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'·

'

· 10-ThA Datlv Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Oct. 6, 1971

Pin
.
. g p ong
(Continued from page I )

talks succeed and it is all right
If-they fail ," Chou said.
At this point, about 30
·minutes before a simultaneous
announcement was !&lt;&gt; be made
in Washington and J'eking
about Kissinger's second trip to
Peking, Chou told the Americans of the- presidential assistant's visit ..•
This

11

time .Kissinger

is

coming openly," Chou said.
The Chinnese premier said
China 's willingness to negotiate
was nothing new. "We did this
(negotiate) with the arch
enemy Chiang Kai-shek for
almost 10 years. "
History Teaches Lesson
Referring to Nixon 's state-

ment that the current era is
one of negotiations, Chou said it

was

indeed

negotia tions

"an

era

of

-and

one

of

struggle by armed force.
d

As for us, we do not lik(!

armed struggle and we do not
provoke others . Not only have
we not gone to Long Island, we
have not gone to Honolulu .

Ev'en with the U.S. Navy in the
Taiwan strait, we are for
negotiations. ''

BEWARD BoOTLEGGERS
COLBMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
will need a special eofotcement
unit to prevent cigaret
bootlegging if the General
Assembly boosts clgaret taxes
to 15 cent. a pack, State Tax
Commissioner Robert Kooyder
said Tuesday.
Kosyder noted Kentucky
collec t. only lbree cents a pack
and Indiana, another bnrdering
stale, bas only a slx&lt;ent-aiJBck

Money R·eieas.e d.' ' .':,,:~;~,t;:;:~;~::=, :~,, KC

Maxme Plwnmer, director of
the Cqmrnunity Health and
Mental Retardation board of
Gallia, Meigs and Jackson
Counties, meeting with the
Meigs County P,mmissioners
Tuesday morning, asked for the
release of $1,250 appropriated
las! May for operatiOn of the
Community H&amp;MR in three coWities.
tax.
·Offices of the Mental
:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Retardation Board, which are
in operation, are located in the
Chamber
of Commerce
ewSBuilding in Gallipolis. Jackson
and Gallia Counties' ap( Contmued from page i )
having paid admission to the
nding club as a specU!tor, the
petition avers .
VINCENT LAUDERMILT,
lR .
19, Pomeroy , who escaped from
,
the Middleport jatl early Four bus driver applications
Tuesday and was later ap- were approved and two emprehended at his Pomeroy ployes who work in conjunction
home, was fin ed on three with an eight county program
char ges by Middleport Mayor were employed Tuesday night
C. 0 . Ftsher Tuesday night.
by the Meigs County Board of
Laudermilt was fined $10 and Education at its offices in the
cos ts each on cha rges of cowity infirmary .
disturbing the peace, assault Bus driver applicaiions ap-.
and battery and failing to have proved were those of Clair

In The N

Four Drivers
Wi ApproVal

Swan , Robert Meier, Thomas
History has taught China a m otor vehicle registered.
Meanwhile. Gary L. Pickens, Theiss and Earl Adams.
important lessons, Chou said.
19, Long Bottom, who escaped Employed were Margaret
" If we are only prepared for
With Laudermill Tuesday Burggraf, a psychologist, and
negotiations without preparing
aga inst arnied war . tha t is not

morning, remains fre e.

FINED $100, COSTS
John Eynon, Racine, was
fined $10d and costs and given a
three-day jail sentence on
conviction of driving while
intoxicated by Pomeroy Mayor
Charles Legar Tuesday night.
Earl Phelps of Pomeroy was
fined $5 and costs for improper
muffler.

107 MILL STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DISCOUNT-----

.

I

(LIMITED
SUPPLY
ON MANY

THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Pennsylvania .''

to the first

144

you won't went to be without.
Discount Price 38c

Limited Quantities . Reg . 79c. Save 41c.

"GET SET" HAIR SPRAY

Discount Price 2 for $1 .00

16-o unce Spray Can . Reg . 2 for $2.18. Save $1 .1 8
ELECTR~CORNPOPPER

Discount Price Sl.BB

DiscountPrice88c

3 PC. ALUMINUM RANGE SET

"JERGENS" LOTION AND DISPENSER

ELECTRIC KITCHEN WALL CLOCK

Discount Price77c

Popular 10 ounce size. Reg . $1.19. Save .t2c

Discount Price S4.88

Gift boxed. Stainless, 24 piece. Req . $8.95. Save $4.07

Discount Price sa.aa

Discount Price88c

11n bushel , round , close weave des ign. Reg . $1 .49. Save 61 c

STIX DECORATOR MATERIAL
Discount Price SLOO
Sell adhesive plast ic coaled. 3 yd. rol l. Reg . $1 .77. Save 77c

2 PC. PKG. OVEN LINERS

Discount Price S4.66

ONION CHOPPER
SYRUP SERVER

Reg . $3.49. Save $1.50
Discount Price

COBBLER APR.ON
Discount Price
$1.00
Get several. Reg . 11.49. Save 49c
NUT CHOPPER
Discount Price 84c
12 ounce capacity. Reg. $1.19. Save 35c
ENAMEL ROASTER Discount Price
$2.22
Blue speckled enamel. Reg . $3.39. Save
11.17
CAKE PAN
Discount Price38c

"Poly" Reg . 69c. Save 25c
Discount Price 77c

Reg. $1 .19. Save 42c
Trophy Auto Kits
77c or 2 for $1.50
Assorted. Reg . $1.50. Save 11.50
Extension Cord Sets

11.00

3 pc. Reg . $1.98 . Save 9Bc

ROASTER PAN

Di scount Price $3.88

"Poly" Wood Grain Reg. $5.95. Save
$2.07
Discount Price Sl.OO

Discount Price $4.88

BALLE RlNA LAMP SHADES

Discount Price 88c

BOOSTER CABLE
Don't get stuck or stalled.

44 QT. "POLY" WASTEBASKE;r ,
.
' Discount Price88c
Generousslze poly wastebasket with roll top edge. Reg. 11.59. Save 71 c

Assorted scenes, Landscapes,
Western, Still Life and Early
American.

Reg: $9.95

'5.88
ALCOHOL
Reg. 25'
16 oz.

BUY NOW!

LH Iw OIMNTITY!

with Sets

95

CHfii;)M.bCOLOR lOO'The sramd c(tACele i.e 11 alb- tv
992 _2635

INGELS FURNITURE

I..~~~....~Op=:cn:!F~ri~.&amp;~s:at~.~~~. .~~~~~J

Discount Pricell.OO

72"x90

'CANNON

Thermal Blanket

PANTY HOSE

•3.66

Reg . 99c Pr.

OR

68~

2 For •7.00
I Save $2.29)

WFSTINGHOUSE

FLASHCUBES

or

•·

••,.

pr.

ELECTRIC
OIP4NERWARE
OF PROVINCIAL
MAKEUP MIRROR CH.OORICECURRIER
AND IVES
'

18.95

2-)

·'

•

-•.

Reg. $11.95

32 Pt's • •

YOU'LL FLIP OJIER THESE -BIGGEST SAVINGS.~OF THE YEAR!
..

'

'

Reg.

•

9.9

Diana ari wearing purple velvet suits with black boots and
Renee a while polyester suit with purple trim and white •
boots. Renee wiU be featured in a fire baton number Friday
night in half-time activities al the Southern-southwestern
football game.

.

..

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meiga·MCUIOn Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHlO

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

•

The ninth annual Meigs
County Junior Miss Pageant for
senior girls of the Meigs County
area has been set for Saturday,
Nov. 20, al Eastern High School.

Ralph Werry and Earl Ingels,
ciHlirectors of the pageant, said
ali senior girls in the county
may enter . Contestants must be
single, never married or

Annexation Aired

Connally Warned by Sen. Long

promised in 30 days.

WASHINGTON - mEASURY SECRETARY John B
Connatly Jr. was told today that the adminislration's three-year
$15.4blllion tax cut bill favors business more than the Senate will
tolerate. Sen. Russell B. Long, O.La., who is usually sympathetic
to White House requests, opened hearings on the tax bitl by his
Senate Finance Conunittee with an attack on the bill, which
zipped through the House yesterday with little opposition.

Speaking for the annexation
was E. A. Wingett of Racine
who stated that in his opinion
such a move would be a step
forward by Racine village .
However, he asked who would

SAN FIIANCISCO - ABOUT 15,000 West Coast
longshoremen, on strike for more than three m"'!ths, are expected to return 1!J their jobS today. AU. S. district judge Wednesday night ordered the striking longshoremen back to work
under the provisions of the ~~. Hartley Law. Meanwhile·
negotiations ,sontinue in New l'ork lo end the east coast
longshoreTJ.en 's strike.

"Some employment may re-

sult, but we all recognize that
while new machinery and equipment of~n increase production,
there is frequently a noncomitant sharp reduction in the use
of hwnan labor in the productive process," Gilligan said.
"And the experience ·over the
last 20 years in our basic in·
dustry in Ohio is that production levels may well climb

while employment levels in
those same industries sag."
Gilligan noted that in Ohio
nearly 100,000 persons have lost
their jobs in the past two years,
not including those who were
never able to land jobs and
are, therefore, not listed in the
official unemployment figure .
"I am not U!lking only about
the high school and college
graduates who are walking the
streets searching for employ.
men!; I am talking as well
about the men returning from
service in Vietnam."
There are an estimated 32,000

Vietnam veterans without jobs
in Ohio.
The governor also said the
bleak economy has forced public employment rolls down, with
3,000 jobs lost smce August
alone.

Gilligan said a "ver.)l._great
prob1em n in the President's ec-

onomic plan is in the field of
public employment and called
for an end to the freeze on
wages of public employes.
He said the state today em·
ployes about 55,000 persons, al·
most 3,000 less than in August
because of insufficient state

Junior Misses Date Set

A hearing in connection with
the annexation to Racine of
certain property in Sutton
Township to the village of
Racine was held this morning in
the Courthouse by the county

15,000 Longshoremen Returning

other negative employment picture was likely if the administration leans too heavily on investment credit tax relief for
industry,

"There are 100,000 teachers
in Ohio schools and again hundreds of them have been dismissed because of inadequate
resources available to the
school boards, " said Gilligan.
"I would emphasize that almost all of these public employes are completely without
the protection of unemployment
compensation, and when dismissed they are immediately
confronted with economic disaster," he said. "Hundreds of
them are quickly reduced to absolute destitution."
Gilligan said his administra·

lion last March completed a
study of pay scales of public
employees.
" lncredib~sit may sound
our study vealed that under
the terms o
970 Disaster
Relief Act, due to go into ef·
feet in December, nearly 2,000
full time ell)plqyees the state
of Ohio will qualify for the federal food stamp program," he
said. "The s tudy also disclosed
that several hundred employees
actually qualified for welfare
assistance under the very low
income standards established
by our state."

revenues.

VATICAN CITY -PRELATES FAVORING married priests
or imminent doctrinal reforms in the Roman Catholic Church
were on the defensive today, their hopes for change dashed by
Pope Paul VI as the International Synod of Bishops began
discussing a wide variety of priesthood problems today. The 74year~ld Pope warned Wednesday that the current Synod would
produce no "changes, evolution or lransformaUons" in church
doclrine.

commissioners, with a decision

be responsible for financing the
needed extended water lines
and other facilities.
Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
president of the conunissioners,
said financing would be the
responsibility of Racine Village
Council and the town's board of
public affairs.
Opposition to the proposal
was registered by Mrs. Douglas
Wickline, Mrs. Ralph Neigler,
Mrs. George Hill, Dallas
Cleland, William H. Cleland and
Herbert White.

Cycle Driver Injured ..

Thomas
Weaver,
24, the neck, lip, left arm and ear.
Syracuse, was seriously injured The Pomeroy E-R squad took
Wednesday afterMon in a Weaver to Veterans Memorial
motorcycle accident on SR 124, Hospital from where he was
five tenths of a mile west of later transferred to Holzer
Syracuse, the Meigs County Medical Center by Ewing
Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Ambulance.
Weaver was traveling west
New
when his cycle went off the
highway on the right. When he
tried to pull back onlo the highMARRIAGE LICENSE
way, the cycle flipped over,
Ray Lynn Yonker, 19,
throwing him onto the highway.
NEW YORK (UPI)-A new....boy scouts and institutes a
'Pomeroy,
Rl. 3 and Rhea Ann
Weaver suffered severe innovel by Philip Roth about a program under which sentenc- ternal Injuries, lacerations to Pooler, 17, Pomeroy, Rt. 3.
U.S. President called Trick E. ing for crimes is immediate.
Dixon-a thinly disguised refer- The novel ends · with the
ence to Richard M. Nixon-will a~assinated president in hell
be published Nov. 2 by Random campaiging on the basis of his
House, it was announced revil record on earth to replace
Wednesday .
the devil.
The new book by Roth, 38,
Random House in a promoauthor of the best-seller, taional statement called the The grand opening of cable worked out earlier in the year
"Portnoy's Commplaint," is book a "stinging and uproarious television service in P~meroy with the village governments of
called "Our Gang, Starring vision of national leadership and Middleport Will be Middleport and Pomeroy.
Tricky and HIS Friends."
speaking the sort of debased Thursday;· Oct. 14 1 with Cable TV interviewers will
According to the publishing language that, according to ceremonies starting ~t 7:30 p. begin calling on every family In
firm, the cenlral character of George orwell, is 'designed 1o m. ln. Meigs Junwr High School the service area inunediately
the book promises the complete make lies sound _truthful and m Middleport. .
after the grand opening
withdrawal of Vietnamese from murder respectable, and 1o give Like all communities in the ceremony, and installation will
Vietnam in 1972, invades an appearpnce of solidity to PomTVIew system, owned by begin in Middleport homes at
Denmark because of its "pro· pure . wind."'
Faul Crabtree and Assoc. _of once.
Roth is known for his novels Pt. Pleasant •. ever¥ famtl_Y Major coltstruction remains
pornography" stand, meets
with advisers dressed lo and short stories ·and last year will be given a .free dable to be done in the Pomeroy area,
football uniforms .in an under- was elected to the National connection and at least two but Pomeroy homes sbould be
ground locker room at the Institute of Arlj; and Letters months of free cable service ready for inslallation in 3-4
White House, condones . ~e the .honor society established by with no stri~gs attached, in weeks, according :o. company
poison gasing of demonstratmg Congress.
accordance w1th ~n agreeJQent . prestdenl Paul Crabtree.

Roth's
Book about
President Trick E. Dick

.3· $2,00

~"x6%"

SLEEVE OF 3

LIMIT 2

•

IRONSTONE

Rei. 11.99

12~

'

Diseount Price 'Be

Rectangular, modern design. Reg . 98c. Save JOe

PICTURES
C2963W
Contemporary
styled lowboy
console

14QT. DELUXE DISH PAN

Sharppointfelttip markers in lOcolors. Reg . $1 .49. Save 8lc

. $2.00. Save $1.00

•

domed, clear styrene, see thru cover . Reg . $1.79. Save 79c

Beautiful assorted colors . Reg . $1.49. Save 55c

10 PC. MARKER SET

'

CAKE PAN
Discount Price38c
Round Aluminum. Reg. 69c. Save lie
PUDDING PAN
Discount Price 38c
2 Qt. Aluminum . Reg. 69c. Save 31c
Bread and Loaf Pan Discount Price J8c
Aluminum . Reg . 69c. Save 31c
CAKE PAN
Discount Price 38c
Oblong Aluminum. Reg . 69c. Save J1c
NUM CAKE PAN
Discount Price II.OO

"SEE

Discount Price94c

•

Square Aluminum . Reg . 69c . Save Jlc

Holds 18 lb.
REUSEABLE
Reg. 99'

"Amity" Reg . $9.00. Save $4.12

CONFERENCE SET
Racine An1erican Legion Post
602 will host the eighth district
fall conference Sunday . Dinner
will be served at 11 :30 a.m. with
the meeting to convene at I p.m.
Speaker will be Pat Hone,
department adjutant.

Discount Price44c

8 ounce capacity . Reg . 69c . Save 25c

Mens Wallet

The BRITIANY

Discount Price 84c

Stainless steel, sharpened blade s. Assorted colors. Reg . $1. 19. Save35c

Space Saver Cabinet

Dresser Set

Catholic Reformists Slowed

Discount Price 68c

Fits all gas and el ectric ovens. Reg . 99c. Save 31c

9 Piece. Reg . $7 .98 . Save $3.32

Ice Bucket

Discount Price $2.66

POLY LAUNDRY BASKET

tutes any really effective response, " Gilligan said in testimony prepared for the House
Banking and Currency Conunit·
I tee .
He said real income in Ohio
fell last year for the first time
in two decades, and that an-

SAIGON- U.S. 85%8, FIGIITER-BOMBERS and helicopter
gunships conducted heavy raids today against North Vietnamese
positions along the Cambodian border, while Communist artillery
bombarded allled bases on both sides of the fronUer. The B~:&gt;s
flew four .raids or twice the number in the same area on Wednesday, but fail$d to halt North Vietnamese gunners who gained
91 rocket and mortar rounds on 10 allied bases. As the bombardments were taking ptace the U. S. e&lt;&gt;mmand announced that
American battlefield deaths declined e&lt;&gt;nslderably from last
week's figure.

Discount Price Sl.OO

Discount Price 88c

ATTRACI'IVE MAJORE'M'ES OF SOUTilERN HIGH
SCHOOL, wear\!lg their 'new majorette outfits, 1 to r, are
Sharon Drake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Drake,
Racine, Rt. I; Renee Burke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Burke, Racine, head majorette, and Diana Norris, daughter
of the Rev. and Mrs. Charles Norris, Racine. Sharon and

Tax Break to Industry Criticized

News ... in Briefs !

Heavy Raids Along Border

Cotton bac k, safefv cu ff , selected st de split . R~ . $1 '19 . Save4lc

7 PIECE COOKWARE SET
Poppy, gold or avocado. Reg . $15.95. Save $7.07

kind of debris for fill purposes," said Highway Public Relations
DirectOr Karl Bunkelman.
Stone and concrete foundations of an old house which had occupied the lot amounted to about 165 cubic yards, worth about $825
at local prices. Bunkelman said the state wiU spend only about
$500 in hauling it away.
Farley says the lot is full of good material, "all co~centrated in
one area and easy to collect without having crews scattered all
over the place. "
Farley said once the lot is cleared the state's work is done.
"Despite rumors, we have no intention of paving it as a parking
lot," he said .

Canaday claims the equipment cannot be used on private
NO. 123
property legally. He was in the NO. XXIV
Laurel Cliff area Wednesday ·
afternoon photographing iarg,•
stones being turned up in the Rl.
7 bypass project being done for
the state by the Shelly and
Sands Construction Co. He
believes the supply of stone
from the Laurel Cliff project WASHINGTON (UP!)- Gov.
should meet highway depart- John J . Gilligan told Conment needs.
gress today that President NixCanaday also charged that a on's plan to revive the economy
dangerous situation may be through a tax break for indus·
created at the E. Second St. lot try would probably increase unwhere stone is being removed, employment in Ohio.
in that a slip could develop in
"No one should be deluded
the hillside just behind the lot. into believing that this consti-

By Ulllted Press lnternaUooal

·

WORK GLOVES

Prices for farm products and
processed foods and feeds fell
1.7 per cent, while conswner
finislfed goods went down 0.9
per cent.
Wholesale price fluctuations
aie usually reflected in consu·
mer prices in a matter of days
or weeks. The Septembe~
~epott on " retail prices-commonty known as tjle Cost of
Living Index-probably will not
be out for about two weeks.

reclaim stone from the site. The
stone is being stockpiled at the
State Highway Garage on Route
7.

I

Electric kitchen clock in styrene case·. Reg . $3.98. Save Sl .32

" ECK0"24 PIECE TABLEWARE SET

Leai Rake

!

Discount Price 77c

A must for every kitchen . Reg . $1.49. Save 49c

Storm Windows

'

Simu lated stag sm oking pipe design with plastic lops. Reg. $1.19. Save 42c

10INCHASHTRAY

wholesale price front came less
than 10 hours before President
Nixon addresses the nation on
the "Phase II" economic
controls to follow the wage-·
price freeze, which ends Nov.
13..
Underscoring the extent of
the drop in wholesale prices
was the first decline in the key
industrial commodities price
index in nearly 3'h .years- 0.1
per cent.

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

J £WE L BOX
Discount Price 88c
An elegant velvet lined jewelry box. Reg. $1.19. Save J1c
PHOTO ALBUM
Discount Price $2 66

Giant square. 10 inch ceramic ash tray . Reg . $1 .98. Save $1.10

plus for President Nixon's
economic policies. ·An even
more sensitive report bearing
heavily on his· program is due
Friday-the September employrntnt-unemploymentreport.
.·'Nixon's program is designed
botQ to stop inflation and to
lower the rate of unempioyment, which has hovered at the
6 per cent level for almost a
. year.
•
.
· The good news on the

POMEROY, Ohio (UP!)- The president of the Pomeroy National Bank ts getting the debris cleared from a downtown lot be
. owns for free, and what's more the state Highway Department is
footing the bill.
"II is just a happy coincidence for all concerned," explained
Max Farley, high division 10 engineer in Marietta, Wednesday .
"We need this kind of stone and concrete block for fill in erosion
conlrol."
The department is ~au)ing concrete and rock from the lot owned
by Edison Hobstetler, and the operation has attracted a litUe
crlliclsm by residents who see the state trucks there.
."This is what we would do for anybody because we need that

res umed.

PKGS.

SALT AND PEPPER SET

•

StOne Project Defended

owned by Edison Hobstelter, lo

Size 10ld2 in ches, chorce of burlap or cloth bound. Reg . SJ.98. Save $1.32

Complete with cord and plug . Reg . $5.95. Save $2 .07

WASHINGTON (l]PI)
Wholesale prices declined. 0.4
. pe~ cent in September, the first
full month under President
Nixon's 90-day wage-price
freeze,__ the _government said
today.
·
The Bureau of Labor Stalls·
tics said the decline, adjusted
for seasonal factors, was the
first drop in wholesale prices in
10 months.
The decline appeared to be a

ment equipment on the lot, now

(SAVE 17')

"VISCO" AIR FILTERS

rices

Local and division highway
officials said they had depart-

COOKIES

A useful l'lincoet that

Shoe Polisher Kit

(Limit One)

DELICIOUS CREME SANDWICH

customers Thursday .morning.

3 piece. Reg. $2 .00 . Save SI.OO
Cologne or Dusti~g Powder 11.00 ea.
" April Showers" . Reg. S2.50 Save $1.50

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS : Mrs. Garland
Mayes, Gallipolis Ferry; Sarah
St. Clair, Henderson ; William
Patterson, Fl. Springs, W. Va.;
Cynthia Anthony, Buffalo ; Mrs.
Gary We stmoreland, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Homer Bland,
West Columbia ; Phyllis
Mulford , Middleport, and Mrs.
Carliss Gailenwater, Point
Pleasant.
DISCHARGES :
Norman
Searls. Ronald Mayes, Shannon
Darst, Napoleon Sturgeon, Mrs.
Robert7¥ayes, Scott Clendenin,
Homer Whittington, William
Hunt, Jr ., Mrs . Joseph
Bonecutter, Audrey Sterrick,
Mrs. Jasper Eden and Mrs.
Richard Thomas.

HELP GIVEN
The Middleport E-R unit
answered a call to help Allen
Oiler , Middleport, who had
fallen and suffered a head
laceration at Pearl and Ash Sts.
TUesday night. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted.

PROCTOR • SILEX
ELECTRIC

Reg. '7.95

•

Use of State Highway
Department equipment on a
privately owned lot in Pomeroy
resumed Wednesday despite
controversy
which
has
developed .
Lodging the complaints
against the use of the equipment
on the property, the former
home site of the late Jane
Louise Smith of Pomeroy, was
Delmar A. Canaday. Canaday
first complained to local and
division highway officials about
the matter on Sept. 20. Work
was discontinued until Monday
of this week . Tuesday there was
no work on the properly .
Wednesday, however, work was

.

CAN OPENER

'

Work Resumed

'.

BULLS-EVIt:

On Probation

Mines

New

MIDDLE.PORT DEPARTM·ENT STORE

Mary Bacon, a work study

Others fined Tuesday night coordinator. Mrs. Ba~on witl be
good," he said.
·
were Bud McKinn ey, 54 , working primarily in Meigs,
Chou only briefly men tioned
Middleport, $10 and costs, in- Gallia and Jackson Counties
the Uni ted Nations situatiOn ,
toxication; Eddie R. Burns, 21, while Miss Burggraf will work
saying there had been no
Pomeroy, excessive speed for almost all of her time in Meigs
change from the foreign
co ndilions, $10 and costs; CoWity. Both were employed
ministry statement Issued Aug .
17. China firmly opposes two Harold S. Little, 35, Middleport, last year in the program that
$10 and costs disturbing the encompasses an eight-county
Chinas. one Chma, one Taiwan;
peace; Walter L. Smith. 56, area . Attending the meeting
and an y independent Taiwan.
Parkersbur g, $5 and costs , were Supt. Robert Bowen , and
All were unacceptable, he said,
and if anylhmg the third even into xication. and David M. · board members Virgil Atkins,
Hindy, Middleport, $10 and Harold Lohse, Harold Roush,
less so
costs,
distw·bing the peace.
Gordon Collins and George
Chou said, however, he hoped
Ric hard A. Andrews , 29, Perry.
to see more Americans visiting
Lincoln,
R. I., forfeited .a $200
China . "More and more ha ve
been comin g," he said. bond .posted on a charge of
"Though japanese visitors have driving while intoxicated.
According to an entry in
been the most numerous. the
Meigs County Cominon Pleas
nwnber of Americans commg
MAGIC DOESN'T HELP
Court,
the prison sentences of
should catch up with them m
BERKELEY. Calif. (UPI ) - Earl Franklin Snyder and
the 1970's."
Phillip Bonewits, the only man Gregory Pickens have been
to possess a degree in magic suspended and each has been
fr om the University of placed on probation for two
Califorma , wound up in jail for years.
challengtng a ·'street person"
Snyder was sentenced to an
1Continued from page I)
with a dueling sword . Bonewits indeterminate term in the Ohio
..
Hollaway ,
a
non-union told police he wore the 3()(J.year • penitentiary for the breaking
operation. Windows at the mine old European sword as part of and entering of Dr. Roger
office were smashed Tuesday . his regular dress and pulled it Daniels' farm on Aug . 5.
The Norfolk &amp; Western Monday because someone Pickens was sentenced to an
Railroad Tuesday reported accosted him . He was booked indeterminate tenn at Ohio
"roving bands of pickets '' for brandishing a weapon and State Reformatory at Mansfield
for auto larceny on Aug. 7.
released the brakes on 34empty held for two hours.
coal cars at the R&amp;F Coal Co .
mine near Cadiz and sent them
NO ONE HURT
UNSOLVED MYSTERY
rolling down the traces. The
N
o
injuries
were reported in a
empty CB'S crashed into fo ur SAN FRANCISCO (UP I) - A two car accident Tuesday at
loade,d hopper cars and candidate for sheriff of San 5:45p .m. on township road 363,
Francisco had an unsolved
destroyed two of them.
the Meigs County Sheriff's
An N&amp;W spokesman said the mystery today - a baby Dept. reported. Harvey Hobbs,
vandals "went in and released abandoned at his campaign 65, Langsville, Rt. I, traveling
the brakes on 34 empty hopper headquarters. Volunteers at the south uphill around a slight
cars, letting them roll down the campaign office of Richard D. curve, collided with a car
tracks where they hit four Hongisto said a slim, redha!fed driven by Terry L. McGuire, 21,
loaded cars. Two of the loaded woman worked one day and left
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, coming down
cars went over the side of the a child when she went out for hill. There was heavy damage
cigarettes.
hill and were demolished .
lo the Hobbs vehicle, minor to
The other cars derailed and
mLED ON BIKE
McGuire's. No citations were
blocked the main line of the COLUMBUS (UP!) - Craig issued.
N&amp;W branch in the area of the Hardesty, 18, Reynoldsburg,
non-union operation which has was killed Tuesday when nis
been closed since the nation- motorcycle struck the rear of a
' wide UMW strike began at car, throwing him over the auto
midnight last Thursday.
and into the path of an onThe N&amp;W spokesman also coming car.
said commWiication poles and
wires were knocked down at the
STABBED DEAD
mine site .
TOLEDO (UPI) - Eugene
Aspokesman for the Harrison Smith, 33, was stabbed to death
County sheriff's office said the at his horne here late Tuesday
pickets were from out of state. night, apparently during a
"Our boys don't do stuff like domestic quarrel. Police
llf E. 2nd
Pomeroy
this," said the spokesman.
· Phone 992·5~28 .
charged his wife, Rachel, 32,
"These pickets came from with second degree murder.
either West Virginia or western

Buy

,Kyger " Ct~'~k" s · Athietic · available . in .time..for •Friday's on the,payment of funds towarS:
Boosters Club Tuesday night important game with the tiie .... players'
insurancl.
approved the purchase of a new Eastern Eagles.
program.
:
camera for the athletic
The boosters tabled a motion Head coach Dick Ada~ .
program on a rna tching basis
briefly diScussed the ilpcoming:, :
with the Board of Education and
'Eastern game. He announcef
Athletic Department. It is
PROBE INCIDENT
that Clay Hudson, sophomor• .
hoped .the camera will be Gallia County sheriff's end; George curry, junior en!
deputies Tuesday investigated a and Glenn Smith, · senlol ~
FIGHT SCHEDULED
burglary at lbe Shahan cabin quarterback . had been name\{ '"
NEW YORK ( UPI)~orge located across from Pete Cox's the "Players of the Week" fo(
Foreman will face Lewis Pires Body Shop below Eureka. Mrs. their performance lasl Fridar
of Sao Paolo, Brazil in a 10- Darrell Shahan, Jackson Pike, at North Gallla. The lrio wa~ ,
rounder on Oct, 29th. Foreman reported someone entered the selected for the honors spon•
will ta~ a 3().0 pro record into cabin by forcing a window open. sored by the school's Pep Club~
Missing were bed linens,
the match.
blankets, an eleclric sliillet;·and "
POLAND OFFERS .HELP ~ •
RECEIPTS NOTED
antiques valued at·$l!JO.
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -'
Meigs County Court receipts
P~land
offered the UniteJl
. SAFE OVER 125
in September were $3,0ll.85,
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The Nations Tuesday a stand-b):
according lo Betty Hobstetter,
clerk. Funds distributed were, Selective Service System said force of its army for possib~
in
peace-li'eepln~
lines to state $586.43; fees to Tuesday draft lottery No. 125 use
sheriff $200.40; fines arid eosts would be the ceiling for draft operations: Poland was thii
to county general fund, calls the remainder of \his year . second Soviet bloc nation fZI
$1,382.01: law library fund Thai means young meq who got offer Its troops for U.N. peace
$373.64, and lo auto license and a number above 125 in the 1970 keeping, the other bein£
lottery are safe from the draft. Czechoslovakia two years ago.
gas fund, $462.37.

the high school at 7:30 Thurs·
day night In preparation for
the Eastern-Kyger Creek
game was planned by the
Eastern High School Athletic
Boosters Tuesday liighl.
The group also planned a
horse show to be held
Saturday at the Bar 30
Horseman Clubgrounds.
Members are asked lo bring
pies to the grounds. A film of
the Eastern-Glouster game
was shown to the ap·
proximately fO persons.

propriatimis have beM made .
The Meigs Commission approved release of tbe funds.
Permission was granted
Evelyn Lucke, Clerk of Courts,
to attend a district meeting
today in Ironton . Barbara
Shuler, Welfare Director, was
also granted permission to
attend a staff meeting al Burr
Oak Lodge on Oct. 13.
Jack Cwnmins, Ohio Valley
Health Services Director, met
with trustees of Orange, .Bed·
ford, Salisbury and Chesler
Townships to view possible sites
for container pickup when the
new landfill is established.
Thursday at 10 a.m. a hearing
will be held at the Courthouse in
regard to annexation of certain
territories in Sutton Township
to the village of Racine. Atlending were Charles R. Karr,
Sr., Bob Clark and Warden
Ours, conunissioners, and Mrs.
Chambers.

Boosters Help

•

Camera~
-

.

.

I

-.
w

Weekend Thing

divorced, or had a marriage
annulled. They must be bona
fide high school seniors and
cannot graduate prior to May I,
1972.
'
Girls must not be less than 16
or more than 19 years old by
March 15 of this year; be of
good character, possess poise,
personality, intelligence,
charm, attractiveness and good
grooming.
Each contestant will display a
talent in the fonn of singing,
dancing, playing a musical
instrwnent, dramatic reading,
art display, dre.S designer or
may give a talk on a subject of.
RAYMOND FISCHER
her choice. It is the rule talent
Raymond Fischer who
routines exceeding 3'h minutes
came
to Columbus and
may disqualify a contestant
from receiving any points in Southern's Middleport office
that category. No girl shall be in November, 1945, was
denied the right to participate in promoted to division truck
the local ~geant by race , operator, then truck operator
A, is retiring as a driver
creed, or rem:ion .
operator.
Mr. and Mrs.
Entry forms may be obtained
by writing the Meigs County Fischer have three grown
Junior Miss Pageant, Pomeroy, children and live In Pomeroy.
or by contacting Ingels or
Werry.
•
All high school senior girls
LOCAL
TEMPS
wishing to participate are to
Temperature in downtown
attend a meeting Sunday, Oct.
Pomeroy
Thursday at II a.m.
10, at the Trinity Education.al
Building in Pomeroy at 2 p.m. was ~4 degrees Wider cloudy
skies.

· Weather
Clear tonight except partly
cloudy northeast. Lows tonight
upper 30s to lower 40s. Friday
fair with highs in the lower 60s
north and in the mid to upper
60s south.

FOR EARLY BIRDS
A weekly program , "Lights
for Christ" sponsored by the
First .Baptist Church of Middleport, will make its debut on
WMPO radio Sunday at 7:45
a.m. Not p.m. as was reported
earlier.

With Ecology
NEW HAVEN - Possibly as
many as 82 teenagers will
participate in an Ecology
Retreat here this weekend. The
Lutheran Church will be their
temporary headquarters.
The Retreat, sponsored by the
Luther League of St. Paul
Lutheran Church in New
Haven , is one of several
throughout the state over the
three-day period by other
Luther Leagues. Reservations
have been made for 82 at the

. church.
The youths will begin arriving
Friday evening after school.
They will spend Saturday
picking up trash and debris, in
the area from Hartford to
Roush 's Drive-In above New
Haven. Saturday evening there
will be a hayride.
The collections made, the
youths will sell it back lo the
merchants in 10 cent bags.
Proceeds will be donated to the
New Haven Park and
Recreation Commission.
Sunday, a unique program
Phase 2 Will he
will be introduced when the
yoWlg folks will present a
Explained on Air "Contemporary Folk Service,"
using guitars. The program will
. WASHINGTON (UP!) - conclude after . church service
President Nixon goes on and a luncheon Sunday
television and radio tonight to
NOT DEAD
reveal how he hopes to control
inflation after the 90-day wage- BANGKOK (UPI) - Tbe
price-rent freeze ends Nov. 13. Bangkok Post said today a SS.
The President's speech from year~ld woman presumed dead
the While House Oval Office is Jay Jor a week in a coffin before
scheduled for all networks al friends discovered she was
alive.
7:30p.m. EDT.
The broad outlines of Nixon's
"Phase 2" program already are
PHONE FAILED
known. ll will concentrate on
For the benefit of persons
major industries, be unlimited trying - Wlsuccessfully - to
in duration and be enforced by reach the Meigs County
government action . Nixon has sheriff's dept. last night from
pol his prestige and perhaps his II : 15 p.m.- until 8 a.m . today,
political future on the line with Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach
his effort lo combat the nation 's said his telephone was out of
pressing economic problems. order.

PoinTView Grand Opening ·Set For Next Week
Middleport construction of the
main cable system Is complete.
Door prizes - including at
least two fee television sets,
refreshments, and a questionand-aqs~Yer period will be
highlights of the grand opening
ceremonies at the junior high
school.
·
The high point of the evening
will be the actual "lighting ·off"
of the Middleport-Pomeroy
system. Crabtree said Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar and
Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisher
are being asked to join in

making the connection that will than three-quarters of all homes
present cable TV signals in the have taken the " free-preMiddleport-Pomeroy area for wiring " services.
the first time.
" Middleport and Pomeroy
City, county and other of- should be just.as receptive, if
ficials are being invited to the not more so," he said, adding:
program, but "open house" will "We're bringing to Meigs
be observed , with the general County - for the first time public invited to attend and service from Ohio television
participate, in the program.
stations, with three Columbus
Crabtree emphasized that signals and one from Athens .
reception to the cable television " In addition, we are
service has been outstanding in presenting local services, with a
Pt. Pleasant, Mason and New 24-hour-a-day weather and time
Haven, where service already · service, and around-the-dock
has been- initiated , and more coverage of local news, In

cooperation with the PomeroyMiddleport Daily Sentinel, and
frequent local programs about
government, school, activities
and local sports."
In all, the cable TV service
wlll offer . 11 channels of
television.
"Pomeroy and Middleport
have had to wait a long time for
quality cable service, and had
frequent disappointments wilb
other operators In the past. We
are very proud to be brin~ing
this service to the area,' he
said.

•

�~ ~~

2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Ott 7, 1971

Z Takes a
Slight Chance :

A Cardinal Writes
An End to an Era
It IS usually left to posten ty to pmpomt the endmg of
an era
Rarely m the usual confused course of events can a
moment of h1story m t he makmg 01 changmg be recog
mzea clearly for what II IS
Such a mome nt, however , ma) be seen m the de parture
of Josef Cardmal Mmdszenty from Hunga1y, after more
tha n 2Q years 6f uncomprom1smg confrontation w1th h1s
country's Commumst overlords
The Hungau an pnm ate IS the last of the great church
fig ures who stood agamst the post-World War II !Ide of
Commums t unpen a hsm Back when the spilt between
East and West was fr esh and the pass1ons aroused still
raw , Ea&gt;tern Europe was studded w1th them- Mmdszenty
m Hungary, Archbishop AloysiUs Stepmac m Yugoslavia,
Stefa n Cardmal Wyszynski m Poland Archb1shop Josef
Beran m Czechoslovakia Men 11ho by force of character
or circumstances came to symbolize both spmtual and
to a great extent pohtlcal opposition to the new caesars
of thelf countnes
But times change and passwns cool Yugoslavia, the
first dropout from the Sov1et emp1re, was also the first
to seek accommodatiOn w1th the Church, releasmg Arch
bishop later Cardmal , Stepmac m 1951 Later, Archbishop
Bera n left Czechoslovakia and Cardmal Wyszynski, freed
from pn son m Poland's false dawn of 1956 , has smce
ma mta med a somet1mes stramed coexistence pol!C) With
the Warsaw reg1 me
That left Mmdszenty for the past 15 years a beSieged
guest m the Amen can legatwn m Budapest where he had
taken 1efu ge durmg the 1956 upns mg
There was a t1me, a decade back when the Mmdszenty
quest1on-11 ould he leave Hungan and under what conditions-meant a great dealm the diplomatic maneuvermgs
m centra l Europe and beyond
H1s departure now sllll makes news, but 11 1s largely
a n t 1c 11 m ax T1mes have mdeed changed Pope John
opened wmdows m all d1rectwn s Vatican emiSsaries now
' lSll Moscow And the Church faces some ol 1ts most senous problems among the clergy and la1thful of the West
,.. 1 An era of toe to-toe confrontatiOn between Immovable
spmtua l and ~rr es lstlble secular forces has ended, s•gmfy mg not only the mellowmg of pollhcal-rehgwus antago
ms ms wh1ch 1! does , and the mutmg or redu-ectmg of
Cold War passwns WhiCh 11 also does, but that both
Church and State m a much-changed world have more
pressmg and me a n 1n g I u I demands on attentwns and
energ1es

NORTH

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.AS
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East-West vulnerable
West North East South
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Pass 2 •

SISt S

The food that would nor
mally stay m the stomach to
be m1xed and ac ted upon by
stoma ch fl u1ds IS "dumped "
1mmed1ately mto the small
1ntestme Us uall) , part ol
the small mtestme has al S&lt;
been rem oved at surgery
The dumomg over dis tend•
the small mtestme, wh1ch
IS not used to rece1vtng such
a large bulk of food at one
t1me
In an effort to d1lute the
food m1xt ure fluid po urs
mto the mte stme from the
bloodstream JUSt hke 1t doe s
after certam laxati ves Thi s
Increases the o;erloadmg of
the mtestme and produces a
laxat1ve effect
The loss of flUid fr om the
bloodstream can decrea se
the vol ume of blood causmg
a person to feel famt
The eve nts also tngger thE
1 elease of e xcess msulm
c a u s 1n g low blood sugar

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

! Voice along Broadway
I

,----- -- - -

r-~ The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

1/LE IGS MASON A REt
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
~ •tv E d•tOr

P u b l •s hed

da !l v

e)C cep t

I

,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
HE'LL BE BRUSHING UP
FOR EVERY PERFORMANCE
NEW YORK - Full of chic smger Jack
Jones hauls h1s very own personal hau- stylist
along when he opens at the Copa later this month
Producer Joe Kipness blew half a milhon
trymg to run the breat old Dmty Moore's Bdwy
restaurant His Way . Decca will release an
album based on the recent Baker St Lloyd's
Bank heiSt wherem cops and others kiblt.zed the
wallue-talkie exchanges of the robbers Lloyd's
33-year-old du-ector, a radio ham who picked up
the amazmg exchange , gave Decca the nghts
They 're playmg our tune '
The DaVId Frost
Show's Widespread pubhClty about DaVId 's
longplay ha1son w1th beautiful black star
D1ahann Carroll has caused conruptive swJIchoffs m the Deep South wh1ch has affected 1ts
ratmgs, the backstage pamc 1s qmet but real
There were Pr111ce Rainer and h1s Prmcess
Grace m "21" after theater, k1ssmg a Bdwy.
colummst hello . Asked 1f she m1ght be
pregg1e, the serene Kelly gu-1 sa1d that questiOn
always brmgs to per attention the strategic
moment to start another d1et . Also m the
midn1ght "21 " crush , F1orence Henderson of
"The Brady Bunch " With producer spouse Ira
Bernstem, Charl otte Ford N1archos; International banker Andre Meyer With N1cole
Alphand, fmanc1er Henry ltleson , Mets' pres
Donald Grant, and a merry mess of JUst plam
millionrures m theu- autumn fmery
Cen·
tiniillionau-e banker Charley Allen indeed was m
the hosp1tal for h1s 6th VIS! I m a year - but not
for heart trouble Bryan Forbes and his lovely
actress w1fe also d1d the "21" at·nndn1ght scene,
toasting the fme reVIews h1s "Long Ago
Tomorrow " movie mented , Bryan was happy
WJth the crJtics but sbll confused at hiS American
distributor (Rugoff ) changmg the title from
"Ragmg Moon," hopmg to capitalize on the
f1bn's theme, tunesm1thed by Burt Bacharach
and Hal Dav1d
Group of Russ1an JOurnalists and diplomats
are domg the Manhattan rounds, one of them a
Sovtet.TV talk-6how host who, trymg to explam
what sort of show he captained, crmged at the
suggestion 1\ rrught be "like Johnny Carson 's" ,
he cons1dered 1t more like David Frost's . Mrs
Bunny Mellon of the (of course I1Mellon millions
has been conslant hostess for the VISiting Hubert
G1venchy , w1th whose PariS dress salon she
spent a light little clothes budget last year of
$170,000 - 111 that one atelier alone .. Not

MUCH lloiSTEAD OF

DOING YOUR WORK :

unusual m the upper fiscal reaches: the late
Margaret Thompson Biddle
(copper
multimillions) also spent $125,000 annually WJth
each of several PariS couturieres, when
Margaret bought a smt, she always had them run
up two Identical skirts ; sa1d she feared gettlll8
them "rump sprung", and she must've worn
each smt easily half a dozen times
Our favorite summer stop, Hello Cabala in
Marmo, Italy, where we've spent lazy vacations
these last rune summers, has been sold by our
landlord, Tony Prantera, to the (N.Y Stock
Exchange-hsted) Chromalloy Co for a lldy
fortune; Tony also sold off hiS fanCJest;n.Rome
restaurant, Hostar1a dei'Orso, but will retain
management of both, while ascendmg to the
presidency of Chromalloy Europa N V , frurly
fancy fiSCal footwork for a former Roman
JOUrnalist
We met a Father McCarthy (a Boston Jesmt
stationed there for life) near Castel Gandolfo and
he S3ld he was an astrologer stationed at the
world renowned Vahcan observatory, we
allowed as we had seen his observatory's three
handsome huge globes glimmermg in the sun
over the Alban Hill.s, and he S3ld, "Yes - two by
Ze1ss and one by Berruru."
Both members of the great old vaudeville
comedy team, Smith &amp; Dale, are kib1t.zing out
the1r lives at the Actors Home near N Y Qty not that they're char~ty-poor only because
they 're old and prefer to be WJth some of thell' old
two-a-day cromes Charlie Dale 's JUS! 90 and
recently broke hiS collarbone, and Joe Smith they 've been par tilers more than 70 years 11\Sisls on bemg With the more delicate Charlie in
case he tilts agam m his br1tUe dotage
Cliff
Hall, stra1ghtman for Jack (Baron Munchausen)
Pearl, also dec1ded at hiS age (tlUsl 11 was easier
to getup a coffee klatch at the Actors' Home than
111 Manhattan and moved m WJth the old gang .
Only 111 America Dep't Dionne WarwJcke
doesn't have to take a seat 111 the back of the
coullmer limousme 111 comparmg her wardrobe
w1th the aforenoted Margaret B1ddle and Bunny
Mellon : Dionne's speclacular duds are valued at
more than $250,000
More mighty money :
She1k Zay1d bm Sultan Al·Nuhayan, ruler of Abu
Dhab1, got mto a muscular mood and went out
and bought his own health spa m Sussex,
England, for $625,000 - an 18th~ntury mansJon
awash Wlth saunas, rowmg machines, masseurs
and hedomstic pamperers who 'd been calel'JIIg
to the Bntish swells smce 1966

992 2156 E d •lor•a l PhOn e 992
115]
Second cl ass po stage pa•d at
Pomer o y Oh•o
N a t a na l ad v erl•s • n g

rep r esen ta t . ve

Botlln e ll•

Gal lagt:ler I nc, 12 Ea st 42nd
St Ne W Yor k C•ly , New York

--S ubs c r•PI •on ra tes

~· vere d

by

De

c arr 1e r wher e

.! vaita ble 50 cent s p er w eek ,

By Motor Rou te where carr• er
se r v•ce no t ava il able One

m on th S l 75 By ma• l '" Oh 10
and W va , On e y ear Sl4 00
S1 x m ont h s $ 7 25
Thr ee

montns $4 SO Sub scr 1pf 10n
pr 1c e lf'lc l udes St:Mda y T1mes

'

___ __

S@
nhne l
_._;_

.

__

.:_

TIMELY QUOTES

More than 70 per cent of
the South VIetnamese peoIf they I the adm1mstra for a tooth, napalm for na ple profess BuddhiSm , 10
lion ) can work out somethmg palm
per cent are Roman Cathow1th Mao Tse-tung, surely - Pres zdent Anwar £1 Sadat lics
they can do 1! With Geor ge
of Egypt , tell zng hzs peo
Mean y
ple th ey must be prepared

- Dr George W Tay l or
chmrman of War Labo z
Board m W odd War 11
and Wa ge Stabtltzat zon
Board zn the Kor ean War
on what happens after th~
end of t he wage przce
freeze

An eye for an eye , a tooth
®

':lOUR STITCHES 1&gt;-RE
ON TH E 61/&gt;..5 AND
'IOU'VE GoT GUSSETS
IN TI1E INNER SEAMS·
ALL OF ':10&lt;..1 GAB 'TOO

j

Satur d ay b y The Oh10 V a tter
Pu b l 1sh m g Compan y
J 11

Cou rt St
Pomero y. Oh 10,
J57 69 Bus1 ness Off• ce Phone

Pass

3NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

4.

Openmg lead- • J

S\mptom s mclud1ng nerv
ousness and anx1ety
You can help y o u r s e I f
Stop us111g free sugar Cut
down on carboh) drates and
concentrate more on protem
fm y o u r d1et Eat small
meals frequently Try a fiveor S!X·tunes-a-da y routme of
a small a mo unt of food
When possible, lle down 1m
mediately after eatmg to diS
courage early emptymg of
the stomach Use some fat
m your d1et to delay empty
mg of the stomach (You' ll
get th1s anyway 1f yo u eat
meats ) Don't dnnk any hq
tud s durm g or 1mmed1ately
after eatm g All of these
measures are des1gned to
p r e v e n t overloadmg the
stomach to prevent sudden
' dumpmg " of the food mto
t he small mtestme Sugars
and c a r b o h y d r a t e foods
seem to make the problem
wor se (AvOid coffee , tea
colas and c1garettes 1
My last blt of adv1ce 1s to
fmd a new doctor Evef) one
should have a doctor who
has seen h1m at least oncebefore he needs h1m for a
sudden 1llness It works bet
ter that way for vou and the
doctor

Dear Reader- You are de·
s c fl b 1n g what IS called
du mpmg " It IS a comph
ca twn of your sur gery The
p•oblem diSappears m most
pallents Wl thm a ) ear after
surgery but m a few 1l per

... 9 8 7 5

SOUTH

Ulcer Operation
Has Complication

Dear Dr. Lamb-! have
had stomach ulcers for a
long t 1m e and h a v e had
three operatwns With 75 per
cent of my sto m ac h removed and the last lime the
nenes were clipped Smce
then I ha'e d1arrhea pretty
bad get s p e 11s of a SICk
stomach and am real weak
and nervo us Sometimes 1t
b o th e r s me nearly every
da) and other t1mes not for
two weeks
My doctor told me no t to
ta ke med1cme that 11 should
clear up m two years That
lime 1s pa st and 1t seems to
be gettm g worse The doctor
d1ed r e c e n t l v and I won·
dered If yOU COuld g1ve me
an; ad;Jce as to d1et treat
men\ etc I am a welder Is
hard work InJUriOus?

EAST
• J 104
¥K2
• 76 32

WEST (D )

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

B) La\lrence Lamb, MD

7

. 63

(NEW SPA PE R ENTE RPR ISE ASSOCI ATI ON\

1

~

WIN AT BRIDGE

EDITQ}liJU

for battle wzt h Jsrael

For the first t1me m history a r,reat power 1s deliberately throwmg away 1\s Ill·
escapable obl1 ga t1ons of
leadership to adopt dellber
ate weakn ess as a natwnal
poll c)
- Vzce Adm Hyma~ G Rzck
over on dec lmzng U S na
va l power
l he middle-class Amen

can may be a denhst, a doctor, a truck dr iVer or msur

ance salesman He may be a
wh1te Anglo-Saxon Protes.
tant, a black, a Ukra1man ,
an Inshman or a Pole, a
Democrat or Repubhcan He
beheves m law and 01 der,
hard work , self-rehance and
paymg hiS own way He does
all the n ght thmgs but the
11ght thmgs don't seem to be
paymg off- an~ he 1s frustrated
- D r ,Jos eph L Tomchak
professor of anthropology
at Orange Coast College
Col&gt;f

What do you do when you
reach a supposed populat10n
hm1t' Stand at the county
hne w1th a sledge hammer '

Bc~Rrs WO~LD

The b1ddmg has been
West
North
East

Pass
Pa ss
Pass

1•
3¥
3 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

You, ·South, hold
.AKI062 ¥A2 t84AK1062

Bv Helen and Sue Bottel

(Got a problem? Or a subject lor dlscuulon, two-geae111tlon
slyle? Direct your questiODS to ellller SUe or Helen Botlel -or
botb, If you want a combination motber.&lt;JauBbler •uwer.)
TEN YEARS LATER IS TIME
ENOUGH TO "TELL EVERYTIUNG"
Dear Sue and Helen :
My mother expects a complete report every time I go out. She
even wants to know what I THINK, and what my friends are
domg. These rMUns are boring: after all, I'm not wild. And If I
answer her questions about my friends, she might get the wrong
1111presslon, as tt's easy for her to do.
If I clamup,she'sallhurtandsuspects the worst .
Should a teen tell her parents EVERYTIIING? - QUIZZED
SUE'S VIEWS
Dear Quizzed.
Definitely not, never, noway, no how, and uh·UH! 1!!
If you told your paren~ everything, you'd have no personal
though Is and .ecrets whic;!f ai'e your private posseSSions, and only
to be shared (if at all) WJth a best gu-1 friend
Mothers who demand mlnute-byofllinute total recall are the
worrying type who are happier NOT knowing you kissed your boy
fr1end ten times mstead of once at the door, and that several of
your acquamlances have tried weed. They'd only get uptight and
start lecturmg, wh1ch doesn't solve anything
Also, parents shouldn't ever expect their kids to "spy" on the
younger generation, or turn informer
Even if·you have cool parents, telling them everything now
rwns hilarwus dmner talk Isler on. You should HEAR the
escapades my brothers rermrusce about at family get.togethers a dozen years after they can't get grounded for them! -SUE
HELEN'S TURN
Dear Quizzed
A mother shouldn't 1ns1st her teenager tell her everything any
more than she should "tell all" to her child. Everyone needs hiS or
her pr1vate world
BUT if the teen sees her mother as an understandmg ear, not
a flappmg mouth, the llllporlant thmgs seldom go Wl81red
A word to your mother, "Quizzed": The woman who brags
that her daughter always tells her EVERYTHING IS either
raJSmg a dull robot, or she's fooling herself - HELEN
Dear Sue
.
I'm wnting you 'cause you're a teenage gu-1 and rrught know
what I'm domg wrong
I'm ail'average guy Not bad looking I Jetter in sports and am
popular around school What's my problem' I can't get a girl I
know a lot of girls, but they only want to be "friends " I'm not
pushy Wlth them, and they are good pals, but I'd like to have a real
GffiL, not a buddy What am I domg wrong' - OONFUSED
Dear Confused
Agu-l can sense when a guy IS after her only to say he has a
gJrl fnend So she'll turn you down, not wanting to be a boy's
status symbol And so will the next, and the next Pretty soon
other gu-ls slart thinkmg, "If nobody wants hun, neither do I "
And the word gets around, "He's a buddy, not a dste," w1thout
anyone remembermg how 11 slarted.
Why not stop worrying and walt until you find a gu-1 who
really turns you on Then show her she's the greatest In other
words, make your move for ONE spec181 gu-1 , not JUSt any

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Harris: A Hope
For Magic in '72
Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT

What do you do nov. ?
A-Bid four hearts The hand
should play better 1n heart:!!

