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                  <text>Two-Party System Comes Alive in Middleport
e

e

Middleport voters will have a
variety of candidates to choose
from when they go to the polls in
the May primaries. Pomeroy
has quite another picture, with
barely enough candidates for
the posts in the offing.
This was apparent Wednesday at 4 p. m., the filing
deadline for candidates seeking
nomination in the May
primaries.
According to the official list of

candiaates recorded by the
Meigs County Board of Elections, there are five Middleport
candidates for nomination to
run for mayor. There are two
Republicans, two Democrats
and one independent. Five
candidates filed for the
Republican nod to run for
council in the fall and three
Democrats are seeking the
nomination of their party to run
for council in Middleport. Both

Now You Know
The Apollo 14 astronauts
named their lunar lander Antares after the highest star in
the constellation Scorpio.

the Democrats and Repuow.:ans
will nominate two council
candidates in May.
Republican candidates filing
for mayor were John Zerkle,
long-time council member, and
Kim Neal, a newcomer to the
political scene. Democrat
candidates for mayor are H. Joe
Denison and Charles Paul
Gerard, both making their first
bid for public office. Going
against the nominee from each

fall. The Democrat candidates are Donald ,H. Pearch
Jr., Mary E. 'Searles and
Donovan D. Roush.
Filing for election to the
board of public affairs in
Middleport were Richard P.
Gress, D., and Jack M. Hawley,
R. Both are currently serving
on the board.
In
Middleport, neither
Lawrence Stewart or Charles
Byer, incwnbent councilmen,

party in the fall will be Allen
Lee King, independent mayor
candidate, also a newcomer to
the political picture.
Republicans seeking the
nomination for council in
Middleport are Jacob Turner,
Donald E. Kelly, Carl H.
Platter, Fred Hoffman and
William (Bucky) Walters. The
party will nominate two candidates who will go against two
Democratic nominees in the

are seeking nomination and
reelection.
Pomeroy will have a primary
election to determine the two
Republican nominees for
council out of the three candidates who filed. The three
include Mrs. Bertha Canaday,
Franklin M. Rizer, incwnbent,
and James R. Mees.
Only one Democrat filed for
the two council seats. He is
William Snouffer. Robert

Hysell, Republican incwnbent
councilman, did not file .
The candidates for mayor in
Pomeroy are unopposed and
will face each other in the fall
election as a result. They are
William G. Baronick, a
Democrat, and Delmar A.
Canaday, twice formerly mayor
of Pomeroy, who filed for
mayor as an independent
candidate. His wife, Bertha, has
filed as a Republican candidate

Weather

The Daily Sentinel

Showers likely tonightwith a
few thundershowers west.
Warmer today and tonight.
Lows tonight in mid 30s to near
40. Cloudy, windy and warmer
Friday with showers, highs in
the 40s and 50s.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVI NO. 206

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

New
•

SAIGON (UPI)-The U.S. command announced today that

square miles of the northwestern corner of South Vietnam in
a major offensive that took American soldiers to the border
of laos.
The command thus lifted the tightest news embargo of the
Indochina war on the massive operation that began six days
ag·o. It insisted no American ground troops would be sent into
laos but left open the question of an invasion by South
Vietnamese troops.
Front dispatches said the South Vietnamese were poised
to enter Laos. "We are ready to go into laos if we are ordered
to," Lt. Gen. Due Quoc Dong, commander of the South
Vietnamese airborne division, said today at Khe Sanh, the
newly recaptured U.S. Marine base that withstood a 77-day
siege in 1968.

•

It was announced at the same time that 12,500 South
Vietnamese troops had crossed into Cambodia today in two
new operations, one in the Parrot's Beak sector and the other
in the lower Fishhook region where last spring's Allied in-

vasion was centered. This brought to 21,000 the number of
South Vietnamese fighting in Cambodia.
Sepone Key Objective
Veteran UPI correspondent Leon Daniel reported from the
old Green Beret camp at lang Vei, a mile and a half from the
border, that the U.S. positions would be untenable unless
supported by troops inside Laos and that the men involved
were told they would be there at least three months.
Daniel said the object of the operation -the biggest in
South Vietnam in three years -was to cut the Ho Chi Minh
trail, and that to do so effectively meant the capture of
Sepone, 25 miles inside Laos. The mountain passes leading
from North Vietnam empty into the Sepone area, from which
supplies are sent southward.
The drive was supported by massive U.S. air strikes into
Laos, an offense by B52s and fighter-bombers that entered its
118th day today. U.S. helicopter gunships and supply planes
also were involved.
Few Casualties
The U.S. command said the drive had encountered little
resistance as the Allies reccupied a string of bases already
famous -Khe Sanh, the Rockpile, Camp Carroll, Cam Lo,
(Continued on page 10)

in lighting along the line that
separates daylight and darkness.
'Rugged Country'
Shepard, Mitchell and Stuart
A. RAOsa, f ·ung into orbit
around the moon at 2 a.m. EST
and dropped to within 10.7
miles of its surface 4¥4 hours
later in a daring maneuver
never before attempted.
"Good show," said Shepard
when advised the firing went
off like clockwork. "That
sounds good to us."
" We're here, " Mitchell
chimed in.
"This country down here is
really rugged at this altitude,"
Mitchell said later.
The command ship's biggest

engine fired 20.6 seconds to line
the landing craft Antares up for
its final descent 22 hours later.
H the engine had fired sixtenths of a second too long, the
astronauts would have needed
an emergency "bail out" burn
to avoid hitting the moon.
By using the command ship
to lower Antares' orbit from

Mills
Found
Guilty
r---------------------------,
I

•
B rze
. 1+.s :I
Yfews ••• zn
1

1\.T
1

McARTHUR, Ohio (UPI) Oliver Mills, 61, Creola, was
I
I found guilty of first degree
manslaughter in the shotgun
By United Press International
slaying of Vinton County Sheriff
Harold Steele and sentenced to
Egypt Expected to Go Along
one-to-20 years in the Ohio
ISRAELI MILITARY SOURCES said today Egypt has Penitentiary.
Mills was charged with first
massed 100,000 troops along the Suez Canal - more than at the
start of the 1967 Six Day War. But reports from Washington and degree murder in the killing last
Cairo said Egypt will extend the cease-fire another month to avert Aug. 31 at his rural home, but
the jury convicted him Weda new conflict. The current truce expires Friday.
nesday
on the reduced charge.
President Anwar Sadat was to announce the country's
County Prosecutor Arlo L.
decision to the national assembly in Cairo at 11 a. m. EST today.
Chatfield called the verdict "a
Egypt said the three-month cease-fire that began in November total miscarriage of justice."
was to expire at midnight tonight (5 p. m. EST), though Israel
"The trial was basically a test
contended it was in effect until midnight Friday.
of whether we will be governed
by law or the will of man,"
25 Killed in Munitions Blast
Chatfield said.
WOODBINE, GA. -SOME SAID AFTERWARDS they heard
Mills was the object of a
someone yell "fire." Moments later Wednesday a fire-triggered massive five-day search in the
explosion tore through a Thiokol Chemical Corp. munitions plant rugged countryside after Steele
where magnesium flares were assembled for use in Vietnam.
was killed. He surrendered near
At least 25 persons were killed, 17 of them women, said his home, which had burned
Cambden County Sheriff W.E. Smith. Sixty others were injured, down while he was being
many of them with burned faces and limbs, and 38 of the injured sought.
were hospitalized. Six were hurt critically. A company
spokesman said Thiokol and the Army were "checking all
possibilities" for the blast, including sabotage.

:

Eight Counties Hit Hard

•

TEN CENTS

It· Was a
Bad Day
To Drive

Apollo in Moon's Orbit

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UPI)-Apollo 14 dived to an
orbit only 11 miles above the
jagged moon today and set up
the $400 million mission payoff
-man's first laPtling . in the
lunar hills early Friday.
" Wow, it's really a wild place
up here!" exclaimed Commander Allen B. Shepard, the 47"
year-old space pioneer who
· waited a decade to get there.
" It has all the grays, browns,
white and dark craters that
everybody's talked about.
"It looks like you could walk
along that surface and fall into
nothing, absolutely nothing, "
said Shepard's fellow moonwalker Edgar D. Mitchell,
looking at the stark difference

•

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1971

at Laos Border

29,000 U.S. and South Vietnamese troops had reoccupied 1,000

•

for council.
Jane Walton, Republican,
incwnbent clerk, is unopposed
in her bid for clerk. An action
increasing her salary from $900
to $1200 a year as given final
approval by Pomeroy Village
Council Tuesday evening was
also filed with the board of
elections. E. F. Robinson,
Republican, incwnbent, filed
for a term on the Pomeroy
Soard of Public Affairs.

A FREEZING RAINSTORM SLASHED ACROSS northwest
Ohio early today, bringing traffic to a standstill because of "very
treacherous" road conditions and caused the closing of almost
every school in an eight county area .
The hardest hit were Lucas, Seneca, Wood, Fulton, Henry,
Sandusky, Ottawa and Hancock counties. Sheriff's departments
and the Ohio Highway patrol reported hundreds of fender bender"
type accidents. The storm moved up from the Ohio River and hit
most of the state but not as bad as the northwest area.

Two Guards Overpowered
MIAMI - FORTY CONVICTS, "MOSTLY KillERS and
armed robbers," overpowered two guards at the Dat.e County Jail
and held them hostage for three hours today until officials agreed
to listen to demands for reforms in the controversial jail.
The guards, identified as John Mravintz, 29, and Roy Rhea!,
35, were released unharmed by the convicts who had taken over
the maximum security wing on the sixth floor of the jail, which
was recently called "a snakepit" by a local judge. The convicts
issued seven demands for immediate reforms in the jail and also
demanded cellblock interviews with newsmen to "tell what really
goes on inside here."

the initial 67-by-191-mile-high
path, Shepard and Mitchell
saved precious fuel for their
landing Friday in a shallow
valley on the hilly Fra Mauro
formation at 4.:17 a.m.
WOMEN ARE TAKING a more active role in ? o.neroy uitd Middleport tx&gt;hti , a:. ......:.:
Problems Left Behind
as the nation. Here, Mrs. Mary E. Searles, a Democrat, file~ her petition to run for Mid"I guess we can make it
dleport Village Council in the May primaries. Earlier Mrs. Patricia Kennedy Groves, D.,
down from here tomorrow,"
filed for clerk-treasurer in Middleport. Pomeroy now has one women, Mrs. Elma Russell
Shepard said.
serving on council and a second woman, Mrs. Bertha Canaday, has filed her Republican
They will spend 33 1/z hours on
petition to run for council.
the surface and conduct two
moonwalks lasting four to five
hours apiece. Their goal is to
return with a treasure of rocks
that may write a new chapter
,
in the history of the moon.
•
PARIS (UPI) The
The astronauts outdistanced
Communists said today the
two problems that had dogged
United States had carried the
Heavy
damages
were
their flight. Sunday night after
Meigs
Countians
paid
Indochina War inside Laos
five unsuccessful tries they '"reported in a single car accident
and Cambodia and was trying $10,012.73 in sales tax on motor
managed to dock their space today at 8:30a.m. on SR 124 in
to "cover up" the operations. vehicles purchased during
ship with the lunar lander. And Syracuse.
The United States rejected January, according to the
Wednesday a voltage shortage
Syracuse Marshall Milton
the accusations and said it monthly report of Mrs. Evelyn
in one of the lander's two Varian said a car driven by
was Hanoi that had invaded Lucke, Meigs County Clerk of
batteries signaled potential Jesse E. Brinker, 49, Racine,
Laos, Cambodia and South Courts.
difficulties. But after close due to icy highway conditions, Vietnam.
In addition to the sales tax,
study of both problems, ground lost control o£ his car, struck
U.S. Ambassador David K. residents paid $2,292.77 in
experts gave the spacemen the and broke off a telephone pole,
E. Bruce said Hanoi had casual and use taxes and $252
go-ahead for the lunar explora- and went over the embankment shipped massive forces into for inspection of motor vehicles
tion.
across from the Bob Louks Laos and Cambodia in brought into the county from
A 6-minute, 12-second braking residence .
violation of international law another state.
blast from the big Apollo 14
There were no injuries or and said today's accusati.ons
Receipts for the office of Mrs.
rocket ended the astronauts' 3¥.! arrests, but heavy damage to were a plot to cover up tl1 :.! use Lucke resulting from other
day, 230,000-mile journey from the car.
of Laotian and Caml odian automotive activities totaled
Earth and started three busy
territories for North Viet- $1 ,053.50 with the county to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
days of scientific investigation
namese and satellite armies. receive $810.25 as its share and
on and above the moon.
ADMITTED - Doris Haley,
the state, $243.25. During the
"Okay, Fredo, we had an Rutland;
Rodney
King ,
month, Mrs. Lucke's office
extremely fine burn," Shepard Pomeroy;
Judy Denney ,
issued 526 certificates of title,
told Fred W. Haise, the ground Rutland; Genevieve Meinhart,
149 notations of lien, 86
NEW VICE PRESIDENT
communicator. Haise missed an Pomeroy; William Carman ,
memorandum, 428 applications,
William
Hobstetter,
manager
opportunity to explore Fra Pomeroy.
affidavits and assignments, and
Mauro 10 months ago when the
DISCHARGED - Coleen of the Rutland Branch of The four certified copies.
Apollo 13 flight was aborted by Kirkham, Jacquelyn Dray , Pomeroy National Bank, was
an oxygen tank explosion.
Darlene Blackwood , Sharon named to a vice president's post
when the bank's board of
McDaniel, Mary Hawk.
Quite A Slight
E-R CALLED
directors met Tuesday. Other
After periods of prolonged
LOCAL
TEMPS
The
Middleport
emergency
branch
employes
reappointed
silence most of the way to the
The temperature in downtown include Edith Williamson, squad was called today at 10:31
(Continued on page 1C)
Pomeroy at 11 a .m. Thursday, assistant manager, and Joan a.m. for Mary Quillen who had
with light rain falling, was 36 May and Karen Grate, fallen at home. She was taken to
degrees.
bookkeepers.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

AutO Skids

T ax

Off Ht.ghway

A series of fender benders all traceable to ice and snow kept Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. busy Wednesday.
The first accident occurred on
the SR 7 bypass, 1.3 mile east of
Middleport at 1:27 p. m. Edmond J . Schaefer, 43, Pomeroy,
was going southeast in a county
owned truck when Homer C.
Forrest, 70, Middleport, Rt. 1,
pulling onto the highway struck
the Schaefer truck in the rear
causing it to hit another car in
its rear driven by William
Snyder. There was heavy
damage to the truck, mediwn to
the Forrest car and light to
Snyder's vehicle. There were no
injuries.
At 1:36 p. m. on County Road
20, five-tenths of a mile from the
Rt. 7-33-124 intersection, Homer
H. Goeglein, 86, Pomer y, Rt. 3,
and Charles A. Leo -J, 1:9,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, collided in a
curve. There were medium
damages to both vehicles, and
no injuries.
At 2:57p.m. on SR 143, about
seven miles northeast of
Pomeroy, Larry G. Lemley, 20,
Rutland, was driving south
when he hit a slick spot in the
highway. He skidded off into a
ditch. There was medium
damage to the car.
On SR 7, at 3:34p.m. Denzil
M. Clelanc!, 77, Chester, who
was traveling north, also slid off,
the icy highway, hit a guardrail, ·
and went over an embankment. ·
Cleland complained of a back'•
injury and his wife of an injury
to her right leg. The Pomeroy .
emergency squad was called. · '
However, the two were not
immediately treated.
At 5:25 p. m. on SR 124 in
Syracuse, across from Sadie's .
Market, another single car
accident occurred.
William Roy Thomas, 47,
Pomeroy, was traveling east
when a vehicle to his front
slowed down to make a turn into·
the market. Thomas applied his
brakes, but he slid sideways,
went off the highway on the left
side, scraped a telephone pole,
skidded back and to the left,
went through a hedge and~
stopped against a tree in
Charles Blake's yard.
There were no injuries, but
heavy damage to the car.
Today at 8:10a. m. on SR 248,
four-tenths of a mile west of the
Keno Road, a single car accident was reported.
Glen 0. Deeter, Long Bottom.
(Continued on page 10)

Chinese Reaffir1n
Support of Hanoi Ferguson Says $13 Million Misused
By United Press International
Communist China accused the
United States today of escalating the war in Indochina and
said it has the obligation to
support the Communist forces
" until final victory."
An official statement by the
Chinese Foreign Ministry
broadcast by Peking Radio and
monitored in Hong Kong said
the Chinese people "absolutely
will not tolerate U.S. imperialism to do what it likes in
Indochina."
"We have the responsibility
and the obligation to support
the people of the three
Indochina nations until final
victory in the war against U.S.
aggression and for national

salvation," the statement said.
It stopped short of threatening outright Chinese intervention in Indochina.
Premier Prince Souvanna
Phowna of Laos said today in
Vientiane his country would
protest to the Soviet Union and
Great Britain, cochairmen of
the 1962 Geneva conference, if
allied troops enter Laos. He
said he knew of no such
incursion and reported new
Communist advances in Laos.
"Red" Prince Soupanouvong,
leader of the pro-Communist
Pathet .Lao movement in Laos
and half brother of Prince
Souvanna, appealed to Souvanna to stop South Vietnamese
troops from entering Laos.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - State
Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson
claims Hamilton County commissioners have been illegally
transferring funds into the local
welfare department since 1963
and may have to return $13
million they gained from the
state as a result.
Ferguson charged Wednesday
the commissioners have, over
the last seven years, taken 31'z
million in tax revenues meant
for Drake Hospital and put it
into welfare programs. He said
the extra county money for welfare produced an extra $13
million in matching state funds .
Ferguson sa1d he would initiate legal action today by delivering a copy of the report
his office prepared to county

·Prosecutor Simon Leis .
"They'll have to pay it all
back," Ferguson said.
The commissioners . called a
10:30 a.m. news conference today. Commissioner Robert A.
Wood said the purpose of the
conference was to ' 'clear the
air immediately on this matter
and put it in its proper perspective and keep the public informed ."
John Blwn, chief of the Bureau of Inspections in Ferguson's office, said the diversion
of funds showed up in state
audits since 1963. He said, however, they had been covered up
for political reasons .
Blum charged that state Sen.
Michael Maloney, R-Cincinnati,

intervened when the issue was
raised.
He said Maloney "came into
the office and talked to (the
state Auditor Roger Cloud.)
Then Glenn Buller, who was in
our Hamilton County office, got
a telephone call and was told
to file the audit and then get
on with the next one."
Ferguson, who became auditor Jan. 11, ordered audits of
the regional offices. It was
then, he said, that the financial
records of Hamilton County
were reviewed.
"We are going to stop political a udits that have been going
on,·· Ferguson said. ''As soon
as public officials learn that the
better off they will be."
Ferguson said if the county

prosecutor does not take action
within 90 days, he would take
the case to state Attorney Gen
eral William J. Brown.
Commissioner John E. Held
said " our books are open."
"When this senile political
hack was accider:t.:lly elected,
we expected hara:;sment," Held .
said. "Typical of this outdated,
uneducated, ignorant man is
the method in which he .:ails .
more attention to our would-be
wrongdoing ."
· County Administrator R. E.
Anderegg said the fund diversion, which Ferguson said must
be repaid Drake Hospital, was.
an " expedient solution" to
budget problems, "but perhaps
slightly irregular.' '

�2-The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 4, 1971

•

RAVCROMLEV

Muskie Tops all Rivals zn California
...._

improve his national status materially in six months or
so, he can't look to them for help.
McGovern delivered his usual hard shots about getting
out of Vietnam, and at Stockton spoke in strong terms
about recognizing Red China. Yet canvassers among
Democrats had to draw his name up when reaction to the
three visiting candidates was being sought.
An avowed Muskie backer, Rep. Jerome Waldie, thinks
McGovern will not be able to capitalize greatly on his
preeminent antiwar position, notwithstanding the strength
of such sentiment among California liberals. Waldie's
argument is that if Vietnam fades as a 1972 issue it won't
mean all that much to the South Dakotan, whereas if it
flares up and becomes a "national obsession," all candidates will virtually merge in opposition outcry and McGovern's voice will be undistinguishable.
On his five-day swing, Muskie's resonant voice was
carrying well. He is a superb speaker, able occasionally
to infuse even the broadest generality with at least the
faint thunder of significance.
He got over the demographic circuit with meticulous
completeness, talking to politicians, businessmen, labor
leaders, women, young folk , and having some breakfast
with Tom Bradley, defeated black candidate for mayor
of Los Angeles in 1969. How he registered on all these
cannot be precisely measured, but the guessing is he

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Washington. Correspondent

.•..

