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•

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Rescue
workers using jackhanuners, acetylene
torches and cranes pulled more bodies
today from a veterans hospital smashed
into "three floors of compressed concrete"
by the Los Angeles earthquake.
The death toll in California's worst
quake in nearly 40 years rose to 40-23 ~f
them in the twisted wreckage of the hospital which crashed down on 91 patients and
staff when the 'quake struck at dawn
Tuesday.
Two miles away, police ordered 120,000
persons to stay out of their homes below
the Van Norman Dam, cracked in the
massive quake and shaken by hundreds of
subsequent aftershocks.
Nearly 1 000 persons were injured in the
massive t:mblor which shook 300 miles of

....

•

I

California and devastated parts of a 40mile section of the Los Angeles area.
Damage mounted into the hundreds of
millions of dollars.
Gov. Ronald Reagan alerted 10 National
Guard units. Vice President Spiro Agnew,
dispatched to Los Angeles when President
Nixon declared California a disaster area
Tuesday, was to meet with Reagan and
disaster officials today.
Former Interior Secretary Stewart Sdall
blamed the earthquake on "developers
who developed and people who built where
they shouldn't."
"We know where the fault lines lie,"
Udall said at San Jose State College
Tuesday night. "I think some of these
Southern California problems- the floods

Now You Know
One of the country's biggest
earthquakes hit Southern
Missouri in 1811-12, covered
40,000 square miles and was felt
from Canada to the Gulf of
Mexico.

•

eatfut

Co unt Climbing

and fires they've had !L..are environmental
disasters, people&lt;aused. • ·
In Washington, Sen. Alan Cranston, DCalif., said he would press for a full
congressional investigation of the VA
hospttal collapse.
Working all night under the glare of
searchlights, rescue workers at the VA
hospital were "going through three
complete floors of compressed concrete
rubble," a fire department spokesman
said.
Some persons were pulled out -badly
injured but still Rlive- after up to 14 hours
buried in the rubble.
At the badly damaged Van Norman Dam
two miles away, disaster workers frantically pumped out water and said they
were hopeful the dam would hold barring a

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OH 10

Doris Well, fourth grade
teacher at Chester, was appointed to provide home instruction for Bruce Conde, a
student who has a heart
problem.
Frank
Wooters,
band
director, reviewed projects
being carried out by the band
and the band boosters. He noted
that the boosters are purchasing new uniforms and
music stands. The board agreed
to help financially as much as
law permits.
The board agreed to permit
J on
the high school to be
evening each week - prouably
Tuesday for an adult
recreation program. A group
using the building will pay $5 to
defrav heating and lighting

• i---------------------------,
I

:
I

7\.T

1 ~ews

•
B rze
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1
I

By United Press International

1

Cambodian Premier Stricken

•

PH/'1 OM PENH - PREMIER LON NOL suffered a heart
attack Monday night and is paralyzed over half his body, reliable
sources close to the Cambodian government said today. A
government communique said only that Lon Nol had been ordered
to rest and cease all activities and undergo medical treatment.
The sources said Lon Nol, 58, was under treatment at his
home by several physicians including Thong Boyan, head of
Phnom Penh's military hospital, and Gen. Kang Keng, public
health minister and a close friend of the prime minister.

Randolph Thinks He Can Save It

•

•
•

WASHINGTON -SEN. JENNINGS RANDOLPH, D-W. Va.,
predicted Tuesday in a short time he will have 70 senate cosponsored for his bill to extend the Appalachian program another
four years. The economic development subcommittee of Randolph's Senate Public Works Committee is conducting hearings
on the proposed four-year extension instead of one year sought by
the Nixon Administration.
The president has called for absorbing the Appalachian
Regional Development Program and other similar ones across
the country in his proposed revenue sharing proposaL Randolph
said he supports the revenue sharing principle, but added, "we
don't want the Appalachian program to be a victim of revenue
sharing because the Appalachian program is proving itself."

Most Quake Damage Uninsured
LOS ANGEL~ - BECAUSE EARTHQUAKE insurance
costs about twice as much as other insurance, most of the damage
in Tuesday's devastating Southern California temblor probably
was not covered.
Kenneth H. Klee, president of Insurance Brokers. Association
of California, said although several insurance firms offer such
coverage, its cost and a substantial deductible provision made it
unattractive to purchase. He said only one in 10,000 homeowners
has earthquake coverage.

They Just Won't Listen
SAN FRANCISCO -THE EARTHQUAKE that shook the Los
Angeles area Tuesday occurred on a branch of the 650-mile San
Andreas Fault along which masses of Californians continue to live
and build new homes. Scientists have warned again and again of
the dangers of new quakes, but few California home owners have
bought earthquake insurance. The Insurance Information Institution reports that only 10 per cent of the quake insurance is
bought by householders. Comrr.arcial firms buy the rest.
A quake the size of San Francisco's 1906 disaster measuring 8.3 on the Richter Scale - is considered "inevitable"
on the San Andreas Fault by Dr. William Pecora, director of the
(Continued on page 16)

•
•

costs. All adults in the district
are eligible to take part in the
program. Personnel associated
with the school will be named to
be in charge of opening and
closing the building and
supervising on the evenings of
the program.
A new pay scale also was
adopted benefitting substitute
bus drivers, custodians, cooks
and secretaries. Bus drivers on
a substitute basis will be paid
$10 a day, others $1.60 an hour.
Earl Ingles, manager of the
Meigs County Branch of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Assn., explained the
program of the branch
operation to board members.
Roy Holter, a resident of the
district, spoke commending the
board, administrators and

VA Hospital Collapses
Two miles to the east lay the collapsed
wreckage of the San Fernando Veterans
Hospital, where at least 18 died and the
groans of the trapped and dying drifted up
to firemen who frantically chopped holes
in the collapsed roof.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1971

same location, David A. Carter,
28, Pomeroy, swerved his car to
avoid hitting the Carter and
Marshall vehicles, ran off the
highway and into a deep ditch .
Vicky Carter, age four, a
passenger in Carter 's a uto,
sustained minor injuries but
was not immediately treated.
Moderate damage resulted and
no citation was issued .
William J. Armineo, 18,
Belford, N. J ., was cited to
Gallipoli s Municipal Court
following an accident in Gallia
County on Rt :l5, one and three
tenths nules wes t of Ht. 538.

faculty for their work in the
district.
Larry Ritchie, head football
coach, and Carl Doddrill, his
assistant, reviewed the football
program. The board took no
action, but will make football
coaching assignments later in
the year. Bills were approved
for payment.
Others attending the meeting
were Supt. John Riebel,
Principal Bobby Ord, Clerk
Creston Newland, and board
members I. 0. McCoy, Ernest
Whitehead, Don Mora and Oris
Smith. The fifth board member,
Roger Epple, is 2onfined to
Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, with a back
ailment.

By United Press Internnt; mal
Olnoans::; v&gt;&gt;lJ bc 6 &lt;.. '"'~ · · o t ing today as a warming trend
moved into the state and it was
expected to get even warmer
by Thursday,
The national Weather service
said temperatures could climb
as high as the mid 50s in some
areas by Sunday.
Temperatures early today
were ncar the zero mark and
Youngstown recorded a reading

All Funds
At 8169,460
The total of all Middleport
Village funds amounted to
$169,459.64 as of Jan. 31, ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate reports.
Receipts and disbursements
plus the balance in each of the
funds, respectively, follow :
General, $3,412.29, $3,847.17,
$34,301.59; cemetery, $434.22,
$491.47, $834.59; parking meter,
no receipts, no disbursements,
$60.33; fire equipment, $500,
$418.44, $182.13; swimming pool,
no receipts, $6.50, $848.36;
planning comm1ss1on, no
receipts, $14.90, $1,675.39.
Street maintenance, $2,219.16,
$2,000.31, $3,538.70; state highway, $140.77, $41.86, $2,992.60;
s anitary sewer, $3,813.64,
$3,280.94, $25,715.73; water,
$6,010.16, $5,175.41, $22,688.63;
water meter deposit trusts,
$100, $149, $4,996.78; water
construction, no receipts,
$169.37, $8,1 71.25; sanitary
escrow, no receipts, no
disbursements,
$54,034 .90;
general bond retirement, no
receipts, no disburs ements,
$9,418.66.
Receipts for the month
totaled $16,630.24 compared to
disbursements of $15,595.40.

Patrol officers said Armineo in
attempting to pass, struck the
rear of a ca r driven by Carolyn
M. Holley, 24, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Armineo was charged with
passing without caution .
A single car accident was
inves tigated at 9: 20 p .m .
Tuesda} un old Rt. 7 near
Middleport. According to the
patrol , Ka} King, 30, Middleport , lust control of her auto,
ran off the left side of the high·
v.a~
and s truck an em bankJIIenl. She was uninjured .
N11 ('I tal! on was Issued.

of two below.
C1Jl thus and Akron -C'.artu;
had lows of four above and
Zanesville was five above .
Most schools that were closed
Tuesday were reo,Pened today,
and the Ohio Highway Patrol
said all major roads were open
although some county roads
were closed.
Forecasters said
temperatures will slowly moderate
today and tonight but will rise
sharply by late tonight and
through Thursday to begin a
thaw that is expected to last
through the weekend .
The dramatic change will occur as upper level winds change
the flow of air from out of a
cold area in the northwest to
from a warm area to the west
and southwest.
High temperatures today will
range from the mid or upper
teens to the lower 20s today
with tonight's lows in almost
the same range.
The Weather Service said
temperatures would start to rise
by late tonight and will reach
the lower 30s in northern and
central portions of the state's
Thursday and into the lower 40s
in Southern Ohio.
YOUNG: TOP GUN
RUTLAND-U . S. Air Force
Sergeant Ronnie L. Young of
Rutland has been selected
"Gunfighter of the Month" at
Da Nang AB, Vietnam. He was
judged on leadership, initiative,
efforts toward educational
improvement and military
courtesy and conduct as a
communications specialist. A
1968 graduate of Meigs High
School , he enlisted in the Air
Force in February 1969. His
wife, the former Diane
Holliday, is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Holliday, Rt.
1, Dexter.

Weather
Partly cloudy with slowly
moderating temperatures
tonight. Lows in the teens.
Considerable cloudiness, windy
and much warmer Thursday,
highs from the upper 20s
northeast to the mid 40s southeast.

TEN CENTS

·Improvements
In Telephones
•
Planned zn '11
.

.·

Let's Defrost

Child Injured in Accident
A four-year-old child was
slightly injured in two minor
traffic accidents - actually a
single accident - investigated
at 10:54 a .m. Tuesday on county
road 32, five and two tenths
miles east of Rt. 7 in Meigs
County .
State highway patrol officers
said Carla R. Carter , 26 ,
Pomeroy, lost control of her
auto on the icy road and skidded
into an eastbound car driven by
Richard L Marshall, 16, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. There was moderate
damage to both vchides.
Then, within seconds at the

a man-made reservoir behind the 60-yearold dam. The 'quake ripped an 18-inch
crack in the thin concrete shell which
protected the earthlill structure from
waves, and water started leaking out.
"What we're worried about now is
another severe 'quake," said Jolm G.
Cowan, assistant general manager of the
city Water and Power Department. "If
that happens, the whole thing could come
apart."

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Bus Driver Pay Raised
•

Chief Edward M. Davis said he asked
Gov. Ronald Reegan to call out 300
National Guardsmen to guard against
looters but Reagan refused. Ten National
Guard units were placed on "alert,"
however.
11 Persons Arrested
"We have virtually stopped police work
in the city"' Davis said. He said 11 persons

had been arrested for looting already.
The dam appeared to be holding as
rescue workers frantically pumped the
lake out, into a sister lake and then into the
Los Angeles River.
Many of the residents of the area-a
flatland covered with neal checkboards of
ranch-style homes-and voluntarily
moved out during the afternoon. But after
the sun set, some started returning and
police changed their evacuation warnings
to a mandatory order.
Police patrolled the area to prevent
looting. The evacuated families stayed
with friends and relatives or camped at
emergency centers set up at schools and
churches .
Work crews used pumps and spillways to
lower the level of lower Van Norman Lake,

The Daily Sentinel

VOL. XXVI NO. 210

A revised salary schedule for
bus drivers was adopted and a
resolution to advertise for two
new school buses was approved
.Tuesday night by the Eastern
Local School District Board of
Education.
The board agreed that bus
drivers of the district will
receive an additional $50 a year
for each year's service up to six
years, to be added to the present
$1800 base scale. The top increase would be $300 for drivers
who have served six years or
more.
The board agreed to advertise
immediately for one 60passenger and one 66-passengcr
bus. George Kuhn and Warren
Rose were added to the list of
approved
substitute
bus
drivers.

strong new temblor.
' Police told all residents of an 18-squaremile area below the dam to stay out at
least until tonight and possibly longer.
The entire 6,700-man Los Angeles police
force was mobilized on 12-hour shifts to
patrol deserted streets below the dam,
which was cracked wtth fissures up to 18
inches wide.

JEANNE MORGAN
FIRST COUNCILWOMAN
- Mrs. Roger (Jeanne}
Morgan, South Third Ave.,
believed to be the first woman
ever to serve on Middleport
Village Council, was sworn in
by Mayor C. 0. Fisher this
morning. The appointment of
Mrs. Morgan to serve the
unexpired term of Charles
Byer, who resigned effective
Feb. 1, was approved by
council Monday night. The
term will run the remainder
of 1971. Mrs. Morgan has two
children, Keith, a student at
Ohio University, and Kathy,
attending
Ohio
State
University. Mrs. Morgan's
husband served as council
several years ago. She is a
Republican.

General Telephone Co. of
Ohio today announced a $382,300
service improvement and expansion program for a fiveexchange area in Meigs county
during 1971.
Kenley Krinn of Athens,
district commercial manager,
said all exchanges will benefit
from the program. Included are
the exchanges of Pomeroy,
Rutland, Racine, Letart Falls
and Portland.
One of the highlights of the
program will be the construction of a toll relief cable
between the communities of
Pomeroy, Racine and Portland.
Seventeen miles long, the cable
will provide additional long
distance circuits. The job will
cost $62,400 and will be completed during the fourth
quarter.
Pomeroy is scheduled for two
major cable projects. One will
follow old Ohio 33 north to the
fairgrounds. It will provide
additional
facilities
to
customers throughout the area
and will cost $69,300. The other
will cost $27,500 and will cover
the area along Ohio 7, east of the
community.
A $31,300 cable job in Portland
expand
distribution
will
facilities south along Ohio 7 and

Four Forfeited Collections at
Bonds to Court Parking Meters
Total '992.50
Four defendants forfeited
bonds and four others were
fined Tuesday night by Middleport Mayor C. 0 . Fisher.
F or feiting bonds were
Richard E. Rathburn , 24,
Ch eshire, $30, po&amp;~ed for
reckless operation; Robert C.
Rawlings, 23, Mansfield, $25,
running a red light; Jan Durst,
Middleport, $30, disturbing the
peace, and Herbert L. Clark,
Cheshire, $25, speeding.
Fined were Charles Wheeler,
45, West Columbia, $100 and
costs and a three day jail
s e nte nce on conviction of
driving while intoxicated; Sam
McKinney, Middleport, $5 and
costs, disturbing the peace;
Robert M. Newell, 25, Cheshire,
$10 and costs, left of center, and
Roger L. Bush, 22, Gallipolis,
$10 and costs, speeding.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Russell Lewis,
Mason ;
Phyllis
Fultz,
Pomeroy ;
Mary
Little,
Ches hire ; Daniel Lewis,
Middleport.
Two petitions of candidacy
DISCHARGED - Alfred
subject to' the May primary
Sexton, Helen King, Wesley
election in Middleport have
Gregory, Martha Gilmore.
been disqualified by the Meigs
County Board of Elections. The
result is the elimination of a
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad Democratic primary election in
answered a call to Cheshire at that community .
7: 23 p.m. Tuesday night for
Petitions declared invalid are
Mary Little who was suffering
from high blood pressure. She those of H. Joe Denison who had
was taken to Veterans filed as a Democrat candidate
Memorial Hospital where she for mayor and Dono~an Roush
who had filed as a Democrat
was admttted .

Parking meter collections in
Middleport for the month of
January totaled $992.50, Chief of
Police J. J. Cremeans reports.
During January the Middlepor~ Police Department
made 37 arrests including six
for speeding; three, driving
while intoxicated; eight, intoxication; five disturbing the
peace; three, assault and
battery; two, assured clear
distance ;
two ,
reckless
operation; one each on
following too closely ; squealing
tires ; too fast for road conditions; failure to yield right of
way;
disorderly
house;
destruction of property; larceny, and profanity to a police
officer.
The police cruiser was driven
4,658 miles during January.

124. The cable will be buried,
Krinn said, not only to preserve
the natural beauty of the area,
but also to protect the facility
from weather damage.
Another Portland project
costing $16,300 will extend
facilities north along Ohio 7.
Completion is scheduled for late
in the year.
Rutland also is scheduled for
two major cable jobs. One will
go north along Ohio 68, while the
other will follow Ohio 124 west of
the urban area. Total cost of
both projects will exceed

$75,000.
Installation already is morethan half completed on a new
ringing machine in the Letart
Falls exchange. Change~ver is
scheduled during the first
quarter.
Krinn noted that Letart Falls
subscribers will hear a different
dial tone at the time of the
change to the new ringing
machine. It will be a more
precise, electronic-sounding
lone. The ring-back tone (the
sound of the called phone
(Continued on page 16)

Exterior Lighting
Project Approved
Exterior lighting -lacking at
the new Meigs High School will be installed soon.
Meeting in regular session
Tuesday night, the Meigs Local
School District Board of
Education accepted the bid of
Cass Hindy of Middleport to
install the exterior lighting
system at a cost of $1,929.42.
The board also approved a
resolution to advertise for three
new school buses to be delivered
in January, 1972. The buses are
a part of the 1972 budget.
Attendance of the a thletic
board and the senior high school
coaching staff to the state
basketball tournament was
approved . The expense involved
to the board will be the cost of
three substitute teachers during
the absence of the basketball
coaching staff.
An adult carpenters' class
currently underway in the
district was approved. The only
cost involved to the district is

the light and heat which are
provided plus the space for the
class.
Mrs. J~annie Taylor, a Meigs
High School teacher, was
granted a leave of absence from
April 16, through May 28, this
year. The home tutor rate of $5
an hour was approved with $5 of
the total to be paid by the state.
The board approved a one
year extension of the discussion
agreement with the Meigs tocal
Teachers Assn., retroactive to
Jan. 1, this year, and the rightof-way for the Colwnbia Gas
Company's line on high school
property was approved.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. George Hargraves,
Assistant Supt. Larry Morrison,
board members, Frank
Porter, Virgil King, Don
Mullen, Joe Sayre and Hiram
Slawter, Clerk L. W. McComas
and Mrs . David Bowen,
teachers association president.

w.

