200,000 National Airlines
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Open Golf Tournament Sunday
Reed, local.
to win it by two strokes over Lee
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hill and Trevino.
Linda of Reedsville spent the
A week ago, Player won the
weekend with her parents, Mr. Greater Jacksonville Open in a
and Mrs. Harold Brannon of playoff with Hal Underwood
Reedsville.
and next week he plays in the
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Brannon Greater Greensboro, N.C.,
and family visited recently with Open, where he is defending
her mother, Mrs. Covert of champion.
Nelsonville, Ohio.
But Player, although he
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baker admits to consistency, isn't
and family visited recently with optimistic about his chances
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle and next week.
family of Coolville.
"I have too much respect for
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Walls and the game and for the competiPermy of Lancaster, Ohio were tion," he said. He added he
recently visiting with Mr. and would feel better if the fairways
Mrs. Clarence Baker and were shorter and the holes
· family and Mr. and Mrs. Leo longer on the Greensboro
Boston and family of Reed- course.
sville.
And if he wins next week, he's
even more pessimistic about
winning the Masters for his
BELKIN'S TENNIS WIN
fourth straight - which would
BROOKVILLE, N.Y. (UPI)- be a first in tour golf .
Mike Belkin of Toronto won the
"That's a Jack Nicklaus
fifth annual Long Island Indoor benefit when you leave it so
Tennis championship at C. W. wide open," he said, referring
Post College Sunday and earned to the long-hitting PGA cham$2,000 first prize money. Cliff pion and the w1dc fairways on
Richey of San Angelo, Tex., the the Augusta, Ga., course.
:--/o. 1 seed, earned $1,500 for
Altogether, the 160-pound
second place and Clark Graeb- South African believes four, or
ner of New York collected $700 even three, wins in a row are
for third.
"expecting a bit too much, the

Philadelphia Phillies to a 7-6
triumph over the Chicago White
Sox and George Scott hit two
homers and Billy Conigliaro
and Regie Smith added one
each as the Boston Red Sox beat
the Detroit Tigers 5-3.
Two-out doubles by Donn
Clendenon and Ken Singleton
produced three runs in the 12th
inning and gave the New York
Mets a 5-2 victory over the New
York Yankees.

Ailing Monroe Paces
Bullets Over 76ers

In other busmess, Carl
Wamsley association treasurer,
was authorized to order new
Little and Pony League
uniforms. Kenny W1se was
elected president of the
association succeeding Elmer
Baird. Charles Winebrenner
ONTARIO, Calif. (UPI)- was named vice-president.
Marion Andretti, driving a Wamsley was retained as
Beach Athletic Club and Bob
Ferrari 312-B, won the first secretary-treasurer.
Saunders Quaker State Service
$288,900 Questor Grand Prix for
Center
posted
victories
Serving as managers this Saturday night in the Second
Formula I and A cars.
year are Dale Allensworth, Annual North Gallia High
BRISTOL, Tenn. (UPI)- Wendell Roush and Charles School Independent Cage
David Pearson of Spartanburg, Winebrenner, Little League; Tournament.
S.C., won the Southeastern 500 Dale Rothgeb and Mike Beebe,
Beach advanced by blasting
stock car race with a speed of Pony League. Managers are Wellston, 149-85. QSSC topped
91.704 miles-per-hour in a Ford. still being sought for the Pee Royal Crown Bottling, 116-65.
Wee team.
Tonight, Bickers' Bidwell
GENEVA, Switzerland (UPI)
- The U.S. National hockey
team lost to Sweden 4-3 for its
sixth straight loss in the World
Ice Hockey championships.

Joppa News

beat the Tokyo Lotte Orions 7-2.
Mike Lum's tie-breaking single in the seventh inning--his
third hit of the game-gave the
Atlanta Braves a 4-3 victory
over the Baltimore Orioles
while Denny Lemaster and
Gary Waslewski combined for a
two-hitter to lead an All-Star
squad to a 1..{) triumph over the
Montreal Expos.
Bobby Pfeil's two-run double
highlighted a four-run ninth
inning rally that carried the

way things are today."
But he won two in a row for
the first time since Palmer won
the Heritage Classic and the
Danny Thomas Open in December of 1969.
"I think it's time for him to go
home," quipped runnerup
Trevino after playing the final
round with Player on the par 72,
6,970-yard Country Club of
Miami course_
Player beat Trevino by two
strokes with a 68 to Trevino's 69
in the final round. Player went
into the round a stroke ahead of
Trevino and finished with a 14under-par 274, two strokes in
front of the flamboyant
Mexican-American.
Young Jerry McGee, a native
of the Ohio hill country, shot a
six-under-par 66 including a
blistering first-nine 31 for 277
and third place. Charles Coody
and Australian Bruce Crampton
were another stroke back at 278.
Crampton was tied with
Player for the lead going into
the round but faltered to a par72, mainly by bogeying thefourth and fifth holes.
Palmer fired a 69 for 279 and
Jack Nicklaus is spending these
two weeks preparing for the
masters.
Player started slowly, sinking
a birdie on the second hole on a
25-foot putt but three-outtinll for
a bqgey on the fourth. But then
he strung birdies on the eight,
ninth and lOth and on the 14th,
15th and 16th. His big putts were
20-footers on the eighth and
15th, and a 15-footer on the lOth.

Milling winners of its first
game, 111-80, will tangle with
Athens Masonry. Athens won its
first outing, 103-63 over French
City Mobile Homes.
Rio A.T.D. an easy winner,
155-77, over Goodyear, its first
time out will battle Brown's
Insurance in the second contest
of the evening.
Brown's Insurance posted a
123-90 victory over Smith's
Performance Center during last
Friday's action.
The
championship and
consolation games will be
played on Wednesday night. Six
players hit double figures in
Beach's 149-85 win over
Wellston. Tony Bass led the way
with 38 points. Blaine Henry had
30; Dave Smith, 31; Rick
Turnbow, 16; Franklin Beach,
13 and Harry Hairston canned
13.
Tom Compston led Wellston
with 25 points. Marvin Hale and
Mike Hughes had 13 each.
Beach led at halftime, 56-37.
Carl Wolfe's 23 points led
QSSC to its 116-65 victory over
Royal Crown Bottling.
Other players in double
figures were Dick Schelat, 22;
Al Martin, 20; Gary Popplewell,
17, Danny Moyer, 14 and Asa
Bradbury and Dean Rinehart
added 10 each.
Dave Thomas and Roger
Puckett scored 13 points each
for the losers. Max Knopp
canned 11 points. Officials
donating their time were Pete
Young and Bill Underwood.

Kevin Loughery, who was the
second high scorer for the
Bullets with 21 points, said,
"not many guys could come out
and do the job he did after
being in shock and taped up. He
did a fantastic job of overcoming that mentally as well as
physically. He's the best
offensive guard in the league."
The Bullets led only 97-95
with 2:40 left, but three straight
basket by Monroe made the
score 103-96 with 1:36left to put
the game out of reach.
Greer led Philadelphia with
28 points, and Billy Cunningham added 21.
Bulls' coach Motta was
thrown out of the game with
Los Angeles on a technical
foul call by referee Mendy
Rudolph with 7:09 left in the
first period, and Sloan was put
out in the third period when he
drew his second technical.
Mter three periods, the
Lakers led 77-73 but Bob Love
got 10 of his 27 points in the
final quarter to lead Chicago's
comeback. Love's three consecutive baskets put the Bulls
ahead by two points with 7:47
left and finally after the Lakers
tied the sc6re again, Jim King
hit a layup at 5:24 to put
Chicago ahead to stay.
Chet Walker and Bob Weiss
each had 23 points for Chicago,
and King, who took over as
coach, had 13. Gail Goodrich
led the Lakers with 39 points,
including 25 in the second half.
Atlanta led the Knicks until
Frazier stole a errant Hawks'
pass and drove the length of
the court for a layup that put
New York ahead 73-71 with less
than five minutes left in the
third period.
Although New York never
trailed again, Atlanta pulled to
within one point with 9:04 left.
However, Frazier and Dave
Debusschere combined for five
straight points as the Knicks
pulled away.
Willis Reed had 26 points for
the Knicks, and Dick Barnett
added 23. Atlanta was led by
Walt Bellamy with 29 points.

Your
lndeoeJildll'~nt'...,_''"'

Insurance
Agent
Dale Warner

UNDERINSURED
a horrible combination of words. Let
us take away those
first five letters.
Insure - be sure!

Consult Us Soon

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

992 -2171
125 E . Main

Pomeroy, 0.

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29,1971

u::'~

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Overnight Wire

·.

•:.·:
...

Cancer Crusade Month Proclaimed
COLUMBUS- Governor John J. Gilligan Friday signed
a proclamation declaring April as "Cancer Crusade Month"
in Ohio. Accepting that decree for the Ohio Division of the
American Cancer Society was Dr. Arthur G. James, a
member of both the National and Ohio Board of Directors of
the ACS. This act officially launched the Crusade conducted
by over 150,000 American Cancer Society volunteers. They
will try again this year to top a goal of three million dollars
for the third year in a row. Ohio is the second largest fundraiser for the ACS in the United States.

Carpenter News, Event
Members of Temple Church
W.S.C.S met at the home of
Mrs. Robert Mattox for their
March meeting. Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree called the meeting to
order in the absence of the
president. The annual meeting

Apple Grove
News, Events
Mrs Eula Wolfe and Aaron
Wolfe were Gallipolis visitors
recently.
Mrs. Elizabeth Roush of
Letart Falls callt&gt;d on Mrs.
Herb • R ush Sa
Mr R Don
her s r ar.d fa
Mrs George
Columbus The I
are
the parents of a bab •trl. .Mrs.
Donohue is assistmg m the care
of the children and new baby
and mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaskill
of Wellston spent the weekend
at their cottage.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
visited Mrs. Harr~ Pickens,
Martha Anderson, and Mrs.
Vetrice Nice all patients at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mcl'\ickles visited the
former's mother, Mrs. Vetrice
Nice Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Cloist Badgely
spent Sunday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Warner, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill and
Mrs. Gladys Shields spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Roush at Mansfield, 0.
Mrs. Edna Roush spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Ott Boston
while Mrs. Shields was in
Mansfield. Mrs. Howard Roush
is home and is improving
satisfactonly from a recent
heart attack.
Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Aaron
were dinner guests Tuesday
evening of Thomas Wolfe and
daughter, Mickey, at Racine.
Mrs. Wolfe and Aaron visited
Mr . and Mrs. Harry Love at Pt.
Pleasant Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Don Stevens of
Culloden, W.Va., called on Mr.
and Mrs. St. Clair Hill Thursday
morning.
Mrs Erma Wilson was a
dinner guest Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs . Butch Wilson at Mt.
Moriah and also called on Mr.
and Mrs. Roy VanMeter at
Morning Star and Mr. and Mrs .
Paul Erwin at Oak Grove.
Mrs. Virgil Roush, Mrs .
Herschel !.'l'orris and Mrs. John
Boyd attended a bridal shower
for Mrs. Patricia Martin Wine
at the American Legion Hall at
• Pomeroy Sunday afternoon.
. Sunday guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Jess Anderson were Mr.
· and Mrs John Lusher of
~ Glassglow, W. Va., Kim Jarrell,
:Mrs. BE&gt;nny Boggess and
·Wayne.
: Paul Howe and Alvin Stover
: spent Saturday evening with
: Wayne Hoscbcrry.
• Mr. and Mrs . Everette
·Ransom moved from Delaware,
: 0., to their residPnr·e m An: tlqui•y.

