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                  <text>14 - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Sept. 20, 1972

President Thien Turned

HOOPLE'S CHOICES---

Texas, Notre Dame, Trojans to Win;
Kentucky Upset Choice Over 'Bama
lyMAJORAMOS I . HOOPLE

SMU 35, Florida 8 ( N)
Southern CaUfornta %9, llll·
· nola 8
Indiana 17, TCU 14
Iowa State 40, Utah 20
Iowa 31, Oregoa State 10
Kansas U, Wyoming 14
·o~to U. 18, Keat State 10.
Brigham Voung r7, Utah
· Slate 1% (N) . .
LSU 118, Texas A&amp;M 22 (N)
Ma~Yland 18, VMI 8
Memphis State 21, Drake !0
(NJ
Miami (Ohio I 22, BowUng
Greea 18
Mlchlgaa State 30, Georgia
Tech !0
Colorado 118, Minnesota 15
Missouri U, Baylor 14
New Mexico state 25, Fre10o
Slate 6 (N)
Te•a• Tech 34, New Mexico

Peerless Protnosticator

Egad, friends, we ~ave
some tasty pigskin tidbits in
store for you this week .. Two
of the nation's perennial
f&gt;owers - Texas and Notr.e
Dame are slated to see
a~tlon . fOJ'. the first (iljle. Top·.
ranked·. Southern Callfornla
will g&lt;i · fo(th~ thli'd IV!n in a
row, as W.lll !'llgged C.olorado
and suipri.shlg UCLA. Every·
where you liK&gt;k. on Saturday
,t h,re's a big game on tap.
· Her~'·s the way the Hoople
The Old lloy Himself
~t~m sees some of these
b1gg1eS•. . .
dear readers, that's what's
·: ·DaneJi..Royal's T e x a s In the cards.
Jidng~rn(riiU ~11k~ it rough
Other contests worthy of
on.the :M18mf Humcanes as note will find Arkansas stopthey :..repulse the invaders, ping Oklahoma state, 30-20;
I (N)
· :11&gt;-21,;. At the same time Ara Nebraska leveling Army, 33·
Parseghlan will ·take the, 7; Stanford walloping Duke, North CaroUna '1:1, North
wraps off his '72 Irish eleven 35·12; high-scoring SMU rol·
CaroUna State 21
meeting strong Northwestern lin!~ over Florida, 35-8; LSU Western Michigan 14, North·
in Evanston. Our data-kaff takmg Texas A&amp;M, 28·22,
ern ·Illinois 1!
kaff-indicates a close 22-16 and m I g h t y Oklahoma Notre Dame 22, Northweat.
triumph for Notre Dame - shading a fine Oregon team,
ern II
35-28.
um-kumph!
Oklahoma 35, Oregon Z8
In a bruising Mid-Ameri· Pen state U , Navy 1
Southern California's Tro·
jans with two impressive can Conference battle the Washington 35, Purdue 21
wins behind them will chalk Miami Redskins will edge Rice 19, Clem10a 10 (N)
up another by thrashing !Ill· the visiting Bowling Green Mississippi 33, South Caro·
nois 29-8 on the latter's Falcons. Your PeerlessProg·
llaa 18
home grounds, It will be the nosticator confidently picks Tenesaee 38, Wake Forest 6
. same story for powerful the Redskins to .prevail, 22· Texas 26, Miami (Florida)
Colorado whic~ Is the Hoople 18 over the B·G Falcons who
Zl (N)
cl!i;iice " to whip Minnesota last week upended Purdue! Toledo 20, U. Texas (Arllngwhim these twn fine insti· -Now go on with the fore·
toa) 10 (NJ
tiltions meet for the first cast.
Tulane 17, Georgia 14
Air Force r7, Plttaburgh 14
time on.the gridiron.
Kentucky
17, Alabama 14 (N) Houston !S, Tulsa 12 (N)
For surprising UCLA there Arizona State
41, Ka11a1 Michigan 15, UCLA 12 (NJ
is a surprise in store. The
Paclftc %4, U. Texas (El
State 2% (NJ
Uclans, who shocked Nebras- Washlngtoa state 25, Arizona
Paso) 17 (N)
ka and narrowly whipped
Mllllulppl State 30, Vander·
17 (N)
Pittsburgh, are in for a bit
bllt 7 (NJ
state 14, Arbnna
of shock themselves when Wichita
WUllam
&amp; Mary 17, VUlooova
state 12 (N)
they entertain Michigan in Arkanaas 30, Oldahoma State
14
the Los Angeles Coliseum. !0 (N)
Vlrelllla 25, West VIrginia 14
Our scouts, Jack Wolverine Nebraska 33, Army 7
West Texas State 18, Colo·
and Golden .Gates, who have
·udo State 10 (N)
!4, Ulliveralty Tenbeen watching these clubs Auburn
Wlsco01ln
22, Syracuie 12
neasee (Chattanooga) 10
for us, see Michigan ftlnlsh· Boaton
Athens 58 Wellston 0
ing on the long end of a 15·12 (N) College 2%, Temple 14 GaUfpoUs 20 Jackson 18
count-har·rumph!
Holy Cross 18, Browa 14
lroaton 22 Waverly 6
Another astonishing result California 33, San Jose State Meigs 14 Logan 8
Is foreseen for the clash of 6
Kyger Creek 20 Hannan Trace
Johnny Ray's rejuvenated Xavier 14, Clnclnnatl10 (N)
6
Kentucky Wildcats and Bear Colgate 13, Layfayette 7
North Ga!Ua 28 Southwestern
Bryant's 'Barna Boys in Daytoa 18, Marshall 14 (N)
12
Birmingham. The Wildcats Stanford 35, Duke 12
with sparkling newcomer Eastern Carolina 41, Appa· Eastern 7 Southern 6
quarterback Dinky McKay at lachlan State 8 (N)
Ft. Gay 34 Symmes Valley 0
the controls wiU upset the Florida Slate '1:1, Vlrglala Duvall 20 Wabama 6
Crimson Tide, 17-14! Yas, Tech 6
Barboursvllle 28 Pi. Pleasant
Marriage Licenses
Ronald Leo Dalley, 19,
MiddleportRt. I, and Ruth Ann
Ellis, 18, Middleport; Robert
Dale Blankenship, 20, Rt. 2
Albany, and Stella Sue Smith,
18, Rt. 1 Langsville.

.MEIGS WTRE.
Tonight &amp; Thur..Uy
September 20-21
NOT OPEN

..

Friday lhru Tuesdey
September 21-26
Wall Disney's
NAPOLEON &amp; SAMANTHA
(Technlcolor)
Michael Douglas
Will Geer
Also
Wall Disney's
MYSTERIES OFTHE
DEEP
Disney Cartoon : Bearly
As loop
Admission:
AdullsS1.50
Children 75c
Show StartS7 P.M.

Ohio Tour Ended
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Democratic presidential candidate
George S. McGovern wrapped
up a campaign visit here today
with a 5Cknlnule tour of the
sprawling Western Electric
plant, where 9,000 persons are
employed.
Following the morning tour,
during which he chatted with
supporters and debated with

PEP RALLY SET
There will be a pep rally and
wiener roast Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at Eastern High School
following the Junior High
Eastern-Racine game. Junior
high students are invited to
parUcipate.

critics, McGovern departed
Port Columbcs Airport for
North Bergen, N.J.
Although many workers
wore "McGovern" bultons,
someone had preceded the
candidate's visit to the plant
and handed out "Nixon Now"
buttons, worn by several
workers.
McGovern chatted with
secretaries and white collar
workers In the plant's. front
office and was criticized by a
man working on the assembly
line.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E·R squad
answered a call to the Arnold
W. Hayes residence, 749 South
Third Ave., at 10:35 p.m.
Tuesday. Hayes, who was ill,
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

DIVORCE ASKED
Doris J. Jones, Rt. 3, Albany,
has filed suit for divorce in
Meigs COWl ty Common Pleas
Court against Simon Jones,
same address, charging gross
.neglect of duty and extreme
, cruelty.

WE OUT.STRIPE
MOST LACES

6%
'INTEREST
On Certificates
of Deposit

FROM ONE
BRASS EYEl ET
TO
ANOTHER

.44.4 "/o

OVER
LAST YEAR 1~7'~·1

Our Price
RINGS OUR CH IMES.

ine
IN Black/W
· · BrowntChl!fl'j ·

Chapman's Shoes
· Main She!

' percent per year on 2
Year Certificates of
Deposit. $10,000 .00
Minimum . Interest
payable Quarterly. 9fl
day interest penalty if
cashed
before
maturity.

Meigs Co. Branch

Walton 12 Hannan 0
Coal Grove 32 Rock HID 1%
Portsmouth 7 Col. Llndea
McKinley 0
Chesapeake 20 Fairland 12
Oak Hill 12 Ironton St. Joe 8
Alexander 22 Nelsonville-York
12
Federal-Hocking 2&amp; Mlller 8
Wheelersburg 34 Valley 14
Portsmouth West 20 North
West 8

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Births

Mrs. Walter Slayton, son,
Apple Grove, Friday; Mrs.
James Allen, son, Jackson,
Saturday; Mrs. David Walke,
son, Jackson, Saturday; Mrs.
James Mollhan, son, Wellston,
Saturday; Mrs. Ronald Shook,
daughter, Wellston, Saturday;
Mrs :
Larry
Wickline,
daughter, Jackson, Saturday;
Mrs. Ronald Petrie, daughter,
Vinton, Saturday; Mrs. Asit
Ray, son, Middleport, Satur·
day; Mrs. Russell Wood, son,
Va ., Sunday ; Mrs.
Letart,
Dana Smith, son, Oak Hill,
Sunday; Mrs. Richard Eblin,
daughter, Gallipolis, Stmday;
Mrs . Robert Hartley, son,
Ravenswood, Sunday; Mrs.
Allen Martin, daughter,
Gallipolis, Friday.
Discharges
Sept. 15, II and 17
Curtis Doolittle, Michael
Jones, Morgan Smith, Pauline
Kim
Marjorie
Finley,
Rutherford, Catber Lancaster,
Helen !lritton, Mrs. Raymond
Klein, Edgar Dennison, Jodie
Kumath, Dennis Robertson,
Phillip Hilgenberg, Susan
Dingess, Phyllis Weels, Leona
Pulley, Mandeville Parsons,
Thomas Mossbarger, Stanley
Jones, Jr., Georgene Grate,
Orpha Wooten, Mrs. James
Terry and son, Juanita Sanders, Amy Roush, Sharon
Moss, Jack Mills, Carol
Randolph, Cecil Wolfe, John
Scurlock, Roxie Mercer,
Fennle Miller, Mrs. Terry
Lloyd and son, Katie Kearns,
JoAnna Hull, LyM Crabtree,
Jane Ratcliff, Kevin Evans,
Cheryl Spiers, Della Proffitt,
Helen Yoder , Mrs. Randy
Westmoreland and son, Mabel
Waugh, Brenda Smeltzer,
Merrill Sanders, Mrs. Paul
Kautz and daughter, Wendell
Roush, Irene Reed, Linda
Perry, Anna Latham, Robert
Lanning, Ruth
Knapp,
Christine Jamison, Mrs.
Robert Hoff and daughter,
Charles Hampton, Jr., Mrs.
Woodrow W. Jlall, Jr., and son,
Angela Garretson, Hazel
Dillon, Bob Chapman, Ruth
Carr, Flo Carey, Frances
Cantrell, Richard Bradley,
Virginia Betz, Sharon Goodnile, Viele James, Ethel
Beckner, Madeolyn Rickard,
Mrs. James ouver and son,
Infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Rutherford, Allysa
Harvey, Richard Corvin,
Emma Stewart, Georgia
Clark, Sharon Conger, Tony
Jean Matbews, Eula Cochran,
Jacqueline Proffitt, Sheri
Roush, Lawrence SoiSBon,
Nellie Fowler, Scott Marcum,
Racbel McBride, Susie Kelly,
Tracy Jo Garlic, Robert

w.

Brown.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges : Mrs. WIIUam
Ault, Middleport ; James
Wheeler,
Jr.,
Point'
Pleasant ; Mrs .
Henry
Rainey, Gallipolis Ferry;
Keith Hall, Apple Grove; Mrs.
Richard Clonch, daughter,
Gallipolis; Mrs. R. D. TUIIs,
Point Pleasant ; Clarence
Adkins, Letart ; James
Baisden, Henderson; Emory
McCallister , Southside; ·
Dorsey McDade, Leon; James
Ryan, Gallipolis ; Mrs. WllUam
Tucker, Grimms Landing ;
Cottrill,
Point
Russell
Pleasant; Owens Plants, Leon ; ,
William Flora, Apple Grove;
Mrs . Charles Searls, Mid·
dleport.
Births: Sept. ll, .a SOil to Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Johnson,
Racine ; Sept. 19, a daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Simpkins,
Rt. 2, Point Pleasant.

SAIGON (UPI )-Communist artillery ba~age detonated a Saigon,' aDd Ita fortreu Citadel
artillery today narrowly missed nearby ammunition dump. were recaptured Friday. TO.
a convoy carrying President There were no reporta of day's artillery lire prevented
Nguyen Van Thieu and three of casualties.
Thieu from entering the 50-acre
his top generals In Quang Tri Tbe convoy quickly spun Citadel.
:
City . Thieu later vowed that the around after officers flashed a
ruined city, recaptured after warning to Thieu's motorcade
ayntOD
.
138 days of Communist occupa- and sped to marine beadquar·
• ·
tlon, would be rebuilt.
ters at ljuong Dien, 18 miles to
U
Far to the south albng the the south. A Vleinamese officer
···
Central Coast, allied officers told Kurrus : "Tbe VC (Viet
told UPI correspondent Edward Cong) . apparently had his Raymond J. Miller, 70j
Bassett the Communista were timetable." AnQther officer said Pomeroy Roqte 4, died
using civilians as human shields ''it was a lucky thing he didn't Tuesday afternoon at Veterllllli
Memorial Hospital. Mr. M111er;
against air strikes and artillery go any further."
fire. Officers told Bassett the
The U.S. command In Saigon a retired coal miner, opera lei!'
tactic left 20 civilians dead said American jet fighters and a grocery store In Dexter
.
Monday.
B52s Tuesday flew 310 strikes several years.
He
Is
survived
by
his
wife,
UPI reporter Ted Kurrus, over North Vieinam, most of
reporting from the rubble that them in the country's southern Minnie; two som, Bllly and
is now Quang Tri, said Thieu panhandle. Spokesmen said the Bud, in North Carolina ; a .. tep;
~~;
and his party- who paid a visit attacks destroyed 17 bridges, 16 daughter, Mrs.
Pomeroy
Route
4;
a
brother,
to the city to congratulate the · warehouses, 25 boats and 18
Saigon troops on their victory- trucks. The command ·also Charles, in Pennsylvania, and
.
were headed toward a marine announced the loss of a Navy three ,grandchildren.
Funral
services
will
be
held
brigade position for awards jet in the raids over the North.
ceremonies when a 130mm A Saigon command spokes· at 2 p.m. Fridly at the Martin
man said the government Funeral Home in Rutiand with
counteroffensive in Quang Tri the ~v . Clifford .Smith . Of.
Passing Auto's
City, which began June 28, was ficiating. Burial win be jh
officially declared victorious Miles Cemetery. Friends ~ir
Brakes Grabbed
Tuesday. The city, South call at the funeral home a!Jf
Meigs County Sheriff Robert Vietnam's northernmost provin- time Thursday until time fil
'
C. Hartenbach 's Dept. in- cial capital 43li miles north of services.
vestigated a single · car accident Tuesday at 11:15 p.m. on
SR 7 close to the exit into the
Middleport business loop.
,•
William T. Jones, 23, Mid·
(Continued from Page ll
.
dieport, said he was traveling cially help parochial and other private schooll will be mulllld
north on 7 when as he passed a over by a three-judge federal panel here in the next lew montli8.
car he applied his brakes, The U. S. District Court took over the cue Tuesday, pmen~ '
which grabbed. His auto
the tax credit plan from attalnlng legal statua u 8Cheduled Ml
veered off the highway on the
days after passing through the Ohio General A.saembly.
::
right and jumped a ditch.
The
American
Civil
Uberties
Union
of
C»&gt;lo
Ia
challeDII!Oj!
There were no injuries and no
citaLion issued. There was the constitutionality of the law on grounds It violates the doctribe
of separation of church and slate. Both tbe ACLU and llwyehs
medium damage to his car.
representing slate Tax Conunl88loner Robert J. Kosydar ~
stipulated the new law will not take effect until Jan. 1. ~
NEW GROUP OPENS
Van Johnson's new group, legislature has budgeted $81 mll!lon for the program ~
-:
"Rip Van Winkle" will be next June 30.
David
Young,
legal
counsellor
the
Catholic
Conference
if
·.
playing at Southern High
School Saturday from 9 to 12. Ohio, observed that no credita could be claimed until u.io ·
The dance Is being sponsored anyway "because no one can ftle a slate income tu return befote
~ ."
::
by the senior class.