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Oklahoma s Sen Fred Harns, an able man br1mmmg
than m no-trump.
w1th
ammal v1gor, 1s workmg from a very dreamy presiTODA Y'S QUESTION
dential scnpt and has almost no one w1th real political
Your partn er b1ds a Blackexpenence aboard h1s campa1gn entouragP
wood fou r no-trum p You show
Some talented people who could have helped turned h1m
three aces and he co ntmues to
down
at the outset of h1s candidacy It IS an old story that
five no- tr ump What do you do ¥
he
also
lost at least a couple that he already had
now ?
Answer Tomorro\\
Hams prese ntly does not have a pract1ced delegate
hunter on h1s staff, and evidently 1sn't piannmg to get one
un\11 early m 1972
He IS getting enough money to keep movmg around the
BARBS
country H1s October schedule mcludes vlsJts to Massachusetts, New Hampsh1re, Connecllcut, New York, PennBy PHIL PASTORET
sylvama, Flonda, Oh1o, M1chtgan, New Mex1co, Cahlorma
A pess1mist 1s a reformed and North Carolina He h1t some 20 states m the first
ophmJst
seven weeks of effort
• • •
Yet there 1s a strange ca sualness m bQth the conception
The fellow who gets a
and the executiOn of th1s campa1gn
buss when ne leaves for
Harns ms1sts no cand1date can wm the 1972 Democratic
work nas a pretty happy
pres1denhal nommatwn who does not get mto the early
domestiC s1tuat1on gomg
pnmanes
But he says he can surv1ve these first tests
for htm
and
be
an
mcreasmgly
v1able prospect 1f he s1mply does
• • •
well- though does not w111
He defines "domg well " as beatmg out some other can
The f•rst promzse to be
d1date, as for mstance Sen George McGovern or B1rch
broken after tne NovemBayh The defimllon stops Just short of saymg Hams can
ber elections unll be tne
bmld toward v1c tory m later pnmanes by av01dmg last
one to take down tne
place 111 the early ones
compmgn s1gns
(NEWSPA,IR EHTUPll!tE ASSN )
In surveys of leader sentiment taken recently, l have
found no ev1dence that such a showmg would advance
Hams Indeed, Oklahoma sources told me that 1f the!f
senator d1d no better than th1rd 111 any of the first few
pnmar1es, he would not even have the "favonte son"
support of the Oklahoma delegahon at the July 10 M1am1
Beach conventwn
Checkmg about also turned up few signs ol genwne
back111g for Harns , notw1thstandmg h1s cla1ms of appeal
across the board to the discontented- the blacks the
Ohwans , some of the young and the old Almost nothmg
appears for him, of course, m the polls
He 1s among several Democrabc candidates who seem
to feel that lack of poll status and name •denllficahon 111
1971 may be no great drawback 111 1972, once the pnmanes get rollmg
There may be a lesson for Harns and others however
m a line from a play by the d1stmgUJshed L11lian Hellman ;
"There are no great moments unless you have a ptle
of small ones to bu1ld upon "
. A study by the Brookmgs InstitutiOn d•scloses that In
U S preSidential pollt1cs there 1s a very strong correlahon between h1gh rank 111 the polls and eventual nom 1.
nation
Harns , qmte cav.aller ln we1ghmg such hard reahtles,
1s playmg for mag1c m 1972 The ch1ef mgred1ent in h1s
mag1c 1s. as everyone knows, what he calls the "new
popuiism"- better distrJbubon of mcome and1Jower and
a return to Jdeahsm m foreign policy
'
uttered m h1~ ~~rthy, boneless verbal style, h1s assault
on the country s shared monopohes" may attract some
Amencans who are gravely discontented and turned off
on trad1honal polit1c1ans
Still, th1s 1sn't exactly catchy stuff. And, on the road
he often sounds pretty much hke any other pollhcian'
When he doesn't, h1s call for "fundamental change" 18
so revoluhonary that the voters may truly wonder how
Harns, strugghng on the frmges , can l;&gt;rlng 1t off

In~

arauders

Generation· Rap

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Old man Y gnnned as he
put down the dummy He
sa1d , " Fifty years and sWl l
never get to play a hand "
Z looked over dummy--and
called for the q u e e n of
hearts East plunked on the
kmg and returned the swt
Fmally Z rephed to Y,
'Maybe you should h a v e
played th1s one That kmg
ol hearts really belonged m
the West hand "
Then Z led a spade fr om
dummy East played the
four spot and Z produced the
nme The mne knocked out
West's ace From then on
the only tnck Z had to lose
was the ace of diamonds
Y remarked , "Th1s doesn't
look hke a hand you played
m the old a uction days You
must really be gettmg on to
contract play "
" Elementary, old fnend ,"
c h o r t I e d Z ' Once East
showed up w1th the km g of
hearts 1! became certam that
West held both the spade and
the d 1am on d aces Th1s
wasn't gomg to do me any
good 1f West also held e1ther
the Jack or 10 of spade s
There would be no wa y then
for me to av01d the loss of
two trump tncks I gave my
self that shght extra chance
of fmdmg East With both
those mtermed1ate cards "
It was a s 11 g h t extra
chance but a large part of
the difference between expert play and ordmary play SUE
l!es m those extra chances
the expert g1ves h1m self
{tUWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

- ·II) Sentlnei,MMolepor&amp;-Pcmeroy,O.,Oct. 7,1971

- Suffo l k County executwe •
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPAISf ASSOCIAfiON)
1-1 Lee Denmsnn, on estl
© 1'171 br NU
mate s that the suburban
New York C1ty COUIIty Wllf
"He used to JUSt watch football &gt;n the afternoon,
go from I 2 mzllzoH popu
Q- How does t ouch foot - merely by touchmg him It
but now that they've upgraded the kids' morning
/o twn today to 3 06 mtl
ball differ from reg ular foot - can be played by almost any
shows- Saturdays ore completely shot!"
l&gt;o ll b1: til e 11e" r 2020 un
ball?
number of players and on a
l e s~ c o 11 1 t o I s ore wst1
A-It
differs
m
that
the
'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _..;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ·- - - - - - - b a i l camer can be "downed" f1eld of almost any size
f ut erl

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Me1gs Marauders and the
Jackson Ironmen must win m
order to slay ahve m the tough
Southeastern OhiO Athletic
League race Fnday mght
There IS one rub both can't
wm, as they play each other
Both squads have 1denl!cal
records, 3·1 overall and 1·1 m
league play ; both teams' losses
commg last Friday The
Marauders lost to Ironton, ~ .
and Jackson was upset by the
same score, by Athens

An otha. loss would not
mathemattcally rule e1ther
Me1gs or Jackson out of the IItle
picture, but m aHJ probab1hty
they 'd l1kely start looking
toward next year The pack's
two leaders, Ironton and
Galhpohs, 2-0, are two of the
state's toughest and probably
won't lose two games each
Coac h Ben Buckles' Ironmen,
p1cked for second place m the
league , started out like nobody
had a chance agamst them,
wmmng thm first three, ail by

lro.n men

'

starter Steve Meadows, a 173lb
semor fullback. He ts a powerful
runner, the second leadmg
ground gamer on the' team
behmd Valentme
Eddie Hughes, 140 lb sharpshoohng quarterback , can
throw the bomb w1th amazmg
accuracy He IS 19 of 34 for the
year, but can break a game
open anytune w1th a long one
He averages 21 yards per
completion
8I
Elsewhere m the Jackson
One of the amazmg thmgs
backfield w11l be re turmng about the Jackson backf1eld 1s

b1g scores and shutouts But the
Bulldogs from Athens silenced
them last week
The Marauders w1il be a httle
smaller , but hopefully, qmcker,
espeCially up front Jac k~on has
one ground-burner m 160 lb
JUIIIOr
ta1lback,
Kenny
Valentme The fleet-footed
Vatentme beat the Marauders
last year w1th an electr1fymg 60
yard gallop (Jackson won , 12-

Clash

'-

1ts depth Take out Valentine
and there 1s Steve Rice, 140 lb
sophomore, an excepl!onal
runner Replace Meadows, and
m comes 176 Jb sophomore,
Brad Thompson , a b1g, strong
runner with about a 7 0yard per
carry record All they lack 1s
exper1ence
Other Ironmen who could g1ve
Me1gs headaches are 192 lb
semor end Chr1s Ondera, a b1g
fellow w1th much the same style
of play as the Marauders' Jell
Morns, the 190 lb semor end,

Dave Ruggles, 177 lb tackle,
and 169 lb semor k1cker , M1ke
Buckley
Now , for the Marauders
They should be prepared for
th1s mass of talent fro m
Jackson as they played a great
deal of 11 last week Hughes ISn't
the passer that Ironton's Hal
Spears 1s, the Jackson backfield
IS "great" but not as good as the
T1gers, and the Ironmen's lme
doesn 'tshape up like the T1gers
Last year, the lronmen had

Eagles in Critical Gridiron Test
BY KEITH WISECUP
The Sou thern Local TorThe undefeated Eagles • nadoes play at Southwestern
Friday w11l be playing the1r where both teams need that
toughest opponent of the season elus1ve No 1 v1ctory One
to date m the Kyger Creek should fmd 11, barnng a he
Bobcats at Kyger Creek
The Eagles, coached by

By Col. Mole
Several streaks are on the !me Fr1day mght m both the
SEOAL and Southern Valley Athletic Conference
Coach John Ecker's B1g Blue Machine will be seekmg 1ts 17th
straight Win over a three-year span , Eastern of Me1gs County w11l
be attemphng towm 1\s lOth strrught league game, and Coach Bob
Bruney at Ironton agam will try to ke~p h1s pre..season pred1ct10n
on the r1ght side of the le&lt;)ger .
- The Tigers alsO have won all thelf games thus far
While we are watchJpg the close league races, the old
Molemanmust also keep pace w1th his arch nval, MaJor Amos B
Hoople
Last week yours truly posted a 10-2 recol'l!t m1ssmg onlv the
Jackson-Athens and Miller-Alexandria games
MaJor Hoople recorded a 13-4 slate for the week He missed on
Metgs-Ironton , Logan, W Va .'s 7-&lt;, v1ctory over South Pomt ,
Ale!Uinder's wm and Zanesville's 32-13 romp over NelsonVIlle·
York
After a month of prognostications, the Moleman has a seven
game lead Mole has an overall ~3-9- 2 record MaJOr Hoople
slands at 40-16-2
What's happemng th1s week '
SEOAL
Ironton 21 Logan 18 Ch1eftalllS must make real b1g move now
to challenge, but Tigers are JUSt too b1g and too Iough
Athens 32 Waverly 6. No contest aga111 Poor Tigers have had
11 rough m the well-balanced SEOAL
Jackson 20 Me1gs 14 Jronmen won't be caught off guard two
weeks m a row Marauders could be hard to beat if they should get
early breaks
Gallipolis 30 Wellston 8. Aga111 , Devils should ha ve a breather
agaii\SI Golden Rockets Awarrung though , don 't look for11ard to
next week's game too early
SVAC
Kyger Creek 14 Ea stern 13 Upset spec ta l? No It w1ll take a
supe rh u man effort. but 1t can be don e
Southern 22 Southwest ern 6 Coach Bruce Wa ll a ce sc r ew ge ts
that Illusi ve vi ctory
North Gall1a 26 Sy mmes Vall ey 6 P ~r a tes take las t weeks
f r ustration ou1 on the V1 k1ngs
H annan W Va 18 Hanna n Trace 0 Aga1n HT has t rou bl e
mov1 ng the ball

OTHER S
Milton 1.4 Pt Pl easant 0
Chilli cot he 19 Portsm outh 12

)

South Poon t 52 Oa k Ho iI 0
Coa l Grove 2.4

Fa ~r land

6

Buffalo 16 lronlon Sf Joe 14
Crum 18 Rock Holl 12
Nelson vi lle York 36 Federa l Hockmg 6
Ale xander 18 Vmton Count y 0

M1ller 28 Glo uster 6

'

Weather-Master
\"300"Premium

Roger K~rkh a rt , have the
Southern Valley Conference
champiOnship poss1bly w1thm
thelf grasp 1f U~ey can make the
Bobcats their fifth straight
v1cllm But Coach DICk Adams'
boys might not giVe m so easily
They also are undefeated, 3-0-1
overall and 3.0 111 league play
Eastern IS 2.0 111 league play
Coac h Bruce Wallace 's
Tornadoes,
1mprov1ng every
1
week, w1ll test SV AC foe , Southwestern Both teams are IH

PITTSBURGH (UPI ) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates, belieVIng
the1r p1tchmg staff v111dicated,
~acted for the World Ser~es
today--womed more about an
elbow and a th1gh lhan about the
Baltimore OriOles
" We don 't care 1f Paul
Bunyon IS pi tchmg," Sa!d W1lhe
Stargell "We're gomg to beat
them ''

The elbow belongs to !!!.game
w1nner Dock Elhs and the thigh
to Nelson Br1les, but despite the
111Jurles the Pu-ates are confident they w11l not suffer the
same fate that Cincmnall 's
cr1ppled p1tchmg slaff met m
IllS\ year's World Senes
"My 'Jfilltlltili; lii!ttet," sa1d
Elhs, Plti!tiilrgh's 'top \Vlnner,
who created a storm when he
labeled club off1c1als "cheapskates " because of travel

pohc1es
Only momen ts after the
Pirates beat the San Franc1sco
Giants 9-0 Wednesday to w1n the
NatiOnal League pennant,
Manager Danny Murtaugh se·
lee ted Ellis - If he 1s healthy to p1tch the sen es opener
Saturday at Baltimore
It was one of the lessheralded
members of the P~rates ' pllchlng staff who did m San
Franc1sco
Bruce Kison, a fuzzy-cheeked
21-year-old righthander w1th
only a half-season m the
maJorS, picked up the bJ.ggest
wm of his career when he shut
out the g1ants on two h1ts 111 four
and two-thirds mrungs of clutch
relief
"!knew I had to do the job,"
Kison sa1d "It was e1ther today
or never and I knew there was
no reason to save 1t "
When Kison came m the score
was tied ~only because Richie
Hebner hit a three-run homer 111
lbe bottom of the second mnmg

'

~~FULL

FOUR PLY
CONSTRUCTION
COOPERS BESTWINIER TI RE
PREIIUM CONSTRUCTION
THROUGH AND THROUGK
• OEEP POWERF UL TRACTI ON
111 niEr lr e~d 1111lh tr aCtiO n

"Can't beat
the

lllltoonatiUI Iy klt k m I mud and

snow- keep head apt~ ~w ays
rud) lor actoon Vd!l able P tch
~r&gt;d

s

pf!

du lgn

hu~hes

old shoes

annoy

road no se
• AIR RETAINING LINER -

1113

ch omllul yl rub bef to let ~ou
pract c ~ l l )" l or~e l r I a liOn

v.omes
, SAFER WIN TE R llRIYING stu i.l es pro ve that w 1ter t1res

stop betl e r t ra c ~ str a Kilter
than regular lread l lrei

6 SO 13 WHITEWAL LTUBELESS NYLON CO RD

CHECK MOORE1S PRICES
BEFORE YOU BUY!

MOORE'S
128 W. MAIN

992·2848 POMEROY

North Galha Kyger Creek has
had a harder tune th1s year,
tymg Wahama, 6-6, defeatmg
Southern 14-12, North Galha 8,f,,
and Hannan Trace, 4ii-O
The probable starting hneup
for the Eagles w1ll be J1m
Amsbary, quarterback, R1ck
Sanders and Randy Bormg,
halfbacks,
and
Denms
E1chmger, fullback On the hne
will be Bob Caldwell and RICk
W1lhams, ends , Alan Holter and
e1ther D1ck Stettler or Roger

Pittsburgh Is
Re'a dy For O's

1

ba rs ta groo and go 1n lhe (l~ep
e:;l mud or snow Sur ~ swerve
free stops. tvo.
• SE LF CLEANIN G W~ ISPER
QUIET - w de flal tr r 3d de
s1gned !;() Ill~ II &lt;l(hone lemen ts

overall and I).! 111 SV AC play
The Highlanders, wmless last
year, will be out for revenge
The Tornadoes won one game
last year, and 1\ came at the
H1ghlanders' expense. Southwestern w1ll be out to try not to
let 1! happen two years stra1ght
The powerful Eagles haven't
played anybody w1th theu- class
yet They've run up scores as 536 over Glouster, 4J,f, over
Frontier Local, 43-0 over
Hannan Trace, and 26.0 over

for comfort,
Can't beat reloable oil heat
for wintert1me comfort

For quality heating oil,
phone 992 2101 for Rizer's
prompt ~elovery

after Steve Blass, the struggling
Pittsburgh starter, was lifted
ffor a pmch hitter
The game r:emamed tied until
the bottom of the sixth when
Roberto Clemente smgled home
the tie-breakmg run and, after
the siumpmg Slargell was m·
lentionally passed 1n a bit of
queshonable strategy, AI Oliver
slanuned a three-run homer
KISon, who was 10·1 at
Charleston, W Va , m the International League when the
Pirates recalled hun July 3,
retired 10 men m a row between
the fourth and seventh mrungs.
Murtaugh yanked hun w1th two
out m the seventh when W111ie
McCovey s1ngled and Bobby
Bonds walked
Dave G1ust1 then came m,
struck out Dick D1e~ to end the
mnmg and set the G1ants down
m the e1ghth and n111th mrungs
Without a hit to record hiS third
successiVe playoff save.

Pirates

"'

The Giants scored lhelf fmal
four runs m the second on ChriS
Speier's homer, Singles by Ken
Henderson and Tlto Fuentes
and a three.run homer by
McCovey
In the bottom of the second,
Hebner homered after smgles
by Manny SangUlllen and Bill
Mazerosk1 , pmch-h1ttmg for
Blass
The Prrates were scheduled to
fly to Baltimore today and work
out Friday at Memor1al
Stad1um

MAGNUM APPOINTED
NEW YORK (UPI ) - PGA
commiSSIOIIer Joseph C Dey
sa1d Wednesday that Clyde C
Mangum Jr of Southern Pmes,
N C , has been appomted an
ass1s tan t tournament superv 1sor
of the PGA Tournament Play-

BIG CROWDS

The 1959 Wolld Senes set
By Un1ted Press International
the
all-t1me Senes attend
Nattona I League Champ1onsh1p
ance
record , even though 1t
Playoff. (4th game I
only SIX games, w1th
lasted
San Fran 140 000 llOO- 5 10 0
420,784
people see1ng the Los
P1tlsburgh
230 004 oox- 9 11 2 Angeles Dodgers top the ChiPerrJ, Johnson 161. McMahon cago Wh1te Sox
181 an Doetz , Blass. Koson (31.
G1usto(7) and Sanguzllen WPAMERICAN POWER
Kison LP-Perry HRs- Speoer,
Me Covey, Hebner, Ol 1ver
The Amencan League has
shown a strong dommance m
Nahonal LeagueChamp1onshop power m World Senes play
Playoff Standmgs
Amencan League players
By Un1ted Press lnternat1ona I have hit 277 home run s to
(Best of F1ve1
175 f01 the Natwnal League
w I pet.
• Poltsburgh
3 I 750
I 3

250

x-Cilnched Pennant
Wednesday's Result

P1tts 9 San Fran 5

BIG RETURNS

for tfle Marauders Will be
Vaughan , T W1lhams, M
Wilhams, and Sm1th m the
backfield Vaughan will call the
SJgnals, Tmy will be at fullback
agam, Mark Will carry the ball
from the ta1lback slot, and
Smith will resume catchmg
pa sses, blockmg, and occasiOnally runnmg the ball at
wingback
On lhe lme w1ll be Me1gs '
"pr1de and tOY" pau- of ends ,
Larry Harmon and Jeff Moms
At tackles are b1g Lee and
smaller but tough Dave
Krawysczyn The guards are
those "sure-thmg" Roger D1xon
and Ted Le hew Eddie Young
w1ll anchor the !me al cente r
On defense, John Thomas will
play m1ddle guard, Lee and
John Gr ueser w11l handle the
tackles, Harmon and Mom s,
ends, T Williams and Lehe11 ,
linebackers, Ke1th Van Inwagen
and Sm1th, cornerbacks, and
Chuck Faulk and R1ck Ash,
deep backs

BANKING TWINS
They belong together your Checking and
Sav1ngs Accounts here at th1 s modern
conve nien t ba nk Let us te ll you why

ers Dlvlston

Wednesday's Baseball Results

San Franc1sco

Question

Karr, tackles; John Clme and
RICk Hauber, guards, and Tim
Gumpf, center
On defense , Warren Calaway
and John Sheets Will be at ends,
Holter and Stettler, tackles,
Hauber, m1ddle guard; Alan
Duvall
and
EIChmger,
linebackers , Gumpf and
W1l11ams , cornerbacks, and
Sanders and Caldwell, safeties
For the Tornadoes, 1t w1ll be
Vern Ord . Quarterbacks, Mitch
Nease and M1ke Nease, half·
backs , N1ck !hie or Ne1l Baker,
fullback, Ihle, (when he 1sn't
playmg fullback), Jay H1ll and
J1m W1lllams, ends, Larry
Wilcoxen and Ron H1ll, tackles,
Greg M1ddleswart and Jun
Sm1th , guards , and M1ke
Codner, center
On defense , B11l Cornell,
middle guard , R H11l and
M1ddleswa1 t, tackles , Randy
Forbes and Williams, ends,
Codner and Baker, linebackers,
J H1ll and !hie, cornerbacks ,
and the Neases at halfbaek~

.
an outstandmg unbeaten freshman team w1th a Wln over
Upper Arhngton These guys
are now sophomores and are
makmg the regulars work hard
for the1r JObs Any loafmg, and
boom, m goes a sophomore who
can do the JOb
Leadmg the way for Me1gs
w1ll be those same ole guys;
Mark W1lhams, Tmy W1lhams,
Andy Vaughan , Ron Smith ,
Fred Lee, Larry Harmon, etc
They're heartbroken because
they failed last week, certa111ly
no diSgrace It's been a long
lime smce a Charley Chancey
coached Marauder team has
lost two m a row And I'd be
wlllmg to bet 11 won't happen
th1s week
The last lime the Marauders
traveled to Jackson, they were
down 28-0 at the half and 3 ~.0
after three quarters, but came
back to g1ve the unbeaten
Jacksomans a ball game, losmg
35·18
The probably startmg hneup

BIG GIANTS

The Nell York Giants have
a big edge on the Washington Redsk!ns in their llletime
series. The Giants have won
44, lost 21 and tied two.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings' Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
1s Open 9 a.m . to 7 p.m .• (Conllnuouslyl.

$20,000 Maximum lnsur~nce
For Each Depostlor

NEWCOMERS TO
OUR COMMUNITY

George McAfee of the ChiWE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
GROUNDED
cago Bears has the big llle·
COME IN AND SEE US!
time punt return average In
The Pittsburgh Steelers
pro football history. He re- went through the enhre 1945
PITISBURGH (UP!) - It Will turned punts at a 12.78 yard s e a son w1thout a smgle
touchdown scored passmg
take more than llllpreSS!ve average.
statistics to convmce the P1tt- ,.----------------------------------------~--·
sburgh P1rates that the
Balhmore p1tchmg staff 1s
mvinC!ble
Baltimore has lour p1tchers
who won 20 games or more thiS
season : Jun Palmer (21J.9),
Dave McNally (21-5), Pat
Dobson (21)..8) and Mike Cuellar

O's Staff

•

Gasification of
Coal Seen as
Future Energy

(2().9)

"Those four p1tchers are
great," sa1d the Pirates' batting
Coach B1ll V1rdon, who played
centerfield for the Pirates when
they won the World Senes
agal!ISt the Yankees 1n 1960
HBut," Vudon satd, " It
remaUIS to be seen how good
they are agamst NatiOnal
League hitting th1s year."
In 1970, the Baltimore pitch·
ers effeclively throttled the
ancmnati Reds, who had won
the National League team
baUing championship, by Wln·
rung the senes m five games
"I'm not worried about
them," Pu-ates slugger W111ie
Stargell sa1d. "Wa1t 'till we get
there "
The Pirates' batters may be
anx1ous to get the1r hcks
agaUISt the Baltimore pttchers,
but the Pirates' pitchers-two
of them in particular-are
thankful for a few days of rest
before the senes starts m
Baltimore Saturday
One of them IS Dock Ellis,
who has a sore right elbow.
Elhs, who was 19·9 th1s
season, said Wednesday his
elbow "Feels better, but 111 fmd
out for sure tomorrow."
The other pitcher is Nelson
Briles who waa supposed to
pitch agamst the Giants rues·
day but pulled a hamstrmg
muscle warming up for the
game
_ "It feels good," Briles said.
"With the added rest of tln'ee or
lour days I th1nk I can pitCh in
the series "

MARBLE CLIFF , OHIO
(CGS)-Al the lnslltute of
Gas Technology m Ch1cago,
scientists are perfecting a
..coalau1ficat1on" process for
w•dwpread commerctal use

Although a gas-from-coal
proc:CII was employed zn lhe
t 800'a and early t 900's ( remember the early gas loghts')
the old·fash1oned manufac·
lured gas d1dn't have the h1gh
heat content needed for modern~ay

homes and mdustnes

So current research I! cenlenng on prod"cmg a synthetic gas that's a• good as
natural gu A polot plan! for
coal a:aslficatton, des1sned to

: II
When does coal become clean, modern and convenient?
Anow« When 1111 goo • No JOkt Ont good
th1119 about coat There's lots of ot So, 1f you

coukj use the gas energv from coal to 11r
conditiOn your home, dry vour clothes and
cook your food- all automatically and Without
dtrt and mconventence - you'd really have
something Something hke

clean, modern

natural gas
Coal gastflcatton •• the process
of turnmg coal tnto gas Columbta Gas ts
pantclpatlng 1n .1n extenstvt lnduatrvfvovernment research Pf'OJtct to devt19P e precttcal
methpd It s JUSt one of the ways we wdl meet
your ever-mcretStfl9 need lor more clean
energy Gas ts nght there

produce t.S mlihon cub1c feet
of p1pelone qualoty gas da1ly,
IS scheduled to begm operatton th1s year.
At preoent, Columbza Gas
System 1s supplementmg mtlustry research on coal gastfi·
cat1on w1th zts own findings
Coal gaSificallon IS expected
lo boost not only the gas mdustry, but also lhe coal in·
~ustry .

E•perts es11male thai the
cxzii!OG supply of coal w11l
last for hundreds ol years
rhus, coal gaSificatoon offen
the prosp&lt;!ct of .on add1t10nat
surply or clean-burmng. ver:o;,tlth! 11·'~

for hom.: .mtltndus-

try fllr

lllng . long. ltnlC'

.t

o

�~ ~~

2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Ott 7, 1971

Z Takes a
Slight Chance :

A Cardinal Writes
An End to an Era
It IS usually left to posten ty to pmpomt the endmg of
an era
Rarely m the usual confused course of events can a
moment of h1story m t he makmg 01 changmg be recog
mzea clearly for what II IS
Such a mome nt, however , ma) be seen m the de parture
of Josef Cardmal Mmdszenty from Hunga1y, after more
tha n 2Q years 6f uncomprom1smg confrontation w1th h1s
country's Commumst overlords
The Hungau an pnm ate IS the last of the great church
fig ures who stood agamst the post-World War II !Ide of
Commums t unpen a hsm Back when the spilt between
East and West was fr esh and the pass1ons aroused still
raw , Ea&gt;tern Europe was studded w1th them- Mmdszenty
m Hungary, Archbishop AloysiUs Stepmac m Yugoslavia,
Stefa n Cardmal Wyszynski m Poland Archb1shop Josef
Beran m Czechoslovakia Men 11ho by force of character
or circumstances came to symbolize both spmtual and
to a great extent pohtlcal opposition to the new caesars
of thelf countnes
But times change and passwns cool Yugoslavia, the
first dropout from the Sov1et emp1re, was also the first
to seek accommodatiOn w1th the Church, releasmg Arch
bishop later Cardmal , Stepmac m 1951 Later, Archbishop
Bera n left Czechoslovakia and Cardmal Wyszynski, freed
from pn son m Poland's false dawn of 1956 , has smce
ma mta med a somet1mes stramed coexistence pol!C) With
the Warsaw reg1 me
That left Mmdszenty for the past 15 years a beSieged
guest m the Amen can legatwn m Budapest where he had
taken 1efu ge durmg the 1956 upns mg
There was a t1me, a decade back when the Mmdszenty
quest1on-11 ould he leave Hungan and under what conditions-meant a great dealm the diplomatic maneuvermgs
m centra l Europe and beyond
H1s departure now sllll makes news, but 11 1s largely
a n t 1c 11 m ax T1mes have mdeed changed Pope John
opened wmdows m all d1rectwn s Vatican emiSsaries now
' lSll Moscow And the Church faces some ol 1ts most senous problems among the clergy and la1thful of the West
,.. 1 An era of toe to-toe confrontatiOn between Immovable
spmtua l and ~rr es lstlble secular forces has ended, s•gmfy mg not only the mellowmg of pollhcal-rehgwus antago
ms ms wh1ch 1! does , and the mutmg or redu-ectmg of
Cold War passwns WhiCh 11 also does, but that both
Church and State m a much-changed world have more
pressmg and me a n 1n g I u I demands on attentwns and
energ1es

NORTH

¥AQ7
t KJ 8 5
... A 1063

.AS
¥J 109 8 64
tAQ4
... J4
• KQ9752

¥53
• 109
4KQ2
East-West vulnerable
West North East South
1¥
Pass
Pass 2 •

SISt S

The food that would nor
mally stay m the stomach to
be m1xed and ac ted upon by
stoma ch fl u1ds IS "dumped "
1mmed1ately mto the small
1ntestme Us uall) , part ol
the small mtestme has al S&lt;
been rem oved at surgery
The dumomg over dis tend•
the small mtestme, wh1ch
IS not used to rece1vtng such
a large bulk of food at one
t1me
In an effort to d1lute the
food m1xt ure fluid po urs
mto the mte stme from the
bloodstream JUSt hke 1t doe s
after certam laxati ves Thi s
Increases the o;erloadmg of
the mtestme and produces a
laxat1ve effect
The loss of flUid fr om the
bloodstream can decrea se
the vol ume of blood causmg
a person to feel famt
The eve nts also tngger thE
1 elease of e xcess msulm
c a u s 1n g low blood sugar

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

! Voice along Broadway
I

,----- -- - -

r-~ The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

1/LE IGS MASON A REt
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
~ •tv E d•tOr

P u b l •s hed

da !l v

e)C cep t

I

,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
HE'LL BE BRUSHING UP
FOR EVERY PERFORMANCE
NEW YORK - Full of chic smger Jack
Jones hauls h1s very own personal hau- stylist
along when he opens at the Copa later this month
Producer Joe Kipness blew half a milhon
trymg to run the breat old Dmty Moore's Bdwy
restaurant His Way . Decca will release an
album based on the recent Baker St Lloyd's
Bank heiSt wherem cops and others kiblt.zed the
wallue-talkie exchanges of the robbers Lloyd's
33-year-old du-ector, a radio ham who picked up
the amazmg exchange , gave Decca the nghts
They 're playmg our tune '
The DaVId Frost
Show's Widespread pubhClty about DaVId 's
longplay ha1son w1th beautiful black star
D1ahann Carroll has caused conruptive swJIchoffs m the Deep South wh1ch has affected 1ts
ratmgs, the backstage pamc 1s qmet but real
There were Pr111ce Rainer and h1s Prmcess
Grace m "21" after theater, k1ssmg a Bdwy.
colummst hello . Asked 1f she m1ght be
pregg1e, the serene Kelly gu-1 sa1d that questiOn
always brmgs to per attention the strategic
moment to start another d1et . Also m the
midn1ght "21 " crush , F1orence Henderson of
"The Brady Bunch " With producer spouse Ira
Bernstem, Charl otte Ford N1archos; International banker Andre Meyer With N1cole
Alphand, fmanc1er Henry ltleson , Mets' pres
Donald Grant, and a merry mess of JUst plam
millionrures m theu- autumn fmery
Cen·
tiniillionau-e banker Charley Allen indeed was m
the hosp1tal for h1s 6th VIS! I m a year - but not
for heart trouble Bryan Forbes and his lovely
actress w1fe also d1d the "21" at·nndn1ght scene,
toasting the fme reVIews h1s "Long Ago
Tomorrow " movie mented , Bryan was happy
WJth the crJtics but sbll confused at hiS American
distributor (Rugoff ) changmg the title from
"Ragmg Moon," hopmg to capitalize on the
f1bn's theme, tunesm1thed by Burt Bacharach
and Hal Dav1d
Group of Russ1an JOurnalists and diplomats
are domg the Manhattan rounds, one of them a
Sovtet.TV talk-6how host who, trymg to explam
what sort of show he captained, crmged at the
suggestion 1\ rrught be "like Johnny Carson 's" ,
he cons1dered 1t more like David Frost's . Mrs
Bunny Mellon of the (of course I1Mellon millions
has been conslant hostess for the VISiting Hubert
G1venchy , w1th whose PariS dress salon she
spent a light little clothes budget last year of
$170,000 - 111 that one atelier alone .. Not

MUCH lloiSTEAD OF

DOING YOUR WORK :

unusual m the upper fiscal reaches: the late
Margaret Thompson Biddle
(copper
multimillions) also spent $125,000 annually WJth
each of several PariS couturieres, when
Margaret bought a smt, she always had them run
up two Identical skirts ; sa1d she feared gettlll8
them "rump sprung", and she must've worn
each smt easily half a dozen times
Our favorite summer stop, Hello Cabala in
Marmo, Italy, where we've spent lazy vacations
these last rune summers, has been sold by our
landlord, Tony Prantera, to the (N.Y Stock
Exchange-hsted) Chromalloy Co for a lldy
fortune; Tony also sold off hiS fanCJest;n.Rome
restaurant, Hostar1a dei'Orso, but will retain
management of both, while ascendmg to the
presidency of Chromalloy Europa N V , frurly
fancy fiSCal footwork for a former Roman
JOUrnalist
We met a Father McCarthy (a Boston Jesmt
stationed there for life) near Castel Gandolfo and
he S3ld he was an astrologer stationed at the
world renowned Vahcan observatory, we
allowed as we had seen his observatory's three
handsome huge globes glimmermg in the sun
over the Alban Hill.s, and he S3ld, "Yes - two by
Ze1ss and one by Berruru."
Both members of the great old vaudeville
comedy team, Smith &amp; Dale, are kib1t.zing out
the1r lives at the Actors Home near N Y Qty not that they're char~ty-poor only because
they 're old and prefer to be WJth some of thell' old
two-a-day cromes Charlie Dale 's JUS! 90 and
recently broke hiS collarbone, and Joe Smith they 've been par tilers more than 70 years 11\Sisls on bemg With the more delicate Charlie in
case he tilts agam m his br1tUe dotage
Cliff
Hall, stra1ghtman for Jack (Baron Munchausen)
Pearl, also dec1ded at hiS age (tlUsl 11 was easier
to getup a coffee klatch at the Actors' Home than
111 Manhattan and moved m WJth the old gang .
Only 111 America Dep't Dionne WarwJcke
doesn't have to take a seat 111 the back of the
coullmer limousme 111 comparmg her wardrobe
w1th the aforenoted Margaret B1ddle and Bunny
Mellon : Dionne's speclacular duds are valued at
more than $250,000
More mighty money :
She1k Zay1d bm Sultan Al·Nuhayan, ruler of Abu
Dhab1, got mto a muscular mood and went out
and bought his own health spa m Sussex,
England, for $625,000 - an 18th~ntury mansJon
awash Wlth saunas, rowmg machines, masseurs
and hedomstic pamperers who 'd been calel'JIIg
to the Bntish swells smce 1966

992 2156 E d •lor•a l PhOn e 992
115]
Second cl ass po stage pa•d at
Pomer o y Oh•o
N a t a na l ad v erl•s • n g

rep r esen ta t . ve

Botlln e ll•

Gal lagt:ler I nc, 12 Ea st 42nd
St Ne W Yor k C•ly , New York

--S ubs c r•PI •on ra tes

~· vere d

by

De

c arr 1e r wher e

.! vaita ble 50 cent s p er w eek ,

By Motor Rou te where carr• er
se r v•ce no t ava il able One

m on th S l 75 By ma• l '" Oh 10
and W va , On e y ear Sl4 00
S1 x m ont h s $ 7 25
Thr ee

montns $4 SO Sub scr 1pf 10n
pr 1c e lf'lc l udes St:Mda y T1mes

'

___ __

S@
nhne l
_._;_

.

__

.:_

TIMELY QUOTES

More than 70 per cent of
the South VIetnamese peoIf they I the adm1mstra for a tooth, napalm for na ple profess BuddhiSm , 10
lion ) can work out somethmg palm
per cent are Roman Cathow1th Mao Tse-tung, surely - Pres zdent Anwar £1 Sadat lics
they can do 1! With Geor ge
of Egypt , tell zng hzs peo
Mean y
ple th ey must be prepared

- Dr George W Tay l or
chmrman of War Labo z
Board m W odd War 11
and Wa ge Stabtltzat zon
Board zn the Kor ean War
on what happens after th~
end of t he wage przce
freeze

An eye for an eye , a tooth
®

':lOUR STITCHES 1&gt;-RE
ON TH E 61/&gt;..5 AND
'IOU'VE GoT GUSSETS
IN TI1E INNER SEAMS·
ALL OF ':10&lt;..1 GAB 'TOO

j

Satur d ay b y The Oh10 V a tter
Pu b l 1sh m g Compan y
J 11

Cou rt St
Pomero y. Oh 10,
J57 69 Bus1 ness Off• ce Phone

Pass

3NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

4.

Openmg lead- • J

S\mptom s mclud1ng nerv
ousness and anx1ety
You can help y o u r s e I f
Stop us111g free sugar Cut
down on carboh) drates and
concentrate more on protem
fm y o u r d1et Eat small
meals frequently Try a fiveor S!X·tunes-a-da y routme of
a small a mo unt of food
When possible, lle down 1m
mediately after eatmg to diS
courage early emptymg of
the stomach Use some fat
m your d1et to delay empty
mg of the stomach (You' ll
get th1s anyway 1f yo u eat
meats ) Don't dnnk any hq
tud s durm g or 1mmed1ately
after eatm g All of these
measures are des1gned to
p r e v e n t overloadmg the
stomach to prevent sudden
' dumpmg " of the food mto
t he small mtestme Sugars
and c a r b o h y d r a t e foods
seem to make the problem
wor se (AvOid coffee , tea
colas and c1garettes 1
My last blt of adv1ce 1s to
fmd a new doctor Evef) one
should have a doctor who
has seen h1m at least oncebefore he needs h1m for a
sudden 1llness It works bet
ter that way for vou and the
doctor

Dear Reader- You are de·
s c fl b 1n g what IS called
du mpmg " It IS a comph
ca twn of your sur gery The
p•oblem diSappears m most
pallents Wl thm a ) ear after
surgery but m a few 1l per

... 9 8 7 5

SOUTH

Ulcer Operation
Has Complication

Dear Dr. Lamb-! have
had stomach ulcers for a
long t 1m e and h a v e had
three operatwns With 75 per
cent of my sto m ac h removed and the last lime the
nenes were clipped Smce
then I ha'e d1arrhea pretty
bad get s p e 11s of a SICk
stomach and am real weak
and nervo us Sometimes 1t
b o th e r s me nearly every
da) and other t1mes not for
two weeks
My doctor told me no t to
ta ke med1cme that 11 should
clear up m two years That
lime 1s pa st and 1t seems to
be gettm g worse The doctor
d1ed r e c e n t l v and I won·
dered If yOU COuld g1ve me
an; ad;Jce as to d1et treat
men\ etc I am a welder Is
hard work InJUriOus?

EAST
• J 104
¥K2
• 76 32

WEST (D )

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

B) La\lrence Lamb, MD

7

. 63

(NEW SPA PE R ENTE RPR ISE ASSOCI ATI ON\

1

~

WIN AT BRIDGE

EDITQ}liJU

for battle wzt h Jsrael

For the first t1me m history a r,reat power 1s deliberately throwmg away 1\s Ill·
escapable obl1 ga t1ons of
leadership to adopt dellber
ate weakn ess as a natwnal
poll c)
- Vzce Adm Hyma~ G Rzck
over on dec lmzng U S na
va l power
l he middle-class Amen

can may be a denhst, a doctor, a truck dr iVer or msur

ance salesman He may be a
wh1te Anglo-Saxon Protes.
tant, a black, a Ukra1man ,
an Inshman or a Pole, a
Democrat or Repubhcan He
beheves m law and 01 der,
hard work , self-rehance and
paymg hiS own way He does
all the n ght thmgs but the
11ght thmgs don't seem to be
paymg off- an~ he 1s frustrated
- D r ,Jos eph L Tomchak
professor of anthropology
at Orange Coast College
Col&gt;f

What do you do when you
reach a supposed populat10n
hm1t' Stand at the county
hne w1th a sledge hammer '

Bc~Rrs WO~LD

The b1ddmg has been
West
North
East

Pass
Pa ss
Pass

1•
3¥
3 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

You, ·South, hold
.AKI062 ¥A2 t84AK1062

Bv Helen and Sue Bottel

(Got a problem? Or a subject lor dlscuulon, two-geae111tlon
slyle? Direct your questiODS to ellller SUe or Helen Botlel -or
botb, If you want a combination motber.&lt;JauBbler •uwer.)
TEN YEARS LATER IS TIME
ENOUGH TO "TELL EVERYTIUNG"
Dear Sue and Helen :
My mother expects a complete report every time I go out. She
even wants to know what I THINK, and what my friends are
domg. These rMUns are boring: after all, I'm not wild. And If I
answer her questions about my friends, she might get the wrong
1111presslon, as tt's easy for her to do.
If I clamup,she'sallhurtandsuspects the worst .
Should a teen tell her parents EVERYTIIING? - QUIZZED
SUE'S VIEWS
Dear Quizzed.
Definitely not, never, noway, no how, and uh·UH! 1!!
If you told your paren~ everything, you'd have no personal
though Is and .ecrets whic;!f ai'e your private posseSSions, and only
to be shared (if at all) WJth a best gu-1 friend
Mothers who demand mlnute-byofllinute total recall are the
worrying type who are happier NOT knowing you kissed your boy
fr1end ten times mstead of once at the door, and that several of
your acquamlances have tried weed. They'd only get uptight and
start lecturmg, wh1ch doesn't solve anything
Also, parents shouldn't ever expect their kids to "spy" on the
younger generation, or turn informer
Even if·you have cool parents, telling them everything now
rwns hilarwus dmner talk Isler on. You should HEAR the
escapades my brothers rermrusce about at family get.togethers a dozen years after they can't get grounded for them! -SUE
HELEN'S TURN
Dear Quizzed
A mother shouldn't 1ns1st her teenager tell her everything any
more than she should "tell all" to her child. Everyone needs hiS or
her pr1vate world
BUT if the teen sees her mother as an understandmg ear, not
a flappmg mouth, the llllporlant thmgs seldom go Wl81red
A word to your mother, "Quizzed": The woman who brags
that her daughter always tells her EVERYTHING IS either
raJSmg a dull robot, or she's fooling herself - HELEN
Dear Sue
.
I'm wnting you 'cause you're a teenage gu-1 and rrught know
what I'm domg wrong
I'm ail'average guy Not bad looking I Jetter in sports and am
popular around school What's my problem' I can't get a girl I
know a lot of girls, but they only want to be "friends " I'm not
pushy Wlth them, and they are good pals, but I'd like to have a real
GffiL, not a buddy What am I domg wrong' - OONFUSED
Dear Confused
Agu-l can sense when a guy IS after her only to say he has a
gJrl fnend So she'll turn you down, not wanting to be a boy's
status symbol And so will the next, and the next Pretty soon
other gu-ls slart thinkmg, "If nobody wants hun, neither do I "
And the word gets around, "He's a buddy, not a dste," w1thout
anyone remembermg how 11 slarted.
Why not stop worrying and walt until you find a gu-1 who
really turns you on Then show her she's the greatest In other
words, make your move for ONE spec181 gu-1 , not JUSt any

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Harris: A Hope
For Magic in '72
Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT

What do you do nov. ?
A-Bid four hearts The hand
should play better 1n heart:!!