SAN FRANCISCO (NEAl
Maine's
Sen.
Edmund
Muskie
is far better placed tod~y
•
for the highly important 1972 California Democrat~c
"
presidential primary than any of his rivals. And he w1ll
have to suffer pretty severely to lose that advantage.
The stakes are incredibly high. With its 1960-70 popula tion gains cranked in, California next time could have
200 or more (possibly many more) dele~ate votes-?r
"
nearly one-fifth of the total needed to nommate. All w11I
go to the primary winner in one big lump.
_
Despite some mistakes, Muskie seemed to ~old hts _own
"•
on his bold, early plunge into the always rolled Califor•
nia political waters.
He made a good if not dominant impression on state
~:
Democratic convention delegates in Sacramento who also
'•
heard rival Sens. George McGovern of South Dakota and
::
Birch Bayh of Indiana.
i:
Bay's effective speech may hav~ _s&lt;;~red. the most ~mo'• . tional points. But his very low v~stbll~ty 1~ the n~twn~l
,. • polls is a terrible handicap. Fnendlies hke Califorma
::
Assembly speaker Robert Moretti told him if he doesn't

..
~

......

....

...

·:'·

Nixon Firm on •
'Save' Cambodia

hung in there.
Private meetings figure heavily on the trip, some with
political and legislative leaders, most with business types
packing fat wallets .
Behind the doors, Muskie gave these listeners the lofty
stuff about his talks with Soviet Premier Kosygin, German Chancellor Willy Brandt, Israeli Prime Minister
Golda Meir and others, while aide Berl Bernhard talked
coin of the realm. Muskie says some ()£ those present
were Republicans unhappy over President Nixon's economics. Names of possible contributors not on the dinner
lists were sought.

By RAY CROMLEY

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Though no public announcement has been made, be certain that President Nixon is not going to let Cambodia goedown the drain .
Sources a t very high levels indicate the President is prepared to pay a very high price in dollars, plane losses and
in congressional and public dissent at home.
(But, as noted before in these columns, he will commit
no American ground combat forces .)
Nixon will not be limited by the funds Congress has 1
voted for Cambodia. Supplies, weapons, ammunition and .
dollars in or earmarked for South Vietnam will be diverted to Cambodia as required.
There is remarkable agreement on the save-Phnom )
Penh-strategy at State, Defense and the White House-despite some hot dispute over "tactics."
The key prize is the " right" to continue the Cambodian
blockade.
If the North Vietnamese can oust Cambodia Premier
Lon Nol and set up a pro-Hanoi government in Cambodia,
that new regime would certainly declare the U.S. blockade of the Cambodian coast both unwelcome and illegal.
Talk privately on this point with men at high levels in
the Nixon administration and they make no secret of
their belief that if there is a new Cambodian government •
and if it does declare the blockade illegal, then we will
have to withdraw our ships from the Cambodian coast.
They say the same political considerations which prevent the United States from blockading North Vietnam's
port of Haiphong would then prevent us from continuing
the blockade of southern Cambodia.
But a free South Vietnam may hinge on that blockade.
As long as U.S. or South Vietnamese warships patrol
the Cambodian coast, North Vietnam has almost no
chance for a military victory in the south-even after
American ground combat troops have come home.
Without the blockade, the situation could be touch and if
go, after a period for the North Vietnamese to rebuild
their strength in the sanctuaries and the Delta .
The reasoning behind this analysis is simple. Almost
all North Vietnam's supplies in the Vietnam Delta war
have come by sea and river-first along the South Vietnamese coast and up the Mekong, then later, primarily
across the Cambodian coast.
What North Vietnam can send down the Ho Chi Minh
trails can supply no major war in the southern third of
South Vietnam where most of the people live-certainly
not for long.
Especially is this true when the "trails" are subject to t
sustained bomber and guerrilla attacks. As Americans
withdraw, the bombing may lighten. But the anti-North
Vietnamese guerrilla harassment will increase .
Antiguerrilla theory here thus holds that the North Vietnamese southern invasion armies, deprived of the South
Vietnamese and Cambodian co3sts, will slowly strangle.
All of this argument, of course, comes down to one
~bing. If the North Vietnamese armies are weak enough
m the south (because they lack arms, ammunition an&lt;4
supplies ) the South Vietnamese, without major hitches,
can take over the complete defense of their own country •
in a reasonable period of time.
Then U.S. troops can continue to come home at a steady
pace.
But upset that blockade and it may be a whole new ball
game.

Muskie told newsmen in a 45-minute chat that big
money is needed to underpin the sizable organization he
is building in his downtown Washington political office.
Expected early additions are a major political strategist
and a press secretary .
For Democrats, the wealthy California and New York
Jewish communities are inevitably the prime money
markets. Muskie will need funds not just for general use
but particularly for California itself, where the primary
campaign could cost from $2.5 million to $3 million.
He got off to a good start this trip. Any rival who can't.
get the big dollar will be sorely strapped for the great
California test in 1972.

.

'•'•

"Hark! I Think I Hear

.

.•

I

/

..•

WIN AT BRIDGE

Voices!~~
~

./

v

/

EDITORIALS

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

•·.

Student Radicals--A Mixed-up Bag

J,

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Soloway Handles
Slam Carefully

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Voice along Broadway

!

• I
BY JACK O' BRIAN

NEW YORK - Hear tell
• Sinatra's uptight about his old
• "Guys and Dolls" pal Brando
taking "The Godfather" title
role .... Carl Reiner's actor-son
•; Robert has an April 10 wedding
·: date with actress Penny
.• Marshall .. .. Alan Arkin will
• attempt an L.A. revival of
'• Leonard Bernstein's "Candide"
"'.• with Bdwy. in mind ; it's one of
those splendid bores .... As we
found "Midsummer Night's
Dream," which attacks its
Shakespearean enchantment
with violence, noise, phallic
symbols and psychedoldrums
.... And still the old Bard's
brilliant nonsense comes
through .... They're beautiful
and they're engaged: Green
Bay Packers back Donny Anderson and Texas model Karen
• Harrison at the 37th St.
Hideaway .. .. David Black
wants Claudette Colbert for a

-~

Bdwy. play ; especially since his
projected W. C. Fields musical
"W.C." couldn't lure enough
backers. 1
Gig Young's summer stock
vehicle will be "40 Carats" ....
Much-liked comic Stubby
Kaye's okaye after surgery ....
Shirley MacLaine was eating
lamb at Mykonos; never
humble pie .... George Frazier
III, son of poppa George of the
brilliant columnar broadsword,
busted a shoulder .. .. Ginger
Rogers is so in love with Paris
she may marry it permanently
.... Doug Fairbanks Jr. wants to
syndicate a TV talk show out of
London; certainly Sir Junior
knows everyone there .... You
can't be a rrreally-big star until
you get your own disease or
charity project : Tennessee
Ford has arrived as chairman
of
the
" Friends
of
Melungeons," a fund-raising
drive for poverty beleaguered

BERRY'S WORLO

Radical students are the product of overpermissive parents. Or they are superior people who could successf!-!IIY
fit into conventional society but who have chosen to ftght
against injustice and oppression.
These are two among a number of popular conceptions
about the student revolutionaries which a research psychiatrist has discovered are simply not true.
Herbert Hendin of the faculty of the Columbia University Psychoanalytic Clinic studied 15 radical students, interviewing each five times and giving them a battery of
psychological tests.
The students were white, from middle-class or affluent
families and with a variety of religious backgrounds. All
believe in the necessity for a violent revolution and are
working actively to promote it. •
Hendin found that in general these students had parents
who had little ability or desire to see their children as they
are or to confront their actual feelings. This kind of emotional abandonment, he says, is anything but "permissive."
Political activism bv the students is thus both a sort of
mask to hide the lack· of closeness with their parents and
a substitute channel for expressing personal feelings.
''Their acute ability to see and feel the flaws of society," he writes in the New York Times magazine, " is in
striking contrast to their need not to see or know the often
devastating effect their family life has had on them."
In the revolutionary culture , many of them have found
a "family" which understands theit emotional needs better than their real families ever did, even though, ironically, this culture is highly intolerant of any individual
expression which does not serve group aims. Danger from
outside-from police and other authorities-cements this
closeness and tightens the bonds within the " family."
For some of the students, their first involvement with
radical action gave them an excitement and exhilaration
.they had never known before. Far from choosing radical
politics out of a wealth of possible choices, it soon became
the only possible life for them.
The prospect of each new violent p~;otest provides an
outlet for their anger and gives some relief to their depression. Identification with the Poor and the oppressed
permits these radical students to react to poverty and oppression without having to face how personally impoverished , victimized and enraged they feel.
Student revolutionaries are often accused of not offering any alternative plan for a future society.
"But these students are hardly interested in their own
future, " says Hendin, " let alone in the future of the rest
of us ."
Although they are intelligent and articulate men and
women, most of the radicals will not finish college. Their
frustration, their anger and their increasingly exclusive
interest in violent political action deprive them of the necessary patience to finish, even though they realize that an
education, such as in law, would enable them to contribute
more to the radical cause.
Psychological forces alone can't explain why some people become revolutionaries at a particular time and place
in history, Hendin admits. Nor do the students' personal
hang-ups invalidate their criticism of society.
But to discuss the historical and social forces that produce revolutionaries without knowing who the revolutionaries are or what they feel is misguided, he believes.
We have all, he says, paid too much attention to the
politics of the radicals and too little attention to them as
people.
" To insist that these students are products of overprivilege, the spoiled sons and daughters of the affluent, is to
insist that the only hunger is for food and the only deprivation is material and economic."
Revolution, like charity, apparently begins at home.
And at least in the case of the students analyzed by this
one psychiatrist, the absence of true charitv at home has
been a major factor in breeding revolutionaries.

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Opening lead- ¥ 6

North's three-heart bid is
an example of expert technique. He intended to try
for slam later on provided
his partner could show he
really had a heart suit.
South confirmed hearts by
going to four and North
Blackwooded his way to the
slam.
The slam is a very good
one. When perennial McKenney Trophy Winner Paul
Soloway looked over dummy,
he saw he would romp home
barring some very bad
breaks. His only problem
was to find the safest line
against t h e s e potential
troubles.
He won the trump lead in
dummy and led a club.
West's ace collared his king
and a second trump was
won in his own hand. He
noted that East discarded a
diamond.
At this point Paul had
several ways to make his
slam. He could ruff a club,
draw trumps and spread the
slam if clubs would break
4-3. If not, he could develop

'LAWRENCE

Aspirin Acts on Many Ills
But Treat It with Respect ~
By LAWRi'NCE E: LAMB, M.D.

