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                  <text>Now You Know
Palindrome, which means a
word or phrase that reads the
same forwards as backwards such as Lon Nol - is taken from
the Greek Word for "that which
runs back again."

•

VOL. XXVI

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

~ Truman

•

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Former President Harry S.
Truman, 86, was rushed in an ambulance to a hospital today
suffering severe abdominal pain. Doctors said he was "fairly
weak."
The nation's 33rd chief executive was admitted to Research
Hospital in south Kansas City at 8:28 a.m. CST. He was driven the
15 miles to the hospital from his 17-room Victorian mansion in

( - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

! News ... in Briefs !
I

By United Press International

I

Debt ceiling must go up again

•
•

WASHINGTON - PRESIPENT NIXON plans to ask
Congress for an emergency increase in the $395 billion national
debt ceiling to permit the government to continue to borrow
money needed to pay its bills. Paul A. Volcker, assistant treasury
secretary for monetary affairs, said Wednesday there is no way
the government could stay within the present limit until the fiscal
year ends June 30.
The national debt covered by the limit stands at slightly more
than $392 billion. That is almost $20 billion more than the debt last
year at this time. Volcker said no decision has been made yet how
much an increase will be required. But it appeared likely a boost
of $20 billion or more would be needed.

Fresh fighting breaks out
THE AL FATAH GUERRILLA ORGANIZATION said today
fresh fighting has broken out between the Jordanian army and
Palestinian conupandos. A spokesman for Al Fatah in Beirut said
the fighting started Wednesday night. It was the first clash between government forces and guerrillas in Jordan since 10 days of
fighting ended with a new peace accord in Jan. 13.
In Cairo, western diplomatic sources said today the United
States has urged Egypt to agree to extend the cease-fire with
Israel beyond Feb. 5.

Incredible waste, delays

•

COLUMBUS- ERNEST FITZGERALD, who claims he was
fired by the Pentagon when he publicized the "enormous waste"
that goes on there, said Wednesday much of it could be eliminated
if contracts were enforced.
Fitzgerald, speaking at Ohio State University, said the
current Pentagon system of weapons procurement "invites
mounting costs, incredible extravagance and delays." Fitzgerald
was dismissed from his job as an efficiency expert for the Air
Force in 1969 after he testified before a congressional committee.

Communists challenged again

•
•

PARIS - U. S. AMBASSADOR DAVID K. E. Bruce
challenged the CommuniSts at the lOOth session of the Vietnam
peace talks today to permit impartial inspection of their prison
camps in South Vietnam. Bruce said their refusal to allow such
inspections, to provide any information, or permit mail to flow
between the captured Americans and their families leads to the
conclusion that "you fear what would be revealed through such
visits."
"There is perhaps nothing which so clearly demonstrates the
hollowness of your side's claims to authority and responsibility in
South Vietnam than this refusal to make the slightest effort to live
up to legal and humanitarian standards recognized by civilized
people everywhere," Bruce said.

More steel prices raised
PITISBURGH - TWO MORE FIRMS raised the price of
steel Wednesday, following the lead of the nation's major
producers. Jones &amp; Laughlin Steel Corp., and Youngstown Sheet
&amp; Tube Co., joined U.S. Steel Corp., Bethlehem, Armco, Lukens
and Kaiser steel in boosting prices of steel used in the construction and ship-building industries.
Jones &amp; Laughlin raised its prices about 6.8 per cent - the
same as U.S. Steel Corp. But Youngstown Sheet and Tube boosted
its prices 8.8 per cent on plate steel and 7.2 per cent on structural
steel.

Hog industry in trouble
WASHINGTON- HOG PRODUCERS, who have seen their
prices tumble nearly in half in the past year, told the Nixon administration Wednesday they need help. But they differed widely
on what form it should take. About 40 farm organization leaders
and farmers from most major hog states were present for an
(Continued on Page 10)

Byrd Ousts EMK

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts was ousted from his post as Senate
Democratic whip by Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia
today minutes before the new 92nd Congress began.
The vote in Byrd's favor was 31 to 24, according to one of
the senators.
The result started the new session on a note of surprise
and was viewed as a sharp setback to any presidential ambitions Kennedy might have in the future .
At a Senate Republican caucus, Sen. Hugh Scott of
Pennsylvania was re-elected as GOP leader by a narrow, 24to-20, vote margin over Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee. Scott had won 24 to 19, over Baker tw years ago.

92nd Convenes

•

..

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
92nd Congress convened today
under firm Democratic control,
opening a session which will
write the legislative record of
President Nixon's next two
years in office.
There was a major change of
command in the House where
Rep Carl Albert, D-Okla ., took
over as speaker and Rep . Hale
Boggs, D-La., became majority
leader.
The Senate confined itself to a
ritual oath-takmg ceremony on
opening day but was faced with
an early fight over a move to
change the traditional rule for
ending filibusters .

THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 196

In the House, 434 members 254 Democrats and 180
Republicans - were sworn in
simultaneously . There is one
vacancy and 55 first-termers. In
the Senate, 35 members including 11 newcomers elected in
November were taken in to set
up a chamber consisting of 55
Democrats and 45 Republicans.
Nixon already has served
notice that he will present the
new Congress in his State of the
U1110n message Friday "the
most comprehensive, the most
far-reaching , the most bold
program in the domestic field
ever presented to an Amencan
c·or•gri'~S . "

Weather
Cloudy, turning colder
tonight, chance of snow and
showers south this evening .
Lows tonight mid 30s southeast.
Cloudy, little change in temperature Friday, chance of rain
south.

TEN CENTS

'Weak '
Independence, Mo.
His wife Bess, 85, was at his bedside. His bodyguard and lifelong
companion, Mike Westwood, stood close by.
Truman's attending physician said he was hospitalized because
of a "rather sudden onset of moderately severe abdominal pain."
John P. Dreeves, a hospital spokesman, said diagnostic tests
would be made to determine the nature of Truman's illness.

worldCalled
0

LONDON (UPI) -The postal
workers union, successful in
bringing the nation's mails to a
virtual standstill, appealed today to the world's postal unions
to boycott British telephone and
Telex calls.
The post office in Britain also
controls telephone and Telex
communications, but the strike
has been only partially successful in those fields.
With the country's first postal
and telecommunications walkout in its second day, the staterun Post Office Corp. and the
230,000-member Union of Post
Office Workers waited for each
other to make the first move at
ending the dispute.
The union wants a 15-20 per
cent pay raise. The post office
has offered 8 per cent.
The government's emergency
committee decided Wednesday
night to take a wait-and-see
attitude on the strike, govern-

ment sources said. They said
there was no question at the
moment of its stepping in with
troops or transport to run
postal services.
The government was hoping
inconveniences caused by the
strike would bring public
pressure on union leaders to
end the walkout -a tactic it
found successful in ending the
recent electrical workers strike.
It regards the union's demands
as inflationary.
No talks were scheduled
between the two sides.

THESE SIX STUDENTS were selected winners of their respective classes in a
safety poster contest conducted at the Salisbury Elementary School sponsored by the
school's PTA safety committee. School safety was the theme of all of the posters
made during school hours. Awards of $1 each and small first aid kits were presented
by John lisle, faculty member, at the PTA meeting Tuesday night. Winners from the
left are Teresa Dorst, first grade; Delores Gill, second; Cathy Quivey, third; Charles
Kennedy, fourth; Kathleen Ney, fifth and Cheryl Kennedy, sixth. Awards were
provided by the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co .

if''';;:;,,;;:::,,;;";~:;:;;;''''''"'XI Bank Deposits
inci~~~~~~:. ~:!~s--;:; ~~~:~::aws~:;;~o~~i:~ ~:_;i :_;,· Up During 1970

Tom Jackson, general secretary of the postal union, said he
had asked the Post, Telephone
her show at the Plaza Hotel's Persian Room Wednesday
and Telegraph International,
based in Brussels not to accept :·:· night touched off a "free-for-all," police said. Miss Carne, ·:·:
messages and calls relayed :;:: the former "sock-it-lo-me" girl who got doused with water :;:;
from Britain. He said some
operators in the United States
_!.__!_I
and Australia already have
complied.
She said she became angry and "pointed out that their
remarks were really uncool. Suddenly one of the three
stood up and threw a glass of water at me."
"I threw it back," she said. Her conductor, Randy
Edelman, came to her defense and more water was
sloshed. "Everybody was very wet," Miss Carne said.
A "free-for-all involving seven or eight people"
erupted
after Miss Carne had finished her act and left the
water supply was dwindling
room. The actress said most of the remarks ''were
rapidly. "We get our water
directed at the fact that my navel was showing."
from wells and we have enough
left for about another hour,"
~id Bowers at the time. "Th~n
we don't know what we are
going to do."
Blake said the fire was
brought under control about
Meigs County dog owners in the taxpayers money.
7:15a.m.
Dog owners may purchase the
"It is now down and I would Meigs County may pay a
judge under control," said penalty for the late purchase of license at the auditor's office
Blake. "But of course it isn't dog licenses and still save anytime by paying the $2 fee per
money, dog warden George each dog plus a $1 penalty on
out."
each for late purchase.
"As soon as we get this to Logan said today.
the position where we can
Sales of licenses at the office However, owners failing to
handle it we will shuttle water of Meigs County Auditor Gordon purchase tags at all can be cited
in tankers from our reservoir," Caldwell Wednesday, the final to court, with the fine running
said Blake.
date of purchase without as high as $25, Logan warned,
The community has a reser- penalty, were about 135 under considerably more than the $1
voir but it is not hooked up to last year on the same date. The penalty.
the water system because there only solution to the apparent
is no water treatment plant.
failure of some owners to
FIRE KILLS BOY
However, subfreezing tem- purchase tags will be to put on
CLEVELAND (UPI)
peratures the past week created. extra help and conduct a can- Donald Nance, 2, died Wedanother problem because most vass to insure that dog owners nesday in a fire at his home, but
reserve water supplies are• do have tags for their animals, his mother and another child
frozen.
Logan said. And this will cost escaped.
i:·=_.i:.::i.·

~-.: l ;~:!~~~·.~::v:~;:;;,:;L~u:;~~i~· ~:·.u:.: :.':.'::.~::

Fire Controlled
NORTH BALTIMORE, Ohio
(UPI) - A general alarm fire
destroyed a large furniture store
in the downtown area early
today. Fire fighters nearly exhausted the water supply in
this Northwestern Ohio community, causing a critical water
shortage.
"We've got water problems
right now, quite frankly," said
Bob Blake a city councilman
and volunteer fireman. "We
have sent out an alarm for the
public to conserve water and
we have also closed our schools
to conserve water."
Charles Bowers, a fireman,
said earlier the fire in the twostory half-block long L. L. Troug
Furniture Store started at 2:30
a.m. The fire was battled by
more than 100 volunteer firemen
from here, Cygnet, Bloomdale,
Whiteville, Portage and Gerry
City.
Supply Dwindling
Bowers said at 6:30a.m. the

SaviTig Moriey

3,000 Cambodians Fight FTee
PHNOM PENH (UPI) Cambodian troops broke
through Viet Cong and North
Vietnamese encirclement today
to recapture the last Communist - held segment of
Cambodia's lifeline to the sea.
Jubilant Cambodian soldiers
raised their flag over Pich Nil
Pass and danced on the shellpocked Highway 4.
"Chhayo! Chhayo! Hurray!
Hurray!
the
Cambodian
soldiers shouted, scrambling to
the roof of the summer palace of
deposed Prince Norodom
Sihanouk on the side of Pich Nil
Mountain, waving the cambodian flag triumphantly.

The Cambodian victory
climaxed a four-day battle
around Pich Nil and came only
a few hours after the 3,000
Cambodian troops had been
surrounded by the Viet Cong
and North Vietnamese, who had
swept in behind them and cut
them off. Vietnamese troops
had been trying to go to their
rescue.
The Cambodian troops were
moving towards the pass from
the north while the South
Vietnamese moved towards it
from the south in a joint effort
to clear the Communists from
the vital link between Phnom
Penh and Cambodia's seaport

of Kompong Sam. The Communists cut the road Nov. 21.
South Vietnamese military
sources said three Cambodian
regiments totalling about 3,000
men were involved in the trap.
They earlier had said only one
regiment was cut off.
In other developments, the
South Vietnamese government
announced today it will observe
a 24-hour cease-fire for the Tet
lunar new year from sundown
Jan . 26 until sundown Jan. 27.
U. S. and other allied forces
will honor the one-day standdown . The Communists already
heve said they will hold a fourday Tet cease-fire beginning

Jan. 26. The cease-fire affects
only South Vietnam, not Cambodia.
The U. S. command said 37
Americans died in battle in
Indochina last week and 211
were injured. The toll the week
before was 27 with 83 injured.
u. s. spokesmen said they
could nut explain the rise in
casualties.
The South Vietnamese said
their casualties dropped to 232
dead and 764 wounded compared to 277 dead and 688
wounded the week before. The
allies claimed 1,361 Viet Cong
and North Vietnamese dead
during the same period.

The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. of Pomeroy had
another successful year in 1970
even though it was a difficult
year for the American economy
generally, according to Bank
President Theodore T. Reed Jr .
This was the substance of
President Reed's report to the
shareholders in their annual
meeting Wednesday at the
bank's office. Deposits, he said,
increased approximately 7.5
per cent and gross income 16
per cent.
Shareholders re-elected these
directors, Theodore T. Reed,
Jr., Thereon Johnson, E. Robert
Schellhase, L%lie F. Fultz,
Fred W. Crow, Jr., Dr. Fred R.
Carsey, Jr., C. Wayne Swisher,
Richard C. Follrod and Harold
E. Smith.
At the directors' organization
meeting immediately following
the shareholders' meeting,
these officers were re-elected:

Mr. Reed, president; Thereon
Johnson,
executive
vice
president; Paul E. Kloes, vice
president and cashier; Dorothy
B. Will, Joanne J . Russell, and
Roger W. Hysell, assistant
cashiers.
In addition, Mrs. Evelyn G.
Lanning was elected to the
position of assistant cashier.
Mrs. Lanning is the wife of
Donald L. Lanning, an electrician at Kaiser Aluminum in
Ravenswood. She is a graduate
of Pomeroy High School and
The Ohio School of Banking. She
has been an employee of the
bank since 1958 working as a
bookkeeper, then in the proof
department and presently is a
teller.
Mr. and Mrs. Lanning have
two daughters, Susan, a
secretary at Ohio University,
and Connie, a junior at Meigs
High School. They reside on Rt.
3, Pomeroy.

Welker on Committe to
Probe Campus Disorder
State Representative Ralph
Welker (R-Pomeroy) has been
appointed to the Joint HouseSenate Select Committee to
Investigate Campus Disturbances, Ohio House Speaker
Charles F. Kurfess announced
Thursday.
Welker's appointment fills a
vacancy created by former
State ~ep. Mark A. Schinne:er
who dtd not run for re-election
last Novem?er.
.
Welker .wtll be servmg o~ _a
subcommittee th~t was to VISit
Kent Sta~e U_mver~tty and
Akr~~ Umv~r.sity thts week.
Additional ~ISits to Cleveland
an~ B?:Vhn~ Green State
u~:versihes will be made soon.
Mr. Welker ?as demonstrated ~ ke~n mterest and
concern m dtsturbances that
have occurred on our campuses
and developments leading to
them. His attendance and
participation in the hearings·
and discussions held last July at
Ohio University provide him
with a good background for this

new appointment," Kurfess
said.
A former Meigs County
sheriff, Welker is serving his
fourth term in the Ohio House
from the 27th District.

Frame H ouse
I S Damaged
'

A one story frame home in
Rutland was damaged by fire of
undetermined origin Tuesday at
7: 15 p.m. the Meigs County
sheriff's department reported.
The home was occupied by
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Fisher and
three children. The property is
owned by John E. Blake,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2. There was
damage to the outside of the
house the window in the
bathro'om was broken and floor
joists were charred.
The Rutland fire department
answered the call. The fire is
still under investigation. The
Fisher family was home at the
time of the fire.

Women's Lib Here to Stay, and More

Riggs to Emcee
Variety Show

By Deborah Conklin
Extension Agent, Home Econ.
Dr. Robert H. Roth, professor
of Sociology, Ohio State
Universtty, predicted
"Women's Lib" will be in for
the 70's in a speech delivered to
a group of Extension home
economists recently. He con tends that the most crucial
change which is taking place at
U1e moment, and which all of us
will have to live with in the 70s is
the "Women's Liberation
Movement."
All known societies have
treated men differently than
women, and most known
soeieties have valued men more
than women Now, since it
appears human history denies
thai proposition, we should look

Gene Riggs will emcee a
variety show to be staged at the
Chester Grade School at 8 p.m.
Saturday under the sponsorship
of the Chester Alumni Assn.
Among the acts of the show
will be Mike Gorrell and his
Band, the McGrath Sisters,
Gary Parsons and ill Allen,
the Eastern High School vocal
trio of Melanie Dean, Joy Kautz
and Celia McCoy, Mrs. Boyd
Hackney and her youth group,
numbers from the Judy Riggs
Royal Cadet Baton Classes,
vocal numbers by Vernon
Weber and Ruth Baer, and a
"mystery number."
Cake, pies and other items
will be auctioned during the
eve"ning. Door prizes will be
awarded . Proceeds will go
toward a scholarship for a
senior ;&gt;t Eastern High School.

closely at the consequences of
placing into law an assertion
that women MUST BE
TREATED the same as men .
Since the beginning of human
society there have been two
primary bases of ranking
people socially, that is, defining
their place m society. One of
these was age, the other sex.
Most early societies valued
the oldest man of the tribe most
highly and the youngest female
least highly In times of crisis,
some of these societies practiced infanticide, the primary
victims being females . Other
s octeties responded to this
ranking by "noblese-oblige,"
protecting women and children
at all costs . But regardless of
their treatment, women were

regarded being basically different than men.
Starting resullc; have flowed
from this system. Traditionally,
crime rates are much lower for
women than for men, and
violent crime has been virtually
unknown among women.
We will see an even further
breakdown 1n the role of
women. More and more women
will be uncertain, frustrated,
and unhappy about their place
in society because their place
will not be very well defined and
will be undergoing change . Such
unhappiness among the female
population is bound to have
consequences among the male
population as well .
Unisex means a laek of
identity for everyone, and the

consequences are going to be
very disturbing. One very
simple predtction I might make
is that female suicide rates are
going to soar. Other consequences may be neither so
simple or obvious.
The change in the role of
women leads us necessarily to a
change in the structure of
families.
Now, don't mistake me. Not
all women of the future will be
"liberated,·· and not all famtlies
of the future will resemble the
types I sketch here .
Instead, there will be a
variety of roles for women land
this is basically healthy) and a
variety of styles of family to
ehoose from . However, the very
(Continued on page !i)

DEBORAH CONKLIN

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 21,1971

Warning: Eating May Be Hazardous
to Your Health

EDITORIALS

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

Voice along Broadway i

I

Basic Research--U.S. Stepchild
Basic scientific research has fallen on lean times, the
result both of federal budget cutbacks and of anti!llilitarism on the campus, where so many research proJects
were funded in past years by the Defense Department.
Ironically, it was President Truman's veto in 1947. of
the original bill to create the National Science Fo~ndah~n
that brought about heavy Pentagon involvement m b~stc
research, claims Dr. James B. Conant, president ementus
of Harvard University.
Truman vetoed the bill because he thought it would give
too much control to private citizens over the determination of vital national policies and the expenditures of large
public funds.
Thus over the next three years, says Conant, the armed
forces moved in to support research projects, both on and
oft' campus: Many of the projects, he says, had little or
no direct application to weaponry, but it was believed that
the research was important to the survival of the nation
in the long run.
Civilian control in this field eventually won out. When
the National Science Foundation was established in 1950
as the chief national agency for the funding of basic research, Conant was named chairman of the National
Science Board, a body of private citizens charged with
supervising the foundation.
But by that time, says Conant, military support, conceived of as an interim measure, had become an accepted
practice alld it was still difficult to obtain a substantial
budget for the foundation. ·
The subject is more or less academic today since government support of basic research, whether through the
Pentagon or other nonmilitary agencies, has been drastically slashed. It is, however, an interesting footnote to
recent history.
The campus radicals are partly right and partly wrong
when they denounce American "militarism."
The Pentagon got invoived in the business of subsidizing
basic scientific research, not because it wanted more and
better wars, but mostly to fill a void- a void created by
the fact that Congress was willing to vote billions for
defense and only pennies for science.

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

1

!Helen Help Us!
I

For Whom Breakdowns Loom
The U.S. Public Health Service reports that one out of
every five adult Americans has either suffered a "nervous breakdown" or has felt on the brink of one at some
time or another.
In round numbers, of the 111 million adults aged 18 to
79, at least 5.4 million have suffered nervous breakdowns
and another 14.2 million thought they were going to have
one but didn't. The figures are extrapolated from a sample
of 6,672 persons, 88 per cent white and 10 per cent black.
who were interviewed by the service.
The interviewees were asked to fill out questionnaires
reporting their experience with 12 symptoms of psychological distress, including nervousness, insomnia, hand
trembling or sweating, nightmares. fainting. headaches.
dizziness and heart palpitations.
Perhaps not surprisingly, women had "significantly
higher rates" than men for every symptom. especially
··nervousness." This was true of both races.
Also, never-married persons reported the fewest symptoms while separated persons reported the most.
But oddly enough, complaints were higher among lesseducated than among well-educated people, and people
living in big cities had fewer symptoms than those in
small ctties and rural areas.
Geographically, residents of tlie Northeast had the
lowest symptom rates while supposedly easy-going
southerners had the highest.
What may be the most surpnsing thing of alL however, is not that nearly 20 million adult Americans have
had or have thought they were going to have nervouc;
breakdowns, but that despite all the private and public
crises of these frantic times, the other 91 million have
somehow managed to remain calm, cool and collected.

