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                  <text>Homes of the Bend Get Free TV Cable Hookup
J ~

PI'. PLEASANT -Every home in Middleport, Pomeroy and
Mason will be connected for cable television absolutely free and
every family in the three communities will be given a 60-day free
trial on Cable TV, it was announced today.
Paul Crabtree, p':esident of the firm building the TwinVillage
Cable TV Service for the area, announced the new policy in
response to requests by the area communities mayors -Charles
W. Legar of Pomeroy, C. 0. Fisher of Middleport, and Mrs.
,. Charlotte Jenks of Mason.
The "free pre-wiring" is a radical new concept in cable TV
service, Crabtree explained. The first community to receive such
service will be Pt. Pleasant, which his company also is building.
Normally, costs for a cable connection cost the average
homeowner between $5 and $25, and the monthly rental of $5.50 is
payable to the cable company from the time the household is
connected to the cable.
Crabtree told the three mayors that his company is spending
many thousands of dollars and taking some admitted risks in

agreeing to wire every home free and to offer a free trial period,
but he said that he believes enough customers will remain on the
system after they see what cable TV can offer to offset the additional expense and loss of revenue.
He also announced that his company's representatives and
those of the prime contractor on the system, the Jerrold Corp. of
Philadelphia, met today with utility company representatives in
the Middleport- Pomeroy area in a construction conference.
Attending the luncheon with Crabtree at Crow's Restaurant
were TwinVillage manager Richard P. Newell Jr., Jerrold
supervisor Jack Gossett, Fred Morrow of Ohio Power Co., Don
Learch of General Telephone Co., John Welsh of Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric, and other utility company representatives.
PROGRESS REPORTED
Reporting on progress of the system, Crabtree said that
erection of a 285-foot tower to serve the communities is under
way. The tower is situated midway between Pt. Pleasant and the

Mason-Pomeroy Bridge.
Approximately 12 miles of support cable for the 80-mile
system has been strung by the Jerrold Crews, most of it in or near
Pt. Pleasant, which is the first community which the company
will build.
Enough materials are on hand for construction of almost 60
miles of the total system, and Crabtree predicted:
"If we do not have unusually bad weather or run into unforeseen difficulties, we should be able to start operations in Pt.
Pleasant in late March or early April, and in Middleport and
Pomeroy in May or early June."
Regarding the free connection and service for the TwinVillage system, Crabtree elaborated:
"There is absolutely no gimmick or hidden charges in this
offer.
"Any family can accept the free connection and approximately two months of free service without it costing them
one penny.

"They can disconnect at any time during the trial period and
do so with no questions asked and no charges involved.
"The only exceptions are these:
"If a family wants more than one TV set or FM stereo set
connected during the trial period, they will be charged a dollar a
month per set - and a dollar only - FOR THIS ADDITIONAL
SERVICE.
"If a home-owner wants an underground connection or some
other special arrangement, we'll work out a fair price for this
extraordinary cost on a case-by&lt;ase basis.
"If a family moves from one home to another which has been
disconnected during the free trial period, they will not receive
another free connection.
"Beyond that, there are no tricks or restrictions whatever.
We think the people of Pomeroy and Middleport, as well as
Mason, want more television selectivity, particularly from Ohio
stations, and we believe they'll respond favorably if we give them
a chance to see what cable TV can offer."

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The lntere.t. Of The Meig•-Mcuon Area

VOL. XXIII NO. 188

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OH 10

r--N;;:~:::~~~:~~~;-~ 0
Four in

8

common grave

Coco, the queen, ,i s dead
PARIS - GABRIELLE ''COCO" CHANEL, the queen of
haute couture who gave her name and lucky numer to the world's
most famous perfume, died Sunday night in her suite at the Ritz
Hotel. She was 87.
A legend for decades, she was active until the end. During the
past few weeks she had been busy preparing for her spring
showing, one of the major events of the fashion season.

Detailed talks in Tel-Aviv
PREMIER GOLDA MEIR AND FOREIGN Minister Abba
Eban have given U.N. mediator Gunnar V. Jarring Israel's most
detailed proposals for peace in the Middle East, diplomatic
sources in Jerusalem said today.
Jarring arrived in New York Sunday after a 48-hour visit to
Israel, telling newsmen at Kennedy International Airport "We
have had very interesting and useful talks." Jarring would not
disclose the substance of the talks but diplomatic sources in
Jerusalem said Mrs. Keir and Eban made proposals "far more
detailed than ever before."

Elder first west coaster to win
RIVERSIDE, CALIF. -RAY ELDER CARRIED off a check
for $19,165 today as the first West Coast NASCAR driver to capture the $100,000 Motor Trend Riverside 500 Grand National stock
car race. Elder, a farmer from Caruthers, Calif., who finances his
own racing ventures, quipped: "I owe most of it to the bank."
The 28-.tear-old Elder drove his 1970 Dodge to a 10.5-second
victory over Bobby Allison of Huestown, Ala. Sunday. The winner
averaged 100.985 miles an hour over the 2.62-mile, eight-tum road
course at the Riverside International Raceway. Elder completed
the 19llaps in four hours and 58 minutes.

Fewer farms but not so rapidly

SAIGON (UPI)- Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said
today the military situation in
South Vietnam was so heartening the Nixon administration
could "meet or beat" its goal of
reducing U.S. troop strength to
284,000 by May 1.
But the situation in Cambodia
was steadily worsening and
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, was flying to Phnom
Penh Tuesday to look at the
war there. Already 10,500 South
Vietnamese were operating in
Cambodia to try to hold off a
Communist onslaught.
A force of 2,000 of these
South Vietnamese were pushing
westward along east-west Highway 1 which links Saigon and
Phnom Penh, hoping to clear a
route for the transport of fuel
to the Cambodia capital where
the shortage was becoming
critical.
Another South Vietnamese
force including 60 trucks and

jeeps branched off from that
operation to try to sweep
Highway 4 leading south from
Phnom Penh to the deep water
port of Kompong Som and the
oil refinery 120 miles southwest.
Cambodian Prime Minister
Lon Nol flew today to Kompong
Som for the second time in a
week to try to coordinate the
Cambodian part of the clearing
operation. Cambodians have
suffered heavy losses in two
weeks of futile efforts to reopen
the road.
Laird made his statement as
he wound up four days of
conferences with Allied and
American officials and headed
for Honoluu. He said U.S. troop
morale was high and that the
program of turning the ground
war over to the South
Vietnamese would be virtually
complete by May 1.

Shooters Warned

Variable cloudiness and little
change in temperatures today.
Considerable cloudiness tonight
and Tuesday with chance of
snow flurries north. Lows
tonight in the 20s. Highs
Tuesday in upper 20s and 30s.

MASON - Dogs running loose
and the use of BB guns and air
rifles in the corporation limits
of Mason have prompted Police
Chief Richard Ohlinger to issue
a warning that strict enforcement of ordinances
governing these is in effect.
Chief Ohlinger reminds
parents they are responsible for
actions of children with such
Coup d'etat marked as failure
guns and dog owners are being
LAPAZ - BOLIVIAN PRESIDENT JUAN JOSE Torres said cautioned to keep dogs confined
today a small group of Fascists financed from outside the country to their property located within
the town's limits.
(Continued on Page B)

Cabinet of 17 Taking Over-

•

cinnati.
Highways: J. Phillip Richley,
44, Youngstown.
Finance: Harold A. Hovey,
32, Columbus.
Highway Safety : Eugene P.
O'Brady, 49, Columbus.
Industrial Relations : Martin
J. Hughes, 49, Cleveland.
Insurance:
Kenneth
deShetler, 42, Toledo.
Liquor Control: Richard E.
Guggenheim, 57, Cincinnati.
Natural Resources: William
B. Nye, 37, Akron.
Personnel: Paul A. Corey, 44,
suburban Cleveland.
Public Welfare: John E.
Hansay, 40, Cincinnati.
Taxation: Robert J. Kosydar,
39, Columbus.
Urban Affairs : Bruce L.

the community responsibility
which we can neither evade, nor.
hide, nor explain away," the 49year-old Cincinnatian told his
audience. "No one else can, or
will, solve our problems for us.
There are no easy answers."
"The first thing that we have
to do is to stop making excuses
_for ourselves, for each other,
for our society, for our economy, for our government," Gilligan continued. "We are what
we want to be. We do what we
will. We are not in the grip of
blind and irresistable forces
beyond our control."
The new governor, taking the
oath on the west steps of the
statehouse, noted members of

Laird Much
Encouraged

WASHINGTON -THE NUMBER OF FARMS in the United
States is declining again this year. But the rate of the long-term
slide is not as steep as in the past, an Agriculture Department
report indicates.
Department experts said a preliminary estimate indicates
there will be 2,876,000 farms in the United States this year, down
less than 2 per cent from the 2,924,000 estimated for 1970. Last
year's figure also represented a drop of only about 2 per cent from
the previous year.

COLUMBUS
(UPI)
Seventeen cabinet members
took over the state government
today when John J. Gilligan
becomes Ohio's 62nd governor,
succeeding James A. Rhodes.
They have an average age of
43 years, while the new
governor is 49. A majority is
from northern Ohio.
Those selected by Gilligan for
top positions were :
Adjutant general: Dana L.
Sewart, 51, Cuyahoga Falls.
Agriculture:
Gene
R.
Abercrombie, 54, Cincinnati.
Commerce : Ronald J . Coffey,
34, suburban Cleveland.
Development : David C.
Sweet, 31, Columbus.
Employment Services:
William E. Garnes, 47, Cin-

11, 1971

TEN CENTS

h io Challenged

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UPI)- John J.
LANCASfER, OHIO- FOUR TEENAGED runaways from a Gilligan was sworn in today as
county children's home who died when the barn they sought Ohio's 62nd governor, and he
refuge in burned down will be buried in a common grave. The promptly challenged its citizens
charred remains of the four youths _ Jeff Smith and Tony to "stop making excuse~" and
Conkey, both 14, and Debra Snyder and Gordia Knight, both 15 share in the responsibility of
were found Saturday in the ashes of a fireoof"avaged barn.
making government an inOfficials believe the youngsters, who apparently fled because strument for the public good.
"they were in love," were trapped and killed by a fire they had
Gilligan issued the challenge
built to keep warm the night they left the Fairfield County in the prepared text of his inaugChildren's Home. "There was nothing but bones laying there," a ural address after taking the
~ deputy sheriff said. "You could just see rib cages and half a oath as Ohio's first Democratic
torso."
chief executive in eight years,
succeeding Republican James
A. Rhodes.
Scare campaign rattling colony
"All of us share in some
MOSCOW - THE SOVIETS TODAY increased pressure on degree both the credit and the
the American colony in Moscow with a scare campaign by van- bbme for what our society has
dals who damaged five parked and empty cars with knives and become and each of us shares in
clubs. The 36-hour weekend spree of tire-slashing and window
smashing transformed Moscow's anti-American retaliations
from protest to intimidation.
l
Some Americans showed the strain, cutting trips away from
their guarded ''foreign ghetto" apartment buildings to a
minimum and arranging to take taxis where trips were
unavoidable.

./It

MOND~Y. JAN~ARY

Newman, 34, Cleveland.
Youth Commission: William
J. Ensign, 46, Toledo.
Gilligan decided to retain
Bennett J. Cooper, 49, Mansfield, as head of the corrections
division.
The incoming governor also
has the holdover Public Works
Director Alfred C. Gienow, who
was named by Rhodes for a one
year term to start Jan. 1.
Gilligan was expected to try to
block the appointment.
Gilligan also has holdovers
heading health, Dr. Emmett W.
Arnold, having one year left in
his term; mental hygiene,
Martin A. Janis, who is to be
replaced, and workmen's
compensation, Jay C. Flowers,
who may be ousted.

Weather

• •

the legislative and judiciary
branches have, like he, sworn
to serve as instruments of the
public will.
"They have pledged, and I
pledge to you today, to strive
to be, within the limits of our
human talents, within the limits
set forth by our constitution and
our laws, the instruments by
which you will fashion the society in which we and our children
shall live," Gilligan said.
Await Command
"We whom you chose for positions of responsibility in your
government- in the e.xecutive,
legislative,
and
judicial
branches - have pledged you
our faithful service. We await

your command .
"But use us well. Do not
demean us by directing us to
petty tasks. Command us to
undertake the fearful struggle
to build a society based upon
justice, order and mutual respect, enriched by compa~ion
and hope.
"And if you so command us,
we, your servants, will strive
with all our strength to give substance to your dreams of a
better world and a better life,
as God is our witness."
Gilligan made clear he plans
to take direction from the peopie of Ohio rather than run the
state as ~-dictatorship:._
(Continued on Page 8)

Court to Hear Clay Appeal
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court agreed
today to examine the conscientious objector claims of former
heavyweight champion Cassius Clay on his draft evasion
conviction.
Clay, who now prefers the name Muhammad Ali, is
scheduled to fight present champion Joe Frazier for the title
March 8. The high court will hear the case later this term and
decide it by written opinion.
The 5th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals has twice upheld
Clay's conviction, most recently on July 6, 1970. The 5th
Circuit basically rejected Clay's claim that wiretapping
figured in the government's prosecution.
In a related action, the Supreme Court also today denied
an appeal by James R. Hoffa, imprisoned Teamsters Union
president, of his conviction of defrauding the union's pension
fund, which means he must serve an additional five-year
sentence.

Lavelle Tagged
COLUMBUS (UPI) -William
A. Lavelle, a 45-year-old Athens
attorney, was named to assume
the chairmanship of the Ohio
Democratic Party, succeeding
Eugene P. O'Grady.
Lavelle was tagged for the
leadership post Sunday by the
Ohio Democratic Executive
Committee. He was formerly
vice chairman of the party and
was supported for the position
by Gov. John J. Gilligan.
O'Grady resigned to accept a
cabinet post in the new Gilligan
administration as director of
the Highway Safety Department.
Lavelle was Athens County

chairman from 1958 to 1966 and
since then has been the lOth
District state committeeman.
He was a delegate to the 1956
and 1960 national party conventions. Lavelle was also an early
supporter of John F. Kennedy
and campaigned for him in the
West Virginia primary in 1960.
Lavelle said he would consult
Wednesday with O'Grady about
transfer of office.
Others elected included Joseph Shump, Dayton, first vice
chairman; Henry W. Eckart,
Columbus, treasurer, and state
Rep. C. J. McLin, D-Dayton,
secretary.

.of Cigarettes, and Cancer

HOWIE CALDWEJJ.,, Eastern High School's top pointgetter, a sertior guard, gets a field goal in the Eagles' romp
over Southwestern Friday night. See more pictures on page 4
today. The Eagles are 9-0 on the season.

3 Switches
To be Made
At least three democrats
have selected to take key
positions in Meigs County as the
result of the change of administrations at the state level
from the Republican to the
Democratic party it was
reliably reported today.
James Bailey, of near
Chester, will be the new Meigs
County superintendent of the
State Department of Highways.
Opera tor of a service station in
Pomeroy, Bailey was a candidate of the Democratic party
for election as county commission last November.
It was also reported the local
Democratic organization has
recommended Miss Martha
Howell be named motor vehicle
registrar replacing Miss
Freddie Houdashelt in Middleport, and in Pomeroy, Paul
Simon to replace W. A. Gibbs of
Gibbs Grocery.

Phone Rate

(First Article of Six)
Seven years ago today, the then-U.S. Surgeon General Luther L. Terry released a report
called "Smoking and Health," compiled by an advisory committee of public health experts.
In his own words, the report stated, "conclusively and unequivocably that cigarette
smoking is a hazard to health and a problem of sufficient concern to call for remedial ac•tion."
Today, Dr. Terry, who is now professor of medicine and community medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania, launched National Education Week on Smoking (NEWonS)
sponsored January 11-16 by the National Interagency Council on Smoking and Health.
The last seven years have been marked by both an increased output of information on
the health effects of smoking and increased cooperation between organizations interested in
the subject. Membership of the National Interagency Council includes the nationwide
Cancer, Heart, and Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Associations, the American
Medical Association, Parent-Teachers Association, the U.S. Public Health Service and 29
other agencies.
Most dramatic evidence of the health agencies' fight against cigarettes is the broadcast
of anti-smoking TV spots, on time donated by the broadcasters in accordance with the
FCC's ''fairness doctrine."
With the departure from the airwaves last week of cigarette commercials, the effectiveness of the broadcast anti-smoking messages is in doubt.
That's one reason for the National Education Week on Smoking. The inter-agency
council considers it the first step in an intensivied cooperative effort to keep Americans
aware of the dangers of cigarettes and to help them to kick the habit.
Those of us who are still smoking may pause before we Ught up and ask ourselves how
much attention we have paid to the message of the last seven years.

Meeting is

Thursday
A public meeting has been
called for 7:30p.m. Thursday at
the Salisbury elementary school
to air opinions of Meigs County
residents on local rates and
services of the General
Telephone Co. of Ohio.
Mrs. Herbert Gilkey said the
meeting is a follow-up of the
circulation of petitions in
Bedford and Salisbury Townships requesting that a rate hike
sought by the company be
denied. About 200 residents
signed them, Mrs. Gilkey said .
The petitions are in the hands of
the PUCO.
Thursday night's meeting is
open to all Meigs County phone
subscribers. Anyone needing
transportation may phone 992~
6144.

Going to Columbus Sunaay to
attend the inauguration today of
governor-elect John J. Gilligan
from Meigs County were Mr.
and Mrs. A. R. Knight, Mr. and
Mrs. Delmar Canaday, Mr. and
Mrs. Olan Boothe, Dr. and Mrs.
Raymond Boice, Dr. Harold
Brown, Mrs. Agnes Brown, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Wingett, Mr.
and Mrs. Edwin Cozart, and Mr.
and Mrs. James Bailey.
The group attended a buffet
dinner Sunday evening at the
Neil House. This evening they
will attend the ball at the Ohio
State Fairgrounds.

