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Boundary Decision Near
· By United Press International
One boundary feud between
Ohio and a neighboring state
looks close to being decided in
the U.S. Supreme Court, while
another long-standing dispute is
still being fought with vigor.
A "special master" appointed
by the Supreme Court recommended in a report released
Tuesday that the Michigan-Ohio
dispute over a mineral-rich
pie-shaped piece of land in Lake
Erie be settled in the Buckeye
State's favor .
U.S. Circuit Court Judge Albert B.. Maris of Philade1phia
recommended to the high court
that it decide · the 13:i-year-&lt;J!d
question for Ohio, giving it
ownership.

Meanwhile a Kentucky-Ohio
argwnent over who owns how
much of the Ohio River also
was revived Tuesday.
Kentucky filed a brief oppos- baseless.n
ing a brief opposing a change
Ohio wan is to make in lis complaint about the dispute, now
before the Supreme Court the
past 5'k years.

QUAINT Fort Meigs
at Forest Acres Park
near Rutland helps
provide
atmosphere
for park visitors and
will be a backdrop next
Saturday and Sunday
when the trout derby is
staged again at the
park from 6 a.m. to 8
p.m. both days.

Bowling
Women's Thursday Afternoon
Ocl. 21. 1971

STANDINGS

New York Clothing
48 16
Pomeroy Lanes
44 20
Dave's Tire Land
38 26
Simon's Mkt.
38 31
Forest Run Block
19 45
Smith's Body Shop
10 54
High Team 3 Games - New
York Clothi ng 1726; Pomeroy
Lanes 1656 ; Simon's Mkt. 1620;
High Team Game New
York Clothing 598 ; Pomeroy
Lanes 590 ; Simon's Mkt. 572 .
High Ind. Game - Drema
Smi th 200 ; Loi s Hawl ey 188 ;
Norma Amsbary , Drema Smith
178.
High Ind. 3 Games - Drema
Smith 543 ; Norma Amsbary
480 ; Lois Hawley 468 .

THIS SCENE MAY BE repeated this week at Forest Acres Park when the lake is stocked
with 600rainbow trout in preparation for a weekend fishing derby open to the public.

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Washington l
R e'nort. By
:I:'
-

Miller

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Starting Nov. 14 and stretching for an indefinite period of
time a new set of governmental
economic controls will be implemented in an effort to
squelch inflation and increase
employment. .
Basically , the Phase II
economic plan will lest the
willingness of labor, business
and the general public to
comply
with
economic
restrainls to be imposed after
the end of the 90-day freeze .
Phase ll 's primary aim is to
get the rate of increase in the
cost of living down to no more
than 2 to 3 pel. by the end of next
year and will rely heavily on
voluntary compliance.
The Administration has
recently sent a leg islative
proposal to the Congress to
impl ement Phase lJ . The
pr oposal would make the
following revisions in the
existing statutory authority
contained in the Economic
Stabilization Act of 1970 under
which the President instituted
the new economic program ;
( a) extends the Act for one
year to April 30, 1973;
(b ) broadens authority to
incluc•: the stabilization of
inlfrest and dividends;
(c) creates an Emergency
Court of Appea Is to expedile
judicial review over wage-price
cases;
(di perrnil.s selective controls
on individual industries;
(e ) exempls members of the

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Clarence

I

"-MIDDLEPORT

Island in Maumee Bay, far
north of the Michigan cl;lim.
The wedge of land includes
about 200 square miles of lake
bed, which geologisls say is
rich in oil and gas deposits.
The Kentucky-Ohio disrute
was brought to the Supreme
Court in March 1966. It centers
over whether the northern lowwater mark in the Ohio River
should be the one set in 1792
when Kentucky became a state
or the present•one deeper into
the state of Ohio caused by the
construction of several dams on
the river and subsequent rises
in the water level.
"Legally Baseless"
Ohio recently filed papers
with the court to amend its
original complaint to define the
border as the middle of the
river, rather than the lowwater mark.
But Kentucky, in a brief filed
by ils attorney general, John
B. Breckinridge, said the new
contention by Ohio is "legally

REACH LIMIT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds today reached
the roster limit of 40 players by
dropping three men and adding
six.
The Reds sent to their farm
club in Indianapolis pitchers
Mickey Pless and Greg Garrett
and infielder Willie Smith. All
will be eligible for the Nov. 29
baseball draft.
Added were pitchers Dave
Tomlin, Mike Ruddell and John
Jackson and outfielders Kent
Burdick, Ken Griffey and Gene
Locklear.

Pay Board and Price Com·
mission from conflict of interest
laws;
(f) authorizes use of sub·
poenas and clarifies the use of
injunctive action;
(g) clarifies the Congressional Delegation of
authori ty to the President to OPERATION SUCCESSFUL
CINCINNATI (UP!)
create functioning boards and
Cincinnati
Royals rookie forcommissions;
(h) imposes criminal fines of ward Ken Durrett, who suffered
$5,000 for each violation and a a torn medial cartilage in his
right knee in an Oct. 23 game
civil penalty of $2,500;
(i) authorizes the hiring of the against Portland, underwent a
necessary personnel to carry successful knee operation
Tuesday afternoon.
out Phase II.
Team physician Dr . Edward
The Senate must act upon the
Zenni
said he expected a good
Revenue Act of 1971 which includes , with only a few recovery for Durrett, Cincnmodifications, the President's nati's No. l draft choice.
Zenni said Durrett would be
lax relief proposals requested
by the White House when the out of the Royals lineup for at
wage-price freeze was unveiled least 12 weeks. Durrett is
at
Good
in mid-August. The main recuperating
provisions of the bill include an Samaritan Hospital here.
acceleration in personal income
In the who-else-would-tell·
lax exemptions, a repeal of the
.you-these-things d e par t .
seven percent federal excise tax ment' Before be became
on automobiles and a seven Kono on Hawaii Flve-0, Zulu
percent inveslment tax credit was Hawaii's most popular
to
stimulate
industrial disc jockey.
production . I voted in support of $&lt;~~
.
•
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Y..
the measure when it was approved by the House on Oct. 6. change.
Such large-scale economic
The President has agreed that
controls
as are embodied in the
the head of the Cost of Living
Coun cil which is· now super- Phase li program have never
vising Phase I will not have veto before been tied in our nation
- in peacetime, and while sortie
~ower over the decisions of the
Pay Board and Price Com- critics have scoffed at the
appeal
to
mission . However, a veto President 's
authority will be retained by the patriotism for support of the
President in the form of his economic program, most
power to appoint and remove Americans have reacted enmembers of the board and thusiastically to his appeaL His
commission and to abolish the plea was stated during his
entire wage-price control October 7 TV appearance in
these words:
program at any time.
"I call upon all of you ... to
Notwit hstanding the
overriding voluntary aspecls of look at this program not as
the Phase II program, the Democrats or Republicans,
Presiden t has requested workers or businessmen, farauthority to establish a Service mers or consumers, but as
and Compliance Administration Americans.''
which, in turn, will utilize the
Internal Revenue Service and
other existing units of the
Federal Government to enforce
strict penalties.
Congressional response to the
SAME DAY
Phase II guidelines has been
SERVICE
favorable. Encouraging results
In
AI9-0ut
At 5
from the 90-day temporary
wage-price freeze are indicated
bY; the recent reduction in the
Use Our Free Parking Lot
wholesale price Index as well as
an upturn of industrial averages
on the New. York Stock Ex· . ._2•1•6•E•
. 2•nd•'•P•o•m•o•ro.iy_...
'~~

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SHIRt
FINISHING

Robinson's aeaners

War Once Close
The Michigan-Ohio dispute
probably will be decided by the
Supreme Court later this term,
concluding testimony and argumenl.s heard for more than four
years.
At iss ue is whether the north
cape of Mawnee Bay in Lake
Erie existed when the boundary
finally was drawn in 1836. The
line was drawn only after the
two states had threatened war
over the wedge of land and
President Andrew Jackson sent
a peace mission to head off the
battle.
The cape has since eroded,
however , and MariL was
charged with establishing
where it had been and whether
that should be the determination for the boundary between
the states on the Lake Erie
shores.
Maris recommended that the
border follow a line extending
from near Toledo across Turtle

Kentucky bases its claim to
the northern border on the cession of Virginia in 1784, which
gave all land northwest of the
Ohio River it owned to the newly formed United States of
America. Ohio was later .formed from this land.
In ils latest filing, Ohio
traced the history of the ownership back to 1609 when King
James I of England gave a
charter to the London company
whose land later became the
Commonwealth of Virginia.
Ohio Attorney General William J. Brown said in the brief
that Virginiij had no claim to
the land northwest of the Ohio
River at the time of its cession.
No More Tban Virglllia
The Quebec Act, Ohio argued,
made all the land north and
west of the Ohio part of the
Province of Quebec prior to the
American Revolution.
"Virginia was not, therefore,
the common proprietor of both
sides of the Ohio River and ils
boundary ran, at most, in the

middle of the river," the:
amended complaint said. "The
commonwealth of Kentucky, being successor to Virginia, is entitled to no more."
·
In rebuttal, Breckinridge argued "there is simply no legal
basis for holding that the laws
of the United States pursuan\
to which the.state of Ohio was
created are to be dlsregardeq
and that the boundary betweef\
Ohio and ' Kentucky should be
adjudicated as the middle o(
the river on the basls of al;
leged dispositions of the subject
territory prior to the Americarf
Revolution ."
When the original complaint
was filed, then Attorney Gener.
a! William B. Saxbe of Ohio
stated that Kentucky bas insist,
ed on the right to license boat.\
docked on the Ohio side and .
liquor establishments on wharfs
and marinas on that shore. He
also said Kentucky wanls to
control fishing licenses to Ohio
residen Is lor all parts of the
river.

Population Closely Related to Meigs' Economy
(Tblrd and Last In a Series)
Tbe Melp County Regional PlaJioing Commission, E.
F. RobiDson, cbalrman, Invites comment and suggestl008
on the preliminary draft of the first pbase of a proposed
comprebeiiSive plan for Meigs County. The first arUcle
JRlbllsbed Monday was on the population trends of M~igs
County. Tuesday's study was of the COIDity's ·economy.
Today, the final article summarizes socio-economic facts.
SOCIO-ECONOMIC ST4TISTICS
EDUCATION AND INCOME .
Socio-economic statistics show some of tbe relationships
between population and economy. One table and graph illustrate
the relative deprivation in education levels and family income of
the Meigs county population in 1960.
In educatlonallevel of people over 25 years of age, the median
number of years of school attended for county residents Is 8.9.
This means that over half of Meigs County's population over 25
years old has not finished 9th grade as of 1960. The rural
population of Ohio as a whole had a median level of 10.4 years.
This difference of Jlh years is difficult to make up statistically

when younger people (traditionally those with t~ ' opportunity for
the most education) appear to be leaving the county.
Median family income shows Meigs County to be fairly close
. to the Ohio rural farm average, but the graph also shows that
there were many county families earning less than $2,000 per year
in 1959, This is a very low level of income, even for residents of
farms and homesteads who may grow much of their own food .
Although fioal1970 U. S. Census figures were not available at the
time of this report, it is reasonable to assume that Meigs County 's
advances in income would not be sufficient to close the gap. The
all-Ohio average would not be sufficient to close the gap. The all· Ohio average should certainly have increased at a very rapid rate
during the 1960s.
Per capita personal income figures from tbe Appalachian
Regional Commission go beyond tbe 1959 family income statistics
to compare Meigs County with Ohio and the U. S. These figures
show tbat personal per capita income in Meigs County increased
from $1,087 ( 1959) to$1,730 (1967), a gain of 59.2 peL This increase
is larger than those for Ohio, from $2,290 to $3,223 (40,7 pet .) and
the U.S., from $2,161 to $3,159 ( 46.2 pet.). These statistics are an
important sign that progress bas been made in Meigs County's

the lighter side

MEIGS THEAIR£'
Tonight &amp; Thursday
Oct. 27·28
NOT OPEN
Friday thru Tuesday
Oct. 29-Nov. 2
ESCAPE FROM THE
PLANET OF THE
APES
(Technicolor l
Roddy McDow~ II
Kim Hunter

· BROTHER JOHN
(Technicolorl
Sid ney Poi tier

Will G«"

. SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

PROSPECTS FOR TilE F1JTURE
ECONOMIC DEVEUlPMENT
While the general economic condition of Meigs County over

the last several decades bas been declining, there are signs of
change which are encouraging. The biggest new development in
mining and industry i,; the $115,000,000 Ohio Power Company
complex being developed in Gallta and Meigs Counties . Ultimate
developmenl is expected to include several major slopes, a
preparation plant, Iii-mile overland conveyor system, and the
General Gavin power plant. Two thousand new jobs are expected
in this development by 1975, and many of these could go to Meigs
County residents. It should be remembered that the production of
coal is not scheduled to begin for at least 2 years ; injtial mining
employment may be limited.
Although the coal-mining complex should have a favorable
effect on Meigs County's economy, it should not be viewed as
enough to lead the county to dynamic population and economic
growth by itself. Other steps must be taken to attract additional
industrial development and encourage expansion of the existing
retail and service base. Among manufacturing industries the
following showed strong growth patterns in the Ohio Valley
Region during the 1960s, fabricated metals ; lumber, wood, and
paper producls ; food products; and apparel. ft is not unlikely that
I Continued on page 9)

•

Communist China occupies
territory about one third larger
than the continental United
States.

Weather
Mostiy sunny an&lt;i warmer
today with highs in the lower to
mid 70s. Partly cloudy tonight.
Lows in the 50s. Thursday
partly cloudy and continued
warm. Highs generally in the
70s.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meig,,·Mason Area

Elberfelds Second Floor Childrens
Department Is Headquarters For

VOL XXIV NO. 137

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1971

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

\\lister/JtoUJ~ ~~
Deliberation by the jury was
expected to begin this afternoon
in the second degree murder
trial of Elijah (Slim) Davis, 64,
Gallipolis, charged in the ·June
30 stabbing death of Charles L.
Clagg, 54 , Gallipolis. The
prosecution and defense closed
their cases Ia te Tuesday a!·
ternoon during the first day of
the trial.
Davis, indicted by the September term of the Gallia
County Grand Jury, was the
only defense witness called by
his court-appointed Attorney,
Thomas S. Moulton. He.
maintained he committed the
stabbing under fear of death.
Prosecuting Attorney Hamlin
C. King called five witnesses
including two residents of
Kerr's Trailer Court on Garfield
Ave ., where the Incident occurred.

You'll find a large and
complete selection of
styles and colors for in ·
fants &amp; toddlers and boys
and girls 3 to 6x and 7 to 14,
for school. play, dress-up.
Shirts - Pants - Romper
Sets - Pajamas - Un derwear - Socks - Crawlers
- Overalls - Skirts Jumpers· All Dependable ,
Long
Lasting
Buster
Brown Quality.
p

How long will it be before
medical science discovers a
treatment for orphanannilication, a malady that turns the
eyeballs into zeros'
And how long will it be before
the Pentagon devlops a defense
against the subterrain, a
missile-firing vehicle that travels underland?
No such ailment or weapon
currently exists. Appearance of
the solutions, however, almost
certainly would lead to creation
of the problems. Which, in turn,
would lead to the decline and
Take the Children to Elberfelds New
fall of civilization, give or take
roller derbys.
Toy Store In the Mldd!s Block
If man progresses by finding
solutions to his problems, the
finding of problems for his
solutions obviously is retrogresssive.
We would soon be back in
horse-and-buggy days. Only this .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....

And human progress comes
about through solving problems.
If man had no more problems,
all progress would stop and
man would stagnate, gather
barnacles and eventually
atrop hy.
Up to now, the shortage of
problems has, of ilself, never
been a problem . The world has
been blessed with many inven·
tive leaders who were capable
of creating an abundance of time the cart would be before
new problems, some of which the horse.
have lasted for generations.
Swing Is Reversed
Thus we came to think of the
supply of problems as being
boundless, just as we once took
the earth's atmosphere for
granted. But lately the pendulum has begun to swing the
other way.
Excessive amounls of energy
and celebration have been
devoted to . the formulation of
solutions, with the result that
we are getting dangerously
close to the point of imbalance
- i.e., the point where we have
solutions for which there are no
problems. Already that has
· happened to some extent.
Solutions (breath-sweeteners)
were discovered; then the
public had to be convinced they
had the problem (halitosis). So
far we have been lucky in that
regard.
We havs managed to invent
problems (B.O., tattletale gray,
wax buildup) to match the
precipitate solutions. But the
trend is ominous.

TAX BASE
An important indicator of a community's ability to "support
public facilities, schools, and services is its ta&lt; base. In assessed
tax valuation Meigs County has a low position relative to the Ohio
per capita average. One table shows the 1968 assessed valuation
for Ohio, Meigs County and the major incorporated villages in the
county. In addition, pet aapita averages are computed to show the
relative ability of each area to support development. It's interesting to note that the villages in Meigs County have a smaller
per capita valuation than the co4nty as a whole.

Now You Know

Always a Worry
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - If
you ever ran out of anything to
worry about, you should worry
about not having anything to
worry about.
For next to breathing,
worrying is probably man's
most vital function. Consider
this:
Worry is caused by problems.

economic condition, but obviously more improvement is
necessary (by 1970 U.e respective per capita personal incomes for
Ohio and the U.S . were $3,972 and $3,921) . It is also possible that
these incomes overstate the county's progress, if people of lower
incomes have been leaving the county in search of better jobs,
with people of higher incomes remaining.

niERE'S A NEW LOOK for American Education Week at the Bradbury Scbool. Maxi
skirts and a single shirt in original designs are being worn by the faculty. Using magic markers
on white cloth fifth and sixth graders created geometic and modem designs on several large
pieces of material. These were used as wall tapestries for several days and then over the
weekend were fashioned Into maxi skirts and a shirt. The teachers wbo are wearing the ap·
pare! all week In observance of American Education Week, left to right, front, are Mrs. Maxine
Philson, Mrs. Marjorie Goett, and Mrs. Sabra Morrison; second row, Mrs. Phyllis Hackett,
bon Hanning, and Mrs. Betty Fultz.

Witnessing the stabbing were
Okey Longfellow and Jack
Welch. Also testifying were Ptl.
Gary Wallace and Gallipolis
Chief of Police John Taylor and
Gallia County Coroner Dr.
Donald R. Warehime.
Both Longfellow and Welch
described the events preceding

and during the stabbing . Chief
of Police Taylor's testimony
centered around a six-inch knife
owned by Davis confiscated
shorlly after the incident.
Under
cross-examination,
Taylor said lhe knife had not
.undergone laboratory analysis.
· lfr. Warehime testified on the

cause of death and showed the
jury a picture pointing out the
fatal stab wound. He died from
internal
and
external
hemorrhaging. Clagg had been
stabbed at least three times.
Ptl . Wallace described the
events leading to Davis' arrest.
Davis, while under direct

examination, said he stabbed
Clagg under fear of his life .
Davis sa id Clagg had
threatened to kill him the night
prior to the stabbing.
Prior to the opening of the
trial, jurors viewed the scene of
the incident at Kerr 's Trailer
Court.

Thursday
Fun Set
The annual public Halloween
Party of Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion in Mid·
dlepm't, will get underway at
the football stadiwn near the
Meigs Junior High School at 7
LARRY WOLFE'S LARGE collection of Indian relics
p.m . Thursday.
Include arrowheads, a single-grooved tomahawk, doubleNumerous cash prizes will be
grooved tomahawk and spear-fork arrow. Showing the rare
awarded in three age categories
for the best costwnes. There
will be prizes of $2, $1 and 50
cenl.s for the most original,
WASHINGTON - The
prettiest, ugliest and funniest Appalachia Regional Com·
costumes in three age groups mission today informed Cong.
including infanls through the Clarence E. Miller of the
The importance of a .65 mill
first grade , second grade approval of $27,153 grant to tuberculosis levy to be voted
through the sixth grade, and the Holzer Medical Cenler of upon in Meigs County at the
seventh grade through adults. Gallipolis.
Nov. 2 election was explained
Judging the costumes will be
ARC officials said the funds today by Mrs. Dollie Hayes,
Mrs . Dwight Zavitz, Mrs. are for the continuation of a e:recutive secretary of the
Raullin Moyer and Mrs. Audrey laboratory technician Meigs Cwnty Tuberculosis and
Miller, all wives of ministers in training program.
Health Association.
the community.
Total cost of the project is
A renewal, the .65mill levy, 65
Cider and donuts will be $56,768.
cenls on each $1,000 evaluation,
served, first to the people in ~::::::;:;:;;;;;:;;;:::~;:~~=~~~~=~m..~~=~~~-=;~~ was renewed in 1966 and
costume and then to the public
LOCAL TEMPS
through the funds provided
and each person attending in
Temperature in downtown more cases through improved
costume will receive a dime . In Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m. , clinic and diagnostic services
case of rain the affair will be was 56 degrees unrler sunny bave been found. In 1966, eight
staged at the Legion hall .
skies.
cases of tuberculosis were

collection, 1-r, are Jake 9Iuler, Scott Wolfe, Darlene Dugan
and Kevin Wilford, of the Southern Jr. High seventh grade
class. The collection is owned by Larry Wolfe, principal of
Syracuse Elementary School. See page 8 for more pictures.

TB Levy is .R enewal

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

found while In 1970, 14 cases
were detected. All of the latter,
however, were not active - the
type which spreads from person
to person.
Active cases have been on the
decline. Seven were found in
1966, six In 1967 and two in each
of the last three years.
Hospitalization costs are also
going up. Meigs County paid
$9.25 per patient-Oay when the
levy was first passed. Beginning Oct. I the rate went up to
$39 a day, an increase of 421 pet.
By the same token there are

Restitution
Is Reported

MR. AND MRS. PUMPKIN" HEAD greeted gu~ at the Halloween carnival stage(!
Monday night at the BradbUry School. The four students of Mrs. Betty Fultz wbo created the
stuffed figures were, left to right, Marty Krawse2yn, Kevin King, Cynthia Lane, and Connie
Burton. See Page 10, account of party.
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By Uuited Press International

French Economy Swings Eastward
PARIS- THE SOVIET UNION today signed with France a
l(}.year economic pact which French and Soviet officials said was
the biggest such deal MQSC()w has ever concluded with a we,tern
nation. The deal , coming on the third day of the French visit of
Soviet Colnmunist leader Leonid I. Brezhnev, would enable each
country to participate In industrial and commercial projects of
the_other, French and Soviet officials said.
They described the pact as a "frame" agreement and said
details of any projects would have to be worked out between
governments and private firms later: One of the first results was
the signing today of a $240 million deal between the French stateowned Renault automobile company to take part in building a
giant new Soviet truck factory on:the River Kama, 300 mijes west
of Moscow.

River Barges Collide, Blow Up
BRANDENBURG, KY. - TWO RIVER barges carrying
wood alcohol exploded and burned under a bridge spanning the
(Continued on page 9)
·

· ··
·r
WASHINGTON (UPII
Treasury Secretary John B.
Conally said today the goals
of
President
Nixon's
economic policies could not
be reached before bls current
authority to Impose economic
controls ends next April 30.
Connally asked the House
Banking Committee to approve legislation to extend for
one more year the Economic
Stabilization Act of 1970, ·
which Nixon at flrsl said be
did not wan!, then used to
earry out sweeping economic
alteralions intended to arrest
lnflalion.
"I know of no one who
believes thai the goals of
Phase II could be reached by
April 30, 1972, the expiration
date
of the
current
authority," Connally · said in
prepared testimony. ·

Through the cooperation of
the Pomeroy and Ironton police
departmenls apprehension and
restitution has been made in the
theft of players and tapes and
damages to vehicles that oc- ·
curred on Oct. I.
Pomeroy Chief Jed Webster
said today the thefls occurred
during the Ironton-Meigs
football game at Marauder
~tadium in Pomeroy.
Restitution in the amount of
$669.57 has b~en made, Webster
reported . The subjecls involved
were . juveniles whose names
were not released.

::::::!:;:~=~~:::::;e~?.=8::::::w:

::::;:.:::;:. ~;~::-:·:~:::::::;.:::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::;::::: :::::··· •'

fewer hospital patients today
and the patient days involved
are leas. Some cases can even
be handlect by a clinic without
hospitalization , The total
number of cases - active,
inactive and arrested - is also
decreased from 78 in 1966 to 49
in 1970.
Through the tuberculosis
levy, the association's nurse in
1970 provided nursing consultation , medication and in
excess of 600 people received xrays. There were 941 skin tests
given in 1970 in addition to the
mass of skin testing conducted
during the visit of a mobile unit.

FINISHING TOUCHES are being ~pplied to the Village
Pharmacy in Middleport Tuesday In preparation for open
house which gets underway ~hursday to mark the opening of

a new 40 by 25 foot addition to the original atructure. Tbe
original building houses a millinery store many years. See
Page 4.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to the Dale
Nicholson residence , 51 North
Third Ave., at 4:10 a.m. Wed··
nesday . Nic holson, suffering
severe pains in the side, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted.

.,

�.

Z- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0_, Oct. %1, 1971

~-------------~---------------------------;

l Voice along Broadway ]

" Hee,I Boy "'
:

EDITORIAL

End Vaccination
Against Smallpox?

I

Nothmg succeeds like success And few smgle masstve
campatgns agamsl dtsease scoll! ges of mankmd can b&lt;·
termed as successful as the smallpox vaccmatwn pro
grams m the Umted States and at ounct the wot lct

•

French n11crobwlogrst Lows Pastelll once claimed that
m ttme certam get m caused dtseases tlteOt eltcally coufd
be wtped ft om the face of the eat lh Although smallpox
has not been completely eradtcated tl of fat s a fme ex
ample of what can be done to teduce a gtven dtsease to
mtmmum pt opot twns lht ough llgtd quat ant me pt act tees
and Widespread use of \accmatwn s

The long term obJeCitve of an; dtsease control pro
gram of course, IS to self-destt ucl- et adtcate the dtsease
and thus render the pt ogt am ttself obsolete But m the
case of smallpox-sttll a problem tn central Aft tea the
lndtan subcontment and Indonesta - some phystctans
questton the tdea of dtscontm umg vaccmatton pt ograms
The WHO and PHS recommendatiO ns are based upon
the fact that small pox has become so rare that the
chances of tndtvtduals m the Um ted States and other ad
vanced natwns ol d)tng from fatal teacltons to the vac·
cme are now greate r than the chances of d) mg hom the
once·dteaded diSease 1tself

Cessatwn of rouhne smallpox vaccmatwn would mdeed
be a medtcal mtlestone It was exactly 175 years ago thts
year that Bnltsh Dr Edward Jenner tnJected some pus
from a m1lkmatd's "cowpox " et upt wn mto an 8-year-old
boy and rendered htm tmmure to smallpox
The PHS vtsualtzes masStve stores of smallpox vaccme
In case an ep1derntc does occur tn the future But as rnm e
than one spectaltst has pomted out masStve emergenc;
1mmumzatto n programs are more eastly talked abou t
than tmplemented
The dectswns now lte wtth the state and local health
organtzaltons who wtll have the optwn to pass them alon g
, to the natlon's pedtatnctans
'
1t can only be hoped that none of them nor the WHO
w~ or PHS wtll be proved short Stghted at some future ttme
At anv rate . the publtc can be assuted that dectstons on
aU levels are bemg made wtth care and tn good fmth
for there tS no destre to return 111 ttme to the davs when
95 of every 100 persons 111 some areas contracted small
pox

DAVID POI.ING, D.O.

A Need to Inspire
From Pen, Pulpit
B• REV DAVID POLING
' For the fm t wne m h:story the g1owth of the C/ms

tto ll Cltu1ch lws 11111 kept pace With the growth of the
wo rld s pup ulallott Today Clmstwns m the world
numbe , u11e m three By the year 2000, p&gt;ovtded that
we do not los e [J1o und anu fas ter than we are losmg at
presem u;e sh all 1111mber one zn fw e Whether we f1ke
tile 1cl ea (JI nul Cl!nstzallltlf 1s a nwwnty movement
m t he u.o1 /d '

- rrom Fatth Und er Ftre by Donald Strobe

~s

the Chnsttan commumt y goes through contmual
change a nd upheaval the role of the pastor theologtan
becomes mote evtdent and dectstve The last maJ ot up
heaval for Chnstendom "as the 16th century Refm ma
!ton Masstve cha nges 1aced through the Western world
wtth all sor ts of poltttcal soctal and reltgtous factors
shaptng the des ttny of the world In the affairS of the
Church pa stor theologta ns ltke Calvtn and Luther were
to ca rry enormous po,.er from pen and pulptt It ts ou r
clatm that a stmtl ar penod ts upon the Chnsttan fam tlv
111 the 20th centun and that the pastor theologtan wtll
be tn the va nguard
The reasons mtght be at ranged thts way
11 ~uth o nty and dtsc tpltne wtthm the church have
pass. d fro m bt shops and bUt eauct ats to the local pansh
Demands from htghc t-ups' now come tn the form of
requests Pet suaSion from tt ad tlton ts negot ta ble Power
has moved to the people and the pew IS the pomt of
fmal dectston
21 The pastor theologtan IS closest to the people and
most senSt ttve to thetr needs ti ts counsel, gUidance and
asSistance are obvto us In penods of change a nd alter·
at10n people turn to those concerned and at hand The
16th century proved th ts factor m teltgtous ltfe It may
be happenmg agam
31 The p astor - theolo ~ t a n who It uly counts has a fotce·
fu l vtew of theology and the .world- and IS able to com·
mumcate thts message m te t ms that young, adults and
nonbelievers can understand Luther and Calvm. and a
century.Jater, Wesley, had thtS sktll m wntmg and speak
ing These men were not em barrassed to gtve thetr full
attentiOn to the local pansh Wesley htt the ctrcutt more
than the other two. but hts ltstemng audtence was m the
local parish
The pastor theolog• n ar r even where and 111 every
denontt nat to n They
II ' tclenttfled by a pan sh
that has st1011g p1og
wJu ll edHcatwn , marked
w1th se n ou s study of 1&lt;, Bw.e all(/ a bruud dwewty of
members /up Soctal pt oblems are not neglected, and lay
leaderstup of courses encouraged These c hurches are
also marked by a good refet ence ltbrary a nd racks of
paperbacks often appear m the soctal rooms
Thts year one pastor-theologtan put together some
ideas and Word Books published " Fatth Undet F'tre"
by Donald Strobe of the Ftrst Untied Methodtsl Chutch ol
Grand Raptds, Mtch ThiS clergyman ts comm ttled to
the parish , ,yet makes no bones about the futUt e ol hts
task Said Strobe
" In the next 10 years, the chut ch's membetshiV wtll
be , ut in half Half of the people wtll et lhct leave he·
cause the chUJ ch tS becommg too tel evan t ot beca use

lt rs not tx.ocuming 1elcvant enyu uh We mrr st dee rd e

which half we wtsh to keep' "

BY JACK O'BRIAN
BOYD'S BRIDE WILL BE
HIS BLOOD BRO'DII!R
NEW YORK (KFS) - Austrian actress
Marlll8 Melland star Stephen Boyd plan a Gypsy
marriage - ritual wrlst-cuttlng, mingling of
blood and all that merry stuff .... Mother Dolores
fonner actress, now a nun, Dolores Hart) Is
ltQspttalized in Waterbury, Conn., Hospital .... In
Un&lt;hay's Mugg City, if opportunity !mocks,
everyone's afraJd to open tbe door .... George C.
Scott on the subject of his precarious actor's life:
"Actors find shields to hide their msecurity and
pain. Sometimes mine Is a bottle." .... Best TV
coverage of Ute N. Y. cops-c:rbne scandal comes
from CBS-TV's Otrls Borgen - he was a N.
City narco-cop for ten years before be"took to TV
.... His right name is Sid Slepherd; took Ute
&lt;llris Borgen from hiB mother's family when he
moonlighted In Ph illy as a broadcaster ....
Junmy Weston, owner of the restaurant of the
same name, told us Chris was '1earless" in the
narcotics-war, and Jimmy should !mow - he
was a top tough N.Y. Narcotics Squad detective
for 16 years.
Now that Woody Allen's no longer a closet
clarinetist and has played on TV (Cavett Show),
It's time for a crltlcalappralsal: he SO\Ulds like
early Ted Lewis .... The early Bdwy. stage
curtain remams an edgy conlroversy among
restaurants· "21" hates it and will salute the
only 8 p.m. show-c:urtain in town by putting e
poster of Davtd Merrick's "Promises,
PromiSes" m a fancy sUver lobby frame.
"Ain't Supposed to Die a Naturai!JeaUt" ts a
jazz.t·ock mustcal at the Barrymore Theater,
with book, words and music created by Melvin
Van Peebles, who hA'I fashtoned not a musical
comedy, but a musical tragedy; It excited some
of the audience mto strange laughter, but. its
characters are IUliformly terribly sad.
The Peebles' production is a black-c:reated
and perfonned catharsis, violently imagllled and
perceptively caricatured from all the black
ghetto fears and hate of whitey; certainly no
leaverung hint of affection or Integration arises
on Peebles' stage: every one of the many
characters is a vrctim, a loser, a forced soc~al
misfit, and tis crushing criticism of Ute ghetto
scene doesn't -skip black persecution, either;
expectedly, the black cop is patnted a monster,
more v1clously even than the crooked white cop
and the symbolic pig-on-high.
The abject characters are cops, jiUlkies,
assorted prostitutes, punps, lesbians, transvestites, murderers, fags, a bUnd beggar, an

x.

