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                  <text>•

Mason County Moving Ahead- -Moore
PT. PLEASANT - West
Virginia Gov. Arch A. Moore,
Jr. Monday night pledged, "We
arc going to move this county"
in the keynote address at the
anniversary
27th annual
meeting of the Point Pleasant Mason County Chamber of
Commerce.
Speaking to an enthusiastic
crowd of about 300 at the Moose
Club dining hall , the Republican
governor predicted significant
activity during his administration in the following
areas:
Bringing the closed
Pleasant Point Resort into the
state park system .
- Continued improvements
to West Virginia Route 2.

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mental health program of the
state in no way interferes with
the future of the Lakin facility ,"
continued Moore.
Gov. Moore also pointed out
that $:Pfl million worth of work,
in the form of resurfacing and
new construction, has been
accomplished in Mason County
since he began his tenure.
He further noted that $9
million has been spent in
upgrading the equipment of the
State Highway Department so
that a more efficient job can be
done. Moore predicted that the
secondary road system of
Mason County, and all of West
Virginia, will be significantly
improved during the summer
months of 1971. "We have a

program now," said Moore,
"And we're going to get thing:;
dune."
PRI&lt;:SJ&lt;:NTED BY JONES
Gov. Moore was introduced
by E . Bartow Jones, former
state senator and Mason County
community leader, who noted
that it was the first time any
chief executive of the state has
spuken at a Chamber dinner.
Jones praised Moore for taking
time to come to Mason County
while the Legislature is in
session and also applauded him
as "A man who gets things
done."
At the conclusion of Gov.
Moore's speech, Point Pleasant
Mayor Jon M. Leighty.
(Continued on page 8)

POM EROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY. JAN UARY 26. 1971

TEN CENTS

Venus Landing Claimed

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By DAVID NAGY
MOSCOW (UP!)-The Soviets
announced today their Venus 7
spacecraft landed in operating
condition on Venus last Dec. 15
and relayed scientific information from the surface of
another planet for the first
time. Venus is hot as believed
and the atmosphere is thick as
believed.
An announcement by the
Soviet news agency Tass said
the spacecraft which blasted off
from Central Asia on Aug. 17
radioed back word the temperature on Venus was in the
neighborhood of 887 degrees
Fahrenheit and that the atmospheric pressure was around 90
times that of earth -or 1,523
pounds per square inch.
Because of this dense atmosphere and high temperatures
most Western scientists assumed the Soviet spacecraft
had been crushed after parachuting into the atmosphere.
But the analysis reported today

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MEMBERS OF MEIGS-GALIJA Soil Conservation
Districts erected a Soil and Water Conservation sign at the
Meigs-Gallia line, near Cheshire, Monday. Left to right are
Stan Bahmer of Gallia County, Roy Miller and David
Koblent.z, Meigs County and Paul Evans of Gallia County.

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by Tass said it operated for
some time afterwards on the
actual surface.
The radioing of information
from Venus gave the Soviets
another first the same day the transmission coincided with
a broadcast from a Soviet lunar
probe to mark the first time
earth has received information
simultaneously from two celesx
tial bodies.
The Soviet findings confirmed
what scientists had suspected
- the surface of Venus cannot
sustain life as it is known on
earth. The temperature wouls
soften glass and the atmospheric pressure would crush almost
anything earthern.
The Tass announcement of
the landing of Venus 7 last
December reported only that
for 35 minutes the transmitter
sent o ck infu,matJon as Venus
7 parachuted lirough the thick
clouds of Venus. Today's report
indicated the signals had
continued slightly longer.

"The signals from the descending probe were received
for another 23 minutes after
landing," Tass said . "Here the
volume of the signal was about
100 times weaker than during
the descent and a special
method made it possible to
isolate and decipher the information transmitted."
The findings were not analyzed and reported for a month .
The spacecraft blasted off on
Aug. 17 and covered the 192

million miles to Venus, earth's
nearest planetary neighbor, in
120 days.
From 1967 through 1969 the
Soviets attempted and apparently failed to parachute
Venus 4, 5 and 6 on the planet .
Venus 3 intentionally crashed
into Venus in 1965. In the
meantime scientific speculation
centered on whether the Soviets
had been able to develop a
heat-pressure shield for No. 7
and an asbestos parachute.

First Job Set

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By United Press International

Corn, Soybean Acreage Up
WASHINGTON -OHIO FARMERS PLAN to increase their
corn and soybean acreage 8 per cent this year, according to
Agriculture Department figures . Buckeye State Farmers
reported they plan to put 3,507,000 acres into corn and 2,655,000
acres into soybeans.
Both increases were above the national average intentions, of
6 and 7 per cent gains. Ohio farmers had 10 per cent more acreage
in corn in 1970, when the crop was hit by the corn blight, so the
production then was about the same as the prior year. Fanners in
the 35 major states plan to put 70.1 million acres into corn and 45.9
million acres into soybeans.

Ohio Will Lobby Hard
WASHINGTON -GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN announced
Monday the creation of an Ohio office here "to establish the
closest possible liaison with the federal government."
Gilligan named Mark Shields, a fonner coordinator for the
presidential campaign of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, as a
special assistant to the governor for federal government
relations.
The governor said the Washington office would enable Ohio
"to take advantage of every federal program available to the
states."

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bringing the closed facility
"into the state park system at
little or no cost to the state
through cooper a lion of the
federal government."
"The resort is a vital part of
Mason County," said Moore,
"And we are going to get after it
and make it a productive
facility with the state accepting
the responsibility."
Moore also said the state is
going to award a $130,000
contract for a sewage facility at
Lakin State Hospital. He added,
"You can count on one-halfmillion dollars or so being spent
on Lakin during the remainder
of my administration."
"What you have read or heard
regarding my position on the

Devoted To '1Le lntere.t. Of 1Le Meiga-MOMJn Area

VOL. XXI II NO. 199

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Moore, "and Mason County will
share, though probably not
abundantly,
but
more
significantly than many other
areas."
Gov. Moore, noting the need
of continued improvements to
W.Va. 2, said Mason County is a
part of the "Golden Triangle"
which
offers
unlimited
possibilities, not only for industry, but also for recreation.
As toW . Va. 2, Moore said he
will take action yet this week to
make the route a part of the
Appalachian system and have it
upgraded to, "Where it will
open up the golden triangle."
Touching on the Pleasant
Point Resort situation, Gov.
Moore said he is hopeful of

The Daily Sentinel

RECEIVES KEY~ Pt. Pleasant Mayor Jon M. Leighty,
left, presents Gov. Arch Moore of West Virginia a handsome
"key to the city".

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Additiona l industry for
Mason County.
~ Improvements at Lakin
State Hospital worth about $12
million.
Completion of the proposed
repair of the Shadle Bridge.
INDUSTRY ASSURED
"1 don't think Mason County
has any problems when it
comes to the prospects of future
industrial development," said
Gov. Moore. He pointed out that
Mason County has been
recommended to 17 companies
by the state durir.g the last two
years and several of the firms
remain interested.
"The State of West Virginia is
on the threshold of its most
flourishing industrial era," said

Pen Down to Lock and Feed
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO PENITENTIARY slowed down to
a "lock and feed" routine toda:r as all but a handful of guards
continued their walkout for higher pay and better working conditions.
By keeping prisoners in their cells and curtailing all unnecessary activities, state and prison officials hoped to prevent
the need of calling in highway patrolmen or National Guardsmen.
A re-evaluation was to be made today.
Only three of the 67 guards assigned to the 10 p.m. Monday
shift showed up. Four reported on the 2 p.m. shift earlier after
one-third of the guard force worked during the morning .
Gov. John J. Gilligan, in Washington to testify before
Congress, was briefed on the situation by telephone. An aide said
unless there is a "drastic change" in the prison atmosphere, no
outside forces would be called in.

Pipeline Burst, Exploded
CANAL WINCHESTER, OHIO - A 16-INCH natural gas
pipeline ruptured and exploded in an open field near this centra l
Ohio community early today, sending flames shooung 300 feet
into the air . The fire , which was not close enough to any buildings
to cause damage, burned for nearly three hours before a valve
was closed, snuffing it out.
The Fairfield County sheriff's office was deluged with calls
from frightened residents as far away as :30 miles. Firemen from
eight nearby departments .~tood b} until the firf' was out to ensure
it did not sprf'&lt;Jd , hut usNl nc• eqlllprw•nt .

WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Nixon told the 92nd
Congress today its first business ·
was to clean up unfinished work
of the 91st Congress and that he
would resubmit shortly 40
proposals including a request
for $1.5 billion to ease problems
of school desegregation.
He also renewed a request
that Congress "consider an
urgent item of unfinished
business" his welfare reform
program.
Many of the bills he said
would be resubmitted deal with
comparatively minor issues,
but among them will be
requests for increases in airline
and highway user taxes that
died like the school fund in the
last session.
Nixon said in a special
message to the House and
Senate that the rundown of
legislation he would propose on
"the unfinished business of the
91st Congress" would be

followed by several other
messages dealin11: with maior
left-over issues.
JACOB
TURNER,
Those, he said, will include
separate statements on legisla- Republican, filed his petition
tion dealing with draft reform; of candi dacy to run for
steps to move toward an all- Middleport Village Council
volunteer army; strikes that with the Meigs County Board
cause national emergencies; of Elections Monday. Turner
social security increases and is a member of a Meigs
bail refonn, and aid to pioneer family and a lifelong
member of the Republican
education.
Nixon said he was proposing party. He headed the local
again emergency school aid to campaign o Robert Taft in
school systems under directives Meigs County last fall.
to desegregate because "changes needed to desegregate our
schools -either through court
order or voluntary action place a heavy strain on local
school systems, and the federal
goverrunent should assist the
schools in this effort."
"Although great progress has
The Gallia-Meigs Community
been made," he said, "the need
Action Program (CAP) has
for such aid remains. I urge the
Congress to complete action at received new funding from the
Office of Econo.aic Opportunity
an early date."
for program administration and
community services projects.
The federal funds amount to
$56,000 and the local share
$14,000. These funds are for
Program Year E, which begins
March 1, 1971, and runs through
Feb. 28, 1972.
The administration portion of
this grant will allow continuation of the CAP in the twocounty area. The community
services portion will extend
part of the out-reach services of
the agency for another year.
These out-reach services include the service of a home
health nurse and two three-dayweek community aides.
The community action
agency has played an important
role in assisting the underprivileged of Meigs and
Gallia Counties and for this
reason, the reduction of their
funding level was less than one
per cent, according to Richard
Sayre, director . Some community action agencies have
been reduced as much as 19 per
cent, he said.
FILES PETITION - Mrs . Bertha Canaday, Republican,
standing, filed her petition of candidacy for a seat on
Pomeroy Council in the May primaries. Receiving the
petition is Mary Wippel, deputy of the Meigs County Board of
Elections. Mrs. Canaday, Lincoln Hill, is a lifelong resident
The human heart wetghs
of Pomeroy and wife of Delmar A. Canaday, twice mayor of
about an ounce at birth and
l'orneroy during the 1950s.
about a pound at maturity .

CAP GrantS
For Year 'E'

1\"ow You Know

MRS. GROVES
Mrs . Patricia Kennedy
Groves filed her petition of
candidacy for the Republican
nomination
as
ClerkTreasurer in the village of
Middleport in the May
primaries Monday with the
Meigs County Board of
Elections. Mrs. Groves, a
native of Middleport, is
making her first bid for
public office. She is the
daughter of Leo Kennedy, Sr.
and Mrs . Dorothy Young.
Mrs. Groves is a graduate of
Middleport High School and
Jackson Manpower Training
Center . She is a member of
the Middleport Church of
Christ. Mr. and Mrs. Groves
and children reside at 361
South Front Street. Their
children attend school in the
Meigs !:.ocal School District.
Gene Grate, Republican
incumbent, has already filed
his petition for the clerktreasurer post.

Easter Seal
Campaigns to
Be Discussed

MIDDLEPORT MAYOR C. 0. FISHER wore a happy
expression Monday night when he announced his withdrawal
from the community's political scene. Mayor Fisher said
that he will not be nmning for another tenn as mayor. He
served three two-year terms in the 1~, two two-year terms
in the 1~, and was elected to a two year term in 1965. He is
presently completing the final year of his first four year
tenn, rounding out 16 years service as mayor of Middleport.
In announcing his plan to leave politics, Mayor Fisher said,
"I am grateful for the cooperation and support of our citizens
over the years."

•
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
B. F. Goodrich Co. announced
today it would spend more
than $200,000 to eliminate
sulphur dioxide and particulate emissions from a
plant at Marietta, Ohio, to
help assure "a purer air
reservoir" for the area.
BFG Chairman Ward
Keener said the equipment
would be installed at the
firm's plastic products plant.
The work will include converting coal-fired boilers to
smokeless oil-gas units for
generating ~team.

Two Plead
To Guilt
Two men pleaded guilty in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Monday to information
affidavits filed by Prosecuting
Attorney Bernard Fultz.
Placed on one year probation
by Judge John C. Bacon was
Harry D. Smith, 63, Coal St.,
Middleport, arrested last week
on a charge of larceny. He stole
several rings from the home of
Mrs. Mildred Carson, Third
Ave., Middleport.
Charles Roger Leonard, for
breaking and entering, was
remanded to the custody of
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach
pending sentencing.
Mary S. Burns also was
granted a divorce from Eddie
R. Burns on chargee; of extreme
cruelty, and an action asking
partition of real estate located
in Bedford Township was
granted George Nicinsk} ('( al.

Five File
Petitions
The political pots of Pomeroy
and Middleport began to boil a
bit Monday as five petitions of
candidacy- bringing the total
to nine - were filed with the
Meigs County Board of Elections.
Most of the action to date has
been in Middleport. Four of the
five petitions filed Monday
pertained to that community.
Filing Monday were Pabicia
Kennedy Groves, Republican,
for clerk-treasurer. Incumbent
Gene Grate has already filed his
petition for the Republican
primary. Filing Monday for
council in Middleport were
Jacob Turner, a ~p;;blican;
Donald E. Kelly, Republican,
and Donald H. ~arch, Jr.,
Democrat. Both Democrats and
Republicans will name two
council candidates at the May
primaries.
Filing Monday in Pomeroy
was Mrs. Bertha Canaday
seeking a Republican nomina tin
to run for Pomeroy Council.
Others who filed earlier in
addition to Grate include Jo!m
Zerkle, Republican for mayor
Middleport; H. Joe Denison,
Democrat, for mayor of Middleport, and William Baronick,
Democrat, for mayor of
Pomeroy.

W. J. (Jack) Treece, assistant
director, fund raising of the
Ohio Society for Crippleu
Children and Adults, and Mrs.
Charles Simons, Middleport,
this year's Crippled Children's
fund drive chairman, will be
guests when the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club meets at
6 p.m. Friday at Heath United
MethOdist Church.
Treece will discuss the
national and state aspects of the
annual Easter Seal Sale and
Mrs . Simons, wife of Rotary
President the Rev. Charles
Simons, will speak on the Meigs
County campaign which is
QUOKL'I\J UA
ED
sponsored by the Rotary Club.
Dut• to tht' iack of a quortUJ'l..a
:'vtrs . Simons said the
regular meetm!-( of lfW-If$.""'
program is being planned early
EXTRA TAX APPROVED
Vi llagt• Council
in the year so that Rotarians
TOLJ:nu; UPJ 1 A one-half ~lunda) rugh:
muy contribute ideus and pt•r cent ptgg~· um k sales and plan• Tl\ n of
su ~gestions fnr the eamp&lt;u~n use l~1x "a~ H!Jill'll\'t'd Monda) ('llrlll'll
whit'h will start Mart·h I and h) tlw J.m·a:; ( uunl~ I'OIIIIIlt~'l"lll'l'~. l'fft•t'll\1' Fl'lt I
cont inm• until April 11.

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 26, 1971
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(joSPITAL NEWS

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Social
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Service Conducted
Funeral services for Mrs.
Lelia Howett were conducted
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Adventist Church. Burial was in
the Birlingham Cemetery.
Among those from out-oftown here for the services were
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Hanning,
Mrs. Mary Karr, Millersport ;
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Hanning,
Nelsonville; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Saunders, Mrs. Una Bolin, Mr.
and Mrs. Millard Clous, Ge&lt;4"ge
Bush, Athens; Mrs. Carl Chase,
Worthington; Miss Susan Story,
Columbus; George Bolin and
Sammy Lee Bolin, Logan ;
Charlie Bolin, Marietta; Mrs.
Juanita Luckadoo, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Dye, Mrs. Mary
Baker, The Plains; Mr. and
Mrs. B1ron Kellmeyer and Mr.
and Mrs. T. Jaynes, Columbus.