at Logan was announced.
Members of the local society
are invited to a luncheon
meeting in Athens on April 13.
Theme for the evening's
program was, The Woman Who
Missed Easter. Special "Holy
Week" services are being
planned in Charge churches and
a revival will be held at Mineral
with Arthur Crabtree in charge
and Reverend Cecil Cox as
evangelist.
Friends here have learned of
the birth of a daughter, Joy
Elizabeth, to Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Comer, Albany, Rt. 3, on
March 12 at Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Puck
nd Mr. and Mrs.
Cia\ ton Com r, Oak Hill. The
tt
r
hac; a stster, Vicky and
a brothl'r, Rtchc..~rd .
Vma Rutherford, Columbus,
was an overnight guest at the
home of her mother, Faye
Jordan. Mrs. Jordan's sister,
Mrs. Ida Dennison, Salem
Center, is spending a few days
with her.
Mr. and Mrs Herman Mattox, South Charleston, visited
his brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mattox.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly
were business visitors in
Columbus on Thursday.
Guests of Murl Gallaway
were Mr . and Mrs. D. V.
Cummings, Athens; Clair
Cummings, Elyria; and Mr.
and Mrs. Leon Woodrum,
Randy and Kathy, McArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. William Lawson
were overnight guests of his
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Grim in Poca, W.
Va. and they called to see Mrs.
Lawson's mother, Mrs. Bert
Withrow in Charleston, W. Va.
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna, Erie, Pennsylvania
were weekend visitors at the
home of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Lewis Smith and Nancy.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hoyd
spent the weekend in Columbus
with their daughter, Delores
Hoyd.
Mr. and Mrs. Noble Hamon
and Randy , Zaleski, visited
their son-in-law and daughter,
Mr . and Mrs . Rex Cheadle and
family.
Jackie and Danny Jordan
were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Paynter and Ruth . Betty
and Jerri Jordan visited their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Reed Jeffers while their
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Lavern
Jordan were on vacation.
Among those attending the
blue and gold banquet fur
Scouts and families at the
Albany Elementary School
were Cecil Gillogly, Steve and
Jeff: Mr. and Mrs. John
Gillogly and Mark, Mr. and
Mrs . Dwaine Jordan, Bryan and
Keith; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Gill ugly, Bruce and Vicky and
;\1rs. Hobert Reeves, Robin,
Hick:or, H.on and Rob. Cub Scouts
of thP group are Bruce Gillogly,
Ron Hcevcs, :\1ark Gillogly,
Bryan .Jordan and Jeff Gillogly.
~Jr. and :vlrs. Earl Starkey
at tpru!t:d tile State finals of
rtluali&lt;;lie and dnll contests of

By United Press International
WASHINGTON- THE NUMBER OF CRIMES reported to
police in Cleveland during 1970 decreased from the year before,
but five more killings occurred, the Federal Bureao of Investigation reports. In the FBI's preliminary crime report for
1970 Cleveland was listed among 22 major U.S. cities where crime
actually marked a decrease from 1969.
Cleveland had 271 killings, compared to 266 the year before,
and 307 rapes compared to 303 for 1969, but robberies, aggravated
assault, burglary, larceny and auto theft were all lower. In other
Ohio cities listed in the report, Canton had lower numbers of
killings and rapes; Cincinnati had 59 killings, seven fewer than in
1969; and Dayton reported 57 killings, one less than the year
previously.
WASHINGTON -TWO SENATORS WHO authored last
year's law against the use of U.S. ground combat troops in Laos,
Cambodia and Thailand say they are nearing agreement on
another proposal that would commit the nation to total withdrawal from Indochina. Sens. John Serman Cooper, R-Ky., and
Frank Church, D-Idaho, told UPI in separate interviews the
proposal would be made in an amendment later this year, and
that it would, according to Church, spell out a policy of complete
withdrawal of all forces, including air and ground support units.
"It is not going to be a meaningless, mamby-pamby approach," Church said. He said it would look beyond President
Nixon's month-by-month troop withdrawals to the end of conflict
and spell out an irrevocable disengagement.
WASHINGTON- BUYERS OF PENN CENTRAL stock in
the months before the railroad went bankrupt were victimized by
a big-time shell game carried on by banks and investment
companies who dumped their stock because of inside information,
Rep. Wright Patman, D-Texas said today.
Patman made the comments as his House Banking Committee issued its fifth staff report on the Penn Central failure. The
report said nine banks and investing firms sold 1.8 million shares
of Penn Central from April1, 1970, until June 21, 1970, when Penn
Central Transportation Co. went into receivership. "The purchasers of this stock can rightfully feel that they were victims of a
massive shell game carried on by financial entities in a position to
know the innermost financial secrets of the Penn Central
organization," Patman said.
A CLOUD SHIELD HOVERED OMINOUSLY over the lower
Mississippi Valley today, harboring thunderstorms and
triggering a variety of foul weather. Severe thunderstorm warnings were in effect for portions of northeast Texas, southern
Arkansas, northern Louisiana and central Mississippi.
Allen and Evangeline parishes in southeast Louisiana were
under a tornado warning after a twister was indicated on radar
and trees were knocked down at Elizabeth, La.

Choice of Pants Length
Dependant on Figures
or slightly above. They offer
fashion flattery for the youthful,
slender-legged miss. Short
shorts are available in many
fabrics and styles, including
close-fitting cuffed or full-flared
versions.
Another pants style is slightly
longer than Hotpants. The
length called "city shorts."
stops slightly above the knee.
This is a length lots of women
can wear. City short-:; are a new
pants look and are apt to be a
favorite for those with fuller
figures.
There are several below-the-

knee pants styles. Knickers are
pants with fullness softly
gathered to a band just below
the knee. Often shown in floral
design fabrics this spring,
knickers might also feature
ruffles at the knee or even a bibtop.
The bootlegger is a slimmed
down style of calf-length pants,
either straight and cuffed or
flared. Bootleggers are often
shown in such spring fabrics as
cotton-polyester duck or knits
or denim. Gaucho pants are also
calf-or-midi length, generally
with more fullness than either

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
TURN FUNDS IN
Births
Collections
made
by
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Henry,
American Legion Auxiliary
members and volunteers for the Mason, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
George Thompson Kidney Fund Billy J. Black, New Haven, a
in the house-to-house canvass daughter; Mr. and Mrs. James
are to be turned in to Mrs. Ben E. Page, Middleport, a
Neutzling, Eighth District daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
American Legion Auxiliary G. Parsons, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, a
president, after 1 p.m. Thurs- daughter; Mr. and Mrs. George
F. Tabit, Gallipolis, a son; and
day at the Trinity Church.
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Coen, Pt.
Pleasant, a son.
Discharges
Elephants have an average
Stanley H. Allen, Kathy L.
life of 50 years, however, one
in India was recorded as living for 130 years, according
to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Blakeman, Mrs. Walter K.
Carpenter and infant son,
Charles E. Cramer, Chester E.
Crank, James R. Dixon, Mrs.
Paul F. Fuller, Albert J.
Gabrielli.. James F. Jacobs •.
Mrs. Walter T. Johnson, Mrs.
Charles Earl King and infant
son, Mrs. Julia N. Kirby, Mrs.
Ross Kent, Miss Doris Malone,
Mrs. Earl W. McHenry, Kevin
W. Nelson, Lester K. Ohlinger,
Salathiel W. Quesenberry,
Robert Harvey Spencer, Mrs.
Wilma M. Stobart, Mrs. Joseph
H. Swaim, Homer W. Swain,
Charles M. Tackett, Mrs. Owen
H. Wilbur, Willard Williams,
Mrs. Eliza V. Wilson, Mrs. Lacy
E. Woody, Mrs. Reed H. Eynon.

Contributions to the Easter
Seal Society and the George
Thompson Kidney Fund were
made by the Loyal Women's
Class of the Middleport Church
of Christ Thursday night at the
home of Mrs. Martha Childs.
Arrangements were made to
provide two lilies for the sanctuary for Easter. A bake sale
was planned for April 16 at the

Western Auto Store with
proceeds to go to the carpet
fund for the church.

By Deborah Conklin
Home Economist
The fashion most likely to
succeed this spring is pants.
And it's a fashion that offers
true
fashion
freedom,
especially in choice of lengths.
You are free to choose the pants
length - long, short or inbetween - that flatters your
figure.
A wardrobe of pants lengths
might begin with the short
shorts, a new fashion designers
call "Hotpants." The length is
usually at mid-point of the thigh
TOPIC WAS SECURITY
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Eighth
District American Legion
Auxiliary president, was guest
speaker at the Legion birthday
observance of the Gallipolis
post last week. Her topic was
na tiona! security.

In Democratic Polls

the Grange at Watkins
Memorial High School near
Etna, Ohio, on Saturday. The
Starkeys were business callers
in Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. one day
this past week.
Reed Jeffers was in Columbus
on Friday where he attended a
business meeting.

and he went dead."
Cater, who is now senior adviser for the Academy for Educational Development, predicted the trend toward centralization of power in the President
would reverse itself because
"the war in Vietnam has become a symbol of discontent
and a cause of fear of an unresponsive President.''
Cater said the public also is
beginning to fear the President
is becoming "insulated from the
public by his own bureaucracy."
On other topics, Gallup, president of the American Institute
of Public Opinion, said he believes the American public is
"generally well informed" although many housewives probably think that the Common
Market is "the place where
the average person goes to
shop."

Bash an
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Trussell
attended funeral services for
their brother-in-law, Orner
Cramlet, at the Racine
Methodist Church, on Wednesday.
Mrs. Ralph Ballard has been
sick the past two weeks.
Mrs. Mary Holter and
daughter,
Sharon,
were
shopping in Parkersburg on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
(Chucky) Lee of Buena Vista,
Va., are the parents of a baby
daughter born March 5. She has
been named Melinda. Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Lee are grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Trussell
and Dawn Renee of Mt. Vernon
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Trussell and children spent
Sunday with their parents, Mr .
and Mrs. Stanley Trussell.
Mr . and Mrs. Stanley Trussell
spent Sunday evening with Mr.
and Mrs . Robert Trussell of
Reedsville R. D. and were
guests at a supper honoring
their 46th wedding anniversary.
Also present were Mr. and Mrs .
Donald Trussell and daughter,
Mrs. Jeanne Trussell and
children, Mr. and Mrs. John
Ridenour, Richard Kerns, and
the host and hostess, and
daughter, Sandy.

OPTOMETRIST

knickers or bootleggers.
Fabrics featured in gauchos
include buckskin, embroidered
leather and suede plus polyester
or cotton-blend knits.
The below-the-knee pants
styles are flattering to many
figure types. But if the calf of
your leg is heavy, you may want
to avoid a length which em- •
phasizes this portion of your leg.
Your ankle-length pants
choice includes pant suits, city
suits, or slacks in casual to very
formal fabrics. Wide-legged
styles will help ~lance large
hips or thighs. A long tunic over
the pants may help to
camouflage extra inches, too.
Whickever length you choose,
try it on - preferably before a
three-way mirror. Experiment
with length- an inch or two can
make considerable difference in
how attractive a particular
pants tyle is on your figure.

P. J. Pauley

Mrs. Oscar Roush presided at
the meeting. Prayer was given
by Mrs. Herman Lohse and a
dessert course was served by
Mrs. Childs who gave devotions
using a meditation on "Faith"
by Norman Vincent Peale.

Gallup said his polls are
within 2.5 per cent of "abso- 7\. T
lute accuracy'' and rejected 1 ~ew
criticism of 1'bandwagon psychology" attached to polls made
PT. PLEAS&amp;~T - Two new used to prevent serious erosion
prior to national elections.
publications prepared by the U. during construction of highCites 1948 Race
S. Soil Conservation Service ways, impoundments,
Phone 992-2318
The 1948 Dewey-Truman race (SCS) are available at local SCS residences and other urban
was one example of the ex- offices
AUTO
throughout
West developments.
perts predicting the victory of Virginia.
Soil conservation districts are
FIRE- LIFE
the wrong candidate without
One of the booklets, "Ponds placing increased emphasis on
HEALTH
voters being affected, he said. for
Water
Supply
and attacking water pollution
MUTUAL FUNDS
Packwood, who bounced vet- Recreation," gives hints for problems. Since sediment is the
eran Wayne Morse from his developing successful ponds. It major pollutant by volume,
N ATIONWIDE
Senate seat in 1968, said he be- describes what to look for districts and the SCS are
l
t
N SURANCE
lieves the U.S. Supreme Court during
preliminary
site focusing attention on measures
"- _':. ~'i'&gt; HOIYf Of flU • COlUMBl,~ OHIO
intends to sidestep the issue of selection, detailed site studies, to prevent erosion.
abortion reform rather than construction, erosion control ,..-------~~--------------­
take direct action in cases chal- and pond maintenance.
lenging anti-abortion laws.
West Virginia's 14 soil con- •
The 39-year-old senator, who servation districts have made
has sponsored a bill legalizing technical assistance available
abortions in all the states, pre- for construction of more than
dicted "Congress will fmally 17,000 ponds throughout the
act when the disparity between Mountain State.
state laws becomes unacceptaAnother timely bulletin is
ble."
"Controlling Erosion on ConPackwood also said he does struction Sites." It describes
not think the April Moratorium sediment control measures
planned in Washington D.C. to
oppose the war in Indochina
will affect the government's
DEADLINE TUESDAY
policies.
Reservations for the Four
Cater, who recently complet- Rivers Girl Scout Council's
ed a briefing trip of Strategic annual leaders' luncheon at the
Air Command bases, said he University Inn, Athens, on April
found the SAC "appropriate and 7 are to be made with Mrs.
worthwhile" but recommended William Ohlinger, Big Bend
a congressional investigation of Neighborhood chairman, no
the Pentagon's public informa- later than tomorrow. The $2
tion programs.
luncheon charge is to be paid at
"Some of their communica· the time the reservation is
tions techniques are not justi- made.
fied and should be the subject
Southern Chile is closer to
of a congressiOnal investigathe
Antarctic Circle than anv
tion," Cater said.
other country
·

