<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16704" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/16704?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T22:05:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49851">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/4266b4c397aa31a316a0d09f58991793.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fa21f7e994267f08f0ea88a2415bd3b0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53357">
                  <text>Eagles
Running

a

omero

.

FRIDAY AND SAT

Better

Discontinued Colors

BY KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles defeated
the Glouster Tomcats three
touchdowns to one Wednesday
at Glouster, but dominated the
pre-season s~rimmage more
than that score indicates.
The Eagles had lour sixpointers called back, and
defensively they stopped the
Tomca Is cold .
Coach Roger Kirkhart said
alter the scrimmage :
"Again, we hit hard and we
looked better than in our first
scrimmage. 1 was fairly well
pleased with our defense, but
still not satisfied with the offense."
One sparkplug the offense
showed off was senior running
back Ralph Parker who didn't
get to see much action last year
because super backs Rick
Sanders and Randy Boring
handled the job. "He is really
shifty and made several
beautiful runs, once breaking
as many as seven tackles,"
said Kirkhart.
Glouster's offense generated
nothing in the first part of the
scrimmage. It finally scored
when Kirkhart let them have
the ball as much as they
wanted because the Eagles
needed defensive work.
The Eagles' reserves and the
Glouster seconds battled to a
scoreless tie. In an earlier
scrimmage against New
Lexington, the Eagles'
reserves were beaten, ~. as

".

Friday - Saturday Sale!

WOMENS SPORTSWEAR

Mens • Young Mens

Small group - broken sizes in this well-known
brand of coordinates. Pants - Shirts - Vests Skirts .
While they last

1f2 price

Sheets and Pillowcases
Contempo stripe pattern in several color combinations.

Reg. 5.99 Full Size - - - - - - - - Sale 3.99
Reg. 4.99 Twin Size- - - - -- - - Sale 3.39
Reg. 3.49 pr. Pillowcases - - - Sale 2.39

JEWELRY SALE

Save During Our Annual

Stretch Lace

Another
big
shipment
"Whirlpool"
Refrigerators - Washers and Dryers - On sale
on Elberfelds 3rd floor .

Sale '1 11

Visit Elberfelds 3rd Floor Furniture and Carpet
departments . Well known dependable makes of
Furniture and Carpet for every room in your
home.

WOMENS FALL DRESSES
Selected from our regular stock.

Also a big sale on all Whirlpool and Chrysler Air
Temp Air Conditioners on the Jrd floor.

Save up to 40 per cent on Juniors- Misses - Half
Sizes d.u ring our Labor Day Sale.

Womens Sleepwear Sale

KIRBURY BLANKETS

Selected from our regular stock.

Our Own Klrbury

Sale 1h Price

Floral Print Vinyl

Reg. 4.00 Play Suits
Sale 2 ·49

Mens $3.95
long Sleeve

SPORT SHIRTS

New solid colors. Nlany beautiful patterns
'
t
checks
- stripes . Small (14-14112 ). medium (15·
1
Reg . 3.So PI ay Su1 s
Sale 1.99
151!2 ), large (16-16'12 ), and extra large (17-17'12)
------~---~---:;:::::;::-~~~ sizes. Big selection of collar styles. Tapered and
fuller cut models .
Two Day Sale

Two Day Sale!

2 for '700
Now on Sale at Elberfelds Warehouse on
Mechanic Street is a fine selection of Metal ·
Cabinets . Choose from many styles including
wardrobes, wall cabinets, base cabinets and
china cabinets . These cabinets are finished in
attractive gold. green, white, brown and wood
finishes.

Sizes 6 through 18 .
Cotton anp polyester
blends. All permanent
press. An excellent
selection of solid colors stripes - patterns . Long
sleeves.
Special Sale Price

5 ROOM house. bath, front

porch, full basement, two lots,
S. D. Buskirk, Sr .. 341 Page
Sf .. Middleport, Ohio.
8-Jf .3tp

MASON DRivE-IN

for

Tonight and Friday
·Augusi31-Sept. I

I

R

PLUS
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS
(Color)
(Rl

Group 1

'1.00

TONIGHT: AUG. 31
NOT OPEN

Fits sizes 10 through 13.
White with multl.color lop.

9x12 size
9x18 size
12x18 size •

.

lOc
15c
20c

"Beautysheen"

Throw Rugs
24x48
Oriental
reproduction
made In Belgium. Ric ly
colorful. Four popular
Oriental designs on
background of Gold.
Green, Red, Blue. Ivory .

Simplicity's new sewing book for teens. 96 colorful pagn of
young fashion fun.
75c

Boys

Cotton
Crew SOCKS

Sizes 9 to 11 and 8 to 9'h.
White with multi color top
or solid color with contrast
color lop.

"Par.a gon"

.4.

Srinplicity Home Catalog, Fall-Winter

75i:

Simplicity Fashion Magazine for
Wom(!n who sew, Fall-Winter - - - - • -

75c

100 per cent Rayon and

Good Housekeeping Needlecraft Magazine Sl.OO

two lonn and solids In a

Upholstery
FABRIC
54" Width
Rayon Blends.

Jo~uard

wide ieloctlon of colors.''
Friday and Seturday

An Ideo I publication for women who knit, crochet or sew.

'·

SAIGON 1UP!) -Communist troops marked the start of the
sixth month of their current offensive in South Vietnam roday by
engaging government troops in the heaviest coastal highlands
fighting since the drive begWJ, military spokesmen said.
In addition to the highiWids batUe, intelligence reports
warned of Communist plans ro intensify already heavy lighting
around QuWJg Tri City to mark two weekend anniversaries Saturday's 27th birthday of the North Vietnamese declaration of
independence and Sunday's fourth anniversary of Ho Chi Minh's
death.
Major fighting at Quang Tri a cost of four government
today appeared to bear out the troops dead and five wounded.
In the coastal fighting, a
intelligence reports. Saigon
Saigon
command spokesman
spokesmen said Communist
gunners launched an hour- said government militiamen
long, 132-round artillery and reported killing 29 Communist
mortar attack on government . soldiers in two skirmishes
marine positions arOUnd the I around Tam Quan that left 26
besieged city, 435 miles north South Vietnamese dead and 21
wounded. The spokesman said
of Saigon .
In live skirmishes that it was the most intense fighting
followed, the marines reported in the coastal area since the
killing 36 North Vietnamese at offensive began March 30.
~=::x::o::::~«=m.:•= ·· ::~s:~&gt;&lt;~.~.::::-~'!"""'i~:l.

'1.79

By United Pres! luteroaliooal
MIAMI - TROPICAL STORM CARRIE built 55-mile-anhour winds off the North Carolina coast roday and forecasters
said the distrubance would head northward and grow stronger.
Although litUe information was received on the season's third
tropical storm during the night, forecasters estimated it was
located early today near latitude 35.3 north and longitude 69.5
west. This was about 350 miles east of Cape Hatteras.
Forecasters said gales extend 150 mlle5 outward ro the north
of Carrie's eye and 75 miles to the south. Weathermen said
Carrie, born Thursday out of a low pressure area, was .a small
storm, but could grow larger as it matures.

-

and fighting for seats in the
cafeteria when the telephone
call came. Cramer and the new
champion's second, the Rev .
William 4ombardy, told
Fischer shortly after he awoke,
ready to resume the game.
Fischer asked Schmid to get
' a statement in writing from
Spassky that he had resigned,
Cramer said.
When Fischer sat down at the
board Thursday for the
beginning of the 21st game, he
had 11.5 points - one point
away from the title. Spassky
had 8.5 points.
Five hours later Fischer
rushed off the brightly lit stage
(Continued on page 10)

THIRTY.ONE PUPil.'l at Pomeroy Elementary make up the school's
patrol. First row, 1..-, Pomeroy Police Chief Jed Webster, Sleven Little,
David Burt, Wesley Smith, Troy Griffith, Mark Casto, Todd Smith, Elaine
Barnhart, Cheryl Mowery, Peggy Johnson and Amanda Sisson; second row,
Karen Smith, Kathleen Smith, Lori Wood, Shari Mitch, Sherrie Osborne,
Anna McKinney, Judy Hall, Shari Colmer, Jamie Sisson, Cindy Richards;

•

at y
VOL. XXV

NO. 98 .

FRID~Y .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHINGTON IUPI)-The
nation's unemployment rate
edged up slightly to 5.6 per cent
in August after holding at a 20month low of 5.5 per cent for
two months, the government
said roday.
DONL.DILTS

Dilts Looking

For Support in
Meigs, GalliJJ
Don L. Dilts, Rt. !, Hopewell,
Ohio, a candidate for a seat on
the Ohio State Board of
Education, roured Gallia and
Meigs Counties Thursday.
Dilts, vice-president of the
First National Bank of
Zanesville, is married and the
fath er of lour school age
children. He served four turns
as Muskingum County auditor.
He said he feels persons other
than retired educators should
have a voice in Ohio education .
Dilts is a member of the
Lions, Elks, Eagles and
Grange. He was selected as the
Outstanding Young Man of
Zanesville in 1969 by the
Zanesville Jaycees. He is
active in all community affairs
and a member of the South
Zanesville United Methodist
Church . While visiting in
Gallipolis and Pomeroy, he
met voters and school officials.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the number of persons
with jobs increased by 290,000
to an all-lime high of 81.97
million last month. But 390,000
more workers were looking for
jobs, so unemployment went up

Driver Hurt
At 3:09a.m. today Gary Lee
Simpson, 22, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
was traveling down Rose Hill,
three-tenths of a mile north or
U.S. Rt. JJ , when his car went
off the road on the left, hit a
guardrail, then struck and
broke off a power pole.
Simpson was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R squad
where he was admitted for
lacerations . He is reported in
satisfactory condition.
The sheriff's department
filed charges of driving while
under suspension and reckless
operation.
At 8 a. m. today on SR .124,
about 50 feet west of Route 338
at Great Bend, George A.
Deem, 72, Racine, was
traveling east and Homer
Proffitt, 40, Racine, west, when
the two collided. Heavy fog was
blamed. There was heavy
damage to both vehicles, but no

HUNTERS' ALERT
'!be squirrel season In Meigs
County will open on Sept. 8,
Gary Swope, county game
protector, reports.
The season extends through
Nov_ 11 on private lands and
through De&lt;. Z3 on state public
hunting areas. HUOllog hours
wiU be daylight to dark. The
dally bag limit Is four and the
possession limit after the first
day Is eight.

injuries or arrest.

Thursday at 12:40 p. m. on
SR 124 in Salem Township , one
and five-tenths mile east of the
Vinton-Meigs Co unty Line ,
Emer~o n Reese, 51, Rt. 1,
(Continued on page 10)

Students Agree

To Rules for
Driving Cars
Meigs High School students
must sign agreements if they
are to drive their autos ro
school this year.
Students driving must sign
statements pledging to operate
their vehicles safely ro and
from school; not to move their
autos at anytime during the
day without permission; not to
sta rt their cars after school has
been dismissed until all of the
school buses have left the
groiUids, and to park their
autos only in designated
locations.
Students, particularly during
the first 10 weeks when a part
of the parking area will be used
as a practice space for the
marching band, must have
good reasons for driving,
school officials said.
·
The band will be practicing
on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings alter school under the
direction of Dwight Goins .

Start of '72-73 School Year is Smooth

staff, but It certainly makes for a much more orderly
beginning of school.
Mr. Moore's organization at the jWlior high school
enabled things to get off on a very even keel in that
buUding. Our elementary [X'Incipals had things well
organized too, especially the ccmpllcated problem of
getting the right pupilll on the right buses. I extend
my congratulations to all our administrators an~
staff for this good start.
1 want ro extend my gratitude lor the help,
cooperation and understanding of all kindergarten
pereniS as we attempt to work out the problems
. concerning the scheduling and transporting of kln'dergarten students. Our present arrangement of
alternating full day seuions of kindergarten Is being
carefullY studied.
1 WOULO LIKE TO CALL to your attention that
our football- ope111 jult cme week from Ulnlght.
Season footballlicketsareavailableln the prlncipl.l'a

•

enttne
SEPTEMBER 1. 1972

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Unemployment Rate Up

Weather

By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
This evening I will try to report on a variety of
topics I hope will be of interest. The beginning of
school is a very busy ·time. There Is much ro report.
I have been in every school in the distri~t at least
once this week and I have been In several a number of
limes. -1 can report ro yo!l that we had a smooth start
this 1972-73 school year.
Schedule cards were malled ro all high school
students late In the summer and students were
directed to request changes at that time rather than
at the beginning of school. This takes a lot of additional effort in the summer by Mr. Diehl and his

third row, Tod Morrow, Keith Krautter, Jeff Grueser, Tom Hawley, Brett
Jones, Harold Pettit, Scott Williams, Pat Owens, Raymond Andrews, and
David Dillard. Advisor is Marlene Fisher . Police Chief Webster instructs
each youngster and administers the oath. Absent was Keith Landers. The
members of the patrol have several projects planned to finance another trip
tQ Washington next summer.

Devoted To The lntere&amp;u OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

COLUMBUS -THE OHIO FARM BUREAU Federation
WJnounced Friday it will defend the right of farmers ro have their
land values lor tax purposes based on farm use. Taxes are
currenUy figured on the farmland's potential value . "Farmers
have been discriminated against for years," Farm Bureau
President Leonard Schnell said In remarks prepared for a
meeting of more than 400 farmers here Friday.
"Residential, commercial Wid industrial properly has been
appraised on current use value, while appraisal of farmland has
been on a potential value basis. The result is that farmers are
caught In a severe pinch." The Farm Bureau has filed a motion
Chance of thundershowers
with the Ohio Supreme Court ro allow the organization ro become
over
slate tonight. Low tonight
a party in defending the provisions of Senate Bill 455, new
mostly in the 60s. Cooler
legislation which provides true uniformity in tax appraisal.
Saturday, chance of showers in
southern sections early in the
ORLANDO, FLA . - MULTIMIU.IONAffiE Glenn W.
day. Highs tomorrow in the 70s.
(Continued on page 101

Speaking of Schools-No. 246

$8.98

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WELCOME HOME,
SOL OlEA BOYS
1Technlcolor l
SHOW STAATS 7 P.M.

"

'2.00

All colors . Including
,seasonal and holiday
colors.

"Let Yourself Sew"

79~
GP

Group 2

It fl.

At Pattern Counter SLOO

colors for fall wear. Ideal
slacks fo school. Stop In Select what you need now.

Cushion Foot
Crew Socks

Made of lSI quollty croft

Seamless heavy gauge vinyl plastic. Standard
size 72"x72" .
Beautiful easy to clean patterns In all colors.

Sizes 6 to 18. Crushed corduroy

Mens and Young Mens

FELT
SQUARES

SHOWER CURTAINS

and corded cottons. New

MEIGS THEATRE

Excellent Quality
Ideal lor upholslerlng. Also
.used lor Tole Bags, etc.

Special Purchase!

See the New Slmpllclly Sewing Book - naw rtvlsod ond
expanded. It's got everything you need to know obout llwlng
tor today.

Aare Leg Slacks

Sale 51.19 Skein
Furniture
Webbing

New Publications
In The Sewing Dept.

Boys

Virgin Wool
Sollcb · Heathers · Multi
color Heather and shaded
and variegated colors.

'4.49

Another Shipment

Double Fealure
"FRIENDS"
(Technlcolor)

IDO Pet. Purt

Jute

Excellent patterns and colors. Pinch pleated.
Handwash- no iron. Fire and Sun safe . All first
quality .
Special sale price Friday and Saturday

have been opened when the
game resumed at 10:30 a. m.
EDT today. World chess experts said then he had no
chance ro win. They said an
" incredible blunder" by
Spassky on his 30th move
Thursday had cost him the
game and the championship.
After the telephone call
today Schmid sought a ruling
from Dr. Max Euwe, the
president of the International
Chess Federation and the last
non-Russian to hold the world
title . Euwe said a telephoned
resignation was valid and
permissable.
Fischer did not even know at
the time he was world champion.
Crowds were still buying
tickets outside the playing hall

fL 1ews.. zn Brzef~1

50x84

While you are shopping for your metal cabinets.
look over the beautiful array of vinyl floor
covering on ale . We feature the most popular
patterns in 9 and 12 foot widths .

2 $5..00

'.I ' '

45" Permanent Press
Good patterns and
colors.
For This Sale

KNiniNG
YARN

$7.95 fiberglas Draperies

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

Sport Shirts

DRESS
FABRIC

Red Heart

Special!

Sale /z Price

Boys $2.95

99'

S1.39

New patterns and colors - 72"x90"
"Juno"-100 pet. Acrylic - - - - - - - - S5.49
"Cioud"-100 pet. Polyester Thermal---. sus
"Rose Bower"-100 pet. Acrylic Screen
Print.
$6.95

Sleep 'n Play

SUITS

All At
Sale Prices!

Large Shipment Blankets

Infants

Reg. '4.98 and 15.98

NO WEDDING
The wedding of Miss Judy
Taylor and Ronnie Adrian has
been cancelled.

Fruit wood color. Flat slat
vinyl roll-up blinds. All611.
drop.~·. 7' , B' and 10' width .

Mens Leather Work Belts - - - - •• - - - 1.75

White - beige - chocolate · nav.y - lemon -plum.

1

Porch
Blinds

Boys and mens Reversible Wide Belts - - 1.75

,.

Bra and Bikini Sets

VISITS TURNERS
Mr. and Mrs. Dale K. Roush
and children, Steven and
Kathy, of Apple Creek, were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Turner, Middleport.
Stephen leaves Saturday for
New Bedford, Mass. where he
attends college.

Gibraltar

'2.50

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
- Bobby Fischer won the
world c hess championship
roday when Russian defender
Boris Spassky telephoned his
resignation in the 2;st game of
their $25Q,OOO match.
Fischer, 29, thus fulfilled his
lifelong dream of becoming the
first American world chess
champion of modern times - a
dream that had driven him for
20 years.
Fischer 's aide,
Fred
Cramer, said the Russian
champion telephoned .arbiter
Lothar Schmid to tell him he
resigned the 21st game, giving
Fischer the title.
The 21st game was adjourned Thursday and Spassky
sealed his 41st move in a brown
paper envelope that was to

North Pressing
Heaviest Force
In Six Months

Cleanup Sale!

Boys sizes 24 to 28- Mens sizes 30 to 38. White
- Brown - Black . A brand new selection.

Reg. $3.00

Diaper Bags

20% off
Elberfeld• In Pomeroy are
continuing the 20. per cent
off sole of custom-made
drapes. Bring In your
measurements.

WIDE SPORT BELTS

All styles of Supp,-Hose Pantyhose and
Stockings included in this sale.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
International vice president of
the Communications Workers
of America (CWA) called a
mee ling here today of AFLCIO union leaders who are
willing to launch a committee
supporting Sen. George
McGovern for President.
Martin J. Hughes said he rold
the Democratic presidential
condidate last week in
Washington
there
was
"widespread support among
trade unions in Ohio for the
election of a McGovern..Shriver
ticket."

Sale

Young Mens - Boys

Supp-Hose Sale

Meeting Called

Drapery

'10.95 Knit SlaCks Sale '8.25
'11.95 Knit Slacks Sale ~95
'12.95 Knit Slacks Sale '9.75
'13.95 Knit Slacks Sale '10.50
'14.95 Knit Slacks Sale '11.25
'15.95 Knit Slacks Sale '11.95
'16.95 Knit Slacks Sale '12.75
'17.95 Knit Slacks Sale '1150

- Ropes - Pins - Rings - Bracelets.
Selected from our regular stock. Values to
$4.00.

In a general wrap-up comment of the game, Kirkhart
said: ·•
''We need more power on
offense, but our defense is
getting much better."
The Eagles will scrimmage
tl1e NelllonviUe-York Buckeyes
at Nelsonville Saturday at 10 a.
m. Nelsonville-York whipped
Kyger Creek 14-8 (two rouchdowns ro one) in • scrimmage
Saturday.

Custom-Made

Comfort knit slacks. So popular for
school and dress wear. A brand new
selection of colors - patterns - styles.
All famous makes. You can really
save during this two-day sale.

No-Iron Percale

~arrings

Now Gainl On! .

Knit SICicks

Cannon Royal Family

was the varsity.

Frldly anil Saturday
September 1-2
CATO'NINE TAILS
(·TechnicolorJ
Jas Franclscus
Karl Malden
e&amp;therlne Speak

Spassky Gives up
In 21st Game

office at the high school. The phone number is 9922158.
SCHOOL INSURANCE APPLICATION forms
have been sent home with all students. I remind you
that the Insurance does not become effective until the
day the student brings the premium to the teacher in
the school. Please remember that this insurance Is a
matter between you and the insurance company. The
. school simply provides the means for the distribution
of information, the collection of premiums, and the
recording of the students Insured.
It is the policy of the school system that all
students who will be participating in any athletic
activity during the school year MUST have school
insurance, This policy includes all students in grades
7-12.
THE DAILY LUNCH menu for all the schools In
'
the dllltrlct will be announced each morning on radio.
We apologize for a couple of differences during this
past week. We will try to keep these to WI absolute
minimum.
.
THE MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL BAND spent a week
at band camp in August. This was a period of intensive training In b9th marching and music. In
addition to this, the bilnd will be practicing a couple of
nighiS each weel alter IIChool during marching
season. We will appreciate the understanding of the
parents of these youngaters In the added probl~m of
'
transportation.
OUR BUS SCHEDULES have been slowed additlooally this week by !he change in the road location
In the vicinity of the high school. If you haven't been
In tha~ area this week, you won't know what I am
referring to, but it Is more difficult to get ro the high
adi!Jol now than It was last Monday morning. We look

forward ro the completion of the road that will permit
us direct access ro the school.
IN ONE OF THE MEETINGS WE HAD last
summer, an extremely important topic was
discussed, namely, that parents with children in
grades 7-12 have no real way to have contact with the
teachers of their children. It is alllo important for us
ro have additional opportunities for parent-teacher
contacts in grades K~. even though we already have
PT As. We are going I() make an effort ro remedy this
situation this year.
This is how we plan to do it: On four days we will .
dismiss school 21&gt; hours early, right after lunch. All
teachers and students will be excused at that time.
During the evening of each of these four days, from' 7
p.m. to 9:30p.m., all teachers will be in school to
meet in conferences with parents.
The first of 'these half dty sessions will be on
Thursday, Sept. '28, On that same date all teachers
will be In the schools from 7 _9:30 p.m. for parent
conferences. The other dates on which we plan these
parent conferences are Oct. 26, March 29 and April 26.
These meetings are now possible because of recent
changes in otate legislation that permit four on~.lJalf
days of the school year to be constructe&lt;flor parent
conferences.
We will be giving you additional reminders of
these dates as the year progresses, but you might
want to circle September 28 right now, so you won't
forget ft.
I want to remind you again that this is something
that developed from dlscus'lions that we had with
citizens' groups this summer. We hope that we wlU
have the support of parents in making this effort a
success.

•

by 100,000 to 4,11l17,000.
The BLS termed the 290,000
growth in employment as
substantial, and said unemployment was "basically unchanged" despite the addition
of the 100,000 workers ro the
jobless roles and the increase
in the unemployment rate from
5.5 up to 5.6 per cent.
Average weekly earnings of
rank-and-file workers continued ro keep ahead of inflation during President
Nixon's economic controls,
now more than one year old,
the BLS said.
Average weekly earnings
last month went up $1.12 to
$137.23 -4!.4 per cent above the
previous August.

the nearly 5 million· unemployed.
At the same time, Meany
said: "Wages have been held
down, but prices and profits
have been allowed to
skyrocket, employers,
naturally, are only roo happy to
police wage controls-but no
effective machinery was ever
set up ro keep prices in check...
Prior ro release oi lliilateSt
figures, Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson contended
that American workers had
made "impressive economic

and social gains" since Labor
Day, 1971, saying the rate of
inflation was down, employment up, unemployment
down, and productivity and
Conswner prices went up purchasing power of average
about 3 per cent during the 12- wages up.
month period.
The report said virtually all
the increase in employment
occurred among _adult women
working part time . .Their
jobless rate declined from 5.7
down to 5.5 per cent.
'!'he employment statistics,
made public just before the
lon g Labor Day weekend
began, eame as George Meany,
The Meigs Marauder grid
AFL-CIO president, was again · squad may have a new l~k
attacking President Nixon's when it goes for the extra pomt
economic policies which he after touchdowns this year.
said had caused a "tragic The growing popularity of the
human waste" in the form of kick in the 1970s has arrived in
Marauderland.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said jobless rates for most
categories of workers showed
Utile or no change during
August.
The rate for adult men held
steady at 3.9 per cent,
joblessness for white workers
went up from 5 to 5.1 per cent
and Negro unemployment
dropped from 9.9 ro 9.7 per
cent. The rate for married men
edged down from 2.7 to 2.6 per
cent and unemployment
among heads of households
remained unchanged at 3.3 per
cent.
But unemployment amoog
teenagers shot up from 14.8 per
cent in July ro !6.9 per Cl!ht in
August, with most of the increase among 16 Wid 17 yearold
(Continued on page ~0)

McKinney Putting
Toe to the Ball

Labor Day Is Holiday
Meigs Co unty
school
students who began classes
Monday will get their first
" holiday" Monday (Labor
Day) .
Students in the Meigs LQcal
School District will ge t another
break in September when the
first of four parent-student
conFere nces is held. On Sept. 28
classes will be dismissed at
noon in the district. In the
eveni ng from 7 to 9:30 p. m.,
teachers will return to their
classrooms and parents are

invited to visit them to discuss
any phase of their child's work .
Similar
conferences
arranged on the same schedule
with classes being dismissed In
the afternoons will be held on
Oct. 26, March 29 and April 26.
The next holidays for
students will come on Oct. 13
when the annual Meigs County
Education Association meeting
is to be held, and on Oct. 27
when the Southeastern Ohio
Teachers Assn . meets.

Lou McKinney, 175lb. senior
guard Thursday was kicking
over a backslap (there are no
goalposts) on the Salisbury
Elementary practice field .
McKinney was making good
on some of his boots; some
sailed low. Only one was
blocked, a good sign. A little
practice and maybe the
Marauders will have a few 7s
and 2's in their final .scores
instead of 8s or other even
numbers.
Meigs will scrimmage the
Warren Local Warriors at
Middleport Saturday at 10 a.
m. The public Is invited ro
come out and see what the
Marauders have.
The test against the Warriors
will be a tough one for they are
one of the favorites in the TrtValley Conference this year
along with Belpre, the second
game on the Meigs schedule.

Teaching Aided by $20,150
A $20,150 state program will work as teacher aides in
which provides for teacher the Pomeroy Elementary and
aides, school office aides and a the Salisbury Elementary
$135 allowance lor each Schools. Their assignments as
teacher from kindergarten to grade level will be deterthrough sixth grades to be used mined by Mrs. Bailey and the
for additional teaching respective school principal. ·
materials, is being carried out
Rounding out !he program Is
this fall in the Meigs Local the
teaching
material
School District .
The allocations are based
upon the number of children in
the county whose families are
receiving aid ro dependent
Bryson R. Carter, Gallla
children. Butthemoneyisrobe - County Agriculture Agent, has
spent for general programs ro an nounced dates lor nine fall
improve
all
teaching feeder call sales.
situations.
The first, for yearling calves,
Under It, six aides have been is planned Oct. 4 at Chillicothe.
employed to help in the office
Other sales are Oct. 10 at
work at six elementary school. 8::::;:;:;:;:;:;:~::::::::::::::::::::::~::::&gt;:~::~:::::::::~:::::~:
These aides are at Bra~ury
MEETING
and Middleport where tbey
work six hours a day, and at
TONIGHT
Salem Center, Rutland ,
of
Harrisonville and Salisbury,
MIDDLEPORT
where the aides will work four
MERCHANTS
hours each dsy. The only
ASSOCIATION
elementary school not having
7:30P.M.
an aide assigned 1s th e,
Pomeroy Elementary where
Columbus &amp; Southern
there is a full time secretary.
Ohio Elec. Co.
Five Meigs High School
Social Rooms
, students under supervision of
Mrs. Joe Bailey of the faculty m;~~·EJI!EU;

allowance .
Under provisions of the
teaching materialll allowance,
57 classroom teachers will
spend •135 each on whatever
additional teacher materials
!hey feel will be most helpul
for their pupils during the 1m73 school year.

9 Sales.·on Autumn List
Athens, all beef breeds; Oct.
11, GalltpoUs. all beef breeds;
Oct . 17, Chillicothe , all
Hereford; Oct. 24, Chillicothe,
Angus ltlld Angus-Cross; Oct.
31, Chillicothe, ali beefbreeds;
Nov. 2, Gallipolis, all beef
breeds; Nov . 8, Chillicothe,
Hereford hornle~s and No¥.••ll,
Chillicothe, all beef breeds.
The first sale in Gallipolis Is
during the day. Calves should
be brought ro the Ohio Valley
Srockyards on Oct. 10.
Dairy and dairy cross calves
that meet the slandards for the
number five grade may be
consigned to the Galllpolla
sale. According to Carter, they ·
will be Penned aeparately and
sold separately from the beef
catUe,

�. ... . .
~

_________ ,

.

•

~

3- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Sept.l,1972

2- The Dally Senlmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sept. !, 1972

Democrats Huddle
By NORMAN KEMPSTER
WASHINGTON (UPI )-Predicting V!clory despite Pres·
!dent Nixon's seemingly commanding lead in the pubhc

opiruon polls, sen. George S.
McGovern today called his
runnmg mate, Sargent Shriver,
to a campaign strategy
session

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Bottel

•
•
Perils of Playing With Fire

Dear Helen :
I'm 22and my husband is 27 We've been married mne years,
so you can see I d1dn't live much before the weddmg.
We have two children, SIX and two, a mce, well kept home
and - this may seem hard 1o believe - we love each other more
and more. We can talk openly and to the poml on any subJect
without embarrassment.
Up to lh1s year, we've spent lime off mostly w1th the k1ds,
having fun on p1cmcs, etc Now we've decided to give ourselves
one day a week We go dancmg, have a few drmks w1th fr~ends
But there's th1s real good looking guy m our crowd In a kidding way, I lold my husband 11 would be fun lo date hun , as he
turns me on My husband sa1d, "Okay, 1f we make it a double
date. " In olher words swap males for a night.
What started as kiddmg now sounds real temptmg It's kmd
of sad, to think you'll never know what another man (or gll'l) 1s
like, just 'cause you're mamed We've never been unfaithful, but
!guess you wouldn 't call it chealmg 1fwe all agreed .
What do you thmk ' Could we trust each other' Would this
lead to more swaps, and maybe a break-up ? We don't want
that'- TEMPTED AND BURNING
DealT and b:
1 think mate-!lwapping om1ts the human element somewhere along the lme, one or the other of you w11l let
emotions surface: jealousy, " love " , disgust perhaps
Relationships seldom stay purely physical for long - and then
• the marriage problems start.
Remember back to your weddmg vows, and ask yourselves
one more question Is this "new thing" the kmd of life I'd want
for my children ' - H
DEAR HELEN
After lhe Tom Eagleton fiasco, I wonder how many people m
hjgh places will av01d psychiatric counseling - even 1f they need
it badly to help them over a temporary depressiOn '
When disturbed people go untreated through lear of public
op1nlon - it could mean we'll fmd a lot more disturbed people m
command, and that's frightening -OBSERVER
Dear Observer:
That it IS. Read onDear Helen :
I entered a psychiatriCtreatment center voluntarily because
I fell my nerves were at the breakmg point.
!learned a sreat deal about myself and consider the cure
complete. But since commg out, I've learned even more about
my fellow man.
The former mental pallenl 1sn 't shunned Rather, he 's
,\YATCHED. And while peo~le . h1de lhe y-J~ ~ 1\• .Tbey,.
• 'protect" him (by not glvmll.h!Jn the pro'l'o~~si~~¥ 4f!!e&lt;U~ ,
·,They put a "handle with care"label on hi!Jl.lfe must act tw1ce as
""normal" as anyone else m order to prove he's worth half as
much as less competent men
Psychiatric treatment speeded my return to mental health,
llut It may have brought me more problems than if I had pulled
through my nervous breakdown by myself.
We still aren 't out of lhe dark ages when 1t comes to illnesses
of lhe mind. People never quite believe you can get over them. Sl'ALLED CAREER

By JACK O'BRIAN
Hanoi, ThaiiUtymes With Boy, and ...
NEW ;YORK (KFS) - Quote from Roger
Vadlnl, Jane Fonda's distant husband "If I had
1o choose three persons w1th whom to make a
round~h e-world cruiSe Iiley would all be male."
Same w1th Jane, plamly . Mrs. George
McGovern got lots of k1sses at Charley O's her
lapel button mVIted, "Kiss Me. I'm for
McGovern." . . "The actors m the happy fun fillo!d "Sugar" musiCal know, despite a few
&lt;:;rltjcal d1ssents, they're m a longrun hit ; the
bulletm board sports the bold -lettered
assurance, 'Here Today, Here Tomo rrow."
Uberace doesn't hke bemg loid he sounds hke
George McGovern . Thinks he sounds like Burt
Reynolds . . Phil Bennett, composer and LIZ
Taylor-admirer, wrote a song titled "! Want a
Gll'l Just Like the G1rl Who Mam ed N1cky
HUlon , Michael Wildmg, Mike Tood, Eddie
FiBber and Richard Burton." Raquel Welch
was at Jimmy Westoh's w1th new beau Ron
Talsky, who wears lifts because he's a bit
shorlsky . . Patnotism may be making a
comeback - Jack Jones smgs the Nat'! Anthem
In hiS act .. Bob Hope's a1de IS Bill Faith , what
with alllhe char1ty benefits Bob does 1t's, Fa1th ,
Hope and charity indeed
Chateau Madr1d thrush Olga Gmllot snooled
a Fidel Castro offer to come back to Duba to
perform. Olga fled penniless when Castro
ripped' in .. Top sculplor Robert Berks (he
sculpted Truman, Johnson &amp; Kennedy) 1s
flnishmg a bust of Joe E. l£w1s for the Friars
Club, which Joe headed for years . . There were
Sunday matinee mugg ings at 8th Ave. and 53rd
St.-at 4 p.m. ' .. The big Post Office at 55th &amp;
l'd Ave. collects the homos. Who play alfresco
Post Off1ce in lhe ou1 hours .. There are only a
lew hundred health clubs m N Y., but the
11
Shamus " fh ck re nted O'Henry 's fame d
restaurant m the V1llage for a scene - in a
health club.
Las Vegas' Caesars Palace must think ll's a
country: it sent 1960 tnple.gold medal wmner
Wilma Rudolph lo Mumch as its diplomatiC
representati·Je. Wilma's now a happily wed
mother offm (al32) .. . "DaysofOur Lives" TV
soap opera star Ryan MacDonald thinks he
might be the next Burt Reynolds-type Cosmo
centerfold; unaglne that as an ambition ! ...
Golfers are delighted the Times spreads so
much space on golf; Its publisher, Punch
Sulzberger, adores the game ... Hearmg Steve
Allen sing on TV IS lhe convincer that singmg Is
the tiniest of Steve's many small talents .
Former Brooklyn ass't D A. Burton Turkus
(who helped smash Murder Inc. more than 20

Shriver canceled scheduled
appearances m the Middle
West to confer with t~e
Demo crall c presidential
nommee at his Japanrse style
home in Washington.
McGovern said Thursday he
expects 1o begin closmg the
gap m lhe polls-34 points In
the most recent Gallup Pollby Oct. 1 and move steadily up
until the Nov. 7 electiOn
ul think we will win/' he
sa1d.
"The poll situation is much
better now than it was when I
was seeking the nomination,''
he sa1d. "We lhought 11 was a
good day when we hit 5 per cent
m the Gallup Poll."
But lhere was bttle doubt
that the Democratic campaign
was having its trouble. Lawrence F. O'Brien, who has the
title of campaign chairman but
whose duties are loosely
defmed, complained that the
whole operation was dlsorgaruzed and uncoordinated.
An a1de to O'Brien S8ld the
organizational problems were
discussed durmg a stormy
lhree-hour meetmg of McGovern's lop associates at the
candidate's home Wednesday
rughl. He said O'Brien was
encouraged by lhe lone of that
sess1on
"Th1s campa1gn has just a
few weeks lo go and if this
whole campaign IS nol firmly
m place the day after Labor
Day, my judgment 1s that 11
w1ll never be in place,"
O'Bnen sa1d Thursday m an
mlerv1ew w11h National Public
Radio
Although he has been tourmg
the nat10n for several weeks,
mostly on what he called
"listenmgn trips, McGovern
launches h1s campaign 1n
earnest Sunday .

BY PAUL CRABTREE

SEAMAN McDANIEL
Navy Seaman ' Recruit
Dwight McDaniel, son of
Mrs. Barbara McDaniel, tO
Riverview Place, Mid·
dleporl, is home on leave
after completing recruit
training at Recruit Training
Cenler at Orlando, Fla.
McDaniel, a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High School, will
leave Sept. 9 for duty In
Hawaii.

MAXVILL TRADED
ST LOUIS (UP! ) - Dal
Maxv1ll, the lighl-hitting but
shck-f1eldmg shortstop of the
St. Lou1s Cardmals for the last
10 years, was sent to the
Oakland A's Thursday m ex·
change for th1rd baseman Joe
Lmdsey and another player to
be named later Lmdsey 1s a
first-year player with the A's
Bll'mmgham farm club m the
AA Southern League. He was
bal ling 259 m 36 games lh1s
season Maxvlll hll 221 m lOa
games for St !.oms
In 1923, at least 150,000
persons died when an earthquake shook Japan m the Tokyo
and Yokohama areas

'

Loses by Scorning 1O-S pot
NORTH

H~

• Q 10 9 54

¥ Kl02

+A J 5

WEST

"'J

6

EAST

• 3

• 72

¥ J76 3
. 9732

¥ AQ9B
. Q I06

. KI098
olo Q754
SOUTH (D)
. A KJ 8 6
• 54

+ KB 4
olo A32

West

l4..

Both vu lnerable
North
East South

Pass 3 4
Pas~
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opcmng lead- .t. 10

Oswald &amp; James Jacob)
No pomt coun t value IS asSigned to a IO·spot but don 't
desp1se those mce card s for
that reason. On occaswn a
10-spot will turn out to be
wo1 th a full tnck
It 1s a cmch fo1 South to
fmd a way to go down w1th
today 's four-spade contract
He w1ns the hrst club .
draws trumps ; leads a heart
to dummy's kmg ; groan s
when Eas t plunks on the
ace loses a second hearl
and a club and eventually
sees East plunk the queen of
diamonds on dummy 's Jack
II 1s even easier for So uth
to msure this contrac t by
lakmg full advan tage of
dummy 's 10 of hearts
He starts proceedm gs by
plavmg dummy s jack of
clubs. He lets East hold the
tr1ck With his queen Eas t
returns a club South wms.
ruffs his last club m dummy ; draws trumps and leads
a heart
II West plays low South
plays dummy's 10 East
wms With the queen and IS
helpless If he cashes the
ace of hearts 1! sets up dummy's kmg fQr_a d1amond diSca rd ; 1f he leiil~ d1amond
11 takes care of th d1amond
fmesse . a club ead gives
South a ruff and discard.

years ago) says the prunary solution to
gangster killmgs IS, "Brmg back the death
penalty" .. . Darryl Zanuck becomes a grandpop
agam any day, v1a the D1ck Zanucks . The
Times Square area smut JOints peddle hsts of
names of gay lads to meet Wllhout "crlllSing" ;
all so drab.
Rocky Graziano explams h1s appearances
m a TV commerctal as a woman with, "Dey
took me lnSleada Haque! Welch" . Manager
Bullets Durgom once had Jackie Gleason as
chen! and lost hlnl ; his gill for rruslaymg highfee clients came through again - he just lost
Cr-I EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
T in1 Lopez .. Sign of the mflated Urnes: Com1c
Freddie Roman bought a whole new roullne on high prices
I•
Makeup man Jack Turner once toned up the
The b1ddmg has been
faces of Lana Turner , Garbo, Judy Garland, West North East South
+ Dble Pass
Jean Harlow; a sign of the beastly H'wood tunes IPass
2+
Pass
2 N.T.
- h1s latest JOb was to touch up the rodent star Pass 4 •
Pass
5+
Pass
5
¥
Pass
'
of lhe "Ben" horror fl1ck .. Jon Vmght thinks
Y
S
th
h
1
d
ou, ou , o
his "The All American Boy" for Warners will
•874
3 ¥ 2 tAK943..,76Z
make h1s career b1g enough to form his own
What do you do now?
production company. It's the Elmer Company,
A--Just bid live spades. Your
named after h1s dad .. No new hotels abuilding five-diamond eatl was doubtful
here, but Londcn has 30 rising - and more and you must sign off from now
on.
planned
TODAY'S QUESTION
Nostalgia freaks will go crUJsmg down
Instead
of bidd mg two dlamemory lane withoulloo much on the1r mmds monds, your
p a rl n e r has b1d
- radio-TV nostalgia maven Joe Franklin's two hearts over your one spade
shepherding hiS second Memory Lane cruiSe to What do you do now'
lhe Car1b and South America aboard the S. S
Olympia .. Sid Gary, an early Amencan AI
Jolson sound-alike, will be one of the stars;
we'd've said offhand lhe band Joe will take, Sy
Oliver's, was too modern lor lhe fond look back,
but then we thought of Sy's years With lhe great
The Dai~ Sentinel
Jiimme Lunceford Band and decided 35 years
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ago is good enough nostalgia , at that.
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL.
Gene Kelly lost his mom .. Calif ex-Gov
E11ec Ed
Pal Brown ambled 52nd Sl - and nobody
ROBER T HOEFLICH .
Ctt y Edt lor
recogn1zed lhe gent who beat Nixon for the
Pub l iShe d da ll y e xc ep t
Calif. Gov's chair In 1962 ... In fact, Pat always S e~t u r da't by The Ot't to Val ley
P ub lls t11ng com pa ny , 111
had an Identity problem; he 's the definillve Cou
rt St ,, Po mero y OhtO,
ordinary fellow; not meant In the pejorallve 45769 Bli St n ess Olltce P hon e
221 56, E d ttorta l Phon e 992
sense, parenlhelically ... The homo-movie "Bob 99
2157
&amp;Daryl&amp;Ted &amp;Alex" is a drag.
Second c la n po~t&amp;oe Pl!lld at
eroy, Ohto
Sinatra and Burt Lancaster walked lnlo Pom
N at i ona l ad ~ H fls l ng
london's famed pub the Guinea, where Tony repr esenta 1t ve Bo tt mell l
G ~lla g her , Inc , 12 East 42nd
Curtis looked up and catcalled, "Imagine you St . New Yor k. Ct l 'f New Yor k
Sub scr tptt on rat es
De
eating here !" The management then roped off
l tv er ed b y c arr 1er where
all the lables around them so Sinatra wouldn't ava ilab le SO ce nh per week. .
By M otor Route wh ere carr 1er
be disturbed by the peasants ... The hairiest new ser
vtc e not avail able One
male sex symbol contacted Hair Again Ltd., the m onth Sl 7S By rT'Illll tn Oh10
an d w va , On&amp; ytar 514 00
bald-lixmg (wilh cosmetic surgery) •.mporlum, S•x
m on Hu S7 2S Three
about the bare spol not seen In his beefcake mo nt hs s• SO StJbs crtpt ton
prrce tncl udt s Sunda y Ti mes
photos.
Senf tnel

1•

r
l

&amp; THINGS
Don't blame this one on me. The opinionsaren'tmine.
But for what it's wtrth, as we begin the schoolboy football
seasoo tonight (with a lot of work In bringing more lhan 20 games
Into your living room), here is the first annual Crabtree Unscientific &amp; Probably Inaccurate Football roll :
GALLIPOLI$ : On average, the Blue DeVIls are very young,
very Inexperienced, and very promising. A half-&lt;lozen of their
hottest fans say they're about a year away, and should be really
awesome In the 1974 season, as a good crop ot sophomores
readies maturity. sclme more ebu!Uent sources feel they could
come faster. and be spoilers late In the campBlgll this fall. Coach
Johnny Ecker could find himself with a solid, coordinated ball
team by the lime the big annual SEOAL shootout w1th Meigs
comes up in November.
Consensus - The rugged SEOAL schedule, combined with
immaturity, make a 3-7 or H record probable. Anything over 5-5
would he a tribute lo Ecker and his staff.

++ +
MEIGS : The Marauders are rebuilding from heavy graduation
losses, but with a good and talented nucleus on both. defense and
offense Nobody is predicting a league championship. The Bend
area fans I talked willl point to outstanding lines, on both offense
and defense. The defensive secondary and offensiv~ backfields
must come last, though, if Meigs is 1o have a more-thanrespectable year.
Nowhere did I· hear the faintest word of crillcism of Coach
Charlie Chancey. He enjoys a fantastic level of public confidence
1o get the most he can, out of the material he has lo work with.
Consensus: "A wmnlng season," with most of those asked
pegging it at about 7-3. With luck, they could do a litUe better.

++ +

wAHAMA : The Wh1te Falcons lost just about everything from
last year's find squad, wh1ch was 7-1·2. Most of the graduates
played both ways, complicating the problems of Coach Grant
Barnette.
He's faced w1th the task of rebuilding a team around SIX or
eight boys, I'm lold, but those six or eight have a lot of talent
Wahama won't be long m finding out: Their season opener
lonight is with Wirt County, a team which has every single
starter back. Last year, the Falcons topped Wirt on some laslmmute heroics, scoring on lhe game's last play, as I recall it.
Consensus - Rough going, tough schedule, with a green club.
If they're better than 3-7, it won't have been too bad a year.

+++
PT. PLEASANT : The area 's mystery team. Coach D1ck Ware
lost heavily from a very fine defenaive unit, llut has several
returnees on offense. The trouble is that the offense wasn't very
potent last year. Ware has announced he 'll UBe more double-duty
players than ever before.
Fans polled say lhe Big Blacks will he okay on defense, but are
vague about specil1cs. ("Ware always has a good defense, thai 's
why," was a stock answer.) Definite Improvement seems
present in the offens1ve Une, but the backfield has yet to prove
itself. Every individual polled was high on the potential for
passmg and leadership abilities at quarterback. If the backfield
jells, the Blacks could be belligerent and rugged. But, honestly,
those holes m the defense are big and hard lo fill.
Consensus - Who knows ? Anywhere from U lo 8-2. Almost
everyone, lhough,lorcasts an Improvement over last year's 2-71. As at Meigs, most fans expect "a wmnmg season," and
probably would be happy w1th 7-3.

I

I and must be signed with llle signee's address. Names may be I
I wllllheld upon publication, however, on request. Leiters I
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities. 1
I
I

Television Log
Programs for Tonight and Tomorrow
Oli- News 3, 4, a. 10. IS ; NB C News 8, 10, Truth or Conseq. 6, I
Dream of Jeanme 13. Sesame St 20 . Halhayoga 33.
6 3Q-News. 3, 4, 6 8, 10, 13. IS , French Chef 33
_
7.011-Porter Wagoner 3, D•ck Van Dyke 4, News, Weather.
Sports 6, 10, Doddletown Popers 8; Mag1c Circus 13,
Saont 15, Masterpiece Theatre 33
1 311-Adam 12, 3, I Dream of Jeann•e 4, To Tell the Truth 6;

6

Parent Game 10

8 oo-Dr S1mon Locke 3; Summer Olympics 6. 13. O'Hara . U
S Treasury 8, 10 , To Be Announced 15.