DON SLATTERY
DON SLATTERY, Athens,
began work Monday as sales
manager of Dennie's Mobile
Homes, Inc., W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, succeeding Mike
Morrison, of Middleport, who
has been transferred to the
Lancaster home office.
Slattery
formerly
was
associated with Paint Valley
Mobile
Homes,
Inc.,
Chillicothe, and has been
manager of Athens Mobile
Homes, Inc., Athens. He was
also formerly with Glick
Furniture Co. at Chillicothe.

Club Meets at Inn
The January meeting and the
annual dinner of the Past Officers Club of Racine Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star, was
held recently at the Ohio
University Inn, Athens.
Preceding the dinner, a social
hour and meeting was held in
the reception room at the Inn.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Philson, Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Grimm, Mr. and Mrs. W. 0.
Barnitz, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Webb, Mr. and Mrs. William
Stewart, and Mrs. Mina Lewis.
Mrs. Greta Simpson will host
the Feb. 11 meeting of the
group.

25 Greeks Win
Richest Horse

Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4::10 p m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Ray M.
McGuire, Crown City, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Ray Sims, Gallipolis, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Barna H. Lasseter, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, a daughter.
Discharges
Aaron E. Bryan, Mrs. Lewis
C. Clagg and infant son, .Mrs.
Nancy L. Davis, Robert H.
Eads, Mrs. Roger Stanley
Glassburn and infant son, .Mrs.
James R. Grueser and infant
son,
Daniel
J.
Hall,
Mittford E. Kingery, Henry
G.
Kisor,
Do reel
A. Knapp, Mrs. Marvin
G. Miller and infant son, Mrs.
Phillip S. Sanders and infant
son, Mrs. Miles M. Slone,
Joseph Smith, Richard Fitch,
Louie Thomas, Mrs. Willie
Fraley, and Mrs. Pius Hyrne.

A contribution to assist in
bringing a girl from the
Philippines to the Supreme
Session of International Order
of Jobs Daughters to be held in
Cleveland this summer was
made Monday night by members of Bethel 62 meeting at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Twila Clatworthy, honored
queen, presided at the meeting
during which time plans were
made for a bake sale with
proceeds to go to the
educational and promotional
fund . It was reported that Jill
Houdashelt, second messenger,
is a patient at the Holzer
Medical Center.
The next meeting was
changed from Monday to
Tuesday, Feb. 9 to avoid a
conflict with a Masonic
meeting. Paul Darnell, vice
grand guardian of Jobs
Daughters, State of Ohio, was
presented. An invitation to the
DeMolay dance to be held on
Feb. 20 at the Middleport
Masonic Temple was extended.

Race Pot Ever
AUCKLAND, New Zealand
(UPil - A syndicate of 25
Greek immigrants Monday won
what was believed to be a world
record horse racing prize of
$716,776.
The immigrants, who live in
Wellington, won the prize when
50 to 1longshot Gather won the
fifth and first jackpot race at
Ashurst Race Track, 250 miles
south of here.
The jackpot is run at various
race meetings in the central
district of the north island, and
pool money accumulates until
bettors pick five consecutive
winners. The jackpot won today
began in October with $350.

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BUILDING NEW HOME
The Rev. and Mrs. Odell
Manley and son, Steve, have a
new home under construction
on Sycamore St. in Middleport.
The family has been residing in
Hartford, W.Va., for the past 18
months where the Rev. Mr.
Manley has been pastor of the
Hartford Christian Union
Church. The new home is being
constructed by Corbett Patterson and partner, Syracuse.

TIMELY
BUDTES

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Polish Ballet leapers lunched
at a 5 &amp; 10 and paid for it with a
$100 bill (Capitalists!) .... The
gifted Los Indios Tabajaras
guitar team invited some
militant American Indians to
their N. Y. digs to talk protest
- and fed them with pizzas ....
The wife in a big imminent show
biz divorce swears she 'II throw
homo accusations at hun ....
Sen. Hubert Humphrey's
cooling it - doesn't even have a
press secretary rhe's also never
drawn an unexpressed breath J.
Bdwy. show money's so tight,
pruducer David Black shelved
his W. C. Fields mustcal ....
Seln,CI Diamond t whose latest

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hilarity is "Nose Jobs For
Peace," a book stressing that
anyone with a nose bob won't
fight) said at The Library
restaurant "everyone" now is
in the market for a schnozz job:
"Except Eskimos they
consider it a sex change
operation."
Local color: Diana Sands (a
black actress) played the
pros titute role in the "Owl &amp; the
Pussycat" stage original- and
Barbra Streisand got the film;
in "Doctors Wives," the
origmal chief-nurse role was
changed from white to black
and who gets it? Why, Diana
Sands of course.
Film czar Jack Valenti's
getting very actorish: Switched
to Bergdorf's J erry the Barber
who administered a "casual
cut," the actors' pet .... Miami
Dolphins'
co-owner
Earl
Smalley, this generation's
Diamond Jim Brady, tossed a
lavish nautical bash at Miami's
Jockey Club on Super Bowl
weekend and had his 150 closest
guests arrive by yacht; What A
Way To Go! .... Sheldon Tannen,
co-owner of "21," also sailed 24
pals to the Super Bowl from the
Jockey Club v1a yacht.
Gifted comedienne Elaine
Stri ~ch (so marvelou s in
"Company'' most show folk
think she's a cinch for stageawards 1 asked us at the "21"
bar if ' 'u, :\o, Nanette" was as
Y.(lncl•·rful as slw'd heard ; we
SJ uJ I l v. '
!.a\ bt.'

Elaine asked who won the
biggest hands and we said
everyone, and that Helen
Gallagher was superb ....
"Well," Elaine stri tched,
"There goes my Tony!"
Chatting with Hildegarde, the
Dear Who Made Milwaukee
Famous, she told us she'll next
start a cosmetics business; we
reminded her Zsa Zsa 's having
bankruptcy Chapter 11 agonies
with her goo company, but
Hildy says she'll try it anyway
.... She's a lso the Low Calorie
Morton Downey : like Mort's
Coca Cola goodwilling, Hildy 's
new roving ambassador for
Mountain Valley Water.
Internationally respected
lady has a tough booze problem
.... Fired Interior Sec. Walter
Hickel checked into the
Berkshire and told friends he
watched the Super Bowl in his
Alaska home - at 7: 45 a .m.
Anchorage time ; first for a
''live" TV grid game up there
.... No benefits needed for
Hickel Tho fired, he owns three
hotels in the 49th state ....
George Segal ankled into Bill
Chan's Gold Coin in a fur coat
and asked owner Bill if he could
park it in a safe place; Bill
opined he could - hung it next
to Ius own double breas ted
nutria benny in the office as the
boys talked fashion and compared their ecological noselhumbings .... The Knic;ks' s tar
Wi Ill s Reed lumbered into
Cnllaglll'r's 33 in Ius latesllight1 .

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mmunity

Corner By

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Charlene Hoefll'ch

Little Sherrie Marshall, Meigs County's cystic fibrosis child,
will observe her sixth birthday Friday.
Members of the Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and Forty, will
be sending cards and taking a gift, and perhaps you, too, might
want to join in making it a memorable occasion for a little girl
whose future is anything but bright. Sherrie is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Marshall, Hemlock Grove.
AFTER THE PAST 15 YEARS in Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. B.
F. Turner are returning to Meigs County. The couple lived in
Pomeroy many years before moving to Lancaster.
This past weekend while here as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Owen
Watson of Racine, brother-in-law and sister of Mr. Turner, they
purchased the Harold Kauff residence at 415 Page St. in Middleport.

IF INFLATION HAS ALL but eliminated the "extras" at your
house, perhaps you will be interested in joining the arts and craft
club being organized this Thursday.
Purpose of the group will be to exchange ideas which will in
MRS. CORRINE LUND is with television personality, Dennis Cole, at a state-wide cancer
some way contribute to better homemaking. Odds and ends can
meeting in Columbus over the weekend. Mrs. Lund is executive director of the Meigs County
many times be made into useful and attractive things. Mrs.
Cancer Society.
Howard Nolan who has a special knack along this line will be
working with the club.
As for the Thursday meeting it will be held at the Meigs Bookmobile headquarters from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Take a sack lunch, if you like; spend an hour, stay for the
whole session, but do come. Interest will determine what
American Cancer Society Reds.
research in progress rises by
develops. And do be sure to bring an idea for exchange and
volunteers from here attending
"Cancer research," Mrs. more than eight per cent, the
sharing with others there.
a state-wide campaign planning Lund explained, "needs greater way the cost of living increases.
meeting in Columbus the past funds to continue in the '70s the That means that the American
BETTY JO AND "CUB" (RAYMOND) ALLENSWORTH are
weekend learned of the great progress made in the '60s.
Cancer Society must raise that
just back from a 10-day tour of the Holy Land.
need to raise additional funds
"Our theme for the '71 much more money here in April
The couple joined a church group of 70 for the tour which took
for cancer research.
Crusade, 'We Want to Wipe Out and in other communities jusftt
them to every sector significant in the life and death of Christ.
Mrs. Corrine Lund, Executive Cancer In Your Lifetime!' can keep going."
They took a ride on a camel and brought back bottles of water director of the American
be a reality because interested
from the Jordan River and the Dead Sea, along with almost 200 Cancer Society's Meigs County volunteers -nearly 2.4 million
Mrs. Lund added that the
colored slides.
Unit who led the group said that strong will be crusading for the current American Cancer
During their absence, Mrs. Lettie Roush went to Groveport to the state
and
national Society th1s year to raise the Society sponsored research not
stay with her four grandchildren - Harvey, at Ohio State, spokesmen at the meeting needed funds."
being conducted in Ohio
Rayann and Jeannie both in office positions, and Joe, a high painted a hopeful but needy
Centers
totals
Mrs. Lund pointed out that the Medical
school sophomore.
picture concerning cancer Federal Government at the $1,121,181 and is financed by
Betty Jo has her own beauty shop in Groveport, and her research in the '70s.
present time appears to be public contributions to the April
husband, out of service now for nearly five years, works at the old
Headlines at the two-day holding the line on its support of Cancer Crusade. Nationwide
Army Depot.
confab, which drew more than research and added that there is the ACS research figure •
400 volunteers from all parts of no guarantee at this time that it $24,088,529. "Since 1945, the
American Cancer Society has
SPEAKING OF• FARAWAY PLACES, Ray Farnham Ohio, were: Dennis Cole, will be increased.
"In the meantime," Mrs. invested more than $5 million in
received a telegram of congratulations from the former Mildred Television Actor from the
Smith of Pomeroy, who now resides in Alaska. Mildred was on one Series "Felony Squad" and Lund said. ''the American cancer research in Ohio," she
Bracken's
World,"
Past Cancer Society is receiving said.
of the outstanding girls teams which Farnham coached.
National Public Education grant
Other American Cancer
applications
for
Chairman of the ACS and Ohio's worthwhile research that Society leaders from here atPete Rose, 1971 Ohio Division cannot be pursued because the •.ending the rally were Mr. and
American Cancer Society Society lacks the much needed Mrs. James Brewington,
Crusade Chairman and Star funds to support it.
members of the Meigs Counb.r
Outfielder
of
the
Cincinnati
Unit Board of Directors.
•
"Each
year
the
cost
of
SYRACUSE - A six-thirty White;
card
chairman,
potluck dinner preceded the Margaret Cottrill, and flower
regular meeting of the Sunshine chairman, Beatrice Blake. The
Makers Class of the First meeting night was changed to
United Presbyterian Sunday the third Thursday of each
School in the Annex Tuesday, month .
Yearbooks
were
Five members of the Meigs with a joint conference for all procedure.
January 19. The meeting, distributed and planned. Choir VICA (Vocational • Industrial officers at
which
time
Workshops on duties of the
conducted by the president practice will be held each Clubs of America) and their leadership skills were em- various officers concluded the
Naomi London, opened with Tuesday night at seven o'clock. advisor, Mrs. Mary Powell, phasized. Discussed were the leadership conference.
scripture read by Esther All interested are invited.
were in Zanesville Saturday for VICA handshake, the creed,
Harden. Devotions from the
a leadership training con- emblem, pledge and motto,
At a recent meeting of t.
Upper Room were read by Hostesses to the February ference held at the Muskingum etiquette, courtesy, conduct and Meigs VICA Club, plans were
Agnes White, followed with a meeting to be Mrs. Harden and Joint Vocational School.
made for a poster contest on
dress.
I\ew Year's Prayer by Mrs. Mrs. Cottrill, roll call word,
Going from here were Adelle
Following the luncheon, the drug abuse. The contest is open
London Twelve members an- "heart," devotions also by Mrs. Davidson, treasurer; Charles discussion moved into personal only to VICA members and
swered roll call.
Harden. There will be study of Lane, secretary; Christy appearance and hygiene, state posters must be completed by
Secretary and treasurer the first and second chapters of Hooper, sergeant at arms; and national service to local Feb. 1 to qualify for judging.
reports were read and ap- Matthew.
Debbie Laney, VICA Queen of chapters,
Prizes will be $5 for first
achievement
proved. The yearly report of the Sunshine Pal names were Meigs High, and Dan White, programs, the national supply place, and VICA shirts for
treasurer showed a balance of drawn to whom cards were alternate parliamentarian. service, VICA membership and second and third places. The
$212.58. Dues were collected and sent, especially on birthday and Gerald Powell accompanied the officer responsibility, public winning posters will la
free will offering taken.
anniversaries, with a gift on group.
in
downtow'll'
relations, management, local displayed
A thank you card from Mrs. Christmas.
The all-day meeting opened club activity and parliamentary businesses.
White, teacher of the class, for a
Present were Charlotte
Christmas gift, was read.
Nease, Esther Harden, Pauline
The same officers were Morarity, Helen Diddle, Helen
retained, namely, president, Harris, Eura Largent, Linda
Naomi London; vice president, Hubbard, Agnes White, Naomi
Mrs. Gretta Simpson and on forsythia.
those contributing to the fund
Helen Diddle ; secretary, Linda London , Jean Hall, Margaret Mrs. Bert Grimm won blue
For roll call members for the beautification project at
Hubbard; treasurer, Agnes Cottrill and Mildred Pierce.
ribbons for arrangements in- discussed their plans for spring the entrance of the Letart Falls
terpreting winter wonderland plantings. Mrs. Carpenter, cemetery.
showing motion at the recent president, conducted the
Thank you notes were rea.
meeting of the Bend 0' the meeting which opened with from Mrs. Joe Bolin for a
River Garden Club at the home devotions entitled, The Flower program gift presented her, and
Grower's 23rd Psalm by Mrs. the Athens Mental Health
Mrs. Alex Wheeler, president, followed.
of Mrs. Ralph Webb.
presided at the recent meeting
The refreshment table,
holiday
arMrs. Clifford Morris and Mrs. Webb who also gave a prayer Center for
rangements. The hostess
of the Ladies Auxiliary of the covered with a white cloth, was Carpenter judged the ar- for earth.
It was voted to seno cards to served refreshments. The next
Veterans Memorial Hospital in centered with a New Year's rangements. The program
the dining room of the hospital. baby, sitting on snow, a mint featured material by Mrs. ill members in lieu of flowers. A meeting will be held at the home
Minutes of the previous meeting tree branch in the background, Grimm entitled Best Way to round-robin card was prepared of Mrs. Simpson with Mrs.
were read by Mrs. Thomas with white candles on each side. Prepare Flowering Shrubs for for Mrs. Robert Kuhn, a patient Morris as hostess.
Mankin and the treasurer Hostesses were Mrs. Ray Forced Blooming Inside, and at the Holzer Medical Center.
report was by Mrs. Richard Pickens, Sr ., Mrs. Howard Let the Sunshine In, an article Thank you notes will be sent to
Slack.
Burris, Mrs. William Crow, and
Miss Erma Smith, director, Mrs. Richard Gilkey. Others
will call a meeting of the present were Mrs. Thomas
committee to redecorate the Mankin , Miss Erma Smith,
lobby . Mrs. Hugh Bearhs was Mrs. Eslie Mossman, Mrs. Alex
named to serve in the absence Wheeler, Mrs. Hugh Bearhs,
SYRACUSE - Will I let God
Ten members answered roll
of Margaret Ella Lewis. The Mrs . Richard Slack, Mrs. speak through me today?, was
call. Each brought handmade
Mr. and Mrs. George Kindle
executive board and the Harold Sauer, Mrs. Ada Slack, the thought for the day, when articles she had made or had
of
Columbus, here for the Ray
auxiliary approved purchase of Mrs. Myla Hudson, Mrs. Arnold the
Third
Wednesday been given to her. The various Farnham
dinner,
wer,£:_
a projector and record player. Hayes, Mrs. Albert Roush, Mrs. Homemakers club met at the items were discussed.
Saturday guests of Mrs. Chari~
Auxihary evening workers Bertha Parker, Mrs. Gladys Municipal Park. The meeting,
The
County-wide
will collect in the rooms for · Mowery, Mrs. James Daniels, conducted by the president Homemakers Extension club Warner, Ebenezer St. Kindle
television service. When any Mrs. Robert McElhinny and Linda Ferrell, opened with the was discussed. The time and graduated from Pomeroy High
School in 1936. Sunday guests of
Auxiliary member is unable to Mrs. R. K. Rowan.
Lord's Prayer and flag pledge place of meeting will be an- Mrs. Warner were Mr. and Mrs.
work, she is to eall her day
in unison . Devotions from nounced . A poem, Mothers are John Sewell of Marietta.
cha1rman or Auxiliary chairUpper Room were read by Irene People was read by Margaret
PRACTICE
CALLED
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fischer
man. A general discussion
A practice for the officers of Parker, followed by prayer. Cottrill.
and daughter, Sharon of
Hostesses for the February 17 Williamstown, W. Va. were
Evangeline Chapter, Order of Secretary report was approved
as
read.
Pennies
for
Friendship
meeting
to be Elva Dailey, Ada weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Eastern
Star,
has
been
the
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Slack and Myla Hudson.
called for Friday night at 7 p.m. were taken.
Karl Grueser.
t)
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
A delicious potluck dinner
at the Masonic Temple, by Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Maag
MEIGS-MASOt: AREA
Raymond Wilcox, worthy
was enjoyed at noon, with grace spent the weekend in Columbus
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
SURGERY PLANNED
Exec. Ed.
matron . Regular Chapter
given by Mrs.
Cottrill. with their son-in-law and
Jackson
of
Liberty
David
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
meeting will be held at 7:30p.m. Lane, Pomeroy, entered the Hostesses were Helen Diddle daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
City Editor
Published daily except
Feb. 4 and Mrs. Wilcox urges Holzer Medical Center Monday and Mrs. Cottrill with Betty Lowe and daughter.
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
good
attendance since Mrs . and was scheduled for surgery Hayes as contributing hostess.
Here for a weekend visit with
PubliSh•ng Company, 111
Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Wilma Styer, Beverly, deputy this morning. He is the brother
The afternoon feature was his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
45769. Business Office Phone
grand :-natron of District 25, will of Mrs. Con Young who has as planning projects for the William Russell, was Ted
992 2156, Editorial Phone 9922157
make a pre-inspection visit.
her gues ts now Mr . and Mrs. meetings. It was decided that Russell who attends school in
Second class postage paid at
Douglas Jackson of Rendville. "textile painting" will be done Troy.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Nationai
advertising
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hayma ...
David and Douglas are at the February meeting. All
representative
Bottinelli
are asked to bring something to of Toledo were Sunday visitors
TEACHERS TO MEET
brothers.
Gallagher, In c., 12 East 42nd
~t, New York City, New York.
paint. Th~ club owns several of Mr . and Mrs . Charles
The
Southern
Local
Subscription
rates
tubes of paint, as do several Neuman, Syracuse.
Educallon
Association
will
Delivered by carrier where
Started Meetings
available 50 cents per week ;
members. The meeting closed
Mr. and Mrs. J . C. Russell of
meet
at
7:30
Thursday
night
at
By Motor Route where c arrier
Camp or revival meetings with the Mizpah in unison.
spent Friday and
Columbus
the
high
school.
The
high
school
service not available: One
are said to have begun in
Others enjvying the day were Saturday with his parents, Mr.
.nonth $1.75 By mail in Ohio te~chers will present the
and w . Va. , One year $14.00.
1799 to 1801 by James Me- I inda Ferrell Irene Parker and Mrs. Truman Russell. They
Racine Gready. a Presbytenan, who . · .
Six months $7 25
Three program and the
. . '
.
·
months $4 .50. Subscrip tion se\'enth and eighth g rade initiated them in L 0 g an M~ldred Pter ce, Jantce Laws&lt;ln , came especially for the wedding
price incltJdes Sunrlay Times .
teachcn; will SPrv(• refresh- County, Ky ·: ac~·ordir:tg to Jean Hall, Ele~n~r Bohraim, of Sean Mullen to Paula Kay
Sen tinel