The smallpox vaccmatwn pt ogt ams have been so sur
cessful that ma]Ot health gt oups tncludmg the Wot ld
Health Orgamzatwn and U S Pubhc Health Servtce
!PHS) ha;e now declated that tl would be safe fot the
Untied States and other advanced natwns to abolish cus
tomary smallpox \oaccmatwn requnements iOI you ng.
sters and to admtmstet the vacc me only to personnel
likely to contact an mlected tt avelet

The stattSttcs go hke thts The odds that m the Umted
States a pet son wtll dte from a reac lton to smallpox
vaccmatton are abo ut a nullwn to one-seemmgl) mm
tscule But 14 to 17 mtlhon Amencans ate vaccmated
yearly In 1968 for example. some 14 nulhon were v,tc
cmated and mne deaths were assoctated "'th the vac
cmatwns , whtch can cause encephahhs a bram and nerv
ous system mfeclton and someltmes othet lethal mfec
!tons
Thus the PHS has calculated that 15 cases of smallpox
would have to entet the Umted States each year before
deaths from the diSease would equal deaths from the
vaccme Thts may even be an underesttmate smce medt
cal textbooks gtve 25 per cent as the mortahty ra te of
smallpox Man y surv tvot s howevet ate left scat red ot
blinded by the dtsease
Even though the PHS has made tis t ecommendatton
tt 1s not btndmg, for the PH S has no power to change
state and local health laws It wtll be up to the state and
local health de pat tmenls to detet nune a course of act ton
The preshgous Amettcan Academy of Pedta tncs has at
ready sent tts members nottftcatwn that tt plans to
formall y back the PHS 1ecommendatwn shortly

'

u.fAtt 't:(}trr

• t"'~A('7'

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

!Helen Help Us\
I

i

By Helen Bottel

I
I
I

WHITE LIE HAS HJM WORRIED
Dear Helen
As the oldest 111 the family, and the only man, I put off
mamage ftrst ur'tl my ststers were through college and settled,
then because our mother needed help
By the lime sbe passed on after a long illness, 1 was 38, and
not exactly the "eltgtble bachelor" type When you're thiS age,
and have ltttle expertence wtlh women - weD, people asswne
you're queer Nowadays, any unmarrted guy who doesn't keep a
"bachelor pad" and a strmg of girls tS suspected of likmg only
men
I decided to change this, so I got a JOb m another state, told
my employer I was dtvorced, and the word got around. Maybe my
new sell-tmage had somethmg to do wtth it, but suddenly women
were mterested
As you mtght guess, I've fallen 111 love and want to get
marned She's a great person But I've told her all about my "exwtfe " To bolster up my courage, I made tt a good story. It wasn't
hard - I JUSt conJured up a person who was the exact oppostte of
the woman I love She had a bad ftrst marnage, "too," so we
related rtght from the start
My questiOn Do I confess and rtSk losmg her, or do I keep thts
ftctttlous "ex" the rest of my life' - BACHELOR TURNED
DIVORCEE
Dear BTD
A "great person " will understand - and you'll feel mtghtly
relteved to have thts "ex" out of your life
My I GAP ("I'm Guessmg Agam Perceptton") says she
already suspects Do you really thtnk an mexpertenced bachelor
can convmcmgly descrtbe a "wife " to the woman he loves•- H.
Dear Helen
I've been gomg wtth a wtdower whose wife d1ed three years
ago We get along perfectly, but he mvahably talks about hts
wtfe' 1 feel left out, though I hate to mentiOn thtS He'd probably
take tt as Jealousy
I love htm, and don't want to be part of a threesome - that's
why I keep my former ltfe out of the conversalton My husband
and I were very happy together and shared a wonderful
relattonshtp, but he's been gone ftve years He wouldn't want me
ltvmg m the past
Wbat do you say, Helen' - MARIE
Dear Marte
I vote for life among the ltvmg
Perhaps your gentleman frtend wtll, too, if you (temporarily)
make thiS a foursome Each tune he menttons htS former wife ,
remember an mc1dent from YOUR marrtage.
It shouldn't take long - H
Dear Helen
It looks like soon they'll be taktng homosexuality (between
consenting adults ) off the books as a crune. And tt's high time we
learned we can't legtslate morality, or mstst that all humans be
cut of one pattern or the other
But bere'smy question : When the gay life ts no longer illegal,
will the milttary go back and clear all those "undestrables" who
were dtscharged wtth a black mark agamst thetr names•WAITING
Dear Wattmg :
I don't know But there's a counter questton : If homosexuality
were no longer a erune, wouldn't the "undesirables" be
automatically cleared' Surely the military wouldn't tSSue a new
honorable discharge to each mdiv1dual. - H.

Thoughts
F'or everythmg there

IS

a

season, ond a !!me for every
m a t t er under heaven a
t&lt;me to k1ll, and a ttme to
/teal. a ttme to break down .

a

and

time to budd up -

Eccl 3 1 3

' '

Regret for ttme wasted
can be co me a power for
food m the lime that remams, tf we wtll only stop
the waste and the tdle, use·
less regretting - Arthur
Bttsbane ]ournaltst
Supenor planets are those
whose orbtts he oulstde that
of the earth , such as Mars ,
.Jupttet , Saturn, etc

WIN AT BRIDGE

27

4Q64 2
¥75
QB
4KJ!043

+

WEST

48 53
¥QJ9 2
tKJ7
olo7 52

EAST
4109 7
¥8643
+96 32
olo86

SOUTH (D)

4AK J
¥AK10
t Al0 54
oloAQ 9
Both vulnerable
West

North

East

Pass
Pass

South
3NT.

6 NT

Pass

Pass

Openmg lead- ¥ Q

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The V1enna coup ts a spe

eta! form of squeeze De·
clarer starts by settmg up a
tnck for one of h1s oppo·
nents Tnen he wmds up by
squeezmg htm out of tt
Most of the ltme tt IS an
ace play and today's hand IS
no exceptiOn
South happens to be m s1x
no-trump , but tt makes httle
dtfference what the contract
ts to a perfecltomst
He can count 12 easy
ncks Four m spades , two
n hearts , one m diamonds
and five m clubs Where ts a
13th tnck commg from ? It
has to come m one of the
red smts
Maybe West's queen of
hearts was from a doubleton
queen-jack Maybe there IS
a smgleton kmg of diamonds
ThiS ts most unltkPiy and tt
appears certam that West IS

t

There was a time m thts
country when only one app roach was tolerated But
now they are beginning to
see that there may be two or
more approaches to any·
thmg
- Viohmst Yehudi Menulnn,
on the ldeologreal state of

mustc tn Russia.

Dai~

The

Sentinel

C1tv Ed1tor
Published dally except
Sat urday by The Oh •o Va ll ey
Pubi1Sh1ng Company
11 1
Court St Pom eroy , Oh o,
45769 Busmes s Off•ce Pl\ 011&amp;
992 21561 Ed1tona1 Phone 992
I

2151

Second class postage pa1d at
Pomeroy , Ot11o
Nat.onal advert•s•ng
representatn1e eottmelll
Gallagher, Inc 12 East 42nd
Sf, New York C1 ty, New York
I

De

l 1vered by carrier where
available SO ce nts per week J
By Motor Route where carrter
se rv ice not ava1lable One

" The new foreman deswbes himself os o 'striCt
construct10nrst' -wflatever t~at 's'"

d

yout name, atlJteu anti liP

h

h

t

ondltlon ~re­

code to ''Wm of '"dge," /c/o th" v~ovuesl~ ~~~ld c this possibly
newspaper!, PO. Bar 4.19, Rodto
be brought on by smokmg•
Stohon. New York, NY 10019,
On my medtcal clatm he
dtagnosed tt as ASHD- old
two, but he mtght as well M I Could you please exThe play looks pret!Jer that plam this m your column
way Then he cast.es hts and IS tl very sertous'
three top spades and runs h.'s Dear Reader - Yes, yo u
ftve clubs endmg up tn can have a heart attack and
dummy He cashes hts queen never know 1t We call these
of spades and now dummy's "Silent heart attacks" and
last two cards are the heart they are usually founct wtth
seven and dtamond queen an electrocardtogram du:mg
whtle South holds k.ing-10 of a routme exammabon , or
hearts West cannot protect are noted on a post-mortem
both dtamonds and hearts exammation
and wtll be squeezed out of Not all of these are truly
hiS tnck
wtthout symptoms or stlent,
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
bUt cause SUCh rntld symp·
toms that the condttion ts
not suspected I have seen
several apparently healthy
The btddmg has been
men who have had thts oc
West North East South cur and then they remem·
1+
bered an eptsode of mtld in·
2NT digestion they had Ignored
Pass
1¥
Pass
Pass
3 olo
Pass 3+ We had problems of this sort
3N.T w1th the Air Force flym g
Pass
3•
Pass
?
Pass
4•
Pass
populatton Others had no
You, South, hold
story of any Illness what·
4A.Q4¥K6+ AQ1085.K109 ever
What do ,you do now'
Some p eo p 1e normally
h
a
v e electrocardiograms
A-Bid four hearts. You have
one more club, but it looks bel· that look like those caused
ter to try for 10 tritks than by heart attacks Tbts ts why
(or 11.
I hate to d1agnose a heart
attack if the person has not
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Instead of reb1ddmg three had any trouble and other·
clubs, your partner has b1d wise appears normal The
three d1amonds over your two best way to be sure a heart
to
no ~trump What do you do attack has occurred IS
no w?
have an old record avatlable

c,.,

'
for compartson Smce we
had yearly records for the
Atr Force flying populatiOn
we were able to spot changes
and also knew what a man 's
record looked Itke normally
Somettmes we could spot
heart trooble sooner because
a change had occurred from
the earlter record Thts IS
one reason l recommend
that every adult should ha ve
an electrocardiogram and tt
should be part of the permanent merltcal records for
later study and companson
Stlent heart attacks are
ca used by the same thmg as
those that cause symptom s
Thts tncludes smokmg A
heavy smoker- man or woman-wtll mcrease hts ltkelthood of havmg a heart at.
tack as much as three times
the nsk he m1ght have tf he
dtdn't smo ke Stoppmg
smokmg almost tmmed1ately
removes the mcreased n sk

-so 11 IS never too late to
qutt
M I means old myocardtal
mfarct10n, the mediCal term
for damage (tnfarct!On) to
the heart muscle (myocardtum), and ASJ-!D IS an ab·
brevlatton for arterwsclero.
tic heart dtsease, the com
mon type of heart d1sease
caused by fatty deposlls
(atherosclerosis) tn the ar·
terms leadmg to the heart
I am amazed that there
are not more silent heart
attacks smce the heart tt·
self Is nearly devoid of
nerves for pam The pam
from a heart attack ts really
referred pam to other areas
of the body, like the arm,
shoulder or chest

®

r· ::·. .:.:~A:·:~Key Games
By United Press lnternallonol
Eulern Conference
Atlantic Dlvt51on
W. L. Pet. GB
Philadelphia 5 1 833
Boston
4 2 607
New York
4 3 571
Buffalo
2 5 222
.,
Centra I D•vis1on
W. L. Pel. GB
Cleveland
2 5 286

P111sburgh at Carolina
Virginia at Kentucky ·
Memphis at Utah
!Only gamesscheduledl

COLUMBUS (UPI)- A couple
of key games whtch could go
a long way toward dectdlng the
1971 Class AAA state htgh
AHL Standtngs
By U01ted Press lnternattonal school football champtonship
East
are on tap for Friday mght
W. L. T. Pts.
Both Warren Hardmg, rated
Boston
5 0 I 11
Cincinnati
1 4 200
Nova Scotta
4 2 1 9 No I m thts week's United
Baltimore
J 5 167
''' Springfield
3 2 2 8 Press In ternahonal Ohio htgh
Atlanta
1 5 167
''' Rochester
4 3 0 8 school Board of Coaches' poll,
Western Conference
Providence
2 4 2 6
and second ranked Cmcmnah
M1dwest D1vls1on
West
W. L. Pet GB
W L. T. Pts. Moellet wtU be up agamst rugMilwaukee
7 0 1 000
Cmcmnat1
4 1 4 12
Chicago
5 1 833 Ph Hershey
5 1 1 11
Detroit
4 3 571 3 Cleveland
3 5 2 8
Phoenix
2 3 400 4 Bal1imore
3 3 2 8
Pac1f1c Olvlston
Richmond
1 5 l
3
W. L. Pet GB Tidewater
1 9 0 2
Los Angeles
5 1 833
Tuesday 's Results
Seattle
5 2 714
''' Bal1tmore 2 Richmond o
GotdenS1ate 3 3 500 2 Boston 5 Sprtngfleld 4
Portland
1 4 200 3'1&gt; Nova Scotia 4 Cmcmnatl 4
Houston
1 6 143 4•h
I Only games scheduled )
Tuesday's Results
Wednesday's Games
Southern Jr High defeated
Houston 104 De1rott 103
Balt1more at Hershey
Milwaukee 120 Baltimore 90
Rochester at Providence
the Metgs Jr High seventh
New York 106 Boston 101
!Only games scheduled)
grade football team 30-0
Chicago 123 Portland I ll
Tuesday afternoon, scormg m
Buffalo 91 Golden State 89
Phoenix t26 Clnclnna1199
every
quarter except the lhtrd,
NHL Standtngs
I Only games scheduled)
By Umted Press International wrappmg up a perfect 7-0
Wednesday's Games
East
De1ro•1at Bal11more
W L T Pts season
Houston at Boston
Tornado sconng was by
5 1 2 12
New York
Cleveland at Phlladelph•a
5
1
I
11
Boston
Jenkins on a !()..yard run, agam
New York at Atlanta
4 1 2 10 on a 3()-yard run, wtth Greg
Montrea l
!Only games scheduled)
2 3 2 6
Toronto
3 6 0 6 Dunnmg runmng the extra
Vancouver
ABA S1andtngs
2 6 0 4
Detro1t
By Un1ted Press lnternahona I
2 7 0. 4
Buffalo
East
West
W. L Pet GB
W L. T Pts
Kentucky
3
1 750
Ch1cago
8 2 0 16
VIrginia
4 2 661
•
;
,
Mmnesota
5 I l 11
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Rocky
New York
4 3 571
p
,
P1ftsburgh
5
2 1 11 Colavtto, who spent 13 years
Floridians
3 4 429 1
Philadelphia
3 4 o 6
Pittsburgh
2
2
4 333
St LouJS
3 5 0 6 playmg maJor league baseball
Carolina
2 4 333 2
Los Angeles
2 6 1
5 and now ts a mushroom farmWest
California
1
5
2
4
W L Pet GB
er, has asked the Cleveland lnTuesday's Resu Its
Indiana
5 I 833
dtans to constder hun for the
Chicago 5 De1rml 2
Utah
5 3 625
(On
ly
game
scheduled)
sltll-unftlled
posttton of managDallas
3 4 429 2• 2
Wednesday's
Games
Denver
2 4 333 3
mg the club
Memphis
2 5 286 3''' Boston at Montreal
Colavtlo, 38, played outfteld
Vancouver at Toronto
Tuesday's Results
De1rol1
at
New
York
wtth
the Indians and several
N Y 128 Florldtans 118 (l otsl
Buffalo
at
Los
Angeles
Vtrglnia U9 Pittsburgh 136
other teams durmg hts career
Ca lt1ornla at Pt11sborgh
Denver Ill Memphis 100
He came here Tnesday to talk
M1nnesota at St Lou1s
Utah 131 Dallas 116
(Only
games
scheduled)
wtth
the front offtce and tell
I Only games scheduled)
Indtans Prestdent Gabe Paul
exactly how he felt

mon th Sl 75 By ma 11 in OhiO
and W Va , One year 514 00

S1x IT)Onlhs S7 25
Three
month s s~ 50 Su b st r~ptlon
pr1 ce mcludes Sunday T1mes
Sent.nel
I •

ged opposttlf t
Hardtng, unbeaten m seven
games and tops m the ratmgs
for the secopd stratght week,
travels to Massillon to meet
the once-beaten Tigers, who
also sltll have state champwnshtp thoughts
Moeller, wtth one of tis better of a strmg of outstanding
teams under Coach Gerry
Faust, plays another perenmal

Little Tornados
Make Season 7 ·0
pomts, Ertc Dunnmg passmg to
Ketlh Ctrcle 40 yards for the
thtrd TD, and Boso runnmg the
extra pomts ; Greg Dunnmg, 3
pomts wtth a 20 yard field goal,
and Mtke Roberts on a 55-yard
pass play from Greg Dunmng
The squad wtll be honored
wtth the semors on Nov, 13 wtth
players and parents mvtted

Colavito Would Manage

Blue Wins Top
war
d
A
Diamond
OAKLAND( UPl )- Vtda Blue,
at 22 the youngest pttcher ever
to Wtn a Cy Young Award as
pi teller of the year m hts
league, satd today he ts happy
because u1t's about ltme we
young ones show the older folks
we can do the jOb "
The Oakland . Athlettc leftbander, who compiled a 24-8
record despite a late-season
slwnp, heat out 25-game wmner
Mickey Lohch of the De trot t
Tigers for the Amertcan
League award, 98 potnts to 85
Blue was the No. I chotce of 14
of the 24 members of the
Baseball Wrtters Assoctation of
Amertca Commtttee whtle Lolich received mne-ftrst-place
votes
Wtlbur Wood, who won 20
games for the Chtcago Whtte
Sox, recetved the other ftrstplace vote and ftmshed third m
the balloting wtth 23 potnts
Dave McNally, one of the AL
champton Baltunore Ortoles'
four 20-game wmners, had etght
potnls whtle Dtck Drago of the
Kansas City Royals and Andy
Messersrntth of the Califorma
Angels had one pomt each
Blue, who learned of Ute
honor from Mike Forrest of
radto stalton KNEW m Oakland, satd, "this is good for me
. . I am very happy to get the
award."
" It makes me feel better to
know I am the youngest pttcher
ever to get the award," he satd
"But tl doesn't erase the
dlsappomtment of losing the

playoffs to the Onoles We
were trymg to knock the
Ortoles out of tt and get mto
the World Sertes. Everythmg
we had worked for durtng the
season went down the dram."
Blue enjoyed a sensahonal
ftrst half of the season durmg
whtch he • woh ' 17 games,
tncludmg stx shutouts, and was
the key man m the Athlettcs'
drtve to a secure ftrst-place
hold m the Amertcan League
West. He slwnped to 7~ durmg
the second half of the season
Blue ftmshed the season wtth a
league-leading e1ght shutouts,
301 strtkeouts, and a I 82 ERA
Loltch, 31, had a 25-14 record
and a 2 92 earned run average
plus a league-Ieadmg 308
strtkeouts He completed 29 of
hts 45 starts
Wood had a 22-13 record after
bemg promoted from the
bullpen to startmg asstgnments
m mtd-season
Under the voting system, the
panel casts votes for Utree men
wtth five points awarded for
ftrst, three for second and one
for thtrd Prtor to Blue, the
youngest wmner of the award
was 23-year old Dean Chance of
the Angels m 1964.

"I wanted to let them know
I'm deftmtely mterested m
managmg the Indtans," Colavtto satd "If you don't tell them
you're tnterested, how else are

'

m our ,rumor league system/'

Paul satd "We haven't thought
much about htm there, but we
wtll and we wtll get back to
htm ''

Conference Oashes To
Dominate Saturday Play
By MAJOR AMOS B HOOPLE
Peerless Prognostteator

Go in Snow
"SURE GRIP N" AUTO TIRE

,...

(111)
I

they gmng to know' I'd ltke to
return to baseball and to Cleveland "
Paul satd Colavtto has no
chance to be named to manage
the Indtans, succeedmg Johnny
Ltpon
Lipon was not rehtred for
next year after takmg over
from the ftred Alvm Darke
mtdway through the season
The Trtbe lost 102 games last
season, tymg tts all-tune worst
record
"But we wtll constder hun
for manager or a coachmg JOb

Schedule~
toughie, Cmcmnatt Roger Bacon
for ftrst place m the Queen
Ctty's Catholic League. Both
are 7-0.
Hardmg's lead over Moeller
stands at 279-226 wtth the
Panthers pulhng down 16 ftrst
place votes to 9 for Moeller
Masstllon, loser only to Ntles
McKmley by a 7~ count.

Friday Night

moved mto thtrd as Niles
dropped a 10-0 dectston to Warren Western Reserve and fell
to fourth place Elyna rounds
out the lop ftve
In the Class AA votmg, Steubenvtlle Central Catholtc, a 23-.'1
conquerer of rtval Steobenvtlle
Btg Red Frtday mght, conltn·
ues to hold a wtde margtn over

second place Warren Kennedy
Wtth four of last week's Class
AA top ten losmg, a general
shakeup occurred, wtth Cleveland Holy NAme mov mg mto
the thtrd spot, takmg the place
of Napoleon, a 16-12 loser to
Bowhng Green
Mmerva and Youngstown
North round out the top f1ve

Eastern Seeks Eighth
Straight Win Friday
Eastern's power!~! Eagles
are expected to move closer to
an unbeaten season and thetr
second stratght Southern Valley
Athleltc Conference champtOnshtp Fnday mght tn a
league battle wtlh Coach Mel
Carter's Southwestern
Htghlanders
1
Coach Roger Ktrkhart's
Eagles "own a perfect 7-0 rriark
and 3-0 slate m the SVAC
Eastern, led by stgnal caller,
J1m Amsbary , a semor, has
rolled up 258 pomts this year
whtle permtlttng JUSt 18 by tis
opponents
The Metgs Counltans have
shown a well-balanced attack
provided by the runmng of two
speedy backs tn Rtck Sanders, a
semor, and Randy Bormg, a

1umor The tenacwus defense
has been paced by Dtck Stettler,
John Chne, Allen Holter, Alan
Duval and Rtck Hauber
Stettler and Duval wtll be back
next year
The Eagles have only
Southern left after Frtday's
game. Coach Mel Carter 's
Htghlanders are sltll seeking
thetr ftrst wtn of the 1971
campatgn Southwestern lost 320 last Fnday at Green
The Highlanders are led offenstvely by John Earl Hut-

Big Games On Tap

Egad, frtends, seldom m
collegiate ptgsktn htslory
have there been so many 1m·
portant conference contest&amp;
scheduled for one da y as
there are thtS Saturday!
From the Ivy Lea~ue to
the Pac-8, and mcludmg all
of the major conferences m
between, there are btg meet·
mgs OJI tap
In the Ivy League unbeat·
en Cornell takes on Colum·
bta and Dartmouth enter·
tams Yale We see the Btg
Red whtppmg Columbta by
a 41-16 margm, and Dartmouth repellmg Yale, 37-20
In the Btg Ten, we look
for Mtchigan to keep rolltng
toward a Rose Bowl date by
whackmg l n d tan a, 35-10,
Ohto State, looktn~ ahead to
tls Nov 20 date wtth mtghty
Mtchtgan, Will vanquiSh Mm·
nesota at Mmneapolts, 25-18,
Not1 ce
YA RD SA LE , Frtday and and Purdue wtll bounce back
Saturday, Oct 29 and Oct 30 fr om tis shockmg defeat of
Old dishes, Iron pots. stone last week to top Mtchtgan
1ars, clothes and many other State, 28-21- um-kumph!
1tems Two m1les above
In the Southeastern ConReedsvi lle on Rt 124
ference,
the hlgh-ranktng
tO 27 31c
trto of Alabama , Auburn and
LouStana State wtll keep
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • thetr league records unsul·
lted The Hoople System con·
ftdently predtcts The Cnmson Tide, w t t h brilltant
Johnny Musso tn the vanguard, Will roll over Mts·
stsStppt State, 33-24, the Au·
burn Ttgers wtll take the
measure of Flortda's Gators,
32·20,
and the Lous1ana State
• The tread detngn for our rarnoua Sure Grip tires
Fighting
T1gers have too
gives deep, interlocking "L" center cleats
much
of
everythmg
for chal·
teamed with doubl e shoulder cleats for
lengmg
MlsstSstppi
and wtll
grtp-and·go power
prevatl, 39-22
• Four full plies of 3-T Tnple-tempered nylon cord
body for long-lastmg wear
· In the Pactflc Etght, Stan·
ford will keep tts Rose Bowl
dnve altve by edgmg Oregon
State, 36-28
LARGER SIZII
70013
In the Southwestern, high·
tubtiUI
PRICED
tll•ckwaH
scoring
Arkansas will tram·
IUGHnY
ple Texas A&amp;M It's the
Fed. • r..
HIGHER •.,
tnd old tlr1
Razorbacks 47·18
FRI!I! MOUNTING
In the M1d-Amer1ca, To·
ledo Will stretch it's unbeaten string to 31 stratght as
they turn back dangerous
Mtaml in a wtld affatr, 38-31
Savmg the best for the
lAst, we gtve you- hak-kaff
- Colorado to stun the foot·
ball world as they shuck the
Cornhuskers' of Nebraska ,
the nahan's No I team Yas,
dear readers , all the Hoople
charts indicate the nattonal
TV audience IS in for real
barnburner- heh-heh- as the
Buffaloes (6·11 stop undefeated Nebraska, 26-26--harrumph Now go on wtth the
forecast
Air Force lti, Arizona St. t&gt;
(N)
tt2-21Dl
700
Arizona 22, New · Mrxlco 21
Arkansas 47, Texas A&amp;M 1~

'""

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

Subscr1pllon rates

Silent Heart Attack
Can Really.Occur

Sttttng wtth the ]ack of hearts
among hts souvemrs What
can South do•
The stige· is set for a
Vtenna coup if West also
holds the kmg of diamonds
b MD
Sputh doesn't need to play By Lawrence Lam , , .
hiS ace of dtamonds at tnck Dear Dr. Lamb-Dunng a
recent checkup an mtermst
Ame.,co's top upe.ts "P'••• theot tol~hme l ~ad heart fttfc~
tournament winmng techn1ques m a 10 de pas anha:! :c~:ed
••• JlB-poge book on 1 .1. coB Y car wgram s
ttssue It came as a shock as
MODERN. For your copy sent II I've never been known to
w1th

Timely Quotes

BERRfS WORLD\

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AMB

The Coup: Vienna Style
NORTH

alcoholic, Cheating hus~, thieves, a true
American lower depths beyond Gorki's
Imagination ; a sniper who kills the black ,coP
seemed Ute maChismo hero of the balcony, which .
applauded .... Not that the cop Inspil'ed the
tiniest admiration: his big scene was 'forcing
what seemed a nice black girl into a symbolic
perversion, pushing his gUttering extra pistol as
an all too plain apocryphallic aymbol.
Somehow much of this drew mirth from Ute
mixed first night audience ; we found It a truly
beartbreaking black tragedy wiUtoul laugh,
snicker or even a chortle in Its length, hearttreaking In Its piUiess exacerbation of the worst
black fears and terrors by portraying the most
wrenching, desolate, violent emptiness in
grmding, angry despair .... Peebles subtitles his
production "Tunes From Blackness," and It Is
just thai; Its audience Masochists Intent on
wallowmg in magnified, Incurable despond ....
The players uniformly are excellent as Peebles'
characters - every one. But It's so sad.
The 9th N. Y. Fthn Festival was Ute most
successful to dale - and no film won .... Ina
Balin's bauble was a "Un&lt;hay for Pres. In "72"
at the Skyline !JUJ's restaurant ... Looked like
two N.Y. mayors' names on the guest book at the
Ubrary, but 11 was just an actress with the nodoubt real name of Lindsay Wagner, who says
site's taking the Mrs. Tom Jefferson role In the
11
1776" film.
Glor~&amp;_,SWanson told the Pen &amp; Pencil she'd
never owned anything but a Rolls-Royce unUI
her current caravan - a Toyota .... But a couple
of years ago Gloria dropped us off at the Met
Opera after a Dick Cavett Show In a chauffeurpiloted Caddie .... Master guitarist Avram
Pengas at the El Avram spot oo Grove St. in the
Vtllage served In Ute Israeli Air Force; got
Utrough wiUt flying fingers.
Remember Ute Revelers quartet on early
radio : Junmy Melton, Frank Parker etc.? Thetr
hannoo1es will be revived at tbe Gay ~ Tommy Edwards bought their library of
arrangements (by Dr. Frank Black) .... Buddy's
Rich's meaUy41ig band (19 pieces) jammed
Barney Googles' spot (outdrew the biggest rock
groups) and was signed for six more onenighters .... It's Melvyn Douglas' 40th flbn year
(''Tonight or Never" for Sam Goldwyn w11,1 his
1931 start; his imminent ''One Is ' a Lonely
Number" hts latest) .... Peter Lawford doe8n 't
even get bllling m his "Clay Pigeon" ruck; plays
a CIA agent (can't tell If be's cautioUs, or
ashamed).

3- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. Z'l, 1971

Mary 8
Notre Dame 35, Navy 17
Ohio U. 17, Western Mich. 12
Oklahoma 49, Iowa State 8
Stanford 36, Oregon St. 28
Harvard 42, Penn. 19
Syracuse 26, Pittsburgh 12
Princeton 8, Brown 7
Purdue 28, Michigan St. 21
Georgia 39, South Carohna
38 (N)
Texas 40, SMU 15
So. Mlss. 26, Richmond 17
(N)

Tennessee 29, Tulsa 16
Texas Tech 13, Rice 10
Tulane 24, VanderbUt 6 (N)
Washington 44, UCLA 25
Utah 21, Wyoming 12
Brig. Young 23, U. Tex., El
Paso 13
Oregon 17, Wash. St. 15
Penn State 34, W. VIrginia
14
W. Tex . St. 16, Wichita St.
10 (NI
Ft. Gay 28 Hannon Trace 6
Kyger Creek 14 Green 8
The Old Boy Himself
Eastern 10 Southwestern 8
Auburn 32, Florida 20
North Gallla 44 Hannan 0
TCU 24, Baylor 17 (N)
Spencer 7 Wahama 6
Bucknell 21, Rutgers 7
Pl. Pleasant 27 Ravenswood
So. Cal. 28, California 20
20
Cincinnati 17, Memphis St. Southern 8 Symmes Valley 6
10
Chesapeake 12 Rock Hill 6
Wake Forest 33, Clemson 13 Waverly 22 Wellston 12
Utah State 29, Colo. St. U. 19 Galllpolls 14 Meigs 8
Cornell 41, Columbia 16
Ironton 44 Jackson 6
Dartmouth 37, Yale 20
Athens 32 Logan 16
Dayton 26, Youngstown 12
Matewan 28 South Point 20
Duke 35, Georgia Tecb %1
Lima 27 Portsmouth o
Holy Cross 24, Northeastern Fairland 20 Oak Hill 8
12
Florida St. 28, Houston 21 - Belpre 30 Vinton County 0
Northwestern 30, Illinois 14 Coal Grove 14 Ironton St.
Wisconsin 36, Iowa 16
Joe 12
Nelsonville-York 20 Miller 0
Okla. St. 2'1, Kansas 15
Kent Slate 18, North, Ill 10
Kentucky 24, Va. Tech 20
Colgate 30, Lehigh 14
Tampa 29, Louisville 18 (N) TROPICAL PARK
Bowllng Green 49, Marshall NEW YORK (UP! )-James
0
E. Brock, prestdent of Ute
'
Mar)land
22, VMI 15
Thoroughbred Racmg AssoctaToledo 38, Miami, 0. 31
tions, announced Tnesday that
Michigan 35, Indiana 10
the TRA board of dtrectors has
Ohio State 25, Minnesota 18 acted favorably on the appltcaAlabama 33, Miss. State 24 lton of Troptcal Park for
(N)
membership.
LSU 39, Mississippi 22
Troptcal Park's membership
Missourl 17, Kansas St. 11
m the TRA becomes effecttve
Colorado 28, Nebraska 20
wtth the opemng of 1ts 1971-72
New Mexico St. 36, Idaho 13 season on Nov 17 It wtll be the
(N)
only race track m the Mtamt
Virginia 20, N.C. State 12
North CaroUna 31, Wm . &amp; area operatmg under the TRA

chmson, a freshman fullback
and Mtke Dtllon, a JUntor
halfback. - Freshman quarterback Terry Carter and" the
other Htghlander stgnal caller,
Larry Frazter, like to throw to
thetr semor end Mark Smtth
Dale Whtll, a 180 lb Jumor, IS
thetr other target
,
In non-league actton, Hannan,
W Va , travel&lt; to North Gallta,
Fort Gay ts at Hannan Trace,
Kyger Creek plays at Green and
Southern IS on Lhe road at
Symmes Valley
North Galha's Ptrates wtll
seek thetr four th stratght vtctory agamst the Wtldcats of
Hannan
Coach John Blake's eleven
has ;uacked up three stratght
vtctortes and four wms m the
last ftve outmgs The P1rates
have combmed an explostve
attack wtlh a stmgy defense
whtle playmg wnimng ball Led
by semor halfback Jackte
Smtth, North Galha defeated
Hannan Trace, 40-0 last week
Smtth scored two touchdowns
Tony Glassburn, semor end,
playmg hts ftrst game smce
suffermg a broken collarbone
agamst Eastern, scored one TD
as dtd speedy Harvey Brown
and Garnes
Semor quarterback John
Eggleton connected on four of
seven passes for IIIli yards
Garnes, Loren Neal , Ketth
Saunders and Davtd Grant were
named as the top defenstve
players m the game
Hannan has had tts problems
thts year but have recorded
wtns over Hannan Trace and
Southwestern
Coach Dtck Adams' Kyger
Creek Bobcats wtll attempt to
get back mto the wmmng s1de of
the ledger Frtday agamst the
Green Bobcats.
KC defeated Green last year,
20-6m a mud batUe at Cheshire
Coach Dave Boyer's eleven tS 34 on the season The Bobcats
have a 4-2-1 record
Kyger Creek started the 1971
gnd season on a very optimtSitc
note after holdmg the powerful
Wahama Wht te Falcons to a ~
lte, but smce that ttme, the
Bobcat offense has been mconststent A maJor problem
has been in]unes Kyger Creek
has lost Gary Collms, sentor
halfback, due to a concusston
suffered m the North Galha
game and now , George Curry, a
prom·sing 180 lb JUniOr end, has
been stdelined wtth a pmched
nerve
Several other Bobcats mcludmg semor captam Terry
Moles have been beset wtth
numerous InJunes Moles
suffered a shoulder separatton

code of standards and utthzmg
the servtces of the Thoroughbred Racmg Protecttve
Bureau

agamst the Pnates but has
played m every game
, Ureen defeated Southwestern
32-0 last Frtday The Sctoto
Coun ty team has been led by
semor fialfback M1ke Trtplett,
quarterback Davtd McDavtd
and Jeff Holzapfel Kyger Creek
was shutout, 17-0 last Frtday
durmg tis hotnecornmg game
agamst Alexander
Coach Bruce Walla ce's
Southern Tornadoes after a
week's layoff return Lo the
grtdtron aga mst Coach John
Patton 's Symmes Valley
Vtkmgs Southern IS 2-4 on the
year whtle the Vtktngs have a 25 record Southern has shown a
revttahzed offense led by Ntck
Ihle, JUntor tatlback, Mtke and
Mttch Nease and Jay Htll
Coach Tom Belvtlle's Hannan
Trace Wtldcats are sttll seekmg
thetr ftrst wm of the yea r Fort
Gay comes to Mercervtlle wtth
an trnpresstverecord The Class
A school ts ranked m the West
Vtrgmta ratmgs
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P OP
Eastern
7 0 0 258 I B
Kyger Creek 4 2 I 101 123
North Ga II 1a
4 3 0 148 76
Southern
2 4 0 66 104

AA teams, followed by Campbell Memonal, Napoleon, Ironton and New Lexington tied for
etghth , and Sprmgfteld Shawnee
tenth Other losers from last
week's top 10 were Campbell
Memortal, Galhpohs and Riverdale.
Contrary to the performance
uf the Class AA teams over
the weekend, only one Class A
team suffered a defeat and the
enttre cast from last week ts
back agam
Cory Rawson holds on to a
113-IO! Iead over Marton Pleasant as the two teams run onetwo for the second week tn a
row Portsmouth Notre Dame
moved mto thtrd place replacmg Covmgton , which lost to AA
Spnngfteld Shawnee. Zanesvtlle
ts fourth and Covmgton rounds
out the top ftve
The only change tn the next
ftve from last week was a
swttch that saw Marton Local
take over mnth place, droppmg
Ada to tenth West Jefferson ts
stxth, Newark Cathohc seventh,
Tuscarawas Cathohc
and
etghth All the A teams are unbeaten except for Covmgton.

Watch Your
$$Grow
as you add to your sav1ngs

each week at the Metgs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
Sav1ngs and Loan.

4%%
CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
Save by the lOth, earn
from the lsi.

Mei~

Co. Branch

Southwestern 0 7 0 JB 188
Hannan Trace 0 7 0 12 188

tji.)
-,:r~

Southe rn

2

North Gallla
Southwestern

2 2 0 84 34
0 3 0 30 86

TheAthens County
Savtngs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

H an nan

0

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP
Eastern
3 0 0 115 6
Kyger Creek
4 I 0 95 80
Trace

1 0 58

34

6 148

4 0

Totals
tt tt 0 388 388
GAMES THIS WEEK
Eastern at Southwestern

Hannan, W Va , at North
Gallta
Kyger Creek at Green
Fort Gay at Hannan Trace'

.

Member Federal Home LO&lt; n

Bank

Memb er Federal Sav mgs &amp;
Loan Insura nce Corp Ill
accounts 1nsu red up ~o

$20,000.00.

Southern at Symmes Valley

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

PRICE CONTROLS

We have always had price controls to save you
money. On Certified XE-110 You

SAVE UP
TO •1.00 A TANKFUL
UNDER MAJOK COMPANiES

CERTIFIED
GAS STATIONS
992-9981

538W. Main

Pomeroy&lt; 0.

750x14
or Smaller

2

FOR

(Add A $1.00 For Each Size Larger l

H
&amp;
R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd AVE.
.,
992·2238
MIDOLEPORTt 0.

�.

Z- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0_, Oct. %1, 1971

~-------------~---------------------------;

l Voice along Broadway ]

" Hee,I Boy "'
:

EDITORIAL

End Vaccination
Against Smallpox?

I

Nothmg succeeds like success And few smgle masstve
campatgns agamsl dtsease scoll! ges of mankmd can b&lt;·
termed as successful as the smallpox vaccmatwn pro
grams m the Umted States and at ounct the wot lct

•

French n11crobwlogrst Lows Pastelll once claimed that
m ttme certam get m caused dtseases tlteOt eltcally coufd
be wtped ft om the face of the eat lh Although smallpox
has not been completely eradtcated tl of fat s a fme ex
ample of what can be done to teduce a gtven dtsease to
mtmmum pt opot twns lht ough llgtd quat ant me pt act tees
and Widespread use of \accmatwn s

The long term obJeCitve of an; dtsease control pro
gram of course, IS to self-destt ucl- et adtcate the dtsease
and thus render the pt ogt am ttself obsolete But m the
case of smallpox-sttll a problem tn central Aft tea the
lndtan subcontment and Indonesta - some phystctans
questton the tdea of dtscontm umg vaccmatton pt ograms
The WHO and PHS recommendatiO ns are based upon
the fact that small pox has become so rare that the
chances of tndtvtduals m the Um ted States and other ad
vanced natwns ol d)tng from fatal teacltons to the vac·
cme are now greate r than the chances of d) mg hom the
once·dteaded diSease 1tself

Cessatwn of rouhne smallpox vaccmatwn would mdeed
be a medtcal mtlestone It was exactly 175 years ago thts
year that Bnltsh Dr Edward Jenner tnJected some pus
from a m1lkmatd's "cowpox " et upt wn mto an 8-year-old
boy and rendered htm tmmure to smallpox
The PHS vtsualtzes masStve stores of smallpox vaccme
In case an ep1derntc does occur tn the future But as rnm e
than one spectaltst has pomted out masStve emergenc;
1mmumzatto n programs are more eastly talked abou t
than tmplemented
The dectswns now lte wtth the state and local health
organtzaltons who wtll have the optwn to pass them alon g
, to the natlon's pedtatnctans
'
1t can only be hoped that none of them nor the WHO
w~ or PHS wtll be proved short Stghted at some future ttme
At anv rate . the publtc can be assuted that dectstons on
aU levels are bemg made wtth care and tn good fmth
for there tS no destre to return 111 ttme to the davs when
95 of every 100 persons 111 some areas contracted small
pox

DAVID POI.ING, D.O.

A Need to Inspire
From Pen, Pulpit
B• REV DAVID POLING
' For the fm t wne m h:story the g1owth of the C/ms

tto ll Cltu1ch lws 11111 kept pace With the growth of the
wo rld s pup ulallott Today Clmstwns m the world
numbe , u11e m three By the year 2000, p&gt;ovtded that
we do not los e [J1o und anu fas ter than we are losmg at
presem u;e sh all 1111mber one zn fw e Whether we f1ke
tile 1cl ea (JI nul Cl!nstzallltlf 1s a nwwnty movement
m t he u.o1 /d '

- rrom Fatth Und er Ftre by Donald Strobe

~s

the Chnsttan commumt y goes through contmual
change a nd upheaval the role of the pastor theologtan
becomes mote evtdent and dectstve The last maJ ot up
heaval for Chnstendom "as the 16th century Refm ma
!ton Masstve cha nges 1aced through the Western world
wtth all sor ts of poltttcal soctal and reltgtous factors
shaptng the des ttny of the world In the affairS of the
Church pa stor theologta ns ltke Calvtn and Luther were
to ca rry enormous po,.er from pen and pulptt It ts ou r
clatm that a stmtl ar penod ts upon the Chnsttan fam tlv
111 the 20th centun and that the pastor theologtan wtll
be tn the va nguard
The reasons mtght be at ranged thts way
11 ~uth o nty and dtsc tpltne wtthm the church have
pass. d fro m bt shops and bUt eauct ats to the local pansh
Demands from htghc t-ups' now come tn the form of
requests Pet suaSion from tt ad tlton ts negot ta ble Power
has moved to the people and the pew IS the pomt of
fmal dectston
21 The pastor theologtan IS closest to the people and
most senSt ttve to thetr needs ti ts counsel, gUidance and
asSistance are obvto us In penods of change a nd alter·
at10n people turn to those concerned and at hand The
16th century proved th ts factor m teltgtous ltfe It may
be happenmg agam
31 The p astor - theolo ~ t a n who It uly counts has a fotce·
fu l vtew of theology and the .world- and IS able to com·
mumcate thts message m te t ms that young, adults and
nonbelievers can understand Luther and Calvm. and a
century.Jater, Wesley, had thtS sktll m wntmg and speak
ing These men were not em barrassed to gtve thetr full
attentiOn to the local pansh Wesley htt the ctrcutt more
than the other two. but hts ltstemng audtence was m the
local parish
The pastor theolog• n ar r even where and 111 every
denontt nat to n They
II ' tclenttfled by a pan sh
that has st1011g p1og
wJu ll edHcatwn , marked
w1th se n ou s study of 1&lt;, Bw.e all(/ a bruud dwewty of
members /up Soctal pt oblems are not neglected, and lay
leaderstup of courses encouraged These c hurches are
also marked by a good refet ence ltbrary a nd racks of
paperbacks often appear m the soctal rooms
Thts year one pastor-theologtan put together some
ideas and Word Books published " Fatth Undet F'tre"
by Donald Strobe of the Ftrst Untied Methodtsl Chutch ol
Grand Raptds, Mtch ThiS clergyman ts comm ttled to
the parish , ,yet makes no bones about the futUt e ol hts
task Said Strobe
" In the next 10 years, the chut ch's membetshiV wtll
be , ut in half Half of the people wtll et lhct leave he·
cause the chUJ ch tS becommg too tel evan t ot beca use

lt rs not tx.ocuming 1elcvant enyu uh We mrr st dee rd e

which half we wtsh to keep' "

BY JACK O'BRIAN
BOYD'S BRIDE WILL BE
HIS BLOOD BRO'DII!R
NEW YORK (KFS) - Austrian actress
Marlll8 Melland star Stephen Boyd plan a Gypsy
marriage - ritual wrlst-cuttlng, mingling of
blood and all that merry stuff .... Mother Dolores
fonner actress, now a nun, Dolores Hart) Is
ltQspttalized in Waterbury, Conn., Hospital .... In
Un&lt;hay's Mugg City, if opportunity !mocks,
everyone's afraJd to open tbe door .... George C.
Scott on the subject of his precarious actor's life:
"Actors find shields to hide their msecurity and
pain. Sometimes mine Is a bottle." .... Best TV
coverage of Ute N. Y. cops-c:rbne scandal comes
from CBS-TV's Otrls Borgen - he was a N.
City narco-cop for ten years before be"took to TV
.... His right name is Sid Slepherd; took Ute
&lt;llris Borgen from hiB mother's family when he
moonlighted In Ph illy as a broadcaster ....
Junmy Weston, owner of the restaurant of the
same name, told us Chris was '1earless" in the
narcotics-war, and Jimmy should !mow - he
was a top tough N.Y. Narcotics Squad detective
for 16 years.
Now that Woody Allen's no longer a closet
clarinetist and has played on TV (Cavett Show),
It's time for a crltlcalappralsal: he SO\Ulds like
early Ted Lewis .... The early Bdwy. stage
curtain remams an edgy conlroversy among
restaurants· "21" hates it and will salute the
only 8 p.m. show-c:urtain in town by putting e
poster of Davtd Merrick's "Promises,
PromiSes" m a fancy sUver lobby frame.
"Ain't Supposed to Die a Naturai!JeaUt" ts a
jazz.t·ock mustcal at the Barrymore Theater,
with book, words and music created by Melvin
Van Peebles, who hA'I fashtoned not a musical
comedy, but a musical tragedy; It excited some
of the audience mto strange laughter, but. its
characters are IUliformly terribly sad.
The Peebles' production is a black-c:reated
and perfonned catharsis, violently imagllled and
perceptively caricatured from all the black
ghetto fears and hate of whitey; certainly no
leaverung hint of affection or Integration arises
on Peebles' stage: every one of the many
characters is a vrctim, a loser, a forced soc~al
misfit, and tis crushing criticism of Ute ghetto
scene doesn't -skip black persecution, either;
expectedly, the black cop is patnted a monster,
more v1clously even than the crooked white cop
and the symbolic pig-on-high.
The abject characters are cops, jiUlkies,
assorted prostitutes, punps, lesbians, transvestites, murderers, fags, a bUnd beggar, an

x.

The smallpox vaccmatwn pt ogt ams have been so sur
cessful that ma]Ot health gt oups tncludmg the Wot ld
Health Orgamzatwn and U S Pubhc Health Servtce
!PHS) ha;e now declated that tl would be safe fot the
Untied States and other advanced natwns to abolish cus
tomary smallpox \oaccmatwn requnements iOI you ng.
sters and to admtmstet the vacc me only to personnel
likely to contact an mlected tt avelet

The stattSttcs go hke thts The odds that m the Umted
States a pet son wtll dte from a reac lton to smallpox
vaccmatton are abo ut a nullwn to one-seemmgl) mm
tscule But 14 to 17 mtlhon Amencans ate vaccmated
yearly In 1968 for example. some 14 nulhon were v,tc
cmated and mne deaths were assoctated "'th the vac
cmatwns , whtch can cause encephahhs a bram and nerv
ous system mfeclton and someltmes othet lethal mfec
!tons
Thus the PHS has calculated that 15 cases of smallpox
would have to entet the Umted States each year before
deaths from the diSease would equal deaths from the
vaccme Thts may even be an underesttmate smce medt
cal textbooks gtve 25 per cent as the mortahty ra te of
smallpox Man y surv tvot s howevet ate left scat red ot
blinded by the dtsease
Even though the PHS has made tis t ecommendatton
tt 1s not btndmg, for the PH S has no power to change
state and local health laws It wtll be up to the state and
local health de pat tmenls to detet nune a course of act ton
The preshgous Amettcan Academy of Pedta tncs has at
ready sent tts members nottftcatwn that tt plans to
formall y back the PHS 1ecommendatwn shortly

'

u.fAtt 't:(}trr

• t"'~A('7'

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

!Helen Help Us\
I

i

By Helen Bottel

I
I
I

WHITE LIE HAS HJM WORRIED
Dear Helen
As the oldest 111 the family, and the only man, I put off
mamage ftrst ur'tl my ststers were through college and settled,
then because our mother needed help
By the lime sbe passed on after a long illness, 1 was 38, and
not exactly the "eltgtble bachelor" type When you're thiS age,
and have ltttle expertence wtlh women - weD, people asswne
you're queer Nowadays, any unmarrted guy who doesn't keep a
"bachelor pad" and a strmg of girls tS suspected of likmg only
men
I decided to change this, so I got a JOb m another state, told
my employer I was dtvorced, and the word got around. Maybe my
new sell-tmage had somethmg to do wtth it, but suddenly women
were mterested
As you mtght guess, I've fallen 111 love and want to get
marned She's a great person But I've told her all about my "exwtfe " To bolster up my courage, I made tt a good story. It wasn't
hard - I JUSt conJured up a person who was the exact oppostte of
the woman I love She had a bad ftrst marnage, "too," so we
related rtght from the start
My questiOn Do I confess and rtSk losmg her, or do I keep thts
ftctttlous "ex" the rest of my life' - BACHELOR TURNED
DIVORCEE
Dear BTD
A "great person " will understand - and you'll feel mtghtly
relteved to have thts "ex" out of your life
My I GAP ("I'm Guessmg Agam Perceptton") says she
already suspects Do you really thtnk an mexpertenced bachelor
can convmcmgly descrtbe a "wife " to the woman he loves•- H.
Dear Helen
I've been gomg wtth a wtdower whose wife d1ed three years
ago We get along perfectly, but he mvahably talks about hts
wtfe' 1 feel left out, though I hate to mentiOn thtS He'd probably
take tt as Jealousy
I love htm, and don't want to be part of a threesome - that's
why I keep my former ltfe out of the conversalton My husband
and I were very happy together and shared a wonderful
relattonshtp, but he's been gone ftve years He wouldn't want me
ltvmg m the past
Wbat do you say, Helen' - MARIE
Dear Marte
I vote for life among the ltvmg
Perhaps your gentleman frtend wtll, too, if you (temporarily)
make thiS a foursome Each tune he menttons htS former wife ,
remember an mc1dent from YOUR marrtage.
It shouldn't take long - H
Dear Helen
It looks like soon they'll be taktng homosexuality (between
consenting adults ) off the books as a crune. And tt's high time we
learned we can't legtslate morality, or mstst that all humans be
cut of one pattern or the other
But bere'smy question : When the gay life ts no longer illegal,
will the milttary go back and clear all those "undestrables" who
were dtscharged wtth a black mark agamst thetr names•WAITING
Dear Wattmg :
I don't know But there's a counter questton : If homosexuality
were no longer a erune, wouldn't the "undesirables" be
automatically cleared' Surely the military wouldn't tSSue a new
honorable discharge to each mdiv1dual. - H.

Thoughts
F'or everythmg there

IS

a

season, ond a !!me for every
m a t t er under heaven a
t&lt;me to k1ll, and a ttme to
/teal. a ttme to break down .

a

and

time to budd up -

Eccl 3 1 3

' '

Regret for ttme wasted
can be co me a power for
food m the lime that remams, tf we wtll only stop
the waste and the tdle, use·
less regretting - Arthur
Bttsbane ]ournaltst
Supenor planets are those
whose orbtts he oulstde that
of the earth , such as Mars ,
.Jupttet , Saturn, etc

WIN AT BRIDGE

27

4Q64 2
¥75
QB
4KJ!043

+

WEST

48 53
¥QJ9 2
tKJ7
olo7 52

EAST
4109 7
¥8643
+96 32
olo86

SOUTH (D)

4AK J
¥AK10
t Al0 54
oloAQ 9
Both vulnerable
West

North

East

Pass
Pass

South
3NT.

6 NT

Pass

Pass

Openmg lead- ¥ Q

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The V1enna coup ts a spe

eta! form of squeeze De·
clarer starts by settmg up a
tnck for one of h1s oppo·
nents Tnen he wmds up by
squeezmg htm out of tt
Most of the ltme tt IS an
ace play and today's hand IS
no exceptiOn
South happens to be m s1x
no-trump , but tt makes httle
dtfference what the contract
ts to a perfecltomst
He can count 12 easy
ncks Four m spades , two
n hearts , one m diamonds
and five m clubs Where ts a
13th tnck commg from ? It
has to come m one of the
red smts
Maybe West's queen of
hearts was from a doubleton
queen-jack Maybe there IS
a smgleton kmg of diamonds
ThiS ts most unltkPiy and tt
appears certam that West IS

t

There was a time m thts
country when only one app roach was tolerated But
now they are beginning to
see that there may be two or
more approaches to any·
thmg
- Viohmst Yehudi Menulnn,
on the ldeologreal state of

mustc tn Russia.

Dai~

The

Sentinel

C1tv Ed1tor
Published dally except
Sat urday by The Oh •o Va ll ey
Pubi1Sh1ng Company
11 1
Court St Pom eroy , Oh o,
45769 Busmes s Off•ce Pl\ 011&amp;
992 21561 Ed1tona1 Phone 992
I

2151

Second class postage pa1d at
Pomeroy , Ot11o
Nat.onal advert•s•ng
representatn1e eottmelll
Gallagher, Inc 12 East 42nd
Sf, New York C1 ty, New York
I

De

l 1vered by carrier where
available SO ce nts per week J
By Motor Route where carrter
se rv ice not ava1lable One

" The new foreman deswbes himself os o 'striCt
construct10nrst' -wflatever t~at 's'"

d

yout name, atlJteu anti liP

h

h

t

ondltlon ~re­

code to ''Wm of '"dge," /c/o th" v~ovuesl~ ~~~ld c this possibly
newspaper!, PO. Bar 4.19, Rodto
be brought on by smokmg•
Stohon. New York, NY 10019,
On my medtcal clatm he
dtagnosed tt as ASHD- old
two, but he mtght as well M I Could you please exThe play looks pret!Jer that plam this m your column
way Then he cast.es hts and IS tl very sertous'
three top spades and runs h.'s Dear Reader - Yes, yo u
ftve clubs endmg up tn can have a heart attack and
dummy He cashes hts queen never know 1t We call these
of spades and now dummy's "Silent heart attacks" and
last two cards are the heart they are usually founct wtth
seven and dtamond queen an electrocardtogram du:mg
whtle South holds k.ing-10 of a routme exammabon , or
hearts West cannot protect are noted on a post-mortem
both dtamonds and hearts exammation
and wtll be squeezed out of Not all of these are truly
hiS tnck
wtthout symptoms or stlent,
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
bUt cause SUCh rntld symp·
toms that the condttion ts
not suspected I have seen
several apparently healthy
The btddmg has been
men who have had thts oc
West North East South cur and then they remem·
1+
bered an eptsode of mtld in·
2NT digestion they had Ignored
Pass
1¥
Pass
Pass
3 olo
Pass 3+ We had problems of this sort
3N.T w1th the Air Force flym g
Pass
3•
Pass
?
Pass
4•
Pass
populatton Others had no
You, South, hold
story of any Illness what·
4A.Q4¥K6+ AQ1085.K109 ever
What do ,you do now'
Some p eo p 1e normally
h
a
v e electrocardiograms
A-Bid four hearts. You have
one more club, but it looks bel· that look like those caused
ter to try for 10 tritks than by heart attacks Tbts ts why
(or 11.
I hate to d1agnose a heart
attack if the person has not
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Instead of reb1ddmg three had any trouble and other·
clubs, your partner has b1d wise appears normal The
three d1amonds over your two best way to be sure a heart
to
no ~trump What do you do attack has occurred IS
no w?
have an old record avatlable

c,.,

'
for compartson Smce we
had yearly records for the
Atr Force flying populatiOn
we were able to spot changes
and also knew what a man 's
record looked Itke normally
Somettmes we could spot
heart trooble sooner because
a change had occurred from
the earlter record Thts IS
one reason l recommend
that every adult should ha ve
an electrocardiogram and tt
should be part of the permanent merltcal records for
later study and companson
Stlent heart attacks are
ca used by the same thmg as
those that cause symptom s
Thts tncludes smokmg A
heavy smoker- man or woman-wtll mcrease hts ltkelthood of havmg a heart at.
tack as much as three times
the nsk he m1ght have tf he
dtdn't smo ke Stoppmg
smokmg almost tmmed1ately
removes the mcreased n sk

-so 11 IS never too late to
qutt
M I means old myocardtal
mfarct10n, the mediCal term
for damage (tnfarct!On) to
the heart muscle (myocardtum), and ASJ-!D IS an ab·
brevlatton for arterwsclero.
tic heart dtsease, the com
mon type of heart d1sease
caused by fatty deposlls
(atherosclerosis) tn the ar·
terms leadmg to the heart
I am amazed that there
are not more silent heart
attacks smce the heart tt·
self Is nearly devoid of
nerves for pam The pam
from a heart attack ts really
referred pam to other areas
of the body, like the arm,
shoulder or chest

®

r· ::·. .:.:~A:·:~Key Games
By United Press lnternallonol
Eulern Conference
Atlantic Dlvt51on
W. L. Pet. GB
Philadelphia 5 1 833
Boston
4 2 607
New York
4 3 571
Buffalo
2 5 222
.,
Centra I D•vis1on
W. L. Pel. GB
Cleveland
2 5 286

P111sburgh at Carolina
Virginia at Kentucky ·
Memphis at Utah
!Only gamesscheduledl