R

CLEANING
(UPon Kequest)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
I

d Miller·

Died T esdaY ::

JAMES WALKER

Walker Takes
Medical Center
Personnel Post
John W. Rafferty, executive
vice president, today an·
nounced appointment of James
D. Walker of Gallipolis as
personnel director of Holzer
Medical Center.
Walker, a Gallipolis native,
was promoted from safety
director effective September
15. He began association with
the medical center at the
Gallipolis Clinic in 1965 as
comptroller. Following the
merger of the clinic and Holzer
Hospital in 1968, Walker was
appointed safecy director.
Before joining the Gallipolis
Clinic, be was a National Bank
examiner and an accountant
lor the State Utilities Com·
mission.
A graduate of Washington &amp;
Lee Universicy, be Is married
to Mary Jeanne Walker. They
reside on Lower River Road,
Gallipolis. Their son, James H.
Walker and family also live in
Gallipolis.

Campers Get
Bear Trophy
In Far North

Edt•

News • • . in Brief~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SYRACUSE - Bruce Cot.
trill, local, Ed, Rocl:y and
Steve Hupp of Letart Fails, and
Andy Shaeffer of East
Liverpool returned Sunday,
Sept. 10 from a three-week
vcation trip to White River,
Canada.
They report having caught
plenLy of fish to eat, but their
big thrill was when Ed killed a
200-pound, black bear. The
boys dressed the bear, bringing
the meat home with them, and
a rug is being made of the hide.
The trip was made in a
camper-school bus. Enroute
they spent a night and a day at
Old Man's Cave.
Camping near them were
Mr. and Mrs. AI Barnett and
family of Rutland.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Raymond
Miiier , Pomeroy; Billy
McLaughlin , Pom eroy ;
Gregory Collins, Tuppers
Plains ; Mary Williams,
Gallipolis; Loretta Tackett,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Ethel
Collins, Brenda Massingale,
Beth Cassell, Paul Jones, Dana
McCain, Betcy Gilkey.

Headquarters For

Super Dux Hunting Clothes
Extra heavy 2 ply army duck trolled with spocl•l wu.

Water repellen·t. Featuring :

!- Hunting Coat las pictured) with vinyl coated lla~nei In·
side yoke lining . corduroy collar . shell loops In lower
large flapped pockets . game bag. Sizes 361o -48.
11- Naugahyde Brush Buoter Pants with double front. Very
well made. Sizes 32 to u .
Ill- Super Dux regular hunting pants. Pien'ty of pockets . lull
cut and comfortable. Sizes JO to 46.
IV- Shell and game vest vinyl coaled flannel Inside yoke
lining · quilted corduroy recoil pads . extra largo
detachable game bag · shell loops Small, medium, large
and extra large sizes.

carhartt

Stop in,
See this
Fine line of
Hunting Clothes .
Mens Department
1st Floor.

Just arrived - Hanes Underwear for men in fashion
colors. Undercolor briefs · T shirts • Athletic shirts and
boxer shorts.

Democrats .
Organize
About 20 local persons
organ ized a Meigs County
McGovern for President
CommilLee in Pomeroy
Wednesday ni ght.
Mt·s. Alicia Brown of
Jackson the main speaker,
displayed literatu re · and
campaign buttons to be
distributed to democra t
workers. Her talk covered
loca l methods of enlisting
M&lt;:Govern supporters and the
major pmnts to be used in
convincing Republicans to vote
democra lie . Door-to-door
canvassing, persona l notes
throu gh the mails, and
telephone conversations were
listed as three methods proven
successful in other areas, she
said .

Ernest Wingett, . county
Democrat chairman, pointed
out that while Lhere are approximate ly 14,000 eligible
voters in Meigs County only
abouL 6,000 voted in the
primaries. Mrs. Brown said
thaL this is the point of rural
campa igning to get these
potential Demcrats to the polls.
In an ope n disc ussion,
mi sco ncepti ons
a bout
McGovern 's stands pn issues
were correc ted, according to
John Sebo, publicity chairman
of the new committee, said.
The most fervently discussed
issues were McGovern's labor
and union positions. The AFLCIO, America's sLrongest labor
group, rated McGovetn 95 pet.
(Continued on page 12)

TilE DOUBLE LANES of highway above are poured In the construction of the Route 7
bypass which is continuing In the Rock Springs-Laurel Cliff area. Eventually these roads will
be a part of the Route 1 bypass across-eountry to near Five Points. However, that part of the
projected program has not been put up for bid. About a year more of constru ctiOn 1s expected

•

Now You Know
Rennin, the enzyme used tu

By Makers You .Will Know.!

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDUPOIT, 0.

I

J

Weather

•

enttne

at y

coagulate milk in the
manufacture or cheese, is
obtained in a sail-brine extract
from the fourth stomach of
youn g ca lves.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meit!s·Mason Area

VOL XXIV

NO. 11 1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1972

Variable cloudiness with a
chance of showers and thun·
dershowers tonight, lows in the
50s and lower 60s northwest
and upper 50s and 60s
southeast. Partly cloudy and
cooler Friday. Highs in the
upper 60s and 70s.

TEN CENTS

NeW Bid for
By United Pre•• lntemalional
COLUMBUS -TWO COAL COMPANIES have asked the
state to renegotiate their contracts for supplying coal to mental
hospitals and prisons, claiming Ohio's tough new strip mine
reclamaLion Jaw is forcing up costs. Aspokesman for the Gilligan
administration said this was expected and it is ready to pay the
higher prices.
"We are commilled to stopping the destruction of
southeastern Ohio and are willing to spend more lor better
reclamation," said Jay Tepper, former budget director who
becomes top administrator in Gov. John J . Gilliga n's office next
month . Water Coal Co., Oa k Hill in Jackson County, and Canton
Coal Sales are requesting the hikes and at least four others are
expected to follow suit.
Waterloo wants $1 more per ton lor coal supplied to Chillicothe
and Lebanon correctional institutions and Orient State Hospital.
Canton Coal wants $1.15 more a ton 'for coal delivered to
Massillon State Hospital.
WASHINGTON - CHANCES CONGRESS would act this
session on st•·ong legislation reducing and tightening strip
mining activit y appeared slim today.
Because of Congressional jockeying apparenlly aimed at
making sure a sliff bill doesn 't pass, a strong House measure
appeared dead for the waning session, leavlng a weaker Senate
bill the only hope for a stripmining foes.
SAIGON- PRESIDENT NGUYEN VAN THIEU, who just
missed being hit by Communist artillery at Quang Tri City
Wednesday. flew today to the central coast where Communist
troops hours earlier attacked three distri ct Lowns .
TI1e president, on a two-day tour of the northern battlefront,
visited the province capital of Quang Ngai City 318 miles nor·
theasL of Saigon. The Communists last weekend shifted the
emphasis of their offensive to tbe region and heavy fighting has
been under wa y south of Quang Ngai City for six days.

Peace Made

TilE FIRST GRADERS enjoy a physical education class
at the Salisbury Elementary School on a new blacktop area
providing children of the school a place to play during rainy
periods. The regular playground of the school - the source of
complaints by parents - does not drain properly and
becomes extremely muddy for long periods. Blacktopping
the entire playground area was prohibitive in cost, so this
area just behind the school, formerly a graveled section, was
lilacktopped. No vehicles are permitted on it.

Six- Selected
Six of Meigs Coun ty's high.
ability high school students will
head for Mershon Auditorium
on The Ohio State University
campus Sepl. 23 for the seventh

'TilE DEATH·BY·MAIL CAMPAIGN AGAINST Israeli
diploma ts spread today to Africa and the Israeli Embassy In
Kinshasa, Zaire, the former Belgian Congo, said it had in· ·
tercepted three of the explosive missives mailed from Hoiland.
1Continued on page 12)

annual Youth and Scie nce
Conference.
The one-day pr og ram is
designed to enlighten Ohio's
top science students about the
challenges and opportunities
awaiting them in scientific
careers, according to County
Agent C. E. Blakeslee. Over
1500 youngsters will attend.
Emphasis will be on the "job
market'' which always has an
opening for the talented youth
trained in agricultural, home
economics, a nd natura l

resource sciences.

Big Selection of Furniture to Decorate Your Home

desfgns for liv1ng.

before Shelly and Sands Inc. complete work now under contract. The State Highway Depart·
ment is inspecting work as It progresses. Tbere are several large overpasses similar to the
above construction in the present contract. A clover-leaf interchange from Rt. 7 onto the four·
lane Rt. 33 is taking shape at Rock Springs.
'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

2-HOUR

210 E.

'

In Time to Escape · Artillery !

14

..@·
Tho Athln; County
Snings &amp; Lu.n Co.
296 SKond Sl.
Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured To
$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

•

Students represe nting Meigs
County are Jim Evans, Vickie
Johnston, Connie Roush, Ingrid
Hawley, Jill Smith, and Mary
Krawsczyn. Hosts are Carla
Salser and James Butcher.
Sponsors include the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District and the Meigs County
Landmark Cooperative.
Spea kers sc heduled are
Sylvan H. Wittwer, Michigan
State University Director of
Agri cultur a l Experiment
Sta ti on, whose topic is
"Nothing Stands Still"; Peggy
L. Walton, Manufacturing
Chemist s Association,
Washington, D. C., "The
Woman 's Touch"; George
Slaby, Horticulture Depart·
ment, OSU, "Sex, Plants and
You"; Virginia M. Vivian,
Professor, Home Economics,
OSU,
" Nutrition Again
(Naturally )"; Ronald V.
Josephson, Food, Science and
NuLrition, OSU, "Push Button
Foods"; and Roy M. Kottman,
Dean, College of Agriculture
and Home Economics, OSU,
"Youth and Science ... Em·
ployment Catalyst".
Youth and Science Day is
sponsored annually by the
College of Agriculture and
Home Economics and the Ohio
Agricultural Council. The
council, represented by
agencies, associations and
Institutions in Ohio, provides
transportation and noon Jun •
cheon. School principals and
science teachers determine
which students attend the
conference,
based
on
sc hOlastic interests and
abilities.

themselves, has become even
more apparent than before."
Porter said the Viet Cong, in
their latest call for a tripartite
coalition or "national concord"
cabinet, called lor a pledge
that none of the contesting
political factions should seek
the elimination of tbe otber by
physical violence.
Such a non~llmination gua·
rantee, Porter said, can come
only through an impartially
controlled ceaae.fue.
· Hanoi's deputy delegate
Nguyen Minh Vy demanded
acceptance of the coaliUon
cabinet after Thieu's dismissal
as the price for any peace.
"Otberwise the Nixon adml·
nlstratlon will bear the full
consequence for the conUnua.
lion of the war," he said.
The unchanged position of
the two sides indicated no
progress in the latest secret
meeting
here
between
presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger and North Vietnam's
top negotiators Xuan Thuy and
Le Due Tho last Frlday. lt was
the 17th such private meeting.

Teacher
Hired

RACINE - Anna Hilldore
was hired as substitute second
grade teacher at Syracuse
Elementary School until a
permanent teacher can be
hired, Supt . Ralph Sayre
reported following a meeting of
Southern Local School Board
Wednesday night.
Heavy damage was reported
In other busine88 the board
in a single car accident approved purchase of furnace
Wednesday at 3:20p.m. onSR 7 parts for the high school from
in Salisbury Twp., one and the Hoffman Specialty Mfg.,
three tenths of a mile north of Corp., Columbus; approved
the Pomeroy corporation line. payment to George Stobart lor
Sheriff Robert C. Har· work completed on the roof at
ten bach's Dept. said Margaret Racine Elementary, approved
E. Fields, 47, Pomeroy, was an "in--service" fee for Tom
traveling south on 7 when a Theiss and Robert Spurlock
passenger advised her a car who attended in-service
was following close behind and training for bus drivers at
was going to hit her car. Mrs . Meigs Local this summer, and
Fields pulled to the right too agrt'ed to have William Hoback
far; ran off the road, lost furnish material and labor for
control in gravel, went through downspouts
at
Racine
a guardrail, and went 40 feel Elementary.
along the inside of the guard·
Sayre will meet with bus
rail before coming to a stop. drivers of the district Friday to
No citation was issued. The complete routes for the South·
driver was not immedia teiy ern Local District effeclive
treated for injuries.
Monday, Sept. 25.
Sayre also reported that Mrs.
Pauline Hill will begin her
student teaching at Letart
law. C. E. Bogard who owns a results are beautiful. Any of
GO TO BURR OAK
Elementary Monday lor II
marble factory at Cairo, W. the pieces may be purchased
Tbe annual meeling of the weeks.
Va . Joan doesn't have a name from her .
Southuat District of Ohio
Sayre also noted that in the
fo1· her hobby but the end
At left, Jon Bogard, two year
Retired Teacbers Assn. will be seven project area there have
old son of Mr. and Mrs.
held at Burr Oak on Wed· always been seven speech
'8W;':':.•.S.t:... 81i:::::uo: , , ,1 Bogard, stands beside the
nesday, Oct. 4. A get· therapists. For the 1972·73
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Bogards' marble decorated
acquainted session at II a.m. year, In addition to th'
Ohio Exteoded Outlook lor mail box which is probably the
will open the meeting followed therapists, there w!U be seHn
Saturday through Monday: most unusual mail box in
by a luncheon at noon . therapista' aides.
Gradually warming trend Meigs County.
Reservations are to be made in
Sealed bids for bus tires may
..·llh a chance ol showers ·
Meigu COWlty by mail or be submitted at the ofltce of the
Monday. Highs In the 70s
telephone with Mrs. Anna clerk unUI Sept. 30 at 3 p.m.
IWLA TO MEET
LOCAL TEMPS
Saturday and low and mid
Hilldore,
Syracuse, 992-5123, Letters were sent to parenll or
The
regular
montHly
The temperatute ill down·
80s Sunday and Monday.
not
later
than
Tuesday, Sept. guard1ana of every student in
ilown Pomeroy aL 11 · a.m. meeting of the lzaak Walton
Overnight lows mostly In the
Thursday was i Odegrees l!llder League will be Monday at 7 26. Tbe luncheon coat ta P .Tla tbe dlatrlct in teprd to !ree
50s.
ptrson, to -p~l4 !llldvance. meals.
p.m.
sunny skies.

Marbles Important to Unique Hobby
Mrs. John (Joan ) Bogard,
Long Bottom, has a new and
interesting hobby. It calls for
lots and lots of marbles. First
s~ collects any type of a round
glass bottle, then cuts it into a
desi~n. and marbles are placed
over it.·
She has made candle .
holders, candy disbes, lamps,
candy dishes and centerpieces.
Some marbles are fractured by
placing them in a dry skillet
under heat which gives the
marbles quite a different
appearance. She obtains her
marbles !rom her brQther·tn·

By GEORGE SWERA
PARIS (UP!)-The United
States called on the Viet·
namese Communists today to
agree to an Internationally
IIUpe!'Vised cease-lire In aU of
Indochina and to begin direct
political negotiations with
South Vietnam.
U.S. peace negotiator
Wtillam J . Porter told Hanoi
an«&lt; Viet Cong diplomats the
latest Communist call for the
creation of a tripartite
· coalition cabinet in Sa)gon with
VietCong participation wlll not
be accepted.
Porter, spes king at the !60th
Vietnam conference session,
said Communist calls lor a
three -s egment coalition
cabinet to be formed after the
dismissal of President Nguyen
Van Thieu and a complete U.S.
military pullout ''would, if
achieved, lead neither to peace
nor to self-determination for
the South Vietnamese popula·
tion."
"Instead, prolonged warfare
and Conununist dictatorship
by the north would be the
clearly predictable con·
sequences," he said.
Porter added, "By contrast,
the need lor an internationally
supervised cease-fire throughout Indochina, and the subsequent resolution of polltical
questions throughout cliscussions among tbe Vietnamese

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

... ::~!:,:,::::::w···~-:.:,., : .: : ···· '

Damage to
Auto Heavy

�•

•
3- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o, Sept 21, 1972

2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept . 21, 19'12

IDIFORIA1

HabaualOJfenderLaw

Defense Policie~ Argued

Crippled Marauders Open League Play at Logan

&amp; ·THINBS

BY KEITH WISECUP
Plen ty of tears were shed b)
fans and coaches ahke fm· the
1972 Me1gs Maraude1 football
squad before the season
star ted, and lhey• 1e undefeated 1n two games Maybe
a larger crymg touch IS now m
order
There'll be plenty of 1easons
to throw a tanlrum fo1 the
upcom1ng Mei gs-Logan
Southeastern Ohw Athletic
League opener Among the
walkmg wounded fo r the
Marauders are starlets Chuck
Faulk, Lou McKmney, Mark
Werry, and Rand) Faulk, and
reserve T1m Kmg
Chuck Faulk,J60 lb semor
l&lt;ulback, sulle1 ed neck and

'\

." Needs Public Support

'' '

&lt;»no's new Habitual Offender Law, designed to screen
• ,. irresponsible motorists and eliminate much of the carnage on the
, . highways, becomes effective September 22 It has the bscking of
• • the Ohio Department of Highway Safety, the Ohio Insurance
Institute, hundreds of Civic groups and nwnerous concerned
'' "' individuals.
••
It deserves public support.
Although only a "handful" of Ohio's drivers can be termed
·•• • "habitual offenders," this group of repeaters has been rell)lOn·
:• • sible for far more than their share of the traffic violations and
many of the accidents.
'•,
The Ohio Insurance Institute, for example, has compiled a
· ' llat of 425 Irresponsible Ohio drivers who have amassed recorda
'· over the past five years that should have terminated their
"·' driving careers for long periods of time. They are still driving.
ONE OF TilE Mosr FLAGRANT offenders Is a motorist
, who has lleen convicted of 14 offeMesln the last tbtee years (one
' Involving two vehicular homicides), has been charged with two
' other driving violations, and continues to operate his car- to the
. · perU of everyone who meets him on the highway.
The Department of H~gbway Safety notes that something
::!:~ ~ must be done to end the terrible auto toll of death (2,3591atalltles
.•.; in traff1c last year and 1,079 m fU"St half of 1972), lnjQrles (110,000
;:·. persons treated for hurts m 250,000 reportable 1970 collisions),
: ·: and some $600 million a year m annual economic loss.
· ::
The Ohio Insurance Inst1tute has launched an elght..week,
·,• state-wide educational campaign to emphasize the heavy new
•:: penalties under the law and to enlist public support
''
;&lt;;
Law enforcement agencies must teep a more watcbful
1
: ,! eye than ever before on the hablls of motorilll who drive 111
:, the areas under their jurisdiction. And conrts mast refrabi
from leniency thai can be construed as diJcrlmlnallon or
favoritism. Slrlcl ud equllshle enfonemenl Gl the new law
·' Is aotbbig short of esseudal.
If every segment of the public cooperates, lbe Habitual
Offender Law can remove well over a thousand reckless
,motorists from our thoroughfares within two years (Virginia,
for example, took hab1tual offender action against 2,225 drivers
: In the first two years' operation of a slmUar law, and convicted
• 110111e 1,100 of them.)
Without question, this Is a cause meriting full !lllpport and
unified action

..

