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'

-'

•

ran

rtze to

eace

•

His Ostpolitik
Aimed to East

Devoted To The lntere~IA Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

NO. XXIV
SPIRIT IS RUNNING high among Eastern High School band members
this week as they put in long hours after school rehearsing for participating
in the Tri.Sta:te Marching Band Festival to be held in Huntington, W. Va.,
Saturday. Twenty-four bands from Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky will

take part In the festival with three awards to be given In each oftlree c!aues
for bands including those with 96 members and over; 64 to 96 and less than
64, and to the best majorettes. Director of the band is Charles Willis.

. ·.·. ..

. . '•'·'·. ·.

:

Undercover Deals Bared
COLUMBUS (UP! )- •·Major
changes" will be made in land
acquisition procedures or the
state Department of Natural
Resources as a result of disclosures alleging the wasting of
taxpayers'
dollars
and
"quickie" land transactions
profits during the last administration, Gov. John J. Gilligan
said Monday .
"It seems clear that the department in previous years did
not obtain nearly as much land

as it could have for the money
it spent," Gilligan said. "There
has been gross waste of taxpayers' dollars and, in at least
one instance, land speculators
have made substantial 'quickie'
profil'l at the taxpayers' expense.''

Gilligan said the alleged improper practices were revealed
in a study conducted lor the
department by International
Appraisal Co. ol Columbus. The
study uncovered "apparent

'quickie' profi.ts in the sale of
land for Geneva State Park .in
Ashtabula County in late 1970,"
the governor said.
"A complete apprisal made
for the department by John M.
Calhoun &amp;Associates of Columbus indicated the state overpaid $319,400 for 212 acres, anq
that the slate paid $473,000 to
businessman Theodore Case
and real estate dealer Hart
Morrison last December for
12.4 acres at the park that

Principals Would Bargain
COLUMBUS (UP! ) -A state
law that woul&lt;j,require recognition ol supervisory and management level personnel by
school districl'l lor the purpose
ol collective bargaining was
recommended Monday by the
Ohio Association ol Secondary
School Principals (OASSP) .
About 450 delegates to the
!all conference of the OASSP
resolved that such legislation
would consider administrative
units separate from local
· t;,acher associations or other
employe units.
The statewide group resolved
to encourage boards of education "to work earnestly and cooperatively with local administrator groups in the developmen! of adequate guidelines resuiting in the protection of the
status and welfare of the members."
The resolution said administrator associations should have
the same rights and privileges
other employe groups in a
school district.

MEIGS THEAtRE
Tonight, OCtober 19
LOVE

STORY

Clechnicolor)

Ali McGraw
Ryan O' Neal

" GP"

Colorcartoons :
Soup's On

Oon 's Fountain of Youth
Hawaiian Holiday
One admission 'only : Sl.OO

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
Wednesday and Thurs.
Oct. 20-21

NOT

OPEN

The principals also asked for
more authority "to determine
the kinds of programs best for
each individual student, such as
dlflerentiated instruction,
length of school day" and
alternative ways of completing

Bail Bonders
Hit Hard by
l
New R U ing
CINCINNATI (UP!) - In a
move that will probably drive
many bail bonding companies
out or busmess, Hamilton
County Municipal . Court
Monday adopted a reduced bail
procedure for misdemeanor
offenses.
Under the revised rules for
this, Ohio's second most
populous county, most charges
will carry a traction of the
previous bond requirement lor
an arrested person to gain his
release until trial.

Possession of marijuana,
which previously carried a
SI,OOO bond, was reduced to $50
for residents or the county and
$250 for out.of-&lt;:ounty residents.
The bond for carrying a
concealed weapon was reduced
from $1,000 to $100 for county
residenl'l, although the bond
remains the same for oul'liders.
A person will need to post just
a $5 bond for driving without a
license starting today, down
from $300. Out-of-county
residenl'l must post $15. Judges
of the court unanimously
adopted the new procedure
which was proposed in July by
Judge Paul Gilday.

SQUIRRELS DO IT!
Far-sighted little critters. Come
fall they start storing up for the
winter ahead . Get the habit too, and
start putting some of you.r earnings
away now for the future.
WH! N YOU Vl',lT PARK FREE

lllbens
J1a~iorutl
-c.

state educational requirements.
Other resolutions adopted
Monday called for administrator contracts for three to five
years, proper evaluation procedures for secondary administrators and improvements in
state retirement benefil'l, including up through five years
of military service credit as
!;,aching service for retirement
and full benefil'l for aU educators with 30 years of experience, regardless of age.

Stewardess
Helped Cool
Hijacker
VANCOUVER, B. C. (UP!) A pretty, blue-eyed stewardess
on her first working .flight was
credited today with thwarting a
convicted killer who tried to
hijack a 737 jetliner with 31
passengers aboard for a 5,000
mile flight from Alaska to Cuba.
Nancy Davis, 22, Seattle, who
graduated only Sunday !rom
flight school, said the hijacker
"stuck a gun into my face"

shortly alter the WeinConsolida ted Airlines plane
took off Monday from An·
chorage for Bethel in wesoorn
Alaska .
The soowardess talked the
hijacker into letting the pilot
turn the plane around and land
at Anchorage to let out the
passengers and another
st;,wardess. The plane took off
again, this time for Vancouver.
The hijacker, who finally
surrendered to a Royal
Canadian Moun ted Police inspector who boarded the plane
here, was identified as Dale
Labon Thomas, 28, of
Hawthorne, Cali!. He was
released in August from a
lederai prison camp in Alaska
after serving a manslaughter
sentence for shooting a man in
Kodiak, Alaska, in 1965.
From the time the hijacker
threatened Miss Davis until the
time he surrendered, he landed
three times, took of! twice and
kept authorities on both sides ol
the border oonse for 12 hours.
He forced the plane to return
to Anchorage, take off and fly to
Vancouver, take off again presumably for Havana - then
returned to Vancouver alter 60
minutes in the air.
After the passengers were
allowed to get off in Anchorage
the plane flew 1,500 miles to
Vancouver with only Thomas,
Miss Davis, Pilot Don Peterson,
first oflicer Ray Miller and
engineer Keith Forsgren.
The the jet took off again.
About an hour later it returned
and RCMP inspector Bruce
Northrup got ahoard and took
Thomas into custody without a
struggle after a long conversat ion.

FREEZE VIOLATION
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Huber Investment Corp. of
Dayton was char.ged Monday by
the U. S. Justice Department
with violating the wage-price
MIDDLEPC'RT . O ili:J
lreeze by raising apartment
Member Federal Depllllt-Insurr.ot'&lt; Corporation
rents by $5 ang $10 in Ohio,
.,___________""!'________!lllndian.l and Florida. ·
CINCINNATI

Surn Approved

MEET TONIGHT
NEW HAVEN -There will be
a meeting of the New Haven
Park and Recreation Commission on Tuesday, Oct. 19, at 7
p.m. at the City Building.
Members of the Fund Raising
Committee and Advisory Board
are requested to be present at
this meeting. Any other interested citizen is also invited to
attend this important meeting.

DOG SAVES MASTER
CONDOVE, Italy (UP!)
Doctors said Angelo Maffei
Pecchio probably owed his life
to his dog. Pecchio, 45, fell into a
crevice during a hunting party
Sunday. His dog led rescue
parties to its injured master
Monday. Doctors said the
animal apparently saved
Pecchio from exposure by
keeping him warm with il'l bndy
throngh the chilly night.

NUDE SKIERS
KEMPTEN, Germany (UP!)
- The tourist oflice of this
Bavarian wint;,r resort has
reserved a slalom course for the
exclusive use of nulllit skiers
this winter.

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
The Board of Trustees of the
Tuppers Plains -Cht:ster Water

District hereby request bids on
the following :

10,000 ft . 4 in . PVC pipe to ·
meet all AWWA specifications.
Com plete with 9 inch , schedule
80 class with twin gaskets , fluid

type couplings.
Written bids must be sub mitted by noon. November 2,
1971 and delivery to be made
November 4, 1971. The Board
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids .
Tuppers Plains Chester Water
Dis trict Board .
1101 19. 26 1111 2. Jl

Farm

Plan

(Continued from page I )
turn for land-diversion paymenl'l. As a third step, the
grower then may of!er to idle
another 5 to 10 per cent of his
acreage in return for diversion
paymenl'l. The Agriculture Department will decide by next
March whether to accept any
or all or the third-st;,p land retirement oilers.
Farmers will be able to enroll in the 1972 leed grain and
cotton programs between Jan .
17 and Feb. 25.
Hardin told questioners he
did not expect the new moves
to pare back grain surpluses to
result in any significant increases in retail · prices of
mears or other livestock products. Most reed grains are used
in producing a livestock product.
The new program will help
conswners, Hardin asserted,
because it will help assure an
orderly sUpply of meat, milk
and poultry.
He indica ted he hoped for
about a five million acre increase in soybean acreage.

REV. RAULIJN MOYER, pastor, Is pictured hanging a rellglou.s painting In thesancwary
of the Middleport Church of Christ. The painting, depleting Christ knocking at a door, Is the
original work of Mrs. W. F. Koenig, 642 Brownell Ave., Middleport. It is the first religlous work
of Mrs. Koenig who has been painting for several years. The painting Is a gift to the Rev· and
Mrs. Moyer, to be used in the church during the Rev. Mr. Moyer's mlniBtry here.

Brinkley Isn't Seared
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Newscaster David Brinkley,
disagreeing with his competitor
!rom another network-Walter
Cronkite- told a congressional
hearing today that criticism
from Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew and others has not
intimidated television journa-

pared for today's hearing of the
Senate subcommittee on constutitional rights, took an opposite
viewpoint.
"As for intimidation by our
critics, there is none that I
know of," Brinkley said.
"Anyone who can't stand
criticism should not go into

lism .

journalism ... "

Cronkit;,, anchorman lor the
CBS evening news, told the
same lorum on Sept. 30 that TV
news' freedom to report is
"curtailed or endangered by
intimidation and harassment."
He advocated elimination of
government licensing of broadcasters to remove the possibility that a government official's
criticism could be taken as a
threat to silence a station.
But Brinkley, an NBC commentator, in testimony pre-

"Intimidation" is defined as
the act of making someone
timid or fearful.
Brinkley said television news
is the target ol "a fairly
widespreadpuglicanger" which
is "now reflected in the public
statemenl'l of political figures
who have detected this anger
and hostility and have made a
public issue ol it."
The reasons, he said are that
TV news is more personal than
newspaper news; TV news is

Ambulance Services

preceded and followed by light
entertainment; and TV news is
seen by a large audience which
never read serious news in
newspapers "and who don't
really understand what its
purpose is."
He said this is reflected in
letters he receives asking why
he glorifies or dignifies an ugly
or depressing pubUc event-=
letters now invariably ending
with: Agnew ·was right."
"The answer, of course, is so
obvious it's abnost embarrassing to have to make It," he
said. "It is that we put this
stuff on because we think the
audience would like to know
about it, or ought to know about.
i~rtainly not because we
like it or approve it or advocate
it. 0
In contrast to Brinkley's
conlidence that television news
would survive il'l critics,
Cronkit;, contended that t;,levision news already has suflered
!rom intimidation.
11

1Continued from page I)

chants Association, asked council to offer free parking on the
two parking lots from Dec. 1&amp; to the 24th. Walton said the
merchants would reimburse council the amount of money the
town would receive during that period.
Several council members were not irmfavor of the free
parking even with payment. Walton agreed, following a
snggestion made by£ouncil, to contact aU merchants by letter to
get each one's opinion and submit it to council at the next
regular meeting. Council will act on the matter at the next
meeting.
William Baronick, president of the Board ol Public Affairs
reported that the water company was now operating in the blaclo
and making money for the village . Baronick asked council to
purchase a new fire hydrant to be placed on Lincoln Hill. Council
agreed.
The mayor reported that a representative was here from
tile U. S. Corps of Engineers at Huntington had lnapected the
parking lot walls. Areport will he SMt to council on his findings.
The mayor's report which showed receipts in the amount of
$497.98 for the month of October was accepted. Attending were
Legar, Rizer, Ralph Werry, E1ma Russell, Jim Mees, and Doo
C&lt;&gt;llins, council members, Jane Walton, clerk, Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer, Ewing and Baronick.

News ... in BriefS
(Continued from page I)
them as Eugene Padovlck, 28, the Ohio vice president of the gang;
Frank Amboskl 21, construction worker, and James Camolte,
30, a mechanic. All listed the Cleveland chapter of the club as
their address. Five persons were ldiJed March 6 when a flght
lroke out between members of the Hell's Angela and the rival
"Breed" gang at a motorcycle show at the Polish Women's Hall. ·

a

Middleport
Personal Notes
Mrs . Kathern Smith returned home Sunday after a several days visit
In Columbus with her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Flowers. She
went especially for medical
treatment. Mr . and Mrs.
Flowers brought her home
Sunday.
Mr . and' Mrs. Fielding
Hawkins, Middleport, and Mr.
and Mrs . Charles Vroman,
Belpre, have returned from a
several days' vacation at the
English Mountain Resort in
Tennessee.
While
they
vacationed, Mr. and Mrs. John
Vroman stayed with their
grandchildren, Mark and Mary,
at their Belpre home.
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds was in
Lancaster Sunday for a meeting
of the International White
Shrine Club at the home of Mrs.
William Baker. Mrs. Freda
Welllng accompanied her there
and visited Mrs. Carl Fletcher.
Mrs. Ruth Nine, Mrs. Pauline
Reece, and Mrs. Anna Groce of
Akron are the guesl'l today of
Mrs. Nina Bland.

ELBERFELD$
BARRY KUSH.QNS
WASHABLE· REVERSIBLE

CUSHIONS
SEE THE EXT£NSIVE LINE IN ALL THE MOST
WANTED STYLES, NEWEST FASHION COLORS
FOR HOME ACCESSORIZING

LEGAL NOTICE
Donald Covert

vs .

Agnes Sellers
Case No . 591
In pursuance to an execution
issued from the Meigs County
Court , Pomeroy, Oh io, on the

20th day of September 1971, and
to me directed in the case above
named, I will expose for sa l e at
publi c au ction at the front door
of the Court House , Pomeroy ,
Ohio , Meigs County on Friday ,
October 29th , 1971, at 10 o'clock
A .M ., the following goods and
chattel to -wit :
1960 Automobile Ford Fa l con ,
Serial Number OH 11 S 198693,
color Black .
Terms of sale : Cash In hand
on day of sale .
Ta ke n as the properly of
Ag nes Se llers to satisfy an
e•ecu l ion in favor of Don.ald
Covert .
s Robert c Hartenba ch
Sheriff
Meigs c;:oun ly
f iO J 19. li e

POMEROY-M!DOI EPORT. OHlO

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

Fire at Goeglein Mine Minor

·.··:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday:
Partly cloudy and mild
Case and 'Morrison had pur- Thursday. Chance of showers
chased four days earlier for Friday and Saturday with
$220,000.
little change in temperature.
"ln!;,rnational Appraisal re- Highs from the mid 60s to the
viewed the Geneva purchase lower 70s. Lows from the mid
from procedural standpoinls 40s to the lower 50s.
and said former Natural Re- s·w·.-~rw.:::!!~:::::::::~:::::::::::::~::::~::.~·
sources Director Fred E. Morr
and other top department oflicials bypassed the head of the
real estate section in setting Gallia County Commissioners
Monday appropriated $1,306. to
the selling price of the land,"
the 648 Mental Health and
Gilligan said.
The governor said he would Retardation Board ol Gallia,
instruct his executive counsel, Jackson and Meigs Counties:
James M. Friedman, and Wil- The allocation represented
liam B. Nye, department direc- Gallia 's share for the project.
tor, "to meet with Morr to de- Mrs. Maxine S. Plummer, Rt.
l, Wellston, is executive
!ermine how this irregularity director lor the · board. The
could occur in a land purchase funding ol the 648 Board is
involving nearly 1.\00,000 in tax- provided by the State Departpayers' money."
.
ment of Mental Hygiene and
"There is a definite need for C
t·
d b th
.
·
·
·
·
d
IOn an y e coun 11es.
tr ammg m appra1sa1proce ures Thorrec
b rd
f
lab!' hed
for (the department's) staff ape oa was Irs1 es . •s .
·
d h ( ts' d ) through a steermg committee m
r;:·~~~ra~ers wa~~ s~~ec~. the three counties .
In other matters, com·
greater care should be given to missioners received ollicial
the use of qualified professional
notification on the appointment
persons," Gilligan said the re- ol Fritz Stover as the new Gallia
port stated.
The governor said that County Civil Delense director.
recommendation would be lol- Stover chosen by the Civil
Delense Executive Committ;,e
lowed by the department and replaced· Terry Alley who
added that other procedural
changes are to be instituted resigned.
"as a result ol the study's dis- Recorder Evalee Myers was
granted permission to att;,nd a
closures. "
recorders' convention Oct. 29Nov. 2 in Columbus.

NO 13?

TEN CENTS

ZIPPERED CHAIR PADS,
·TUFTED CHAIR PADS, 2 PIECE CUSHION SETS FOR
ROCKERS AND HIGH BACK CHAIRS
FABRICS - FIVE WALE CORDUROY,
LUXUR IOUS COTTON VELVETEEN,
AND AN ATTRACTIVE PROVINCIAL COTTON PRINT

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Gallipolis volunteer tlremen,
alerted by an Ohio Highway
Patrol plane, prevented what
could have been a major fire
Tuesday afternoon at the
Goeglein coal mining operation
at Clipper Mills.
Firemen were summoned at
2:49 p.m. to the area where a
caravan ol roving pickets took
to the roads to scare non-union
operators into closing down
their mines.
Fire chief James A. Northup
said his men used live gallons of
water in dousing a blaze that
caused an estimated $5 damage
when rags, oil and other
materials were set afire.
Northup said a major blaze
could have broken out since an
acetylene tank and oxygen tank
were round nearby with open
valves. The tipple was not
burned.
Gallia County Sheri!! Denver
A. Walker said, "It seems it was
a warning bonlire." A Goeglein
spokesman said no one was at
the Clipper mine at the time.
Pickel'l there told officials
they were interested in closing
down all strip mines in the area.
Windows in the company's
office adjacent to the tipple
contained at least six holes,
apparently caused by gunlire.
Oil cans and rags were lying
near the point where the lire
occurred. The mine ceased
operation Monday morning.
The pickel'l continued up Rt. 7
and stopped at the Raven Coal
Company near the Skyline
Lanes Bowling Alley, but there
was no violence .
The Gallia County sheriff's
department reported late
Tuesday tluit the pickets were
enroute to Marietta where the
caravan was disbanded.-"We
had deputies checking coal
companies in the area all night,
but we saw no sign of the
miners," a deputy said .
Meanwhile, in Lawrence
County, a quick-thinking sheri!!
confronted 600 men armed with
shotguns, rifles and pistols and
talked them out of burning down
a mine owned by state Sen.
Oakley Collins.
Law enforcement officers
said the group was the same one
that went on a rampage
Saturday in east central Ohio,
burning equipment, overturning coal trucks and
throwing rocks at deputy
sheriffs.
The 43-ear and truck caravan
ol miners had visited the
Clipper works after leaving
adjacent Lawrence County.
Lawrence County Sheri!!
James H. Howell said he conlronted the miners when they
"rolled into my area about 11
o'clock Tuesday morning ."
"They told me they were
going to burn the tipple at the
Collins Coal Co., three miles
south of Ironton," Howell said.
"I confronted them by myself,
and with some fast talkin' and a
little bit of luck, I talked them
out of burning down the Collins

' '"

'

CHARLES PYLES

Mayor Pyles
Is PromotedVoting Place

'"
~

OSLO (UP!) ·- The 1971 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded
today to West German Chancellor Willy Brandt.
'
The award was in recognition of his efforts to ease West
Germany's relations with Eastern Europe through a series of
treaties and a friendship pact with the Soviet Union.
The award was announced by the Norwegian parliament
Nobel committee which selects the peace prize winner. The other
Nobel prizes are awarded in Stockholm.
The prize, considered the
world's finest humanitarian an East-West troublespot.
award, is worth 450,000 Swedish
Brandt was one or 39
kronor - $90,000 at current candidates lor this year's
market rates .
award but most observers had
Brandt, 58, a Social Demo- ruled him out of contention,
crat, fled to Norway during considering him too controverWorld War II to escape nazism. sial.
After the war he returned to
Brandt, who became chancelserve as mayor of West Berlin lor in 1969 when he formed a
when he became a world figure. coalition between his own Social
As chancellor he has worked Democrats and the Free
to reach a permanent peace Democrats, has made reconcilisettlement with Poland and ation between West Germany
settle their border disputes, has and the Communist nations the
sent emissaries to other East major aim of his loreign policy .
He began this new "ostpoiiEuropean countries to try to
improve relations with them tik" (eastern policy) as a
and is currently engaged in foreign minister···in the grand
East-West German talks to coalitioH between the Christian
ease the Berlin situation, long Democrats and the Socialists.

••

omo STATE Patrolman Roger Hyden, left, points to one
of six bullet-type holes in the Goeglein Coal C&lt;&gt;., weighing-in
office, located off Rt. 7, at Clipper Mills, five miles south of
Gallipolis. Patrolman Hyden and Patrobnan Mark Shaffer,

right, were on the scene around 6 p.m., Tuesday. Three sides
of the square structure were hit. Glass was seen both outside
the window, and on the inside. One of the chairs appeared to
have a bullet hole in it.

Arnett of Maryland Gets ARC
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Birginia, Kentucky, Maryland,
Alvin J . Arnett, an aide to Sen. New York, Virginia, Tennessee,
J. Glenn Beall, R-Md., today Georgia, Alabama, North
was named to the $36,000-a-year Carolina, South Carolina and
post of executive director of the . Mississippi.
Appalachian Regional Com- Arnett will oversee the operamission (ARC).
lions of the Washington-based
Arnett, a native of Salyers- organization in his new duties.
ville, Ky., succeeds Ralph R.
The 36-year-old Arnett served
Widner, who resigned. The ap- as a special assistant to former
pointment was announced by ARC federal co-&lt;:hairman John
ARC at a meeting here.
Waters before taking his post
"I look forward to this chal- with BeaU. He also was a staff
lenging assignment and hope member ol the commission
that in some small way I can earlier in his career.
contribute to the continuing im·
A to-year Coast Guard veter·
provement in the quality of life an, Arnett was a White House
in Appalachia," Arnett said.
aide during 1967-&lt;ill while a lieuThe !~ate ARC is a lederal- tenant commander.
He attended Marshall Universtate partnership designed to
improve health, education, em- sity at Huntington, W. Ya., and
ployment and transportation in is a graduate of Florida Souththe poverty belt.
ern College.
Included are the states of
Arne}! and his family reside
Ohio, Pennsylvania, West in Bethesda, Md.

,:::;:::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,~,--~~\,

l,~:. l,_ Blood Donations are Needed ~~:-·,
:;;:
:;,

i!l

The Meigs County Chapter, American Red Cross,
asks everyone who is sensitive of other persons' tragedies
to make a blood donation at the next Bloodmobile visit at
Pomeroy Elementary School on Tuesday, October 26from
1
a blood donation
must weigh 110 lbs. or
more and must be between the ages of 18 and 66. Many
people think their blood lsn'tthe righttype. But every type
is the right type!
Even rare types are needed at all times. Every
minute,!Ounlts of blood are needed In hospitals across the
country.
,
Your blood donation will be your gift of llfe that may
help to replace blood lost by an accident victim, make It
possible for a sick child to run and play, enable an elderly
patient to withstand surgery, or give a new born baby a
healthy start in llfe.

!*a ~ ~~~ake
::::
~;

&lt;

~ :.

,.,.

the

o~e

~:eB~===~f~~i~ give a blood donation during
Decide now to be a blood donor.

The promotion of Charles F.
Pyles to the position of
Superintendent of Shipping at
the Graham Plant of Foote
Mineral Company, effective
last October I, was announced
today by C. G. Adler, Plant
Manager.
Pyles graduated !rom
Chester !ljgh School, Chester,
and began his employment with
Foote Mineral Company in
September, 1953. In March,
1959, he was promoted to
Shipping Foreman and in May,
1970 to Assistant Superintendent
of Shipping.
•
Pyles and his wile, Shirley,
'd
with their lour children rest e
at 410 Fourth Street, Racine. He

Staffs Named
Precinct workers for the Nov.
2 -election were announced
today by the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
The first named in each
precinct is the presiding judge,
the next three are judges and
the last two are clerks. The "R"
and "D" after each name
signily to which political party
the precinct workers belong :

t

.

Carper D.
WEST SEDFORD- Mr. Guy

Sargent R, Mrs. Victoria Jones

R. Mr. Cecil Toban D, Mrs.
Louise Harrison O, Mrs. Audra
Hayes R. Mrs. lona Brickles D.
NORTH CHESTER - Mrs.
Ann S. Radford R, Mrs. Bertha
F. Smith R, Mrs. Dorothy L.
Myers D. Mrs. Mary J . Hunter
0, Mrs. Norma J . Sesxan R,

EAST SEDFORD - Mrs.
Sylvia L. Midkiff R, Mrs .

Mrs . Marcia L. Keller 0.

(Continued bn page 2)

Half Mill Levy

Being Asked
For Cemetery

Pomeroy voters will decide
upon a one-hall-mill new tax
levy when they go to the polls on
Nov. 2.
The hall-mill levy would be in
effect for five years, if passed,
and would amount to SO cenl'l on
each $1,000 of property
valuation. It would produce
about $3,000 annually.
The cemetery trustees have
tentative plans for paving the
roadways of the cemetery if the
measure is approved. The levy
would provide not only funds for
the paving but also money for
other
needed
cemetery
Pomeroy town hall secretary maintenance, the trustees said.
Mrs. Dorinda Nardei is being a
good Samaritan but would be
just as happy to be relieved
!rom the role.
Tuesday evening Mrs. Nardei · Mostly sunny and continued
encountered on East Main St. a mild tnday with a high in the
brown and white dog which mid to upper 70s. Partly cloudy
insisted on staying in the middle and little change in temol the road ..Fearing the animal perature tonight, low in the
· would he struck by a car, Mrs. upper 40s and 50s. Thursday
Nardei rescued it: took it home variable cloudiness with a high
and confined it. The pet in the 70s .
resembles a small boxer. He
was wearing a black collar
LOCAL TEMPS
bearing no identification tag .
Temperature
in do.wntown
The owner may claim his pel
by phone 992-2427 until 4 p.m. .or Pomeroy Wednesday was 64
degrees under sunny skies . .
992-3580 after 4.

Brown, White

·.:.'!.!!_!:.:

Dog Rescued

Victory Promised

Editor's
Note:
The planned visit of President
following dispatch on Henry Nixon, which may take place
Kissinger's arrivalln Peking before, the end of the year.
Punctually at 11:15 a.m .
was filed by the German news
PHNOM PENH (UP!)- Prime Minister Lon Nol said today
agency Deutsche Presse (11:15 p.m. EDT Tuesday) the his government no longer will "play the game of democracy and
Agentur (DPA). The dispatch . Boeing 707 with the delegation
'freedom" but will act in a way that "will bring us to victory."
Is being distributed by United aboard landed at Peking AirThe prime minister of Cambodia spoke in a nationwide
Press International with port !rom Washington. A few
approval of the agency.
minutes later, Kissinger and his broadcast following a silent protest by Buddhists against
aides, accompanied by their Saturday's action suspending the powers of the National
Chinese hosts, srepped into cars Assembly. "Should we vainly play the game of democracy and
DISTRIBUTED BY UP!
which had been standing ready lreedom which will lead us to complete defeat or should we curtail
PEKING
(DPA)
anarchic freedom in order to achieve victory?" Lon No! asked in
Presidential adviser Henry far out on the runway.
Kissinger arrived in Peking
Because of the distance !rom the broadcast.
"The government has made ing the action against the
mine .
today for four days of con- the terrace or the airport
"! told them they could talk sultations. Along with his nine- building from which newsmen il'l decision," he added. "We national assembly and asked
with Coleman Collins, Oakley's man staff, he will meet with observed the arrival, it was not have selected the way that will Lon Nol to "rectify the state of
(Continued on page 12)
alfairs." The monks stayed in
Chinese leaders to prepare the possible to identify who was on bring us to victory."
He
appealed
for
unity,
but
their pagodas, gathered behind
hand to welcome
the
it with a veiled threat. .,.;·,······································································
r-------------;-------~-----1 Americans, or o\her details of coupled
"Recently, certain groups ·!·.···············································...·.•·•·•·•·······•·······
the arrival.
HOW THEY VOTED
Peking radio said Kissinger have launched acl'l aimed at
WASHINGTON (UPI) and a group of 13 were creating confusion," he said. The U. S. House of
I
By United Press International
welcomed by Chi Peng-lei, "There is a fifth column at Representatives, on a 215-192
China's acting foreign minister, work .''
roll call vote Tuesday, voted
Bar Checking Six Candidates
and other officials. It said He did not elaborate, but to bar consideration of the
WASHINGTON- THE AMERICAN BAR Association today Kissinger was welcomed during information minister Long Bo- Mansfield end-the-war
began formal consideration of six candidates for the Supr~e a briel stopovel"at Shanghai by rel told a news conference the amendment.
Court amid reports that President Nixon has already made hts Chinese officials and the statement did not mean nationAn "aye,. vote was, tn ef~
selections to nn the two vacancies on the bench. There have been Revolutionary Party Com- al assembly deputies were feet against the amendment.
suspected of being members of
reporis that the FBI has beilun backg~oun~ investigations of Mrs. mittee and that several olficials
A "no" vote was for it. This
the Viet Cong.
Mildred L. lillie, a judge on the Califorrua Court of Appeal and accompanied him on the flight
the
way
Ohio
On Saturday, Lon Nol was
to
Peking.
Herschel H. Friday, an Arkansas bond attorney,
congressmen voted:
.
The 111-car motorcade swept stripped the national assembly
Democrats For - Ashley,
&amp;t fast pace along streets closed of its powers. Three of the Hays.
3 000 Enemy Outflanked
deputies, including vice premier
' SAIGON - MORE mAN 2,500 SOUTH VIetnamese
.
t roops to other traffic through
Democrats Against downtown Peking to the guest In Tam, refused to accept the Carney, Seiberling, James
with heavy Amer~~n air and artillery support today swept into a
house in a western suburb action as illegal. However, 59 of
large (Ubber plantlit\on north of the Caml'!ldl?n border_town of where Ethiopian Emperor the deputies signed a petition Stanton, Yanik.
Democrats Not Voting Krek 1n a drive 111· outflank 3,000 North VIetnamese troops.
Haile Selassie stayed during his saying they supported the Stokes.
~portS from the area indicate U.s·. B52s saturated the area with
government in stripping the
rece nt visit.
Republicans For - Betts,
bombs prior to the operation.
·
·
Along the streets stood body or its powers .
Bow,
Brown, Calncy, Devine,
hundreds of curious onlookers, The assembly largely has Harsha, Keating, Latta,
15 Patients Die in Fire
who had noticed something was been an ineffective body since McCulloch, Minshall, Powell,
HONESDALE .- A F1RE BROKE OUT at bedtime in a happening because the streel'l Lon Nol led the bloodless coup
private nursing horne for the elderly and spread so swiftly that all were closed to regular . traffic, that overthrew Prince Norodom J. William Stanton, Wylie.
Republicans Against - ·
15 residents were killed before they could make an effort to but probably did not know who Sihanouk March 18, 1970.
Ashbrook, Miller, Mosher,
escape. The fire Tuesday night at the Geiger Nursing home near was driving by, because the Today, some 4,000 politically
Whalen.
here caused the aspliyxiatlon deatha of 10 women and five men exact time of arrival was not influential Buddhist monks help
a silent demonstration protestannounced in Peking.
(Continued on page 12)

: News ... zn Brzefs :

Grueser 0, Mrs. Maxine P.
Williams R, Miss Wendy J .

:s "':a~:~vi~f :cfi~~thH~r~ '''''''''\'"'~'''''''''''~'''''''""$::s:r~:\:r.!~w.:,~:«
president of Southern Local
PRECINCTS CHANGED
Board of Education, a member
Changes In the locations of
;::: of Racine American Legion
!~ Post 602, and a member of the two voting precincts have
been made for the Nov. 2
% Racine First Baptist Church. election,
the Meigs County
Board of Elections reported.
j}. Two-Year-Old Boy
At Long Bottom Precinct in
0
:::!
Olive Township voting will
;~i Injured by Auto
take place on Nov. 2 in the
;:~
Michael A. Holter, two-year former telephone exchange
.:.:.:.•
building. In Chester South,
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
voters
will cast ballots In the
::~ Holter, Racine, was treated and
auditorium of the Chester
:~~·
.•.. released at Veterans Memorial Elementary School this
:1: Hospital Tuesday after being election.
:;: struck by a car.
James Wallace Weaver, Jr.,
74, Racine, was traveling south
~:; on Fourth St. in Racine when
the youngster stepped in front or
his car. The tot was taken to the
hospital by the Racine E-R
"' squad. No citation was issued.

t~::~:~s~=~=~:::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::~:::: :~:~::::: : : : : : : ::::::::::=:=:=:=~:::::::::=~===~=:=:=:=:=:=~:::::::::::::=:=:=:=::::::::J;~

Kissinger Lands

Mildred F. Betzing R, Mrs. Eva
L. King D, Mrs. Herman A.

saffron-&lt;:olored banners calling
for democracy .
Police and soldiers moved
into !he area of the 18 pagodas
and urged the monks not to
take to the streel'l.
Buddhist leaders said the
demonstration was called hastily Tuesday night and was
taking place only in the capital
of Phnom Penh. They said its
purpose "is to attract the
government and world attention
to the !act that we want the
crisis to end, democracy and
unity to return to the country." .

Grangers Take
Committee Posts
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will of
near Rutland were appointed as
members of the Committee on
Marketing and cooperatives at
the 99th annual session of the
Ohio State Grange now underway in Toledo.
Following the study of
resolutions presented to it, the
will
submit
committee
recommendations to the
delegate body for linal action
near the close ol the convention.
Mr . and Mrs. Will, members
of Harrisonville Grange 1731,
were accompanied to Toledo by
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey and
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins.
Among the highlig~L'l of the
convention will be the b•nquet
address by Lt. Go_v. J 0 hn W·
. Brown and the youth luncheon
address by c Jerome Davis
· · officer
· of the'
highest ritualistic
· 1 ·
h h ld th
Nat10na Grange, w " o s . e
· 1eo1 H1g
· h p nes
· t of De
. me te r.
tit

Weather

p

omeroy Active

Funds at $77,318
Pomeroy Village had active
lunds totalling $77,318.14 and
inactive funds of $17,237.73 as ol
Sept. 30 according to the report
of Clerk Jane Walton submitted
to Pomeroy Council Monday
night. Receipl'l, disbursements
and clerk's balance, respeclively in the active fund were:
General, $8,111.70, $6,467.16,
$3,422.72; boat dock, $100, no
expenditures $703.95· sew~r.
$4,ll2.8S, 17 ,•132_63 , $29, 448 _29 ;
lire department, $20, $207.72,
$2,387.26 ; cemetery fund, $1,000,
$1,039.15, $41.63 ; street fund,
$5,067.93, $1,655.76, $13,161.95;
state high~ay , $410.91, $48.93,
$1,964 .19; utility fund ,- no
.
· .
receipts, $858.54, $11,796 .22,
water operating, $8,044 .33,
' $9 •095 · 25 • $4 •686 ·01 ·• water
improvement ~ no receipts no
'
'
expenditures • $15 ·61• guaranty

meter, $125, $300, $3;622.74;
parking meter fund, $876, no
expenditures,
$6,061.99;
sanitary sewer construction, no
receipl'l, no expenditures, $$.58.
Total receipts, disbursements
and the balance in active funds
respectively were, $28,528.75,
$26,805.14, $77 ,318;14.

Re~eipl'l, disbursements and
clerks balance respectively In
the_inactive fund includ_e, bond
t
1
rebremen ' no receip s, no
exp~nditures, $14,879 .62;
special street repair bond
retire~ent, no receipts, no
eboxpednd1tures, $d2,023.85; senior
n repair an 1mprovemen1
fund no r~jltS no ex:
- $33t!IO •
.
pend1tures,
. . Receipts,
dlsbursemenls and. -balances in
all funds respectively totaled
. $2ti
$
""" 555 tr1
28,528.7 5·, ,805.14,
, .~. . .

�3- The DIUy 8entir.Jl Mlcldlepwt-PoiJlCIOy 0 Oct 20 1971

COLUMBUS UP! LegiSla
tive leaders and Ill&lt;' adm niStra
ti on of Gov John J G ll gan
are working to set the stage for
a vote next ~eek on the states
budge t and tax program no•
!12 days Ia e
The governor conferred Tues
dal • th leaders of the Gene ral
Assembl n an a ten p o tron
out f nal deta ls of the plan o
go o the f oo of both chan
bers w th a conference comm
tee report no\\ n he '.\ Ork
The targe for he ote ap
pears to be nex week s nee the
House has adjourned to allo•
about 30 members to a tend a
meeung of the '-;a ona Sore
of Sta te Leg sla ors • h h be
gan n Ph ladelptua oda
House and Sena e leade s

fran both par 1es are faced
• th l n ng up otes n !herr
own caucuses and dec ding
~&lt;hlch chamber • ll comm t t
self f rsl on the latest budget
tax plan • h ch s sa d to n
c ud• $8 b ll on n spending
and a one half o 4 per cen
personal neon e tax
Sena e M no h Leader !\n
thon 0 Calabrese D C eve
land sa d he hough he could
ge n ne of hts 3 men bers o
ote for an ncome tax bu
added
s up o the admin s
tra on o con nee others
The go ern or s • ork ng on
those fell o• s no•
Calabrese
sa d He d d no den ill the
ho douts bu
• as speculated
the • e e Democrat c Sens
Har \I ehe of ' oungs own

Douglas !\pplegate of Steuben
v lle Anthony F Nova k of
Cleveland and Ronald M Mottl
of Parma
Fallen To Calabrese
S nee ne !her the Republ can
controlled House nor Senate has
expressed a des re to take the
espons bil ty for pushing for an
ncome tax t has fa llen to Cal
abrese s caucus to come up
" th a maJor ty of votes n the
Senate for the proposal
Presumabl) the House which
alread' has cleared an mcome
tax b ll w th a maJor ty of
Democrallc votes would then
fee l free to follow su1t
Meanwh le the s1x man con
ference comm ttee cont nued to
alter the education section of
the budge t addmg about $28

r-----------------------------------------1
!

Voice along Broadway !

