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                  <text>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.

'

�=-----2-

n.e [)allySentlnel,Mldcleport~erov. o.,Clrct.., Ji71

r-----""7-----"-------------------------·----,

.

r--------------.----"'7--------.

Autumn Haroest WSCS Theme! Voice along ·Broadway ! ! · HOSPITAL NEWS
.

A table loaded with fall
vegetables, fruits and autumn
leaves surrounding a Bible with
a picture of the head of Christ
overlooking it provided the
worship center setting for
Wednesda y's meeting of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Forest Run
United Methodist Church.
The worship center was
prepared by Mrs. Uswin Nease
who also used a nun1ber of other
autumn flower arrangements
around the room.

"Autumn Harvest" was the
program topi c. and each
member presented an article
pertaining to the season with a

discussion at the conclusion of

each . Mrs. Edison Hollon
cond~cled
a Bible quiz.
Members sang "Bringing in the
Sheaves" and Mrs. Denver
Holler gave devotions using the
scripture from St. Matthew
pertaining to houses built upon
the sand and those built upon
the rock. Mrs. Holter concluded
with prayer.
Mrs. Russ Watson conducted
the business meeting and love
offerings were collected. A dale
was set for a committee to
prepare the date books for the
year beginning in January 1972.
The group sang "God Be With
You" .
Refreshments consisted of
coffee and a sample of food

which each member present
had prepared from a recipe
they had never tried before.
Besides those members men·
tioned above attending were
Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. All
Yeauger, Mrs. Hanson Holter,
Mrs. Vernon Nease, Mrs. Edith
Sisson, Mrs. Fred Nease and
one guest, Jane Sisson.

I

BY JACK O'BRIAN
AFrER 'GODFATHER,' \Cl'ING
IS CHILD'S PLAY'
NEW ylJRJ:~ (KFS)- David Merrick signed
Brando for his "Child's Play" movie .... Variety
reports Charles Collingwood, most sophi~icated
and stylish network newscaster, may retife ....
Italian TV showed a nude male, and nuns galore
squawked officially .... Plagiarism suit by
Chappell Music in Federal Court here claims
Perry Como's hlt song "It's Impossible" is a
steal of its 1965 French composition "J'ai le Mal
Toi," but the suit doesn't involve Perry - who
only made it a hit.
Up in staid old Ottawa, it's okay now for
shows to have completely nude gals .... "Lovein," a totally nude musical revue at Lake
Tahoe's Kings Castle gaming heaven, packed the
littl~ 300-seat room it premiered in and had to be
moved to a !l(J().seater to hold all the voyeurs who
prefer prurient leering to gambling; choose your
vice, Nevada 's got it all.
"Sleuth" has a half-million profit already ....
With the smallest cast of any Bdwy. show (we
won't tell you the total because that's part of the
exciting whodunit's chilly fun) its weekly payroll
is $8,600 .... Martin· Bookspan, one of the critics
who panned "Jesus Christ Superstar," calling it ·
"a stage catastrophe," belted the show's ad
campaign, noting it took peripheral positive
praise for his praise of the scenery which was
quoted "out of context" in hope of camouflaging
Bookspan's critical sneer.
"The Rothschilds" musical is amazing: jogs
right along at a regular weekly gross that's
almost precisely half its financial capacity
(110,000 ) ..... The out-of-town ward on Neil
Simon's new "Prisoner of Second Ave." comedy
is splendid : the critics in New Haven flipped
their typewriters .. .. The three Bctwy. shows
opening this past week all were awful.
Plot of a new comedy trying out in Westport,
Conn., seems typical of today's dreadful
"relevancy," a word we're getting to despise:
this one's a two-character whatzit starring
Colleen Dewhurst as a middle~ged woman
whose Greenwi~h Village flat is invaded by a 25year-old radical with a rifle, intent on lcilling the
Vice President due for a Fourth of July speech
within bullet-range oftheaging gal's windows ....
It's called "The Big Coca Cola Swamp," and
early word is - it won't he around long enough to
make Atlanta, Ga ., worry.
Sad victim of a Ponzi-type father-son
swindling duo who pleaded guilty to mail fraud,
perjury and conspiracy was Monier Binder,
happy-faced doorman at the Drake Hotel on
Park Ave., who trusted $5,000 to the pair and lost

Meigs ,

Property
Transfers

Charles L. Fryling, Saundra
~Jl:~r~~t~!~~!i!!!i~!~!~i!if!~i!~!!~i!!~!!~~;i~!tf~~~!i!~!~!~!~!tm~:;!!~~;j~!~~~~~~t!~;~~!~~!~~m~~!!~~~~!~~~!~~~m~~~l~~~~~~~~ ~f~ J . Fryling to Cecil V. Dillon,
Flossie N. Dillon, .42 Acre,
Olive.
Helen M. Riggs to Franklin
Real Estate c:o., 38.05 Ac res,
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Salem.
Dear Sue and Helen :
Marjorie M. Harris to Eugene
.
M.
Harris, Janet H. Harris, lot,
My parents have finally come around to long hair for guys.
We even talked Dad into sideburns and lin electric comb. He looks M~~~h~tj_ Ryther, Anna M.
great. Of course his hair is still short compared to mine.
Ryther, Edith v. Ryther to
Sue, here comes a time bomb! We're going south for Waid Hayman, Donna Hayman ,
Christmas, and we'll stop to visit my grandmother. Dad says all 7 acres, Salisbury.
the men in the family must have haircuts before we leave . He
Dwight w. Corbin, Delores
showed me pictures of him when he was young and announced June Corbir., aka June B.
that this is the way his mother expects us to look. Migosh, I'll be Corbin to Ohio Power Co., 2.50
scalped ' Can you help save a mass shearing? ~ LB.R. (MALE ) acres, Lebanon.
SUE'S VIEWS
Guy Sargent, Bertha Sargent
Dear L.B.R. (Male ):
to Richard Sargent, parcel,
Is that short for "Utt!e Bald Ridinghood, Male? "
lledford.
Maybe you won't be, if you ask your dad one question: "Are
Charles W. Heck, Bessie I.
you really AFRAID of Grandma, Pop?" - SUE
Heck to Mack Taggart, parcels,
NOTE TO READERS : Who, besides me, wants a vacation Lebanon .
from oldies like hair, sex and "my parents don't understand' Charles W. Heck, Bessie I.
me! " ' l think such subjects are growin' a beard -they've been Heck to James J . Smith, Wilma
hassled so long they need a rest.
R. Smith, parcels, lebanon.
If yo u want extra snap in GENERATION RAP, please,
Huntington National Bank,
readers, send us some new-type problems. K? Thanx.
Trustees, to Ben H. Ewing, lot,
P.S . No offense, L.B.R. - your letter wasn't run-of-the- Pomeroy.
harberchair hair trouble.
Oren Wears, JoAnn Wears to
HELEN'S TURN
Glen Edwards Beebe, Roma
(GLOSSARY FOR ADULT READERS: "Growin' a beard' Jean Beebe , 1.83 acre,

~:[m Generation

~:[!' [

1

Rap · II

·: :~!\

means getting old ; "K" is short for Okay. Or did you already
know?) - H.
Dear L:
Grandmothers, having weathered many changes, are often
not as reactionary as grown children assume them to be.
Sometimes they aren't as uptight as the middle generation.
Yours is no doubt surrounded by hairy teenagers and even
their parents, for southern styles are no different from any others
these days.
Why not send Grandma your pictures to soften her up for the
real thing? I think she'll adjust.- HELEN
P.S. Second the motion on "differnt-type" letters. Here's an
example :
Dear Bottels :
,•
: This is too good to keep.
My brother, who enjoys conning the E!!!ablishment, decided
to grow marijuana plants in a weed fie ld near our house. He
wasn't going into business. He just did it to see if it 's as easy as
people say to grow your own and not get caught.
It was ... unW our littlest brother, who's not even out of
training pants, got a big crush on our next-door neighbor and
started bringing her bouquets. He went through our garden in a
hurry, and then beamed in on the wild flowers in the field .
You guessed it, our neighbor turns up with a nice bouquet of
Canabissativa and she doesn't evtm know she's "holding" pot in
the raw . Thank goodness she threw it away next day.
You'd better believe my big brother dug a hole and buried
those illegal plants fast . The field is now back to weeds, not
'"weed."

There's some use for little brothers after all. Right?
REUEVED ENOUGH TO LAUGH
Dear R.:

... Especially little brothers who lack "pot-ty training." - H.
AND S.
Dear Sue:
Could you please tell us again where teenagers can write to
get an overseas pen pal ? - STUDENTS
Dear Students:
Write to World Pen Pals, World Affairs Center, University of
Mimesota , Minneapolis, Minn., 55455. Print your name, age, sex
and address, and send 50 cents for each pen pal requested. Pen
friends are provided for boys and girls, ages 12·19. Good luck!SUE

Sa~~~~~i'G.

Edwards, Exec .,
William J . Edwards, Exec.,
Robert R. Edwards, deed, to
lola A. Bartrum,' tots,
Langsville .
Willard E. Cunningham,
Alma c. Cunningham to Ullian
R. Schenkle, Grace Marie Wise,
parcels, olive.
Leslie G. Hoffman , Dena F.
Hoffman, to Manning Webster,
parcels, Rutland.
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
Webster to Leslie G. Hoffman,
Dena F . Hoffman, parcels,
Rutla nd .
Owen Damewood, Lora
Damewood to Francis Willard
Baird, Ethel Baird, parcel,
Chester·
Philip Donovan , Betty
Donovan to Thelma Grueser,
lots, Syracuse.
Daniel B. O'Dell, Carole R.
O'Dell to Eugene H. Roush,

Prizes Awarded

Juanita J . Roush, 1 acre,

Bedford.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Clarence E. Hill, lot, Syracuse.
Russell Holsinger , Freda
Holsinger to Earle D. Schultz,
Mary belle D. Schultz, parcel,
Olive .
Green Hill Homes , Inc., to
Salem A. Yates, Carrie L.
Yates, .234 acre, Sutton.
Opal M. Priddy to Linda
Li pscomb, lots, Sutton
Syracuse.

Donations Made
Contributions to the Gifts to
the Yanks Who Gave and the

Sa~l~v!~at.~i~on night's
Army meeting
were made
at
®
of the
r:::-::-:~::"::::--------,~~

PH I Lc 0

NEW SUPER-SCREEN 2
DIAGONAL CQLQR TV
RECTANGULAR

"''

I

Legion Junior
IArJXiliary of Feeney·Bennett
Post 128, at the hall. The group
voted to contribute to the
Department of Ohio for a
1n1err10ri'.al fund for Mrs . Charles
Bennett, a gold star mother.
The annual Christmas party
discussed and members
exchanged names for a gift
exchange . The pledge to the
flag, prayer, and reciting the
preamble to the Auxiliary
constitution opened
the
meeting . Nine junior members
and two adult leaders atte nded.

Dai~

The charter was draped for
Mrs. Sophia Lazon and Mrs.
Mary B. Heines at Monday
night's meeting of Theodorus
Coun cil 17, Daughters of
America, held at the IOOF hall.
Plans were discussed for the
59th anniversary observance of
Theodorus Council. The death of
Lawrence Lanning, husband of
a member, was noted and it was
reported that flowers had been
sent. It was noted that Mrs.
Edna Reibel had injured her
foot, that Mrs. Lydia Stewart i5
a patient at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and that
Mrs . Sarah Brown and Mrs.
Edna Stiles are both'home from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Jewelry to be sold for the
state councilor 's project was
displayed . Christmas plaques
are also being sold by the
council.

brightest, shar ,.,, i " .lure ever seen on a Hipicture tube-25" prcture measu red diagonally;
sq.in. pictu re • Super-Sc reen Hi-Brite MagiColor
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FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
o.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr . and Mrs. Archie J.
Patterson, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Jolin Meldick, Oak Hlll, a son;
Mr. and Mrs. James Valentine
Polcyn, Gallipolis, a daughter ;
Mr.andMrs. John Dale Waugh,
Jr., Crown City, a daughter ;
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Phllllp
Wood, Ironton, a sori, and Mr.
and Mrs. Rodney Eugene
Walker, Langsville, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Lloyd Baker, Clinton
Betz, Dewey Birchfield, Edward Blake, Sr., Mrs. Clarence
Campbell, Clyde Cron, George
Curry, Jr., Mrs. Romey Dean,
Mrs. Jinunle Deem and son,
George Eastman, Mrs. Nanme
Fox, Mrs. Wm. H. Grigsby,
John Harrison, Mrs. Clemma
Haskins,
Mrs .
Harold
Hazelbaker, Mrs. Carl Hood,

Christina .tmb&lt;lden, Mrs. VernIn Jaynes, Herbert King, Mr$.
Calvin Lambert, Emma McDaniel, Diane Mullins, Mrs.
Fred Phlllips, Mrs. Zona
Powell, Mrs. Charles Price and
son, Roy Russell, Mrs. Charles
Watson, Mrs. Alex Schultz, Mrs.
Owen Wilbur,' Elijah E. Bunch,
Mrs. George P. Johnson and
Virgil Grayman .

WIN AT BRIDGE

ing and now she started to
sort her ~and. All she could
find for awhile were hearts.
When she got through she
was looking at nine of them .
Four hear ts looked like her
best bid. She could count 10
tricks and from the looks of
the dormouse she was going
to get no help froin him .
The rest of the bidding is
shown in the box. Alice saw
no reason to go down two
tricks at six hearts. She had
a plan to beat the five-spade
contract. She opened her ace
of clubs and in spite of look·
ing at the seven or hearts in
dumm y Alice led her &lt;1euce.
Sure enough the four was
played fro m dummy and the
Pass
5"
Pass 5 •
dormouse won the trick with
Pass
Pass
:rass
his six. It took some time to
Opening lead- · A
appraise him of that fact,
but he did return a club to
llv Oswa•d &amp; James Jacoby give
Alice th e r u f f s he
.. Curiouser an d curiouser, " wanted.
thought Alice. "Ever since l
(N EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
arrived in Wonderland my
bridge hands have been ter·
The Duchess opened the
Th e bidding has been:
bidding with one club. Alice's
East South
partner, the dormouse looked West North
I+
even sleepier than usual as
2N.T.
Pass
1
¥
Pass
he passed. She decided that
3t
Pass
he could not- have much in Pass
You, South, hold:
the way of cards.
The Cheshire Cat gri nned .AQ4.K8 +AQ1085.K109
and bid one spade .
What do you do now?
Alice .had been daydream·
A-Bid three spades. II your

r

S.HIR
fl NISHI NG
SAME DAY
SERVICE

Use Our Free Parking Lot_

Robinson's Ceaners
216 E. 2nd. Pomeroy

AFriend
You Can

Rely On ...
Your pharmacist should be your
friend. Someone to help. Someone
who's always there with careful at·
tendon to prescriptions.
And, as your doctor's back-up
man, your pharmacist follows his
instructions with precision.

Bandages, Strips

heat. No hot spots,
no overdrylng .
\F ine Mesh Lint
Filter .
Wt Sptcilllle In

..

Squires In 110-107 Win

By Untied Press Internatlooal
service
It no longer holds true that if
you stop Charlie Scott, you stop
the Virginia Squires.
;742·4211
The Kentucky Colonels held
Arnold Grate
Rutland, .0.
U...---- - - - - - - - -- - -- - - , . Scott, the American Basketball

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SEASON OPENS NOV. 15

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We Issue

lfs
Ebersbach

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A selection of nat•"•'

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equipment Is here ready for selection. Made
by world-known manufacturers and In a large
range of prices.

TODAY'S QUESTIO~
Your partner continues to
four hearts. What do you dQ
now?

•

·Ammunition Of All Kinds

SEE AND HEAR

WESTERN - REMINGTON ·

Your Local Candidates in the

7 P.M., MONDAY, NOV. 1
9A.M., ~ESDAY, ELECTION DAY
WATCH CABLE CHANNEL 5 ON
. ELECTION NIGHT FOR THE RESULTS FIR$T

&amp; Rifles

Association's leading scorer, to
only seven points Wednesday
· ht but rooleies W'lli
S.
I e OJOUr·
mg
ner and Julius Erving combined
for 46 points and Neil Johnson
added 24 to give the Squires a
111).107 victory.
Sojourner, from Weber State,
had 25 points and Erving, from
Massachusetts, added 21 as the
Squires took over first place In
the ABA East and handed the
Colonels their first ioss at home
· this season.
Dan Issei led the Colonels
with 36 points while Kentucky's
prized rookie, Artis Gilmore,
managed only six.
In other ABA action, the
Pittsburgh Condors ripped the
Carolina Cougars, 131·121, and
the Utah Stars stopped the
Memphis Pros, 104-98.
George Thompson scored nine
consecutive points in the third
quarter to give Pittsburgh the
lead and the Condors held off a
Carolina rally in the last period
to beat the Cougars. Thompson
finished with 31 points while
rookie Jim McDaniels led the
Cougars with 30.
Glen Combs hlt nine points in
a row in the last quarter to
boost Utah past Memphis.
Combs hit on three field goalsone a three-polnter-4!nd two
foul shots to give the Stars an
8?~ lead. He finiahed with 31
points and Willie Wise added 21.
Wendell Ladner's 21 points led
the. Pros.

Brilliant.

Region 10
1. Marion Pleasant ; 2. 'Mont.
pelier; 3. Fostoria 51. Wendelin; 4. Monroeville ; 5. (tiel
Marion Catholic and Cory Rawson; 7. Norwalk St. Paul ; 8.

All you do is buy one of our fine suits at the
re gular price and the sport coat is yours . Bear
in mind this is all name brand merchandise, a
rare opportunity to add a fine coat· to your
wardrobe at no cost to you. We have plenty of
slacks. shirts. belts and ties to team up with
your new coat and suit.

(tiel Ada and Hicksville; 10.
MoComb.
~
Region 11
t. Newark Catholic; 2.
Drooksv ill e;

3.

Tuscarawas

Ca tholic; ~. Zanesville Rose·
crans; 5. Ironton Sf. Joseph ; 6.

Come in and see the new patterns in men's
clothing.

Tuscarawas Valley ; 7. Eastern

ARTERS .
.20
MAINPLEASANT
STREET
POINT

MENSWE 'R
;"\

"PLANT''

YOUR
MONEY

here and watch II
"bloom"! ·Earn at our
passbook rate of

4%%
ON
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

IS OPEN
FOR EARLY

Meigs County Bronch of
The Athens County 5avlngs
Co.
296 Second St.

&amp; Loan

SHOPPERS
A big department of famous

Pomeroy, Ohio

Member Federal Home l.orrn
19ank.
Member Federal Savings al
Loan Insurance Corp. AI'
accounts Insured up tq

$20,000.01'
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.

brand toys to brighten any
child's Christmas, at prices to
please any parent. We have a
complete selection of dolls for
every girl . , • trains for boys
and dads. Make. Moore 'Si

Toyland
your
Sa~ta 's
headquarters for one stop
shopping this holiday season .

NEW WINTER

~.:

,_

·~

-c-Q~r

Lay-Away

Plan Is The
Com.enient Way
To Sti)P NCM!

AT

.

PRICES
YOU CAN

BELIEVE
IN!

BUDGET ACCOUNTS ARE CARRIED HERE IN OUR STORE

EbersbCich Hardware

·GE~ERAL nRE SALES

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
·
·
POMEROY, OHIO
:..·'•

6. Mineral Ridg e; 7. M cDonald ;
8. Mogadore; 9. Windham; 10.

or

BOWS, ARROWS, ACCESSORIES

liOW. MAIN

By popular demand we are extending our
sport c oat offer for one week. Come in and
select your fre e coat today .

s. Garrettsv i ll e Garfield :

Class AA
Cl
Regd ioHn 15 N
. 2
1. eve 1an
a
me.
Camptiell Memoria ; 3. Warren.
K~nnedy ; 4. Cloverleaf; 5. Cha.
~rn Falls; 6: Youn~stown
orth ; 7.. Elyna Catho. lc; 8.

-UCENSED GUN DEALERBRO~NING

stone;

· Free Sport Coat

!Meigs ); 8. Millersport; 9.
Amanda Clearcreek ; 10. Scio·
Jewett.
Region 12
1. Covington; 2. Middletown
Fenwick ; 3. Jonathan Alder; 4.
Cedarville; 5. West Jefferson ;
6. Southeastern (Clarki; 7.
Portsmouth Notre Dame ; 8.
5. Princeton; 6. Dayton Patter- Marton Local ; 9. New Boston;
son; 7. Kettering Fairmont 10. Portsmouth East.
West; 8. Kettering Aller; 9.
Kettering Fairmont East; 10.

• Remington •Winchester •Ithaca
• Harrison &amp; Richardson •Mossberg
•Browning
•Gun Cleaning Kits
eGun Oil • Recoii'Pads •Game Bags
• Shell Vests eGun cases
Accessorle!I•Hunters Jackets &amp; Ca~1es~
• H11nting Pants &amp; Caps'·
.
• Rifle Sling Straps • Steel Traps
.

Poland ; 9. Triway ; 10. Cardi·
nat.
6
Re&lt;J;on
1. Ore&lt;Jon
";tritch; 2. St.
Marys Memorial ; J. Columbus
Watterson ; ~ . Napoleon ; 5. Fos·
Ioria
; 6· Columbus
DeSales; 7·
Vermilion;
8. Gibsonburg ; 9.
Columbus Wehrle; 10. Colum.
bus Mohawk.
t. Steuben~~ft~0 ~:ntral Catho.
Iic; 2. Ironton ; 3. New Lexing.
ton; ~. New Concord ~~~nn ; 5.
Barnesvil le ; 6 · Minel&lt;.ya ' 7·
Carrollton; s. Hargville 'La ke;
9. Warsaw ; 10. (tie) Fort Frye,
Gallipolis and Wellsv ille .
t. Spring~:',il~on Sah~wnee; 2.
Madeira ; 3. Mllton·Un ion; 4.
Dayton Jefferson; 5.. Marie·
mont; 6. (tiel Loveland and
Greenon; 8. Valley View; 9.
Tipp City ; 10. Carli sle.
Cia" A
Region 9
1. Lorain Catholic; 2. Smith·
field; J. Smithville; 4. Ken.

Meigs and have lost to the same games in order to match last
two teams, lost to Ironton last year's 8-2 team.
week, 38-3.
The Marauders have a shot at
a tie, but it's rather far .fetched.
Ironton has to lose either to
Jackson this week or to Waverly
the following week. Athens
mu8t lose to eittrer Logan this
week or Wellston the following
week. And, of course, Meigs
must win their final two games;
Logan and Gallipolis. Sound
impossible, well keep your
fingers crossed.
The Blue Devils, winner of
their first five games and loser
of their last two, are still ranked
in the top 20 in AP and UP! stale
polls.
Meigs has been nowhere in
"You
sight all year long in state
rankings. In the computer
always
ratings, the Marauders were
rated a ridiculously low 34th in
get
Region 7 last week. This was
even lower than the 29th ranked .
Warren Local Warriors whom
cold feet!"
the Marauders defeated easily
in a pre-season scrimmage.
Gallipolis was ranked 7th last
Not with reliable oil heat,
you don't! Call' Rizer's Oil,
week by the computer.
phone 992.2 t01 for quality oil
In league statistics released
and prom pt delivery .
this'W.ef:)&lt;, the Marauders still
rank tbe highest in plays from
scrimmage/ They are second in
plays run against them behind
Athens.
·
'. ! Not only will a Marauder loss
knock them out of contention,
buttheymighthavetosettlefor
a second division finish. Meigs
needs to win their final three
. ._ _ _ _ __

Sycamore.

MAYTAG

Red carpet

Second c la ss postage pa id at

992·2709

0

HElPING TO SAFEGUARD HEAlTH

CHANNEL 5

99 2 . 21~6, E d itorial Phone 992 .

~

Tops Region 7

In At 9- 0ut At 5

Middleport &amp; Pomeroy
City Elections

tremendous defensive tackle;
will get the nod if Young isn't
able.
On 1 the other hand, Coach
Jobn Ecker's Blue Devils will
have a healthier Pete Neal, a
great runner and defensive
player. The Gallipolis offensive
punch lacks a great deal
without their ace running back.
The senior halfback has played
the last.two weeks, but started
only last week. The Blue Devils,
who have the same record as

Steubenville

·

On PoinTView Cable TV

'

best rusher, doesn't start, eltber
Tom Cooke or Chuck Faulk will
EASTERN
SOUTHERN
entering the SV AC next season,
By KEITH WISECUP
open for the Marauders. At
OFFENSE
OFFENSE
The Eastern Eagles travel to are coached by John Patton. PLAYER
WT YR
WT YR center, John Grueser, a
E Bob Caldwell
170 t2
E Jim Williams
152 10
Southwestern to battle the They own a 2-5 record .
E Rick ~1\llams 17J 12
E Jay Hill
126 11
Highlanders In a Southern Eastern's opponent, South·
J
Alan
..
Q
.f!r
200
12
T
Ron
Hill
2
40 11
Valley Conference Ult while the western, has a 0-7 slate overall
T Roger Karr
170 11
T Larry Wilcoxen 217 11
orDickSteHier 175 11
G Jim Smith
142 12
surprising Southern Tornadoes and 1).3 In the SVAC. The TorG
Rick
Hauber
175
12
G
Greg
Mlddleswart
play the Symmes Valley nadoes will play the Eagles
, G John Cline
155 12
146 10
Vikings at Symmes Valley in a week after next in the annual
c Tim Gumpf
145 12
C Nell Baker
162 12
,165· 12 QB Vern Ord
129 10
non-league game In area "A" Meigs County showdown. lithe QB Jlm .Amsbary
145 12 . HB Mike Nease
146 11
Tornadoes upset the Eagles, HB Rick Sanders
football Friday night.
HB
Randy
Boring
·.,
1~5
11 · HB Mlfch.Nease
150 9
The Eagles, coached by they can tie for the cham- FB Dennis Eichinger 190 12 F'B Nick Ihie
164 11
DEFENSE
DEFENSE
Roger Kirkhart, are going for pionship with Kyger Creek and
WT YR
.
WT YR
their eighth straight win against the Eagles, provided Southern
E
John
Sheets
170
10
MG
Bill
Cornell
142 12
na defeats. They are on the whips North Gallia the
E Warren C&lt;rlaway 150 12
T Ron Hill
. 240 11
175 11
T Greg Mlddleswart
verge of becoming Eastern's following week in the season's · T Dick Stettler
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Steu.
T Alan Holter
200 12
146 10
first unbeaten or untii!d football finale. Eastern's season ends
10
MG
RlckHauber
175
12
e
Randy
Forbes
145
henville Central Catholic, run·
team In history .- Eastern with the Southern clash.
LB Dennis Eichinger 190 12
E Jim Williams
152 10 away leader in the United
football dates back to 1958. The
LB Alan Duvall
175 11
LB Mike Codner
134 10
CB
Rick
Williams
173
12
LB
Nell
Baker
162 t2 Press International Class AA
Eagles are on top in the SV AC
CB
Tim
Gumpf
145
t2
CB
Jay
Hill
126 11 Board of Coaches ratings, has
with a spotless record in three
HB Bob Caldwell
170 12 CB Nick I hie
164 11 finally made it to the top in
games.
9
HB Rick Sanders
145 12 HB Milch Nease
150
11
its region in the latest compu·
H
B
Mike
Nease
t
46
Coach Bruce Wallace's
ter ratings released WednesTornadoes have a two game
winning streak going. After
time will tell whether I can." day by the Ohio High School
completely healed.
losing their first four en·
This winter he plans to return Athletic Association.
"[ want to play, probably
The Crusaders, who had two
counters, the Wallacemen have
more so than I ever did," Cook to the University of Cincinnati of their seven victories over
jelled. They have whipped
said. "But I'm not going to be a to complete work on a six-year
orit of stale opponents, not
Hannan Trace, 21).6, and South..
fine arts course.
football bum. "
western, 26-14. The Tornadoes
"If It ( th~ arin) comes taken into account by the comCook, a standout at the Univpuler until after the season is
have a 2-1 record in the SVAC;
ersity of Cincinnati and rookie around, I'll be elated,",he said.
over, moved into the top spot
their loss was a heartbreaking
of the year In the American "If it doesn't I'll be in school." on the strength of a 23-8 vic14-12 decision to the Kyger
The Bengals have some real tory over AAA Steubenville Big
Football Conference in 1969, led
Creek Bobcats.
the Bengals to three wins in quarterback miseries, and the
Eastern, having given ·up only
1970. But he was tackled by problems don~ include Cook. Red.
18 points all year was rated 16th
Virgll Carter suffered a dis- The top 10 in each of the 12
Bobby Bell and Jerry Mays of
regions are:
in ''A" ratings this week by the
Kansas City in that third game located shoulder against Green
Class. AAA
AP. This Is believed to be the
and his ann has never been the Bay and has been sidelined the
Reg1on I
highest a SVAC team ever
last three games.
same since.
l .. Warren Har~lng ; 2. Pa r ma
ranked in Ohio. The Eagles CINCINNATI (UP!) - Greg Cook has undergone two
That brought up rookie Ken Senror; 3. Mayf&gt;eld ; 4. Lake·
have a !!).game winning streak Cook, the promising Cincinnati operatlons on the ann and Anderson, but he was injured wood St. Edward ; 5. Warren
West~rn Re~e rve ,· 6. Mentor ; 7.
in the SV AC, dating back to Bengal quarterback who hasn't worked out with the team last last week agsinst Oakland and Garfield
Heights; 8. Bedford '· 9.
early in 1969 when Kyger Creek played since being Injured in sununer. It was thought for a will be out an indeterminate ~l yrla ; 10. Cl eveland Bened1c "
ttne.
defeated them for their only the third game of the 1970 sea- while he might be able to play. amount of time.
Region 2
son,
says
he
wll1
quit
football
So
the
only
player
on
the
team
league loss that yea r, 31).14.
!. Upper Arlington ; 2. Co"Strength
Is
not
a
problem,"
with any signal-calling ex· lumbus Linden ; J. (t iel Toledo
The Vikings, who will he next year if his shoulder is not
he said. "The problem Is the perience is Dave Lewis, the Woodward and Worthington ; 5.
r - - - -- --· -------~:::-:-~:---,1 pain factor . If l can eliminate
Findlay ; 6. (tiel Columbus
punter.
Big C1P1clfy
Northland and Shelby; 8. Port
Maytlg ·
that, I'll be okay,"
·
The news that he will start in Clinton; 9. Bowling Green; 10.
Automotlcs
Pain when he throws will the game Sunday at Houston Toledo Central Cafholic .
2 spetd operation.
Choice of water prevent him from playing in against the Oilers stunned LewRegion 3
1. Ak ron Garfield ; 2. Ma ss il·
temps . Auto.
any games this season, Cook is, who turned 26 on Oct. 16.
water
level
ion ; 3. Lancaster ; 4. Canton
co nt r o 1.
L1n t said, although his doctors are
But he admits "it's something Centra I Catholic; 5. Zanesville ;
Fi ller or Power · optimistic he will eventually be I've always wanted. There's no 6. Barberton ; 7. Perry; 8. New·
Fin Agitator .
ark ; 9. Walsh Jesuit; 10.
Ptrma -Prtn
fine.
doubt about it."
Young.stown Cardinal Mooney.
Ho~•:,t~!at
· "I'm not really discouraged.
Region 4 ,
Quarterback-receiver coach
t. Cincinnati Moefier; 2.
Dryers
Right now I want to come back Bill Walsh said he has "comTroy ; 3. Cincinnati Roger Ba·
Surround clothes
and play and everything. Only plete confidence in Dave."
with gentle, even
con ; 4. Cincinnati St. Xavier ;

Walter Hagen, in 1922, was
the first u.S. golfer to win
the British 0 pen Tourna·
ment.
~~---...~,_-. . .

trump.

RALLY PLANNED
Local talent will participate
in the Sunday School Rally this
Sunday at the Rutland Church
of the Nazarene. There will be
vocal and instrumental numbers during the opening exercises . The recently formed
orchestra. will be play.;ng .
Sunday School starts at 9:30
a.m. A cordial invitation is
.
extended to the pubhc.

Wllllams and Eddie Young.
Mark Werry, a starting tackle,
has been out since the Belpre
game and p-obably won't play
the remainder of the season.
Middle guard Jobn Thomas is
slightly injured but is slated to

~~:~~:n~=;~h:n~~~

Eag.les, Tornadoes Traveling

partner is heading for a s lam,
thi~ will show you are agree ..
able. If not, it tells him not to
worry about spades at three no ..

2157

:;~cttn';!': !',,'d.•s,o.SuSubscrip
tio n·
nday Times
'

Meigs, suffering an embarrasslng- 31.(1 defeat from
Athens last week, lB pretty well
banged~· Doubtful starters for
the Marauders, now 5-2 overall
and 3-2 in league play, are Mark

Devils, who . have the same · the league champion Blue
chance, In the French City Devils last year, 1U, The
Friday night.
· Charles Chancey coached
The MIO'auders have waited Marauders have waited a long
one year and now the time has time for this one. Meigs Is 3-1 in
come.Theywereknockedoffby the all-time series.

rific ."

City Editor
Published daily except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publ is hing company, lll
Cou r t St. , Pomeroy. Oh io,
.45769 . Business Office Phone

Pomeroy, Ohio.
National adve r tising
represe ntat iv e Botfinelli .
Gallagher , In c., 12 East 42nd
St., New York City , New York .
Subscrip t ion rates : De livered by carrier wt'lere
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carr ier
service not· avallabl~ : One ,
month $1.75 . By rna il in Oh io
w. Va ., One yea r $14.00.
onths 57 .25 . Thr ee

Battere Marau ers Still Long ........hots
By KEITH WISECUP
Tile Meigs Mirauders, still
with a longshot chance of tying
for the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League championship,
will battle the Gallipolis Blue

am

TERmiTE

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ME IGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed .
ROaERTHOEFtiCH , .

