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                  <text>•

Heavy Battle Building zn Pass
SAIGON ( UPI)-Cambodian
and South Vietnamese troops
with heavy support from U.S.
Army helicopter gunships entered the Pich Nil Pass on
Highway 4 today and were
heavily engaged in hand to
hand combat with Communist
troops on its mountainous
slopes, the Cambodian high

command reported .
Although no U.S. ground
troops were reported in action
in Cambodia the United States
has greatly increased its
mvolvement there. Vientiane
dispatches reported increased
use of U.S. air power against a
Communist offensive there and
the U.S. command in Saigon

reported new protective strikes
in North Vietnam.
Pich Nil Pass is 60 miles
southwest of Phnom Peny on
the 138-mile long Highway 4
linking Phnom Penh with the
deep water port of Kompong
Som. A South Vietnamese tank
force was driving northward
from Kompong Som and a

Cambodian and South Vietnamese unit was driving south.
The Cambodian command
said the southern task force
had reached the isolated
outpost of Kompong Seila, just
below the pass, and was
battling to link up with the
northern task force only 12lh
miles away. The command said

the northern force had entered
the pass and was fighting to
di:slodge Communist troops
from its slopes.
The U. S. Army Cobra
helicopters were operating
from aU. S. Navy amphibious
transport ship (LPD) cruising
in the Gulf of Thailand off
Cambodia - the first known

example of such Army-Navy
cooperation. In addition, aU. S.
NF~vy helicopter carrier (LPH)
of 18,300 tons was operating
nearby in support of the LPD.
The LPD carries 32 choppers.
While South Vietnamese and
Cambodians battled to reopen
Route 4 and restore Cambodia's
gasoline and oil supplies, a

The Daily Se ntinel
Devoted To 'l'he lntere&amp;IJI Of 'l'he Meig1-MtJM)n Area

VOL. XXIII NO. 193

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pay Cuts
Possible

•

•

Roy]. Grimm of

'

New Haven Dies
NEW HAVEN - Roy J.
Grimm, 72, New Haven, died
Sunday at the Holzer Medical
Center.
A retired coat miner and a
member of the New Haven
United Methodist Church, Mr.
Grimm was born Oct. 2, 1898, at
New Haven, the son of Lewis J.
and Essie Graham Grimm.
Surviving are his wife, Emma
Cunningham
Grimm;
a
daughter , Mrs . Annabelle
Hudnall, and a son, Roy Dale
Grimm, Sr., both of New
Haven; four sisters, Mrs. Sadie
Warth, Mrs. Ada Wears, both of
New Haven; Mrs. Florence
Yonker, Parkersburg, and Mrs.
Geneview Grinstead, Albany;
three brothers, Elmer, New
Haven; Franklin, of Pomeroy,
and Melvin of Syracuse; six
grandchildren, and three greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
New Haven United Methodist
Church with the Rev. William
Demoss officiating. The body
will lie in state at the church one
hour before the service. Burial
will be in Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong F uneral Home after
1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
SHERIFF INVESTIGATED
Investigation in accident in
which three-year old Elizabeth
Ann Wolfe of Rutland was saved
from drowning in icy Thomas
Fork Creek Thursday was the
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department. Walter Morris,
Pomeroy Rt. 3, was credited
with saving the youngster.

TEN CENTS

McGovern Is In

RALPH
WERRY
of
Pomeroy has been named
chairman of the annual fund
drive of the Meigs County
Heart Association. Activities
for the month of February
when the drive will be held
will include the appearance of
a Columbus heart specialist
at a local public meeting, a
queen of hearts ball, a balloon
sale, a bowling tournament
and Heart Sunday which will
be a house-to-house canvass
on Sunday, Feb. 21 in
Pomeroy and Middleport.

All Meigs County elected
officials may find themselves
drawing reduced salaries of
from $400 to $600 a year as a
result of the 1970 census count,
it was reported today.
It was earlier reported that
only the salaries of officials
elected last fall - Charles Karr,
commissioner, and Gordon
Caldwell, auditor, could be
affected by the new census
figures. However, today it was
disclosed that an addition to the
Ohio Code provides for the
reduction of all salaries of
county officials when a county
loses population and falls into a
different category. Salaries of
county officials are set by Ohio
law on the basis of population.
A preliminary report of the
1970 census received by the
Meigs County Commission May
20, 1970, showed a count of
20,341. However, an official
report received more recently
from the Ohio Secretary of State
shows the official count of 19,799
which throws Meigs County into
the under 20,000 population
category as far as the salaries
of county officials are concerned.
County Prosecutor Bernard
Fultz said he will look in to the
matter. A check will also be
made to determine the accuracy of the recent report of
the Secretary of State showing
the under 20,000 figure.

MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1971

lOOSE BALL -They're after a loose ball all off balance, in the Marauders' 53-50
victory Saturday night over Logan. Left to right are Logan's George Shaw, Meigs' Tony
Vaughan and Logan's great star, Mark Shaw.

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

! News ... in Briefs !CaUey Sane
I

By United Press International

1

Act, or be sent home

Court Told

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (UPI)Sen. George S. McGovern of
South Dakota announced his
presidential candidacy today
with a call for a "second
American Revolution" and an
ironclad pledge to withdraw
every American soldier from
Vietnam.
Charging President Nixon
with deepening "the sense of
depression and despair in our
land," McGovern predicted the
next president would be a
Democrat and offered himself
as "unique! qualified" to lead
the nation in these times.
McGovern also said his
nomination in 1972 "offers the
best chance of heading off a
fourth-party movement by Democrats still fuming with
impatience over the mistakes of
past leadership."
The South Dakota senator
announced his long-anticipated
candidacy in a statewide
television and radio broadcast
(5 p.m. EST) and in a letter
mailed to 275,000 potential
contributors to his campaign.
Beating the traditional timetable
for
presidential
declaration by many months,
the 48-year old senator got an
early jump in what is expected
to be a free-for-all for the
Democratic nomination and a
chance to run against Nixon.
McGovern, who plans to enter
every primary, is sure to run
into Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of
Maine, the acknowledged frontrunner for the nomination.
Other possible candidates
include Sens. Birch Bayh of
Indiana, Harold E. Hughes of
Iowa, Fred R. Harris of
Oklahoma, William Proxmire of
Wisconsin, Henry M. Jackson of
Washington, and Walter F.Mondale of Minnesota, plus former

T. BENNING, GA. (UPI) Lt. William L. Calley Jr. "was
absolutely sane and suffering no
character or behavior disorder" at the time of the alleged
My
Lai
massacre,
a
psychiatrist testified at his
court-martial today.
However, Dr. Albert A. la
Verne testified Calley was
under a combat stress which
impaired his judgment and
visual-motor performance and
Guerrilla split widening
his ability to make complex
AL FATCH, THE LARGEST ARAB GUERRILLA decisions.
organization, says it will join Jordanian troops in fighting militant
Witnesses at the murder
guerrillas if the militants violate a cease-fire and engage in a n- court-martial, now in its 29th
tigovernment violence. The cease-fire last week ended fighting day, have testified that the
between guerrillas and government troops but members of the infantry platoon Calley led that
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) have said day encountered no combat and
no return fire in its search-andthey are not bound by the agreement.
King Hussein's government and Al Fatch issued separate destroy sweep of the Vietstatements Sunday warning they would use military force against namese subhamlet in which
the PFLP if the group carries out its threats of violence against Calley is accused of point-blank
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Four
Jordan. Political sources said the Palestinian resistance slaughter of 102 civilians.
quick-acting teenagers rescued
movement was in danger of a_serious split.
two small children Sunday who
Chester Firemen
Even rattlesnakes waked up
had fallen through thin ice of a
Went to 14 Fires
city park pond.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA STARTED THE WEEK with
Police said Allen Becker, 16;
Damages
in
fires
covered
by
temperatures so warm rattlesnakes awoke early from their
his brother, John, 15, Linda
hibernation. Wisconsin, New York and New England had subzero the Chester Volunteer Fire
Epling, 15, and Wilma Hinkle,
cold. Hazardous driving warnings were in effect in Kansas early Department during 1970 totaled
14, were skating on the Linden
$8,000,
it
was
announced
todjy.
today because of snow and freezing rain and in parts of Arkansas
Park
pond when they saw the
The Chester Department
and Tennessee because of ice on bridges and ove!passes.
answered a total of 14 calls with children fall into the freezing
Los Angeles' temperature soared to a record 90 degrees
400 man hours spent. The calls water.
Sunday, breaking a 51-year-old mark. At least four persons were included six runs in Chester
Linda removed a scarf she
bitten by rattlesnakes in nearby foothills, including an 8-year-old Township, six in Orange had received as a Christmas
boy who was listed in serious condition.
Township and two in Olive present, Allen tossed it to Robin
Township. An average of 10 men Edwards, 9, and pulled him to
Sommer heads workmen :S bureau
answered each call and 200 safety. Then Allen jumped into
COLUMBUS--GOY. JOHN J. GILLIGAN today named Stark miles were driven in answering the four-feet-deep water, found
Lisa Davis, 5, and brought her
County Commissioner Joseph J. Sommer as administrator of the
the calls.
to shore.
Bureau of Workmen's Compensation. Gilligan said Sommer, 43,
He pulled off his jacket,
and a native of Canton, was well qualified for the post because of
SALE OF RIGHTS
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The wrapped her in it and began
his record and experience in the field of workmen's comInterior Department has an- artificial respiration as his
pensation.
"He has the knowledge to administer the day to day nounced that a Dec. 15 sale of oil brother went to call for an
operations of the bw-eau efficiently and intelligently as well as the and gas drilling rights off the emergency squad.
talent and desire to get the BWC moving again in a direction that Louisianna coast brought in. The little girl was listed in fair
$845.8 million - a figure second condition
at
Children's
~ill benefit all the people of Ohio," Gilligan said.
only to the $900 million collected Hospital.
no
last year for drilling rights on The
required
boy
Lelia L. Howett Dies on Sunday
Alaska's North Slope.
hospitalization.
Lelia L. Howett, 79, Shade, daughters, Donna Story,
Rt. 1, died at her residence Dayton, and Mildred Knopp,
Sunday. She was preceded in Dayton; two brothers, Hoyt
death by two infant children. Haning, Millersport, Ohio, and
She was a member of the Harry G. Haning, Pagetown;
Seventh Day Adventist Church. one sister, Ruth Chase, WorWASHINGTON (tJPI) - Re- overseas, as well as easy ones
Mrs. Howett is survived by thington; four grandchildren, volt, reform and reorganization like how much- not whether- to
her husband, Dana; two and several nieces and were in the air today as raise monthly Social Security
nephews .
lawmakers returned to map checks.
F un eral services will be major decisions on conduct of
SEVEN DISMISSED
President Nixon will outline
Seven divorce actions have Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the the 92nd Congress opening
Pomeroy Adventis t Church with Thursday.
his plans and requests at a
been dismissed in Meigs County
Pastor Rudy Bata officiating,
The legislative outlook got joint House-Senate meeting,
Common Pleas Court. Actions
assisted by Herbert Morgan. little attention among early na tionally televised, at 9 p.m.
dismissed were Glenna G.
Burial will be in Burlingham arrivals, and weeks may elapse EST Friday. But first comes
Douglas vers us Harold R.
Cemetery. Friends may call at before much gets done about organization, always a timeDouglas, Nancy 0. Ohlinger
Ewing Funeral Home any time. major issues facing the new killer at the start of a
versus Ronnie L. Ohlinger,
Congress, and this year loaded
Congress .
Mary T. Clark versus Paul E.
These include such sticky with controversy on both sides
OFFICERS NAMED
Clark, Ann L. Swain versus
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UPI) - problems as what to do about of the Capitol.
Ronald L. Swain, Arlie E.
'1'he congressional seniority
Collins versus Joann B. Collins, E. Roy Smith, publisher of the extending the draft, reforming
welfare,
curbing
textile
system
was under sharp attack
imOhio,
News,
has
been
Lima,
J ean Alle n versus Mitch~ll
Allen and Constance Craig named a vice president of the ports, improving medical care, in both parties- formally in the
and reducing troop strength House and at unofficial hearFreedom newspaper group.
versus V1:1rvin Craig .
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN has warned the
Republican -dominated legislature to help him find an adequate
way to finance public education or be cast from office. "If this
legislattire doesn't do the job the people of Ohio want done, they're
going to be gone," said Gilligan at a weekend meeting of the
Machinists Council of Ohio.
"The battle has just begun," he said. "Three, fow-, five years
ago it was possible for ow- Republican friends to close their eyes
to education and hope the problem would go away. Now there is
not a single man in the legislature who does not have a school in
his district which is disappearing beneath waves."

2 Youngsters

Saved by Four

Alert Teeners

Attorney General Ramsey
Clark. Waiting for a deadlocked
convention could be former
Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey and Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy of Massachusetts.
In assembling his campaign
team, McGovern recruited
people who worked for Humphrey, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy,
and Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy
in 1968.
In addition to working them
into his personal organization,
the South Dakota senator
announced the formation of the
National Citizens for McGovern
Committee with Blair Clark,
McCarthy's campaign manager
in 1968, as a vice chairman.
McGovern, one of the first to
speak out against the Vietnam
War, said "we must have the
courage to admit that however
sincere our motives, we made
a dreadful mistake in trying to
settle the affairs of the Vietnamese people with American

troops and bombers.
"There is now no way to end
it and to free our prisoners
except to announce a definite,
early date for the withdrawal
of every American soldier,''
McGovern said. "I make that
pledge without reservation."
McGovern also called for a
second American Revolution "not a revolution of violence,
but a quiet determination to
square our nation's policies and
priori ties with the ideals of our
founding fathers .
"In fact, I believe this is our
only hope for avoiding the ugly
violence that now temps many
desperate people.
"We cannot reconcile the deep
divisions in our society by
merely patching over them,"
McGovern said. "We can only
reconcile them by instituting the
reforms so urgently needed and
persuading the majority of the
American people to accept
them."

:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;::~:=~==~::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Ohio weather
outlook Wednesday through
Friday:
Fair and cold Wednesday,
lows in early morning near 10
north and in teens south,
highs in 20s to low 30s.
Temperatures
moderating
Thursday and _ Friday with
chance of snow north and rain
or snow south portion
Thursday, ending Friday.
Highs in 30s north and 40s
south.
:;::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::~:::;:;:::::::~::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:

Gun Club is
Broken Into
NEW HAVEN - Extensive
vandalism was reported in a
breaking and entering of the
New Haven - Broad Run Gun
Club over the weekend. Club
officers have offered a reward
for the person or persons
responsible .
Mason County Sheriff Troy
Huffman said the club's
building, located in The Pend,
was entered sometime Friday
or Saturday. The vandalism
was discovered Sunday morning by Bill Roush and Revna
King.
The officer said nothing was
found missing, but windows had
been broken and several other
acts of destruction were
committeed. King, president of
the club, is offering a $25
reward for information concerning the incident.

Weather

Partly cloudy and quite cold
today, tonight and Tuesday with
chance of snow flurries mainly
north. Highs today and Tuesday
from teens to lower 20s. Lows
tonight 5 below to 10 above zero.
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R unit answered a call at 2:54 a. m.
Sunday to the Joseph Hood
home in Minersville. Hood, ill,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

SEN. ROBERT DOLE,
Kansas, above, a conservative,
has succeeded Rogers Morton
as
Republican
national
chairman.
Morton
was
promoted to secretary of interior. Morton succeeded former Alaskan Gov. Hickel, who
resigned at the request of
President Nixon.

Meetings Planned
Parents of all children who
will make up the confirmation
class of Trinity Church in
Pomeroy this year are to meet
at the church at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday , the Rev. Bill Perrin,
pastor, announced. Children
making up the group should be
11 or 12 years of age.
The Council of Trinity Church
will meet at 7:30 p. m . Wednesday at the church.

TWO FINED
Fined in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar Saturday
night were Robert Collins,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs on
conviction of reckless operation
charges, and Timothy Michael,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, left of
center. Forfeiting an $18.70
bond posted on speeding
charges was Gerald Roach,
Gallipolis.

heavily guarded South Vietnamese convoy arrived in
Phnom Penh Sunday night with
fuel. UPI field dispatches said it
had full U.S. air support during
the trip up the Mekong River.
UPI front dispatches said the
U. S. Army Cobras were
working three at a time in
support of the ground forces and
that the airwaves crackled with
English-speaking radio
operators calling in coorc:lirll:ltes
and were answered by airbor ne
Cambodian interpreters or
French in heavily accented
English.
The dispatches said hand-tohand fighting broke out when
the government troops began
their ascent of Pich Nil
Mountain at 4 p.m. toward the
Communist held summer
palace of deposed Prince
Norodom Sihanouk. The pass
extends for six miles through
the mountains.

Coldest
Was -6
By United Press International
Columbus took top honors for
being the coldest city in the
state early today with a temperature of four below zero at
6 a.m. That temperatw~::, coupled with a five mile per hour
wind resulted in an equivalent
cooling effect (wind chill) of
11 below.
Temperatures around the
state all were below 10 degrees
at 6 a. m. The warmest spot,
Chesapeake, registered 20
degrees. Other terneratures
included Zanesville and Finc:ruly
at the zero-degree mark,
Cleveland, 7, Youngstown and
Mansfield 6, Akron-Canton 1,
and Cincinnati 7.
- Theextendedweatherforecast
for the state for Wednesday
through Friday called for continued cold weather through
Wednesday with overnight low
temperatures near 10 in northern counties to the teens in the
southern part of the state. Daily
high readings were to be in
the 20s or low 30s.
Lows tonight were again to
be in the frigid zooo, with
reading:. expectea ! vt, flve
above zero to five below zero.
Similar overnight lows were
predicted for Tuesday night.
Little or no precipitation was
expected until Thursday when
a chance of snow was forecast
for northern Ohio and snow or
rain for the southern sections of
the state.
The four-degree below Jlel"O
reading in Columbus today
failed to set any records. 1be
coldest temperature in the National Weather Service records
in the state's capital city for
this date was eight below in
1930.
Incidently, if you think it was
cold today, be thankful you do
not live in Dawson, Alaska. At
3 a.m. this morning it was 68
degrees - below zero - in
Dawson.