COLUMBUS (UPI)- A couple
of key games whtch could go
a long way toward dectdlng the
1971 Class AAA state htgh
AHL Standtngs
By U01ted Press lnternattonal school football champtonship
East
are on tap for Friday mght
W. L. T. Pts.
Both Warren Hardmg, rated
Boston
5 0 I 11
Cincinnati
1 4 200
Nova Scotta
4 2 1 9 No I m thts week's United
Baltimore
J 5 167
''' Springfield
3 2 2 8 Press In ternahonal Ohio htgh
Atlanta
1 5 167
''' Rochester
4 3 0 8 school Board of Coaches' poll,
Western Conference
Providence
2 4 2 6
and second ranked Cmcmnah
M1dwest D1vls1on
West
W. L. Pet GB
W L. T. Pts. Moellet wtU be up agamst rugMilwaukee
7 0 1 000
Cmcmnat1
4 1 4 12
Chicago
5 1 833 Ph Hershey
5 1 1 11
Detroit
4 3 571 3 Cleveland
3 5 2 8
Phoenix
2 3 400 4 Bal1imore
3 3 2 8
Pac1f1c Olvlston
Richmond
1 5 l
3
W. L. Pet GB Tidewater
1 9 0 2
Los Angeles
5 1 833
Tuesday 's Results
Seattle
5 2 714
''' Bal1tmore 2 Richmond o
GotdenS1ate 3 3 500 2 Boston 5 Sprtngfleld 4
Portland
1 4 200 3'1&gt; Nova Scotia 4 Cmcmnatl 4
Houston
1 6 143 4•h
I Only games scheduled )
Tuesday's Results
Wednesday's Games
Southern Jr High defeated
Houston 104 De1rott 103
Balt1more at Hershey
Milwaukee 120 Baltimore 90
Rochester at Providence
the Metgs Jr High seventh
New York 106 Boston 101
!Only games scheduled)
grade football team 30-0
Chicago 123 Portland I ll
Tuesday afternoon, scormg m
Buffalo 91 Golden State 89
Phoenix t26 Clnclnna1199
every
quarter except the lhtrd,
NHL Standtngs
I Only games scheduled)
By Umted Press International wrappmg up a perfect 7-0
Wednesday's Games
East
De1ro•1at Bal11more
W L T Pts season
Houston at Boston
Tornado sconng was by
5 1 2 12
New York
Cleveland at Phlladelph•a
5
1
I
11
Boston
Jenkins on a !()..yard run, agam
New York at Atlanta
4 1 2 10 on a 3()-yard run, wtth Greg
Montrea l
!Only games scheduled)
2 3 2 6
Toronto
3 6 0 6 Dunnmg runmng the extra
Vancouver
ABA S1andtngs
2 6 0 4
Detro1t
By Un1ted Press lnternahona I
2 7 0. 4
Buffalo
East
West
W. L Pet GB
W L. T Pts
Kentucky
3
1 750
Ch1cago
8 2 0 16
VIrginia
4 2 661
•
;
,
Mmnesota
5 I l 11
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Rocky
New York
4 3 571
p
,
P1ftsburgh
5
2 1 11 Colavtto, who spent 13 years
Floridians
3 4 429 1
Philadelphia
3 4 o 6
Pittsburgh
2
2
4 333
St LouJS
3 5 0 6 playmg maJor league baseball
Carolina
2 4 333 2
Los Angeles
2 6 1
5 and now ts a mushroom farmWest
California
1
5
2
4
W L Pet GB
er, has asked the Cleveland lnTuesday's Resu Its
Indiana
5 I 833
dtans to constder hun for the
Chicago 5 De1rml 2
Utah
5 3 625
(On
ly
game
scheduled)
sltll-unftlled
posttton of managDallas
3 4 429 2• 2
Wednesday's
Games
Denver
2 4 333 3
mg the club
Memphis
2 5 286 3''' Boston at Montreal
Colavtlo, 38, played outfteld
Vancouver at Toronto
Tuesday's Results
De1rol1
at
New
York
wtth
the Indians and several
N Y 128 Florldtans 118 (l otsl
Buffalo
at
Los
Angeles
Vtrglnia U9 Pittsburgh 136
other teams durmg hts career
Ca lt1ornla at Pt11sborgh
Denver Ill Memphis 100
He came here Tnesday to talk
M1nnesota at St Lou1s
Utah 131 Dallas 116
(Only
games
scheduled)
wtth
the front offtce and tell
I Only games scheduled)
Indtans Prestdent Gabe Paul
exactly how he felt

mon th Sl 75 By ma 11 in OhiO
and W Va , One year 514 00

S1x IT)Onlhs S7 25
Three
month s s~ 50 Su b st r~ptlon
pr1 ce mcludes Sunday T1mes
Sent.nel
I •

ged opposttlf t
Hardtng, unbeaten m seven
games and tops m the ratmgs
for the secopd stratght week,
travels to Massillon to meet
the once-beaten Tigers, who
also sltll have state champwnshtp thoughts
Moeller, wtth one of tis better of a strmg of outstanding
teams under Coach Gerry
Faust, plays another perenmal

Little Tornados
Make Season 7 ·0
pomts, Ertc Dunnmg passmg to
Ketlh Ctrcle 40 yards for the
thtrd TD, and Boso runnmg the
extra pomts ; Greg Dunnmg, 3
pomts wtth a 20 yard field goal,
and Mtke Roberts on a 55-yard
pass play from Greg Dunmng
The squad wtll be honored
wtth the semors on Nov, 13 wtth
players and parents mvtted

Colavito Would Manage

Blue Wins Top
war
d
A
Diamond
OAKLAND( UPl )- Vtda Blue,
at 22 the youngest pttcher ever
to Wtn a Cy Young Award as
pi teller of the year m hts
league, satd today he ts happy
because u1t's about ltme we
young ones show the older folks
we can do the jOb "
The Oakland . Athlettc leftbander, who compiled a 24-8
record despite a late-season
slwnp, heat out 25-game wmner
Mickey Lohch of the De trot t
Tigers for the Amertcan
League award, 98 potnts to 85
Blue was the No. I chotce of 14
of the 24 members of the
Baseball Wrtters Assoctation of
Amertca Commtttee whtle Lolich received mne-ftrst-place
votes
Wtlbur Wood, who won 20
games for the Chtcago Whtte
Sox, recetved the other ftrstplace vote and ftmshed third m
the balloting wtth 23 potnts
Dave McNally, one of the AL
champton Baltunore Ortoles'
four 20-game wmners, had etght
potnls whtle Dtck Drago of the
Kansas City Royals and Andy
Messersrntth of the Califorma
Angels had one pomt each
Blue, who learned of Ute
honor from Mike Forrest of
radto stalton KNEW m Oakland, satd, "this is good for me
. . I am very happy to get the
award."
" It makes me feel better to
know I am the youngest pttcher
ever to get the award," he satd
"But tl doesn't erase the
dlsappomtment of losing the

playoffs to the Onoles We
were trymg to knock the
Ortoles out of tt and get mto
the World Sertes. Everythmg
we had worked for durtng the
season went down the dram."
Blue enjoyed a sensahonal
ftrst half of the season durmg
whtch he • woh ' 17 games,
tncludmg stx shutouts, and was
the key man m the Athlettcs'
drtve to a secure ftrst-place
hold m the Amertcan League
West. He slwnped to 7~ durmg
the second half of the season
Blue ftmshed the season wtth a
league-leading e1ght shutouts,
301 strtkeouts, and a I 82 ERA
Loltch, 31, had a 25-14 record
and a 2 92 earned run average
plus a league-Ieadmg 308
strtkeouts He completed 29 of
hts 45 starts
Wood had a 22-13 record after
bemg promoted from the
bullpen to startmg asstgnments
m mtd-season
Under the voting system, the
panel casts votes for Utree men
wtth five points awarded for
ftrst, three for second and one
for thtrd Prtor to Blue, the
youngest wmner of the award
was 23-year old Dean Chance of
the Angels m 1964.

"I wanted to let them know
I'm deftmtely mterested m
managmg the Indtans," Colavtto satd "If you don't tell them
you're tnterested, how else are

'

m our ,rumor league system/'

Paul satd "We haven't thought
much about htm there, but we
wtll and we wtll get back to
htm ''

Conference Oashes To
Dominate Saturday Play
By MAJOR AMOS B HOOPLE
Peerless Prognostteator

Go in Snow
"SURE GRIP N" AUTO TIRE

,...

(111)
I

they gmng to know' I'd ltke to
return to baseball and to Cleveland "
Paul satd Colavtto has no
chance to be named to manage
the Indtans, succeedmg Johnny
Ltpon
Lipon was not rehtred for
next year after takmg over
from the ftred Alvm Darke
mtdway through the season
The Trtbe lost 102 games last
season, tymg tts all-tune worst
record
"But we wtll constder hun
for manager or a coachmg JOb

Schedule~
toughie, Cmcmnatt Roger Bacon
for ftrst place m the Queen
Ctty's Catholic League. Both
are 7-0.
Hardmg's lead over Moeller
stands at 279-226 wtth the
Panthers pulhng down 16 ftrst
place votes to 9 for Moeller
Masstllon, loser only to Ntles
McKmley by a 7~ count.

Friday Night

moved mto thtrd as Niles
dropped a 10-0 dectston to Warren Western Reserve and fell
to fourth place Elyna rounds
out the lop ftve
In the Class AA votmg, Steubenvtlle Central Catholtc, a 23-.'1
conquerer of rtval Steobenvtlle
Btg Red Frtday mght, conltn·
ues to hold a wtde margtn over

second place Warren Kennedy
Wtth four of last week's Class
AA top ten losmg, a general
shakeup occurred, wtth Cleveland Holy NAme mov mg mto
the thtrd spot, takmg the place
of Napoleon, a 16-12 loser to
Bowhng Green
Mmerva and Youngstown
North round out the top f1ve

Eastern Seeks Eighth
Straight Win Friday
Eastern's power!~! Eagles
are expected to move closer to
an unbeaten season and thetr
second stratght Southern Valley
Athleltc Conference champtOnshtp Fnday mght tn a
league battle wtlh Coach Mel
Carter's Southwestern
Htghlanders
1
Coach Roger Ktrkhart's
Eagles "own a perfect 7-0 rriark
and 3-0 slate m the SVAC
Eastern, led by stgnal caller,
J1m Amsbary , a semor, has
rolled up 258 pomts this year
whtle permtlttng JUSt 18 by tis
opponents
The Metgs Counltans have
shown a well-balanced attack
provided by the runmng of two
speedy backs tn Rtck Sanders, a
semor, and Randy Bormg, a

1umor The tenacwus defense
has been paced by Dtck Stettler,
John Chne, Allen Holter, Alan
Duval and Rtck Hauber
Stettler and Duval wtll be back
next year
The Eagles have only
Southern left after Frtday's
game. Coach Mel Carter 's
Htghlanders are sltll seeking
thetr ftrst wtn of the 1971
campatgn Southwestern lost 320 last Fnday at Green
The Highlanders are led offenstvely by John Earl Hut-

Big Games On Tap

Egad, frtends, seldom m
collegiate ptgsktn htslory
have there been so many 1m·
portant conference contest&amp;
scheduled for one da y as
there are thtS Saturday!
From the Ivy Lea~ue to
the Pac-8, and mcludmg all
of the major conferences m
between, there are btg meet·
mgs OJI tap
In the Ivy League unbeat·
en Cornell takes on Colum·
bta and Dartmouth enter·
tams Yale We see the Btg
Red whtppmg Columbta by
a 41-16 margm, and Dartmouth repellmg Yale, 37-20
In the Btg Ten, we look
for Mtchigan to keep rolltng
toward a Rose Bowl date by
whackmg l n d tan a, 35-10,
Ohto State, looktn~ ahead to
tls Nov 20 date wtth mtghty
Mtchtgan, Will vanquiSh Mm·
nesota at Mmneapolts, 25-18,
Not1 ce
YA RD SA LE , Frtday and and Purdue wtll bounce back
Saturday, Oct 29 and Oct 30 fr om tis shockmg defeat of
Old dishes, Iron pots. stone last week to top Mtchtgan
1ars, clothes and many other State, 28-21- um-kumph!
1tems Two m1les above
In the Southeastern ConReedsvi lle on Rt 124
ference,
the hlgh-ranktng
tO 27 31c
trto of Alabama , Auburn and
LouStana State wtll keep
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • thetr league records unsul·
lted The Hoople System con·
ftdently predtcts The Cnmson Tide, w t t h brilltant
Johnny Musso tn the vanguard, Will roll over Mts·
stsStppt State, 33-24, the Au·
burn Ttgers wtll take the
measure of Flortda's Gators,
32·20,
and the Lous1ana State
• The tread detngn for our rarnoua Sure Grip tires
Fighting
T1gers have too
gives deep, interlocking "L" center cleats
much
of
everythmg
for chal·
teamed with doubl e shoulder cleats for
lengmg
MlsstSstppi
and wtll
grtp-and·go power
prevatl, 39-22
• Four full plies of 3-T Tnple-tempered nylon cord
body for long-lastmg wear
· In the Pactflc Etght, Stan·
ford will keep tts Rose Bowl
dnve altve by edgmg Oregon
State, 36-28
LARGER SIZII
70013
In the Southwestern, high·
tubtiUI
PRICED
tll•ckwaH
scoring
Arkansas will tram·
IUGHnY
ple Texas A&amp;M It's the
Fed. • r..
HIGHER •.,
tnd old tlr1
Razorbacks 47·18
FRI!I! MOUNTING
In the M1d-Amer1ca, To·
ledo Will stretch it's unbeaten string to 31 stratght as
they turn back dangerous
Mtaml in a wtld affatr, 38-31
Savmg the best for the
lAst, we gtve you- hak-kaff
- Colorado to stun the foot·
ball world as they shuck the
Cornhuskers' of Nebraska ,
the nahan's No I team Yas,
dear readers , all the Hoople
charts indicate the nattonal
TV audience IS in for real
barnburner- heh-heh- as the
Buffaloes (6·11 stop undefeated Nebraska, 26-26--harrumph Now go on wtth the
forecast
Air Force lti, Arizona St. t&gt;
(N)
tt2-21Dl
700
Arizona 22, New · Mrxlco 21
Arkansas 47, Texas A&amp;M 1~

'""

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,

Subscr1pllon rates

Silent Heart Attack
Can Really.Occur

Sttttng wtth the ]ack of hearts
among hts souvemrs What
can South do•
The stige· is set for a
Vtenna coup if West also
holds the kmg of diamonds
b MD
Sputh doesn't need to play By Lawrence Lam , , .
hiS ace of dtamonds at tnck Dear Dr. Lamb-Dunng a
recent checkup an mtermst
Ame.,co's top upe.ts "P'••• theot tol~hme l ~ad heart fttfc~
tournament winmng techn1ques m a 10 de pas anha:! :c~:ed
••• JlB-poge book on 1 .1. coB Y car wgram s
ttssue It came as a shock as
MODERN. For your copy sent II I've never been known to
w1th

Timely Quotes

BERRfS WORLD\

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AMB

The Coup: Vienna Style
NORTH

alcoholic, Cheating hus~, thieves, a true
American lower depths beyond Gorki's
Imagination ; a sniper who kills the black ,coP
seemed Ute maChismo hero of the balcony, which .
applauded .... Not that the cop Inspil'ed the
tiniest admiration: his big scene was 'forcing
what seemed a nice black girl into a symbolic
perversion, pushing his gUttering extra pistol as
an all too plain apocryphallic aymbol.
Somehow much of this drew mirth from Ute
mixed first night audience ; we found It a truly
beartbreaking black tragedy wiUtoul laugh,
snicker or even a chortle in Its length, hearttreaking In Its piUiess exacerbation of the worst
black fears and terrors by portraying the most
wrenching, desolate, violent emptiness in
grmding, angry despair .... Peebles subtitles his
production "Tunes From Blackness," and It Is
just thai; Its audience Masochists Intent on
wallowmg in magnified, Incurable despond ....
The players uniformly are excellent as Peebles'
characters - every one. But It's so sad.
The 9th N. Y. Fthn Festival was Ute most
successful to dale - and no film won .... Ina
Balin's bauble was a "Un&lt;hay for Pres. In "72"
at the Skyline !JUJ's restaurant ... Looked like
two N.Y. mayors' names on the guest book at the
Ubrary, but 11 was just an actress with the nodoubt real name of Lindsay Wagner, who says
site's taking the Mrs. Tom Jefferson role In the
11
1776" film.
Glor~&amp;_,SWanson told the Pen &amp; Pencil she'd
never owned anything but a Rolls-Royce unUI
her current caravan - a Toyota .... But a couple
of years ago Gloria dropped us off at the Met
Opera after a Dick Cavett Show In a chauffeurpiloted Caddie .... Master guitarist Avram
Pengas at the El Avram spot oo Grove St. in the
Vtllage served In Ute Israeli Air Force; got
Utrough wiUt flying fingers.
Remember Ute Revelers quartet on early
radio : Junmy Melton, Frank Parker etc.? Thetr
hannoo1es will be revived at tbe Gay ~ Tommy Edwards bought their library of
arrangements (by Dr. Frank Black) .... Buddy's
Rich's meaUy41ig band (19 pieces) jammed
Barney Googles' spot (outdrew the biggest rock
groups) and was signed for six more onenighters .... It's Melvyn Douglas' 40th flbn year
(''Tonight or Never" for Sam Goldwyn w11,1 his
1931 start; his imminent ''One Is ' a Lonely
Number" hts latest) .... Peter Lawford doe8n 't
even get bllling m his "Clay Pigeon" ruck; plays
a CIA agent (can't tell If be's cautioUs, or
ashamed).

3- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Oct. Z'l, 1971

Mary 8
Notre Dame 35, Navy 17
Ohio U. 17, Western Mich. 12
Oklahoma 49, Iowa State 8
Stanford 36, Oregon St. 28
Harvard 42, Penn. 19
Syracuse 26, Pittsburgh 12
Princeton 8, Brown 7
Purdue 28, Michigan St. 21
Georgia 39, South Carohna
38 (N)
Texas 40, SMU 15
So. Mlss. 26, Richmond 17
(N)

Tennessee 29, Tulsa 16
Texas Tech 13, Rice 10
Tulane 24, VanderbUt 6 (N)
Washington 44, UCLA 25
Utah 21, Wyoming 12
Brig. Young 23, U. Tex., El
Paso 13
Oregon 17, Wash. St. 15
Penn State 34, W. VIrginia
14
W. Tex . St. 16, Wichita St.
10 (NI
Ft. Gay 28 Hannon Trace 6
Kyger Creek 14 Green 8
The Old Boy Himself
Eastern 10 Southwestern 8
Auburn 32, Florida 20
North Gallla 44 Hannan 0
TCU 24, Baylor 17 (N)
Spencer 7 Wahama 6
Bucknell 21, Rutgers 7
Pl. Pleasant 27 Ravenswood
So. Cal. 28, California 20
20
Cincinnati 17, Memphis St. Southern 8 Symmes Valley 6
10
Chesapeake 12 Rock Hill 6
Wake Forest 33, Clemson 13 Waverly 22 Wellston 12
Utah State 29, Colo. St. U. 19 Galllpolls 14 Meigs 8
Cornell 41, Columbia 16
Ironton 44 Jackson 6
Dartmouth 37, Yale 20
Athens 32 Logan 16
Dayton 26, Youngstown 12
Matewan 28 South Point 20
Duke 35, Georgia Tecb %1
Lima 27 Portsmouth o
Holy Cross 24, Northeastern Fairland 20 Oak Hill 8
12
Florida St. 28, Houston 21 - Belpre 30 Vinton County 0
Northwestern 30, Illinois 14 Coal Grove 14 Ironton St.
Wisconsin 36, Iowa 16
Joe 12
Nelsonville-York 20 Miller 0
Okla. St. 2'1, Kansas 15
Kent Slate 18, North, Ill 10
Kentucky 24, Va. Tech 20
Colgate 30, Lehigh 14
Tampa 29, Louisville 18 (N) TROPICAL PARK
Bowllng Green 49, Marshall NEW YORK (UP! )-James
0
E. Brock, prestdent of Ute
'
Mar)land
22, VMI 15
Thoroughbred Racmg AssoctaToledo 38, Miami, 0. 31
tions, announced Tnesday that
Michigan 35, Indiana 10
the TRA board of dtrectors has
Ohio State 25, Minnesota 18 acted favorably on the appltcaAlabama 33, Miss. State 24 lton of Troptcal Park for
(N)
membership.
LSU 39, Mississippi 22
Troptcal Park's membership
Missourl 17, Kansas St. 11
m the TRA becomes effecttve
Colorado 28, Nebraska 20
wtth the opemng of 1ts 1971-72
New Mexico St. 36, Idaho 13 season on Nov 17 It wtll be the
(N)
only race track m the Mtamt
Virginia 20, N.C. State 12
North CaroUna 31, Wm . &amp; area operatmg under the TRA

chmson, a freshman fullback
and Mtke Dtllon, a JUntor
halfback. - Freshman quarterback Terry Carter and" the
other Htghlander stgnal caller,
Larry Frazter, like to throw to
thetr semor end Mark Smtth
Dale Whtll, a 180 lb Jumor, IS
thetr other target
,
In non-league actton, Hannan,
W Va , travel&lt; to North Gallta,
Fort Gay ts at Hannan Trace,
Kyger Creek plays at Green and
Southern IS on Lhe road at
Symmes Valley
North Galha's Ptrates wtll
seek thetr four th stratght vtctory agamst the Wtldcats of
Hannan
Coach John Blake's eleven
has ;uacked up three stratght
vtctortes and four wms m the
last ftve outmgs The P1rates
have combmed an explostve
attack wtlh a stmgy defense
whtle playmg wnimng ball Led
by semor halfback Jackte
Smtth, North Galha defeated
Hannan Trace, 40-0 last week
Smtth scored two touchdowns
Tony Glassburn, semor end,
playmg hts ftrst game smce
suffermg a broken collarbone
agamst Eastern, scored one TD
as dtd speedy Harvey Brown
and Garnes
Semor quarterback John
Eggleton connected on four of
seven passes for IIIli yards
Garnes, Loren Neal , Ketth
Saunders and Davtd Grant were
named as the top defenstve
players m the game
Hannan has had tts problems
thts year but have recorded
wtns over Hannan Trace and
Southwestern
Coach Dtck Adams' Kyger
Creek Bobcats wtll attempt to
get back mto the wmmng s1de of
the ledger Frtday agamst the
Green Bobcats.
KC defeated Green last year,
20-6m a mud batUe at Cheshire
Coach Dave Boyer's eleven tS 34 on the season The Bobcats
have a 4-2-1 record
Kyger Creek started the 1971
gnd season on a very optimtSitc
note after holdmg the powerful
Wahama Wht te Falcons to a ~
lte, but smce that ttme, the
Bobcat offense has been mconststent A maJor problem
has been in]unes Kyger Creek
has lost Gary Collms, sentor
halfback, due to a concusston
suffered m the North Galha
game and now , George Curry, a
prom·sing 180 lb JUniOr end, has
been stdelined wtth a pmched
nerve
Several other Bobcats mcludmg semor captam Terry
Moles have been beset wtth
numerous InJunes Moles
suffered a shoulder separatton

code of standards and utthzmg
the servtces of the Thoroughbred Racmg Protecttve
Bureau

agamst the Pnates but has
played m every game
, Ureen defeated Southwestern
32-0 last Frtday The Sctoto
Coun ty team has been led by
semor fialfback M1ke Trtplett,
quarterback Davtd McDavtd
and Jeff Holzapfel Kyger Creek
was shutout, 17-0 last Frtday
durmg tis hotnecornmg game
agamst Alexander
Coach Bruce Walla ce's
Southern Tornadoes after a
week's layoff return Lo the
grtdtron aga mst Coach John
Patton 's Symmes Valley
Vtkmgs Southern IS 2-4 on the
year whtle the Vtktngs have a 25 record Southern has shown a
revttahzed offense led by Ntck
Ihle, JUntor tatlback, Mtke and
Mttch Nease and Jay Htll
Coach Tom Belvtlle's Hannan
Trace Wtldcats are sttll seekmg
thetr ftrst wm of the yea r Fort
Gay comes to Mercervtlle wtth
an trnpresstverecord The Class
A school ts ranked m the West
Vtrgmta ratmgs
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P OP
Eastern
7 0 0 258 I B
Kyger Creek 4 2 I 101 123
North Ga II 1a
4 3 0 148 76
Southern
2 4 0 66 104

AA teams, followed by Campbell Memonal, Napoleon, Ironton and New Lexington tied for
etghth , and Sprmgfteld Shawnee
tenth Other losers from last
week's top 10 were Campbell
Memortal, Galhpohs and Riverdale.
Contrary to the performance
uf the Class AA teams over
the weekend, only one Class A
team suffered a defeat and the
enttre cast from last week ts
back agam
Cory Rawson holds on to a
113-IO! Iead over Marton Pleasant as the two teams run onetwo for the second week tn a
row Portsmouth Notre Dame
moved mto thtrd place replacmg Covmgton , which lost to AA
Spnngfteld Shawnee. Zanesvtlle
ts fourth and Covmgton rounds
out the top ftve
The only change tn the next
ftve from last week was a
swttch that saw Marton Local
take over mnth place, droppmg
Ada to tenth West Jefferson ts
stxth, Newark Cathohc seventh,
Tuscarawas Cathohc
and
etghth All the A teams are unbeaten except for Covmgton.

Watch Your
$$Grow
as you add to your sav1ngs

each week at the Metgs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
Sav1ngs and Loan.

4%%
CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
Save by the lOth, earn
from the lsi.

Mei~

Co. Branch

Southwestern 0 7 0 JB 188
Hannan Trace 0 7 0 12 188

tji.)
-,:r~

Southe rn

2

North Gallla
Southwestern

2 2 0 84 34
0 3 0 30 86

TheAthens County
Savtngs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

H an nan

0

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP
Eastern
3 0 0 115 6
Kyger Creek
4 I 0 95 80
Trace

1 0 58

34

6 148

4 0

Totals
tt tt 0 388 388
GAMES THIS WEEK
Eastern at Southwestern

Hannan, W Va , at North
Gallta
Kyger Creek at Green
Fort Gay at Hannan Trace'

.

Member Federal Home LO&lt; n

Bank

Memb er Federal Sav mgs &amp;
Loan Insura nce Corp Ill
accounts 1nsu red up ~o

$20,000.00.

Southern at Symmes Valley

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

PRICE CONTROLS

We have always had price controls to save you
money. On Certified XE-110 You

SAVE UP
TO •1.00 A TANKFUL
UNDER MAJOK COMPANiES

CERTIFIED
GAS STATIONS
992-9981

538W. Main

Pomeroy&lt; 0.

750x14
or Smaller

2

FOR

(Add A $1.00 For Each Size Larger l

H
&amp;
R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd AVE.
.,
992·2238
MIDOLEPORTt 0.

�.

..
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pam•roy, 0 ., Oct. Z'l, 1971

Reedsville
News, Notes
....

Millinery to Pharmacy

Mrs. Bess Larkins c e g tand Mrs. Grant Boring.
a birthday the past w k.
Mrs. Gladys Baughman of
received an arrang · ~ of Gahanna is spending a few days
:-. (lowers delivered to her by a wiU1 . her aister, Mrs. Rose
Pomeroy flower shop. This was ;Thomas.
'
a surprise from her grand- Mr. and Mrs. Steve CQwdery
daughter and family, Mr. and of ParketsbllJ'g visited wllli Mr.
Mrs. James Carruthers and and Mrs . Waller Brown
Penny of Louisville.
recenUy.
•
Jean Whitehead, student of Mr. and Mrs . Ern~st
Ohio
State
University, Whitehead have returned home
Columbus, spent a weekend after a trip through the Skyline
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Drive.
~Mn. L. Balderson
Ernest
Whitehead
and
daughters.
Steve Follrod and Steve
'
Goebel of Tuppers Plains were
Supreme Court
justices of
overnight guests of David the United States are not
Weber.
permitted to ' engage in the
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson private practice of law .
recenUy visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Smith at East PI_ _ _..,._ _ _,

..

•&lt;·

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Shoppers used to stop by 271
North Second Ave. in Middleport to pick up something to
keep a head warm - and
fashionable. Shoppers now stop
by the same address to pick up
something to keep a head cool.
The address is the location of
the Village Pharmacy, owned
and operated by Dan Meadows.
For man,1, many years it was a
millinery shop where milady
purchased a fashionable
chapeau.
Beginning Thursday, an open
house will be ~ld al the
pharmacy to mark the opening
of a new addition to the
establishment. Carrying out an
early American theme, the
addition to the building is brick
wllli a slant-tlhingle roof. A new
brick front has been added to
llie front of the original
structure.
The addition marks a notable
expansion by the pharmacy
which was opened by Meadows
m 1967. The building was owned
by Dr. ano Mrs. J. J . Davis. In

1969,. Meadows purchased it and
last July work was begun on the
addition which is 40 by 25 feet
and provides an additional1,000
feet of sales space -more than
the original structure which is
40 by 18 feet.
The addition was designed by
Meadows who did all
of
the
inside
finish ing with the exception of
the basic electrical installations
done by the Cass Hindy elec!rica! firm. The exterior was
done by the Earl Werner
.Construction Co.
A 20-car paved parking lot
was installed at the side of the
establishment last year .
Meadows plans to continue his
building program Monday when
work will start on a small mall
at the side of the new section.
History of the original
building dates back into the
1841i'i when the millinery shop
was operated by Mrs. Graves.
The building changed ownership several times over the
years. Many remember when
the building was the location of

llie McCoy Hat Shop.
Residenls are invited to stop
by the pharmacy during the
open house. A special sale is
being held in conjunction with
llie event.

BARGAINING RECESSED
TOLEDO (UPI ) - Contract
negotiations are to resume Nov.
23 between the Libbey.Qwensr ord Co. and the United Glass
and Ceramics Workers of North
America.
Negotiations were recessed
Monday after spokesman for
each side said bargaining was
complicated by the wage-price
freeze .
Union officials said work
would continue on a day-to-&lt;lay
basis, even though the contract
expired at noon Monday.
LOF has planls in Rossford,
Ohio ; Ottawa, Ill. ; Lathrop,
Calif.; Charleston, W. Va . and
Shreveport, La.

o·

.: ~
..... ~
....

Pharmacy Sets Open House

Liverpool, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Reed of Marion and Mr. and
Mrs . Junior Congrove of
Zanesville.
Mrs . R. E. Williams, Mrs.
Lyle Balderson visited with
Mrs. Eunice Sprague at the
Arcadia Nursing Home at
Coolville. Mrs. Bess Webster of
Tuppers Plains accompanied
them to the nursing home.
Mike Boring, student at Ohio
University, Athens, spent a
weekend with his parents, Mr.

1. ·' ,
.m_ -~
I.

THE VILLAGE PHARMACY which will observe open house to mark the opening of a new
addition which carries out an early American theme at 271 North Second in Middleport was for
many, many years a millinery shop in Middleport. Here is a picture of the shop which dates
back into the 1840's. Among the women in the picture taken when the shop was operated by the
Sauer.Qrr-Buchanan family are the late Miss Margaret Sauer, the late Emma Sauer Buchanan
and the late Mary Sauer Orr . Mrs. Buchanan owned the building unW 1913-14 when it was sold
to Mrs. Essie Russell.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort·Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 27, 1971

-·

BALLARD
OR
",.

1

NOVEMB R Znd
1
HOWARD

CALDWELL JR,
FOR
EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Pd. Pol. Adv.

KENTUCKY BRAND \

-•
•

THIS IS Aportion of the new gift corner featured in the new addition to the Village Pharmacy in Middleport. Dan Meadows, owner, says the corner "has something for everybody." It
is enhanced by an interior shingled roof.