Auto Strikes
Utility Pole
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a one-car
accident Saturday at 7:30p.m.
on County Road ~2 about 4.5
miles east of SR 7.
Ayward C. Jones, 47, Racine,
Rt. 1, was driving on County
Road 32 when he was blinded by
the lights on an oncoming car in
a curve. His car hit loose gravel
and went out of control. It
struck a power pole owned by
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company and a barbed
wire fence on the Gary Diehl
property at Long Bottom.
Two passengers, Mae Jones,
44, and Brenda Joy Jones, 3
suffered lacerations. They were
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by private car where
they were treated and released.
There was heavy damage to the
car. No citation was issued.
GAME CHANGED
MASON - A change is announced in the Wahama- Southwestern basketball game
scheduled Tuesday evening.
Wahama Coach Donald Van
Meter said the game will be
played at Wahama High instead
of in Ohio as was prevtously
announced. The first game is
slated for 6:30 p.m.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.ll, 1971

Th ings Aren't All Bad

EDITORIALS

By Oswald &amp; James Jac oby

Profile (?) of a Pickle
The "perfect pickle," a~ d~fine~ by Pic~le Packers
International, a trade orgamzatwn, 1s one .which produces
a crunch audible at 20 paces when bitten mto.
This standard is too imprecise for food scientists at the
University of Minnesota, who have launched a search ftlr
the· really perfect pickle with the use of "an extremely
sophisticated texture-measuring instrument" that provides a "texture profile analysis" of pickles and cucumbers.
"By this means," explains William M. Breene, assistant
professor of food science and industries, "we can place
numerical values on such textural aspects as crispness,
hardness, cohesiveness, elasticity, gumminess, chewiness
and adhesiveness."
The research team has evaluated 24 different varieties
and breeding lines for texture. It will select the best of
these and concentrate on texture improvement of the
pickled product through processing innovations.
The quest for the perfect pickle is no small potatoes.
Pickle consumption has increased fourfold since 1930. In
1967, the average American cons u me d 7.3 pounds of
pickles, more than any other processed vegetable.
The foregoing is for the edification of those who may
fear that in the mad rush of technology important things
are being neglected.

The 'Worm' that Turned
Every American shares the shock experienced by 10
demonstrators who invaded California Gov. Ronald Reagan's jnaugutal gala at Memor ial Stadium in Sacramento.
It is reported that actor John Wayne, serving as master
of ceremonies for the event, became so incensed that he
menaced the little kiddies.
Specifically, in a complaint filed with the police, one
youth wlJO was carrying a Viet Cong flag charges that
Wayne called him an obscene name.
Not only that, but he says Wayne actually ADVANCED
on him.
Wayne denies the allegations. Let us hope it was all a
misunderstanding.
Imagine-swearing at and advancing on. Such behavior
is unheard of among our genteel, sensitive young people.

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1

Voice along Broadway I

I
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - That superAfro hairdo Angela Davis
sported for her Calif. trip is a
super-wig, staffers at the
Women's House of Detention
whispered our way .... Howard
Hughes is close to buying the
beautiful and huge Coral
Harbor Club in Nassau, the
Bahamas .... Noel Coward's
insisting on a full 15 per cent
royalty for a road revival of his
"Fallen Agels" starring Hermione Gingold and Selma
Diamond; it sounds like a
howling notion but producers
can't skim that much off the top
retarded
these
fiscally
theatrical days.
Shelley Winters' maiden (sic)
attempt at playwriting, "One
Night Stands of a Noisy Nei!;hbor," three acts, each set in
bed, went permanently to sleep,
perchance to dream of some of
the worst reviews of the season
.... "Stag Party" won the nod
tor unquestionable recipient of
the worst .. .. The author is a
drama p'fessor £'Sophocles'
sake .... Woody Allen finished a
play and another movie script,
so with nothing else to do but
tootle his flute (clarinet, at the
N. Y. Playboy Club every Wed.

nite), he's off to Las Vegas for a
couple of weeks' money at the
Riviera.
Judy Carne, Laugh-In's
water-socked cutie, gets a
three-week glamour dousing at
the Plaza's Persian Room as of
Jan. 13 .... Laugh-In's about the
only show anyone remembers
her being in - Judy came to TV
prominence after Cy Howard
starred her in the TV series
"Fair Exchange" (flop ),
followed by "The Baileys of
Balboa" (flop) and "Love on a
Rooftop" (flop); made her
American film debut with Julie
Andrews in ''The Americaniza lion of Emily, " a
dirty little tale which caused no
stir; and then, those silly liquid
cruelties with Rowan &amp; Martin
belting her in the chops with
pails of water made her famous
.... Judy starred in "The Boy
Friend" on theN. Y. stage and
her luck ran out there, too:
Little Sandy Duncan danced off
with the show and the reviews
.... The Persian Room is starry
consolation.
Trevor Howard's up for a
cinch Oscar nomination and a
fine chance of winning it for his
priest role in "Ryan 's
Daughter," but he's not staying

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Population a s Pollution factor

Better Limit Cars than People
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB/ M.D.
someone would say something about that. Of cou~se ,
we should have a sensible
population control program.
The key word is sensible. I
don't think limiting people
is the whole answer . It is not
people but what people do
that causes the problem.
In some nations where factories, cars and other
sources of pollution are not
part of the picture, rather
densely populated cities do
not have the problems of the

BERRY'S WORlD

developed nations.
For years New York City
has had a steady increase in
pollution with no increase in
the number of people. Why
not limit automobiles- one to
a family at maximum- instead of p e o p I e as a first
sane step. Besides I think it
might be easier to legislate
what goes into the garage
than what goes on in the
bedroom .
We can indeed control how
foods are packaged- eliminate plastic containers that
are next to indestructible,
control how wastes are disposed of, what factories do.
We should limit the ~ ver­
growing population of automobiles.
With a little automobile
" birth control" the quality
of life might 1 m p r o v e remarkably. And while we are
on the subject, why not cut
down on pollution by cutting
out cigarettes?

* * *

1971 by NEA,

Real Test Soon
Of Vietnamization

Shuts Out East

Five score and almost 10 years ago, Charleston, S.C.,
wanted no part of the federal military.
Things have changed. During the long tenu~e of the late
L. Mendel Rivers as a member and later charr~~n of tpe
House Armed Services Committee, so many mllitary Installations were placed in the Charleston area ~hat Rep.
Carl Vinson of Georgia was said_ to have. tol~ R1_v~rs t~at
"if you put another thing down m that d1stnct, tt s gomg
to sink.'
With the passing of Rivers, Charlestonia~s. are now _worried that not only will they get no more m1htary busmess
but that what they have will be taken away from them.
The military payroll alone in the area am_ounted to 35.3
per cent of the total p~yroll f.or all occupations last year.
not including defense mdustnes.
Folks in New Orleans, however,. are hopeful that their
port may now be mad~ more !~pregnable to enemy
attack than it has been smce Adm1ral Farragut ~aptured
it in 1862 even though the defense pork barrel 1s somewhat smaller than it used to be.
Why not? Rivers' successor as chairman of the powerful committee will be Rep. F . Edward Hebert of-you
guessed it-New Orleans.
All of which may be one more reason why Congress
ought to ta~e a deep ~ook at. the senior~ty system of choos.
ing the chairmen of 1ts vanous comm1ttees.
Since it is too much to expect congressmen to be gwd~d
by what is best for their nation rather than by what 1s
merely best for their home d_istricts, .it may be that "!'e
need a system of rotating charrmanships, perhaps lastmg
the length of one Congress. Two years ought to be long
enough to do right by one's constituents.
That way all parts of the country would have. an equal
chance to dip into all the pork barrels rollmg from
Washington.

~

BRUCE BIDSSAT

Limit-jump Raise

Ladle Rotation
In Pork Barrel?

Dear Dr. Lamb--In your
column you m e n t i on "HEW's ill-advised comment
on limiting people to control
pollution- ." I believe there
is nothing in the least " illadvised" about the idea of
population control. The enclo~ed article states America
is act u a 11 y overpopulated
right now. I encourage you
to do further r esearch on the
population problem and to
r econsider your position.
DearReader- Ikn e w

WIN AT BRIDGE

loc~~

" Mom, sometime, can I wear your bullet belt?"

Dear Dr. Lamb--Early
this year I took up bicycling
as a wonderful form of exercising. But with the smoke
put out in one part of the
city by the steel mill, would
the particles taken into the
lungs be more harmful than
the general exer cise? In
other words, if a person
breathes much more in his
exercise in a smog- or dustladen city, is it better to
work less?
Dear Reader- That ·is a
good question . Unless the
level of pollution is ver y
high the benefits from your
exercise would outweigh the
danger. Although you would
increase the a mount of air
taken into the lungs during
the exercise, this is a relatively small increase over
the a m o u n t you would
breathe in a day's time.
Your problem points up
beautifull y that it is not al·
ways how ma ny people, but

,
here to campaign: He's off to
Australia for his next film, "The
Story of Burke and Wills" ....
We can't figure why we didn't
hear more about pop-star John
B. Sebastian starring at Carnegie Hall Dec. 21 &amp; 22: His
mother is C. H.'s press agent.
There's a mammalian trend
to save-the-whales : Electra
label waxed Judy Collins on an
album titled "Whales &amp;
Nightingales," and one number
("Farewell to Tarwai thie")
includes a chorus vocalized by
" humpbacked singing whales,"
if you can believe the publicity
(we do, we do! ) .... Capitol
records has one album just of
whale sounds.
Jackie Gleason's biggest
benefactor through the many
lean years was musical comedy
star Jack Haley · The two
haven't communicated in
many, many months
Gleason wasn 't the lone
recipient of Haley 's benefactions : We x:ec'd a card from
Downey's 8th Ave. theatrical
hangout from a show biz
veteran who wrote : " When I
worked for Paul Small more
years ago than I care to
remember (circa "Showtime"
and "Laughtime"), and Small
didn't send me my salary check
from the West Coast, guess who
gave it to me ; hep, Jack
Haley.''
Actress Harriet Matthey was
hired for the bathing suit
cheese-cake ph otos at the
Hatteras Yachts exhibit at the
Nat'l Boat Show here in a few
weeks ; Harriet didn't own one
swimsuit herself ; she's been
studying with Lee ( Actors
Studio ) Strasberg where it's
either overcoats or nudes,
apparently .... Naomi Rock who
covered the Woodstock rockfestival for the AP has scooted
far enough away from that
scene: She's now in Tokyo with
a new hubby.

14..

Jim: " Some gadgets used
in expert b i d d i n g are so
complicated that even the
experts become confused by
them. Others are even simpler than the methods the
average players use."
Oswald: "Of the latter,
point count is the most conspicuous example. I used it
from 1932 on. By 1940 it had
achieved popularity among
most experts. Yet it was 10
years later before the public
adopted it."
Jim: "Limit raises are a
current case in point. It is
much s i m p I e r to use all
jump raises as limit bids
than to use some as invitations and others as absolute
forces. All experts don't use
limit-jump raises today , but
the majority do."
Oswald: "This includes the
Jacobys who switched to
limit raises almost 20 years
ago and we use it in JACOBY
MODERN.''
Jim: "Today's hand shows
one of the great advantages
of the limit-jump raise.
North responds three spades
to his partner's opening
spade b1d. East can't afford
to try a four-diamond bid.
South goes on to game . Our
jump raises aren't forces,
but they are strong invitations. West makes his normal lead of the club queen.
South takes his king, draws
trumps, finesses against
West's jack of clubs, discards one 1 o sin g diamond
and winds up making four
or five depending on how he
plays the hearts. "
Oswald: " Playing standard
American, Noith must respond two clubs. East gets a
two-diamond bid in. South
still gets to the spade game,
but the d e f e n s e starts by
taking two diamond tricks
and shifting to a trump.
South will still make his contract if he locates the jack
of hearts. Otherwise he will
be one down. All because
North could not jump right
to three spades.''
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA W ashington Correspondent
WASHINGTON (NEA)
The next U.S. troor. withdrawals from Vi.etnam ~eyo~d
May 1 very likely Will be handled by President N1xon m
a more gingerly, shorter-term fashiOn than marked the
. .
sweeping 1970-71 pullouts.
Defense Secretary Melvin Laird's early January. v1s1t
to South Vietnam begins the review. process that Wlll ~e­
duce recommendations for the Wh1te House .. ~he Jomt
Chiefs of Staff and high State Department offiCials later
will have their proposals cranked m.
If the President follows form , he probably will.not make
up his own mind until a day or two before h1s chosen
spring deadline for a new announcement; lJndoubtedly ~
he will have the advice of aide Henry K1ssmger at the
moment of decision.
By May 1, ass uming the existing pullout schedule. is
kept, our forces in Vietnam will be down to 284 ,000, w1th
most but considerably less than all ground combat forces
withdrawn. Which units in what size leave after that can
be critical to the final Vietnam outcome.
The real test of "Vietnamization" will be at hand , when
Saigon's 1.1-million man army finds itself with sever~ly
diminished U.S. ground combat support.
U.S. decision-makers will not be operating totally .blin~.
lf Hanoi makes an expected Tet assault in Cambodia th1
month and South Vietnam moves sizable forces t~ Phno~
Penh's assistance, the performance of those soldiers w11l
provide crucial guidance as to. the worth an~ progress of
Vietnamization. A good showmg clearly w1ll speed our
post-May 1 pullouts .
Sources in this capital think the prospects for such a
showing are promising. They believe that the command
structure of Saigon's army is much improved over even
mid-1970. All major sectors are said to be under competent top leadership and middle-echelon officers also are
on the up~rade. Some of the notoriously we~k South Vie~­
namese d1visions manning the protective nng above Sa1 ~
gon are in better shape, though lack of lower-echelon
leaders seems still serious.
A recent thrust by Saigon's forces against Viet Cong
units in the delta 's U Minh forest is offered here as evidence of more aggressive leadership in the country's
most-populous and most-prized area .
South Vietnamese men are now operating some of our
older airplane gunships and are beginning to make real
headway in the building of an in d i g e n o u s air force
equipped with U.S. planes of the less sophisticated variety
and with limited range. The purpose, of course, is for
Saigon ultimately to provide most of its own direct tactical air support.
-r
Large numbers of South Vietnamese are at U.S. training bases learning how to man our newer, more versatile
helicopter gunships.
There is no intention whatsoever to provide South Vietnam with our longer range, fleeter and more devastating
fighter-bombers. Saigon. could use these for direct assaults
upon the populous regions of North Vietnam.
This bar having been erected, U.S. units manning our
best fighter-bombers appear destined to remain in and
near South Vietnam for a long time. We have taken note
that Hanoi now has a fairly sizable air force compose~
of Soviet MIGs. We do not intend to leave Saigon vulnerable to these, nor to take away the retaliatory air strike
force the President has told Hanoi he will use when he
deems a born bing response necessary.
Incidentally, in the light of the recent furor over our
air strikes in North Vietnam (partly in reply to attacks
on U.S. reconnaissance aircraft), it is interesting to learn
that the Reds leave about 95 per cent of our exploratory
missions alone. They attack very selectively.
If this low-key approach is sustained, it, too, could affect
our pullout pace in mid-1971. But the main pivot of decision here still will be cued to Hanoi's ground efforts at
Tet time and thereafter.
~
Our later withdrawals could be at good pace if the enemy
mounts no major 1971 offensives , or if it tries and is repulsed- especially if helping South Vietnamese forces are
keys in that throwback.
But if Hanoi punches deep and Saigon's armies fare
badly, newer U.S. pullouts could be slowed to smaller
numbers in more-limited time frames.

Ca H:J ;]a!M!ND r---------------------------1
The bidding has been:
West
North
East
Sou th
1•
Dble
Pass
?
You, South, hold:

.8 743 . J986 + K1043 . 7
What do you do?
A-Bid two hearts. Your diamonds are slightly stronger but
you should prefer the major
suit.

G.UCTES

!Helen Help Us~
I

I

I

By Helen Bottel

WHAT WE HAVE
HERE IS - NO
COMMUNICATION
SOUPWISE
Dear Helen :
My husband an d I can
talk over big problems,
so why did he wait
25 years to tell me he
stopped liking navy bean soup
three months after we were
married?
I've been serving it at least
quarter
once a week for
century. You see, when we were
engaged he raved about my
bean soup - and I aim to please
that guy I love.
Yesterday he put his spoon
down finally and said,
"Enough!"
I've never liked the stuff
myself. Think of all those
was ted years! If he can 't
communicate soupwise, how
much more is he holding back?
_ IN THE SOUP ON HER

maintain fewer pounds).
As for humane societies
placing pets - forget it. There
is a less than 10 per cent
adoption rate, even at the best,
and less than five per cent of the
animals brought to most poundt
survive. I was at our locar
shelter one afternoon when 12
litters of puppies and 26 litters
of kittens arrived, averaging
over 150 animals. On the same
day, only 13 people came to
select animals. And that was a
sunny day. In rainy weather, no
one visits the shelter, but the
animals keep arriving. Some
10,000 kittens and puppies ar~
born PER HOUR in the United
States !
There are parents who let an
animal bear a litter "because
the children enjoy the kittens or
puppies so much.'' But when
they get bigger, off the doomed
creatures go to the gas.
chamber. Such cruelty is unbelievable! Others still believe
the myth that it is best for th~ .
ammal to have one litter before ·
spaying. Not so! An altered pet
makes a more sanitary, devoted
and satisfactory pet in every
way - and the ideal age for the
work is five or six months.
Another myth: Nursing
mothers are immune against
pregnancy. When kittens are
barely two weeks old, th
mother will amost surely se
about preparing for her next
ones .
It is far better, if your pet has
an unwanted litter , to put them
to sleep immediately. The worst
crime of all is abandonment.
The greates t kindness altering!- ANIMAL LOVER IN
CALIFORNIA

what people do that counts.
The steel mill is the problem in your area, not how
The situation is desperate.
many people Jive there . Livlt is the worst situation
ing in Colorado, you are in
since I've been in Congress.
a state with vast areas of
Not only is the public losing
sparse population and yet
confidence but we as senayou are a victim of pollutors are beginning to destion.
pair at our ability to funcI a p p r o v e of bicycling
You can say w hat you
tion.
want
to
about
t
he
modern
w h o l e-heartedly. Bicycling
- Senate D emocratic leader
is a good way to keep the dances, and most everyMike Mansfie~d, referring
circulation in shape. If you one over 30 will agree
to the 91st Congress'
with
y
ou.
could just r eplace a lot of
stalled end-of-1970 ~egisexpensive automobiles with
lation.
bicycles, we would have a to induce the menstrual
much healthier population cycle without a prescription?
The city of New York and
and a lot less pollution.
Dear R ead er- You should the taxpayers of New Yor k
* * *
not take any medicine for can no longer meet the risDear Dr. Lam b--I am this unless your doctor says ing cost of welfare in our
smaller than most girls my you really have a problem city.
age (14) and I haven't with yo ur gl ands- which - Mayor J ohn V. Lindsay.
started my period. I am isn't likely. Some girls start
rejecting a record $2.4teased very often because later. Count yourself lucky . billion budget request for
wel fare ai d.
they have. Is there any way to postpone those problems.
.....--- - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - , SILVER ANNIVERSARY
H atlo's They'll Do It Every Time
®
~~~~~thing important, I'm
~============~~~~====~========~---.~~=7~~~============~~ sure.
WOULD YOU
OH, ~! BAD EXAMPL-E FOR. TH E
Tell me, did you ever let your
CHOW T IME
WANT TO E.A-T
KID'S! DINNER. 5HOUL-D BE EI\TEf.J
husband know YOU hated bean
A~D FOOTB.A..LLIN HERE
AT THE DININ&lt;H~M TABL-E!
LOVING POP 16
IT'S A 5LON GAME
soup? .... Or that your taste in
AND WA"Tt:.H
VERY SEL FTH E GA.ME?
ANYWAY--··
perfume has changed, or you no
SACRIFICING .. ·
longer just ADORE those
chocolate covered cherries he
gives you every Valentine Day?
That's not non - communication, friend - it's
LOVE! - H.
Dear Helen:
,~~~~.__
A new law here in our
~
California town makes it
. . . . . . . . . .~ mandatory that any cat taken
from the pound or humane
__......_.._, society shelter must be altered
before "adoption ." This is
. _-1--l-l expensive, and will just about
bring to a halt the few requests
for pets which save these poor
By PHIL PASTORET
creatures from being exNo , Gwendolyn, the junkterminated.
man isn't the local dopeHow much better to educate pusher.
ALL pet owners on the necessity
* .. •
for spaying and altering. And to
It takes a r eal pro to
bring the price down (with help make an easy job look
from state funds by having to d ifficu lt.

a

_ _]liliilfiiiii'iiJllill

1

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 11, 1971

~::;;:::::::~:1~=lt~1~1=1~1~1:1:1:l:1:1:l:1:1:1:1:~:::~:1:1:1:1:~:1:l:1:~1:1:1{:1:1:1:1:~:~:::~:::~:~:::::::::::::~1~1~1~11lll111llllfjl~1~·

('I the Sports Desk II Eagles Win 24 Straight
I
~~~
........