WASHINGTON (NEA)
Oklahoma s Sen Fred Harns, an able man br1mmmg
than m no-trump.
w1th
ammal v1gor, 1s workmg from a very dreamy presiTODA Y'S QUESTION
dential scnpt and has almost no one w1th real political
Your partn er b1ds a Blackexpenence aboard h1s campa1gn entouragP
wood fou r no-trum p You show
Some talented people who could have helped turned h1m
three aces and he co ntmues to
down
at the outset of h1s candidacy It IS an old story that
five no- tr ump What do you do ¥
he
also
lost at least a couple that he already had
now ?
Answer Tomorro\\
Hams prese ntly does not have a pract1ced delegate
hunter on h1s staff, and evidently 1sn't piannmg to get one
un\11 early m 1972
He IS getting enough money to keep movmg around the
BARBS
country H1s October schedule mcludes vlsJts to Massachusetts, New Hampsh1re, Connecllcut, New York, PennBy PHIL PASTORET
sylvama, Flonda, Oh1o, M1chtgan, New Mex1co, Cahlorma
A pess1mist 1s a reformed and North Carolina He h1t some 20 states m the first
ophmJst
seven weeks of effort
• • •
Yet there 1s a strange ca sualness m bQth the conception
The fellow who gets a
and the executiOn of th1s campa1gn
buss when ne leaves for
Harns ms1sts no cand1date can wm the 1972 Democratic
work nas a pretty happy
pres1denhal nommatwn who does not get mto the early
domestiC s1tuat1on gomg
pnmanes
But he says he can surv1ve these first tests
for htm
and
be
an
mcreasmgly
v1able prospect 1f he s1mply does
• • •
well- though does not w111
He defines "domg well " as beatmg out some other can
The f•rst promzse to be
d1date, as for mstance Sen George McGovern or B1rch
broken after tne NovemBayh The defimllon stops Just short of saymg Hams can
ber elections unll be tne
bmld toward v1c tory m later pnmanes by av01dmg last
one to take down tne
place 111 the early ones
compmgn s1gns
(NEWSPA,IR EHTUPll!tE ASSN )
In surveys of leader sentiment taken recently, l have
found no ev1dence that such a showmg would advance
Hams Indeed, Oklahoma sources told me that 1f the!f
senator d1d no better than th1rd 111 any of the first few
pnmar1es, he would not even have the "favonte son"
support of the Oklahoma delegahon at the July 10 M1am1
Beach conventwn
Checkmg about also turned up few signs ol genwne
back111g for Harns , notw1thstandmg h1s cla1ms of appeal
across the board to the discontented- the blacks the
Ohwans , some of the young and the old Almost nothmg
appears for him, of course, m the polls
He 1s among several Democrabc candidates who seem
to feel that lack of poll status and name •denllficahon 111
1971 may be no great drawback 111 1972, once the pnmanes get rollmg
There may be a lesson for Harns and others however
m a line from a play by the d1stmgUJshed L11lian Hellman ;
"There are no great moments unless you have a ptle
of small ones to bu1ld upon "
. A study by the Brookmgs InstitutiOn d•scloses that In
U S preSidential pollt1cs there 1s a very strong correlahon between h1gh rank 111 the polls and eventual nom 1.
nation
Harns , qmte cav.aller ln we1ghmg such hard reahtles,
1s playmg for mag1c m 1972 The ch1ef mgred1ent in h1s
mag1c 1s. as everyone knows, what he calls the "new
popuiism"- better distrJbubon of mcome and1Jower and
a return to Jdeahsm m foreign policy
'
uttered m h1~ ~~rthy, boneless verbal style, h1s assault
on the country s shared monopohes" may attract some
Amencans who are gravely discontented and turned off
on trad1honal polit1c1ans
Still, th1s 1sn't exactly catchy stuff. And, on the road
he often sounds pretty much hke any other pollhcian'
When he doesn't, h1s call for "fundamental change" 18
so revoluhonary that the voters may truly wonder how
Harns, strugghng on the frmges , can l;&gt;rlng 1t off

In~

arauders

Generation· Rap

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Old man Y gnnned as he
put down the dummy He
sa1d , " Fifty years and sWl l
never get to play a hand "
Z looked over dummy--and
called for the q u e e n of
hearts East plunked on the
kmg and returned the swt
Fmally Z rephed to Y,
'Maybe you should h a v e
played th1s one That kmg
ol hearts really belonged m
the West hand "
Then Z led a spade fr om
dummy East played the
four spot and Z produced the
nme The mne knocked out
West's ace From then on
the only tnck Z had to lose
was the ace of diamonds
Y remarked , "Th1s doesn't
look hke a hand you played
m the old a uction days You
must really be gettmg on to
contract play "
" Elementary, old fnend ,"
c h o r t I e d Z ' Once East
showed up w1th the km g of
hearts 1! became certam that
West held both the spade and
the d 1am on d aces Th1s
wasn't gomg to do me any
good 1f West also held e1ther
the Jack or 10 of spade s
There would be no wa y then
for me to av01d the loss of
two trump tncks I gave my
self that shght extra chance
of fmdmg East With both
those mtermed1ate cards "
It was a s 11 g h t extra
chance but a large part of
the difference between expert play and ordmary play SUE
l!es m those extra chances
the expert g1ves h1m self
{tUWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

- ·II) Sentlnei,MMolepor&amp;-Pcmeroy,O.,Oct. 7,1971

- Suffo l k County executwe •
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPAISf ASSOCIAfiON)
1-1 Lee Denmsnn, on estl
© 1'171 br NU
mate s that the suburban
New York C1ty COUIIty Wllf
"He used to JUSt watch football &gt;n the afternoon,
go from I 2 mzllzoH popu
Q- How does t ouch foot - merely by touchmg him It
but now that they've upgraded the kids' morning
/o twn today to 3 06 mtl
ball differ from reg ular foot - can be played by almost any
shows- Saturdays ore completely shot!"
l&gt;o ll b1: til e 11e" r 2020 un
ball?
number of players and on a
l e s~ c o 11 1 t o I s ore wst1
A-It
differs
m
that
the
'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _..;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ·- - - - - - - b a i l camer can be "downed" f1eld of almost any size
f ut erl

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Me1gs Marauders and the
Jackson Ironmen must win m
order to slay ahve m the tough
Southeastern OhiO Athletic
League race Fnday mght
There IS one rub both can't
wm, as they play each other
Both squads have 1denl!cal
records, 3·1 overall and 1·1 m
league play ; both teams' losses
commg last Friday The
Marauders lost to Ironton, ~ .
and Jackson was upset by the
same score, by Athens

An otha. loss would not
mathemattcally rule e1ther
Me1gs or Jackson out of the IItle
picture, but m aHJ probab1hty
they 'd l1kely start looking
toward next year The pack's
two leaders, Ironton and
Galhpohs, 2-0, are two of the
state's toughest and probably
won't lose two games each
Coac h Ben Buckles' Ironmen,
p1cked for second place m the
league , started out like nobody
had a chance agamst them,
wmmng thm first three, ail by

lro.n men

'

starter Steve Meadows, a 173lb
semor fullback. He ts a powerful
runner, the second leadmg
ground gamer on the' team
behmd Valentme
Eddie Hughes, 140 lb sharpshoohng quarterback , can
throw the bomb w1th amazmg
accuracy He IS 19 of 34 for the
year, but can break a game
open anytune w1th a long one
He averages 21 yards per
completion
8I
Elsewhere m the Jackson
One of the amazmg thmgs
backfield w11l be re turmng about the Jackson backf1eld 1s

b1g scores and shutouts But the
Bulldogs from Athens silenced
them last week
The Marauders w1il be a httle
smaller , but hopefully, qmcker,
espeCially up front Jac k~on has
one ground-burner m 160 lb
JUIIIOr
ta1lback,
Kenny
Valentme The fleet-footed
Vatentme beat the Marauders
last year w1th an electr1fymg 60
yard gallop (Jackson won , 12-

Clash

'-

1ts depth Take out Valentine
and there 1s Steve Rice, 140 lb
sophomore, an excepl!onal
runner Replace Meadows, and
m comes 176 Jb sophomore,
Brad Thompson , a b1g, strong
runner with about a 7 0yard per
carry record All they lack 1s
exper1ence
Other Ironmen who could g1ve
Me1gs headaches are 192 lb
semor end Chr1s Ondera, a b1g
fellow w1th much the same style
of play as the Marauders' Jell
Morns, the 190 lb semor end,

Dave Ruggles, 177 lb tackle,
and 169 lb semor k1cker , M1ke
Buckley
Now , for the Marauders
They should be prepared for
th1s mass of talent fro m
Jackson as they played a great
deal of 11 last week Hughes ISn't
the passer that Ironton's Hal
Spears 1s, the Jackson backfield
IS "great" but not as good as the
T1gers, and the Ironmen's lme
doesn 'tshape up like the T1gers
Last year, the lronmen had

Eagles in Critical Gridiron Test
BY KEITH WISECUP
The Sou thern Local TorThe undefeated Eagles • nadoes play at Southwestern
Friday w11l be playing the1r where both teams need that
toughest opponent of the season elus1ve No 1 v1ctory One
to date m the Kyger Creek should fmd 11, barnng a he
Bobcats at Kyger Creek
The Eagles, coached by

By Col. Mole
Several streaks are on the !me Fr1day mght m both the
SEOAL and Southern Valley Athletic Conference
Coach John Ecker's B1g Blue Machine will be seekmg 1ts 17th
straight Win over a three-year span , Eastern of Me1gs County w11l
be attemphng towm 1\s lOth strrught league game, and Coach Bob
Bruney at Ironton agam will try to ke~p h1s pre..season pred1ct10n
on the r1ght side of the le&lt;)ger .
- The Tigers alsO have won all thelf games thus far
While we are watchJpg the close league races, the old
Molemanmust also keep pace w1th his arch nval, MaJor Amos B
Hoople
Last week yours truly posted a 10-2 recol'l!t m1ssmg onlv the
Jackson-Athens and Miller-Alexandria games
MaJor Hoople recorded a 13-4 slate for the week He missed on
Metgs-Ironton , Logan, W Va .'s 7-&lt;, v1ctory over South Pomt ,
Ale!Uinder's wm and Zanesville's 32-13 romp over NelsonVIlle·
York
After a month of prognostications, the Moleman has a seven
game lead Mole has an overall ~3-9- 2 record MaJOr Hoople
slands at 40-16-2
What's happemng th1s week '
SEOAL
Ironton 21 Logan 18 Ch1eftalllS must make real b1g move now
to challenge, but Tigers are JUSt too b1g and too Iough
Athens 32 Waverly 6. No contest aga111 Poor Tigers have had
11 rough m the well-balanced SEOAL
Jackson 20 Me1gs 14 Jronmen won't be caught off guard two
weeks m a row Marauders could be hard to beat if they should get
early breaks
Gallipolis 30 Wellston 8. Aga111 , Devils should ha ve a breather
agaii\SI Golden Rockets Awarrung though , don 't look for11ard to
next week's game too early
SVAC
Kyger Creek 14 Ea stern 13 Upset spec ta l? No It w1ll take a
supe rh u man effort. but 1t can be don e
Southern 22 Southwest ern 6 Coach Bruce Wa ll a ce sc r ew ge ts
that Illusi ve vi ctory
North Gall1a 26 Sy mmes Vall ey 6 P ~r a tes take las t weeks
f r ustration ou1 on the V1 k1ngs
H annan W Va 18 Hanna n Trace 0 Aga1n HT has t rou bl e
mov1 ng the ball

OTHER S
Milton 1.4 Pt Pl easant 0
Chilli cot he 19 Portsm outh 12

)

South Poon t 52 Oa k Ho iI 0
Coa l Grove 2.4

Fa ~r land

6

Buffalo 16 lronlon Sf Joe 14
Crum 18 Rock Holl 12
Nelson vi lle York 36 Federa l Hockmg 6
Ale xander 18 Vmton Count y 0

M1ller 28 Glo uster 6

'

Weather-Master
\"300"Premium

Roger K~rkh a rt , have the
Southern Valley Conference
champiOnship poss1bly w1thm
thelf grasp 1f U~ey can make the
Bobcats their fifth straight
v1cllm But Coach DICk Adams'
boys might not giVe m so easily
They also are undefeated, 3-0-1
overall and 3.0 111 league play
Eastern IS 2.0 111 league play
Coac h Bruce Wallace 's
Tornadoes,
1mprov1ng every
1
week, w1ll test SV AC foe , Southwestern Both teams are IH

PITTSBURGH (UPI ) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates, belieVIng
the1r p1tchmg staff v111dicated,
~acted for the World Ser~es
today--womed more about an
elbow and a th1gh lhan about the
Baltimore OriOles
" We don 't care 1f Paul
Bunyon IS pi tchmg," Sa!d W1lhe
Stargell "We're gomg to beat
them ''

The elbow belongs to !!!.game
w1nner Dock Elhs and the thigh
to Nelson Br1les, but despite the
111Jurles the Pu-ates are confident they w11l not suffer the
same fate that Cincmnall 's
cr1ppled p1tchmg slaff met m
IllS\ year's World Senes
"My 'Jfilltlltili; lii!ttet," sa1d
Elhs, Plti!tiilrgh's 'top \Vlnner,
who created a storm when he
labeled club off1c1als "cheapskates " because of travel

pohc1es
Only momen ts after the
Pirates beat the San Franc1sco
Giants 9-0 Wednesday to w1n the
NatiOnal League pennant,
Manager Danny Murtaugh se·
lee ted Ellis - If he 1s healthy to p1tch the sen es opener
Saturday at Baltimore
It was one of the lessheralded
members of the P~rates ' pllchlng staff who did m San
Franc1sco
Bruce Kison, a fuzzy-cheeked
21-year-old righthander w1th
only a half-season m the
maJorS, picked up the bJ.ggest
wm of his career when he shut
out the g1ants on two h1ts 111 four
and two-thirds mrungs of clutch
relief
"!knew I had to do the job,"
Kison sa1d "It was e1ther today
or never and I knew there was
no reason to save 1t "
When Kison came m the score
was tied ~only because Richie
Hebner hit a three-run homer 111
lbe bottom of the second mnmg

'

~~FULL

FOUR PLY
CONSTRUCTION
COOPERS BESTWINIER TI RE
PREIIUM CONSTRUCTION
THROUGH AND THROUGK
• OEEP POWERF UL TRACTI ON
111 niEr lr e~d 1111lh tr aCtiO n

"Can't beat
the

lllltoonatiUI Iy klt k m I mud and

snow- keep head apt~ ~w ays
rud) lor actoon Vd!l able P tch
~r&gt;d

s

pf!

du lgn

hu~hes

old shoes

annoy

road no se
• AIR RETAINING LINER -

1113

ch omllul yl rub bef to let ~ou
pract c ~ l l )" l or~e l r I a liOn

v.omes
, SAFER WIN TE R llRIYING stu i.l es pro ve that w 1ter t1res

stop betl e r t ra c ~ str a Kilter
than regular lread l lrei

6 SO 13 WHITEWAL LTUBELESS NYLON CO RD

CHECK MOORE1S PRICES
BEFORE YOU BUY!

MOORE'S
128 W. MAIN

992·2848 POMEROY

North Galha Kyger Creek has
had a harder tune th1s year,
tymg Wahama, 6-6, defeatmg
Southern 14-12, North Galha 8,f,,
and Hannan Trace, 4ii-O
The probable starting hneup
for the Eagles w1ll be J1m
Amsbary, quarterback, R1ck
Sanders and Randy Bormg,
halfbacks,
and
Denms
E1chmger, fullback On the hne
will be Bob Caldwell and RICk
W1lhams, ends , Alan Holter and
e1ther D1ck Stettler or Roger

Pittsburgh Is
Re'a dy For O's

1

ba rs ta groo and go 1n lhe (l~ep
e:;l mud or snow Sur ~ swerve
free stops. tvo.
• SE LF CLEANIN G W~ ISPER
QUIET - w de flal tr r 3d de
s1gned !;() Ill~ II &lt;l(hone lemen ts

overall and I).! 111 SV AC play
The Highlanders, wmless last
year, will be out for revenge
The Tornadoes won one game
last year, and 1\ came at the
H1ghlanders' expense. Southwestern w1ll be out to try not to
let 1! happen two years stra1ght
The powerful Eagles haven't
played anybody w1th theu- class
yet They've run up scores as 536 over Glouster, 4J,f, over
Frontier Local, 43-0 over
Hannan Trace, and 26.0 over

for comfort,
Can't beat reloable oil heat
for wintert1me comfort

For quality heating oil,
phone 992 2101 for Rizer's
prompt ~elovery

after Steve Blass, the struggling
Pittsburgh starter, was lifted
ffor a pmch hitter
The game r:emamed tied until
the bottom of the sixth when
Roberto Clemente smgled home
the tie-breakmg run and, after
the siumpmg Slargell was m·
lentionally passed 1n a bit of
queshonable strategy, AI Oliver
slanuned a three-run homer
KISon, who was 10·1 at
Charleston, W Va , m the International League when the
Pirates recalled hun July 3,
retired 10 men m a row between
the fourth and seventh mrungs.
Murtaugh yanked hun w1th two
out m the seventh when W111ie
McCovey s1ngled and Bobby
Bonds walked
Dave G1ust1 then came m,
struck out Dick D1e~ to end the
mnmg and set the G1ants down
m the e1ghth and n111th mrungs
Without a hit to record hiS third
successiVe playoff save.

Pirates

"'

The Giants scored lhelf fmal
four runs m the second on ChriS
Speier's homer, Singles by Ken
Henderson and Tlto Fuentes
and a three.run homer by
McCovey
In the bottom of the second,
Hebner homered after smgles
by Manny SangUlllen and Bill
Mazerosk1 , pmch-h1ttmg for
Blass
The Prrates were scheduled to
fly to Baltimore today and work
out Friday at Memor1al
Stad1um

MAGNUM APPOINTED
NEW YORK (UPI ) - PGA
commiSSIOIIer Joseph C Dey
sa1d Wednesday that Clyde C
Mangum Jr of Southern Pmes,
N C , has been appomted an
ass1s tan t tournament superv 1sor
of the PGA Tournament Play-

BIG CROWDS

The 1959 Wolld Senes set
By Un1ted Press International
the
all-t1me Senes attend
Nattona I League Champ1onsh1p
ance
record , even though 1t
Playoff. (4th game I
only SIX games, w1th
lasted
San Fran 140 000 llOO- 5 10 0
420,784
people see1ng the Los
P1tlsburgh
230 004 oox- 9 11 2 Angeles Dodgers top the ChiPerrJ, Johnson 161. McMahon cago Wh1te Sox
181 an Doetz , Blass. Koson (31.
G1usto(7) and Sanguzllen WPAMERICAN POWER
Kison LP-Perry HRs- Speoer,
Me Covey, Hebner, Ol 1ver
The Amencan League has
shown a strong dommance m
Nahonal LeagueChamp1onshop power m World Senes play
Playoff Standmgs
Amencan League players
By Un1ted Press lnternat1ona I have hit 277 home run s to
(Best of F1ve1
175 f01 the Natwnal League
w I pet.
• Poltsburgh
3 I 750
I 3

250

x-Cilnched Pennant
Wednesday's Result

P1tts 9 San Fran 5

BIG RETURNS

for tfle Marauders Will be
Vaughan , T W1lhams, M
Wilhams, and Sm1th m the
backfield Vaughan will call the
SJgnals, Tmy will be at fullback
agam, Mark Will carry the ball
from the ta1lback slot, and
Smith will resume catchmg
pa sses, blockmg, and occasiOnally runnmg the ball at
wingback
On lhe lme w1ll be Me1gs '
"pr1de and tOY" pau- of ends ,
Larry Harmon and Jeff Moms
At tackles are b1g Lee and
smaller but tough Dave
Krawysczyn The guards are
those "sure-thmg" Roger D1xon
and Ted Le hew Eddie Young
w1ll anchor the !me al cente r
On defense, John Thomas will
play m1ddle guard, Lee and
John Gr ueser w11l handle the
tackles, Harmon and Mom s,
ends, T Williams and Lehe11 ,
linebackers, Ke1th Van Inwagen
and Sm1th, cornerbacks, and
Chuck Faulk and R1ck Ash,
deep backs

BANKING TWINS
They belong together your Checking and
Sav1ngs Accounts here at th1 s modern
conve nien t ba nk Let us te ll you why

ers Dlvlston

Wednesday's Baseball Results

San Franc1sco

Question

Karr, tackles; John Clme and
RICk Hauber, guards, and Tim
Gumpf, center
On defense , Warren Calaway
and John Sheets Will be at ends,
Holter and Stettler, tackles,
Hauber, m1ddle guard; Alan
Duvall
and
EIChmger,
linebackers , Gumpf and
W1l11ams , cornerbacks, and
Sanders and Caldwell, safeties
For the Tornadoes, 1t w1ll be
Vern Ord . Quarterbacks, Mitch
Nease and M1ke Nease, half·
backs , N1ck !hie or Ne1l Baker,
fullback, Ihle, (when he 1sn't
playmg fullback), Jay H1ll and
J1m W1lllams, ends, Larry
Wilcoxen and Ron H1ll, tackles,
Greg M1ddleswart and Jun
Sm1th , guards , and M1ke
Codner, center
On defense , B11l Cornell,
middle guard , R H11l and
M1ddleswa1 t, tackles , Randy
Forbes and Williams, ends,
Codner and Baker, linebackers,
J H1ll and !hie, cornerbacks ,
and the Neases at halfbaek~

.
an outstandmg unbeaten freshman team w1th a Wln over
Upper Arhngton These guys
are now sophomores and are
makmg the regulars work hard
for the1r JObs Any loafmg, and
boom, m goes a sophomore who
can do the JOb
Leadmg the way for Me1gs
w1ll be those same ole guys;
Mark W1lhams, Tmy W1lhams,
Andy Vaughan , Ron Smith ,
Fred Lee, Larry Harmon, etc
They're heartbroken because
they failed last week, certa111ly
no diSgrace It's been a long
lime smce a Charley Chancey
coached Marauder team has
lost two m a row And I'd be
wlllmg to bet 11 won't happen
th1s week
The last lime the Marauders
traveled to Jackson, they were
down 28-0 at the half and 3 ~.0
after three quarters, but came
back to g1ve the unbeaten
Jacksomans a ball game, losmg
35·18
The probably startmg hneup

BIG GIANTS

The Nell York Giants have
a big edge on the Washington Redsk!ns in their llletime
series. The Giants have won
44, lost 21 and tied two.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings' Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
1s Open 9 a.m . to 7 p.m .• (Conllnuouslyl.

$20,000 Maximum lnsur~nce
For Each Depostlor

NEWCOMERS TO
OUR COMMUNITY

George McAfee of the ChiWE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
GROUNDED
cago Bears has the big llle·
COME IN AND SEE US!
time punt return average In
The Pittsburgh Steelers
pro football history. He re- went through the enhre 1945
PITISBURGH (UP!) - It Will turned punts at a 12.78 yard s e a son w1thout a smgle
touchdown scored passmg
take more than llllpreSS!ve average.
statistics to convmce the P1tt- ,.----------------------------------------~--·
sburgh P1rates that the
Balhmore p1tchmg staff 1s
mvinC!ble
Baltimore has lour p1tchers
who won 20 games or more thiS
season : Jun Palmer (21J.9),
Dave McNally (21-5), Pat
Dobson (21)..8) and Mike Cuellar

O's Staff

•

Gasification of
Coal Seen as
Future Energy

(2().9)

"Those four p1tchers are
great," sa1d the Pirates' batting
Coach B1ll V1rdon, who played
centerfield for the Pirates when
they won the World Senes
agal!ISt the Yankees 1n 1960
HBut," Vudon satd, " It
remaUIS to be seen how good
they are agamst NatiOnal
League hitting th1s year."
In 1970, the Baltimore pitch·
ers effeclively throttled the
ancmnati Reds, who had won
the National League team
baUing championship, by Wln·
rung the senes m five games
"I'm not worried about
them," Pu-ates slugger W111ie
Stargell sa1d. "Wa1t 'till we get
there "
The Pirates' batters may be
anx1ous to get the1r hcks
agaUISt the Baltimore pttchers,
but the Pirates' pitchers-two
of them in particular-are
thankful for a few days of rest
before the senes starts m
Baltimore Saturday
One of them IS Dock Ellis,
who has a sore right elbow.
Elhs, who was 19·9 th1s
season, said Wednesday his
elbow "Feels better, but 111 fmd
out for sure tomorrow."
The other pitcher is Nelson
Briles who waa supposed to
pitch agamst the Giants rues·
day but pulled a hamstrmg
muscle warming up for the
game
_ "It feels good," Briles said.
"With the added rest of tln'ee or
lour days I th1nk I can pitCh in
the series "

MARBLE CLIFF , OHIO
(CGS)-Al the lnslltute of
Gas Technology m Ch1cago,
scientists are perfecting a
..coalau1ficat1on" process for
w•dwpread commerctal use

Although a gas-from-coal
proc:CII was employed zn lhe
t 800'a and early t 900's ( remember the early gas loghts')
the old·fash1oned manufac·
lured gas d1dn't have the h1gh
heat content needed for modern~ay

homes and mdustnes

So current research I! cenlenng on prod"cmg a synthetic gas that's a• good as
natural gu A polot plan! for
coal a:aslficatton, des1sned to

: II
When does coal become clean, modern and convenient?
Anow« When 1111 goo • No JOkt Ont good
th1119 about coat There's lots of ot So, 1f you

coukj use the gas energv from coal to 11r
conditiOn your home, dry vour clothes and
cook your food- all automatically and Without
dtrt and mconventence - you'd really have
something Something hke

clean, modern

natural gas
Coal gastflcatton •• the process
of turnmg coal tnto gas Columbta Gas ts
pantclpatlng 1n .1n extenstvt lnduatrvfvovernment research Pf'OJtct to devt19P e precttcal
methpd It s JUSt one of the ways we wdl meet
your ever-mcretStfl9 need lor more clean
energy Gas ts nght there

produce t.S mlihon cub1c feet
of p1pelone qualoty gas da1ly,
IS scheduled to begm operatton th1s year.
At preoent, Columbza Gas
System 1s supplementmg mtlustry research on coal gastfi·
cat1on w1th zts own findings
Coal gaSificallon IS expected
lo boost not only the gas mdustry, but also lhe coal in·
~ustry .

E•perts es11male thai the
cxzii!OG supply of coal w11l
last for hundreds ol years
rhus, coal gaSificatoon offen
the prosp&lt;!ct of .on add1t10nat
surply or clean-burmng. ver:o;,tlth! 11·'~

for hom.: .mtltndus-

try fllr

lllng . long. ltnlC'

.t

o

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~ -: Tbe Dlllly Sentinel, Midi!Ieport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 1, 1971 '

-The

!

OHSAA Releases

SEO Grid Statistics
1971 SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
LEAGUE STATISTICS
I Includes gamos through Oct. l)
TEAM STATISTICS (l GAMES)
TEAM

F. DOWNS PASSING SCRIMMAGE
Team Avg. OPP. Avg . CMP-ATT INT. Team O?P.
Athens
23 · 11.5
26
13.0 5.-13
1 104 90
Gallipolis
32
16.0 21
10.5 9.- 13
0 11 3 98
Ironton
34
17.0 21
10.5 19-28 0 118 92
Jackson
27
13.5 16
8.0 10-24
4 105 90
Logan
24
12.0 38
19.0 13-29
2
Ill
Meigs
28 14.0
25
12.5 6 -21 3 102 123
Wa yerl y
16
8.0 24
12.0 6 -29
7 . 102 105
Wellst on
20
10.0
33
16.5 12-30
4
99 120
RUSHING
PASSING
T. OFF.
T. DEF.
TEAM
Yds. Avg . Yds. Alig. Yds. Avg . Yds. Avg.
Athens
401 200.5 15
7.5 416 208.0 466 233.0
Gallipolis
. 491 245.5 100 50.0 597 298.5 299 &gt;49.5
I rant on
324 162.0 259 129.5 583 296 .5 417 158.5
Jackson
358 179.0 198 99.0 556 278.0 284 192.0
Logon
203 IOU 192 96.0 395 197.5 676 388.0
Meigs
404 202 .0 86
43 .0 490 245.0 381 190.5
Waver ly
76
·38.0 110 55.0 lBO
90 .0 575 287.5
Well ston
184
92.0 178 89.0 362 181.0 581 290:5
'" OVERALL SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TD PAT Pis. (G) AVG.
Pete Neal. Ga lli polis
9
12
(41
66
16.5
(4)
Randy Boring , Eastern
7
0
42
10.5
(4)
Mark Will iams, M eigs
6
6
42
10.5
(41
Rick Sanders , Eastern ·
6
4
40
10.0
Chris Ondera , Jackson
6
0
36 . (4)
9.0
(4)
Ri ck Krebs, logan
6
0
36
9.0
(4)
Br ian Da vidson, l ogan
4
12
9.0
36
(4)
J(J
Ken Va lent ine, Jackson
5
0
7.5
E!o~ Caldwe ll. Eastern
s 0 30 (4)
7.5
B1ll Woodson, Nels-York
2 15
(4)
30
7.5x
SEOAL SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (GI AVG.
Pete Neal. Gal lipol is
5
8
38
(2)
19 .o
Chri s Onder a, Jackson
4
0
24
12)
12.0
Mark Williams, Me igs
11.0
3
4
22
12)
Brian Davidson, Logan
2
6
18
12)
9.0
Ken Culbertson. Logan
2
2
14
(2)
7.0
Stu Smith. Athens
2
0
12
(2)
6.0
Ji m Pa yne , Ironton
2
0
12
(2)
6.0
Rick Boykin, Ironton
6.0
2 0 12 121
Rick Krebs , Logan
6.0
2 0
12
121
Tiny Will ia ms, M eigs
2 0 12
12)
6.0
SVAC SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (G) AVG.
Randy Bor ing, Eastern
3
0
18
(2)
9.0
(3)
Harvey Brown , North Ga ll ia
4
0
24
8.0
J im Amsbary, Eastern
2
0
12
(2)
6.0
M itch Nease, Southern
1
0
6
(I )
6.0
Nick Ihie, Southern
f
0 _,;__ (I)
6.0
(2)
Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
1
4
10
5.0
(3)
Glenn Smith, Kyger Creek
2 0 12
4.0
Phil Hollonbaug h, N. Gall ia
2
o
12
(3)
4.0
Louie Louden, Kyger Creek
2
0
12
(3)
4.0
Rick Smi th, Kyger Creek
2 0
12
(3)
4.0
~'ic k Sa nd ers, Ea stern
1
2
8
(2)
4.0
TRI -VALLEY SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TO PAT Pts. I G) AVG.
Greg Kirk. Belpre
3 2 20 (11 20.0
Bill Woodson, Nels-York
1 8 17 (I) 17.0x
Denny Morrow. Warren Local
2
2
14
(l l
14.0
Greg Bookman, Nels York
2 0 12 (11 12.0
Chr is Wh itm ore. Nel s- York
2
0
12
( 1)
12.0
Dave Knost. Warren Local
2
0
12
( 1)
12.0
Jeff Bradford. Warren Local
1 2
8 (I)
8.0

r:

Seven tied tor eig hth with six po int s in one game.
x- lnc ludes a field goal.

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Miller
56 (4) 14.0
RUSHING
Yds Car Avg . North Gallia
SO (4) 12.5
Neal. Ga ll.
257 51 s.o Federal-Hocking 34 141 8.5

M. Willi ams, Meigs 191 J l 6.2 Glouster

30 (4}

~~ mi t h, Athens

22 (4)
20 (4)

5.5
5.0

20

5.0

Wood. Athens
j(rebs, Loga n

149 34 4.4 Waverly
135 39 3.5 Southern
ll9

l7

7.0 Vinton Co.
Pl . Pleasant

(4)

7.5

PASSING
Cmp-Att tnt Yds TO
Spears, Iron. 19-28 0 259 4
Smith, Logan 12-25 1 184 3
Hughes, Jack . 10-24 4 198 3
Seffles, Well . 10-26 4 127 o
Snowden. Gall. 9-12 0 100 2

8 (4) 2.0
DEFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pts. IGI Avg .
Eastern
12 14) 3.0
Wahama
26 (51 5.2
Jackson
22 14) 5.5
Kyger Creek
24 W 6.0

(4

Ironton

or morel

PUNTING
Moizer, Logan
Snowden, Gall.

27

(4)

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio High School Athletic
Association Wednesday
relea.sed for the first time the
cgmptiterized · high school
football ratings which it hopes
will evenlllally lead to a state
high school football playoff.
The ratings, prepared for the
OHSAA by National Scanning,
Inc. of Columbus, divide the
state into four regions in each
classification, picking the best
team , according to performances so far .
Points are accumulated not
only from beating a team but
also from vicoories posted by
· the beaten team.

8. Can ion Central Calhollt ; 9.
Region 6
·
(lie) Akron Kenmore and Com- 1. Columbus Mohawk ; 2. Na poleon ; J. Columbus Watterson ;
1. N il es McKinley ; 2. Wa rr~n brldge.
Region 4
4. St . Marys Memorial ; 5. (tie)
Hard ing;. 3. Lakewood St . Ed'
ward ; ~- Parma Valley Forge ; 1. Cincinnati 51. Xavier; 2_ Gibsonburg and .OreglonnCardl 5. Garfield Heights; 6. Mentor ; 2. Cincinnati Moeller; 3. Keft. nat Slrltch; 7. Fostoria ; B. (tie)
7. Ma ~tield ; 8. Parma Senior ; tering Alter ; 4. Kettering Fair- Huron and Vermilion ; 10. Fre.
9. Fairview Park . 10. Cleve - monl West; 5. Kettering Fair- mont St. Joseph .
land Cathedral Latin .
mont East ; ·6. Cincinnati f!oger
1. lront~~~~on~teubenville
Region 2
Bacon
;
7.
Princeton
;
B
.
Troy;
Central
Catholic,· 3. Barnes . .
I. (tiel Columbus Northland 9. Dayton Chamlnade; 10. Cln·
,,
ville ; .i. (tie) Bridgepor1 and
~nd Worthington ; 3. Upper Ar - cinnali Elder .
CLASS AA
'.¥
Carrollton ; 6. Wellsville ; 7. New
lmg ton; 4. Westerville ; 5. Port
Region 5
;.
Concord John Glenn ; 8. Galli ·
Clinton ; 6. (tie) Lima Senior
and Toledo Woodward ; 8. Fre- 1. Cleveland Holy Naote ; 2_ polls; 9. (tie) Hartv-ille Lakd
mont Ross; 9. Findlay ; 19. Ga - Elyria Catholic ; 3. (tie) C.mp- and Minerva.
hanna Lincoln .
bell Memorial and woos!er
Region 8
Region J
Triway ; 5. (tie) Middlefield
l. Madeira ; 2. Springfield
1. lancaster ; 2. Akron Gar - Cardinal and Youngstown Shawnee ; 3. Loveland; 4. Harfield ; 3. (fie) Barberton and North ; 7. warren Kennedy ; B. • riSon; 5. C~rcte~llle; 6. Da_yfon
Region 1

Steubenville ;
Zanesville ; 7 .

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Ohio
Attorney General William J .
Brown is reaching all the way
hack to the French and Indian
War to prove that Kentucky
By BilL MADDEN
does not own as much of the
UP! Sports Writer
Ohio River as it claims.
Sonny Sixkiller-Don Bunce;
The boundary of the river has'
Washington-Stanford; the sub- been in dispute for years, and
ject is roses.
five years ago the U. S.
.
That's the story Saturday Supreme Cour t appor' nted a
when the two giants of tie special master to recommend a
Pacific Eight . Conference,
led borderline between the states.
.
bYtw o of the natton's premiere
Kentucky contends the Ken•· b ks
.
quar.,r ac converge m Seat· tucky boundary is the north
Ue for what could prove to be a shore of the river and cites old
ti cket to th e Rose land grants and cessions to
one-way
Bo
1
prove it.
w·
Washington
( 4-0)
has Ohio has long claimed the
di spose d 0f non league op- boundary should either be the
"·Uf .
ponen ts '-"' orrua at Santa middle of tire river or what the
Ba rbara • Pu rdue, Tcu • and northern boundary of the rl·ver
. .11
ru .mors. as Sixla
er tossed eight was before high-level dams ,·n· ked
tou chdown passes an d prc
. . undated much Ohio bank sor·t.
949
rds
up
ya ·
• A month ago, Brown asked
Sta nfor d • Ied bY Bunce's the Supreme Court to allow
TD passes and 909 yar ds, Ohio to amend ,·ts su1·1 to r'ns1'st
seven
·ts
1os t 1 f'ITS t game 1ast week (9-3 on the middle of the river boun·
to Duke) b t
· us1
lied
u
previO
Y
ro
over Missouri, Army and dary and in his briei in support
Oregon. With Southern California the only other team rated a
shot at the Pacific Eight crown,
Sixkiller and Bunce may very
well decide things even this
1
early in the season.
In other key college games
'
this weekend, Texas is a six·
point favorite over Oklahoma,
Michigan is rated 13 over
Michigan State, Penn State 20 PONTIAC, Mich. (liPI)over Army, Georgia 10 over Jerome Lauinger, scarred by
Mississippi, Ohio state 22 over childhood memories of antilllinois, Colorado 17 over Iowa Semitism and anti-German
State, Kansas three over bigotry, . made his "down
Kansas SU!te, Southern Califor- payment on democracy" by
nia 12 ovec Oregon and Air infiltrating the local branch of
Force 14 over SMU.
the Ku Klux Klan as an
Top . ranked Nebraska is a informe~ for the FBI.

Oppos.

10. Brilliant.

of the motion he goes ail the
Meigs
way back to Oct. 10, 1763.
On that date, the attorney·
general claims, a royal proclamation gave all territory north
of the river to Indians who helped the English defeat the
French.
·
"
Alth hJ
M d'
•h
Ada Cramlet to Kenneth Wllt,
oug ames a IS:J.w o Doris Wilt, Lots, Myers Ad·
rePre sen tedV'~rgml8
· · m
·
Con· dition, Racine.
tinental Congress, tried to' prove
his tat h d
'·im to Kennedy
Leo Kennedy,
Jr ., Julia
A.
s e a
a Cus
to Fletcher
Welch
th a, t Iand I't never could .
'
parcel, Rut.land.
· As a resuIt of furtbe r re- · John W· Arbaugh Ethel M
· h'18 Arbaugh to· Larry Salser,
'
searc h~ ". B'.,own sat'd 10
Carla·
t
f
I
f
ed
cour 1 mg, we are now ore Salser Lot Olive-Tuppers
to conclude Virginia had no title Plains'
'
·In 1784 t a.~Y of the I an d on th • ' Ora M.
· Bacon, John C. Bacon
nor th ban k ' and there fore could to Denzel Boggess, Dessie
--"thern Boggess Lot and Landing
no t 1ega11 Y ced e the nvo
'
'
wa ter 1·me as a boun dary to"
.,.en- Letart Antiquity
.
tu k
c Y. .
George H. Warner, Gdn.,
Federa l .J udge Ph 111 '~,
~ ..-or·
-"'
Richard A. Warner, minor, to
man , spec,_a1 maste r ••
m · th e Elmer W. Hysell, Flossie
boun dary d_ISpu te , canno t . hear Hysell, 38 acres, Rutland.
•·
"'s tlmony '" the case un til th
Leafie F. Doston to Gerald E.
t
d
'd
h
th
II
8
cour eel es w e .e,r to . _ow Johnson, Opal Johnson, .67
Brown toc hangr Ohrospe titi on. acre. Olive.
Leona Leiving , Bertha
Leiving to Kathryn Harvey,
Lots, Syracuse.
Robert C. Hartenbach,
,.
Sheriff, Kenneth B. &amp; Beulah M.
~·Cross to Beulah Cross, 147.44,
:~
Scipio.
Beulah Cross to John E.
Williams, Annie M. Williams,
147.44 Acres, Scipio.
father of six, would not
George E. Carson, dec., to
comment Tuesday on whether Garnet Carson, Adrian A.
he expects reprisals from Klan Carson, Geraldine Reed,
sympathizers because of his Anabel Hale, Bonnie • Wolford,
actions. But he said he would Cert. for Trans., ,1\Utland.
do it again.
Geraldine C. Reed, Ann C.
A tall, spare man ·f lth Hale, Charles Wolford, Bonnie
receding brown hair, Laqjrlger Wolford to Adrian A. Carson,
wouldn 't detail his activl~for Rose Ellen Carson, 50 acres,

son .

1.

fi

•

Transfers

•
•

°

come
out when
the klansmen
go
the FBI
because
those will
to trial. He said he contacted
the FBI and volunteered to
infiltrate the group about four
years ago.
. "I have never had any use
for any sort of hate organizalion, " he said. "America is for
everybody."
·
Childhoodexperiencessltongly influenced his decision, he
said.
"When I was really small-S
or 7-1 belonged to a iocal
branch of the Brownshirts (a
pro-German group in the late
1930's)," Lauinger said. "I
didn't know any · -better. I
thought they were some kind of
Boy Scouts."
It was then that Laulhger
learned of anti-SemitiS!Jl ,and
realized how false ~c
stereotypes could be whl!lf· he
discovered .that a friend of his
was Jewish and didn't acl like
people said Jews were supposed'
to act. He also became the butt
of anti-Gennan sentiment during World War II because of his
ancestry .

...

1 RACK SUITS '49.95

TABL£ OF SlACKS lh PRICE
BOYS SUITS 20% OFF
SOORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 20% OFF
LONG SLEEVE FRENQI aJFF SHIRTS '2.98

a

992-2709

Ml

Egad, friends , there will
be plenty of fireworks in
Dallas this Saturday as the
point-happy Oklahoma Sooners (3·01 tangle with powerful Texas (3·0) .
The Sooners, who h a v e
chalked up 118 points for a
39.3 point average in win·
ning their first thr~e games,
are grven the nod by the
Hoople System to take the
Longhorns, w h o averaged
30.3 points in whipping their
first three 1971 opponents. In
a free-scoring fray we make
II Oklahoma 28. Texas 22um-kumph!
While the eyes of Texas
will be focused on Dallas
there are many other outstanding clashes on Saturday's card.
Sportilig the three longest
unbeaten strings in major
collegiate competition , Toledo ('}:1 straight), Nebraska
123 in a row ), and Arizona
State (20 consecutive winS1,
will add another game to
their strings .
'
The Rockets will record
No. 28 as they spank Bowl·
ing Green37-12,' the Nebraska Cornhuskers will notch
No. 24 as they whack· Mis·

17 (N)
South C;1rollna 47, Virginia
12 (N)
Southern Cal. 38, Oregon
35 (N)
Tampa 26, Dayton 12 (N)
Tennessee 32, Ga. Tech 16
Oklahoma St. 21; TCU 15 (N)

E i g h t conference opener .
The Arizona State Sun Devils
will extend two strings as
the y rack up No. 21 and
make it 11 straight wins over
host Colorado State U. I pre·
diet a 44-12 victory for the
Sun DevUs-hak-kaff'
The Hoople Upset of the
Week is Michigan State (2-2)
to surprise mighty Michigan
14-0) on State's home
grounds . In this , the 64th renewal of this great interslate classic, I look for
Duffy Daugherty's stalwarts
to rebound from their penalty-plagued loss to rugged
Notre Dame• with a sterling
performance to edge the
W o 1 v e r in e s, 24-21-har·
rum ph!
Now go on wilh the forecast.
Air Force 31, SMU 7
Auburn 27, Southern M\ss. 6
Arkansas 23, Baylor 0 (N)
Boston Coli. %8, VIllanova 21
Toledo 37, Bowling Green 12
Yale 16, Brown 14
Bucknell 24, Davidson 20
Oregon St. 41, California 32
Cincinnati 26, Xavier 13 (NI
Arizona St. 44, Col. St. U. 12
Ct¥nell 35, Princeton 21
Dartmouth 20, Peon. 6

North Carolina 34, Tulane 7 ley 12
Northern Ill. 22, Marshall
Eastern 211 Kyger Creek 18
7 (N)
Hannan Trace 8 Hannan 6
North Texas St. 25, Akron .Southern 28 Southwestern 0
6 (N)
Milton 18 Pt. Pleasant 8
Penn State 29, Army 27
Nelsonville-York 2() FcderalPlttsl&gt;urgh 38, Navy 6
Hocking 12
Purdue 23, Minnesota 12
Rutgers 16, Lehigh o
Alexander 6 Vinton County 0
San Diego St. 33. Pacific
Miller 32 Glouster 0

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

New Haven Social Events

a slipper that feels as
marvelous as it looks!

.I:J

p •nt

LJou~e
n -· ....._--a
. ·-'·

8eat •••• "

!

1

I

I By Bob Hoeflich

I

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Mrs. John Hite, Findlay ,a former resident of Lincoln Terrace
in Pomeroy, has suffered her second heart attack but is in
satisfactory condition . She's confined to room 368, Blanchard
Valley Hospital in Findlay.
WAYNE WELL, son of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well, Pomeroy
Route 3 and a freshman at Ohio University, has been named a
member ofOhio University's Men 's Glee Club. Wayne was one of
30 selected out of over 60 attending. Wayne's voice is a natural
bass.
MR. AND MRS. THEODORE T. REED, JR. spent last week
in Philadelphia attending the !59th session of the Supreme Council
of the Scottish Rite (33rd degree). Monday evening they attended
a dinner given by the Valley of Columbus and on...W~sday night
were dinner guests of the Ohio Council of Libera lion.
Ted, of course, attended SUpreme Council meetings and on
Wednesday witnessed the conferring of the 33rd degree upon 190
candidates from across Northeast United States. Many of the
events of the session were formal and as many as 1200 men, all in
white tie and tails, were assembled at some of the occasions.
While there , the Reeds toured Buck County in Pennsylvania. They
were accompanied by Mr . and Mrs. James J . Harbage of
Columbus .
JACQUE GABRITSCH, Pt. Pleasant , formerly of Mason and
well known in the Bend area, is a member of the majorette corps
and a solo baton twirler with the West Virginia Tech Golden Bears
marching band .
Jacque is attending Tech on a band-staff work study
scholarship with full tuition, fees and room and board paid. She is
majoring in music with her instrumental concentration on flute ,
and a minor in piano and voice. She is a former voice, organ and
piano student of Mrs. Paul B. Powell, having studied flute with
William Warlield and John Brunicardi, Gallipolis, who helped her
with the scholarship audition music.

foam-cuohioned
washable, too

project of. the Women 's Class
was made when the Loyal Pals
Class met Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs . Sidney Russell.
The Women's Class met at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Tuesday to make layettes which
Will be sent to a misswn in
Africa.
Arrangeme nts were made for
·the an nua l Thanksg iving
meeting at which time a special
thank offering is taken and a
program presented.
Mrs. Russell gave devotions
to open the meeting . Refreshments were served to Miss
Fra nces Roush, Mi ss Ni na
Russell , Mrs. Alice Robeson,
Mrs . Grace Pratt, Mrs. Pearl

Mrs. Audrey Frost, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds , Mrs . Louella
Je-nkin son , Miss Mildred
Hawley, a nd Mrs. Freda
Welling of Florida, a fanner
member-of the class.

PASSIN'G GEORGE
George Blanda still holds
the pro footb all record for
most passes completed in
one ga me . lie connected 37
limes for the Houston Oilers
agai nst Bullalo1n a 1964 contest.
'

BAKER

RUNNING PAYS
Jim Brown. has a comfort·
able lead on the field In life:
time touchdowns scored
r u s h i n g in pro football.
Brown ran for 106 touch·
downs for Cleveland from
1957 to 1965 while 'the second
p I a c e man, Jim Taylor,
scored 83.

.

.

-----·

Middleport, 0 .

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locust~·

FURNITURE

FOR TODDLERS BY

MILISA RIZER, SHERRY KING and Susie Soulsby will be
instruclilrs for the pony lines of the Fall Follies of the Big Bend
Minstrel Assn. to be staged Saturday, Nov. 13, at Meigs High
SchooL Gloria Buck and Debbie Keebaugh Buck have volunteered
to help with the choreography.

STEADY WINNERS
The longest streak without
a loss in pro football history
is 24 games. Canton did it in
1922·23 and the C h i c a g o
Bears equaled the feat in
1941·43.

/

African Mission Project ·Helped

1
I
' mission Reynolds, Miss Mabel Hysell,
I · A contribution to !he

! Of.the Bend

ATfEND FUNERAL
A number of out-of-town
friends and relatives came for
the funeral services of Fred
Dessauer . They were Mrs .
Roberta
Dessauer,
Philadelphia, Pa. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Des~auer, Albert
Dessauer, and Brian Dessauer,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mrs. Herman
Rusche!, Columbus ; Mrs. Syble
Russell, Henrietta Russell, and
Jon Guinther, Athens; Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Lawson, Chester;
Mrs. Dwight Russell, Reedsville · Mrs. Evelyn Romine and
' Keith,
' Hemlock Grove; Harold
Russell, Sr ., Mrs . Phyllis
Russell, and Mrs. Robert
Herrman and children , Mrs.
Don Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
Russell, all of Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. Walter White and children
of Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Russell, Columbus.

/
/

arualnlt the weather.

·[HE KIDDIE SHOPPE
·

ON THE TIN MIDDLEPORT

Weathersfield,
Conn . to
visit . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
Mr.
and Mrs. William
Horner,
nephew of the Laynes, and
attend the wedding of their
daughter, Sally.
Lester Ohlinger was a recent
medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center . ·
Lt. Com. Ret. and Mrs. James
M. Dyer of Norfolk, Va ., are
Visiting the former 's mother,
Mrs. Harry Dyer.
John Powell of St. Cloud, Fla. ,
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William Powell recently.

COLUMBUS DAY

•

er

at your fip store

fl!!ll

$ea1Jt 'W ltb

wcm®
"

• Dries to a protective sheet
• Flexible-stretches and shrinks
when your house does
• Lets moisture out, won't let
weather in.
• Protects from crackinr and
peeling ·
• Proven best by test

A hea rt 's delight fashio n favo rite so sensuously .so rt it 's
love at first sight. first touch, fir st step. Barry 's fam ou~
heel-to-toe foam cushlon a nd lig ht weigh t buoyant sole
makes a ll the dllfcrc nce between com fort and marve lous comfort. Av ocadoJ black , blue, burgandy, ce rise or
~old. 8(4 -5 i(Z) ~:(6- t 1/21, L(S-9 1/ 21, XL(I0-11 1/ 2)

I;

~

I

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

113·5683

I

I
l

recent patient at Holzer
HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Layne
and Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Layne left Monday morning for
a visit with relatives. They went
to Canton , Ohio, first to see Mrs.
Clair Horner, sister of the
Layne brothers, and from there.
they will go to Danville, Pa. , to
The buffalo is the official
visit Mr. and Mrs . John Layne, state animal of Kansas, ac·
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry cording to Encyclopaedia
Layne . They will travel on to Britannica.

/

."''\

r----------7--- ------ -------~

At the Thursday evening
dmner meeting of the New
Haven Rotary Club it was announced that the meeting the
following week would be
''Ladies' Night", the program
to be presented by Dr. John
Ridgway . Attending were
James N. Roush, Karl Wiles,
Herman Layne , Dick Ord ,
Uoyd Roush, Donald F. Roush,
John
Thorne,
Donald
Foglesong, Russell Capehart,
Rome Williamson and Harry
Miller .
Personal Mention
Mr. and Mrs. Bethel Vance
left Wednesday for Poplar
Branch, N. C., where they will
visit Mr . Vance ,s mother, Mrs.
L. F. Vance .
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Dodd
have returned home after
visiting relatives in Montana .
Rev . John A. Pettie of
Marietta was guest pastor at St.
Paul Lutheran Church, Sunday.
Mrs. Arthur Smith was a

/

MENSWE \R
~~::~~L~~~!:;

(;IT~'

6 (N)

VMI 29, Citadel' 7
UCLA 23, Washington St. 16
Duke 39, Clemson 8
Washington 31, Stanford 28
Richmond 14, E. Carolina 6 Kent State 32, Western
Michigan 22
(NI
Florida St. 33, Miss, State 28 W. Textis St. 14, U. Texas,
Arlington 7 (N)
Harvard 17, Columbia 14
West VIrginia 31, Wm. &amp;
Holy Cross 20, Colgate 12
Mary 6
Idaho St. 22, Idaho 16
Wisconsin 27, Indiana 20
Ohio Stole 42, Illbiols 12
Colorado 34, Iowa State 8
Wyoming 20, Arizona 16
Northwestern 29, Iowa 22
(N) Nlgbt Game
Kansas St. 19, Kansas 14
Kentucky 27, Ohio U. 17 (N) Athens 35 Waverly 7
LSU 30, Florida 11 (N)
Syracuse 23, Maryland 12
Ironton 32 Logan II
Louisville 19, Memphis State Meigs 20 Jackson 12
7 INI
Gallipolis 26 Wellston 8
Notre Dame 39, Miami, Fla. Chlllicothe 22 Portsmouth
16 (N)
20
Michigan St. 24, Michigan 21 South Point 68 Oak Hill 6
Georgia 30, Mississippi 10
Coal Grove 26 Fairland 8
Nebraska 28, Mlss'Auri 14
Buffalo 24 Ironton St. Joe
New Mexico 21, New Mexlc~ ·12
State 15 (N)
Crum 6 Rock Hill 0
W=k~~rorest 27, N.C. State Nortb Gallia 20 Symmes Val-

Jlroteet JOUI' boule

t;l1

Texas Tech 24 Texas A&amp;M
21 (N)
Oklahoma 28, Texas 22
Tulsa 3, Virginia Tech 0 (N)
Utah State 14, Brigham
Young 13
\
·utah 33, U. Tex., El Paso
29 (N)
Alabama 43, Vanderbilt

The Old Boy Himself

A nurse will be present from 9 to 12
a.m. and from 1 to 4 p.m. until Oct. 20,
1971, and the office will be closed
thereafter unti I my return.

s

MASON,-wyA.,

Hour" 7a.m.to5:30 p.m. Dally
7a .m. to 9 p.m. Friday &amp; Sl!urdoy

I

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDL£PORT

..

GRANDSON HONORED
Mrs. Eula Frances entertained Tuesday night with a
party honoring her grandson ,
Keith Black, on his lOth
birthday anniversary . Ice
cream, cake and coffee
were served. Gifts were
presented to the youth ,
and games were played.
Attending were Ann Yeauger,
Mrs. Gertrude Kloes, Mrs.
Robert Vance, Marion Francis,
Mrs. Flora Bailey, and Jim
Bailey who is here on a leave
from his base in· California.

Far C)lra dry skin .

New Dispenser Top
and pla stic bottle .

$1.19 size (10 oz.)

ANIMAL-SHAPED
SOAP FOR KIDS

53 e

Pure mi ld castile

49¢

~9~~~1ue

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY THOSE TIRES
NED-SYNEPHRINE
Nose Drops, Wo/o

DRUG
ABUSE
WEEK
STOP AND THINK ABOUT THE HORRIBLE
::.CONSEQUENCES OF DRUG ADDICTION.
BIIORE . If'S TOO LATfl . We must .

stem the epidemic of drug-abuse.
We must edu«Jte ourselves and our
children to the dangers, We must
work. wltlt J?atlonal and local organ·

c....

GET FREE' LITERATURE ON DRUG ABUSE AT •••

JUlagt

J4nnnary

"THE CREATOR OF RE~SONABLE DRUG PRICES"

VAllEY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.·

Ha1fbuck Specialist

ALL CPO's ON SALE
ARTER

ters, Drug RehaiJllltatlon Programs.
Term ite Control Conce ntrate. Add an Arab hose·end
spray Applicator and you're ready to comp lete,y termite-·
proof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves yo; over SlOO.
compared to the cost of calling in a profeisional ex ~
terminator . Buy Arab and do both _you and -..y our home a
favor . Price may vary sliohtly , •

By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE souri, 28·14, in their Big

SPORT COATS
REDUCED FROM 20% TO 40%
ALL WEATHER COATS 1h OFF

lzatlons to set up Information

, AND SAVE '100 OR MORE

Oklahoma Will Top Longhorns-Hoople

r~u~tl:a:nd:·~===~~~~~=;~=~::::::::::~=~===~

0

ROARKE ~~iAMED
MILWAUKEE (UP!) - Mike
Roarke, a Detroit Tiger catcher
from 1961 to 1964, has been
named manager of the · Milwaukee Brewers' Class AA club
next season. The Brewers have
no double A,_A affiliation at the
.moment, bui' have applied for
franchise and ~xpect to learn
soon where it is lcJCaled.

&lt;

I WIU BE ABSENT FROM MY OFFICE
FROM OCT. 13 TO OCT. 28. 1971

°

6.8

&lt;'undar1J Luncheon

MELLON ACCEPTS
LAUREL, Md. (UPI) -The
American selection board announced Wednesday that Paul
Mellon has accepted an lnvtta.
lion to enter Run the Gantiet In
the $150,000 Washington International at the Laurel race
course. Tbe. 3-year..Id gained
his reputation by beating older
horses- in. three grass stakes
this year.

BATTLE DAYS
' SALE

Property

p ayment Made
on D.emocracy

Plans Reviewed

Belpre
1 o 0 36 6
Federal-Hocking o 1 0 6 .36
Vinton County
0 2 0 o 102
OFFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pts. (Gl Avg.
Eastern
,J65 141 40.8
Jackson
156 (4)' 39.0
Nelson .. York
144 (4) 36.0
Logan
138 (4) 34.5
Gall ipolis
122 (4) 30.5
Ironton
ll7 ( 4) 29.3
Meigs
96 14) 24.0
Athens ...
95 (4) 23.8
Kyger Creek
73 (4) 18.3
Wahama
BY (5 1 17.8
Wellston '
66 ( 4) 16.5
Ale•ander
57 (4) 14.3

Region to .
1. Montpelier; 2. Marton Plea
sant ; 3. Ada ; ~- (tiel Arlington,
Monroeville and Norw~tk St.
·Paul ; 7 (tie l McComb ~nd Buck
eye Central ; 9. New London ; 10
(tiel Hicksville ~nd Cory Raw·

Kentucky's Oaim

PEC Giants To·· River
Collide
On Sat urd 8 y

fo~d

Poll

Rt9ion 11
Ironton St. Joseph; 2.
Crooksville ; 3. Newark Catholic ; 4. Tuscarawas Catholic; 5.
Zanesville Rosecarns; 6. Woods
field; 7. Centerburg; 8. Millersport ; 9. Amanda Clearcreek ;
10. Scio-Jeweft.
·
Region tl
l. West Jefferson ; 2 (tiel
Covington and Middletown Fenwick; 4. Jonathan Alder; 5 (fie)
5. Newark ; 6. Poland seminary; 9 . Clover - Jefferson ~ 7. L1ttle M1am1. . a. Belle Center, Cedarville ~nd
East Liverpool ; leal ; 10. Chagrin Falls.
Ole) Manemonf and Wyom~ng Southeastern (Clark) ; 8.
10. (l1el Greenon and Milton - Columbus St: Charles; 9. Portsmouth Notre Dame: 10 .
Union .
DeGraff Riverside.
CLASS A
Region 9
1. Lorain Catholic ; 2. Mogadore ; 3. LaGrange Keystone; 4 .
Smithville; 5. Kirtland ; 6. Riftman ; 7. Sm llhfield ; 8. Mt.
Pleasant ; 9. Irondale Stanton ;

Yds No . Avg. Meigs
279 7 39.9 North Galli a
197 5 39.4 Miller

1 0 0 49

..