2 Districts Still Closed
Schools in two of Meigs
County's three school districts
were closed today due to
weather conditions.
Remaining closed the second
full day were schools of the
Meigs Local and the Southern
Local districts.
Operating today was the
Eastern Local District where
John Riebel, superintendent,

said 220 students of 260
enrollment in the high school
were in attendance. The Tuppers Plains elementary school
had 57 absent of 215 enrolled.
Riebel commented that attendance appeared to be good
throughout the district, lower
than on a normal day, but g&lt;J04
in view of weather conditior;u~.

2 Democrat Candidates Ousted
candidate for counciL
According to the board of
elections , Denison and Roush
had at some time during the
four preceding years voted as
Republicans and therefore were
disqualified by law from running as Democrats in this
pnmary.
Denison had been aligned
ag&lt;~inst the youthful candidate
P&lt;~ul Gerard in Ius bid for
mayor Gerard now will be

unopposed . Roush was one of
thrt::e candidates for nomination
as candidates for counciL His
disqual ification leaves two
candida tes, with two to be
nominated ; hence, a primary
will not be required for the
Democrat party in May. The
rematmng two Democrat
candidates for council are
Donald II. Pearch. Jr ., and
Mary E Searles.

will not be required in Middleport now, the costs involved
in holding primary elections are
expected to be somewhat
reduced since the number of
workers required can be
reduced with only a Republican
primary to be held.
Pomeroy will have a
Republican primary only made
necessary through the candidaey of three residents
seeking the two nominations to
run for eouneiL

�2 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 10,1971

Tough Decisions Coming Up in Southeast Asia.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Below is the first
of a series of articles dealing with great
decisions of 1971. In these articles
United Press International reporters
who are specialists in their fields, will
report on, and assess, great decisions
facing nations, their people and their
leaders in the year ahead.
Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia:
Which way to peace- and when?
By STEWART HENSLEY
Chief Diplomatic Reporter
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - President
Nixon, while pleased with the progress so
far of his Vietnamization program, badly
needs a breakthrough on the diplomatic
front between now and mid-1972.
The U.s. troop withdrawal program is
proceeding on schedule to the accompaniment of administration acclaim
over prospects for getting out of the war.
Nevertheless, the President still faces
tough decisions in Southeast Asia and

there is no doubt he recognizes this.
The decisions he must make have to do
with the manner in which the United States
finally liquidates its Vietnamese adventure and what it leaves behind in an
area that now is plagued by a wider war
than existed at the time of American intervention.
Most
administration
officials
acknowledge that a peace agreement,
backed by some form of international
guarantees, offers the only real prospect
for giving the South Vietnamese the right
to determine their own future, which is
what the war has been all about.
Vietnamization - The process of
gradually withdrawing American troops
as South Vietnamese attain the capability
to replace them - is not a solution in
Vietnam or Southeast Asia in general.
Formula for Disengagement
It is simply a formula for U. S.
disengagement, hopefully under conditions that will leave the Saigon govern-

ment with a fighting chance for survival in
the midst of chaos.
Complete withdrawal of U. S. forces
cannot be contemplated until and unless a
way is found to induce Hanoi and the Viet
Cong to talk peace on terms somewhat
acceptable to the United States and South
Vietnam. This in turn involves decisions as
to whether the United States, which
maintains President Nguyen Van Thieu in
power, should insist that he discuss with
the Viet Cong some form of interim
coalition government. So far he has flatly
refused to do this and Nixon has backed
him up.
The situation also could be altered if
some South Vietnamese leader such as
Gen. Duong Van Minh, who held office
briefly in 1963, is able to regain power in
the proposed September, 1971, elections.
The Communists have said they would
be willing to negotiate with Minh, who is
trying to put together a coalition of antiCommunist leaders to oust Thieu in

An Issue Broader T han T una Catch
The American ··tuna war·· with Ecuador might be of
interest primarily as comic relief from Vi~tnam.. the
Mideast and other major contemporary cnses 1f 1t d1d not
also have something rather serious t.o say ~bout human
affairs and nature in general at th1s particular crisisridden point in history.
The dispute has been going off and on for some years
and involves fishing rights in the waters off South America where three nations-Peru, Ecuador and Chileclaim territorial jurisdiction out to 200 miles from their
coasts. These waters happen to be particularly rich hunting for American-flag boats supplymg the msat1able
home appetite for sandwiches and casseroles.
Consequently, they ignore the Latin jurisdictional
claims, inciting protests and, from Ecu~dor. forceful _retaliation. To start with. seizure and hnmg-somethmg
like an average $35,000-of American boats. A relatively
cheap and botherless way out would appear to be the
purchase of fishing licenses, which the Ecuadorans are
perfectly willing to sell at $10,000 per .. But the U.S .. government discourages such accommodatiOn because 1t would
amount to recognizing the 200-mile limit. Wa.shington. a
conservative among world governments on th1s pomt. refuses to acknowledge anything beyond 12 miles .
So to compensate the fishermen caught in the middle.
Washington has been quietly paying the fines while the

By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEAl
now seems clear President Nixon is extending the
Nixon Doctrine to American economic strategy.
• In foreign aid, as in foreign military alliances the
U.S. profile will be lowered .
More assistance will be channeled through regional and
worldwide organizations-the Asian Development Bank.
Inter-American Development Bank, World Bank, International Development Association, Inter-American Social
Development Institute.
• A prerequisite for aid (where feasible ) will be the
willingness of the country seeking help to do what it can
for itself with the resources it has.
This includes a willingness to assess and collect taxes
a nd step down hard on evaders, a readiness to cut govern· .
ment corruption to manageable levels. a program for
bringing inflation under control and willingness to eliminate unnecessary government spending. That is, it sometimes will require very tough domestic measures.
• More of the economic aid planning for countries and
regions will be done by local planners, less by Americans.
The United States will step up technical and administrative training programs for countries or regions short of
first-rate economists, economic administrators and tech·
nicians .
• More countries will be pressured to give more aid .
The theory here is that even underdeveloped lands have
some specialists who can pass expert knowledge along to
others. And many countries are rich enough to do more
than they're now doing.
The new Nixon emphasis shows up in his fiscal 1971
supplementary requests to Congress, in his 1972 budget
just out, and in programs being discussed at the White
House, the State Department and the Agency for International Development.
One objective is to keep th{: United States out of the
internal politiC'S of foreign countries.
Direct aid has too often embroiled thi5 nation in local
domestic differences and , at times. brought us more
,enemies than friends. (This IS not solely an American
problem. A recent U.S. study has found Moscow plagued
with the same troubles. l
The second objective, of course, is to make the Ameri can dollar go for more . Obviously, the United States can 't
give each underdeveloped country all the aid it requires .
American aid must be channeled where it will be most
effective. And used as seed money to trigger other giving
and greater efforts by the country being helped.
The third objective is to get more effective foreign aid .
Government and private studies have shown that American planning for the needs of a foreign country is often
unsuitable to local conditions and sometimes does more
harm than good. Even if the American plan is good, it is
still a ··foreign·· plan so far as the government receiving
aid is concerned. And therefore isn't effective.
The studies indicatP the Marshall Plan for Europe was
effective because the planning was done by the Marshall
Plan countries, It was regional and it did involve a great
deal of internal bet! tightening and sacrifice.
I-IULLO, At.I6LE'M:&gt;RM,.·
l-ONG TIME t-10 SEE-

SAW·· ·

Whether and when Hanoi decides to
negotiate on terms acceptable to the Allies
may well be determined by events in
Southeast Asia outside Vietnam.
Hanoi is orchestrating the war in Laos
and Cambodia, as well as Vietnam, from a
new headquarters and supply area in
Southern Laos where Hanoi has widened
its area of conquest.
There are differing_ views as to
whether the primary objective of the
buildup there is to strike eastward across
the northern part of South Vietnam or
di'i.ve south into Cambodia, in an effort to
outflank South Vietnam.
Congressional pressure has resulted in
a prohibition against the use of American
ground forces in Cambodia to prop up the
struggling regime of Premier Lon Nol.
South Vietnam has undertaken to help Lon
Nol at present and, amid congressional
controversy, the United States has given
heavy a ir and logistical support.

BERRY'S WORLD

Plan Your Play
For All Holdings
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NORTH

10

.K7
'I AJ 1095

+ AJ8

""64 2
WEST
.J9653

'16

+
""J

EAST
.AQ102
• 74
Q 1095
""A 7 5

+

72

10 9 8 3

SOUTH

(D)

.84
'IKQ832
+ K643
""KQ
East- West vulnerable
West
North
East South
1 '1
Pass
2 N.T.
Pass 4 'I
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead-• J

North's two no-trump call
was the Jacoby Two Notrump . The bid has nothing
at all to do with no-trump
but is a strong raise of partner's major-suit opening.
Those players who use this
artificial convention must
give up the standard 13-15
point. two no-trump response

today·s FUNNY

but there are compensating
advantages.
South's jump to four hearts
illustrates one of them. This
jump says, "Partner, you
have forced us to game. I
have no interest in slam be·
cause 1 have a minimum
opening bid with no singleton."
The wav the cards lie a
spade lead by West will defeat the game contract. but
West has a norml:ll club lead
and makes it. Even with the
club lead and club ret urn
South can go down 'if he tries
to lead a spade to the king
or a diamond to the jack.
If he takes time to study
all possibilities he should
find a play to win against all
card combinations.
After winning the second
club he plays two rounds of
trumps: ruffs dummy's last
club and leads a low diamond.
West must play low, whereupon South plays dummy's
eight of diamonds . East wins
with the nine and is now
thoroughly end-played. He
doesn't have a club but that
doesn't matter since a club
lead would allow a ruff in
one hand and a spade di~
card from the other.
If East leads a spade
dummy's king is established.
Actually East made his best
play by returning a diamond.
However, this allowed dummy's ace and jack to score.
Then South came to his hand
with a trump to discard one
spade on the diamond king.
10

I.

The bidding has been:
West
North
East
South
1 'I
Dble
Pass
Pass
2 'I
Pass
Pass
3 +
Pass
?
You, South, hold:
.8 74 3 2 '17 +Q 9 8 ""K to 4 :l
What do you do now?
A-Your partner is biddin~
rathc1· peculiarly, but .vou have
an eas.v four-d i a m o n d bid.
Make it.

3""

Today's FUNNY "ill pcy Sl 00 for
each original "'funny·· used. Send gags
to · Today"s FUNNY, 1200 West Th~rd
St , Cleveland, Ohio..J4113 .

AI-IGLEWORM OOLY
LOOKS UP ~IS NEW5Pt&gt;.PER PAL5 WH EI&gt;J
H~ WAI-ITS 'M)RL D
SER.IE5 TICKETS
OR S()M..ETI-41N' .'£~:=-=:..:...:...-:...__

Related
Reptiles, b i o 1o g i c a ll y
speaking, a re the nearest
relatives of birds. Though
birds have advanced far beyond the most highly developed reptiles. their kinship.
reaching back m ore than
100 million years. remains.

A major assault by Hanoi, which so far
is estimated to have used only about 8,000
of its more than 40,000 troops in Cambodia,
could drain strength from South Vietnam
if the Saigon government tried to help
resist a major offensive in Cambodia.
This, in turn, could delay the ability of
the South Vietnamese to take over ~1
responsibility for gound defense of ttie1r
own country.
·
Officials acknowledge that an international sponsored and enforced peace
agreement for the area would be the most
desirable objective. Therefore Nixon can
be expected to intensify efforts to end the
impasse at Paris - possibly even to the.'
extent of twisting Thieu 's arm to get him to
agree to an interim coalition with the
Communists pending a final settlem• .
This could be considered an
"honorable" conclusion to the American
participation in the conflict - so long as
the settlement lasted.

Keeping /em Down on Farm
Is Harder Than Ever No~

seizures and counteractions go on. The dispute has
escalated beyond ships and fish to the point where Ecua·
dor has demanded the withdrawal of the U.S. militarv
mission as retaliation for U.S. suspension of arms aid. ·
And so it continues to go.
What the wrangling is all about is not really 200- or J2.
mile limits or licenses versus fines, but the control and
exploitation of a natural resource. In this case. it is a
product of the sea-tuna-which the United States re·
gards as belonging to no one and therefore anyone"s for
the taking. In this case. again, anyone being defined as
the United States since American boats predominate in
these waters.
The Latin countries demand excl usive control over
those portions of the resource in their immediate vicini·
ties. although none do any large-scale commercial fishing then1selves .
The impasse raises a question about the proper use
of world resources in general. If the United States and
three basically friendly nations can't come to a rational
understanding on tuna·. what is the prospect for rational
sharing among all nations of much more vital resources
of planet earth-not only plant and animal products but
the very water, air and earth itself-which. if the forecasters of increasing ecological crisis are correct. will be
essential"'

WIN AT BRIDGE

Nixon Doctrine
Is Economic, Too

September. However, in South Vietnam
the army comprises the only cohesive
political force and there is no evidence at
this point that it is prepared to desert
Thieu for Minh.
Some analysts have concluded that
Nixon's Vietnamization program is simpl.Y
a face-saving cover behind which the
United States intends to pull all its forces
out of Vietnam and leave it up to the Indochinese to settle their own differences.
Conclusion .Misleading
But this probably is misleading. When
the President explained his Vietnamization program in detail on Nov. 3,
1969, he said that final U. S. withdrawal
would come only when the South Vietnamese " become strong enough to defend
their own freedom."
U.S. military officers and pacification
officials in the field say it will be four to
five years before Saigon can be expected
to handle its own defense without any help.

By LEE MUELLER

"We've got to handle Ecuador's seizing of American tuna
boats with kid gloves. They COULD get mad and refuse
to accept our aid money!"

~

~ ~:~

LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D.

Spasm of Small Muscles

~
.1\. '·.~:_.~~ ~
.· ~ouses
'"'-:~~

Pleurisy Pains

By LAWRENCE E. LAMB, M.D .

I&gt;ear Dr. Lamb - Would
Treatment obviously deyou kindly write about pends upon the cause. In
pleurisy. possible ca uses most cases small doses of
and resulting f.&gt; a i n and aspirin will help a great
fever? Could this be con- deaL. A heating pad may
traded because of driving provide comfort and wrapwith an air-conditioner unit ping the chest tightly with
vented directlv at the dri- an elastic bandage may
ver'? After a recent automo- minimize pain. Of course. if
ble trip my husband began the underlying cause is a
to have pains in his right serious medical problem.
chest where the cold air that too mvst be treated.
blew at hirh. It does not get
There are other causes for
better and the doctor says it similar chest pain . This incould be pleurisy. He has eludes disorders of the spine
b e e n trou bled for two and shingles (a virus inmonths. Chest X rays. elec- volvement of the nerve 1
trocardiograph and other which may involve one or
tests are normal. Is there more spaces between the
any treatment other than ribs. I suspect your husband
pain killers . Can this be has had trouble long enough
cured or does it become that you can forget about
chronic?
shingles.
Dear Reader-The surface - X rays and other studies
of the lungs and the inner are often normal when the
surface of the chest cage problem is the usual viral
are lined with a very thm form. The studies must be
clear membrane which is done though to be certain
c.alled th~ pl.e~ra. _lnflam~a- that some more serious distwn of t~1s lmmg IS pleunsy. ease isn't the underlving
Interestmgly enough. there cause.
are no pain fibers from this
lining over the lung surface.
Aspirin in doses of six or
so the pain must come from more a day can affect the
the chest wall . Many people b I o o d-clotting mechanism .
think that the pain is caused People taking medicine to
by the inflamed lung surfaee contrpl blood clotting should
rubbing against the c hest be careful in their use of aseage. This is probably not pirin.
true .
!Newspaper Enterprise Assn. )
The pain appears to be
more related to spasm of
Please send your questions and
the small muscles between comments to Lowrenc~ E. Lomb,
each of the ribs. When you M.D., in core of this paper. While
breathe and the chest wall Dr. Lomb cannot answer individual
expands. t h e s e m useles letters, he will answer letters of
move. Like any muscle general interest in future columns.
eramp. the move rn en t
causes severe pain. This is
BARBS
why limiting the motion of
the chest by tight bandages
By PHIL PASTORET
tends to relieve the pain. ·
Dieters who don 't keep up
M usde spasm can mdeed
be caused by a cool air blow- their regimens are waisting
ing over the body surface. their money.
Severe . sudden pain in the
neck muscles can follow
The boss complains that
sleeping under a fan .
lie's being spied on-can't
get rid of !lis 5 o "clock
Pleurisy can be caused bv
shadow.
a long list of medical dis.. '
orders . Fortunately. most
In line with naming autos
cases are caused b\ \ u·at
diseases that cause
lot of after critters-we"re calling
pain and discomfort but
seldom cause an~· lasting
damage or serious illness.
The pain is tlsuall~· far out
of proportion to any aetual
danger. hut it i~ quilt•

a

Sl'\'E:'rt' .