Syracuse Sunshine Class Dines

Training Conference Conducted in Zanesville

Mrs. Simpson, Mrs. Grimm Win Blue Ribbons

Aid to Romance
In modern s o c i e t y one
Brazil's Kraho Indian earns what one is worth.
tribesmen believe that the -Helenio Herrera, coach of
larger the disk they wear in
an Italian soccer team, to
their ears, the greater their
the assertion that his ansuccess with the girls. Some
nual income of $240 000
men wear plugs the size of
is 10 times that of a gov·
ernment minister.
teacups.

Voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - The electronic
ribbon of news headlines on
Times Square's Allied Chemical
Tower (formerly Times Tower)
end their 50-year run Feb. 28 ....
London's double-deck buses are
bemg phased away
Algonquin Hotel owner Ben
Bodne's grandsons Michael &amp;
Douglas Colby ( 19 and 16) wrote
a Bdwy. musical, and several
producers are interested ....
Bob Hope gave S. Methodist U,
a million clams for a campus
theater so now SMU wants Bob
for a professorship, spending
one month there yearly ....
Patty Duke's costume at her
hairdressers (Raymond &amp;
Nassir) included the new-fad
suede hotpants and a Baltimore
Colts football jersey, with three
Yorkies nipping at her cuffs

l

Cancer Research Fund-s Needed

Jobs Daughters to
Conduct Bake Sale

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

1

rc~~-~------~~-~--:~--..........,.___l

Holzer Medical Center', First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
vis1ling hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. ~

~

TUESDAY
RACIN.i!: American Legion
Auxiliary, 7:30, Tuesday,
Legion hall.
FRIENDLY Neighbors Club.
7:30 tonight home of Mrs. Roy
Smith.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday night, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
office.
JUNIOR
AUXILIARY,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. at the hall; Mrs. Ben
Neutzling to assist with a skit to
be presented at the district
conference.
WEDNESDAY
FEENEY-BENNETT
Post
128, American Legion, 7:30p.m.
Dinner preceding at 6:30 p.m.
for legionnaires and auxiliary
members.
WILDWOOD Garden Club, 8
p.m. Wednesday, Ohio Power
Co., open meeting, Mrs. Homer
Holter to show slides of Expo '70
and the International Flower
Show in Japan.
RUTLAND Friendly Gardeners, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.,
home of Mrs. Tom Martin;
program on ecology by Mrs.
James Carpenter; OAGC slide
set, "Nature Trails," by Mrs.
Bruce Davis.
POMEROY WOMEN'S
Christian Temperance Union, 2
p.m. Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
STATED CONCLAVE Ohio
Valley Commandery Wednesday Pomeroy Masonic
Temple 7:30 p.m., full form
opening.
THURSDAY
WEEKEND services at
Hartford Christian Union
Church, starting 7:30 p.m.
Thursday; Rev. Odell Manley,
pastor, speaking; music by
Pomeroy Lower Light Church;
public invited.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245, Thursday, American
Legion hall, 7 p.m.; parents
urged to ~ttend.
WOMEN'S ASSN., Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church, 7:30p.m.
Thursday, at the church; installation of officers by Mrs. 1.
E. Harley.

J

Ladies Auxiliary Unit Meets

10 Attend Homemaker Meeting

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 26, 1971

•

Louisiana Surprises Tennessee
11r;:,: ;;:~:i ;:::~~'''111
li·

-

•
...."
"'·"·

''

!I

by Chet Tannehill

The facts, in perspective, are emerging of that hassle (a mild
word) in coMection with the basketball game of last Friday night
in Gallipolis. I commend two letters on page 4 from Gallipolis
folks, one a student and one the mother of one of the Blue Devil
players, to be read thoughtfully.
I am particularly impressed by the letter written by Keith
Rocchi, the student, a dark complected, serious, contemplative
sort of young man who fully realizes the possible fingers (and
maybe worse) that may be pointed at him in his horne town. I
asked him: "You realize what may ensue when this letter is
published?"
"I'm not afraid," he said, quietly and with more dignity than I
imagine 90 per cent of the basketball fans attending the game we
are talking about displayed last Friday night. (Oh, this terrible
young generation!).
I was at that game, too, but sitting the first half at the opposite
end of the bleachers from where all the action was and near the
scorers' table the second half, still removed from the apparent
crossfire of words and implied threats.
The actual facts in such incidents always are nigh impossible
to get out in the open. We believe, however, that this open
discussion by public letters probably will do more to clear the air
than any other procedure available to both school communities.
The non-attached public (that is, the non-sports fan) may
wonder why all this trouble now when "relations" apparently had
been under control, if not serene, before?
We understand it is at least partially rooted in the defeat of
the Marauder football team last autumn by the Blue Devils .
Certain animosities were born at that climactic contest for the
SEOAL championship between over eager fans, not the players.
The incident at a restaurant in Gallipolis mentioned by Rocchi
was a direct product of the football season, and now this more
recent incident at the GAHS gym is a residue.
The single, most happy aspect of the entire proceedings is
that the athletes themselves played hard, clean basketball Friday
night.
I was particularly impressed by the coolness of Meigs' fine
senior forward Jeff Tyo. He had complete control of himself under
the most intense pressure. At the end, still cool, with two seconds
left in the fourth overtime, Tyo put in a one-handed flip from 12 to
14 feet out on the wing that won the game for Meigs. My hat is off
to young Mr. Tyo. The game couldn't have been won by a more
deserving player.
There was one very brief scuffle on the floor, late in the fourth
quarter of the regulation time. Three or four boys slithered
around trying to gain control of the ball. It was over quickly, the
two most involved boys shook hands, and Tyo walked away from
the point of the scramble, not consoling a teammate, but with a
Blue Devil player, patting him on his back.
I'd say we saw the highest order of sportsmanship last Friday
night. "'
On the floor, that is.

...

•

O'BRIEN WINS
MELBOURNE,
Australia
( UPI) - Scottish lighweight
Johnny O'Brien survived a
fourth-round butt that slashed
open his forehead and went on
to score a narrow 10-round
verdict over South African
Anthony Tmorodi.

,,

..

••

•
,.,.

•
I

,.

Hy FRED MrMANE

UPI Sports Writer
Last Saturday the Louisiana
State Tigers came within an
eyelash of beating SEC powerhouse Kentucky and Monday
night they made it known that
they will be contenders for the
conference ti tie this year by
knocking off eighth-ranked Tennessee, 80-70.
Hitting on a phenomenal 61
per cent of its shots, LSU
completely overwhelmed the
Vols in boosting its conference
record to 4-2. The victory was

By United Press International
Ken May, the University of
Dayton's talented senior forward, has gone over the 1,000
mark in his basketball career.
The 6-foot-5 captain of the
Flyers scored 17 points to boost
the team to an 81-71 win Monday
night over St. Louis and also
pushed his three-year total to
1,001 points.

No. One In UPI Poll
NEW YORK ( UPI)-It's taken 65 years but Southern
California has finally made it.
The Trojans were named the
nation's No. 1 basketball team
for the firsl time in the school's
history Monday in balloting by
the 35-mernber United Press
International Board of Coaches.
Taking advantage of UCLA's
loss to Notre Dame, Southern
Cal ( 14-0) received 16 of the 35
first place votes cast and put
together 318 points to oust the
Bruins.
UCLA captured 12 first-place
votes to edge Marquette for
second by a single point. UCLA,
now 14-1, had 302 points to 301
for Marquette, which had six
first-place vot.es after recording
its 14th victory without a
defeat.
Pennsylvania, unbeaten in 15
games, remained fourth, followed by Kansas and Jacksonville. Notre Dame, which had
one first-place vote after
upending UCLA, was seventh,
with Tennessee, South Carolina
and Western Kentucky to
complete the top 10.
Five coaches from each of
the seven geographical areas of
the nation comprise the UPI
ratings board. Each week they
select the top 10 college teams
in the nation, with points
awarded on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1
basis on votes from first
through lOth.

SKYJACKER? An interest·
ing juxtaposition is formed
b~· a plane passing over up·
raised hand on statue of
Theodore R o o s e v e I t in
Washington. n.C .

Comes in fast·hanging 2 x 4-ft.
panels for suspended ceilings. Or TICKETS ~OLD
regular 12 x 12·in. size for staple or
NEW YORK (UPI)- The last
adhesive application.
tickets for the championship
Pomeroy
bout between Joe Frazier and
Muhammad Ali March 8 in
Cern ent Block Co.
Madison Square Garden were
The Department Store
sold within two hours after the
of Building Since 1915
box office opened Monday.

CLOSEOUT SALE
ON GUARDIAN

WINTER TIRES
Sizes Thru 775xl4 or 15

and up

Plus Fed. exc tax .
to
~220
depencttn9 on stzc
&amp; old CilSinq
S17~

Sizes Thru 825xl4 or 15

And Up

P lus f cd

7 "l'J
on

"" '"x
fH'IId,nq
anrJ old

IO 'l Rl dr
~,,,,

E.\ S Y HIDER - Saigun
st.' le. .\ \ "ietnamest• girl
ridl'S hl'r motorcvele in thl'
capital cit.'
motor·
bikt•s and CH:les an· tht•
must 11 11 p u i a r means uf
transportatiun .

''hen·

&lt;)- Wiwt
yeur?

IS

a tropical

:\- The vear of the seasons
which we' know as the cal·
&lt;·ndar year

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

cacdnq

,,

.,
"

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
PO ~.A F R 0

V

0 H I0

Playing on their home court,
the Flyers took a 17-6 lead, but
the Billikens came back to tie it
up at 30-30 and then at 34-34
when the intermission buzzer
sounded.
In the second half the going
was easy as the Flyers pounced
to a 79-54 lead with 2:17 to go
and the substitutes took the

Southern Cal Named

CEIUND TIL£

Installs easy too!

by Pacific Eight rival Washington, 82-75; 13th-ranked Kentucky beat Alabama, 86-73; and
18th-ranked Memphis Stale
topped Loyola of the South, 8468.
Jacksonville placed six players in double figures in turning
back South Alabama for its 13th
victory in 15 games. Artis
Gilmore, the Dolphis' 7-foot-2
center, paced his team with 15
points and also collected 19
rebounds. However, game scoring honors went to South

Alabama's Andy Denny who
had 22 points.
Jim McDaniels, a 7-foot
center, scored :lJ points for
Western Kentucky, which
snapped a two-game losing
streak by routing Ohio Valley
Conference rival Austin Peay.
The Hilltoppers rolled to a 28-9
lead with less than two minutes
gone in the first half and led by
as much as 52 points in the
second half.
Utah State connected on 63
per cent of its shots in the
second half to break open a

Dayton Tops St.

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Perfect for rec rooms, playrooms any room where ceilings could get
hard knocks. It's both tough and
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Has deep·textured
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the only ceiling tile that looks good
being durable. Conwed Stone Face
Ceiling Tile!

I .SU's eighth against five losses
overall.
Bill Newton was the major
offensive weapon for LSU with
27 points and 11 rebounds while
Jimmy England topped the Vols
with 22 points.
In other action involving the
nation's top 20 ranked teams,
sixth-ranked
Jacksonville
downed South Alabama, 91-76;
lOth-ranked Western Kentucky
whipped Austin Peay, 117-72;
11th-ranked Utah State defeated
Long Island University, 82-74;
12th-ranked Oregon was upset

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
216 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992.5428

floor.
In other college games, Miami beat Xavier 73-61, Defiance
edged Alliance (Pa.) 91-89 and
Central State whipped Cedarville 83-50.
Jim Amstutz of Defiance
missed two foul shots with two
seconds to go and his team

By United ress International
It hasn't been a very happy
new year for the San Diego
Rockets, but their time for
celebration has finally arrived.
The Rockets snapped a 10game losing streak Monday
night by beating the Buffalo

115-107.
Rookie Dave Sorenson's 25foot shot at the buzzer enabled
the Cavaliers to win their
eighth game of the season.
Sorenson, who came off the
bench to score 10 fourth
quarter points, took a pass
from Bob Washington , who had

anFz.ndlay

Old Town

Flats News

PLACE CHANGED
A meeting of Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Ph1
Sorority scheduled at 8:15 this
t•vcning will be held at the
:Vll'Igs Junior High School
caft•lt•ria rather than at the
so('t&lt;tl room of the Columbus
&lt;rnd Southern Ohio F.ledric Co.
·\ bake sa lt· wtll be held among
lll('lllbl'I"S .