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M. D.

Pain at the Right Spot
And Time Indicate Ulcer
By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.
Often you can make a
diagnosis of a peptic ulcer
from the symptom s it
causes. When the symptoms
are sufficiently characteristic, the ulcer is usually
there even if it cannot be
seen by X-ray studies.
The most constant symptom of peptic ulcer is pain.
It may. be a burning ache,
cramphke or gnawing pain.
If the peptic ulcer is in the
lower esophagus, the pain is
at the 1ower end of the
breastbone and may begin
during eating or soon afterward.
The pain from an ulcer in
th.e .sto1nach usually starts
Wit.hm an hour after eating.
It IS usually just under the
left rib margin and sometimes over the lower chest
area. Duodenal ulcer pain
com m on 1 y begins two to
three hours aftet eating in a

small area b e t w e e n the
navel and the lower end of
the breastbone.
Rarely, an ulcer will cause
back pain or if it involves a
portion of the small intestine
quite some distance from the
stomach, the pain may be in
the middle of the abdomen
&lt;.'r even in the lower left
abdomen.
A peptic ulcer usually does
not cause pain before breakfast This more o f t e n is
"burning" due to nervousness or anxiety. Ulcer pain
frequently occurs at nightone to four hours after going
to bed. If the pain is relieved
by antiacid or food, it usually does not recur until after
b r e a k fa st. Pain at night
usually means a severe ulcer
or form at i o.n of large
amounts of acid-pepsin digestive juice in the stomach.
The ulcer p a t i e n t soon

I

I

By Helen Bottel

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young
people, their problems and
pleasures, their troubles and
fun. As with the rest of Helen
Help Us!, it welcomes laughs
but won't dodge a serious
question with a brush-off.
Send your teenage questions
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Helen Help US! this
newspaper.
THEY'LL GO TO
ANY LENGTHS
FOR A BREAK-UP
Dear Helen:
I only knew Jim two weeks
before we were married, and
then he left for Vietnam four
days later. Because I was
having lots of trouble at home,
he told me to stay with his folks,
so I went down south, 1000 miles
learns that his discomfort
can be r e 1i eve d by food.
While the stomach churns,
the valves at the inlet and
outlet of the stomach are
c 1o sed, preventing acidpepsin juice from spilling
out over the ulcer. The acid
stomach contents b a thin g
exposed nerve endings in
and around the ulcer cause
pain. The t y pi c a I ulcer
patient eats when the pain
occurs and if he is having
pain at night, he eats or
drinks milk for relief.
Of course, antiacids relieve
peptic ulcer pain. Baking
soda (not good treatment)
usually provides some relief.
Some patients have a sensation of fullness in the pit
of the stomach. Nausea and
vomiting occur be tween
meals but usually along with
typical pain.
Among atypical symptoms
of a duodenal ulcer is the occasional patient with diarrhea. The patient has an
overactive digestive t r a c t
and the ulcer is only part of
the picture. Eventually a
caref';ll an~~ysis of. the p;oblem Identifies pam in the
typical location above the
navel or adequate X-ray
studies show an ulcer.
It is true that an ulcer may
not fit the "textbook" picture but most of them cl\use
~roblems so much like those
hsted above that if you have
these symptoms you can be
fairly certain you have a
peptic ulcer.

Hatlo\ They'll Do It Every Tin1e

•-

.-."""'__,==-=.:.=J

I
I

WIN AT BRIDGE

Bidde Makes
Gift to Defense

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Jane Fonda
and Roger Vadim are talking
reconciliation after all those
protests .... Anyone else spot the
now officially banned tobacco
commercial that faded onto
NBC for a wispy moment at 9
p.m. last Mon., faded off and on
again and then disappeared? ....
Joseph Cotton tapes a history of
his home state of Va. for its
archives soon as he finishes
filming " Dr. Vibes" in London
.. .. Arthur Schlesinger Jr. can't
stand Nixon's steady troop
pullout of Vietnam: Now Jr.
whines (in Playboy) about the
"way" the U. S. inexorably is
withdrawing .... The Aga Khan
planned his sardinia resort as
catnip to millionaires, but
they're not snapping at it sufficiently, and now comes the
sure sign of such social apathy:
It's starting "package tours"
for the her-pellur .... If it were in
a movie, Peggy Cass would be
starred.
Betcha Melvyn Douglas wins
the best-actor Oscar - and we
didn't even see the flick he's in
(I Never Sang For My Father);
he's a sentimental favorite
backed by pressurized publicity
.... He should have won it for
some of the most gracefully
stylish performances in almost
every picture he was in ....
"Ninotchka," for instance.
Golf champ Billy Casper flew
to Scotland to try and buy the
16th century Kellie Castle in
Arbroath - and discovered he
was 16 days late; it had been
peddled .... TV's "Civilisation"
made that Kenneth Clark book a
nationwide best-seller uncommon indeed for such an
artistic tome .... At $15 yet ....
More than 200,000 copies are in
print and 90 per cent of sales
have been traced directly to the
TV series, which Xerox
financed on 190 educational TV
stations.
Italy's selected the wow-hit
" Investigation of a Citizen
Above Suspicion" as its official
Oscar nominee .... The Yamaha
motorcycle races management
at Madison Square Garden
thought a N. Y. City police
motorcycle drill team would be
available, but there hasn't been
such a municipal showoff outfit
in many years, so they're still
lookin' .... The new L. A.
Shubert Theatre will be the first
so named since 1918 when the
Philly Shubert opened .... The
last Shubert Theatres constructed anywhere were the
Ethel Barrymore in N. Y. and
the Forrest in Philly, in 1928 ....
Three new legit theatres are
abuilding on Bdwy., but they
aren't Shubert houses.
Writer George Simon, who
once drummed with the Glenn
Miller band and now heads the
Nat'l Academy of Recording
Arts &amp; Sciences, is finishing

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
away to be with people I'd never
met.
NORTII
21
They didn't like me, and I
.K106
.974
ended up being a babysitter for
• 109 64
all the relatives. I had a hard
... KQ7
time keeping some of those
WEST (D)
EAST
husbands away from me,
• 73
.QJ982
especially Jim's cousin. I told
¥3
•A s
my in-laws about his passes, but
+ AQ53
+ KJ82
they just laughed and said I
o1o A J 108 4
o1o963
asked for them. Then they
soum
.A 54
wrote to Jim and told him I was
.KQJ10862
flirting around, and they could
+7
prove it.
"'52
After that I went home.
East-West vulnerable
Yesterday I got a letter from
West North East South
Jim sayind he'd heard from his
1...
Pass
1•
4•
cousin that I threw myself all
Dble Pass
Pass Pass
over him. Because he doesn't
Opening lead-• 7
know me very well (less than '------------,..,:---'
thx'ee weeks in all), he doesn't
To q u o t e from Grey's
know who to believe, but he'll Elegy, "Full many a gem of
probably side with his family. purest ray serene, the dark
unfathomed caves of Ocean
His letters already sound like he bear."
thinks he made a mistake.
West made a really brilI guess I should tell you that
!ian~ defensive play today
Jim's folks are pretty well off but If South had been on his
while mine are poor, and don't toes West's brilliance would
get along with each other. His never have had a chance to
mother says he married me out scintillate.
of pity and I should just quietly
The play started out tameget a divorce and forget this ly enough. South won the
ever happened. They'll pay for spade lead with his ace over
it.
East's jack and led a club.
Helen, I love Jim. Should I West ducked and dummy's
held the trick.
give up without a fight? - queen
South's next play was a "The Glenn Miller Story" book
ALICE
trump. West took his ace and - just the right man for it .... At
•Dear Alice:
led his last spade. This Raffles, Bob Hope arrived
No one should EVER give up knocked out dummy's king. straight from a plane from
without a fight. You may be the Now South played a second
best thing that ever happened to
Jim - if he's man enough to
JACOBY MODERN, in on illusstand up against his family and trated, 128-page book, is available
through this newspaper. Send nome,
let you prove it.
FACTS
Keep writing the truth to him, address and Zip code, plus $1 for
book, to: "Win at Bridge," c/o
and remember this: A lonely each
(Name Newspaper) P.O. Box 489,
Serviceman would far rather Dept. (first three digits local Zip
believe a loving letter from a code), Radio City Station, New York,
wife than a spiteful blast from a N.Y., 10019.
cousin. - H.
Dear Helen :
trump to his own hand and
This is in answer to those led his last c 1 u b. West
people who say rock music and hopped up with his ace and
festivals induce kids to take was ready with his gem.
He led his three of diadrugs . They are wrong!
I listen to rock all the time, monds. East was surpri sed
his king held, but not
and though a few of the lyrics when
so surprised that he failed
Secretary of State John
are about drugs, they don't to take the setting trick with
Hay was the first to recmake me go out and try to buy his queen of spades.
some. These songs reflect the
As advertised earlier, West o m m e n d that the term
states of mind of many people - had come up with a tremen- American be used as an
adjective instead of United
they show the problem like it is, dous play. Do you see how States.
The World AlmaSouth
could
have
prevented
but don't create it. Songs,
nac recalls that on Aug. 3,
it?
books, movies, the underground
1804, Hay instructed U.S.
Just go back to trick diplomatic officials to use
press do not by themselves
three.
Instead
of
playing
a
encourage drug use any more
American as an adjective.
trump from dummy, South
than Romeo and Juli~::t en- should
have led a diamond.
courage teenage suicides.
It wouldn't do West any good
Furthermore, I was at to win the trick, so East
Woodstock and it was beautiful, would take it. He would lead
but I stayed clean. I'm sure his second spade to North's
BARBS
most people there didn't just king. Now South could start
By PHIL PASTORET
start smoking or shooting on the trump suit. West
because they were at a festival. could take his ace, but there
How come the boys hav ~
would be no way for him to
The choice is up to the in- get East in to t ake a spade to work la te every time the
dividual, not the pusher, the trick. Event u a ll y, South burleyque changes its bill?
rock musician, or the writer. would lead a club toward
Songs and publications do not dummy's king; get to dum One of the h a r de s t
hook people. People hook my with the last trump and things a parent can tackle
is to tell a kid.
themselves. - MUSIC WVER discard his losing spade.
( N ewspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Dear Helen:
I want to tell D.W. (who
21
Prudent people who plan
blamed rock festivals for
to retire should wait for the
causing drug habits) to wake up
and stop downing music for the
The bidding has been:
weakness of her brother. No
West
North
East
South
matter what anyone says, the
Pass
Dble
2•
majority of kids are NOT on 1•
4N.T.
4•
Dblc
Pass
drugs and they won't suddenly Pass
5 .;.
Pass
swing over just because of hard
You, Sou th, hold:
annual sale at the gas starock
or because someone • 8743 ¥J9 86 +KI043 .7 tion .
offers to sell them some junk.
What do you do now?
Kids aren't that dumb! - L. 1.
Of course. you don't
A-Bid five diamonds. Your
see suckers i n the stores
four no - trump bid asked him
The earth is traveling in to choose a suit This bid savs, very often- they're all
its orbit around the sun a t ·•J can't stand clubs but do h~\'t' spending the wiHter i11
1 as VerJas .
nearly 19 miles per second. hearts as well as diamonds."

WORLD ALMANAC

•
London; why was he there?
"Just spreading a little culture
among the natives." .... We
were at Bob's 59th Birthday
party in H'wood some seasons
back and Lucille Ball, then
making a film with Hope,
persuaded Bob's gag writers to
bang out a monologue for her to
needle old ski-nose with ....
"I've made five pictures with
Bob," Lucille bawled, "and he's
always been a gentleman. He's
always tried." .... Of course she
was fooling .
Bianchi &amp; Margherita 's hired
baritone Joe D'Amico 16 years
ago to save money with his
combination of restaurant
know-how and the fact he could
warble between headwaiting;
now Joe's co-owner .... Rock
Hudson's future is in TV and a
series is being written ....

Brooklyn Cong. Emanuel Celler
and heavyweight ex-champ
Floyd Patterson got into a long
deep discussion at the Miami
Beach Algiers Hotel - about
their favorite recipes .... In his
late 30s, Floyd's considered
"old" in fisticuffing; Manny
Celler's a young congressional
82.
,.
Cookbooks are so popular, if
best-seller lists included them
(they don't), they'd cop the top
ten spots .... One new such tome
gives us mixed feelings: "The
Lucretia Borgia Cookbook,"
which publisher Price-sternSloan subtitles "Favorite
Recipes of Infamous People"
.. .. The late gangster Owna
Madden liked ice cream sodW
.... Underworld "secretary of
state" Frank Costello adoretf'
the Irish Stew at Dinty Moore's.

Red China Spurn~
Soviet Olive Twig
By LEON DENNEN
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (NEA)
Their ideological dander up, the Russians have resumed their propaganda campaign against Communi.
China.
The latest war of words was deliberately provoked by
the Chinese. Ever ready to exploit trouble in the Red
world, Peking blamed the Kremlin "revisionists" and
their puppets for the recent Polish strikes and riots.
Moscow's Pravda, in a sharp editorial, accused Peking
of siding with the "imperialists" and seeking ways to
deepen division among Marxist-Leninists.
Pravda's attack followed a Radio Moscow broadcast
which disclosed that the Kremlin offered China participation with "equal status" in an Asian security pact. So.viet party chief Leonid Brezhnev has been pushing sue
a pact since 1969.
However, Peking's "ungrateful" leaders "concealed"
the proposal from the Chinese people, Radio Moscow
complained. "Mao Tse-tung and his clique did not ajopt
a serious attitude" to Brezhnev's offer and labeled it
"anti-Chinese and anti-Communist."
After more than a year of negotiations, the Russians
finally acknowledged their failure to reach agreement
with Peking on minor border problems.
Thus, the world Communist movement remains riven
by the conflict of the two giants, with little prospect ~
a compromise. Behind the ideological quarrel lie ged!"
political problems arising out of Chinese claims to large
tracts of the Soviet Far East taken by Russian czars from
the Manchus.
President Nixon's advisers, in search of a clue to Moscow's current policy, are now giving some extra time to
reexamining Russia's relations with China.
In their view, Soviet policy in the Middl~ East and
Berlin will depend in a large measure on the intensity of
the Kremlin's conflict with Mao Tse-tung.
For Brezhnev, who is fighting for his political life, all..
agreement with the Chinese would have been a "positiv•
achievement" to present to the crucial 24th congress of
the Russian Communist Party now scheduled or March.
But Mao refused to play Brezhnev's game. Instead,
the Chinese stepped up anti-Russian activities in Asia,
Africa and the Middle East. They also decided to mend
their diplomatic fences in the West.
There is little doubt that, in their confrontations with
the Chinese, the Russians have latterly suffered some
setbacks in Indochina and the Middle East.
The Southeast Asian "United Front" of North Vietnam
and the Communists of Cambodia, Laos and South Viet.
nam- formed in Peking in April, 1970-is now firmly in
China's orbit.
In the Middle East, radical guerrilla groups have long
been fired by Mao's ideas. Now more influential groups
are lining up behind China. Political instability in the
Arab world following President Nasser's death has
brought to the fore in Syria and Iraq men inclined to take
their lead from Peking rather than Moscow.
But it is China's growing ties with the West that really
frightens the suspicious Russians.
Britain and France have long had diplomatic relations,a
with Red China. In 1970, Canada, Italy, Belgium, Austria•
and Luxembourg-in addition to Guinea in Africa and proCommunist Chile in Latin America-have also decided to
grant Peking full diplomatic recognition.
Other members of NATO and the United Natioos"even President Nixon himself," Pravda complained
-ean be expected to follow suit.
Brezhnev's efforts to reach an understanding with the
Chinese or isolate them diplomatically thus ended in total
failure.

BEARY'S WORlD

•
•

© 1971

byNEA,lnc.~

"The marvy thing about wild animal fur coats is, it
makes no difference if they're imitation or genuine--we
can still snub the wearer!"

•

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. ~1. 1971

Pro Standings

•

Logan Ended Panthers' League Streak zn '35

T earns

•
"

•

1934 FOOTBALL TEAM (7-2)- Front, 1 tor, Donald Rosenbaum, Jed Mees, Henry
Joachim; second row, Leo Vaughan, Willis Durst, Richard Crow, William Swatzel, Marsh
Shumaker, Chester Zirkle, Willard Durst, Julius Zahl; third row, Max Brickles, Lloyd
Moore, Shirley Guinther, Roland Spencer, Charles Blackwell, Charles Schorn, Chester
Roush, Howard Seidenabel, Roy Tracy; back row, Carl House and C. L. Johnson, Asst.
coaches; George Joachim, Robert Blackwell, George Jenkins, Chauncey Shumaker,
George Kindle, Raymond Kloes, Karl Kloes, Edward Baer, W. R. Farnham, coach.

the Sports Desk
BY PAUL (MOONBEAM) CLIFFORD

•

The Pomeroy Panthers again came close to a Southeastern
Ohio football championship in 1934. Farnham had pretty much a
veteran team on hand, and some good youngsters coming up . The
Panthers had Dinty Moore at quarterback with Bob Blackwell
and Karl Kloes at two of the other backfield positions. Red
Jenkins, Chester Roush and Pete Kloes also saw action in the
backfield.
Up front Ed Baer was back at center and the trusty Beanie
Kindle was back at tackle. George Joachim, Charlie Blackwell,
big Chauncey Shumaker, Roland Spencer, Shirley Guinther,
Howard Seidenabel, Chester Zerkle, Charlie Schorn and Roy
Tracy all saw service in the line. Others on the team were Leo
Vaughan, Willis Durst, Rich Crow, Bill Swatzel, Marsh
Shumaker, Willard Durst and Julius Zahl. Don Rosenbaum, Jed
Mees and Henry Joachim were the managers.
The Panthers opened with a 19-0 win over Chesapeake, and
breezed past Rutland 33-0. In the first league game they took a 450 win from the Athens Bulldogs, but then the following week the
Logan Chieftains took a 12-0 win over Pomeroy. I believe this was
the Logan eleven that starred Bob McBride at fullback. McBride
later starred at Notre Dame as a guard.
The Panthers then took a 19-0 win from Wellston, and won a
hard fought 9-0 battle over Gallipolis. Then came a 32-0 win over
Nelsonville and a non-league 55-0 decision over Glouster. That set
the stage for another Panther-Yellow Jacket Thanksgiving clash.
Complete details are not available, but Pomeroy led the
Jackets 10-6 until late in the fourth quarter. Karl Kloes had kicked
a field goal for the Panthers, but the Jackets scored late in the
game to take a 12-10 hard fought victory.
1934-35 BASKETBALL
The 1934-35 basketball season saw Pomeroy's long streak of
league championships come to an end. The Panthers had not lost
a league contest since late in the 1929-30 campaign. Actually the
number of consecutive wins is not known since the 1930-31 records
are not complete.
Farnham had another fine ball club with veterans in every
position. Chauncey Shuma)cerwas at center with Red Jenkins and
Dinty Moore at the forwards. Bob Stivers and AI Russell were the
guards with Charlie Murray, John Sauvage and Beanie Kindle the
front line subs. Jed Mees and Dana Winebrenner also saw action.
Overall, including tournament games, the Panthers had a
record of 16 wins and only three losses that season. One of the
losses was a 32-29 setback to Columbus Central and their big
center, Dunn. The only other regular loss was to the Logan
Chieftains 19-16 on the Logan floor. Pomeroy led most of the way
in this game, but ran into late foul trouble and the Chiefs came
through to stop the league winning streak.
Other big wins that season included a 28-19 win over Portsmouth, a 30-19 win over Huntington, W. Va., a 38-26 win over
Perlruiboro, W.Va. and a 41-25 trouncing of Columbus North. The
real big win that came at the wrong time was a 16-14 victory over
Greenfield. This was Jim Hull's final season of play when he had
help from a big center by name of Hill.
Pomeroy stopped Hull in regular season play, out the McLain
five gained revenge by beating the Panthers in the finals at
Athens in the Class A District play. Gre enfield lost in their first
game at Columbus in the state tourney to Lima Central25-23.
Ray Farnham's last football team as a coach was the fine
team of 1935. The Panthers had only three regulars back from the
1934 team, but they surprised everyone by winning their first
seven games before losing to a fine Middleport eleven on
Thanksgiving Day, 19-0. Needless to sa y this battle was for the
league championship.
Farnham had the veteran and poised Dinty Moore back at
quarterback, and he moved the versatile Charlie Blackwell to
fullback. It was one of the greatest moves he ever made. Charlie
in this season and in 1936 was to become the scourge of the league .
He was big and had fine speed. He could overpower you, or go all
the way on a breakaway run. Ray had other good backs in Pete.