inft't"tton of tlw ltmgs ours the ··upossum ·· It plays
dead every time wt• t n to
p ll' 11 r is~· . This includes start it. ·
tub(·iTulosi~.
tlw lwcll' rial
and \·iral diseast's. l'\'Pn
Ships rlwt an· 111'1'1'1
tun101.., and ran' rlisl'&lt;lSl'.'&gt;
lr.ullcl!e&lt;i from drtidtwk
W(' &lt;·al l mPtaboltc clis(•as(·~
seldo m &lt;'&lt;&gt;Ill&lt;' 111
·
An~·

l"an ill' assoeialt'd with

At a time when men are flying to the moon and city
girls are parading around near-naked in costumes called
··hot pants," the question is again posed:
How you going to keep them down on the farm?
It was asked before-in a song after World War I. At
that time. America was mostly a rural society, filled with
people who liked to crank out homemade ice cream in the
backyard and bake apple pies. But the war gave man :~~...
farmers their first chance to see the world and. somehow~
after Paris. a milk pail never looked the same.
Now it's the Department of Agriculture asking. And no·
body is about to writP. a song about it.
·· It's a serious matter.·· said a department representative. ··The day might come when there are no more farmers-or when we all have to grow our own food again.
' 'The average age of the farmer in the United States is
getting higher and higher. It's 52.2 now-compared to the
average age of the American business executive, which is
35. Many, many young people are leaving the farms. And,
for certain, you just can't find farm workers , any more
not for love nor money."
Earthy statistics bear this out.
There were 131,669,000 people in the United States in
1940. more than six million of whom were farmers. Thirty
years later in 1970, 200,251.326 persons included only 1.8
million farmers.
One of these men is Robert Weverstad of Yankton , S.D .,
a 32-year-old graduate of South Dakota State who operates
a 1,400-acre farm just north of town near the airport. (The
planes don't bother his cattle. he says. &gt;
Weverstad was recently named the ··outstanding Yo u n ~
Farmer· · in South Dakota by the state Jaycees.
-.
·'Young farmers are few and far between around here,"
he said. "Most of them have moved out-for several
reasons.
··]n tne first place, the opportunity for a young man to
start just isn't there unless he 's been able to start in witb
his parents. Ws hard to fmd any land availabl~. Mos't 'of 'it
is already rented up. I know that in Yankton County,
there are quite a few farmers who have up to 2,000 acres.
·'If it's true farmers are fewer, it also is true that farms
are getting bigger."
Department of Agriculture figures support this theory.
Modern machinery has helped the farmer take up much
of the slack. Of the 2.27 billion land acres in the U.S. 1.12
billion were used last year for farming. This is only few
million less than were utilized in 194!..
··Another ~hing, of course," said Weverstad, "is that
most people don't seem to want to put in the hours that
go with farming. Punching a clock or working an eighthour day probably sounds pretty attractive to most people
compared to the 14-16-hour days we sometimes put in
during the summer."
'
. The spoils of farm labor have never been that lucrative!&amp;
either. Weverstad says the prices of farm produce wil~
have to keep step with inflation in order to attract new
blood.
··It"s the one thing that wili help," he said.
For himself, Weverstad will continue to rise at 6 :30
each morning, dress in jeans and T-shirt, feed his 500
cattle. pat his wife and two daughters, and work.
·.·It's something I've always been interested in," he
sa1d. ·"I majored in animal husbandry in college. I knew
what I wanted . And I enjoy it.
··we make a good living-nothing terrific-and it gives
me a lot of satisfaction: being able to do something that
I know how to do. I don"t see any other way to measure
it. •.

a

Contputer Speeds

ECG Diagnosis
By ROBERT E. SWEET
SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) - A
new telephone - linked computer system can give doctors
anywhere in the country a
speedy, complete diagnosis of a
patient's condition based on
electrocardiogram
readings.
The Boeing Co. has developed
the method especially to conduct
routine
physical
examinations in industrial
clinics and hospitals.
Dr. Larry Mellon, who runs
the computer center in
Philadelphia, said the high
speed service "could definitely
save lives" of persons needing
prompt medical attention but
who are unaware of it.
"The computers won't think
for the physician, but they can
greatly reduce his workload in
this application," Mellon said in
a telephone interview. "In fact,
the computer
tends to
·overreact.' We have an awful
lot of information."
He said the computer hookup
saves at least half of the time
typically required to process an
ECG The results would be back
to tht&gt; physician within a few
hours of the original tests, he
said.
··Thf' C(iDlputer reads the
tests in about :lO seconds and
tllcn it is just a matter of the
printout.·· Mellon smd.
He addt•d tile method could be

useful particularly in handling
large numbers of routine
physical examinations, spotting
the borderline and disqualified
cases and passing the
remainder quickly.
"It definitely could save lives
because we are offering speedy,
accurate and uniform readin~,
diagnoses and data," the docS'
said.
Thus far, Boeing serves three
large medical bureaus and
clinics in the East, the Medical
Service Bureau in Philadelphia
being the largest, and has about
20 proposals out to hospitals
around the country.
In the original testing of the
equipment, Boeing used its o•
employes as "guinea pigs" bY
evalua ling physical exams in
recommending persons for
work assignments.

Timely Quotes
Those childrt'n kept shouting .. power to the people· ··
l~u t I don"t see how you·
u:oing to havt&gt; power if you
don 't know anything. And 1
could have told them some
mterest ing things.
llr'lll'!l Cal1ot l.odue. com/tl('lltiluJ o11 dr•mo11.~trcrtors
II"'"&lt;' ~l1011fi11p /)l'!'l'!:'lllr•d

lum Jl"lll/!ll(l&lt;!n·~s/11!/ otll&lt;'l'
SllldC'IIIs 11/ .'iltiii(Orrf Iiiii·
l" t'I'S!If/

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 10,1971

.Otterbein Keeps T itle Hopes Alive, 86 to 72
Pro Standings
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Los Angeles 36 22 .621
San Franc1sco 32 29 .525 51 2
Seattle
26 34 .433 11
San Diego
27 37 .422 12
1
' ~aston
33 28 .541 6 2 Portland
21 39 .350 16
by Che~ Tannehill
Tuesday's Results
Buffalo
16 46 .258 24
Phoenix 120 Baltimore 115
Central Division
There are murmurs again, as probably in each of the past five
W. L. Pet. GB Milwaukee 107 Detroit 106
winters,
suggesting serious study be given organization of a
Atlanta 114 New York 109
Baltimore
34 25 .576
county-wide
Boys' League baseball organization.
Cincinnati
24 35 .407 10
Los Angeles 116 Cleveland 111
Atlanta
22 39 .361 13
Boston 90 Chicago 88
that
I don't call it Little League because what we have
Note
Cleveland
11 53 . 172 251/2 San Diego 132 Seattle 115
today in separate organizations is not affiliated with the National
Midwest Division
(Only games scheduled)
Little League Association and therefore legally cannot be
W. L. Pet. GB
Wednesday's Games
48 11 .814 ...
New York at Buffalo
Milwaukee
referred to as Little League. Pearl Kisor of Wellston had that fact
J
37 22 .627 11
Seattle at San Francisco
Detroit
made quite plain several years ago when he began promoting
36 24 .600 121/ 2 ~'~oston at Atlanta
Chicago
36 25 .590 13
·another of his Wellston Recreation Department's Southeastern
(Only games schedul~~l
.Phoenix
Ohio Little League Tournaments.
"No," said the people in Williamsport, Pa., "stop, or we'll
sue."
That's why The Daily Sentinel, always trying to be ligit,
reports our youngster baseball as Boys' League, and why Kisor
labels his August extravaganza other than "Little League."
Together with proposing a county-wide set-up goes the idea
that such an organization should be nationally associated so as to
compete in the tournaments that lead up to the annual Little
League World Series in Williamsport.
•
Two important league games Brown, 6-1 senior forward and
Both are open questions to be decided by the people in our ·.
will highlight the final week of Dave White, 5-10 junior guard. communities who make the program go, namely, the managers,
action in the Southern Valley Brown is the fifth leading scorer the association officers, the people who go out and collect the
Athletic Conference.
in all games with an 18.3 money, the people who give the money, and the parents of
Again, the league cham- average and is third in league players.
pionship will be on the line scoring with a 19.2 average.
This sounds like a lot of people, which it is. But if we were to
Friday night when North Gallia
White, who missed last call for a public meeting next week to decide the question of
travels to Kyger Creek. North week's game with Eastern due
widening the organization and of possible national affiliation the
Gallia 8-1, must win in order to to an in jury, is second in league
entire turnout could be seated in about anybody's living room with
retain first place with the scoring with a 19.5 average. He
some chairs unoccupied. That's how it is; face it. So if anything is
Eastern Eagles. Eastern will has scored a total of 2.19 points
changed
in these winter and spring months when plaMing for the
. host rival Southern Saturday for an all game average of 18.4.
summer
activities
has to be completed, it will be done by the usual
evening.
In order to stop the taller
few
managers,
parents
and fans who generally do most of the
The Eagles, likewise, must Pirates, KC must get a super
post a victory in order to finish effort from Wade Henson, 6-1 work.
I don't have the answer to the questions, should our comwith at least a share of the title. senior center and Ro:,:: ThompLast week, in a similar son, 6-2 junior forward. North munities go county-wide, and should national affiliation be obshowdown, Eastern topped Gallia won the first meeting this tained? But I do have some history to relate which might help
readers interested in this subject make a judgment upon which to
Kyger Creek, 74-61 while North season, 109-72.
Gallia was overpowering
Eastern paced by 6-3 Dennis act.
Southern, 78-39.
First, what has been tried earlier.
Eichinger, junior center, will be
Coach Paul Aikman's Pirates seeking its third straight title
Middleport is the only association that since the beginning of
are led by Arthur Clark, 6-5 against the pesky Southern Boys' (Little) League in 1955 went national. In the late 50s Midjunior center, and Roger Tornadoes.
dleport paid its dues three years, was knocked off each time in its
Pelfrey, 6-0 senior guard.
Southern is in third place in first district tournament game, and participated in local tourClark continues to pace the the league standings with a 5-4 naments contrary to National League Little League rules. MidSVAC scorers with an all game slate. A loss would drop the dleport also was affiliated on a sort of "probation" basis as it did
average of 23.4 points. He is Tornadoes in a tie with the not have diamonds constructed in full accordance with official
averaging 24.9 points in nine Hannan Trace Wildcats.
regulations, that is, complete separation by a fence of the playing
league tilts. PeHrey, the Pirates
Eichinger after a slow start, area from the spectator area. As I recall, the requirement was
big playmaker and floor has an all game average of 19.1
waived in Middleport's case following a special pleading.
general, is averaging 16.7 points points. His SV AC average
The closest arrangement to a county-wide organization
ein all games and 18.1 points in stands at 17.4. Howie Caldwell,
probably was in those same late 50s when Pomeroy was allied
the SVAC.
5-10 senior guard, is also among
with Racine and Syracuse into a single - and quite strong In addition to Clark, North the league leaders. Caldwell has
league.
Racine had two teams, Syracuse two, and at least for a
Gallia relies heavily on the scored 318 points for an all
Pomeroy
put in six teams. There were problems. The kids
time,
rebounding strength provided game average of 19.8 points per
by Dave Justus, 6-3 senior game. He stands sixth in SVAC generally got along quite all right. There were some rhubarbs
f.Or,"\Yatq; L~F.Y Justus, 6-4 competition with a 16.1 average. among fans. Splitting up the expenses and raising the money
junior forward and Tony
Southern is led offensively by needed in the several communities was another problem.
None of these probably was insurmountable, but the problem
Glassburn, 6-2 junior.
Roger Wilford, 6-1 junior forCoach John Sang's Bobcats ward. Wilford has canned 172 of distance was one that wouldn't go away by talking about it.
will rely on the shooting of Ken points for a 12.2 average in all Team managers had to rely on parents to help haul their players
games . He is averaging 10.3 to games out-{)f-Lown. Sometimes not enough cars would show.
points in nine league en- Time, even for a Boys' League manager, has value, and out-{)ftown games meant at least one hour, maybe two, extra be ear:A LITTLE BECOMES counters.
other
games,
Southern
will
In
marked
for game nights. And there was the added expense of the
I
A LOT, WHEN
host Hannan, W. Va ., Friday travel, a direct drain on likely already strained resources of
I
night. Hannan Trace will play managers and volunteer parents.
I
at Hannan Saturday night.
Along about 1960 the folks in the eastern end of our county
I
Coach Paul Dillon 's Wildcats operated for several years a league embracing Tuppers Plains,
J
finished their league season last Alfred, Chester, Hemlock Grove, Coolville, and a couple others I
f
Saturday against Southwestern. don't recall. Those folks had a bushel of problems, naturally.
I
Keith Swain , 5-10 junior Their organization probably was doomed, but a lot of kids got to
guard, although somewhat in a play baseball for several summers.
I
slump the last three games,
After the breakup of the Pomeroy-Syracuse-Racine
I
continues to lead the Wildcats
organization about 1960 the record is varied and spotty. Racine
I
offensively with an average of
I
and Syracuse, off and on, have been in groups that included Letart
15.8 in 15 games and 16 points in
I
Falls and Portland. Pomeroy for a time took in a Harrisonville
The Athens County
10 SVAC contests.
I
Co.
Savings
&amp;
Loan
All Gallia County teams will team. Middleport reduced its teams to five from six and took in
I
296 Second St.
participate
in the Gallia County Rutland, which won the championship, then was unable to field a
I
Pomeroy, Ohio
I
Tournament next week at North team the next year. Pomeroy and Middleport organizations for
the past few years have been operating with four teams.
I
Gallia.
Experienced Boys' League followers deduce from this that
the boys' interest is dying and partly blame il on the in-grown
I
nature (small league, little outside competition) of the schedules.
I
SIX CONTRACTS
I Interest per year, comHOUSTON (UPI) - Pitcher
1 pounded quarterly on
I HAVE HEARD, but never from people directly involved,
Larry Dierker, who finished the
1 regular passbook savings
that
the folks in the summer programs in Syracuse, Racine,
1970 season with a 16-12 record
1 acco_unts. No minimum or
1 max•mum amount. Interest
following a 20-win season in Portland, and Letart Falls, favor a county set up, or at least
I is paid from date of deposit
1969, Tuesday signed his 1971 realignment with Pomeroy. I have been told they want it so badly
I to date of withdrawa I as long
contract with the Houston they even would agree to play more of their games away - in
I as you maintain an open
Pomeroy or Middleport (if Middleport came in) - than at home.
Astros.
• account,
Also agreeing to terms The reasoning here apparently is that those communities have a
Tuesday were pitchers Wade built-in distance problem. Adding travel to Pomeroy -Middleport
I
Blasingame, Fred Gladding, wouldn't make it much worse.
&lt; I
It is frequently held that a county league year-in and year-{)Ut
Bill Brief, Mark Schaeffer and
I
first baseman John Mayberry. could field a strong enough team to make a showing in the
National Little League Tournament system. But is that sufficient
reason to go county-wide?
The most serious drawback to going "national" no doubt is
that "traditional" local tournaments would have to be given up,
tournaments in which all boys - not just an all-star cast - are
permitted to play. I refer to the Kyger Creek tournament for all
boys and the Wellston and Syracuse tournaments for all-star
teams of the several communities.
Plainly, there is much to consider in any move designed to
enlarge and-{)r rejuvenate our summer boys' baseball programs.
Send us a letter, or use your telephone, to convey YOUR
ideas.
NBA Standmgs
By United Press International
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New York
40 22 .645 ...
Philadelphia 37 25 .597 3

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Middleport, 0.

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. their strong sophomores, came
(UPI) _The Ohio State Buck- from a 42-41 deficit to lead 55eyes broke a seven-year jinx 46 in the second half, and hung
this Big Ten town has been for on for a 69-67 win over the
them by storming past Purdue Boilermakers.
Tuesday night.
The victory, which gives the
The Bucks, supported by Bucks a 5-1 Big Ten slate, is

Ohio High School
Basketball Notes
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
high school basketball notes
from around the state:
Veteran official Dick Gibbs,
37, of Elyria, who had worked
the first of Friday night's
Lorain Catholic - Fremont St.
Joseph game, suffered a fatal
heart attack just prior to the
start of the second half. Gibbs,
who had made no mention of
feeling ill, collapsed while walking· from. the officials' locker
room back to the court.
Steubenville Central Catholic
( 12-2) avenged both its earlier
losses last weekend. Friday
night, the Crusaders whipped
Wintersville 71-56, and Saturday
night upended fourth - ranked
( AAA) Steubenville Big Red 5857. It was the first regular season loss for the Big Red in 32
games. Central Catholic's Don
"Kip" McLane, a 6 - foot - 5
senior, had 37 points against
Wintersville and 29 against

College Ratings
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
United Press International top
20 small college basketball
teams with first place votes and
won lost records in parentheses.
(Tenth week, includes games
played through Sunday, Feb. 7)
Team
Points
1. Ky. St. (19) (17·ll
278
255
2. Assumption (6) ( 17-0)
173
3. Southwest La. (2) (6-2)
169
4. Tennessee St. ( 16-2)
153
5. LSU (N.O.) (2) (18-0)
112
6. Louisiana Tech ( 16-3)
7. Ashland ( 18 2)
101
8. Ky . Wesleyan (15-4)
75
59
9. Fairmont St. (21 -0)
10. Puget Sound ( 15-3)
51
11. Wooster ( 19-1)
45
12. Eau Claire ( 19·1 l
35
13. Phila. Tex. (15-3)
28
14. Howard Payne (18-5)
24
15. Oral Roberts (1) (17-5)
18
16. S.F. Austin (15-5)
16
17. Sam Houston St. (17-6)
11
18. (Tiel Jackson St. (19-3)
9
(Tiel Akron (14-3)
9
20. Capital (Ohio) (15-2)
8
Others receiving five or more
points - Evansville, Western
Washington.

College Scores
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Ohio St 69 Purdue 67
M Harvey 92 Aldrsn Brdds 72
Boston U 102 Rochester 82
Westfld St 93 Salem Sf 84
Mass 85 Boston Coli 77
Bucknell 74 Gettysburg 63
Lafayette 92 Lehigh 74
Villanova 97 Fairfld 60
Defiance 86 Cedarvl 81
Cent St 88 Cleve St 59
West Reserve 74 J Carroll 72
Fairmont 83 Glenville 65
Clarion 63 Geneva 58
Baylor 92 Arkansas 91
Md Sf 101 Sf. Pauls 69
Nebraska 69 Iowa St 67
Assmptn 104 Brandeis 80
N.M. Hilnds 96 Wstmnstr 76
S. F. Auslin 79 E N.M. 78
Ala St 98 Fla A&amp;M 93
Hunter 68 Lehman 58
SMU 93 Texas Tech 91
Indiana 71 Mich St. 70
Lyla (Md.) 75 Geotwn 69
Md . St. 101 St. Pauls 69
Pittsburgh 73 Omaha 59
Holy Cross 110 RIU 73
U of Del 91 Kings 66
Rice 89 TCU 63
Texas 78 Tex A&amp;M 69
Ab Chris 70 Lamar Tech 66
Mdwstrn 89 Austin Coli 76
Sou St. 78 Ark A&amp;M 55

Saturday and Sunday
1 P.M. to 11 P.M.

Weekdays
6 P.M. to 11 P.M.

Laot SUAd&amp;)' 1 P.M. to 1 P .M.