B 00 kle t s A vaz•lable

307 SPRING AVE.

POMEROY

a11.
It

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

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

""""
fhe Pak1stan flood left two million people
homeless and starving.
Please help them . Every dollar you give will
feed ten Pakistan children a day.
(All money goes directly to Independent
Amer1can relief organizat ons 1n Pakistan)
Send what you can to Sdve the Survivors .
Save the Surv1vors.
Pakista'1 Rel1ef F1md .
Box 16 / 0 Wash 1ngton D.C 20013

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.
OFFICE HOURS 9· 10 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS . )
EAST COURT ST.,

r---------------------------,
!
HOSPITAL NEWS \

DEBBIE CONKLIN

Contributions Approved

Kennedy Tops Muskie
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI) George Gallup Jr. said Sunday
night his latest public opimon
poll shows Sen. Edward Kennedy leading for the Democratic
nomination for President in
1972.
Gallup, who participated in a
symposium at Marietta College
on public opinion, said 46 per
cent of the Democrats queried
chose Kennedy to 43 per cent
for Sen. Edmund Muskie of
Maine. Kennedy was picked by
47 per cent when matched
against Sen. Hubert Humphrey
of Minnesota, who received 42
per cent support.
"The latest findings on the
Democratic candidacy is that
Sen. Muskie of Maine is winning support from Democratic
leaders, but not correspondingly from registered Democrats,"
Gallup said.
Gallup, who appeared here
with Sen. Robert Packwood, ROre., and Douglass Cater, former aide to President Lyndon
Johnson, said his polls also
show seven of 10 persons polled
feel President Nixon "is not
telling the public everything
about Vietnam."
"Fifty-one per cent of the
people approve of Nixon's handling of his office," Gallup added, a percentage which is the
lowest of his administration.
Packwood predicted the decision on whether Vice President
Spiro Agnew would remain on
the Republican ticket would not
be made until "a few days before the convention ."
Reveals LBJ's Problems
Cater said Johnson, who was
elected to office with the largest majority in history, left
four years later "because he
could not unite public opinion."
He said he never saw a
"more self-conscious person in
front of a television" than Johnson .
"He (Johnson) was probably
the most persuasive man I
ever met," Cater said, "but
put him behind a TV camera

•

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

Advc ' ' ''lnl ,v,tr •t1ut ··.' lo tt·· JhiJ IL t:t,od •l'llPOpt!·Jt on w1th
1he Advurt•,.~nr, rc 1r1 . II'U1 tt ·' •n!t• · nJ! t, n 11 Nt&gt;w"P IPt' Ad~· t'rtls•ntt Executives

•

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29, 1971

• Cub Scout SOAR Chairmen Announced

•

I.
c

•

•

4f

•

,.

.
r

Chairmen of the local SOAR
(Save Our American Resources)
program and
the
Sustaining Membership
Enrollment campaign were
announced Thursday night at a
meeting of Cub Scout Pack 245
at the Middleport Legion hall.
Selwyn Smith, cubmaster,
said Manning Kloes has been
named chairman of the
Sustaining Membership
Enrollment with the MGM
District Counc!l of Huntington,
the purpose of which is to
provide funds for the scouting
program.
Milford Hysell, webelos
leader, announced that Edison
Baker, a Middleport businessman and member of
the Middleport Chamber of
Commerce, is the chairman of
the local SOAR project.
The "Cowboy and Indian"
theme of the month was carried
out by the webelos in a
simulated campfire scene. Dale
Spencer beat the drum for the
gathering of the cowboys and
Indians around the campfire to
lead in the pledge of allegiance.
Awards presented by Smith
included Mark Hood, Keith
Black, Mitchell Cart, Roger
Carson, Danny Smith, John
Stewart, David Hysell, and
John Byer, one year attendance
pins; James Gheen, a bobcat
pin; John Byer, a one year
service star; Billy McMillion, a
bear patch; James Humphreys,
a bear book and a one year
service star; Clifford Murray, a
bobcat pin; Bruce Fisher, a
service star.
Mr. Hysell presented webelos
awards to Ricky Hovatter,
athlete;
Michael Hindy,
athlete; Kenny Roush, sportsman badge; Dean Spencer,
athlete; Jeff Laudermilt, a bear
patch; Dean Spencer and David
Wilcox, two year attendance
pins.
Mark Hood was received into
the webelos den from Dean 3.
Taking roles in a western skit
were Leslie Whittington as
Jessie James; Keith Doss, Billy
the Kid; Mrs. Jean Thomas, the

KitchenAid
introd s
then t
in portable
.dishwashers

'
Front- opening convenience.
Big, roomy racks. Beautiful
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HOBART to work better and
last longer. No installation.
Buy one today. Use it tonight.

,

Royal (KDR -66)
• Automatic SOAK CYCLE*
that removes hard-to- getoff foods without sinksoaking. Plus FULL CYCLE
and RINSE/HOLD.
*Patent pendtng

• 9 - position upper rack. It
raises, lowers or ti l ts to
accommodate big items in
either rack.
• Hard maple top.

Choice of models

bank teller; and Kevin King,
Chief Running Snake. Dorsel
Thomas led in an India n dance
around the simulated campfire,
and the group sang "Home on
the Range ."
Introduced by Smith were
three new boys, Clifford
Murray, James Gheen, and
Brett Dodson. The "Cubie"
award went to Francis Whittington a nd Mrs. Thomas' Den
2.
Den 4 gave a stunt on a
conu ary lawnmower and the

closing was by Mrs. Larry
Spencer a nd Mrs. Jean Cart's
Den 5. Mrs. Spencer read an
Indian tribe story entitled "The
Raccoon and the Fox" as the
boys gathered around the
campfire scene to repeat the
cub scout promise in a living

Inspection

•

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food waste
finer, faster,
q uieter. And
lasts longer.

TV &amp; APP LI ANCE
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e 995 3308

Held

Notes . ...
Wildflowers

DON'T PICK!
1. COLUMBINE lAquilegia canadensis) 1' to 2'. Mecca of
ruby-throated hunningbirds. On rocky hillsides and bordering
wooded glens ; also in sunny meadows. Acid to neutral soil.
2. JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT 1' to 2'. Same family as calla lily .
Blooms in spring woodlands. Acid soil.
3. MOCCASIN FLOWER, Pink Lady's Slipper (Cypripedium
acaule) 8" to 12" Deeply veined. Flourishes in high and low
woodlands, especially beneath oak and pine. Moderately acid soil.
4. BLOODROOT (Sanguinaria canadensis) 4" to 10". Bud
emerges from clylinder-shaped deeply lobed leaf. Petals open in
morning, erect at noon, folded at dusk. Stem and root juice r ed,
flower white.
5. DUTCHMAN'S-BREECHES (Dicentra cucullaria) 5" to
9". Grows in high and low moist, stony woodlands, New England
to South Carolina, to Dakotas and Nebraska. Acid to neutral soil.
6. WAKE-ROBIN (Trillium erectum) 7" to 15". Three
petaled, deep red blossom, leaves in threes. Along walls and
stream banks and in high shaded woodlands of rich soil.
7. LARGE-FLOWERED TRILLIUM (Trillium) 7" to 18".
Grows on upright stem, Blossoms are three petaled, white, 1" to
4" across, turn pink as flower ages. Grows in forests in acid
humus-rich soil.
8. HEPATICA, liverleaf (Hepatica triloba) 3" to 5". Among
the earliest flowers of s, ..1g; blooms come well a head of leaves.
Appears in high and low woodlands in slightly acid to neutral soil.
IF YOU "DO PICK" list seems scimpy, wait just a little
while. There are lots of summer and Fall pickables.
There is one circumstance under which you can pick or dig to
your heart's content of any forbidden variety. Find where a new
road is being put through or where they are preparing to bulldoze
the land for more housing. Such areas need your help. By digging
up the wild material you are doing a great favor to the cause of
conservation as well as to the plants. If you do not save these
rarer plants, they may well be lost.
Certain wild flowers propagate easily from seed gathered in
late summer or fall. Among the easiest are Bloodroot, California
poppy, Columbine, all lilies, milkweed, devils paintbrush, datura,
and butterfly weed. And of course you can always experiment
further with any that you are drawn to. Whether you grow them
from seed or transplant, however, observe most carefully where
and how they thrive in nature. Note in detail the slope of the land,
type of soil, what kinds of trees are nearby, rocks or no, sun or
shade. Then approximate similar conditions on your own place
and you can't miss.
(Ref: Woman's Day - May 1970.)

Need a
real estate agent
who knows
a lot?

Installation Set
Installation of Thea Court on
April 14 at the York Masonic
Temple, Columbus, was announced by Mrs. Jean Moore at
Thursday night's meeting of the
Twin City Shrinettes at the
Pomeroy Flower Shop.
Mrs. Moore also announced
the spring ceremonial on May 1
at the Masonic Tern pie,
Columbus, and arrangements
were made to present$50 for the
Shr ine Crippled Children's
Hospitals and $50 to the Burns
Institute at that time.
A silent auction was held at
the conclusion of the meeting.
Spring flowers at the Flower
Shop were viewed and
arrangements were made. A
question and answer period on
techniques of arranging was
held . Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Vera Van Meter .

A brief memorial service for
Mrs. Edith Russell was conducted by Mrs. Bernice Winn
when the Past Matrons of
Evangeline Chapter met
Tuesday night at the temple.
Mrs. Winn read two poems
"What God Hath Promised"
and "He Giveth More." Mrs.
John Lyons gave devotions
using a meditation from "The
Secret Place," scripture from
Acts 2:1-4, and prayer.
Mrs . Bessie King, new
president, announced the in-

Pages

WEDNESDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
special assembly, Wednesday, 7
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Purpose to confer the royal
master degree and the select
master degree on several
candidates.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Victor Hysell.
Mrs. Milton Houdashelt to be
the assis ting hostess.
THURSDAY
EVANGELJNE CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern Star ,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Masonic Temple, Middlepor t.

New uniforms for the
Southern Local High School
marching band are expected
this week, it was reported
during a meeting of the Band
Boosters recently.
Mrs. Connie Romine, band
director, announced a spring
concert with a special
presentation at that time of the
new uniforms. Mrs. Virginia

Class Welcomed
1 New Member
Mrs. Dale Davis was
welcomed as a new member of
the Willing Workers Class of the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church Thursday night at the
home of :'drs. James Will.
Mrs. Ed Bowen, president,
gave devotions using, "Faith,
Hope, and Love" as her theme
from Romans 5, Psalm 16, and
~1att. 22. Meditations were read
by Mrs William Airson on
faith; Mrs. Davis on hope, and
Mrs. Thomas Bentz on love.
Mrs. Bowen concluded with the
comment that we find peace
with God through strong faith,
complete hope and a consecrated love.
The group sang, Near the
Cross and Mrs. Eldon Weeks
gave prayer.
A donation was made to the
George Thompson fund. It was
noted that the sale. of cards,
knives and dish cloths is still
being held. The wonder box
brought by Miss Frieda Leiving
was won by Mrs . Bowen ..
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Will to those named and
Mrs. Beulah Utterbach, Mrs.
Carl Moore, Mrs. Ben Buck,
Patty Edward , Brenda, Becky,
Beverly and Brian Will.

NEW
FURNITURE
Ba lance On
Co nv enient
Terr:ns.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

SALE DAYS SET
A rummage sale will be held
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
at the Fry building in Middleport by the Heath United
Methodist Chur ch. The sale will
begin at 9 a.m. each morning.