I

m 11 on for baste educat on m
cludmg money for h gher teach
ers salar es and reword ngsubs dy proviS ons to holster a d
for urban d str ciS
The conference comm ttee
was scheduled to deal w th h gh
er educat on appropriatiOns to
day but t was generally
agreed they were mark ng t me
while awa1tmg direction from
party caucuses on taxes
Calabrese was to have polled
h s caucus on t;lxatwn Tuesday
but he sad he was unable to
get toge ther with hts mem
bers
Ev dently they are sk pp ng
out one by one he said They
are susp ctous they are go ng
to be polled and they don t want
to be
Calabrese also expressed dis
sat sfaction with the way the
governor s off ce had handled a
meet ng and press conference
earl er m the day w1th James
M Carney Democrat c cand

should be reqwred to vote frrst
date for mayor of Cleveland
He said he was upset that on any coilference report con
ne ther he nor any of the other tammg an mcome tax
CUyahoga Cowtty Democrats
It started m the House let
had been tnvtted to attend by
the governor
t go back there frrst, he S8ld
Other sources mdtcated how
But some House Republicans
ever that the admimstratton IS were 1nststent that the Senate
makmg progress m convertmg take the lead We ve already
Democrat c holdouts on the tax passed 1t said one Why put
b 11 wh ch IS sa•d to contam our feet to the fire agam?
about $900 million tn new rev
Gill gan expressed trntat1on
enues and $125 nullion worth of that House members were Ieav
general property tax relief
mg for the legislative con
Other Developments
ference but 1! they feel this
These other developments m meeting IS more unportant than
dtcated next week s the target the problems we have m Ohio
for a vote
there s nothing I can do about
House Republicans are be 11 he said
mg polled pnvately on therr
It was learned later that some
feel ngsabout taxes preparatory of the lawmakers were traveling
to a full-scale caucus
to Philadelphia VIa Ill&lt;' state s
There are no plans for a DC-3 all'Jllane whlch the gov
November budget which ern or s offtce released to them
would remove press ure for
The Senate scheduled a 1 3(J
p
m
sesswn for today but the
qu ck acbon on a permanent
House set only skeleton ses
budget
Calabrese sa d the House SIOOS WI UJ next Tuesday

BY HCK 0 BRIA!\
The entrre production of course smks to the
eve! of hard-rock most of Is noiSily dreary
SUPERST!\R ~ FAR
ength the volume IS ear-shattermgly h gh the
FROM HEA\ENLY
NEW ) ORK KFS
Tasteless eck ess
elec ron c effects distorted gu tar twang ng n
unmus cal emphases mostly truly batter ear
r diculous .- s mg of the B ble for co dl sen
sa onal zed commerc al sm Jesus Chr s
drums phys cal and cerebral sensttiVIIles and
WASHINGTON COU RT Department reported Tue.day robbed the Lagonda National
Superstar s rikes a ne~ l o~ m IIISQlen
he rough unlovely language pmmttve rock HOUSE O!uo (UP!)- An arm
The $238 cbarter fee from Bank In nearby Springfield of
a o dance of an th ng resemblmg the truth i}T cs personif ed are more revoltmg than ed bank robber apparently here to Clarksville Tenn wu between $S 000 and $50 000 Mon
made a successful escape m a patd by the UIUdentified passen day Police would only say that
about the life and death of Jesus Chr st m shock ng
eluding the er offens e Supers ar
tular
Now fo r the m ghty few past ve elements chartered arrplane whose pilot germ cash poSSibly part of the more than $5 000 was taken and
bank offiCials sa!d Jess than
af ter hough w ts shallo• ug ness
Ben Vereen as Judas s pas vely marvelous was unaware of the st ckup the bank robbery loot
$50
000 was llllSSillg
The cruel of the actua cruciftxiOn offers excellent n act ng s ngmg m h s choreography Fayette County Sheriffs A shotgun weilding bandit
A short time after the rob
maJest c suffenng th s grubb) expedten
of despatr apart from the ltrn at ons of the 1e
bery
pilot Uoyd Anderson re
rxmsense s msul mg o ChriS ans a I bel o his character infl cts on the true B ble he s a
cetved a telephone call at h•s
Je ws Rabb \!arc Tanenbaum of the Amer can mos g f ed and rounded performer
Hillsboro horne from the Wash
Je~ sh Corruni ee has slashed
off c all)
Y•onne Elliman plays Mary Magdalene as a
Ington Court House atrport
Mrs Edw na Scott D
Contmued from page 1
ms ghts and abuses Jews and has loaded soft nsptred beautifully sympathetiC convert to
lTH WARD
'They satd there was a fellow
SOUTH CHESTER
M s - MIDDLEPORT
ts spec ous nots ength ~ h e erything from Chr s f no en rely l dily but the fa ults are aU
Mrs Thelma Collins D Mrs who wanted to charter a plane
Esthe P R denour R Mrs Beatr ce 0 Stewarf D Mrs
w al distor on and a o dance of the tru h to n he charac er g ven to her by lyr CIS! Tim Sad
e E Trussell R Mrs Beulah I Roush R Mrs Reva and he was m a hurry An
mcred b twiS ed falsehood
R ce he coni nu ty ac ually s dO extended Sh rley Mae Long D Mrs D N
Beach R Mrs Volet Caud tt derson said I drove straight
Herod comes on as a nauseously mmcmg ser es of rock-song tortures of the Bible but th s Luc lie R denou D Mrs D Mrs Golda Mourn ng R
up there shook hands With hun
Ba bara K Sargent R Mrs
POMEROY 1ST WARD homosexual n drag screammg n anachrom st c canna ake away from M ss Elltrnan her sen HldaSWhteD
Mary F McAngus D Mrs and got mto the plane
COLUMBIA Mrs Louse Z Mrs
rock4 ngo offens eaccusaw abuse at ChriS
s t v y sol ness her unusual vocal style
Anderson said the man at first
Audrey Young 0 Mrs A leen
E
II
s
R
Mrs
Bonn
e
M
Cheadle
m actual
Chr s and Herod ne• er me
Wehrung
R
Mrs
L
nda
L
Jett
p a n ve po gnant plead ngly lo vely n tone R Mrs Ethel M Jordan D
told hllTI be wanted to go to
R Mrs W1lovene W Zurcher D Nashville Tenn but changed
Pon us Pila e also s portra ed as a swiSh ng ex u d phras ng anq s ncer ty
Mrs lucret a Brook s D Mrs Mrs Jean W1 tt R
homo and e en the s range at empiS w ma ke
M ss Elltrnan s mak ng her s age debut Emma M Wh tt ngton R Mrs
his nund m the course of flight
POMEROY 2ND WARD
James
E
Gaston
0
Mrs
Patr
c
a
A
McKnoght
D
Jesus Chr s ar aesthete Ja ck he uuest af er her on! recorded performance ever n the
and decided to go to Clarksville
DYESVILLE
M Harvey
Frances E Brown D Mrs
sugges on of manhood and descent also mto recording of Jes us Chr s Superstar after E Sta key D M s Ge a td ne F Mrs
He looked a little rough you
Eleanor A Werry R Mr Ed
Anderson SOld
He
hard!) sub Je "' sh ness wh le Marv her discovery dur ng her very ftrst profess onal Faube 0 Mrs Grace Turner ward M Mart n R Mrs Edna know
R Mrs Glor a J Hann ng R M Hunnett D Mrs Etta E needed a shave and It looked
Magdalene s nob e ascens on from prost tu on work n a small London cafe Th s her f rst Mrs Ve a L Holcomb 0 Mrs
Sm th R
w the glor es of bel ef m Jesus ChriS herem s Broadway performance establishes her as an Lo etta Stansbury R
POMEROY 3 A
Mrs hke he had slept 111 hts clothes
GREAT RIVER Mrs Ca ol Maqor e E Reuter R Mrs The only luggage he had was
mo vated h) wha strnply must be noted as a assured nomtnee for mus cal greatness perhaps
E Rhodes R M s Matt e F Sharon
L Manley R Mro Dor s two of those little black swt
sexual vear;nmg spoken m song
n act ng oo she s from Hawa paren lawrence R Mr s Ethel
E Re nhart 0 Mrs Louse cases and he kept tbem With
Hoback D Mrs Letha L Thompson D Mrs Ruth C
Chnst as the Son of God hard!) s reflected n the cally and enormously talented
Proff tt 0 Mrs Ann L Boso R F anc s R M s Rose 5 sson 0 him up front
the often vtc ous lyr cs lrt Gethsemane Chrts
Jeff Fenhol who plays Jesus of Nazareth M
s Juan ta M Say e D
POMEROY J B- Mrs Hazel
demands why He should de Car )OU show me fa Is o touch the aesthete he pia nly adm res to
PORTLAND - Mrs Fann e P Eoch nger R Mrs Marfha W
now tha I would no be killed m va n Always pro ject mstead he reaches away f not short of M Durst R Mr H A Hayman Struble R Mrs Bernad ne S
R Mrs Nell M ddleswart D Me er D Mrs Peggy M
Chrts knew why He was to d e HIS ment on of aes het c1sm n o a more dangerous mtstake of M
s V olet B ewer 0 Mrs Houdashelt D Mrs Leah J
wme as His blood and bread as H s bod) s cheap almos femm ne gestures ha r toss ng vocal Gertrude Lehew R Mrs AdaM E
ch nger R Mrs Jane Ann
camp a desperate aun no a solemn symbol c scream ng for emotional punctual on too I ght 1n VanMeter 0
Snouffer
D
LETART - Mrs
POMEROY 3 C - Mrs Flo
promtse as he concludes w th pe ulantly a bus ve character zat on too feathery n personal ty too E EAST
een Roush R Mrs Foe e L
ck land R Mrs Pandora
Funeral services for Bobby
mocker&gt; I must be mad think ng I I be I ghl on his fee
Hts stage exper ence was n Hayman R Mrs Eula J Wolfe Str
Coli
ns
R
Mrs
Ruth
Ebersbach
Ray
Mallory 43 Racme killed
D Mrs Belva F F sher D Mrs D Mrs Martha Hoffman D
remembered Yes I mus be out of my head
Har
Janet S Manuel R Mrs Evelyn Mrs Evelyn E G lmore R Mrs m an automobile accident 1n
'he Gaspe anv vers on s ns an disp roof
The show s form style unpact and stagmg Manuel D
VIetnam Oct 9 will be held at I
I Ohl nger D
LETART - Mr James R GaPOMEROY
chap er and verse IOta y
s w Idly nots ly and cheap y spectacular
4TH
WARD
p m Frtday at the Ewmg
J~das !scar o turns ou to be the hero of thiS
Tom 0 Horgan most celebrated for his stag ng H II R M s Cia a J Powell R Mrs Norma Z rkle R Mrs Funeral Home
Mrs Marg e Hunt D Mrs Etta
reckless far ce he does no turn ChriSt over to of Ha tr here n wallows m the spectacularly Mae Parsons D Mrs Bonn e Max ne Owens R Mrs
Mr Mallory was a CIVIlian
Genev eve Me nhart 0 Mrs
he Rnman solders n rapac ous destre for the tas eless wr th ng bod es none nude though MIter R Mrs Paul ne Wolfe 0 Esther R Fugate D Mrs employe of the Vmnell Corp
LONG BOTTOM - M s EI zabefh Ohl nger R Mrs
bib! cal) es abiiShed 30 p eces of silver
n suggested Incredibly loud amp! f cat on Ernest
and had been working m
ne Hayman R Mr
M Norton D
rock shl thm thts Judas establiShes from the necess tat mg each smger hold a hand mike and Harry L Coleman R Mrs Ruth Della
MIDDLE PORT PCT - Mrs Vtetnam the past year He was
ver) !U"s scene tha he has honest
tra I electr c cords like endless snakes hardly Stefhem D Mr Joseph E Kathryn L Evans R Mrs a veteran of servtce mth the U
B ssell D Mrs Phytl s Lark ns
d sag reemen w h Jesus ove r met hod
conduc ve oo b blical credibU y armd th s openly R Mrs Nelle E Andrew D Martha A Searls R Mrs Nora S Navy and had served m
Cambron 0 Mrs Norma M
cr c z IUl Him as f he were Joe McCar hy arachromst c rock-&amp;Jund and pmmt vely un
OLIVE DALE Mrs Esther Russell D Mrs Mary M Buck Vtetnam while In the anned
B Landon R Mrs M ldred V R Mrs Bern ce Jeffero D
Jump ng from head! ne to head! ne 'w thou! pret y lyrics
forces He was employed as an
Brooks R Mrs Carroll Dod
POMEROY PCT - Mrs electrtclllll with the Vmnell
plan he accepts the silver on y when Ca aphas
But we do believe we ve discovered the true derer D Mrs Lucy M K m D
Kathleen L Wells R Mrs
assures htrn he can use for good char table aud ence for Jesus Chnst Superstar as we Mrs Glenna J Sanders R Mrs Evelyn M Thoma R Mrs Clara Corp
Longenette D
effects as Judas rock smgs and wr thes through lef the Mark Hellinger Theater and all Its Mary
K Pull ns D Mr Est1l G
Survtvmg are his parents Mr
REEDSVILLE - Mrs Nell Coli
ns D Mrs Belle J Boggs and Mrs Charles Mallory
tus this vers on of s ncer y Even hiS legendary ulttrnately caricatured cruciftxton and b blical E W tson D Mrs Leona N
R Mrs Barbara L Ebl n D
swctdal despatr has htrn hangmg from a flam
brutality we met a European fnend whose Roth D Mr Charles E Hall R
ROCK SPRINGS - Mrs Racme a siSter Mrs David
Mrs
Ruth
A
Balderson
R
Mrs
boyant g bbet wtuch lifts him symbol cally female Amer can companion asked us n excited Opal Randolph D Mrs Mary A9nes D xon R Mss Esther E Hill Racine two brothers
D tt R Mrs Emma G Charles D Mallory of River
toward heaven
antrnat on Wasn t t fun
B se R
Broderock
Mrs Carol dale Ga and Lynn Mallory of
ALFRED - Mr Donald H Ohl nger D D
Mrs
Dorothy L
Robonson R Mrs Ma y M Sm th R Mrs Frances
J Athens
Amos R Mrs Evelyn Well D Hunnel D
OffiCiating at the sernces
Mr C L Henderson 0 Mrs
HARRISONVILLE
Mrs
Mary S Penn ngton R M s Sharon J Jewell R Mrs Phylhs Fnday will be the Rev Dale
fhe perm an e n t goal of Vera Henderson 0
M Cl ne R M s Freda M McClurg Bur al will be m the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr C Carsey
our correct onal system s to
D Mrs Eloza E Letart Cemetery Friends may
secure the safety and well 0 Newland R Mrs Ulah W Powell D Mrs Conn1e K call at the fwteral horne any
R Mrs Dons A Koen g Chapman
Ardos
be ng of t he overwh elm ng Swan
D
Mrs
Evelyn E Summer! eld Waggoner DR Mrs
time after 6 p rn Wednesday
maJor ty of law ab dm g Ill
D Mrs Joyce A Rotchoe R
PAGEVILLE - Mrs Grace
no s c tiZens who w 11 never Mrs Carolyn L R tch e D
WHEELJt;G W Va UP! - Oh o pu n o serv ce n 1928 that s•e the ms de of a pr son
L Wilson R Mrs Betty M
RUTLAND VILLAGE - Mrs
Th e Whee ng Suspens on fe noo he Oh o Rt ver Dec 15 But I subm t we do not serve Betty J Parker D Mrs Mane Stout R Mrs Dor s E Fox D
First Klndergartep
Mrs Ruby M Holley D Mrs
Br d~e over he rna n channe of 1967 w th the loss of 46 lives
that end by operat ng nhu L B rchf eld D Mrs Bermce H Lou se E Burbridge R Mrs
The hrst kindergarten was
he Oh o R e be ween
Moore ordered Comm ss oner man nst tut ons wh ch ock Nelson R Mrs Myrv lie G v olet L Do lion D
founded 10 1837 by Frtedrtch
Brown
R
Mrs
Kathleen
Fonk
men
up
n
despa
r
and
nd
g
RACINE
VILLAGE
Mr
Wheel ng prupe and Whee ng W I am S Ritch e of the West
D Mrs Thelma A Hysell R Erline E Wolfe R Mrs F r o e b e 1 10 Blankenburg
mty
for
an
appo
nted
per
od
Is and was o de red
osed V g n a Department of H gh
EAST RUTLAND - Mrs Dorothy E McKenZie R Mrs Germany to meet the educa
of t me and then r e t u r n Mary
in S W lcox D Mrs Mary E Spencer D Mrs Nancy tiona! needs of children from
Tuesday n ght afte r res dents wa ys to send h s top br dge them to the streets more n
Myrtle M Clark 0 Mrs LOUISe Aeoker D Mrs Shtrley A 4 to 6 through the agency of
ep rted loud crack ng sounds exper ts to make an mmed ate carr g ble than ever w th G Eden R Mrs Pearl E Lottie
R Mrs Belly J Ross D play according to Encyclo
om ng f om the br dge
nspect on of the 110-year-old httle prepa at on for the re R Mrs Carr e F Moore D Dugan
SYRACUSE VILLAGE - paedia Bntann ca
sponstb I t es of c t zensh p Mrs Jest e G Molden R
A res den n he a ea sa d the span
Mrs
Jean Hall D Mrs Ado
WEST
RUTLAND
Mrs
Slack
D Mrs Opal E Zerkle R
no ses f om he br dge arr e
The other hr dge connect ng - /l!zn o G v Rzchard B Rose Elien Carson R Mr Seth
Mrs
Eura Largent R Mrs
• hen hree heavy ru ks had he 10 000 Wheel ng [s Jand
Ogtlv e dedzcat n g the F N cholson R Mrs Allegra
Helen
Hubbard D Mrs
state s I st new p r s n W II D Mrs Betty J 01 ver D Wanda M
d srega ded the no tru ks
es denLs to he rest of the c ty s
J Gu nther R
for men n 16 years ot Mrs Maqor e L R ce R Mrs
) s gn and we e us ng he b dge he For Hen y Br dge It has
MINERSVILLE Mrs
Betty J Roggs D
V
enna
Grace
M
Fosher
R
Mr
Vernon
Gov A ch A Mo e s off c been part ally closed to rece ve
DEXTER - Mrs Pauline M
TOLEDO OhiO ( UPI) R Mrs Vttg1n1a A
eported
Holt day R Mrs Paul ne H Nease
a ne w de k w th one ane open to
F sher 0 M ss Maud Grueser Even Chuck Ealey has to agree
Perry R Mrs Mabel G Pauley
The b dge s he sarr e pe a traff Another ramp of that
M es Cove r d a e f rst D Mrs Dorothy M Bolen D D Mrs Dorothy E Smith R that his performance last
he S ver B dge at Pt pan wa s opened Tuesday n ght t ans ated he B b e nto Mrs Frances C Mmor R. Mrs Mrs Betty L Johnson D
RACINE PCT - Mrs Edna Saturday agam~t Western
Pleasan W Va and Ka auga U he p a lev ate the traff c Jam Eng! sh
Esther F Anderson D
L Knopp R Mrs Bonnie F M1chlgan was 'probably the
SALEM - Mrs Nelle M
ss R Mrs Ollie H Cozarf
Myers R Mrs Helen L M tier The
D Mrs Myrtle L Walker D best game of his outstanding
R Mrs Mary E Arney D Mrs Mrs Jan1ce Salser R Mrs career as the Uruversity of
Wanda B Johnston D Mrs Martha L Beegle D
Toledo quarterback
Dorothy Edmundson R Mrs
Ealey who has turned defeat
Jess e M M ghf D
MIDDLE PORT 1ST WARD
mto victory many tlmes for the
- Mrs tena M McK nley R Veterans Memorial Hospital Rockets durmg thetr 29-game
Unemp loymen l
oo
ma JO co e n
- The presence of oppos ng Mrs Mildred P Long R Mrs
ADMITTED
Kev n mmung streak had to be at his
m gra on
pove ty
and
An a a rm ng rate of fa ct ons n the commun ty and Mabel Cl ne D Mrs Juan Ia D
po l t cal fact ona sm we e p pulat on dec ne populat on the resul t ng b tterness we Just Gerard D Mrs Gladys R Mowery Pomeroy Kenneth very best Saturday as the
R M ss Debb e Laney Braun Pomeroy Mary Eblin Rockets tralled by 14 points In
among problen s n M ddl port for MeiUs County between 1960 c1n t afford to be cult ng our Vroman
D
Pomeroy
Guy
Morris the third quarter the btggest
I sled today by Paul Ge ard and 970 was d wn 10 7 pet tn selves to p eces
MIDDLEPORT 2ND WARD
- Mrs Mur el Bradford R Pomeroy Jackie Lyons Sr deficit they have faced in al
Democrat c and date for M dd eport t wa s do vn 17 5
Jeanette Duffy most three years
Dom nance of the Mrs Clyda L Allensworth R Rae ne
mayor
p
Mrs Lett e Roush D Mrs Nora Syracyse Evelyn Motter
All he did was rally his team
[ have said tha no one s - The ra t;, of out m graton Republ can Party It has come N M Its D Mrs Fay~ L
gomg to solve overn ght 80 pet or more of ur children to take elections for granted Wallace R Mrs Lenn e E Pomeroy Rosahe Wrtght for 21 fourth quarter pomts and
Langsville
a 35-24 come from behind vic
and worse to take people for Haptonstall D
problems tha t have been w I leave the area
MIDDLEPORT
3RD
WARD
DISCHARGED
Carl
Still
tory which kept the Rockets un
buildtng up for years People
An unemploymentral&lt;! that granted which IS unhealthy
Mrs Cathy Erw n D Mrs Amta Harmon Ruth Darst beaten in SIX games preserved
- A lack &gt;f any hope that Isabel Wnebrenner D Mrs
have asked me what these s tw ce he state a ve ra~e
Flavte the nation s longest winrung
tomorrow
holds anyth ng any Elo se B Wolson R Mrs Homer Goeglem
crushing problems a re The r about1 1 ~ pct l ou peo1le a c
El zabeth Roush R Mrs Rhoda Stgman Chester Fouty
streak and earned him the hon
better
pomt IS well taken We don t w thout jol s
Hac kett D Mrs Ruby A
or of United Press International
If we can address ourselves Vaughan R
after all ha~e a lot of the - Poverty even among those
VItam
n
D
commerCially
Midwest Back of the Week
Ml DOLE PORT 4T H WARD
troubles tha t plague other who have a JOb a th rd of our to these problems Gerard
manufactured
In
1927
and
Mrs Jean Cra g R Mrs
Wtth the Toledo groWid game
btgger places
people live at levels below said and some others f can -V olet
M Hart nger R Mrs Jr s marketed m 1928 was the effectively bottled b} the btgger
However I would Identify Ieder lly-establ shed paver y see the beg nn ngs of a new day Payne D Mrs Nel e J Werner f rst VItam n to be Synthe
Broncos Ealey went to the air
f r Middleport
D Mrs Eulah L Francs R s zed
the followmg as problems of levels

Bank Robber Cons Escape

Precinct Workers

Mallory Rites

Here on Friday

Silver's Sister
Ordered Oosed

TIMELY QUOTES

Mr and Mrs Harry Roush Sr of Mason bave had two
weddings m the family recently Their son Roy Allen Roush was
marrted on October 8 and their daughter Mi&amp;! Joyce Roush
marrted Sp 5 Michael Brewer on October 11 before the soldier left
for VIetnam He had been stationed in Germany
'lbe Rev George Hoschar married Miss Rouah and Sp 5
Brewer at hts home in West Columbia He 18 the son of Mrs
Sterldan Russell and Mr Floyd Brewer Rutland
For her wedding the bride wore a mint green street~ength
dress and carried a bouquet of white daisies Her accessories
were white Her slster-i!Haw Sharon Roush was maid of honor
and Alfred Roush brotber of the lride served as best man
Joyce graduated from Waharna High School class of 1970 and
Sp 5 Brewer graduated from there in 1969

MR AND MRS ROUSH S SON Roy Allen Roush was united
in marriage to Jenny Bowers daughter of Mr and Mrs Eddie
Fife of Pomeroy on October 8 at the Mt Mor1ah Church in Racine
The br1de wore a dark blue dress and carried a white BUlle With a
red rose Her accessories were black
Mrs Ella Roush was matron of honor and her husband Harry
Roush Jr was best man
Mr Rnush graduated from Wahama Htgh School also the
class of 68 The newlyweds are residing m Pomeroy
MR AND MRS ROBERT TRIPP of Tuppers Plains are
announcing the birth of a son Daniel Vaughan on Oct 12 at
Holzer Medical Center Tbe mfant weighed 10 pounds and 2
ounces
Mr and Mrs Tripp have another son Allen Robert age 1
year and 11 months Grandparents are Mr and Mrs Fred Tripp
Mason and Mr and Mrs LewiS Vaughan Pomeroy

TilE MASON COUNTY SENIOR Citizens Action group met
Oct 15 for an orgamzational meeting m Mason and elected Mi&amp;!
Edna BWTis of Mason president The Seruor Citizens elected Mrs
Fred (Mildred) Tripp secretary-treasurer
They dec1ded to name the organizatton the Mason County
Action Society A meeting has been scheduled for Thursday Oct
21 m Mason at I p m Mrs BurriS was elected to represent the
group at a similar meeting m Pt Pleasant
GROVER ROUSH MASON was the guest of honor at a
dinner in honor of his 87th birthday on Sunday His wife Lizzie
planned the happy occasion at tberr home m Mason
Attending were the honoree and Mr and Mrs Clyde Roush
Camp Conley Mr and Mrs Harold Roush Philo Ohio Mr and
Mrs Jim Hanes Philo Mr and Mrs Fred Roush Letart Mr
and Mrs Arlie Roush Flat Rock Mrs Orte Cochran St Albans
Mr and Mrs Larry Lnckeydao Charleston Mrs Edna Roush
New Haven Mrs George Carson Mason Mrs Arthur Flck
Pomeroy Mrs Rulli Wallace Pomeroy Mr Willie Grinun New
Haven Mrs Lola Jeffers and Mrs Paul Turnbull Mason and
Mrs Grover (LIZZie) Roush

North Gallia s Pirates 3-3
after SIX out ngs lhts fall seek
the r thtrtl straight VIctory
Fr day n ght m a Southern
Valley Alhlet c Conference t lt
aga mst the Hannan Trace
W IdealS
North Galha coached by
John Blake has a I 2 record m
league play Tom Belville s
Hannan Trace Wtldcats are ().3
m the SVAC and !Hi overall
The Pirates have defeated
Symmes Valley 44-14) and
Green Local 24 !4 ) smce
dropp ng an 8-6 heartbreaker to
Kyger Creek They also own a
38-0 v ctory over Southwestern
Their other losses were 14-0 to

Fa rvtew Ky and 29~ to the
league leadmg Eastern Eagles
North Galha s offense has
rea ll y cl eked s nee Coach
Blake moved 6-I !86 pound
John Eggleton nto the quar
te rback slot The move sw1t
ched Jackie Sm th a smaller :;.
10 145 pounder nto the back
f eld Sm th a fast runner s
also a deadly pass rece ver
The P rates also boast a
power runn ng backfield m Ph I
Hollenbaugh 190 Ib J Un or
fullback and K1m Hall 171 lb
sophomore halfback
The r defense 1s led by Loren
Neal 152 lb semor I nebacker
George Gar 1es a small but

Tigers 8th,
Devils 9th
In AA Poll
COLUMBUS UP[ ) Warren
Hardmg after three weeks n
the runnerup spot has taken
over the lead th s week m the
Un ted Press International Oh o
H gh School Board of Coaches
Class AAA football ratings
The Panthers who bombed
Alliance 27~ Frtday mght for
U.e1r s xth stra ght VIctory took
adva ntage of a !Hi t e between
Canton McKinley andlastweek s
leader N les McK nley to grab
the top spot
Ntles now 541 on the sea
son dropped to th rd place n

TilE OPEN CHURCH WEDDING and reception of Mi&amp;!
Beverly Marte Carson daughter of Mr and Mrs George Carson
Mason and Gary William Gregory son of Mr and Mrs John
Wilfuun Gregory Shinnston West Vtrginia will be an event of
Oct 30 at 7 30 p m at the Mason Uruted Methodist Church
Mason The double ring ceremony will be performed by the co.llSlll
of Mrs Carson the Reverend Robert Bumgarner pastor of Heath
Umted Methodist Church Middleport and the Reverend Parker
Hinzman of the Mason Umted Methodist Church

UP'l

MRS NELOON EUGENE THOMAS (Claudia Zerkle) of
Mason was honored recently with a nuscellaneous shower at tbe
Mason Ul\lted Methodist Church Hostesses were Mrs James
Diehl Mrs Mel Clark Mrs George Burns Mrs Harry Miller
Mrs Charles Yeager Mrs Robert Gilmore and Mrs Rnbert
Cooke A color scheme of orchid and pink were carried out m
floral arrangements and other decorations
Games were played and priZes won by Jennifer Hart and
Murl Megee Attending were the guest of honor Mrs Thomas
Mrs Reuben Stewart Mrs Mary Berry Mrs Russell Barton
Mrs Murl Megee Mrs Parker Hinzman Mrs Howard Van
Matre Mrs R K Wilson Mrs Barbara Clark Jo Ellen Diehl
Mrs Beverly Hester and Stacy Ara Jewell Mrs Rhoda Yeager
Mi&amp;! Lena Gibbs Mrs James Proffitt Mrs Ray Proffitt and
Mrs Jennifer Hart and Regina Mrs Willlarn L Zerkle and Mrs
George Car11011
Sending gifts were Mrs Gladys Thoiii8B Mrs Fred Spencer
Nancy Proffitt Mrs Nolan Swackhamer Mrs Sally Rosa Becky
Gilmore and Mrs Freda Henry

Team

h Sch

u•

~~zg

00

Grid Ratings
COLUMBU S UPI
week s

Un ed

Th s

P ess

n

erna t ana ()h o H gh Schoo
Boll rd o

ra ngs
and

Coaches

fo otba

st pace

(w h

won ost

o es

eco ds

n

pa entheses

(C lass AAAI

Po nts

War en Ha d ng

6 0 339
2 C nc nna

Moel er

3 N es McK n ey
2
4 Mass

8

60

261&gt;

226
86

on

6 Ey a

63
9:

7
3

6 Toy

7 P nceton
B Fremon t Ross

86

9 Canton Me K n ey
4

0 Ak oo Ga

eld

Second en

50

1 C nc nna

83
8
St

Xav e 80 2 Toledo Woodwa d
63 3 Lakewood S Edwa d
54 4 F nd ay 45 5 Co umbus
East moo

Worth ngton 2) and

Uppe A nglon 37 each
Pa rma Sen o

34

9

8

L ma

Sen or and Sandusky 30 each
Others w th o or mo e po nt s
lancas1er
Ba ber on

Youngstown Mooney

/

th s week s l st w th unbeaten
(6-0 ) C nc nnall Moeller takmg
over second
Hard ng wh ch still has N les
and fourth rated Mass llon on
Its schedule p eked up 17 of the
43 ava !able first place votes
and amassed 339 po nts Moe!
ler got e ght f rsts and 266
po nts wh leN les had two and
226 and Mass lion got 186 po nts
and no r rsts
The lop four n Class AA re
rna ned the same th s week w th
powerful Steubenv lie Cathol c
holdmg a comn and ng 231 to
173 lead over runnerup Warren
Kennedy p ck ng up 15 f rst
place vo es to onll two for JFK
Napoleo held th rd place w th
137 and You ngstown North
fourth w th 102
Cleveland Holy Nan e how
ever moved nto the f fth spot
dropping Campbell Memonal
one notch to s xth M nerva
Ironton Galhpol s and R ver
dale round out the top ten n
AA
Cory Rawson Leads
The Class A vat ng th s week
f nds unbeaten Cory Rawson re
claim ng the No 1 spot t lost
a week ago to Mar on Pleasant
The Hornets of Coach J m
Berry who beat e ghth ranked
Arlington 14~Fr da) n ght post
ed 120 po nts to !04 for
Pleasant a 5&lt;Hi w nner over
R dgedale
Cov ngton mo ed nto th rd
place n the small school vot
mg dropp ng Portsmouth Notre
Dame o fourt h wtth Zanesv lie
Rosecrans roundmg out the top
r ve

Men o

W ntersv li e C nc nnaf Roger
Bacon Au stontown F ch 1

Lakin Personnel
Change Annottnced
Dr Reyna! do Sotomayor wa
born in the Philippines Where he
graduated trom the Manila Cen
tral University In 1962 He
was employed in private prac
tlce In Manila from 1962 until
1968 and at Huntington State
Hospital until recently
Sbe was ai so born in the
Phlllwines was gractuawd
from Manila Central University
in 1962 and was employed m
private practi ce from 1962

mo

A change In personnel at
Lakin State Hospital has been
announced by Samuel L Nichols
Jr Hosp~lal Administrator
Due to the recent resignation
of a man and wife team
Dr E D Gardo M Sayoc and
Dr Pilar Evora Sayoc another
couple has been named to re
place them on the professional
staff This Includes Dr Rey
naldo N Sotomayor and his
wife Dr Adoraclon p Spto
mayor

Dayton Patte son Da yton Team
Carro and Ketie ng Alter
Co y Rawson
(Class AA)
Team

2

J

Napoleon

-4

Youngstown North

60
5 C eveland Ho y Name
50
6 Ca mpbe

Memo a
2
60

M ne va

60

8 Ironton
9 Gall pols
0 R verdale
Second ten
Sha wnee 36

(2) (5 I)
(511
60
I Sp ng
2 Made a

L ma Bath 26

86

S
49
37
ed
34

9 Ada

0 M a on Loca

~~

(6 0

35

29

9 Harr son 6

Leavo ts burg
0 rv I e

G bso nbu g

Cathol c and Parkway 23 each
17 Sm t hf e d 2 and Jewet1

Sc o 20 each

9

Amanda

Clea c eek 8 20 Montpel er
7
Of he s w h 0 o mo e po nt s
M oga do e

Crooksv lie

Cana

W nches e

Ceda v e and

New Bj'ston

varslty competition of 59 in a

Western Michigan Coach Bill
Doolittle sald of Ealey s perfor
mance whlch mcluded touch
down tosses of 68 30 17 and 11
yards It was the grll8test in
divldual performance 1 ever
saw I thought Gl)d waa throw
mg some of those passes
I don t know who in our con
ference can stop Ealey For that
matter I don t know who can
stop hlm period
Ealey sald his big asset Ia hts
ability to both run and throw U1e
ball

60

Second ten
No wa k St
Pa u and A ngton 30 each 13

row

Ealey said he was concerned
but not worried when the
Rockets fell behind Western 21 7
m the tltrrd quarter of Satur
day s Important conference
game
I knew we could score he
S81d but I was afraid Western
might beableto keep U.e ball on
the grolDld and run out the
block

5

8 Tuscarawas Catho l
1 60

20 Ely a Ca hoi c and Hart
v e Lake
5 each
B dg epo
Ve m I on

60

88

7 Ba nesv lie 9 8 St Ma ys

Lab ae

5

7 Newa k Cathol c

Wat erson 25 16 C rclev lie 24
Memor a 18

60

90

4 Jonathan A der
2 28 14
5 Columbus Lo a n Cathol c 26 5 Mar on

3 New Lex ngton

Sha dy s de

and completed 2.'1 of 42 passes
for 381 yards and four touch
downs
In the process he set two Mld
Arnencan Conference smgle
game records and tied another
The 381 passing yards set tbe
conference mark and he also
had 11 yards on the ground for
392 total offense yards another
record He and two others al
ready held tbe record for most
touchdown passes in a game
which he tied
Ealey a 6-foot 185-pound sen
tor from Portsmouth Notre
Dame High School in Ohio is a
transportation major at Toledo
very appropriate for the way he
moves the football
59 Game streak
H~ has Cjl!!!rterbacked the
Rockets in every game since the
begmning of his sophomore
year and they have won all 29
He also was starting quar
terback for 30 straight victories
at Notre Dame High giving hlm
a personal wimmg streak in

Po nts

Steubenv le Cent a
1
60
2 War en Kennedy

Others w th 10 o mo e po nts

Ealey Named UPI Back Of Week

Problems Pinpointed

North Gallia Seeks
Third SVAC Victory

Standings

Ara Beware

By Un ted Press lnternatlona I
Eastern Conference
Atlant c D vtston

Danger Signals Up At South Bend;