Napper Seroices
Will be Tuesday
Funeral services for Jerry
Napper, 16, Pomeroy Route 4,
Meigs High School sophomore
who died Saturday evening at
Cabell-Huntington Hospital in
Huntington, W. Va., as a result
of injuries received in an auto
accident Friday evening in
Rutland will be held at 2 p. m .
Tuesday at the Martin Funeral
Home.
Napper was preceded in
death by his mother, Mary, and
a brother, Leonard, Col!!Illbus,
was not listed earlier as a
Officiating
at
survivor.
Tuesday's service will be the
Rev. Uoyd Grimm. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime.

92nd Congress Will Begin Thursday
ings which opened today in the
Senate. Modest changes in the
system already were assured in
the House, and Democratic
liberals a t a caucus today
pushed for major revisions
including a possible eight-year
limit on committee chairmanships.
In another break with tradition, a reported 70 House
members signed a letter urging
replacement of a veteran South
Carolina committee chairman,
Rep. John L. McMillan, whose
management of a committee
handling District of Columbia
matters long has drawn liberal
fire . They want him r eplaced

by Rep. Charles C. Diggs, DMich , a black.
A delegation of "regular"
democr ats from Mississippi
was on hand seeking a denial of
party status-and thus committee standing and chairmanships
- for the entire Mississippi
House delegation plus Sen. John
C. Stennis, D-Miss., all of whom
were elected in November on
their own Independent state
party ticket.
Five House members were
locked in battle for election
Tuesday as House Democratic
leader to succeed Rep. Carl
Albert of Oklahoma who will be
eleva ted to speaker. Albert

faces a norminal last-minute
challenge from Rep . John
Conyers Jr ., D-Mich., but has
no real opposition.
In the Senate, conservative
challenges were being weighed
against Democratic Whip Edward M. Kennedy, by Sen.
Robert Byrd, D-W.Va .; and
against Republican Leader
Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, by
Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn.
Senate liberals of both parties
meantime were plotting their
semiannual opening attack on
the filibuster, an event guaranteed to set off a talkfest of the
kind they would like to bring
under control.

�2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.18, 1971

r---------------------------·
I

I

I Beat....

I

! Of the Bend

!

I By Bob Hoeflich

l

I

I
I

I

I

I

the Sports Desk
by Chet Tannehill

Before Moon Clifford gets into his Golden Era report for
today, below is the recap on the weekend's crystal ball exercise.
After the firing in 20 regional games was over Saturday night,
Sports Desk had 15 of 20 the way the ball bounced. To date 49 of 62
have gone the way of the form charts. I got a lot of bee haws on
picking Meigs over Athens by one Friday night. But look at it this
way: should the Marauders have done the unexpected and upset
Athens - by no means impossible - Sports Desk would have
lived hard in certain circles (and rightly).
Note that the average spread of actual scores and of predicted
scores came out at 22.1 and 22.6!
BY TilE WAY, if you sit on the sidelines and criticize the
On the record, Logan is the most inconsistent performer in
officiating at football games here's your big chance. Classes in the area, though managing to come up the loser. The Chiefs had
football officiating will begin at 7 p. m. tomorrow night at the their brains beaten out last week, then played a close one (53--50 to
Meigs Junior High School cafeteria in Middleport. Ronnie Smith
Meigs).
will be the instructor and those interested are to report to the
In the table below, the first score is the actual count, the score
cafeteria.
in parenthesis is the predicted score; and in the spread column,
the first figure is the actual spread, the second the predicted
AND- PLANS ARE BING MADE to organize a men's slospread.
pitch softball league in the Meigs-Mason area. All interested
FRIDAY
managers or teams are asked to contact Larry Grueser at 992Sunofagun
Meigs 56 (62) Athens 78 (61)
2974or Roger Hysell, 992-2136 or write P. 0. Box 96 in Minersville
FARNHAM'S FIRSr (1928-29) BASKETBALL TEAM11-3
Gallipolis 44 (52) Wellston 55 (55)
by Wednesday. An organizational meeting is being planned for all
Front,
1 to r, Richard Davis, James Clark, James Terrel;
Darn
Jackson 70 (58) Ironton 49 (64)
managers on Jan. 24.
second
row, Harlan Eiselstein, James Fontana, Frank Shay,
24-77!
Waverly 78 (109) Logan 54 (32)
Ralph Welker; third row, Farnham, Gerald Welker, Charles
3(}.17
Glouster 57 ( 43) Miller 87 ( 60)
GIRLS' TEAM, 1928-29- First row, 1 tor, Helen Grace
THE CHESTER SCHOOL ALUMNI ASSN. is still looking for
Winebrenner, Otho Tracy and Robert Elberfeld (Mgr.)
14-4
Vinton Co. 47 (54) Nel-York 61 (58)
Williams,
Frances Dye, Dolores Parmer ; second row,
talent for a variety show to be held at 8 p. m. Saturday at the
11-28
Federal Hock 80 (80) Alexander 69 (62)
SET PACE
official trials for the forthcomEmmy Lou Keehne, Florence Smith, Gladys Schmittauer,
Eastern High School. Proceeds will go towards providing a
Doggone
North Gallia 82 (62) Eastern 78 (75)
CERVINIA, Italy (UPI)- ing world two-man bobsled
Beulah Winebrenner. Third row, Martha Hobstetter, Phyllis
scholarship for an Eastern High School senior. In addition to the
23-4
Ravenswood 91 (62) Wahama 68 (58)
Chase, Martha Schlagel, Mildred Smith, Lydia Davis; fourth
Two Italian teams set the pace championships in this alpine
talent show there will be an auction of cakes ~nd other items.
SATURDAY
Sunday on the first day of resort.
row, Farnham, Mildred Smith.
Chairman of the show is Mrs. Betty Dean and Mrs. Olive Weber is
22-24
Athens 65 ( 62) Gallipolis 43 ( 38)
serving as accompanist.
-s-id_e_!_N_o_b_o_d_y_l-ik_e_,s'--m-e_!_"_(_G_e_t
33-34 , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ironton 41 ( 48) Waverly 74 ( 82)
46-36 1
Wellston 42 ( 42) Jackson 88 (78)
your own network show, girlie,
ALICE NORTON, A LIBRARY publicity consultant from
3-26 :
Logan 50 ( 43) Meigs 53 (69)
1
andso-lovinglythey'llallcome
New York, has been employed by the Ohio Valley Association of
back.)
6-8 1
Nel-York54 (52) Alexander 60 (60)
Libraries and will conduct a publicity program for the 11 counties
•
Great news: the marvelous •
Zane Trace 109 (74) Glouster 51 ( 40)
58-34 1
involved in the association. The New York writer visited the
"1776" musical definitely will
27-21
Vinton Co. 50 ( 43) Miller 77 (64)
Meigs Bookmobile, Mr. Eddy, recently. She was accompanied by
Phil Iselin (owner of the Jets not close, and hopes to be
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Lou Nova, who stood on his
1(}.2
Federal Hock 67 (76) Sheridan 57 (74)
Jerry L. Grim, OVAL director.
YORK
The
Robert
and
Monmouth Race Track) around until 1976, management
NEW
yoga-head
figuring
out
inOuch
Southern 63 (54) Hannan Tr. 81 ( 48)
14-22 (former NBC chairman) tellectual problems, figured out passed out cigars - his son hurrahs ... Only artist in music
Kyger Creek 56 ( 40) Rock Hill80 ( 62)
TIIATWASMIDDLEPORT'S Dave Diles doing another color
No luck Kintners separated ... Bennett his after-ring career that way, Jimmy and missus ( Ruth history to win the award 18
North Gallia 65 (73) Symmes Val. 67 (60)
telecast of sports activities in Florida on television's ABC
Average 22.1-22.6 Cerf is out of the hospital; apparently: He 's now in Anne)) grandpopped Phil .... years in a row: Since 1953 Ella
Saturday night. Dave is seen quite frequently on national
Record to Date 49 of 62 - 79 per cent minor surgery, not on his "personnel placement" with an Publisher asked Mary Barelli Fitzgerald has been chosen No.
television these days.
funnybone .... The Eve of Rome L. A. employment agency Gallagher (who basked in 1 Female Vocalist by Downbeat
cosmetics outfit (Gillette had (Atlas, on Wilshire Blvd.) .... Jackie O.'s White House mag; the only choice for us, too
Clifford reviews the 1928-29 Pomeroy High School season in
bought it) has been dropped .... The Copa expected Tom Jones splendor and then peached) to .... Roseland's dance star Pedro
A DOE DEER CREATED a wave of excitement Friday when
athletics, including its distaff side, which also was outstanding.
John Lindsay never seems even to torso-twist back to the Copa, write another book, but she Varvara (Pedro &amp; Olga) has to
it was chased from the hills by a couple of dogs into the area in
to consider a city problem where his career got its huge explained she'd told it all; quit permanently (gall bladder)
back of the courthouse to the Masonic Temple building. One
BY PAUL (MOONBEAM) CLIFFORD
personally until it's in push, but owner Jules Podell nastily, too ... Joanne (Mrs . on doctors orders .... Biggest
Community Action Program worker came near getting run down
Ray Farnham's first basketball team at Pomeroy in the 1928desperation headlines .... Ch 5's now shrugs, "he out-priced Johnny) Carson now wails: "All customers for N. Y. art
by the excited deer which again took off for the hills after its
29 season proved to be a good one. The young Marietta graduate newsman made a marvelous himself."
our friends are taking Johnny's galleries - restaurants; seems
appearance near the courthouse.
had lost most of his players from the team that had lost the goof on the Ia te-evening news:
most now hang some of the
previous season in the Class B District finals to Hillsboro Mar- Called it "The Women's Lip" ....
finest daubs in the medium
shall. Included in the losses was big Ralston "Bruz" Russell, who The fella presumably dating
price field .... Rod Steiger
had given the 1927-28 Panthers the height they had needed. Bruz Barbra Streisand really is WIN AT BRIDGE
18
NORTH
arrived for lunch at the Pen &amp;
• Q10842
was later to become the brother-in-law of Farnham, who was to "the beard" for his brother.
Pencil in a sinister long black
¥63
marry Dorothy Russell. It might be pointed out that Tippy Dye Solution for the Yankees - N.
complicatedly
fastened cape •
Holzer Medical Center, First Wellston, a daughter.
• 54
also is a brother-in-law of Farnham's. Tip married his high school Y. Grid Giants in their irk
and
a
hat
that
maitre-d Ty
.9876
Ave. and Cedar St. General
sweetheart, Mary Russell.
against
the
obsolete
Yankee
described
as
"clerical";
the
EAST (D)
WEST
Discharges
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Stadium:
Coming
back
as
regulars
from
the
1927-28
team
were
Harlan
Shea
Stadium
soon
hatchick
had
to
help
unwrap
.AK97
.J3
Mrs. David E. Bennett, Mrs.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
., 10 2
'I AKQ85
Rod, like a gift .
4:30 p.m. Parents only on Thomas Glenn Boroff and infant Eiselstein at forward and Ralph Welker at the other forward. Yes, . .. . Sure sign Huntington
• QJ1097
• 83
Jim: "How about a few
Hartford's
sans
a
regular
gal:
this
is
the
same
Ralph
Welker
who
is
now
our
State
Represendaughter, John W. Campbell,
Pediatrics Ward.
.Ql054
.JZ
articles on some of the comiC
.
~vid . Casey, Mary L. tative. Farnham received a boost when Jimmy Clark and Charlie He's attending many cocktail mon errors in bidding?"
SOUTH
parties
these
dusks
solo.
Births
Farley, Mrs. Lee Hall, Donald "Punk" Winebrenner transferred from Syracuse. Both were
.65
Oswald: "In the early days
Renny Youngman called him
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hardesty, Mrs. Grace E. seasoned players, as Jim took over one of the guards, and Charlie
'IJ974
of contract perhaps the
"Flop"
Wilson;
outside
of
being
+AK62
~FOR
~
Mollett, Oak Hill, a son; Mr. Hoszapfel,Mrs. Ralph V. Howe, took over the pivot position. The other guard was won by Otho
worst of the common errors
"-AK3
and Mrs. Michael E. Davis, Rt. Mrs. Charles L. LaDeaux, Mrs. Tracy. Subs on the team included the late Gerald "Shep" Welker, wrong, why? .... The USO was the feeling that because
~ They can conquer, who ~
Both vulnerable
1, Northup, a daughter; Mr. and Charles A. Mulholland, Mrs. Ralph's brother, Jimmy Fontana, Jimmy Terrell, Richard scuttle sighs Bob Hope has your hand was worth an
iC bel1eve they can
iC
made
his
last
Vietnam
Yule
opening
bid,
it
really
cried
South
West
North
East
Mrs. Anthony Cemini, Pt. Marie Nelson, James W. "Chessy" Davis and Frank Shay. Bob Elberfeld was the team
out
for
action
when
an
op~
P.
Vergil
~
1¥ 2+
trip; maybe Nixon whispered
Pleasant, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Ousley, Jr., Mrs. Thomas J. manager.
ponent opened the bidding."
Pass
Dble
Pass
Pass
iC
+:
Roger E. Swisher, Ft. Pleasant, Perry and infant son, Miss
Thus Ray Farnham in his first coaching venture was to come something in Bob's shell-like?
Jim: "This error isn't as
Opening lead- + Q
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bertha E. Righthouse, Mrs. up with a winner. Pomeroy went on to win 20 games while losing .. .. WKIP in Poughkeepsie prevalent now, but it certain~
David Musick, Rt. 2, Jackson, a Marie G. Roberts, Russell only five. They won the Class B District tourney at Athens, and doesn't carry booze com- ly crops up. There are still
iC
+:
daughter; Mr . and Mrs. Scott, Harley L. Stalnaker, then in the game at Columbus for the State title they lost to mercials, but its disc jocks plenty of players who feel down. We'll never know. Or ~
It's Quick! Easy :
include Jac k Daniels and that because they have so West might try a no-trump.
Douglas leroy Bugg, Gallipolis Melissa D. West, Mrs. G.
Youngstown Boardman 28-17. In that game, Pomeroy trailed 3-1
Ferry, a daughter ; and Mr. and Eugene Wolfe, Mrs. Marvin at the end of the first period, and was still very much in the game Johnny Walker .... Strip Drugs many high-card points they East might bid again and
sound sinister, eh? Like a dope must get into the bidding." East-West might even reach iC
iC
Mrs. Dennis M. Robinette, Rt. 2, Miller, and Jerry Jones.
at halftime as they were behind only 9-8. However in the third joint with nudes? It's simply a
Oswald: "Here is one I a no-trump game. They
~
~
probably
wouldn't
make
it,
-----------------------~ stanza Boardman outscored the Panthers 10 to three to take a 19- most respectable drugstore on saw in a rubber bridge game
but even if they did their
lllead and then coasted to victory. Punk Winebrenner was high the Las Vegas strip .... Dinty just the other day. South profit would be just 600 ~
Fridays Only
~
for Pomeroy with seven points with Clark and Eiselstein scoring Moore's manager, L]y Reed, held 15 points in high cards, points instead of 1,100."
iC The Drive- In Window+:
including the ace and king
four points. Ralph Welker and Tracy both had one point. Shep signed at the porno-films ad~
is Open
~
of both minor suits. He had
Welker, Jim Fontana and Jim Terrell played in the game, but did vertised all around his a good hand and no one was
ie
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
+:.
not score.
restaurant: "We didn't have all going to keep him from bid~
(Continuously)
iC
~
In regular season play Pomeroy had victories over Tuppers those four-letter words in ding with it."
The bidding has been:
~ Other Banking Hours 9 to 3+:'
Jim: "I see that West
Plains, Syracuse, Racine and Wellston, and had two wins over movies before the talkies."
South iC and 5 to 7 as usual on: ·
West
North
East
Ex-heavyweight
contender knew just what to do about
Gallipolis, Middleport, Rutland, and Chester. They lost 32-21 to
2'1
Dble
Pass
iC Fridays.
iC
that bid. He doubled it and 14
the Alumni, 32-31 to Logan, 35-19 to Nelsonville and 24-23 to New
24
Pass
3+
opened the queen of trumps Pass
+:
iC
?
4 'I
Pass
Boston. The Chester games were both classics. I believe that this
after everyone had passed." Pass
~
~
You,
South,
hold:
was the Chester team that starred Pickles, Knight, Jake Gaul and
Oswald : "A few moments
48743 'IJ986 +Kl043 "-7
Saturday's
Doddle Ridenour. Eiselstein won the second game 24-22 with a
later East and West had
What do you do now?
Ohio College Basketba II Scores chalked up 1,100 points above
basket in the last few seconds.
A-Pass. Your partner is
POMEROY, OHIO
~
By United Press International
the line and South was deal- showing a tremendous hand, :
In the Meigs Co. tourney played at the old K&amp;P hall, the Ohio State 83 Wisconsin 69
Member FDIC
~
ing
the
next
hand."
but your hand does not look ~
Member Federal
iC
Panthers beat Rutland 29-15 in the opening game, and then won Bowling Green 78 Miami 68
Technicians often earn twice as much
Jim: "It is interesting to like one t h a t will produce a iC
University 62 Toledo 53
Reserve System
~
another thriller from Chester 24-22. They then walloped Mid- Ohio
Western Michigan 87 Kent State speculate on what might slam.
as the average high school graduate. As
dleport 31-16 in the finals. In the District tourney at Athens
78
have b e e n if S o u t h had
Pomeroy trailed Wheelersburg until the final quarter but rallied Dayton 76 DePaul 71
much as some college graduates make. For
realized that he would probDetroit 78 Xavier 76
ably take as many tricks on
to take a 22-18 win. They thumped Cadmus 4G-17 in the second Youngs
town
State
70
Westmore information about short-term technidefense as on attack and
game, and then squeezed past Glenford 18-17. The Panthers beat minster, Pa. 61
just passed. West might have
cal training, tear out this ad and send it in.
Hillsboro Marshall, the defending Class B state champs 24-20 in Ashland 58 Fredonia, N. Y.
passed also in which case
State 35
the semi-finals, and then won 2G-17 over Stewart to go on to
Kentucky Stale 66 Central State East would struggle with his
You'll get this guide from the governone-heart contract. He might
Columbus.
62
Akron 89 Centra l Connecticut 62 make it or he might go
Jimmy
Clark
went
on
to
Marietta
College
to
star
in
football,
ment-free.
Wittenberg 75 Hiram 63
basketball and baseball. Jim wasn't very big, but he was good Otterbein 92 Kenyon 51
enough to play regular third base for the Pioneers, end in football Uenison 70 Uber11n 6U
THE DAILY SENTINEL
and guard in basketball. It might be added that Marietta at that Muskingum 84 Wash. &amp; Jeff. 78
DEVOTED TO
Capital 91 Ohio Northern 75
INTEREST OF
time was a powerhouse in all sports, particularly in basketball. Mount Union 91 Baldwin MEIGS-MASON AREA i
Wallace 63
Clark later was to come back to Pomeroy in 1936 when Farnham
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Wooster
69
Walsh
54
Exec. Ed.
took over the Athletic Director position. Jim was the head Findlay 96 Heidelberg 80
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor .
basketball coach, and had some very good teams.
Wilmington 78 Malone 75
Published daily except
Farnham also had the task (or should be call it ple&amp;;:;ure) of Cedarville 82 Wright State 71
Saturday
by The Ohio Valley
Urbana 122 Marion, Ind . 103
Publishing Company, 111
coaching the girls' basketball team. Pomeroy had a good team Defiance 105 Bluffton 98
Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio,
that year as the gals won 14 and lost only two games. They had Ohio Dominican 114 Rio Grande
45769 . Business Office Phone
97
992-2156,
Editorial Phone 992wins over Syracuse, the Alumni, and Wahama, and had two
2157.
victories over Gallipolis, Middleport, Tuppers Plains and
Second class postage paid at
State Tournament
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Rutland, three wins over Chester while their losses came at the
National advert ising
Pomeroy 17
Boardman 28
representative
Bottinelli ·
hands of Rutland 15-14 and Wellston 21-17.
1928-29 Girls' Basketball
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
Tuppers Plains 8 St
Beulah Winebrenner, captain of the team, was one of the Pomeroy 20
., New York City, New York.
Pomeroy 35
Syracuse 6
Subscription
rates :
finest guards in the area. Phyllis Chase was the top scorer, and
Alumni 15 Delivered by carrier where
Pomeroy 25
r eally could toss them through the hoop. Lydia Davis played the Pomeroy 19
Wahama 13 available 50 cents per week ;
1111 CORFER!RCIBOARO
Gallipolis 17 By Motor Route where carrier
other forward position, and Mildred Smith was the center. Pomeroy 35
Midd leport 8 service not available ; One
Pomeroy 26
Another Mildred Smith (Butternut Avenue) was the other guard. Pomeroy
Rutland 15 .nonth S1.75. By mail in Ohio
14
r------ --------------- ---~ Subs on the team were Martha Hobstetter, Martha Schlagel,
Chester 6 and W. Va ., One year $14.00.
Pomeroy 43
Six months $7.25. Three
I
I Frances Dye (Tip's sister), Helen Grace Williams, Dolores Pomeroy 17
Wellston 21
months $4.50. Subscription
1 To: Careers, Washington, D.C. 20202
1
Galli poli s 14 price
Pomeroy 22
includes Sunday Times .
Palmer, Gladys Schmittauer and Florence Smith.
Chester
7
Pomeroy
26
·
Sentinel.
I
I
Midd leport 3
Pomeroy 23
EXAMPLE:
I ~~
I
Four states have adopted
Rutland 9
Pomeroy 22
1928-29 Basketball Record
Pomeroy
11
Middleport
7
Pomeroy 42
Tuppers Pia ins 3 the rose as their state flower
I
I Pomeroy 55 Tuppers Plains 17 Pomeroy 32
Rutland 27 Pomeroy 32
12 x 15 SIZE-79.95
Chester 14 - Georgia, Iowa, New York
Syracuse 19 Pomeroy 23
I Af:!c:l[~S~I Pomeroy 46
New Boston 24 Pomeroy 21
Rutland 7 and North Dakota.
I
- - - I Pomeroy 21
Alumni 32
County Tournament
Pomeroy 31
Logan 32 Pomeroy 29
Rutland 15
I CiJL
I Pomeroy 26
Racine 14 Pomeroy 24
Chester 22
I
I Pomeroy 43
Gallipolis 20 Pomeroy 31
Middleport 16
Middl eport 21
I
I Pomeroy 43
District Tournament
Rutland 11 Pomeroy 22
1 State
Zip_
1 Pomeroy 51
Wheelersburg 18
OPTOMETRIST
Pomeroy 28
Chester 18 Pomeroy 40
Cadmus 17
OFFICE
HOURS
9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
Pomeroy 28
Wellston 13 Pomeroy 18
Glenford 17
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
1
Pomeroy 27
Ga llipolis 12 Pomeroy 24
AT NOON ON THURS) - EAST COURT ST.
Ma
rshall
20
1n:~
Advertising contnbuted for the public good in cooper ation with
Ph.
992
-2635
Middleport
1
Pomeroy 19
Nelsonvi lle 35 Pomeroy 20
Stewart 17
POMEROY.
'o,;•• ••
The Advertising Council and the International Newspaper Adver ti sing Executives
Pomeroy 24
Chester 22
In case you've wondered, Saturday night's affair honoring
Ray Farnham, former Pomeroy athletic coach, at the Orchid
Room is not a stag affair. Everyone's welcome, says Fred Crow,
one of the promoters of the dinner which gets underway at 7 p. m.
A smoker- which is stag-will be from 3 to 5.
Incidentally, Tip and Frances Dye and Mr. and Mrs. Ralston
Russell, who are coming for the Saturday night activities will be
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hobstetter.
Looks like a really big Saturday night.