Burke, president, and the
uniform committee thanked
those who workdd and donated
toward the uniform project.
Mrs. Burke reported that the
square dance held at Royal Oak
Park was a success. Plan were
made for the band to attend a
young people's concert in
Athens on April 6. Buses will
transport the band members.
Mrs. Romine noted that a
band inventory has been made
and copies provided to the
school office, the insurance
company, and the Boosters.
Try-outs for majorettes was
announced for May 11. Bill
Beegle thanked the group for
the recent banquet which was
served smorgasbord. The next
meeting was set for April 27 at
the high school. The secretary's
report was given by Mrs.
Virginia Fisher, and Mrs. Erma
Norris
presented
the
treasurer's report.

mits. Some of them will be
planted on the school ground,
others at the civic park on Main
St.
Each child was provided with
a carton filled with potting soil
and given a packet of seeds.
After planting, they were
watered and placed on the
classroom window sill to germinate. Each child also was
given two packets of flower
seeds to take home and use in a
flower bed. Mrs. Thelm a
Campbell, classroom teacher ,
will assist the children in daily
cleanup of the school play
grounds to further the program.
The garden club has provided a
litter basket at the school.
During each therapy session
the youngsters make at least
one item which they· can take
home . They used foam trays as
a frame and background for
pictures they made using a wide
variety of dried plant materials.
Mrs. Joe Bolin, pointed out to
them some of the lines of floral
design which were most effective in designing the pictures. Each child was allowed to
select whatever materials and
color schemes they desired.
They then placed the materials
in the design they had chosen
and glued each piece into place
(more than 20 varieties of dried
materials were supplied by club
members for the children to
use) .
Paper clips were then secured
to the back as hangers. Some of
the n. \terials used were ironweed, ornamental grasses,
wheat, celosia, cattails, star
flowers, strawflowers, seaoats,
goldenrod, etc.
Name tags in the design of an
Easter bunny fashioned from
construction paper and milkweed pods for ears wer e worn

by the students. Each child was
given an Easter basket made
from a detergent bottle and
decorated with ~ rmanent
flowers, filled with Eas ter
candies and bubble gum as
favors . These were made by
Mrs. Homer Parker, who &lt;:.!so
donated Kool-Aid . Easter bunny
cookies, cups and napkins were
provided by Mrs. Larry Edwards. Pictures were taken
dur ing the work session .
The potting soil, flower seeds,
trays and cardboard for poster s
were provided by the club. The
day's activities were planned by
Mrs. James Carpenter and Mrs.
F r ed Williams on, gar den
ther apy co-chairmen. Members
carrying out the pr ogram were
Mrs. Harold Wolfe, Mrs . Joe
Bolin, Mrs. Larry Edwards and
Mrs. Homer Parker.
The group will have a special
Arbor Day observance during
the April therapy session. Plans
are to plant flowering cr abapple
trees, buckeyes, a nd pine
seedlings. Guests were Beth
and Darien Wolfe.

WATCH YOUR

$$$GROW
as you add to y our savings
each we ek a t Meigs Co.
Branch of the At he ns Co.
Saving s &amp; Loan . . .

Cu rren t
Passbook
Rate. Save by the 1Oth,
earn fro m the lst.

Meigs Co. Branch

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5
Use"Our Free Par king L ot

@
Meigs County Bran ch of The
Athen s County Savi ngs &amp;
Loan Co.
296 Sec ond St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd , Po meroy

GLORIA BUCK
BATON CLASSES STARTING
IN POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT

Week of March 29th.
Ph. 992-7326
GWRIA'S INSTRUCTORS IN BATON HAVE BEEN:
eHer 1st teacher was her aunt - Jeanne (Matson) Blair
Miss Parade of the Hilss 1952 &amp; Ohio Sta te Fa ir Baton Twirling Winner
1951.

Sarah
Bowman
was
welcomed following a long
absence due to illness. Mrs.
King and Mrs. Evelyn Lewis
served refreshments from a
table centered with jonquils.
Favors were pill boxes,
shampoo, datebooks, and pens.

eMr. Walter McShea - World's Champion at World's Fair
eGail Fuchs • Grand National U.S.T.A. Champion 1 and 2 Batons

Circus elephants are always females, as bull elephants are apt to become
dangerous at certain seasons
of the year.

el968 National Teachers Clinic - Milwaukee , Wisconsin

Dr. T. J. Bradshaw

3 ROOMS

Posters
RUTLAND
promoting the cleanup program
here were made and flower
seeds planted during the garden
therapy session conducted by
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners with the 13 special
education students at Rutland
Elementary School Thursday.
The class will have an active
role in the special observance to
be held April 5-10.
The students each made a
poster using their own wording
urging every one to participate
in the cleanup-paintup- plantup
week activities. These posters
will be displayed in business
places of Rutland in cooperation
with the club's civic project,
"Let's Keep Rutland A
Bloomin' Clean Town."
In addition, each child has
planted flower seeds in an egg
carton greenhouse to raise
plants to be transplanted into
beds as soon as weather per -

Uniforms Coming Soon

specti on of Bethel 62, In- • - - - - - - - - - -. .
ternational Order of Jobs
Daughters, on Saturday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Helen Reynolds and Mrs.
Optometrist
Beulah Hayes were named as
MOVING OFFICE
hostesses for the April 30
meeting of the past matrons. A
TO
Stanley party was disc ussed but
no date was set.
181 N. SECOND
Mrs. Ann Thomas and Mrs.
Etta Mae North were named
MIDDLEPORT
clJairmen for refreshments to
be served at the May meeting of
Ph. 992-3279
Evangeline Chapter.

S35.00 Down-

Yellow

MEIGS County NFO meeting,
8 p.m. Monday at Chester
Grange Hall.

Brief Memorial Service Held

$349.95

WE S ERVICE WIIJ\T WF.

Ridenour's

IS

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$25 .00 Off Waste Disposer
when you purchase dish.
washer. Offer good thru
March 31.

DISPOSER

Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Marion Francis of Den 3
MONDAY
.
assisted by Mrs. Bertha Knapp,
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
her assistant den m\)ther, and Lions Club directors meeting,
Dean Spencer of Boy Scout 7:30p.m. Monday at Columbia
Troop 245.
Gas Office, Middleport.
SOUTHERN
ATHLETIC
Boosters, Monday, 7:30p.m. at
high school in Racine.

Approximately 140 persons Eastern Star chapters attended
representing 17 Order of the the recent inspec tion of
Evangel ine Chapter 172 at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Wilma Styer, deputy
grand matron, was the inspecting officer. Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Wilcox, worthy
matron and worthy patron,
presented the disti nguished
guests including Mrs. Styer,
Mrs. Roberta K. Mindling of
Beverly, past grand matron;
Mrs. Wimfred Hooper, ·grand
A weekly feature of Meigs
representative to British
County Garden Club members.
Columbia; Mrs. Catherine
Shenefield, grand representative to Virginia; Ben Philson
of Racine, district deputy grand
BY MRS. ROGER MORGAN
master; Tom Edwards, Knight
Middleport Amateur Gardeners
of the York Cross of Honor, and
Before the last frost is scarcely melted, the earliest wild- the worthy matrons and worthy
flowers unfold, among them hepaticas, violets, and bloodroot. patrons of visiting chapters,
Species after species continue the parade until well after the first and the past matrons and past
frosts when the asters bloom, but this is spring and we'll confine patrons of Evangeline Chapter.
Initiatory work for two
ourselves to spring flowers.
What fine indoor bouquets many varieties of wild flowers candidates was exemplified .
make! Spring's first small bunch of violets weaves a spell of Glenn Evans sang "Some
enchantment, and who can resist the magic of a miniature vase of Golden Daybreak."
Chapters represented were
forget-me-nots on a bedside table? Never reject the idea of
picking wild flowers, but first find out which you are permitted to Pomeroy, Belpre, Beverly,
gather. Some of the "don't picks" are rare, others shatter too Harrison ville, Wilkesville,
Marietta, Cheshire, Athens,
easily.
New Marshfield, Albany,
Racine, New Matamoras,
DO PICK!
Glouster, Macksburg, Stock1. FORGET-ME-NOT (myosotis scorpioides) 6" to 15".
port, and Wellston.
Grows in shallow, partly shaded streams as well as along banks;
Guests were registered by
found in drifts in alpine meadows. Spring, summer, fall.
Mrs. Marie Hawkins and Miss
2. BLUETS (Houstonia caerules) 3" to 6". Thrive in sunny Kathy King. Pin-ons were green
meadows near running water or ponds. Spring and Summer.
shamrocks. Serving on the
3. COMMON VIOLET (Viola cucullata) 3" to 7". Found along
refreshment committee were
roadsides, in fields and woodlands. Heart-shaped leaves are Mrs. Arlene Davis, Mrs. Eloise
toothed.
Wilson, and Mrs . Naomi King.
4. WOOD BETONY, Lousewort (Pedicularis canadensis) 6" Mrs. Linda Mayer, Mrs.
to 10". Bunched yellow blossom, fernlike leaves. Spring and Jacqueline Gaddis, and Mrs.
summer in sunny damp meadows, open dry woods. Acid to Farie Kennedy decorated the
neutral soil.
tables in the St. Patrick's Day
5. LARGE BLUE FLAG (iris versicolor) 16" to 30". Grows in theme using centerpieces with
shamrock containers. Yellow
sunny wet grasslands, flowering in spring and summer.
6. RED CLOVER (Trifolium pratense) 18" to 24". Sweet- and green flowers were on the
scented, especially at dusk. Found along roadsides, in sunny serving table.
meadows, spring and summer.

IN WHITE • AVOCADO
• COLONIALTONE

KitchenAid
FOOD
WASTE ~ @-

circle.

1963

el965 National Teachers Clinic - Miami, Florida
Inst ructors we re: Fred Miller &amp; Mar le ne Miller, tea cher of National
Champion " Blackhawks" Corps. Mar le ne is di recto r of the Mi ss America
of Baton Pagea nt. Bill Alle n - famous t eacher from Flo r ida. Bobby
Cour tright - famou s twi r ler fr om Cle veland - now of Flo rida.

Ron Kopas f rom Canada- known for Da nce &amp; Twi r l.
Ken Sasser- for m er ly with Ba lle t Russe in Ne w York, now fa m ous baton
instructor .
Bud Skriva n - Corps.
Arylein We i I - Na ti ona l St r utting Cham pio n U. S. T. A.
Past Commande r of the All Am e r ica n Judges
Maynard Ve lier Associa tion.

el970 Bahamas ITII
Gloria is a Char ter me mber of the internationa l Twir ling Teach ers Insti tute.
Instructors Were:
J a n nie Wa d s worth - First N. B. T.A. Nationa l Strutting Cha mpion .
M1ss Ma jorette of Am erica 1954.
Fred Mill e r - tauah t manv n&lt;'l tion;~ l c ham pions .
Brooks Go ing - " Outasite " Tricks.
Ken Sasser - Fa mous Twir ler

eGioria's Baton Corps and Dance-Twirl Teams the "Gio-Ettes"
are well known throughout the area.
• Dance Instructors:
Mr . Pavlish a nd Mr. Richar d Me Donald, for m er Po m eroy teachers .
He le n Sc hraeder - Charleston, W. Va.
Stel la Bec ker - Columbus , Oh io
Ken t Sta te Uni versity Dance ins tr uctors
Ohi o Universi ty - Co llege of Fi ne Ar ts - Da nce Instr uctors .

Gloria is a Dance Major at Ohio University

�6- The Daily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomer oy, 0., March 29, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds •
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
Fairview
Business
~erv:ice~
OF

News Notes

· For Sale

- WANT AD
INFORMAT ION
DEADLIN ES
5 P.M. Day Befor e Publication
Noonda y De adl ine 9 a.m.
Can cel lat ion &amp; Corrections
Wi ll be accepted un til 9 a. m . f
Da y of Pub Iicat ion
REGULA T IONS
The Publ is her reserves the
rig ht to edit or reject a ny ads
d eeme d
obj ecti onal.
The
publ isher w ill not be responsible
for mor e tha n one incorrect
inserti on .
RAT E S
For Wa nt Ad Service
~ cents per Word one insertion
Mini mum C'harge.75(.
12 cents per wor d three .
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word s(x con·
secutive insertions.
25 Per cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days
CA R D OF T HAN KS
&amp; OBIT UAR Y
$1.50 for 50 word· minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLI ND AD S
Additiona I 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFF ICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

Motor Co.

QUALITY

HANNAH'S husband Hector
hates hard work so he cleans
the rugs with Blue Lustre.
Rent electric shampooer, $1
Baker Furni lure, Middleport.
3·24 6lc

.

---- - - - - - - - ,

AT TENTION PROSP ECTI V E
MOBI LE HOME BU YE R S!