NATIONAL WINDOW

Sparta Ends Arms Race
By LOUIS CASSELS
dangerous level when Sparta 's
UPI ·Senior Editor
white mayor, T.M. Patterson
The arms race has heen Sr., tried to block street
halted in Sparta, Ga.
marches, but found his edicts
The story of Sparta's arms ignored and his roadblocks
race- why it began, how it circumvented by blacks.
developed, and where it might At about that point, druggist
have led- is relevant to every Leroy Napier, a white member
American community, and in- of the City Council, and several
deed to all nations.
like-minded white men concludSparta is a small town in ed that Sparta's six-man police
central Georgia, ahout halfway force should be armeu with
between Atlanta and Augusta. rapid-fire military weapons.
It has a population of 1,800, They bought 10 submachine
predominantly white. It is the guns.
seat of rural Hancock County, Black leaders responded by
which has a population of about ordering 30 submachine guns.
9,000, predominantly black.
They also formed a "hunting
The arms race seems to have club" which financed the
been touched off last fall, when purchase of high-powered rifles
about 1,000 blacks staged 26 for its members .
days of demonstrations to The situation was deterioratprotest what they called ing rapidly toward a bloody
Hancock County's failure to racial shootout when moderate
comply with national guidelines men of hoth races enlisted the
of desegregation of public peacemaking intervention of
schools. The demonstrations Georgia's progressive white
were accompanied by a black Gov . Jimmy Carter, and the
boycott of stores and . other U.S. Department of Justice .
business establistunents run by Between them , the governor's
whites.
office and the Justice DepartRacial tensions rose to a ment were able to arrange a

12 OZ PKG.

negotiated setUement under
which both sides agreed to
return their submachine guns
to the sellers, and the blacks
disbanded their "hunting club."
Recent inquiries by lliis
reporter indicate that race
relations in Sparta and Hancock
County are still a long way
from sweetness and light. But
there is evident relief on hoth
sides that the reckless arms
race was stopped before it led
to civil war in the conununity.
.This episode in a small
Georgia town might contain a
lesson for other · American
communities-

CAN

Beautiful

Grained Kashmir Walnut I
Titan 80 Handcrafted Chassis

Fall Flower
Arrangements

ZBIJiil2f.
._
- ....,1,.

•Customized Tuning • Super

cou:·fN COf1111111tlB
UURRYll.imiJBJ 6me _
DIIIgl

Dudley's Florist

NO TRICKSJUST BIG 9 VALUES

!Phebe Says:

••

REG. 45'

We

Glad~

UAN AND MEATY FRESH

Prices ~ffective
Oct 27·Nov. 2
'
Mon. Tues., Wed.--9 to 7
ThutS., Fri., Sat ___ g to 9

souP ~:~M~-~~~~~. . . . . . . . . .

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Produce Features

BLUE
GRAPES...1.~·••

29

LOAVEs•l

~

---------------·-·~
·

. ·39~

CRANBERRIES............ ~·.
1

.

LB.

59~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

l
I

Sliced

LB.

55~

DAIRY. SPECIAL
.

CARROTS ...... ~~:.l5e
NEW CROP .

cans99~

FAIRMONT

SMALL WHITE

BUTTERMILK

EGGS

1h gal. 43~

2lB.
ti'N
COUPON

28 OZ. CAN

SAVE

SOAP

30' LB.

PIUA With Cheese.~.~.~.................~~.49~
SLICED
BISCUITS . ~~~~.~~~ .......................................~?. ... 9~ RK STEA
~
DIAL SOAP....~~. ~~~.~....................... 5 bars 99~
LB. 55
SHORTEN lNG ALLMRS.VEGETABL£.........
TUCKER'S
3
lb. 69~
....
can ,· PORK
PORK ,BARBECUE ....... ~~.~~........~~~ _59~· SHOULDER ROAST lb.
----------T------------------1
Choice, ·. Lean Fresh
PAPE.RTOWELS.~~~.~.~~ ........... 3j:~99~
SPARE RIBS
PORK SIDE

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

•

tOMATOES

HOLSUM

3

COFFEE

oz.

HUNT'S

BAKE &amp; SERVE

BREAD

FOLGER'S

WlTH

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
992-2635
Middleport

Featuring USDA Choice Pork

Right reserved to lirnit quantities

I

22

INGELS FURNITURE

Serving: Gallipolis.

'

:

PORK
LOIN

'

VIdeo Range Tuner • Automatic
Fine-tuning Control.

Fresh, Dried
or Artificial

Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Milson Co. W.Va.

KAHN'S POPLAR

PRICE
EVER
for 8 giant 8CI'8BO

BRIGHTON. C2915W

• IVORY
:LIQUID

SAVE s1oo
SLICED

CHERRY APPLE DRINK
CARTON OF 8 · 8 Ol

·----------------~--~

••

95

OUR

Fine For Trick or Treat
FA_IRMONT ONLY

•
•

3 LB.

$399

8 Ol CAN

:
• WITCH'S. BREW

BAKERY BUY

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
•r1~e Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

PILLSBURY

-~·

volE

CORN

PREPARED
READY SPER
PKG.
TO OOOK

DOGS

JIFFY BREADED VEAL STEAKS LB. 79~ 30~~~~.
SAVE
CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAK
20' LB.
SAVE
4
COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS LB: 59 20' LB.
LB. 79~ 3~Th.
LOIN PORK CHOPS
BOB' EVANS FARM

$}57

FAMILY PAK

LITTLE PIG SAUSAGE
ROME BEAUTY

APPLES

24 CT.

t{tt~f1'S

s::,E
PKG.

tl£~1H

$

PORK
&amp;
BEANS

BUSHEL

160z. CAN

-----------------·
I~--------~--------------,------. 30' COUPON
I
10'
COUPON
. l
IJ f9LGER'S 2.COFFEE
$}09 ! AJAX SOAP POWDER
!
LIQUID
LB. CA~ ONLY
WITH l
REG. SIZE
o~ WITH
I
I REG. 1.87
COUPON I
41' REG. PACK
COUPON I PLUMER
I ONE PER COUPON
CNE COUPON LIMIT I ONE COUPON PER PERSON
ONE BOX LIMIT I
I
. .EXPIRES OCT. 30th
l
EXPIRES OCT. 30th
I 12 Ol .

1

1

l------~-A-~~~~~~~~-------L--~~--J!~!~~J!~~!---~---J

3 dOtgg~

.

,

.

..
•

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19*
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COLA

12 oz.
CAN

10~

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..
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pam•roy, 0 ., Oct. Z'l, 1971

Reedsville
News, Notes
....

Millinery to Pharmacy

Mrs. Bess Larkins c e g tand Mrs. Grant Boring.
a birthday the past w k.
Mrs. Gladys Baughman of
received an arrang · ~ of Gahanna is spending a few days
:-. (lowers delivered to her by a wiU1 . her aister, Mrs. Rose
Pomeroy flower shop. This was ;Thomas.
'
a surprise from her grand- Mr. and Mrs. Steve CQwdery
daughter and family, Mr. and of ParketsbllJ'g visited wllli Mr.
Mrs. James Carruthers and and Mrs . Waller Brown
Penny of Louisville.
recenUy.
•
Jean Whitehead, student of Mr. and Mrs . Ern~st
Ohio
State
University, Whitehead have returned home
Columbus, spent a weekend after a trip through the Skyline
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Drive.
~Mn. L. Balderson
Ernest
Whitehead
and
daughters.
Steve Follrod and Steve
'
Goebel of Tuppers Plains were
Supreme Court
justices of
overnight guests of David the United States are not
Weber.
permitted to ' engage in the
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson private practice of law .
recenUy visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Smith at East PI_ _ _..,._ _ _,

..

•&lt;·

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Shoppers used to stop by 271
North Second Ave. in Middleport to pick up something to
keep a head warm - and
fashionable. Shoppers now stop
by the same address to pick up
something to keep a head cool.
The address is the location of
the Village Pharmacy, owned
and operated by Dan Meadows.
For man,1, many years it was a
millinery shop where milady
purchased a fashionable
chapeau.
Beginning Thursday, an open
house will be ~ld al the
pharmacy to mark the opening
of a new addition to the
establishment. Carrying out an
early American theme, the
addition to the building is brick
wllli a slant-tlhingle roof. A new
brick front has been added to
llie front of the original
structure.
The addition marks a notable
expansion by the pharmacy
which was opened by Meadows
m 1967. The building was owned
by Dr. ano Mrs. J. J . Davis. In

1969,. Meadows purchased it and
last July work was begun on the
addition which is 40 by 25 feet
and provides an additional1,000
feet of sales space -more than
the original structure which is
40 by 18 feet.
The addition was designed by
Meadows who did all
of
the
inside
finish ing with the exception of
the basic electrical installations
done by the Cass Hindy elec!rica! firm. The exterior was
done by the Earl Werner
.Construction Co.
A 20-car paved parking lot
was installed at the side of the
establishment last year .
Meadows plans to continue his
building program Monday when
work will start on a small mall
at the side of the new section.
History of the original
building dates back into the
1841i'i when the millinery shop
was operated by Mrs. Graves.
The building changed ownership several times over the
years. Many remember when
the building was the location of

llie McCoy Hat Shop.
Residenls are invited to stop
by the pharmacy during the
open house. A special sale is
being held in conjunction with
llie event.

BARGAINING RECESSED
TOLEDO (UPI ) - Contract
negotiations are to resume Nov.
23 between the Libbey.Qwensr ord Co. and the United Glass
and Ceramics Workers of North
America.
Negotiations were recessed
Monday after spokesman for
each side said bargaining was
complicated by the wage-price
freeze .
Union officials said work
would continue on a day-to-&lt;lay
basis, even though the contract
expired at noon Monday.
LOF has planls in Rossford,
Ohio ; Ottawa, Ill. ; Lathrop,
Calif.; Charleston, W. Va . and
Shreveport, La.

o·

.: ~
..... ~
....

Pharmacy Sets Open House

Liverpool, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Reed of Marion and Mr. and
Mrs . Junior Congrove of
Zanesville.
Mrs . R. E. Williams, Mrs.
Lyle Balderson visited with
Mrs. Eunice Sprague at the
Arcadia Nursing Home at
Coolville. Mrs. Bess Webster of
Tuppers Plains accompanied
them to the nursing home.
Mike Boring, student at Ohio
University, Athens, spent a
weekend with his parents, Mr.

1. ·' ,
.m_ -~
I.

THE VILLAGE PHARMACY which will observe open house to mark the opening of a new
addition which carries out an early American theme at 271 North Second in Middleport was for
many, many years a millinery shop in Middleport. Here is a picture of the shop which dates
back into the 1840's. Among the women in the picture taken when the shop was operated by the
Sauer.Qrr-Buchanan family are the late Miss Margaret Sauer, the late Emma Sauer Buchanan
and the late Mary Sauer Orr . Mrs. Buchanan owned the building unW 1913-14 when it was sold
to Mrs. Essie Russell.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort·Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 27, 1971

-·

BALLARD
OR
",.

1

NOVEMB R Znd
1
HOWARD

CALDWELL JR,
FOR
EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Pd. Pol. Adv.

KENTUCKY BRAND \

-•
•

THIS IS Aportion of the new gift corner featured in the new addition to the Village Pharmacy in Middleport. Dan Meadows, owner, says the corner "has something for everybody." It
is enhanced by an interior shingled roof.

NATIONAL WINDOW

Sparta Ends Arms Race
By LOUIS CASSELS
dangerous level when Sparta 's
UPI ·Senior Editor
white mayor, T.M. Patterson
The arms race has heen Sr., tried to block street
halted in Sparta, Ga.
marches, but found his edicts
The story of Sparta's arms ignored and his roadblocks
race- why it began, how it circumvented by blacks.
developed, and where it might At about that point, druggist
have led- is relevant to every Leroy Napier, a white member
American community, and in- of the City Council, and several
deed to all nations.
like-minded white men concludSparta is a small town in ed that Sparta's six-man police
central Georgia, ahout halfway force should be armeu with
between Atlanta and Augusta. rapid-fire military weapons.
It has a population of 1,800, They bought 10 submachine
predominantly white. It is the guns.
seat of rural Hancock County, Black leaders responded by
which has a population of about ordering 30 submachine guns.
9,000, predominantly black.
They also formed a "hunting
The arms race seems to have club" which financed the
been touched off last fall, when purchase of high-powered rifles
about 1,000 blacks staged 26 for its members .
days of demonstrations to The situation was deterioratprotest what they called ing rapidly toward a bloody
Hancock County's failure to racial shootout when moderate
comply with national guidelines men of hoth races enlisted the
of desegregation of public peacemaking intervention of
schools. The demonstrations Georgia's progressive white
were accompanied by a black Gov . Jimmy Carter, and the
boycott of stores and . other U.S. Department of Justice .
business establistunents run by Between them , the governor's
whites.
office and the Justice DepartRacial tensions rose to a ment were able to arrange a

12 OZ PKG.

negotiated setUement under
which both sides agreed to
return their submachine guns
to the sellers, and the blacks
disbanded their "hunting club."
Recent inquiries by lliis
reporter indicate that race
relations in Sparta and Hancock
County are still a long way
from sweetness and light. But
there is evident relief on hoth
sides that the reckless arms
race was stopped before it led
to civil war in the conununity.
.This episode in a small
Georgia town might contain a
lesson for other · American
communities-

CAN

Beautiful

Grained Kashmir Walnut I
Titan 80 Handcrafted Chassis

Fall Flower
Arrangements

ZBIJiil2f.
._
- ....,1,.

•Customized Tuning • Super

cou:·fN COf1111111tlB
UURRYll.imiJBJ 6me _
DIIIgl

Dudley's Florist

NO TRICKSJUST BIG 9 VALUES

!Phebe Says:

••

REG. 45'

We

Glad~

UAN AND MEATY FRESH

Prices ~ffective
Oct 27·Nov. 2
'
Mon. Tues., Wed.--9 to 7
ThutS., Fri., Sat ___ g to 9

souP ~:~M~-~~~~~. . . . . . . . . .

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Produce Features

BLUE
GRAPES...1.~·••

29

LOAVEs•l

~

---------------·-·~
·

. ·39~

CRANBERRIES............ ~·.
1

.

LB.

59~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

l
I

Sliced

LB.

55~

DAIRY. SPECIAL
.

CARROTS ...... ~~:.l5e
NEW CROP .

cans99~

FAIRMONT

SMALL WHITE

BUTTERMILK

EGGS

1h gal. 43~

2lB.
ti'N
COUPON

28 OZ. CAN

SAVE

SOAP

30' LB.

PIUA With Cheese.~.~.~.................~~.49~
SLICED
BISCUITS . ~~~~.~~~ .......................................~?. ... 9~ RK STEA
~
DIAL SOAP....~~. ~~~.~....................... 5 bars 99~
LB. 55
SHORTEN lNG ALLMRS.VEGETABL£.........
TUCKER'S
3
lb. 69~
....
can ,· PORK
PORK ,BARBECUE ....... ~~.~~........~~~ _59~· SHOULDER ROAST lb.
----------T------------------1
Choice, ·. Lean Fresh
PAPE.RTOWELS.~~~.~.~~ ........... 3j:~99~
SPARE RIBS
PORK SIDE

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

•

tOMATOES

HOLSUM

3

COFFEE

oz.

HUNT'S

BAKE &amp; SERVE

BREAD

FOLGER'S

WlTH

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
992-2635
Middleport

Featuring USDA Choice Pork

Right reserved to lirnit quantities

I

22

INGELS FURNITURE

Serving: Gallipolis.

'

:

PORK
LOIN

'

VIdeo Range Tuner • Automatic
Fine-tuning Control.

Fresh, Dried
or Artificial

Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Milson Co. W.Va.

KAHN'S POPLAR

PRICE
EVER
for 8 giant 8CI'8BO

BRIGHTON. C2915W

• IVORY
:LIQUID

SAVE s1oo
SLICED

CHERRY APPLE DRINK
CARTON OF 8 · 8 Ol

·----------------~--~

••

95

OUR

Fine For Trick or Treat
FA_IRMONT ONLY

•
•

3 LB.

$399

8 Ol CAN

:
• WITCH'S. BREW

BAKERY BUY

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
•r1~e Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

PILLSBURY

-~·

volE

CORN

PREPARED
READY SPER
PKG.
TO OOOK

DOGS

JIFFY BREADED VEAL STEAKS LB. 79~ 30~~~~.
SAVE
CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAK
20' LB.
SAVE
4
COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS LB: 59 20' LB.
LB. 79~ 3~Th.
LOIN PORK CHOPS
BOB' EVANS FARM

$}57

FAMILY PAK

LITTLE PIG SAUSAGE
ROME BEAUTY

APPLES

24 CT.

t{tt~f1'S

s::,E
PKG.

tl£~1H

$

PORK
&amp;
BEANS

BUSHEL

160z. CAN

-----------------·
I~--------~--------------,------. 30' COUPON
I
10'
COUPON
. l
IJ f9LGER'S 2.COFFEE
$}09 ! AJAX SOAP POWDER
!
LIQUID
LB. CA~ ONLY
WITH l
REG. SIZE
o~ WITH
I
I REG. 1.87
COUPON I
41' REG. PACK
COUPON I PLUMER
I ONE PER COUPON
CNE COUPON LIMIT I ONE COUPON PER PERSON
ONE BOX LIMIT I
I
. .EXPIRES OCT. 30th
l
EXPIRES OCT. 30th
I 12 Ol .

1

1

l------~-A-~~~~~~~~-------L--~~--J!~!~~J!~~!---~---J

3 dOtgg~

.

,

.

..
•

t.\~RS\\t.'~llO'MS

19*
'

TOPPS

COLA

12 oz.
CAN

10~

�•..
6- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.f'mr.c'I'Oy, 0., Oct. 27, lfll

••

znese Gloat
By CHARLES R. SMrt'H
HONG KONG (UP!) Communist China today cele·
brated its election to member·
ship · in the United Nations,
claiming the action was a
major defeat lor the United
States.
Almost all speeches, broad·
casts and newspaper articles
from China took the opportunity
to lash out at the United States
and Japan , which also had
oppcsed tile Communist entry
while attempting to save a seat
in the United Nations for tile
Nationalist Chinese.
Chi Peng-lei, acting Chinese
foreign minister, set the tone in
a speech Tuesday when he said
"'this is a victory ol the people
of tile whole world an&lt;fit is tile
complete bankrupl&lt;:y of the
policy long pursued by U.S.
imperialism.''
Peking Radio said in a

commentary today tllat China 's
admission ,was a trend against
the United States and Japan.
"Representatives of the Unit·
ed States and Japan were like
ants on a hot frying pan'?
during the crucial voting
Monday night in the U.N .
General Assembly.
It accused tile United States
and Japan of using "crude
threats" to try to persuade
countries to vote against
Nationalist Chinese expulsion
and added "IIley have mel witll
complete failure."
There was speculation among
China watchers here that
Premier Chou En·lai himself
might lead the delegation to
take over his country 's new
seat In the Security Council.
However, there was no indica·
lion from Peking itself this
might happen.
Before the debate on the

Nursing Homes Were Warned

CLEVELAND (UP!) - State
Welfare ' Director John E. Han·
san said today he stripped nine
nursing homes in the state from
tile Medicaid program after
repeatedly warning tllem they
were not providing the "skilled
nursing care" they were being
paid for.
Hansan, in a speech prepared
lor presentation to tile Cleveland chapter of tile Seniors of
Ohio, said he took the "drastic
Some credence was given to action" last weekend in carrythis diplomatic speculation by ing out his "duty to tile needy
Chinese officials in Geneva
Tuesday. They indicated China POPULAR ROBBER
would not join current disarPUZILHAC, France (UP! Imament talks tllere but still A courtroom crowd applauded
favored a world summit lor several minutes Tuesday
conference to discuss this when the five-year sentence of
problem. The Chinese have put restaurant owner Max Rey was
forth this proposal many times suspended by the court.
Rey had been convicted of an
in. the past, even before they
acquired nuclear weapons in armed robbery. He held up his
1964.
local tax collector for $5,200.

China question began in the
United Nations, Peking-based
diplomats told UP! tllat it was
likely one of the first Chinese
speeches in the world body
would be moderate. They said
it probably would contain some
sweeping proposals, including a
renewed call for a world
summit conference to discuss
disarmament and destruction of
nuclear weapons.

Foreign Aid Plans in Trouble
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Foreign Aid program, which
already was in deep trouble,
laced a new assault today from
senators who contend the
United States has been dealt a

i,

hwniliating setback at the
!Jnited Nations by the very
nations it has been helping.
The $3.2 billion aid bill brought
to the Senate floor Tuesday,
was greeted by angry calls lor

RAY CROMLEY

Phase II Cooperation

As 'Voluntary'
As Income Tax
B~

RAY CROMLEY

WASHINGTON \ NEA I
Don't be misled by talk ol "voluntary'' cooperation in
President Nixon 's Phase II on price and wage controls.
The program , as Nixon insiders see it. will be about as

•

~

::.
~

.,

..,;
'•
~

~

4
.j.
·

voluntary as the income tax.
. The rules will be quite fi rm, not vague as erroneously
tmphed m some news reports. But the application will be
as complex and with as much give and take as the deci·
sions in cases before courts ol law or arbitration boards.
The regulators begin with the dictate that the rate of in·
flation must be down to a rate of 2 to 3 per cent a year
by the end ol 1972.
By one body or another, this over-all standard will be
translated into wage and pnce gain average limits . These
in turn ar~ expected to be calculated industry by indus·
try accordmg to that industry's effects on the economy,
its rate of productivity increase. how rar behind or ahead
that industry is compared with the rest or business and
in&lt;\ustry in its past and currently proposed price and
~\yJ~e increases, and"by that particularindustry's need to
~ ~Uract capital. skilled labor and professionals in order
!fiat it flourish , hold steady or d!i.cline in the national
interest. I National interest is here'aefined as business or
other economic activity which creates new jobs, expands
exports, aids in the search for critical materials. insti·
lutes cheaper, more efficient methods or production, or
which aids other national objectives , such as defense or
the fight on poverty . I
Then formulae will be worked out for the relationships
between wage and price increases. For obviously a com·
pany whose workers win approval of a 01ajor wage in·
crease, or whose suppliers. are granted price increases. ts
under the strongest sort of pressure to increase its own
prices.
But behind all this there will be the mat hematical cal·
culations which limit wage and price increases over-all
to those limits which will not push inflation above the 2
to 3 per cent a year rate- a goal to be achieved by the
end of 1972, in time for the next presidential election.
These computer .calculated maximums lor wage and
prtce mcrease averages set very precise upper limits.
These upper limits (or levels) in turn will directly a£.
feet each wage and price increase. Because if some in· ·
creases are allowed above the average as calculated in
this fashion , then other increases must be he ld below
that average.
As lor how the system will operate, major concerns
and unions must submit projected price and wage boosts
to the boards in advance lor approval. The great middle
ground ol industry and labor must report all increases
but need not seek prior app roval. The bulk of smalle;
llrms wtll not report but will be subject to spot checks .
Now this "voluntary compliance" accompanied by spot
checks IS a system familiar to every man and woman
who fills out federa l income tax forms . It works very
well mdeed at keepmg us all in line, especially now that
much of what we do is recorded and cross-checked by
computer.

retaliation against aid reci·
pients who voted to expel
Taiwan and give its seat to
Communist C.hina . Friends of
Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist
government were expected to
mount an effort to trim the bill
--particularly a $100 million
U.S. contribution to the U.N.'s
developme nt assistance program.
The aid bill, even before the
U.N. vote, was on shaky ground
because of longtime opposition
from the traditionally isolation·
ist Midwest and because of new
criticism from senators who
feel that bilalera' aid is at the
root of U.S. overinvolvement
arollfld the world.
The U.N. vote on China,
however, heightened the criti·
cism and produced warnings
that the entire aid program
may be scuttled. Sen. William
B. Saxbe, R.Ohio, sought to
send the bill back to the Foreign
Relations Committee until
tempers cool ; but he withdrj.W

nation . Sen . B. Everett Jordan,
D-N.C., said it was clear now
that a foreign policy "so
heavily based on gifts to our
'allies' cannot be expected to
keep them on our side when the
chips are down ."
,
Saturday is the only day
of the week named for a
Roman god . It was named
for Satu

aged and to all the citizens of
Ohio."
"We repeatedly warned tllese
homes they were risking a cut
off in Medicaid funds, but the
violations were not corrected,"
Hansan said.
Hansan cited as one reason
why the homes were decertified
for the program was that funds
were being paid lor services
never rendered.
He said in one case some 300

- - -- - ---"7"-LIVAS HONORED
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Bowling Green State Univer·
sity'.s Julius Uvas today was
named the Mid-American
Conference defensive player-of·
tile-week, one year after taking
tile league's offensive honors.
Livas, a 5-11, 200-pound junior
from Youngstown, helped the
Fa lcons whip Miami 33·7
Saturday by coming up witll two
pass interceptions.

(ONHA) bowever, blamed the
'decertukatlon TuesdaY oo "reeent pressure frllll\ the Nts.oo
admlnlstratlon."

Beautiful
Fall Flower
Arranpments

facilltJes providing less skilled
and intensive C!\re.
"I want to stress that only a
small minority of nursing
homes have been found in violation
of .federal standards,'' he
nurses aren't present,'' Hansan
said. "The majority of Ohio's
said.
The welfare director denied nursing homes are as concerned
the patients would be hurt by as we are that their patienta
receive hwnane and decent
the state's action.
11
·
care.
"No patient in need ot' skilled
nursing care in an institution The president of the Ohio
will be deprived of it because of Nursing Home Association
decertification," he said. "We
are working to assure tllat
patients requiring skilled care
are moved to homes which meet
federal standards."
Each of ihe 311 patients affected wlll be individually re·
considered, he said, to see if
maximum care is required. If
not, they may continue to live in
the same home under a lesser
level of care, he said.
Hansan added that tile decertified homes could reapply to
- ···
tile department to qualify as
hours a week of federally
mandated skilled nursing
coverage never was given.
"it iB absurd to pay for
maximwn nursing care when

...
'
•
•
•
.,•
•"

Fre$h, Dried

or ArHiiclal

Dudley's Florist
Ser:ving: Golllpotis,
Pomeroy; Mlddt.port
&amp; Mu on Co. W. V,o .

OCTOBER 28 THRU NOVEMBER 3
·--··· - ·-- -

~

To The VoleiS of Southern Township

... Jllitlt .

R. .lect William S. (Bill) Cross
For
Clerk of Southern Township
- SECOND TERM -

8~ .

BA·KER

BAYER
SPIRIN

FllttiSIINGS
fr..oin our

BUDGET:
.

SHOP!

TV. . .in Review

r

.•

fifth football season, and, in the
interests of public enlighten·
men!, as well as a natural
corporate desire for self·
aggrandizement, Ampex Corp .
has come up with a summary
or how "instant replay" works.
To begin with, Ampex notes
that its "instant replay"
recorders, developed in 1967,
"use highly polished disks for
recording surfaces instead of
reels of tape used on conventional videotape recorders.
"The disKs permit variable
speed playback, plus stop
motion, not easily possible with
tape recorders. And access to
recorded pictures can be
accomplished much more
quickly · and accurately, as
tllere is no rewind process as
with tape."
How does ':instant replay"
get to !.he home screen? Well,
as an .example, says the
company, in an impcrtant game
two ~r three cameral are.

"Prints"

00

.

or 25$
per
box

. j

'

boxes

Reg. 11.07
FURNiTURE
:
MIDDUI'OIT, 0.

•

-

-

Corne In And Register For

Pd. Po l. Adv.

"Admiral
Color TV"

r:__::::r~n~.------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:::::::::::::::::::::~

No Purchase NecessaJY

Sun Mark Cool · Mist

(PRV-1)

Sun Mark

VAPORIZER·
HUMIDIFIER

·Hot Steam
Vaporizer

the motion when it became

obvious he would lose.
The administration indicated
Tuesday it might approve of
cuts in the U.S. contribution to
the United Nations-not as a
retaliatory measure but simply
because the world organization
has been spending too much
money and that the U.S.
contribution has been too high
for too long .
Secretary ol State William P.
Rogers gave that indication at
a news conference, adding, "I
hope the Uni ted Nations will
not be weakened." He called
tile expulsion of the Nationalists
a mistake of major proportions
and predicted tllat the world
body will be damaged by it.
The current U.S. appropriation to the U.N. operating
expenses is $52,437,700. The
total U.S. contribution last year
for all activities-including
voluntary and specialized agen·'
cies- was $318 million-33 per
cent of the entire U.N. budget.
Saxbe said tile United States
had suffered an embarrassing,
humiliating defeat by a "lynch·
ing party" that rejoiced and
slapped each others bscks when
Taiwan was ousted .
He said 54 counlries who
participated in the votes were
recipients of U.S. aid and said
some of them were revelling. in
the U.S. defeat.
Otllers echoed Saxbe 's indig-

assigned to reed pictures of the play during the game."
action to instant replay
From all the material provid·
machines.
ed him, the video director
"The Slo camera, located in decides what to send out to
tile end zone, generally focuses · viewers. Via intercom, he
on the wide receiver or split- communicates with cameraend and follows his maneuver- man, the men who operate the
ing against the defensive "instant replay" recorders and
back," it is explained. "This a technical director who mans
often provides the most exciting tile control board.
'instant replay' action as the
This technical director hand·
wide receiver is a frequent les the pressing of the buttons
target for the quarterback 's tllat "select the camera output
passes."
to be shown on the air .. , and
Then there is a second also what camera fflldS 'lSO'
camera assigned to tile offen· recorders. A special bank of
sive team, and a third one to television sets shows .the
keep an eye on the defense. director what is available for
This provides viewers with slow 'instant replay."'
motion replays of key blocks by
interior linemen to spring
Of course, it is conceded,
run ners loose, or perhaps a conventional videotape machance to see how a linebacker chines caii be used to record
may get thro~gh to clobber a each play of a game, and
quarterback.
routine action can be erased
Besides these cameras, it is immediately so that top
explained, as many as five momeniB only are available for
otllers may be beaming pic· a quick summary or highlights.
tures of the action "into a bank
For those somewhat techni·
of small television monitors in cal-minded, Ampex notes that
one of the television vans its device "records up to · 30
located outside tile stadium.
seconds or action on highly
"Recordqs,
transmission polished and plated metal disks.
equipment· and key television The operator can cue up any
people are located in the vans. portion of the 30-second record·
All decisions as to what is ing in just four . seconds for
broa,dcast are made in the vans immpdiate playback on the
by peoP.le who never see a live air ."

. --

-Beautiful New Store
-Fully Carpeted
-Complete New Gift Section
-Something For Everyone
-Enlarged Card_De rtment

PuHs Facial
Tissues

lOO's

Reg.