8 311- Pro Football 3, 4, 15. Youth Drug Ward 33.
9 oo=Movie,

" Operation Solon 8, " Diamond Head'' 10

9 311-Bellota 33
10 OQ-MIIIstones of Progress 33
10 3D-Washmgton Week

1n

Rev1ew 33

11 oo-News, Weather. Sports, 6, 8. 10, 13
11 311-Dock Cavett 6. Movie, " The Comedy of Terrors" 8;
" Flight of the Lost Balloon" 10.
12 oo-Johnn Carson 3, 4, IS
1 3Q-Roller Derby 4, Local News 13
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
Oil- Faith for Today 10.
6 3o-Chrostopher Closeup 10
7 oo-Ne1ghbors 13; Commun ique 6. Farm Front 4; Dea1h

6

Valley Days&amp; , SOCietieS In Transition 10 , Farmbook 3
7 15--Woman's Pomt of V1ew 13
7 3()-Gollogan's Is 4, Man from C 0 S I 10, Gosepl 6, Blastofl

13; Monkees 8.
8 QO- Dr. Dool ittle 3, 4. 15. Jerry Lewos 13; Bugs Bunny 8, 10;

I

Attention, Citizens and
Voters of Middleport
Dear Sir ·
At the council meellng Monday, Aug., 28th, II was voted lo
purchase a truck for the water and sewerage department to be
paid for from the water and sewerage department funds. My
question is this : "How can they afford such an outlay of money
for an item such as this when the water dept. cannot afford lo
make any of the much needed repairs and replacements to our
obsolete water system? "
I have attended council meetings over a period of several
months requesting an adequate water Une and fire hydrant be
placed In our area lor the benefit of several families. The only
definite answer that I came up with was that what money was In
the fund cannot be spenl due to the fact that in the long, distant,
and unforeseeable future, there might just possibly be an
emergency that would deplete this lund completely. Since they
now see fit lo spend a sizeable amount of money for a truck, I
would imagine the expected emergency has been postponed.
In closing, I would like for the voters of the Village to please
(before the next election) try to attend some of lhe council and
Board of Public Affairs meetmgs and see what kind of a runaround people are getting.
My reason for not attending council meetings smce May - I
am workmg the evenmg shill.
James Brewer

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO
(UP I) Defending champion Michigan
and rebounding Ohio State
should set the pace In the
Midwest football race In 1972
with Michigan Stale, Purdue
and Illinois likely B1g Ten
challengers.
l!ul outside the B1g Ten the
power will he mediocre Wllh
Notre Dame heading lor an off
year and lhe Mid Amer1ca
hkely to be an open race be·
tween Miami, Bowling Green,
Toledn and Western Michigan.
Bo Schembechler's Michigan
club must find replacements
lor two strong runners, Glenn
Doughty and Billy Taylor.
Sophomores Chuck Heater and
Glenn Franklln may be the
answer, furnishmg good
rushing with veteran Ed
Shuttlesworth. Quarterback
could be solved by Kevin
Casey, Larry Clpa or

It's all so strange, not as I dreamed,
The people are different - or so it seems.
But I am the stranger, this is the1r homeland
Today I was pleased - a stranger extended his hand !
He told me of his land, and how it had grown,
As I listened, a genUe breeze began to blow .
I began to understand , and I knew I could make amends
Because we are all God's children, each With his ways,
But w1th each makmg changes and following HIS footsteps .
By Amn. James Brewer, Jr.
Stationed at Karmusel, Turkey

Tran~fers _

cowllillus" (ui&gt;J i ·-

,

State Auditor Joseph
Fa nn1e Phillips , William
Ferguson has hired his kid Dav1d Ph1lhps, Marcella
brother as a liquor audit Phillips to Charles Ray Hysell,
examiner.
Kathryn Hysell, Quit Clalnl,
The &amp;0-year-old auditor Sutton.
said Tuesday he put Leo, 7&amp;, ' Charles Ray Hysell, Kathryn
on the otale payroll July 31. Hyse ll to J F. Whittle, Sharhe
Leo Ferguson worked as an Neum an Whittle, Parcel,
examiner nnd~r bls brother Sutton
from 1937 to 1953 when he
Lincoln E Sm1th, Shll'ley A.
was auditor before. "He did Smith to Thelma Custer, Lot,
not ask me, I asked him," Syracuse.
Ferguson said of tbe latest
Thomas R Savage, dec., to
job.
Ina Mae Savage, Cert. for
Leo Ferguson also worked Trans , Sc1pio.
for his brolller when Joseph
Basharat A. Munei, Ameena
was state treasurer. His new Munei to Joe N. Sayre, Rosabe
duties whlcb be came out of Sayre, Parcels, Scipio
retirement to accept at an
Robert L Godfrey, Barbara
annual salary of $12,313, will S Godfrey to Harley Godfrey,
involve making liquor audits Alma Godfrey, 32 &amp; .45 A.,
In the central Ohio region. Olive.
Robel! McCarlney, Bar·
bara McCartney lo Orville
Johnson, Velma E. Johnson,
TEENAGER KILLED
Lot, Middleport
XENIA, Ohio IUP! ) - Scott
Alfred F. McCoy to Carl 0.
Cochran, 17, Bellbrook, was Taylor, Patricia L Taylor, &gt;
killed early today m a one-car A:, Chester.
crash on Penewit Rd., just
Bernice Ann Dursllo Charles
southeast of Bellbrook in Ray Hysell, Kathryn Hysell,
Greene County
Lot, Sutton

Happy Birthday,
Motorist!
Check Your
Driver's License
If It up1res this month you
mustronew1IBEFORE your

btrthdav. Thts warning is a

servtce of

AUTO CLUB OF
SOUTHERN OHIO
33 Court 51

sophomore Dennis Franklin.
The
Wolverines
have
numerous strong juniors and
good-looking sophomores who
could fill In to make Michigan a
solid tiUe lhreal agam.
Woody Hayes optimistically
declared that his Ohio Stale
club could be m contention with
such standouts as Randy
Gradlshar, George Haenohrl,
Rick Galbos, Morris Bradshaw
and Vic Koegel at hand. Greg
Hare probably will be at
quarterback and there should
be good depth and talent at all
defensive and line positions.
Michigan Stale
Michigan Slate will count on
quarterback George Miahlu
and tight end Billy Joe DuPree
to furnish a passing attack and
Mike Holt and Paul Manderino
to turn m strong rumlng.
Unemen who should star are
Joe DeLamieUeure, John Shm·
sky and Duane McLaughlin
with All-America Brad Van
Pelt certain to have another
great year at safety.
Purdue warranta a nod ao a
dark horse on the merits of
quarterback Gary Danielson
and halfbacks Otis Armstrong
and Darryl Stingley. The
Boilermakers' offensive Une
will be green, llut the defense
headed by 279-pound Dave Butz
at tackle Will be big and experienced wilh good depth .
Illinois, in Bob Blackman's
second season, hopes lo carry
over from last season's late
form when the Dllnl, after
losing the first six games, won
lhe last five. Again Mike Wells
at quarterback, George
Uremovlch at halfback and
Garvin Roberson at split end
will have to key the offense

All\

GOES BACK
I(!Sii' TO SCHOOl
EVERY YEAR!
Thanks to the School Safety
Patrol Program, millions ol

10 ~Iets~ns3, 4, 15; Pebbles and Bamm Bamm 8, 10;
Bewitched 6, 13

10 3o-Barrier Reef 3, 4, 15, Archie's TV FUnnies 8, 10; Lldsvllle
6, 13
Child , Th t 3 4
11 oo-Sabrtna, The Teenage Witch 8, 10,
ren s ea re , ,
15 , Curiosity Shop 6, 13
'
11 3Q-JoSie and the Pussycats 8
12 oo-Mr Wizard 3. 4, 15. Jonny Quest 13; Batman 8, Friendl y
Junction 10

12 3Q-Bugaloos 3, 15 , Roller Derby 4; Lance lot Link 13, Lloyd
Bridges' Waterworld 6, You Are There 8.
1 oo-Kartoon Karniva i 3; Ameri can Bandstand 6, Chlldren~ s

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Cin'
clnnati Bengals
''messenger
guard" Pat Matson says Sunday's pre-season game against
Cleveland Browns here should
be a good one, llut not necessarily a gfe41 one.
"It's no more Important than
any other game," says Matson,
used by Bengals coach Paul

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

MEETING TONIGHT!
I

.•'

EARN EXTRA MONEY
IN PLEASANT
SURROUNDINGS

'

7:30 P.M.

•
'•
••
••

a

AT

11::1111 lfiiOIII!:

t;n

piCpdLIIIilll

1l;Jiil

••

COLUMBUS
&amp;SOUJHERN OHIO
•
ELECTRIC COMPANY

••
••
l
•

UPSTAIRS

while Tab Bennett Will be the
leader on defense. The lllini
should have better depth and
more talent, perhaps enough to
lhreaten.
Agase Retains Optimillm
Northwestern, runnerup for
the past two seasons, had
heavy losses both on offense
and defense, llut Coach Alex
Agase retains his opUmism
because of a veteran offensive
line, top rank pass rece1vers,
and a winning attitude. Sophomore Milch Anderson could
wind up as lhe quarterback and
both Jim Lash and Steve Craig
w11l he good receiVers. Randy
Anderson and AI RoblllSOn
should be dependable runners,
and Jim Anderson should key
the defense.
Indiana might be worth dark
horse mention, too, smce lhe
Hoosiers have 16 starters
returning-nine on defense and
seven on offense-beaded by
fullback Ken St. Pierre, one of
lhe league's best runners last
season. Ted McNulty again will
be at quarterback .

diVISIOn
Ara Parseghian at Notre
Dame could get lucky and
score a Jot of pomts, but only
three defensive starters
return-Greg Marx, Jtm
Musaraca aod Jlnl O'Malley.
On offense, lhe Irish agam Will
have Andy Huff at fullback,
M1ke Creaney at tight end, and
probably WUlie Townsend at
split end. But the quarterback
job wtll be up for grabs between Chff Brown, Pal Seenberge and sophomore Tom
Clements . Both Darryll Dewan
and Gary Dlmimck will challenge lor the left halfback job.
Miami, w11h 1ts entire backfield returnmg, could make a
strong challenge to Inlprove on
last year's 7-3 record and
capture the Mid-America
wh1le
Western
crown,
Michigan needs only a quar·
terback to remam in contention. Running back Paul
Miles could be lhe strong man
for Bowling Green, wh1le
Toledo, unbeaten again last
year, will be a threat again
Wisconsin should be im- desp1le heavy losses.
proved with Rufus "Road
Runner" Ferguson on hand
again to spark lhe offense,
more overall speed on the club,
and better exper~ence. Rudy
INTO loth PLACE
Sterner may be lhe lop quarAKRON, OhiO IU PI ) - J1m
terback and Gary Lund should Godman , Loram, OhiO, has
take over at fullback. Delen- moved mlo lOth place on the
Sl vely, the Badgers will he Professional Bowl e r s
strong In the line, but Assoc1alwn money wmner hst
questionable In the backfield following his $4,000 first-place
with only one regular back, v1ctory durmg last weekend's
Ron Buss.
Grand Rap1ds Open. FourLow on the Totem Pole
teen lh on the hsl pr10r to the
Neither Ml nnesota , under Grand Rapids contest, Gndnew Coach Cal Sloll, nor Iowa man has now won $25,90llm 24
figure to climb to the first tour even Is th1s year.

welterweight Wayne Wells of
Norman , Okla ., and light
heavyweight Ben Peterson of
Comstock, W1s. Peterson's
brother, John, a middleweight,
and R1ck Sanders of Lakeview,
Ore , won Slivers and 4IJII.pound
Chns Taylor of Dowagiac,
M1ch., won a bronze.
The only olher medal lor the
Umted States was a bronze by
Jerry He1denreich of Dallas 1n
the tOO-meter butterfly. Gymnast Olga Korbut led lhe
Russian parade with two golds
and a silver.
The Soviet Umon won golds
m the modern pentathlon team
and Viktor Sidyak took the
md1vidual sabre fencing.
The Umted Stales finished
fourlh m modern pentathlon,
was second after two days m
the equestrian event, won its
filth straight in volleyball
game by beating defending
champiOn Yugoslavia, 5-3, lost
to West Germany, 7.0, m soccer
and was 1dle m basketball.

~M~a~jo"'r~L"'e"'19"'u"'e"!S!l!lta~n~d~ln~alll•- Connecticut,

By Umted Press International
Nat•onal League
East
b
w . 1. pc1. g
P1llsburg h
77 46 626
Choca~o
67 5ll 536 11

~t"tou~~k

Montreal
Pholadelph 1a
C1nc• nnatl
Houston
Los Angeles

Brown to bring In plays. "To
our younger players and some
of our rookies it might be. But
1o me, it's just another ball
gnme.
"It's getting close to the regular season with only one more
week of p,._son gnmes
after thl&amp; o.1e," he said. "So
I'm sure they (Cleveland) will
be wanting to play the people
they're going to be using during the season to see what they
have.
"! think they'll go out and try
1o take it to us," Matson added.
"They have a good defensive
line with guys like (Jerry)
Sherk and (Walter) Johnson."
Clnctnnall hopes its offensive
line holds up as well against the
Browns as it did In Monday
night's win over the Phlladelphia Eagles. Not once did an
Eagle get to quarterbacks
Kenny Anderson and Virgll
carter.
"The offensive line was Ire-

Is~nd fREE
for

"Th~ Income r.x Peopt."

information :

Now you can learn income tax preparatiOn from
H&amp;R Block. Thollsands are eam1n1 &amp;ood money as
ltn preparers. Enrollment open to men and women
1of all ages. Job •nlerv•ews available lor best students.
1
1

I Classes Start Sept. 12. 1972
I Hd W. Phone m-379s
I Tura•ysOnly
I Please send me free Information
I~
I Addt,~

H&amp;:RW. I~lr
1

6 66 57 .53711;~

Kil1huck Mary

lournament, Memphis downed
Lewiston, Idaho, 4-2; El Cerrlto, Calif., defeated Norfolk,
Va., 8-7 In 10 mmgs ; North
Haven, Conn ., beat Rio
Piedras, P. R , 8-2 ; and
Findlay, Ohio, blanked
Ballwin, Mo , 6-41
Today's action pits El
·
Cerrito againSt North Haven
and Findlay against Memphis
on the winner's side and
Norfolk against Rio Piedras
and Ballwin against Lewislon
in the loser's bracket.
In Thursday's final game
'
Mike Paxton provided the
spark needed for the Memphis
VIc•~· Hethrewalour-hitter
~J ·
'
striking out 12 and walking just
two while going lhe lull nine
lru!lngs The 13th round draft
cho1ce. of th e New y or k
Yankees also collected two hils

Stole

•

-~~~~!!!!!!

19 cu. It Side by Side,

Coppertone.

teed

Guaran.

'24f00

GE 30" Range
Automallc, Coppertone
Guaranteed

G.E. Freezer
12 Fl Upright

'13500
Norge Gas Dryer
(Guaranteed)

Bo~r~n~~a1\~ g1:r7·~~ ~-~· HAlf· QUARTS
Port1b'*, O.lux•

GE Dishwasher
IOnly One I
Full Guarantee

Cleamons Now

On Cavs' Team

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd

992-2238
Middleport, 0 .

• • • Walk AUttle Taller
Levrs
Authentic
•
For Men and &amp;ys

ims In Super Slim
Regular, &amp; Bell Bolbln l.ep
Levi Casuals: In Tapers

•

areund Mr. Lavi

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, 0.

HAPPINESS
IS

mMSI~

:
'I

By
The Famous

ai!

Geo. Hall

THE FAMOUS

KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
ANNOUNCES
LYN CAMPBELL OF NASHVILLE
and

GEORGE HALL AND THE Hill MARKS

I
I

Z1p

Refrigerator

EH1·

2 ..

Pl"ono

Admiral

Tennis Seeds
In No Trouble

t
i!1
304 E. Main St. ~

Pomoroy,Ohlo4S76?

New Bargains
That Can't Be
Beat • • •

In Filly Record

Shows are contlnuoU$ nltely from t:30. The
greatest Labor Dly -'loncl of •ntertlinmtnt
•nywhtre. RtMrvotlons lleld til 10:30 Frlclly,
Satunloy, SUftday. 51111\Yy'sllvelllow 11 t : JI to
2:01o.m. No - •
oxc.,t Sahlnllly. ·

I

I

ella,..

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;;;.~. ~ ••• CUP MD MAIL TODAY• • • • • 4

. 't

Oh1o and Tennessee moved Into today's
second round of the American
Legion baseball world series
with unblemished records.
In Thursday's action m the

~ ~ - ~~ ~~ e~ghl-team, double~lirnlnallon

57 65 467 191/,
44 79 358 33
West 1
w78 •46pet.629g.b.
71 s• 571 7

Wins
In lhree Urnes at bat and stole
two bases.
In the Findlay-Ballwin contest, Charles Rogers, a &amp;-foot,
200-pounder, threw a sevenhitter to blank theckMl8SC•ri
b:
squad. Rogers stru out
anll walked only two In gomg
lhe route. At f:be plate ftr
Fmdlay, Karl Wlrtz _went lour
for fiVe lo lead the attack.
North Haven, which ez.
-•~~
ploded for Iour runs In lhe.a
..,
Inning to break open a
scoreless game , was led at the
plate by John Cipo!Um with a
double and a single.
In the first game of the
·
d
tche Le
opemng roun , ca
r
n
Patterson stroked a clutch
single and drove In the wmnlng
run in the loth inning to lead his
El Cerrilo squad lo victory.
The California team was down
by five runs at one point, but
Ron Selak struggled through
all 10 Innings for the victory.

(UPI)-

~~~~~~nclsco ~~ ;~ ~: 23
San Doego
46 78 371 32
Thursday's Results
Los Angeles 5 Chicago 3
Houston 5 Philadelph ia 1
(Only games scheduled)
Today'• Probable Pitchers
11
san b~ ~i~~~r~~~~ 14 1 at
Chocago 1"flands 9 8) , 2 30 p m
San Francosco !Bryant 10-51
at Po ttsburgh I Ellis 11 -71. 8 OS
pm
L~s Angeles (Sutton 14-8 and
Downong 76) at 51 Lou•s (Wise
12 14 and Durhalll 261, 2, 6 JO
pm
Pholadelphoa 1Reynolds o 12
and Lersch 2-41 at Atlanta
I Reed 11 12 and Freeman 0-0),
2. 6 OS p.m.
New York (Seaver 16-91 at
Houston 1Roberts 10 8), 8 JO
pm
Mon I real IS loneman 10 9) at . :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·... :: ··:·:·:···:·:·: :·:·:·:·:·:·&lt;:·:::~·· :·
Cmcmnah (McGlothlin 7 t5l.
8OS p m
REDS PLAY
Saturday's Games
COLUMBUS (UP! )
San Otego at Cht cago
CINCINNATI (UPI) Killbuck Mary set a national Los Angeles at 51 Louis
Tbe Cincinnati Reds, leadl!qj
season record for lhree-year- Ph1la at Atla, 2, tw l night
Fran at Pittsburgh, n1ght llle National League West by
old fillies on a half-mile track San
Montreal at Cinct, ntght
seven games, entertain the
here Thursday, winning the New York at Houston, night
Montreal Expos tonight.
Governor's Cup harness race
Jim MeGiotblln (7-ll) was
Amencan League
at the Ohio State Fa1r in 2:01 4scheduled to pitch lor llle
East
5
w. I. pel. g.b. Reds, going against Mon·
Previous best was 2:02 by Balf1more
67 57 .540 !real's BUI Stoneman (10.9).
Detro1f
67 58 536 •;,
Songcan al Saraloga .
The Reds lead Houston by
York
66 59 528 1'h
The horse won $7,292 for co- New
Boston
64 58 525 2 seven games in the NL West.
owners Henry and Bob Critch- Cleveland
58 66 468 9 Montreal Is in next-to-last
49 75 395 18
field of Wooster, Ohio. Oriver M 1lwaukee
place in the NL East, 19\2
West
was Dick Buxlon.
w. I pet. g.b. games behind Plttoburgb.
Slandmg m for Gov John J. Oakland
73 51 589 - Cincinnati was idle ThursGilligan and presentmg a tro- Ch 1cago
71 52 577 p;, day.
61 60 504 10112
phy lo the co-owners was Dr. Mmnesota
Kansas C1ty
60 63 488 12112 ··:-:-:-»:;:-:·:·:·:·:·w·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:::::*:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
Dav1d Sweet, director of the California
57 67 460 16
Ohio Department of Economic Texas
49 76 392 241!,
IN FAIR CONDITION
Thursday's Results
and Conununily Development
NIAGARA
FALLS, N. Y.
New York 7 Texas 0
The race capped four days of Mllw
(UP!
)
Former
National
7 Kansas C1ty 3
harness racing at the fair. Cal1forma 4 Detro1t 0
League pitching standout Sal
IOnly games scheduled)
Appaloosa and quarter horse
Maglie, &gt;5, a Niagara Falls
Today's Probable Pitchers
races are scheduled Sunday.
native, was hsled 1n fair
IAll Times EDTl
Detro•! (Coleman 14 11) at condition Thursday at Mount
Oakland (Holtzman 14-11), 11 St. Mary's Hospital alter
pm
Baltomore !McNally 12-13) at suffermg an apparent heart
Calofornoa (Wright 14 7), 11 attack.
pm
By BOB STEWART
Cleveland (Wilcox 7 11) at
FOREST HILLS, N. Y. Mmnesota (Woodson 11 12),
IUP! ) - The greatest tenms 8:30 p.m
M11waukee
tournament of the year enters Texas
(Paul 6!Colborn
5), 8 30 p6-41
m. at
Chicago
(Lemonds
3·4)
at
lis third day today still wa1llng
New
York
tStottlemyre
12·15),
,
for an explosion.
7 JO p m
As lhe f1elds of 148 men and
80 women battled through firstSaturd•v's Gemes
round tests Wednesday and
Ch1cago at New York
agam on Thursday, only the Kansas C1ty at Boston
m1ld upset of 15th-seeded Cleveland at Minnesota
J1mmy Connors by Tom Detroit at Oakland
at Texas, night
Gorman on opening day M1lw
Baltimore at Calif, night
detracted frol" the manner in
which the l top players were
supposed to advance.
Today, however, defendmg
champiOn Stan Sm1lh can run
into ser10us trouble against
unseeded Clark Graebner.
Sm1lh was far from unpress•ve
m defeatmg 15-year-&lt;~ld Billy
CLEVELAND (UPI)- For·
Martin m four sets m hiS f~rst mer Ohio Slate Univeralty basRoyal Crown
round, and Graebner, m.,and- ketball star Jim Cleamons,
Bottling Company
oul m many matches, is a fine who saw only limited action
grass court player.
with the Los Angeles Lakers
Middleport
last year, has been obtained by L--------~
the Cleveland Cavaliers.
The Cavs armounced Thursday night !bey gave up a future
draft choice In exchange for
list
Cleamons, the Lakers' lop
McKay suffered a hairline draft choiCe a year ago.
fracture of the right leg last
"Jim C1eamonB has good size
week and Skorlch wanted lo and speed and we think be hal
clear him through waivers to strong defensive abiUtles as
make l'OOm on the official ros- well as good abllltieslo direct a
ter for another player.
ballclub," Cavs coach BW
But Brown claimed McKay Fitch said of the 6-1, 185-poond
and wouldn't lift the claim, so Cleamons. "He fits Into a fast
Skor1ch had to put him back on break style and into lhe Cavthe active roster.
aliers' long range plans at the
"II put a little crimp In our guard position."
With Ohio State, CleiiJllOllll
cut ""·" Skorich said, ''The
clalmmg party knows McKay averaged 18.5 pointa per game
has a broken leg, but still with a 5U shooting perwouldn't recall."
centage. N. captain of the 197~
Skorich was successful in 7lleam he led the Buckeyes to
getting some key players a 19-6 record.
through wmvers and they will
Cleamons played only 201
be on the taxi squad.
minutes wilh the Lakers last
Cleared through the waiver season, averaging 2.6 points
list were quarterback Brian per game.
S1pe, running back Billy I.efear, guard Craig Wyclnsky
and wide receiver Dave Jones.
The BrownsBengals game
will he played in Ohio Stadium
home of the Ohio State University Buckeyes. A sell-out crowd
of about 85,000 Is expected for
Sunday's 2 p.m. kickoff.

/

I

.STANDINGS Teams
MEMPHIS, Tenn.
from California,

Bengals Expect Good Football Game

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

ASSOCI AT:~N

AREA GAMES
Tonight
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South
Wlrl County at Wahama
Saturday
Tyler County at Hannan, W.
Va.

mendous," and Anderson said
"I had all the Ume In the world
lo throw And when it's easy
like that, anybody can do it."
youngsters are protected
Rook1e safety Tommy Casaevery day .. AAA CARES
nova has replaced middle nnebacker Bill Bergey as defenSCHOOL'S OPEN
sive signal-caller for CinDRIVE CAREFULLY
cinnati's defensive unit.
.
"No Big Deal"
"It's really not a b1g deal,"
Casanova sa1d. "All I do IS
relay the defensive signals as
signaled lo me from coach
Chuck Weber from the sideOPEN FOR BUSINESS :
lines.
"It would mean a lot more if
Relax ... Drive in for a Delicious
I was calling them on my
own," the rookie standout from
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
Louisiana State said.
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
Bergey still will be doing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.
things like calling out lo his
teammates what offensive for·
mation the opponent has lined
up in.
Meanwhile, In the Browns
At Forked Run Lake Entrance
camp, coach N1ck Skorich is
Long Bo«om. 0 .
unhappy that Bengals coach
Paul Brown blocked an attempt lo get Browns tackle Bob
. .----~~~~~~~~~,... ~ • • • CUHND MAIL TODAY . . . . . . . . McKay on the Injured waiver

Fun for Everyone 6.

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

knew the rev1 red schedule, and
11 was camo!d 1n the major
English language newspa(X'rs
In Europe.
"It's my laull," Wright sa1d
w1th tears m his eyes. "ThiS IS
by far lhe worslthmg that has
ever happened lo me m my
life."
Two Medals In Track
The only two gold medals m
track Thursday went to He1de
Mar1e Rosendahl of West
Ger.many in the women's long
Jump with a leap of 22-3 and to
Peter Frankel of East Germany In the 2().kllometer walk
In 1:26 ·42.6. The Americans
were shut out m both events
with Larry Young's !OthiJlace
fm!Sh the best m the walk.
The s1x medals won m
wrestling were the most taken
by lhe Americans since 1924
Golds went lo lightweight Dan
Gable of Waterloo, Iowa,

Gallipolis

·------..

8 15-Matters of L1fe 6
8 3()-Depuly Dog 3. 4, 15 , Road Runner 6, 13. Scooby Doo 8;
Bugs Bunny 10
1
9· 00 Woody Woodpecker 3, 4, 15, Funky Phantom 6, 13 ; Harem
Globetrotters 8, 10
9 3()-Pink Panther 3, 4, 15, Jackson Five 6, 13, Help Hair Bear
B
h 8 10

Film Festival B. 10. Marshall Football Preview 13 , Western
Theater 15.
1 3()-Johnny Bench 4. Pistons, Propellors and Pilots 3;
Olympics 6, 13
2· oo-Job Show 10, Baseball 3, 4, 15, VIrg inian 8.
2: 15-Baseball 3, 4, 15
2 30- Then Came Bronson 10
3 3()-Golf 6, 13; U S. Open Prev lew 8, 10.
4 oo-u S Open Tennis 8, 10.
.
s oo-Sporls Challenge 3, Goll Tourname11ts 8, 10; Midwestern
Hayride 4 ; Olympics 6, 13 , Roller Derby 15
5: 3Q-B•II Anderson 3
6. 3Q-News. Weather. Sports3, 4, 8; ChannellO, Reports 10
6 3o-NBC News 3. 4, 15 , CBS Ne,ws 8. 8, 10.
7 oo-ThiS Is Your Lo 'e 3; Hee Haw 6. 8; Lawrence Welk 4. 15.
Death Valley Days 10, Farmer's ~!!9_hter 13
7·3o-Nashvllle Muslc 3. Green Acres -Ill; l'llm 13
6:QO-AII In The Family 8, 10, NBC Comedy Theatre 3, 4, IS :
Summer Olym lcs 6. 13
8:3()-Mary Tyler MooreS ; The FlrstTwenly Days 10
9: DO-Movies· Banacek 3, 15; Back Street4 ; Pro-Football 8, 10.
IO·QO-ABC News Special 6, 13.
10·311-Pure G~ld 6, Survival 13
11 :QO-News3. 4, 6. 13 , Movie The Tall Men, 15.
11 : 15-News 6, 13
11 3Q-Mov••s· The Mark oflhe Hawk 3; Head of a Tyrant4, The
Cal Creeps 6; Devils ~I Darkness 13.
12:QO-News 8, 10
.
12·3Q-Movles Colorado Territory 8; On the Double 10, The
Tome Travelers 13.
1:QO-Movle Information Received 3.
1 15-Mov le The Sergeant Was A Lady •
1 3()-,\\ovle Dimension 5
2 3Q-Movle· Gunllghlatllodge City 4 , The Petrified Forest10 :
News 13.
City 4. The Petrified Forest 10; News 13
4.15-Movle. The Delightful Rogue 4.

1o take lhe lead wilh 35.
Hart and Robinson, both
stunned by the tragedy, sa1d
Stan Wright, the assistant
coach who handles the sprinters, told them they were
running at 7p.m. so they would
go to lhe stadium at 5 p.m.
They left a little early lo catch
their bus and noticed a race on
television In the building at the
llus stop.
Wright's schedule, which
was 18 months old, had the 100.
meter heats after the 10,000.
meter heats, but the schedule
was changed lo put the 100
heats firsl. Wright never got
lhe message and neither did
Head Coach Bill Bowerman of
Oregon or morge Wilson, lhe
manager who is m charge of
track schedules.
But all of lhe other countries
had their runners at the
stadium ; the sports wnters

Up as Midwest Powers

STRANGER TO ANEW COUNTRY
New faces, a foreign tongue,
Wanting to hide - no place lo run.
Ponies pulling carts along s1de the road,
Farmers going to market, each w1th hiS load.

KID BROTHER HIRED

heat and qualifled for today's
semifinals desjlite not having
Ume to warm up. He finished
second to Russian Valeri
Borzov, now favored to bring
lhe honors to the Soviet Union
for the first time In Olympic
history.
A Brighter Day
It was a brighter day for lhe
United States at the swimming
pool, where Mark Spitz earned
two more gold medals 1o run
his total 1o a record-equallng
five and kept it perfect by
making them all world
records. Hi8 latest victories
were in the 100-rneter freestyle
and anchoring the 400-rneter
medley relay team. He has a
chance lor seven gold medals.
In all, the United Slates won
nme medals Thursday, lncludlng six in wrestlmg, to brmg its
totallo 31 for lhe games. But
lhe Russians won 24 Thursday

Michigan, OSU Shape

the poet's~ corner

+++
ON THE TV DIAL : Local area football coverage begins, with
live audio of Pl. Pleasant. at Parkersburg South .and Wirt al
Wahama, 7:45p.m. (not seen in Gallipolis) ... The pros present
lhe Lion-Colt pre-5easoner at 8:30, WSAZ-TV ... And there's an
unusual program on drug lherapy, 8 30, WMUL-TI'

MUNICH (UP!) - Two
American sprinters were on
the sldellnes for today's 100.
meter dash final, out of the ·
race because a coach read an
old Ume table and the runners
missed their preHminary heat
The 100-rneler event, one of
lhe highlights of track and
field, has long been a Amer1can-&lt;lomlnated event In the
Olympics and the U.S. runners
were expected lobe In the thick
of it agam this year, the 20th
annual games.
But Thursday, Eddie Hart of
Pittsburg, Calif. , and Rey
Robinson of Lakeland, Fla.,
were late lor their quarterfinal heats of the !()().meter
dash and were disqualified.
Both had run 9.9s this year,
equallng the world record.
The third U.S. sprmter,
Robert Taylor of Houslon,
barely made it 1n time lor his

I
II

I

"·~BASEBALL Findlay

Coach Bfows Sprinters' Hop'es

I- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I
I
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
I IIIID 300 words long tor be subject to ~duction by the editor) I

I
I
,8~..t~~~II •••?Jtt. UUW"L:

•

-

'

�. ... . .
~

_________ ,

.

•

~

3- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Sept.l,1972

2- The Dally Senlmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sept. !, 1972

Democrats Huddle
By NORMAN KEMPSTER
WASHINGTON (UPI )-Predicting V!clory despite Pres·
!dent Nixon's seemingly commanding lead in the pubhc

opiruon polls, sen. George S.
McGovern today called his
runnmg mate, Sargent Shriver,
to a campaign strategy
session

Helen Help

Us.

By Helen Bottel

•
•
Perils of Playing With Fire

Dear Helen :
I'm 22and my husband is 27 We've been married mne years,
so you can see I d1dn't live much before the weddmg.
We have two children, SIX and two, a mce, well kept home
and - this may seem hard 1o believe - we love each other more
and more. We can talk openly and to the poml on any subJect
without embarrassment.
Up to lh1s year, we've spent lime off mostly w1th the k1ds,
having fun on p1cmcs, etc Now we've decided to give ourselves
one day a week We go dancmg, have a few drmks w1th fr~ends
But there's th1s real good looking guy m our crowd In a kidding way, I lold my husband 11 would be fun lo date hun , as he
turns me on My husband sa1d, "Okay, 1f we make it a double
date. " In olher words swap males for a night.
What started as kiddmg now sounds real temptmg It's kmd
of sad, to think you'll never know what another man (or gll'l) 1s
like, just 'cause you're mamed We've never been unfaithful, but
!guess you wouldn 't call it chealmg 1fwe all agreed .
What do you thmk ' Could we trust each other' Would this
lead to more swaps, and maybe a break-up ? We don't want
that'- TEMPTED AND BURNING
DealT and b:
1 think mate-!lwapping om1ts the human element somewhere along the lme, one or the other of you w11l let
emotions surface: jealousy, " love " , disgust perhaps
Relationships seldom stay purely physical for long - and then
• the marriage problems start.
Remember back to your weddmg vows, and ask yourselves
one more question Is this "new thing" the kmd of life I'd want
for my children ' - H
DEAR HELEN
After lhe Tom Eagleton fiasco, I wonder how many people m
hjgh places will av01d psychiatric counseling - even 1f they need
it badly to help them over a temporary depressiOn '
When disturbed people go untreated through lear of public
op1nlon - it could mean we'll fmd a lot more disturbed people m
command, and that's frightening -OBSERVER
Dear Observer:
That it IS. Read onDear Helen :
I entered a psychiatriCtreatment center voluntarily because
I fell my nerves were at the breakmg point.
!learned a sreat deal about myself and consider the cure
complete. But since commg out, I've learned even more about
my fellow man.
The former mental pallenl 1sn 't shunned Rather, he 's
,\YATCHED. And while peo~le . h1de lhe y-J~ ~ 1\• .Tbey,.
• 'protect" him (by not glvmll.h!Jn the pro'l'o~~si~~¥ 4f!!e&lt;U~ ,
·,They put a "handle with care"label on hi!Jl.lfe must act tw1ce as
""normal" as anyone else m order to prove he's worth half as
much as less competent men
Psychiatric treatment speeded my return to mental health,
llut It may have brought me more problems than if I had pulled
through my nervous breakdown by myself.
We still aren 't out of lhe dark ages when 1t comes to illnesses
of lhe mind. People never quite believe you can get over them. Sl'ALLED CAREER

By JACK O'BRIAN
Hanoi, ThaiiUtymes With Boy, and ...
NEW ;YORK (KFS) - Quote from Roger
Vadlnl, Jane Fonda's distant husband "If I had
1o choose three persons w1th whom to make a
round~h e-world cruiSe Iiley would all be male."
Same w1th Jane, plamly . Mrs. George
McGovern got lots of k1sses at Charley O's her
lapel button mVIted, "Kiss Me. I'm for
McGovern." . . "The actors m the happy fun fillo!d "Sugar" musiCal know, despite a few
&lt;:;rltjcal d1ssents, they're m a longrun hit ; the
bulletm board sports the bold -lettered
assurance, 'Here Today, Here Tomo rrow."
Uberace doesn't hke bemg loid he sounds hke
George McGovern . Thinks he sounds like Burt
Reynolds . . Phil Bennett, composer and LIZ
Taylor-admirer, wrote a song titled "! Want a
Gll'l Just Like the G1rl Who Mam ed N1cky
HUlon , Michael Wildmg, Mike Tood, Eddie
FiBber and Richard Burton." Raquel Welch
was at Jimmy Westoh's w1th new beau Ron
Talsky, who wears lifts because he's a bit
shorlsky . . Patnotism may be making a
comeback - Jack Jones smgs the Nat'! Anthem
In hiS act .. Bob Hope's a1de IS Bill Faith , what
with alllhe char1ty benefits Bob does 1t's, Fa1th ,
Hope and charity indeed
Chateau Madr1d thrush Olga Gmllot snooled
a Fidel Castro offer to come back to Duba to
perform. Olga fled penniless when Castro
ripped' in .. Top sculplor Robert Berks (he
sculpted Truman, Johnson &amp; Kennedy) 1s
flnishmg a bust of Joe E. l£w1s for the Friars
Club, which Joe headed for years . . There were
Sunday matinee mugg ings at 8th Ave. and 53rd
St.-at 4 p.m. ' .. The big Post Office at 55th &amp;
l'd Ave. collects the homos. Who play alfresco
Post Off1ce in lhe ou1 hours .. There are only a
lew hundred health clubs m N Y., but the
11
Shamus " fh ck re nted O'Henry 's fame d
restaurant m the V1llage for a scene - in a
health club.
Las Vegas' Caesars Palace must think ll's a
country: it sent 1960 tnple.gold medal wmner
Wilma Rudolph lo Mumch as its diplomatiC
representati·Je. Wilma's now a happily wed
mother offm (al32) .. . "DaysofOur Lives" TV
soap opera star Ryan MacDonald thinks he
might be the next Burt Reynolds-type Cosmo
centerfold; unaglne that as an ambition ! ...
Golfers are delighted the Times spreads so
much space on golf; Its publisher, Punch
Sulzberger, adores the game ... Hearmg Steve
Allen sing on TV IS lhe convincer that singmg Is
the tiniest of Steve's many small talents .
Former Brooklyn ass't D A. Burton Turkus
(who helped smash Murder Inc. more than 20

Shriver canceled scheduled
appearances m the Middle
West to confer with t~e
Demo crall c presidential
nommee at his Japanrse style
home in Washington.
McGovern said Thursday he
expects 1o begin closmg the
gap m lhe polls-34 points In
the most recent Gallup Pollby Oct. 1 and move steadily up
until the Nov. 7 electiOn
ul think we will win/' he
sa1d.
"The poll situation is much
better now than it was when I
was seeking the nomination,''
he sa1d. "We lhought 11 was a
good day when we hit 5 per cent
m the Gallup Poll."
But lhere was bttle doubt
that the Democratic campaign
was having its trouble. Lawrence F. O'Brien, who has the
title of campaign chairman but
whose duties are loosely
defmed, complained that the
whole operation was dlsorgaruzed and uncoordinated.
An a1de to O'Brien S8ld the
organizational problems were
discussed durmg a stormy
lhree-hour meetmg of McGovern's lop associates at the
candidate's home Wednesday
rughl. He said O'Brien was
encouraged by lhe lone of that
sess1on
"Th1s campa1gn has just a
few weeks lo go and if this
whole campaign IS nol firmly
m place the day after Labor
Day, my judgment 1s that 11
w1ll never be in place,"
O'Bnen sa1d Thursday m an
mlerv1ew w11h National Public
Radio
Although he has been tourmg
the nat10n for several weeks,
mostly on what he called
"listenmgn trips, McGovern
launches h1s campaign 1n
earnest Sunday .

BY PAUL CRABTREE

SEAMAN McDANIEL
Navy Seaman ' Recruit
Dwight McDaniel, son of
Mrs. Barbara McDaniel, tO
Riverview Place, Mid·
dleporl, is home on leave
after completing recruit
training at Recruit Training
Cenler at Orlando, Fla.
McDaniel, a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High School, will
leave Sept. 9 for duty In
Hawaii.

MAXVILL TRADED
ST LOUIS (UP! ) - Dal
Maxv1ll, the lighl-hitting but
shck-f1eldmg shortstop of the
St. Lou1s Cardmals for the last
10 years, was sent to the
Oakland A's Thursday m ex·
change for th1rd baseman Joe
Lmdsey and another player to
be named later Lmdsey 1s a
first-year player with the A's
Bll'mmgham farm club m the
AA Southern League. He was
bal ling 259 m 36 games lh1s
season Maxvlll hll 221 m lOa
games for St !.oms
In 1923, at least 150,000
persons died when an earthquake shook Japan m the Tokyo
and Yokohama areas

'

Loses by Scorning 1O-S pot
NORTH

H~

• Q 10 9 54

¥ Kl02

+A J 5

WEST

"'J

6

EAST

• 3

• 72

¥ J76 3
. 9732

¥ AQ9B
. Q I06

. KI098
olo Q754
SOUTH (D)
. A KJ 8 6
• 54

+ KB 4
olo A32

West

l4..

Both vu lnerable
North
East South

Pass 3 4
Pas~
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opcmng lead- .t. 10

Oswald &amp; James Jacob)
No pomt coun t value IS asSigned to a IO·spot but don 't
desp1se those mce card s for
that reason. On occaswn a
10-spot will turn out to be
wo1 th a full tnck
It 1s a cmch fo1 South to
fmd a way to go down w1th
today 's four-spade contract
He w1ns the hrst club .
draws trumps ; leads a heart
to dummy's kmg ; groan s
when Eas t plunks on the
ace loses a second hearl
and a club and eventually
sees East plunk the queen of
diamonds on dummy 's Jack
II 1s even easier for So uth
to msure this contrac t by
lakmg full advan tage of
dummy 's 10 of hearts
He starts proceedm gs by
plavmg dummy s jack of
clubs. He lets East hold the
tr1ck With his queen Eas t
returns a club South wms.
ruffs his last club m dummy ; draws trumps and leads
a heart
II West plays low South
plays dummy's 10 East
wms With the queen and IS
helpless If he cashes the
ace of hearts 1! sets up dummy's kmg fQr_a d1amond diSca rd ; 1f he leiil~ d1amond
11 takes care of th d1amond
fmesse . a club ead gives
South a ruff and discard.

years ago) says the prunary solution to
gangster killmgs IS, "Brmg back the death
penalty" .. . Darryl Zanuck becomes a grandpop
agam any day, v1a the D1ck Zanucks . The
Times Square area smut JOints peddle hsts of
names of gay lads to meet Wllhout "crlllSing" ;
all so drab.
Rocky Graziano explams h1s appearances
m a TV commerctal as a woman with, "Dey
took me lnSleada Haque! Welch" . Manager
Bullets Durgom once had Jackie Gleason as
chen! and lost hlnl ; his gill for rruslaymg highfee clients came through again - he just lost
Cr-I EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
T in1 Lopez .. Sign of the mflated Urnes: Com1c
Freddie Roman bought a whole new roullne on high prices
I•
Makeup man Jack Turner once toned up the
The b1ddmg has been
faces of Lana Turner , Garbo, Judy Garland, West North East South
+ Dble Pass
Jean Harlow; a sign of the beastly H'wood tunes IPass
2+
Pass
2 N.T.
- h1s latest JOb was to touch up the rodent star Pass 4 •
Pass
5+
Pass
5
¥
Pass
'
of lhe "Ben" horror fl1ck .. Jon Vmght thinks
Y
S
th
h
1
d
ou, ou , o
his "The All American Boy" for Warners will
•874
3 ¥ 2 tAK943..,76Z
make h1s career b1g enough to form his own
What do you do now?
production company. It's the Elmer Company,
A--Just bid live spades. Your
named after h1s dad .. No new hotels abuilding five-diamond eatl was doubtful
here, but Londcn has 30 rising - and more and you must sign off from now
on.
planned
TODAY'S QUESTION
Nostalgia freaks will go crUJsmg down
Instead
of bidd mg two dlamemory lane withoulloo much on the1r mmds monds, your
p a rl n e r has b1d
- radio-TV nostalgia maven Joe Franklin's two hearts over your one spade
shepherding hiS second Memory Lane cruiSe to What do you do now'
lhe Car1b and South America aboard the S. S
Olympia .. Sid Gary, an early Amencan AI
Jolson sound-alike, will be one of the stars;
we'd've said offhand lhe band Joe will take, Sy
Oliver's, was too modern lor lhe fond look back,
but then we thought of Sy's years With lhe great
The Dai~ Sentinel
Jiimme Lunceford Band and decided 35 years
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
ago is good enough nostalgia , at that.
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL.
Gene Kelly lost his mom .. Calif ex-Gov
E11ec Ed
Pal Brown ambled 52nd Sl - and nobody
ROBER T HOEFLICH .
Ctt y Edt lor
recogn1zed lhe gent who beat Nixon for the
Pub l iShe d da ll y e xc ep t
Calif. Gov's chair In 1962 ... In fact, Pat always S e~t u r da't by The Ot't to Val ley
P ub lls t11ng com pa ny , 111
had an Identity problem; he 's the definillve Cou
rt St ,, Po mero y OhtO,
ordinary fellow; not meant In the pejorallve 45769 Bli St n ess Olltce P hon e
221 56, E d ttorta l Phon e 992
sense, parenlhelically ... The homo-movie "Bob 99
2157
&amp;Daryl&amp;Ted &amp;Alex" is a drag.
Second c la n po~t&amp;oe Pl!lld at
eroy, Ohto
Sinatra and Burt Lancaster walked lnlo Pom
N at i ona l ad ~ H fls l ng
london's famed pub the Guinea, where Tony repr esenta 1t ve Bo tt mell l
G ~lla g her , Inc , 12 East 42nd
Curtis looked up and catcalled, "Imagine you St . New Yor k. Ct l 'f New Yor k
Sub scr tptt on rat es
De
eating here !" The management then roped off
l tv er ed b y c arr 1er where
all the lables around them so Sinatra wouldn't ava ilab le SO ce nh per week. .
By M otor Route wh ere carr 1er
be disturbed by the peasants ... The hairiest new ser
vtc e not avail able One
male sex symbol contacted Hair Again Ltd., the m onth Sl 7S By rT'Illll tn Oh10
an d w va , On&amp; ytar 514 00
bald-lixmg (wilh cosmetic surgery) •.mporlum, S•x
m on Hu S7 2S Three
about the bare spol not seen In his beefcake mo nt hs s• SO StJbs crtpt ton
prrce tncl udt s Sunda y Ti mes
photos.
Senf tnel

1•

r
l

&amp; THINGS
Don't blame this one on me. The opinionsaren'tmine.
But for what it's wtrth, as we begin the schoolboy football
seasoo tonight (with a lot of work In bringing more lhan 20 games
Into your living room), here is the first annual Crabtree Unscientific &amp; Probably Inaccurate Football roll :
GALLIPOLI$ : On average, the Blue DeVIls are very young,
very Inexperienced, and very promising. A half-&lt;lozen of their
hottest fans say they're about a year away, and should be really
awesome In the 1974 season, as a good crop ot sophomores
readies maturity. sclme more ebu!Uent sources feel they could
come faster. and be spoilers late In the campBlgll this fall. Coach
Johnny Ecker could find himself with a solid, coordinated ball
team by the lime the big annual SEOAL shootout w1th Meigs
comes up in November.
Consensus - The rugged SEOAL schedule, combined with
immaturity, make a 3-7 or H record probable. Anything over 5-5
would he a tribute lo Ecker and his staff.

++ +
MEIGS : The Marauders are rebuilding from heavy graduation
losses, but with a good and talented nucleus on both. defense and
offense Nobody is predicting a league championship. The Bend
area fans I talked willl point to outstanding lines, on both offense
and defense. The defensive secondary and offensiv~ backfields
must come last, though, if Meigs is 1o have a more-thanrespectable year.
Nowhere did I· hear the faintest word of crillcism of Coach
Charlie Chancey. He enjoys a fantastic level of public confidence
1o get the most he can, out of the material he has lo work with.
Consensus: "A wmnlng season," with most of those asked
pegging it at about 7-3. With luck, they could do a litUe better.

++ +

wAHAMA : The Wh1te Falcons lost just about everything from
last year's find squad, wh1ch was 7-1·2. Most of the graduates
played both ways, complicating the problems of Coach Grant
Barnette.
He's faced w1th the task of rebuilding a team around SIX or
eight boys, I'm lold, but those six or eight have a lot of talent
Wahama won't be long m finding out: Their season opener
lonight is with Wirt County, a team which has every single
starter back. Last year, the Falcons topped Wirt on some laslmmute heroics, scoring on lhe game's last play, as I recall it.
Consensus - Rough going, tough schedule, with a green club.
If they're better than 3-7, it won't have been too bad a year.

+++
PT. PLEASANT : The area 's mystery team. Coach D1ck Ware
lost heavily from a very fine defenaive unit, llut has several
returnees on offense. The trouble is that the offense wasn't very
potent last year. Ware has announced he 'll UBe more double-duty
players than ever before.
Fans polled say lhe Big Blacks will he okay on defense, but are
vague about specil1cs. ("Ware always has a good defense, thai 's
why," was a stock answer.) Definite Improvement seems
present in the offens1ve Une, but the backfield has yet to prove
itself. Every individual polled was high on the potential for
passmg and leadership abilities at quarterback. If the backfield
jells, the Blacks could be belligerent and rugged. But, honestly,
those holes m the defense are big and hard lo fill.
Consensus - Who knows ? Anywhere from U lo 8-2. Almost
everyone, lhough,lorcasts an Improvement over last year's 2-71. As at Meigs, most fans expect "a wmnmg season," and
probably would be happy w1th 7-3.

I

I and must be signed with llle signee's address. Names may be I
I wllllheld upon publication, however, on request. Leiters I
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities. 1
I
I

Television Log
Programs for Tonight and Tomorrow
Oli- News 3, 4, a. 10. IS ; NB C News 8, 10, Truth or Conseq. 6, I
Dream of Jeanme 13. Sesame St 20 . Halhayoga 33.
6 3Q-News. 3, 4, 6 8, 10, 13. IS , French Chef 33
_
7.011-Porter Wagoner 3, D•ck Van Dyke 4, News, Weather.
Sports 6, 10, Doddletown Popers 8; Mag1c Circus 13,
Saont 15, Masterpiece Theatre 33
1 311-Adam 12, 3, I Dream of Jeann•e 4, To Tell the Truth 6;

6

Parent Game 10

8 oo-Dr S1mon Locke 3; Summer Olympics 6. 13. O'Hara . U
S Treasury 8, 10 , To Be Announced 15.

8 311- Pro Football 3, 4, 15. Youth Drug Ward 33.
9 oo=Movie,

" Operation Solon 8, " Diamond Head'' 10

9 311-Bellota 33
10 OQ-MIIIstones of Progress 33
10 3D-Washmgton Week

1n

Rev1ew 33

11 oo-News, Weather. Sports, 6, 8. 10, 13
11 311-Dock Cavett 6. Movie, " The Comedy of Terrors" 8;
" Flight of the Lost Balloon" 10.
12 oo-Johnn Carson 3, 4, IS
1 3Q-Roller Derby 4, Local News 13
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
Oil- Faith for Today 10.
6 3o-Chrostopher Closeup 10
7 oo-Ne1ghbors 13; Commun ique 6. Farm Front 4; Dea1h

6

Valley Days&amp; , SOCietieS In Transition 10 , Farmbook 3
7 15--Woman's Pomt of V1ew 13
7 3()-Gollogan's Is 4, Man from C 0 S I 10, Gosepl 6, Blastofl

13; Monkees 8.
8 QO- Dr. Dool ittle 3, 4. 15. Jerry Lewos 13; Bugs Bunny 8, 10;

I

Attention, Citizens and
Voters of Middleport
Dear Sir ·
At the council meellng Monday, Aug., 28th, II was voted lo
purchase a truck for the water and sewerage department to be
paid for from the water and sewerage department funds. My
question is this : "How can they afford such an outlay of money
for an item such as this when the water dept. cannot afford lo
make any of the much needed repairs and replacements to our
obsolete water system? "
I have attended council meetings over a period of several
months requesting an adequate water Une and fire hydrant be
placed In our area lor the benefit of several families. The only
definite answer that I came up with was that what money was In
the fund cannot be spenl due to the fact that in the long, distant,
and unforeseeable future, there might just possibly be an
emergency that would deplete this lund completely. Since they
now see fit lo spend a sizeable amount of money for a truck, I
would imagine the expected emergency has been postponed.
In closing, I would like for the voters of the Village to please
(before the next election) try to attend some of lhe council and
Board of Public Affairs meetmgs and see what kind of a runaround people are getting.
My reason for not attending council meetings smce May - I
am workmg the evenmg shill.
James Brewer

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO
(UP I) Defending champion Michigan
and rebounding Ohio State
should set the pace In the
Midwest football race In 1972
with Michigan Stale, Purdue
and Illinois likely B1g Ten
challengers.
l!ul outside the B1g Ten the
power will he mediocre Wllh
Notre Dame heading lor an off
year and lhe Mid Amer1ca
hkely to be an open race be·
tween Miami, Bowling Green,
Toledn and Western Michigan.
Bo Schembechler's Michigan
club must find replacements
lor two strong runners, Glenn
Doughty and Billy Taylor.
Sophomores Chuck Heater and
Glenn Franklln may be the
answer, furnishmg good
rushing with veteran Ed
Shuttlesworth. Quarterback
could be solved by Kevin
Casey, Larry Clpa or

It's all so strange, not as I dreamed,
The people are different - or so it seems.
But I am the stranger, this is the1r homeland
Today I was pleased - a stranger extended his hand !
He told me of his land, and how it had grown,
As I listened, a genUe breeze began to blow .
I began to understand , and I knew I could make amends
Because we are all God's children, each With his ways,
But w1th each makmg changes and following HIS footsteps .
By Amn. James Brewer, Jr.
Stationed at Karmusel, Turkey

Tran~fers _

cowllillus" (ui&gt;J i ·-

,

State Auditor Joseph
Fa nn1e Phillips , William
Ferguson has hired his kid Dav1d Ph1lhps, Marcella
brother as a liquor audit Phillips to Charles Ray Hysell,
examiner.
Kathryn Hysell, Quit Clalnl,
The &amp;0-year-old auditor Sutton.
said Tuesday he put Leo, 7&amp;, ' Charles Ray Hysell, Kathryn
on the otale payroll July 31. Hyse ll to J F. Whittle, Sharhe
Leo Ferguson worked as an Neum an Whittle, Parcel,
examiner nnd~r bls brother Sutton
from 1937 to 1953 when he
Lincoln E Sm1th, Shll'ley A.
was auditor before. "He did Smith to Thelma Custer, Lot,
not ask me, I asked him," Syracuse.
Ferguson said of tbe latest
Thomas R Savage, dec., to
job.
Ina Mae Savage, Cert. for
Leo Ferguson also worked Trans , Sc1pio.
for his brolller when Joseph
Basharat A. Munei, Ameena
was state treasurer. His new Munei to Joe N. Sayre, Rosabe
duties whlcb be came out of Sayre, Parcels, Scipio
retirement to accept at an
Robert L Godfrey, Barbara
annual salary of $12,313, will S Godfrey to Harley Godfrey,
involve making liquor audits Alma Godfrey, 32 &amp; .45 A.,
In the central Ohio region. Olive.
Robel! McCarlney, Bar·
bara McCartney lo Orville
Johnson, Velma E. Johnson,
TEENAGER KILLED
Lot, Middleport
XENIA, Ohio IUP! ) - Scott
Alfred F. McCoy to Carl 0.
Cochran, 17, Bellbrook, was Taylor, Patricia L Taylor, &gt;
killed early today m a one-car A:, Chester.
crash on Penewit Rd., just
Bernice Ann Dursllo Charles
southeast of Bellbrook in Ray Hysell, Kathryn Hysell,
Greene County
Lot, Sutton

Happy Birthday,
Motorist!
Check Your
Driver's License
If It up1res this month you
mustronew1IBEFORE your

btrthdav. Thts warning is a

servtce of

AUTO CLUB OF
SOUTHERN OHIO
33 Court 51

sophomore Dennis Franklin.
The
Wolverines
have
numerous strong juniors and
good-looking sophomores who
could fill In to make Michigan a
solid tiUe lhreal agam.
Woody Hayes optimistically
declared that his Ohio Stale
club could be m contention with
such standouts as Randy
Gradlshar, George Haenohrl,
Rick Galbos, Morris Bradshaw
and Vic Koegel at hand. Greg
Hare probably will be at
quarterback and there should
be good depth and talent at all
defensive and line positions.
Michigan Stale
Michigan Slate will count on
quarterback George Miahlu
and tight end Billy Joe DuPree
to furnish a passing attack and
Mike Holt and Paul Manderino
to turn m strong rumlng.
Unemen who should star are
Joe DeLamieUeure, John Shm·
sky and Duane McLaughlin
with All-America Brad Van
Pelt certain to have another
great year at safety.
Purdue warranta a nod ao a
dark horse on the merits of
quarterback Gary Danielson
and halfbacks Otis Armstrong
and Darryl Stingley. The
Boilermakers' offensive Une
will be green, llut the defense
headed by 279-pound Dave Butz
at tackle Will be big and experienced wilh good depth .
Illinois, in Bob Blackman's
second season, hopes lo carry
over from last season's late
form when the Dllnl, after
losing the first six games, won
lhe last five. Again Mike Wells
at quarterback, George
Uremovlch at halfback and
Garvin Roberson at split end
will have to key the offense

All\

GOES BACK
I(!Sii' TO SCHOOl
EVERY YEAR!
Thanks to the School Safety
Patrol Program, millions ol

10 ~Iets~ns3, 4, 15; Pebbles and Bamm Bamm 8, 10;
Bewitched 6, 13

10 3o-Barrier Reef 3, 4, 15, Archie's TV FUnnies 8, 10; Lldsvllle
6, 13
Child , Th t 3 4
11 oo-Sabrtna, The Teenage Witch 8, 10,
ren s ea re , ,
15 , Curiosity Shop 6, 13
'
11 3Q-JoSie and the Pussycats 8
12 oo-Mr Wizard 3. 4, 15. Jonny Quest 13; Batman 8, Friendl y
Junction 10

12 3Q-Bugaloos 3, 15 , Roller Derby 4; Lance lot Link 13, Lloyd
Bridges' Waterworld 6, You Are There 8.
1 oo-Kartoon Karniva i 3; Ameri can Bandstand 6, Chlldren~ s

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Cin'
clnnati Bengals
''messenger
guard" Pat Matson says Sunday's pre-season game against
Cleveland Browns here should
be a good one, llut not necessarily a gfe41 one.
"It's no more Important than
any other game," says Matson,
used by Bengals coach Paul

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

MEETING TONIGHT!
I

.•'

EARN EXTRA MONEY
IN PLEASANT
SURROUNDINGS

'

7:30 P.M.

•
'•
••
••

a

AT

11::1111 lfiiOIII!:

t;n

piCpdLIIIilll

1l;Jiil

••

COLUMBUS
&amp;SOUJHERN OHIO
•
ELECTRIC COMPANY

••
••
l
•

UPSTAIRS

while Tab Bennett Will be the
leader on defense. The lllini
should have better depth and
more talent, perhaps enough to
lhreaten.
Agase Retains Optimillm
Northwestern, runnerup for
the past two seasons, had
heavy losses both on offense
and defense, llut Coach Alex
Agase retains his opUmism
because of a veteran offensive
line, top rank pass rece1vers,
and a winning attitude. Sophomore Milch Anderson could
wind up as lhe quarterback and
both Jim Lash and Steve Craig
w11l he good receiVers. Randy
Anderson and AI RoblllSOn
should be dependable runners,
and Jim Anderson should key
the defense.
Indiana might be worth dark
horse mention, too, smce lhe
Hoosiers have 16 starters
returning-nine on defense and
seven on offense-beaded by
fullback Ken St. Pierre, one of
lhe league's best runners last
season. Ted McNulty again will
be at quarterback .

diVISIOn
Ara Parseghian at Notre
Dame could get lucky and
score a Jot of pomts, but only
three defensive starters
return-Greg Marx, Jtm
Musaraca aod Jlnl O'Malley.
On offense, lhe Irish agam Will
have Andy Huff at fullback,
M1ke Creaney at tight end, and
probably WUlie Townsend at
split end. But the quarterback
job wtll be up for grabs between Chff Brown, Pal Seenberge and sophomore Tom
Clements . Both Darryll Dewan
and Gary Dlmimck will challenge lor the left halfback job.
Miami, w11h 1ts entire backfield returnmg, could make a
strong challenge to Inlprove on
last year's 7-3 record and
capture the Mid-America
wh1le
Western
crown,
Michigan needs only a quar·
terback to remam in contention. Running back Paul
Miles could be lhe strong man
for Bowling Green, wh1le
Toledo, unbeaten again last
year, will be a threat again
Wisconsin should be im- desp1le heavy losses.
proved with Rufus "Road
Runner" Ferguson on hand
again to spark lhe offense,
more overall speed on the club,
and better exper~ence. Rudy
INTO loth PLACE
Sterner may be lhe lop quarAKRON, OhiO IU PI ) - J1m
terback and Gary Lund should Godman , Loram, OhiO, has
take over at fullback. Delen- moved mlo lOth place on the
Sl vely, the Badgers will he Professional Bowl e r s
strong In the line, but Assoc1alwn money wmner hst
questionable In the backfield following his $4,000 first-place
with only one regular back, v1ctory durmg last weekend's
Ron Buss.
Grand Rap1ds Open. FourLow on the Totem Pole
teen lh on the hsl pr10r to the
Neither Ml nnesota , under Grand Rapids contest, Gndnew Coach Cal Sloll, nor Iowa man has now won $25,90llm 24
figure to climb to the first tour even Is th1s year.

welterweight Wayne Wells of
Norman , Okla ., and light
heavyweight Ben Peterson of
Comstock, W1s. Peterson's
brother, John, a middleweight,
and R1ck Sanders of Lakeview,
Ore , won Slivers and 4IJII.pound
Chns Taylor of Dowagiac,
M1ch., won a bronze.
The only olher medal lor the
Umted States was a bronze by
Jerry He1denreich of Dallas 1n
the tOO-meter butterfly. Gymnast Olga Korbut led lhe
Russian parade with two golds
and a silver.
The Soviet Umon won golds
m the modern pentathlon team
and Viktor Sidyak took the
md1vidual sabre fencing.
The Umted Stales finished
fourlh m modern pentathlon,
was second after two days m
the equestrian event, won its
filth straight in volleyball
game by beating defending
champiOn Yugoslavia, 5-3, lost
to West Germany, 7.0, m soccer
and was 1dle m basketball.

~M~a~jo"'r~L"'e"'19"'u"'e"!S!l!lta~n~d~ln~alll•- Connecticut,

By Umted Press International
Nat•onal League
East
b
w . 1. pc1. g
P1llsburg h
77 46 626
Choca~o
67 5ll 536 11

~t"tou~~k

Montreal
Pholadelph 1a
C1nc• nnatl
Houston
Los Angeles

Brown to bring In plays. "To
our younger players and some
of our rookies it might be. But
1o me, it's just another ball
gnme.
"It's getting close to the regular season with only one more
week of p,._son gnmes
after thl&amp; o.1e," he said. "So
I'm sure they (Cleveland) will
be wanting to play the people
they're going to be using during the season to see what they
have.
"! think they'll go out and try
1o take it to us," Matson added.
"They have a good defensive
line with guys like (Jerry)
Sherk and (Walter) Johnson."
Clnctnnall hopes its offensive
line holds up as well against the
Browns as it did In Monday
night's win over the Phlladelphia Eagles. Not once did an
Eagle get to quarterbacks
Kenny Anderson and Virgll
carter.
"The offensive line was Ire-

Is~nd fREE
for

"Th~ Income r.x Peopt."

information :

Now you can learn income tax preparatiOn from
H&amp;R Block. Thollsands are eam1n1 &amp;ood money as
ltn preparers. Enrollment open to men and women
1of all ages. Job •nlerv•ews available lor best students.
1
1

I Classes Start Sept. 12. 1972
I Hd W. Phone m-379s
I Tura•ysOnly
I Please send me free Information
I~
I Addt,~

H&amp;:RW. I~lr
1

6 66 57 .53711;~

Kil1huck Mary

lournament, Memphis downed
Lewiston, Idaho, 4-2; El Cerrlto, Calif., defeated Norfolk,
Va., 8-7 In 10 mmgs ; North
Haven, Conn ., beat Rio
Piedras, P. R , 8-2 ; and
Findlay, Ohio, blanked
Ballwin, Mo , 6-41
Today's action pits El
·
Cerrito againSt North Haven
and Findlay against Memphis
on the winner's side and
Norfolk against Rio Piedras
and Ballwin against Lewislon
in the loser's bracket.
In Thursday's final game
'
Mike Paxton provided the
spark needed for the Memphis
VIc•~· Hethrewalour-hitter
~J ·
'
striking out 12 and walking just
two while going lhe lull nine
lru!lngs The 13th round draft
cho1ce. of th e New y or k
Yankees also collected two hils

Stole

•

-~~~~!!!!!!

19 cu. It Side by Side,

Coppertone.

teed

Guaran.

'24f00

GE 30" Range
Automallc, Coppertone
Guaranteed

G.E. Freezer
12 Fl Upright

'13500
Norge Gas Dryer
(Guaranteed)

Bo~r~n~~a1\~ g1:r7·~~ ~-~· HAlf· QUARTS
Port1b'*, O.lux•

GE Dishwasher
IOnly One I
Full Guarantee

Cleamons Now

On Cavs' Team

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd

992-2238
Middleport, 0 .

• • • Walk AUttle Taller
Levrs
Authentic
•
For Men and &amp;ys

ims In Super Slim
Regular, &amp; Bell Bolbln l.ep
Levi Casuals: In Tapers

•

areund Mr. Lavi

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, 0.

HAPPINESS
IS

mMSI~

:
'I

By
The Famous

ai!

Geo. Hall

THE FAMOUS

KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
ANNOUNCES
LYN CAMPBELL OF NASHVILLE
and

GEORGE HALL AND THE Hill MARKS

I
I

Z1p

Refrigerator

EH1·

2 ..

Pl"ono

Admiral

Tennis Seeds
In No Trouble

t
i!1
304 E. Main St. ~

Pomoroy,Ohlo4S76?

New Bargains
That Can't Be
Beat • • •

In Filly Record

Shows are contlnuoU$ nltely from t:30. The
greatest Labor Dly -'loncl of •ntertlinmtnt
•nywhtre. RtMrvotlons lleld til 10:30 Frlclly,
Satunloy, SUftday. 51111\Yy'sllvelllow 11 t : JI to
2:01o.m. No - •
oxc.,t Sahlnllly. ·

I

I

ella,..

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;;;.~. ~ ••• CUP MD MAIL TODAY• • • • • 4

. 't

Oh1o and Tennessee moved Into today's
second round of the American
Legion baseball world series
with unblemished records.
In Thursday's action m the

~ ~ - ~~ ~~ e~ghl-team, double~lirnlnallon

57 65 467 191/,
44 79 358 33
West 1
w78 •46pet.629g.b.
71 s• 571 7

Wins
In lhree Urnes at bat and stole
two bases.
In the Findlay-Ballwin contest, Charles Rogers, a &amp;-foot,
200-pounder, threw a sevenhitter to blank theckMl8SC•ri
b:
squad. Rogers stru out
anll walked only two In gomg
lhe route. At f:be plate ftr
Fmdlay, Karl Wlrtz _went lour
for fiVe lo lead the attack.
North Haven, which ez.
-•~~
ploded for Iour runs In lhe.a
..,
Inning to break open a
scoreless game , was led at the
plate by John Cipo!Um with a
double and a single.
In the first game of the
·
d
tche Le
opemng roun , ca
r
n
Patterson stroked a clutch
single and drove In the wmnlng
run in the loth inning to lead his
El Cerrilo squad lo victory.
The California team was down
by five runs at one point, but
Ron Selak struggled through
all 10 Innings for the victory.

(UPI)-