EXPERIENCED

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
18 FOOT fiberglas boat, 90 H. P.
40 Minutes of Your Time Ca n Well Be the Most Profita b le
1N7CHEVRO LET2TON
n 3~
Evinrude motor, tandem
Calling on Mrs. Kate Rowe
Time You Ever Spent.
Cab
Chassis,
102"
Cab
to
Axle,
new
825x20
tires,
2.speed
trailer.
Excellent
mechanical
and Ada Sunday were Mrs.Anna
ax le, clean cab, 292 cu. in. 6 cyl. eng.
condition. Cost over $5,000
Drive 36 Mi les and Sa ve A Bund le!
Wines, daughters, Karen and
new. $1,000 and it's yours.
Phone
949
3913.
~ ALSO
Jackie, Sandra Wolfe of Racine,
1968 FOR D
$1895
.. CHAM PION
-1CWI NSOR
3-23 6tp
' i 2 Ton 8' Styleside Pickup, V 8 engine, std. trans., custom
DOUBLE~ WI DES
~VA N DYKE
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells,
« BU DDY
cab. R-step bumper, chrome int. bumper, radio, white &amp;
Mandy and Amy of Syracuse.
12
FOOT
meal
case,
10
foot
SEE TOM CROW, G UY SHU LE R OR BOB CROW
red finish. Good tires.
vegetable case. Also, 1959
Other callers in the Rowe home
Chevrolet
pickup.
Rebuilt
during the week were Mrs.
PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
1966 CHEVRO LET
$1 695
motor. Inquire M and G Food
2 Ton Cab-Chassis, 84"-cab to axle. Good 825x70 tires, 2Donald Hupp and Mrs. Carroll
From the Largest Truck or
Market, Rt. 7, three miles
MEMOR IAL BRIDGE T RAFF IC CIRCLE
speed rear axle, clean cab, 292·cu. in. 6 cyl. engine.
south of Middleport.
Bull dozer Radiator to the
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.
White.
3·28-3tp , Smallest Heater Core.
Edward Laudermilt, son-inlaw of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
For Sale or Trade
Donohue, was injured at work
Roofing &amp; Carpenter
1958
GMC wide bed pickup truck
Pomeroy
Ph . 992·2143
and has returned home after
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
for sale or trade for cattle.
Work
being a patient at Veterans
John Hayes, phone Chester
-NlMEROY, OHIO
Memorial Hospital.
985 3515.
Spouting, Roof
3 28-3tp
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Painting
Mrs. Russell Roush were Mr.
Notice
For Rent
Notice
and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton,
NE W &amp; OLD WORK
Auto
Sales
Mrs. Edna Roush and Mrs. SKATE·A-WAY, April Fool HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327. UNFURNISHED 3 - room 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
All Ma kes &amp; Mode ls
- G UA RANTEEDParty, Wednesday, March 31.
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
2-23-30tc
All weather Roofing &amp;
Also
Gladys Shields of Racine, Mr.
hardtop, power steering,
Races, prizes, balloons. Open
Phone 992-2094
1-31-lfc
Construction Co .
&amp;
Tapes
Stereos
power
brakes,
air,
18,000
Wednesday, Friday and ATTENTION ladies! Wou ld you
and Mrs. Don Russell of
DE XTER, 0 . 45726
675-3482
or
773-5196
miles.
Excellent
conditton.
P HONE 742-3945
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. to 10:30
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Pomeroy. Mrs. Alice Russell of
like to try a wig on in the TWO OR three pedroom home,
Phone 992-2288.
p.m.
Private
parties
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
privacy of your own home?
Insured-Experienced
Pomeroy call:-d on the Roushes
11-10-tfs,
available Monday, Tuesday
Adults only. Phone 992-5133.
606 E. Maln, Pom eroy, 0 .
Work Guar a nteed
You can. Just call us. We a lso
and
Thursday
nights;
3-2-lfc 1968 GMC 112-lon pickup, 23,000
on Thursday evening.
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Saturday and Sunday p.m.
miles, new tires, camper top,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
Koscot,
of
course.
Phone 985 3929 or 985-3585.
good condition. Phone 992·
and
Distributors, Brown's. Phone TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
and Bobby of Long Bottom
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller TREE·TRIMMING
J. Durbin- C. In score
3-28-3tc
•12·mile north of new Meigs
2805, Eldon Walburn.
remova l. Fully insured. Free
Middleport 992-5113.
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph.
Se
rvice
Personne
l
called on Mr. and Mrs. Joe
3-28-tfc
High School. Phone 992-2941.
estimates. Call after 5 p.m .,
12-31-tfc
662-3035.
3-5-lfc
collect
Dick
Hayman ,
Manuel, Tim and Sid, Sunday RUBBER STAMPS made to
2-12·tfC
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
1964 CHEVELLE convertible.
Coolville 667 3041 or Tom
afternoon. Mrs. Alva Hudson
SE
PTIC
TANKS
CLEANED.
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
FURN ISHED and unfurnished
Good condition, B-cylinder,
Hayman, Chester 985-3509.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
a1·d Mrs. Katie Young of
apartments. Close to school.
au tomatic
transmission. "Ditching. Electric sewer
3 28-30tp
Ohio.
HERE
IT
lSI
Complete
Service
cleaning."
Reasonable
rates.
2-12-90tc
Phone 992-5434.
Phone 992-3917.
Minersville
Route
spent
Phone 949-3821
Phone
John
Russell,
10
18-tfc
3-28-6tp
PAPER·HANG ING, painting, •
Saturday evening with the
Racine, Ohio
Gall ipolis 446-4782.
COINS. Bought, sold, traded.
plastering, dry wa ll . Arthur
Critt
Bradford
4-7-lfc
Manuels.
Market
and
M
AND
G
Food
Complete line of supplies,
Musser . Phone 992-3630.
5-1-tfc
equipment.
Also,
3-room
a lbums, price guides. Open
3-28·30tp
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Michael
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
furnished apartment, utilities Real Estate For Sale
daily 5 p.m . to9 p.m. and all
and children called on Mr. and
ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
HOUSE,
1640
Lincoln
Hts.,
del
ivered
right
to
your
paid.
Inquire
at
M
and
G
Food
ct'ay Saturday. Freasure Chest
hold·up. Southeastern SEWING MACH INES. Repair
Mrs. Russell Roush Monday
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
project. Fast and easy. Free
Market, Rl 7, three miles
Coins, U.S. Rt. 33 South
service , all makes. 992-2284
Security
Systems. Call Ray
10-25-tfc
estimates.
Phone
992-3284.
south
of
Middleport.
evening.
(Pomeroy Road). Athens,
Olde Fashioned
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Adams 247·2055 Mike
Goeglein
Ready-Mix
Co.,
3-28-3tp
Ohio. 10 per cent off on any
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
Authorized Singer Sales and
O'Brien 247-2113.
44
ACRE
farm,
Salem
TownMiddleport.
Ohio.
SPRING
supplies with this ad.
3-17-tfc
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
returned home Friday from a
6-30-tfc
ship. Phone 742-4459.
3 ROOM, bath, furnished or
3-26-6tc
3-29-tfc
3-73 6tp
vacation in Florida. Mr. Sayre
OPEN HOUSE
semi · turn ished
apartment.
PAINTING,
roofing
and
O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
Service.
Also,
2
room,
bath,
furnished
PALMattended baseball games in MADAM MARY APRIL 1-2-3
spouting service. Richard
Commercial, residential and
apartment. Mulberry Ave., 200 ACRE farm near Mt. Union
ISTRY.
Reader
and
Insurance
Tampa, Clearwater, Winter
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
industrial wiring. Phone 247Pomeroy.
References
Lots of old fashioned
Church, Carpenter. Available
advisor. Tells past. present
3-11-30tc
Haven, Pinellas, Park. The
required . Phone 992-6698.
2113.
soon George Caldwell, Rt. 4,
barg.ains, money-saving sale
and future. I will tell you just
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
3·12·1fC
3-23-tfc
Pomeroy, Ohio.
spec1als ...
Sayres also visited Mrs. Donald
what you want to know about
cancelled?
Los t
your
3-18-12tp
FUN-PRI
ZES
friends and enemies. I give
operator's license? Call 992Payne at Pinellas Park and Mr.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
FURNISHED apartment. five
never failing advice on all
REFRES HME NTS
LEGAL NOTICE
2966.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
and Mrs. Don Herbert Powell at
rooms, bath, Chester, phone
matters of
Iife.
707 1/2
6-15-tfc
EVERYONE INVITED
Complete
front
end
service,
NOTICE
OF
985-3350.
Washington
Blvd.,
Belpre,
Bradenton, Fla.
APPOINTMENT
tune up and brake service.
3-26-lfc
Ohio.
Look
for
sign.
For
Pomeroy Landmark
Mrs. Lloyd Nice returned
Case No. 20473
Wheels
balanced
elecappointment call 423·9153.
home Saturday from Veterans
tronically.
All
work Estate of Lewis E. Trip lett
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
TWO
BEDROOM trailer,
3-24-10tc
.
guaranteed.
Reasonable Deceased
Syracuse, Ohio. Elderly
Memorial Hospital.
Notice is hereby g iven that
LEGAL NOTICE
rates.
992-3213.
REVIVAL
meeting
at
the
couple
or
elderly
people.
No
Frankl
in
Triplett
of Midd leport
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
3-17·30tc has
been duly appointed
Church of God at Chester WILL PICK up merchandise
children. Call after 5 p.m.
NOTICE ON FILI NG
and Charles of Letart, W. Va.,
and take to auction on a
Executor of the Estate of Lewis
Broker
OF INVENTORY
starting March 28 at 7:30p.m.
phone 992-5249.
BACK HOE and end-loader E . Tr iplett , deceased, late of
percentage basis. Call Jim
AND APPRA ISEMENT
A
3-28-31c
110 Mechanic St.
spentSundaywith Mr. and Mrs.
with Evangelist Emma Jean
Midd
leport
,
Me
igs
County
,
Tile
State
of Ohio, Mei gs .,.
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
work. Septic tanks installed.
Po me roy, Ohio
Perry from
Cincinnati.
Charles Lawson.
Oh
io.
County.
Probate
court.
George &lt;Bill) Pullins. Phone
Phone 742·4461.
Special singing and prayer for
Credi tors are required to file
To the Adm inistrator of the
Cindy Lawson spent Saturday
RACI N E
RUR AL
4
9-23-tfc Pets For Sale
992-2478.
the sick each evening. Come
c laims with said fiduciary estate ; to such of the following
bedrooms,
bath,
nice
kitchen
11-29-lfc their
night with Miss Hope Bird at
and bring a friend.
with
in
tour
months.
REGISTERED Toy Fox Terrier
as
are res idents of the State of
with oven and cook units. Full
WHEN? Each
3-25-6tc AUCTION Dated t his 18th day of Marc h Oh io, viz : the surviv ing
puppies Phone 742-5625 or
Antiquity.
basement . Furnace. Carport. HARRISON ' S TV AND AN- 1971.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Whert?
spouse, the next of kin, the
contact Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Mrs.
David Sayre
$8,300.00.
TENNA
SERVICE
.
Phone
Hayman's
Auction
House,
benef iciaries under t he will;
REVIVAL Mt. Hermon U. B.
Rutland .
John C. Bacon and to the attorney or attorneys.
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
edto
992 2522.
Dorothy Glenn
Church March 26 to April 4.
3 ' 23· 6tc Ml DOLE PORT -- 4 bedrooms,
Acting Probate Judge represent ing any of the
6
lO·Ifc.
Pomeroy
Middleport
Bythe
Rev
Carey
Knittle,
of said County aforementioned persons:
Farrt orn Frid:.
bath , gas heat. Large living,
pass.
v ... rgelist, Cincmnati. Rev.
Floyd E. Well , Deceased ,
's
side porch and garage. NE IGLER Construction. For
hosp1 taliza tion
2·7-lfc
For
Sale
(3 ) 22, 29, (4 ) 5, 3tc
Freeland
Norris,
song
Pomeroy , Oh io, RD . 3 , No.
Asking $10,500.00.
building or remodeling your
daughter, Pegg
evangelist. Stories for the
20463.
21
INCH
Motorola
television.
home, Call Guy Neigler ,
You are he r eby notified that
Mrs. Ralph S m and Mrs.
children. Everyone welcome . WILL GIVE piano and organ
Phone 992·3293.
2 HOUSES - 2 bedrooms, bath ,
NOTICE OF
lessons in my home. Phone
Racine, Ohio.
the
Inventory
and
Ap7:30p
.m
.
each
evening
.
3-25-6tp
David Shain of Antiquity spent
gas
heat.
Rented.
Second
:
3
APPO
INTMENT
7·31-tfc
pr
aisement of t he estate of the
992-3666.
3-23-10tc
case
No.
20469
bedrooms, gas furnace , full
aforeme nt ioned , deceased , late
8-16-lfc
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Estate of Sadie Wolfe Deceased . of said county , was filed in this
COAL, limestone. Excelsio:
basement. 3 car garages. 6 RALPH'S
CAR PET
Mrs. Herbert Sayre. Paul Sayre OVEN
FRESH
bakery
Notice
is
hereby
given
that
Sa id Inventory and
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
acres only $18,000.00.
Upholstery Cleaning Service. Frank Gilkey Sr . of RD 4, Court.
products. Jimmy's Pastry W
Appraisement will be for
of Columbus, and Brooks Sayre
anted
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Free
estimates.
Phone
Jackson , has been duly ap· hearing before th is Court on the
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., Mid4-9-tfc HARRI SONV ILLE- 4 rooms,
of Syracuse spent Saturday
Gallipolis 446-0294.
pointed Executor of the Estate 7th day of Apr il, 1971, at 1r.oo "'
I RON I NG to do in my home.
dleport. Phone 992-3555.
half
bath,
cistern
water.
3-12·1fC
of
Sadie Wolfe, deceased , late of o ' clock A.M.
evening with the Sayres.
3-28-30tc
Phone Cheshire 367-7700.
M iddleport , Meigs County ,
Outbuildings. Large level lot.
Any person desiring to file
MODERN WALNUT STEREO
Miss Hope Bird of Antiquity
Ohio .
exceptions thereto must file
$7,500.00.
- radio combination, solid
3-23·1fc
Creditors
are
required
to
fi
le
them at least five days pr ior to
Real Estate For Sale
HE LEN L. TEAFORD,
spent Friday night with Cindy For Rent
state stereo, 4 speed changer ,
their claims with said fiduciary the date set for hearing.
ASSOCIATE
4 speaker sound system. Pay
Lawson.
with
in
four
months.
Given under my hand and
LA ND AN D HOU SES
4 ROOM house and bath in
balan c e $68 .70. Use our
Dated this 17th day of Ma r ch seal of sa id Court , th is 17th day
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
anted To Buy
WA NTED
Hartford, W. Va. Phone 882- W
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
1971.
of March 1971.
Clifton and Ronnie Russell of
Call992-3325
John c . Bacon
2370.
3·25-6tc
John C. Bacon •
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
POMEROY - Liberty Avenue
Acting
Probate
Judge
3-29-3tc
3-26-6tc
Judge and ex-off icio Clerk
Pomeroy spent Wednesday
condition, as long as have not
of said County
H '2 story frame,
2
of sa id Court
been wet. Paying $10 each.
(3) 22, 29 (4) 5, 3tc
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
bedrooms , bath , porch,
MAPLE
STEREO-Radi~
First floor only. Mondays will
24 ACRE farm at Long Bottom,
By Ann B. Watson
basement, NEE DS SOM E
Russell Roush and family. For Sale
combination. Equipped with
be pick-up day . Write, giving
house with 3 bedrooms, dining
Deputy Clerk
REPAIR. $3,500.
Ronnie Russell showed films
AM·
FM
radio,
4
speakers,
(3 ) 22, 29, 2tc
good directions. Witten Piano
room, kitchen , living room,
REGISTERED black male toy
NOTICE
OF
four
speed
automatic
Company,
Box
188,
Sardis,
1'12 baths , enclosed back RU TLA ND- Depot' Street - 1
during the evening.
APPOI NTMENT
poodle. House broken. Call
changer, separate controls.
porch, wall to wall carpeting,
Ohio 43946.
story cement block, ALMOST
Case No. 20471
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Sid
992-3591.
Balance $82.50. Use our
8 20-tfc
aluminum
siding,
awning,
NEW,
3
bedrooms,
bath
,
Estate
of Everette Shoemaker
3·29-6tc
and Tim, and Max Manuel Sr.
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
storm windows and storm
porch, 2 AC R ES. $8,900.
Deceased.
3-25-6tc
IT EM: Tom Hill. He plays
doors, city water. Selling due
spent Saturday afternoon with COIN OPERATED pool table. OLD furniture, dishes, brass
Notice is hereby given that
Geraldine
Grueser of Pome roy,
to ill health. Phone 614-985- PO M EROY
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
Phone 882·2370.
beds, etc. Write M. D. Mil ler,
Butternut
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel at
Ohio,
has
been
duly
appointed
KILL
TERMITES
and
yard
3938.
3-29-3tc
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
Mama Cass. But he pla ys
Avenue - 2 story frame, 3 Adm inistratrix of the Estate of
Racine. Mr. Manuel recently
insects
with
Arab
"You-Do3-26-12tp
992-6271.
bedrooms, bath , porch , Everette Shoemaker , deceased,
Moonlight Serenade an d
9-1-lfc
lt." King Builders Supply
returned home from Holzer
BASEME NT HA S APA R~ late of Pomeroy , Me igs Coun t y,
Andy Williams too. Variety
Company,
Middleport.
REAL
ESTATE
KEY
MENT.
Garden
space, Ohio .
Medical Center.
is t he spice of our music.
2-21-60tc
4
HARRISONVILLE
1962 OR 1963 ·chevrolet s tali on
Creditors are required to file
garage. $10,000.
Mrs. Iva Orr and Mrs. Herbedrooms, bath , garage on
their claims with said fiduc iary
wagon,
standard
transbert Roush attended the County
within four months.
one acre lot. $10,800.00.
mission. Must be in good NEW 1970 Zig - Zag Sewing
TO BUY O R SEL L
Dated this 17th day of
Mac hine in original factory
condi lion. Phone 992·5286.
Union Class meeting at Chester 1 Classified Ads
CALL US
March 1971.
carton . Zig Zag to make HARR ISONVILLE
3
3-28-2tp
I
HENRY CLE LAND
John c. Bacon
Nazarene Church Sunday af- I
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
bedrooms - 2 baths, a story
REA LTO R
I
I
Acting Probate Judge
ternoon .
monograms
,
and
make
fancy
and
half
on
2.8
acre.
$8,750.00.
Office 992-2259
of said County
1
bring you
1
designs with just the twist of a
Residence 992-2568 3-28-6tc
Mr. Robert Varian is visiting
Lost
105
acre
farm,
(3)
22, 29 (4) 5 , 3tc
SNOWVILLE
single
dial.
Left
in
lay
away
extra cash
his nephew Frank Varian at
LOST· child's pet gray striped
and never been used. Wi II sell
3 bedroom house, ful ly carcat wearing a red collar. If
East Liverpool.
I
for
I
for only $47 cash, or credit
peted, bath , forced air fur- CONVENIENT but secluded
seen phone Mrs.
Bob
building lots on T79 at Rock
I
I
terms available. Phone 992nace, built-in kitchen with
St.,
MidHoudashe!t,
High
Springs. Within walking
I
shopping sprees
1
dishwasher and free gas.
5641.
dleport. Phone 992 7088.
distance of Meigs High
3 23-6tc
$20,750.00.
I
I
3-26-3tc
School. a 5 m inute drive from ·
---- - -- - KEY REAL ESTATE
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Ray Doug las, Broker
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
Cleaner complete with at420 W. Union St.
He lp Wanted
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992 ·
tachments, cordwinder and
Phone 592-3414
6887.
paint spray. Used but in like
Athens, Ohio
2-3-tfc
new condition. Pay $34.45
3-26·3tc
cash or budget p lan avai lable.
WANTED
Phone 992·5641.
3-23.6tc VI DANNI E'S MOBIL E HOM ES DANNIE' S MO B I
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson,