~··~

l,y Che! Tannehill

~~

)
"

,

"

"!

~~

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles zipped in
36 third quarter points to make
a runaway of a Southern Valley
Conference game with the
Southwestern Highlanders here
Saturday night, winning 86-35.
With the win - which saved
Chet Tannehill a lot of dribbling
- the Eagles were undefeated
in half of their regular season.
They are 7-0 in the SVAC, 9-0
overall, winning their 24th
straight in a span of three years
in the conference ! The Eagles
have not begun play in the
tougher Mid-Ohio Valley
Conference. That league

The good get better and the poor get poorer.
This Basketball Law I have just deduced may not become as
famous as Newton's Law of Gravity but it'll stand until proven
wrong. Which may not be long, as there are exceptions to every
law involving the genus homo sapiens.
My Basketball Law is based on the indisputable fact - from
point spread figures - that three weeks ago the actual point
spread of 15 area games averaged 121h points and after the 17
games of last Friday and Saturday had been decided, the actual
point spread was 15.5! Sensing something cataclysmic like this
might be abrewing, Sports Desk had predicted scores that
averaged out to a 12.1 spread (predicted spread was 6 three
weeks ago), but 12.1 wasn't enough.
The Dealt was 11 for 11 Friday night but by Saturday night the
crystal ball had fogged. Three for six! Three upsets! I even had
some commiseration -that's what it sounded like - from Miss
Patti Ihle, Southern High scorekeeper, who called from Hannan,
W.Va. High School Saturday night. She prefaced her report by the
statement, "We were Upset!"
For the year, The Desk is going along at a 34 of 42 pace which By VITO SfEI.LINO
is 81 per cent. The eight games missed have to be considered
UPI Sports Writer
upsets, or outcomes contrary to "form" or "record" charts. (This
Last year the South Carolina
will be sensational and most valuable information to all bookies Gamecocks breezed to the
registered under the Federal Laws. If they heed the upset per- regular season crown but lost
centage by allowing for it on their weekly spot cards it'll be money the NCAA bid when they were
(your money) in the bank. It'll be like guaranteeing a Florida
vacation come every spring. It also will insure the bettors
remaining at their salt mines another season.
About the weekend results :
Logan (Ohio), losing 64-40 to Nelsonville-York, which has had
rough going this season, must be growing more disorganized by
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)-Leo
the day.
·
Hayden of Ohio State was the
Southern, dopping that game Saturday night to Hannan workhorse of the offense and
(WVa) 59-47, simply had a bad night against a team that was hot, carried off the Most Valuable
inspired, ready for anybody even a little bit nonchalant.
Player Award Sunday as the
Greenfield's tipping over Jackson~ was in the unexpected North swamped the South, 39-2,
category to Sports Desk. Perhaps we've been over eager to uprate in the American Bowl game to
Jackson which on paper has a wealth of material but on the court ring down the curtain on
is having trouble winning big ones (Waverly 110 Jackson 61, college football for another
FridAy night!). Below,how it went (first score after the team was season.
But he might well give a
actual score, predicted score in brackets, and at right, first figure
piece of the silver cup to
is actual spread, second the predicted spread):
several members of the North
FRIDAY
defense.
30-17
Athens 85 (75) Logan 55 (58
That unit, led by Murry
30-13
Alexander 90 ( 63) Glouster 60 (50)
Bowden of Dartmouth and
Federal Hocking 75 (64) Belpre 58 (56)
17-8
Clifton Hardy of Michigan,
WarrenLocal83 (68) Vinton Co. 63 (62)
20-5
11-13
Ironton 71 ( 61) Gallipolis 60 (48)
20-14
Meigs67(74)Wellston47(60)
Waverly 110 (73) Jackson 61 (67)
49-6
Eastern 84 ( 89) Hannan Trace 66 ( 46)
18-43
l'he Southern Local TorNorth Gallia 109 ( 68) Kyger Creek 72 (51)
37-17 nadoes blew a first quarter lead
Miller 67 (58) Nelsonville York 52 (51)
15-7 of 15-7 and were upset at
Wahama64(54) Hannan (WVa) 53 (46)
11-8 Hannan (W. Va.) High School
SATURDAY
Saturday night, 59-47, in a non(Night of Upsets)
league battle. Coach Hilton
Ouch Wolfe's Tornadoes are now 5-4
Southern47 (65) Hanna1"' (WVa) 59 ( 45)
Jackson 58 (72) Greenfield 60 (68)
Wow on the year. They remain at 3-2
Holy Cow!
Logan 40 ( 66) Nels.-York 64 ( 61)
Starr-Wash. 92 (73) Glouster 46 (50
46-23
Logan (WVa) 90 (79) Pt. Pleasant 60 (62)
30-17
30-17
Portsmouth 89 ( 76) Ironton 59 (59!)
Average 15.5 12.1

comprises of Miller, Glouster,
Alexander, and Eastern.
Southwestern is winless in 10
games thus far. Coach Mel
Carter's Highlanders have
dropped six SVAC games.
The Eagles were led by their
junior sensation, Dennis
Eichinger, with 25 points. The 63 center made 12 of 21 from the
field and cleaned the boards
with 15 rebounds, tops for the
Eagles.
Howie Caldwell, 5-10 senior
guard, the leading scorer so far
for Coach Bill Phillips' Meigs
Countians, chipped in with 19
points and Mike Benedum, 5-9

junior guard, came off the
bench to rip the nets for eight.
Eastern had all 12 of their
players in the scoring column.
John Ehman, 6-3 senior
center, and 6-0 senior forward
Larry Dillon each collected 11
for the losers.
The Eagles started slowly,
playing somewhat ineptly in the
first quarter, and held only a 13-'
8 advantage after the first eight
minutes.
The Highlanders are still
within striking distance after
the first half, being outscored in
the second quarter 18-11 and
trailing 31-19 at this point.

But Coach Phillips must have
said something pertinent to the
occasion at halftime as his
Eagles came out flying. They
fast breaked, stole the ball, and
hit for a better percentage,
simply
outclassing
the
Highlanders. After three
quarters, it was 67-26.
SUbstitutes from both benches
played most of the final quarter,
Eastern outscoring their opponents, 19-9.
Eastern had 43 rebounds in
the game. They shot 46 per cent,
making 38 of 81. They cashed in
on only 10-21 free throws. Southwestern made 11 of 21 from the

•
ID

SVAC

charity stripe. The Eagles had
19 turnovers compared to 32 for
the Highlanders.
In the reserve game, Coach
Ord's little Eagles upped their
record to 7-2 as they whipped
the Southwestern reserves, 3824. Cross led Eastern with 16
and Rick Sanders added eight.
Bush and Dillon were high for
Southwestern with five apiece.
BY QUARTERS
Southwestern
8 11 7 9-35
Eastern
13 18 36 19-86
SOUTHWESTERN, ( 35) Smith 1-4-6, Ehman 3-5-11,
Dillon 5-1-11, Gills 1-0-2,
Chambus 2-1-5, Kuhn 0-0-0,

Potter 0-0-0, Rose 0-0-0. Totals
12-11-35.
EASTERN, (86)- Smith 3-17, Williams 2-0-4, Eichinger 12-125, H. Caldwell 9-1-19, Karr 2-15, Boring 1-0-2, Amsbary 2-0-4,
Benedum 2-4-8, B. Caldwell 3-17, Gumpf 1-0-2, Millhone 1-0-2,
Young 0-1-1. Totals 38-1086. Officials, Bowers and
Hudnell.
Miller 68 Waterford 58
Columbus South 71 Columbus
Central 60
Columbus Eastmoore 62
Columbus Brookhaven 50
Columbus North 93 Columbus
East 73
Pickering t on 82 Canal Winchester 77

Maryland Upsets So. Carolina 31-30

"

..

beaten in the post-season
tourney by North Carolina
State's slowdown game after
John Roche was injured the
previous night.
But this season the Game-

cocks may have trouble finishing on top during the regular
season and may welcome the
opportunity to win the NCAA
bid in the tourney. The

Gamecocks were beaten for the margin.
The game was a rematch of
second time in a week Saturday
night when Maryland scored six the .celebrated _game in South
points in the final 16 seconds of Carolina last month when the
overtime to win by a 31-30 Gamecocks breezed to a 96-70
triumph but the contest was
called because of a brawl with a
4:52 remaining.
The loss left South Carolina
with a 3-2 record in the conference while North Carolina,
tackled John Dwyer of George- which beat the Gamecocks, 79town in the end zone for a 64, last week, lead with a 3-0
record.
safety.
Second-ranked
South
The Most Valuable Player
Award for the South went to Carolina was the only team in
defensive end Bruce James of the too 10 to lose ,Saturday night
and 14th ranked Louisville.
Arkansas.
which dropped a 78-75 decision
A crowd of only 12,000 turned
to Memphis State, and 19thout to watch the game.
Hayden's two touchdowns ranked Drake, which lost to
rushing set an American Bowl Tulsa, 66-60, were the only
record, one of five set during teams in the top 20 to lose.
Top-ranked UCLA rolled on
the game. The others were
Rogers' field goals, Bowden's with a 95-71 victory over
pass interceptions, longest re- Washington St., third-ranked
turn of an intercepted pass (35 Southern California downed
Washington, 79-72, fourthyards by Bowden) and most
ranked Marquette whipped Xapoints scored by one team .
vier of Ohio, 91-60, fifth-ranked
Staroba's two touchdowns by
Penn topped Dartmouth, 92-77,
passes tied a record.
sixth-ranked Western Kentucky
beat Eastern Kentucky, 83-64,
seventh, ranked Kansas was
THE DAILY SENTINEL

Hayden Most Valuable Player

-J"

..

•
"

oft
..

1

... ,
•
1

•

-

intercepted five South passes,
pounced on three fumbles and
choked off one South drive on
downs at the three.
Bowden picked off three
passes for an American Bowl
record, one of them setting up
a North touchdown, while
Hardy grabbed two passes, one
of them setting up a Hayden
touchdown and the other in the
end zone with less than a
minute to go to thwart a final
South drive.
Michigan's Paul Staroba
matched Hayden's scoring by
catching a pair of touchdown

passes, one· from 17 yards out
from Michigan teammate Don
Moorhead and the second a 15yarder from Boston College's
Frank Harris. Harris also got
on the scoreboard with a twoyard scoring plunge.
Paul Rogers of Nebraska set
an American Bowl record with
two field goals from 41 and 24
yards away and kicked three
extra points.
The lone South score came at
the hands of the defense when
Houston's Richard Harrington

Adams' Club Upsets Southern 59-47

in the Southern Valley Con- minutes, Coach Bill Adams'
(formerly
of
Pomeroy,
ference.
DEVOTED TO
assistant football coach),
INTEREST OF
Frank Ihle, 6-2 senior center, quintet tied it up at the half, 27MEIGS-MASON AREA
L. TANNEHILL,
paced the Southern attack with 27. Mter three quarters, it was CHESTERExec.
Ed .
18 points. Larry Thompson led still knotted at 40-40. Hannan,
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City
Editor
games
with
the
which
split
the Wildcats with 20.
Published daily except
Mter trailing by 8 after eight Tornadoes last year, outscored Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publishing
Company , 111
Southern, 17-9, in the final
Court St. , Poml!!roy, Oh io ,
period.
45769. Business Office Phone
Coach Duane Wolft:'s little 992-2156, Editorial Phone 992.
Tornadoes defeated the Hannan 2157
Second class postage paid at
reserves, 40-22. Norman Curf- Pomeroy , Oh io.
National advertis i ng
man led Southern with 10 points. representat
i ve
BottinelliGallagher
, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
SOUT.ti.l!;ttN 15-12-12-9- 49;
New York City, New York .
Holzman plans to open with 2, Nease 5, Ihle 18, Hart 6, Shain St.,Subs
c rip t ion
rates :
Delivered
by car r ier where
John Havlicek of Boston and 3, Wilford 10, Hubbar d 3, Snyder
available 50 cents per week ;
Billy Cunningham of Philadel- 2.
By Motor Route where carr ier
not available : One
phia at forwards and Earl
HANNAN( 8-19-13-17 - 57; service
month $1.75. By mail in Ohio
Monroe of Baltimore in the Payne 7, Powell 6, Thompson and
W . Va ., One year $14.00.
Six months $7 . 25 . Three
backcourt with Frazier.
20, Smith 14, Edmonds 10.
$4 .50. Subs c r iption
The 10 top former players in
Officials: L. Jordan and R. months
price includes Suntll!y T i mes •Sentinel.
the 25-year history of the league Jordan.
will be honored at a special
banquet tonight. They are Bob
Pettit, Dolph Schayes, Paul
Arizin, Joe Fulks, Bill Russell,
George Mikan, Bob Cousy, Bob
Davies, Sam Jones and Bill
Sharman.

NBA All-Star Game

~4

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Agent
Dale Warner

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By planning insurance

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....

present Buckeyes will fall under
the category of a pretty good
team," but they did set the
Iowa Fieldhouse on fire, jumping out to a 27-10 lead and
keeping the pressure up the
whole game, leading 48-26 at
halftime.
Two Pace Bucks
Allan Hornyak and Jim Cleamons, a pair of hot-shooting
southpaw, led the Bucks in
scoring with 30 and 23 points
respectively.
Hornyak, the sophomore sensation from Bellaire St. John's
High School, ripped in eight of
the Bucks' first 10 points and
the Hawks never were able to
recover.
''Wereallyplayedexceptionally well, " Taylor said. " We had
real good movement and were
going to the basket. We went
after the ball with a lot more
reckless abandon than before."
The loss was the worst for
the Hawkeyes since the 1954
season when Illinois beat them
74-51 and marked the first Ohio
State win at Iowa since 1964.
Fred Brown, Iowa's only r eturn starter from last year's
Big Ten championship team,
topped all scorers with 35points,
but Taylor thought his Bucks
did a pretty good job on him.
Shoots Under Pressure
" Brown 's total doesn't really
indica te the job we did on him,"
the Buckeye coach said. "He
made some shots with good
pressure on him, which is to
his credit.''
In summing up, Taylor said
"it was the best half we've played this year . The kids went right
at them.''
The win was the sixth in 10
games for the Buckeyes and
gave them a 1-0 start in the
conference race. Iowa's record
evened out at ~ .
Ohio State travels to Morgantown, W. Va. Wednesday night
for a game with the Mountaineers and returns to Big Ten
play at home Saturday night
against Wisconsin.

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPT0M ETR 1ST

PUT OUR
MONEY WHERE
YOUR BI/J.S ARE••.