CLASS AAA

42 (4) 10.5 solid
Missouri
Notre
Dame over
is 14 mont
of six
21 while
points
choice
His and
workarrest
led to
the alleged
indict48 (4) 12.0
over
Miami,
Tennessee
10
over
klansmen
on
charges
they
53 141 13.3
Krie bel, Ironton
153 .t 38.3 Gallipolis
60 (-4 ) 15 .0 Georgia Tech, LSU 20 over conspired to bomb school buses
Lightle, Waverly 391 11 35.5 Athens
67 (41 16.8 Florida and North Carolina 10 one week before a scheduled
Patton, Wel l.
274 8 34.3 Logan
83 (4) 20 .8
RECEIVING
No. Yds TO Southern
84 14) 21.0 over Tulane. The Washington- court-ordered busing program
Payne . Iron ton
8 87
1 Pf . Pleasant
85 !4) 21.3
Stanford matchup is considered was to begin here.
S. Massey. Iron .
7 90 1 Wellston
94 141 23.5 a ooss-up.
The 37-year-old fireman, a
Shaw, Logan
6 63 1 Fed.- Hocking
95 14) 23.8
"We have forgotten Duke and
McKinniss, Well.
5 63 o Nelson .-York
99 14) 24 .5
Ondera , Jack.
5 156 3 Alexander
lOB 14) 27.0 all that disappointment," StanHelber. Logan
5 99 1 Wa verly
139 141 34.8
Coach John Ralston says.
Wh ile. Gall.
4 71 1 Glouster
161 14) 40 .3
Right
now we feel we'll be J;
._,.
KO RETURNS
Vinton Co.
199 141 49.8
Yds No. TO THIS WEEK' S SCHEDULE
playiug the best team in the
Sm ith . Athens
166 6 0
· Friday ·
Pacific Eight this Salllrday in
Pa yne, Ironton
145
4 1
SEOAl
Seattle
and that's all we're
Webb. Waverl y
115 6 o Athens at Waverly
Stewart. Well.
105 6 o Wellston at Gallipolis
thinking about right now."
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Cor by, Logan
84 5 o logan at Ironton
Last season, Stanford em- Tuppers Plains Community
PUNT RETURNS
Meig s at Jackson
ployed
the ann of HeiSlllan Club in a special meeting
Yds No. TO
Tri-Valley
Valentine, Jack .
48 6 0 Nelsonv ille- York at
Trophy Winner Jmi Plunkett oo Wednesday night at the home of
Davis, Ga ll.
22 2 o
Federa l- Hock ing
~llkout a 29-22 wm over _the Nita Jean Ritchie reviewed
Krebs , Logan
19 3 o
SVAC
us res rn the fourlh penod. plans for the upcoming IunGul l1on. Waver ly
17 2 o Eastern at Kyger Creek
Sm1th, Athens
9 1 o Southern at Southwestern
Bunce has proven to be a cheon to be served by members
INT. RETURNS
Others
worthy
~ucc?""or to Plunkett, Sunday, Oct. 10, at the Bar 30
No Yds. TO Belpre at Paden City
butSixluller _IS a year older _and horse show .
Valen tine, Ja ck .
2 52
o. Alexander at Vinton County
Wiser and Will have
.
19 tied wi t h one each
Sym mes Valley at
. th'a partisan
t·
Work on the comm umty
OVERALL STANDINGS
NorfhGallia crow d behind hun
. " very
Th
T
O.klS1 une
h · bu1'ld"rng .IS progressmg
TEAM
W l T p OP Hannan Trace at Hannan
e
exas a oma well." It was noted that club
4 o 1 89 26 Pt. Pleasant at Milton
Wahama
meetrng matches up the No. 3
Eastern
4 0 0 163 12 Glouster at Miller
d N 7 tea . tr diti 1 members have brooms to selL
Gal lipolis
4 0 0 122 60
SATURDAY
an
o. . ms m a a ona All members are urged to atIron ton
4 o o 117 27 Wa rre n Local at Caldwell
grudge affair at neutral Dallas. tend the next meeting at Merle
Kyger Creek
3 0 1 73 24
The Sooners, WIth quarterback
Jackson
3 1 0 156 22 G
•
. Gn.ff'1th ,s horne on Wedne sd ay,
J ack Mildren complementing Oct
Meigs
3 1 o 96 42·
yman 8 Ganu lS
.
m T
th
. of J W U
d
. 13' a 1 7.30 p. . en
Athens
3 I 0 95 67
e nmru~
oe Y e an_ members attended the WedNels York
2 2 o 144 99 On .Oc*-ber 24
Gret Pruitt, have won .thiS nesday mght
.
.
Logan
2 2 0 138 83
..,
meetmg.
gr
ttl
dg
b
nl
u e a eo yoncesmce
Miller
1 2 1 56 53
Wellston
1 3 0 66 94
1958.
Alexander
1 3 0 57 108
The public, especially those of
In another game involving
North Gallia
1 3 0 50 48
Welsh
heritage,
is
invited
to
Big
Eight teams, Colorado (tied
Federai•Hocking 1 3 0 34 95
ATIEND FUNERAL
Glouster
1 3 0 30 161 attend the 23rd annual Gymanfa with Oklahoma at No. 7) meet.&lt;;
Waverly
0 4 0 22 139 Ganu (.Guh mahn'fah Gah'nee ). Iowa in a battle of unbeatens. Mrs . Charles Goeglein ,
Southern
0 4 0 20 84
Vinton Co.
0 4 0 20 199 An assembly far a festival of The Buffs have beaten more Pomeroy, Route 3, Mrs. Nina
Point Pl easant
0 40
8 85 sacred singing will be held impressive opponents ( LSU, Robinson, Mrs. Clara Follrod
IS EOALI
Sunday, Oct. 24 at 2:30p.m. in Ohio State among its 4-0 Alfred, and Mr. and Mrs. Ott~
TEAM
W L T POP the First Baptist Church, .511:! record), but tbe Cyclones (3-(1) Swartz, Shade, were in CinGallipol is
200 ' 6228
Ironton
20 0 50 13 East Broad Street, Columbus. have not forgotten last year's cinnati Wednesday for the
logan
1 105842
This service of hymn singing humiliating 61-10 defeat at funeral of Mrs. M. A. (Mayme
Jack son
1 104722 .will be conducted by D. Merrill
Follrod) Moers.
Colorado.
Meigs
11 04422
Athens
1 1 0 29 34 Davis of Jackson, Ohio. Mrs.
Well ston
0 2 0 14 76 Elizabeth Lange of Columbus
Waver ly
0 2 0
8 75 will
provide
the
acISVAC)
TEAM
W L T POP companiment. Special music
Kyger Creek
3 0 0 67 18 will be provided by the Scottish
Eastern
2 0 0 69 0 Rite Choir of the Valley of
North Gallia
I 2 0 44 34
Southern
0 1 0 12 14 Columbus Consistory, directed
Southwestern
0 I 0 0 38 by Mr. Dale Gilliland.
Hanna n-Tra ce
0 2 o 0 88
A traditional Welsh Tea will
ITRI-VALLEYI
TEAM
W L T POP follow the service.
Nels.· York
1 0 o 53 0
Warren Local

Firs~.- Computer

AAU VOTES SEA'ITLE
LAKE PLACID, N. \'. (UP!) - The Amateur Athletic Union
voted Wednesday to hold the
1972 men's trick and ofleld
championships at the Univenlty of Washington ne1t June.
Seattle beat out San Franclaco
in the bidding.

MID.DLEPORT

650.13
E78-14
F18-14
G78-14
H78-14
F18-15
G78-15
H78-15
J78-15
L78-15

Guardian Premium
4 Ply Polyester
·wHITE WALL

TIRES

· FRI~

•25.14
•25.32
•25.89
•27.15

+ $1.76 FET
+ SUt F ET

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SHAMPOO

+ $2.38

oz . plast'c

'28~20

+ $2.74 FET

'25.55
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'28.65
'29.36
•29.76

+ $2 .42 FET
+ $2 .64 FET

FR~Et

Wheel Balance

~ith

Waterproof, 3-heats, braille' typ~ co ntrol, washable cover,
static-f ree th ermostat

$4.95 value

!

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+ Sl.96

FET

+ $2.119 FET

r

Each Tire.

Tear ~· · .

69

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new 16

bottle

$2.29 size

'$1.19

~~

LISTERINE ANTISEPTIC

40's

$1.59 value
ORAL THERMOMETER (9D# 41

Regular, Super, Vee-Form .

DeVILBISS VAPORIZER (;d22)
Gallon-s ize, steams all
nigh!, au to shut-off

14 oz . '

. ..

Your Fam ily Independen t Pl1armacy (F IP)
assures you of the highest sta ndard s of professional excellence
in filling your prescription!; in addi t ion t o offe rin g good
super-sailings values 1or the ent1re fam1ly .

$6.95 value
SAVE $4.00

$2.95

DUTTON 5

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992·3106

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$·2 95

+ $1.10 F ET

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+ $2.55 FET

Tires.
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$1.06size
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"P/fESC.RlPTJONS ARE OUR MAIN BUSINESS"
-'
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

�I •

'

'

.-

.I

'

'
~ -: Tbe Dlllly Sentinel, Midi!Ieport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 1, 1971 '

-The

!

OHSAA Releases

SEO Grid Statistics
1971 SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
LEAGUE STATISTICS
I Includes gamos through Oct. l)
TEAM STATISTICS (l GAMES)
TEAM

F. DOWNS PASSING SCRIMMAGE
Team Avg. OPP. Avg . CMP-ATT INT. Team O?P.
Athens
23 · 11.5
26
13.0 5.-13
1 104 90
Gallipolis
32
16.0 21
10.5 9.- 13
0 11 3 98
Ironton
34
17.0 21
10.5 19-28 0 118 92
Jackson
27
13.5 16
8.0 10-24
4 105 90
Logan
24
12.0 38
19.0 13-29
2
Ill
Meigs
28 14.0
25
12.5 6 -21 3 102 123
Wa yerl y
16
8.0 24
12.0 6 -29
7 . 102 105
Wellst on
20
10.0
33
16.5 12-30
4
99 120
RUSHING
PASSING
T. OFF.
T. DEF.
TEAM
Yds. Avg . Yds. Alig. Yds. Avg . Yds. Avg.
Athens
401 200.5 15
7.5 416 208.0 466 233.0
Gallipolis
. 491 245.5 100 50.0 597 298.5 299 &gt;49.5
I rant on
324 162.0 259 129.5 583 296 .5 417 158.5
Jackson
358 179.0 198 99.0 556 278.0 284 192.0
Logon
203 IOU 192 96.0 395 197.5 676 388.0
Meigs
404 202 .0 86
43 .0 490 245.0 381 190.5
Waver ly
76
·38.0 110 55.0 lBO
90 .0 575 287.5
Well ston
184
92.0 178 89.0 362 181.0 581 290:5
'" OVERALL SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TD PAT Pis. (G) AVG.
Pete Neal. Ga lli polis
9
12
(41
66
16.5
(4)
Randy Boring , Eastern
7
0
42
10.5
(4)
Mark Will iams, M eigs
6
6
42
10.5
(41
Rick Sanders , Eastern ·
6
4
40
10.0
Chris Ondera , Jackson
6
0
36 . (4)
9.0
(4)
Ri ck Krebs, logan
6
0
36
9.0
(4)
Br ian Da vidson, l ogan
4
12
9.0
36
(4)
J(J
Ken Va lent ine, Jackson
5
0
7.5
E!o~ Caldwe ll. Eastern
s 0 30 (4)
7.5
B1ll Woodson, Nels-York
2 15
(4)
30
7.5x
SEOAL SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (GI AVG.
Pete Neal. Gal lipol is
5
8
38
(2)
19 .o
Chri s Onder a, Jackson
4
0
24
12)
12.0
Mark Williams, Me igs
11.0
3
4
22
12)
Brian Davidson, Logan
2
6
18
12)
9.0
Ken Culbertson. Logan
2
2
14
(2)
7.0
Stu Smith. Athens
2
0
12
(2)
6.0
Ji m Pa yne , Ironton
2
0
12
(2)
6.0
Rick Boykin, Ironton
6.0
2 0 12 121
Rick Krebs , Logan
6.0
2 0
12
121
Tiny Will ia ms, M eigs
2 0 12
12)
6.0
SVAC SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TO PAT Pis. (G) AVG.
Randy Bor ing, Eastern
3
0
18
(2)
9.0
(3)
Harvey Brown , North Ga ll ia
4
0
24
8.0
J im Amsbary, Eastern
2
0
12
(2)
6.0
M itch Nease, Southern
1
0
6
(I )
6.0
Nick Ihie, Southern
f
0 _,;__ (I)
6.0
(2)
Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
1
4
10
5.0
(3)
Glenn Smith, Kyger Creek
2 0 12
4.0
Phil Hollonbaug h, N. Gall ia
2
o
12
(3)
4.0
Louie Louden, Kyger Creek
2
0
12
(3)
4.0
Rick Smi th, Kyger Creek
2 0
12
(3)
4.0
~'ic k Sa nd ers, Ea stern
1
2
8
(2)
4.0
TRI -VALLEY SCORING
NAME , TEAM
TO PAT Pts. I G) AVG.
Greg Kirk. Belpre
3 2 20 (11 20.0
Bill Woodson, Nels-York
1 8 17 (I) 17.0x
Denny Morrow. Warren Local
2
2
14
(l l
14.0
Greg Bookman, Nels York
2 0 12 (11 12.0
Chr is Wh itm ore. Nel s- York
2
0
12
( 1)
12.0
Dave Knost. Warren Local
2
0
12
( 1)
12.0
Jeff Bradford. Warren Local
1 2
8 (I)
8.0

r:

Seven tied tor eig hth with six po int s in one game.
x- lnc ludes a field goal.

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Miller
56 (4) 14.0
RUSHING
Yds Car Avg . North Gallia
SO (4) 12.5
Neal. Ga ll.
257 51 s.o Federal-Hocking 34 141 8.5

M. Willi ams, Meigs 191 J l 6.2 Glouster

30 (4}

~~ mi t h, Athens

22 (4)
20 (4)

5.5
5.0

20

5.0

Wood. Athens
j(rebs, Loga n

149 34 4.4 Waverly
135 39 3.5 Southern
ll9

l7

7.0 Vinton Co.
Pl . Pleasant

(4)

7.5

PASSING
Cmp-Att tnt Yds TO
Spears, Iron. 19-28 0 259 4
Smith, Logan 12-25 1 184 3
Hughes, Jack . 10-24 4 198 3
Seffles, Well . 10-26 4 127 o
Snowden. Gall. 9-12 0 100 2

8 (4) 2.0
DEFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pts. IGI Avg .
Eastern
12 14) 3.0
Wahama
26 (51 5.2
Jackson
22 14) 5.5
Kyger Creek
24 W 6.0

(4

Ironton

or morel

PUNTING
Moizer, Logan
Snowden, Gall.

27

(4)

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio High School Athletic
Association Wednesday
relea.sed for the first time the
cgmptiterized · high school
football ratings which it hopes
will evenlllally lead to a state
high school football playoff.
The ratings, prepared for the
OHSAA by National Scanning,
Inc. of Columbus, divide the
state into four regions in each
classification, picking the best
team , according to performances so far .
Points are accumulated not
only from beating a team but
also from vicoories posted by
· the beaten team.

8. Can ion Central Calhollt ; 9.
Region 6
·
(lie) Akron Kenmore and Com- 1. Columbus Mohawk ; 2. Na poleon ; J. Columbus Watterson ;
1. N il es McKinley ; 2. Wa rr~n brldge.
Region 4
4. St . Marys Memorial ; 5. (tie)
Hard ing;. 3. Lakewood St . Ed'
ward ; ~- Parma Valley Forge ; 1. Cincinnati 51. Xavier; 2_ Gibsonburg and .OreglonnCardl 5. Garfield Heights; 6. Mentor ; 2. Cincinnati Moeller; 3. Keft. nat Slrltch; 7. Fostoria ; B. (tie)
7. Ma ~tield ; 8. Parma Senior ; tering Alter ; 4. Kettering Fair- Huron and Vermilion ; 10. Fre.
9. Fairview Park . 10. Cleve - monl West; 5. Kettering Fair- mont St. Joseph .
land Cathedral Latin .
mont East ; ·6. Cincinnati f!oger
1. lront~~~~on~teubenville
Region 2
Bacon
;
7.
Princeton
;
B
.
Troy;
Central
Catholic,· 3. Barnes . .
I. (tiel Columbus Northland 9. Dayton Chamlnade; 10. Cln·
,,
ville ; .i. (tie) Bridgepor1 and
~nd Worthington ; 3. Upper Ar - cinnali Elder .
CLASS AA
'.¥
Carrollton ; 6. Wellsville ; 7. New
lmg ton; 4. Westerville ; 5. Port
Region 5
;.
Concord John Glenn ; 8. Galli ·
Clinton ; 6. (tie) Lima Senior
and Toledo Woodward ; 8. Fre- 1. Cleveland Holy Naote ; 2_ polls; 9. (tie) Hartv-ille Lakd
mont Ross; 9. Findlay ; 19. Ga - Elyria Catholic ; 3. (tie) C.mp- and Minerva.
hanna Lincoln .
bell Memorial and woos!er
Region 8
Region J
Triway ; 5. (tie) Middlefield
l. Madeira ; 2. Springfield
1. lancaster ; 2. Akron Gar - Cardinal and Youngstown Shawnee ; 3. Loveland; 4. Harfield ; 3. (fie) Barberton and North ; 7. warren Kennedy ; B. • riSon; 5. C~rcte~llle; 6. Da_yfon
Region 1

Steubenville ;
Zanesville ; 7 .

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Ohio
Attorney General William J .
Brown is reaching all the way
hack to the French and Indian
War to prove that Kentucky
By BilL MADDEN
does not own as much of the
UP! Sports Writer
Ohio River as it claims.
Sonny Sixkiller-Don Bunce;
The boundary of the river has'
Washington-Stanford; the sub- been in dispute for years, and
ject is roses.
five years ago the U. S.
.
That's the story Saturday Supreme Cour t appor' nted a
when the two giants of tie special master to recommend a
Pacific Eight . Conference,
led borderline between the states.
.
bYtw o of the natton's premiere
Kentucky contends the Ken•· b ks
.
quar.,r ac converge m Seat· tucky boundary is the north
Ue for what could prove to be a shore of the river and cites old
ti cket to th e Rose land grants and cessions to
one-way
Bo
1
prove it.
w·
Washington
( 4-0)
has Ohio has long claimed the
di spose d 0f non league op- boundary should either be the
"·Uf .
ponen ts '-"' orrua at Santa middle of tire river or what the
Ba rbara • Pu rdue, Tcu • and northern boundary of the rl·ver
. .11
ru .mors. as Sixla
er tossed eight was before high-level dams ,·n· ked
tou chdown passes an d prc
. . undated much Ohio bank sor·t.
949
rds
up
ya ·
• A month ago, Brown asked
Sta nfor d • Ied bY Bunce's the Supreme Court to allow
TD passes and 909 yar ds, Ohio to amend ,·ts su1·1 to r'ns1'st
seven
·ts
1os t 1 f'ITS t game 1ast week (9-3 on the middle of the river boun·
to Duke) b t
· us1
lied
u
previO
Y
ro
over Missouri, Army and dary and in his briei in support
Oregon. With Southern California the only other team rated a
shot at the Pacific Eight crown,
Sixkiller and Bunce may very
well decide things even this
1
early in the season.
In other key college games
'
this weekend, Texas is a six·
point favorite over Oklahoma,
Michigan is rated 13 over
Michigan State, Penn State 20 PONTIAC, Mich. (liPI)over Army, Georgia 10 over Jerome Lauinger, scarred by
Mississippi, Ohio state 22 over childhood memories of antilllinois, Colorado 17 over Iowa Semitism and anti-German
State, Kansas three over bigotry, . made his "down
Kansas SU!te, Southern Califor- payment on democracy" by
nia 12 ovec Oregon and Air infiltrating the local branch of
Force 14 over SMU.
the Ku Klux Klan as an
Top . ranked Nebraska is a informe~ for the FBI.

Oppos.

10. Brilliant.

of the motion he goes ail the
Meigs
way back to Oct. 10, 1763.
On that date, the attorney·
general claims, a royal proclamation gave all territory north
of the river to Indians who helped the English defeat the
French.
·
"
Alth hJ
M d'
•h
Ada Cramlet to Kenneth Wllt,
oug ames a IS:J.w o Doris Wilt, Lots, Myers Ad·
rePre sen tedV'~rgml8
· · m
·
Con· dition, Racine.
tinental Congress, tried to' prove
his tat h d
'·im to Kennedy
Leo Kennedy,
Jr ., Julia
A.
s e a
a Cus
to Fletcher
Welch
th a, t Iand I't never could .
'
parcel, Rut.land.
· As a resuIt of furtbe r re- · John W· Arbaugh Ethel M
· h'18 Arbaugh to· Larry Salser,
'
searc h~ ". B'.,own sat'd 10
Carla·
t
f
I
f
ed
cour 1 mg, we are now ore Salser Lot Olive-Tuppers
to conclude Virginia had no title Plains'
'
·In 1784 t a.~Y of the I an d on th • ' Ora M.
· Bacon, John C. Bacon
nor th ban k ' and there fore could to Denzel Boggess, Dessie
--"thern Boggess Lot and Landing
no t 1ega11 Y ced e the nvo
'
'
wa ter 1·me as a boun dary to"
.,.en- Letart Antiquity
.
tu k
c Y. .
George H. Warner, Gdn.,
Federa l .J udge Ph 111 '~,
~ ..-or·
-"'
Richard A. Warner, minor, to
man , spec,_a1 maste r ••
m · th e Elmer W. Hysell, Flossie
boun dary d_ISpu te , canno t . hear Hysell, 38 acres, Rutland.
•·
"'s tlmony '" the case un til th
Leafie F. Doston to Gerald E.
t
d
'd
h
th
II
8
cour eel es w e .e,r to . _ow Johnson, Opal Johnson, .67
Brown toc hangr Ohrospe titi on. acre. Olive.
Leona Leiving , Bertha
Leiving to Kathryn Harvey,
Lots, Syracuse.
Robert C. Hartenbach,
,.
Sheriff, Kenneth B. &amp; Beulah M.
~·Cross to Beulah Cross, 147.44,
:~
Scipio.
Beulah Cross to John E.
Williams, Annie M. Williams,
147.44 Acres, Scipio.
father of six, would not
George E. Carson, dec., to
comment Tuesday on whether Garnet Carson, Adrian A.
he expects reprisals from Klan Carson, Geraldine Reed,
sympathizers because of his Anabel Hale, Bonnie • Wolford,
actions. But he said he would Cert. for Trans., ,1\Utland.
do it again.
Geraldine C. Reed, Ann C.
A tall, spare man ·f lth Hale, Charles Wolford, Bonnie
receding brown hair, Laqjrlger Wolford to Adrian A. Carson,
wouldn 't detail his activl~for Rose Ellen Carson, 50 acres,

son .

1.

fi

•

Transfers

•
•

°

come
out when
the klansmen
go
the FBI
because
those will
to trial. He said he contacted
the FBI and volunteered to
infiltrate the group about four
years ago.
. "I have never had any use
for any sort of hate organizalion, " he said. "America is for
everybody."
·
Childhoodexperiencessltongly influenced his decision, he
said.
"When I was really small-S
or 7-1 belonged to a iocal
branch of the Brownshirts (a
pro-German group in the late
1930's)," Lauinger said. "I
didn't know any · -better. I
thought they were some kind of
Boy Scouts."
It was then that Laulhger
learned of anti-SemitiS!Jl ,and
realized how false ~c
stereotypes could be whl!lf· he
discovered .that a friend of his
was Jewish and didn't acl like
people said Jews were supposed'
to act. He also became the butt
of anti-Gennan sentiment during World War II because of his
ancestry .

...

1 RACK SUITS '49.95

TABL£ OF SlACKS lh PRICE
BOYS SUITS 20% OFF
SOORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 20% OFF
LONG SLEEVE FRENQI aJFF SHIRTS '2.98

a

992-2709

Ml

Egad, friends , there will
be plenty of fireworks in
Dallas this Saturday as the
point-happy Oklahoma Sooners (3·01 tangle with powerful Texas (3·0) .
The Sooners, who h a v e
chalked up 118 points for a
39.3 point average in win·
ning their first thr~e games,
are grven the nod by the
Hoople System to take the
Longhorns, w h o averaged
30.3 points in whipping their
first three 1971 opponents. In
a free-scoring fray we make
II Oklahoma 28. Texas 22um-kumph!
While the eyes of Texas
will be focused on Dallas
there are many other outstanding clashes on Saturday's card.
Sportilig the three longest
unbeaten strings in major
collegiate competition , Toledo ('}:1 straight), Nebraska
123 in a row ), and Arizona
State (20 consecutive winS1,
will add another game to
their strings .
'
The Rockets will record
No. 28 as they spank Bowl·
ing Green37-12,' the Nebraska Cornhuskers will notch
No. 24 as they whack· Mis·

17 (N)
South C;1rollna 47, Virginia
12 (N)
Southern Cal. 38, Oregon
35 (N)
Tampa 26, Dayton 12 (N)
Tennessee 32, Ga. Tech 16
Oklahoma St. 21; TCU 15 (N)

E i g h t conference opener .
The Arizona State Sun Devils
will extend two strings as
the y rack up No. 21 and
make it 11 straight wins over
host Colorado State U. I pre·
diet a 44-12 victory for the
Sun DevUs-hak-kaff'
The Hoople Upset of the
Week is Michigan State (2-2)
to surprise mighty Michigan
14-0) on State's home
grounds . In this , the 64th renewal of this great interslate classic, I look for
Duffy Daugherty's stalwarts
to rebound from their penalty-plagued loss to rugged
Notre Dame• with a sterling
performance to edge the
W o 1 v e r in e s, 24-21-har·
rum ph!
Now go on wilh the forecast.
Air Force 31, SMU 7
Auburn 27, Southern M\ss. 6
Arkansas 23, Baylor 0 (N)
Boston Coli. %8, VIllanova 21
Toledo 37, Bowling Green 12
Yale 16, Brown 14
Bucknell 24, Davidson 20
Oregon St. 41, California 32
Cincinnati 26, Xavier 13 (NI
Arizona St. 44, Col. St. U. 12
Ct¥nell 35, Princeton 21
Dartmouth 20, Peon. 6

North Carolina 34, Tulane 7 ley 12
Northern Ill. 22, Marshall
Eastern 211 Kyger Creek 18
7 (N)
Hannan Trace 8 Hannan 6
North Texas St. 25, Akron .Southern 28 Southwestern 0
6 (N)
Milton 18 Pt. Pleasant 8
Penn State 29, Army 27
Nelsonville-York 2() FcderalPlttsl&gt;urgh 38, Navy 6
Hocking 12
Purdue 23, Minnesota 12
Rutgers 16, Lehigh o
Alexander 6 Vinton County 0
San Diego St. 33. Pacific
Miller 32 Glouster 0

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

New Haven Social Events

a slipper that feels as
marvelous as it looks!

.I:J

p •nt

LJou~e
n -· ....._--a
. ·-'·

8eat •••• "

!

1

I

I By Bob Hoeflich

I

I

l
I

I_

Mrs. John Hite, Findlay ,a former resident of Lincoln Terrace
in Pomeroy, has suffered her second heart attack but is in
satisfactory condition . She's confined to room 368, Blanchard
Valley Hospital in Findlay.
WAYNE WELL, son of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well, Pomeroy
Route 3 and a freshman at Ohio University, has been named a
member ofOhio University's Men 's Glee Club. Wayne was one of
30 selected out of over 60 attending. Wayne's voice is a natural
bass.
MR. AND MRS. THEODORE T. REED, JR. spent last week
in Philadelphia attending the !59th session of the Supreme Council
of the Scottish Rite (33rd degree). Monday evening they attended
a dinner given by the Valley of Columbus and on...W~sday night
were dinner guests of the Ohio Council of Libera lion.
Ted, of course, attended SUpreme Council meetings and on
Wednesday witnessed the conferring of the 33rd degree upon 190
candidates from across Northeast United States. Many of the
events of the session were formal and as many as 1200 men, all in
white tie and tails, were assembled at some of the occasions.
While there , the Reeds toured Buck County in Pennsylvania. They
were accompanied by Mr . and Mrs. James J . Harbage of
Columbus .
JACQUE GABRITSCH, Pt. Pleasant , formerly of Mason and
well known in the Bend area, is a member of the majorette corps
and a solo baton twirler with the West Virginia Tech Golden Bears
marching band .
Jacque is attending Tech on a band-staff work study
scholarship with full tuition, fees and room and board paid. She is
majoring in music with her instrumental concentration on flute ,
and a minor in piano and voice. She is a former voice, organ and
piano student of Mrs. Paul B. Powell, having studied flute with
William Warlield and John Brunicardi, Gallipolis, who helped her
with the scholarship audition music.

foam-cuohioned
washable, too

project of. the Women 's Class
was made when the Loyal Pals
Class met Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs . Sidney Russell.
The Women's Class met at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Tuesday to make layettes which
Will be sent to a misswn in
Africa.
Arrangeme nts were made for
·the an nua l Thanksg iving
meeting at which time a special
thank offering is taken and a
program presented.
Mrs. Russell gave devotions
to open the meeting . Refreshments were served to Miss
Fra nces Roush, Mi ss Ni na
Russell , Mrs. Alice Robeson,
Mrs . Grace Pratt, Mrs. Pearl

Mrs. Audrey Frost, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds , Mrs . Louella
Je-nkin son , Miss Mildred
Hawley, a nd Mrs. Freda
Welling of Florida, a fanner
member-of the class.

PASSIN'G GEORGE
George Blanda still holds
the pro footb all record for
most passes completed in
one ga me . lie connected 37
limes for the Houston Oilers
agai nst Bullalo1n a 1964 contest.
'

BAKER

RUNNING PAYS
Jim Brown. has a comfort·
able lead on the field In life:
time touchdowns scored
r u s h i n g in pro football.
Brown ran for 106 touch·
downs for Cleveland from
1957 to 1965 while 'the second
p I a c e man, Jim Taylor,
scored 83.

.

.

-----·

Middleport, 0 .

CARTER'S
SIZE 2 TO 12
Nylon Ruffl ed

PANTIES
.........................
SPANKY PANTS
White &amp; Print
...........................
' ........ .
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I • ' • ' • • • ' o ' o • • • • • • o • • • • o • • •' o • o • o