W L Pet
Ph lade ph a 3 0 1 000
New Yo k
2 2 500
Boston
1 500
Buffa o
3 250
Cenlral D vos on
GB By MAJOR AMOS B HOOPLE
scrappy cornerback Carl
W L Pet
Dewitt a 6-3 278 lb tackle C nc nna
l
500
Fearless Fo ecos te
1 2 333
Dw ght Campbell !73lb tackle Ba I more
Egad f 1 end s you no
3 250
and Dave Wtckl ne 173 lb C eve and
Allan a
0 2 000
doubt
noticed lha most of
JUn or
Western Conference
he p gsk m forecaste s sur
The Wildcats have had
M dwest DIVISIOn
fered througl a d smal da l
W L Pet GB
problems m mov ng the ball thts
last
Saturday as the dope
!waukee
4 0 1 000
season Garland Montgomery a M
bucket
was booted w ll y n y
De o I
3
750
sophomore halfback has been Ch cago
1
500 2 over he a mna land
1 1 500 2 sca pe
moved mto the Important Plioen x
Pac f c OIV s on
quarterback slot m an attempt
Neverthe ess y ou r fea
W L Pel GB
to garner more offense
Los Ange es
3 0 000
less to ecaste posted I e
3 1 750
Thus far Hannan Trace has Seat e
' env able ceo d of correct y
Golden
S
ate
1
2
333
2
p ck ng the w nne s n all
scored only 12 pomts whtle Por and
0
J 000
ol
the co ests nvolv ng he
perm ttmg 1ts opponents 148 Hous on
0 3 000
top
10 ated clubs
nc ud
Tuesday s Resulfs
In non league games M1ller
g
the
defea
s
of
oth
ranked
Boson
34
Bait
mo
e1
14
travels to Eastern Kyger
Co I o ado and lOth ra ed
Sea e 101 C nc nnat 00
Creek hosts Alexander n Its New Yo k 93 Golden Sta e 84 Texa s har rumot
homecoming match and South Los Angeles 123 Butta o 06
Space d e n pern t me
wes tern will play at Green M waukee 116 Cleve and 82
De o 101 Po land 99
to repeat the fo re ast of he
Local
Wednesday s Games
antes s nvolv ng the top
Coach Roger K1rhart s Sea e a Ph ladelph a
0
ea rn s b t y u I remem
Eastern Eagles the area s only Los Ange es a A lan a
be
we gave yo Oklahoma
Ch cago vs Hou a Waco Tex
unbeaten &lt;Ind untied team will Go
u
"h
p 5 h an ked Colorado
den S a e a C eve land
be out for revenge when M ller
and
unranked
Arkansas u
On y ga m es sc hedu ed
mack 10 h ra ed I ex as and
takes the field Frtday mght m
tha
s exactl y w h a t a
By
Un
ted
Press
lnternat
onal
the Eagles f nal home game of
East
1
ened
the season
W L Pet GB
B t enough k f kaff io
Last year Eastern while F o dan s
2 0 000
en t h sto y
a
n
0
000
en oy ng a f ne yea r was Ken ucky
2
1
667
New
York
bombarbed 51-0 at Miller The
' T h s week s head! ne s
1 500
V g na
p on se some thr ll ng ac
Falcons are 3 2 1 after romp ng P sbu gh
2 333
on w h th e No I colleg a
o
Jooo
2,
Ca
o
na
V nton County last Frtday 26-0
e
eve n Neb ras ka 6 0 un
West
Miller s led offens vely by
W L Pet GB
g ts eco d o 26 games
R ck Eberts Dave Starner and U ah
3 0 1 000
w hout defeat as tl ey sub
J 0 l 000
M ke Merckle Merckle gamed lnd ana
d e Oklahoma S ate by a 32
Memph
s
500
160 yards aga nst the V kmgs
10 co nt
Da as
0 2 000
He should give the staunch Denve
0 4 000
No 2 0 k a hom a 50
Eagle defense a real workout
Tuesday s Results
s o d have an easy t me o
Eastern s offense has ex New Yo k 125 P sbu gh 120
n anqu sl ng Kansa
ah 50 Carol na 93
ploded for 238 po nts m s x U
S
ate
42 20 M ch gan 6 0
lnd ana 22 Denver l 7
an
I
A
abama 6 0 rated 3
games whtle tis defense has
On y games schedu ed
and
4
w II pro e wor hy of
Wednesdays
Games
pert !ted only 18 po nts Sen or
V
g n a a Flo dans
he
r
h
gh at ngs as he
quarterback J m Amsbary s Ca o na a Da llas
Wol es 11h p B g f en foe
the na n cog n the Eastern Memph s al Ken uck y
M nnesota 26 18 and he
On y games scheduled
offense He scored two touch
r de ol s 36 12 over Ho s
downs and passed for another n
ton
Ea stern s 29 0 v clory over
fl e o n y danger s gna
Federal Hock ng a week ago
)o
avor te fo recaster sees
Defens" sta ndouts have been
n Ihe weekend s b g ga mes
Allen Duvall John Chne Roger
fl ng a So u t I Bend
w h e e No 5 No re Dam e
Karr Allen Holter and Dick
ta kes o un anked bu a
Stettler
" a l s da nge ous So tt e
Coach D ck Adams Kyger
Ca lo n a
Creek Bobcats w II also seek
To an
J o "n M Ka
revenge n a b g homecommg
game aga nst Coach Dave
Sn pe s Alexander Spartans
\lexander edged the Bobcats
14-8 n a bru s ng battle last
yea r at Albany The Bobcats
f n shed the r 1971 league
COLUMBUS (UP! - Mid
campa gn last Fr day w1th a
Amencan
Conference offens ve
dose 22 16 w n over South and defens
ve players-of the
westeon 1 .,
CLEVELAND
-Cleve
Kyger Creek assured tself of week are Toledo quarterback land
Browns headUP!)
coach
N ck
Mhuhck Ealefy anRd WKestelrn Skor ch sa d there s no doubt
a least a ~e for second place C
gan sa ety on ar s the Denver Broncos will know
The Bobcats only league loss whoc opposed
each other last
was to Eastern The Eagle; Saturday
what to do after watch ng the
have Southern and South
films of the Browns " mcmnat
Ealey led the Rockets to a
"'"'
western left n the league
comeback 35-24 VIctory over Bengals game last Swtday
Alexander afte r droppmg Is Western Michigan despite the
Denver s strength s thetr
f rst three games has reversed defens ve efforts of Karl s who runn ng game and I m sure
the trend and won three n a
they will try to run aga nst us
~~~~~:~;ns
ble
for
four
Toledo
after
they see films of our
row The Spartans defeated
Glouste r !2 0 last Fr day
game Skonch said
Ealey
who
also
won
UP[
s
The coach sa d the B
Alexander s paced by JuniOr M dwest Back of the Week
rowns
quar te rback Grdg Brooks honors completed 23 of 42 tack! ng a~a nst the Bengals
Brooks scored one toughdown passes for 381 yards and four was poor too often and tt
agamst the Tomcats The other touchdowns Hts passmg yard had better Improve before Sun
came on an ntercephon by age was a new smgle game day
defens ve back B II Hart
Coach Mel Carl&lt;!r s South MAC record as was h s total
offense mark of 392 yards The
western Highlanders still
seek ng that llus1ve frrst w n of four TD passes tied a confer
ence record Ealey already
the !971 campa gn JOurney to
WASHINGTON UPI) The
Frankl n Furnace for a non held
Karlis
a
semor
from
Chester
Supreme
Court agreed Tuesday
league encounter w1th the
ton [nd forced one fumble to hear an appeal of Curt
Green Bobcats
Led by John Earl Hutch nson recovered two others and mter Floods anti trust sUit aga nst
and Btll Flowers Southwestern cepted an Ealey pass n the organ zed baseball n which the
scored two touchdowns m the Bronco end zone to stop a To- former St Lou s Cardmal star
ledo touchdown dnve
s challeng ng the legality of the
last two mmutes Frtday mght m
a come from behmd effort Karl s second fumble recov game s reserve clause
agamst the Kyger Creek ery led to the th1rd Western
The court s expected to
Bobcats which fell one TD touchdown and gave the Bran announce a dec s on by the end
cos a 21 7 lead at the tune He
short
also
made f ve solo tackles and of ts current sessiOn m June
Green s 2-4 on the year after
los ng to the North Gallia had two assiSts
Flood s sull cla ims that
Other nommees for thiS
Prates 24-14 last week
weeks honors were Bowling baseball s reserve clause
Green s Jerry Ftelds Kent makes nvoluntary slaves of
States Eddie Woodard M1 players by bmd ng them to the
SVAC STANDINGS
am s Bob Hitchens Ohw U s team w th which they stgn the r
SVAC ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP Dave Green and Western s Lar or gmal contracts Baseball has
Ea s e n
6 0 0 238 B ry Ulmer on offense
enJOYed exemption from ant
Kyge c eek
4
101 06
On defense the other nomina trust laws s nee 1922 when the
No th Ga a
3 3 0 lOB 76
Southe n
2 4 0 66 04 t ons were V1c Murphy of Kent Supreme Court ruled that 11 was
Southwestern
0 6 0 38 56 Jerry Tillman of M1am1 Jack not mterstate conunerce
Hannan T ace
0 6 o 12 48 LeVeck of Ohio U and John
Flood a $90 000 a year cen
SVAC ONLY
W L T POP N ezgoda of Toledo Bowlmg terftelder With the Card nals
TEAM
East e n
3 0 0 15 6 Green had no defensive selec brought h s su t after bemg
Kyge Creek
4 1 0 95 80
traded to the Phtladelphta
2 10 58 34 t on
Souihe rn
Ph II es He sat out the !970
204434
North Gal a
Southwestern
0 303086
The Smyrna fig depends season was traded to the
Hannan T ace
030 6 OB upon the f g wasp for cross Wash ngton Senators m 1.97! but
10 10 0 348 34B pollmahon
Tofals
Jumped the team after play ng a
few
games
Th s Week s Games
M n mum age for member
M e at Eastern
h p n the U S House of He 1s currently believed to be
A exande at Kyger C eek
Representat ves s 25 years somewhere n Europe
Southwestern at G een Loca

1 urdue 45 Illinois 29
Northwestern 26 Indiana 18
Kat sas 36 Iowa State 27
Okl ho na 42 Kans as St 20
I o sv lllc 17 Wtclnta St 10
S Mtss 32 'I mph s St 28

Honor

© NEI\

The Old Boy H msel l

e hav ng a u usua bad 011 State 29 Wt scoos

t me of
th s fa but t
vou d &lt; n n o a ha11y ea
son I they upset he lr sl
So A. a b w a e s he
wo d f on o
enu wne J
Hoos e s t
ng e r Ie r
H ute Te ry ee th ND
has m ed
dcf n e wh
ts r ve 197 v c m to a
a e1 age of 65 8 ya ds usl
ng com ng th o gh aga n
In a yp ca ha d ought I
pn I sh e n c o u n e
th
Hoo1 e 5) ste n favo s ND
o w n by a 26 12 n a g n
In o I e conles s wo h)
o note Oh o S a e 4 I w
ack up s fo u th B g Ten
n o he season o e W s
ons n 29 7 Geu g a 6 0
sl ou d h a e tt e oub
h Kent ky as he 11
b g 39 8
Now g on w t the fu e
cas
Alaba na 36 Housto I?
lta h 24 Amon a 2• ( ~
\rkansas 4! Nort h Texas
St 7
V rg n1a 16 \rm) 6
A1 bun 24 Cle n son 8
P ttsburgh 35 Boston Col 28
M ami 0 21 Bowling Green
1?
Co lgate 28 Brown 22
A r I orce 30 Colo Sl {j 10
C !orad 38 MISso r1 8
South Carolma 22 Florida
St 20 (N)
Florida 32 Maryland 14
Georgia 39 Kentucky 8
Dartmouth •• Harvard 6

To Be Heard

Oneng
reason
for the
laxity
tack!
and some
poor
blockm
mg by the offens ve lme may
h
ave been tha t the Browns
were too upt ght he ven
turned
There wasn t a sound n our
dressmg room before the
game Skor ch said If you
had dropped a p n 1t would
have sounded hke a bomb gomg off
I U1 nk they wanted to wm
so much they d dn t play up to
thetr potenbal
The Browns did wm but they
had to come from beh nd m the
f nal 39 seconds wtth a touch
down that made the I nal score
27 24
Three Cleveland touchdowns
were scored by Bo Scott fa
maliar to Canadian football
fans

0

Id aho 14 West Texas St 1

MORE NOW

(N
West V rgmiU 35 Temple 7
1\
&amp; Marv 34 VMI 18
Wy !7 U 1 ex El Paso 16
Kent State 21 Xavter 8
C rnell 42 l ale 17
Washmgton 26 Ore Sta te 21
Ironton 28 Gallipolis fi
Meigs 22 Athens 7
Logan 28 Waverly 14
Jackson 35 Wellston 14
North Galha 28 Hannan Trace

Your regular payday
savmgs plus our high
rate of return wtll
make your sa vtngs
grow quick Jy

4*%
PASSBOOK RATE

6

Eastern 40 Miller 6
K) ger Creek 6 Alexander 0
Green 12 Southwestern 7
Ft Gay 27 Symmes Valley

MEIGS CO BRANCH

7

Wayne 14 Chesapeake 12
Ironton Sl Joe 26 Fair
land 14
South Pomt 20 Coal Grove
0
Pt Pleasant 11 Rtpley 12
Ravenswood 20 Wahama 8
Huntmgton B 28 Hannan 0
Belpre 26 Nelsonville-York
8
Sprmgfield 34 Portsmouth 8

Me gs County Branch of The
Athens County Sav ngs &amp;
Loan Co

296 Second St
Pome oy Oh o
M embe F ede a Home
Bank

GENERAL TIRE
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
only
$139
gal
GENERAL TIRE SALES
992 7161

SAVE UP
TO •1.00 A TANKFUL

R;c:k~H=lll~6~0=a~k~H:ll~I~O~--!:::::::::~

SAVE WITH

GOBLE

STOP 'N' SAVE
IN A
GUARANTEED
USED CAR
AT••••

KEITH GOBLE FORD
NEW USED CAR LOT
3RD AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0

WINTER RETREADS

Q- Wha Arne ca JOILl
oltst szg ed tl e bazl bo d of
Jejje1 s01 Dav s pres de t of
tl e Co federacy

A- Horace G eeley

750x14
or Smaller

UNDER MAJOR COMPANIES

CERTIFIED
GAS STATIONS
$~8

992 9981

W Mam

Pomeroy 0

(Add A $1 DO For Each Stze Larger)

N 2nd

oa n

Mem be Fede a Sa ng &amp;
oan nsu an e Co po a on
A
a oun s ns ed up o
$20 000 00

PRICE CONTROLS

We have always had pr1ce controls to save you
money On Certtfted X E 110 You

Sentinel

EARN

North Ga a at Hannan Trace ,.. .lllll~i~!~•••••••••••••••--'1

WEAVER SIGNS
BALTIMORE (UP! )
Earl
Weaver who has managed the
Daltlmore Orwles to three
straight American League pen
nants signed a new contract
Tuesday for the !972 season
Weaver 41 took over when
Hank Bauer was ftred m July
1968 and under hts dltectwn
the Onoles have won 336 games
and lost !98

Da1~

7

Nebraska 32 Okla St 10
Or gon 47 Sa J sc St 2
1
State 18 fCU 6
I c nsyl 17 Pr nceton 11
loh mbta 30 R tgc rs 11
1 xas Tech 18 SMU 14
St nford 28 Was! St 12
Syracuse 26 Hoi Cross 14
VIllanova z? Ta lpa 15 (N)
1 enncssee 35 M ss St t 12
Ba lor 12 f exas A&amp;M 27
Texas 41 R1cc 16
I oledo 44 Uavton 18 ( N
Tulane 29 Geo rg a I eel 10
T lsa 27 Br gl an Y un ~ I
Cahfor 1a 31 Ut:LA •4 II\
Oh o U 28 VIrgin a Tech •
1\ esten M1 h 44 Marshall

It was a b g change for me

my ftrst year here but now I
feel I ke I m back n the
groove I had n Canada Scott
sa d
Scott played one year at
OhiO State before gong to the
Canadian Football League
H1s show ng so far th s sea
son 1s 311 yards m 83 cames
and I ve touchdowns
I Just I ke to carry the
ball he sad

The

Mtchtgan St 37 Io" a 21
Michigan 26 M nnesota 18
M•ss ss1pp1 14 Va ndcrb It II
I actflc 14 Mo nta •a 0
l)ukc 49 Na&gt; 9
Ar 1 St lH Nc Mcxllo I
r.. C Stat 8 f ast Carol a
7 11'1
1\ rlh C r I n 23 Wak
I orest ?f
1\ Ire ()a c 2( S thern
Ca l 1•

We Must Stop Denver's
Running Game-Skorich

FloodS Appeal

Ch ang Ka shek eader of
Na t ana st Ch na was bap
ed a Chr s an n 1930 and
o ned I e Method st Church

(N)

l

Ealey,
Karlis

NE WCOMBE ADVANCED
BARCELONA Spam (UP[
Top-seeded John Newcombe of
Austral a advanced to the
fourth round of the Span sh
Open tenn s tournament w1th a
4-0 6-4 6-0 v ctory Tuesday
over countryman Ray Ruffles

H &amp; R FIRESTON

�3- The DIUy 8entir.Jl Mlcldlepwt-PoiJlCIOy 0 Oct 20 1971

COLUMBUS UP! LegiSla
tive leaders and Ill&lt;' adm niStra
ti on of Gov John J G ll gan
are working to set the stage for
a vote next ~eek on the states
budge t and tax program no•
!12 days Ia e
The governor conferred Tues
dal • th leaders of the Gene ral
Assembl n an a ten p o tron
out f nal deta ls of the plan o
go o the f oo of both chan
bers w th a conference comm
tee report no\\ n he '.\ Ork
The targe for he ote ap
pears to be nex week s nee the
House has adjourned to allo•
about 30 members to a tend a
meeung of the '-;a ona Sore
of Sta te Leg sla ors • h h be
gan n Ph ladelptua oda
House and Sena e leade s

fran both par 1es are faced
• th l n ng up otes n !herr
own caucuses and dec ding
~&lt;hlch chamber • ll comm t t
self f rsl on the latest budget
tax plan • h ch s sa d to n
c ud• $8 b ll on n spending
and a one half o 4 per cen
personal neon e tax
Sena e M no h Leader !\n
thon 0 Calabrese D C eve
land sa d he hough he could
ge n ne of hts 3 men bers o
ote for an ncome tax bu
added
s up o the admin s
tra on o con nee others
The go ern or s • ork ng on
those fell o• s no•
Calabrese
sa d He d d no den ill the
ho douts bu
• as speculated
the • e e Democrat c Sens
Har \I ehe of ' oungs own

Douglas !\pplegate of Steuben
v lle Anthony F Nova k of
Cleveland and Ronald M Mottl
of Parma
Fallen To Calabrese
S nee ne !her the Republ can
controlled House nor Senate has
expressed a des re to take the
espons bil ty for pushing for an
ncome tax t has fa llen to Cal
abrese s caucus to come up
" th a maJor ty of votes n the
Senate for the proposal
Presumabl) the House which
alread' has cleared an mcome
tax b ll w th a maJor ty of
Democrallc votes would then
fee l free to follow su1t
Meanwh le the s1x man con
ference comm ttee cont nued to
alter the education section of
the budge t addmg about $28

r-----------------------------------------1
!

Voice along Broadway !

I

m 11 on for baste educat on m
cludmg money for h gher teach
ers salar es and reword ngsubs dy proviS ons to holster a d
for urban d str ciS
The conference comm ttee
was scheduled to deal w th h gh
er educat on appropriatiOns to
day but t was generally
agreed they were mark ng t me
while awa1tmg direction from
party caucuses on taxes
Calabrese was to have polled
h s caucus on t;lxatwn Tuesday
but he sad he was unable to
get toge ther with hts mem
bers
Ev dently they are sk pp ng
out one by one he said They
are susp ctous they are go ng
to be polled and they don t want
to be
Calabrese also expressed dis
sat sfaction with the way the
governor s off ce had handled a
meet ng and press conference
earl er m the day w1th James
M Carney Democrat c cand

should be reqwred to vote frrst
date for mayor of Cleveland
He said he was upset that on any coilference report con
ne ther he nor any of the other tammg an mcome tax
CUyahoga Cowtty Democrats
It started m the House let
had been tnvtted to attend by
the governor
t go back there frrst, he S8ld
Other sources mdtcated how
But some House Republicans
ever that the admimstratton IS were 1nststent that the Senate
makmg progress m convertmg take the lead We ve already
Democrat c holdouts on the tax passed 1t said one Why put
b 11 wh ch IS sa•d to contam our feet to the fire agam?
about $900 million tn new rev
Gill gan expressed trntat1on
enues and $125 nullion worth of that House members were Ieav
general property tax relief
mg for the legislative con
Other Developments
ference but 1! they feel this
These other developments m meeting IS more unportant than
dtcated next week s the target the problems we have m Ohio
for a vote
there s nothing I can do about
House Republicans are be 11 he said
mg polled pnvately on therr
It was learned later that some
feel ngsabout taxes preparatory of the lawmakers were traveling
to a full-scale caucus
to Philadelphia VIa Ill&lt;' state s
There are no plans for a DC-3 all'Jllane whlch the gov
November budget which ern or s offtce released to them
would remove press ure for
The Senate scheduled a 1 3(J
p
m
sesswn for today but the
qu ck acbon on a permanent
House set only skeleton ses
budget
Calabrese sa d the House SIOOS WI UJ next Tuesday

BY HCK 0 BRIA!\
The entrre production of course smks to the
eve! of hard-rock most of Is noiSily dreary
SUPERST!\R ~ FAR
ength the volume IS ear-shattermgly h gh the
FROM HEA\ENLY
NEW ) ORK KFS
Tasteless eck ess
elec ron c effects distorted gu tar twang ng n
unmus cal emphases mostly truly batter ear
r diculous .- s mg of the B ble for co dl sen
sa onal zed commerc al sm Jesus Chr s
drums phys cal and cerebral sensttiVIIles and
WASHINGTON COU RT Department reported Tue.day robbed the Lagonda National
Superstar s rikes a ne~ l o~ m IIISQlen
he rough unlovely language pmmttve rock HOUSE O!uo (UP!)- An arm
The $238 cbarter fee from Bank In nearby Springfield of
a o dance of an th ng resemblmg the truth i}T cs personif ed are more revoltmg than ed bank robber apparently here to Clarksville Tenn wu between $S 000 and $50 000 Mon
made a successful escape m a patd by the UIUdentified passen day Police would only say that
about the life and death of Jesus Chr st m shock ng
eluding the er offens e Supers ar
tular
Now fo r the m ghty few past ve elements chartered arrplane whose pilot germ cash poSSibly part of the more than $5 000 was taken and
bank offiCials sa!d Jess than
af ter hough w ts shallo• ug ness
Ben Vereen as Judas s pas vely marvelous was unaware of the st ckup the bank robbery loot
$50
000 was llllSSillg
The cruel of the actua cruciftxiOn offers excellent n act ng s ngmg m h s choreography Fayette County Sheriffs A shotgun weilding bandit
A short time after the rob
maJest c suffenng th s grubb) expedten
of despatr apart from the ltrn at ons of the 1e
bery
pilot Uoyd Anderson re
rxmsense s msul mg o ChriS ans a I bel o his character infl cts on the true B ble he s a
cetved a telephone call at h•s
Je ws Rabb \!arc Tanenbaum of the Amer can mos g f ed and rounded performer
Hillsboro horne from the Wash
Je~ sh Corruni ee has slashed
off c all)
Y•onne Elliman plays Mary Magdalene as a
Ington Court House atrport
Mrs Edw na Scott D
Contmued from page 1
ms ghts and abuses Jews and has loaded soft nsptred beautifully sympathetiC convert to
lTH WARD
'They satd there was a fellow
SOUTH CHESTER
M s - MIDDLEPORT
ts spec ous nots ength ~ h e erything from Chr s f no en rely l dily but the fa ults are aU
Mrs Thelma Collins D Mrs who wanted to charter a plane
Esthe P R denour R Mrs Beatr ce 0 Stewarf D Mrs
w al distor on and a o dance of the tru h to n he charac er g ven to her by lyr CIS! Tim Sad
e E Trussell R Mrs Beulah I Roush R Mrs Reva and he was m a hurry An
mcred b twiS ed falsehood
R ce he coni nu ty ac ually s dO extended Sh rley Mae Long D Mrs D N
Beach R Mrs Volet Caud tt derson said I drove straight
Herod comes on as a nauseously mmcmg ser es of rock-song tortures of the Bible but th s Luc lie R denou D Mrs D Mrs Golda Mourn ng R
up there shook hands With hun
Ba bara K Sargent R Mrs
POMEROY 1ST WARD homosexual n drag screammg n anachrom st c canna ake away from M ss Elltrnan her sen HldaSWhteD
Mary F McAngus D Mrs and got mto the plane
COLUMBIA Mrs Louse Z Mrs
rock4 ngo offens eaccusaw abuse at ChriS
s t v y sol ness her unusual vocal style
Anderson said the man at first
Audrey Young 0 Mrs A leen
E
II
s
R
Mrs
Bonn
e
M
Cheadle
m actual
Chr s and Herod ne• er me
Wehrung
R
Mrs
L
nda
L
Jett
p a n ve po gnant plead ngly lo vely n tone R Mrs Ethel M Jordan D
told hllTI be wanted to go to
R Mrs W1lovene W Zurcher D Nashville Tenn but changed
Pon us Pila e also s portra ed as a swiSh ng ex u d phras ng anq s ncer ty
Mrs lucret a Brook s D Mrs Mrs Jean W1 tt R
homo and e en the s range at empiS w ma ke
M ss Elltrnan s mak ng her s age debut Emma M Wh tt ngton R Mrs
his nund m the course of flight
POMEROY 2ND WARD
James
E
Gaston
0
Mrs
Patr
c
a
A
McKnoght
D
Jesus Chr s ar aesthete Ja ck he uuest af er her on! recorded performance ever n the
and decided to go to Clarksville
DYESVILLE
M Harvey
Frances E Brown D Mrs
sugges on of manhood and descent also mto recording of Jes us Chr s Superstar after E Sta key D M s Ge a td ne F Mrs
He looked a little rough you
Eleanor A Werry R Mr Ed
Anderson SOld
He
hard!) sub Je "' sh ness wh le Marv her discovery dur ng her very ftrst profess onal Faube 0 Mrs Grace Turner ward M Mart n R Mrs Edna know
R Mrs Glor a J Hann ng R M Hunnett D Mrs Etta E needed a shave and It looked
Magdalene s nob e ascens on from prost tu on work n a small London cafe Th s her f rst Mrs Ve a L Holcomb 0 Mrs
Sm th R
w the glor es of bel ef m Jesus ChriS herem s Broadway performance establishes her as an Lo etta Stansbury R
POMEROY 3 A
Mrs hke he had slept 111 hts clothes
GREAT RIVER Mrs Ca ol Maqor e E Reuter R Mrs The only luggage he had was
mo vated h) wha strnply must be noted as a assured nomtnee for mus cal greatness perhaps
E Rhodes R M s Matt e F Sharon
L Manley R Mro Dor s two of those little black swt
sexual vear;nmg spoken m song
n act ng oo she s from Hawa paren lawrence R Mr s Ethel
E Re nhart 0 Mrs Louse cases and he kept tbem With
Hoback D Mrs Letha L Thompson D Mrs Ruth C
Chnst as the Son of God hard!) s reflected n the cally and enormously talented
Proff tt 0 Mrs Ann L Boso R F anc s R M s Rose 5 sson 0 him up front
the often vtc ous lyr cs lrt Gethsemane Chrts
Jeff Fenhol who plays Jesus of Nazareth M
s Juan ta M Say e D
POMEROY J B- Mrs Hazel
demands why He should de Car )OU show me fa Is o touch the aesthete he pia nly adm res to
PORTLAND - Mrs Fann e P Eoch nger R Mrs Marfha W
now tha I would no be killed m va n Always pro ject mstead he reaches away f not short of M Durst R Mr H A Hayman Struble R Mrs Bernad ne S
R Mrs Nell M ddleswart D Me er D Mrs Peggy M
Chrts knew why He was to d e HIS ment on of aes het c1sm n o a more dangerous mtstake of M
s V olet B ewer 0 Mrs Houdashelt D Mrs Leah J
wme as His blood and bread as H s bod) s cheap almos femm ne gestures ha r toss ng vocal Gertrude Lehew R Mrs AdaM E
ch nger R Mrs Jane Ann
camp a desperate aun no a solemn symbol c scream ng for emotional punctual on too I ght 1n VanMeter 0
Snouffer
D
LETART - Mrs
POMEROY 3 C - Mrs Flo
promtse as he concludes w th pe ulantly a bus ve character zat on too feathery n personal ty too E EAST
een Roush R Mrs Foe e L
ck land R Mrs Pandora
Funeral services for Bobby
mocker&gt; I must be mad think ng I I be I ghl on his fee
Hts stage exper ence was n Hayman R Mrs Eula J Wolfe Str
Coli
ns
R
Mrs
Ruth
Ebersbach
Ray
Mallory 43 Racme killed
D Mrs Belva F F sher D Mrs D Mrs Martha Hoffman D
remembered Yes I mus be out of my head
Har
Janet S Manuel R Mrs Evelyn Mrs Evelyn E G lmore R Mrs m an automobile accident 1n
'he Gaspe anv vers on s ns an disp roof
The show s form style unpact and stagmg Manuel D
VIetnam Oct 9 will be held at I
I Ohl nger D
LETART - Mr James R GaPOMEROY
chap er and verse IOta y
s w Idly nots ly and cheap y spectacular
4TH
WARD
p m Frtday at the Ewmg
J~das !scar o turns ou to be the hero of thiS
Tom 0 Horgan most celebrated for his stag ng H II R M s Cia a J Powell R Mrs Norma Z rkle R Mrs Funeral Home
Mrs Marg e Hunt D Mrs Etta
reckless far ce he does no turn ChriSt over to of Ha tr here n wallows m the spectacularly Mae Parsons D Mrs Bonn e Max ne Owens R Mrs
Mr Mallory was a CIVIlian
Genev eve Me nhart 0 Mrs
he Rnman solders n rapac ous destre for the tas eless wr th ng bod es none nude though MIter R Mrs Paul ne Wolfe 0 Esther R Fugate D Mrs employe of the Vmnell Corp
LONG BOTTOM - M s EI zabefh Ohl nger R Mrs
bib! cal) es abiiShed 30 p eces of silver
n suggested Incredibly loud amp! f cat on Ernest
and had been working m
ne Hayman R Mr
M Norton D
rock shl thm thts Judas establiShes from the necess tat mg each smger hold a hand mike and Harry L Coleman R Mrs Ruth Della
MIDDLE PORT PCT - Mrs Vtetnam the past year He was
ver) !U"s scene tha he has honest
tra I electr c cords like endless snakes hardly Stefhem D Mr Joseph E Kathryn L Evans R Mrs a veteran of servtce mth the U
B ssell D Mrs Phytl s Lark ns
d sag reemen w h Jesus ove r met hod
conduc ve oo b blical credibU y armd th s openly R Mrs Nelle E Andrew D Martha A Searls R Mrs Nora S Navy and had served m
Cambron 0 Mrs Norma M
cr c z IUl Him as f he were Joe McCar hy arachromst c rock-&amp;Jund and pmmt vely un
OLIVE DALE Mrs Esther Russell D Mrs Mary M Buck Vtetnam while In the anned
B Landon R Mrs M ldred V R Mrs Bern ce Jeffero D
Jump ng from head! ne to head! ne 'w thou! pret y lyrics
forces He was employed as an
Brooks R Mrs Carroll Dod
POMEROY PCT - Mrs electrtclllll with the Vmnell
plan he accepts the silver on y when Ca aphas
But we do believe we ve discovered the true derer D Mrs Lucy M K m D
Kathleen L Wells R Mrs
assures htrn he can use for good char table aud ence for Jesus Chnst Superstar as we Mrs Glenna J Sanders R Mrs Evelyn M Thoma R Mrs Clara Corp
Longenette D
effects as Judas rock smgs and wr thes through lef the Mark Hellinger Theater and all Its Mary
K Pull ns D Mr Est1l G
Survtvmg are his parents Mr
REEDSVILLE - Mrs Nell Coli
ns D Mrs Belle J Boggs and Mrs Charles Mallory
tus this vers on of s ncer y Even hiS legendary ulttrnately caricatured cruciftxton and b blical E W tson D Mrs Leona N
R Mrs Barbara L Ebl n D
swctdal despatr has htrn hangmg from a flam
brutality we met a European fnend whose Roth D Mr Charles E Hall R
ROCK SPRINGS - Mrs Racme a siSter Mrs David
Mrs
Ruth
A
Balderson
R
Mrs
boyant g bbet wtuch lifts him symbol cally female Amer can companion asked us n excited Opal Randolph D Mrs Mary A9nes D xon R Mss Esther E Hill Racine two brothers
D tt R Mrs Emma G Charles D Mallory of River
toward heaven
antrnat on Wasn t t fun
B se R
Broderock
Mrs Carol dale Ga and Lynn Mallory of
ALFRED - Mr Donald H Ohl nger D D
Mrs
Dorothy L
Robonson R Mrs Ma y M Sm th R Mrs Frances
J Athens
Amos R Mrs Evelyn Well D Hunnel D
OffiCiating at the sernces
Mr C L Henderson 0 Mrs
HARRISONVILLE
Mrs
Mary S Penn ngton R M s Sharon J Jewell R Mrs Phylhs Fnday will be the Rev Dale
fhe perm an e n t goal of Vera Henderson 0
M Cl ne R M s Freda M McClurg Bur al will be m the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr C Carsey
our correct onal system s to
D Mrs Eloza E Letart Cemetery Friends may
secure the safety and well 0 Newland R Mrs Ulah W Powell D Mrs Conn1e K call at the fwteral horne any
R Mrs Dons A Koen g Chapman
Ardos
be ng of t he overwh elm ng Swan
D
Mrs
Evelyn E Summer! eld Waggoner DR Mrs
time after 6 p rn Wednesday
maJor ty of law ab dm g Ill
D Mrs Joyce A Rotchoe R
PAGEVILLE - Mrs Grace
no s c tiZens who w 11 never Mrs Carolyn L R tch e D
WHEELJt;G W Va UP! - Oh o pu n o serv ce n 1928 that s•e the ms de of a pr son
L Wilson R Mrs Betty M
RUTLAND VILLAGE - Mrs
Th e Whee ng Suspens on fe noo he Oh o Rt ver Dec 15 But I subm t we do not serve Betty J Parker D Mrs Mane Stout R Mrs Dor s E Fox D
First Klndergartep
Mrs Ruby M Holley D Mrs
Br d~e over he rna n channe of 1967 w th the loss of 46 lives
that end by operat ng nhu L B rchf eld D Mrs Bermce H Lou se E Burbridge R Mrs
The hrst kindergarten was
he Oh o R e be ween
Moore ordered Comm ss oner man nst tut ons wh ch ock Nelson R Mrs Myrv lie G v olet L Do lion D
founded 10 1837 by Frtedrtch
Brown
R
Mrs
Kathleen
Fonk
men
up
n
despa
r
and
nd
g
RACINE
VILLAGE
Mr
Wheel ng prupe and Whee ng W I am S Ritch e of the West
D Mrs Thelma A Hysell R Erline E Wolfe R Mrs F r o e b e 1 10 Blankenburg
mty
for
an
appo
nted
per
od
Is and was o de red
osed V g n a Department of H gh
EAST RUTLAND - Mrs Dorothy E McKenZie R Mrs Germany to meet the educa
of t me and then r e t u r n Mary
in S W lcox D Mrs Mary E Spencer D Mrs Nancy tiona! needs of children from
Tuesday n ght afte r res dents wa ys to send h s top br dge them to the streets more n
Myrtle M Clark 0 Mrs LOUISe Aeoker D Mrs Shtrley A 4 to 6 through the agency of
ep rted loud crack ng sounds exper ts to make an mmed ate carr g ble than ever w th G Eden R Mrs Pearl E Lottie
R Mrs Belly J Ross D play according to Encyclo
om ng f om the br dge
nspect on of the 110-year-old httle prepa at on for the re R Mrs Carr e F Moore D Dugan
SYRACUSE VILLAGE - paedia Bntann ca
sponstb I t es of c t zensh p Mrs Jest e G Molden R
A res den n he a ea sa d the span
Mrs
Jean Hall D Mrs Ado
WEST
RUTLAND
Mrs
Slack
D Mrs Opal E Zerkle R
no ses f om he br dge arr e
The other hr dge connect ng - /l!zn o G v Rzchard B Rose Elien Carson R Mr Seth
Mrs
Eura Largent R Mrs
• hen hree heavy ru ks had he 10 000 Wheel ng [s Jand
Ogtlv e dedzcat n g the F N cholson R Mrs Allegra
Helen
Hubbard D Mrs
state s I st new p r s n W II D Mrs Betty J 01 ver D Wanda M
d srega ded the no tru ks
es denLs to he rest of the c ty s
J Gu nther R
for men n 16 years ot Mrs Maqor e L R ce R Mrs
) s gn and we e us ng he b dge he For Hen y Br dge It has
MINERSVILLE Mrs
Betty J Roggs D
V
enna
Grace
M
Fosher
R
Mr
Vernon
Gov A ch A Mo e s off c been part ally closed to rece ve
DEXTER - Mrs Pauline M
TOLEDO OhiO ( UPI) R Mrs Vttg1n1a A
eported
Holt day R Mrs Paul ne H Nease
a ne w de k w th one ane open to
F sher 0 M ss Maud Grueser Even Chuck Ealey has to agree
Perry R Mrs Mabel G Pauley
The b dge s he sarr e pe a traff Another ramp of that
M es Cove r d a e f rst D Mrs Dorothy M Bolen D D Mrs Dorothy E Smith R that his performance last
he S ver B dge at Pt pan wa s opened Tuesday n ght t ans ated he B b e nto Mrs Frances C Mmor R. Mrs Mrs Betty L Johnson D
RACINE PCT - Mrs Edna Saturday agam~t Western
Pleasan W Va and Ka auga U he p a lev ate the traff c Jam Eng! sh
Esther F Anderson D
L Knopp R Mrs Bonnie F M1chlgan was 'probably the
SALEM - Mrs Nelle M
ss R Mrs Ollie H Cozarf
Myers R Mrs Helen L M tier The
D Mrs Myrtle L Walker D best game of his outstanding
R Mrs Mary E Arney D Mrs Mrs Jan1ce Salser R Mrs career as the Uruversity of
Wanda B Johnston D Mrs Martha L Beegle D
Toledo quarterback
Dorothy Edmundson R Mrs
Ealey who has turned defeat
Jess e M M ghf D
MIDDLE PORT 1ST WARD
mto victory many tlmes for the
- Mrs tena M McK nley R Veterans Memorial Hospital Rockets durmg thetr 29-game
Unemp loymen l
oo
ma JO co e n
- The presence of oppos ng Mrs Mildred P Long R Mrs
ADMITTED
Kev n mmung streak had to be at his
m gra on
pove ty
and
An a a rm ng rate of fa ct ons n the commun ty and Mabel Cl ne D Mrs Juan Ia D
po l t cal fact ona sm we e p pulat on dec ne populat on the resul t ng b tterness we Just Gerard D Mrs Gladys R Mowery Pomeroy Kenneth very best Saturday as the
R M ss Debb e Laney Braun Pomeroy Mary Eblin Rockets tralled by 14 points In
among problen s n M ddl port for MeiUs County between 1960 c1n t afford to be cult ng our Vroman
D
Pomeroy
Guy
Morris the third quarter the btggest
I sled today by Paul Ge ard and 970 was d wn 10 7 pet tn selves to p eces
MIDDLEPORT 2ND WARD
- Mrs Mur el Bradford R Pomeroy Jackie Lyons Sr deficit they have faced in al
Democrat c and date for M dd eport t wa s do vn 17 5
Jeanette Duffy most three years
Dom nance of the Mrs Clyda L Allensworth R Rae ne
mayor
p
Mrs Lett e Roush D Mrs Nora Syracyse Evelyn Motter
All he did was rally his team
[ have said tha no one s - The ra t;, of out m graton Republ can Party It has come N M Its D Mrs Fay~ L
gomg to solve overn ght 80 pet or more of ur children to take elections for granted Wallace R Mrs Lenn e E Pomeroy Rosahe Wrtght for 21 fourth quarter pomts and
Langsville
a 35-24 come from behind vic
and worse to take people for Haptonstall D
problems tha t have been w I leave the area
MIDDLEPORT
3RD
WARD
DISCHARGED
Carl
Still
tory which kept the Rockets un
buildtng up for years People
An unemploymentral&lt;! that granted which IS unhealthy
Mrs Cathy Erw n D Mrs Amta Harmon Ruth Darst beaten in SIX games preserved
- A lack &gt;f any hope that Isabel Wnebrenner D Mrs
have asked me what these s tw ce he state a ve ra~e
Flavte the nation s longest winrung
tomorrow
holds anyth ng any Elo se B Wolson R Mrs Homer Goeglem
crushing problems a re The r about1 1 ~ pct l ou peo1le a c
El zabeth Roush R Mrs Rhoda Stgman Chester Fouty
streak and earned him the hon
better
pomt IS well taken We don t w thout jol s
Hac kett D Mrs Ruby A
or of United Press International
If we can address ourselves Vaughan R
after all ha~e a lot of the - Poverty even among those
VItam
n
D
commerCially
Midwest Back of the Week
Ml DOLE PORT 4T H WARD
troubles tha t plague other who have a JOb a th rd of our to these problems Gerard
manufactured
In
1927
and
Mrs Jean Cra g R Mrs
Wtth the Toledo groWid game
btgger places
people live at levels below said and some others f can -V olet
M Hart nger R Mrs Jr s marketed m 1928 was the effectively bottled b} the btgger
However I would Identify Ieder lly-establ shed paver y see the beg nn ngs of a new day Payne D Mrs Nel e J Werner f rst VItam n to be Synthe
Broncos Ealey went to the air
f r Middleport
D Mrs Eulah L Francs R s zed
the followmg as problems of levels

Bank Robber Cons Escape

Precinct Workers

Mallory Rites

Here on Friday

Silver's Sister
Ordered Oosed

TIMELY QUOTES

Mr and Mrs Harry Roush Sr of Mason bave had two
weddings m the family recently Their son Roy Allen Roush was
marrted on October 8 and their daughter Mi&amp;! Joyce Roush
marrted Sp 5 Michael Brewer on October 11 before the soldier left
for VIetnam He had been stationed in Germany
'lbe Rev George Hoschar married Miss Rouah and Sp 5
Brewer at hts home in West Columbia He 18 the son of Mrs
Sterldan Russell and Mr Floyd Brewer Rutland
For her wedding the bride wore a mint green street~ength
dress and carried a bouquet of white daisies Her accessories
were white Her slster-i!Haw Sharon Roush was maid of honor
and Alfred Roush brotber of the lride served as best man
Joyce graduated from Waharna High School class of 1970 and
Sp 5 Brewer graduated from there in 1969

MR AND MRS ROUSH S SON Roy Allen Roush was united
in marriage to Jenny Bowers daughter of Mr and Mrs Eddie
Fife of Pomeroy on October 8 at the Mt Mor1ah Church in Racine
The br1de wore a dark blue dress and carried a white BUlle With a
red rose Her accessories were black
Mrs Ella Roush was matron of honor and her husband Harry
Roush Jr was best man
Mr Rnush graduated from Wahama Htgh School also the
class of 68 The newlyweds are residing m Pomeroy
MR AND MRS ROBERT TRIPP of Tuppers Plains are
announcing the birth of a son Daniel Vaughan on Oct 12 at
Holzer Medical Center Tbe mfant weighed 10 pounds and 2
ounces
Mr and Mrs Tripp have another son Allen Robert age 1
year and 11 months Grandparents are Mr and Mrs Fred Tripp
Mason and Mr and Mrs LewiS Vaughan Pomeroy

TilE MASON COUNTY SENIOR Citizens Action group met
Oct 15 for an orgamzational meeting m Mason and elected Mi&amp;!
Edna BWTis of Mason president The Seruor Citizens elected Mrs
Fred (Mildred) Tripp secretary-treasurer
They dec1ded to name the organizatton the Mason County
Action Society A meeting has been scheduled for Thursday Oct
21 m Mason at I p m Mrs BurriS was elected to represent the
group at a similar meeting m Pt Pleasant
GROVER ROUSH MASON was the guest of honor at a
dinner in honor of his 87th birthday on Sunday His wife Lizzie
planned the happy occasion at tberr home m Mason
Attending were the honoree and Mr and Mrs Clyde Roush
Camp Conley Mr and Mrs Harold Roush Philo Ohio Mr and
Mrs Jim Hanes Philo Mr and Mrs Fred Roush Letart Mr
and Mrs Arlie Roush Flat Rock Mrs Orte Cochran St Albans
Mr and Mrs Larry Lnckeydao Charleston Mrs Edna Roush
New Haven Mrs George Carson Mason Mrs Arthur Flck
Pomeroy Mrs Rulli Wallace Pomeroy Mr Willie Grinun New
Haven Mrs Lola Jeffers and Mrs Paul Turnbull Mason and
Mrs Grover (LIZZie) Roush

North Gallia s Pirates 3-3
after SIX out ngs lhts fall seek
the r thtrtl straight VIctory
Fr day n ght m a Southern
Valley Alhlet c Conference t lt
aga mst the Hannan Trace
W IdealS
North Galha coached by
John Blake has a I 2 record m
league play Tom Belville s
Hannan Trace Wtldcats are ().3
m the SVAC and !Hi overall
The Pirates have defeated
Symmes Valley 44-14) and
Green Local 24 !4 ) smce
dropp ng an 8-6 heartbreaker to
Kyger Creek They also own a
38-0 v ctory over Southwestern
Their other losses were 14-0 to

Fa rvtew Ky and 29~ to the
league leadmg Eastern Eagles
North Galha s offense has
rea ll y cl eked s nee Coach
Blake moved 6-I !86 pound
John Eggleton nto the quar
te rback slot The move sw1t
ched Jackie Sm th a smaller :;.
10 145 pounder nto the back
f eld Sm th a fast runner s
also a deadly pass rece ver
The P rates also boast a
power runn ng backfield m Ph I
Hollenbaugh 190 Ib J Un or
fullback and K1m Hall 171 lb
sophomore halfback
The r defense 1s led by Loren
Neal 152 lb semor I nebacker
George Gar 1es a small but

Tigers 8th,
Devils 9th
In AA Poll
COLUMBUS UP[ ) Warren
Hardmg after three weeks n
the runnerup spot has taken
over the lead th s week m the
Un ted Press International Oh o
H gh School Board of Coaches
Class AAA football ratings
The Panthers who bombed
Alliance 27~ Frtday mght for
U.e1r s xth stra ght VIctory took
adva ntage of a !Hi t e between
Canton McKinley andlastweek s
leader N les McK nley to grab
the top spot
Ntles now 541 on the sea
son dropped to th rd place n

TilE OPEN CHURCH WEDDING and reception of Mi&amp;!
Beverly Marte Carson daughter of Mr and Mrs George Carson
Mason and Gary William Gregory son of Mr and Mrs John
Wilfuun Gregory Shinnston West Vtrginia will be an event of
Oct 30 at 7 30 p m at the Mason Uruted Methodist Church
Mason The double ring ceremony will be performed by the co.llSlll
of Mrs Carson the Reverend Robert Bumgarner pastor of Heath
Umted Methodist Church Middleport and the Reverend Parker
Hinzman of the Mason Umted Methodist Church

UP'l

MRS NELOON EUGENE THOMAS (Claudia Zerkle) of
Mason was honored recently with a nuscellaneous shower at tbe
Mason Ul\lted Methodist Church Hostesses were Mrs James
Diehl Mrs Mel Clark Mrs George Burns Mrs Harry Miller
Mrs Charles Yeager Mrs Robert Gilmore and Mrs Rnbert
Cooke A color scheme of orchid and pink were carried out m
floral arrangements and other decorations
Games were played and priZes won by Jennifer Hart and
Murl Megee Attending were the guest of honor Mrs Thomas
Mrs Reuben Stewart Mrs Mary Berry Mrs Russell Barton
Mrs Murl Megee Mrs Parker Hinzman Mrs Howard Van
Matre Mrs R K Wilson Mrs Barbara Clark Jo Ellen Diehl
Mrs Beverly Hester and Stacy Ara Jewell Mrs Rhoda Yeager
Mi&amp;! Lena Gibbs Mrs James Proffitt Mrs Ray Proffitt and
Mrs Jennifer Hart and Regina Mrs Willlarn L Zerkle and Mrs
George Car11011
Sending gifts were Mrs Gladys Thoiii8B Mrs Fred Spencer
Nancy Proffitt Mrs Nolan Swackhamer Mrs Sally Rosa Becky
Gilmore and Mrs Freda Henry

Team

h Sch

u•

~~zg

00

Grid Ratings
COLUMBU S UPI
week s

Un ed

Th s

P ess

n

erna t ana ()h o H gh Schoo
Boll rd o

ra ngs
and

Coaches

fo otba

st pace

(w h

won ost

o es

eco ds

n

pa entheses

(C lass AAAI

Po nts

War en Ha d ng

6 0 339
2 C nc nna

Moel er

3 N es McK n ey
2
4 Mass

8

60

261&gt;

226
86

on

6 Ey a

63
9:

7
3

6 Toy

7 P nceton
B Fremon t Ross

86

9 Canton Me K n ey
4

0 Ak oo Ga

eld

Second en

50

1 C nc nna

83
8
St

Xav e 80 2 Toledo Woodwa d
63 3 Lakewood S Edwa d
54 4 F nd ay 45 5 Co umbus
East moo

Worth ngton 2) and

Uppe A nglon 37 each
Pa rma Sen o

34

9

8

L ma

Sen or and Sandusky 30 each
Others w th o or mo e po nt s
lancas1er
Ba ber on

Youngstown Mooney

/

th s week s l st w th unbeaten
(6-0 ) C nc nnall Moeller takmg
over second
Hard ng wh ch still has N les
and fourth rated Mass llon on
Its schedule p eked up 17 of the
43 ava !able first place votes
and amassed 339 po nts Moe!
ler got e ght f rsts and 266
po nts wh leN les had two and
226 and Mass lion got 186 po nts
and no r rsts
The lop four n Class AA re
rna ned the same th s week w th
powerful Steubenv lie Cathol c
holdmg a comn and ng 231 to
173 lead over runnerup Warren
Kennedy p ck ng up 15 f rst
place vo es to onll two for JFK
Napoleo held th rd place w th
137 and You ngstown North
fourth w th 102
Cleveland Holy Nan e how
ever moved nto the f fth spot
dropping Campbell Memonal
one notch to s xth M nerva
Ironton Galhpol s and R ver
dale round out the top ten n
AA
Cory Rawson Leads
The Class A vat ng th s week
f nds unbeaten Cory Rawson re
claim ng the No 1 spot t lost
a week ago to Mar on Pleasant
The Hornets of Coach J m
Berry who beat e ghth ranked
Arlington 14~Fr da) n ght post
ed 120 po nts to !04 for
Pleasant a 5&lt;Hi w nner over
R dgedale
Cov ngton mo ed nto th rd
place n the small school vot
mg dropp ng Portsmouth Notre
Dame o fourt h wtth Zanesv lie
Rosecrans roundmg out the top
r ve

Men o

W ntersv li e C nc nnaf Roger
Bacon Au stontown F ch 1

Lakin Personnel
Change Annottnced
Dr Reyna! do Sotomayor wa
born in the Philippines Where he
graduated trom the Manila Cen
tral University In 1962 He
was employed in private prac
tlce In Manila from 1962 until
1968 and at Huntington State
Hospital until recently
Sbe was ai so born in the
Phlllwines was gractuawd
from Manila Central University
in 1962 and was employed m
private practi ce from 1962

mo

A change In personnel at
Lakin State Hospital has been
announced by Samuel L Nichols
Jr Hosp~lal Administrator
Due to the recent resignation
of a man and wife team
Dr E D Gardo M Sayoc and
Dr Pilar Evora Sayoc another
couple has been named to re
place them on the professional
staff This Includes Dr Rey
naldo N Sotomayor and his
wife Dr Adoraclon p Spto
mayor

Dayton Patte son Da yton Team
Carro and Ketie ng Alter
Co y Rawson
(Class AA)
Team

2

J

Napoleon

-4

Youngstown North

60
5 C eveland Ho y Name
50
6 Ca mpbe

Memo a
2
60

M ne va

60

8 Ironton
9 Gall pols
0 R verdale
Second ten
Sha wnee 36

(2) (5 I)
(511
60
I Sp ng
2 Made a

L ma Bath 26

86

S
49
37
ed
34

9 Ada

0 M a on Loca

~~

(6 0

35

29

9 Harr son 6

Leavo ts burg
0 rv I e

G bso nbu g

Cathol c and Parkway 23 each
17 Sm t hf e d 2 and Jewet1

Sc o 20 each

9

Amanda

Clea c eek 8 20 Montpel er
7
Of he s w h 0 o mo e po nt s
M oga do e

Crooksv lie

Cana

W nches e

Ceda v e and

New Bj'ston

varslty competition of 59 in a

Western Michigan Coach Bill
Doolittle sald of Ealey s perfor
mance whlch mcluded touch
down tosses of 68 30 17 and 11
yards It was the grll8test in
divldual performance 1 ever
saw I thought Gl)d waa throw
mg some of those passes
I don t know who in our con
ference can stop Ealey For that
matter I don t know who can
stop hlm period
Ealey sald his big asset Ia hts
ability to both run and throw U1e
ball

60

Second ten
No wa k St
Pa u and A ngton 30 each 13

row

Ealey said he was concerned
but not worried when the
Rockets fell behind Western 21 7
m the tltrrd quarter of Satur
day s Important conference
game
I knew we could score he
S81d but I was afraid Western
might beableto keep U.e ball on
the grolDld and run out the
block

5

8 Tuscarawas Catho l
1 60

20 Ely a Ca hoi c and Hart
v e Lake
5 each
B dg epo
Ve m I on

60

88

7 Ba nesv lie 9 8 St Ma ys

Lab ae

5

7 Newa k Cathol c

Wat erson 25 16 C rclev lie 24
Memor a 18

60

90

4 Jonathan A der
2 28 14
5 Columbus Lo a n Cathol c 26 5 Mar on

3 New Lex ngton

Sha dy s de

and completed 2.'1 of 42 passes
for 381 yards and four touch
downs
In the process he set two Mld
Arnencan Conference smgle
game records and tied another
The 381 passing yards set tbe
conference mark and he also
had 11 yards on the ground for
392 total offense yards another
record He and two others al
ready held tbe record for most
touchdown passes in a game
which he tied
Ealey a 6-foot 185-pound sen
tor from Portsmouth Notre
Dame High School in Ohio is a
transportation major at Toledo
very appropriate for the way he
moves the football
59 Game streak
H~ has Cjl!!!rterbacked the
Rockets in every game since the
begmning of his sophomore
year and they have won all 29
He also was starting quar
terback for 30 straight victories
at Notre Dame High giving hlm
a personal wimmg streak in

Po nts

Steubenv le Cent a
1
60
2 War en Kennedy

Others w th 10 o mo e po nts

Ealey Named UPI Back Of Week

Problems Pinpointed

North Gallia Seeks
Third SVAC Victory

Standings

Ara Beware

By Un ted Press lnternatlona I
Eastern Conference
Atlant c D vtston

Danger Signals Up At South Bend;

W L Pet
Ph lade ph a 3 0 1 000
New Yo k
2 2 500
Boston
1 500
Buffa o
3 250
Cenlral D vos on
GB By MAJOR AMOS B HOOPLE
scrappy cornerback Carl
W L Pet
Dewitt a 6-3 278 lb tackle C nc nna
l
500
Fearless Fo ecos te
1 2 333
Dw ght Campbell !73lb tackle Ba I more
Egad f 1 end s you no
3 250
and Dave Wtckl ne 173 lb C eve and
Allan a
0 2 000
doubt
noticed lha most of
JUn or
Western Conference
he p gsk m forecaste s sur
The Wildcats have had
M dwest DIVISIOn
fered througl a d smal da l
W L Pet GB
problems m mov ng the ball thts
last
Saturday as the dope
!waukee
4 0 1 000
season Garland Montgomery a M
bucket
was booted w ll y n y
De o I
3
750
sophomore halfback has been Ch cago
1
500 2 over he a mna land
1 1 500 2 sca pe
moved mto the Important Plioen x
Pac f c OIV s on
quarterback slot m an attempt
Neverthe ess y ou r fea
W L Pel GB
to garner more offense
Los Ange es
3 0 000
less to ecaste posted I e
3 1 750
Thus far Hannan Trace has Seat e
' env able ceo d of correct y
Golden
S
ate
1
2
333
2
p ck ng the w nne s n all
scored only 12 pomts whtle Por and
0
J 000
ol
the co ests nvolv ng he
perm ttmg 1ts opponents 148 Hous on
0 3 000
top
10 ated clubs
nc ud
Tuesday s Resulfs
In non league games M1ller
g
the
defea
s
of
oth
ranked
Boson
34
Bait
mo
e1
14
travels to Eastern Kyger
Co I o ado and lOth ra ed
Sea e 101 C nc nnat 00
Creek hosts Alexander n Its New Yo k 93 Golden Sta e 84 Texa s har rumot
homecoming match and South Los Angeles 123 Butta o 06
Space d e n pern t me
wes tern will play at Green M waukee 116 Cleve and 82
De o 101 Po land 99
to repeat the fo re ast of he
Local
Wednesday s Games
antes s nvolv ng the top
Coach Roger K1rhart s Sea e a Ph ladelph a
0
ea rn s b t y u I remem
Eastern Eagles the area s only Los Ange es a A lan a
be
we gave yo Oklahoma
Ch cago vs Hou a Waco Tex
unbeaten &lt;Ind untied team will Go
u
"h
p 5 h an ked Colorado
den S a e a C eve land
be out for revenge when M ller
and
unranked
Arkansas u
On y ga m es sc hedu ed
mack 10 h ra ed I ex as and
takes the field Frtday mght m
tha
s exactl y w h a t a
By
Un
ted
Press
lnternat
onal
the Eagles f nal home game of
East
1
ened
the season
W L Pet GB
B t enough k f kaff io
Last year Eastern while F o dan s
2 0 000
en t h sto y
a
n
0
000
en oy ng a f ne yea r was Ken ucky
2
1
667
New
York
bombarbed 51-0 at Miller The
' T h s week s head! ne s
1 500
V g na
p on se some thr ll ng ac
Falcons are 3 2 1 after romp ng P sbu gh
2 333
on w h th e No I colleg a
o
Jooo
2,
Ca
o
na
V nton County last Frtday 26-0
e
eve n Neb ras ka 6 0 un
West
Miller s led offens vely by
W L Pet GB
g ts eco d o 26 games
R ck Eberts Dave Starner and U ah
3 0 1 000
w hout defeat as tl ey sub
J 0 l 000
M ke Merckle Merckle gamed lnd ana
d e Oklahoma S ate by a 32
Memph
s
500
160 yards aga nst the V kmgs
10 co nt
Da as
0 2 000
He should give the staunch Denve
0 4 000
No 2 0 k a hom a 50
Eagle defense a real workout
Tuesday s Results
s o d have an easy t me o
Eastern s offense has ex New Yo k 125 P sbu gh 120
n anqu sl ng Kansa
ah 50 Carol na 93
ploded for 238 po nts m s x U
S
ate
42 20 M ch gan 6 0
lnd ana 22 Denver l 7
an
I
A
abama 6 0 rated 3
games whtle tis defense has
On y games schedu ed
and
4
w II pro e wor hy of
Wednesdays
Games
pert !ted only 18 po nts Sen or
V
g n a a Flo dans
he
r
h
gh at ngs as he
quarterback J m Amsbary s Ca o na a Da llas
Wol es 11h p B g f en foe
the na n cog n the Eastern Memph s al Ken uck y
M nnesota 26 18 and he
On y games scheduled
offense He scored two touch
r de ol s 36 12 over Ho s
downs and passed for another n
ton
Ea stern s 29 0 v clory over
fl e o n y danger s gna
Federal Hock ng a week ago
)o
avor te fo recaster sees
Defens" sta ndouts have been
n Ihe weekend s b g ga mes
Allen Duvall John Chne Roger
fl ng a So u t I Bend
w h e e No 5 No re Dam e
Karr Allen Holter and Dick
ta kes o un anked bu a
Stettler
" a l s da nge ous So tt e
Coach D ck Adams Kyger
Ca lo n a
Creek Bobcats w II also seek
To an
J o "n M Ka
revenge n a b g homecommg
game aga nst Coach Dave
Sn pe s Alexander Spartans
\lexander edged the Bobcats
14-8 n a bru s ng battle last
yea r at Albany The Bobcats
f n shed the r 1971 league
COLUMBUS (UP! - Mid
campa gn last Fr day w1th a
Amencan
Conference offens ve
dose 22 16 w n over South and defens
ve players-of the
westeon 1 .,
CLEVELAND
-Cleve
Kyger Creek assured tself of week are Toledo quarterback land
Browns headUP!)
coach
N ck
Mhuhck Ealefy anRd WKestelrn Skor ch sa d there s no doubt
a least a ~e for second place C
gan sa ety on ar s the Denver Broncos will know
The Bobcats only league loss whoc opposed
each other last
was to Eastern The Eagle; Saturday
what to do after watch ng the
have Southern and South
films of the Browns " mcmnat
Ealey led the Rockets to a
"'"'
western left n the league
comeback 35-24 VIctory over Bengals game last Swtday
Alexander afte r droppmg Is Western Michigan despite the
Denver s strength s thetr
f rst three games has reversed defens ve efforts of Karl s who runn ng game and I m sure
the trend and won three n a
they will try to run aga nst us
~~~~~:~;ns
ble
for
four
Toledo
after
they see films of our
row The Spartans defeated
Glouste r !2 0 last Fr day
game Skonch said
Ealey
who
also
won
UP[
s
The coach sa d the B
Alexander s paced by JuniOr M dwest Back of the Week
rowns
quar te rback Grdg Brooks honors completed 23 of 42 tack! ng a~a nst the Bengals
Brooks scored one toughdown passes for 381 yards and four was poor too often and tt
agamst the Tomcats The other touchdowns Hts passmg yard had better Improve before Sun
came on an ntercephon by age was a new smgle game day
defens ve back B II Hart
Coach Mel Carl&lt;!r s South MAC record as was h s total
offense mark of 392 yards The
western Highlanders still
seek ng that llus1ve frrst w n of four TD passes tied a confer
ence record Ealey already
the !971 campa gn JOurney to
WASHINGTON UPI) The
Frankl n Furnace for a non held
Karlis
a
semor
from
Chester
Supreme
Court agreed Tuesday
league encounter w1th the
ton [nd forced one fumble to hear an appeal of Curt
Green Bobcats
Led by John Earl Hutch nson recovered two others and mter Floods anti trust sUit aga nst
and Btll Flowers Southwestern cepted an Ealey pass n the organ zed baseball n which the
scored two touchdowns m the Bronco end zone to stop a To- former St Lou s Cardmal star
ledo touchdown dnve
s challeng ng the legality of the
last two mmutes Frtday mght m
a come from behmd effort Karl s second fumble recov game s reserve clause
agamst the Kyger Creek ery led to the th1rd Western
The court s expected to
Bobcats which fell one TD touchdown and gave the Bran announce a dec s on by the end
cos a 21 7 lead at the tune He
short
also
made f ve solo tackles and of ts current sessiOn m June
Green s 2-4 on the year after
los ng to the North Gallia had two assiSts
Flood s sull cla ims that
Other nommees for thiS
Prates 24-14 last week
weeks honors were Bowling baseball s reserve clause
Green s Jerry Ftelds Kent makes nvoluntary slaves of
States Eddie Woodard M1 players by bmd ng them to the
SVAC STANDINGS
am s Bob Hitchens Ohw U s team w th which they stgn the r
SVAC ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP Dave Green and Western s Lar or gmal contracts Baseball has
Ea s e n
6 0 0 238 B ry Ulmer on offense
enJOYed exemption from ant
Kyge c eek
4
101 06
On defense the other nomina trust laws s nee 1922 when the
No th Ga a
3 3 0 lOB 76
Southe n
2 4 0 66 04 t ons were V1c Murphy of Kent Supreme Court ruled that 11 was
Southwestern
0 6 0 38 56 Jerry Tillman of M1am1 Jack not mterstate conunerce
Hannan T ace
0 6 o 12 48 LeVeck of Ohio U and John
Flood a $90 000 a year cen
SVAC ONLY
W L T POP N ezgoda of Toledo Bowlmg terftelder With the Card nals
TEAM
East e n
3 0 0 15 6 Green had no defensive selec brought h s su t after bemg
Kyge Creek
4 1 0 95 80
traded to the Phtladelphta
2 10 58 34 t on
Souihe rn
Ph II es He sat out the !970
204434
North Gal a
Southwestern
0 303086
The Smyrna fig depends season was traded to the
Hannan T ace
030 6 OB upon the f g wasp for cross Wash ngton Senators m 1.97! but
10 10 0 348 34B pollmahon
Tofals
Jumped the team after play ng a
few
games
Th s Week s Games
M n mum age for member
M e at Eastern
h p n the U S House of He 1s currently believed to be
A exande at Kyger C eek
Representat ves s 25 years somewhere n Europe
Southwestern at G een Loca