•
•

•

•

I

•

Hartley's FINAL

•

CONNIE LOAFERS
NOW 5.00

JOYCE
DRESS SHOES
NOW

8.00

CONNIE
SPORTS &amp; DRESS
NOW

6.00

Al l shoes displayed
on racks for ea sy
selection.

'

New Spring Shoes
are arriving daily
U s e
y o ur
BankAmericard.

NOTE- In answer to a query from a Chester fan:
Chester did not defeat Pomeroy in basketball in the 1928-29
season. However in the 1927-28 season in the finals of the County
Tourney, Chester defeated the Panthers 26-25 as Pickles Knight
made a field goal in the last two seconds to bring victory .
Chester had defeated Pomeroy twice during the regular
season, 22-19and 36-32. The Panthers, under coach Ward, went on
to the finals as they defeated McLuney 24-16, Glenford 23-22 but
lost to Hillsboro Marshall 26-21 in the finals.
Since we are discussing this 1927-28 team, the players for
Pomeroy were Ralston Russell at center, Max Dye and Harlan
Eiselstein at forwards, and Horace Karr and Willard Ashworth at
guards. ~bs were Nappie Stobart, Jim Fontana, Red Wiggins,
Ralph Welker and Shep Welker.
The girls' basketball team had Helen Grueser, Kathryn Lutz,
Lydia Davis, Leona Carpenter, Phyllis Chase, Mildred Smith,
Eleanor Smith, and Violet Burris on the roster. The girls had 11
victories and two ties for their play, and won the county tournament with victories over Tuppers Plains 33-10, and Syracuse,
Pomeroy 35
Wellston 12 30-12.
Pomeroy 16
Logan 19
Pomeroy 38
Middleport 23
Pomeroy 30
Htng., W.Va . 19
Pomeroy 38 Pennsboro, w. va.
26
Pomeroy 41
Cols. Norlh 25
Pomeroy 33
Nelsonville 14
Pomeroy 26
Athens 24
No Tournament Scores
1935 FOOTBALL RECORD
Pomeroy 25
McArthur 0
Pomeroy 38
Chesapeake 0
Pomeroy 25
Athens 0
Pomeroy 25
Rutland 0
Pomeroy6
GallipolisO
Pomeroy 40
Nelsonville 0
Pomeroy 21
Logan 13
Pomeroy o
Middleport 19

Kloes, Marsh Shumaker, Kimble Hite and Jed Mees.
Up front big George "Beanie" Kindle anchored a good line.
Charlie Schorn was at center with Roy Tracy, Chet Zerkle, Max
Brickles, Charlie Murray, Walter Ketter, Hartwell Curd, Don
Rea, Charlie Russell, Charlie Sayre and Grover Hawk all seeing
action there. Others on the team were Leo Vaughan, Eugene
Tyree, Willard and Willis Durst, Julius Zahl and Bill Clark. Speed
Johnson and Carl House were the assistant coaches, while Henry
Joachim and Frank Kimes were the managers.
Pomeroy opened with a 254lwin over McArthur, and walloped
Chesapeake 38-0in another non-league game. Athens fell next, 250, and Pomeroy beat Rutland 25-0 in a non-league contest.
Gallipolis gave Pomeroy a real battle, but finally fell, 6-0.
Then the Panthers beat Nelsonville 40-0 and squeeked past Logan
21-13. Again the league title was on the line in the Thanksgiving
battle, but Middleport had too many horses and beat the Panthers
19-0. It would have been fitting for Pomeroy to come through and
give Farnham his first football title, but it was not to be.

Redmen Win Over
Ohio Northern
Box score of Wednesday's
victory over Ohio Northern.
RIO GRANDE (113)- Bass,
14-2-30; Bentley, ~; Pulley, 30-6; Williams, ~2-18; Lambert,
14-5-33; Jacobs, 1-0-2; Hairston,
7-2-16. TOTALS - 51-11-113.
OHIO NORTHERN (lOS) Hall, 10-0-20; Davis, 11-1-23;
Mellinger, 10-6-26; Scaletta, 9-018; Gasser, 2-0-4; Thompson, 62-14. TOTAL~ - 48-9-105.
HALFI'IME SCORE - ONU
61 Rio 57.

NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. LT. Pts.
8 5 67
Boston
31
New York
29 9 7 65
Montreal
20 13 10 50
Toronto
22 21 3 47
Vancouver
15 26 4 34
Detroit
13 25 5 31
25 8 28
Buffalo
10
West
W. L. T. Pts.
Chicago
29 9 5 63
St. Louis
20 11 12 52
Philadelphia 17 20 7 41
Minnesota
15 20 9 39
Pittsburgh
13 20 12 38
Los Angeles
12 23 8 32
California
13 29 3 29
CARDS' NEW CLOTHES
Wednesday's Results
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - The St.
Philadelphia 3 New York 3
Toronto 5 Vancouver 1
Louis Cardinals announced
Pittsburgh 4 California 2
Wednesday the team members
NEW YORK (UPI)-A total parks and in Gillette retail (Only games scheduled)
will wear newly-designed baseb
Thursday's
Games
'
'II
I
of 64 Payers
names Wl
e on outlets. The All-Star game will Montreal at Philadelphia
ball uniforms this year.
the ballots which baseball fans be played Tuesday night, July New York at Buffalo
will use to select the starting 13, in Detroit.
rn
lineups in the 1971 All-Star
game, it was announced Wednesday by Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn.
AHL STANDINGS
Kuhn, in announcing that the
By United Press International
fans will select the teams
East
W. LT. Pfs.
again, moved to avert another
18 17 6 42
"Rico Carty incident" by Quebec
16 19 5 37
Springfield
expanding the list of names Providence
13 20 8 34
which will appear on the Montreal
14 21 6 34
West
ballots.
W. LT. Pts.
Carty's name did not appear Ba ltimore
25 9 5 55
on the 1970 ballot although he Cleve land
20 14 5 45
16 17 7 39
was leading the National Rochester
14 19 6 34
Hershey
League in batting at the time of
Wednesday's Results
the voting and wound up Cleveland 4 Hersehy 2
winning the batting title with a Roches ter 3 Providence 2
WEATHER STRIPPING
scheduled )
.366 average . Carty made the (Only games
No Games Today
CAULKING COMPOUND
team on the streng th of write-in
PLASTIC STORM WINDOWS
votes but Kuhn, who organized
HEAT TAPES - DOOR STRIPS
the computerized voting sysTHE DAILY SENTINEL
tem, was criticized for the
WARM MORNING HEATERS
DEVOTED TO
(Gas &amp; Coal)
oversight. He pointed out that
INTEREST OF
the ballots had to be made up
.COLEMAN OIL HEATERS
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
before the season because of
ELECTRIC HEATERS
Ex~c. Ed.
technical problems.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
WINDO''/ GLASS - THERMOMETERS
City Editor
The 1971 ballot will have
PIPE INSULATION
Published daily except
eight nominations for each of Saturday by The Ohio Valley
STOVE PIPE, COLLARS, SHOULDERS,
Pub lis hing Company, 111
the infield and catching posi- Court
COAL BUCKETS, ETC.
St., Pomeroy , Ohio,
tions and 24 for the three 45769. Business Office Phone
992-2156,
Editor
ial
Phone
992outfield berths compared with 2157.
last year's system of six for
Second class postage paid at
eroy , Oh io .
each of the four infield and Pom
National adver ti sing
Main Street
catching positions and 18 for representative
Bottinel1i the three outfield berths. The Ga 11 agher, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
Ph. 992-2811
St., New York City, New York.
write-in provision will be
S u b s cription
rates:
Pomeroy, 0.
Delivered by car rier where
continued .
availab l ~ 50 cents per week;
Kuhn announced that the By Motor Route where carrier
Gillette Company will under- service not ava il a ble: One
.nonrh $1.75. By mai l in Oh io
write the preparation , distribu- and W. Va., One year $14.00.
tion and tabulation of the Six months $7.25 . Three
months $4 .50. Sub scription
ballots, which will be available price in cludes Su nd ay Times .
Sentine
l.
at all major and minor league

Fans WI•II
Narne D ream
T
Again
earn

using a deliberate offense.
Meigs, meanwhile, has put an
average of 56 points on the
board per game. The Blue
Devils have permitted opponents to score an average of
62.9 points; the Marauders
opponents have popped in an
average of 57.6.
Contemplation of the above
figures suggests the Gallians,
with a batch of extra effort and
a hot shooting night, could upset
Meigs.
Coach Tom Osborne's top
guns in all games have been
Larry Snowden, the long
bomber averaging 15.1 points
per outing, and like Snowden
who is a junior, Rod Ferguson
with a 10.9 average.
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
For the Marauders, Jeff Tyo,
East
the slick 6-2 senior wingman got
Navy 59 Gettysburg 42
a beautiful start but, slowed by
Pe nn 62 Temple 49
LaSalle 96 Niagara 79
an injury, after the holidays has
W.Va. 79 Penn Sf 68
had problems being consistent.
St. John's (NY) 88 Seton Hall
None of the performers on the
70
floor Friday night in Gallipolis
South
is among the league's top 10
Loui sville 85 Cincinnati 72
pointmakers.
Ja cksonvil le 94 Furman 60
Georgia Tech 74 Clemson 64

The Meigs Marauders, with
five wins in eight Southeastern
Ohio League starts ( 6-3
overall), go to Gallipolis Friday
evening to open the second
round of conference action.
If the Marauders produce
victories at the same pace this
round as in the first their league
record come mid-February will
be 8-6, one victory off their 1970
pace of 9-5 whkh stood up for a
third place tie with Ironton.
The affair of this Friday
should result in a Meigs win, if
the form charts mean anything
at all.
The Gallians have scored an
average of 51.3 points per game

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Wooster 73 John Carroll 60
Southwest
Steubenvi ll e 66 Yo un gstown
Hous ton 130 Nevada (LV) 73
State 57
Louisville 85 Cincinnati 72
West
Find lay 89 Malone 64
W. Tex St 84 Loyola (Ca l 73 Rio Grande 113 Ohio Northern
Colo St 90 Regis 79
105
Heidelberg 84 Ohio Wes leyan 78
Mount Union 78 West ern
Reserve 77
Cedarvi ll e 82 Bluffton 74
Toledo 70 Bowling Green 67
[HOSPITAL NEWS
Centra l State 66 Capita l 64

J

RACINE - Southern Local
District seventh and eighth
grade basketball teams took
two wins over Eastern here
Tuesday. The seventh grade
squad won 38 to 24 over the baby
Eagles.
Leading scorer for Southern
was Paul Schultz with 8 points
followed by Mike Roberts and
Greg Dunning with 5 each, Paul
Cross, Danny Brown and Brady
Huffman 4 each, Tim Curfman,
Tim Jenkins, Keith Zerkle and
Mike Warner 2 each.
For Eastern Cande and
Hannam each had 7, Nelson 5, •
Pickens 3 and Chaney 2.
Southern
18 24 32 38
Eastern
6 11 19 24
In the eighth grade contest
Southern downed Eastern 45 to
29. Shooting in double figures
for the winners were Mitch
Nease with 15 and Tim Maurer
10.
Other scorers for the winners
were Donald Shaffer with 7,
Dave Huddleston and Glen
Simpson 4 each, Dave Jenkins 3
and Jeff Circle 2.
For Eastern Larkins had 8,
Eichinger and Blake 7 each,
Harris 4, Mays 2 and Lodwick 1.
Southern
17 34 40 45
Eastern
7 17 28 29

e

Blue DevilS Next

Midwest
Drake 130 Missouri (KCi 73
Air Force 83 Kearny Sf 73
Tol edo 70 Bowling Green 67

w·ffi

WITH THESE

SP~CIAlS

Ebersbach Hardware

Holzer Medical Center, First ~p~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

•
Values
Up to S21

1934-35 BASKETBALL TEAM (16-3) -Front, 1 tor, Donald Rosenbaum, Jed Mees,
Dana Winebrenner, Henry Joachim; standing, Charles Murray, John Sauvage, Robert
Stivers, Chauncey Shoemaker, Albert Russell, George Kindle, Lloyd Moore, Ray Farnham,
coach.

1934 FOOTBALL RECORD
Pomeroy 19
Chesapeake 0
Pomeroy 33
Rutland 0
Pomeroy 45
Athens 0
Pomeroy 0
Logan 12
Pomeroy 19
Wellston 0
Pomeroy 9
Ga llipol is 0
Pomeroy 32
Nelsonville 0
Pomeroy 55
Glouster 0
Pomeroy 10
Middleport 12
1934-35 BASKETBALL
RECORD
Tuppers Plains 8
Pomeroy 63
Jackson 15
Pomeroy 44
Greenfield 14
Pomeroy 16
Cols. Centra l 32
Pomeroy 29
Portsmouth 19
Pomeroy 28
Middleport 16
Pomeroy 47
Gallipolis 6
Pomeroy 33

NBA Standings
By United Press InternatiOnal
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
33 17 .660 ...
Philadelphia 30 22 .577 4
Bos I on
28 21 .571 4'h
Buffalo
14 39 .264 20 112
Centra I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
28 20 .583 ...
Cincinnati
21 27 .438 7
Atlanta
16 34 .320 13
Cleveland
7 46 .132 23 112
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee 39 7 .848
Detroit
34 16 .680 7
Chicago
29 20 592 11 112
Phoenix
29 22 .569 12112
Pacific Division
W. l. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 26 20 .565
San Francisco
27 23 .540 1
Seattle
23 27 .460 5
San Oiego
23 28 .451 5112
Poroland
16 34 .320 12
Wednesday's Results
Milwaukee 120 Baltimore 116
Boston 142 San Diego 112
Seattle 112 Atlanta 108
Cincinnati 126 Phoenix 114
Chicago 109 New York 103
Buffalo 126 Portland 106
(Only games scheduled)
No Games Today
ABA Standmgs
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
33 17 .660 ...
Virginia
29 22 .569 4112
Ken'tucky
21 26 .447 10112
New York
22 29 .431 111!2
Carolina
Pittsburgh
22 30 .423 12
20 31 .392 131(2
Floridans
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Indiana
31 16 .660 ...
31 17 .646 112
Utah
Memphis
27 23 .540 51!2
Denver
18 30 .375 131/2
Texas
18 31 .367 14
Wednesday's Results
Caroli na 114 Virginia 104
Memphis 120 Denver 103
New York 113 Floridians 106
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Floridians vs. Memphis
at Nashville, Tenn .
Indiana at Denver
(Only games scheduled)

M &gt;oo•e of !he Upper Block

POMEROY, OHIO
Open Fnday N•ghls Ti l 9
Ooen All Day Thursdays

Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip E.
Sanders, Marysville, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul E . Tope,
Gallipolis, a daughter; and Mr.
and Mrs . James R . Grueser,
Minersville , a son.
Discharges
Eugene Hillard Adkins, Mrs.
Harold T. Allyn, Mrs. Avonelle
Cobb, Ora P. Crabtree, Mrs.
Frieda Faehnle, Paul G.
Higbee, Mrs. Charles W. Janey
and infant daughter, David 0.
Jenkins , Mrs. Dana 0 . Murray,
Mrs. Gerald F. O'Neal and
infant son, Mrs. Roy J . Queen,
Mrs. Myrna Rice, Mrs. F loyd
Rose and infant daughter, Mary
K. Ruhl, Roy I. Simpkins,
Charles S. Sinclair, Mrs . Ora E .
Vaughn , Blancey Wanko, Miss
Mary E. Ward, Lori Lee Watson , Leah Adams, Mrs . Clyde
Hammonds, Shawn Paugh, and
Mrs. Ada Pierson .

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon
PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP

1·5.85

8 CYLINDER
Includes Parts
and Labor

Is your car acting up? Has th e winter
been hard on your a uto? Now's the
t ime to have a tune-up . We ca n have
your car r unning smoothly in no time.
Save money at Moore's.

Moore's Service Center
Expertly Install:

SHOCKS
BRAKES
MUFFLERS
TAIL PIPES

MOORE'S
Service Center
124 W. Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2848

�~-----------------------------------------------------------------------~- --~~----~

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

~-

---

---

-~~---

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor t-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 21~ 1971

Central State Upsets Cap, 66-64
By United Press International
Two of Ohio's ranked college
basketball teams were stung by
defeats Wednesday night.
For Capital, it wasn't just a
loss - it was a home loss,
something that had not happened since Jan . 21, 1969.
The Crusaders, 14th among
the nation's small college
teams, took it on the chin 66-64
when Central State's Graham
Russell sank a corner shot at
the buzzer.
The loss makes Cap 10-2 and
Central State 11-3.
"That was a hard one to

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MAIL ORDERS FILLED.

lose," said Capital coach Vince
Chickerella afterwards.
Youngstown State was upset
by upstart Steubenville 66-57.
The 16th rated Penguins were
stymied by Steubenville, which
led 30-20 at the half enroute to
its ninth win in 14 games. Bill
Johnson scored 23 points in the
losing effort for Youngstown,
now 11-2.
Among The Wins
But on the other side of the
coin, Wooster and Findlay
marched on their merry way.
Wooster downed John Carroll
73-60 for a 14-1 record and
Findlay rolled over Malone 8964 for its 13th win in 14 games.
Tom Dinger was high point
man for Wooster with 21. He
fouled out with 6:18 to go, the
first time in his college career.
Marty Arft tallied 25 points
for the Oilers, whose only loss
this season has been to MidOhio Conference rival Bluffton.
In other games Wednesday
night, Louisville stopped Cwcinnati 85-72, Rio Grande topped
Ohio Northern 113-105, Heidelberg beat Ohio Wesleyan 84-78,
Mount Union edged Western
Reserve 78-77, Cedarville whipped Bluffton 82-74 and Toledo
squeezed by Bowling Green 7067.
Toledo's win was its first this
season in the Mid-American
Conference after losing the first
two. Tom Kozelko scored 27

~
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V •IS I•f
Bakers

Budget Shop
BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

points and grabbed 14 rebounds
to assure the win, which makes
the Rockets 8-5 overall.
Heidelberg evened its record
at 6-6 and snatched its fourth
Ohio Conference win in six.
Bob Crowther pumped in 22
points. Ohio Wesleyan fell to

7-6 and 1-3.
Basket Try Fails
Jim Bailosky and Barry Ring
each contributed 21 points and
Western Reserve's Russ Drake
missed a last-second basket to
give Mount Union its seventh
win in 12 games. WRU fell to

Quakeps 17'14"ake
'.1.
I

,

~

It 14 In Row
By United Press International
Penn's fourth-ranked QJaker s
may become the ''Cardiac
Kids" of 1971.
The unbeaten Quakers recorded their 14th victory of the
season Wednesday night, beating crosstown rival Temple 6248. But as in so many instances
this season, they had to battle
back from behind to do it.
Temple reeled off six straight
points at the end of the first
half to take a 22-19 lead at the
intermission, but wilted under
the relentless pressure applied
by Dave Wohl and the Quakers
in the second half.
Wohl scored 12 of his 16
points in the closing minutes of
the game and Bob Morse had
nine points in the closing stages
to help Penn preserve its
unbeaten record.
Wohl, Morse and Steve Bilsky
highlighted an 11-point burst in
the last three minutes that put
the game out of reach.
In the only other action
involving top 20 teams, sixranked Jacksonville clobbered
Furman 94-60 and LaSalle (No.
14) cruised past Niagara 96-79.
Harold Fox scored 22 points
as Jacksonville provided an
unhospitable welcome to former
coach Joe Williams, now in
charge at Furman The Dolphins
pulled away to a 28-10 lead
before coach Tom Wasdin
emptied the bench.
Artis Gilmore had 18 points
and 24 rebounds for Jacksonville while Bernard Collier was
high man for Furman with 18
points.
Ken Durrett scored 40 points
and Bob Fields threw in 30 as
Lasall~ surged to its 11th
victory in 12 starts by beating
Niagara.
In other action , Houston

Rates of Taxation for 1970
In pursua nce of la~, I, Howard E. F r ank, Treas._1r er of Meigs County, Ohio ct,.
h er e by give notice that the number of Mills levie d on each dollar of property shown
on the General Tax Duplica~ of Rea l E&lt;.; tate, Public Utility and Personal Property
. .
.
.
withm sa1d County for the year 1970 IS as follows:
TOWNSHIPS
S C HOOL DISTRICTS
AND CORPORATIONS
= = == = = = = = = = = = = == = = == == =
BEDFORD
M eigs Local S .D. . . . . . . 3.80

1.50

27.00

.55

.65

1.00

3 4.50

CHES TER
3.80
E ast ern Local S.D.
M eigs L oca l S .D . . . ... 3.8 0

2 .5 0
2.50

23.50
27.00

.55
.55

.65
.65

1 .00
1.00

walloped Nevada-Las Vegas
130-73, Georgia Tech downed
Clemson 74-64, St. John's
(N.Y. ) beat Seton Hall 88-70,
Louisville defeated
. . .Cincinnati
.
d
85 -72' Wes t VIrgmia n ppe
Penn State 71-62, Eastern
K t k
h.
d v· . .
en uc Y w Ippe
Irgmia
Tech. 86-79, Toledo edged
Bowlmg Green 70-6 7 a n_d
Colorado State stopped Regis
90-79.