•

VOICe
• a Iong Broad way I
1

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

!

HOSPITAL NEWS

I

Anxiety to Bid
Leads to Errors

t~··············
A THOUGHT:
TODAY

... :

:

How much more
would you make
if you went to
a technical school?

DRIVE-IN :
BANKING ·t

.

a: R;J :1 •!*i!fflU

t

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS CO.~

.

...................

r

0

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

L------------------------J

INGELS FURNITURE

·---------------------·

�r

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 18, 1971
Morrall

Colts Capture Title, 16-13
MIAMI (UPI) -The Baltimore Colts didn't exactly do it
the classy way Brooks Robinson
and the Baltimore Orioles didbut they'll take it anyway.
They fumbled five times, they
threw three pass interceptions,
they flubbed an extra point, and
three of 'em even collided
trying to stop a punt from

going into the end zonenothing like the super way
Robinson scooped up hot
grounders for
baseball's
Orioles.
But the Colts are laughing all
the way to the bank today to
deposit their $15,000 checksthanks to a 22-year-old longhaired rookie named Jim

Scores
Meigs 53 Logan 50
Hopweii-Ludon 61
Jackson 88 Wellston 42
Gibonsburg 63 Lakota 48
Alexander 60 Nelsonville York Youngs town
Liberty
50
54
Champion 49 (ot)
Eastern Meigs 68 Waterford 42 Columbus Academy 88 Lucas 56
Zane Trace 109 Glouster 51
Danville 71 Centerburg 70
Miller 77 Vinton County 59
East Knox 87 New Albany 64
Springfield 56 Ravenna 54
Columbus DeSales 63 Columbus
Akron South 120 Walsh Jesuit 53
Brookhaven 60 (ot)
Triway 83 Waynedale 62
Columbus Watterson 69 LanTuscarawas
Valley
45
caster 66 (ot)
Zanesville 72 Columbus NorNewcomerstown 40
thland 62
Minerva 80 Leetonia 44
West Geauga 79 Chamberlin 71 Massillon 65 Columbus East 60
Cleveland Univ. School 53 Newark 66 Cambridge 54
Pittsburgh Shdysd 51
West Jefferson 75 Triad 52
Garretsville 85 Field 50
Columbus North 83 Mifflin 71
Crestwood 61 Southeast 55
Grove City 99 Franklin Heights
South Central 61 Black River 58
50
Norwalk St. Paul 60 Monroeville Mt. Vernon 71 Buckeye Valley
54

•

Cuyahoga Falls 71 Barberton 65
Solon 71 Aurora 34
Lakewood St. Edward 74
Wickliffe 41
Brecksville 66 Maple Heights 45
Rocky River 59 Midpark 34
Cleveland Cathedral Latin 69
Mansfield St. Peter 61
S. Amherst 79 Lake Ridge
Academy 62
Revere 53 Akron Kenmore 46
Akron Central-Hewer 98 Dayton
Roth 73
Medina 73 Brooklyn 47
New Bremen 87 Spencerville 42
Xenia 102 Fairborn Park Hills
63

Preble Shawnee 68 College
Corner 60
Findlay 87 Dayton Roosevelt 75
Fort Loramia 76 Newton 56
Miami East 68 Ansonia 46
Dixie 72 Eaton 67
Dayton Stebbins 40 Northridge
38

Tipp City 83 Dayton Carroll 48
Toledo Rogers 58 Sylvania 56
Toledo Whitmer 75 Oregon Clay
65

54

Marion Franklin 81 Hamltn
Township 54
Granville 100 Olentangy 75
Big Walnut 62 Dublin 54
Celina ICHS 58 Minster 40
Sidney Lehman 91 Anna 67
Fort Recovery 75 Bryant, Ind.
65

Lima Bath 68 Lima Central
Catholic 58
Covington 93 Bradford 67
Zane Trace Ross 78 Unioto 59
Ross Southeastern 73 Frankfort
Adena 57
Piketon 82 Peebles 75
Carlisle 53 Kings Mills 52
Lincolnview 58 Coldwater 53
Bethel 74 Franklin Monroe 71
Springfield
Shawnee
64
Springfield Cath. 63
Brookville 72 National Trail 63
Middletown Madison 98 Valley
View 54
Springfield North 70 Piqua 49
Wellsville 85 Carrollton 39
Sebring 72 United Local 45
Warren Harding 66 Youngstown
South 51
Steubenville Cath. 45 East
Liverpool 40
Western (Pike) 72 Chillicothe
Flaget 58
New Knoxsville 85 Waynesfield

Lisbon 57 Columbiana 55
Cleveland Rhodes 64 Cleveland
John Marshall 34
Tallmadge 62 Akron Ellet 46
72
Stow 80 Springfield 52
North Ridgeville 47 Brookside Celina 82 Wapakoneta 53
44
Creatview 69 Mendon Union 60
Wakeman Wsn Reserve 67 New Sandusky St. Mary 71 Sandusky
London 49
Prkns 64
Windham 76 Mogadore 59
Fremont Ross 54 Tiffin
Colmbian 52 (ot)
Edison 79 Mapleton 64
Old Fort 87 Clyde 39
Sandusky 84 Bellevue 69
Fostoria St. Wendelin 83 Norton 78 Coventry 55

O'Brien, who redeemed all
mistakes with a 32-yard field
goal for a 16-13 win over the
Dallas Cowboys.
"My mother's an astrologer
and she told me we were gonna
win," said O'Brien, who's not
only an Aquarius himself (and
isn't this the "Age of Aquarius?) but also (sorry, Cow-

Pro Standings

boys) a born Texan.
While O'Brien's tie-breaking
boot, in the final nine seconds,
was the simple reason for the
Colts' victory in Super Bowl V
Sunday, the football pundits
came up with several other
reasons today why the Colts
were able to gain revenge for
their 1969 Super Bowl upset by

•

•

fourth quarter.
Jeff Tyo, 6-3 senior forward
and leading scorer for the
Marauders, reinjured his ankle
in the second quarter and did
not return. The injury is not
expected to keep the all-leaguer
out of next week's clash with the
Gallipolis Blue Devils.
Both teams shot a cold 31 per
cent from the field, Meigs
making 18 of 57 and the Chiefs 16
of 51. The Marauders hit only 17
of 37 free throws for a very
frigid 45 per cent. In the fourth
quarter, they missed six
straight one and one situations.
Logan canned 18 of 28 for 64 per
cent.
Meigs, which won the opening
game with the Chiefs, 74-58, at
Logan, outrebounded their foes,
47-41. Besides Vaughan's 11,
Van Matre also collected 11
retrieves and Bill Hensler, 6-3
senior forward-center, nine.
All the Marauders' trouble
started in the first quarter.
Mter Vaughan split the cords
with only 15 seconds gone,
Logan came back with a twinpointer by Shaw and a free
throw by Norris to lead , 3-2.
Mter Hensler's free throw
tied it up, Shaw, who connected
on 13 of 14 from the line, put in
two from the foul line to give
Logan a 5-3 edge . Three free
throws by Jeff Morris, 6-2 junior
center, changed the advantage
to Meigs, 6-5, with 3:49 left in
the opening quarter.
Then the Chiefs hit the
warpath, scoring nine in a row
to take a 14-6 lead . A tip-in by
Tyo and a free throw by Van

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
32 16 .667 ...
Philadelphia 30 21 .588 3112
Boston
27 21 .563 5
Buffalo
13 37 .260 20
By MILTON RICHMAN
Centra I Division
UPI Sports Writer
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
28 19 .596 ...
MIAMI (UPI) -Wouldn't you
Cincinnati
20 25 .444 7
know it, America's new golden
Atlanta
15 33 .313 13112
Cleveland
6 46 .115 241/2 boy turns out to be a hippie.
Midwest Division
Part-hippie anyway.
W. L. Pet. GB
That's the way Jim O'Brien,
Milwaukee
38
7 .844 ...
the long-haired 22-year-old
Detroit
33 16 .673 7
Chicago
27 20 .574 12
place-kicking rookie of the
Phoenix
28 21 .571 12
Baltimore Colts, describes
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB himself.
You can't miss O'Brien's
Los Angeles 25 20 .556
San Francisco 26 23 .531 1
hair. It sticks out from under his
San Diego
23 26 .469 4
Seattle
22 26 .458 4112 helmet.
"Some of the guys on the club
Portland
16 32 .333 1Q112
Sunday's Results
call me 'Lassie,"' he laughs.
Milwaukee 120 Boston 113
"They call me other things, too,
Baltimore 111 Seattle 96
like 'hippie,' 'flakey' and
Phila 106 San Diego 105
(Only games scheduled)
'rookie.' I've been wearing my
Monday's Games
hair long since summer. They
Phoenix vs. Cincinnati
at Omaha threatened to cut it if we won
the game. But I'm gonna ask for
Atlanta at Buffalo
San Diego at Philadelphia
amnesty.''
(Only games scheduled)
If you were among the 80,055
ABA Standings
who were in the Orange Bowl
By United Press International
Sunday or if you were among
East
w. L. Pet. GB the multimillions who watched
33 15 .688 ...
Virginia
the Colts come from behind to
Kentucky
27 22 .551 6112
20 25 . 444 11 112 win the Super Bowl game by
New York
21 28 .426 121/:2
Carolina
Pittsburgh
21 30 .412 13112
Floridians
19 30 .388 141J2
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
31 15 .674 ...
30 17 .638 1112
Utah
26 22 .542 6
Memphis
18 28 .391 13
Denver
17 31 .354 15
Texas
Sunday's Results
New York 120 Carolina 112
Indiana 137 Kenttucky 124
BY KEITH WISECUP
Memphis 117 Utah 116
Denver 129 Texas 123
WATERFORD
The
Monday's Games
Eastern
Eagles
rebounded
from
Kentucky vs . Virginia
at Hampton, Va. their first defeat of the season

Matre narrowed it to 14-9, but a
Logan bucket with seconds left
gave them a first period lead of
16-9.
Meigs came back with five
straight at the opening of the
second eight minutes to make it
16-14. But Shaw, who made all of
Logan's nine second quarter
points, made it 18-14 with a long
outside jumper. With 3: 41left in
the opening half, the Chieftains
had built up a 23-16 margin.
With 1:14 remaining, Tyo
hobbled to the sidelines with the
Chiefs up 25-18. Vaughan
connected on a two-pointer from
15 feet to end the half with
Meigs trailing 25-20.
In the third quarter, the
Marauders played by far their
best basketball of the night as
they turned a Logan advantage
of five points to an advantage of
their own of eight points.
With 5:08 left in the third
period and the Marauders
trailing,
29 -26,
Vaughan
stripped the nets with two
buckets from the foul line and
Hensler added a frew throw to
make it 31-29, Meigs leading.
After Van Matre made a
technical foul shot, Mick Childs,
5-5 senior guard, dropped two
successive bombs from far
outside while Shaw collected a
free throw for the Chiefs.
Another bucket by Vaughan
made it 38-30.
Bob Werry, 6-0 senior guard,
hit on a long set shot after Shaw
added two more free throws. A
bucket by Hensler and one by
Shaw made it 42-34 after three
periods.
Van Matre hit for two on a
driving lay-up, made another
technical foul shot, and ripped
in two more on a 10 foot jumper
the field, making 16 of 30. A rare while Logan settled for a twinthing, the little Marauders fired pointer by George Shaw. This
more times from the foul line gave the Marauders a 47-36
then they did from the field. lead.
They made 15 of 31 from the foul
Two free throws by Werry to
line.
one for the Chiefs gave Meigs
Logan connected on 17 of 55 their largest lead of the night, 12
for 31 per cent and cashed in on points, 49-37 with 3:55 left. Then
only four of 15 from the charity the Chieftains started again.
Two quick buckets narrowed
stripe.
MEIGS (47), Boggs 4-1-9; the gap to 49-41. Two free
Chaney 0-0-0; Werry 4-5-13; throws by Childs with 3 : 25 left
Bailey 4-4-12; B. Vaughan 1-4-6; gave Meigs a 51-41 lead. That
Sayre 0-0-0; Burney 0-0-0; A. would be the only points the
Vaughan 2-1-5 ; Birchfield 0-0-0; Marauders would score for over
Chafin 1-0-2; George 0-0-0.
Totals 16-15-47.
LOGAN (38), Culbertson 8-016; Davidson 0-2-2; Greer 2-0-4;
McGrady 0-0-0; Walker 0-1-1;
Buerhaus 0-0-0; Tolliver 3-0-6;
Kornmiller 2-1-5. Totals 17-4-38.
By Quarters
Logan
6 12 10 10- 38
Meigs
12 12 11 12-47
Officials: Arnold and Sarver.