1 urdue 45 Illinois 29
Northwestern 26 Indiana 18
Kat sas 36 Iowa State 27
Okl ho na 42 Kans as St 20
I o sv lllc 17 Wtclnta St 10
S Mtss 32 'I mph s St 28

Honor

© NEI\

The Old Boy H msel l

e hav ng a u usua bad 011 State 29 Wt scoos

t me of
th s fa but t
vou d &lt; n n o a ha11y ea
son I they upset he lr sl
So A. a b w a e s he
wo d f on o
enu wne J
Hoos e s t
ng e r Ie r
H ute Te ry ee th ND
has m ed
dcf n e wh
ts r ve 197 v c m to a
a e1 age of 65 8 ya ds usl
ng com ng th o gh aga n
In a yp ca ha d ought I
pn I sh e n c o u n e
th
Hoo1 e 5) ste n favo s ND
o w n by a 26 12 n a g n
In o I e conles s wo h)
o note Oh o S a e 4 I w
ack up s fo u th B g Ten
n o he season o e W s
ons n 29 7 Geu g a 6 0
sl ou d h a e tt e oub
h Kent ky as he 11
b g 39 8
Now g on w t the fu e
cas
Alaba na 36 Housto I?
lta h 24 Amon a 2• ( ~
\rkansas 4! Nort h Texas
St 7
V rg n1a 16 \rm) 6
A1 bun 24 Cle n son 8
P ttsburgh 35 Boston Col 28
M ami 0 21 Bowling Green
1?
Co lgate 28 Brown 22
A r I orce 30 Colo Sl {j 10
C !orad 38 MISso r1 8
South Carolma 22 Florida
St 20 (N)
Florida 32 Maryland 14
Georgia 39 Kentucky 8
Dartmouth •• Harvard 6

To Be Heard

Oneng
reason
for the
laxity
tack!
and some
poor
blockm
mg by the offens ve lme may
h
ave been tha t the Browns
were too upt ght he ven
turned
There wasn t a sound n our
dressmg room before the
game Skor ch said If you
had dropped a p n 1t would
have sounded hke a bomb gomg off
I U1 nk they wanted to wm
so much they d dn t play up to
thetr potenbal
The Browns did wm but they
had to come from beh nd m the
f nal 39 seconds wtth a touch
down that made the I nal score
27 24
Three Cleveland touchdowns
were scored by Bo Scott fa
maliar to Canadian football
fans

0

Id aho 14 West Texas St 1

MORE NOW

(N
West V rgmiU 35 Temple 7
1\
&amp; Marv 34 VMI 18
Wy !7 U 1 ex El Paso 16
Kent State 21 Xavter 8
C rnell 42 l ale 17
Washmgton 26 Ore Sta te 21
Ironton 28 Gallipolis fi
Meigs 22 Athens 7
Logan 28 Waverly 14
Jackson 35 Wellston 14
North Galha 28 Hannan Trace

Your regular payday
savmgs plus our high
rate of return wtll
make your sa vtngs
grow quick Jy

4*%
PASSBOOK RATE

6

Eastern 40 Miller 6
K) ger Creek 6 Alexander 0
Green 12 Southwestern 7
Ft Gay 27 Symmes Valley

MEIGS CO BRANCH

7

Wayne 14 Chesapeake 12
Ironton Sl Joe 26 Fair
land 14
South Pomt 20 Coal Grove
0
Pt Pleasant 11 Rtpley 12
Ravenswood 20 Wahama 8
Huntmgton B 28 Hannan 0
Belpre 26 Nelsonville-York
8
Sprmgfield 34 Portsmouth 8

Me gs County Branch of The
Athens County Sav ngs &amp;
Loan Co

296 Second St
Pome oy Oh o
M embe F ede a Home
Bank

GENERAL TIRE
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
only
$139
gal
GENERAL TIRE SALES
992 7161

SAVE UP
TO •1.00 A TANKFUL

R;c:k~H=lll~6~0=a~k~H:ll~I~O~--!:::::::::~

SAVE WITH

GOBLE

STOP 'N' SAVE
IN A
GUARANTEED
USED CAR
AT••••

KEITH GOBLE FORD
NEW USED CAR LOT
3RD AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0

WINTER RETREADS

Q- Wha Arne ca JOILl
oltst szg ed tl e bazl bo d of
Jejje1 s01 Dav s pres de t of
tl e Co federacy

A- Horace G eeley

750x14
or Smaller

UNDER MAJOR COMPANIES

CERTIFIED
GAS STATIONS
$~8

992 9981

W Mam

Pomeroy 0

(Add A $1 DO For Each Stze Larger)

N 2nd

oa n

Mem be Fede a Sa ng &amp;
oan nsu an e Co po a on
A
a oun s ns ed up o
$20 000 00

PRICE CONTROLS

We have always had pr1ce controls to save you
money On Certtfted X E 110 You

Sentinel

EARN

North Ga a at Hannan Trace ,.. .lllll~i~!~•••••••••••••••--'1

WEAVER SIGNS
BALTIMORE (UP! )
Earl
Weaver who has managed the
Daltlmore Orwles to three
straight American League pen
nants signed a new contract
Tuesday for the !972 season
Weaver 41 took over when
Hank Bauer was ftred m July
1968 and under hts dltectwn
the Onoles have won 336 games
and lost !98

Da1~

7

Nebraska 32 Okla St 10
Or gon 47 Sa J sc St 2
1
State 18 fCU 6
I c nsyl 17 Pr nceton 11
loh mbta 30 R tgc rs 11
1 xas Tech 18 SMU 14
St nford 28 Was! St 12
Syracuse 26 Hoi Cross 14
VIllanova z? Ta lpa 15 (N)
1 enncssee 35 M ss St t 12
Ba lor 12 f exas A&amp;M 27
Texas 41 R1cc 16
I oledo 44 Uavton 18 ( N
Tulane 29 Geo rg a I eel 10
T lsa 27 Br gl an Y un ~ I
Cahfor 1a 31 Ut:LA •4 II\
Oh o U 28 VIrgin a Tech •
1\ esten M1 h 44 Marshall

It was a b g change for me

my ftrst year here but now I
feel I ke I m back n the
groove I had n Canada Scott
sa d
Scott played one year at
OhiO State before gong to the
Canadian Football League
H1s show ng so far th s sea
son 1s 311 yards m 83 cames
and I ve touchdowns
I Just I ke to carry the
ball he sad

The

Mtchtgan St 37 Io" a 21
Michigan 26 M nnesota 18
M•ss ss1pp1 14 Va ndcrb It II
I actflc 14 Mo nta •a 0
l)ukc 49 Na&gt; 9
Ar 1 St lH Nc Mcxllo I
r.. C Stat 8 f ast Carol a
7 11'1
1\ rlh C r I n 23 Wak
I orest ?f
1\ Ire ()a c 2( S thern
Ca l 1•

We Must Stop Denver's
Running Game-Skorich

FloodS Appeal

Ch ang Ka shek eader of
Na t ana st Ch na was bap
ed a Chr s an n 1930 and
o ned I e Method st Church

(N)

l

Ealey,
Karlis

NE WCOMBE ADVANCED
BARCELONA Spam (UP[
Top-seeded John Newcombe of
Austral a advanced to the
fourth round of the Span sh
Open tenn s tournament w1th a
4-0 6-4 6-0 v ctory Tuesday
over countryman Ray Ruffles

H &amp; R FIRESTON

�...
•
,

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 20, 197!
l

.

\t

'Frisco, 93-84
NBA Roundup
By GARY KALE
!:PI Sports Writer
Bill Bradley outgunned Cazzie
Russell tn the first confrontati on between the two top pros
who once battled for a starting

assignment wtlh the New York
Krucks .
Both deny there is any fe ud
material in the meeting. They
played their usual hard-nosed
game and either co uld easily
ha ve been the hero as New
York defeated the Golden Gale
Warriors 93-84, Tuesday night.
Bradley led all scorers with
23 points and Russell paced the
Warri ors with 17. It was
Bradley 's ftre baskets in the
final penod. howeve r. thai
pro\·idrd thr final touc h to a
second half comeback for the
Knicks. 1.-ho trailed 50-46 at
intermi SSI On

Russell. acquired by the
Warnors 1n a trade for Jerry
Lucas. was \"Ol uable in his
pra1se of Bradley .•
"Bradley IS an open shootergJH h1m a foot of room and
he'll beot you," Russell said . "I
was Irytng to discourage Bill by

r

l

1:,

The La kers took their third in
a row as Gail Goodrich 's 24
points and Wilt Chamberlain's
20 paced Los Angeles over
Buffalo. They each scored nine
points in the first period.
Roo kie Elmore Smith, the
highly-touted 7-foot re nter from
Ken tucky State, scored 20 for
Buffalo , his best effort as a
pro.
Lennie Wtlkens' running hook
shot with seven seconds remaining boos ted Seattle past
Cinctnnati. The Sonics battled
fr om a 100-97 deficit on a goaltending call against rookie Nate
Wilhams and Wilkens' winning
basket. Dick Snyder paced
Seattle with 24 points and
Spencer Haywood had 23. Nate
Archibald ne tted 26 for the
Roya ls.
.
Bob Lanier had 44 points and
20 rebounds-both career highs
- to lead the Pistons over
Portland. Jimmy Walker ,,p!aytng with four fuls for almost
the last two periods, added 23
fo r Detroit.

,

I .),

A long-overlooked ordinance that permits cruncil to regu-

' 't

fic laws brought two delegations to t;.&lt; Masoo Town Council
meeting Monday nighL
The meeting opened at 6:30 p.m., in the office of Mayor
Roy Harless while some 20 persons waited outside of his chambers to protest the prq:&gt;osed ordinance regulationg trucl&lt; traffic, load limits ar&gt;:l speed limits oo town streets.
Mayor Harless, when several members of the delegation
(mostly residents from outside the town who travel over Anderson St.) appeared at Ute door ofhls office shortly after the meeting had gotten under way, told them that their protests could not
be heard "legally" until a mCeting for that purpose on November 1 at 6:30p.m.
·
.
I
Some members of the group evening came up for discussion.
of citizens, how~ver, continued
This l}'latter involved a deletheir att~mpl lo b.i heard ar&gt;:l gallon of fire department memasked for a CoPY of the propos- hers who appeared to request
ed ,ordinance./ Mayor Harless that council repeal a long overpresented the ~elegatioo a copy. looked ordinance that gives the
of the ordinance, but refused town the right to regulate the
to formally hear the group. nwnber of fireme n and their
Council entered into a dis- age an:t the mayor the authoricussloo on !he proposed ordi- ty to appoint a fire chief.
nance soon after the delegaThe discussion between the
lion left w.ith the second read- firemen and ,town fathers brouing finally being approved, sui&gt;- ght out a variety of comments
ject to revision.
· and charges by members of
It was pointed. out by Town each group.
Attorney Mike Shaw, duri'l( the
At one point during the discourse of the discussion, that cuss ion, Councilman Joe Jones
the ordinance proposal appears told the firemen he felt the
"so broad, it may be prohibi- "townspeople are bei~ shortlive."
changed by the Fire DepartThe main question over the ment." Jones, while maki~the
ordinance proposal was the claim, iOOica_ted his dissatiswording concerning "through faction of firemen answering
trarfic" or vehicles with over out ,of town calls.
10,000 weight. It was also polnFire Chief George A. Carson
ted out that the new ordinance pointed out the fire department
made provision for allowing is a volunteer groUp that has
school buses to pass through been incorporated to operate
the town over the lood limit, uooer its own charter,
but did not carry an exemption
He said the ordinance regarclause for the fire truck.
ding the fire departmert dating
Pollee Chief John Harrah back to 1949 was just apparentalso pointed out the ordinance, ly overlooked alter the fire deas pres ented, would permit 25 partment was chartered arxl had
mUes per hour speed limit on apparemly not been repealed
town streets, The present speed simply through over sigh~
limit on WWn streets is 15
Councilman Jones, throughmiles per hour.
out the discussion, stood firm
Routine business of council in his attempt to keep the ordiwas haooled by council before nance in effect though admitthe secom heated Issue or Ute ting that it would need some

..,

Congratulations to Scott Van Vranken, son of MF. and Mrs:
Harvey VanVranken and a junior at Meigs High SchooL
Donald A. Bible, youth coordinator of the Ohio West Conference of the United Methodist Olurch, has named Scott to the
planning conunissionJor 1972 of the school of missions for youth.
Serving on the commission will involve Scott's attending several
planning sessions in Columbus.

'

'

.

COLEEN AND TERRY OHLINGER and son, Jay, now living
in Philo, were here Sunday sO that Coleen could attend the annual
preferential tea of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phl
Sorority at the home of Jeannette Crooks Thomas in Middleport.
The Ohlingers, expecting an addition to their lamUy at any
time now. are enjoying their new residence in Philo where Terry
is employed in the school system.
Incidentally, the Thomas home, so tastefully furnished with
antiques: was an excellent locatioo lor the sorority social event.
The home, of course, was the residence of the late Capt. John
Lyons and later that of his so n, Lindsey.

--

SIXTH GRADERS OF the Pomeroy Elementary School are
getting an early start in earning funds lor their annual spring trip.
Sunday, the patrol will sponsor a skating party at the Skate-AWay Rink on Route 7. The affair is lor both children and adults.
Advance tickets are being sold or can be purchased at the door at
50 cents per person. Hours will be from 2 to 5p.m.

DO .YOU RECOGNIZE the oldtimers in this picture

taken in Mason, W. Va., when the WUdermuth Brewery of
Pomeroy did a flourishing business merchandising
Wildermuth's Lager Beer' The Gresses are numerous and
identifiable, but the bearded gentlemen are not. On the extreme left is Pete Gress. The small fellow leaning against the

YOUNGSTERS IN A NUMBER of Meigs County communities will be enjoying trick or treat Saturday night, Oct. 30,
from 7 to 8 p.m.
\-ra \'lng my hands in his fa ce
Saturday night traffic is generally a little heavier than usual DINKINS WAIVED
BICKLEY DEAD
and allem pting to distract him . NE W YORK (UP!)- The anyway, so if you're driving do be careful about the little ones.
CHICAGO I UP! )-The ChicaRENO, Nev. (UPI!-Horse
I was on the bench when he got Uni ted Press International top There's not one to spare - not one!
go Bulls have put rookie racing entrepreneur Kenneth
th ose th ree quick baskets in the 20 small college football teams
forward Jackie Dinkins on Bickley, who wan ted to build an
fourth penod and those shots with first place votes and wonYOUNG PEOPLE OF TWO county Nazarene Ch urches will waivers and -activated forward $8.5 million thoroughbred and
lo!';t records in parentheses :
reall y moved the Kn ic ks.''
be getting log ether Th ursday night. The Christian youth band and Howard Porter as of Oct. 26. quarter horse racing and
(Sixth Week)
The Knicks capitalized on
singers of the RuUand Church will be at the Pomeroy Nazarene Porter, the Bulls No. 3 draft training fa cility here, died
Golden Sta\e 's Six for 20 TEAM
Points Olurch for a singspiration starting at 7:30. The public is invited, choice this year, . has been Tuesday at the age of 48.
shooting in the third quarter. A I. Delaware 125 1(5-0 )
313
sidelined with an eye infection.
by the way.
fa1rer percentage of connec· 2. Tampa 121 (4-1 )
250
'
tions could easily have sent 3. Eastern Mich (4-0-1)
:-.-ew York down to its third Joss 4. Akron 131 (5-0 )
m four games. Instead, New 5. McNeese St (2) (IMJ)
97
York IS 2-2 and the Warriors 1- 6. So Illinois ( 4-I )
By United Press Inte rnational Basketball Association. didn't first half alone and had their
Bill Melchionni had 32 points
7. Gramblin~ (5-l )
89
2.
People claim nobody's per- miss a shot Tuesday night as lowest output in the third and Rick Barry 30 as the Nets
85
In other NBA action, Mil- 8. N Dakota St (5-1 )
fect , but try telling that to he scored 35 points and led the period when they were "held" beat Pi!Lsburgh. But Barry
9.
North
Dakota
(
4-2)
83
waukee smothered Cleveland
Roger Brown .
Indiana Pacers to a 122-1 I 7 to 36 points. Zelmo Beaty led may be lost for a few games
116-82, Boston clobbered Balti- 10. WesternKentucky i4-l ) .82
Brown, possibly the outstand- victory over the Denver the barrage with 26 points, Ron after suffering a sprained ankle
73
more 134-114, Los Angeles 11. Weber State ( 4-0-1)
ing shooter in the Americau Rockets.
Boone had 21 and George Stone with · 57 seconds left to play.
remained undefeated wi th a 12. EasternKentucky l4-l-l ) 49
Brown
hit
13-of-13
field
goal
19.
Eight Stars hit in double George Carter and John Bris13 . Drake 14-21
34
123-106 victory over Buffalo,
attempts, including a trio of figures. Larry Miller led the ker teamed for 65 Condor
14 . Tennessee State 13-1)
33
Seattle edged Cincinnati 101-100,
three-pointe rs from outside the Cougars with 17 points.
points.
and Detrml nipped Portland 15 . rioColorado i l !i 3-!-l ) 28
16 . So Texas St (5-0)
25-foot circle and added a 6-for- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
26
101-99.
6
performance at the f~ul line
17 . Boise State (5-l )
23 By United Press International to he lp the Pacers score · their
The defen ding champion
18 . St. John 's IMinn ) (5-I) 15
Bucks won then· four th stratght
third victory without a Joss.
19.
Arkansas State (2-2)
14
NEW YORK I UP! I
as Kareem Jabbar led the way
Bob Netolicky added 21 poinLs
Valdes ,
160 1 ~ .
past Cleveland with 24 points. 20. Abilene Christian ( 4-1 ) 11 Rodrigo
and Mel Daniels had 19 as
Colombia, knocked out Perry Indiana sent the winless RockCleveland, down 13-3, had a 25 WEAVER SIGNS
per cent shooting average in BALTIMORE (UP!) - Earl "Lil " Abner , !56, Philadelphia ets reeling to their fourth lo~s.
11
first half. Bobby Smith led Weaver, who has managed the I I I.
Ralph Simpson was top scorer
!he Cavaliers with 26 points.
for Denver with 34 poin ts.
Baltimore Orioles to three
HOUSTON (UP! J - Johnny
Bostor benefited from Jo Jo strai ght American League penIn the only other ABA action
White 's torri d shoo ting-13 field nants, signed a new contract "The Mad" Baldwin , !59'h , Tuesday night, Utah unleased a
goals for 26 poi nts- tha t gave Tuesday for the 1972 season. Houston, knocked out Alfonso team record scoring barrage to
the Celtics their ftrsl victory . Weaver, 41 , look over when Ag ui rre, 158%, Mexico (5); bury Carolina 150-93 and the
Baltimore, which did not play Hank Bauer was fired in July, Willie "The Worm" Monroe, New York Nets downed Pitnewly acquired Archie Clark, 1968, and under his direction, 160, Philadelphia, outpointed tsburg h 125-120.
was led by Earl ~l onroe's 28 the Orioles have won 336 games Willie Warren , 165, Corpus
Utah scored 77 points in the
Pd. Pol. Adv .
Olristi, Tex . ( 10).
poi!lt'i.
and lost 198.

College Ratings

door is Gordon Gress, Pete's son . Phil Gress, was the bartender. George H. Gress, owner of the business at that time,
was absent. He also operated the Mason Coal and Mining
Company. He is the Ia ther of Miss Stella Gress, Mas&lt;ln. .
.
The picture was taken on the corner of Pomeroy and
Front St. in Mason . Thanks is extended to Miss Gress lor use
of the picture.

:~~ Indiana Pacers Outlast~Denver Rockets, 122-117

Pre-Cut

Fight Results

HAVE A VOICE IN YOUR
GOVERNMENT

STUDS

VOTE"

ttJe

ELECT WILLIAM (8111) HARRIS
FOR CLERK
OF SUnON TOWNSHIP

Phebe Says:

•

I

CitiZens Protest
Truck Ordinance
late the fire department and a measure pr'l)osed to set new traf-

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Property
Tran~fer~

revision.
Mayor Harless assured the
firmen he would not appoint a
fire chief without the recommendation first comi'l( from
the fire department.
Members of the fire department said they are asking the
ordinance be •·epealed so that
at a future time some other
village official "could not hold
it over their heads."
The discussion between the
Cooncil aoo fire department
members continued for over an
hour with the end result bei'l(
that a special meeting of council will be he ld on November
26 to 1give the matter further
sti'/dy,
Both Council and fire department
represe ntatives
agreed, as the discussion con-

H. Guinther, Lot, Syracuse.
Lenna Brinker aka Lena
Brinker to Lynn E. Shuler,
1
Johanne D. Shuler, h Acre,
Letart.
Kenneth E. Riggs, Judith
Riggs to Sherman E. Sum-

eluded, that both groups should
work to have unity.
In other activity, Roger llysell of the Emergency Squad
read a letter that will be circulaled in the near future aski'l(
for support of the Mason Rescue Squad.
Insurance coverage of all
city vehicles, i ncludi~ fire
tr ucks aOO emergency vehicles,
was discussed and obligations
of the town lor the month totaled $440.70 am obligations for
the water department were announced as $657.92.
Attending were Mayor Barless, Councilmen Fred Samsel , Joe Jons and Hichard
Fowler, WaterCierk Charlotte
Jenks am City Attorney Mike
Shaw.

.

Mason Area
News., Notes
Mrs. Parker Hi nzman, Mrs .
George Carson and Mrs. Ray
Proffitt will attend the Spiritual
Life Retreat at Jackson's Mill
on Friday . They will represent
the Mason United Methodist
Church. They will return on
Saturday .
Mrs . Paul Rando lph and
Stella Mae were din ner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. John Roach and
fami ly on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Tripp,
Rodney and Tod of Chester, 0 .,
visited on Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Smith and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Lloyd and
son of New Haven, spent the
weekend at Lexington, Ky.
attending the car races there.
Mrs. WU!iam Chisler, Fourth
St., New Haven, is visiting her
mother, Mrs. Ellen Croghan at
Carnegie, Pa. Mrs. Creghan
observed her !04th birthday
Oct. 19.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Jr ., Lesage, W. Va ., Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Harris and Lisa of
Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs . Randy
VanMeter, Middleport, visited
on Sunday with Mrs. Elmer
VanMeter in Clifton.

.News Notes

~!~L.. ~.J9~

Meigs

Henry E. Bahr, Eileen Bahr
to Lorena J. Wolf, Marian
. Czaika, 39 Acres, Chester.
Betsey J . Gilkenson , ~ouis
Leon Gilkenson to Harry C.
Surface, Lot, Middleport.
John T. Halliday, Pauline
Halliday, Eugene Halliday,
Mary Halliday to Robert D.
Halliday, Avanel Halliday,
Parcel, Salem.
Malcolm E. Guinther, Dopna
J. Guinther to William E.
Guinther. Beverly H. Guinther,
Lots, Syracuse.
Citizens Natl. Bank to
William E. Guinther, Beverly

Laurel Oiff

79e

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I

BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance at
the Free Methodist Church Ocl.
17 was 117. Day's offering was
$146 . Rev ,· Raymond Gill ,
Cambridge, m inis terial
student, had charge of morning
services.
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
visited Friday evening with Mr.
and Mrs . Rober t Burke,
Parkersburg. They went to help
celebrate the Burkes' anniversary and their son Chris's
birthday.
Miss Polly Karr, Ted
Mathew and Kellie Zoe
DeConnick, Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Bauer, Marion,
spent lhe weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Cha rles Karr, Sr.
Rev. Eugene Gill attended the
Southeastern Area Ministers
meeting at zanesville Tuesday.
Mrs.
Struters and

merfield, Lo~~ I, 2, 3, 4, Orange.
Vazie Lee to Bob J. Ord, Leah
J. Ord, Lot, Syracuse .
John E. Kaylor, dec. to
Katurah V. Kimb le, Gerald
Kimble, Cerl. of Trans.,
Orange-Olive.
Bessie Scholl, dec. to Albert
sCholl, Albert Millon Scholl,
Delbert Becker, Aff. for trans. ,
Pomeroy.
Albert Scholl, Albert Milton
Scholl, Delbert Becker, Theresa
Becker to Crow 's Steak House,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Eugene R. Facemyer, Dennis
L. Facemyer, eta! to Stale of
Ohio , Jo urnal Entry , Jury
Verdict, Meigs .
April Smith, Comm., William
Gerald Graham, dec'd ., lo
Goldie Graham .56 Acre,
Rutland .
Clara Prosser to Frances E.
Hewitt. 4 Acres, Lebanon.
Carrie M. King , Fletcher
King to Flossie D. Stanley, 80
Acres, Bedford,
Walter E. Baker, Dorothy
Baker to Billy Humphrey,
Sandra Humphrey. 1.5 Acre,
Orange.
Botkins Grai n &amp; Feed Co . to
Charles S. Beller, Alma E.
Beller, 59.12 Acres, Rutland.
Rona ld Osborne, Ella
Osborne lo Raymond Byrd,
Pauline Byrd, .61 Acre, Olive.
Jemo Assoc iates, Inc . to
Celesta C. Bush, Lot 23,
Riverview Acres, Middleport.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Gregory P. Howell, Norma J.
Howell, .19 Acre, 100 Acre, Lot
.!95, Sutton.
Clare nce Baker, Laura
Baker, lo Charles Bissell.
Margare t Bissell, 3 Acres,
Chester.
Ralph T. Bass, Cledith Bass,
Leonard Bass , Ora Bass,
Bernice Levacy. Everett
Levacy , Betty J. Tyree, James
H. Tyree to Lula Bass, 15 Acres.
Sutton.
Blaeltnar Auto Co., Fred S.
Blaettnar. Margaret
E.
Blaettnar, John W. Blaettnar,
Eleanor M. Blaeltnar to Smith
Nelson Motors , Inc., Lots,
Pomeroy.

Plur

l&amp;~l

children visited recently with
Mrs. Dora Halley.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met Thursday evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Karr for potluck dinner with 13
members present. Sunshine
Sisters were revea led and
names drawn for the --eoming
year. Several members were
abse nt because of illness. The
November meeting will be with
Mrs. Allen Eichinger, Mulberry
HeighLs. This was the 36th
anniversary of the club.

Timely Quotes
It is important for American society that institutions
under black leadership and
with a trad ition of service to
black students have an oppor ,t unity to thrive and
share fully in our natio nal
effo rts in higher education.
- McGeorge Bundy, president of the Ford Founda-

tion. announcing grants
to Negro private colleges.

pedwin®

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I...;M;;.;ai~n.;F~Ioo;.;;.r.;Ba;;s;;e;;;m;.;e;;;n~t------...;;;;;_....;;M;,;;a;;;in~FI~oo;,;r.;B;.;a;,;,se,;.m;,;,e.;.n.t__~-.,..~~----

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POMEROY, OHIO

TO

�...
•
,

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 20, 197!
l

.

\t

'Frisco, 93-84
NBA Roundup
By GARY KALE
!:PI Sports Writer
Bill Bradley outgunned Cazzie
Russell tn the first confrontati on between the two top pros
who once battled for a starting

assignment wtlh the New York
Krucks .
Both deny there is any fe ud
material in the meeting. They
played their usual hard-nosed
game and either co uld easily
ha ve been the hero as New
York defeated the Golden Gale
Warriors 93-84, Tuesday night.
Bradley led all scorers with
23 points and Russell paced the
Warri ors with 17. It was
Bradley 's ftre baskets in the
final penod. howeve r. thai
pro\·idrd thr final touc h to a
second half comeback for the
Knicks. 1.-ho trailed 50-46 at
intermi SSI On

Russell. acquired by the
Warnors 1n a trade for Jerry
Lucas. was \"Ol uable in his
pra1se of Bradley .•
"Bradley IS an open shootergJH h1m a foot of room and
he'll beot you," Russell said . "I
was Irytng to discourage Bill by

r

l

1:,

The La kers took their third in
a row as Gail Goodrich 's 24
points and Wilt Chamberlain's
20 paced Los Angeles over
Buffalo. They each scored nine
points in the first period.
Roo kie Elmore Smith, the
highly-touted 7-foot re nter from
Ken tucky State, scored 20 for
Buffalo , his best effort as a
pro.
Lennie Wtlkens' running hook
shot with seven seconds remaining boos ted Seattle past
Cinctnnati. The Sonics battled
fr om a 100-97 deficit on a goaltending call against rookie Nate
Wilhams and Wilkens' winning
basket. Dick Snyder paced
Seattle with 24 points and
Spencer Haywood had 23. Nate
Archibald ne tted 26 for the
Roya ls.
.
Bob Lanier had 44 points and
20 rebounds-both career highs
- to lead the Pistons over
Portland. Jimmy Walker ,,p!aytng with four fuls for almost
the last two periods, added 23
fo r Detroit.

,

I .),

A long-overlooked ordinance that permits cruncil to regu-

' 't

fic laws brought two delegations to t;.&lt; Masoo Town Council
meeting Monday nighL
The meeting opened at 6:30 p.m., in the office of Mayor
Roy Harless while some 20 persons waited outside of his chambers to protest the prq:&gt;osed ordinance regulationg trucl&lt; traffic, load limits ar&gt;:l speed limits oo town streets.
Mayor Harless, when several members of the delegation
(mostly residents from outside the town who travel over Anderson St.) appeared at Ute door ofhls office shortly after the meeting had gotten under way, told them that their protests could not
be heard "legally" until a mCeting for that purpose on November 1 at 6:30p.m.
·
.
I
Some members of the group evening came up for discussion.
of citizens, how~ver, continued
This l}'latter involved a deletheir att~mpl lo b.i heard ar&gt;:l gallon of fire department memasked for a CoPY of the propos- hers who appeared to request
ed ,ordinance./ Mayor Harless that council repeal a long overpresented the ~elegatioo a copy. looked ordinance that gives the
of the ordinance, but refused town the right to regulate the
to formally hear the group. nwnber of fireme n and their
Council entered into a dis- age an:t the mayor the authoricussloo on !he proposed ordi- ty to appoint a fire chief.
nance soon after the delegaThe discussion between the
lion left w.ith the second read- firemen and ,town fathers brouing finally being approved, sui&gt;- ght out a variety of comments
ject to revision.
· and charges by members of
It was pointed. out by Town each group.
Attorney Mike Shaw, duri'l( the
At one point during the discourse of the discussion, that cuss ion, Councilman Joe Jones
the ordinance proposal appears told the firemen he felt the
"so broad, it may be prohibi- "townspeople are bei~ shortlive."
changed by the Fire DepartThe main question over the ment." Jones, while maki~the
ordinance proposal was the claim, iOOica_ted his dissatiswording concerning "through faction of firemen answering
trarfic" or vehicles with over out ,of town calls.
10,000 weight. It was also polnFire Chief George A. Carson
ted out that the new ordinance pointed out the fire department
made provision for allowing is a volunteer groUp that has
school buses to pass through been incorporated to operate
the town over the lood limit, uooer its own charter,
but did not carry an exemption
He said the ordinance regarclause for the fire truck.
ding the fire departmert dating
Pollee Chief John Harrah back to 1949 was just apparentalso pointed out the ordinance, ly overlooked alter the fire deas pres ented, would permit 25 partment was chartered arxl had
mUes per hour speed limit on apparemly not been repealed
town streets, The present speed simply through over sigh~
limit on WWn streets is 15
Councilman Jones, throughmiles per hour.
out the discussion, stood firm
Routine business of council in his attempt to keep the ordiwas haooled by council before nance in effect though admitthe secom heated Issue or Ute ting that it would need some

..,

Congratulations to Scott Van Vranken, son of MF. and Mrs:
Harvey VanVranken and a junior at Meigs High SchooL
Donald A. Bible, youth coordinator of the Ohio West Conference of the United Methodist Olurch, has named Scott to the
planning conunissionJor 1972 of the school of missions for youth.
Serving on the commission will involve Scott's attending several
planning sessions in Columbus.

'

'

.

COLEEN AND TERRY OHLINGER and son, Jay, now living
in Philo, were here Sunday sO that Coleen could attend the annual
preferential tea of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phl
Sorority at the home of Jeannette Crooks Thomas in Middleport.
The Ohlingers, expecting an addition to their lamUy at any
time now. are enjoying their new residence in Philo where Terry
is employed in the school system.
Incidentally, the Thomas home, so tastefully furnished with
antiques: was an excellent locatioo lor the sorority social event.
The home, of course, was the residence of the late Capt. John
Lyons and later that of his so n, Lindsey.

--

SIXTH GRADERS OF the Pomeroy Elementary School are
getting an early start in earning funds lor their annual spring trip.
Sunday, the patrol will sponsor a skating party at the Skate-AWay Rink on Route 7. The affair is lor both children and adults.
Advance tickets are being sold or can be purchased at the door at
50 cents per person. Hours will be from 2 to 5p.m.

DO .YOU RECOGNIZE the oldtimers in this picture

taken in Mason, W. Va., when the WUdermuth Brewery of
Pomeroy did a flourishing business merchandising
Wildermuth's Lager Beer' The Gresses are numerous and
identifiable, but the bearded gentlemen are not. On the extreme left is Pete Gress. The small fellow leaning against the

YOUNGSTERS IN A NUMBER of Meigs County communities will be enjoying trick or treat Saturday night, Oct. 30,
from 7 to 8 p.m.
\-ra \'lng my hands in his fa ce
Saturday night traffic is generally a little heavier than usual DINKINS WAIVED
BICKLEY DEAD
and allem pting to distract him . NE W YORK (UP!)- The anyway, so if you're driving do be careful about the little ones.
CHICAGO I UP! )-The ChicaRENO, Nev. (UPI!-Horse
I was on the bench when he got Uni ted Press International top There's not one to spare - not one!
go Bulls have put rookie racing entrepreneur Kenneth
th ose th ree quick baskets in the 20 small college football teams
forward Jackie Dinkins on Bickley, who wan ted to build an
fourth penod and those shots with first place votes and wonYOUNG PEOPLE OF TWO county Nazarene Ch urches will waivers and -activated forward $8.5 million thoroughbred and
lo!';t records in parentheses :
reall y moved the Kn ic ks.''
be getting log ether Th ursday night. The Christian youth band and Howard Porter as of Oct. 26. quarter horse racing and
(Sixth Week)
The Knicks capitalized on
singers of the RuUand Church will be at the Pomeroy Nazarene Porter, the Bulls No. 3 draft training fa cility here, died
Golden Sta\e 's Six for 20 TEAM
Points Olurch for a singspiration starting at 7:30. The public is invited, choice this year, . has been Tuesday at the age of 48.
shooting in the third quarter. A I. Delaware 125 1(5-0 )
313
sidelined with an eye infection.
by the way.
fa1rer percentage of connec· 2. Tampa 121 (4-1 )
250
'
tions could easily have sent 3. Eastern Mich (4-0-1)
:-.-ew York down to its third Joss 4. Akron 131 (5-0 )
m four games. Instead, New 5. McNeese St (2) (IMJ)
97
York IS 2-2 and the Warriors 1- 6. So Illinois ( 4-I )
By United Press Inte rnational Basketball Association. didn't first half alone and had their
Bill Melchionni had 32 points
7. Gramblin~ (5-l )
89
2.
People claim nobody's per- miss a shot Tuesday night as lowest output in the third and Rick Barry 30 as the Nets
85
In other NBA action, Mil- 8. N Dakota St (5-1 )
fect , but try telling that to he scored 35 points and led the period when they were "held" beat Pi!Lsburgh. But Barry
9.
North
Dakota
(
4-2)
83
waukee smothered Cleveland
Roger Brown .
Indiana Pacers to a 122-1 I 7 to 36 points. Zelmo Beaty led may be lost for a few games
116-82, Boston clobbered Balti- 10. WesternKentucky i4-l ) .82
Brown, possibly the outstand- victory over the Denver the barrage with 26 points, Ron after suffering a sprained ankle
73
more 134-114, Los Angeles 11. Weber State ( 4-0-1)
ing shooter in the Americau Rockets.
Boone had 21 and George Stone with · 57 seconds left to play.
remained undefeated wi th a 12. EasternKentucky l4-l-l ) 49
Brown
hit
13-of-13
field
goal
19.
Eight Stars hit in double George Carter and John Bris13 . Drake 14-21
34
123-106 victory over Buffalo,
attempts, including a trio of figures. Larry Miller led the ker teamed for 65 Condor
14 . Tennessee State 13-1)
33
Seattle edged Cincinnati 101-100,
three-pointe rs from outside the Cougars with 17 points.
points.
and Detrml nipped Portland 15 . rioColorado i l !i 3-!-l ) 28
16 . So Texas St (5-0)
25-foot circle and added a 6-for- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
26
101-99.
6
performance at the f~ul line
17 . Boise State (5-l )
23 By United Press International to he lp the Pacers score · their
The defen ding champion
18 . St. John 's IMinn ) (5-I) 15
Bucks won then· four th stratght
third victory without a Joss.
19.
Arkansas State (2-2)
14
NEW YORK I UP! I
as Kareem Jabbar led the way
Bob Netolicky added 21 poinLs
Valdes ,
160 1 ~ .
past Cleveland with 24 points. 20. Abilene Christian ( 4-1 ) 11 Rodrigo
and Mel Daniels had 19 as
Colombia, knocked out Perry Indiana sent the winless RockCleveland, down 13-3, had a 25 WEAVER SIGNS
per cent shooting average in BALTIMORE (UP!) - Earl "Lil " Abner , !56, Philadelphia ets reeling to their fourth lo~s.
11
first half. Bobby Smith led Weaver, who has managed the I I I.
Ralph Simpson was top scorer
!he Cavaliers with 26 points.
for Denver with 34 poin ts.
Baltimore Orioles to three
HOUSTON (UP! J - Johnny
Bostor benefited from Jo Jo strai ght American League penIn the only other ABA action
White 's torri d shoo ting-13 field nants, signed a new contract "The Mad" Baldwin , !59'h , Tuesday night, Utah unleased a
goals for 26 poi nts- tha t gave Tuesday for the 1972 season. Houston, knocked out Alfonso team record scoring barrage to
the Celtics their ftrsl victory . Weaver, 41 , look over when Ag ui rre, 158%, Mexico (5); bury Carolina 150-93 and the
Baltimore, which did not play Hank Bauer was fired in July, Willie "The Worm" Monroe, New York Nets downed Pitnewly acquired Archie Clark, 1968, and under his direction, 160, Philadelphia, outpointed tsburg h 125-120.
was led by Earl ~l onroe's 28 the Orioles have won 336 games Willie Warren , 165, Corpus
Utah scored 77 points in the
Pd. Pol. Adv .
Olristi, Tex . ( 10).
poi!lt'i.
and lost 198.