citizens of Sneedville, Tenn.
Jack Dempsey will be the
first athlete ever glorified in the
Have you ever taken asH'wood Wax Museum ....
pirin? Over 27 m i ll i o n
Georgeous Anjanette Comer
pounds of aspirin are used
each year in the U n i t e d
has a few nude scenes in
States. That is enough to
Warner's "Rabbit, Run" but
treat more than 17 billion
none of that stuffy "I did it for
headaches .
art's sake" from Anj: "I did
In addition to headaches,
them because it's in vogue, it's
aspirin
is used to treat muscommercial and sells tickets."
JACOBY MODERN, in an illuscle pains, decrease fever,
trated, 128-poge book, is ayailable treat arthritis and for a host
"In April1969 you ran an item
through this newspaper. Send name, of other problems. Since anyabout my son Carl Parlatore, a
address and Zip code, plus $1 for one can buy it across the
U.S. Air Force fighter pilot who
each book, to : "Win at Bridge," c / o counter, p. ~~ ~nts often don't
returned to Vietnam after
(Nome Newspaper) P.O. Box 489, realize that it is a potent
recovering from wounds
Dept. (First three digits local Zip medicine. Aside from allerreceived when he was shot down
code ), Radio City Station, New York, gic reactions, in large doses
by Vietcong missiles. You said
N.Y., 10019.
it can and does sometimes
'Not all the younkers are
cause coma and death. It
picketing, rioting, etc.' That
a squeeze against East by should not be regarded as a
item brought many letters from
playing out the ace and king s i m p 1e household remedy
of spades after drawing but should be treated with
all around the country from
respect and kept away from
trumps.
your readers. Just to keep you
A more attractive line children.
up to date on Carl: He is now a
would be to try to ruff two
The important ingredient
Captain returned home after
low clubs in dummy. This in aspirin is salicylate. In
completing 230 combat missions
line would succeed provided aspirin it is acetylsalycilic
as an aircraft commander of an
he could get back to his acid . Salicylate is also used
F-4 Phamton. He has been
hand with the spade ace and as a salt called sodium salidiamond king. A careless cylate. The sodium salt cannominated for the Silver Star,
player would lose the hand not be used in patients who
received three Distinguished
if he played the spade first do not tolerate salt, like paFlying Crosses for heroism, 14
since West could. jettison his tients with heart failure. OrigAir Medals plus other
singleton diamond on the next inally, salicylate was obdecorations. After a short rest
club lead and trump the dia- tained from willow bark,
he is being assigned to
which is w h e r e its name
Homestead AFB, Florida. J just
comes f r o m. Willow bark
thought you'd like to know.
was used by the ancients to
lower fever. Sodium salicyWarmest regards," signed by
Jim Parlatore of Plainview, L. , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , late was used in the later
Hado's They'll Do It Every Time
~
19th century in the treatment
I., who covered Manhattan
_of rheumatic fever and it is
Police Headquarters with us too
;:======:::::;====:;:=====::;:::::;:=====~=======::;still used today for that purmany years ago .... That's our
pose . Aspirin as we know it
HOW ABOUT
'SALES DEP'T
favorite happy ending of the
appeared in 1899.
IT, CAL. ...
PLEA.DS FOR
month.
CAN YOUR
Aspirin will lower fever
A.
PROTOTYPE
DEP~RTMENT
Maria Callas and her mother
GET IT OOT'?
aren't on speaking terms, but OFAN ITEMTO
SHOW THE
you should hear the opprobrium CUSTOMERS--·
Mom heaps on Jackie Onassis!
mond lead. Paul had noted
.... The Las Vegas salute to all
East's diamond discard and
time great champ Joe Louis
decided it was from length.
May 14 was planned with no one
Hence, he led a diamond;
realizing Joe's 56th birthday is
ruffed his last low club, returned to his hand with the
one day earlier .. .. The dead
ace of spades; drew trumps
future: Mausoleums 20 stories
~~~~~=--.....J and spread the slam.
high and higher are acoming,
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
with more space than a 100-acre
So THE
cemetery .. .. Lee Meredith
MACH IN E SHOP
4
blunts propositions as she
BOYS WORK
bikinis away at the Nat'l Boat
THE WEEKEt-lD
Show's Hatteras exhibit - by
TO GET IT
showing prospective wolves
cx.&gt;T-- A1'4D· · •
The bidding has been:
pictures of her seven-month-old
West
North
East
South
daughter Kimberly .
1¥
Dble
Pass

I

1He

·C 1971 by NE...

I~

"We may be coming to the explicit part, dear-better
toke some deep breaths!"

1.

It takes half a million gallons
of water to produce one ton of
raw sugar on the island of Maui.

E. LAMB, M. D.

...__--="'----'

Pass
1 N.T.
Pa$s
?
You, South, hold :
.8 74 3 2 ¥7 +Q 9 8 ...K 10 4 3
What do you do n ow?
A-Bid two clubs. You have
some values and ,vou aren't
keen nn no-trump.

but wl!l not affect the temperature of normal people.
It accomplishes this by dilating the blood vessels in the
skin and causing the body to .-.
lose heat.
lllll!f
T w o aspirin t ablets are
about as effective in relieving pain as the usual small
dose of morphine or codeine
taken by mouth. Aspirin is
particularly good in relieving muscle pains, generalized aches and headaches
but not so good at relieving
pain from internal organs,
like kidney or gall bladder.
pain. It is a good thing to
take before going to the dentist as it will significantly
. decrease the pain you might
feel.
Salicylates can irritate the
stomach. In the acid juice,
small crystals form on the
stomach lining and cause irritation and even hemorrhage. You should take aspirin after eating, not on an•
empty stomach. It is a good
idea to take aspirin with an
alkalizer (not sodium bicarbonate, however, since that
gets rid of the salicylate
from the body). A glass of
m ilk will sometimes do the
trick. The p e r s o n taking
large amounts of aspirin regularly should be under a doctor's care and he will be able
to prescribe a good alkalizer
for this.
·
Aspirin will start having
effects within 30 minutes and
about half of it will last 24
hours. It does not cure colds
but merely reduces fever
and discomfort-which, after
all, is a lot.
The usual dose for an adult
is one to three tablets (0.3
gram tablets) every three to
four hours. Larger doses are •
used to control inflammations, like in rheumatoid
arthritis.
If a person needs to take
lots of aspirin he can save
money by buying aspirin in
1,000-tablet bottles . Some of
the less adveriised cheaper
brands are just as good as
those with well-advertised
names. Your doctor can help
Y?U select the right medi- ,
cme.

•1

(Newspaper Enterprise Assn. )
Please send your questions rmd
comments to Lawrence E. Lomb,
M.D., in care of this paper. While
Dr. Lamb cannot onswer individual
le::crs, he will answer /etters ol
(leneral interest in future c:olumnJ. 1

�3- The Daily Sentfnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 4, 1971

• Pitt

Fans Blamed For Team's Loss

against ~he Pittsburgh stands
Most losing coaches can for throwing refuse provided
usually pinpoint the cause for the key points that enabled West
defeat but Pittsburgh's Buzz Virginia to score a 95-91 victory
Ridl may never know who cost over the Panthers.
West Virginia took the lead to
him Wednesday night's game
stay late in the first half when
against West V~rginia.
A pair of technical fouls the Pitt stands were assessed a
By Unitd Press International

•

technical foul for splattering an
egg on the court. A second
technical against the cheering
section with seven seconds left
-for throwing a head of lettuce
~nded Pittsburgh's chances
for catching the Mountaineers.
Wil Robinson had 25 points
and Sam Oglesby 23 to lead

West Virginia. Robinson
dropped in the first technical
foul that gave West Virginia a
44-43lead with 2:49 to go in the
first half.
Paul O'Goreck had 24 to lead
the Panthers while the Pittsburgh stands contributed
three eggs, two firecrackers, a

SEOAL Standings
OVERALL STANDINGS (Throuah Jan. 30)
TEAM
L
Pet
.929
Federal- Hocking
13
1
12
1
Waverly
.923
Starr-Washington
13
.867
2
Eastern
11
2
.846
Athens
12
.800
3
11
4
.733
Jackson
11
Alexander
4
.733
9
Miller
5
.643
Meigs
8
5
.615
Southern
7
.538
6
Wahama
5
6
.455
9
Ironton
6
.400
Nelsonville- York
4 8 .333
10
Vinton County
3
.231
Wellston
3 11
.214
Gallipolis
3 11
.214
Point Pleasant
2 10
.167
Logan
2 12
.143
Glouster
1 12
.077

w

•

This week oughtta be a cinch in the crystal ball business.
How could one go wrong on Athens at Wellston, Gallipolis at
Waverly, Jackson at Logan. Waverly, which has been averaging
93.2 per game at home, meets the Blue Devils in Waverly who
have been pouring in points at a 51.8 clip (all games).
But there are a few that might swing either way. Take Meigs
at Ironton. The Marauders took 'em 73-&amp;l at home, and could do it
again at Ironton, but will they? Ironton has been strong at home,
performing the ultimate upset already there once this season in
soundly knocking off Athens.
The Marauders (8-5) will have to be sharp Friday night if they
want to put a good hold on finishing with a solid winning season,
say something like 12-6.
The Marauders have Ironton, Wellston and Athens remaining
in league play and Pt. Pleasant (this Saturday night at home) and
Wahama outside the conference. They will be heavy favorites to
take Wellston, Point, and Wahama, having already done it once
spectacularly in each instance. Athens is another matter. And as
suggested above, Ironton this Friday at Ironton could depend on
which club is the better shooters that night.
The rest of the Friday and Saturday night card presents few
real problems. Saturday night (see below) the Wellston at Vinton
County game - on the records - could be a toss up. Also,
Frontier Local (where's that?) is at Federal Hocking. Make a
guess.
Here's how the chips are likely to fall:
FRIDAY
Athens 78 at Wellston 51
Gallipolis 43 at Waverly 72
Meigs 62 at Ironton 58
Jackson 97 at Logan 49
Fed.-Hocking 78 at Vinton Co. 57
Warren Local 68 at Nels.-York 60
Zane Trace 70 at Alexander 58
Kyger Creek 60 at Eastern 74
North Gallia 87 at Southern 54
Southwestern 46 at Wahama 61
Starr-Wash. at Laurelville 60
SATURDAY
Eastern 81 at Glouster 55
Belpre 67 at Nels.-York 58
Wellston 67 at Vinton Co. 62
P1. Pleasant 54 at Meigs 76
Frontier Local 62 at Fed.-Hocking 72
Waterford 40 at Starr-Wash. 73
(Percentage to date: 73 of 85 for 78.5 per cent)

Pts
1108
1030
1217
1005
1071
1160
1139

718
919
661
759
799
726
753
756
644

OP
787
693
796
737
842
869
1030
891
833
707
731
1028
697
921
1094
873
929
972
1118

6
8
9
10

Pts
897
798
838
677
668
597
541
621

OP
576
634
661
729
711
838
722
766

L
1
4
4
4
7
7
8
9

Pts
477
496
481
476
432
370
400
321

OP
362
397
451
448
427
403
454
511

945
823
718

SEOAL STANDINGS !VARSITY)

w

TEAM
Waverly
Athens
Jackson
Meiqs
Ironton
Wellston
Gallipolis
Logan

L
1
2
3

10
9
8
6

5

5
3
2
1
SEOAL STANDINGS !RESERVES)

w

TEAM
Athens
Waverly
Ironton
Meigs
Jackson
Gallipolis
Logan
Wellston

10
7
7
7
4
4
3
2

crushed Southern Illinois 90-73,
Georgia Tech beat Georgia 9077, Louisville downed Tulsa 9885, Tulane upset Louisiana State
93-86, North Carolina State
trimmed Maryland 71-6 and St.
Bonaventure trounced Xavier
(Ohio) 104-77.
Kenny Durrett and Bobby
Fields teamed for 51 points as
LaSalle boosted its record to 151 with a triumph over Loyola,
which failed to score in the first
eight minutes.
Bill Mainor scoredl7 of his 20
points in the second half to lift
Fordham past Army. It was the
Rams' 14th victory in 15 games.
Jarrett Durham scored 24
points and Duquesne (14-2) hit
on better than 64 per cent of its
shots in beating San Francisco.
John Taylor's 23 points helped
Creighton beat Southern Illinois
and Rich Yunkus poured in 27 of
his 37 points in the second half to
spark Georgia Tech past
Georgia. Larry Carter had a
career high 30 points in
Louisville's victory over Tulsa,
which wasted Dana Lewis' 37
point effort and Harold Sylvester had 34 points to help Tulane
upset LSU.

fish, oranges and a head of
lettuce.
In action involving top 20
teams, 12th-ranked LaSalle
trounced Loyola of Louisiana
74-53, Fordham (No.l4) downed
Army 6-6; and Duquesne (No.
18) whipped San Francisco 9077. Elsewhere, Creighton

REBOUNDS
TEAM
No. G
Logan
505
11
Jackson
500
11
Waverly
489
11
Meigs
445
11
Athens
444
11
Ironton
396
11
Wellston
381
11
Gallipolis
307
11
PERSONAL FOULS
TEAM
No. G
Athens
149
11
Wellston
167
11
Waverly
191
11
Gallipolis
199
11
Logan
202
11
Meigs
203
11
Iron ton
208
11
Jackson
215
11

Avg
45.9
45.5
44.5
40.5
40.4
36.0
34.6
27.9
Avg
13.5
15.2
17.4
18.1
18.5
18.5
18.9
19.5

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Field Goal Percentage
NAME
FG-A Pet
D. Smith, Athens
62-98
.633
Martin, Jackson
78-126
.619
Couladis, Athens 71-124
.573
Eblin, Waverly
101-181
.558
Swart, Athens
64-130
.492
Free Throw Percentage
NAME
FT-A Pet
M. Shaw, Logan
98-126
.778
Swart, Athens
42-56
.750
Miller, Waverly
36-49
.735
Eblin, Waverly
48-66
.727
Martin, Jackson
49-68
.721
REBOUNDS
NAME
No. G Avg
M. Shaw, Logan 218
11
19.8
Marlin, Jack.son 173 11
15.7
Rouse, Jackson
166 11
15.1
Eblin, Waverly
153 11
13.9
K it chen,lronlon 111
8
13.9

""

THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Athens at Wellston
MOVC STANDING (VARSITY)
Gallipolis at Waverly
TEAM
L
Pts OF Meigs at Ironton
Eastern
1
0
97
59 Jackson at Logan
Miller
1 314
271
3
Tri-Valley
Alexander
2
1 255
216 Federal-Hocking at Vinton
Glouster
4 225
345 Coun ty
0
Warren Local at NelsonvilleMOVC STANDINGS (RESERVES)
YQrk
p
~TEAM
OP
L
Others
Alexander
3
0
211
125 Zane Trace at Alexander
Eastern
1
0
50
45 Kyger Creek at Eastern
Miller
2
2
217
203 North Gallia at Southern
Glouster
0
4
146
251 Sou thwestern at Wahama
Starr -Washington at Laurelville
TRI-VALLEY VARSITY
SATURDAY
TEAM
w L p OP
MOVC
Federal-Hocking
0 415
314 Eastern at Glouster
6
Warren Local
2 372
341
3
Tri-Valley
Belpre
1
3 223
257 Belpre at Nelsonville-York
Vinton County
1
270
3 204
Others
4 262
294 Wel lston at Vinton County
Nelsonville-York
1
Frontier Local at FederalHocking
TRI-VALLEY RESERVES
Point Pleasant at Meigs
TEAM
W
L
P
OP VVaterford at Slarr-VVashin~ton
Belpre
4
0 200
155
Warren Local
3
2 202
208
SVAC STANDINGS
Federal-Hocking
3
3 236
220
SVAC ONLY
Vinton County
2
2 147
162
TEAM
W L P OP
0
5 181
221
Swisher Lohse 915; 3rd, H-R Nelsonville-York
Eastern
7 1 634 438
Note: MOVC standings do not include Tuesday night EasternFirestone 892
North Gallia
7 1 639 495
1st high ind. game - Reibel Miller game.
Southern
5 3 445 447
CITY LEAGUE
242; 2nd Dugan 213; 3rd
Hannan Trace
4 5 608 644
'
WON LOST Bowen 212
Kyger Creek
2 6 543 539
OVERALL SCORING (As of Jan. 30)
Lou's Ashland
30
10
Southwestern
0 9 391 697
FG
FT TP G Avg_
NAME
H-R Firestone
28
12
Totals
25 25 3260 3260
Mark Shaw, Logan
125
108
358 14
25.6
Cement Block
20
20
ALL GAMES
Dave Poling, Starr-Washington
162
56
380 15
.25.3
Swisher Lohse
18
22
Tri-COUNTY LEAGUE
W L P OP
Chuck Robinson, Federal-Hocking
120
110
350 14
25.0 TEAM ,
Quality Print
14
26
January 26, 1971
Eastern
11 3 1063 796
112
118
342 15
22.8
Buckeye Potato Chips
10
30 Team
Points Randy Sinnott, Starr-Wash.
9 3 908 754
117
59
293 13
22.5 Nor•h Gallia
First high 3 games- Swisher Davis-Warner Ins.
23 Rick Eblin, Waverly
7 6 718 710
126
65
317 15
21.1 Southern
Mason Furniture
Lohse 2718
22 Mike Rouse, Jackson
Hannan
Trace
6
8 888 960
106
48
260 13
20.0
2nd high 3 game H- R Rawlings Dodge
22 Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
2 12 899 990
107
78
19.5 Kyger Creek
292 15
H&amp;R Firestone
Firestone 2540
12 Gary Martin, Jackson
0 14 610 1141
18.8 Southwestern
88
69
245 13
3rd high 3 games Lou's Eagles
9 Howie Caldwell, Eastern
FRIDAY'S GAMES:
99
79
277 15
18.5
Holsum Sales Dept.
Ashland 2473
8 Alex Couladis, Athens
Kyger Creek at Eastern
Team High Series - Davis1st high ind. 3 games- Riebel
North Gallia at Southern
SEOAL ONLY SCORING
621; 2nd, Bowen 595; 3rd, Warner Ins. 2650~
FT TP G Avg Wahama at Southwestern
NAME
FG
Blackston 575
Team High Game - DavisSATURDAY'S SCHEDULE:
Mark Shaw, Logan
110
98
318 11
28.9
Warner Insurance 1045
1st high team game 101
250 11
22.7 Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Rick Eblin, Waverly
48
Swisher
Lohse 974;
2nd,
Individual High Series- Paul
226 11
20.5 Eastern at Glouster
48
Mike Rouse, Jackson
89
Harris 663
75
20.0
Charlie Kitchen, Ironton
20
160
8
Individual High Game- Paul
205 11
18.6
Gary Martin, Jackson
49
78
Harris 279
71
200 11
18.2
Alex Couladis, Athens
58
17.6
SVAC STATS
176 10
Phil Miller, Waverly
70
36
16.5
TOP OFFENSIVE TEAMS
Randy Rate I iff, Wellston
61
49
181 11
THE BIG GAME
16.0
SVAC ONLY
44
160 10
Larry Snowden, Gallipolis
58
NEW YORK (UPI) - The Mark Swart, Athens
15.5 GAMES TEAM
PTS. AVG.
64
42
170 11
8- North Gallia
639 79.8
Hughes Sports Network an8- Eastern
634 79.2
nounced Wednesday that more
MOVC SCORING
8- Kyger Creek
543 67.8
than 100 television stations NAME
FG
FT TP G Avg 9- Hannan Trace
608 67.5
15
1
31
1
31.0 8- Southern
445 55.5
across the nation would carry Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
Jerry Bankes, Miller
33
4
391 43.4
17.8 9-Southwestern
5 71
Saturday's basketball game Sam Hern, Miller
16.7
17 16
50
3
TOP DEFENSIVE
between top-ranked Southern Howie Caldwell, Eastern
16
1
6
4
16.0
TEAMS
19
8
46
3
15.3 GAMES TEAM
PTS. AVG.
California and No. 2 UCLA live Gary Risley, Alexander
Rich White, Alexander
9
18
45
3
15.0 8- Eastern
438 54.8
from Los Angeles, beginning at Greg
Brooks, Alexander
19
4
42
3 14.0 8- Southern
447 55.9
Middleport
992-27""
11 p.m. EST.
Steve Brown, Alexander
10
21
41
3
495 61.9
13.7 8-NorthGallia
20
Pete Kiener, Miller
11
51
4 12.8 8- Kyger Creek
539 67.6
Bruce Steiner, Miller
17
11
45
4
644 71.5
11.3 9- Hannan Trace
9- Southwestern
697 72 .4
TRI-VALLEY SCORLN..G
FT TP G Avg
TEAM
FG
47 153
Chuck Robinson, Fed.-Hocking
53
6
25.5
11
Phil McGraw, Warren Local
31
73
4 18.3
Ernie Driggs, Fed.-Hocking
36
23
78
5
15.6
Hoy Seckinger, Nels.- York
29 30 78 5 15.6
Joe Lark, Belpre
20
18
58
4
14.5
Gary Barber, Vinton County
9
57
4
24
14.3
Jerry Meeley, Belpre
24
46
4
11
11.5
Joe Mitchem, Warren Local
11.4
57
5
11
23
Tom Eddy, Warren Local
10.6
9
53
5
22
Bill Lower, Nelsonville- York
10.4
52
5
26
0

w

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••••••••••••••••••••

SVAC SCORING (TOP 10)
(ALL GAMES)
TEAM
FG

G PLAYER
12- Ciark, NG
14-Eichinger, E,
14-Caldwell, E
14-Brown, KC
13-White, KC
14-5wain, HT
12-Pelfrey, NG
14- Daniels, HT
13-Willford, S
14-Ehman, SW

110

114
95

93
97

92
77
71
61
58

TEAM STATISTICS
Field Goal Percentage
TEAM
FG-A
Athens
307-642
Jackson
335-735
Waverly
364-823
Iron ton
28.:-702
Meigs
229-5'}4
Gallipolis
195 559
Logan
232-708
Wells ton
222-700

78
62

59
58
56
61
40
57
46
34

Pet
.478
.456
.442
.405
.386
.349
.328
.317

FT
58
50
75
71
45
45

35
45
41
57

pts
278
278
265
257
239
229
189
187
163
173

Avg
23.2
19.9
113.9
18.4
18.4
16.3
15.7
13.3
12.5
12.4

FG FT pts
42
198
32
156
37
155
22
138
137
25
29
151
44
124
18
132
35
127
31
99

Avg
24.8
19.5
19.4
17.2
17.1
16.8
15.5
14.7
14.1
12.4

Free Throw Percentaoe
TEAM
FT-A
Pet
Waverly
169-247
.684
Jackson
168-262
.641
Athens
184-289
.637
Gallipolis
151 -238
.634
Logan
167-278
.601
Meigs
Ironton
Wellston

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SVAC ONLY
G PLAYER TEAM
8-Ciark, NG
8-White, KC
8-Brown, KC
8- Eichinger, E
8-Pelfrey, NG
9-Swain, HT
a-Caldwell, E
9-Cremeens, HT
9-Daniels, HT
9-Ehman, SW

DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL.
Exec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily e·xcept
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992 2157 .
, Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National advertising
reoresenta ti ve
BottinelliGallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nt1
St., New York City, New Yo.rk.
Subscript i on
rates :
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available: One
month $1.75. By mail in Ohio
a':"d W. Va ., One year $14.00 .
S1x months $7.25. Three
m~nt~s $4.50. Subscript i on
pnce 1nc ludes Sunday Times •Sentinel.

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GET A FREE TV WITH EVERY NEW
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Local Bowling

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OILERS FOURTH
NEW YORK (UPI) -Findlay
College has moved up to fourth
in the NAIA ratings of college
basketball teams.
The Oilers were sixth last
week in the poll that has been
dominated by Fairmont (W.
Va.) State.
Central State fell a notch to
sixth.

POMEROY

992-2848

.589
.583
.537 . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•

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

7 Greats Make
Grid Fame Hall
CANTON, Ohio (UPI)-Vince
Lombardi, the coach who made
winning a tradition at Green
Bay, and Jim Brown, the
Cleveland fullback who virtually rewrote National Football
League rushing records, were
among the seven new inductees
announced today for the Pro
Football Halll of Fame.
Joining Lombardi and Brown
are defensive end Andy Robustelli, quarterbacks Y .A. Tittle
and Norm VanBrocklin and old
timers Bill Hewitt and Frank
"Bruiser" Kinard.
The seven members inducted
this year by a representative
·from each pro football city and
the president of the Pro Football Writers Association· mark
the largest group selected since
1968 and boosts to 70 the number
of football stars enshrined.
enshrined.
Lombardi, who passed away
on Sept. 3, 1970, gained fame
late in his career but became
virtually synonomous with
coaching dominance during the
1960s. In 1959 he took over a
Green Bay team that finished 110-1 the year before and two
years later guided it to a
division title. Lombardi's
powerful Packer teams won
five NFL titles and two Super
Bowl championships in the next
seven years.
Brown, elected in his first
year of eligibility, was the
premier runner in the NFL for
his nine pro seasons. He led the
league in rushing seven of those
nine years and compiled 12,312
career yards rushing, a figure
that may never be equaled. He
. quit at the height of his career

\

to become a movie actor.
Robustelli, from little Arnold
College in Connecticut, played
14 seasons in the pros with the
Los Angeles Rams and New
York Giants and finished with a
first place team in nine of those
years. He is tied for the NFL
record for fumble recoveries in
• career-22-and was named
Ell League seven times.
Tittle, a 17-year veteran,
made his greatest mark when
traded from the San Francisco
Forty Niners to the Giants.
Never a divisional winner with
the Forty Niners, Tittle won
three with the Giants as an
aging but highly competitive
quarterback.
Van Brocklin, like Robustelli
and Tittle, also gained fame
late in his career, leading the
Philadelphia Eagles to the NFL
title in 1961. He led the league
in passing three times and in
punting twice.
Hewitt, who died in 1947,
joined the Chicago Bears in
1932 after starring at the
University of Michigan and
gained acclaim as one of the
great ends in the league. He
played without a helmet until
the league made him wear one
in 1939.
Kinard joined the Brooklyn
Dodgers out of the University
of Mississippi in 1938 and made
the All League team at tackle
in his first year. He was the
only all league player to switch
to the All American Conference
when that league was begun in
1946 and immediately became
the first player to win honors in
two leagues.

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - AN OFFICIAL OF TilE State Division of
Administration on Aging says elderly Ohioans rank a solution to
their transportation problems above even housing, employment
and nutrition." Mrs. Carol Reynolds, information officer for the
division, presented a survey of 3,500 older citizens in Ohio Wednesday to the Ohio House Committee of Health, Education and
Welfare, which is considering proposed legislation to allow the
elderly to use public school buses.
She said 42 per cent in the survey said they needed transportation facilities to get downtown, see their physicians or
participate in senior citizen groups.
YOUNGSTOWN - APRIL AND MAY WILL be the "target
period" for more campus disruptions this year on Ohio campuses,
a Youngstown State University professor has told state
legislators . Dr. George Overby made the prediction during
testimony before a joint legislative subcommittee holding
hearings here Wednesday on campus unrest and what has been
done to prevent future trouble.
The elementary education professor said he had documented
proof to support his prediction of disruptions this spring, but he
did not elaborate.
CLEVELAND - GARBAGE COLLECTORS, unhappy over
the defeat of an increase in the city income tax, will leave
residents a reminder of their wrath next week - piled up garbage.
Members of the municipal Foreman and Laborers' Union