Radiator Service

Pomeroy Motor Co.

BLAETTNARS

EXPERT

Wheel Alignment

TELEVISIOr•
REPAIR

$5.55

•

-----------

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

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

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

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

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

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

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

Virgil B.
1.,EAFORD
SR.

- -------

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

Cleland Realty

,-------------l

l

WMP0/1390

l

Wolfpen

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

News, Notes

Alfred
Socia l ,Votes

LOOK

SENTINEL

Otto Johnson, Mrs. Howard
Thoma, Mrs. J. R. Murphy and
Saturday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith were last Mrs. Vere Swartz were Vernon
Tuesday visitors of Mrs. A. J. Swartz and children of
Reuter and Mr. and Mrs. Lovell Hockingport; Mr. and Mrs.
Blake of Charleston, W.Va.
Millard Swartz, local, and their
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and guests, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Life .
family were Sunday visitors of
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell. Henderson received word from
Mr and Mrs. Jack Handley Sgt. David and Mrs . Williams
and family of Lincoln Heights and son of Glenn that they
were Saturday evening visitors would be spending a five-day MATURE woman for com
panion for elder ly lady . Live
of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp leave in Hong Kong, China.
in . Reterences required
Phone Ches ter 985 3301 .
and family.
Word has been received that
3· 17-lfc
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Knapp, Murl Hawk is very ill in the
--Michael and Timmy of University
Hospital
at BARMAID. Apply in person . Hi
Columbus were Friday over- Columbus. Also Pearl Koehler,
Ho Bar, Middlepor1.
3·26·6tc
night guests of Mr. and Mrs. father of Marilyn Robinson, of
Doyle Knapp, Kall, Charles and th1s locality, is ill.
Kevin.
Delbert Yost and sons , For Rent
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Russell and Richard, of Sugar
BEDROOM house, Lincoln
Mrs . Charley Smith and Jo were Grove. visited Genevieve 2 His.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and Guthrie through the weekend.
5127 after 4 p.m .
3·2 1fc
family . Miss Jo Smith returned
Sunday to resume classes at
4 ROOM, bath , unfurnished
Concord College, Athens, W.
house. 1650 Lincoln He ights.
Va . after spnng vacation.
Phone 992·3874.
Mi~s .Jo Smith was Sunday
3·23 ·tfc
Mr. and Mrs . Donald Sayre
aftl'rnoun cCJller of her grandarc visiting with his parents, UNFURNISHED 3 room
pan~nt~, Mr. and Mrs . Harley
apartment in Coats Bldg ..
:\lr . and Mrs ChCJrles Sayre .
.Johnson .
Middleport
Inquire
at
Als&gt;J
v1s1ting \\ere Mr. Charles
Mr . Ch ;;r l t·~ Sayre re turned
apartment 16 or phone 992·
Sayre an d fam il y of ne&lt;H'
3641
I urJlc frcmr hospital Munday
('lll'Sil·l'
·ncc rs rcc: u Pra ti n~.

CARRIER

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

r

UJ

IT'S HER E - Mini -motor home
of the year. Seeing is
believing at Gaul Trailer
Sales , Inc., Chesler, Ohio,
County Road 36. Rentals,
supplies, travel trailers,
campers . Champion , Con tinental. Tag · A-Long and
Skamper.
3-24 7tc

-------

- --------

ALUMINUM car lop boats, 10
12-13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
Kingsbury Road .
3·24·301c
VEGETABL E
PLANTS ,
c abbage, cauliflower,
brocc oli , big boy tomatoes,
brussel spr outs . Also, pansy ,
s napdragon , delphinium .
Midway Markel , W. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·2582 or
992 2565
3-28.3tc
S TRAWBERRY PLANTS ,
ar r iving Monday night.
Varielies , Midland, Sparkle ,
Carskill s and Surec r op
Midway Markel , W. Main St. ,
P omeroy Phone 992 2582 or
992 2565
3 28 31c

~
0

DANNIE'S MOBILE HOMES "'J:
o

POMEROY

J:
UJ

1st In Service- 1st In Vol ume - 1st In Se lect ion
UP TO 12 YEAR TERMS

..J
cQ

~

m
VI

0

:E
VI

UJ

60x l2

z Hillcrest
z

m

Holly Park ,;.
~

2 Bedroom oCl
Now

$7872
VI

UJ

~

0

::J:

UJ

..J

65'x1 2'
Buckingham
By King
Now

$8400

60'xl2'
Hillcrest
3 Be dr oom
Now

~250

W E HAV E BU TC H E R E D PRI CES
All Hom es Are Priced To Se ll Now !
UJ

r
m
J:
0
~

Down payment too high,
Monthly payments

t~

high,

don't own your
own lot. ..

m

Vl

c

)&gt;

z
z

m
Vl

~

0

FREE
FREE
Cl
DANNIE'S
DANDY spreader and freeder .
SET-UP
Double barrel
12 gauge ~ DELIVERY
r
POMEROY
s horgun . Hopkins and Allen &lt;(
m
992 7195
single shot rifle ; 1890 Win - 0 Open 7 Days A Week
chester pump rrfle Phone 247
~
- ~~------------------2161.
, DANNI E'S MOBIL E HOM ES DA NNI E'S MOB IL E

________

NEW HOME

BECAUSE:

SAVE
50x12

If You Haven't
Bought A

DR. MOODY OF

JEMO ASSOCIATES
Can cure your ills! Coniact him
today at . . .
Park &amp; Sycamore Sts.

Middk·port , Ohio

992-7034 or 1-268-1810

'----------------------- ----

I

)

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

EEK AJ'T1) ~..-':EK

BARNEY
I HEERED OF
WRENCHED ANKLES,
ARMS, LEGS, BACKS,
BUT I NEUER
HEERED OF NO
WRENCHED HEADS

LUKEY CAN'T PLAY
CARDS TONIGHT,
SNUFFY-· HE'S GOT
A WRENCHED
HEAD

'IE CAN TAKE MY WORD
FER IT- LUKE'I'S HEAD
IS WRENCHED !!

)~
:rl

W/-{E.RE IS THAT
VOICE: COMI~
!=ROM~

WHO ARc

YOU?

~
I

AH WATCHED '10, MONTH
AFTER "-"'NTH, SLA\/1 N'
m SUPPORT 'YORE LI'L

5EE, 't 'TVLI7 YOU
YOU'17 L.llc:EO ~ASEML.L.

AH KNEW'IO'WASTOO

LO'/AL TO US -AN' TO

FAMBL'I A-TESTII-J' MATTRESSES!!