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·w~ii·---~-­
~~~~AL~JN

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P.J.'s &amp; Gowns

CERTIFIED WELDER

Portable Equipment
Shop or Field
Ph . 992-2511
'•

thase Hardware
\liddleporl

locust~·

FURNITURE

FOR TODDLERS BY

MILISA RIZER, SHERRY KING and Susie Soulsby will be
instruclilrs for the pony lines of the Fall Follies of the Big Bend
Minstrel Assn. to be staged Saturday, Nov. 13, at Meigs High
SchooL Gloria Buck and Debbie Keebaugh Buck have volunteered
to help with the choreography.

STEADY WINNERS
The longest streak without
a loss in pro football history
is 24 games. Canton did it in
1922·23 and the C h i c a g o
Bears equaled the feat in
1941·43.

/

African Mission Project ·Helped

1
I
' mission Reynolds, Miss Mabel Hysell,
I · A contribution to !he

! Of.the Bend

ATfEND FUNERAL
A number of out-of-town
friends and relatives came for
the funeral services of Fred
Dessauer . They were Mrs .
Roberta
Dessauer,
Philadelphia, Pa. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Des~auer, Albert
Dessauer, and Brian Dessauer,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mrs. Herman
Rusche!, Columbus ; Mrs. Syble
Russell, Henrietta Russell, and
Jon Guinther, Athens; Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Lawson, Chester;
Mrs. Dwight Russell, Reedsville · Mrs. Evelyn Romine and
' Keith,
' Hemlock Grove; Harold
Russell, Sr ., Mrs . Phyllis
Russell, and Mrs. Robert
Herrman and children , Mrs.
Don Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
Russell, all of Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. Walter White and children
of Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Russell, Columbus.

/
/

arualnlt the weather.

·[HE KIDDIE SHOPPE
·

ON THE TIN MIDDLEPORT

Weathersfield,
Conn . to
visit . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
Mr.
and Mrs. William
Horner,
nephew of the Laynes, and
attend the wedding of their
daughter, Sally.
Lester Ohlinger was a recent
medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center . ·
Lt. Com. Ret. and Mrs. James
M. Dyer of Norfolk, Va ., are
Visiting the former 's mother,
Mrs. Harry Dyer.
John Powell of St. Cloud, Fla. ,
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William Powell recently.

COLUMBUS DAY

•

er

at your fip store

fl!!ll

$ea1Jt 'W ltb

wcm®
"

• Dries to a protective sheet
• Flexible-stretches and shrinks
when your house does
• Lets moisture out, won't let
weather in.
• Protects from crackinr and
peeling ·
• Proven best by test

A hea rt 's delight fashio n favo rite so sensuously .so rt it 's
love at first sight. first touch, fir st step. Barry 's fam ou~
heel-to-toe foam cushlon a nd lig ht weigh t buoyant sole
makes a ll the dllfcrc nce between com fort and marve lous comfort. Av ocadoJ black , blue, burgandy, ce rise or
~old. 8(4 -5 i(Z) ~:(6- t 1/21, L(S-9 1/ 21, XL(I0-11 1/ 2)

I;

~

I

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

113·5683

I

I
l

recent patient at Holzer
HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Layne
and Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Layne left Monday morning for
a visit with relatives. They went
to Canton , Ohio, first to see Mrs.
Clair Horner, sister of the
Layne brothers, and from there.
they will go to Danville, Pa. , to
The buffalo is the official
visit Mr. and Mrs . John Layne, state animal of Kansas, ac·
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry cording to Encyclopaedia
Layne . They will travel on to Britannica.

/

."''\

r----------7--- ------ -------~

At the Thursday evening
dmner meeting of the New
Haven Rotary Club it was announced that the meeting the
following week would be
''Ladies' Night", the program
to be presented by Dr. John
Ridgway . Attending were
James N. Roush, Karl Wiles,
Herman Layne , Dick Ord ,
Uoyd Roush, Donald F. Roush,
John
Thorne,
Donald
Foglesong, Russell Capehart,
Rome Williamson and Harry
Miller .
Personal Mention
Mr. and Mrs. Bethel Vance
left Wednesday for Poplar
Branch, N. C., where they will
visit Mr . Vance ,s mother, Mrs.
L. F. Vance .
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Dodd
have returned home after
visiting relatives in Montana .
Rev . John A. Pettie of
Marietta was guest pastor at St.
Paul Lutheran Church, Sunday.
Mrs. Arthur Smith was a

/

MENSWE \R
~~::~~L~~~!:;

(;IT~'

6 (N)

VMI 29, Citadel' 7
UCLA 23, Washington St. 16
Duke 39, Clemson 8
Washington 31, Stanford 28
Richmond 14, E. Carolina 6 Kent State 32, Western
Michigan 22
(NI
Florida St. 33, Miss, State 28 W. Textis St. 14, U. Texas,
Arlington 7 (N)
Harvard 17, Columbia 14
West VIrginia 31, Wm. &amp;
Holy Cross 20, Colgate 12
Mary 6
Idaho St. 22, Idaho 16
Wisconsin 27, Indiana 20
Ohio Stole 42, Illbiols 12
Colorado 34, Iowa State 8
Wyoming 20, Arizona 16
Northwestern 29, Iowa 22
(N) Nlgbt Game
Kansas St. 19, Kansas 14
Kentucky 27, Ohio U. 17 (N) Athens 35 Waverly 7
LSU 30, Florida 11 (N)
Syracuse 23, Maryland 12
Ironton 32 Logan II
Louisville 19, Memphis State Meigs 20 Jackson 12
7 INI
Gallipolis 26 Wellston 8
Notre Dame 39, Miami, Fla. Chlllicothe 22 Portsmouth
16 (N)
20
Michigan St. 24, Michigan 21 South Point 68 Oak Hill 6
Georgia 30, Mississippi 10
Coal Grove 26 Fairland 8
Nebraska 28, Mlss'Auri 14
Buffalo 24 Ironton St. Joe
New Mexico 21, New Mexlc~ ·12
State 15 (N)
Crum 6 Rock Hill 0
W=k~~rorest 27, N.C. State Nortb Gallia 20 Symmes Val-

Jlroteet JOUI' boule

t;l1

Texas Tech 24 Texas A&amp;M
21 (N)
Oklahoma 28, Texas 22
Tulsa 3, Virginia Tech 0 (N)
Utah State 14, Brigham
Young 13
\
·utah 33, U. Tex., El Paso
29 (N)
Alabama 43, Vanderbilt

The Old Boy Himself

A nurse will be present from 9 to 12
a.m. and from 1 to 4 p.m. until Oct. 20,
1971, and the office will be closed
thereafter unti I my return.

s

MASON,-wyA.,

Hour" 7a.m.to5:30 p.m. Dally
7a .m. to 9 p.m. Friday &amp; Sl!urdoy

I

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDL£PORT

..

GRANDSON HONORED
Mrs. Eula Frances entertained Tuesday night with a
party honoring her grandson ,
Keith Black, on his lOth
birthday anniversary . Ice
cream, cake and coffee
were served. Gifts were
presented to the youth ,
and games were played.
Attending were Ann Yeauger,
Mrs. Gertrude Kloes, Mrs.
Robert Vance, Marion Francis,
Mrs. Flora Bailey, and Jim
Bailey who is here on a leave
from his base in· California.

Far C)lra dry skin .

New Dispenser Top
and pla stic bottle .

$1.19 size (10 oz.)

ANIMAL-SHAPED
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53 e

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NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY THOSE TIRES
NED-SYNEPHRINE
Nose Drops, Wo/o

DRUG
ABUSE
WEEK
STOP AND THINK ABOUT THE HORRIBLE
::.CONSEQUENCES OF DRUG ADDICTION.
BIIORE . If'S TOO LATfl . We must .

stem the epidemic of drug-abuse.
We must edu«Jte ourselves and our
children to the dangers, We must
work. wltlt J?atlonal and local organ·

c....

GET FREE' LITERATURE ON DRUG ABUSE AT •••

JUlagt

J4nnnary

"THE CREATOR OF RE~SONABLE DRUG PRICES"

VAllEY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.·

Ha1fbuck Specialist

ALL CPO's ON SALE
ARTER

ters, Drug RehaiJllltatlon Programs.
Term ite Control Conce ntrate. Add an Arab hose·end
spray Applicator and you're ready to comp lete,y termite-·
proof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves yo; over SlOO.
compared to the cost of calling in a profeisional ex ~
terminator . Buy Arab and do both _you and -..y our home a
favor . Price may vary sliohtly , •

By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE souri, 28·14, in their Big

SPORT COATS
REDUCED FROM 20% TO 40%
ALL WEATHER COATS 1h OFF

lzatlons to set up Information

, AND SAVE '100 OR MORE

Oklahoma Will Top Longhorns-Hoople

r~u~tl:a:nd:·~===~~~~~=;~=~::::::::::~=~===~

0

ROARKE ~~iAMED
MILWAUKEE (UP!) - Mike
Roarke, a Detroit Tiger catcher
from 1961 to 1964, has been
named manager of the · Milwaukee Brewers' Class AA club
next season. The Brewers have
no double A,_A affiliation at the
.moment, bui' have applied for
franchise and ~xpect to learn
soon where it is lcJCaled.

&lt;

I WIU BE ABSENT FROM MY OFFICE
FROM OCT. 13 TO OCT. 28. 1971

°

6.8

&lt;'undar1J Luncheon

MELLON ACCEPTS
LAUREL, Md. (UPI) -The
American selection board announced Wednesday that Paul
Mellon has accepted an lnvtta.
lion to enter Run the Gantiet In
the $150,000 Washington International at the Laurel race
course. Tbe. 3-year..Id gained
his reputation by beating older
horses- in. three grass stakes
this year.

BATTLE DAYS
' SALE

Property

p ayment Made
on D.emocracy

Plans Reviewed

Belpre
1 o 0 36 6
Federal-Hocking o 1 0 6 .36
Vinton County
0 2 0 o 102
OFFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pts. (Gl Avg.
Eastern
,J65 141 40.8
Jackson
156 (4)' 39.0
Nelson .. York
144 (4) 36.0
Logan
138 (4) 34.5
Gall ipolis
122 (4) 30.5
Ironton
ll7 ( 4) 29.3
Meigs
96 14) 24.0
Athens ...
95 (4) 23.8
Kyger Creek
73 (4) 18.3
Wahama
BY (5 1 17.8
Wellston '
66 ( 4) 16.5
Ale•ander
57 (4) 14.3

Region to .
1. Montpelier; 2. Marton Plea
sant ; 3. Ada ; ~- (tiel Arlington,
Monroeville and Norw~tk St.
·Paul ; 7 (tie l McComb ~nd Buck
eye Central ; 9. New London ; 10
(tiel Hicksville ~nd Cory Raw·

Kentucky's Oaim

PEC Giants To·· River
Collide
On Sat urd 8 y

fo~d

Poll

Rt9ion 11
Ironton St. Joseph; 2.
Crooksville ; 3. Newark Catholic ; 4. Tuscarawas Catholic; 5.
Zanesville Rosecarns; 6. Woods
field; 7. Centerburg; 8. Millersport ; 9. Amanda Clearcreek ;
10. Scio-Jeweft.
·
Region tl
l. West Jefferson ; 2 (tiel
Covington and Middletown Fenwick; 4. Jonathan Alder; 5 (fie)
5. Newark ; 6. Poland seminary; 9 . Clover - Jefferson ~ 7. L1ttle M1am1. . a. Belle Center, Cedarville ~nd
East Liverpool ; leal ; 10. Chagrin Falls.
Ole) Manemonf and Wyom~ng Southeastern (Clark) ; 8.
10. (l1el Greenon and Milton - Columbus St: Charles; 9. Portsmouth Notre Dame: 10 .
Union .
DeGraff Riverside.
CLASS A
Region 9
1. Lorain Catholic ; 2. Mogadore ; 3. LaGrange Keystone; 4 .
Smithville; 5. Kirtland ; 6. Riftman ; 7. Sm llhfield ; 8. Mt.
Pleasant ; 9. Irondale Stanton ;

Yds No . Avg. Meigs
279 7 39.9 North Galli a
197 5 39.4 Miller

1 0 0 49

..

CLASS AAA

42 (4) 10.5 solid
Missouri
Notre
Dame over
is 14 mont
of six
21 while
points
choice
His and
workarrest
led to
the alleged
indict48 (4) 12.0
over
Miami,
Tennessee
10
over
klansmen
on
charges
they
53 141 13.3
Krie bel, Ironton
153 .t 38.3 Gallipolis
60 (-4 ) 15 .0 Georgia Tech, LSU 20 over conspired to bomb school buses
Lightle, Waverly 391 11 35.5 Athens
67 (41 16.8 Florida and North Carolina 10 one week before a scheduled
Patton, Wel l.
274 8 34.3 Logan
83 (4) 20 .8
RECEIVING
No. Yds TO Southern
84 14) 21.0 over Tulane. The Washington- court-ordered busing program
Payne . Iron ton
8 87
1 Pf . Pleasant
85 !4) 21.3
Stanford matchup is considered was to begin here.
S. Massey. Iron .
7 90 1 Wellston
94 141 23.5 a ooss-up.
The 37-year-old fireman, a
Shaw, Logan
6 63 1 Fed.- Hocking
95 14) 23.8
"We have forgotten Duke and
McKinniss, Well.
5 63 o Nelson .-York
99 14) 24 .5
Ondera , Jack.
5 156 3 Alexander
lOB 14) 27.0 all that disappointment," StanHelber. Logan
5 99 1 Wa verly
139 141 34.8
Coach John Ralston says.
Wh ile. Gall.
4 71 1 Glouster
161 14) 40 .3
Right
now we feel we'll be J;
._,.
KO RETURNS
Vinton Co.
199 141 49.8
Yds No. TO THIS WEEK' S SCHEDULE
playiug the best team in the
Sm ith . Athens
166 6 0
· Friday ·
Pacific Eight this Salllrday in
Pa yne, Ironton
145
4 1
SEOAl
Seattle
and that's all we're
Webb. Waverl y
115 6 o Athens at Waverly
Stewart. Well.
105 6 o Wellston at Gallipolis
thinking about right now."
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Cor by, Logan
84 5 o logan at Ironton
Last season, Stanford em- Tuppers Plains Community
PUNT RETURNS
Meig s at Jackson
ployed
the ann of HeiSlllan Club in a special meeting
Yds No. TO
Tri-Valley
Valentine, Jack .
48 6 0 Nelsonv ille- York at
Trophy Winner Jmi Plunkett oo Wednesday night at the home of
Davis, Ga ll.
22 2 o
Federa l- Hock ing
~llkout a 29-22 wm over _the Nita Jean Ritchie reviewed
Krebs , Logan
19 3 o
SVAC
us res rn the fourlh penod. plans for the upcoming IunGul l1on. Waver ly
17 2 o Eastern at Kyger Creek
Sm1th, Athens
9 1 o Southern at Southwestern
Bunce has proven to be a cheon to be served by members
INT. RETURNS
Others
worthy
~ucc?""or to Plunkett, Sunday, Oct. 10, at the Bar 30
No Yds. TO Belpre at Paden City
butSixluller _IS a year older _and horse show .
Valen tine, Ja ck .
2 52
o. Alexander at Vinton County
Wiser and Will have
.
19 tied wi t h one each
Sym mes Valley at
. th'a partisan
t·
Work on the comm umty
OVERALL STANDINGS
NorfhGallia crow d behind hun
. " very
Th
T
O.klS1 une
h · bu1'ld"rng .IS progressmg
TEAM
W l T p OP Hannan Trace at Hannan
e
exas a oma well." It was noted that club
4 o 1 89 26 Pt. Pleasant at Milton
Wahama
meetrng matches up the No. 3
Eastern
4 0 0 163 12 Glouster at Miller
d N 7 tea . tr diti 1 members have brooms to selL
Gal lipolis
4 0 0 122 60
SATURDAY
an
o. . ms m a a ona All members are urged to atIron ton
4 o o 117 27 Wa rre n Local at Caldwell
grudge affair at neutral Dallas. tend the next meeting at Merle
Kyger Creek
3 0 1 73 24
The Sooners, WIth quarterback
Jackson
3 1 0 156 22 G
•
. Gn.ff'1th ,s horne on Wedne sd ay,
J ack Mildren complementing Oct
Meigs
3 1 o 96 42·
yman 8 Ganu lS
.
m T
th
. of J W U
d
. 13' a 1 7.30 p. . en
Athens
3 I 0 95 67
e nmru~
oe Y e an_ members attended the WedNels York
2 2 o 144 99 On .Oc*-ber 24
Gret Pruitt, have won .thiS nesday mght
.
.
Logan
2 2 0 138 83
..,
meetmg.
gr
ttl
dg
b
nl
u e a eo yoncesmce
Miller
1 2 1 56 53
Wellston
1 3 0 66 94
1958.
Alexander
1 3 0 57 108
The public, especially those of
In another game involving
North Gallia
1 3 0 50 48
Welsh
heritage,
is
invited
to
Big
Eight teams, Colorado (tied
Federai•Hocking 1 3 0 34 95
ATIEND FUNERAL
Glouster
1 3 0 30 161 attend the 23rd annual Gymanfa with Oklahoma at No. 7) meet.&lt;;
Waverly
0 4 0 22 139 Ganu (.Guh mahn'fah Gah'nee ). Iowa in a battle of unbeatens. Mrs . Charles Goeglein ,
Southern
0 4 0 20 84
Vinton Co.
0 4 0 20 199 An assembly far a festival of The Buffs have beaten more Pomeroy, Route 3, Mrs. Nina
Point Pl easant
0 40
8 85 sacred singing will be held impressive opponents ( LSU, Robinson, Mrs. Clara Follrod
IS EOALI
Sunday, Oct. 24 at 2:30p.m. in Ohio State among its 4-0 Alfred, and Mr. and Mrs. Ott~
TEAM
W L T POP the First Baptist Church, .511:! record), but tbe Cyclones (3-(1) Swartz, Shade, were in CinGallipol is
200 ' 6228
Ironton
20 0 50 13 East Broad Street, Columbus. have not forgotten last year's cinnati Wednesday for the
logan
1 105842
This service of hymn singing humiliating 61-10 defeat at funeral of Mrs. M. A. (Mayme
Jack son
1 104722 .will be conducted by D. Merrill
Follrod) Moers.
Colorado.
Meigs
11 04422
Athens
1 1 0 29 34 Davis of Jackson, Ohio. Mrs.
Well ston
0 2 0 14 76 Elizabeth Lange of Columbus
Waver ly
0 2 0
8 75 will
provide
the
acISVAC)
TEAM
W L T POP companiment. Special music
Kyger Creek
3 0 0 67 18 will be provided by the Scottish
Eastern
2 0 0 69 0 Rite Choir of the Valley of
North Gallia
I 2 0 44 34
Southern
0 1 0 12 14 Columbus Consistory, directed
Southwestern
0 I 0 0 38 by Mr. Dale Gilliland.
Hanna n-Tra ce
0 2 o 0 88
A traditional Welsh Tea will
ITRI-VALLEYI
TEAM
W L T POP follow the service.
Nels.· York
1 0 o 53 0
Warren Local

Firs~.- Computer

AAU VOTES SEA'ITLE
LAKE PLACID, N. \'. (UP!) - The Amateur Athletic Union
voted Wednesday to hold the
1972 men's trick and ofleld
championships at the Univenlty of Washington ne1t June.
Seattle beat out San Franclaco
in the bidding.

MID.DLEPORT

650.13
E78-14
F18-14
G78-14
H78-14
F18-15
G78-15
H78-15
J78-15
L78-15

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4 Ply Polyester
·wHITE WALL

TIRES

· FRI~

•25.14
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+ $1.76 FET
+ SUt F ET

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+ $2.38

oz . plast'c

'28~20

+ $2.74 FET

'25.55
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•29.76

+ $2 .42 FET
+ $2 .64 FET

FR~Et

Wheel Balance

~ith

Waterproof, 3-heats, braille' typ~ co ntrol, washable cover,
static-f ree th ermostat

$4.95 value

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+ Sl.96

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+ $2.119 FET

r

Each Tire.

Tear ~· · .

69

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new 16

bottle

$2.29 size

'$1.19

~~

LISTERINE ANTISEPTIC

40's

$1.59 value
ORAL THERMOMETER (9D# 41

Regular, Super, Vee-Form .

DeVILBISS VAPORIZER (;d22)
Gallon-s ize, steams all
nigh!, au to shut-off

14 oz . '

. ..

Your Fam ily Independen t Pl1armacy (F IP)
assures you of the highest sta ndard s of professional excellence
in filling your prescription!; in addi t ion t o offe rin g good
super-sailings values 1or the ent1re fam1ly .

$6.95 value
SAVE $4.00

$2.95

DUTTON 5

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992·3106

T

$·2 95

+ $1.10 F ET

Front End Alignment wlth·Two

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FET

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Tires.
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"P/fESC.RlPTJONS ARE OUR MAIN BUSINESS"
-'
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

�.

.

,....
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middle])9rt-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 7, 1971

•

.

Bar-30 ·Horsemen S'taging Tw~ Weekend Shows

·; .,- •• Oatiy Sentinel, Middle]l9rt-Pmnero~. 0., Oct. 7,1971

!

HOSPITAL NEWS
•

Mallory Hubbard, Mrs. Ralph
Hutchinson , Harry Hysell ,
Danny · Jordan, · Mrs. Roger
McGuire and. son, Mrs. James
Mullins, Mrs. Carl Murphy and
son, Jj&gt;n·ntfer Nibert, Mrs .
Robert-Patrick, Ernest Quillen,
Mrs. Dora Roush, Mrs. Doris
Rudy, Mrs. George Schneider,
Leon Shoemaker, Mrs. Floyd
Walker, Harold Williams and
Mrs. Henry Layne.

•

The new show ground~ of the
Haller and performance
Youth Horsemanship, 13 th ru
Lead In Pony (lobe judged) , Horsemanship, 16 thru 19 years, Horsemanship, 12 yrs : and
Bar-30Horscmen,just offRoute classes for the show include: 15 years. Egg and Spoon. Open Show Horse, Western Equip· "Nalk-Trot Pony , rider 8 yrs. under, Enolish Pleasure HnrsP.
Hor - Pick - Up Race, Drunkard's
7. between Tuppers Platns and
Western Pleasure, Jr s. to Ride, men I. Regisfered Quarlerhorse and under , Youth
Ride and Run , Youth Hor · Pleasure, Flag Race, Western semansh ip, 13 thru 15 years, ParadiSe. 'Appaloosa Pleasure
Horse, Show Horse, English
Chester , literally will be
HALTER CLASS ES. s p.m ., semanship, 12 yrs . and under , Arabian Pleasure Horse (Half- Egg and Spoon .
Open
Western
Pleasure,
Jrs
.
Equipment, Open Rein ing ,
jumping this Yieekend when tw o Entry fee , 50c , Five Ribbons
Engli sh Pleasure Horse, Pick, Arabs included), Western
to
ride,
Ride
and
Run
,
Yo
uth·
W
estern Pleasure Horse,, Barrel
Pleasure
Pony,
under
56",
Southeastern Ohio Horse
Race,
Drunkard's
Western Show Horse, Western Up
1
· t
1
)
AParadise
a·I
Ra ce, Senior Western Hor ·
Western
Stake
Race,
Youth
Exhibitors' Assoc\·at '\o\1 sho\VS PI Pony (unde r 48 -- ), Western Pleasure
non -pam Horse,
c ass Show
, . PPHorse,
oosa
semanship, Open Trail Class.
· Anyone desiring additional
are staged.
PI Pony (46 " and under 56"), Englis h Equipme nt, Open
information concerning the two
Thf~ firs-t show will be held , Show manship, under 12 yea rs, Rein ing', We.stern Pleasu re
shows m·ay contact Bar -30
Reg . Quarterhorse Stallions, Horse, Barrel Race, Western
ra in or shine, beginning at 5 Reg. Q.H. Mares, 3 yrs. &amp; over , Senior Horsem an ship. Open
H or se man~_hlp president, J . R.
Kennedy , Middleport , or
p.m . Saturday under th e Reg . Q.H Mares, 2 yrs. &amp; un Trail Class. ·
Secretar
y- Norma Newland of
3
sponsorship of the E:astrrn der , Reg. Q.H . Geldings, yrs. The Sunday show will begin at
Coolv
ille.
2
Local Athletic Boosters'.
&amp; over, Reg . Q.H. Geldings,
10 a.m . with lB ha lter classes
yrs . &amp; under.
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The . volving a child ... could trigger
Reg Appaloosa Stall,·ons . and 24 performat ion classes to head of the "metro" school sys- active and widespread op])9siVISITORS HERE
Mrs · Cati1)' 1' or·t " Stubbs Of
begin at 1:30p .m Judge wi ll be
Recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Leesburg will be the judge and Reg
Appaloosa
Mares , Larry Edwards of Dayton.
tem at Nashville, Tenn., said tion to the, point that meaningful
Showmanship, 13 thru 15 yrs .,
the re will be ribbons and prize Reg Appaloosa Geld ings., Non · Food at the Sunday show will Wednesday he feared it "must intergration would be lost for Pete Shields of East Letart
money awarded as well as a $50 Reg . Stock Horse, Reg . Arabian be served by the Tuppers Pla ins halt operations" unless it gets another generation," Brooks were Mr . and Mrs. Warren
Club which is
h1.gh point .award lo the owner of Hor se, Reg . Half -Arabian Community
Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
raising funds for i:s new fire federal help to meet busing said.
the h.igh point horse .
Horse, Open All -8reed Yearling station.
&amp; un der Foals , Showmanship,
costs.
"Without help from federal . Dearberry of Grand Junction,
The Bar JO Club will award a
Food will be available at a 16 thru 19 yrs.
Director Elbert D. Brooks of sources we have little chance of Colo. Calling at the Shields
PE
RFORMAN
CE
CLASSES
$50
pr
ize
to
the
high
poin
f
contest horse of the day, $50 to the Nashville-Davidson County continuing
stand to be opera (ed by !.he
our
current residence were Mr. and Mrs .
52
5
boosters. The most recent ] : JO p.m., Entr y fee, • rib- the high poin t pleasure horse of system· was one of five school operation beyond the end of the Early Roush, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
bons - money , SS, $6 , S4 , $2 . lh d
d th
· t th
Governor'• Salaries
Buck, Mr. and Mrs. James
projects o£ the boosters have
Lead-In Pony 9 to be iudged) , e ay , an
ree pnzes o e leaders, one from Ohio, who first semester," he said.
. Iuded re f'1ms
. h.mg of tl1e Iug
. I1 Show Horse , Western Equip- high
point$30,youth
of $10.
the day
Roush , Mrs. Marlene Fisher The governor of Arkansas
mc
including
$20 and
testified before the Select Sen· The other wimesses similarly
the lowest paid in the na·
21t E. 2nd
Pomeroy
school basketball court fl oor ment, Western Pleasure Pony, The events included in the ale Committee on Equal Edu- said they must get federal help and children, Mrs. Clara Mae is
tion at $10,000 a year. The
under 48 ", Rider 12 yrs. &amp; unPhone
t\'2-5421
and installation of an electric der , Registered Quarterhorse Sunday show are :
cation Opportunity on a $1.5 with busing costs if massive Sargent, Mrs. Ann Radford and governor of New York is the
sign for the listing of the Pleasure, Flag Race, Western
HALTER CLASSES
Stephanie.
highest paid at $85,000.
,
·a PI
H
lh If
. 10 a.m. Entrv fee, soc, Five million emergency school aid school intergration is to sueA
ab
schedule of athletic evenls near r •·., easure orse a - Ribbons
Arabs. included), Western
t h~ school. The group is now Pleasure Pony , under 56 .. and
Western Show Horse, Western billAforerunner$75million
.
. bill is ceed.
They were Sup. Thord M.
raisi ng funds with which lo over 48", Western Stake Race, Pl. Pony (under 48" ), Western
already
providing
some
help
Marshall
of the Savannah-ChatYouth Horseman ship, 16 thru 19 Pl. Pony (48" &amp; under 56" ),
purchase weather proof cloaks tears, Walk-Trot Pony , Ride r 8 Showmanship, under 12 years, but President Nixon has cut off ham County, Ga ., Schools,
for footbe:lll playrrs .
yrs . and under .
Reg. Quarterhorse Stallions, money for busing and is seeking . Supt. Raymond 0. Shelton of
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · over,
Reg. Q.H.
Mares,Mares,
3 yrs2 yrs.
and to amend the new bill to prevent Hillsborough County Schools at
Reg. Q.H.
and under , Reg . Q. H. Geldings, use of its proposed funds for Tampa, F1a .; Supt. Wayne Car·
3 yrs. and over, Reg . . Q.H. busing.
le of Dayton Ohio; and Supt.
Geldings, 2 yrs. and under .
Because his system could not John M. Franco of Rochester,
Reg . Appaloosa Sta llions,
Reg . Appaloosa
Mares , buy enough buses, Brooks said, N.Y . ·
. .
Showmansh ip, 13 thru 15 years, children must attend schools in Under questwmng by the
Reg. Appaloosa Geldings, NonReg. Stock Horse, Reg . Arabian shifts, some leaving home be- committee chairman Sen .
Hor se, Reg . Hal f-Arabian fore dawn and others returning Walter Mondale, D-Mmn., all
Horse, Open All -Breed Yearling after dark
'
said busing costs have pushed
and under Foal, Showmanship,
"NashvWe citizens are law them nearly to the financial
16 thru 19 years.
PERFORMANCE CLASSES abiding ... but many are angry , breaking point.
1:30 p.m., Entry Fee, 52, Five and frustrated over the busing "At this point I doubt if we
ribbons and money (SS, S6, S4,
12) . Youth Classes soc, trophy issue and its attendant incon- .can educate and desegregate at
venience," he said.
tlle same time with tlle reand ribbons
-~--~~~.... "An accident or incident in- sources that we have," Brooks
- - - - - - - - - said.
11
F1JNDS GIVEN
Most witnesses said they faCOLUMBUS (UPil _ Toledo vored intergration in principle
has been awarded 123!i,759 from but when Mondale asked Sheltlle Office of Civil Defense for ton about it, he replied: "I re(LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNEJ
damages suffered during the fuse to answer that question heJuly 4, 1969, floods and tor- cause it tends to emotionalize
na does . Lucas County got an the issue.''
additional $7,870, Dover All represented systems unreceived $9,120 and Swanton in der court desegregation orders
here and watch it
Fulton
County was given $3,059. except Franc&lt;~ , who said Roch"bl oom,,.,.
"' Ea rn a I our
ester in ·1966 became une of the
passbook rate of
REJECT BILL
nation's first cities to buss inWASHINGTON (UPI ) - ner-dty children to the suburbs
••
&amp;
Sens. William Saxbe and Robert voluntarily .
ON
Taft Jr. both voted against the Franc&lt;~ said Rochester is conbill the Senate passed Wed- tinuing a voluntary desegregaPASSBOOK SAVINGS
nesday in favor of granting lion program but fears fiscal
equal pay raises for federal, problems will hold back the
Fake furs . qui lted nylons, wash &amp;
civilian and military workers program unless it gets federal
"KER M"
wear polyester. wools, etc. Take
your choice now.
program.
bill was
passed
under
anyThefuture
economic
on a 6().27 rollcall vote.

Busiftg Blocked

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DISCOUNT PRICES .

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This Includes all the various owners,
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for years and years, It's good to know
you've got all that quality going lor you
In your first year as well as In later years,

What ore these BEST BUYS? They're our BEST SELLERS · . , •
CARPETS many of your fr iends have bo.ughf, love, brag
about. If th is were an electio.n year, you 'might say they'~!!
"THE PEOPLES CHOICE". So see them. You'll agree (as
thol·u sands have ) that no other carpets can give you so much
beauty, service, comfort ..• for so liHie.
CONVENIENT
CREDIT TERMS
Enjoy your carpet while
YC?U pay for it.

FREE. SHOP AT HOME SERVICE
No obligation.
CALL

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
992-5321

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

I

lvr.

bat~ .

sa.~!

CIOAA

,Right PlaCe.

-

·-

AUtHORIZED

DE.WA.IItllf~ CHRVBLER

'w

MOTOIIII IIOIIIPDM.ftON

'

REG. $1.49 99~

48's

l1f2 Ol

~

HAIR
TONIC

59~

and on your hair! '

Nil/:
----

1

REG. 2.00
16 oz.

•1 • 19

SOFTIQUE
BATH OIL BEADS
'

98~

4,

REG. 1.39
1

ONLY

REG. 12.59

$1.39

With

BATH BEADS
• Water softening
• Skin smoothing
• Body relaxing

2 01 .

Trial

Sit~ Free

NEW ESOTERIC

•3 e 50
$2• 0
ONLY

Fades

HAND LOTION Brown Spots

5

REVLON PROFESSIONAL
SEniNG GEL Protein Rich

REG. 11.75

4 Ol

Only

•1.50

RUBINSTEIN HEAVEN

Only
Matching Talc•2 2 5
Only $l.so
1 .

-SCALES

HAl KARATE
AnER SHAVE
LOTION

99~

REG. 16.50

•4.44

WEEK
OCT.3·9

- - - - - - - - .- --r
Good At Nelson's Drugs
EXPIRES: 10·13-71

REG.

UNICAP VITAMINS

98'

REG. 13.11
lOO's
WITH
24 FREE

59~

Dl .

BORG BATHROOM

1

89 ~

NEWSofiique,
..

10..()-6 LOTION

8

WITH IRON

BUFF ERIN
REG. 1.67
99~
IDO's

GET SET
HAIR SPRAY

RINSE AWAY
DANDRUFF RINSE
REG. 11.15
8 oz. · s9~

BONNE BELL

SENT COLOGI•U

49~

4 1ll.

LISTERINE COUGH

PALS' VITAMINS
60's

REG. 69'

REG.
•

VASELINE
..........

PEPTO-BISMOL

If our cars aren't right, we don't wan!
you to have them, For example, ovary
Imperial Is put through a road test at .
the factory that includes over 100
dilferent checks belore It reaches you. ,
This.year every Chrysler car offers a
new optional electronic Ignition system
Newport Royal 2-0oor Hardtop
that does away wllh the points and
condenser that can wear out. This helps
You gotta have heart.
keep the engine tuned longer..And a ·
The quality of a Chrysler starts deep
tuned engine means cleaner exhaust.
down In the heart of the car. That.'s
From our lowest-priced Chrysler
where you've gotta have it. That's
Royal to our big, luxurious Imperial,
where you get it. With such time- and
Chrysler cars are built to last. The aame
road-proven features as Chrysler's
is true of every Chrysler-engineered car
torsion-bar suspension and Torque- . we seii.- Vallant, Duster, Cricket,
FIIte automatic transmissioA.' The
Satellite and Fury.
rigid strength of unibody construction.
We think that's the kind of car
And a 7-step dlp.and-spray anti-rust
America wants, That's the kind of car
process. Extra care like that Is why
we'd like to show you. Come see us
so many Chryslers stay In great shape. today.

You can't go
wrong at The

, Jlfynwulfi
--

Ia road-tested at the
factory.

'TOM RUE MOTORS, 399 SOUTH 3RD. AVE., M,IDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

•

c

CHRYSLER
-

NORMANDIE.•. sculptured
100% KODEL. 12~::.'t.
Floro! detign, Vel¥41 pll•.
14 ColorJ, Ooubit
'

---------

25's

S's

Evarv Chrysler Imperial

9 out of 10 new Chryslers
registered in the last
10 years are still on the road •

24's 59~

43

~

99~

$444

REG. 98'

Clear and Clean
in the bottle

REG. 98'
o iOlH,H:.O.to!o ' •'-~"

ITALIA •,•Shag. Made of
3 COLORED KODEL YARN

Reg. 69'

66~

.

.

oz.

8 oz.

That should tell you a lot about the cars we sell.

100's
With
30 FREE

VASELINE

REG. $1.00

4as

15 Ol

1

REG. 11.25

ALKA· .
SELTZER

REG. 11.69

THERAGRAM-M
VITAMINS

,uA~IUI5 Ullllt

16

•3.39

ONLY

vos.

HAIR
SPRAY

ronnula

' "99~ .

UN WAXED

MISS BRECK

ArthddS
RJin

WITH 12
FREE

whaT ·

Natio".-,1 Red Crou .

CEPACOL LOZENGES
100's

_
,.~

utr witk Americon

88~

99~

LIQUID READY
TO USE.
QTS BY THE CASE

+
--u•v•..... ...

·~-··· ~

Cepacol Liquid
14 Ill.

60's

ENFAMIL

No

REG. 'll9

REG. 11.59

REG. 11.59

oz.

59~

REG. 89'

POLIDENT TABL£TS
.'

200Z.

.... P

plastic strips

RELIEF DECREASES
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A total
of 79,159 Ohioans applied for
unemployment relief for the
wee'k ending Oct. 2, 1971, the
state Bureau of Employment
Services reported Wednesday.
The figure compares with 70,
147 for the corresponding week
last year.

Whether you own
a big or small car, .pay
a little or a lot, the
one-thing you don't l)eed
from a car Is trouble. You
want a car that will hold up. A
car that's built to last.
Well, we're with you.
Just looK at this figure:

88~

Reg . $1.00 each

REG. $1.79

~ru~·d_.---,-------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;~

~IZES

SHAMPOO

Chewable
Cold Tablets
for Children

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

Meig s County Branch of
The Alhens County Savings
&amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Member Federa l Home Loan
Hank.
Member Federa l Savings g,;
Loan Insu rance Corp. All
accounts insu red up tO
$20,000.0'

SHAMPOO

Beeauty Lotion
For Hand and Body

and
Ronnie Smith and Bill Nelson
As You Enter The Automobile
Field In The Big Bend Area , ,

4 3/4%

.· TEGRIN
MEDICATED

MEDIC.ATEC

2 •1

Sears On Your Grand Opening
In Pomeroy ••••

YoUR
M0NEy

TEGBIN"

REG. $1.07
40Z.

r-;:==============::::::::::::::1

PLANT"

-

DEODORANT

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

1

.

r------.-~---""""----------~~---1

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
vis,iting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 'p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics ~ard .
Births
Mr . and Mrs. Homer James
Gilbert, Vinton , a son; Mr. and
Mrs, George D. Hudson,
Southside, a son, and Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Alan Little, Oak
Hill , a dughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Elizabeth Allman, Mrs.
Ernest Anderson,;·Alisa Batey,
Mrs. Ralph Boster, Mrs. Bryon
Dudding, Vernon Fisher, Mrs.
Earnest Hill , Lisa Houck,

~

.

I.

$1.77

REG. 11.09

- · 39~

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

�.

.

,....
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middle])9rt-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. 7, 1971

•

.

Bar-30 ·Horsemen S'taging Tw~ Weekend Shows

·; .,- •• Oatiy Sentinel, Middle]l9rt-Pmnero~. 0., Oct. 7,1971

!

HOSPITAL NEWS
•

Mallory Hubbard, Mrs. Ralph
Hutchinson , Harry Hysell ,
Danny · Jordan, · Mrs. Roger
McGuire and. son, Mrs. James
Mullins, Mrs. Carl Murphy and
son, Jj&gt;n·ntfer Nibert, Mrs .
Robert-Patrick, Ernest Quillen,
Mrs. Dora Roush, Mrs. Doris
Rudy, Mrs. George Schneider,
Leon Shoemaker, Mrs. Floyd
Walker, Harold Williams and
Mrs. Henry Layne.

•

The new show ground~ of the
Haller and performance
Youth Horsemanship, 13 th ru
Lead In Pony (lobe judged) , Horsemanship, 16 thru 19 years, Horsemanship, 12 yrs : and
Bar-30Horscmen,just offRoute classes for the show include: 15 years. Egg and Spoon. Open Show Horse, Western Equip· "Nalk-Trot Pony , rider 8 yrs. under, Enolish Pleasure HnrsP.
Hor - Pick - Up Race, Drunkard's
7. between Tuppers Platns and
Western Pleasure, Jr s. to Ride, men I. Regisfered Quarlerhorse and under , Youth
Ride and Run , Youth Hor · Pleasure, Flag Race, Western semansh ip, 13 thru 15 years, ParadiSe. 'Appaloosa Pleasure
Horse, Show Horse, English
Chester , literally will be
HALTER CLASS ES. s p.m ., semanship, 12 yrs . and under , Arabian Pleasure Horse (Half- Egg and Spoon .
Open
Western
Pleasure,
Jrs
.
Equipment, Open Rein ing ,
jumping this Yieekend when tw o Entry fee , 50c , Five Ribbons
Engli sh Pleasure Horse, Pick, Arabs included), Western
to
ride,
Ride
and
Run
,
Yo
uth·
W
estern Pleasure Horse,, Barrel
Pleasure
Pony,
under
56",
Southeastern Ohio Horse
Race,
Drunkard's
Western Show Horse, Western Up
1
· t
1
)
AParadise
a·I
Ra ce, Senior Western Hor ·
Western
Stake
Race,
Youth
Exhibitors' Assoc\·at '\o\1 sho\VS PI Pony (unde r 48 -- ), Western Pleasure
non -pam Horse,
c ass Show
, . PPHorse,
oosa
semanship, Open Trail Class.
· Anyone desiring additional
are staged.
PI Pony (46 " and under 56"), Englis h Equipme nt, Open
information concerning the two
Thf~ firs-t show will be held , Show manship, under 12 yea rs, Rein ing', We.stern Pleasu re
shows m·ay contact Bar -30
Reg . Quarterhorse Stallions, Horse, Barrel Race, Western
ra in or shine, beginning at 5 Reg. Q.H. Mares, 3 yrs. &amp; over , Senior Horsem an ship. Open
H or se man~_hlp president, J . R.
Kennedy , Middleport , or
p.m . Saturday under th e Reg . Q.H Mares, 2 yrs. &amp; un Trail Class. ·
Secretar
y- Norma Newland of
3
sponsorship of the E:astrrn der , Reg. Q.H . Geldings, yrs. The Sunday show will begin at
Coolv
ille.
2
Local Athletic Boosters'.
&amp; over, Reg . Q.H. Geldings,
10 a.m . with lB ha lter classes
yrs . &amp; under.
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The . volving a child ... could trigger
Reg Appaloosa Stall,·ons . and 24 performat ion classes to head of the "metro" school sys- active and widespread op])9siVISITORS HERE
Mrs · Cati1)' 1' or·t " Stubbs Of
begin at 1:30p .m Judge wi ll be
Recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Leesburg will be the judge and Reg
Appaloosa
Mares , Larry Edwards of Dayton.
tem at Nashville, Tenn., said tion to the, point that meaningful
Showmanship, 13 thru 15 yrs .,
the re will be ribbons and prize Reg Appaloosa Geld ings., Non · Food at the Sunday show will Wednesday he feared it "must intergration would be lost for Pete Shields of East Letart
money awarded as well as a $50 Reg . Stock Horse, Reg . Arabian be served by the Tuppers Pla ins halt operations" unless it gets another generation," Brooks were Mr . and Mrs. Warren
Club which is
h1.gh point .award lo the owner of Hor se, Reg . Half -Arabian Community
Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
raising funds for i:s new fire federal help to meet busing said.
the h.igh point horse .
Horse, Open All -8reed Yearling station.
&amp; un der Foals , Showmanship,
costs.
"Without help from federal . Dearberry of Grand Junction,
The Bar JO Club will award a
Food will be available at a 16 thru 19 yrs.
Director Elbert D. Brooks of sources we have little chance of Colo. Calling at the Shields
PE
RFORMAN
CE
CLASSES
$50
pr
ize
to
the
high
poin
f
contest horse of the day, $50 to the Nashville-Davidson County continuing
stand to be opera (ed by !.he
our
current residence were Mr. and Mrs .
52
5
boosters. The most recent ] : JO p.m., Entr y fee, • rib- the high poin t pleasure horse of system· was one of five school operation beyond the end of the Early Roush, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
bons - money , SS, $6 , S4 , $2 . lh d
d th
· t th
Governor'• Salaries
Buck, Mr. and Mrs. James
projects o£ the boosters have
Lead-In Pony 9 to be iudged) , e ay , an
ree pnzes o e leaders, one from Ohio, who first semester," he said.
. Iuded re f'1ms
. h.mg of tl1e Iug
. I1 Show Horse , Western Equip- high
point$30,youth
of $10.
the day
Roush , Mrs. Marlene Fisher The governor of Arkansas
mc
including
$20 and
testified before the Select Sen· The other wimesses similarly
the lowest paid in the na·
21t E. 2nd
Pomeroy
school basketball court fl oor ment, Western Pleasure Pony, The events included in the ale Committee on Equal Edu- said they must get federal help and children, Mrs. Clara Mae is
tion at $10,000 a year. The
under 48 ", Rider 12 yrs. &amp; unPhone
t\'2-5421
and installation of an electric der , Registered Quarterhorse Sunday show are :
cation Opportunity on a $1.5 with busing costs if massive Sargent, Mrs. Ann Radford and governor of New York is the
sign for the listing of the Pleasure, Flag Race, Western
HALTER CLASSES
Stephanie.
highest paid at $85,000.
,
·a PI
H
lh If
. 10 a.m. Entrv fee, soc, Five million emergency school aid school intergration is to sueA
ab
schedule of athletic evenls near r •·., easure orse a - Ribbons
Arabs. included), Western
t h~ school. The group is now Pleasure Pony , under 56 .. and
Western Show Horse, Western billAforerunner$75million
.
. bill is ceed.
They were Sup. Thord M.
raisi ng funds with which lo over 48", Western Stake Race, Pl. Pony (under 48" ), Western
already
providing
some
help
Marshall
of the Savannah-ChatYouth Horseman ship, 16 thru 19 Pl. Pony (48" &amp; under 56" ),
purchase weather proof cloaks tears, Walk-Trot Pony , Ride r 8 Showmanship, under 12 years, but President Nixon has cut off ham County, Ga ., Schools,
for footbe:lll playrrs .
yrs . and under .
Reg. Quarterhorse Stallions, money for busing and is seeking . Supt. Raymond 0. Shelton of
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · over,
Reg. Q.H.
Mares,Mares,
3 yrs2 yrs.
and to amend the new bill to prevent Hillsborough County Schools at
Reg. Q.H.
and under , Reg . Q. H. Geldings, use of its proposed funds for Tampa, F1a .; Supt. Wayne Car·
3 yrs. and over, Reg . . Q.H. busing.
le of Dayton Ohio; and Supt.
Geldings, 2 yrs. and under .
Because his system could not John M. Franco of Rochester,
Reg . Appaloosa Sta llions,
Reg . Appaloosa
Mares , buy enough buses, Brooks said, N.Y . ·
. .
Showmansh ip, 13 thru 15 years, children must attend schools in Under questwmng by the
Reg. Appaloosa Geldings, NonReg. Stock Horse, Reg . Arabian shifts, some leaving home be- committee chairman Sen .
Hor se, Reg . Hal f-Arabian fore dawn and others returning Walter Mondale, D-Mmn., all
Horse, Open All -Breed Yearling after dark
'
said busing costs have pushed
and under Foal, Showmanship,
"NashvWe citizens are law them nearly to the financial
16 thru 19 years.
PERFORMANCE CLASSES abiding ... but many are angry , breaking point.
1:30 p.m., Entry Fee, 52, Five and frustrated over the busing "At this point I doubt if we
ribbons and money (SS, S6, S4,
12) . Youth Classes soc, trophy issue and its attendant incon- .can educate and desegregate at
venience," he said.
tlle same time with tlle reand ribbons
-~--~~~.... "An accident or incident in- sources that we have," Brooks
- - - - - - - - - said.
11
F1JNDS GIVEN
Most witnesses said they faCOLUMBUS (UPil _ Toledo vored intergration in principle
has been awarded 123!i,759 from but when Mondale asked Sheltlle Office of Civil Defense for ton about it, he replied: "I re(LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNEJ
damages suffered during the fuse to answer that question heJuly 4, 1969, floods and tor- cause it tends to emotionalize
na does . Lucas County got an the issue.''
additional $7,870, Dover All represented systems unreceived $9,120 and Swanton in der court desegregation orders
here and watch it
Fulton
County was given $3,059. except Franc&lt;~ , who said Roch"bl oom,,.,.
"' Ea rn a I our
ester in ·1966 became une of the
passbook rate of
REJECT BILL
nation's first cities to buss inWASHINGTON (UPI ) - ner-dty children to the suburbs
••
&amp;
Sens. William Saxbe and Robert voluntarily .
ON
Taft Jr. both voted against the Franc&lt;~ said Rochester is conbill the Senate passed Wed- tinuing a voluntary desegregaPASSBOOK SAVINGS
nesday in favor of granting lion program but fears fiscal
equal pay raises for federal, problems will hold back the
Fake furs . qui lted nylons, wash &amp;
civilian and military workers program unless it gets federal
"KER M"
wear polyester. wools, etc. Take
your choice now.
program.
bill was
passed
under
anyThefuture
economic
on a 6().27 rollcall vote.

Busiftg Blocked

NAME BRANDS
DISCOUNT PRICES .

BAN
SPRAY

bari

. ROLL-ON
DEODORANT
REG.
11.09 EACH
.

2-HOUR
CLEAN.lNG

(Upon Request)

20% OFf
ALL
CAR COATS

ALL-WEATHER
COATS

DRY

ban

ANTI-PERSPIRANT
SPRAY
DEODORANT

8TO
20

FOR

REG. $1.55

2

oz.

lllfz

FOR

99~

ANALGESIC NASAL DECONGESTANT

ORANGE FLAVORED

36's

REG. 79'

39~

NOW

_.,._,_, ..
....
__
O~o , ,_. , _M o &lt;• •

-··"'
""-·
--···-

4-WAY
NASAL SPRAY

BAND·AID
u~

Reg. 98c

REG. 11.68
lOO's

ss~

4 Shick Injector
Blades FREE With
Easy Rider Razor

REG. 93' EACH

2

4 oz.

FOR

sa~

lf2

49~

No. 5624
Reg . SSe .

'"'--/

REG. 69'

99~

c~::u'lnection

NO. 5050 - lhxlO

REU5'

to~

39¢

IJEI1'AI.
FLOSS

39~

20

27~

for dry hands
and skin

REG.

11.76 VALUE

$2.25

REGUlAR 75'

1962 Chryater

For the dean guys!

Relieves sinus headache
and congestion

......

....

~~~· .'"

REG. 89'

12 ft. width. I and 1/4"
high pll•. 2-4 Color1 ,

•

sa 49
-

e SQ. YD.

here's why

This Includes all the various owners,
any kind orterraln, and numbers of
miles. But every Chrysler Is designed
and built the way you want It-to last.
So even If you won't be keeping a car
for years and years, It's good to know
you've got all that quality going lor you
In your first year as well as In later years,

What ore these BEST BUYS? They're our BEST SELLERS · . , •
CARPETS many of your fr iends have bo.ughf, love, brag
about. If th is were an electio.n year, you 'might say they'~!!
"THE PEOPLES CHOICE". So see them. You'll agree (as
thol·u sands have ) that no other carpets can give you so much
beauty, service, comfort ..• for so liHie.
CONVENIENT
CREDIT TERMS
Enjoy your carpet while
YC?U pay for it.

FREE. SHOP AT HOME SERVICE
No obligation.
CALL

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
992-5321

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

I

lvr.

bat~ .

sa.~!

CIOAA

,Right PlaCe.

-

·-

AUtHORIZED

DE.WA.IItllf~ CHRVBLER

'w

MOTOIIII IIOIIIPDM.ftON

'

REG. $1.49 99~

48's

l1f2 Ol

~

HAIR
TONIC

59~

and on your hair! '

Nil/:
----

1

REG. 2.00
16 oz.

•1 • 19

SOFTIQUE
BATH OIL BEADS
'

98~

4,

REG. 1.39
1

ONLY

REG. 12.59

$1.39

With

BATH BEADS
• Water softening
• Skin smoothing
• Body relaxing

2 01 .

Trial

Sit~ Free

NEW ESOTERIC

•3 e 50
$2• 0
ONLY

Fades

HAND LOTION Brown Spots

5

REVLON PROFESSIONAL
SEniNG GEL Protein Rich

REG. 11.75

4 Ol

Only

•1.50

RUBINSTEIN HEAVEN

Only
Matching Talc•2 2 5
Only $l.so
1 .

-SCALES

HAl KARATE
AnER SHAVE
LOTION

99~

REG. 16.50

•4.44

WEEK
OCT.3·9

- - - - - - - - .- --r
Good At Nelson's Drugs
EXPIRES: 10·13-71

REG.

UNICAP VITAMINS

98'

REG. 13.11
lOO's
WITH
24 FREE

59~

Dl .

BORG BATHROOM

1

89 ~

NEWSofiique,
..

10..()-6 LOTION

8

WITH IRON

BUFF ERIN
REG. 1.67
99~
IDO's

GET SET
HAIR SPRAY

RINSE AWAY
DANDRUFF RINSE
REG. 11.15
8 oz. · s9~

BONNE BELL

SENT COLOGI•U

49~

4 1ll.

LISTERINE COUGH

PALS' VITAMINS
60's

REG. 69'

REG.
•

VASELINE
..........

PEPTO-BISMOL

If our cars aren't right, we don't wan!
you to have them, For example, ovary
Imperial Is put through a road test at .
the factory that includes over 100
dilferent checks belore It reaches you. ,
This.year every Chrysler car offers a
new optional electronic Ignition system
Newport Royal 2-0oor Hardtop
that does away wllh the points and
condenser that can wear out. This helps
You gotta have heart.
keep the engine tuned longer..And a ·
The quality of a Chrysler starts deep
tuned engine means cleaner exhaust.
down In the heart of the car. That.'s
From our lowest-priced Chrysler
where you've gotta have it. That's
Royal to our big, luxurious Imperial,
where you get it. With such time- and
Chrysler cars are built to last. The aame
road-proven features as Chrysler's
is true of every Chrysler-engineered car
torsion-bar suspension and Torque- . we seii.- Vallant, Duster, Cricket,
FIIte automatic transmissioA.' The
Satellite and Fury.
rigid strength of unibody construction.
We think that's the kind of car
And a 7-step dlp.and-spray anti-rust
America wants, That's the kind of car
process. Extra care like that Is why
we'd like to show you. Come see us
so many Chryslers stay In great shape. today.

You can't go
wrong at The

, Jlfynwulfi
--

Ia road-tested at the
factory.

'TOM RUE MOTORS, 399 SOUTH 3RD. AVE., M,IDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

•

c

CHRYSLER
-

NORMANDIE.•. sculptured
100% KODEL. 12~::.'t.
Floro! detign, Vel¥41 pll•.
14 ColorJ, Ooubit
'

---------

25's

S's

Evarv Chrysler Imperial

9 out of 10 new Chryslers
registered in the last
10 years are still on the road •

24's 59~

43

~

99~

$444

REG. 98'

Clear and Clean
in the bottle

REG. 98'
o iOlH,H:.O.to!o ' •'-~"

ITALIA •,•Shag. Made of
3 COLORED KODEL YARN

Reg. 69'

66~

.

.

oz.

8 oz.

That should tell you a lot about the cars we sell.

100's
With
30 FREE

VASELINE

REG. $1.00

4as

15 Ol

1

REG. 11.25

ALKA· .
SELTZER

REG. 11.69

THERAGRAM-M
VITAMINS

,uA~IUI5 Ullllt

16

•3.39

ONLY

vos.

HAIR
SPRAY

ronnula

' "99~ .

UN WAXED

MISS BRECK

ArthddS
RJin

WITH 12
FREE

whaT ·

Natio".-,1 Red Crou .

CEPACOL LOZENGES
100's

_
,.~

utr witk Americon

88~

99~

LIQUID READY
TO USE.
QTS BY THE CASE

+
--u•v•..... ...

·~-··· ~

Cepacol Liquid
14 Ill.

60's

ENFAMIL

No

REG. 'll9

REG. 11.59

REG. 11.59

oz.

59~

REG. 89'

POLIDENT TABL£TS
.'

200Z.

.... P

plastic strips

RELIEF DECREASES
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A total
of 79,159 Ohioans applied for
unemployment relief for the
wee'k ending Oct. 2, 1971, the
state Bureau of Employment
Services reported Wednesday.
The figure compares with 70,
147 for the corresponding week
last year.

Whether you own
a big or small car, .pay
a little or a lot, the
one-thing you don't l)eed
from a car Is trouble. You
want a car that will hold up. A
car that's built to last.
Well, we're with you.
Just looK at this figure:

88~

Reg . $1.00 each

REG. $1.79

~ru~·d_.---,-------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;~

~IZES

SHAMPOO

Chewable
Cold Tablets
for Children

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

Meig s County Branch of
The Alhens County Savings
&amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Member Federa l Home Loan
Hank.
Member Federa l Savings g,;
Loan Insu rance Corp. All
accounts insu red up tO
$20,000.0'

SHAMPOO

Beeauty Lotion
For Hand and Body

and
Ronnie Smith and Bill Nelson
As You Enter The Automobile
Field In The Big Bend Area , ,

4 3/4%

.· TEGRIN
MEDICATED

MEDIC.ATEC

2 •1

Sears On Your Grand Opening
In Pomeroy ••••

YoUR
M0NEy

TEGBIN"

REG. $1.07
40Z.

r-;:==============::::::::::::::1

PLANT"

-

DEODORANT

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

1

.

r------.-~---""""----------~~---1

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
vis,iting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 'p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics ~ard .
Births
Mr . and Mrs. Homer James
Gilbert, Vinton , a son; Mr. and
Mrs, George D. Hudson,
Southside, a son, and Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Alan Little, Oak
Hill , a dughter.
Discharges
Mrs. Elizabeth Allman, Mrs.
Ernest Anderson,;·Alisa Batey,
Mrs. Ralph Boster, Mrs. Bryon
Dudding, Vernon Fisher, Mrs.
Earnest Hill , Lisa Houck,

~

.

I.

$1.77

REG. 11.09

- · 39~

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

�'

I

;

. . .

,.

)

'

I

'I

Letters .of~
Opinion

,.. COL.ILDIV'T

IU6 A~S.LIM€ .••

.-

Leiters of oplnl111 are welcomed. They should be less
lblliiO wm'ds 11118 (or be subject to reductloo by the editor)
l'!!tmul be signed wllllllle &amp;Jpee's address. Nam!JI may
be wllbbeld upon pubUealllll, however, oo reqvesl. Letlelil
allould be In load lasle, addreasinllssues, uot personalities.

BADGE GUYS
I

~EC 1 ~EC

Mll\Wl~NER's ..usr

I COULC SL6EP
I eOUND OUT.

~IN

'!HE
StiOWER ..¥aAJN I

10-7

I COLH.t&gt;N'T ~

THE'I'LL FOLL'I
MOONBEAM
'WHAREYER SH I':
GOES - AN ' SHE'S
A· GO IN' HOME I!

If" IT

PSST.' MISTAH C:APP - !S ff SAFE
RJ' YO' ro MAKE FUN 0 '
-sHuDD£R!- 6ULp!- Hll't ?

NOTHING

-

AJ.IHAS
SPOKEN-

WINNIE

IS SAFE.-

'

MY PRICE

WA~

WAY OUT OF
LINE FOR 'THE RATE OF RET1JRN .
THEY ACCUSE ME OF RUNNINGTH E 6U51NE&amp;&amp; IN'TO
THE GROUND' CAN

®eur,MR .GILT, I
THOUGHT )'tJlJ
HA{) 1'1 13UYER

FOR OONNAZ !

,.

NEWS OF' 'fOUR

DO YOU HAVE ANY

DELIGHTFULEATERY SHALL
BE CARRIED 'TO

I NSTI1UCTIONS1

LAST-MINUTE
SIRE?

THE FAR. REACHES
OF OUR FAIR

CITY.. .BLA ...

')OU IMAGINE

•

SUCH 1'1 PREPC5TEROUE&gt;
CHAR3E?

~~fit

·,'.

I SUESS I MIGtlT /&gt;8
WEU. STAAT AT THE

aq'in!

"'-LACE ...

Thank ~ou, Cousin
Caleb' Thi!'&gt; here's
where I qets off!

THE

LOSER
WHATOC&gt;'OJ~,

'I'MAT AM!S'Cfe
ABOUTL.

UlTI.E ORPHAN ANNIE
I '

.:1. P.O.G.ING TORRENT OF A
~'f E R Al"iNIE ···lHAl I'M

--·SEEM'S TC BE CHANG ING ... AND
UNLESS I MISS MY GUESS ... IT
WILL HEAD IN OM l.l§ 11-JIT HII'l

ThE

S.~E 'wASN'l THERE '(f: E':?·
:;.:. ( ' ~ DC E~ N ' T /11~1(: :::..
... ::" !.: . rC¥-J THE COURC..
~ ~ TH E. ~ '=R_ •., ,
1

.t.OROSS

YNterday'o Ceyptoquote: WE ARE A KIND OF CHAME
LEONS, TAKING OUR HUE-THE HUE OF OUR MORAL •
CHARACTER- FROM THOSE ABOUT US.-JOHN LOCKE •

Stakes

1.

·;5, Dress

material

-~~~~j
~

10. Helm

position
U. Earth, for
example
13. "Piccolo

-

"

H .-

bearing
15. Board a
sleeper
17. Cyprino!d
fish
18. Word of
encourage.
ment
19. Small cask

9. In want

•2. Trans-

of

plant

43. Irish river
1. Doll or

tiger

2. Girl's name

3. Under·

Dres·

cymbals

repeated
TV

U111cramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each squlll1!, to
form four ordinary words.

way

sler
role
2~ . The wrinkle
25. Wiley
Post,

Yetter4&amp;7't .btw•

30. Tower

structure
32. Mao
Tse-tt:ng,
for one
33. Davis
36.Tempo
38. Foot
(Lat.)

for one
26. Prank

28. France's
"sex

phrase

•

,_

hy HI NHI AllNIIlll · "'II litHll t f

23. Marie

(3 wds.)
•· Visionary
5. More
agile
6. Onward
7. Indian
8. Oft-

J11lJ1MOO~;Ih.I4D•~•~~J-....,

port
16. Similar
22. Half.

DOWN

atand

I~ ]171 KIDC Peatur.. 8rudlcate, lne.)

12. Kind of

kitten"

She's yovr
child,

r------.
IJ&gt;SUE

I

20. -

NJXEV

I I

~

••

dolorosa
~RRY

' &amp;€ A JUICY ~ E , DO!.oRf"S .
"' "- .... , 31JRL-,; IJNI7ER: OATH, Will
1 SUPPOSE WE RJ
HAVE EiOUGH TO
HOLD A f:'ORMA L
HEARING 8Y MY
PERSONAL SUB·

BE.

U~H.APP'f

WHEN WE ASK
HIM· ASOU T THOSE ROI.l1Ck'I N6
T ~PS TO CANAPA .

MY60155 15 HE 'LL
FOLD. ~E'll TELL US
AlL A60UT TH E
• EPIKURE SNACKS 1

12 Chord Organ Reg.
$29.95
4 Legs
Reg. $10.00
Hassock Bench Reg.
$16.95
3 Music Books
Reg.
$4.50
Reg. Value $61.40

•

[J I

VE

•

21. Arab
chieftain
23. Aftercandy
Rabbit fur
26. Squalld
. 27. Athirst
2~.

.A
to fonn
the surprise
anawer,
u
l!.f-=:=~=~ ~::::O"l~=-~~~:;=~~
=~~=:!_~Now
arran1e
theabove
clreled
letlen
ounnled
by the
cartoon.
-+-+-+--1 I PriUe SIMIISI AIISWIIIIn
"( XI XI ]"

28. Luscious
cherry

29. Part of a
pencil
game

(A-wen

30. Downcast

Jumble•t MANGY

31. Street cry
M. Hit the

SOIIIY

DlfiNI

with

/t?n~t·

loiDOI'f'OW'

IN.IICT

. ULI'-ADHfSNI! fi'C.A$TIC

grub

CAP!' AIN EASY

35. Nominate
37. Dumbbell
39. Landed, as
ally
·
~0. Corrida
hero
41. Layer of
paint

Etpeclell)l whtn you buy thlt
newest
blttek·tnd·whltt

of'"

pttt.ma In CON·TAC'N ttlf·
tdhnlvt pltltlc. It's 11157,
caNed TARGET tnd rMint to
zero In on your d.COrttlnl
problem• wtth tht 1re1t..t of ·
taHI Ptrftct for conttmporll')'
Httlnp--trtlt for • boY•
1oom .tunnlnl on 1 walltlmolt
enywhtN. Just ont of thl
dremltlc new pMttmt for Ftll
JOU'U ... In our ttiCWtrMI'Il of

lr+-+-+--11--1---

DAlLY CRYPTOQUoTE
· J;~; to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR'
lo LONGFELLOW
One letter o!mply stands for another. In .th!a sample A !a
used for the three ,L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single Mtera,
apostrophes, the -Ie'ngth and torm.atton

'i=========:2

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...

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DTM HYMEHWM ZHJ'B. IVN:WZMJD
'

PB

BC

MYMEO
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FCCE,

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DPZM .,ll'M

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'H

• HALLOWEEN SPECIALTIES
'

.
•

FlOwer Jiulbt f« 'lallplintlng
1ust ~rrivad-tullps,
hyo¢lnths, nar~lnus, crqcus,
:ot:c:
:

VSMS . PD . - MN

.

L

..• LOW PRICED!
HalloWeen costumes, masks,
.&gt;.

candles, novelties, toys, porty

}-11.

goods, trick of frHt .Cindy,
bags, pumpkins, l11nterns' -

everything tor HaiiiiWeen.

..!!t.:J~:-- ,.~~'' '·' '', , , , , ,.,' ' "·'' ·'' ' '.,,,, , , , , ,; ; ,·, , , ,"""*""'' ' ' ' ' ' ' %·i;.,".''m· ''' I;:' ' ' ·"'·' ' ' ' '·~' ' ' ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,i,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,' ' 'i,,,,,,,.,,,'''"' ' ' ' '' '·' '' "' ' "'1

I ULBS

WASHINGTON - Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally Jr.
was told today that the ad-

i·!&lt;.

II

•

B_PH-EONEN
_ _,FRA202ENastMaKinUSt.
992-3498

Pomeroy,Otiio

========..:O~P':EN~F~:I:D:AV:.:&amp;~SA~·T~~u:~:D:A~Y;N:IG:H~T~S~T:IL~9J

favoritism to business th~n the
Senate ·will tolerate. Sen.
Russell B. Long, D·La., who
usually is sympathetic to White
House . reqqests, opened
hearings on the tax bill by his
Senate Finance Committee with
an Wlcharacterlstic atblck on

th~e111fueasure zipped' through
the'House Wednesday on a voice
vote with hardly any opposition.
Long told Connally that "what I
Senate"
di~tates
tax
perceive to
be the greater
mood of flle
relief for Individual taxpayers
and less for corporations. He
said the bill gives $6 in tax cuts
to business for e\'ery $1 given

. individuals.

•
•

We don't make

SANDWICHES
--we

"Create" em~
'•

Hamburgers with per sonality . Tenderloins' with
taste appeal .

992-5241

Mlclclllport, 0.

"

SEEING IS
BELIEVING.

'•

These Swisher &amp; Lohse

DISCOUNTS

••

100

...

~

TABLETS
REG. s1.67

ONLY
VAS~LINE

INTENSIVE
CARE LOJION

' .

COLD TABLETS

69~

lOOZ.
ONLY

20 TABLETS
REG.

4 oz.

ONLY

REG. s1.09

~

ONLY

.r
,.

,.

.McKESSON ASPIRIN

46#1

200 TABLETS
5 GRAIN
REG. 69'

@l

REG. sl.85

~

-·

CEPACOL REG.

PAMPERS

MOUntWASH

GARGLE

14

DAYTIME 30's

CARSON CITY, NEV. -Gov.
Mike O'Callaghan believes ·
"there are more prostitutes
within five miles of the nation's
capitol in Washington than
there are citizens in Nevada.".
O'Callaghan told a news
conference Wednesday that
prostitution in urban areas is
"very dangerous" because of
its possible link to hoodlwns and
narcotics . O'Callaghan was
asked about prostitution in
Nevada, which is outlawed in
the major Reno and Las Vegas
areas but flourishes in certain
areas in the smaller counties.

~~~O~u~~~L~~~~~!la~n~!~J ministration's
$15.4
billion tax cut three-year,
bill shows more

care for.

SPRING: BLOOM~NG

Quotation

Special $67.18 ·
Easy To "Learn to Play Without Less_ons

COII·TAC1: ploot-IIWOIII-

hlntl. Each day the code- letters are different.
A Oryptorram

.•./· SAVE •23.52

abl~ wlltfProof', Ill)' to 1ppfy,

of the wol'(la are aU

•23.52

12 Chord Organ Reg.
$69.95
Hauock Bench Reg .
$16.9'5
3 music Books
Reg.
$4.50
.. ·~·~ Reg. Value$91.~0

10·7

dinner

You can start los ing weigh t
today . MONADEX is a ti ny
t ablet and easy · to take .
MONAD EX w i ll he lp curb your
desire for excess food Eat less we igh
less .
Con tains
no
dangerous drugs and will not
make
you
nervous .
No

Overnight Briefs ..

MAGNUS CHORD ORGANS

Americ:n
businesswoman's
plant, when he nominated her,
and that regardless of the raids
Mrs . Banuelos' name would not
be withdrawn.
The U.S; Treasurer's post Is
largely a ceremonial post.
The man who ordered lhe
raid, George K. Rosenberg of
the Federal Immigration and
Naturalizatioo Service, said he
had no political motives.
. "! owe nothing to any
politician," Rosenberg, a district director, said. "! didn't
know who the lady was when .
my men went out."

,..iiiiiiiiiiiiioiiii.iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiil.;;~;;;;;.;;,;;;;;.;,:..._..

MISSING KIDS?
FRESNO, Calif..( UP!) - The
Fresno school district is
missing 1,000 pupils who pre- stre n uou5 exercise. Chang e
registered for classes but you r life
s tart today .
MONA DEX costs $3 .00 for a 20
haven't showed up. "! can't day
sup ply. Lose ugly fa t or
visualize where lhese kids are, yo ur money will be refunded
unless there has been an w i th no questions asked .
MONADEX is sold with th is
exOdus," said one official.· He guarantee by :
said the lost students all were In Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs . 112 E.
Main &amp; Dutton Drug Store .
school last semester.
Middleport. Mail Orders Filled .

By UPI
Wednesday he decided to enter
BOSTON - SEN. George S. the Massachusetts Democratic
Pomeroy
McGovern, D-S.D., said presidential primary after
consulting with ·Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass.
"I've spoken with Senator
Kennedy and he has urged me
Three Models To . Choose From
oo come inoo the Massachusetts
primary
/ ' said McGovern. "I
Table Model
6 Chord Organ
plan to make Massachusetts a
Music Rack
major focal point of my cainMusic Book
paign ." McGovern said he
REG. VALUE $19.95
doubted Kennedy would himself
SAVE •1.51
seek
the
Democratic
nomination in 1972.
Special $18.44

Court St.

Long said the committee
would exami"" · closely the
circwnstances surrounding the
. employment of illegal aliens,
particularly whether Mrs . !!an·
uelos knew of the practice.
Hiring was done by a plant
manager.
Mrs. Banuelos said she was
unaware her employes were ln
the coWJtry illegally, bul added
lhat if she· asked all job
applicanls that question il
would only "start a fight."
The White House said President Nixon was unaware of the
previous raids on the Mexican-

LOSE UGLY FAT

-;{U«J4

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

HOuR ' !t.lf -1?ivEIO Hll!tRY';A'MN fET .

DAIL.Y CROSSWORD

Senate Finance Committee,
which 'Will hold hearings on
Mrs. Banuelos' appointment.
Immigration agents raided
Romana 's Food Products Co .
Tuesday and arrested 36
Mexicans for entering . the
United States illegally. They
were returned to Mexico.
Agents said there were al
least 100 illegal aliens working
on another shift who were
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio: Extended outlook missed in the raid . It was the
Saturday through Monday : sixlh raid on Mrs. Banuelos'
Partly cloudy and mild plant in three years.
Asked in an interview WedSaturday. Chance of showers
Sunday or Monday. Turning nesday whefller the new events
would have any effect on her
cooler
Monday.
High .
Saturday in the 70s dropping confirmation, Long responded:
" They certainly haven't
by Monday to the low 70s or
mid 60s. Overnight lows from helped ."
the mid 40s to the mid 50s.

"GENUIN_lSTONE"
Jewelm()nt

•

&lt;;he
spit

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sen .
Russell Long, D-La ., says the
discovery of illegal aliens
working in a food packing plant
owned by U.S. Treasurerdesignate Romana Banuelos
Middleport, Ohio has damaged her chances for
October 6, 1971 confirmation.
Long is chairman of lhe

· Dear Sir:
Being a member of flle Meigs High School marching band, I
don't feellhe band is due alllhe criticism it has been gelting. I
would just like to throw ln a little of my own criticism.
How can you call yourselves fans when you sit and laugh at
the band coming down flle field or curse the players when they
make a wrong play?
· .To Whom It May Concern
Our rcalfans are flle ooes that stick by their band and football
Pomeroy, Ohio team no matter bow lhey look. How would you feel if you were
October 5,1971 down on the field_with everyone sitting in the stands laughing at
After reading the letter in Friday's Sentinel, we would like to you? I bet you wouldn'thavemuchspiritleftafterthat!
N! for the people who say the band doesn't play for touchanswer the person who wrote concerning Marauder.spirit. Being
downs, and lack spirit, flle only time wti don't play is during third
band members, defending It is our main goal.
quarter
when we and all other bands get a break. Maybe you can't
The members of lhe band who care work hard to try and .
make our band the show flle best possible. It is lrue, naturally, hear us from where you are sitting, but I assure you we DO play.
that other bands may be better than us, but we do try. H "Name At one game a man from Meigs told us to be quiet because the
Withheld" could feel as nervous as we do before performing, he signals cOuld not be heard on the field ..If this is so why didn 't an
official tell us. I think flle whole thing was, that out of the whole
wouldn't bave even thought about.-critlcizlng us.
Concerning the band spirit at games: H we doo't support our football field he chose to stand right in frQJit of our band and HE
team, then why, at all away games, do nearly all flle cheerleaders couldn't hear flle signals.
You talk about our student body not having spirit : who are the
stand In front of lhe band? Even when we play a home game, half
ooes
that stand up when we play .the fight song? It's not the
of them cheer with the band!
The ooly lime Meigs has made a touchdown and we have not grownup, it's the students. I admit the band has many problems,
played the "FlgbiSoog," is In the third quarter of play . It ts at this but nothing ts going to be accomplished wifllout the full
lime, and this time only, that lhe band is excused. At the begin· cooperation of both band members and parents. Spirit has to
nlng of lllefourthquarterwe MUSfbe In our seats ready to cheer come from all not just some .
I'm not ashamed to sign my name? Are you?
and play. There has NEVER beim a time during the other
BOBBIE ARCHER
quarters that we have made a touchdown, and have failed to play
the "Fight Song."
It is our hope that "Name Withheld" will think twice before Fans, Band not to Blame
Dear Sir:
crilicizing us again.
I am a spirited Marauder fan and band member who, like 99.9
The Connles.
pet. of my fellow classmates and friends, expresses my feelings
voraciously In all school activities.
II is true that since our first year of consolidation the team
has never looked as well. But I don't see how flle school band and
flle fans are to be blamed for the team's ill luck.
Gallipolis did have signs through town boosting their team
last week. But, personally, I think boosting the team by word of
moufll is a better way oo show spirit. That is what MEIGS peopl~
do! We tell 'em!
, .
.
There has been many complaints, as well as rumors, about
oor band at lhe Wellston game. I would like to clarify the
siluation.
The Meigs hand arrived al the Wellston stadiwn about five
minutes before the Wellston band played flle "National Anthem."
We did not get to our seats until kickoff because we waited
(respectfully) until flle Wellston pre.game show was over before
ml!' moved a~oond the field .
It is not unusual for a band of our size to have !roubles enroute
to a game, especially the games at a distant school. The Wellston
game was not an exceptioo. One of the band buses made a wrong
lurn, and had traveled some distance before anyone realized the
mistake. Although lhe bus regained Its lost distance, time could
not be regained, and subsequenUy, we arrived a few minutes later
fllan we were expected to arrive.
Let me also remind you of the huge capacity of Meigs fans
who, not ooly at the Wellston game, but also a tall the away games
Ring Styla
in the past .(JI). rain, snow, or windy nights) have attended
No. 80
religiously these away games. And the roar of this Meigs crowd
has been as loud as the home fans' cheering during the game .
No. 10 Fomlly Ring, mounting only $30.00 - SS.OO addltionollor .toch child's 5 pl. genuine stone, except S15.00
At least ooe fan has noticed the distinct ring of the Meigs band
when dlomond is requtsled. Mother's large one-fifth carat
_over lhe crowd. At limes throughout the season our band director,
genuine stone $10.00, except S.O.OO when Chatham.
Mr. Bowen,hasbeenasked if flle band cauld please hold down the
Cruled Emerald is requested and $10.00 when diamond is
cheering, for flle band seemed to be distracting the players so
requested . Ring will hold from Ito • stones. ,
much they could not hear the plays.
The Jewelmonl Fami\r Ring finely crafted lor mother or
For a school that is supposedly unspirited, I wonder just what
irandmofher. Her large one-fifth carat genuine birthstone
It
has
been showing! Laziness? Unthoughtfulness? No ... It has
Is attractively set In the center. Her cherished family Is
been determinedly backing our great Meigs Marauder team, no
represented by S pl. genuine birthstones delicately set to
matter what!
surround her large stone. In an exquisite 14 Kt . yellow or
white gold mounflng .
Becky Scaggs

lfl lt11 ~ IUA, lo&lt;., T.M. ltl . 0.1. Pol . Otf

JUST AS WEL L I N SEC AS
IN ARINH:LASSJ

Band, Team Defended

'

Chances of Confirmation Lessened
.

Marauder-Band,
Fans Defended

·-~

"

~:

.,·:

..
••
••

76.
1.29

1

,

oz.

/"»

44

..
.•.. .

18 SIZE

LISTERINE.
Antl•...tla

THfiiOAT LOZeNo•e
18 l0!ENGES

AYDS

~oz.

',

Reducing Plan Candy
REG. 11.39

24 oz.

ONLY

ONLY

Q-TIPS

'

.

COTION SWABS
88 SIZE
REG. 65' ONLY

37°

',

.

REG. Sl50

.

PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE

;'..,•

,,
•i' "
H

...

4 Registered
Phannatists
to

~rve· You.l

OPEN

DA.ILY

8:00A.M.

TO

10 P.M.,

SUNDAY

10:30 A.M. 10 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 10 9 P.M.

•••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••~•.;..;.~;;;.. . ..J

�'

I

;

. . .

,.

)

'

I

'I

Letters .of~
Opinion

,.. COL.ILDIV'T

IU6 A~S.LIM€ .••

.-

Leiters of oplnl111 are welcomed. They should be less
lblliiO wm'ds 11118 (or be subject to reductloo by the editor)
l'!!tmul be signed wllllllle &amp;Jpee's address. Nam!JI may
be wllbbeld upon pubUealllll, however, oo reqvesl. Letlelil
allould be In load lasle, addreasinllssues, uot personalities.

BADGE GUYS
I

~EC 1 ~EC

Mll\Wl~NER's ..usr

I COULC SL6EP
I eOUND OUT.

~IN

'!HE
StiOWER ..¥aAJN I

10-7

I COLH.t&gt;N'T ~

THE'I'LL FOLL'I
MOONBEAM
'WHAREYER SH I':
GOES - AN ' SHE'S
A· GO IN' HOME I!

If" IT

PSST.' MISTAH C:APP - !S ff SAFE
RJ' YO' ro MAKE FUN 0 '
-sHuDD£R!- 6ULp!- Hll't ?

NOTHING

-

AJ.IHAS
SPOKEN-

WINNIE

IS SAFE.-

'

MY PRICE

WA~

WAY OUT OF
LINE FOR 'THE RATE OF RET1JRN .
THEY ACCUSE ME OF RUNNINGTH E 6U51NE&amp;&amp; IN'TO
THE GROUND' CAN

®eur,MR .GILT, I
THOUGHT )'tJlJ
HA{) 1'1 13UYER

FOR OONNAZ !

,.

NEWS OF' 'fOUR

DO YOU HAVE ANY

DELIGHTFULEATERY SHALL
BE CARRIED 'TO

I NSTI1UCTIONS1

LAST-MINUTE
SIRE?

THE FAR. REACHES
OF OUR FAIR

CITY.. .BLA ...

')OU IMAGINE

•

SUCH 1'1 PREPC5TEROUE&gt;
CHAR3E?

~~fit

·,'.

I SUESS I MIGtlT /&gt;8
WEU. STAAT AT THE

aq'in!

"'-LACE ...

Thank ~ou, Cousin
Caleb' Thi!'&gt; here's
where I qets off!

THE

LOSER
WHATOC&gt;'OJ~,

'I'MAT AM!S'Cfe
ABOUTL.

UlTI.E ORPHAN ANNIE
I '

.:1. P.O.G.ING TORRENT OF A
~'f E R Al"iNIE ···lHAl I'M

--·SEEM'S TC BE CHANG ING ... AND
UNLESS I MISS MY GUESS ... IT
WILL HEAD IN OM l.l§ 11-JIT HII'l

ThE

S.~E 'wASN'l THERE '(f: E':?·
:;.:. ( ' ~ DC E~ N ' T /11~1(: :::..
... ::" !.: . rC¥-J THE COURC..
~ ~ TH E. ~ '=R_ •., ,
1

.t.OROSS

YNterday'o Ceyptoquote: WE ARE A KIND OF CHAME
LEONS, TAKING OUR HUE-THE HUE OF OUR MORAL •
CHARACTER- FROM THOSE ABOUT US.-JOHN LOCKE •

Stakes

1.

·;5, Dress

material

-~~~~j
~

10. Helm

position
U. Earth, for
example
13. "Piccolo

-

"

H .-

bearing
15. Board a
sleeper
17. Cyprino!d
fish
18. Word of
encourage.
ment
19. Small cask

9. In want

•2. Trans-

of

plant

43. Irish river
1. Doll or

tiger

2. Girl's name

3. Under·

Dres·

cymbals

repeated
TV

U111cramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each squlll1!, to
form four ordinary words.

way

sler
role
2~ . The wrinkle
25. Wiley
Post,

Yetter4&amp;7't .btw•

30. Tower

structure
32. Mao
Tse-tt:ng,
for one
33. Davis
36.Tempo
38. Foot
(Lat.)

for one
26. Prank

28. France's
"sex

phrase

•

,_

hy HI NHI AllNIIlll · "'II litHll t f

23. Marie

(3 wds.)
•· Visionary
5. More
agile
6. Onward
7. Indian
8. Oft-

J11lJ1MOO~;Ih.I4D•~•~~J-....,

port
16. Similar
22. Half.

DOWN

atand

I~ ]171 KIDC Peatur.. 8rudlcate, lne.)

12. Kind of

kitten"

She's yovr
child,

r------.
IJ&gt;SUE

I

20. -

NJXEV

I I

~

••

dolorosa
~RRY

' &amp;€ A JUICY ~ E , DO!.oRf"S .
"' "- .... , 31JRL-,; IJNI7ER: OATH, Will
1 SUPPOSE WE RJ
HAVE EiOUGH TO
HOLD A f:'ORMA L
HEARING 8Y MY
PERSONAL SUB·

BE.

U~H.APP'f

WHEN WE ASK
HIM· ASOU T THOSE ROI.l1Ck'I N6
T ~PS TO CANAPA .

MY60155 15 HE 'LL
FOLD. ~E'll TELL US
AlL A60UT TH E
• EPIKURE SNACKS 1

12 Chord Organ Reg.
$29.95
4 Legs
Reg. $10.00
Hassock Bench Reg.
$16.95
3 Music Books
Reg.
$4.50
Reg. Value $61.40

•

[J I

VE

•

21. Arab
chieftain
23. Aftercandy
Rabbit fur
26. Squalld
. 27. Athirst
2~.

.A
to fonn
the surprise
anawer,
u
l!.f-=:=~=~ ~::::O"l~=-~~~:;=~~
=~~=:!_~Now
arran1e
theabove
clreled
letlen
ounnled
by the
cartoon.
-+-+-+--1 I PriUe SIMIISI AIISWIIIIn
"( XI XI ]"

28. Luscious
cherry

29. Part of a
pencil
game

(A-wen

30. Downcast

Jumble•t MANGY

31. Street cry
M. Hit the

SOIIIY

DlfiNI

with

/t?n~t·

loiDOI'f'OW'

IN.IICT

. ULI'-ADHfSNI! fi'C.A$TIC

grub

CAP!' AIN EASY

35. Nominate
37. Dumbbell
39. Landed, as
ally
·
~0. Corrida
hero
41. Layer of
paint

Etpeclell)l whtn you buy thlt
newest
blttek·tnd·whltt

of'"

pttt.ma In CON·TAC'N ttlf·
tdhnlvt pltltlc. It's 11157,
caNed TARGET tnd rMint to
zero In on your d.COrttlnl
problem• wtth tht 1re1t..t of ·
taHI Ptrftct for conttmporll')'
Httlnp--trtlt for • boY•
1oom .tunnlnl on 1 walltlmolt
enywhtN. Just ont of thl
dremltlc new pMttmt for Ftll
JOU'U ... In our ttiCWtrMI'Il of

lr+-+-+--11--1---

DAlLY CRYPTOQUoTE
· J;~; to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR'
lo LONGFELLOW
One letter o!mply stands for another. In .th!a sample A !a
used for the three ,L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single Mtera,
apostrophes, the -Ie'ngth and torm.atton

'i=========:2

..
~~~~~§~~~~J
...