Slated Tuesday Night

OSU Surprises
Hawkeyes 97-76
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Through
the years, the Iowa Fieldhouse
has been one of the most difficult places for visiting baske tball teams to win, but Ohio
Sta te's young Buckeyes just
didn't believe it.
Coach Fred Taylor's team,
with three sophomores , a junior
and a senior in the starting lineup, did everything but blow the
Hawkeyes out of their "snake
pit" Saturday night with a 97-76
opening Big Ten victory.
"We haven't exactly been
consistent winners out ther e,"
Taylor said. " We've had some
pretty good basketball teams go
out there and not exactly set
the place on fire."
It r emains to be seen if the

idle, eighth-ranked Kentucky
beat Florida, 101-75, ninthranked Jacksonville whipped
Miami of Florida, 124-82, and
tenth-ranked Notre Dame beat
Air Force, 75-71, in a Sunday
contest.
UCLA had problems in the
first half and held iust a 41-39
lead at halftime but the Bruins
routed Washington State in the
second half. Coach John Wooden's team outscored the losers 12-4 in the first 4 minutes
of the second half. Steve Patterson led the Bruins with 22
points and 16 revounds.
Southern California, now 1~,
took a different route while
beating Washington. The Trojans led 44-29 lead at halftime
but blew the lead in the second
half before rallying to win the
game. Dennis Layton and Paul
Westphal scored 16 each for the
winners.
Marquette stretched its winning streak to 23 straight by
downing Xavier as Dean
Meminger scored 29 points.
In the Sunday game, Austin
Carr scored 34 points as Notre
Dame beat Air Force. Ron
Wielert led the losers with 19.·

1:"

OFFI C I:: HUUR S 9: 30 l v , .~. , _ I 5 (CLOSE'
-.,...
AT NOON ON THUR S. ) - EA ST CC
.
.,
POMEROY.
.../'

SAN DIEGO (UPI )-Johnny
Green, a guy who began his pro
career 12 years ago, becomes
the oldest All-Star in the history
of the National Basketball
Association Tuesday night.
Green, 37, is a member of the
East team that will face the
high-powered West in the
league's silver anniversary
game at the San Diego International Sports Arena.
It is the fourth time in Green's
12-year NBA career that he has
Been accorded All - Star
recognition.
The 6-foot-5 forward of the
Cincinnati Royals was picked
for the 1962 game with New
York, repeating in 1963 while
with the Knicks and played in
the 1965 All..Star game while
still with New York when he
was 32.
The West, which has lost
three straight games and seven
out of the last eight contests, is
favored this season because of
the presence of Lew Alcindor of
the Milwaukee Bucks.
The West also has Oscar
Robertson, the ex-Cincinnati
great who was traded to
Milwaukee during the off
season.
Milwaukee Coach Larry Costello will guide the Western AllStars and his starters will be
Alcindor, Connie Hawkins of
Phoenix and Jerry Lucas of San
Francisco at forwards and,
Jerry West and Dave Bing of
Detroit at guards.
Two members of the world
champion New York KnicksWillis Reed and Walt Frazierare scheduled to start for Knick
Coach Red Holzman. The 6-10
Reed was the NBA's Most
Valuable Player last season and
also won MVP honors in the AllStar game.
Coaching the East team for
the second straight year,

3 ROOMS

NEW

.FURNITURE

$349.95
$35.00 Down-

Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
32 14 .696 ...
26 19 .578 Slf2
Boston
Philadelphia 27 20 .574 5112
Buffalo
12 35 .255 20112
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
26 17 .605 ...
Cincinnati
19 23 .452 6112
Atlanta
14 32 .304 13112
Cleveland
6 44 . 120 23'12
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
35
7 .833 .. .
Detroit
30 16 .652 7
Chicago
26 18 .591 10
Phoenix
26 21 .533 11112
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Ang el es
24 19 .558
San Francisco 25 23 .521 1112
San Diego
23 24 .489 3
Seattle
21 25 .457 4'12
Portland
16 31 .340 10
Sunday's Results
Philadel p hia 115 Boston 117
Detroit 118 Los Angeles 109
Chicago 141 Buffalo 113
Milwaukee 151 Baltimore 99
Phoenix 116 Atlanta 105
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games
(No game s sc heduled)

LAVER DUE
BOSTON (UPI)- Defending
champion Rod Laver, with
$20,000 earned in previous wins
over Ken Rosewall and John
Newcombe, was due here today
for the third match in the
winner-take-all $210,000 Tennis
Champions Classic, against
Tony Roche Wednesday night .

STUDENT
DRIVER
It isn't Math, History or English.
But it's just as basic.
To earn a livong. he needs the old fundamentals. To keep
on living , he must learn the right way to d rove. Yet only
one out of three hogh school students takes a drover educatoon course. Too bad. Automobole accidents are the
number one killer of American teenagers.
How important is driver edu cation ? Well. 1t's important
enough that traoned drive rs have 50% fewer acc idents
and traffic violations. important eno ugh that many 1nsur·
ance co mpanies offer lower rates for teenagers who have
co mpleted dnver tratnong .
And important enough that new car dealers across th e

nation loan 34.000 automobiles every year to o ur p ubliC
schools tor driver training
u·s you r responsibi lity to help make sure you r teenager
takes the p roper subjects 1n school. So make su re drive r
educatoon os one of them. Where it's not available, we
suggest that you consider a good private ;.:·········
driving school.
(i ·
·._,
!
I!
When it comes to preparation for living. 1,1 · I · : ;
•.........· '
learning how to dnve safely really is basic.

National Automobile Dealers Association

One in a series presented by N.A . D.A. , The Daily Sentinel and The Tri-County Automobile

ealers Assoc •

�4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 11, 1971

RedmenRipl
Berea Five

Action Caught in
Eastern Victory
Pictures by Katie Crow

Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande College
Redmen jolted Berea 106-95 at Berea Saturday night
in a Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
game.
It was Rio's fifth triumph against six setbacks.
The Redmen are now 2-3 in league play. Berea
dropped to 6-7 on the year, and 1-4 in conference
action.

JOHN EHMAN (10) of the Highlanders and Dennis
Eichinger of Eastern are in a modern dance sequence here,
but only because the ball took a crazy bounce away from
them.

SEO Standings

DAVE SMITH, Eastern, is a top performer on the 9-0
,Eagles basketball team. Above, he gets off one of his
patented jump shots from 15 feet out against Southwestern
Friday night.

Ohio Cage Standings

High School Scores
By United Press International.
Columbus Walnut Ridge 84
Columbus Whetstone 55
Portsmouth 89 Ironton 57
Coal Grove 81 Oak Hill 54
South Point 85 Chesapeake 64
Rock Hill 56 Symmes Valley 52
Fairland 88 Ironton St. Joseph
60
Cleve. East Tech 74 Cleve
Benedictine 52
Cleve. East High 80 Cleve. John
Hay 38
Cleveland Lincoln · West 55
Cleveland Holy Name 52
Cleve. Rhodes 52 Cleve. South 49
Cleveland West Tech 77
Cleveland John Marshall 62
Cleveland Heights 91 Parma 67
Euclid 110 Garfield HeiQhts 64
Lakewood 76 Valley Forge 61
Avon Lake 64 Olmsted Falls 60
Berkshire 47 Richmond Heights
45 (ot)
Cleveland Lutheran East 67
Newbury 46
Ashtabula
86
Ashtabula
Edgewood 44
Geneva 39 Conneaut 35
Solon 100 Maple Heights 76
Padua 59 Independence 45
Chane! 62 Painesville Riverside
59
Cleve. St. Edward 78 Central
Catholic 19
Lorain Catholic 80 North
Bloomfield 20
Cro::ve. Bor romeo 87 Cuyanoga
Valley 45
Toledo Macomber 77 Southview
67
Cleveland St. Ignatius 72
Cleveland Max Hayes 71
Bay 64 Westlake 59 (ot)
Medina 77 Rocky River 57
Clearview 83 Midview 58
Columbia 73 Keyston 68
Painesville Harvey 78 Mentor 62
Cleve. J. Adams 57 Cleve.
Glenville 52
Kirtland 62 Fairport 40
i=armmgron 88 Ledgemont 70
Buckeye 67 Highland 46

North Olmsted 75 Fairview 58
Beachwood 65 Cleve. Cardinal
56

Pymatining Valley 74 Jefferson
55

North Ridgeville 62 Amherst 50
South Amherst 71 Firelands 63
Strongsville 53 Midpark 44
Millersport 77 Berne Union 61
Lima Senior 65 Toledo Rogers
50
Zane Trace (Guernsey) 74
Barnesville 58
Shenandoah 56 Guernsey
Catholic 45
Indian Valley South 80 Lakeland
40
Madison 56 Columbus St.
Charles 46
Coshocton 66 Claymont 63
Tri Valley 65 Riverview 61
Eastern 86 Southwestern 35
Morgan 65 Crooksville 63
Warr n Local 61 Frontier Local
53
Steubenville 52 Tridelphia (W.
Va.) 49
R1ver 85 Paden City (W.Va.) 66
Glenwood 62 Canton Timken 47
Canton South 56 Canton Lincoln
54

Canton McKinley 82 Akron
Garfield 51
Massillon 65 Canton Central
Catholic 62
Alliance 68 Youngstown Rayen
67 (ot)
Louisville 89 North Canton
Hoover 56
Fairless 53 Jackson 46
Oakwood 72 Perry 59
Canton Aquinas 72 Tuscarawas
Cath. 63
Poland 83 Minerva 52
Northwest 68 Central Christian
45

Tuslaw 41 Lake 40
Nelsonville York 64 Logan 40
Greenfield 60 Jackson 58
Starr-Washi~gn 92_Giou~ter 47
Lancaster Fisher 93 Fairfield
Union 81
Columbus Academy 101 Dan·

Weekend Sports Summary
By United Press International

Saturday
OBERSTAUFEN, Germany
(UPI) Michele Jacot of
France won the women's
speci"al slalom and moved
within a point of the World CUp
ski lead.

death playoff to beat Billy
Casper and win the $110,000
Glen Campbell Los Angeles
Open.

BU~NOS AIRES (UPI)racing driver Ignazio GkWlti
was killed when his Ferrari
rammed in to another car
BEDFORD, Ohio (UPI)during the $1,000 kilometers of
Baseball Hall of Farner Elmer Buenos Aires auto race.
Flick, an outfielder with
Cleveland and the Philadelphia
MAOONNA DI CAMPIGLIO,
Phillies, died. He was the Italy (UPI)-Gustavo Thoeni of
American League batting Italy won the special slalom
champion in 1905 with a .306 event of the "3-three" ski races.

mark.
PIDLADELPIDA
(UPI)Billy Cunningham said he
has a new five-year contract
deal with the Philadelphia 76ers
of the NBA. CWlningham said
an earlier pact with Carolina of
the ABA was voided when the
club missed a contract payment.

BERCHTESGADEN,
Germany (UPI) - World champions Horst Floth and Pepi
Bader of West Germany won
the European two-man bobsled
championship.

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - Leo
Hayden of Ohio and Paul
Staroba of Michigan each
scored two touchdowns as the
MOBILE, Ala. (UPI)- The North routed the South, 39-2, in
North beat the South, 31-13, in the American Bowl All-Star
the Senior Bowl game as J.D. football game .
Hill of Arizona State scored
twice for the winners.
DETROIT (UPI) - Doug
Barkley, who had taken over as
ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI) - temporary coach of the Red
King Of Cricket won the $48,450 Wings only a few days earlier,
, Malibu Stakes at Santa Anita by was given the position on a
2lh lengths and paid $6.60.
permanent basis Wltil the end of
the season by General Manager
HONOLULU
(UPI) - Ned Harkness.
Heisman Trophy winner Jim
Plunkett ot Stanford ran tor two
touchdowns in the North's 42-32
victory over the South in the
Hula Bowl.

ALLGAMI=c;
TEAM
W L P OP
Waverly
7
1 652 438
Chesapeake
7
1 579 488
Athens
B 2 737 561
Meigs
5 2 476 435
Jackson
7 3 779 596
Ironton
4
6 630 716
Coa I Grove
3 5 552 581
Gallipolis
2 6 426 509
Logan
2 7 489 628
Wellston
1 7 457 675
Oak Hi ll
0 9 439 715
SATURDAY'S RESULTS:
Greenfield 60 Jackson 58
Portsmouth 89 Jackson 59
Nels.· York 64 Logan 40
Coal Grove Bl Oak Hill 54
South Point 85 Chesapeake 64
DENNIS EICHINGER (12), Eastern's leading
FRIDAY'S GAMES:
rebounder and second high scorer, is heading in for a twoGallipolis at Wellston
Meigs at Athens
pointer against Southwestern. John Ehman ( 10) and Richard
Jackson at I ron ton
Gill (30) won't be stopping him.
Waverly at Logan
Oak Hill at Ironton St. Joe
Symmes Valley at Chesapeake
Coal Grove at Fairland
SATURDAY'S GAMES:
Athens at Gallipolis
Ironton at Waverly
Mla-umo \..Om.,rence
By United Press International
Wellston at Jackson
League Overall
Independents
Logan at Meigs
W L W L
w l
2 0 12 0
1 Findlay
Youngstown State
9
ABA Standings
2 0
6 5
2 Bluffton
10
By United Press International Ashland
1 1
5 7
2 Cedarville
Central State
8
East
2 2.
2 8
3 Wilmington
8
w. L. Pet. GB Urbana
1 3
8 4
4 Defiance
7
32 14 .696 ... Dayton
Virginia
1 3
2 6
3 Maline
Ohio Dominican
5
26 18 .591 5
Kentucky
Big Ten
Akron
5
3
18 24 .429 12
New York
League Overa II
4
6
19 26 .422 12112 Steubenville
Carolina
W L W L
'}_
3
18 27 .400 13112 John Carroll
Floridians
1 0
8 2
7
5 Indiana
Pittsburgh
18 29 .383 14'12 Cincinnati
1 0
6 2
6 Illinois
Rio Grande
5
West
1 0
7 3
7
6 Purdue
W. L. Pet. GB Xavier
1 0
7 4
4
5 Michigan
28 13 .683 ... Walsh
Utah
1 0
6 4
5
7 Oh io State
27 15 .643 1'12 Cleveland State
Indiana
0 1
5 4
5
7 Wisconsin
23 21 .523 6112 Wright State
Memphis
0 1
5 5
2
3 Minnesota
16 26 .381 12112 Case Tech
Denver
0 1
5 5
2
8 Michigan State
16 28 .364 13112 Ohio Northern
Texas
0 1
5 5
Western Reserve
1
4 Iowa
Sunday's Results
0 1
4 7
Northwestern
Mid-American Conference
Memphis 114 Pittsburgh 106
League Overall
Utah 129 Floridians 116
W L W L
Virginia 117 New York 107
Miami
2 0
6 3
Denver 124 Carolina 118
Ohio University
1 0
7 2
(Only games scheduled)
7 2
Western Michigan 0 0
Monday's Games
0 1
6 4
Toledo
Utah at Indiana
Kent State
0 1
6 4
Kentucky vs. Memphis
0 1
3 6
at Nashville, Tenn. Bowling Green
(Only games scheduled)
Conference
Ohio
League Over a II

LAYUP MOVE - Dave
Smith gets inside for a closein layup against Southwestern.
ville 90
New Albany 41 Lucas 40
Canterburg51 Newark Cafholic I
41
Columbus Ready 98 West
Jefferson 60
Columbus DeSales 60
Mansfield St. Peter's 52
Grove City 92 Columbus
Westland 46
Xenia Wil son 68 Ohio Deaf 49
Circleville 74 Franklin Heights
61
Gahanna 80 Bexley 68
Teays Valley 68 Olentangy 61
Big Walnut 85 Plain City 63
Ridgedale 50 Pleasant 45
Miami Trace 75 London 72
Chillicothe 70 Washington C. H.
62 (3 otl
Cincinnati Hughes 102 Dayton
Dunbar 91
Milford 102 Glen Este 48
Loveland 77 Sycamore 68 (2 ot)
New Richmond 52 Bethel 51
Amelia 58 Felicity 47
Bethel Tate 82 Williamsburg 61
Hamersville 66 East Clinton 63
North College Hill 59 Finneytown 54
Eastern Local 57 North Adams
49
Taylor 63 St. Bernard 55
Readina 67 Wyoming 63
West Union 70 Fayetteville 69
Mason 68 Kings 51
Cincinnati St. Xavier 54
Cincinnati Moell er 47
Clermont North eastern 63
Goshen 51
Cincinnati Western Hills 73
Fa irfield 68
Sidney 68 Celina 66
Hardin Northern 53 Ada 51
Tiffin Columbian 85 Willard 68
Bucyrus 76 Galion 58
Port Clinton 66 Sandusky
Perkins 59
Mansfield Senior 68 Ashland 61
Oak Harbor 83 Woodmere 59
Fostoria St. Wendelin 84 Tiffin
Calvert 61
Plymouth 86 Mapl eton 69
Colerain 87 Norwood 69
Oak Hills 85 Anderson 54
Hamilton Garfie ld 88 Oxford
Talawanda 70
Blanchester 77 Waynesville 65
Frankl in 72 Eaton 68
Madeira 61 Deer Park 57
Lakota 76 Twin Valley South 55
Greenhills 63 Mt. Healthy 56
Harrison 74 Lock land 67
Cincinnati Elder 57 Cincinnati
Purcell 50
Cincinnati Country Day 68
Covington (Ky.) Laton36
Sidney Lehman 58 Marion Local
38
Fort t&lt;ecovery tJ/ Ansonia 57
Dixie 73 Arcanum 53
Del phis St. John 84 Wapakoneta
76
Lima Bath 110 Elida 80

eek 'S

TY/

This W
Cage Games
By United Press International
Monday
Northern Illinois at Cincinnati
Central State at Thomas More
Steubenville at
Kentucky
Wesleyan
Point Park at Walsh
Wr ight-Patterson AFB at
Wilberforce
Tuesday
Heidelberg at Baldwin-Wallace
Rio Grande at Campbellsville
Urbana at Defiance
Oberlin at Muskingum
Wilmington at Cedarville
Wednesday
Ohio State at West Virginia
Ohio Univers ity at Kent State
Miami at Western Michigan
Marshall at Toledo
Louisville at Dayton
Ohio Northern at Central State
Akron at Cleveland State
Walsh at Ohio Dominican
t&lt;io Grande at Union (Ky.)
Ohio Wesleyan at Denison
West Virginia Wesleyan at
Marietta
Mount Union at Wooster
Wittenberg at Otterbein
Findlay at Bluffton
Thursday
Gannon at Youngstown State
Case Tech at Hiram
Steubenville at Point Park
Friday
Kenyon at Urbana
Saturday
Wisconsin at Ohio State
Kent State at Western Michigan
Ohio University at Toledo
Miami at Bowling Green
Dayton at DePaul
Detroit at Xavier
Denison at Oberlin
Marietta at Ohio Wesleyan
Kenyon at Otterbein
Hiram at Wittenberg
Findlay at Heidelberg
Mount Union at Baldwin·
Wallace
Youngstown State at West.
minster
Kentucky State at Central State
Central Connecticut at Akron
Fredonia State at Ashland
Rio Grande at Ohio Dominican
Ohio Northern at Capital
Marion (Ind.) at Urbana
VVooster at VValsn
Wright State at Cedarville
Bluffton at Defiance
Wilmington at Malone
Sunday
Gannon at Steubenvi lie

Sunday
Lunn sank a one-foot birdie putt
on the fourth hole of a su den-

5
4
3
2
1
2
2
1
1

l
0
0
0
0
0

w

1
2

4
5

2
4

2
3

3
3

8
6

'1.·~·~.