By U11Ued PrMI Jntemallonll

secunty"
The contenders for the
V1ce President Sp1ro T
presidency lrought their ar- Agnew antlcipted the' new
gument over defense policies to round of debate when he said m
the forefront ag8UI today when 81. LoUIS Wednesday that McadVIsers of Sen . George S. Govern's defense poliCies were
McGovern charged President "fnghtemng" because they
Nllon Is overspending for arms would leave the country w1th
and still trying to play the role nuclear retaliation as 1ts only
of world pollcen\an.
course of action If 11 were atNllon's defense secretary, tacked.
Melvin R. Laird, struck back
Immediately, descrlbmg a ma- Clalma Misuse
jor
39-page
campaign
McGovern's adVISers sa1d
statement
issued
by the admimstration had
McGovern's Panel on National nusused the recent nuclear
Security as a ''new white arms limitation agreements
paper" thai "endorses and "as a hunting license to step up
muddles his white flag- the anns race." They sa1d the
surrender approach to national administration was guilty of

Warner Returning
To Penitentiary
Michael Lee Warner, 24,
Lancaster, who attempted to
escape Tuesday from the
Galha County Ja1l w1ll be
returned today to the Ohio
PemtenUary .
Warner, already facmg a
sentence of 34 to 196 years m
(he state penitentiary, attempted escape after appeanng m Gall1a Common
Pleas Court
Tuesday he was arraigned on
felony charges of carrymg a
concealed weapon, assault
w1th a deadly weapon and
escape flied m Athens County.
HIS case was transferred to
Gall1a County on a change of

venue.

.. 38 Bombs Mailed
Ualled Press Iutemalloual
Dutch pollee sa1d today an
investigation showed 38 bombladen letters had been mailed
from AmSterdam to Israeli
diplomats mat least nine c1Ues
throughout the world, in:· clud1ng New York. Israel!
.; Deputy Prenuer Y1gal Allon
· warned that such Arab
· guerrilla tactics JeopardiZe
:· chances for Middle East peace.
~:
"No pohtical progress IS
;, ~~~ II' vi,ew .o! thts grave
Z Ptoblem; Alton told a group of
~ foreign •• ., ltews!llen - !n
:· Jerusalem. "Th1s 1s a diSease
·: that must be liqwdated - the
· sooner the better "
: One of the lelhallelters killed
:: Israeli agricultural counselor
• Ami Shachon at his embassy m
·: London on Tuesday. The rest of
:: the booby-trapped parcels

·-.

.--

have been Intercepted by
postal clerks and police.
W1th the help of two Scotland
Yard ofliclals who arrived m
Amsterdam Wednesday PQiice
sa1d they had determined the
letters had been mailed bet.
ween 10 a m Saturday and
m1dmght Sunday, apparently
by members of the Black
September Arab guerrilla
group who were reported
operating out of Amsterdam.
The group claimed reSPQnSlblhty for killing ll Israeli
athletes" al the Olyrnp1cs in
Mun1ch Sept. 5.
BeSides the letter bomb that
killed Shachon in London,
bombs have arrived In New
York , Montreal, Ottawa,
Brussels, Paris, Geneva,
V1enna and Jerusalem durmg
the past few days, PQhce sa1d.

·::: ~~~~~~-~

::.,
;:
:~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

;:
Stepfather out of Step
;: DEAR HELEN AND SUE
::
I am the mother of two growmg boys, 13 and 14. They are
;: active in many ll)lOrts. They also eat wnpleen meals a day -so
:: my husband says He IS !hell' stepfather. Whatever he IS domg,
•:" when the boys come into the hoqse, he Immediately gels up to see
:; which way they are headed. If they go to the refngeralor (even
:: for a glass of water) he hollers, "Get the h- out of there! Don't
:: youeatfor len already?" He constantly cheeks to see how much
:: fruit and other food IS gone - he's been known to hold an apple;: count! Says he never aaw kids eat so much. The truth Is, he has
;; never been around teenagers before.
::
Theboysaren'thogs. 'lbey'reactually on the 111m side. They
:; eat wholesome meals, but they get hungry in between limes.
:: Must they beg for every snack, and be refused? I've seen my
;. husband tell them they can1 have this or that and It's stayed In
:: the refrigerator unlil 1t's spoiled.
::
Another thing, he won't allow them to watch any type of
: sports on TV because he doesn'tcarefor sports.
I tell him better food and sports than banging around the
: streets or poppmg pills. He says that's an illogical female
• argument - thefU"St doesn't shut off the possibility of the secood.
• Incidentally, we aren't broke.
'
So what CAN lieU him? Boy, do I need help! - WITS' END
: DEAR WITS' END
'
Boy,yousure do! I could see a refrlgerator-glWd If the boys
, were overweight, or you had a big budget problem. Neither of
· th..- being the case, then your husband needs a refresher COill'Se
: on teenager hunger pangs. Can't he remember what It's like to be
:; 14, active and never quite full• Start him talking about his
:- ch~ood and maybe he'll loosen up a bit- on food, sports and
•· all-around fatherhood. - SUE
: DEAR W.E:
For your husband's information, thai "lfiogical female
::argument" of yours makes a lot of sense. Kids who are denied
::nonnal privileges (and between-meal snacks for gro~ boys
::are NORMAL!), yelled at, treated 81 expensive nulsarices and
; :given few rights, could easily drlfllo the streets where drugs are
::plentiful Of course a closed refrigerator won 'I drive a boy to
::&amp;lpe but an unfriendly stepfather can drive him out of the house,
·::.Od Into company that goes £or different kinds of "sports.":-HELEN
"
·::J&gt;EAR RAP:
:: I've read those advertiSements about enlarging your bust
;:''up to two mches m 14 days" if you just buy "our product." One
: ~ny has a massager that costs $18.98 and hooks to your
:jlathtub faucet. II guarantees your money back and oo harm to
:,our body.
• H you're sure to get your money back unless you gel bigger
::
;llpmlrs, would it be safe to send the $18.98• - HOPEFUL
;bEAR HOPEFUL:
:; You can he sure of one thing: nothing oulslde of surgery will,
:,ru.r,e your lre811s two Inches m14 days! No mere machine
::JU make mountainll out of molehUIB.
:: AI. for getting your money back : don't count on it! A com·
:111nY thai pull out false advertlaing q t alao renege on ill
:l 'plrantee."- HELEN AND SUE
•
•••

.

..

.

Warner was being returned
to his cell following IUs court
appearance when he struck
Shenff Denver A Walker m the

mouth w1th h1s f1sls Shenff
Walker staggered, attempted
to tnp Warner, but was unsuccessful. Warner ran down
the alley behind the courthouse
w1th Walker and depulles John
Knapp and Erme Thompson m
pursmt.
Both depulles yelled at
Warner, demandmg that he
stop, but were forced to draw
the1r revolvers Knapp fired
Iw1ce while Thompson f1red
three t1mes. One bullet apparently creased Warner m the
h1p He wentmto the yard near
the Holzer School of Nursmg
and then ran !award Second
Ave , where he was apprehended by Shenff Walker
and Deputy Thompson
Warner was treated at the
Holzer Med1cal Center lor a
superfiCial flesh wound

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Karen
Brothers, Bidwell , Wanda
Dillon, Reedsville ; MIChael
Custer, Pomeroy ; Thelma
Grueser, Pomeroy, Jess1e
While, Rutland, Margaret
Fields, Pomeroy; Jerry Ward,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED
Bessie
McKmght, Lucy Harnson,
Herman Hoffner, Ralph Davis,
Roger Kiem, Wdma Riggs,
Fredenck Ohhnger, Conme
Manley, Clyde Roy, Charles
HlllRphreys, Larry Powell

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Harold
Pierce, New Haven , Charles
Humphrey, Pomeroy, Mrs
Larry Miller, GalilPQlis, Mrs
Ronald Long, daughter; Mrs
Wilham VarlBn, daughter,
Clifton, Mrs. Larry Jeffers,
Southside ; Robert LewiS, Oak
H1ll, 0 , t-una Lamer,
Southside; Mrs Carl Vanover,
Syracuse; Henry Ramey,
Galhpohs Ferry , Samuel
Rodgers, Kerr, 0.

DAM NEEDS CHECKED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Department of Natural
Resources officials have or·
dered the city of Youngstown to
determine the safety of Milton
Dam, which contains a 1,'/00.
acre reservoll' with more than
9 bUIIon gallons of water
OffiC18Is aa1d although there
seems to be no lmmedlBte
caqse for concern, the dam
west of Youngstown has had
very little maintenance smce
World War D.

INAUGURATION SET
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!) - Dr.
Glen Rasmuasen will he Inaugurated Sept. 29 as Findlay College's 13th president.
Inaugural ceremonies will be
preceded by an Inaugural luncheon.

The Daily Sentinel

TO THE
INTIIIIST OF
MEIGS-MASON AilE A
CHESTEII L TANNEHILL.
Euc Eel
IIOIERT HOEFLICH.
DEVOTED

City Edttor
Pub ltS htCI dally ncept
Saturday bv The Oh lo Valley
Pub i!S htng Company
111
Court Sl, Pomtro y OhtO
·U169 BU StntSS Ofltce- Phon~
t92 2156 Ecllfor1tl Phone 992

1157

Second clan poltage pa ld at
Pomeroy Oh io
Nat i onal advertls • nliJ
rtpruentalive 8ott1ne 111

Gallagner1 Inc , 12 Ent •2nd

St, Ntw YOrk Cllv , New York

SubscrlrHion ntu
Dt
l tvtred bv .carrier where
avallablt SO ctnls per week ,
8'1 Motor Routt where urr.er
strv1u not 1vallable One
month 11 15 Bv ma11 '" Oh1o
1nd W VI , One year su 00
S1• months S7 2$ Three
months U SO Subscription
prtce Includes Sundav T•mes
Sentlntl

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
Douglas Adkms, Eva Miller,
James Lucas , Sr , Randal
Craig, Eva Dabney, 'l10la
Hally, Forman Stevens, Jewel
'Walters, Nelson Howell, Mrs
Ronald Shook and daughter,
Mrs. James MoiJhan and son,
Corenth1a Wdliams, Thomas
Ph1pps,
Patsy
Rames,
Margaret Wilber, Jo N1bert,
Mehssa Nance, Mary Clagg,
Vesta Ham, Lilly Caldwell,
Stella Woodyard, Wanda
Waugh, Vwlet Watkins, Mrs
Gus Th1venir and daughter,
Arnold Stump, Edwm South,
Cathy Ryan, Lucllle Rathburn,
Mrs. Robert Pnce and son,
Robert Molden, Mrs. Allen
Martm and daughter, Flora
Mamskas, Ph1ll1p Honaker ,
Harry Hill, W1lhs Frost,
Juamta Fay ne, Beatnce
Evans, Ruby Conley, Judy
Brand
Births
Mrs Larry MoiJhan, a son,
Hamden; Mrs Stephen Stout, a
daughter, GalhpoiJs

r

poor defense management and
of deliberately overstating the
threat of the Soviet Umon. And
they said Nillon Intends "to
undertake unilaterally the policeman 's role throughout the
world
in January, McGovern sug.
gested cutting po bUIIon from
the defense budget over a
three-year per1od, llSlJl8 the
money saved for domestic
programs ,
The
panel
statenienl did not mention any
figures but said the $64.8 billion
budget McGovern suggested
earlier for flSC8l 1975 would
keep U.S. mllilary strength

''second to none."
Lall'd SBld the panel report
was a ''new attempt to retreat
from the facts of national
security." He said McGovern
not only wants to return to a
"neo-isolatlOnlst Fortress
Amer1ca, he wants to
dismantle the fortress." He
said NIXon was replacing the
prev~ew
role of world
policeman With "a new PQIIcy
of partnership With our allies "
Agnew Argues
Agnew argued the McGovern
program ''restricts the Size of
our traditional forces and
leaves us with weapons
systems that are rapidly
hecommg obsolete m the face
of continuous modernization of

roovent!Onal armed forces by
other world powers." He said 11
might force the United Slates
to back down m a confrontation
With a major power in "a few
short years."
McGovern campaigned In
Oh10, New Jersey and Pennsylvama Wednesday, sounding his
anuwa~ theme In a speech at
Phlladelphill. He waved two
anti1'"tsonnel bombs before
an audience of about 600
Democratic campaign fund
contributors, saying devices
like them were "tearing
human flesh" in Indochina "in
the name of protecllilg the
honor of the United Slates."
Earlier Wednesday the South
Dakota senator debated factory workers In Cincinnati on
the subjects of amnesty and
priSOner of war release.
Democratic vice presidential
candidate Sargent Shriver was
In Minneapolis where he said
Nllon bas made ''prisoners of
war" out of American cities
He said a Democratic administration would pump badly
needed money to the cities.
Nixon was in Washington
today but will fly Friday to
Texas where he will meet with
members of the organization
Democrats for N110n. Mrs.
N110n campaigned Wednesday
in Idsho and CaHfornta

WIN AT BRIDGE

With Care, 3 N. T. Stopped
NORTII
.974
.1092
t KQ94
ofoKJlO

WEST

EAST

.Ql0862

.K3
.43

.K76 5
t63

.AQ

soum

tJJ052
ofo76432
(D)

• AJ5

.AQJ8

t A 87
ofo985
Both vulnerable
West North East South
INT.
Pass
3 NT
Pass Pa!!l

Pass
Openmg lead-• 6

wa11lng lor the setting tr1ck
long after South has romped
home with his contract
A realistic West will see
that klng-jack-10 of clubs
nght in b a c k of his acequeen and Will realize that
he must clear the spades before South has a chance to
go alter clubs He will play
queen and another spade .
South will collect a second
spade tr1ck plus '.hree hearts
and three diamonds, but 1f
East hangs onto all h1s diamonds South will not be able
to score that all Important
mnth lrtck

BY PAUL CRABTREE
The marijuana plant ts a small one, but It's very pretty In our
family room. The leaves are nice and green, and the five-pointed,
jagged leaves look as IMoceqt as the three-pointed ones on a
poison Ivy plant.
My wife can make almost anything grow, but she's not
certain just how to nourish the marijuana plant. Understandably, the books on plant life and gardening on her
bookshelf are notably sparse In their description of cannlbas
saliva, let alone 1ts care and feeding.
This plant fll'st aaw the sunligbl in Meigs County, Ohio,
earlier this year. It was pulled up, along with about 7,000 of 1ts
countel'J)!Irts, in a ma8Slve PQiice raid on Sept. 9, when two young
men were seized- allegedly in the act of harvesting the plants88 they !ended their plot of neat, orderly rows.
The market value of those 7,000 plants, "on the street," W81
estimated at $70,000 by authorities. The tract of land was a
quarter-acre to a half-acre In SIZe.
On Sept. 13, authorities hit a smaller tea plot, finding $3,001).
$4,000 worth of the plant m the same general area. A 23-year.old
girl was held in the second raid.
So, the rumor mill was essentially and tragically correct, if a
little off-target. Most of the gossip concerned marijuana growmg
In Mason and Gallia counties, but the PQt was actually growing in
Mags.
We need to he concerned - deeply concerned.
By the sample use of arithmetic, If a half-acre of well-grown
marijuana yields a harvest worth $70,000 retail - and that's a
generous estimate of the size of the tract, I'm told -then an acre
would be worth $140,000, or thereabouts.
An acre is a smallarea. lf only 100acres ofPQtls being grown
throughout the TnCounty region, then a yield of FOURTEEN
MU..IJON DOLLARS could result from the entering of that
marijuana miD the market
That is a gigantic amount of money - and it's worth taking
some awesome risls. Some people, obviously, are willing to take
them. And anyone who thinks you couldn 'I "hide" 100 acres of
planting in the region just doesn't know the Melgs.{lallla-Mason
area very well.
I had nothing to do with the discovery of the two plots In
Meigs County - but my offer of 135 for each verif1ed plot
reported to me still stands. No, let's make that 150, up to a
maxlmwn of six plots.
The manjuana plant m our family room LS very pretty The
county prosecutor, Mike Shaw, lives a couple of doors up the
street, and he knows we're keeping ltfor comparison purposes II
there's more of this stuff being cultlvaled around the area,
please, please, help us get rid of 11, m the name of our kids '

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We have ~hanged a lew
cards around m Hand 29 of
the nahonw1de Olympiad
game so as to make sure
that South gets to be declarer at three no-trump
The contract IS not one of
the best we have ever seen
but worse ones make every
day and th1s one will make
unless West 1s nghl on h1s
toes
So uth takes East's king of
spades w1th h1s ace at tr1ck
one and enters dummy w1th
a dtamond m order to try
the heart fmesse It loses
and West 1s back on lead
West ass umes that South
IS s•ttmg w1th the guarded
J a c k of spades and some
West players will make the
m•stake of trymg a wa1t1ng
lead If they do they will be

Pass

1•

Television Log
Programs for Tonight
and Tolnorrow

Pass

.AQ87 .KJ4 t3Z ofoK986
Wha t do you lead'&gt;'
A-Lead • diamond. Your
hirh cards will keep. Meanwhale, you want to start to cut
down the enemy ruffinr power
TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead o£ p&amp;Mmg, West has
h1d two dtamonds over your
double Your partner buis two
spades What do you do?