,J E~igge!&gt;t ,

it all: Binder's $5,000 was German reparation for
losing his parents in Nazi gas chambers. That's
about the grubbiest swindle of the decade.
Nevada gambling joint owner Bill Harrah is
bucking for the Art;ie Slaw Cup: Bill just was
divorced the third time .... Small bushed-Up (so
far) scandal in the Federal courts: judge, asked
to step down, refused. He was superseded by a
White House ap!Jointment - but the reluctant
jurist refuses to move out or tum over his offic.e
to the lawful successor ..... Advisers are coaxing
him to give in and get out before tbe embarrassing tale wags into headlines.
Playwright ("Brother Rat") and . movie
writer Fred F. Finldehoffe pacted Muhanunad
Ali to narrate a TV series of famous fights ....
Gov. Harriman's Eastside town house is up for
sale at a reduced price .... You'd be amazed at
the borde of doctors whO've applied for China
visas_ to study "acupuncutre"; of course it's a
splendid ploy to make a business trip to an exotic
land that hasn't been open to tourists for
decades.
La Scala restaurant owner ArthurMirlallo's
daughter, Jenelle, and James Sarcone are
hOneymooning in St. Maureen's .... So many
ladies demanded to be permitted into the
Copacabana to see Jack Jones owner Julie
Podell finally relented and now ~ts women
in groups of two and up to attend the dinner show
- only "" Never at midnight.
Recession or no, Manhattan always seems to
be coming up with glittering hopes and plans:
such as Lorna (Mrs. Oliver) Bivins' elaborately
expensive project to be called ''Lolly's Club L,"
.... Lorna Bivins, of the Amarillo, Texas, Bivins,
a lady of iron whim, decided Manhattan's smart
~per Eastside is just the ilpot to open the most
glamorous all-services - a combination clUb,
care, restaurant, swimming pool, health-spa
facilities, a ballroom, three dining roomtt, one
officially for tbe diet-conscious (organic foods),
Mt. Valley water only etc.), hot and cold
whirlpools and every sort of exercise equipment
in the gym, chauffeured limousines always
available, a 90-foot yacht (fully staffed) tied up
nearby in the East River.
This sumptuous cap-Ice will open next
month and herein a few details as to why
how : Her notion solidified, Lorna BivinS simply
bought a pair of expensive Eastside town houses
at 62nd St. and Lexington Ave. (tire Lex. and 135
E. 62n~ ) and went quietly and expensively about
restoring them to the area's fonner elegance and connected them with a huge three.fltory
glass-enclosed roof garden, where a main
ballroom emerged.

•s

-------

The

'

Wonderlands Never Cease

Charter Draped

!

I

Costume prizes were awarded
al a Halloween party of the
Junior Missionary Society of the . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
NORTH ( 0 )
28
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
• AQ97
Church Tuesday in the par·
• 7~
sonage basement.
+A6
Winning the prizes were
ofo QJ1095
Sherrie Clark, the prettiest; WEST
EAST
Joyce Baker, the ugliest; Kathy jfl4
jfl 5
•
AKQJ
1098
.
6
Gill , the most original; and
32
.
Patty Ebli n, the fun ni es!.
• 52
• t09874J
Delores Gill and Penny Eblin ,fo
A
,fo 76~.J2
won the door prizes. Refresh·
SOUTH
me nts were served. Others
• KJ108632
a !lending were Mark and
+KQJ
Belinda Friend, Darla Gill,
ofo
K8
Terry Clark, Laura Russell.
E&lt;tstWest
vul ne r able
Adul ts attending were Mrs.
Seldon Baker, Mrs. Eugene West North East South
Pass 1 •
I ofo
Gill, Mrs. Richard Friend .
~ ·
4.
Pass ~N .T.

Man can live without food
for as long as five weeks but
only four or five days wrth·
Highest rank obtainable in 'out water , accordrng to En·
the Boy Scouts of America cyclopaedia Britannica.
is Eagle Scout, an honor for
which most Scouts strive.
, ~-

:::~-, ... -.

S- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, O., Oct. 28, 19'11

··~-C•o ...

~ N. 2nd Ave.

·.

m :7161

Middleport,

o.

MOORE'SIN.POMEROY
124 W. MAIN

Your Toy Store

Ph. M2-2841
.• ' l

.,

�=-----2-

n.e [)allySentlnel,Mldcleport~erov. o.,Clrct.., Ji71

r-----""7-----"-------------------------·----,

.

r--------------.----"'7--------.

Autumn Haroest WSCS Theme! Voice along ·Broadway ! ! · HOSPITAL NEWS
.

A table loaded with fall
vegetables, fruits and autumn
leaves surrounding a Bible with
a picture of the head of Christ
overlooking it provided the
worship center setting for
Wednesda y's meeting of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Forest Run
United Methodist Church.
The worship center was
prepared by Mrs. Uswin Nease
who also used a nun1ber of other
autumn flower arrangements
around the room.

"Autumn Harvest" was the
program topi c. and each
member presented an article
pertaining to the season with a

discussion at the conclusion of

each . Mrs. Edison Hollon
cond~cled
a Bible quiz.
Members sang "Bringing in the
Sheaves" and Mrs. Denver
Holler gave devotions using the
scripture from St. Matthew
pertaining to houses built upon
the sand and those built upon
the rock. Mrs. Holter concluded
with prayer.
Mrs. Russ Watson conducted
the business meeting and love
offerings were collected. A dale
was set for a committee to
prepare the date books for the
year beginning in January 1972.
The group sang "God Be With
You" .
Refreshments consisted of
coffee and a sample of food

which each member present
had prepared from a recipe
they had never tried before.
Besides those members men·
tioned above attending were
Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. All
Yeauger, Mrs. Hanson Holter,
Mrs. Vernon Nease, Mrs. Edith
Sisson, Mrs. Fred Nease and
one guest, Jane Sisson.

I

BY JACK O'BRIAN
AFrER 'GODFATHER,' \Cl'ING
IS CHILD'S PLAY'
NEW ylJRJ:~ (KFS)- David Merrick signed
Brando for his "Child's Play" movie .... Variety
reports Charles Collingwood, most sophi~icated
and stylish network newscaster, may retife ....
Italian TV showed a nude male, and nuns galore
squawked officially .... Plagiarism suit by
Chappell Music in Federal Court here claims
Perry Como's hlt song "It's Impossible" is a
steal of its 1965 French composition "J'ai le Mal
Toi," but the suit doesn't involve Perry - who
only made it a hit.
Up in staid old Ottawa, it's okay now for
shows to have completely nude gals .... "Lovein," a totally nude musical revue at Lake
Tahoe's Kings Castle gaming heaven, packed the
littl~ 300-seat room it premiered in and had to be
moved to a !l(J().seater to hold all the voyeurs who
prefer prurient leering to gambling; choose your
vice, Nevada 's got it all.
"Sleuth" has a half-million profit already ....
With the smallest cast of any Bdwy. show (we
won't tell you the total because that's part of the
exciting whodunit's chilly fun) its weekly payroll
is $8,600 .... Martin· Bookspan, one of the critics
who panned "Jesus Christ Superstar," calling it ·
"a stage catastrophe," belted the show's ad
campaign, noting it took peripheral positive
praise for his praise of the scenery which was
quoted "out of context" in hope of camouflaging
Bookspan's critical sneer.
"The Rothschilds" musical is amazing: jogs
right along at a regular weekly gross that's
almost precisely half its financial capacity
(110,000 ) ..... The out-of-town ward on Neil
Simon's new "Prisoner of Second Ave." comedy
is splendid : the critics in New Haven flipped
their typewriters .. .. The three Bctwy. shows
opening this past week all were awful.
Plot of a new comedy trying out in Westport,
Conn., seems typical of today's dreadful
"relevancy," a word we're getting to despise:
this one's a two-character whatzit starring
Colleen Dewhurst as a middle~ged woman
whose Greenwi~h Village flat is invaded by a 25year-old radical with a rifle, intent on lcilling the
Vice President due for a Fourth of July speech
within bullet-range oftheaging gal's windows ....
It's called "The Big Coca Cola Swamp," and
early word is - it won't he around long enough to
make Atlanta, Ga ., worry.
Sad victim of a Ponzi-type father-son
swindling duo who pleaded guilty to mail fraud,
perjury and conspiracy was Monier Binder,
happy-faced doorman at the Drake Hotel on
Park Ave., who trusted $5,000 to the pair and lost

Meigs ,

Property
Transfers

Charles L. Fryling, Saundra
~Jl:~r~~t~!~~!i!!!i~!~!~i!if!~i!~!!~i!!~!!~~;i~!tf~~~!i!~!~!~!~!tm~:;!!~~;j~!~~~~~~t!~;~~!~~!~~m~~!!~~~~!~~~!~~~m~~~l~~~~~~~~ ~f~ J . Fryling to Cecil V. Dillon,
Flossie N. Dillon, .42 Acre,
Olive.
Helen M. Riggs to Franklin
Real Estate c:o., 38.05 Ac res,
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Salem.
Dear Sue and Helen :
Marjorie M. Harris to Eugene
.
M.
Harris, Janet H. Harris, lot,
My parents have finally come around to long hair for guys.
We even talked Dad into sideburns and lin electric comb. He looks M~~~h~tj_ Ryther, Anna M.
great. Of course his hair is still short compared to mine.
Ryther, Edith v. Ryther to
Sue, here comes a time bomb! We're going south for Waid Hayman, Donna Hayman ,
Christmas, and we'll stop to visit my grandmother. Dad says all 7 acres, Salisbury.
the men in the family must have haircuts before we leave . He
Dwight w. Corbin, Delores
showed me pictures of him when he was young and announced June Corbir., aka June B.
that this is the way his mother expects us to look. Migosh, I'll be Corbin to Ohio Power Co., 2.50
scalped ' Can you help save a mass shearing? ~ LB.R. (MALE ) acres, Lebanon.
SUE'S VIEWS
Guy Sargent, Bertha Sargent
Dear L.B.R. (Male ):
to Richard Sargent, parcel,
Is that short for "Utt!e Bald Ridinghood, Male? "
lledford.
Maybe you won't be, if you ask your dad one question: "Are
Charles W. Heck, Bessie I.
you really AFRAID of Grandma, Pop?" - SUE
Heck to Mack Taggart, parcels,
NOTE TO READERS : Who, besides me, wants a vacation Lebanon .
from oldies like hair, sex and "my parents don't understand' Charles W. Heck, Bessie I.
me! " ' l think such subjects are growin' a beard -they've been Heck to James J . Smith, Wilma
hassled so long they need a rest.
R. Smith, parcels, lebanon.
If yo u want extra snap in GENERATION RAP, please,
Huntington National Bank,
readers, send us some new-type problems. K? Thanx.
Trustees, to Ben H. Ewing, lot,
P.S . No offense, L.B.R. - your letter wasn't run-of-the- Pomeroy.
harberchair hair trouble.
Oren Wears, JoAnn Wears to
HELEN'S TURN
Glen Edwards Beebe, Roma
(GLOSSARY FOR ADULT READERS: "Growin' a beard' Jean Beebe , 1.83 acre,

~:[m Generation

~:[!' [

1

Rap · II

·: :~!\

means getting old ; "K" is short for Okay. Or did you already
know?) - H.
Dear L:
Grandmothers, having weathered many changes, are often
not as reactionary as grown children assume them to be.
Sometimes they aren't as uptight as the middle generation.
Yours is no doubt surrounded by hairy teenagers and even
their parents, for southern styles are no different from any others
these days.
Why not send Grandma your pictures to soften her up for the
real thing? I think she'll adjust.- HELEN
P.S. Second the motion on "differnt-type" letters. Here's an
example :
Dear Bottels :
,•
: This is too good to keep.
My brother, who enjoys conning the E!!!ablishment, decided
to grow marijuana plants in a weed fie ld near our house. He
wasn't going into business. He just did it to see if it 's as easy as
people say to grow your own and not get caught.
It was ... unW our littlest brother, who's not even out of
training pants, got a big crush on our next-door neighbor and
started bringing her bouquets. He went through our garden in a
hurry, and then beamed in on the wild flowers in the field .
You guessed it, our neighbor turns up with a nice bouquet of
Canabissativa and she doesn't evtm know she's "holding" pot in
the raw . Thank goodness she threw it away next day.
You'd better believe my big brother dug a hole and buried
those illegal plants fast . The field is now back to weeds, not
'"weed."

There's some use for little brothers after all. Right?
REUEVED ENOUGH TO LAUGH
Dear R.:

... Especially little brothers who lack "pot-ty training." - H.
AND S.
Dear Sue:
Could you please tell us again where teenagers can write to
get an overseas pen pal ? - STUDENTS
Dear Students:
Write to World Pen Pals, World Affairs Center, University of
Mimesota , Minneapolis, Minn., 55455. Print your name, age, sex
and address, and send 50 cents for each pen pal requested. Pen
friends are provided for boys and girls, ages 12·19. Good luck!SUE

Sa~~~~~i'G.

Edwards, Exec .,
William J . Edwards, Exec.,
Robert R. Edwards, deed, to
lola A. Bartrum,' tots,
Langsville .
Willard E. Cunningham,
Alma c. Cunningham to Ullian
R. Schenkle, Grace Marie Wise,
parcels, olive.
Leslie G. Hoffman , Dena F.
Hoffman, to Manning Webster,
parcels, Rutland.
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
Webster to Leslie G. Hoffman,
Dena F . Hoffman, parcels,
Rutla nd .
Owen Damewood, Lora
Damewood to Francis Willard
Baird, Ethel Baird, parcel,
Chester·
Philip Donovan , Betty
Donovan to Thelma Grueser,
lots, Syracuse.
Daniel B. O'Dell, Carole R.
O'Dell to Eugene H. Roush,

Prizes Awarded

Juanita J . Roush, 1 acre,

Bedford.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Clarence E. Hill, lot, Syracuse.
Russell Holsinger , Freda
Holsinger to Earle D. Schultz,
Mary belle D. Schultz, parcel,
Olive .
Green Hill Homes , Inc., to
Salem A. Yates, Carrie L.
Yates, .234 acre, Sutton.
Opal M. Priddy to Linda
Li pscomb, lots, Sutton
Syracuse.

Donations Made
Contributions to the Gifts to
the Yanks Who Gave and the

Sa~l~v!~at.~i~on night's
Army meeting
were made
at
®
of the
r:::-::-:~::"::::--------,~~

PH I Lc 0

NEW SUPER-SCREEN 2
DIAGONAL CQLQR TV
RECTANGULAR

"''

I

Legion Junior
IArJXiliary of Feeney·Bennett
Post 128, at the hall. The group
voted to contribute to the
Department of Ohio for a
1n1err10ri'.al fund for Mrs . Charles
Bennett, a gold star mother.
The annual Christmas party
discussed and members
exchanged names for a gift
exchange . The pledge to the
flag, prayer, and reciting the
preamble to the Auxiliary
constitution opened
the
meeting . Nine junior members
and two adult leaders atte nded.

Dai~

The charter was draped for
Mrs. Sophia Lazon and Mrs.
Mary B. Heines at Monday
night's meeting of Theodorus
Coun cil 17, Daughters of
America, held at the IOOF hall.
Plans were discussed for the
59th anniversary observance of
Theodorus Council. The death of
Lawrence Lanning, husband of
a member, was noted and it was
reported that flowers had been
sent. It was noted that Mrs.
Edna Reibel had injured her
foot, that Mrs. Lydia Stewart i5
a patient at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and that
Mrs . Sarah Brown and Mrs.
Edna Stiles are both'home from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Jewelry to be sold for the
state councilor 's project was
displayed . Christmas plaques
are also being sold by the
council.

brightest, shar ,.,, i " .lure ever seen on a Hipicture tube-25" prcture measu red diagonally;
sq.in. pictu re • Super-Sc reen Hi-Brite MagiColor
:l.o•iCI&gt;ure tube for the brightest, sharpest, most true-to-life
picture in Philco history • Super-Balanced Cosm•t:ic Color Circuit (Pat. Pend.) for even more realistic
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Philco A.C.T. with panel ON-dicator • 26,500-volt Oyna·~~;~{ chassis • Automatic Color Balance control • Co'1
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FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
o.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr . and Mrs. Archie J.
Patterson, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Jolin Meldick, Oak Hlll, a son;
Mr. and Mrs. James Valentine
Polcyn, Gallipolis, a daughter ;
Mr.andMrs. John Dale Waugh,
Jr., Crown City, a daughter ;
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Phllllp
Wood, Ironton, a sori, and Mr.
and Mrs. Rodney Eugene
Walker, Langsville, a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Lloyd Baker, Clinton
Betz, Dewey Birchfield, Edward Blake, Sr., Mrs. Clarence
Campbell, Clyde Cron, George
Curry, Jr., Mrs. Romey Dean,
Mrs. Jinunle Deem and son,
George Eastman, Mrs. Nanme
Fox, Mrs. Wm. H. Grigsby,
John Harrison, Mrs. Clemma
Haskins,
Mrs .
Harold
Hazelbaker, Mrs. Carl Hood,

Christina .tmb&lt;lden, Mrs. VernIn Jaynes, Herbert King, Mr$.
Calvin Lambert, Emma McDaniel, Diane Mullins, Mrs.
Fred Phlllips, Mrs. Zona
Powell, Mrs. Charles Price and
son, Roy Russell, Mrs. Charles
Watson, Mrs. Alex Schultz, Mrs.
Owen Wilbur,' Elijah E. Bunch,
Mrs. George P. Johnson and
Virgil Grayman .

WIN AT BRIDGE

ing and now she started to
sort her ~and. All she could
find for awhile were hearts.
When she got through she
was looking at nine of them .
Four hear ts looked like her
best bid. She could count 10
tricks and from the looks of
the dormouse she was going
to get no help froin him .
The rest of the bidding is
shown in the box. Alice saw
no reason to go down two
tricks at six hearts. She had
a plan to beat the five-spade
contract. She opened her ace
of clubs and in spite of look·
ing at the seven or hearts in
dumm y Alice led her &lt;1euce.
Sure enough the four was
played fro m dummy and the
Pass
5"
Pass 5 •
dormouse won the trick with
Pass
Pass
:rass
his six. It took some time to
Opening lead- · A
appraise him of that fact,
but he did return a club to
llv Oswa•d &amp; James Jacoby give
Alice th e r u f f s he
.. Curiouser an d curiouser, " wanted.
thought Alice. "Ever since l
(N EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
arrived in Wonderland my
bridge hands have been ter·
The Duchess opened the
Th e bidding has been:
bidding with one club. Alice's
East South
partner, the dormouse looked West North
I+
even sleepier than usual as
2N.T.
Pass
1
¥
Pass
he passed. She decided that
3t
Pass
he could not- have much in Pass
You, South, hold:
the way of cards.
The Cheshire Cat gri nned .AQ4.K8 +AQ1085.K109
and bid one spade .
What do you do now?
Alice .had been daydream·
A-Bid three spades. II your

r

S.HIR
fl NISHI NG
SAME DAY
SERVICE

Use Our Free Parking Lot_

Robinson's Ceaners
216 E. 2nd. Pomeroy

AFriend
You Can

Rely On ...
Your pharmacist should be your
friend. Someone to help. Someone
who's always there with careful at·
tendon to prescriptions.
And, as your doctor's back-up
man, your pharmacist follows his
instructions with precision.

Bandages, Strips

heat. No hot spots,
no overdrylng .
\F ine Mesh Lint
Filter .
Wt Sptcilllle In

..

Squires In 110-107 Win

By Untied Press Internatlooal
service
It no longer holds true that if
you stop Charlie Scott, you stop
the Virginia Squires.
;742·4211
The Kentucky Colonels held
Arnold Grate
Rutland, .0.
U...---- - - - - - - - -- - -- - - , . Scott, the American Basketball

.RUTLAND FURNITURE.

Nature
A Hulthy Body, A Youthful Appearance/Needs
Fr11h Air, Exercise and, Oh Yes! Natural Nutrition.

NATURAL FOODS AND VITAMINS, INC.,

SEASON OPENS NOV. 15

has dlrived from nature's own sources vitamin
food supplements, bursting with natural vitamins
and full of rich essential nutrients.

We Issue

lfs
Ebersbach

·HUNnNG
UCENSE

A selection of nat•"•'

' foods and vitamins may be purchased at

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE DRUGS

THAT FILL
THE BILL

Open daily 8 a .m. to 10 p.m. - Sunday 10: 30
a.m. to 12 : 30 p .m. and 5: oo to 9 p.m .

.

-

. A.ND SAVE '100 OR MORE
Termite Control Concentrate. Add an Arab hose-end

spray Applicator and you're ready lo completet·, termiteproof the average J-bedr.oom home! Saves you over SlOQ
compared t o the cost of ca ll ing in a professional ex:
terminator . Buy Arab and do b,oth you and your home a

favor . Price may vary slightly.

·

. VALLEY WMBER &amp;·SUPPLY CO•.

Our complete line of hunting ·supplies and
equipment Is here ready for selection. Made
by world-known manufacturers and In a large
range of prices.

TODAY'S QUESTIO~
Your partner continues to
four hearts. What do you dQ
now?

•

·Ammunition Of All Kinds

SEE AND HEAR

WESTERN - REMINGTON ·

Your Local Candidates in the

7 P.M., MONDAY, NOV. 1
9A.M., ~ESDAY, ELECTION DAY
WATCH CABLE CHANNEL 5 ON
. ELECTION NIGHT FOR THE RESULTS FIR$T

&amp; Rifles

Association's leading scorer, to
only seven points Wednesday
· ht but rooleies W'lli
S.
I e OJOUr·
mg
ner and Julius Erving combined
for 46 points and Neil Johnson
added 24 to give the Squires a
111).107 victory.
Sojourner, from Weber State,
had 25 points and Erving, from
Massachusetts, added 21 as the
Squires took over first place In
the ABA East and handed the
Colonels their first ioss at home
· this season.
Dan Issei led the Colonels
with 36 points while Kentucky's
prized rookie, Artis Gilmore,
managed only six.
In other ABA action, the
Pittsburgh Condors ripped the
Carolina Cougars, 131·121, and
the Utah Stars stopped the
Memphis Pros, 104-98.
George Thompson scored nine
consecutive points in the third
quarter to give Pittsburgh the
lead and the Condors held off a
Carolina rally in the last period
to beat the Cougars. Thompson
finished with 31 points while
rookie Jim McDaniels led the
Cougars with 30.
Glen Combs hlt nine points in
a row in the last quarter to
boost Utah past Memphis.
Combs hit on three field goalsone a three-polnter-4!nd two
foul shots to give the Stars an
8?~ lead. He finiahed with 31
points and Willie Wise added 21.
Wendell Ladner's 21 points led
the. Pros.

Brilliant.

Region 10
1. Marion Pleasant ; 2. 'Mont.
pelier; 3. Fostoria 51. Wendelin; 4. Monroeville ; 5. (tiel
Marion Catholic and Cory Rawson; 7. Norwalk St. Paul ; 8.

All you do is buy one of our fine suits at the
re gular price and the sport coat is yours . Bear
in mind this is all name brand merchandise, a
rare opportunity to add a fine coat· to your
wardrobe at no cost to you. We have plenty of
slacks. shirts. belts and ties to team up with
your new coat and suit.

(tiel Ada and Hicksville; 10.
MoComb.
~
Region 11
t. Newark Catholic; 2.
Drooksv ill e;

3.

Tuscarawas

Ca tholic; ~. Zanesville Rose·
crans; 5. Ironton Sf. Joseph ; 6.

Come in and see the new patterns in men's
clothing.

Tuscarawas Valley ; 7. Eastern

ARTERS .
.20
MAINPLEASANT
STREET
POINT

MENSWE 'R
;"\

"PLANT''

YOUR
MONEY

here and watch II
"bloom"! ·Earn at our
passbook rate of

4%%
ON
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

IS OPEN
FOR EARLY

Meigs County Bronch of
The Athens County 5avlngs
Co.
296 Second St.

&amp; Loan

SHOPPERS
A big department of famous

Pomeroy, Ohio

Member Federal Home l.orrn
19ank.
Member Federal Savings al
Loan Insurance Corp. AI'
accounts Insured up tq

$20,000.01'
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.

brand toys to brighten any
child's Christmas, at prices to
please any parent. We have a
complete selection of dolls for
every girl . , • trains for boys
and dads. Make. Moore 'Si

Toyland
your
Sa~ta 's
headquarters for one stop
shopping this holiday season .

NEW WINTER

~.:

,_

·~

-c-Q~r

Lay-Away

Plan Is The
Com.enient Way
To Sti)P NCM!

AT

.

PRICES
YOU CAN

BELIEVE
IN!

BUDGET ACCOUNTS ARE CARRIED HERE IN OUR STORE

EbersbCich Hardware

·GE~ERAL nRE SALES

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
·
·
POMEROY, OHIO
:..·'•

6. Mineral Ridg e; 7. M cDonald ;
8. Mogadore; 9. Windham; 10.

or

BOWS, ARROWS, ACCESSORIES

liOW. MAIN

By popular demand we are extending our
sport c oat offer for one week. Come in and
select your fre e coat today .

s. Garrettsv i ll e Garfield :

Class AA
Cl
Regd ioHn 15 N
. 2
1. eve 1an
a
me.
Camptiell Memoria ; 3. Warren.
K~nnedy ; 4. Cloverleaf; 5. Cha.
~rn Falls; 6: Youn~stown
orth ; 7.. Elyna Catho. lc; 8.

-UCENSED GUN DEALERBRO~NING

stone;

· Free Sport Coat

!Meigs ); 8. Millersport; 9.
Amanda Clearcreek ; 10. Scio·
Jewett.
Region 12
1. Covington; 2. Middletown
Fenwick ; 3. Jonathan Alder; 4.
Cedarville; 5. West Jefferson ;
6. Southeastern (Clarki; 7.
Portsmouth Notre Dame ; 8.
5. Princeton; 6. Dayton Patter- Marton Local ; 9. New Boston;
son; 7. Kettering Fairmont 10. Portsmouth East.
West; 8. Kettering Aller; 9.
Kettering Fairmont East; 10.

• Remington •Winchester •Ithaca
• Harrison &amp; Richardson •Mossberg
•Browning
•Gun Cleaning Kits
eGun Oil • Recoii'Pads •Game Bags
• Shell Vests eGun cases
Accessorle!I•Hunters Jackets &amp; Ca~1es~
• H11nting Pants &amp; Caps'·
.
• Rifle Sling Straps • Steel Traps
.

Poland ; 9. Triway ; 10. Cardi·
nat.
6
Re&lt;J;on
1. Ore&lt;Jon
";tritch; 2. St.
Marys Memorial ; J. Columbus
Watterson ; ~ . Napoleon ; 5. Fos·
Ioria
; 6· Columbus
DeSales; 7·
Vermilion;
8. Gibsonburg ; 9.
Columbus Wehrle; 10. Colum.
bus Mohawk.
t. Steuben~~ft~0 ~:ntral Catho.
Iic; 2. Ironton ; 3. New Lexing.
ton; ~. New Concord ~~~nn ; 5.
Barnesvil le ; 6 · Minel&lt;.ya ' 7·
Carrollton; s. Hargville 'La ke;
9. Warsaw ; 10. (tie) Fort Frye,
Gallipolis and Wellsv ille .
t. Spring~:',il~on Sah~wnee; 2.
Madeira ; 3. Mllton·Un ion; 4.
Dayton Jefferson; 5.. Marie·
mont; 6. (tiel Loveland and
Greenon; 8. Valley View; 9.
Tipp City ; 10. Carli sle.
Cia" A
Region 9
1. Lorain Catholic; 2. Smith·
field; J. Smithville; 4. Ken.

Meigs and have lost to the same games in order to match last
two teams, lost to Ironton last year's 8-2 team.
week, 38-3.
The Marauders have a shot at
a tie, but it's rather far .fetched.
Ironton has to lose either to
Jackson this week or to Waverly
the following week. Athens
mu8t lose to eittrer Logan this
week or Wellston the following
week. And, of course, Meigs
must win their final two games;
Logan and Gallipolis. Sound
impossible, well keep your
fingers crossed.
The Blue Devils, winner of
their first five games and loser
of their last two, are still ranked
in the top 20 in AP and UP! stale
polls.
Meigs has been nowhere in
"You
sight all year long in state
rankings. In the computer
always
ratings, the Marauders were
rated a ridiculously low 34th in
get
Region 7 last week. This was
even lower than the 29th ranked .
Warren Local Warriors whom
cold feet!"
the Marauders defeated easily
in a pre-season scrimmage.
Gallipolis was ranked 7th last
Not with reliable oil heat,
you don't! Call' Rizer's Oil,
week by the computer.
phone 992.2 t01 for quality oil
In league statistics released
and prom pt delivery .
this'W.ef:)&lt;, the Marauders still
rank tbe highest in plays from
scrimmage/ They are second in
plays run against them behind
Athens.
·
'. ! Not only will a Marauder loss
knock them out of contention,
buttheymighthavetosettlefor
a second division finish. Meigs
needs to win their final three
. ._ _ _ _ __

Sycamore.

MAYTAG

Red carpet

Second c la ss postage pa id at

992·2709

0

HElPING TO SAFEGUARD HEAlTH

CHANNEL 5

99 2 . 21~6, E d itorial Phone 992 .

~

Tops Region 7

In At 9- 0ut At 5

Middleport &amp; Pomeroy
City Elections

tremendous defensive tackle;
will get the nod if Young isn't
able.
On 1 the other hand, Coach
Jobn Ecker's Blue Devils will
have a healthier Pete Neal, a
great runner and defensive
player. The Gallipolis offensive
punch lacks a great deal
without their ace running back.
The senior halfback has played
the last.two weeks, but started
only last week. The Blue Devils,
who have the same record as

Steubenville

·

On PoinTView Cable TV

'

best rusher, doesn't start, eltber
Tom Cooke or Chuck Faulk will
EASTERN
SOUTHERN
entering the SV AC next season,
By KEITH WISECUP
open for the Marauders. At
OFFENSE
OFFENSE
The Eastern Eagles travel to are coached by John Patton. PLAYER
WT YR
WT YR center, John Grueser, a
E Bob Caldwell
170 t2
E Jim Williams
152 10
Southwestern to battle the They own a 2-5 record .
E Rick ~1\llams 17J 12
E Jay Hill
126 11
Highlanders In a Southern Eastern's opponent, South·
J
Alan
..
Q
.f!r
200
12
T
Ron
Hill
2
40 11
Valley Conference Ult while the western, has a 0-7 slate overall
T Roger Karr
170 11
T Larry Wilcoxen 217 11
orDickSteHier 175 11
G Jim Smith
142 12
surprising Southern Tornadoes and 1).3 In the SVAC. The TorG
Rick
Hauber
175
12
G
Greg
Mlddleswart
play the Symmes Valley nadoes will play the Eagles
, G John Cline
155 12
146 10
Vikings at Symmes Valley in a week after next in the annual
c Tim Gumpf
145 12
C Nell Baker
162 12
,165· 12 QB Vern Ord
129 10
non-league game In area "A" Meigs County showdown. lithe QB Jlm .Amsbary
145 12 . HB Mike Nease
146 11
Tornadoes upset the Eagles, HB Rick Sanders
football Friday night.
HB
Randy
Boring
·.,
1~5
11 · HB Mlfch.Nease
150 9
The Eagles, coached by they can tie for the cham- FB Dennis Eichinger 190 12 F'B Nick Ihie
164 11
DEFENSE
DEFENSE
Roger Kirkhart, are going for pionship with Kyger Creek and
WT YR
.
WT YR
their eighth straight win against the Eagles, provided Southern
E
John
Sheets
170
10
MG
Bill
Cornell
142 12
na defeats. They are on the whips North Gallia the
E Warren C&lt;rlaway 150 12
T Ron Hill
. 240 11
175 11
T Greg Mlddleswart
verge of becoming Eastern's following week in the season's · T Dick Stettler
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Steu.
T Alan Holter
200 12
146 10
first unbeaten or untii!d football finale. Eastern's season ends
10
MG
RlckHauber
175
12
e
Randy
Forbes
145
henville Central Catholic, run·
team In history .- Eastern with the Southern clash.
LB Dennis Eichinger 190 12
E Jim Williams
152 10 away leader in the United
football dates back to 1958. The
LB Alan Duvall
175 11
LB Mike Codner
134 10
CB
Rick
Williams
173
12
LB
Nell
Baker
162 t2 Press International Class AA
Eagles are on top in the SV AC
CB
Tim
Gumpf
145
t2
CB
Jay
Hill
126 11 Board of Coaches ratings, has
with a spotless record in three
HB Bob Caldwell
170 12 CB Nick I hie
164 11 finally made it to the top in
games.
9
HB Rick Sanders
145 12 HB Milch Nease
150
11
its region in the latest compu·
H
B
Mike
Nease
t
46
Coach Bruce Wallace's
ter ratings released WednesTornadoes have a two game
winning streak going. After
time will tell whether I can." day by the Ohio High School
completely healed.
losing their first four en·
This winter he plans to return Athletic Association.
"[ want to play, probably
The Crusaders, who had two
counters, the Wallacemen have
more so than I ever did," Cook to the University of Cincinnati of their seven victories over
jelled. They have whipped
said. "But I'm not going to be a to complete work on a six-year
orit of stale opponents, not
Hannan Trace, 21).6, and South..
fine arts course.
football bum. "
western, 26-14. The Tornadoes
"If It ( th~ arin) comes taken into account by the comCook, a standout at the Univpuler until after the season is
have a 2-1 record in the SVAC;
ersity of Cincinnati and rookie around, I'll be elated,",he said.
over, moved into the top spot
their loss was a heartbreaking
of the year In the American "If it doesn't I'll be in school." on the strength of a 23-8 vic14-12 decision to the Kyger
The Bengals have some real tory over AAA Steubenville Big
Football Conference in 1969, led
Creek Bobcats.
the Bengals to three wins in quarterback miseries, and the
Eastern, having given ·up only
1970. But he was tackled by problems don~ include Cook. Red.
18 points all year was rated 16th
Virgll Carter suffered a dis- The top 10 in each of the 12
Bobby Bell and Jerry Mays of
regions are:
in ''A" ratings this week by the
Kansas City in that third game located shoulder against Green
Class. AAA
AP. This Is believed to be the
and his ann has never been the Bay and has been sidelined the
Reg1on I
highest a SVAC team ever
last three games.
same since.
l .. Warren Har~lng ; 2. Pa r ma
ranked in Ohio. The Eagles CINCINNATI (UP!) - Greg Cook has undergone two
That brought up rookie Ken Senror; 3. Mayf&gt;eld ; 4. Lake·
have a !!).game winning streak Cook, the promising Cincinnati operatlons on the ann and Anderson, but he was injured wood St. Edward ; 5. Warren
West~rn Re~e rve ,· 6. Mentor ; 7.
in the SV AC, dating back to Bengal quarterback who hasn't worked out with the team last last week agsinst Oakland and Garfield
Heights; 8. Bedford '· 9.
early in 1969 when Kyger Creek played since being Injured in sununer. It was thought for a will be out an indeterminate ~l yrla ; 10. Cl eveland Bened1c "
ttne.
defeated them for their only the third game of the 1970 sea- while he might be able to play. amount of time.
Region 2
son,
says
he
wll1
quit
football
So
the
only
player
on
the
team
league loss that yea r, 31).14.
!. Upper Arlington ; 2. Co"Strength
Is
not
a
problem,"
with any signal-calling ex· lumbus Linden ; J. (t iel Toledo
The Vikings, who will he next year if his shoulder is not
he said. "The problem Is the perience is Dave Lewis, the Woodward and Worthington ; 5.
r - - - -- --· -------~:::-:-~:---,1 pain factor . If l can eliminate
Findlay ; 6. (tiel Columbus
punter.
Big C1P1clfy
Northland and Shelby; 8. Port
Maytlg ·
that, I'll be okay,"
·
The news that he will start in Clinton; 9. Bowling Green; 10.
Automotlcs
Pain when he throws will the game Sunday at Houston Toledo Central Cafholic .
2 spetd operation.
Choice of water prevent him from playing in against the Oilers stunned LewRegion 3
1. Ak ron Garfield ; 2. Ma ss il·
temps . Auto.
any games this season, Cook is, who turned 26 on Oct. 16.
water
level
ion ; 3. Lancaster ; 4. Canton
co nt r o 1.
L1n t said, although his doctors are
But he admits "it's something Centra I Catholic; 5. Zanesville ;
Fi ller or Power · optimistic he will eventually be I've always wanted. There's no 6. Barberton ; 7. Perry; 8. New·
Fin Agitator .
ark ; 9. Walsh Jesuit; 10.
Ptrma -Prtn
fine.
doubt about it."
Young.stown Cardinal Mooney.
Ho~•:,t~!at
· "I'm not really discouraged.
Region 4 ,
Quarterback-receiver coach
t. Cincinnati Moefier; 2.
Dryers
Right now I want to come back Bill Walsh said he has "comTroy ; 3. Cincinnati Roger Ba·
Surround clothes
and play and everything. Only plete confidence in Dave."
with gentle, even
con ; 4. Cincinnati St. Xavier ;

Walter Hagen, in 1922, was
the first u.S. golfer to win
the British 0 pen Tourna·
ment.
~~---...~,_-. . .

trump.