Kentucky trailed Alabama by
s1x points early in the second
half but outscored the Crimson
Tide 20-7 in the final six

Louis,

ahead 91-89, but Alliance had no
time to make a last effort shot.
Amstutz led Defiance, now 124, with 2 points.
Ed Roeth added 21 points to
the Defiance cause.
Central State won its 13th in 16
season outings by disposing of
Cedarville early in the game.

minutes to post iL&lt;; 12th victory
in 15 games. Kent Hollonbeck
led the wildcats with 21 points.
Don Holcomb scored 23 points
and Larry Finch added 21 as
Memphis State won easily to
boost i L&lt;; record to 13-:l.
In other games, Dayton
downed St. Louis, 81-71; Niagara lopped DePaul, 83-72;
Mississippi State beat Georgia ,
67-66, in overtime; Florida
routed Mississippi, 106-86; Kansas State defeated Oklahoma,
78-70; and Oregon State edged
Washington State, 78-73.

81~71

'fhe Marauders led 19-4 in the
first nine minutes and held a 4220 intermission advantage.
Bradley Biggs and Sterling
Wuant tallied 18 points apiece
for Central State. Don Atherton
scored the same for the Yellow
Jackets, now 8-8.
Miami finally went ahead of

xavier at 60-59 with 5:47 left in
the game and the Musketeer
attack collapsed. Miami then
outscored the host team 13-2 to
assure its ninth win in 13 games.
Xavier, led by Tom Biegar's 21
points, is 7-8.
Nine games will be played
tonight.

SD Rockets End Losing Streak

NEW YORK (UPIJ- The
Un i 1ed Press lnternalional top
20 major college basketball
leams with first place votes
and won.los 1 records in par en.
theses. (Eighth week, includes
games played lhrough Jan. 24). Braves, 114-106, and the victory
... Team
Points marked the return to action of
1. Sou. Cal. (16) (14·0)
318 guard Larry Seigfried who had
2. UCLA ( 12) ( 14-1)
302
3. Marquetle (6) (14-0)
301 manikssleedl_n2J.9Urgya.mes because of
4. Pennsylvania (15·0)
235
5. Kansas ( 13-1l
159
Siegfried put in a strong 30
133 minutes as he scored five
6. Jacksonville (12 · 2&gt;
7. NolreDame (l)(9·4l
108
8. Tennessee ( 12·2)
69 points and picked up five
9. South Carolina ( 10·3)
47 assists while taking some of the
43 pressure off the Rockets'
10. Weslern
( 12 ·3&gt; 36
11.
Utah St. Kentucky
(15-2)
12. Oregon (10·2)
28 backcourt duo of Calvin Mur13. Kentucky (11·3)
24 phyandSVTULantz.
12-1l
23
14.
The Rockets, who have won
15. LaSalle
Fordham( (12·1)
17
16. Illinois (8 2)
13 two games this month, trailed
17. Villanova (14·4)
11 by nine points at the half but
18. (Tie)
(Tiel Memphis
Duquense Sl.
(9·2)(12 3) 99 rallied behind the shooting of
(Tie) North Car. (11-3)
9 Lantz and Elvin Hayes to
Olhers receiving five or more overhaul the Braves in the
points: Arizona State, Michi· second half. Lantz was especialgan, Murray Stale , Brrgham J
ff t"
h"ttf
37
Young.
y e ec 1ve , I mg or
points, while Hayes scored 21
points and grabbed 25 rebounds.
In the only other National
Basketball Association game,
Cleveland upset Boston, 117-116.
In the only America Basketball Association contest,
Memphis defeated Carolina,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Long of
Eagle Ridge, and Smith Long,
The Almanac
local, visited Mrs. Mona Long.
By United Press International
Miss Leota Birch, local, and
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 26,
Raymond Holsinger called on the 26th day of 1971.
Mr. and Mrs. Dillon Taylor.
The moon is between its new
Mrs. Icy Dailey, Mr. and Mrs. phase and first quarter.
Danny Haines, Mrs . Mattie
The morning stars are
Lawrence and
daughter, Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Borinie, Elsie Smith, Mr. and Jupiter.
Mrs. Homer Icenhower, local,
The evening star is Saturn.
Ralph Van Cooney, Ked WarThose born on this day are
ner, Pomeroy visited Mrs. under the sign of Aquarius.
Hattie Powell and family.
On this day in history:
Mrs. Erma Johnston was
In 1815 the 7,000-volume
shopping in Pomeroy recently. library of Thomas Jefferson
Aaron Sayre of Columbus who was bought by the U.S.
is attending Ohio State spent the government to be used to start
weekend at home with his the Library of Congress.
mother, Mrs. Doris Sayre, and
In 1918 Food Administrator
Ollie Jr . Sayre. He visited his Herbert Hoover asked Amerigrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. cans to observe wheatless
Clint Johnson of Portland.
Mondays and Wednesdays,
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. meatless Tuesdays, and porkLawrence Johnston were Mr. less Thursdays and Saturdays.
and Mrs. Ronald Wise and two
In 1964 Harry Stuhldreher of
children of Middleport Route, Notre Dame's famous "Four
Mrs. Dorothy Roseberry, local , horsemen" football backfield
and Allan Boggs of Tuppers died.
Plains.
In 1964 Harry Stuhldreher of
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wolfe of Notre Dame's famous "Four
Racine Route and Mr. and Mrs. horsemen" football backfield
Jack Cornell and family, local, died at the age of 63.
called on Mr. and Mrs.
In 1969 the worst flooding in
Maywood Johnston.
32 years to hit California led to
Mr. Proffitt called on Mr. and declaring the state a disaster
Mrs. Homer Icenhower.
area.
Laurence Grant Johnston
A thought for today : British
called on Terry Congo.
Statesman Joseph Chamberlain
- May Johnston said, " I never like being hit
without striking back."
Best Baseball Bats
Baseball bats are made
from the northern white ash
because its wood has the
right hardness. resilience
and weight . The best bats
are m ad e from second·
growth trees with a diameter
of 12 to 15 inches because
their wood is more resilient
than that from larger. older
tree!. .

light defensive battle with LIU
and rolled to i L&lt;; 11th consecutive victory. Marv Roberts
paced the Aggies with 22 points.
Washington never trialed in
handing Oregon only ils third
loss in 1:1 games. The Huskies
were led by Steve Haas with 24
points, but Oregon's Stan Love
took game scoring honors with
35 points.

This Week' s Special

Early Wednesday Mixed
Lea·gue
Jan. 20, 1971
Standings
Team
Points
Zide's Sport Shop
36· 4
Lou 's Ashland
26·14
Porter·Smith
22·18
Ashland Oil
16·24
Nelson 's Drug
12·28
Oiler's Sohio
8-32
High Individual Game - Jim
Queen.Charles Smith 191
Women High Ind. Game Carolyn Bachner 178
High Series - Jim Queen.
Charles Smith 520
Women High Series - Linda
Winebrenner 491
Team High Game
Zide's
Sport Shop 709
Team High Series
Zide's
Sport Shop 1955

NAMED CHAIRMAN
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Pete
Rose, the CinciMati Reds' star
outfielder, has been named Ohio
chairman of the 1971 Cancer
Crusade
The announcement was made
~onday by Charles Mechem,
director of the crusade.

The Redmen, who will return
home to the Paul R. Lyne
Center to host Pikeville College
Saturday, have won their last
two starts. Last Wednesday the
Redmen dumped Ohio Northern
University behind a 33-point
effort by Ron Lambert. The
Redmen trailed by a 61-57 count
at the half, but came back
:strong in the second half,
despite a total of 26 turnovers.
Saturday night, a short jumpshot by Tony Bass w1th less than
20 seconds on the clock sparked
the Redmen to a 71-69 win over
Wright State University.
Lambert led Rio Grande with 29
points, followed by Bass's 20.
Lambert is now averaging 25.3
points per game, while Bass is
carrying a 21.5 average.
The scoring punch for Find-

and

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Qualrty
Way of Dorng Business."
GMAC FINANC IN G
992·5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings ' Til6 :00
Ttl5 P.M . Sat.

The cost of building in·
creases an average of 3 per
cent per year. A home built
five years ago for $20,000
would cosl over $23,000 to
replace today. Fire in.
surance
to
full
"replacement" value is
available from DowningChilds Agen cy.

Downing-

Childs
Agency, Inc.
220 N. 2nd

MIDDLEPORT

Even Elephants
Can't Remember
All The Changes
in the

SAVINGS ACCOUNT

Meigs Co. Branch

FURY I 4 Door
~95

"What a FIRE! ~
-And no
marshmallows"

College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Miss. St. 67 Georgia 66, ot
Dayton 81 St. Louis 71
Mass. 73 Adelphi 69
Hous•on 89 Cenlenary 69
Mmphs Sl. 84 Lyla (La) 68
Kansas Sl. 78 Okla. 70
Ulah St. 82 LIU 74
Or. Sl. 78 Wash . St 73
Wynsbg 92 Crnge Mlln 77
Penn Sl. 70 Princeton 62
Fairmnl St. 98 W.Va. St. 85
LSU 80 Tennessee 70
Florida 106 Miss. 86
Ken lucky 86 Alabama 73
Jcksnvl 91 Sou. Ala. 76
Niaga ra 83 DePaul 72
Wesl. Ky. 117 Astn Peay 72
Tenn . Tech 80 Pan Am. 74
Grambling 97 Tex. ~thn 87
Ablne Chris. 87 Tex.·Arlngtn 79
Boise St. 118 Prtlnd St. 96
LA Tech 103 LA St. 94
Wash . 82 Oregon 75
Oral Rbrts .11 Monl. 79

4%%

65 PLYMOUTH

lay, which suffered its second
loss of the season Saturday
night at the hands of Tri-State
College, has been contributed
this season by 6'3" guard Ken
Burgei and 6'5" center Marty
Arft. Burgei has a 21.3 average,
while Arft has a 19-point
average. As a team, the Oilers
are averaging 87.2 points per
game on offense, and yielding
73.2 points per game.

IN TODAY , LET US START
YOU A HIGH RETURN

Interest per year , com
pounded
quarterly
on
regular passbook savings
accounts, no mintmum or
max•mum amount . Interest
s paid from date of deposit
to date of withdrawal as long
as you maintain an open
account

USED CARS

Six cyl., auto. trans
radio.

Owns 14-2 Mark

The R1o Grande College
Redmen will be trying to reach
the .500 mark for the fi.rst t1"me
since Dec. 10 when they travel
to Findlay College to face the
Findlay Oilers. The Redmen
currently stand at 8-9 on the
year, while the Oilers, ranked
fourth nationally,
. are sporting a
14-2 mark.
Wednesday's game will be the
seventh meeting between Rio
Grande and Findlay. In the
previous six games, starting
with the 1963-64 season, each
team has won three times. Rio
Grande won in 1964, 1966 and
1968, while Findlay won in 1963,
1965 and 1967.

Lo l Bo }
ca
wing

25 points.
Memphis connected on 52 per
cent of its shots to down
Carolina for the first time this
year. The Pros were led by
Steve Jones with 23 points and
Jimmy Jones with 22. Larry
Miller led Carolina with 25
points.

picked up a loose ball in the
backcourt, and tossed in the
wmning field goal as the buzzer
sounded.
Bobby Smith 's 31 points
paced the Cavaliers, who have
scored only two victories
against established NBA clubs.
John Havlicek led Boston with

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St
Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured By

If

po~h·,.dNm~

hovP orob·

BOTH

IPn&gt;~.

how obcut people?
ThP &lt;:osy answer - toke
yOU' retur" to BLOCK Owr
'Y~t! ,.., of checkmg evf"Y
rrturn "'c'On~ vou wttl re '" "'Ll f'iYPry !•-.q1tir1otc de
ct.~ '~ \1~.

Yal

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FEDERAL
AND
STATE

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111 W~,.· ~tJOtOIH~t.~ ot:~o.urotc
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..--:::=::-

-~:---:-

'

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or

304 t::. Main Street

Ph. 992-3795

Pomeroy, Ohio

AMERICA 'S lAitl•tST U X ~:;h viCE W!TH OVER SOC" OFFICES
· - - - - · N::)

.A.nDOINTMENT NECESSARY

�-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~--,

4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 .. Jan. 26, 1!!71

r·~~:;;-:;~Opi::;,~~~~-~:l

Pro Standings
N BA Standings
Milwaukee at New York
By Un1ted Press lnfernafiona I
C111cago al Los Angeles
Atlantic Division
Bullalo at Phoenix
w. L. Pet. GB Allanta at Philadelphia
35 17 .673
(Only games scheduled)
New York
Phi Iadelphia 32 22 .593 4
Boston
29 L4 .547 61 ~
ABA Standings
Buffalo
16 40 .286 21
By United Press I nternationa I
Central Division
East
L. Pet. GB
L. Pet. LB
Baltimore
30 20 .600 ...
9
Virginia
.420
34 17 .667
Cincinnati
21 29
Kentucky
29 23 .558 5' 2
Atlanta
17 35 .327 14
22 26 .458 101 2
Cleveland
8 47 .145 241 2 New York
Pittsburgh
Midwest Division
23 30 .434 12
22 31 . 415 13
w. L. Pet. GB Carolina
41
8 .837 ..
Floridians
20 33 .377 15
Milwaukee
34 18 .654 81 2
West
Detroit
w. L. Pet. GB
30 21 .588 12
Chicago
30 23 .566 13
Indiana
Phoenix
32 17 .653 ...
Pacific Division
Ulah
31 18 .633 1
w. L. Pet. GB Memphis
30 23 .566 4
19 31 .380 1312
28 20 .583
Denver
Los Angeles
San Francisco 27 25 .519 3
Texas
18 31 .367 14
Monday's Results
Seattle
24 28 .462 6
24 20 .444 7
Memphis 115 Carol ina 107
San Diego
Tuesday's Games
Portland
17 36 .321 13 1 2
Monday's Results
New York vs. Floridians
at Tampa, Fla.
Cleveland 117 Boston 116
Kentucky at Texas
San Diego 114 Buffalo 106
Utah at Pillsburgh
(Only games scheduled)
Indiana at Memphis
Tuesday's Games
(Only games scheduled)
San Francisco at Baltimore

w.

••••
~"•

•,

~.

w.

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

Careful of Salt Intake;
Excess Causes Problems
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-! do not
use much salt. onlv while
cooking v e g e t a b I s. The
rest of my family adds more
at the table . Would it be
possible to for you to com·
ment in vour column on the
effects of salt?
Dear Reader-With salt.
like other things, there is an
optimal amount. Only under
unusual circumstances is it
necessary to add salt to the
diet to ·p r e v en t medical
problems.
The water in the body contains about the same amount
of salt as sea water and it is
essential to maintain about
that much salt in the body.
The food we eat contains a
lot of sodium. which is the
1mportant element of salt.
In fact, it is very hard to
construct a good diet which
is low in sodium or salt.
Meat. milk and vegetables
all contain some sodium and
even city water often contains more sodium than is
allowable if a person really
needs to restrict sodium.
The normal kidney is able
to conse,..,e sodium if the
body needs it and filters out
water wit!'~ little salt in it.
The most common reason
for needing salt added to
the diet is excessive sweating, for example. from
heavy manual labor or exercise in the heat Sometimes salt pills are advisable in these circumsta11ces.
Other than this. the big

e

.

"·
~·

....

DR. SCHOLl'S
FLEXO
FOAM ARCH

problem with salt ts that
people may use too much.
In some people. excess
salt c o n t r i b u t e s to high
l&gt;lood pressure. For awhile
some investigators thought
there was something magic
to rice and rice diets be came very popular 111 treat·
ing high blood pressure . It
was soon learned that the
magic in rice was the absence of sodium. A salt·
restricted diet is still a good
treatment for high biood
pressure. particularly if
there is associated accumulation of fluid . In fact. some
of the medicines we give
people for high blood pressure act in part b.v causing
the kidney to eliminate excess sodnlm
Some a u thor 1 ties have
suggested that the excess
use of salt. so characteristH:
of Americans. is related to
developing fatty deposits m
the arteries but this is only
theoretical at the moment.·
Of course. people with
heart failure causing accumulation of fluid. liver disease
or kidnev disease must be
particulai·l) careful not to
rat much salt. \Vhile medi cme can help prevent the
accumulation of salt and
water. the role of salt restriction is still important.
Most healthy people can
use a moderate amount of
salt and have no ill effects
from it
You are not missing an~· ­
thing you need for health b~·
not adding a lot of salt to
your food and hopefully the
rest of your family is not
doing too much harm to
themselves. but your prac tice is more health~'·

FOR MEN AND WOMEN

THE SHOE BOX

Mittie Nelson

Where Shoes are sensibly
priced.
Middleport

~·············~

. ~THOUGHT~

.

:·•'

..••'

~FOR
iC

TODAY!
iC The rule of my life is to t
iC make
business
a -tc

t
t
tift
t
~
t-tc
t-tc

iC pleasure, and pleasure iC
~

my business.