College Ratings

door is Gordon Gress, Pete's son . Phil Gress, was the bartender. George H. Gress, owner of the business at that time,
was absent. He also operated the Mason Coal and Mining
Company. He is the Ia ther of Miss Stella Gress, Mas&lt;ln. .
.
The picture was taken on the corner of Pomeroy and
Front St. in Mason . Thanks is extended to Miss Gress lor use
of the picture.

:~~ Indiana Pacers Outlast~Denver Rockets, 122-117

Pre-Cut

Fight Results

HAVE A VOICE IN YOUR
GOVERNMENT

STUDS

VOTE"

ttJe

ELECT WILLIAM (8111) HARRIS
FOR CLERK
OF SUnON TOWNSHIP

Phebe Says:

•

I

CitiZens Protest
Truck Ordinance
late the fire department and a measure pr'l)osed to set new traf-

EACH

HOG·G &amp;ZUSfAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

We Deliver

MASON

TRY OUR VALUES

It's the [N [O[R [G [EI

WASHER for big, family-sized loads
I'

rape Jelly.::A:......2;; 49e
Marshmallow'' creRme:E.'25!
Sandwich Bags:~:
....
:!~ 29e
•
e
Ch ocoIate Ch 1ps ....... !~ 49
5 $}
Eva P. M1.1 k~~~~~~AY
HI.·C Drl·n·ks ••••••••••••• 3~n~z. $}
d
w
t
49e
DIS• t•ll
-1 e a er.... ~t
HERSHEY'S

5th and PEARL STS.. RACINE
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WELl KE"
Right reserved to limit quantities

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective
Oct 20.26
•
Mon. Tues., Wed.... - 9 to 7
Thurs., Fri., SaL --9 to 9
CLOSED :sUNDAYS

LOW PRICE

1

CORN

Cream

~StYle

CHOICE OF FlAVORs

gal.

PURE

u ••••

AUSTIN'S WINDS~IELD ~~
WASHER FLUID J~n!i!':e!8l ...... .

USDA

BEEF LIVER.~.~~.~~~ ........~.~-. 25~
WIENERS. ~~~-~~.~-~r.~~-.P.~:. 99~
BOLOG NA . .~~~~~~...........1.~· 59~
••

·- FAIRMONT.

INSTANT RI&amp;ER'S
CiitU CRYSTALS

COTTAGE
CHEESE

10. oz.
jar

$}19
REG.
I t.99

e..- coot.""" I.'M ~ !&amp;

30 oz.
fami~

size

'

59¢

WAS $299.95

o11 ly 21ft" wide

Save 15()-00

Now•24995

Buill For B,Sger Loa ds , Gora big 19-pound loads, even th9 grtmt&amp;SI.
lhoroughl~ :le an. Stgger cepacttv can &amp;a ve you severa l washload~

'each week

v.

h p motor, heavy du ly trans-

de~·in,

day -out usage vou asso ciate

lulll For llepend•blllty. Heal')' duly
misston . You gelthtt HOuble-flee

Buill For 1V• rulltlty. Four Speed St!lecrlons. four wa tor t&amp;mp&amp;rature
combinawns tor proper washmg ot all labn cs Pre-Wash lo r very
toiled ciJihes

I

Buill Fof Ptnunent Pr111 Ptmperlng. Special cool down rinse tor
perma?.',.,t preu labrlcs tJe rore spin. juSI ~s permanenl pren manu -

PRODUCE FEATURES!

Yellow Onions
BA KER Y

~UY!

REG. 35' HOLSUM

PAN ROLLS

on~

29t

3

lb.
bag

CALIF. SUN KIST

ORANGES .............~ 89~
RED GRAPES ........1~:. 29~

Property
Tran~fer~

revision.
Mayor Harless assured the
firmen he would not appoint a
fire chief without the recommendation first comi'l( from
the fire department.
Members of the fire department said they are asking the
ordinance be •·epealed so that
at a future time some other
village official "could not hold
it over their heads."
The discussion between the
Cooncil aoo fire department
members continued for over an
hour with the end result bei'l(
that a special meeting of council will be he ld on November
26 to 1give the matter further
sti'/dy,
Both Council and fire department
represe ntatives
agreed, as the discussion con-

H. Guinther, Lot, Syracuse.
Lenna Brinker aka Lena
Brinker to Lynn E. Shuler,
1
Johanne D. Shuler, h Acre,
Letart.
Kenneth E. Riggs, Judith
Riggs to Sherman E. Sum-

eluded, that both groups should
work to have unity.
In other activity, Roger llysell of the Emergency Squad
read a letter that will be circulaled in the near future aski'l(
for support of the Mason Rescue Squad.
Insurance coverage of all
city vehicles, i ncludi~ fire
tr ucks aOO emergency vehicles,
was discussed and obligations
of the town lor the month totaled $440.70 am obligations for
the water department were announced as $657.92.
Attending were Mayor Barless, Councilmen Fred Samsel , Joe Jons and Hichard
Fowler, WaterCierk Charlotte
Jenks am City Attorney Mike
Shaw.

.

Mason Area
News., Notes
Mrs. Parker Hi nzman, Mrs .
George Carson and Mrs. Ray
Proffitt will attend the Spiritual
Life Retreat at Jackson's Mill
on Friday . They will represent
the Mason United Methodist
Church. They will return on
Saturday .
Mrs . Paul Rando lph and
Stella Mae were din ner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. John Roach and
fami ly on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Tripp,
Rodney and Tod of Chester, 0 .,
visited on Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Smith and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Lloyd and
son of New Haven, spent the
weekend at Lexington, Ky.
attending the car races there.
Mrs. WU!iam Chisler, Fourth
St., New Haven, is visiting her
mother, Mrs. Ellen Croghan at
Carnegie, Pa. Mrs. Creghan
observed her !04th birthday
Oct. 19.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Jr ., Lesage, W. Va ., Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Harris and Lisa of
Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs . Randy
VanMeter, Middleport, visited
on Sunday with Mrs. Elmer
VanMeter in Clifton.

.News Notes

~!~L.. ~.J9~

Meigs

Henry E. Bahr, Eileen Bahr
to Lorena J. Wolf, Marian
. Czaika, 39 Acres, Chester.
Betsey J . Gilkenson , ~ouis
Leon Gilkenson to Harry C.
Surface, Lot, Middleport.
John T. Halliday, Pauline
Halliday, Eugene Halliday,
Mary Halliday to Robert D.
Halliday, Avanel Halliday,
Parcel, Salem.
Malcolm E. Guinther, Dopna
J. Guinther to William E.
Guinther. Beverly H. Guinther,
Lots, Syracuse.
Citizens Natl. Bank to
William E. Guinther, Beverly

Laurel Oiff

79e

COUPON
SPECIAl PIIC£
llfTN Tli!S COUPON

BEEF

CHOICE Beef Stew

DAIRY SPECIAL

or Whole Kernel

~ 5 ~Js $1 oo

tall
cal!$

• •• •• • •• • • •• • • •

Reduced to Sell.
SPECIAL GROUPING
Stoke~, Del Monte, Joan
. of Arc

12 oz.

Featuring USDA Choice

I

BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance at
the Free Methodist Church Ocl.
17 was 117. Day's offering was
$146 . Rev ,· Raymond Gill ,
Cambridge, m inis terial
student, had charge of morning
services.
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
visited Friday evening with Mr.
and Mrs . Rober t Burke,
Parkersburg. They went to help
celebrate the Burkes' anniversary and their son Chris's
birthday.
Miss Polly Karr, Ted
Mathew and Kellie Zoe
DeConnick, Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Bauer, Marion,
spent lhe weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Cha rles Karr, Sr.
Rev. Eugene Gill attended the
Southeastern Area Ministers
meeting at zanesville Tuesday.
Mrs.
Struters and

merfield, Lo~~ I, 2, 3, 4, Orange.
Vazie Lee to Bob J. Ord, Leah
J. Ord, Lot, Syracuse .
John E. Kaylor, dec. to
Katurah V. Kimb le, Gerald
Kimble, Cerl. of Trans.,
Orange-Olive.
Bessie Scholl, dec. to Albert
sCholl, Albert Millon Scholl,
Delbert Becker, Aff. for trans. ,
Pomeroy.
Albert Scholl, Albert Milton
Scholl, Delbert Becker, Theresa
Becker to Crow 's Steak House,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Eugene R. Facemyer, Dennis
L. Facemyer, eta! to Stale of
Ohio , Jo urnal Entry , Jury
Verdict, Meigs .
April Smith, Comm., William
Gerald Graham, dec'd ., lo
Goldie Graham .56 Acre,
Rutland .
Clara Prosser to Frances E.
Hewitt. 4 Acres, Lebanon.
Carrie M. King , Fletcher
King to Flossie D. Stanley, 80
Acres, Bedford,
Walter E. Baker, Dorothy
Baker to Billy Humphrey,
Sandra Humphrey. 1.5 Acre,
Orange.
Botkins Grai n &amp; Feed Co . to
Charles S. Beller, Alma E.
Beller, 59.12 Acres, Rutland.
Rona ld Osborne, Ella
Osborne lo Raymond Byrd,
Pauline Byrd, .61 Acre, Olive.
Jemo Assoc iates, Inc . to
Celesta C. Bush, Lot 23,
Riverview Acres, Middleport.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Gregory P. Howell, Norma J.
Howell, .19 Acre, 100 Acre, Lot
.!95, Sutton.
Clare nce Baker, Laura
Baker, lo Charles Bissell.
Margare t Bissell, 3 Acres,
Chester.
Ralph T. Bass, Cledith Bass,
Leonard Bass , Ora Bass,
Bernice Levacy. Everett
Levacy , Betty J. Tyree, James
H. Tyree to Lula Bass, 15 Acres.
Sutton.
Blaeltnar Auto Co., Fred S.
Blaettnar. Margaret
E.
Blaettnar, John W. Blaettnar,
Eleanor M. Blaeltnar to Smith
Nelson Motors , Inc., Lots,
Pomeroy.

Plur

l&amp;~l

children visited recently with
Mrs. Dora Halley.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met Thursday evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Karr for potluck dinner with 13
members present. Sunshine
Sisters were revea led and
names drawn for the --eoming
year. Several members were
abse nt because of illness. The
November meeting will be with
Mrs. Allen Eichinger, Mulberry
HeighLs. This was the 36th
anniversary of the club.

Timely Quotes
It is important for American society that institutions
under black leadership and
with a trad ition of service to
black students have an oppor ,t unity to thrive and
share fully in our natio nal
effo rts in higher education.
- McGeorge Bundy, president of the Ford Founda-

tion. announcing grants
to Negro private colleges.

pedwin®

deteu;~ent,

lrtl iM&amp; Wflt er
saves
water .
lid, p,n trap, 0111 of balance co mpensator . ancl S8f\11Ce from !root.

Featuring A Complete

on ly NORGE ~as a clg ma rching dryar.

SPRAY PAINT
• Interior-Exterior

• Odo~ess

Reg. '3.49

•

e Best Colors
e Dries in Minutes

2 gal.

.

.

N [O[R[G[E[ ,.. ,,.....,....... ,..... ~;;.,

.

REG, •2A9 VALUE
VIM
INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

•

GLOSS•LATEX PAINT

99

,
•

Best Color

•

Reg. '2.49

•

Interior-Exterior

VALUES TO •1,79
CLOSE OUT GROUP

Ru G RI T
·

e Viscme Rayon

I

•

gal,

Main Floor Basement

• Assl Colors
• Values to 11.79
Main Aoor

VALUES TO •1.1 9
TOY-RIOT

•

TOYS

TOYS

Middleport

I

Others At 11.44 Ea.

.59

• One Big Table
• Values to '1.19

• 100% Cotton

• For Boys and Girls

• Assl Bright Plaids

e Sizes S-M·L

EA.

each

• First Quality

Viscme Rayon Loop and Shag

REG. •4.99 YARD
58 and 60 INCH

ASST. THROW RUGS

Polyester Double Knit

VALUES TO '1.00-'1.19

• Close.()ut Group
• Assl Colors
• Bjg Group

c

Main Floor

ea.

.99

• Assl New Colors
• First Quality

• 100% Po~ester
• 58/60 Inches Wide

yard

Values to 17.99, '9.99, 110.99
One Rack Ladies Fall, Winter

Values to 114.99, 116.99, 112.99
!.adies Fall and Winter

DRESSES

DRESSES

.00

• Smart Fall Styles

7.99, '9.99 Values

1

• Famous Brands .

$

00

• Close Out Group
• Values to 116.99

• Reduced For

each

each

• Smart Styles

REG. •1.99

VALUES TO •22.95
LADIES

30 DAYTIME FOR BABY

PAMPE-RS
• For Drier Baby
00
•
$
• No Plastic Pants

FALL DRESSES

.57

e Famous Brands
• Close.()ut Group
• New Fall Styles

each

REG. 59t
READY TO HANG

Needed
• Diapers and
Pants in One

box

VALUES TO •5.99 &amp; •6.99
LADIES

PLASTIC DRAPES

FALL SHOES

• Ready To Hang

• Values to '6.99

• Assl Colors

• 'Fall Styles

• Plain &amp; Fancy

$

•

• Close.()ut

pr.

..
pa1r

• Save Now

Lay Away Your Toys Now I I
'

OPEN FRIDAY
and

See our selection.

SATURDAY

CHAPMAN S SHOES·
1

Main St .

·,

each

Mens Flannel Shirts

FURNITURE
992-2635
Open Fri- · Sat. Nights

Ohio

00

REG. 1.99 VALUE
HAPPY WAY

Main Floor Toy Depl

•

.1

Loop and Shag

&amp; Boots for fall.

INGELS

can

I...;M;;.;ai~n.;F~Ioo;.;;.r.;Ba;;s;;e;;;m;.;e;;;n~t------...;;;;;_....;;M;,;;a;;;in~FI~oo;,;r.;B;.;a;,;,se,;.m;,;,e.;.n.t__~-.,..~~----

Line of Pedwin Shoes

CHARG E ... For Choice of Color,
:.ervice or Delivery.

c

• Quick Dry
e Net Wl 13 oz.
• Non-Toxic

for

'

~p
I

Latex Wall Paint

• Reg. 59' Value

Buill 0 If Dtllcltlt To DeUctiH. Stow wash ami slow spl11 are
genu&amp; wrth shears end I he lhms,es l delicates
S a l~,

REG. 891 TOWN &amp;COUNTRY

Quick Sale

la cture recommend .

CrtrJ,.td With f'lllll urea.

TOWN &amp;COUNTRY REG. 3.49

MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

TO

�...
·I

••

•

•

•

•.

, . ..

:~·

, .

.r , .

..,,

BONELESS ·

-.&lt;".,

ALL ITEMS ON SALE ALL WEEK LONG!
,___..;~;._
__,~~~~~__:'·..;.
·· ~
····._

___

,•_·•,••·•- f' l

J

7~ T11e ll&lt;li ly Senti ne l, Mi~dlcpo~'tratneroy, o., Oct. 20, 1971

.

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P• .neroy, 0., Oct. 20, 1971

•

_ _

.

I

. . .··

I

.
•

{

.

"'•f··
I

-:;

'

'

,

I

FULLY LINED

ou ean

We Carry Out

our ·

lb.

Your Groceries

.....
.
.,...' .

LEAN &amp;TENDER
FRESH BEEF lb.

TIp TENDER BONELESS
ROAST
lb.

I

~

pa1r'
•

Enjoy'juicy Ten.der
!I

.

'

--

REGULAR 1.89

.-.~

~·

..

FOAM
SKINS

.19
24~'

Wide, 4 to 6
Feet Long ..

'

For beds, chairs, a~tos

FRESH PORK
OOUNTRY STYLE

.......

lb.

r-~~=========+ /

FAMILY SIZE

.

LISTERINE

FRESH PORK
·__,LEAN,·TENDER

MOUTH WASH

lb.
YOUNG &amp; TENDER

GROUND BEEF

20 ounce

FRESH &amp; LEAN

Family Size

3 LB. PKG.

lb.
ALL MEAT

OR MORE

4" x 10 FOOT

lb.

DRAIN
PIPE

12
pkg.

each

. PIECE
"CHEF BOY-AR-DEE
-

PIZZA
MIX

AUTOMATIC

1s% oz. box

44~

I

FLUID

DEL MONTE

3 !"~59~

gallon
only

FOIL

~-

12" X 25 ft

WATCH .

1

AND BE SURE TO

box

$

(16 PIECES)

*
bu.
.
Right Reserved To
Limit Quantities!

I

M&amp;R

GRIMES
ROME BEAUTY
GOLDEN DELICIOUS

· BUCKET
OF CHICKEN

'··

WAIT FOR

APPLES

4 BREASTS
4 WINGS
4 DRUMSTICKS ·
4 THIGHS

••

TRANSMISSION

Aluminum

Mixed
Vegetables .

. --~

•

joint

Toyland Opening
.

r-= -

..

I I"

.

-=-==::::: - - - - I

I

~M
. IN·I BIKES . I
1.
•15.00 ·o F F II ··

PILLOW FORMS
SQUARE
12" X 12"
and
ROUND

-

.:
I

I
,

EA.

ANY MINI BIKE WITH COUPON

20% DOWN after coupon is taken off
price. Will hold until Dec. 21, 1971.

I
I
I

M&amp;R- Limit 1 Per Person- M&amp; R
I
Coupon Eltpires 10·23-71
I1 - - - - ----- ~

.

..

.

.

PLASTIC
DRAPES

At IGA

•

�. ..

'

'

,.
'-.

'
I

.I

I- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Porn• . oy, 0., Oct. 31, 1971

.Sentinel ClaSsifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
---------------------------j'
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
Business
Services
OF
!Helen Help Us l
For Sale

r-----------------~-------~-,

~1

I DON'T KNOW WHETHER 2ELDY
HAS HER CAP SET FER ARKY
OR WHETHER SHE'S FIXIN' TO
HOOK THAT FLATLAND FURRINER

•

2 END TABLES, round coffee
table . Mahogany , very good

I

I

By Helen Bottel

DON'T MARRY INTO THE BUSINESS
Dear Helen:
,
I met a man at our local drug store and we have marked this
plaee as our love spot, as that's where I fell in love with him He is
handsome, smooth and wonderful, but there's a problem.
He has another girl working Cor him (prostitution), which he
says is strictly business, and he'll only staY with her until he
makes enough money to build our future. There aren't any jobs
around now, so he takes what he can get.
I don't want to start married life on money made that way ,
but he thinks of it as just another night's work.
He's really not what you might think. He treats me like a
queen and swears if I marry him he'll give me the best. But that
word (pimp) sounds terrible OJye n if it's just temporary. Please
don 't jump to conclusions, but tell me what are my chances. - SO
MUCH IN LOVE
Dear So :
U you choose a pimp, you have every chance o( marrying into
the business. And in his line of work, queens become slaves
overnight.
Jwnp on MY conclusions, and nde out of his life fast ! - H.
Dear Helen :
Once upon a time I was an idealist. I was going to go out and
change the world, free it from fear and prejudice. What a laugh!
A!; soon as I had to deal with people instead o( theories I
learned that ideals formed in a comfortable middle class envirorunent seldom survive ouL&lt;;ide of that environment. Maybe it
is a case of too little too late, or the fa ct that only violence makes
headlines, but people have slopped working and started building
walls again. Racial pride (essential to self-respect) ha s given way
to racial separatism - an assertion of superiority. And tt seems
that people are worKing harder than ever to instill (ear in one
another.
Black is cool, red is hip, yellow brainy, brown misunderstood,
but white is not where it's at. We are supposed to feel ashamed to be so constantly aware of the sins of our ancestors that we can't
relate as human beings lo those of different color.
Because I am white, I have beerl' bullied, insulted, in·
timidated, accused, and generally made a Cool o( on several oc·
casions. I understand the anger and resentment minority races
feel for the injustices they have suffered at the hands o( some.
white people, but such misdirected sense o( revenge can only '
intensiCy the problem.
Any • movement motivated by hatred will end in sell·
destruction. When will people learn that fighting fire with Cire
only makes for a bigger Cire - until everything is consun1ed' CYNIC
Dear Cynic:
And when will the majority of people start congratulating
themselves on how far we 've come, rather than mourning (and
fighting ) over how "impossibly" far we have yet to go '
Cynicism is an easy cop~ut. It takes guts and a tremendous
amount o( work these days to be an educated optimist, and you
can start (as we all should ) by becoming a true TALKING friend
with one person who looks or thinks differently than you do. And
how much better if he is the one you assumed co uld never be your
Criend!
Good race relations can't be legislated. They grow with good
one.J.&lt;l'J)IIf\ .relationshi~ between people. Reach out and be a part
of the solution, Cynic. It's much more ·run than wringing your
hands over the problem. - H.

Motor Co.

QUALITY

:
1

1966 FORD
Special $595
Fairlane 500 4 door . Local owner, new tires ,
clean inL 6 cyL, std. trans .. radio .
1965 BUICK SPECIAL4 DR.
'·
$850
V-B· motor , auto. trans , radio, good W· S·W
t ires, white finish. like n ew blue viny l int .

LIVING room suite - $20, set of

5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
_Cance!Jotlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publ ication

The Publi sher r ese r ves the
ri ght to edit or reject any ads
de emed
objectionaL
The
publ isher will not be responsible
lor more than on e incorrect
inserti on .

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cent s per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three.
consecu ti ve insert ion s.
18 cents per word six con ·
secu tive insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Eac h additio nal word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Charge per

Advertisem~nt.

OFFICE HOURS

8:30a .m . to s:ot p.m. Daily,
8: JO- a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Sa turda y

tK QIO
• QI0853
WEST
. A83
¥ 10986
t 7642

oloK4

EAST
. 97642
¥ A3
t 3
. AJ762

SOUTH (D)
.KJS
¥K J72

.9

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

t AJ985

East-West vulnerable
West North East South
Pass
2 ...
P ass
Pass
3t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- ¥ 10

rt
2t
3 N.T.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A letter from Augusta , Ga. ,
reads , " Wes t opened the lO
of hearts. East took his ace
and returned the three. I
won with the kin g and led
my fi ve of s p a de s. We st
thoug ht for a while and pro·
ceeded to go up with his ace .
Then he thought some more
and finall y led the king of
clubs . He contin ued the sui t
and I was down one . My
partner thinks tha t I should
have passed to three dia ·
monds . I cla im he should
have passed two dia mond s.
What do you thi nk ' "
We think that West is a
very fine playe r. He wa s
able to vis ual ize the whol e
hand. To start with , it be·
came ap parent t h a t East
held just two hearts. Then
he counted five diamond s
and three hea rts for our cor·
respondent In that case , one
spade trick would give him
the contract. West's only
chance was to find East with
j ust what he held and West
made his mo ve.
Now (or the bidding. Nor th
a nd South bid thei r hand s to
the limit North held just 11
high-card points Cor hi s re·
spo nse , but he also held
three 10 spots . So uth held
just 13 high-card points Cor
Americo's top upetfs explain their
tournam~nt- winning techniques in o

tt~!I;I:H!rMUU)
The bidding has been;
South
West
North
East
It
2N.T
Pass
1¥
Pass
3N.T.
Pass
3¥
Pass
?
Pass
4t
Pass
You, South , hold:
.i\Q4¥K6+ AQ10854oKt09
What do you do now?
A-Bid four spades. Your
partner is showing signs of real
life. Show your ace of spad es as
a start toward a slam.

TODA Y'S QUESTIOX
You bid four spades and your
partner bids five clubs. Wh at do
you do now?

In 1936 an around-the-world
airplane race by three newspa·
per writers ended at Lakehurst,
N.J. H. R. Elkins won over
Dorothy Kilgallan and Leo
Kiernan with a time o£ 18 days,

11 hours, 14 minutes and 33
seconds.

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

" Dark horse " de sc ribes a
relatively unknown candi ·
now Ill· page book on I A C 0 8 Y datel who receives hi s
MODERN. Fot your copy sent S1
party 's presidentia l nom·
with your namlt, ·address and zip
inatio n. The World Alma·
cotlt to: ''Win at' Btitlit," (c/o thi s nac note s that a " dark
"'"'Pfl~). P..o. IJox 489, Ra.rlio City horse'' is usual ly chosen as
StotH&gt;n, Now Y01k, N.Y. 10019.
a com promise when neither
presidential rival obtains a
his open in g bid, but he majority vote . Presid ~nts
counted on five diamond Polk, Pierce, Garfield and
· tricks as · the base for no· Harding were "dark horse :
tromp operation . Then he candidates .

MEN-WOMEN 18 and Over
Applications now being
accepted.
Train for Secure Future with
Civil Service . No Experience. No High School.
Excellent Private Training
Program.
Pos1al Clerks

fri ends and re lat ives who sent
cards and flowers , and t he
ones who were so kind and
he lpful during the recent
illness and death of our loved
one. Special thanks to Dr .
l som Walker, the Nurses and

Staff of the Holze r Medi cal
Center, Th e Rev . James
Cummings, the Masons, The
Eas tern Stars, and t he Mart in
Fun eral Home. A very spec ial
thank you to the Rev . Albert
MacKenzie for hi s comforti ng
words during our tim e of
sorrow . The Fam i ly of Larry

10-20-llc

Notice
GUN SHOOT. For ked Run
Sport sm an Cl ub Sunday ,
October 14, 12 noon .

Chur ch star t ing Monda y, Oct.
ltJ. /:JU p. m. with Sister
Dorothy Overton as evangelist.
Everyone welcome to come and
worsh ip with us .

10·156tc
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

plenty of cupboards, 7 good
tires. Motor in A-1 condition .

left in layawa y Beautiful
pastel color, full size mode l.

S140perweek .
100s of other types of jobs.
Tra ining guaranteed unt il
appo i ntm ent.
For
i n·
formation on job, salar i es
and requirement s, Write Inc luding phone number and
hours usually home to
Modern Carrers

cepled. Phone 992-5(14\.
l0-19 61c

cleaning tools. Sma ll paint
damage in shipping . Will take
$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992 -5641 .

10· 19-6tc

Lost

- -- · -- -

KOSCOT Kosme ti cs for sale,
delivered to your door. New
product s
coming
out
regu larly . Would you like to

Farm Bureau Federation

ANNUAL MEETING

wh ile and black spotted with " STAR " k il ls rat s qu i ckly .
li tt le tan on hea d in Leading
Sure . 2' 17 pounds, $1 .69 .
Creek Area near Rutland ,
Ebe rs ba ch Hardware, Suga r
Ohio .
Ha s col lar
with
Run Mil ls, Pi ckens Hard·
nameplate on i t. Reward.
ware. Mason .
Ph one 475 -2981. Delbar ton, W.
9-21-11H n
Va , Les lie Marcum .

t0-1 76fc

- - -- -- -

r---------..
1

Found
BLACK and white female cat in
Pomeroy area . Phone 843-

2

10-20·31c

2d2.

Feinale Help Wanted
LADIES.1 Supplement your

husban d 's income by showing
Beeline Fash ions . Cal l 949·

3703 - 446-4146.

10-2 0-Jtc

- - · -- -- --Help Wanted

PART-TIME kitchen

Save $10 .00 Now!

help .

Apply in person. craw's Stea k
House.
10- 19-Stc
- - - - - - -- -

Balance $78 .93 .

7085.

OLD Furn i ture, dishes, clock,
and -or complete households.
Wri te M. D. Mill er , Rt. 4,

I
I

Use

our

t0-18-6tc

For Sale or Trade

1969 PICKUP truck , 8 ft . bed ,

For Rent
boals.

trailers , autos, campers, etc .•

10-15-6tc

e)(celle nt condition. 18 ,000
actual miles. Phone 992 -6407
or see at M &amp; G Market. Rt. 7,

Middleport .

10- 19·51c

Mobile Homes for Sale

8X35 TRAILER with fipout ,
Meigs Local High Schoof
,.----~------,
Phone 992-3954,
DINNER
PROGRAM
I0-19-6tc
ENTERTAINMENT
, - - - - -- - - - -- ' FURNISHED and unfurnished
·apartments. Close to school.
OPEN
Phone 992·5434.
10-18-lfc
Physica l Fitness and Redu cin g
Cenler. 2011 N. Main. Pt.
TRAILER spaces, e)(tra large,
Pleasa nt. Phone 675-1930.
overlooking the Ohio River _ _ _ _ __ _ _t_o_.1_4-_
6tc
14' · 24' - WIDE
$25 a month. Velma G.
SHOOTING mat ch eve ry
Zu span, Ma son, W. Va .
Saturday beginning Saturday,
10·5-20tc
Oct. 23al the Racine Planing
Mifl ·at 6 p.m . Factory choke TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
guns only . ' Assorted meat.
Court, Rt: 124, Syracuse.
1220 Washington Blvd.
Sponsored by the Syracuse
Jhio,. 992-295L
Belpre, Ohio
F ire Dept .
4·2-tfc
10· 14-8fc
----TRAILER space . desirable Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE .
SAV E up lo one half . Bring your
ne ighborhood, phone 992-2084.
No down payment , 12 years to
sick TV to Chuc k's TV Shop,
9-J9.1fc
pay to, qual ifled GL Up to
151 Bul ft.rnut Ave ., Pomeroy,
$2,500 available for tot im·
phone 992.5080.
provements
if you own a lot.
9-24-ff c For Sale
Get
your
new
mobile home
- - -- - FRIGIDAIRE flair electric
now. See James Simpkins.
REDUCE safe and fas t with
range, slide.out burners, eye
Valley Eslales Mobile Home
Gobese tab leis and E· Vap
leve l oven. Phone 992-5765.
Sales, RL 50 Easl Athens Water Pills. Nel son Drug s.
10-14-6tc
593·8762
.
9·22-30tp
9-19-371c

12: -

MILLER
MOBIL£. HOMES

------

1971 TRAVEL trailer, 27ft. fully
factory air ,

twin bed, carpet throughout.

We talk to you

like a person.

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

must sacr ifice due to illness,
can be seen behind Frosty
Freeze, 1 Garfield Ave.

HOUSE - Two apts., 4 room s

~OAL. limestone . Excelsior

and bath eac h, nea r new
housing proiect. Trade for
sma ll er house. Phone 992 ·

10-19-3fc

'a tt Works, E. Main SL
~omeroy. Phone 992-3891.

2608.

A.9.ttc

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,

- -

.Virgil B.
TEAFORD

9-26·30fc

Real Estate For Sale

OFF!!- ~~

•

IM

1HING OUT !

and

HA~WEO\N

I\ORK 50ME:-

Ajr

AFRA ID
ITS IMP055113LE MR.
GILT. l.[X)NT HAVE
KIND OF MONEY
VfJII '01J l'lE ASKING

I CHE'CKee&gt; fT
OVER: PROM 'TOP

WHAT~

CSPECIALLY

T'Bo:rTOM!

BElWEEN

I'RIENOS

l'bmeroy, Ohio
bedrooms, bath , gas furna ce.
Nice kitchen . Garage . Large
lot. Sli .OOO.OO .

4 rooms

porch . Nice lot . Only $3,500.00.
6 room frame

Phone 992-2550
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranleed
See
us
lor
Free
Eslimale on Furnace
lnstalalion .
READY .MIX
CO NCRETE

-

LIKE U&amp; I

FOR F.IONNAZ,

GASOlJNE All.EY

•

Sanitation , Stewart , Ohio. Ph.

40u

~e l l

LJ~r

car,
how LJOU
qoin' t'

~·preme
~acrifice!

mone4
i.;; ll6
qood

--·

662.3035.

'\JOU , cousin, mLj
own blooc:l an' kin,
l i~ makin' th'

rent

6·30-ft&lt;'

SE PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller

leave?

&lt;¥.;

2· t2.tfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance beeh
carac elle d?
Los1
your
ope r alor's license? Call 992·

2966.
6·15-llc
- - -- - -- - - HAR RISO N' S TV and Antenna

BORN LOSER

Se r vice, Phone 992 ·2522 .

6. tO.Ifc

.--------

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

Reasonable rates . Ph . 446 -4782 ,
Gallipolis . John Russe ll ,
Ovmer &amp; Operator .

IT'S All RIGHT, CHILD··

I'I'E GOT A FIRM GRIP
crt YOU .....

5· 13-lf&lt;

7-2/.tfc

p.m. weekdays . Phone 992·
3·29-tlc
6887.
10-tHic NEIGLER 1&gt;ui1aong &gt;up pl y .

- -$2.300 WIL L buy J.J acres rn
$3,000.00.
Bedford Townsh ip, Wolfpen
Road . 20 m inut es from
POMEROY - Renovaled 3
Pomeroy . J:.. of land in timber,
bedrooms, balh, gas furnace .
balan ce in pasture . No
buildings . Ca ll 992 ·2152 and
Ni ce kitchen wi th electric

'ck.
ask for Dl .

range , Askin'g $12,000.00.
30 ROOM BRICK - a business
and a home overlooking the
Ohio River .

NEW BUSINESS BUILDING 44 x 30 and a 3 bedroom home.

9-22-tfc

-..
,,

AVBOSS

1. Splendor
5, Altar

t

constella-

'

tion
EIIRLV ANIMAl
CA.SES WERE MOSTL'I
llG~T WOOD AND
CARDBOARD .

.'l,

Free estima te on bu ilding
your new home. Will draw
prints to suit th e lay of your
land . Ca ll Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
1
·
'd'
ft t
a ummum Sl ln g, so e and

1

Racine, Ohio.

~
·~

i

-1 1

.,

10./-tfc

Priced Auto

term
9. Hard to

10· tl -tfc

QII~;Liil

orr" .Xli&lt;E
A/NJHG
Al STATE
TH ~

CAPilOl, Ml&lt;~. l&gt;l'fPSI~ . THE
MAN WANTED
GETTING THAT ~TAL

H~ Of'FfR!P 1Hf FfPf~Al

AOMtNISTIIAlOR A CUT OF

THE PtiOFIT5. MR. 8U~LY

THREW HIM OUT OF HIS

oFFICE.

CONT~ACT .

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

8-JS. ff c

---~-~

~PPLES

Fitzpatrick Or·
chards, Slate Roule 689,
phone Wilkesvli le. 669·3785.
9-3-tic

musical

Unocramblt theae four Jumble1,
Yelterdar'• h1wer

29. Galahad's

215. Curse

3. Playboys

26. An·

( 8 wds.)

swered

4, Kind of
peeve
5. Bowers
6. Frall ;
slender
7. Candlenut

the
alarm

(2 wds,)
27. Expiate
28. In a

meager
way

ttee

one letter to each aquare, to
lorm rour ordinary words.

VANKE

30, Phyll!s
or
comedy
32. Ocean

bed

38. Peruvian
ctty
39. Man's
nickname

I

[J

1;;,

lor-+--+-

the....,..
A(IIIIII]

c-..,. •••onow)
Y~••~rd•J'•

32. Prohibit
33. Wallach
34, Also
35. Metric
land

~

Ju•blo" 'ION I SQUAW IUIIL T JUNOLI
•llr•IJI indkadon dt.at mor• •~nd il
req..U.d- .,UIS

A.:w n : .4

nwasure

' 36. Bookkeeper's
abbreviation
37. Injudicious
39. Dirty

CAPI'AIN EASY

with

plenty o shade trees, localed
on large tot, 250ft. by 250ft. on
SR 124 In Syracuse, Ohio.
Available for Immediate

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
A.XYDLBAAXB

phone

lo LONGFELLOW
One letter simply
stands for another. In thla oample A Ia
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophea, the fengtll and formation ot the words are all
hints. Elaoh day the code Jettera are different.

. Gallipolis 446-9539 alter 5 p.m.
week days for appointment.

10·3.tf

A Oryptorram ·Q~otalton

RIZER OIL 00.

DBLP X FBJJFP FWLP JW X AZBFQ
XUQ
'

THIS. All': L.tNE
OOES OVER: SEAS.

Now lllTUIP the clreled leUen
to form the ourprloe anower, u
ourreoted by
cu:toon.

name

BEST TIRE BUY IN ITS PRICE RANGE

brick home . ~ IX J&lt;OOM house, bath, fuli
Phone 992-3457.
:,a semen I. 133 Bultermd Ave.,
______
10-/:
.2 i,'c
ius! walking dijtance·. from
d0wntown Pomeroy . Contact
RACINE - 10 room hou a~
; d Hedri ck, 2137 Wadswoo th;
bath Two ·l ots, basement.
.urive, Columbus, Ohio, phone.
700 E,. MainP.OMEROY' , o. Y92·2l01
garage. Phone 949-4313.
t0-20-12tc · 237 ·4334, Columbus.
5·9-lfc, · - - - - - - - - - · - - - -

Loolu likt o
wb down fhtr•

mother

rlf--+--

25. Somewhat

26. Box-offlce
take

Park view Kennels . Phone 992- 4 BEDROOM

5443.

name
16. Dawdle
DOWN
22. Pay
l, Manltest
dirt
2. Lionel Bart 23. Islet

31. Coopers·
town

, 2 porches, garage, concrete

occupancy . To see,

addict
(slang)

28. Went for
a swim

ANY OF THESE SIZES 7.75 K 14, 7.75 X 15, 8.Z5 x 14, $18.00 Plus $2.20 to
' , $2 .36 Fed, Ex. Tax and old ti re .

bedrooms, living room, dining
room, bath with shower, large
kitchen with lots of bu ilt-in
birch cabinets. Hardwood
floors . Natural gas furnace,
50 -gallon electric water
heater, 2 large recreation
rooms, paneled In basement.

~lJ)JM@~;~ ltli_,(J .-J,...

12, FBI

coin
21. Boy Scout
h-+-+~groups
23. Remotely
24, English
river

882·2717,
---,--------

&lt;C 1971 Ktnr Features Syndicate. Inc. )

(4 '

wds,)
lL Earth
(Latin)

Saxon

IT'S AN

HOUSE , 1642 Linco ln Heig ht s.
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
2t96.
7-18-tfc

fellow
41. Newcastle's
river
4:2. Some
43. Drug

13. cOloration
H . Hit on
the head
(slang)
15. Mar!e
Saint
16. Clothing
· style
11. Work unit
18. Blrd's beak
19. Ending for
dormit
oramat
20. Anglo-

''

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MOST PEOPLE CAN'T UNDERSTAND ROW OTHERS CAN BLOW THEIR NOSES DIFF.ERENTLY THAN THEY DO.- TURGElNEV

10. Regular

40. Stypttc

reach

·1
l!lJ51N~55MfN

home on an 80 x 235 lev el lot.
Block utility building , washer
and dryer, on M ill St., Phone

UT Tf.lE BEST S~E
00 IS KICK OUT
A VENTILATOR SCREEN
AND EVOKE LAUGf.lTER
FROM t-IER ~APIORS.

i

FOR RESULTS, TRY US.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3325 99p378
10·17-61c

NEW HAVEN - 12 x 50 mob ile

8. Nautlcal

~
gut1er. Call Donald Smith, ' •

Both for $2t ,500.00,

dnvewa/ , large yard

ME A Cl&gt;NTJ

ALLEY OOP

delivered right to your
proiect. Fast and easy . Free
estimates . Pho ne 992 -3284 .
Goeglein Ready ·Mi)( Co .,
M iddleport. Ohio.

home and 2 loi s. Now only

house,

•

.., YA DON' T OWE

240 Lincoln SL Midd tepoo!

building lo ts on T79 at Rock
Springs . Within . walk~ng SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992 -2264
di stance of Metgs Htgh
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
School, a 5-minute drive lrom
Auth orized Singer Sales and
Pomeroy. Call · or see Sil l
Se rvice . We Sharpen Scissors.
Witte weekends , or after s

paneled , ci ty water, storm
doors , and windows . Front

block

:t COULPN'T FINO
A THIN!# WllOI&gt;JG

Con·

J·bedroom home fn O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Middleport. Built -in ki tc hen,
located at Cr ossroads , Rt. 124.
ceram ic tile bath. all -electri c
Complete Iron! end servi ce,
heat. good ne i_ghborhood . Can
lune up and brake service .
arrang e FHA finan ci ng .
ba, tanced
elec Wheels
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
tr on ically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Rea sona ble
21BI&gt;.
7-25-lf c
r ates . Phone 992·3213 .

Br-oker

I -ROOM

_.:j_,

New,

110 Mechanic Street

DEXTER -

NEVE/I G£r 1r

BUGS BUNNY

Plumbing,

Real Estate For Sale

SR.

NEW LISTING -

TOiEU.
I:Jll':&gt;i"
IN iHt= CAR !

SWITCH ON THE
POWER, HE CAN

ORDER ··-

Compl ete

NEW LISTING - 7 rooms, 3 CONVE NIENT but secluded

Auto Sales

contained

$5,995.

TH IS 5 UtTAH

SIT DOWN, MISS
MURTAGH . PER-

marquees, aluminum sid ing
and ra ili ng . Call A. Jacob,
sales representati ve. For free
e5.t imaf es , phone Cha r le~
Lisle , Sy r acuse . V. V
Johnsen and Son , In c.

storm doors and windows ,
nice lot, alm ost 1;,. acre.

Oil .

THE OLD medical man is back. automat ic, V-8. Phone 992 ·6547 .
Bring in your roots or mail by
t0-15-tlc
parce l post to Bil l Bail ey,
Reedsv ille , Ohio, 45772 .
10· 1n tc

or see Dick Seylor .

5· t.tfc

S. stor m doors and
RUTLAND - t•n story frame , 3 AWNING
w i ndow s,
c arport s,
bedrooms , bat ~, alum . siding ,

budge! terms. Call 992-7085.
10· t8·6!c

~anted To Buy

STORAGE space for

Racine, Oh io

Cri ll Bradford

J

Employment Wanted

se lf

Phone 949·3821

SIEGLER
H~~!!,~S

I

7;26 P.M.

-------

Complete Service

WANTED 6 to 10 ACRES ON
ROUTE 7 OR 33, NEED 400f t.
5·21·11&lt;
hrin g this ad and get $10
FRONTAGE - WILL PAY
I on vou r purchase of a ne w
HIGH PRICE , MUST BE HOU SE MOVING : Houses, etc.
I Siegler heat er .
I
CLOSE TO POMEROY OR
raised, moved, underpinned,
MIDDLEPORT . CALL IF
d. Est imates free,
1
~ YOU-+IAVE ANYTHING AT remodele
anywhere Nati ona l House
ALL.
'
Movers, Box 5002, Char leston ,
•
W_Va . 253 11 , or phone 304-925·
I
PLACE THE SALE OF
3279.
I AII .
.
,
I
YOUR PROPERTY IN
9·3Q.60tp
. s•zes •n st?c ... . We rns tall , 1
COMPETENT
HANDS.
I frnan ce, se rvr ce .
HENRY E. CLELAND
HACKNEY"S Electric Serv ice ••
I
POMEROY
I
REALTOR
all types of elec tr icol work .
9. _ J•ck w. C•rsey , Mgr. I
Office 992-2259
Phone 99H407.
I ~ Phonett2·2lll
Residence 99'2 -2568
9.29-JOtc
_
__
__
_
_
_
l_
0·_
2
0·6tc
-•••••••••••
BACKHOE AND DOZER work ,
EARLY American s!ereo-radio
Septic !&lt;Inks ins talled . George
combination , AM-FM radio,
I Bill ) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-speed automatic cha nger, 4speaker
sound
system .
4-25·ftc

$4 per month. Phone 992-2798·

October 21, 1971

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

rooms-,
3
bedr oo m s,
basemen t, porches , IN GOOD
CONDITION . SS,OOO.

cHuCKLE f- ONC£ I

WHIPLASH "PERFECK
FIT" COMP 'N'/ -

ditioning .

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0.

9·21 -lf c POMEROY - t story fram e, 6

!,.'1

GOT BY MAIL

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather !holing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony .Plumbing &amp; Heating:
Healing

Open 8 Til S

doors. $5,300 .

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. '64 CHEVY , 2·dr . hardtop ,
8-25-llc automat ic, v.a; '67 Plymouth
try them? Call 992·5111
-Satell ite ,
2-dr .
hardtop,
to.s.ttc

Meigs County

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

POMEROY - NICE FOR
RETIREMENT - 2 story
frame, 2 bedrooms. NEW
BATH , NEW forced -air

ONE WALKER fem ale dog ,

E:.