Local 1099 voted Wednesday to stop work starting Monday "to
protest the vote, the people of Cleveland and everything connected with the city's situation." They said today will be the last
day of work until the city gets "enough money to pay us.''

College Basketball Results
By United Press International
East
LaSalle 74 Loyola (La.) 53
W. Virginia 95 Pitt 91
Fordham 65 Army 60
Syracue 68 Penn St. 64
South
No. Car. St. 71 Maryland 61
Gee Wash 87 Navy 86 (ot)
Louisville 98 Tu lsa 85
Tu lane 93 LSU 86
Georgia Tech 90 Georgia 77
Midwest
Creighton 90 So Ill 78
St. Bona 104 Xavier (0) 77
West
Duquesne 90 Sa n Fran 77

Pro Standings
N BA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
40 18 .690 ...
Philadelphia 35 24 .593 5112
Boston
30 28 .517 10
Buffalo
16 45 .262 25112
Centra I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
32 24 .571 ...
Cincinnati
24 32 .429 8
Atlanta
19 38 .333 13112
Cleveland
11 49 .183 23
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
45 10 .818 ...
Detroit
36 20 .643 9112
Chicago
34 22 .607 11 112
Phoenix
34 23 .596 12
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 32 22 .593
San Francisco 31 26 .544 2112
Seattle
26 31 .456 7112
San Diego
24 36 .400 11
Portland
18 39 .316 15'12
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 124 Baltimore 102
Seattle 98 Cleveland 95
Cincinnati 134 Boston 115
Milwaukee 108 San Diego 101
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
San Francisco at Phoenix
Atlanta at Portland
(Only games scheduled)

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
38 18 .679 ...
Kentucky
31 25 .554 7
New York
25 30 .455 12112
Carolina
25 33 .431 14
Pittsburgh
24 33 .421 1412
Floridians
23 36 .390 16'12
West
W. L. Pet. GB
36 18 .667
Utah
Indiana
35 19 .648
Memphis
34 25 .576 4'12
Denver
19 36 .345 17'12
Texas
19 36 .345 17'12
Wednesday's Results
Memphis 118 Carolina 109
New York 104 Floridians 100
Texas 127 Denver 119
Utah 120 Indiana 111
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Pi llsburgh vs. Indiana
at Kentucky
New York at Kentucky
Virginia vs . Floridians
at West Palm Beach, Fla.
(Only games scheduled)

_
NHL Standmgs
By United Press International
East
W. l. T. Pts
36 8 6 78
Boston
30 II 10 70
New York
23 16 II 57
Montreal
24 24 3 51
Toronto
13 26 10 36
Buffalo
Detroit
14 28 8 36
Vancouver
15 31 5 35
West
W. l. T . Pts
Chicago
34 11 6 78
St. Louis
21 15 13 55
Philadelphia
19 22 9 47
Minnesota
18 22 11 47
Pi llsburgh
17 22 12 46
Los Angeles
14 24 11 39
Cat ifornia
15 33 3 33
Wednesday's Results
Toronto 6 St. Louis 2
Chicago 4 New York 2
Boston 7 Los Angeles 3
Minnesota 4 Detroit 4
Pittsburgh 6 California 1
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
New York a I Detroi I
Los Angeles at Buffalo
Chicago at Philadelphia
(Only games scheduled)

AHL Standmgs
By United Press International
East
W.- l. T. Pts
20 19 8 48
Quebec
17 22 8 42
Montrea l
18 23 5 41
Springfield
15 21 9 39
Providen.:e
West
W. L. T. Pts
Baltimore
27 12 5 59
Cleveland
23 17 5 51
Rochester
18 21 7 43
Hershey
17 20 7 41
Wednesday's Results
Quebec 4 Montreal 2
(Only game scheduled)
PATRIOTS' ACQUISITION
Thursday's Games
BOSTON (UPI) -The Boston Springfield at Quebec
Patriots Wednesday acquired (Only game scheduled)
offensive guard Jim Schmedding from the San Diego
Chargers for an undisclosed
1972 draft choice.

Heredity and Environment Intermingle .
By Deborah M. Conklin
Ext. Agent, Home Econ.
Once there was a little boy
who, when he showed his bad
report card to his father said,
"What you see on the card, Dad,
is because of heredity or environment.''
This story brings up the
question you hear many times.
Which is more important,
heredity or environment?
Which plays a larger part in a
person's life, the things that
come down from his ancestors
or the things around him that
affect him as he grows up?
Some people give all the credit
- or blame - to heredity.
Others hold that environment
shapes the man.
Most traits or characteristics·
such as intelligence or personality are a result of interaction between heredity and
environment. You cannot
separate heredity from en-

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

By United Press International
A couple of Vans ran over the
Boston Celtics Wednesday
night.
Tom Van Arsdale scored 34
points and Norm Van Lier
added 32 as the Cincinnati
Royals rolled over Boston, 134115, to enhance their chances
for a berth in the National
Basketball Association playoffs.
In other NBE action Chicago
beat Baltimore, 124-102, Seattle
edged Cleveland, 98-95, and
Milwaukee topped San Diego,
108-101.
Cincinnati opened a 4lh-game
bulge over third-place Atlanta

By United Press International
Ohio University's home court
magic continues to stun the opponents.
The Bobcats, now 11-4 on the
season, have won 25 straight
home games, the latest Wednesday night, against Marshall, 8780.
OU shot 56.4 per cent from
the field and hit on 25 of 32
charity shots as Marshall lost
three players to fouls.
Bob Howell tallied 26 gamehigh points for the Cats and
teammate Ken Kowall added

23.
In other contests, Capital
kept on top of the Ohio Conference by sweating through a 7472 win over Marietta.
Mike Stumpf led the Capital
attack with 30 points as Cap
caught its ninth OC win in a
14-2 overall season. Marietta,
led by Gary Popplewell's 17points, is now 14-5 and 5-3.
Miami won its fifth MidAmerican Conference game
against one loss by downing
Toledo 64-49. The Redskins are
now 12-4 overall. Toledo is 11-6
and 2-3.
Ashland Wins 16th
Ashland, the eighth-ranked
small college power in the
country, thumped Calvin
(Mich.) 52-40, giving the Eagles
their 16th win against two losses .
Ashland, which has held opposing teams to an average of

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BEN~FRAN KLIN~

PHONE
992-3498

There are still a great many
hereditary conditions for which
there are no remedies, at least
not yet. There are also many
environmental conditions for
which there are not remedies,
yet.
Many babies are born every
year who are defective in body
or mind. Some defects are due
to poor heredity, "birth ac-

in the Central Division as the
Royals rallied from a nine-point
deficit early in the second
quarter to down Boston. John
Havlicek's 28 points was high
for the Celtics, who dropped 41;2
games back of idle second-place
Philadelphia in the Atlantic
Division.
Chicago stalled briefly in its
game with Baltimore. Bob Love
then scored 13 of his game-high
35 points in the second session
to start the runaway over the
Central Division-leading Bullets.
It was the first Chicago victory
in Baltimore in three seasons .
Earl Monroe led the Bullets

with 19 points.
Four foul shots in the final 34
seconds by player-&lt;:oach Lenny
Wilkens enabled Seattle to beat
Cleveland. Wilkens scored a
game-high 30 points and Dick
Snyder added 28 for the Sonics.
Bobby Smith's 25 points and
Walt Wesley's 24 kept the
Cavaliers in contention.
Lew Alcindor scored 25 points
to lead Milwaukee over San
Diego, the Rockets' sixth
straight loss.
Jon McGlocklin had 21 points
for Milwaukee while Elvin
Hayes poured in 41 in a losing
effort.

DEBORAH CONKLIN
respected citizen. It may be
poorer; it may be as good; it
may even be better. You can't
decide what a child's heredity is
just from what you know about
his parents ' good and bad
habits.
Breckenridge and Vincent in
their book, Child Development,
sums it up for us:
" While we never inherit
criminality as a full-fledged
behavior pattern, life patterns
are set by heredity that help to
determine whether behavior
will be 'social' or 'anti-social.'
Some people become criminals
not because of a particularly
bad environment, but because
of internal instabilities that
prevent them from making a
satisfactory adjustment to the
requirements of life. Most
criminality, however, is thought
to be environmentally determined."

tt-

It

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Reg. $11.77 Mattei Super Cartoon Maker Set
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Specia I $5.99
ALL MATTEL TOG'l TOYS MARKED DOWN
MANY OTHER SPECIALS NOT MENTIONED HERE

BAKER

If your figure is not what you
wish it to be, well-selected
clothing will improve your
appearance. Hair curl and body
build and many other traits
may be due to heredity. But just
because they're inherited
doesn't mean they are final,
unchangeable traits.

cidents," and poor envtronment
before birth.
The science of genetics , or
heredity, is still new, and many
questions are unsettled . But
there is one principle that we
are sure of: a child cannot
inherit any trait the parent has
acquired during the parent's
lifetime.
The appealing idea that
parents can pass their accomplishments directly on to
their children is false. In other
words, parents can't improve
the heredity of their children,
much as they might like to.
Compare Gail with Mary .
Gail's parents are both college
graduates and Mary 's parents
never learned to read. Does this
mean that Gail has an advantage over Mary when it
comes to learning her school
subjects? Mary may be as
bright as or brighter than Gail.
The parent's education has no
effect on the genes passed on to
the child.
It is true, however, that
educated parents present a
better environment for their
child and this will have an effect
on the child's learning process.
Gail's parents probably will
have more ability to provide a
good educational surrounding,
and therefore, Gail may be
" brighter," but not because of
inherited traits.
This principle , that acquired
characteristics cannot be
passed on through heredity,
works both ways. The child will
not inherit his parents'
achievements. Neither will he
inherit their failures.
The child of a thief or an
alcoholic or a murderer will not
necessarily have a poorer
heredity than the child of a
0

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FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

wave.
If you are born with a tendency to have astigmatism and
nearsightedness, you can
correct this defect with glasses.

Royals Dump Celtics

SPECIAL SALE ON MATTEL TOYS

Preserved Foods
A Paris confectioner,
Nicolas Appert, discovered
how to preserve foods in
1809, using glass bottles
immersed in boiling water,
to win a governm e nt prize
of 12,000 francs.

viromnenl in most cases. So
environment is never allimportant, no matter what trait
you consider. Neither is
heredity all-important. There is
a tendency to think that if a trait
is hereditary (inherited) there's
nothing you can do about it.
That isn't so!
There's often a great deal you
can do to offset an unsatisfactory trait that you may
have inherited from Grandmother Jane or from GreatGrandfather
Jonathan.
Remember that all you have
inherited are genes. The effect
of these genes may often be
changed in the environment.
• Heredity produces in persons
tendencies to react in certain
ways. In many cases it does not
produce final results. Let's take
a few examples.
Suppose you're born with
straight hair and you don't like
it. You can get a permanent

202 East Main St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEH FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TJL·9

43 points per game, reeled off
12 straight points to lead most
of the way.
In other games, Thiel (Pa.)
downed Case Tech, 72-60; Carnegie-Mellon beat Western Reserve 68-62; St. Joseph 's (Pa.)
whipped Bowling Green 86-71;
Akron downed Baldwin-Wallace
91-81; St. Bonaventure swept
past Xavier 104-77; Youngstown
State defeated Cleveland State
79-65; Wittenberg beat Ohio
Wesleyan 89-74.
Findlay downed Defiance 8172 and Western New England
pushed by Steubenville 88-82 in
other results.
Billy Johnson scored 21
points, pushing his career mark
to 1,022, as Youngstown State
got its 14th, win in 18 outings.
Johns~m is now the eighth highest scorer in school history.
Akron Triumphs
Akron got its 13th win in 16
games as Lem Paul tossed in
35 points. Baldwin-Wallace scored 24 for Baldwin-Wallace, now
5-13.
Larry Baker recorded 29
points and Jim Thrasher added
28 as Wittenberg got its sixth
Ohio Conference win in eight
starts and 11th overall win in
16. Jackie Brown scored 32

points for Ohio Wesleyan, now
1-7 and 7-10.
Greg Gary tossed in 28 points
and Paul Hoffman 25 as St.
Bonaventure handed Xavier its
lOth loss in 17 season starts.
Marty Arft scored 2ti points
for Findlay as the Oilers increased their Ohio Conference
mark to 5-l. It was their 16th
overall win in 18 games. Defiance is 12-6 and 3-4.
Steubenville trailed the entire
second half enroute to its eighth
loss in 18 games. Bowling
Green never led at all in its
game with St. Joseph's, losing
its 11th against four wins.

•
BULOVA
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and sensible
gift

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full collection of Bulova gift watches today.

Laundry &amp;
Dry Cleaning

HOME LAUNDRY
2nd Ave.

Middleport

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Court St.

oat
below!
Untapped pockets of clean natural gas lie miles
beneath the surface of the earth. And we mean to
reach them.
We listen to the earth's heartbeat
deep underground in the Appalachian area and our sophisticated
prospecting instruments guide us
to potential deposits of natural gas.
So we're tooling up to drill further
down than we've ever gone before.
:=_ Wildcat exploration is expensive and the chances of finding gas
in commercial quantities are one
out of nine . But the rewards in
more clean, modern natural gas for
heating an d cooling, cooking,
clothes drying, water heating and
industrial uses will be well worth
it. Drilling deeper in America's
original natural gas land is just one
of the ways we will meet your everincreasing need for valuable
natural gas.
Gas is right there.

Pomeroy

Gas Company Drills
to Record Depths in
Appalachian Area
MARBLE CLIFF, OHIO
(CGS)-Drilling for gas is
like planning military strategy:
all you have to go on is a calculated guess.
But Columbia Gas System
geologists have a better-thanaverage calculated guess of
where vast, rich gas deposits
are located. They've zeroed-in
on the Appalachian Basin area
-a prime source of natun•l
gas and the second largest geological basin in the United
States.
New drilling equipment and
mature drilling experience in
this area justify Columbia's
efforts.
Improved rotary drilling
methods cut into the earth
three times faster than before.
And improved drill bits are
now tougher than ever. Rotary drills also go deeper than
the familiar cable rigs.
Geological findings also
play an important part in pinning down an exact location.
The results of geophysical surveys, using seismic shock
waves, earth's gravity and
magnetic intensity, help to describe the underground structure of the earth.
Despite all the technological
advances, exploration for natural gas remains a high-risk
business. For example, the
chances of hitting a successful
wildcat well are one out of
nine. The other eight wells are
either dry holes or not commercially productive. Presently, Columbia Gas is activating several deep-drilling
operations in the Appalachian
area. These test wells will contribute to our geologica l
knowled~e of the hasin. which
presently accounh for 12r;,
of Columbi a's suprly.

•

•

�Fun Tin1e Shows Feb. 13-21

•

Boats, Recreational Vehicles,
Travel, Sporting Equipment,
and Stage Entertainment.
Combine these and you have
The Columbus Sports, Vacation
and Travel Show.
Sponsored by Dispatch
Charities and produced by Hart
Productions of Cincinnati, the
show will be open Feb. 13
through 21 at the Coliseum and
adjoining exhibit pavilion at the
Ohio Expositions Center.
The Sports Show, in its sixth
year, has become a tradition in.
Central Ohio, to the delight of
sports- and vacation-minded
residents.
Representative'S from 12

the Penn Central Railroad.
Tillinghast, President Edward E . Carlson of United
A GROUP OF MEIGS Countians chat with Astronaut John Glenn at a recent reception held
Airlines and President Stuart G.
.in Columbus. They are, from the left, Beverly Price, Agnes Brown, James Bailey and Mrs.
Tipton of the Air Transport
James Bailey.
Association of America all said
the CAB is doing nothing to
help.
They said Nixon's CAB has
generally refused to grant fare
increases, while at the same
WASIDNGTON (UPI - The
"Competition has been en- danger of financial collapse" in time forcing airlines into costly
nation's airline industry, shrined as a goal in its own the air industry and said "wasteful competition" by
reeling under sudden heavy right," said Charles C. Congress does not intend to "sit approving more and more
losses, has told Congress there Tillinghast Jr., board chairman back idly and just wait" for. routes for both scheduled and
is nothing wrong with the of Trans World Airlines, "and disaster to strike as it did with chartered flights.
airlines that a little less has become so destructive that
government won't cure.
the needs of the nation are
In testimony to a Senate seriously in jeopardy ....
aviation subcommittee this
Though neither Tillinghast
week, airline officials blamed nor the other two witnesses at
the Civil Aeronautics Board the opening day of hearings into
(CAB) for driving the industry the financial headaches of the
from a combined $428 million air industry forecast imminent
profit in 1966 to a $175 million bankruptcy for any air carrier,
loss in 1970.
they did predict that combined
And unless strict CAB con- losses could top $300 million this
trols are promptly relaxed, they year unless there is an
said, losses could keep building economic upturn coupled with a
to the point where sinking policy shift.
airlines may have to look to
But Sen. Vance Hartke, DCongress to bail them out.
Ind., said there was "grave

' Airlines Ask Freedom
•

•

r---------------------------1
I

•
•
I'

The show will also feature the
first Central Ohio showing of
1971 recreational vehicles and
boats. Visitors can examine
closely many models of trailers,
campers and the increasingly
popular motor homes; canoes,
runabouts, cruisers, sailboats

VISITED PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clay
(Patricia Gaul) of Ypsilanti ,
Mich., spent several days here
visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J . M. Gaul and Vickie,
Chester. Both are students at
the University of Eastern
Michigan and are currently
between semesters.

The highest mountain in
South America is Aconcagua, a
22,834-foot peak in western
Argentina.

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young
people, their problems and
pleasures , their troubles and
fun. As with the rest of Helen
Help Us!, it welcomes laughs
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.
MUST SHE OR
MUSN'T SHE?
Dear Helen:
You asked your teen readers
if a girl "has to" be an easy
make if she wants to make it
with the "in" crowd - this after
a mother said her 16-year-old
daughter was
unpopular
because she was a "good girl."
I'm a male sophomore and
speak for a lot of us. I personally enjoy a girl more if she
is free and relaxed, not free and
easy - just being h.erself and
not trying to make it. I take her
out to enjoy her company. If she
feels she "has to" just to buy
another date, we'd both be
short-changed.
If this girl and her mother
think teenage girls can't be
popular unless they give in,
they'd better take another look
at themselves -and the world.
- NOT A BAD GUY
Dear Helen:
To that mother who blames
her daughter's unpopularity on
not putting out. Baloney! As you
said, Helen, if a girl makes a
federal case out of being good,"
she'll turn the guys off because
nobody likes a girl who comes
on with "I'm 99.44 percent
pure."
Or ... if she's constantly asked
out by the "handy" men, maybe
it's because she is a tease. Boys
don 't like that kind either. What
you promise by your actions,
they expect you to give.
Or .... maybe she has a bad
personality, so she doesn't get
asked twice because she's a
bore .... Or scared of males, and
shows it. (Her mother's fault?)
Believe me, it isn't for sex
reasons unless she's chosen the
wild crowd, and I wouldn't call
them "in."
I know. I've been dating since
ninth grade. I'm only fair
looking, no great figure, but I've
never been dumped by a boy
after one date. Maybe I've
decided not to date him again, if
his ideas are different from
mine, but there are always

Dear Helen:
It's all relative. If a girl
trades herself in piece by piece
for popularity, she'll end up
feeling used and empty and
probably discarded. But if she
truly loves the guy - and is
mature enough to know what
love is - nobody looks down on
her, though if she feels guilty,
she'll hate herself. And if she
gets in trouble, they may one or
both decide it wasn't love after
all. - NOT CONDEMNING,
NOT PARTAKING

DON'T BE FAT
MONADEX will help you lose weight. MONAD EX is a tiny tablet
and easily swallowed. Start losing weight now. Contains no
dangerous drugs and does not make you nervous. MONADEX
reduces your desire for excess food. Helps you eat less- so you
weigh less. For your health' s sake - get rid of excess fat. You
must lose ugly fat or your money will be refunded by yo~r
druggist with no questions asked. MONADEX costs $3.00 and IS
sold with this guarantee by: Swishv &amp; Lohse- Pomeroy &amp; Dutton
Drug Store- Middleport . Mail Orders Filled.

THE SPORTABLES
Advance Spring event. Leading shoe
fashion footnotes for a woman's

THE WET LOOK.

wardrobe.

Brown or
Black

A and B Width

I

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SET LOTION

others who accept my standards and even like them. NOT YET

21.

foYJP:;}

BRAND rtAMES

1

Dear Helen:
It makes me furious when I
read, "My baby is a good girl,
so she doesn't get asked out"
from others. She doesn't have to
if she doesn't want to- and she
will still be popular if she isn't a
dud. It's girls.' choice. ENGAGED AND WAITING
Dear Helen:
That girl who thinks she " has
to" should try dating older guys
who aren't so demanding. I've
found it's the kids my age (1516) who have nothing but sex on
their minds. Older fellas value a
girl for what she is not what she
does.- P.T.
Dear Helen:
A girl who thinks she has to
put out to get a date is so
desperate she probably will and then she 'II discover she
doesn't keep him anyway
because he can find other girls
who really enjoy it. - A GUY
Dear Helen:
Let's be honest and say that
"Yes, nowadays if a girl is over
18 - maybe even younger - a
kiss doesn't end the evening, it
begins the night."
To many "liberated" girls
have spoiled it for those of us
who aren't yet ready. I can't get
romantic about every guy I
date, but he seems to think that
if I don't make all signals "go"
I'm a cold one and not worth
bothering with.
Seems to me women have
emancipated themselves into
slavery. By being "equal,"
they're forced to act like sex
machines. And the more they
give, the less likely it is that
marriage will survive as an
institution.
Speak up, girls, and unite
before it's too late.- READER
FROM WEEHAWKEN, AGE

ea~-j0fd9

SAVINGS oN

I

By Helen Bottel

adults, $.75 for children 13 or
under. Tickets are available
only at the door.

OLD SPICE

iHelen Help Us I
I

and houseboats. The exhibit
pavilion will be an outdoorsman 's dream, packed with
luxurious outdoor equipment.
Trained personnel will again be
available to help interested
visitors.
The Sports Show is for all
ages with diverse activities,
including fishing for trout,
miniature golf , basketball,
archery, slot car racing, casting
lessons and target shooting.
The evening and weekend
matinee stage shows will
feature unusu~l entertainment.
For instance, there will be
Victor the Wrestling Bear, who
loves to flip people and sit on
them. His owner, Tuffy
Truesdell, will act as referee
while adventuresome visitors
try their hand at westling this
Canadian Black Bear.
The hour-long stage performances will also feature:
Former World Heavyweight
Boxing Champion Jack Sharkey
who will display his expertise at
fly casting; the Dam Brothers
balancing act; Willie Necker
and his retrieving dogs and
Johnny Luxem thrilling the
audiences with his giant wheel.
Johnny Matson will return as
Master of Ceremonies.
The show will be open from 6
p.m. to 11 p.m. on weekdays and
from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. on
weekends. On closing day,

states, Canada and many
resorts will fill the Coliseum
with colorful displays and
mountains of brochures .
Visitors may take the information home for later
browsing, or they may plan
their vacations with the trained
personnel on hand at each
travel exhibit.

Sunday, Feb. 21, the doors will
be open from 1 p.m . to 7 p.m.
Price of admission is $1.75 for

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 4, 1971