-

iC

Aaron Burr ~

*It's Quick!
* * :~
iC

Easy

~

DRIVE-IN

BANKING~

Fridays Only
iC
The Drive- l n Window ~
is Open
-tc
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iC
iC
(Continuously)
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Banking Hours 9 to iC
iC 3 and S to 7 as usual on ~
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and SAVINGS 00. ~

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t

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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

~

....................
~

iC
ie
iC
iC

~

Dies Tuesday
Mrs. Mittie M. Nelson, 89,
Wilkesville, died Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Nelson was a member of
the Salem Center Methodist
Church. She was a 50-year
member of Star Grange 778 and
belonged to the Pythian Sisters
Lodge at Wilkesville.
Mrs. Nelson is survived by
three daughters, Mrs. Kenneth
(Shirley) Cooper, Columbus;
Mrs. Ralph (Nina) Macomber,
Dexter, and Mrs. Walta (Vista)
Canode, Apple Creek; three
sons, Clair, of Langsville;
Edwin, of Wooster and Archie,
of Maumee; a sister, Mrs. Jess
(Ora) Profitt, Albany; 21
grandchildren, 21 greatgrandchildren and two greatgrea l-grandchildren . Preceding
her in death were her husband,
Frank D. Nelson, in 1958, and a
daughter, Mrs. Grace Martin.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the Martin
Funeral Home in Rutland with
the Rev . Chesler Lemley officiating. Burial will be in the
Nelson Cemetery at Dexter.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Thursday and on Friday
until time of services.

~ welcomt&gt;d. The E'Clilnr reserves the right to shorten letters. ~
All lf'ttcrs must bt' signed, with a full address, although ~
initials may be used upon request.
~

~
~
~
~
~

Sportsmanship at GAHS
Gallipolis, Ohio
Jan. 25, 1971
Dear Sir:
I would like to say something about our behavior after our
defeat at the hands of a good Meigs Marauder squad. Regardless
of what probable reason has been given for the aggressive
character of a small minority of Blue Devil fans, I do not believe
any of these reasons are acceptable. Perhaps the Meigs supporters did use vulgarity in their cheers, but is that an acceptable
reason for the violence which they were subjected to?
I saw the fight after Friday night's game, and I would like to
clarify present confusion. The truth is that a very small minority
of Meigs supporters lea,.ing the game were subjected to intense,
obscene language by a large majority of Blue Devil fans. The
aggressive character of these fans was ignored as much as
possible by the supporters of the Marauders. But when it was
apparent that a fight was inevitable, these few Meigs fans attempted to protect themselves with hockey sticks. Once they
were safely locked in their car, the car itself was severely
damaged with bottles and grocery carts.
What people fail to realize is that a fight such as this, though
provoked by only a small minority of GAHS fans, reflects on the
image or our school, and even the basketball team. We do not fully
realize the result of this action. Our position in the SEOAL is
certainly in jeopardy simply because the fight was provoked in
Gallipolis. The historic fact is that the Marauder basketball team
was subjected to ill treatment at a restaurant in our town a few
weeks ago. This act was preceded by the brutality of Friday night.
And the pathetic fact is that these acts were provoked by a small
minority of students.
This minority has plagued our school for the past few years
with acts of violence and vulgarity. To think that our reputation is
still solid and firm is a false illusion. The harsh reality is that our
reputation of integrity and good sportsmanship was partially
destroyed Friday night by a minority. I think the time has arrived
for the majority of us students to defend the image of GAHS. We
can retain our reputation by completely stamping out the voice of
this small minority by acts of good conduct.
Coach Osborn made a special challenge to this minority at the
start of the basketball season. He asked them to support our team
with vigor and stamina. Indirectly, that challenge also meant to
accept defeat with pride and dignity. The majority of us students
have met that goal. But the pathetic fact is that the actions of a
small minority usually reflects on the whole.
I think that we have a tradition to retain. The best probable
means to uphold our sportsmanship is to continue to support our
basketball team whether they be winners or losers. It was easy to
support our football team in their arduous trek for the championship. But the most difficult task to accomplish is to support a
team frustrated with consecutive failures. It is easy to quit, but
the greater satisfaction is knowing that we supported a losing
basketball team.
We can aclmowledge OW' victories when we attain them; we
can proudly hold our heads high when we lose.
Keith Rocchi

Vulgar, Distasteful Cheers
Gallipolis, Ohio
Jan. 25, 1971
Dear Sir:
I have been reading the letters that have been written in the
past few weeks by other people and have found some to be good
and some not so good, but at least there has been truth in them.
But on reading the letter today from Mary Bradbury, I am sorry
to say I found nothing but distorted facts.
As a parent and a fan, I can say that I have never attended a
high school basketball game where the cheers were so distasteful
and vulgar. Atfirst I couldn't believe my ears, but after talking to
other people, I discovered that my ears were not failing me. H the
president of the Student Body and captain of the cheerleaders
feels that the action and cheers of the "Meigs Bleacher Bums",
are the best thing that ever happened to high school basketball at
Meigs High School, I am certainly glad not to know the worse.
From the time they entered the gym and removed their shirts
until the game was over they were completely vulgar. Why the
policemen that were in the gym didn't speak to them I don't understand; perhaps if they had, the following fight might have been
prevented.
Both teams, Meigs and Gallipolis, are to be commended for
an Excellent Basketball Game and their Sportsmanship.
The fans should take a lesson from the ones who play so hard
and who are the ones to suffer from the results of others. Let's get
back to backing OW' teams with good clean cheers from all - And
keep the games a sport, not a brawl.
Mrs. Ray Boone
114Mabelene Dr.

REAUME FAIR
HAMILTON, Ont. (UPI)Marc Reawne, a former
National Hockey League player,
was reported in fair condition
Monday with injuries incurred
in an automobile accident
Saturday night.

Oil Nations Demanding
By RICHARD C. LONGWORTH
VIENNA IUPI) -Any organization that controls 85 per cent
of the world's oil exports and 68
per cent of its known oil
reserves has power to burn.
The unlikely base of that
power is the tree-lined Ringstrasse of Vienna, where the 10
member nations of the Organization of Petrolewn Export
Countries (OPEC) maintain a
marble-walled headquarters. It
is this headquarters that is
calling the shots in the current
struggle between the oilproducting nations and the oil
companies.

OPE:C was formed only 10
years ago, after the me~jor oil
companies decreed a cut in the
official price-per-barrel of oiland hence in the countries
share of the oil revenue .
The problem, as explained in
an OPEC publication, \:as that
the companies could play each
nation off against the other. In
a blizzard of metaphors, the
publication said the idea behind
the organization was "to make
hay while the sun shone by
closing ranks beneath the
wnbrella of OPEC."
OPEC currently has 10
members-Venezuela, Iran, Qa-

tar, Kuwait, Algeria, Saudi
Arabia, Libya, Iraq, Indonesia
and Abu Dhabi. Between them,
they produce nearly half the
world's oil.
Smce such oil-producing nations as Russia and the United
States use most of their
own product, the impact of the
OPEC nations on the export
market is enormous. If the
OPEC members were to ration
their output- or turn off the tap
entirely - they could cripple
the industry of Western Europe
and Japan.
But this cuts both ways.
Without the oil revenues, the

Washington Window

By NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Communist attacks on Phnom
Henh are causing considerable
worry in the Nixon administration.
State Department officials do
not minimize the deep psychological shock which the fall of the
Cambodian capital would have
on morale among the South
Vietnamese and native forces
operating in that country - if
the Commun1sts chose seriously
to try to capture the city.
At the same time, officials
left little doubt that U. S.supported military missions
would continue energetically
throughout Cambodia even if
the capital fell.

Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird has outlined quite
specifically the administration
intention to use extensive air
power in Cambodia while
holding back on introduction of
any American ground troops
there.
Other high administration
officials acknowledged that they
were disturbed at the wide
attention given Laird's remarks, plus charges by critics
of the administrations recent
Cambodia actions that the
executive branch had changed
American policy in Indochma
by exceeding the intent of
Congress which wrote a ban on
ground combat activity by U. S.
troops in Cambodia.

'Bass Third In
League Scoring
Statistics released today by
the Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference show that,
after 14 games, forward Tony
Bass of the Rio Grande College
Redmen ranks third m the
conference in scoring while
sophomore center Bernard
Williams has moved into the top
five in rebounding. Bass is
averaging 21.5 points per game,
while Williams has gathered in
142 rebounds for a 10.9 per game
average.
The leading scorer for Rio
Grande, although not listed in
the KIAC's weekly report, is
transfer student Ron Lambert.
Lambert, a 6'4" forward who
sat out the first half of the
season due to an eligibility
ruling, has appeared in nine
games for the Redmen, and is
averaging 25.3 points per game.
Pikeville's Steve Butcher, listed
as the KIAC's top scorer in the
weekly report, is averaging 24.6
points per outing.
Lambert has hit on 59.4 per
cent of his field goal attempts,
which would rank him second in
the conference, and 69.6 per
cent of his free throws. He
scored the most points in a
single game for Rio Grande this
season. 43 in a losing effort

against Urbana College.
KIAC statistics also show that
Harry Hairston, a junior forward for Rio Grande, is ranked
fourth in the conference in free
throw percentage, hitting on 80
per cent of his attempts, and
eighth in field goal percentage,
with a 51.3 per cent average.
As a team, Rio Grande ranks
second in offense, with an
average of 90.1 per game, and
sixth in defense, with a 92.2
average. Last season, the
Redmen finished sixth in the
nation in team offense, with an
average of more than 102 points
per game.
The Redmen travel to Findlay
College Wednesday night to
face the Findlay Oilers, and
return home Saturday to host
Pikeville College.

QUICK QUI Z
Q- What is the major
function of a leaf?
A- Leaves are "factories··
for making food out of car·
bon dioxide, light and water.
Without this food, plants,
animals and man could not
live.

President Nixon in June
created a widespread impres
sion that the use of air power
in Cambodia would be directed
primarily against infiltration of
men and supplies from North
Vietnam southwards.
Administration officials nov.
are concerned over the
possibility of new restrictive
legislation being passed by
Congress.
The administration contends
that the greatly expanded
American aerial operations in
Cambodia are vital to the
"Vietnamization" program in
South Vietnam and continuing
American troop withdrawals.
At the State Department
other officials were concerned
that inevitably more American
pilots would fall into Communist hands, aggravating the war
prisoner problem.
Officials speculated that any
pilots captured in Cambodia
likely would be transferred to
prison camps in North Vietnam.

CH~ r)

It f, ,ni C' UJMPANY

BOOSTERS TO MEET
A meeting of the Southern
Local School District band
Boosters will be held at 7:30
tonight at the high school in
Racine.

LOVe
has.a
new ring
to it:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Nora
Hurlow, Claude Cordray, Mrs.
Leota Walmsley, Mrs. Henry
Pittman, Timothy Hammack,
Mrs. Alice, Bradshaw, all Point
Pleasant; Susan Martin, West
Columbia; Cora Brannon,
Southside; Bradford Massey,
Albany, 0.; and Mrs. Dencil
Kimberling, Leon.
DISCHARGES- Mary Beckwith, James McMahon, Mrs.
Charles Hudson.

k!Carvea

the LOve Ring

™

people.

It's a love ring. Because you are
in love you'll want a ring that
says love in every way. From
the exciting cut of its diamond
to the graceful elegance of its
setting. Such a ring is a Love
Ring from ArtCarved. Do come
see our ArtCarved collection
soon.

CANCEL MEETS
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)-The
United States Auto Club
(USAC) has cancelled two
championship races scheduled
for March 14 and Oct. 10 at
Hanford, Calif.

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

Court St.

Fabric Shop In Pomeroy

Fabric Clearance

Sa\e
eont\nues

't\l\S -

~ee\

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

from IGNORANCE

to INSIGHT

Bonded Acrylics, Sweater Knits, Printed
Corduroys, Permanent Press Prints, now

¥3 off

We've come a long way from the days when

a cold -

1eSS .
f\a\0~ nea.'t \S
~ c.\S\c co~···
e;e
cot\\~
u\e
CC LI&gt;Mf•ll' ,',N[I ':QCPi&gt;O'I

FREE CLOTHING
The Salvation Army, 115
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, will
hold its free clothing day from
10 a.m. to noon Thursday. All
area residents in need of
clothing are welcome.
]

Ca:rnbodian War W orriso:rne

DUB NAMED
HANOVER, N.H. (UPI)William D. "Dub" Fesperman, for the past three years
defensive coac h at the
University of Massachusetts,
Monday was named to a similar
post at Dartmouth.

""'

v

(J.

Greater Slice of Pie

Group 60" - 5.98
Polyester Double Knits

people hung onions around their necks to cure

r

of 111ost OPE('
n&lt;Jltons would clisrntcgr&lt;.~te
OPEC rncrnbcr nations wee
penodieally to plan r:&lt;.~rnpwgns.
During the first decade
OPEC's existence, most of
these eampaigns were defens1vo
aimed e~t preventing further
price cuts or other encroachments by the uil compe~nies into
their economies.
The change came le~st month
when, at a meeting m Caracas,
Venezuela, OPEC demanded a
five per cent increase in th.
taxes on oil companies operating on their territory. The
current tax bite is 50 per cent.
OPEC officials here have
called the demand "reasonable" and have been hurt by
charges that they are "blackmailing" the companies.
"All we're asking for is q
share of past price increases,"
a spokesman said.
•
('('(JJJOJJIII"S

~

today moder n research has found ,

1 Big Table Fabrics, now

and continues to seek answers to the causes

3.69 yd.
lJz off

Srnger Zig -Zag Portable
Sewmg Machine, Reg. $88, now

of diseases and iflnesses.

77.00

i'i.~I~'~;~~~o~Q~Jiiil
w

~

:;::
:;::

BAKERS

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

t~

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
McCALL· :.&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTER NS

115 W. Second

992-2284

Pomeroy, O.

;~;;

:;:;

Jt·

£~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::;::;:;:;:;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~~~~

�•

SCOT PRIDE

RC
COLA

•

ICE .
MILK

,~/o~K 69~
BTlS.

GAL

89~

LEAN &amp; FRESH

GROUND

BEEF
La

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

59~

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

~

•

BOSTON BUTTS
Fresh and Meaty
6 to 8 lb. Average

lb.

SAUSAGE ........................!~:.59 e

·

PORK STEAK

•

LOAF

69~

l-Ib.
can

12 oz.
can
only

lb.

59e

CHUCK ROAST..... ~.~~~-~-~-~~-~~~~--~'........................................~~:. 6ge
ENGLISH CUT ROAST..................................................~~: 79¢
ROUND BONE ROAST..................................................~~: 79¢
ROUND STEAK .....~~~~--~~~~~~--~~-~~················ ......................~~:.!. 09
FRESH GROUND BEEf.....~~-~~--~--~~~-~---························'·~· 69¢
GROUND CHUCK ....~~~~--~~-~~-~-~~~-~~-~~~...............................~~·. 79~
Mark V Lowers The Price!

QUEEN OF SCOT FROZEN

Peas.......................... 4 p:: $1
• Corn ...........................4 p!~ $1
Vegetables ............... 4 p~~ $1
Lima Beans.............4 p~~ $1
. TV Dinners.................~~; 39¢
· French Fries..............~;~ 79e
Egg Noodles...........A ~k: $1

Choice Hand Picked

SPECIAL!

SEALTEST

I

PINTO .
BEANS

GRADE A

_. Check Our Special Beef Values!

MILK

93¢

f

%gal.

GAL

. Ch eese.~~-~t--~~~~-~-~~~~i~-~~!'~--~'!~~~....................s~
Amer1can
P.~~-- 49~
Tomato Juice ...~~~!.~~...............................................~~~;~. 29~
Orange Juice... ~~~~-~~.~~1•••. ~~~--~~: .............................~~t 39c
Grapefruit Juice ...~~~~~..~..~~.:.~.~~:.................... _. ~~~ 43c
2
Aluminum Foil ..... ~~~~-~~.................................. 4 r!u~ 1.00
Toastette Pop-Ups -~~~.3!.~~-~i~....................... 3 ~~ 1.00

QUEEN OF SCOT WHOLE KERNEL

QUEEN OF SCOT MIXED

QUEEN OF SCOT FROZEN

•

•

GOLDEN RIPE FRUIT

BANANAS
RED DELICIOUS

APPLES
Your Choice

BANQUET BRAND

SCOT LAD FROZEN

c

REAMS FROZEN

RAINBOW

RAINBOW

TWIN
POPS

ASSORTED
SPLITS
¢

R~DEEM

LUNCH MEAT

HAM;~~Ie Jb.59¢

~Ill~ SQI.ef

MIDDLEPORT, Q.