•

®

- FUM TH' LARSON

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

pari hardwood floo rs, JUST

overwei ght ladies. teens .;tnd HOUS E CLEANING in Racine ,
WALNUT stereo , fo ur-speed
men in terested in a We ight
Sy racu se and Pome roy area .
interm ixe d
chan ger ,
4·
Watchers { R)
Cl ass in
Phone 992-2876.
speaker
sound
system
,
AM·
Pome roy write:
We i ght
I0- 17-61c FM radio. Balance S67 .59. Use
Watchers IRJ. tlll&gt;3 Section
our budget terms. Call 992Rd ., Cincinnati , Oh io 45237.

10·3-lfc

2 st ory frame , 6 rooms, 3

10·20

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

15;55
'

13,800 ,

2 · GAS circulating heaters .
Phone 992 ·5262 evenings .

1

FURNITURE

Wheel Alignment

furnace , large l ot, stor m

Pomeroy , Ohio

?

And

EXPERT

bedro oms, bath , ALMOST
NEW gas forced -air furnace,

VACUUM cleaner, brand new
t971 modeL Complete with all

The Daily Sentinel
Box 729C

WITH A BROOM

,;

OFFICE SUPPLIES

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

POMEROY - tiERE IS A BUY
-

606

992-2174

608 Easl Main,
POMEROY

buttonhole .

Overcast and fancy stitch .
Pay ·l ust $48.75 cash or terms
ava i able. T rade -ins ac ·

HOME &amp; AUTO

Deland
Realty

t971 ZIG-ZAG sewing mach ine
built-in to

MOTOR, INC.

Real Estate For Sale

Phone alter 5 p.m. 949-2726.
l0-19·21c

Att

SMITH NELSON

POMEROY

PHONE NUMBER

992-7608 .

10-19-3fc

CA MPER, completely fu r nished. bottled gas equipped,

STARTING PAY IS

WE WI &gt;H to thank all the many

Endloader Work

wr inger type wasnl!r . Also
two nice size hogs. Phone 247 ·

2337.

..

•

Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And

TWO-SPEED Lady Kenmore

Civil Ser~ice Jobs For
Qualified People ·

~

' WRONG
50 WHATG

DID YOU GET 50ME'fl.IING
lllAT FIT 14ER PERSONA[. tTY, ~"'' •t

r.J.MA, YOU ASKED
ME TO BUY YOUR
MO'IIIER A BIRJ\lt:¥\Y
PRE5ENT.

-

•

Kitchens, Baths

JO.t5-6tp

HILTON WOLFE
'949-3211

BILL NELSON
992·3657

Complete
Remodeling

1972 22 FT. Holiday Travel

Thank~

THERE WILL be a revival at
the Rutland Free Wi ll Baptist

held pretty good stu([ in both
majors and his partner had
bid clubs.
Furthermore , iC West held
the jack o( clubs there would
be nine easy tricks waiting
Cor him at no-trump and
even with the jack being
held by East the g a m e
would have w he e I e d in
against any but a very alert
and expert West

IOHNSQN MASONRY

Trail er , fully self -contained , .
lots of ex tras. Must sacrifice.
PEP-UP with new Zippies iron Can see anytime, Henderson .
pills. Non ~ habil forming . Only W. Va ., Henderson's Trailer
Court.
Sl .98 , Nelson Drugs .

Instruction

AT TEN tlOLLARS ANb FIFTY
CENTS" 1T'S A GOOD T~tNG
VOU REMtND&amp;D ME~

fte

10·20

':::=~=~~~~~

$10 , set of

9·22301p

-·-.

Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

$10,

bed springs - $5, att in good r
shape Phone 992. 5510 ' t0-15-6Ic

REGULATIONS

G. Hoffman .

LOVING CARE
Reg. $6,50
Now 15.00
November 8 lhru tJ
PERMANENT
Reg. 112.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-4747

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

Card c!

-

st ationary r oc ker -

OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'OMEROY, OHIO

Additiona l 25c

-SPECIALsNovember 11hru 6

hoi pla te, 3 burner grilL
Phone 992·2584 or 992-9943.
10-20-Stc
cupboards

FOUR NEW HOMES ,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as tow as $65.00 tor a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and · three children . 7'1• Pel. annual

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

l0-20-6tp

5 PONIES, I riding horse, I
G.E. automatic washer, 1941
Pon liac. 4 dr . sedan ; 1938
Buick Coupe, Frehch fryer,

Pomeroy Motor Co•.

Maybe It's Smart Defense
. QIO
¥ QS4

985-3368.

' mel a I

.....
---

10·20-61c

co nd i ti on $75 . 2 Early
American ta ble lamps, like
new $25. Harli s Fr ank, phone

1966 VOLKSWAGEN
$1095
Square Back Sedan. Blac k finish , c lean in ·
terior , good tires. radio .

WIN AT BRIDGE

ZO

afler 6 p .m .

1 LAZ't' BOY chair, excellent

10 20-3tc

NORTH

condition . Phone 992 -3401

VWS

DPJ

R X.A C . - E W Z U

X

DMPX ·J

MS K C8 U

QPXF

f~~~~~~~ '{OU
1
+\AVE
,
WILD ANIMAl5
IN THE GULLIES ARE U\LLI:L/.,,.;

�. ..

'

'

,.
'-.

'
I

.I

I- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Porn• . oy, 0., Oct. 31, 1971

.Sentinel ClaSsifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
---------------------------j'
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
Business
Services
OF
!Helen Help Us l
For Sale

r-----------------~-------~-,

~1

I DON'T KNOW WHETHER 2ELDY
HAS HER CAP SET FER ARKY
OR WHETHER SHE'S FIXIN' TO
HOOK THAT FLATLAND FURRINER

•

2 END TABLES, round coffee
table . Mahogany , very good

I

I

By Helen Bottel

DON'T MARRY INTO THE BUSINESS
Dear Helen:
,
I met a man at our local drug store and we have marked this
plaee as our love spot, as that's where I fell in love with him He is
handsome, smooth and wonderful, but there's a problem.
He has another girl working Cor him (prostitution), which he
says is strictly business, and he'll only staY with her until he
makes enough money to build our future. There aren't any jobs
around now, so he takes what he can get.
I don't want to start married life on money made that way ,
but he thinks of it as just another night's work.
He's really not what you might think. He treats me like a
queen and swears if I marry him he'll give me the best. But that
word (pimp) sounds terrible OJye n if it's just temporary. Please
don 't jump to conclusions, but tell me what are my chances. - SO
MUCH IN LOVE
Dear So :
U you choose a pimp, you have every chance o( marrying into
the business. And in his line of work, queens become slaves
overnight.
Jwnp on MY conclusions, and nde out of his life fast ! - H.
Dear Helen :
Once upon a time I was an idealist. I was going to go out and
change the world, free it from fear and prejudice. What a laugh!
A!; soon as I had to deal with people instead o( theories I
learned that ideals formed in a comfortable middle class envirorunent seldom survive ouL&lt;;ide of that environment. Maybe it
is a case of too little too late, or the fa ct that only violence makes
headlines, but people have slopped working and started building
walls again. Racial pride (essential to self-respect) ha s given way
to racial separatism - an assertion of superiority. And tt seems
that people are worKing harder than ever to instill (ear in one
another.
Black is cool, red is hip, yellow brainy, brown misunderstood,
but white is not where it's at. We are supposed to feel ashamed to be so constantly aware of the sins of our ancestors that we can't
relate as human beings lo those of different color.
Because I am white, I have beerl' bullied, insulted, in·
timidated, accused, and generally made a Cool o( on several oc·
casions. I understand the anger and resentment minority races
feel for the injustices they have suffered at the hands o( some.
white people, but such misdirected sense o( revenge can only '
intensiCy the problem.
Any • movement motivated by hatred will end in sell·
destruction. When will people learn that fighting fire with Cire
only makes for a bigger Cire - until everything is consun1ed' CYNIC
Dear Cynic:
And when will the majority of people start congratulating
themselves on how far we 've come, rather than mourning (and
fighting ) over how "impossibly" far we have yet to go '
Cynicism is an easy cop~ut. It takes guts and a tremendous
amount o( work these days to be an educated optimist, and you
can start (as we all should ) by becoming a true TALKING friend
with one person who looks or thinks differently than you do. And
how much better if he is the one you assumed co uld never be your
Criend!
Good race relations can't be legislated. They grow with good
one.J.&lt;l'J)IIf\ .relationshi~ between people. Reach out and be a part
of the solution, Cynic. It's much more ·run than wringing your
hands over the problem. - H.

Motor Co.

QUALITY

:
1

1966 FORD
Special $595
Fairlane 500 4 door . Local owner, new tires ,
clean inL 6 cyL, std. trans .. radio .
1965 BUICK SPECIAL4 DR.
'·
$850
V-B· motor , auto. trans , radio, good W· S·W
t ires, white finish. like n ew blue viny l int .

LIVING room suite - $20, set of

5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
_Cance!Jotlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publ ication

The Publi sher r ese r ves the
ri ght to edit or reject any ads
de emed
objectionaL
The
publ isher will not be responsible
lor more than on e incorrect
inserti on .

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cent s per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three.
consecu ti ve insert ion s.
18 cents per word six con ·
secu tive insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Eac h additio nal word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Charge per

Advertisem~nt.

OFFICE HOURS

8:30a .m . to s:ot p.m. Daily,
8: JO- a.m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Sa turda y

tK QIO
• QI0853
WEST
. A83
¥ 10986
t 7642

oloK4

EAST
. 97642
¥ A3
t 3
. AJ762

SOUTH (D)
.KJS
¥K J72

.9

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

t AJ985

East-West vulnerable
West North East South
Pass
2 ...
P ass
Pass
3t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- ¥ 10

rt
2t
3 N.T.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A letter from Augusta , Ga. ,
reads , " Wes t opened the lO
of hearts. East took his ace
and returned the three. I
won with the kin g and led
my fi ve of s p a de s. We st
thoug ht for a while and pro·
ceeded to go up with his ace .
Then he thought some more
and finall y led the king of
clubs . He contin ued the sui t
and I was down one . My
partner thinks tha t I should
have passed to three dia ·
monds . I cla im he should
have passed two dia mond s.
What do you thi nk ' "
We think that West is a
very fine playe r. He wa s
able to vis ual ize the whol e
hand. To start with , it be·
came ap parent t h a t East
held just two hearts. Then
he counted five diamond s
and three hea rts for our cor·
respondent In that case , one
spade trick would give him
the contract. West's only
chance was to find East with
j ust what he held and West
made his mo ve.
Now (or the bidding. Nor th
a nd South bid thei r hand s to
the limit North held just 11
high-card points Cor hi s re·
spo nse , but he also held
three 10 spots . So uth held
just 13 high-card points Cor
Americo's top upetfs explain their
tournam~nt- winning techniques in o

tt~!I;I:H!rMUU)
The bidding has been;
South
West
North
East
It
2N.T
Pass
1¥
Pass
3N.T.
Pass
3¥
Pass
?
Pass
4t
Pass
You, South , hold:
.i\Q4¥K6+ AQ10854oKt09
What do you do now?
A-Bid four spades. Your
partner is showing signs of real
life. Show your ace of spad es as
a start toward a slam.

TODA Y'S QUESTIOX
You bid four spades and your
partner bids five clubs. Wh at do
you do now?

In 1936 an around-the-world
airplane race by three newspa·
per writers ended at Lakehurst,
N.J. H. R. Elkins won over
Dorothy Kilgallan and Leo
Kiernan with a time o£ 18 days,

11 hours, 14 minutes and 33
seconds.

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

" Dark horse " de sc ribes a
relatively unknown candi ·
now Ill· page book on I A C 0 8 Y datel who receives hi s
MODERN. Fot your copy sent S1
party 's presidentia l nom·
with your namlt, ·address and zip
inatio n. The World Alma·
cotlt to: ''Win at' Btitlit," (c/o thi s nac note s that a " dark
"'"'Pfl~). P..o. IJox 489, Ra.rlio City horse'' is usual ly chosen as
StotH&gt;n, Now Y01k, N.Y. 10019.
a com promise when neither
presidential rival obtains a
his open in g bid, but he majority vote . Presid ~nts
counted on five diamond Polk, Pierce, Garfield and
· tricks as · the base for no· Harding were "dark horse :
tromp operation . Then he candidates .

MEN-WOMEN 18 and Over
Applications now being
accepted.
Train for Secure Future with
Civil Service . No Experience. No High School.
Excellent Private Training
Program.
Pos1al Clerks

fri ends and re lat ives who sent
cards and flowers , and t he
ones who were so kind and
he lpful during the recent
illness and death of our loved
one. Special thanks to Dr .
l som Walker, the Nurses and

Staff of the Holze r Medi cal
Center, Th e Rev . James
Cummings, the Masons, The
Eas tern Stars, and t he Mart in
Fun eral Home. A very spec ial
thank you to the Rev . Albert
MacKenzie for hi s comforti ng
words during our tim e of
sorrow . The Fam i ly of Larry

10-20-llc

Notice
GUN SHOOT. For ked Run
Sport sm an Cl ub Sunday ,
October 14, 12 noon .

Chur ch star t ing Monda y, Oct.
ltJ. /:JU p. m. with Sister
Dorothy Overton as evangelist.
Everyone welcome to come and
worsh ip with us .

10·156tc
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

plenty of cupboards, 7 good
tires. Motor in A-1 condition .

left in layawa y Beautiful
pastel color, full size mode l.

S140perweek .
100s of other types of jobs.
Tra ining guaranteed unt il
appo i ntm ent.
For
i n·
formation on job, salar i es
and requirement s, Write Inc luding phone number and
hours usually home to
Modern Carrers

cepled. Phone 992-5(14\.
l0-19 61c

cleaning tools. Sma ll paint
damage in shipping . Will take
$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992 -5641 .

10· 19-6tc

Lost

- -- · -- -

KOSCOT Kosme ti cs for sale,
delivered to your door. New
product s
coming
out
regu larly . Would you like to

Farm Bureau Federation

ANNUAL MEETING

wh ile and black spotted with " STAR " k il ls rat s qu i ckly .
li tt le tan on hea d in Leading
Sure . 2' 17 pounds, $1 .69 .
Creek Area near Rutland ,
Ebe rs ba ch Hardware, Suga r
Ohio .
Ha s col lar
with
Run Mil ls, Pi ckens Hard·
nameplate on i t. Reward.
ware. Mason .
Ph one 475 -2981. Delbar ton, W.
9-21-11H n
Va , Les lie Marcum .

t0-1 76fc

- - -- -- -

r---------..
1

Found
BLACK and white female cat in
Pomeroy area . Phone 843-

2

10-20·31c

2d2.

Feinale Help Wanted
LADIES.1 Supplement your

husban d 's income by showing
Beeline Fash ions . Cal l 949·

3703 - 446-4146.

10-2 0-Jtc

- - · -- -- --Help Wanted

PART-TIME kitchen

Save $10 .00 Now!

help .

Apply in person. craw's Stea k
House.
10- 19-Stc
- - - - - - -- -

Balance $78 .93 .

7085.

OLD Furn i ture, dishes, clock,
and -or complete households.
Wri te M. D. Mill er , Rt. 4,

I
I

Use

our

t0-18-6tc

For Sale or Trade

1969 PICKUP truck , 8 ft . bed ,

For Rent
boals.

trailers , autos, campers, etc .•

10-15-6tc

e)(celle nt condition. 18 ,000
actual miles. Phone 992 -6407
or see at M &amp; G Market. Rt. 7,

Middleport .

10- 19·51c

Mobile Homes for Sale

8X35 TRAILER with fipout ,
Meigs Local High Schoof
,.----~------,
Phone 992-3954,
DINNER
PROGRAM
I0-19-6tc
ENTERTAINMENT
, - - - - -- - - - -- ' FURNISHED and unfurnished
·apartments. Close to school.
OPEN
Phone 992·5434.
10-18-lfc
Physica l Fitness and Redu cin g
Cenler. 2011 N. Main. Pt.
TRAILER spaces, e)(tra large,
Pleasa nt. Phone 675-1930.
overlooking the Ohio River _ _ _ _ __ _ _t_o_.1_4-_
6tc
14' · 24' - WIDE
$25 a month. Velma G.
SHOOTING mat ch eve ry
Zu span, Ma son, W. Va .
Saturday beginning Saturday,
10·5-20tc
Oct. 23al the Racine Planing
Mifl ·at 6 p.m . Factory choke TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
guns only . ' Assorted meat.
Court, Rt: 124, Syracuse.
1220 Washington Blvd.
Sponsored by the Syracuse
Jhio,. 992-295L
Belpre, Ohio
F ire Dept .
4·2-tfc
10· 14-8fc
----TRAILER space . desirable Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE .
SAV E up lo one half . Bring your
ne ighborhood, phone 992-2084.
No down payment , 12 years to
sick TV to Chuc k's TV Shop,
9-J9.1fc
pay to, qual ifled GL Up to
151 Bul ft.rnut Ave ., Pomeroy,
$2,500 available for tot im·
phone 992.5080.
provements
if you own a lot.
9-24-ff c For Sale
Get
your
new
mobile home
- - -- - FRIGIDAIRE flair electric
now. See James Simpkins.
REDUCE safe and fas t with
range, slide.out burners, eye
Valley Eslales Mobile Home
Gobese tab leis and E· Vap
leve l oven. Phone 992-5765.
Sales, RL 50 Easl Athens Water Pills. Nel son Drug s.
10-14-6tc
593·8762
.
9·22-30tp
9-19-371c

12: -

MILLER
MOBIL£. HOMES

------

1971 TRAVEL trailer, 27ft. fully
factory air ,

twin bed, carpet throughout.

We talk to you

like a person.

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

must sacr ifice due to illness,
can be seen behind Frosty
Freeze, 1 Garfield Ave.

HOUSE - Two apts., 4 room s

~OAL. limestone . Excelsior

and bath eac h, nea r new
housing proiect. Trade for
sma ll er house. Phone 992 ·

10-19-3fc

'a tt Works, E. Main SL
~omeroy. Phone 992-3891.

2608.

A.9.ttc

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,

- -

.Virgil B.
TEAFORD

9-26·30fc

Real Estate For Sale

OFF!!- ~~

•

IM

1HING OUT !

and

HA~WEO\N

I\ORK 50ME:-

Ajr

AFRA ID
ITS IMP055113LE MR.
GILT. l.[X)NT HAVE
KIND OF MONEY
VfJII '01J l'lE ASKING

I CHE'CKee&gt; fT
OVER: PROM 'TOP

WHAT~

CSPECIALLY

T'Bo:rTOM!

BElWEEN

I'RIENOS

l'bmeroy, Ohio
bedrooms, bath , gas furna ce.
Nice kitchen . Garage . Large
lot. Sli .OOO.OO .

4 rooms

porch . Nice lot . Only $3,500.00.
6 room frame

Phone 992-2550
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranleed
See
us
lor
Free
Eslimale on Furnace
lnstalalion .
READY .MIX
CO NCRETE

-

LIKE U&amp; I

FOR F.IONNAZ,

GASOlJNE All.EY

•

Sanitation , Stewart , Ohio. Ph.

40u

~e l l

LJ~r

car,
how LJOU
qoin' t'

~·preme
~acrifice!

mone4
i.;; ll6
qood

--·

662.3035.

'\JOU , cousin, mLj
own blooc:l an' kin,
l i~ makin' th'

rent

6·30-ft&lt;'

SE PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller

leave?

&lt;¥.;

2· t2.tfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance beeh
carac elle d?
Los1
your
ope r alor's license? Call 992·

2966.
6·15-llc
- - -- - -- - - HAR RISO N' S TV and Antenna

BORN LOSER

Se r vice, Phone 992 ·2522 .

6. tO.Ifc

.--------

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

Reasonable rates . Ph . 446 -4782 ,
Gallipolis . John Russe ll ,
Ovmer &amp; Operator .

IT'S All RIGHT, CHILD··

I'I'E GOT A FIRM GRIP
crt YOU .....

5· 13-lf&lt;

7-2/.tfc

p.m. weekdays . Phone 992·
3·29-tlc
6887.
10-tHic NEIGLER 1&gt;ui1aong &gt;up pl y .

- -$2.300 WIL L buy J.J acres rn
$3,000.00.
Bedford Townsh ip, Wolfpen
Road . 20 m inut es from
POMEROY - Renovaled 3
Pomeroy . J:.. of land in timber,
bedrooms, balh, gas furnace .
balan ce in pasture . No
buildings . Ca ll 992 ·2152 and
Ni ce kitchen wi th electric

'ck.
ask for Dl .

range , Askin'g $12,000.00.
30 ROOM BRICK - a business
and a home overlooking the
Ohio River .

NEW BUSINESS BUILDING 44 x 30 and a 3 bedroom home.

9-22-tfc

-..
,,

AVBOSS

1. Splendor
5, Altar

t

constella-

'

tion
EIIRLV ANIMAl
CA.SES WERE MOSTL'I
llG~T WOOD AND
CARDBOARD .

.'l,

Free estima te on bu ilding
your new home. Will draw
prints to suit th e lay of your
land . Ca ll Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
1
·
'd'
ft t
a ummum Sl ln g, so e and

1

Racine, Ohio.

~
·~

i

-1 1

.,

10./-tfc

Priced Auto

term
9. Hard to

10· tl -tfc

QII~;Liil

orr" .Xli&lt;E
A/NJHG
Al STATE
TH ~

CAPilOl, Ml&lt;~. l&gt;l'fPSI~ . THE
MAN WANTED
GETTING THAT ~TAL

H~ Of'FfR!P 1Hf FfPf~Al

AOMtNISTIIAlOR A CUT OF

THE PtiOFIT5. MR. 8U~LY

THREW HIM OUT OF HIS

oFFICE.

CONT~ACT .

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

8-JS. ff c

---~-~

~PPLES

Fitzpatrick Or·
chards, Slate Roule 689,
phone Wilkesvli le. 669·3785.
9-3-tic

musical

Unocramblt theae four Jumble1,
Yelterdar'• h1wer

29. Galahad's

215. Curse

3. Playboys

26. An·

( 8 wds.)

swered

4, Kind of
peeve
5. Bowers
6. Frall ;
slender
7. Candlenut

the
alarm

(2 wds,)
27. Expiate
28. In a

meager
way

ttee

one letter to each aquare, to
lorm rour ordinary words.

VANKE

30, Phyll!s
or
comedy
32. Ocean

bed

38. Peruvian
ctty
39. Man's
nickname

I

[J

1;;,

lor-+--+-

the....,..
A(IIIIII]

c-..,. •••onow)
Y~••~rd•J'•

32. Prohibit
33. Wallach
34, Also
35. Metric
land

~

Ju•blo" 'ION I SQUAW IUIIL T JUNOLI
•llr•IJI indkadon dt.at mor• •~nd il
req..U.d- .,UIS

A.:w n : .4

nwasure

' 36. Bookkeeper's
abbreviation
37. Injudicious
39. Dirty

CAPI'AIN EASY

with

plenty o shade trees, localed
on large tot, 250ft. by 250ft. on
SR 124 In Syracuse, Ohio.
Available for Immediate

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
A.XYDLBAAXB

phone

lo LONGFELLOW
One letter simply
stands for another. In thla oample A Ia
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophea, the fengtll and formation ot the words are all
hints. Elaoh day the code Jettera are different.

. Gallipolis 446-9539 alter 5 p.m.
week days for appointment.

10·3.tf

A Oryptorram ·Q~otalton

RIZER OIL 00.

DBLP X FBJJFP FWLP JW X AZBFQ
XUQ
'

THIS. All': L.tNE
OOES OVER: SEAS.

Now lllTUIP the clreled leUen
to form the ourprloe anower, u
ourreoted by
cu:toon.

name

BEST TIRE BUY IN ITS PRICE RANGE

brick home . ~ IX J&lt;OOM house, bath, fuli
Phone 992-3457.
:,a semen I. 133 Bultermd Ave.,
______
10-/:
.2 i,'c
ius! walking dijtance·. from
d0wntown Pomeroy . Contact
RACINE - 10 room hou a~
; d Hedri ck, 2137 Wadswoo th;
bath Two ·l ots, basement.
.urive, Columbus, Ohio, phone.
700 E,. MainP.OMEROY' , o. Y92·2l01
garage. Phone 949-4313.
t0-20-12tc · 237 ·4334, Columbus.
5·9-lfc, · - - - - - - - - - · - - - -

Loolu likt o
wb down fhtr•

mother

rlf--+--

25. Somewhat

26. Box-offlce
take

Park view Kennels . Phone 992- 4 BEDROOM

5443.

name
16. Dawdle
DOWN
22. Pay
l, Manltest
dirt
2. Lionel Bart 23. Islet

31. Coopers·
town

, 2 porches, garage, concrete

occupancy . To see,

addict
(slang)

28. Went for
a swim

ANY OF THESE SIZES 7.75 K 14, 7.75 X 15, 8.Z5 x 14, $18.00 Plus $2.20 to
' , $2 .36 Fed, Ex. Tax and old ti re .

bedrooms, living room, dining
room, bath with shower, large
kitchen with lots of bu ilt-in
birch cabinets. Hardwood
floors . Natural gas furnace,
50 -gallon electric water
heater, 2 large recreation
rooms, paneled In basement.

~lJ)JM@~;~ ltli_,(J .-J,...

12, FBI

coin
21. Boy Scout
h-+-+~groups
23. Remotely
24, English
river

882·2717,
---,--------

&lt;C 1971 Ktnr Features Syndicate. Inc. )

(4 '

wds,)
lL Earth
(Latin)

Saxon

IT'S AN

HOUSE , 1642 Linco ln Heig ht s.
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
2t96.
7-18-tfc

fellow
41. Newcastle's
river
4:2. Some
43. Drug

13. cOloration
H . Hit on
the head
(slang)
15. Mar!e
Saint
16. Clothing
· style
11. Work unit
18. Blrd's beak
19. Ending for
dormit
oramat
20. Anglo-

''

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MOST PEOPLE CAN'T UNDERSTAND ROW OTHERS CAN BLOW THEIR NOSES DIFF.ERENTLY THAN THEY DO.- TURGElNEV

10. Regular

40. Stypttc

reach

·1
l!lJ51N~55MfN

home on an 80 x 235 lev el lot.
Block utility building , washer
and dryer, on M ill St., Phone

UT Tf.lE BEST S~E
00 IS KICK OUT
A VENTILATOR SCREEN
AND EVOKE LAUGf.lTER
FROM t-IER ~APIORS.

i

FOR RESULTS, TRY US.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3325 99p378
10·17-61c

NEW HAVEN - 12 x 50 mob ile

8. Nautlcal

~
gut1er. Call Donald Smith, ' •

Both for $2t ,500.00,

dnvewa/ , large yard

ME A Cl&gt;NTJ

ALLEY OOP

delivered right to your
proiect. Fast and easy . Free
estimates . Pho ne 992 -3284 .
Goeglein Ready ·Mi)( Co .,
M iddleport. Ohio.

home and 2 loi s. Now only

house,

•

.., YA DON' T OWE

240 Lincoln SL Midd tepoo!

building lo ts on T79 at Rock
Springs . Within . walk~ng SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992 -2264
di stance of Metgs Htgh
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
School, a 5-minute drive lrom
Auth orized Singer Sales and
Pomeroy. Call · or see Sil l
Se rvice . We Sharpen Scissors.
Witte weekends , or after s

paneled , ci ty water, storm
doors , and windows . Front

block

:t COULPN'T FINO
A THIN!# WllOI&gt;JG

Con·

J·bedroom home fn O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Middleport. Built -in ki tc hen,
located at Cr ossroads , Rt. 124.
ceram ic tile bath. all -electri c
Complete Iron! end servi ce,
heat. good ne i_ghborhood . Can
lune up and brake service .
arrang e FHA finan ci ng .
ba, tanced
elec Wheels
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
tr on ically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Rea sona ble
21BI&gt;.
7-25-lf c
r ates . Phone 992·3213 .

Br-oker

I -ROOM

_.:j_,

New,

110 Mechanic Street

DEXTER -

NEVE/I G£r 1r

BUGS BUNNY

Plumbing,

Real Estate For Sale

SR.

NEW LISTING -

TOiEU.
I:Jll':&gt;i"
IN iHt= CAR !

SWITCH ON THE
POWER, HE CAN

ORDER ··-

Compl ete

NEW LISTING - 7 rooms, 3 CONVE NIENT but secluded

Auto Sales

contained

$5,995.

TH IS 5 UtTAH

SIT DOWN, MISS
MURTAGH . PER-

marquees, aluminum sid ing
and ra ili ng . Call A. Jacob,
sales representati ve. For free
e5.t imaf es , phone Cha r le~
Lisle , Sy r acuse . V. V
Johnsen and Son , In c.

storm doors and windows ,
nice lot, alm ost 1;,. acre.

Oil .

THE OLD medical man is back. automat ic, V-8. Phone 992 ·6547 .
Bring in your roots or mail by
t0-15-tlc
parce l post to Bil l Bail ey,
Reedsv ille , Ohio, 45772 .
10· 1n tc

or see Dick Seylor .

5· t.tfc

S. stor m doors and
RUTLAND - t•n story frame , 3 AWNING
w i ndow s,
c arport s,
bedrooms , bat ~, alum . siding ,

budge! terms. Call 992-7085.
10· t8·6!c

~anted To Buy

STORAGE space for

Racine, Oh io

Cri ll Bradford

J

Employment Wanted

se lf

Phone 949·3821

SIEGLER
H~~!!,~S

I

7;26 P.M.

-------

Complete Service

WANTED 6 to 10 ACRES ON
ROUTE 7 OR 33, NEED 400f t.
5·21·11&lt;
hrin g this ad and get $10
FRONTAGE - WILL PAY
I on vou r purchase of a ne w
HIGH PRICE , MUST BE HOU SE MOVING : Houses, etc.
I Siegler heat er .
I
CLOSE TO POMEROY OR
raised, moved, underpinned,
MIDDLEPORT . CALL IF
d. Est imates free,
1
~ YOU-+IAVE ANYTHING AT remodele
anywhere Nati ona l House
ALL.
'
Movers, Box 5002, Char leston ,
•
W_Va . 253 11 , or phone 304-925·
I
PLACE THE SALE OF
3279.
I AII .
.
,
I
YOUR PROPERTY IN
9·3Q.60tp
. s•zes •n st?c ... . We rns tall , 1
COMPETENT
HANDS.
I frnan ce, se rvr ce .
HENRY E. CLELAND
HACKNEY"S Electric Serv ice ••
I
POMEROY
I
REALTOR
all types of elec tr icol work .
9. _ J•ck w. C•rsey , Mgr. I
Office 992-2259
Phone 99H407.
I ~ Phonett2·2lll
Residence 99'2 -2568
9.29-JOtc
_
__
__
_
_
_
l_
0·_
2
0·6tc
-•••••••••••
BACKHOE AND DOZER work ,
EARLY American s!ereo-radio
Septic !&lt;Inks ins talled . George
combination , AM-FM radio,
I Bill ) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-speed automatic cha nger, 4speaker
sound
system .
4-25·ftc

$4 per month. Phone 992-2798·

October 21, 1971

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

rooms-,
3
bedr oo m s,
basemen t, porches , IN GOOD
CONDITION . SS,OOO.

cHuCKLE f- ONC£ I

WHIPLASH "PERFECK
FIT" COMP 'N'/ -

ditioning .

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0.

9·21 -lf c POMEROY - t story fram e, 6

!,.'1

GOT BY MAIL

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather !holing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony .Plumbing &amp; Heating:
Healing

Open 8 Til S

doors. $5,300 .

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. '64 CHEVY , 2·dr . hardtop ,
8-25-llc automat ic, v.a; '67 Plymouth
try them? Call 992·5111
-Satell ite ,
2-dr .
hardtop,
to.s.ttc

Meigs County

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

POMEROY - NICE FOR
RETIREMENT - 2 story
frame, 2 bedrooms. NEW
BATH , NEW forced -air

ONE WALKER fem ale dog ,

E:.

•

®

- FUM TH' LARSON

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

pari hardwood floo rs, JUST

overwei ght ladies. teens .;tnd HOUS E CLEANING in Racine ,
WALNUT stereo , fo ur-speed
men in terested in a We ight
Sy racu se and Pome roy area .
interm ixe d
chan ger ,
4·
Watchers { R)
Cl ass in
Phone 992-2876.
speaker
sound
system
,
AM·
Pome roy write:
We i ght
I0- 17-61c FM radio. Balance S67 .59. Use
Watchers IRJ. tlll&gt;3 Section
our budget terms. Call 992Rd ., Cincinnati , Oh io 45237.

10·3-lfc

2 st ory frame , 6 rooms, 3

10·20

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

15;55
'

13,800 ,

2 · GAS circulating heaters .
Phone 992 ·5262 evenings .

1

FURNITURE

Wheel Alignment

furnace , large l ot, stor m

Pomeroy , Ohio

?

And

EXPERT

bedro oms, bath , ALMOST
NEW gas forced -air furnace,

VACUUM cleaner, brand new
t971 modeL Complete with all

The Daily Sentinel
Box 729C

WITH A BROOM

,;

OFFICE SUPPLIES

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

POMEROY - tiERE IS A BUY
-

606

992-2174

608 Easl Main,
POMEROY

buttonhole .

Overcast and fancy stitch .
Pay ·l ust $48.75 cash or terms
ava i able. T rade -ins ac ·

HOME &amp; AUTO

Deland
Realty

t971 ZIG-ZAG sewing mach ine
built-in to

MOTOR, INC.

Real Estate For Sale

Phone alter 5 p.m. 949-2726.
l0-19·21c

Att

SMITH NELSON

POMEROY

PHONE NUMBER

992-7608 .

10-19-3fc

CA MPER, completely fu r nished. bottled gas equipped,

STARTING PAY IS

WE WI &gt;H to thank all the many

Endloader Work

wr inger type wasnl!r . Also
two nice size hogs. Phone 247 ·

2337.

..

•

Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And

TWO-SPEED Lady Kenmore

Civil Ser~ice Jobs For
Qualified People ·

~

' WRONG
50 WHATG

DID YOU GET 50ME'fl.IING
lllAT FIT 14ER PERSONA[. tTY, ~"'' •t

r.J.MA, YOU ASKED
ME TO BUY YOUR
MO'IIIER A BIRJ\lt:¥\Y
PRE5ENT.

-

•

Kitchens, Baths

JO.t5-6tp

HILTON WOLFE
'949-3211

BILL NELSON
992·3657

Complete
Remodeling

1972 22 FT. Holiday Travel

Thank~

THERE WILL be a revival at
the Rutland Free Wi ll Baptist

held pretty good stu([ in both
majors and his partner had
bid clubs.
Furthermore , iC West held
the jack o( clubs there would
be nine easy tricks waiting
Cor him at no-trump and
even with the jack being
held by East the g a m e
would have w he e I e d in
against any but a very alert
and expert West

IOHNSQN MASONRY

Trail er , fully self -contained , .
lots of ex tras. Must sacrifice.
PEP-UP with new Zippies iron Can see anytime, Henderson .
pills. Non ~ habil forming . Only W. Va ., Henderson's Trailer
Court.
Sl .98 , Nelson Drugs .

Instruction

AT TEN tlOLLARS ANb FIFTY
CENTS" 1T'S A GOOD T~tNG
VOU REMtND&amp;D ME~

fte

10·20

':::=~=~~~~~

$10 , set of

9·22301p

-·-.

Corner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

$10,

bed springs - $5, att in good r
shape Phone 992. 5510 ' t0-15-6Ic

REGULATIONS

G. Hoffman .

LOVING CARE
Reg. $6,50
Now 15.00
November 8 lhru tJ
PERMANENT
Reg. 112.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-4747

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

Card c!

-

st ationary r oc ker -

OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'OMEROY, OHIO

Additiona l 25c

-SPECIALsNovember 11hru 6

hoi pla te, 3 burner grilL
Phone 992·2584 or 992-9943.
10-20-Stc
cupboards

FOUR NEW HOMES ,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as tow as $65.00 tor a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and · three children . 7'1• Pel. annual

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

l0-20-6tp

5 PONIES, I riding horse, I
G.E. automatic washer, 1941
Pon liac. 4 dr . sedan ; 1938
Buick Coupe, Frehch fryer,

Pomeroy Motor Co•.

Maybe It's Smart Defense
. QIO
¥ QS4

985-3368.

' mel a I

.....
---

10·20-61c

co nd i ti on $75 . 2 Early
American ta ble lamps, like
new $25. Harli s Fr ank, phone

1966 VOLKSWAGEN
$1095
Square Back Sedan. Blac k finish , c lean in ·
terior , good tires. radio .

WIN AT BRIDGE

ZO

afler 6 p .m .

1 LAZ't' BOY chair, excellent

10 20-3tc

NORTH

condition . Phone 992 -3401

VWS

DPJ

R X.A C . - E W Z U

X

DMPX ·J

MS K C8 U

QPXF

f~~~~~~~ '{OU
1
+\AVE
,
WILD ANIMAl5
IN THE GULLIES ARE U\LLI:L/.,,.;

�'

,,
10 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Puneroy, 0., Oct. 20, 1971

Style Show Set
Thirty casual and holiday
ensembles lVIII be modeled m a
style revue to be staged
Thursday nig ht in conjunction
with a card party at the
Amer ica n Leg ion hall

ncsy.

The event 1s sponsored by the
Ame ncan Legion Auxilia;y of
Drew Webster Post 39, and
tickel' are available from any
mem ber. Game pri zes and
refreshments will be served.
Junio r a uxilia ry me mbers
Wider the leadership of Mrs.
Paul Casci ha ve prepared
poMers on the card party and
style show which will be placed

in

Pomeroy, 8 p.m . .
Mrs . lola Bartru m will
prese nt costumes from her
dress shop to include teen
fashions, apparel for the young
woman , and gcmnents for lhe

mature woman.
Mode li ng the clothes will be
Mis. Janice Couch, Miss Debbie
!caney, Mrs. Marion Michael,
Mrs. Becky Anderson, Mrs.
Pearl Welker, Miss Jan Kennedy, Mrs. Veda Davis. Miss
Irene Bar nes, Annette Phalin,
Mrs. Roberta O'Brien, Miss
Peggy O'Brien. Miss J o Ellen
Diehl, Miss Debbie Cremeans.
Mrs. Donna Nease, Mrs.
Elizabeth Roush. Miss Milisa
Ri zer, &gt;trs. ~1 arga r et Blaetlnar, and Miss Ma uree n Hen-

Orr Honored

A potluck dinner to be
followed by a film on drug
abuse was planned for OcL. 27
when the executive committee of Lydia Circle of
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church mel recently at the
home of Mrs. William Baronick. The 6 p:m. dinner will
be for members of both
P om ero y

and

Chest er

churches. The film will be
shown at 7:30 p.m.

in business displa y windO\'r'S.

18th Celebrated
The 18th birthday of Ted
Lehew was observed Sunday
with a dinner party at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Davis.
A decorated cake centered
the table. Guests were Mrs.
Harold Johnson. Springfield;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lehew,
Debbie , Charlotte and Robin .
Columbus; Jyl Beaver , Middle port ; Mr . and Mrs. William
Lehew, John, Bill and Cheryl,
Pomeroy.

Chester

BASHAN - Thirty persons
attended a sur pri,se dinner
party giYen in honor of Paul Orr
by his wife and his friends at the
Orr 's co antry ho me near
Bashan . Among the invited
guests were members of the
Galloway Equipment Company.
Dinne r nJusic was. provided by
Mrs. O li ~e Weber
Pieces of a model bulldozer
were used as place cards which
were reassembled dw- ing the
dinner hour . Followi ng dinner
games were played.

'

Film Will Follow

News Notes

By CLARICE ALLEN
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Troop of
f ort Wayne, Ind., spent a week
wi th Mr. and Mrs. Purley Karr.
~lr . and Mrs. Troop and the
Karrs made a trip to the Sky
Line Drive and Blue Ridge
Parkwa y to th e Sm oky
Moun tai ns.
Mr s.
Mildred
f ra nk ,
--~-~...- -... Pomeroy, recently called on
Mrs . LeU1a Wood.
Mr. and Mrs. Ga ry Wolfe,
Columbus, spent a weekend
with their paren ts, Mr. and Mrs.
George Wolfe and Mr . and Mrs.
David Kobientz.
Fresh , Dried
Elmer Newell of Philadelphia
.
spent
t~e weekend wi th Mr. and
or Artiflcial
Mrs. Hobart Newell and Sheila.
Mr . and Mrs. Eldon Will.
Syracuse,
called on Mr . and
Se rving : Gallipoli s,
Pomeroy, Middleport
Mrs. Denzil Cleland Thursday

BeautifUl

Police Sanction
Dance at School

The Meigs County Jaycees
will sponsor a high school dance
par ty from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport with
the Jays emceeing .
The Jays have cleared it with
the Middleport Police Department that young people ma y
attend the dance if they go
straight to the dance and go
home immediately following it .
The clearance was obtained due
to an 8 p.m. curfew in effect in
Middleport.
Jones .
and family of Colwnbus spent a
recent weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Willis Frost and Billie
Jea n.
Mr. and Mrs. Green Ilde rton,
Wellston, are guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Purley Karr .
Mr . and
Mrs. f red
Haushalter, Ponti ac, Mich .,
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Willis frost.
Mrs. Curtis Wolf has retw-ned
home from
Parkersburg
hospital where she underwent
surgery .

a

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
The birthday of Mrs. Lee
Baughman was observed
recently with a celebration at
th e Baug hman horne .m
B db
Alte d'
b .d
lhr\ ury.d
~ ~g h esbl eds
ed tohnore guJesff' er us aMn
an elf son, e rey, were r.
and Mrs. William Fred Smith,
Sr. of Bra db ury, an d Mr. an d
Mrs. F re d HoIf man ao d
children, Beverly and David,
M'ddl
1 epor 1·

Fall Rower

Bobby joe Lawrence Surprised

Arrangements

Sunday on His Ninth Birthday

HARRISONVILLE - A
surprise birthday party was
held for Bobby Joe Lawrence
Sunday, Oct. 17 at 2 p.m. on his
ninth birthday at his home in
evenin g.
Ha rri sonville . Games were
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Fraley
played and prizes awarded to
the winners.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dares Arnold, Mrs. George
Hicks, Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Hysell , Bruce, Terry and
Norma Jean; Mr . and Mrs.
Jack King, Debbie, Jackie,
Timmy, Greg, Dick, Carla, and
Darla, all of Pomeroy ; Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Arnold, Mason, W.
Va.; Mrs. Paul Hill and Paul
Jr., Letart Falls; Mr. and Mrs.
Vincent Gheen, Harrisonville ;
Na ncy, Debbi e, Ka thy, Jo

Dudley's Aorist

&amp; Mason Co. W. va .

Twirler
Winners
Listed
.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, fi rst
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Materni ty vi~iling how-s 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles I.
Adkins, Gallipolis, a daughter ;
, Mr . and Mrs. William ArthwTaylor , Long Bo ttom, a
daughter ; Mr . · and Mrs.
Stephen Kent
Walburn ,
Jackson, a son ; Mr . and Mrs.
James L. Angel, Oak Hill, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Dean
Haryey, Radcliff, a son ; and
Mr. and Mrs. William Harrison
Wamsley, Hartfo rd , a son.
Discharges
Mrs . Jack Braley, Mrs.
James Caldwell and daughter,
Miss Mary Dowaard, Truman
Gobl e, Mrs. Oma Grant,
Harv ey Hall , Rand y Hall ,
Jeffrey Jordan, Charles Roush,
Mrs. J . Everett Saunders, Mrs.
Albert Shifflet, Mrs. Opie
Swiney , Mrs. Arthw- Whetstone,
Jr. and son, Charles Zerkle,
Mrs. Iva Stewart and John Paul

TEX HARRIOON COMING - Henry Frank said today
that there was still time to get reservations for the Meigs
County Farm Bureau annual meeting and dinner Thutsday,
Oct. 21. Tickets are $1.25 for adults and 75c for children .
Make reservations by calling the offices at Pomeroy, phone
992-2181. Entertainment will feature Tex Harrison and the
Valley Boys. Election of directors and state delegates will
also be held with county, state, and national resolutions being
considered. All members and the general public are cordially
invited. The dinner will be served at 7:26p .m. in the new
Meigs Local High School.
,
•

l.JJmbert Famt/y Reuntted Sunday
. of the late Mr. and
The fam1ly
Mrs. Everett Lambert was
reunited Sunda y at the home of
their
late parents on
H .
·n R d
arnsonvl e oa .
•
Attendmg were Mr . and Mrs.
Car I Mow-mng,
. Elyna
. ; Mr . an d
M
C . G'll
St
rs. ect1 . l og1y, even ,
Jeffrey and Lisa , Athens; Mr .
a nd Mrs. Kenneth Grover ,

.
Joyce and Jenmfer,
Lon g
Bottom · Mrs. Beverly Roush ,
Rodne / and Cheryl, Logan ;
Mrs. Helen Johnson, Janie Sue
d M G
Johnson, Mr . an . rs. ene
Lambert, Charolette, Sheryl,
. Ron Sm'th
and Dav1d;
1 , an d Mr.
H ·
ll
and Mrs. Harley amng, a
local Unable lo attendwas Mrs.
E!iu'beth Vaughan .