Reserves Hang in There

•

The Meigs Marauder reserve
squad defeated Logan reserves
here Saturday night, 47-38, to
stay in the running for the
SEOAL reserve title.
Coach Bill Wickline's Little
Marauders, now 6-2 in league
play and 7-2 overall, are tied for
second place with Ironton
behind
Athens.
Ironton
reserves , upset by Waverly
Saturday night, dropped back
into a tie for second with Meigs.
Ironton defeated Meigs in their
first meeting, 41-40. Logan is 1-7
in league action .
Big Mark Werry led the little
Marauders with 13 points while
Rich Bailey, the leading scorer
for Meigs this year, chipped in
12.
Ken Culbertson, the big,
bruising fullback of the Chiefs'
football varsity last fall, led led
Logan with 16.
Meigs shot 53 per cent from

scored, we would have had a
20-6 lead and the Colts would
have had to do a lot of catching
up. After that, it was nothing
but errors for us."
"Earl Morrall did a fine job"
explained Colt quarterback
Johnny Unitas, who went out
with a rib injury in the second
period and then watched

Today's Sport Parade

Longhair O'Brien Hero
beating the Dallas Cowboys, 1613, on a 32-yard field goal in the
final nine seconds, then you
know by this time who Jim
O'Brien is.
Although O'Brien is a first
year member of the Baltimore
Colts, he was someething of an
"old Oriole" out there on the
field through all of the second
half because he hurt his knee
out kicking off following Baltimore's first touchdown in the
second quarter.
O'Brien Hits Knee
''I was running down the field
and I hit my knee on
somebody's helmet who was
trying to block me," O'Brien
said.
Didn't the injury bother him?
"Nah," said O'Brien. "It was
my left knee .''
Oh, so it didn't really matter
at all.
"I wouldn't say that," the
rook corrected. "I still needed a
leg to stand on."
Jim O'Brien isn't the nervous

type. Still, when he went out to
try that placement with only
nine seconds left there were a
few things running through his
mind.
"I wasn't cluttering up my
mind with too many thoughts,"
he says. "If I started thinking
I'd start worr~ing_ and I didn 't
wanna do that. I was just
concentrating on getting my
steps down. Some of the guys
like Jimmy Orr, Ray Perkins
and Tom Mitchell told me not to
worry too much if I missed the
kick. There was always the
overtime period. Earl Morrall
(who held the ball for him) also
was helpful. He said, 'Just kick
it straight through. There's no
wind."'
That's what O'Brien did. He
really wasn't overly worried.
His mother, who is an
astrologer. told him beforehand
his team would win but it would
be close. He believed what she
told him .

game."
Counting the $15,000 winner's
share here, each Colt earned
$25,000 in post-season money.
Each Cowboy got $7,500 here
and a total of $18,500.
A mouse, tiny animal as it
is, has the same number of
bones in its neck as a
giraffe, tall as it is-each
has seven neck bones.

6-6.
Washington Blocks
Mark Washington blocked
O'Brien's extra point when the
eventual hero got it away a
little slow. And the Cowboys
went ahead again, 13-6, when
Jethro Pu .. h's fumble recovery
set up a seven-yard scoring run
by Thomas on a swing pass
from Morton.
The Colts didn't match that
until the fourth period when
Rich Volk's interception of a
Morton aerial set up a two-yard
plunge by Tom Nowatzke. This
time O'Brien converted and the
score stayed 13-13 until the lastminute dramatics.
For the first time in history,
a loser, linebacker Chuck
Howley of the Cowboys, got the
"Outstanding Player" Award,
worth a new car.
"It's nice," admitted Howley,
"but I wish we had won the

Eagles Make Waterford

lOth Victim of Season

•
Marauders Rally to WIn
BY KEITH WISECUP
The Meigs Marauders were
cold and ragged against the
Logan Chieftains here Saturday
but put together a third quarter
rally to defeat the Mark Shaw
led Chiefs, 53-50.
Every team has an off night
sometime during the season. If
the Marauders were ever off
form, they were Saturday.
Coach Carl Wolfe's Marauders
bettered their overall slate to 63 and to 5-3 in Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League action. Meigs is
in fourth place, behind the
teams they have lost to,
Waverly, Athens, and Jackson .
In the second round of league
play, the Marauders will have
Athens and Waverly at home
while they travel to Jackson to
meet the Ironmen.
Coach Ken Insani's Chieftains
dropped to 2-9 for the season
and to 1-7 in league play. As a
spokesman for the Chiefs
s tated, " We seem to play well
on the road and get walloped at
home ."
Tony Vaughan, 6-2 junior
guard, started only the second
time this year and responded
with 14 points and 11 rebounds,
both high for the Marauders.
Rick Van Matre, 6-0 senior
forward, scored 11 points
though he did not start. Van
Ma tre has been out of the lineup
for several weeks due to a foot
injury.
Shaw, 6-4 senior center, paced
the Chiefs with 25 points, 18 in
the first half. The big all-stater
also led in rebounding with 15,
although fouling out late in the

the New York Jets.
"Defense Did It"
"Our defense did it," explained Colt Coach Don
McCafferty.
"The big play was in the
third period," said Cowboys'
Coach Tom Landry. "That was
when Duane Thomas fumbled
on the Colt goal line. If he had

lead the Colts in
the second half.
"But a lot of fans were
finding the key in the pass
tossed by Cowboy quarterback
Craig Morton with a minute to
go that bounced off the hands
of intended receiver Dan
Reeves and was picked off by
Colt Mike Curtis, who ran it
back to the Cowboy 28 to set up
O'Brien's field goaL
In the first period, the
Cowboys had a first down on
the Colt nine and had to settle
for Mike Clark's three-pointer.
In the second, they settled for
another boot after having a
first down on the Baltimore six.
So when the Colts scored on a
weird play-John Mackey scoring on a 75-yard pass play from
Unitas when the ball bounced
off the hands of defender Mel
Renfro-the Colts were tied up,
dominatin~

three minutes.
The Marauders then went into
a stall, drawing several fouls
from the Chiefs. But they
couldn't cash in as they missed
free throw after free throw.
During this interim, Logan had
cut the lead to 51-49 with 25
seconds left on two free throws
and three baskets. Shaw left the
game at the 1:34 mark with his
fifth personaL
Vaughan then got one of his
biggest rebounds ever as he put
in Childs' missed free throw
with 22 seconds left to make it
53-49. With eight seconds left,
the Chiefs added a free throw
but couldn't make up the difference as time ran out.
MEIGS

G-A F-A RB PF TP

A RB PF TP
Tyo
2-8 0-0
3
Hensler
1-4
3-5
9
Morris
1-6
3-3
8
Childs
2-15 4-6
o
Vaughan 7-10 0-6 11
Werry
2-7 2-3
5
Haggerty 0-0 0-3 o
VanMatre 3-6 5-11 11
Dunfee
0-1 0-0
0
TOTALS
18-57 17 37 47

1
5
3
0
2
1
4
3
0

4
5

Friday night to defeat the
Waterford Wildcats here
Saturday night in a non-league
battle, 68-42. Coach Bill
Phillips's Eagles are now 10-1
overall and remain 7-1 in
Southern Valley Conference
play . Waterford is 0-10.
Dennis Eichinger, 6-2 junior
center, paved the way once
Eastern shot a hot 55 per cent
from the field, making 26 of 47.
The Eagles connected on 16 of 25
from the foul line for 64 per
cent. Waterford made 16 of 31
from the line for 52 per cent.
All told, the Eagles had 38
rebounds, 12 turnovers, and
stole the ball eight times from
the Wildcats. Mike Boring, 6-2
senior forward, was second high
in rebounding for Eastern with
six.
Waterford, a much better ball
club than its record indicates,
was on top after one quarter, 1614. The Eagles were still
probably trying to figure out
what they had done wrong the
night before.
Eastern came back to take
the lead and at the half was on
top by 27-25. The margin
swelled to 47-33 after three
quarters and Coach Phillips'
Eagles coasted the final eight
minutes.

You can pay
all your old

Miller Falcons at Miller Friday
night and next night get "The
Game."
That one is against FederalHocking at the Lancers' home
boards. Eastern has pinned the
only loss of the season on the
Chuck Robinson led Lancers,
74-58.
EASTERN (68) - Smith 4-08; Eichinger 9-7-25; Williams 23-7; H. Caldwell7-1-15; Karr 1-35; Boring 0-2-2; Amsbary 1-0-2;
Benedum 1-0-2; Young 1-0-2;
Totals 26-16-68.
WATERFORD
(42)
Gilliand 7-11-25; Skinner 2-D-4;
Warren 1-0-2; Schaad 1-0-2;
Keggins 2-3-7; Rutter 0-1-1;
Bauerbach 0-1-1. Totals 13-16-42.
By Quarters
14 27 47 68
Eastern
16 25 33 42
Waterford

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5
8
14
6
0
In the preliminary reserve
11
0 game, Terry Carson and Randy

19 53

LOGAN
FG-A FT-A PF TP
McBroom
1-4
0-0
1
2
Davidson
3-4
0-2
2
6
M. Shaw
6-21 13-14
5 25
Norris
1-5
1-3
5
3
Good
0-0
0-0
2
0
G. Shaw
3-7
1-4
4
7
Krebs
0-2
2-3
1
2
Smith
2-4
0-0
3 4
Whitcraft
0-3
0-0
3
0
Beougher
0-1
0-0
1 0
Crawford
0-0
1-2
1
1
TOTALS
16-51 18-28 28 50
Rebounds - 41
By quarters
Logan
16 9
9 16 50
Meigs
9 11 22 11- 53
Officials : Wallis and Craft.

Boring paced the little Eagles to
a 43-27 win over the Waterford
reserves by scoring 12 points
each.

Make your
dreams come
true ... call
us for

Eastern will play the Glouster
Tomcats at home next Friday,
but will have a rough schedule
on the weekend following. The
Eagles will play the tough

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TRI -COUNTY LEAGUE
January 5, 1971
Pts
Rawlings Dodge
6
Eagles
6
Mason Furniture
6
H&amp;R Firestone
6
Hol sum Sales Dept.
2
Davis-Warner Ins urance
2
High Te am
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Team Game - H&amp;R Fires tone
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Individual High Series - J r.
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Minute We Can
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The Department Store
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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 18, 1971

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

COLD FRAMES
BY MRS. DOLLIE HAYES
Winding Trail Garden Club
There are few if any gardens which cannot use a cold frame to
advantage. No matter what sort of garden or ty;&gt;e of plants are
being grown or what kind of a home, there is a place for a cold
frame. It may be a permanent one used the year around or it may
be a temporary one used only for starting seedlings in the spring.
Once you use a cold frame you will never be without one if you
are a real dirt gardener. A cold frame will save you both money
and plants. Besides, it gives your garden a certain professional
appearance and you will have a garden thrill you never had
before.
What is a cold frame? A cold frame is merely a square or
rectangular frame made of boards, concrete or brick and covered
with a glass sash or glass substitute. It may be an old wooden
packing box with the bottom knocked out, set on top of the ground.
It may be an old window frame or it may be made to order of any
lumber, preferably cypress or redwood. It may be any size or
shape either to fit an old window sash or to fit any standard 3 and 6
foot cold frame sash.
The back of the frame should be two inches higher; a 6 foot
frame 6 inches. If a glass sash is not used, a light wooden frame of
1 by 2 inch strips may be coverM with celo-glass. The other glass
substitutes on the market such as polyethylene, paraffined muslin
or cellulose covered string netting or nylon netting are two
perishable to be satisfactory for permanent use.
In addition to the sash for cold weather, a summer shade may
be made by nailing ordinary building lathes an inch apart to 1 by
2-inch strips, or muslin or cheesecloth may be tacked to a light
wooden frame.
A cold frame may be placed along the side of the house, along
the back of the house, along the side or back of the garage, or out
in the open. If it is to be used for growing seedlings or young plants
after they have been rooted from cuttings, it should be in the sun
and face the south, east, or west. If it is to be used for propagation,
that is, the rootings of cuttings -or to be used for winter storage
of tender perennials, it may be in the shade. Cold frames placed
outside cellar windows may receive some heat from the open
window and be more or less hot beds. The nearer the frame is to
the house the easier it will be to care for it and water it.
Only the best soil available should be used in the cold frame.
It will usually be necessary to prepare this soil by mixing in sand
and organic matter such as leafmold or peat moss. For growing of
plants such as perennials or young evergreens or shrubs, a four to
six inch layer of this soil should be used. For seed sowing, a oneinch layer of sand and peat can be placed on top of the soil. For
cuttings a two to four inch layer of sand, vermiculite, or sand and
peat should be used.
For the winter storage of perennials or the plunging of potted
bulbs or potted plants, a six inch bed of sand, peat or sawdust may
be used, this being much easier to plunge in than soil. Where
plants or seeds are being grown, the soil should be changed every
year. The old cold frame soil may be used to fill in low spots in the
lawn or in the flower beds.
During the growing season, to give the best results a cold
frame should have daily attention. Watering should be done faily
if necessary. When the temperature is above 60 def. F. it will
usually be necessary to open the cold frame during the day, and in
cool weather close it at night. Newly planted divisions, cuttings,
young evergreens and similar plants should be shaded with lath
or muslin to lower the temperature during hot weather and to
prevent scalding of the foliage.

New Haven Social Events
CLUB MEETS
The Nehaclima Garden Club
met at the home of Mrs. William
Grinstead with Mrs. A. L.
Sprouse as co-hostess for their
regular meeting. Mrs. Carroll
Adams, Jr., secretary, presided
at the meeting in the absence of
the president.
The roll call was answered
with "Name of Your Favorite
type of arrangement." A short
business meeting was held at
which time Mrs. Ruth Thompson was accepted into the club
membership.

New Haven Garden
Club Meeting Held
The New Haven Garden Club
met at the home of Mrs. Herman Layne on Thursday
evening with Mrs. B. R. Vance
as co-hostess. The meeting was
opened in regular form. Mrs.
Lee Gibbs, president, presided
at the meeting. Devotions were
led by Mrs. B. R. Vance. She
read Psalm 8 and a reading
from the pamphlet "The Upper
Room." The roll call was answered with "What I Plan for
the New Year."
Regular reports were given
and approved. They voted to
sponsor the flower show in
connection with the Mason
County Fair this year, Mrs.
Patrick Riley was named
chairman.
Mrs. Donald F. Roush was
appointed to serve on the
nominating committee for
officers for the Mason County
Council of Garden Clubs.
Mrs Howard Wagenhals was
program leader. She spoke on
Varieties of Moss growing in
West Virginia. She also showed
slides of the recent trip she and
Mr. Wagenhals had taken
through the South.
Those in attendance were
Mrs. Fred Batey, Mrs. Howard
Burris, Mrs . William Chisler,
Mrs. Ray Fox, Mrs. Lee Gibbs,
Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs. Ray
Pickens, Miss Lelah Jane
Powell, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs .
Donald F. Roush, Mrs. Lloyd
Roush, Mrs . 0. C. Roush, Mrs.
Patrick Riley, Mrs . D. A. Smith,
Mrs. II1J·;, ;. ,.d Wagenhalc;, :\1rs.
Vane~: and Mrs. Layn~: .

Dues were collected by the
treasurer, Mrs. Tom Hoffman.
Members discussed sending a
student to Camp Ceaser Conservation Camp. This is an
annual project of the club.
Mrs. Pete Shields was
program leader for the
meeting. She showed slides of
the growing, caring and
arranging of flowers. The slides
showed the basic types of
arrangements and steps used in
arriving
at
the
final
arrangement. The slides were
also of the wearing of flowers
and how to make corsages.
Refreslunents were served to
those attending: Mrs. James N.
Roush, Mrs. Harry Miller, Mrs.
Roy Jones, Mrs. Tom Hoffman,
Mrs. Pete Burris, Mrs. Phil
Batey, Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr.,
Mrs. Sprouse and Mrs. Grinstead.
P.T.A. WH..L MEET
The New Haven Elementary
Parent Teachers will meet on
Thursday, January 21 at the
school at 7:30 p.m. The guest
speaker will be Mike Shaw,
speaking on the making of wills.
BAND BOOSTERS
The Wahama Band Boosters
met at the school for their
regular meeting, with James
Hart, president, presiding.
Regular reports were given and
approved. A report on the
Junior Miss Pageant was given
by
Robert Gilmore.
A
discussion on the holding of the
pageant was held.
There was $300 turned over to
the treasurer from the hard
candy
committee.
They
discussed the making of the
candy again to sell around
Valentine Day.
A lengthy discussion was held
on the finishing of the band
room. They agreed to contact
the contractor to see if he
couldn't have the building
completed in the next two
weeks. They voted to have the
contractor finish the office and
storage rooms of the builcting.
The storage room would be
finished with wall board, this
room would hold files, uniforms
and other equipment. The office
would be paneled and large
window overlooking the large
room and the floor covered with
carpet.

Mrs. Hayes
Is Elected
Mrs. Mary Hayes was elected
president of the Past Councilors
Club of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, at a
recent meeting at the home of
Mrs. Jean Summerfield.
Other officers elected for the
1971 year were Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, vice president; Mrs.
Zelda Weber, secretary; Mrs.
Ethel Orr, sentinel.
Mrs. Ada Neutzling opened
the meeting by reading
scripture and leading in the
pledge to the flag. Games were
conducted by Mrs. Orr and Mrs.
Mary Showalter. Mrs. Ada
Morris was co-hostess for the
meeting.
Hostesses for the February
meeting when members are
asked to take a valentine will be
Mrs. Letha Woods and Mrs.
Erma Cleland. Present for the
meeting besides those named
were Mrs. Pauline Ridenour,
Mrs. Zona Biggs, Mrs. Inzy
Newell, Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs.
Goldie Frederick, Mrs. Mabel
Van Meter, Mrs. Dorothy
Myers, Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
Mrs. Barbara Sargent, members; and guests, Mrs.
Elizabeth Hayes, Miss Ferne
Showalter, Mrs. Elizabeth
Wickham,
and
Lowell
Ridenour.