'

,
·· •

II&amp;)' to

DTM HYMEHWM ZHJ'B. IVN:WZMJD
'

PB

BC

MYMEO
T CAM

FCCE,

TM

DPZM .,ll'M

E VJ B

'H

• HALLOWEEN SPECIALTIES
'

.
•

FlOwer Jiulbt f« 'lallplintlng
1ust ~rrivad-tullps,
hyo¢lnths, nar~lnus, crqcus,
:ot:c:
:

VSMS . PD . - MN

.

L

..• LOW PRICED!
HalloWeen costumes, masks,
.&gt;.

candles, novelties, toys, porty

}-11.

goods, trick of frHt .Cindy,
bags, pumpkins, l11nterns' -

everything tor HaiiiiWeen.

..!!t.:J~:-- ,.~~'' '·' '', , , , , ,.,' ' "·'' ·'' ' '.,,,, , , , , ,; ; ,·, , , ,"""*""'' ' ' ' ' ' ' %·i;.,".''m· ''' I;:' ' ' ·"'·' ' ' ' '·~' ' ' ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,i,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,' ' 'i,,,,,,,.,,,'''"' ' ' ' '' '·' '' "' ' "'1

I ULBS

WASHINGTON - Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally Jr.
was told today that the ad-

i·!&lt;.

II

•

B_PH-EONEN
_ _,FRA202ENastMaKinUSt.
992-3498

Pomeroy,Otiio

========..:O~P':EN~F~:I:D:AV:.:&amp;~SA~·T~~u:~:D:A~Y;N:IG:H~T~S~T:IL~9J

favoritism to business th~n the
Senate ·will tolerate. Sen.
Russell B. Long, D·La., who
usually is sympathetic to White
House . reqqests, opened
hearings on the tax bill by his
Senate Finance Committee with
an Wlcharacterlstic atblck on

th~e111fueasure zipped' through
the'House Wednesday on a voice
vote with hardly any opposition.
Long told Connally that "what I
Senate"
di~tates
tax
perceive to
be the greater
mood of flle
relief for Individual taxpayers
and less for corporations. He
said the bill gives $6 in tax cuts
to business for e\'ery $1 given

. individuals.

•
•

We don't make

SANDWICHES
--we

"Create" em~
'•

Hamburgers with per sonality . Tenderloins' with
taste appeal .

992-5241

Mlclclllport, 0.

"

SEEING IS
BELIEVING.

'•

These Swisher &amp; Lohse

DISCOUNTS

••

100

...

~

TABLETS
REG. s1.67

ONLY
VAS~LINE

INTENSIVE
CARE LOJION

' .

COLD TABLETS

69~

lOOZ.
ONLY

20 TABLETS
REG.

4 oz.

ONLY

REG. s1.09

~

ONLY

.r
,.

,.

.McKESSON ASPIRIN

46#1

200 TABLETS
5 GRAIN
REG. 69'

@l

REG. sl.85

~

-·

CEPACOL REG.