WE

Fancy Blend -Reg. or Drip

Fresh, Young and Tender

•

"We Reserve The Right To Limit Ouantltles"

CORNET
COFFEE

49e

FRESH HOME MADE

•

•

PHONE: 992-3480

•

Low Price Buy! DANISH

SUPERIORS SEMI-BONELESS

•

.J

SATURDAY ONLY/.
FAVORITE
loaves
BREAD
for

•
•

•

Corner .VIlli anu Second Sts.

I

USE THIS S

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Jan. 26, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds

~

{

WIN AT BRIDGE

~

\
1t
I

!'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH

1

26

I

.62
., J 7

..

...QJ985

I

I

• A1098

I

WEST (D)

EAST

.84
'I K53
• KQJ62

• 953

... A 72

... 643

., 6 4 2
• 7 54 3

SOUTH
• AKQJ107
'I AQ 1098
• Void
Both vulnerable

!'•

OF
QUALITY

69 CHEVROLET
$2489Townsman Station Wagon, 327 eng., P.S.,
Powerglide trans., elec. power tailgate, air
deflection, radio, like new w-s-w, black vinyl
int., with medium blue exterior.
66 PONTIAC
$1295
GTO Cpe., white finish, vinyl interior, 4 speed
trans., good w-w tires, radio &amp; heater.
66 FORD
$995
Falcon 2 dr., 6 cyl. std. trans., all good tires,
smart looking copper fin ish, radio. Real
economy in this car.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

... KlO

'

West

North

East

South

1•
Pass
Pass

Pass
3 N.T.
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
6•

Opening lead- • K

We don't think much of
North's jump to three no·
trump but we can't fault
South for jumping right to
six spades.
West opened the king of
diamonds. So u t h pl•mked
dummy's ace of diamonds
on the king, remarking, "No
better place for it." ln so
doing he had succeeded with
one of the rarest coups in
bridge. This coup requires
the play of the ace on the
king, the specific remark
and the loss of an important contract as a result.
It is easy to see that South
can't use that ace at trick
one and make his contract.
The discard from his hand
does him no good and while
he can take the heart finesse
it is going to lose.
If South had been using
his b r a i n instead of his
JACOBY MODERN, in an illustrated, 128-poge book, is available
through this newspaper. Send nome,
address and Zip code, plus $1 for
each book, to: "Win at Bridge," c/o
(Nome Newspaper), P.O. Box 489,
Dept. (first three digits local Zip
code), Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y., 10019.

mouth he would have found
the winning line of plav. rhis

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

\

winning line is to play low
from dummy and ruff tht&gt;
diamond . Then South plays
out three rounds of trumps
and leads his king of clubs.
West will be smart efillllgh
to duck and South will continue with the 10. If West
ducks this lead, South has
avoided the loss of a club
trick and can lose one heart
trick only. but West will undoubtedly play the ace of
clubs this time.
South will have lost one
trick. but West will be on
lead and will be forced to
let dummy gain the lead. If
he leads a diamond or club
South will get one heart discard on the diamond ace
and three more on clubs. If
he leads a low heart South
will play dummy's jack. If
he leads the king of hearts
South will have trick-.; to
burn.
26

The bidding has been:

West
1 'I

North

East

Dble
Pass
Pass
Pass
1 N.T.
You, South, hold:

1.

South

What do you do now?

•'

).

~

'

I

By Helen Bottel

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This colwnn is for young
people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and
fun. As with the rest of Helen
Help Us!, it welcomes la1.&lt;ghs
but won't dodge a serious
question with a brush-off.
Send your teenage questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Helen Help US! this
newspaper.
THE ALCOHOLIC FATHER
Dear Helen :
This isn't the usual "What Is
A?" but it's written from experience - and heartbreak:
WHAT IS AN
ALCOHOLIC FATHER?

An alcoholic father is just like
any other father except when
he's drunk, which is 20 hours a
day.
You love him, just like any
child loves a father, except you
can't tell him or anyone else
because he hurts you so much,
and the only way you can get
even is by saying you hate him
- which doesn't seem to matter
to him, but it does to you.
An alcoholic father is
someone who calls you filthy
names and never knows how it
hurts. But when you shout
something back, your heart
tears apart because you hate
fighting with him.
He's someone you're so
asho.med of that when your
friends ask to come over and
play records you make all kinds
of fake excuses, which they
pretend to believe, and that
hurts all the more .
He's the man who breaks
things and yells so loud that you
take your little brother next
door so he won't have to "know"
quite so soon.
An alcoholic father is the
reason you broke up with your
boy friend because he didn't like
sneaking around, but you
couldn't bring a nice guy into a
mess like that. It's feeling
empty and cried-out every time
you see him at school because
you know you really love him.
A father is a person you can
tell your troubles to, but an

fill••••••••••..
I
ITEM : Tom Hill. He plays
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears and
Mama Cass. But he plays
Moonlight Serenade and
Andy Williams too. Variety
is the spice of our music.

WMP0/1390

1

alcoholic father is a person you
hide your problems from.
An alcoholic father is the man
who gave your mother that big
bruise on her right side.
He's the person your sister
loathed so much that she ran
away and got pregnant because
he was already chasing her out
of the house. And you loved her
so much you wanted to kill him.
And yet you have to love him
because he's your parent, and
you're so mixed up and
miserable you want to die.
Finally, an alcoholic father is
the man you told your girl
friends was your step-father
because you were ashamed
when he started yelling at you in
front of them. But while you're
saying it, you're crying inside
because you love him even
when you hate him. And you
hate yourself for being disloyal
So what is an alcoholic
father? He's the man who
leaves you mad at the world,
confused, but most of all- hurt.
So Helen, what does a 15-yearold girl do when she has a
problem like this? - MIXED
UP 15.
Dear Mixed Up :
Your best help is in realizing
you aren't alone. Children of
lushes are often so beaten
down
with
shame
and guilt (about hating
the person one is supposed to love) that they close
out the world. And, in their
loneliness, they sometimes
blame parents for rejections
they bring on themselves.
You might not have lost your
boy friend had you told him
frankly, "My father is ill ... "
Girl friends would not turn
away, if you'd level with them.
Your mother might face up to
the situation, if you'd urge her
to attend therapy sessions. (The
phone book lists Alcoholics
Anonymous where you can
learn about family groups such
as Al-Anon and Alate en.)
Perhaps you should both visit
the local alcoholism center.
Above all, yvu must discuss the
problem, not try to hide it! You
must understand that your
father is sick and in desperate
need of help - that his case is
not hopeless, nor is yours .
Please call A.A. today! You'll
be amazed how the burden
lightens when you share it with
others. - H.
The s a c red b o o k s of
Buddha are caiJP.d the Tripitakn OnP of tlwrn is meta ph y sir· a I, one disciplinary
and one t'Onlains lhf' dis ·
r·OIII'Sf'.~

of' Buddha

INCOME TAX service, daily
except Sunday . Evenings by
appointment only. Phone 992·
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
mile south of fairgrounds.
12-31-30tc
WILL DO ironings in my home .
Phone 992-6221.
1-26-2tc

?

.8743 '17 .J!I86 ... K1043

I

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be'eccepted until 9 a.m. for
D.ay of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Pub I is her reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
inserti6n.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c~
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con secutive insertions.
25 Per cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
QFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

Notice

(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.!

IHt:len Help Us I
I

Business Services
EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

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

BLAffiNARS
Ph. 992-2143

------------------WILL not be responsible for

any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself.
Ralph W. Shain. U.S. Army,
Vietnam .
1-24-3tp
REWARD, $500, for arrest and
conviction of person or persons who took my female
Walker dog from Leading
Creek area
and kept her
concealed for six weeks. This
dog was turned in for reward
by Mr. Floyd Barnhouse, Rt.
2, Pomeroy. Leslie Marcum,
Box 165, Delbarton, W. Va.
1 24-Stc

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO(1} Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
(2} Own Mobile Homes and would like to own a Home
(3l Live in Sub-Standard Housing
INCOMES OF$4,000to$9,000 PER YEAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In Most
cases pay less. ·
MODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY for your INSPECTION
1. No money down
2. We will furnish lot or erect on your lot .
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night
,

Pomeroy

I

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

•'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

The Rare Coup
To Get Set By

Wanted To Buy
GOOD 327 cu. in. Chevy engine.
Phone 992-2640.
1 26-3tp

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

OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
condition, as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
be pick-up day. Write, giving
good directions . Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Ohio 43946.
8-20-tfc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

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

o.

For Sale

FOR "A Job Well Done"
feeling, clean carpets with
Blue Lustre. Rent electric
shampooer, $1. Baker FurFURNISHED and unfurnished
niture, Middleport.
apartments. Close to school.
1-21-6tc
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

For Rent

Real Estate For Sale

1970 MODEL, 12X60 trailer. Gas 7 ROOM hou e, bath. New roof.
heated, completely furnished,
New porch. Garage. Paneled
like new. Large patio, nice
l iving room and dining room.
location. Phone 949-2261.
Carpets. Excellent condition.
Albert Hill, Racine.
Phone 992-5900.
1·20-6tc
1·24-3tc
-----------NEW MOBILE home. Adults HOUSE , 164o Lincoln Hts.,
only. Phone 992-5592.
Pomeroy. Phone 99 2. 2293 .
1-7-tfc
10-25-tfc

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

LOT IN Bradbury, Phone 992·
5404.
1-19-6tc

For Sale
1964 DODGE 880 Custom, A-1
shape, $630. Phone 992-7375 or
992·9981.
1-26-Jtc
COBRA CITIZEN band cam 88,
23 channel. Also, Cobra
transistor 23 channel mobile
unit, complete with antenna
and lead in wire. Phone 9922640.
1-26-Jip
EXTRA NICE springing 3 year
old Holstein heifer. By Tidy
Burke 49'er. Call 949-2172.
1-26-Jtc

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD,
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
SMALL OLDER HOME 3
bedrooms , bath , gas heat.
Near s tores. $3,500.00

AIR CONDITIONING. Refrigeration service. Jack's
Refrigerati on , New Haven.
Phone 682-2079.
4-6-tfc
JOHNSON MASONRY, Com
mercia!
or
residential
remodeling. Brick, block,
stone. cement work, garages,
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
Free estimates. Jim. Larry,
Jake. 992-7044.
1-7-30tc
----------BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2476.
_ .tfc
11 29
HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6·1 0-tfc
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler ,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc
----------SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc
----------WHEEL Horse Sales and
Service.
Baum
Lumber
Company, Chester, Ohio.
Phone 985-3301.
5-20-tfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3621
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5· 1-tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Phone
John Russell, Gallipolis 4464782 after 5:30 p. nn.
4-7-tfc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

BOOKKEt:.P~G service, Mrs.
Marvin King,_ 1h-mile north on
4 BEDROOMS - Older home,
bath , gas heat. Large living,
Rt. 33. PhoMf 992-3762. Week·
ONE 12 foot meat case. One 10
days 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ,
Garage. Near slores. Asking
foo t vegetable case. One 6x6
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon .
$10,500.00
walk -i n. Inquire M and G
Evenings by appointment.
Food Market, Rt. 7, south of
12-15-tfc
ALL PANELED Cozy 3
Middleport .
bedrooms with closets, bath,
1-26-6tp
READY -MIX CONCRETE de·
modern ki I chen. Gas forced
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
livered right to your project.
air furnace. Stores 3 blocks.
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller, NEW 1970 zig -zag sewing
Fast
and
easy.
Free
Only $12,000.00
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
machine in original factory
estimates. Phone 992·3284.
carton. Zig -zag to make
992-6271.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
50 ACRES Warm 6 room
9·1 -tfc
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Middleport, Ohio.
home, modern kitchen, bath,
monograms, and make fancy
6-30-tfc
dry basement. Gas forced air
designs with just the twist of a
furnace. Double garage.
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
single dial . Left in lay-away
Minerals. Asking $25,000.00
like to try a wig on in the
and never been used. Will sell
HELEN TEAFORD
privacy of your own home?
for only $47 cash, or E-Z
AUTOMOBILE insurance t&gt;een
ASSOCIAT,Y
You can. Just call us. We also
terms available. Phone 992·
cancelled?
Lost
your
992-3325
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
5641.
operator's license? Call 992·
1-22-6tc
Koscot, of course. Dis1-26-6tc
2966.
tributors, Brown's. Phone - --------------6·15-tfc
Middleport 992-5113.
/
ELECTROLUX
vacuum
12-31 -tfc
cleaner complete with at .
tachments, cordwinder, and
WILL PICK up merchandise
paint spray. Used, but in like
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
and take to auction on a
new condition. Pay $34.45, or POMEROY
6
ROOM
hardtop, power steering,
percentage basis. Call Jim
terms if desired. Phone 992·
FRAME, 3 bedrooms, bath, 2
power brakes, air, 18,000
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
564 1.
porches, GOOD NEIGHmiles. Excellent condition.
Phone 7 42-4461.
BORHOOD. $3,750.
1-26-6tc
Phone 992-2288.
9-23-tfc ---------------11-10-tfc
POMEROY
LITTLE
BUT
1970 TAG -A - LONG 20' self
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
NICE
2
story
frame,
2
1965 PONTIAC Bonneville, 2
contained travel trailer. Like
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
bedrooms, bath, utility room ,
door, with snow tires. Good
new. Call Virgil Walker,
10-18-tfc
NEW
forced
air
gas
furnace.
condition. Doyle Sargent ,
Racine, Ohi o. Phone 949-2599.
LARGE
LOt.
$5,300.
Phone 992-6252.
1-20-6tc
WILL GIVE piano and organ
1-24-6tp
lessons in my home. Phone F R 1 G 1 D A I R E
3. c y c I e SYRACUSE - ALMOST NEW
992-3666.
automatic washer, white.
- 5 room frame, 3 bedrooms, 1964 OLDS Cutlass, 4-speed,
8-16-tfc
Phone 992-2500.
bath, gas forced air furnace,
1969 Chevy engine, mags, sun
1-24-3tp
carport, hardwood floors. A
tach. Phone 992-3571 .
STEAL AT JUST $15,950.
1-21-6tc
YOUNG guineas, $1 .25, dressed,
HOUSEKEEPER needed. Live
POMEROY BEAUTI FUL
$1.50. Phone 992-6221.
in if desired. Good working
1-26-2tc
BRICK - 3 large bedrooms
conditions. Phone 992 -5251 .
double closets, built in kit1-19-tfc
chen, wall to wall carpet,
FIREWOOD, Gera ld King ,
--~--------------bath, recreation room, utility CAMPERS and travel trailers.
Shade, Ohio . Phone Shade 696·
SEMI DRIVERS needed. Ex·
Don't buy until you see our
room , fu ll basement, carport.
1287.
p erience helpful but n ot
new line Coming in February.
1 acre of ground. $27,500.
1-14 12tp
necessary, for local and over
What a surprise! You pick it
TO BUY OR SELL
the road hauling . You can
out. we'll put it on sale. Gaul
CONTACT US.
earn $10,000 to $15,000 per COAL, limestone. Excelsior
Trailer Sales, Inc., One -half
FARMS NEEDED.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
year if you are willing to
mile north of Chester, Ohio off
HENRY CLELAND
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
learn. For appli cation and
Rt. 7, watch for sign. Yes, WE
REALTOR
4-9-tfc
interview, call 513-224-3071, or
RENT campers and travel
Office 992-2259
w r ite Advance D . T. Dept.,
trailers.
Phone 614-965 -3832
Residence 992-2568
1100 Enoch Drive, Mid · REDUCE SAFE and fast with
for full information.
1-25 -6tc
dletown, Ohio 45042.
Gobese tablets and E -Vap
1-17-12tc
1-2S-2tc
water pills. Nelson's Drugs.
1-22-30tp

Insurance

Cleland Realty

Auto Sales

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

---------------------Help Wanted

For Rent or Sale

Wanted

STAR kills rats quickly, surely.
2112 pounds , $1.69. Ebersbach
BAR MAID. Apply in person,
Hardware, Sugar Run Mills,
night shifl. Hi - Ho Bar ,
Pickens Hardware, M ason.
Middleport.
1·5-30!e
1 26-3tc

QUICK QUIZ
Q- How many U.S. presidents have appointed personal representatives to Vat·
ican City?
A- Two. In 1940, Franklin
Roosevelt appointed Myron
T a y 1or: in 1970, President
Nixon a p p o in ted Henry
Cabot Lodge.

..

;r

Country Squire
MUD&amp;SNOW TIRES
Al l sizes in stock Lowest
prices Free installation . We
do studding.
POMEROY

J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Q- Who is called the "faPhone 992-2181
ther of American football"?
A- Walter Camp. In 1889,
he originated All-A m e r i c a WALNUT finish stereo, 4 speed
football team selection.
changer,
4
i ntermixed

Q- What is the meaning
of the word "Christ''?
A- The name comes from
the Greek word "Christos,"
which means ''anointed one. •·

Q- What is the w e i g h t
comparison between fresh
and dried milk?
A- l''ifty quarts of fresh
milk equals 6 1'4 quarts of
dri,•rl milk .