• ,.j
t ' ·;:• .1

•

0 1
0 2
0 3

6 4
3 3
2 6

0

3

3

0

4

2 7

Saturday's
Ohio College
Basketball Scores
By United Press International
Ohio State 97 Iowa 76
Ohio University 100 Bowling
Green 79
Miami 61 Toledo 51
St. Bonaventure 85 Kent State 68
Marquette 91 avier 60
Dayton 111 Loyola (La.) 94
Ashland 78 Oakland (Mich.)
University 40
Central State 60 Central
Michigan 53
Capital 62 Oberlin 50
Akron 77 Westminster 59
Wooster 83 Ohio Wesleyan 73
Findlay 112 Wilmington 89
Youngstown State 75 San Diego
57
Marietta 100 Hi ram 70
Defiance 88 Cedarville 71
Bluffton 80 Malone 71
Otterbein 109 VVest Virginia
Tech 87
Heidelberg 80 Muskingum 68
Mount Union 104 Denison 84
Wittenberg 83 Baldwm-Wallace
50
Rio Grande 106 Berea (Ky.) 105
Allegheny 75 Case Tech 73
Steubenville 74 Bellarmine 70

!

t ' A THOUGHT ·t

t

FOR TODAY : .

f

it It takes less time to do d
it thing right than it does to;;

tit explain
why
wrong.

.
it

f

"?-

•

CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - The Pittsburgh
Pirates' new farm club in the
International League will be
known as the "Charleston
Charlies," owner Robert
Levine announced Monday.
The team replaces the
Pirates' former farm club in
Columbus, Ohio, the Jets.
Levine, president of the
team, said the name was
selected in honor of \ his
father, "Poor Charlie"
Levine, a junk dealer and a
familiar figure in minor
league sports in West
Virginia.

~

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you did it -tt

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.

-Henry Wadsworth·:
Longfellow • •

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DRIVE~IN :

BANKING
Fridays Only

•

9 A.M. to7 P.M.

t

•t
it

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il

-tc The Drive-In Window t~~...
·•
isOpen
-tc..,

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(Continuously)

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Other Banking Hours 9 to :
it 3 and 5 to 7 as usual on it
it Fridays.

t -FARMERS BANK :
•t and SAVINGS CO. •t
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it

..............
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it

POMEROY, ut1IO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

·~
ic
il
il

~

ON ABE

DREAM MAID~
MATTRESS SET

2-HOUR
'CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

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

S'.:··,I:',~J!
i~nant
Ie'l!istant T1LB
CEII.IND
&gt;.•. .UII.f''
111• iJj,

Save $20 on the
Twin or Full Size Dream Maid
2-Piece Set
Nationa lly Advertised Price .. $119.50

2·Piece Ensemble
Nationally Advertised Price . . $179.50

Bemco Dream Maid-the sale priced mattress set with these
expensive features:
• Unifused' Quilted Construc.tion for long wear and special
back care
• Firm Innerspring Unit for the ultimate in comfort and luxury
• Double-Reinforced Sag-Proof Border helps the mattress last
• Heavy Insulator preserves the mattress and your back
• Heavy Duty Matching Box Spring Unit provides added support
• Genuine Sani·Septlc Ticking resists germs. odor,
perspiration and mildew

Also makers of" The World's Greatest Sleeping Pills" •;
Prestige Quiltorama ••• Imperial Ouiltorams ..• Quiltotama._

...

Stone Face Ceiling tile.
The tile that looks good at being durable!
12 x 12" tiles- 24x 48" Panels.

Pomerov Cement Block Co;

The D~p~rtm~nt Store
_ _ _ _ __ __ _ _..,:,of ~1ldmg Smce 1915

AVAILABLE AT:

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT

~!CHTS

•

t

It's Quick! Easy

The peba, or nine-banded
armadillo, bears its young in
litters of four and invariably
of the same sex.

f.,..
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Let us show you Conwed Impact Resistant

/'l:f'.

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~

7

h(:,l \ .•

-~:

Saturday, Rio will play at
Ohio Dominican in a non-league
contest.
Box score of Saturday night's
victory over Berea:
RIO GRANDE (106) - Bass•
15-6-36: Bentley 7-3-17; Hairston
448,: Lambert 8-10-2~; J?aulley
0-1-1; Williams 7-4-18. TOTALS
41-24-106.
BEREA ( 95) - Broome 4-0-8;
Hairston 3-0-6; Grant ~;
Thompson 6-2-14; Backigalupi
3-1-7; Maynard 7-3-17; Fox 6-113; Jones 1-0-2; Miller 4-0-8;
Smith 6-2-14. TOTALS 40-15-95. ,

l
9 1
8 2
11 1
6 3
6 1

}5:Y;;;r;·~:.~e wl ~ Conwecl
• ... , ,,.,_,.~. • ~
,_.~'' ;•&lt;'

WS ANGELES (UPI)i- Bob

w

Capital
Marietta
Wooster
Wittenberg
Otterbein
Mount Union
Heidelberg
Baldwin-Wallace
Muskingum
Ohio Wesleyan
Oberlin
Denison
Kenyon
Hiram

Tony Bass was the big gWl for
Rio Grande. The Dayton forward pumped in 36 markers.
Ron Lambert added 26, Bernard
Williams 18 and Roger Bentley
17.
Ken Maynard paced the
losers with 17 points. Joe
Thompson had 14.
Rio Grande led 51-47 during
the halftime intermission.
The Redmen hit 41 of 89 field
goal attempts ( 46.1 per cent)
and 24 of 31 free throw attempts
(61.6).
Williams hauled down 20
reboWlds for the Redmen. Bass
collected 13.
The Redmen will play two
more league games on the road
this week. Tuesday, the
Lanham quintet will battle
powerful
Campbellsville
College, and Wednesday, the
Redmen take on the alwaystough Union quintet at Barbourville, Ky. ·

4

MIDDLEPORT

THE PARTY WILL BE OVER SOON-SO. DON'T BE LATE!

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 11, 1971 '
~OOOO~~~~~XXXM~OO,OO~~~

•

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

POMEROY- A lazy gardener, are you? Get no kick out of
digging a hole and dropping a seed into it? Then seed-tape was
made for the likes of you.
Using seed-tape, the Ferry-Morse Seed Company tells us, can
give a maximum in garden fresh vegetables and fragrant flowers
with a minimum of time and effort. So if you're a gardening
novice or just a lazy one, it may be just the thing for you. The
company calls it "instant planting".
•
Water - soluble seed tapes - green colored strips with seeds
encased -are being marketed for the first time this year by the
Ferry-Morse Co.
And they make it sound so easy to have a bountiful harvest
with their new product.
All you do, they say, is prepare a furrow to the proper depth,
lay in the seed-tape, cover it, insert the handy row marker so
you'll know what you planted, then relax until the darlings start
popping through the ground. Isn't that easy.
And there they are all evenly spaced in straight lines or
~ designs which you created when you laid the tape. If the 15 foot
strip is too long, you just cut it off; if it's too short, just add
another strip.
Anyways with spring just 10 weeks from today- that's not
long really- it's time to start planning your garden, particularly
if you're not only a lazy gardener but a slow planner.
So you have a poison thumb instead of a green one. Use the
seed-tape and you don't have a chance to kill the seed before it
gets into the ground. The substance covering the seeds on the tape
provides the right nutrients, the company reports, for good
growth. After all, we're not all equipped with the innate instinct or
knowledge about where to plant what.
How many times have you planted a seed and up comes a
weed. You thought it was the aster you planted. You nurture it,
you give it loving care and plenty of water, it blooms one day, and
would you believe ... a dandelion.
Seed-tape has been tested in 36 states and five countries in
plantings of more than 100 varieties of vegetables and flowers
representing 30 species, the company reports, and that's good
enough for us. We'll buy.
•
The planting is quicker and easier, the thinning is minimized
since the seeds are evenly spaced, and the harvest is more
uniform because all the seeds are covered with the same depth of
soil. Who could ask for anything more.
But convience doesn't come cheap.
The 15 feet of seed tape will cost you 69 cents; the same
number of seeds in a packet about 20 cents.
You have a choice. Isn't that wonderful !

•

r---------------------------,.
,. !
HOSPITAL NEWS I

Holzer Medical Center, Fiist
Ave. and Cedar St. G-eneral
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
· Births
Mr. and Mrs. Pius Eugene
Hyrne, Gallipolis, a daughter;
•
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wayne
Belcher, Wellston, a son; and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.
Chevalier, Gallipolis, a son.
Discharges
Deanna L. Bragg, Lawrence
Craig, Charles C. Daniels,
Edward J. Frey, Mrs. John F.
Groth, Jr., Millard S. Hammond, Jr., Nichol&amp;s Stone
Johnson, Mrs. William Edward
._, Kelley and infant daughter,
Mrs. Morlan K. Kiser, Norris A.
Nunn, Mrs. Jerry D. Raines,

Officers are
Installed
New church officers were
installed Sunday at the Middleport First Baptist Church by
the Rev. Charles Simons.
Installed for one year terms
were Mrs. Janice Gibbs, church
clerk, Mrs. Richard Owen,
assistant;
Miss
Freddie
Houdashelt, church treasurer,
Mrs. Willis Anthony, assistant;
Mrs. Gerald Anthony, church
organist, Mrs. Gibbs, assistant;
Daniel Thompson, church
school superintendent, Gerald
Anthony, assistant; Delores
Richardson, church school
secretary and treasurer, Kent
Kloes assistant; Mrs. Willis
Anthony, church missions
treasurer, Mrs. Lettie Roush,
assistant.
Church board officials installed were Freda Hood, Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Mrs. Owen,
Miss Jerry Pullen, Mrs. David
Darst and Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin, Board of Christian
Education; Tony Fowler,
Robert Richardson, Charles
White, Edison Baker, Milton
Hood, Paul Smart, Clifford
Hayes, John Kauff and Fred
Russell, Board of Deacons.
Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mrs.
Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
Gerald Anthony, Mrs. John
Werner, Mrs. Ethel Hughes,
and Mrs. Iva Turner, Board of
Deaconesses; David Darst,
Kenneth Imboden, Mrs. Beulah
White, Gerald Anthony, Gene
Kauff, Texanna White Well,
Martha King, Manning Kloes
and John Werner, Board of
Trustees.
On the finance committee are
Mrs. Paul Smart, Jacob Turner,
Cecil Evans, Fred Hoffman,
Mrs. Tony Fowler and Mrs.
John Fultz.
Ushers for this year are
Gerald Anthony, Edison Baker,
Mark Fowler, Mike Hoffman,
Kent K.loes, Willis Anthony,
David Darst, John Kauff, Gene
I&lt;'auff, Bob Richardson, Jacob
'i'urner, Wally Davis, Bill
Davis, Greg Hayes, Jack Kauff
and Kenneth Imboden.

VISITS PARENTS
Miss Beverly Price, a teacher
in the Lancaster schools, was in
Mrs. James R. Roush and infant Portland to visit her parents,
son, James A. Rutherford, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Price,
Garnet 0. Swain, Jodi G. Webb, over the weekend.
Homer C. Willard, Harry E.
Wing, Mrs. William T. Winter,
Mrs. Donald Adkins and
TO HAVE SURGERY
Charles L. Yeaw.
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Middleport, was scheduled for
surgery this morning at the
Holzer
Medical
Center,
AUXILIARY TO MEET
SYRACUSE - The Ladies Gallipolis. She was admitted to
Auxiliary of the Syracuse the hospital Sunday.
Voluntary Firemen will meet
ACCOMPANY RANDY
aU-day Tuesday at the hall
Mrs. Marvin Burt and David
beginning at 9:30 a. m. with and Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
work on Easter baskets. The Pomeroy, accompanied Randy
afternoon session will consist of Burt to Ohio State University
the regular business meeting
Sunday.
with installation of officers.
Secret pals will be drawn .
The Charter of the United
Everyone is welcome. There
Nations was signed in San
will be apotluck dinner at noon. Francisco, Calif., in 1945.

If There Really •IS
•

..

No Need for
Continuous
Advertising
MINISTERS- should preach only one sermon or so a year.
People are against sin anyway, so why harp on it?
TRAFFIC LIGHTS - should be turned off at dangerous
intersections to save electricity. Everybody knows it's a
dangerous spot and that is sufficient.
TEACHERS- shouldn't review lessons. Tell children just ·
once and they'll never forget it.
HIGHWAY POLICE- should stop driving up and down the
highways. No need to caution drivers by patrolling highways.
Drivers know the law and obey it.

••

I

OUT-OF-TOWNERS - that advertise in the "big City"
papers and Mail Order Firms that send out catalogs are
wasting their money. Everybody knows what is sold in the
stores in the Meigs-Mason Area and they'll all stop here.!
BUT IF YOU are one of the foolish kind - like the Notre
Dame Cathedral that has stood for six centuries but continues to ring the bell every day to let people know it is still
there - believe in continuous, profitable advertising then
your advertising belongs in . . .
'