PAMPERS

MOUntWASH

GARGLE

14

DAYTIME 30's

CARSON CITY, NEV. -Gov.
Mike O'Callaghan believes ·
"there are more prostitutes
within five miles of the nation's
capitol in Washington than
there are citizens in Nevada.".
O'Callaghan told a news
conference Wednesday that
prostitution in urban areas is
"very dangerous" because of
its possible link to hoodlwns and
narcotics . O'Callaghan was
asked about prostitution in
Nevada, which is outlawed in
the major Reno and Las Vegas
areas but flourishes in certain
areas in the smaller counties.

~~~O~u~~~L~~~~~!la~n~!~J ministration's
$15.4
billion tax cut three-year,
bill shows more

care for.

SPRING: BLOOM~NG

Quotation

Special $67.18 ·
Easy To "Learn to Play Without Less_ons

COII·TAC1: ploot-IIWOIII-

hlntl. Each day the code- letters are different.
A Oryptorram

.•./· SAVE •23.52

abl~ wlltfProof', Ill)' to 1ppfy,

of the wol'(la are aU

•23.52

12 Chord Organ Reg.
$69.95
Hauock Bench Reg .
$16.9'5
3 music Books
Reg.
$4.50
.. ·~·~ Reg. Value$91.~0

10·7

dinner

You can start los ing weigh t
today . MONADEX is a ti ny
t ablet and easy · to take .
MONAD EX w i ll he lp curb your
desire for excess food Eat less we igh
less .
Con tains
no
dangerous drugs and will not
make
you
nervous .
No

Overnight Briefs ..

MAGNUS CHORD ORGANS

Americ:n
businesswoman's
plant, when he nominated her,
and that regardless of the raids
Mrs . Banuelos' name would not
be withdrawn.
The U.S; Treasurer's post Is
largely a ceremonial post.
The man who ordered lhe
raid, George K. Rosenberg of
the Federal Immigration and
Naturalizatioo Service, said he
had no political motives.
. "! owe nothing to any
politician," Rosenberg, a district director, said. "! didn't
know who the lady was when .
my men went out."

,..iiiiiiiiiiiiioiiii.iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiil.;;~;;;;;.;;,;;;;;.;,:..._..

MISSING KIDS?
FRESNO, Calif..( UP!) - The
Fresno school district is
missing 1,000 pupils who pre- stre n uou5 exercise. Chang e
registered for classes but you r life
s tart today .
MONA DEX costs $3 .00 for a 20
haven't showed up. "! can't day
sup ply. Lose ugly fa t or
visualize where lhese kids are, yo ur money will be refunded
unless there has been an w i th no questions asked .
MONADEX is sold with th is
exOdus," said one official.· He guarantee by :
said the lost students all were In Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs . 112 E.
Main &amp; Dutton Drug Store .
school last semester.
Middleport. Mail Orders Filled .

By UPI
Wednesday he decided to enter
BOSTON - SEN. George S. the Massachusetts Democratic
Pomeroy
McGovern, D-S.D., said presidential primary after
consulting with ·Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass.
"I've spoken with Senator
Kennedy and he has urged me
Three Models To . Choose From
oo come inoo the Massachusetts
primary
/ ' said McGovern. "I
Table Model
6 Chord Organ
plan to make Massachusetts a
Music Rack
major focal point of my cainMusic Book
paign ." McGovern said he
REG. VALUE $19.95
doubted Kennedy would himself
SAVE •1.51
seek
the
Democratic
nomination in 1972.
Special $18.44

Court St.

Long said the committee
would exami"" · closely the
circwnstances surrounding the
. employment of illegal aliens,
particularly whether Mrs . !!an·
uelos knew of the practice.
Hiring was done by a plant
manager.
Mrs. Banuelos said she was
unaware her employes were ln
the coWJtry illegally, bul added
lhat if she· asked all job
applicanls that question il
would only "start a fight."
The White House said President Nixon was unaware of the
previous raids on the Mexican-

LOSE UGLY FAT

-;{U«J4

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

HOuR ' !t.lf -1?ivEIO Hll!tRY';A'MN fET .

DAIL.Y CROSSWORD

Senate Finance Committee,
which 'Will hold hearings on
Mrs. Banuelos' appointment.
Immigration agents raided
Romana 's Food Products Co .
Tuesday and arrested 36
Mexicans for entering . the
United States illegally. They
were returned to Mexico.
Agents said there were al
least 100 illegal aliens working
on another shift who were
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio: Extended outlook missed in the raid . It was the
Saturday through Monday : sixlh raid on Mrs. Banuelos'
Partly cloudy and mild plant in three years.
Asked in an interview WedSaturday. Chance of showers
Sunday or Monday. Turning nesday whefller the new events
would have any effect on her
cooler
Monday.
High .
Saturday in the 70s dropping confirmation, Long responded:
" They certainly haven't
by Monday to the low 70s or
mid 60s. Overnight lows from helped ."
the mid 40s to the mid 50s.

"GENUIN_lSTONE"
Jewelm()nt

•

&lt;;he
spit

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sen .
Russell Long, D-La ., says the
discovery of illegal aliens
working in a food packing plant
owned by U.S. Treasurerdesignate Romana Banuelos
Middleport, Ohio has damaged her chances for
October 6, 1971 confirmation.
Long is chairman of lhe

· Dear Sir:
Being a member of flle Meigs High School marching band, I
don't feellhe band is due alllhe criticism it has been gelting. I
would just like to throw ln a little of my own criticism.
How can you call yourselves fans when you sit and laugh at
the band coming down flle field or curse the players when they
make a wrong play?
· .To Whom It May Concern
Our rcalfans are flle ooes that stick by their band and football
Pomeroy, Ohio team no matter bow lhey look. How would you feel if you were
October 5,1971 down on the field_with everyone sitting in the stands laughing at
After reading the letter in Friday's Sentinel, we would like to you? I bet you wouldn'thavemuchspiritleftafterthat!
N! for the people who say the band doesn't play for touchanswer the person who wrote concerning Marauder.spirit. Being
downs, and lack spirit, flle only time wti don't play is during third
band members, defending It is our main goal.
quarter
when we and all other bands get a break. Maybe you can't
The members of lhe band who care work hard to try and .
make our band the show flle best possible. It is lrue, naturally, hear us from where you are sitting, but I assure you we DO play.
that other bands may be better than us, but we do try. H "Name At one game a man from Meigs told us to be quiet because the
Withheld" could feel as nervous as we do before performing, he signals cOuld not be heard on the field ..If this is so why didn 't an
official tell us. I think flle whole thing was, that out of the whole
wouldn't bave even thought about.-critlcizlng us.
Concerning the band spirit at games: H we doo't support our football field he chose to stand right in frQJit of our band and HE
team, then why, at all away games, do nearly all flle cheerleaders couldn't hear flle signals.
You talk about our student body not having spirit : who are the
stand In front of lhe band? Even when we play a home game, half
ooes
that stand up when we play .the fight song? It's not the
of them cheer with the band!
The ooly lime Meigs has made a touchdown and we have not grownup, it's the students. I admit the band has many problems,
played the "FlgbiSoog," is In the third quarter of play . It ts at this but nothing ts going to be accomplished wifllout the full
lime, and this time only, that lhe band is excused. At the begin· cooperation of both band members and parents. Spirit has to
nlng of lllefourthquarterwe MUSfbe In our seats ready to cheer come from all not just some .
I'm not ashamed to sign my name? Are you?
and play. There has NEVER beim a time during the other
BOBBIE ARCHER
quarters that we have made a touchdown, and have failed to play
the "Fight Song."
It is our hope that "Name Withheld" will think twice before Fans, Band not to Blame
Dear Sir:
crilicizing us again.
I am a spirited Marauder fan and band member who, like 99.9
The Connles.
pet. of my fellow classmates and friends, expresses my feelings
voraciously In all school activities.
II is true that since our first year of consolidation the team
has never looked as well. But I don't see how flle school band and
flle fans are to be blamed for the team's ill luck.
Gallipolis did have signs through town boosting their team
last week. But, personally, I think boosting the team by word of
moufll is a better way oo show spirit. That is what MEIGS peopl~
do! We tell 'em!
, .
.
There has been many complaints, as well as rumors, about
oor band at lhe Wellston game. I would like to clarify the
siluation.
The Meigs hand arrived al the Wellston stadiwn about five
minutes before the Wellston band played flle "National Anthem."
We did not get to our seats until kickoff because we waited
(respectfully) until flle Wellston pre.game show was over before
ml!' moved a~oond the field .
It is not unusual for a band of our size to have !roubles enroute
to a game, especially the games at a distant school. The Wellston
game was not an exceptioo. One of the band buses made a wrong
lurn, and had traveled some distance before anyone realized the
mistake. Although lhe bus regained Its lost distance, time could
not be regained, and subsequenUy, we arrived a few minutes later
fllan we were expected to arrive.
Let me also remind you of the huge capacity of Meigs fans
who, not ooly at the Wellston game, but also a tall the away games
Ring Styla
in the past .(JI). rain, snow, or windy nights) have attended
No. 80
religiously these away games. And the roar of this Meigs crowd
has been as loud as the home fans' cheering during the game .
No. 10 Fomlly Ring, mounting only $30.00 - SS.OO addltionollor .toch child's 5 pl. genuine stone, except S15.00
At least ooe fan has noticed the distinct ring of the Meigs band
when dlomond is requtsled. Mother's large one-fifth carat
_over lhe crowd. At limes throughout the season our band director,
genuine stone $10.00, except S.O.OO when Chatham.
Mr. Bowen,hasbeenasked if flle band cauld please hold down the
Cruled Emerald is requested and $10.00 when diamond is
cheering, for flle band seemed to be distracting the players so
requested . Ring will hold from Ito • stones. ,
much they could not hear the plays.
The Jewelmonl Fami\r Ring finely crafted lor mother or
For a school that is supposedly unspirited, I wonder just what
irandmofher. Her large one-fifth carat genuine birthstone
It
has
been showing! Laziness? Unthoughtfulness? No ... It has
Is attractively set In the center. Her cherished family Is
been determinedly backing our great Meigs Marauder team, no
represented by S pl. genuine birthstones delicately set to
matter what!
surround her large stone. In an exquisite 14 Kt . yellow or
white gold mounflng .
Becky Scaggs

lfl lt11 ~ IUA, lo&lt;., T.M. ltl . 0.1. Pol . Otf

JUST AS WEL L I N SEC AS
IN ARINH:LASSJ

Band, Team Defended

'

Chances of Confirmation Lessened
.

Marauder-Band,
Fans Defended

·-~

"

~:

.,·:

..
••
••

76.
1.29

1

,

oz.

/"»

44

..
.•.. .

18 SIZE

LISTERINE.
Antl•...tla

THfiiOAT LOZeNo•e
18 l0!ENGES

AYDS

~oz.

',

Reducing Plan Candy
REG. 11.39

24 oz.

ONLY

ONLY

Q-TIPS

'

.

COTION SWABS
88 SIZE
REG. 65' ONLY

37°

',

.

REG. Sl50

.

PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE

;'..,•

,,
•i' "
H

...

4 Registered
Phannatists
to

~rve· You.l

OPEN

DA.ILY

8:00A.M.

TO

10 P.M.,

SUNDAY

10:30 A.M. 10 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 10 9 P.M.

•••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••~•.;..;.~;;;.. . ..J

�•

Get Result~il ,
Sentinel Cla.ssifieds Get Action /.Sentinel Classifieds
.....
Busfuess Se_rvices _. __,
10 _ ~ llollv Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomaov. 0 Oct. 7. 1971

~

••

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publ ,calror
J,\anday De&lt;ldlrne 9 a m
~ll4tlon

Notice

a. Correcti2n~

REGULATIONS

~al t

Walchers (R), 1863 Seclron

MIN IA TUR E Schnauzers AKC pupp1es , no sheddmg,
odorless, permane nt shots ,
wormed , $85 Coolville 667

Pomer oy

wrlle

Cla ss

Wetghl

Rd . Ctnctnnalt , Ohto 45237

10 3 lfc

The-

6214

Lost

publt sher wtll not be respons tble
for more than one Incorrect
SHORT legged small black and
InsertiOn
For Want Ad Se rvtce

7&lt;2 4179

Sce nt s per Word one tnsertton
Mtmmum Charge 75c
12 cents per word thre&lt;

10 7 31c

.

sew1 ng mach1ne, ma kes
buttonholes, fa shion des 1gns,
elc Total pr1ce $32 50 Phone

60 x 12 w1th expando , two
bedroom s, e)C.cellent con
d1t 1on Ma ke us an offer See

anyl rme , 982 Hyse ll Sf ,
Mrddleport
10 6 'tc

$1 50 tor 50 word m1n1mum
Each add1t1ona 1 word 2c

992 7065

OFFICE HOURS
8 30am toSOO pm Da1ly ,
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturda y

WANTED!

I WI SH to lhank my ne1ghbors
and fnends for the n1c:e g 1fts,
cards a nd beaut1ful flowers
g1 ven me 1n observance of my
b 1rf hday God bl ess each one
Mrs Lena Wells
10 7 ltG

AP PLES chards,

~2

Prtzes&amp; Bargams
~1,000 FIRST PRIZE
5500 SECOND PRIZE
5 PRIZES ofSIOO

Pa 19053

{In Mdse From Landmark )
Plus 200 more pr11es
no purchase necessary

J::.

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
_
Phone 992 ·'2181

BABY SITT ING rn

my

Rd , phone 992 6187

man over 21 years old to work
1n our store Mu st have good
per sonal ity , l1ke t o meet
publiC, w1llmg to assum e
respons1b111 t y. vaca t 1on plan
hosp1 fa llzat1on plan and other
fnnge benefits Plea se sta te
sa la ry req u1rem en ts Send
resume of presen t and past
employers t o Box 729 L co
The Da1ly Sent1nel, Pomeroy
Oh10'

10 7 6tc

SAVE up to one half Bnng you r
s1ck TV to Chuck s TV Shop
151 Butt(;rnu t Ave , Pomeroy

phone 992 SQBO

Ohro Call 992 6271

GUN SHOOT Sun day, October
10, 1 p m ,jlacrne Gun Club
10 6 4tc

8 25 lie

am to 6 p m and Satu rda y,

Oct 9 9 am to noon at Don

10 5 3tc

KOSCOT Kosme t 1cs for sale,
delivered to your door New
pr oduct s
com1ng
out
r eg ularly Would you like to

try lhem' Call 992 5113
105 11c
PEP-UP w1th new Z1pp1es 1ron
pills Non-hab it form 1ng Only
Sl 98 , Nel son Drugs

9 22 30tp

WIL L DO sew 1ng 1n my home
Mr s Arthur Barr , 581 Gran t

drsc.

1 BEDROOM lrader apart
men! , 1deal for couples
Contact M cClure 's Dairy Isle.

992 5248 or 992 3436

10 6-Sip

HOUSE rn Tuppers Plains on
Rt

7, references requ1red

Phone 667-3956.

Martha Cha mber s,
Cle rk
{9) 30 (10)? 'll

10 6 3fc

Phone 667 3333

10 7 3tc

WARM MORNING gas heater,
48 ,750 btu Antique organ ,
Dutnam 75 years to 100 years

old Phone Nellie Duddrng,
New Haven, W Va 882-3229
10-7 3tp
POTATOES , home

Shop

TIMES FOR HOLDING
COMMON PLEAS COURTS ,
A 0 197'2

apartments Close to school

It tS ordered thai the terms of
the Common Plea s Court 1n th e
County of MEIGS for the y ear
197'2 be f 1xed as ~ all ows . to w11
On the Jrd day of January and
the 151 day of Ma y and the l st
de y of Septem ber and the sa1d
te r ms of sa1d cou rt begtns at
9 00 o 'clock AM
J OHN C BACON

Judge of Co mm on
Plea s Courf
Me1gs County , OhtO
( 10) 7 ,.. 21 , 31

10 18-tfc

r2X60 MOBILE home, 2 bd rm ,
washer

and

dryer,

on

Bulavllle Porter Rd Ca ll 615
1319
10 3 6tc

TRAILER space, desrrabl e
nerghborhood, phone 992 2084
9 19 ltc

.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Courl, Rl 124, Syracuse,
Jhlo. 992 2951.
'
4·2-tfc

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR, INC.

TRAILER spaces, exira large,
overlooking lhe Ohio Rrver $25 a mon fh Velma G

PHONE NUMBER
992-2174
FOR"' SALES
&amp;SERVICE

Zuspan, f'.Aa son, W. Va

- 10·5·20ic

APARTMENTS, furnrshed or
unfurn ished. beaut1flll large
rooms , central heat. garbage
dispo sal. dls'lt~sher. car -

pets Phone 992-3074

.

10 5 6tc

TEAFORD
SR.

MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom

Jl 2 miles below Ravenswood

Ferry on Rt 338 Phone 843
2286
10-7-3tc
SWEET peppers, hot peppers .
$1 a bushel. p1 ck your own
Mar sha l l Adam s, Letart

I0-76tc

COAL tacketed heated wrlh fan,
Larkin St , Rutland, across
fr om F1re House Tom An
derson

10 5 3tc

4 speaker sound system. 4
s peed automat1c cha ng er,
Balance $65 71
Use our

budget terms. Call 992 7085
10 4 6fc

EARLY Amencan Stereo-rad1o
combmat1on , AM FM rad1o , 4
speaker sound system . 4
spee d automat1c changer
Balance $
Use our

I 992-7085.
10 4-6tc

bedrooms, llv1ng room , dm1ng
room , bath w1th shower. large
kdchen w1th lots of built m
birch cab1ne t s Hardwood
floor s Natura l gas furnace ,
50 gallon elect n c water
heater , 2 large recreat1on
rooms . paneled 1n basement,
2 porches, garage, concrete
dnvewar, Ia rge yard w1th
plenty o shade trees, located
for
To

week days tor appotntment .

10 3 tl

CONVEN 1ENT but secluded

budd mg lots on H9 at R ~ck
Springs. Wilh1n walkmg
d 1stan ce of M e1gs H1gh
School. a 5 mmute dnve from
Pomeroy Call or see Bill
W1 t te weekends, or after 5
p m weekdays Phone 992

6887

10 3 61c

POMEROY

MILLER

MOBIL£ KOMES
'mo Washmgton Blvd .
Belpre, Ohio

HOME &amp; AUTO

pa1nl

sale ,

Ktng

Supply, Middleport.

Builder s

10 6 12tc

--

606

E.

And

FURNITURE
Stop ln..aqd See Our
Floor Displ'ay .
ROSEBERRY

furnace

rn

stallat 1on Free est1mates on
new f urnaces. oil or gas
Serv1ce work Ca l l Cecil
Ro se berr y, Ra ci ne , Oh1o

Phone 614-843·2274

9 8-301p

AWN 1NGS, storm door s and
windows.
c arports ,
marquees, alum1num s1dmg
and ra ll1 ng Call A Jacob,
sales representat1ve For free '
estimates ,. phone Charles
L1sle , Syracuse
V
V ,
Johnson and Son, Inc
i

5 ll tfc

THE SHOP , C11stom meal
cutHng. Pleasal\l'Rtdge Road,
Pomeroy 01ck Vaughan . 992

3374 and Dale Lrllle, 992-6346
91 2301c
_,

C. BRADFORD, Auctroneer

, ·

JtU/IY.PRICJ'D USIDCARS

downtown PomerotN Contact'

od Hedrick, 2137

adswo' t~

Unve, Columbus, Oh10, phon ,

237,4334, Columbus

5·9-lfd,

IN COSHOCTON
In Coshocton Tuesday
evemng attending a meeting of
Group 7 of the Ohw Bankers
Assn were Tom Wolfe, Racine
Home-Na tiona l Bank · Joan
Harnson and Millie Midkiff
Pomeroy Natwnal Bank and'
Roger Hysell and Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., The Farmers Bank
and Savmgs Co

Automatics
2 speed operatton
Cho ice of water
temps
Auto
water
level
co ntro l
L 1nf
Ftl l er or Powe1
~ ~ n Ag1fa tor
Perma -Pren
Maytag
Halo of Hear
Dryers
Surround clothes
w1th gentle, even
heat No hot spots,
no overdrymg
IFJne Mesh L 1nt
F liter

Racme, Ohio
Not respons•ble for accidents or loss of property

~HIIJH1'.111Cl71PDIIIJIIKAIGIJ

AWORD
TO THE
WISE:

Will be Bought

WE'RE HERE TO DO
THE JOB FOR YOU

1970
Camaro Cpe. ------- '3295
Less than 11,000 mrles appearance of 71 model Rally

&amp;
Sport equipped. Class1c copper w1th sandalwood Inter ior,
tmted glass. factory a1r conditioned, sport s m 1rrors,
console, air spoiler , turbo hydromat1c, power st~ring &amp;
brakes, 350 cu 1n V 8 engtne. Really Sharp

1970 Dodge Polara·~------·$2495
ve

4 or,
eng1ne, automatic trans , P S , factory a~r, good
fires, rad io &amp; other extras, white fmish, clean lntenor

1967 Ford Mustang -~---- $1595
HT Cpe, 1 owner &amp; very n1ce, V-8 eng1ne, w1de oval tires,
p
P B., factory a1r cond , rad1o &amp; other extras

Dart 4 ~-----$1495

c.utomat1c trans . radio. clean mterlor

1965 Buick Special 4 Dr.-----~

Station Wagon , 9 pass., A.T., A. C., P
brakes .

S.

&amp;

$1495

Galaxie XL, 2 dr . H.T., A.T., P.S., vinyl top.

$1195

V 8 motor. auto. trans , radio, good w-s.w tires, white

,frnlsh, like new blue vinyl Int.

'1966 Comet 2

Door------..:.~95

6 Cyl., std: trans .. new tires, needs grille, bumper &amp; hood
SPECIAL'

1964 Chev. BelAir 4 Door ·-----'695

1964 Falcon Sta. Wagon·----J169
~

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co., Pomeroy Motor ~
MIDDLEPORT 992·2151 · 992·2152

100 LOIS- 100'

X

120'

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9th
1:00 P.M. PROMPT
'

RODNEY VILLAGE _, 2

992-212~ ,

Celebrated
Beaver. Judy Lavender, Lisa
Whlttmgton, Ray Mowery,
K1tty Pugh, Trent Ney, Ivan
Lane, Tmuny Just1s, Tinuny
Mtlier, Mike Dent, Terry Sm1th,
VIcky Riley, Darlene Robmson,
Mary F1tzpatnck , Ronme
Davis, Angela Martm, Ray
Stewart, Jamie Scally, Margo
Marttn, Randy Batey, Dorsel
Thomas, Lisa Scaggs, Joni
Murray , and Leshe Whit·
tmgton . Unable to attend was
Enc Oiler.
ABOARD INTREPID
MINERSVILLE - Navy
Petty Off1cer Third Class
Emerson R Johnson, husband
of Mrs Anna K. Johnson of
Route I, Minersville, is aboard
the anti-submarine warfare
aircraft earner USS Intrepid
wh1ch parhctpated m the NATO
Stnke Fleet Exercise Royal
Knight in the Eastern Atlanti&lt;
The seven-day exercise which
ended Oct. 4 mcluded 35 war·
ships and 200 aircraft from
Canada , the Umted Kingdom ,
Norway , the Netherlands and
the Umted States
HOMECOMING SET
The annual homecoming of
the Flatwoods Methodist
Church will be held Sunday with
a basket dinner at noon. Af.
ternoon servtces will begm at
I 30 p. m With the Rev. Jacob
Lehman
dehvenng
the
message. There Will be special
smgmg. Everyone Is welcome
to attend
CALLED TO MARION
Mr and Mrs. Larry Hudnall
were called to Marion Tuesday
by the death of hiS father ,
Charles Hudnall. He IS survived
by hiS wtfe, two sons, and a
daughter. Fu/leral services will
be held at I p m. Fr1day at the
Demmg Thomas Funeral Home
m Marion

Galva-Guard Roof Paint

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

designed for lhe Wyman Caldwell farm located on Route 35 (~ mrles west of the
~ew

Hol zer Med1ca l Center) ..A sign w i ll be o~ th~ prqperty , ,
A f easi bility study s~ows th1s property is a prime locat1on for prof1table
commercial or res 1dent1al uses. This development has been planned and la1d

ouf with city properly specifrcafron tof sizes- 100' bv 120', all lots face 50 fool
streets, sewer &amp; city water will be In front of each lot
This message is to all people in this area planning to build, buy
or Invest . Be at this sale Saturdilv the 9th . Restricted enough to
protect your investment, this is al) auction where you can buy at
your own price, so don't miss this sale. Oct . 9th at 1:00 PM.
Land ownership is the sure basis for TRUE WEALTH, (Not
the stock market) .

_4Mi.~

+-&lt;PMi-

w

NEW
lo\01.1U.

HoiPIT~

l;;;~t.T.

(SJ

35

llbOMI.Y
Gallipolis &amp; Galli a County os on the move. "The pro]ected vrowth area of Ohio."
We have 100 home sites to be sold. Drive out &amp; choose your lot. Attend our sale
sat,, Oct. 9th. Small down payment &amp; e•cellenlterms.

·Your Chevy Dealer
Opef'l J:ves. Til 9 .

God's love, to involve us in work
w1th young children and create
a bet.ter understanding and a
source of encouragement fu1
the creative abilities of young
people "
Mrs. Jenme Warth and Mrs.
Frances Hunnel sang "For the
Beauty of the Earth."
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Theodosia Frecker, Mrs .
Hunnel presided at the business
meeting . Several members
reported tn • the recent
workshops l'&lt;ew rcaamg books
were distributed and members
were urged to begm their
readmg
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Agnes
Weeks, Mrs. Beulah utterbach,
Mrs Ethel Smith, Mrs. Dorothy
Smith, Mrs. Nancy Smith, Miss
Dorothy Long, MISS Fneda
Le1vmg, Mrs Bermce Evans,
Mrs. Agnes DIXon, Mrs. Jean
Blazew1cz, Mrs. Cordelia Bentz,
Mrs. Beatnce Buck, Mrs. Susan
Pullins, and Patty Edwards,
Artie Hunnel, David and Darrm
Warth

The above aenal photograph Is of the proposed new housmg project ·wh1ch 1s

8 Cyl., anto. trans .• local 1 owner lady driven car, radio

Coronet 4 dr . sedan, AT., P .S., radio.

Dependable City

~~s~;~~t ~~e~~;:~o;~u!~~a;:

75 Song Books

270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish , all good tires, 6 cyl .

1969 Chevrolet

Bz•-t-thdary

Dedication Set

Smart buy ers all over this
area have found the place
to really sa ve money IS at
Pomeroy Motor Co Your
bu smess 1s Important to us
and we' l l do everything
poss 1ble to mak e you a
regular cus tomer If you've
been thmk1ng about a new
or used car, make a point of
see1ng our selecf 1on

1~ Dodge

2 Dr. H. Top , V 8, console, A.T. , P. S., radio,
road wheels .

1966-Dodge

Rutland, 0.

Love Is·-Theme
At WSCS Meet

THURSDAY
CLEANING DAY, Rutland
Inter pre tatiOns of "Love
United Methodist Church. All
day, any time, taking clearung Is. " In art work by children
and adults was the emphasis of
supplies.
a program presented by Mrs
MEIGS COUNTY Council,
Margaret Ella LewiS at a
PTA , Thursday 1 30 P m meeting Tuesday mght of the
Middleport Elementary School Women's Society of Christian
EVANGEUNE Chapter 172 Service of the Ente rpnsc
O.E.S • Middleport, Thursday, Umted Methodist Church
7 30 P m. Electwn of officers.
Mrs. Lewts dtsplayed "Love
Members are asked to pay dues. Is .. " free expressiOn drawmgs
WALK·IN Garden Club by children m the Pomeroy
Thursday, 7:30 p.m home of Elementary Art Club, and then
Mrs. Clarence Storyb.l Bring had each member of the WSCS
arrangement suiia e for draw her interpretatiOn of the
Halloween . Anyone mterested "love" theme. Each one then
m jommg the club IS mvited to displayed her work and gave
attend.
the mtrepretat10n Mrs Lewts
BRICKLAYERS Local 32, 8 was mtroduced by Mrs. Claude
P m. Thursday at Drew Webster Husted, program cha1rman
Post 39, Amencan Legion
"Freedom for Expression of
Home. Refreshments.
Faith" was the program topic
CATHOLIC Women 's Cl ub, Group singmg of "This Is My
Sacred Heart Church, 8 p.m Father's World," and scripture
Thursday preceded by rosary from Col 3, 12--17 were used
and Mass at 7:15 P m
Mrs Husted explained the
YOUTH Against Cancer purpose of the program as an
meeting at 7·30 this evemng at mcent1ve to move "toward
st . p au 1 Lu th eran Ch urc h , freemg our imagmatwn and
p
F t
t
f
omeroy. Irs mee mg o new creat1ve abilities, to allow us to
' teres ted m become more expressive of
sc hoo 1year an d a tl m
JOining mv1 ted to be presen t.
'
FRIDAy
DANCE Fnday Wahama
H1gh School gym 8 30 to II: 30
f 1
p.m Jays will emcee. Ad·
mission 75c. School sponsor•?,
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs Ke1th Black was honored at
Chapter, DAR, will meet the Middleport Commumty
Friday, 2 p.m at the home of Park Tuesday after school with
Mrs. Patnck Lochary. Mrs. a party m observance of his lOth
birthday
Mrs. Frances Wh1ttmgton
................ ~ the speaker. Members are to ass1sted Mrs Eulah Francis
,
respond to roll call w1th com- With the party. Games were
ments on DAR membership played with pnzes gomg to the
Mrs. Dwight Milhoan and Mrs. wmners and pictures of the
group were taken. Cake, ICe
Rally day was observed Dor Schaefer Will be co- cream, potato chips, and punch
ANTIQUITY - Mr and Mrs. Sunday at the Tnmty Church hostesses.
were served. G1fts were
SATURDAY
Jack Teaford of Nelsonville wtth the program bemg
presented to Ke1th and balloons
SQUARE DANCE Saturday
entertained Sunday, Sept. 26, at dediCated to Mrs. Lena Huber
and suckers were gtven as
their home m Nelsonville in
Perfect attendance pms were at Rutland High School gym favors.
honor of the former's mother, presented by Roy Mayer, sponsored by Rutland F1re
Attendmg were L1sa Oiler,
Mrs Vada Teaford of Antiquity supermtendent, to Jon Perrm, a Department: ti·30 p.m. Adults
Mark Tyree, June Justts,
who was celebratmg a bll'thday. three year bar ; Beth Pemn, a $1, children 50c . Youngsters
Danny Smith, Chns Darst,
Attendmg were Mr and Mrs. f1ve year bar; Tom Hawley, under 12 admi Ited free.
David Stewart, Mike Ralston,
MorriS Teafqrd and children, Fatth Perrin , Patty Young, the Proceeds to be used to purchase
Jeffrey Whittington, Keith
Richard, Cheryl, Kevm and Rev W. H. Perrm, Miss Freda new fire truck Everyone
Doss, Teresa Whittington , JOEy
Steven of Portland; Delbert Grueser, seven year bars; welcome.
HIGH SCHOOL Dance party
Teaford and son, Marvm ; Bert Paul me Mayer and M1ss Maude
Teaford, Fritz Teaford and Grueser, e1ght year bars ; Miss Saturday Meigs Junior High,
Thelma Walton , all of Racine; Nancy Jo Mayer, a mne year Middleport, 8 30-11 :30 p.m.
Mrs Doris Sayre of Portland, bar ; Ingrid Hawley, an 11 year Jays wUI emcee. Adimss10n 75c
Mrs Kay Hill and children of bar; Mrs Frances Reibel, a 14 RIVERVIEW School carRACINE - Dedication of the
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll year bar, and Mrs Freda mval , Saturday, beginnmg 5 recently remodeled annex of the
Teaford
and
daughter, M1tch, an 18 year bar . The p.m. with a supper. Games and Wesleya n Un1ted Methodtst
Charlotte, and a fnend ; Mr. and supenntendent was presented a rummage sale. Door pnzes .
Church here, will be held
Mrs. Bob Wmes and Brett of one year pm.
Saturday mght at a family mght
SUNDAY
Columbus and Mrs. Sharon
Sunday afternoon the Sunday
observance.
Kerns and SonJa of Mason, W. school had a skatmg party at RUTLAND CHURCH of
A covered d1sh dinner at 6
Chnst, !!2nd homecommg
Va.
the Chester Skate-A-Way from 2
Sunday, Oct. 10; services at 9:30 p.m will begm the observance
to !p m. A Halloween party will
w1th a program to follow at
a m., basket dmner at noon;
be held at the church on Oct 21.
which lime the men ancl women
afternoon services at 2, John
Wya tt , speaker
Spec1al who have worked on the proJect
will be hon ored The event IS
smgmg. Everyone welcome
sponsored by the Women's
ATTEND MEETING
Society of Christian Serv1ce
MONDAY
Mrs. Ruth Euler, Mrs. Mary
Those attendmg are to take
W.S.C.S. HEATH Methodist
Purchase of 75 song books Hughes, Mrs. Nan Moore , MISS
their own table serviCe
was approved at a meetmg Lucille Smith, and Mrs Gladys Church, Middleport, Program
Tuesday mght of the Umted Hayman were at Burr Oak entitled "DIVIded by Race. "
Nancy Collins, 304 Sprmg Ave ,
Faith Non-denommational Wednesday for a meeting of the 7:30 Monday night. Mrs. Beulah
Pomeroy, 7 30 p. m. Bring
Church at the home of Mr , and Retired Teachers Assoc1at10n, Hayes, Mrs. E. M. Wood and
mformat10n on nutntwn for
Miss Nellie Zirkle to serve.
Mrs. Norman E. Hysell. The Southeast D1str1ct
horses
LETART FALLS PTA, Oct.
Rev. Dennis Weaver gave grave
II, Monday, 7:30 p m. Fmal
before a potluck supper atTUESDAY
plans to be made for Oct. 23
tended by 13 adults and e1ght
EASTERN BAND Boosters
jitney supper.
Tuesday at the high school, 8 to
children
SALES SET
MEIGS PLEASURE Riders 9 30 p.m. All mterested persons
An orgamzational meeting for
A ya rd sale will be held
a church chOir was set for Fr1day and Saturday at the Club Monday home of Mrs. urged to attend.
Tuesday mght. Panelmg of the home of Mr. and Mrs Don
church intenor and a reviVal Johnson , Portland, by the
were discussed. Prayer to Women's Society of Christian
conclude the meeting was by Service, Portland United
Hysell.
, Methodist Church

Mrs. Teaford ,.,.:,~.~'~'~.,;~~~--~,.~,~~:,~~,:,.,..,..,. . .,.
Js Honored Rally Day Held

WEEKENDS HERE
Edwa rd
l!obinsol1
of
Cleveland spenl the weekend
w1th Mrs Berth~ Robmson and
Mr and Mrs Pete Shields, East
Tetart

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnold Grate

Less than 10,000 miles by local owner Sharp as new 1n all
ways, wh1te over gold finish , 350 V 8 eng1ne. power
steen ng , radio. wh1te-walls , wh covers

1971 Challenger $3025

1967 Ford

~:~~e~t;v;;;s·~~, tr"Z~~:.~~s

MAY TAG

j

Social
Calendar

Contribution
,.
Made to runu

report. Refreshments were
served by Mrs Focie Hayman,
Mrs Mary Roush, Mrs. Adams,
and Mrs Barbara Dugan.

Red Carpet
Service

Committees Set
rDor PTA Frolic

•
SYRACUSE - The com- Richard Burkhammer.
mittees for the P.T.A
Cane Toss, Carolyn Roush,
Halloween carnival Friday, Dorothy Amberger , Mary
Oct 22 at 7·30 p m m the Chancey, Shirley Huston.
. '
.
. .
Syracuse Elementary school
R. C. Ring Toss, Charles
house, are as follows (chairman Hamilton, Thomas Chapman,
:::::::::·:·:::&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&gt;·:·:·:·~:·:·:·:·:-::;&gt;.:::::::i::::::::: named f1rst) : Games, Faye Danny Brown, Kenneth Nease.
Hamilton, Marybelle Warner,
Pop, Beverly Chapman,
Emogene Holstem, Jeanette Mmnie Harris, Mildred Pierce,
Duffy.
Pat Houdashelt , Charlotte
Fun · iiDuse, Joyce Thoren, Nease.
Pat Winebrenner, Judy Flagg,
Tickets, Janice Deem, Jane
D
...JMary Gumther, Janet Nease Barnett
[!art Board, Mr. Donald
Announcer, David Flag.
·
Salmons and Mr. William Baer,
Door, Elma Louks, Beverly
· cystiC C!HOhairmen, Paul Forbes, Dale Pnce.
A contnbuhon to the
ftbrosis fund drive was made by Warner
Marsha II ' Pete Th oren
Country Kitchen, Helen · Judge, David Nease, Mr. and
the Women's Society of
Chnst1an Serv1ce meetmg Hubbard, Susie Grueser, Mrs Charles Neuman, Rev
Tuesday night at the East Jonet\a DaviS, Marcia Arnold, Forrest Donley
Letart Umted Methodist Betty Joh'lson .
Everyone's help will be apChur~h .
, j
Cotton
Candy,
Jamce prec1ated m decoratmg the gym
It was noted tbat Chnstili"as Lawson, Jean Hall , Doris on the evening of the 21st and
cards and gift wrap are bemg Frtend
afternoon of the 22nd.
sold by the group Thank-you
Balloons, Lmda Hubbard ,
notes were read from the Jos1e Betty Ash, Dee Brown.
·::::::i::::::::::::::::::::·:·:::·:·:·:·&gt;:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·: :-:·:·:
Roush family, Mrs. M~rlene
Sno Cones, Pat Patterson,
SPEAKS TONIGHT
her
and
Mrs
Ferne
Arletta
Vanover
Fis
Mrs.
Harold
Lohse,
Hayman•
'
Cider and Donuts, Daisy
president of District 16, Ohio
Mr •. Focie Hayman pre- Patterson, Lou Ferrell
•
Coffee, Rita Slavin, \.ilona Congress of Parents and
sented the Program entitled
Teachers, will discuss "PTA
"1.1vmg Throuvh Change and, Micha'el
•
P
Structure" at a meeting of the
Beyond Fear," with Mrs. Mabel
Pop Corn, Larry Hubbard, Meigs County Council of
Shields and Mrs Dom Adams Stanley Johnson, Opal Zerkle, Parents and Teachers tonight
lakmg part Scnpture was fr om Louise Frank.
at the Middleport ElemenFish Pond, Nancy Patterson,
lsaiah 40
b
Ch
Sh 1
tary School, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs Eula Wolfe gave Bar ara
apman,
Ir ey
Certificates
will
be
devotions on the topic "What Hubbard, Mrs. Wilham Cougar, presented to those completing
Can Save Us'," re.admg Donna Rae Wolfe, Donna the study course, and there
scnpture from Job and praymg Sellers, Faye Clifford, Mrs will be round-table discussion
Mrs
Mary Roush, v1ce
on the role of PTA. Refresh-

We Specialize m

1970 Chevrdet BelAir-4 Door-- '2795-

space for 2 cars, large storage

1

The annual reuniOn of the
descendants of Andrew Watts
(1807-1899) will be held Sunday,
Oct. 10, at the home of Mr and
Mrs. Harold Wetherholt, 409
First Avenue, Gallipolis
Richard Logan, Columbus,
president of the family
association, and all of these
descendants and their fam1hes
are Invited to join in a basket
dmner at noon. A br1ef business
meeting will follow, after which
old homes and graves of ancestors may be v1s1ted.

TICKETS QN SALE
Tickets are now on sale for
the card party and style show
to be held by the American*
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39 on Oct. 21, 8
p. m, at the hall. All member~ ·
of the unit have tbe Uckets
which are given for a $1
donation. Door prizes and
refreshments are included in
the donation. A style revue
will be presented by Mrs. lola
Bartrum.

Complete Serv1 ce

Middleport, Oh1o

Garage

OWNER . IDA DONAHUE
TERMS CASH
CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
Dan Smrth - 949 2033

cyl., std . trans , rad1o

buil ding , STEAL AT JUST
$8,900.
'
.

Watts Reunion Set

refrtgerator , 2 metal kitchen cabmets . wood kitchen
cabinet. rad1o, library table. 3 pc bedroom su1 te, buffet,
dressers. chest of drawers, metal wardrobe, portable
sew1ng machine, hand tools and items too numerous to
mention
COLLECTIBLES &amp; TOOL5- Horse-drawn wagon, horse
collars. harness, Iron kettle &amp; stand, cradle , stone 1ars,
smg le trees, picture frames. 011 stove . strawberry plow &amp;
others, log chains. barbw1re, smgle cylinder gas engme,
alummum ext ladder, trunks, book s, and etc

OFFICE SUPPLiES

bedrooms , balh, lots of.

DEXTER - 2 story frame, 4
bedrooms , bath,. GREAT
FOR FAMILY, Lot 50x100,

Neutzhng ,
Mrs .
Hattie
Frederick, Mrs. Mary Hayes,
Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs.
Dorothy Myer, Mrs. Doris
Koemg, Mrs. Eulah Swan, Mrs
Elizabeth Wickham, Mrs
,Mabel Van Meter, Mrs Mary
Showalter,. Mrs . Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. Letha Wood, and
Mrs Mary J o Pooler

Maytlg

storage, hardwood floors,

BUSINESS, ESTABLISHED
IN 1951, dorng good busrness
INTERESTED CALL US.

Mrs. Erma Cleland,'· commissioned as deputy of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, was honored at a
meeting of the Council members Tuesday night.
Mrs. Cleland's conurusswn
from State Councilor Alice L
Weaver, was presented at the
meeting conducted by Enzy
Newell. She was excorted to the
altar where a poem was read by
Mrs, Ethel Orr who also
presented a gift to her on behalf
of the Council. Asingle rose was
given to Mrs. Cleland by Mrs
Ada MorriS.
A district meeting to be held
on Sunday at 2 p m. at the
Chester hall was announced. All
deputies and diStriCt officers
are asked to attend. Reported til
were Mrs. Mae Spencer, Mrs.
Zona Biggs, and Mrs. Goldie
Wolfe . Mrs. Opal Hollon
presented the auditing report
which was accepted
A pract1ce for receiving
national and state officers and
for balloting was held In·
spectioh will be held at the Oct.
19 meeting and members are
asked to wear white
Attending besides those
named were Mrs Margaret
Tuttle, Mrs Jean Summerfield,
Mrs. Helen Wolf, Mrs Barbara
Sargent, Mrs . Thelma Whtte,
Mrs Mary K Holter, Mrs Ada

r · ----------------~._--~----~--~
B1g Capactty

SPECIAL 11:.
d
95
F
966
1
or
·------------T_,
fairlane 500 4 door Local owner. new t1res, clean mt , 6

4 SPEED transmrssron lor 289 'SIX ROO/II house, bath, full"'
- $75 Phone 949 4843.
~aseme~l . 133 Bullern~l Ave.,
10·6·61p
JUS I walktng drs lance . from'
FARM and Home latex house

-

Deputy Honored

followrng at the farm located off S R 338 at Apple Grove,
Ohio Turn 1usl above old U S Locks 23 Walch for and
follow sale •rgns off S R 338.
HOUSEHOLD - Motorola TV , Syn Ray gas stove.

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

1970 Coronet

608 East Mam
POMEROY

SYRACU SE
DRIVE' IN,
BUILDING
AND
ALL
POTATOES lor winler Ken·
EQUIPMENT, dorng nrce
nebec, red Pon t 1ac 1 mile off
busrness, OWNER HAS
124 on 338 fowar~ terry Great
OTHER INTERESTS. JUST
Bend Tom Sayre, Phone 843
$18,500.
2436.
- 11!·6 6lp
PLACE THE ~AL£ QF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
FABULOUS fake mrnk look fur
COMPETENT HANDS
coat. s1 ze 38, Jf• length, never
HENRY E. CLELAND
been worn, $30, pre-styled
REALTOR
platmum wig, never be~n
Office 992-2259
worn , $15 w1lh case and w1g
ReSidence 992-2568
form. Call 992-3816
10 5 61c
10·6.31c

-----------

606 E. Ma.n, Pomeroy , 0 .

11-The DAily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 7, ~~

Havmg sold my farm and mov1ng to Florida I Will se ll the

J0x45 1n 1Ce apartment over, 3

. 14' · 24' ·,WIDE

· Open 8Trl'l
Monday thru Saturday

s,

Realty
BUSINESS AND .HOME OF
YOUR OWN FOR ONE
PR IC~ 1 - 2 slory burldrng

12~

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., OCT. 9, 1971-12:30P.M.

2 Dr H.T .. console, auto . trans ., AM- FM, P.S .,
radio, Rallye wheels, black vinyl top. red
finish, extra clean, low mileage .

Cleland

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

992-7608

1mmed1ate
see, phone

Gallrpol rs 4'6 9539affer 5 p m

'5.55

Sat~rday

6·30·11"'
BEFORE SELLING OR
BUYING, TRY US
HELEN L. TEAFORD
O' DELL WHEEL al ,gnm ent
ASSOCIATE
located at Crossroads, Rt 124
992-3325 or 992-2378
Complele front en d serv1ce,
10 3 61c
tun e up and brake serv1 ce
· Wheel s balanced elec t ro ni c ally
All
work
HOUSE . 1642 Lrncoln Heights
guaran
teed
.
Reasonable
Call Danny Thompson, 992ra tes Phone 992 3213
1
2196.
on large lot, 250ft by 250 It on
7 27-tfc
SR 124 rn Syracuse, Ohio
7 18 tic
Available
occupancy

Wheel Alignment

8:30 a.m.to 1p.m.
I?HqN E 992-7474

Septrc Tanks
And Leach Beds

older home. bath , co rner lot

your very own, wlfh 2 r entals

EXPERT

JOHN IE'S
BEAutY SHOP
and Slate Rt. 7
Hours-Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Frrday
8 30a.m to6p.m
Thursday
10a.m. to8:30p.m.

And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

2 ACRES - Near Pomeroy All
ulll l lleS

t

Corner Union AvP. .

Phone 949 3821
Bedford Townshrp, Wolfpen MIDDLEPORT - 10 room
Racme , Ohio
older ho m e Near stores
Road
20 m1nutes irom
Cntt Bradford
$3,500
00
Pomeroy J" of land 1n t1mber,
5 l-Ife
ba lance 1n pasture
No
"
buildrngs Call 992 2152 and 5 BEDROOMS - New spirt READY MIX
CONCRETE
level w1lh 4 acres on RI 7
ask for DICk
del ive red nght to yo ur
9 22 ffc
projec t Fast and easy Fret
RACINE - 3 n1 ce bedroom s,
esftm'afes Phone 992 3284
ba th, larg e modern kJ tc hen
7 ROOM blo ck house , 4
Goeglern Ready Mrx Co ,,
and d1 n 1ng Gas furnace

Paul Sayre, Portland. Ohro,

budget terms

B.:oker
110 Mechamc Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o

HILTON WOLFE

BILL NELSON
992-3657

Room Add1tions

$2 300 WILL nuv .d acres 1n

grown ,

Fal ls

1

-

10 5 6tp

FURN ISHED and unf urnrshed
Phone 992-5434

Virgil B.

Telephone 992 3600 or 992
Garage SIO.OOO 00
2166
___________!.e7e!c25=
1fc POMEROY - A busrness of

ex tra n1ce. 1ust dug for w1nter
use Cobblers and Kennebecs

4 ROOM and balh furnrs hed

- -- --

'

motor wdh trailer , $325

10 7 tfc

Rea I Estate For Sale

NEW , J bedroom home In
Middleport Bu111 1n kitchen,
ceramic tile bath , all electnc
heat , good ne1ghborhood Can
arrange FHA fmancmg

apartment Tele phone 773
5145, Ma son, W Va on mq 1n
h1ghway
Rey nold s Flower

Me tgs Cou n ty CommtSS1o ne rs

Rac1ne , Oh1o

Phone 992 5523 after 4 p m
5 7 tfc

STEREO, Walnul modern slyle.

For Rent

-

RED AND Green peppers, prc k

16 FT LINEMAN boat. 30 hp

Bradford, Auct1oneer
·
1071tc

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed btds will be rece1ved
by the Board of Me1gs Co unt y
Comm tSStoners at the tr oft1ce 1n
the Co ur th ouse , Pomeroy , Ohto
unt il 9 OOa m O'clock, Oc tober ,
12 197 1. for coal
Spectft caltons as follows
Lump coal deltvered 1n two
ton lo t s to the Courthouse and
Stoker Coal F 0 B e~t m 1ne
The Board of County Com
mtsstone r s reserve the nght to
re1ect any or all bt ds

10 7 3tp

and Will sell the following
arl1cles, located 2112 m iles

C Bradford , Mgr., C C

51 , Mrddleport , phone 992
7252
10 5 31c

Pomeroy , Rt 2 Phone 992-

3930

10 7 3tc

Syracuse
H1l ls 1de pl ow,
M cCor mick
mow1ng
mach me , horse drawn wagon ,
Pr work harness anvil ,
forge , 6 1n v1se, 26 1n c ha m
•,saw l D Bradley ). gnnder ,
house 1ack , heavy du ty steel
bed trailer , bu tc henng kett le,
5 18 It railroad 1rons, I 10 fl ,
buzz saw, m1lk cans, used 12
11 bndge plank . chams, sa'ws,
shove ls, augers , Cant hook , 6
1n belt 35 ft , Dodge school
bus chass is, 40 000 B. T U
Kenmore hea te r, coal healer,
ad lamps. bn c a bra e, set of
d!shes, bowlmg ball. books,
qu1lts, three beds, dressers.
k tlchen cabtnet, two rocking
cha1rs, many 1lems not li sted
Terms· CASH No! respon
s1ble for a cCi dents A lpha
Russell. owner Brad ford
Auct1on Co , Racme , Oh1o A

YARD
SALE
Porlla nd
W S C S, Frrday Oct 8, 10

Farm ,

AUCT ION I ha ve sold my farm

1920 model , 6 fl

10 6-3tc

Burdette

Ne tgle r.

gutter Ca ll Donald Smrth

10 7 31c

Cho1ce 1ocat1on m Middleport
Seen by appomtment only

10510tc

your own . $2 bu she l Bnng
con tamers
Ear l Adams ,
Letart Falls

S1gns), Saturday, October 9,
11 00 am ' Farmall trac tor,

at the Laur el Cl 1ff Free
M ethod1sl Church, sponsored
by
t he
youth
S1 nger s
welcome

Johnson res tdence

APPLE S,

north ol Sf Rl 124 on Hysell
Run Rd (Watch lor Sale

HYMN SING Sunday, at 2 p m

10 5 31p

Phone 843 2254

Auction

10-6-3tc

Sm rfh Phone 742 3694

bushe l
P1ck you~ own
Clarence Proffitt , Portland

- - -- -

Spor t sman Club, Sunday ,
October 10, 12 noon

water House. downstairs. dry
basement w1th gas .furna ce ,
l1v1ng room . bedroom , k1f
chen d 1nmg area together,
buil t 1n cabme l s, built tn
oven , bath , wall to wall
carpet
Upsta1rs
3
bedroom s, plenty of c loset
space. Out of Harnson v1lle on
Cou nt y Road 17 , Landon

10 5-3tc

Ca ll Guy

Rac1ne , Oh1o For repair and
alumi num Siding , soffet and

HA LF RUN NER bean s, $1 3 BEDROOM brrck home

OLD Furniture, d1shes. clocks ,
and or comp le te households
Wn te M D Miller , Pomeroy ,

GUN SHOOT , Forked Gun

land

-

Kitchens, Baths

your new home W1ll draw
prmts to su1t the lay of your

~-----

tanteo To Buy

9 22 30tp

3 29 tic

-

Complete
Remodeung

Henry Bahr , Phone 985 3988 NEIGLER Burld rng Supply
10 7 6tp
Free est1mate on bulldmg

Boy cha~r, two table lamp s,
one go cart Harl 1s Frank ,

9 26 111c

Gobese tablets and E Vap
~ Wat er Pllls Nelson Drug s

between Ch'ester and Tuppers
Pla1ns w1th water tap W1th or
w1thout 25 wooded acres

ONE SI MMONS sofa, one Lazy

9 24 tfc

REDU CE sate and fa ,t wtth

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Au thonzed S1nger Sales and
Serv1ce We Sharpen Sc1ssors

1 60o FT of Frontage on Rt 7

St , Mrddleport

JOHNS9N MASONRY :

SEW ING MACHINES. Reparr
servrce, all makes, 992-22ll4,

Real Estate For Sale

tw o year
old
Kenmore
elec tnc dryer . $90 Electr~ c
heater, $5 Fou r pa 1r of
drapes, $8 All m good shape

phone 985 3368

-

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septtc tanks mstalled George
(Bill I Pullins, Phone 992-2478
4-25 tfc
9 26 30tc

2608

Co.

Phone 992-2550
Insured . Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See
us
for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

and bath each, near new
housmg pro1ect Trade for
sma l ler house. Phone 992

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

Call 992 5510

d1flonmg .
, 24~ Lrncoln

W Va 25311,orphone304925
3279
9 30 60tp

!read $5 Phone 992 2958
10 5-3tp 175 ACRE farm . 3 ponds, free
gas, t1mber , farming and
10 6-3fc GAS HEATER, 30.000 BTU $20,
pasture land. well and c1stern

IMMEDIATE open rng for a

10 3 61c

21 ffc

Construdion

&amp;
and _An-.

thony flumbing &amp; Hedttng.
Complete
Plumbtng,
Healing and AJr Con·

ra 1sed, moved , underpmned,
remodeled Est1mates free,
anywhere Nat1onal House
M over s, Box 5002 , Charleston,

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

c 1rculatmg heaters
Phone 992 5262 even1ngs

FOUR NEW HOMES .
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HDME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILABLE
100
be purchased wlth a
A 3 bedroom $16,900 00 horne .can
f 'I with a base
thl
~ ment as low as $65 00 fof a amr Y
•
mon
Yfpa$5 000 00 and· three children 7'1• Pet. annual
sa lary o
• ·

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
'ROOF PAINTING

HOUSE MOVING Houses, etc

10 I 61c

GA ~

'56 BUI CK, runnmg condtllon ,
cheap spare parts, 3 speed
standard
Tempe st
fra n
sm 1sS10n r ebuil t, early 60s ,
$40
64 Pont1ac automatte
tra nsmi SS I On, repairab le,
dnve shaft and flywheel. $10
each 735xl5 T&amp;C , 1h ongma l

Male He Ip Wanted

ANYONE 1nterested 1n formmg
a small organ 1zat1on for t he
ca re of pets , such as dog s,
ca ts &amp; b1rds , please call 992

6976

~~

Krd s back

home for

pre school children Mr s
Glenn Sm1 lh, Rock Sprmg s

State Route 689,

10 5-61p

928121&lt;

949 3703 - 446 4146

-

Dubbeld , phone 742 5625 ,
Rutland
10 • Sic

1800 se n es, long wheel base ,
good sol1d cab, good con
d1f 1on Phone 985 3988

MUMS, all col or s, fte ld grown,
ready to go B1g clu sters
Rey nol ds
Flower
Shop .
Mason, W Va

school' T 1me on your ha nds
JOin Beel 1ne Fash1ons Ca ll

1

10 5-3tc

HOUSE - Two a pis, 4 rooms

Female Help Wanted
MOTHERS!

ad rust - $4 Phone 992 7085
10 4 6tc

standard. A-1 cond1t1on ms1de NEW con tracto r 1n area Dry
and out New t1res and low
wall
patchmg
general
mrleage Phone 992 2669
pa1nt1ng Ca ll R1 c hard I

Ftlzpalrrck Or

9

WIL L PAY well lor your spare
t im e work 1ng at home for us
Anyone who can read and
wnte ca n qual1 fy Week ly
salary
For' deta ils wnte
James Bliss Co , P 0 Box
32 4, De pt K 479 Lev 1ttown

OCT. 4 TO 16

10 6 4fc

1961 STUDE BilKER , 6 cyl

phone Wilkesv rlle, 669-3785
9 3 ffc

FOR DETAILS!

HARVEST OF VALUES
SALE AT LANDMARK

8 15 lfc

SEWING mach1ne serv 1ce m
your home Clean, 0 11 and

9 21 -30tp 1965 IN TERNATIONAL truck ,

PHONE 992-2156

Notice

phone 985 3807

STAR' kill s r at s qu1 ck l y
Sure
2 1 &lt; pounds
$1 69
Ebersbach Hardware, Sugar
Run Mill s, Pi ckens Hard
wa re Ma son

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

Card of Thanks

'·

5443

Owner &amp; Operator

1954 DODGE truck, 2 ton s 13 tfc
$300 Phone 949 3915
10 6 3tp SEPTIC tanks cleaned -Miller
Sanda lion, Stewarl, Ohi o Ph
1966 PONTIAC Lemans. 19M
662 3035

Park v1ew Kennels Phone 992

Help Wanted

Advert1sem~nl

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates Ph . 446-4782,
Ga ll rpo lrs John Russell.

Pon t 1ac Catal1na Contact
Geral d R Dougla s, Baum
Addll1on. Rt J. Pomeroy or

•

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
' 15 If&lt; I All Wea1her ~oofrng

~~----

Auto Sales

POODLE pupp,es, Srlver Toy ,

2Sc Charge per

2966

Valley Eslates Mobrle Home
Sales, Rf 50 East Athens 593 8762
9-19-371&lt;

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

BLIND ADS

Add1t10nal

10 4 6tc

caDcelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992

Get your new mobile home
now See James S1mpkms,

9·8 30tp

PORTAB LE Ne cch r 21g zag

970 SCHULTZ mobrle home

CAR 0 OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

9 29 12tp

envelopes Ru sh stamped
self addressed envelope The
Ambrose Co , 4325 Lakeborn .
Dav1sburg, M1ch , 48019

For Sale

.:om- ecu tt ve Inser tions
18 cents per word SIX con
secut 1ve tnsert10ns
25 Per Cent 01 scount on pa1d
ads and ads pa1d w 1th 1n 10 days

HACKNEY'S Electric Service.
all types of eleclrrcal work
Gl FINANCfNG' AVAILABLE .
Phone 992 6407
No down payment, 12 years to
9-29-301&lt;
pay to qualrfred Gl Up to
$2.500 available for lot lm
provements 1f you own a lot AUTOMOBILE1nsurance been

Mobile Homes for Sale

EAR N AT home addressrng

tan beegle, Saturday evenmg
1n Rutland Rew ard Phone

RATES

1

r&gt;omeroy Phone 992 3891

- ..t.9.ttc •

( R)

'

Business Services

HEADBOARD and fro sfed wrg HARRISON'S TV and Antenn~
lrmeston~ Excels.,\'1
Serv1ce , Phone 992 2522
Works, E. Ma in St.,. Besl offer Phone 992 6976
10 6 3tc
6 10 If&lt;

tn

Wat c hers

The Publisher reserves t he
right to ecM or reted any ads·
obtecf1onal

~OAL .

rnen Interested 1n a Wetght

Day of Publlcatton

deem ed

For Sale

ABO UT YOUR WEIGHT
overwetght lad1es, teens and

Will be acCepted u-ntl f9a m for

For S~le

I

Pomero~

" .

Mrs. Mildred Tubbs, ,Pomeroy, underwent major surgery
Wednesday at O'Bieness Hospital m Athens. If anyone needs
cheering up it is Mildred. She has spent her entire life domg for
others; now it is our turn . Her room number is 3!9B.
SPEAKING OF HOSPITAL patients, Mrs. George
(Genevieve) Schneider, Syracuse, has just returned home from
Holzer Medical Center while Mrs. Marlene Fisher, s1xth grade
teacher at Pomeroy Elementary, is confined at Holzer for an
indefinite time.
·
QUITE UNUSUAL are the birthday anniversaries of Paula
SWatzel and Roger Sayre, son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Sayre of Syracuse. Both Paula and Roger were born on the
same day, four years apart that is.
Best wishes to botli.
ROSE GINTHER, POMEROY, and her son and family, Mr.
and Mrs. James Ginther and son Philip of Middletown, Ohio,
recently relurned home following a two weeks vacation in
Colorado Springs, Colo.
They visited the Ginthers' son George who is attending the
U.S. Alr Force Academy at C61orado Springs.
Traveling 4,000 miles, they saw their first snowfall on Sept.
17; in fact, their camping lraUer became stalled in snow on one of
the 'llounlalns.
They traveled the southern route to Colorado, stopping on the
way \0 vi.llt Mr. and Mrs. John Cotter, the former Evelyn Ross,
and rebJrned hcme the northern route.
Rose was delighted with her trip and is ready to go back
. again. She stated that the w:ealher was not ememely cold as you
might think, wltha11110wfall.She said Colorado Is beautiful.
I

Pernlanent Color - Won't Fade!
Galva-Guard Red
GAL

7.20 ~NGAL

LOTS ·

Per Gallon-7.35

Galva-Guard Green
GAL.

7.3 5 ~"c,AL

•.

LOTS

Per. Gallon-7.50

It pays to buy our best Galva-Guard by Vanguard. Goes farther. lasts
longer. Permanent color, won't fade . For metal roofs, wood &amp; metal
buildings, shutters, lawn furniture and masonry surfaces.

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN ST,

POMEROY
Clean-Up - Paint Up - Fix-Up NoUJ

•

�•

Get Result~il ,
Sentinel Cla.ssifieds Get Action /.Sentinel Classifieds
.....
Busfuess Se_rvices _. __,
10 _ ~ llollv Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomaov. 0 Oct. 7. 1971

~

••

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publ ,calror
J,\anday De&lt;ldlrne 9 a m
~ll4tlon

Notice

a. Correcti2n~

REGULATIONS

~al t

Walchers (R), 1863 Seclron

MIN IA TUR E Schnauzers AKC pupp1es , no sheddmg,
odorless, permane nt shots ,
wormed , $85 Coolville 667

Pomer oy

wrlle

Cla ss

Wetghl

Rd . Ctnctnnalt , Ohto 45237

10 3 lfc

The-

6214

Lost

publt sher wtll not be respons tble
for more than one Incorrect
SHORT legged small black and
InsertiOn
For Want Ad Se rvtce

7&lt;2 4179

Sce nt s per Word one tnsertton
Mtmmum Charge 75c
12 cents per word thre&lt;

10 7 31c

.

sew1 ng mach1ne, ma kes
buttonholes, fa shion des 1gns,
elc Total pr1ce $32 50 Phone

60 x 12 w1th expando , two
bedroom s, e)C.cellent con
d1t 1on Ma ke us an offer See

anyl rme , 982 Hyse ll Sf ,
Mrddleport
10 6 'tc

$1 50 tor 50 word m1n1mum
Each add1t1ona 1 word 2c

992 7065

OFFICE HOURS
8 30am toSOO pm Da1ly ,
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturda y

WANTED!

I WI SH to lhank my ne1ghbors
and fnends for the n1c:e g 1fts,
cards a nd beaut1ful flowers
g1 ven me 1n observance of my
b 1rf hday God bl ess each one
Mrs Lena Wells
10 7 ltG

AP PLES chards,

~2

Prtzes&amp; Bargams
~1,000 FIRST PRIZE
5500 SECOND PRIZE
5 PRIZES ofSIOO

Pa 19053

{In Mdse From Landmark )
Plus 200 more pr11es
no purchase necessary

J::.

POMEROY
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
_
Phone 992 ·'2181

BABY SITT ING rn

my

Rd , phone 992 6187

man over 21 years old to work
1n our store Mu st have good
per sonal ity , l1ke t o meet
publiC, w1llmg to assum e
respons1b111 t y. vaca t 1on plan
hosp1 fa llzat1on plan and other
fnnge benefits Plea se sta te
sa la ry req u1rem en ts Send
resume of presen t and past
employers t o Box 729 L co
The Da1ly Sent1nel, Pomeroy
Oh10'

10 7 6tc

SAVE up to one half Bnng you r
s1ck TV to Chuck s TV Shop
151 Butt(;rnu t Ave , Pomeroy

phone 992 SQBO

Ohro Call 992 6271

GUN SHOOT Sun day, October
10, 1 p m ,jlacrne Gun Club
10 6 4tc

8 25 lie

am to 6 p m and Satu rda y,

Oct 9 9 am to noon at Don

10 5 3tc

KOSCOT Kosme t 1cs for sale,
delivered to your door New
pr oduct s
com1ng
out
r eg ularly Would you like to

try lhem' Call 992 5113
105 11c
PEP-UP w1th new Z1pp1es 1ron
pills Non-hab it form 1ng Only
Sl 98 , Nel son Drugs

9 22 30tp

WIL L DO sew 1ng 1n my home
Mr s Arthur Barr , 581 Gran t

drsc.

1 BEDROOM lrader apart
men! , 1deal for couples
Contact M cClure 's Dairy Isle.

992 5248 or 992 3436

10 6-Sip

HOUSE rn Tuppers Plains on
Rt

7, references requ1red

Phone 667-3956.

Martha Cha mber s,
Cle rk
{9) 30 (10)? 'll

10 6 3fc

Phone 667 3333

10 7 3tc

WARM MORNING gas heater,
48 ,750 btu Antique organ ,
Dutnam 75 years to 100 years

old Phone Nellie Duddrng,
New Haven, W Va 882-3229
10-7 3tp
POTATOES , home

Shop

TIMES FOR HOLDING
COMMON PLEAS COURTS ,
A 0 197'2

apartments Close to school

It tS ordered thai the terms of
the Common Plea s Court 1n th e
County of MEIGS for the y ear
197'2 be f 1xed as ~ all ows . to w11
On the Jrd day of January and
the 151 day of Ma y and the l st
de y of Septem ber and the sa1d
te r ms of sa1d cou rt begtns at
9 00 o 'clock AM
J OHN C BACON

Judge of Co mm on
Plea s Courf
Me1gs County , OhtO
( 10) 7 ,.. 21 , 31

10 18-tfc

r2X60 MOBILE home, 2 bd rm ,
washer

and

dryer,

on

Bulavllle Porter Rd Ca ll 615
1319
10 3 6tc

TRAILER space, desrrabl e
nerghborhood, phone 992 2084
9 19 ltc

.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Courl, Rl 124, Syracuse,
Jhlo. 992 2951.
'
4·2-tfc

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR, INC.

TRAILER spaces, exira large,
overlooking lhe Ohio Rrver $25 a mon fh Velma G

PHONE NUMBER
992-2174
FOR"' SALES
&amp;SERVICE

Zuspan, f'.Aa son, W. Va

- 10·5·20ic

APARTMENTS, furnrshed or
unfurn ished. beaut1flll large
rooms , central heat. garbage
dispo sal. dls'lt~sher. car -

pets Phone 992-3074

.

10 5 6tc

TEAFORD
SR.

MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom

Jl 2 miles below Ravenswood

Ferry on Rt 338 Phone 843
2286
10-7-3tc
SWEET peppers, hot peppers .
$1 a bushel. p1 ck your own
Mar sha l l Adam s, Letart

I0-76tc

COAL tacketed heated wrlh fan,
Larkin St , Rutland, across
fr om F1re House Tom An
derson

10 5 3tc

4 speaker sound system. 4
s peed automat1c cha ng er,
Balance $65 71
Use our

budget terms. Call 992 7085
10 4 6fc

EARLY Amencan Stereo-rad1o
combmat1on , AM FM rad1o , 4
speaker sound system . 4
spee d automat1c changer
Balance $
Use our

I 992-7085.
10 4-6tc

bedrooms, llv1ng room , dm1ng
room , bath w1th shower. large
kdchen w1th lots of built m
birch cab1ne t s Hardwood
floor s Natura l gas furnace ,
50 gallon elect n c water
heater , 2 large recreat1on
rooms . paneled 1n basement,
2 porches, garage, concrete
dnvewar, Ia rge yard w1th
plenty o shade trees, located
for
To

week days tor appotntment .

10 3 tl

CONVEN 1ENT but secluded

budd mg lots on H9 at R ~ck
Springs. Wilh1n walkmg
d 1stan ce of M e1gs H1gh
School. a 5 mmute dnve from
Pomeroy Call or see Bill
W1 t te weekends, or after 5
p m weekdays Phone 992

6887

10 3 61c

POMEROY

MILLER

MOBIL£ KOMES
'mo Washmgton Blvd .
Belpre, Ohio

HOME &amp; AUTO

pa1nl

sale ,

Ktng

Supply, Middleport.

Builder s

10 6 12tc

--

606

E.

And

FURNITURE
Stop ln..aqd See Our
Floor Displ'ay .
ROSEBERRY

furnace

rn

stallat 1on Free est1mates on
new f urnaces. oil or gas
Serv1ce work Ca l l Cecil
Ro se berr y, Ra ci ne , Oh1o

Phone 614-843·2274

9 8-301p

AWN 1NGS, storm door s and
windows.
c arports ,
marquees, alum1num s1dmg
and ra ll1 ng Call A Jacob,
sales representat1ve For free '
estimates ,. phone Charles
L1sle , Syracuse
V
V ,
Johnson and Son, Inc
i

5 ll tfc

THE SHOP , C11stom meal
cutHng. Pleasal\l'Rtdge Road,
Pomeroy 01ck Vaughan . 992

3374 and Dale Lrllle, 992-6346
91 2301c
_,

C. BRADFORD, Auctroneer

, ·

JtU/IY.PRICJ'D USIDCARS

downtown PomerotN Contact'

od Hedrick, 2137

adswo' t~

Unve, Columbus, Oh10, phon ,

237,4334, Columbus

5·9-lfd,

IN COSHOCTON
In Coshocton Tuesday
evemng attending a meeting of
Group 7 of the Ohw Bankers
Assn were Tom Wolfe, Racine
Home-Na tiona l Bank · Joan
Harnson and Millie Midkiff
Pomeroy Natwnal Bank and'
Roger Hysell and Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., The Farmers Bank
and Savmgs Co

Automatics
2 speed operatton
Cho ice of water
temps
Auto
water
level
co ntro l
L 1nf
Ftl l er or Powe1
~ ~ n Ag1fa tor
Perma -Pren
Maytag
Halo of Hear
Dryers
Surround clothes
w1th gentle, even
heat No hot spots,
no overdrymg
IFJne Mesh L 1nt
F liter

Racme, Ohio
Not respons•ble for accidents or loss of property

~HIIJH1'.111Cl71PDIIIJIIKAIGIJ

AWORD
TO THE
WISE:

Will be Bought

WE'RE HERE TO DO
THE JOB FOR YOU

1970
Camaro Cpe. ------- '3295
Less than 11,000 mrles appearance of 71 model Rally

&amp;
Sport equipped. Class1c copper w1th sandalwood Inter ior,
tmted glass. factory a1r conditioned, sport s m 1rrors,
console, air spoiler , turbo hydromat1c, power st~ring &amp;
brakes, 350 cu 1n V 8 engtne. Really Sharp

1970 Dodge Polara·~------·$2495
ve

4 or,
eng1ne, automatic trans , P S , factory a~r, good
fires, rad io &amp; other extras, white fmish, clean lntenor

1967 Ford Mustang -~---- $1595
HT Cpe, 1 owner &amp; very n1ce, V-8 eng1ne, w1de oval tires,
p
P B., factory a1r cond , rad1o &amp; other extras

Dart 4 ~-----$1495

c.utomat1c trans . radio. clean mterlor

1965 Buick Special 4 Dr.-----~

Station Wagon , 9 pass., A.T., A. C., P
brakes .

S.

&amp;

$1495

Galaxie XL, 2 dr . H.T., A.T., P.S., vinyl top.

$1195

V 8 motor. auto. trans , radio, good w-s.w tires, white

,frnlsh, like new blue vinyl Int.

'1966 Comet 2

Door------..:.~95

6 Cyl., std: trans .. new tires, needs grille, bumper &amp; hood
SPECIAL'

1964 Chev. BelAir 4 Door ·-----'695

1964 Falcon Sta. Wagon·----J169
~

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co., Pomeroy Motor ~
MIDDLEPORT 992·2151 · 992·2152

100 LOIS- 100'

X

120'

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9th
1:00 P.M. PROMPT
'

RODNEY VILLAGE _, 2

992-212~ ,

Celebrated
Beaver. Judy Lavender, Lisa
Whlttmgton, Ray Mowery,
K1tty Pugh, Trent Ney, Ivan
Lane, Tmuny Just1s, Tinuny
Mtlier, Mike Dent, Terry Sm1th,
VIcky Riley, Darlene Robmson,
Mary F1tzpatnck , Ronme
Davis, Angela Martm, Ray
Stewart, Jamie Scally, Margo
Marttn, Randy Batey, Dorsel
Thomas, Lisa Scaggs, Joni
Murray , and Leshe Whit·
tmgton . Unable to attend was
Enc Oiler.
ABOARD INTREPID
MINERSVILLE - Navy
Petty Off1cer Third Class
Emerson R Johnson, husband
of Mrs Anna K. Johnson of
Route I, Minersville, is aboard
the anti-submarine warfare
aircraft earner USS Intrepid
wh1ch parhctpated m the NATO
Stnke Fleet Exercise Royal
Knight in the Eastern Atlanti&lt;
The seven-day exercise which
ended Oct. 4 mcluded 35 war·
ships and 200 aircraft from
Canada , the Umted Kingdom ,
Norway , the Netherlands and
the Umted States
HOMECOMING SET
The annual homecoming of
the Flatwoods Methodist
Church will be held Sunday with
a basket dinner at noon. Af.
ternoon servtces will begm at
I 30 p. m With the Rev. Jacob
Lehman
dehvenng
the
message. There Will be special
smgmg. Everyone Is welcome
to attend
CALLED TO MARION
Mr and Mrs. Larry Hudnall
were called to Marion Tuesday
by the death of hiS father ,
Charles Hudnall. He IS survived
by hiS wtfe, two sons, and a
daughter. Fu/leral services will
be held at I p m. Fr1day at the
Demmg Thomas Funeral Home
m Marion

Galva-Guard Roof Paint

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

designed for lhe Wyman Caldwell farm located on Route 35 (~ mrles west of the
~ew

Hol zer Med1ca l Center) ..A sign w i ll be o~ th~ prqperty , ,
A f easi bility study s~ows th1s property is a prime locat1on for prof1table
commercial or res 1dent1al uses. This development has been planned and la1d

ouf with city properly specifrcafron tof sizes- 100' bv 120', all lots face 50 fool
streets, sewer &amp; city water will be In front of each lot
This message is to all people in this area planning to build, buy
or Invest . Be at this sale Saturdilv the 9th . Restricted enough to
protect your investment, this is al) auction where you can buy at
your own price, so don't miss this sale. Oct . 9th at 1:00 PM.
Land ownership is the sure basis for TRUE WEALTH, (Not
the stock market) .

_4Mi.~

+-&lt;PMi-

w

NEW
lo\01.1U.

HoiPIT~

l;;;~t.T.

(SJ

35

llbOMI.Y
Gallipolis &amp; Galli a County os on the move. "The pro]ected vrowth area of Ohio."
We have 100 home sites to be sold. Drive out &amp; choose your lot. Attend our sale
sat,, Oct. 9th. Small down payment &amp; e•cellenlterms.

·Your Chevy Dealer
Opef'l J:ves. Til 9 .

God's love, to involve us in work
w1th young children and create
a bet.ter understanding and a
source of encouragement fu1
the creative abilities of young
people "
Mrs. Jenme Warth and Mrs.
Frances Hunnel sang "For the
Beauty of the Earth."
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Theodosia Frecker, Mrs .
Hunnel presided at the business
meeting . Several members
reported tn • the recent
workshops l'&lt;ew rcaamg books
were distributed and members
were urged to begm their
readmg
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Agnes
Weeks, Mrs. Beulah utterbach,
Mrs Ethel Smith, Mrs. Dorothy
Smith, Mrs. Nancy Smith, Miss
Dorothy Long, MISS Fneda
Le1vmg, Mrs Bermce Evans,
Mrs. Agnes DIXon, Mrs. Jean
Blazew1cz, Mrs. Cordelia Bentz,
Mrs. Beatnce Buck, Mrs. Susan
Pullins, and Patty Edwards,
Artie Hunnel, David and Darrm
Warth

The above aenal photograph Is of the proposed new housmg project ·wh1ch 1s

8 Cyl., anto. trans .• local 1 owner lady driven car, radio

Coronet 4 dr . sedan, AT., P .S., radio.

Dependable City

~~s~;~~t ~~e~~;:~o;~u!~~a;:

75 Song Books

270 Series, vinyl roof, white finish , all good tires, 6 cyl .

1969 Chevrolet

Bz•-t-thdary

Dedication Set

Smart buy ers all over this
area have found the place
to really sa ve money IS at
Pomeroy Motor Co Your
bu smess 1s Important to us
and we' l l do everything
poss 1ble to mak e you a
regular cus tomer If you've
been thmk1ng about a new
or used car, make a point of
see1ng our selecf 1on

1~ Dodge

2 Dr. H. Top , V 8, console, A.T. , P. S., radio,
road wheels .

1966-Dodge

Rutland, 0.

Love Is·-Theme
At WSCS Meet

THURSDAY
CLEANING DAY, Rutland
Inter pre tatiOns of "Love
United Methodist Church. All
day, any time, taking clearung Is. " In art work by children
and adults was the emphasis of
supplies.
a program presented by Mrs
MEIGS COUNTY Council,
Margaret Ella LewiS at a
PTA , Thursday 1 30 P m meeting Tuesday mght of the
Middleport Elementary School Women's Society of Christian
EVANGEUNE Chapter 172 Service of the Ente rpnsc
O.E.S • Middleport, Thursday, Umted Methodist Church
7 30 P m. Electwn of officers.
Mrs. Lewts dtsplayed "Love
Members are asked to pay dues. Is .. " free expressiOn drawmgs
WALK·IN Garden Club by children m the Pomeroy
Thursday, 7:30 p.m home of Elementary Art Club, and then
Mrs. Clarence Storyb.l Bring had each member of the WSCS
arrangement suiia e for draw her interpretatiOn of the
Halloween . Anyone mterested "love" theme. Each one then
m jommg the club IS mvited to displayed her work and gave
attend.
the mtrepretat10n Mrs Lewts
BRICKLAYERS Local 32, 8 was mtroduced by Mrs. Claude
P m. Thursday at Drew Webster Husted, program cha1rman
Post 39, Amencan Legion
"Freedom for Expression of
Home. Refreshments.
Faith" was the program topic
CATHOLIC Women 's Cl ub, Group singmg of "This Is My
Sacred Heart Church, 8 p.m Father's World," and scripture
Thursday preceded by rosary from Col 3, 12--17 were used
and Mass at 7:15 P m
Mrs Husted explained the
YOUTH Against Cancer purpose of the program as an
meeting at 7·30 this evemng at mcent1ve to move "toward
st . p au 1 Lu th eran Ch urc h , freemg our imagmatwn and
p
F t
t
f
omeroy. Irs mee mg o new creat1ve abilities, to allow us to
' teres ted m become more expressive of
sc hoo 1year an d a tl m
JOining mv1 ted to be presen t.
'
FRIDAy
DANCE Fnday Wahama
H1gh School gym 8 30 to II: 30
f 1
p.m Jays will emcee. Ad·
mission 75c. School sponsor•?,
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs Ke1th Black was honored at
Chapter, DAR, will meet the Middleport Commumty
Friday, 2 p.m at the home of Park Tuesday after school with
Mrs. Patnck Lochary. Mrs. a party m observance of his lOth
birthday
Mrs. Frances Wh1ttmgton
................ ~ the speaker. Members are to ass1sted Mrs Eulah Francis
,
respond to roll call w1th com- With the party. Games were
ments on DAR membership played with pnzes gomg to the
Mrs. Dwight Milhoan and Mrs. wmners and pictures of the
group were taken. Cake, ICe
Rally day was observed Dor Schaefer Will be co- cream, potato chips, and punch
ANTIQUITY - Mr and Mrs. Sunday at the Tnmty Church hostesses.
were served. G1fts were
SATURDAY
Jack Teaford of Nelsonville wtth the program bemg
presented to Ke1th and balloons
SQUARE DANCE Saturday
entertained Sunday, Sept. 26, at dediCated to Mrs. Lena Huber
and suckers were gtven as
their home m Nelsonville in
Perfect attendance pms were at Rutland High School gym favors.
honor of the former's mother, presented by Roy Mayer, sponsored by Rutland F1re
Attendmg were L1sa Oiler,
Mrs Vada Teaford of Antiquity supermtendent, to Jon Perrm, a Department: ti·30 p.m. Adults
Mark Tyree, June Justts,
who was celebratmg a bll'thday. three year bar ; Beth Pemn, a $1, children 50c . Youngsters
Danny Smith, Chns Darst,
Attendmg were Mr and Mrs. f1ve year bar; Tom Hawley, under 12 admi Ited free.
David Stewart, Mike Ralston,
MorriS Teafqrd and children, Fatth Perrin , Patty Young, the Proceeds to be used to purchase
Jeffrey Whittington, Keith
Richard, Cheryl, Kevm and Rev W. H. Perrm, Miss Freda new fire truck Everyone
Doss, Teresa Whittington , JOEy
Steven of Portland; Delbert Grueser, seven year bars; welcome.
HIGH SCHOOL Dance party
Teaford and son, Marvm ; Bert Paul me Mayer and M1ss Maude
Teaford, Fritz Teaford and Grueser, e1ght year bars ; Miss Saturday Meigs Junior High,
Thelma Walton , all of Racine; Nancy Jo Mayer, a mne year Middleport, 8 30-11 :30 p.m.
Mrs Doris Sayre of Portland, bar ; Ingrid Hawley, an 11 year Jays wUI emcee. Adimss10n 75c
Mrs Kay Hill and children of bar; Mrs Frances Reibel, a 14 RIVERVIEW School carRACINE - Dedication of the
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll year bar, and Mrs Freda mval , Saturday, beginnmg 5 recently remodeled annex of the
Teaford
and
daughter, M1tch, an 18 year bar . The p.m. with a supper. Games and Wesleya n Un1ted Methodtst
Charlotte, and a fnend ; Mr. and supenntendent was presented a rummage sale. Door pnzes .
Church here, will be held
Mrs. Bob Wmes and Brett of one year pm.
Saturday mght at a family mght
SUNDAY
Columbus and Mrs. Sharon
Sunday afternoon the Sunday
observance.
Kerns and SonJa of Mason, W. school had a skatmg party at RUTLAND CHURCH of
A covered d1sh dinner at 6
Chnst, !!2nd homecommg
Va.
the Chester Skate-A-Way from 2
Sunday, Oct. 10; services at 9:30 p.m will begm the observance
to !p m. A Halloween party will
w1th a program to follow at
a m., basket dmner at noon;
be held at the church on Oct 21.
which lime the men ancl women
afternoon services at 2, John
Wya tt , speaker
Spec1al who have worked on the proJect
will be hon ored The event IS
smgmg. Everyone welcome
sponsored by the Women's
ATTEND MEETING
Society of Christian Serv1ce
MONDAY
Mrs. Ruth Euler, Mrs. Mary
Those attendmg are to take
W.S.C.S. HEATH Methodist
Purchase of 75 song books Hughes, Mrs. Nan Moore , MISS
their own table serviCe
was approved at a meetmg Lucille Smith, and Mrs Gladys Church, Middleport, Program
Tuesday mght of the Umted Hayman were at Burr Oak entitled "DIVIded by Race. "
Nancy Collins, 304 Sprmg Ave ,
Faith Non-denommational Wednesday for a meeting of the 7:30 Monday night. Mrs. Beulah
Pomeroy, 7 30 p. m. Bring
Church at the home of Mr , and Retired Teachers Assoc1at10n, Hayes, Mrs. E. M. Wood and
mformat10n on nutntwn for
Miss Nellie Zirkle to serve.
Mrs. Norman E. Hysell. The Southeast D1str1ct
horses
LETART FALLS PTA, Oct.
Rev. Dennis Weaver gave grave
II, Monday, 7:30 p m. Fmal
before a potluck supper atTUESDAY
plans to be made for Oct. 23
tended by 13 adults and e1ght
EASTERN BAND Boosters
jitney supper.
Tuesday at the high school, 8 to
children
SALES SET
MEIGS PLEASURE Riders 9 30 p.m. All mterested persons
An orgamzational meeting for
A ya rd sale will be held
a church chOir was set for Fr1day and Saturday at the Club Monday home of Mrs. urged to attend.
Tuesday mght. Panelmg of the home of Mr. and Mrs Don
church intenor and a reviVal Johnson , Portland, by the
were discussed. Prayer to Women's Society of Christian
conclude the meeting was by Service, Portland United
Hysell.
, Methodist Church

Mrs. Teaford ,.,.:,~.~'~'~.,;~~~--~,.~,~~:,~~,:,.,..,..,. . .,.
Js Honored Rally Day Held

WEEKENDS HERE
Edwa rd
l!obinsol1
of
Cleveland spenl the weekend
w1th Mrs Berth~ Robmson and
Mr and Mrs Pete Shields, East
Tetart

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arnold Grate

Less than 10,000 miles by local owner Sharp as new 1n all
ways, wh1te over gold finish , 350 V 8 eng1ne. power
steen ng , radio. wh1te-walls , wh covers

1971 Challenger $3025

1967 Ford

~:~~e~t;v;;;s·~~, tr"Z~~:.~~s

MAY TAG

j

Social
Calendar

Contribution
,.
Made to runu

report. Refreshments were
served by Mrs Focie Hayman,
Mrs Mary Roush, Mrs. Adams,
and Mrs Barbara Dugan.

Red Carpet
Service

Committees Set
rDor PTA Frolic

•
SYRACUSE - The com- Richard Burkhammer.
mittees for the P.T.A
Cane Toss, Carolyn Roush,
Halloween carnival Friday, Dorothy Amberger , Mary
Oct 22 at 7·30 p m m the Chancey, Shirley Huston.
. '
.
. .
Syracuse Elementary school
R. C. Ring Toss, Charles
house, are as follows (chairman Hamilton, Thomas Chapman,
:::::::::·:·:::&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&gt;·:·:·:·~:·:·:·:·:-::;&gt;.:::::::i::::::::: named f1rst) : Games, Faye Danny Brown, Kenneth Nease.
Hamilton, Marybelle Warner,
Pop, Beverly Chapman,
Emogene Holstem, Jeanette Mmnie Harris, Mildred Pierce,
Duffy.
Pat Houdashelt , Charlotte
Fun · iiDuse, Joyce Thoren, Nease.
Pat Winebrenner, Judy Flagg,
Tickets, Janice Deem, Jane
D
...JMary Gumther, Janet Nease Barnett
[!art Board, Mr. Donald
Announcer, David Flag.
·
Salmons and Mr. William Baer,
Door, Elma Louks, Beverly
· cystiC C!HOhairmen, Paul Forbes, Dale Pnce.
A contnbuhon to the
ftbrosis fund drive was made by Warner
Marsha II ' Pete Th oren
Country Kitchen, Helen · Judge, David Nease, Mr. and
the Women's Society of
Chnst1an Serv1ce meetmg Hubbard, Susie Grueser, Mrs Charles Neuman, Rev
Tuesday night at the East Jonet\a DaviS, Marcia Arnold, Forrest Donley
Letart Umted Methodist Betty Joh'lson .
Everyone's help will be apChur~h .
, j
Cotton
Candy,
Jamce prec1ated m decoratmg the gym
It was noted tbat Chnstili"as Lawson, Jean Hall , Doris on the evening of the 21st and
cards and gift wrap are bemg Frtend
afternoon of the 22nd.
sold by the group Thank-you
Balloons, Lmda Hubbard ,
notes were read from the Jos1e Betty Ash, Dee Brown.
·::::::i::::::::::::::::::::·:·:::·:·:·:·&gt;:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·: :-:·:·:
Roush family, Mrs. M~rlene
Sno Cones, Pat Patterson,
SPEAKS TONIGHT
her
and
Mrs
Ferne
Arletta
Vanover
Fis
Mrs.
Harold
Lohse,
Hayman•
'
Cider and Donuts, Daisy
president of District 16, Ohio
Mr •. Focie Hayman pre- Patterson, Lou Ferrell
•
Coffee, Rita Slavin, \.ilona Congress of Parents and
sented the Program entitled
Teachers, will discuss "PTA
"1.1vmg Throuvh Change and, Micha'el
•
P
Structure" at a meeting of the
Beyond Fear," with Mrs. Mabel
Pop Corn, Larry Hubbard, Meigs County Council of
Shields and Mrs Dom Adams Stanley Johnson, Opal Zerkle, Parents and Teachers tonight
lakmg part Scnpture was fr om Louise Frank.
at the Middleport ElemenFish Pond, Nancy Patterson,
lsaiah 40
b
Ch
Sh 1
tary School, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs Eula Wolfe gave Bar ara
apman,
Ir ey
Certificates
will
be
devotions on the topic "What Hubbard, Mrs. Wilham Cougar, presented to those completing
Can Save Us'," re.admg Donna Rae Wolfe, Donna the study course, and there
scnpture from Job and praymg Sellers, Faye Clifford, Mrs will be round-table discussion
Mrs
Mary Roush, v1ce
on the role of PTA. Refresh-

We Specialize m

1970 Chevrdet BelAir-4 Door-- '2795-

space for 2 cars, large storage

1

The annual reuniOn of the
descendants of Andrew Watts
(1807-1899) will be held Sunday,
Oct. 10, at the home of Mr and
Mrs. Harold Wetherholt, 409
First Avenue, Gallipolis
Richard Logan, Columbus,
president of the family
association, and all of these
descendants and their fam1hes
are Invited to join in a basket
dmner at noon. A br1ef business
meeting will follow, after which
old homes and graves of ancestors may be v1s1ted.

TICKETS QN SALE
Tickets are now on sale for
the card party and style show
to be held by the American*
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39 on Oct. 21, 8
p. m, at the hall. All member~ ·
of the unit have tbe Uckets
which are given for a $1
donation. Door prizes and
refreshments are included in
the donation. A style revue
will be presented by Mrs. lola
Bartrum.

Complete Serv1 ce

Middleport, Oh1o

Garage

OWNER . IDA DONAHUE
TERMS CASH
CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
Dan Smrth - 949 2033

cyl., std . trans , rad1o

buil ding , STEAL AT JUST
$8,900.
'
.

Watts Reunion Set

refrtgerator , 2 metal kitchen cabmets . wood kitchen
cabinet. rad1o, library table. 3 pc bedroom su1 te, buffet,
dressers. chest of drawers, metal wardrobe, portable
sew1ng machine, hand tools and items too numerous to
mention
COLLECTIBLES &amp; TOOL5- Horse-drawn wagon, horse
collars. harness, Iron kettle &amp; stand, cradle , stone 1ars,
smg le trees, picture frames. 011 stove . strawberry plow &amp;
others, log chains. barbw1re, smgle cylinder gas engme,
alummum ext ladder, trunks, book s, and etc

OFFICE SUPPLiES

bedrooms , balh, lots of.

DEXTER - 2 story frame, 4
bedrooms , bath,. GREAT
FOR FAMILY, Lot 50x100,

Neutzhng ,
Mrs .
Hattie
Frederick, Mrs. Mary Hayes,
Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs.
Dorothy Myer, Mrs. Doris
Koemg, Mrs. Eulah Swan, Mrs
Elizabeth Wickham, Mrs
,Mabel Van Meter, Mrs Mary
Showalter,. Mrs . Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. Letha Wood, and
Mrs Mary J o Pooler

Maytlg

storage, hardwood floors,

BUSINESS, ESTABLISHED
IN 1951, dorng good busrness
INTERESTED CALL US.

Mrs. Erma Cleland,'· commissioned as deputy of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, was honored at a
meeting of the Council members Tuesday night.
Mrs. Cleland's conurusswn
from State Councilor Alice L
Weaver, was presented at the
meeting conducted by Enzy
Newell. She was excorted to the
altar where a poem was read by
Mrs, Ethel Orr who also
presented a gift to her on behalf
of the Council. Asingle rose was
given to Mrs. Cleland by Mrs
Ada MorriS.
A district meeting to be held
on Sunday at 2 p m. at the
Chester hall was announced. All
deputies and diStriCt officers
are asked to attend. Reported til
were Mrs. Mae Spencer, Mrs.
Zona Biggs, and Mrs. Goldie
Wolfe . Mrs. Opal Hollon
presented the auditing report
which was accepted
A pract1ce for receiving
national and state officers and
for balloting was held In·
spectioh will be held at the Oct.
19 meeting and members are
asked to wear white
Attending besides those
named were Mrs Margaret
Tuttle, Mrs Jean Summerfield,
Mrs. Helen Wolf, Mrs Barbara
Sargent, Mrs . Thelma Whtte,
Mrs Mary K Holter, Mrs Ada

r · ----------------~._--~----~--~
B1g Capactty

SPECIAL 11:.
d
95
F
966
1
or
·------------T_,
fairlane 500 4 door Local owner. new t1res, clean mt , 6

4 SPEED transmrssron lor 289 'SIX ROO/II house, bath, full"'
- $75 Phone 949 4843.
~aseme~l . 133 Bullern~l Ave.,
10·6·61p
JUS I walktng drs lance . from'
FARM and Home latex house

-

Deputy Honored

followrng at the farm located off S R 338 at Apple Grove,
Ohio Turn 1usl above old U S Locks 23 Walch for and
follow sale •rgns off S R 338.
HOUSEHOLD - Motorola TV , Syn Ray gas stove.

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

1970 Coronet

608 East Mam
POMEROY

SYRACU SE
DRIVE' IN,
BUILDING
AND
ALL
POTATOES lor winler Ken·
EQUIPMENT, dorng nrce
nebec, red Pon t 1ac 1 mile off
busrness, OWNER HAS
124 on 338 fowar~ terry Great
OTHER INTERESTS. JUST
Bend Tom Sayre, Phone 843
$18,500.
2436.
- 11!·6 6lp
PLACE THE ~AL£ QF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
FABULOUS fake mrnk look fur
COMPETENT HANDS
coat. s1 ze 38, Jf• length, never
HENRY E. CLELAND
been worn, $30, pre-styled
REALTOR
platmum wig, never be~n
Office 992-2259
worn , $15 w1lh case and w1g
ReSidence 992-2568
form. Call 992-3816
10 5 61c
10·6.31c

-----------

606 E. Ma.n, Pomeroy , 0 .

11-The DAily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 7, ~~

Havmg sold my farm and mov1ng to Florida I Will se ll the

J0x45 1n 1Ce apartment over, 3

. 14' · 24' ·,WIDE

· Open 8Trl'l
Monday thru Saturday

s,

Realty
BUSINESS AND .HOME OF
YOUR OWN FOR ONE
PR IC~ 1 - 2 slory burldrng

12~

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., OCT. 9, 1971-12:30P.M.

2 Dr H.T .. console, auto . trans ., AM- FM, P.S .,
radio, Rallye wheels, black vinyl top. red
finish, extra clean, low mileage .

Cleland

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

992-7608

1mmed1ate
see, phone

Gallrpol rs 4'6 9539affer 5 p m

'5.55

Sat~rday

6·30·11"'
BEFORE SELLING OR
BUYING, TRY US
HELEN L. TEAFORD
O' DELL WHEEL al ,gnm ent
ASSOCIATE
located at Crossroads, Rt 124
992-3325 or 992-2378
Complele front en d serv1ce,
10 3 61c
tun e up and brake serv1 ce
· Wheel s balanced elec t ro ni c ally
All
work
HOUSE . 1642 Lrncoln Heights
guaran
teed
.
Reasonable
Call Danny Thompson, 992ra tes Phone 992 3213
1
2196.
on large lot, 250ft by 250 It on
7 27-tfc
SR 124 rn Syracuse, Ohio
7 18 tic
Available
occupancy

Wheel Alignment

8:30 a.m.to 1p.m.
I?HqN E 992-7474

Septrc Tanks
And Leach Beds

older home. bath , co rner lot

your very own, wlfh 2 r entals

EXPERT

JOHN IE'S
BEAutY SHOP
and Slate Rt. 7
Hours-Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Frrday
8 30a.m to6p.m
Thursday
10a.m. to8:30p.m.

And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

2 ACRES - Near Pomeroy All
ulll l lleS

t

Corner Union AvP. .

Phone 949 3821
Bedford Townshrp, Wolfpen MIDDLEPORT - 10 room
Racme , Ohio
older ho m e Near stores
Road
20 m1nutes irom
Cntt Bradford
$3,500
00
Pomeroy J" of land 1n t1mber,
5 l-Ife
ba lance 1n pasture
No
"
buildrngs Call 992 2152 and 5 BEDROOMS - New spirt READY MIX
CONCRETE
level w1lh 4 acres on RI 7
ask for DICk
del ive red nght to yo ur
9 22 ffc
projec t Fast and easy Fret
RACINE - 3 n1 ce bedroom s,
esftm'afes Phone 992 3284
ba th, larg e modern kJ tc hen
7 ROOM blo ck house , 4
Goeglern Ready Mrx Co ,,
and d1 n 1ng Gas furnace

Paul Sayre, Portland. Ohro,

budget terms

B.:oker
110 Mechamc Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o

HILTON WOLFE

BILL NELSON
992-3657

Room Add1tions

$2 300 WILL nuv .d acres 1n

grown ,

Fal ls

1

-

10 5 6tp

FURN ISHED and unf urnrshed
Phone 992-5434

Virgil B.

Telephone 992 3600 or 992
Garage SIO.OOO 00
2166
___________!.e7e!c25=
1fc POMEROY - A busrness of

ex tra n1ce. 1ust dug for w1nter
use Cobblers and Kennebecs

4 ROOM and balh furnrs hed

- -- --

'

motor wdh trailer , $325

10 7 tfc

Rea I Estate For Sale

NEW , J bedroom home In
Middleport Bu111 1n kitchen,
ceramic tile bath , all electnc
heat , good ne1ghborhood Can
arrange FHA fmancmg

apartment Tele phone 773
5145, Ma son, W Va on mq 1n
h1ghway
Rey nold s Flower

Me tgs Cou n ty CommtSS1o ne rs

Rac1ne , Oh1o

Phone 992 5523 after 4 p m
5 7 tfc

STEREO, Walnul modern slyle.

For Rent

-

RED AND Green peppers, prc k

16 FT LINEMAN boat. 30 hp

Bradford, Auct1oneer
·
1071tc

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed btds will be rece1ved
by the Board of Me1gs Co unt y
Comm tSStoners at the tr oft1ce 1n
the Co ur th ouse , Pomeroy , Ohto
unt il 9 OOa m O'clock, Oc tober ,
12 197 1. for coal
Spectft caltons as follows
Lump coal deltvered 1n two
ton lo t s to the Courthouse and
Stoker Coal F 0 B e~t m 1ne
The Board of County Com
mtsstone r s reserve the nght to
re1ect any or all bt ds

10 7 3tp

and Will sell the following
arl1cles, located 2112 m iles

C Bradford , Mgr., C C

51 , Mrddleport , phone 992
7252
10 5 31c

Pomeroy , Rt 2 Phone 992-

3930

10 7 3tc

Syracuse
H1l ls 1de pl ow,
M cCor mick
mow1ng
mach me , horse drawn wagon ,
Pr work harness anvil ,
forge , 6 1n v1se, 26 1n c ha m
•,saw l D Bradley ). gnnder ,
house 1ack , heavy du ty steel
bed trailer , bu tc henng kett le,
5 18 It railroad 1rons, I 10 fl ,
buzz saw, m1lk cans, used 12
11 bndge plank . chams, sa'ws,
shove ls, augers , Cant hook , 6
1n belt 35 ft , Dodge school
bus chass is, 40 000 B. T U
Kenmore hea te r, coal healer,
ad lamps. bn c a bra e, set of
d!shes, bowlmg ball. books,
qu1lts, three beds, dressers.
k tlchen cabtnet, two rocking
cha1rs, many 1lems not li sted
Terms· CASH No! respon
s1ble for a cCi dents A lpha
Russell. owner Brad ford
Auct1on Co , Racme , Oh1o A

YARD
SALE
Porlla nd
W S C S, Frrday Oct 8, 10

Farm ,

AUCT ION I ha ve sold my farm

1920 model , 6 fl

10 6-3tc

Burdette

Ne tgle r.

gutter Ca ll Donald Smrth

10 7 31c

Cho1ce 1ocat1on m Middleport
Seen by appomtment only

10510tc

your own . $2 bu she l Bnng
con tamers
Ear l Adams ,
Letart Falls

S1gns), Saturday, October 9,
11 00 am ' Farmall trac tor,

at the Laur el Cl 1ff Free
M ethod1sl Church, sponsored
by
t he
youth
S1 nger s
welcome

Johnson res tdence

APPLE S,

north ol Sf Rl 124 on Hysell
Run Rd (Watch lor Sale

HYMN SING Sunday, at 2 p m

10 5 31p

Phone 843 2254

Auction

10-6-3tc

Sm rfh Phone 742 3694

bushe l
P1ck you~ own
Clarence Proffitt , Portland

- - -- -

Spor t sman Club, Sunday ,
October 10, 12 noon

water House. downstairs. dry
basement w1th gas .furna ce ,
l1v1ng room . bedroom , k1f
chen d 1nmg area together,
buil t 1n cabme l s, built tn
oven , bath , wall to wall
carpet
Upsta1rs
3
bedroom s, plenty of c loset
space. Out of Harnson v1lle on
Cou nt y Road 17 , Landon

10 5-3tc

Ca ll Guy

Rac1ne , Oh1o For repair and
alumi num Siding , soffet and

HA LF RUN NER bean s, $1 3 BEDROOM brrck home

OLD Furniture, d1shes. clocks ,
and or comp le te households
Wn te M D Miller , Pomeroy ,

GUN SHOOT , Forked Gun

land

-

Kitchens, Baths

your new home W1ll draw
prmts to su1t the lay of your

~-----

tanteo To Buy

9 22 30tp

3 29 tic

-

Complete
Remodeung

Henry Bahr , Phone 985 3988 NEIGLER Burld rng Supply
10 7 6tp
Free est1mate on bulldmg

Boy cha~r, two table lamp s,
one go cart Harl 1s Frank ,

9 26 111c

Gobese tablets and E Vap
~ Wat er Pllls Nelson Drug s

between Ch'ester and Tuppers
Pla1ns w1th water tap W1th or
w1thout 25 wooded acres

ONE SI MMONS sofa, one Lazy

9 24 tfc

REDU CE sate and fa ,t wtth

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Au thonzed S1nger Sales and
Serv1ce We Sharpen Sc1ssors

1 60o FT of Frontage on Rt 7

St , Mrddleport

JOHNS9N MASONRY :

SEW ING MACHINES. Reparr
servrce, all makes, 992-22ll4,

Real Estate For Sale

tw o year
old
Kenmore
elec tnc dryer . $90 Electr~ c
heater, $5 Fou r pa 1r of
drapes, $8 All m good shape

phone 985 3368

-

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septtc tanks mstalled George
(Bill I Pullins, Phone 992-2478
4-25 tfc
9 26 30tc

2608

Co.

Phone 992-2550
Insured . Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See
us
for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

and bath each, near new
housmg pro1ect Trade for
sma l ler house. Phone 992

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

Call 992 5510

d1flonmg .
, 24~ Lrncoln

W Va 25311,orphone304925
3279
9 30 60tp

!read $5 Phone 992 2958
10 5-3tp 175 ACRE farm . 3 ponds, free
gas, t1mber , farming and
10 6-3fc GAS HEATER, 30.000 BTU $20,
pasture land. well and c1stern

IMMEDIATE open rng for a

10 3 61c

21 ffc

Construdion

&amp;
and _An-.

thony flumbing &amp; Hedttng.
Complete
Plumbtng,
Healing and AJr Con·

ra 1sed, moved , underpmned,
remodeled Est1mates free,
anywhere Nat1onal House
M over s, Box 5002 , Charleston,

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

c 1rculatmg heaters
Phone 992 5262 even1ngs

FOUR NEW HOMES .
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HDME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILABLE
100
be purchased wlth a
A 3 bedroom $16,900 00 horne .can
f 'I with a base
thl
~ ment as low as $65 00 fof a amr Y
•
mon
Yfpa$5 000 00 and· three children 7'1• Pet. annual
sa lary o
• ·

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
'ROOF PAINTING

HOUSE MOVING Houses, etc

10 I 61c

GA ~

'56 BUI CK, runnmg condtllon ,
cheap spare parts, 3 speed
standard
Tempe st
fra n
sm 1sS10n r ebuil t, early 60s ,
$40
64 Pont1ac automatte
tra nsmi SS I On, repairab le,
dnve shaft and flywheel. $10
each 735xl5 T&amp;C , 1h ongma l

Male He Ip Wanted

ANYONE 1nterested 1n formmg
a small organ 1zat1on for t he
ca re of pets , such as dog s,
ca ts &amp; b1rds , please call 992

6976

~~

Krd s back

home for

pre school children Mr s
Glenn Sm1 lh, Rock Sprmg s

State Route 689,

10 5-61p

928121&lt;

949 3703 - 446 4146

-

Dubbeld , phone 742 5625 ,
Rutland
10 • Sic

1800 se n es, long wheel base ,
good sol1d cab, good con
d1f 1on Phone 985 3988

MUMS, all col or s, fte ld grown,
ready to go B1g clu sters
Rey nol ds
Flower
Shop .
Mason, W Va

school' T 1me on your ha nds
JOin Beel 1ne Fash1ons Ca ll

1

10 5-3tc

HOUSE - Two a pis, 4 rooms

Female Help Wanted
MOTHERS!

ad rust - $4 Phone 992 7085
10 4 6tc

standard. A-1 cond1t1on ms1de NEW con tracto r 1n area Dry
and out New t1res and low
wall
patchmg
general
mrleage Phone 992 2669
pa1nt1ng Ca ll R1 c hard I

Ftlzpalrrck Or

9

WIL L PAY well lor your spare
t im e work 1ng at home for us
Anyone who can read and
wnte ca n qual1 fy Week ly
salary
For' deta ils wnte
James Bliss Co , P 0 Box
32 4, De pt K 479 Lev 1ttown

OCT. 4 TO 16

10 6 4fc

1961 STUDE BilKER , 6 cyl

phone Wilkesv rlle, 669-3785
9 3 ffc

FOR DETAILS!

HARVEST OF VALUES
SALE AT LANDMARK

8 15 lfc

SEWING mach1ne serv 1ce m
your home Clean, 0 11 and

9 21 -30tp 1965 IN TERNATIONAL truck ,

PHONE 992-2156

Notice

phone 985 3807

STAR' kill s r at s qu1 ck l y
Sure
2 1 &lt; pounds
$1 69
Ebersbach Hardware, Sugar
Run Mill s, Pi ckens Hard
wa re Ma son

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

Card of Thanks

'·

5443

Owner &amp; Operator

1954 DODGE truck, 2 ton s 13 tfc
$300 Phone 949 3915
10 6 3tp SEPTIC tanks cleaned -Miller
Sanda lion, Stewarl, Ohi o Ph
1966 PONTIAC Lemans. 19M
662 3035

Park v1ew Kennels Phone 992

Help Wanted

Advert1sem~nl

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates Ph . 446-4782,
Ga ll rpo lrs John Russell.

Pon t 1ac Catal1na Contact
Geral d R Dougla s, Baum
Addll1on. Rt J. Pomeroy or

•

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
' 15 If&lt; I All Wea1her ~oofrng

~~----

Auto Sales

POODLE pupp,es, Srlver Toy ,

2Sc Charge per

2966

Valley Eslates Mobrle Home
Sales, Rf 50 East Athens 593 8762
9-19-371&lt;

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

BLIND ADS

Add1t10nal

10 4 6tc

caDcelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992

Get your new mobile home
now See James S1mpkms,

9·8 30tp

PORTAB LE Ne cch r 21g zag

970 SCHULTZ mobrle home

CAR 0 OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

9 29 12tp

envelopes Ru sh stamped
self addressed envelope The
Ambrose Co , 4325 Lakeborn .
Dav1sburg, M1ch , 48019

For Sale

.:om- ecu tt ve Inser tions
18 cents per word SIX con
secut 1ve tnsert10ns
25 Per Cent 01 scount on pa1d
ads and ads pa1d w 1th 1n 10 days

HACKNEY'S Electric Service.
all types of eleclrrcal work
Gl FINANCfNG' AVAILABLE .
Phone 992 6407
No down payment, 12 years to
9-29-301&lt;
pay to qualrfred Gl Up to
$2.500 available for lot lm
provements 1f you own a lot AUTOMOBILE1nsurance been

Mobile Homes for Sale

EAR N AT home addressrng

tan beegle, Saturday evenmg
1n Rutland Rew ard Phone

RATES

1

r&gt;omeroy Phone 992 3891

- ..t.9.ttc •

( R)

'

Business Services

HEADBOARD and fro sfed wrg HARRISON'S TV and Antenn~
lrmeston~ Excels.,\'1
Serv1ce , Phone 992 2522
Works, E. Ma in St.,. Besl offer Phone 992 6976
10 6 3tc
6 10 If&lt;

tn

Wat c hers

The Publisher reserves t he
right to ecM or reted any ads·
obtecf1onal

~OAL .

rnen Interested 1n a Wetght

Day of Publlcatton

deem ed

For Sale

ABO UT YOUR WEIGHT
overwetght lad1es, teens and

Will be acCepted u-ntl f9a m for

For S~le

I

Pomero~

" .

Mrs. Mildred Tubbs, ,Pomeroy, underwent major surgery
Wednesday at O'Bieness Hospital m Athens. If anyone needs
cheering up it is Mildred. She has spent her entire life domg for
others; now it is our turn . Her room number is 3!9B.
SPEAKING OF HOSPITAL patients, Mrs. George
(Genevieve) Schneider, Syracuse, has just returned home from
Holzer Medical Center while Mrs. Marlene Fisher, s1xth grade
teacher at Pomeroy Elementary, is confined at Holzer for an
indefinite time.
·
QUITE UNUSUAL are the birthday anniversaries of Paula
SWatzel and Roger Sayre, son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Sayre of Syracuse. Both Paula and Roger were born on the
same day, four years apart that is.
Best wishes to botli.
ROSE GINTHER, POMEROY, and her son and family, Mr.
and Mrs. James Ginther and son Philip of Middletown, Ohio,
recently relurned home following a two weeks vacation in
Colorado Springs, Colo.
They visited the Ginthers' son George who is attending the
U.S. Alr Force Academy at C61orado Springs.
Traveling 4,000 miles, they saw their first snowfall on Sept.
17; in fact, their camping lraUer became stalled in snow on one of
the 'llounlalns.
They traveled the southern route to Colorado, stopping on the
way \0 vi.llt Mr. and Mrs. John Cotter, the former Evelyn Ross,
and rebJrned hcme the northern route.
Rose was delighted with her trip and is ready to go back
. again. She stated that the w:ealher was not ememely cold as you
might think, wltha11110wfall.She said Colorado Is beautiful.
I

Pernlanent Color - Won't Fade!
Galva-Guard Red
GAL

7.20 ~NGAL

LOTS ·

Per Gallon-7.35

Galva-Guard Green
GAL.

7.3 5 ~"c,AL

•.

LOTS

Per. Gallon-7.50

It pays to buy our best Galva-Guard by Vanguard. Goes farther. lasts
longer. Permanent color, won't fade . For metal roofs, wood &amp; metal
buildings, shutters, lawn furniture and masonry surfaces.

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN ST,

POMEROY
Clean-Up - Paint Up - Fix-Up NoUJ

•

�'•

"•

12.:.. The Daily &amp;:ntinel, Mlddleporl-P&lt;meroy, 0., Oct. 7, 1971

.Two

•

~----------------------------~------------~~·

Promotions~E_
Ib_•~
"~
•-'ld~s_ln_
~o_m
_e
_r_o"'l"'y_O_p_•~"~·~-"-'_11_9.,......-_F_rl_d...,ayr----a_nd_....;_sa_t_u_rd__.a_;..y_S_a_le--t·
Another big shipment of
199.50 Carousel Model 860 Slide Pro jector
SALE!"
LEE
RIDERS
•
Made by Kodak
WOMEN'S SLACKS

Retirement
Announced

Boot Cut

Sizes 8 to 20 and 32. to 38
A wonderfu l v alue ~ 100 per cent nylon In colors of red , navy,
black, brown, plum, green. Also 100 percen t Acrl lan slacks in
navy, burgundy, green, black, brown .

100% NYLON SlACKS ........................ 5.95
100% ACRILAN ACRYLIC SLACKS ............ 4.95

Supp-tbe Sale

Two Days Only

Reg , $5.95 Pantyhose

Our .Regular $2.50

2·pairs 9.00

CANTRECE II
PANTYHOSE

Reg . ·$4.95 Stockings

SALE 105.00
99.50 Carousel Model 650 Slide Projector
Made by Kodak

SALE 68.00
199.50 Model M9 Kodak Movie Came.ra

SALE 99.00

100% TV JERKS SOCKS

69.50 Model M4 Kodak Movie Camera

SALE 49.00

One size f its si'zes 10 fa 13. 75 percent HI bulk orion ·.25 per cent
sttefch nylon. White, bl ack, and an excell ent selection of
sol id color s and heathertones.

59.50 Model M16 Kodak Movie Camera

DAYTON PHILLIPS
NE W HAVEN Two
promotions and one retirement
were annow1ced at Philip Sporn
Power Plan t today . Dayton L.
Phillips retired and Gem·ge H.
Hesson and Harry A. Pickens
have won promotions.
Phillips, stores supervisor ,
retired effective October I after
23 yea rs service . Born in
Pomeroy, he graduated from
the Bliss Business College in
1932.
Employhment here began in
1948 as a senior clerk in the
cons tructi on storeroom. He
progressed through the ranks
Juntil he became head of the
departmen t in 1969.
Sa id Phtll ips, " I'm not
making any big plans. I just
wan t to relax and take things as
they come ." He will probably
l&lt;lke some short trips around
the country, but has no other
plans. Pomeroy is the present
home of Phillips and his wife,
Irene . They have two chtldren
and six grandchildren .
Hesson, assistant stores
supervisor , moved into Phillips·

posi lion.
Born in New Haven, Hesson
graduated from Wahama High
School. He was discharged from
the U. S. Army Reserves as a
corporal.

In June of 1960 Hesson came
to Sporn Plant as a laborer. He
worked in the Labor Depart·
men t untill966 when he entered
the Stores Department as a
material clerk. Promoted to

Tie Rod Came Off
A one-car accident was in·
vestigated this morning at 8:02
a.m . on SR 33. eight tenths of a
mile northwest of Pomeroy , the
Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Vtctor C. Young, Jr ., 18,
Pomer oy , tr aveling northwest

on SR 33. said as he rounded a
curve, a tie rod dropped off
causing the car to continue &gt;&gt;
feet tearing out 52 feet of
guardrail and slopping in the
yard of the Myr tle ·Long
residence. There was medium
dam age to the car ; no in jur ies,

or arrest.
PLEASANT V~ ... LEY
ADMISSIONS : Ronnie Neal,
West Columbia ; Mrs. William
Young, West Columbia ; Mrs.
Ralph Davis, Point Pleasant ;
Calvin Swindle, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Bruce McClintic, Carl Cook,
Traci Wolfinbarger, all 'Point
Pleasan t; De neil . McCoy ,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Vertie Stevens,
Vinton.
DIS CHARGES : J ame s
McClure, Letart; Mrs. Glennon
Persinger , Mrs. James Farley
and daughter.

GEORGI

H+ '"''N

Reg. 1.98 60"x104" Oblong . . . . . . . .
Reg. 6.98 68" Fringed round . · · . .. •· ·
Reg . 5.98 60"x86" Oblong . . .. . . . .
Reg. 5.98 60"x86" Oval .
. . . . .
Reg. 4.98 60"x80" Oblong . . . . . . . .
Reg . 19c

FLARE LEG JEANS

DISHCLOTHS

Reg . $20.00, $25.00, and $30.00 Wigs

until his r ecent promotion .

Hesson spends a lot of spare
time with Little League Foot·
ball in Pt. Pleasant as a coach.
He enjoys all sports. He is a
member of the First Church of
God in Pt. Pleasant. Pt.
Pleasant is the present home of
Hesson and his wife and son.
Har ry A. Pickens, utility
fo reman, is promoted to
assistant ya rd fore man.
Pickens was born in South
Grove, Ill. and graduated from
Wahama High School. He
served in the U. S. Marine Corps
from 194&gt; to 1947.
In JUne of 1950 Pickens was
employed at Sporn as a coal
handler, then as a conveyor
operator and later as boat
operator. In 1960 he was made a
crane operator . Last July he
wa s promoted to utility

BESTfORM
OCTOBER SALE

and Sunda y
Oct. 8·9-10
DOUBLE FE ATURE
FIV E EASY PIE CES
Ja ck Nic holson

COLOR . ( Rl
PLUS
YOU CAN'T
WIN 'EMAL L
Ton y Curt is
Char les Bronson

•

COLOR

MEIGS THEAJR£,'
Tonight, October 1
NOT OPEN

Friday and Saturday
October 8-9
WILD RIDERS
(Technicolor)
Arell Blanton
Elizabeth Knowles
INDIAN PAINT
Technicolor
Show Starts 1 P.M.

WOMEN'S
GLOVES
Wr ist· len gth .

Dou ble

89~

Two Days Only

Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags

- - - ·
· · · ·
. . . .
· · · ·
....
... .

· . · .
· · · ·
. . . .
· · · ·
. ..•
.• . -

. Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Small. medium . large and extra large si zes .
Coat s weate rs and slipovers in this selection.
Solid color s and smart pattern s . An e xcellent
group . Save during this sal e .

Walnut f in ish · double dresser and m ir ror , pa nel bed, 4
drawer chest and n lg ~ t stand.

Chur&lt;;.h activities take a large
part of Pickens' spare time . He
is the church lay leader , the
chairman of the Administrative
Board , and the chairman of the
Pa stor Parish Re la tions
Committee at the New Hann
United Methodist Church. He is
a member of the Jr. Order of
United American Mechanics
and holds the state office of
Inside Sentinel in that order. He
coac hes the grade school
basketball team.
Pickens and his wife, Vera,
make their home in New Haven
They have one daughter who is
marrie d.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITIED - Allen Oiler,
Middleport ; Minnie Carroll ,
Long Bottom; Karen Bolin ,
Syracuse; Gladys Burch,
Rutlan d; Donald Pier ce ,
Pomeroy; Lena Heilma n,
Pomeroy ; James J ones,
Racine · Joan Conkle, Cheshire
DI SCHARGED - E uge ne
McKinn ey, Millard Ball ,
William Barrett.

WINTUCK
KNITTING YARN

CLOSING MONDAY
The Meies Countv Court
House and all banks in the
coun ty will be closed Monday ,
Oc t. II , in observance of
Columbus Day.
NOW YOU KNOW
Muum uu dresses worn by
Hawaiian wom en ar e der ived
from the Mother Hubbard
gowns made for natives by
wome n.

SALE SET
The Cheshire WSCS will hold
a rummage sale Friday and
Saturda y in the Fry Bldg. in
Middleport.
DIVORCE GRANT.ED
One di vorce was granted and
another has been filed in Meigs
County Commone Pleas Court
Robert Forrest was granted a
di,vorce from Lyvonnia Forrest
Kathy Benson, Albany, Rt.' 3,
filed suit against Walter Ben·
son, Amesville, on charges of
gross neglect of duty and e~­
treme cruelty.

i

Sale

1.19 __
skein

......___.....,......,..._..

mo vement.

..... _....

_...

Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .

Billfolds · Key cases · Purses.
9.00 Leather Goods . . . . . , • Sale 5.39
8.00 Leather Goods . . . . . . . Sale 4.79
7.50 Leather Goods . . . . . . . Sale 4.49
7.00 Leather Goods · • · · · · · Sale 4.19
6.00 Leather Goods • . . . · . . Sale 3.59
5.50 Leather Goods • • . - . . . Sale 3.29
5.00 Leather Goods · · •. · .• Sale 2.99
4.50 Leather Goods · · · · · . . Sale 2.69
4.00 Leather Goods · • · · • · · Sale 2.39
3.50 Leather Goods • · • - · · • Sale 2.09
3.00 Leather Goods • . . . · • . Sale 1.79

Famous MakP-r

15.00
13,00
11.00
10.00
9.00
8.00
7.00

'
Sieepwear
Sleepwear
Sleep wear
Sleepwear
Sleepwear
Sleepwear
Sieepwear

·
.
•
.
.
•
.

l

• • • . ..
· •
. . : ·' : •
. ...•.
. . . . . .
• . . .. .
.• . .• •

;1 .

-

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Carhartt .527.95

69e ORLON SOCKS·
White, black, plus a big selection of solid colors .
One size .fits all si zes 10 to 13.

_

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

Sale! lee $10.98

-

...... -

·- -..

_.....,......,...~.._-....,.-4.__.-__.. ....

MEN'S
4.95
SPORT
SHIRTS
All sizes . small 114·14'1&gt;), megj um (15-15'12 ), large (16-l6'h l.
ex tra large (11·17'121. Solid colors . stripes , plaids. All per.
manent press. E)(cell enl selection of sty les in full cut and

taper models.
Sale Friday and Saturday

2

for 8.50

Friday and S.turday

2.79 Twin Size lf4"x34'70 ·
3.59 Twin Site 1"x36x70
5.49 Twin Site 11f2 11 X36x70
7.29 Twin Site l " x34x70
3.69 Full Size '14" x50x70
4.79 Full Size l " xSOx70 -

PICTURE FRAMES

:

.

-

-

-

. . .
.

.
.

•

1.99

2.79

. . 4,59
6.49
•

.

.

2.89
3.99

.

6.69

. . . 8.69

Thermals an d Fiberwoven. Twin . DOu-bl e and Ki ng size.

Good colors. While the y last.

With wide molding
Non r eflect ing gl ass,
tarni sh proof, 8x10 size.

SALE.99.00

5.95 · · · SALE 4.49
6.95 · . . SALE 5.49
7.95 · · • SALE 6.49

SALE 77.00

$4.49

BROADCLOTH

··

SALE 58.00,

WH.ISRING
TEA KETTLES

For cutting sheer

and accurafe cutting. Long

7.99

100% DACRON FILlED

45" w. Beautiful fa shion
colors.

YD.

All cotton broadstrlpe tick.
Colors: Pink, Blue.
Sale Friday
and Saturday

2 5.99
FOR

Use Qur Free Customer Parking lots on Second
Street and at our Mechanic Street Warehouse.

~ nd

heavy fabrics. Fasl, ea1y

life precision blades.

--·-·-··

~·----------L-----------~

ELECTRIC SCISSORS
..

BED PILLOWS

. Dacron

Pot yester · 35 percent
cotton . Wash and Wear .
Dr ip-Dry .
Preshrunk
Requires little or no

11~

$9.95
Dural 2 ·speed

$2.69

per cent

ironing. Permanenf Press.

$89.95 RCA Radio with two speakers. AM- FM
and F M Stereo.

8.95 . . · . SALE 7.49
9.99 · · · SALE 7.99
10.99 • - - SALE 8.99

Special!
Friday and Saturday

65

$11?.95 RCA Radio with one separate s peake r .
AM-FM and FM Stereo .

SALE 2.00

. . ·
.
. • • • - •
. . -

BLANKETS

$149.95 RCA Radio with 2 separate speakersAM-FM and FM Stereo.

Alum inum tea kettl es ..wi th
ac r ylic enamel ex terior .
2 qu arf size.

·

Special Sale prices on Our enfire sfock.

99' ·

.

99' yd.

1.19 yd.

7.49 Full Size 1'12''x50x70 .
9.49 Full Size 2"x50x10 . .
Multi Purpose
Quality

COVERAUS

Sale Friday
and S.turd•y

Made of Polyurethane

22.00

.

Hand washabl e. Se w up a
Blou se,
Pa ntsuit
or
Lounge wear .

WASHABLE MATTRESS TOPPERS

Famous Carhartt brown duck with warm nylon
quilt li ning . Sizes 36 to 50. Shorts . regulars and
long·s. Water repellent · Bi -swing back . Ad·
justable c uff and leg closure .
Sale Price
...,

100 per cent Cotton - Perma·
Press. Machine wa shable 45" wi de. Pr ints and sol ids.

'

INSULATED COVERALLS

Sale Friday and Saturday

pairs 1.00 ·

Acetate
Beautiful printed Iabrie.

,.

Save during th is sale.

10.49
9.09
7.69
6.99
6.29 .
5.99
5.29

Mens and Young Mens

2

_........... ....-..... '

3.88
,...
- .....- .................

DUCKLING PRINT

34" wi de . 100 percent

Popular V nee~ style ~ Big se lection of solid
colors . Warm ffeecy lining .
. • Sale price Friday and Saturday

Shor ts · regular s · longs.
SO. Gr ey
herr ingbone st r ipe or dark
oli ve . Sanfori zed shr unk .

Peignoir Sets • Gowns • Pajamas
Reg .
Reg.
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .

i

51.39

1.99 TEMPO

SWEAT SHIRTS

Sizes 36 · to

WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR

•

Mens 100 percent Orion $4.95 Slipover

~---

LEATHER GOODS

1"

Friday· Saturday Sale

..._... .._... .._~----~

Well known brand.
Mens and Womens

tapered pan with no st icking . Qu ick hea ting al uminum , with
fired -on no st i.ck interior.

,.

2.77

1 SALE 9.99

.

Omelettes, oysters. sauteed mushrooms slip out of this gently

Long s lee ve pullover style . Warm fleece lining .
Small. medium , large and extra large sizes .

jewel

17

WITH NO-STICK INTERIOR

SWEAT SHIRTS

DIGITAL WATCHES
Space age styling .

8" SAUTE PANS

Mens $3.25 Kodel and Cotton

7.18
6.38
5.58
4.78
3.98
3.18

Of'l'he Meigs-Mason Area

FRLDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1971

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Un- Labor Statistics was the second
employment decreased slightly in two days showing improved
from 6.1 lo 6 per cent in economic conditions for the
September, the first full month nation during Nixon's 9(klay
W1der President Nixon's new wage-price freeze. The BLS
economic policies, the govern· said Thursday that wholesale
prices declined 0.4 per cent last
ment.said today.
During the same period, the month , the largest decline in
total nwnber of persons with five years and the first decline
jobs increased by 325,000 to an ·in 10 months.
all-time high of 79. ~ million
Despite the slight sl&lt;ltistical
after seasonal adjustment for decline of OJ per cent in
Ule return to school by students joblessness, the BLS termed
who had joined the work force total unemployment in ~plem­
during Ule swnmer .
ber as "virtually unchanged"
The report by the Bureau of from August.

own
The actual number of persons
with jobs in September declined
by more than 1.3 million. the
BLS said, but added that this
was less than usual between
August and September when
many students re turn to school.
.Therefore, after seasonal ad·
justment, officials said the
nuniber of persons with jobs
actually increased by 325,000.
The gain in employment was
concentrated among part-time
workers, and 130,000 of the gain
was in manufacturing. This
represented the largest monUily

gain in fac tory jobs 1n more
than five years with the
exception of two months in
which striking a utomobi]e work·
ers returned to their jobs.
Officials said average weekly
earnings of rank and file
workers went down 27 cents in
September to $128.76 because of
a 0.2 hour decline in the
average work week to 36.7
hours- lowest in a year. Aver·
age hourly earnings however,
went up 3 cents to $3.48.
There was a total of 4;8
nullion unemployed persons m

September, a decline of more
than 200,000 since August. After
seasonal adjustment, unemploy·
ment totalled nearly 5.1 million ,
a drop of 42,000.
•
The report said the unem·
p!oyment rate for Negro
workers increased from 9.8 to
10.5 per cent while joblessness
for while workers went down
from 5.6 to 5.4 per cent.
The unemployment rate for
Vietnam·&lt;!ra veterans aged 20
to 29 years remained unchanged
at 8.3 per cent.

Voc-Ed

ELB'ERFELDS
IN POMEROY

~----------~----~~----~~----~
- ~---.. ''

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - State
School Supt. Martin Essex said
today he would recommend the
slate Board of Education
dissolve two joint vocational
School District.
Essex said he would also
recommend that the JacksonVinton County Joint Vocational
School District be dissolved and
Jackson join the Gallia County
Joint Vocational School District
to become a Gallla-Jackson
Joint Vocational District.
Vinton Coun ty then would join
the joint Gallia-Jackson
District on a contract basis ;
according to Clarence Thomp·
son, Gallia Coun ty Supt. of
Schools.
He said a new pattern of high·
ways constructed in this area
fa ci li tal es tran spor ti ng
students over a large r
geographic area than fo rmerly
possible.
The sl&lt;lte board will also be
asked to approve a request
fr om the Tri-County Joi'nt
Vocational School district to
enlarge its board of education
from nine to II members.
The request was submitted as
a result of Ule addition of the
Athens City School District and
to attain equitable represen·
talion on the board for all
schools associated with the
district.

fo r most of the major labor ::::
force groups was essentially
unchanged in September . The
jobless rate for all adult men
(4.5 per cent) , married men (3.3
per cent ), adult women (5.6 per
cent ), and tee n-agers (17.1 per
cent ) showed virtually no
change fr om their August
levels."

Race war
..

Wagon · Hit •

.

In Accident

Middleport
police
in·
vestigated an accident at the
intersection of North Second
Ave. and Race St. at 1:45 p.m.
Thursday.
They said a car driven by Joe
E. Wilson, Fifth Ave., Mid·
dleport, struck the rear of a
station wagon driven by
Howard Dailey, Middleport.
There was no damage to the
wagon, but damage to Wilson's
car was estimated at $350.
Wilson told police his foot
slipped from his brake pedal
when he went lo stop.
Wilson was cited to mayor's
· court for failipg to maintain
assured clear distance.
ARTICLES FILED
COLUMBUS - Articles of
incorporation have been·filed in
Colwnbus with Secretary of
Stale Ted W. Brow/1 by Smith
Nelson Motors Inc: by Webster
and Fultz, Pomeroy attorney
finn . Agent is William H.
Nelson, Ill Union • Ave .,
I'omrroy ,

42li ves was a " large scale race

war."

; to complete the relocation of Routes 124 and 7. The new high·
way will tie in witll a cloverleaf exchange at Rock Springs.
Shelly-Sands also will build the cloverleaf.

NEW LOOK - The landscape in the heart of the Laurel
Cliff area of Meigs CoWJty is takilljl on a new look as heavy
equipment of the Shelly-Sands ConstrucUon Co. moves earth

---------------------------,
f
1\T
•
B . ,.f.
I
I
I

11ews ••• 1n

r1e1 s

By Uolted Press lnternaUooal

I

1
I
.

(

Terrorists Hit Pumps
BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND - A BRmSH army
spokesman reporled that terrorists today blew up a pumping
stati'dn at a reservoir. He added Ulat Ule station was e.sentiallo
the pumping of water into the capitaL However, it was not im·
mediately known how long water supplies would be cut off. The
spokesman revealed that the explosion tore a hole into Ule side of
a tank and left the station a mass of wreckage,

Enemy
Artillery Undaunted
•

SAIGON -NORTH VIETNAMESE ARTILLERY, in the face
of strong American air attacks, resumed bembarment today of
allied bases in and around the Cambodian town of Krek . Scores of
enemy rockets struck a South Vielnarnese position in Krek and
nearby Camp Alpha , which had been freed Monday from a llklay
Communist siege. Casualties were repOrted as light.

Four Dozer Operators Die
SUMMERLAND, CALIF. - FOUR MEN operating
bulldozers in lhe fight against a- ~,41HHlct e brush fire burned to

Auction Planned

· 21 are Guests

"Only the most naive person
would believe the same thing
would have happened if .the
prisoners were all white ,"
Julian Tepper said Thursday at
a news conference prior to a
speech at Brown University.
"Sixty per cent of the
prisoners at Attica were black
or brown, probably 75 per cent
in Yard D. All the guards, all
the state police and all the
National Guardsmen were
white," he said, and blamed
New York 's Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller for not going to the
prison .
"If Rockefeller had met witll
the observation committee,
which was what we asked him
to do, it would have given us
more time. With time non·
negotiable demands became
negotiable," Tepper said. He
also said if the governor had
been there the prisoners might
(Continued on page 10)

Twenty-one persons attended
the Meigs-Gallia Lodge 95
Frate rnal Order of Police
meeting Thursday evening at
the home of Sheriff and Mrs.
Robert Hartenbach.
They were Paul North. Hollis Leader-Training
North, Bruce Davis, Garland
Meeting Set Up
Nibert, John Taylor , Tony
Taylor , Grant Long, Silas Homemaker club leaders,
Hamilton and Chester Leaper, and 4-H advisors are invited to
Henry Werry, David Ohlinger, attend the-fall Leader:training
Robert Beegle, Jim Soulsby, meeting , "Color Complements
Carl Hysell, J . J. Cremeans, You" Thursday , Oct. 28, at Rio
Ronnie
Anderson , David Grande.
Sheets, Bernard FUltz, ~teve The event will be from 10 a.m.
Har tenbach, Kenny Imboden , to 3:30 p.m. with registration
and a coffee hour starting at
and Sheriff Hartenbach.
Refreshments were served by 9:30 a .m. Everyone interested
Mrs. Hartenbach and daughter should contact the County
Mos tly cloudy, chance of Debbie.
Extension
Office.
The
showers tonight, lows from the·
registration fee of 75 cents
lower 40s lo near 50. Shqwers
LOCAL TEMPS
should
also be
paid.
ending by afternoon east and
Tempera ture in down town Registrations must be in the
southwest. High Saturday upper Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was , County Extension Office by Oct.
50s to lower 60s.
50 degrees under sunny skies. 18.
A fund-raising aucllon ls
being planned by the Rolland
Volunteer Fire Department.
Proceeds,.wlll go toward the
purchase of a new fire truck.
Archi e McKinney ,
president of the department,
has requested dooallons of
any type Items - household
furniture, farm machinery,
anllques of any kind. Anyone
having contrlbulloos Is asked
to telephone 742-5721 giving a
name and the type of Items to
be donated. Arrangements
will then be made for pickup .

Weather

Israelites in Discontent

"The unemployment situation

PROVIDENCE. R.I. (UP!)A member of a five-man
observa tion team at .the upris·
ing at Attica State Prison says
!he re-takeover which claimed

Proposed

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

But the BLS said :

At Attica

Switch

169.95 4 PIECE BEDROOM SUITES

Reg . $25.00 Mens

Reg . 1.39

SALE PRICE 199.00

8.99

Big selection of Fall Handbags and Shoulder
Bag s in latest colors and finishes .
8.98
7.98
6.98
5.98
4.98
3.98

WALNUT BEDROOM SUITE

MEN'S 9.95 SWEATERS

HANDBAG SALE .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg .

Sale $249.00

Sale Friday and Saturday

woven nylon.

SALE

SALE 39.00

Double dresser wi th mirror ·. ~ dra~er chest, large and
roomy · full size panel bed. Beautiful Walnut finish.

13.00

foreman .

missionary
~

Special Purchase

Save now on famous
Bestform Bras and
Girdles during our
October Sale .

Famous Makes
8 Only 59.00, 69.00, 79.00 Box Springs

10 ONLY 39.00 BOX SPRNGS SALE 28.00

Sale Price