~~~i~'i@!%W~Th'Th\10!1%T'iil%WW%il!JWHJtHHI'If1HKilMIWHl\iii!IMMhi

Appalachia Book Reviewed

1
...·'•..

...

•

'I

"The Longest Mile", Renz
Gazaway's graphic description
of Appalachia and the life of
deprivation and isolation that it
holds, was reviewed by Mrs.
Marion French at a meeting of
the Middleport Literary Club
Wednesday afternoon at the
home of Mrs. Larry Spencer.
Mrs. French prefaced her
review with comments on the
background of the author who
lived with a family in the
Kentucky mountains while
collecting material for her

book. Miss Gazaway in her book
gives vivid descriptions of the
Branch, a creek, in the milelong hollow where the story is
set and of its use for water, as a
recepticale for trash, and as the
only method of getting in and
out of the "pocket of poverty".
In her review, Mrs . French
told of the people whose lives, as
Miss Gazaway describes them,
were bounded by a lack of
necessities and of their struggle
to get necessary food, have
adequate housing, and secure

some income. She described the
welfare program as contributing to the aimless future
of the people .
Following the review, 12
members responded to roll call
with a comment on Appalachia.
Mrs. Richard Owen presided at
the meeting which opened with
the club collect. Candy was
served by the hostess.

Ladies Conduct

A silent auction was announced by the ways and means
committee for the Feb. 16
meeting when Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, met
Tuesday night at the hall.
Mrs. Jean Summerfield,
councilor, had charge of the
meeting attended by 28
members . Reported ill were
Mrs. Dorothy Myers and Mrs.
Lucille Kraeutter. A meeting of
the past councilors was an~:::;:~:::::::$*!:::~::::::::::::::~::::::::::~=~~=:::~~:~~~::::::::::~~::::::::~::;~::::::::::::::::::;:~~~~::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::~:.::::;:::;:~::;:~:.
nounced for Feb. 10 at the home
of Mrs. Letha Wood. Each
member is to take a valentine.
Games were conducted at the
close of the meeting by the good
of the order committee.
Attending were Mrs. Thelma
White, Mrs. Esther Ridenour,
Mrs. Zona Biggs, Mrs. Mae
Spencer, Mrs. Elizabeth
Wickham, Mrs. Betty Roush,
Mrs. Goldie Fredericks, Mrs.
Helen Wolf, Mrs. Barbara
Sargent, Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs.
Hattie Frederick, Mrs. Sadie
Trussell, Mrs. Ferne Showalter,
1
Mrs. Ada Neutzling, Mrs. Mary
K.
Holter,
Mrs.
Mary
4-Piece
Showalter, Mrs. Zelda Weber,
~~
re Mrs . Ada Van Meter, Mrs.
Ethel Orr, Mrs. Margaret
i!J, - 2-Piece Wash &amp; Wear Suits
/JjJ1
Tuttle, Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs.
Aaa Morris, Mrs. Elaine Hart,
Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler, Mrs.
Denim Washable Suits
Mary Hayes, Mrs. Inzy Newell
and Mrs. Erma Cleland.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High School students named to
the honor roll at the close of the
third six weeks grading period
were named today. Making a
grade of "B" or above to be
named to the roll were:
Eighth Grade: Rhonda Ash,
Hope Bird, Jeff Circle,
Stephanie Ord, all A's; Dan
Huston, Ellis McMillan, Mitch

Nease, Paul Simpson, all A's;
Vicki Wolfe, all A's, and Helen
Wilcoxen.
Seventh Grade: Bill Bush,
Keith Circle, Paul Cross, Becky
Sayre, all four all A's, Molly
Fisher, Kim Jerrell, Tim
Jenkins, Cheryl Larkins, Steve
Nease, Sandra Norris, Rhonda
West, Bob Roush.

lcome see our brighd

I

I

young

I !~;~f.?~;
1-

I

s~~=:i: :eve~ible

f

II

I~~:~:~:

~

~-Glen c;~;;e~l :;:~o

~

r:

The KIDDIE SHOPPE

1::11:

L~~:!~:::~-"-,~~::~~=.:J
FOREMAN
ABBOTT

Loss Easily Regained
Camels can lose up to 25
per cent of their weight by
dehydration without ill effects and regain their loss in
10 minutes by drinking up to
25 gallons of water.

White Sale

We have just recently taken the Westinghouse Franchise and now are
offering introductory prices on all Westinghouse.

Famous Westinghouse
• Heavy Duty-16 Pound Capacity

• Two Speed Permanent Press

$
Top Load

Westinghouse Washing Flexibility
Stack Pair

Front Load

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
Cornish h e n s with an
herbed mushroom stuffing
make an attractive meal
that takes little time to prepare. It's an ideal dish for a
new bride to add to her beginning repertoire since little
(hopefully) can go wrong.
Remember, if the hens are
frozen, thaw completely and
remove whatever is stuffed
into the cavity. Many a new
cook gets a red face when .,.
she presents an undercooked
Cornish hen with giblets in
wrappings still intact inside.
CORNISH HENS WITH
HERBED, MUSHROOM
STUFFING
1
~ pound fresh mushrooms
or 1 can (3 to 4 oz.)
sliced mushrooms
4 tablespoons butter or
margarine, divided
3 tablespoons parsley
flakes
2 tablespoons instant
minced onion
1 teaspoon salt
I teaspoon poultry
seasoning
% teaspoon ground black
pepper
4 ready-to-cook Cornish
hens
Salt
Ground white pepper

Meigs

WASHER
and
DRYER
ONLY

Property
Transfers
Everette W. Holcomb, Vera
Holcomb to Ohio Power Co.,
eastement, Columbia.
Helen W. Turner, Glenn
Turner to Ohio Power Co.,
easement. Columbia.
Hal B. Harmon to Ohio Power
Co., easement, Columbia.
Clyde E. Hampton, Erma
Janice Hampton to Ohio Power
Co., 27 acres coal, Salem.
Madge L. Oiler, Grada C.
Oiler, to Ohio Power Co., 36
acres, coal, Salem.
William H. Francis, dec., to
Kathleen Francis, William E.
Francis, Kathy Jean Francies,
cert. of Trans., Syracuse.
Lelah Mora to Norman W.
Mora, parcel, Chester.
Lelah Mora to Ora Pauline
Myers, Mary Virginia Kautz,
Martha Theodora Mora, Betty
Jane Russell, parcel, Chester.
William E. Francis to
Kathleen Francis, parcels,
Syracuse, Sutton.
Edna Bradford Deem, G. A.
Deem to Kermit Fisher,
Delores Jeane Fisher, 3.75
acres, Lebanon.
Con R. Young, dec., to Laura
A. Young, Cert. for Trans.,
Middleport.
Estella M. Mourn to Homer
G. Mourn, parcels, Orange.
Doris A. Koenig to Ohio Fuel
Gas, right of way, Chester.
Paul R. Karr, Ruth Karr,
Charles F. Sayre, Paula J.
Sayre to Ohio Fuel Gas Co.,
right of way, Chester.

Stacks In Just 27"

• Save Water

R inse , pat dry and slice
fresh mushrooms (makes
about Il/4 cups) or drain
canned mushrooms. Heat 2
tablespoons butter in a skillet. Add mushrooms and
saute until golden. In a large
bowl combine parsley flakes,
minced onion, salt, poultry
seasoning and black pepper.
Stir in sauteed mushrooms.
Rub c a viti e s and skin of
hens with salt and white pep-

J

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Harry W.
Downard, Rt. 4, Jackson, a son.
Discharges
Kimberly D. Basham, Ronald
E. Bostic, Mrs. John E. Burns,
Dallas L. Collingswood, L.
Aaro·n Cruise, William T. Cyrus,
Richard Dow, Kathy L. Edwards, John R. Fellure ,
Kathryn L. Grose, Mrs. Luster
W. Hale, Beverly Ha:Tison ,
Arthur H. Hess, Mrs. Rotert H.
Kearns, Mrs. Charles G. McComas, Harley McCulty, Mrs.
Winnie M. Meadows, Walter D.
Miller, Carl H. Murray, Jr.,
Marcella L. Nunn, Mrs. Jack
Dean Parks and infant
daughter,
Lawrence
F.
Roberts, Mrs. Floyd M. Sams,
Jr. and infant daughter, Mrs.
Robert L. Schaeffing, John L.
Thacker, Mrs. Iva L. Thomas,
Mrs . Gratho Ward, Gaylord I.
Woomer , Mrs. Michael Hardway and Robert Tilton.

Eastern Local

Mrs. Oscar Babcock of
Tuppers Plains spent the
weekend with her sister, Mrs.
Leota Massar.
Sunday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman McCain were Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Deeter, Long
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell and Shiela and Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Cleland, Chester;
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hall,
daughter Marilyn, Barberton;
Virginia's motto is "Sic Mrs. Nora Damewood, Akron;
Semper Tyrannis," or "Thus Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will and
Duane, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
Always To Tyrants."
Vernon Cleland, Columbus;
Mrs.
Herbert
Parker,
LEGAL NOTICE
Syracuse; Mrs. Cecil Caldwell,
Mrs. Edna Summerfield and
STATE OF OHIO
COUNTY OF MEI G S
Mrs. Leota Massar, local.
BOARD OF COUNTY
Calling on Mrs. Mary Reed
COMMISSIONER S
NOTICE {)F OPPORTUNITY
Sunday afternoon were Mrs.
FOR HEA R IN G
Cecil Caldwell, Mrs. Herbert
POMEROY, OHIO,
JANUARY 26, 1971
Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Pursuant to Section 128, Title
23 of the United States Code. the Will and Duane, and Mrs .
Board
of
County
Com- Reed's sister, Mrs . Nora
missioners in Meigs County,
Ohio is offering lhe opportunity Damewood of Akron.
for hearing arguments for and
Bruce Conde has been a
against the proposed toea t ion
and design of County Road No. patient in the Children's
20
Hospital at Columbus several
And
being
more
fu l ly
weeks following heart surgery.
described as fol lows:

( 1) 28 (2) 4, 2tc

• Save Detergent

Herbed mushroom stuffing heightens Cornish hen
dish.

( HOSPITAL NEWS

IMPROVEMENT OF MEIGS
COUNTY ROAD NO . 20:
Beg inning 1.5 m il e, more or
less, north of State Route U.S. 33
and continuing northerly along
the existing County Road 20 for
a distance of 0.1 mile. more or
less and there end . The improvement consists of the
construclion of a bridge over
the East Branch of Thomas
Fork Creek and the construction of the necessary
approaches.
Any person or organization
desiring a hearing on this
project must submit a written
request to the Meigs County
Board
of
Comm i ssioners ,
Courthouse , Pomeroy, Ohio .
The f in al date for submission of
requests will be February 18,
1971.
Robert Clark
Ra l ph W. Ours
BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MEIGS COUNTY

Heavy Duty

Articles Made for Shut-ins

51 Corn ish Hens, Taste Treats

Silent Auction

Junior High Honor Roll is Announced

Food for Americans

Wifdin:
__
~~PECIALISTS g
CERTIFIED WELDER

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Portable Equipment

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Chase Hardware

Shop vr Field
Ph. 992-2511

Locust St.

Middleport

Valentines and house slippers
for the shut-ins of the community were made at Tuesday's
session of the Helping Hands
Missionary Circle of the
Bradford Church of Christ.
It was reported during the
meeting that a quilt, sheets and
pillowcases had been provided
for two needy families. Plans
were made to purchase
medicine for the first aid
cabinet which was installed at
the church. Remainder of the
day was spent quilting.
Mrs. Frances Hysell gave
devotions using scripture from
Luke 11:9-13, and a meditation
GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, will meet at 7:30 p.
m. Thursday, Feb. 11, at the
home of Mrs. Elizabeth Roush.
Mrs. Roush resides next door to
the grange hall. P otluck
refreshments will be served.

entitled " Praying with Confidence." Officers reports were •
presented. A potluck dinner. was_
held at noon. Taking part in the
day's activities besides those
named were Mrs. Madeline
Painter, Mrs. Evelyn Wood and
Lora Jane, Mrs. Delores Hawk,
Mrs. Mary Bowles, Mrs. Verna
Hysell, Mrs. Eleanor Hoover,
Mrs. Tressie Hendricks, Mrs.
Jackie Reed and Mrs. Mildred. ,
Sisson.

SHIRT
FI,NISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use'Our Free Parking

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

per. Lightly fill cavities
with stuffing. Close with
small skewers or toothpicks.
Fold wings back and under.
Brush skin of each hen with
rem a in i n g 2 tablespoons
melted butter. Place hens on
rack in shallow baking pan.
Roast, uncovered, in a preheated 350-degree oven for 1
hour or until done. Makes 4
portions.

Charles McCarty
Died on Tuesday
APPLE GROVE, W. Va. Charles Elza McCarty , 89,
Columbus, formerly of Apple
Grove, W. Va., died Tuesday
at 1 p.m . at Alum Crest Nursing
Home in Columbus. Mr. McCarty was born Feb: 20, 1882, in
Meigs County, a son of the late
George and Martha Folden
McCarty. He was a retired
farmer. His wife, Gusta McCarty died Dec. 16, 1963 and a
daughter, Mrs. Gertrude
Smallwood in June 1970.
Surviving
are
three
daughters, Mrs. Ruth Wears,
Lancaster; Mrs. Gale McCaffrey and Mrs. Florence
Myers, both Columbus; a son,
Gilbert McCarty, Marysville; a
sister, Mrs. Myrtle Chapman,
Pleasan tville;
10 grandchildren,
three
stepgrandchildren and 11 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted today at 3 p.m. in the
Beale United Methodist Chapel
at Apple Grove with burial to
follow in the church cemetery.

Alfred
Social IVotes
Sunday School attendance on
Jan. 31 was 49, the offering
$22. Perfect attendance pins
and bars were awarded to the
following: 7th year bar to Vicki
Carr; Sth year bar to Kathy
Dillinger; and 1st year pin to
Howard Flanders.
Worship services were held at
11 a.m. with the Rev. Lavender
speaking from John 12:20-36.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
and family of Marietta, 0.,
visited her mother, Mrs. Nina
Robinson and aunt, Clara
Follrod, Sunday afternoon, and
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Swartz.
Other visitors in the FollrodRobinson home Sunday were
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robinson
and family of Belpre, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker
and Eddie visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Michael
Sunday afternoon.

VALENTINE'S DAY IS SUNDAY,
FEB. 14TH

A RED

FOIL HEARTS assorted chocolates •• 51;2 oz. $ 1.00

B RED

FOIL HEARTS chocolotes and butter bons

. . . . . . . . • • • 1 lb. $2.45

......... 1%

CASSOP.1 ED

lbs . $4.15

CHOCOLATES . • . . . • . . 1 lb. box $1.95
. • . . . • • 2 lb . box $3 .85

Also Good Selection of
Whitman's Valentine Candy

•

Textiles, tobacco items and
furniture
are the main
products . ._ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _....
of
North Carolina
.

- ....,

NOW
20%
OFF
ALL HEATING STOVES
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY!
WARM MORNING -

GAS AND COA

COLEMAN AND PERFECTION
OIL HEAliNG STOVES

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
992-2811

Lot

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

POMEROY

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 4, 1971

•

,:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:~

I

~

I-

III PersonaJity

I

I ~~~~f~:J~~~~::E
•

I/1 /1~1/ ~~~;~~~;~r.:~~:i;l~~~:::~~~~

firms just that.
Joanna describes her duties as
varied, ranging from promoting
total electric living through group
and individual discussions to actual
cooking demonstrations for adults
and young people.
Of her work with young people,
she says it usually turns out to be a
"learning experience for me." She is
impressed with what she defines as
their " honest view of life, not only in
word but in action."
Off the job, Joanna's chief interests are reading and sewing. But
presently she is involved in apartment redecoration, having completed new drapes, and now trying
her hand at a slipcover -her first .
Before joining C&amp;SOE Joanna

•

worked as home economist for the
Kentucky Utilities Co. at Maysville
and prior to that taught in the
Houston High School at Houston,
Ohio, and the Nicholas County
School at Carlisle, Ky. She is a
graduate of Eastern Kentucky
University.
A native of Kentucky, Joanna
for the past year and a half has
resided in Middleport. She comes

•
•

¥,,,

Mrs. Ivan Wood antl Mrs.
Painter served refreshments to
those named and Mrs. Larry
Pickens, Terry Seidenable, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Mossman, Mrs.
THURSDA)'
Walter Morris and Carol, Mrs.
BRICKLAYERS Local 32
Richard Gilkey and Mark, Thursday 8 p.m. Pomeroy
Patty Crossan, and Guy Hysell . Legion Hall.
FRIDAY
DANCE FRIDAY Wahama
High
School
Auditorium
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meier, following basketball game 9:30
Middleport, are announcing the to 12. Jay will emcee.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery
birth of their first child, a six
pound, nine ounce daughter, 24 will confer order of the
Elizabeth Nadine, on Tuesday temple, 7:30 p.m. Friday at
at the Holzer Medical Center. Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
SATURDAY
Grandparents are Mrs. BerOHIO VALLEY Commandery
nadine Meier, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Stumbo, 24 annual inspection, 3:30p.m.
Middleport.
Great- Saturday at Pomeroy Masonic
grandparents are Ollie Hindy Temple; Order of Temple to be
and Mrs. N. R . Stumbo, Mid- conferred ; dinner at 6 p .m . for
dleport. Meier is a faculty knights and ladies.
HYMN SING, 7:30 p.m .
member at the Meigs Junior
Saturday at the Freedom
High School.
Gospel Mission at Bald Knob.
The Rev. L. R. Gluesencamp,
pastor, extends public in¥,,,
vitation.

·------------------·
Serta
great
awakening
sale!

•

..

We wake you up
for notfiing

We put you to sleep
for very littleI

$§9!~""'

FREE Webcor
Clock Radio
W t!h the pu rc h ase of a
Serta·Ortholux Caprt k tng
or queen size m attress and
m atchi ng box spring set

Maltress or box sprmq

SERTA-ORTHOLUX CAPRI
With all the luxury a nd sleeping
comfort you 'd expec t fro m a mattress costing much more. Plus a
free offer you wouldn ' t expect. Th is
is an outstanding mattress v alue.
Take advantage of il.