, J•cos• "ODE"H ,_,
S.•'• $1 ••
~ •
• ~
• -•

to· "Wtn ot lridgo," [cfo t~u ••••·
poptrJ, P.O. lox .ull, RodtO C;ty
Station, How Yor•, N.Y. 10019

llllltl'

, ~ 0$! :C , • :0 ~ WJ:i«!k:;~~.~.1&gt;1.~~M%f/S:Uf/Sutf/S.f/S."f.f/SPtli"'tli"llliPIIt?'lltPI&gt;1,.M"P111PPPPPPAPPtll?'tli,.tlirntll"tliPtli1IIIIIIIIU1111UI&gt;1UUMOUMO:Mb!MJJMJLII'i

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1971
6 00 - News J. 4. 8 10. 15. Truth or Conseq 6 , News 13
Hathayoga 33.
6 30- NBC News 4, 15, ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10, Folk
Guitar 33, I Dream of Jeann ie IJ
7 00 - Truth or Consequences J; Beat the Clock 4 Course of
Our Times 33, What's My Ltne' 8. Big Red Jubilee 15; News
6. Amazing World of Kreskln 13
7 30- Chapter 33, Hollywood Squares J, To Tell The Truth 6
Wild Kingdom 10, !'IlSee You In Court 4, Beat the Clobk 13
Lassie 8, Love Tennis JJ
8 00 - Jean Shepherd's Amer ica 33, Flip Wilson 3, ' · 15, Mod
Squad 6. 13; The Waltons 8, 10
8 JO - Jazz Set JJ
9 00 - lronsldeJ, ' · 15, Jigsaw 6, 13, Movie " The Profess ionals,
9, 10, Hollywood Television Theatre 33
10 00 - Paul Nuchlns 33. Dean Martin J. 4, 15, Owen Marsha ll&amp;,
11.
News J, 4, 6, 10, 13, 15
11 JO - Johnny Carson 3, •· 15 , Otck CaveN 6, Movie " Papa's
Delicate Condition" lJ
1 SO - Mov ie "When Worlds Collide" 8

CHAIN

dt-

• No gas and ml to
miX

• Oouble Insulated lor
maxtmum safety
• Atoll 12 bar and chatn
• Ca n be used bolh •ndoors
and ouldoors

Voice along Br'Jray

be known un til15ame-t une

Lou McKinney 164 lb sc mor
gua1d -lrnebacker . k1ckc1 has

. . . p.

.

·'

,\

°

gom~

at

100 pet !'he Meigs ktckmg
ga111e IS tn gt ave ell.
c: umsta nces w1th hts InJUry

thcu

11ght one) but 11111 probabl)

counters have fallen 43 8 to
powclful New Lexmgton and
beal HIIhmd 20-19 Logan's
fn ;,t-ycm coach Pau l Adams
accounts fo1 fou1 lost fumbles

two

$94·50
~~

• LlgMwetght • Powerful

• Handy

~

We Servtce What We Sell

RIDENOUR
SUPPLy
985 3308

Chester. Ohto

Seal s, a defens1ve I me star

the 1971 season

A FIRST

NEW YORK (UPI)-John
Kerr, an All-Star mldllelder of
the New York Cosmos, Wednesday became the f~rst North
Amencan Soccer League
player ever to be picked up by
a fore1gn team when he was
sold to Club Amenca of

; : : ; ; ; ; : : : ; ; : : . MeX ICO.

OU CA ;;:;:-'i;iiBUh.iY

ABETTE PAINT
Colors so alive
- so dl$1lnc.I1Yel
And • tabulm.1s whites

tor that touch of
sheer elegance

R~~o

'775 pt.

BUT YOU PAY ONLY

$62!

SAVE

'1.50
On E"'J

•

Gallon

Meigs'

1ecord

d!Cdles tills We definitely
won I be able to make many

non-league

en-

Kemper brothel to ex Logan
g1 eat Ch uck Kemper, and 206

MEIGS Alan Mclaugh lm , 152 lb 1un 1or m1dd le guard
Lehew and Stack , tack les, Weber and e•ther M cKm ney J D
Story, 170 lb runmr or Robb •e Eason ISS lb IUn Jor, linebackers
Chaney and e•ther Robert Qua l Is 1381b JUnior, or Tom Lowery
155 lb Jun• or ends Jon Dillard 148 lb semor and Ash cor
nerbacks, and Dave Wolfe 158 lb 1un1or. and Melvm Cremeans,
160 lb 1Un1or deep backs
LOGA N Kalee and John Backus, 150 lb sen •or, guards
Moz1er and Porter tackles Greg Cu lber tson, 160 lb I Unlor, and
e1 lher Krebs or Glende ll Por ter 165 lb sophomore end s K
Cu l bertson m1ddle l•nebacker John Smart 150 lb 1Un10r and
Corby cornerb ack s and Roger Shaw 147 lb rumor , and Berry,
sa feties

v. ell-&lt;:oached team

the 1e:mlt queslwnable

For All the Marbles

Eagles, Tornadoes
Meet Friday Night
BY KEITH WISECUP
The Sou th ern Tornadoes
have beaten the Eastern
Eagles only once m 10 previous
meet10gs, that a tremendous
34-26 upset m 1!167
·n,e Eagles o"n a 15-game
Southern Valley Conference
game wmnmg streak and a 14ga rne O\C I all wmmng streak

Fm the fu st lune m history,
both teams are undefeated
headmg mto thiS cros!l-county
claSSIC

Thus the suspense before the
crownmg of the class

• A"

Tornadoes will be fired up, but
so wtll we "
Jewell added, "We owe 'em
one I thmk we're as good as
Ihey are The team thai makes
the fewer m1sta kes w11l
probab ly wm "

: ..•::

..... :····::::::.. ..:·:
•,

on1j

•

'•
'•

······=··

Jewell hit the nail nght on
the head when he sa1d Southern
owed the Eagles one The
Eagles plastered the Tornadoes 5tHI In 1970 and 197 1
Both of the Meigs h1gh
schools w1ll be gmng at full
strength except for the Tor·
nadoes who may be Without 160
DEFENSE
lb sophomore linebacker Tim
EASTERN Duvall and Baum ends. Sleltler and Mora
Mower who rece1ved a poss1ble tack les, Reed , m1ddteguard Donn 1e E1ch1nger ( 1J8 1bs, 9) and
chipped elbow Wednesday Hts Gnff1th or Mlllhoan, lmebackers Chaffee and Osbourne, cor
status of start10g was pend10g nerbacks and Bonng and Edward s. safeties
Htll. mtddle guard , Forbes and Wtlllams
on a medtcal exammallon endsSOUTHERN
Greg Mtddleswa rt ISS 11. and Hawk. tackles. J Htll and
Wednesday night
T1m Mower, 160, 10, linebackers I hie and Ord. cornerbacks. and
The only changes 10 th e Mtlch Nease and Mike Nease halfbacks
Eastern bne-up wlll be the
·······:··
sw1tch of Randy Bonng, 1451b
scn101, to quarterback from halfback, and M1ke Codner, 150
halfback John Sheets, 183 lb lb Junior guard, both return to
JUnior, last week's startmg th e To rnado hne-up aft er
quarterback, wlll return to the suffermg from the flu last week
halfback pos1t10n vacated by m Southern 's 32-0 wm over
Bor10g Bor10g took over the Hannan Trace (Eastern
Slt,'Ilal-calhng duties last week defeated Hannan Trace 2&amp;&lt;1)
m th e second quarter agamsl
The two teams, conSymmes Valley and sparked sequently , are exactly the
the offense to 20 qmck PQIDIS same stze, we1ght-wiSe The
The httle speedster has talhed Eagles have a 162-151 lb adSIX touchdowns 10 th e first two vantage m the backfield, but
ga mes, all but two of the Eagle Southern has a 179-168 lb
total of SlX.pomters
advantage on the lme Both
Nick lhle, 160 lb sen1or differences are II lbs

ROB 01 PIETRO
UPI Sports Wnler
IIIsn 't often that a team w1ns
a game by a score of 49-0 and
fmds Ilself dropped a notch m
the ratmgs, but such 1s the fate
of Oklahoma, now No 2 and
forced to try harder Saturday
aga1nst Oregon
The Sooners found themselves m the No I position
after defend1ng na twnal
champion Nebraska was upset
by UCLA on the seasonopemng Saturday two weeks
ago
Coach Chuck Fairbanks'
charges steamrollered Utah
State In their season debut last
week, but the Umvers1ty of
Southern Callforn1a began 1ls
season w1th an upset of
Arkansas and followed last
Saturday a 51~ rout of Oregon
State
Now, USC IS number one
The TrOJans travel to Champaign, Ill., Saturday to toy, m
all hkehhood, w1th the euphe·
m1sllcally mcknamed Fighting
Tihm, who lost to USC last year,
28-0, one of s1x losses Tihn01s
absorbed m II games
Oklahoma, with only a 35-31

toss to Nebraska last year
marnng a 11).1 record topped
by a 40-22 drubbmg of Auburn
10 the Sugar Bowl, sllll has the
proven Greg Prwtt, Joe Wylie
and Leon Crosswhite and a
plethora of freshman talent to
keep lis supercharged offense
hummmg

In other contesls mvolvmg
th e top 10, third-ranked Colorado meets Minnesota, fourthtabbed Tennessee, wh1ch foiled
Penn State's b1d for revenge,
28-21, last week, hosls Wake
Forest and Alabama No 6
1dle last week, returns actio~
ag31nst Pittsburgh.

SAVE 'l.lS on Mry pion

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
·~o.

tune

until cleanup IS com-

pleled The sheels may be
turned mto one of the coaches
or Mrs Roger Kirkhart
Phda 2 St Lou 1s 1
Jomght
All an Ia 13 Hou ston 6
The Eastern Athletic
C•nc nnt~l• 8 San Fran 6
Los Ang 5 San D•ego 3
Boosters voted a "thank you"
Today 's Probable Pttctlers
for the donatwns of food and
I All Ttmes EDT I
Pholadelphta tTwtlchell 4 81 lime at the recent horse show.
a/ StLouiS (Btbby 101.9 pm
Ptllsburgh (B lass 17 71 al
New York (Genlry 7 91 8 05
Uncle John Say;:
pm
(Only games scheduled)
Fnday's Games
Phlla at New York, n ght
Montreal at P• tl s ntght
Ch cago at St Lou1s n1ght
San D1ego at Attanla n•ght
C1nc1 at Houston, n•ght
San Fran at Los Ang , n •g ht
Amencan league

Boston
Detro1l
Ba lttmor e
New York
Cleve land
Milwauk ee

Oakland
Ch•cago
Mmnesota

Kansas Ctly

East
w I pet g b
78 64 549
78 66 542 1
77 68 531 2'12
75 68 524 3' '
66 80 452 14
59 86 407 20' ~
West
wlpctgb
85 58 594
80 63 559 5
73 69

70 71

514 l Jl/ 2

496 15

Cal•fornta
67 76 469 18
Texas
52 91 364 33
Wednesday 's Results
M1nnesota 3 Texas 1
Detro.t 4 Clevela nd 1
Boston 9 Balflmore 1, 1st
Boston 4 Batt1more 0 2nd
New York at M1l w ppd ra1n

WE HUSTLE, at
R1zer Oil Co • to
promptly
and
ca r efully sal1sfy our
customer s' needs We
welcome a cha nce to
serve you well

Oakland 6 Chtcago J

See
Uncle

Kan Ct t y 9 Callforn ta 2
Today 's Probable Pitchers

tAll Times EDT I
Kansas Ctty I Nelson 9 Sl at

Cal 1forn 1a {Ryan 16 15). 11 p m
De lro1f (Coleman 17 13) at
Boston (Curt is 10 7) , 7 30 p m

Frank

New York tKektch 10 121 at
Mtlwaukee t Bell 3 11. 9 p m
tOnly games scheduled)

or Uncle

Fnday's Games

Kansas Ctty al Oakland
Callforn •a at M tl'1n n 1ght
Texas at Ch1cago ntght
New York a t Cleve ntght
Detroit at Boston mght

John Now

!Only Games Scheduled)

los An,g
QQ1 203,00()- 6 11 2
San Otego 000 012 000- 3 8 0
Os leen I 18 10) at1d Yeager.
Cann tzza ro (8) , Norman, Ross

181 and Kenda ll LP- Norman
t9 10 )

Friday and Saturday Sale to Celebrate
Kerm's 15 Years in Pomeroy
I

I

I

io

NO INSTALLATION
CHARGE FOR CABLE TV
DURING SEPTEMBER!
•••

OFF
STORE-WIDE REDUCTION

SAVE '10 ... AND GET

OHIO CHANNELS, BEITER PICTURE, LOCAL
NEWS &amp; EVENTS, AND ALL THE NEW FALL
SHOWS!

!

(EXCEPT FAIR TRADE ITEMS)

You're Invited!

CALL POINTYlEW TODAY

Free Birthday Cake and
Coffee Served
Friday and Saturday

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY- SE PTEMBER23rd
UNTIL4 P1M.

CONSTRUCTION &amp; GENERAL
LABORERS UNION

4 5~

A pep rally and w1ener roast
w1ll be held at Eastern Hlgh
School tomght at 7 30 p m
followtng the JUnior high
Eastern Racme game Eastern
JUniOr high studenls are mvited
to participate
Parents of the football
players are asked lo return the
refre shment stand work
schedule sheets for the at-home
games Sept 22, Oct 6, and
Oct 26 Shifts are from 6 p m
to half-tune, and from half-

Sooners Must Try Harder

Just think what it will be when Kermit has been here a
100 years. Buy the new wearables you need now and
save 15 percent at Kerm's Korner.

OF

PRESIDENT
LATEX

RICo '5.85

.::: ·::::::::::: .. ...

EASTERN SOUTHERN
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
p OS
EASTERN
WT
WT
SOUTHERN
Q B 140
Randy Bortng I 12)
14S
Vern Q.-d 111 1
Ra lph Parker 112 1 140
or B1 ll Osbou rne ( 12) 155
H B 155
Mttch Nease (10 )
John Sheets t 11 1
189
H B 160
Nt ck lhle(12)
Alan Duvall (121
183
F B 15()
Jay Htll (12)
Georqe Mora ( 12 )
190
c 180 DenniS Hawk { 1l)
Dan Challee I 11)
155
or Dave Grtff1 fh ( 12) 155
G 160
Bob Eynon 1111
Sleve Mtllhoan ti21 163
or T 1m Baum (111
165
G 150
M1ke Codner (11 )
Dtck Stelller (121
189
T 220
Ron Htll t121
Steve Reed t 12)
210
T
230 Larry Wilcoxen (12 )
Phtl Bowen I 11)
150
E
160
J tmWtlltamstlll
Bobby Edwards t 121 120
E
150
Mtke Nea se t 121

"FAMILY OUTING"
~;:..,~.......-/'if

STANDINGS· Rally Tonight

Jn-

lb semor tackle Mike MozJei
In other SEOAL actiOn this
F11day, Athens trave ls to
Wellston
J ackso n hosts
Ga lhpolis, and
dnd ovc1 al l m1slake -1 1dden winless
play fm the poor sho"mg Wave rl y goes to Ironton The
Ma l.JUcler · Ch ieflarn battle
dg,lln~t Ne\1. Lex1n gton
I know "e II be up agamst a should be lhe only game w1th
~ood (u1d