•
•
•
•

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• Recreation Vehicles
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ADMISSION
$1.75 ADULTS

Children Under 14

75 CENTS

Otterbein's Dwight Miller
scored 24 points for the Cardinals, who were down 38-36 at
the half. Jim Vejsicky paced
the Muskies with 21 points as
they absorbed their 13th loss in
20 games and became 2-8 in the
OC.
Cumberland (Ky.) forged

Steubenville.
One-Man Team
Holgate'sSteve Sonnenberg, a
6 - foot - 5 senior, scored 50
points in a losing cause Friday
night against Paulding and
came back with 46 the next
night in an 88-83 victory over
Lima Perry. In Fridey's 84-82
loss, Holgate led by 16 points
with six minutes remaining,
when Sonnenberg fouled out. A
straight-A student, Steve averages 30.5 points per game.
Zane Trace (Guernsey), 15-0
on the year, is the only unbeaten team remaining in the Class
A top ten and unless there's a
sleeper, the only A team in the
state with a perfect mark. The
Warriors will have their hands
full Friday night, however,
when the visit tough Zanesville
Rosecrans. Zane Trace defeated
Rosecrans earlier.
Garrettsville Garfield ( 15 - 0)
clinched its second strai~ht
Portage County League title
Friday night with a 54 - 53
victory at Windham. Garfield
has won 31 of its last 33 games
under Coach Frank Dalton,
formerly at Windham.
Russia, with a 6 - 10 record,
pulled one of the big upsets of
the season with its 64-63 victory
over top - rated Fort Loramie
(17 - 1). The Raiders' Don
Cordonnier hit a free throw
with two seconds remaining as
Russia overcame an eight-point
deficit in the final two and a
half minutes.
Tygers Stretch Streak
Mansfield Senior, off · to a
slow start this season, won its
eighth straight game Friday
night, 85-59 over Lorain Senior.
The Tygers, 13-3 overall and 10-2
in the Buckeye Conference, invade Findlay ( 15-1 and 12-0)
Friday night to take on the
third - ranked Trojans.
Will Finley of Morgan and
Jerry Ryan of Philo matched
42 - point performances Saturday night. Morgan, who also
had 27 points from Cecil Camp
bell, won the Muskingum Valley
League game 102-98.
Bellefontaine Coach Pat Riley
has found a way to limit the
number of tickets given to the
parents of his players. Simply
limit the number of parents.
There are three sets of brothers
on the Chieftain squad, including the Roberts brothers, Greg,
a senior, Doug, a junior, and
Biff, a sophomore. The other
combinations are John Brown,
a senior, and his brother, Jim,
a junior, and the Dearwester
brothers, Roger, a senior, and
Karl, a junior. Two other
players on the squad have
brothers who do not play, but
one is a manager and the other
keeps statistics.

the first here for them since
1963.
Allen Hornyak produced 27
points to spark the OSU attack
and Luke Witte's crucial tip-in
basket broke a 65-65 tie as the
game neared its end. Then
Mark Minor and Dave Merchant hit free throws that cancelled out the layup by Purdue's Bob Ford, the last shot of
the game.
Witte added 17 points to the
winning attack, 12 coming in
the last half, and senior captain
Jim Cleamons chimed in with
12.
The method by which Cleamons controlled the game's tempo brought praise from coach
Fred Taylor, who said it was
"probably his best game of the
year."
The game was knotted at 35all at the half and Taylor said
OSU's defense during the first
half could have been better "if
we could have shut off their
extra shots after missed ones

Your Dependable
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Ford was Purdue's high scorer with 23 points and Bill
Franklin added 19.
The victory gave Ohio State
an overall ll-5 mark. Purdue is
4-2 in the conference and ll-5
overall.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
By United Press International
Cols. Walnut Ridge 82 Cols.
Eastmoor 61
Steubenville 86 Weirton (W.
Va.l 51
Linsly (W. Va.) 91 Bellaire St.
Johns 87
Wheeling (W. Va.) 99 Marlins
Ferry 97 (ot)
Fairland 72 Huntington (W.
Va .) St. Joe. 51
McMechen (W. Va.) Bishop
Donahue 100 Seton Central 85

LET US SOLVE IT
WITH A
RENTED FORD
"REASONABLE RATES"

RENT A
1971 FORD
DAY -WEEK MONTH

1Vi

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Phone 992-2196
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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ahead in the last minutes to
hand Rio Grande its fifth
straight loss in an 8-14 season.
Roger Bently scored 20 points
for Rio.
Stan Rubin's three clutch free
throws boosted Western Reserve over John Carroll, the
first win by the Red Cats over
the Blue Streaks in seven
games. Rubin ended up with 25
points.
Sterling Quant continued to
weave his particular magic by
scoring 23 game-high points for
Central State, which won its
15th game against six losses.
The Marauders led by 18 at the
half, 43-25, and as much as 30
points after intermission.
Cleveland State, led by Sam
Thomas with 19 points, fell to
a 5-16 record.
Defiance had to weather a
late Cedarville charge to take
its 14th win in 20 games. Three
free throws in the final seconds
iced the win. Don Atherton
paced Cedarville, now 10-11,
with 27 points.
Thirteen games were on the
schedule tonight, including the
postponed Denison - at - Hiram
contest.

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Witte, with his 17 points, and
Allen Hornyak, with 27 points,
sparked the Buckeye attack as
OSU went from a 42-41 deficit
to a 55-46 lead and then had to
battle for the win, the fifth in .
six Big Ten games and 11th in
16 on the season.

In other contests Tuesday
night, Ohio State slipped past
Big Ten rival Purdue 69-67,
Central State downed Cleveland
State 88-59, Defiance beat
Cedarville 86-81, Western Reserve edged John Carroll 74-72,
Cumberland (Ky.) downed Rio
Grande 74-69, and the DenisonHiram game was postponed until tonight because of inclement
weather.
Luke Witte tipped in a basket
with 39 seconds left to snap a
65-65 tie and teammates Mark
Minor and Dave Merchant hit
free throws later to assure Ohio
State its win.

Buck eyes Nip Boilerntakers

h&gt;ternate 71 - Exit at 11th or 17ih AYe.

•14.95
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Seat
Covers,
assorted colors Nylon w1th
foam rubber backing.
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sa.95 Set

By United Press International
Otterbein is keeping its Ohio
Conference title dreams alive,
but it isn't easy with the talent
abounding in the 14-team
league.
The Cardinals iced an easy
Jne, 86-72, over Muskingum
Tuesday night to make them
15-2 overall and 10-1 in the OC .
The record is still only good
enough for third, behind Capital and Wooster, both undefeated in league play.
Wooster goes against Marietta
tonight, but Capital does not
see league play until Saturday,
against Baldwin-Wallace.

992-2101

Pomeroy

�4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 10, 1971

Redmen Drop 74-69
Visiting Cumberland College
rallied in the final two minutes
of play to hand Rio Grande
College a 74-69 Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference setback at the Paul R.
Lyne Center Tuesday night.
The defeat, fifth in a row for
Coach Art Lanham's Redmen,
dropped Rio in indisputed last
place in the KIAC standings
with a 3-8 mark.

The Indians took over undisputed sixth place with a 4-7
conference mark.
Rio Grande held a 35-28
halftime lead over the visitors.
Tom Jensen was top gun for
Cumberland with 27 points.
Roger Bentley's 20 markers
paced the Redmen.
Rio hit 31 of 68 field goal attempts for 45.6 per cent. The
Redmen sank seven of 10 free

throws for 70 per cent.
Rio Grande is now 8-14 on the
year. Tonight, Rio will battle
powerful Capital University at
Columbus. Saturday, the
Redmen will host KIAC leader
Union. It will be Rio's final
conference game.
Box score of Tuesday's
contest:
CUMBERLAND- Hodges, 90-18; Jensen, 12-3-27; Ricker, 0-

1-1; Byrd, 4-2-10; Skees, 4-0-8;
Coul tor, 3-4-10 - TOTALS - 3210-74.

Satch Still Looking
Ahead, not Backward
the contributions of the Negro
leagues to baseball at the Hall
of Fame at Cooperstown, N.Y.

NEW YORK (UPI)-Satchel
RIO GRANDE- Bass, 1-0-2;
Hairston, 6-2-14; Bentley, 10-0- Paige, who never looked back,
20; Bartram, 3-0-6; Jordan, 4-3- isn't going to start now.
11; Williams, 3-0-6; Lambert, 4- Barred from the major
leagues by the color line until
2-10 - TOTALS - 31-7-69.
he was past 40 in 1948, Paige
Score at half: Rio 35, Cum- received recognition for his
three decades of legendary
berland 28.
stardom in the Negro leagues
Tuesday. He was named the
first star to be honored by a
special committee as part of a
new exhibit commemorating

Paige will be "inducted" into
the hall at the official
ceremonies on Aug. 9th and will
have a plaque, but Commissioner Bowie Kuhn admitted that
"technically" he isn't a Hall of
Farner because he didn't play
for 10 years in the majors.
Kuhn added, "Realistically,

2 Good Ouhs to Miss Playoffs

.":•.-.:

..
•.

.•.·•..
.....::.
..

.::
~:­

:-:

:::·.

....·.
·:·

By United Press International
It's patently evident that two
of the better teams in the
league will miss the National
Basketball Association playoffs.
The fantastic Midwest Division, where all four teams are
playing way above .500 ball,
features the tightest race in the
NBA. Milwaukee is virtually a
shoo-in for the sectional title,
but only two games separate
the second and fourth place
clubs.
Milwaukee's 107-106 victory
over Detroit put the Bucks 11
games in front of the secondplace Pistons. Phoenix moved
within a half game of third
place by beating Baltimore, 120115, while Chicago was dropping a 90-88 decision to Boston.

Building

•.,,..

·:

Ban Held
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Water Pollution Control
Board has resisted pleas to lift
Cleveland 's building ban and
hinted the city's 32 suburban
communities may be next.
The board Tuesday refused to
remove the construction freeze
it imposed on Cleveland nearly
a year ago and asked the attorney general's office to draft
an order preventing Cleveland
from accepting increased sewer
discharges from outside the
city. The board will consider
adopting the order March 9.
The freeze , the result of the
city's failure to improve its
sanitary facilities and sewer
lines, is not working, a
Cleveland official testified.
Public Utilities Director
William S. Gaskill told the
board construction in the
suburbs continues to increase
the sewer load, causing complications with negotiating
sewer rates with those communities.
Gaskill also said the city was
proceeding to meet scheduled
improvements. However, a
financing program for treatment plants to stop pollution of
the Cuyahoga River and Lake
Erie remains unfinished.
In other action, the board
imposed an immediate building
freeze on the Perry County
village of New Lexington and
gave the community until June
8 to show cause why the freeze
should not remain in effect.
A New Lexington spokesman
told the board a full-time
operator has been assigned to
the sewage treatment plant
there to prevent the pollution of
Rush Creek.

•
Grazn

D

.C

•

rzces

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Daily
cash grain prices paid to farmers Wednesday at grain elevators in central, northwestern
and southweste.rn Ohio as
quoted by the Ohto Department
of Agriculture: No. 2 Wheat
(bu) unchanged to one lower;
1.63 - 1.67, mostly 1.65 - 1.67
No. 2 Ear Corn (bu) mostly
one lower; 1.37 - 1.45, mostly
1.37 - 1.40 No. 2 Shelled Corn
(bu) mostly one lower; 1.41-1.50,
mostly 1.41 - 1.44 No. 2 Shelled
Corn ( 100 lb) mostly two lower ; 2.52 - 2.68, mostly 2.52-2.57
No. 2 Oats (bu) mostly unchanged; .73 - .90, mostly .80.85 No.1 Soybeans (bu) mostly
one to two lower; 2.89 - 2.96,
mostly 2.89 - 2.93.

In other games, Atlanta
defeated New York, 114-109, Los
Angeles topped Cleveland, 116111, and San Diego clobbered
Seattle, 132-115.
Greg Smith's layup with 22
seconds left ~ve Milwaukee its
fourth win in five meetings this
season with Detroit. Lew
Alcindor went above his season's average with a 38-point
output to pace Milwaukee's
victory. Dave Bing and, Jimmy
Walker each scored 28 points
for Detroit, which lost a chance
to tie with eight seconds
remaining when Terry Dischinger missed a foul shot.
Phoenix's better balanced

attack beat Baltimore despite a
season high output of 38 points
by Earl Monroe. Dick Van
Arsdale led the Suns with 27
points, Clem Haskins scored 18,
Mel Counts 17 and Connie
Hawkins 16.
John Havlicek scored 33
points for Boston, but it took a
field goal with 36 seconds
remaining by Rookie of the
Year candidate Dave Cowens to
beat Chicago. The Bulls frittered away a 12 point lead in
the fourth quarter. Bob Love
led Chicago with 27 points.
Walt Bellamy outplayed Witlis Reed under the boards and
scored 23 points for Atlanta as

the Hawks moved within three
games of second-place Cincinnati in the Central Division.
Reed tamed 24 points. Pete
Maravich led Atlanta with 28 as
the Hawks pinned New York
with its fourth consecutive loss.
Gail Goodrich tallied a season
high 42 points and Happy
Hairston added 31 for Los
Angeles. Dave Sorenson had 30
points for Cleveland. Bobby
Smith of the Cavaliers left the
game in the second period with
an injured right ankle.
Elvin Hayes scored 36 points
in San Diego's victory over
Seattle. Spencer Haywood led
the Sonics with 22.

Brown Biography

In World Listing
Victor L. Brown of Minersville is having his biography
listed in the current edition of
the "Dictionary of International
Biography."
Brown was born at Minersville Aug. 13, 1912. He is a
businessman and was educated
at Bliss Business College,
Columbus. He was with Atlantic
&amp; Pacific Tea Co., Pomeroy,
1931-34; Williams Variety Store,
1935-42; Marietta Mfg. Co. and
General Chemical Corp., Point
Pleasant, W. Va. 1942-45; Asst.
Mgr.,
Brown's
Grocery,
Pomeroy, 1945-48; Owner,
Brown's Grocery, Service
Station, Marine Business &amp;
Trailer Park, Minersville, 1948-.
He served as member and vice
president of Southern Local
Board of Education, Racine,
1952-60. He is a member of
Southern Development Corp. of
Meigs County and is connected
with World Field Research Inc.,
Mineola, N.Y. His membership
included Church School Supt.,
Minersville, Methodist Church,
1948-53; Trustee, 1948-64;
Church School Teacher 1949-64;
Lay Leader 1950-64; Chairman
of Stewardship and Finance
Comm. 1958-64; Pas tor al
Relations Com. 1958-64. He was

NEW
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Mason, W. Va.

MAYOR PROPOSES TAX
TOLEDO (UPI)-Mayor Harry Kessler plans to propose a 5
per cent admissions tax on all
entertainment in the city, including sports activities, movies
and circus performances, in order to add $500,000 annually to
Toledo's treasury.
Kessler proposed the tax take
effect, along with a 3 per cent
hotel-motel tax on April 1.

HOUSEWIFE IN BAKE-OFF
HONOLULU (UPI) - Mrs.
Marsha Kramer of Columbus
NAME WRONG
won $2,000 as a runnerup in the
Pleasant Valley Hospital in refrigerated crescent dough diThe Daily Sentinel Monday vision of the 22nd annual Pillsreported Ann Snyder being bury Bak~-Off here Tuesday.
admitted. The name should
have read William Arthur
Snyder of Middleport. Snyder is
confined to the hospital with
double pneumonia. His room
number is 166.

SEARS CLASSIC
PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla.
(UPI)-Sixty-six women golfers
will seek first prize money of
$10,000-and a mink coat-in
the $60,000 Sears Women's
World Classic, Feb. 19-21.

RECOMMENDATION VOICED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Carl
Rubin, 50, Cincinnati, has been
recommended to the U.S. attorney general by Sens. William
Sax be and Robert Taft Jr. of
Ohio for appointment as a U.S.
District Court judge.

Stanley Kramer.
Durante, married to his wife
Margie for 11 years, works only
about half the year. The rest of
the time he spends at home in
Beverly Hills or in Del Mar,
Calif.
His 9-year-old daughter, Cecille, keeps him young.
"She's a wonderful little girl
and I spend all the time I can
with her," the entertainer said.
On the Threshold
"So I'm on the threshold of
middle age. That's fine with
me. I expect to go another 70
years. From here I go to
Chicago and then to Philadelphia. By June I'll be !Jack

~

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-tc Garner up pleasant iC
-tc though Is in your lives; tor -tc
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Member FDIC
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«••···········

'"I. Qftl.lf:=
1

CONTINUES - - Cha pman.' s Shoes

LODGE TO MEET
The regular meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30 p.m . Thursday at
the hall in Chester. There will
be work in the EA degree. All
master masons are invited.

POMEROY

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CHA PMAN'S

VICTOR BROWN

playing at one of Mr. Howard
Hughes' establishments in Vegas."
How will the Great Schnozz
celebrate his birthday?
"I'd like to let it slip by nice
and quiet. Me and Marge and a
few friends will go out to
dinner. Then I'll go home and
go to bed early-which is what
I always do when I'm not
working."
And what would Jimmy like
to have for a birthday present?
"Another good year," he
replied. "And a few more
winners at the race track. That
would be the cream on the
boithday cake !"
·

co;ht;~·Jackie Robinson broke

the color line in 1947, Paige
(whose official birthdate is July
7, 1906 although he might be
REVIVAL P LANNED
A youth revival will be held at older) was considered too old
7:30 each evening at the for the majors. That's why
Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene Friday through
Sunday with the Rev. 0. G.
McKinney speak!ng. Special
music by different young people
will be a nightly feature. Mrs.
Shirley Smith is president of the
local Nazarene Young People's
Society.

ASSIST ANT HIRED
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Thomas
J. Conway Jr., a Cleveland native riow studying law here,
was appointed as administrative assistant in the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles .
The 25-year-old former Cincinnati area school teacher served
on Gov. John J. Gilligan's campaign staff last year.

with

3 ROOMS

foreman, and R. L. Zerkle, yard
supervisor, first submitted their
idea to the American Electric
Power Corporation's ( AEP )
Operating Ideas publication.
Now, the Electric Light and
Power Magazine which serves
the entire power industry, has
deemed it worthy of publication
in their January, 1971, issue .
Plant Manager Louis R. Ford,
Jr., in commenting on the article stated:
"We at Kyger have long noted
and used this improved method
of shifting our coal barges and I
am delighted to see it get
national circulation for the
benefit of the rest of the industry."