RALLY PLANNED
Local talent will participate
in the Sunday School Rally this
Sunday at the Rutland Church
of the Nazarene. There will be
vocal and instrumental numbers during the opening exercises . The recently formed
orchestra. will be play.;ng .
Sunday School starts at 9:30
a.m. A cordial invitation is
.
extended to the pubhc.

Wllllams and Eddie Young.
Mark Werry, a starting tackle,
has been out since the Belpre
game and p-obably won't play
the remainder of the season.
Middle guard Jobn Thomas is
slightly injured but is slated to

~~:~~:n~=;~h:n~~~

Eag.les, Tornadoes Traveling

partner is heading for a s lam,
thi~ will show you are agree ..
able. If not, it tells him not to
worry about spades at three no ..

2157

:;~cttn';!': !',,'d.•s,o.SuSubscrip
tio n·
nday Times
'

Meigs, suffering an embarrasslng- 31.(1 defeat from
Athens last week, lB pretty well
banged~· Doubtful starters for
the Marauders, now 5-2 overall
and 3-2 in league play, are Mark

Devils, who . have the same · the league champion Blue
chance, In the French City Devils last year, 1U, The
Friday night.
· Charles Chancey coached
The MIO'auders have waited Marauders have waited a long
one year and now the time has time for this one. Meigs Is 3-1 in
come.Theywereknockedoffby the all-time series.

rific ."

City Editor
Published daily except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publ is hing company, lll
Cou r t St. , Pomeroy. Oh io,
.45769 . Business Office Phone

Pomeroy, Ohio.
National adve r tising
represe ntat iv e Botfinelli .
Gallagher , In c., 12 East 42nd
St., New York City , New York .
Subscrip t ion rates : De livered by carrier wt'lere
available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carr ier
service not· avallabl~ : One ,
month $1.75 . By rna il in Oh io
w. Va ., One yea r $14.00.
onths 57 .25 . Thr ee

Battere Marau ers Still Long ........hots
By KEITH WISECUP
Tile Meigs Mirauders, still
with a longshot chance of tying
for the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League championship,
will battle the Gallipolis Blue

am

TERmiTE

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ME IGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed .
ROaERTHOEFtiCH , .

,J E~igge!&gt;t ,

it all: Binder's $5,000 was German reparation for
losing his parents in Nazi gas chambers. That's
about the grubbiest swindle of the decade.
Nevada gambling joint owner Bill Harrah is
bucking for the Art;ie Slaw Cup: Bill just was
divorced the third time .... Small bushed-Up (so
far) scandal in the Federal courts: judge, asked
to step down, refused. He was superseded by a
White House ap!Jointment - but the reluctant
jurist refuses to move out or tum over his offic.e
to the lawful successor ..... Advisers are coaxing
him to give in and get out before tbe embarrassing tale wags into headlines.
Playwright ("Brother Rat") and . movie
writer Fred F. Finldehoffe pacted Muhanunad
Ali to narrate a TV series of famous fights ....
Gov. Harriman's Eastside town house is up for
sale at a reduced price .... You'd be amazed at
the borde of doctors whO've applied for China
visas_ to study "acupuncutre"; of course it's a
splendid ploy to make a business trip to an exotic
land that hasn't been open to tourists for
decades.
La Scala restaurant owner ArthurMirlallo's
daughter, Jenelle, and James Sarcone are
hOneymooning in St. Maureen's .... So many
ladies demanded to be permitted into the
Copacabana to see Jack Jones owner Julie
Podell finally relented and now ~ts women
in groups of two and up to attend the dinner show
- only "" Never at midnight.
Recession or no, Manhattan always seems to
be coming up with glittering hopes and plans:
such as Lorna (Mrs. Oliver) Bivins' elaborately
expensive project to be called ''Lolly's Club L,"
.... Lorna Bivins, of the Amarillo, Texas, Bivins,
a lady of iron whim, decided Manhattan's smart
~per Eastside is just the ilpot to open the most
glamorous all-services - a combination clUb,
care, restaurant, swimming pool, health-spa
facilities, a ballroom, three dining roomtt, one
officially for tbe diet-conscious (organic foods),
Mt. Valley water only etc.), hot and cold
whirlpools and every sort of exercise equipment
in the gym, chauffeured limousines always
available, a 90-foot yacht (fully staffed) tied up
nearby in the East River.
This sumptuous cap-Ice will open next
month and herein a few details as to why
how : Her notion solidified, Lorna BivinS simply
bought a pair of expensive Eastside town houses
at 62nd St. and Lexington Ave. (tire Lex. and 135
E. 62n~ ) and went quietly and expensively about
restoring them to the area's fonner elegance and connected them with a huge three.fltory
glass-enclosed roof garden, where a main
ballroom emerged.

•s

-------

The

'

Wonderlands Never Cease

Charter Draped

!

I

Costume prizes were awarded
al a Halloween party of the
Junior Missionary Society of the . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
NORTH ( 0 )
28
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
• AQ97
Church Tuesday in the par·
• 7~
sonage basement.
+A6
Winning the prizes were
ofo QJ1095
Sherrie Clark, the prettiest; WEST
EAST
Joyce Baker, the ugliest; Kathy jfl4
jfl 5
•
AKQJ
1098
.
6
Gill , the most original; and
32
.
Patty Ebli n, the fun ni es!.
• 52
• t09874J
Delores Gill and Penny Eblin ,fo
A
,fo 76~.J2
won the door prizes. Refresh·
SOUTH
me nts were served. Others
• KJ108632
a !lending were Mark and
+KQJ
Belinda Friend, Darla Gill,
ofo
K8
Terry Clark, Laura Russell.
E&lt;tstWest
vul ne r able
Adul ts attending were Mrs.
Seldon Baker, Mrs. Eugene West North East South
Pass 1 •
I ofo
Gill, Mrs. Richard Friend .
~ ·
4.
Pass ~N .T.

Man can live without food
for as long as five weeks but
only four or five days wrth·
Highest rank obtainable in 'out water , accordrng to En·
the Boy Scouts of America cyclopaedia Britannica.
is Eagle Scout, an honor for
which most Scouts strive.
, ~-

:::~-, ... -.

S- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, O., Oct. 28, 19'11

··~-C•o ...

~ N. 2nd Ave.

·.

m :7161

Middleport,

o.

MOORE'SIN.POMEROY
124 W. MAIN

Your Toy Store

Ph. M2-2841
.• ' l

.,

�. I ,

4- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Mldcleport-Pcmeroy, o., on. a. t97I

Pro Standings

Top Teams Will Face Toughies
By GARY KALE
UPI Sporls Writer
Seven of the nation's top 10
college football teams put their
perfect records on the line
Saturday.
Top-ranked Nebraska (7-0)
goes against No. 9 Colorado (61), No. 2 Oklahoma ( 6-0) faces
once-beaten Iowa St. , thirdrated Michigan ( 7-0) clashes
with Indiana, No. 4 Alabama 170) takes on Mississippi St., No.
5 Auburn (6-0 ) meets Florida ,
sixth-ranked Georgia (7-0) tackles South Carolina and seventhrated Penn St. 16-Q ) locks horns
with West Virginia .
No. 8 Arkansas (6-1) plays
Texas A&amp;M and No. 10 Ohio
State (5-l) 1s at Minnesota.
Nebraska meets a tough
Colorado team that suffered its
lone loss at the hands of
Oklahoma . The Cornhuskers,
however, have perfect balance .
Nebraska boasts a defensive
unit that has yielded only 40
points this season.
It's Davis and Johnson
Colorado relies on tailback
Charlie Davis for its ground

game and Ken Johnson for
passing. Cliff Branch and Willie
Nichols handle the receiving.
Oklahoma comes off a record
spree of 711 yards rushing ,
against Kansas State. Iowa St.
can 't. be rated a pushover,
however. The Cyclones have
lost only to Colorado.
The question remains how
many times will Alabama's
Johnny Musso score against
Mississippi St? He has 13
touchdowns in seven games this
yea r and Sl&lt;lte, with its 2-S
record, isn't the kind of team
that can contain Musso 's
rushing game.
Michigan is gunning for a
Rose Bowl berth and the
Wolverine chances of attaining
this goal grow each weekend.
Indiana, this week's oppon e nt ~
poses little threat to the
Michigan express.
Primed For Dogfight
Auburn is primed for an
aerial dogfight with Florida and
the two team pilots have the
ammun ition to carry out . this
battle. Auburn quarterback Pat
Sullivan and Florida signal

caller John Reaves are· among
the nation's total offense
leaders, with Sully accounting
for 1,293 yards and Reaves for
1,149.
Buzy Rosenberg, Georgia 's
little bundle of dynamite, give!
the Bulldogs a potent offensive
weapon with his punt returns .
Rosenberg has a total of 305
yards in this category, lnclud·
ing a 56-yard return last
Saturday against Kentucky.

KNIT SLACKS

Penn State has not lost to
West Virginia since 1~ and
this certainly isn't the year for
the injury-riddled Mountaineers.
Other top games Saturday
include Texas vs. Southern
Methodist, Cornell vs .. Colurn·
bia, Washington vs. UCLA,
Tulane vs. Vanderbilt, Houston
vs. Florida St., Stanford vs.
Oregon St. and Princeton vs.
Brown.

By Col. Mole
Remember Ray Charies• old tune, "Here We Go Again"?
Well, come Friday night, we have the same old tune ringing
from the same old fans, but this lime in a different setting,
Memorial Field. If you haven't guessed what I'm talking about
yet, I'm discussing the always rough and tough gridiron battle
between the Big Blue Machine and the Maroon Warriors of Meigs
County.
Finally, the moment of truth has arrived. Fans from both
counties have been waiting for this one since Oct. 23, 1970. Last
year, Coach John Ecker's Wreckers took Coach Charley Chancey's Marauders, !Ulna close call at Poineroy. _
The Moleman recalls very vividly how last year's game was
abnost the 01Jy talk heard In these parts for months and months.
This year's conversation bas been, to say the least, very quiet. It
must stem from last week's games. Gallipolis is still recovering
from a 38-8 pasting suffered at the hands of the Ironton Tigers
while the Marauders may still be shell shocked over last Friday's
3 1~ bombing at Athens.
What can we expect Friday night? I would say that only two
things are certain, the game will be another hair raiser from the
start and a packed house will overflow Memorial Field.
Major Amos B. Hoople gained one game over the old
Moleman last week. Hoople hit on 13 of 18 predictions. Col. Mole
recorded a poor 12-S-1 mark.
After seven weeks of prognostications, yours truly stands at
91-22-4. Major Hoople is now 85-29-4. How's the ball to bounce this
week '
SEOAL
Athens 13 logan 8.- Bulldogs are very real. Chiefs should be
scalped in move toward the top.

Gallipolis 20 Meigs 20. There's a lot riding on this game but
since both teams are rather evenly matched a tie seems to be the
only thing that might be reasonable, once the dust settles on the
old Chickamauga Friday night.
SVAC
Eastern 48 Southwestern 0. Eagles show why they are still
undefeated.

to
'22.50

New York Clothing House"
"KERM'S KORNER"

r. . .

POMEROY, OHIO
:.:&gt;.lM.-

Colorado
~ll Lay Away Gifts at Goessler's Faces
~~
Nebraska
~
~

By Vnlled Press Intemallonal
Watch out, Oklahoma!
That 's the message our
Midlands regional expert has
for the powerful Sooners'
football team this Saturday
when they tangle with Big Eight
rival Iowa State at Norman,
Okla.
·
The Sooners, railked No. 2
behind Big Eight foe Nebraska
in the weekly ratings, have been
steamroiiing over opponents the
last three weeks and reached a
high of 7~ points against Kansas
State last Saturday. But Iowa
State has lost only once in six
starts and presents a definite
problem for Oklahoma with the
passing of quarterback Dan
Carlson .
Our man doesn't expect tbe
Sooners to lose Saturday, but It
·will be closer than Oklahtlllll
bas become accustomed to this
season.
Among the top 10 only ninth·

·~

,.

&gt;

fsa snap!
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'

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'"'"'' ""'' - ~• o ' I'IJ•&gt;'ror' I&lt;II'&lt;WG o ""''
o•d ~ " '"""" _ , cloto
"'"'I I"""' Mil 1"- lop II'D"' - " ' "ppJo &lt;oo.11.do " pori ol "'" 00&lt;1'01 104.
Go a'*'d. •-:r "'" '"'"" lmo 'oot~ ovt ,., IK'-' to&lt;
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,.., ......... t.ll'old lSOil,
eo.. kOO,
~ (f7 o.,,... Sl !0, Tk&lt;M·Fold t.~191d l l.OO,
lo"U. t.ltldG b .OO, P.U.. ~ llOD,
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PRINCE GARDNER

CERTIFIED WELDER

Portable Equipment

••

r•
••
••

rMffi1W/A~1 Goessler's JEWELRY sroRE
~rt~

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Cleveland Browns veteran Erich
Barnes, relegated earlier this
year to the taxi :;Quad, was
named Wednesday by coach
Nick Skorich as a sU.;·ter at
free safety this Sunday against
Atlanta.
Barnes lost his regular left
cornerback post to_rookie Ciarence Scott this year but continued to practice at all defensive secondary positions.
Barnes will replace Mike
Howell, who is being benched

came
regular
1966. he befor thea first
timein since
"Barnes is a fine leader and
we need a little more leadership in there," Skorich said, remembering last Sunday's 27-0
North Gallia 36 Hannan, W. Va. 0. Pirates continue to have lost to Denver. "We do not feel
good season with well-balanced offense.
Howell has been playing up to
his potential. He hasn't been
Kyger Creek 16 Green 12. Bobcats must bounce back after playing his coverages the way
weak offensive display on their homecoming night.
he had in the past. "
Skorich was more than a litFt. Gay 36 Hannan Trace 0. West Virginians are just too tle angered by the loss and he
much.
said he made his point "strongly and emphatically" at a priSouthern 20 Symmes Valley 8. Tornadoes are looking for their vate team meeting Wednesday.
'I poured salt in their wounds
third straight win after a dismal start.
with
my appraisal," the coach
O'l1IERS
Coal Grove 24 Ironton St. Joe 12
Oak Hill 20 Fairland 8
ranked Colorado is eipected to
Lima 32 Portsmouth 12
lose this weekend, and that's
South Point 21 Matewan 8
only because the Buffaloes go
Pl. Pleasant 16 Ravenswood 0
against
top-ranked Nebraska .
Wshama 21 Spencer 19
The Midwest ·
Nelsonville-York 22 Miller 8
By
ED
SAINSBURY
Belpre 26 Vinton County 6
UP!Cblcago
Notre Dame 21 Navy 0-lrish
can't score much, .but neither
can the Middles.
Northwestern 20 Dlinois 14Wildcats have tougher defense
than Purdue .
Ohio State 42 Minnesota ?Buckeyes want more points
than Michigan.
·

§

P~e~

Shop or Field

Ph. 992-2511

1

Compare

GALLIPOLIS
MEIGS
DEPARTMENT
'TOTAL DEPARTMENT
First Downs
62 First Downs
Opponents
58 opponents
Passing Attempts
M Passing Attempts
Completed
31 . Completlo118
Intercepted
~ Intercepted
293 Passing Yardage
Passing Yardage
Total Yards
117~ Total Yards
Opponents
899 Opponents
Plays
· 252 Plays
Opponents
247 Opponents
.
Friday's opening kickoff is scheduled for 8 p.m.

Social Calendar

TOTAL
67
47
39
17

..TiruRSDAY
.ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 Thursday night at the hall.
Third and fourth degrees to be
conferred. ·
MEIGS COUNTY Cancer
Society Board meeting, 7:30.
p.m. Thursday, at society office, Coal St,_Mlddleport.
HOUDAY Handicraft Club,
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Boolanobile Headquarters .
WilLING WORKERS Class,
Enterpri.Be United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday night at
the borne of Mrs. Beulah Utterbach and Miss Frieda
Lelvlng . Masked Halloween

8
237
1171
820
276
238

76ers Top Cavaliers
ByUnlledPresslnternallonal
Injuries ar~ supposed to slow
athletes down but that wasn't
the case with BiUy Cunningham
and Dave Cowens Wednesday
night as they led their
respectlve teams to victory
despite physical handicaps.
Cunningham, playing with a
bandaged right wrist to protect
a recenUy aggravated bone
chip, poured in 31 points, 10 In
the final period, to spark the
Philadelphia 76ers to a 126-106
win over the Cleveland
Cavaliers.
Cowens, who sat out Tuesday
night's game against New York
with pains in his chest,
returned to action against the
Houston Rockets and grabbed
17 rebounds and added 14 points
to lead the Boston Celtlcs to a
103-97 triUll)ph.
Jo Jo White topped the
CeiUcs with 31 points and John
Havlicek added 21. Secoud-year
pros Rudy

with 2~ and 24 points ,
respectively.
In other National Basketball
Association games, the AUanta
Hawks defeated the New York
~icks, 110.96, and the Baltimore Bullets routed the Detroit
Pistons, 128-98.
Mil Williams, who was
released by New York two
weeks ago, got back at his old' ·
team by scoring 16 points and
feeding off for nine other
baskets to spark the Hawkll to
their second victory In seven
games.
Lou Hudson bad 28 points for
the Hawks to lead all scorers
while Walt Frazier topped the
Knicks with 20.
The Bullets managed their
second win of the season behind
the hot shooting of forward
Jack Marin. Marin scored 11 of
his 26 points in the opening
period and then hit six baskets
In the third period to put the
game on ice. Jimmy Walker led
the Plsio118 with 19

party.
WOMEN'S Christian Temperance Union, Middleport,
home of Mrs. Audrey Miller, 910
Broadway, 8 p. m. Thursday.
FREE CLOTHING day ,
Thursday, 10 a.m. till noon at
SalvatlOI) Army Headquarters,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. All in
need of clothing welcome.
RIO GRANDE College
faculty women's style show for
men and women, 8 p.m.
'l'bursday, coUege dining hall.
Proceeds to club's scholarship
fund . Amy's and HaskinsTanner, GaUipolis, wiU provide
clothing. Refreshments, door
prizes.
FRIDAY
PRACTICE Session by White
Shrine of Jerusalem, 7:30 p. m.
Friday at Odd Fellows Hall,
Pomeroy.
YOUNG PEOPLE of Mt.
Moriah Church of God will
present a play, "U Jesus Came
to Your House ", 7:30 p. m.
Friday. Public invited.

EAT AT THE

said .
"The players have to prove
how badly their pride was
burt," he said. "They found out
they were human and they
were embarrassed. We'll lind
out what they have inside this
Week. "
Atlanta defeated New · Orleans last Sunday, rushing for
a team record of 284 yards for
one game.
The big ground gainer for
the Falcons was Jim Butler,
who gained 144 yards in the

Dairy Isle
Don 't divorce your wife if she
can't cook. Bring her here .

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

Middleport, 0.

g:a:
me·-------""'1'~:::;;:;:::::::::;:::;;:;;;::;;:;::;;~
.

~ . ~...

I

e.y
l.i.ll::O.:O!W j

Barnes To Start

Waverly 18 Wellston 6. Sloemaker's crew came close last
week but fell short. One thing certain tbey haven't given up. Awin
would stop a long losing spell.

I•H SLACKS
Stride Into flared and straight leg styl·
ing. Plaids, !lnpts and solids.
ACIIOI
Wnnklt-free. Slr01 30-38.

•

NBA Stondings
Thursctoy's Gomes
By United.Press International Carolina
at Floridians
Eastern Conference
I Only game scheduled)
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
NHL Stondings
Philadelphia
6 1 .857
By United Press lnternotionol
Boston
·
s 2 .714 1
East
New York
4 4 .500 2lfl'
W. L. T. Pll
Buffalo
2 s .286 4
6 1 2 14
N
ew
York
Central Division
5 1 2 12
W. L. Pet. GB Montreal
5 2 1 11
Boston
Baltimore
2 5 .286
2 3 J 7
Toronto
Atlanta
2 S .286
6
1 7
3
Vancouver
Cleveland
2 6 .25Q 'h
3
7
0
6
Buffalo
Cincinnati
1 4 .200
2
7
0
4
Detroit
Western Conference
West
Midwest Division
W. L. T. Pis
W. L. Pet. GB
Chicago
8 2 0 16
Milwaukee
7 0 1.000
Minnesota
6 1 1 13
Chicago
5 1 .833 l'h
Pittsburgh
5 3 1 11
Detroit
4 4 .500 3'1'
Philadelph ia
J
4 0 6
Phoenix
2 3 .400 4
St . Louis
J 6· 0 6
Pacific Division
2 5 2 6
W. L. Pet. GB California
Los
Angeles
2 7 1 5
Los Angeles
5 1 .833 ...
Wednesday's
Results
Seattle
5 2 .714 v,
Montreal 5 Boston 2
Golden State
3 3 .500 2
Tor
Vancouver 0 (tiel
Portland
1 4 .200 3'h New0York
7 Detroit 4
, Houston
1 7 .125 5
Calif 6 Pittsburgh 4
Wednesday's Results
Minnesota 2 St. Louis 1
Baltimore 128 Detroit 98
Buffalo 3 Los Angeles 2
. Boston 108 Houston 97
(Only games scheduled)
Phila 120 Cleveland 106
Thurscloy's Games
Atlanta 110 New York 9~
California at Boston
(Only games scheduled!
Vancouver at Phtla
Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh at Minnesota
Houston at New York
(Only games scheduled)
Buffalo at Seattle
IOnly games scheduled!
AHL Standings
By United Press International
ABA Standings
East
By United Press International
W. L. T. Pis
East
5 0 1 11
W, L. Pet. GB Boston
4
2
1 9
Nova Scotia
Virginia
s 2 .71 4
.
4
3
1
9
Rochester
Kentucky
32 .6001
3
2
2
8
Springfield
New York
4 3 .571 1
2 4 3 7
Provi.dence
Floridians
3 4 .429 2
West
Pittsburgh
3 4 .429 2
W. L. T. Pis
Ca rolina
2 5 .286 3
Hershey
6 1 1 13
West
4 1 4 12
W. L. Pet. GB Ci ncinnati
Batlimore
3 4 2 8
Indian
5 1 .833 ...
3 5 2 8
Utah
6 3 .61J7 v, Cleveland
Richmond
1 5 1 3
Dallas
3 .4 .429 21,12
Tidewater
t 9 0 2
Denver
2 4 .JJJ 3
Wednesday's Results
Memphis
2 6 .250 4
Hershey 8 Baltimore 3
Wednesday's Results
Providence 2 Rochester 2
Pills 131 Carolina 121
&lt;Only games scheduled)
VirginiallO Kentucky 107
Thursday's Games
Utah 104 Memphis 98
!No
games
scheduled)
t Only games sctteduled I

Ironton 30 Jackson 6. Spears-Boykln combination is hard to
handle. Ironmen just don't have it any longer.

'14.98

1".'iio;,i.!.~:li!T\l.!H
ht

· S-'ftlelldJIIail:ll,Midlll; IO~f,0.. 1lf't.28, 1971 .
.
'
'

. .

" SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party,
Meigs Junior High, Middleport,
Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m. with Jays
emceeing, sponsored by athletic
department.
CO LUMBIA
CHAPEL
Christian Church, Point Rock,
annual fall festival supper
Saturday evenins starting 6
p.m. Public invited.
HALLOWEEN dan ce,
Eastern High School, Saturday,
8:30 to 11 :30 p.m. sponsored by
junior class. Cider and donuts
and spook house to be featured .
Music by Cogswell ConvenUon.
SUNDAY
SMORGASBORD Sunday at
Southern Local High Scbool
from 11 :30 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Adults and high school students,
$2, children $1. All you can eat.
Sponsored by Southern Athletic
Boosters.
MONDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Monday 7:30 p. m. at
high school. All interested
persons are urged to attend.
POMEROY Garden Club,
7:30p. m. Monday a.t the home
of Mrs. J. 0 . Roedel with Mrs.
Irving Karr, Jr., as co-hostess.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF Hall.
Initiatory work will be given
and plans will be completed for
the 59th anniversary observance on Nov. 15.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
Monday, 7:30p.m. at Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social rooms, Mrs. David Entsminger, Mrs. M. C. Wilson and
Mrs. James Arnold, hostesses.

·

,

LONG BO'ITOM - The 75th
birthday of Raymond L. Fitch
and the sevenUl of his granddaughter, De Anna Wills, was
observed Sunday in his home at
Long Bottom. Dinner, cake and
ice cream were served to his
wile, Bessie, and their
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. E. H.
Price , Dana ; Mrs . Joyce
Rldenbaugh, Harold Price and
sons Harold and Dustin ; Mr.
,r"illd Mrs. Willard Pric,e, Janet
~ and Marilyn; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Pratt, Marlene, and

The Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association fall
meeting will be held Saturday,
Nov. 6 at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy .
Mrs. Katherine McCall,
district director ofORTAwUI be
the featured speaker following

All New

Arrivals!

,

her fiance, Tom Armstrong;
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Gluesencamp, Barbara, Jackie, and
her friend, Dan Oberlin; Mr.
and Mrs. Carmel Oiler ·and
Sammy, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wills, Keith and De Anna; and
Mrs. Wilma Tillis, Debra and
Tammy Fitch.
Other guests attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Clint Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Homer lieU and Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Blarm and
family .

the 12:30 p.m. luncheon.
Reports on legislation will be
given and area, state and
district conferences discussed .
Reservations at $2.25 a person
are to be made with Mrs. Anna
Hilldore , 992-~123, Syracuse,
before Nov. 2.

presents:

New Party Dresses
New Pants Suits
New Hot Pants

for Qua/ily·Service
Depe!Jrlability

Here's a new collection you'll want to
see at once . . . many of these were
modeled at the Legion Auxiliary Style
Show . .Come and browse!

r'~~H~A:":v:E~Y~O~U~A~n~E:N;.D~E~D~=====;Lo:o~t~B~a:g~F~If~EiE~w:i;th~a:n~y~Ha:l~lo~w=e:en~P~u~rc~h:a:se~~

NKLIIW"

More direct 'citizen involvement In schools, their
needs and achievements toward
bridging the gap in modern
educationwastheemphasis of a
talk given by Larry Morrison,
assistant superintendent of
schools, at a meeting of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, Tuesday
night.
.
Morrison spoke on American
Education Week and its origin
51 years ago by a joint action of
the American Legion and the
American Education
Association.
·
lnlroduced by Mrs. Russell
Moote,
education
and
scholarship
chairm ~ n.
Morrison stressed the need to
meet the requirements of all
children and said that progress
can be made only through the
cooperative efforts and hard
work of the teaching staff and
parents.
He cited attempts to bridge
the gap in the Meigs Local
School District mentioning
ability
grouping,
level
grouping, summer school instruction, reading ability
grouping, individualized instruction in reading and math,
and programs on special
education.
At the junior high level, he
said remedial reading is the
chief effort being made to
bridge the gap, and commented
on the occupational work experience program in the high
school which is geared for
potential dropouts.
Mrs. Moore reported that in

WHERE YOU ARE ALWAYS
WELCOME!
I

reward for ~er Central Division
•win in .last year's American
Legion Auxiliary program on
education and scholarship. She
donated this to the scholarship
fund.
It was noted that the unit bas
achieved the goal of 1~2
members and Mrs . Harry
Davis, president, presented
Mrs. Ben NeutzUng with a gift
for having secured 41 members.
Mrs. J. M. Thornton was second
with 37 members.
In her report on legislation
affecting veterans, Mrs.
Thornton urged that members
write President Richard M.
Nixon that he use his authority
in converting the Nelsonville
Tuberculosis Hospital into a
Veterans Hospital. Mrs.
Thornton read an article on the
Legion's concern for the
returning Vietnam veteran and
plans were made to contact
disabled veterans to see if there

building on Main St., formerly
occupied by Downie-Cross. The
theme " Bridging the Gap" is
carried out in the display.
M M
ted
th:

, Plans for a therapy program
at the Gallipolis State Institute
were made recently by the Star
Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. C. E. Stout, Albany.
Miss Ruby Diehl reported a
tour of Mrs. Homer Holter's
flower garden. The program at
the meeting conducted by Mrs.
James Nicholson was presented
by Miss Hazel Henson who
discussed leaves' value to the
soil both as a mulch and for
erosion control. She also
commented on the harmful
effects of burning leaves.
Mrs . Lawrence Chapman
talked about Christmas
arrangements and how these
can be made from dried seeds
and pods. Arran1ements
displayed at the meeting were
judged with Mrs. Orion Nelson
taking first, Mrs. G. A.
Radekin, second, and Mrs .
Bessie Stout, third.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Stout. Members answered roll
call by naming their fj!vorite
fall flower. Mrs. Nlch~on led
the group In the collect and
creed. Miss Octa Gillogly, Mrs.
Willlam Gillogly and Lori Ann
Crossan were guests.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. G. A. Radekin was
contributed by Mrs. Nelson.
Mrs. Nicholson won the hostess
prize and closed the meeting
with prayer. Refreshments
were serveil by the hostess.

is ·any help needed in securing
housing and employment.
Again she urged that members
continue writing about humane
treatment for prisoners of war
and spoke on a bill in Congress
regarding add!tional air and
mail
transporta lion
for
veterans in Vietnam .
It
was
noted
that
Congressman Clarence Miller
will supply a flag which has
flown over the White House to
the Auxiliary which will present
it to the Salisbury Elementary
School. A leadership training
school was announced for Nov. 3
at Gallipolis, and parties at
Athens for Dec. 2 arid Dec. 16.
The district party at th'e
Chillicothe Hospital'will be held
on Dec. 9.
Mrs. Catherine Welsh noted
that flowers had been sent to
Mrs. Mary Burkett on her 90th
birthday anniversary. and Mrs.

meeting . Mrs. Clarence
Headley will investigate the
problem of obtaining additional
decorations.
Several years ago the club
took on the project of decorating
the village for the holiday
season and since that time has
added decorations each year.
The Region 11 meeting on Oct.
30 in Gallipolis was discussed
with tentative arrangements

TUPPERS PLAINS - Again
this year the Rose Garden Club
will decorate Tuppers Plains for
the holiday season.
Plans for this project were
discussed by the club recently
afthe home of Mrs. J . S. Davis.
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith, chairman, was asked to begin
planning the decorations and
the assistance needed and
report at the November

First Pair for 89c, Second Pr. 1c. More
1c Sale Men's Socks
Reg. 1.79 Panty Hose
Reg. 1.79 Elmer's Glue, 16 oz.
Washcloths, a 01. Terry
Reg. 3.99 White Toilet Seot
Reg. 49&lt; Onward Envelopes
Reg. 45c SoH Spun Rug Yarn
Reg. ts.aa 7 pc. Coakwa.-. Seh
Chilton Colorful Blkoware
Reg. 2.99 Alum. J pc. Soucepan Set
Reg. 1.99 coveroa ~;aKe l'ons
Reg. 4.99 Hvy. Alum. 11" Sguare Griddle
Reg. 8.99 Laska Eloc. Con Opener
Reg. 5.99 72x90" Neecllewoven Blankets
Reg. 1.99 21•1" Bolster Pillows
Dust-Stop Air FiHers, (4Silesl
Reg. 12.95 Jr. Grandfathtr Elec. Clock •
Reg. 2.99 All Purpose Stools, 21•12"
Values to 1.89 .
Wastebaskets, 36 qt. size
Laundry Baskets, bu.
16 Quart Dish Pa~s
13 Quart Pails

HALLOWEEN
COSTUMES, MASKS,
PARTY GOODS, ETC.
Trick or Treat Candy

2 pr. 90c
·pr. 97c
bot. 99c
pkg. 9. 99c
2.97
27c
skein 27c
9.99

ea. 97c .
1.97
1.27
2.97
5.96
4.97
1.66
Hor$1
9.99
1.99

ea. 97c

97c
97c
97c.

Reg. 5.9524 pc. Stainless Steel Flatware
Reg. 69c Sheared Kitchen Towels
Royal Flush Ptarlng C.. refs
Reg. 5tc-25'•tl 'Diamond Foil
Reg. 65c Shredded Poly Foom
Reg. 1.99 Pillow Tubing to Embroider
Reg. 99c Chlld.-.n's Panty Tights
Stretch'Tights, lnfants6 fa 11 mo.
Reg. 1.29 Cuddle Molt Sllp-Qns, tots 3to 13
Reg. 39c-4-pitet Comb Set
Reg. 1.00 Holr Brushes
·
Reg. 1.29 Curler C..p, bauHanhlza
Reg. 1.00 ShamJOOsf, Rinse, •;, gal.
Reg. 1.00 Bubble Bath, 'h gal.
Reg. 2.29 Mlcrin Mouthwosh, 32 01.
Reg. etc Colgate Dental Croom, 5 oz.
Reg. 89c Hair Sprays, Holo, Lust.-. Creme
· Revlon Lotion, 12 1., Shampoo, 14 01.
Reg. 1.49 Ptavt .. Rubber Glavu
Reg. 1.19 Bathroom Tissue, 10 ralls
Reg. 9,95 Steam VaPO!'IIer
Reg. 12.95 Vaporizor-Humfdifier

Bereans Plan Soup Sale

A donation for layette sets to
be sent to a mission in Rhodesia
was made and plans were
discussed for a soup sale to be
held in November when· the
Loyal Bereans met Tuesday
night at the Middleport Church
of Christ.
Providing layette sets for the
mission is a project of the Loyal
Women's Class with various
Sunday school classes contributing to it. Mrs. Grace
Hawley, president, reported on
the women's retrea t held
recently at Bedford. Mrs. Louis
Triplett, Mrs . Genevieve
Farmer, and Mrs, Minerva
Childers were reported ill.
Members sang "Happy Birthday" to Mrs . Martha Childs,
Mrs. L. R. Wiley, Mrs. Bessie
Ashley, and Bob McElhinny.
Men of the class presented
the devotions and also served
refreshments. Wiley accompanied the group on his
guitar for group singing of
"That Will Be Glory" with
prayer by George Meinhart.