Rev. Borden Will
Speak at Church
The Rev. Nyle Borden will be
speaker at the Jan. 31 service of
the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church, according to plans
made at Thursday night's
meeting of the Missionary
Society which has charge of the
fifth Sunday service.
Mrs. Campbell Harper
presided at the meeting during
which time a new study book,
"Women of the Bible," was
presented. Mrs. Margaret
Bowles gave devotions. Mrs.
Arnold Richards will be hostess
for the February meeting. Mrs.
John Moon, hostess, served
sandwiches and salad during a
concluding social hour.
RETURNS HOME
John Weeks of Reynoldsburg
returned Miss Genevieve
Stobart home after two days in
Columbus at the brace clinic.
She was the overnight guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Weeks and
children.
VISITS IN MIDDLEPORT
Roger Stiles, in x-ray
technician training at the
Marietta Memorial Hospital,
spent Wednesday in Middleport
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Stiles.
HERE FROM LEON
Miss Edna Burdette of Leon,
W. Va., visited Thursday with
Mrs. Minerva Childers, Middleport.
The annual spaghetti dinner
will be held in February, date to
be announced. Tickets will be
$1.25 for adults and 75 cents for
children. Co-chairmen will be
Mrs. James Hart and Mrs.
Robert Gilmore, committee
members are Mrs. John Hoffman, Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. Florene Finnicum and
Mrs. Chester Weaver. They will
have advance ticket sale and
tickets will be sold by band
students.
Mr. Simmons announced that
40 members would be trying out
for All State Band and cars
were needed for transportation.
Band Boosters volunteered to
drive to Charleston for the
tryouts.
HOLD WORKSHOP
The Senior Citizens held a
workshop on Wednesday at 1 in
the basement of the New Haven
Library. They opened their
meeting with the singing of a
hymn followed with the Lord's
Prayer. They recognized the
January
birthdays,
and
presented him with a cup cake
with one candle on the top, the
group then sang Happy Birthday.
One group met and played
checkers, another dominoes.
The rest of the group made
valentines to be sent to
hospitals. Several articles to be
made were demonstrated:
Easter baskets, place mats
from Christmas cards, etc. Iva
Capehart served coffee and
Frances Goodnite, cookies to
those attending. Another
workshop will be held next
Wednesday at the same place
and time.
LUTHERAN WOMEN
The Esther and Rebecca
Circles of the Lutheran Church
Women met for their regular
monthly meetings. They will
hold a General Meeting on
February 21, at which time
slides of the Rocky Boy Indian
Mission will be shown. A
progressive dinner will be held

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Social
Calendar

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!Helen Help Us !
!
By
!

l
1

MONDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER: Order of
DeMolay, Monday, 7.30 p.m.,
initiatory work exemplified;
Mothers Club in basement
dining room at same time.
SPECIAL CONCLAVE, Ohio
Valley Commandery, 7:30p.m.
Monday Pomeroy Masonic
temple fo"t conferring Temple
Degree.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Monday, noon,
Bower's Restaurant.
THEODORUS Council 17, D.
of A., IOOF Hall, initiation,
members to wear white; sandwiches, coffee and cookies to be
served.
MIDDLEPORT PTA Fathers'
Night, 7:30 p. m. Monday; the
Rev. Forrest Donley, Syracuse
Methodist minister, to speak on
"Family Living."
TUESDAY
THIRD TUESDAY Club,
home of Mrs. Dale Smith, 7:30
Tuesday night.
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, 6:30 potluck supper,
Tuesday at the church; Mrs.
Pearl Mora has program.
SPECIAL MEETING, Racine
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., to confer Master
Mason Degree.
RUTLAND FIRE Dept.
Women's Auxiliary, Tuesday,
7:30p.m., department building;
all interested women invited.
SALISBURY P.T.A., 7:30
p.m. Tuesday; program on
safety by Ralph Dixon, of
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.; safety poster
contest; executive committee
meeting at 7 p.m.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, clirectors' meeting,
7:30 Tuesday at Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
WEDNESDAY ,
BOSWORTH Council, Royal
and Select Masters, stated
assembly, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.,
Pomeroy
Masonic
Temple.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. Rodney Downing;
review of "Mary Queen of
Scots" by Mrs. Larry Spencer;
response, "A Great Woman of
Yesterday."
PAST PRESIDENTS, Ladies
Auxihary, Drew Webster Post,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m., home of
Mrs. Eva Powell; Edith Sauer,
devotions; Edith Fox, program
chairman.

Helen sattel

HISTORY REPEATS,
AND REPEATS,
AND REPEATS
Dear Helen:
I met Marty when he was
married to his first wife. Three
days after he got his divorce, we
married, and I was expecting
his baby. His wife gave their
three children up for adoption.
The court wanted me to take
them, but I was still a teenager
and couldn't cope with all those
kids.
We got along fine for six
months. Then I found out he was
running around on me. If I said
anything, he beat me up, and
started blaming me for his
losing his first three children.
He left me just after our
second daughter was born
to
live with a girl who was three
months pregnant, by him. That
broke up, and when he came
home, he was real good for a
while, but then he met my
cousin, and off he went again.
Next thing I heard he was in
jail on a drug charge. My
parents put up the bail to get
him out - they had to borrow,
and they've never got it back.
When in jail, Marty promised
me the sky if I'd just give him
one more chance. The sky fell
after a week, when I found him
with the doper he got busted
with.
Up to than I was faithful, but
I decided this was dumb, so now
I've found a wonderful guy. My
husband knows, but still lives
with me and the children. He
seems to think this is a good
arrangement- each of us doing
what we please, but sharing a
house. My new boy friend isn't
DAUGHTER BORN
Rise Surface Jeffers of
Columbus is announcing the
birth of her second child, Susan
RaNae. The infant was born on
Jan. 1 at Mount Carmel
Hospital. She weighed five
pounds, ten ounces. Maternal
grandparents are Harry C.
Surface of Middleport and Mrs.
Janet Di Frishchia of New
Castle, Pa. Mrs. Grace Beabout
of Columbus is a greatgrandmother.

FATHERS IN SKIT
A humorous skit will be
presented at tonight's Middleport PTA meeting in observance of Fathers' Night.
Taking roles in the skit are
Selwyn T. Smith, the Rev.
Charles Simons, Fred Hoffman,
Tom Kelly, the Rev . Donahue,
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better Greg Donahue and Edward
Health Club, 1: 15 Thursday, Kitchen.
home of Mrs. Scott Folmer.
CLASS 12, Heath United
RETURNS HOME
Methodist Church, Thursday
Mrs. Ben Buck, Rock Springs
evening; program by Mrs. L. Road, has returned home after
W. McComas; devotions by spending several weeks at New
Miss Bess Sanborn; hostesses, Lexington. She visited her son,
Mrs. Perry Mitch, Mrs. Ken- Benny Buck, and his wife, and
neth Byer, Mrs. David Ent- her daughter, Mrs. Pete
sminger.
De molt, and family, and
WILLING WORKERS Class, assisted in the care ur her sister,
Enterprise United Methodist Mrs. Perry Smith, who has been
Church, 7: 30 Thursday night,· ill.
home of Mrs. Eldon Weeks.
VISITS IN COLUMBUS
Perry Ault, 14, Saturday,
April21. They discussed helping
with Valentine parties for the celebrated his birthday with a
children and youth of the trip to Columbus to visit his
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
church.
The Esther Circle met on and Mrs. Ronald Logan. He was
Tuesday evening at the home of accompanied to Columbus by
Mrs. Herman Layne. Devotions his mother, Mrs. William Ault
were led by Mrs. Harry Layne. and daughter , Chris, MidMiss Lelah Jane Powell was dleport.
program leader. Those attending were Mrs. Lloyd Roush,
Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs. David
RETURNING TODAY
Roush, Mrs. Douglas Singer,
Mrs. Gertrude Cabeen will
Mrs. John Thorne, Mrs. Jack return to Middleport today from
Roush, Miss Lelah J. Powell, Cleveland where she spent the
Mrs. Donald F. Roush, Mrs. weekend with her son-in-law
Helen Knapp and Mrs. Layne. and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
The Rebecca Circle met on Walter Wharton II. She went
Wednesday afternoon at the especially for the wedding of
church with Mrs . B. R. Vance as her grandson, Walter III.
hostess and as program leader.
Those attending were Mrs. John
Fry, Mrs. Donald Bumgardner,
Mrs. Edna Burris, Mrs. William
Powell, Mrs. J. V. McGrew,
Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr ., and
Mrs. Vance.

SHIRT
FINISHING

SKATERS TITLE
MADONNA D1 CAMPIGLIO,
Italy (UPI)-Dutch and Swedish skaters won the "four
courses" title Sunday in the
International Speed Skating
competition.

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE
$349.95
$35.00 Down-

Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

SAME DAY
SERVICE

In At 9- 0ut A15
Use'Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

in a position to marry and raise
my family -he's still in school
and working part time (would
you believe this - in the same
shop with Marty, and they're
friends!)
Maybe the men are happy,
but I'm not. And I'm afraid for
how it will affect my daughters .
Marty says he should never
have got his first divorce and
lost his kids, but inasmuch as I
"stole" a guy once, I deserve
what I'm getting now, and why
should I kick: He lets me have
my boy friend?
Right now the two guys in my
life are out playing pool
together. Where does that leave
me?
NOT THAT MODERN
Dear Not:
-In the middle of a mess!
I'd suggest you give bbth men
their walking papers and start
learning how to walk a straight
line yourself! Which means:
Get a job, concentrate on
raising your daughters, and
stay away from married men!
-H.
Dear Helen:
The encyclopaedia
explanation of the word "Hoosier"
is incorrect, as you stated it in a
recent column.
The name derived from
Samuel Hoosier, a contractor on
the Ohio Falls Canal at
Louisville, Kentucky, who gave
employment preference to men
living in Indiana. His workers
were called Hoosier Men, later
"Hoosiers." - LITERARY
RESEARCHER
Dear L.R.:
Thank you. I'll let Encyclopaedia Britannica know.
-H.
Dear Helen:
Here's a tip for the bride who
is irked because the grocery
clerk doesn't • ,,....ber the
"specials," and cH...
.1e~ hll
price unless she watches him
like a hawk.
I put all marked-&lt;lown items
in the part of the grocery cart
that's for small children (or in
the front of the cart, separated
by a box or paper). I point to
these and tell the clerk "Here
are the specials." It helps him
as well as me. - T.D.

Eighth Birthday Observed Saturday
Mrs. Gene Dodson entertained Saturday afternoon
with a party in observance of
the eighth birthday of her son,
Brett.
A cowboy theme was carried
out in the decorations. Cupcakes, ice cream and mints
were served. Games were
played with prizes going to Jeff
and Gregg Laudermilt, Ronnie
Casci, Bobby Duckworth, Ricky
Hovatter, John Davis, Greg
Bush, Bobby Fox, Jason Bush,
and David Dodson.

Other guests at the party4
were Dav1d Demoskey, Dean
Spencer, Larry Byer, Greg and
Nick Bush, Pam Dodson,
Danny, Alan and David Dodson,
Mrs. Celeste Bush, and Mrs.
Ruth Dodson.
ATTENDED SCHOOL
Linda Sheets of Harrisonville
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, attended the District 25
school of instruction held
Wednesday at the Federal- ·•
Hocking High School.

CLASS MEETS
James Will hosted a meeting
of the Men's Brotherhood of the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church last week. Eldon Weeks
Mrs. Eddie Smith entertained presided at a brief business
Saturday afternoon with a party meeting. Attending were Carl
honoring her granddaughter, Jennings, Ralp Spencer, Ed
Lori Ann Rupe, on her eighth Bowen and the Rev. William
birthday.
Airson.
Pink and white streamers
were used in the decorations.
Several team games were
played with prizes being
FOR YOUR
awarded to the winners.
SUEDE and
Guests were Tammy GuinHUSH PUPPIE
ther, Tina Duffy, Patricia
SHOES
Duffy, Paige Carr, Debbie
Woodyard, Lorra Wisecup, Sue
Taylor, Andrea Riggs, Lena Sue
Phalin, Beth Perrin, Linda
Kovalchik, Jayne Hoeflich,
Where Shoes are sensibly
priced.
Linda Eason, Kenda Braun, and
Middleport
Jan Betzing.

Lori Ann Rupe's

Birthday Observed

REVIVE

THE SHOE BOX

Any
lumber company
that pines for you
is in

the[;)

Reserve District No.4
State No. 223X
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF

THE FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.

of ~omeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
busmess December 31, 1970, a state banking institution organized and operating
Wlder the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Published in accordance with a call made by the State Bank' g
Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
m
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - _ - _ _ _ _ _ _ $1 069 293.51
u.s_. Tr~asury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ 1:152:540.61
Obhgahons of States and political subdivisions - - - - _ - - _ 579 632 54
Other securities - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 21'ooo:oo
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
'
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - 100,000.00
Other loans - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ _
- - - - 7,878,405.42
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures and
other assets representing bank premises - - 468,606.99
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - _ - - - - - - 1'762.58
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - - - _
- $11,271,241.65
LIABU..ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - _ • _ _ _ $2,563,052.55
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - • - - _ _ _ 6,376,586.58
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - _ _ - _ _ 62,426.43
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - _ - - - 538,325.16
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - - - - - _ - _ _ 2,724.70
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - _
_ 56,409.27
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - $10,099,524.69
(a ) Total demand deposits - - - - - - - - $ 2,920,938.11
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - - - $ 7 178 586.58
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - ~ _' _ _ _ 375,348.90
TOTAL UABIUTIES - - - - - - - - - - _ - $10,474,873.59
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - - __ _
$66,656.31
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
$66,656.31
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital, total - - - - - - - - - $729,711.75
Common stock-total par value
300,000.00
No. shares authorized 12 000
No. shares outstanding 12:000
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _
- - 400,000.00
Undivided profits - - - - - - - - - - - 29,711.75
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
729,711.75
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$11,271,241.65
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
days ending with c~ll date - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $10,156,662.56
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - $8,157,382.27
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value) :
U.S. ~overnment obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities
- - - $935,000.00
TOTAL - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $935,000.00

I, Paul E. Kloes, Vice President &amp; Cashier, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge
and belief.
Paul E. Kloes
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Dr. Fred R. Carsey, Jr. - Directors
Harold E. Smith
State of Ohio , County of Meigs ss:
SWorn to and subscribed before me this 14th day of January, 1971.
Mary P. Young
Notary Publir
My Commiss10rr Expires .Jnly 1, !Q74.

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 18, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel· Classifieds
Apple Grove News, Events
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Howard
of Akron visited over the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Norris at Syracuse and
Mr. Norris and Mr. Howard
visited Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair
Hill. It was the first time in
fifty-three years that Mr. Hill
and Mr. Howard had seen each
other.
Mrs. Pete Snyder of Delaware
spent Thursday evening with
Mrs. Miles Childress.
Frank Varian of East
Liverpool spent the weekend
with his cousin, Mrs. Iva Orr.
Mr. Varian visited his wife at
Parkersburg where she is in a
nursing home. Mr. Varian also
visited his Uncle Bob Varian at
Dorcas.
Mrs. Ross Norris fell the day
before Christmas and broke a
bone in her foot.
New Year's Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Hupp were Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp and
Eddie and Cheryl Stewart of Pt.
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
spent a week with Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Bass at Columbus and
Mr. and Mrs. Bus Hupp at
Lancaster. Tina Bass accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Hupp home for a week's visit.
Rocky Hupp spent a week with
Mr. and Mrs. Bass.

Long Bottom

Social Notes
New Year's Eve guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Prince were
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Caldwell
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Young of Tuppers Plains and
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wilson of
Hockingport.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Hauber
and family of New Matamoras
were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Larkins.
Calling at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Hayman were Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Higley,
Akron;
Sara
Smith,
Waynesville; Mr. and Mrs. C.
B. Hayman, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Fitzpatrick and daughter,
Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
Fitzpatrick and family, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Ridenour, Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Hayman ~nd sons
and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hayman
and daughters.
Spending several days with
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith were
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young of
Paden City, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cozart
and family of Lorain were
visiting Nellie Cozart.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Osborn
and sons of Keno visited Ethel
Larkins .
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hank
Holter were Mr. and Mrs. Robin
Nye and family of Columbus,
Edith Sisson and family of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. David
Holter and family of Chester,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell Jr. and
family of Mason, W. Va. and
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith.
Eugene Erlewine of New
Mexico visited Serena Sisson.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larkins
and Brent of Portland were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Larkins.
Inez (Stethem) Young is a
patient at Camden Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg. Fred
Larkins is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Collins
and farr.ily visited the Harliss
Frank family.
- Violet Smith

CARNIVAL

Christmas Day guests of Mrs.
Laura Circle at Dorcas were
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bostick and
family.
Tim and Jeff Wickersham
spent a weekend with Jimmy
Adams and attended Sunday
School at the Letart Falls
United Brethern Church.
Miss Dolly Hill, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hill, was
a patient at Holzer Medical
Center for a week. She returned
home on Friday.
Miss Loretta Ours of Middleport spent a weekend with
her aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Donohew. Jeff Dono hew of
Nelsonville also spent the
weekend at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
spent Thursday with Mr. and
Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson at New
Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Roy
and Nancy and Rex of Dorcas
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Warner.
Scotty Fredenck of Miners..:
ville Route spent a weekend
with his graribparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Wood and Debbie .
His parents, Mr. and Mrs.,
Milford Frederick spent Sunday
with the Woods. Waid Johnson
and Scotty accompanied them
home.
Uoyd Nice received word of
the death of a cousin, Ray Nice,
at Stockport.
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Boggess
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Sayre and Chad at
Minersville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sargent of
Racine spent Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields.
Mrs. Elmer Stone and Missy
of Leon, W.Va ., and Mrs. Hazel
Taylor called on Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Spawn
and family were dinner guests
Saturday evening of Mr. and
Mrs. Benny Boggess and
Wayne.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and Roger were dinner guests
Monday evening of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton, W.
Va.
The
Roushes were
celebrating their 24th wedding
anniversary and the Lewis'
were celebrating their second.
Kentucky fried chicken was
served with all the trimmings.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman
and Keith visited Sunday afternoon with their daughter,
Mrs. Phyllis Lewis and children
of Mason. Sunday evening they
visited their daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Jewell and family at
New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Childress
Sr. and daughter, Mrs. Della
Childress and Billy Childress
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Snyder at Delaware.