Winners of the NBTA sanctioned baton twirling contest
Satw-day at the Eastern High
School and sponsored by life
Meigs County Jaycees, are
announced by Contest Director
Mrs. Judy Riggs.
Winning the three high point
awards for the day were Cindy
Patterson, juvenile high point;
Diana Guthrie , junior high
point, artd Connie Rector, senior
high point, and also winner of a
$25 savings bond. Traveling the
farthest distance for th€ contes t
were Diana and Monica Koczon
from New York (410 miles).
First place winners in the
junior corps competition were
the Riggs Royal Kad..,ttes.
First place winners in the
Dance-Twirl and Twirling
Team Competitions were Pat's
High
Steppers
from
Buckhannon, W.Va. ; The Pink
Panthers from Coolville, and
The Riggs Royal Kad..,ttes.
Twirlers from the area
winning trophies in the contest
are listed below with the total
number won by each:
Diana Guthrie, 13; Connie
Rector ,12 ; Cindy Patterson, 10;
Oebbi~ Ford, 7; I..i.sa Kuhn, 7;
Libby Ahn Watkins, 5; Debbie
Scott, 4; Marcia Carr, 4; Juiia
Carpenter, 4; Louann Newell, 4;
Caplolia Cole, 4; Debbie Jef-

ville.
His sis ters decora ted the
table and room in a birthday
and halloween theme. Refreshments of cake, ice cream,
potato chips and Kool-Aid were
served by the hostess and

Quick" Service

hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie

King. Evening supper guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Bissell and Bruce, and Todd, of
Bashan, who presented Robert
with a birthday gift.

lfs Quick! Easy

~

: 01her Banking Hours 9 to J •
7

as usual on,._
,._

.FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS
POMEROY, OHIO

MemberFDI C
Member Federa l
Reserve System

WIN THE

FIMSHINGS

I#

BUDGET

BAKER

Dick Vaughan

from our

SHOP!
FUINITURI
MIDDUPOIT, 0.

992-3374

•

Ill

·. :: ·::

;. ' :; ':

. AT RAC!Nt .

A'P.. CROSS

•·::

. . ·:

Center Cut

Round

. .:·;

: :·

;. ;:; ;.,

:·

,. ;':. ;:

·.....

;.

•'

LYONS
... ' -: -: -: :-: ;

lb. . 69~

LEMONADE

2

6 oz.
cans

CHOC. MILK
qt

29~

Rilht
Reservect
To
limrt
. Quantities

'

DEPT•.~tORE

;:;:;:;:;:,.;:;:~;:P:::$:~:~}::~:/:~:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::·:·:

STAR KIST

PEACHES ::r: 2!~ 69~
DEL MoNrE

·TUNA 2

61h 0~
CANS

Produce Buys

No. l Quality

Yellow Onions

DEL

BakeiJ Buys

3

4 ~~s 99~

CABBAGE

89~

DEL MONTE

b~~ 29~

3

TOMATO JUICE

~C0__R_N~~~~~:~4~~M__9_9_~~-~--N-ew----------~
PEAS-

Buys

\

RUTLAND
.
.

WIENERS
2 ~~·9~

r

;::
":: ;: :

:

AT llUTLA~D

DEL MONTE

Frozen
Frosty Acres

;:

; :~:·:· :·:·:·;·:·:::·:·:·:·~+:i:;:;:;:;&lt;r;;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;;t:::::W': : ;:; :;.;:;.;:;.;:; ;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;i.j.

SUPERIOR
ALL M~AT

ARM ROAST

\:

,•,,

;:,

AT TUPPERS rLAIN:

CHUCK ROAST lb.59°

lb.

...
~

aq

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

JUICY-FIRST QUALITY

i

Fridays Only
~The Drive-In Wind!lW
&gt;t
1s Open
&gt;t 9 A.M. to 7 P. M.
&gt;t
( C!lntinuously)
:

...

Cut To Your Specifications

992-6346

:

8~

!

Government Inspected

Dale Little

i
~ *****
i* BANKING
DRIVE-IN

.. . With

to The ,

- ·~- ~

- Zoroaster

PRlCES ARE RIGHT!

:' If .I have to go'.

__ -

:

When in doubt, absta in.

&gt;t

&gt;t
**
&gt;t
*
"''**************

t' - - - - - - - '1

...._

FOR TODAY

VISITING PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Rllymond Zirkle
are here visiting their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duckworth and Mrs. Norma Zirkle.
:
Mr. Zirkle is now stationed with &gt;t
the U. S. Air force at Warner
Robins, Ga. A family dinner
was held on Sunday.

"custom meat cutting"

me
,. ._'_\••take
Shop ..

***-*************
A THOUGHT

5 to
Fridays .

The Shop

Pleasant Ridge Road
POMEROY,OHIO

fers, 4; Peggy Trussell, 3; Vi.cki
Spencer, 3; Teresa Carr, 3;
Rhonda Savel, 3; Suzy Goebel,
3· Gloria Barber, 3; Sandy
•
Hamilton, 2; Belinda Deeter, 2;
Joanne Fick, 2, and Mandie
Rose, Kaleen Millhone, Nancy
Ridenour, Janet Ambrose,
Kathy Newell, Betsy Amsbary,
Daielene Scott, Grella Miller,
Pam Kautz, Karen Smith, and
Teresa Edwards, one each.

&gt;t and

COMMITTEE CALLBD
Rosenbawn , Earl Thoma, Mr.
A meeting of the playg round and Mrs. Ben Rife, Mr. and
equipment committee of the Mrs. William Anderson, Mr .
Pomeroy Elementary PTA has and Mrs. Charles Gloeckner,
been called for 7 p.m. tonight. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Grueser, Mr .
Ellen, 'Timmy a nd Pamela Don Thomas is chairman of the and Mrs. Rlly Jewell, Mr. and
Lawrence.
committee. Serving with him Mrs. John Manley, Mr. and
The above presented Bobby are Gene Milch. Richard .Mrs. Pete Michaels.
gifts and money . Sending gifts fi•iititi.O.Iilililltiiiii-i.iitlllllll.il.llillii;,;,.;.;,;;,;,,;;;.;;;,;.__.,.
were Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Jeffers, Bobby and Rhonda ;
Pomeroy, and Mrs. King, Bill,
Frank, and Vince, Harrison-

' .

3

gt

46 oz.

Pumpkin bre~d. custard, pie, or cake. What's your pleasure?
During the past week we have had a variety of tried-and-true
pumpkin recipes come in - all sure to delight the man of tiie
house on a cool crisp fall evening .
Several recipes for pumpkin bread have been submitted and
. today we share those with you. Mrs. Ethel Smith of 1558 Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy, sent along her recipe :
Mix 1\1 cups cooking oil, 2 cups sugar, 2 cups pumpkin
together.Add 4 eggs, one at a time. Beat hard.
Sift 3 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 2 teaspoons
cinnamon, 2 teaspoons soda, \1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons pum]}
kin pie spice, and add to the first mixture.
.. Bake in six No. 2 ca"'l or 2 loaf pans for one hour at 350
degrees. Do not grease pans.
MRS. KATE WELL'S RECEIPT calls for chopped nuts.
PUMPKIN BREAD
3\1 cups flour, 2 teaspoons soda, 3 cups sugar, 1\1 teaspoons
salt, I teaspoon nutmeg, I \io teaspoon cinnamon.
Mix the above ingredients together in a large bowl and add : I
cup oil, 4 eggs, two-thirds cups water, 1 cup chopped nuts, 2 cups
of pumpkin.
·
Bake at 350 degrees for one hour. Makes three loaves.

A book fair will be held the
week of Nov. 4, according to
plans announced by Mrs .
Beverly Long at Monday night's
meeting of the Middleport PTA.
Books will be on display in the
school foyer for examination by
the children dw-ing the week.
Orders may be placed with the
PTA f!!embers.
The fair will mark "American
Education Week." First grade
parents will serve as greeters of

visitors to the school.
Mrs. Elaine Hart reported
membership at 123. The Nov. 4
meeting of the Meigs County
Council of Par ents and
Teachers was announced for
7:30 p.m . at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Fathers' Night will be observed at the No vember
meeting when fathers will coun t
double in the attendance contest,

After Ohio University junior
students were introduced,
Robert Morr is, principal ,
proposed testing second, third
and fourth graders to determine
their reading levels which
would be followed by a program
provirting six levels of reading
based on ability to read in
ungraded classroom work.
Morri s explained how this pian
can wor k to the advantage of
pupils.

Pomeroy School to be Open for Visitation
Pomeroy Elementary School
classrooms will be open to
visitors Monday through Friday
of next week in observance of
American ·Education Week.
The Pomeroy PTA will serve
refreshments all day on Wednesday to parents visiting the
classrooms. An award for the
highest percentage of visiting
parents one classroom will be

adequate support and initiate
given by the PTA.
American Education week ac tio n toward correc ting
has been held annually since problems or weaknesses in the
1921 under the auspices of the educational program.
Ed u c a t i o n Mrs. Gene Mitch, Pomeroy
Na t i o n a I
Association, the American PTA president, stressed the
Legion , the National Congress need for adults to become inof PTA and the U. S. Office of . formed of their school system,
Education , to encoura ge the areas where improvements
citizens to look intensively at are needed, a nd the optheir schools in order to provide porlunities to make needed
changes .

ANOTHER VARIATION ON pumpkin bread comes from
Mrs. Kathryn Mora, Chester Road. Kathryn says that it freezes
well and is good just pulled out of the freezer, sliced and served
when unexpected CQlllpany comes.
I \io cups sugar, 1 teaspoon soda, ¥• teaspoon baking powder,
:y, teaspoon salt, \1 teaspoon cloves, \io teaspoon cinnamon, 'h
teaspoon nutmeg, \io teaspoon allspice, one and two-thirds cups
flour.
Put all the dry ingredients in a bowl, mix together, make a
well and add :
'h cup cooking oil, one-third cup water, I cup pumpkin, and 2
well-beaten eggs.
Mix together good and pour into loaf pan. Bake for one hour at
350 degrees. Add \1 cup chopped pecans, if desired .
NEXT WEEK; Pumpkin cake, custards and pie. ·

Miss Mary Francis' kindergarten and Mrs. Jennifer
Butcher's second grade tied for
the room a ttendance banner.
The pledge to open the
meeting was given by the fourlh
grade rs of Mary An n
Daniscewski. The Rev. Robert
Bwngarner of Heath United
Methodist
Chu rch ga ve

'

Holsum

AT_

BREAD

29°

Expires 10-25-71
•

. wmt COUI'OII

'I

· Give A

presented by Dr . Albert
MacKenzie who gave a chal k
talk on the good and evil in each
of us.
Milford Hysell presented the
minutes of the previous meeting

'
'

Aoral Tribute
To Our Heroes

Dudley's Aon'sf

and the treas urer 's repor t was

Se rving : Ga IIi polis,

given by Mrs. Edwina Scott.

Pomeroy, Middleport

&amp; Ma son County ,

w., Va .

Ruom visitation was held at the ' - - - - - - - - - - '

Mrs. Lee Roush and childre n
of Logan were Sunday visitors
of -Helen Johnson.
Helen J ohnson , Beverly
Roush and children and Genna
Shumate were Sunday aftern oon visitors of Mrs. Berdie
Wyatt.
Weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr .
and Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
family and Mr . and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey and family of Albany.
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
Michelle of Rutland was
Monday visitor of Mrs. Howard
Thoma and Patricia .

3 ROOMS
NEW

FUR~ITURE

SJ49.95
$35.00 l&gt;own'Salance On
Convenient
Terms .

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W Va .

c

or

Social Calendar
WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Wednesday, home of Mrs. Paul
Casci, Middleport.
BOSWORTH Council 46 ,
Royal and Select Masons, 7;30
Wednesday at the Masonic
Temple .
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Qub, 2 pm. Wednesday at the
home of Mrr. Ben Philson,
0 - •
.....ctne . Mrs. o. B. St ou t to
review '"Since Silent Sjring."
Sesponse will be a wonder of
nature.
. _
WINDI NG TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. John Terrell, Mulberry
Heights.
BIG BEN D Neighborhood
meeting of the Fow- Rivers Girl
Scout Council, 9 a.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
leaders to present craft ideas.
THURSDAY
BRADBURY PTA, Thursday,
1: 30 p.m. Teachers will be
available to answer questions.
Parents urged to attend.
CLASS 12 Heath United
·
'
Methodtst Church, 7:30 Thursday at the chw-ch. Mrs. James
Jividen to have the program,
Mrs.. J ac k Bechtle the
devotiOns . Mrs. L. W. MeC
M Robert Rinehart
Mor~asJan;s.Gilkey and Mrs:
N
W land will be the
h or:;an ay
~A~s. PARTY and Style
Show, Thursday night at the
American Legion hall spon-

$1,200

Pledged For
Fire Truck

Split With
Backs &amp; Giblets

Prices Good Thru Set., Oct. 23rd.

We Are Happy To
Redeem Federal
Food Stamps

sored by the AUlUUary of Drew
Webster Post 39 . Door prizes,
refreshments.
BASHAN AUXILIARY, fire
department, toy party and ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " ' :
Chrisimas' decoration sale, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at fire house.
Public invi~d .
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club I : 15 p.m. Thursday. home of Mrs . Amos
Leonard; Mrs. Qilford Leifheit
to bave ·the program; Mrs.
Mark Grueser the contest.
Secret pals will be revealed.
MAGNOLIA CLUB, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs.
Herschel Rose, Minersville.
FRIDAY
P AST
M AT R 0 N S ,
Evangeline Chapter OES,
Friday, 7;30 p.m. home of Mrs.
Willis Anthony wi.th Mrs. Beth
• tb.agc:
Cowan , c&lt;&gt;-hostess, and Mrs.
Roma Hawkins , devotional
• lb.
~:~..
I
•
leader.
FlESH
SATURDAY
LEAN •
•
PRACTICE SESSION, Meigs
Pleasw-e Riders 4-H Club, Rock
•
.
Springs Farrgrounds Saturday,
1 p.m.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING Stiversville
.
'
Communi~ · Church, 2 p.m.
Sunday. Smgers welcome.
HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL
'd
s
Frl ay' 7 p.m. a1 yracuse
Elementary School. Games, fun
house, priZes, country kitchen.
Prizes for best costumes;
sponsored by PTA.

....

Fryer Legs • • lb. 59c Fryer Breasts • '"·69c: Fryer Thighs •
Fryer Drumsticks • • . • '•- 69~ Box of Chicken . • • • •
"Super-Right" Lamb Sale

Leg Of Lamb ~~~~~~~I
Lamb Shoulder Roast •
lamb Shoulder Chops
•

Lamb Rib Chops .. "·$1.59
Lamb Loin Chops .. o.$1.79

'129
• lb. 7t
Ground Beef
Braunschweicer • • • lb.gc:

lb •

I do not believe. any good
can come from that meetbng.
I pray for him.
- Paul Cardinal Yu-pin of
Taiwan , on Presid e nt
Nixon's forthcoming trip
to Red China.

BELTONE

bat

• •
I

. ,._89c

•

3-lb.

c:an

Lamb Stew Breast .. "· 19c:
Lamb Patties .......... ,. 59c:

lb. fit
Por kCh ops
Pork Roast .~~e;:;~~ . . . . lb.74c
Smoked Picnics • . • . '"-~'
Sliced Bacon •L;.;~~o. . 2lb. s1n

Fall Harvest Produce Buys!

YGRAPES

pkr-

lb.

JONATHAN APPLES
FRESH BROCCOLI •
SOUTH'ERN YAMS •

•

• •
• • • bunch]t)c
• • •

jumbo
rolls

A&amp;P BRAND WHOLE or

• • • •

ANNPA&amp;E

Gelatia Desserts • •
or
Bir~s Eye V:UO:ES • • · 3 5100

=

CAULIFLOWER. BROCCOLI

BRUSSELS SPROUTS

SLICED BEETS • •
GOLDEN CORN • • •
GREEN BEANS • •
BATHROOM TISSUE
COLBY CHEESE ••
PANTY HOSE s::ce •

Vienna Sausage
Ahoy Detergent
PINK LIQUID

A&amp;P WHOLE KERNEL or CREAM STYLE

W~eat

Bread -. •
Twi1 Rolls • • • • • 3pkr•-lt
Spanish lar Cake

BELTONE

Ken-L-Ration : .

.,15'/J-or.W,·.
!
.
I I

.,.

·"

Heinz Ketchup

49C

c.,...

.

A&amp;P .~:l~~~~T Drinks

49C

•

•

Facial Tissues • • • 4..... s1cx
Non-Dairy Creamer • • 1:"69•
of !00

A&amp;P BRAND

1

VACUUM PACK

-chase &amp;Sanborn Coffee ~ 51 8~
SOFT
Margarine • • • • 3 1-lb. '10(
A&amp;P

....to

Halloween Candy!
•

Harvest Mix :.N:e • • .~.
Hershey Jr. Bars • . :=. 79'
footsie Roll Pops • IT-oo.79c:
Boyer Mallo Cups • ,.. 69c:
7ftc:
Leaf Bubble Gum

pkg.99c

1

Pkl.

..

pkr.

3 89C
-=-=

.3::89'

• •

A&amp;P BRAND

A pledge of $1 ,200 to the
A&amp;P FRENCH STYLE
Rutland Fire Department on
JANE PARKER CRACKED
the purchaile of a new truck was
made by the Firemen's
•
Auxiliary at a meeting Tuesday
SO .SOFT
JANE PARKER BROWN AND SERVE
Will Be At
night at the hall.
To raise the money, plans
La Sa lie Hote I
were made for several lund
Middleport, Ohio
JANE PARKER
raising projects, including a
on
KRAFT
traditional turkey dinner on
Thursday, Oct. 21
• •
Nov . 18 at the Rutland
From
Elementary School and a food
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
stand at the Thelma Michael To repair and service
MELLOWMOOD - SHEER STRETCH
sale in Rutland, Oct. 30.
hearing aids.
The Auxiliary plans to have Batteries and supplies
1
the $1,200 for the firemen by for all makes for sale.
Dec. 1.
Mellowmood Pantyhose ~~~~ ~cc
•
The group also voted
We will be glad to give
unanimous support to the
hll••
tuberculosis levy, a .65 renewal you a free hearing lest
J~g
.
to be on the ballot next month. with the latest Bellone
The traveling prize donated Electrllnic equipment.
by Mrs. Howard Birchfield was
If hearing is your
won by Mrs. Bob Bishop. The
problem Bellone is
next meeting of the group was
JANE PARKER
eot.DIN, SU$1,1110
plcp.
the answer
announced for Nov. 16 with Mrs.
oJ CINNAI&gt;!ON
Bruce Davis and Mrs. Merle
Davis as the hostesses. Tl)e
IIICII.:.: Yolt1ablo
CKII:Illljl
~-•Y•luelole Caopoa
· - - Valoalllo C:oopooii:IIICII=I'!
traveling priZe will be provided
by Mrs. Merle Davis.
Mrs. Charles Barrett and
Mrs. Birchfield served refresh·
Hearing Aid Center
ments to those named and Mrs.
32·01.
WITH
AlL· pkg. of
r~1~
WITH
THIS
VARIETIES
6
COU,ON
Kenneth Michael, Mrs. Jerry
ca•s
THIS
. battle
COUPOft
504 Tenth St.
COU,ON
Eads, Mrs. Bill Brown, Mrs.
. Huntington, W.Va.
Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
Good Th•u Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
Maxine Dyer, MrS. Russell
You• Friendly A&amp;P Store.
Y011' Frior.dly A&amp;P St.,e.
Ph~:~ne 525;7221
y..,. Friendly A&amp;~ Storo.
Little, Mrs. Archie McKinney,
:.:::1-~~ Por Fl•tly =-:~mil klt.-:IILO.o Per Fo•ily -::.:~• ICI.:.:-=tOat Per Famliy ICIICIII::III
and Mrs. Dick Foley.
. ...._ _ _ _ _ _ _..

Hearing Aid
Service Center

• '"·99'
lb.59c

ARMOUR

AHNPA&amp;E

Ecc Noo41es

•

I

QUAOTEREO LOIN
SLICED-II• Hb. AVG. PK6.

California Roast • • •
Cube Steaks

25 99

....

FRESH DONUTS

.... HOllE•
COFFEE
Big 3 Mkls.
$}
09
10 OZ. JAR ONLY

Whole Wheat or
Honey Meal

devotions, and the progrCJm was

concl usion of the mee ting.

Wolfpen

ggc

YOU BUY A_lO~OZ.· JAR OF

~~I

October·25th
Veterans Day

Whole Bagged

APPLE CIDER

WITH 'THIS COUPON WHEN

.I

Book Fair Planned by Middleport PTA

Everybody's Favorite

cans

I

I

-=-=• Yaloahlo Coupoo
Robin Hood Flour

EIICIICII

25

lb.

bag

$4 99

I

WITH

cJ~~~N

plqo.
• of 1110

~--Yalualllo Caupoo

~-

-=-tEll

Ajax Detergent
10,

OFF . 19-oz.
LAIEl
pkg.

, ,_C

'f~\~

COUPON

Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. Ai
Your Friendly /'IP Storo.
Your Friendly A&amp;P Sto•e.
be.:.:~ One Per Fomlly ICIICLI:ai k-ICitO~o Par hmily c:.=-:.1
Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
I

•

�'

,,
10 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Puneroy, 0., Oct. 20, 1971

Style Show Set
Thirty casual and holiday
ensembles lVIII be modeled m a
style revue to be staged
Thursday nig ht in conjunction
with a card party at the
Amer ica n Leg ion hall

ncsy.

The event 1s sponsored by the
Ame ncan Legion Auxilia;y of
Drew Webster Post 39, and
tickel' are available from any
mem ber. Game pri zes and
refreshments will be served.
Junio r a uxilia ry me mbers
Wider the leadership of Mrs.
Paul Casci ha ve prepared
poMers on the card party and
style show which will be placed

in

Pomeroy, 8 p.m . .
Mrs . lola Bartru m will
prese nt costumes from her
dress shop to include teen
fashions, apparel for the young
woman , and gcmnents for lhe

mature woman.
Mode li ng the clothes will be
Mis. Janice Couch, Miss Debbie
!caney, Mrs. Marion Michael,
Mrs. Becky Anderson, Mrs.
Pearl Welker, Miss Jan Kennedy, Mrs. Veda Davis. Miss
Irene Bar nes, Annette Phalin,
Mrs. Roberta O'Brien, Miss
Peggy O'Brien. Miss J o Ellen
Diehl, Miss Debbie Cremeans.
Mrs. Donna Nease, Mrs.
Elizabeth Roush. Miss Milisa
Ri zer, &gt;trs. ~1 arga r et Blaetlnar, and Miss Ma uree n Hen-

Orr Honored

A potluck dinner to be
followed by a film on drug
abuse was planned for OcL. 27
when the executive committee of Lydia Circle of
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church mel recently at the
home of Mrs. William Baronick. The 6 p:m. dinner will
be for members of both
P om ero y

and

Chest er

churches. The film will be
shown at 7:30 p.m.

in business displa y windO\'r'S.

18th Celebrated
The 18th birthday of Ted
Lehew was observed Sunday
with a dinner party at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Davis.
A decorated cake centered
the table. Guests were Mrs.
Harold Johnson. Springfield;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lehew,
Debbie , Charlotte and Robin .
Columbus; Jyl Beaver , Middle port ; Mr . and Mrs. William
Lehew, John, Bill and Cheryl,
Pomeroy.

Chester

BASHAN - Thirty persons
attended a sur pri,se dinner
party giYen in honor of Paul Orr
by his wife and his friends at the
Orr 's co antry ho me near
Bashan . Among the invited
guests were members of the
Galloway Equipment Company.
Dinne r nJusic was. provided by
Mrs. O li ~e Weber
Pieces of a model bulldozer
were used as place cards which
were reassembled dw- ing the
dinner hour . Followi ng dinner
games were played.

'

Film Will Follow

News Notes

By CLARICE ALLEN
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Troop of
f ort Wayne, Ind., spent a week
wi th Mr. and Mrs. Purley Karr.
~lr . and Mrs. Troop and the
Karrs made a trip to the Sky
Line Drive and Blue Ridge
Parkwa y to th e Sm oky
Moun tai ns.
Mr s.
Mildred
f ra nk ,
--~-~...- -... Pomeroy, recently called on
Mrs . LeU1a Wood.
Mr. and Mrs. Ga ry Wolfe,
Columbus, spent a weekend
with their paren ts, Mr. and Mrs.
George Wolfe and Mr . and Mrs.
David Kobientz.
Fresh , Dried
Elmer Newell of Philadelphia
.
spent
t~e weekend wi th Mr. and
or Artiflcial
Mrs. Hobart Newell and Sheila.
Mr . and Mrs. Eldon Will.
Syracuse,
called on Mr . and
Se rving : Gallipoli s,
Pomeroy, Middleport
Mrs. Denzil Cleland Thursday

BeautifUl

Police Sanction
Dance at School

The Meigs County Jaycees
will sponsor a high school dance
par ty from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport with
the Jays emceeing .
The Jays have cleared it with
the Middleport Police Department that young people ma y
attend the dance if they go
straight to the dance and go
home immediately following it .
The clearance was obtained due
to an 8 p.m. curfew in effect in
Middleport.
Jones .
and family of Colwnbus spent a
recent weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Willis Frost and Billie
Jea n.
Mr. and Mrs. Green Ilde rton,
Wellston, are guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Purley Karr .
Mr . and
Mrs. f red
Haushalter, Ponti ac, Mich .,
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Willis frost.
Mrs. Curtis Wolf has retw-ned
home from
Parkersburg
hospital where she underwent
surgery .

a

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
The birthday of Mrs. Lee
Baughman was observed
recently with a celebration at
th e Baug hman horne .m
B db
Alte d'
b .d
lhr\ ury.d
~ ~g h esbl eds
ed tohnore guJesff' er us aMn
an elf son, e rey, were r.
and Mrs. William Fred Smith,
Sr. of Bra db ury, an d Mr. an d
Mrs. F re d HoIf man ao d
children, Beverly and David,
M'ddl
1 epor 1·

Fall Rower

Bobby joe Lawrence Surprised

Arrangements

Sunday on His Ninth Birthday

HARRISONVILLE - A
surprise birthday party was
held for Bobby Joe Lawrence
Sunday, Oct. 17 at 2 p.m. on his
ninth birthday at his home in
evenin g.
Ha rri sonville . Games were
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Fraley
played and prizes awarded to
the winners.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dares Arnold, Mrs. George
Hicks, Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Hysell , Bruce, Terry and
Norma Jean; Mr . and Mrs.
Jack King, Debbie, Jackie,
Timmy, Greg, Dick, Carla, and
Darla, all of Pomeroy ; Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Arnold, Mason, W.
Va.; Mrs. Paul Hill and Paul
Jr., Letart Falls; Mr. and Mrs.
Vincent Gheen, Harrisonville ;
Na ncy, Debbi e, Ka thy, Jo

Dudley's Aorist

&amp; Mason Co. W. va .

Twirler
Winners
Listed
.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, fi rst
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Materni ty vi~iling how-s 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles I.
Adkins, Gallipolis, a daughter ;
, Mr . and Mrs. William ArthwTaylor , Long Bo ttom, a
daughter ; Mr . · and Mrs.
Stephen Kent
Walburn ,
Jackson, a son ; Mr . and Mrs.
James L. Angel, Oak Hill, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Dean
Haryey, Radcliff, a son ; and
Mr. and Mrs. William Harrison
Wamsley, Hartfo rd , a son.
Discharges
Mrs . Jack Braley, Mrs.
James Caldwell and daughter,
Miss Mary Dowaard, Truman
Gobl e, Mrs. Oma Grant,
Harv ey Hall , Rand y Hall ,
Jeffrey Jordan, Charles Roush,
Mrs. J . Everett Saunders, Mrs.
Albert Shifflet, Mrs. Opie
Swiney , Mrs. Arthw- Whetstone,
Jr. and son, Charles Zerkle,
Mrs. Iva Stewart and John Paul

TEX HARRIOON COMING - Henry Frank said today
that there was still time to get reservations for the Meigs
County Farm Bureau annual meeting and dinner Thutsday,
Oct. 21. Tickets are $1.25 for adults and 75c for children .
Make reservations by calling the offices at Pomeroy, phone
992-2181. Entertainment will feature Tex Harrison and the
Valley Boys. Election of directors and state delegates will
also be held with county, state, and national resolutions being
considered. All members and the general public are cordially
invited. The dinner will be served at 7:26p .m. in the new
Meigs Local High School.
,
•

l.JJmbert Famt/y Reuntted Sunday
. of the late Mr. and
The fam1ly
Mrs. Everett Lambert was
reunited Sunda y at the home of
their
late parents on
H .
·n R d
arnsonvl e oa .
•
Attendmg were Mr . and Mrs.
Car I Mow-mng,
. Elyna
. ; Mr . an d
M
C . G'll
St
rs. ect1 . l og1y, even ,
Jeffrey and Lisa , Athens; Mr .
a nd Mrs. Kenneth Grover ,

.
Joyce and Jenmfer,
Lon g
Bottom · Mrs. Beverly Roush ,
Rodne / and Cheryl, Logan ;
Mrs. Helen Johnson, Janie Sue
d M G
Johnson, Mr . an . rs. ene
Lambert, Charolette, Sheryl,
. Ron Sm'th
and Dav1d;
1 , an d Mr.
H ·
ll
and Mrs. Harley amng, a
local Unable lo attendwas Mrs.
E!iu'beth Vaughan .

Winners of the NBTA sanctioned baton twirling contest
Satw-day at the Eastern High
School and sponsored by life
Meigs County Jaycees, are
announced by Contest Director
Mrs. Judy Riggs.
Winning the three high point
awards for the day were Cindy
Patterson, juvenile high point;
Diana Guthrie , junior high
point, artd Connie Rector, senior
high point, and also winner of a
$25 savings bond. Traveling the
farthest distance for th€ contes t
were Diana and Monica Koczon
from New York (410 miles).
First place winners in the
junior corps competition were
the Riggs Royal Kad..,ttes.
First place winners in the
Dance-Twirl and Twirling
Team Competitions were Pat's
High
Steppers
from
Buckhannon, W.Va. ; The Pink
Panthers from Coolville, and
The Riggs Royal Kad..,ttes.
Twirlers from the area
winning trophies in the contest
are listed below with the total
number won by each:
Diana Guthrie, 13; Connie
Rector ,12 ; Cindy Patterson, 10;
Oebbi~ Ford, 7; I..i.sa Kuhn, 7;
Libby Ahn Watkins, 5; Debbie
Scott, 4; Marcia Carr, 4; Juiia
Carpenter, 4; Louann Newell, 4;
Caplolia Cole, 4; Debbie Jef-

ville.
His sis ters decora ted the
table and room in a birthday
and halloween theme. Refreshments of cake, ice cream,
potato chips and Kool-Aid were
served by the hostess and

Quick" Service

hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie

King. Evening supper guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Bissell and Bruce, and Todd, of
Bashan, who presented Robert
with a birthday gift.

lfs Quick! Easy

~

: 01her Banking Hours 9 to J •
7

as usual on,._
,._

.FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS
POMEROY, OHIO

MemberFDI C
Member Federa l
Reserve System

WIN THE

FIMSHINGS

I#

BUDGET

BAKER

Dick Vaughan

from our

SHOP!
FUINITURI
MIDDUPOIT, 0.

992-3374

•

Ill

·. :: ·::

;. ' :; ':

. AT RAC!Nt .

A'P.. CROSS

•·::

. . ·:

Center Cut

Round

. .:·;

: :·

;. ;:; ;.,

:·

,. ;':. ;:

·.....

;.

•'

LYONS
... ' -: -: -: :-: ;

lb. . 69~

LEMONADE

2

6 oz.
cans

CHOC. MILK
qt

29~

Rilht
Reservect
To
limrt
. Quantities

'

DEPT•.~tORE

;:;:;:;:;:,.;:;:~;:P:::$:~:~}::~:/:~:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::·:·:

STAR KIST

PEACHES ::r: 2!~ 69~
DEL MoNrE

·TUNA 2

61h 0~
CANS

Produce Buys

No. l Quality

Yellow Onions

DEL

BakeiJ Buys

3

4 ~~s 99~

CABBAGE

89~

DEL MONTE

b~~ 29~

3

TOMATO JUICE

~C0__R_N~~~~~:~4~~M__9_9_~~-~--N-ew----------~
PEAS-

Buys

\

RUTLAND
.
.

WIENERS
2 ~~·9~

r

;::
":: ;: :

:

AT llUTLA~D

DEL MONTE

Frozen
Frosty Acres

;:

; :~:·:· :·:·:·;·:·:::·:·:·:·~+:i:;:;:;:;&lt;r;;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;;t:::::W': : ;:; :;.;:;.;:;.;:; ;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;i.j.

SUPERIOR
ALL M~AT

ARM ROAST

\:

,•,,

;:,

AT TUPPERS rLAIN:

CHUCK ROAST lb.59°

lb.

...
~

aq

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

JUICY-FIRST QUALITY

i

Fridays Only
~The Drive-In Wind!lW
&gt;t
1s Open
&gt;t 9 A.M. to 7 P. M.
&gt;t
( C!lntinuously)
:

...

Cut To Your Specifications

992-6346

:

8~

!

Government Inspected

Dale Little

i
~ *****
i* BANKING
DRIVE-IN

.. . With

to The ,

- ·~- ~

- Zoroaster

PRlCES ARE RIGHT!

:' If .I have to go'.

__ -

:

When in doubt, absta in.

&gt;t

&gt;t
**
&gt;t
*
"''**************

t' - - - - - - - '1

...._

FOR TODAY

VISITING PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Rllymond Zirkle
are here visiting their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duckworth and Mrs. Norma Zirkle.
:
Mr. Zirkle is now stationed with &gt;t
the U. S. Air force at Warner
Robins, Ga. A family dinner
was held on Sunday.

"custom meat cutting"

me
,. ._'_\••take
Shop ..

***-*************
A THOUGHT

5 to
Fridays .

The Shop

Pleasant Ridge Road
POMEROY,OHIO

fers, 4; Peggy Trussell, 3; Vi.cki
Spencer, 3; Teresa Carr, 3;
Rhonda Savel, 3; Suzy Goebel,
3· Gloria Barber, 3; Sandy
•
Hamilton, 2; Belinda Deeter, 2;
Joanne Fick, 2, and Mandie
Rose, Kaleen Millhone, Nancy
Ridenour, Janet Ambrose,
Kathy Newell, Betsy Amsbary,
Daielene Scott, Grella Miller,
Pam Kautz, Karen Smith, and
Teresa Edwards, one each.

&gt;t and

COMMITTEE CALLBD
Rosenbawn , Earl Thoma, Mr.
A meeting of the playg round and Mrs. Ben Rife, Mr. and
equipment committee of the Mrs. William Anderson, Mr .
Pomeroy Elementary PTA has and Mrs. Charles Gloeckner,
been called for 7 p.m. tonight. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Grueser, Mr .
Ellen, 'Timmy a nd Pamela Don Thomas is chairman of the and Mrs. Rlly Jewell, Mr. and
Lawrence.
committee. Serving with him Mrs. John Manley, Mr. and
The above presented Bobby are Gene Milch. Richard .Mrs. Pete Michaels.
gifts and money . Sending gifts fi•iititi.O.Iilililltiiiii-i.iitlllllll.il.llillii;,;,.;.;,;;,;,,;;;.;;;,;.__.,.
were Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Jeffers, Bobby and Rhonda ;
Pomeroy, and Mrs. King, Bill,
Frank, and Vince, Harrison-

' .

3

gt

46 oz.

Pumpkin bre~d. custard, pie, or cake. What's your pleasure?
During the past week we have had a variety of tried-and-true
pumpkin recipes come in - all sure to delight the man of tiie
house on a cool crisp fall evening .
Several recipes for pumpkin bread have been submitted and
. today we share those with you. Mrs. Ethel Smith of 1558 Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy, sent along her recipe :
Mix 1\1 cups cooking oil, 2 cups sugar, 2 cups pumpkin
together.Add 4 eggs, one at a time. Beat hard.
Sift 3 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 2 teaspoons
cinnamon, 2 teaspoons soda, \1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons pum]}
kin pie spice, and add to the first mixture.
.. Bake in six No. 2 ca"'l or 2 loaf pans for one hour at 350
degrees. Do not grease pans.
MRS. KATE WELL'S RECEIPT calls for chopped nuts.
PUMPKIN BREAD
3\1 cups flour, 2 teaspoons soda, 3 cups sugar, 1\1 teaspoons
salt, I teaspoon nutmeg, I \io teaspoon cinnamon.
Mix the above ingredients together in a large bowl and add : I
cup oil, 4 eggs, two-thirds cups water, 1 cup chopped nuts, 2 cups
of pumpkin.
·
Bake at 350 degrees for one hour. Makes three loaves.

A book fair will be held the
week of Nov. 4, according to
plans announced by Mrs .
Beverly Long at Monday night's
meeting of the Middleport PTA.
Books will be on display in the
school foyer for examination by
the children dw-ing the week.
Orders may be placed with the
PTA f!!embers.
The fair will mark "American
Education Week." First grade
parents will serve as greeters of

visitors to the school.
Mrs. Elaine Hart reported
membership at 123. The Nov. 4
meeting of the Meigs County
Council of Par ents and
Teachers was announced for
7:30 p.m . at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Fathers' Night will be observed at the No vember
meeting when fathers will coun t
double in the attendance contest,

After Ohio University junior
students were introduced,
Robert Morr is, principal ,
proposed testing second, third
and fourth graders to determine
their reading levels which
would be followed by a program
provirting six levels of reading
based on ability to read in
ungraded classroom work.
Morri s explained how this pian
can wor k to the advantage of
pupils.

Pomeroy School to be Open for Visitation
Pomeroy Elementary School
classrooms will be open to
visitors Monday through Friday
of next week in observance of
American ·Education Week.
The Pomeroy PTA will serve
refreshments all day on Wednesday to parents visiting the
classrooms. An award for the
highest percentage of visiting
parents one classroom will be

adequate support and initiate
given by the PTA.
American Education week ac tio n toward correc ting
has been held annually since problems or weaknesses in the
1921 under the auspices of the educational program.
Ed u c a t i o n Mrs. Gene Mitch, Pomeroy
Na t i o n a I
Association, the American PTA president, stressed the
Legion , the National Congress need for adults to become inof PTA and the U. S. Office of . formed of their school system,
Education , to encoura ge the areas where improvements
citizens to look intensively at are needed, a nd the optheir schools in order to provide porlunities to make needed
changes .

ANOTHER VARIATION ON pumpkin bread comes from
Mrs. Kathryn Mora, Chester Road. Kathryn says that it freezes
well and is good just pulled out of the freezer, sliced and served
when unexpected CQlllpany comes.
I \io cups sugar, 1 teaspoon soda, ¥• teaspoon baking powder,
:y, teaspoon salt, \1 teaspoon cloves, \io teaspoon cinnamon, 'h
teaspoon nutmeg, \io teaspoon allspice, one and two-thirds cups
flour.
Put all the dry ingredients in a bowl, mix together, make a
well and add :
'h cup cooking oil, one-third cup water, I cup pumpkin, and 2
well-beaten eggs.
Mix together good and pour into loaf pan. Bake for one hour at
350 degrees. Add \1 cup chopped pecans, if desired .
NEXT WEEK; Pumpkin cake, custards and pie. ·

Miss Mary Francis' kindergarten and Mrs. Jennifer
Butcher's second grade tied for
the room a ttendance banner.
The pledge to open the
meeting was given by the fourlh
grade rs of Mary An n
Daniscewski. The Rev. Robert
Bwngarner of Heath United
Methodist
Chu rch ga ve

'

Holsum

AT_

BREAD

29°

Expires 10-25-71
•

. wmt COUI'OII

'I

· Give A

presented by Dr . Albert
MacKenzie who gave a chal k
talk on the good and evil in each
of us.
Milford Hysell presented the
minutes of the previous meeting

'
'

Aoral Tribute
To Our Heroes

Dudley's Aon'sf

and the treas urer 's repor t was

Se rving : Ga IIi polis,

given by Mrs. Edwina Scott.

Pomeroy, Middleport

&amp; Ma son County ,

w., Va .

Ruom visitation was held at the ' - - - - - - - - - - '

Mrs. Lee Roush and childre n
of Logan were Sunday visitors
of -Helen Johnson.
Helen J ohnson , Beverly
Roush and children and Genna
Shumate were Sunday aftern oon visitors of Mrs. Berdie
Wyatt.
Weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr .
and Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
family and Mr . and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey and family of Albany.
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
Michelle of Rutland was
Monday visitor of Mrs. Howard
Thoma and Patricia .

3 ROOMS
NEW

FUR~ITURE

SJ49.95
$35.00 l&gt;own'Salance On
Convenient
Terms .

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W Va .

c

or

Social Calendar
WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Wednesday, home of Mrs. Paul
Casci, Middleport.
BOSWORTH Council 46 ,
Royal and Select Masons, 7;30
Wednesday at the Masonic
Temple .
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Qub, 2 pm. Wednesday at the
home of Mrr. Ben Philson,
0 - •
.....ctne . Mrs. o. B. St ou t to
review '"Since Silent Sjring."
Sesponse will be a wonder of
nature.
. _
WINDI NG TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. John Terrell, Mulberry
Heights.
BIG BEN D Neighborhood
meeting of the Fow- Rivers Girl
Scout Council, 9 a.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
leaders to present craft ideas.
THURSDAY
BRADBURY PTA, Thursday,
1: 30 p.m. Teachers will be
available to answer questions.
Parents urged to attend.
CLASS 12 Heath United
·
'
Methodtst Church, 7:30 Thursday at the chw-ch. Mrs. James
Jividen to have the program,
Mrs.. J ac k Bechtle the
devotiOns . Mrs. L. W. MeC
M Robert Rinehart
Mor~asJan;s.Gilkey and Mrs:
N
W land will be the
h or:;an ay
~A~s. PARTY and Style
Show, Thursday night at the
American Legion hall spon-

$1,200

Pledged For
Fire Truck

Split With
Backs &amp; Giblets

Prices Good Thru Set., Oct. 23rd.

We Are Happy To
Redeem Federal
Food Stamps

sored by the AUlUUary of Drew
Webster Post 39 . Door prizes,
refreshments.
BASHAN AUXILIARY, fire
department, toy party and ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " ' :
Chrisimas' decoration sale, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at fire house.
Public invi~d .
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club I : 15 p.m. Thursday. home of Mrs . Amos
Leonard; Mrs. Qilford Leifheit
to bave ·the program; Mrs.
Mark Grueser the contest.
Secret pals will be revealed.
MAGNOLIA CLUB, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs.
Herschel Rose, Minersville.
FRIDAY
P AST
M AT R 0 N S ,
Evangeline Chapter OES,
Friday, 7;30 p.m. home of Mrs.
Willis Anthony wi.th Mrs. Beth
• tb.agc:
Cowan , c&lt;&gt;-hostess, and Mrs.
Roma Hawkins , devotional
• lb.
~:~..
I
•
leader.
FlESH
SATURDAY
LEAN •
•
PRACTICE SESSION, Meigs
Pleasw-e Riders 4-H Club, Rock
•
.
Springs Farrgrounds Saturday,
1 p.m.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING Stiversville
.
'
Communi~ · Church, 2 p.m.
Sunday. Smgers welcome.
HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL
'd
s
Frl ay' 7 p.m. a1 yracuse
Elementary School. Games, fun
house, priZes, country kitchen.
Prizes for best costumes;
sponsored by PTA.

....

Fryer Legs • • lb. 59c Fryer Breasts • '"·69c: Fryer Thighs •
Fryer Drumsticks • • . • '•- 69~ Box of Chicken . • • • •
"Super-Right" Lamb Sale

Leg Of Lamb ~~~~~~~I
Lamb Shoulder Roast •
lamb Shoulder Chops
•

Lamb Rib Chops .. "·$1.59
Lamb Loin Chops .. o.$1.79

'129
• lb. 7t
Ground Beef
Braunschweicer • • • lb.gc:

lb •

I do not believe. any good
can come from that meetbng.
I pray for him.
- Paul Cardinal Yu-pin of
Taiwan , on Presid e nt
Nixon's forthcoming trip
to Red China.