Reg. $19.95
Now

$}98

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PLENTY OF
FREE PARKING

SUSPENSION

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LISTERINE
Antiseptic

·BAND·
AID

Reg. 12.19

98~

99~

Now get full-size boxes of Kleenex ·
facial
-a 25e value, se with each 8-gallon purchase.
Here' s a brand new collection you 'll want to start today . Attrac -

You 'll find the5e de,ign• fit perfectly into you r home. decor,

tive 125-sheet boxes of Kleenex" fa cia l tissues in a variety of his-

whether it's traditional or mod ern . You can start your co l lection

tori c American design s, now at pa rt ic ipating Sunoco dealers.

of brand new Kleenex Americana focia l ti55ue5 nght now. And
you can gel the m for only 51 a box with each 8-gallon purchase
... a big 5aving on th' ' 25¢ volue. See your pa r t ic ipati ~ g Sunoco
deoler today.

You get a choice of four Folk Art de,ig ns .. . Ame ncon Eagle,
Cro" Stitch Sampler, Nova to Blanket and Pennsylvan ia Du tc h.
And on the bock of ea ch box i' the 5tory behind the de5ign5 .

Plan to Visit Us!
Something
For Everybody!

Aerosol Shave Cream

"Pro" Toothbrushes
Reg. sr &amp; sr

19C

Gillette
Foamy
Reg.

Da;tirne 30's - Reg. 11.69

•

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Per Pkg.-!lf 4

Vaseline
Intensive ·Care Lotion

89C

COMBS
Nylon Reg.
29$ ·&amp; 19$
Pint Thermos Bottles

99C

•

t

urmary

69C
· '1 29

''alannin" 4's

ATHROOM

39C

Reg. '1.09 49~

sr

PAMPERS
'

TOOTHPASTE

Reg. 11.69

$159

\

~ ff WT IIOl

39C

RIGHT GUARD
Reg.

Overnite 12's - Reg. 891

Reg. 69'

Mennen Sol Stroke

60's
12 A. Oz.
Reg. 51.59

Cresf

ALKA-SELTZER

32 OL

Reg. 79'

Reg. 85'

Instant Replay Exp]ained
By RICK DuBROW
HOLbYWOOD (UP!) - Few
things '.n television have been
so much enjoyed, and so little
understood, as the "instant
replay" technique used widely
in covering sports events.
Thus technique now is in its

.

VILLAGE PHARMA.CY'S • • •

PRICES ARE RIGHT!

WIN THE .

- --·

TIS~UI
C.

''rh~

Creator of
Reasonable Drug Prices"

CONTAC 10's

29

271 North Second Avenue
Phone 992-5759
.Middleport, Ohio·

®KlEENEX "NO KLEENEX AMER ICANA ARE

Rt:GtSTERED TRADEMARKS

or THE KIMBERLy CUAK, CORP.

We ~eserve The Right T~ Urn~ Quantities

. I

•

..l . '

I

�•..
6- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.f'mr.c'I'Oy, 0., Oct. 27, lfll

••

znese Gloat
By CHARLES R. SMrt'H
HONG KONG (UP!) Communist China today cele·
brated its election to member·
ship · in the United Nations,
claiming the action was a
major defeat lor the United
States.
Almost all speeches, broad·
casts and newspaper articles
from China took the opportunity
to lash out at the United States
and Japan , which also had
oppcsed tile Communist entry
while attempting to save a seat
in the United Nations for tile
Nationalist Chinese.
Chi Peng-lei, acting Chinese
foreign minister, set the tone in
a speech Tuesday when he said
"'this is a victory ol the people
of tile whole world an&lt;fit is tile
complete bankrupl&lt;:y of the
policy long pursued by U.S.
imperialism.''
Peking Radio said in a

commentary today tllat China 's
admission ,was a trend against
the United States and Japan.
"Representatives of the Unit·
ed States and Japan were like
ants on a hot frying pan'?
during the crucial voting
Monday night in the U.N .
General Assembly.
It accused tile United States
and Japan of using "crude
threats" to try to persuade
countries to vote against
Nationalist Chinese expulsion
and added "IIley have mel witll
complete failure."
There was speculation among
China watchers here that
Premier Chou En·lai himself
might lead the delegation to
take over his country 's new
seat In the Security Council.
However, there was no indica·
lion from Peking itself this
might happen.
Before the debate on the

Nursing Homes Were Warned

CLEVELAND (UP!) - State
Welfare ' Director John E. Han·
san said today he stripped nine
nursing homes in the state from
tile Medicaid program after
repeatedly warning tllem they
were not providing the "skilled
nursing care" they were being
paid for.
Hansan, in a speech prepared
lor presentation to tile Cleveland chapter of tile Seniors of
Ohio, said he took the "drastic
Some credence was given to action" last weekend in carrythis diplomatic speculation by ing out his "duty to tile needy
Chinese officials in Geneva
Tuesday. They indicated China POPULAR ROBBER
would not join current disarPUZILHAC, France (UP! Imament talks tllere but still A courtroom crowd applauded
favored a world summit lor several minutes Tuesday
conference to discuss this when the five-year sentence of
problem. The Chinese have put restaurant owner Max Rey was
forth this proposal many times suspended by the court.
Rey had been convicted of an
in. the past, even before they
acquired nuclear weapons in armed robbery. He held up his
1964.
local tax collector for $5,200.

China question began in the
United Nations, Peking-based
diplomats told UP! tllat it was
likely one of the first Chinese
speeches in the world body
would be moderate. They said
it probably would contain some
sweeping proposals, including a
renewed call for a world
summit conference to discuss
disarmament and destruction of
nuclear weapons.

Foreign Aid Plans in Trouble
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Foreign Aid program, which
already was in deep trouble,
laced a new assault today from
senators who contend the
United States has been dealt a

i,

hwniliating setback at the
!Jnited Nations by the very
nations it has been helping.
The $3.2 billion aid bill brought
to the Senate floor Tuesday,
was greeted by angry calls lor

RAY CROMLEY

Phase II Cooperation

As 'Voluntary'
As Income Tax
B~

RAY CROMLEY

WASHINGTON \ NEA I
Don't be misled by talk ol "voluntary'' cooperation in
President Nixon 's Phase II on price and wage controls.
The program , as Nixon insiders see it. will be about as

•

~

::.
~

.,

..,;
'•
~

~

4
.j.
·

voluntary as the income tax.
. The rules will be quite fi rm, not vague as erroneously
tmphed m some news reports. But the application will be
as complex and with as much give and take as the deci·
sions in cases before courts ol law or arbitration boards.
The regulators begin with the dictate that the rate of in·
flation must be down to a rate of 2 to 3 per cent a year
by the end ol 1972.
By one body or another, this over-all standard will be
translated into wage and pnce gain average limits . These
in turn ar~ expected to be calculated industry by indus·
try accordmg to that industry's effects on the economy,
its rate of productivity increase. how rar behind or ahead
that industry is compared with the rest or business and
in&lt;\ustry in its past and currently proposed price and
~\yJ~e increases, and"by that particularindustry's need to
~ ~Uract capital. skilled labor and professionals in order
!fiat it flourish , hold steady or d!i.cline in the national
interest. I National interest is here'aefined as business or
other economic activity which creates new jobs, expands
exports, aids in the search for critical materials. insti·
lutes cheaper, more efficient methods or production, or
which aids other national objectives , such as defense or
the fight on poverty . I
Then formulae will be worked out for the relationships
between wage and price increases. For obviously a com·
pany whose workers win approval of a 01ajor wage in·
crease, or whose suppliers. are granted price increases. ts
under the strongest sort of pressure to increase its own
prices.
But behind all this there will be the mat hematical cal·
culations which limit wage and price increases over-all
to those limits which will not push inflation above the 2
to 3 per cent a year rate- a goal to be achieved by the
end of 1972, in time for the next presidential election.
These computer .calculated maximums lor wage and
prtce mcrease averages set very precise upper limits.
These upper limits (or levels) in turn will directly a£.
feet each wage and price increase. Because if some in· ·
creases are allowed above the average as calculated in
this fashion , then other increases must be he ld below
that average.
As lor how the system will operate, major concerns
and unions must submit projected price and wage boosts
to the boards in advance lor approval. The great middle
ground ol industry and labor must report all increases
but need not seek prior app roval. The bulk of smalle;
llrms wtll not report but will be subject to spot checks .
Now this "voluntary compliance" accompanied by spot
checks IS a system familiar to every man and woman
who fills out federa l income tax forms . It works very
well mdeed at keepmg us all in line, especially now that
much of what we do is recorded and cross-checked by
computer.

retaliation against aid reci·
pients who voted to expel
Taiwan and give its seat to
Communist C.hina . Friends of
Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist
government were expected to
mount an effort to trim the bill
--particularly a $100 million
U.S. contribution to the U.N.'s
developme nt assistance program.
The aid bill, even before the
U.N. vote, was on shaky ground
because of longtime opposition
from the traditionally isolation·
ist Midwest and because of new
criticism from senators who
feel that bilalera' aid is at the
root of U.S. overinvolvement
arollfld the world.
The U.N. vote on China,
however, heightened the criti·
cism and produced warnings
that the entire aid program
may be scuttled. Sen. William
B. Saxbe, R.Ohio, sought to
send the bill back to the Foreign
Relations Committee until
tempers cool ; but he withdrj.W

nation . Sen . B. Everett Jordan,
D-N.C., said it was clear now
that a foreign policy "so
heavily based on gifts to our
'allies' cannot be expected to
keep them on our side when the
chips are down ."
,
Saturday is the only day
of the week named for a
Roman god . It was named
for Satu

aged and to all the citizens of
Ohio."
"We repeatedly warned tllese
homes they were risking a cut
off in Medicaid funds, but the
violations were not corrected,"
Hansan said.
Hansan cited as one reason
why the homes were decertified
for the program was that funds
were being paid lor services
never rendered.
He said in one case some 300

- - -- - ---"7"-LIVAS HONORED
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Bowling Green State Univer·
sity'.s Julius Uvas today was
named the Mid-American
Conference defensive player-of·
tile-week, one year after taking
tile league's offensive honors.
Livas, a 5-11, 200-pound junior
from Youngstown, helped the
Fa lcons whip Miami 33·7
Saturday by coming up witll two
pass interceptions.

(ONHA) bowever, blamed the
'decertukatlon TuesdaY oo "reeent pressure frllll\ the Nts.oo
admlnlstratlon."

Beautiful
Fall Flower
Arranpments

facilltJes providing less skilled
and intensive C!\re.
"I want to stress that only a
small minority of nursing
homes have been found in violation
of .federal standards,'' he
nurses aren't present,'' Hansan
said. "The majority of Ohio's
said.
The welfare director denied nursing homes are as concerned
the patients would be hurt by as we are that their patienta
receive hwnane and decent
the state's action.
11
·
care.
"No patient in need ot' skilled
nursing care in an institution The president of the Ohio
will be deprived of it because of Nursing Home Association
decertification," he said. "We
are working to assure tllat
patients requiring skilled care
are moved to homes which meet
federal standards."
Each of ihe 311 patients affected wlll be individually re·
considered, he said, to see if
maximum care is required. If
not, they may continue to live in
the same home under a lesser
level of care, he said.
Hansan added that tile decertified homes could reapply to
- ···
tile department to qualify as
hours a week of federally
mandated skilled nursing
coverage never was given.
"it iB absurd to pay for
maximwn nursing care when

...
'
•
•
•
.,•
•"

Fre$h, Dried

or ArHiiclal

Dudley's Florist
Ser:ving: Golllpotis,
Pomeroy; Mlddt.port
&amp; Mu on Co. W. V,o .

OCTOBER 28 THRU NOVEMBER 3
·--··· - ·-- -

~

To The VoleiS of Southern Township

... Jllitlt .

R. .lect William S. (Bill) Cross
For
Clerk of Southern Township
- SECOND TERM -

8~ .

BA·KER

BAYER
SPIRIN

FllttiSIINGS
fr..oin our

BUDGET:
.

SHOP!

TV. . .in Review

r

.•

fifth football season, and, in the
interests of public enlighten·
men!, as well as a natural
corporate desire for self·
aggrandizement, Ampex Corp .
has come up with a summary
or how "instant replay" works.
To begin with, Ampex notes
that its "instant replay"
recorders, developed in 1967,
"use highly polished disks for
recording surfaces instead of
reels of tape used on conventional videotape recorders.
"The disKs permit variable
speed playback, plus stop
motion, not easily possible with
tape recorders. And access to
recorded pictures can be
accomplished much more
quickly · and accurately, as
tllere is no rewind process as
with tape."
How does ':instant replay"
get to !.he home screen? Well,
as an .example, says the
company, in an impcrtant game
two ~r three cameral are.

"Prints"

00

.

or 25$
per
box

. j

'

boxes

Reg. 11.07
FURNiTURE
:
MIDDUI'OIT, 0.

•

-

-

Corne In And Register For

Pd. Po l. Adv.

"Admiral
Color TV"

r:__::::r~n~.------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:::::::::::::::::::::~

No Purchase NecessaJY

Sun Mark Cool · Mist

(PRV-1)

Sun Mark

VAPORIZER·
HUMIDIFIER

·Hot Steam
Vaporizer

the motion when it became

obvious he would lose.
The administration indicated
Tuesday it might approve of
cuts in the U.S. contribution to
the United Nations-not as a
retaliatory measure but simply
because the world organization
has been spending too much
money and that the U.S.
contribution has been too high
for too long .
Secretary ol State William P.
Rogers gave that indication at
a news conference, adding, "I
hope the Uni ted Nations will
not be weakened." He called
tile expulsion of the Nationalists
a mistake of major proportions
and predicted tllat the world
body will be damaged by it.
The current U.S. appropriation to the U.N. operating
expenses is $52,437,700. The
total U.S. contribution last year
for all activities-including
voluntary and specialized agen·'
cies- was $318 million-33 per
cent of the entire U.N. budget.
Saxbe said tile United States
had suffered an embarrassing,
humiliating defeat by a "lynch·
ing party" that rejoiced and
slapped each others bscks when
Taiwan was ousted .
He said 54 counlries who
participated in the votes were
recipients of U.S. aid and said
some of them were revelling. in
the U.S. defeat.
Otllers echoed Saxbe 's indig-

assigned to reed pictures of the play during the game."
action to instant replay
From all the material provid·
machines.
ed him, the video director
"The Slo camera, located in decides what to send out to
tile end zone, generally focuses · viewers. Via intercom, he
on the wide receiver or split- communicates with cameraend and follows his maneuver- man, the men who operate the
ing against the defensive "instant replay" recorders and
back," it is explained. "This a technical director who mans
often provides the most exciting tile control board.
'instant replay' action as the
This technical director hand·
wide receiver is a frequent les the pressing of the buttons
target for the quarterback 's tllat "select the camera output
passes."
to be shown on the air .. , and
Then there is a second also what camera fflldS 'lSO'
camera assigned to tile offen· recorders. A special bank of
sive team, and a third one to television sets shows .the
keep an eye on the defense. director what is available for
This provides viewers with slow 'instant replay."'
motion replays of key blocks by
interior linemen to spring
Of course, it is conceded,
run ners loose, or perhaps a conventional videotape machance to see how a linebacker chines caii be used to record
may get thro~gh to clobber a each play of a game, and
quarterback.
routine action can be erased
Besides these cameras, it is immediately so that top
explained, as many as five momeniB only are available for
otllers may be beaming pic· a quick summary or highlights.
tures of the action "into a bank
For those somewhat techni·
of small television monitors in cal-minded, Ampex notes that
one of the television vans its device "records up to · 30
located outside tile stadium.
seconds or action on highly
"Recordqs,
transmission polished and plated metal disks.
equipment· and key television The operator can cue up any
people are located in the vans. portion of the 30-second record·
All decisions as to what is ing in just four . seconds for
broa,dcast are made in the vans immpdiate playback on the
by peoP.le who never see a live air ."

. --

-Beautiful New Store
-Fully Carpeted
-Complete New Gift Section
-Something For Everyone
-Enlarged Card_De rtment

PuHs Facial
Tissues

lOO's

Reg.

Reg. $19.95
Now

$}98

\95

PLENTY OF
FREE PARKING

SUSPENSION

Maalo1

95·

LISTERINE
Antiseptic

·BAND·
AID

Reg. 12.19

98~

99~

Now get full-size boxes of Kleenex ·
facial
-a 25e value, se with each 8-gallon purchase.
Here' s a brand new collection you 'll want to start today . Attrac -

You 'll find the5e de,ign• fit perfectly into you r home. decor,

tive 125-sheet boxes of Kleenex" fa cia l tissues in a variety of his-

whether it's traditional or mod ern . You can start your co l lection

tori c American design s, now at pa rt ic ipating Sunoco dealers.

of brand new Kleenex Americana focia l ti55ue5 nght now. And
you can gel the m for only 51 a box with each 8-gallon purchase
... a big 5aving on th' ' 25¢ volue. See your pa r t ic ipati ~ g Sunoco
deoler today.

You get a choice of four Folk Art de,ig ns .. . Ame ncon Eagle,
Cro" Stitch Sampler, Nova to Blanket and Pennsylvan ia Du tc h.
And on the bock of ea ch box i' the 5tory behind the de5ign5 .

Plan to Visit Us!
Something
For Everybody!

Aerosol Shave Cream

"Pro" Toothbrushes
Reg. sr &amp; sr

19C

Gillette
Foamy
Reg.

Da;tirne 30's - Reg. 11.69

•

RC 4f ,
'.

Per Pkg.-!lf 4

Vaseline
Intensive ·Care Lotion

89C

COMBS
Nylon Reg.
29$ ·&amp; 19$
Pint Thermos Bottles

99C

•

t

urmary

69C
· '1 29

''alannin" 4's

ATHROOM

39C

Reg. '1.09 49~

sr

PAMPERS
'

TOOTHPASTE

Reg. 11.69

$159

\

~ ff WT IIOl

39C

RIGHT GUARD
Reg.

Overnite 12's - Reg. 891

Reg. 69'

Mennen Sol Stroke

60's
12 A. Oz.
Reg. 51.59

Cresf

ALKA-SELTZER

32 OL

Reg. 79'

Reg. 85'

Instant Replay Exp]ained
By RICK DuBROW
HOLbYWOOD (UP!) - Few
things '.n television have been
so much enjoyed, and so little
understood, as the "instant
replay" technique used widely
in covering sports events.
Thus technique now is in its

.

VILLAGE PHARMA.CY'S • • •

PRICES ARE RIGHT!

WIN THE .

- --·

TIS~UI
C.

''rh~

Creator of
Reasonable Drug Prices"

CONTAC 10's

29

271 North Second Avenue
Phone 992-5759
.Middleport, Ohio·

®KlEENEX "NO KLEENEX AMER ICANA ARE

Rt:GtSTERED TRADEMARKS

or THE KIMBERLy CUAK, CORP.

We ~eserve The Right T~ Urn~ Quantities

. I

•

..l . '

I

�"
•

.

~

/

t--:- The DallJBeNlntl, Mlo'deport..PaliwtDy, 0,, Oct. 11, It'll

•

.Ropula#on Closely Related to Meigs' Economy
.

HEAP GOOD FIELD TRIP was enjoyed Tuesday by
pupils of .the seventh grade class at Southern Junior High in
Racine. They toured the Larry Wolfe home to view the 3,000piece collection of valuable Indian relics. This was part of
their study of the American Indian.

part of the nation. ll noted that.
the rise of super-sized farmer
co-ops - formed by merging
s m a II sing I e -mar k e t
cooperatives - had given
farmers an effective new
bargaining tool. The powerful
Knutson's study concentrated new cooperatives including
mainly on developments since Associated Milk Producers,
the mid-1960's in the central Inc., were able to demand and

gel higher prices from handlers
who generally passed the increases along to conswners,
Knutson said.
"This bargaining experiment may be one of the first
limes cooperatives have sueceeded in raising farm prices of
a major agricullurai product
throughoul .a large area of the

country. The dairy experience
now makes cooperative
bargaining a ttJol for producers
of other farm products to
consider seriously," the
economist said.
The boost in net returns to
farmers which followed higher
prices does not mean the boosts
were unjustified, Knutson
added. They came, he said,

.

Meigs County are recreation and services. Thr service Industry to 1970) extended to 1990, with an upward birth estimation based
has been the fastest growing industrial sector of the ~tiona! on increased birth rates in 1967-70. In other words, with tittle net
economy in recent years. Professional busineSs service, public oubnigration between 1970 and 1990, Meigs County's population
admlnil!tration, entel;'laimnent, and recreation all offer potential · could rise to 23,000.
for development In the county. Many of these services are mil
Based on current migration rates and net natural increase
found In the county outside of Pomeroy and Middleport (in which over the past 20 years, the pqpulation of Meigs County in 1990
60 pci. 'of all service estabUslunents are located); while a would fall to about 17,000 persons . If migration is concentrated
minlrnwn level of population Is often necessary to support such among young people, and continues at the high rates it has been
services, many residents have had to journey outside of Meigs undergoing, the result would be an even greater population loss.·
.County to get them.
Birth rates would be lower and death' rales higher due to the
The scenic·potential of Meigs Co1111ty's hilly woodlands and greater concentration of older people in the county; there would
water resources suggest that camping and other recreational be a smaller net natural increase to offset migration. This would
activity could play a. part In the area's economic development. cause the population of the country to fail below 17,000 in 1990 However, the importance of a highway accessibitity caMot be possibly even lower than the straight-line decrease.
overlooked. Improving the access ways to Meigs County is
The Ohio Development Department predicted a population
necessary to attract people and industry alike. The realization of growth for Meigs County to over 25,000 people by 1990. This
many of the above suggestions will depend, in large measure, on estimate, which appeared in tbe Statistical Abstract of Ohio the abitity of the county to expand its economic base beyond its 1969, was probably based on relatively high rates of net natural
dependence on primary or extractive industry.
increase and economic development and underestimated the
POPULATION FORECASTS
outmigration from Meigs County during the 1960s. This
The population of Meigs County in the future is difficult to Development Department figure must be considered extremely
predict. Past trends extended in a straight line projection to the optimistic and rather unrealistic, considering Meigs County's
year 1990 would show a continuing decllne in the county's 1970 population of 19,799.
·
population. This· is due to the large outmigration from Meigs
Arange of expected population growth is projected for Meigs
.COUnty which has occurred since 1940. H the migration rate can be County based on "moderate" economic growth. Population for
gradually reduced, there would be reason w expect a stable the County is projected to 20,000 to 22,000 by 1990 with the high
po)lllation level of about 20,000 persons. If migration can be representing approximately a 10 pet. growth in 20 years. This
curtailed completely, growth to about 23,000 population in 1990 is projection assumes that the County has the potential to grow half
possible. This figure is based on birth and death rates (from 1950 as fast as the state as a whole grew in the 1960s. However, even

.... ·
(Continued froiiqia~e . l)
·' · ·
'!l'e 1r more ~ lhoee industries may offer pcitential for tuduatrial
apanalon In Meigs County.
EcqnOI!Ik; development requires a trained manpower supply
-a ~ force which ))08se88ell a good baale education. In order
Whave a well-trained Ia~ force available, every effort should be
made~ encourage students to finlsb highschool. All of 1980 70 pet.
al the residents of "'elgs Co1111ty. over 2&amp; years Of age had not
completed their high acli,ool educations. In addition, many industries today require speciaUzed knowledge and aptitudes. In
ocder to ctev.:lllp IJIBIIpower capable of being I!IDJlloyed by new
lridUBicy, Meigs County must make full use of Its vocational and
educattdial programs to train residents for employment within
the C\)unty. To trl!in a person for a vocation which does not fill a
'job need lor the county encour'ages !hilt person to migrate from
the county In search of a suitable job. This Ia J!llrticu).arly true of
ytnmpr men between 20 and 35 who may not have established
permailent ties w the COUilty. Therefore, vocational programs
should be oriented toward skills which may attract ilew industry
or promote expansion of exlaUng firma. Education cannot be
lsolated from the needs of the county, and Meigs County's
problems of unemployment and low income can be reduced If a
!rained labor supply ls made available for Industrial development.
One of the ln!portant natural resources of Meigs County Is the
Ohio River. Long an important "highway" for exploration, lhe
Ohio River today has potential for development in the areas of
recreation, Industry, and low-cost tranSportation. Among the
various products carried by heavy barge on the Ohio are coal and
coke, oil and gasoline, iron and steel, chemicals, grain, frozen
foods, sugar, and salt. Whether Meigs CoWJty will be able w
utilize the Ohio River's potential will depend on the nature of tbe
county's development effort, and whether growth can be achieved
In those areas suited to the county's resources.
Two other areas appearing to offer significant potentlal for

BOBBIE CHAPMAN, left, and Steve Boso dlsplay war
points in the arrowhead collection.
SYRACUSE ELEMENTARY School Principal Larry
Wolfe has a very large and fascinating collection of Indian
relics found by Larry in the Letart Falls area, Portland,
Racine and pt, Pleasant. Most of the pieces Wolfe has obtained himself. Afew have been given to him and some have
been purchased. The collection is as large, if not larger, than
that in the Marietta Musewn. Larry's brother, Hilton , Jr.,
also has started an Indian collection. According to the Wolfe
brothers, plowed ground containing flint is a good place to
find Indian relics as is the mouth of a creek.

.

after a period of very low
returns which had driven many
farmers out of the milk
business.
The study added that the coop mergers of the. 1960's,
resulting in groups which wield
great bargaining power
because they can dominate the
supply situation over wide
areas, probably will conUnue.

this moderate projection must depend on reversing past economic
trends and taking full advantage of economic prospects for the
future.
LAVER TOP-8EEDED
STOCKHOLM (UPli - Rod
Laver of Australia was seeded
No. I Tuesday in the $45,000
Stockholm Open tennis tournament which gels under way
next Saturday.
Tom Okker of The Netherlands was seeded second, Stan
Smith of Pasadena, Calif., was
third and Ken Rosewall of
Australia was fourth.

MIDDLEPORT

ORTIZ RETURNS
NEW YORK (UP I)- Carlos
Ortiz, 35-year-&lt;&gt;id former lightweight champion, announced
Tuesday that he will resume his
professional bDKing career,
Nov. 27, under the auspices of
promoter Murray Goodman.
Ortiz' opponent has yet to be
selected for the bout which will
he held at the New Jersey State
Fair Grounds.

Fischer Ready
For the Champ
shutouts over two grandmasters.
Against Petrosian, Fischer
won the first game, then lost
one and drew three before
finishing with a mighty four
wins in a row.
The matches have been held.
in the San MarUn theater over
the past several weeks, with
Fischer's win brought him seats going at a premium. The
$7,500 while Petrosian received
incident was at the
$4,500, tournament officials only
beginning Of one match when
said.
someone threw a stink bomb in
Fischer's win over Pelrosian, the theater, but Fischer and
himself a former world cham- Petrosian Ignored it and went
pionilegives him .the. right to ahead with play. Fischer, at 14
cha nge the retgrung chess U.S. chess champion and at 15
Boris Spa53kY of the a grandmaster, dropped out of
So
Union. The clianpiOII,ShiP . !Ugb !M:bool&gt;~ deyote his- Ufe to
se
will be played next chess --and SIDce has had time
spring at a site and time w be for litUe else. For some lO
decided on.
years he has claimed to be the
The ~limax came in the ninth world's best chess player, but
game of their scheduled 12- until recently refused w prove
game series. Playing white, it by declining to participate in
Fischer, 28, forced Pelrosian, a the long and tiring elimination
Russian, to resign in .the 46th tournaments that ·took place
move. With that, Fischer had every three years.
the necessary &amp;-1-2 points to H~ become&amp; !he first Ameriwln the tournament.
can to win the challenge round,
The American's record in the which began In 1948 following
matches leading up wthe finals the death of then champion
against Petrosian, 42, went a Alexander Alekhine of the
long way w prove his long- Soviet Union. Since then the .
standing claim he .~ the best. title has been in the grip of the
At one point Fischer won 20 Russians, with Petrosian losing
games in a row, Including 6-0 it to Spassky in 1969.
By CHARLES PADILLA
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)-Bobby
Fischer, a Brooklyn high school
dropout who long has claimed
to be the best chess player in
the world, earned the chance to
prove it Tuesday night by
beaUng Tlgran Petrosian in the
final challen11e round.

,,

fULTON WOLFE, right, seventh grade teacher at Southern Junior High in Racine, and
David Bass, student, display a large glass casement containing assorted arrowheads. The
display is a part of a 3,000 piece Indian collection belonging to Larry Wolfe, Hilton's brother,
who is principal at Syracuse Elementary Schoolr Seventh grade students used the valuable
collection Tuesday as part oftheir study of the American Indian .

Jobless Benefits
Raised by House
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Legislation raising maximum
unemployment compensation
benefits 17to 27 pet. and making
sweeping changes in the
benefits system was overwhelmingly approved by the
Ohio House Tuesday.
' ·
The bill, which has been
traveling through committees
of .the General Assembly for
eight months, was passed on a
93-3 vote. It must he returned to
the Senate for concurrence in
minor amendments, but swift
approval was expected.
Rep. Howard A. Knight, RFremonl, said it provides the
"mos. ~ramatic changes since
· the program was, inaugurated
back in 1936." It was a compromise between Gov. John J.
· Gilligan 's administration ,
· Republicans and lobby groups.
· In addition to increasing
. benefits for unemployment, the
measure extends benefits an
additional 13 weeks in periods of
: high unemployment. It also
: calis for the inclusion of a cost: of-living factor in figuring
·· benefits effective next Jan . 1.
' Benefits would increase from
: the current maximum of $66 per
! week for a jobless worker wilb
: four dependents to $84 a week.
: Persons ·with no dependents
: would receive $55 instead of the
: current $47 a ·week; those with
.; one dependent would get $65
: instead of $53; those with two
; dependents would receiY.e $71
: instead of $57; and those with
~ three dependents would receive
$76 instead of $61.
: The increased benefits would
; be effective immediately with
: ~ governor's signature since
• an "emergency clause" was
:; attached wthe measure. Other
~ featW't&gt; of the'bill, however, go
'; into effect Jan. l : .

i

limit, and the Gilligan administration asked for a top of
$99.
Although the bill received
support from 'ali fa ctions,
argwnents were raised when
House Speaker Pro Tempore
Charles E. Fry , a Springfield
building contractor , tried to
insert an amendment. He intraduced a clause which would
exempt the construction industry from paying benefits
whiie there is a strike on their
premises.
Fry and Rep . John A.
Bechtold, R-Cincinnali, co ntended small businessmen
would be supporting strikes at
their own firms without the
amendment. The amendment,
however, failed 30-63.
"If you want to encourage
strikes , this isn 't bad," said
Fry .
He also charged the
legislation was a product of a
"deal " by the Ohio Manufacturers Association , Ohio
Chamber of Commerce, Ohio
AFL-CIO and Ohio Building
Trades Council.
"Let's look at who made the
deal, big busines and big
labor," he said.
Coverage Expanded
Current unempl oy ment
compensa tion law requires·
employers of three or more
persons to furnish coverage, but

the new piece of legislation
would require coverage by all
employers.
Employer contributions to the
unemployment compensation
fund , however, would be
reduced from 60 to 50 pel. The
taxable wage base for the
purpose of contributions would
be increased by 40 pet. and the
lime period for contributions
would be expanded.
Companies with less unemployment historically would be
able to contribute less to the
fund .
Also, the minimum safe level
of the fund would be raised from
$454 million to $606 million to
cover the higher benefits. An
estimated $650 million is
currently in the fWJd .
Coverage is extended, for the
first lime, to state employes and
employes of hospitals operated
by political subdivisions.
In other action the House
approved a Senate-passed bill
setting up an Office of Appalachia in the Department of
Development.
The
Senate
approved
legislation
providing
a
maximum 31klay jail term for
disturbing the peace and increasing the fine from $50 to
$100.
ll also adopted a measure
a:towing motorists who hit deer
to keep the carcass .