Three coal handling department supervisors at Kyger
Creek Power Plant have written
an article describing a faster
and safer method of shifting
coal barges that has been
published in a nationally circulated magazine .
The three, 0 . W. Neal, yard
foreman; B. D. Nelson, yard

recommended as an approved
lay speaker in the Portsmouth
District of the Methodist Church
in 1952 and was cited as an
outstanding layman in this
field. He served as pastor of the
Portland Charge of four
churches for three years, and
many
speaking
fulfilled
engagements in
various
churches throughout Meigs
County.
In addition to having his
biography included in the
"Dictionary of International
Biography" he was included in
the 1966 edition of "Who's Wh(l
in the Methodist Church."
Brown is present owner and
manager of Brown's Trailer
Park, Minersville. His wife is
the former Kathryn Maag, and
they have four children, Danny
Brown and Marilyn Williams,
local; Mrs. Vickie Cummins,
Columbus, and Mrs. Sharon
Wolfe, Jackson.

Da Nose, not Owner, is 78
By VERNON SCOTI
UPI Hollywood Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD
(UPI)-"Da
nose may be 78 years old today,
but not da man what owns it,"
quoth Jimmy Durante on his
birthday.
Jimmy stroked his proboscis
with affection. "Doesn't look a
day older, does it?"
The beloved comedian moved
with energy, his legs spry, his
eyes a twinkle. He is astonishingly agile for a man of his
years which he explains is due
to his never having drunk
alcohol.
"Thank God the birthdays
keep coming around," the great
Durante rasped. "I certainly
wouldn't want to miss one."
Durante returned recently
from Las Vegas where he
starred in his own reveue at
one of the hotels on the desert
town's famed Strip. He still
sings the same songs, throws
his hat at his drummer, wrecks
the piano and straightens his
tie while ogling girls.
The spotlight narrows on
Jimmy as he sings "September
Song" in a memorable rendition
which brings audiences to their
feet, as he did this week at a
testimonial dinner to producer

OVEC Supervisors Win
Nati•onal Recogm•t•on
l

the Hall of Fame is a state of
mind and the important thing is
how the sports fans view
Satchel Paige. I know how I
view him. I think he's right up
there with the top four or five
pitchers of all time."
Controversy Glossed Over
Paige glossed over the
controversy about whether he
and the other Negro league
stars to be selected in the
future-at a rate of one a year
-should be regular Hall of
Famers.
"I don't know where my
plaque is going to be hanging
but I'm proud to be wherever
. th H 11 0 f
they put me m
e a
Fame," he said.
Paige , whose most famous
slogan was, "Never look back
because something may be
gaining on you," also said he
had no bitterness about the
years in his prime he had to
spend barnstorming around the
country while being barred
from the majors.
"I had a world of my own,"
he sadid, "I had a lot o.~ fun and
1 rna e some money.
No Exact Records
No exact records are available on Paige's career before
1948 because few records were
kept in those gypsy days of the
Negro leagues when they
played every day, all year
round in towns across the

showman Bill Veeck was
blasted for pulling a publicity
stunt when he signed Paig ·n
1948 for the Cleveland Indians.
But Patge posted a 4-1 record
and helped the Indians win the
pnnnant. He pitched for Veeck
in 1949 at Cleveland and from
1951 to 1953 in St. Louis.
His last connection with
major league baseball was two
years ago when the Atlanta
Braves signed him as a coach
to give him more time in
major league pension plan. "I
could throw as hard as anyone
on the club," Paige insists,
"but my legs were going bad
and I couldn't handle the' ./
bunts.,

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�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 10,1971
he Was here," satd Gilligan
"The purple prose to which w~
became a ccustotned during the
campa ign was totally absent. r
think he has a different assignment now."

.Revenue Sharing: Mysterious, Political
By LEE LEONARD
his opposition to the plan after
UPI Statehouse Reporter
the vice president left.
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Gov.
"The program as explained
John J. Gilligan said Tuesday by the vice president is really
the revenue - sharing proposal shrouded in mystery," Gilligan
explained by Vice President said at a news conference withSpiro T. Agnew during his two- in hours of Agnew's departure.
day visit here "is really shroud"I have some very grave resl. d in mystery" and was poli- ervations. The amount of new
tically expedient for the Presi- money is wholly inadequate for
dent.
the job to be done."
Gilligan remained silent while
Gilligan, who has espoused a
Agnew was here to discuss the tax credit program to provide
proposal with state and local more federal funds to the
officials, but again vocalized states, said the revenue -sharing

proposal by Nixon might be
used to his advantage in future
campaigns.
"Either way the Congress
goes, he (Nixon ) wins," Gilligan said.
Before Agnew left Tuesday,
he held a briefing with the
news media in which his remarks departed from the revenue - sharing proposal to other
national interests.
No Troops In Laos
He said there were no U.S.
troops in Laos and there would

By United Press International
COLUMBUS- THE WARDEN OF THE OHIO PENITENTIARY has testified that better
qualified corrections officers and an upgraded pay system for all prison employes would help immeasurably in solving problems at his institution. Warden Harold J. Cardwell appeared Tuesday
before a sub&lt;ommittee of a special task force assigned by Gov. John J. Gilligan to recommend
improvements in Ohio's prison system.
He said conditions at the.penitentiary could also be improved by a closer liaison between guards
and supervisory personnel and by a clearcut procedure for airing employe grievances. The sub• committee, headed by Edward J. Orlett of Dayton, is to report to the task force Saturday on specific
recommendations for Ohio Penitentiary, recently hit by an eight~ay walkout of guards.
CLEVELAND - THE TWICE-POSTPONED EXTRADITION hearing for Yablonski murder
suspect Sillous Huddleston, 61, La Follette, Tenn., is now scheduled for Thursday in Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Court. The hearing was to be held Tuesday, but a crippling snow storm forced a
postponement. The original date for the hearing was last week . Judge Frank J. Gorman said several
persons who were to come here from Philadelphia were unable to make it.
Huddleston, president of a small United Mine Workers Union local in La Follette, is one of five
suspects in the New Year's Eve 1969, slayings of UMW official Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, his wife
• and daughter. They were shot.to death~~ their home in Clarksville, Pa. Authorities from Washington
County, Pa., have succeeded m extraditmg one of the suspects to face murder charges. He is Claude
E. Vealey, 26, Cleveland.

maxing 15 years of service on
the force.
The 37-year-old Goodin, who
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Carl
Goodin was sworn in today as headed the Police Inspection
Cincinnati's police chief, eli- Bureau since May, topped a list
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any scotch tape across my than the $16 billion in funds
offered by the President's prolips ," he said.
The vice president said the gram. He said only 1.3 per
administration revenue - shar- cent of the federal budget
ing plan had an " excellent" would be diverted under the
chance of getting through Con- proposat.
" I would like to think in
gress. He added he felt Gilligan
was "somewhat reassured" fol- terms of 5, 8 or 10 per cent
lowing his presentation of the within a short time, " he said.
Money For Needy
proposal to the governor and
Agnew told officials Monday
his cabinet.
one of the benefits of Nixon's
Gilligan remained skeptical.
plan was it could be imple"That depends what he men ted immediately and money
· to nee dY
means by 'reassured,"' the gov- could be f unneJed Ill
areas. He said a tax credit
ernor said.
The governor said state and plan would take time to enact
local governments needed more because of several necessary
procedures to get it through
Congress and state governments .
"A tax credit plan could be
enacted immediately, •• countered Gilligan a t his news conference.
The governor conceded, howneling $100 million in federal
ever , that he would accept the
funds into Ohio.
Gilligan has been lukewarm president's plan if it came
to President Nixon's proposed down to that or nothing.
" I'm for getting all the help
federal - state revenue-sharing
program because he fears Ohio we can, and if that 's all we
stands to lose money if the can get, we'll take it," he said.
Gilligan also told newsmen
Appalachia programs are disthat Agnew 's colorful language
continued.
He had said Tuesday after was noticeably absent during
the departure of Vice President his visit here.
" He spoke very softly while
Spiro T. Agnew, who is touring
the country to boost the President's program, that he has
"some very grave reservations."
"The amount of new money
is wholly inadequate for the
job to be done," he said.
The governor, in his testimany to the subcommittee, said
the public hearing he attended
in Athens last week to discuss
the Appalachia programs " reinforced my belief that this
program is having a good effect
on Appalachia Ohio."
" The impact of this program
on the lives of these public
officials and their constituents
is quite apparent," Gilligan
said. " They expressed a spirit
of cooperation and a belief in
what can be done that is not
common among state and local
governments."
But the governor warned the
program was still needed.
" Even with positive signs of an
economic recovery, the region
still lags behind the nation in
growth ," he said.

and New Patterns

with severe injuries.
Rev. Wyatt, pastor of the
Christian Church here called on
Mrs. Oscar Babcock Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Newell
and daughter of Chester called
on his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jessie Newell Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Marcinko have returned home from
AncHorage, Alaska where he
was stationed while in the Army
there. They will live in the
Manning Marcinko property
(formerly the Everett Calloway
property).
Mr . and Mrs. Dana Hoffman,
Jr., of Rutland, visited their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Betzing Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenne th
Griffith returned home after
several days vacation in
Florida.

59e

FROZEN SPECIAL

REAME'S

•

schools, 70 miles of developmental highways and other
needed improvements.
"These are projects which
have helped to reverse the
downward trend of the region's
economy," Gilligan said. " Withaut Appalachian funds it is
doubtful that these projects
would have been undertaken. "
The Subcommittee on Economic Development is currently
holding hearings on the Randolph - Cooper Appalachia Bill,
which would retain the present
programs responsible for fun-

lb.
bag

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan argued today
in favor of retaining the current Appalachia development
programs, which he said "have
helped to reverse the downward
trend" of Ohio 's 28 - county
poverty area.
In written testimony presented to a subcommittee of the
U.S. Senate Public Works Committee, Gilligan cited a "tremendous" investment program
over the last six years that has
resulted in 19 new hospitals and
health centers, six vocational

FLORIDA
GRAPEFRUIT

69C

States," he said .
" One thing that confuses me
is that doesn't it seem incomprehensible that the use of
South Vietnamese troops to defend themselves would be
labeled an invasion? "
Will Not Be Silent
Agnew, who has gained many
headlines through his saucy
verbal attacks on administration opponents, said he would
continue to speak out on issues.
" Don't think for a minute
that my appearance as an
administration expert on revenur - sharing, health and other
domestic issues is going to put

Progra!fls Cited

By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Attendance for Sunday School
at United Methodist Church was
60, the offering was $17.41.
Attendance for worship was 50
and offering was $73.75.
Leonard McGill returned
home from Camden Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, after
undergoing major surgery
there. He is ..-ecovering
satisfactorily.
Mrs. Maxine Marcinko
visited recently with her
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kelso and family of Columbus.
Kenneth Young entered a
hospital in Columbus where he
is receiving treatment.
Mrs. Margaret Maraz of
Detroit, Michigan, is spending
some time here in the care of
her brother, Leonard McGill,
who is home now from the
hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Fan Halsey
received word that their
daughter, Donna Jean, was in a
bad wreck in North Carolina
and was taken to a hospital in
Winston Salem, N. Carolina

CINCINNATI -TWO TEENAGERS TRACKED DOWN by police dogs going on the scent of a
dropped hat have been charged with first degree murder in the killing of a woman carryout clerk.
Stephen L. Newell, 18, and Anthony L. Collins, 18, both of Cleveland, were arrested Monday night in a
house about a mile away from Bob's Pony Keg in suburban Norwood.
The Canine Corps tracked the suspects through the city's new nine-inch snowfall. The men are
charged with killing Mrs. Esta Pomeroy, 63.
EGYPT HAS CONDEMNED ISRAEL FOR WHAT IT CONSIDERS a "clear rejection " of an
Egyptian proposal to reopen the Suez Canal if Israeli troops are withdrawn. Israeli newspapers interpreted Israel's stand as a counter offer that left the next move up to Egypt.
Prime Minister Golda Meir told the Knesset parliament Tuesday that Israel would not pull ils
troops back from the canal without a peace treaty but would be willing to discuss reopening uf the
canal and mutual de-escalation of the military confrontation. An Egyptian government spokesman in
Cairo said "We consider the statement made by Mrs. Meir to the Knesset today as constituting a
clear rejection of the Egyptian peace initiative."

•

The vice president said he
was disappointed that some
Americans felt the United States
was the agressor in the Southeast Asia conflict.
"The communists are the
aggressors, not the United

Tuppers Plains
Society News

MARIETTA, OIDO- ATTORNEY WILLIAM KUNSTLER characterized Ohio's new campus
disorder law as a "vicious" attempt to deprive_students of their education Tuesday night. "I think
that you can see why it is on the books," Kunstler said in a question-and-answer session following a
speech at Marietta College. "It is utilized to deprive people of their education.
"This vicious law was designed out of fear again to keep you quiet and adjust yourselves to your
programmed life that lies ahead when you go into what they like to call the real world," he said. The
law, enacted by the Ohio Legislature last summer, requires the expulsion of students and facult y
found guilty of participating in a disruption at a state university.
Kunstler defended Ronald Cabe, an Ohio State University student accused of taking parlin last
May's disturbance on that campus, and won his acquittal in a university hearing. Kunstler said Cabe
would have lost his education and his life "if he had not been absolved.

e

not be any American invasions
into Laos under Nixon's adminIstration.
'.'I can state to you unequivocally that there are no ground
forces in Laos and there will
be no ground forces in Laos,"
he said.
"Some public officials are
trying to mislead the public.''

2 lb.

l .6 9

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 10,1971

... .,....._..

Junior Club

Personality Profile
" 'e1ther the president nor the
preacher could keep me from
jeopardy," quipped Miss Mabel
Hysell as she talked of a favorite
retirement pastime - television
game and panel shows.
Miss Hysell. employed in the same
Middleport business block for 49
years, retired five years ago. She
contends that during those five
years she's never had a time when
she felt lonesome.
Fnendly and outgoing, Mabel
finds plenty to occupy her time.
She's an avid reader, a devout
churchwoman, and faithful in her
contacts with the sick and shut-ins of
the community.
Reading - "nothing trashy, just
plain simple fiction and sweet love
stories" -is what Mabel says she
enjoys most. She tells of taking her
shopping bag to the library for her
supply of books and of the numerous
paperbacks friends and relatives
supply.
The panel and the game shows on
daytime television are what appeals
to Mabel. " o soap operas for me.
What I like are shows where I can
learn something."

Modern Woodmen of America
Junior Service Club 6335
Middleport,
under
th~
leadership of Junior Director
Mrs. Helen Hart, has been
named a 1970 Modern Woodmen
Merit Club.
Mrs. Hart was aided by her
husband, George, assistant
junior director. Club fi335 was
one of the only !11 of the
fra lerna!
life
wsurance
society's 400 nationwide clubs to
win the merit honor this year.
An objective point system
determined the winners. Club
6335 earned the required
number of points through
community service, handicrafts,regularity of meetings,
attendance, membership
growth, themed parties, and
service to individual members
of the community.
Club membership includes
more than 50 Middleport area
youngsters age 16 and under. In
addition to leading her club to
meril status, Mrs. Hart is an
active member of the Chester
Daughters of America. She and
her husband, George, have a
son, William, 9, and a son,
George, 8.

MABEL HYSELL
with the Loyal Pals Class. She is also
a member of the Pythian Sisters
Lodge 152.
Mabel's philosophy of life is
wrapped up in one verse of scripture
- "Do unto others as you would
have them do unto you." That's the
right way, the sensible way to live,
says Mabel.

Polly's Problem

POLLY'S POINTERS
Decal Remoya( Is Easy

DEAR POLLY-We have lots of shells of all sizes
that we have _collected during trips to Florida. My
lodge 1s plannmg a banquet with the seashore as the
t~eme and I would like some ideas from the other
girls for favors that could be made with the small
and medium-sized shells.-JANE

But Don •t Ruin Surface
By POLLY CRAMER

of hot or cold applications.-FRANCES
DEA~

POLLY-After spending a small fortune on
matermty clothes my first time around I was determined
to find cost c~tters the next time. I had saved old panty
hose fo: stuffmg and polishing but find thev make nice
matermty panels when just c:ut to shape and fit. I like
them all across the front-MRS. R. D. B

DEAR POLLY-Th1s is for Carol who wanted to remove
decals from her bumpy glass shower doors. There is a
commercial decal r~move~ available in many places
where decals are sola and 1t does not cost much. Directions for its use are on this remover and it can be used
more than once. I suggest that she tries this.-JEAN
DEAR POLLY and CAROL-I have used clear nail
polish remover to get decals off of GLASS surfaces. Do be
careful about using this on plastic or painted surfaces as
it is a solvent and may damage them.-M. S.
DEAR GIR~S-:A. decal !Jecomes almost a part of the
surface to whtch 1t IS applied and removal is not always
easy. Nail polish remover does work qulcklv and easilv
on a slick, glazed surface comparable to glass-I tried it
on glazed pottery-but do heed M. S. 's warning about not
using on plastic or painted surfaces unless you have
assured yourself that the} will not be damaged.-POLLY
DEAR_ POLL~-Hot oil t:eatments for the scalp can be
~ccoi?phshed Without burmng the hands if you use a rollmg pm to roll the water out
of the towel i n s t e a d of
handwringing it. I fold a
h e a v y towel lengthwise
tour times, lay it on my
sink drain board and pour
boiling water on it. Then
simply roll the water out.
I also prolong the benefits
after winding the towel
around my head by donning
_ _::~:::=:~~~~~~;;,.
a turban made of heavy- NE.A
duty foil. The rolling pin
works equally as well when a patient must have a sene.s

I

THE DAI~Y SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor
Published daily e1&lt;cept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Off ice Phone
992-21 56, Editorial Phone 9922157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio
National advertising
representative BottinelliGallagher, Inc., 12 East 42nd
St., New York Ci ty, New York.
Subscription
rates·
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available: One
.nonrh $1. 75. By mail in Ohio
a':"ld W. Va .. One year $14.00.
S1x months $7.25. Three
m~nt~s $4.50. Subscription
pnc~ mcludes Sunday Times .
Sentmel.

USDA

Local Bowling

PEAK BRAND

NAVY BEANS ................4

1!