Lau:rcl Cliff
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Jan. 10 at the Free Methodist
Church was 106. The offering
was $22.98.
The Holiness Rally will be
held Jan. 26 at the Nazarene
Church, Pomeroy, Union
Avenue.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs has been
reported ill.
Mrs . Charles Karr, Sr .
recently received word of the
death of her aunt, Miss Anna
Mae Turner, 75 years old, of
Washington, D. C. Burial was in
Iron ton . Due to illness the Karrs
were not able to attend the
funeral.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cole
visited recently with his
grandmother, Mrs. Carmon
Evans.

by Dick Turner

Today's
Almanae
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Jan. 18, the
18th day of 1971.
,
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars,
Jupiter and Venus.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Capricorn.
American orator Daniel Webster was born Jan. 18, 1782.
On this day in history·

OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

:I
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B __;u_
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Radiator Service

Chester

News Notes

Mason Area

News, Notes

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
- GUARANTE EOPhone 992-2094
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Pomeroy .Motor Co

L-_:....----------------------

Social Events

EXPERIENCED

1965 CORVAIR
$695
500 2 Dr., local low mileage car, interior extra clean,
medium green finish, all good w-w tires, radio. Plenty of
go in the snow . Just nicer than the average car.
1965 CHEVROLET
$695
Impala HT Cpe, 327-V-8 engine, 4 speed trans., white
finish, red interior, good tires, radio.
1966 FORO
$995
Falcon 2 Dr., 6 cyl. std . trans., all good tires, smart
looking copper finish, radio. Real economy in this car.

In 1943 Moscow anrounced
the Nazi siege of Leningrad had
•
been lifted. It had started in
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
the autumn of 1941.
'f'()MEROY, OHIO
In 1966 the daughter of the '
1
late Indian Prime Minister
Nehru, Indira Gandhi, was
named the new prime minister
WANT ADLost
tr
INFORMATION
0f tha t coun y.
DEADLINES
In 1968 the United States and 5 P.M. Day Before Publication LOST, brown and white, small
Russia agreed on a draft of a
Noonday Deadline9a.m.
miniature collie. Name,
.f
t' tr t
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
"Johnny." Reward. Contact
l
1
nuc ear non-pro 1 era 10n ea Y· Will be-.ccepted until9 a.m . for
Albert Zahl, Racine. Phone
In 1970 Mormon leader David
~Y of Publication
247-2162.
REGULAT IONS
1-12-6tp
0. McKay died at the age of 96.
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
A thought for the day: pub I isher will not be responsible LOST: PAl R of lady's black
for
more
than
one
incorrect
gloves on N. Second Ave.,
American
writer
Henry
inserti15n .
Middleport. Reward. Phone
Thoreau said, " I had three
RATES
(304) 675·4267 or 675-3358.
For
Want
Ad
Service
chairs in my house; one for
1·5-tfc
5 cents per Word one insertion
solitude, two for friendship, Minlri·lUm"'eflarge 75c
12 cents per word three
three for society."
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con Notice
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25 Per cent Discount on paid· WILL not be responslole for
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
any debts contracted by
CARD OF THANKS
anyone other than myself.
&amp; OBITUARY
Pearlie F. Jewell, Jr., Rt. 1,
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Langsville, Ohio.
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
1·15-6tc
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
By Clarice Allen
qFFICE HOURS
INCOME TAX service, daily
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. Daily,
except Sunday. Evenings by
Auxiliary Meets
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
appointment only. Phone 992·
The Ladies Auxiliary of the Saturday.
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin ,
Chester
Volunteer
Fire
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
Department met Wednesday
mile south of fairgrounds.
12-31-30tc
evening at the fire house. In Memory
President Margaret Christy IN LOVING memory of our WILL
DO
sewing
and
alterations, 115112 W. Second
dear husband, father and
opened the meeting by leading
grandfather, James S. Hood,
St., Pomeroy.
the group with the Lord's
1-8-12tp
who passed away 21 years ago
Prayer. Minutes of the previous
today, January 18, 1950.
meeting were read by the acting
FUND RAIS ING plans for
schools, churches and other
secretary, Betty Newell. The May you always walk in sunshine,
organizations. No investment.
treasurer's report was given by God 's love around you glow,
Write c-o Box 729-F, The
Lela Windon. Reports of For the happiness you brought
Daily Sentine l, Pomeroy,
us,
committees were given by the
Ohio.
Everyone was sure to know.
1-14-6tc
chairmen. Roll call was an- It broke our heart to lose you,
- - - - -- -- - - swered by Margaret Christy, But you did not go alone;
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
Jean Sexson, Betty Newell, Part of us went with you,
like to try a wig on in the
The day God called you home.
Clarice Allen, Inzy Newel:,
privacy of your own home?
Erma Cleland, Ethel Orr, Sadly missed by wife, Edith ;
You can. Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
daughters and grandchildren.
Grace Gumpf, Dorothy Myers,
Koscot , of course. Dis1-18-ltp
Opal Eichinger, Opal Wickham,
tributors, Brown ' s. Phone
Virginia Burke and Lela
Middleport 992-5113.
Lost
12-31-tfc
Windon.
Mrs. Roy Christy and Mrs. THANKSGIVING night one
female walker hound in WILL PICK up merchandise
John Wickham were recent
vicinity of Leading Creek,
and take to auction on a
callers
of
Mrs.
Hattie
Ohio near Rutland. 21!2 years
percentage basis. Call Jim
old. Black and white spotted ,
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
Frederick, Long Bottom.
dark head with brown spot
Phone 742-4461 .
Mr. D. D. Cleland, Columbus,
over each eye, white a cross
9-23-tfc
called on Mr. and Mrs. Denzel
end of nose, mostly white on
white
legs
and
tail.
body
with
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
Cleland and Vern Cleland.
When lost had collar with
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hines
name plate. Reward $150 for
10-18-tfc
and daughters of Gallipolis
recovery of this female dog.
Ph.
475-2981
from
8
a
.m.
to
6
visited Sunday evening with Mr.
WILL GIVE piano and organ
p.m. except Sunday or write
lessons in my home. Phone
and Mrs. Charles Woode.
Leslie Marcum , Box 165,
992-3666.
Miss Shelia Newell visited
Delbarton, W. Va. , or Hun ·
8-16-tfc
tington, W. Va. Ph . 429-2920.
Sunday with Sherry and Faith
1-6-10tc
McCain, Eastern.
Wanted To Buy
Mrs. John Hayes and Mrs.
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
James Ridenour visited Sunday
condition, as ion,. as have not
with Emerson Hayes, Portsbeen wet. Paying $10 each.
mouth.
First floor only. Mondays will
be pick-up day. Write, giving
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Newell
good directions. Wiften Piano
and sons of Columbus recently
Company , Box 188, Sardis,
spent a few days with Mr. and
Ohio 43946.
B-20-tfc
Mrs. Hobart Newell and Sheila.
The WSCS met Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mcafternoon at the Methodist
GOOD QUALITY 50-pound
Carthy and two children of
feeder pigs. Direct from
Church.
producer. Pickens Farm ,
Kenneth
Hartung
has Parkersburg visited over the
Reedsville, Ohio. Phone 378weekend with her parents, Mr.
returned to his training base in
6289.
and
Mrs
.
Harvey
Newland
in
1-17-6tc
Kentucky after a two weeks
Mason. Other recent visitors at
furlough with his wife and
the Newland home were two OLD furniture, dishes, brass
mother.
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
other daughters and their
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
husbands, Mr. and Mrs.
992-6271 .
visited Sunday evening with Mr.
9-1-tfc
and Mrs . Norman McCain, Douglas Carroll, Houston,
Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Eastern.
Grueser, Columbus, Ohio.
For Sale or Trade
Miss Lucille Smith has
Mr. A. P. (Lon) Roush is a
returned home after a few
1954 GMC 112-ton truck. 1955
Dodge 112-ton truck . Will sell
weeks visit with Mrs. Elma patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. His room is 114.
or trade. Phone 742-3633.
Reuter and family of Akron.
1-15-6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Vaughan
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen
of
Charleston,
W.
Va.
visited
on
spent a recent evening with Mr.
Saturday, with Mr. and Mrs. Salesman Wanted
and Mrs. Charles Goeglein and
Eber Roush.
TEXAS REFINERY Corp.
family, Flatwoods.
Mrs. Thurma Love of St.
offers opportunity for high
income plus regular cash and
Petersburg, Florida returned
vacation bonuses, abundant
home after a visit with her
fringe benefits to mature man
sister, Mrs. Emma Ryan, and
in Pomeroy area, regardless
with her daughter and family,
of experien ce. Air Mail Dr. J .
A. Pate , Pres., Texas
Mr. and Mrs. Brooki~ Henry,
Refinery Corp. , Box 711, Fort
Pt. Pleasant, and with her son
Worth, Texas 76101.
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
1-17-4tp
James Love and two children .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Belcher Female Help W
Mrs. Don Nease was a Sunday
anted
guest of Mrs. Bertha Shreiber and family of Newark, Ohio
WOMEN Need work but
and Mrs. Bessie Blentz at visited over the weekend with
unable to devote full time?
her
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Mason, W.Va.
Watkins has a splendid income opportunity for you .
Sunday guests of Mr. and McDaniel.
Write Ruth Bergaus, Watkins
Mrs. Raymond Sisk, Mason,
Mrs . Ralph Badgley were Mr.
Products, Inc. , Winona,
and Mrs. Chester Simpson, is a patient at Pleasant Valley
Minnesota 5?987.
1-18-1yc
local, and Mr. and Mrs. Brian Hospital.
Simpson of Baltimore . Lisa and
Darin returned home with their For Rent
Male Help Wanted
parents after spending a week 3 ROOM downstairs furnished EMPLOYED man . Repair
apartment. Phone 742-5032.
with their grandparents.
typewriters
part
time.
1-18-3tc
Training furnished . Local
Miss Martha Yost spent
interview . Wr ite Regional
Christmas vacation from Ohio
Manager , Box 25, Glenshaw,
For Sale
Valley College , Parkersburg ,
Pa . 15116.
12 INCH, 2-bottom plow, 3-point
1-10-12tp
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
hitch. Good condition, $100.
Albany 698-2882, evenings.
Gene Yost and grandmother,
1-18-3tc Help Wanted
Mrs. Mattie Yost. New Year's
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Carl
The first s c he d u 1e d ai~ SALESMAN or Saleslady to sell
Circle and baby of Columbus .
real estate in Meigs County.
service in the world was
Other callers were Mrs. established in Florida, beExperience not necessary.
Write or call Key Real Estate ,
Carolyn Kucsma of Gahanna tween Tampa and St. PetersP. 0 . Box 545, Athens , Ohio.
and Mrs. Hattie Paynter, local. burg, in 1914.
1-17-2tp

Racine

" We' re so sorry to cause y ou all this trou ble, M rs.
Tremblay, but our metal detector thought your
corset buckle was a revo lver!"

2 SIGNS

Bl.AElTNARS
Ph. 992·2143

Pomeroy

Help Wanted
DRIVERS NEEDED. We train
you to be a semi driver, local
and city training now
available. Earn over $4.50 a n
houraftershorttrainlng. For
application and interview,
call 513-863-6404, or write
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
Corwin Ave., Hamilton, Ohio
45015.
1-1B-4tc

For Rent
3

ROOM unfurnished a partment. Phone 992-2288.
7-1-ffc

3 - ROOM semi-furnIshed
apartment in Coats Building,
Middleport. Call 992-3641, or,
to see apartment, inquire apt.
16.
1-13-6tc

----------HOUSE, 1676 Lincoln Hts.,

2
bedrooms, basement, hardwood floors. Attic for storage,
gas furnace. Ca ll 992-3054.
1-12·6tc

2 BEDROOM apartment, large
kitchen and living room, nice
floors, large store room,
closets in each room. Stove
and refrigerator furnished.
Hall carpeted. Hot water
heat. Pomeroy. Write Box
729-C, c-o The Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
1-12-5tc

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606

E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

For Sale
CAMPERS and travel trailers.
Don' t buy until you see our
new line Coming in February.
What a surprise ! You pick it
out, we'll put it on sale. Gaul
Tra iler Sales , Inc., One-half
mile north of Chester, Ohio off
Rt. 7, watch for s ign. Yes, WE
RENT campers and travel
trailers. Phone 614-985-3832
for full information.
1-17-12tc
Ray Hummel
Says:

DON'T WAIT

POWER-VAC
Cleaning System
Al l The Dirt In
One Simple Operation
Homes - Tra ilers - Public
Bu ildings, etc. No muss, no
fuss - have your furnace
cleaned today.

'1

OiASELocust
HARDWARE
St.
Middleport, 0.
HARRISON ' S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc

------------------N E IGLE R Construction. For

bui lding or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Ne ig ler ,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Phone
John Russell, Gallipolis 4464782 after 5:30 p. m.
4-7-tfc

------------------SEWING MACHINES. Repair

GET
'EM NOW
·Country Squire
MUD &amp; SNOW T IRES
All sizes in stock . Lowest
prices. Free installation . We
do studd ing .
POM E ROY
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181 •

service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy .
Author ized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

------------------SEPT IC tanks cleaned. Mi ller

Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
___________
2-_12-tfc,.._

WHEEL Horse Sales and
Service. Baum
Lumber
Company, Chester , Ohio.
Phone 985-3301.
60x12 FOOT 1970 model Schult
5-20-tfc
trailer. Also, 17 acres of land.
BACK HOE and end-loader
Phone 992-6455.
1·6-12tp
work. Septic tanks insta lled.
George ( Bi ll) Pul lins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc
Real Estate For Sale
LOTS WITH all ut ilities.
Restricted subdivision. 1!z to
2-acre lots. Phone Chester
985-3301, night 985-3302.
1-6-tfc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
6· ROOM house, bath. Phone 992Critt Bradford
- --------2371.
5- 1-tfc
1-10-12tc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
JOHNSON MASONRY, Com.
apartments. Close to school.
mercia !
or
res identia l
HOUSE , 1640 Linco ln HTs.,
Phone 992-5434.
remode li ng. Br ick, b lock ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-18-tfc
stone, cement work, garages,
10-25-tfc
septic tanks. Backhoe work .
Free estimaies. Jim, Larry,
4 ROOMS and bath unfurnished
house, 1650 Lincoln Hts .
Jake. 992-7044.
•
Phone 992-3874.
1-7-30tc
11-15-tfc
BOOKKEEPING serv ice, Mrs.
4 ROOM house on Laurel St.,
Marvin King, 112-mile north on
Pomeroy. Call Frank Fugate,
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Week992-5293.
days 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
11-6-tfc
Saturdays 9 a .m. to noon.
Broker
Evenings by appointment.
110 Mechanic St.
2 BEDROOM house, central
12-15-tfc
Pomeroy, Ohio
heating , nice yard, $65 month.
1663 Lincoln Hgts. Phone 992READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
3381 or 992·3453.
livered right to your pro ject.
1-10-12tp RURAL-6rooms,3bedrooms,
Fast and
easy.
Free
- - - -- - - - - - bath, well water, garage, out
es t imates . Phone 992 - 3284/ ~
cel lar.
$7 ,000.00
NEW
Goegle in Ready-M ix Co. ,
NEW MOBILE home. Adults
LISTI NG
only. Phone 992-5592.
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc
1-7-tfc RUTLAND- 2 bedrooms, bath,
----------modern kitchen, doub le steel
FILING, all k inds of
sink, living room 15 x 20, n ice SAW
sharpen ing. Lawn mower
Auto Sales
lot. NEW LISTING
repa ir. Briggs and Stratton
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr .
engine se r vice. Low cost
hardtop, power steering, POMEROY- modern 7 rooms,
pickup and delivery. Col mer' s
power brakes , air, 18,000
3 bedrooms large living room
Saw S.hop, Mechanic St. ,
miles. Excellent condition.
with fireplace, modern birch
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2804.
Phone 992-2288.
kitchen with electric range
1-14-3tc
11-10-tfc
and refrigerator, Ph baths,
double garage, 2 lots.
AIR CONDIT IONING, Re-~
$21,000.00.
For Sale
fri geration service. Jack' s
Refr igerat ion , New Haven .
INTERNATIONAL hot water POMEROY - 8 rooms, nice
Phone 882-2079.
boiler and stoker. Complete
bath, large living room, dry
4-6-tfc
with gauges and pumps, $200.
basement, good gas forced air
Phone Ripley 372-8392.
furnace, 1112 acres , only
1-15-6tc
$5,000.00.
,lnsurance
Helen Teaford,
AUTOMOBILE
insurance ~en
LIME SPREADER and brush
Associate
cancelled?
Lost
your
hog. Phone 247-2161.
992-3325
operator's license? Ca ll 9921-17-Stc
992-2378
2966.
1-15-6tc
6-15-tfc
NICE lot, 40x125 feet. MidOUT-OF-TOWN owner must
dleport. Phone 992-5251.
sell B-room , vacant modern
1-5-tfc
The Peace Corps was crehouse with extra lot in ated March 1, 1961, by execuPomer oy , $2 ,750. For in- tive order.
FIREWOOD, Gerald King ,
formation phone 949-2165 .
Shade, Ohio. Phone Shade 696·
1-3-13tc
1063.
LEGAL NOTICE
1-14-6tp
NOTICE .:&gt;:
STAR kills rats quickly, surely.
APPOINTMENT
3
a
nd
4
Bedrooms
2•12 pounds, $1 .69. Ebersbach
Case No. 20,427
Built to your specifications.
Estate of David C. M ille r
Hardware, Sugar Run Mills,
Sites
avai
lable
now.
Deceased .
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
Notice is hereby g iven that
1-5-30tp
Eleanor L. Mi ll er of Midd leport ,
Meigs Coun ty, Ohio , has bee 11a
PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 Zig
duly a ppo inted Executr ix of th e!"'
Estate of Dav id c . Mill er,
Zag Sewing Machines. Still in
Monthly Payments
deceased , late of Midd leport ,
Lower Than Rent
original cartons. No at Meigs Cou nty, Oh io.
tachments needed, as our
Cred itors are required to file
Contact : Mr. Moody, Ph. 992controls are built-in. Sews
their c la ims with said fiduciary
7034
at
our
field
office
at
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
with in fo ur mon ths.
Park &amp; Sycamore in Midbuttonholes, sews on buttons,
Da t ed th is 30th day of
dleport.
monograms, and blind hem
December 1970.
JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
F . H. O' Brien
stitch . Full case price, $38.50
Formerly Kissell Associates,
P robate Judge
Ph. 1- 262·1531
or terms arranged. Phone 992- ,Inc.
of
sa id Coun t y
5641.
( 1) 4, 11 , 18, 3tc
1-12-6tc

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD,
SR.