Dairies in Pinch
WASHINGTON (UPI I Dairy farmers who have driven
milk prices up substantially in
recent ye,, ·s will find the going
harder in the future, according
to .a pvernrnenl-finan ced

_udy
........ -~ ~ - ·

.
l ... ~ _ ,....,,.,, ...

; ...

n-~illr

stable-to-declining demand
situation, mean that price increases are not going to be as
easy lu obta in in tlJC fulure," ,
said Honaid D. Knutson , a
Purdue University. economist,
in a report prepared for the
fl

,.,.;.,;,lt,,,,t&gt;

npn;trlrnerit 'g

Price• Good Thru Set., October 30th.

WE IIEDEEM
FEDWL FOQII SUMPS

por kCh ops

SLI~\~ 2~~~:~~RE~~OIN

,

,

,

,

SWISS Steak R~~~BL~~~E
California Beef Roast . . • .
R'ILI Ro••t
of Beef
•

,

,

,

,

hi.

RIIS

1

1

•

•

•

c
5-lb. pkg.

or larger

Clorox Bleach

lb.

•

•

•

Gat.
Jug

49'

.SOFT- 4c OFF LABEL

.'
(Continued from page I)
' Ohio River Tuesday nlght when they collided with another siring
of barges. Pollee reported no Injuries. ''They blew up right 1111der
the Matthew Wells Bridge," said Meade Co1111ty Sheriff Dave

Read all about it. Never before in the history of the world
has history been made so rapidly. Never before has the need and the right-for in-depth information been so vital. Men walk on
the moon, governments decide the fate of millions, a little lad is
reunited with his dog. The drama of living -at every level- is
reported in your newspapers as it happens. Accurately. Completely.
Freely. Knowledge- through information- gives each individual a
freedom of choice. Your newspapers are dedicated to this concept.
America and her newspapers are growing together. Read all about it.

This newspaper's advertisers bring you
the freedom to compare and choose
from advertised values - for your fam·
ily, your home, for your every need.

'

Th.e Daily Sentine_l_

JANE PARKER

A&amp;P PRODUCE BUYS!

Pumpkin Pies
-

• • • •

Blue Bonnet Margarine • ~~:~ age

GOLDEN RIPE

RED DELICIOUS

BANANAS

APPLES

50c LESS THAN A YEAR AGO

•

c

Eicht O'Clock Coffee •• 3~~• 51 99

18

lb.

lb.

KRAfT

Col•y Cheese •

News... in Briefs

•

28

$

A&amp;P BRAND

• • • •

Giant Tide. • • •

ench

Jib
.
1 oz.

59c

83'

JANE PARKER

Spanish Bar Cake

• ••ch39c
3pkgo. 7t
• •
39'
• • nr

• •

JANE PARKER- BROWN AND SERVE

Twin Rolls

• • •

JANE PARKER- CHEESE

lbs.
Corn Puffs •
Sugar ••• • tb.• 59'
lb.
Ross.
5
7t
A COa.st Guard spokesman said the explosion was caused by
......
Marvel
lee
Cream
French
Fries
•
•
•
•
•
3
39c
the collision between a siring ol eight empty oil barges )IUBhed by
Cooking
Onions
"·29c
Bartlett
Pears
•
the tugboat "Aetna Louisville" and five barges loaded with wood ANN
alcohol )lllllhed by the tugboat "Martha Mae."
Beans WIT~Jlcf'ro • • •
3
$100 Handi Whip • • • • • t3t
"'lbe tugboat
apparently got m!J:ed up on their
....
Dennis
Chicken
Broth
•
•
• •
wblstle signais, state pollee said.

~~e

5

Bag

Ukra.

I

SULTANA FROZEN

CHOfOLATE MARSHJ-,IALLOW

l&gt;·pi.69C

YELLOW

SWEET JUICY

lb.
b•g

I

I

U. S. Steel Takes Loss ,
NEW YORK - U. S. STEEL CORP. Tuesday reported a
$10,515,826loas for the third quarter of 1971, the first quarterly loss
since the ·third quarter of 11159, when operations were hit by a
lengthy
sirlke, B,lg ,Steel and Its domestic competitors
avoided a strike this year, but the lmJ!Bct of the generous wage
settlement and lhe sllarp drop In slllpmenla arid orders following
lhe-'settlement adversely affected lhlrd quarter results.

steer

Republic Steel Shows Loss·too

· S1-0L39C
I

GM Adversely Hif by Free%e
DI!.'I'ROIT -GENERAL MOTORS Corp. earnlngs'durlng the
third q\IBfler, when lhe company·waa seD:Jng a re~:ord lllllilbiir of
cars and trucks, were "adversely al!ected" by President Nllon 's
wage-price freeze, GM's two top e:ncutives say. .GM Board
atillrman James Roche and GM Preelilent Edward N. Cole loJd
stocllholdersln a letter Tuesday that net Income for Jt#, Au ~'~it
and September "wu adversely afteded as a result of lbe price
freeze which necessitated rescinding the price Increases on 1972
model cars and trucks announced Aug. U!'
Net Income for the period was $217milllon on net Jaleaof $5.6
lKlllm, a third quarter record,.for l,~$6;1!0!1 cars~ trucks, allo a
third quarter record. Net ~001e )11,yte 1971 third 11111rter Wet!!
down $13 mlllion from the reported 1911 level of $230 mllllorl,
allbough thla year's worldwide factory unit Alea were up ~ pel.
from 1,42'1,000unlts in lhe 11169perlodquarteroff0 bllllon. ·
~
~·
.\ .
. .

A&amp;P FROZEN

•&amp;-oL

Wl

Sno-Fioss Sauerkraut • • • • 4 ·~s1oo
Appian Way Cheese Pizza • 21S\&gt;·M·89C
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce • • • • ~··69c
'

pkfl.

IIAIJJJU"EE!\' TREATS!!

_

CLEVELAND -REPUBLIC STEEL COrp. reported Tuesday
a net loss of 96 cents a share of common stock for the lhlrd quarter
of 1971, the flrstsuchloasin12years,
Republic, the nation's third~argest steel producer, reported
lhlrd quarter sales of $284,471,063, a 24.2 pel. decline over the
same period last year. It was the first loss for Republlc In any
quarter since 11159' when the company reported a loll$ of
$24,861,406, caused mainly by a ilti-ike by lhe United Steelworkers
Union.

lb.
hg

1

PAGE

operaiDrS

I

APPLE CIDER.

Harvest Mix ~:tE ·:;.~~· 49c
Gum Pumpkins !~~. 35c
Hershey Jr. Bars :~:o 79c
Mounds -Jr. Bars !~:. 69'
Boyer Mallo Cups:::o&amp;9c

~t99C
AND

FRESH DONUTS
GOLDEN,
SUGARED,
CINNAMON

31-doa.89(
.....

SCOPE SECRET -GLEEM
Mouthwash Anti-Perspirant
20c OFF LABEL

~·-··· 9 sc

bottle

1s.. off .....
LAIEL obo

52c

FAMILY SIZE

6'1•-••·79c

~$119
'
.....,

SHAMPOO

HEAD &amp; SHOUL-DERS

tube

LOTION

8.5-••·
ol..

Toothpaste·

$1 ~7

CREME
lk&gt;t

lor

CONCENUATE

155. u......
......$137

•

�"
•

.

~

/

t--:- The DallJBeNlntl, Mlo'deport..PaliwtDy, 0,, Oct. 11, It'll

•

.Ropula#on Closely Related to Meigs' Economy
.

HEAP GOOD FIELD TRIP was enjoyed Tuesday by
pupils of .the seventh grade class at Southern Junior High in
Racine. They toured the Larry Wolfe home to view the 3,000piece collection of valuable Indian relics. This was part of
their study of the American Indian.

part of the nation. ll noted that.
the rise of super-sized farmer
co-ops - formed by merging
s m a II sing I e -mar k e t
cooperatives - had given
farmers an effective new
bargaining tool. The powerful
Knutson's study concentrated new cooperatives including
mainly on developments since Associated Milk Producers,
the mid-1960's in the central Inc., were able to demand and

gel higher prices from handlers
who generally passed the increases along to conswners,
Knutson said.
"This bargaining experiment may be one of the first
limes cooperatives have sueceeded in raising farm prices of
a major agricullurai product
throughoul .a large area of the

country. The dairy experience
now makes cooperative
bargaining a ttJol for producers
of other farm products to
consider seriously," the
economist said.
The boost in net returns to
farmers which followed higher
prices does not mean the boosts
were unjustified, Knutson
added. They came, he said,

.

Meigs County are recreation and services. Thr service Industry to 1970) extended to 1990, with an upward birth estimation based
has been the fastest growing industrial sector of the ~tiona! on increased birth rates in 1967-70. In other words, with tittle net
economy in recent years. Professional busineSs service, public oubnigration between 1970 and 1990, Meigs County's population
admlnil!tration, entel;'laimnent, and recreation all offer potential · could rise to 23,000.
for development In the county. Many of these services are mil
Based on current migration rates and net natural increase
found In the county outside of Pomeroy and Middleport (in which over the past 20 years, the pqpulation of Meigs County in 1990
60 pci. 'of all service estabUslunents are located); while a would fall to about 17,000 persons . If migration is concentrated
minlrnwn level of population Is often necessary to support such among young people, and continues at the high rates it has been
services, many residents have had to journey outside of Meigs undergoing, the result would be an even greater population loss.·
.County to get them.
Birth rates would be lower and death' rales higher due to the
The scenic·potential of Meigs Co1111ty's hilly woodlands and greater concentration of older people in the county; there would
water resources suggest that camping and other recreational be a smaller net natural increase to offset migration. This would
activity could play a. part In the area's economic development. cause the population of the country to fail below 17,000 in 1990 However, the importance of a highway accessibitity caMot be possibly even lower than the straight-line decrease.
overlooked. Improving the access ways to Meigs County is
The Ohio Development Department predicted a population
necessary to attract people and industry alike. The realization of growth for Meigs County to over 25,000 people by 1990. This
many of the above suggestions will depend, in large measure, on estimate, which appeared in tbe Statistical Abstract of Ohio the abitity of the county to expand its economic base beyond its 1969, was probably based on relatively high rates of net natural
dependence on primary or extractive industry.
increase and economic development and underestimated the
POPULATION FORECASTS
outmigration from Meigs County during the 1960s. This
The population of Meigs County in the future is difficult to Development Department figure must be considered extremely
predict. Past trends extended in a straight line projection to the optimistic and rather unrealistic, considering Meigs County's
year 1990 would show a continuing decllne in the county's 1970 population of 19,799.
·
population. This· is due to the large outmigration from Meigs
Arange of expected population growth is projected for Meigs
.COUnty which has occurred since 1940. H the migration rate can be County based on "moderate" economic growth. Population for
gradually reduced, there would be reason w expect a stable the County is projected to 20,000 to 22,000 by 1990 with the high
po)lllation level of about 20,000 persons. If migration can be representing approximately a 10 pet. growth in 20 years. This
curtailed completely, growth to about 23,000 population in 1990 is projection assumes that the County has the potential to grow half
possible. This figure is based on birth and death rates (from 1950 as fast as the state as a whole grew in the 1960s. However, even

.... ·
(Continued froiiqia~e . l)
·' · ·
'!l'e 1r more ~ lhoee industries may offer pcitential for tuduatrial
apanalon In Meigs County.
EcqnOI!Ik; development requires a trained manpower supply
-a ~ force which ))08se88ell a good baale education. In order
Whave a well-trained Ia~ force available, every effort should be
made~ encourage students to finlsb highschool. All of 1980 70 pet.
al the residents of "'elgs Co1111ty. over 2&amp; years Of age had not
completed their high acli,ool educations. In addition, many industries today require speciaUzed knowledge and aptitudes. In
ocder to ctev.:lllp IJIBIIpower capable of being I!IDJlloyed by new
lridUBicy, Meigs County must make full use of Its vocational and
educattdial programs to train residents for employment within
the C\)unty. To trl!in a person for a vocation which does not fill a
'job need lor the county encour'ages !hilt person to migrate from
the county In search of a suitable job. This Ia J!llrticu).arly true of
ytnmpr men between 20 and 35 who may not have established
permailent ties w the COUilty. Therefore, vocational programs
should be oriented toward skills which may attract ilew industry
or promote expansion of exlaUng firma. Education cannot be
lsolated from the needs of the county, and Meigs County's
problems of unemployment and low income can be reduced If a
!rained labor supply ls made available for Industrial development.
One of the ln!portant natural resources of Meigs County Is the
Ohio River. Long an important "highway" for exploration, lhe
Ohio River today has potential for development in the areas of
recreation, Industry, and low-cost tranSportation. Among the
various products carried by heavy barge on the Ohio are coal and
coke, oil and gasoline, iron and steel, chemicals, grain, frozen
foods, sugar, and salt. Whether Meigs CoWJty will be able w
utilize the Ohio River's potential will depend on the nature of tbe
county's development effort, and whether growth can be achieved
In those areas suited to the county's resources.
Two other areas appearing to offer significant potentlal for

BOBBIE CHAPMAN, left, and Steve Boso dlsplay war
points in the arrowhead collection.
SYRACUSE ELEMENTARY School Principal Larry
Wolfe has a very large and fascinating collection of Indian
relics found by Larry in the Letart Falls area, Portland,
Racine and pt, Pleasant. Most of the pieces Wolfe has obtained himself. Afew have been given to him and some have
been purchased. The collection is as large, if not larger, than
that in the Marietta Musewn. Larry's brother, Hilton , Jr.,
also has started an Indian collection. According to the Wolfe
brothers, plowed ground containing flint is a good place to
find Indian relics as is the mouth of a creek.

.

after a period of very low
returns which had driven many
farmers out of the milk
business.
The study added that the coop mergers of the. 1960's,
resulting in groups which wield
great bargaining power
because they can dominate the
supply situation over wide
areas, probably will conUnue.

this moderate projection must depend on reversing past economic
trends and taking full advantage of economic prospects for the
future.
LAVER TOP-8EEDED
STOCKHOLM (UPli - Rod
Laver of Australia was seeded
No. I Tuesday in the $45,000
Stockholm Open tennis tournament which gels under way
next Saturday.
Tom Okker of The Netherlands was seeded second, Stan
Smith of Pasadena, Calif., was
third and Ken Rosewall of
Australia was fourth.

MIDDLEPORT

ORTIZ RETURNS
NEW YORK (UP I)- Carlos
Ortiz, 35-year-&lt;&gt;id former lightweight champion, announced
Tuesday that he will resume his
professional bDKing career,
Nov. 27, under the auspices of
promoter Murray Goodman.
Ortiz' opponent has yet to be
selected for the bout which will
he held at the New Jersey State
Fair Grounds.

Fischer Ready
For the Champ
shutouts over two grandmasters.
Against Petrosian, Fischer
won the first game, then lost
one and drew three before
finishing with a mighty four
wins in a row.
The matches have been held.
in the San MarUn theater over
the past several weeks, with
Fischer's win brought him seats going at a premium. The
$7,500 while Petrosian received
incident was at the
$4,500, tournament officials only
beginning Of one match when
said.
someone threw a stink bomb in
Fischer's win over Pelrosian, the theater, but Fischer and
himself a former world cham- Petrosian Ignored it and went
pionilegives him .the. right to ahead with play. Fischer, at 14
cha nge the retgrung chess U.S. chess champion and at 15
Boris Spa53kY of the a grandmaster, dropped out of
So
Union. The clianpiOII,ShiP . !Ugb !M:bool&gt;~ deyote his- Ufe to
se
will be played next chess --and SIDce has had time
spring at a site and time w be for litUe else. For some lO
decided on.
years he has claimed to be the
The ~limax came in the ninth world's best chess player, but
game of their scheduled 12- until recently refused w prove
game series. Playing white, it by declining to participate in
Fischer, 28, forced Pelrosian, a the long and tiring elimination
Russian, to resign in .the 46th tournaments that ·took place
move. With that, Fischer had every three years.
the necessary &amp;-1-2 points to H~ become&amp; !he first Ameriwln the tournament.
can to win the challenge round,
The American's record in the which began In 1948 following
matches leading up wthe finals the death of then champion
against Petrosian, 42, went a Alexander Alekhine of the
long way w prove his long- Soviet Union. Since then the .
standing claim he .~ the best. title has been in the grip of the
At one point Fischer won 20 Russians, with Petrosian losing
games in a row, Including 6-0 it to Spassky in 1969.
By CHARLES PADILLA
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)-Bobby
Fischer, a Brooklyn high school
dropout who long has claimed
to be the best chess player in
the world, earned the chance to
prove it Tuesday night by
beaUng Tlgran Petrosian in the
final challen11e round.

,,

fULTON WOLFE, right, seventh grade teacher at Southern Junior High in Racine, and
David Bass, student, display a large glass casement containing assorted arrowheads. The
display is a part of a 3,000 piece Indian collection belonging to Larry Wolfe, Hilton's brother,
who is principal at Syracuse Elementary Schoolr Seventh grade students used the valuable
collection Tuesday as part oftheir study of the American Indian .

Jobless Benefits
Raised by House
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Legislation raising maximum
unemployment compensation
benefits 17to 27 pet. and making
sweeping changes in the
benefits system was overwhelmingly approved by the
Ohio House Tuesday.
' ·
The bill, which has been
traveling through committees
of .the General Assembly for
eight months, was passed on a
93-3 vote. It must he returned to
the Senate for concurrence in
minor amendments, but swift
approval was expected.
Rep. Howard A. Knight, RFremonl, said it provides the
"mos. ~ramatic changes since
· the program was, inaugurated
back in 1936." It was a compromise between Gov. John J.
· Gilligan 's administration ,
· Republicans and lobby groups.
· In addition to increasing
. benefits for unemployment, the
measure extends benefits an
additional 13 weeks in periods of
: high unemployment. It also
: calis for the inclusion of a cost: of-living factor in figuring
·· benefits effective next Jan . 1.
' Benefits would increase from
: the current maximum of $66 per
! week for a jobless worker wilb
: four dependents to $84 a week.
: Persons ·with no dependents
: would receive $55 instead of the
: current $47 a ·week; those with
.; one dependent would get $65
: instead of $53; those with two
; dependents would receiY.e $71
: instead of $57; and those with
~ three dependents would receive
$76 instead of $61.
: The increased benefits would
; be effective immediately with
: ~ governor's signature since
• an "emergency clause" was
:; attached wthe measure. Other
~ featW't&gt; of the'bill, however, go
'; into effect Jan. l : .

i

limit, and the Gilligan administration asked for a top of
$99.
Although the bill received
support from 'ali fa ctions,
argwnents were raised when
House Speaker Pro Tempore
Charles E. Fry , a Springfield
building contractor , tried to
insert an amendment. He intraduced a clause which would
exempt the construction industry from paying benefits
whiie there is a strike on their
premises.
Fry and Rep . John A.
Bechtold, R-Cincinnali, co ntended small businessmen
would be supporting strikes at
their own firms without the
amendment. The amendment,
however, failed 30-63.
"If you want to encourage
strikes , this isn 't bad," said
Fry .
He also charged the
legislation was a product of a
"deal " by the Ohio Manufacturers Association , Ohio
Chamber of Commerce, Ohio
AFL-CIO and Ohio Building
Trades Council.
"Let's look at who made the
deal, big busines and big
labor," he said.
Coverage Expanded
Current unempl oy ment
compensa tion law requires·
employers of three or more
persons to furnish coverage, but

the new piece of legislation
would require coverage by all
employers.
Employer contributions to the
unemployment compensation
fund , however, would be
reduced from 60 to 50 pel. The
taxable wage base for the
purpose of contributions would
be increased by 40 pet. and the
lime period for contributions
would be expanded.
Companies with less unemployment historically would be
able to contribute less to the
fund .
Also, the minimum safe level
of the fund would be raised from
$454 million to $606 million to
cover the higher benefits. An
estimated $650 million is
currently in the fWJd .
Coverage is extended, for the
first lime, to state employes and
employes of hospitals operated
by political subdivisions.
In other action the House
approved a Senate-passed bill
setting up an Office of Appalachia in the Department of
Development.
The
Senate
approved
legislation
providing
a
maximum 31klay jail term for
disturbing the peace and increasing the fine from $50 to
$100.
ll also adopted a measure
a:towing motorists who hit deer
to keep the carcass .

Dairies in Pinch
WASHINGTON (UPI I Dairy farmers who have driven
milk prices up substantially in
recent ye,, ·s will find the going
harder in the future, according
to .a pvernrnenl-finan ced

_udy
........ -~ ~ - ·

.
l ... ~ _ ,....,,.,, ...

; ...

n-~illr

stable-to-declining demand
situation, mean that price increases are not going to be as
easy lu obta in in tlJC fulure," ,
said Honaid D. Knutson , a
Purdue University. economist,
in a report prepared for the
fl

,.,.;.,;,lt,,,,t&gt;

npn;trlrnerit 'g

Price• Good Thru Set., October 30th.

WE IIEDEEM
FEDWL FOQII SUMPS

por kCh ops

SLI~\~ 2~~~:~~RE~~OIN

,

,

,

,

SWISS Steak R~~~BL~~~E
California Beef Roast . . • .
R'ILI Ro••t
of Beef
•

,

,

,

,

hi.

RIIS

1

1

•

•

•

c
5-lb. pkg.

or larger

Clorox Bleach

lb.

•

•

•

Gat.
Jug

49'

.SOFT- 4c OFF LABEL

.'
(Continued from page I)
' Ohio River Tuesday nlght when they collided with another siring
of barges. Pollee reported no Injuries. ''They blew up right 1111der
the Matthew Wells Bridge," said Meade Co1111ty Sheriff Dave

Read all about it. Never before in the history of the world
has history been made so rapidly. Never before has the need and the right-for in-depth information been so vital. Men walk on
the moon, governments decide the fate of millions, a little lad is
reunited with his dog. The drama of living -at every level- is
reported in your newspapers as it happens. Accurately. Completely.
Freely. Knowledge- through information- gives each individual a
freedom of choice. Your newspapers are dedicated to this concept.
America and her newspapers are growing together. Read all about it.

This newspaper's advertisers bring you
the freedom to compare and choose
from advertised values - for your fam·
ily, your home, for your every need.

'

Th.e Daily Sentine_l_

JANE PARKER

A&amp;P PRODUCE BUYS!

Pumpkin Pies
-

• • • •

Blue Bonnet Margarine • ~~:~ age

GOLDEN RIPE

RED DELICIOUS

BANANAS

APPLES

50c LESS THAN A YEAR AGO

•

c

Eicht O'Clock Coffee •• 3~~• 51 99

18

lb.

lb.

KRAfT

Col•y Cheese •

News... in Briefs

•

28

$

A&amp;P BRAND

• • • •

Giant Tide. • • •

ench

Jib
.
1 oz.

59c

83'

JANE PARKER

Spanish Bar Cake

• ••ch39c
3pkgo. 7t
• •
39'
• • nr

• •

JANE PARKER- BROWN AND SERVE

Twin Rolls

• • •

JANE PARKER- CHEESE

lbs.
Corn Puffs •
Sugar ••• • tb.• 59'
lb.
Ross.
5
7t
A COa.st Guard spokesman said the explosion was caused by
......
Marvel
lee
Cream
French
Fries
•
•
•
•
•
3
39c
the collision between a siring ol eight empty oil barges )IUBhed by
Cooking
Onions
"·29c
Bartlett
Pears
•
the tugboat "Aetna Louisville" and five barges loaded with wood ANN
alcohol )lllllhed by the tugboat "Martha Mae."
Beans WIT~Jlcf'ro • • •
3
$100 Handi Whip • • • • • t3t
"'lbe tugboat
apparently got m!J:ed up on their
....
Dennis
Chicken
Broth
•
•
• •
wblstle signais, state pollee said.

~~e

5

Bag

Ukra.

I

SULTANA FROZEN

CHOfOLATE MARSHJ-,IALLOW

l&gt;·pi.69C

YELLOW

SWEET JUICY

lb.
b•g

I

I

U. S. Steel Takes Loss ,
NEW YORK - U. S. STEEL CORP. Tuesday reported a
$10,515,826loas for the third quarter of 1971, the first quarterly loss
since the ·third quarter of 11159, when operations were hit by a
lengthy
sirlke, B,lg ,Steel and Its domestic competitors
avoided a strike this year, but the lmJ!Bct of the generous wage
settlement and lhe sllarp drop In slllpmenla arid orders following
lhe-'settlement adversely affected lhlrd quarter results.

steer

Republic Steel Shows Loss·too

· S1-0L39C
I

GM Adversely Hif by Free%e
DI!.'I'ROIT -GENERAL MOTORS Corp. earnlngs'durlng the
third q\IBfler, when lhe company·waa seD:Jng a re~:ord lllllilbiir of
cars and trucks, were "adversely al!ected" by President Nllon 's
wage-price freeze, GM's two top e:ncutives say. .GM Board
atillrman James Roche and GM Preelilent Edward N. Cole loJd
stocllholdersln a letter Tuesday that net Income for Jt#, Au ~'~it
and September "wu adversely afteded as a result of lbe price
freeze which necessitated rescinding the price Increases on 1972
model cars and trucks announced Aug. U!'
Net Income for the period was $217milllon on net Jaleaof $5.6
lKlllm, a third quarter record,.for l,~$6;1!0!1 cars~ trucks, allo a
third quarter record. Net ~001e )11,yte 1971 third 11111rter Wet!!
down $13 mlllion from the reported 1911 level of $230 mllllorl,
allbough thla year's worldwide factory unit Alea were up ~ pel.
from 1,42'1,000unlts in lhe 11169perlodquarteroff0 bllllon. ·
~
~·
.\ .
. .

A&amp;P FROZEN

•&amp;-oL

Wl

Sno-Fioss Sauerkraut • • • • 4 ·~s1oo
Appian Way Cheese Pizza • 21S\&gt;·M·89C
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce • • • • ~··69c
'

pkfl.

IIAIJJJU"EE!\' TREATS!!

_

CLEVELAND -REPUBLIC STEEL COrp. reported Tuesday
a net loss of 96 cents a share of common stock for the lhlrd quarter
of 1971, the flrstsuchloasin12years,
Republic, the nation's third~argest steel producer, reported
lhlrd quarter sales of $284,471,063, a 24.2 pel. decline over the
same period last year. It was the first loss for Republlc In any
quarter since 11159' when the company reported a loll$ of
$24,861,406, caused mainly by a ilti-ike by lhe United Steelworkers
Union.

lb.
hg

1

PAGE

operaiDrS

I

APPLE CIDER.

Harvest Mix ~:tE ·:;.~~· 49c
Gum Pumpkins !~~. 35c
Hershey Jr. Bars :~:o 79c
Mounds -Jr. Bars !~:. 69'
Boyer Mallo Cups:::o&amp;9c

~t99C
AND

FRESH DONUTS
GOLDEN,
SUGARED,
CINNAMON

31-doa.89(
.....

SCOPE SECRET -GLEEM
Mouthwash Anti-Perspirant
20c OFF LABEL

~·-··· 9 sc

bottle

1s.. off .....
LAIEL obo

52c

FAMILY SIZE

6'1•-••·79c

~$119
'
.....,

SHAMPOO

HEAD &amp; SHOUL-DERS

tube

LOTION

8.5-••·
ol..

Toothpaste·

$1 ~7

CREME
lk&gt;t

lor

CONCENUATE

155. u......
......$137

•

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middt•"""'·i'u!1croy, O.,lkt. 21, 1971

AutO Wrecked
Enroute To
Probe Shooting

Athens Bank Destroyed
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) -The
Athens National Bank was desu:oyed by a fire Tuesday night
that was believed to have started in a basement workroom in
tbe tw~tory concrete block
wilding. Firemen kept shooting
flames from torching nearby
blildings in the downtown area .
The blaze reduced the inside
of the bank to a scorched shell,
but walls and most of the roof
remained intact. No estimate on
amount of damage was
available.
Bank President Tad Grover
watched as firemen from the
city department and surroWld·
ing communities in southeastern Ohio fought the fire for five
hours before tapping it out. He
said he would inspect the bank
today to assess the loss, but he
doubted whether any money or

contents of safety deposit boxes
would he banned .
"We feel that the vault that
we have can withstand any fire
that might be around it," Grover said.
What was believed to be lost
were check processing machines, savings records and
records stored on magnetic
tapes. The bank was believed,
liowever, to have duplicates of
some "essential records"
stored in a Cincinnati bank .
The bank is located across the
street from the Athens County
sheriff's office and the county
courthouse.
Deputy Sheriff DeWitt Walker
said heavy smoke "poured and
poured from the building."
"It's going to be a big loss ... it
looks like it is gutted inside,"

Walker said. ·
Firemen streamed water into
the building from the fifth story
of a parking -garage next door
and from hook and ladder
trUcks. The roof of an additlon
to the main bank building partially fell through, firemen said.
Two firemen suffered smoke
inhalation, but after being treated at a local hospital
they returned to help the 35 or so
other firefighters .
Grover said the fire would not
affect business at any of the
hank's branches today .
He said engineers would be
summoned from Cincinnati to
detennine whether Ute builwng
should be razed or whether it
was structuraily sound enough
to remain standing and be renovated.