··
Wiley also read the 17th chapter
of Acts from the new translation , " The Living New
Testament", along with a poem,
"Prince of Peace, and a prayer
by Helen Steiner Rice. Marvin
Kelly read "Smile Day ", and
there was a solo, "Let a Smile
CAPPING PLANNED
A demonstration on how to
feed a patient was given by
Debbie Ohlinger, Sheila
Folmer, and Becky Wright at a
recent meeting of the Candystripers
of
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Plans were
made for a capping ceremony
Nov. 15 followed by a tea . The
Halloween theme was carried
out in the decorations and
refreshments served during the
concluding social hour. Becky
Wright presided.
' In .1920 Terence MacSwiney,
lord mayor of Cork, died after
fasting 75 days in a prison cell,
demanding independence for
Ireland.

Grange Has Program
LETART FAUS - Ohio Nature, by Virgil Atkins ; Quiz
Valley Grange No. 2612 of ~ Songs, by Pauline Atkins;
elementary school building
Thursday evening with Worthy
Master Herbert Shields in the
chair. Harrisonville Grangers
were guests and their Lecturer,
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, had the
program using for her theme,
" October ." The program
opened with the song, America,
by the group; . I eadings ,
Columbus Day, by Seth
Nicholson ; Can You Remember
When, by Alice Nicholson; The
Pendulon Period, by Duane
Will; Lazy Man's 23rd Psalm,
by Andy Cros8; In Balance with

c ..

J92-3498

.

.

...
71c
71c
71c

4.9t

U4

Middleport,

o.

HOLIDAY VELVETS
FOR INFANTS - ·
6-18 MONTHS

•

Dresses
Crib Sets
Boys' One
Piece Outfits
LAYAWAY NOW

The Kiddie Shoppe
On The T In Middleport, 0.

Members reported sick were
Bertha Robinson and Robert
Smith. The Ohio Valley Grange
voted to visit Hemlock Grange
on Nov. 6. Refreshments of
potato salad, sandwiches,
cookies, coffee, and ice tea were
served by the Women's Activity
Committee.

GIRLS' WINTER COATS
A great ·selection of wools, blends,
acrylic piles, and other fall fabrics in the
young styles and colors of the season . All
budget priced!

Latch
onto
what's groovy
It's fun fas hion for you all the
way. New moe styling with
the look your go-group
goes for .

IN NAVY AND BROWN
WE STILL HAVE
MANY WONDERFUL
BARGAINS FROM . FIRE SALEI

$AVE

r

,.

KNOWLEDGE

meeting will be held at the home
of Mrs . Frederick Goebel with
Darrell Taylor to present the
program . Refreshments were
served by the hostess.

BAKER
FURNITURE

Falls Around the Farm, by
Norman Will ; If You Must
Worry, by Herbert Shields;
Skit, by Norman and Duane
Will, and Reading by Pauline
Atkins.

$ 95

9tc

57c
llo!;.90c
ea. $1.51
99c
71c

arrangement. The November

SALEM
CENTER
American Education Week will
be observed with an assembly
program at 1:30 Friday afternoon at the Salem Center
Elementary School.
Mrs. Maurita Miller, vocal
music teacher, will have charge
of music to commemorate
Veterans' Day. The program
will consist of choral readings,
poems and other contributions
from the various grades.
Pare nts a re invited to visit
the school either today or
tomorrow. Refreshments will
be served followin g the
assembly program by the PTA .
The opportunity will be
provided for parents to confer
with teachers and to make
classroom visitations. Work of
the children will be on display.

SIZE 4 lHRU 14

71c
97c
Set27c

vention at Lancaster on June I,
and the Girls State Tea in
Pomeroy on June 4.
Plans were made for the
annual turkey dinner to be held
on the fourth Tuesday in
November. Special guests will
be the new members, Etta Mae
Norton, Mary Kauff, Vera
Crow, Chery l Lehew , Ada
Sla ck, Mila Hudson, Ann
Sauva ge, Marjo(ie Hoffner ,
Mary Hasba rgen, Kimberly
Ann Scott and Piersis Scott.
Game party committees
named were Nov. 8, Mrs. Roy
Reuter and Mrs. Moore; Nov.
15, Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Leona
Smith; Mrs. Tiemeyer, Nov. 22,
and Mrs. Welsh and Mrs .
Carolyn Evans, Nov. 29. Edith
Fox , chaplain, gave the opening
prayer.

S. Davis and Mrs. Charles Carr
read the club objectives from
the new program books. She
also presented the program
entitled "Take Your Gardening
Indoors".
Hints for the month were read
by Mrs. James Stout. A blue
ribbon was won by Mrs .
Frederick Goebel for her floral

Program Set

ALSO JACKET STYl£S

13C

Agift will be sent to Mrs. Kay
Nimon, national chaplain, for a
reception planned in November.
Department junior conference
was announced for June 3 at
Ashla nd , the summer con·

·
Be Your Umbrella" by Wiley .
Mrs. Hawley commented on an
article "Are You Soft-Soaping
God".
Mrs . Doris Smith was a guest.
Serving the refreshments were
McElhinny. Meinhart, Kell y
and Wiley.

3.99 .

ea. 57c
deck 25c
47&lt;
2 blgsSt
pr. 1.57

Pomeroy Flower Shop, Francis
Florists, lola 's Beauty Salon,
Elberfelds , Lar.dmark ,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes and
Shammy 's Place for door
prizes; and Citizens National
Bank, Royal Crown Bottling
Co., Werner's Insurance ,
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
Pomer oy National Bank ,
Kroger's, Mrs. Edna Triplett,
Mrs. Margaret Fortune, Mrs.
Pea rl Kn app, Mrs. Eve lyn
Gilmore and Mrs. Tiemeyer for
favors.
She announced that candles
are still being sold and that a
rummage sale will be held Nov.
lt-13 at the Fry building in
Middleport.

•

·~

·THE SHOE 101

UP

It takes years of training and

BEN,FRAN·KUN•
PHONE

made for several members to
attend. Mrs. Grace Stout will
give the club's program on
WMPO Radio on Dec. 6.
Mrs . Carl Barnhill presided at
the meeting with Mrs. R. V.
Weatherman giving devotions.
Members responded to roll call
by giving signs of autumn, and
lhere were comments on the
wonders of na ture. The verse of
the month was given by Mrs. J .

·

MANY FAKE FURS!
what goes
into your,
prescription?

.
Carolyn Miller and Loretta
Tiemeyer
durin g
hospitalization. A planter will
be sent to Mrs. Eloise Hayes, ill
at he!" home in Middleport._A
card and gift will go to William
Grueser who is confined to the
University Medical Center at
Louisville, Ky .
The card party was reported
a success and Mrs. Grace Pratt
expressed appreciation to Bob's
Salad Co. and Mrs. Dorothy
Douglas for food ; Dudley
Florist, Ingels Furniture, Mills
Ceramics, Bargainland, Quality
Print, Baker Furniture, Mid·
dleport Book Store, Village
Pharmacy, the A. and P.,
D1,1tton's Drug, and Bonanza in
Middleport, and Nelson Drug,
Ben Franklin , New York
Clothing, Chapman-Canaday
Shoes, Moore's, K. and C.
Jewelry, Swisher and Lohse,
Fabric Shop, Vaugha n Beauty
Sa lon, Simon's Market ,

Christmas Decoration Project Accepted

~~~:~~~o~c~ee:.
f
a ~~~i~~ Loyal
been placed in the window of the

('
h Btrt
• he/ar1JS
7'.J(th and uevent
'J'
D. tch R ide
Ob'Served at £t
es nee che::· fo;o~ ~~i~:~~
Star Garden
Club Meets

Fall Meeting Is Saturday

BE

More Involvement in Schools Urged

202 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

·

CONVENIENT
LAY-A-WAY PLAN, ETC..
For Any RegLIIar
Or Christmas gifts,

Toys Etc.

.experience to qualify for dis.
pensing drugs. Our pharma-

.

ciets are all registered
State Pharmacy .Board .

by

the

., .

9 til5

dAILY
·9119.
SATUIIMY

Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

. ........ .•
. •.·

-·- . --'&gt;-h-'---'----------...__~-~~- L."----.--

I

�. I ,

4- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Mldcleport-Pcmeroy, o., on. a. t97I

Pro Standings

Top Teams Will Face Toughies
By GARY KALE
UPI Sporls Writer
Seven of the nation's top 10
college football teams put their
perfect records on the line
Saturday.
Top-ranked Nebraska (7-0)
goes against No. 9 Colorado (61), No. 2 Oklahoma ( 6-0) faces
once-beaten Iowa St. , thirdrated Michigan ( 7-0) clashes
with Indiana, No. 4 Alabama 170) takes on Mississippi St., No.
5 Auburn (6-0 ) meets Florida ,
sixth-ranked Georgia (7-0) tackles South Carolina and seventhrated Penn St. 16-Q ) locks horns
with West Virginia .
No. 8 Arkansas (6-1) plays
Texas A&amp;M and No. 10 Ohio
State (5-l) 1s at Minnesota.
Nebraska meets a tough
Colorado team that suffered its
lone loss at the hands of
Oklahoma . The Cornhuskers,
however, have perfect balance .
Nebraska boasts a defensive
unit that has yielded only 40
points this season.
It's Davis and Johnson
Colorado relies on tailback
Charlie Davis for its ground

game and Ken Johnson for
passing. Cliff Branch and Willie
Nichols handle the receiving.
Oklahoma comes off a record
spree of 711 yards rushing ,
against Kansas State. Iowa St.
can 't. be rated a pushover,
however. The Cyclones have
lost only to Colorado.
The question remains how
many times will Alabama's
Johnny Musso score against
Mississippi St? He has 13
touchdowns in seven games this
yea r and Sl&lt;lte, with its 2-S
record, isn't the kind of team
that can contain Musso 's
rushing game.
Michigan is gunning for a
Rose Bowl berth and the
Wolverine chances of attaining
this goal grow each weekend.
Indiana, this week's oppon e nt ~
poses little threat to the
Michigan express.
Primed For Dogfight
Auburn is primed for an
aerial dogfight with Florida and
the two team pilots have the
ammun ition to carry out . this
battle. Auburn quarterback Pat
Sullivan and Florida signal

caller John Reaves are· among
the nation's total offense
leaders, with Sully accounting
for 1,293 yards and Reaves for
1,149.
Buzy Rosenberg, Georgia 's
little bundle of dynamite, give!
the Bulldogs a potent offensive
weapon with his punt returns .
Rosenberg has a total of 305
yards in this category, lnclud·
ing a 56-yard return last
Saturday against Kentucky.

KNIT SLACKS

Penn State has not lost to
West Virginia since 1~ and
this certainly isn't the year for
the injury-riddled Mountaineers.
Other top games Saturday
include Texas vs. Southern
Methodist, Cornell vs .. Colurn·
bia, Washington vs. UCLA,
Tulane vs. Vanderbilt, Houston
vs. Florida St., Stanford vs.
Oregon St. and Princeton vs.
Brown.

By Col. Mole
Remember Ray Charies• old tune, "Here We Go Again"?
Well, come Friday night, we have the same old tune ringing
from the same old fans, but this lime in a different setting,
Memorial Field. If you haven't guessed what I'm talking about
yet, I'm discussing the always rough and tough gridiron battle
between the Big Blue Machine and the Maroon Warriors of Meigs
County.
Finally, the moment of truth has arrived. Fans from both
counties have been waiting for this one since Oct. 23, 1970. Last
year, Coach John Ecker's Wreckers took Coach Charley Chancey's Marauders, !Ulna close call at Poineroy. _
The Moleman recalls very vividly how last year's game was
abnost the 01Jy talk heard In these parts for months and months.
This year's conversation bas been, to say the least, very quiet. It
must stem from last week's games. Gallipolis is still recovering
from a 38-8 pasting suffered at the hands of the Ironton Tigers
while the Marauders may still be shell shocked over last Friday's
3 1~ bombing at Athens.
What can we expect Friday night? I would say that only two
things are certain, the game will be another hair raiser from the
start and a packed house will overflow Memorial Field.
Major Amos B. Hoople gained one game over the old
Moleman last week. Hoople hit on 13 of 18 predictions. Col. Mole
recorded a poor 12-S-1 mark.
After seven weeks of prognostications, yours truly stands at
91-22-4. Major Hoople is now 85-29-4. How's the ball to bounce this
week '
SEOAL
Athens 13 logan 8.- Bulldogs are very real. Chiefs should be
scalped in move toward the top.

Gallipolis 20 Meigs 20. There's a lot riding on this game but
since both teams are rather evenly matched a tie seems to be the
only thing that might be reasonable, once the dust settles on the
old Chickamauga Friday night.
SVAC
Eastern 48 Southwestern 0. Eagles show why they are still
undefeated.

to
'22.50

New York Clothing House"
"KERM'S KORNER"

r. . .

POMEROY, OHIO
:.:&gt;.lM.-

Colorado
~ll Lay Away Gifts at Goessler's Faces
~~
Nebraska
~
~

By Vnlled Press Intemallonal
Watch out, Oklahoma!
That 's the message our
Midlands regional expert has
for the powerful Sooners'
football team this Saturday
when they tangle with Big Eight
rival Iowa State at Norman,
Okla.
·
The Sooners, railked No. 2
behind Big Eight foe Nebraska
in the weekly ratings, have been
steamroiiing over opponents the
last three weeks and reached a
high of 7~ points against Kansas
State last Saturday. But Iowa
State has lost only once in six
starts and presents a definite
problem for Oklahoma with the
passing of quarterback Dan
Carlson .
Our man doesn't expect tbe
Sooners to lose Saturday, but It
·will be closer than Oklahtlllll
bas become accustomed to this
season.
Among the top 10 only ninth·

·~

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PRINCE GARDNER

CERTIFIED WELDER

Portable Equipment

••

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••
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rMffi1W/A~1 Goessler's JEWELRY sroRE
~rt~

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Cleveland Browns veteran Erich
Barnes, relegated earlier this
year to the taxi :;Quad, was
named Wednesday by coach
Nick Skorich as a sU.;·ter at
free safety this Sunday against
Atlanta.
Barnes lost his regular left
cornerback post to_rookie Ciarence Scott this year but continued to practice at all defensive secondary positions.
Barnes will replace Mike
Howell, who is being benched

came
regular
1966. he befor thea first
timein since
"Barnes is a fine leader and
we need a little more leadership in there," Skorich said, remembering last Sunday's 27-0
North Gallia 36 Hannan, W. Va. 0. Pirates continue to have lost to Denver. "We do not feel
good season with well-balanced offense.
Howell has been playing up to
his potential. He hasn't been
Kyger Creek 16 Green 12. Bobcats must bounce back after playing his coverages the way
weak offensive display on their homecoming night.
he had in the past. "
Skorich was more than a litFt. Gay 36 Hannan Trace 0. West Virginians are just too tle angered by the loss and he
much.
said he made his point "strongly and emphatically" at a priSouthern 20 Symmes Valley 8. Tornadoes are looking for their vate team meeting Wednesday.
'I poured salt in their wounds
third straight win after a dismal start.
with
my appraisal," the coach
O'l1IERS
Coal Grove 24 Ironton St. Joe 12
Oak Hill 20 Fairland 8
ranked Colorado is eipected to
Lima 32 Portsmouth 12
lose this weekend, and that's
South Point 21 Matewan 8
only because the Buffaloes go
Pl. Pleasant 16 Ravenswood 0
against
top-ranked Nebraska .
Wshama 21 Spencer 19
The Midwest ·
Nelsonville-York 22 Miller 8
By
ED
SAINSBURY
Belpre 26 Vinton County 6
UP!Cblcago
Notre Dame 21 Navy 0-lrish
can't score much, .but neither
can the Middles.
Northwestern 20 Dlinois 14Wildcats have tougher defense
than Purdue .
Ohio State 42 Minnesota ?Buckeyes want more points
than Michigan.
·

§

P~e~

Shop or Field

Ph. 992-2511

1

Compare

GALLIPOLIS
MEIGS
DEPARTMENT
'TOTAL DEPARTMENT
First Downs
62 First Downs
Opponents
58 opponents
Passing Attempts
M Passing Attempts
Completed
31 . Completlo118
Intercepted
~ Intercepted
293 Passing Yardage
Passing Yardage
Total Yards
117~ Total Yards
Opponents
899 Opponents
Plays
· 252 Plays
Opponents
247 Opponents
.
Friday's opening kickoff is scheduled for 8 p.m.

Social Calendar

TOTAL
67
47
39
17

..TiruRSDAY
.ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 Thursday night at the hall.
Third and fourth degrees to be
conferred. ·
MEIGS COUNTY Cancer
Society Board meeting, 7:30.
p.m. Thursday, at society office, Coal St,_Mlddleport.
HOUDAY Handicraft Club,
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Boolanobile Headquarters .
WilLING WORKERS Class,
Enterpri.Be United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday night at
the borne of Mrs. Beulah Utterbach and Miss Frieda
Lelvlng . Masked Halloween

8
237
1171
820
276
238

76ers Top Cavaliers
ByUnlledPresslnternallonal
Injuries ar~ supposed to slow
athletes down but that wasn't
the case with BiUy Cunningham
and Dave Cowens Wednesday
night as they led their
respectlve teams to victory
despite physical handicaps.
Cunningham, playing with a
bandaged right wrist to protect
a recenUy aggravated bone
chip, poured in 31 points, 10 In
the final period, to spark the
Philadelphia 76ers to a 126-106
win over the Cleveland
Cavaliers.
Cowens, who sat out Tuesday
night's game against New York
with pains in his chest,
returned to action against the
Houston Rockets and grabbed
17 rebounds and added 14 points
to lead the Boston Celtlcs to a
103-97 triUll)ph.
Jo Jo White topped the
CeiUcs with 31 points and John
Havlicek added 21. Secoud-year
pros Rudy

with 2~ and 24 points ,
respectively.
In other National Basketball
Association games, the AUanta
Hawks defeated the New York
~icks, 110.96, and the Baltimore Bullets routed the Detroit
Pistons, 128-98.
Mil Williams, who was
released by New York two
weeks ago, got back at his old' ·
team by scoring 16 points and
feeding off for nine other
baskets to spark the Hawkll to
their second victory In seven
games.
Lou Hudson bad 28 points for
the Hawks to lead all scorers
while Walt Frazier topped the
Knicks with 20.
The Bullets managed their
second win of the season behind
the hot shooting of forward
Jack Marin. Marin scored 11 of
his 26 points in the opening
period and then hit six baskets
In the third period to put the
game on ice. Jimmy Walker led
the Plsio118 with 19

party.
WOMEN'S Christian Temperance Union, Middleport,
home of Mrs. Audrey Miller, 910
Broadway, 8 p. m. Thursday.
FREE CLOTHING day ,
Thursday, 10 a.m. till noon at
SalvatlOI) Army Headquarters,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. All in
need of clothing welcome.
RIO GRANDE College
faculty women's style show for
men and women, 8 p.m.
'l'bursday, coUege dining hall.
Proceeds to club's scholarship
fund . Amy's and HaskinsTanner, GaUipolis, wiU provide
clothing. Refreshments, door
prizes.
FRIDAY
PRACTICE Session by White
Shrine of Jerusalem, 7:30 p. m.
Friday at Odd Fellows Hall,
Pomeroy.
YOUNG PEOPLE of Mt.
Moriah Church of God will
present a play, "U Jesus Came
to Your House ", 7:30 p. m.
Friday. Public invited.

EAT AT THE

said .
"The players have to prove
how badly their pride was
burt," he said. "They found out
they were human and they
were embarrassed. We'll lind
out what they have inside this
Week. "
Atlanta defeated New · Orleans last Sunday, rushing for
a team record of 284 yards for
one game.
The big ground gainer for
the Falcons was Jim Butler,
who gained 144 yards in the

Dairy Isle
Don 't divorce your wife if she
can't cook. Bring her here .

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

Middleport, 0.

g:a:
me·-------""'1'~:::;;:;:::::::::;:::;;:;;;::;;:;::;;~
.

~ . ~...

I

e.y
l.i.ll::O.:O!W j

Barnes To Start

Waverly 18 Wellston 6. Sloemaker's crew came close last
week but fell short. One thing certain tbey haven't given up. Awin
would stop a long losing spell.

I•H SLACKS
Stride Into flared and straight leg styl·
ing. Plaids, !lnpts and solids.
ACIIOI
Wnnklt-free. Slr01 30-38.

•

NBA Stondings
Thursctoy's Gomes
By United.Press International Carolina
at Floridians
Eastern Conference
I Only game scheduled)
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
NHL Stondings
Philadelphia
6 1 .857
By United Press lnternotionol
Boston
·
s 2 .714 1
East
New York
4 4 .500 2lfl'
W. L. T. Pll
Buffalo
2 s .286 4
6 1 2 14
N
ew
York
Central Division
5 1 2 12
W. L. Pet. GB Montreal
5 2 1 11
Boston
Baltimore
2 5 .286
2 3 J 7
Toronto
Atlanta
2 S .286
6
1 7
3
Vancouver
Cleveland
2 6 .25Q 'h
3
7
0
6
Buffalo
Cincinnati
1 4 .200
2
7
0
4
Detroit
Western Conference
West
Midwest Division
W. L. T. Pis
W. L. Pet. GB
Chicago
8 2 0 16
Milwaukee
7 0 1.000
Minnesota
6 1 1 13
Chicago
5 1 .833 l'h
Pittsburgh
5 3 1 11
Detroit
4 4 .500 3'1'
Philadelph ia
J
4 0 6
Phoenix
2 3 .400 4
St . Louis
J 6· 0 6
Pacific Division
2 5 2 6
W. L. Pet. GB California
Los
Angeles
2 7 1 5
Los Angeles
5 1 .833 ...
Wednesday's
Results
Seattle
5 2 .714 v,
Montreal 5 Boston 2
Golden State
3 3 .500 2
Tor
Vancouver 0 (tiel
Portland
1 4 .200 3'h New0York
7 Detroit 4
, Houston
1 7 .125 5
Calif 6 Pittsburgh 4
Wednesday's Results
Minnesota 2 St. Louis 1
Baltimore 128 Detroit 98
Buffalo 3 Los Angeles 2
. Boston 108 Houston 97
(Only games scheduled)
Phila 120 Cleveland 106
Thurscloy's Games
Atlanta 110 New York 9~
California at Boston
(Only games scheduled!
Vancouver at Phtla
Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh at Minnesota
Houston at New York
(Only games scheduled)
Buffalo at Seattle
IOnly games scheduled!
AHL Standings
By United Press International
ABA Standings
East
By United Press International
W. L. T. Pis
East
5 0 1 11
W, L. Pet. GB Boston
4
2
1 9
Nova Scotia
Virginia
s 2 .71 4
.
4
3
1
9
Rochester
Kentucky
32 .6001
3
2
2
8
Springfield
New York
4 3 .571 1
2 4 3 7
Provi.dence
Floridians
3 4 .429 2
West
Pittsburgh
3 4 .429 2
W. L. T. Pis
Ca rolina
2 5 .286 3
Hershey
6 1 1 13
West
4 1 4 12
W. L. Pet. GB Ci ncinnati
Batlimore
3 4 2 8
Indian
5 1 .833 ...
3 5 2 8
Utah
6 3 .61J7 v, Cleveland
Richmond
1 5 1 3
Dallas
3 .4 .429 21,12
Tidewater
t 9 0 2
Denver
2 4 .JJJ 3
Wednesday's Results
Memphis
2 6 .250 4
Hershey 8 Baltimore 3
Wednesday's Results
Providence 2 Rochester 2
Pills 131 Carolina 121
&lt;Only games scheduled)
VirginiallO Kentucky 107
Thursday's Games
Utah 104 Memphis 98
!No
games
scheduled)
t Only games sctteduled I

Ironton 30 Jackson 6. Spears-Boykln combination is hard to
handle. Ironmen just don't have it any longer.

'14.98

1".'iio;,i.!.~:li!T\l.!H
ht

· S-'ftlelldJIIail:ll,Midlll; IO~f,0.. 1lf't.28, 1971 .
.
'
'

. .

" SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party,
Meigs Junior High, Middleport,
Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m. with Jays
emceeing, sponsored by athletic
department.
CO LUMBIA
CHAPEL
Christian Church, Point Rock,
annual fall festival supper
Saturday evenins starting 6
p.m. Public invited.
HALLOWEEN dan ce,
Eastern High School, Saturday,
8:30 to 11 :30 p.m. sponsored by
junior class. Cider and donuts
and spook house to be featured .
Music by Cogswell ConvenUon.
SUNDAY
SMORGASBORD Sunday at
Southern Local High Scbool
from 11 :30 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Adults and high school students,
$2, children $1. All you can eat.
Sponsored by Southern Athletic
Boosters.
MONDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Monday 7:30 p. m. at
high school. All interested
persons are urged to attend.
POMEROY Garden Club,
7:30p. m. Monday a.t the home
of Mrs. J. 0 . Roedel with Mrs.
Irving Karr, Jr., as co-hostess.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Monday night at the IOOF Hall.
Initiatory work will be given
and plans will be completed for
the 59th anniversary observance on Nov. 15.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
Monday, 7:30p.m. at Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social rooms, Mrs. David Entsminger, Mrs. M. C. Wilson and
Mrs. James Arnold, hostesses.

·

,

LONG BO'ITOM - The 75th
birthday of Raymond L. Fitch
and the sevenUl of his granddaughter, De Anna Wills, was
observed Sunday in his home at
Long Bottom. Dinner, cake and
ice cream were served to his
wile, Bessie, and their
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. E. H.
Price , Dana ; Mrs . Joyce
Rldenbaugh, Harold Price and
sons Harold and Dustin ; Mr.
,r"illd Mrs. Willard Pric,e, Janet
~ and Marilyn; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Pratt, Marlene, and

The Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association fall
meeting will be held Saturday,
Nov. 6 at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy .
Mrs. Katherine McCall,
district director ofORTAwUI be
the featured speaker following

All New

Arrivals!

,

her fiance, Tom Armstrong;
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Gluesencamp, Barbara, Jackie, and
her friend, Dan Oberlin; Mr.
and Mrs. Carmel Oiler ·and
Sammy, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wills, Keith and De Anna; and
Mrs. Wilma Tillis, Debra and
Tammy Fitch.
Other guests attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Clint Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Homer lieU and Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Blarm and
family .

the 12:30 p.m. luncheon.
Reports on legislation will be
given and area, state and
district conferences discussed .
Reservations at $2.25 a person
are to be made with Mrs. Anna
Hilldore , 992-~123, Syracuse,
before Nov. 2.

presents:

New Party Dresses
New Pants Suits
New Hot Pants

for Qua/ily·Service
Depe!Jrlability

Here's a new collection you'll want to
see at once . . . many of these were
modeled at the Legion Auxiliary Style
Show . .Come and browse!

r'~~H~A:":v:E~Y~O~U~A~n~E:N;.D~E~D~=====;Lo:o~t~B~a:g~F~If~EiE~w:i;th~a:n~y~Ha:l~lo~w=e:en~P~u~rc~h:a:se~~

NKLIIW"

More direct 'citizen involvement In schools, their
needs and achievements toward
bridging the gap in modern
educationwastheemphasis of a
talk given by Larry Morrison,
assistant superintendent of
schools, at a meeting of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, Tuesday
night.
.
Morrison spoke on American
Education Week and its origin
51 years ago by a joint action of
the American Legion and the
American Education
Association.
·
lnlroduced by Mrs. Russell
Moote,
education
and
scholarship
chairm ~ n.
Morrison stressed the need to
meet the requirements of all
children and said that progress
can be made only through the
cooperative efforts and hard
work of the teaching staff and
parents.
He cited attempts to bridge
the gap in the Meigs Local
School District mentioning
ability
grouping,
level
grouping, summer school instruction, reading ability
grouping, individualized instruction in reading and math,
and programs on special
education.
At the junior high level, he
said remedial reading is the
chief effort being made to
bridge the gap, and commented
on the occupational work experience program in the high
school which is geared for
potential dropouts.
Mrs. Moore reported that in

WHERE YOU ARE ALWAYS
WELCOME!
I

reward for ~er Central Division
•win in .last year's American
Legion Auxiliary program on
education and scholarship. She
donated this to the scholarship
fund.
It was noted that the unit bas
achieved the goal of 1~2
members and Mrs . Harry
Davis, president, presented
Mrs. Ben NeutzUng with a gift
for having secured 41 members.
Mrs. J. M. Thornton was second
with 37 members.
In her report on legislation
affecting veterans, Mrs.
Thornton urged that members
write President Richard M.
Nixon that he use his authority
in converting the Nelsonville
Tuberculosis Hospital into a
Veterans Hospital. Mrs.
Thornton read an article on the
Legion's concern for the
returning Vietnam veteran and
plans were made to contact
disabled veterans to see if there

building on Main St., formerly
occupied by Downie-Cross. The
theme " Bridging the Gap" is
carried out in the display.
M M
ted
th:

, Plans for a therapy program
at the Gallipolis State Institute
were made recently by the Star
Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. C. E. Stout, Albany.
Miss Ruby Diehl reported a
tour of Mrs. Homer Holter's
flower garden. The program at
the meeting conducted by Mrs.
James Nicholson was presented
by Miss Hazel Henson who
discussed leaves' value to the
soil both as a mulch and for
erosion control. She also
commented on the harmful
effects of burning leaves.
Mrs . Lawrence Chapman
talked about Christmas
arrangements and how these
can be made from dried seeds
and pods. Arran1ements
displayed at the meeting were
judged with Mrs. Orion Nelson
taking first, Mrs. G. A.
Radekin, second, and Mrs .
Bessie Stout, third.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Stout. Members answered roll
call by naming their fj!vorite
fall flower. Mrs. Nlch~on led
the group In the collect and
creed. Miss Octa Gillogly, Mrs.
Willlam Gillogly and Lori Ann
Crossan were guests.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. G. A. Radekin was
contributed by Mrs. Nelson.
Mrs. Nicholson won the hostess
prize and closed the meeting
with prayer. Refreshments
were serveil by the hostess.

is ·any help needed in securing
housing and employment.
Again she urged that members
continue writing about humane
treatment for prisoners of war
and spoke on a bill in Congress
regarding add!tional air and
mail
transporta lion
for
veterans in Vietnam .
It
was
noted
that
Congressman Clarence Miller
will supply a flag which has
flown over the White House to
the Auxiliary which will present
it to the Salisbury Elementary
School. A leadership training
school was announced for Nov. 3
at Gallipolis, and parties at
Athens for Dec. 2 arid Dec. 16.
The district party at th'e
Chillicothe Hospital'will be held
on Dec. 9.
Mrs. Catherine Welsh noted
that flowers had been sent to
Mrs. Mary Burkett on her 90th
birthday anniversary. and Mrs.

meeting . Mrs. Clarence
Headley will investigate the
problem of obtaining additional
decorations.
Several years ago the club
took on the project of decorating
the village for the holiday
season and since that time has
added decorations each year.
The Region 11 meeting on Oct.
30 in Gallipolis was discussed
with tentative arrangements

TUPPERS PLAINS - Again
this year the Rose Garden Club
will decorate Tuppers Plains for
the holiday season.
Plans for this project were
discussed by the club recently
afthe home of Mrs. J . S. Davis.
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith, chairman, was asked to begin
planning the decorations and
the assistance needed and
report at the November

First Pair for 89c, Second Pr. 1c. More
1c Sale Men's Socks
Reg. 1.79 Panty Hose
Reg. 1.79 Elmer's Glue, 16 oz.
Washcloths, a 01. Terry
Reg. 3.99 White Toilet Seot
Reg. 49&lt; Onward Envelopes
Reg. 45c SoH Spun Rug Yarn
Reg. ts.aa 7 pc. Coakwa.-. Seh
Chilton Colorful Blkoware
Reg. 2.99 Alum. J pc. Soucepan Set
Reg. 1.99 coveroa ~;aKe l'ons
Reg. 4.99 Hvy. Alum. 11" Sguare Griddle
Reg. 8.99 Laska Eloc. Con Opener
Reg. 5.99 72x90" Neecllewoven Blankets
Reg. 1.99 21•1" Bolster Pillows
Dust-Stop Air FiHers, (4Silesl
Reg. 12.95 Jr. Grandfathtr Elec. Clock •
Reg. 2.99 All Purpose Stools, 21•12"
Values to 1.89 .
Wastebaskets, 36 qt. size
Laundry Baskets, bu.
16 Quart Dish Pa~s
13 Quart Pails

HALLOWEEN
COSTUMES, MASKS,
PARTY GOODS, ETC.
Trick or Treat Candy

2 pr. 90c
·pr. 97c
bot. 99c
pkg. 9. 99c
2.97
27c
skein 27c
9.99

ea. 97c .
1.97
1.27
2.97
5.96
4.97
1.66
Hor$1
9.99
1.99

ea. 97c

97c
97c
97c.

Reg. 5.9524 pc. Stainless Steel Flatware
Reg. 69c Sheared Kitchen Towels
Royal Flush Ptarlng C.. refs
Reg. 5tc-25'•tl 'Diamond Foil
Reg. 65c Shredded Poly Foom
Reg. 1.99 Pillow Tubing to Embroider
Reg. 99c Chlld.-.n's Panty Tights
Stretch'Tights, lnfants6 fa 11 mo.
Reg. 1.29 Cuddle Molt Sllp-Qns, tots 3to 13
Reg. 39c-4-pitet Comb Set
Reg. 1.00 Holr Brushes
·
Reg. 1.29 Curler C..p, bauHanhlza
Reg. 1.00 ShamJOOsf, Rinse, •;, gal.
Reg. 1.00 Bubble Bath, 'h gal.
Reg. 2.29 Mlcrin Mouthwosh, 32 01.
Reg. etc Colgate Dental Croom, 5 oz.
Reg. 89c Hair Sprays, Holo, Lust.-. Creme
· Revlon Lotion, 12 1., Shampoo, 14 01.
Reg. 1.49 Ptavt .. Rubber Glavu
Reg. 1.19 Bathroom Tissue, 10 ralls
Reg. 9,95 Steam VaPO!'IIer
Reg. 12.95 Vaporizor-Humfdifier

Bereans Plan Soup Sale

A donation for layette sets to
be sent to a mission in Rhodesia
was made and plans were
discussed for a soup sale to be
held in November when· the
Loyal Bereans met Tuesday
night at the Middleport Church
of Christ.
Providing layette sets for the
mission is a project of the Loyal
Women's Class with various
Sunday school classes contributing to it. Mrs. Grace
Hawley, president, reported on
the women's retrea t held
recently at Bedford. Mrs. Louis
Triplett, Mrs . Genevieve
Farmer, and Mrs, Minerva
Childers were reported ill.
Members sang "Happy Birthday" to Mrs . Martha Childs,
Mrs. L. R. Wiley, Mrs. Bessie
Ashley, and Bob McElhinny.
Men of the class presented
the devotions and also served
refreshments. Wiley accompanied the group on his
guitar for group singing of
"That Will Be Glory" with
prayer by George Meinhart.

··
Wiley also read the 17th chapter
of Acts from the new translation , " The Living New
Testament", along with a poem,
"Prince of Peace, and a prayer
by Helen Steiner Rice. Marvin
Kelly read "Smile Day ", and
there was a solo, "Let a Smile
CAPPING PLANNED
A demonstration on how to
feed a patient was given by
Debbie Ohlinger, Sheila
Folmer, and Becky Wright at a
recent meeting of the Candystripers
of
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Plans were
made for a capping ceremony
Nov. 15 followed by a tea . The
Halloween theme was carried
out in the decorations and
refreshments served during the
concluding social hour. Becky
Wright presided.
' In .1920 Terence MacSwiney,
lord mayor of Cork, died after
fasting 75 days in a prison cell,
demanding independence for
Ireland.

Grange Has Program
LETART FAUS - Ohio Nature, by Virgil Atkins ; Quiz
Valley Grange No. 2612 of ~ Songs, by Pauline Atkins;
elementary school building
Thursday evening with Worthy
Master Herbert Shields in the
chair. Harrisonville Grangers
were guests and their Lecturer,
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, had the
program using for her theme,
" October ." The program
opened with the song, America,
by the group; . I eadings ,
Columbus Day, by Seth
Nicholson ; Can You Remember
When, by Alice Nicholson; The
Pendulon Period, by Duane
Will; Lazy Man's 23rd Psalm,
by Andy Cros8; In Balance with

c ..

J92-3498

.

.

...
71c
71c
71c

4.9t

U4

Middleport,

o.

HOLIDAY VELVETS
FOR INFANTS - ·
6-18 MONTHS

•

Dresses
Crib Sets
Boys' One
Piece Outfits
LAYAWAY NOW

The Kiddie Shoppe
On The T In Middleport, 0.

Members reported sick were
Bertha Robinson and Robert
Smith. The Ohio Valley Grange
voted to visit Hemlock Grange
on Nov. 6. Refreshments of
potato salad, sandwiches,
cookies, coffee, and ice tea were
served by the Women's Activity
Committee.

GIRLS' WINTER COATS
A great ·selection of wools, blends,
acrylic piles, and other fall fabrics in the
young styles and colors of the season . All
budget priced!

Latch
onto
what's groovy
It's fun fas hion for you all the
way. New moe styling with
the look your go-group
goes for .

IN NAVY AND BROWN
WE STILL HAVE
MANY WONDERFUL
BARGAINS FROM . FIRE SALEI

$AVE

r

,.

KNOWLEDGE

meeting will be held at the home
of Mrs . Frederick Goebel with
Darrell Taylor to present the
program . Refreshments were
served by the hostess.

BAKER
FURNITURE

Falls Around the Farm, by
Norman Will ; If You Must
Worry, by Herbert Shields;
Skit, by Norman and Duane
Will, and Reading by Pauline
Atkins.

$ 95

9tc

57c
llo!;.90c
ea. $1.51
99c
71c

arrangement. The November

SALEM
CENTER
American Education Week will
be observed with an assembly
program at 1:30 Friday afternoon at the Salem Center
Elementary School.
Mrs. Maurita Miller, vocal
music teacher, will have charge
of music to commemorate
Veterans' Day. The program
will consist of choral readings,
poems and other contributions
from the various grades.
Pare nts a re invited to visit
the school either today or
tomorrow. Refreshments will
be served followin g the
assembly program by the PTA .
The opportunity will be
provided for parents to confer
with teachers and to make
classroom visitations. Work of
the children will be on display.

SIZE 4 lHRU 14

71c
97c
Set27c

vention at Lancaster on June I,
and the Girls State Tea in
Pomeroy on June 4.
Plans were made for the
annual turkey dinner to be held
on the fourth Tuesday in
November. Special guests will
be the new members, Etta Mae
Norton, Mary Kauff, Vera
Crow, Chery l Lehew , Ada
Sla ck, Mila Hudson, Ann
Sauva ge, Marjo(ie Hoffner ,
Mary Hasba rgen, Kimberly
Ann Scott and Piersis Scott.
Game party committees
named were Nov. 8, Mrs. Roy
Reuter and Mrs. Moore; Nov.
15, Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Leona
Smith; Mrs. Tiemeyer, Nov. 22,
and Mrs. Welsh and Mrs .
Carolyn Evans, Nov. 29. Edith
Fox , chaplain, gave the opening
prayer.

S. Davis and Mrs. Charles Carr
read the club objectives from
the new program books. She
also presented the program
entitled "Take Your Gardening
Indoors".
Hints for the month were read
by Mrs. James Stout. A blue
ribbon was won by Mrs .
Frederick Goebel for her floral

Program Set

ALSO JACKET STYl£S

13C

Agift will be sent to Mrs. Kay
Nimon, national chaplain, for a
reception planned in November.
Department junior conference
was announced for June 3 at
Ashla nd , the summer con·

·
Be Your Umbrella" by Wiley .
Mrs. Hawley commented on an
article "Are You Soft-Soaping
God".
Mrs . Doris Smith was a guest.
Serving the refreshments were
McElhinny. Meinhart, Kell y
and Wiley.

3.99 .

ea. 57c
deck 25c
47&lt;
2 blgsSt
pr. 1.57

Pomeroy Flower Shop, Francis
Florists, lola 's Beauty Salon,
Elberfelds , Lar.dmark ,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes and
Shammy 's Place for door
prizes; and Citizens National
Bank, Royal Crown Bottling
Co., Werner's Insurance ,
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
Pomer oy National Bank ,
Kroger's, Mrs. Edna Triplett,
Mrs. Margaret Fortune, Mrs.
Pea rl Kn app, Mrs. Eve lyn
Gilmore and Mrs. Tiemeyer for
favors.
She announced that candles
are still being sold and that a
rummage sale will be held Nov.
lt-13 at the Fry building in
Middleport.

•

·~

·THE SHOE 101

UP

It takes years of training and

BEN,FRAN·KUN•
PHONE

made for several members to
attend. Mrs. Grace Stout will
give the club's program on
WMPO Radio on Dec. 6.
Mrs . Carl Barnhill presided at
the meeting with Mrs. R. V.
Weatherman giving devotions.
Members responded to roll call
by giving signs of autumn, and
lhere were comments on the
wonders of na ture. The verse of
the month was given by Mrs. J .

·

MANY FAKE FURS!
what goes
into your,
prescription?

.
Carolyn Miller and Loretta
Tiemeyer
durin g
hospitalization. A planter will
be sent to Mrs. Eloise Hayes, ill
at he!" home in Middleport._A
card and gift will go to William
Grueser who is confined to the
University Medical Center at
Louisville, Ky .
The card party was reported
a success and Mrs. Grace Pratt
expressed appreciation to Bob's
Salad Co. and Mrs. Dorothy
Douglas for food ; Dudley
Florist, Ingels Furniture, Mills
Ceramics, Bargainland, Quality
Print, Baker Furniture, Mid·
dleport Book Store, Village
Pharmacy, the A. and P.,
D1,1tton's Drug, and Bonanza in
Middleport, and Nelson Drug,
Ben Franklin , New York
Clothing, Chapman-Canaday
Shoes, Moore's, K. and C.
Jewelry, Swisher and Lohse,
Fabric Shop, Vaugha n Beauty
Sa lon, Simon's Market ,

Christmas Decoration Project Accepted