~~~~~~nclsco ~~ ;~ ~: 23
San Doego
46 78 371 32
Thursday's Results
Los Angeles 5 Chicago 3
Houston 5 Philadelph ia 1
(Only games scheduled)
Today'• Probable Pitchers
11
san b~ ~i~~~r~~~~ 14 1 at
Chocago 1"flands 9 8) , 2 30 p m
San Francosco !Bryant 10-51
at Po ttsburgh I Ellis 11 -71. 8 OS
pm
L~s Angeles (Sutton 14-8 and
Downong 76) at 51 Lou•s (Wise
12 14 and Durhalll 261, 2, 6 JO
pm
Pholadelphoa 1Reynolds o 12
and Lersch 2-41 at Atlanta
I Reed 11 12 and Freeman 0-0),
2. 6 OS p.m.
New York (Seaver 16-91 at
Houston 1Roberts 10 8), 8 JO
pm
Mon I real IS loneman 10 9) at . :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·... :: ··:·:·:···:·:·: :·:·:·:·:·:·&lt;:·:::~·· :·
Cmcmnah (McGlothlin 7 t5l.
8OS p m
REDS PLAY
Saturday's Games
COLUMBUS (UP! )
San Otego at Cht cago
CINCINNATI (UPI) Killbuck Mary set a national Los Angeles at 51 Louis
Tbe Cincinnati Reds, leadl!qj
season record for lhree-year- Ph1la at Atla, 2, tw l night
Fran at Pittsburgh, n1ght llle National League West by
old fillies on a half-mile track San
Montreal at Cinct, ntght
seven games, entertain the
here Thursday, winning the New York at Houston, night
Montreal Expos tonight.
Governor's Cup harness race
Jim MeGiotblln (7-ll) was
Amencan League
at the Ohio State Fa1r in 2:01 4scheduled to pitch lor llle
East
5
w. I. pel. g.b. Reds, going against Mon·
Previous best was 2:02 by Balf1more
67 57 .540 !real's BUI Stoneman (10.9).
Detro1f
67 58 536 •;,
Songcan al Saraloga .
The Reds lead Houston by
York
66 59 528 1'h
The horse won $7,292 for co- New
Boston
64 58 525 2 seven games in the NL West.
owners Henry and Bob Critch- Cleveland
58 66 468 9 Montreal Is in next-to-last
49 75 395 18
field of Wooster, Ohio. Oriver M 1lwaukee
place in the NL East, 19\2
West
was Dick Buxlon.
w. I pet. g.b. games behind Plttoburgb.
Slandmg m for Gov John J. Oakland
73 51 589 - Cincinnati was idle ThursGilligan and presentmg a tro- Ch 1cago
71 52 577 p;, day.
61 60 504 10112
phy lo the co-owners was Dr. Mmnesota
Kansas C1ty
60 63 488 12112 ··:-:-:-»:;:-:·:·:·:·:·w·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:::::*:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
Dav1d Sweet, director of the California
57 67 460 16
Ohio Department of Economic Texas
49 76 392 241!,
IN FAIR CONDITION
Thursday's Results
and Conununily Development
NIAGARA
FALLS, N. Y.
New York 7 Texas 0
The race capped four days of Mllw
(UP!
)
Former
National
7 Kansas C1ty 3
harness racing at the fair. Cal1forma 4 Detro1t 0
League pitching standout Sal
IOnly games scheduled)
Appaloosa and quarter horse
Maglie, &gt;5, a Niagara Falls
Today's Probable Pitchers
races are scheduled Sunday.
native, was hsled 1n fair
IAll Times EDTl
Detro•! (Coleman 14 11) at condition Thursday at Mount
Oakland (Holtzman 14-11), 11 St. Mary's Hospital alter
pm
Baltomore !McNally 12-13) at suffermg an apparent heart
Calofornoa (Wright 14 7), 11 attack.
pm
By BOB STEWART
Cleveland (Wilcox 7 11) at
FOREST HILLS, N. Y. Mmnesota (Woodson 11 12),
IUP! ) - The greatest tenms 8:30 p.m
M11waukee
tournament of the year enters Texas
(Paul 6!Colborn
5), 8 30 p6-41
m. at
Chicago
(Lemonds
3·4)
at
lis third day today still wa1llng
New
York
tStottlemyre
12·15),
,
for an explosion.
7 JO p m
As lhe f1elds of 148 men and
80 women battled through firstSaturd•v's Gemes
round tests Wednesday and
Ch1cago at New York
agam on Thursday, only the Kansas C1ty at Boston
m1ld upset of 15th-seeded Cleveland at Minnesota
J1mmy Connors by Tom Detroit at Oakland
at Texas, night
Gorman on opening day M1lw
Baltimore at Calif, night
detracted frol" the manner in
which the l top players were
supposed to advance.
Today, however, defendmg
champiOn Stan Sm1lh can run
into ser10us trouble against
unseeded Clark Graebner.
Sm1lh was far from unpress•ve
m defeatmg 15-year-&lt;~ld Billy
CLEVELAND (UPI)- For·
Martin m four sets m hiS f~rst mer Ohio Slate Univeralty basRoyal Crown
round, and Graebner, m.,and- ketball star Jim Cleamons,
Bottling Company
oul m many matches, is a fine who saw only limited action
grass court player.
with the Los Angeles Lakers
Middleport
last year, has been obtained by L--------~
the Cleveland Cavaliers.
The Cavs armounced Thursday night !bey gave up a future
draft choice In exchange for
list
Cleamons, the Lakers' lop
McKay suffered a hairline draft choiCe a year ago.
fracture of the right leg last
"Jim C1eamonB has good size
week and Skorlch wanted lo and speed and we think be hal
clear him through waivers to strong defensive abiUtles as
make l'OOm on the official ros- well as good abllltieslo direct a
ter for another player.
ballclub," Cavs coach BW
But Brown claimed McKay Fitch said of the 6-1, 185-poond
and wouldn't lift the claim, so Cleamons. "He fits Into a fast
Skor1ch had to put him back on break style and into lhe Cavthe active roster.
aliers' long range plans at the
"II put a little crimp In our guard position."
With Ohio State, CleiiJllOllll
cut ""·" Skorich said, ''The
clalmmg party knows McKay averaged 18.5 pointa per game
has a broken leg, but still with a 5U shooting perwouldn't recall."
centage. N. captain of the 197~
Skorich was successful in 7lleam he led the Buckeyes to
getting some key players a 19-6 record.
through wmvers and they will
Cleamons played only 201
be on the taxi squad.
minutes wilh the Lakers last
Cleared through the waiver season, averaging 2.6 points
list were quarterback Brian per game.
S1pe, running back Billy I.efear, guard Craig Wyclnsky
and wide receiver Dave Jones.
The BrownsBengals game
will he played in Ohio Stadium
home of the Ohio State University Buckeyes. A sell-out crowd
of about 85,000 Is expected for
Sunday's 2 p.m. kickoff.

/

I

.STANDINGS Teams
MEMPHIS, Tenn.
from California,

Bengals Expect Good Football Game

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

ASSOCI AT:~N

AREA GAMES
Tonight
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South
Wlrl County at Wahama
Saturday
Tyler County at Hannan, W.
Va.

mendous," and Anderson said
"I had all the Ume In the world
lo throw And when it's easy
like that, anybody can do it."
youngsters are protected
Rook1e safety Tommy Casaevery day .. AAA CARES
nova has replaced middle nnebacker Bill Bergey as defenSCHOOL'S OPEN
sive signal-caller for CinDRIVE CAREFULLY
cinnati's defensive unit.
.
"No Big Deal"
"It's really not a b1g deal,"
Casanova sa1d. "All I do IS
relay the defensive signals as
signaled lo me from coach
Chuck Weber from the sideOPEN FOR BUSINESS :
lines.
"It would mean a lot more if
Relax ... Drive in for a Delicious
I was calling them on my
own," the rookie standout from
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
Louisiana State said.
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
Bergey still will be doing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.
things like calling out lo his
teammates what offensive for·
mation the opponent has lined
up in.
Meanwhile, In the Browns
At Forked Run Lake Entrance
camp, coach N1ck Skorich is
Long Bo«om. 0 .
unhappy that Bengals coach
Paul Brown blocked an attempt lo get Browns tackle Bob
. .----~~~~~~~~~,... ~ • • • CUHND MAIL TODAY . . . . . . . . McKay on the Injured waiver

Fun for Everyone 6.

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

knew the rev1 red schedule, and
11 was camo!d 1n the major
English language newspa(X'rs
In Europe.
"It's my laull," Wright sa1d
w1th tears m his eyes. "ThiS IS
by far lhe worslthmg that has
ever happened lo me m my
life."
Two Medals In Track
The only two gold medals m
track Thursday went to He1de
Mar1e Rosendahl of West
Ger.many in the women's long
Jump with a leap of 22-3 and to
Peter Frankel of East Germany In the 2().kllometer walk
In 1:26 ·42.6. The Americans
were shut out m both events
with Larry Young's !OthiJlace
fm!Sh the best m the walk.
The s1x medals won m
wrestling were the most taken
by lhe Americans since 1924
Golds went lo lightweight Dan
Gable of Waterloo, Iowa,

Gallipolis

·------..

8 15-Matters of L1fe 6
8 3()-Depuly Dog 3. 4, 15 , Road Runner 6, 13. Scooby Doo 8;
Bugs Bunny 10
1
9· 00 Woody Woodpecker 3, 4, 15, Funky Phantom 6, 13 ; Harem
Globetrotters 8, 10
9 3()-Pink Panther 3, 4, 15, Jackson Five 6, 13, Help Hair Bear
B
h 8 10

Film Festival B. 10. Marshall Football Preview 13 , Western
Theater 15.
1 3()-Johnny Bench 4. Pistons, Propellors and Pilots 3;
Olympics 6, 13
2· oo-Job Show 10, Baseball 3, 4, 15, VIrg inian 8.
2: 15-Baseball 3, 4, 15
2 30- Then Came Bronson 10
3 3()-Golf 6, 13; U S. Open Prev lew 8, 10.
4 oo-u S Open Tennis 8, 10.
.
s oo-Sporls Challenge 3, Goll Tourname11ts 8, 10; Midwestern
Hayride 4 ; Olympics 6, 13 , Roller Derby 15
5: 3Q-B•II Anderson 3
6. 3Q-News. Weather. Sports3, 4, 8; ChannellO, Reports 10
6 3o-NBC News 3. 4, 15 , CBS Ne,ws 8. 8, 10.
7 oo-ThiS Is Your Lo 'e 3; Hee Haw 6. 8; Lawrence Welk 4. 15.
Death Valley Days 10, Farmer's ~!!9_hter 13
7·3o-Nashvllle Muslc 3. Green Acres -Ill; l'llm 13
6:QO-AII In The Family 8, 10, NBC Comedy Theatre 3, 4, IS :
Summer Olym lcs 6. 13
8:3()-Mary Tyler MooreS ; The FlrstTwenly Days 10
9: DO-Movies· Banacek 3, 15; Back Street4 ; Pro-Football 8, 10.
IO·QO-ABC News Special 6, 13.
10·311-Pure G~ld 6, Survival 13
11 :QO-News3. 4, 6. 13 , Movie The Tall Men, 15.
11 : 15-News 6, 13
11 3Q-Mov••s· The Mark oflhe Hawk 3; Head of a Tyrant4, The
Cal Creeps 6; Devils ~I Darkness 13.
12:QO-News 8, 10
.
12·3Q-Movles Colorado Territory 8; On the Double 10, The
Tome Travelers 13.
1:QO-Movle Information Received 3.
1 15-Mov le The Sergeant Was A Lady •
1 3()-,\\ovle Dimension 5
2 3Q-Movle· Gunllghlatllodge City 4 , The Petrified Forest10 :
News 13.
City 4. The Petrified Forest 10; News 13
4.15-Movle. The Delightful Rogue 4.

1o take lhe lead wilh 35.
Hart and Robinson, both
stunned by the tragedy, sa1d
Stan Wright, the assistant
coach who handles the sprinters, told them they were
running at 7p.m. so they would
go to lhe stadium at 5 p.m.
They left a little early lo catch
their bus and noticed a race on
television In the building at the
llus stop.
Wright's schedule, which
was 18 months old, had the 100.
meter heats after the 10,000.
meter heats, but the schedule
was changed lo put the 100
heats firsl. Wright never got
lhe message and neither did
Head Coach Bill Bowerman of
Oregon or morge Wilson, lhe
manager who is m charge of
track schedules.
But all of lhe other countries
had their runners at the
stadium ; the sports wnters

Up as Midwest Powers

STRANGER TO ANEW COUNTRY
New faces, a foreign tongue,
Wanting to hide - no place lo run.
Ponies pulling carts along s1de the road,
Farmers going to market, each w1th hiS load.

KID BROTHER HIRED

heat and qualifled for today's
semifinals desjlite not having
Ume to warm up. He finished
second to Russian Valeri
Borzov, now favored to bring
lhe honors to the Soviet Union
for the first time In Olympic
history.
A Brighter Day
It was a brighter day for lhe
United States at the swimming
pool, where Mark Spitz earned
two more gold medals 1o run
his total 1o a record-equallng
five and kept it perfect by
making them all world
records. Hi8 latest victories
were in the 100-rneter freestyle
and anchoring the 400-rneter
medley relay team. He has a
chance lor seven gold medals.
In all, the United Slates won
nme medals Thursday, lncludlng six in wrestlmg, to brmg its
totallo 31 for lhe games. But
lhe Russians won 24 Thursday

Michigan, OSU Shape

the poet's~ corner

+++
ON THE TV DIAL : Local area football coverage begins, with
live audio of Pl. Pleasant. at Parkersburg South .and Wirt al
Wahama, 7:45p.m. (not seen in Gallipolis) ... The pros present
lhe Lion-Colt pre-5easoner at 8:30, WSAZ-TV ... And there's an
unusual program on drug lherapy, 8 30, WMUL-TI'

MUNICH (UP!) - Two
American sprinters were on
the sldellnes for today's 100.
meter dash final, out of the ·
race because a coach read an
old Ume table and the runners
missed their preHminary heat
The 100-rneler event, one of
lhe highlights of track and
field, has long been a Amer1can-&lt;lomlnated event In the
Olympics and the U.S. runners
were expected lobe In the thick
of it agam this year, the 20th
annual games.
But Thursday, Eddie Hart of
Pittsburg, Calif. , and Rey
Robinson of Lakeland, Fla.,
were late lor their quarterfinal heats of the !()().meter
dash and were disqualified.
Both had run 9.9s this year,
equallng the world record.
The third U.S. sprmter,
Robert Taylor of Houslon,
barely made it 1n time lor his

I
II

I

"·~BASEBALL Findlay

Coach Bfows Sprinters' Hop'es

I- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I
I
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
I IIIID 300 words long tor be subject to ~duction by the editor) I

I
I
,8~..t~~~II •••?Jtt. UUW"L:

•

-

'

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Sepi.I, 1972

f-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. I, 1972

S~reak

Astros

I

By NEIL HERSH.BERG
UPI Sports Writer

.

Extended Oto Five Games over Phillies

twCHJul singles in the third
inning to drive in two runs and
Larry Dierker sea llered seven
hits Thursday night to extend
Houston's winning streak to
five games as the Astros
downed the Philadelphia Phillies, 5-I.
The victory was the fourth
straight for the Astros under
the leadership · of Leo
Durocher, who was named
manager of the club last
Saturday by Houston General
Manager Spec Richardson.
Durocher, who managed the
chicago Cubs from 1966 until

· A.OWERS
......Eor All Occasions

-·------ ---·- 992-2039
We "wire flowers
Everywhere

Pomeroy Flower Shop
a·u"ernut Ave., Pomeroy
Mrs. Mlltord Von Meter

July 25 of this season, replaced.
Harry "the hal" Walker.
"We are playing good but I
don't !!now If It's because we
have a different manager,"
said Houston star Cesar Cedeoo. "We are just plzying good
ball and everybody is happy
with him."
Durocher himself would take
no credit for the Aslros'
current success. "I'd take no
credit for it at all. They're

A.
SPECIAL
FOR EVERYONE

playing the way I Jl!&lt;e to see a
club play--ibey lflr goiqg out
to win. They hav~ a lot of spirit,
more thau I've .seeh in a long
time."
May and Watson hit back-tohack singles and Rader hit a
bases-loaded double to score
the two runners and climax the
fo~r-run outburst. Cedeno doubled in the sixth inning to drive
in ·Roger Metzger, who had
walked and stolen second.

ley Leigh and edged the
Dolphins, 27-24, in a pre-season
contest.
Knight's winning boot came
with only 36 seconds left in the
see-saw contest which saw the
Redskins raise their exhibition
record to 4-1.
Head Coach Allen again
divided playing time between
Billy Kilmer, who led Wilshington into the championship
playoffs last season, and Sonny

Bowling League
'

Finalizes Plans
The Keilh Goble Ford Ellie Harf and Charlie Neal .
Bowling League mel at the Team 9- Kafe Dobblris. Ginny
Skyline Lanes on August 29 to Grover, Wilma Fi sher, Clint
finalize plans for the 1972-73 Abshire and Gary Ellis .
bowling season which will begin
Team 10 - Kay Gygax, Betty
on Tuesday, September 5, 1972 Saxon, Lillian Teed, Bob Teed
at 7 p.m. at the Skyline Lanes. and Mike Dobbins.
The league is sponsored by
Team 11 - Betty Gooch, John
Keilh Goble Ford of Middleport, Lloyd , Loretta Pushkar, Roy
Oh io. The officers are : Charles Bickel and Linda Stewart.

Complf! ot 125.001
e GENUINE NATURAL COLOR PORTRmS

e

e
e

I

e
e

!.lyl~ tlnttd

SELECTION OF
FOl ALL AGES

or palnttd Ola(k &amp; Wh itt pho to s.
PROOFS 4·6 P M~s to choo1r from.
.ll1biu.

M. Nea l, President ; Mary

Roush, Vice-President ; Alice
M . Icard, Secretary -Trea su rer
and Jack Mink, Sargent.at .
Arms.
·
Fourteen teams will make up

fhi!drtn.

GrouPS photoaraphtd 1t 1ft add itional

~dulls .
~mall charg t.

FREE TO ALL SENIOR CITIZENS

Fret 8d0 ti•ing color portnil to all cu ~tomers om 60 yuu of •ae.
LIMITED OFFER!
Ono pn suh]fd. ont per fa mit)':

the league and !hey are listed

"'dnttistd Slltcill Hea• ' S~auldm Only

· TILL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT THIS SPECIAL OFFER

Village Cut Rate

below.
A waiting li st Is being held tor
first available va cancies in the
league.
All bowlers are urged to be
prompt so that bowling may
begin at 7 p.m . each Tuesday
evening . The teams are :

Team 12 -

Judy

Dave

Isaac.

Hazel Holley,

Darlene

Holley

and

ruES•r SEPT 5

Swai n,

Jack

Ferguson .

Team 13 - Marlo Bush.
Sheryl Bush, Sandy Blackburn ,
Lois Shaver and Wayne Shaver.
Team 14 - Helen Oseland,
Lou Ferrell, Hilda Gygax, Bill
Gygax and Dave Hart.

Jurgensen, the No. I active .
passer in the National Football
League. But his decision as to ·
who will be his field goal kicker
•
is all but settled as Knight, who m'
led the National Cllnference in
\...d1
points scored last season with
114, has looked impressive in
DARLINGTON, S. C. (UP!)
pre-season play.
'
- Bobby Allison piloted his
Leigh, who had touchdown Chevrolet
around
the
returns of 99 and 57 yards Darlington Raceway at a
called back on penalties in record speed of 152.228 mil es
Miami's contest last week, tied per hour Thursday to capture
the game 21-21 with his elec- the pole position for the Southtrifying run late in third ern 500 stock car race on Labor
quarter.
Day.
In games this weekend
Allison bested lhe track
Baltimore plays Detroit Friday record of 151.983 m.p.h. set by
night. Saturday's schedule fea- Cale Yarborough in 1969.
tures Denver vs. New England,
.Fred Lorenzen of Elmhurst,
Kansas City vs. Dallas, Atlanta Ill., also in a Chevrolet, won the
vs. New York Jets, New outside pole with a speed of
Orleans vs. Pittsburgh, San 149.094 m.p.h.
Diego vs. Los Angeles, Green
It marks the first lime since
Bay vs. Sl. Louis, and the New 1958 that a Chevrolet won the
York Giants vs. Philadelphia. pole posilion and the first lime
In Sunday contests its Chicago ever that Chevrolets have won
vs. Buffalo, Cincinnati vs. beth lop spots .
Cleveland and San Francisco
vs. Oakland. Houston is at
Minnesota is the single Laber
LARSON TO BROWNS
Day clash Monday night.
TAMPA,
Fla. (UP! ) - The
In other player developBaltimore
Colts
sent offensive
ments Washington announced
it traded defensive back Willie U!ckle Lynn Larson to the
Germany to Atlanta for a Cleveland Browns Thursday
future draft choice . Germany for an undisclosed draft choice,
was drafted on the seventh reducing the team roster to 48.
round last season from Morgan
State.
The Pittsburgh Steelers
traded veteran center Bobby
Maples to the Denver for a 1973
draft choice.

Alliso·n Pole

'
THE
NEW SCOFIELD
REFERENCE

to record the 18th shutout of his
care~r in New York's win over
the Rangers. l\:lurcer, . who
became the 20th Yankee to
achieve 100 or more homers in
a career, hil his 25th homer off
Rich Hand.
Dave May, George Scoti and
Tommie Reynolds each drove
in two runs for Milwaukee as
the Brewers 'scored all their
runs in tbe first three innings in
defeating Kansas City. Richie
Scheinblum of Kansas City

BIBLE
•8.95-'15.95
and '23.95

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

SEE HERE
HEADQUARTERS
FOR.
HOOVER APPLIANCES
--------- -·--·--·-··-·-··

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

You

Will

5%

INTEREST
On Passbook
Savings

SPEAKING OF

Hair Styling
6 .......................... .

by

KAY

:ZONOLITE
FOR POURING

ROCK WOOL
FOR POURING

FIBERGLASS and BAns
WITH FOIL VAPOR BARRIER
(MEDIUM, THICK AND SUPER
THICK FOR 16" AND 24" SPACING).
,-----------------------~

I IT IS A PROVEN FACT THAT I
INSULATION DOES NOT COST, IT
1 SAVES.
I

I

I

··-----------------------.J
MID"DLEPORT, OHIO

405 N. 2nd Ave.
992-3748

Hair grows much faster
in I he summer than it does
In the winter and faster in

Linescores

Find Insulation:

Defroi I
000 000 ooo- 0 3 t
California 400 000 ooo- 4 6 0
Fryman , LaGrow (6) , Zacha·
ry 18) and Sims; Ryan ll5·12l
and Torborg . LP- Fryman 13·
21.
!Only games scheduled)

SPECIAL!
MAES 2 TON

Pull &amp; Hoist

lilfMcCulloch . ~~"~~:,,.,..""

Meigs Equipment Co.

and eflorllo care for . Sott.
casual,

Mulbe,ny Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy

ha ir

m lng and smart and are
quite easy to manage and
care for.
Let us Introduce vou to
the newest thing in hair
styles whether your hair ls

You Can't Put
Sticky Bandages
on a Pup!
BUT...

long. medium length, or
short, It can be styled Into a
flattering , lashlonable
colllure to add beauty and
charm to your appearance .

·- ...

• ' I.

CHATEAU BEAUTY
SALON
214 E. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-7606
'

'

piCnic date.
Mrs . Thomas, Council
director, reported that prizes
were awarded during Senior
Citizens Day at the Meigs
Cllunty Fair to Mrs. Myrtle
Warren, Christy Baer, Wilbur
Lpgan, Edna Russell, Otto lies,
and Mrs . Mildred McDaniel.
Recognition and prizes were
also given to the oldest attending, two who were 86 and
two who were 87; Mrs. McDaniel who traveled the farthest; and to Clarence Struble
pre~idenl of lhe Meigs County
Council on Aging, who was
observing a birtllday.
Those
providing
entertainment for lhe senior
citizens at the fair were Dick
Wiley, Amos Leonard, James
Doss, Glenn Evans, Dennis
Manuel , Buddy Hendricks,
Mrs. Bernice Winn and Mrs.
Hazel Thomson. Mrs . Winn and
Mrs. Thomson were in charge
of the enlerU!inment.

Browns M eet

In Lan'"aster
'-"'

MINERSVILLE - The
descendants of George and
Elsie Brown, Minersville, held
their family reunion Aug, 20 at
Rising Park in Lancaster. A
picnic dinner was served at
noon arter which badminton
and soft ball were played by
lhe young. The afternoon was
spent informally with visiting,
pictures
and
ta king
reminiscing, including a hike
to the lop of a large rock on the
hill from which all of Lancaster
is seen.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Brown, Pomeroy ; Miss
Roberta Reinhart, Albany; Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Brown,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Harmon, Gina, Laura, and
Steve, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Strawser, Julie and
Michael, Reynoldsburg ; Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Brown,
Minersville ; Mr. and Mrs . Ed.
Wolfe , Jamie and Janelle,
Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs , Jack
Cummins, Todd and Michelle ,
Columbus: Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Williams, Minersvllle: Mr. and
Mrs ,
Edgar
Thomas,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Zana Yahcoubian and Christy, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs, Danny
Brown , Megan, Dan, Joe ,
Debbie, Robert, ")inersville;
Mr. and Mrs. John :rhomas,
Jeffrey and Jimmy, Mansfield; Mrs. Zana Withrow,
Minersville, and Mr. and Mrs.
William Reinhart, Pomeroy.

DINNER HELD
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Guy
Guinther entertained with a
turkey dinner honoring the
birthday of her son • Malcolm •
on Aug. 20, A decorated cake
and ice cream were also served
lo Mrs. Malcolm Guinther and
ch ildren, Malcolm 1!, and
Juanita ; Mr. and Mrs. William
Guinther, Guy Guinther and
children Kenneth, Karen, and
Terry ; Mrs. Elmo Johnson,
Kermil Williams, and the
honored guest.

NAMES OMI1TED
LETART, W. Va. - Unintentionally omitted from the
list of names of people attending the Howell reunion
were Mrs. Christina Marshall
Mrs . Eugene Hudson and
chlldren Bryant, Sue, Donald,
Vernon and David, of Paris,
Pa .

Wed itr Virginia
FRIDAY
WEEKEND Revival Friday
through Sunday, al Graham's
Chapel Church, three miles
northeast of Shade, 7:30 each
evening with Rev . Jesse Fyffe,
Webbville, Ky., evangelist.
Homecoming Sunday, basket
dinner 12 noon ; afternoon
MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commerce, 7:30 p.m. Friday,
al the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. social room.
service, 1:30 p.m. Special
singing by Bissell Brothers and
George Lewis.
SATURDAY
ALL NIGHT hymn sing,
Mason First Baptist church,
beginning 7:30p.m. Saturday.
Duncan Family, Tampa, Fla.,
Dan Hayman and Country
Hymn Timers and Joint Heirs
to sing . ~blic invited.
SUNDAY
EVENING services, 7:30
p.m . Sunday at Syracuse
United Methodist Church by
the Rev. Murre! Floyd, .,
ANNUAL Swartz Family
Reunion, Sunday, Woode
Grove at Alfred. Family and
friends invited .
MONDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
slated meeling, 8 p.m. Monday
at Masonic Temple. Worthy
Matron asks as tnany officers
and members possi ble be
present because of imporU!nl
business to be discussed .
CHESTER FIRE Deparl·
ment annual Labor Day
celebration, Monday . Barbecued chicken and spareribs,
homemade ice cream. Parade
slarting, 1:30 p,m. Parade
participants be at fire house by
1:30 p.m ,
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room .
CLEAN UP night by Meigs
Band Boosters at food booth at
Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy.
Take rags and buckets.
SOUTHERN Band Boosters,
8 p.m. Tuesday at the high
school. lmporU!nt meeting and
all interested persons are

urged to attend.
B. H. SANBORN Missionary
Society, Middleport First
Baptist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
evenin g al the church.

!'lliss Sheila Marie Childs,
daughter of Mr. ~nd W.rs.
William D. lhilds, Lincoln M.,
Middleport, and Mr. Rober!
Lee Reeves, son of Mr. "nd
Mrs. James C. Reeves, Route
4, Pomeroy, were united in
marriage on Aug .11.
The afternoon ceremony was
performed by the Rev. Thomas
Sexton at lhe Church o.f God in
Pearisburg, Va.
For her wedding the bride
' was attired in a street length
gown of while satin and lace, It
was fashioned with an empire
waist, a scoop neckline and
white lace long full sleeves.
Her shoulder length veil of
illusion fell from a while satin
bow. The ensemble was made

by Miss Linda Heeves, sister of
the bridegroom.
The bride wore her maternal
grandmother's diamond
earrings, hl!r mother 's ring ,

and a white and gold pearl
neckla ce of her Aunt Ne llie
Brown .
The coup le had a brief
honeymoon at Pipestem Resort
in West Virginia . The new Mrs.
Rec~es is employed in the Title
Office at the Meigs County
Courthouse. Mr. Reeves works
with Ben-Tom Corp.