With the Bears, played out h1s
optiOn last year and has been
k
h
see mg a ne" connection w1t
a Nat 1onal Football League
team almost smce the end of

l&lt;1Id&lt;Jy

MEIGS LOGAN
Mat or League Standmgs
PROBABLE START ING LINEUPS
zm stdkes and wtn, " sa1d
By Untted Press International
Nattonal league
MEIGS
WT POS WT
LOGAN
Inn Kmg , 131 lb semor Adams
Andy
Vaughan
t
12)
173
QB
175
Jtm
Kemper
110)
East
Meigs, 1f 1ts two big tackles
gu~ll rl
and number one
Chuck Faulk ( 121
160
w I pet g b
play "'11 have a 190-180 lb Or Terry Wh•ttatch (10)
1cpldt:ernent on offense be lund
90 53 529
180
John Corby I 111 Ptltsburgh
138 TB 155
Ch•cago
79 65 549 1] I 7
McKi nney . suffe1ed a twisted weight advantage on the lme,
Kevm Ber ry ( 121
Mock
Ash
(Ill
New
York
157
74 68 521 l 51~
we
210
Ken
Culberlson
t
121
IU1ee and IS ve1) doubtful If bul will give up a whoppm g 185- Dalla s Weber ( 11 )
Sl LOU IS
179
70 75 483 21
FB
187
Ketth
Porter
1121
166 disadvantage m !he back Rock Gaul t11)
Mt K tnney IS knocked out or
153
c 185
BtlI Kazee 11 11 Montrea t
65 78 453 25
Lou McK1nney ( 12)
164
Phtladelphta 53 90 371 37
c,m I ~o on offense Ihat gua1d field
G 180
Wayne Newland (12}
John
Lehew
(
11)
175
West
G
The leaders of the Clncftam Mark Werry ( 12)
slot ts undc1 seve I c handicap
238
206
M1ke Mozt er (12)
w I pet g b
1 111 hopmg all 01 at least T11be a1e 210 lb sen101 OrMtkeMc Dan1el (11) 210
C1nc•nna tt
89 55 6 18
futlback, Ken Culbe1tson, " 1111 T
some of them mil be able to
Houston
80 63 S59 8 11
Randy Faulk 1101
265
200
Dave Bnmmer {12)
Los Angeles
77 67 535 12
pi a) Fnday We 1 em a hu11 y p1 obabl) will be tile most Or
Mark Oiler (Ill
205
175
Dave Krebs ( 11)
Allanta
67 77 465 22
up, gc t-1 e~dy' pos1t10n 11ght powe1ful back the Marauders Or Boll Sla ck t II)
168 T 160
M1ke Fann (11 )
San Franosco 63 82 434 261 •
noll, smd th e dean of SEOAL LJCe all year , 180 lb JUniOr Randy Chalon (121
155 E
San Ooego
54 88 380 34
180
E
Wednesday 's Results
lialfback Julm Corby , 175 lb Btll Chaney (121
C(Jache;,, Chm lcs Chancey
New York 4 P11tsburgh 1
fhc Logan Ch1cflam s, 1 1 m sophomm e quarte1 back .Jnn
DEFENSE
Chtcago 6 Montreat 2

a !lOI e fuot ( h1s k1ck1n g foot, the

:,C•

,g:

a

st.u t But he won't be

champ of Me1gs County foot·
ball Friday at Eastern when
the two nvals crack heads
The winner of Fnday's ga me
will ha~~ an ms1de !rack to !he
SVACcltampwnship, which th e
Eagles have won the past two
seasons The Eagles are 2-0 m
SV AC play and lhe Tornadoes
rue 1-0 w1th Kyger Creek
These three teams may run 1-23 rn lhe SVAC 1ace, the exact
order yel to be determmed
Both coaches , Roger
SAW
Kirkhart of Eastern and B1ll
Jc\1 ell of Southern, neither of
whom ha ve lost a game as a
head coach 1Kirkhart w1nnmg
Just SEAlS TO CHIEFS
look
CHICAGO (UPf) - George 11 m h1s one-plus years and
at
Seals has signed w1th the Je\\ell both of his ), used five
lhes e Kansas City Cluefs the Chicago Identical words, spoken very
Horne 11le Bears announced Wednesday ca lml y
features : and the Bears w1ll get th~
"We'll be ready for 'em "
Ku
khart added " I know the
• lnslanl
Olref's No I draft p1ck for the
starttng
next season

11 55 - Movie "36 Hours" 10

1 00 - NewS4
1 30 - News 13
FIUDAY.-SEPTEMBER 22,1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmtlme 10, Farm Report 13
to
the
6 30 - Paul Harvey 13
Ia
M
U
the
J
a 'tendmg
ason 1 er P Y ge r;
6 2S- Blue Ridge Quartet 13
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Pulitzer Prize playwright Sidney Kingsley who
6 30- Columbus 'Today 4, Bible Answers 8; Herald ot Truth 10
goaded Jean Kerr mto lmlshing her imminent
6 4S - Corncob Report J.
A BUMPER CROP
7 00 - Today l, 4,15, CBS News6, 8, 10
Broadway comedy- and getting some dainty
OF POLITICS
returned verbs! abuse from Jean trymg to goad
7 ~- Romper Room 6 , Sleepy Jeffers 8, Bullwlnkle and Rocky
NEW YORK (KFS) - McGoverners Ethel
at
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame st 33
and Jean Sm1 th and Pal Lawford were m "21" Sidney mtofinlShlng his play; be's only been
th
Romper Room 8. Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
I
8 30 - Jack La Lanne 13; New zoo Revue 6, Romper Room 8
and next table were N!Xon.phUes "Bo" Polk ltforf!Ve-&amp;Xyears : "The irslact'seasy - en
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15 , What Every Woman
(ex-pres or MGM) and Chase Bond head's wife 1t gels tough," Kingsley alibied.
"That Ouunp1011ship Season" has more than
Wants to Know J. Concentration 6, Capt. Kangaroo 8 , Ben
Mrs Hrbert Patterson who let an evil whim
3
10
expire unexecuted - they decided not to wave the smell til a hll going fonl - 11 opened earlier 9 ~a~eJ~~r~ 6~1f?.i~ll rtf~1r~~ ~~u~~t;on
year as another smash from the probably 10 ~- -111 DlnahJ Shk ore J. 15, Dick Van Dyke 13. Columbus Six
their under-the-table-bumper sUcker which thiS
1
Ja.fato ofJ
hP
h
~ ng6, oer'sWrld8, 10
osep app, w 0 IO 30- Concentration J, 15, Phil Donahue~ Spill Second 13
teased, "McGovern W1ll Do for Amenca What e eem011ynaryp Y c ry
now has three shows on Broadway ("Two
Price Is Right 8, 10
'
·
Lindsay Has Done lor New York "
Gentlemen
of
Verona"
has
been
toddling
along
n.oo
Love
American
Style
6. Sale of the Century 3 lS
Congressional bigshols were very,privatePassword 13; Gambit 8, to
' '
sLove of Life s. Bewltchad 6, 13; HollywOOd Squares J. 4,
partled upstairs m "21" w1th f1lmman Joe delightfully and profitably, plus the ugly little 11 J0
1
Levme holSUng the undoubtedly deductible tab· antiwar antic "Sticks and Bones" kepi alive by 12 00
the "Verona" c881Hlow), and we know from
- Jeopardy 3• IS , Bob Braun's 50 50 Club~; Password 6
the emphaSis by the remarkably Influential
Local News 10, News 13 , Contact 8
'
Info
scalpers
already
have
demanded
12
30Sec
on3d
w
's
Game
3.
15,
Search
tor
Tomorrow
8,
,
Spilt
firsthand
(and reahsUc) group of solons was less on
10
6
rootmg w McGoff than a light to keep their (and got) $50 a pair for "Season"- before.its 1 00 - NewsJ, All My Children 6, 13, Green Acres 10 If's Your
Best a. Watch Your Child 15
·
Dem congressiOnal ma)orlly ... The PQis In· Bd wy. prenuere.
ll's
a
comedy
of
failure,
a
remarkably
I
30
J
Ont
A
Match
3.
4,
15,
Let's
Make
A
Deal
6
13
As The
eluded House Speaker Carl Albert who new, not
cohes1ve
cavalcade
o1
hateful
noslalgla
on
the
World
ums
a.
10.
'
'
drove , to the "21" secret klatch , Senators
2
~lghf':,Y~0~ ~keL~gla~• 1 !' Newlywed Game 13, Guid ing
Hubert Humphrey, Mike Mansfield, Tom 20th anniversary of thai championship season of
30 - OoctorsJ.4, IS ; Dating Gamell; Edge of Night a, 10.
Eagleton (the whole crowd seemed 1,000 pet. for a Scranton high school basketball team, lour of 32. 00
• - Another World 3, 4• 15, General Hosplta16 13 Love Is A
whose members and their sanctimoniously
McGoff ), Teddy Kennedy, Scoop Jackson, Ed
Many Sptendored Thing a. 10
' .
coach
In
reumon,
wallowing
off
in
a
J:
JLo
Return
to
Peyton
Place
3,
~.
IS
,
Secret
Storm
sennomzing
8 10 . One
Musk1e, ex-Sen. Genion, Little Wide Joe Levme,
1e 1t9 Live 6, 13.
rich
bathos
of
super~ntlmentality
for
the
one
1
.
' '
Renato Franccinl
4•00
Mr
Cartoon
3,
Somerset
lS;
Sesam&amp;
St
33,
Fllntstones
6, Merv Griffin 4, Gilligan's Island 8, Movie "Kidnapped"
!n the unsmoke-fllled "21" downstairs were b1ggest trlumph of thei r mlddle-aged IIves; a
10; Love, American Style 13.
the Fred Warmgs (we swear Fred looked 15 1r1umph gone stale and empty by third act
curtain.
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Password IJ, Merv Grltfln 8 . Andy
years younger than last we saw him - and he 's
Griffith 15, Daniel Boone 13.
'
It is getting brilliant performances (coach s oo - Pondorosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6; Mister Rogers 33 Dick
72), Leonard "Deadeye" Henry of the AVCO
Van 0
1S
•
'
hierarchy, m op~site corners Cha1rman Brown R1chard Dysart's role, th1ck 88 soup, needed a 5 30
15, Electric Co 33· Gomer Pyle 13
lew
sp1clercroutons,
but
the
rest
ranged
good
to
rshalt
Dillon
Dragnet a
•
'
of Wesleyan U. and Chairman Purcell of Cornell, famed mtenor designer Ellen Lehman superb), fine direction (A J. Antoon and a 6 00 - News J, U , 10, 15, NBC News a, 13; Truth or Conseq 6 .
Hathoyoga JJ
•
McCloskey of the late Gov.'s family, Tom setting splendidly shabb)', a comfortable 7· 00
- What's My l.jne 8; Masterpiece Thaatre 33 · Wild
Ia
Kingdom 13, News 6, 10, Truth or l;or!Hquences 3· s.;lnt 15
Hovmg of the Metropblltan Museum and Tiffany horror) . It's a p Y for adults, full of obscemties
and
scatologies
and
blaBphemy
of
7
30
- To Tell Ilia Truth 6, Parent Game10, Beet'""" Clock 13 •
ownership, and Glanm Uzielli, who has a Ford
lower-locker
roorn
subculture
faahioned
from
TV·Th•
Child 4, To Be Amoun«d a.
'
m hiS present. . "21" co-owner Jerry Berns told
8 00 - Boote Beat 33; Sanford &amp; Son 3. ~. IS; Brady Bunch 6 13
Sonny &amp; Cher a, 1p.
' •
us he 'd be a grandpop agaw any edition V18 authot MIUer's qulle plain superior knowledge
of
thi!
seml-dlmoufiaged
•oclal
dregs;
no
8 JO - Political Talk3; Partridge Famlly6 13 Little p
• ,
daughter Diana and her husband, Jerry Stein .
15; Take Des Moines 33
' '
- 1e ••
In Shubert Alley absfl the Booth Theatre deviSer of soanng noble Stmantlca, but oh, how 9 oo - Ghost Story J, 4, 15; Room 222 6 13 . Movies "Ma 1 tit
West" a. "My Six Loves" 10.
' '
n
e
where "That Championship Season" was accurate his knowledge of the cheaper
pretensions,
the
bellicose
imitations
of
grubby
30
JaMc:Obt
BtronowskiJJ.
BoldCouple6,13.
1
opemng on Broadway this time· Melina Mer-'·imi
th
.
· 00 "ones
of Progress JJ ; Banyon 3 ~ 15 · L
bo
nhomie;
drab
ven•
Illude,
Y
name
IS
American
$tyle6, 13, Washington Welkin Revi~ 33 ' ove,
'"u' '· mlense and ch1c, Elholt Gould for the
News3, 4, 6. a, 10, tJ, lS
•
f1rst lime m years beardless and In a p~oper if Jason Miller whose proviDC181 ugUnesses herein 11·0010
The Sixth
flamboyant su1t; Today's Barbai'a Wal!lo.rs and · he has obllerved and experienced and raised to ' ~)::.~~~·~~~~~~~~:~~·10; ~0-'?:Y·
4
Tomorrow's Sherrye Henry provmg distaff TV PQwerful dramatic depths in sure, searmg 1.00-Roller0arby4 ; llhvle"ThllDNII";) 1;, '
strokes of lo..lna indecencies
1 30 - NMs
NMs ••
'
•
2:004 13.
competitors don't have to he mutually hateful,

lm!l

pullc'&lt;i leg muscle suffet cd th1s
week In pr acllce and bi g Rand)
ho~s the fl u !'heir status won't

NEW YORK (UP! )-Floyd pomts, Ah . rushed from his
Pallerson won't have to wear a corner at the start of the sixth
mustache and beard today but and nailed Pallerson with a
he'll probably hsve on a pair of hard combmahon Floyd nevc1
dark glasses to h1de an ugly left recovered A hard nght caught
eye that for ced an end to h1s Pallerson on the left temple
hghl w1 th Mahammad Ah and he came off the ropes With
Wednesday rught m Madison his eye puffed and bleeding
When the fmal round began
Square Garden
Patterson's
eye already was
"I'm ashamed whenever I
lose a f1ght," smd Patterson closed and Ali was hittmg him
alter Dr Harry Klerman w1 th everything he threw
stopped the scheduled 12-round
Thr ee more mmute.s of
ftght at the end of the seventh leather from Ah and that was
as Floyd's eye was slashed and enough for Floyd The cut "as
swollen shut
loo close to the eyeball," sa 1d
"I hope you (press 1 will see Dr Kle1man, who stopped the
th1s hghl as I saw 1t He did not fight JUS! before the bell
carry me hke the last t1me I m sounded for the e1ghth
I
still ashamed that I lost but didn't want h1m to suffer any
there Will be no more mustach e nermanenl damage "
Ah ISS) mpathctic
and beard "
Ah, who back m 1965 as
That old d1sgmse that Fatterson once used after bemg champiOn pumshed Patte1son
hum1hated by Sonny Liston for 12 rounds and felt no
was part of the old Floyd remorse about 1t, was sym
pathetic afte1 1t v.ds o\er
Pallerson
Floyd Pallerson fought a
The new Floyd Patterson.
the man who no longer hghls great fight, said Ah "He
w1th the whole world on his slunned me a couple of tunes
shoulders, put up a game effort and he was "mmng lhe hghl
aga1nst Ah for f1ve rounds But Floyd, you keep m tra1mng ar.d
Ali, d1smterested tn the early I ll give you a rematch You
gomg, put an end to Pat- deserve 1t "
terson's endless dream of
Actually Patterson was begellmg another shot at the lund on two of the officials
heavyweight t1tle m the Sixth cards and th e other JUdge had
round.
'~ /' ·•
the ' light even through the
Told by h1s !ramer Ange lo .cventh
'I felt I was ho lding m)
Dundee, that he was behmd on
own, ' sa 1d Patterson " A:. the
fi ght progressed ! tried to step
up the pace but I got hit m the
NEW
eye and that was 1t
"I felt I should have thr own
HOMELITE 11
more punches, done more
110 ELECTRIC
f1ghtmg I'll do It next hme

.•

2.

Pass

3 + Dble
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold

We11 y

ques! 1onable

Comeback Try

ON THE TV DIAL ABC gels 1ts mystery series, featunng
turn-about heroes, under way at 9, WHTN-TV, With James
Wainwnght 81 a detective . The Friday afternoon mov1e on
WBNS-TV ai41S worth reminding the ldds to watch· It's the 1938
classic version of Robert LoUIS Stevenson's "Kidnapped "

The btddmg haa been.
North
East South
It
Dble

We&amp;t

tnjunc:s ugamst Belpte
lasl Fitday and hdS rl' t pt acIIced litis week Faulk has Ius
doctm sgreen hght to play, but
Ius status Is questionable If the
game we1 c to be played
lomght, Faulk probably would
be used spanngly
1 he g1ganhc tackle duo,
Mark Wen), 238lb seniOr and
R.mdy Faulk
265 lb
SOJlh omme,
me
also

Patterson Fails In

+++

{NIWSPAPEl ENTERPRISE ASSN I

hec~d

~ BASEBAU Easte~ High

LOCAL NO. 1353
OPERATING SCHEDULE FOR REST OF 1972 SEASON
Sept 14-0pen tor full day 11 oo a m lttiiO oo p m.
Sept. 3()-Reservea unlit 6 OOp m. tor tndustnal Group Outing
Oct !- Reserved for enltre day for large Labor OrganiZation Outing
Oct 7-Reserved unlit S:OO p m for Labor Organtza!Ion OUttng
Oct. 8-LAST DAY 01' lf72 SEASON. OPEN FOR FULL DAY .