IF '-IOU fbAVS:

THEM MATTRESSES, TO
TAKE A REST Of..! LESS
AH FO"CEO '10' TO!!

rr

HAL.F A CHANCf~}

BUGS BUNNY

WINNIE WINKLE
®0uRE STILL NOT GOING
W TELL ME WHAT$ 00
HU5H-HU5H ABOUT THIS
DESIGN YOU'RE

IM 50RRY; ,\\OM,
BUT I CANT.

.•• IT'S GONNA BE ON A !AO.Y
WHEN YA DON'T DO YE~

BUT BEFORE

W':" START "I'M
LETTIN' YA
KNOW THAT TH'
NEXT TIME

I PROMIBED
uERRY:::
'MJULDN'T.

WASHIN'!

WE PLAY ...

WORKING

ON?

IF OL! TUNK'S PUTnNG
OUT A. DRAFT CALL.
Y'CAN BET HE'S UP
T'SUMPIN'!

3·:2.5

THE BORN LOSER

OJfZ..iA'/ All1E:RFA'r'
1PuNJA8 KMOWS THAT THE DIFFERENC£

&amp;TWEEH liFE AND DI!ATH LI£'0 IH THE
POWER OP HIS MlGHTY .ARMS ....

6 OOFY0A'I
COKINioL-A.'f'!

0

Ooo

0

BEl~Y THE STOWIN'
i5'TRfASURE, SKIPPER

'"QUEER HAPPENII'I'S
OUT YONDER COULD BE 11111!11'"'---.

'THE EHD Q' XQl,J, Mf: ...
AN' THE 8LOOMIN'

_,"'lllll~.rn...

-~OLD!~--___...,.....,.

Saturday's Cryptoquote: HE WHO SACRIFICES ms CONSCIENCE TO AMBITION BURNS A PICTURE TO OBTAIN
THE ASHES. -CffiNESE PROVERB

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Chess term

DICK TRACY

5. Humoris t
8. D eadly pale
9.Soapbox
f igure
13. So that's
how!
(2wds.)
14. Esprit
de corps
15. Meat c.ut
16. Brown In
the sun
17. Toolbox
18. Purloined
20. Jacob's son
21. June beetle
22. Less risky
23. Administer
to (2 wds.\
25. Put on a
pedes tal
26. Expunge
27. Thrice

BALLOONS,
POPCORN,
C IGARETTES,
COLD BEER -

•

2. Point in
one's favor
3 Puzo's bes t
seller
(2wds.)
4. Watch
5. Oldshoe
occupant
6. Inflexible
7 Paving
substance
10. Execute,
gangland
style
(4wds.)
11. Hardy or
Twist
12. Go
to bed

16. - - Haute,
Indiana
19. Unbound
20. Heavy
with
cargo
22. Silk
fabric
23. Picture
24. Wise
m an
29. Burning
30. Embankment
31. Wield

(~

~l!!IWID~~®r::.#~=..r::
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

Weaterday•• A•ewer

33. English
river
36. Altar
constellation
37. Pnrtuguese
title

I I

(mus.)

.•• IRY A 5UGGESTION

THAT, IF
THEY COM E UP THE STAIR~ THE
PREMIUMS 01'1 THEIR LIFE INSURA NCE ARE GOING
CLIMB OUT

OF SIGHT! -~~!IJII-~:!!ii~

28. Head
29. Closing part
32. Fraulein's
"I"
33. French river
34. "Oedipus

WHILE, ON THE ROAI7 TO

THE HACIEN17A, A RESCUE
PAI&lt;:TY ENCOUNTERS A

5TRANPEC7 MOTORIST.

1971 King Features Syndicate. Inc.)

l~Erf'AlLJ

I vb-., X

WHY THE TURK15H

[J
rk

'l

E5ATH WO~KER5
WENT ON STRII&lt;E.

A
1 ,..::~~ ~~~ wAs A

35. Split
37. Submerge;
38. Fear and
trembling
39. European
river
40. Some
41. Convene

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer. aa
suggested by the above cartoon.

r xxr x J a xu

(Anowen tomorrow)

:-iatrrrdu,··!Jumhlt··: NOTCH
·

AUGUR

VELVET

BOUNCE

An"• •·r: }u31 .~ittinll on " fm r~tool '""'·' Pno"!lh 1&lt;~
Ri•·" thP f" t nr1111 rlri.• - A "HANGOVER"

DOWN
1. Sends

by
post

CAPTAIN EASY
$LOAT HA ~ TAKEN THE MOTOR60..\T

A NP DI?ABLE:D RLJD17'? CABIN CRU I?ER~

•

THEN WE' VE NO
WAY TO GET OFF
THE 17L..AND'.... WE'RE;
TAAPPED H!=RE WITH
"' HAT CRAZY Ki ll ER
ON THE L005E ~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
~E' H~""N'T 1&lt;11.-L..E::D ANYO N E YE T, VIDA, ..

6 L.IT L..I?TEN- D ID YOU TWO TAKE IHAT
FAL..7e FACE AND KNIFE FROM THE
DOCK~

BUT DON'T GET
UP?ET, Mt?S LAI'OY.. .WE'L..L T HINK OF
SOME WAY TO
NA'L "IHE
WE IRDO "!

AX¥DLBAAXR
is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter s imply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used tor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters .
apostrophes. the length and !ormation of the words are nil
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe rent.
A

Crypto~ram

ULMGHCDWXQLM
EQGH
QXG
QUV

FGH

LI

VLLT

RQMUPLX

L I

XPH

HW CXP

ILC
J H M .

~

AM AGAIN ... 511LL.

LOOKING FOR THE ANSWERS!