FREE Westclox
Electric Alarm Clock
Wtth t he p urchase o f a
Sert a.Orthol ux Capri , twin

o r fu ll size ma ttr ess and
mat ch m g bo x sp r ing set.

EXTRA LONG
twrn or fu l srze $139.95 2 prece set

QUEEN SIZE S169 95 ? ptece set
KING SIZE S259.95 3 pteCP. se:

•
MASON

FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va.

Ill

from a big family - two sisters and
three brothers - and that perhaps is
where she gained her optimistic
outlook on life.
She's a firm believer that the
road to happiness is paved with
humor. "Finding the humor in every
situation and getting a good laugh,
even if it's at yourself, is the solution
to lots of problems, " Joanna contends.

Bradbury Church Group Meets
" The Church at Worship" was
the devotional topic used by
Catherine Russell at the
Monday night meeting of the
Young Adult Class of the
Bradford Church of Christ.
Mrs. Russell read scripture
from John 4, 24, Acts 2, and
Ephesians 5. Earl Mossman
gave the opening prayer.
With Ben Rife, president, in
charge, the class voted to send
flowers and cards to those who
are sick. Mrs. Ralph Painter
and Mrs. Ben Rife, teachers of
the junior class, announced a
valentine party on Feb. 12 at the
church for members of the
class. It was noted that the
Meigs County youth rally will be
held at the Bradford Church on
Feb. 14. The host church is to
provide refreshments.
~ Devotions for March will be
by Mrs. Homer Forrest with
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mossman to
have refreshments.

A membership pin was
presented to Mrs. Barbara
Dugan by Mrs. Ferne B.
Hayman, president of the East
Letart Women ' s Society of
Christian Service, at a meeting
at the church Tuesday night.
Members signed a get-well
card for Mrs. Mary Roush, a
patient at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Plans were
made for the group to meet at
the church today to cut and sew
rags for rugs.
"Missions to Nepal, Its New
Challenges in Change," was the
program topic developed by
Mrs. Hazel Fox. The purpose
was to show how the United
Methodist Board of Missions is
adapting its approach in Nepal

Five hundred dollars was
contributed to the church
building fund by the Loyal
Pals Class of the Middleport
Church of Christ during a
meeting Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
The class made plans
during the meeting to stage a
bake sale on March 13 with
the money from that also to
be designated for the church
project. Mrs. Reynolds gave
devotions and the program on
love was presented by Mrs.
Donna Russell. A dessert
course was served. The Rev.
Raullin Moyer was a guest.

Returns to Iowa

JOANNA DISTLER

··:·:·:·:·

Miss Brenda Bradford,
Racine , has returned to
Graceland College, Lamoni,
Iowa, after spending a month's
vacation here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bradford.
Miss Bradford, a sophomore
at the college, was on the honor
list for both the fall and winter
quarters achieving a 3.8
average. She is majoring in
nursing. Other recent visitors of
the Bradfords were Mr. and
Mrs. Leon Jordan and family of
Columbus and Mr . Kelly Weller
of San Jose, Calif.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Eastern Band Boosters
. .
. .
will meet at 7:30 Tuesday at the
More than 52 million v~s1tors high school. All members are
have ascend~d th.e Washmgton urged to attend since special
Monument . si~ce It was opened items of business will be taken
to the public m 1888.
· report e d .
up, 1·t IS

Mrs . Eva Dessauer was
elected six month trustee to fill
a vacancy created by a
resignation at Monday night's
meeting of Theodorus Council
17, Daughters of America .
A letter was read from Mrs.
Mrytle H. Nordan, national
councilor, in which she advised
the council that insurance
benefits will be discontinued
after June 30, 1971. She noted
that the benefits department is
being dissolved but that efforts
are being made to work out a
plan providing some protection
for members who are eligible.
A valentine party was
planned for the next meeting
with sandwiches, cookies and
coffee to be served. Mrs. Glen
Swatzel,
vice
councilor,
presided at the meeting. It was
reported that Mrs. Kate
Goodwin is home from the
Holzer Medical Center, Edith
Spencer is ill at home; and that
Marvin Darst, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernice Darst, is confined
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
PTATOMEET
The Syracuse PTA will meet
in regular session Monday at
7:30p. m. The meeting has been
moved ahead one day , from
Tuesday to Monday. A founders' Day program will be
presented.
\

to keep pace with the rapid
political and technological
changes. She cited the work
there as an example of what is
happening in other newly
emerging smaller countries,
and the new role which today's
professional church workers
are taking.
Group singing of "My Jesus, I

COMMITIEES NAMED
Committees for the year were
named when 10 members of the
Tuppers Plains Community
Club met at the home of Nita
Jean Ritchie. The next meeting
will be held Feb. 10 at the home
of Janie Headley. Refreshments
were served.

Love Thee '' with Mrs. Hayman
at the piano opened the
meeting. Reports were given by
Mrs. Fox and Mrs. Eileen'#•''
Roush. Mrs. Fox and Mrs.
Hayman served refreshments
to those named and Mrs. Nora
Pearson, Ml's. Focie Hayman,
Mrs. Lucy Donahue and Mrs.
Mildred Donahue.

A

Pharmacy's
Customers
comes in all
sizes and ages.
From Grandpa right on down
to baby, the health needs
o £ our comll'A.Ini ty are wellcared for by a qualified,
skilled specialist in his
fie! d--our pharmacist.

OVERWEIGHT?
FREE OFFER
Odr inex can help you become
the trim slim person you want to
be. Odrinex is a tiny tablet and
easily swa l lowed . Contains no
dangerous drugs. No starv i ng .
No spec i al exercise . Get rid of
excess fat and I ive longer .
Odrinex has been used suc cessfully by thousands all over
the country for over 12 years .
The regular price for Odr i nex i s
S3.25 and $5.25 for the large
economy size.
FREE OFFER: Buy either s i ze
Odr inex and rece i ve another
one FREE. You must lose ugly
fat or your money will be
refunded by your drugg ist. No
questions asked . Sold with this
guarantee by: Dutton Drug
Store- Middleport. Mail Orders
Filled.

~illnge lJlptrma~

CUPID GUARANTEES YOU'LL WIN A HEART WITH OUR

Valemrltine Gifts
FASHIONS, ACCESSORIES &amp; SWEETS I
SPECIAL PRICES- 3 DAYS ONLY- THURS., FRI., SAT.

GIFT SHOP NOW
·=··:·

. . . WHILE SELECTIONS AND SAVINGS ARE BIG
WIN FREEl I I

SOFT, SILKY KANEKALON'"

Streich Wigs
3 SMART STYLES

Straight, w a v y or
softly curled style.

IJBB

$3500 GIANT SIZE
HEART SHAPE BOX

GIVE HER SLEEK. STRETCH

REG.

IT"

Panty Hose

94~

NEW SPRING SHADES

Clingy stretch nylon.

ASSORTED CHOCOLATES

"CHARGE

73~

Nothing To Buy
Winner Notified
Drawing 4:00 P.M. Feb. 13

SUNDAY
CHAPEL CHOIR, Capital
University, Columbus, in a
public concert at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, 231 E. Second St.,
Pomeroy. Public invited; free
will offering.
MONDAY
WSCS at Middleport Heath
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m .
Monday.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
Tuesday, 2 p.m. social room
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.; Mrs. James Titus
to conduct workshop on how to
make velvet roses; Mrs. M. C.
Wilson, Mrs . David Entsminger, Miss Lucille Smith,
hostesses.

Insurance is
Discontinued

Missions in Nepal are WSCS Topic

$500 Contributed

Stretch
To
Fit
Sizes 8112-11

NAME
ADDRESS
PHONE
Drop in Box at Candy Dept. Either
Store.
Can Register Every Time in the Stores.

NOTHING TO BUY
MURPHY'S COUPON

AQUA-NET
HAIR SPRAY

n

0
c:
0

.,

CONYE-RSATION

PRETTY SPRIN G

Candy Hearts

EARRINGS

~izes

37C

lb.

Catchy saying on every
heart!

77c

Pr.
Pierced-look and pierced

z

ACETATE TRICOT

PETTICOATS
Our

With Coupon

94c

Low
Price
· Lace, nylon trims. Short

./

BIG SELECTION

WIDE TIES
Our

Limit 1 Per Coupon

$2

Low
Price
Handsome 4·in-hand
or clip-on styles.

~

OUR OWN BRAND

SWEET GIFT!

REG. $1.56

Valentine Boxed Chocolates
ALL MILK CHOCOLATE

Cremes, nougats, caramels, r a i sin
fudge, jelly-creme combinations.

J33

lb. Box

CaroleJoanne•

SIZES 30 TO 38

274

Convertible Collar Blouses
DACRON / COTTON BLEND

Short sleeves. Shirt tail bottom.
Smart solids or prints.

"CHARGE

IT"

MEN'S SOLID OR STRIPE

2 s7

NEAT BAN-LON®KNITS
BLUE C'' NYLON
Crew neck or collar.
Short sleeve. S, M,

L, XL.

for

3 WAYS TO BUY AT MURPHY'S! CASH, CHARGE OR LAY-AWAY
JUST SAY

"CHARGE IT"
AT MURPHY'S

BOTH STORES IN GALLIPOLIS - OPEN FRIDAYS AND MONDAYS TILL

$3.51
Each

�8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Feb. 4. 1971

.