Men's Apparel
Youn&amp; Men's
Apparel
Women's Apparel

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY, OHIO

�•

•
3- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o, Sept 21, 1972

2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept . 21, 19'12

IDIFORIA1

HabaualOJfenderLaw

Defense Policie~ Argued

Crippled Marauders Open League Play at Logan

&amp; ·THINBS

BY KEITH WISECUP
Plen ty of tears were shed b)
fans and coaches ahke fm· the
1972 Me1gs Maraude1 football
squad before the season
star ted, and lhey• 1e undefeated 1n two games Maybe
a larger crymg touch IS now m
order
There'll be plenty of 1easons
to throw a tanlrum fo1 the
upcom1ng Mei gs-Logan
Southeastern Ohw Athletic
League opener Among the
walkmg wounded fo r the
Marauders are starlets Chuck
Faulk, Lou McKmney, Mark
Werry, and Rand) Faulk, and
reserve T1m Kmg
Chuck Faulk,J60 lb semor
l&lt;ulback, sulle1 ed neck and

'\

." Needs Public Support

'' '

&lt;»no's new Habitual Offender Law, designed to screen
• ,. irresponsible motorists and eliminate much of the carnage on the
, . highways, becomes effective September 22 It has the bscking of
• • the Ohio Department of Highway Safety, the Ohio Insurance
Institute, hundreds of Civic groups and nwnerous concerned
'' "' individuals.
••
It deserves public support.
Although only a "handful" of Ohio's drivers can be termed
·•• • "habitual offenders," this group of repeaters has been rell)lOn·
:• • sible for far more than their share of the traffic violations and
many of the accidents.
'•,
The Ohio Insurance Institute, for example, has compiled a
· ' llat of 425 Irresponsible Ohio drivers who have amassed recorda
'· over the past five years that should have terminated their
"·' driving careers for long periods of time. They are still driving.
ONE OF TilE Mosr FLAGRANT offenders Is a motorist
, who has lleen convicted of 14 offeMesln the last tbtee years (one
' Involving two vehicular homicides), has been charged with two
' other driving violations, and continues to operate his car- to the
. · perU of everyone who meets him on the highway.
The Department of H~gbway Safety notes that something
::!:~ ~ must be done to end the terrible auto toll of death (2,3591atalltles
.•.; in traff1c last year and 1,079 m fU"St half of 1972), lnjQrles (110,000
;:·. persons treated for hurts m 250,000 reportable 1970 collisions),
: ·: and some $600 million a year m annual economic loss.
· ::
The Ohio Insurance Inst1tute has launched an elght..week,
·,• state-wide educational campaign to emphasize the heavy new
•:: penalties under the law and to enlist public support
''
;&lt;;
Law enforcement agencies must teep a more watcbful
1
: ,! eye than ever before on the hablls of motorilll who drive 111
:, the areas under their jurisdiction. And conrts mast refrabi
from leniency thai can be construed as diJcrlmlnallon or
favoritism. Slrlcl ud equllshle enfonemenl Gl the new law
·' Is aotbbig short of esseudal.
If every segment of the public cooperates, lbe Habitual
Offender Law can remove well over a thousand reckless
,motorists from our thoroughfares within two years (Virginia,
for example, took hab1tual offender action against 2,225 drivers
: In the first two years' operation of a slmUar law, and convicted
• 110111e 1,100 of them.)
Without question, this Is a cause meriting full !lllpport and
unified action

..

By U11Ued PrMI Jntemallonll

secunty"
The contenders for the
V1ce President Sp1ro T
presidency lrought their ar- Agnew antlcipted the' new
gument over defense policies to round of debate when he said m
the forefront ag8UI today when 81. LoUIS Wednesday that McadVIsers of Sen . George S. Govern's defense poliCies were
McGovern charged President "fnghtemng" because they
Nllon Is overspending for arms would leave the country w1th
and still trying to play the role nuclear retaliation as 1ts only
of world pollcen\an.
course of action If 11 were atNllon's defense secretary, tacked.
Melvin R. Laird, struck back
Immediately, descrlbmg a ma- Clalma Misuse
jor
39-page
campaign
McGovern's adVISers sa1d
statement
issued
by the admimstration had
McGovern's Panel on National nusused the recent nuclear
Security as a ''new white arms limitation agreements
paper" thai "endorses and "as a hunting license to step up
muddles his white flag- the anns race." They sa1d the
surrender approach to national administration was guilty of

Warner Returning
To Penitentiary
Michael Lee Warner, 24,
Lancaster, who attempted to
escape Tuesday from the
Galha County Ja1l w1ll be
returned today to the Ohio
PemtenUary .
Warner, already facmg a
sentence of 34 to 196 years m
(he state penitentiary, attempted escape after appeanng m Gall1a Common
Pleas Court
Tuesday he was arraigned on
felony charges of carrymg a
concealed weapon, assault
w1th a deadly weapon and
escape flied m Athens County.
HIS case was transferred to
Gall1a County on a change of

venue.

.. 38 Bombs Mailed
Ualled Press Iutemalloual
Dutch pollee sa1d today an
investigation showed 38 bombladen letters had been mailed
from AmSterdam to Israeli
diplomats mat least nine c1Ues
throughout the world, in:· clud1ng New York. Israel!
.; Deputy Prenuer Y1gal Allon
· warned that such Arab
· guerrilla tactics JeopardiZe
:· chances for Middle East peace.
~:
"No pohtical progress IS
;, ~~~ II' vi,ew .o! thts grave
Z Ptoblem; Alton told a group of
~ foreign •• ., ltews!llen - !n
:· Jerusalem. "Th1s 1s a diSease
·: that must be liqwdated - the
· sooner the better "
: One of the lelhallelters killed
:: Israeli agricultural counselor
• Ami Shachon at his embassy m
·: London on Tuesday. The rest of
:: the booby-trapped parcels

·-.

.--

have been Intercepted by
postal clerks and police.
W1th the help of two Scotland
Yard ofliclals who arrived m
Amsterdam Wednesday PQiice
sa1d they had determined the
letters had been mailed bet.
ween 10 a m Saturday and
m1dmght Sunday, apparently
by members of the Black
September Arab guerrilla
group who were reported
operating out of Amsterdam.
The group claimed reSPQnSlblhty for killing ll Israeli
athletes" al the Olyrnp1cs in
Mun1ch Sept. 5.
BeSides the letter bomb that
killed Shachon in London,
bombs have arrived In New
York , Montreal, Ottawa,
Brussels, Paris, Geneva,
V1enna and Jerusalem durmg
the past few days, PQhce sa1d.

·::: ~~~~~~-~

::.,
;:
:~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

;:
Stepfather out of Step
;: DEAR HELEN AND SUE
::
I am the mother of two growmg boys, 13 and 14. They are
;: active in many ll)lOrts. They also eat wnpleen meals a day -so
:: my husband says He IS !hell' stepfather. Whatever he IS domg,
•:" when the boys come into the hoqse, he Immediately gels up to see
:; which way they are headed. If they go to the refngeralor (even
:: for a glass of water) he hollers, "Get the h- out of there! Don't
:: youeatfor len already?" He constantly cheeks to see how much
:: fruit and other food IS gone - he's been known to hold an apple;: count! Says he never aaw kids eat so much. The truth Is, he has
;; never been around teenagers before.
::
Theboysaren'thogs. 'lbey'reactually on the 111m side. They
:; eat wholesome meals, but they get hungry in between limes.
:: Must they beg for every snack, and be refused? I've seen my
;. husband tell them they can1 have this or that and It's stayed In
:: the refrigerator unlil 1t's spoiled.
::
Another thing, he won't allow them to watch any type of
: sports on TV because he doesn'tcarefor sports.
I tell him better food and sports than banging around the
: streets or poppmg pills. He says that's an illogical female
• argument - thefU"St doesn't shut off the possibility of the secood.
• Incidentally, we aren't broke.
'
So what CAN lieU him? Boy, do I need help! - WITS' END
: DEAR WITS' END
'
Boy,yousure do! I could see a refrlgerator-glWd If the boys
, were overweight, or you had a big budget problem. Neither of
· th..- being the case, then your husband needs a refresher COill'Se
: on teenager hunger pangs. Can't he remember what It's like to be
:; 14, active and never quite full• Start him talking about his
:- ch~ood and maybe he'll loosen up a bit- on food, sports and
•· all-around fatherhood. - SUE
: DEAR W.E:
For your husband's information, thai "lfiogical female
::argument" of yours makes a lot of sense. Kids who are denied
::nonnal privileges (and between-meal snacks for gro~ boys
::are NORMAL!), yelled at, treated 81 expensive nulsarices and
; :given few rights, could easily drlfllo the streets where drugs are
::plentiful Of course a closed refrigerator won 'I drive a boy to
::&amp;lpe but an unfriendly stepfather can drive him out of the house,
·::.Od Into company that goes £or different kinds of "sports.":-HELEN
"
·::J&gt;EAR RAP:
:: I've read those advertiSements about enlarging your bust
;:''up to two mches m 14 days" if you just buy "our product." One
: ~ny has a massager that costs $18.98 and hooks to your
:jlathtub faucet. II guarantees your money back and oo harm to
:,our body.
• H you're sure to get your money back unless you gel bigger
::
;llpmlrs, would it be safe to send the $18.98• - HOPEFUL
;bEAR HOPEFUL:
:; You can he sure of one thing: nothing oulslde of surgery will,
:,ru.r,e your lre811s two Inches m14 days! No mere machine
::JU make mountainll out of molehUIB.
:: AI. for getting your money back : don't count on it! A com·
:111nY thai pull out false advertlaing q t alao renege on ill
:l 'plrantee."- HELEN AND SUE
•
•••

.

..

.

Warner was being returned
to his cell following IUs court
appearance when he struck
Shenff Denver A Walker m the

mouth w1th h1s f1sls Shenff
Walker staggered, attempted
to tnp Warner, but was unsuccessful. Warner ran down
the alley behind the courthouse
w1th Walker and depulles John
Knapp and Erme Thompson m
pursmt.
Both depulles yelled at
Warner, demandmg that he
stop, but were forced to draw
the1r revolvers Knapp fired
Iw1ce while Thompson f1red
three t1mes. One bullet apparently creased Warner m the
h1p He wentmto the yard near
the Holzer School of Nursmg
and then ran !award Second
Ave , where he was apprehended by Shenff Walker
and Deputy Thompson
Warner was treated at the
Holzer Med1cal Center lor a
superfiCial flesh wound

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Karen
Brothers, Bidwell , Wanda
Dillon, Reedsville ; MIChael
Custer, Pomeroy ; Thelma
Grueser, Pomeroy, Jess1e
While, Rutland, Margaret
Fields, Pomeroy; Jerry Ward,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED
Bessie
McKmght, Lucy Harnson,
Herman Hoffner, Ralph Davis,
Roger Kiem, Wdma Riggs,
Fredenck Ohhnger, Conme
Manley, Clyde Roy, Charles
HlllRphreys, Larry Powell

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Harold
Pierce, New Haven , Charles
Humphrey, Pomeroy, Mrs
Larry Miller, GalilPQlis, Mrs
Ronald Long, daughter; Mrs
Wilham VarlBn, daughter,
Clifton, Mrs. Larry Jeffers,
Southside ; Robert LewiS, Oak
H1ll, 0 , t-una Lamer,
Southside; Mrs Carl Vanover,
Syracuse; Henry Ramey,
Galhpohs Ferry , Samuel
Rodgers, Kerr, 0.

DAM NEEDS CHECKED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Department of Natural
Resources officials have or·
dered the city of Youngstown to
determine the safety of Milton
Dam, which contains a 1,'/00.
acre reservoll' with more than
9 bUIIon gallons of water
OffiC18Is aa1d although there
seems to be no lmmedlBte
caqse for concern, the dam
west of Youngstown has had
very little maintenance smce
World War D.

INAUGURATION SET
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!) - Dr.
Glen Rasmuasen will he Inaugurated Sept. 29 as Findlay College's 13th president.
Inaugural ceremonies will be
preceded by an Inaugural luncheon.

The Daily Sentinel

TO THE
INTIIIIST OF
MEIGS-MASON AilE A
CHESTEII L TANNEHILL.
Euc Eel
IIOIERT HOEFLICH.
DEVOTED

City Edttor
Pub ltS htCI dally ncept
Saturday bv The Oh lo Valley
Pub i!S htng Company
111
Court Sl, Pomtro y OhtO
·U169 BU StntSS Ofltce- Phon~
t92 2156 Ecllfor1tl Phone 992

1157

Second clan poltage pa ld at
Pomeroy Oh io
Nat i onal advertls • nliJ
rtpruentalive 8ott1ne 111

Gallagner1 Inc , 12 Ent •2nd

St, Ntw YOrk Cllv , New York

SubscrlrHion ntu
Dt
l tvtred bv .carrier where
avallablt SO ctnls per week ,
8'1 Motor Routt where urr.er
strv1u not 1vallable One
month 11 15 Bv ma11 '" Oh1o
1nd W VI , One year su 00
S1• months S7 2$ Three
months U SO Subscription
prtce Includes Sundav T•mes
Sentlntl

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
Douglas Adkms, Eva Miller,
James Lucas , Sr , Randal
Craig, Eva Dabney, 'l10la
Hally, Forman Stevens, Jewel
'Walters, Nelson Howell, Mrs
Ronald Shook and daughter,
Mrs. James MoiJhan and son,
Corenth1a Wdliams, Thomas
Ph1pps,
Patsy
Rames,
Margaret Wilber, Jo N1bert,
Mehssa Nance, Mary Clagg,
Vesta Ham, Lilly Caldwell,
Stella Woodyard, Wanda
Waugh, Vwlet Watkins, Mrs
Gus Th1venir and daughter,
Arnold Stump, Edwm South,
Cathy Ryan, Lucllle Rathburn,
Mrs. Robert Pnce and son,
Robert Molden, Mrs. Allen
Martm and daughter, Flora
Mamskas, Ph1ll1p Honaker ,
Harry Hill, W1lhs Frost,
Juamta Fay ne, Beatnce
Evans, Ruby Conley, Judy
Brand
Births
Mrs Larry MoiJhan, a son,
Hamden; Mrs Stephen Stout, a
daughter, GalhpoiJs

r

poor defense management and
of deliberately overstating the
threat of the Soviet Umon. And
they said Nillon Intends "to
undertake unilaterally the policeman 's role throughout the
world
in January, McGovern sug.
gested cutting po bUIIon from
the defense budget over a
three-year per1od, llSlJl8 the
money saved for domestic
programs ,
The
panel
statenienl did not mention any
figures but said the $64.8 billion
budget McGovern suggested
earlier for flSC8l 1975 would
keep U.S. mllilary strength

''second to none."
Lall'd SBld the panel report
was a ''new attempt to retreat
from the facts of national
security." He said McGovern
not only wants to return to a
"neo-isolatlOnlst Fortress
Amer1ca, he wants to
dismantle the fortress." He
said NIXon was replacing the
prev~ew
role of world
policeman With "a new PQIIcy
of partnership With our allies "
Agnew Argues
Agnew argued the McGovern
program ''restricts the Size of
our traditional forces and
leaves us with weapons
systems that are rapidly
hecommg obsolete m the face
of continuous modernization of

roovent!Onal armed forces by
other world powers." He said 11
might force the United Slates
to back down m a confrontation
With a major power in "a few
short years."
McGovern campaigned In
Oh10, New Jersey and Pennsylvama Wednesday, sounding his
anuwa~ theme In a speech at
Phlladelphill. He waved two
anti1'"tsonnel bombs before
an audience of about 600
Democratic campaign fund
contributors, saying devices
like them were "tearing
human flesh" in Indochina "in
the name of protecllilg the
honor of the United Slates."
Earlier Wednesday the South
Dakota senator debated factory workers In Cincinnati on
the subjects of amnesty and
priSOner of war release.
Democratic vice presidential
candidate Sargent Shriver was
In Minneapolis where he said
Nllon bas made ''prisoners of
war" out of American cities
He said a Democratic administration would pump badly
needed money to the cities.
Nixon was in Washington
today but will fly Friday to
Texas where he will meet with
members of the organization
Democrats for N110n. Mrs.
N110n campaigned Wednesday
in Idsho and CaHfornta

WIN AT BRIDGE

With Care, 3 N. T. Stopped
NORTII
.974
.1092
t KQ94
ofoKJlO

WEST

EAST

.Ql0862

.K3
.43

.K76 5
t63

.AQ

soum

tJJ052
ofo76432
(D)

• AJ5

.AQJ8

t A 87
ofo985
Both vulnerable
West North East South
INT.
Pass
3 NT
Pass Pa!!l

Pass
Openmg lead-• 6

wa11lng lor the setting tr1ck
long after South has romped
home with his contract
A realistic West will see
that klng-jack-10 of clubs
nght in b a c k of his acequeen and Will realize that
he must clear the spades before South has a chance to
go alter clubs He will play
queen and another spade .
South will collect a second
spade tr1ck plus '.hree hearts
and three diamonds, but 1f
East hangs onto all h1s diamonds South will not be able
to score that all Important
mnth lrtck

BY PAUL CRABTREE
The marijuana plant ts a small one, but It's very pretty In our
family room. The leaves are nice and green, and the five-pointed,
jagged leaves look as IMoceqt as the three-pointed ones on a
poison Ivy plant.
My wife can make almost anything grow, but she's not
certain just how to nourish the marijuana plant. Understandably, the books on plant life and gardening on her
bookshelf are notably sparse In their description of cannlbas
saliva, let alone 1ts care and feeding.
This plant fll'st aaw the sunligbl in Meigs County, Ohio,
earlier this year. It was pulled up, along with about 7,000 of 1ts
countel'J)!Irts, in a ma8Slve PQiice raid on Sept. 9, when two young
men were seized- allegedly in the act of harvesting the plants88 they !ended their plot of neat, orderly rows.
The market value of those 7,000 plants, "on the street," W81
estimated at $70,000 by authorities. The tract of land was a
quarter-acre to a half-acre In SIZe.
On Sept. 13, authorities hit a smaller tea plot, finding $3,001).
$4,000 worth of the plant m the same general area. A 23-year.old
girl was held in the second raid.
So, the rumor mill was essentially and tragically correct, if a
little off-target. Most of the gossip concerned marijuana growmg
In Mason and Gallia counties, but the PQt was actually growing in
Mags.
We need to he concerned - deeply concerned.
By the sample use of arithmetic, If a half-acre of well-grown
marijuana yields a harvest worth $70,000 retail - and that's a
generous estimate of the size of the tract, I'm told -then an acre
would be worth $140,000, or thereabouts.
An acre is a smallarea. lf only 100acres ofPQtls being grown
throughout the TnCounty region, then a yield of FOURTEEN
MU..IJON DOLLARS could result from the entering of that
marijuana miD the market
That is a gigantic amount of money - and it's worth taking
some awesome risls. Some people, obviously, are willing to take
them. And anyone who thinks you couldn 'I "hide" 100 acres of
planting in the region just doesn't know the Melgs.{lallla-Mason
area very well.
I had nothing to do with the discovery of the two plots In
Meigs County - but my offer of 135 for each verif1ed plot
reported to me still stands. No, let's make that 150, up to a
maxlmwn of six plots.
The manjuana plant m our family room LS very pretty The
county prosecutor, Mike Shaw, lives a couple of doors up the
street, and he knows we're keeping ltfor comparison purposes II
there's more of this stuff being cultlvaled around the area,
please, please, help us get rid of 11, m the name of our kids '

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We have ~hanged a lew
cards around m Hand 29 of
the nahonw1de Olympiad
game so as to make sure
that South gets to be declarer at three no-trump
The contract IS not one of
the best we have ever seen
but worse ones make every
day and th1s one will make
unless West 1s nghl on h1s
toes
So uth takes East's king of
spades w1th h1s ace at tr1ck
one and enters dummy w1th
a dtamond m order to try
the heart fmesse It loses
and West 1s back on lead
West ass umes that South
IS s•ttmg w1th the guarded
J a c k of spades and some
West players will make the
m•stake of trymg a wa1t1ng
lead If they do they will be

Pass

1•

Television Log
Programs for Tonight
and Tolnorrow

Pass

.AQ87 .KJ4 t3Z ofoK986
Wha t do you lead'&gt;'
A-Lead • diamond. Your
hirh cards will keep. Meanwhale, you want to start to cut
down the enemy ruffinr power
TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead o£ p&amp;Mmg, West has
h1d two dtamonds over your
double Your partner buis two
spades What do you do?