I

Calendar

~~,

~I

Pomeroy....
Personal Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Truman Russell
were Saturday guests of their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Russell
Columbus.
'
Mrs . Earl
Thoma
is
recuperatwg from a head
laceration suffered m a fall at
her home Thursday. Her head
struck a cement step when she
slipped just outside her Wolfe
St. home.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Nicholson of Athens were
Saturday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Hoeflich and Jayne.
Mrs.
Edgar
Roush,
discharged from Veterans
Memorial
Hospital,
is
recuperating at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. 0. A. Martin. Here to
VIsit her Monday were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Matthews of
Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks
have returned from Reynoldsburg where they spent 10 days
at the home of their son and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John
Weeks. They went especially to
be with their grandchildren,
Tom and Mary Beth, while Mr.
and Mrs. Weeks went to
Philadelphia, Pa. on business.

The student book fair at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
will be concluded Thursday
morning. Students desiring to
purchase books must have the1r
money in Thursday morning.
Books not sold will be packed
and returned to the suppli~
that day.
·~
The book fair has been a
project of the Pomeroy P.T.A.
with 20 per cent of all sales
going in~o the P.T._A. treasury. 11
Parents mterested m seeing the
displ~y are welcome Thursday
mormng, Mrs. Earl Thoma
P.T.A. ways and mean~~
chairman, reports .

Youths Shovel Off
Sidewalks' Snows

•

Seven youths of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church did
something nice for the older
members of the congregatiOn
Tuesday
morning.
T~
shoveled the snow from thTusidewalks.
In the group were Paul, Susie
and Becky Card, Becky Wright,
Shari Reuter, Charles Wright,
and Gene McKinney. The
donations they received will go
into the youth fellowship
treasUFy. At noon Mrs. George
Wright served hamburgers to
the young people.
•

"lt\G~t\Ul\1:,
UlC\JtNl
~01l\. tAOOl\.
10~ (lU~l\fi

tA~'tlRlSS &amp;.
60~ Sl'R\~GS

SOUP SUPPER, Southern
High School beginning 4:30p.m.
preceding Hannan, W. Va.Southern High basketball
game; sponsored by band
boosters.
SATURDAY
JITNEY SUPPER, Saturday,

REG. $139

SALE

S99. 90

SET

BAKER Middleport,
F~RNITURE
0.

U.S. Government
Inspected
U DA
CHOICE

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

bag

Pork Chops-~~~-~~~~-~~.~~-----~~:.

HUNT'S BRAND

sse

•
20 Cl
W1eners.
.. ............... ..... pkg. gge

300
PORK &amp; BEANS................... 7 cans

FRF:\C/1 CIT}"

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ...........................~ c:~ 45¢

RED &amp; WHITE

COLONIAL

SUGARWith $10

pkg.
only

10

BAKERITE

SHORTEN IN G........................................ ~a'~·

lb.

ONIONS

or More
Purchase

bag

Good Olly At Racine Food Market

~

VELVEETA· CHEESE ............................. ~~~· 99¢
ARMOUR'S RICH &amp; WHOLESOME

r.1

I

I
I

Expires

2-16-71 ~:l'tltl~~

-. :--.-.;---.-!
NU-MAID

I

MARGARINE

I

l-Ib.
Reusable Bowl

39¢

With

Coupon

I

I
BEEf STEW .............................................. ~~noL 59¢ I
~~~~Eixiireis-:2--1·6--7~1~._._. I
LUCKY LEAF
- - ·· - - - - - - - - : J
CHERRY PIE FILLING ........................ ~:~n 39¢
Only At: Racin" Food Market

2

Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 7
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

~i1;111Q:I!Ij•1IJ4•1:r;@.l~~~

6

KRAFT FAMOUS

Prices Effective Feb. 10-16

1
I.E '

SEALDSWEET SWEETENED OR UNSWEETENED

DEL MONTE PEACHES~-~~~-~~--~-~-~~-~~~- 3N~~~Yz $}

"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Sta s

Beef· Stew Meat ..:'f~:~:c.............!.:.
b 79e

IDAHO. POTATOES-~~-~~-~~~................. ~~--~~-~.~~-- 5¢
CHEESE PIZZA .......................................

End Thursday •

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

lb.

JENO'S SINGLE SIZE

l

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80
Royal Arch Masons, stat~
convocation Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Ama teur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
at the ceramic shop of Mrs.
Russell Mills. Co-hostesses
Mrs . Ferman Moore, Mrs. Ed
Burkett, and Mrs. Wesley Fry.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club 8
p.m. Thursday, preceded by
Mass and Rosary at 7:15p.m.
Hostesses, Mrs. Phyllis Hennesy, Mrs. Janet Duffy, Sandy
Korn, Mrs. Peg Rudolph, Mrs.
Barbara Mullen.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary, 6 p.m. Thursday at
the hall; conference contest
rules to be distributed· conference is April
at
Wilkesville, District 8.
MEIGS CHAPTER, DAV and
its auxiliary, Thursday evening
at hall, Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy; refreshments at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting at
7:30; all veterans welcome.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Heath
United
Methodist
Church, 1 p.m. Thur,;day to
prepare trays for shut-ins; all
women of church asked to
contribute cookies.
4:30 to 7 p.m. at Eastern High
BRADBURY P.T.A. , 7:30 School sponsored by band
p.m
Thursday, skit by boosters.
American Legion Auxiliary,
Our
Precious
American
Heritage.
PHILATHEA
SOCIETY,
Middleport Church of Chnst,
7:30 Thursday at the church
instead of at the home of Mrs.
Alfred Roush as previously
announced.
LEGION
AMERICAN
Auxiliary juniors, Racine unit
602, valentine party, 7 p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs. Gerald
Simpson; each member may
bring a guest.
FRIDAY
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 2 p.m.
Friday , Mrs. C. M. Hennesy
home; co-hostesses, Mrs.
Everett Hayes and Miss Lucille
Smith, who will also have the
program; valentine verses to be
given in response to roll call.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F&amp;AM, master mason degree;
Inspection, 7:30 p.m. Fnday.

2s

Book Fair to

I

R

I

The Best!

TO ATIEND SERVICES
Mrs. 0. A. Martin and Mrs.
Virgil Walker of Meigs Salon
710, Eight and Forty, will be in
Columbus this weekend to attend a seminar on cystic
fibrosis at the Sheraton Motor
Inn . Among the speakers will be
Dr. Gordon Young.

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Pomeroy
P.T.A. scheduled for Monday
night was cancelled due to the
snowfall.
It
has
been
rescheduled for next Monday
night at 7:30 p.m. Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, art instructor at the Meigs High
Pomeroy lanes
School, will be the speaker, and
Team
W L
Lou's Ashland
38 10 past presidents will be honored.
H· R Firestone
32 16
Cement Block
24 24
Swisher &amp; Lohse
22 26
MEETING POSTPONED
Quality Print
14 34
Due to the weather a meeting
BuckeyePotatoChips
14 34
1st high team 3 games
of the Middleport Amateur
Lou's Ashland 2580; 2nd high
team 3 games
Quality Print Gardeners scheduled for
2433; 3rd high team 3 games- tonight at the home of Mrs.
H R Firestone 2362
Russell Mills has been post1st h1gh Ind. team game Lou's Ashland 935; 2nd high lnd poned until next Wednesday.
team game - H-R Firestone
849; 3rd high Ind . team gameSwisher &amp; Lohse 846
1st high Ind. 3 game
McElhinney 625; 2nd high Ind. 3
IN COLUMBUS
game- B. Boyles 567; 3rd high
Ind. 3 game - Anderson 543
Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz and
1st high Ind. game - B.
Boyles 220; 2nd high Ind. game son, Marc, Middleport, were in
McElhinney 219; 3rd high Columbus Sunday to see
Ind. game- Wipple- Bowen 207 Disneyland on Parade.

CHOCE
Phoebe Says:
Enjoy

----...-......-...

I Social

Is Recognized

Born in Mason County and reared
m Rutland, Mabel came to Middleport where she went to work for
the old Chamber's Grocery on the
..T... She worked there 20 years,
spent the next seven with the I. E.
Miller Variety Store, and the 22
yea1·s before her retirement
managing Robinson's Tri-Lustre
Cleaners outlet in Middleport.
Dunng that time she saw
numerous businesses "come and
go." They were busy years as Mabel
assisted with various fund drives,
the Red Cross, the Cancer Society,
from which she received an award of
ment for extra-ordinary service, the
Middleport Fire Department, and
school projects.
While Mabel never married to
have children of her own, her nieces
and nephews have filled that gap.
ow 72, the youngest in a family of
four, she has two sisters, Mrs.
Goldie Fry of Columbus, 85, and
Mrs. Alice Fink, 78, who makes her
home at Racine with her daughter . A
brother, "Chick" Hysell, died at 85
two years ago.
A member of the Middleport
Church of Christ, Mabel is active

_____

2 lb. 35e
YELLOW ON IONS...................3
MICHIGAN U.S. NO. 1

WINESAP

POTATOES

APPLES

lb.

3 !:~ 39~

20

89&lt;=

bag

J33ken ,
11

sveciJl

HOLSUM REGULAR 49c ,

• DONUTS

lb.

bag

GOLDEN YELLOW

CARROTS
bch

only

10~ .

�1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 10, 1971

Mason Area

... -r-J

Apple Grove

tNews, Notes

News, Events

MASON - The Mason United
Methodist Youth Fellowship
took a field trip to Huntington
recently to the Otterbein United
Methodist Church where the
Rev. Lowell E. Keeney is
pastor. Rev. Keeney w~ a
former pastor of the Mason
.hurch.
Mter attending both Sunday
School and worship services the
group went to the Keeney home
to visit. Members attending
• were Susan Thabet, Clarice
Dhvls, Debbie Stewart, Debbie
Gilland, Kay Schaekel, Cecilia
Smith ' Susie McDaniel, Connie
f
Gilland Belva Johnson, Terri
Ross, D'iane Johnson, Billy F~y,
~arvin Newell, Jason Dav1s,
Marty Yeager and Mike Lewis.
Drivers of cars were Richard
Waybright, Charles Kitchen,
Gary Hamrick and Roger
Hysell.
ANNOUNCE PREACHER
The Rev. Charles Thompson
will bring the messages at
Graham United Methodist
revival scheduled for March
~1st to 28th, according to Rev..
Mrs. Achsah Miller, pastor of
Graham United Methodist.
Persons in teres ted in singing
are to contact the music
committee, Eleanor Roush,
chairman for the adults and
Ruth Pickens, chairman for the
children. Visitation chairman is
Sandy Lowman and Prayer
,.committee, Michael Merritt.
,.,
WSCS INVITED
The Graham WSCS is invited
to the New Haven United
Methodist Church on Feb. 16 at
10 a.m. where a study program
on the Psalms will be conducted
by the Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller.
On Feb. 25 at 7:30p.m. a SelfDenial Service will be held at
the home of the pastor, Mrs.
~Miller. Each member is urged
to bring a guest.
GIVEN SHOWER
Mrs . William G. (Linda)
Zuspan, Mason, was surprised
with a stork shower Thursday
evening at Christian Brethren
Church in Mason . Hostesses
were Carolyn Zurcher, Norma
Jean Camp, Judy Young and
Blanche Compson Jones.
•
The color scheme ofpink and
blue was used in the decorations
which consisted of an umbrella,
cradle, and baby carriage.
Games were played and prizes
awarded. Refreshments were
served.
Registering were members of
the church, friends and
relatives including Lucille Clay,
.• Betty Roush, Sandy Henry,
Theresa Becker, Nancy Hall,
Carolyn Zurcher, Hester A.
Rayburn, Judy McWhorter,
Eileen
Duncan,
Shirley
Meadows, Ruth Thompson,
Martha Thompson, Vera
Dodson, Alice Tripp, Amelia
Davis, Gladys Riley, Mildred
Riley, Maureen Riley, Carolyn
Satterfield, Lillian L. Burt,
Jean Bowling, Debbie Zuspan,
Mary Hendricks, Alice Zuspan,
Mrs. George Zuspan, Marjorie
Burt, Patty Roush, Janet
Compson and Timmy, Sally
Bland, Judy Young, Tammy
and Lisa, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Riley, Mr. and Mrs. William
Zuspan, Sr., and Carolyn
Zurcher, Mrs. Camp, David and
Lisa, Mrs. Young, and Mrs.
• Jones.
Sending gifts were Madalyn
Rickard, Vickie Taylor, Norma
Riggs, Peggy Anderson, Alma
Newton, Doris Roberts, Lou
Yonker,
Roxan
Russell,
Imogene Crow, Vickie Crow,
Elsie Roach, Dora VanMeter,
Mildred Riley, Sarah Foster,
Betty Becker,- Cathy Bland,
. . Cathy King, Cathryn Stewart,
Tod Zuspan, Sarah Zuspan,
Joann Harbour, Mrs. Vic
Turnbull and Compton's
Jewelry Store.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Homer Warner
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Hoyt Fugerson at New Haven,
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ray
Parsons and family and Pete
Snyder of Delaware called
Sunday on Mr. and Mrs. Benny
Boggess.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor
moved Saturday to their trailer
home in Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Anderson
spent Sunday with Mrs. Andct'son's cousin, Ed Crouch at
Hurricane, W. Va., who is ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Beegle,
Zane and Tracy, returned to
their home in Marietta, Georgia
after a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Buck and Pam. They also
visited Lawrence Beegle of
Dorcas and relatives in
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Stevens of
Colluden, W. Va., were dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
St. Clair Hill and visited Mrs.
Florence Hill at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
Lorna spent Sunday afternoon
with the former's father,
Raymond Bell at Oak Grove.
Lorna Bell spent Friday night
with Miss Denise Cross at Oak
Grove and attended a slumber
party in honor of Denise's birthday.
Mrs. Don Bell and Linda Hill
visited the latter's mother, Mrs.
Erma Hill at Holzer Medical
Center Saturday evening.
Dallas (John) Clifford, James
Ray and Don Richard Hill and
Marshall Roush attended a
vegetable meeting in Columbus
Tuesday.
Dean Hill is confined to his
home with strepthroat. Dean is
the small son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Hill.
Mrs. Virgil Roush was
returned home Sat.urday from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Brice Hart of Racine spent
Friday night with Keith
Hayman.
Harry Hill is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Alex Wheeler is ill.
Miss Juanita Frederick,
granddaughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Bob Wood, is a medical patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bostick
and family of Dunbar, W. Va.,
spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood and
Debbie and Waid Johnson. Mr.
and Mrs. Milford Frederick of
Minersville, Rt., returned to the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Wood
Saturday evening for · an indefinite visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp and
sons, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Wells, Mandy and Amy of
Syracuse, spent Thursday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll White and children. The
evening was spent making ice
cream and playing canasta.
Mr. and Mrs. George Roberts
of Bashan visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts
and family.
Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Aaron
joined Mrs. James Lewis and
children at Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
and they all were dinner guests
of Mrs. Lewis, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Stein at Nitro,
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Roush
of Mansfield spent the weekend
with Mrs. Edna Roush and Mrs.
Gladys Shields at Racine.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 10,
the 41st day of 1971.
The moon· is full.
•
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn .•
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Aquarius.
On this day in history:
In 1942 the last civilian cars
for the duration of World War
II rolled off the Detroit
• assembly lines, as the industry
converted to war production.
In 1962 U2 pilot Fracis Gary
Powers was returned to A!flerica in exchange for Soviet spy
Rudolf Abel.
In 1964 an Australian aircraft
carrier and a U.S. destroyer
collided in the Tasman Sea,
ktlling 100 Americans.
In 1968 Peggy Fleming won a
gold medal for the United States
in figure skating at the Olympic
Games in Mexico City.
A thought for today: Samuel
Johnson said , "Thr first ) cars
IJf man r11ust rnakt• provisiorr
for the last. "

Herbert, Lestpr and Russell
Roush 1:1lso vrsrled Mrs. Edna
Roush, who is ill.
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs. Iva
Orr called on Mrs. Florence Hill
and Elmer Parsons and Mrs.
Virgil Roush Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
spent Friday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Ott Boston at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
and daughter, Vicki, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McDade at Troy, 0.
Norma Jean and Kim Jarrell
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Benny Boggess and
Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Ransom of Antiquity spent
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Boggess.
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Ruth •
Donohew and Carl Jr. Wolfe,
Ross Norris, Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Farra, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Farra and family attended
funeral services for William
Heiney (a former resident) at
the Haley's Funeral Home at
New Matamoras Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manuel
of Racine called on Roger
Roush Saturday.

Acti•VI•ti·es
Announced
MASON - Mason United
Methodist Church activities
have been announced by the
Rev. Parker Hinzman. The
School of · Missions which
commenced Sunday, Feb. 7,
will continue each Sunday
evening during February.
Scheduled for Wednesday,
Feb. 17 is family night with a
covered dish dinner.
On March 12, 13 and 14th
Lenten Youth Retreat will be
held at Cedar Lakes. The cost is
$12, one half of which will be
paid by the church for the first
ten young people to register.
Evangelistic services will be
held March 21-28. Members of
the committee are chairmen,
Gladys Stewart and Sarah
Spencer; Roy Harless, LeVera
Yeager, Debbie Stewart,
Cecelia Smith, Murl Megee.
Margaret Pickens and Belva
Lewis.

J

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave . and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
Rayburn, New Haven, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. James
A. Taylor, Kanauga, a son; and
Mr. and Mrs. William B.
Thomas, Gallipolis, a daughter.
Discharges
Mrs. John Adkins, Mrs.
Hewitt W. Buescher, Mrs. E. J.
Caldwell, Mrs. Roger D. Case
and infant daughter, Arthur E .
Casey, Urban A. Cornett, Mrs.
Charles A. Cottrell and infant
son, Mrs. Harry Coughenour,
Jr., and infant daughter; Harry
B. Davis, Mrs. Norene A.
Graham, Robert D. Hensley,
Karen Ann Howard, Daniel L.
Hysell, Mrs. Clarence E.
Jayjohn, Mrs . Robert Jones,
Jr., and infant son, Charles H.
Leonard, Mrs. Marie F. Northup, Edward Reicherderfer,
Charles F. Rife, Arthur W.
Saunders, Mrs. Frank Westfall,
Shelia D. Whitt, Roosevelt
York, Mrs. Gary Miller, McCoy
Snavely, and Mrs. Jesse A.
Beaver.

ATHENS
General
Telephone Co. of Ohio announced today that $1,548,100
has been budgeted for expansion and improvement of its
communications facilities this
year in the Athens County area .
Kenley Krinn, Athens district
commercial manager, said all
exchanges, Athens, Albany,

Amesville, Chauncey, Shade,
Guysville, The Plains and New
Marshfield, will benefit.
Operating in 70 counties, the
company's total budget for Ohio
is $37.2 million - a 26 per cent
increase over 1970. These
figures do not include an additional $19.5 million being
expended by Northern Ohio

New Haven Social Events
" would have to take over."
It was brought out that the
volunteer ambulance service
could be operated similar to a
volunteer fire departmen t.
There will be a· need to solicit
funds. The New Haven Lions
Club has agreed to help get the
project started . Part of the cost
of two ambulances would
reportedly be paid by a federal
grant. These ambulances would
be for Mason and New Haven.
Mrs. Smith reminded the club
of the state convention which
starts March 18, at the
Greenbrier, White Sulphur
Springs, W. Va . It is necessary

Donald Foglesong, Mason,
spoke at New Haven Women's
Club on Tuesday evening on the
prospects of a voluntary
community ambulance service.
It reportedly was a very informative meeting. The guest
was introduced by Mrs. Jane
Russell, New Haven Town
Recorder and a member of the
Women 's Club.
Mr. Foglesong said that in the
near future he will not be
transporting patients by ambulance and will announce soon
the reasons for discontinuing
his firm's ambulance service.
" The communities," he said,

PORK LOIN ROAST FU~LAt~tN.
PORK CHOPS
•
BONELESS PORK LOIN ROAST
FRESH SPARERIBS c~~GNur~~\~Y~E

Prices Good Thru Sat., February 13th.

QUARTERED LOIN
CENTER CHOPS INCLUDED

WHOLE OR SHANK HALF

Fresh Hams

•

to make reservations now. At
the opening of the meeting,
devotionals were given by Mrs.
David Roush, Letart.
The next scheduled meeting
will be held on Feb. 23 with Mrs.
Jack Flesher in charge. A
program on fine arts will be
presented. Hostesses are Mrs.
Charles Dodd, Mrs. Carl Wiles,
Mrs. Dan Edwards, Mrs . Mark
Ward and Mrs. Robert Gurtis.
Guest night will be observed
and club members are
requested to let hostesses know
if they will be bringing a guest.
Hostesses at Tuesday's meeting
were Mrs. Donald Bumgardner,
Mrs. Ruth Campbell and Mrs.
Robert Gilmore.

PORK BACK RIBS
79~
PORK ROAST Plc~f~srrYLE
• lh.asc PORK STEAKS ~~Y L E •
•lh.ss~ FRESH PORK FEET

•

•

Telephone Co., also a subsidiary
of General Telephone &amp; Electronics Corp. •
Highlight of the program will
be installation of 1,400 new
customer lines, termirtals for
1,000 new telephone numbers
and 100 terminals to serve
business customers in the
Athens exchange. Several

• Ill.

•

major cable projects also are
scheduled in the Athens exchange area . Construction will
start this month on a $57,000 job
which will increase facilities
along East State St. and Ohio 50
east.
Strouds Run and the area
around Dow Lake are earmarked for major additions to
cable facilities. Cost of this
project will be $36,700. Albany
has several projects planned.
One major cable addition will
be westerly along Ohio 50. More
than $36,000 will be spent on
specialized central office
equipment which is designed to
upgrade local calling.
. Four hundred new customer
lines and 500 phone number
terminals will be installed in
Chauncey by December at a
cost of over $58,000.
The major cable project
scheduled in the Guysville
exchange will extend additional
cable facilities from Guysville
to Stewart. General of Ohio
serves more than 22,000
telephones in Athens vicinity .

•

•
•

11

•
•

•

•

•

•

lb.39c

• • •

•

•

• •

•

• •

•

•

55~.

Swift's Sausage :R~~~
$129
Skinless WienersHa~~vJgr. 2
~t-o&lt;- 79c
Oscar Mayer Smokies
Sliced Bacon e~c;,~:
Thick Sliced Bacon e:._c:e:
,.,... ggc
Eckrich Smorgas Pac
Eckrich Beef s~~:g"s
·~-·'· ggc
7ft..
Eckrich Beef Franks
I

lh.
l'kl.

VkiC.

I

1

1

llklf.

SWISS STEAKS R~~~BL~~~E.
CHARCOAL STEAKS • •

lJkl.

•

l-Ib.
lolkl.

.,-

• lb.

• • • •

BOILING BEEF ic~fE. • •
BONELESS BEEF BRISKET

lh.gg~

• • • • •

E

$139

• •

• •

• • • •

CHECK AND COMPARE!
"Suf* • Right" Qu•lity Beef

RIB ROAST
4th. 5th.
c

&amp; bth. RIBS

98

lb.
151h -oz. can 49c

BROADCAST

STOKELY

00
Shellie Beans • • 4
Stokely Peas • • •
Stokely Peaches • 3 $100
Green Beans • • • 4 $100
$100
Stokely Corn
• • 4
·Fruit Cocktail • • . 4~~~· $100
Northern Tissue • .4 age
Modess- Regulars • .48 $1 59
•

15 ~··02. $1

Western Red or Golden

cans

Delicious Apples

3-SIEVE

5

YELLOW CLING- SLICED or HALVES

:l().oz.

•

can~

STOKELY CUT

•

17-oz.
cans

$100
lbs.

D'Anjou Pears
Navel Oranges
Temple Oranges
Pi neap pies PRUI~:~
Fresh Turnips

FRESH CARROTS· 2 -lb. bac
YELLOW ONIONS· 3 -lb. b••
•
FRESH SPINACH or KALE· 10 -··
PASCAL CELERY· ~~:~~

WHOLE KERNEL

17-oz.

cu.ns

STOKELY

(HOSPITAL NEWS

Gen Tel to Spend Over $1Y2 Million

ScOFF LABEL

Your
b•r

plH'k

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

count

I

I

f•r

89c
$100

for

I

10~.

Ice Milk • • •
Excel Cashews •
Sandwich Bread
Cherry Pie • •
Egg Noodles
•

•

•

•

•

JANE PARKER

14-oz.
btls.

•

•

ANN PAGE

Req.
Bars

•

•

•

~!Pall:lil V~.I..UABLf

lb.
baq

t'!=l'gt:D::a:.· VALUAII.Lf COUPON

COUPON

Heinz Reg. K•t~hup '' ,
'

A&amp;P

·.~
_
~r

Camay Bar

a"·' h

B

P.

Soap
WITH
iHfS
COUPON

Gqod Thru Saf11rday, Fabru&gt;try llth.

•

FROZEN

I~

All

Columbut. O:vhion A&amp;:P'i • One Pel' F&lt;tmily

1HHHHHHHHHH#HHHH»·

a a h h

4

lll·u&lt;.

,,a..c ...

$100

VALUABLE COUPON h u h h '·

· Chiffon Liquid Detergent
WITH
.· ~·p
~~~ 29C
'THIS
.,.,.._