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

NEW HOME?

!No Down Pavment

ELECTROLUX Vacuum
Cleaner complete with attachments, cordwinder and
paint spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay $37.45
cash or terms if desired.
Phone 992·5641.
1-12-6tc

Cleland Realty

POMEROY AVERAGE 2 bedroom ,
CONDITION -

ABOVE THE
5 room frame,
bath , NICE
$4,250.

POM EROY - 3 front lots , new
business room on the 4th lot in
rear, East Main Street $6,500.

COAL , limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
MIDD LEPORT - HERE IS A
4-9-tfc
GEM - LOTS OF WORK
OO ~ E ON THIS ONE 2
story frame , 2 baths , 4
THE PROVEN carpet cleaner,
bedrooms , garag e. GOOD
Blue LustrE', is easy on the
LOCATION . GOING AT JUST
budget . Restores forgotten
$7,950.
colors . Rent electric sham pooer, $1, Baker Furniture, POMEROY - ABOUT ONETHIRD ACRE story
Middleport.
frame, bath, 3 bedrooms,
1·14-6tc
basement,
CLOSE
TO
SHOPPING - $6,500.
MODER N Walnut stereo-radio
TO BUY OR SELL CO NTACT
combination , dual vo lume
us
control, 4 speakers, 4 speed
FARMS NEEDED
changer, separate controls.
Balance $69.52. Use our HENRY CLELA ND REAL TOR
Office 992 ~ 2259
budgel terms. Call 992-3352.
Residence 992-2568
1·14-6tc
1-17-6tc
COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio
combination, AM, FM radio, 2 BEDROOM house, Mason, W.
Va. Bath and kitchen ca rfour speak~:.rs , 4 speed inpeted. Utility room, car port,
termixed cfianger, separate
storm doors and windows,
controls. Balance $78.39. Use
stove and dryer included.
our budget terms . Call 992·
Phone Mason 773-5457
3352.
1-10-7tc
• 4-6tc

•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20 ,408
Estate of Homer Lovett
Deceased .
Notice is hereby g iven that
Clara Be lle Yinger of 216 West
" B" Street, Wellston, Oh io, has
bee n duly appointed Ad
min istratr ix of the Estate of
Homer Lovett, deceased , la te of
Leba n on Townsh ip , Me igs
County, Oh io.
Cred itors are requ ired to fil e
thei r claims with sa id fiduc iary
with in four months.
Dated th is 5th day ot J an uar t
1971.
F . H O' Brien
Probate J udge
of said County
( 1l 11 , 18, 25 , Jtc

We talk. to you
· like a person.

WMP0/ 1390

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.l8,1971

'

4~

.-.

JuRf.
•

'

•

Save 20%. 30% up to 50% During This Fantastic Salel

Living Room
Values
WAS
2 Piece Early American
100 per cent Nylon.

•)

e

•

2 Piece Traditinna I Sofa &amp;
Chair
Green.

NOW

325.00 199.95
415.00 299.95

3 Piece Early American,
Gold
Sofa - Chair - Swivel Rocker.

544.95 399.95

2 Piece Modern Sofa
Nylon Sofa - Print Chair.

319.95 149.95

2 Piece Modern Sofa
Olefin Fiber.

359.95 169.95

Rowe Sofa &amp; Chair
Modern Blue Sofa

430.00 225.00

NOW

4 Piece Bedroom Suite
Pecan Finish - Dixie

349.95

299.95

S Piece Bedroom Suite
Contemporary Style

349.95

299.95

Piece Bedroom Suite
High Style.

669.95

549.95

Piece Bedroom
white.
Formica Tops.

395 ·85

299.95

4

Suite,

319.95

4 Piece Maple Suite

Tubs Chairs

Early
Table

American

Coffee

Early American High Back.
Berkline Recliner
Berkline Recliner, green.

NOW

WAS

Marble Top Coffee Table
Slate Top Table.

I

Modern Black &amp; White Chair

a

•

149.00

69.95

Barstool,

Early

American

Desk Chair
Rowe Traditional
green
3 Cushion Sofa.

gold

65.00
129.95
149.95
199.95

39.95
59.00
79.95
99.95

One-Of-A-Kind Items

430.00 225.00

,

NOW

129.95 49.95
328.00 149.00

Credenze

Green Velvet Sofa
Italian Provin cia l

249.95

&amp;

Night Stand

289.00 199.95

WAS
6 Piece Formal

Cocktail Table

119.95
119.95
68.25
49.95
19.95
79.00
109.95

WAS

NOW

Milk Can Lamps

49.95

29.95

Kirsch Atavio Curtain Rods.

12.95

6.00

Pictures

10.99

5.99

Portrait of a Young Man
by Bronzino.

49.95

24.95

27.95

10.00

NOW

499.95 399.95
499.95 399.95

Dining Room Suite, Spanish.
Piece Dining Room Suite
Comtemporary Style

6

Brody Table-Formica top
4-vinyl cover chairs, Early
American

224.95
279.95
99.95

Table- 6 Swivel Chairs
Dinette Set
Table &amp; 4 Chairs

129.95
199.95
79.00

Bedding &amp; Dual Sleep

Chair &amp; Table Buys
WAS

LAMPS &amp;
ACCESSORIES

Dining Rooms &amp; Dinettes

WAS

3 Piece Group Table
Nutmeg Finish

Close-Out
Special
Bargains

delivery. Many years in business which assures you of service and satisfaction. While these prices last, you're invited
to discover why Larry's Wayside Furniture is the best place
for you to shop.

Bedroom Bargains

s

WAS
•

There are many reasons why more people buy their furniture
at Larry's Wayside Furniture than at any other store. Our
Wisurpassed values that guarantee you the lowest prices
possible. Infinite selections for every room in the home.
Excellent taste and fashion freshness at all price levels. Free

339.95 299.95

2 Piece Early American
Olive

~

While these low prices last come in and save.
Choose from hundreds of bargains listed below.

WAS

NOW

Sealy Vinyl Sofa Bed &amp; Chair

249.95

199.95

Bunk Bed, complete set

189.95

139.95

Simmons Hide-A-Bed.

365.00

Flexsteel Hide-A- Bed
Love Seat Size

269.99

Sealy 100 percent nylon Hidea- Bed.
Green, Early American.

349.95
129.95

Matching Chair.

299.95
199.95
299.95
99.95

Chinese Girl Picture

RUG &amp; CARPET
VALUES
Shag Carpet Tiles
18"x18"
Adhesive back. 6 colors to
choose from.

WAS

NOW

1.99
a

1.69

square

square

Save and

NOW

49.95
59.00
39.95
35.00
9.95
39.95
59.95

Do It Yourself

Floor Sample Values
WAS
White Dove Mattress &amp; Box
Spring
Never Needs Turning, full

-

IANKAMERICARD_

200.00

White Dove Mattress &amp; Box
Sprinq
Never Needs Turning, Queen

Sealy King Size Box Springs
&amp; Mattress.

NOW

159.95

269.95 199.95

249.95

189.95

Budget Terms
To Suit

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE
854 lhird Ave.

a

Ph. 446-1830

Gallipolis, Ohio

�HE'S ON
HIS WAY TO
A SINGIN'
CONVENTION
IN TWIN
FORKS

~--------~--------~ r--~--------~------~------------~EEKANDMEEK
AtJ'bfV~ LVITI-\ ~~~S
GLORY BE!!
Kt-JOVJ~ lt-\t&gt;.T C~IME
IS.

I~REA'SI~G

All 'OJ GOITI\
PO I'S READ It\€
:::ot&lt;:&gt;~s.

...

STOP
I
PUT V04JR
~UIT

IN

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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

1 5110ULDNT 8E"

ALLOWED 1b MIN6L.E
Wi{H 50CicT'(!
F~EC~ES, LOCKI

NE IN MY

~OoM.

LANCELOT
HE'S FTOO FAST.':'

SURE. 'IOU ARE., BABY-

HE'L.L. TEAR ME
APART IN MID-AIR,
I FAINT.':'

BUT \VE.'RE GETTING
SOME.THIN' FROM

AS

DOGPATCH, TO Fl)t
THAT!.'

BUGS BUNNY

®

MY MOTI-lER HAS
11-lE CHANCE. TO

VISIT NEW ORLEANS
AND SHE'S
HESiTATING

TOGO .

•
ALLEY ClOP

.

Mavin' a:n•t
no 'oiq thinq!
All I own~ t'

'Your

~arca~m i~

BACK IN

unwarranted,Rufu6'
After alI, thi6 hurts

m' name if&gt;

~

l}l0SE FELLAS ARE WASTING
THEIR ilME LOOKI~G FOR
THAT Oll-IER HOOD... HE'S

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me more

than ·t

m' TV an'
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THE BORN LOSER

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE·
LOOK YOI'lDER, PRI!iCESS "'A
G\AHT WATERSPOUT THAT
MUST REACH R
HEIGHT OF SEVERAL
HUHDRED FEET ...

PRETTY 15 IT, CHILD·--? AYE&gt; IH THE
'SAME WRY A WIDDER SPIDER IS,
OR A SCORPION ··• OR THE SHARP
~ POINT Q' .B STILETT0 1

Saturday's Cryptoquote: EXPERIENCE IS NOT WHAT
HAPFENS TO A MAN ; IT IS WHAT A MAN DOES WITH
WHAT HAPPENS TO HIM.- HUXLEY

DAILY CROSSWORD
DICK TRACY

TERRY

YOU!? YQU'RE THE PENTAGON'S
GOON! AND YOU HAVE THE
BRAZEN GALL TO STILL BE HERE?'

14. F loral
42. Kind of
ACROSS
aradve rtising
1. Vow
rangesign
5. For whom
ment
43. Feat
Thursdav
19. Chef's
DOWN
is named
garb
1 . Academv
9. Parched
20. Fren ch
award ·
10. Wander
rive1·
2. Eagle's nest
11. M.onarcqy's
23. Walked
3. Plight
proud
24. Soil
4. C hop
pol!sessions
prob5. Arduous
(2wds.)
lem
journey
15. Islet
25. Stir
6. By what
16. Astronaut·~
up the
means?
"perfect"
rabble
7. Generally
(colloq.)
26. Venti·
8. Press
17. Washington
lated
statement
legislator
31. Belgian
12. Of the
(abbr.)
cit y
proboscis
18. Go over
32. Kind
13. American
again
of
abolitionis t
20. European
drum
(2 wds.)
river
21. Face
(lllang)
22. Miss
M artineJII
23. Famed
songstress actress
(2 wds.)
27. Jason's ship
28. Tenth of

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

\ "f'tdt-rday'a Anawt-r

33. Terminated
35. Auroral
38. India
farmer
39. Bricklayer's
need

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to form the surprise answ;,r, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

BAKED

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A Crn&gt;togram Quotation
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37. Famed·
Hawaiian
promontory
40. Great
Barrier
island
41 . Mons ter

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used for the three L"s, X fo t· the two O's. e t c . S ing le lett&lt;'r:&lt;.
apostrophes. the length and formation of the \\'OI·ds ar&lt;' all
hints. Each day the code letters a1·e different.

•

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(Anewf'r• tomorro"'·)

is

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WORTH IN TOOM :7
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WE I~Hi LIFTE~

Ll KED MOST A130UT
HIS LOCAL.\AVERt-.1.

Jumt.l•·-= WHILE

(Lat.)
35. Lamb

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29. - - a
phrase
30. Threatening
reminder
(2wds.l
3•. It is

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�8-The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jar..l8, 1971

Slip Corrected ~:~~:. ~:~:~~:~8..,, Labor Defends Tax Reform Plan
Jam..

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - We had a
call from Harold Cranston, who
is building a home on the east
side of the Crooked Creek near

Lay of the Land
Jerrico Road. His problem was
a landslip which had broken
above the site on which he had
poured a concrete pad on which
the house would be built. Mter
examination, we suggested to
Mr. Cranston that he install
drainage using rigid perforated
metal pipe in order to collect
and carry water.
The slips were caused by
· several water seeps which at
this time of year are very
common on the soil which he
chose for his house site. That
soil is Vandalia Silt Loam.
Mr. Cranston installed the
system of drainage in the back
of three terraces and picked up
a flow of water which would
probably fill a three-quarters
inch pipe.
We were careful to caution
Mr. Cranston that installing
drainage in slippy ground can
be dangerous because the soil
structure is unstable and caveins can be expected. A cave-in
at the wrong time could trap a
worker.
WE VISITED the John A.
Kapp farm on Kapp Ridge off
Route 87. Mr. Kapp is one of the
Mason County octogenarians
who is still actively farming .
Mr. Kapp will be 83 years old
February 10.
Kapp Ridge was named for
the Kapp family which was one
of the first settlers in that area.
We found Mr. Kapp threequarters of a mile away from
home along the road with a
mattock and shovel. He had
been cleaning out the road
ditches, but complained that the
ground was grozen and that he
was not able to make the ditches
as deep as he would have liked.
Mr. Kapp has 38 head of cattle
and 19 head of sheep which he
feeds and cuts hay for. He clips
his pasture annually with a
brush hog and tractor. He has
t:rP.ated much of his land with
lime and
fertilizer.
In
discussing
plowing
and
cultivation with him, he said
that he plows the way the land
lies and that he always turns the
furrow uphill.
We noted a farm pond in his
pasture which he said had been
there for several years and was
supplying water for his
livestock.
WHEN WE WERE helping
James H. Lewis of Citizens
National Bank develop a plan
for his farm near White Church,
he showed us a diversion ditch
28 years old. His father, C. H.
Lewis, was operating the farm
at that time and Jim and his
brother, Bill, were in high
school. They had made the ditch
with a team of horses and a Vdrag furnished by the Western
Soil Conservation District.
The purpose of the diversion

MEIGS lHEAl Kt
lumgn• a. 'Ut!:.day
January 18-19
FRANKENSTEIN
MUST BE
DESTROYED
(Technicolor)
Peter Cushing
Veronica Carlson
M ... with parental guidance!
MARLOWE
(Technicolorl
James Garner
Gayle Hunnicutt
... with parental guidance!
Admission:
Adults, $1.00, Children,
60c.
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

being built was to keep water
from running down over a badly
eroded area. On careful
examination during our recen.
visit we noted that the erosion
had been completely stopped
and that the diversion, as well
as some trees which had been
planted on the eroded area, had
been quite effective in accomplishing the purpose for
which they were intended.
Jim noted that Floyd
Rothlisberger was the District
Conservationist in Mason
County at the time and that
Holland Lecky had helped him
and his brother with the construction of the ditch.
WE VISITED the farm of Roy
and Holly Stewart on Yeager
Fork of Thirteen Mile Creek.
The Stewart brothers have been
farming with the guidance of a
conservation plan for many
years. All their farming land is
in alternate contour strips.
They manage their pasture land
carefully and have developed
water for their livestock. Mr.
Stewart called our attention to
the fact that the last spring
which they had developed was
not working quite properly. On
examination of the spring
collection basin and the trough,
we found that the trough was
full of water and that the spring
collection basin was filled with
water above the overflow pipe
which carries water from it to
the trough.
Mr. Stewart removed t!le
screen cap from the overflow
pipe whereupon the water
began to drop and air began to
gurgle out of the pipe. It was
apparent that somewhere in the
distance of the pipe from the
collection basin to the trough
that there was an air lock
preventing a free flow of water.
This is an occurrence which
occasionally happens where the
amount of fall from a collection
basin to a trough is not very
great. To correct such a
situation, it is often necessary to
find the place and make an air
vent for the trapped air to
escape.
ABEL ENLISTS
NEW HAVEN - Richard
(Rick) Abel, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jess Abel of New Haven,
has enlisted in the United States
Air Force. He left January 14
for Lackland Air Force Base in
San Antonio, Texas for his six
weeks basic training. He will
then go to Lowry Air Force
Base in Denver, Colorado to Air
Intelligence School for sixteen
weeks. Rick is a graduate of
Wahama High School and
Marshall University. At the
time of his enlistment he was
employed by General Adjustment Bureau, working out
of Columbus, Ohio with the
regional office at Athens.
CLUB TO MEET
SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club
will meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday
at the headquarters for a
business session. Each member
is to bring a homemade article
or one that has been given to
them in answer to roll call. A
potluck lunch will be served at
noon. The afternoon will be
spent in planning project&lt;;. All
homemakers are welcome.
CLUB TO MEET
The Winding Trail Garden
Club will meet at 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday at the home of Mfs.
Cora Beegle in Racine.
COUNCIL TO MEET
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, will
meet at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at
the hall. The good of the order
committee will sell homemade
candy. Potluck refreshments
will be served.

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

Tf4\N S\lE
\\Oll~OOD

STILE
BED
toMPlElE

S69
BAKERS

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

'

man were Sunday visitors of her
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Bratton of Radcliff.
Miss Naomi Jo Smith
returned to Concord College
after spending Christmas
vacation and semester break
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. John Earnheart
of L-ogan were Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. John Earnheart
of Logan visited Sunday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Johnson.
Mrs. Lee Roush and children
of Logan visited with her
mother, Helen Johnson, and Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Johnson and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts
and son of King Hill were
Sunday afternoon visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp
and Charles and Kevin were
Monday visitors of Mrs. Lena
Knapp of Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Reeves
visited a few days with his

Carmel News

'

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson,
Mrs. Howard Blazer of Belpre
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ables
of Bald Knobs were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle.
Florence Circle visited her
aunt, Mrs. Laura Eiselstein and
son, Cecil, in Pomeroy recently.
Twenty-nine were present at
Sunday School on Jan. 10. Offering_ was $140.