~~~:~~~o~c~ee:.
f
a ~~~i~~ Loyal
been placed in the window of the

('
h Btrt
• he/ar1JS
7'.J(th and uevent
'J'
D. tch R ide
Ob'Served at £t
es nee che::· fo;o~ ~~i~:~~
Star Garden
Club Meets

Fall Meeting Is Saturday

BE

More Involvement in Schools Urged

202 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

·

CONVENIENT
LAY-A-WAY PLAN, ETC..
For Any RegLIIar
Or Christmas gifts,

Toys Etc.

.experience to qualify for dis.
pensing drugs. Our pharma-

.

ciets are all registered
State Pharmacy .Board .

by

the

., .

9 til5

dAILY
·9119.
SATUIIMY

Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

. ........ .•
. •.·

-·- . --'&gt;-h-'---'----------...__~-~~- L."----.--

I

�1-Tbe DIOy Sentinel, Mldclepwt·PomMy, 0., Oct. Jl. It'll

-Drugs Fight Clarified

News .. ~in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)

. Jury Seated ·in $40,()(}() Case
Jutors were beins seated
today in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to hear the case of
William A. Shiflet, Canal
Winchester, versus Edison
Hobstetter, administrator of the
estate of the late Fred A. Shiflet
in the amount of $40,000 plus
interest and costs.
The amount is being asked by

7-The DaUy Sentiilei, Middleport·Pomeroy, o., Oct. 28 , 1971

MEETING SET
The Meigs County American
Red Cross Chapter will meet at
7, 30 p.m. next Thursday, Nov.
4• In the cafeteria of Veterans
M orlal Hospital.
em

above were Ora N. Carsey,
Jeanne Ann; Bradbury, Don
Rea, Mabel Moore, Joyce E.
Hoback, Judy Roberts, George
Skinner, Sylvia Byers, Emma
Hayman , Lindley Roush, Jr.,
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Lillian Pickens and Lester
John Finley McCUnrock, 22,
Hawk, with Willis Anthony as Racine, Rt. 1, and Joann Kay
alternate .
Tiemeyer, 19, Pomeroy.
. ._;..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.

ods of high unemployment and,
COLUMBUS(UPI )- Legisla- hooked on it.
lion to combat problems which The legislation also would effective . next Jan. 1, covers Imagination Staggered
COLUMBUS., - THE OHIO EDUCATION Association an·
have ariSen with increasing tighten restrictions on drug state employes for the first
treatment of drug abuse was samples, which Mastics said of- time and makes Ohio the first nounced plans Wednesday to create a political action arm to raise
Wianimously passed by the Ohio ten are negligently stored or state in the nation to use a cost- moneyforthepolitlcalcampaignsofcandidatesitsupports.
House Wednesday and sent to discarded, or repackaged and of-living factor in figuring ben·
J. Alan Aufderheide, organizer of the committee, said the
the Senate.
sold illegally. The Department efits. The bill was sponsored by OEA's 90,000 members will be asked to contribute all or part of
The bill would regulate drug of Mental Hygiene and Correc- Rep. Rodney H. Hughes, R- the pay they get for election day next Tuesday to put in the
the plaintiff for services rentreatment centers and the use . tion would be required to keep Bellefontaine.
ca.'llpaigo fund . "The potential staggers the imagination," dered his· Ia te uncle six years
Also Wednesday, the House
of methadone, an addictive a "data bank" on drug abuse,
agreed
to Senate amendments Aufderheide said of the new group.
prior to his death. Jurors sealed
drug substitute used for treat- but the ·identity
offenders
this morning in the Shiflet case
lng heroin addicts.
would be kept confidential.
and sent the governor legisla- Equality of Sacrifice Demande.d
lion banning the spotlighting of
The measure ·was authored
wild game from autos after 10
WASHINGTON - AFL-CIO PRESIDENT George Meany
by Rep. George E. Mastics, R· The Senate Wednesday unanwarned the administration today it must provide "equality of
Fairview Park, and co-sponsor- imously agreed to House p.m.
Lions Events Set
The Senate unanimously . sacrifice" in its Phase n economic program if it is to win labor's
ed by 60 other House members. amendmentsin a comprehensive
A meeting of directors was
The bill also would regulate the bill liberalizing Ohio's unem· agreed to a House-passed bill continued cooperation to slow inflation and bolster the economy.
authorizing
courts
tb
award
vis·
Meany
said
administration
proposals
for
Phase
II,
which
will
announced for 7 p.m. on Monillegal use of hypodermic need- ploymentcompensation benefits
itation
rights
to
persons
interstart
at
the
end
of
the
wage-price-rents
freeze
Nov.
13,
would
day, Nov. 1, at the Columbia
les and drug samples.
and sent it to Gov . John J. Gil·
ested in the welfare of children place the biD'den ori working people and shower bonanzas on the Gas Co. offices in Middleport
Mastics' bill, designed to com- ligan for signature .
plement his drug control reform The bill will hike maximum of divorced or deceased parents. wealthy. He said they would control wages but fail to halt price when the Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club met for a noon
The House unanimously clear- increases.
bill enacted last year, would re- benefits for those temporarily
luncheon Wednesday at the
quire state registration of drug without jobs by 17 to 27 per edSenate-passed legislation fur·
Senior
Citizens
Overtaxed
Pomeroy United Methodist
treatment centers, which he cent, upon the governor's signa- nishing out-patient kidney dial·
CLEVELAND - STATE WELFARE Director John E. Church. A zone meeting also
ysis benefits on the same basis
said are "springing up like ture, expected next week.
mushrooms in drug store fronts
The measure extends benefits as in - hospital benefits after Hansan said Wednesday Ohio is "overtaxing" its nearly one was announced for Nov . 11 at 7
million older citizens by relying on state sales and property taxes. p.m. at the Pomeroy United ·
and churches and could very an additional 13 weeks in peri- next July l.
Hansan said 75 per cent of the "older citizens" in Ohio own their Methodist Church with the local
well become spawning grounds
for addiction, defeating the
bomes. ''Gov. John J. Gllllgan introduced an income tax program club as hosts.
A fiim, "Reins of Command"
very purpose for their ex·
by which a person with $40,000 income would pay $2,200 a year in
· istence."
taxt&gt;s," he said. "But the Senate has reduced this so that his tax provided by the General
Telephone Co. through Don
inflicted
by
a
.22
pistol.
He said registration was need- Mrs. Phyllis Fife, 28, Eureka
would be only $153 a year."
Pearch describect the defense
Taken into custody and
ed to establish who is respon· Star Rl., Gallipolis, former
communications
system and
sible for the treatment, not to meter maid with the Gallipolis charged with shooting with
demonstrated a worldwide alert
persecute former drug abusers Police Department, remained intent to wound, maim or kill
by the U. S. Air Force.
whom he said often are the in fair condition today at the was 2l)oyear&lt;lld James Steven _
(Continued
from
page
I)
President Paul Kloes presided.
most effective counselors at the Holzer Medical Center where Robinson , Eareka Star Rt.
the
shot
might
trigger
ear·
she was admitted early Wed· Robinson, through his attorney,
centers.
Willlam p. Cherrington, Albert (Tody) Scholl, 84, of 1 thquakes and destructive
The bill also would authorize nesday morning.
seawaves and at the same time
the state to license clinics dis- A hospital spokesman con· pleaded not guilty to the Cole St., Pomeroy, died Thurs·
pensing methadone to eliminate firmed that Mrs. Fife suffered charges when arraigned day morning at Veterans destroy marine and other
wildlife, still were fighting the
morning
in Memorial Hospital.
"phony"methadone clinics, pre- six bullet wounds allegedly Wednesday
Gallipolis Municipal Court. He Mr. Scholl was preceded in test in federal courts when the
vent bootlet methadone sales
is in the Gallia County jail in death by his parents, Jacob and AEC announced Nixon's okay .
and eliminate "pseudo-addicts"
lieu of $20,000 bond.
Barbara Scholl; five brothers, AEC Chairman James R.
- those who feign drug depen- Flora Gearhart
The Gallla County sheriff's and two sister, Surviving are his Schlesinger told reporters at a
dence to get presciptions for
Died Wednesday
department and Gallla County wife, Bessie; a son, Albert news conference Wednesday
methadone and then become
that in the absence of a federal
Mrs. Flora A. Gearhart, 87, of Prosecutor's office have Milton Scholl, Pomeroy; a
court restraining order, the
1440 College Ave .. Barbours- withheld details of the incident. stepson, Delbert Becker,
Middleport; a brother, Oscar commission will go ahead and
ville, W. Va., died at home
(Ollie) Scholl, Pomeroy; three conduct the test Hwithin a
Wednesday evening. Born at
sisters, Mrs. Ellen Wilson, week."
Leon, March 11, 1884, Mrs. Subsidy Received
(Continued from page I l
Pomeroy; Mrs. John Bachman, He said chances of enGearhart was preceded in death
State subsidy payments to
Barth, Marilyn Davis and Pam by her parents, Henry and
Columbus, and Mrs . Earl vironmental damage are
Meigs
County's
school
districts
Henderson .
and
that
Lydia Roush Williamson of and the county board of Carter of Wapakoneta ; two " minimal"
In charge of the canteen was
"
overriding
requirements
of
Mason , and her husband, the education in October totaled grandchildren, six great·
the Child Conservation League
grandchildren and several national security ha ·:&gt;, of
Rev. W. L. Gearhart, pastor of $158,152.71.
with Mrs. Arthur Arnold and
necessity, taken precedence.''
nieces and nephews.
the Mason United Methodist
Amounts received by the local
Mrs. Don Mullen cO&lt;hairmen. Church many years. Surviving
SPRAY PAINT
Mr. Scholl was a co-owner of
districts after deductions for the former Purity Ice Cream
Loading and unloading was
• Dries in minutes·
are several nieces and nephews. sc hool employes retirement,
,done by Pomerey Elementary
Co.
in
Middleport
for
a
number
• Use indoors or out ,
REECE TO SPEAK
Funeral services will be held stale teachers retirement and
students and Boy Scout Troop
of
years
and
also
worked
for
the
metal or wood
The
Middleport-Pomeroy
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the allotment to the county board of
249, Tom Cassell, scoutmaster.
Highway
Dept.
in
Meigs
State
•
Safe
for children's
Rotary Club will meet at the
Mason United Methodist education are : Eastern,
Clerical workers were Mary
toys and furn iture
Church with the Rev. George $21,659.65; Meigs Local, County. Funeral services will Legion Hall in Middleport
Nease, Jean Nease , Joyce
be
held
all
p.m.
Saturday
at
the
•
In I 6 decorator colors
Friday evening instead of their
Porter and the Rev. Parker $81,862.58, and Southern,
Hoback, Janice Davis, Grace
• The fun way to paint
Hinzman officiating. Burial will $21,544.68. The county board Ewing Funeral Home where regular meeting place, the
Drake, Jean Sayre, Juanita
friends
may
call
anytime.
Heath Methodist Church. John
be in Suncrest Memorial Park. received $8,662.60.
Sayre, Lulabelle Hampton,
Burial
will
be
in
Beech
Grove
Reece , public affairs coor·
Friends may call at the
Eloise White, Dorothy Smith,
Cemetery.
dinator for the Gavin Power
Foglesong Funeral Home after
Jeanette Lawrence, Elva 3 p.m. Friday . Mrs . Gearhart
Plant at Cheshire, a native of
Dalley, Martha Lou Beegle,
OBSERVERS
HERE
TWO
AT
CAMP
was ·a member of the Steel
Wash., will show
Barbara Mullen , Harriet
Pat Harris, Leanne Sebo and · College studenis of Ohio Longview,
Memonal United Methodist
slides and speak.
Neigler, Vernon Nease , Clare
Church after moving to Bar· Melanie Hackett represented
Mcintyre and Marybelle
attend
University
School who
the first
two Meigs
weeks
the Meigs High School Girls High
boursville.
Warner.
of
school
as
observers
in
their
Athletic Association (GAA) at
Donations were made by
the Division of Girls and special fields were James Crow,
Quality Print Shop, The Daily
Chaney, Charles
Women's
Sports
State Kenda
Sentinel,
The
Athens
Leadership Camp, Sept. 24, 2li Frecker , Mike Hargraves ,
Messenger, WMPO Radio,
and 26. The girls participated in Linda Hackett, Lois Ann Sauer,
(Continued from page I)
Meigs Local School, Veterans
volleyba ll , speed-a-way, John Eich, Cynthia Ann Miils,
Memorial Hospital, Ewing the cost of the country from cageball , parachutes, cross Nancy Jane Smith, John
Funeral Home, Pomeroy Street where they are from," Young country race, tumbling, fen- Krawsczyn and Mike Buskirk.
Department, Elberfelds, M&amp;R said.
cing, tennis, golf, track and
Foodliner, Don Mullen Ins.,
No Extra Money
field, canoeing and crab soccer.
VOTE
A&amp;P, Krogers, Mark V, and
"When these cruisers are
Dutton Drug Store . Donors brought in, it's the sheriff's job
NOVEMBER 2nd
to maintain them, to keep them
were :
Pomeroy - Richard Bearhs, running," he added. "Il would
Jr .. Kenneth Scites, Mrs. Gay be my responsibility to set up
Sunny and mild today. Highs
Perrin, Walter Rober1 Couch,
in
the mid to upper 60s northRober! L. Shook. Galdys Wolfe, proper maintenance for breakWayne Wolfe. Steven Might, ing down equipment or serv· west half and 70 to 75 in
Shirley Might. David Koblentz. ice."
southeast half. Clear and cooler
Robert
Bauer , Florence
FOR
tonight. Lows in the mid 40s.
Bearhs, Lewis Taylor , Ann
Friday mostly sunny and mild.
EASTERN WCAL
Browning . Fred Thompson ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Highs generally in the upper 60s
Sidney Spencer, John Ambrose,
BOARD OF EDUCATION
ADMITTED
Dale . to the lower 70s.
Jim McHaffie, Stanten Smith,
Pd. Pol. Adv.
James Gilmore, Albert Parker, Nicholson, Middleport; Randy
Leo Vaughan, Homer Baxter,
Larry E. May, Howard P. Woods, Rutland, Edith Watkins,
Logan, Kathleen Wells. Gene Pomeroy; Mary F . Roush, ·
Houdashe lt.
V i rginia Minersville; Gladys Rumfield,
Blazewicz, Fritz Buck , William
Radford , Harold Norton , Pomeroy ; Earl Pickens,
Margaret Wh ite. Don Hunnel, Syracuse; Margaret Donahue,
Marvin Keebaugh, Demaree Portland.
Sexson, Richard Sargent.
DISCHARGED - Kenneth
Homer Sm ith, Don Miller, Janet
Braun,
Richard Bearhs, Sr.,
Duffy, Ivan Wood. Larry Milch,
Harr( Clark, Jean Warner .
James McClain, Randy Hupp,
Ru land - R. L. Imboden. Evelyn Motter, Nara Hartman,
Donna Davidson .
Middleport - Betsy Horky, Della Parker, Dwight McFreda Edwards, Eva Hartley , Daniel, James Hall, Jr., Lydia
Rober! King, Hobart Goggin s, Stewart.
Gene Oiler, Edward Durst,

We Give the Best Buys

..

We Give Excellent Service
We Have the Biggest Selections

'!!

VASELINE
PETROLEUM

JELLY EX-LAX
The Chocolated Laxative
REG. 69'

-•.
~·

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ASPIRIN
•

200's

The Farmers Bank

DRY BAN

POMEROY, OHIO
Memt)el· Federal Reserve System

Jergens
lotion .

SPRAY
DEODORANT REG. 11.19

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
Is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., ICon ·
Hnuouslyl.
·
no.ooo Muimum lnsur11nce
For Each Depositor

OUR OOMMUNITY

7 01.

60's

$1.19

won't IRRITATE eyes
REG. $1.29

REG. '1.09

COME IN AND SEE USt

30'S

•

77~

REG. 12.79

$}.69

PLASTIC

SECRET
SPRAY
DEODORANT
Reg. $1.09
4 oz.

NO. 623-C

~~

1

REG. 1.69

as~

10's

11

Minersville - Ross Stewart,
Dan Nease, Clara Mcintyre,
Phyllis Mclnlyre , Herbert
Mcintyre .
Syracuse
Lawrence

Ebersbach, Donald F. Hen·
dr lcks.
Rac ine - Floyd Hendricks,
Ruth Lutheran, Wll liom Har
den, Emma Adams, Martin
Wilcoxen ,
James
Circle,

Martha Lou Beegle, William
Cleland, Ronald Salser.
Cheshire - Luella Taylor.
Chester - Wanda Wolfe.
Long Bottom - Robert K.
Lute, Susan E. Pigoll, Ada
Bissell, Richard Barton, Billie
Windon. Howard Parker,
James Young, Rose Young.

LOCAL TEMPS
Welker.
Temperature in downtown
Mason - Booole McFarland. Pomeroy Thursday at II a. m.
Mary Artis.
'
West Columbia - David was 58 degrees, under sunny
Mattox.
skies.
Hemlock Grove -

-...
•~:
••
~=

PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS : Mrs. Grant
Roberts, Point Pleasant;
William
Hamm,
Point
Pleasant; Dave Dunn, Point
Pleasant; George Rodgers,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Emmons
Thomas, Leon .
DISCHARGES:
Claude
Vance, Janice Santonio, Junior
Wood, Mrs . Cleo Smith, Mrs.
Glassco Fairrow, Oma Sheline,
Whalen Jones, Eber Pickens,
Jr., Mrs. Grant Roberts, Hoy
Jones, Sr.

Sharon

R. .lect William S. (Bill) Cross

•

For
'
Clerk of Sutton Township

..•••

••

•

'

PAYS OFF

~

Pd . Pol. Adv.

Cepacol
REG. 1.29
1

14 Ol

I

i

\.•.

REG. 98'

77~
On Any Order
of $50.00
or More
from the
Christmas
Wish Book.

"

f

c

SSS TONIC
REG. 11.60
10 Ol

I

Limited Time Only! Offer Expires Nov. I
1

I

Plymoalfi

DEODORANT
SPRAY

Authorized
Catalog Merchant

REG. 11.98 •

TOM RUE MOTORS 399 SOUTH 3RD AVE., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

5ot

'

•

REG. 11.59
6.3

99~

REG. 984

oz.

4 07.

VITALIS
DRY
CONTROL

100 WITH 24 FREE
1

Reg. $1.00

REG. 3.11

DOAN'S
PILLS

For Hand and Body

SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

1

REG. '1.00
1B7 Ol

4-WAY
NASAL SPRAY
REG. '1.59
1 oz.

99

~

. _.__.

..............

.........,.•

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spray

-

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

FAttfiLY SIZE

... "'

......

_

2 for

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COTY CREME DE PARFUM .............. '2.50

~

REG. 11.09

DANDRUFF
RINSE

59~

•1 e77

Beeauty Lotion

4 oz.

HEAD &amp;

8 oz.

-

Chewable Vitamins

RINSE AWAY

REG. 1.09

69~

UNICAP

68¢

~~..:J:..:.OO::..:TH::...:..:PA.:::ST.:.::E~-~~:....._j

Availabl e
L'Origan.

in

Emeraude.

L' Armant

&amp;

Look of Nature Hair Color By Toni, Reg. 2.95 1.77
Sleeping Beauty
Polyester
Fiber

PILLOWS
Reg. S5.00

BUTANE MATCH

1.90 VALUE
3.6 oz.

_\!I!JI EXTRA REFILL LIGHTS

2
BOUNTY
TOWELS

88 ~

F.D.S. FEMININE

PAA

cREO~~lSION'
CHILDREN

15's

BOTTLES

' CHHYSI.EH

220 E. Main
992·2178
Pomeroy
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDA.Y TIL9

-SECOND TERM-

"BATH
BEADS .

SHOPPING. EARLY

To The Vote~ of Southern Township

t.

••
""•

SOFTIQUE

I•

••

•••

AT SEARS

INFANT FORMULA__,__..-....__ _

REG. 99'

l.-!."'~'~,,~~·'Reg.·:": :'$2.15
'~":":- 85's •1 .3 3

LUNCH
KIT
REG. '4.79

vttllj 1

READY-TO-USE

18 07.

6 Ol
-~-----J-.~----~~~

ALADDIN -

49~

ADORN
HAIR
SPRAY

With Freezer
Lid

99~ 66~

Reg. 79c

REG. $1.59

Reg . 51.19

HOWARD
CALDWELL JR.

PLAYING
CARDS

BY THE CASE

EXTRA STRENGTH

THERMO ·
JA.R

100's

BICYCLE

REG. 85'

CONTAC

ANACIN

ALADDINS
INSULATED

REG. 11.67

•3.88

13 Ol

MICRIN
BUFFER IN
TABLETS

REG. '5.49

•3.44
200's

•

NO. 108

REG. 98'

ENFAMI[

99~ 69~~

WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT

pJitS!

Erwin,

FILM

2FOR99~

baby shampoo
7 07.

10 oz. (

REG. 11.79

NEWOOMERS TO

$1.19

ONLY 59~

REG. 774

and Savings Co.

REG. 12.19

REG. 11.89

1Ji51' 3

Don

POLAROID
COLOR PACK

SPRAY
NET

r----------------·-·--.,

Miller· Wood, Charles Thornton,
Rhoda Hall .

99°

BAYER

Violence

Sandy Taylor.

MOUTHWASH &amp; GARGLE
- SUPER SIZE
REG. '2.85

•

~~------------------------------------•

Weather

•1.39

oz.

l

SCOPE

sa~

48's

~

Albert Scholl .Big Boom
Died Thursday

LUCITE®

REG. '2.19

REG. 11.39

..

Mrs. Fife Just Fair

Donors

VICKS SINEX
NASAL SPRAY

For Relief of

2 ROLLS

CIGARETTES
PIPES
CANDLES
FIREPLACES
BARBECUES
LANTERNS, ETC.

REG. 11.50
4 oz.

REG. 11.47

Made with Virgin Polyester
Fiber.
Hv~l enically

Clean Odorless

Mothproof

Non·AIIerg ic

Mildew Proof Always Fluffy
Dust &amp; Lint Free

�1-Tbe DIOy Sentinel, Mldclepwt·PomMy, 0., Oct. Jl. It'll

-Drugs Fight Clarified

News .. ~in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)

. Jury Seated ·in $40,()(}() Case
Jutors were beins seated
today in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to hear the case of
William A. Shiflet, Canal
Winchester, versus Edison
Hobstetter, administrator of the
estate of the late Fred A. Shiflet
in the amount of $40,000 plus
interest and costs.
The amount is being asked by

7-The DaUy Sentiilei, Middleport·Pomeroy, o., Oct. 28 , 1971

MEETING SET
The Meigs County American
Red Cross Chapter will meet at
7, 30 p.m. next Thursday, Nov.
4• In the cafeteria of Veterans
M orlal Hospital.
em

above were Ora N. Carsey,
Jeanne Ann; Bradbury, Don
Rea, Mabel Moore, Joyce E.
Hoback, Judy Roberts, George
Skinner, Sylvia Byers, Emma
Hayman , Lindley Roush, Jr.,
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Lillian Pickens and Lester
John Finley McCUnrock, 22,
Hawk, with Willis Anthony as Racine, Rt. 1, and Joann Kay
alternate .
Tiemeyer, 19, Pomeroy.
. ._;..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.