COUPON

Good Thru $.,turday, FebfuMy I :nh. In All
Colt.~mbus Division A&amp;P's • One Per FaM.ity

•·i

u n •• o, VAJ,.UABLE. COUPON

:·~Kieeraex Facial

4!':=$100

t&gt;.ach

!j8c

3 1-lh. $100

SULTANA FROZEN

Broccoli Spears

ctn .

JANE PARKER

~:ans

lh

"~-gal.5t

~.

•

6-oz.

I

$100

69c
320-oz.
... 8t

A&amp;P BRAND FROZEN

Liquid Drano · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · "'''"'
."" 89 c
Purina Chuck Wagon Dog Dinner . . 5 .:::;. 99c
Purina Chuck Wagon Dog Dinner 10 ,:::~. $1.79
11 oz. }24
Heinz Tomato Soup
can
15' • oz. 29(
Kal Kan Burger Roun d s
can
Butter 'Kernel Golden Corn
.
•;.;;: 27c
Nabisco Fig Newtons
,.,, 49c

l -Ib.

12-o:r:.
• PkJt.

Boxes
of 200

•

26-07..nc
C'.an

pkgs.

•

WITH COUPON BELOW

•

•

0

29C
Kl eenex
4 $1 00
Plaid Stamps Orange Juice
• • 6
French Fries • • 5
TISSUES •

can

2c OFF LABEL

22-oz.
btl.

FACIAL

79c
65c

15V2 -oz. can 45c

BROADCAST

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

•

26-o:r:.

•

WITH COUPON BELOW

Chiffon Liquid

&lt;~an

MARVEL - ALL FLAVORS

Choice

Ccimay Bar Soap 3

At A&amp;P You
Save Two Ways .. .
Low, Low Prices
PLUS

10
3

25\4-oz.

15-oz. can 39c

BROADCAST

2

H;iniowKetchup . 2

roll

Corned Beef Hash • •
Chili With Beans • •
Beef Stew • • • •
BIue Bonnet Marganne 3

pkgs.

�OSAGE

PEACHES
IN HEAVY SYRUP
21f2 CAN

TOMATO
JUICE
46 Ol CAN
$

TASTY

APPLES
RED OR YELLOW

F
0

DELICIOUS

R

OR

FRESH

WINESAP
PINEAPPLE
1UICE

4

LB.
BAG

46 Ol CAN
$

~

0
R

SOLID

HEAD
LETTUCE
HEAD
BUFFET ROYAL CROW
¢

BAG

•

SUPPERS
STEAK
TURKEY
CHICKEN
BEEF

PINEAPPLE

ORANGE
DRINKS
46 Ol CAN

~

~

D
R

CORN

WHOLE
KERNEL

303 CAN

$

$

R

¢

8

ea.

ONLY

CORN

303 CAN

F
0

Qt. Bottle

CARTON. OF

$

CREAM
STYLE

COLA

PINEAPPLE
CHUNKS
CRUSHED
NO. 2 CAN

F
0

R

~

0
R

$

�The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 10, 1971

9

~-------~=~~~.@~~~-·

SLAB

BACON
Whole or Half Slab

FRESH

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN
STEAK

¢ .
lb.

SPINACH-

LEAN &amp; TENDER
SLICED

303 CANS

PORK
STEAK

F
0
R

Shop For Name Brands
At I.G.A.
FRESH

MIXED
VEGETABLES
$

CELLO
ARROTS
1 LB. PKG.

F

0
R

12e

303 CANS

· cherry
p1e

CHERRY

KRAUT

PIE

303 CANS

SUPREME

(/

¢

$

INSTANT
POTATOES
3 OZ. BAG

F

BAG

BLUE LAKE CUT

PINEAPPLE
GRAPEFRUIT
DRINK

SLICED
TIDBITS

46 OZ. CAN

No. 2 Can

F
0

R

$

~

0
R

0
R

GREEN BEANS
303 CAN
$

303 CAN

F
0

R

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. HI, l\171

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
1\o\onday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9a.m. tor
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional.
The
pub Iis her will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertien.
RATES
For want Ad Service
5 cents P.er Word one irsertion
Minim um Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.
. 25 Per cent Discount on paid·
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for SO word ' minimum .
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
QFFICE HOURS
8:3!1a.m. to 5:00p .m. Daily,
8 :30 a.m. t o 12:00 Noon
Saturday .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

Business Services

L-~----------------------------~--------------------~

1968CHEVYII
$1595
Nova 2 dr., white fi nish , blue interior, 6 cyl. eng.,
automatic trans., new tires •. radio &amp; heater .

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

1967 PLY MOUTH
$1395
Belvedere 2 dr . hardtop, V-8 motor, power steering, std. 3speed trans., blk . top, cream body, radio.

~....~.'.~~.~~

1967 FORD
$1495
Mustang, 6 cyl., auto . trans. , console, maroon fin ish, all
good w-w tires, radio. Real Nice.

-'- ·--.....:

l.
:

I

I:

IJ 1111111•1. IUi·l· I ••,. •I
I ii ,., I'H. Ill' II· .J I.
Fl i ' I n •lliiJ.I t· :~
1' •11 • •:·.r

,,-,.

....._,......

. "I: ' I '

II

··- I

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad iator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
t\OMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2143

Card of Thanks

WE WISH to express our sincere and heartfelt thanks to
our many friends and Wanted
Buy
relatives .for the sympathy
OLD
furniture,
dishes, bras~
and kindness shown us at the
beds, etc. Write M. D. Mil ler,
death of our husband and
Rt. 4. Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
father. Herman L. Hill. Also,
992-6271.
special thanks .to. Rev.
9-1-tfc
Freeland Norris, h1s s1ngers,
the Ewing Funeral Home ~n.d
the Meigs County Shenff s ALL U. S. gold coins, $1 to $50.
Top prices paid. Phone 992Department. All have our
3476 after 6 p . m.
everlasting gr~titude.
2-5-6tp
Wife and Children
2-10-ltc ----------------

To

Notice

BAND
"THE SUNS"
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY NIGHTS
9 to 2 a.m.

Hl-7 CLUB

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

DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949-4761. '
10-18-tfc
WILL PICK up merchandise
and take to auction on d
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc

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

SKATE-A-WAY is open Wednesday , Friday and Saturday
nights, 7:30 to 10: 30 p.m.
Available for private parties
on AAonday , Tuesday and
Thursday nights or Saturday
and Sunday aflernoons.
Phone Ches ter 985-3929 or 9853585.
2-2·12tc

ATTENTION ladies! Would you
like to try a wig on in the
privacy of your own home?
You can. Just call us . We a lso
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Koscot, of course . Dis tributors, Brown's_. Ph9.n.e
Middleport 992-5113.
12-31-tfc
WILL GIVE piano and organ
lessons in my home. Phone
992-3666.
8-1 6-tfc

------------·------INCOME TAX service, daily

e xcept Sunday . Evenings by
appointment only . Phone 9922272. Mrs . W;:nda Ebl in,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
mi le south of fairgrounds.
2-7-30tc
--------~---------

AUCTION -"WHEN? Each
Friday nigh t. 7 p.m. Where?
Hayman's Auc li on House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Pomeroy -Middleport
Bypass.
2-7-tfc
~-----------------

GUN SHOOT, sponsored by
Syracuse Fire Dept. Assorted
meats, half hog . Every
Saturday n ight, 6 p.m., near
Racine Planing Mill.
2-10-3tc
BAND AT Red' s Club, Mason,
W. Va., Gai l and T-C
Playmates . Dance Friday 9
p.m. to 2 a.m. and Saturday 9
p.m. to 1:30a.m. All members
and guests welcome.
2-10-3tc

Male Help Wanted
EMPLOYMENT offered in
retail sales and record
keeping
by
Pomeroy
business. Wri te Box 534,
Pomeroy , Ohio.
2-10-3tc

For Rent or Sale
THEY
ARE
he r e:
The
SKAMPER line from A to Z.
Wha1 a surprise lo see :
Travel !railers, campers are
all on display. What isn't here
is on lhe way . GAUL
TRA IL ER SALES. INC., 11 2
miles nor1h of Chesler, Ohio.
Wa 1ch for sign. Phone 985
3832. CONTINENTAL and
GO TAG -A LONG
lravel
1ra1lers for sale Renlals by
day, week, mon1h .
2 4 121c

Wanted To Buy

Real Estate For Sale

Phone 992-2094

AIR CONDITIONING. Refrigeration service. Jack' s
Refr igeration , New Haven .
P hone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

JEMO ASSOCIATES

------------------READY-MIX CONCRETE de-

MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL HARRIS
192 Beech St.
Middleport•

livered right to your pro ject.
Fast
and
eas·y.
Free
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goegle in Ready-Mix Co. ,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

" The sense of pride one has in
owning lheir own home cannot
be measured in dollars and
cents. We will be eternally
gra lefu l to Jemo Associates for
lhis opportunity."

UNFURNISHED 3-room
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
1-31-lfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments . Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18·tfC

Sites Available

I:M:I

Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Today!
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, Middleport
Phone 992-7034

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

Auto Sales
1968 LTD FORD, factory ai r
conditioned, stereo, vinyl top.
Phone 742-3806.
2-7-5tc

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

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

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

SR.

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

Cleland Realty

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

FERTILIZER

{1 l

Now and get the early

27

(2) 3 ,

10, 3tc

Discount
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fer
t11!zer. all available now.
T,1ke delivery now from our
area warehouse at Pomeroy.

L

POMEROY
J . W. Carsey, Mgr.