August Picnic
Enjoyed Monday

::::;:;;~::::::::::--::!=;;:::~*:x::::.:::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::

The annual Augu st picnic of
:;a lhe Middleport Women's
:~:~
~j Christian Temperance Union
~::
:~: was held Monday evening at
}l
f:! the Legion Memorial Park.
:-:. Mrs. Betty Cline, president,
·:'
The Rev. Robert Buckley, conducled the short business
pastor of the Laurel Cliff Free meeting during whi ch lime Ihe
Methodist Church, and Mrs. Meigs County Union annual
Buckley spent Wednesday at meeting was announced for
Mansfield
attending
a September allhe home of Mrs.
Robert Warner, Mulberry
preachers' workshop.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore Ave ,, Pomeroy.
and Mrs, Hubert Wolfe were . Members signed round-robin
recent visitors in Alton wilh cards for Mrs. Lillian McGhee
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Darst and and Mrs. Lillian Stief!. Mrs.
family .
Lena McKinley gave a
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, her humerous reading. Present
granddaughter, Diane Lewis were Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs.
imd M~ . and Mrs. Larry Jacobs Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
and daughter, Teri, have Cline, Mrs. McKinley, Mrs.
returned from Florida where Pearl Hoffman, and Mrs .
they visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack Beulah White.
Jacobs and son, Sean, at
Patrick Air Force Base . They
traveled lo Florida via the
GIRLS HETURN
scenic route through the
Brenda Hysell, daughter of
Carolinas. Joining them there
Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Hysell,
for a visit were Benny Wright,
and
Kathy Manley, daughler of
son of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Wright, Pomeroy, who is Mr. and Mrs. Ray Manley,
stationed at the Tampa Air have returned from a two week
Force Base, and Mr. and Mrs. stay at Camp Sandy Bend,
Ervin Acree, Doug and Sandy, Elizabeth, W. Va. Monday
former Middleport residents, night Kathy and Brenda and
now residing at St. Petersburg, Penny Hysell joined Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Manley for a trip to
Fla.
Mr. and Mrs , Lloyd Wright the Ohio SUite Fair lo see the
left Thursday morning for Osmond Bros .
Ma con, Ga . to visit their son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and
A thought for the day : British
Mrs, John Card. Their son,
writer
Hector Hugh Monro said,
Benny, of Tampa will join them
"Women
and elephants never
there for the weekend. On
Saturday night the Wrights forget an injury."
enterU!ined with a cookout at
their Royal Oak Park camp
site. Guests were the Rev . and
Mrs . Robert Buckley and
family , and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Barton and family ,

:::

p
Omeroy . . .
Personal ·Notes

returned home Thursday from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she has been confined
for the past several weeks for
treatment of a shoulder injury
received in a fall at her home.
Mrs . Esther Edwards,

Middleport
:Personal Notes
Mr . and Mrs. George
Doolittle and children, Steven,
Connie and Kri sly , have
returned to Berea after visiting
here with her parents, Mr , and
Mrs. Glenn Lambert. Mrs.
Lambert joined Mr , and Mrs.
Doolittle, Connie and Krisly,
for a day at. Kings Island.
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds accompanied by Miss Edna
Burdette , Mrs . Genevieve
Campbell, Leon , W. Va.: and
Mrs . Clarence Whittington,
Poin t Pleasant, were al Car·
dmglon Sunday for the funera l
services of Mrs. Reynolds'

enroute from New York City to
her Miami Beach, Fla . hoine,
is here visiting her mother,
Mrs. Laura Bradbury, a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hoopital, Mr. and Mrs. James
Arnold, and other relatives.

aue
entertainment makerl

cousin .

Mr . and Mrs . Gene Harris,
Kathy and Robbie and Mrs.
Norma Hecox left Wednesday
for New Orleans, La. where
Mr. Harris was transferred by
Kaiser Alumin~. The family
earlier purchased a home
there.
Mrs . Francis Kl ein was

.

MOTOROLA

a.

Track -Tape Player

Stereo Phono Combination

CROW'S

When the pprty ge ls going strong,
this "entertainment maker " really ·
comes on. Plays your favorite records
.. . and your favorite 8· Track Stereo
Tape Cartridges. It's a 2-in-1 combination. See it today!

STEAK
HOUSE

•

~,._111 LOOK ATTHESE · - MOTOROLA
QUAUTY FEATURES •..

Home of

the Fabulous

• Two 6" Speakers • Detachable Speaker Wings
• 8 watts instantaneous peak power output
(EIA1music power rating-4 watts)
• Retractable Diamond LP Stylus
• Automatic Program Advance
,ll

Model LP200HE. High
Impact polystyrene In
Ebony color.

fom oy
Pl ays 8 track ster&amp;O

SANDWICH
Order By Phone

And Toke Em Home

992-5432

tape cartridges.

MOTOROLA makers of

Quasar. color TV

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
MIDDlfPORT, 0.

GRAB ·ONE Of THESE

Ladies Plan Sale in Yard
SYRACUSE - Prayer and
the Hag pledge preceded the
Ladies Auxiliary of Volunteer
Firemen meeting at their
regular place the evening of
Aug. 26.
Jean Hall, president, was in
charge. Devotions were St.
John 4: 1-10, read by Eleanor
Bohram.
It was decided to have a yard
sale at the meeting house at
Municipal park Saturday, Sept.
9, beginning at 10 a.m. The
committee named included
Ada Slack, Myla Hudson,
Theima Grueser, Elva Dailey,
Mildred Pierce, and Charlotte
Nease.
Money made at the yard sale
will go toward helping finish
the inside of lhe new town hall
being built on the park. Anyone
having any thing to donate
toward the sale may get in

touch with any of the above
named committee members
and it will be picked up. The
town will also be solici ted.
Mrs. Hall, hostess, served
refreshments lo Agnes White,
Elva Dailey, Mildred Pierce,
Thelma Grueser, Eleanor
Bohr am, Jean Hall, Ada Slack,
Myla Hudson.

SHIRT
FINISHING

I
•

SAME DAY
SERVItE
ln At 9-0ut At S
Use Our Free Parktng Lot

Robinson~
216 E. 2nd,

Ceaners
Pomeroy

World's favorite motorcycle.

COIN GLASS
by

FOSTORIA

YOU CAN PROTECT HIS CUTS AND BITES

FOUR COLORS

WITH CoRONA FOR PETs •••

RUBY, AMBER, OLIVE GREEN
AND CRYSTAL

Antiseptic ointment Corona is rich in
nature's own healing oil, Lanolin.
Apply Corona generously for bites,
cuts, scratches, sore feet, elbow
callouses and minor skin irritations.

ALL '72 HONDA
MOTORCYCLES REDUCED
FOR CLEA·RANCE!
OVER 100 MOTORCYCLES TO CHOOSE FROM.

~n

ALL MODELS ON OUR HUGE DISPLAY FLOOR!

a Hydrous BRse of Lanolin•

and Deriv{\tlves, Petrolatum,

Beeswax, Borax and Aromatic
Oils.

PRICE

SUGAR RUN MILLS

versatile

slyles always look char.

•wool Fat

SPECIAL FOR 1 WEEK ONLY!

the dayllghl hours than il
does at nlghl.
M ost women prefer a
hair slyle lhat keeps them
looking well -groomed at all
times , yet requires a
min imum amount of t ime

Ph. 992-2176 Pomeroy

After you bathe your Pet - dog or cat apply small amounts of Corona through the
hair with finger tips . Rich , Lanolin Oil in
Corona works the way nature does to
restore li.fe and sheen.

$

A picnic with the family of
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight and
son, Steven, of Caledonia, was
held Sunday at the Rising Sun
Park at Lancaster.
Attending besides the Terry
Knight family were Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Knight and son,
Dick, Pomeroy; Miss Sandy
Yates, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Stewart
Parkersburg; Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ji~
Conkle and daughter, Nancy;
Mr . and Mrs. Ron Baxter and
Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Purl
Greeney, Mr. and Mrs. AI
Greene, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Greene, and Mr . and Mrs.
Dave Conkle, Marion .

SALE PLANNED
A rummage sale will be held
by the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
Tuesday and Wednesday from
10 a.m. to 3 p,m, in the Coalq
building on North Second SI.,
Middleport .

(!)

King Builders.Supply Co.

A ptcnoc for all senior
citizens at lhe . Rock Springs
fairgrounds on Thursday, Sept.
21st, has been planned by the
Meigs County Council on
Aging.
The outing will be held from 2
p.m. to 7 . p.m. with entertainment from 3 to 5 p.m .
and from 6 to 7 p.m . Each
person is to take a covered dish
and their own table service.
Coffee and ked tea will be
provided.
Those planning to attend are
asked to advise Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, 992-7400, prior to the

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. John (Merle ) Diehl of
Spokane, Wash ., a former
Pomeroy area resident , is
hospitalized, friends here
report Mrs. Diehl left Meigs
County abeut 13 years ago
following the death of her
husband and since that time
has been residing with a sister.
Cards may be sent to her at her
home address, East 26 18
Joseph, Spo~ane , Wash. 99207.

Meigs Co. Branch

AT

Picnic Date Set .

Picnic Enjoyed

£'fl..evy

LEADING ~~
BATTERS '~ ~-

Save Heat Thls Winter

the Tigers out of first place in
the American League East.
Claude Osteen, helping himself with a two-run single,
overcame a shaky seventh
inning to pitch the Dodgers
pass Chicago . Osteen had
a two,hitler and a 44llead until
the last of the seventh when
Billy Willlams lined a one-&lt;:&gt;ut
single. Osteen tben issued a
walk to Jim Hickman and Ron
Santo followed with a three-run
homer.
Bobby Murcer's !DOth career
home run, a three-run shot in
the second inning, was all the
support Fritz Peterson needed

RETURNS $11
CINCINNATI (UP! )
L ookado and Sh irley Capehart . Cactus Balloon covered the
Team 2 - Be1ty Merry, Dori s five one-half furlongs of the
F itzs immons , Ali ce Icard ,
featured eighth race at River
Gilbert Meal, Jack Mink.
Team 3 - Mary Allman, Downs Thursday in 1:07,
Georgia Riehle. Barbara Ab· returning $11, $4 ,20 and $3.20
shire, Gene Carter and Steve
for the two-length victory over
Carter .
Team .4 - Rut Janey, Garnet Julia 's Dash. Cal Creek was
5 per cent per year paid on
Elliott , Jack Janey and Merid a third in the $1,900 claiming
Regular Passbook Savi ngs.
Maior
League
Leaders
Shaw.
.
No Minimum . Interest from
race
.
Paulalisa
and
Rebel's
By United Press International
Team 5 Pat Johnston,
date
of deposit to date of
Leading
Barters
Georgia Cook , Mary Roush, Fuzzy combined for a 4-1 daily
withdrawal. lnter:es f com ·
National League
Burl Cook and Ralph Johnston. double payoff of $28,20. Atpounded quarterly. Interest
g. ab r . h. ~ct.
Team 6 - Joan Pitchford. tendance was 3,491 and the
paid
as long as an open
Cdeno.
Hou
112
450
93
154
.342
Judy Fuller , Tom Pitchford and
Wilms. Chi 123 477 79 162 .340 account is ma intained.
day 's handle was $268,078.
John Fuller .
Garr .AII
113464 70149 .321
Team 7 - Mary All ie, Joyce
Bckner, LA 90 330 41 106 .321
Robie. Dorothy Hiq ley. Kerm
Baker, All
99 341 47 108 .317
Malone and Wa lter Allie .
Sngu
iln,
Pit
11
3 434 51 13&lt;1 .313
Team 8 - Jack Schultz.
Hbner, Pi I 95 323 52 101~ 313
Juanita Nea l, Penny Schultz,
IN FINAlS
Slrgel. Pi I 114 406 65 126 .31 0
MUNICH IUP! ) - Deena Sanlo, Chi
106 374 50 116 .310
Deardruff of Cincinnati won Wlson, Hou 122 453 64 140 .309
American League
her semifinal heat in the 100.
g. ab r. h, ptt.
meter butterfly swimming Allen, Chi
123 421 80 t34 .318
The Athens County
competition here Thursday to Shblm,KC 108 365 50 116 .318
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
Major League Results
296 Second St.
qualify for today's finals in the Carew. Min 112 433 51 137 .316
Pomeroy, Ohio
By United Press International
Rud
i,
Oak
119
484
77 tSI .3 12
20Ih Olympics ,
National league
Pniela, KC 121 463 58 t44 .3 11
All Accounts Insured To
Los Ang
300 001 01o- 5 9 o Madeline Manning of Otis, KC
115 436 63 t31 .300
$20,000.00 by FSLIC.
Chicago
000 000 3110-3 6 3 Columbus, Ohio, qualified for Fisk, Bos
lOt 354 61 tOS .297
Osteen {15 -9) and Cannizzaro ;
Berry, Cal
94 327 35 97 .297
Reuschel, McGinn 171. Aker (8) the women's 800 race while May. Chi
12t 428 74 t26 .294
and Hundley, Hendricks 181. Dave WolUe of Bowllng Green, Braun , Min 89 303 31 89 .294
Rudolph {9), LP- Reuschel (6· Ohio , the co-world record
Home Runs
7) . HR- Sanfo (151h ).
National
: Colbert, SD
holder, made it in the men's 36 ; StargellLeague
, Pilt 32; Bench, Cin
Phi la
000 100 OOQ- I 7 I 800.
29; Williams, Chi 28; May, Hou
Houston
004 001 00&lt;- 5 8 0
27.
.,.• • • • • • •
Twi tchell. Terlecki 181 and
Ameritan League : Atlen, Chi I
Bateman : Dierker (14-7) and
32; Mur cer, NY 25; Cash, Del,
Edwards. LP- Twi tchetll3·71 .
Epstein and Jackson , Oak 22.
FOUR CALLED UP
Runs Balled In
(On ly games scheduled )
CLEVELAND (UP!)
National League : Stargell ,
American League
Pitchers Steve Hargan and Pill 103; Colbert, SD 96 ;
Kan Ci ly
300 000 ooo- 3 8 0
Williams, Chi 95 ; Bench, Cln
Milw
331 000 00&lt;- 7 9 I Vince Colbert, along with in- 92; Simmons, St.L 82.
Jackson, Dal Canton 121. fielders Kurt Bevacqua and
Ameritan League : Allen, Chi
Fitzmorris (4). Burgmeler (8) Jack Heidemann, will be called 92: Murcer, NY 79; Mayberry,
and Kirkpatrick ; Lockwood (7· up next Tuesday from Portland KC and Scott, Mil 71 ; Darwin,
10) and Rodriguez.• LPM inn 67 .
Jackson (1.1). HR- Reynolds of the Pacific Coast League,
Pitching
(2nd ).
the Cleveland Indians an - National League : Carlton,
Phil 21 -8; Jenkins, Chi 18-10;
Texas
000 000 ooo- 0 50 nounced Thursday. The Tribe Seaver, NY 16-9; Blass. Pitt 15·
New York 140 020 ooo- 7 9 1 also announced the purchase of 6. Gibson, St.L 15-8; Osleen,
Hand, Cox (5) , Pina {8) and the contracts of pitchers LA 15-9.
Billings; Peterson It •· t3) and Marcellino Lopez and Bill
American League: Wood, Chi
Mun son, LP- Hand (10-10) .
22-12 ; Lolich, Del 19-11; Perry,
HRs- Ciarke (2nd ). Murcer Butler from Portland .
Clev 19-t4; Palmer. Ball 18-6;
l251h),
•
Hunter. Oak 17-7.
Team I - Mary Lookado.
Marly Baird , Ora Baird, Harold

RACINE, OHIO
9:00 'TIL 12:00
•
1:00 TO 5:00

Los-Angeles defeated Chicago, 5,3, in tbe only other
l•ational league game scheduled. In the American
League,' California shutout
Detroit, 4-U; New York blanked
Texas, 7-0, and Milwaukee beat
Kansas City, 7-J.
3.
Nolan Ryan hurled a threehitter for his ninth shutout and
the Angels erupted for four
runs in the first inning to knock

Knight's Toe Doing Great
United Press International
George Allen is still undecided as to whom his starting
quarterback will be but Curt
Knight has left very little doubt
as to who will be kicking
Washington's field goals · this
season.
Knight booted field goals of
51 and 24 yards in the final
period Thursday night that
enabled the Redskins to rally
from a 101-yard kickoff touchdoWil return by Miami's Char-

Not lht old

went three-for.five to tie Dick
,Allen for the American Leagu~
lead in batting.

the

'

804

•

MODERN SUPPLY
399,WEST MAIN STREET
992-2164
POMEROY, OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS - STABLES- LARGE AND SMALL ANIMALS. LAWNSGARDENS .

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

700 W•.Main - Pomeroy

SAVE- SAJIE - ·-FALL CLEARANCE

SMITH AUTO.SALES
KANAUGA, OHIO

1 &amp;o t Dally-Sunday 1·9

'I

·'

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Sepi.I, 1972

f-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. I, 1972

S~reak

Astros

I

By NEIL HERSH.BERG
UPI Sports Writer

.

Extended Oto Five Games over Phillies

twCHJul singles in the third
inning to drive in two runs and
Larry Dierker sea llered seven
hits Thursday night to extend
Houston's winning streak to
five games as the Astros
downed the Philadelphia Phillies, 5-I.
The victory was the fourth
straight for the Astros under
the leadership · of Leo
Durocher, who was named
manager of the club last
Saturday by Houston General
Manager Spec Richardson.
Durocher, who managed the
chicago Cubs from 1966 until

· A.OWERS
......Eor All Occasions

-·------ ---·- 992-2039
We "wire flowers
Everywhere

Pomeroy Flower Shop
a·u"ernut Ave., Pomeroy
Mrs. Mlltord Von Meter

July 25 of this season, replaced.
Harry "the hal" Walker.
"We are playing good but I
don't !!now If It's because we
have a different manager,"
said Houston star Cesar Cedeoo. "We are just plzying good
ball and everybody is happy
with him."
Durocher himself would take
no credit for the Aslros'
current success. "I'd take no
credit for it at all. They're

A.
SPECIAL
FOR EVERYONE

playing the way I Jl!&lt;e to see a
club play--ibey lflr goiqg out
to win. They hav~ a lot of spirit,
more thau I've .seeh in a long
time."
May and Watson hit back-tohack singles and Rader hit a
bases-loaded double to score
the two runners and climax the
fo~r-run outburst. Cedeno doubled in the sixth inning to drive
in ·Roger Metzger, who had
walked and stolen second.

ley Leigh and edged the
Dolphins, 27-24, in a pre-season
contest.
Knight's winning boot came
with only 36 seconds left in the
see-saw contest which saw the
Redskins raise their exhibition
record to 4-1.
Head Coach Allen again
divided playing time between
Billy Kilmer, who led Wilshington into the championship
playoffs last season, and Sonny

Bowling League
'

Finalizes Plans
The Keilh Goble Ford Ellie Harf and Charlie Neal .
Bowling League mel at the Team 9- Kafe Dobblris. Ginny
Skyline Lanes on August 29 to Grover, Wilma Fi sher, Clint
finalize plans for the 1972-73 Abshire and Gary Ellis .
bowling season which will begin
Team 10 - Kay Gygax, Betty
on Tuesday, September 5, 1972 Saxon, Lillian Teed, Bob Teed
at 7 p.m. at the Skyline Lanes. and Mike Dobbins.
The league is sponsored by
Team 11 - Betty Gooch, John
Keilh Goble Ford of Middleport, Lloyd , Loretta Pushkar, Roy
Oh io. The officers are : Charles Bickel and Linda Stewart.

Complf! ot 125.001
e GENUINE NATURAL COLOR PORTRmS

e

e
e

I

e
e

!.lyl~ tlnttd

SELECTION OF
FOl ALL AGES

or palnttd Ola(k &amp; Wh itt pho to s.
PROOFS 4·6 P M~s to choo1r from.
.ll1biu.

M. Nea l, President ; Mary

Roush, Vice-President ; Alice
M . Icard, Secretary -Trea su rer
and Jack Mink, Sargent.at .
Arms.
·
Fourteen teams will make up

fhi!drtn.

GrouPS photoaraphtd 1t 1ft add itional

~dulls .
~mall charg t.

FREE TO ALL SENIOR CITIZENS

Fret 8d0 ti•ing color portnil to all cu ~tomers om 60 yuu of •ae.
LIMITED OFFER!
Ono pn suh]fd. ont per fa mit)':

the league and !hey are listed

"'dnttistd Slltcill Hea• ' S~auldm Only

· TILL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT THIS SPECIAL OFFER

Village Cut Rate

below.
A waiting li st Is being held tor
first available va cancies in the
league.
All bowlers are urged to be
prompt so that bowling may
begin at 7 p.m . each Tuesday
evening . The teams are :

Team 12 -

Judy

Dave

Isaac.

Hazel Holley,

Darlene

Holley

and

ruES•r SEPT 5

Swai n,

Jack

Ferguson .

Team 13 - Marlo Bush.
Sheryl Bush, Sandy Blackburn ,
Lois Shaver and Wayne Shaver.
Team 14 - Helen Oseland,
Lou Ferrell, Hilda Gygax, Bill
Gygax and Dave Hart.

Jurgensen, the No. I active .
passer in the National Football
League. But his decision as to ·
who will be his field goal kicker
•
is all but settled as Knight, who m'
led the National Cllnference in
\...d1
points scored last season with
114, has looked impressive in
DARLINGTON, S. C. (UP!)
pre-season play.
'
- Bobby Allison piloted his
Leigh, who had touchdown Chevrolet
around
the
returns of 99 and 57 yards Darlington Raceway at a
called back on penalties in record speed of 152.228 mil es
Miami's contest last week, tied per hour Thursday to capture
the game 21-21 with his elec- the pole position for the Southtrifying run late in third ern 500 stock car race on Labor
quarter.
Day.
In games this weekend
Allison bested lhe track
Baltimore plays Detroit Friday record of 151.983 m.p.h. set by
night. Saturday's schedule fea- Cale Yarborough in 1969.
tures Denver vs. New England,
.Fred Lorenzen of Elmhurst,
Kansas City vs. Dallas, Atlanta Ill., also in a Chevrolet, won the
vs. New York Jets, New outside pole with a speed of
Orleans vs. Pittsburgh, San 149.094 m.p.h.
Diego vs. Los Angeles, Green
It marks the first lime since
Bay vs. Sl. Louis, and the New 1958 that a Chevrolet won the
York Giants vs. Philadelphia. pole posilion and the first lime
In Sunday contests its Chicago ever that Chevrolets have won
vs. Buffalo, Cincinnati vs. beth lop spots .
Cleveland and San Francisco
vs. Oakland. Houston is at
Minnesota is the single Laber
LARSON TO BROWNS
Day clash Monday night.
TAMPA,
Fla. (UP! ) - The
In other player developBaltimore
Colts
sent offensive
ments Washington announced
it traded defensive back Willie U!ckle Lynn Larson to the
Germany to Atlanta for a Cleveland Browns Thursday
future draft choice . Germany for an undisclosed draft choice,
was drafted on the seventh reducing the team roster to 48.
round last season from Morgan
State.
The Pittsburgh Steelers
traded veteran center Bobby
Maples to the Denver for a 1973
draft choice.

Alliso·n Pole

'
THE
NEW SCOFIELD
REFERENCE

to record the 18th shutout of his
care~r in New York's win over
the Rangers. l\:lurcer, . who
became the 20th Yankee to
achieve 100 or more homers in
a career, hil his 25th homer off
Rich Hand.
Dave May, George Scoti and
Tommie Reynolds each drove
in two runs for Milwaukee as
the Brewers 'scored all their
runs in tbe first three innings in
defeating Kansas City. Richie
Scheinblum of Kansas City

BIBLE
•8.95-'15.95
and '23.95

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

SEE HERE
HEADQUARTERS
FOR.
HOOVER APPLIANCES
--------- -·--·--·-··-·-··

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

You

Will

5%

INTEREST
On Passbook
Savings

SPEAKING OF

Hair Styling
6 .......................... .

by

KAY

:ZONOLITE
FOR POURING

ROCK WOOL
FOR POURING

FIBERGLASS and BAns
WITH FOIL VAPOR BARRIER
(MEDIUM, THICK AND SUPER
THICK FOR 16" AND 24" SPACING).
,-----------------------~

I IT IS A PROVEN FACT THAT I
INSULATION DOES NOT COST, IT
1 SAVES.
I

I

I

··-----------------------.J
MID"DLEPORT, OHIO

405 N. 2nd Ave.
992-3748

Hair grows much faster
in I he summer than it does
In the winter and faster in

Linescores

Find Insulation:

Defroi I
000 000 ooo- 0 3 t
California 400 000 ooo- 4 6 0
Fryman , LaGrow (6) , Zacha·
ry 18) and Sims; Ryan ll5·12l
and Torborg . LP- Fryman 13·
21.
!Only games scheduled)

SPECIAL!
MAES 2 TON

Pull &amp; Hoist

lilfMcCulloch . ~~"~~:,,.,..""

Meigs Equipment Co.

and eflorllo care for . Sott.
casual,

Mulbe,ny Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy

ha ir

m lng and smart and are
quite easy to manage and
care for.
Let us Introduce vou to
the newest thing in hair
styles whether your hair ls

You Can't Put
Sticky Bandages
on a Pup!
BUT...

long. medium length, or
short, It can be styled Into a
flattering , lashlonable
colllure to add beauty and
charm to your appearance .

·- ...

• ' I.

CHATEAU BEAUTY
SALON
214 E. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-7606
'

'

piCnic date.
Mrs . Thomas, Council
director, reported that prizes
were awarded during Senior
Citizens Day at the Meigs
Cllunty Fair to Mrs. Myrtle
Warren, Christy Baer, Wilbur
Lpgan, Edna Russell, Otto lies,
and Mrs . Mildred McDaniel.
Recognition and prizes were
also given to the oldest attending, two who were 86 and
two who were 87; Mrs. McDaniel who traveled the farthest; and to Clarence Struble
pre~idenl of lhe Meigs County
Council on Aging, who was
observing a birtllday.
Those
providing
entertainment for lhe senior
citizens at the fair were Dick
Wiley, Amos Leonard, James
Doss, Glenn Evans, Dennis
Manuel , Buddy Hendricks,
Mrs. Bernice Winn and Mrs.
Hazel Thomson. Mrs . Winn and
Mrs. Thomson were in charge
of the enlerU!inment.

Browns M eet

In Lan'"aster
'-"'

MINERSVILLE - The
descendants of George and
Elsie Brown, Minersville, held
their family reunion Aug, 20 at
Rising Park in Lancaster. A
picnic dinner was served at
noon arter which badminton
and soft ball were played by
lhe young. The afternoon was
spent informally with visiting,
pictures
and
ta king
reminiscing, including a hike
to the lop of a large rock on the
hill from which all of Lancaster
is seen.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Brown, Pomeroy ; Miss
Roberta Reinhart, Albany; Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Brown,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Harmon, Gina, Laura, and
Steve, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Strawser, Julie and
Michael, Reynoldsburg ; Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Brown,
Minersville ; Mr. and Mrs . Ed.
Wolfe , Jamie and Janelle,
Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs , Jack
Cummins, Todd and Michelle ,
Columbus: Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Williams, Minersvllle: Mr. and
Mrs ,
Edgar
Thomas,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Zana Yahcoubian and Christy, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs, Danny
Brown , Megan, Dan, Joe ,
Debbie, Robert, ")inersville;
Mr. and Mrs. John :rhomas,
Jeffrey and Jimmy, Mansfield; Mrs. Zana Withrow,
Minersville, and Mr. and Mrs.
William Reinhart, Pomeroy.

DINNER HELD
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Guy
Guinther entertained with a
turkey dinner honoring the
birthday of her son • Malcolm •
on Aug. 20, A decorated cake
and ice cream were also served
lo Mrs. Malcolm Guinther and
ch ildren, Malcolm 1!, and
Juanita ; Mr. and Mrs. William
Guinther, Guy Guinther and
children Kenneth, Karen, and
Terry ; Mrs. Elmo Johnson,
Kermil Williams, and the
honored guest.

NAMES OMI1TED
LETART, W. Va. - Unintentionally omitted from the
list of names of people attending the Howell reunion
were Mrs. Christina Marshall
Mrs . Eugene Hudson and
chlldren Bryant, Sue, Donald,
Vernon and David, of Paris,
Pa .

Wed itr Virginia
FRIDAY
WEEKEND Revival Friday
through Sunday, al Graham's
Chapel Church, three miles
northeast of Shade, 7:30 each
evening with Rev . Jesse Fyffe,
Webbville, Ky., evangelist.
Homecoming Sunday, basket
dinner 12 noon ; afternoon
MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commerce, 7:30 p.m. Friday,
al the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. social room.
service, 1:30 p.m. Special
singing by Bissell Brothers and
George Lewis.
SATURDAY
ALL NIGHT hymn sing,
Mason First Baptist church,
beginning 7:30p.m. Saturday.
Duncan Family, Tampa, Fla.,
Dan Hayman and Country
Hymn Timers and Joint Heirs
to sing . ~blic invited.
SUNDAY
EVENING services, 7:30
p.m . Sunday at Syracuse
United Methodist Church by
the Rev. Murre! Floyd, .,
ANNUAL Swartz Family
Reunion, Sunday, Woode
Grove at Alfred. Family and
friends invited .
MONDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
slated meeling, 8 p.m. Monday
at Masonic Temple. Worthy
Matron asks as tnany officers
and members possi ble be
present because of imporU!nl
business to be discussed .
CHESTER FIRE Deparl·
ment annual Labor Day
celebration, Monday . Barbecued chicken and spareribs,
homemade ice cream. Parade
slarting, 1:30 p,m. Parade
participants be at fire house by
1:30 p.m ,
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room .
CLEAN UP night by Meigs
Band Boosters at food booth at
Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy.
Take rags and buckets.
SOUTHERN Band Boosters,
8 p.m. Tuesday at the high
school. lmporU!nt meeting and
all interested persons are

urged to attend.
B. H. SANBORN Missionary
Society, Middleport First
Baptist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
evenin g al the church.

!'lliss Sheila Marie Childs,
daughter of Mr. ~nd W.rs.
William D. lhilds, Lincoln M.,
Middleport, and Mr. Rober!
Lee Reeves, son of Mr. "nd
Mrs. James C. Reeves, Route
4, Pomeroy, were united in
marriage on Aug .11.
The afternoon ceremony was
performed by the Rev. Thomas
Sexton at lhe Church o.f God in
Pearisburg, Va.
For her wedding the bride
' was attired in a street length
gown of while satin and lace, It
was fashioned with an empire
waist, a scoop neckline and
white lace long full sleeves.
Her shoulder length veil of
illusion fell from a while satin
bow. The ensemble was made

by Miss Linda Heeves, sister of
the bridegroom.
The bride wore her maternal
grandmother's diamond
earrings, hl!r mother 's ring ,

and a white and gold pearl
neckla ce of her Aunt Ne llie
Brown .
The coup le had a brief
honeymoon at Pipestem Resort
in West Virginia . The new Mrs.
Rec~es is employed in the Title
Office at the Meigs County
Courthouse. Mr. Reeves works
with Ben-Tom Corp.

August Picnic
Enjoyed Monday

::::;:;;~::::::::::--::!=;;:::~*:x::::.:::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::

The annual Augu st picnic of
:;a lhe Middleport Women's
:~:~
~j Christian Temperance Union
~::
:~: was held Monday evening at
}l
f:! the Legion Memorial Park.
:-:. Mrs. Betty Cline, president,
·:'
The Rev. Robert Buckley, conducled the short business
pastor of the Laurel Cliff Free meeting during whi ch lime Ihe
Methodist Church, and Mrs. Meigs County Union annual
Buckley spent Wednesday at meeting was announced for
Mansfield
attending
a September allhe home of Mrs.
Robert Warner, Mulberry
preachers' workshop.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore Ave ,, Pomeroy.
and Mrs, Hubert Wolfe were . Members signed round-robin
recent visitors in Alton wilh cards for Mrs. Lillian McGhee
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Darst and and Mrs. Lillian Stief!. Mrs.
family .
Lena McKinley gave a
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, her humerous reading. Present
granddaughter, Diane Lewis were Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs.
imd M~ . and Mrs. Larry Jacobs Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
and daughter, Teri, have Cline, Mrs. McKinley, Mrs.
returned from Florida where Pearl Hoffman, and Mrs .
they visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack Beulah White.
Jacobs and son, Sean, at
Patrick Air Force Base . They
traveled lo Florida via the
GIRLS HETURN
scenic route through the
Brenda Hysell, daughter of
Carolinas. Joining them there
Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Hysell,
for a visit were Benny Wright,
and
Kathy Manley, daughler of
son of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Wright, Pomeroy, who is Mr. and Mrs. Ray Manley,
stationed at the Tampa Air have returned from a two week
Force Base, and Mr. and Mrs. stay at Camp Sandy Bend,
Ervin Acree, Doug and Sandy, Elizabeth, W. Va. Monday
former Middleport residents, night Kathy and Brenda and
now residing at St. Petersburg, Penny Hysell joined Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Manley for a trip to
Fla.
Mr. and Mrs , Lloyd Wright the Ohio SUite Fair lo see the
left Thursday morning for Osmond Bros .
Ma con, Ga . to visit their son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and
A thought for the day : British
Mrs, John Card. Their son,
writer
Hector Hugh Monro said,
Benny, of Tampa will join them
"Women
and elephants never
there for the weekend. On
Saturday night the Wrights forget an injury."
enterU!ined with a cookout at
their Royal Oak Park camp
site. Guests were the Rev . and
Mrs . Robert Buckley and
family , and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Barton and family ,

:::

p
Omeroy . . .
Personal ·Notes

returned home Thursday from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she has been confined
for the past several weeks for
treatment of a shoulder injury
received in a fall at her home.
Mrs . Esther Edwards,

Middleport
:Personal Notes
Mr . and Mrs. George
Doolittle and children, Steven,
Connie and Kri sly , have
returned to Berea after visiting
here with her parents, Mr , and
Mrs. Glenn Lambert. Mrs.
Lambert joined Mr , and Mrs.
Doolittle, Connie and Krisly,
for a day at. Kings Island.
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds accompanied by Miss Edna
Burdette , Mrs . Genevieve
Campbell, Leon , W. Va.: and
Mrs . Clarence Whittington,
Poin t Pleasant, were al Car·
dmglon Sunday for the funera l
services of Mrs. Reynolds'

enroute from New York City to
her Miami Beach, Fla . hoine,
is here visiting her mother,
Mrs. Laura Bradbury, a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hoopital, Mr. and Mrs. James
Arnold, and other relatives.

aue
entertainment makerl

cousin .

Mr . and Mrs . Gene Harris,
Kathy and Robbie and Mrs.
Norma Hecox left Wednesday
for New Orleans, La. where
Mr. Harris was transferred by
Kaiser Alumin~. The family
earlier purchased a home
there.
Mrs . Francis Kl ein was

.

MOTOROLA

a.

Track -Tape Player

Stereo Phono Combination

CROW'S

When the pprty ge ls going strong,
this "entertainment maker " really ·
comes on. Plays your favorite records
.. . and your favorite 8· Track Stereo
Tape Cartridges. It's a 2-in-1 combination. See it today!

STEAK
HOUSE

•

~,._111 LOOK ATTHESE · - MOTOROLA
QUAUTY FEATURES •..

Home of

the Fabulous

• Two 6" Speakers • Detachable Speaker Wings
• 8 watts instantaneous peak power output
(EIA1music power rating-4 watts)
• Retractable Diamond LP Stylus
• Automatic Program Advance
,ll

Model LP200HE. High
Impact polystyrene In
Ebony color.

fom oy
Pl ays 8 track ster&amp;O

SANDWICH
Order By Phone

And Toke Em Home

992-5432

tape cartridges.

MOTOROLA makers of

Quasar. color TV

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.
MIDDlfPORT, 0.

GRAB ·ONE Of THESE

Ladies Plan Sale in Yard
SYRACUSE - Prayer and
the Hag pledge preceded the
Ladies Auxiliary of Volunteer
Firemen meeting at their
regular place the evening of
Aug. 26.
Jean Hall, president, was in
charge. Devotions were St.
John 4: 1-10, read by Eleanor
Bohram.
It was decided to have a yard
sale at the meeting house at
Municipal park Saturday, Sept.
9, beginning at 10 a.m. The
committee named included
Ada Slack, Myla Hudson,
Theima Grueser, Elva Dailey,
Mildred Pierce, and Charlotte
Nease.
Money made at the yard sale
will go toward helping finish
the inside of lhe new town hall
being built on the park. Anyone
having any thing to donate
toward the sale may get in

touch with any of the above
named committee members
and it will be picked up. The
town will also be solici ted.
Mrs. Hall, hostess, served
refreshments lo Agnes White,
Elva Dailey, Mildred Pierce,
Thelma Grueser, Eleanor
Bohr am, Jean Hall, Ada Slack,
Myla Hudson.

SHIRT
FINISHING

I
•

SAME DAY
SERVItE
ln At 9-0ut At S
Use Our Free Parktng Lot

Robinson~
216 E. 2nd,

Ceaners
Pomeroy

World's favorite motorcycle.

COIN GLASS
by

FOSTORIA

YOU CAN PROTECT HIS CUTS AND BITES

FOUR COLORS

WITH CoRONA FOR PETs •••

RUBY, AMBER, OLIVE GREEN
AND CRYSTAL

Antiseptic ointment Corona is rich in
nature's own healing oil, Lanolin.
Apply Corona generously for bites,
cuts, scratches, sore feet, elbow
callouses and minor skin irritations.

ALL '72 HONDA
MOTORCYCLES REDUCED
FOR CLEA·RANCE!
OVER 100 MOTORCYCLES TO CHOOSE FROM.

~n

ALL MODELS ON OUR HUGE DISPLAY FLOOR!

a Hydrous BRse of Lanolin•

and Deriv{\tlves, Petrolatum,

Beeswax, Borax and Aromatic
Oils.

PRICE

SUGAR RUN MILLS

versatile

slyles always look char.

•wool Fat

SPECIAL FOR 1 WEEK ONLY!

the dayllghl hours than il
does at nlghl.
M ost women prefer a
hair slyle lhat keeps them
looking well -groomed at all
times , yet requires a
min imum amount of t ime

Ph. 992-2176 Pomeroy

After you bathe your Pet - dog or cat apply small amounts of Corona through the
hair with finger tips . Rich , Lanolin Oil in
Corona works the way nature does to
restore li.fe and sheen.

$

A picnic with the family of
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight and
son, Steven, of Caledonia, was
held Sunday at the Rising Sun
Park at Lancaster.
Attending besides the Terry
Knight family were Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Knight and son,
Dick, Pomeroy; Miss Sandy
Yates, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Stewart
Parkersburg; Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ji~
Conkle and daughter, Nancy;
Mr . and Mrs. Ron Baxter and
Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Purl
Greeney, Mr. and Mrs. AI
Greene, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Greene, and Mr . and Mrs.
Dave Conkle, Marion .

SALE PLANNED
A rummage sale will be held
by the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
Tuesday and Wednesday from
10 a.m. to 3 p,m, in the Coalq
building on North Second SI.,
Middleport .

(!)

King Builders.Supply Co.

A ptcnoc for all senior
citizens at lhe . Rock Springs
fairgrounds on Thursday, Sept.
21st, has been planned by the
Meigs County Council on
Aging.
The outing will be held from 2
p.m. to 7 . p.m. with entertainment from 3 to 5 p.m .
and from 6 to 7 p.m . Each
person is to take a covered dish
and their own table service.
Coffee and ked tea will be
provided.
Those planning to attend are
asked to advise Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, 992-7400, prior to the

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. John (Merle ) Diehl of
Spokane, Wash ., a former
Pomeroy area resident , is
hospitalized, friends here
report Mrs. Diehl left Meigs
County abeut 13 years ago
following the death of her
husband and since that time
has been residing with a sister.
Cards may be sent to her at her
home address, East 26 18
Joseph, Spo~ane , Wash. 99207.

Meigs Co. Branch

AT

Picnic Date Set .

Picnic Enjoyed

£'fl..evy

LEADING ~~
BATTERS '~ ~-

Save Heat Thls Winter

the Tigers out of first place in
the American League East.
Claude Osteen, helping himself with a two-run single,
overcame a shaky seventh
inning to pitch the Dodgers
pass Chicago . Osteen had
a two,hitler and a 44llead until
the last of the seventh when
Billy Willlams lined a one-&lt;:&gt;ut
single. Osteen tben issued a
walk to Jim Hickman and Ron
Santo followed with a three-run
homer.
Bobby Murcer's !DOth career
home run, a three-run shot in
the second inning, was all the
support Fritz Peterson needed

RETURNS $11
CINCINNATI (UP! )
L ookado and Sh irley Capehart . Cactus Balloon covered the
Team 2 - Be1ty Merry, Dori s five one-half furlongs of the
F itzs immons , Ali ce Icard ,
featured eighth race at River
Gilbert Meal, Jack Mink.
Team 3 - Mary Allman, Downs Thursday in 1:07,
Georgia Riehle. Barbara Ab· returning $11, $4 ,20 and $3.20
shire, Gene Carter and Steve
for the two-length victory over
Carter .
Team .4 - Rut Janey, Garnet Julia 's Dash. Cal Creek was
5 per cent per year paid on
Elliott , Jack Janey and Merid a third in the $1,900 claiming
Regular Passbook Savi ngs.
Maior
League
Leaders
Shaw.
.
No Minimum . Interest from
race
.
Paulalisa
and
Rebel's
By United Press International
Team 5 Pat Johnston,
date
of deposit to date of
Leading
Barters
Georgia Cook , Mary Roush, Fuzzy combined for a 4-1 daily
withdrawal. lnter:es f com ·
National League
Burl Cook and Ralph Johnston. double payoff of $28,20. Atpounded quarterly. Interest
g. ab r . h. ~ct.
Team 6 - Joan Pitchford. tendance was 3,491 and the
paid
as long as an open
Cdeno.
Hou
112
450
93
154
.342
Judy Fuller , Tom Pitchford and
Wilms. Chi 123 477 79 162 .340 account is ma intained.
day 's handle was $268,078.
John Fuller .
Garr .AII
113464 70149 .321
Team 7 - Mary All ie, Joyce
Bckner, LA 90 330 41 106 .321
Robie. Dorothy Hiq ley. Kerm
Baker, All
99 341 47 108 .317
Malone and Wa lter Allie .
Sngu
iln,
Pit
11
3 434 51 13&lt;1 .313
Team 8 - Jack Schultz.
Hbner, Pi I 95 323 52 101~ 313
Juanita Nea l, Penny Schultz,
IN FINAlS
Slrgel. Pi I 114 406 65 126 .31 0
MUNICH IUP! ) - Deena Sanlo, Chi
106 374 50 116 .310
Deardruff of Cincinnati won Wlson, Hou 122 453 64 140 .309
American League
her semifinal heat in the 100.
g. ab r. h, ptt.
meter butterfly swimming Allen, Chi
123 421 80 t34 .318
The Athens County
competition here Thursday to Shblm,KC 108 365 50 116 .318
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
Major League Results
296 Second St.
qualify for today's finals in the Carew. Min 112 433 51 137 .316
Pomeroy, Ohio
By United Press International
Rud
i,
Oak
119
484
77 tSI .3 12
20Ih Olympics ,
National league
Pniela, KC 121 463 58 t44 .3 11
All Accounts Insured To
Los Ang
300 001 01o- 5 9 o Madeline Manning of Otis, KC
115 436 63 t31 .300
$20,000.00 by FSLIC.
Chicago
000 000 3110-3 6 3 Columbus, Ohio, qualified for Fisk, Bos
lOt 354 61 tOS .297
Osteen {15 -9) and Cannizzaro ;
Berry, Cal
94 327 35 97 .297
Reuschel, McGinn 171. Aker (8) the women's 800 race while May. Chi
12t 428 74 t26 .294
and Hundley, Hendricks 181. Dave WolUe of Bowllng Green, Braun , Min 89 303 31 89 .294
Rudolph {9), LP- Reuschel (6· Ohio , the co-world record
Home Runs
7) . HR- Sanfo (151h ).
National
: Colbert, SD
holder, made it in the men's 36 ; StargellLeague
, Pilt 32; Bench, Cin
Phi la
000 100 OOQ- I 7 I 800.
29; Williams, Chi 28; May, Hou
Houston
004 001 00&lt;- 5 8 0
27.
.,.• • • • • • •
Twi tchell. Terlecki 181 and
Ameritan League : Atlen, Chi I
Bateman : Dierker (14-7) and
32; Mur cer, NY 25; Cash, Del,
Edwards. LP- Twi tchetll3·71 .
Epstein and Jackson , Oak 22.
FOUR CALLED UP
Runs Balled In
(On ly games scheduled )
CLEVELAND (UP!)
National League : Stargell ,
American League
Pitchers Steve Hargan and Pill 103; Colbert, SD 96 ;
Kan Ci ly
300 000 ooo- 3 8 0
Williams, Chi 95 ; Bench, Cln
Milw
331 000 00&lt;- 7 9 I Vince Colbert, along with in- 92; Simmons, St.L 82.
Jackson, Dal Canton 121. fielders Kurt Bevacqua and
Ameritan League : Allen, Chi
Fitzmorris (4). Burgmeler (8) Jack Heidemann, will be called 92: Murcer, NY 79; Mayberry,
and Kirkpatrick ; Lockwood (7· up next Tuesday from Portland KC and Scott, Mil 71 ; Darwin,
10) and Rodriguez.• LPM inn 67 .
Jackson (1.1). HR- Reynolds of the Pacific Coast League,
Pitching
(2nd ).
the Cleveland Indians an - National League : Carlton,
Phil 21 -8; Jenkins, Chi 18-10;
Texas
000 000 ooo- 0 50 nounced Thursday. The Tribe Seaver, NY 16-9; Blass. Pitt 15·
New York 140 020 ooo- 7 9 1 also announced the purchase of 6. Gibson, St.L 15-8; Osleen,
Hand, Cox (5) , Pina {8) and the contracts of pitchers LA 15-9.
Billings; Peterson It •· t3) and Marcellino Lopez and Bill
American League: Wood, Chi
Mun son, LP- Hand (10-10) .
22-12 ; Lolich, Del 19-11; Perry,
HRs- Ciarke (2nd ). Murcer Butler from Portland .
Clev 19-t4; Palmer. Ball 18-6;
l251h),
•
Hunter. Oak 17-7.
Team I - Mary Lookado.
Marly Baird , Ora Baird, Harold

RACINE, OHIO
9:00 'TIL 12:00
•
1:00 TO 5:00

Los-Angeles defeated Chicago, 5,3, in tbe only other
l•ational league game scheduled. In the American
League,' California shutout
Detroit, 4-U; New York blanked
Texas, 7-0, and Milwaukee beat
Kansas City, 7-J.
3.
Nolan Ryan hurled a threehitter for his ninth shutout and
the Angels erupted for four
runs in the first inning to knock

Knight's Toe Doing Great
United Press International
George Allen is still undecided as to whom his starting
quarterback will be but Curt
Knight has left very little doubt
as to who will be kicking
Washington's field goals · this
season.
Knight booted field goals of
51 and 24 yards in the final
period Thursday night that
enabled the Redskins to rally
from a 101-yard kickoff touchdoWil return by Miami's Char-

Not lht old

went three-for.five to tie Dick
,Allen for the American Leagu~
lead in batting.

the

'

804

•

MODERN SUPPLY
399,WEST MAIN STREET
992-2164
POMEROY, OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS - STABLES- LARGE AND SMALL ANIMALS. LAWNSGARDENS .

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

700 W•.Main - Pomeroy

SAVE- SAJIE - ·-FALL CLEARANCE

SMITH AUTO.SALES
KANAUGA, OHIO

1 &amp;o t Dally-Sunday 1·9

'I

·'

�,.

,. .

MIDDLEPORT PENUNITED MIN ISTRY OF
ce. 7: 30 p.m.; Youlh
TECOSTAL - Thord Ave, Ihe MEIGS COUNTY, The Unileo Servi
meeling 6. 30 p.m.; Evening

Rev . WtiHam Knille l . par.lor .
Ronald Dugan, Su ndi\y school
supt Cla s::.~s for al l ages,
evrr· nq servtce, 7 JO p.m ,
R,htP study. W~ucsdcly, 7 30
,..rv •ces, Fnday ,
' ,v p.m.

I.

'I' •

l•

1
I

POMEROY
POMEROY TRIN ITY

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN, -

FREEWILL BAPTIST -

Rev . Ar lhur C Lund , pastor Corner Ash and Plum, Mtd·
Noel
Herrman ,
Sunday School. 9 15 am., dleport ,
Sa turday eve ning
Charles Evans , Supt., worsh1p pa st or
service, 10 :30 a.m . Con · ,.,.,.v 1ce, 7 p m Sunday schoor,
fJrmat1on class, Tuesday. 4 15 10 a m , Sunday evening
to 5 JO p m , Juntor Con· worsh ip, 1 p.m.
llrmallon class, Thursday, 6 lO
FIRST BAPTIST ol Mid·
rehearsa l, 7:30p.m .. Thursday. to7·45pm
dlepor t, corner of Sixth and
Mrs. Paul Nease, director.
SEVE;NTH - DAY AD - Palmer 'Sireets, Rev . Char les
POMEROY CHURCH OF
pas to r .
Fred
VENTIST
- Located on Sim ons,
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Schoo l
Hetghts,
near Holtman , Sunday
Union and Mulberr y. Rev . Mulberry
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor. Ve terans IV\emonal Hosp1tat , Super in tendent Sunday church
Sunday school. 9:30a .m .. Glen Pomeroy . Pa st or Herb ert school for every one 9' 15 a m ,
McClung, supt., morning Morgan Sabbath School, every M orn tng worship 10. 15 a m ,
worship, 10. 30 a.m ., even1ng Sa t urda y at 2 p m and worshtp Evemng servtces, 7:30 p.m .,
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7:30
servt ce, 7: 30, mid week ser· ser v 1ce foll ow ing at J · l5 p m
Open Bible discussion each p m Extra youth activ1l1es on
vke, Wednesday , 7 30 p.,m

' Rev . W. H. Pernn, pastor Roy
' Mayer, Supt. Church schoool,
1 9: 1S a.m.; worsh1p, 10 24 am,
youth choir rehearsa l Monday,
I ' ·30 p.m .; Mrs. Marv1n Bur t,
director,
sen1or
choir

f

,
1

:
,
'
'
•

GRACE

EPISCOPAL -

Rev . Leroy Davis, minister.
Morning pr ayer and sermon,
10 30a.m Holy communton and
, sermon, f1rst Sundays, 10· 30
a.m Chur c h schoo l. km·
' dergarten through eighth
: grade, 10. 30 a.m .
j

Thursday at 7 30 p m. at the
chu rch
" The
Friendly
Chur ch "

Sunday. S p. m.. for all youth up
to stx lh grade ; 6:30 for jun mr
and senior h1gh students

CHURCH OF CHRIST,
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST - Preach ing 9 30 M1ddl epor t , 5t h and Marn

a m , first and second Sundays Raulm M oyer, pastor M1 chael

of each month, third and f ourth Gerlach, Sunday School supt
Sundays each month, worship 8 1ble School, 9 30 a m , mor serv 1ceat 7:30 p.m . Wednesday ning worship, 10 30 a.m .;
• POMEROY CHURCH OF evenmgs at 7. 30. Prayer and evening worsh ip. 7: 30 p.m. ,
prayer serv1ce 7 r,..m. Wed
: CHRIST - Mr. Hoyl Allen , Jr .. Bible Study
pastor. Bible School. 9:30a .m ,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- nesday.