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
Notice

,. WANT AD.
INFORMATION
WILL GIVE piano and organ
DEADLINES
5 P.f.A ...Oay Before Publication
lessons in my home. Phone SINGER Cabinet model sewing
NOTICE OF
M.Dnday
Dead
I
ine
9
a.m.
ROAD VACATION
992-3666.
machine, equipped with dial
cancellation &amp; Corrections
The Meigs County Com ·
8-16-tfc
control for zig-zag, but
missioners having previously Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for
lonhole, and fancy design
Day of Pub I ication
resolved to vacate and relocate
WILL PICK up merchandise
work as well as beautiful
REGULATIONS
portib'ns of county and township
and take to auction on a
The Publisher reserves the
slraight sewing. Will sacrifice
roads located on proposed State
percentage basis. Call Jim
Route 7, Construction Section right to edit or reject any ads
for $51.60 or E - Z terms
objectional.
The
6.34, and in Salisbury Township, deemed
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
arranged. Phone 992-5641.
Meigs County, Ohio, and more pubI is her will not be responsible
Phone 742-4461.
2·2·6fc
particularly
described
as for more than one incorrect
9-23-tfc
inserti~n .
follows:
ELECTROLUX
CLEANER
RATES
FIRST PROPOSED
OOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
large deluxe model. Complete
For Want Ad Service
RELOCATION
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
5 cents oer Word one insertion
with all cleaning tools and
10-18-tfc
· Mlll ooooum Cnarge 75c..
Salisbury Township
paper bags. Used but cleans
12 cents per word three
Road No. 207
like new. Will sell for $28 cash
Situated
in
Salisbury consecutive. insertions.
or terms available. Phone 99218 cents · per word six con- SKATE-A -WAY is open Wed·
Township, Fraction 32 Town 2
nesday, Friday and Saturday
5641.
North, Range 13 West, Meigs secutive insertions.
nights, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m .
-6tc
' 25 Per cent Discount 011 paid·
County, Ohio.
Avai table for private parties
And
being
more
fully ads and ads paid within 10 days.
-~
CARD OF THANKS
on Monday, Tuesday and RECONDITIONED TV sets.
described as follows:
&amp; OBITUARY
Beginning at a p~in_t on the
Thursday nights or Saturday
One 17" cabinet model, black
$1.50 for 50 word·' minimum.
northerly side of extsttng State
and
Sunday afternoons.
DeVille Deluxe-65x12- 2 Bedroom - 2 Bathand white; two 19" portables,
Route No. 7 and No. 124, said Each additional word 2c.
"Where Customers
Phone Ches fer 985-3929 or 985·
black and white; one 21" table
Reg. $8890.00
BLIND ADS
point being 0.10 mile, more or
SAVE $690.00
3585.
model, black and white. Also,
Send Their Friends"
Additional 25c Charge per
less. as measured easterly
2-2-12tc
along existing State Route No. 7 Advertisement.
one 23" color TV, 1 year
QFFICE HOU~
and No. 124 from the in picture
tube
warranty.
8:3&lt;r•a.m. to 5:00pm . Daily,
tersection of State Route No. 7
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
Werner Radio and T.V.,
_Nova _2 dr ., white finish, blue
HILLCREST-60x12·2 Bedroom- Front Living Room
Req. $5485.00 Now S5100.00
$:30
a.m.
to
12:00
Noon
and State Route No. 124 and
like to try a wig on in the
Middleport, Ohio.
lntenor,
6
cyl.
eng.,
existing Salisbury Township Saturday.
HILLCREST-50x12-2 Bedroom- Front Kitchen
Reg. $4890.00 Now $4490.00
privacy
of
your
own
home?
2-4-3tc
Road No. 207 ; thence, northerly
automatic trans .• new tires,
HILLCREST-60x12-2 Bedroom- Front Kitchen
Reg. $6890.00 Now $6450.00
You can. Just call us. We also
along relocatet;l
Salisbury
radio &amp; heater.
I
HILLCREST-60x12-2 Bedroom- Front Kitchen
Reg. $5980.00 Now $5590.00
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics, MODERN Walnut stereo-radio
Township Road No. 207 and
Koscot, of course. DisHILLCREST-60x12-3 Bedroom- Front&amp; Rear
Reg. $6160.00 Now $5690.00
crossing proposed Sta-te Route GUN SHOOT, Syracuse Fire
combination, four speaker
tributors, Brown's. Phone
No. 7 at a point 0.06 mile, more
HOLLY PARK -60x12- 2 Bedroom- Front Kitchen
sound system,
4 speed
Reg. $8450.00 Now S7800.00
Dept.. assorted meats and
or less, as measured easterly
Middleport 992-5113.
·
changer, separate controls.
half hog, at Racine Planing
HOLLY PARK-60x12- 2 Bedroom- Front Kitchen
Reg. $9280.00 Now $8690.00
along relocated State Route No.
Belvedere
2
dr.
hardtop,
V-81
12-31-lfc
Balance $73.50. Use our
Mill. Every Saturday night at
WINSTON- 64x12- 3 Bedroom -11h Bath
Reg. $6990.00 Now $5600.00 7 from existing Salisbury
motor, power steering, std.
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
6 p.m.
Township Road No. 207 and
SAVE $1390.00
2-4-6lc
3-speed trans., blk. top,
2-3-3tc
passing through the lands of
Manning D . Webster, Iva Eblin
cream body, radio.
We will Spec'ial Order the Home of Your Choice at Special Prices During February!!
et . al. , Betty Russel and GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
MAPLE STEREO beautiful
DR IVERS needed. Train now to
Thurston Stone, Jr .• et. a I. A
and Gun Club, New Haven , W.
colonial style, Am-FM radio,
drive semi-truck, local and
distance of 0.27 mile, more or
Va ., Sunday, Feb. 7, noon
four speakers, 4 speed
over the road. Diesel or gas,
less, to a point in existing
aulomatic changer, separate I Mustang, 6 cyl., auto. trans .•
until - -.
experience helpful but not
Salisbury Township Road No.
2-4-3tc
con trots. Balance $83.60. Use
necessary. You can earn over
207 and there terminate .
console, maroon finish, alii
our time payment plan . Call
FIRST PROPOSED
$4.50 per hour after short
g~od w-w tires, radio. Reali
VACATION
GUN SHOOT, February 7,
992-3352.
training. For application and
N1ce.
Salisbury Township
2-4 6tc
Sunday, 1 p. m., Mile Hill
interview call 513-241 ·5572, or
Financing At Our Office- Up To 10 Years To Pay
Road No. 207
Road. Hams, bacons, beef,
write
Safety
Dept.,
United
Beginning at the intersection
pork. Sponsored by Racine
Systems, Inc., C-0 Motor THE Undersigned will sell at
of existing Salisbury Township
Now for the Best Deal- Dannie's will Never Knowingly
Fire Department.
Freight Terminal Bldg., 3101
Road No. 207 and existing State
public auction, for cash only,
2·4-31c
Gano
Rd.,
Sharonville,
be Undersold!!
Service Is Our Byword!
Route No.1and No . 124; thence,
one 1969 Dodge pickup, Model 14 dr ., black vinyl top &amp; II
northerly
along
existing
Cincinnati, Ohio 45241.
D100,
Serial
Number lcream body, black nylon
Salisbury Township Road No. UNABLE to accept any more
2-4-2tc
1181907733 at 2 p. m. on I interior &amp; astro seat, factory
207 a d i stance of 0.10 mile, more
customers for rags to be
Comfortron air conditioning,
February 11, 1971 at the R. H.
or less, to the proposed Limited
made into rugs until next fall.
Rawlings Sons Company, Mill I automatic trans., power
Access R tght-ofWay line on the
William Rizer.
northerly side of proposed State
and 2nd Street, Middleport.
steering &amp; brakes, &amp; all the
1·31-6tp
Route No. 7 and there ter Ohio.
The
undersigned
THEY
ARE
here:
The
accessories of a luxury car.
Mon. thru Fri.
minate.
reserve the right to bid.
SKAMPER line from A to Z.
Low mileage &amp; sharp as they
REFINISHING of golf clubs for
9:00 to 8:00
SECOND PROPOSED
Associates
Financial
Services
Wha
t
a
surprise
to
see:
I
come.
use in March impossible alter
RELOCATION
Sat 9 to·s
Co.,
1911
E.
7th
St.,
P.
0.
Box
Travel
trailers,
campers
are
Salisbury Township
Feb . 5. Regular repairs
Sun.
1 to 5
1745,
Parkersburg,
W.
Va.
all
on
display.
What
isn't
here
Road No. 79
available by arrangement.
Si tuated
in
Salisbury
is on
the way.
GAUL
26101.
John Teaford. golf pro.
Township, Section 16 and
2-4-1tc
TRAILER SALES, INC., 1112
1-31-6tc
Fraction 12. Town 2, North
miles north of Chester, Ohio.
IIGTO Cpe., white finish, vinyl
Range 13 west, Meigs County ,
Watch for sign. Phone 985SHOOTING Match. Rutland
interior, 4 speed trans., good
Ohio.
3832. CONTINENTAL and COAL, limestone. Excelsior
Gun Club, New Lima Road,
And
being
more
fully
w w tires, radio &amp; heater.
Salt
Works,
E.
Main
St.,
GO-TAG-A-LONG
travel
described as follows:
12:30 p.m. Sunday February
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
trailers for sale. Rentals by
Beginning at a point in the
7. Trap and still targets.
4-9-tfc
proposed
intersect i on
of
day, week, month.
Hogs, hams and bacons.
relocated Meigs County Road
2-4-12tc
2-3-4fc
IFalcon 2 dr., 6 cyl. std.
No. 20 and a relocated Salisbury
8 ROOM house with bath and
Township Road No . 79, said
ltrans .• -all good ~i~es, sm~rt
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
half,
extra
lot.
Five
minute
point being 0.08 mil e, more or
looking copper fm1sh, rad1o.
ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHOwalk from Middleport Post
less , as measured northerly
Real economy in this car.
Beeline
( 1l Rent Homes, Mobile Homes, or Apartments
along relocated Meigs County township roads until the HOUSEWIVES:
Office. Also, one farm, 52'12
Fashions will supplement
Road No . 20 from the in · completion of Meigs State
(2) Own Mobile Homes and woul~ like to own a Home
acres, no buildings. On hard
tersection of reloca t ed Meigs Route 7, Construction Section
your family's income and
(3) Live in Sub-Standard Housing
road, water and electricity
County Road No . 20 and 6.34.
wardrobe . Highest comINCOMES OF $4,000to $9,000 PER YEAP
available .
Has
timber,
Galaxi HT Cpe., 6 cyl.
relocated Meigs County Road
Mr. Ours moved for public
mission. Up to $300 samples.
mineral rights, very suitable
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
engine, std. trans., air
No. 25; thence , in a nor - convenience and welfare and in
Call 949-3703 or Gallipolis 446·
for trailers, five miles from
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
theasterly direction along accordance with Section 5553 of
conditioning, good tires,
4146.
courthouse. Call 992-3400.
relocated Salisbury Township the Ohio Revised Code, that the
cases pay less.
clean
interior,
dark
green
2-4-3lc
Road No. 79 and passing commissioners
2·4-3tp
view
said
-GUARANTEEDMODEL HOMES ON DISPLAY tor your INSPECTION
through the lands of carl Fred proposed
finish.
vacations
and
------------------Goeglein et. al., a distance of relocations as hereinbefore set
Phone 992-2094
1. No money down
ANTIQUE BED, 2 mattresses,
0.08 m i le, more or less, to a forth on the 23rd day of
2. We will furnish lot or erect on your lot
gas
stove
complete
with
point in existing Salisbury February, 1971, at 8:30 o'clock
pipes, set of new bunk beds.
CONTACT: GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
Township Road No. 79 and there A.M. et the first proposed 1973 MEIGS class ring Sunday
Tempest St. Wagon , local 1l
Reo~onable. Jake Scoll, Pearl
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
terminate .
reioc~ ton
and vacatiOn, and
in Rutland. Name inside:
owner, low mileage car, V-B I
606 E. M3in, Pomeroy, 0.
St. , Middleport.
SECOND PROPOSED
each ucceeding road will be
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day ·
James Birchfield. Reward.
engine,
automatic
trans.,l
VACATION
2-4-3tp
viewed in the order as I is ted
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night
Phone 742-4494.
power steering, non-slip rear I
Salisbury Township
above as soon as time perm its ,
2-3-3tc
Road No. 79
and that final hearing be held on
axle,
vinyl
interior
like
new,
HAY, ON C53 near Five Points.
Beginning at a point in the the 23rd day of February, 1971 ,
AIR CONDITIONING. Relight blue finish, radio. Save
Joe Wippel. Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
intersection
of
ex i sting at 9 :30 o'clock A.M . in the WALTHAM nurse's watch. Lost
frigeration service. Jack's
Phone 992-6410.
Today.
Salisbury Townsh i p Road No. 79 commissioner's room at the
Refrigeration. New Haven.
in downtown Pomerov. Call
1-31-6tp
and existing Mei gs cou nt y Road Courthouse, Meigs County ,
Phone 882-2079.
Agnes Dixon.
No. 25; thence, in a n or th erl y Pomeroy, Ohio.
4-6-tfc
2-2-3tp
direction
along
exi st i ng
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
500
2
Dr.,
local
low
mileagel
Salisbury Townsh ip Road No. 79
By order of the
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
608 East Main
- '_..,.,.,.....,;::
car, interior extra clean,
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
a distance of 0.10 mile, more or
Board of Meigs County
water pills. Nelson's Drugs.
Pomeroy, Ohio
less, to the proposed limited Commissioners, Pomeroy, Ohio
livered right to your project.
medium green finish, alii
1-22-JOtp
INVESTMENT PROPERTYI ; :; : j.;; ~~ .
,·.
access right-of -way l ine on the
ELIGIBLE
male
comFast
and
easy.
Free
good w-w tires, radio. Plenty
1:'" ! 11 T
I
1112 story frame, bath, coal
northerly side of proposed State
Clerk Martha Chambers
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
panionship. age 50 to 65. Write
of
go
in
the
snow.
Just
nicerl
r
1:
1
1
..
,
I
Route No. 7 and there ter.
furnace, porches, NEEDS A
Box 729-C, The Daily Sentinel, STAR kills rats quickly, surely.
Goeglein
Ready-Mix
Co.,
than the average car.
minate.
(2) 4, 11, 2tc
LITTLE REPAIR. $3,500.00
'
21!2 pounds, $1.69. Ebersbach
' 'I
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Middleport, Ohio.
THIRD PROPOSED
6-30-tfc
3-3-6tc
Hardware,
Sugar
Run
Mills,
RELOCATION
._.
NEW
SIDING,
NEW
ROOF,
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
Meigs County
NEW CARPORT, SMALL SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
H. T. Sed., spotless interior,l
1-5-30tp
Road No. 20
LEGAL NOTICE
YARD. 2 story frame, 3
From the Largest Truck or
Situated
in
Salisbury
good tires, radio, heater,l
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
bedrooms,
bath,
GOOD
Township , Section 16 and
Bulldozer Radiator to the
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
662·3035.
OLD furniture, disnes, brass
automatic
&amp;
p.
steering
.•
NEIGHBORHOOD. $3,900.00
Fraction 6, Town 2, North
COURT MEIGS COUNTY,
Smallest Heater Core.
2-12-tfc
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
Priced to move.
Range 13 West, Meigs County,
OHIO
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
Ohio.
JESSE MORRIS,
ABOUT 50 YEARS OLD - 2 WHEEL Horse Sales and
BUY YOUR
992-6271.
And
being
more
fully R. D. 2,
story frame. 8 rooms, 4
Service.
Baum
Lumber
9-1-tfc
described as follows:
Pomeroy, Ohio,
bedrooms, bath. NEE OS
Pomeroy,·
Ph. 992c2143
Beginning at a point in the
Company, Chester, Ohio.
P.la intiff,
SOME
REPAIR,
CLOSE
IN.
8'
F
leetside,
6
cyl.
center of existing Meigs County
Phone 985-320) .
vs.
Now
and
get
the
early
OLD UPP..IGHT pianos, any
$4,100.00
Road No . 20. said point being MEDA ELOISE MORRIS,
5-20-tfc
good tires .
0.15 mile, more or less, as Address Unknown,
condition, as long as have not
Discount
JOHNSON MASONRY, ComRuns
extra
good
measured northerly along
STORM
DOORS,
STORM
been wet. Paying $10 each.
Defendant.
mercial
or
residential
INTERIOR carpenter work, by
Bag,
Bulk
and
Liquid
Ferexisting Meigs County Road No.
No. 14,791
WINDOWS. basement, bath, 2
First floor only. Mondays will
remodeling. Brick, block,
the hour or contract. Phone
tilizer,
all
available
now.
20 from the existing intersection
NOTICE BY
bedrooms, 1 story frame,
be pick-up day. Write, giving
stone, cement work, garages,
992-3511 .
Take delivery now from our
of Meigs County Road No. 20
PUBLICATION
GOOD CONDITION. $6,700.00
good directions. Witten Piano
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
1-31 -30tp
and State Route No. U.S. 33, No.
area warehouse at Pomeroy.
Meda Eloise Morris, whose
TO BUY OR SELL
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
Free estimates. Jim, Larry,
7 and No. 124; thence , southerly, place of residence is unknown
CONTACT US
Ohio 43946.
easterly and southerly along will take notice that on the 6th.
Jake. 992-7044.
POMEROY
HARRISON'!:&gt;
TV
AND
AN·
8-20-tfc
HENRY CLELAND
Your Chevy Dealer
relocated Meigs County Road day of January, 1971, the un
1-7-3otc
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
TE;NNA SERVICE. Phone
No . 20 and crossing proposed dersigned filed his Com plaint
REALTOR
Open Eves. Til 8
•
Phone 992-2181
992-2522.
State Route No . 7 at a point 0.02 against her in the Common
Office- 992-2259
I 992-2126
Pomeroy
6-10-tfc ...~PTIC TANKS CLEANED
mile, more or less, westerly Pleas Court of Meigs County,
Residence 992-2568
from
existing
Salisbury Ohio, praying for a divorce,
IT'S inexpensive to clean rugs
Reasonable rates. Phone
--------1-31-6tc...,
Township Road No. 79 and custody of minor child, and
NEIGLER
Construction.
For
UNFURNISHED 3 - room
and upholstery with Blue
John Russell, Gallipolis 446passing through the lands of other relief on the grounds of
building
or
remodeling
your
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
Lustre.
Rent
electric
47~2 after 5:30 p . rn.
Carl Fred Goeglein, et . al., a gross neglect of duty and ex home, Call Guy Neigler,
shampooer, $1. Baker Fur·
4-7-tfc
distance of 0.41 mile, more or treme cruelty. The Complaint
Racine,
Ohio.
'
1-31
-tfc
ni lure, Middleport.
less, to the intersection of also prays that the following
7-31-tfc
2-3-6tc
relocated Meigs County Road rea I estate be awarded to the
'sEWINt; MACHINES. Repair
Home
No. 20 and relocated Meigs Plaintiff :
service, all makes. 992-2284:
FURNISHED and unfurnished
County Road No. 25 and there
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
apartments. Close to school. MOBILE HOME, 8X35, one
terminate.
Situate in Bedford Township,
Authorized Singer Sales and
bedroom. Also, 1965 Chevrolet
Phone 992-5434.
THIRD PROPOSED
Meigs County, Ohio, in Section
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
one - lon
truck.
Carroll
10-18-tfc
VACATION
7, Town 3, Range 13, beginning
3-29-tfc
Johnson , Lower Trailer Park,
Meigs County
at the Southeast corner of Ar ·
Road No. 29
Powell St., Middleport. Ohio.
thur Story' s land; then:e south 3 ROOM apartment, all electric,
~----------------Beginning at a point in the on said line to the road leading
'sACK HOE and end-loader
2-3-3tp
walt oven, table top range,
intersection of existing Meigs from Harrisonville to Pomeroy ;
work. Septic tanks installed. ,
George S.
slamless steel double sink ---------------County Road No. 20 and existing thence East along said road to
George (Bill) Pullins. PhoneoHOBSTETTER, Jr.
food disposal. Nice clea~ 1957 OLIVER Dozer DC 3,
State Ro1.1te No. U. S. 33, No . 7 the Pomeroy and Athens Road;
992-2478.
Real Estate Broker
and No . 124; thence, northerly thence North along said road to
apartme11t. See to appreciate.
new motor. new paint job,
11-29-tfc
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
along existing Meigs County the East line of Arthur Story's
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
front end loader, fork lift, 61l 2·
Racine,
Ohio
Road No. 20 a distance of 0.08 land; containing three acres,
Gallipolis 446-9539.
foot blade, $1200. Phone 992·
SAW FILING, all kinds of
mile, more or less, to the more or less, and being all of the
Phone 949-3211
2-2-tfc
6048.
MR. &amp; MRS. ARTHUR SNYDER
proposeq limited access right- tract lying west of the road.
sharpening, lawn mower
100 ACRES land, mostly timber.
1-29-6tc
176 Beech St.
Middleport
of way line on the northerly side
repair, Briggs and Stratton
This is Pleasant Valley,
of proposed State Route No. 7
Thiscausemaybeheardon 28 5 ROOM house, bath, Racine
engine service. Low cost pick
plenty
of
deer
and
small
game
and there terminate.
days after the last publication of
"At our age we had given up
area. Phone 992-6329.
up and delivery. Phone 992·
- a hunter's paradise. Buy
FOURTH PROPOSED
this notice, which date is the
2·2-3tc
hope of ever owning a home of
2804. Colmers Saw Shop,
this one and get away from it
RELOCATION
19th . day of March, 1971.
Mechanic St., Pomeroy.
our own . For the first t ime in
all. $9,000.
Meigs County
11
2·3-3tc
Road No. 25
our lives we are warm , even
2-4-3tc
10X50, 2-BEDROOM mobile
Jesse Morris,
Situated
in
Salisbury
Plaintiff
home. Call 992-3954.
on the coldest days."
Township, Section 16, Fraction 6 Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
2-3-6tc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
and 12, Town 2 North, Range 13 Attorneys for Pia in tiff
Complete Service
west, Meigs County, Ohio.
(1) 7, 14, 21,28 (2) 4, 11, 18, 7tc
4
ROOM
house
with
ba
t
h
and
Phone 949-3821
NEW MOBILE home. Adults
And
being
more
fully
ulility
room.
Buill-i
n
kitchen,
Racine, Ohio
described as follows :
only. Phone 992-5592.
tile
floors,
paneled,
Carport
;
Beginning at a point in the
1-7-tfc
Critt Bradford
1 85 acres. Furn i shed or
center of existing State Route
Sites
Available
'S· 1-tfc
Broker
No. U . S. 33, No.7 and No . 124,
unfurnished . Contact Lila
5 ROOM downstairS apar 1111ent,
110 Mechanic St.
LEGAL NOTICE
said point being 0.10 mile, more
Bentz, Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Phone
Don't
Delay!
Contact
AI
Moody
Today!
Clyde E. Wells, whose place
basement, gas furnace. Also,
Pomeroy, Ohio
or less, as measured southerly
.msur~nce
days Coolvi l le 667 3280 or
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
along existing State Route No. of residence is unknown and
one 4 room apartment and one
evenings Chester 985-3865. AUTOMOBILE insurance been
NEAR
KROGER'S
Phone 992-7034
U . S. 33. No . 7, and No. 124 from cannot by reasonable diligence
3 room furnished apartment.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Located on County Road 36,
the intersection of State Route be ascertained, will take notice
Call 992 -3056.
operator's license? Call 992·
1'12 miles north off Rt. 7.
No. U.S . 33, No.7 and No . 124 that on the 6th day of January,
Middleport- 4 bedrooms, bath,
2·
4-3tc
2966.
with existing Meigs County 1971 , the undersigned plintiff,
2·4·3tp
modern kitchen, cook and
CONVENIENT but secluded
Road No. 25; thence, in a nor Florence Carol Wells, filed her
bake uni Is. Forced air gas
therly, easterly, and southerly complaint against him in the 6 ROOM house, bath, 255 W.
building
lots
on
T79
at
Rock
furnace with air conditioning .
Main St. Phone daytime 992
direction along relocated Meigs Common Pleas Court of Meigs
Spr i ngs. Within walking
New double garage. Lot from
County Road No. 25 and passing County, Ohio, Case No. 14,794
2668 or nigh Is 992-2961.
distance of Meigs High
High
to
Page.
Only
$14,500.00
through the lands of Carl Fred for divorce on the grounds of
2·4-6tp
1966 MERCURY, A-1 condition,
School, a 5 minute drive from
Goeglein, et. al., Fannie L . Oiler gross neglect of duty and ex $795. Phone 843-2211 .
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
and the Meigs Local School treme cruelty , and pray ing for UNFURNISHED apartment WARM 2 years old. 3
1-31-6tp
Wi tte weekends, or after 5
District, a distance of 0.34 mile, divorce and other relief . The
bedrooms,
1112
baths,
gas
close to Pomeroy. Phone 992p .m. weekdays. Phone 992more or less, to a point in said Clyde E . Wells is required
forced air furnace with air 1946 CHRYSLER, good con 3962 afler 4 p.m.
extsting Meigs County Road No. to answer said complaint within
6887.
conditioning.
Stove
and
2· 4-tfc
dition. Phone 742-3912.
twenty eight days after the last
25 and there terminate.
2-3-tfc
refrigerator. Heated garage .
publication of this notice, which
1 31 6tc
FOURTH PROPOSED
Level lot. January's gas bill
date is the 25th day of March,
VACATION
1971 . This cause will be for
$18.60. Asking $26,500.00
Meigs County
1967 GTO, 400 cu. in . with .060 HOUS.!=, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
hearing on the 25th day of
Road No. 25
Pomeroy. Phone 992 2293.
overbore brand new engine
Beginning at a point in the March , 1971, or as soon
1961 CHEVY, good condition TUPPERS PLAINS Large
10-25-tfc
wilh many extras, including
intersection of Meigs County thereafter as the Court can
$250. Phone 992-6880.
old house, '7 large rooms, floor
JANS, CRANE, HOLLEY ,
Road No 25 and State Route No . conveniently hear th e sam e.
2 3-2tp
furnace. Lot 60 x 320. Asking
U .S 33, No . 7 and No. 124,
ELDEBROCK ,
HOOKER,
$6,500.00. Offer welcomed.
FLORENCE CARO L
thence, in an easterly direction
ZOOM rod shop heads. 1968
HOME
ORGAN
to
be
p1c1&lt;.eo
up
TEAFORDS
HAVE
WELLS
along existing Meigs County
Muncie 220. 1 transmiss1on
in area. Can be seen 1ocally.
Plaintiff
Road No 25, a distance of 0.26
GOOD BUYS
and much more. $1,900 with
Wri 1e for details, Graves
mile, more or less, to the in · Mann tng D . Webster
HELEN TEAFORD,
M. T. aluminum wheels. Call
tersection of extsting Meigs Webster and Fultz
Ptano and Organ Co., Credit
ASSOCIATE
992-3453 or 992-3381. 583 S.
County Road No. 25 and Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Manager, 383 E. Broad St.,
992-3325
Salisbury Township Road No. 79 Attorney for Plaintiff
Second St.. Middleport, Ohio.
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
992-2378
)1) 24, 28, (2) 4, 11, 18, 25. 7tc
and there terminate
1·13·6tp
2· 2 6tc
1·29-6tc
Traffic will be matntatned on
the above described county and

LEGAL NOT1CE

For Sale

New Manager's

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

I
I
I
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I

SEE OUR

BEST BUYS

I
I

I
II

Daonie's of Pomeroy

PH. 992-7195

NOW •8.200

t19S8 CHEVY II $15951

1
l
I

Notice

1
I

11967 P~mouth$1395
1

I
I

I
I

Help Wanted

1

I19S7 Ford

$14951
I

1
I

!EXTRA SPECIAL! 60x12 • 2 Bedroom •3995

b9SS CAPRICP1795l

SEE DON

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

For Rent or Sale

1
I
I
1
I

I
1

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I

1SS Pontiac $1295

DON SLATTERY, MGR.
PHONE 992-7195
.
POMEROY, 0.

t

:\~~-------·
Business Services-~~--~
-l~~-

I

Iss Ford

Dannie's Mobile Homes

~95

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

- - - - - - - - Female Help Wanted

$1095

66 Ford

I
I

65 Pontiac $10951

Lost

$5.55

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

I Real Estate For Sale
1

65 Corvair

------------------Wanted

~95 1
1

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

.....,_.

Cleland Realty

I

~4

Pontiac

.... ._.

$4951

...

Wanted To Buy

WHY WAIT

FERTILIZER

I

1962 CHEV·RO
$495

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

I
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I

BLAmNARS

.....
PO_M_E._R_O_Y__.I

For Rent

MOTOR CO.

L

II

1

L---------..

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

'Real Estate For Sale

HOBSTETTER

JEMO ASSOCIATES

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

IMI

Auto Sales

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

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

For Sale

Auto Sales

- -------

__________;_______________

-......__.~--&gt;:-_ _ _ _ _. . . _ __ _ _ _~-----------_...!._-..:......_

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

�•

WHAT ARE YE
STANDIN' OUT
HERE IN MY
FRONT '-lARD
FER I PARSON?

I TOLD MY WIFE TO
RING TH' CHURCH BELL
TO SEE IF I COULD
HEAR IT THIS FUR OFF

GOODY!!

SHORE '-IE CAN -I
HEAR IT EVER'
SUNDAY MORN IN'-LOUD AN' CLEAR

GET OUT OF HERE
~ITH IHAT STUPID

i

THEN YE GOT
NO EXCUSES

11-\£. &amp;.x;L£ IS AIJ INFERIOR
lfJSTRUMEJJT AIJD UNFIT
TO A.AY IH£ CLASSICS !

8UGLE!

-p

l

. TI-l&amp; COLLEGE'S FINANCIAL CONC&gt;ITION

DON'T KNOW! l

JUST THOUGI-lrtfWAS
A CATCHY TiTLE FOF?..
MY BOO~ ! BtJT 1'1/E:

MUST BE: WORSE TAAN I TI-IOUGI-IT!

tJE:.Vf?.fl- E:IIEN BeEN

KiSSeD BY A BOY!

HE DONE HAD A
WEALTH DREAM

-BUTAH
001-J'TKNOW
WHAT OF!!