ods of high unemployment and,
COLUMBUS(UPI )- Legisla- hooked on it.
lion to combat problems which The legislation also would effective . next Jan. 1, covers Imagination Staggered
COLUMBUS., - THE OHIO EDUCATION Association an·
have ariSen with increasing tighten restrictions on drug state employes for the first
treatment of drug abuse was samples, which Mastics said of- time and makes Ohio the first nounced plans Wednesday to create a political action arm to raise
Wianimously passed by the Ohio ten are negligently stored or state in the nation to use a cost- moneyforthepolitlcalcampaignsofcandidatesitsupports.
House Wednesday and sent to discarded, or repackaged and of-living factor in figuring ben·
J. Alan Aufderheide, organizer of the committee, said the
the Senate.
sold illegally. The Department efits. The bill was sponsored by OEA's 90,000 members will be asked to contribute all or part of
The bill would regulate drug of Mental Hygiene and Correc- Rep. Rodney H. Hughes, R- the pay they get for election day next Tuesday to put in the
the plaintiff for services rentreatment centers and the use . tion would be required to keep Bellefontaine.
ca.'llpaigo fund . "The potential staggers the imagination," dered his· Ia te uncle six years
Also Wednesday, the House
of methadone, an addictive a "data bank" on drug abuse,
agreed
to Senate amendments Aufderheide said of the new group.
prior to his death. Jurors sealed
drug substitute used for treat- but the ·identity
offenders
this morning in the Shiflet case
lng heroin addicts.
would be kept confidential.
and sent the governor legisla- Equality of Sacrifice Demande.d
lion banning the spotlighting of
The measure ·was authored
wild game from autos after 10
WASHINGTON - AFL-CIO PRESIDENT George Meany
by Rep. George E. Mastics, R· The Senate Wednesday unanwarned the administration today it must provide "equality of
Fairview Park, and co-sponsor- imously agreed to House p.m.
Lions Events Set
The Senate unanimously . sacrifice" in its Phase n economic program if it is to win labor's
ed by 60 other House members. amendmentsin a comprehensive
A meeting of directors was
The bill also would regulate the bill liberalizing Ohio's unem· agreed to a House-passed bill continued cooperation to slow inflation and bolster the economy.
authorizing
courts
tb
award
vis·
Meany
said
administration
proposals
for
Phase
II,
which
will
announced for 7 p.m. on Monillegal use of hypodermic need- ploymentcompensation benefits
itation
rights
to
persons
interstart
at
the
end
of
the
wage-price-rents
freeze
Nov.
13,
would
day, Nov. 1, at the Columbia
les and drug samples.
and sent it to Gov . John J. Gil·
ested in the welfare of children place the biD'den ori working people and shower bonanzas on the Gas Co. offices in Middleport
Mastics' bill, designed to com- ligan for signature .
plement his drug control reform The bill will hike maximum of divorced or deceased parents. wealthy. He said they would control wages but fail to halt price when the Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club met for a noon
The House unanimously clear- increases.
bill enacted last year, would re- benefits for those temporarily
luncheon Wednesday at the
quire state registration of drug without jobs by 17 to 27 per edSenate-passed legislation fur·
Senior
Citizens
Overtaxed
Pomeroy United Methodist
treatment centers, which he cent, upon the governor's signa- nishing out-patient kidney dial·
CLEVELAND - STATE WELFARE Director John E. Church. A zone meeting also
ysis benefits on the same basis
said are "springing up like ture, expected next week.
mushrooms in drug store fronts
The measure extends benefits as in - hospital benefits after Hansan said Wednesday Ohio is "overtaxing" its nearly one was announced for Nov . 11 at 7
million older citizens by relying on state sales and property taxes. p.m. at the Pomeroy United ·
and churches and could very an additional 13 weeks in peri- next July l.
Hansan said 75 per cent of the "older citizens" in Ohio own their Methodist Church with the local
well become spawning grounds
for addiction, defeating the
bomes. ''Gov. John J. Gllllgan introduced an income tax program club as hosts.
A fiim, "Reins of Command"
very purpose for their ex·
by which a person with $40,000 income would pay $2,200 a year in
· istence."
taxt&gt;s," he said. "But the Senate has reduced this so that his tax provided by the General
Telephone Co. through Don
inflicted
by
a
.22
pistol.
He said registration was need- Mrs. Phyllis Fife, 28, Eureka
would be only $153 a year."
Pearch describect the defense
Taken into custody and
ed to establish who is respon· Star Rl., Gallipolis, former
communications
system and
sible for the treatment, not to meter maid with the Gallipolis charged with shooting with
demonstrated a worldwide alert
persecute former drug abusers Police Department, remained intent to wound, maim or kill
by the U. S. Air Force.
whom he said often are the in fair condition today at the was 2l)oyear&lt;lld James Steven _
(Continued
from
page
I)
President Paul Kloes presided.
most effective counselors at the Holzer Medical Center where Robinson , Eareka Star Rt.
the
shot
might
trigger
ear·
she was admitted early Wed· Robinson, through his attorney,
centers.
Willlam p. Cherrington, Albert (Tody) Scholl, 84, of 1 thquakes and destructive
The bill also would authorize nesday morning.
seawaves and at the same time
the state to license clinics dis- A hospital spokesman con· pleaded not guilty to the Cole St., Pomeroy, died Thurs·
pensing methadone to eliminate firmed that Mrs. Fife suffered charges when arraigned day morning at Veterans destroy marine and other
wildlife, still were fighting the
morning
in Memorial Hospital.
"phony"methadone clinics, pre- six bullet wounds allegedly Wednesday
Gallipolis Municipal Court. He Mr. Scholl was preceded in test in federal courts when the
vent bootlet methadone sales
is in the Gallia County jail in death by his parents, Jacob and AEC announced Nixon's okay .
and eliminate "pseudo-addicts"
lieu of $20,000 bond.
Barbara Scholl; five brothers, AEC Chairman James R.
- those who feign drug depen- Flora Gearhart
The Gallla County sheriff's and two sister, Surviving are his Schlesinger told reporters at a
dence to get presciptions for
Died Wednesday
department and Gallla County wife, Bessie; a son, Albert news conference Wednesday
methadone and then become
that in the absence of a federal
Mrs. Flora A. Gearhart, 87, of Prosecutor's office have Milton Scholl, Pomeroy; a
court restraining order, the
1440 College Ave .. Barbours- withheld details of the incident. stepson, Delbert Becker,
Middleport; a brother, Oscar commission will go ahead and
ville, W. Va., died at home
(Ollie) Scholl, Pomeroy; three conduct the test Hwithin a
Wednesday evening. Born at
sisters, Mrs. Ellen Wilson, week."
Leon, March 11, 1884, Mrs. Subsidy Received
(Continued from page I l
Pomeroy; Mrs. John Bachman, He said chances of enGearhart was preceded in death
State subsidy payments to
Barth, Marilyn Davis and Pam by her parents, Henry and
Columbus, and Mrs . Earl vironmental damage are
Meigs
County's
school
districts
Henderson .
and
that
Lydia Roush Williamson of and the county board of Carter of Wapakoneta ; two " minimal"
In charge of the canteen was
"
overriding
requirements
of
Mason , and her husband, the education in October totaled grandchildren, six great·
the Child Conservation League
grandchildren and several national security ha ·:&gt;, of
Rev. W. L. Gearhart, pastor of $158,152.71.
with Mrs. Arthur Arnold and
necessity, taken precedence.''
nieces and nephews.
the Mason United Methodist
Amounts received by the local
Mrs. Don Mullen cO&lt;hairmen. Church many years. Surviving
SPRAY PAINT
Mr. Scholl was a co-owner of
districts after deductions for the former Purity Ice Cream
Loading and unloading was
• Dries in minutes·
are several nieces and nephews. sc hool employes retirement,
,done by Pomerey Elementary
Co.
in
Middleport
for
a
number
• Use indoors or out ,
REECE TO SPEAK
Funeral services will be held stale teachers retirement and
students and Boy Scout Troop
of
years
and
also
worked
for
the
metal or wood
The
Middleport-Pomeroy
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the allotment to the county board of
249, Tom Cassell, scoutmaster.
Highway
Dept.
in
Meigs
State
•
Safe
for children's
Rotary Club will meet at the
Mason United Methodist education are : Eastern,
Clerical workers were Mary
toys and furn iture
Church with the Rev. George $21,659.65; Meigs Local, County. Funeral services will Legion Hall in Middleport
Nease, Jean Nease , Joyce
be
held
all
p.m.
Saturday
at
the
•
In I 6 decorator colors
Friday evening instead of their
Porter and the Rev. Parker $81,862.58, and Southern,
Hoback, Janice Davis, Grace
• The fun way to paint
Hinzman officiating. Burial will $21,544.68. The county board Ewing Funeral Home where regular meeting place, the
Drake, Jean Sayre, Juanita
friends
may
call
anytime.
Heath Methodist Church. John
be in Suncrest Memorial Park. received $8,662.60.
Sayre, Lulabelle Hampton,
Burial
will
be
in
Beech
Grove
Reece , public affairs coor·
Friends may call at the
Eloise White, Dorothy Smith,
Cemetery.
dinator for the Gavin Power
Foglesong Funeral Home after
Jeanette Lawrence, Elva 3 p.m. Friday . Mrs . Gearhart
Plant at Cheshire, a native of
Dalley, Martha Lou Beegle,
OBSERVERS
HERE
TWO
AT
CAMP
was ·a member of the Steel
Wash., will show
Barbara Mullen , Harriet
Pat Harris, Leanne Sebo and · College studenis of Ohio Longview,
Memonal United Methodist
slides and speak.
Neigler, Vernon Nease , Clare
Church after moving to Bar· Melanie Hackett represented
Mcintyre and Marybelle
attend
University
School who
the first
two Meigs
weeks
the Meigs High School Girls High
boursville.
Warner.
of
school
as
observers
in
their
Athletic Association (GAA) at
Donations were made by
the Division of Girls and special fields were James Crow,
Quality Print Shop, The Daily
Chaney, Charles
Women's
Sports
State Kenda
Sentinel,
The
Athens
Leadership Camp, Sept. 24, 2li Frecker , Mike Hargraves ,
Messenger, WMPO Radio,
and 26. The girls participated in Linda Hackett, Lois Ann Sauer,
(Continued from page I)
Meigs Local School, Veterans
volleyba ll , speed-a-way, John Eich, Cynthia Ann Miils,
Memorial Hospital, Ewing the cost of the country from cageball , parachutes, cross Nancy Jane Smith, John
Funeral Home, Pomeroy Street where they are from," Young country race, tumbling, fen- Krawsczyn and Mike Buskirk.
Department, Elberfelds, M&amp;R said.
cing, tennis, golf, track and
Foodliner, Don Mullen Ins.,
No Extra Money
field, canoeing and crab soccer.
VOTE
A&amp;P, Krogers, Mark V, and
"When these cruisers are
Dutton Drug Store . Donors brought in, it's the sheriff's job
NOVEMBER 2nd
to maintain them, to keep them
were :
Pomeroy - Richard Bearhs, running," he added. "Il would
Jr .. Kenneth Scites, Mrs. Gay be my responsibility to set up
Sunny and mild today. Highs
Perrin, Walter Rober1 Couch,
in
the mid to upper 60s northRober! L. Shook. Galdys Wolfe, proper maintenance for breakWayne Wolfe. Steven Might, ing down equipment or serv· west half and 70 to 75 in
Shirley Might. David Koblentz. ice."
southeast half. Clear and cooler
Robert
Bauer , Florence
FOR
tonight. Lows in the mid 40s.
Bearhs, Lewis Taylor , Ann
Friday mostly sunny and mild.
EASTERN WCAL
Browning . Fred Thompson ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Highs generally in the upper 60s
Sidney Spencer, John Ambrose,
BOARD OF EDUCATION
ADMITTED
Dale . to the lower 70s.
Jim McHaffie, Stanten Smith,
Pd. Pol. Adv.
James Gilmore, Albert Parker, Nicholson, Middleport; Randy
Leo Vaughan, Homer Baxter,
Larry E. May, Howard P. Woods, Rutland, Edith Watkins,
Logan, Kathleen Wells. Gene Pomeroy; Mary F . Roush, ·
Houdashe lt.
V i rginia Minersville; Gladys Rumfield,
Blazewicz, Fritz Buck , William
Radford , Harold Norton , Pomeroy ; Earl Pickens,
Margaret Wh ite. Don Hunnel, Syracuse; Margaret Donahue,
Marvin Keebaugh, Demaree Portland.
Sexson, Richard Sargent.
DISCHARGED - Kenneth
Homer Sm ith, Don Miller, Janet
Braun,
Richard Bearhs, Sr.,
Duffy, Ivan Wood. Larry Milch,
Harr( Clark, Jean Warner .
James McClain, Randy Hupp,
Ru land - R. L. Imboden. Evelyn Motter, Nara Hartman,
Donna Davidson .
Middleport - Betsy Horky, Della Parker, Dwight McFreda Edwards, Eva Hartley , Daniel, James Hall, Jr., Lydia
Rober! King, Hobart Goggin s, Stewart.
Gene Oiler, Edward Durst,

We Give the Best Buys

..

We Give Excellent Service
We Have the Biggest Selections

'!!

VASELINE
PETROLEUM

JELLY EX-LAX
The Chocolated Laxative
REG. 69'

-•.
~·

••

ASPIRIN
•

200's

The Farmers Bank

DRY BAN

POMEROY, OHIO
Memt)el· Federal Reserve System

Jergens
lotion .

SPRAY
DEODORANT REG. 11.19

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
Is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., ICon ·
Hnuouslyl.
·
no.ooo Muimum lnsur11nce
For Each Depositor

OUR OOMMUNITY

7 01.

60's

$1.19

won't IRRITATE eyes
REG. $1.29

REG. '1.09

COME IN AND SEE USt

30'S

•

77~

REG. 12.79

$}.69

PLASTIC

SECRET
SPRAY
DEODORANT
Reg. $1.09
4 oz.

NO. 623-C

~~

1

REG. 1.69

as~

10's

11

Minersville - Ross Stewart,
Dan Nease, Clara Mcintyre,
Phyllis Mclnlyre , Herbert
Mcintyre .
Syracuse
Lawrence

Ebersbach, Donald F. Hen·
dr lcks.
Rac ine - Floyd Hendricks,
Ruth Lutheran, Wll liom Har
den, Emma Adams, Martin
Wilcoxen ,
James
Circle,

Martha Lou Beegle, William
Cleland, Ronald Salser.
Cheshire - Luella Taylor.
Chester - Wanda Wolfe.
Long Bottom - Robert K.
Lute, Susan E. Pigoll, Ada
Bissell, Richard Barton, Billie
Windon. Howard Parker,
James Young, Rose Young.

LOCAL TEMPS
Welker.
Temperature in downtown
Mason - Booole McFarland. Pomeroy Thursday at II a. m.
Mary Artis.
'
West Columbia - David was 58 degrees, under sunny
Mattox.
skies.
Hemlock Grove -

-...
•~:
••
~=

PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS : Mrs. Grant
Roberts, Point Pleasant;
William
Hamm,
Point
Pleasant; Dave Dunn, Point
Pleasant; George Rodgers,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Emmons
Thomas, Leon .
DISCHARGES:
Claude
Vance, Janice Santonio, Junior
Wood, Mrs . Cleo Smith, Mrs.
Glassco Fairrow, Oma Sheline,
Whalen Jones, Eber Pickens,
Jr., Mrs. Grant Roberts, Hoy
Jones, Sr.

Sharon

R. .lect William S. (Bill) Cross

•

For
'
Clerk of Sutton Township

..•••

••

•

'

PAYS OFF

~

Pd . Pol. Adv.

Cepacol
REG. 1.29
1

14 Ol

I

i

\.•.

REG. 98'

77~
On Any Order
of $50.00
or More
from the
Christmas
Wish Book.

"

f

c

SSS TONIC
REG. 11.60
10 Ol

I

Limited Time Only! Offer Expires Nov. I
1

I

Plymoalfi

DEODORANT
SPRAY

Authorized
Catalog Merchant

REG. 11.98 •

TOM RUE MOTORS 399 SOUTH 3RD AVE., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

5ot

'

•

REG. 11.59
6.3

99~

REG. 984

oz.

4 07.

VITALIS
DRY
CONTROL

100 WITH 24 FREE
1

Reg. $1.00

REG. 3.11

DOAN'S
PILLS

For Hand and Body

SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

1

REG. '1.00
1B7 Ol

4-WAY
NASAL SPRAY
REG. '1.59
1 oz.

99

~

. _.__.

..............

.........,.•

~

spray

-

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

FAttfiLY SIZE

... "'

......

_

2 for

as~

............

COTY CREME DE PARFUM .............. '2.50

~

REG. 11.09

DANDRUFF
RINSE

59~

•1 e77

Beeauty Lotion

4 oz.

HEAD &amp;

8 oz.

-

Chewable Vitamins

RINSE AWAY

REG. 1.09

69~

UNICAP

68¢

~~..:J:..:.OO::..:TH::...:..:PA.:::ST.:.::E~-~~:....._j

Availabl e
L'Origan.

in

Emeraude.

L' Armant

&amp;

Look of Nature Hair Color By Toni, Reg. 2.95 1.77
Sleeping Beauty
Polyester
Fiber

PILLOWS
Reg. S5.00

BUTANE MATCH

1.90 VALUE
3.6 oz.

_\!I!JI EXTRA REFILL LIGHTS

2
BOUNTY
TOWELS

88 ~

F.D.S. FEMININE

PAA

cREO~~lSION'
CHILDREN

15's

BOTTLES

' CHHYSI.EH

220 E. Main
992·2178
Pomeroy
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDA.Y TIL9

-SECOND TERM-

"BATH
BEADS .

SHOPPING. EARLY

To The Vote~ of Southern Township

t.

••
""•

SOFTIQUE

I•

••

•••

AT SEARS

INFANT FORMULA__,__..-....__ _

REG. 99'

l.-!."'~'~,,~~·'Reg.·:": :'$2.15
'~":":- 85's •1 .3 3

LUNCH
KIT
REG. '4.79

vttllj 1

READY-TO-USE

18 07.

6 Ol
-~-----J-.~----~~~

ALADDIN -

49~

ADORN
HAIR
SPRAY

With Freezer
Lid

99~ 66~

Reg. 79c

REG. $1.59

Reg . 51.19

HOWARD
CALDWELL JR.

PLAYING
CARDS

BY THE CASE

EXTRA STRENGTH

THERMO ·
JA.R

100's

BICYCLE

REG. 85'

CONTAC

ANACIN

ALADDINS
INSULATED

REG. 11.67

•3.88

13 Ol

MICRIN
BUFFER IN
TABLETS

REG. '5.49

•3.44
200's

•

NO. 108

REG. 98'

ENFAMI[

99~ 69~~

WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT

pJitS!

Erwin,

FILM

2FOR99~

baby shampoo
7 07.

10 oz. (

REG. 11.79

NEWOOMERS TO

$1.19

ONLY 59~

REG. 774

and Savings Co.

REG. 12.19

REG. 11.89

1Ji51' 3

Don

POLAROID
COLOR PACK

SPRAY
NET

r----------------·-·--.,

Miller· Wood, Charles Thornton,
Rhoda Hall .

99°

BAYER

Violence

Sandy Taylor.

MOUTHWASH &amp; GARGLE
- SUPER SIZE
REG. '2.85

•

~~------------------------------------•

Weather

•1.39

oz.

l

SCOPE

sa~

48's

~

Albert Scholl .Big Boom
Died Thursday

LUCITE®

REG. '2.19

REG. 11.39

..

Mrs. Fife Just Fair

Donors

VICKS SINEX
NASAL SPRAY

For Relief of

2 ROLLS

CIGARETTES
PIPES
CANDLES
FIREPLACES
BARBECUES
LANTERNS, ETC.

REG. 11.50
4 oz.

REG. 11.47

Made with Virgin Polyester
Fiber.
Hv~l enically

Clean Odorless

Mothproof

Non·AIIerg ic

Mildew Proof Always Fluffy
Dust &amp; Lint Free

�'

~ -,

'

'

'

~.

1- 'n1e 01117 Sentinel, Mldlleport-Punero)', 0., Oct. a, lrTl

Sentinel Classifieds -Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds ·Get Resultsl!
... ..
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5.P.M. Day Before PublicatiOn
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cilnce!141101)_a, ~~~e.ctlQn$ ·
Will be accepted unlll9 a .m. for
Day ot Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves lhe
right lo edit or reject any ads
'de•med oblectlona I. The
pvbllsher will not be responsible

for more fhan one incorrect
lnserflon .

Help Wanted

EARN. at home addressing
self-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co. , 4325 Lakeborn ,
Davisburg, Mich. 48019.
.
10-24-30fp

For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one insertion

Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three.
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con
secutlve Insertions.

wu med

to stay

w l th

teenage girl. Phone 843-2194.
10-26·31c

envelopes . Rush stamped

'63 CHEVROLE T, runs good, in
go od

condition , air

di tioning, $350.00. See at 152
Butlernut Ave ., or phone 992-

5080.

For Sale

Pre -season trap sale . Complete
line of traps and suppl ies.

Open daily 4 PM - 10 PM only .

dryer . M&amp;G Food MarkeL 3
mi. south on

St. Rt.

Middleport.

1 below

Maran Fur House, North
Brown St., Mason, W. Va .,

I0-28-3fp

Phone 773-5296.

Complete
Remodeling

$100.00. Phone 992-7106.
10-28-31c

40 WHITE Leghorn hens, oneyear old . Phone 949-3051.
I0-26-Jtc

lires, $125.00. Phone 992-7106.
10-28-3tc

I

Kilchens, Baths
Room Additionli
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

tires , good motor , new spare ,

1967 ENGLISH Ford , been

FOUR NEW HOMES ,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION ·
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family wlfh a base
salilry of $5,000.00 and ' three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
pe•·ce~n' tage rate,

IOHNSON. MASONRY ;

1956 FORD ton truck , good

I0-28-3tc

rolled over, all glass good,
motor been overhauled, good

ttems.

Two

m i les

abov e

Very reasonable. Phone 9927173 evenings.

Reedsville on Rt. 124.
I0 -27-3tc

10-26-51c

BILIKAM. Deceased .
Noti ce is hereby g iven that
Carl W. Bilikam , of Pomeroy ,
Ohio, has been du l y appo inted
Adm inistrator of the Estate of

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Ocl . 31 , I
p.m., Mile Hill Road ; 20 lb.
steak , turkeys, hams, bacon s.
Sponsored by Racine Fire

Hattie Mae Bllikam , deceased .
Oepl.
late of Meigs Countv , Ohio .
Creditors are required to f ile
10-17-..tl c
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months .
I WILL not be responsible for
Dated th is 22nd day of Qc .
any debts contracted by an y
tober 1971.
one other than my sel f .
John C. Bacon
Signed, Albert E Roseberry .
Acting F'robate Judge
10-17- 3tp
of sa id County

110128 Ill ) 4. 11,31

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sportsman Clu b, Sunday. Ocl.

NOTICE OF

10 27-31c

cue No. 20S6l

Estate of OSCAR L. WINCE ,
SHOOTING MATCH, Saturday,
Decened .
Notice Is hereby given tha t
Oct . 30 al the Racine Planing
Vernon 0 . Wince , of Bo11. 107.4,
Mill al 6 p.m. Factory choke
Roseville , California , hiSs been
guns only . Ass erted meat.
duly appointed Executor of the
Sponsored by the Syracuse
Estate of Oscar L. Wince ,
Fire Dept.
deceased , late of Meigs Coun t y ,
I0-27-3tc
OhiO.
Creditors are required to
tile their claims with said YARD SALE , Friday and
fiduciary w ithin four months .
Salurday, Oct . 29 and Ocl . 30.
Oa!ed th is 22nd day of
Old
dishes, iron pots, stone
October , 1971 .
jars.
clothes and many other
John C. Bacon
items . Two miles abov e
Act ing Probate .Judge
Reedsville on Rt . 124.
of said County

I0-27-3tc

(10)28(11)4, 11 . 31

old, $150. Phone 992-2720.
I0-26-3tc
GASOLINE powered go-karl ,
$100. Phone 992-3589.
I0-26-3fc

11 , 31

Oct. 29. Sale starts at 7 p.m.
10-26-3fc

YARD SALE, Friday and
Saturday, Oct. 29 and 30, 10

7_25 .1fc

-

M1ddleport, Oh1o.

6-30·Hc

home on an 80 x 235 level lot. O' DELL WHEEL al ignment
Block util ity build ing , washer
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
and dryer. on Mill 51. , Phone
Complete front end service ,
882-2717 .
tune up and brake service .
10-11 -tfc
Wheels
balanced
elec tronically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
LOTS for sale. Phone 992 6329.
rates . Phone 992 -321 3.
10 22-6fc

VICTOR cash re9isler , 2 snow 7-ROOM
tires , 7.00 x 13 ' - 4 ply on
wheels, 2 snow tires , 1 on
whee L 6.50 x 13" with stubs , 15
case pop cooler, 2 Buckeye
heating slo11es. l Heatrola
heating stove. Phone 985-3811.

Fr iday and Saturday nights

new

( II) 4,

ft . with all connections in cluding thermostat , 2 years

balloons. Open Wednesday ,

Case No. 20 , 541
from 7:30p . m. to 10:30p. m.
Estate of Newell S. HyselL
Deceas.fd .
Available forparties Monday,
Notice is hereby g i..,en that
Tuesday
and
Thursday
Dortha Lyman Of 3646 E . Ma in
nights. Saturday and Sunday
Street, Columbus. Ohio, has
afternoons. Schedule part ies
been duly appointed Execut r ix
early
, dates going fast . Phone
of the Estate of Newell s .
985-3929 or 985-3585.
HyselL deceased , late of
10-21 -12tc
Pomerov. RO No . 1, Meigs
County, Ohio .
Cred itors are required to file
their claiMs will'! said fiduc iary AT HAYMAN'S auetton on
Rt. 7 bypass. Load of rugs,
within four months .
Date-d this 22nd day of Oc . "bedspreads, and all kinds of
tober 1971.
appliances. You don't want to
John c. Bacon
miss this sale. For bargains ,
Acting Probate Judge
see you at Hayman's, Friday ,
of sa ld County

2186 ·

HOUSE, i"642 Lincoln Heights
SEPTIC TAN~S CLEANED
Call Danny Thompson, 992- Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782,
Phone 992-5641.
2196.
Gallipolis . John RusselL
I0-26-6tc
7-18-ffc
ONner &amp; Operator .
5-12-tfc
TEMCO GAS furt.dce , oo.ooo cu. NEW HAVEN - 12 x 50 mobile

SKAT · A -WAY
announce s
Halloween Party , Friday ,
October 29. Races , prizes,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

28

tachments, cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan ava ilable.

10-27-Jtp
POLLEU

good

7-27-lfc
4 _ _:__ __ _ ___:_

bedrooms , livingroom,dining RUBBER stamps made to
order , 24 -hour serv ice . Dwain
room , bath with shower, large
kitchen with Jots of built-in
or Wilma Casto , Portland.
birch cabinets . Hardwood
10-24-JOtc
floors . Natural gas furnace,

50-gallon

electric

water HARRISON 'S TV and Antenna

10-22-12tc
condition ,

on large lot, 25011. by 250ft. on

Herefor d

'iU,

house .

heater, 2 large recreation
rooms, paneled in basement,
2 porches, garage, concrete
drivewa(, large yard with
plenty o shade trees, located

cattle .

Phone 742 ·3435.
HONDA

block

$150. Phone 992-5323.

10-24-61p

NICE 2-story home with full
basement. 2 lots, new forced
air furnace, near elementary
school. Phone 992-7384 to see .

10·24-6tp

1r---------..~
Save $10.00 Now!

I
l

I

SR 124 in Syracuse, Ohio.
Available for immediate
occupancy. To see, phone

Bill NELSON
992-36SI

Original Cabinet
'
Company
~

Gallipolis 446-9539 after 5 p.m .

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Sept ic tanks installed. George

(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-ttc

------

SEWING MACHINES. Repair

I

I
I
I
I
I

New Service

Cleland

Ph. 992-7796
POMEROY
HOM~ &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPUES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All -Weother Rooli~g
and

&amp;
An -

thony .Plumbing &amp; Healing .

Phone 992-2550
lns11red. Experienced
Work Guarant~d
See us tor Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

Realty

SMITH NELSON

3-29-tfc
------c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

1

MOTOR, INC.
PHONE NUMBER

992-2174

-------

I
I

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

II

J

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

··anted To Buy

r

We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in
roofing to our staff.

I

·----------

•

service, all makes. 992-2284.

1

SIEGLER
HEATERS

742-3123.

Now Offering A

Construction Co.

Employment Wanted
HOUSECLEANING in Racine,
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .

Phone 992-2876.

10-24-ttc

NEED A PICKUP?

SEE US THIS WEEK FOR THESE
SPECIAL PRiaS ON TRUCKS

USABLt: wood burning cook

LEGAL NOTICE

10-22-6fp POMEROY

stove ; also need fuel oil space - - - - - - - - heater - 50,000 B. T. U.'s or COAL. lime stone . E x cel s ior

The annual elect ion of th e
Meigs County Agr ic ultural
up . Phone 592-5332.
Salt Works , E. Main St. ,
Society Directors will be held
I0-24-6tc
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Thur~, day, November ll , 1971 at
4-9-ftc
the of;lce of the Meigs County
Comm ;ssioners in the Court
House at Pomeroy , Oh io from s
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
p .m . to 9 p .m .
MOTHERS. Beeline Fashion
Park view Kennels, Phone 992Qualifications tor dire ctors
offer you and your family a
5443.
are tl'lat they must be a
year -round wardrobe olus a
6-15-ftc
qualified voter of Meigs County
weekly paycheck . Cali 446and muat have a membership
4146 or 949-3703.
APPLES
Fitzpat rick Orticket In said soc i ety tor 197 1.
I0-27-31c
chards , State Route 689 ,
Candidates' petitions must be
flied with the Secretary no later
p.hone Wilesville. 669-3185 .
than 5 p .m . Wednesday ,
9-3-tlc
November 3, 197 1.
Only
persons
hold ing TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
membership tickets at the close
Park . Miner svill e, Ohio .
of the 1971 County Fair or at
Phone 992-3324.
lent fifteen (15) calendar days
10-27-6tc
before the date of election are
quallfitd to vote .
----:--The Meigs County 3 ROOMS and bath, furn ished .
Agr icultura l Soc iety
Also, !railer lol . M&amp;G Food
By : Mrs . Marvin King ,
Markel, 3 mi . south on St . Rt .
Secretary
( 101 2I, 28 Cll ) 4
7, below Middleporl.

Female Help Wanted

For Rent

Mobile Homes for Sale

10-26-31p

TRAILER space on R1 . 3J.

•12

mile fr om Pomer oy C or ~
poration Limits . Phone 992 -

BLOUNT TO QUIT?

2941.

I0-24-6tc
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Re·
-.a- 1-1 -M-r-s . Arports in Washington nnd _T_W_O_ H_O_U_S_E-S.-L
Aiabama indicate Postmaster
thur Skinner 992-2500.
General Winton M. Blount will
I0-26-3tc

ruign, perhaps in a couple of

FURNISHED and unfurniShed
days, Ill run for the senate
apartmenli. Close to school.
against Sen. John J. Sparkman,
Phone m-5434.
10-18-Hc
O.Ala.

12: · 14' • 24' • WIDE

MILLER
MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd ..
Belpre, Ohio
Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE.
No down payment, 12 years to

pay to qualified Gl . Up to
S2,500 available for lot im·

Sparkman, who will be 73 -o;T~R"A""'IL""'E""Ro=;=LO""T""s""',~B""
ob~'-s~
Mo
bile
provements il you own a lot .
next Dec. ~. ·is expected Ill try
Courl , Rl . 124, Syr·acus e,
Gel your new mobile home
for another tenn. Blount, .50, . Jhio .• 992-2951.
now . See James Simpkins,
4-2-ttc
was 11 · millionaire In the
Valley Estales Mobile Home
Sales, Rt. 50 Easl Atheno .Cflllllr\lction industry before/ R4LER spac•, desirable
593-8762.
Prelident Nilon aPpOinted him
nei hborhood, phone 992-2084.
_ _ ,
9 19 371
Jo the cabinet.
.
9-19-tfc , . - : - - - - - - - - -

-

2 business

buildings for lease.

3 HOUSES -

2 renled -

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

1

modern 3 bedrooms. bath,
furnace, Free gas to all. 19
acres of land. Now only

Dependable City

$16,000.00.
NEW LISTING- 2 bedrooms,
bath. gas heat,

basement.

Oak lloors. POMEROY.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,

1966 DODGE

baths, gas furnace . 2 room
apartment down wi th private
entrance . Only $7,500.00.

RURAL -

3/•

3 bedrooms, bath ,

garage. Asking $7,000.00.

$1395
$1295

3

NEW LISTING-S Acres on the
OHIO River with opportunity

t995
1965
DODGE
112 Ton, six cyl., 3 speed, new paint .

for vacation lodges. Asking

$10.00 a front foot .
MONEY TALKS, MAKE
US AN OFFER
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3325 992-2378
10-24-6tc

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

Ton, V-!1-__.l_speed, ready to go

1966
DODGE
'h Ton, v.a, speed, solid

furnace, cellar , garden, and

1963 CHEVROLET

3f4 Ton, six, sharpest '63 in town .

1957 DODGE
1'/2

'695

4 room

10·28-lfc

®

_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

1965
DODGE
$345
12 Ton, 6 cyl., 3 speed, runs out A1.
1964 DODGE

H·:ZS

T '

.......

. ... .

JUST ONE. IN A

PLACE CALLED
OOGPATCH. BUT IT'S

SUCH A DISTANT
COMPLAINT, THE
COMPUTI':R HAS.N'T
PICKED IT UP!.'

. PHYSICAL THERAPIST

:t'LL TAKS A
1:\?ZEN 60XEG!

'N"-" UP THI. POWI!:"!!
Wlt'LL PINPOINT
IT' AND HUIUo THE

''CRUSHER"

AT IT!! ~-1

Must have or be eligible for Ohio
License; new graduate considered,
New, well equipped physical therapy
department in a ninty-two (92) bed
general hospital in Southeastern Ohio
- thirty (30) minutes from Ohio
University, Sa Ia ry commensurate
with experience, Send resume toWaIter S. Lucas, Administrative
Assistant,
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy, Ohio .. or call
collect 614-992-2104 for interview.

THAT WAS
QUICK WORK!

IS THIS 'THE (;UY YOU
SAID Ale: A PLA"TIO OF
STt!W AND THEN 1tlOK
Al..l.. THE MONE.Y FROM
YOUR CAG~ RE!'GISTt!R

WHIS!lll'D YA
FIND

A 8l.OCK POWN THe: STllE!'ET,
DOUSLED·UP WITH INDISE!'$TIO~!

HIM?

~-··

Truck Specials
1969 CHEVROLET
CE -50 · 2 Ton, 84" cab lo axle, 350 cu. ln . V-8 engine, 7000
lb. front axle, 15000 lb. 2 speed rear axle, 23000 lb. rear
springs &amp; auxiliary springs. H. duty frame. &amp; frame
reinforcement, front tow hooks, custom comfort &amp; ap·pearance cab, w.c . mirror!, radio, power steering, 900x20
fires . Locally owned &amp; look~ &amp; drives right.

·~

-'

NOW •2995
1967 Ford Econoline .................. '695
TilE BORN LOSER

Panel , Super H. Duty Van, 6 cyi. Special Price.

1966 Chevrolet ..............~~-~~!~.~;.'1695

-

Two ton truck. 84" cab to axle , extra good. 825x20 tires,

solid cab, foam seat, 292 cu . in . engine, 15,000 lb., 2 speed
rear axle , 23,000 lb. rear springs, never been overloaded &amp;
abused .

Used Car Buys!

HEAR.T~

--

1)10

rMR . ?• ... 81JT

1MIIT MATTfll T0

-·

FROM MYIICTIOMS?

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance ot.71 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior,

DAILY CROSSWORD

t inted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console , air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;

AOBOSS 39. Spllce

brakes, 350 cu. ln. V-6 engine. Really sharp.
,;

1970 Dodge Polara••.

00 • • • • • • • • • 00 • • •

'2495

·-.
-·

1966 Volksw_agen ..•

00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 00

~ -···.

1966 Ford .......................s.~~.c}~~. 1595
Fairlane 500 4 door. Local owner, new tires , clean Int., 6
cyl. , std. trans ., radio.

1965 Dodge Coronet ..... '••• '••• '•.•• '795

0~

THE OTHER
5~NTLY MLY c::c "-"
HIT )(It) 'CJVEI(

----

HEAP WITH A

..... ;:&lt;' .

I

VAIIIAG!

SUIT-IF
Hf CAN

FIHP

Y0Uf'

.
•

1961 Rambler Classic St.;WIIgon
1963 Corvair Monza Cpe.
1962 Olds "88" 4 Dr.
1964 Ford Falcon St. Wagon
1960 Ford Falcon 4 Door

$195
$150
$295
$169
$189

(0 1m Kibl' FeatureJ Syndic:1te, Inc.)

20. Harem

11. Prepared

..

Jllg~M;~ -~tJ..-~,hy II£ NIH 1\HNlH 0 , ,&gt;&lt;1 fillB I ll

---

...~ "'

"' . . .

•

Vollo? knpom? WoHo?
you talktng about?

j JAROM

32. Sum
in
the
pot
33. Put up
with
35. H1111dle
roughly
36.New
Guinea
port

Whol'ro

members

... -

. 11111Po l .. o-;,... ~­

-~

tJ
II
II
I
III
~ I

ORGUP

tHUDOLS

"" - - · 23:Easily
angered
2i. 'Tiny
Alice"
playwright
25. Brink
26. Stuck
. .together

~

P:~I5TANCE

AN

E!.ECT'RICIAN.

V~N::.;..11:.:l:.;.A~G:...t-,.,...::T'"....., · Now arr1111p the circled !etten
I I ( "l I to form he aurpriH -wer, u
.

.

.A

••cc••

by the aboYe cartoon.

(I I I]

27. Prefix

(Ant'll'en tomorrow)

for three

28. Con·
trlbuted
28. Peruvian
city
30. Musical
note
. 31. Smidgen
St. Took a

.

'

unaerambl•!h••efoorJumbles,
one letter to each square,. to

form four ordinary wordo.

·21. He.lr·22.Drlnk

500 H.T. Cpe., V-8, automatic trans., p. steering, radio,
good w.w. tires, while finish, vinyl Interior.

BUDGET PRICED CARS

tlcl·

pate
16. Bloodthirsty
19. Em·
ploy

chamber

6 Cyl. engine, automatic trans., radio, . needs a good
·

l'eaterday'l Cryp!oquote: LAUGHTER IS THE BEST
MEDICINE FOP. A LONG Am&gt; HAPPY LIFE. BE WHO
LAUGHS , , , LASTS.-WILFII2U&gt; A. PETERSON

12. Par:-

16. Sticky
stuff
17. Capture,
as game
18.Annoy,
ance;
attUctlon

favorite

Square Back Sedan. Black finish, clean interior, good
tires, radio.

cleanup .

DOWN

wor&lt;l
U. Filched
'&gt;.'1f'&lt;':::l lG. Teacher's

'1095

G&lt;onnan
river

1. Valise
latch
2. Woodwind 21. (JOCk·
tall
3. Hit the
22.
Veer
bottle
23. Play(3 wds.)
Ing
4. Like the
host to
hills
2t.Span5. Clll8l!ify
lsh
6. Pretend
gen(2 wda.)
eral
7, Tlmorese
26. Gold
coin
cov10. Barfly's
ered
exerclsc
28. Gaggle's
(2 wds.)

tloneer's

- ·.

4_Dr., V-8.englne, automati&lt;" trans ., P.S.. factory air, good
ttres, rad10 &amp;other extras. white finish, clean interior.

~0.

1.Knlghtof
the road
5. Winglike
part
8. Blbil~al
I&gt;.ND THIS
brother
15 FOR
. 9. Stringent
6Ail&gt;V, 18. Auc·
'~·-"

"'

-

SWI~Ef)·Rr'!:..