CHURCH
OF
THE
worship, 10 30; adult worshtp TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ..
serv ic e and young peoples Pomeroy. affiliated with S.B.C .. NAZARENE - Middl epor t,
meeting , both 7 30 p m. Sunday. !he Rev . Fred Hill. pastor Rev Audry Mill er. pastor .
Wednesday, combined B1bl e Sunday School, 9.30 am .. Fl oyd Carson, sup t Sunday

study and prayer meet1ng, 7· 30 morning warship, 10· 30 am ,
pm .
jUnior socie ty, 6 30 a m NYPS,
THE SALVATION ARMY - 6 45 p m Sunday evangelistic
Envoy RayS Wining , officer in meeting, 7· 30 p m. Prayer
charge . Sunday, 10 a . m ., mee!ing Wednesday, 7· 30 p m
Holiness meeting , 10 30 am ,
MIDDLEPORT

Sunday School. Young People's MT. MORIAH BAPTISl Logion. 7 p m.. Thursday , 1 to 3 Corner F ou rth and Main ,
p.m , Ladies Home League , 7 Middleporl Rev Henry L Key ,
p.m , Prep classes
Jr, pastor. Sunday School 9 30
SACRED HEART - Rev. a m , Arn old R1 chard s, sup! ,
Fat her

Bernard Kra icov ic, Morning worshtp 10 JO a m

pasl or
Phone
992-2825.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES Saturday evening Mass, 7 30 Larry Carnahan presiding
p.m. Sunday Mass. 8 and 10 min 1ster. Sunday, Bible lecture,
a.m. Confessions, Saturday, 7- 9. 30 a m ; Watch lower study,
7.30 p.m
10 30 a m ; Tuesday , Bible
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST study, 7 30 p m., Thursday,
- Robert Kuhn , paslor, William min1stry school 7 JO p m.,
Watson, Sunday school supt. serv tce meet1ng s· 30 p.m .
Sunday school, 9 30 a.m .; BYF,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
6 p.m ; Bible study, Weo - Christ in Christian Union nesday. 7 p.m.: choir practice, Lawrence Manley, pastor ; Mrs
Weonesday, 8:30 p m.
Russell Young, Sunday School
Supl. Sunday School 9 30 am

school, 9 30 a.m ; Morning
worsh1p 10 30 a m. , junior

socie ly , 6:30p.m.. NYPS. 6: 45
p m . Sunda y eva ngeli stic
meeting, 7 30 p .m . Prayer
meetmg Wednesday, 7 30 p.m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH
THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert R. Card
Rev. Stanten Smith
CHESTER - Worship 9 15

Presbyferlim Churc:h, Dw1gh!
l
Zavit;, Prtstor - D~r ector,
G..,ota t W Hutton and Rev
Linson Stebbi ns. Ass't Par.:or
Dtretlt•rs

FIRn

UNITFD

BYTE A: IAN,

Grale, paslor Worship ser vice,

11 a m and 7· 30 p.m. Sunday.
PRES- Svnday School , 9 30 a.m .

Harrl son v ol !1 , Richard Bar ton, supl. Prayer

Sund"y Church School, Y JO meelmq , Wednesday , 7:30pm.
a rn • Mrs Hornet Lee, Supt ,
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Morn ing Worship 10 30 a.m CHRIST - Cli llord Smith ,
FIRST
UNITED m1nisl cr . Sunday School 9 30
PRESBYTERIAN, Middleporl , rl m . morn1ng chur ch 10 30
Sunday Church School. 9. 30 ,1 m . Sunday eve nmg service,
a m , Lewis Sauer , Supt , 7 30 p m Wednesday service, 8
Mnrnmo Wor sh ip, 10 30 a.m p nl
-

LAUREL CLIFF -F REE
FIRST
UNITED METHODIST - Rev Robert
PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse. E. Buckley, pastor William
Morn1ng Worshtp , 9 a.m. ; Bailey, supt ; Sunday school,
Sunday Church School, 10 a.m . 9: 30 a.m , morning worship,
Mrs Sa mpson Hall , Supt.
10 . 30 am , evening worship.

Is the Sabbath Binding Today?
Today we live in a period of basic biblical ignorance in which
Ule erroneous doctrines of past ages are being accepted by an
increasing number of people.
One of Ulese doctrines Is Ule inslstace that Ule observance of
Ule Sabballl Day Is still binding. This doctrine leaches Ulal Ulere
were two laws given on Mt. Sian!: that God gave one, and that
Moses gave anolller; Ulat the one given by the Lord was written
on tables of stone which were durable and sliD in Ioree today, and
Ulat the law given by Moses was written in and was abolished by
Christ . Let us prayerfully look at Ule Bible to correct such
erroneous Ulinking.
As stated previously, the doctrine says Ulat the "law of God"
and Ule "law of Moses" were two different laws. The Bible, on
Ule oilier hand states Ulat Ulese tenns are interchangeable.
'"'bis Ezra went up from Jerusalem. And he was a ready scribe
in Ule law of Moses." (Ezra 7:6) . The same chapter says, "Ezra
Ule priest, Ule scribe of Ule law of the God of heaven." (Ezra ·

7:12)
Another doctrinal sidetrack is that Moses gave Ule law of
Moses. However, Ezra 7:6 definitely says God gave the law of
Moses. This doctrine also says Ulat God gave the law of God, but
again, the Bible says, "And when they brought oul lhe money
that was brought into Ule house of Ule Lord, Hilkiah then foWJd a
book of the law oftheLordglven by Moses." (2Chron. 34 :14)
One of Ule cardinal principles of sabbath observances ts thai
Ule sabbath is a moral obligation. The Btble teaches that Ule
sabbath "was made" (Mark 2:27) . Moral obligations are right
wllllin themselves. Religious duties are right only because God
commanded them. The sabballl was made right and binding on
Ule Jews only ~use God commanded 11. (Exodus 20:8) Moral
obligations relate to our fellowmen. Religious duties relate to
God. When Adam and Eve ate of Ule forbidden frmt, Uley smned
because Uley violated a command of God; but they did not
thereby commit an act ollmmorall!y. They sinned against God,
but not against their fellowmen .
Failure to keep Ule sabbath violates no moral law. Men would
never have known to keep the sabha Ill H God had no I commanded
it. Even Ule morals of Ule ten commandments are far below the
standards of Christianity. Jesus exemplifies this by his remarks
in Ule !Hill chapter of Matthew.
Another major statement of Ule sabbath day doctrine is that
Ule sabballl is a lDliversal day of worship lor all mankind. The
Bible again teaches Ulat Ule sabbath was given to the Israelites
and to them ooly - unless a Gentile was proselyted to their faith.
(Deut. 5:l.J) The sabbath was a sign. (Ex. 31 :13, 17) and Ule
sabbath was a memorial (Deut. 5:15). If we consider Ulis in light
of the fact that after 33 A.D. when Ule Church was established,
lDltll Ule last inspired Apostle penned Ule last verse
f Revelation, then one can see Ulat there Is not one command for
Christians to observe lhe sabbath. II anything, we are commanded not to keep the sabballl (Col. 2:14-17).
If those who claim to keep Ule sabbath Insist on Uletr course,
they must also, ( I) Do no work (Ex. 20 :9, 10) (2) Kindle no fire
(Ex. 35 :3) (3) No baking or boiling (Ex. 16:23) (4) Bear no
burdens (Jer. 17:21, 22) (5) Give an offering oftwo lambs (Nwn.
28:9, 10).
Keilll Wise (Minister), Church of ChriSt, Rutland

Worsh ip 9 15

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST pastor Norman C. W•ll , supt.

Paul McElroy Sunday S h00 1 Chn~t1an Endeavor Sunday
'
c
even1ng .
Sup l. Sunday Sch.ooi9·30
a.rn ' REORGANIZED CHURCH

mornmg worshop and com - OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATmunt.on, 10 30 a.m ; Sunday TER OAYSAINTS - Portland -

evenmg youth Chnsflan en· R
acme Road
deavor, 6.30, Worship services,

Ralph Johnson,

Sunday. 7 30 P m. Wednesda pastor Herbert While, Sunday
evening prayer meeting
~ School D~rector . Sunday School,
Btble study 7 30 p m
an
9 30 a.m.; Morning worship,
ST. JOHN · LUTHERAN _ 10 30_ am. : Sunday evening

P1n e Grove, the Rev. Arthur serv!ce 7 p .m . Wednesday
Combs'
pa.
stor Sunda yscoo,pm
h 1 evenmg pr ayer serv1ces, 7: 30
9 30 am . church serv1 ces,
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST 10 3D- a.m .
·
Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor. Worship service . 9:30

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Ronm e Russell, who is
stationed at Fort Knox, Ky,
spent a weekend w1lh Mrs.
Russell and daughter, Mandy,
at Ule home of hts parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Russell at
Wolf Pen. They called on Mr.
and Mrs . Russell Roush and
lamtly .
Friday guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Sayre we~e Mrs.
Gene Sayre of Kanauga and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Payne of
Pinellas Park, Fla.
Wayne Rowe of Racine
Route called on his aunt, Miss
Ada Rowe Saturday.
Mrs. Hazel Lawson and
daughter, Wilda Attended a
picnic at the horne of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Lawson at Lelarl,

I

\

W. Va . Sunda y. E dward
Lawson ac compamed them
there and returnee them home
Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
of Wolf Pen spent SWJday
evening wllll Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush and famtly
Mrs. Herbert Roush and son,
Roge r , Sharon and Cindy
Roush, and Mrs. Iva Orr were
shopptng m Parkersburg
Wednesday.
Visiting Mrs. Iva Orr over
the week~nd were her sister,
Mrs. Emma Yokley and friend,
Helen, and granddaughter,
Cherly, all of Colwnbiana, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Varian and
other relatives of Eas t
Uverpool.

·' CL.I.AN AS A
HOUND'S T'OOn-l'
ORIGINALLY
REFERRED
NOI'lODOGS
BUT TO THE
HOUNDSTOOTH
FAMILY-

BRADBURY CHURCH OF a m .. Sunday School. 10.30 a.m.
CHRIST. Soble School. 9 30
CARLETON CHURCH a m , mormng worsh1p, 10 30 Kingsbury Road . Sunday

am Sunday evening Wor sh ip School, 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl,
Serv 1c e, 7 JO p. m.. c ho1r supt Worship service , 10.30
pracftce Sunda y and Wed a m. and 7· 30 p m alternately.
nesday. 7 p. m , prayer meeti ng Prayer mee ting . Wednesday,
and Btbi e stud y Wednesday 7 30 7 30 p m. Rev . Jay Sllles,
pm
pa stor .

VICes first and tf11rd Sundays

Gerald Weel ls

Pastor , Rev

Mor m M Wolle
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST -

am .. preachtng 10 45 am.,
Evening services, 7.30 p m

HYSELL

RUN
FREE
Cectl WISe.
Sunday School. 9:30

Sc:rop1urr1

~ ~~led

b11he .-.menn n Bible

Tu11dar
l1aiah

9 a m., Church School 10 a m ,

Psalms

2d ·ll

1J ,\A.28

6-"8-12

WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30
pm
MINERSVILLE - Worship

even1ng worship, 7 30 p m ., am.; Young People's serv1ce,
Wedn esd ay evening B1ble 6' .45 p m , EvangeliStiC serv1ce,
7 30 p m. Prayer meeting,
St udy . 7:30p.m

am , youth and juntor youth L R Gluesencamp, pastor
serv tce, 6 45 p m ; evenmg Roger Wilfred , Sr.. Sunday
worshtp, 7 30 p m , prayer and School Supl. Sunday School.
praiSe, Wednesday, 7 30 p m 9: JO a m , Sunday even in g
SILVER RUN FREE BAP· worsh1p 7 30 Prayer meetmg ,

TIST - Rev . Howard Kimble. Tu esday, 7 30 p m

pas1or . Sunday sc hocl . 10 am .; Dee ter,

SYRACUSE - Worsh1p, 8
am , Church School, 9 a rn ,

scrv1cc , 7 30 p m Pra yer Ernest Deeter , leader
mee mq , Thurda y, 1 30 p.m.

Prayer and B1ble Study,
Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. W. Dale McClurg
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
Rev ~ Martha Ann MaHner

BETHANY

{Dorcas)

Worshi p, 9 30 am ,
School 10 30 a m

w.dn••day

Tllundoy

Friday

J1 rotm1ah
3N6-44

Malachi

Mark

cla ss

leader

CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD - Rev James Satterf ield.
pastor Sunday school. 9 30 MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
am, worship service, 11 a.m .. IHE UNITED BRETHREN IN
even 1ng serv ice, 7; prayer CHRIST Robert Shook,
se rv1 ce and you th serv 1ce, pastor . Su nda y school , 9 30

Wednesday , 7 p.m

a. m . _Russell . Spencer, supt ;

worsh tp ser vtce, 10 45 a m ,
even1ng worship alternating

with C. E at 7 30 p.m . on
Su nday Prayer meeting, 7:30
P m. Weonesday. All reo Wolle,
lay leader

.

Tra ile r Re ntals and Supplies
St. Rt. 7
Chester, Oh io

Rexall Drugs
We Ftll All Doctors ' Prescriptions
992-2955
· Pomeroy

l.rsland lhird Sundays; 10 a.m..

Sunday School Sup I Su nday

second and fourth Sundays.
M1d week serv1ce, Wednesda y,

School, classes for all ages, 9 JO
a m . , morning worship, 10· 45.

Worship ,

11 a.m ..

Chu r ch

UMYF for all churches of the
Southern Cluster , 7 30 p m

each Sunday al the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road .)

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev . Jacob Lehman
Rev. Standley Brandum
JOPPA - Worship 10 am ,

Bible study and prayer

RUTLAND
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST

Rev. Samuel Jack son ,
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p.m.; evangelistic serv 1ce Sunday, pastor. Sunday School. 10 a.m .
7:

o

P

m

Mid ~ week

prayer Mr s Gertrude Butler, sup t.
Pr ayer Se r vice, 1.30 p m ;
preach mg service, 2 p m

3
Chu rch School, 10 am.
LETART FALLS _ Worship meeltng . Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
M IS Si onary mee t mg , second
10 a.m.: Church School 9 a.m . Wednesday, 7 30 p.m.
MORNING STAR - Worshtp
9. 30 am , Church School 10.30
UNITED FAITH NON .
a m . Mid-We ek Servoce, DENOMINATIONAL - Rev
Wed nesday, B&gt;' m.
Robert Sm ith. pastor. Sunday
MORSE CHAPEL - Worsh1p school. 9.30 am., class leader,

School, 10 a.m.

. , 1-6

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN

Larimore , pastor . Bob Moore, ser vtce, Wednesday, 7 30 p m

EAST LETART - Worsht p.
10am ,l.rstandthirdSundays ,
9 a.m, second and lourt h THE NAZARENE - Rev M C. am

WESLEYAN {Racinel -

Leo H1l l, worship serv1ce, 10· 30

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Keith Wi se, pastor
Sunday school, 9 30 a.m , V. H
Braley , supt.; worship service
and commun ion, 10·30 am ;
eve ning serv1ce, 7· 30 p.m.

Wednesday , Bible stud y. 7:30
a m , church, 7 30 p.m • prayer p.m Regular boa rd meet ing,
meetmg , Wednesday
7: 30 p m . third Saturday each
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN month
IN CHRIST-Eld on R Slake,
THE RUTLAND COMpastor . Sunday School. 10 a .m ;
MUNITY
CHURCH - Rev
Winnie Holsmger, sup I. Mar ning sermon, II a .m .. Evening Ri chard Dubbeld , pastor
serv1ce Christian Endeavo r , School, 9:30 am., Worship
7.30 p m .. Mrs. Lyda Cheva lie r, serv ice, 11 a.m ., Wednesda y
prestden t. Song serv 1ce and praye r meeti ng . 7:30 p.m
sermon, 8 20 Mid -Week prayer Sunday nigh I worsh1p, 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
meehng Wednesday. 7 30 p.m.
THE
NAZAR ENE - Rev.
Mrs . Man e Holsinger. class
Ll oyd 0 Grimm. Jr . pastor.
leader.
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School. 9· 30 a m.;
CHURCH Harrisonville Mornmg worsh ip. 10; JO a.m. ,
Roa d, Rev . Roy Taylor, pastor; Young people's servi ce, 6:45

Church Schoo l 9 a.m.; Prayer

Henry Eblm , Sunday School

services, 9 am , SUnday School

Pray er and praise servi ce,

MASON COUNTY
Thursday, 7 30 p m
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
NORTH BETHEL - Worship De&lt; ter - Worship services George Casto, pastor . Sunday
11 am .; Church SchoollOam. Saturda y an d Sunday , 7:30 School, 9 30 , even1n9 worship,
ALFRED - Sunday school. o.m
7 30. Thu rsday even tng prayer
eac h

Sunday ,

preaching at 11 am
Sunday

each

Prpyer meeting , 7 45

p.m Wednesday , WSCS. 8 p m.
on th ~rd Tuesday each month.
REEDSVILLE - Sunday

730pm Tuesday , WSCS.7:30
ftrs t Thursday eac~ month .
SILVER RIDGE't - Worshtp,
10 am , Church Sc hoo l, 9 a.m.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Wors h•p 9 a.m., Church School
10 am
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Hobarl Newel l, supt Services
weekly. 9:30 am . on Sunda y.
Preaching firs I and third
Sunda ys of monlh by Cl ifford
Sml
lh, 9 30 am ()C
HOBSON
HRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll.
paslor Sunday School, 9·30
a.m .. Leonard Gilmore, first
elder , evening service, 7: 30
p.m
Wedn esday prayer
m~~-n~~:R3~ApH. mC. HURCH OF
GOO - Racine Route 2. The
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor .
Sunday school , 9:45 a.m.;
morning worship, 11 a.m.
Evening services. Thuesday
and Friday, 7:30 .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Dav id
Jewell, pastor. Bible sludy, 9· 30
l .m : morning worship, 10·30;
evening worship, 6 30 p.m.
Weonesday B1ble study. 7.30
p.m.

¥ lJJIIIFOJ'?M5!

21,2 5-28

GASOUNE ALLEY

®M4 paper5
of ow ner~h ip !

H EM L 0
CK

~

ANO

EXAMINE
DUFFEL

DICK'S GROCERY

{Fom1er ly Domlgans )
New Owner - Dick Sargent
Old U. S. 33
Ph . 992-7735
Stop In and See Us

.

MONTG JMERY WARD

... WHY, YES, LI EUTENANT CAlAI!OlO. OUR
IHYESTKSATIOit SHOWS TliAT NEUrAL roa·•
FIFTY THOUSAND

·::::~/~ ORIGINALlY, Til~
REMAINING SUM
A SHORT TIME

CARPET-lAND, INC.

116 W. Main
Ph. 992-7590
Free Esllmoles · Guaranteed Installation

•

307 Spring Ave .
Ph. 992-2318

.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
0.

Attend the Church of Your Choice
'

STORE

Ph . 992-3496

J

SEARS .

'

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

F. J. WAll ar.E, JEWELERS

100 Years in Pomeroy
Kermit Walton

Bulova Wafches • Sales &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

22. Endure;
abide
23. Railroad
ear
:U. Quit
the

I
I KJ

IL_.L.
I _L_.L.
I--'::.......::J
\

NARFC

V
'I
1--._ A

I

L....l.:&gt;...&lt;.L.-'"-a...__J

] I

\m:wEs

I

I

•••
!!-!':AVE: AT 'THE !5EACH
-COUL.D !5E
DANGE~OUS!

[J

Now IIIT&amp;nfe the circled lellera
form the surpriae anawer, u
aucrtated by the above cartoon.

II
IPtitt . . . . AIISWIIItn 1A j·r :r xJ r xr r r
I K

)

to

(Ann•rn lomorrow)

scene

Jumbk" IIASS METAL

25. Was solici·

EL!Xll NESTLE

'V f!tlerd•:r"•

tous

Anawera f/G r nmur 1 it'• milrlf'r - MIASLIS

26. Anglo· •
Saxon
letter
27. Shoemaklng

l:
u
lJ

,l!

28. Indian
farmer
29. Scottish

••
••

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Authorized Catalog Merchant
Louis W. Osborne
220 E. Me in Pomeroy Ph. 992-2178

Church and Office Supplies . Gifts
992-2641
Middleport

20. Belief
21. Exhaust
22. Disfigure
23. Flash Gordon's girl
25. Arrive
(2 wds.)
27. Quarrel
(hyph .
wd .)
31. Bugbear
32. Run into
34. Gobbled
35. Partlet

"uncle"

Pomeroy

MIDDLPORT
. . BOOK STORE

7. Performlng (3
wds.)
B. Appre·
hended by
second
sight
9. Wander
aimlessly
11. Arkin and
others
15. Petition
18. Violent
happening

30. One
of the
DiMaggios
33. lnstmctive

Nationwide Insurance Co. of Columbus, 0 .

Meats and Groceries
992-3986
Syracuse

5. Fellow
6. Cockney
oath

~. I SIIIWK

Yesterday,&amp; Answer

pieces

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

SADIE'S MARKET

wiper

around

Wall-to-Wall Carpet Specialists

CATAlOGUE STORE
Mr . and Mrs . Charles R. Sheets
106 Court St. Pomeroy 992-3001

access

3. Duel
{3 wds.)
4. Fcot

20. Whimpers
21. Lug

D.B A ANTHONY
PLUMBING and HEATING
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-3:-50

Middleport, Ohio

DOWN
1. - disl
atty
2. Mean s of

disease

All WEAlHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

"no"

peace

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, Ohio

Middleport

38. Immediately following
this
39. Molotov's

19. Sheep

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Unocrambletheoe four Jumbles,
one letter to each squart, to
form four ordinary worda.

d'-

lL_-can
bear
(2 wds )
12. Lenient
13.Nabokov
novel
U . Musical
syllable
15. Egyptian
colton
16. Convent
dweller
17. Goddess
of

DICK TRACY

Sales-Allis Chalmers - Service
Farm · Industrial - Lawn · Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

GOEGLEI N tttADY MIX CO.

37. Raison

seat

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

The Store With A Heart
Racine
Ph . 949-3342

~WJWID~;UwJ IDt-~t.l .-4 , _

bantone ,

Antonio

10. Love

Chester, Ohio

RACINE FOOD MARKET

35. Mammo th
36. Famed

over

GAUL'S MARKET

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington , W.Va .

Pomeroy

ACROSS
I. Garden
dweller
5. Cloud

Bakers of Holsum Bread_
'
Middleport, Ohio

HEINER'S BAKERY

Yeslerday'a Crnlloqaole: PROVIDENCE SEES TO IT THAT
NO MAN GETS HAPPINESS OUT OF CRIME-VITl'ORIO
ALFIERI
'
(C 18T2 Klnr Featorot Sy•dlcate,loc.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

Pomeroy-Member FDIC &amp;
Federal Reserve System

F~ANKLIN

, l~ll '' Hf~ I"' TM ~ •• UI ' "' ()jl,

Middleport, Ohio

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

BEN

Ph. 992- 3865

MARK VSTORE

Family Recreation
Swimming, Camping

Furniture and Appliances
Ph . 985-3308
Chester,

Pomeroy

Member of the Big 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plain s
Ph . 667-3280

ROYAL OAK PARK

Phone 992-3284

'IOU 11em fff 1 "'-'-t:'IS! :t SAID t
00 ~ ~L.ATE TO VXJMAA~ VJORK.!

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

SWISHER &amp;WHSE

serv1ce, 7 30 p.m

G R 0 V E MASON FIRST BAPTIST CHRISTIAN - David &gt;Iauner, Second and Pomeroy Sts, Stan
pas to~ , Stanford Stocklon, supl Craig pa stor Sunday schoo l
Mornm~ worshop , 9 30 am ,
'
.
'
chu r ch school 10 30 ·
. 9.45 am .' .worship serv 1ce, 11
-0 un
a .m .. •am : tramtngunton.6:30p.m.,
1 '
Y g peop es meell~g , 6:JO evenmg worship service 7 30
P m.; evenmg worshtp, 7 30
Mid
k
' ·
Blble.atudy Wednesda
-wee pra yer service,
7. 30 p.m .
pm .
'
y, ·
Wodnesdav , 730pm
MT. UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Rev Cec'1l C
t S d
·
o&lt;, pas or. un ay -Le ta rt Route 1, the Rev. Stan
school supt ' Joe Sayre Sunday Craig, paslor Sunday sc hool,
school, 9 45 a . m. ; Sunday 9'30 a .m., prayer and Bible
eventng worship, 7 30. Wed- sludy, 7: 30pm . Cottage prayer
n~sday prayer and Bible study, service, Tuesday. 10 a.m ;
7.30 p.m .
worship service Friday 7· 30
T U P PER S
P LA I N S ' p m
'
' ·
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
MASON
CHURCH
OF
Eugene Underwood, pas lor; CHRIST- Loren T Ste phens
Howard Caldwell , Jr., Sunday minis ter. Worship, 10 a.m.,'
Scoo
h 1 Sup t.; Sun day Scoo,
h I. Biblestudy,ll : 15a.m.. evenlng
9 30 a. m ' Morn ing sermon, worshrp, 7:30 p.m. Mid-week
10 30 a .., m.; Sunday even ing serv ice. Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
se[l1t"ART0 j!'ALLS )JNITED MASON ASSEMBLY OF
Second St., Mason, W.
BRETHREN - Rev. Robert GODVa Chester Tennant pasto
Shook. past or; Herschel Norris, Sunday school, 10 a.,;,.; mo;·
supt. Sunday school. 9:30a.m .: ning worship, 11 a m.:
mor~lng sermon, 10 30 a .m .. evangelistic serv ice 7·30
evenrng sermon, 7·30 alter- Bible study and prayer .ser~~~·
natl ng each Sunday. Prayer Wednesday 7·30 p m Phon'0
servtce, Wednesday, 7 30 ~ .m. 773-513 3 ' ·
· ·
Prayer mee11ng, 7.30 p. m.
·
alternating Sundays.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF CHRISTin Christian Un ionGOD OF P~DPHECY. G. P. Rev . Autum Scott, pastor.
Sm it h, pastor. Sunday School, Sunday school, 9:30 am. ;
10a.m ; Arthur Henson, Supt.; James Hughes, Supt. ;
Morning Worsh ip 11 a.m ., evening service 7·30. Wed·
Youn~ Peoples service, 7 p.m. ; nesday even ing
prayer
Eventng serv ice. 7: 30 p.m.; meeting , 7. 30 p.IJl . No
Weone_sday Mid-Week Prayer Tuesday service.

Meigs County 'Branch

LODWICK'S MARKET

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH

9 45 a m. Bible study every Thursday, 7 30 p.m.

a m

1H2-&lt;7

296 W. Second

p.m .• Evangelist 1c serv1ces.

Mee ting. Wednesday, 8 p.m
oup1 . &gt;unday Sc hool. 9:30a .m.: 7 30 p m Wedn esday evening
LONG BOTTOM - Church evening worship , 7 30 p.m. service 7 30 p m .

9 4S

M I ~S WINNIE?

9 ·1

" We Sponsor Jesus "
Rev. Stan Craig , Pastor

School 10 am

PRISON FORA
WHILE1 RIGHT 1

ON 1HE CONTRAR_Y,.IM GOING
6ACK 1HIS WEEKt:ND TO
PERSONALLY PRESENT

·confetti!

mornmg worshtp, 10 30; Sun
day even1ng service, 7 30 , M id
WHITE'S CHAPEL
week serv1 ce, Wednesday, 7 30 Coolville RD. Rev Roy Deeter,
Pm
pastor. Sunday school, 9 30
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF am . worship serv 1ce, 10 30

Church School. 10 a.m .
PORTLAND - Worsh 1p 7 30
p m . Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worsh1p, 11 a.m
2nd and 4th Sundays ; Chur ch

LOOK!:&gt; LIKE 'ttJU .. ~... r.
SEE 1HE INSIDE OF A

Saturday
Lukt

Youth

7 30 p m ., ch urch sc hoo l, 9 30
am ;
mid·week
serv ic e.
Wednesday, a p m

11 am , l si and Jrd Sundays ;

FOR ALL 'THE LETTERS AND
FlOWERS I'VE RECEIVED !

Erne st

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - Robert E Musser,
pastor Sunday School, 9:30
a m. ·. Robert . Bobo, supt. ,

am , 2nd and 4th Sundays;

®DON'T FORGET ID MENTION MY
PEEP l'HANK6 ro EVERYONE

With the hope it will , in some measure, foster and help sustain that whi.c h i ~.
good in family and community life , this feature is sponsored by the bustness
firms and organizations whose _(1ames appear below.

CARMEL - Worsht p, 11
am ., lsi and 3rd Sundays .
Church School , 10 am
APPLE GROVE - Worshi p,

8 Pm
GREAT BEND - Worshtp 11

WINNIE WINKLE

Henry Dav iS, su pl .. even ong Meeling Wednesday, 7 30 p m.,

Church

Sundays, church sc hool , 9 a.m.,

TRADITION WITH HAF\1&gt;.1 ET
HOUNDSTOOT H -

DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Thur sday, 7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
Rev
Lawrence Sull ivan.
pasto r. Sunday School 9. 30 MISSION - Bald Knobs. Rev

10 am , Church School 9 am ,

WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m.

CLEAN LINE:SS IS MEREL'f A

S oclrr~

Mond ay

1s Tu esd ay .
FOREST RUN - Worship 9
am , Chur ch School 10 am ,

..I' ...

Charles Noms, pastor . Sunday METHODIST -

Acts

m.
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev. Murrel Floyd
ASBURY - Worshtp 11 a.m.;
Churc h School9 50 a.m.. WSCS,

'1,' '...

People are so busy here and there that they often fail to perceive the
beauty and grandeur of Creation.
A storm at sea, a beautiful sunrise or a full moon riding in a clear sky
are but commonplace aspects of the weather. Towering mountains, a great
waterfall or a fa r-spread fertile valley are but features of the landscape.
Blessed is the man gifted with the vision and understanding to see the
deeper meaning of Nature's matchless wonders .
For behind all the wonderful phenomena of earth and sea and sky Is the
pattern of a sublime plan which stirs the awe and challenges the imagination
of man. There can be but one answer to the marvels and wonders of the unl·
verse-God! The Church brings man Into spiritual relationship with his Creator.
Sunday

school, 9 30 ; prea ching, 7 30
p m Sunday, pra yer meetmg,

Fairview News Notes

U'L ABNER

UMYF 7 p.m.
School, 9 30 a.m ; Morn tng Pas tor
SALEM CENTER - Worsh• p ' worsh•p, 10· 45 a m , Sunday am ; Morn ing worsh ip, 10: JO

UMYF Thursday, 7 p

WHY '?

MY TAl&lt;.E5
HELP PAY
YOU!?
5ALARIE5.

P ome roy Harrison vi lle Sunda.y Sc hool 9 · J~ am .;
Road Kenneth Eberts. pastor. Wor~h1p service , 10. 30 a.m.

a m , Church School 9 15 a m ,
UMYF 6 30 p.m

RUTLAND -

oor

A WARRANT FOR
MY ARREST.

pa s lor Sunday School service p.m ; Thursday choir pract 1ce,
10 a m Prayer Meeting each 7
Thur~day 7 30 p m Sunday PD~XTER CHURCH OF
even1 ng service. 7 30 D m.
CHRIST _
Dann
Evans,

OLD
DEXTER
ANTIQUI'rY BAPTIST - CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
ENTERPRISE - Worship. 9
- Rev Wtllard Dutcher,
a.m.; Church School. 10 am . Rev Freeland Norris, pastor
FLATWOODS- Worshtp, 11 Sunday school. 10 a.m.; church . astor Mrs Worley Franc1s,
a.m.; Church School 10 a m
ser v1ce, 7 p.m . Wednesday Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School. 9 45 a.m. Church SerPOMEROY- Worshtp, 10 30 Btble stud y, 7 p.m.

am .; Ch urch School 10 a.m..

AND NOW 'IOU

fAY ltlt.l'VE

MR. SI1ARKEV, nilS 1$
A~ ENTOMOLO!J'I
FtE'-D TRIP~

"SVI 'LE
cOM· 7Chnst•anYouth
30
P m.
Wednesday,
ST IVEK
~
Crusade. 6.30
MUNITY , Rev. Edsel Hart, p.m : prayer meeting, 7 30

RACINE FIRST CHURCH fol low•ng Sunday School.
Second and fourth Saturday
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship OF THE NAZARENE
10 a.m .; Church School9 a.m.. Sunday School. 9 30 a .m.; evenmgs, 8 p m sennces
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Mornmg Worsh ip, 10.30 a.m ..
Evenmg worsh1p 7 30. Weo- UMYF 6 30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Evenina wors hoo, 7 30 p m, - Mr Robert Wyat l, pas lor .
nesday prayer meetmg , 7 30
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
Wedn esda y M1d Week Ser v1ce 1 Sunda y School supt.. Ronald
p.m
HEATH - Worsht p 10 30 Sunday School Superintendent, Osborne. Bible School, 9 30

the Sermonette

RIO· fMvS.

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev. Herbert

a.m ; Church School 10 a m

am, Church School 9· JO am,
UMYF 7 p m

MOST OF
71-\EM ARE

worship. 7 JO p.m .

.

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
Oae letter limply stands for another. In tbls sample A II
uaed far the three L'a, X lor the two O's, ete. Single letters,
apostrophes, Ule loncth and formation. of the words are all
hlnll. Each day the code !etten are dll'lerent.
CBYPI'OQUOTBS
GP RPFBPLP XJ WUAP BU PLBF, GP
WUFV

RPFBPLP

M.PNFPAJBWU .
-Y XQXYP

BK

BU

DWWQ

JZBK

UWJ

Q WK W·J Z PP QPF SO~·

STWU
KXQ ?

I

I M 6LAD

r CAN'T HEAR

WHAT ~OWARD COSELL 15
5AI(IN6 ASOUT THIS ...

�,.

,. .

MIDDLEPORT PENUNITED MIN ISTRY OF
ce. 7: 30 p.m.; Youlh
TECOSTAL - Thord Ave, Ihe MEIGS COUNTY, The Unileo Servi
meeling 6. 30 p.m.; Evening

Rev . WtiHam Knille l . par.lor .
Ronald Dugan, Su ndi\y school
supt Cla s::.~s for al l ages,
evrr· nq servtce, 7 JO p.m ,
R,htP study. W~ucsdcly, 7 30
,..rv •ces, Fnday ,
' ,v p.m.

I.

'I' •

l•

1
I

POMEROY
POMEROY TRIN ITY

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN, -

FREEWILL BAPTIST -

Rev . Ar lhur C Lund , pastor Corner Ash and Plum, Mtd·
Noel
Herrman ,
Sunday School. 9 15 am., dleport ,
Sa turday eve ning
Charles Evans , Supt., worsh1p pa st or
service, 10 :30 a.m . Con · ,.,.,.v 1ce, 7 p m Sunday schoor,
fJrmat1on class, Tuesday. 4 15 10 a m , Sunday evening
to 5 JO p m , Juntor Con· worsh ip, 1 p.m.
llrmallon class, Thursday, 6 lO
FIRST BAPTIST ol Mid·
rehearsa l, 7:30p.m .. Thursday. to7·45pm
dlepor t, corner of Sixth and
Mrs. Paul Nease, director.
SEVE;NTH - DAY AD - Palmer 'Sireets, Rev . Char les
POMEROY CHURCH OF
pas to r .
Fred
VENTIST
- Located on Sim ons,
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Schoo l
Hetghts,
near Holtman , Sunday
Union and Mulberr y. Rev . Mulberry
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor. Ve terans IV\emonal Hosp1tat , Super in tendent Sunday church
Sunday school. 9:30a .m .. Glen Pomeroy . Pa st or Herb ert school for every one 9' 15 a m ,
McClung, supt., morning Morgan Sabbath School, every M orn tng worship 10. 15 a m ,
worship, 10. 30 a.m ., even1ng Sa t urda y at 2 p m and worshtp Evemng servtces, 7:30 p.m .,
Wednesday prayer serv1ce, 7:30
servt ce, 7: 30, mid week ser· ser v 1ce foll ow ing at J · l5 p m
Open Bible discussion each p m Extra youth activ1l1es on
vke, Wednesday , 7 30 p.,m

' Rev . W. H. Pernn, pastor Roy
' Mayer, Supt. Church schoool,
1 9: 1S a.m.; worsh1p, 10 24 am,
youth choir rehearsa l Monday,
I ' ·30 p.m .; Mrs. Marv1n Bur t,
director,
sen1or
choir

f

,
1

:
,
'
'
•

GRACE

EPISCOPAL -

Rev . Leroy Davis, minister.
Morning pr ayer and sermon,
10 30a.m Holy communton and
, sermon, f1rst Sundays, 10· 30
a.m Chur c h schoo l. km·
' dergarten through eighth
: grade, 10. 30 a.m .
j

Thursday at 7 30 p m. at the
chu rch
" The
Friendly
Chur ch "

Sunday. S p. m.. for all youth up
to stx lh grade ; 6:30 for jun mr
and senior h1gh students

CHURCH OF CHRIST,
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST - Preach ing 9 30 M1ddl epor t , 5t h and Marn

a m , first and second Sundays Raulm M oyer, pastor M1 chael

of each month, third and f ourth Gerlach, Sunday School supt
Sundays each month, worship 8 1ble School, 9 30 a m , mor serv 1ceat 7:30 p.m . Wednesday ning worship, 10 30 a.m .;
• POMEROY CHURCH OF evenmgs at 7. 30. Prayer and evening worsh ip. 7: 30 p.m. ,
prayer serv1ce 7 r,..m. Wed
: CHRIST - Mr. Hoyl Allen , Jr .. Bible Study
pastor. Bible School. 9:30a .m ,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- nesday.

CHURCH
OF
THE
worship, 10 30; adult worshtp TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ..
serv ic e and young peoples Pomeroy. affiliated with S.B.C .. NAZARENE - Middl epor t,
meeting , both 7 30 p m. Sunday. !he Rev . Fred Hill. pastor Rev Audry Mill er. pastor .
Wednesday, combined B1bl e Sunday School, 9.30 am .. Fl oyd Carson, sup t Sunday

study and prayer meet1ng, 7· 30 morning warship, 10· 30 am ,
pm .
jUnior socie ty, 6 30 a m NYPS,
THE SALVATION ARMY - 6 45 p m Sunday evangelistic
Envoy RayS Wining , officer in meeting, 7· 30 p m. Prayer
charge . Sunday, 10 a . m ., mee!ing Wednesday, 7· 30 p m
Holiness meeting , 10 30 am ,
MIDDLEPORT

Sunday School. Young People's MT. MORIAH BAPTISl Logion. 7 p m.. Thursday , 1 to 3 Corner F ou rth and Main ,
p.m , Ladies Home League , 7 Middleporl Rev Henry L Key ,
p.m , Prep classes
Jr, pastor. Sunday School 9 30
SACRED HEART - Rev. a m , Arn old R1 chard s, sup! ,
Fat her

Bernard Kra icov ic, Morning worshtp 10 JO a m

pasl or
Phone
992-2825.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES Saturday evening Mass, 7 30 Larry Carnahan presiding
p.m. Sunday Mass. 8 and 10 min 1ster. Sunday, Bible lecture,
a.m. Confessions, Saturday, 7- 9. 30 a m ; Watch lower study,
7.30 p.m
10 30 a m ; Tuesday , Bible
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST study, 7 30 p m., Thursday,
- Robert Kuhn , paslor, William min1stry school 7 JO p m.,
Watson, Sunday school supt. serv tce meet1ng s· 30 p.m .
Sunday school, 9 30 a.m .; BYF,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
6 p.m ; Bible study, Weo - Christ in Christian Union nesday. 7 p.m.: choir practice, Lawrence Manley, pastor ; Mrs
Weonesday, 8:30 p m.
Russell Young, Sunday School
Supl. Sunday School 9 30 am

school, 9 30 a.m ; Morning
worsh1p 10 30 a m. , junior

socie ly , 6:30p.m.. NYPS. 6: 45
p m . Sunda y eva ngeli stic
meeting, 7 30 p .m . Prayer
meetmg Wednesday, 7 30 p.m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH
THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert R. Card
Rev. Stanten Smith
CHESTER - Worship 9 15

Presbyferlim Churc:h, Dw1gh!
l
Zavit;, Prtstor - D~r ector,
G..,ota t W Hutton and Rev
Linson Stebbi ns. Ass't Par.:or
Dtretlt•rs

FIRn

UNITFD

BYTE A: IAN,

Grale, paslor Worship ser vice,

11 a m and 7· 30 p.m. Sunday.
PRES- Svnday School , 9 30 a.m .

Harrl son v ol !1 , Richard Bar ton, supl. Prayer

Sund"y Church School, Y JO meelmq , Wednesday , 7:30pm.
a rn • Mrs Hornet Lee, Supt ,
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Morn ing Worship 10 30 a.m CHRIST - Cli llord Smith ,
FIRST
UNITED m1nisl cr . Sunday School 9 30
PRESBYTERIAN, Middleporl , rl m . morn1ng chur ch 10 30
Sunday Church School. 9. 30 ,1 m . Sunday eve nmg service,
a m , Lewis Sauer , Supt , 7 30 p m Wednesday service, 8
Mnrnmo Wor sh ip, 10 30 a.m p nl
-

LAUREL CLIFF -F REE
FIRST
UNITED METHODIST - Rev Robert
PRESBYTERIAN, Syracuse. E. Buckley, pastor William
Morn1ng Worshtp , 9 a.m. ; Bailey, supt ; Sunday school,
Sunday Church School, 10 a.m . 9: 30 a.m , morning worship,
Mrs Sa mpson Hall , Supt.
10 . 30 am , evening worship.

Is the Sabbath Binding Today?
Today we live in a period of basic biblical ignorance in which
Ule erroneous doctrines of past ages are being accepted by an
increasing number of people.
One of Ulese doctrines Is Ule inslstace that Ule observance of
Ule Sabballl Day Is still binding. This doctrine leaches Ulal Ulere
were two laws given on Mt. Sian!: that God gave one, and that
Moses gave anolller; Ulat the one given by the Lord was written
on tables of stone which were durable and sliD in Ioree today, and
Ulat the law given by Moses was written in and was abolished by
Christ . Let us prayerfully look at Ule Bible to correct such
erroneous Ulinking.
As stated previously, the doctrine says Ulat the "law of God"
and Ule "law of Moses" were two different laws. The Bible, on
Ule oilier hand states Ulat Ulese tenns are interchangeable.
'"'bis Ezra went up from Jerusalem. And he was a ready scribe
in Ule law of Moses." (Ezra 7:6) . The same chapter says, "Ezra
Ule priest, Ule scribe of Ule law of the God of heaven." (Ezra ·

7:12)
Another doctrinal sidetrack is that Moses gave Ule law of
Moses. However, Ezra 7:6 definitely says God gave the law of
Moses. This doctrine also says Ulat God gave the law of God, but
again, the Bible says, "And when they brought oul lhe money
that was brought into Ule house of Ule Lord, Hilkiah then foWJd a
book of the law oftheLordglven by Moses." (2Chron. 34 :14)
One of Ule cardinal principles of sabbath observances ts thai
Ule sabbath is a moral obligation. The Btble teaches that Ule
sabbath "was made" (Mark 2:27) . Moral obligations are right
wllllin themselves. Religious duties are right only because God
commanded them. The sabballl was made right and binding on
Ule Jews only ~use God commanded 11. (Exodus 20:8) Moral
obligations relate to our fellowmen. Religious duties relate to
God. When Adam and Eve ate of Ule forbidden frmt, Uley smned
because Uley violated a command of God; but they did not
thereby commit an act ollmmorall!y. They sinned against God,
but not against their fellowmen .
Failure to keep Ule sabbath violates no moral law. Men would
never have known to keep the sabha Ill H God had no I commanded
it. Even Ule morals of Ule ten commandments are far below the
standards of Christianity. Jesus exemplifies this by his remarks
in Ule !Hill chapter of Matthew.
Another major statement of Ule sabbath day doctrine is that
Ule sabballl is a lDliversal day of worship lor all mankind. The
Bible again teaches Ulat Ule sabbath was given to the Israelites
and to them ooly - unless a Gentile was proselyted to their faith.
(Deut. 5:l.J) The sabbath was a sign. (Ex. 31 :13, 17) and Ule
sabbath was a memorial (Deut. 5:15). If we consider Ulis in light
of the fact that after 33 A.D. when Ule Church was established,
lDltll Ule last inspired Apostle penned Ule last verse
f Revelation, then one can see Ulat there Is not one command for
Christians to observe lhe sabbath. II anything, we are commanded not to keep the sabballl (Col. 2:14-17).
If those who claim to keep Ule sabbath Insist on Uletr course,
they must also, ( I) Do no work (Ex. 20 :9, 10) (2) Kindle no fire
(Ex. 35 :3) (3) No baking or boiling (Ex. 16:23) (4) Bear no
burdens (Jer. 17:21, 22) (5) Give an offering oftwo lambs (Nwn.
28:9, 10).
Keilll Wise (Minister), Church of ChriSt, Rutland

Worsh ip 9 15

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST pastor Norman C. W•ll , supt.

Paul McElroy Sunday S h00 1 Chn~t1an Endeavor Sunday
'
c
even1ng .
Sup l. Sunday Sch.ooi9·30
a.rn ' REORGANIZED CHURCH

mornmg worshop and com - OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATmunt.on, 10 30 a.m ; Sunday TER OAYSAINTS - Portland -

evenmg youth Chnsflan en· R
acme Road
deavor, 6.30, Worship services,

Ralph Johnson,

Sunday. 7 30 P m. Wednesda pastor Herbert While, Sunday
evening prayer meeting
~ School D~rector . Sunday School,
Btble study 7 30 p m
an
9 30 a.m.; Morning worship,
ST. JOHN · LUTHERAN _ 10 30_ am. : Sunday evening

P1n e Grove, the Rev. Arthur serv!ce 7 p .m . Wednesday
Combs'
pa.
stor Sunda yscoo,pm
h 1 evenmg pr ayer serv1ces, 7: 30
9 30 am . church serv1 ces,
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST 10 3D- a.m .
·
Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor. Worship service . 9:30

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Ronm e Russell, who is
stationed at Fort Knox, Ky,
spent a weekend w1lh Mrs.
Russell and daughter, Mandy,
at Ule home of hts parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Russell at
Wolf Pen. They called on Mr.
and Mrs . Russell Roush and
lamtly .
Friday guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Sayre we~e Mrs.
Gene Sayre of Kanauga and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Payne of
Pinellas Park, Fla.
Wayne Rowe of Racine
Route called on his aunt, Miss
Ada Rowe Saturday.
Mrs. Hazel Lawson and
daughter, Wilda Attended a
picnic at the horne of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Lawson at Lelarl,

I

\

W. Va . Sunda y. E dward
Lawson ac compamed them
there and returnee them home
Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
of Wolf Pen spent SWJday
evening wllll Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush and famtly
Mrs. Herbert Roush and son,
Roge r , Sharon and Cindy
Roush, and Mrs. Iva Orr were
shopptng m Parkersburg
Wednesday.
Visiting Mrs. Iva Orr over
the week~nd were her sister,
Mrs. Emma Yokley and friend,
Helen, and granddaughter,
Cherly, all of Colwnbiana, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Varian and
other relatives of Eas t
Uverpool.