Local Bowling
TRI-COU NTY LEAGUE
Team
Point s
Rawling's Dodge
12
Mason Furniture
10
Davis-Warner Ins.
10
Eagle's
8
H&amp; R Firestone
6
2
Holsum Sales Dept.
High Team Series - Davis
Warner Insurance, 2652.
High Team Game - DavisWarner Insurance.
Individual High Series - Ed
Voss, 605.
Individual High Game- Ed
Voss, 233.
MORNING GLOR IES
Jan. 12, 1971
Standings:
Points
Team
Newell Sunoco
92
Gibbs Grocery
87
70
Fraley &amp; Schil ling
Lou' s Ashland
65
64
Bailey's Sunoco
Team No.2
54
High Team (3 games)
Newell Sunoco, 2227; Gibbs
Grocery, 2183; Bailey's Sunoco,
2163.
High Team Game - Fraley &amp;
Schil ling, 766; Newell Sunoco,
759; Newel l Sunoco, 759.
High Ind . (3 games) - Vicky
Gillilan, 457; Jan Jenkins, 449 ;
Margaret Fullrod, 436.
Hig h Ind. Game - Jan
Jenkins, 163 ; Vicky Gill ilan,
159; Jan Jenkins · Barbara
Riggs · Ann Radford, 157.

2-5.
Subst1tute John Harrison
scored 21 big points for Cedarville, but Clair Recker's 25 was
game high despite Bluffton's
loss in a M1d-Oh1o tilt.
Cincinnati fell to an 8-6 record as its Kentucky neighbor
led by as many as 19 points in
the second half. Dave Johnson,
a sophomore, scored 23 points
for the losing Bearcats.

Berra, Kiner
ynn F avored

w

B FRED DOWN
UYPI 8 porIs Wr1•te r
NEW YORK (UPI)-Yo i
.
g
Berra, Ralph Kine1 a nd Early
Wynn, three of the greatest
stars of the 1940s and 1950s, are
the most likely candidates to be
voted into baseball's Hall of
Fame today by the Baseball
Writers Association of America.
Jack Lang, secretary-treasurer of the BBWAA, will announce the results of this year's
balloting at 11 a .m . EST.
As many as 10 players could
be named but the total is almost
certain to be much lower
inasmuch as players must be
named on 75 per cent of the
ballots to be elected.
Berra was eligible for the first
time this year but Kiner and
Wynn have been passed over by
the writers' association in
several elections. A player must
be retired at least five years
and not have finished his career
prior to 1951 to be eligible in
this election.
Berra, 45, was the American
League's Most Valuable Player
three times and played in a
record 14 World Series as a star
catcher for the New York
Yankees from 1947 through
1963. He managed the Yankees
to the 1964 American League
pennant, then was fired after
the Yankees lost a seven-game
World Series to the St. Louis
Cardinals. He made a handful of
appearances for the New York
Mets in 1965.
Berra hit 358 homers and had

Cougars Topp le Squires
By United Press International
The largest home crowd of
the season brought out the best
in the Carolina Cougars Wednesday night.
With 8,192 fans looking on in
Charlotte, six players hit in
doubtle tfhigureEs ates the D~o~~ars
upse
e
as rn
IVlSIOnleading Virginia Squires, 114104, in an American Basketball
Association game .
Joe Caldwell led the scoring
parade for Carolina with 26
points and he was assisted by
George Peeples and Larry
Miller with 17 each , Gene
Littles with 14, George Lehmann with 11 and Frank Card
with 10. Charlie Scott led
Virginia with 24 points.
Despite the victory, Carolina
remained one game behind
third-place New York in the

East since the Nets whipped
the Floridians, 113-106. Rick
Barry scored 32 points, 20 of
them in the second half, to lead
the New York effort. Mack
Calvin was high for the
Floridians w1th 27 points .
In the only other game , guard
Steve Jones scored 29 points to
lead the Memphis Pros to a
120-103 triumph over the
Denver Rockets. Memphis is
third in the West, 5% games
behind first-place Indiana.

r---------..
SH IRJ
fIN ISH IN G
SAM E DAY

S E RV 1c E

In Af 9-0uf Af

s

Use·our Free Parking Lot

COLUMBIA
Alexander L ocal S.D . . . 3.80

1.50

33.30

.55

.65

1.00

3 2.00
35.50 De troit at Chicago
Pitts burgh at Los Ange les
St. Louis at Minnesota
(Only games schedul ed)
40.80

· LEBANON
E ast ern Loca l S.D. . . .. 3.8 0
Southern L ocal S .D . .... 3.8 0

2.00
2.00

23.5 0
22.50

.55
.55

.65
.65

1.00
1.00

31.50
30.50

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

"/

..,

JElVELRY*
"* 6oJt VALENTINES
o""

2.50

22.50

.55

.65

1.00

31.00

OLIVE
E astern Local S .D. .... 3.80

3.00

23.5 0

.55

.65

1.00

3?..51)

ORANGE
Eastern L ocal S.D. ... . 3.8 0

2.00

23.50

RUT LAND
M e igs Local S .D.
Rutla nd Villag e

3 .80
3.80

2.50
1.40

27.00
27 .00

SALEM
M e igs Local S .D. .. .. . . 3 .80

1.5 0

27.00

SALIS BURY
Me igs Local S.D .
3.80
Middleport Village .... 3 .80
Pom e r oy Villa g e
3.80

1.3 0
.2 0
.2 0

2 7.00
27.00
27.00

SCIPIO
Meigs Local S .D . . . . . . . 3.80

2.50

2 7.00

3.80
3 .8 0
3 .80
3 .8 0

SPECIAL SALE ON MATTEL TOYS

•
•

Local Bowling

BEN,FRANKLtN•

r-----------------------------------~=

Prevent
double trouble - use
1. A SAFE DEPOSIT BOX -

•
•

•

va luable documents are safe

LETART
Southe rn Loca l S.D ..... 3.80

SUTTON
Southern Local S.D . . ...
Racine Village .. ......
S yracuse Village ......
Sutton-M eigs Local . . .

Lumber, Hardware
and
·Building Supplies
Valley Lumber
&amp; Supply Co.

Be sure your jewels, securit ies,

s.~ s.w~/

- ~-made

2.00
.70
.70
2 .00

22.5 0
22.50
22.50
27.00

9.00

3.20
7.7 0

8.00
10.30

.55

.65

1.00

31.50

.55
.55

.65
.65

1.00
1.00

3 5.50
43.40

.55

.65

1.00

3 4.5 0

.55
.55
.55

.65
.65
.65

1.00
1.00
1.00

34.30
3 6.40
40.9U

.55

.65

1.00

3 5.51)

.55
.55
.55
.55

.65
.65
~
•6D

.65

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

30.50
37.2 0
39.50
35.00

Real est a t e t axes which have not b een pa id a t t.he clos e of each collec tion carry
a p en a lty of t en p er cent. T axes may b e paid a t the office of the county treasurer
or by m a il. Please brm g yo ur la st t ax r e(! eipt a nd if y ou pay by mail be s ure to locaLe your p rop erty by l axing di strict a nd enclose s tamped self addressed en velope.
Always examine yo u r t ax r e ceipt to see th a t it cover s all your prope rty. Offi&lt;:e
Hours 9 :00A.M. to 4 :00P.M. d a ily except S aturday when office clos es at N oon.
rax Books will ope n D ecembe r 15, 1970 · to Feb. 3 , Hl71.
HOWARD E . FRANK, Meigs Co. Treas .

2. TRAVELERS CHECKS -

Don't risk carrying a large
amount of cash

FOR

~::

Rio Grande came from a
halftime deficit to take its seventh win of the season. Ron
Lambert poured in 33 points for
the victorious Redmen while
By United Press International 114 and Buffalo ripped Portland
Jack Mellinoer scored 29 for
If winning close games is the 126-106.
the Polar Bears, now 2-11.
Chet Walker scored 33 points,
Tonight Cleveland State will measure of a good basketball
be at Duquesne, Walsh at Ur- team then the Milwaukee Bucks converting 15 of 16 foul shots,
bana and Muskingum at Rol- are indeed a very good team . as the Bulls handed the Knicks
The Bucks continued their their fifth defeat in the las t six ~
lins (Fla.).
rampage through the National games. New York drew to
Basketball Association Wednes- within three points in the final
day night, recording their lOth minute but a free thr ow by
straight victory, 120-116 over Jerry Sloan and three by
the Baltimore Bullets.
Walker put the game out of
Bob Boozer sank a pair of reach.
free throws with three seconds
left and Lew Alcindor had a 39point performance to lift the
Bucks to their 39th victory
See Us For • - against only seven losses, best
a .285 lifetime battmg average. mark in the NBA.
Earl Monroe had 24 points for
A squat, 5-foot, 8-inch, 190pounder from St. Louis, he was the Bullets and Gus Johnson
regarded as one of the most had 23.
Other Games
da ngerous clutch hitters of his
In other action, Chicago beat
tim e. Although awkward in his
ear ly seasons, he developed into New York 106 - 103, Boston
blitzed San Diego 142,112,
an accomplished catcher.
Kiner, who played most of his Sea ttle stopped Atlanta 112-108,
career with the Pittsburgh Cincinnati downed Phoenix 126992-2709
Middleport
Pirates, led the National
League in homers in seven
seasons, from 1946 through 1952,
and hit a total of 369 during his
10-year career . He had his best
BARGAINS GALORE WHILE T HEY LAST
seasons in 1947 when he hit 51
Reg.
$8.88 Hot Wheels Indy Tea m
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hom ers a nd batted .313 and in
Reg. $4.44 Hot Wheels Sky Show
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1949 when he hit 54 homer s and
Reg. $2.44 Hot Wheels Rod Runne r
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batted .310. His lifetime batting
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average, including two seasons
Reg. $4.99 Hot Whee ls Stunt Action Set
Special $3.33
with the Chicago Cubs and
Reg. $5.97 Hot Wheels Super Charger
Specia 1$3.99
Reg. $6.99 Hot Wheels Double Dare Race Set
Special $3.99
Cleveland Indians at the end of
Reg. $4.44 Hot Whee ls Dual Lane Speedometer Special $2.99
his career, was .279.
Reg. $6.44 Hot Wheels Rod Runner Speedwa y Set Special $4. 99
Wynn, 51, compiled a career
Reg. $8.99 Hot Whee ls Hot Curve 3 Race Action Set
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record fo 300-244 during a 23$5.99
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Washington Sen a tors,
Reg. $11 .88 Hot Wheels Dua l Lane Rod Ru nner Set
Special
$8.88
Cleveland Indians and Chicago
Reg. $15.88 Hot Wheels Road Tria l Set with Tune-up
White Sox. He won 20 games in
Tower
Specia l $11.88
five seasons, with a top of 23 in
Reg. $24.88 Hot Whee ls High Perfor ma nce Set with Tune-Up
1952 a nd 1954 for the Indians and
Tower a nd Two-Way Super Cha rger
Special $18.88
a 22-10 mark for the White Sox
Reg. $11.88 Hot Wheels Super Charger Speed Set Special $8.88
in 1959 which earned him the
Reg. $10.44 Hot Wheels Super Charger Sprint J et Special $7.44
Reg. $10.44 Hot Wheels Super Charger Sprint J et Special $7.44
major leagues' Pitcher of the
Reg . $17.88 Hot Wheels Hot Whee l Fa ctory
Special $12.88
Year award.
Berra is now a coach with the
Reg. $9.88 Sizzler Laguna Oval Race Set
Specia I $6.88
Mets, Kiner is a radio-TV
Reg. $12.88 Sizzler Newport Pacer Set
Special $9.88
Reg. $2.49 Sizzler Speed Brake and Esses
broadcaster for the Mets and
Special $1.99
Reg. $7.44 Sizzler Power Pit Recha rge r Set
Specia I $6.44
Wynn is pitching coach for the
Reg. $3.88 Sizzler Dua I Speed Brake and Esse s Special $2.99
Minnestoat Twins.
Reg. $8.66 Ma ttei Barbie Matt~f-0-Ph one
Special $6 .66
Reg. $11.77 Mattei Super Cartoon Ma ker Set
Special $7.99
Reg. $8.77 Mattei Dolly Maker Set
Specia 1$5.99
ALL MATTEL TOG'L TOYS MARKED DOWN
CITY LEAGU E
Jan . 12, 1971
MAN Y OTH E R SPE CIALS NOT MENT IONED HERE
Won Lost
WHILE THE Y LAST
Lou' s Ashland
20
4
Firestone
16
8
Reg. $22.88 Johnny Lightning 500 Cyclone Set Special $1 5.88
Cement Block
14 10
Reg. $8.44 Johnny Lightning J et Power Compressor Specia l
Swisher Lohse
10 14
$6.44
Buckeye Potato Chips
6 18
Reg. $7.99 Grippidee Gravidee
Specia 1$5.99
Quality Print
6 18
Reg. $9.99 Mini Motorific Speed Race Set 100
Special $6.99
Team High Game- Swisher
Reg.
$4.99
Mini
Motorific
Speed
Trail
Set
Special$3.99
Lohse, 925.
Team High Series - Cement
Block, 2585.
Individual High Game - Ed
Voss, 215.
Ind ividual High Series P HON E
202 Easf Main St.
Sauer, 583.
992-3498
Pomer oy, Ohio
Season High Series - Riebel,
658.
OPEN FRI DAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL·9
Season High Game - Bowen,
280.

THIS DOUBLE PROTECTION

MOTHER

avai lable at this bank

at LOW COST!

•

Ring Style
No. b8

Set with radiant birthstones - one stone for
each member of the
family.
Ring can be made to
hold from two to five
birthston es.
In preci ous I Okt. yellow
or white gold .

Valentine's

$1500
$2.00 .. dditional

1----------------------t
Goessler Jewe!ry Store
Day, Feb. 14

Court St.

for eac h
bi rthstone

Pomeroy

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

•

POMEROY, 0.
Member Feder al Rese rve System
On Fridays Ou r Drive- In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p . m ., (Con ti n uous ly).

DEPOSITS NOW INSURED TO $20,000 BY f .D.I C.

..-..

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 21,1971

•

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Reg. 1.29

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Reg. 1.65

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•

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SYNCHRONEX SUPER 8
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1

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Satin Lotion

For sore aching
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LOTION

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Reg. 2.98

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BUTTON BLENDERS · ~nu •
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OHIO ART
"TWIRL-0-PAINT"
FANTASTIC WAY TO
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.

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$2.99 $1.12

sss
20 oz.
REG. 2.63

60's

Jon fiGHTH PRIZES

Reg. 2.50

TONIC

formul~ tor rel1ef

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MENTHOLATUM

100's

Reg. 1.49

$1.99 $1.19 $1.52 $1.99 $1.16

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80 FIFTH PRIZES
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gentle buffers~

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80's RE'G. 4.55

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Don't Miss The Boat. .• Take Advantage of Large Size Savings Nlnv!

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 21 , 1971

~-&amp;:;.=~--------------------~ ~~ti:~:
~I
0£ the Bend
I1
, 1

::. ~ib !---w;;hi~gt;;~----~

choice process itself will be a
difficult and painful one to
I
I make.
• I By Bob Hoeflich
I
We will still have the
traditional family with working
1
husband, working housewife
1
(meaning that her work is done
R. W. Finch, public information officer of the Internal at home), and assorted
Revenue Service, advises that the services has many, many in- children. However, this will not
come tax refunds, for the year 1968 or before, that are unclaimed. be the most prevalent type of
The refund checks were returned to IRS because there were family.
discrepancies in addresses, or the people had moved and left no
Instead, the most common
forwarding address.
will be the working husband and
On a list released Wednesday afternoon are 2,787 persons who working wife, perhaps either
have not received refund checks due them. It's a small world, without children or with
they say, and perhaps, you might know someone listed and can adopted children. Increasingly
put them wise to the fact that Uncle Sam will be glad to send them as well, single people will be
;. a check if they will advise him of their proper address. Perhaps more common _ single people
some have moved into Meigs County.
' of all categories _ never
:
Below are the names of Southeastern Ohio residents whose married, divorced, widowed.
It is increasingly likely that
• addresses are incomplete as far as the Internal Revenue Service
single people will be allowed to
.., is concerned.
•• Michael L. Adams, listed as Chester Va. but possibly Chester adopt and make homes for
.,. h'
.
,
,
,
:: 0 10; Larry D: A~ms, Millfield; Deloris Bentley, Athens; John children- yes, even single men
: an~ Sheila Blarr, listed as Dexter City, Ohio, possibly Dexter in will do so. Of course, we'll also
: M~1~s County; John and Adeldia Broyles, Gallipolis; Jayson have couples living together
without formal marriage, we'll
William ~ryant, Jackson, Mich., possibly Jackson, Ohio; Douglas
have a general liberalization of
G. Carmichael, Athens; Willard Franklin Clark, Athens; Baxter
divorce, we '11 have more
D. Con~ey, Logan; .Ella E. Gifford, Salem possibly Salem available abortion services, as
, Township; Charles G11key, The Plains; Nellie L. Grim, Athens; well as the growing possibility
: Hershel A. and Donna F. Hamrick, Nelsonville; Adrian J. of having children by artificial
• Holleworth, Cheshire; James L. Hughey, Jackson; Thomas insemination and incubation
Joseph Kean, Athens; Grace Kittle, Albany; Joe E. Lindsay, outside the womb.
t Albany; Ch:irles L. Lorna, ~cArthW'; William J. McComery,
All of this will start slowly,
Logan; Claude. S. McVea, Chester; Delford and Donna Mead, naturally, but will grow readily
• Belpre; Fr.anciS J. and Betty R. MW'phy, McArthur; Gail T. more apparent as we live
Poquette, ~1sted as Racine, Wis., possibly Racine, Ohio; Joyce through the '70s. All of these
An~ Proff~tt, Athe~; Wanedia M. Rader, listed as Coonville,
things will have a tremendous
Ohio, possibly Coolv1lle; Marjorie E . Reeder, Granville; Roger impact upon the family. But the
Roberts, Lebanon; Donald A. Robison, Enterprise; Gerald E. family as a unit will survive_ it
Shumway, Reedsville; Henry J. Skinner, Portland; Charles . has done so since the dawn of
Burton Smith, Gallipolis; Madelaine C. Smith, listed as Bradford· lime, though "in trouble"
James P. and Mami~ Snider, Pomeroy; John Tippie, Athens; practically all of its history.
If these things do indeed
Charles and Mary Ti~ham, The Plains; Margaret T. Webb,
happen, how can the '70s be the
Logan; Thomas W. Wnght, Enterprise.
If you know any of those listed do mention it to them. They'll best of all times?
Obviously, the challenge of
be glad you did.
the '70s will be a human
FRIENDS MUST HAVE been surprised at the announcement challenge _ the challenge of
living with diversity. The
• that ~rs. ~erth~ Canaday will run for a seat on Pomeroy Village
• Council this sprmg. Although highly interested in politics, Mrs. problem will be one of tolerance
- as long as a type of behavior
Canaday has not taken an active role previously -in fact, she has
does not hW't another human
shunned such a role.
being, we must find ways to let
Circu!~~ng her. petition Wednesday, Mrs. Canaday com- others accept this style of
mented: I m runrung on a platform to clean up Pomeroy so if behavior.
they want Pomeroy clean they can vote for Bertha Canaday. ••
Let me suggest to you that
America's strength as a society
A SECOND TELEPHONE meeting will be held next Thurs- has not been as a melting pot in
day a~ 7:30 p.m. at the SalisbW'y Elementary School. Some which all different types of
confus1o~ has develope~ in tha.t some of those interested thought
people are "melted down" into
the m~eting w~s to be this evenmg. Not so, it's next Thursday. The one "standard American."
gro~p lB pl~nrung to protest a rate hike in telephone service and is
America's strength as a
askmg for unproved service particularly if that rate increase is to society has been in accepting
materialize.
her blessed diversity of peoples
with toleration, then enthusiastically encoW"aging and
using the wide-ranging fruits of
their talents.

l

Alfred
Socia/1\fotes

;,' Carpenter

News, Event
Those present for a family
gathering at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Jeffers and
family were Mr. and Mrs. John
~ Dunham and family , New

CERTIFIED WELDER

:
:

Portable Equipment
Shop or Field
Ph. 992-2511

: Chase Hardware
:
...-~------------~
Middleport

Locust St.

Sunday School attendance on
Jan.17 was 51. The offering was
$21.37.
Worship services were held at
11 a .m. with the Rev. Lavender
speaking from Eph. 3:11, "The
Jew &amp; Gentiles are both one in
Jesus Christ."
The Women's Society will
Boston, Illinois; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Jeffers and daughters,
Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jordan,
Jane, Jackie, Danny, and
Betty; Danny Thompson, Mrs.
Faye Jordan, Mrs. Ida Dennison, Mike Lawson and Julia
Barillas.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grim and
family, Poca, W. Va., spent
several days here with Mrs.
Grim's brother and sister-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. William
Lawson and family.

WESTINGHOUSE • • •

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•ooor Projects Additional 1)\'.''