TIIOI!E WltO BfNE~ITfD

~-

Less than 10,0CIO miles by local owner. Sharp as new In llll
ways, white 011er gold finish, 350 V-8 engine. power
ste&lt;&gt;ring, radio, white.walls, wh . covers .

1I

10U SAY IPID li01 GIYI!
1111«111eseE8 \IIITH MY

......

1970 Chevrolet BelAir 4 Door•••••• '2595

fEU.O. ~­

CA!J S'nlL 'tlUCH
M~ 11%$,' 'OJ SAID!

'H6'f o llXJr'. Iff
IN;,' 'IOJ SliD,.

I

Jumbl"' VOUCH

Yetterday'•

ILIGY

QUIVER

IOILID

Antwer: TltU "body" embrace• all-"IVIRY(IODYY'

I'LL BET I KNOW
WHAT IT IS ..

snooze
36.Queue

.'

ST.monkey
38. Brazilian
tapir

''

.,

DAILY CRYP'.OOQUOTE-Here's how to work lt:

Ton, V-8, 4 speed, cab &amp; chassis.

1

- -·- .

. . . ..

~45

EXTRA SPECIALS ON THESE TWlJ

I

·-

YE~ %! BLOTT€R.
WHt:N WE Sf'AGED
OI,.IR RAID ...

' 1966 CheveIIe•••••••••••.••.••••••••••••
4 DR. MALIBU
M!95
v

-~1Q.I!!J.9.BL_~&amp;t11l.:.!9J.:.2l5t __

1'12

rHE BADGE GUYS

'

-

1970 Camaro Cpe. ••••.•••••.••..•••. '3095

jjiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii......iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.•

SR.

-SPECIALsNovember 1 lhru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. $6.50
, Now $5.00
November 81hru 13
PERMANENT
Reg. 112.50
Nowsa.5o
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
;:orner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

house and bath, 2 bedrooms,
carpeted, $50 a month . Phone

240 Lincoln St. , Middlepoo·t

week days for appointment.

10-3-tf

HARRISONVILLE -

HACKNEY' S Electric Serr lce,
all types of electrical work .

9-29-301c

... ..

: =-==~ ... '.
1-~::::::~--~·~·===~~c~

For Rent or Sale

Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Ajr Con ditioning.
·

Notice of Filing of
Bring this ad and gel $10 off
a.m . to 6 p.m . Miscellaneous
Inventory and
on your purchase of a new
Items, new and used. Will be
608 East Main
Appr.tisement
Siegler heater .
Complete Service
held inside In case of rain .
Prob1te Court
POMEROY
Phone949-3821
The St1te of Ohio , Meigs
Wilma H. Casto, State Rt. 124,
Racine,· Ohio
County.
Portland .
Critt
Bradford
To the Executor of the estate ;
LOOKING
FOR
REAL
I0-26-31c
5 l -Ife
to such of the following as are
ESTATE? THEN LOOK TO
residents of the State of Ohio ,
CLELAND REALTY. 608 AWNINGS, storm doors and
FUEL OIL
viz : - the sur._.l..,ing spouse, the ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
East Main, Pomeroy, WE
overweight ladies, teens and
next of kin , the benefic iaries
windows . carport s,
~ II sizes in st~ c k . we in sta ll,
HAVE
SEVERAL HOMES
under the will ; and to the at.
men interested in a Weight
f.nance , serv tce .
marquees, alum inum siding
OF WHICH YOU MAY BE
tornev
or
attorneys
Watchers (RI Class in
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
INTER EST ED.
repreunting any of the
Pomeroy write :
We ight
POMEROY
·sales representati11e. For free
aforementioned persons :
HENRY E. CLELAND
••~
J1ckW.C1rsey,Mgr.
Watchers
(R),
1863
Section
estimates . phone Charles
No . 20 ,557, Marion
A.
6.:d!l
PhanefU-2111
REALTOR
Rd ., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
Lisle, Syracuse,
V. V.
Nicholson, Deceased , Rutland
Office 992-2259
10-3-lfl'
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Townsh ip, Meigs courlty, Ohio .
Residence
992-2568
You are hereby notified that - - - - - - 5·27-lfc
EARLl AMERICAN stereo10-27-3tc
Inventory
and
Ap . KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
the
radio combination, AM· FM
pralsement of the estate of the
AUTOMOBILE . insurance
radio.
4-speaker
sound
delivered to your door. New
aforement ioned , deceased, late
been
cancelled? Lost your
system. 4-speed automati c
products
coming
out
of said County , was filed in this
operator's
license? Call 992 ·
changer.
Balance
S77
.79.
Use
regularly. Would you like to
Court . Said Inventory and
2966.
our budget terms . Call 997. ·
try them? Call 992-5113.
Appra i sement wil t be for
6-15-lfc
hearing before this Court on the
10-5-tfc
7085.
8th day of No..,ember , 197 1, at
I0 -25-6tc
10:00 o'clock A.M .
Any person des ir ing to fi le
MODERN walnut style stereo ·
exceptions thereto must t il e 8FT. CAMPER for pickup with
radio . AM- FM radio. 4them at least l ive day s prior to
sleeper over cab . Phone 992 speaker sound system , 4the date set for hearing .
speed automatic changer .
7106.
Gi ... en under my hand and
I0-28-3tc
sea l of said Court , th is 19th da y
Balance $69.72. Use our
Bl«&lt;ker
of October , 1971 .
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
110 Mechanic Street
John C. Bacon
10-25-6fc
~me roy, Ohio
Acting Judge and ex .off iclo OLD Furniture, dishes, clock,
and.or
complete
households.
Clerk of sa id Cour t
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4, 1972 SPARTAN travel tra iler, 25 NEW LISTING - Neat 3
By Ann B. Watson ,
bedrooms, bath, gas furnace .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
Deputy Clerk
ft., fully self-contained, must 3 porches. Double garage.
8-25-tlc
sell. Henderson Trailer Park ,
(10)2 1, 28
One acre RUTLAND.
Henderson , W. Va .

I

' Opan I Til'S
Monday thru Solurday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

'

.

'

PomeRIJ Home &amp; Auto ,

HILTQN WOLFE
,949.. 3211

Service. Phone 992 -2522 .
6-10-tf c

Phone 992-6407.

, ELVINEV

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

- - - - -- -

31, 12 noon .

APPOINTMENT

(I OJ

NEW 1971 zig -zag sewing
5-9-lfd W. Va. 25311 , or phone 304-925mach ine in original factory
-3279.
carton . Zig . zag to make
9-30-60ip
buttonholb, sew on buttons, RACINE - 10 room house and
monograms, and make fancy
bath . Two lots, basement ,
SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
designs with just the twist of a
garage. Phone 949-4313.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
10-20-12tc
single dial. Left in lay -away
662 3035
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit NEW, 3-bedroom home fn
2-12-lfc
terms ava ilable. Phone 99.2Middleport. Built-in kitchen , READY -MIX
CONCRETE
5641.
ceramic tile bath, all -electric
" hb hood C ·
delivered right to your
10-26-6tc
h-ea 1, 9 ood netg
or
· an
project. Fast and easy. Free
arrange FHA financing .
estimates . Phone 992 ·3284 .
ELECTROLUX vacuum
Telephone 992 -3600 or 992G~egteln Rea.dy - Mix Co .,
cleaner complete with at-

I

Phone 992-2094

992-7608

just walking distance .. from HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc.
downtown Pomeroy . Contact: raised, moved, underpinned,
; d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswot t~ remodeled. Estimates free,
urive, Columbus, Oh io, phonE'
anywhere. National House
237 -4334, Columbus.
Movers. Box 5002, Charleston,

.

'

-GUARANTEE~

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid Notice
ads and ads paid within 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
THERE will be a reviva l at the
&amp; OBITUARY
Rutland Free Will Baptisl 1966 FORD Fairlane, GTA, new 1965 PLYMOUTH wagon . very
gJod condition . Phone 992 ·
$1 .50 for SO word minimum. Church . Star led . Monday ,
C 6 automatic with chrome
Each additional word 2c.
6417
.
wheels. Halley carburetor .
October 18, 7:30 p.m. with
I0 -26-5fc NEIGLER Building Supply .
BLIND ADS
Needs engine, $400. Phone
Sister Dorothy Overton as
Free estimate on building
Additional 25c Charge pee evangelist .
992-3597. .
Everyone
your
new home. Will draw
Advertisement.
I0-26-31p Real Estate For Sale
welcome to come and worsh ip
prints to suit the lay of your
OFFICE HOURS
with us .
land. Call Guy Neigler,
8:30a.m. to 5:00p-.m. Da ily .
10-24-lfc THREE Beegle pups, one 7 ROOMS and bath on Union
Ave
..
Pomeroy
,
Ohio.
Phone
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
8: 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Be~le dog . Phone 992-5510.
992-5641
.
aluminum
siding , soffet and
Saturday.
I0-26-3tc
YARD SALE , Friday and
I0-22- 12tp
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
Saturday, Oct. 29 and Oct . 30. HARLEY - 74 - Chopper, 90
Racine , Ohio.
Old dishes, iron pots, stone
LEGAL NOTICE
'SIX
ROOIII
house,
bath,
,full'
10-7-tfc
per cent finished . Excellent
jars, clo1hes and many other
basemeol,
133
Butternljl
Ave.,.
condition.
See
to
appreciate.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20567
Es t ate of
HATTIE
MAE

EXPERT
:Wheel Alignment
,,.55

Business Services

con -

10-28-Jic
POTATOE S, ' Char les Hilt on .
Portland . Ohio. Phone 843 - '66 FORD truck , l;,. ton. Camper
spe c iaL All heavy dut y .
2268.
Phone 773-5977 , Mason, W.
For Sale or Trade
10-28-lfc
Va .
10-28-31 p
FOR CATTLE will trade boat
FUR MARKET LOOKS GOOD
and trailer , 4 cyl. Crosley
motor . Aluminum boat with
new 7 h.p. mot or . Washer and

RATES

LADY

_________..., '"'

,....

Auto Sales

Wanted

TH' FELLERS ARE . .
PLAI/IN' CARDS OVER
AT SNUFF'/5 HOUSE

.A.XYDLBAAXR

-Pomeroy Motor Coi .-·
..

I;· ... ,

LONGFELLOW
One letter almply atanda for another. In this aample A Ia
uMd for tho three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apootrophea, the length an&lt;! fonnation or the wor&lt;ls are all
hints. Each day the codo letters are different.
.
Ia

..~

·•,,
•d
'

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til&amp;

992-2126

'

Pomeroy

.'

~ ·

......

~

I KNEW
IT..

·.A. Cryptogram Quotation

~;/'· /

--

V U G I
AIY

....

'

.

...

V I K X A

GRY

QWYRSNW

·v U M I

QWRA .I

QWI

Q UK . '-- K VI FlU A

K

PWR

YRBM

B . K Y Y IV

RG

N I Z •
.JYUVV

UOJY·

'--

•
.

-·

" .I

..

•"' '!'

�'

~ -,

'

'

'

~.

1- 'n1e 01117 Sentinel, Mldlleport-Punero)', 0., Oct. a, lrTl

Sentinel Classifieds -Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds ·Get Resultsl!
... ..
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5.P.M. Day Before PublicatiOn
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Cilnce!141101)_a, ~~~e.ctlQn$ ·
Will be accepted unlll9 a .m. for
Day ot Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves lhe
right lo edit or reject any ads
'de•med oblectlona I. The
pvbllsher will not be responsible

for more fhan one incorrect
lnserflon .

Help Wanted

EARN. at home addressing
self-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co. , 4325 Lakeborn ,
Davisburg, Mich. 48019.
.
10-24-30fp

For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one insertion

Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three.
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con
secutlve Insertions.

wu med

to stay

w l th

teenage girl. Phone 843-2194.
10-26·31c

envelopes . Rush stamped

'63 CHEVROLE T, runs good, in
go od

condition , air

di tioning, $350.00. See at 152
Butlernut Ave ., or phone 992-

5080.

For Sale

Pre -season trap sale . Complete
line of traps and suppl ies.

Open daily 4 PM - 10 PM only .

dryer . M&amp;G Food MarkeL 3
mi. south on

St. Rt.

Middleport.

1 below

Maran Fur House, North
Brown St., Mason, W. Va .,

I0-28-3fp

Phone 773-5296.

Complete
Remodeling

$100.00. Phone 992-7106.
10-28-31c

40 WHITE Leghorn hens, oneyear old . Phone 949-3051.
I0-26-Jtc

lires, $125.00. Phone 992-7106.
10-28-3tc

I

Kilchens, Baths
Room Additionli
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

tires , good motor , new spare ,

1967 ENGLISH Ford , been

FOUR NEW HOMES ,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION ·
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family wlfh a base
salilry of $5,000.00 and ' three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
pe•·ce~n' tage rate,

IOHNSON. MASONRY ;

1956 FORD ton truck , good

I0-28-3tc

rolled over, all glass good,
motor been overhauled, good

ttems.

Two

m i les

abov e

Very reasonable. Phone 9927173 evenings.

Reedsville on Rt. 124.
I0 -27-3tc

10-26-51c

BILIKAM. Deceased .
Noti ce is hereby g iven that
Carl W. Bilikam , of Pomeroy ,
Ohio, has been du l y appo inted
Adm inistrator of the Estate of

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Ocl . 31 , I
p.m., Mile Hill Road ; 20 lb.
steak , turkeys, hams, bacon s.
Sponsored by Racine Fire

Hattie Mae Bllikam , deceased .
Oepl.
late of Meigs Countv , Ohio .
Creditors are required to f ile
10-17-..tl c
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months .
I WILL not be responsible for
Dated th is 22nd day of Qc .
any debts contracted by an y
tober 1971.
one other than my sel f .
John C. Bacon
Signed, Albert E Roseberry .
Acting F'robate Judge
10-17- 3tp
of sa id County

110128 Ill ) 4. 11,31

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sportsman Clu b, Sunday. Ocl.

NOTICE OF

10 27-31c

cue No. 20S6l

Estate of OSCAR L. WINCE ,
SHOOTING MATCH, Saturday,
Decened .
Notice Is hereby given tha t
Oct . 30 al the Racine Planing
Vernon 0 . Wince , of Bo11. 107.4,
Mill al 6 p.m. Factory choke
Roseville , California , hiSs been
guns only . Ass erted meat.
duly appointed Executor of the
Sponsored by the Syracuse
Estate of Oscar L. Wince ,
Fire Dept.
deceased , late of Meigs Coun t y ,
I0-27-3tc
OhiO.
Creditors are required to
tile their claims with said YARD SALE , Friday and
fiduciary w ithin four months .
Salurday, Oct . 29 and Ocl . 30.
Oa!ed th is 22nd day of
Old
dishes, iron pots, stone
October , 1971 .
jars.
clothes and many other
John C. Bacon
items . Two miles abov e
Act ing Probate .Judge
Reedsville on Rt . 124.
of said County

I0-27-3tc

(10)28(11)4, 11 . 31

old, $150. Phone 992-2720.
I0-26-3tc
GASOLINE powered go-karl ,
$100. Phone 992-3589.
I0-26-3fc

11 , 31

Oct. 29. Sale starts at 7 p.m.
10-26-3fc

YARD SALE, Friday and
Saturday, Oct. 29 and 30, 10

7_25 .1fc

-

M1ddleport, Oh1o.

6-30·Hc

home on an 80 x 235 level lot. O' DELL WHEEL al ignment
Block util ity build ing , washer
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
and dryer. on Mill 51. , Phone
Complete front end service ,
882-2717 .
tune up and brake service .
10-11 -tfc
Wheels
balanced
elec tronically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
LOTS for sale. Phone 992 6329.
rates . Phone 992 -321 3.
10 22-6fc

VICTOR cash re9isler , 2 snow 7-ROOM
tires , 7.00 x 13 ' - 4 ply on
wheels, 2 snow tires , 1 on
whee L 6.50 x 13" with stubs , 15
case pop cooler, 2 Buckeye
heating slo11es. l Heatrola
heating stove. Phone 985-3811.

Fr iday and Saturday nights

new

( II) 4,

ft . with all connections in cluding thermostat , 2 years

balloons. Open Wednesday ,

Case No. 20 , 541
from 7:30p . m. to 10:30p. m.
Estate of Newell S. HyselL
Deceas.fd .
Available forparties Monday,
Notice is hereby g i..,en that
Tuesday
and
Thursday
Dortha Lyman Of 3646 E . Ma in
nights. Saturday and Sunday
Street, Columbus. Ohio, has
afternoons. Schedule part ies
been duly appointed Execut r ix
early
, dates going fast . Phone
of the Estate of Newell s .
985-3929 or 985-3585.
HyselL deceased , late of
10-21 -12tc
Pomerov. RO No . 1, Meigs
County, Ohio .
Cred itors are required to file
their claiMs will'! said fiduc iary AT HAYMAN'S auetton on
Rt. 7 bypass. Load of rugs,
within four months .
Date-d this 22nd day of Oc . "bedspreads, and all kinds of
tober 1971.
appliances. You don't want to
John c. Bacon
miss this sale. For bargains ,
Acting Probate Judge
see you at Hayman's, Friday ,
of sa ld County

2186 ·

HOUSE, i"642 Lincoln Heights
SEPTIC TAN~S CLEANED
Call Danny Thompson, 992- Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782,
Phone 992-5641.
2196.
Gallipolis . John RusselL
I0-26-6tc
7-18-ffc
ONner &amp; Operator .
5-12-tfc
TEMCO GAS furt.dce , oo.ooo cu. NEW HAVEN - 12 x 50 mobile

SKAT · A -WAY
announce s
Halloween Party , Friday ,
October 29. Races , prizes,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

28

tachments, cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget plan ava ilable.

10-27-Jtp
POLLEU

good

7-27-lfc
4 _ _:__ __ _ ___:_

bedrooms , livingroom,dining RUBBER stamps made to
order , 24 -hour serv ice . Dwain
room , bath with shower, large
kitchen with Jots of built-in
or Wilma Casto , Portland.
birch cabinets . Hardwood
10-24-JOtc
floors . Natural gas furnace,

50-gallon

electric

water HARRISON 'S TV and Antenna

10-22-12tc
condition ,

on large lot, 25011. by 250ft. on

Herefor d

'iU,

house .

heater, 2 large recreation
rooms, paneled in basement,
2 porches, garage, concrete
drivewa(, large yard with
plenty o shade trees, located

cattle .

Phone 742 ·3435.
HONDA

block

$150. Phone 992-5323.

10-24-61p

NICE 2-story home with full
basement. 2 lots, new forced
air furnace, near elementary
school. Phone 992-7384 to see .

10·24-6tp

1r---------..~
Save $10.00 Now!

I
l

I

SR 124 in Syracuse, Ohio.
Available for immediate
occupancy. To see, phone

Bill NELSON
992-36SI

Original Cabinet
'
Company
~

Gallipolis 446-9539 after 5 p.m .

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Sept ic tanks installed. George

(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-ttc

------

SEWING MACHINES. Repair

I

I
I
I
I
I

New Service

Cleland

Ph. 992-7796
POMEROY
HOM~ &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPUES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All -Weother Rooli~g
and

&amp;
An -

thony .Plumbing &amp; Healing .

Phone 992-2550
lns11red. Experienced
Work Guarant~d
See us tor Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

Realty

SMITH NELSON

3-29-tfc
------c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

1

MOTOR, INC.
PHONE NUMBER

992-2174

-------

I
I

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

II

J

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

··anted To Buy

r

We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in
roofing to our staff.

I

·----------

•

service, all makes. 992-2284.

1

SIEGLER
HEATERS

742-3123.

Now Offering A

Construction Co.

Employment Wanted
HOUSECLEANING in Racine,
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .

Phone 992-2876.

10-24-ttc

NEED A PICKUP?

SEE US THIS WEEK FOR THESE
SPECIAL PRiaS ON TRUCKS

USABLt: wood burning cook

LEGAL NOTICE

10-22-6fp POMEROY

stove ; also need fuel oil space - - - - - - - - heater - 50,000 B. T. U.'s or COAL. lime stone . E x cel s ior

The annual elect ion of th e
Meigs County Agr ic ultural
up . Phone 592-5332.
Salt Works , E. Main St. ,
Society Directors will be held
I0-24-6tc
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Thur~, day, November ll , 1971 at
4-9-ftc
the of;lce of the Meigs County
Comm ;ssioners in the Court
House at Pomeroy , Oh io from s
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
p .m . to 9 p .m .
MOTHERS. Beeline Fashion
Park view Kennels, Phone 992Qualifications tor dire ctors
offer you and your family a
5443.
are tl'lat they must be a
year -round wardrobe olus a
6-15-ftc
qualified voter of Meigs County
weekly paycheck . Cali 446and muat have a membership
4146 or 949-3703.
APPLES
Fitzpat rick Orticket In said soc i ety tor 197 1.
I0-27-31c
chards , State Route 689 ,
Candidates' petitions must be
flied with the Secretary no later
p.hone Wilesville. 669-3185 .
than 5 p .m . Wednesday ,
9-3-tlc
November 3, 197 1.
Only
persons
hold ing TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
membership tickets at the close
Park . Miner svill e, Ohio .
of the 1971 County Fair or at
Phone 992-3324.
lent fifteen (15) calendar days
10-27-6tc
before the date of election are
quallfitd to vote .
----:--The Meigs County 3 ROOMS and bath, furn ished .
Agr icultura l Soc iety
Also, !railer lol . M&amp;G Food
By : Mrs . Marvin King ,
Markel, 3 mi . south on St . Rt .
Secretary
( 101 2I, 28 Cll ) 4
7, below Middleporl.

Female Help Wanted

For Rent

Mobile Homes for Sale

10-26-31p

TRAILER space on R1 . 3J.

•12

mile fr om Pomer oy C or ~
poration Limits . Phone 992 -

BLOUNT TO QUIT?

2941.

I0-24-6tc
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Re·
-.a- 1-1 -M-r-s . Arports in Washington nnd _T_W_O_ H_O_U_S_E-S.-L
Aiabama indicate Postmaster
thur Skinner 992-2500.
General Winton M. Blount will
I0-26-3tc

ruign, perhaps in a couple of

FURNISHED and unfurniShed
days, Ill run for the senate
apartmenli. Close to school.
against Sen. John J. Sparkman,
Phone m-5434.
10-18-Hc
O.Ala.

12: · 14' • 24' • WIDE

MILLER
MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd ..
Belpre, Ohio
Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE.
No down payment, 12 years to

pay to qualified Gl . Up to
S2,500 available for lot im·

Sparkman, who will be 73 -o;T~R"A""'IL""'E""Ro=;=LO""T""s""',~B""
ob~'-s~
Mo
bile
provements il you own a lot .
next Dec. ~. ·is expected Ill try
Courl , Rl . 124, Syr·acus e,
Gel your new mobile home
for another tenn. Blount, .50, . Jhio .• 992-2951.
now . See James Simpkins,
4-2-ttc
was 11 · millionaire In the
Valley Estales Mobile Home
Sales, Rt. 50 Easl Atheno .Cflllllr\lction industry before/ R4LER spac•, desirable
593-8762.
Prelident Nilon aPpOinted him
nei hborhood, phone 992-2084.
_ _ ,
9 19 371
Jo the cabinet.
.
9-19-tfc , . - : - - - - - - - - -

-

2 business

buildings for lease.

3 HOUSES -

2 renled -

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

1

modern 3 bedrooms. bath,
furnace, Free gas to all. 19
acres of land. Now only

Dependable City

$16,000.00.
NEW LISTING- 2 bedrooms,
bath. gas heat,

basement.

Oak lloors. POMEROY.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,

1966 DODGE

baths, gas furnace . 2 room
apartment down wi th private
entrance . Only $7,500.00.

RURAL -

3/•

3 bedrooms, bath ,

garage. Asking $7,000.00.

$1395
$1295

3

NEW LISTING-S Acres on the
OHIO River with opportunity

t995
1965
DODGE
112 Ton, six cyl., 3 speed, new paint .

for vacation lodges. Asking

$10.00 a front foot .
MONEY TALKS, MAKE
US AN OFFER
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3325 992-2378
10-24-6tc

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

Ton, V-!1-__.l_speed, ready to go

1966
DODGE
'h Ton, v.a, speed, solid

furnace, cellar , garden, and

1963 CHEVROLET

3f4 Ton, six, sharpest '63 in town .

1957 DODGE
1'/2

'695

4 room

10·28-lfc

®

_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

1965
DODGE
$345
12 Ton, 6 cyl., 3 speed, runs out A1.
1964 DODGE

H·:ZS

T '

.......

. ... .

JUST ONE. IN A

PLACE CALLED
OOGPATCH. BUT IT'S

SUCH A DISTANT
COMPLAINT, THE
COMPUTI':R HAS.N'T
PICKED IT UP!.'

. PHYSICAL THERAPIST

:t'LL TAKS A
1:\?ZEN 60XEG!

'N"-" UP THI. POWI!:"!!
Wlt'LL PINPOINT
IT' AND HUIUo THE

''CRUSHER"

AT IT!! ~-1

Must have or be eligible for Ohio
License; new graduate considered,
New, well equipped physical therapy
department in a ninty-two (92) bed
general hospital in Southeastern Ohio
- thirty (30) minutes from Ohio
University, Sa Ia ry commensurate
with experience, Send resume toWaIter S. Lucas, Administrative
Assistant,
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy, Ohio .. or call
collect 614-992-2104 for interview.

THAT WAS
QUICK WORK!

IS THIS 'THE (;UY YOU
SAID Ale: A PLA"TIO OF
STt!W AND THEN 1tlOK
Al..l.. THE MONE.Y FROM
YOUR CAG~ RE!'GISTt!R

WHIS!lll'D YA
FIND

A 8l.OCK POWN THe: STllE!'ET,
DOUSLED·UP WITH INDISE!'$TIO~!

HIM?

~-··

Truck Specials
1969 CHEVROLET
CE -50 · 2 Ton, 84" cab lo axle, 350 cu. ln . V-8 engine, 7000
lb. front axle, 15000 lb. 2 speed rear axle, 23000 lb. rear
springs &amp; auxiliary springs. H. duty frame. &amp; frame
reinforcement, front tow hooks, custom comfort &amp; ap·pearance cab, w.c . mirror!, radio, power steering, 900x20
fires . Locally owned &amp; look~ &amp; drives right.

·~

-'

NOW •2995
1967 Ford Econoline .................. '695
TilE BORN LOSER

Panel , Super H. Duty Van, 6 cyi. Special Price.

1966 Chevrolet ..............~~-~~!~.~;.'1695

-

Two ton truck. 84" cab to axle , extra good. 825x20 tires,

solid cab, foam seat, 292 cu . in . engine, 15,000 lb., 2 speed
rear axle , 23,000 lb. rear springs, never been overloaded &amp;
abused .

Used Car Buys!

HEAR.T~

--

1)10

rMR . ?• ... 81JT

1MIIT MATTfll T0

-·

FROM MYIICTIOMS?

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance ot.71 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior,

DAILY CROSSWORD

t inted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console , air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;

AOBOSS 39. Spllce

brakes, 350 cu. ln. V-6 engine. Really sharp.
,;

1970 Dodge Polara••.

00 • • • • • • • • • 00 • • •

'2495

·-.
-·

1966 Volksw_agen ..•

00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 00

~ -···.

1966 Ford .......................s.~~.c}~~. 1595
Fairlane 500 4 door. Local owner, new tires , clean Int., 6
cyl. , std. trans ., radio.

1965 Dodge Coronet ..... '••• '••• '•.•• '795

0~

THE OTHER
5~NTLY MLY c::c "-"
HIT )(It) 'CJVEI(

----

HEAP WITH A

..... ;:&lt;' .

I

VAIIIAG!

SUIT-IF
Hf CAN

FIHP

Y0Uf'

.
•

1961 Rambler Classic St.;WIIgon
1963 Corvair Monza Cpe.
1962 Olds "88" 4 Dr.
1964 Ford Falcon St. Wagon
1960 Ford Falcon 4 Door

$195
$150
$295
$169
$189

(0 1m Kibl' FeatureJ Syndic:1te, Inc.)

20. Harem

11. Prepared

..

Jllg~M;~ -~tJ..-~,hy II£ NIH 1\HNlH 0 , ,&gt;&lt;1 fillB I ll

---

...~ "'

"' . . .

•

Vollo? knpom? WoHo?
you talktng about?

j JAROM

32. Sum
in
the
pot
33. Put up
with
35. H1111dle
roughly
36.New
Guinea
port

Whol'ro

members

... -

. 11111Po l .. o-;,... ~­

-~

tJ
II
II
I
III
~ I

ORGUP

tHUDOLS

"" - - · 23:Easily
angered
2i. 'Tiny
Alice"
playwright
25. Brink
26. Stuck
. .together

~

P:~I5TANCE

AN

E!.ECT'RICIAN.

V~N::.;..11:.:l:.;.A~G:...t-,.,...::T'"....., · Now arr1111p the circled !etten
I I ( "l I to form he aurpriH -wer, u
.

.

.A

••cc••

by the aboYe cartoon.

(I I I]

27. Prefix

(Ant'll'en tomorrow)

for three

28. Con·
trlbuted
28. Peruvian
city
30. Musical
note
. 31. Smidgen
St. Took a

.

'

unaerambl•!h••efoorJumbles,
one letter to each square,. to

form four ordinary wordo.

·21. He.lr·22.Drlnk

500 H.T. Cpe., V-8, automatic trans., p. steering, radio,
good w.w. tires, while finish, vinyl Interior.

BUDGET PRICED CARS

tlcl·

pate
16. Bloodthirsty
19. Em·
ploy

chamber

6 Cyl. engine, automatic trans., radio, . needs a good
·

l'eaterday'l Cryp!oquote: LAUGHTER IS THE BEST
MEDICINE FOP. A LONG Am&gt; HAPPY LIFE. BE WHO
LAUGHS , , , LASTS.-WILFII2U&gt; A. PETERSON

12. Par:-

16. Sticky
stuff
17. Capture,
as game
18.Annoy,
ance;
attUctlon

favorite

Square Back Sedan. Black finish, clean interior, good
tires, radio.

cleanup .

DOWN

wor&lt;l
U. Filched
'&gt;.'1f'&lt;':::l lG. Teacher's

'1095

G&lt;onnan
river

1. Valise
latch
2. Woodwind 21. (JOCk·
tall
3. Hit the
22.
Veer
bottle
23. Play(3 wds.)
Ing
4. Like the
host to
hills
2t.Span5. Clll8l!ify
lsh
6. Pretend
gen(2 wda.)
eral
7, Tlmorese
26. Gold
coin
cov10. Barfly's
ered
exerclsc
28. Gaggle's
(2 wds.)

tloneer's

- ·.

4_Dr., V-8.englne, automati&lt;" trans ., P.S.. factory air, good
ttres, rad10 &amp;other extras. white finish, clean interior.

~0.

1.Knlghtof
the road
5. Winglike
part
8. Blbil~al
I&gt;.ND THIS
brother
15 FOR
. 9. Stringent
6Ail&gt;V, 18. Auc·
'~·-"

"'

-

SWI~Ef)·Rr'!:..

TIIOI!E WltO BfNE~ITfD

~-

Less than 10,0CIO miles by local owner. Sharp as new In llll
ways, white 011er gold finish, 350 V-8 engine. power
ste&lt;&gt;ring, radio, white.walls, wh . covers .

1I

10U SAY IPID li01 GIYI!
1111«111eseE8 \IIITH MY

......

1970 Chevrolet BelAir 4 Door•••••• '2595

fEU.O. ~­

CA!J S'nlL 'tlUCH
M~ 11%$,' 'OJ SAID!

'H6'f o llXJr'. Iff
IN;,' 'IOJ SliD,.

I

Jumbl"' VOUCH

Yetterday'•

ILIGY

QUIVER

IOILID

Antwer: TltU "body" embrace• all-"IVIRY(IODYY'

I'LL BET I KNOW
WHAT IT IS ..

snooze
36.Queue

.'

ST.monkey
38. Brazilian
tapir

''

.,

DAILY CRYP'.OOQUOTE-Here's how to work lt:

Ton, V-8, 4 speed, cab &amp; chassis.

1

- -·- .

. . . ..

~45

EXTRA SPECIALS ON THESE TWlJ

I

·-

YE~ %! BLOTT€R.
WHt:N WE Sf'AGED
OI,.IR RAID ...

' 1966 CheveIIe•••••••••••.••.••••••••••••
4 DR. MALIBU
M!95
v

-~1Q.I!!J.9.BL_~&amp;t11l.:.!9J.:.2l5t __

1'12

rHE BADGE GUYS

'

-

1970 Camaro Cpe. ••••.•••••.••..•••. '3095

jjiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii......iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.•

SR.

-SPECIALsNovember 1 lhru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. $6.50
, Now $5.00
November 81hru 13
PERMANENT
Reg. 112.50
Nowsa.5o
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
;:orner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

house and bath, 2 bedrooms,
carpeted, $50 a month . Phone

240 Lincoln St. , Middlepoo·t

week days for appointment.

10-3-tf

HARRISONVILLE -

HACKNEY' S Electric Serr lce,
all types of electrical work .

9-29-301c

... ..