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Co~J

992-2156

rt St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

~~~

--l

Social !
Calendar 1
MONDAY
RUTLAND PTA, 7:30 Monday at the school. Dr. Dale
Matmiller,
director
of
University Health Services,
Ohio University, guest speaker
on "Youth and Drug Abuse".
HEATH
METHODIST
Church WSCS 7:30p.m. Monday
at the church.
POMEROY P.T.A., 7:30p.m.
Monday. George Hargraves to
speak. Rev. Stanley Plattenburg to give devotions.
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Monday 7:30 p.m. at
high school. Everyone urged to
attend. Refreshments.
TUESDAY
MINISTERIAL
Assn.
Tuesday 10 p.m. at Pomeroy
Baptist Church.
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday. Work in FC
degree.
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at school with Barbara
Scites, nurse with county CAP
program speaking; film on use
of marijuana.
HARRISONVILLE
OES,
Tuesday, regular session;
Avanell
George,
worthy
matron, asks all officers be
present at 7:30p.m. to practice
march.
P 0 MER 0 y
UNITED
Methodist Church WSCS 7:30
Tuesday at the church.
LEWIS-MANLEY Post 263,
American Legion Auxiliary,
7:30 Tuesday night at the home
of Mrs. Barbara Coates,
Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAy
Firemen's
MIDDLEPORT
Auxiliary, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday night at the home of
Mrs. Alice Mills. Mrs. Mills and
Mrs. Howard Dailey, hostesses.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30 p.
m. Wednesday, American
Legion Hall, Middleport.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions
Wednesday
noon,
UnitedClub,
Methodist
Church,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
convocation, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Conferring of most excellent masters degree.
THURSDAY
AFTERNOON Circle, 2 p. m.
Heath Methodist Church. Mrs.
Rose McDade, devotions; Mrs.
Emerson Jones, Lesson; iMrs.
Nan Moore, Mrs. Nelle Davis
and Mrs. Garnet Entsminger,
hostesses.
PAST COUNCILORS, D of A,
7p. m. Thursday, home of Mrs.
Mabel Wolfe.

Kingsbury
The Carleton Church had a
New Year's Watch Friday night
followed by a potluck lunch in
the church basement.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. John Pedras at Cleveland.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited Fred Cool and
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cool and
family at Piketon, Ohio and Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Willson at Jasper,
Ohio.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Beal were Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Beal and family of
Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Swart and Roma Sue of
Columbus and Mrs. Martin
Swart, Sr. of Willington, North
Carolina . While here they
visited with Mrs. Roma Beal at
Portland.
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray and
Mrs. Louise Garrison visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Brickles.
Miss Carol Sue Hall returned
to Willmore, Ky. to college after
spending the holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hall
and family .
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean, John and
Richard were Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie King, Joey and Mike,
Charles King and Susan, Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Waggoner of
Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins of Racine and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Paynter of
Carpenter; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Gilkey and daughters of
Athens.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Philip Harrison
and Rodney of Columbus were
New Year's guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Olen Harrison. Also
visiting were Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Harrison, Jodi and Scott, Ottie
Scholl and David Riggs.
New Year's visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie King and sons
and Charles King and Susan
were Mr. and Mrs . Peter Sewar
and Mrs. David McDonald of
Rutland.
Miss Judy King, who was
home over the holidays for a
visit with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil King and family,
has returned to Kankakee,
Illinois where she is attending
college.

Projects Reviewed by Harvester Class
Accomplishments over the
past year, including an $800
contribution to the Trinity
Church Council to defray the
manse debt, were reviewed and
plan'&gt; for this year were
discussed Friday night by the
Happy Harvesters Class
meeting in the church social
room.
Mrs.
Phil
Meinhart,
treasurer, presented the annual
report which showed a balance
of $488.49 in the general fund
and $19.29 in the flower fund.

She noted that during 1970, a
total of $1,172.54 had been taken
in through various projects,
activities, and contributions.
During the meeting conducted by Mrs. Ella Smith,
president, plans were made for
a valentine costume party to be
held at the February meeting.
Prizes will be awarded to the
one in the prettiest costume.
Hostesses will be Mrs. Clarence
Massar, Mrs. Stella Kloes and
Mrs. Georgia Williamson. Mrs.
Edith Lanning will give the

Installation Held
For Club Officers
Installation of new officers for
the next two years highlighted a
meeting of the Catholic
Women's Club of the Sacred
Heart Church.
Installed were Mrs. Phyllis
Hennesy, president; Mrs.
Peggy Rudolph, vice president;
Mrs. Sandy Korn, secretary;
Mrs. Janet Duffy, treasurer;
Mrs.
Mary
Kunzelman,
auditor; and Mrs. Jo Ann
Tatterson, historian.
Named to the ways and
means committee were Mrs.
Rudolph, chairman; Mrs.
Barbara Mullen, Mrs. Korn,
Mrs. Duffy, Mrs. Patterson and
Mrs. Kunzelman. The kitchen
workers of the organization
were reminded to get their
blood tests.
A report was given on
Christmas projects which ineluded a box of candy to each
resident at the Meigs County
lnfimary, a sled to the Meigs
County Children's Home, and
three baskets of groceries for
needy families.
Mrs. J. M. Thornton spoke to
the group on "Project
Freedom" and urged the

members to JOm in the
movement designed to pressure
Hanoi into abiding by provisions
of the Geneva Convention in
dealing
with
American
prisoners of war. Mrs. Thornton
reported on the meeting held
recently in Pomeroy to organize
door-to-door canvassing in May
for signatures on letters
protesting the treatment of
American prisoners.
To increase attendance each
member present was asked to
take two others to the February
meeting. Mrs. Diana Bartels
was welcomed as a new
member. Mrs. Korn, Mrs .
Duffy, Mrs. Hennesy, and Mrs.
Tatterson were named as
hostesses for the next meeting.
At that time Mrs. Hennesy will
teach bridge.
Thank you notes were sent to
Mrs. Norma Goodwin and Mrs.
Charlene Davis Batey.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Emma Radford, Mrs.
Cecilia Mitch, Mrs. Martha
Gress and Mrs. Isabelle Werry.
Prayer was by the Rev. Fr.
Bernard Krajcovic;

Se rv I. ce He Id Jan. 2nd
Funeral services for Mrs.
Edocia J. Lane, 90, of Middleport were conducted on Jan.
2 at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home.
The Rev. Eugene Gill officiated at the services and
burial was in the Riverview
Cemetery beside her late
husband,
Cumberland.
Pallbearers were her grandsons, Tommy and Steve Lane,
Middleport; Charles E. Lane,
Oregon, Ohio; Walter and
Donald Lynch, Toledo, and
Bernard Cottrill of Jamesville,
0.
Here from out of town for the
services were Mrs. Rosa Lynch,
Toledo; Mrs. Lillie Cottrill,
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Lynch, son Dale and daughter,
Karen, Toledo; Donald Lynch
and son, Donald, and daughter,
Lori Ann, Toledo; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles E. Lane of Oregon, 0.;
Mrs. Gertrude Lechene of
Warren, Mich.; Calvin, Bernard, Marvin and Robert
Cottrill, Jamesville, Ohio; Mrs.
Sadie Perkins and son of Akron;
Mrs. Nora Woods, Mrs. Violet
Hanna, Mrs. Alberta Stump,
Mrs. Jean Goldsmith, all of
Jamesville; Tenn Rowell,
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Lynch, Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Jenkins, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Klein,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. C.
Little, Cheshire.
Mrs. Lane was preceded in
death by her parents, her
husband, a son, a daughter, a
grandson, two sisters and two
brothers. She is survived by
three daughters, Mrs. Roy
(Nellie) Russell with whom she
made her home; Mrs. Pat

Dutton's

ELECfED TO COUNCIL
Mrs. Evelyn Lanning, Mrs.
Alice Nease and John Mitcher
were elected to the Trinity
Church Council at a business
meeting Sunday. Received into
membership of the church was
Mrs. Clara Karr. Annual
reports were heard.

GUESTS OF BREWERS
Holiday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Brewer were Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Beegle,
Christa, Rodney and Ryan,
Dorcas; Mr. and Mrs. John
Dobbins and sons, Dennis and
Kerry, and their guest, an
exchange students from
Sweden, Lars Lundevist,
Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Simera I and daughter,
Tisha Jane, Findlay.

LADY ESQUIRE
INSTANT

SHOE

COLORING '

WMPQ-1390
On your dial
Buy at your priceChairs Tables Lamps - Mirrors Clothes Hampers Wall
Plaques
Mattresses Rugs
Card Tables Step Stools - Radios
- Tape RecordersPillows Lawn
F urniture Book
Shelf Toy Chests
- Desks- These are
a lew of the items we
have sold on the
Radio
Auction.
Radio Auction .

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

Interest Per Year on
Passbook Savings. Com·
pounded quarterly from date
of deposit to date of withdrawal, as long as you
maintain an open account.
No minimum or maximum
amount to qualify. Withdrawals can be made at any
time.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pome'r oy, "hio
All Accounts Insured to
$20,000.00 By FSLIC.

Pharmacy

for Your Drug Neetls

Famous McKesson

VITAMIN C REGULAR
If you prefer the Famous Regular
(EASY TO SWALLOW) McKESSON VITAMIN C TABLETS 100
mg., 250 mg. or 500 mg.

TWO BOTTLES
FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
100 mg.- 2/100's- $129
250 mg. - 2/ 1 CO's - $249
500 mg. - 2150's - $249

are

Dr. Linus Pauling, twice a Nobel prize
winner, has recommended Vitamin C
for controlling the common cold.

(REGULAR) FOR CHILDREN
VITAMIN C CANDY-LIKE TABLETS
100 mg. 250 mg. -

Wed., 8:45 am.

NOW EARN A

IMPORTANT!

THE SHOE BOX

HAVE YOU
HEARD?
Baker's
Radio
Auction

Mrs. Phil Meinhart, Miss Sybil
Ebersbach and Mrs. Seyfried
were observed. Mrs. Smith
opened the meeting with a
prayer from the yearbook. She
also presented devotions using
the articles, "The Blessing
Tree," "So What About New
Year's," and "It's Water Under
the Bridge," concluding with a
poem, "The Bread of Life."
Mrs. Phil Meinhart read "Think
of Someone You Love." A
potluck dinner preceded the
meeting. Mrs. Tom Bowen was
a guest at the dinner.

llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

(Rosa) Lynch of Toledo; Mrs.
Lillie Cottrill of Akron; two
sons, Calvin Lane of Middleport; Charles Cecil Lane of
Hattiesburg, Miss.; 17 grandchildren, 42 great-grandchildren, and four greatgreat-grandchildren.

Where
Shoes
sensibly priced.
Middleport

devotions and Mrs. Smith will
present the program.
Members prepared roundrobin letters to be sent to Mrs.
Mildred Headley, a patient at
St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg. Mrs. Meinhart
will arrange for a planter to be
sent to her.
The possibility of having
about 16 chairs caned was
discussed and Mrs. Rose
Ginther, Mrs. Neva Seyfried
and Mrs. Ben Neutzling were
appointed to secure estimates.
If the chairs are repaired it will
be a joint project of the Happy
Harvesters and the Busy Bee
Class.
Notes of appreciation were
read from Mrs. Glenroy Ewing,
residing in a rest home in
Columbus, along with a
donation; from Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Massar for serving
their golden wedding anniversary along with a special
thanks to Mrs. Nwtzling for the
elaborate decorations; from
Mrs. Freda Fauber for flowers
sent during her hospitalization;
from Amanda Kaspar and
Edith Heines for plants at
Christmas; from Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Midkiff for a wedding
reception, and from the Rev.
and Mrs. W. H. Perrin for a gift
of money at Christmas.
Acknowledged was a $10
donation from Mrs. Bessie
Weed in lieu of serving as a
hostess. The class president
thanked Mrs. Phil Meinhart,
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart and Mrs.
Eva Dessauer for compiling the
yearbook and appointed Mrs.
Ginther and Mrs. Ada Holter to
select a gift for Miss Erma
Smith who prepared the
yearbook.
The birthday anniversaries of

100's Reg. $1.29 at 86c ea.
100's Reg. $1.98 at $1.32 ea.

"\S\l OUR

.

\mproved ~etennar,
Department
TERRA~YCIN

A &amp;D~C.OUR TABLETS,
COMBIOTIC
INJECTION, 10 cc vial,
PENICILLIN
INJECTION, 10 cc via.l,
TERRAMYCIN
INJECTION, 50 cc vial

DJJTTONS
PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR MAIN BUSIN ESS

MIDDLEPORT; O. ·

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Jan . ll, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds •
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
Syracuse News, Society
Business Services
OF
I: .
Motor Co.
Wanted To Buy

By ADA SLACK
SYRACUSE - Dinner guests
at the home of Elva Dailey on
Christmas Day were Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Dailey of Lowell,
Mr. and Mrs. James Pape of
Middleport. Afternoon callers
were Mr. and Mrs . Carl
Autherson of Long Bottom and
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Allen of
Newark.
Mr. Clifford Hall and mother,
Mrs. Hattie Arms, attended
funeral services for Richard
Carey of Trimble.
Mrs. Blanche Cunningham
and son, Robert, of Athens
visited on Wednesday at the
James Teaford • Sampson Hall
home.
Spending from Saturday until
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
Troy Zwilling were their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs . Russell Zwilling, son,
Frankie, and his girl friend,
Judy Brown, of Valley Station,
Ky.
The Rev. and Mrs. Howard
Kemp of Cleveland were
weekend guests of the Rev. and
Mrs. Raymond Butcher. He was
the guest speaker Sunday
morning at the local Baptist
Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Frank
and andy of Nelsonville visited
on Sunday with Mrs. Holly
Friend.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Pierce,
Cherri and Dean, of Elyria
spent ·from Wednesday until

Stivers ville
News Notes

•
•

Mrs. Zetta Boyd, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Boyd of Parkersburg
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dell
Ta lbott on Sunday.
Mrs. Ethel Larkins, Mrs.
Tressie Stethem of Long Bottom, Mrs. Amanda Taylor of
Huntington P ark, Calif., and
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Slavens of
Bellville, W. Va., were r ecent
guests of Mrs. Sylvia Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkerson
and Shawn of Columbus were
Christmas gu e sts of h er
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudy
Durst.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst
a nd Scotty, Athens, wer e
holiday callers at the home of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. R.
Durst and Tom.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Bud Gluesencamp and daughters of Bolivar
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Fitch Sr. and
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Gluesencamp and Nickie.
Delbert Ours of Chester was a
recent guest of his daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Middleswart.
Clint Donovan of Pomeroy
spent an afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Bryant and children .
Harold Brewer and family
wer e Sunday guest s of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Brewer and David.
Mr . and Mrs. Clint Smith of
Portland were Sunday guests of
Mr. a nd Mrs. Homer Belt.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ron Beegle and
children of Racine sp ent
Saturday afternoon with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Edgar
Brewer .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson and
family of Racine spent Sunday
with his parents, Mr . a nd Mrs.
J. W. Lawson .
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van Meter
and Missey of P omeroy and Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Evans and
daughters visited Mrs . Ada Van
Meter Friday.
Mrs. Violet Brewer is convalescing at home following a
r ecent hospitalization.
Mrs. L arr y Curtis and
children and Mrs. Mary Pier ce
of umg Bottom were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Van Meter
last week.
Mr. a nd Mrs. J im Middleswart and family visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Bush , Racine, Sunday .
Mr. a nd Mrs. Geor ge Hupp

~

were recent guests of Mr. and

~

:
:
:
:
•
•
..

'

, Mrs. Cha rles Hilton.
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Talbot,
~ New Lexington , and Mr. and
: Mrs . George Souders of Xenia
~ visited their par ents, Mr. and
~ Mrs , Dell Talbott over the
' Christmas holida ys.
Recent guest s of E. H. Car penter and family were Mr . and
Mrs . Joe Boyd, Mrs . Zetta
• Boyd, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Lisle and Kathy , Mrs. Ethel
Larkins, Mrs. Tressie Stethem ,
Mrs. Am anda Taylor, Sylvia
• Allen , S. W. Durst , Violet
Brewe r, Tom Dur:.t, Patty
Gluesc nra mp , T a dd y , Tim ,
1
Shawn Wilkerson, Rudy Durst,
1
Pame la Buc k and J. W.
Lawson.

SatUrday with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Pierce and
brother Tony and sister Tina .
Mr. and Mrs. .Jj;mmett
Pickens and family of Toledo
visited his parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hubbard
spent Sunday with their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
James Hubbard, and family of
Lancaster.
Virgil Hudson of Pomeroy
spent Christmas with his son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Dencil Hudson and
children.
Miss Louanna Staats of
Hemlock Grove was an overnight guest of Darlene Duncan.
Mr. and Mrs. John Slack and
Johnny, Donald and Linda, of
Sandyville were New Year's
weekend guests of his mother,
Mrs . Ada Slack, and her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Truman
Priddy and family of Rutland.
They were joined for Sunday
dinner by Mrs. Ada Slack's
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson,
Tammy, Cheryl and Terry, of
Wolfpen Road.
Thursday night and New
Year's Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Guy A. Guinther and
family were their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Willie Guinther of Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hysell
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. James Hayman of Dayton.
Enroute home they visited with
their daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Max Folmer and
baby in Cincinnati.
Mrs. Elva Dailey spent New
Year's with her daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James
Pape of Middleport.
Spending a Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Troy Zwilling were
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Adkins and
family of Pomeroy Route, Mr.
and Mrs. Pat Patterson and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Hendrix and Barbara, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Burgess
and children of Millwood, W.
Va., and Mrs. Sadie Smith of
Hartford were New Year's
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Guinther and family.
Visiting with Elva Dailey
wer e Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Autherson of Beverly, Louise
Yates, Racine, Denise Barnhart
of Middleport, Mrs. Shirley
Johnson and Bruce and Brian
and Brenda Lawrence of
Portland,
and
Patricia
Autherson, local.
Kenneth Guinther was an
overnight guest of Ronnie
Staats of Hemlock Grove.
Christmas Day guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Pete Hendrix was her
mother, Mrs. Sadie Smith of
Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Harris was
pleasantly
surprised
on
Christmas Day to receive a
telephone call from their son SSgt. James Harris and family in
Germany. They will be home in
March after a three and onehalf years tour of duty there
with the U. S. Army.
Mrs. Cynthia· Slavens and
Mrs. Melvina Burke and sons,
Rick and Anthony, of Wellston
were Sunday guests of the
former's daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Diddle.
Karen Guinther spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Willie Guinther of Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Mr. and Mrs. Freeman
Enoch attended a surprise
silver wedding anniversary
celebration for Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Biggs of Pomeroy
Route on Christmas Eve.
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Guinther and family spent
Sunday with Mrs. Sadie Smith,
Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. James Harden
of London were New Year's
weekend visitors of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
and Debbie.
The Rev. and Mrs. Ralph
Hudson and family of Portsmouth were guests of his
mother, Myla Hudson and sons,
Glenn and Eugene. Mr. and
Mrs. Dencil Hudson and
children, local, were callers.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
McPhail and sons wer e his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
McPhail of Grafton, W. Va .
Glenna
Soulsby
was
Christmas and New Year's
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Gibbs of Rutland.
Mrs .
Mollie
Guinther
r eceived Christmas greetings
by phone from her nephew, Mr.
Howard Quillen, in California.
Chris tmas weekend visitor s
of Mr. and Mrs. Her bert Parker
wer e their son and daughter in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Parker and children, of
Marietta. They also visited her
mother, Mrs. Opal Hollon of
Chester.

QUALITY

1964CORVAIR
$295
500-2 Dr., std. trans., local 1 owner car, radio,
good tires. Jan. Clearance Special.
1965 CORVAIR
$695
500 2 Dr., local low mileage car, interior extra
clean, medium green finish, all good w-w
tires, radio. Plenty of go in the snow. Just
nicer than the average car.
1965 CHEVROLET
$695
Impala HT Cpe., 327- V-8 engine, 4 speed
trans., white finish, red interior, good tires,
radio.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OP.EH EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
Mrs. Thelma Reitmire of New
Haven visited her grandmother,
Mrs. Mollie Guinther.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker
was Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Parker of Alfred.
New Year's dinner guests of
Mrs. Lettie Spencer were Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Frank and
sons, Johnny and Jeff. The Rev.
and Mrs. Marshall Larimore
were Tuesday callers.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Frank
visited with Mrs. Gertrude
McBride at the Kimes Rest
Home at Athens.

WANT AD '

OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
condition, as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