·' CL.I.AN AS A
HOUND'S T'OOn-l'
ORIGINALLY
REFERRED
NOI'lODOGS
BUT TO THE
HOUNDSTOOTH
FAMILY-

BRADBURY CHURCH OF a m .. Sunday School. 10.30 a.m.
CHRIST. Soble School. 9 30
CARLETON CHURCH a m , mormng worsh1p, 10 30 Kingsbury Road . Sunday

am Sunday evening Wor sh ip School, 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl,
Serv 1c e, 7 JO p. m.. c ho1r supt Worship service , 10.30
pracftce Sunda y and Wed a m. and 7· 30 p m alternately.
nesday. 7 p. m , prayer meeti ng Prayer mee ting . Wednesday,
and Btbi e stud y Wednesday 7 30 7 30 p m. Rev . Jay Sllles,
pm
pa stor .

VICes first and tf11rd Sundays

Gerald Weel ls

Pastor , Rev

Mor m M Wolle
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST -

am .. preachtng 10 45 am.,
Evening services, 7.30 p m

HYSELL

RUN
FREE
Cectl WISe.
Sunday School. 9:30

Sc:rop1urr1

~ ~~led

b11he .-.menn n Bible

Tu11dar
l1aiah

9 a m., Church School 10 a m ,

Psalms

2d ·ll

1J ,\A.28

6-"8-12

WSCS, 3rd Wednesday, 7 30
pm
MINERSVILLE - Worship

even1ng worship, 7 30 p m ., am.; Young People's serv1ce,
Wedn esd ay evening B1ble 6' .45 p m , EvangeliStiC serv1ce,
7 30 p m. Prayer meeting,
St udy . 7:30p.m

am , youth and juntor youth L R Gluesencamp, pastor
serv tce, 6 45 p m ; evenmg Roger Wilfred , Sr.. Sunday
worshtp, 7 30 p m , prayer and School Supl. Sunday School.
praiSe, Wednesday, 7 30 p m 9: JO a m , Sunday even in g
SILVER RUN FREE BAP· worsh1p 7 30 Prayer meetmg ,

TIST - Rev . Howard Kimble. Tu esday, 7 30 p m

pas1or . Sunday sc hocl . 10 am .; Dee ter,

SYRACUSE - Worsh1p, 8
am , Church School, 9 a rn ,

scrv1cc , 7 30 p m Pra yer Ernest Deeter , leader
mee mq , Thurda y, 1 30 p.m.

Prayer and B1ble Study,
Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. W. Dale McClurg
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
Rev ~ Martha Ann MaHner

BETHANY

{Dorcas)

Worshi p, 9 30 am ,
School 10 30 a m

w.dn••day

Tllundoy

Friday

J1 rotm1ah
3N6-44

Malachi

Mark

cla ss

leader

CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD - Rev James Satterf ield.
pastor Sunday school. 9 30 MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
am, worship service, 11 a.m .. IHE UNITED BRETHREN IN
even 1ng serv ice, 7; prayer CHRIST Robert Shook,
se rv1 ce and you th serv 1ce, pastor . Su nda y school , 9 30

Wednesday , 7 p.m

a. m . _Russell . Spencer, supt ;

worsh tp ser vtce, 10 45 a m ,
even1ng worship alternating

with C. E at 7 30 p.m . on
Su nday Prayer meeting, 7:30
P m. Weonesday. All reo Wolle,
lay leader

.

Tra ile r Re ntals and Supplies
St. Rt. 7
Chester, Oh io

Rexall Drugs
We Ftll All Doctors ' Prescriptions
992-2955
· Pomeroy

l.rsland lhird Sundays; 10 a.m..

Sunday School Sup I Su nday

second and fourth Sundays.
M1d week serv1ce, Wednesda y,

School, classes for all ages, 9 JO
a m . , morning worship, 10· 45.

Worship ,

11 a.m ..

Chu r ch

UMYF for all churches of the
Southern Cluster , 7 30 p m

each Sunday al the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road .)

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev . Jacob Lehman
Rev. Standley Brandum
JOPPA - Worship 10 am ,

Bible study and prayer

RUTLAND
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST

Rev. Samuel Jack son ,
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p.m.; evangelistic serv 1ce Sunday, pastor. Sunday School. 10 a.m .
7:

o

P

m

Mid ~ week

prayer Mr s Gertrude Butler, sup t.
Pr ayer Se r vice, 1.30 p m ;
preach mg service, 2 p m

3
Chu rch School, 10 am.
LETART FALLS _ Worship meeltng . Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
M IS Si onary mee t mg , second
10 a.m.: Church School 9 a.m . Wednesday, 7 30 p.m.
MORNING STAR - Worshtp
9. 30 am , Church School 10.30
UNITED FAITH NON .
a m . Mid-We ek Servoce, DENOMINATIONAL - Rev
Wed nesday, B&gt;' m.
Robert Sm ith. pastor. Sunday
MORSE CHAPEL - Worsh1p school. 9.30 am., class leader,

School, 10 a.m.

. , 1-6

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN

Larimore , pastor . Bob Moore, ser vtce, Wednesday, 7 30 p m

EAST LETART - Worsht p.
10am ,l.rstandthirdSundays ,
9 a.m, second and lourt h THE NAZARENE - Rev M C. am

WESLEYAN {Racinel -

Leo H1l l, worship serv1ce, 10· 30

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Keith Wi se, pastor
Sunday school, 9 30 a.m , V. H
Braley , supt.; worship service
and commun ion, 10·30 am ;
eve ning serv1ce, 7· 30 p.m.

Wednesday , Bible stud y. 7:30
a m , church, 7 30 p.m • prayer p.m Regular boa rd meet ing,
meetmg , Wednesday
7: 30 p m . third Saturday each
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN month
IN CHRIST-Eld on R Slake,
THE RUTLAND COMpastor . Sunday School. 10 a .m ;
MUNITY
CHURCH - Rev
Winnie Holsmger, sup I. Mar ning sermon, II a .m .. Evening Ri chard Dubbeld , pastor
serv1ce Christian Endeavo r , School, 9:30 am., Worship
7.30 p m .. Mrs. Lyda Cheva lie r, serv ice, 11 a.m ., Wednesda y
prestden t. Song serv 1ce and praye r meeti ng . 7:30 p.m
sermon, 8 20 Mid -Week prayer Sunday nigh I worsh1p, 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
meehng Wednesday. 7 30 p.m.
THE
NAZAR ENE - Rev.
Mrs . Man e Holsinger. class
Ll oyd 0 Grimm. Jr . pastor.
leader.
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School. 9· 30 a m.;
CHURCH Harrisonville Mornmg worsh ip. 10; JO a.m. ,
Roa d, Rev . Roy Taylor, pastor; Young people's servi ce, 6:45

Church Schoo l 9 a.m.; Prayer

Henry Eblm , Sunday School

services, 9 am , SUnday School

Pray er and praise servi ce,

MASON COUNTY
Thursday, 7 30 p m
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
NORTH BETHEL - Worship De&lt; ter - Worship services George Casto, pastor . Sunday
11 am .; Church SchoollOam. Saturda y an d Sunday , 7:30 School, 9 30 , even1n9 worship,
ALFRED - Sunday school. o.m
7 30. Thu rsday even tng prayer
eac h

Sunday ,

preaching at 11 am
Sunday

each

Prpyer meeting , 7 45

p.m Wednesday , WSCS. 8 p m.
on th ~rd Tuesday each month.
REEDSVILLE - Sunday

730pm Tuesday , WSCS.7:30
ftrs t Thursday eac~ month .
SILVER RIDGE't - Worshtp,
10 am , Church Sc hoo l, 9 a.m.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Wors h•p 9 a.m., Church School
10 am
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Hobarl Newel l, supt Services
weekly. 9:30 am . on Sunda y.
Preaching firs I and third
Sunda ys of monlh by Cl ifford
Sml
lh, 9 30 am ()C
HOBSON
HRISTIAN
UNION - Darrel Doddrlll.
paslor Sunday School, 9·30
a.m .. Leonard Gilmore, first
elder , evening service, 7: 30
p.m
Wedn esday prayer
m~~-n~~:R3~ApH. mC. HURCH OF
GOO - Racine Route 2. The
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor .
Sunday school , 9:45 a.m.;
morning worship, 11 a.m.
Evening services. Thuesday
and Friday, 7:30 .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Dav id
Jewell, pastor. Bible sludy, 9· 30
l .m : morning worship, 10·30;
evening worship, 6 30 p.m.
Weonesday B1ble study. 7.30
p.m.

¥ lJJIIIFOJ'?M5!

21,2 5-28

GASOUNE ALLEY

®M4 paper5
of ow ner~h ip !

H EM L 0
CK

~

ANO

EXAMINE
DUFFEL

DICK'S GROCERY

{Fom1er ly Domlgans )
New Owner - Dick Sargent
Old U. S. 33
Ph . 992-7735
Stop In and See Us

.

MONTG JMERY WARD

... WHY, YES, LI EUTENANT CAlAI!OlO. OUR
IHYESTKSATIOit SHOWS TliAT NEUrAL roa·•
FIFTY THOUSAND

·::::~/~ ORIGINALlY, Til~
REMAINING SUM
A SHORT TIME

CARPET-lAND, INC.

116 W. Main
Ph. 992-7590
Free Esllmoles · Guaranteed Installation

•

307 Spring Ave .
Ph. 992-2318

.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
0.

Attend the Church of Your Choice
'

STORE

Ph . 992-3496

J

SEARS .

'

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

F. J. WAll ar.E, JEWELERS

100 Years in Pomeroy
Kermit Walton

Bulova Wafches • Sales &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

22. Endure;
abide
23. Railroad
ear
:U. Quit
the

I
I KJ

IL_.L.
I _L_.L.
I--'::.......::J
\

NARFC

V
'I
1--._ A

I

L....l.:&gt;...&lt;.L.-'"-a...__J

] I

\m:wEs

I

I

•••
!!-!':AVE: AT 'THE !5EACH
-COUL.D !5E
DANGE~OUS!

[J

Now IIIT&amp;nfe the circled lellera
form the surpriae anawer, u
aucrtated by the above cartoon.

II
IPtitt . . . . AIISWIIItn 1A j·r :r xJ r xr r r
I K

)

to

(Ann•rn lomorrow)

scene

Jumbk" IIASS METAL

25. Was solici·

EL!Xll NESTLE

'V f!tlerd•:r"•

tous

Anawera f/G r nmur 1 it'• milrlf'r - MIASLIS

26. Anglo· •
Saxon
letter
27. Shoemaklng

l:
u
lJ

,l!

28. Indian
farmer
29. Scottish

••
••

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Authorized Catalog Merchant
Louis W. Osborne
220 E. Me in Pomeroy Ph. 992-2178

Church and Office Supplies . Gifts
992-2641
Middleport

20. Belief
21. Exhaust
22. Disfigure
23. Flash Gordon's girl
25. Arrive
(2 wds.)
27. Quarrel
(hyph .
wd .)
31. Bugbear
32. Run into
34. Gobbled
35. Partlet

"uncle"

Pomeroy

MIDDLPORT
. . BOOK STORE

7. Performlng (3
wds.)
B. Appre·
hended by
second
sight
9. Wander
aimlessly
11. Arkin and
others
15. Petition
18. Violent
happening

30. One
of the
DiMaggios
33. lnstmctive

Nationwide Insurance Co. of Columbus, 0 .

Meats and Groceries
992-3986
Syracuse

5. Fellow
6. Cockney
oath

~. I SIIIWK

Yesterday,&amp; Answer

pieces

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

SADIE'S MARKET

wiper

around

Wall-to-Wall Carpet Specialists

CATAlOGUE STORE
Mr . and Mrs . Charles R. Sheets
106 Court St. Pomeroy 992-3001

access

3. Duel
{3 wds.)
4. Fcot

20. Whimpers
21. Lug

D.B A ANTHONY
PLUMBING and HEATING
337 N. 2nd Middleport 992-3:-50

Middleport, Ohio

DOWN
1. - disl
atty
2. Mean s of

disease

All WEAlHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

M&amp;R FOODLINER

"no"

peace

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, Ohio

Middleport

38. Immediately following
this
39. Molotov's

19. Sheep

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Unocrambletheoe four Jumbles,
one letter to each squart, to
form four ordinary worda.

d'-

lL_-can
bear
(2 wds )
12. Lenient
13.Nabokov
novel
U . Musical
syllable
15. Egyptian
colton
16. Convent
dweller
17. Goddess
of

DICK TRACY

Sales-Allis Chalmers - Service
Farm · Industrial - Lawn · Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

GOEGLEI N tttADY MIX CO.

37. Raison

seat

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

The Store With A Heart
Racine
Ph . 949-3342

~WJWID~;UwJ IDt-~t.l .-4 , _

bantone ,

Antonio

10. Love

Chester, Ohio

RACINE FOOD MARKET

35. Mammo th
36. Famed

over

GAUL'S MARKET

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington , W.Va .

Pomeroy

ACROSS
I. Garden
dweller
5. Cloud

Bakers of Holsum Bread_
'
Middleport, Ohio

HEINER'S BAKERY

Yeslerday'a Crnlloqaole: PROVIDENCE SEES TO IT THAT
NO MAN GETS HAPPINESS OUT OF CRIME-VITl'ORIO
ALFIERI
'
(C 18T2 Klnr Featorot Sy•dlcate,loc.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

Pomeroy-Member FDIC &amp;
Federal Reserve System

F~ANKLIN

, l~ll '' Hf~ I"' TM ~ •• UI ' "' ()jl,

Middleport, Ohio

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

BEN

Ph. 992- 3865

MARK VSTORE

Family Recreation
Swimming, Camping

Furniture and Appliances
Ph . 985-3308
Chester,

Pomeroy

Member of the Big 3
General Merchandise
Tuppers Plain s
Ph . 667-3280

ROYAL OAK PARK

Phone 992-3284

'IOU 11em fff 1 "'-'-t:'IS! :t SAID t
00 ~ ~L.ATE TO VXJMAA~ VJORK.!

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

SWISHER &amp;WHSE

serv1ce, 7 30 p.m

G R 0 V E MASON FIRST BAPTIST CHRISTIAN - David &gt;Iauner, Second and Pomeroy Sts, Stan
pas to~ , Stanford Stocklon, supl Craig pa stor Sunday schoo l
Mornm~ worshop , 9 30 am ,
'
.
'
chu r ch school 10 30 ·
. 9.45 am .' .worship serv 1ce, 11
-0 un
a .m .. •am : tramtngunton.6:30p.m.,
1 '
Y g peop es meell~g , 6:JO evenmg worship service 7 30
P m.; evenmg worshtp, 7 30
Mid
k
' ·
Blble.atudy Wednesda
-wee pra yer service,
7. 30 p.m .
pm .
'
y, ·
Wodnesdav , 730pm
MT. UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Rev Cec'1l C
t S d
·
o&lt;, pas or. un ay -Le ta rt Route 1, the Rev. Stan
school supt ' Joe Sayre Sunday Craig, paslor Sunday sc hool,
school, 9 45 a . m. ; Sunday 9'30 a .m., prayer and Bible
eventng worship, 7 30. Wed- sludy, 7: 30pm . Cottage prayer
n~sday prayer and Bible study, service, Tuesday. 10 a.m ;
7.30 p.m .
worship service Friday 7· 30
T U P PER S
P LA I N S ' p m
'
' ·
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
MASON
CHURCH
OF
Eugene Underwood, pas lor; CHRIST- Loren T Ste phens
Howard Caldwell , Jr., Sunday minis ter. Worship, 10 a.m.,'
Scoo
h 1 Sup t.; Sun day Scoo,
h I. Biblestudy,ll : 15a.m.. evenlng
9 30 a. m ' Morn ing sermon, worshrp, 7:30 p.m. Mid-week
10 30 a .., m.; Sunday even ing serv ice. Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
se[l1t"ART0 j!'ALLS )JNITED MASON ASSEMBLY OF
Second St., Mason, W.
BRETHREN - Rev. Robert GODVa Chester Tennant pasto
Shook. past or; Herschel Norris, Sunday school, 10 a.,;,.; mo;·
supt. Sunday school. 9:30a.m .: ning worship, 11 a m.:
mor~lng sermon, 10 30 a .m .. evangelistic serv ice 7·30
evenrng sermon, 7·30 alter- Bible study and prayer .ser~~~·
natl ng each Sunday. Prayer Wednesday 7·30 p m Phon'0
servtce, Wednesday, 7 30 ~ .m. 773-513 3 ' ·
· ·
Prayer mee11ng, 7.30 p. m.
·
alternating Sundays.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF CHRISTin Christian Un ionGOD OF P~DPHECY. G. P. Rev . Autum Scott, pastor.
Sm it h, pastor. Sunday School, Sunday school, 9:30 am. ;
10a.m ; Arthur Henson, Supt.; James Hughes, Supt. ;
Morning Worsh ip 11 a.m ., evening service 7·30. Wed·
Youn~ Peoples service, 7 p.m. ; nesday even ing
prayer
Eventng serv ice. 7: 30 p.m.; meeting , 7. 30 p.IJl . No
Weone_sday Mid-Week Prayer Tuesday service.

Meigs County 'Branch

LODWICK'S MARKET

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH

9 45 a m. Bible study every Thursday, 7 30 p.m.

a m

1H2-&lt;7

296 W. Second

p.m .• Evangelist 1c serv1ces.

Mee ting. Wednesday, 8 p.m
oup1 . &gt;unday Sc hool. 9:30a .m.: 7 30 p m Wedn esday evening
LONG BOTTOM - Church evening worship , 7 30 p.m. service 7 30 p m .

9 4S

M I ~S WINNIE?

9 ·1

" We Sponsor Jesus "
Rev. Stan Craig , Pastor

School 10 am

PRISON FORA
WHILE1 RIGHT 1

ON 1HE CONTRAR_Y,.IM GOING
6ACK 1HIS WEEKt:ND TO
PERSONALLY PRESENT

·confetti!

mornmg worshtp, 10 30; Sun
day even1ng service, 7 30 , M id
WHITE'S CHAPEL
week serv1 ce, Wednesday, 7 30 Coolville RD. Rev Roy Deeter,
Pm
pastor. Sunday school, 9 30
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF am . worship serv 1ce, 10 30

Church School. 10 a.m .
PORTLAND - Worsh 1p 7 30
p m . Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worsh1p, 11 a.m
2nd and 4th Sundays ; Chur ch

LOOK!:&gt; LIKE 'ttJU .. ~... r.
SEE 1HE INSIDE OF A

Saturday
Lukt

Youth

7 30 p m ., ch urch sc hoo l, 9 30
am ;
mid·week
serv ic e.
Wednesday, a p m

11 am , l si and Jrd Sundays ;

FOR ALL 'THE LETTERS AND
FlOWERS I'VE RECEIVED !

Erne st

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - Robert E Musser,
pastor Sunday School, 9:30
a m. ·. Robert . Bobo, supt. ,

am , 2nd and 4th Sundays;

®DON'T FORGET ID MENTION MY
PEEP l'HANK6 ro EVERYONE

With the hope it will , in some measure, foster and help sustain that whi.c h i ~.
good in family and community life , this feature is sponsored by the bustness
firms and organizations whose _(1ames appear below.

CARMEL - Worsht p, 11
am ., lsi and 3rd Sundays .
Church School , 10 am
APPLE GROVE - Worshi p,

8 Pm
GREAT BEND - Worshtp 11

WINNIE WINKLE

Henry Dav iS, su pl .. even ong Meeling Wednesday, 7 30 p m.,

Church

Sundays, church sc hool , 9 a.m.,

TRADITION WITH HAF\1&gt;.1 ET
HOUNDSTOOT H -

DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Thur sday, 7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
Rev
Lawrence Sull ivan.
pasto r. Sunday School 9. 30 MISSION - Bald Knobs. Rev

10 am , Church School 9 am ,

WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m.

CLEAN LINE:SS IS MEREL'f A

S oclrr~

Mond ay

1s Tu esd ay .
FOREST RUN - Worship 9
am , Chur ch School 10 am ,

..I' ...

Charles Noms, pastor . Sunday METHODIST -

Acts

m.
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev. Murrel Floyd
ASBURY - Worshtp 11 a.m.;
Churc h School9 50 a.m.. WSCS,

'1,' '...

People are so busy here and there that they often fail to perceive the
beauty and grandeur of Creation.
A storm at sea, a beautiful sunrise or a full moon riding in a clear sky
are but commonplace aspects of the weather. Towering mountains, a great
waterfall or a fa r-spread fertile valley are but features of the landscape.
Blessed is the man gifted with the vision and understanding to see the
deeper meaning of Nature's matchless wonders .
For behind all the wonderful phenomena of earth and sea and sky Is the
pattern of a sublime plan which stirs the awe and challenges the imagination
of man. There can be but one answer to the marvels and wonders of the unl·
verse-God! The Church brings man Into spiritual relationship with his Creator.
Sunday

school, 9 30 ; prea ching, 7 30
p m Sunday, pra yer meetmg,

Fairview News Notes

U'L ABNER

UMYF 7 p.m.
School, 9 30 a.m ; Morn tng Pas tor
SALEM CENTER - Worsh• p ' worsh•p, 10· 45 a m , Sunday am ; Morn ing worsh ip, 10: JO

UMYF Thursday, 7 p

WHY '?

MY TAl&lt;.E5
HELP PAY
YOU!?
5ALARIE5.

P ome roy Harrison vi lle Sunda.y Sc hool 9 · J~ am .;
Road Kenneth Eberts. pastor. Wor~h1p service , 10. 30 a.m.

a m , Church School 9 15 a m ,
UMYF 6 30 p.m

RUTLAND -

oor

A WARRANT FOR
MY ARREST.

pa s lor Sunday School service p.m ; Thursday choir pract 1ce,
10 a m Prayer Meeting each 7
Thur~day 7 30 p m Sunday PD~XTER CHURCH OF
even1 ng service. 7 30 D m.
CHRIST _
Dann
Evans,

OLD
DEXTER
ANTIQUI'rY BAPTIST - CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
ENTERPRISE - Worship. 9
- Rev Wtllard Dutcher,
a.m.; Church School. 10 am . Rev Freeland Norris, pastor
FLATWOODS- Worshtp, 11 Sunday school. 10 a.m.; church . astor Mrs Worley Franc1s,
a.m.; Church School 10 a m
ser v1ce, 7 p.m . Wednesday Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School. 9 45 a.m. Church SerPOMEROY- Worshtp, 10 30 Btble stud y, 7 p.m.

am .; Ch urch School 10 a.m..

AND NOW 'IOU

fAY ltlt.l'VE

MR. SI1ARKEV, nilS 1$
A~ ENTOMOLO!J'I
FtE'-D TRIP~

"SVI 'LE
cOM· 7Chnst•anYouth
30
P m.
Wednesday,
ST IVEK
~
Crusade. 6.30
MUNITY , Rev. Edsel Hart, p.m : prayer meeting, 7 30

RACINE FIRST CHURCH fol low•ng Sunday School.
Second and fourth Saturday
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship OF THE NAZARENE
10 a.m .; Church School9 a.m.. Sunday School. 9 30 a .m.; evenmgs, 8 p m sennces
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Mornmg Worsh ip, 10.30 a.m ..
Evenmg worsh1p 7 30. Weo- UMYF 6 30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Evenina wors hoo, 7 30 p m, - Mr Robert Wyat l, pas lor .
nesday prayer meetmg , 7 30
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
Wedn esda y M1d Week Ser v1ce 1 Sunda y School supt.. Ronald
p.m
HEATH - Worsht p 10 30 Sunday School Superintendent, Osborne. Bible School, 9 30

the Sermonette

RIO· fMvS.

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE - Rev. Herbert

a.m ; Church School 10 a m

am, Church School 9· JO am,
UMYF 7 p m

MOST OF
71-\EM ARE

worship. 7 JO p.m .

.

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
Oae letter limply stands for another. In tbls sample A II
uaed far the three L'a, X lor the two O's, ete. Single letters,
apostrophes, Ule loncth and formation. of the words are all
hlnll. Each day the code !etten are dll'lerent.
CBYPI'OQUOTBS
GP RPFBPLP XJ WUAP BU PLBF, GP
WUFV

RPFBPLP

M.PNFPAJBWU .
-Y XQXYP

BK

BU

DWWQ

JZBK

UWJ

Q WK W·J Z PP QPF SO~·

STWU
KXQ ?

I

I M 6LAD

r CAN'T HEAR

WHAT ~OWARD COSELL 15
5AI(IN6 ASOUT THIS ...

�'

'

t• o r fr,

,

~ . ''f' ' l

II '

~

'

f

,

t

' '

8-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 1, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEADt.INES

In Memory

IN MEMORY ol Charles E.
Massar who departed from
Cancellation - Corrections
th is lite September 1, 1967, to
Wilt be a ccepted until 9 a.m . for. live in a world of peace and
Day of Publication
love with his Blessed
REGULAT I ONS
Redeemer . Greatly missed by
The Publisher reserves the
his wife , Leota ; son, Starl ing
rlghl ro edit or rejecf any ad~
and fdm ily; and lriends.
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be re sponsi ble
9-1-llp
for more than one . incorrect
5 P .M . Day · Before

Pl.!b l lcatiorf.
Monday Deadl ine 9 a .m .

Insertion.

R·ATES

For Wan"t Ad Ser vice

Lost

s cents per word one insertion LOST BETWE~N Pomer oy
Motor and Farmer's Bank,
Minimuin Charge 7Sc ~
12 cents per wo r d three
ladies wh ile gold Lady Elg in
con secu ti ve in sertio.,·s.
wa lch and band. Evelyn G.
16 cents per · word six con ·
Knighl , 118 Lincoln Hi ll.
seculi\o'e insertions . .
phone 992 -2433 .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
8-30-3lp
rds and ads paid with i n 10 days .
CARD OF THANkS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO for 50 word m inimum .

Wanted To Buy

Each add jlional word 2c .

OLD Furniture, oak ta bles,
BLIND ADS
organs , dishes, clocks, brass
Charge per
beds,
or comp lete households .
Advertisement.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt . 4OFFICE HOltR~ 1
8:30a .m.. to 5:0CI,p .m, Daily ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8:30 a . m . to 12 :00 Noon
6-28-llc
Saturday .
Additiona l 2k

Notice

For R;•·'(

Notice
r----~~~--~"1

''HEll"
HEAliNG &amp;
COOLING

Window ,_
Air Conditioners

Ho; Wa :e r Heaters
P lumbing
C: tcc"ic al Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
~91 - 2448

Pomeroy . 0 .

Fot Sale

Syracu '~ El' .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
*5.55

'i p .m .

8-29 -41&lt;
AUCTION NOTICE
WE wi sh lo thank al l w~o a t- NEW DELUXE ZIGZAG
tended the first day of the
sewing
machine.
Th is
George A. Eastman estate
machine makes buttonholes,
sale. and invite everyone to be
darns and embroid eries; all
wi th us on Sat.. Sept. 2. 1972.
withOut attachmen ts; phone
starling promptly at 10 :00
992 -.5331.
A.M. with farm tools, shop
8-29-tlc
equipment, etc.
CATTLE and larm mac ~i nery 8
TRACK
STEREO
wi ll sell at 1 P· m., with the 04
Repossessed, looks like new;
Caterpill er Dozer selling at 2
beauti ful hand rubbed Walnut
p.m .
cabine t; take over payments
IF you need cattle, machinery ,
o f $ 1. 50 per week or pay
s:1op equipment, feed or farm
$101.47 ; phone 992-5331.
tools, you can not afford to
8 29 11
miss this sa le.
· · c
Lunch Served
Mrs. John Epple, Adm .
LeBLANC clar inet. B flat , very
1. 0 . "Mac" McCoy
good con dition ; phone 66735 11 or 667 -3400.
8-30-3tc
8-29-Mc
-r·
YARD SALE. Thursday , Fr iday KENNEBEC potaloes, ss for
100 lb. ; see Joh n Pape. Racine
an d Saturday on Lar ki n
or phone 949-3025.
Street, Rutland .
8-29-61c
8-30-3tc

School Special!
PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

DANCE

NEW HOMES

3 BEDROOMS

CARRIERS
WANTED

The Daily Sentinel

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

____

-====::::;====:_,

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
991-2174
Pomeroy

Dozer &amp; End looder work,
pands, basement, l1~d·
scaping. We have 2 s1zt
dozers, 2 silt IDidtrs. ~ork
done by hour or conlroct.
Free Estimates. We aiSQ
haul lilt dirt, top S~&gt;ll. Dump
trucks and tow:boy for . hire .
See Bob or R09er JeHors.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone m5231.

Fallulous Seledion-lod! lottom Prices!

So Come In Now and Save Many $$On
A New Bvick, Pontiac or Opel. We
Have 4 Demos. That You Really Can
Save Some Money.

eROOFING
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

1971 Dodge ........... only $2695
Coronet Cust. 4 Dr . Seda n . Factory air. Low
owner . We wa nt to se ll this ca r .

1970 Dodge ................... $2695

~CLELAND
REALTY

6ot E. Main
~
01"11o .......

~.!.omeroy,

According to Its Old English
derivation, the word HOUSE
means a place to hide.
WHATEVER A HOU SE
MEANS TO YOU, WE' LL
FIND ONE TO MEET
YOUR NEED S! CA LL
TODAY.
NICE LEVEL LOT
I story - 3 bedrooms. Bath .
.Dining R. Utility space .
Paneling. Porches . A good
neighborhood . JUST $9,800.
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
4 bedrooms. Bat~ . Modern
kitchen . Storm Doors &amp;
Windows. Storage buildings.
1'12 ACRE of ground. CLOSE
IN $16,900.
POMEROY
EXCELLENT - 2 bedroom
home wtth walk-In closets.
Large livi ng room with
llreplace. Modern kitchen
and dining . Utility. 2 car
garage. Porches. JUST
$12,900.
WE HAVE THE CON TAC_TS, USE THEM FOR
THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY . JUST A
PHONE CALL AWAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
REALTOR
992-225t
ff no answec.m -2568

1967 Buick only ............ $1595
Elec. 225 4 Dr . H.T. Full power and air. Real
nice . 67 model.

1969 Ford ...................... $1595

WMP0/1390

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~;~~:·t

AUG. &amp; SEPT.

Sell down
It's NOW Tlmell
EXCELLENT SELECTION

35 CARS IN STOCK

Excellen~ Selection ... Maverick, Mustang, Fa icons, Torin

Gran ~ortno, Galaxie soo, LTO 2 Dr. &amp; 4 [)r ... Shop Early For B
Bargam_s. ~lso FlOO &amp; F2SO Pickup Trucks - V-S's, Automat
TransmiSSions.

15-'72 TR_UCKS ,IN STOCK

Wildca t. All white . Runs real good . Make
so m e one a real nice car for the pri ce.

WE NEED

i-------------------.
This Week Special
I

1
I

USED

I

:

1969 lnl '"h Ton Pickup

:

48,921 mil es on it. Thi s Week

I
I

I
1

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

Open Evenings Till 7 p. m . &amp; Sat . Till
ServicP Till 12 Noon on Sat .

992 -2174
.•

USED: CARS-

. TJHICKS

-~----

68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air......... .S1695

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancel led?
Lost
your ·
operator's license? Call m ·
2966.
6-15-tfc

68 Dodge Charger 2 Dr., H.T., V-8 auto•.• 11395
1

66 Oldsmobile 88 4 Dr. H.T... •.•. •.••••••• 795
65 Falcon 2 Dr., 6 c~. 1 std . ............... '195
61 Chev. 2 Door, 6 c~., std............... .'145

Holstein

Only 5- 1972 Oldsmobiles
Remaining At Sale Prices

DAIRY
DISPERSAL

Karr &amp; Van Zanclt

Albany. Ohio (Athens County&gt;. 3112 miles
northwest on St. Rt. 681 to Township Road lO.
North of St. Rt.
Watch for signs from 68 1.

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
I'OMEROY
Open Evenings Until 6l ClO-- Til .~ . PM. Sat..

so.

Friday, Sept. 8

TOO LATE
TO CLASSIFY

11:30

YARD SALE, 9 a. m. to ~ p. m.
Labor Day. Clothing, Shoes,
Household articles. Fay Sauer,
U!adlng Creek Road, Mid·
dlepott, Route I.
9-1-2tc

·
51&gt;-HOLSTEIN COWS&amp; BRED HEIFERs-50
23 cows fresh In August and.September, balance due from
October to January . Damsareallslred by COBA bulls and
cowsselllng are by COBA bulls. 10 first calf ~elfers, sired
by Curtiss bulls. due In September and October. All
animals are bred to a Hereford bull.

REUNION PLANNED
Areunion of the family of the
late Frederick Buck will be
held Labor Day, Sept. 4 at
Rising Sun Park, Lancaster. A
basket dinner will be held at
noon. For additional information local friends a d
relatives may contact eith .
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs or Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs.

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

69 Ghev. Bis. 2 Dr., 6 c~ .• std ........... .'1295
69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air..... '1695

Pontiac

BUICk

70 Chev. Impala 4 Dr., V-8, auto.... ..... 11995
69 Dodge Polara 4 Dr., H.T., air .......... 11995

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
dellv,red right to )'Cur ·
pro/ect. Fast and ea5y . Free.
esl mates . Phone 992 ·l2U, ·
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.
·
6·30-tft .

.

OPEN EVES. 1.00 P.M.

_,PMEROY, OHIO

COWBOY GONE
ANN ARBOR , Mi ch .
(UPI ) - Seolor tailback
Alan " Cowboy" Walker,
Michigan's second-leading
r e turning
rush er,
mysteriously left the team
Thursday and dropped out of
sight.
"Alan Walker withdrew
from the team, " Coach Bo
Schembechler said after
practice. " He doesn' t want
to play football any more."
Schembechler would not
elaborate but Walker was
believed to be withdrawing
from school, which begins
Friday.

•'

ALSO LUNCH MEAT, SOFT DRINKS, BREAD, MILK, PICNIC SUPPLIES, ETC.

•••
~·

r--suusFmsiro;~~nt~iNomNiwAffRME~N---1

.

••'
••

fLOW. HOME GROWN CANTALOUPES, FRESH CORN-PUUEDI

.,·:.,

f · DAILY AND OTHER PRODUCE FOR THE HOLIDAY AHEAD.

.,

••

'

I

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

7-33 MARKET

992-5880

'.

Open 8 to 8 Daily-Thurs. &amp; Sat. Til 6

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

,·

..
••

8

CHEVROLET KING~ WOOD 3 SEAT ST. WAGON
Golf Green finish. green viny l int., tint . glass , 4 season a ir
conditioned , fron t and rear mat s, side mldgs., power
ta ilgate. super lift rear shocks. wh. covers. AM radio, F&amp; R
guards, luggage carrier, USxlS w-w tires, 350 cu . in .
engine, p. steering and brakes, turbo hydrami!llic .
Retail 55068.40 - Closeout. 54315.DD

·.

,,

·

KEITH GOBLE FORD

NEW\972 CLO~EOUTS!
CHEVROLET BROOKWOOD2 SEAT ST. WAGON
Dark Blue with Black vinyl Interior. roof dr ip mldg .. body
side mldg., L 78x15 W· W tires, P.B., radio, luggage carr ier,
350 V-e engine. turbo ~ ydramatic. p. sleering and brakes.
Retail 54210.40 - Closeout S3598.00

This Is a real good working herd of cows show!
plenty of slzund milk. All were ral11d on the ,,;m fromrrg1
foundation ot Wisconsin cows.

•'••
L-~-------.J •,••·~
'

·

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

------

:',.
·'.•''
;;

s PM

OPEN IAM 'TIL9 PM-7 DAYS A WEEK
Worthy Rogers and Marcia Capehart
Corner SR 7 &amp; 33

o.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

461 S. 3rd

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Members of the Happy
Hustlers Sunday School class
of the Methodist Church enjoyed a six o'clock dinner in the
church social rooms Friday
evening, Aug. 25. Mrs. Ullian
Jividen was honored with two
birthday cakes, sherbet and
tea. Mrs . Bertha Spencer
oresented a program after the
jinner. There were several
readings by members, songs
&gt;nd prayer. A business session
foll owed the program .
Mr. Clarence Wickline is
&gt;gain hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan spent a
week in Columbus with her
sister, Mrs. Fern Gilmore and
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb and
family and Jeff Parsons of
Miami also was a guest. Mrs.
Carnahan visited her sister,
Mrs. Loe Tisdale at Buckeye
Lake also.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Holman
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
William Holman and family of
Memphis, Tenn., spent a week
vacation with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs,. Earl Holman.
Mrs. Roger Holman visited her
mother, Mrs. Mid Hubbard, at
Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sacco of
Chicago visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Holman and
family several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Beckwith
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Swan of Parkersburg were

Sabbath School attendance
at Free Methodist Church on
August 27 was 104. Offering for
all services, which was
building fund day, was $228.24.
Mrs. Daisy Buckley, Karrie,
Keith, Patty and Larry Mit·
chell, Akron, visited recently
with Rev . Buckley and family.
David Williams of Columbus
spent a week with his grandmother, Mrs. Ben Brown, and
the Lawrence Eblin family .
Mrs. Georgia Diehl visited
recently with Mrs . Nellie
Tracy, Ball Run .
Mr . and Mrs. William
Peeples of U!xingtoo attended
Sunday morning services at
the local ahurch.
Mr. &amp; Mrs . erman Kaspar
and son, Ronald, Dayton, spent
several days with r,lrs. Bertha
Parker and Mr. Kaspar 's
mother, Mrs. Amanda Kaspar,
Mr. and .Mrs. Rny Smith and
family and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Arnold.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell of
Illinois were called here by the
SPEAKER NOTED
death of Mrs. Howell's sister,
The Rev. Loran Strahm of
. Grove City will be evangeUst
Mrs. Earl Roush .
Mr . and Mrs . Herman for revival services to begin
Kaspar of Daytori called on Mr. Sunday and continue through
Sunday, Sept. 10, at the Rutand Mrs. Walter Walker.
Mrs . Charley B.rown of land Church of the Nazarene.
GallipoUs visited her mother, Servicea will be held at 7:30
Mrs. Cora Renshaw recently. each evening and at 10:30 a.m.
,
on Sun~ays . The Rev. Uoyd D.
In 1971,PresidcntNixon froze Grimm, Jr ., pastor, has exthe pay of fedPral workers for .tended an Invitation to the
six months.
public.

•

r

'I

Middleport

Phone 992-2196

Racine Social Events

•'

1

CARS.~

Your Trade Is
Worth More NOW

Buy Of A Lifetime!
Come In Now!

I
1

only '1395
~-------------------J

SEE US FOR : Awnings , iform ·
doors and wll)dows, cArports, ;
marquees, aluminum '!ildlng ·
and rail ing . 'A. Jacob, sales' :
representative . For free, ;
estimates, phone Charles .
Lisle, Syracuse , V. V. :
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
3-2-tf•

OWNER .
Don Bradley, Auctioneer
-Lunch Avallabl- , .

FORD

1965 Buick ...................... s595

-SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makH. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorl2ed Singer Sales and ·.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.'
3·29-tfc

Earl Bailey

'72

F -L 500 Wagon . Auto . Small VB . Rea l nice
wagon. Local owner .

WILL DO light ~aullng " in al ·
ternoons . Phone 992 ·39Q3 .
8-27-61&lt;

DAIRY EQUIPMENT
Haverly 300 gal. bulk tank ; Surge 30 plus compressor · 5
Surge units ; stainless steel wnh vats; large stalnl~ss
steel strainer; Jamesway Llquldmatlc barn cleaner .
Jamesway Llquldmatlc elevator: 24 drinking cups ; ·AO
sta nchlons.

GIGANTIC SELLDOWNIII

LeSabre 4 Dr . Sedan. Factory a ir. One owner.
Real sharp. 69 model. Pri ced to sell.

O'DELL WHEEL alignment'
localedat Crossroads, Rt . 12&lt;1.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced elecAll
work .
tronically .
guaranteed.
RfllllcnnAhl•
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
9&lt;12-3213.
f ·V ·nC

30 day test, TB &amp; Bangs tested. Individual health papers
furnished.

End of Model

1969 Buick ..................... $2195

SEWING Mach ine Service,
clean, oil, adjust, S39'/,l n your
home; phone 9'12·5331.
8-11 -JOtc

Real Estate For Sale

A~

Monaco 4 door Hard Top . Full power equipment , a~r, one owner, only 26.000 miles.

LEGAL NOTICE

We talk to JOU
like t peiSOil.

•

EARllt MOVING

OOZE R and back hoe work.
ponds and septic tanks, ditReal Estate For Sale
ching service : lop soil, fi ll
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex 8 ROOM house, bath , large lot , cavaling . P~ one 992 -5367 ,
gas and electric, Rt . 1.
Midd leporl . P~one 9&lt;12-2602. Di ck Karr , Jr .
9-1-lfc
8-27-8tp
WILL CUT or trim trees .
ONE ACRE and old -house In
reasonable; also clean out
Pom eroy . Phone 992-6675.
ba semenls , attics
and
8-3l-3tp cellars; phone 949-3221.
8-29-30tc
TWO BUILDING Lots in
Harri so nville . One Is ap · SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
For Free Estimate
prox imately 1 acre with REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446septi c tank and a dr illed well
4782, Gallipolis. Jo~n R_ussell ,
PHONE 992-2550
and a dug well. Doyle Hudson,
Owner &amp; Operator.
·
P~on e 992-5048.
S-12-tfc
8-31-3tc
INTERIOR, exterior pa inting .
remodeling, bu ilding. Contact
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Ernest Deeter, Bashan.
CONVENIENT but secluded
Complete Service
8-31-6tc
building lots at Ro~k Springs,
Phone 949-3821
ciO&lt;e to High School &amp; Fair
Racine, Ohio
PRICE CONSTRUCTION ,
Ground ; call or see Bi ll Witte,
'Critt Bradford
roof ing , pore ~ repair and
992-27 89 after 5 p.m. week S-l-Ife
electrical ; p~one 742-4286.
days .
.~......................- -8-16-J&amp;Ic
8-6-30ic SEPTIC tanks clean'ed. Miller
--------~
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn .
TUNE -UPS, brake jobs and
LOTS ON Wright St reel.
662-3035.
Pomeroy; phone 7.42-5930.
2-12-llc ot her auto work . Very
8-29 -12tc -.-----,---reasonable rates . Waine s
BACKHOE AND DOZER work:· Aulo Service, school lralned.
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
Route 1, Shade, Oltlo 992-6547,
Septic tankslnslal led . Georqe
985-3529.
(.Bill ) Pullins. P~one 99'2 -247~ . next lo Whaley's Pa int S~op .
6-11 -tfc
8-20-12ic
4-25-ttc