J H W M G

XPH

CHGLFC'UHG

1-lERE

Quotation

XPH

WM T

KWGX

VQIIL C'T

~

~f,\ ~

~j/

~~~j

.

._ -_ ~--~-·L_~_r~ xj ~\ ~~ ..

�.

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 29 1971

Weekend Grass, Brush Fires.
Keep Area Firemen Alerted

Fat Bids Awaited
By DARRELL MACK
UPI Sports Writer
HOUSTON ( UPI) - Sidney
Wicks, Steve Patterson and
Curtis Rowe-who completed
near perfect collegiate careers
Saturday by winning their third
straight and leading UCLA to
its fifth straight NCAA Championship turned their attention
to today's National Basketball
Association's annual draft.
The talented trio, who paced
UCLA past Villanova 68-62 in
the title game, already have
been drafted by the Texas
Chaparrals of the American
Basketball Association, but
were waiting on the NBA draft
and a possible bonus bidding
war.
"Whoever pays the most will
get me," the 6-7 Rowe said. "I
don't care where I play, just
how much money I get. If the
money were right, I'd play in
Canada."
"I'd be stupid if I didn't wait
and see what the NBA did,"
Wicks said.
The Cleveland Cavaliers indicated an interest in making the
6-8 All-American and two-time
NCAA All-Tournament player
their No. 1 selection. Someone
asked Wicks about 7-2 Artis
G;lmore of Jacksonville signing
a $2.7 million contract with
Kentucky of the ABA.
"I look at that this way,"
Wicks said. "I don't think
Gilmore could have gotten
more than $2.7 million anywhere."
Patterson, a 6-9, 217-pounder,
improved his pro chances by
scoring 29 points, the highest of
his career, in the championship
game. He hit 13 of 18 shots,
many from outside, and that
kind of shooting could make
h1m valuable as a forward in
the pros.
Howard Porter of Villanova,
the most outstanding player in

the NCAA tournament, had to
stgn an affidavit saying he was
not committed to a pro contract
before the final game.
"There is nothing to it,"
Porter said "l haven't signPrl
with any one. I'll go with the
best offer-NBA or ABA. If the
money is not right, I'll go to
graduate school."
Jim McDaniels, who scored
36 points in leading Western
Kentucky to third place with a
77-75 victory over Kansas, was
offered $2.2 million by the
Carolina Cougars of the ABA, a
Louisville paper reported. He
was drafted by Utah, but
Carolina apparently had acquired the rights to him.
The 7-foot McDaniels, who led
all NCAA tournament scorers

Huey Donohew

Dies Saturchy

~···············t
A Thought
t For Today t

i

it Every indtvldual has a it
it place to fill in the world, it
it and he is important in it
some respect, whether he -+c
-+c chooses to be- ~o or not -+c
-+c
-Nathan
y;+horn€'~

!

.. It's* Qui

•

~

~
~~

..

1l

~

..

~

DRIV ·I

! BANKING
it
Fridays Only
-+c
! The Drive- In Window !
-+c
is Open
-+c
t 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. -+c
(Continuously)
!
-+c

..
..
..! FARMERS BANK ~..
i and SAVINGS CO. £
-+c Other Banking Hours 9 to -+c
-+c 3 and s to 7 as usual on -+c
-it Fridays.
-+c

iC

~

!-+c

iC
iC
-+c

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

!

.........................ljr&gt;t(

Huey Donohew, 74, Racine
Route 2, was pronounced dead
upon arrival Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where he was taken by the
Racine E-R squad, after
becoming ill at h1s home.
Surviving are his wife, Ida
Belle, and a brother, Howard,
Racine Rt. 2, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the East
Letart Church with the Rev.
Dale McClurg officiating.
Burial will be in the Letart
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home until
11 a.m. Tuesday when the body
will be taken to the church.

Doris ]ewell
Dies Sunchy
Mrs. Doris E. Jewell, 50,
Columbus, former Vinton
Township resident, died Sunday
at Mt. Carmel Hospital in
Columbus.
Surviving are six sons and
daughters, Wilma F. Frigley,
Westerville; Wanda N. Gordon,
Columbus; Peariie F. Jewell,
Langsv1lle; Raymond F.
Jew ll, Pomeroy; William K.
Je ll,
Georges
AFB,
'ahfor,..Ia, and Manlyn S.
Parker, Waterford; 14 grandchildren, four s1sters, \1rs.
Jessie M. Moore, Columbus;
Mrs. Dorothy Townsend,
Westerville; Mrs . Madaline
Curley, Florida, and Mrs.
Gertie Brooks, Columbus, and
three brothers, Francis Queen,
McConellsville; Worley Queen,
of Sidney, and Marvin Queen, of
Hamden.
Mrs. J ewell was preceded in
death by her parents, Norma
and Edward Queen, and two
brothers, William Queen of
Gallipolis, and Elba Queen of
Columbus.
Funeral services will be held
at the Ewing Funeral Home at 2
p.m. Wednesday with the Rev.
Robert Kuhn officiating. Burial
will be in Miles Cemetery.

IT'S INGELS FOR BEST

CARPETING

BUYS

$399
SQUARE YARD

ROOM SIZE

ECIAL!
9x12 RUG--------- 48.00
12x15 RUG--------·79.00
INGELS FURNITURE
Op~ n

Fn. &amp; Sat. Niqhts

Middleport

Area fire fighters were busy
over the weekend putting out
grass and brush fires.
Several acres burned Sunday
afternoon in the Cheshire area
on land owned by Ohio Power
Company, keeping Middleport
Volunteer Firemen occupied
approximately 2% hours at fires
located near the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railroad tracks. It
was believed the fires were
caused either by children
playing with matches or
combustion from a train which

Emma Eynon

Emma Eynon, 83, Racine
Route 1, died Saturday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
A member of the Keno
Christian Church, Mrs. Eynon
is survived by her husband,
Reed; two sons, Bernard, of
Belfast, Me., and Emil of near
Racine; three daughters, Mrs.
Robert (Wilma) Reiber, of near
Racine; Mrs. Carroll (Wanda)
Neigler, Syracuse; and Mrs.
Ivon (Mar jorie) Watson,
Sterling Heights, Mich.; a
sister, Mrs. Fred (Elizabeth)
Haushalter, Pontiac, Midi.; 11
grandchildren, seven-great
grandchildren, and a number
of nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Denver Hill
officiating. Burial will be in the
Sand Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
any time.
..
~

Stillborn Twin

"

Is Buried Today
Graveside services for
Mathew
William
Jones,
stillborn twin son born to Mr.
and Mrs. Charles D. Jones,
Pomeroy, Friday, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, were held at 2
p.m. today at the Rock Springs
Cemetery.
. . . \:1
Surviving besides the p~ents
are a sister, Mary Elizabeth;
two brothers, Timothy Daniel,
and the yet unnamed other twin
son, all at home, and the
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Holt and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles W. Jones, all of
Pomeroy Officiating at the
graveside services was the Rev.
Amos Tillis.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Charles
Jones, Jr., Pomeroy; Mrs. John
Hamm, Marion, 0.; Mrs. John
McDermitt,
Sr.,
Point
Pleasant;
Mrs.
Darrell
Hawthorne, Long Bottom, 0.;
Mrs. Lottie Wilfong, Point
Pleasant; Malis sa Gardner,
Point Pleasant; Jerry Hickman, Evans; Mrs. Otis Neal,
Leon; Oris Hubbard, Syracuse,
0.; Homer Reed, Theodore
Smith, both Point Pleasant;
Audrey Baker, Leon; Sammy
Bauer, Point Pleasant; Arnold
Blankenship, Letart; Kenna
Randolph, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Robert Payne, Letart; Bobby
Stanley, Gallipolis; Mrs. Paul
Glover, Milton ; Lelah Powell,
New Haven; Mrs. Paul
Bonecutter, Poin t Pleasant;
Mrs. Albert Harris, Gallipolis,
and Clarence Hesson, Point
Pleasant.
DISCHARGES - Shirley
Nibert, Kevin Cole, Everett
Thomas, Carl Barnett, John
Pensis, Ada Harrison, Edward
Ueving, Mrs. Hattie Young,
Edith Dent, Bonnie Francisco,
Mrs. Earl Mayes, Mrs. Emmon
Thomas, Mrs. M. C. Clark.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
March 29-30
Lee Marv in
In
MONTE WALSH
( Technicolor)
Lee Marvin
Jeanne Moreau
Colorcartoon :
Skyscraper (Phantom)
Win Lucky
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

moved through the area prior to Chambers Roads, 12 miles
south of Gallipolis. The blaze
the first blaze.
started on the Arthur E.
Three acres burned in a grass Saunders property and got onto
and brush fire at 3:15 p. m. the Robert Armstrong propert~
Sunday in a field located at the It was caused by the wind which
north end of Mills Village carried sparks from trash being
between Mt. Zion Rd. and Rt. burned in a container.
160. Gallipolis Fire Chief James
A. Northup said the fire was
Vinton volunteer firemen
believed the result of children extinguished a brush fire •
playing with matches. Another Saturday afternoon on the Lou
1.6 acres of grass and brush Jones Rd. three miles from
burned at 2:22p.m. Sunday at Vinton where three acres were
the junction of Teens Run and scorched.

Court to Look into Ohio Law

Died Saturchy

DAR TO MEET
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will meet
at 2 p.m. Friday at the home of
Mrs. Dale Dutton in Middleport.
The Rev. Stanley Plattenburg
will be guest speaker and Mrs.
James Brewington and Miss
Frieda Faehnle the assisting
hostesses.
EXTENDED WEATHER
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wednesday Through Friday
Partly cloudy with a chance
of showers. Highs in the
upper 40s north to the low 60s
south. Lows in the 30s.

501 NYLON

992 2635

with 147 points and made the
All-Tournament Team with
Patterson, Wicks, Porter and
Villanova's Hank Sierniontkowski, said he had not given his
pro career any senous consideration.
"1 don't have any preference
between the leagues," McDaniels said. "I'll go where the
money is. They both pay you to
put the ball in the basket and it
doesn't matter to me whether it
is a brown ball (NBA) or a red,
white and blue one (ABA)."

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Supreme Court agreed today to
examine a wide-ranging attack
on Ohio's election laws.
A special three-judge federal
court in Columbus invalidated
A CIVTI.. WAR MUSKET, an oil lamp over 100 years old,
a school bell from the Mount Gilead one-room school house,
sleigh bells and high shoes were exhibited by Lorra Wisecup,
John Hoffman, Charles Ball, and Jan Betzing, standing, and
Todd Johnson and Cathy Hess, seated, last week on "Pioneer
Day" at Pomeroy Elementary School.

Buff Sees
(Continued from page 1)
Stewart said he and three other officers had gone to the armory to check out a complaint
telephoned in about a disorder
of some "long haired hippies."
A few long-hairs were sitting
quietly on the floor, so, after a
brief vTsit,. Stewart said he and
his contingent left the arena,
without bothering anyone.
"We didn't say anything to
anybody, and they didn't say
anything• to us," Stewart told
UPI.
"Those hippies he speaks of
were junior and senior students
of Clinchfield College of the University of Virginia," Buff said
Sunday. "They were honor students in sociology who came to
learn about black lung ."
"What did he (Stewart) mean
by carrying loaded rifles?" asked Buff. "You would have
thought a raid was taking
place. He's not going to heaven with the stories he's telling.
"The devil will certainly get
h1m.''

BODY FOUND
WARREN, Ohio (UPI)- The
badly charred body of a man,
trussed and shot in the back of
the head, was found in the trunk
of a burned out car here during
the weekend. Police and fire
officials said Sunday they were
without a clue to the man's
identity.
SQUAD CALLED
The Racine E-R squad was
called Sunday at 8:30a.m. toRt.
1, Racine, for Arthur Fletcher,
88, who was suffering back
pains. Mr. Fletcher was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted.
GOES TO TRIAL
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Robert
Brodt, a former police vice
squadsman charged with accepting bribes, goes on trial
today in Franklin County
Common Pleas Court. Brodt
was indicted more than a year
ago on charges of accepting
more than $10,000 in payoffs
from local numbers operators
between 1966 and 1969.

Da Nang
(Continued from page 1)
In the heavy fighting that
lasted for an hour, 12 North
Vietnamese were reported
killed. The Americans called in
helicopters, jet fighters and
artillery to pound the area
surrounding the base, but no
fire was directed on the base
itself during the fighting .
The base was not identified
by name pending notification of
next of kin of those killed and
wounded. However, military
spokesmen said it was an
America! Division base 330
miles northeast of Saigon. The
600 Americans on the base
retained control and the Communists withdrew.
It was the heaviest cost of
American lives in Indochina in
one day since Feb. 24, 1969,
when North Vietnamese troops
killed 36 U.S. Marines and
wounded 97 others in coordinated assaults on two bases near
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ),
U.S. command officers said.
The base was not involved in
the recent incursion into Laos
and 1s 140 miles southeast of
Khe Sanh, headquarters for
American support for the
Laotian operation to cut the Ho
Chi Minh supply trail.

Sleuth, Con1pany Win Award
NEW YORK (UPI}- The
silver anniversary of the
Broadway Theater's annual
Tony Awards Sunday night
brought best play honors to
"Sleuth" by England's Anthony

Nephritis
Hits Hard
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) - H. V.
Holt needs $9,000 right away to
keep two of his children alive.
After that bill is paid, he still
owes his doctor $9,000 and the
hospital another $6,000. And the
chemical used to pump life into
his children costs $360 a month.
Three of Holt's 10 children
have died from nephritis, a rare
hereditary kidney disease. Five
other children are in the age
bracket during which the
disease normally strikes and
twQ of them, Gary, 20, and
Paula, 17, have the disease.
They 'mus( spend 15 hours a
week pumping their blood
through a machine to keep
alive.
An Austin church has started
a fund for Holt, a salesman, and
he is receiving money directly
by mail.
"I can't say I'm optimistic,"
he said Sunday· "I'm $20,000
behind right now and so much
goes out each month. I'm a
bread salesman. I don 't make
that kind of money. It's.all! can
do to keep up with the daily
bills."

Shaffer and best musical
laurels to "Company."
Winners in 19 categories of
nominees were revealed before
an audience of 1,350 in the
Palace Theater during a twohour nationally colorcast program on ABC-TV. They were
decided by secret balloting by
some 450 persons connected
with the stage in one way or
the other.
"Company" easily won the
most Tonys. Harold Prince
received two of the silver
medallions as producer of the
best musical and as best
director of a musical. Stephen

Bidd~~ T•lnrnt,y
Oprn~ rl\u~sday
The 1970 _71 Biddy League
Tournament will open Tuesday
night at the Point Pleasant High
School gym. Ten teams will
be participating.
They are
from Point Pleasant, Mason,
Clifton, West Columbia, Winfield, Hannan and South Western Ohio.
There will be a 50 cents
admis sion for adults and 25
cents admission for children.
Here is the schedule for the
tournament.
TUESDAY :MARCH 30
6:00 South;,.estern Local vs.
Winfield Poore Boys.
6:50 Hannan 49'ers vs. Point
Pleasant Lal{ers.

Sondheim picked up two more
as composer and lyricist,
George Furth scored as the
librettist and Boris Aronson
was honored as best scenic
designer.
Four Tonys were won by
persons connected with the
current revival of the 47-yearold musical, No, No, Nanette.
Helen Gallagher won as best
actress in a musical, Donald
Saddler as choreographer,
Raoul Pene du Bois as costume
designer and Patsy Kelly as
supporting actress.
Honors for players in starring
roles of plays went to Brian
Before for "The School for
Wives" and Maureen Stapleton
of "The Gingerbread Lady."
Hal Linden of "The Rothschilds" was the musical star
winner.
Winners in other categories
were:
Supporting actor, play- Paul
Sand, "Story Theater."
Supporting actress, play- Rae
Allen, "and Miss Reardon
Drinks a Little."
Supporting actor, musicalKeene Curtis, "The Rothschilds."
Director, play- Peter Brook,
"A
Midsummer
Night's
Dream ."
Lighting designer - R. H.
Poindexter, "Story Theater."

numerous statutes on July 29,
1970, but upheld two. It refused
to eliminate the state's election
loyalty oath and the filing requirements for independent candidates .
The cases are part of a continuous effort by the Socialist
Labor Party, the American Civil
Liberties Union and others to
reopen Ohio's election processes
to minority parties and independent candidates.
Independent forces won a
victory in October, 1968, when
the Supreme Court ordered Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace's
name listed on the ballot that
year as the presidential candidate for the American Independent Party.
Former state Attorney General Paul W. Brown appealed
all the parts of the 1970 decision which found state laws unconstitutional. These sections of
the Ohio Code fix definitions of
a political party, specify its
organizational structure and require it to be part of a national
party, among other things.
The lower court construed the
loyalty oath law to mean that
the party is not engaged in an

attempt to overthrow the government by force or violence,
is not knowingly associated with
such a group, and does not
carry on a program of sedition
or treason. Thus interprete.
the statute was found constitutional.
The Socialist Labor Party lost
this point and appealed to the
Supreme Court. The state also
appealed because the panel had
not upheld the law as written.

1

1

Frank Talbert

Dies Saturchy

Frank Talbert, 57, former
Meigs County resident, died
Saturday at the U. S. Naval
Hospital in Charleston, S. C.
Born Sept. 16, 1913, he was the
son of the late Harve and Electa
Montgomery Talbett. He wa.
married to the former Edith
Strong of Meigs County, who
survives, with a brother, Edward, of Cleveland; two sisters,
Mrs. Clara Smith and Mrs.
Elizabeth Hughes, boU, in
Tennessee. Mr. Talbert was a
veteran of World War II.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Stro~g_. 1
and Son Funeral Home iJlllll
Wilkesville with the Rev. John
Bryant officiating. Burial will
~
be in the Standish Cemetery
j
·
Attendance at the Nazarene near Dexter. Friends may call
Sunday School March 21 was 70. at the funeral home any time
Monday evening.
Offering was $12.80.
Mr. and Mrs. Zenith Price of
Florida, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Pr1ce and family of Hamilton Divorce Granted
spent a weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
One divorce has been granted
Price.
and a lawsuit was dismissed in
Mrs. Virgil Price is on the Meigs County common pleas
SICk list.
court.
Rev. and Mrs. Taylor, pastor
Ralph Shain, Racine, was
of the Lower Light Mission, took granted a divorce from Judith
Sunday dinner with Mr. and Shain on charges of gross
Mrs. Clay and attended prayer neglect of duty and extreme
services in the afternoon.
cruelty. The case of Walter E.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Woode King, etal against Harlan
spent Thursday with their Aleshire was dismissed.
•
daughter, Mrs. Willard Heines,
Athens Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Woode
called on Jessie Weber and
Gertrude Warner last week.
Opal Offutt of Athens Rd.,
called on her grandmother,
Jessie Weber, last week.
Mrs. Viola Moon and Mrs.
Freda Miller took dinner with
Mrs. Eloise Hayes and Lenore
There were forty present for
Betzing of Middleport on
Sunday School on March 21.
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ludwick Collection was $16.11.
and two ladies of Westerville · Tammy Smith spent the
took Sunday dinner with his weekend with her grandmother, Mrs. Harry Ludwick parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
and called on her parents, the Smith of Dorcas.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Buckleys, of Reedsville.
The county-wide prayer Johnson and Patrick acservices at the Nazarene companied by Mr. and Mrs.*
Church was well attended Douglas Johnston of Racine,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Farley Johnson and daughter, Connie,
and family of Columbus visited of Hamden, Ohio on a recent
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Sunday.
Mrs. William Perry, Danny
Frost and Billie Jean. They'also
visited her father who is in and Francine of Hollon, Ohio ;
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle, Mr.
Holzer Hospital.
· Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma and and Mrs. George Circle and
two children of Pmeroy spent family, all of New Haven, W.
Sunday evening with his Va., visited Mrs. Mary Circl~
mother, Mrs. Georgie Thoma. during the past week.

Chester East

i

News Notes

Carmel News,

By the Day

Visit Elberfelds 3rd Aoor Furniture Department

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