Washer Model LTlOOSXA
Dryer Model DEHlOSAO

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

sponsor "Week of Prayer &amp;
Self-Denial Services," at the
chW"ch here next Sunday, Jan.
24, at 3 p.m. Anyone is welcome.
Several local families attended services for Orville
Watson on Wednesday, at the
South Bethel ChW'ch, on Silver
Ridge.
Clara Follrod and Nina
Robinson had Sunday dinner
and spent the rest of the day
with Mr. and Mrs. Otto swartz
of Shade, 0.
Clarence Atherton and son
Larry, of Long Bottom visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ArthW' Atherton, on SatW'day and
helped saw wood.
Mrs. Charles D. woode
received word on Friday that
her uncle, Emerson Hayes, of
Portsmouth, 0., is somewhat
improved at this time. His
address is: Elmwood Valley
Convalescent Home, Room 125,
Portsmouth, 0. If he lives until
March 28, he will be 96 years
old.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Douglas
and daughter of Pomeroy R. D.
recently visited Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Buck, Jr., and daughter
here.

Laurel Oiff

BY AVA GILKEY
Mr. Leo Morris moved the
I
8 Q
trailer of Mr . and Mrs. Joe
:
y ..arcnce I Carsey from the William Clonch
I
Miller
I lot to the farm of Miss Ella
,
I
Bright below town.
Last September in our opportunities, and manpow~r
Mrs. Susie Heitger is caring
Quarterly Newsletter which training reform. This does not
for Mrs. Katie Wilson while
reviewed the activities of the mean that I could support all of
Mrs.
May
Mason
is
9l~t Congress up to that point, I this legislation, but we should
hospitalized.
said that I hoped the 91st see it in its final form. Despite
Mr. Robert R. Gibson of
Congress would be "judged on the long list of measures the
Columbus spent his day off with
its determination to tackle the Congress balked at, there were
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
remaining business before it many significant and important Robert Alkire.
and not by the legislation it accomplishments in which it
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Gilkey and
refused to confront." In can take pride. Perhaps the
son, Joey, of Columbus spent
retrospect, either because of greatest achievements of the the weekend with Ava Gilkey
partisan politics, Senate in- 91st Congress are the three
and Rod and Dennis Gilkey.
difference, or antiquated reform measW"es it enacted and
Mr. Clarence Eastmas
legislative procedW'es, much the national commitment it
reports that his wife, Alta, who
important legislation was side- gave to cleaning up and is patient at Holzer Medical
stepped and swept under the restoring OW' environment.
Center, is much improved.
rug before adjoW"nment on
POSTAL REFORM _ 0n
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Haning
January 2. I felt that the August 12, 1970, the President
visited Mr. and Mrs. M. A.
Congress had an obligation to signed into law H.R. 17070 _the Epple recently.
the American people to confront most important reform bill in
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
these bills and either vote them American postal history. The
Douglas were recent visitors of
up or down. In the last analysis, legislation replaced the Post
the MW'l Douglases.
the 91st Congress may be long Office Department with an
Mrs. Joe Carsey spent a night
remembered not for what it did entirely new government with her mother, Mamie
but for what it did not do. Ther~ corporation, the United States Newlun.
is no doubt it passed the buck on Postal Service.
Kenneth Payne tended the
many issues to the 92nd
DRAFT
REFORM
filling station in the absence of
Congress and thus delayed December 1, 1969, marked an owner Darold Graham.
necessary government reform. historic day for millions of
Joe Carsey has employment
EL~C~ORAL REFORM- A young men. It was on this at the Joe McMW"ray station in
constitutional amendment was evening that the new lottery Pomeroy.
approved by the House on system for selecting inductees
The Halliday-Atkins farm
September 18, 1969, to abolish into the Armed Forces was recently received a new bunch
the . electoral college and instituted. Legislation enacted of turkeys.
provide for the direct election of just five days earlier reduced
Several persons from this
the President and Vice from seven years to one the community have recently been
President. The Senate after the period of draft vulnerabilit; and having the 24 hour virus. Among
threat of filibuster, dropped the allows any young man to know them were Mrs. Darold
matte~ entirely. There is little in his 19th year how likely it is Graham and the Bishop
hope It can now be enacted to that he will be drafted.
children.
cover the 1972 elections.
TAX REFORM
On
Robert Alkire pW'chased a
S 0 CIA L SECURITY December 23, 19 9, the day the
travel trailer from Kenneth
REFORM - May 21, 1970, the first session of the 91st Congress Brooks.
~ouse appr~ved H. ~· 17550, to r.ecessed, the Congress gave
Norman Will and son and Mr.
mcr~ase socta~ secW"Ity benefits fmal approval of a package of Woodrow Zwilling attended the
and unprove Its operation. By substantivE' tax reforms in- inaguration of Gov. Gilligan
the time a liberalized version eluding some of the most Monday.
w~s reported out of the Senate significant changes since the
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
Fmance Committee, it was so income tax was instituted in of Albany visited Ava Gilkey
loaded down with trade and 1913, overhauling the tax Monday evening.
welfare riders that it had to be structure,
closing many
Mrs. Eliza Powell and son
unraveled on the Senate floor - loopholes and cutting taxes for
Clarence Jordan, attended th~
tO? late to resolve its difference millions of low-income families. funeral of Everett Michael 71
With the. House version. The The Congress later repealed the at Youngstown. He was Mrs:
Se.na~'s.meptness in expediting 10 per cent sW'charge on all Powell's brother.
this bill Is unexcusable and the taxable income - welcome
Mr. and Mrs. Babe Whaley of
most unnecessary failW"e of the relief for the nation's million Columbus, 0., spent the
Congress.
taxpayers.
weekend with Mrs. Edith
WELFARE- Like so many The other area in which the Whaley Downington, and Mrs.
other measW"es approved by the Congress excelled was en- Ava Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs.
Ho~se, the President's Family vironmentcontrol. Although the Robert Alkire and Mr. and Mrs.
Assistan~e Plan was kicked problem has been building for Robert Clark.
around 10 the Senate for six years, this Congress made a
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams
months bef,ore it was lost in the commitment to enact the and Margaret Douglas visited
shuffle for adjoW"nment. With statutes and mechanics in
SatW'day with their sister, Mrs.
~elfare costs doubling every which we can begin to save OW'
f1ve years, some method needs world from pollution. (A new Clara Hull of Waldo, 0.
Mrs. Beige Lambert had the
to be found to help solve the approach to the environment
misfortune to fall at her home
~elfar.e _Proble~. The increase was provided in the National and break two fingers.
~n rectpients, w~th no hop~ for Environmental Policy Act
We are glad to report Mrs.
~provement, lS a nahonal which established a new Council Katie Wilson was able to visit at
disaster a~d requir~s effective on Environmental Quality in the her home ThW'sday.
Congressional action before White House.) On March 25
Recent visitors of the M. A.
state and local governments go 1970, the Congress approved th~ Epples were Minnie Foit
b~nkrupt. It is tragic the Senate Water Quality Improvement
Minnie McGrath, Alice Whaley'
did ~ot e~en take a vote on the Act which strengthened Federal Susie Heitger and Mr. and Mrs:
Presidents Plan and instead laws on pollution and later
William Clonch.
passed the buck to the new enacted the ResoW"ce Recovery
Mr. Kimey, a retired postCo~g~~ss to ~ke some sort of Act which provides financial master of Albany, is moving in
defmihve action.
assistance for the construction the rental house owned by
R~VE~UE . SHARING - of solid waste disposal facilities Catherine Althouse.
Legislation 10 which the and research . The last day of
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Miller of
Federal G.overn~ent would 1970 marked the enactment of Sedalia, Ohio, were weekend
retW"n an mcreasmgly larger the historic Clean Air Act _ the visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
part of the federal tax dollar strongest anti-pollution Alkire.
each year to the states and local measure ever passed by
Tom Campbell, a T.V. sports
governm~nt w~s proposed by Congress. The new law will
commentator on Channel 6 of
10
the ~esident
.August, 1969, require a near pollution -free Columbus, is the son of Rev. and
and tt was totally Ignored by the automobile by 1976 and Mrs. Louis Campbelle (the
House. Ways an~ Means establishes national air quality former Coelle Alkire) of
Committee . A maJOr lobby standards. The Congress also Delaware, Ohio .
effort by the nati.on's governors approved the President's plan
Mrs. Virginia Burke and
and ma~ors 10 the next to reorganize and consolidate Renee of Racine visited ThW"sC~ngress IS expected to enact nearly all Federal en- day evening with the Robert
this m~asW'e ..
vironmental and conservation Alkires .
The hst of bills left hanging in agencies and programs into a
Mrs. Might in the K. C. Welsh
the 91st Congress goes on : single Environmental

News Notes

II

R e~nort

I

r

consumer pr~tection, federal
wate.r pollution standards,
fundmg of the Supersonic
Trans~ort, trad.e legislation,
P.r e-tnal de ten liOn, women's
F!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!r!!I~ghts, equal employment
p!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!B

f

Always Ready
to Serve You -----Get to know your Pharmacist. Consult him about your daily drug
and health needs.

~illn_gt

llarrisonvi lie
Soeiety News

llJirarntttrll

DAN MEADOWS
"The Creator of Reasonob le Drug Price s"

(i)Jtiit

Protection Agency for a more
coordinated and effective attack on pollution.
Prompted by the Nixon Administration to launch an effective campaign on the
criminal elements in OW' nation
the Congress passed legislatio~
to combat organized crime, halt
the alarming rise in drug abuse,
~trengthen anti-bombing laws,
mcrease federal assistance to
state and local law enforcement
agencies, and amended the
Postal Reform Act to help
stop unsolicited obscene advertising in the news. We have
only begun to wage a
meaningful war on crime, and
the new Congress must address
itself to such related matters as
judicial and penal reform.
The 91st Congress was
probably not the worst, not the
best, ever assembled. It broke
new legislative ground in
several areas while refusing to
do so in others. It became more
assertive in the area of for-

mulating our foreign policy, yet
refused to assert itself in the
serious matter of reforming
many of its own antiquated
procedures.
Not since 1849 has a new
Administration entered the
White House with the opposition
party commanding both houses
of Congress. This situation led
to great misunderstanding and
contributed to legislative impasses and impeded the efficient flow and exchange of
ideas.

2nd Ave.

Middleport

rental farm house, is a sister to
Jerry Napper, who was killed in
an auto accident at Rutland.
Mrs. Elwood Howard Jr., and
daughter, Debbie, spent the
past week in Columbus visiting
her sister-in-law.
Mrs. Junior Halley of West
Virginia visited Mrs. Mamie
Newlon Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams
are spending a weekend with his
sister, Clara Hull, at Waldo.
Mrs. Hull was hospitalized
recently. Her daughter-in-law

12 days before Mississippi
seceded from the Union.
In 1908 New York City
enacted the Sullivan ordinance
which called smoking by
women illegal.
In 1954 the first atomicpoweredsubmarine, the "Nauti- •
Ius," was launched at Groton.
Conn.
In 1968 a U.S. Air Force R-52
carrying four non-explosive
hrdrogen bombs crashed off
Greenland.
A thought for today:
President Harry Truman saiti,
"The responsibility of the great
states is to serve and not
dominate the world."

Josephine Hull, is in criticai . .- - - - - - - - - - •
cond1hon with cancer. She was
formerly Josephine Pickens of
Racine .
•
1
· Shoe ·rsiretch J(
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Whaley
are enjoying a six weeks
For
vacation. They first went to
Arizona where they own five
Tight Shoes
acres of land, then to
Hollywood, Calif., to visit the
Mickey Rooneys, the actor.
Mrs. Ronney is Mrs. Whaley's Where Shoes are sensibly
niece. From Hollywood the priced.
Middleport
Whaleys went to Florida to visit
friends.

•

SPRAY

THE SHOE BOX

•
ON WINTER MERCHANDISE

CONTINUES I
FOR BOYS AND GIRLS

• • •

INFANT THRU SIZE 12
All
A-Plus Values

•

"Adorable Styles"

On The T In Middleport

VALUES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
WOMENS AND MISSES FASHIONS BY

AILEE~-

RUSS TOG- WHISTLERS

•

GREAT DISCOUNT ON
MEN &amp; BOYS: COATS &amp; CPO JACKETS
LADIES &amp; GIRLS: COATS &amp; JACKETS

CALL 992-2057

HOME LAUNDRY

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is ThW"sday, Jan. 21,
the 21st day of 1971.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are Mars
Jupiter and Venus.
'
The evening star is SatW'n.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of CapriCorn.
Civil War General Thomas
Jonathan Jackson, known as
"Stonewall Jackson," was born
Jan. 21, 1824.
On this day in history:
In 1861 Jefferson Davis
resigned from the U.S. Senate,

CONTINUES

.,

Laundry &amp;
Dry Cleaning

I

•

TOPCOATS RENEWED - ·t~
~o't w.M.t u..:..MtA wW&lt; lfr
Pickup &amp; Delivery

JIMMY LEE
Jimmy Lee, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Lee, Pomeroy,
has been assigned to the 233rd
Military Police Detachment
Carlisle Barracks, Pa. Th;
20-year-old soldier is a 1969
graduate of Meigs High
School. He entered the Army
in June of 1969 and was last
ass~gned to the 93rd Military
Pohce Battalion in Vietnam.

•

BY BERTHA PARKER
Jan. 27 services were held at
the new Free Methodist ChW'ch
with 138 attending. Sabbath
School offering was $32.40.
Attendance
of
morning
preaching service was 71.
Holiness Rally will be held
Jan. 26 at the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church, Union
Avenue.
,.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs remains on
the sick list.
Mrs. Gladys Mowery has
returned home from a three
weeks visit with relatives in
California.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr, Sr.
. Mrs.
Frances
Brown
Pomeroy, visited recently with
her aunt, Mrs. Georgia Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry,
Athens, spent Sunday with Mrs.
Perry's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer recently visited with'
Nellie Tracy, Ball Run.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
IsenhoW' visited recently with •
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Isenhour
Old Town Flatts.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Howell
Canton, is spending the week
with their son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold
Southside, W. Va., visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Hysell and family.

-

BAHKAMERICARD

New
Store Hours
Monday thru
Friday
9 til s
Saturday
9 til9

•

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 21., 1971

~~-·---~--------1

•

Girl Scout
Diary

By Charlene Hoeflich

t

•

A four-week course in ceramics was started Tuesday by
members of the Salisbury Cadette Troop 208. Mrs. Tom Martin of
Rutland is conducting the classes which will qualify the girls for
the ceramic and pottery badge.
MIDDLEPORT BROWNIES 87
SCRAPBOOKS AND MEMO pads are being made by the
Brownies of Troop 87 for the Southeastern Ohio Mental Health
Center, Athens.
The scrapbooks of pictures from used Christmas cards are
being made especially for the children. The memo pads with
Christmas card covers will be given to the older patients. Mrs.
Larry Spencer, leader, will deliver the items to the hospital once
the project is completed.
CADETIE TROOP 185
A DISCUSSION on badge work was held during the Tuesday
night meeting of Troop 185 held at the Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Judy Owen was appointed badge leader for the girls who will
work in one patrol on preps for the active citizenship challenge.
This includes the "My Government" badge.
It was decided that the troop will meet every other Tuesday
with their new leader, Mrs. Janice Gibbs, and that the patrol
meetings will be held on the alternate Tuesdays. Mrs. Richard
Owen will serve on the troop committee.
Re-registering with the. troop were Miss Owen, Barbara
Fultz, Beth Vaughan, April Fraser, Venida Gibbs, Carol Lewis,
and Linda Gerard.
ATTENTION LEADERS: Friday is the final day that orders
for church folders or inserts to be used on Girl Scout Sunday can
be accepted. The orders are to be placed with Mrs. William
Ohlinger, neighborhood chairman.

ALSO FRIDAY is the final day for junior, cadette, and senior
patrol leaders and assistants to register for a training workshop
to be held on Jan. 31 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the old school in Chester.
Purpose of the workshop will be to familiarize the girls with
the patrol system and the court of honor. It will be conducted by
two Ohio University campus girl scouts. Girls planning to attend
are to register with Mrs. Ohlinger.

•
•

•
•

Deputy's Commission is Read
The commission of Esther
Ridenour to the position of
deputy of District 13 was read
by Mrs. Ada Neutzling,
assi:5tan t recording secretary,
at the Tuesday night meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America.
A communication from Mary
Jane Smith, state councilor,

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Clyde E. Wells, whose place
of residence is unknown and
cannot by reasonable diligence
be ascertained, will take notice
that on the 6th day of January,
1971, the undersigned plintiff,
Florence Carol Wells, filed her
complaint against him in the
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, Case No. 14,794
for divorce on the grounds of
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty, and praving for
divorce and other relief . The
said Clyde E. Wells is required
to answer said complaint within
twenty eight days after the last
publication of this notice, which
date is the 25th day of March,
1971. This cause will be for
hearing on the 25th day of
March, 1971. or as soon
thereafter as the ::ourt can
conveniently hear the same.
FLORENCE CAROL
W ELLS
Pia in tiff
Manning D . Webs ter
Webster and F ultz
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attorney for Plaintiff
) 1) 24, 28, (2} 4, 11, 18, 25, 7tc

LEGAL NOTICE

•

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JESSE MORRIS,
R. D. 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
Plaintiff,
vs .
MEDA ELOISE MORRIS,
Address Unknown,
Defendant.
No. 14,791
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Meda E loise Morris, whose
place of r es idence is unknown
will take notice that on the 6th.
day of January, 1971, th e un dersigned filed his Complaint
against her in the Common
Pleas Court of Meigs County,
Ohio, praying for a divorce,
custody of minor child , and
other relief on the grounds of
gross neglect of duty and ex trem e crue lty . The Complaint
also prays that the following
real estate be awarded to the
Pia in tiff :
Situate in Bedford Township,
Meigs Co unty, Ohio, in Section
7, Town 3, Range 13, beginning
at the Southeast corner of Arthur Story's land ; thence south
on said line to the road leading
from Harrisonville to Pomeroy;
thence East along said road to
th e Pomeroy a nd A then s Road;
then ce North along said road to
the Eas t I ine of Arthur Stor y's
land ; con taining three acres,
more or l ess, and being all of the
tract lying west of the road.
This ca u se may be heard on 28
days after the last pub I ication of
this notice, whi ch date is the·
19th . day of March, 1971.

•

Jesse Morri s,
Plaintiff
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(1) 7, 14, 21,28 (2) 4, 11 , 18 , 7tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20425
Estate of RUTH LOUELLA
FLORY, Deceased .
Notice is h ereby given that
Donaldson E . Flory , of 270
W~lnut Stree t , Middleport,
Ohto, has been duly appointed
Executor of the Estate of Ruth
Louella Flory, deceased, late of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months .
Dated this 4th day of January
1971.
'
F . H . O'Brien
Probate Judge
of said County
(1} 7, 14, 21,etc

congratulated Mrs. Ridenour on
her appointment. Deputy State
Councilor Erma Cleland installed Dorothy Lawson as
warden of the Council.
Jean Summerfield, councilor,
presided at the meeting attended by 25 members .
Reported ill were Lucille
Kraeutter, in poor condition at
her home, Mae Spencer
recuperating from injuries in a
fall, and Zona Biggs and Opal
Hollon, confined by illness.
It was announced that the
Feb. 2 meeting the good of the
order committee will conduct
games. Potluck refreshments
were served. Attending besides
those named were Goldie
Frederick, Dorothy Ritchie,
Doris Grueser, Betty Roush,
Elizabeth Wickham, Mary Jo
Pooler, Elaine Hart, Mary K.
Holter, Barbara Sargent, Ada
Morris, Sadie Trussell, Inzy
Newell, Letha Wood, Hattie
Frederick, Margaret Tuttle,
Zelda Weber, Ada Van Meter,
Ethel Orr, Dorothy Myers, and
Mabel Van Meter.

Sewing Club Meets
Crocheting Mghans was the
topic at a meeting of the First
Monday night Sewing Club held
recently at the home of Mrs.
Robert Lewis.
A dessert CO\ll'Se was served
by the hostess. Plans for the
Feb. 2 meeting to be held at the
home of Mrs. George Schneider
were made with three dimensional pictures to be the topic .
Names were drawn for secret
pals. Attending besides Mrs.
Schneider were Miss Eleanor
Robson, Miss Myrtis Kay
Parker, Mrs. Dwight Parker,
Mrs. Paul Kloes, Mrs. James
Clatworthy, and Mrs. Grace
Holter.

Contributions Made
A $5 contribution was made to
the Middleport school program
during the Tuesday night
session of the EJecta Circle of
the B. H . Sanborn Missionary
Society, Middleport First
Baptist Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
A. R. Pullen, the group heard
cards of thanks from shut-ins
for Thanksgiving and Christmas remembrances. A letter
was read from Dr. and Mrs.
Frank
Curray,
India
missionaries, currently on
furlough .
Mrs . Charles Searles opened
the meeting with devotional
thoughts on the Holy Land. Mrs .
Pullen read a poem, Your
Church, and the program entitled, What I Learned from
Ruth, was given by Mrs. Jacob
Turner. Cake and coffee were
served by the hostess.

E-R CALLED
RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad was called Tuesday at 3
p .m . to the Racine Garage for
Harold Bird who was having
difficulty breathing. He was
ta ken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, treated and released .