Buy 2 Pairs and
LEGAL NOTICE
Get
1 PAIR FREE
To th e unknown he irs and
devisees of John Betzing
All kinds, all sizes for men,
deceased ; th e unknown heirS
women , voung men, boys
and devisees of Conrad Betzing,
deceased; the unknown heirs
and girls. Hurry to
and devisees of Bertha Betzing
Bah r, deceased; the unknown Wo rm
·
POMEROY
you rse lf
fr om
heirs and dev isees of Peter Worldliness &amp; Worrying to
~
Jack
w. Carsev, Mgr.
Bet zing ,
deceased; · the.
the
Word
&amp;
Worship.
Phone992-2
181
unknown heirs and devisees of
'---...:..:.::.:.:..:..:=~-__1
Srel ta Hoffman. deceased ; the
Sunday Sc~ool-9:30 A.M.
un!&lt;.nown heirs and devisees of
COA L, Limestone, Excelsior
Worship-10 :4S A.M.
John Betzlng , Jr .. deceased ; th e
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
Young
People-6:30P.M.
unknown heirs and devisees of
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
Etdo Betzing, deceased ; th e Evening Worship-7 :30P.M.
4_12_tfc
unknown heirs and devisees of
Prayer Mtg .-Wed . Night
______ _ _ __
Ralph Betzing, decea sed; th e
7:30P.M.
unknown heirs and devisees of
POO DLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
Henry Be tzing, deceased ; th e
Park view Kennels , Phone 992unknown heirs and devisees of KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
wig s, more new products
5443 .
Lupert Betzing, deceased; th e
unknown heirs and devisees of
com in g soon. For free
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _8_-15-tfc
Will Betzing, deceased; th e
demonstration, phone 992 ·
CA
NNING lomatoes and
un known heirs Md devisees of
5113.
Ernest Betz.ing, deceased; the
mangoes. Geraldine Cleland,
8-17-tfc
unknown he1rs and devisees ot
Racine, Ohio.
1
Eva Jo hn son, deceased ; and the
GARAGE Sale at Dwain Durst PONY , , quarter horse, we ll
SPEC
IAL
lor
t
~
e
Older
Gi
rl
trained Mila Powe-l l, ca ll 992· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
8·_16-tfc
unknown heirs and devisees of
residence near Fire Sta lion,
Now thru Se pte mber 15,
Helen Hormals, deceased
2622.
Reedsvill e, Ohio . Fri day ,
You a re hereby potified that
everythi ng half-price to
8·30-3tc SEVERAL varle li es of lop
Saturday
and Sunday.
you have been n :-: :1
fen . Senior Citi zens. The Beauty
quality, tree ripened, can ning
dants in a lega l action en1i fled
Spot, Phone 992 -2840.
- - - - - - - - - - - llj165 HARLEY Davidson 74 , peaches ; now availab le RACINE - 10 room house/
C. F. Betzlng, Plaintiff, vs .
8-31 -3tc
through ear ly September;
bath, basement, garage, two
Phone qas.4132 .
Archie Betzing, et al. , Defen.
Help
Wanted
8-30-61c
Bob's
Mar
ket,
Mason,
W.
Va
.,
.lots.
Phone 949-4313.
dant s. This action has been
4-S-tfp
above the Pomeroy-Mason
assigned Case No . 15 11 8 and is YA RD SALE. T~ursday. Fr iday ATTENTION LADIES - Sel l - - - - - - - - - and Saturday , 10 a. m. 'tl l8 p.
pending In th e Court of Common
APPLES.
Fitzpalrick
Or
Bri
dge
;
phone
773-5308.
-Toys &amp; Gifts now thr u
Pleas, Meigs County , Pom ero y,
m. Household items, clothing
chard s, Slate Route 689 .
8-15-tfc IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
December with the oldest Toy
O~lo . 45769.
and a little of everything ,
Phone
Wilkesville
669·3785.
-Conchas. New flhexico. $2,975.
Part
y
Plan
in
the
Country
.
The object of the Complaint is
Across from Happy Hollow on
No Down . No Interest. $25 mo.
High
est
commissions,
No
8-30-lfc
Real
Estate
Fo
r
Sale
to reform a deed or the Plain tiff
Rt. 12.4 nea r Rutland.
for 119 mo s . Vac ation
Cash Oullay. Call or write
for rea l estate situated in
8-31-2tc
Paradise. Fre e Brochure.
Orange Townsh ip, Meigs
"Santa's Par ties", Avon Ct. ALL electric mobile home with 3 BEDROOM house in
County, Oh io, to in clud e th e
Harrisonville; phone 742-3386.
Ranchos La ke Conchas : Box
06001 . Tel. 1 (2031 673-3455. add -on. enclosed porch, 7
entire Interest in the rea l estate
w-w
carpeting
8-30· Jtp
2001 DD, Alameda, California
ALSO BOOKI NG PARTIES. r ooms,
desc rib ed In Volume 123. Page
94501.
9-1-tfc
throughout
,
furn
itu
re.
ap
25, Me igs County Deed Records ,
8-6-30tp
plian ce, drapes , la und ry 5 ROOMS and bath , nice size
In lieu of the one -half interest as
ba ckya rd . New a lumi num - -- -- REFINED
woman
in
need
of
room
with
Maytag
washer
&amp;
described th erein and to quiet
siding , roof and in sulation . 5 ROOMS &amp; bath. 2 story block
WHISPERING PINES
home to live in and care for dryer in Rio Grande. $5,500,
the title or the Plaintiff against
Ove-rlooking new Belvi ll e
house ; gas forced air furna ce,
all of tl)e Defendants t~ sa id
inval id woman. Nursing Ph . 245-5448.
Loc;ks and Dam in Reedsv ille.
action .
v. acre lot , Rt . 7&amp; Old Chester
NITE
CWB
experience not necessary .
9-1-3tc
Ohio. Phone 378-6365.
You are required to answer
Rd .. $5.500 ; ph one 9&lt;12-3874.
Sa lary negotiable. Write E.
the Complaint within 28 days
8-30-31c
Music
By
8-29-tlc
Donal
dso
n,
5440
Phea
sa
nt
COLONIAL slyle stereo, AM- - - - - - - - - -after the last publ ica tion of th is
Dr ive , Orient, Ohio 43146.
The Memphis SOunds
FM radi o, 4 speakers, 4 speed PT PLE ASANT - 6 room
no11ce, wtllch wil l be published
9-1-2fc
onc e each week for six conreco rd changer . Balance house , 11t2 baths , recreation OUT OF STATE . IDEAL SACR E RANCH . Lake Consecu tiv e weeks . Th e last
J pc . trio from
$78.52. Use our budget term s. room, new built -in kitchen.
publ ication will be made on
AUTO BODY man, experience
chas
. New Mexico. $2975. No
New P~iladelphia
Call 992-7085.
must sel l, leav ing town . Days
September 15, 1972, and th e 28
necessary. we want a man
down
. No interest. $25 per mo.
9-1-61c phone 992·3502, evenings
days for answer will commence
who can do quality work in a
for 119 mos . Vacation
Saturday
Night
on that date.
reasonable length of time . MODERN Walnul stereo. AM- phone 675.2J72.
Paradise . Fr ee Broch ur e.
In case of your failure to
8·_
10
til2
biggest and best body
The
Ranchos La ke Conhas : Box
FM radio, fea tu res 4 speed _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
3o_.tfc
answer or oth erwise res pond as
shop ln the area, excellent
2001
DO. Alameda, California
required by the Oh i'o Rules of
changer.4speakers.separate BEDFORD Tow nship - 32
pay and fr inge be nefits.
94501
.
Civ il Procedure, judgment by YARD SA LE. Labor Day , Sept.
controls. Balance $68.41. Use acres of lan d, some good
Contact
Jlm
Buchanan
,
Body
defautr wi ll be: rendered aga inst
8-29-301p
4, 9a .m. lo7p.m.; Norman E.
our budget terms . Ca ll 992- limber, oil Rt . 681 - $4000 ;
you fo r the relief demand ed i n
Shop Foreman, Mason County
Hyself
residence
,
near
7085.
Raci ne - 3 bedroom house
tt1e Compla int .
Motor Company, Chevrolet
Hospi ta l on County Road No.
9-1-6tc and 1.4 acres , ba semen t
Dated : August 11. 1972
and
Oldsmobile
Dealership,
76 : an tiques and misc. items ;
Evelyn Lucke
dishwasher and gar Poin t Pleasant, W. Va . Phone DON ' T pump your sluggish 24x38,
Gravely outfit, brass bells,
Clerk of Cour ts of
b
d
1
1 1 ·
d
1304)
675-3370.
septic tank . Get Klean. Em age isposa , cen ra a1r an
Meig s County , etc .
cen
tral
heat
$18,000.
Phone
8-31 -21&lt;
Common Pleas Cou r t,
9-1 -2lp
All Septic Tank Cleaner . 949 -3211. GEORGE HOB Pom eroy. Ohio
Landmark Farm Bu rea u. ST ETTER , JR .,
REAL
(8} 11 , 18 , 25, (9) 1, 8, 15, 6t
PI.ANO &amp; organ lessons by
Pomeroy .
ESTATE
BROKER ,
9-l-ltc POMEROY, OHIO.
graduate of Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music witt1 23
8-J0·3lc
2 New Homes, all e~ctrlc. 3
IN THE MATTER OF
ALLIS·CHALMERS C traclor
yean&gt; teach ing exper ience ;
bedroo ms. full basement and
SETTLEMENT
OF
AC ·
with s ide mower ; Oscar
phone 9&lt;12 -3825.
COUNTS,
garage, with lake frontage;
W
eber,
Sta
te
Route
248
B
ROOM,
2
story
bnck
house,
8-23-121&lt;
PROBATE COURT,
9-1-Jtp baseme nt , barn &amp; out
at Five Points area .
IN
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
buildings
;
1
to
J
acres
as
RED
UCE
e)(cess
fl
uids
with
Accounts and vouchers or the
STEREO tape player for car. needed ; on Ohio Power
FL UIDE X, Sl.69 - LOSE
follow ing named fiduciaries
Clifton and
S25; ca ll 9&lt;12-5786.
electric; on Main Street, Rut have been filed in the Probate
WEIGHT wi lh Dex -A-Di el
PH. 992-2571
9.1-Jtc land; phone 742·4691 after 5
Court, Meigs Coun ty, Ohio, for
capsules, $1.98 . at Ne lson
approval and setflement :
Drug .
-------------------p.m.
Hartford, W. Va.
OR 992-3975
CASE NO. 11 ,620 Thir ty -sixtll
9-l-6lc
9-1-llp
5-15
"
CHEVY
wheels.
He"
Account of Myrtle E. Carman ,
Guardian or Clyde W . Carman ,
opening ; 2-15" Ford wheels. r - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
PHONE 992-2156
SKIN disorders? Try Toco2%" opening ; 1-16" Ford
an Incompetent Person .
Oerm Vitam in E cream 1260
CASE No . 18,496 Eleventh
wheel, 31/e" opening ; 1-14"
Annual Account of Mary Tra cy
IU per tube al Nelson Drug.
Ford wheel. 2'-'e" opening ; 2·
Riggs , Guard ian of the Person
9-1-11p
16"
Chrys ler wheels , 31J:2''
and Estate of caralynn Tracy
opening; $3 a piece ; phone
and M.:Jralynn Tracy, minor s. TRY "Sleepers" tonight lor ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES.
742-4691 after 5 p.m.
CASE NO . 19.567 Second and
110 Mechanic Street
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th .
9· 1-Jtc
Final Account of Paul E . Klees, sate and restful sleep, onl y
Last
chance
to
hop
aboard
the
Gua rd ian of the Person and 98c at Nelson Drug.
PLAYHOUSE TOY train to TWIN Needle Sewing Machine
9-1-llp
Estate of Amy Esther Graham,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
success . We 're se ll ing toys
a minor .
.
1972 model in walnut stand.
and booking part ies, having
CASE NO , 19,71 1 Fourth COUR T Slree l Cab. Pomeroy.
All fea tures built in to make
Accoun t of Free land S. Norris,
fun and gell ing pa id. As a
wi
ll
be closed on Labor Dey,
fancy des igns and do stretch
THE LATEST NEW LISTING
Guard ian of the Estate of
demo I have no deliveri ng , no
sew ing. Also buttonholes.
RENOVATED - Lovely 2 bedrooms, large living , nice
Donald Lovett, an incom peten t Sepl. 4lh and wi ll be open lor
coll ection, and I do not need
business, Tuesday, Sept. 5th.
blind hems etc. $.43.35 cash
kitchen and gas for ced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
person .
any
experience. I get free
9-1-2lp
CASE NO . 20,16.4 First and
pri ce or terms available.
fo wall carpeting. Partial basement on large lot. Asking
Final
deadline
for
training
.
Fina l Accoun t of Haze l M .
Phone 992-5641.
only $11,500.00.
Bla ckwood , Administratr ix of SPE CIAL - Thursday, Friday &amp; hiring is Sept. 25, call me now
9-H ic
don ' t wa it, Margaret Fortune:
the Estate or Al len Dean Bla ck
Satur~ay . With a fi ll-up of
MIDDLEPORT
wood. deczeased .
949-54 14 or Barbara Lambert, VACUUM Cleaner . Electro
~as , oil chan~e and filter - a
CASE NO . 20,3 81 Fi rst and
4
BEDROOMS
2
baths,
ni ce kitchen wit~ bar and cook
ree grease tob. Free pickup 446-3411.
Hygiene New Demons trator
Final Accoun t of Richard
un
1ts.
Garage
and
den
in
full
basement. Covered patio on
8-22-lfc
and de livt'ry . Queen 's Penn__.:_:...
has al l cleaning attachments
Chambers , e~~:ecu t or Of the
back
ol
house.
Asking
$24,000.00.
zo
il
,
North
Second
Ave
estate of Ethe l Thompson .
plus the new Electro Suds for
Middleport ; phone 992-9913: DOMESTIC ~elp . Send resume
deceased .
shampooing carpet . On ly
CASE NO . 70,527 First and
to P. 0 . Box 405, Pomeroy .
LEVEL LOT
8-29 -4tc
$27 .SO cash pric e or terms
Fin al Account of Virgil v .
8-30-3tc
CO
RNER
With
a
four
room house, ~a s gas , city waler,
ava
ilable.
Phone
9&lt;12-5641.
Brown , Administrator of the
and
electric.
Ask
ing
only
$2,500.00.
REWARD
.
fo
r
shopping
at
9-1-6tc
Esta te of Lewis M. Brown ,
Showalter's Wei Pel Shop
dec eased
Chester , Ohio: 10 per cent 0 f Mobile Homes For Sale
: HRYSLER BOAT DEALER. 1
CASE NO . 20,574, First and
LOTS-LOTS-LOTS
Final Account of Leora Young ,
your total purchase ma y be CASH pa id for all makes ani! Tarry Bass Fishing Boat wi th
1 ACRE - Nice laying on high ground. Chester water
EKe&lt;; utr ix of th e Es tate of Josle
appli ed to the purchase of any
available. 11 loi s In all.
model s of mobile homes . 20 h. Mercury, w-trailer ; 1
Roush , deceased .
ceramic items.
Phone area code 614-423 -9531. Monarch Fishing Boat with 20
Un less exceptions are filed
2·30tp
4-13- tfc h. Mer cury , w-trailer ; 1
thereto, sa id accounts will be _ _ _ _ __ _8.:_·.:_
Cherokee Fishing Boat with
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
-----for hearing before said Court on
40 h . Johnson. w-frai ler ; your
5 BEDROOMS - Nea r downtown shopping nice kitchen
the 30th day of September, 1972,
FOR THE BEST dea l in a new
pi ck lor 11,000 ; also 1972 GMC
at which time said accoun ts will
with double sink. 2 porches and full baseme~l. A good buy
or used mobile home, try
be conside red and cont inued
Sprin t pickup. automatic, W·
at only $7,500.00.
Mobile
Home
Sales,
Kanauga
from day to day until finally Employment Wanted
air , $4,250; 1972 Internationa l
Kanauga, Ohio.
disposed of .
pickup. 12.650; 197 1 Dodge
7-16-301&lt;
LOOK FOR THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN, THEN
Any· person in tere sted may AVAILABLE immediately ,
pic kup , 12,350 ; 1970 Ford
YOU'LL KNOW IT'S FOR SALE. BUY FROM YOUR
file written exceptions to said
Genera l Carpenter Foreman.
Fair lane 500, w-alr. 11.950;
accou nts or to matters per LOCAl
BROKER ; IT'S GOOD BUSINESS AND FOR
P~one 9&lt;12-6675.
r
1969 Cadillac DeVille Sedan,
ta ining to the execut ion of the
THE
ECONOMY
OF MEIGS COUNTY. WE'RE TRYING
8-31
-3tp
• Air Conditioners
tru st. not less than five days
loaded . $3.450 ; 1971 In FOR
A
BIGGER
AND BETTER YEAR .
prior to the date set for h!!aring .
ternational pickup, like new ,
•Awnings
MANNING WEBSTER
12,350; 1948 Chevrolet pickup,
Probate Judge
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
· • Underpinning
992-3325
like new , $1 ,050 ; Longfellow
Meigs County, Ohio
Motors,
2
mi.
S
.•
Ravenswood
(9) 1. ltc
NOTICE TO
'c omplete mobile home
on Rl . 2; phone (3041 273-3594.
TAXPAYERS
service - plus gigant ic
Notice is hereby given , i n
9-1·21c ~---:::-----:---------­
comp liance with sec tion 57 15-17 'display of mobile homes
Big Capoclty
MOBILE HOME for sa le
The Almanac
rev ised code , !hal the tax always available at ...
Maytog
1969
SCHULT
Custom
mobi
le
Autom1ttca
By Untied Press Internationa l relurn s of Meigs County, for the
home, 6())( 12, double expando.
year 19 72 have been rev ised and
MILLER
2 sp.eed operation .
Today is Friday, Sept. I, the th e valuations completed and
Early American Decor, new
Choice of water
are
open
for
public
inspection
at
24~th day o[ 1972 with 121 to
carpe t , awning and un MOBILE HOMES
temps .
Auto.
the off ic e of the Cou nty Auditor
derpinning ; phone 992·3712.
water
leve l
follow.
in _the Cou rt HotJse , P.omeroy,
1220 Washington Blvd.
9-1-6tc
control.
Lint
The moon is between il.s last Oh iO. Compla ints against any 423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
Filter or Power
valuat ion or assessment, except
quarter and new phase.
Fin Ag ftator .
! he
valuations fixed and
Perm a· Press
ass
essments
mad!
by
the
Tu
The morning stars are
Moytog
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
Mercury, Venus and Saturn .
heard bY the Co un ty Board of For Rent
HIID Of Heat
Dryers
The evening stars are Mars Revis ion , at its office in the 3 ROOM apartmen t, un Court House , Pomeroy, Oh io, on
Surround
clothes
fu
rnished.
408 Spring Ave.,
and Jupiter.
or after August 30. 1972 .
with gentle, even
Pomeroy .
Those born on this date arc Comp lai nts must be made in
heat. No hot'spots ,
I
wri ting, on blanks furni shed by
8-10-llc
r:o overdr'( lng .
under the sign of Virgo.
the County Aud itor and flied In
----Fine Mtsh ·Lint
his
ott
ice
on
or
before
the
t
ime
American author Rex Beach limited for payment of ta)(eS for 8x35 HOUSE trailer; country
Filler.
·
We Specialize In
was born Sept. I, 1877.
th e first half year, or a1 . an y
location ; phone 992-3954.
MAYTAG
t!me during whiCh taxes are
9-1-31c
On this day in history :
received by the County
In 1878, Miss Emma Nutt rreasurer , wlt~out penally lor 'J AND 4 ROUM furnished and
became the first telephone the first half year .
unfurflished apartments.
Gordon
H. Caldwell
UN YOUR DIAL '
operator when she took over a
Auditor of Meigs County
'hone 992-5434.
741-4211
4·12-tfc
·
Arnold Grate
8-30-IOlc
Rutland
switchboard In B06ton.
----~-----~----------~

SYRACUSE
CHURCH OF
NAZARENE

BIG

Business Services.

MOBILE home in 1013 CAMPERS and low profile
comp letely lur - Travel Trail ers in stock,
ni-s hed , alr -con(titioning in lowest price in ln -Stotc area;
1972 trailers. huge discount ;
bedroom . Phone 992 ?-141 after
Camp Ct.. lley Starcraft Sales,
5 p. m.
Rl. 62, N. ol Pt. Pleasant
8·31 -llc
behind Red Carpet Inn .
8-25-7tc
· ~'or Sale
---------- FOR YOUR heallh 's sake eat
LARGE select ion of beautiful organically grown tomatoes ;
mahogany dining suites;
8 . Quisenberry has large
bedroom outfits ; also, usual · ones, lOc pound at the old Post
stock of other clean uSed ·Otti ce buil ding, Syrac use:
On Most American Cars
furniture. applian ces dt Ohio.
KUHL 's BARGAIN CEN 8-2J.12tp
- GUARANTEEDTER. "at ca ut ion lighl." Rt .
. Phone 992-2094
7, Tuppers Plains, Ohio .
REDUCED lo sell , registered
Closed Mondays.
8-27-6tc Toy Fox Terrier puppies. Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Hea lthy, have had shols, $25
OpenS Tit 5
each . Papers furn ished .
2 MINIATURE poodles. $25
Monday
thru ~aturday
Phone 742 -5625.
each. Phone 992-7230.
8-29-6tc L:...'0..:6..:E..:.:...M.:a:...in..:._P..:om=e:.:ro~y;_'o:.:'__..j
8-31 -3tc
NEW

REGULATION size pool lable,
like new ; phone 992-2234 after

Keith ·Goble Ford In Middleport

guesl.s Sunday of Mrs. Isabel
Simpson.
Guesl.s of Mr. and Mrs, Critt
Bradford were Critt Bradford
Jr. of Worthington for the
weekend and Mr. and Mrs .
Herman Carson of Coolville on
Sunday .
Mrs. Helen McDevitt and
gra nddaughter , Cher yl
Merriman, of East Liverpool
were weekend guests of their
cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Curt
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J . Carder of
Louisville, Ky., were weekend
guesl.s of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Spencer.
Mr . Jack Curtis and
daughter, Sandra, Pomeroy,
spent a week with his mother,
Mrs. U!one Curtis.
Recent guests of Mrs .
Blanche Spencer were Mrs.
Joan Mattin gly and three
daughters of Kansas, Mrs.
Jean Lindsey and nephew,
Stanley Spencer, of Grove City,
Mrs. Hennan Spencer and son,
Greg, and daughter, Linda, of
Grove City, guests for the
weekend and Linda remained
for a week with her grandmother.
George and David Kuscma of
Gahana called Sunday · af.
ternoon on their aunt, Mrs.
Hattie Paynter, and their
grandmother, Mrs. Mattie
Yost who was visiting her
stsb!r, Mrs. Paynter.
Mrs . Edward Howell of
Pomeroy spent Sunday with
relatives .
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Arthur
of Colwnbus spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Simpson .
Mrs. Frank Cleland and Mrs.
Guy Sayre spent Monday In
Jacksonville visiting their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will
Woods and helped celebrate
their mother's birthday.
Mrs. Grella Simpson and
Mrs. Ura Morris visited Mrs.
Lottie Wilcoxen at Elmwood
Nursing Home at Coolville
Tuesday arternoon .

Leader Training Set
~~ vour

Unes are Showing 11
will be the theme of a leader
training meeting to be offered
by the Cooperative Extension
Service on Sept. 18 at Rio
Grande College .
Emphasis of the program
will be on lines in clothing and
home furnishings and the
meeting is open to the public.
Members of garden clubs,
homemakers' clubs, 4-H
groups, and mothers' clubs are
invited to attend.
Clothing and home furnishing extension specialists
from the Ohio State University
will be on hand to conduct the
training session . They will also
assist those attending with the
techniques of teaching others

what is learned in the training
program. The tra ining will
provide enough information for
two club programs, it is
reported .
The meeting will be held
from 9:30a . m . to 3 p. m. with
registration and coffee hour to
begin at 9 a . m. There will be a
~0 cent registration fee and
lunch will be served In the
college ca feteria .
Those attentling are to take a
pencil, scissors, glue or rubber
cemenl, and several colored
magazine pages, particularly
greens and blues.
Resident.s interested in attending are asked to telephone
the Meigs County Extension
Office by Friday, Sept . 8.

Stiversville News Notes
Rev . and Mrs. Thurber
Thayer and granddaughter of
New York spent vacation at the
hDme of Lawrence and Louise
Gluesencamp. Also visiting
were Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bailey
and children of Wisconsin; Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Theiss of
Vinton, Ada VanMeter, Odessa
Weddle and children, Patty
Gluesencamp.
Mrs . Mike Evans and
children visited Ada Van
Meter.
Mrs. Betty Ward visited Mrs.
Mike Evans.
Mr. and Mrs. La wrence
Gluesencamp visited Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Hauber and family
of Long Bottom.
Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter spent
a few days in Columbus with
her daughter, Anna Haines.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Haines

visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Cornell and family.
Mrs . Gordon Ridenour and
daughter of Chester visited
Lawrence
and
Louise
Gluesencamp.
Harold Brewer visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer and David.
Nicki Dawn Van Meter spent
a week with her sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Theiss of
Vinton.
Maxine Durst visited Ruby
Bryant.
Elaine Lehew visited Ada
Van Meter and Janet Mi!J.
dleswartz.
Louis Gluesencamp visited
Mr. and Mrs. Russell VanMeter.
Sylvia Carpenter visited her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Ellj!e!}e
Carpenter.

OPTO"'EJ..RIST. .

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE"
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST..-

�'

'

t• o r fr,

,

~ . ''f' ' l

II '

~

'

f

,

t

' '

8-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 1, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEADt.INES

In Memory

IN MEMORY ol Charles E.
Massar who departed from
Cancellation - Corrections
th is lite September 1, 1967, to
Wilt be a ccepted until 9 a.m . for. live in a world of peace and
Day of Publication
love with his Blessed
REGULAT I ONS
Redeemer . Greatly missed by
The Publisher reserves the
his wife , Leota ; son, Starl ing
rlghl ro edit or rejecf any ad~
and fdm ily; and lriends.
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be re sponsi ble
9-1-llp
for more than one . incorrect
5 P .M . Day · Before

Pl.!b l lcatiorf.
Monday Deadl ine 9 a .m .

Insertion.

R·ATES

For Wan"t Ad Ser vice

Lost

s cents per word one insertion LOST BETWE~N Pomer oy
Motor and Farmer's Bank,
Minimuin Charge 7Sc ~
12 cents per wo r d three
ladies wh ile gold Lady Elg in
con secu ti ve in sertio.,·s.
wa lch and band. Evelyn G.
16 cents per · word six con ·
Knighl , 118 Lincoln Hi ll.
seculi\o'e insertions . .
phone 992 -2433 .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
8-30-3lp
rds and ads paid with i n 10 days .
CARD OF THANkS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO for 50 word m inimum .

Wanted To Buy

Each add jlional word 2c .

OLD Furniture, oak ta bles,
BLIND ADS
organs , dishes, clocks, brass
Charge per
beds,
or comp lete households .
Advertisement.
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt . 4OFFICE HOltR~ 1
8:30a .m.. to 5:0CI,p .m, Daily ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8:30 a . m . to 12 :00 Noon
6-28-llc
Saturday .
Additiona l 2k

Notice

For R;•·'(

Notice
r----~~~--~"1

''HEll"
HEAliNG &amp;
COOLING

Window ,_
Air Conditioners

Ho; Wa :e r Heaters
P lumbing
C: tcc"ic al Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
~91 - 2448

Pomeroy . 0 .

Fot Sale

Syracu '~ El' .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
*5.55

'i p .m .

8-29 -41&lt;
AUCTION NOTICE
WE wi sh lo thank al l w~o a t- NEW DELUXE ZIGZAG
tended the first day of the
sewing
machine.
Th is
George A. Eastman estate
machine makes buttonholes,
sale. and invite everyone to be
darns and embroid eries; all
wi th us on Sat.. Sept. 2. 1972.
withOut attachmen ts; phone
starling promptly at 10 :00
992 -.5331.
A.M. with farm tools, shop
8-29-tlc
equipment, etc.
CATTLE and larm mac ~i nery 8
TRACK
STEREO
wi ll sell at 1 P· m., with the 04
Repossessed, looks like new;
Caterpill er Dozer selling at 2
beauti ful hand rubbed Walnut
p.m .
cabine t; take over payments
IF you need cattle, machinery ,
o f $ 1. 50 per week or pay
s:1op equipment, feed or farm
$101.47 ; phone 992-5331.
tools, you can not afford to
8 29 11
miss this sa le.
· · c
Lunch Served
Mrs. John Epple, Adm .
LeBLANC clar inet. B flat , very
1. 0 . "Mac" McCoy
good con dition ; phone 66735 11 or 667 -3400.
8-30-3tc
8-29-Mc
-r·
YARD SALE. Thursday , Fr iday KENNEBEC potaloes, ss for
100 lb. ; see Joh n Pape. Racine
an d Saturday on Lar ki n
or phone 949-3025.
Street, Rutland .
8-29-61c
8-30-3tc

School Special!
PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

DANCE

NEW HOMES

3 BEDROOMS

CARRIERS
WANTED

The Daily Sentinel

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

____

-====::::;====:_,

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
991-2174
Pomeroy

Dozer &amp; End looder work,
pands, basement, l1~d·
scaping. We have 2 s1zt
dozers, 2 silt IDidtrs. ~ork
done by hour or conlroct.
Free Estimates. We aiSQ
haul lilt dirt, top S~&gt;ll. Dump
trucks and tow:boy for . hire .
See Bob or R09er JeHors.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone m5231.

Fallulous Seledion-lod! lottom Prices!

So Come In Now and Save Many $$On
A New Bvick, Pontiac or Opel. We
Have 4 Demos. That You Really Can
Save Some Money.

eROOFING
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

1971 Dodge ........... only $2695
Coronet Cust. 4 Dr . Seda n . Factory air. Low
owner . We wa nt to se ll this ca r .

1970 Dodge ................... $2695

~CLELAND
REALTY

6ot E. Main
~
01"11o .......

~.!.omeroy,

According to Its Old English
derivation, the word HOUSE
means a place to hide.
WHATEVER A HOU SE
MEANS TO YOU, WE' LL
FIND ONE TO MEET
YOUR NEED S! CA LL
TODAY.
NICE LEVEL LOT
I story - 3 bedrooms. Bath .
.Dining R. Utility space .
Paneling. Porches . A good
neighborhood . JUST $9,800.
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
4 bedrooms. Bat~ . Modern
kitchen . Storm Doors &amp;
Windows. Storage buildings.
1'12 ACRE of ground. CLOSE
IN $16,900.
POMEROY
EXCELLENT - 2 bedroom
home wtth walk-In closets.
Large livi ng room with
llreplace. Modern kitchen
and dining . Utility. 2 car
garage. Porches. JUST
$12,900.
WE HAVE THE CON TAC_TS, USE THEM FOR
THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY . JUST A
PHONE CALL AWAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
REALTOR
992-225t
ff no answec.m -2568

1967 Buick only ............ $1595
Elec. 225 4 Dr . H.T. Full power and air. Real
nice . 67 model.

1969 Ford ...................... $1595

WMP0/1390

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~;~~:·t

AUG. &amp; SEPT.

Sell down
It's NOW Tlmell
EXCELLENT SELECTION

35 CARS IN STOCK

Excellen~ Selection ... Maverick, Mustang, Fa icons, Torin

Gran ~ortno, Galaxie soo, LTO 2 Dr. &amp; 4 [)r ... Shop Early For B
Bargam_s. ~lso FlOO &amp; F2SO Pickup Trucks - V-S's, Automat
TransmiSSions.

15-'72 TR_UCKS ,IN STOCK

Wildca t. All white . Runs real good . Make
so m e one a real nice car for the pri ce.

WE NEED

i-------------------.
This Week Special
I

1
I

USED

I

:

1969 lnl '"h Ton Pickup

:

48,921 mil es on it. Thi s Week

I
I

I
1

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

Open Evenings Till 7 p. m . &amp; Sat . Till
ServicP Till 12 Noon on Sat .

992 -2174
.•

USED: CARS-

. TJHICKS

-~----

68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air......... .S1695

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancel led?
Lost
your ·
operator's license? Call m ·
2966.
6-15-tfc

68 Dodge Charger 2 Dr., H.T., V-8 auto•.• 11395
1

66 Oldsmobile 88 4 Dr. H.T... •.•. •.••••••• 795
65 Falcon 2 Dr., 6 c~. 1 std . ............... '195
61 Chev. 2 Door, 6 c~., std............... .'145

Holstein

Only 5- 1972 Oldsmobiles
Remaining At Sale Prices

DAIRY
DISPERSAL

Karr &amp; Van Zanclt

Albany. Ohio (Athens County&gt;. 3112 miles
northwest on St. Rt. 681 to Township Road lO.
North of St. Rt.
Watch for signs from 68 1.

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
I'OMEROY
Open Evenings Until 6l ClO-- Til .~ . PM. Sat..

so.

Friday, Sept. 8

TOO LATE
TO CLASSIFY

11:30

YARD SALE, 9 a. m. to ~ p. m.
Labor Day. Clothing, Shoes,
Household articles. Fay Sauer,
U!adlng Creek Road, Mid·
dlepott, Route I.
9-1-2tc

·
51&gt;-HOLSTEIN COWS&amp; BRED HEIFERs-50
23 cows fresh In August and.September, balance due from
October to January . Damsareallslred by COBA bulls and
cowsselllng are by COBA bulls. 10 first calf ~elfers, sired
by Curtiss bulls. due In September and October. All
animals are bred to a Hereford bull.

REUNION PLANNED
Areunion of the family of the
late Frederick Buck will be
held Labor Day, Sept. 4 at
Rising Sun Park, Lancaster. A
basket dinner will be held at
noon. For additional information local friends a d
relatives may contact eith .
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs or Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs.

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

69 Ghev. Bis. 2 Dr., 6 c~ .• std ........... .'1295
69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., air..... '1695

Pontiac

BUICk

70 Chev. Impala 4 Dr., V-8, auto.... ..... 11995
69 Dodge Polara 4 Dr., H.T., air .......... 11995

READY -MIX
CONCRETE
dellv,red right to )'Cur ·
pro/ect. Fast and ea5y . Free.
esl mates . Phone 992 ·l2U, ·
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.
·
6·30-tft .

.

OPEN EVES. 1.00 P.M.

_,PMEROY, OHIO

COWBOY GONE
ANN ARBOR , Mi ch .
(UPI ) - Seolor tailback
Alan " Cowboy" Walker,
Michigan's second-leading
r e turning
rush er,
mysteriously left the team
Thursday and dropped out of
sight.
"Alan Walker withdrew
from the team, " Coach Bo
Schembechler said after
practice. " He doesn' t want
to play football any more."
Schembechler would not
elaborate but Walker was
believed to be withdrawing
from school, which begins
Friday.

•'

ALSO LUNCH MEAT, SOFT DRINKS, BREAD, MILK, PICNIC SUPPLIES, ETC.

•••
~·

r--suusFmsiro;~~nt~iNomNiwAffRME~N---1

.

••'
••

fLOW. HOME GROWN CANTALOUPES, FRESH CORN-PUUEDI

.,·:.,

f · DAILY AND OTHER PRODUCE FOR THE HOLIDAY AHEAD.

.,

••

'

I

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

7-33 MARKET

992-5880

'.

Open 8 to 8 Daily-Thurs. &amp; Sat. Til 6

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

,·

..
••

8

CHEVROLET KING~ WOOD 3 SEAT ST. WAGON
Golf Green finish. green viny l int., tint . glass , 4 season a ir
conditioned , fron t and rear mat s, side mldgs., power
ta ilgate. super lift rear shocks. wh. covers. AM radio, F&amp; R
guards, luggage carrier, USxlS w-w tires, 350 cu . in .
engine, p. steering and brakes, turbo hydrami!llic .
Retail 55068.40 - Closeout. 54315.DD

·.

,,

·

KEITH GOBLE FORD

NEW\972 CLO~EOUTS!
CHEVROLET BROOKWOOD2 SEAT ST. WAGON
Dark Blue with Black vinyl Interior. roof dr ip mldg .. body
side mldg., L 78x15 W· W tires, P.B., radio, luggage carr ier,
350 V-e engine. turbo ~ ydramatic. p. sleering and brakes.
Retail 54210.40 - Closeout S3598.00

This Is a real good working herd of cows show!
plenty of slzund milk. All were ral11d on the ,,;m fromrrg1
foundation ot Wisconsin cows.

•'••
L-~-------.J •,••·~
'

·

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

------

:',.
·'.•''
;;

s PM

OPEN IAM 'TIL9 PM-7 DAYS A WEEK
Worthy Rogers and Marcia Capehart
Corner SR 7 &amp; 33

o.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

461 S. 3rd

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Members of the Happy
Hustlers Sunday School class
of the Methodist Church enjoyed a six o'clock dinner in the
church social rooms Friday
evening, Aug. 25. Mrs. Ullian
Jividen was honored with two
birthday cakes, sherbet and
tea. Mrs . Bertha Spencer
oresented a program after the
jinner. There were several
readings by members, songs
&gt;nd prayer. A business session
foll owed the program .
Mr. Clarence Wickline is
&gt;gain hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan spent a
week in Columbus with her
sister, Mrs. Fern Gilmore and
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb and
family and Jeff Parsons of
Miami also was a guest. Mrs.
Carnahan visited her sister,
Mrs. Loe Tisdale at Buckeye
Lake also.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Holman
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
William Holman and family of
Memphis, Tenn., spent a week
vacation with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs,. Earl Holman.
Mrs. Roger Holman visited her
mother, Mrs. Mid Hubbard, at
Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sacco of
Chicago visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Holman and
family several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Beckwith
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Swan of Parkersburg were

Sabbath School attendance
at Free Methodist Church on
August 27 was 104. Offering for
all services, which was
building fund day, was $228.24.
Mrs. Daisy Buckley, Karrie,
Keith, Patty and Larry Mit·
chell, Akron, visited recently
with Rev . Buckley and family.
David Williams of Columbus
spent a week with his grandmother, Mrs. Ben Brown, and
the Lawrence Eblin family .
Mrs. Georgia Diehl visited
recently with Mrs . Nellie
Tracy, Ball Run .
Mr . and Mrs. William
Peeples of U!xingtoo attended
Sunday morning services at
the local ahurch.
Mr. &amp; Mrs . erman Kaspar
and son, Ronald, Dayton, spent
several days with r,lrs. Bertha
Parker and Mr. Kaspar 's
mother, Mrs. Amanda Kaspar,
Mr. and .Mrs. Rny Smith and
family and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Arnold.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell of
Illinois were called here by the
SPEAKER NOTED
death of Mrs. Howell's sister,
The Rev. Loran Strahm of
. Grove City will be evangeUst
Mrs. Earl Roush .
Mr . and Mrs . Herman for revival services to begin
Kaspar of Daytori called on Mr. Sunday and continue through
Sunday, Sept. 10, at the Rutand Mrs. Walter Walker.
Mrs . Charley B.rown of land Church of the Nazarene.
GallipoUs visited her mother, Servicea will be held at 7:30
Mrs. Cora Renshaw recently. each evening and at 10:30 a.m.
,
on Sun~ays . The Rev. Uoyd D.
In 1971,PresidcntNixon froze Grimm, Jr ., pastor, has exthe pay of fedPral workers for .tended an Invitation to the
six months.
public.

•

r

'I

Middleport

Phone 992-2196

Racine Social Events

•'

1

CARS.~

Your Trade Is
Worth More NOW

Buy Of A Lifetime!
Come In Now!

I
1

only '1395
~-------------------J

SEE US FOR : Awnings , iform ·
doors and wll)dows, cArports, ;
marquees, aluminum '!ildlng ·
and rail ing . 'A. Jacob, sales' :
representative . For free, ;
estimates, phone Charles .
Lisle, Syracuse , V. V. :
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
3-2-tf•

OWNER .
Don Bradley, Auctioneer
-Lunch Avallabl- , .

FORD

1965 Buick ...................... s595

-SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makH. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorl2ed Singer Sales and ·.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.'
3·29-tfc

Earl Bailey

'72

F -L 500 Wagon . Auto . Small VB . Rea l nice
wagon. Local owner .

WILL DO light ~aullng " in al ·
ternoons . Phone 992 ·39Q3 .
8-27-61&lt;

DAIRY EQUIPMENT
Haverly 300 gal. bulk tank ; Surge 30 plus compressor · 5
Surge units ; stainless steel wnh vats; large stalnl~ss
steel strainer; Jamesway Llquldmatlc barn cleaner .
Jamesway Llquldmatlc elevator: 24 drinking cups ; ·AO
sta nchlons.

GIGANTIC SELLDOWNIII

LeSabre 4 Dr . Sedan. Factory a ir. One owner.
Real sharp. 69 model. Pri ced to sell.

O'DELL WHEEL alignment'
localedat Crossroads, Rt . 12&lt;1.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced elecAll
work .
tronically .
guaranteed.
RfllllcnnAhl•
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
9&lt;12-3213.
f ·V ·nC

30 day test, TB &amp; Bangs tested. Individual health papers
furnished.

End of Model

1969 Buick ..................... $2195

SEWING Mach ine Service,
clean, oil, adjust, S39'/,l n your
home; phone 9'12·5331.
8-11 -JOtc

Real Estate For Sale

A~

Monaco 4 door Hard Top . Full power equipment , a~r, one owner, only 26.000 miles.

LEGAL NOTICE

We talk to JOU
like t peiSOil.

•

EARllt MOVING

OOZE R and back hoe work.
ponds and septic tanks, ditReal Estate For Sale
ching service : lop soil, fi ll
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex 8 ROOM house, bath , large lot , cavaling . P~ one 992 -5367 ,
gas and electric, Rt . 1.
Midd leporl . P~one 9&lt;12-2602. Di ck Karr , Jr .
9-1-lfc
8-27-8tp
WILL CUT or trim trees .
ONE ACRE and old -house In
reasonable; also clean out
Pom eroy . Phone 992-6675.
ba semenls , attics
and
8-3l-3tp cellars; phone 949-3221.
8-29-30tc
TWO BUILDING Lots in
Harri so nville . One Is ap · SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
For Free Estimate
prox imately 1 acre with REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446septi c tank and a dr illed well
4782, Gallipolis. Jo~n R_ussell ,
PHONE 992-2550
and a dug well. Doyle Hudson,
Owner &amp; Operator.
·
P~on e 992-5048.
S-12-tfc
8-31-3tc
INTERIOR, exterior pa inting .
remodeling, bu ilding. Contact
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Ernest Deeter, Bashan.
CONVENIENT but secluded
Complete Service
8-31-6tc
building lots at Ro~k Springs,
Phone 949-3821
ciO&lt;e to High School &amp; Fair
Racine, Ohio
PRICE CONSTRUCTION ,
Ground ; call or see Bi ll Witte,
'Critt Bradford
roof ing , pore ~ repair and
992-27 89 after 5 p.m. week S-l-Ife
electrical ; p~one 742-4286.
days .
.~......................- -8-16-J&amp;Ic
8-6-30ic SEPTIC tanks clean'ed. Miller
--------~
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn .
TUNE -UPS, brake jobs and
LOTS ON Wright St reel.
662-3035.
Pomeroy; phone 7.42-5930.
2-12-llc ot her auto work . Very
8-29 -12tc -.-----,---reasonable rates . Waine s
BACKHOE AND DOZER work:· Aulo Service, school lralned.
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
Route 1, Shade, Oltlo 992-6547,
Septic tankslnslal led . Georqe
985-3529.
(.Bill ) Pullins. P~one 99'2 -247~ . next lo Whaley's Pa int S~op .
6-11 -tfc
8-20-12ic
4-25-ttc

Buy 2 Pairs and
LEGAL NOTICE
Get
1 PAIR FREE
To th e unknown he irs and
devisees of John Betzing
All kinds, all sizes for men,
deceased ; th e unknown heirS
women , voung men, boys
and devisees of Conrad Betzing,
deceased; the unknown heirs
and girls. Hurry to
and devisees of Bertha Betzing
Bah r, deceased; the unknown Wo rm
·
POMEROY
you rse lf
fr om
heirs and dev isees of Peter Worldliness &amp; Worrying to
~
Jack
w. Carsev, Mgr.
Bet zing ,
deceased; · the.
the
Word
&amp;
Worship.
Phone992-2
181
unknown heirs and devisees of
'---...:..:.::.:.:..:..:=~-__1
Srel ta Hoffman. deceased ; the
Sunday Sc~ool-9:30 A.M.
un!&lt;.nown heirs and devisees of
COA L, Limestone, Excelsior
Worship-10 :4S A.M.
John Betzlng , Jr .. deceased ; th e
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
Young
People-6:30P.M.
unknown heirs and devisees of
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
Etdo Betzing, deceased ; th e Evening Worship-7 :30P.M.
4_12_tfc
unknown heirs and devisees of
Prayer Mtg .-Wed . Night
______ _ _ __
Ralph Betzing, decea sed; th e
7:30P.M.
unknown heirs and devisees of
POO DLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
Henry Be tzing, deceased ; th e
Park view Kennels , Phone 992unknown heirs and devisees of KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
wig s, more new products
5443 .
Lupert Betzing, deceased; th e
unknown heirs and devisees of
com in g soon. For free
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _8_-15-tfc
Will Betzing, deceased; th e
demonstration, phone 992 ·
CA
NNING lomatoes and
un known heirs Md devisees of
5113.
Ernest Betz.ing, deceased; the
mangoes. Geraldine Cleland,
8-17-tfc
unknown he1rs and devisees ot
Racine, Ohio.
1
Eva Jo hn son, deceased ; and the
GARAGE Sale at Dwain Durst PONY , , quarter horse, we ll
SPEC
IAL
lor
t
~
e
Older
Gi
rl
trained Mila Powe-l l, ca ll 992· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
8·_16-tfc
unknown heirs and devisees of
residence near Fire Sta lion,
Now thru Se pte mber 15,
Helen Hormals, deceased
2622.
Reedsvill e, Ohio . Fri day ,
You a re hereby potified that
everythi ng half-price to
8·30-3tc SEVERAL varle li es of lop
Saturday
and Sunday.
you have been n :-: :1
fen . Senior Citi zens. The Beauty
quality, tree ripened, can ning
dants in a lega l action en1i fled
Spot, Phone 992 -2840.
- - - - - - - - - - - llj165 HARLEY Davidson 74 , peaches ; now availab le RACINE - 10 room house/
C. F. Betzlng, Plaintiff, vs .
8-31 -3tc
through ear ly September;
bath, basement, garage, two
Phone qas.4132 .
Archie Betzing, et al. , Defen.
Help
Wanted
8-30-61c
Bob's
Mar
ket,
Mason,
W.
Va
.,
.lots.
Phone 949-4313.
dant s. This action has been
4-S-tfp
above the Pomeroy-Mason
assigned Case No . 15 11 8 and is YA RD SALE. T~ursday. Fr iday ATTENTION LADIES - Sel l - - - - - - - - - and Saturday , 10 a. m. 'tl l8 p.
pending In th e Court of Common
APPLES.
Fitzpalrick
Or
Bri
dge
;
phone
773-5308.
-Toys &amp; Gifts now thr u
Pleas, Meigs County , Pom ero y,
m. Household items, clothing
chard s, Slate Route 689 .
8-15-tfc IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
December with the oldest Toy
O~lo . 45769.
and a little of everything ,
Phone
Wilkesville
669·3785.
-Conchas. New flhexico. $2,975.
Part
y
Plan
in
the
Country
.
The object of the Complaint is
Across from Happy Hollow on
No Down . No Interest. $25 mo.
High
est
commissions,
No
8-30-lfc
Real
Estate
Fo
r
Sale
to reform a deed or the Plain tiff
Rt. 12.4 nea r Rutland.
for 119 mo s . Vac ation
Cash Oullay. Call or write
for rea l estate situated in
8-31-2tc
Paradise. Fre e Brochure.
Orange Townsh ip, Meigs
"Santa's Par ties", Avon Ct. ALL electric mobile home with 3 BEDROOM house in
County, Oh io, to in clud e th e
Harrisonville; phone 742-3386.
Ranchos La ke Conchas : Box
06001 . Tel. 1 (2031 673-3455. add -on. enclosed porch, 7
entire Interest in the rea l estate
w-w
carpeting
8-30· Jtp
2001 DD, Alameda, California
ALSO BOOKI NG PARTIES. r ooms,
desc rib ed In Volume 123. Page
94501.
9-1-tfc
throughout
,
furn
itu
re.
ap
25, Me igs County Deed Records ,
8-6-30tp
plian ce, drapes , la und ry 5 ROOMS and bath , nice size
In lieu of the one -half interest as
ba ckya rd . New a lumi num - -- -- REFINED
woman
in
need
of
room
with
Maytag
washer
&amp;
described th erein and to quiet
siding , roof and in sulation . 5 ROOMS &amp; bath. 2 story block
WHISPERING PINES
home to live in and care for dryer in Rio Grande. $5,500,
the title or the Plaintiff against
Ove-rlooking new Belvi ll e
house ; gas forced air furna ce,
all of tl)e Defendants t~ sa id
inval id woman. Nursing Ph . 245-5448.
Loc;ks and Dam in Reedsv ille.
action .
v. acre lot , Rt . 7&amp; Old Chester
NITE
CWB
experience not necessary .
9-1-3tc
Ohio. Phone 378-6365.
You are required to answer
Rd .. $5.500 ; ph one 9&lt;12-3874.
Sa lary negotiable. Write E.
the Complaint within 28 days
8-30-31c
Music
By
8-29-tlc
Donal
dso
n,
5440
Phea
sa
nt
COLONIAL slyle stereo, AM- - - - - - - - - -after the last publ ica tion of th is
Dr ive , Orient, Ohio 43146.
The Memphis SOunds
FM radi o, 4 speakers, 4 speed PT PLE ASANT - 6 room
no11ce, wtllch wil l be published
9-1-2fc
onc e each week for six conreco rd changer . Balance house , 11t2 baths , recreation OUT OF STATE . IDEAL SACR E RANCH . Lake Consecu tiv e weeks . Th e last
J pc . trio from
$78.52. Use our budget term s. room, new built -in kitchen.
publ ication will be made on
AUTO BODY man, experience
chas
. New Mexico. $2975. No
New P~iladelphia
Call 992-7085.
must sel l, leav ing town . Days
September 15, 1972, and th e 28
necessary. we want a man
down
. No interest. $25 per mo.
9-1-61c phone 992·3502, evenings
days for answer will commence
who can do quality work in a
for 119 mos . Vacation
Saturday
Night
on that date.
reasonable length of time . MODERN Walnul stereo. AM- phone 675.2J72.
Paradise . Fr ee Broch ur e.
In case of your failure to
8·_
10
til2
biggest and best body
The
Ranchos La ke Conhas : Box
FM radio, fea tu res 4 speed _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
3o_.tfc
answer or oth erwise res pond as
shop ln the area, excellent
2001
DO. Alameda, California
required by the Oh i'o Rules of
changer.4speakers.separate BEDFORD Tow nship - 32
pay and fr inge be nefits.
94501
.
Civ il Procedure, judgment by YARD SA LE. Labor Day , Sept.
controls. Balance $68.41. Use acres of lan d, some good
Contact
Jlm
Buchanan
,
Body
defautr wi ll be: rendered aga inst
8-29-301p
4, 9a .m. lo7p.m.; Norman E.
our budget terms . Ca ll 992- limber, oil Rt . 681 - $4000 ;
you fo r the relief demand ed i n
Shop Foreman, Mason County
Hyself
residence
,
near
7085.
Raci ne - 3 bedroom house
tt1e Compla int .
Motor Company, Chevrolet
Hospi ta l on County Road No.
9-1-6tc and 1.4 acres , ba semen t
Dated : August 11. 1972
and
Oldsmobile
Dealership,
76 : an tiques and misc. items ;
Evelyn Lucke
dishwasher and gar Poin t Pleasant, W. Va . Phone DON ' T pump your sluggish 24x38,
Gravely outfit, brass bells,
Clerk of Cour ts of
b
d
1
1 1 ·
d
1304)
675-3370.
septic tank . Get Klean. Em age isposa , cen ra a1r an
Meig s County , etc .
cen
tral
heat
$18,000.
Phone
8-31 -21&lt;
Common Pleas Cou r t,
9-1 -2lp
All Septic Tank Cleaner . 949 -3211. GEORGE HOB Pom eroy. Ohio
Landmark Farm Bu rea u. ST ETTER , JR .,
REAL
(8} 11 , 18 , 25, (9) 1, 8, 15, 6t
PI.ANO &amp; organ lessons by
Pomeroy .
ESTATE
BROKER ,
9-l-ltc POMEROY, OHIO.
graduate of Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music witt1 23
8-J0·3lc
2 New Homes, all e~ctrlc. 3
IN THE MATTER OF
ALLIS·CHALMERS C traclor
yean&gt; teach ing exper ience ;
bedroo ms. full basement and
SETTLEMENT
OF
AC ·
with s ide mower ; Oscar
phone 9&lt;12 -3825.
COUNTS,
garage, with lake frontage;
W
eber,
Sta
te
Route
248
B
ROOM,
2
story
bnck
house,
8-23-121&lt;
PROBATE COURT,
9-1-Jtp baseme nt , barn &amp; out
at Five Points area .
IN
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
buildings
;
1
to
J
acres
as
RED
UCE
e)(cess
fl
uids
with
Accounts and vouchers or the
STEREO tape player for car. needed ; on Ohio Power
FL UIDE X, Sl.69 - LOSE
follow ing named fiduciaries
Clifton and
S25; ca ll 9&lt;12-5786.
electric; on Main Street, Rut have been filed in the Probate
WEIGHT wi lh Dex -A-Di el
PH. 992-2571
9.1-Jtc land; phone 742·4691 after 5
Court, Meigs Coun ty, Ohio, for
capsules, $1.98 . at Ne lson
approval and setflement :
Drug .
-------------------p.m.
Hartford, W. Va.
OR 992-3975
CASE NO. 11 ,620 Thir ty -sixtll
9-l-6lc
9-1-llp
5-15
"
CHEVY
wheels.
He"
Account of Myrtle E. Carman ,
Guardian or Clyde W . Carman ,
opening ; 2-15" Ford wheels. r - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
PHONE 992-2156
SKIN disorders? Try Toco2%" opening ; 1-16" Ford
an Incompetent Person .
Oerm Vitam in E cream 1260
CASE No . 18,496 Eleventh
wheel, 31/e" opening ; 1-14"
Annual Account of Mary Tra cy
IU per tube al Nelson Drug.
Ford wheel. 2'-'e" opening ; 2·
Riggs , Guard ian of the Person
9-1-11p
16"
Chrys ler wheels , 31J:2''
and Estate of caralynn Tracy
opening; $3 a piece ; phone
and M.:Jralynn Tracy, minor s. TRY "Sleepers" tonight lor ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES.
742-4691 after 5 p.m.
CASE NO . 19.567 Second and
110 Mechanic Street
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th .
9· 1-Jtc
Final Account of Paul E . Klees, sate and restful sleep, onl y
Last
chance
to
hop
aboard
the
Gua rd ian of the Person and 98c at Nelson Drug.
PLAYHOUSE TOY train to TWIN Needle Sewing Machine
9-1-llp
Estate of Amy Esther Graham,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
success . We 're se ll ing toys
a minor .
.
1972 model in walnut stand.
and booking part ies, having
CASE NO , 19,71 1 Fourth COUR T Slree l Cab. Pomeroy.
All fea tures built in to make
Accoun t of Free land S. Norris,
fun and gell ing pa id. As a
wi
ll
be closed on Labor Dey,
fancy des igns and do stretch
THE LATEST NEW LISTING
Guard ian of the Estate of
demo I have no deliveri ng , no
sew ing. Also buttonholes.
RENOVATED - Lovely 2 bedrooms, large living , nice
Donald Lovett, an incom peten t Sepl. 4lh and wi ll be open lor
coll ection, and I do not need
business, Tuesday, Sept. 5th.
blind hems etc. $.43.35 cash
kitchen and gas for ced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
person .
any
experience. I get free
9-1-2lp
CASE NO . 20,16.4 First and
pri ce or terms available.
fo wall carpeting. Partial basement on large lot. Asking
Final
deadline
for
training
.
Fina l Accoun t of Haze l M .
Phone 992-5641.
only $11,500.00.
Bla ckwood , Administratr ix of SPE CIAL - Thursday, Friday &amp; hiring is Sept. 25, call me now
9-H ic
don ' t wa it, Margaret Fortune:
the Estate or Al len Dean Bla ck
Satur~ay . With a fi ll-up of
MIDDLEPORT
wood. deczeased .
949-54 14 or Barbara Lambert, VACUUM Cleaner . Electro
~as , oil chan~e and filter - a
CASE NO . 20,3 81 Fi rst and
4
BEDROOMS
2
baths,
ni ce kitchen wit~ bar and cook
ree grease tob. Free pickup 446-3411.
Hygiene New Demons trator
Final Accoun t of Richard
un
1ts.
Garage
and
den
in
full
basement. Covered patio on
8-22-lfc
and de livt'ry . Queen 's Penn__.:_:...
has al l cleaning attachments
Chambers , e~~:ecu t or Of the
back
ol
house.
Asking
$24,000.00.
zo
il
,
North
Second
Ave
estate of Ethe l Thompson .
plus the new Electro Suds for
Middleport ; phone 992-9913: DOMESTIC ~elp . Send resume
deceased .
shampooing carpet . On ly
CASE NO . 70,527 First and
to P. 0 . Box 405, Pomeroy .
LEVEL LOT
8-29 -4tc
$27 .SO cash pric e or terms
Fin al Account of Virgil v .
8-30-3tc
CO
RNER
With
a
four
room house, ~a s gas , city waler,
ava
ilable.
Phone
9&lt;12-5641.
Brown , Administrator of the
and
electric.
Ask
ing
only
$2,500.00.
REWARD
.
fo
r
shopping
at
9-1-6tc
Esta te of Lewis M. Brown ,
Showalter's Wei Pel Shop
dec eased
Chester , Ohio: 10 per cent 0 f Mobile Homes For Sale
: HRYSLER BOAT DEALER. 1
CASE NO . 20,574, First and
LOTS-LOTS-LOTS
Final Account of Leora Young ,
your total purchase ma y be CASH pa id for all makes ani! Tarry Bass Fishing Boat wi th
1 ACRE - Nice laying on high ground. Chester water
EKe&lt;; utr ix of th e Es tate of Josle
appli ed to the purchase of any
available. 11 loi s In all.
model s of mobile homes . 20 h. Mercury, w-trailer ; 1
Roush , deceased .
ceramic items.
Phone area code 614-423 -9531. Monarch Fishing Boat with 20
Un less exceptions are filed
2·30tp
4-13- tfc h. Mer cury , w-trailer ; 1
thereto, sa id accounts will be _ _ _ _ __ _8.:_·.:_
Cherokee Fishing Boat with
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
-----for hearing before said Court on
40 h . Johnson. w-frai ler ; your
5 BEDROOMS - Nea r downtown shopping nice kitchen
the 30th day of September, 1972,
FOR THE BEST dea l in a new
pi ck lor 11,000 ; also 1972 GMC
at which time said accoun ts will
with double sink. 2 porches and full baseme~l. A good buy
or used mobile home, try
be conside red and cont inued
Sprin t pickup. automatic, W·
at only $7,500.00.
Mobile
Home
Sales,
Kanauga
from day to day until finally Employment Wanted
air , $4,250; 1972 Internationa l
Kanauga, Ohio.
disposed of .
pickup. 12.650; 197 1 Dodge
7-16-301&lt;
LOOK FOR THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN, THEN
Any· person in tere sted may AVAILABLE immediately ,
pic kup , 12,350 ; 1970 Ford
YOU'LL KNOW IT'S FOR SALE. BUY FROM YOUR
file written exceptions to said
Genera l Carpenter Foreman.
Fair lane 500, w-alr. 11.950;
accou nts or to matters per LOCAl
BROKER ; IT'S GOOD BUSINESS AND FOR
P~one 9&lt;12-6675.
r
1969 Cadillac DeVille Sedan,
ta ining to the execut ion of the
THE
ECONOMY
OF MEIGS COUNTY. WE'RE TRYING
8-31
-3tp
• Air Conditioners
tru st. not less than five days
loaded . $3.450 ; 1971 In FOR
A
BIGGER
AND BETTER YEAR .
prior to the date set for h!!aring .
ternational pickup, like new ,
•Awnings
MANNING WEBSTER
12,350; 1948 Chevrolet pickup,
Probate Judge
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
· • Underpinning
992-3325
like new , $1 ,050 ; Longfellow
Meigs County, Ohio
Motors,
2
mi.
S
.•
Ravenswood
(9) 1. ltc
NOTICE TO
'c omplete mobile home
on Rl . 2; phone (3041 273-3594.
TAXPAYERS
service - plus gigant ic
Notice is hereby given , i n
9-1·21c ~---:::-----:---------­
comp liance with sec tion 57 15-17 'display of mobile homes
Big Capoclty
MOBILE HOME for sa le
The Almanac
rev ised code , !hal the tax always available at ...
Maytog
1969
SCHULT
Custom
mobi
le
Autom1ttca
By Untied Press Internationa l relurn s of Meigs County, for the
home, 6())( 12, double expando.
year 19 72 have been rev ised and
MILLER
2 sp.eed operation .
Today is Friday, Sept. I, the th e valuations completed and
Early American Decor, new
Choice of water
are
open
for
public
inspection
at
24~th day o[ 1972 with 121 to
carpe t , awning and un MOBILE HOMES
temps .
Auto.
the off ic e of the Cou nty Auditor
derpinning ; phone 992·3712.
water
leve l
follow.
in _the Cou rt HotJse , P.omeroy,
1220 Washington Blvd.
9-1-6tc
control.
Lint
The moon is between il.s last Oh iO. Compla ints against any 423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
Filter or Power
valuat ion or assessment, except
quarter and new phase.
Fin Ag ftator .
! he
valuations fixed and
Perm a· Press
ass
essments
mad!
by
the
Tu
The morning stars are
Moytog
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
Mercury, Venus and Saturn .
heard bY the Co un ty Board of For Rent
HIID Of Heat
Dryers
The evening stars are Mars Revis ion , at its office in the 3 ROOM apartmen t, un Court House , Pomeroy, Oh io, on
Surround
clothes
fu
rnished.
408 Spring Ave.,
and Jupiter.
or after August 30. 1972 .
with gentle, even
Pomeroy .
Those born on this date arc Comp lai nts must be made in
heat. No hot'spots ,
I
wri ting, on blanks furni shed by
8-10-llc
r:o overdr'( lng .
under the sign of Virgo.
the County Aud itor and flied In
----Fine Mtsh ·Lint
his
ott
ice
on
or
before
the
t
ime
American author Rex Beach limited for payment of ta)(eS for 8x35 HOUSE trailer; country
Filler.
·
We Specialize In
was born Sept. I, 1877.
th e first half year, or a1 . an y
location ; phone 992-3954.
MAYTAG
t!me during whiCh taxes are
9-1-31c
On this day in history :
received by the County
In 1878, Miss Emma Nutt rreasurer , wlt~out penally lor 'J AND 4 ROUM furnished and
became the first telephone the first half year .
unfurflished apartments.
Gordon
H. Caldwell
UN YOUR DIAL '
operator when she took over a
Auditor of Meigs County
'hone 992-5434.
741-4211
4·12-tfc
·
Arnold Grate
8-30-IOlc
Rutland
switchboard In B06ton.
----~-----~----------~