be pick-up day. Write, giving
good directions. Witten Plano
Company, Box 166, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
6-20.tfc

Female Help Wanted
WOMEN _:. Need work but
unable to devote full time?
Watkins has a splendid income opportunity for you.
Write Ruth Bergaus, Watkins
Products, Inc., Winona,
Minnesota 55967.
1-11-ltc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEE~

Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606

E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

DON'T WAIT

POWER-VAC
Ceaning System
All The Dirt In
One Simple Operation
Homes - Trailers - Public
Buildings, etc. No muss, no
fuss - have your furnace
cleaned today.

DiASELocust
HARDWARE
St.
Middleport, 0.

Male Help Wanted
EMPLOYED man. Repair
typewriters
part
time.
Training furnished. Local
Interview. Write Regional
Manager, Box 25, Glenshaw,
Pa. 15116.
1-10·12tp

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
Employment Wanted
5 P.M. Day Before Pub Iication
Monday Deadline9a.m.
WILL DO ironing in my home.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Reasonable. Call anytime.
Will be"tccepted until9 a.m . for
Phone 992-7014.
D.Gy of Publication
1·7·6tc
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edi't or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The For Rent
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect 3 ROOM unfurnished apartment. Phone 992-2266.
insertitfn.
RATES
7·1-tfc
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Wnrrl one insertion
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
Minimum cnarge l:&gt;c
Park, Minersville. Phone 99212 cents per word three
3324.
consecutive insertions.
9-9-tfc
18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
' 25 Per cent Discount on paid· 3 BEDROOM mobile home, 3ads and ads paid within 10 days.
room apt., furnished. M &amp; G
CARD OF THANKS
Food Mkt., 3 miles south of
,
&amp; OBITUARY
Middleport, R't. 7.
$1.50 for 50 word• minimum
Each additional word 2c.
1·10-3tc
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
FURNISHED and unfurnished
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
apartments. Close to school.
8:3o'a .m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Phone 992·5434.
8:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
10-18-tfc
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Reedy
and children, Pomeroy; Mr.
2 BEDROOM house, central
heating, nice yard, $65 month.
and Mrs. W. I. Swett, Mid- Notice
1663 Lincoln Hgts. Phone 992dleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
3381
or 992-3453.
I WILL NOT be responsible for
Hilbert Cox, Albany, were
1-10·12tp
any debts contracted by
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
anyone other than myself.
Marvin L. Monk, Rt. 1, 4 ROOMS and bath unfurnished
Walter Swett.
Rutland, Ohio.
house, 1650 Lincoln Hts .
Mr. and Mrs. Clay· Jordan,
1·8·3tp
Phone 992·3874.
Dale and Barbara, have ~----------------11·15-tfc
DO
sewing
and
returned
from
Orlando, WILL
1
alterations, 115 12 W. Second 4 ROOM house on Laurel St. ,
Florida, where they spent more
Pomeroy. Call Frank Fugate,
St., Pomeroy.
than two weeks with Mrs.
1-8-12tp
992·5293.
Jordan's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
11·6-tfc
C. B. Dwelley and other INCOME TAX service, daily
HOUSES. One 5 room, fur·
except Sunday. Evenings by 2 nished,
relatives in that area.
1!2 bath , Spring Ave.
appointment only. Phone 9924 room, basically furOne
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Jones,
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
nished house, Lower Monkey
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
Bobbi, David and Cindy,
Run. Phone 742-3422 or write
mile
south
of
fairgrounds.
Dayton, visited with Mr. and
Esta Brickles, Albany, Ohio.
12-31 -30tc
1-8-Jtc
Mrs. Victor Perry and Elza
McComas.
ATTENTION ladies! Would you 2 BEDROOM, unfurnished
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly, local,
like to try a wig on in the
apartment. Newly decorated.
privacy of your own home?
and granddaughter , Leah
326 E. Main St., $75 month.
You
can.
Just
call
us.
We
also
See
N.
W.
Compton ,
Gaston, Albany, spent a day
have the Mink Oil Kosm~tics,
with Mrs. Gillogly's brother-inKoscot, of course. Dis- Goessler's Jewelry.
tributors, Brown's. Phone - -- - - - -- - 1-_8-6tc
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Middleport 992-5113.
Otho Gregory, Radcliff.
WANT
TO
GO
to
a
warmer
12-31-lfc
climate? Rent a camper or
Those present for a family
travel trailer from Gaul' s
gathering at the home of Mr. WILL PICK up merchandise
Trailer Sales, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Mendal Jordan and
and take to auction on a
Jl/2·miles north of Chester,
percentage basis. Call Jim
Ohio, on Rt. 7. Watch for sign.
Walter were Mr. and Mrs.
Adams, auctioneer . Rutland.
1·3·12tc
Kenneth Crabtree, McArthur;
Phone 742-4461.
Miss Kathy Gilkey, Albany;
NEW
MOBILE
home.
Adults
9-23-tfc
only . Phone 992·5592.
Mrs. Faye Jordan and Mr. and
l-7-tfc
Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan and DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949·4761 .
Keith, local, and Mrs. Ida
10·18-tfc Auto Sales
Dennison, Salem Center.
BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley WILL GIVE piano and organ 1969
hardtop, power steering,
lessons in my home. Phone
and Anna, Erie, Penn., spent
power brakes, air, 18,000
992·3666.
miles . Excellent condition.
several days here with their
8·16-tfc
Phone 992-2268.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
ll -10·tfc
Stanley, Albany, and Mr. and Lost
Mrs. Lewis Smith and Nancy, THANKSGIVING night one 1963 OLDSMOBILE , 2-door, jetfire, hardtop, $650. Chester
female walker hound in
local.
Hutton, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
Creek,
vicinity
of
Leading
The Robert Holliday family,
Phone 992·6911. This side of
Ohio near Rutland . 21!2 years
Wooster, were guests of Mr. and
fairgrounds on Rt. 33 to Ohio
old. Black and white spotted,
River.
dark head with brown spot
Mrs. G. A. Radekin and Tina
1-6-6tp
over each eye, white across
and other relatives in the area.
end of nose, mostly white on
Thad Dye, grandson of Mr.
body with white legs and tail. 1966 MERCURY Monterey, 2When lost had collar with
and Mrs. Dale Dye, has been
door hardtop, automatic,
name plate. Reward $150 for
power steering, vinyl top,
discharged from the Navy.
recovery of this female dog .
$895. Howard Larkins, PortFollowing his discharge, Mr.
Ph . 475·2981 from 8 a.m. to 6
land, Ohio. Phone 843-2211.
and Mrs. Thad Dye, who had
p.m. except Sunday or write
1-10.Jtp
Leslie
Marcum,
Box
165,
been living in New York,
Delbarton, W. Va., or Hun- 1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner,
journeyed to Columbus where
tington, W. Va . Ph . 429-2920.
automatic
transmission,
they visited his brother-in-law
1-6-10tc
power steering, 12,000 actual
miles. Excellent condition.
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Standard rate insurance to
Price and Danny. They flew LOST: PAl R of lady's black
qualified person. Assume
gloves on N. Second Ave
from Columbus to Florida
balance. Phone Rutland 742·
Middleport. Reward. Phon~
4745. May be seen at Rutland
where they were guests of his
{304) 675· 4267 or 675-3358.
any time.
1-5-tfc
mother, Mrs. Cecil Blackwood
1·10-3tc
and family, at Carrabelle,
Florida and Dotham, Alabama, Wanted To Buy
For Sale
and then accompanied the SMALL FARM with house and
buildings in southeastern HEREFORD bull. Phone 247Blackwoods and his sister, Lisa
2161.
Meigs County area . Contact
Dye , back to Ohio to the Dale
1-10-5tc
Oris
F rederick ,
3221
Dye home where they plan to
Georgetown
Rd. ,
In dianapolis, Indiana, 46224. CL EAN expensive carpets with
live for the present. Thad Dye
Phone 291·9130.
the best. Blue Lustre is
will enter the Technical Center
12·30·10tc
America's favorite . Rent
at Nelsonville and Mrs. Thad
shampooer , $1. Baker ' s
Dye will continue classes at OLD furniture, dishes, brass
Furniture, Middleport.
beds, etc . Write M. D. Miller,
1-7-6tc
Ohio University. Mr. and Mrs.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Cali
Cecil Blackwood and Lisa Dye
992·6271.
9· 1-tfc SING ER 1969 Model sewing
returned to their home
machine, nice cabinet. Just
following a vacation here.
set dial for design stitches,
zig .zag , buttonholes, blind
Sgt. and Mrs. Bert Christian For Sale
hems, etc. Only $74. Nothing
spent some time here at the 4 HOLSTEIN heifers, one fresh,
down , $6.50 monthly, or $69
three closeup. John Hayes,
home of her mother, Mrs.
cash. Phone Ravenswood 273Scout Camp Road, Chester,
Gordon Perry and family and
9893 after 3 p. m .
Ohio. Phone 614·985-3515.
12-4-tfc
v isited with her grandparents,
l -11-3tc
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Lyons and
60x1 2 FOOT 1970 model Schult
trailer . Also, 17 acres of land.
other relatives in the area . They mings, Athens-, visited with
Phone 992·6455 _
were joined here by Mr. and Murl Galaway.
1·6-12tp
Mr. and Mrs. Herman CorMrs. Bill Lyons, Lancaster, who
dray,
Athens,
Rt.,
visited
his
r ecently spent a vacation in
Vacuum
mother, Mrs. Beulah Cordray, ELECTROLUX
Nassau, Bahama Islands.
Cleaner complete with at.
and
his
brother-in-law
and
tachments, cordwinder and
Mr. and Mrs. John Vale and
paint spray. Used but in like
d a ughter, Columbus, were sister, Mr. and Mrs . Reed
new condition. Pay $37.45
Jeffers.
recent guests of his mother,
ca s h or terms if desired.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier,
Phone 992-5641.
Nellie Vale and other relatives
1·5·6tc
Gallipolis,
called
on
her
mother,
here.
Mrs.
Goldie
Gillogly
and
other
Rhonda Cha pman, St. Henry,
SING E R Sewing Machine in
beautiful
light finished
Ohio, spent several days relatives here on Sunday afcabinet , like new . Fully
vacation here with her grand- ternoon.
equipped to do all fancy
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Verlin
sewing as well as beautiful
straight stitching and zig-zag
Howery and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
California produces more
designing. Pay $50 cash or E·
Chapman.
garlic and onions than any
Z Terms . Phone 992·5641.
Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Cum- other state.
1·5-6tc

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

Carpenter

News, Event

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

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

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

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

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

For Sale
MUST SELL, 1970 mobile home,
60x12, 3 bedroom, ful ly carpeted, washer and dryer,
$4,900, or take over payments
of $88.95 per month. Phone
Mason 773-5122.
1·5-JOtc

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

AIR CONDITIONING, Refrigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 682-2079.
4-6·tfc

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

BLAETTNARS
Ph. 992-2143

Pomeroy

--------~~~----SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
JOHNSON MASONRY, Com.
Reasonable rates. Phone
mercia!
or
res idential
John Russell, Gallipolis 446·
remodeling. Br ick, block,
4782 after 5:30 p. m.
stone, cement work, garages,
4-7-tfc
septic tanks. Backhoe work. ------------------FIREWOOD . Gerald King.
Free estimates. Jim, Larry, SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Shade, Ohio. Phone 696-1063.
Jake. Phone 992-5632.
1-5-6tp
service, all makes. 992·2284.
12-7-30tc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. 'STAR kills rats quickly, surely.
Authorized Singer Sales and
GHEEN'S
•
BODY
SHOP,
21!2 pounds, $1.69. Ebersbach
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
Racine, 'Ohio. Wax jobs,
Hardware, Sugar Run Mills,
3·29-tfc
$12.95. Paint jobs as low as
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
$60. Call 949-3295 or drop in for
1-5·30tp
free estimates.
1·7-6tc
NEW HOME in the Village of
..~urance
Middleport, 3 bedrooms, bath,
AUTOMOBILE insurance ~en
utility room, carport. FHA SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
cancelled?
Lost
your
financing available.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
operator' s license? Call 992·
Telephone 992-2186 or 992662·3035.
2966.
3600.
2·12-tfc
6-JS.tfc
1·10-6tc
WHEEL Horse Sales and
NOTICE OF
Service. Baum
Lumber •
GAS RANGE, excellent conAPPOINTMENT
Company, Chester, Ohio.
dition, $35. Phone 992-7376.
Case No. 20396
Phone 985-3301.
1·10-2tc
Estate of Thomas L. Weber
5·20-tfc Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Ray Hummtt•
HARRISON'S TV AND AN- Jessie M. Weber of R. D. No.1 ,
Says:
TENNA SERVICE. Phone Long Bottom, Ohio, has been
duly appointed Executr ix of the
992-2522.
Estate of Thomas L. Weber,
6-10·tfc deceased , late of R. D. No. l ,
Long Bottom , Meigs County ,
NEIGLER Construction. For Ohio.
'EM NOW
Creditors are required to file
build ing or remodeling your
home , Call Guy Neigler, their claims with said fiduciary
• Country Squire
with in four months.
Racine, Ohio.
MUD&amp; SNOW TIRES
Dated th is 21st. day of Dec.
7·31-tfc 1970.
All sizes in stock. Lowest
prices. Free installat ion . We
BOOKKEEPING service, Mrs.
F . H. O' Brien
do studding.
Marvin King, 1f2.mile north on
Probate Judge
POMEROY
of sa id County
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Week( 12 J 30 &lt;ll 4, 11, 3tc.
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
days 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Phone 992-2181 ~
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon.
Evenings by appointment.
LEGAL NOTICE
12-15-tfc
The unknown heirs, dev isees,
NICE lot, 40x125 feet. Mid·
executors ,
adlegatee'S ,
dleport. Phone 992-5251 .
READY-MIX CONCRETE de· min istrators and ass igns ot
Edw in Con dee , deceased; the
1-5-tfc
livered right to your pro ject.
unknown heirs, deviseo:!s ,
Fast and
easy.
i=ree lega
t ees ,
executors,
adBEAUTIFUL Colonial Early
estimates. Phone 992-3284. · min istrators and assigns C)f
American Stereo-Radio
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co. , George P. Wolf , deceased ; the
combination, AM &amp; FM radio
Middleport, Ohio.
unknown heirs , dev.isees ,
4 speaker sound system, 4
6-30-tfc legatees ,
executors ,
ad.
min istrators and assigns of
speed automat ic changer.
Martha
Wolf,
deceased,
all
of
Ba lance $79.32. Use our BACK HOE and end-loader
names and places of
budget terms . Call 992-335-2.
work. Septic tanks installed. whose
residence are unknown , will
1-6-6tc
George {Bill) Pul li ns. Phone take
notice that on the 25th day
992-2478.
of November , 1970, the pia in·
MODERN Walnu t Stereo
11·29-tfc tiffs, Paul S. Sayre, Wilma K.
Console, 4 speaker sound
Styer , Howard S. Sayre,
Douglas D. Sayre and Orville B.
system , 4 speed changer,
Sayre, as plaintiffs, filed their
separate controls. Balance
comp
laint aga inst them in the
$63.89. Use our time payment
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
plan. Call 992-3352.
Complete Service
County , Ohio , being cause No.
1-6-6tc
Phone 949-3821
14,772 in said Court, to quiet title
Racine, Ohio
to the real estate her inafter
Critt Bradford
described ; and plain tiffs allege
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
5· 1-tfc that they are the owners in fee
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
s imple and in actual possess ion
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
of the following real estate :
4-9-tfc Real Estate For Sale
Situated in 100 Acre Lot No . 275,
Town 2, Range 12, Sutton
Township,
Meigs County , Ohio ,
CLEAN 1%5 RAMBLER, 770
TEAFORD
and in the Ohio Company 's
Classic, 6-cylinder, 4 door,
Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.
Purchase, and being Lots No . 4
standard shift, $450. Also,
Broker
and 16, in the Village of Con ·
choice cemetery lot, 4·grave
deeville
. For a more particu lar
111 Mechanic St.
plot in Meigs Memory Gar.
description of said lots ,
Pomeroy, Ohio
den. Call R. H. Ballard, phone 35 ACRES - Near proposed reference is had to the plat as .,
recorded in the Recorder ' s
949·2820.
coal m i ne. Suitable for Office, Pomeroy , Ohio . Being
1-8·6tc
building lots, trailer park, etc. the same real estate conveyed
to Bertha M. Sayre, by deed
Minerals.
recorded in Deed Book 206,
THREE consecutive lots in
Beech Grove, lots No. 9, 10, 2 HOUSES - One rented to Page 351 , Meigs County Deed
rds.
and 11 in row 5. R. C. Jones, 37
same party for 6 years. Has 2 Reco
Plaintiffs fu rther a llege that
Riverside Dr., Dayton, Ohio
bedrooms , bath , garage . they
and their predecessors in
45405.
other has 8 rooms, bath, title have held said real estate
12·19-10tc
forced a ir furnace, garage, adversely ,
open ly . and
fu ll basement. 6 Acres. notoriously as against each and
every one of the defendants
$18,000.00
herein for a period in excess of
Real Estate For Sale
years, so as to
Rutland twenty-one
1TRAILER LOT preclude any claim of owner- e
.-~-N_E_W_H_O_M_E
~?---.
;J~~U · Middleport. only
ship of anyone else in said real
estate, or any part thereof.
Plain ti ffs further allege that
3 and 4 Bedrooms
the
unknown heirs, devisees,·
Built to your specifications.
NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms,
execu tors ,
ad ·
Sites available now.
bath, utility room, and car- legatees ,
port. Dining area has sl iding m inistrators and assigns of .
glass doors. Living 16 x 19. t:aw1n 1...ondee, deceased , may
claim some right in sa id real
Half acre. $19,500.00
No Down
es t ate by reason of an
992-3325
1-8·6tc unrecorded conveyance of sa id
Monthly Payments
992-2378
real estate ; that the unknown
Lower Than Rent
hei r s , devisees . legatees ,
utors, adm inistrators and
Contact : Mr. Moody, Ph. 992· ILOTS WITH all utilities. exec
ass igns of George P . Wolf,
7034 at our field office at
Restricted subdivision. lf2 to deceased , may claim some
Park &amp; Sycamore in Mid2·a cre lots. Phone Chester interest in said real estate by
dleport.
reason of a defective guardian 's
985-3301, night 985·3302.
JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
; and that the unknown
1-6-tfc deed
Formerly Kissell Associates,
hei r s , devisees , legatees 1
,Inc.
Ph. l- 262-1531
executors, admin istrators ana
assigns of Martha Wolfe ,
OUT-OF . TOWN owner must deceased
, may claim some
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
sell B-room , vacant modern interest in
id rea l estate by
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2293.
house with extra lot in reason of a sa
defective deed.
10-25-tfc
Pomeroy , $2 ,750. For in- · The p rayerof said complaint
formation phone 949-2165.
is that each and every one of the
l·3-l3tc defendants be compelled to
6· ROOM house, bath. Phone 992·
assert
any claims which they
2371.
may have in said real estate ,
1-10·12tc
that said claims be declared
inva lid , and that pla intiffs' title
NOTICE OF
in and to sa id real estate be
quieted as against a ll defen .
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20,408 dants , and that defendants be
Estate of Homer Lovett forever barred from asserting
any right, title or interest in
Deceased.
MIDDLEPORT LARGE
Notice is hereby given that said real estate, and for other
LOT, 2 s tory frame , 3 Clara Belle Yinger of 216 West rel ief.
bedrooms, bath, basement, " B" Street, We llston , Ohio, has
Sa id defendants are requin!d
CLOSE TO SHOPPING. be en duly appo inted Ad - lo answer said compla.lnt·witiJin
ministratrix of the estate of twenty-eight days from the date
$9,500.
Homer Lovett, deceased, late of of the las t pu bl ication of this
Lebanon Townsh ip, Me igs notice, the answer day beln'g
POMEROY - CLOSE TO NEW County
February 8th, 1971 , or judg ment
, Ohio.
GRADE SCHOOL, 2 story
Creditors are required to file will be taken against them, as
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath, their claims with said fidu cia ry prayed fo r.
PA ULS SAYRE ,
basement,
garage.
$13,- within fou r months .
Dated this 5th day of January
et a l., Plaint iffs
300.
1971.
Manning D . Webster
F. H. O' Br ien
Atto rney for Pla intiffs
MIDDLEPORT - COTTAGE, 2
Probate Judge
Webste r and Fultz
bedrooms, bath, glassed in
of sa id County
Pom eroy , Ohio
porch, nice lot. $4,500.
( 1) 11 , 18, 25, 3tc
(ll) 30, (12( 7, 14,21, 28, (1)4 ,
POMEROY - ALMOST NEW,
11 , 7tc
1 story frame, 3 bedrooms,
NOTICE ~:·
bath, garage, lots of ground.
APPOINTMENT
$12,500.
Case No. 20,427
Estate of Dav id C. Mille r
TO BUY OR SELL
Deceased .
CONTACT US
Not ice is he reby giv en that
HENRY CLELAND
Ele_anor L. Miller of Middle port'·
REALTOR
Me1gs County , Oh io, has been
Office 992-2259
duly appointed Executrix of the
Res. 992-2568
Estate of David c . Miller,
1·10-6tc deceased, late of Middleport.
Me ig s County , Ohio.
Creditors a re requ ired to file
2 BEDROOM house, Mason, W. the ir claims with said fiduc ia ry
within
tou r months.
Va. Bath and kitchen carDated this 30th day of
peted. Utility room, ca r port, December
1970.
storm doors and windows,
F H O' Brien
stove and dryer included.
Probate Judge
of said County
Phone Mason 773-5457.
(l) 4 , 11 , l8 , 3tc
J.JQ.7tc

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

GET

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

Payme.nt

••

Cleland Realty

We talk to you
like a person.

•

�BARNEY

tl

PAW--I HEAR TELL
SUE S'IBIL'S WUTHLESS
HUSBAND PACKED UP
HIS DUDS AN '
TOOK OFF

It) 1971 try NU, Ill(_ T M.

l~rt

US 'of Off

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIF.NDS
~c:t.JLD l J011-l
THe WOMEN'S

I:M MADAT BO'tS,AND I I-IAVC!
A 816 DECJS!al To MAKe -··6Ur L

L.l6t:AA"r;~

MOI/EM£1-Jr
AN'DOWl6E""
MY LIF6 ST'I'LE--·

f1AVC: ONLY TWO CI-!OGeS {

•'

•
GOOP' NE:WG, LANCE-WE:'I?E' IN\IIT6P TO

ANOfi-JE~ HOLJ5E..·WAII:MING.

HOWEVE~ ••• BURP! .•. I'VE

FROM T IME TO T IME
I HAVE SUFFEK'ED
NUMEROUS BRUISES
AND CONTUSIONS!

LEARNED TO LIVE WIIH
IT!

•
If I knew I'd 6end it
back' l&lt;eaiiL.J don't need
two &lt;;ewinq machine~!

... AL.L.EYOOP

CONFRONTS THE

OTI-IER FASTBUCK ARTIST IN
THE L.AB!

THE BORN

LO~E
..;:;..R
_ _ _~------,

WELL, THE CAP'N'S SURE
,&lt;:~SALTY

CHARACTER.,
"'DADDY"--· AN' THAT
A:IRROT 0 ' HIS'"
BOcA GRANDE ...

JIH l!li. EFFORT TO
0

lEARH Tffi' LFSSOHS
or THE PAST,"
OLIV!R WAR8UCKS
15 COHSIDI!Rli!C:
FIHAHCIHG caPT.
JIHAB'S VOYAGF;
'l'O DISCOVER IF
THE GOLDEM CITY
OP lL OORADO

C' lnt., NIA,

REALLY EXISTS···

-~ l.M. 1..._ U.S. P.t Off

DAILY CROSSWORD
AOROSS
1. Sob noisily
5. Milltary
installation
9.Jal - ••-::-:=~:-:-:--:-:":'':""'''t••"'"• 10. Unwilling
13. Lively
cadence
H. Girl of song,
circa 1927
115. Stationery
item
16. Humorist
17.Speck
18. Landed
property
20. "Three" in
P a lenno
21. British
Conservative
22. Sonny
and - 23. Products of
combustion
25. Run-down
26. Lean-to
27. Lig ht
source
28. Marching
cadence call
29. Brazilian
port
31. Badly
32. Exasperate
33. Devoured
35. One adept at
circumvention
37. Brawl
38. Back out
of a deal
39. Brink
fO. Acute
fl. Secondh and

•
TERRY

THE FIRE FOLLOWING
THE !lOMB BLAST
AND DfSTI&lt;'OYING
THE HARRI17GE