George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
Rea I Estate Broker

6 ROOM house, bath, J/4 acre
ground, storm windows and
- -- 1
doors, gas furnace, carpeting,
. I
all utilities, garage. Miners·
ville , Ohio. $8,000.

Ray Hummel
Says :

GET
'EM NOW

HOBSTETTER

speake r
sound
system.
Balance $63 .79 . Use our
budget ter ms. Ca ll 992 -3352.
1-21 -61c
COLONIAL Maple Stereo-radio
combination, AM, FM radio, 4
speaker sound system, 4
s peed c hanger, separate
contro ls . Balance $74.59. Use
our budget terms . Ca ll 992
3352 .
1·21 -6tc

8 ROOM house, 168 Mulberry
Ave ., Pomeroy, Ohio, close
into town. Make an offer.
Phone-Chester 985-4186
1-24-3tc

Pets For Sale
IRISH SETTER puppies. For
love and show. Champion
blood I ines. Call Christie,
Athens 593-7542.
1-20-7tc
AKC CAIRNS, 10 weeks old,
male or female, $75. Beautiful
Black Chinese pug, "proven
stud," 3 years old, $100.
Dunlap's , 312 John St. ,
Belpre, Ohio. Phone 423-7261.
1 24 3tp

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BOARD
OF EDUCATION
For Fiscal Year Ending
December 31st, 1970
Eastern Local School District,
Meigs County
Reedsville, Ohio
January 16,1971
I certify the following report
to be correct.
C. 0. Newland
Clerk, Treasurer of the
Board of Education .
CASH RECONCILIATION
Total Fund Balances,
December 31.1970 $91,102.97
Depository Balances:
Pomeroy National Bank
74,455.75
Tri County Bank
17,366.04
Total Depository
Balances
91,791.79
Outstanding Warrants,
688.82
December 31. 1970
Total
Clerk
Treasurer's Balance 91,102.97
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1, 1970
General
64,850.41
Bond Retirement
15,287.74
Lunchroom
3,717.21
E.S.E.A. Title I
2,532.62
E.S.E.A. Title II
840.73
Tot a I
87,228.71
Tot a I Receipts
General
492,008.51
Bond Retirement
25.723.34
Lunchroom
57,278.69
Uniform School Supplies
1,937.93
N.D.E .A. Title V
142.50
E.S.E.A. Title I
33,698.56
E.S .E.A. Title II
865.47
E.S .E.A. Title Ill
5,586.96
Total
617,241.96
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
General
556,858.92
Bond Retirement
41,011.08
Lunchroom
60,995.90
Uniform School Supplies
1,937.93
N.D.E.A. Title V
142.50
36,231.18
E.S.E.A. Title I
E.S.E.A. Title II
1.706.20
5,586.96
E .S.E .A. Title II I
704,470.67
Total
Expenditures
General
489,419.05
Bond Retirement
26,917.12
Lunchroom
56,488.54
Uniform School Supplies
1,897.99
N.D.E.A. TitleV
142.50
E.S .E.A. Title I
31,209.34
E.S .E .A. Title II
1,706.20
E.S.E.A. Title Ill
5,586.96
Total
613,367.70
Bala nee Dec. 31, 1970
General
67,439.87
Bond Retirement
14,093.96
Lunchroom
4,507.36
Uniform School Supplies
39.94
E.S.E.A. Title I
5,021.84
Total
91,102.97
CASH BALANCE ,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES BY FUND
Genera I Fund:
Balance , Jan . 1,1970
64,850.41
Receipts - Revenue
Genera I Property Tax Real Estate
107.902.61
Tangible Personal Property
Tax
14,283.23
Foundation Fund
328,147.25
Federal Subsidy
7,208.00
State of Ohio Vocational Education
680.43
State of Ohio Handicapped
Students
225.75
State of Ohio - School
Bus Purchases
18,722.00
State of Ohio - Other
4,731.15
Tuition - Parents and
Patrons
262.00
Rental of School Property 73.00
Total Revenue Receipts
482,235.42
Receipts - Nonrevenue
Adjustments and Refunds
1,011.58
Sale of Non
Real Property
711.00
Other- Nonrevenue
1,893.64
Total Nonrevenue
Receipts
3,616.22
Receipts- Transfers
From.
E.S.E A. Title I Fund
3,635.75
E.S.E.A. Title Ill Fund 2,378.62
E.S.E.A. Title V-A
142.50
Tot a I Transfers
6,156.87
Total
Receipts
(Revenue,
nonrevenue
and Transfers)
492,008.51
Total-Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
556,858.92
Expenditures
Total ExpendituresAdministration
21 ,210.45
Total ExpendituresInstruction
293,348.66
Total ExpendituresLibraries
1,998.13
Total Expenditures Tran sportation
of Pup i ls
56,934.11
Total
Expenditures
Playgrounds
and Community Centers 39.25
Total Expenditures- Auxiliary
Agencies
59,508.27
Total
Expenditures
Operation
of School PI ant
43,499.14
Total Expenditures School
Plant Maintenance
6,475.65
Total Expenditures Capital Outlay
1,352.57
Total Expenditures Transfers
5,052.82
Grant Total Expenditures General Fund
489,415 .05
Balance, Dec. 31. 1970 67,439.87
Total Expend i tures Plus
Balance Dec. 31,1970
556,858 .92
Bond Retirement Fund:
Balance, Jan. 1,1970
15,287.74
Receipts - Revenue
General Property Tax · Real Estate
22,716.34
Tangible Personal Property
Tax
3,007 .00
Total Revenue Receipts
25,723.34
Total Receipts (Revenue,
Nonrevenu'e and Transfers)
25.723.34
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
41 ,011.08
Total Expenditures - Bond
Retirement F und
26,917.12
Balance, Dec. 31 , 1970 14,093 .96
Total Expenditures Plus
Balance Dec. 31,1970 41,011.08
Lunchroom Fund
Balance, Jan. 1,1970
3,717.21
Receipts- Income
Sale of Lunches
26,847. 18
Federal Subsidy - Lunches
26,570. 14
Federal Subsidy - Milk 2,819.89
Other Revenue
210.48
Total Receipts-Income
56,467.69
Receipts - Transfer
Genera I Fund
831.00
Tota l Receipts- Transfers
831.00
Total Receipts (Incomes and
Transfers)
57,278.69
Total Beginning Balance
60,995.90
Plus Receipts

August 31. 1971.

&lt;1l 26, ltc

We sell anything fo
anybody including co
plete eslates. Sale ever
Saturday
evening,
o' clock , corner of Third
Olive Sts . For Pick
Service Call ...

KNOTTS
AUCTION
446-2917

Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Choice of water
temps .
Auto.
water
level
control .
Lint
F i Iter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perma - Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle , even
heat. No hot spots,
no
overdrying .
Fine Mesh Lint
Filter.
We Specialize in
MAY TAG
Red Carpet
Service

LEGAL
MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS
The tax books are now open for the
December or First Half Collection of
the 1970 Real Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
Feb. 3, 1971.
Howard E. frank
Meigs County Treasurer

742-4211

•

Expenditures
Personal Service- ManagerSalaries and Wages
578.50
Personal Service - Cooks Salaries and Wages 10,686.70
Other - Personal ServiceSalaries and Wages
1,286.40
Supplies and Food
39,955.16
Equipment
3,487.60
Repairs to Equ ipment
115.95
Other Lunchroom Fund 3]8.23
Total Expend itures Lunchroom Fund
56,488.54
Balance, Dec . 31.1970
4,507.36
Total
Expenditures
Plu ~
Balance
Dec. 31, 1970
60,995.9
Uniform School Supplies Fund:
Balance, Jan. 1, 1970
None
Receipts-Income
Sale of Workbooks
1,937.93
Total Receipts- Income
1,937.93
Total Receipts (Income
and Transfers)
1,937.93
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
1.937.93
Expenditures
Purchase of Workbooks 1,897.99
Total Expenditures- Uniform
School Supplies Fund 1.897.9,0
Balance, Dec. 31,1970
39.9
Total
Expenditures
Plu
Balance
Dec. 31, 1970
1,937.93
E.S . E . A . Title Ill Fund
Balance, Jan . 1,1 970
None
Receipts
Coordinator- Title Ill 2,378.62
Total
2,378.62
Receipts- Transfer
General Fund
3,208.34
Total Transfers
3,208.34
Total Receipts (Receipts
Plus Transfers)
5,586.96
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
5,586.96
Total Expenditures
3,208.3.
Transfers
Genera I Fund
2,378.62
Total Transfers
2,378.62
Total Expenditures Including
Transfers
5,586.96
Tot al
Expenditures
Plus
Balance
Dec 31, 1970
5,586. 96
E.S . E.A. Title V Fund :
Balance, Jan. 1, 1970
None
Receipts
Coordinator- Title v
142.50
Total
142.50
Total Receipts (Receipts
Plus Transfers)
142.50
Total Beginning Balance
A
Plus Receipts
142.5r '
Transfers
General
142.50
Total Transfers
142.50
Total Expenditures Including
Tfansfers
142.50
Total
Expenditures
Plus
Balance
Dec. 31,1970
142.50
E .S.E.A. Title I Fund:
Balance, Jan. 1,1970
2,532.62
Receipts
Federal Subsidy Fund 32,826.03
Tot a I
32,826.03
Receipts- Transfers
General Fund
872.5.
Total Receipts (Receipts
Plus Transfers)
33,698.56
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
36,231.18
Total Expenditures
27,573.59
transfers
General Fund
3,635.75
Total Transfers
3,635.75
:-otal Expenditures Including
Transfers
31.209.34
Balance Dec. 31,1970
5,021.84
Total
Expenditures
Plus
Balance
Dec. 31, 1970
36,231.18
E.S.E.A. Title II Fund
Balance, Jan. 1, 1970
840.7.
Receipts
Federal Subsidy Fund
724.52
Total
724.52
receipts- Transfers
Gen~::ral Fund
140.95
Tot a I Transfers
1-40.95
Tot a I Receipts &lt;Receipts
Plus Transfers)
865 .47
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
1.706.20
Total Expenditures
1.706.20
Total Expenditures Including
Transfers
1,706.20
Total Expenditures Plus
Balance Dec. 31,1970 1.706.20
SCHOOL DEBTBONDS AND NOTES
Building &amp; Equipment
Outstanding Jan. 1, 1970
190,000 .00
Total
190,000.00
Redeemec:&lt; During Year
1970
190,000.00
Total
190,000.00
Balance Outstanding Dec.
31,1970
171,000.00
Total
171,000.00
Rate of Int.
33/• Per Cent
Date of Final Mat.
12·1·70
Certificate of The
County Budget Commission
The Budget Commission of.
Meigs County, Ohio , hereby
makes the following Official
Certificate
of
Estimated
Resources for the Eastern
Local School District for the
fiscal year beginning January
1st, 1971.
General Fund
Estimated
Unemcumbered
Balance
Jan. 1st, 1970
59,357.00
General Property Tax 122,959.00
School Foundation
320,000.00
Other Sources
24,200.00
Total
526,516.00.
Bond Retirement Fund
Estimated
Unencumbered
Balance
Jan. 1st, 1970
17,394.00
General Property Tax 29, 122.00
Total
46,516.00
The Budget Commission
further certifies that its action
on the foregoing budget and the
County Auditor ' s estimate of
the rate of each tax necessary to
be levied within and w ithout the
10-mill limitation is set forth in
the proper columns of the
preceding pages, and the total
amount approved for each fund
must govern the amount of .
appropriation from such fund.

Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0.

•

�'BARNEY

•

-

EEK AND MEEK

OURN MY HIOE !.'

I'M OFF TO

-

HOW ON AIRTH COULD
I FERGIT A THIN6
LIKE THAT?

TH' CARD GAME,
MAW

-~yRABBIT;JS

'-rt:XJ MAY 11-\I~K J:M CRAZY,

BVT l F rr IA.Jfi...SN'T FCR. YOUR..
FR.lEt.JDSI-\1? I COUL!)fJ'T Ul/f3
...___ARciUA.JD f-\€RE I

FOOT

~

---y-

•
AH ()t-li.JERSTAN'S

•

•

TE:L.L. HSR THE E!&gt;IG HANP

DEAR--AH'LL
CASH TH'CHECK
ATTH' BANK--

IS. ON THe 6EVEN AND 1'HE
L.lTTL.5 HAND IS ON 'THE
NINE:

WINNIE WINKLE
HOWEVER, I ~AVE
TAKEN STEPS TO
ALLEVIATE THE
ANNOYANCE
CAUSED BY MY
EATING HABITS!

MR. 6ALLANTE .
THE N16HT I&amp; YOUN6 ,
DEAR MI&amp;S WINKLE.
!.ET ME &amp;HOW YOU

ONE OF OUR FAMOUS

MY 1MA61NATION.
SOMEONE 18
FOLLOWING
U6.

&lt;.JAZZ SPOTS .

•
•
•

THE BORN LOSER

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
THERE'll BE

DISTURB YER
SLEEP ... BUT

PAY NO MIND, THE CAP' N
SAys ... HIM ... (GlWK !
CAWK') ... KHOIIIIN ' FULL
WELL THERE'S DEATH
8_N' WORSE LURKIN' !£j
EVERY SOUND ... AN'

PAY NO MIND

EVERY SHADOW·...

STRANGE AN'

TERRIFY1f'1'

•

SOUNDS

T' IT· ..

T'

m' lt7 l lor t-IU. I*K, TM Att US. f•t. Off.

DAILY CROSSWORD

•

ACROSS

1. - - lily
5 . Blackboard

DICK TRACY
OUR GUEST TONIGHT,
TilE INTERNATIONAL
NONO KOOSHNA.

IF YOU DO J&lt;NOrV WHO
A~E, J UST RfMEMSER
THEY'F?E [7ANGfROUS MEBBE EVEN TO YOU.

•

•

CAPTAIN EASY
WEl-L., !'L.l.. BE - ~ THAT'
WHOLE R!:-CE~5EO 8001&lt;..~HEL.F 5 WIN G5 OLJT!

Yeeeerday's Cryptoquote: HOW SHALL I DO TO LOVE~
BELIEVE. HOW SHALL I DO TO BELIEVE'! LOVE. LEIGHTON
&lt;© 1971 Kill&amp;' Features Syndicate, Inc.)

4. Shakespear- 21. Lady

ean opera
byVerdi
item
5. Womankind
11. Blue-pencil
(2wds.)
12. Sheriff's
6. Nevada
writ
city
13. Italian coins 7. Deer's hom
14. Dinner
8. Baronet's
course
title
15. Subsided
9. Sooner
16. Musical
than
note
10. Caddoan
17. Attired
Indian
19. Zounds!
18. Amper23. Long cigar
sand's
25.San - -,
meanItaly
ing
26. "- - pro
20. Women,
nobis"
With
27. Appropriate
uthe"
29. Nothing
(2wds.)
30. Labyrinth
32. Hansel's
sibling
3-i. Semiprecious stone
35. Auditorium
36. Make lace
38. City in
Arizona
U . Clo!llrlg
musical part
H. Bavarian
river
f5. Laundry
worker
46. Landlord'S
Income
H. French city
48. Woodsman's
implements

friend
(Fr.)
22. Living
23. Barber
now
baritone l&gt;oir.-+n'l~~~:.l&gt;:'~
2f. AlgerIan city
28. Historical
Yutenay'• AD••u·r
years
37. Toward
of
shelter
note
39. Sensible
31. CurfO. - - and
rently
cratts
existing
oil . Half a
33.C1ty
sawbuck
In
f2. George's
New
lyricist
York
-i3. Negative

~WJwrn~rn®::.=~=·=

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

l)lRI1'

[]
1'11-IHf;

[)·
IJIPCII-

t'J'

II

-

TI.' 1'E,,.

I

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......

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

~...~A ~[I I I IJ IT I I)
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Juonhl.-o: NOBLE
Y rMt.-rda~ '"~
•

I

Anow.-r:

DEPOT

MORBID

tomorrow)

BEATEN

Horc· '" lenm booklteepifiiC-DON'T LEND THEM

AH ! A LETTER FROM WOOOGTOCK..

HE'5 PWJA'f AT WORM

DOWN
1. Ego
2. - - Adams
3. Gershwin
musical
(2wds.)

~CHOvL ...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One Jetter simply stands tor another. In this sample A i~:
used tor the three L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letterr;,
apostrophes, the length and formation ot the words art&gt; ~II
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
Is

•

A Cryptorram Quotation
DVKW
ZVQU

DGXUP

XUP ,

PUAUF

WURF

KWFGCNW

DURFVPN

OWE

WVI

· - RPG PEXGC I

VI

GH

VK
R

P K 1 .