SYRACUSE
CHURCH OF
NAZARENE

BIG

Business Services.

MOBILE home in 1013 CAMPERS and low profile
comp letely lur - Travel Trail ers in stock,
ni-s hed , alr -con(titioning in lowest price in ln -Stotc area;
1972 trailers. huge discount ;
bedroom . Phone 992 ?-141 after
Camp Ct.. lley Starcraft Sales,
5 p. m.
Rl. 62, N. ol Pt. Pleasant
8·31 -llc
behind Red Carpet Inn .
8-25-7tc
· ~'or Sale
---------- FOR YOUR heallh 's sake eat
LARGE select ion of beautiful organically grown tomatoes ;
mahogany dining suites;
8 . Quisenberry has large
bedroom outfits ; also, usual · ones, lOc pound at the old Post
stock of other clean uSed ·Otti ce buil ding, Syrac use:
On Most American Cars
furniture. applian ces dt Ohio.
KUHL 's BARGAIN CEN 8-2J.12tp
- GUARANTEEDTER. "at ca ut ion lighl." Rt .
. Phone 992-2094
7, Tuppers Plains, Ohio .
REDUCED lo sell , registered
Closed Mondays.
8-27-6tc Toy Fox Terrier puppies. Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Hea lthy, have had shols, $25
OpenS Tit 5
each . Papers furn ished .
2 MINIATURE poodles. $25
Monday
thru ~aturday
Phone 742 -5625.
each. Phone 992-7230.
8-29-6tc L:...'0..:6..:E..:.:...M.:a:...in..:._P..:om=e:.:ro~y;_'o:.:'__..j
8-31 -3tc
NEW

REGULATION size pool lable,
like new ; phone 992-2234 after

Keith ·Goble Ford In Middleport

guesl.s Sunday of Mrs. Isabel
Simpson.
Guesl.s of Mr. and Mrs, Critt
Bradford were Critt Bradford
Jr. of Worthington for the
weekend and Mr. and Mrs .
Herman Carson of Coolville on
Sunday .
Mrs. Helen McDevitt and
gra nddaughter , Cher yl
Merriman, of East Liverpool
were weekend guests of their
cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Curt
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J . Carder of
Louisville, Ky., were weekend
guesl.s of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Spencer.
Mr . Jack Curtis and
daughter, Sandra, Pomeroy,
spent a week with his mother,
Mrs. U!one Curtis.
Recent guests of Mrs .
Blanche Spencer were Mrs.
Joan Mattin gly and three
daughters of Kansas, Mrs.
Jean Lindsey and nephew,
Stanley Spencer, of Grove City,
Mrs. Hennan Spencer and son,
Greg, and daughter, Linda, of
Grove City, guests for the
weekend and Linda remained
for a week with her grandmother.
George and David Kuscma of
Gahana called Sunday · af.
ternoon on their aunt, Mrs.
Hattie Paynter, and their
grandmother, Mrs. Mattie
Yost who was visiting her
stsb!r, Mrs. Paynter.
Mrs . Edward Howell of
Pomeroy spent Sunday with
relatives .
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Arthur
of Colwnbus spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Simpson .
Mrs. Frank Cleland and Mrs.
Guy Sayre spent Monday In
Jacksonville visiting their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will
Woods and helped celebrate
their mother's birthday.
Mrs. Grella Simpson and
Mrs. Ura Morris visited Mrs.
Lottie Wilcoxen at Elmwood
Nursing Home at Coolville
Tuesday arternoon .

Leader Training Set
~~ vour

Unes are Showing 11
will be the theme of a leader
training meeting to be offered
by the Cooperative Extension
Service on Sept. 18 at Rio
Grande College .
Emphasis of the program
will be on lines in clothing and
home furnishings and the
meeting is open to the public.
Members of garden clubs,
homemakers' clubs, 4-H
groups, and mothers' clubs are
invited to attend.
Clothing and home furnishing extension specialists
from the Ohio State University
will be on hand to conduct the
training session . They will also
assist those attending with the
techniques of teaching others

what is learned in the training
program. The tra ining will
provide enough information for
two club programs, it is
reported .
The meeting will be held
from 9:30a . m . to 3 p. m. with
registration and coffee hour to
begin at 9 a . m. There will be a
~0 cent registration fee and
lunch will be served In the
college ca feteria .
Those attentling are to take a
pencil, scissors, glue or rubber
cemenl, and several colored
magazine pages, particularly
greens and blues.
Resident.s interested in attending are asked to telephone
the Meigs County Extension
Office by Friday, Sept . 8.

Stiversville News Notes
Rev . and Mrs. Thurber
Thayer and granddaughter of
New York spent vacation at the
hDme of Lawrence and Louise
Gluesencamp. Also visiting
were Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bailey
and children of Wisconsin; Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Theiss of
Vinton, Ada VanMeter, Odessa
Weddle and children, Patty
Gluesencamp.
Mrs . Mike Evans and
children visited Ada Van
Meter.
Mrs. Betty Ward visited Mrs.
Mike Evans.
Mr. and Mrs. La wrence
Gluesencamp visited Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Hauber and family
of Long Bottom.
Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter spent
a few days in Columbus with
her daughter, Anna Haines.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Haines

visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Cornell and family.
Mrs . Gordon Ridenour and
daughter of Chester visited
Lawrence
and
Louise
Gluesencamp.
Harold Brewer visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer and David.
Nicki Dawn Van Meter spent
a week with her sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Theiss of
Vinton.
Maxine Durst visited Ruby
Bryant.
Elaine Lehew visited Ada
Van Meter and Janet Mi!J.
dleswartz.
Louis Gluesencamp visited
Mr. and Mrs. Russell VanMeter.
Sylvia Carpenter visited her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Ellj!e!}e
Carpenter.

OPTO"'EJ..RIST. .

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE"
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST..-

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 1,1972

MH&amp;R Program Expanded
COLUMBUS ( UPI)~ov.
John J. Gilligan today an- ·
nonnced approval of a $15
million one-year contract to
expand five services or the
Department of Mental Health
and Retardation which
would benefit an estimated
10,000 persons.
Joining Gilligan in the an·
nouncement of the contract in

MASON DRIVE-IN
''

&lt;

I

'

:,

'J

I

/)( H'&lt;&lt;HINqll!l,

TONIGHT, SEPT. 1
DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
"FRIENDS"
( Technicolor )

R

PLUS
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS

(Color)
I R)
SATURDAY, SEPT. 2
DOUBLE FEATURE
"THEY MIGHT BE
GIANTS"

Color
George C. Scott

which the slate Welfare Department provides some of the
funds and hel(lll administer the
program were Mental Health
Direetor Kenneth D. Gaver and
Acting Welfare Director
Robert B. Canary.
·
The contract calls for:
- An expansion of early
Short term psychiatric evaluation, testing and treatment for
people with mild forms of mental illness to permit them toreturn oo the community and oo
full or part tie employment.
-The establishment of 10 inpatient drug treatment units
and a post-release counseling
service for rehabilitated pa·
tients.
- The establishment of five
geriatric centers to serve the
psychiatric and rehabilitation
needs of elderly Ohioans.
- Expand drug education
programs designed to promote
awareness of the dsnger of

MEIGS TliEATRE
Tonight and Satorday

Joanne Woodward

September 1-2

G

ALSO
"THE MERCENARY"
Color

CATO'NINETAILS

ITechnicolor)
Jas Franciscus
Karl Malden
Catherine Spaak

Franco Nero
Jack Palance
Tony Musante

GP

WELCOME HOME,
SOLDIER BOYS

ITechnlcolor)

Sunday, Monday
and Tuesday
September 3-4-5

,Sunday, Monday

DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
"PREACHERMAN
Amos Huxley

and Tuesday
September J.4.5

PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM

R

ITechnicolor)
Woody Allen

Ilene Kristen

Diane

PLUS
"WHO SLEW
AUNTIE ROO?" GP

Ke~ton

,

GOING HOME
{Technicolorl

Robert Mitchum

Color
Shelley Winters
"')ark Lester

GP
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

drug abuse.
· ~ Further development of
release
and
aftercare
programs to improve services
to patients leaving state
hospitals.
Gaver said the state institutions providing the evaluation,
testing and treatment as well
as other services included:
Fairhill Mental Health
Center of Cleveland; Portsmouth Receiving Hospital;
Woodside Receiving Hospital
of Youngstown; Fallsview
Mental Health Center of
Cuyahoga Falls; Cleveland
Psychiatric Institute and
Rollman Psychiatric Institute
of Cincinnati.
Gaver said units tD establish
the level of drug dependency
and provide detoxilication programs, counseling and methadone maintenance programs
would he established at:
Fallsvlew Mental Health
Cenler, Cuyahoga Falls;
Rollman Psychiatric Institute;
Columbus State Hospital;
Toledo Mzntal Health Center;
Cleveland Psychiatric In·
stiture; Woodside Receiving
·Hospital; Dayton Mental
Health Center; Athens Mental
Health Center; Cambridge
State Hospital and Tiffin State
Hospital.
Gaver said the geriartic centers to provide testing and
evaluation as well as day and
night care would be established
at:
Toledo Mental Health
Center; Hawhornden State
Hospital
near
Akron;
Massillon State Hospital;
Dayton Mental Health Center
and Athens Mental Health
Center.

Driver

Albert Reuter

Died Thursday
Alber/. G. Reuter, 94, of 1500
Vermo•1l St., Lawrence,
Kansas, formerly of Pomeroy,
died there Thursday.
Mr. Reuter was born on Feb.
15, 1878 in Pomeroy moving tD
Columbus in 1902. He was
employed for 30 years as · a
salesman in Columbus with the
Columbus Dry Goods Co. He
returned to Pomeroy in 1932
and resided with a sister,
Clara, until her death. In 1961
he moved to Lawrence to
reside with a brother, Adolph,
and a niece, Miss Lucille
Reuter. Mr. Reuter was a
lifelong member of the St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Magdalena Boehm
Reuter.
Surviving are a nephew, Carl
Reuter, Lawrence, and these
nieces, Mrs. Ira Zickafoose,
Pomeroy; Miss Lucille K.
Reuter, Lawrence; Mrs.
Mildred Swain, Topeka; Mrs.
Louise Shields, Sr., Mrs.
Frieda Baas, and a sister-inlaw, Mrs. Christina Brunn, all
of Columbus.
Friends may call at the HeldCoiner Funeral Home, 1166
Parsons Ave ., Columbus,
where services will be held at
lOa. m. Saturday with the Rev.
Larry Hoffsis officiating.
Burial will be in the Green
Lawn Cemetery. Omission of
flowers is requested.

You can do jusl aboul all ol your banking by mail .

pomeroy
rullond

pomeroy
national
bank

Jim Merritt

CINCINNATI - The Cin·
cinnati Reds announced today
lhat lefthanded pitcher Dave
Tomlin and catcher Sonny
Ruberto will join the club Sept.
I for the remainder of the 1972
regular season .
In making
the
announcement, Reds Executive
Vice-President and General
Manager Bob How sam said the
lwo Indianapolis players would
be the only additions ·to the
Cincinnati team in the last
month of the season.
Tomlin was 5·6 at In·
dianapolis with an earned run
no lnjuries or arrest.
average of 2.89. He pitched last
At 7 a. m. Thursday, a car night at Evansville but was not
parked at lhe owner's involved in the deeision.
residence, that of Sandra
Tomlin, 21, is a native of
Griffith , Rt . 1, Reedsville, Maysville, Ky. and makes his
apparently jumped out of gear, home in West Union, Ohio.
coasted over a hill, zoomed Used primarily as a reliefer by
through brush tearing down the Indians, he was 2-2 after
small trees, jumped a stump moving into the starting
and stopped after traveling rotation in late July. One of his
approximately &gt;00 feet.
victories was a seven-inning,
There was heavy damage to complete game shutout over
the car.
Denver.
Ruberto, 26, and a native of
Staten Island, N. Y., will back
up Johnny Bench, who has
DIVORCE ASKED
In Meigs County Common been nursing a fractured little
Pleas Court Betty A. Hut- fin ger, and Bill Plummer. He
cbinson, Rt. I, Rutland, has hit .247 with the Indians. He
filed suit for divorce against spent about half his time
Milo B. Htchinson, same ad· behind the plate and the rest at
dress , charging extreme second base and third base .
cruelty. In another case, the
court ruled that William R.
Stephenson, Sr., is to pay
Family Fund , Inc ., the sum of
$758.89 plus interest.
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A
balloon race featuring the
LOCAL TEMPS
world's largest hot air balloon
The temperature in down- highlighls today's activities at
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m. the Ohio State Fair.
Friday was 77 degrees under
This is the ninth day of the 12sunny skies.
day exposition and fair of.
ficials are expecting improved
attendance over the Labor Day
weekend, when the entertainment calendar Includes
popular Bob Hope and teen
favorite David Casaldy.
Attendance Thursday was
154,142, slightly higher than the
152,149 figure for the eighth dey
last year. Total fair attendance
this year has been 1,439,879.
Today's race was scheduled
oo begin at noon from the in·
field of the race track.
British balloonist Julian R.P.
Noll, who last month set an
altitude record of 36,200 feet,
was to pilot the world's largest
baloon, an 84,000 cubic foot
Omega balloon.
The American champ, Bruce

Again
This Week

The Aristocrats
FEATURING

Bruce Stalnaker, vocalist
"THEY PLAY IT ALL"

MEIGS
INN
PomeJOY, Ohio
Ph. 992-3629

1Contlnoted from Page I)

with every grandmaster and
expert predicting victory'. An
A cou•se on · Appalachian · incredible 30th. move blunder
Culture will be offered at Rio by Spassky had opened th~
Grande College beginning on floodgatesc
The Russian, looking gaunt
Sept. 11. Meigs Counlians inand
tired after two months of
terested in enrolling are asked
to advise Mrs. Jennifer L. · joy and agony, finally sealed
Sheets, Meigs County ex· his 41st move and walked
slowly through the curtains.
tension agent, \192-3895.
lnstrucoor for the course will The last 45 minutes after the
be Fred Snuffer who was one of fateful move he had remained
the guest speakers at the well· seated, running a hand through
received program on Ap· his tousled hair, watching
•palacbian Culture at the Fischer leap' in and out for
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy glasses of juice.
"It's all over," said grand·
last February.
master
Svetozar Gligoric of
The course, Sociology 3~.
Yugoslavia.
"Why
he
covers an examination of the
cultural heritage of the region (Spassky) touched that
and the cultural influence of its poisoned pawn I shall never
social institutions. It is open to know. Spassky's 30th move was
anyone.and may he audited or a terrible mistake because it
taken for three hours credit. It opened the way for Fischer's
will be given Monday evenings pawn on a line which otherwise
beginning at 6:30p.m. Sept. 11 was closed.'.'
REYKJAVIK (UP!) - The
throughDec.ll. Thecostis$90.
Mrs. Sheets feels that the moves in the 21st game of the
course will be helpful to Boris Spassky-Bobby Fischer
everyone interested in general World Chess Championship :
Fischer B
improvement of the area, Spassky W
I.
P-K4
P.QB4
which, she says, "can best be
2.
Kt-KBJ
P-K3
accomplished through a better
3.P.Q4
PxP
understanding of our people
4.
KtxP
P.QR3
and our institutions."
5. Kt.QBJ
Kt.QB3
The course will he offered
6. B-K3
KI·KB3
only if enrollment is sufficient
7.
B.QJ
P.Q4
to cover costs, Mrs. Sheets
8.PXP
PXP
said.
9. O.Q
B.Q3
10. KtxKt
PxKt
11. B.Q4
().4)
12. Q-B3
B-Itl
13. R B1-Kl
P-B4
l4.BxKt
QxB
PxQ
The Middleport Fire Dept. 15.QxQ
16.
R
R1-Ql
R
BI.QI
was called to the George
R Rl-Ktl
Hackett, Jr., residence on 17. B-K2
P-BS
Seventh Ave. at 9:08 p. m. 18. P.QK13
19.
KtxP
BxKt
Thursday when the Hacketts'
BxP ch
car caught fire . The blaze was 20. RxB
RxR
out before firemen left the 2l.KxB
22.
BxP
R-Q7
station, however.
RxQBP
AI 1:04 a. m. Friday the ~ . BxQRP
RxR
department received another 24. R·K2
25.
BxR
R.Ql
in a series of fa lse alarms. The
R.Q7
caller advised that Kay 's 26. P-R4
R-R7
Beauty Shop, 169 North Second '!1. B·B4
K-Bl
Ave., was 'on fire. Investigalion 28. K-Kt3
K-K2
disclosed that there was no 29. K-B3
30. P-KKt4
P-B4
fire .
31.
PxP
P-B3
At 9:10 a. m. Friday the
P-R3
Middleport E-R squad was 32. B-Kta
33
.
K-Kt3
K-Q3
called to Rutland for Sheila
R-R8
Adkins who was in ~n auto 34. K-B3
K-K4
apparently
enroute
to 35. K-Kt2
36.
B·K6
K·B5
Pomeroy. Hemorrhaging, she
R.QKta
was taken to Veterans 37. B.Q7
38. B-K6
R·Kt7
Memorial Hospital.
a9. B-B4
R-R7
40. B-K6
P·R4
OFFICES CLOSE
Adjourned,
The Mayor's office and the
Board of Public Mfairs in
Middleport will be closed all
EXTRAS OFFERED
day Monday for the observance
RACINE
- Extra aonuals
of Labor Day. Employes of
other departments also will be from the past school year at the
off duty in observance of the Southern Local School District
are available. Anyone wishing
holiday.
to purchase one of the books
may contact the office of Vinas
DYNAMITE HELPS
Lee at the high school In
LYSKILI, Sweden (UP!) - Racine.
He was sitting on dynamite and It saved his life. Leif
SPEAKER NOTED
Strndgaard, 27, a Swedish
miner, felllOOfeet down a shaft
The Rev. August Kuehl of
when the safety wires broke, Rochester, N. Y., will speak at
But the box or soft dynamite Grace Episcopal Church. at
slicks he sat upon cushioned 10:30 a. m. Sunday. The Rev .
the fall and he escaped unin- and Mrs. Kuehl will arrive in
jured.
Pomeroy Saturday afternoon .

Firemen Called
On False Alann

Better Attendance Expected

!he bank or
lhe century
establi shed 1872

The New

·offered

RedS R eCall

iConllnued from Page I)
Cheshire, driving an Jn.
ternational tractor, was
traveling east when he met an
on-coming truck in a curve.
Reese pulled his tractor to the
righl to allow room for the
other vehicle tD pass, went off
the berm too far, went 8CJ feet
and lurned over, skidding
approximately 15 more feet on
its right side.
Twenty-five tons of coal were
dumped into a hay field
belonging to Annie Ogden,
Wilkesville , Rt. l. There were

It's easy. And convenient . We're as near as
your nearest mail box. And we're open 24 hours a day.
If you like lhe idea, gel our tree Bank·by·Mail lorms.

Soc 323 ·spassky

Saturday
Night.

10 til 2

Middleport Merchants
Association
Meeting Tonight
At

We will be closed
Monday, Sept. 4,
Labor Day.

Co. &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Soclal Room
7:30p.m.

Comstock of Ann Arbof; Mich.,
was to fly the Piccard Gypsy
Balloon - a sphere constructed of a piece of material
from every balloon ever made
hy Piccard.

and Bertha Ashcraft of Hamilton won the prominent senior
citizen awards.
Senior citizen volunteer
award went to Mrs. Anna
Struewing of Yellow Springs.

Testing Was Intensive
Extensive testing, a vital
part of t~e ·individualized
program of Instruction, has
· been carried out at the
Bradbury School during the
first week of classes.
The testing was held so that
instruction can he planned to
meet the Individual need of the
student. Children - fifth and
sixih graders -were tested in
vocabulary, readin·g and
comprehension, spelling·
capitalization, punctuation
usage, map reading, reading
graphics
and
tables,
knowledge and use of reference
materials, mathematic con·
cepts and mathematics
problem solving.
Next week, the testing will
include Individually ad·
ministered reading tests and
further mathematics testing.
After the testing program has
been completed, the individual
needs of each student will be
available for the planning of

Unemployment
(Con Unued from Page 1)
workers. And the unemployment rate for Vietnam war era
veterans increased from 7.3
per cent up tD 7. 7 per cent.
The BLS said unemployment
Showed little change in most
occupational groups, ~cept
lhat joblessness In the durable
goods manufacturing industry
dropped from li. 7 per cent to 5
per cent, . lowest point in 'l1
months.
Looking back over the first
year of President Nixon's
wageprice controls, the BLS
said employment increased 2.6
million, with adult men accounting for 1.1 million of the
Increase, adult women 1
million
and
teenagers
500,000.
White workers accounted for
all but 200,000 of this increase.
PLAN HORSE SHOW
A horse show will be planned
when the Eastern Athletic
Boosters meet at 8 p. m.
Tuesday at the high school. All
members are asked to attend .

individual instruction.
Mrs. Beulah Casto of the
Leading Creek Conservancy
· Dlstric~ Is working at the
school as an aide.

HOSPITAL NEWS

POMEROY - "Make Labor Day
meaningful for Mother. Bring her and the
family to our Labor Day chicken bar-

Holzer Medical Center
BIRTHS- Mrs. James Coy,
son ·wellston; Mrs. Charles
Taylor, daughter, Gallipolis,
and Mrs. Marion Durham,
daughter, Minford.
DISCHARGES - Georgina
McCausland, Kenneth Keats,
Terry Cupp, Stanley Bowman,
Donald Fulton, Mrs. Richard
McKenzie and daughter, Betty
Hamron, Kenneth Belcher,
Sadie Justis, Ray Kline,
· Shannon .Robins, Shelly
Skidmore, Ruby Shoemate,
Stephen Marcum, Andy Lee,
James Cochran, Matthew
Beaver and Betty Ashburn.

becue."
That's the message Joe Struble of the
Pomeroy Fire Depdl'tment is spreading
today in preparation for the department's
annual Labor Day celebration in Pomeroy
on Monday.
The celebration wiU begin at 10:45
a.m. when a parade will move from behind
the Pomeroy Junior Righ School building
down Main St. to Butternut Ave., out
, Butternut to Fifth and .to the Mechanic St .
parking lot where it will disband.
There will be bands, emergency and
fire department vehicles of the area,
marching groups, military units and
(Continued on Page 2)

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Paul Siders,
New Haven; Charles Beegle,
Racine;
lola
Howell,
Pomeroy; ljarbara Douglas,
Guysville; John Bigelow,
Middleport; Douglas
LeMasters, Point Pleasant,
and Grover Klein, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Cynthia
Lane, Larry Thomas, Connie
Manley, Mildred Bissell, Alice
Coleman, Jenny Black,
Francis Klein, Franklin Roush
and Ramona Yonker.

Cloudy Sunday, showers
Lkely southeast. High temperatures ranging to the low
709. Continued cloudy Sunday,
chance of showers In southern
portions. Low in the 50's.
Monday clearing, partly sunny
most areas.

VOL VII NO. 31

Turner said Thursday he will break his controversial Dare To Be
Great finn into 500 smaller companies which will be sold or given
tD "little people" around the nation.
·
orders," Turner told a
"This will cornply with any
crowd of some 800 supporters, "But I will keep one part so 1 can
keep fighting for what I think is right." Turner is charged with 86
counts of violating Florida's uniform sale and security laws, and
he said he and his numerous firms are under legal fire in at least
38 states, including Ohio, as well as from the federal government.
CLEVELAND - RICHARD SKLAR, OHIO campaign coordinator for George McGovern, says the formation of an Ohio
labor movement on behalf of the Demoa"atlc presidential candidate is "greatly encouraging to our organiZation."
"I offer my congratulations and thanks to ~hainnan
Martin Hughes of the Communications Workers and Bill
Casstevens of the United Auto Workers," Sklar said. "Just the
existence of their committee is evidence the workln&amp; people of
this country realize the programs of McGovern and the
Democratic Party are in their beat Interests.

Open Saturday 9:30AM to 9:00PM

Save During Our Storewide
Labor Day Weekend Sale ! !
Sale prices on Fa II Dresses - Coordinate Sportswear -. Supp-Hose - Sleepwear - Custom-Made
Drapene_s - Infants Clothing - Mens Knit Slacks _
Sport Shirts - Shower Curtains - Dress Fabrics _·
Jewelry - Sl!eets and Pillowcases - Yarn . War
drobes and Cabinets - Boys Spo"iJ'irts.
-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

pitch.
The M-V James K. Ellis, a twin of the
Winchester, ·added to the Shearer fleet in
1972, recently pushed a tow of 24 loaded
coal barges up the river.
The crew of the M-V Winchester

consisted of Harry N. Calloway, Master ;
Lesler A. Frieden, Pilot; Lewis R. Haynes
and Dwight L. Taylor , engineers; John D.
Snead, mate ; Glen Smith, watchman;
Jerry C. Hedrick and Johnny L. Lilly,
deckhands, and Chila Carter. cook .

+

Your Invited (;ueM

tmts

Reaching Mort'
Than 11 ,()()()

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

l4 PAGES

THREE SFCTIONS

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1972

Pomerov-Middleport

SAIGON (UPI )-A bloody battle with
heavy casualties on both sides raged
through its second day Saturday 35 miles
north of Saigon where Communist forces
ambuShed a goverment battalion in the
first test of a new outer defense line around
the South Vietnamese capital, military
sources said.
The fighting continued in!D the night
Saturday as governmentJorces backed by
lllnk.li •nd artllierf attempted to break
through the ·Communist forces tD relieve
their 500.man unit. which waa badly
GALUPOUS - Residents and staff members of Gallipolis State Institute said mauled in the ambush Friday. The South
"farewell" to Chief Sopervlsor Clyde A. Bradbory, shown with John Mitch, Hospital Vietnamese lost 200 killed and 60 to 70
Administrator, right, Thursday afternoon when he retired, concluding more than 35 wounded and reported 18Cl North Vietyears' service.
namese dead, including 20 women.
A tea hororlng Mr. Brsdbury was attended by co-workers from every department,
Heavy fighting also swirled in and
who expressed their respect and affection for "Brad" with gifts of a diamond tie tack in around Que Son district capital at the
florentine gold setting and a banker's wallet of sealskin, both presented by Mrs. Laura eastern end of the Que Son valley, 350
Cornwell, R.N., Director of Nursing.
miles north of Saigon, where government
The Nursing Service Department also sponsored a luncheon in the institute Com- troops fought to push the Communists out
missary, Tuesday, attended by the Nursing Service Staff and Administrative Depart- of the town and recapture nearby Artillery
ment heads. A special guest was Mr. Bradbury's wife, Ethel.
Base Ross which was abandoned Aug. 19.
"Qife Son is just darn near totally
destroyed," an officer said. "There was a
bunch of North Vietnamese bodi~s all over
the place. Oh, Lord, the stench is terrible."
MISS JANE STOWERS, above,
Seven fights around Quang Tri, the
recently was crowned Miss Charm of
country's northernmost provincial capital,
Ohio . She is shown with her trophies at
the Neil House in Columbus where the
GALUPOUS - Principal James N. tendent, including those who are employed left 106 North Vietnamese dead at a cost of
M. Davis announced Saturday lhat all under the age and schooling certificate as more than six government troops killed
pageant was held.
and eight wounded, government spokesstudents who fall under the compulsory provided by law.
men said.
school age in Ohio for school attendance
The surge in fighting coincided with
(all students under 18 years of age who
North Vietnam's Independence Day.
have not graduated) must have registered
A Radio Hanoi broacast that announced
by Tuesday, September 5, 1972.
the release of three captured American
Students who are violating this law
JD
'[
pilots, the first tD be freed in three years,
who have not registered by this date will ntrf.l,(.f,er 0 .c
(Continued on Page 2)
itiO GRANDE - Miss Jane Stowers, he referred to the attendance officer for
court
action.
POMEROY
Only
a
few
coins
were
18, of Rio Grande was crowned Miss
For information, each parent, guar- stolen in a breaking and entering of the
Charm of Ohio, senior division, at the
recent Miss Charm Pageant held at the dian, or other person having charge of any Kapple Pennzoil Service Station on East
HOLIDAY HERE, TOO
Nell House in Columbus. She was also child of compulsory school age must send Main St. about I a.m. Saturday.
Readers are reminded tllat Monday,
Entrance inlo the station was gained
voted Miss Congeniality by the contestants such child to a school which conforms to
Labor
Day, there will he no publlcatlon
in the four age divisions represented at the the minimum standards prescribed by the by removing "pop out" metal·panels from
of The Daily Sentinel or The Galllpolls
State l!oard of Education for the full time an overhead door. A nearby resident saw
Pageant.
Dally Tribune In order that the stalls
the
school
attended
is
in
session.
the
intruder
and
called
police.
The
in·
Miss Stowers, daughter of Mr . and
may enjoy the national hollday. Regular
This applies to all of the above men· !ruder had fled from the station, however ,
Mrs. Stollie Stowers, is a 1972 graduate of
publication will be resumed Tuesday.
Gallla Academy High SChool, will enter tioned students except those who have when police arrive.:. Only a few coins were
been
properly
excused
by
the
superin·
m1ssmg
from
the
cash
register.
Rio Grande College this fall. In high school
she was a varsity cheerleader, member of
the National Honor Society, and was active
In other honorary and social organizations.
She reigned as the 1971 Miss Gallla
CoWlty and represented her county in the
Miss Parade of lhe Hills Pageant in
Nelsonville where she was second runnerup.
The Miss charm Pageant provided
each young lady who entered an opportunity to display her talents, modeling
ability, poise and personality. Each
ATHENS - Services for Handicapped assisting school distric!s with their in· General Assembly will follow through
with funding to Implement provisions of
contestant modeled a sports outfit, Children Direl:oor Robert L. Welnfurther dividual plans will include :
-A
two:day
conference
to
be
held
at
the district plans."
evening dress and gave a three-minute Saturday announced plans to assist school
In formal action, the Governing Board
talent prese~tatlon. For her talent ' districts in the 11-county SHC project area Rio Grande College on September 18 and
presentation MillS Stowers performed a with development of comprehensive plans 19 for the SHC project staff and outside voted unanimously to recommend. the
modern jazz dance routine to the theme to provide educational services for all consultants to develop several possible hiring of Mrs. Daisy Cook as Title lll EMR
alternative methods of providing services Models Coordinator to the project's fiscal
from "The Pink Panther."
handicapped children.
agent, the Athens County School Board.
Sponsoring her for the pageant were
Weinfurtner, speaking at the SHC for each category of handicap;
A
two-day
meeting
tentatively
set
for
Welnfurtner said the Governing
Central Soya of Gallipolis, Grover's Studio Govern ins Board's regular August
of ProfeiiSional Photography, Middleport, ~eeting In Athens, said Substitute Senate mid.Qctober for all superintendents in the Board's action followed an extensive
and Neal's Insurance Agency, Galllpolls. Bdl 405, adopted by the 109th General eleven-county region to establish the search for applicants and a series of in·
·
Assembly, requires that each of Ohio's 623 tentative school district plans;
terviews by the Board's screening com·
-Technical assistance by the SHC staff mlttee.
school districts submit such a plan to the
canadian
State l!oard of Education by next and outside consultants for individual
The EMR Models Coordinator Is
. Cool Roams
school boards dw;ing the months of Sep- responsible for monitoring experimental
December
1.
Southward over U.S.
classrooms for EMR children throughout
The . services fo~ Handicapped tember and j)ctober, and;
'
and
materials
aimed
at
-Conferences
Unseasonably cold 'Canadian air swept Children projeet row covers Athens,
the eleven .counties and providing inover the nation 'a mldlectlon S&amp;turdey Gallla, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs, Monroe, developing an awareness and knowledge service training for EMR teachers.
dampening the aplrila of vacationers on Morgan, Noble, Perry, Vinton and of special education and the Services for
Mrs, Cook, who reeeived her master's
the fint.full day ol the Labor Day hoilclay, Washington Counties. Handicapped HandicapPed Children project.
degree from MarShall University, has 17
"The tnteut• of '405"' • Welnfurtner years experience as a teacher and teacher
the UP! reported.
children aerved Include those who are
.
s
aid,
"Ia comprebenslve planning for all supervisor.
,
Scattered rain and thWideratotma enducable mentally'retarded, emotionally
loUond ID the Wlke of the cold front af- dlaturbed, neurol.oilcally handicapped or baadlcapped clllldren. Tbe leglalatloa Ia
Unda Bauer, coordinator of the SHC
fecting 111 area !rGm northwelt Milne to crippled, and th01e who have speech, almDar to IIIIi wbl&lt;b required com- project's lnstructlonal Resource Center,
prebeaalve plaaalag for vocalloaal annomced hours for the central IRC In
aoathwest Telu and frorn the aoulhern hearln&amp; or vision dlaorders.
l'lllnl Ul the Grell lAkes.
Welnfurlner Slid the strategy for eda,calloa by ID acboola. HopefUlly the Athens and for the IRC's satellites In

35 Y
, ears Service

Jucliea•

Shop Tonight Until 9:00 PM

bound for the Philip Sporn Plant above F. Shearer &amp; Sons by St. Louis Ship,
New Haven, W. Va. This tow of 30,000 tons, Division of Poll Industries, St. Louis, Mo.
covering more than three acres, is the in 1970. lt is powered by a General Motors
largest ever seen in the Upper Ohio River. · 2,850 hp engine, which turns a propeller
The M-V Winchester was built for 0. 109 .8 inches in diameter with 103 inches of

Gallioolis-Point Pleasanl.

Families

----------------15 CEr:HS

NewLine
Bloodied
By No

1Continued from Page 11

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

POMEROY - River boat history was
made here Saturday when the M·V Win·
chester, owned by 0. F. Shearer &amp; Sons,
Inc., passed in front of PomeroyMiddleport with 32 loaded coal barges

)(-----------------------~...:..:..:.=.:

News .•• in Briefs

COLUMBUS -STATE OFF1CIALS from IS International
labor organizations met here Thursday to form the Ohio Labor
for McGovem-Shriver Committee. Martin J. Hughes, in·
ternational vice president ol the Cotrununlcations Workers of
America and William Casstevens, United AulD Workers, were
named co-chairmen of the committee which was to act on a nonfinancial basis.
·
"We have been formed solely to get the McGovern message
out," said Casstevens. "This committee will not be raising any
hard money." Caastevensand Hughes, both from Cleveland, said
the committee would attempt to make inroads for McGovern by
exposin&amp; his labor record to workers. He said j'YfcGovern has
voted pre&gt;-labor 94 per cent of the time while Nixon, while in
Congress, votedpr!Habor only 13per centofthetime.

Record Tow Claimed of 30,000 Tons of Coal in 32 Barges

Weather

Pleasant Valley Hospital
BIRTH - Mr. and Mrs .
.Thurman Oiler, Vinton,
deughter.
DISCHARGES - Amande
Burns, Henderson ; Clinton
Swisher II, Elmer Endicott,
Mrs. Elmer Jones, Elmer
Endicott, all Pt. Pleasant;
Mrs. Franklin Persinger,
Bancroft; Mrs. Neil Dilly,
Vienna; Tammy Nibert ,
Steven llenny, both Gallipolis
Ferry; Orville A. Casto, Leon;
Dorothy Boston, New Haven;
Art Campbell, Charlesoon .

''Fox and Hound''

This year's race was to be a
"fox and hound" event -with
the "fox" balloon lifting off at
noon and the seven entires
chasing.
The 6Q.rninute race winnter
is determined by the balloonist
landing closest to the lead balloon.
Prevailing winds determine
the course, expected to be
about 20 miles. Balloonists
compete for a purse of $10,1100.
Today's free entertainment
includes Roberta Flack, Bobby
Vinton and AI Green. Bob Hope
is scheduled Saturday and Sun·
day and David Casaldy winds
up the entertairunent Monday.
In Thursday's 4-11 Bicycle
competition, Tod Mills of Richland County and Carolyn
Temple of Delaware County
were winners in the l().to.12year~ld classes; Brent Sheffer
of Stark County and Judy
Breltkrezu of Warren County
took honors In the 13-to-1._
yearold division, and Eric
Klphard and Sylvia Ehlerding,
both of Clinton County, were
winners· In the 15-year-old
class.
Mrs. Philllp O'Day of Columbus won first prize for her
sauerkraut salad recipe In the
sauerkraut dey contest.
In senior citizen competition,
Mrs . Hilde Nichols of Cincinnati and Willlam Broxterman
of Cleves won the dance contest, while Theodore Berry of
Clnclnllatl, 1 city counclimlln,

.F iremen to
Mark Labor
Day Monday

to

GSI Ended

Deadline is Tuesday

'I

'•

,.,
·'

Jane Stowers

Only Co ins T.ak en by

Is Miss Otann

L .._-

f

ennzoz

YOUNG TONY KENNEDY, son of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Kennedy, Middleport
Route 1, holds the large trophy he and his six year old pony, "Chief," won at the
Ohio Slate 4-H Horse Show in Columbus. Tony was the youngest horseman taking
part.

Youngest Horseman
In Top Fair Work
BY BOB HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT - Being the youngest
horseman at the Ohio State Fair 4-H Horse
Show didn't cramp the style of young Tony
Kennedy of Middleport.
No Sir! Tony still came through amid
the tough competition with his pony,
"Little Chief Handprint," to receive
grades of "A" in both showmanship and

CARRIE MOVES NORTH
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Tropical storm
Carrie slowly lumbered north off the East
Coast Saturday, its fringe winds and rains
ruining the Labor Day weekend for
millions of beach-goers from Virginia
Beach to Coney Island.

State .Will Assist Schools to Develop

Strong ~lans Aiding Handicapped Youths

~

Marietta and at Rio Grande College. The
Athens facility will be open from 9a.m. to S
p.m. on Monday, Tuesday and Friday;
from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Wednesday and
.from 5 p.m. 141 8 p.m. on Thursday.
The sate!Utes at Martella and Rio
Grande will he open from 4 p.m. to 8
p.m. on Thursday and from 10 a.m. to I
p.m. on Saturday. Ml" Bauer said the
Martella faciUiy wlll begin operation
September 7 while tile opening of the Rio
Grande satellite has been JHlSiponed
until shelvtns arrives.
Special education teachers may
arrange alternate times to use tile IRC
facilities by contacting Miss Bauer al
the Atbeos Cente.r.
In addition, she said, at least five inservice workshops .for s'Peclal education
teachers have been set for September and
October: September 7, 6:30 p.m .,
"Developing Understanding of Self and
Others," location to t·e announced; Sep·tember 21, 7 p.m. tD It p.m., Consumer
Education, Rio Grande IRC satellite, Yale
(Continued on page 2

horsemanship. He was among the few to
receive that high rating.
Tony is only eight years old - by 4-H
standards too young to be in 4-H work but qualified by being in the third grade of
school. Unless one has reached that grade
level he couid not take part in 4-H work
unless nine by Jan . 1, 1972.
At the Meigs County Fair where he
served as outrider for the harness race
program riding "Bachelor Boy," owned by
Mrs . Flossie Allensworth of Middleport,
Tony was selected by Judge AI Weygar.~!.
to represent Meigs County at the Ohio
State Fair. His grades were "A" in both
showmanship and horsemanship.
Tony's 4-H project, of course,ls the 'sixyear-old registe•ed Pony of America
named tittle Chief Handprint. Tony
purchased the pony in December, 1971,
with money he had won in horse shows .
"Chief" had never been ridden in the
show ring when he arrived in Meigs
County and, as a result, Tony spent many
hours during the winter and spring months
getting "Chief" ready for his debut in the
show circuit.
The hard work paid off In many enjoyable and exciting moments for the pair;
the highlig)lt being the trip to the State
Fair. Ron Meredith was judge at the state
event.
In addition to the trophy awarded
Tony and "Chief," they received a horse
blanket designating them as Meigs County
representatives. The blanket, given by an
admirer, caused considerable comment at
. the fair in Columbus as many thought the
identifying blanket an excellent idea.
While the State Fair participation
ranks as the highlight of 1972 for Tony and
"Chief," rwming close behind in excitement was their competlr.g and winning
two first places at the All American Youth
Horse Show, the largest young show In the
nation.
Third on the list of accompllllunenta
was attendlns the summet 4-H hone camp
at l.ucuvllle where Tony not on1J
developed his Lalent In handling hor,lllllat
also kept the cooks laughing with his quiJIII.
Starting at such an early age, 1'uay
has 10 more 'years In ._H work and wllh
such an excellent beglnnlnc year be'~ ae
to have many more "111011111111 to
remember".

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="729">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11129">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53359">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53358">
              <text>September 1, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1741">
      <name>reuter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