Gallia County Assistant
Prosecuting Attorney James A.
Bennett, 31, Gallipolis, was
involved in a single car accident
at 12:05 a.m. today on Rt. 7, one
and four tenths miles south of
Gallipolis.
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post Slate Highway Patrol,
Bennett was enroute to investigate a shooting at the Dale
Fife residence when he sud·
denly stopped for a sheriff's
cruiser, which was stopped in
bulance. Bennett's car went off
the right side of the highway
and struck a culvert. There was
moderate damage to his car. No
citation was issued.
A second accident was in·
vestigated at 5 p.m. on Rt. 7,
south of the Middleport Bypass.
The patrol said the brakes on a
car driven by Emerson B. Bing,
31, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, failed
causing Bing 's auto to strike the
rear of a car operated by
Norman
Safstrom ,
48,
Columbus. There was moderate
damage to both cars. Again, no
citation was issued .

Wahama Spirit at Peak
MASON - Spirits are high
today as Wahama High School
students prepare for their
annual homecoming parade,
football game and dance Friday
afternoon and evening .
The student coWJcil, with its
advisor, Ronald Vance, and the
Senior Class will be in charge of
the parade scheduled to begin at
noon. It will form at the commWJity building in New Haven
and will move through that
community. Hartford and
Mason to reach the high school.
The
crowning
of a
homecoming queen will be at
halftime of the game between
Wahama and Spencer at 8 p.m.
on Bachtel Field.
Senior class girls seeking the
title are Kathy Roush, Bonnie
Jones and Kay Schaekel. One

will be selected by students
through votes cast on secret
ballots . The name of the 'winner
will be withheld until that
suspenseful moment when she
is crowned.
Martha Jones will be the
freshman class attenda nt .
Gloria Hess will represent the
sophomore class and Michelle
Kay is the junior class attendant.
Spencer's band is also expected to participate in the
parade . .students are in the
midst of preparing floats and
several of these entries are
expected to be made in addition
to cars.
Tuesday was "Sign Day".
These were created in a spirit of
competition to build school
spirit. They were judged on the

am~

the roadway, and for an

basis of orinality and message.
This also will help detennine
who gets the "Spirit Stick."
Today is Red and White Day.
Students in all grades have
donned the colorful attire in
keeping with school colors of
red and whil e for this special
occasion.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Christy
Matson, Rutland; William
Morris, Pomeroy; Marie Rizer,
Syracuse; Jeanette Ca rter,
Middleport; Freda Grate, .
Rutland;
Mary
Jones ,
Pomeroy; Roberta Roush ,
Letart, W. Va .; Lottie Sheffield,
Syracuse.
DISCHARGED
Sam
McKinney, Mary Eblin, Louise
Green, Sharon Gibbs, Frances
Davidson, Ethel Johnson,
Frances Swartz, Nev White.

Thursday will be another day
(1ill of activities. A "Snake
Dance" will open the evening's
e\·ent at 6 forming at the corner
of Pomeroy and Second Streets
in Mason near the Foglesong
Funeral Home. After a walk
through town, students will
arrive at Bachtel Field for a
bonfire and Pep Rally.
A dance will follow the game
in the school gymnasium
Friday evening .

m the operating room several
hours. The shooting occurred at
11:45 p.m. at the Fife home in
Eureka .
Accordin g to the Gallia
County sheriff's department,
Mrs. Fife ran from her home to
the residence of a neighbor, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Jeffers,
Eureka , where she collapsed on
the living room floor. Mrs.

Cities in Big Race D. HUl
Trouble

Died Tuesday

Race D. Hill, 82, Langsville
Route I, died Tuesday afternoon
CLEVELAND (UP! )
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Former HEW Secretary John
Mr. Hill, born Nov. 2, 1890 in
W. Gardner said Tuesday night Meigs CoWJty, was a farmer in
the nation's cities are "un- the Langsville area all his life.
workable" but will only change Besides his parents, Hilbert and
after they be bankrupt .
Lenora Hill, he was preceded in
Gardner , chairman of death by two brothers .
Common Cause, a citizens
Surviving are his wife, Edna ;
lobby, delivered the 13th annual two daughters , Mrs . Bury I
Rabbi Barnett R. Brickner (Evelyn) White, Chesapeake,
Memorial lecture here .
W. Va ., and Mrs. Eleanor
"The cities are virtually Williamson, Charleston, W.
oonkrupt now but it is a hidden Va .; a grandson, Gary White of
bankruptcy, " said Gardner. Circleville; a nephew, Robert
"The cities are forced to cut Hill, Dayton, and four greatwelfare rolls and services that grandchildren .
make a city liveable.
Funeral services will be at 2
Gardner said only new taxes p.m. Friday at the Martin
and federal help will save the FWleral Home in Rutland with
cities.
Mr. Bill Carter, Minister of the
He also declared that very
Bradbury Church of Christ,
few important changes in this . officiating. Burial will be in
country have been initiated by Miles Cemetery at Rutland .
Congress or the presidency.
Friends may call at the funeral
"Real change has been home any time after noon
initiated by the people," said Thursday .
Gardner. "The initiative for
tackling problems that need to
be solved as a whole must come
from concerned citizens."

Dentists Ask
Broader Aid

In Health Act
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The
dental profession asked
Congress today to include some
dental care provisions in any
health insurance program to
help millions of "dental crippies" in the United States.
Dr. Leroy N. Larson, Fort
Dodge, Iowa, representing the
American Dental Association,
told the House Ways and Means
Committee it opposes the administration health plan
because it does not include
dental care coverage.
The administration plan
would require employers to
(l"Ovide medical coverage in·
surance through private in·
surers for .their employes. The
plan would provide federal
payments io cover the poorest
famllies .
~ Larson said in prepared
testimony that emphasis on any
dental care provisions in a
health care program should be
en children and on emergency
dental care for all.
,
"The average child Is e dental

Coal Talks in
Total Standoff

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Ne·
gotiations between the United
Mine Workers and the Bitumi·
nous Coal Operators Association
continued Tuesday with no
signs of progress toward ending
· a 26-&lt;lay strike by 80,000 miners
in 20 states.
The negotiators recessed at
4:45 p.m. EDT un til 10 a.m.
EDT Wednesday .
"They 're not getting any
place, " said one source close to
the talks. "They seem to just
be goi ng around the mulberry
bush."
The UMW and BCOA 'negotia·
tors were keeping a lid of secrecy on the talks. But sources
said the two sides apparently
were finally bargaining over
\'.,ages and other money items.
The negotiations broke off
last Wednesday when both sides
agreed they were deadlocked,
but during the weekend Gov.
Arch A. Moore of West Virginia
the nation 's largest coal producer, persuaded them to resume bargaining,Monday.

Jeffers ca lled the Waugh- Robinson, charged with
Halley-Wood Funeral Home for malicious shooting with intent
an ambulance and notified the to wound or kill, entered a not
sheriff's office.
guilty plea this morning in
Gallipolis Municipal Court .
Taken into custody without Judge Robert S. Betz set a
resistance was James Steven hearing date for Nov. 9. Bond
Robinson, 25, Eureka, a neigh- was placed at $20,000.
bor and Marine veteran of the The investigation is being
Vie tnam War . Mrs. Fife 's conducted by the sheoiff's
husband, Dale, was at work at department and Gallia CoWJty
the time of the incident.
Prosecutor's Office.

SEVERAL FINED
Fined by Middleport Mayor
C. 0. Fisher Tuesday night were
Delores G. Donohaw, 38,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured
clear distance; Joan Bays, 24,
Middleport, $10 and costs, intoxication; Jimmy H. Owens,
30, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
following another vehicle too
closely ; Lawrence Fields, 5Q:
Middleport, $5 and costs, intoxication, and Thomas Allen,
41, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, intoxication. Davey J . Miller, 18,
Middleport, forfeited a $25 bond
posted on a speeding charge.

FLANNELETTES
e Wide
0
• Assl

t

Ronnie Casci.
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett - Billy
McKinney, Dell Call and Scott
Warner.
In the non-student categories
judged, prizes went to Carrie
Carr, Nicholas Bush of the preschool group ; Cindy Thompson,
Robin Campbell and Joe Powell
of the kindergarten through
fourth grade ( and Diana Arnold , Marilee Cassell, and
Ralph 'Arnold, seventh through
adult.
Game favors were provided
for each child attending by the
Modern Woodmen who also
awarded prizes to Ricky
Blevins, Steven Stanley, Debby ·
Eddy, Jennifer Wise and Ann
Fitch in a telephone game.

t S.M-l
• Cotton

00
ea.

Rats-Casuals
For Dress
Big AssL
Best Values

NOV. 1st THRU 15th

• Asst. Colors
• Cushion Insole
• Shoe

pr.

pair

Devoted
To The
,

'

NO. XXIV

POMEROY- MIDDLEPO~.!,

NO. 138

m-tlO

lnteret~t.

TEN CENTS

•
(

• Compare AI '6.99
• AssL CokHs

00

NATIONAL AWARD- Mrs. RusseD (Hope) Moore, left,

• Fancy Plaid
• Save Here

ea.

EMPLOYES OF THE MEIGS State Higltway Department were on hand Wednesday when the annual winter inspection of aU snow and ice removal equipment was made by
officials of Division 10, Marietta.

ea

66x76 PASTEL PLAID
noN

LADIES 100% NYLON
SEAMLESS STRETCH

co

PANTY HOSE

•

• First Quality
• Beige or Coffee

• Petite, Average,

pr.

11.00

'
3
-------ea.

12 QUART
PLASDC PAIL

W"tlh 12.00 Purchase or More
l To Customer

Um~

00

Cea

LADIES TREND-BONDED KNIT

FLUFF TIP NYLON BRISTLE

HOUSEHOLD BROOM PANT SUITS
• New Fall 2 Piece
• Size 8 to 18
• Asst Colors
• Compare at 18.99

t While 100 Last

• light Weight
• Asst. Colors
• Save Here

LADIES
WOOL &amp; ACRYLIC
'

LADIES BONDED KNIT

NEW FALL
SWEATERS

SLACKS

'

00

FOR

'

00

FLARE
DRESS PANTS

SCALE MODEL

MATCH BOX CARS
•
•
•
•

300 Pair To Go • Close Outs
Reg. 110.00 Values..
Reg. '9.00 Value .... '
Reg. 18.00 Value ..... .
Reg. '7.00 Value ... ..

•

,ews... rn

1

I

Essex Fears

Vietcong POWs to go Free

For Levies

SAIGON - SOUTII VIETNAM ANNOUNCED today it would
celebrate the Inauguration of President Nguyen Van Thieu by
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Local
releasing 612 Viet Cong priaoners of war. The government also school superintendents are
disclosed it plans eventually to free another 2,320 prisoners. Hope
"fearful" that passage of a
Wa:! expressed in some quarters that the projected amnesty might
state budget containing money
induce the Viet Cong to reciprocate.
for education this week will
prompt voters to defeat school
Hearings in Nelsonville
levies in the general election
OOLUIIBUS -GOV. JOHN J, GilLIGAN'S Housing and next week , State Schools
Community Development Adviaory Conunission wlll hold the first Superintendent Martin W.
of a series of public hearings Friday in Nelsonville, conunission Essex said today.
Essex said school officials
officials said Wedne.day.
Commission chairman James I. Huston said the session at think passage of a budget would
, "misunderstood" by the
Tri-County Community College will deal with housing problems in be
voting public.
the ~unty Awalachia region and what the state can do to
"There is gre•t apprehension
alleviate the problems through legislative proposals. Huston said
state legislators, public officials, community organizers, on the part of superintendents
residents and businessmen from the Appalachia area have been and others who are attempting
invited to testify.
to acquaint the electorate with
the urgency of enactment of
Bloody Day in Ireland
school levies, " Essex said.
"They are fearful that an action
BELFAST, NORTIIERN IRELAND - Irish terrorists killed by the legislature will be
three British soldiers and a policeman Wedne.day in one of the misunderstood by their voters
bloodiest days of more than two years of fighting. Four gunmen and as a result that they will
te
ti 1 ,
sprayed an anny convoy with machine-gun fire today, seriously
vo
nega
ve y.
injuring one soldier.
He · said the voting public
A spokesman said two anny vehicles were enroute to deliver
couldinterpretthestatefunding
supplies to a hospital when four men in two cars OPened fire, as enough to keep the schools
Troops in the convoy had no time to return the shots, so quickly operating but "the levies are
did the incident happen , Earlier today, extremists lured an army
u ' ded d 't uld be
urg~n
Y~"":
takan
t i
patrol into ambush outside Annagh and set off a bomb among the a co ossa
mts eon e par o
troops.
the electorate to reject the
(Continued on page 6)
· ,
1ev1es.

\:0

FAMOUS DICKIES MENS

POPULAR METAL

. Big Selection
Toy Depl Main Floor

'

7\.T
1

The names of two more
contestants
in the 1972 Meigs
1
1
County Junior Miss Pageant
'
By UDited Press International
were annoWJced today. They
are Sherry King, daughter of
War Off Peking Agenda
Mr . and Mrs. William King,
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT NIXON more than likely will Middleport Route I, and Terri
not make any attempt to end the war in Vietnam during his forth· Ash daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
coming Ialka with Chinese leaders in Peking, according to Ed~ in Ash, Minersville Route 1.
Miss King is head majorette
Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger. Nixon's main concern,
Kissinger indicated, is breaking down. the harriers that have of Meigs High School's marisolated China and working toward a settlement of differences be·
tween Olina and the United States.

I

SHEET BLANKET
• Soft Fleecy
• Plaid Patterns
• Bit Value
t Shop Early

Brze
. ,.f.s

~---------------------------,

King, Ash Enter Pageant Race

.' f
:~

•

•,

;t,

00
paif
'

SATURDAY

---- .; . -.. --·

POMEROY, OHIO

~resentation .

Miss Ash is a member of the
Girls Glee Club, the Mixed
Choir, Future Business Leaders
of
America,
Future
Homemakers of America, and
the pep club at Southern High
School in Racine. She is
treasurer of the student coWJcil,
reporter for the senior class and
a feature writer for the school
paper.
Sponsored by Hartley Shoes,
Pomeroy, Miss Ash will present

a vocal solo as her talent in the
competition.
The pageant will be an event
of Nov . 20 at Eastern High
School beginning at 8 p.m. The
,local winner will represent the
county at the Ohio Junior Miss
Pageant at East Liverpool on
Jan . 21 and 22.
Last Saturday, Ralph H.

Werry and Roger Young, vice
presidents of the Meigs CoWJty
Junior Miss, Inc., attended the
Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., franchise holders meeting at Scott's
Inn at Springfield where
scholarships,
advertising,
judging, forms , choreography
and staging of the state and
local pageants were discussed.

Biggest Boom

TO

87 Donors Come

"Go ahead. Fire Cannikin ."
So that is what the AEC will
Eighty-seven persons visited
do, on or perhaps a day or so the Meigs County Bloodmobile
~:~~ln~~:·c~:tlei~~~:~~t:~na Tuesday of whom 73 were ac·
cepted as donors with 46 giving
In firing Cannikin, the com- blood in replacement. There
mission will be detonating the were 24 first time donors.
mightiest underground weapon
Gallon and more donors were,
~~~~~nducted by the United gallon, James Gilmore, Harold
Norton and Demaree Sexson;
Pres!.J_
CI~ • .J~
It will be a proof test of the two gallon, Ivan Wood; three
&amp;Uf:1:Rt 0 ~~nt
URC
Spartan antiballistic missile gallon, Kenneth Scites, Jean
John Thomas has been
I ABM) warhead for the Houdashelt; four gallon,
Maureen Hennessy, Vicki Safeguard system which this
elected president of the Student Kelly, Ricky Metheny, Julia country plans to put in
Council at Meigs High School
r · 1976 to pro teet
Capehart, Mick Ash, Sherry opera 1011 111
for the 1971·72 school year.
M' te
· ·1 1 h
Thomas is one of southeastern Lambert, Christine Robinson,
mu man mtsst e aunc ers
Brenda Taylor C'nd
c · from
attack.
• 1 Y ~aig,
Th c· · 'k'
1 ·
f
Ohio's outstanding football
middle guards.
Bill Vaughan, Connie Garnes, than: ,:i~;~;Pe~d~:~~:~: pr~:at~~ib:a!~;ute~r w:~:
Other officers are Sherry Ingrid Hawley, Dana Johnson, remote Amchitka Island in the nesday afternoon a Gallia
King, vice president·, Mary Peggy O'Brien, Br.ian Mullen,
1
ul
Aleutialls, will be equa in County petit jury found Elijah
Midkiff, secretary, and Brenda JW~l' Rosenbaum, Pa Voss, power to nearly five million tons (Slim) Davis, 64, Gallipolis,
Taylor, treasurer.
pi •aHm Barnhpart,GSteve Craig, (five megatons) of TNT - 250 guilty of second degree murder
Members of the council are at ·rarns, at . kress, Mary times bigger than the World in the June 30 fatal stabbing of
Phil
Ohlinger,
Cindy Midkl f, Lynn Ba er, Linda War II bomb that destroyed Charles L. Clagg, 51, Gallipolis.
Schneider, Thomas Sievers, Brogan, Carolyn Pugh, Ron Hiroshima.
Immediately followin g the
Terry Whitlatch, Richard Smith, Becky Will, Chuck
Environmentalists, fearin g verdict, Common Pleas Court
Dailey , Rozalind Ferguson, Faulk, and Julia Hutchison,
(Continued on page 6)
J dg R n ld R Calhoun
.
u e 0 a . · . .
sentenced DaviS to hfe unI
prisonment in the Ohio
Penitentiary . Clarence E.
h
f th
T ompson was 1oreman o e
jury that began hearing
CHESTER - Mrs. Leota raising $900, part of which will three years, is one of the ad- testimony after the jury had
YoWlg and Mrs. Eva Walker of . go to the Ohio 4-H Foundation visors of the Five Point Slar visited the scnee of the killing at
near Chester are representing and part to the National 4-H Stitchers.
Meigs COWlty at the National FoWldation for improvement of
Cost of the trip and LeaderLeadership Forum this week at the National Center.
ship Forum is provided partly
the National 4-H Center in
by the delegates, part by the
Washington, D. C. They will Mrs. Young has served as a 4- Meigs County 4-H Advisor
return Saturday.
Hclub leader two years and has Committee, and part by the
Housing and meals are being also been the County 4-H Ohio and National 4-H Founprovided at the National 4-H Assistant in 1970 and 1971. She dations.
0
Center which is operated by the leads the Pine Grove Pals 4-H
The theme for the week is
National 4-H Club Foundation. Club.
'-' Leadership Principles and
The Meigs County Jaycees
Meigs County is engaged in
Mrs. Walker, a club leader Practices ."
Tuesday night made ·plans for
their annual Christmas Basket
project to aid local underprivileged.
Vincent Knight who will head
the
project, said the Jaycees
Assignments were made offices of president and Doctors making the referral for
Wednesday at the first meeting secretary and additional the service will outline the will need over $1,000 to fill
of the advisory coWJcll to the citizens to serve on the advisory particular service to be per- approximately 75 baskets. Each
new home nursing services of council.
formed by nurses in the basket will have enough food for
three complete balanced meals
The coWJcil serves only as an program.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
and
a toy for each child in the
advisory group. The control of Purpose of the long fange
Donald Diener, hospital the new program is under the program is to reduce the family aided under 12.
Everyone having names of
administrator and director of hospital 's board thr.ough hospital stBy of patients thereby
underprivileged
families should
freeing beds for acute cases.
the program, presided and Diener, the administrator.
named Mrs. Edna Russell, Through the program which The plan is to cut costs of send them to the Meigs County
R.N., coordinator of •the new has been funded for one year by hospitalization to the patient Jaycees, PO Box 603, Pomeroy,
program;
Scot I
Lucas, the Appalachian Regional thus iowering insurance rates. giving the number of persons in
the family and a list of the
ad· Commission in the amount of,
assistant
hospital
children,
ages and sex. Conministrator, program finance $29,920, personnel will make The cost for the nursing visits
officer, '1l~d the Rev. Arthur home visits to perform into homes will be $10 per vlsit tributions for lhe proj~ct may
Lund as a nomi~ating com- specialized nursing duties upon and money collected through be made by mailing them to the
mittee. The committee will the recommendation of any the visits will go back to the Jaycees or by handing to any
· Jaycee.
·, recon•mend narres for the physician licensed in Ohio. Regional Commission .

f

WASHINGTON (UP!) Before noon Wednesday a
document was delivered to the
Atomic Energy Commission. It
was from the White House and
its author was Richard M.
Nixon. The AEC refused to
disclose its precise wording, but
freely translated it said :

Co

U

ATTENDING THE FIRST meeting of lbe new ad'VIaory board for ll!e operation of a home
nuraln8 service department of Veterans Memorial Hospital Wednesday afternoon '!ere front
row, from left, Mrs. Edna Russell, R. N.,coordinator; Mrs. George Hobstetter, Jr., R.N.; Miss
Sandra Lewla, Mrs. Ell7.abeth Smith, R.N.; back row, from left, Scott Lucas, finance officer;
tlie Rev. Arthur Lund, Donald Diener, director. Other hoard members are Dr. R. R. Pickens,
Dale Dutton, Hugh Custer, and Bob Hoeflich. Additional members are to be named. The
program Is being operated prlmarUy through a federal grant.

Marvin Keebaugh ; five gallon
Mrs . Eva Hartley, Albert
Parker and Lawrence Wilcoxen; seven gallon, Howard
Parker and eight gallon, Homer
Smith.
Physicians assisting were Dr .
Roger Daniels, Dr. L. D. Teile,
Dr. Ray Pickens and Dr. Selim
Blazewicz. Nurses were Naomi
London , Mary Armes, Wilma

Davis Gets Life

MeigS

women m• washington

Knight

Program Coordinator Named

THURSDAY MORNING 9 A.M. OCT. 21th

Shop

l

ching band, was Homecoming
Queen, is vice president of the
Student Council, a member of
the Girls' Athletic Asan., the
girls' basketball team, the
dance band, and was a
representative to Buckeye Girls
State last summer. She is
sponsored by King Builders
Supply, Middleport, and will do
a baton routine as her talent

Pomeroy, is presented a check which she has
beep awarded as submitting the outstanding yeaHound
education and scholarship program on behaH of the Ladies
Auxiliary of Drew Wehster Post 39, American Legion,
Pomeroy, Mrs. Moore served as chairman of the group's
program which was one of five in the United States receiving
national awards for the past year. Mrs. Moore will return the
check to the unit for use in the scholarship program. The
program conducted under Mrs. Moore's leadership was
aimed at promoting education in local schools, making
residents of the community more education minded. Ac·
tivities included newspaper articles, radio programs,
programs at both the Meigs Junior and Senior High Schools,
awarding a scholarship, and distribution to students,
libraries and school counselors informational literature. The
junior WJit assisted with the program. Presenting the check
to Mrs. Moore is Mrs. Harry Davis, president of the Drew
Webster Auxiliary.

.

Kerr's Trailer Court on Garft'eld
Ave.
Prosecuting Attorney Hamlin
c. K'mg ca11 ed r·tve witnesses for
the state . Defense counsel
Thomas S. Moulton called only
on Davis to testify in his own
behalf.
Davis admitted the stabbing
but testified his act was from
fear of his own life.
The case went to the jury
Wednesday afternoon followmg
finalargumentsandthecharge
by Judge Calhoun
·

CI'OSS Getti.ng
,

Late Cheers
H8S For Ranking

Jaycee J b

and

-1'

PHONE 992-2156

•

MENS FANCY PLAID
AUTHENTICALLY STYLED

• 2 Yr. Warranted

MAIN ST.

Of The Meiga-Mason Area

. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1971

OPEN FRIDAY

cripple by the time he
graduates from high school,"
Larson said. "The backlog of
Dale Little
Dick Vau(lhan
dental neglect and WJtreated
92-6346
992-3374
dental disease is huge."
..._ _9
;.;.;;.;.;-._ _ _.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

sers and equipment damaged in
the line of duty.
"Normally the cost of board·
ing the deputies comes out of
the county general fund, but
there is no salary reimbursement, " Davies said. "The only
thing they would be reimbursed
for is if a cruiser is torn up or
damaged."
Young, however, said damaged cruisers and equipment
would be paid for by the county that owns them.
"Loss of equipment or damCOWlties, but there was no age of equipment would be at
agreement on who paid for crui·
(Continued on page 6)

•
•

ea.

BLANKET

Quick Service
Governmenl inspocled
Cui To Your S~eclflcalions

I might be wrong. We're not going to break this alert until they
(striking miners ) have gone
back to work."
Payments Confusing
Davies, however, estimated
300 men were patrolling the
county early this week when
non-union mines, which were
shut down by striking miners,
re-opened.
Davies said the county calling
the alert must pay for boarding and other operational costs
for lawmen coming from other

FOR

_,- - - - - - - - ,
· If I have to go ',
lake m:e . to The •

1•

..

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST, OPEN FRIDAY AND SAT. TILL 9100

The-Shop
"custom meat cutting"
.&lt;

00

'

auxiliary officer," he continued.
"And we sent our van with riot
control eqliipment. Then when
these officers left, we just called in 01!1" auxiliary to help supplement. ''
Officials were tightlipped on
the number of lawmen presently patrolling the mining region
of Tuscarawas County, but
Young said the COWlty remains
in "full alert."
·
"All I can say, for security
reasons, is that we are in a
state of full alert," Young said.
"I hope we're finished and I'd
like to think we're finished , but

•

BEACON-SUSSEX
AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC

2419 Dudley Ave.
ParkersbtJrO', W. Va.

of luck."
gency duty."
Sheriff Ralph E. Kreiger of Kreigeremphasized,~oweve r ,
Cuyahoga CoWlty said the courts that a sheriff's first obligation
were closed at the time of the is to keep enough meQ on duty
emergency call from YoWlg, in his own coilllty.
which meant the usual continSent Experienced Men
gent of 22 deputies at the court- Huron County Sheriff John
house was available.
Borgia said he sent four of his
"Since the courts were down, 10 full time. men to the scene.
we had these men available," "We called down there and
Kreiger said. "If it came on a asked if they needed men from
regular workday it would be . our district .and they said they
more difficult. In that case we needed all they could get,"
would call in our organized re- Brogia explained.
serves to fill in for our regular
"So we sent four of our regofficers' posts, then we would ular officers who all bad experrelieve our regulars for emer- ience with riot control and one

.

Brand
• Asst. Colors
• Lay in a Supp~
• Save Now

FOR

and truck caravan through Tuscar a was and other counties. '
Gullilre And Threats
Local officials said they burned a Carroll County mine, over·
turned vehicles and exchanged
shots with law officers.
Three days later about 600
Wlion miners roamed southern
Ohio, threatening to burn down
mines still operating, including
a mine owned by state Sen.
Oakley Collins. Lawrence COWl·
ty Sheriff James H. Howell confronted the group by himself
and said he averted trouble only
by "fast talking and a little bit

•

BATH
TOWELS
• Cannon

FOR

when an emergency is called.
"Any sheriff who needs help
contacts neighboring states and
this office and the sign of help
is sent out," Davies said.
"A call is sent over the teletype that the situation needs
help, it's an emergency and all
available coWJties send troops,"
he 5aid. "He (sheriff) knows
how many he can afford to
lose."
YoWJg's call for assistance·
was made late last Friday night,
less than a week after some 600
union miners, armed with rifles,
pistols and shotgWJs, rode ~ car

MFG. CLOSE OUTS
THERMAL AND NEEDLEWOVEN

22x42 SIZE
FANCY FLORAL

PAIR

By KAY CHRISTENSEN
Ullited Press llltemaUonal
WheJl Tuscarawas County
Sheriff A, J. YoWJg sent out a
call for help to quell violence
by striking coal miners roaming eastern Ohio, sheriffs
aroWJd Ohio quickly assessed
how many men were needed in
their own counties and dispatch·
ed all other available forces to
the emergency area.
Col. H. W. Davies, executive
director of the Buckeye State
Sheriffs Asaoclation, said the
stale's 88 county sheriffs are
obligated under law to respond

.

CUSHION SOLE
CUFFS
• S-M-L-LX

00

'

'·

LADIES ACRYliC PILE

FOOTWEAR
•
•
t
•

yd.

• Big

VALUES TO '5,99
LADIES FALL STYLES

DUDLErS FLORIST

Pleasan.t ~idge Road
POMEROY,OHIO

'

Plaids

t Bright

VISIT OUR
AMNUAL
CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE

Extra
• 49' Value
CokHs

1

Browse Thru Our
Christmas Wonderland
Valuable Door Prizes
Coffee &amp; Doughnuts
on Weekends

SOX GET PALMER
CHICAGO (UP!)-The Chicago White Sox acquired relief
pitcher Lowell Palmer from the
Philadelphia Phillies Tuesday in
exchange for first baseman Bob
Spence and pitcher Don Bolte.
Palmer had a 6-5 record with
Eugene , Ore., in the Pacific
Coast League in 1971. Spence
hit .288 for Tucson and Bolte
had a 2-3 record for Sarasota.

'

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
Reg. 1.99

THURSDAY
ONLY

Full of Spooks
Replicas of ghosts, goblins
and witches decorated the
Bradbury school Monday for a
Halloween party.
In the categories of prettiest,
spookiest and the most original,
costume prizes were awarded in
each homeroom as follows :
Mrs . Betty Fultz - Jill
Walburn, John Stewart and
Gregg Arnold.
Mrs. Sabra Morrison - Sally
Walters, Jimmy Casey, and
Steven Hoover.
Mrs. Maxine Philson - Julie
Byer, Ann Fitch, and Gina
Thompson.
Donald Hanning - Velvet
Swisher, Donald Karr, and

4SINCH FANCY PRitfDD
BIG ASSORTMENT

Tall •

Bradbury School

,.

MENS
BRIGHT PLAID COnON

• Single Control '
t 72x84 Size
• Reg. 114.00

Ex-Meter Maid Shot at Home
Mrs. Phyllis Fife, 28, Eureka
Star Rt., Gallipolis, a former
me ter maid with the Gallipolis
Police Department, is listed in
fair condition at the Holzer
Medical Center where she was
admitted early this morning
following a shooting at her
home.
Mrs. Fife sustained at least
five bullet wounds allegedly
fired from a .22 pistol. She was

..

Team Up Against
Coal
Mine
Violence
.

Sheri

LETART FAW - Edwin
Cross, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Cross of Letart Falls,
placed fifth in the Ohio 4-H
TracJor Operators Contest at
the Ohio State Fair according to
a final report just received . .
It showed that Edwin made a
better score than any previous
contestant from Meigs County,
using the " penalty scoring
system" In which the man with
the lowest number of penalty
points is the winner. Edwin's
score in the four-w.heel event
was 286; the tw&lt;&gt;:-wheel event,
225; the practical examination,
150; the written exam, 360, and
safety, 80, for a tOtal ~ore of
1,101.
.
The score of the top ranking
driver was 828. The score for the
lowest was 2,568 for 33rd
position·,
Belated congratulations we.nt
to Edwin, his parents, and his
club advisor, Roy Miller, of
Chester' this week.

'

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33415">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33414">
              <text>October 27, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