Salisbury PTA Topic, Safety
"Most workers are safer on
the job than they are in their
homes because of strict safety
practices of companies,'' Ralph
Dixon, director of safety instruction for the Southern
Division,
Columbus
and
Southern Ohio Electric Co., told
Salisbury P.T.A. members
Tuesday night.
Dixon's talk was a feature of a
program on safety which included a poster contest with
winners in each grade, and a
film "Just Plug It In" on the
safe use of electrical appliances. John Lisle, fourth
grade teacher, was chairman of
the program on safety.
Winners in the poster contest
with each one receiving a safety
kit and a $1 bill from the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. were Teresa Dorst,

first grade; Delores Gill,
second; Kathry Quivey, third;
Chuck
Kennedy,
fourth;
Kathleen May, fifth, and Cheryl
Kennedy, sixth. Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis, art instructor at the
Meigs High School, judged the
entries.
In his talk, Dixon described
safety "as a frame of mind ." He
said that the electric company
has six safety supervisors for
the 2,500 employes and that
safety meetings were held once
each week. The men are taught
first aid, he said, because this
makes them less likely to be
careless and it gives them the
ability to help in the case of an
accident until other help can be
secured. "Accidents are painful
and costly both to the employe
and the company,'' he commented.

The
speaker displayed
several pieces of equipment
used toward preventing accidents. Rubber sleeves and
gloves which can withstand
5,000 volts of electricity, hot
sticks used for over 5,000
voltage, rubber blankets,
plastic shields were among the
items shown by Dixon.
He said the main concern now
is for the employe in his home
and driving to and from his job.
On the job only the best
equipment is used while in the
home inadequately repaired
equipment is sometimes used.

Slides of Expo '70 and the
international flower show, both
in Japan, will be shown by Mrs .
Homer Holter at the open
meeting of the Wildwood
Garden Club at 8 p .m. Wednesday at the Ohio Power Co.
office in Pomeroy.
Mrs. Holter will also show
slides of her travels around the
world. All garden club members of the county and others
interested in viewing the slides
are invited to attend the
meeting.

The film, Just Plug It In
pertained to the safe use of
electrical appliances and
warned of several dangers:
overloading circuits, using
frayed cord, using in bathrooms
or around water, and using a
wrong size circuit for the job.
Dixon was introduces by
Wendell Hoover, an employe of
the Electric Co. Hoover commended the children for the art
work which was on display
during the evening.
During the business meeting
Treachery and intrigue
surrounding the life of Mary
Queen of Scots in a book of that
title written by Lady Antonia
Fraser was reviewed by Mrs.
A potluck dinner preceded the
Larry Spencer at the Wednesday afternoon meeting of the meeting of Friendly Circle of
Trinity
Church
Tuesday
Middleport Literary Club.
evening.
Speaking of the author, Mrs.
Thirteen members and a
Spencer said that she spent two
guest,
Mrs. Patty Young, were
years researching material for
her book. Mary Queen of Scots seated at a table decorated with
snowmen
and
was a queen at nine months of miniature
snowball
candles.
Table
grace
age, a bride at 15 years. She was
schooled in France, betrothed to was by Mrs. Pearl Mora. Miss
the Prince of France, and Elizabeth Fick, incoming
reigned as queen of three president, had charge of
countries. Facets of the dif- arrangements for the dinner.
Reports were given on
ficulties she encountered in
ruling Scotland due to having holiday projects of the Circle
been reared in France were and on calls made to shut-in
members of the church. Thank
discussed by the reviewer.
Mrs. Spencer said the you notes were read from Mrs .
authenticated book described Lena Huber, Halifax, Mass.;
the queen as being loved by her Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Massar,
common subjects but betrayed Mrs. Glenroy Ewing in the
Home
at
by the nobility. She became a Presbyterian
prisoner of Queen Elizabeth of Columbus; Mrs. Louise Reibel,
England, was held captive for Columbus; Mrs. Amanda
19 years and finally was
beheaded.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
New officers were installed at
Rodney Downing, the 15
a
meeting of the Women 's
members and Mrs. L. P. Klein,
Auxiliary of the Rutland
a guest, responded to roll call by
Volunteer Firemen Tuesday
naming a guest woman of
night at the firemen's hall.
yesterday.
Installed were Mrs. Virginia
Mrs . Richard Owen opened
Michael, president; Mrs.
the meeting with the club
collect. She introduced Mrs. Marjorie Davis, vice president;
Mrs. Muriel Foley, second vice
Spencer with her review in the
president;
Mrs. Louise Eads,
absence of Mrs. Forrest
secretary; Mrs. Myrville
Bachtel. Candy was served .
Brown, treasurer, and Mrs.
Shirley Bishop, news reporter.
Plans were made for a bake
sale to be held at the Rutland
New officers were elected at a Department Store on Feb. 13.
recent
meeting
of
the The sale will begin at 8:30a.m.
congregation of the Middleport The group also decided to have
First United Presbyterian a jitney supper at the Rutland
Church. They are Paul Hap- Grade School on March 18.
The traveling prize donated
tonstall, Robert Haggerty and
Mrs. Michael Zirkle, elders; by Mrs. Davis was won by Mrs.
Hubert Taylor and Dwigh t
Wallace, trustees, and Mrs.
Tom Rue, Mrs. William Morris
Officers were elected and
and Mrs. Paul Haptonstall,
installed
at a recent meeting of
deaconesses. The ordination
and installation of the new of- the Auxiliary of the Bashan Fire
ficers will take place at the Jan. Department. New officers are
Mrs. Mary K. Holter, president;
31 morning worship service.
The Rev. Russell Lester Mrs. Betty Van Meter, vice
presided at the congregational president; Mrs. Sadie Trussell,
meeting which was preceded by secre tary, and Mrs . Jean
potluck
supper.
Ap- Trussell, treasurer.
a
Mrs. Trussell, retiring
proximately 45 members were
present to hear the annual president, conducted the
reports from the officers and meeting with Mrs. Holter giving
the secretary's report, and Mrs.
organizations.
Van Meter, the treasurer's
report. It was decided to have
light refreshments at the
meetings during the winter
months. Cake and coffee were
Plans to purchase four sheets served to those named and Mrs.
and pillow cases for the Meigs Juanita Griffith, a new memCounty Infirmary were made ber, Mrs. Wilma Balard and
recently by the Helping Hands Margaret Ann Johnson.
Missionary Group at the
Bradford Church of Chnst.
Just As We
A devotional period was led
by Vada Hazelton who gave the
Outgrow Clothes,
scripture from Luke 19, first
through 10 verses and a poem,
We Can
The Calf Path. The secretarytreasurer report was approved.
"Outgrow"
A potluck lunch was served at
noon after which the group tied
our Homes
a comfort and prepared a quilt
on which they will work at the
If A Larger Home
next meeting.
Is In Your Plans
Attending were Tressie
STOP IN
Hendricks, Eleanor Hoover,
and see
Verna Hysell, Vada Hazelton
and daughter, Cynthia, Hildred
Clark and Mildred Sisson.

MISS FAEHNLE HOME
Miss Frieda Faehnle, Middleport, is recuperating at home
following surgery two weeks
ago at the Holzer Medical
Center.

HORKY HOME
Carl Horky of Middleport,
who under went heart slll'gery
two weeks ago at the Cleveland
Clinic Hospital, was returned to
his home Tuesday.

Soda! l
Calendar

Queen's Life
Is Reviewed

!

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday Columbus Gas Co.
office; devotions by Mrs.
Kenneth Scites; program by the
Rev. Arthur Lund using
"Today's Morals" as topic; roll
call, humerous quotation or
incident from a child; white
elephant sale.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
Thursday, 7:30p.m., Don Miller
presiding; color film on Crippled Children's Hospital and
Burns Institute. Oyster stew
following meeting.
MEETING ALL parents this
year's confirmation class at
Trinity Church, Pomeroy,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Children
should be 11 or 12.
DEMOCRAT Executive
Committee, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
party headquarters, Brown
building, Pomeroy.
AFTER BASKETBALL game
dance, Thursday, 9:30 to
midnight at Wahama High
School; Jays emceeing.
CLASS 12, Heath United
Methodist Church, Thursday
evening; program by Mrs. L.
W. McComas; devotions by
Miss Bess Sanborn; hostesses,
Mrs. Perry Mitch, Mrs. Kenneth Byer, Mrs. David Entsminger.
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday night,
home of Mrs. Eldon Weeks.
XI GAMMA MU Thursday 8
p.m. home of Tana Simonton,
New Haven. Casual dress.
WEEKEND meeting,
Pomeroy Lower Light Church,
7:30 each evening, Thursday
through Saturday, Rev. Ralph
Spires, Ewington speaking;
public invited.
FRIDAY
TEEN DANCE, Friday, 8:3011: 30. Southern Junior High.
Racine, sponsored by senior
class, music by "The Vision".
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT
WCTU
regular meeting Friday, 7:30
p.m. home of Betty Cline,
Walnut St.
SATURDAY
VARIETY SHOW, 8 p.m.
Saturday at Eastern High
School sponsored by Chester
Alumni Assn .; cakes and other
items auctioned; proceeds,
scholarship for an Eastern
senior.
DANCE following WahamaMeigs game Saturday 9:30-12 at
Wahama High School with Jays
emceeing;
sponsored by
seniors.
SUNDAY
MEETING OF managers of
Meigs-Mason slo-pitch softball
league, 4p.m. Sunday, Farmers
Bank and Savings Co.

Slides to be Shown

it was voted to continue sponsorship of the boy scout troop.
The president thanked those
who gave prizes and worked at
the fall festival.
Mrs. Richard Vaughan,
president of the Meigs County
Council of Parents and
Teachers, announced the Feb. 4
meeting to be held at Bradbury.
She also explained the cultural
art exhibit which will be
featured at the May 6 meeting
of the Council at the Letart
Falls School and urged participatiOn in the 10 categories by
the elementary children.
Mrs.
Edward Kennedy
opened the meeting with the
pledge to the flag. Devotions
from St. John 11 were given by
the Rev. William Airson. The
sixth grade received the attendance banner.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Gerald Pullins, Mrs.
Eugene Gill, Mrs. Harry Clark,
Mrs. Ronald Browning, Mrs.
Oscar Smith, Mrs. Norman
Hysell, Mrs. Herschel McClure,
Mrs. Joe Lawrence , Mrs.
James Haggy, Mrs. Seldon
Baker, and John Lisle .

Circle Dines Potluck
Kaspar , Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Reibel, Mrs. W. H. Perrin, Mrs.
Reino Lind, and Lai Ling, the
Chinese girl in Hong Kong
sponsored by the church.
Arrangements were made for
cards to be sent to several
members of the congregation
who are ill. Mrs. Carl Kautz
reminded members of the
planning meeting for guild
activities to be held t the
church at 1 p.m. on Jan . 26.
Anyone interested is welcome,
she said, and all groups should
be represented.
Facing the New Year with
Wisdom was the program topic
of Mrs. Mora. Miss Mary
Virginia Reibel gave each
member a copy of a recipe for
the New Year which she had
prepared.

OPEN DAILY
8:00AM to 10:00 PM
Sunday 10:30 AM
to 12:30 PM and
5:00 to 9:00PM
Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohse, Kenneth
McCullough, and Charles Riffle are your
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
Rexall Drugs. They
have low prescription
prices and
prompt
service and discount
drug prices seven days
a week. Let us serve you
for all your prescription
and drug needs.

Let us supply your
vitamin needs

Whether you're a youngster or a
Senior Citizen, you can count on us
to stock the finest in vitamin products
to help keep you in the best of health!
If you ' re a newcomer to our community, come in and get acquainted

Auxiliary Officers Installed

with us!

Jane Garnes. Refreshments
were served during a concluding social holll' by Mrs.
Maxine Dyer with Mrs. Eads as
the co-hostess. Next meeting
will be held on Feb. 16 with Mrs.
Margaret Edwards to provide
the traveling prize and Mrs.
Foley and Mrs. Jackie Gaddis
to serve the refreshments.

Mason Furniture Continues January Sale!

Officers Elected

New Officers Named

Save A Big

20%

OFF

In Our January

Purchases Planned

Meigs Co. Branch

DON'T BE FAT

MONADEX will help you lose weight. MONAD EX is a tiny tablet
and easi l y swallowed . Start losing weight n ow . Contains no
dangerous drugs and does not make you nervous. MONADEX
reduces your desire for excess food . Helps you ea t less - so you
weigh less . For your health's sake- get rid of excess fat. You
must lose ugly fat or your money will be refunded by your
druggis t with no questions asked . MONADEX costs $3.00 and is
so ld with this guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohse Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store - Middleport - Mail Orders Filled.

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

We Specialize in Home
Loans
and
Home
Improvement Loans.

r.·=--:

I.Miii:j·j:lfl
•.. .J

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

ih-,Ki\1.'\l\ GRATE

MASON, W.VA.

�~

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 21, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
...

W A N T AD
RESOLUTION
NO. 410
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
RESOLUTION
(VILLAGE)
A RESOLUTION to make
appropriations for Current
Expenses and other
Ex
penditures of the Village of
Pomeroy, State of Ohio, during
the
fiscal
year
ending
December 31, 1971.
Section 1. BE IT RESOLVED
by the Council for the Village of
Pomeroy. State of Ohio, That, to
provide for the current ex
penses and other expenditures
of the said Village of Pomeroy
during the fiscal year ending
December
31,
1971,
the
following sums be and they are
tlereby set aside and ap.
propriated as follows, viz :
Section 2. That there be ap.
propriated from the GENERAL
FUND:
GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICES
MAYOR
Personal Services
$1,200.00
Total for Mayor
1,200.00
Clerk·Cierk Treasurer
Personal Services
900.00
Total for Clerk
Clerk.Treasurer
900.00
TREASURER
Personal Services
360.00
Total for Treasurer
360.00
. SOLICITOR-LEGAL
AD ·
VISOR
Personal Services
2,000.00
Total for Solicitor -Legal
Advisor
2,000.00
COUNCIL
Personal Ser·1 ices
720.00
Total for Council
720:00
GENERAL
A D
MINISTRATION
Personal Services
3,600.00
Supplies and Materials 1,200.00
1,000.00
Capital Outlay
Other
7,004.00
Total for General
Administration
12,804.00
Total for General Govern.
mental
Services
16,374 00
SECURITY OF PERSONS
AND
PROPERTY
POLICE DEPARTMENT
~rsonal Services
37,000.00
Other
14.600.00
Total for Police
Department
51,600.00
FIRE DEPARTMENT
Personal Services
1,300.00
Supplies and
Materials
1,500 00
Capital Outlay
6,500.00
Other
2,160.00
Total for Fire
Department
11,460.00
Total for Security of
Persons and Property
63,060.00
STREET DEPT.
Personal Services
14,000.00
Supplies and
Materials
5.000.00
Capital Outlay
6,000.00
Other
20,000.00
Total for Street
Dept.
45,000.00
Total for Street Construction,
Maintenance and Repair
Fund
45,000.00
STATE HIGHWAY IMP.
Personal Services
500.00
Other
1,000.00
Total for State
Highway Imp.
1,500.00
Total for State Highway
Improvement Fl'nd
1.500.00
PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICES
CEMETERY
OPERATION
AND MA,INTENANCE
7,500.00
PfrjQI}i!l ervices

S~p~! &amp;Frtl

Materials
1,400.00
Total for Cemetery Operation
and Maintenance
8,900.00
WATER PUMPING (Plant)
Personal Services
23,000.00
Supplies and
Materials
9,000.00
Total for Water
Pumping
32,003.00
WATER DISTRIBUTION
Personal Services
12,000.00
Supplies and
Materia Is
11,000.00
Other
9.400.00
Total for Water
Distribution
32,400.00
Total for Water System
Operation
64,400.00
ADMINISTRATION
WA TER
Personal Services
2,000.00
Debt Service
44,000.00
Total for Administration Water
46,000.00
WATER
IMPROVEMENT
Capita l Outlay
220, 100.00
Tota l for Water
Improvement
220,000.00
Total for AdministrationWater
286,000.00
Total for Water !Revenue)
Fund
330,400.00
SEWER MAINTENANCE
Personal Services
7,500.00
Supplies and
Materials
6,500.00
Total for Sewer
Maintenance
14,000.00
ADMIN 1ST RATION
SEWAGE
Personal Services
1,880.00
Supplies and
Materials
1.000.00
Debt Service
31,000.00
Total for Administration 33,880.00
Sewage
Total for Sewer (Revenue)
Fund
47,880.00
That there be appropriated
from the GENERAL BOND
RETIREMENT FUND
Payment of
Principal
11,000.00
Payment of
Interest
4,815 00
That there be appropriated
from
the
SPEC I AL
ASSESSMENT
BOND
RETIREMENT FUND
Payment of
Principal
6,000.00
Payment of
Interest
393.82
Tota l for Specia l
Assessment Bond
Retirement Fund
6,393.82
ADDITIONAL FUNDS
That there be appropriated
from the UTILITY FUND
Other
13,000 00
Total for Ut lily
Fund
13,00000
SANITARY SEWER CONST
Other
68,000.00
Tota l for Sanitary Sewer
Cons! .
68,000 00
Tota l All
Appropriations
596,312.82
Plus
900.00
Tota l
597,212 .82
Section 17 . And the Village
Clerk is hereby authorized to
draw his warrants on the
Village Treasurer for payments
from any of the foregoing ap.
propriations upon receiving
proper
certificates
and
vouchers therefor. approved by
the board or officers authorized
by law to approve the same, or
&lt;1n ordinance or resolution of
co un ci l to make the ex

We talk

t~ 1ou

like a person.

WMP0/1390

penditures ; provided that no
warrants shall be drawn or paid
for salaries or wages except to
persons employed by authority
of and in accordance with law or
ordin&lt;~nce
Provided further
that the appropriations for
contingencies can only be ex pended upon iippeal of two
thirds vote of Council for items
of expense constituting a legal
obligation against the village,
and for purposes other lh&lt;~n
those covered by the other
specific appropri&lt;~tions herein
made
Section lB . This resolution
sha II take effect at the earliest
period allowed by law.
Donald Collins
President of Council
Passed Jan. 4, 1971
Attest: Jane Walton
Clerk of Council
( 1 l 21 . 28, 2tc

ORDINANCE NO.
971-71
An

ordinance to establish
jobs &lt;~nd wage rates,
and establishing legal holidays,
vacations and sick leave.
Be it ordained by the Council
of the Village of Middleport as
follows.
SECTION
1:
That
the
following wage seale is hereby
adopted for employees of the
Village of Middleport :
Chief of
Police
400.00 per month
Regular
Patrol man
354.00 per month
Extra
Pol ice
1.70 per hour
Supervisor of Village
Maintenance 570.00 per month
Vill&lt;~ge

Street Employees:
(40 hour week) :
3 years
service
1. 78 per hour
2 years
service
1. 70 per hour
1 years
service
1.60 per hour
OVERTIME:
3 years
service
1.85 per hour
2 years
service
1.77 per hour
1 years
service
1.67 per hour
Pool and Park
Director
350.00 per month
Head Lifeguard
1.30 per hour
Lifeguards
.80 per hour
Secretary to
Mayor
200.00 per month
Extra Clerical
Help
1.55 per hour
Clerk, Cemetery
Trustees
55.00 per month
Volunteer
Firemen
12.00 per year
Councilman (not to exceed
24 meetings) 4.00 per meeting

Bo~~~ ~~!s~~~~t ~~aei~~eed
c,!;r:e~~~rgdsJ0 /'~~~~~~ meeting

Affairs
325.00 per month
Extra Clerical Help (Board of
Public Affairs) 1.57 per hour
Dispatcher
35 oo per month
Clerk of Water
Department
1.73 per hour
Water Meter Readers
&amp; Repairmen (llh times
over 40 hours)
2.30 per hour
Apprentice. Water Dept. or
Sanitary Sewer 2.00 per hour
Cone or more years
service)
2.15 per hour
Water Department
Extra help
1.73 per hour
Ournp
ndant
1.60 per hour
Mecha ia
2.10 per hour
Custodi n
25.00 per month
Cemetery
Sexton
50.00 per month
Relief
Dispatcher
1.56 per hour
Heavy Equipment
Operator
2.05 per hour
All extra hours to be approved
at Regular Hourly rate unless
specified
SECTION 2: That secretarial,
clerica l and -or bookkeep i ng
record keeping hourly em.
ployees b e employed at a
maximum of 35 hours per week,
except for any emergency that
shall arise, said emergency of
extra hours to be approved by
Council.
SECTIO N 3: T he following
are hereby declared as legal
hoi idays for the employees of
the Village of Middleport : New
Year's Day ; Memorial Day ;
Independence Day; Labor Day;
Thanksgiving Day; Christmas
Day .
SECTION 4: Each full time
emp loyee of the Village shall be
entitled to si ck l ea ve in the
amount of one and one fourth
(H. l days per month, and shall
be entitled to accrue said sick
leave up to ninety days.
SECT ION 5: Each full time
emp loyee of the Village, in ·
eluding full time hourly rate
emp loyees, shall be entitled
during each year after the first
year to two -weeks vacation,
excluding legal holidays, with
pay. Emp loyees with fifteen or
more years service shall be
enti tl ed to thr ee w eeks vacation
with pay each year.
SECT ION 6: All Ordinances
in conflic t with thi s Ordinance
are hereby repeilled .