BELTONE

bat

• •
I

. ,._89c

•

3-lb.

c:an

Lamb Stew Breast .. "· 19c:
Lamb Patties .......... ,. 59c:

lb. fit
Por kCh ops
Pork Roast .~~e;:;~~ . . . . lb.74c
Smoked Picnics • . • . '"-~'
Sliced Bacon •L;.;~~o. . 2lb. s1n

Fall Harvest Produce Buys!

YGRAPES

pkr-

lb.

JONATHAN APPLES
FRESH BROCCOLI •
SOUTH'ERN YAMS •

•

• •
• • • bunch]t)c
• • •

jumbo
rolls

A&amp;P BRAND WHOLE or

• • • •

ANNPA&amp;E

Gelatia Desserts • •
or
Bir~s Eye V:UO:ES • • · 3 5100

=

CAULIFLOWER. BROCCOLI

BRUSSELS SPROUTS

SLICED BEETS • •
GOLDEN CORN • • •
GREEN BEANS • •
BATHROOM TISSUE
COLBY CHEESE ••
PANTY HOSE s::ce •

Vienna Sausage
Ahoy Detergent
PINK LIQUID

A&amp;P WHOLE KERNEL or CREAM STYLE

W~eat

Bread -. •
Twi1 Rolls • • • • • 3pkr•-lt
Spanish lar Cake

BELTONE

Ken-L-Ration : .

.,15'/J-or.W,·.
!
.
I I

.,.

·"

Heinz Ketchup

49C

c.,...

.

A&amp;P .~:l~~~~T Drinks

49C

•

•

Facial Tissues • • • 4..... s1cx
Non-Dairy Creamer • • 1:"69•
of !00

A&amp;P BRAND

1

VACUUM PACK

-chase &amp;Sanborn Coffee ~ 51 8~
SOFT
Margarine • • • • 3 1-lb. '10(
A&amp;P

....to

Halloween Candy!
•

Harvest Mix :.N:e • • .~.
Hershey Jr. Bars • . :=. 79'
footsie Roll Pops • IT-oo.79c:
Boyer Mallo Cups • ,.. 69c:
7ftc:
Leaf Bubble Gum

pkg.99c

1

Pkl.

..

pkr.

3 89C
-=-=

.3::89'

• •

A&amp;P BRAND

A pledge of $1 ,200 to the
A&amp;P FRENCH STYLE
Rutland Fire Department on
JANE PARKER CRACKED
the purchaile of a new truck was
made by the Firemen's
•
Auxiliary at a meeting Tuesday
SO .SOFT
JANE PARKER BROWN AND SERVE
Will Be At
night at the hall.
To raise the money, plans
La Sa lie Hote I
were made for several lund
Middleport, Ohio
JANE PARKER
raising projects, including a
on
KRAFT
traditional turkey dinner on
Thursday, Oct. 21
• •
Nov . 18 at the Rutland
From
Elementary School and a food
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
stand at the Thelma Michael To repair and service
MELLOWMOOD - SHEER STRETCH
sale in Rutland, Oct. 30.
hearing aids.
The Auxiliary plans to have Batteries and supplies
1
the $1,200 for the firemen by for all makes for sale.
Dec. 1.
Mellowmood Pantyhose ~~~~ ~cc
•
The group also voted
We will be glad to give
unanimous support to the
hll••
tuberculosis levy, a .65 renewal you a free hearing lest
J~g
.
to be on the ballot next month. with the latest Bellone
The traveling prize donated Electrllnic equipment.
by Mrs. Howard Birchfield was
If hearing is your
won by Mrs. Bob Bishop. The
problem Bellone is
next meeting of the group was
JANE PARKER
eot.DIN, SU$1,1110
plcp.
the answer
announced for Nov. 16 with Mrs.
oJ CINNAI&gt;!ON
Bruce Davis and Mrs. Merle
Davis as the hostesses. Tl)e
IIICII.:.: Yolt1ablo
CKII:Illljl
~-•Y•luelole Caopoa
· - - Valoalllo C:oopooii:IIICII=I'!
traveling priZe will be provided
by Mrs. Merle Davis.
Mrs. Charles Barrett and
Mrs. Birchfield served refresh·
Hearing Aid Center
ments to those named and Mrs.
32·01.
WITH
AlL· pkg. of
r~1~
WITH
THIS
VARIETIES
6
COU,ON
Kenneth Michael, Mrs. Jerry
ca•s
THIS
. battle
COUPOft
504 Tenth St.
COU,ON
Eads, Mrs. Bill Brown, Mrs.
. Huntington, W.Va.
Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
Good Th•u Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
Maxine Dyer, MrS. Russell
You• Friendly A&amp;P Store.
Y011' Frior.dly A&amp;P St.,e.
Ph~:~ne 525;7221
y..,. Friendly A&amp;~ Storo.
Little, Mrs. Archie McKinney,
:.:::1-~~ Por Fl•tly =-:~mil klt.-:IILO.o Per Fo•ily -::.:~• ICI.:.:-=tOat Per Famliy ICIICIII::III
and Mrs. Dick Foley.
. ...._ _ _ _ _ _ _..

Hearing Aid
Service Center

• '"·99'
lb.59c

ARMOUR

AHNPA&amp;E

Ecc Noo41es

•

I

QUAOTEREO LOIN
SLICED-II• Hb. AVG. PK6.

California Roast • • •
Cube Steaks

25 99

....

FRESH DONUTS

.... HOllE•
COFFEE
Big 3 Mkls.
$}
09
10 OZ. JAR ONLY

Whole Wheat or
Honey Meal

devotions, and the progrCJm was

concl usion of the mee ting.

Wolfpen

ggc

YOU BUY A_lO~OZ.· JAR OF

~~I

October·25th
Veterans Day

Whole Bagged

APPLE CIDER

WITH 'THIS COUPON WHEN

.I

Book Fair Planned by Middleport PTA

Everybody's Favorite

cans

I

I

-=-=• Yaloahlo Coupoo
Robin Hood Flour

EIICIICII

25

lb.

bag

$4 99

I

WITH

cJ~~~N

plqo.
• of 1110

~--Yalualllo Caupoo

~-

-=-tEll

Ajax Detergent
10,

OFF . 19-oz.
LAIEl
pkg.

, ,_C

'f~\~

COUPON

Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. Ai
Your Friendly /'IP Storo.
Your Friendly A&amp;P Sto•e.
be.:.:~ One Per Fomlly ICIICLI:ai k-ICitO~o Par hmily c:.=-:.1
Good Thru Sot., Oct. 23rd. At
I

•

�...

--~ ,

..
•'' .

I

::~~d~~~t ga~e is scheduled K

Friday &amp; Saturday
October 21-13
R. P. M.
(Revolutions Per Minute)

I Color
Ann Margaret
Anthony Quinn

" R"

FRANKENSTEIN
MUST BE
DESTROYED
(Technicolo r)
Peter Cushing
Veronica Carlson

" M"

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

c Homecoming

!\'Irs. Cunningham
Died on Saturday

Slated Friday
The 1971 homecoming at
Kyger Creek High School will be
held Friday, Oct. 22. Activities
begin wi th a parade slated for 7
p.m.
Various school clubs and
classes are busy preparing their
entries. The homecoming queen
will be crowned at ceremonies
beginning at 7:30p.m.
Senior contestants are Shelly
Hall , daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Ja y Hall , Jr., Cheshire;
Rosalee Reese, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Herma n Reese,
Cheshire, and Shelia Springer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Springer, Rt. 1.

JEJEJE
TRIPLE E RANCH
Gallipolis, Ohio

CHAROLAIS SALE
12:00 NOON
SATURDAY
OCT.
23, 1971
'
'

Gallipolis. The junior attendant
will be Terry Hall, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall, Jr. ,
Cheshire, sophomore attendant
is Kandy Gindlesberger,
daughter of Mr and Mrs.
Marvin Gindlesberger, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, and the freshma n
addendant is Kim Taylor,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Taylor, Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
After the crowning of the
queen , the Bobcats will battle
the Alexander Spartans.
Highlight of the evening will
be the Homecoming Dance in
the high school gym. "The
Fox," a rock group, will provide
. the music.
GOP MEETING SET
PT. PLEASANT - Plans
were finalized for a Republican
meeting Thursday evening and
other activities over the next
few months were scheduled by
the Republican Women 's
Organization Tuesday evening.
Mrs . C. R. Hite, Area Director
from Huntington, will be the
guest speaker Thursday at 7:30
p.m. in the courthouse annex.

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
21t E. 2nd
Pomeroy
?hone 992-5428

CAROLINE EE1 (5-20-61)
The 1st EEE Fo un dation Charolais cow

.. She Sells.

SELLING

Mrs. Lucille cunningham, 69,
of 195 Builer Court, Akron,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Saturday in Akron General
Medical Center.
Born in Syracuse, Mrs.
Cunningham lived in Akron 30
years. She was a member of the
Ca lvary United Methodist
Church.
She is survived by her
husband , George ; a son,
Joseph, of Copley, o., a
daughter, Mrs. Jean Fuentes,
Pueblo, Colo.; a brother, Ernest
Lallance, of Middleport; four
sisters, Mrs. Buena P!arr and
Mrs. Esther Delbarre both of
Pennsylvania; Mrs. Margaret
McDowell, Columbus, and Mrs.
Helen Smith Ca nton· six
'
'
grandchildren, and a great·
grandchild.
Services were held Tuesday
afternoon at the Adams Funeral
Home in Akron . Burial was in
Greenlawn Cemetery there .
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS : Mrs . Oma
Shelines, Point Pleasant;
Robert Jenkins, Leon ; Lois
Leport, Point Pleasant; Derrick
Cremea ns, Rutland; Mrs .
Thomas Jones, Cheshire, and
Whalen Jones, Point Pleasant.
. DISCHARGES : Mrs . Monty
Bass, Delores Cooper, Billy
King, Helen Wheeler, Edna
Litchfield, Robert Jenkins, Jeff
McCallister, Nancy Sa)'l'e, Mrs.
Arl Allen, Cynthia Anthony,
Mrs. Bruce McClintic, Robert J.
Chattin .
SPEAKER ASSURED
'!'he Rev. Dale McClurg will
speak at the Apple Grove
United Methodist C hur~h every
Sunday night at 7:30 until
further notice.

fU ~ ~U[ ICR$ ( ... oli )

. ONEIDA 18/e STAINLESS
So iT1 ·1 011(1(1"" .

!&gt;ell

•toohn1. oil ¥tn&gt;l11t

OM ... ni O.. II I I'NI '0 if&lt;'WI&lt;tl,

OWNED BY
RALPH HUTCHINS · Raymondville, Tex .

The largest number of B-71 calves ever
·offered at public auction.
For
*Large number 3-1 B-71 combinat ions.

* Herd Bull Prospects by B-71 .
* Large number of Fe males carrv B-71 service (P.B. thru

1/2 Bloods.)
*Dams ol 4 ol the Champion Carcass steerssired by 8·11
sell.
*Truly a B-71 BONANZA.

OTHER FEATURED HIGHLIGHTS
wlerge &lt;election .of females bred to FEROZ HECTOR , .
sire of the $25 ,536.00 Grand Champion Sleer over all
breeds 1970 Ohio Stale Junior Fair. ·

JIM COLLIVER
"Sales Manager"
Owners: Emerson E. Evans
O.niel E. Evans

Everybody on the Pad
NEW YORK - A VETERAN POUCEMAN who admitted
being on the take for years before becoming an undercover agent
for the Knapp Commission testified that every plainclothesman
he knew was accepting payoffs. He told a tale of police corruption
stretching through the department Tuesday.
Patrolman William Phillips, who is being guarded 24 hours a
day because of his undercover work, testified at the second day of
public hearings before the commission. · Testimony resumes
today. "I never knew a plainclothesman yet that was In plainclothes for more than two months that wasn't on the pad,"
Phillips said.
,

Bond I'v 0 'J'
..teited
1

Goeglem".

.
.
Buddy McKmney, 54, Middleport, forfeited a $30 bond
posted on an intoxication
charge when he failed to appear
before Middleport Mayor C. 0 .
Fisher Tuesday night.
Fined during Tuesday night
were Jerry D. Swart&gt;, 18,
Middleport, $15 and costs,
reckless operation of a motor
vehicle; Ronald D. Thomas, 21,
Norwood , $15 and cos ts ,
reckless operation; (Bumper)
Craig, Middleport, $10 and
costs, disturbing the peace, and
Danny M. Griffith, 31,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, use of a
weapon in a careless manner.
*~~::::::::::::!~~::::%~~:::::~-:::::::::~

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio extended outlook
Friday through Sunday.
Partly cloudy and cooliDued mUd Friday. Chance of
showers late Saturday and
Sunday and not so warm
Sunday. Highs Friday In the
70s droppiDg by Sunday to the
60s. Lows In the early moroiDg In the 50s ·dropping by
Sunday to the 40s.
.;, . .-:·.·:-:-:- . ':-··--=· .
CLUB TO MEET
. The Rutland Garden Club will
meet at the home of Miss Ruby
Diehl at 7:30 p.m. Monday .
There will be installation of
officers and each member is to
bring two gifts for the therapy
program at the Athens Mental
Health Center in November.
The gifts are to be wrapped.
There will also be a bulb exchange.

(Continued from page I )
brother, who was running the
mine," Howell said. "They said
OK ."

ChrU.tmas

.

The sheriff said the miners
told Collins if he did not shut
down his mine "they were going
to burn it down ."
"Mr. Collins shut it down, "
Howell reported.
Howell said he took a pistol
away from one miner who was
talking with Collins. " I
unloaded it and gave it back to
him when the talks were over,"
the sheriff said.
Late Tuesday night the
miners were believed to have
finally gone home.
Ohio's 9,000 union miners
joined the United Mine Workers
Union in a nationwide strike
Oct. I against the soft coal industry.
A union miner from Caldwell,
Ohio who did hot take part in the
cara van said he sympathizes
with the aims because "what's
the use of the non-union mines
reaping the harvest while we
are doing the fighting for it?"
"These are the old hard core
coal miners who have fought for
everything they got and will
fight until it's all over with, "
Isaac McDonald, 58, a Central
Ohio Coal Co. miner who is on
strike said from his home in
Caldwell.
"I absolutely agree with what
the miners in the caravan are
doing," he said. "I feel sure the
strike will be over by the end of
October and then everything
will be all right."

VVilliam Jlnderson.
will start at 7 p.m.
Children's Home - Mrs.
Committees are:
Tickets - Mrs. Tom Grueser, Kenneth Braun.
chairman ; Mrs. Roger Dillard, PIDg Pong Toss - Mr. and
Mrs . Mary McAngus, Mrs. Mrs . Kenny Harris, chairmen ;
Mr~ . and Mrs. John Moon, Mr.
Florence Bearhs.
Pollc'e - Tony Taylor, Jed and Mrs. Homer Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Harris.
·
Webster.
Tic
Tac
Toss
-Mr.
and
Mrs.
Publicity In School - Lela
Bruce Zirkle, chairmen; Mr.
Curtis.
and
Mrs. Terry Phalin, Mr. and ,
Sweep Shop - Mrs. Earl
Thoma, ·Mrs. Bob · Lewis, co- Mrs. Don Jet!, Mr. and Mrs. _
chairman; Mrs.
Harley Danny Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs.
Johnson, Mrs. Charles Legar, Richard Jones.
Mrs. Carl Roach, Mrs. Frank RIDg Toss - Mr. and Mrs ..
Richard Rosenbaum, chairCasto, Mrs. Judy Jewell.
men;
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus :
Cider aod Donuts - Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Eichinger, chair- Browning, Mr. and Mrs. George
men ; Mr. and Mrs. George Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Nash, Mr. and · Mrs. Gene Kennedy.
McKinney, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Fortune Tellers - Margaret
Follrod, Barbara Riggs.
Warner .
Five Cent Fish Pond - The
Pop - Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Rev.
andMrs. W. H. Perrin, Mr.
Sisson, chairmen; Mr. and Mrs.
James Wisecup, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Larry Baker, Mr. and
John Manley, Earl Thoma, Mrs. Harold Norton, Mr. and
Charles Legar, Gene Mitch, Mr. Mrs. Ivan Wood.
Balloons - Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Pete Michael.
, Teo Cent Fish Pond - Mr. Orval Wiles, chairmen; James
and Mrs. Wllliam McDaniels, Soulsby, Bob Lewis.
chairmen ; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jail House - Mr. and Mrs.
Young, Mr. and Mrs. Frank James Hemsley, chairmen; Mr.
Porter, Mr . and Mrs. Pat Duffy. and Mrs. Larry Thomas, Mr.
Pop Bottle Toss - Mr . and and Mrs. Sam Fry, Mr. and
Mrs . James Wamsley, chair- Mrs. Simon Johnson.
LolJlpop Tree - Mr. and Mrs.
men; Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Art Hess, Robert Couch, chairmen; Mr.
and Mrs . Howard English, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eason.
Pocket Ladles - June Glaze, and Mrs. Richard Rawlings,
Lois Burt, Margaret Andrews. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kovalchik.
Peooy Pitch - Mr . and Mrs. " Country Store - Mrs. John
William Woods, chairmen; Mr. Murphy, chairman; Mrs . Diana
and Mrs. Pat Wood, Mr. and Hawley, Mrs . Keithann
Mrs.
Gene
Mrs. Charles Gloeckner, Mr. Whitlatch ,
Houdashelt, Mrs . Richard
and Mrs. Larry Morrison.
Ball Toss - Mr. and Mrs. Rupe, Mrs. Evelyn Thomas,
Karl Krautter, chairmen; Mr. Mrs. Maxine Burns, Mrs. Betty
and Mrs. John Blaettnar, Mr. Triplett.
and Mrs. Dwight Cullums, Mr. Custodian - Austin Philllps.
and Mrs. James Owens.
Spook House - Mr. and Mrs.
Ken McCullough, Mr. and Mrs.

Lillie Rood of
Wellston Dies
· Mrs. Lillie Rood, 77, of
Wellston died at Holzer Medical
Center at 5 p.m. Monday where
she had been a patient 10 weeks .
She is survived by her
husband, Rev. Perry Reed,
Wellston, who is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center: four
datJilhters, Mrs. Earl (Helen)
Wether holt, Huntington , W.
Va .; Miss Dorothy Rood ,
Washington, D. C.; Mrs. James
(Hope) Ratliff, Oak Hill, W.
Va., and Mrs . Mary Jones,
Detroit, Mich., and six sons,
Perry R. Rood, Oak Hill, W.
Va .; Joe M. Rood, Hyattsville,
Md .; Rev. George Rood ,
Wellston ; James Rood, Ray ,
Ohio; J . M. Rood, Nashville,
Tenn ., and Ferrell Rood,
Columbus, Ohio. ·
Four children preceded her in
death.
Services will be at the Simons
Funeral Home, Wellston at 10
a.m . Thursday morning .
Friends may call after 4 p.m.
Wednesday.

Devoted To The lntered• Of TM Meigs·MIJMJn Area

: VOL XXIV

SUIT FILED
A suit for partition cl real
estate has been filed in Meigs
Couniy Common Pleas court by
Faye P. Watson, Rt. 1, Reed·
sville, against James A. Watson, a minor, Reedsville, eta!.
The property is in Tuppers
Plains.
TWO PLACE SALE
The Future Homemakers of
America at Eastern High
School will sponsor a bake sale
Saturday, at Gaul's Market,
Cbester, and Lyons Market at
Tuppers Plains from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m.

ure

A new barn filled with 2,000
bales of hay .and small farm
equipment was destroyed and a
Rutland fireman , Dennis
McKinney, was Injured in a fire
Wednesday night.
Rutland firemen were called
to the Raymond Cotterill farm
at 9:45 p. m. Wednesday when
the fire was discovered. The
barn was destroyed but firemen

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Roy Charles Lyons, 18,
Pomeroy Rt. 2, and Mar\ha

terills had some insurance, but
how much coverage will be
provided is not known.
The barn, still not fully b!till,
was started last spring. The
Cotterills lost a barn on the
same foundation eight years
ago.
Threatened also during the
blaze was a Meigs Local School
District bus which is driven

daily by Mrs. Cotterill. It was
parked near the barn but was
moved by Mrs. Cotterill when
she discovered that, "It was
getting pretty warm." The
Cotterills stayed at the scene
until about 2:30 a. m. to insure
lliat the fire did not break out
again and reach their other
storage building.
lrijured during the fire was

Dennis McKinney when a
coupling broke loose on the fire
hose and struck·him in the head.
The Pomeroy E-R squad met a
vehicle enroute with McKinney
on Route 143 and transported
him to the Holzer Medical
Center where he was put iD
traction. He was to have x-rays
today.
Although the cause of the
blaze is unknown, it is believed
that it could have started from
faulty electrical wiring.

Coal in

THIS IS THE ancient Middleport Fire Department headquarters which will be replaced by .
anew structure if a 1.2mlll bond issue is approved by voters of the community on Nov. 2.

~~~~~~Fire Company

the Ollio General Assembly:
SENATE
Bill Introduced
58446, Secrest, Appropriates
$173 million tor construcfiQ!l

strike that hs shut down most of
the nation's coal production
appeared headed for a prolonged stalemate today, with
contract talks in a state of
collapse and both sides conceding they are deadlocked.
The strike by 80,000 United
Mine Workers members at soft
coal operations in 20 states was
in its 21st day.
Federal Mediator Robert
Donnahoo said he would try to
get the two sides back to the
bargaining table, but union and
management sources said prospects appeared slim for an
early settlement.·
UMW President W.A. "Tony "
Boyle and officials of the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association (BCOA) met for
two hours Wednesday , then said
they were at an impasse and
recessed the talks.

Ladies Make Old Fashioned Apple Butter
EILEEN CLARK, MARY PICKENS AND JANICE LAWSON, 1-r, were kept busy one day
lut week when the S)'l'acuse Ladles Auxlllary began making apple butter. The delicious
product Is being sold for 90c a quart or 45c a pint with jars; without jars, IOc more. At righl,
Mrs. Edith Hood who is85 years old, does herbittohelp,

and Improvements of highways :

Bills Pused
Am . HB959, Welker, Prohibits
use of artificial lights from behlcles to ltx:ate wild animals
after 10 p.m. Vote : 25-0.
Am . HB815, Hail, Makes it
legal for community mental
h&gt;alth and retardat ion boards
to accept gifts or bequests.
Vote: 23-0.
HOUSE
Bills Possed
Am . SB 303, Secrest, Author·
izes Wildlife Division chief to

I

I

ByUDitedPr.,lnlernatlonal

Supreme Court Demeaned

Am . SB 406 , Weisenborn, Au"

CAMJIIUDGE, MAS'!. -PRESIDENT Nixon demeaned the
&amp;lpreme Q)urt by Including ''plainly un~llfled penons" on his
list of six possible nominees to the court, IICcordlng to tbe dean of
the Harvard Law School and 34 other faculty members.
The legal professors said "at least half" of the six "do not
meaS\D'e up to the minimum standarda we think the nation can
expect and should demand of a Supreme Court nomination." None
of the six, who Nixon has asked the American Bar Association to
review, was mentioned by name. In addition to Dean Albert M.
Sacks, other signers Included Profs. Livingston Hall, Louis Losa,
Frank I. Michehnan, Atistin W. Scott and James Vorenburg.

thor izes minor to give con sent to diagnosis and treatment

at drug-related conditions.
Vote: 52-36.
Am. SB 411. Armstrong, Requires sher iff. Instead of cou nty
auditor, to determine sufflclen~Y of l unk yard fences or plantIngs. Vote : 71 · 16.

TREAT NIGHT SET
Trick or treat night In Tuppers Plains will be observed
Saturday, Oct. 30, from 7 to 8
p.m.

Appeal in Kent Case Fails
CINCINNATI-DIE U. S. SlX11I Circuit Court of Appeals
has dlsnlssed an appeal of a federal court order to destroy the
Portage COIIlly grand Jury report on the Kent state University
&lt;iaturbances. The appeal was filed by Seabury Ford of Aurora, a
speciJI prO!tCUtor in the case.
The ruling let stand a ruling by U. S. District Court Judge
William Thomas In Cleveland last Jan. 28 that tbe report be
destroyed, but the 25indlctments were allowed to let stand. The
Q)urt agreed that the appeal should be dismissed because none of
the appellants had any further standing in the case ber~•se their
functiolls as agent• of the state had ended.

Connally Wrong Side of Country
•

WASHINGTON - THE RUSH LEGISLATION President
Nixon requested to help control the economy after the wage-i)rice
freeze end suffered a temporary delay In the House today, with
TreaBW'Y Secretary John B. Connally partly to blam~. Connally
had been Invited to -explain Nixon's legislative requests to the
House Banldng.Commlttee, but showed up in San Francisco for a
bankers' convention Instead.

Not Wrapped Up, Yet
UNITED NA110NS- U.S. AMBASSADOR George Bwtb said
today the Arnerlcan campaign to aav~ Nationalist China's seat In
the United Nations is making headway, but is not "all wrapped liP
and tied with&amp; pretty pink ribbon." The U. N. General Ass ttbly
plan1 to wind up dlsct1881on on the Issue by tonight with a vote
expected Monday. Backers of the move to seat the Red Chinese
have I"JIIed out a Saturday meeting.
·

Back Door into Busing
VVASHINGTON (UP!)- Five getting new life through the efHouse Educatlon Committee .forts of the administration and
'members charged Wednesday congressional supporters·.
that an administration -backed The two-year proMram would
measure to help schools meet help schools pay the costs of
the costs of desegreation is In desegregation ordered by a
court or federal agency or
reality. a school buiing bill,
"This is clearly a ·busing achieved voluntarily.
bill," said Republicans John M. The five Education Committee .
Ashbrook of Ohio, Earl Land- Critics made their objecUons In
~rebe of Indiana and J~~ek minority views contained in a
Kemp .of New York . . ,
. committee report on !he bill reThe measure lhould be call- lease(i Wednesday.
ed the "back door IChool bus President Nixon last month
financing blll of 1971," tu~ld aakect the EduCation Committee
Democrata James G. O'Hara to ban use of any o! the money
and WiUlarn D. Ford, both of In the bill for busing of'studenta.
Michigan.
.
The amendment was defeated
The ilouse Rules Committee by It narrow 19-16 vote in the
voted last week not to consider committee but is certain to be
the $1.5 billion measure this off~(ed again if the measure
year, but the bill appeara Ill be ·t'faohes, the House floor ,

Winner
STOCKHOLM '(UP!) - Pablo
Neruda, Chilean poet, Marxist
politician and diplomat, today
won the 1971 Nobel literature
prize, the Swedith Academy
announced.
The 67-year-old poet, who
serves as President Salvador
Allende's ambessador to Paris,
won the prize for "his poetry
that with the action of an
elemenlal force brings alive a
continent's destiny and
dreams.u
The award is worth $90,000
this year.
Neruda, considered by many
to be the greatest poet ever
produced by the Latin
American continent, had been a
candidate for many years.

Arthur Lundqvist, a Swedish
Marxist poet and novelist and
member of the 18-member
academy, has had Neruda as
his candidate for a decade,
academy sources said.
The Nobel Prize winner is
best known for his gigantic
poem
"Canto General"
(General Song), published in
11190· The poem, which runs into
~vera!
hundred pages,
describes
the
volcanic
geography and history of Latin
America from ancient times up
until today.

"The fire department belongs
to the people and we will be
doing everything we can to keep
llie cost of the new statton down. '
It is very possible that the
yearly cost per taxpayer could
end up less than what he has
been paying, but we need the
bond issue lo back us up so we
can get started .
"One of the ways the
mill bond issue for a fire truck. deparbnent hopes to hold down
" The Middleport Fire the overall cost per taxpayer is
Department is asking for a new through the several hundred
bond issue Nov. 2nd, for a 1.2 dollars that have been raised
mill, or 50 cents per thousand through projects and donations.
valuation more than what tax · After the bids are in for the
payers have been paying. For building this money will be
the average property owner applied on the project. The
that will be a total of $3.90 per department will pledge itself to
year, or an increase of $1.60. raise more funds to keep the
"The bond issue will be used costs per taxpayer as low as
to build and equip a new fire possible .
"The new bond issue amounts
station . Middleport has never
built a fire station in its 151'&gt;-year to a total of 12 cents per $100 or
history . The present garage, $1.20 per $1,000 valuation. A
small and inadequate, dates taxpayer can figure his actual
back to the 1800s . when fire cost by referring to his lax
wagons were drawn by horses. duplicate ."

Explains Issue
The impact of a bond issue 1.2 mills - to be voted up or
down in Middleport at the Nov. 2
election for the benefit of the
fire department was explained
today.
Money produced by such a
levy would provide for the
construction of a new fire
deparbnent headquarters.
Pertaining to the issue, the
Fire Department's Bond Levy
Information Committee said :
"In June of this year when
Middleport taxpayers paid their
real estate lax approximately
$2.30 of that was the final
payment of a seven tenths of a

''There's been no agreement

r---------------------------, M •
! News ••• in Briefs ! arx~st
p oet IS
•

issue wildlife stamps. Vote: BJ0.

----------------------~-----.l

EllenBaker,'J8, Pomeroy, Rt. 2. . .

on the scene until about 12:31 a.
m. prevented the blaze from
spreading to a nearby building
which housed a tractor and
other equipment.
Destroyed in the new barn
besides hay were saddles, a
small garden iractor, bridles
and other small equipment. The
dollar amount of the losses had
not been .set today. The Cot-

A

ELBERFELDS

C OF C TO MEET
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. in the social rooms at
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elecltic Company.

TEN CENTS

•

glance at act ivi ty Tuesda y In

Shop at Elberfelds In Pomeroy- Week Days 9:30 To 5:00
- Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 To 9. See the many new
arrivals all over the store. Housewares - Decorator and
Alarm Clocks - Giftware - Novelties - Dinnerware .
Glassware- Cutlery - Mens Wear- Boys Wear- Sheets Towels - Table Covers - Hosiery - Handbags - Gloves Jewelry - Belts - Cosmetics - Umbrellas - Wigs . Angel
Treads - Womens and Girls knit accessories . Art
Needlework -· Stationery - Cameras and Supplies .
Watches- _Clocks- Binoculars- Greeting Cards - Lingerie
on the mam floor. Womens Ready to Wear. Girls Ready
to Wear - Infants Ready 'to Wear. Complete Infants
Department- Luggage- Draperies and Curtains- Kirsch
Drapery hardware - Cushions - Pillows . Dress fabrics Simplicity patterns- Sewing Notions- Cling-Throw Rugs
- Bedspreads - Blankets - Mattress Toppers . Hoover
Sweepers - Complete Music Department - Pianos _
Radi~s - Stereos - TV's on the 2nd floor. Living Room
Furmture- Bedroom Furniture - Dining Room Furniture
- Appliances- Living Room Tables -'Lamps - Pictures _
Infants Furniture- Mattresses and Box Springs. Desks_
Grandfather Clocks - Easy Chairs - Magazine Racks .
Smokers - Room Dividers - Carpet. Also see the many
new arrivals in floor coverings at the warehouse on
Mechanic Street. Do your Christmas to~shopping now
while se~ections a.re complete at Elberf Ids Toy Store
loc~ted m the middle bloc~ on Main treet. Prompt
delivery to your home- Sensible credit all over the store.

PHONE 992·2156

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 133

Legislative
Briefs
CO LUMBU S ( UPI ) -

Increasing cloudiness and
little change in temperature
tonight with low In the ~to low
60s. Friday considerable
cloudiness and chance of
showers and high in the upper ·
80s to mid 70s.

The first American to win the
Nobel Prize for literature was
Sinclair Lewis in 1930.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thordsen,
Portola Valley, Calif., announce
the birth of their first child

INSPECTION SET
Inspection will be held when
Meigs Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, meets at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.

UtiiiN ~! oonleH 01 lh

C:Omoltme nto

I)

patients, according to Robert Jennings, Wayne County Coroner,
In the northeastern corner of the state.
"Some of them were found in bed and others on th~oor and it
looks like most of them weren't aware of what happened," said
fireman Larry Martone, brother of Fire Chief Vince Martone.
''There wasn't any Indication that they tried to get out."

RALLY SET
The Eastern
Athletic
Boosters will stage a pep rally .
at the high school at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. The band will be on
hand and a, wiener roast will
follow . The public is invited.

TARTARIAN IR. B-71

*

(Continued from page

'

,....--FEATURING--.....

* Approximateiy 60 8·71 calves &lt;ell.
10 6·71 open heifers sell.

News ... in BriefS

.

~

LARGE SELECTION - COWS

&amp; CALVES &amp;
COWS REBRED - BRED FEMALES - OPEN
HEIFERS - HERD BULL PROSPECTS
% FRENCH - P.B. THRU
h BLOODS

any time after 12:30 p.m. on the
day of the party.
All games and prizes will be
at the school available for the
committee chairmen on party
day. School patrons who would
like to help with the party, not
named to a committee, but who
would work may contact Mrs.
Gene Mitch , 992-3478, Mrs .
Soulsby, 992-2377 or Mrs. Troy
Ohlinger, 992-3332. The party

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ Tracy
on Oct.
16. ·GrandparentsLee
are Mr.
and Mrs.
Frank
Rovere, the former Frances
Elberfeld, of Portola Valley,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Thord-.;;
sen of New Jersey. The greatgrandfather is Alfred Elberfeld
of Pomeroy.
l l 'l'l

130- HEAD- 130
BULLS &amp; FEMALES

Mrs. James Soulsby today
named commi !lees for the
annual Halloween party of the
Pomeroy elementary school-Thursday, Oct. 28, at·the school.
Each chairman is responsible
for setting up and tearing down
the booth and also must contact
each member of his respective
committee.
All booths will be in the school
auditorium and may be set up

.I

Weather.

• Now You Kno~

'

BUENOS AIRES (UP!)
Amfrica's Bobby Fischer appeared well on the way today
to challenging the stranglehold
Russian gra ndmasters have
held in the world chess championship for nearly a quarter
century.
The 28-year-old New Yorker
won for the second day in a
row Tuesday, forcing former
world champion Tigran
Petrosian of the Soviet Union to
·esign on llie 34th move. It was
the sevenlli of a scheduled 12match series, with Fischer now
well in the lead with 4'&gt;2 points
to Petrosian's 21;,, with 6'&gt;
points needed to win.
The winner of the series
earns llie right to challenge
world champion Boris Spassky
of the Soviet Union for the title.
The world crown has been in
Ressian hands since 1948 when
it was won by Mikhail Botvin- ·
nik . Petrosian held the title
from 1963 to 1969, when he lost
to Spassky.
TAKING FIRS!' PLACE honors in the annual Homecoming Parade of Southern High
Fischer, U.S. champion at 14
School in Racine last Friday afternoon was the junior class float which used the theme "Tame
and the youngest international
Those Wildcats," complete with a "Wildcat" in person. Later that evening the Tornado football
grandmaster at 15, now has
team won its second game of the season, defeating Hannan Trace 21).() in a Southern Valley
won three games.
Conference match.
Petrosian. 42; has one victory.
Three of the matches ended in

Tonight &amp; Thursday
Oct. 10-11
NOT OPEN

'

PTA Com:nlittees Announced

Fischer too
Much for Red
Grandmaster

MEIGS THEATRE

.

~

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pum~y. ui'~~~

I

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FH\N l H

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~~:_.;:~~.~~

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Questions
Answered
Persons with questions about
the wage-price-rent freeze were
advised today information is
available upon calling the
Meigs County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation
Service (ASCS) office at 9923687. Herbert E. Shields is
executive director.
The office, in the Masonic
Temple Building, Mulberry
Ave., open weekdays from 7:45
a. m. to 4:30 p. m. has
guidelines and answers to
questions provided by the Cost
of
Living
Council
in
Washington . The office
regularly receives rulings and
decisions on previously
unanswered questions.
Local offices of the Internal
Revenue Service are also
available to provide information on the freeze, Shields
said. ASCS offices will forward
written complaints and reports
of violations to Regional IRS
Offices, Shields said.

on anything; except to recess
the talks indefmitely, subject to
recall by either side ," a
management spokesman aaid.
Although the negotiations
opened August, Boyle has made
no specific wage and beneflt
demands on the operators, and
management has made no
contract offer. Earlier, however, Boyle had said he would ask
that tile basic daily wage of coal
minters be increased from $37
up to $50, and that company
contributions . to tbe union's
welfare and retirement fund be
doubled, from 40 cents up to 80
cents per ton of coal mined.

Driver Hurt
In Accident
A Pomeroy man was treated
and released at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Wednesday
night following a single-car
accident on SR 681.
The Sheriff's Dept. said
Richard W. Garfield, 27, was
traveling east when a tire blew
out. His car turned over several
times before coming to a stop in
a field .
Garfield was taken to the
hospital by the Pomeroy ER
Squad where he was treated for
lacerations of his head, one
hand, and a leg. There was
heavy damage to the car. No
citation was issued.

BOOSTER DRIVE
A membership drive will be
held Saturday by the Southern
Athletic Boosters . Football
team members will sell
membershipa door to door. All
residents are urged to support
the program.

Deadlo0k Cracked
By United Press. IDiern~llonal
Authontaltve diplomaltc sources in Cairo said today Egypt
has agreed to an American
suggestion designating a top
State Deparbnent official as a
go-between in Egyptian-Israeli
negotiations for an interim
settlement that would reopen
the Suez Canal.
UPI co~respondent Maurice
Gumd1 said the man proposed
for the job is Joseph J. Sisco,
asststant secretary of state for
Near Eastern affalfs and one of
the architects of American

Middle East policy in the Nixon
administration.
The diplomatic sources said
Sisco would act as middle man
to negotiate on the basis of a
six-point plan for an interim
agreement outlined before the
U.N. General Assembly by
Secretary of State William P.
Rogers.
·
Rogers said a canal pact
would be a first step toward an
ov.er-.all settlement._ However,
Israeli officials have rejected
parts of the plan calling for an
Israeli withdrawal and permit-

ling Egyptians to cross the
canal after the Israeli pullback.
With the negotiations apparently in limbo at \he
moment, both Syria and Egypt
have issued warlike statements
recently outlining a tough ·
posi lion against Israel.
On Wednesday, Egyptian Vice
President Hussein Shafei said
800,000 Egyptian troops stand
ready to embark on a "battle of
destiny" by the end of the year
to liberate • Arab territories
occupied by Israel.

Harris Made Post Trustee
The resignation of Guy
Guinther as a trustee of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, was accepted and
Kenneth Harris was named to
fill the vacancy by the post
membership Tuesday night at
the home.
Guinther has been transferred to another location in his
work with the Kroger Co. and
will be moving there soon .
Commander Leonard Jewell
presented a petition for
signatures of the membership.
The petition will be one of a
number
being
signed

High School.
The group also decided to
conduct the annual bread
project to raise funds for the
"Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave" program. Under this
program, post members
traveling through the community leaving loaves of bread
at the homes of residents who
give a contribution in exchange.
Reported Ul were Charles
Werry, a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and Guy
Morris.

"World War I Night" was
observed and a life membership
was •warded to Harry G.
Hanning. Other World War I
veterans present were Frank
Clark ,. HQJtmer Roush, Bill
J{oudashelt and Lawrence
Smith. Through the Past
Commanders organization, a
life membership was also
awarded to Don Woods who also
is a World War I veteran .
Oyster stew was served by
Roy Reuter.

M T
Balk
~g~~~~"~i~h~h~istr~~:~~~ ore roops

that the Southeast Tuberculosis
.
Hospital at Nelsonville, whici). FIRE BASE PACE, Vtetnam the Cambodian border. It In·
may be closed next June, be (UP!)- Amertcan Gls ordered valved 20 members of an Inconverted Into a Veterans to replace other U. S. troops lantry platoon of ·Delta (D)
Administration Hospital.
who nearly two weeks ago Company of the lsi Battalion of
refused to go on a patrol also the 1st Air Cavalry Division.
Commander Je~ell also balked at going into battle until
Delta Company was sent In to
presented a certificate of th .
d 1 1 ed th · replace Bravo Company which
recognition certificate to Don eir comman er ec ur
em
'
.
k
on
why
the
mission
was
was
pulled
out
after
six
of
tla
'ld
Hunne I for ch1 we 11are wor
....
.
.
Gls re1used to go on a pa tro1
soldiers
necessary, mvolved
th
d
k
d
an
e comm~n er spo e on 'd tod
against the North Vietnamese
the $1lncrease m dues by state sat
ay ·
.
Oct 9
and national effecti e Jan 5 The sources sa1d the second
- .
.
1972. A visit of the b~oodmobil~ consecutive refusal to fight
The Gb satd they carried ?ut
lasted
only
an
hour
last
week
at
the
mtsston after successiVe
Ohio University. A cheerleader tended the Teenage u.. u:ute on
was announced for Tuesday at thl
I'll
t b
confrontations with their
and a member of· tlie Drama Alcohol and Drugs at Ohio the Pomeroy Elementary s ar t ery suppor ase on
platoon leader, the company
Club, she will pfesent a vocal Dominican Q)llege last suinSchool.
commander and finally the base
number as her talent act.
mer ..For her talent, Miss Burke
Plansweremadetoconducta ·Dr"vorces Gr:•anted defense commander, Maj .
will present a dance.
short Veterans Day service
..
Joseph D. Dye of Beaverton,
Miss Burke is being sponMonday
at
10
a.m.
at
Meigs
Three
divorces
have
been
Ore
.
sored by tlie Davis-Warner Each conle4tanl wlll appear
granted and a suit under the
Dye said it is now a "dead
Insurance Agency of Pomeroy. in evening gqwn, talent · and
Reciprocal
Agreement
Act
filed
issue"
and no Gls will be
A senior at Southern High youth fitness compeUtion. The
In Meigs County Common Pleas prosecuted.
T&amp;C TO MEET
School, Racine, she is bead Meigs winner will represent the
majorette atld is a member Of county at the OhiO Junior Miss David Koblentz, president, Court.
Asking was Mary Elizabeth
the Modern Music Masters; Pageant Jan. :il-22 In East bas announced a meeUng of the
CHOIR COMING
Ash,
Pomeroy,'
1\t,
4,
against
Meigs
County
trustees
and
"Th~ Parti'r F)nnon Welsh
Otolr, Girls Basketball Team; Liverpool.
rr.nch Club, College Club and Senior girls have until Sunday Clerks Association for 8 p.m. Denver Ash, Jr., Buffalo, VV, Choir of FUnt, 4Wales will ba
the Pep and Concert Bands. She to enter the ninth annual Saturday at the Second Ward Va. Granted divorces were Jack presented in tlo one-balf how'
was the·.. · Belpre "Tomato pageant . For further in· Firehouse in Pomeroy. ,\ fllm L. Frederick from I.Jnda L. color telecast SUnday at 3:30 p,
Queen" in 1969, a contestant. in formation they may write the and discussion on the establlsh- Frederick and Robert Imboden m: over WSAZ-Tv, Channel a,
the Meigs County Heart Meigs County Junior Miss l)JfQt of a landfill will be a from Hope Imboden, each on The Snowden Men, a quintet,
Association 's "Queen of Pageant, B'ol 2, Pomeroy. nighlight. R~nts will be charges of gross neglect of duty, and Owen Roberta, a Welsh clog
1\. dancer, will be featured. The
Hearts'' contest, a Regatta Contestanls do not have to be a provided by il.etl)ttlph Welker, and Sandra See from .Cecil
' r
queen .conteslllnt, a Buckeye resident ol Meigs County but do Sen. Oakley Collins and the See on charges of gro1,15 neglect choir has been brought to this
S.:lutheasler Equipment 'Co. of duty and extreme crueltv. area by the Bo~ Eyans Farms.
Girls State alterllale and at- have to live In Ohio.

Perry, Burke Enter Pageant
Candy Lee Perry, da1111hter of
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Perry,
Albany, a~d Renee Burke,
daughter of Mr .. alia Mrs.
Walter Burke, Racine, are the
first entries In the 1972 Meigs
County Junior ~ Pegeant.
The pageant, ty be stag~ at 8
p.m. Nov. 20 at Eastern High
School, Is the 'nist lo be
presented by the - newly
organized Meigs County Junior
!&gt;fiss, Inc.
Miss Perry, a senior at
Alexander High School, is
sponsored by Dorothy Perry's
Beauty Shop of Albany . She is a
memlier of the Ecology Club,
Cho~us, Pep Cluli, Future
Homemakers of America, Rifle
Club ahd has attended a speech
and commut\icalion seminar at

...

v~!
!
'

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