~~~--~~--~~--·~----·--------------~

•

Fri day , Safur day

for 7.25 ·

·-

SALE 29.00
SALE 45.00

TWIN SIZE BOX SPRINGS

Small. medium . large and extra large sizes .
Zipper front · 2 slas h pocket s and two button flap
bre ast pockets . Warm , prac li cal winter jac kets .

REG . 15 .00 WIGS . . . . .• • . . SALE 6.88
REG . 12.00 WIGS . . . . . . . . . SALE 5.88
REG. 10.00 WIGS · · · . · . . . . SALE 4.88
Assis tan t Stores Supervisor in
Ma rch of 1970, he served there

39.00 TABLES 59.00 TABLES -

RED AND BLACK PlAID JACKETS

SALE 9.99

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHlO

lnter~l3

nem

An ex cellenf sel ection · sturdily made. Oak and w'aln ut
finish es.

~----·~------~----·---------------------------1
' $17.95
Mens
Mr . Wrangler

WIG SALE ·

NO. XXIV NO. 124

. TABLES AND COCKTAIL TABj.ES

Friday and Saturday sale price

2

Devoted To 1'he

••

SALE! END TABLES - COMMODE

Col ors.

1.00

for

READY, AT LAST - Early in August when Middleport
Attorney Bernard Fulfl (white shirt) touched down •I
"Ohio's Most Scenic Airport" six miles outside McArthur to
talk to manager Bill Abele, hand on propeller, a dedication
da te for the new $3~ .oooadminislration building had not been
set. Now the building is complete with a snack bar aro
control tower equipment, and will be dedicated Suroay. Bill
Abele, brotller of Court of Appeals Judge Homer (Pete)
Abele, McArthur , is leasing the airport from Vinton County.
Bill is retired as utility supervisor with Ule Defense Eleclronic Supply Center, Dayton. The aircraft above is a Sky
Hawk 172Cessna, Bill's own plane. Total cost of Ule airport,
built with sl&lt;lte funds on land donated for Ulat purpose, was
$1SQ,OOO.

•

Sizes 6 t o 18 in soli d col or s. stripes, pla ids, novelty pattern s.
All are perman en t press. Fin e select ion of styles.

Bath Towels · . Sale 99c
S.te 49c
Hand Towels Sale 29c
Wash Cloths ·

8149

4.99 A SET

BOYS 3.95 SPORT SHIRTS

Fl oral prints or jacquards
in Tradifional or Decorator

at

cessorles. Black. Special
sale pr ice Friday and
S.turday

Special

4.88

Bath Ensembles

or Ribbed

7

. . Sale 3.99
. . · Sale 3.49
. . Sale 2.99
. Sale 2.99
. . Sale 2.49

bow ls.

I:

•

Hea vy vinyl · water
resi stant . Holds one or
more suits plus all a c·

Save $15.

'
Blue denim that's extra heavy and saniori zed .
Wide belt loops . Super slim fitting . Sizes 29 to 38
wai st .
Sale price Friday and Saturday

Two Davs Sale
Cannon

Waffle Weave

1112 qt., Jl/:2 pt.
Verde' green.

•

TREMENOOUS, .STUPENDOUS, FANTASTIC- ·The Hollywood words :_ are being used
about !he program ot the free Air Show at the dedication of the new administration building at
the Vinloo County Airport six miles north of McArthur.
Howard Johnson of Dayton will return to "Ohio's Most Scenic Airport" with his antique
aerobaticWacos. At last year's runway dedication Ule crowd was thrilled as those red by-wing
aircraft rolled, spinned and dove over Ule aiiport.
Six hW1dred miles per hour is the speed of !he 2,000 hp WW If N I fighter plane that will
demonstrate sl~olls, lazy eights and high s]ieed low level maneuvers.
The Vickers Squadron of the Lafayette Escadrille will be on hand to sh!Jw low level, tight
formation flying and will also be flying a turbo~harg ed Bellance Viking 300 for amazing high
speed low level air work.
Sky divers with colorful chutes are also on the program as are antique and experimental
aircraft, plane rides, prizes, bands, chicken barbecue and many other exciting events.
'!'he Family-Fun-Day will begin at 8 a.m. with plane rides and an outdoor Early Bird
breakfast for pilots flying in. .
.
Barbecued chicken will he ready as will sandwiches, soft drinks and coffee from II a.m. on.
One o'clock will mark the beginning of the official dedication and an air show.

FLIGHT BAGS

Set consists of 4 qt., 2'12 qt.,

Young Mens 5.95 Wrangler

Machine washa bl e, soil release fin ish. Avocado . Gold - Ecr u

· ~ Building J)edicatio~ on.Sunday

Jet CiJrry-On

BOWL SETS

Permane nt Press

. Wh ite .

~~~:~=:::::::::::::::::~;~;:;~;;;;:::::~:=:i~::~=::::::~:::7:::~:::::::::=:.:;:::g::~:~:::::::::::::~:!:!;~~~:;::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:~:::~=:•::::::::::;:::;:;:;::::::··:::;:::::::::::::~:!:!:!:!:~::::~~:1~

Pyrex 4 piece $6.50

77t;

TABLECOVERS

.,

SALE 39.00

Friday · Saturday Sale

SALE 2 pairs 3.00

2 pairs 7.90

159.50 Carousel Model 750 Slide, Projector
Made by K~!k

Mens and Yourig Mens

Regula r and ext ra sizes

Regula r kn it or ultra sheer

SALE 135.00

Lee Prest to ke ep them loo ~ ing great with no
ironing ever.
7.49 Rust Rider Boot Cut and
Blue denim Riders · · • . • • . Sale 6.35
7·98 Polyester and cotton blend Boot Cut
Riders- Tanbark or Olive . - - • • • ·Sale 6.69
8.98 Houndstooth Check
Boot Cut Riders . . . • . . • • · · Sale 7.69

;

NEW YORK (UP!) - Tbe Israeli press, appareolly
Inspired by Israeli officialdom, said today there bad
been a "serious erosion" In U.S. Middle East policy and
that Israel would stand firm against maklug BDy more
concessions.
The blast appeared as Secretary of Slate William P.
Rogers worked In New York to try to reach some interim
Middle East setUement. He bas talked will! II foreign
envoys aud called a second meeUog today with EgypUan
Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad.
The Israeli unhappiness with Rogers' Middle East
policy was touched off by his U.N. General Assembly
speech &lt;1 last Monday In which llle lsraells say be
retreated from previous demands for an uollmlted
ceaseflre aloog llle Soez Canal and wanted llle Israelis to
permit EgypUans to cross into llle occupied Sinal.

::::

I:t ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,)t

New Boards
lri _Phase 2
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President N~on unveiled the goals
of his p05t-freeze economic policy Thursctay, passing along to two
new citiZens' boards Ule lay decisions on pennissible wage and
price increases.
It may be as long as five weeks before workers, businessmen
and consumers get answers to Ule questions that concern them
most: "How much will wages increase ?" and ''what will happen
to prices?"

Nixon is a national television and radio broadcast, announced
creation of a 15-member pay board with representatives of labor,
management and the general public, and a seven-member price
commission of non-government members to esta~lish the
guidelines for the next phase of infiation conlrol policy , ·
The boards have until Nov. 13 cials said the membership of
- when the . wage-price-rent the boards would be announced
freeze expires - to lay down in a few days.
The wage-price freeze, as
guidelines for pay and price
increases. Administration offi · pre vi ously announced, remains
in effect until Nov. 13.
"The wage-price freeze has
been remarkably successful, "
Nixon said. "The primary
credit for the success of this
first step in the fight against
rising prices belongs to you, it
belongs to the American people.
It is you who have shown a
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The willingness to cooperate in the
three-year hearings by the campaign against inflation."
i'ecurily &amp; Exchange Com· Officials said Nixon 's objecmission on the application of tive was to reduce the annual
American Electric Power Co. to rate of increase in the cost of
acquire Colwnbus &amp; Southern living to between 2 and 3 per
Ohio Electric Co. have been cent by the end of ne xt year,
postponed.
about half of the . pre-free ze
. SEC examiner Irving Schiller level of 4.7 per cent. No effort
ordered the delay Thursday as a would be made to stop all price
result of SEC's delay in ruling increases.
on an appeal by Dayton Power
The officials indicated some
&amp; Light Co. of an order to make prices would be pennitted to
certain documents available for increase more than 3 per cent
AEP inspection.
·-·
while others would be held to
Dayton Power and Cincinnati less than that amount or even
Gas &amp; Electric Co. are opposing' required lo declined.
the merger, along with the Administration sources reJustice Department and the fused to discuss possible wage
SEC staff.
(Continued on page 10 )

AEP's Plan To

Buy C&amp;SOE

Is Postponed

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death late Thursday. Two other firefighters were seriously in-

injured men suffered secondo(!egree burns but were reported in
good condition. "They were working on the line when an emher
from Ule flareup blew behind them. It started a secopd fire which
went up the slope and got them," a U. S. Forest Service
spokesman said.

BY GEORGE HARGRAVES ; SUPT.
dous size. What can we-you and I- do about it? Our
Meigs Local School District
State Attorney General. William J. Brown, has come
· Early Ulis week I recei~ed a fonn letter from Dr. up with an idea that might help.
He has CQOslructed a brief note witll a very simple
100,000 to Greet Dick and Pat
Speaking of Schools-No. 208 Uleme encompassed in tlle letters TIP. TIP stands for
ELKINS, W. VA. -A CROWD numbering nearly 100,000 was
Turn In a Pusher. The brief note tells you how. Let me
expected to !urn out here this afternoon to officially welcome Sidney Marland, the U. S. Commissioner·of Education. quote the Attorney General's message direclly.
President Nixoo to West Vlrglnh .as he takes '(lllrl in the I would like to quote the first paragraph to you, It
"Turn In a Pusher -call 221-0HIO (614-221-M46 ).
corQnalion of the MoWJtain State Forest Festival queen .
follows :
"Ohio is confronted with one of the most serious
Nixon and the first lady, accompanied by various aides, were
"Among the major problems facing us in problems in its history. The crisis is one of drug abuse,
expected to stop here for aiSOUt 90 minutes en route to Camp education today one is so potentially destructive that it which is permeaUng all facets of our society. It is of
David ,Md.,for lhe weekend ..The trip is historical in that witll the warrants our special concern . The increased abuse of such dimension that the state government alone
stop in West Virginia Nixon will become th!!first president to visit drugs among our youtll is shocking , and such a waste of cannot solve the problem. I call on .you to assist in
all 50 states while in office .
Ule precious future resources of our society."
finding the sources of illegal drugs. If' you have any
Imported BrJJnds to Cost More
Dr. Marland goes ,on to emphasize lhe fac t that information concerning the use of illegal drugs or drug
President Nixon has de~Iared Ule week of Octoher 3·9 traffic, call (614-22J.OHI0 ) in Cohuntius.
COLUMBUS - STATE LIQUOR Control Director Richard E. as "Drug Abuse Prevention Week."
''Any information such as names, descriptions,
Guggenheim said today he would increase the cost of imported
Newspapers, magazines, radio and TV all carry the . lirense plate numbers or other tips will be sincerely
liquor in Ohio to pass the surtax on to lhe consumer,
,
same cry of alarm. You pro football fans have seen a appreci~ted . Our conversation will .be completely
"Starting Nov, 1 tlie department will have to pass on to the . lot of NFL phiyers in public service commercials confidential and you need not give your name.
consumer Ule surtax 'Ulat President Nixon imposed in iihports hitting drug abuse.
"!thank you In advance for your cooperation. You
(Continued on page 10)
. ,
Indeed , America is faCing a problem of tremen· are performing a great service for yow: State and its
r ,

'.

children. " Signed - William J. Brown, Attorney
GeneraL
Atty. Gen. Brown provided us witll over 3,000
copies of his letter . Every student in the Meigs Local
School District Should have brought one home from
school today. !! might be a good idea to post it on your
bulletin board for future reference.
That numher again is Columbus 221~6 .
NEWS &amp; NOTES - The House-Senate conference
committee of 'six has begun the difficult task of trying
to fit toget~r the very different House and Senate
educatiOn and revenues bills- Today is the final day of
Ule first six weeks grading period - There will be no
school next Thursday, October a, because of. the
county teachers' meeting - We travel to JacksOn
!.&gt;night to continue in SEOALcompetillon. i hope to see
you' there - The Big Bend Minstrel Slow will lake
place atthe high. school on Saturday, November 13; ~e
Meigs AlhleUc Boosters are sponsoring this fundraising, entertaining evening - The date set for .the
annualfootbaU banquet is Tuesday, Nov, !&amp;at Ule higll
school.

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