EGC

XRP

DVHU ' I

UK I 7

'' DE.;l.R FRIEND JF
FRIENDS . "

�8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJXWt-Pomeroy, 0 .• Jan. 26, 1971

.

MansQn and Cult Guilty
LOS ANGELES \ UPI \ Charlt's Manson idly stroked his
Van Dyke beard Monday while
the jury pronounced him and
thret&gt; of the young women he
all but hypnotized into his
hippte cult guilty of first-degree
murder in all seven of the TateI..aBianca slayings.
The jury now must decide
whether to heed the state's plea
the four be executed at the San
Quentin gas chamber. There
are but two optwns.&lt;Jeath or life
in prison.
Beginning Thursday. the penalty phase of the trial begins,
with the prosecution expected
to call more than 50 witnesses
to back its demand for
execution.
Manson finally stirred as he
was led away from the
courtroom packed with armed
deputies, and snarled at Superior Court Judge Charles H.
Older
"You'll never live to see that
day."
Codefendants Giggle
The female codefendants
giggled after the verdicts were
read and one said "Look at the
jur}. Don't they look sad?"
The seven-man, five-woman
jury found the self-styled
·•Jesus Christ" guilty of sending
his "robots" out to stab and
shoot to death five persons at
the home of actress Sharon
Tate and the next night wealthy
supermarket owner Leno LaBianca and his wife Rosemary.
The young women-Susan
Atkins, 22, Patricia Krenwinkel
23, and Leslie Van Houten, 21:
also were convicted of firstdegree murder. Miss Van
Houten, a former high school
beauty queen, was charged only
with the LaBianca slaymgs and
conspiracy to commit murder.
The four largely were convicted on the testimony of
Ltnda Kasabtan, 21, a tiny
blonde who joined the weird
commune only a month before
the August, 1969, slayings. She
was given immunity from
prosecution in exchange for
turning informer. She was last
reported with her mother and
two children in New Hampshire. • .,
Verdicts Were Expected
C'hief defense attorney Pasl

Fitzgerald said the defendants much chance of a fair trial in
expeded the guilty verdicts and Los Angeles as Sam Sheppard
their lawyers were "disappoint- had in Cleveland," Fitzgerald
ed but not surprised ."
said.
"We thought we lost the case
If there are death sentences
when v.-e lost the change of in the penalty phase they
venue motion. We had about as automatically will be appealed

More Help for
Voc-Ed Urged

MEIGS THEATRE

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - State
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, RCincinna ti said today the
Commission on VocationalTechnical Education he heads
recommends the state provide a
greater share of financial
support for both operations and
facilities.
He said increased state aid
"would assist in providing
greater equalization of support
to career preparation programs
for the skilled and technical occupations and the professions."
Aronoff told a special committee of the Ohio Vocational
Association here his group had
made 13 preliminary findings.
made 13 preliminary findings.
Recommendations currently
considered by the commission,
the legislator said, included other ways to finance operations,
mcreased vocational education
for adult workers, more valid
follow-up studies of graduates,
more and better counseling and
job placement services, and
greatly expanded efforts to improve the attitude of Ohioans
toward skilled and technical occupational careers.
Dr. Robert Reese, an education professor at Ohio State
University and executive director of the Ohio Vocational Association, said the only recommendation he questioned was a
third state Board of VocationalTechnical Education Finance.
Reese said he "questions the
advisability" of having such a
board which would separate the
budgeting of federal funds appropriated by Congress for vocational education from the poltC} -making and management
functions of the programs.
Reese said his association

Gov. Moore

Tonight, January 26

(Continued from page 1)

HELLO, DOLLY!
(Technicolorl
Barbara Streisand
Walter Matthau

presented him with a key to the
city. Newly elected C of C
president Charles Lanham also
presented Gov. Moore with a
sk1llet from West Virginia
Malleable Iron, Mason County's
oldest industry. Lanham then
presented retiring C of C
president Lenzie Hedrick with
a plaque in recognition of his
work during the year.

G

Running time: 2 Hrs 45 Min.
O.dmission:
Adults $1.50, Children 75c
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
January 27-28
NOT OPEN
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

favored appointing a commission to study the feasilibity and
values of setting up e:ther a
single state board to administer
all education from kindergarten
through graduate education or
a third state board for vocational-technical education which
would have all the functions of
such other boards.
"We recognize that Ohio's
total program of occupational
preparation, at less than the
four-year degree level, can never function effectively or efficiently by being administered
within two divisions of state "
Reese said.
'
"Vocational education for
youth and adults in skilled occupations presently operates
under the state Board of Education while vocational education programs for technicians
report to the state Board of
Regents.
"Ohio needs to eliminate this
dichotomy in administering and
funding its career educational
programs."

Syracuse E-R
Unit Mack 32

R uns in 1970
SYRACUSE- Twenty-one intown and 11 out-of-town
emergency-rescue calls and
nine local and two out-of-town
fire calls were answered during
1970 by the local departments.
Officers elected by the
emergency squad are, Chief,
Eber Pickens; assistant chief,
Larry Lavender; captain,
Ralph Lavender; president,
John Koehler; vice president,
Larry Lavender; secretary,
Dick Sauvage, and treasurer,
Eber Pickens.
Fire department officers
named were, chief, Larry
Lavender; assistant chief,
Ralph Lavender; captain, Bill
Rizer; president, John Koehler;
vice president, Kenny Rizer;
secretary, Craig Cottrill, and
treasurer, Eber Pickens.
Applications are being taken
for new members to the Fire
Department.
SQUAD CALLED
The Racine Emer gency
Squad was called Monday at
12:05 p.m . for Mrs. Beatrice
Nice of Plants. Mrs. Rice was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted.
GET SCREEN RIGHTS
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Warner Bros. has acquired
screen rights to "The Eagle and
the Iron Cross."

New Car in the Picture?
Let Us Help First to the showroom and then to your Full Service Bank.
It's just that simple. Stop in and inquire
about a low-cost Automobile Loan. Thenpicture yourself behind
the driver~s seat of a
great new '71 model.

·::·:··

, , Decis~~ 'Cuts DeeP}~ ..:,; ,''

to the California Supreme Court
under state law. If life
sentences are returned Fitzgerald said, "of course we'll
appeal. "
Most of the jurors were
somber when they walked into
the courtroom, but Foreman
Herman Tubick, a mortician at
Rose Hills Cemetery. smtled
broadly at Bugliosi and his two
assistants.
The verdicts came nearly a
year and one-half after the
slayings.

•'

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The decision by Gov. John J.
Gilligan not to distribute pictures of himself to state office
hurts Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-DI. The new Ohio governor
was given some good natured ribbing Monday at a hearing of
the House-Senate Joint Economic Committee where he
testified.
Percy said he wanted to congratulate Gilligan ''for
cutting down on the dissemination of pictures of the ~over­
nor." Gilligan retored, "It's not so painful if you look like I
do."
Then Sen. William Proxmire, D·Wis., Interjected a
.comment. "I think Gov. Gilligan's a very handsome fellow,"
be said. Percy agreed, but then reminded the committee that
before coming to the Senate he had headed Bell &amp; Howell, the
photographic equipment company.
Gilligan's decision, he concluded, "cuts deep."
··:.;.;.;.··:-:-&gt;:··,•s,

Pressure Maintained
PHNOM PENH (UPI)-The
heavily-damaged Phnom Penh
airport reopened to international traffic today, but the CommWlists kept pressure on the
Gambodian capital by attacking
goverrunent positions 18 miles
away.
In South Vietnam, American,
South Vietnamese and other
Allied troops began a 24-hour
Tet lWlar new year cease-fire.
Conunwrist forces already had
begun a four-&lt;l.ay standdown at
midnight, but according to
spokesmen violated it a number
of times within hours after it
started.
South Vietnamese Foreign
Minister Tran Van Lam said his
goverrunent was prepared to
free more than 800 disabled
North Vietnamese prisoners of
war as a "humanitarian"
gesture to mark the lunar new
year and called on North
Vietnam to release South
Vietnamese and Allied prisoners in exchange. The Communists were not expected to
follow the South Vietnamese
lead.
Prior to the truce, the Viet

Capiml Choir

Coming Feb. 7
Pomeroy has been included
as one of the stops on the between-semester tour of the
Capital University Chapel Choir
of Columbus.
The choir will present a public
concert at 2:30p.m. on Sunday,
Feb. 7, at the St. Paul Lutheran
Church sanctuary, 231 E .
Second St.
Every winter the choir tours
different areas of the United
States. In the summer of 1962,
the choir toured eight European
countries and in the summer of
1964 toured in the Orient with
stops including Japan, Hong
Kong, Formosa, the Philippines, Hawaii and Alaska. In
the summer of 1967, the choir
returned to Europe where it
sang in Scotland, Holland,
Sweden, Demark and East and
West Germany.

Herman Hill of
Racine is Dead
Herman L. Hill, 66, formerly
of Meigs County, who was born
in Racine, died at his Columbus
home Monday evening. Mr. Hill
was employed by the state.
He is survived by his wife
Mattie; five sons, Harry, of
Lodi, Ohio; Clark and Donald
of Columbus, and Carl and
Jerry of Medina; one daughter,
Helen Wolfe, Columbus; one
b.rother, Floyd, Athens; a
sts~r, Freda Deeter, Orient,
Ohw; 19 grandchildren, five
great-grandc hildr en, and
Carroll Cline, a nephew who
made his home with Mr. Hill,
and several other nieces and
nephews.
Visiting hours at the HeldCotner Funeral Home, 1166
South Parsons Ave., Columbus,
are from 4 to 9 Tuesday and
Wednesday. The body will be
brought to Ewtng F uneral
Home Thursday where funeral
services will be held Friday at 1
p.m. with the Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will be
in Plants Cemetery, Racine, Rt.
2. Friends may call at the
funeral home after noon Thursday.

Cong blew up a train between
the major northern South
Vietnamese cities of Da Nang
and Hue, killing 10 persons and

Property loss was cstnnatcd
at $!i,500 in a fire Monday
evening which destr&lt;)yed the old
S1sson Store Building in Kyger.
Middleport and G&lt;Jllipolis
Volunteer Firemen were called
to the scene but were unable to
save the structure. Firemen
fought gallantly and successfully, however, to prevent a
possible
explosion
from
gasoline pumps located in front
of the burning structure.
The general store at Kyger
was sold by the Dale Sisson
family last month to Walter
Zwies, formerly of Florida.
Sisson had operated it the past
11 years. The store, also known
as the "old Bradbury Building,"
was built in 1910.
A spokesman for the Middleport Fire Department said

wounding three others. They
also set off a bomb in
downtown Hue, wounding 10
civilians.

Roy Van Cooney Dies Tuescmy
Roy Van Cooney, 58, died
early Tuesday morning at the
home of a sister, Miss Hazel
Van Cooney, 522 Grant St.,
Middleport.
Born April 28, 1912 in Middleport, the son of the late
Frank and Nannie Mae Lee Van
Cooney, he had been in failing
health some time. Before his
illness he was employed as a
mechanic with the Vinton Coal
Co. at McArthur.
Surviving are his former wife
Margaret Morris Van Cooney of
Pomeroy; two sons , Ralph,
Pomeroy, and Donald, of
Middleport ; a daughter, Mrs.

Kyger Store Destroyed

Clifford
(Sharon)
Saltz,
McArthur; five brothers, Pearl,
of Middleport; Clyde and Ira, in
Arizona; Wilbur, of Elyria, and
Albert, of Pomeroy; two sisters
Miss Hazel Van Cooney, and
Mrs. George (Mary) Kauff,
Pomeroy, and three grandchildren. Besides his parents,
he was preceded in death by a
daughter and a sister.
Arrangements will be announced from the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home.

UH~ Virgil Wamsley horr~
lew a ted nearby was slightly
damaged. C&lt;Juse (Jf the blaze
has not been determined.
In all, 21 firemen, 11 from
Gallipolis and 10 from Middleport, fought the fire.
The Virgil Wamsley home
next door was badly blistered
and windows were broken out.
Streams of water had to A
placed on homes across the '
street because gf the huge blaze
and firemen had to keep the
gasoline tanks in front cooled '
down. Wells in the nearby area
were used with portable pumps
to contain the fire.
Gallipolis Volunteer Firemen
were called by Middleport
before they arrived at tta,
scene. It was reported the ner
owner did have insurance.

3 Have Minor Injuries
Three persons were slightly
injured in two separate traffic
accidents investigated Monday
by the Gallipolis Post State
Highway Patrol.
A mother and her five-year
old daughter were injured in an
accident at 9:30p.m . on Rt. 554,
two and seven tenths miles west
of Cheshire.
According to the patrol,
Dott1e L. McCoy, 28, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, lost control of her
auto on the wet pavement, ran
off the roadway and struck
several guide wires and a
culvert. Mrs. McCoy sustained

a lacerated lip and broken
tooth. Her daughter, Susan,
received a bump on the head.
Damage was estimated at $100.
No citation was issued.
Richard T . Bateman 38
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.,' suf~
fered minor injuries in a
rearend collision on Rt. 7, one
mile south' of Rt. 35. Officers
said Bateman's auto was struck
by a tractor-trailer rig operated
cy Craig Owen Rex, 38, Harrod,
0~10 Rex was charged with
failure to stop within til&amp;.
assured clear distance.
9'

e

Collections Up,

Phone

U~ers

Plans
to
proceed
in
Calls Answered
organizing a campaign for
be tter telephone service
The Middleport E-R squad
especially in view of proposed
answered a call to Headquarters Cafe at 10:47 p.m. Monday
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for Delores Landers Summers,
ADMITTED
Bernice
Gallipolis Route 2, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Darst, Pomeroy; George
Logan, Hemlock
Grove;
Hospital and admitted.
The squad was returning Veatrice Nice, Racine; Wilson
from a call to an auto accident Wolfe, Racine; Jean Hayman,
in the Cheshire area when the Syracuse; Stella Bush, Racine;
cafe call was received. Mrs. Hugh Bush, Racine; Christie
David McCoy, injured in the Davis, Minersville; Ronald
Racine;
Delores
accident, was taken to the Grady,
Holzer Medical Center. At 9:38 Summers, Gallipolis; John
a.m. Tuesday, the squad was Hunnell, Pomeroy; Gertrude
called to the home of Mrs. Hall, Syracuse; Elizabeth
Minnie Louise Jackson, 546 Williams, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Chester
Pearl St., who had fallen, but
Curry, John Kauff.
was not seriously injured.

Will Meet

Not Down Locally

rate increases, will be made at
a public meeting to be held at 8
p.m. Thursday at the Salisbury
Elementary School.
About 60 residents met at the
school two weeks ago to discuss
possible action. Chairmen for
the several communities in the
county were named to make a
house-to-house canvass to list
complaints of subscribers to the
service of the General
Telephone Co. and funds were
collected to provide the group
money needed for attorney fees
and to proceed with filing a
protest against the increase
with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
It is stressed that Thursday's
meeting is open to the public.

Although sales and use tax
collections for the first two
weeks in January were down on
an average across the stat1P
they were up in Meigs Count;
according to State Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey.
Sales tax collections for the
two week period ending Jan. 16,
this year, totaled $17,437.82
rompared to receipts of
$15,482.33 for the same period
last year. This was a 12.63 per
cent increase. Motor vehkll,.
and housetrailer sales and uSf
tax collections for the first two
weeks in Meigs County this year
totaled $6,015.53 compared to
receipts of $5,177.26 for the
period last year, an increase of
16.19 per cent.

··--:~-::-------------------------------------------.

ELBERFELD$

FOUNDATION DEPARTMENT

INTRODUCING
the r'atural choice for
college or career ...
the believable
Body™ Bra

$3
• soft cup,
$3.50
• lined cup,
• shaped cup, $4
Airily made in Crepeset® tricot
for today's smooth, rounded
look.

Bids Under Study

PITTSBURGH

l:ilbens /ialioNll B f "'--c.ciNCINNATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

Mt.~mtwr

Ml DOLE PORT. OH 10
Federa l Dcpo!&gt;lt Ins urance Corporat

n

Five bids to sell three trucks
and a passenger auto to the
county were being studied today
by the Meigs County commissioners. Bids will be
awarded later this week .
Submitting bid s for the
vehicles, to be used by the highway department, were Meigs
Equipme nt Company, Keith
Goble Ford, R. H. Rawlings
Sons. Blaettnar Auto and
Pomeroy Motor.
Attending the mee tmg wen'
Bob Clark and Warden Ours
comrmssioners, and Marth~
Chambers , elcrk .

Warner's®designs the believable body
Shop Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursdav 9:30 to ~M
Open Both Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 PM

ELBERFELD$ IN PO

ROY

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