Reeves, Linda and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Reeves and Bryan. The
Bill Reeves' are enroute to
Florida.
Elaine, Peggy, Carmel and
Barbara Murphy were recent
visitors with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Murphy, Crooksville.
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
and Linda were Sunday visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves
and Bryan, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Larry Barr and family
of Rutland were Monday
visitors of her parents, the
Howard Thomas.
Bill McElroy and Bob Shaffer
were business visitors in Cincinnati Monday.

Gallian Arrested

Eden News
By Martha Holsinger
Those spending Christmas
Day with Mr. and Mrs. Alva
Holsinger Sr. were Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Holsinger of
Missouri, Mr. and Mrs. Sol
Bigley and Edie, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Webb and Laura Jean
and Mrs. Cora Webb of
Guysville, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Holsinger and Aleshia Lynn and
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Holsinger
Jr., Paul and Bradley of
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kerwin
spent Christmas Day with Mr.
and Mrs. William Hoselton.
Mrs. Johnnie Kibble visited
Martha Holsinger Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fields and
son,
Reedsville,
visited
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Sol Bigley and son.
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Holsinger
and Timmy of Hockingport
visited Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Holsinger
and family.
Rev. Elden Blake visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Kerwin.
Geraldine Holsinger visited
Saturday afternoon with Doris
Swain.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Webb of
Guysville spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Sol Bigley and
Eddie.
Mrs. Connie Reed is a
medical patient at CamdenClark Hospital in Parkersburg.
Eddie Bigley spent Tuesday
night with Donald Barnhart.

James Circle of New Haven,
W. Va., was at the home of his
mother, Mrs. Mary Circle, on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and Patrick spent
Sunday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Johnson and Ray
of Racine.
Dan Smith, local, and Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Smith, Dorcas,
visited in Columbus Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
and family.
Florence Circle called on Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Circle of
DIVORCE GRANTED
Racine recently.
Freda
Adkins was granted a
Patrick Johnson was a guest
of his great-grandmother, divorce in Meigs County
Mrs. Eunie Brinker, on Friday Common Pleas Court from
Harlin Adkins on charges of
night.
extreme cruelty.

.~~~~~~~~f:f:~~;~~;;;~;~~~t;~~;~~;;;;~;~;~;~;~;;;~;~;~~~~m~m~~~m~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~i~~~~~~~~;~;~;~;~;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.l!!l

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Organized labor said Saturday allegations that its tax proposal would
chase industry from Ohio were
nothing "but political poppycock." The Ohio Chamber
of Commerce said the proposal
was "ill-conceived" and unfair.
''The special interest gang and
their politician allies are sure
to howl long and loud that industry will be driven out of
Ohio," said the Ohio AFL-CIO
in its magazine Focus. "Any
such charges are nothing but political poppycock."
"Quite the contrary, U.S. Labor Department statistics show
those states have a greater pet-

Overnight Wire

ll\1

By United Press International
CINCINNATI -A CINCINNATI ARCHITECT plans to lead a
"drive-in" on Washington and Detroit April 2, hoping to further
snarl traffic in the two cities to protest the proliferation of
automobiles. "I don't consider this inflicting a condition, but as
predicting what it will be in a few years," said Peter Seidel, who
teaches architecture at Miami (Ohio) University. "It would
illustrate what we can expect five to ten years from now unless we
do things differently."
Seidel said the plan is to maneuver cars onto expressways
during the morning and afternoon rush hours, with stops at
overcrowded parking lots and drives past the homes of auto
executives in Detroit and those of their lobbyists in Washington.
BATAVIA, OHIO - HOWARD METZENBAUM, defeated
last November for a seat in the U.S. Senate, charges "negativism
has replaced action in the White House." Speaking at a dinner
Saturday night of the Clermont County Democratic party here, he
singled out President Nixon's vetoes recently of bills for job
training and development of more family doctors.
"All but three members of Congress voted funds to train more
doctors, but President Nixon used a legal maneuver - the pocket
veto - to thwart the $225 million proposal," Metzenbaum said.
Metzenbawn said Nixon in 1968 publicly pledged support for increased job training. "Mter two years of continued promises and
press releases, Nixon's veto of job training - again widely supported by both parties in Congress - showed that negativism has
replaced action in the White House," he said.
CAPE KENNEDY - THE LAUNCH CREW prepared to
pump 736,000 gallons of frigid propellants into the Apollo 14 rocket
today to wind up a critical trial countdown for the Jan. 31 start of
the nation's fourth moon-landing mission. The week-long launch
pad test was scheduled to stop just short of engine ignition at 3:23
p.m. EST.
Because of the risks involved with a fully fueled Saturn 5 rocket,
astronauts Alan B. Shepard, Stuard A. Roosa and Edgl:lr D.
Mitchell did not participate in today's exercise. They will run
through an abbreviated countdown Tuesday after the rocket's
propellants have been drained.
BENNETTSVILLE, S. C. -THE SECOND of two gunmen
who tried to kidnap this tobacco town's wealthiest families in a
van and hold them for ransom surrendered in Columbus Sunday
night after eluding a 150-man posse. The Marlboro County
sheriff's office said Grover L. Bennett of Charlotte, N.C., turned
himself in at the headquarters of the state Law Enforcement
Division in the state capital, about 85 miles southwest of Bennettsville.
Bennett's companion, Charles L. Scales, also of Charlotte,
was wounded in a shootout with one of his hostages, former state
Rep . Jaimie F. Lee. He was hospitalized along with another
hostage the wife of state Sen. John Lindsay, who was wounded in
the neck, shoulder and leg by her captors.
PERTH AMBOY, N.J. - THE HAIRCUTTING business is so
bad that veteran barbers here have resorted to a tactic they last
used in the Great Depression of the 1930s. They are not
patronizing businesses which employ or are owned by long-aired
men.
Stephen Frasca, one of the instigators of the movement, says
modern hair-styling trends have cut his business 40 per cent in the
past two years. " We got a little desperate ," he said. "So
somebody came up with the idea; why don 't we patronize the
people that patronize us? We did that in the depression," he said.
"You sort of feel funny when you go into a place where they have
long hair and you're spending your good money... " he said.

centage of job growth in the
past decade than Ohio with its
low industry taxes," said the
article.
The chamber, in a taxation research bulletin, said the "labor
union 'initiative petition' tax bill
is bad for Ohio."
Corporate Tax Tops
The Ohio AFL-CIO and the

Cats Get TornadoCoach Paul Dillon's Hannan
Trace Wildcats moved into
third place in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
Saturday night by posting an 8163 victory over Southern of
Meigs County. Jerry Waugh, 6-1
senior forward and Larry
Cremeens, 6-1 senior forward,
led the attack with 24 and 23
points respectively. Trailing,
31-28 at halftime, the Wildcats
jumped into a 51-41 lead going
into the final period of action.
Hannan Trace is now 6-5 in all
games and 5-4 in the SVAC.
Other Wildcat players in double
figures were Mike Caldwell, 6-2

A
PT. PLEASANT
Gallipolis, 0. man arrested on a
DWI charge was among three
persons lodged in the Mason
County jail during the weekend.
Fred E. Westfall, 37,
Gallipolis, was arrested by the
sheriff's department on the
DWI charge; Roy Gary Nutter,
21, Spartanburg, S. C., was
arrested by Hartford police
chief John Hinkle on an assault
and battery charge and Roy C. Harold Johnson
McDade, 1205 First Street,
Point Pleasant, was arrested by Dies in Columbus
city police on a charge of inHarold Johnson, 52, formerly
toxication.
of Middleport, a maintenance
foreman at the Sun News in
PT. PLEASANT - Artie Springfield where he resided,
Cornell, 13, of 506 Water Street, died Sunday at University
Point Pleasant, was admitted to Hospital in Columbus.
He was the son of the late
Pleasant Valley Hospital for
Leslie
and Nellie Mills Johnson
observation after she was
of Middleport and a nephew of
struck by a car near Shadle
the late Shirley and Harry
Bridge Saturday afternoon.
Mills. He was also preceded in
The teenager was treated at
death by a brother, Paul.
the local hospital for a back
Surviving are his wife, Alma
injury and was discharged Leifheit Johnson; a ste_pson
1
Sunday, attendants said.
Richard Leifheit, also of
Point Pleasant city police Springfield, and a brother,
investigated and said the child Harry, of Florida. Funeral
was in a group of children that arrangements will be anran out in front of a car being nounced.
driven by Millard Addis, 64, of
917 Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
FIVE AT SCHOOL
0. Police explained that Addis
Five members of Racine
was coming off the by-pass Chapter 134, OES, attended a
and headed toward the bridge school of instruction and district
when the mishap occurred. meeting Thursday at the
The driver was not cited and Federal-Hocking High School.
no property damage oc- Attending from the Racine
curred.
Chapter were Worthy Matron
Barbara Dugan, Associate
·::::::~::::::~::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;!;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:::;:~;:;:;:;:::
Patron Ralph Webb, Treasurer
SORORITY TO MEET
Gretta Simpson, Conductress
The Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Cora Webb, and Phyllis
Beta Sigma Phi will hold its Knighting, Esther.
January social at the home of
Mrs. Dugan served on the
Tana Simonton, New Haven, registration committee and
Thursday at 8 p.m. Casual dress Mrs. Webb, a past president,
is suggested.
was guest of the district at the
5:30p.m. dinner and served as
installing officer for the new
president, Janet Bolin, and
other new officers.

Chester East .
News Notes

Attendance at the Nazarene
Sunday School on January 10
was 74. Offering was $9.95.
Guy Thoma and wife and two
children spent Tuesday evening
with his mother, Mrs. Georgia
Thoma. Freda J,uller also
called on Mrs. Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. George
Genheimer attended a grange
meeting in Rock Springs Friday
evening.
Mrs. Weber Thoma was
called to Youngstown by the
death of a brother. She and a
son, Glen, attended the funeral.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Heines
and two children of Gallipolis
were supper guests Saturday
evening of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Woode .
Mrs. Opal Wickham called on
Letha Wood Sunday afternoon.
Rachel
Hunter
spent
Saturday night and Sunday with
Debbie Windon.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Woode
spent the day Monday with their
daughter and son-in-law,
Athens Road . The occasion was
her father 's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Norbert
Neutzling called on Mrs. Erma
Heilman Sunday and also called
on Elizabeth Wickham at the
home of B.K. Ridenour.
Mrs. Clayton Scartiger called
on Freda Miller and Lenore
Betzing Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs . Earl Thoma and
children of Pomeroy spent
Sunday evening with his
mother, Mrs. Georgia Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Chaffin of
Columbus spent a weekend with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hoffman and his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Chaffin of Pomeroy.
NOTHING OFFICIAL
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
White House says there is still
nothing official to announce
about the rumored engagement
of Tricia Nixon and Edward
Finch Cox.
HANGS HIMSELF
WICHITA FALLS, Tex.
(UPI) -Charles Carpenter, 15,
hanged himself Sunday because
his tather wanted to watch the
Super Bowl instead of taking
him hunting , according to
police.

United Auto Workers union initiated a petition drive to force
the Ohio General Assembly to
enact a tax progra m with the
main point being a corporate income tax.
If the legislature fails to enact the program, then the two
labor organizations could collect more petitions and put the

sophomore with 14; Keith
Swain, 5-10 junior guard , had 13
and Steve Daniels, 6-~ senior
center, had 11.
Roger Wilfred led the Tornadoes with 13 points on six
baskets and one free throw. The
loss dropped Southern into
fourth place in the league
standings with a 3-3 season
mark.

College Scores

By United Press Internationa l
East
Temple 67 F'ordaham 66
lafayette 62 Rider 60
West. Mass. 100 Chyny St. 90
LaSalle 91 Western Ky. 76
Vllnva 82 Niagra 79, 2 ofs
Pitt 75 Penn St. 62
Harvard 89 Navy 72
Syracuse 101 Bucknell 74
lona 81 Scranton 77
Marshall 87 M. Harvey 75
W.Va. St. 73 Bluefield 66
Penn 91 Manhattan 68
Hoi y Cross 73 Bost. Coli. 71
Brandeis 82 Tufts 76
Phila Tex. 89 Ssquhnna 56
Army 69 Darmouth 57
Wouth
Wake Forest 96 No. Car. 84
Citadel 66 VM I 64, ot
Tenn. 75 Kentucky 71
Duke 82 Clemson 56
Virginia 89 Ga. Tech 84
St. Jos. (Pa.) 85 Dvdsn 84
Tenn. Tech 75 Morhed 69
Richmond 74 Va. Tech 73, 2 ot
Fla. St. 122 Samford 79
Ga. Sou. 80 Oral Rbrts 76
East Tenn. 70 East Ky. 64
Maryland St. 92 Del. St. 77
Miami (Fla.) 74 Tulane 71
Mid west
Marquette 65 N.M. St. 53
Illinois 69 Mich. St. 67
Michigan 92 Indiana 81
Bradley 78 Lousvl 74
Missouri 80 Kan . St. 72
Purdue 97 Minn. 92, ot
Ohio St. 83 Wisconsin 69
Nebraska 84 Iowa St. 62
Kansas..J.QJ Okla. ~ity 77
West Mich. 87 Kent St. 711
Dayton 76 DePaul 71
Ohio U 62 1 aledo 53
East. Ill. 98 West. Ill. 75
Millikin 89 DePauw 77
Sou. Ill . 84 Ind. St. (Ind.) 80
Southwest
Tulsa 90 Mmphs St. 85
Baylor 77 Texas 70
Rice 85 Arkansas 82
New Mexico 65 UTEP 53
Okla. 88 Colorado 73
Houston 74 Centenary 68
Pan Am. 103 Tex.-Arlngtn 89
Tex. Sou . 103 Prairie View 91
West
UCLA 94 California 76
USC 71 Stanford 51
Washington 90 Alaska 62
Utah St. 104 Seattle 81
BYU 82 Wyoming 68
Utah 80 Colo. St. 78
Ariz. St. 112 Arizona 83
Hawaii 105 Trnty (Tex.) 67
lng Bch St. 77 Snta Brbra 59
Veterans Memorial Hospital Loyola 82 Santa Clara 61
95 Nev.-Reno 61
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS - UPO
L.A. St. 97 San Diego 87
Robert Cummins, Racine; Air Force 69 Denver 65
Jeffrey Friend, Long Bottom; Westmont 87 Biola 61
Curtis Rayburn, New Haven. Gonzaga 81 Mont. 73

SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Mary Hargarten, Edith
McKenzie, William McKinney,
Betty Donovan, Martha Anderson, Homer Goeglein, Evan
Wiseman, Peggy Imboden.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Joseph Hood, Minersville; Alice
Jacobs, Rutland; Angela
Harmon,
Rutland;
Paul
Stewart, West Columbia; John
Kauff, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Emmett Gilmore, Holly Friend,
Melissa Riggs, Alice Coleman.
PTATOMEET
The Letart Falls PTA will
meet at 7:30p.m. tonight at the
school.

proposal on the ballot in NoM
vember.
"Legislatively, the pr oposal is
law -making blackmail," said
the chamber. "Economically, it
would cripple Ohio's economic
development. Administratively
it would be a compliance nightmare for both government and
business."
"The potential effect of the
41
labor bill on m unicipal income
taxation would be devastating "4
both for municipalities and businesses," said the chamber. It
pointed out that one facet of the
proposal would allow municipalities to change rates of taxation.
So Much Talk
To organized labor, this is all
so much talk.
•
The article in Focus said the
main things wrong with Ohio's
tax structure were:
-"They don't raise enough
money to provide essential services.
-"The money they do raise
is assessed unfairly. The wealthy who can afford to pay a
larger proportion of taxes slips
easily off the hook, while thelk
poor and middle-class working
population are forced to carry
most of the burden."
"Admittedly, the ... proposal is a one - sided program
aimed at the business community," said Focus. "This is because business has not been
paying its fair share of taxes
"'
in recent years."
The labor groups said in 1960,
Ohio manufacturing taxes were
25 per cent lower than surrounding Great Lakes states.
The chamber takes a different look.
"Ohio taxation of tangible
personal property used in business is the steepest in the industrial corridor states, if not
the nation," said the chamber •
Pleasa nt Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Mrs.
William
Mattox,
West
Columbia; Mrs. Joe McComas,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Roger
Shinn, Mason; Mrs. Friend
Furbee, Point Pleasant;
Adriana McGee, Ravenswood;
Russell Poore, Gallipolis, 0.; • •
Rose Marie Gibson, Point
Pleasant; James Johnson,
Mason; Mrs. Perry Jeffers,
Southside; Mrs. Glen Goodman,
Point Pleasant; William Willis,
Eleanor, W. Va.
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
William Plisko, Mrs. George
Gill, Mrs. Raymond Newell,
John Lambert, Famous Hart,
Daniel Northup, Kitty Bragg; '
Wesley Adams, Howard Jeffers, Dell Talbott, Mrs. Robert
Musser, Billy Davis, Artis
Cornell, Mrs. Audrey Crimp,
Okey Jordan, Mrs. John Wright,
Norma Henry and Mrs.
Charriss McDaniel.
BIRTH: January 17, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Joe
McComas, Gallipolis Ferry.

4

SALEI RECORDS
Visit the Record Departm ent on the
2nd f loor. See the la r ge selection of
~lb Uf!~S i~ .country, wester n, easy
hstenmg hvmg st ri ngs, sacred and
m any collector a lbums w ith older
ar t ists.

1.89

EACH

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.....................................

~~

Are You A Newlywed?

........

Open A Checking Account At Pomeroy Nllional Bank
WAIVER OP -VICI OIARGE
(newlyweds for a 6 month period)

Initial Order of 50 PERSONAUZED QfECKS
If you presently have an account with us and are In one of the above
categories, please advise us of your status.
We continue our policy of FRE E CHECK ING ACCOUNT SERVICE
to all Ministers, and Religious and Charitable Organizations.

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POMEROY
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All accounts Insured to $20,000.00

RUTlAND

••

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