INF O ~ MAT I ON

DE AD LI NES
,
._
s P .M. Day Before Publication
N.onday Deadlin~ 9 a.m
Cancellation &amp; Correction s
Will be·eccepted unt i 9 ~.m. tor
Day of Publication
REGULATI ON S '~
The Publisher reserves th~
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
obfectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
inserti6n.
RATES
For Want Ad Ser~~:ice
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum "Cha-rge 75c12 cents per w ord three
consecutive insertion$.
18 cents per word six c on.
secutive insertions.
,
25 Per cent Discount on paid•
ads and ads paid withi n 10 da ys.
CARD OF THA N KS
&amp; OBITUA RY
$1.50 for 50 word· m inlnnum.
Each additional word ~c.
'
BLIND A DS
Additional 25c Cl'large per
Advertisement.
qFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

For Sa le

HOUSEWIVES:
Beeline
Fttshions wi II supplement
your f amily's income and
ward r ob e. Highest com
mission. Up to $300 samples.
Cal l 949-3703 or Gallipolis 446
4146.
1-21-3tc

NICE lot, 40xl25 feet. Mid
dleport. Phone 992-5251.
1·5-tfc

Male Help Wanted
EMPLOYED man. Repair
t ypewriters
part
time.
Training furnished. Local
interview. Write Regional
Manager, Box 25, Glenshaw,
• Pa. 15116.
1-10-12tp

GET
'EM NOW

..

J,

POME R OY
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Ph one 992-2181

Notice

For Rent

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

and take to auct~Q.n ()n a
percentage basis : Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer. Rutl!!nd .
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc

Jt1o MOD~L, 12X60 trailer. Gas
heated, completely furnished,
like new. Large patio, nice
I ocat ion. Ph one 949-2261.
Albert Hill, Racine.
1·20-6tc

DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949-4761.
10' 18·tfc
- - - - - - - - - - - - -d-WILL GIVE piano an organ
lessons in my home. Phone
992-3666.

50X12 MOBILE home, 2·
bedroom, completely fur l)ished, Middleport. Phone
992•7094.

INCOME TAX service, "'~ail~
except Sunday. Eveoints by
appointment only. Pb~ 992: •
2272. Mrs. Wanda, Ebtm, ~
located on Rt. 7 byl)ass, one ......_
mile south of fairgrounds. . . . .

217 s.
Phone
1-19-Jtc

WALNUT finish stereo, 4 speed
intermixed
changer ,
4
speaker
sound
system .
Balance $63.79. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
1-21-6tc

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GU ARAN T EEDPhone 992-2094
From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

ATTENTION TO THOSE PEOPLE WHO -

(1) Rent Homes, Mob ile Homes, or Apa rtm ents

(2) Own Mobi le Homes a nd w ould l ike to ow n a Hom e
(3) Li ve in Sub-Standard Housing
IN COMES OFS4,000 t o59,000 PER Y EAR
Let us show you how you can own your own new home and
probably pay no more than you are paying now. In most
cases pay less.
CONTACT: G R E EN HILL HOM E S, INC.
T OM CROW
OR
DAL E D UTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone992·3106 Day
992-2580 N ight
992-2534 N ight

Real Estate For Sale

LOTS WITH all utilities.
Restricted subdivision. 1!2 to
2-acre lots. Phone Chester
985-3301, night 985-3302.
1·6-tfc
LOT IN Bradbury, Phone 9925404.
1-19-6tc

JOHNSON MASONRY, Commercia l
or
residential
remodeling. Brick, block,
stone, cement work, garages,
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
Free estimates. Jim , Larry,
Jake. 992-7044.
1·7-30tc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
TEN NA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc

---------------6-ROOM house, bath . Phone 992- ---------------NEIGLER Construction. For
NEWHOME?
3 and 4 Bedrooms
Built to your specifications.
Sites available now.

INo Down Payment
Monthly Payments
Lower Than Rent
Contact: Mr. Moody, Ph. 9927034 at our field office at
Park &amp; Sycamore in Mid·
dleport.
JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
Formerly Kissell Associates,
Inc.
Ph. 1-262·1531

Cleland Realty

Real Estate For Sale

building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc

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

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12 tfc
WHEEL Horse Sales and
Service.
Baum
Lumber
Company, Chester, Ohio .
Phone 985 -3301.
5-20-tfc

For Rent or Sa le
CAMPERS and travel trailers.
Don't buy until you see our
new l ine Coming in February.
Wha t a surprise! You pick it
out, we ' ll put it on sale. Gaul
Trailer Sales, Inc. , One-half
mile north of Chester, Oh io off
Rt. 7,watch for sign. Yes, WE
RENT campers and travel
trailers. Phone 614-985-3832
for full information.
1-17-l2tc

For Sale or Trade
1954 GMC lhton truck. 1955
Dodge 1!2-ton truck. Will sel l
or trade. Phone 742-3633.
1-15-6tc