~~~~~:u~;~~~ •-•r••"" [~~!l&gt;--.$i~~
THE VOLUNTEER

D!'ilk'!!!.::l

FIRE COMPANY
SECURES ITS
GEAR AN!/
DEPARTS.

JI&amp;Wrn~rn;-::4=~==

16. - 2. Even up
3. Is executed,
of
pirate style
the
(3 wds.)
Roses
4. Illuminated 19. Kicked
lightly
5. Quality of
being equal 22. Gael
6. Egg-shaped 23. More
pallid
7. Divinity
U.Postschool
pone,
(Abbr.)
as a
8. Worked as
motion
a thespian
25. Gone
(3wds.)
under
11. Slept
27. UnpronolsUy
ductive
12. Dining
29. Persisestabtent
lishment
attack
(slang)

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

30.Put
on, as
a
play
34. Watched
36. Sandra- 37. Fire (Fr.)

Pl~OU

[]
'fl '/,F/1~

I I

tJ

O/VC( ),ll.ll

I_

_

b [)
1- 11

I (]
I

I.

v:~
~_j

~I==,".=.dle=SURP=ltSf=AHS=W!W=-=~~..:....o.ro~Uin n
~aturda\ -"

·

I

'"'"'""r:

HOVEL

f:~~
;3

h

f1

-l

AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for t he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the leng th and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are di!ferent.

ENNPXW

XEVBYAWDH

XYSGAPKJ

VGXTPKWH

DWBSGXW

---AN'/ VULiURE CAU6HT

A Cryptogram Quotation

AE

COMPLY

MUSTER

~i

'!.i

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
TO HE:I?T IT FROM A PRIVATE
OW!I!E:~ B'/ ?OMEON E: EDDIEI&lt;NEW ONL'i A? ''MR.)('•:

IJ

1""/,i.• mil!ltt ,jp,·p/op u n dPr yo11r
n•r.' ""-"'! - A MOUSTACHE

DOWN

NO, HE WAt;. PAID -*'10,000

rx I

(Anow~ro tomorrow)

Juuot.lo·•: SLANT

1. Indonesian
Island

••

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

GDW

XGS ·

PKUWKAWI

XGSXYSGAPKJ

SITTING ON MI./
SNOWMAN GETS CLOBBERED!

NW -

VGSWH.-GKEKQV EYH
Saj;urday's Cryptoquote: IF SOME WOMEN KNEW HOW
WONDERFUL THEY LOOK lN SLACKS THEY WOULD
WEAR SKIRTS- ANONYMOUS
(I!) 1971 King

Features Syndicate, Inc .)

I

II

THERE'S A VULTURE SITTING
ON l{QUR SNOWMAN ...

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 11, 1971

Inaugural

:;::l::::::::;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::;::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::

Relief Coming

On The 3rd Aoor Elberfelds In Pomeroy

(Continued from Page 1)
"A governor is not chosen to
WASHINGTON (UPI) govern, if by that term we mean President Nixon, faced with
to rule by individual edict," he
the highest unemployment
said. "He is, instead, charged
rate in nine years, today was
with the responsibility of exereported ready to cut
cuting policies which are ordainbusiness taxes in a bid to
See the beautiful selections of nationally advertised brands. Heywood
ed by the people themselves, revitalize the economy.
Wakefield, Thomasville, Crawford, Bassett , Lane, Webb, Flanders,
acting through their elected repAdministration sources
Kemp, Caldwell. Modern, French Provincial, Early American,
resentatives in the legislative said the plan, likely to be
Traditional,
Mediterranean and Spanish styling.
body, within the limits of the
made public late today, after
Wood
finishes:
Maple, Cherry, Walnut, Pine, Pecan.
law as interpreted by the judithe New York Stock Exciary.
change closes, has been
Declare Our Faith
under consideration for
"We have never sought, nor several weeks. But Friday's
do we now seek, the governance revelation
that
unemof kings, or angels, or the manployment for December hit 6
ipulation of demagogues," Gilli- per cent - 4.6 million out of
gan continued. "But we declare work - apparently spurred
again our enduring faith in the the President into moving
wisdom, and the courage, and ahead with the program.
the compassiOn of the vast majority of our fellow men. And ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:=:=:=;=;:;=;=;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;::;::;;:::;:::::':':':::::::;:::::m
it is upon that profound profession of faith that our society, Summer Jobs Have
and all our hopes, rest."
The other major state office- Feb.
3 Deadline
holders, including three Democrats who swept to vi~tory with
ASIDNGTON - The U. S.
Gilligan, were sworn m at sep- .W.
.
. .
arate ceremonies prior to the Ctvtl Servtce ComiDlsston has
·
t'on
informed Congressman
maugura
1 .
.
Earlier Gilligan was com- Clarence E. Miller that appared wifu the late President plications .for summer e~­
J ohn F. Kennedy in a sermon ployment w1th federal agenctes
delivered at an 8 a.m. mass must be submitted to the
at St. Joseph's Cathedral.
Commission no later than Feb.
"John Gilligan is a man who 3.
reflects the thoughts and ideals
Congressman Miller urged all
of the late President Kennedy," those interested in summer
said Msgr. Hugh Murphy. "He federal employment to contact
isrecognizedasamandedicated his washington office for a free
to the service of others."
booklet outlining the application
About100friends~ndre~atives procedures. The address is, 128
attended the mass, mcluding the Cannon House Office Building,
new governor's wife, children, Washington, D. t. 20515.
father and brother.
Gilligan gained the governorship after two major setbacks
- losing his congressional seat
in 1966 to Robert Taft Jr. and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
dropping the 1968 senatorial conSATURDAY ADMISSIONStest to Se. William B. Saxbe.
William Stump, Middleport;
The former Cincinnati city
councilman, an underdog in the Juanita Spencer, Pomeroy;
Wanda Jean Wood, Pomeroy.
1968 senatorial primary, had
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
ousted the previously invulner- Lena Snyder, John Ridgway,
able Frank J. Lausche for the
Jr., Kathryn Lunsford, Robert
Democratic nomination.
Gilligan, a former literature Russell, Augusta Will, Patricia
Taylor.
professor at Xavier University
\
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS of Cincinnati, defeated RepubClarence Wolfe, Racine; Neva
lican state auditor Roger Cloud
Grimm, Pomeroy; Stella
last November in the governor's
Carnahan, Long Bottom; Edith
race after a bitterly fought camSayre, Mason.
paign involving personal attacks
SUNDAY DISCHARGES from both sides.
Teresa Johnson, Willard Clay.
DIVORCE ASKED
Jean Hayman, Syracuse, filed
suit for divorce in Meigs C o u n t y . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Common Pleas Court against
Daniel Hayman, Syracuse,
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty. The
plaintiff asks custody of three
minor children.

JANUARY SALE!

•

Dining Room and Bedroom Furniture

THE LAUREL CUFF Free Will Methodist Church is nearing completion. The Rev.
Eugene Gill, pastor, announced that services will be held in the new structure a week from
today.

Orville Watson Dies on Sunday
Orville E. Watson, 55,
Reedsville, Rt. 1, died Sunday
evening in Veterans Memorial
Hospital following a brief
illness.
Mr. Watson was a veteran of
WWII, a life member of DAV
Chapter No. 53, Pomeroy, and a
member of the South Bethel
United Methodist Church at
Silver Ridge.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Arthur, in 1951 and a
brother, Everett, in 1970.
He is survived by his wife,
Faye; one son, James Allan, at
home; his mother, Effie Watson, Tuppers Plains; three
brothers, Harold, of Athens;
Carl, Dayton, and William of
Reedsville; three sisters, Mrs.
Thomas (Garnett) Barthelemy,
Dayton; Mrs. John (Wilma)
Guinther, Chester, and Mrs.
Glen (Dorothy) Robinson,
Alfred, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 2 p. m. at the
Christian Church at Tuooers
Plains with the Rev. Walter A.
Frost officiating. Burial will be
in the Christian Cemetery.

MASON Mason Mayor
Friends may call at Ewing
Charlotte
Jenks
is asking
Funeral Home until 1 p. m.
residents of that community to
Wednesday.
help rid the area of junked
vehicles.
Clarence Grover
Mayor Jenks said Mason's
department
is
Died on Saturday police
cooperating with State Police in
Clarence E. Grover, 80,
a drive to remove junked
Kyger, a retired farmer, died
vehicles. She noted that Sunday
Saturday night at Camdenseveral of these had been picked
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg.
up by members of the National
Mr. Grover was born April 8,
Guard
for disposal in a
1890atKyger, the son of the late
statewide improvement
Alonzo and Alice Roush Grover.
He spent his entire life in the program.
Kyger community. He was
married on Feb. 4, 1912 to Ethel
Bell James who died in 1961. He
was a member of the Kyger
Methodist Church.
SUrviving are a son, Francis,
Parkersburg; a sister, Mrs.
Nellie Athey, Erie, Pa.; a
grandson, great-grandson and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
2p.m. Tuesday at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home with the
Rev. Chester Lemley officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time.

Brother is Lost at Sea
PT. PLEASANT- Word has
been received here of the accidental death of Commander
Keith Curry in a plane accident
over the Gulf of Tonkin while he
was on a tour of duty in Vietnam.
Commander CUrry, brother of
Kinzey Smith, who is a shift
supervisor in Production at the
Stauffer Chemical Company
plant at Gallipolis Ferry, lost
his life at sea last week. He was
a Navy jet pilot, assigned to the
USS Ranger Aircraft Carrier.
Relatives said they were informed the plane was not struck
by enemy fire, but the accident
was believed caused by a plane
malfunction as it flew over the
Gulf of Tonkin after leaving the

recovered.
The naval officer was in
Vietnam for his second tour of
duty and had been there this
time since the last part of October.
In addition to his brother,
survivors include his mother,
Mrs. George K. Smith who
resides in Doddridge County
and his wife and seven children
who make their home in Oak
Harbour, Washington.

Mrs. Bender Dies

PT. PLEASANT- Mrs. Fred
Bender of Portsmouth, Ohio,
mother of Mrs. K. W. (Ruth)
Robinson of 117 Pleasant Street,
Point Pleasant, died at 7 a. m.
Sunday in Mercy Hospital in
carrier. Commander Curry's Portsmouth.
In addition to M~. Robinson,
navigator ejected and was
other survivors include her
husband, Fred Bender; two
other daughters, Mrs. William

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
January 11-12
Wm. Wyler's
BEN HUR
( Technicolor)

Charlton Heston
Jack Hawkins
Admission:
Adults, $1.00, Children 60c

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

TWO CALLS MADE
Two calls were answered over
the weekend by the Middleport
E-R unit. At 11:46 a.m. Sunday
the squad was called for fourweek old Charles Ray Hunter,
Storys Run Road, who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center
unconscious.
At 6:41 a .m. Monday, Harry
Mohler of the Hobson area was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted. It was believed Mohler
had suffered a stroke.

THREE FINED
Two defendants forfeited
bonds and a third got a double
fine in hearings Saturday night
before Pomeroy Mayor Charles
Legar. Daniel Cremeans,
Rutland Route 1, forfeited an
$18.70 bond and Edward Stark.
Pomeroy, a $23.70 bond, both
for speeding. Dale M. Beam,
Pomeroy, was fined $5 and costs
for disturbing the peace and $5
and costs for intoxication.

we will have our walk-up window open
from 3 to .5 p.m.

EVERY FRIDAY EVENING
At .5 p.m., our main banking office
will open, and give service until 7 p.m.

See our loan
officer
from- 5 to 7 p.m.

Pomeroy National Bank
MEMBER FDIC

POMEROY, OHIO

Watch for further announcements of interest
to several of our publics

Prompt Delivery
To Your Home Sensible Credit.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

News ... in Briefs
(Continued from Page 1)
tried to overthrow his government. The Ministry of Interior said
everything was under control, but World War II fighters strafed a
downtown military barracks where the rebels were located.
First word of the attempted coup d'etat came shortly after
midnight when Minister of Interior Jorge Gallardo said "Fascist
elements" led by two army colonels had tried to overthrow
Torres. He said everything was under control but called on
workers to "stay alert" in case they were needed.

Dentocrati•c Wonten
Approve Schedule

Thornton of Dayton, 0., and
Mrs.
Howard
Medley,
Caledonia, 0., and one son,
Robert Bender of Portsmouth.
One son, Earl Bender, preceded
her in death. The body is at the
Daehler Funeral Home in
Portsmouth and funeral serPT. PLEASANT - The year's
vices will be held Wednesday schedule of events was apmorning at 10 a. m.
proved by members of the
Mason County Democratic
Women's Organization during a
regular meeting held Friday
night in the jury room at the
courthouse.
Maxine Nibert presided when
plans were made for a bake sale
to be held Saturday, Feb~

Effective Friday, Jan. 8, 1971

•

Go, Junkers, Go

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS Darrell
Northup, Clifton; Mrs. Frank
Capehart, Jr., Mrs. Robert
Wood, Gladys Devault, Charles
Perry, Vickie Thornton, Cora
Plants, Mrs. L. M. Hyatt, Vitus
Hartley, Jr., Scott Johnson,
Mrs . Hugh Condee, Mrs.
Charles Elliott, Mrs. Hirman
Daughterty, Mrs. Charles
Hudson, Mrs . William Wright,
Mrs. Robert Spencer, all Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs . Ted Swartz,
Letart; Billy Davis, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Raymond Sisk, Sr.,
Mason; Ortha Ohlinger, New
Haven; Mrs. James Fields,
Mason ; Richard Roach, II,
Southside; Mrs. Bernard
Jordan, Gallipolis Ferry.
DISCHARGES - Louis Cox,
Jr., Marsetta Cooper, Patty
Dalton, Mrs. Azel Brillhart, II,
Walter Selby, Rose Ellen
Roush, David Harmon, Lee
Pyles, Minerva Gibeaut, Mrs.
Hiram Potter, Everett Rainey,
Mrs . Tracy Simpkins, Mrs.
Thomas Wilson, Karen Watson,
Vinton Cossin, Mrs. Alton
Fitzwater, Roger Stone and
Mrs. Roger Plumley and
daughter.
BIRTH - January 10, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs .
James Steele, Mason.

6, at the Firestone Store on
Main Street. Plans call for a
soup supper in March, a fund
raising dinner in April, election
of city officials in May.
In June is scheduled a
possible Victory Dinner, a
picnic for July 4, a booth for the
Mason County Fair in August as
well as a corn roast. Plans were
announced for the Federated
Women's Convention in September, a dinner dance in
October, a dinner in November
and finally to close the year's
activities with a Christmas
party in December.
During the same meeting
Mrs. Ronald (Carolyn) Neal
was honored with a stork
shower. The table was festively decorated with a blue stork
carrying a diapered baby and a
bootie theme was carried out in
pink and blue which were
depicted on a large sheet cake.
Jean Burdette, assessor, and
her co-workers, Clarice Gault
and Karen Fierbaugh, were
hostesses for the event. Maxine
Nibert was also remembered by
the group and she was
presented a canister set for her
new home. Patty Frye was a
prize winner.
It was announced that the
next meeting will be Thursday,
Feb. 4, with Eulah Bellamy and
Grace Moser as hostesses.
Attending were Maxine Nibert,
Jean Burdette, Clarice Gault,
Carolyn Neal, Neil Kennedy,
Doddee Foran, Mary Brown,
Barbara Dowell, Alene Plants,
Barbara Huffman, Patty Frye,
Ruth Keefer, Ruth Johnson,
Grace Moser, Grace Somerville, Karen Fierbaugh and
Eulah Bellamy.

For the
next 45 dav.s,
our car deals
will give you
more than
a car.

These days, every car dealer is offering
you a deal. Including us.
The difference is, our deal includes more
than a car.
On cars delivered now through
February 28, during our "What-WouldYou-Do" Special, Americ~n Motors will
give you a General Electnc 12-Inch
Portable TV with any new car you buy
from us.
But that doesn't mean we won't give

you a good deal, too.
Because we've got the IJ;st C8:fS we
ever had this year, and were gomg all-out
to give you a better deal than you can get
anywhere else.
Plus the tv set.
Maybe you don't expect this much from
a car dealer, but, if you had to compete
with GM, Ford and Chrysler dealers,
what would you do?

H you had to compete with GM, Ford and Chrysler dealers,
·
what would you do?
,.. American Motors Dealers

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.,
88 So. Second Avenue, Middleport, Ohio

•

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