Phone 992-2181

HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6-10-tfc

---------------------NE IGLER Construction. For

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

~-------------1

l • -your
l "cash

ph on e w i 11 j 1 n g I e 1
results", too, when[
you place an act i on Wont I
I Ad. You can sell f urni lu re
[opp l ion ces, clothes . . . do: I
I• ens of other unuoed but I
1uoeful l t emo!
I

L..---------:------1

....t::PTIC TANKS CLEANED.
Reasonable rates. Pho ne
John Russe ll, Gall ipol is 4464782 after 5:30 p. m.
4-7 -tfc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, a ll makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service . We Sharpen Scissors .
3-29-tfc
BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bi ll ) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Comple te Serv ice
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Cr itt Bradford

SEPTIC tanks c leaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc
INTERIOR carpenter work, by
1he hour or conlract. Phone
992-3511.
1-31-30tp

Help Wanted

CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots on T79 a t Rock
Springs. Within walking
dis tance of Meigs High 1969 BUICK LeSabre , 2-dr .
hardtop, power steerin g ,
School. a 5 minute drive from
power brakes , a ir, 18,000
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
miles. Excellent conditi on.
Wi lie weekends, or after 5
Phone 992-2288.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992ll-10-tfc
6887.
2-3-lfc 1968 OLDS 442, automatic
transmission, power steeri ng,
For Sale
vinyl lop . Excell ent condition.
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
Phone 742-4873, Salem St .,
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Rutland.
water pills. Nelson's Drugs.
2-7-6tc
1-22-30tp
1967 VALIANT, standard sh ift,
1970 SHUL T mobile home, 17
radio and heater, 28,000 mi les.
acres of land, good well.
$900. Phone 992-3860.
Phone 742-5222.
Broker
2-10-6tp
2-l0-6tc
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
MEN'S WORK uniforms and
LEGAL NOTICE
NEAR KROGERS
coveralls. Jeffers Clothing
LEGAL NOTICE
Store, Rt. 33 going toward WARM . NEAT- 3 bedrooms IN T HE
COMMON PLEAS
w i lh closets and lots of
fairground, Pomeroy.
storage. Modern bath wilh COURT
2-10-6tc
MEIGS COUNTY, OHI O
shower. Gas forced air furnace. Living 15 x 17. Paneling , OHIO VALLEY INDUSTRIES,
BRACE yourself for a thrill the
new walks, new carport. 2
Pld in t iff
first time you use Blue Lustre
vs
blocks of slore. Asking ONLY
to clean rugs. Rent electric
HAROLD
ROSE
AND
$8,500.00
shampooer, $1. Baker FurCHRISTINA
niture, Middleport.
ROSE
,
Defendants
SAVE
2-10-6tc INVEST NOW
CASE NO. 14,274
LATER.
Pursuant to a Writ of
FIREWOOD, Hampshire pigs,
12 weeks old. Gera ld King, 75 ACRES- 20 TRACTOR, 30 Execu t ion issued by the Court of
Common
Pleas of Meigs
pas
lure.
8
room
older
house,
Shade. Phone 696-1287.
runn ing well water. 3 bay County, Ohio, 1 wi ll offer for
2-5-6tp
sale
a
t
publ
ic
a uc tion on the 27th
implement shed, garage, day of February,
------------------at 10:00
ufl llly bUi lding , cellar , hen A.M. at the steps 1971
SPINET-console piano. Wanted
of the Court
house, small barn . School bus House of said cou nty , in the
responsible party to take over
and mail routes by door. ALL Village of Pom e ro y, the
payments on spinet piano.
MINERALS. $13,500.00
following descr ibed r eal estate :
Easy terms, can be seen
Situate in the Townsh ip of
local ly.
Write
Credit
US
SELL
YOUR Sutton, in the County of Meigs
Manager, P. 0. Box 276, LET
and
State of Ohio , and being in
PROPERTY AND SAVE
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176.
160 acre Lot No. 1216, a nd
YOU FROM THE LOOKERS. described
2-7-12tp
as follows:
Beginning at a point on the
BUYING
FROM
US,
SAVES
North li ne of said 160 Acre Lot
PAINT DAMAGE 1971 Zig-Zag
YOU TIME AND MONEY. No . 1216 where said North li ne
Sewing Machines. Still in
992-3325
intersects
the center line of the
CALL
original cartons . No atpub I ic ro ad known as the
992-2378
lachments needed , as our
Rac ine to 0. K . Landing ; thence
2-5-6tc Southeast
conlrols are built-in. Sews
following t he center
line of said public road about
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
1893 teet to the property now
bullonholes, sew on butlons,
owned by Proff itt , and formerly
monograms and blind hem
owned
by Henry Wolfe; thence
slilch. Full cash price, $38.50
Nort h following the West line of
or budget plan ava ilable.
608 East Main
the said Proffitt proper! y, said
Phone 992-5641.
POMEROY
line a lso being the Easl line of a
2-9-6tc RUTLAND-ALMOST NEW- 20 Acre Parcel described as
3 bedrooms, bath , about 2 Parce l Two in the deed to
Rodney Downing, recorded in
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
acres, large living room , nice Volume
199, Page 191, of the
Cleaner complete wilh at kitchen. $8,900.
Meigs County Deed Recor ds to
lachments, cordwinder and
the North line of said Lot No.
paint spray. Used but in . like POMEROY
JUST
RE- 1216, which line is also the South
new condilion. Pay $37.45
MODELED
5 rooms, li ne of the fo rmer John P . Wolfe
cash
or
credit
terms
bath, 2 bedrooms , full land; thence west , follow ing the
available . Phone 992-5641.
basemen!, garage, ALL IN North line of sa id Lot No. 1216,
2-9-6tc
GOOD CONDITION. $13,500. to the place of beg inn ing,
containing 20 a cres more or
MODERN Walnu1 stereo-radio POMEROY - 2 STORY HOME less.
Reference Deeds : Volume
combinalion, four speaker
WITH
APARTMENT,
3 199, Page 191, and Volume 221,
sou nd syslem, 4 speed
bedrooms, 2 baths, garden Page 631, Meigs County Deed
changer. separale controls.
spol. garage . IN , GOOD Records.
Balan ce $73 .50. Use o ur
Terms of Sal e : Cash for not
CONDITION . $10,000.
less th an two th irds of the ap budget lerms. Call 992-3352.
pra
ised value. be in g $100.00.
2-4-6tc POMEROY A LOT OF
REMODELING DONE , 2 ROBERT C. HARTEN BACH,
MAPLE STEREO beau lif ul
story frame, 2 bedrooms , SHERIFF OF
colonial s1yle, Am -FM radi o,
ba th, basement, NEW hot
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO .
four speakers, 4 s peed
waler lank, forced air fur ·
{1) 27 ( 2 ) 3' 10' 17 ' 24' 51 c
au1omalic changer, separate
nace .
COMPLETELY
con 1rols. Balance $83.60. Use
FURNISHED. $4.600.
NOTICE OF
our lime paymenl plan . Call
APPOINTMENT
992 3352.
TO BUY OR SELL
case No. 20430
2-4-61c
Estate of Clara Barb a r a
CONTACT US
- - - -- --------Whaley , Deceased .
HENRY CLELAND
1964 CHEVROLET, 327 engine,
Notice is he r eby given that C.
REALTOR
0 . Rogers , Route 2, Pomeroy ,
$150 ; 1968 Honda SS 125
Office 992-2259
Ohio, has been du ly appointed
motorcycle, excellent con Residence 992-2568
Execulor of the Estate of Clara
dition , $200. Jim Heaton ,
2-7-6tc Barbara Whaley , deceased , late
Chester, Phone 985-4118.
at Meigs County , Oh io.
2-9-3tc
· Creditors are r equired to f1 le
For Sale
lhe ir cla ims with sa id fiduciary
1968 CHEVELLE SS 396, 4within four months .
speed, good tires , low
Dated this 22nd day of
WHY WAIT
January 197 1.
mileage, $1,895. Will take 1964
F . H . O' Brien
or 1965 model car on trade.
BUY YOUR
P roba te Judge
Call after 4:30, phone 742.3631.
of said County
2 9·41c

----------------~6~15~

-GUARANTEED-

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

5 ROOM and bath, apartment.
Chester . Inquire at Newell's
Sunoco
Station .
Phone
Chester 985-3350.
2-7-tfc

OL.D UPRIGHT P''"''-'~· any
condition, as long as have not
been wet. Paying $10 each.
First floor only. Mondays will
Insurance
be pick up day . Wr ite, giving
good d irection!&gt; Willen Piano AUTOMOBILE insurance been
Company, Box 188 Sardis,
cancelled?
Lost
yo ur
Ohio 43946.
operator's li cense? Call 992
8·20 tfc
2966.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

For Rent

COI-\L, l1mestone. Excel5 ior
Sail Works, E. Mai n St.,
Pom.eroy. Phone 992-3891.
4·9-ttc

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

$5.55
Home

5 ROOM house, bath. Racine
area. Phone 992-6329.
2-S-6tc

WE WILL accept estimates and 3 ROOM apar tmenl, all electric,
pay cash for a living room
wall oven, table top range,
suite, 3 cushion davenport and
slainless sleel double sink,
chair, a coppertone electric
food disposal. Nice clean
apartment. See to apprec iate.
stove with top oven not over 32
inches wide, a coppertone
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
refrigerator not over 32 inGallipolis 446·9539.
ches wide, also various end
2-2-tfc
tables, lamps, etc. Must trade
in Kenmore gas stove 30 in- 6 ROOM house, bath, 255 W.
ches wide and Kelvinator
Main St. Phone day time 992refrigerator 30 inches wide,
2668 or nights 992-2961.
both wh ite, good condition.
2-4-6tp
Changing
to
matching ---------------------cabinets. Send estimates to UNFURNISHED apartment
Box 729-W, c-o The Da ily
close to Pomeroy . Phone 992Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
3962 afler 4 p.m.
2-9-3tc
2-4-lfc

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

BLAmNARS

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.

\ !H~i~;;_--H~ip--U;\

SEMI DR IV ERS. Experience
not necessary . Can earn $4.50
per hour and up after short
tra ining for loca l and overthe-road hauling. For application write, Nationwide
Semi Divis ion, 171 New Circle
Rd., N. E., Lexington, Ky.
40505 or call 606-299-6912, after
5 p.m. 252-3484.
:2-8-3tp

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

Alfred
Social .,.ole."i
Sunday School attendance on
Feb. 7 was 47, the offering was
$17.85. Worship services were
held at 11 o'clock with the Rev.
Lavender bringing the message
from John 1:1-19-30, "Behold,
The Lamb of God." John said,
"I am not the Christ . I am the
Voice of one crying in the
wilderness. Prepare ye the way
of the Lord."
The Women's Society of
Christian Service will hold its
next regular meeting on
Tuesday evening, Feb. 16 at 8,
a t the home of Clara Follrod
and Nina Robinson with Osie
Mae Follrod, program leader.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
and Mr. and Mrs. Vere Swartz
recently visited Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Swartz and family of
Hockingport, Ohio.
The Warren Stearns family
were recently called to
Fostoria, 0., due to the death of
·his mother.
Carleton Follrod of Pomeroy
visited his mother, Clara
Follrod and aunt, Nina
Robinson, Sunday afternoon.
Saturday evening visitors of
Genevieve Guthrie were Mr.
and Mrs . Jewell Story of Big
Run and Mr. and Mrs. Harland
Story of Athens, RD.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Swartz
took Sunday dinner with Mr.

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
MARY RUTH LAWRENC E
Ro ute 2
Po meroy , Ohi o
Pla intiff.
vs .
JOSEPH DALE LAWRENCE
{Address Unknown )
Defendant .
- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION No. 14-812
Joseph Dale Lawrence, wt)ose
place of residence is unknown
will take not ice th at on the 6th.
day of February , 1971. the
undersigned filed her Com .
pla int against h 1m in the
Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County , Ohio , praying for a
d ivorce , custody of minor
children, alimony , support and
other r ei ief on the grounds of
gross neg lect of du t y and ex.
treme cruelly, and lha f Pla intiff
be awarded the househo ld
goods. truck and automob il e of
the parties.
This cause w il l be heard on 26
da ys after the last pub li cat ion of
th is notice, which date is the
22nd day of Apri l, 1971. or as
soon thereafter as the Court
may conveniently hear the
same.
Mary Ruth Lawrence ,
Pla inl iff
Crow , Crow &amp; Porter
Atlorneys for P la •ntlff
( 2) , 10, 17 , 24 ( 3) 3 , 10, I 7, 2 4 . 7!

and Mrs. Terry Swartz.
Mrs. Gerald Douglas visited
her daughter, Mrs. Gay Ann
Burke and family Sunday.
Mrs. Ella Yost, who has been
spending some ti me with
Genevieve Guthrie , returned to
Sugar Grove Saturday.
Mrs.
Emma
Findling_
returned home last week after
spending three weeks with Mr.
and Mrs. Benny Ewing and
daughter , at Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Swartz
spent last weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Pete
Parsons in Huntington, W. Va.

I

I

By Helen Bottel

l

1

HE PUT HER
How do you get it across to a
THROUGH RING-ER
man , · without hurting his
Dear Helen:
fee li ngs of manliness, that
On a trip to Europe I met this being close in a friendly way is
seemingly wonderful roman tic importan t too? When I tell him,
man and we became engaged. he thinks I'm rejecting him . He
He was temporarily short of can't see that he's making me
funds, so I bought the ring feel like a mere sex object.
f $1,235.00) . He noticed a
At odd moments I would just
diamond was loose, so he took it love to have my husband hug
to the jewelers.
me -period; kiss me on the ear
Then I was called home by - period; hold my hand illness in my late husband 's period. This, practiced often,
family.
would arouse me much more
It has been nearly a month than the tweeking and poking
now, and I can't get in touch and exploring that he thinks is
with Jacques. The jeweler in- "sexy" - what married people
formed me he picked up the expect. Do other wives feel this
ring. Oh yes , I forgot to say I way about husba1 i who are
gave Jacques the money to this way? - ARDE..:!T BUT
make the purchase (so he ANNOYED.
wouldn't be embarrassed ). He Dear A but A:
gave me an I.O.U.
According to my mail , many
I can't believe his love was a husbands are this way, and
lie. I keep hoping he is on his many wives can 't understand
way to the States so we can be why they shun the small
married. Is there a chance, or friendly demonstrations of
am I a - FOOLISH WIDOW
affection that means so much to
Dear Widow:
women.
Will John Wayne go Jane
NOTE TO MEN : Look fellas,
Fonda's next bail? Will Betty " first base " is forever imFriedan join the Happy portant to a wife who never
Housewives Sewing Circle?
feels more wanted than when
Sorry, but I'm afraid that's her
thoroughly
married
about how much hope you have husband reaches out to hold her
of seeing Jacques or your ring hand at the movies, or gives her
again, unless the gendarmes a hug and kiss- period (when
apprehend him.- H.
he isn't leaving for or coming
Dear Helen:
home from work.) - H.
I 'm trying to phrase this so it Dear Helen:
will fit into a family newspaper.
Now I know you are
(NOTE FROM H. You had a depraved . Imagine saying
little trouble ·there, but I cen- nudists can be decent ! If people
sored a bit).
go nude they are hussies and
Are all husbands this way or hedonists and lechers.
is it only mine? He figures it's
That woman who lived nexi
dumb to merely put his arm door to people who swim nude
a r ound me or g ive me an shou ld move , because her
unexpected kiss. These are children get contaminated.
always
accompanied
by
If you had the right kind of
"roving hands."
mcrals you would turn these
Now this doesn't mean he only people in, not tell the mother " If
gets affectionate WHEN. But you don' t like skinny-&lt;lipping ,
it's just that he can 't seem to stay out of their backyard." Of
touch me without (as the kids course you won't print this.
say) going to "second or third Immoral people never listen to
base." He can't say "hello" what good people have to say.without getting fresh.
INCENSED
~ot that I'm anti-sex. We
Dear Incensed :
communicate just great and
I listen, I print, but I don't
we're wholeheartedly in love. always buy what some of you
But the kitchen, with company have to say. To each his own
just a r ound the corner, is more beliefs ... . - H.
for a platonic pat, sort of.

' f1 J.,

. .,..
:;,rrn

/.',

•

.

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

! Voice along Broadway !
I
BY JACK O' BRIAN
NEW YORK- Say it ain 't so,
Bob Feller : about you and
Jinny ? .... Uncle Sam's about to
unleash some startling Mafiac onnected c harges against
unions .... Betty Grable isn't
s itting there planning nothing:
. She's notified the " No, No,
Nanette" management she'd
love to play the Ruby Keeler
role in the national troupe ....
"Nane tte " busted the all-time
house record a t the 46th St.
Theater: $107 ,000 for one
wonderful week . .. . It's the
toug hest ticket in town .... In
years ···· Katie Hepburn's
"Coco" in Chica_go rolled up a
rousing gross of $154,527 for one
week- and that s till left lots of
empty seats; it was $60,527
under capacity .... "This Is
Your Life" co-producer (with
Ralph
Edwards )
Bill
Carru thers gets the White
House job as TV consultant to
Nixon .
Ali McGraw 's family isn't
nearly so impressed with her
film stardom as they're glad
she's married and a mother ....
Not one X-rated film-filthy
made the Top Ten money
movies in '70 .. .. Ge orge
Kaufman , who was engaged to
Gina Lollobrigida for half a
headline, keeps right on his
star-trek: now it's Linda Crista!
at the Unicorn .... Zoe Caldwell
and husband Robert Whitehead
invi ted the stork again .... Cyd
Charisse's Geritol commercial
has TV viewers wondering how
old she is : The almanacs say 47
and Cyd says : " They're trying
to ge t younger women interested in Geri to!. "
Paris amis of Maria Callas
say she 'll get the Italian divorce
quicker than you can whip up a
mess of lasagna now that splits
are legal there .... We asked a
married Italian journalist about
the Italian divorce law before it
seemed so near , and he replied:
"Is my d ream ! •· ... Manny
Wolf's stea k house a t :lrd Ave. &amp;
~9 1 11 has been surrounded by
parking lots for years but
finally is bowing to the march of
the skys('rapers; he' ll pull up
steak~ for s tJJ JH:'where near .. ..
Cugaf's bride Chan&gt; calls her

~

!;'1r,c

brief
suede
hotpants early TV here ) .... Oy ! Peter
' ' Chihuahuas'' because Sellers told British interviewers
"they're tiny, they're cute, and his marital travail stems from
Cugie loves them. "
" my closeness to my Jewish
Andy Meadows, the 20-year- mo t her"
and Portnoy
old heavyweight who coached complained ?
Michael Caine for fight scenes
Guess who are closest pals:
in "Get Carter," now is Jim Nabors and grid star
managed by Caine who thinks Roman Gabriel .... Folks at Les
Andy's a likely heavyweighf Pyrenes didn't believe it when
prospect .. .. Harpist Daphne the handsome gent with Marie
Hellman at Mary McCarty's T orsie wouldn ' t give his
Marymary spot takes her trio to autograph: Thought he was
Vietnam this week for a George Hamilton, but it was
month's GI tour. Patsy Kel- just his brother Bill
ly takes over Mary's star-spot Management of Ft. Lauderwhile the latter is tryout-touring dale's Bahama Hotel gave
her new " Follies" musical · Woody Woodbury a $2,000 bonus
.. ..Melina Marcouri wants to do ' on his 14th winter anniversary
a flick with Jerry Lewis: Serves there.
them both r ight .... Mercouri's
"Promise at Dawn" is a
boxoffice disapp ointment at
Radio City Music Hall .... The
ITEM: Tom Hil l. He plays
Sands is rum ored Howard
Blood , Sweat &amp; Tears and
Hughes ' first Vegas spinoff ; he
Mama Cass. But he plays
may unload them all.
Moonlight Seren ade and
Israel has small problems,
Andy Williams too. Variety
is the spice of our music.
too: A flood of counterfeit
mezuzahs for instance
machine-stamped instead of
handwritten script as Hebrew prescribed .... British TV has a
problem with TV "plugs "
( payola
for
men ti oning
products not sponsored, a Ia

WMP0/1390

TIRES LOSING HAIR?
Never Heard Of It •••
But we are familiar ~ith the terms.
" CHROME DOME " and " OLD BALDI ES"

If t~ese definitions are c r eeping upon your
fam1 l y care fires-

TRADE TIRES NOW

Regular Retreads
only

~~i~!!!!!

$9.95
With Exchange

Casing

GENERAL TIRE SALES
992 -7161

MIDDLEPORT

CJi~L' 1

',rf:;"I
••iy111:
afl'T'
J,.. l•ot.
qirU ~

-~·~)

OJ

~

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