: =-==~ ... '.
1-~::::::~--~·~·===~~c~

For Rent or Sale

Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Ajr Con ditioning.
·

Notice of Filing of
Bring this ad and gel $10 off
a.m . to 6 p.m . Miscellaneous
Inventory and
on your purchase of a new
Items, new and used. Will be
608 East Main
Appr.tisement
Siegler heater .
Complete Service
held inside In case of rain .
Prob1te Court
POMEROY
Phone949-3821
The St1te of Ohio , Meigs
Wilma H. Casto, State Rt. 124,
Racine,· Ohio
County.
Portland .
Critt
Bradford
To the Executor of the estate ;
LOOKING
FOR
REAL
I0-26-31c
5 l -Ife
to such of the following as are
ESTATE? THEN LOOK TO
residents of the State of Ohio ,
CLELAND REALTY. 608 AWNINGS, storm doors and
FUEL OIL
viz : - the sur._.l..,ing spouse, the ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
East Main, Pomeroy, WE
overweight ladies, teens and
next of kin , the benefic iaries
windows . carport s,
~ II sizes in st~ c k . we in sta ll,
HAVE
SEVERAL HOMES
under the will ; and to the at.
men interested in a Weight
f.nance , serv tce .
marquees, alum inum siding
OF WHICH YOU MAY BE
tornev
or
attorneys
Watchers (RI Class in
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
INTER EST ED.
repreunting any of the
Pomeroy write :
We ight
POMEROY
·sales representati11e. For free
aforementioned persons :
HENRY E. CLELAND
••~
J1ckW.C1rsey,Mgr.
Watchers
(R),
1863
Section
estimates . phone Charles
No . 20 ,557, Marion
A.
6.:d!l
PhanefU-2111
REALTOR
Rd ., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
Lisle, Syracuse,
V. V.
Nicholson, Deceased , Rutland
Office 992-2259
10-3-lfl'
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Townsh ip, Meigs courlty, Ohio .
Residence
992-2568
You are hereby notified that - - - - - - 5·27-lfc
EARLl AMERICAN stereo10-27-3tc
Inventory
and
Ap . KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
the
radio combination, AM· FM
pralsement of the estate of the
AUTOMOBILE . insurance
radio.
4-speaker
sound
delivered to your door. New
aforement ioned , deceased, late
been
cancelled? Lost your
system. 4-speed automati c
products
coming
out
of said County , was filed in this
operator's
license? Call 992 ·
changer.
Balance
S77
.79.
Use
regularly. Would you like to
Court . Said Inventory and
2966.
our budget terms . Call 997. ·
try them? Call 992-5113.
Appra i sement wil t be for
6-15-lfc
hearing before this Court on the
10-5-tfc
7085.
8th day of No..,ember , 197 1, at
I0 -25-6tc
10:00 o'clock A.M .
Any person des ir ing to fi le
MODERN walnut style stereo ·
exceptions thereto must t il e 8FT. CAMPER for pickup with
radio . AM- FM radio. 4them at least l ive day s prior to
sleeper over cab . Phone 992 speaker sound system , 4the date set for hearing .
speed automatic changer .
7106.
Gi ... en under my hand and
I0-28-3tc
sea l of said Court , th is 19th da y
Balance $69.72. Use our
Bl«&lt;ker
of October , 1971 .
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
110 Mechanic Street
John C. Bacon
10-25-6fc
~me roy, Ohio
Acting Judge and ex .off iclo OLD Furniture, dishes, clock,
and.or
complete
households.
Clerk of sa id Cour t
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4, 1972 SPARTAN travel tra iler, 25 NEW LISTING - Neat 3
By Ann B. Watson ,
bedrooms, bath, gas furnace .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
Deputy Clerk
ft., fully self-contained, must 3 porches. Double garage.
8-25-tlc
sell. Henderson Trailer Park ,
(10)2 1, 28
One acre RUTLAND.
Henderson , W. Va .

I

' Opan I Til'S
Monday thru Solurday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

'

.

'

PomeRIJ Home &amp; Auto ,

HILTQN WOLFE
,949.. 3211

Service. Phone 992 -2522 .
6-10-tf c

Phone 992-6407.

, ELVINEV

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

- - - - -- -

31, 12 noon .

APPOINTMENT

(I OJ

NEW 1971 zig -zag sewing
5-9-lfd W. Va. 25311 , or phone 304-925mach ine in original factory
-3279.
carton . Zig . zag to make
9-30-60ip
buttonholb, sew on buttons, RACINE - 10 room house and
monograms, and make fancy
bath . Two lots, basement ,
SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
designs with just the twist of a
garage. Phone 949-4313.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
10-20-12tc
single dial. Left in lay -away
662 3035
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit NEW, 3-bedroom home fn
2-12-lfc
terms ava ilable. Phone 99.2Middleport. Built-in kitchen , READY -MIX
CONCRETE
5641.
ceramic tile bath, all -electric
" hb hood C ·
delivered right to your
10-26-6tc
h-ea 1, 9 ood netg
or
· an
project. Fast and easy. Free
arrange FHA financing .
estimates . Phone 992 ·3284 .
ELECTROLUX vacuum
Telephone 992 -3600 or 992G~egteln Rea.dy - Mix Co .,
cleaner complete with at-

I

Phone 992-2094

992-7608

just walking distance .. from HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc.
downtown Pomeroy . Contact: raised, moved, underpinned,
; d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswot t~ remodeled. Estimates free,
urive, Columbus, Oh io, phonE'
anywhere. National House
237 -4334, Columbus.
Movers. Box 5002, Charleston,

.

'

-GUARANTEE~

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid Notice
ads and ads paid within 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
THERE will be a reviva l at the
&amp; OBITUARY
Rutland Free Will Baptisl 1966 FORD Fairlane, GTA, new 1965 PLYMOUTH wagon . very
gJod condition . Phone 992 ·
$1 .50 for SO word minimum. Church . Star led . Monday ,
C 6 automatic with chrome
Each additional word 2c.
6417
.
wheels. Halley carburetor .
October 18, 7:30 p.m. with
I0 -26-5fc NEIGLER Building Supply .
BLIND ADS
Needs engine, $400. Phone
Sister Dorothy Overton as
Free estimate on building
Additional 25c Charge pee evangelist .
992-3597. .
Everyone
your
new home. Will draw
Advertisement.
I0-26-31p Real Estate For Sale
welcome to come and worsh ip
prints to suit the lay of your
OFFICE HOURS
with us .
land. Call Guy Neigler,
8:30a.m. to 5:00p-.m. Da ily .
10-24-lfc THREE Beegle pups, one 7 ROOMS and bath on Union
Ave
..
Pomeroy
,
Ohio.
Phone
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
8: 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Be~le dog . Phone 992-5510.
992-5641
.
aluminum
siding , soffet and
Saturday.
I0-26-3tc
YARD SALE , Friday and
I0-22- 12tp
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
Saturday, Oct. 29 and Oct . 30. HARLEY - 74 - Chopper, 90
Racine , Ohio.
Old dishes, iron pots, stone
LEGAL NOTICE
'SIX
ROOIII
house,
bath,
,full'
10-7-tfc
per cent finished . Excellent
jars, clo1hes and many other
basemeol,
133
Butternljl
Ave.,.
condition.
See
to
appreciate.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20567
Es t ate of
HATTIE
MAE

EXPERT
:Wheel Alignment
,,.55

Business Services

con -

10-28-Jic
POTATOE S, ' Char les Hilt on .
Portland . Ohio. Phone 843 - '66 FORD truck , l;,. ton. Camper
spe c iaL All heavy dut y .
2268.
Phone 773-5977 , Mason, W.
For Sale or Trade
10-28-lfc
Va .
10-28-31 p
FOR CATTLE will trade boat
FUR MARKET LOOKS GOOD
and trailer , 4 cyl. Crosley
motor . Aluminum boat with
new 7 h.p. mot or . Washer and

RATES

LADY

_________..., '"'

,....

Auto Sales

Wanted

TH' FELLERS ARE . .
PLAI/IN' CARDS OVER
AT SNUFF'/5 HOUSE

.A.XYDLBAAXR

-Pomeroy Motor Coi .-·
..

I;· ... ,

LONGFELLOW
One letter almply atanda for another. In this aample A Ia
uMd for tho three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apootrophea, the length an&lt;! fonnation or the wor&lt;ls are all
hints. Each day the codo letters are different.
.
Ia

..~

·•,,
•d
'

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til&amp;

992-2126

'

Pomeroy

.'

~ ·

......

~

I KNEW
IT..

·.A. Cryptogram Quotation

~;/'· /

--

V U G I
AIY

....

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.

...

V I K X A

GRY

QWYRSNW

·v U M I

QWRA .I

QWI

Q UK . '-- K VI FlU A

K

PWR

YRBM

B . K Y Y IV

RG

N I Z •
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UOJY·

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.

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.. ......

'

Weather

Now You .Know

Mostly sunny and mild today
· and again Saturday. High both
days north )lllrtion in the lower.
to mid 7!E and south p&lt;lrtlon in
the mid to upper 7!E. Clear
tonight with lows in the 40s to .
the lower f&gt;Os extreme .south ·
)lllrtion.

The first· player piano was
patented in 11197 by a U.S.
engineer, E. S. Votey.

Will be

Devoted To The

TREMENDOUS STORE-WIDE SAVINGS NOW

Upgraded
Important qualifications
guidance counselors of the
future will have to have, including the need to be more
problem-oriented, were
stressed by Dr . Ronald Greene
of Athens in a talk to members
of the Meigs-Gallia-Jackson
Guidance Counselors Assn .
following a regular dinner last
Thursday at Rio Grande College
cafeteria .
Dr. Greene, chairman ot the
Guidance Department at Ohio
University , said counselors in
becoming more problemoriented wiil correspondingly
be Jess administrative oriented . He listed these other
forthcoming developments in
the guidance field :
· · -Counselors will of necessity
be more knowledgeable of drug
abuse if they are to be helpful to
students, parents and teachers.
- Counselors wiil have to be
more expert in vocational
guidance so as to be more
helpful to the student who does
not want to go to college.
- Couhselors will have to be
trained in group counseling.
Dr. Greene said effective Jan.
I, 1972, state certification
requirements will be Hmuch
more rigorous" than presently.
Counselors wiil be expected and
required to upgrade their own
training before they will be
permitted to perform the tasks
they were hired to do.
Miss Mabel Conley, president
of the association, presided and
introduced the speaker. Willard
Copley announced that Ross
Fleming , former prmcl·
pai of Gallia Academy
High School, now executive
secretary of the Ohio Assn. of
High School, Secondary School
Principals, will be the speaker
at the November meeting.
Miss Conley urged the
membership to bring their
administrators to the next
meeting to hear Fleming whose
topic will be "Expectations of
the Guidance and Counseling
Staff." June Lee gave the
treasurer's report.
Attending the dinner meeting
were Alma Lemon and Mable
Conley, Oak Hill High School;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ord,
Southern High School; Mrs.
June Eubanks, Miss Pat Davis
and Willard Copley, Jackson
High School; Mr . and Mrs.
Malcolm Orebaugh , Gallia
Academy High School and Rio
Grande College; John Longley,
Gallia Academy High School;
Mrs. June Lee, Rio Grande
College, and Robert Staggs,
Wellston High SchooL

BOY MURDERED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-The
body of a 2-year-old boy, his
throat torn open, was discovered Tuesday beneath a house
next door to his family's home.
Relatives and police had been
searching for Ernest Easter,
son of Linda Fay Birdsong, 19,
since he had failed to come
home from the night before for
dinner.
Two uncles found the body
about 25 feet inside an opening
under the house. There was a
jagged wound opening the left
side of his neck.
His grandmother, Laurene
Birdsong, 38, told officers she
had last seen the boy playing
with other children in the
backyard. Police questioned
neighbors in attempts to get
leads in the slaying.

END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

Selected from Stock
REG. 12.00 HANDBAGS
REG. 7.98 HANDBAGS
REG. 6.98 HANDBAGS
REG. 5.98 HANDBAGS
REG. 4.98 HANDBAGS
REG. 3.9r'HANDBAGS
REG. 3.79 HANDBAGS
REG. 2.49 HANDBAGS

SALE
i

WOMEN'S
BETTER
DRESSES
1

REG. 139.00 WOMEN'S COATS

SALE 105.00
REG. 129.00 WOMEN'S COATS

Endolthe Month Sole
Discontinued Styles
and Colors

SALE 97.00
REG. 99.00 WOMEN'S COATS

3

REG. 89.50 WOMEN'S COATS

. SALE 72.00
SALE 64.00
REG. 69.50 WOMEN'S COATS

SALE 56.00
REG. 59.50 WOMEN'S COATS

SALE 48.00
REG. 49.50 WOMEN'S COATS

SALE 40.00

SALE 2.88
Trick or Treat Special
Reg. 10c

End oft.., Montll Sale
Wintuck Hand Knining

CANDY BARS

YARN

SALE 64.00
SALE 56.00
SALE 48.00

Whil e they last

SALE 14.00

REG. 49.50 COATS

REG. 14.95

SALE 20.00
SALE 17.00
SALE 14.00

99~

MEIGS lHEATB£"
Tonight, oct. 28
NOT OPEN
Fridoy thru Tuesday
Oct. 29-Nov. 2
ESCAPE FROM
THE PLANET OF
THE APES
&lt;Ttchnicolor)
Roddy McDowal)
Kim Hunter

''Gu

BROTHER JOHN
(Todlnicolor)
Sidney Polller
Will Geer
"GP"

SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.

KNIJ.f4. TUCK

SHEATH
LINING

ACETATE AND
NYLON Bl£ND

12.95
14.95
15.95
16.95
17.95

SALE 12.00

18.95
21.95
22.95
24.95
29.95
32.50

SALE 28.00

REG. 29.50 COATS
SALE 24.00

REG. 25.00 COATS

cling took In linings and
slips. Good colors al one
low price - 45" wide.
Regular 69c yd.
Sale Friday and Saturday

49~

yd.

Corduroys . solid

Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and
Jackets and

Coals
Coals
Coats
Coats
Coats
Coats
Coats
Coats
Coats
Coats
Coats

Sale 7.49
Sale 8.89
Sale 9.84
Sale 11.39
Sale 11.89
Sale 12.79
Sale 13.59
Sale 14.39
Sale 16.49
Sale 17.39
Sale 18.89
Sale 22.39
Sale 23 .89

WOMEN'S
UNIFORMS
Over 1000 to choose from . Our entire se lection of womens one
and two piece uniforms is reduced for this big Two Day
Event . Choose white or colors In juniors, misses, ex tra and
half sileS now at tremendous savi ngs for the working girl.

Uniforms
Uniforms

Sale 9.75
Sale 8.75
Sale 8.25
Sale 7.48
· Sale 6.48
Sale 5.48
Sale 4.48
Sale 3.98
- - - - - - Sale 3.48

"BINI
BIKINIS"
Sizes small to extra
Iaroe.

3 $4
FOR

First Floor Lingerie

Nwnerous cash prizes were
awarded for the best costwnes
when the annual Middleport
Community Halloween party
was staged Thursday night at
Middleport stadium by FeeneyBennett Post l28, American
Legion .
Prizes of $2, $1 and 50 cents
were awarded by the judges to

the best costumes in three age
groups .
Winners, first through third ,
respectively, in the infant.s'
through first grade category
were Andrea Batey and Michael
Sweet, tied for first; Christy
Smith and Timmy Miller, most
original; Michele Zerkle and
Caroline Carr. tied for fir.t :

i----------------------------,

1\Tews ••• z"n Brz"e,.f.s
}

11~

~

J

Richy Long and Jennifer
Meadows, prettiest; Terry Lee
Johnson , Allen Lee King,
Charles Davis, ugliest; Ray
Redman , Paula Swisher, tied
for first, and Curt Doss and
Mike Allensworth and Bobby
Spires, (a team), funniest.
First grade to sixth grade,
Joni Murray, April King, Jeff
Moore, most original; Frankie
Martin, Tina Miller, Debbie
zirkle ,

prettiest;

Angela

1 Baker, Dennis Wolfe, Randy

····-··

selection of models to build . Chopperoo . Zoomcycles . new
Christmas tree trim - ornaments . artificial trees . tree and
outdoor lights sets.
Bring'"" children In jo Etbertelds .new Toyland - they'll
enjoy looking around. You'll like I.., fine selection of Toys tor
now and Christmas 1971.

Boys' Jackets and Coats
Toddlerssizes1 to 4 ·small boys sizes 2 to 7 and regular boys
sizes 8 lo 20. Corduroy · quilled ny lons . wool plaids Waist
lengths and longer length styles. Solid colors . plaids All
warml y lined . many with hoods,
·

CAMERA SALEI 1ST FLOOR
7.95 Coats and Jackets .
8.95 Coats and Jackets
9.95 Coats and Jackets
1D.9S Coats and Jackets
11.95 Coats and Jackets
12.95 Coats and Jackets
13.95 Coats and Jackets
14.95 Coats and Jackets
16.95 Coats and Jackets
11:95 Coats and Jackets
18.95 Coats and Jackets
19.95 Coats and Jackets

One or two of a kind - while they last .

69.50 Kodak lnstanoatic M4 Movie Camera .. . Sate 36.00
149.50 Kodak lnstamatic M7 Movie Camera .. . Sale 75.00
59.50 Kodak .lnstamatlc M16 Movie Camera ... Sale 31.00
79.95 Polarood Model330 Camera . - Sale 42 00
. 149.95 Polaroid Model 350 Camera . . . Sale 76:00
199.50 Polarood Model 360 Camera .
. . Sale 105.00

Cl\31e

USE YOUR ELBERFELDS
lt.\ ' All-PURPOSE OORGE ACOOUNT

.

Bu get Blocke
COLUMBUS I UP! I - Legisialive leaders in the Ohio Senate
had hopes of bringing a permanent budget package to the
fioor for a vote Thursday, but
once again the idea was abandoned and another interim
budget was approved before
senators adjourned for the
weekend.
The Senate scheduled a skeleton session for Monday, but no

action was expected on a twoyear budget and tax package
until Tuesday.
House Speaker Charles Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, sa.id the
House would ta ke no action on
the interim measure until Tuesday .
··Cw·rent fundtng of the state
expires Oct. 31 when the present interim budget ends. Once
another temporary measure is

passed, it wiU take an additional 10 days to go into effect
because the governor is refusing to sign any more temporary
funding bills.
The temporary budget was
introduced by Sen. President
Pro Tempore Theodore M.
Gray, R-Piqua, and Minority
Leader Anthony Calabrese, D·
Cleveland, after the party leaders realized they didn't have

Again
a

enough votes to pass permanent budget.
The interim budget, which
keeps the state operating at its
present level, was approved
21-9, with a string of Democrats voting against it.
"H.ope And Pray"
Calabrese repeated hopes expressed last June, when the
first interim measure was passed to give the General Assembly
more time to act.
"! sincerely hope and pray
that this is the last budget and
that next week we get down to
the real business and pass a
two-yea r budget," he said.
The Senate approved the interim measure after Sen. Robin
Turner, R-Marion, attempted to
insert an amendment calling
for a one~e nt hike in the state
sales lax to return school
foundation payments to their
normal levels.
The state's share of school

support was cut 3 per cent in
both September and October as
part of Gov . John J . Gilligan's
austerity program.
"This, to me, is not a perfect
solution to anything," Turner
said. "But, I think it's a shame
to aUow our educational system
... to be working at 3 per cent
(Continued on Page 12)

Murray, ugliest; Keith Doss
By Uolted Press lnternallonal
and Leslie Whittington (a
::::::::;:;::~==~=~~::~:=:~~
Blinard Hits Hiuh States
team ), Jeffrey Whittington,
' ' ~:
..,.
David Smith, funniest.
Direct Comment
SWJRUNG,DRIFl'ING SNOW turned Evanston, Wyo., into a Sixth grade through adul ts,
boom town ol stranded mqlorists and snow-bound cars and trucks first place only awarded,
To PO Box 32
today in the wake of an Arctic-like blizzard that paralyzed parts of Charles Allensworth, most
Readers who have followed
the mountain West.
original; Mae Wallace, pretWyoming authorities advised travelers beading east that ties!; Vickie Moore, ugliest; Joe
the three-lnstaUment series
completed Wednesday of Cbe
Evanston, on the Utah-Wyoming border, was packed \Vith people, Justis, funniest.
pr,ellmlnary
draft of the first
carsandtrucksand th\'l'e was no longer room for anyone. U.S. 30
All those costumed were
phase of a proposed Meigs
was shut down because of shifting snowdrifts following Tlmrs- given a dime and refreshments
County Comprehensive Plan
day's storm and authorities have asked all motorists to keep out , of cider and donuts were serRAC INE - Ralph Sayre, the entire state of Ohio.
should
direct comment or
of Wyoming .
voo, Costume judges we re Mrs. superintendent of Southern The facts are that in !972
A three mtll tax levy, a new
suggestions to E. F. RobiuAudry Miller, Mrs. Dwight
Local School District, em- Southern Local School District tax, ior the Southern Local
soo, chairman, Regional
Admits He Could Have Done It
Zavitz and Mrs. Albert Roush.
phasized today to residents of will lose an estimated $24,000 School District, was endorsed
Plauniug Commission, Post
INDIANOLA, MISS. - A WHITE MAN testified Thursday
the district two reasons why the from the personal property tax. Tuesday night when the
Office Box 3!, Pomeroy, Ohio.
that he was very drunk the night he and two companions rode
o
new three mill levy to be voted The three new mills would bring Southern Local
Band
The commission hu em·
around the town of Drew in May, and conceded he "very T r a n s a c t i
on Tuesday must be approved. in an estimated $21,000 per year Boosters met at the high
phasized Cbe comprehensive
possibly" could have fired the shot that killed a young black girL
I. The State Legislator~ about to offset what is being lost by school.
plan concept Is county-wide,
MARAUDERS WIN BIG
"My memory is awfully vague," said Wesley Parks, 26, of
SIX years ago passed a personal property tax.
The issue will be voted upon
not
Middleport, nor Pomeroy,
The
Baby
Marauders
resolution to discontinue the The three mills are needed at the Nov. 2 election. The
Memphis, T~lll). "! don't say I didn't fire it, because I was pretty . e
· om p l e t e d
nor Rutland, nor Syracuse,
personal property tax, but to do just to maintain what income boosters made another $500 tromped the Gallipolis Blue nor Racine. The Plan "thinks
drunk. I possibly fired- I very possibly fired it. "
it over an extended period. for schools we already have in payment on the new band Devils 5~ Thursday at Meigs in terms of Cbe county."
A jury of eight Negroes and four whites begins deliberation of
Example : In 1972 the personal Southern Local School Distirct. uniforms. Plans were made Stadium in Middleport. Scoring
a murder charge against Parks today in Sunflower County Circuit
Reaction to 11- to be
useuffiproperty tax again will have 2. Three mills ;.,.ould be 30 to make hard lack candy to for the eighth grade squad were helpful-should be In a .
Court.
been decreased, and by 1973 cents per $100 of property sell. Members are presently Marty Dugan, Jerry Cremeans similarly broad frame of
and Terry Qualls, with two
there will be no income at all valuation. Example: $3 per
Buckley 's Motion Cut Down
Officers of the Meigs County from the personal property tax $1,000, or $15 per $5,000 selling Tom Watt products. touchdowns each. Robert Meier reference.
WASHINGTON -111E SENATE, DFSPITE initial anger at Pioneer and Historical Society
is the Marauder Coach.
the turn of events in the United Nations, has decisively rejected a Thursday were presented the in Southern Local District, or in valuation.
move to cut American contributions to tbe world body. Sen. deed and key to the home of Dr.
James L. Buckley's attempt to reduce outlays for U.N. aid and and Mrs. Ray Heaton, Buthumanitarian projects by $101.5 million was defeated Thursday 55 ternut Ave., Pomeroy, which
to 28.
.
will become the site of the
The proposal by the New York conservative Republi~an was Meigs County Museum, long in
the first of two major challenges to U. N. funding by senators planning stages.
Education. Mr. Kozac and I have visited the Joy
Mr. Kozac of AEP is working with the U. S. Bureau
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, SUP!'.
Turning over the articles to
upset about Monday night's expulsion of Taiwan. Sen. Peter H.
Manufacturing Company in Franklin, Pa., where 1,800 of Mines, the Ohio Department of Mines, tbe Ohio
Meigs Local School District
Dominick, R-colo., planned to move today for a smaller cutback the officers was Virgil Teaford,
Coal mining on a very large scale is coming to workers build the mining equipment used in modern Division of Vocational Education and others in an
-estimated at between $25 million and $30 million. The Dominick realtor, to C. E. Blakeslee, Meigs County. I believe that this has been established mines.
effort to construct a second high school 'eve! course in
society president; Mrs. Paul
amendment was given a bette~ chance.
The
reason
for
ail
this
hurried
activity
is
that
we
General Mining. If this can be developed, we will do
Chapman,
second
vice as a fact of life in our inunediate future.
would
like
very
much
to
start
such
a
course
in
January
our best to make it avaUable also.
Asecond fact of life is that mining today is not just
president, and Mrs. Charles
Ancient System under Fire
The way I look at this situation is this: There are
a strong hack4ow skilled job. Modern coal mining for boys in this year's junior c1ass. If we are able to do
CINCINNATI - JOHN W. GARDNER, head of "Common Hayes, treasurer, who in turn depends on the skillful use of costly mining equipment. this, when these boys graduate in May of 1973 they going to be a lot of ~ood-pay job! in mining in Meigs
Cause," said here Thursday one of the reasons Congress is not so presented a draft for $32,500 to It further depends on the adequate maintenance of this should hit the job market at just about the right time. County. Who will have them? Young people trained in
responsive to the public is the "ancient and tyrannical" chairmen Teaford to complete the trans- complex equipment.
The development of this mine should be at that West Virginia or some other place in Ohio, or in
· ol powerful committees. Gardner, who met here with 500 local action.
The successful coal mine of today is one in which stage where job opportunities should be available for Kentucky? Or young people of Meigs County who are
Dan Porter, director of the
members of his 14-month-{)]d national citizens lobby, said the
Ohio Historical Society, will be the most modern machines are used by competent them. A lot of things have to fall in place just the right trained in Meigs County ? To anyone interested in
seniority system of Congress is one of the main targets the group
in Pomeroy in two weeks to help operators and maintained by thoroughly trained and way in order for us to start such a program in January. Meigs County the answer should be quite plain.
is going after.
We are not entirely certain that it can be done, but we
We are going to do our best to establish a p-ogram
the local society arrange the
"One of the things yqu want to do is call the government to in terior of the former residence
Speaking of Schools-No. 211 want to make a maximum effort to achieve our goal to train Meigs County'syoung men so they can work in
account and you are never going to call to account a chairman for the museum. It is anand to make this opportunity available.
Meigs County, make a good wage, and help their
who doesn't stand for re~lection before the members of his own ticipated that the upstairs of the skilled mechanics. The fellow who keeps this expensive
I mentioned earlier that there are four specific county grow and prosper. However, all we can do is
party," Gardner said.
spacious home will be rented. and complicated mining machinery operating is called areas in which we need to provide instruction in order offer the opportunity. If It is not accepted by our youth,
a mine maintenance mechanic.
to produce the specialized mechanic WhO will work on well - that's their choice.
A successful mine maintenance mechanic will be this mining machinery. The student wiU need to learn
Closing Costs Inhibit Buying
We'll need all the help, understanding, pauenc•
one who is trained in electricity, hydraulics, basic electricity and how it applies to the electrical
WASHINGTON - SEN. WD.,U&lt;\M PROXMIRE, 0-Wis., said 145 Voters Make
and cooperation we can get in order to start such a
mechanics, and wedding. He will know his machinery systems on the equipment. He will have to Jearn the
be would introduce a bill today to prohibit money lenders from
course in such a short period of time. I'm not at all
Thursday
Cutoff
and
how
to
take
care
ofit.
He
will
be
well
paid
.
(Continued on Page 12)
principles of hydraulics and ,how they apply to the certain that It can be done.
Severa1 weeks ago I was contacted by a equipment. He will have to Jearn to read plans of the
A total of 145 voters had cast
Nevertheless, we intend to expend every effort to
absentee and disabled ballots in representative of the American Electric Power mechanical structure ol the machines and how to use see that it is done. If it doesn't work out, it won't be
the November election by the 4 Company concerning ·the possibility of constructing various tools in working on them. He will also have to because we didn't try, believe me. We'll keep you ·
p.m. Thursday deadline for and offering to our high school students a course in learn electric arc welding and gas cuiting and brazing. posted.
such voting, the Meigs County Mine Maintenance Mechanics. Since that time I have
NEWS - NOTES- An apology : Last week I wrote
made numerous contacts and done considerable
Mrs. June Kloes was named Christ mas promotional Board of Elections reported.
about tbe changing ol the clocks and buses nmnlng in
In meetings with the boys ln this year's juolor
to head the annual parade that program with Jim Rickman,
In November, 1967, a com- traveling in an "effort to get such a program going in class we wllltry to explain this pro)lllsed course and the dark ln the morning. My mistake was I was moving
will welcome the Christmas Cash Bahr and George Ingels parable year, 105 such votes Meigs County.
the opportunities that it should provide. lolormallon the clock the wrong way. Please forgive my being 100
season In Middleport on Nov. 29 named to the committee to head were cast. However, a possible
I visited such a program that recently started at
pet. wrong- With a limited amount of ll'&amp;ctice time
by Middleport merchants the promotion. Carl Horky was increase in th.e number · of the Carver Vocational School just outside Charleston. I •bout the course is being made available to school
Thursday night at the Columbus named chairman of holiday candidates running this year have obtained a copy of the curriculum of a program officials in Eastern and Southern Local Dlstrlc18. our band has produced some fine shows at our recent
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. lighting. Merchants'will meet at and the inclusion of 18-year-old that was started :~ Septe1nber in Belmont County, This course, as well as all other vocstlonal courses games-Both team and band look for your support
tonight at Gallipolis. See you there - Ne:rt week Logan
Plans were made to award Uje same place at 8 p.m. next vo ters could easily account for Ohio. Frank Kozac of AEP and I have met in Columbus at Meigs· High, wlll be avallablo to all studena. ln
will be here.
Meigs County.
$1,000 in prizes as a part of the Tuesday to complete plans.
the increase, iUs reported.
with Dr. Shoemaker, the Ohio Director of Vocational

Sayre Sees 3 Mills as
Must Levy in District

'

Coal Mining Needs Sk.i lled Mechanics

Sale 5.89
Sale 6.89
Sale 7.49
Sale 8.39
Sale 8.89
Sale 9.89
Sale 10.49
. Sale 11.39
Sale 12.79
Sale 13.59
Sale 14.39
Sale 14.89

I--~.--~FR~~E~~~~~O~ME~R~~A-R-KIN~G-0-N~SE-OO~ND-S-TR-EE-T-AN_D_M_E~-A-NI~C-St-W-~--------~ 1
t

Spooky Creations Rewarded

TAKING PART in the masked Halloween party of Feeney:Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, in Middleport Thursday night were from tbe Jen;·Kirn Batey, Frankie Martin, first
place winner in the second to sixth grade prettiest division, and Charles Allensworth, most
original first place winner in the sixth through adult category.

UNITED NATIONS (UP!) - Acting Chinese Conununist
Foreign Minister Chi Peng.fei told U. N. Secretary General Thant
today that Peking would send a delegation to the current session
of the General Assembly.
AU. N. spokesman said the cable received today from Peking
did not set a date but said the Chinese deiegation would arrive "in
the near future. " Diplomats have predicted the Chinese would
arrive by Nov. 4.
The cable also did not specify the makeup of the miaslon but
there has been speculation that Chi would bead the delegation.
There had been earlier speculation that Premier Chou En-lai
might even attend.
The General Assembly voted of the five permanent represenoverwhelmingly Monday night tatives.
to expel Nationalist China from
Thant sent a cable to Peking
the organization and to seat the immediately informing the
Peoples Republic of China, Communist Chinese of the U.N.
giving it a seat on the Security action and asking them to
(Continued on Page 12)
Council and veto power as one

For M

Incl udi ng coloring books · many new lilies . Christmas
cot.orlng books · Slick-on books . Dots to tollow . Story books .

End Of The
''Month Sale!
REG. 1.79
100% KNIT NYLON

. THESE TINY ONES enjoyed the annual Middleport Conununlty Halloween party Thursday night. They are, I to r, Mary Beth Long, Allen Lee King, second place winner in the
''ugliest" category of the infants through first grade division, and Richy Long, second place in
the infant division, "prettiest" category.

on

Many new arrivals . Toys for boys and girl!i just received

U~.iforms

Machine Washable. Black,
Gold, Green, Purple. Blue.
Red, While, Brown, Wine.
Friday and Saturday
Special

ELBERFELD$ TOYLAND
IN THE MIDDLE BLOCK

SALE 20.00

Uniforms
Un'iforms
Uniforms
Uniforms
Uniforms
Uniforms

54" FABRIC

All ~cetate lining for lhe
shimmery look in blouses
as well as the smooth, no-

9.95 Jackets and Coats
11 .95 Jackets and Coals

REG. 35.00 COATS

Re9 . 19.50
Reg. 17.50
Reg. 16.50
Reg. 14.95
Reg. 12.95
Reg. 10.95
Reg . 8.95
Reg . 7.95
Reg. 6.95

Sale 79c

color and plaid wools - nylons
· acrylics - all warm ly
lined. Good colors - good
sty les. You can realty save
now .

REG. 39.50 COATS

· o~¥~~::01
(Color)

Sale 39c

Washable

An excellent selection of
jackets and car coats . Sizes
36 to 44 and e&gt;ctra large sizes
54 ,

1.00

SSe Single Curtain Rods
28"-48" length • - .
1.09 Double Curtain Rods
28"-48" length . . .

JACKETS

to

Width 36" - X 6' lenglh .
While · Green .
Friday and Saturdoy

Heavy guage steel - white baked enamel iinish.
Brackets and n~ils included.

MENS

46

WINDOW SHADES

CURTAIN RODS

COATS

SALE 40.00
SALE 32.00

1.25 SALE 1h PRICE

5 Yds. 1.75

Reg . ll.l9 4oz. Skein

SALE

SALE 40.00
SALE 32.00
SALE 28.00
SALE 24.00

All Weather Coats
Car Coats
Fake Furs
SALE 48.00

Regular, FashiOfl, Clip-on.

Friday and Saturday

AND

REG. 16.50 COATS ·

Mens and womens styles.

BLEAatED
MUSLIN .

REG. 3.98 CHALLIS GOWNS

DRESSY COATS
AND CAPES

REG. 59.50 COATS

Peking to
Take Up

DRAW DRAPERIES

REG. 79.50 WOMEN'S COATS

REG. 79.50 COATS
REG. 69.50 COATS
REG. 59.50 coats
REG. 49.50 COATS
REG. 39.50 COATS
REG. 35.00 COATS
REG. 29.50 COATS
REG. 25.00 COATS
REG. 19.50 COATS
REG. 16.50 COATS

SALE 7.19 .
SALE 4.79 ·
·sALE 4.19
SALE 3.59
SALE 3.09
SALE 2.39
SALE 2.29
SALE 1.49

over 1200
Dresses now on
Pair
sale in our
Second Floor
1---~-----"--------Ready to Wear
Special Prices for Friday and Saturday
Department.
You'll find your
correct size in
100 per cent Fiberglas - Single width Jacquard Wedding
our complete
Ring patter n In solid colors - white, natural , green, brown,
range of sizes
gold.
fro m Junior
SALE 2.i9
2.99 - 36" LENGTH
Petite to
3.69 - 4S" LENGTH
SALE 2.89
3.99 - S4 " LENGTH
SALE 3.09
half sizes.
4.29
63"
LENGTH
SALE
3.39
You'll want to
4.79 -72" LENGTH
SALE 3.69
buy several at
4.99 - 84" LENGTH
SALE 3.99
5.49- 90" LENGTH
SALE 4.29
special two day
Sale prices.
I
"Advertiser" 80 Square
$1.49 Vynocel

SALE 74.00

End of-the-Month Sale

Rated !GI

Red Orlnese to
Come by Nov. 4

SUNGlASSES

Values to 2.50

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

End of the Month Sale

PANTYHOSE

am mal books · games · Jigsaw puzz les . activity boxes _ new

Victoria Vetri
Robin Hawdon

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1971

HANDBAGS

EN()()F-THE-MONlH

WOMEN'S COATS
Fur Trimmed .Coats

SALE 17.00

Peter Cushing
- Pius"WHEN DINOSAURS
RULED THE
EARTH"

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Of The Meigs-Ma10n Area

End of The Month Sale

REG. 19.50 COATS
Fri .. Sat.- Sun.
Oct. 29-30-31
Double Feature
FRANKENSTEIN

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

NO. 139

VOL XXIV

lntere~~ts

•

Ell RFELDS IN POME

.•

y

Promotion Announced

'

..

I

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