, J•cos• "ODE"H ,_,
S.•'• $1 ••
~ •
• ~
• -•

to· "Wtn ot lridgo," [cfo t~u ••••·
poptrJ, P.O. lox .ull, RodtO C;ty
Station, How Yor•, N.Y. 10019

llllltl'

, ~ 0$! :C , • :0 ~ WJ:i«!k:;~~.~.1&gt;1.~~M%f/S:Uf/Sutf/S.f/S."f.f/SPtli"'tli"llliPIIt?'lltPI&gt;1,.M"P111PPPPPPAPPtll?'tli,.tlirntll"tliPtli1IIIIIIIIU1111UI&gt;1UUMOUMO:Mb!MJJMJLII'i

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1971
6 00 - News J. 4. 8 10. 15. Truth or Conseq 6 , News 13
Hathayoga 33.
6 30- NBC News 4, 15, ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10, Folk
Guitar 33, I Dream of Jeann ie IJ
7 00 - Truth or Consequences J; Beat the Clock 4 Course of
Our Times 33, What's My Ltne' 8. Big Red Jubilee 15; News
6. Amazing World of Kreskln 13
7 30- Chapter 33, Hollywood Squares J, To Tell The Truth 6
Wild Kingdom 10, !'IlSee You In Court 4, Beat the Clobk 13
Lassie 8, Love Tennis JJ
8 00 - Jean Shepherd's Amer ica 33, Flip Wilson 3, ' · 15, Mod
Squad 6. 13; The Waltons 8, 10
8 JO - Jazz Set JJ
9 00 - lronsldeJ, ' · 15, Jigsaw 6, 13, Movie " The Profess ionals,
9, 10, Hollywood Television Theatre 33
10 00 - Paul Nuchlns 33. Dean Martin J. 4, 15, Owen Marsha ll&amp;,
11.
News J, 4, 6, 10, 13, 15
11 JO - Johnny Carson 3, •· 15 , Otck CaveN 6, Movie " Papa's
Delicate Condition" lJ
1 SO - Mov ie "When Worlds Collide" 8

CHAIN

dt-

• No gas and ml to
miX

• Oouble Insulated lor
maxtmum safety
• Atoll 12 bar and chatn
• Ca n be used bolh •ndoors
and ouldoors

Voice along Br'Jray

be known un til15ame-t une

Lou McKinney 164 lb sc mor
gua1d -lrnebacker . k1ckc1 has

. . . p.

.

·'

,\

°

gom~

at

100 pet !'he Meigs ktckmg
ga111e IS tn gt ave ell.
c: umsta nces w1th hts InJUry

thcu

11ght one) but 11111 probabl)

counters have fallen 43 8 to
powclful New Lexmgton and
beal HIIhmd 20-19 Logan's
fn ;,t-ycm coach Pau l Adams
accounts fo1 fou1 lost fumbles

two

$94·50
~~

• LlgMwetght • Powerful

• Handy

~

We Servtce What We Sell

RIDENOUR
SUPPLy
985 3308

Chester. Ohto

Seal s, a defens1ve I me star

the 1971 season

A FIRST

NEW YORK (UPI)-John
Kerr, an All-Star mldllelder of
the New York Cosmos, Wednesday became the f~rst North
Amencan Soccer League
player ever to be picked up by
a fore1gn team when he was
sold to Club Amenca of

; : : ; ; ; ; : : : ; ; : : . MeX ICO.

OU CA ;;:;:-'i;iiBUh.iY

ABETTE PAINT
Colors so alive
- so dl$1lnc.I1Yel
And • tabulm.1s whites

tor that touch of
sheer elegance

R~~o

'775 pt.

BUT YOU PAY ONLY

$62!

SAVE

'1.50
On E"'J

•

Gallon

Meigs'

1ecord

d!Cdles tills We definitely
won I be able to make many

non-league

en-

Kemper brothel to ex Logan
g1 eat Ch uck Kemper, and 206

MEIGS Alan Mclaugh lm , 152 lb 1un 1or m1dd le guard
Lehew and Stack , tack les, Weber and e•ther M cKm ney J D
Story, 170 lb runmr or Robb •e Eason ISS lb IUn Jor, linebackers
Chaney and e•ther Robert Qua l Is 1381b JUnior, or Tom Lowery
155 lb Jun• or ends Jon Dillard 148 lb semor and Ash cor
nerbacks, and Dave Wolfe 158 lb 1un1or. and Melvm Cremeans,
160 lb 1Un1or deep backs
LOGA N Kalee and John Backus, 150 lb sen •or, guards
Moz1er and Porter tackles Greg Cu lber tson, 160 lb I Unlor, and
e1 lher Krebs or Glende ll Por ter 165 lb sophomore end s K
Cu l bertson m1ddle l•nebacker John Smart 150 lb 1Un10r and
Corby cornerb ack s and Roger Shaw 147 lb rumor , and Berry,
sa feties

v. ell-&lt;:oached team

the 1e:mlt queslwnable

For All the Marbles

Eagles, Tornadoes
Meet Friday Night
BY KEITH WISECUP
The Sou th ern Tornadoes
have beaten the Eastern
Eagles only once m 10 previous
meet10gs, that a tremendous
34-26 upset m 1!167
·n,e Eagles o"n a 15-game
Southern Valley Conference
game wmnmg streak and a 14ga rne O\C I all wmmng streak

Fm the fu st lune m history,
both teams are undefeated
headmg mto thiS cros!l-county
claSSIC

Thus the suspense before the
crownmg of the class

• A"

Tornadoes will be fired up, but
so wtll we "
Jewell added, "We owe 'em
one I thmk we're as good as
Ihey are The team thai makes
the fewer m1sta kes w11l
probab ly wm "

: ..•::

..... :····::::::.. ..:·:
•,

on1j

•

'•
'•

······=··

Jewell hit the nail nght on
the head when he sa1d Southern
owed the Eagles one The
Eagles plastered the Tornadoes 5tHI In 1970 and 197 1
Both of the Meigs h1gh
schools w1ll be gmng at full
strength except for the Tor·
nadoes who may be Without 160
DEFENSE
lb sophomore linebacker Tim
EASTERN Duvall and Baum ends. Sleltler and Mora
Mower who rece1ved a poss1ble tack les, Reed , m1ddteguard Donn 1e E1ch1nger ( 1J8 1bs, 9) and
chipped elbow Wednesday Hts Gnff1th or Mlllhoan, lmebackers Chaffee and Osbourne, cor
status of start10g was pend10g nerbacks and Bonng and Edward s. safeties
Htll. mtddle guard , Forbes and Wtlllams
on a medtcal exammallon endsSOUTHERN
Greg Mtddleswa rt ISS 11. and Hawk. tackles. J Htll and
Wednesday night
T1m Mower, 160, 10, linebackers I hie and Ord. cornerbacks. and
The only changes 10 th e Mtlch Nease and Mike Nease halfbacks
Eastern bne-up wlll be the
·······:··
sw1tch of Randy Bonng, 1451b
scn101, to quarterback from halfback, and M1ke Codner, 150
halfback John Sheets, 183 lb lb Junior guard, both return to
JUnior, last week's startmg th e To rnado hne-up aft er
quarterback, wlll return to the suffermg from the flu last week
halfback pos1t10n vacated by m Southern 's 32-0 wm over
Bor10g Bor10g took over the Hannan Trace (Eastern
Slt,'Ilal-calhng duties last week defeated Hannan Trace 2&amp;&lt;1)
m th e second quarter agamsl
The two teams, conSymmes Valley and sparked sequently , are exactly the
the offense to 20 qmck PQIDIS same stze, we1ght-wiSe The
The httle speedster has talhed Eagles have a 162-151 lb adSIX touchdowns 10 th e first two vantage m the backfield, but
ga mes, all but two of the Eagle Southern has a 179-168 lb
total of SlX.pomters
advantage on the lme Both
Nick lhle, 160 lb sen1or differences are II lbs

ROB 01 PIETRO
UPI Sports Wnler
IIIsn 't often that a team w1ns
a game by a score of 49-0 and
fmds Ilself dropped a notch m
the ratmgs, but such 1s the fate
of Oklahoma, now No 2 and
forced to try harder Saturday
aga1nst Oregon
The Sooners found themselves m the No I position
after defend1ng na twnal
champion Nebraska was upset
by UCLA on the seasonopemng Saturday two weeks
ago
Coach Chuck Fairbanks'
charges steamrollered Utah
State In their season debut last
week, but the Umvers1ty of
Southern Callforn1a began 1ls
season w1th an upset of
Arkansas and followed last
Saturday a 51~ rout of Oregon
State
Now, USC IS number one
The TrOJans travel to Champaign, Ill., Saturday to toy, m
all hkehhood, w1th the euphe·
m1sllcally mcknamed Fighting
Tihm, who lost to USC last year,
28-0, one of s1x losses Tihn01s
absorbed m II games
Oklahoma, with only a 35-31

toss to Nebraska last year
marnng a 11).1 record topped
by a 40-22 drubbmg of Auburn
10 the Sugar Bowl, sllll has the
proven Greg Prwtt, Joe Wylie
and Leon Crosswhite and a
plethora of freshman talent to
keep lis supercharged offense
hummmg

In other contesls mvolvmg
th e top 10, third-ranked Colorado meets Minnesota, fourthtabbed Tennessee, wh1ch foiled
Penn State's b1d for revenge,
28-21, last week, hosls Wake
Forest and Alabama No 6
1dle last week, returns actio~
ag31nst Pittsburgh.

SAVE 'l.lS on Mry pion

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
·~o.

tune

until cleanup IS com-

pleled The sheels may be
turned mto one of the coaches
or Mrs Roger Kirkhart
Phda 2 St Lou 1s 1
Jomght
All an Ia 13 Hou ston 6
The Eastern Athletic
C•nc nnt~l• 8 San Fran 6
Los Ang 5 San D•ego 3
Boosters voted a "thank you"
Today 's Probable Pttctlers
for the donatwns of food and
I All Ttmes EDT I
Pholadelphta tTwtlchell 4 81 lime at the recent horse show.
a/ StLouiS (Btbby 101.9 pm
Ptllsburgh (B lass 17 71 al
New York (Genlry 7 91 8 05
Uncle John Say;:
pm
(Only games scheduled)
Fnday's Games
Phlla at New York, n ght
Montreal at P• tl s ntght
Ch cago at St Lou1s n1ght
San D1ego at Attanla n•ght
C1nc1 at Houston, n•ght
San Fran at Los Ang , n •g ht
Amencan league

Boston
Detro1l
Ba lttmor e
New York
Cleve land
Milwauk ee

Oakland
Ch•cago
Mmnesota

Kansas Ctly

East
w I pet g b
78 64 549
78 66 542 1
77 68 531 2'12
75 68 524 3' '
66 80 452 14
59 86 407 20' ~
West
wlpctgb
85 58 594
80 63 559 5
73 69

70 71

514 l Jl/ 2

496 15

Cal•fornta
67 76 469 18
Texas
52 91 364 33
Wednesday 's Results
M1nnesota 3 Texas 1
Detro.t 4 Clevela nd 1
Boston 9 Balflmore 1, 1st
Boston 4 Batt1more 0 2nd
New York at M1l w ppd ra1n

WE HUSTLE, at
R1zer Oil Co • to
promptly
and
ca r efully sal1sfy our
customer s' needs We
welcome a cha nce to
serve you well

Oakland 6 Chtcago J

See
Uncle

Kan Ct t y 9 Callforn ta 2
Today 's Probable Pitchers

tAll Times EDT I
Kansas Ctty I Nelson 9 Sl at

Cal 1forn 1a {Ryan 16 15). 11 p m
De lro1f (Coleman 17 13) at
Boston (Curt is 10 7) , 7 30 p m

Frank

New York tKektch 10 121 at
Mtlwaukee t Bell 3 11. 9 p m
tOnly games scheduled)

or Uncle

Fnday's Games

Kansas Ctty al Oakland
Callforn •a at M tl'1n n 1ght
Texas at Ch1cago ntght
New York a t Cleve ntght
Detroit at Boston mght

John Now

!Only Games Scheduled)

los An,g
QQ1 203,00()- 6 11 2
San Otego 000 012 000- 3 8 0
Os leen I 18 10) at1d Yeager.
Cann tzza ro (8) , Norman, Ross

181 and Kenda ll LP- Norman
t9 10 )

Friday and Saturday Sale to Celebrate
Kerm's 15 Years in Pomeroy
I

I

I

io

NO INSTALLATION
CHARGE FOR CABLE TV
DURING SEPTEMBER!
•••

OFF
STORE-WIDE REDUCTION

SAVE '10 ... AND GET

OHIO CHANNELS, BEITER PICTURE, LOCAL
NEWS &amp; EVENTS, AND ALL THE NEW FALL
SHOWS!

!

(EXCEPT FAIR TRADE ITEMS)

You're Invited!

CALL POINTYlEW TODAY

Free Birthday Cake and
Coffee Served
Friday and Saturday

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY- SE PTEMBER23rd
UNTIL4 P1M.

CONSTRUCTION &amp; GENERAL
LABORERS UNION

4 5~

A pep rally and w1ener roast
w1ll be held at Eastern Hlgh
School tomght at 7 30 p m
followtng the JUnior high
Eastern Racme game Eastern
JUniOr high studenls are mvited
to participate
Parents of the football
players are asked lo return the
refre shment stand work
schedule sheets for the at-home
games Sept 22, Oct 6, and
Oct 26 Shifts are from 6 p m
to half-tune, and from half-

Sooners Must Try Harder

Just think what it will be when Kermit has been here a
100 years. Buy the new wearables you need now and
save 15 percent at Kerm's Korner.

OF

PRESIDENT
LATEX

RICo '5.85

.::: ·::::::::::: .. ...