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - , MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A
,
GEM LOTS OF WORK
~ale
DONE ON THIS ONE 2
1~·31·30k
•
story frame, 2 baths, 4
l b!TERNATIONAL hot water
bedrooms, garage. GOOD 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
• boiler alld stoker. Complete
LOCATION. GOING AT JUST
DR. G. K.
~ith gauges and pumps,_$200.
p~wer brakes, air, 18,000
$7,950.
Phone Ripley 372-8392.
miles. Excellent condition.
POMEROY ABOUT ONEGrade A Dairy
Phone 992-2288.
1-15-6tc
THIRD ACRE story
220 acre farm situated near
11-10-tfc
frame, bath, 3 bedrooms,
Middleport, Ohio with beautiful
basement ,
CLOSE
TO
DENTIST
10 rooms and 11!2 bath home.
1963
MERCURY
Comet,
good
SHOPPING- $6,500.
condition. See at Larry Curtis
Huge Grade A dairy farm with
TOBUYORSELLCONTACT
Has Opened A NeW
home, Long Bottom , Ohio.
1-14· 12tp attached milk house. Grade A
1-19-5tc
Chore Boy milking equipment
FARMS NEEDED
with 300 gallon stainless steel HENRY CLELAND REALTOR
1960
FORD
pickup
truck,
J/4 ton,
Office 992-2259
milk tank. 5,000 bale hay loft.
heavy duty, new paint job.
Residence
992-2568
Drilled well for house and for
1024 Second Ave.
Good
condition.
1966
1·17-6tc
barn. Concrete barn yard. 12x35
GALLIPOLIS
Volkswagen. Good condition.
silo and other out buildings. A
Phone 742-4211 days, 742 -5501
Ph. 446-4144
real buy. Call Bill Stewart 374·
nights.
KlNMO~ 1: Automatic Washer . 7311 co llect or office 373-6787.
1· 19·6tc
Reason for selling is that I
373·6787
• have 2 automatic washers.
1964
OLDS
Cutlass,
4-speed,
317 Third Street
Evelyn Gibbons Sweet, 144
1969 Chevy engine, mags, sun
41!2-MONTH old tan and white
Marietta, Ohio
tach. Phone 992-3571.
beagle pup, Keno vicinity. • Hudson St., Middleport, Ohio.
Bett
y
Dew
373-1093
•
Phone
992-2906.
Phone Chester 985-4162.
1-21 -6tc
l·19-6tp
REAL'fOR
~~~---------1-21-3tp
Broker
1955 DODGE pickup truck, 112.
110 Mechanic St.
ton, good shape, $200. Phone
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7303.
RURAL- 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms ,
1-20-3tc
OLD ~.PRIGHT pianj)s, , a~y
bath, well water, garage, out
cond1t10n, as long as have noj
cellar.
$7,000.00
NEW
t&gt;:en wet. Paying $10 each.
LISTING
F1rst floor only. Mondays will
AKC REGISTERED black toy
be pick-up d.;~y. Write, givi{lg '
RUTLAND - 2 bedrooms, bath,
poodle. Phone 949-3621.
· Witfi tl'ie sales of Dodge &amp; American Motors
good directions. Witten P'iaoo
modern kitchen, double steel ____________1_·....:.
19-3tc
Company, Box 188, S.irdis,
sink, living room 15 x 20, n ice
New Cars going like wildfire, along with the
Ohio 43946.
lot
.
NEW
LISTING
IRISH SETTER puppies. For
TV sets, sheriffs badges, decals, etc.
8-20-tfc
love and show. Champion
giveways, our used car lot is piling up with
POMEROY - modern 7 rooms,
blood lines. Call Christie,
GOOD QUALITY 50-pound
3 bedrooms large living room
shar~:t, late-model, one owner trades. Along
Athens 593-7542.
feeder pigs. Direct from
with fireplace, modern birch
1-20-7tc
with the snow this makes for much needed
producer. Pickens Farm
kitchen with electric range
Reedsville, Ohio. Phone 3?'8~
room, so we're going to try and clear the lot
and refrigerator, 1112 baths,
6289.
double garage,
2
lots .
with specia l prices on the used car of your
1-17-6tc
$21 ,000.00 .

For

BOB DEW

REALTY

I
N

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

Middleport, 0 .

2 BEDROOM house, only few
years old. Carpeted, drapes,
fu l l basement, new carport.
Phone Racine 949-3801.
1-21·3tc

1-10·12tc

POWER-VAC
Ceaning System

606 E. Main, Pom eroy, 0.

AIR CONDITIONING. Re.
frigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

2371.

DON'T WAIT

CHASEL ocu
HARDWARE
st St.

Pomeroy

HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992. 2293.
10-25-tfc

~-

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

BLAmNARS
Ph. 992-2143

COLONIAL Maple Stereo-radio
combination, AM, FM radio, 4 POMEROY ABOVE THE
speaker sound system , 4
AVERAGE- 5 room frame,
speed changer, separate
2 bedroom, bath, NICE
controls. Balance $74.59. Use
CONDITION -$4/~.SO.
our budget terms. Call 992·
3352.
POMEROY - 3 front lots, new
1-21-6tc
business room on the 4th lot in
rear, East Main Street $6,500.

•

BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pul lins. Phone
992·2478.
11·29-tfc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
.,.
Phone 949-3821
~
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5- 1-tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Phone
John Russell, Gallipolis 446·
4782 after 5:30 p . nn.
4·7-tfc

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

SEWI NG MACH I NES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and •
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

BOUKKEEPING serv1ce, Mr-,.
Marvin King, lf2.mile north on
Rt. 33. Phone 992 -3762. Weekdays 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Saturdays 9 a.m. to noon.
Evenings by appointment.
12-15-tfc
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
livered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free •
estimates. Phone 992·3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co. ,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6·15-tfc

Auto Sales

JANUARY

c.

•

AMStiARY

us

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

DENTAL OFFICE

VIRGIL B. ------------------TEAFORD,

Lost

SR.

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

------------------Wanted To Buy

---------------Pets For Sale

"'.

---

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

choice. Here we go, pardner

·. J9~9 Ply mouth Fury I, 4 dr. sedan, 318
. Y-tJ, t-flite, p. steering, former police
cruiser, but at this price you can't go
wrong.
$895
1968 Dodge Charger, 2 dr. h. top, 383 V'.8, t -flite, p. steering, console, bucket
s~ats. Sharp one-owner.
$2095
1969 _Ford Torino GT, 2 dr. h. top, p.
... steermg, p. brakes, automatic, ready
• ·. to go at only
$2195
~'967 _Dodqe M onaco, 4 dr. sedan, p.
st~ermg, p. brakes, t-flite, 41,000
.1rl 1les, one-owner.
$1895
•
1967 Dodge Coronet 4 dr. sedan, 383 V8, p. ~teering, former sheriff's cruiser,
but .here again look at the price,
.{ sp~r-a l at
$595
·· 1969 Plymouth Fury I ll, 4 dr. sedan,
20,000 miles, p. steering, t -flite, factory
~~r, very sharp.
$2495

NOTICE ON F11.1NG
OF I NVENTORY ·
AND APPRIASEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County. Probate Court
To the Executor or A.(! .
min istrator of the estate ; to
such of the followlAg as are
rt:sidents of th~ State of Ohip,
VIZ : - the.surv1ving spou~e, t).lt
next of k1n •. the . beneficlllq_e!J
under the w111 ; and to -tt}e "t .
torney
or
attorneys
representing
any
of
the
aforementioned persons·
HOMER LOVETT t No. 20408,
Lebanon Twp., Meigs co., Obio.
You are hereby notif~ed thiH
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
prai sement of the estate Of tt\e
aforementioned, deceased, late
of said County , was filed in this
Cour t . Sai d Inventory and
Appraisement wiU be · fo r
hearing before this Cburt:6n the
1st. day of Feb., 1971', at 10:'00
o'clock A .M.
~
Any person desiring to file
exceptions thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Given under my hand.,.bnd' ,
sea l of said Court, this 12th . day
• ·
F. H. O'Brien of Jan . 1971.
F. H. O'Brien'
Judge and ex -officio
Judge and ex .officio
Clerk of said court
Clerk of said Court
By Janet E . Morris
Deputy Clerk
I 1) 21. 28, 21c

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

Country Squire
MUD&amp; SNOW T IRES
All sizes in stock. Lowest
prices. Free installation . We
do studding.

Help

w

•
Business .ServiceL ]

[

Ray Hummel
Says:

OftiVERS NEEDED. We train COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
you to be a semi driver, local
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
and
city
training
now
4-9-tfc
available. Earn over S4.50 an
hbur after short training. For
appl ication and interview, ONE COUCH, 3 piece table set,
2 lamps- all for $99.95. One
~all
513·863-6404, or write
couch, 2 chairs, 3 piece table
Sheri~an Truck Lines, 1255
set, 2 lamps- all for $169.95.
Corwii'l Ave., Hamilton, Ohio
45()15 .•
Parson's
Furniture and
BAND AT Red's CluiJ in Mason,
Appliance Store, 2 miles north
1-18·4tc
Gail Lane and tfle T~ C.
of Silver Memorial Bridge on
Playboys. Dance, Friday 9 -----~--Rt. 7. "Out Our Way, We Deal
HOUSI:KEEPER
needed.
Live
p. m . to 2 a.m. and Saturday, 9
Your Way."
in
if
desired.
Good
working
p.m. to 1:30 a.m. All members
1-20-3tc
conditions. Phone 992-5251.
and guests welcome.
1·19-tfc
1-21-2tc:
1970 TAG-A-LONG 20' self
~....;;;._--;----contained travel trailer. Like
V.F.W.GunShoot, Sunaay,.J&lt;~n.
new. Call Virgil Walker,
24, noon, at the Broad Run ~
Racine, Ohio. Phone 949-2599.
Gun Club, New Havel), W.
3 ROOM downstairs furnished
1·20-6tc
Va., sponsored by Stewart .., apartment. Phone 742-5032.
Johnson Post 9926, MasOn, W: "
l-18-3tc
Va.
1970 DIAL 'N SEW Zig-Zag
Sewing Machine left in
1-1l-3tc FURNISHED and unfurnished
layaway. Beautiful pastel
apartments. Close to school.
color, full size model. All
SHOOTING Match . Trap and
Phone 992-5434.
buill -in to buttonhole, overStill
targets.
Sunday,
10-18-tfc
cas! and fancy stitch. Pay just
January 24, 12:30 p.m.
$48.75
cash
or
terms
Rutland Gun Club. Two 112 FURNISH ED apartment, 3
hogs.
·
arranged. Trade - ins acrooms and bath, private
cepted. Phone 992 5641.
1·20-4fc
entrance, nice yard. 211112 N.
l-19-6tc
WILL
DO
sewing
anc;t
3rd, Middleport, Ohio. Phone
alterations, 1151!2 W. Second
992-2780 or 992-3432 .
VACUUM Cleaner brand new
St., Pomeroy.
1·21-tfc
1970 model. Complete with all
________.....__1...!.8E..·1 ~""':-a·so.:..R_OO_MS-',
'--a_n_d_b_a_t_h_u_n-fu_r_n-ished
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. W i ll take
GUN SHOOT, sunday, Jan. 24, 1
house, 1650 Lincoln Hts .
$27 cash or terms if desired.
p.m. Mile Hill Road. ~~f:
Phone 992·3874.
Phone 992-5641.
11-15-tfc
bacon, half hog. Sponsore~ bY' h.
1·19-6tc
Racine Fire Oept.
'
2 BEDROOM house, central
1-21-3t(:
heating, nice yard, $65 month. UPRIGHT piano. Excellent
"condition. Phone Syracuse
1663 Lincoln Hgts. Phone 992ATTENTION ladies! Wo'VId ?wlol
Nursing Home 992-3707 any
3381
or
992-3453.
like to try a wig bft Jn the
time.
1
1
10
privacy of your own hom~?
· · 2tp
1-21-3tp
y
J t
11
1
h ou c:hn. M~skcOa uKs. e a so N-ew MOBILE home. Adults
FOR "A Job Well Done"
ave e '"
il osmetics,
only. Phone 992·5592.
Koscot, of course. Ois·
feeling , clean carpets with
tri butors, Brown's . F'hone
1-7-tfc
Blue Lustre. Rent electric
shampooer, $1. Baker Fur·
Middleport 992-5113. ;_ :tfc '8 ROOM house, Jlh-bath,
1 31
niture, Middleport.
"' garage, Pomeroy. Phone 9921-21-6tc
WILL PICK up merchandise .
lt398 or 949-4780.

SECT ION 7: This Ordinance
sha ll take effect and be in for ce
from and after January 1, 1971
Passed th e 11th day of
January 1971
John w . Zerkle
President of Council
Attest: Gene Grate
Clerk
OLD furniture, dishes·, brass
I 1l 21. 28, 2tc
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Calf
992 6271.

NOTIC E ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County . Probate Court
To the Execu 1or or Ad·
min istrator of the estate; to
such of th e following as are
residents of th e State of Ohio.
viz : - th e surviving spou se, th e
next of kin. the benefi c iaries
under the will ; and to the at.
torney or attorneys represening
any of the aforementioned
persons :
Hazel E. Clark, Syrac use,
Meigs County , Ohio, No . 20,293
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased, late
of said County , wa s fil ed in this
Cour t
Said Inv en to ry and
Appraisemen t will be for
hearing before this Court on th e
8th day of Febr uary. 1971, at
10 : 00 o'c lock A.M.
Any person desiring to file
excep ti ons th ereto must fil e
them at least five days prior to
th e date set for hearing .
Given under my hand and
sea l of said Court, thi s 19th day
of January 1971

Female Hel p Wanted

POMEROY 8 rooms, nice
bath, large living room, dry
basement, good gas forced air
furnace , 1112 acres, only
$5,000.00.
Helen Teaford,
Associate
992-3325
992·2378
1-15-6tc

sell anything fo
anybody Including co
plele estates. Sale e
Saturday
evening,
o'clock, corner of Third
Olive Sts. For Picku
Service Call ...

For Sale
LIME SPREADER and brush
hog. Phone 247-2161.
1-17-5tc

KNOnS
AUCTION
446-2917

Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps
Auto.
water
le-vel
cogtrol.
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator
Perm a- Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat. No hot spots ,
no
overdrying.
Fine Mesh Lint
Fi lter .
We Specealize in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE
992-2151-992-2152

742-4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0.

Best Deals Now
69 Chevrolet s2489
Townsman Station Wagon,
327 eng., P.S., Powerglide
trans. , elec. power tailgate,
air deflection, radio, like
new w-s-w , black vinyl int.,
with medium blue exterior.

66 Pontiac $1295
GTO Cpe ., white finish, vinyl
interior, 4 speed trans. , good
W·W tires, radio &amp; heater.

66

Chev~et

s1495

S.S . Impala, H. T. Cpe.,
power steering, automatic
trans. , blk. vinyl bucket seat
&amp; console, 327 V-B engine,
good tires, beautiful gold
finish.

66 Ford

S995

Falcon 2 dr. , 6 cyl. std .
trans., all good tires, smart
looking copper finish, radio.
Real economy in this car.

66 Ford

s1095

Galaxi HT Cpe., 6 cyl.
engine, std. trans. , air
conditioning, good tires,
clean interior, dark green
finish.

65 Pontiac $1095
Tempest St. Wagon, local 1
owner, low mi leage car, V 8
engine, automatic trans.,
power steering, non-slip rear
axle, vinyl interior like new,
light blue finish, radio. Save
Today.

65 Corvair

f695

64 Pontiac

5

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 .

495

H.T. Sed., spotless interior,
good tires, radio, heater,
automatic &amp; p. steering.
Priced to move.

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.
Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til8
992-2126
Pomeroy

•

�.EEK AND MEEK

WAKE UP,

CAUTI~

PAW!~

REVENOOERS!!

•

CNJ

D\.RJJ WElL PROCEED
UJt11-\CXJT ME!

•

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

®

From

time

immemorial,
Man has

lusted

for the

.~urage­

giVI~seeds

of t..he

-only to be
beaten up
by this

..

most

brutal
belterofthe

botanical
world-··

Doifatch
stun-

flower·~

•

WINNIE WINKLE

® MON51EUR 5'\LLANT.E1
MAY WE VISIT il1E
SITE OF OUR NE:W
10P FLIGHT oHOP ?

HERE IN NEW ORLEANB1
PLEA&amp;URE AND

COMFORT COME
BEFORE ~NEY.

PRESSING
ROOM

•
Beck11 were re6tleG:&gt;
all niqht! lhouqht
~he miqhta' kep'
LJOU awake!

•

•

THE BORN LOSER
~ON'S 1/JE:ATI-I~

CALLS

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

lUR!o»~

50C&gt;iN R..URRIES UJ
ll1G

,A.FTE;R~!

DAILY CROSSWORD

•

SO NOW,
DAI-ILINKS,
MEET

NONO KOOSl-fNA!
A'IE Vi!'&lt;NT TO
BE AI-ILONE? 1\.10?

AH, 'lOUR AMERICAN
MEN!
OO,LA,LA!

DOWN
1. Postpone
2. Expunge
3. T. S. Eliot's

ACROSS
1. Stage
setting
6.1nferior
10. Crumble
into dust
11. Possessor
13. Ties the
oxfords
H. Annoy
15. 1nquire
16. Political
patronage
18. Nourished
19. Still
20. Gelid
21. AngloSaxon coin
22. Swiss river
24. Smirk
25. Endure
27. Religious
composition
28. Function
29. Strip of
wood
30. Swab
31. Transgress
32. Abate
35. Notre
Dame's
Parseghian
36. Darjeeling,
e.g.
37. Brown kiwi
38. Mournful
son g
40. Vocal
group
42. John Jacob

"The - -"

(2wds.)
4. Poem
5. Breathe
6. Medicinal
plant
7. Have debts
8. The last
drink:
colloq.
(4 wds.)
9. Daydream
12. Insect
(2wds. l

COl.D€R

wrrnA~CF

WARMltJG,

~ Wl11-l ON!_'{ A 2%
CtlANLG Ck ~IPITATICN.

HIGHT A CEI'ITURY ~GO
THE PHOEBE PHIL SIN
BLUNDERED II'IT~ THESE
TREACHEROUS SEAS
HOMEWARD BOUND'"
AND THERE'S THEM
THAT SWEAR 'THAT SHE
WAS SUNK---OHLY T'
~ RAISfD AGAIN j•
1
~L At\ ~L 'TIL
THE END Q' TIME!!

••

~A

17. Playing ~&gt;&lt;+;:--;=;t.,...P.ffi,'Hrr.;:;.:.ri
card
23. Fruitflavored lllloli""",;,r.-;.~~"1"!!!"!'!'!
thirst
quencher
24. Obtained
25. Fleet
of warYf"sterday's Answer
ships
33. City in
26. Rude
Idaho
27. Shackle
34. Uncovered
29. Prevari39. Deity
cation
41. Barnyard
31. Cubic
fowl
meter

JJlg~~®!!..=~~==

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

OUDES

0

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I II

1-;l.t

LARREY

t

I

WHAT I~E P5YC:HIAT'RI5T
TOL.D Hie&gt; ~"TTEI-JI.

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Prill the SIIPRISE ANSMUere

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to form the aurprise annoer.. •
sucrested by the above cartoon.

I "( I I 1 D rI I

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(~wen

Yeoterday'o

JumbiPo:

SIXTY

Anower1

What lhe henpec~ luuband'• Ufe
"""•-TIED UP IN "NOTS"

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DENTAL MORTAl.

11-IERE'S A CERTAIN VALVE IN
THE EXCHANGE OF EXf'E~IENCE5

43. Hire
44. Jekyll's
alter ego
45. Terminated

•

CAPI'AIN EASY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how to work it :

AXYDLBAAXR
is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A i~&lt;
used !or the three L's, X !or the two O's. etc. Single lette1·s.
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
TPBTUP

•

YRS

JIB

XPDBZP

CYRS
I p K Z V P

C I P

YRVYVC
HZYFYRS.

GQKZC

BR

HZYRL -

KZP

XPDBZP

TQC ·
CIP

-- K R B R N 0 B Q V

Yestt-rda~ 's Cryptoquott&gt;: OPINIONS GROUNDED ON PRE·
JUDICE ARE ALWAYS SUSTAINED WITH THI&lt;; GREAT·
EST VIOLENCE. ·JEFFREY
('f' 19i l King- Ft•:ttun\,:.; Synd:ratf'. In(' .)

;
~:=:=::=:::::;:;.:!ei:L...:...:..:..:-..!.;;:.!.!..1

1--------------J

I SUPPOSE I COULD ADMIT
THAT I'VE EVEN LEARNED A
LITTLE SOMETHING iV\l&lt;'SELF

h-0Q·
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·'

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 21, 1!'171

Charge Week at W ahama ;;~ :::c;:/.:sZ.y

Mrs. Lucy Justis, 68, Racine

MASON - Wahama High
School is humming with activity
during this "Charge Week."
This is also known as "Spirit
Week," a time set aside to inspire the school's basketball
team to greater achievements.
Wednesday was designated as
Hush Day as well as Badge Day.
In compliance, students were
not permitted to speak to any
basketball players. This was
done in order to give players a
chance to concentrate solely on
the sport. In the event a student

did speak he had to forfeit the being sponsored by the
Hush badge he was wearing.
sophomore class. The Jays will
play for dancing.
Today is one planned with
Students will not attend
numerous activities . Students school Friday since this is
are wearing red and white Records Day and only teachers
clothing in observance of Colors will attend school.
Day. Tonight the White Falcons
Saturday another home game
meet the Buffalo Bisons at the
home gymnasium for the will be played when Wahama's
Varsity game at 8 p.m. This will White Falcons play the Meigs
be preceded with a junior Marauders. After this game,
the senior class will sponsor a
varsity game at 6:30 p.m.
and once more the Jays
dance
A dance will follow in the
Wahama gymnasium and is will furnish dance music.

Balances in Funds Reported
Active and inactive village
funds in Pomeroy totaled
$113,652.41 as of Dec. 31, 1970,
Mrs. Jane Walton, clerk,
reported
Monday
night.
Receipts, expendit.u.res
respectively of each ·fUnd and
balance in each as of Dec. 31
include:
General, $4,843.16, $6,361.53,
$4,760.73; boat dock, no
receipts, no expenditures,
$383.88; sewer, $4, 750.86,
$21,706.33, $39,169.71; cemetery,
no receipts, $814.53, $142.89; fire.
department, $1,122.01, $1,629.48,
$3,285.97; street department,
$1,788.95, $1,957.59, $4,308.40;
utility fund, $2,244.01, $855.42,
$12,876.40; state highway,
145.05,
no
expenditures,.

Passenger Hurt
In Dump Truck
Eddie Nelson, 19, Rt. 2
Pomeroy, suffered minor injuries in a traffic accident at 4
p.m. Wednesday on Rt. 7, eight
tenths of a mile north of Rt. 143
in Meigs County. Nelson was a
passenger in a dump truck
operated by Ronald R. Jeffers,
21, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
According to the Gallipolis
Post State Highway Patrol,
Jeffers was driving north when
he braked to stop for a southbound school bus. The brakes
locked, his truck veered out of
control, ran off the highway and
turned over. He was charged
with excess speed for conditions.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Martha
McElroy, Minersville; Ollie
Young, Pomeroy; Chester
Curry, New Haven.
DISCHARGED - Margaret
McKinney, Curtis Rayburn,
Pearl
Darst,
Josephine
Pickens, Charles Neuman,
James Warner, Mary Wingett.
FORECLOSURE ASKED
A suit for money has been
ffied in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by the Tri-County
Bank of Coolville in the amount
of $4,778.52 against Woodrow
and Kathryn Schaffer, Atlanta,
Ga., and Howard Frank, Meigs
County Treasurer in a mortgage foreclosure action.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, January 21
NOT OPEN
Friday thru Tuesday
January 22-26
HELLO, DOLLY!
(Technicolorl
Barbara Streisand
Walter Matthau
G

Running time: 2 Hrs. 45 Min.
1\dmission:
Adults $1.50, Children 75c
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

$301.26; water operating,
$7,867.77. $5,434.67, $10,998.37;
guaranty meter, $50, $241.00,
$3,017.47; water improvement,
no receipts, $700.00, $15.61;
parking meter fund, $1,543.50,
no expenditures, $9,183.25;
sanitary sewer construction, no
receipts, $20,000.00, $12,148.86.
The above funds are active
funds. Total receipts to all
active funds amounted to
$24,355.31 while expenditures
totaled $59,700.55. The balance

of all active funds as of [lee. 31,
1970 amounted to $100,592.80.
Receipts, expenditures and
balances, respectively, in the
inactive funds as of Dec. 31, 1970
were: special street repair bond
retirement, $673,
$3,141,
$1,891.78; bond retirement,
$3,366.01, $13,740.81, $11,167.83.
Total receipts to inactive funds
amounted to $4,039.21, expenditures were $13,772.22 with
a balance of $13,059.61.

Overnight Wire
By United Press International
FLORENCE, KY. -THE GffiLS at Boone County High
School have been liberated, so to speak. They now are permitted
to wear slacks to class. The Boone County school board adopted a
new dress code at their meeting Tuesday night which permits the
girls to wear "appropriate slacks" to the classroom.
The board acted on a proposal submitted last week by a
special parent - pupil - teacher committee. The proposal was
intended to bring the dress code in line with present - day dress
trends.
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO -YOUNGSTOWN Sheet &amp; Tube Co.
has raised its prices on plate and structural steel, following the
lead of larger steel corporations.
Plate steel increased 8.8 per cent, from $6.80 to $7.40 per
hundredweight, and structural steel 7.2 per cent, from $6.90 to
$7.40 per hundredweight. Both products are heavily used by the
construction industry. Bethlehem Steel Corp.'s earlier 12.5 per
cent price hike was criticized by President Nixon as much too
high.
COLUMBUS -STATE AGRICULTURAL Director Gene H.
Abercrombie believes the use of DDT should be controlled, but a
ban on the powerful pesticide would set Ohio farmers "back 15
years." Aberc;ombie, who took office last week under Gov. John
J. Gilligan, said Wednesday a state law restricting the use of DDT
and requiring the licensing of those who sell or buy it were sufficient to stop it from becoming a danger.
"We think the new pesticide law that the legislature gave us is
a good law," Abercrombie said. "Certainly this stuff shouldn't be
sold by anyone and used by anyone.''
WASHINGTON -SENATE DEMOCRATIC Leader Mike
Mansfield today predicted trouble for two of President Nixon's
priority measures - welfare reform and revenue sharing - as
the 92nd Congress opened. The House and Senate were meeting at
noon EST after the Senate selected its Republican and
Democratic leaders for the coming two years. Indications were
the present leadership would be re-elected on both sides.
In the House 434 members - 254 Democrats and 180
Republicans - were to take the oath of office. There is one
vacancy and there are 55 first-term Congressmen. The Senate is
split 55 to 45 in favor of the Democrats and 35 senators are to be
sworn in.
Mansfield listed Social Security increases, the family
assistance plan, revenue sharing and foreign policy among the
dominant issues in the session.
"Social Security, no trouble; revenue sharing, trouble;
family assistance planning, trouble," Mansfield told reporters.
SAN FRANCISCO - THE MASSIVE spill from a ruptured
tanker spread up and down the Pacific coastline today, and
thousands of volunteers struggled to keep gooey black balls of oil
away from the nesting grounds of the rare white egrets and blue
herons.
Cleanup crews aboard barges equipped with vacuum hoses
worked to suck oil from San Francisco Bay, and tidal action
carried great quantities of the heavy bunker oil out the Golden
Gate, where it spread along 60 miles of coastline.

New~;:,:!!! pag~rieft
agriculture department's "price semmar.·
A National Farmers Union official proposed subsidies to
induce farmers to trim the pork surplus selling hogs at light
-.veights. But others said government aid should be limited to
buying surplus pork for the needy, better production forecasts
and help in giving pork a better "image" with housewives.

Are You A Newlywed?

Route 2, died Thursday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She is survived by four
daughters, Mrs. Nelson (Mary)
Watson, Mrs. Ronald (Betty)
Grady, and Mrs. Byrne
(Dorothy ) Greathouse, all of
Racine, and Mrs. Irvin
(Elizabeth ) Gandee, Beloit; a
son, Paul, of Alliance; four
sisters, Mrs. Emma Patton,
Columbus; Mrs. Ruth Betzing,
Akron; Mrs. Marie Michael and
Mrs. Mary Wolfe, both of
Racine; 31 grandchildren, 19
great-grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Preceding her in death were
her parents, Monroe and Carrie
~' caver; her husband, George,
and three grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 3
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Edward Griffith officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

DRIVE TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY FOR THE

JANUARY CLEAN UP SALE
li

-

The store is open both Friday and Saturday nights until 9

·---y~~·-·-·-----~--------~·~·-··r·-·--~~~---------------1

SALE OF GIRLS

GIRLS AND TEENAGERS

GOWNSPAJAMAS •
ROBES

KNIT SETS
Special purchase and sale of
higher priced Tam and Glove
sets · Scarf and Tam sets ·
Toboggan and Glove sets. A
truly fine selection.

A big selection of girls
sleepwear in sizes 3 to 6 and 8
to 16. Warm flanelettes in solid
colors and fancy patterns.
Excellent styles.

10.00 SETSSALE 6.29

You should stop in on the 1st
floor. See the fine line of girls
Pajamas . Robes . Gowns.
Select what you need for your
family and save now.

SALE 4.39
3.50 SETS-

Mrs. Mary Hood
Died on Thursday
Mrs. Mary June Hood, 33,
owner and operator of Mary
June's Beauty Shop in Middleport, died Thursday morning
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Hood is survived by her
husband, Harold E.; four
children, Bernessa Lee, Gene
Parker, Mary Hunter and
Phillip Marshel, all at home;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles P. Williams, Middleport; a sister, Mrs. Charlene
Cochran, Gallipolis; and her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Darst of Cheshire.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Raullin Moyer officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery, Middleport. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime.

2 Sales Planned
Plans for two bake sales, both
on Feb. 13, were made by the
Candystripers Monday evening
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
One sale will be sponsored at
the Davis-Warner Insurance
office in Pomeroy by Meigs
County members while girls
from New Haven and Mason
will hold another at the Ben
Franklin Store in New Haven.
Members are asked to have
donations at the locations by 9
a.m. on the day of the sales.
BLEW THIS ONE
LONDON (UPI) - The
Taurus Horoscope in the
Daily Mail Wednesday - the
day a postal strike halted all
letter deliveries in Britain said "you can expect a letter
of considerable importance."

SALE 2.49
Sale! Womens

6.00

Handbags
An
excellent
selection in black .
navy blue . brown
and the new fashion
colors, shapes and
sizes that you'll want
to buy.

Sale Price 4.49
Be sure to see all the other Womens Handba_9s
nowon sale 1st floor. Make your selection Friday
and Saturday and Save.

skein

Sale Prices!
WOMEN'S

BED PIU.OWS

KNITTING WORSTED

Filled with Dupont 22 oz.
Dacron ( R) Fiberfill. All
cotton broadstripe tick .
Color Blue and White .
Odor-Free, non-allergenic,
plumper.

4 oz.- 4 p lv

1.19

Flannel
Sleepwear

45~
Dacron ( R&gt; Filled

"Tangleproof" - 100 per
cent Virgin Wool. Beautiful
washable colors.

4.49

Skein

each

"Cameo" Easy Care Throws
Non-slip Urethane Foam Back that is practical and useful.
Completely machine washable. Never needs ironing.
Decorative fringe all around. Colors- Brown, Gold, Green,
Melon , Blue.

Long gowns · Shorty gowns
· Baby Doll and regular
style pajamas. Regular
and extra large sizes.
Famous brands such as
Phil Maid · Katz.
Save on what you need now
- ask any of the sales girls
to he lp you find your
correct size and style.

60x72 {Most Chairs) - - - - - - 72x90 {Large Chairs &amp; Davenos)
72x108 (Most Sofas) 72x126 (Extra Large Sofas)

4.95
6.95
7.95

8.95

100% PURE POLYESTER FIBER

SALE!

WOMEN'S ROBES
AND DUSTERS
Short length and full length
robes in a big selection of
styles. Regular and extra
large sizes. Solid pastel
colors. Neat patterns and
stripes.
Lingerie Department . 1st
floor.

New! Hundreds of uses. Ideal for fill ing Pillows,
Cushions, Toys, Crib Bumpers and many others
- Non Allergenic - Non-Flammable.

1-LB.BAG

1.29

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GLIDDEN PAINTS

Just received in Sewing Dept
J.P. Coats Six Strand Flos- all colors
Clark's Big Ball Mercerized Crochet CoHonwhite and colors
- "Red Heart" Sport Yarn -2 oz. 2 ply
·- Crochet and Knitting Needles
- Stretch Lace - Wide and Narrow for Hem
Facing
- Wide Bias Tape Quilt Binding - all colors
- 500 yd. Spool Coats &amp; Clarks Da·essmaker
Spool Mercerized Thread - White &amp; Black

Housewares Dept. 1st floor

Spred Satin Latex Wall Paint
Sale 6.99 Gallon -

2.19 Quart

Spred Latex and Spred Lustre
Semi Gloss Enamel

2.59 Quart

Spred Gloss All Purpose Enamel
Sale 8.99 Gallon- 2.69 Quart
1.49 Pint - 89c 112 Pint

Spred House Paint -

ANOTHER SHIPMENT TRIMS

Included in this group of beautiful trims are Lace-Ciuny
Trim, Imports, Cotton · Venice, Embroideries.
Values up to $1.75 per yard.

Your Choice 25' YARD

VALENTINE CANDY

7.99 Gallon

Spred Urethane F lorenamel
Sale 7.99 Gallon- 2.49 Quart

Endurance House Paint
BAKE SALE FRIDAY
The choir of the Middleport
Church of Christ will hold a
bake sale Friday, beginning at 9
a.m. at the M. and M. Electric
Shop on Mill St.

Open A Checking Account At Pomeroy National Bank

And Receive
WAIVER OF SERVICE CHARGE
(newlyweds for a 6 month period)

Initial Order of 50 PERSONALIZED CHECKS
If you p~esentl y have an account with us and are in one of the above ,
categones, please advise us of your status.

We continue our policy of FREE CH ECK ING ACCOUNT SERVICE
to all Ministers, and Religious and Charitable Organizations.

Pomeroy National Bank
POMEROY
Member Federol Deposit Insurance Corpore lion
All accounts Insured to $20,000.00.

RUTLAND

STORES BURNED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Fire
destroyed a supermarket and
damaged two other stores in the
Lane Shopping Center here late
Wednesday. Initial estimates
set the loss at $200,000. No one
was injured. The fire was
believed to have started from
sparks from an incinerator
inside the Big Bear Supermarket store.
JOCKEY CLUB ELECTS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Jockey Club on Wednesday
returned Ogden Phipps for his
eighth term as chairman,
reelected all other officers, and
admitted to membership
Warner L. Jones Jr. of Kentucky, a director of Churchill
Downs and of Keeneland Race
Track.

.

Poly-fil

Sale 8.99 Gallon -

MEETING CALLED
A meeting of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Assn. has been set for 7:30p.m.
next Thursday, Jan. 28, at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Manning
Kloes, 208 S. Second Ave
Middleport.
.,

75% Rayon 25% Cotton
Use for making Punch needle, Hooked,
Crocheted, Tufted, Woven , Braided Rugs. Crocheted or Knitted bags, Hats, Slippers and
other accessories. Pot holders and Hot plate
mats.
Fast color. Large range of colors.

"Red Heart"

FAIR DATES SET
1
7.98 Robes and D u s t e r s p }"' . f ';'·.'{. .· ' .·'.· ',
The 1971 Meigs County Fair
Sale 5. 99
.~ . ,;: ~\).~ ~ . :·
will be staged Aug. 17 through
5. 98 Robes and Dusters
,, ·~ . ~,, , I
Aug. 21, according to Gene R.
Sale 4.49
,
' ·-'._.~ ~ . ~ "'
Abercrombie, director of the
4.98 Robes and Dusters
,.
Qhio Department of Ag·
Sale 3.79
'
riculture. Mrs. Marvin King, .............-...-...-..-..-..-.-------~·--·---·~------1
January Sale!
Pomeroy Route 2, is the local
fair board secretary.
AUXILIARY TO MEET
A meeting of the Ladies
Auxiliary of Racine American
Legion Post 602 will be held at
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the Legion
Hall.

AUNT LYDIA'S HEAVY RUG YARN

Sale 8.99 Ga llon

Craftsman House Paint
Sa le 6.99 Gallon

Sale In The Men's and Boys' Department
You can save right now on Mens and Boys
Jackets and Coats. There's a good selection of
boys sizes for the small fry and also larger
boys sizes 8 to 18. These Jackets are all
warmly lin ed. Many have hoods. Ideal for
cold weather.
- Mens Jackets are both waist length and the
longer jackets, too. Solid co lors - all with
warm linings . Regular and extra large sizes.
- There's a big sale of Mens and Boys CPO
Jackets, too. Si zes for boys 3 to 7 · 8 to 20. Mens
sizes smal l , medium, large and extra large.
- Stop in · browse around · try on jackets for
boys - for men. You ' ll like the savings during
this January Clean-up Sale.

A big selection of Valentine Candy now ready for
you to buy. Fanny Farmer Boxed Candy in heart
shaped boxes or with special Valentine wrap. It' s
excellent to give - wonderful to receive Fanny
Farmers Candies. Brachs fine candy in
Valentine boxes or cellophane bag.
Stop in on the lst floor. Select your Valentine
candy now.

Be Thrifty! Save All Of Your Saleslips From

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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