AS YOU MAY HAVE

06VIOU6LY1 HER

5URMISEt:' I AM
WITHOUT FUNDS1
BUT AM WILLING "TO
PERFORM MY USUAL
DISI-IWASHING CH~E
TO PAY FOR MY
MEAL!---

DISAPPEARANCE
HAS NOT1·HN6

TO DO WITH

ROBBERY.'

......"THJ;;RS MAY NOT BE E:NOUSI-l LEFT OF
HIM T' TAI&lt;E PRISONER AFTER THAT n\0I..EGGEI&gt; M~T GRINDER GETS DONE WllH 'IM!

He'6 a touch froGtbit
on t\1' outGicle, but
pow'ful warm on
th'insi

ASE~5E OJ= I·WNtDR... ~T~ WAAT
'()U ~I&lt; I ~lto.D'IS!

~ ..........

/ } - -·

WEAK 0' WILl HE PROVED
HiSSEI.FTiN HIS PLACE I'DA
HARPOONED HIM T' HIS
OWN HIDE~ YA SEE, LASS
u, THERE'S t1Q ROOM FER
MERCY WHEN fl MAN'S
--BEHT OH TRE~
HUNTIN'~!

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Energy

6 . British
aborigine
10. Mountain
ridge
11 . French city
13. Perfect
14 . "Home,
Sweet
Home"
writer
15. Fiber knot
16. Tooth
17. Three
(comb.
form)
18 . Lc Sage's
- Bias"
19. Tuck's
partner
20. Tidy
22. Opera's
Lily - 23. Auspices
24. Plane part
25. Daybreak
26. Boa tswa in's
whistle
27. Son of Bela
28. Prohibition
29. Haggard
novel
32. In favor of
(2wds. )
34. Storage
box
35. Actor Lloyd

2 . Command
3 . Asian tree

21 . Fraulein's
:'one"
(2 wds.)
4. Greek lctler 22. Hum5 . E lectrical
dinger
23. Part
unit
of the
6.. Of t he
auricle
bishop
(2
of Rome
wds. )
7.. Shah's
24. Gain
country
2:i. God11. Get mawkdess
ish: s lang
14 wds.)
Of
9. T hrashing.
the
informally
moon
26. Aver12. Oozes
16. Townsman
Rge
18. Kind
28. Misof jet
take

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

30. Depend

u pon
31. Finished
33. Wither
36. Snake

37. Miss
Farrow

KIACII

I

I

ISJ.IIORT

J I

I 10

t

THE DOeS DIDN'T
WANT 10 60 INl'O
NOAH'$ ARK BECAUBE:
THEY liAD THIS.

r]

I

b-+--+---1 ~::::=====:=;-.......,.'""""...._---'

IPm~SinfAISWIUere l THEIR

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

rI

I J "[I I I )"

(AaaweN lomorrowJ

Jumblro: PANIC
y,.ltrrdav"A

·

I

JADED

BOTHER

DETACH

Ano"·.. r : Why he quit hU job al the

morgue - IT WAS A DEAD END

36. Set right
38. Dwelling
39. Persistent
attack
40. Pitcher
41. Trimmed
DOWN
1. Makeup

•

DAIL\' CR\'PTOQllOTE - Hf'rt"s how

CAPTAIN EASY
A-5?UM1N6 'IOU F I~D THE
G OI...DEN HA~D I ~ K~CH'!?
:;AFE I 1'\..L. THREATEN TO
::OQUEAL ON HIM TO
PHII...I P 1- E-71-lOY ....

IF KERCH WON'T
fAL..K- WEI...L ,J...E7NOY'5

A SYNDICATE L..AWVE:I&lt;:~0

THE MOB Wll-1...-

TAKE IT FROM
THERE !

AXYDI.BAAXR

t&gt;UT AT LEA7T 1'1...(..,
GIVE: YOU A CHANCE:

TO~~TRUTH

OUTIF KERCH5F
FORE I BLOW T HE
WHI?TL.E:

is

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One letter s imply f'tands fot· :-~nothcr . In this ~ample A i~
used for the three L'o;, X (or thr two O's, ~tc. Smglc lt•tters.
apostrophes. t he le ng th a nd formation of the words llr£' :-~11
hints. Each day the code lettet·s are different.
A
JIW
MF
XHR

Crypto~ram

TJ LMJ T

LOR

JY

BRHFO

SOPDVMJT .

P

----.......,......-----.::-""TlT

Quotation
DMWPSHR

SWJFFBJWK

DPT

VIX -

YWPTAHMT

V ..

PKPDF
Yestt&gt;rday'ts ('ryptoquott&gt; : T H E DOUBTF.R'S DISSATISFAC·
TION WITH HIS DOUBT IS AS GREAT AND WID F.SPRF.AD L...L====~~=::J........2~
AS THE DOUBT ITSELF. -DEWITT

ANI{ONE WHO RETURNS FROM
A LONG TRIP SHOUW Be
GREETED WITH A BEA6LE HU6!

-

�...--------------------~-----

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
PT. PLEASANT
A
Gallipolis woman, Evelyn G.
Morrow, 40, narrowly escaped
what could have been a major
catastrophe Wednesday at 2:30
p.m. when her car slid on snow
and ice on the Shadle Bridge,
went left of center and jumped a
sidewalk before it finally came
to a halt against a retaining rail
in the center of the bridge high
over the Kanawha River.
This was one of nine mishaps
investigated by area law en·
forcement officers within the
past 24 hour period, and was
among five blamed on the snow
and ice.
Two vehicles wrecked at 3:40
p.m. Wednesday on State Route
2 approximately 16 miles sou~h
of Point Pleasant near the B1g
Sixteen Mile Creek bridge.
Drivers were Joyce Clifton,
23 Point Pleasant, and Pauline
G;eathouse, 52, Middleport. The
Clifton car failed to stop and
struck the Greathouse car in the
rear. Mrs. Clifton was cited for
failure to keep her vehicle
under control.
Another two vehicle accicent
occurred at 3:50p.m. on State
Route 2 at the intersection of the
Ashton-Upton Road. State
police said drivers were Betty
M. Brumfield, 25, Ashton, and
Shirley C. Maxwell, 40, Huntington. The Brumfield car was
either stopping or had stopped,
police said, and was hit in the
rear by the Maxwell car. Its
driver was cited for failure to
keep vehicle under control.
Damage amounted to approxi.IDately $800.
State police said two drivers
and two passengers were
slightly injured in a collision
Wednesday at 9:50 a. m. on
State Secondary 43 near . the
Mason-Cabell County line.
Estimated property damage
was $1,100. The injured were
Mary E. Ashworth, 27, and
Donnie Lee Rice, 23, both of
Milton, the drivers, and Donna
Ashworth, 2, and Evelyn
Chapman,
40,
Milton,
passengers. The extent of their
·injuries was not learned.
According to police, Mrs.
Ashworth, who was left of
center when her car collided
with Mr. Rice's, was citea for
being left of center and for
improper registration.

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9:00

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

WIG SALE
We1 ve just received another big shipment
of beautiful Kanekalon Wigs in a wide
assortment of styles .and colors. Start
building your wig wardrobe today at these
weekend sale savings ...

REGULAR 25.00 WIGS
2-DAY
SALE
ONLY
Many New Arrivals

TYJ!lll;
om fUel"ney
Dies TY/
ednesday
W t .a
ll
W 4
William A. Heiney, 78, formerly of Apple Grove, Ohio,
died Wednesday evening in the
Baptist Hospital, Phoenix, Ariz.
Mr. Heiney, once an employe
of Lock 23, Apple Grove, was
born Jan. 26 1893 at Ravenswood, W.Va.: the son of the late
George and Laura Robie
Heiney. His wife, whom he
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS- Mrs. Cerry
Smith, Mrs. Carlos Gillinwater,
James Smith, John Jones, Mrs.
William Litchfield, Point
Pleasant; Charlotte Hoffman,
Letart; Mrs. Thomas Baker,
Leon.
DISCHARGES -Mrs. Henry
Hill, Mrs. Robert Lipscomb and
infant; Mary Nina Thomas,
Glenn Spurlock, Okey Jordan,
John Handley, Karen Brown,
Mrs. Lester Hall and daughter,
and Ollie Raines.
Birth: Feb. 4, a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morgan,
Letart.

married in 1914, died in 1969.
He is survived by two
daughters, Mrs. Gladys Hutchinson and Mrs. Juanita
Beaver, New Matamoras; six
sons, Roy and George of
Marietta; Donald, Robert and
Jack of New Matamoras, and
William, of Akron; five sisters,
Mrs. Mona Farra, Racine; Mrs.
Georgia Hendershot, Hartwell,
Ga.; Mrs. Mina Shumway,
Parkersburg; Mrs. Audrey
Shephard, Akron, and Mrs.
Bernice Johnson, Phoenix; one
brother, Ray, of Racine, 17
~andchildren and 14 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be
announced by the Hadley
Funeral Home at New
Matamoras.

Magdalene Young
Dies Wednesday

Apollo 14

New Offensive
(Continued .from Page 1)

Member Federal Reserve : ., .;tern
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).

DEPOSITS .NOW INSURED TO $2p,OOO BY_ F.D.I.C.

1.00

---~-~~~-------------------·

Bovs Size Jerks Socks

New selection of colors
Small (fits si zes 7 to 9) large (fits sizes 9 t o
11 ).

Special Sale! Mens and Boys

Lang Vei-all of them just below the demilitarized wne
(DMZ).
A spokesman said total casualties so far were three
Americans wounded and four Communist soldiers killed.
The news blackout lifted today was the most severe of the
10-year-old war in Vietnem. It had given t~e Commu~ist
nations a field day for propaganda blasts agarnst the Umted
States and aroused misgivings among some congressional
leaders.
The Communist nations charged that South Vietnamese
already had invaded Laos, and the Soviet government
newspaper Izvestia said on Tuesday American officers w~re
commanding them. Communist China said today the Allies
were " poised" to invade Laos.
And in Paris today the chief Hanoi negotiator, Xuan Thuy,
and the Viet Cong negotiator, Mme. Nguyen Thai Binh,
charged U.S. and South Vietnamese troops actually. were
inside Laos and that the Nixon administration was trymg to
cover up.
Laos Claims Neutrality
In Vientiane, Laotian Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma
said if an actual invasion were underway he would protest to
the Soviet Union and Great Britain, co-chairmen of the
Geneva Convention on Laos. Af the same time he reported a
North Vietnamese offensive in Laos had swept 25 miles past
the government bastion of Muong Soui and threatened to cut
the land routes between Vientiane and Luang Prabang, the
royal capital to the north.

· 79~

Another ·big shipment! Mens Blue Denim

SALE PRICES!
MEN'S and BOYS'

"Hi There I"

POMfROY, 0.

Another big shipment of these popular orl~&gt;n
socks. One size fits all sizes 10 to 13. Black, wh1te
and many, many solid and heathertone shades.

You'll want to take time to browse through the mens and boys
depa rtment. Smart new sport shirts for men and for boys.
Short sleeves, solid colors , stripes, tapered an? non-taper
models. All permanent press. Boys and mens unli.ned Jackets
in smart new colors for spring wear. Wembley t1es for men
and young men in the popular new wide width, plenty of
stripes, plaids and neat patterns . New Mr. W~angler Flare
trousers. Stripes and paisleys sizes 28 ~o 36 wa1st. Mens and
boys belts in regular and the popular w1de harness look belts
- Lee Boot cut Western style jeans.
You'll enjoy a visit to Elberfelds mens and boys department.

SPORT COATS

Bad Day ...

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

JERKS SOCKS

Funeral services for Mrs.
Hobart (Magdalene) Young ,
who died unexpectedly Wed·
nesday at her home in Sidney,
Sale prices on smart new
will be held at 1:30 p.m. Friday
sport coats in solid colors
there. Following services at
and smart plaids. Good
Sidney the body will be brought
selection of sizes.
to the Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy where services will be
Regular 19.95 Boys
held at 2 p.m. Sunday. The Rev.
SPORT COATS - SALE 10.90
Bill Perrin will officiate. Burial
will be in Beech Grove
Regular 29.95 Mens
Cemetery.
Mrs. Young, who was reared
SPORT COATS - SALE 19.90
in Pomeroy by an aunt, Miss
Kate Fick, was employed as 1-..;..._.....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:---:-~-----·-·-t
office manager for Frantz
Brothers, Inc. in Sidney.
Friday services in Sidney will
be held at the Cromes and Son
Funeral Home. Friends may
call at the Ewing Funeral Home
here beginning Friday evening
until time of services, Sunday.

SALES ON FRIDAY
The Homebuilders Class of
the Middleport Church of Christ
will hold a food and bake sale
Friday at the Western Auto
RECUPERATING
Store in Middleport beginning
Mrs. Margaret Heaton,
Tonight, Feb. 4
at 10 a. m. Proceeds will go former Meigs County resident
NUT OPEN
toward purchase of new car- now living in Bradenton, Fla., is
peting for the church.
recuperating from an eye
Friday &amp; Saturday
transplant. Mrs. Heaton, who
February 5-6
(Continued from page 1)
lived in the Chester area, is the
SCHOOL PLANNED
was traveling west on SR 248
HOW THE WEST WAS.
A Hocking Area school of mother of James A. Heaton,
WON
when he went off the highway on
religion will begin Sunday at 3 Pomeroy Route 3. Her address
the right, hit a guard rail, came
(Technicolor)
p. m. at the Mount Moriah is Sarasota Memorial Hospital,
Carroll Baker
back across the road and into a Baptist Church in Middleport.
Room 216, Sarasota, Fla.
Lee J. Cobb
ditch . There were medium The school will continue the
Also Cartoon
damages, and no injuries.
next six consecutive Sundays,
SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.
No citations were issued.
niLE RECOVERING
lasting two hours each session.
Mike Ihle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Ihle, Racine, is recovering
from knee surgery at St. Joseph
ROLLS IN DANGER
Hospital, Parkersburg. His
LONDON (UPI) - Rolls- room number is 206.
Royce, long the symbol of
British engineering excellence,
may go out of business if it does
DANCE SET
not get more money from the
A teen dance will be held at
government, industry sources the Southern Junior High School
said today.
Friday following the SouthernNorth Gallia basketball game.
The senior class of the high
If you use our
school is sponsoring the event.
WANTS DISCLOSURE
WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S.
BANK-BY-MAIL
Sen . Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio,
introduced a resolution in the
Senate Wednesday calling for
ENVELOPES,
full public financial disclosure
(Continued from page 1)
of all senators and their key
you'll find one of these
moon, the astronauts loosened
staff aides.
up when the satellite loomed
large outside their cabin
"BANK SERVICE
JET HIJACKED
window. Even Shepard, AmeriATLANTA (UPI) -A Delta ca's quietest spaceman, was
Air Lines jet with 23 passengers awed by the sight.
STAllONS" on
aboard was hijacked today by a
" It's really quite a sight," he
man who ordered it to fly to said. "No atmosphere at all.
'most every corner
Havana, a Delta spokesrr:an Everything's clear up here. It's
said.
really fantastic."

MEIGS lHEATRE

Mens and ·Young Mens

Mens and Boys Department 1st Floor

SALE OPENS- A "Big 9" Sale that opened Wednesday morning in Middleport's Beu
Franklin Store, No. Second Ave., owned by Everett Rall attracted customers despite the frigid
weather and treacherous road conditions. It was a good place to get warm Wednesday, as well
as to find good bargains.

14.88

JACKETS

Good selection of warm
winter jackets at real
sav ings. Toddler boys siles
2T to 4T. Little boys sizes 3
to 6 - r egular boys sizes 8
to 16.
Mens sizes 36 to 54.
Now is a perfect time to
buy jackets for men and
boys and really save.

WORK DUNGAREES
Made of lOounce blue denim. Sanfor ized shrunkTriple stitched seams - Bar tacked at all strai.n
points. Sizes 29 to 44 and extra large sizes 46 to 54
waist.
Stop in the mens department now and stock up on
your needs.
Special Purchase!
Cannon Royal Family

Gl RLS BLOUSES

WASH CLOTHS
3 for 1.00

A new shipment of g irls
blouses in sizes 3 to 6x and 7
to 14. 3/4 length sleeves and
long
sleeves.
White,
turquoise , yellow and
p ri nts. Lace and embroidery trim.

Cannon Royal Family
Velura

DISH TOWELS
3 for 2.00

1.95 - 2.95 - 4.95

SALE! AIRWAY UNI-MOLD LUGGAGE
D iscontinued style in Airway Luggage - (only 33 pieces t o
sell). Colors incl ude: Charcoal - White - Brown - Red. BlueGreen. ( Not all colors in a ll si zes)
FOR LADIES:
6 Reg. 20.95 22" Weekend - - - 7. Reg. 30.95 26" Wardrobe - - - -- - 11 Reg. 35.95 28" Wardrobe - - - - - 1 Reg. 20.95 Cosmetic Case - - - - - - -

- Sale 12.50
Sale 18.25
Se~le 21.50
Sale 12.00

FOR MEN:
2 Reg. 22.95 Companion 3 Reg. 34.95 Two Suiter 2 Reg. 36.95 Three Suiter
1 Reg. 19.95 Attache Case

Sale
- Sale
Sale
Sale

- - - - - - - - -

.
- -

13.90 ·
20.50
21.75
11 .50

Sale price on Dan dee Treds.

FOAM RUBBER MATS _

Save on Mens and Boys

CPO JACKETS
There's a good selection of CPO Jackets on sale. Boys sizes
and mens sizes. Plaids and solid color navy blue.
$5.95 Jackets are $3.00-$7.95 Jackets are $4.00
$14.95 Jackets are $7.50, etc.
Take advantage of this sale Friday a~d Saturday.
Boys Sizes 3 to 7

2.95 Sport Shirts

Sale 1.69
All permanent press . Solid
colors and stripes. Long
sleeves.

Gri p floor flat- No Sk ids - No Slips. Beveled edges prevent
tripping. Natural variegated p u~e rubber .surfac~. Rug
always lies flat-never curls or wrmkles. Res1sts stams and
footprints. Beautiful marbelized colors.
$1.89 18"x30" Sale $1.69
S3.1921"x36" - - - - Sale $2.89

CAPE COD CURTAINS

Sale! Davis 4 D Cushion
Foot

Neva- Press Cape Cod of 50 percent Kodel and 50 percent
Avr i l Ravon.

WORK SOCKS

Solid color Cape Cods. Decorative a ll-over baby headed
ruffle. Easy care fabric . Never needs ironing! Mach ine
washable! Fast colors-Tie backs included. Colors: Gold,
Pink, Turquoise, ·Green, White.

Sale 3 pair 1.69
Sizes 10-101!2, 11-11 112, 12-13
and 14-15 in solid co lor
grey or white.

24 11 length
36" length
45' 1 length

2.49
2.49
2.99

54' 1 length
11
63 length
Valance -

3.29
3.59
1.29

CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERY SALE

Sale 20% Off
Made-To-Measure Draperies
ANY LENGTH OR WIDTH

14 DAYS ONLY
FEB. 5 to FEB. 20
Bring in your window measurement.s. Let ol:lr
experienced helpful sales staff ass1st you In
selecting from hundreds of Decorator Industries fabrics in prints or solids.
Made-to-measure Draperies are made to the
exact length or width you need. And for 2
weeks they're yours at 20 percent reduction.
All draperies feature blind stitched 5" bottom
hems, 1112" side hems, weighted corners.
Select lined or unlined styles. Price depends
on fabric and window size.
How to measure:
1. Measure the width of the area you want to
cover
2. Measure the length
3. Bring us these figures ; we 'l l do the rest.

Be Thrifty! Save All of
Your Saleslips Fro1n

Within two weeks of your order you will receive
your draperies- fanfolded and carefully packed
in tissue in a specially designed carton.

AND NOW, FOR TWO WEEKS ONLY,
YOU CAN SAVE 20%.
r~Y"~~~-~;-;;---;-;;y --;~;;~~~·-~
shape windows and a full line of curta in rods.
~
Also drapery hooks, Everything needed for
i.~~ ~eful hanging of draperies ..

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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