EASTERN SOUTHERN
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
p OS
EASTERN
WT
WT
SOUTHERN
Q B 140
Randy Bortng I 12)
14S
Vern Q.-d 111 1
Ra lph Parker 112 1 140
or B1 ll Osbou rne ( 12) 155
H B 155
Mttch Nease (10 )
John Sheets t 11 1
189
H B 160
Nt ck lhle(12)
Alan Duvall (121
183
F B 15()
Jay Htll (12)
Georqe Mora ( 12 )
190
c 180 DenniS Hawk { 1l)
Dan Challee I 11)
155
or Dave Grtff1 fh ( 12) 155
G 160
Bob Eynon 1111
Sleve Mtllhoan ti21 163
or T 1m Baum (111
165
G 150
M1ke Codner (11 )
Dtck Stelller (121
189
T 220
Ron Htll t121
Steve Reed t 12)
210
T
230 Larry Wilcoxen (12 )
Phtl Bowen I 11)
150
E
160
J tmWtlltamstlll
Bobby Edwards t 121 120
E
150
Mtke Nea se t 121

"FAMILY OUTING"
~;:..,~.......-/'if

STANDINGS· Rally Tonight

Jn-

lb semor tackle Mike MozJei
In other SEOAL actiOn this
F11day, Athens trave ls to
Wellston
J ackso n hosts
Ga lhpolis, and
dnd ovc1 al l m1slake -1 1dden winless
play fm the poor sho"mg Wave rl y goes to Ironton The
Ma l.JUcler · Ch ieflarn battle
dg,lln~t Ne\1. Lex1n gton
I know "e II be up agamst a should be lhe only game w1th
~ood (u1d

With the Bears, played out h1s
optiOn last year and has been
k
h
see mg a ne" connection w1t
a Nat 1onal Football League
team almost smce the end of

l&lt;1Id&lt;Jy

MEIGS LOGAN
Mat or League Standmgs
PROBABLE START ING LINEUPS
zm stdkes and wtn, " sa1d
By Untted Press International
Nattonal league
MEIGS
WT POS WT
LOGAN
Inn Kmg , 131 lb semor Adams
Andy
Vaughan
t
12)
173
QB
175
Jtm
Kemper
110)
East
Meigs, 1f 1ts two big tackles
gu~ll rl
and number one
Chuck Faulk ( 121
160
w I pet g b
play "'11 have a 190-180 lb Or Terry Wh•ttatch (10)
1cpldt:ernent on offense be lund
90 53 529
180
John Corby I 111 Ptltsburgh
138 TB 155
Ch•cago
79 65 549 1] I 7
McKi nney . suffe1ed a twisted weight advantage on the lme,
Kevm Ber ry ( 121
Mock
Ash
(Ill
New
York
157
74 68 521 l 51~
we
210
Ken
Culberlson
t
121
IU1ee and IS ve1) doubtful If bul will give up a whoppm g 185- Dalla s Weber ( 11 )
Sl LOU IS
179
70 75 483 21
FB
187
Ketth
Porter
1121
166 disadvantage m !he back Rock Gaul t11)
Mt K tnney IS knocked out or
153
c 185
BtlI Kazee 11 11 Montrea t
65 78 453 25
Lou McK1nney ( 12)
164
Phtladelphta 53 90 371 37
c,m I ~o on offense Ihat gua1d field
G 180
Wayne Newland (12}
John
Lehew
(
11)
175
West
G
The leaders of the Clncftam Mark Werry ( 12)
slot ts undc1 seve I c handicap
238
206
M1ke Mozt er (12)
w I pet g b
1 111 hopmg all 01 at least T11be a1e 210 lb sen101 OrMtkeMc Dan1el (11) 210
C1nc•nna tt
89 55 6 18
futlback, Ken Culbe1tson, " 1111 T
some of them mil be able to
Houston
80 63 S59 8 11
Randy Faulk 1101
265
200
Dave Bnmmer {12)
Los Angeles
77 67 535 12
pi a) Fnday We 1 em a hu11 y p1 obabl) will be tile most Or
Mark Oiler (Ill
205
175
Dave Krebs ( 11)
Allanta
67 77 465 22
up, gc t-1 e~dy' pos1t10n 11ght powe1ful back the Marauders Or Boll Sla ck t II)
168 T 160
M1ke Fann (11 )
San Franosco 63 82 434 261 •
noll, smd th e dean of SEOAL LJCe all year , 180 lb JUniOr Randy Chalon (121
155 E
San Ooego
54 88 380 34
180
E
Wednesday 's Results
lialfback Julm Corby , 175 lb Btll Chaney (121
C(Jache;,, Chm lcs Chancey
New York 4 P11tsburgh 1
fhc Logan Ch1cflam s, 1 1 m sophomm e quarte1 back .Jnn
DEFENSE
Chtcago 6 Montreat 2

a !lOI e fuot ( h1s k1ck1n g foot, the

:,C•

,g:

a

st.u t But he won't be

champ of Me1gs County foot·
ball Friday at Eastern when
the two nvals crack heads
The winner of Fnday's ga me
will ha~~ an ms1de !rack to !he
SVACcltampwnship, which th e
Eagles have won the past two
seasons The Eagles are 2-0 m
SV AC play and lhe Tornadoes
rue 1-0 w1th Kyger Creek
These three teams may run 1-23 rn lhe SVAC 1ace, the exact
order yel to be determmed
Both coaches , Roger
SAW
Kirkhart of Eastern and B1ll
Jc\1 ell of Southern, neither of
whom ha ve lost a game as a
head coach 1Kirkhart w1nnmg
Just SEAlS TO CHIEFS
look
CHICAGO (UPf) - George 11 m h1s one-plus years and
at
Seals has signed w1th the Je\\ell both of his ), used five
lhes e Kansas City Cluefs the Chicago Identical words, spoken very
Horne 11le Bears announced Wednesday ca lml y
features : and the Bears w1ll get th~
"We'll be ready for 'em "
Ku
khart added " I know the
• lnslanl
Olref's No I draft p1ck for the
starttng
next season

11 55 - Movie "36 Hours" 10

1 00 - NewS4
1 30 - News 13
FIUDAY.-SEPTEMBER 22,1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmtlme 10, Farm Report 13
to
the
6 30 - Paul Harvey 13
Ia
M
U
the
J
a 'tendmg
ason 1 er P Y ge r;
6 2S- Blue Ridge Quartet 13
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Pulitzer Prize playwright Sidney Kingsley who
6 30- Columbus 'Today 4, Bible Answers 8; Herald ot Truth 10
goaded Jean Kerr mto lmlshing her imminent
6 4S - Corncob Report J.
A BUMPER CROP
7 00 - Today l, 4,15, CBS News6, 8, 10
Broadway comedy- and getting some dainty
OF POLITICS
returned verbs! abuse from Jean trymg to goad
7 ~- Romper Room 6 , Sleepy Jeffers 8, Bullwlnkle and Rocky
NEW YORK (KFS) - McGoverners Ethel
at
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame st 33
and Jean Sm1 th and Pal Lawford were m "21" Sidney mtofinlShlng his play; be's only been
th
Romper Room 8. Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
I
8 30 - Jack La Lanne 13; New zoo Revue 6, Romper Room 8
and next table were N!Xon.phUes "Bo" Polk ltforf!Ve-&amp;Xyears : "The irslact'seasy - en
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15 , What Every Woman
(ex-pres or MGM) and Chase Bond head's wife 1t gels tough," Kingsley alibied.
"That Ouunp1011ship Season" has more than
Wants to Know J. Concentration 6, Capt. Kangaroo 8 , Ben
Mrs Hrbert Patterson who let an evil whim
3
10
expire unexecuted - they decided not to wave the smell til a hll going fonl - 11 opened earlier 9 ~a~eJ~~r~ 6~1f?.i~ll rtf~1r~~ ~~u~~t;on
year as another smash from the probably 10 ~- -111 DlnahJ Shk ore J. 15, Dick Van Dyke 13. Columbus Six
their under-the-table-bumper sUcker which thiS
1
Ja.fato ofJ
hP
h
~ ng6, oer'sWrld8, 10
osep app, w 0 IO 30- Concentration J, 15, Phil Donahue~ Spill Second 13
teased, "McGovern W1ll Do for Amenca What e eem011ynaryp Y c ry
now has three shows on Broadway ("Two
Price Is Right 8, 10
'
·
Lindsay Has Done lor New York "
Gentlemen
of
Verona"
has
been
toddling
along
n.oo
Love
American
Style
6. Sale of the Century 3 lS
Congressional bigshols were very,privatePassword 13; Gambit 8, to
' '
sLove of Life s. Bewltchad 6, 13; HollywOOd Squares J. 4,
partled upstairs m "21" w1th f1lmman Joe delightfully and profitably, plus the ugly little 11 J0
1
Levme holSUng the undoubtedly deductible tab· antiwar antic "Sticks and Bones" kepi alive by 12 00
the "Verona" c881Hlow), and we know from
- Jeopardy 3• IS , Bob Braun's 50 50 Club~; Password 6
the emphaSis by the remarkably Influential
Local News 10, News 13 , Contact 8
'
Info
scalpers
already
have
demanded
12
30Sec
on3d
w
's
Game
3.
15,
Search
tor
Tomorrow
8,
,
Spilt
firsthand
(and reahsUc) group of solons was less on
10
6
rootmg w McGoff than a light to keep their (and got) $50 a pair for "Season"- before.its 1 00 - NewsJ, All My Children 6, 13, Green Acres 10 If's Your
Best a. Watch Your Child 15
·
Dem congressiOnal ma)orlly ... The PQis In· Bd wy. prenuere.
ll's
a
comedy
of
failure,
a
remarkably
I
30
J
Ont
A
Match
3.
4,
15,
Let's
Make
A
Deal
6
13
As The
eluded House Speaker Carl Albert who new, not
cohes1ve
cavalcade
o1
hateful
noslalgla
on
the
World
ums
a.
10.
'
'
drove , to the "21" secret klatch , Senators
2
~lghf':,Y~0~ ~keL~gla~• 1 !' Newlywed Game 13, Guid ing
Hubert Humphrey, Mike Mansfield, Tom 20th anniversary of thai championship season of
30 - OoctorsJ.4, IS ; Dating Gamell; Edge of Night a, 10.
Eagleton (the whole crowd seemed 1,000 pet. for a Scranton high school basketball team, lour of 32. 00
• - Another World 3, 4• 15, General Hosplta16 13 Love Is A
whose members and their sanctimoniously
McGoff ), Teddy Kennedy, Scoop Jackson, Ed
Many Sptendored Thing a. 10
' .
coach
In
reumon,
wallowing
off
in
a
J:
JLo
Return
to
Peyton
Place
3,
~.
IS
,
Secret
Storm
sennomzing
8 10 . One
Musk1e, ex-Sen. Genion, Little Wide Joe Levme,
1e 1t9 Live 6, 13.
rich
bathos
of
super~ntlmentality
for
the
one
1
.
' '
Renato Franccinl
4•00
Mr
Cartoon
3,
Somerset
lS;
Sesam&amp;
St
33,
Fllntstones
6, Merv Griffin 4, Gilligan's Island 8, Movie "Kidnapped"
!n the unsmoke-fllled "21" downstairs were b1ggest trlumph of thei r mlddle-aged IIves; a
10; Love, American Style 13.
the Fred Warmgs (we swear Fred looked 15 1r1umph gone stale and empty by third act
curtain.
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Password IJ, Merv Grltfln 8 . Andy
years younger than last we saw him - and he 's
Griffith 15, Daniel Boone 13.
'
It is getting brilliant performances (coach s oo - Pondorosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6; Mister Rogers 33 Dick
72), Leonard "Deadeye" Henry of the AVCO
Van 0
1S
•
'
hierarchy, m op~site corners Cha1rman Brown R1chard Dysart's role, th1ck 88 soup, needed a 5 30
15, Electric Co 33· Gomer Pyle 13
lew
sp1clercroutons,
but
the
rest
ranged
good
to
rshalt
Dillon
Dragnet a
•
'
of Wesleyan U. and Chairman Purcell of Cornell, famed mtenor designer Ellen Lehman superb), fine direction (A J. Antoon and a 6 00 - News J, U , 10, 15, NBC News a, 13; Truth or Conseq 6 .
Hathoyoga JJ
•
McCloskey of the late Gov.'s family, Tom setting splendidly shabb)', a comfortable 7· 00
- What's My l.jne 8; Masterpiece Thaatre 33 · Wild
Ia
Kingdom 13, News 6, 10, Truth or l;or!Hquences 3· s.;lnt 15
Hovmg of the Metropblltan Museum and Tiffany horror) . It's a p Y for adults, full of obscemties
and
scatologies
and
blaBphemy
of
7
30
- To Tell Ilia Truth 6, Parent Game10, Beet'""" Clock 13 •
ownership, and Glanm Uzielli, who has a Ford
lower-locker
roorn
subculture
faahioned
from
TV·Th•
Child 4, To Be Amoun«d a.
'
m hiS present. . "21" co-owner Jerry Berns told
8 00 - Boote Beat 33; Sanford &amp; Son 3. ~. IS; Brady Bunch 6 13
Sonny &amp; Cher a, 1p.
' •
us he 'd be a grandpop agaw any edition V18 authot MIUer's qulle plain superior knowledge
of
thi!
seml-dlmoufiaged
•oclal
dregs;
no
8 JO - Political Talk3; Partridge Famlly6 13 Little p
• ,
daughter Diana and her husband, Jerry Stein .
15; Take Des Moines 33
' '
- 1e ••
In Shubert Alley absfl the Booth Theatre deviSer of soanng noble Stmantlca, but oh, how 9 oo - Ghost Story J, 4, 15; Room 222 6 13 . Movies "Ma 1 tit
West" a. "My Six Loves" 10.
' '
n
e
where "That Championship Season" was accurate his knowledge of the cheaper
pretensions,
the
bellicose
imitations
of
grubby
30
JaMc:Obt
BtronowskiJJ.
BoldCouple6,13.
1
opemng on Broadway this time· Melina Mer-'·imi
th
.
· 00 "ones
of Progress JJ ; Banyon 3 ~ 15 · L
bo
nhomie;
drab
ven•
Illude,
Y
name
IS
American
$tyle6, 13, Washington Welkin Revi~ 33 ' ove,
'"u' '· mlense and ch1c, Elholt Gould for the
News3, 4, 6. a, 10, tJ, lS
•
f1rst lime m years beardless and In a p~oper if Jason Miller whose proviDC181 ugUnesses herein 11·0010
The Sixth
flamboyant su1t; Today's Barbai'a Wal!lo.rs and · he has obllerved and experienced and raised to ' ~)::.~~~·~~~~~~~~:~~·10; ~0-'?:Y·
4
Tomorrow's Sherrye Henry provmg distaff TV PQwerful dramatic depths in sure, searmg 1.00-Roller0arby4 ; llhvle"ThllDNII";) 1;, '
strokes of lo..lna indecencies
1 30 - NMs
NMs ••
'
•
2:004 13.
competitors don't have to he mutually hateful,

lm!l

pullc'&lt;i leg muscle suffet cd th1s
week In pr acllce and bi g Rand)
ho~s the fl u !'heir status won't

NEW YORK (UP! )-Floyd pomts, Ah . rushed from his
Pallerson won't have to wear a corner at the start of the sixth
mustache and beard today but and nailed Pallerson with a
he'll probably hsve on a pair of hard combmahon Floyd nevc1
dark glasses to h1de an ugly left recovered A hard nght caught
eye that for ced an end to h1s Pallerson on the left temple
hghl w1 th Mahammad Ah and he came off the ropes With
Wednesday rught m Madison his eye puffed and bleeding
When the fmal round began
Square Garden
Patterson's
eye already was
"I'm ashamed whenever I
lose a f1ght," smd Patterson closed and Ali was hittmg him
alter Dr Harry Klerman w1 th everything he threw
stopped the scheduled 12-round
Thr ee more mmute.s of
ftght at the end of the seventh leather from Ah and that was
as Floyd's eye was slashed and enough for Floyd The cut "as
swollen shut
loo close to the eyeball," sa 1d
"I hope you (press 1 will see Dr Kle1man, who stopped the
th1s hghl as I saw 1t He did not fight JUS! before the bell
carry me hke the last t1me I m sounded for the e1ghth
I
still ashamed that I lost but didn't want h1m to suffer any
there Will be no more mustach e nermanenl damage "
Ah ISS) mpathctic
and beard "
Ah, who back m 1965 as
That old d1sgmse that Fatterson once used after bemg champiOn pumshed Patte1son
hum1hated by Sonny Liston for 12 rounds and felt no
was part of the old Floyd remorse about 1t, was sym
pathetic afte1 1t v.ds o\er
Pallerson
Floyd Pallerson fought a
The new Floyd Patterson.
the man who no longer hghls great fight, said Ah "He
w1th the whole world on his slunned me a couple of tunes
shoulders, put up a game effort and he was "mmng lhe hghl
aga1nst Ah for f1ve rounds But Floyd, you keep m tra1mng ar.d
Ali, d1smterested tn the early I ll give you a rematch You
gomg, put an end to Pat- deserve 1t "
terson's endless dream of
Actually Patterson was begellmg another shot at the lund on two of the officials
heavyweight t1tle m the Sixth cards and th e other JUdge had
round.
'~ /' ·•
the ' light even through the
Told by h1s !ramer Ange lo .cventh
'I felt I was ho lding m)
Dundee, that he was behmd on
own, ' sa 1d Patterson " A:. the
fi ght progressed ! tried to step
up the pace but I got hit m the
NEW
eye and that was 1t
"I felt I should have thr own
HOMELITE 11
more punches, done more
110 ELECTRIC
f1ghtmg I'll do It next hme

.•

2.

Pass

3 + Dble
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold

We11 y

ques! 1onable

Comeback Try

ON THE TV DIAL ABC gels 1ts mystery series, featunng
turn-about heroes, under way at 9, WHTN-TV, With James
Wainwnght 81 a detective . The Friday afternoon mov1e on
WBNS-TV ai41S worth reminding the ldds to watch· It's the 1938
classic version of Robert LoUIS Stevenson's "Kidnapped "

The btddmg haa been.
North
East South
It
Dble

We&amp;t

tnjunc:s ugamst Belpte
lasl Fitday and hdS rl' t pt acIIced litis week Faulk has Ius
doctm sgreen hght to play, but
Ius status Is questionable If the
game we1 c to be played
lomght, Faulk probably would
be used spanngly
1 he g1ganhc tackle duo,
Mark Wen), 238lb seniOr and
R.mdy Faulk
265 lb
SOJlh omme,
me
also

Patterson Fails In

+++

{NIWSPAPEl ENTERPRISE ASSN I

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OPERATING SCHEDULE FOR REST OF 1972 SEASON
Sept 14-0pen tor full day 11 oo a m lttiiO oo p m.
Sept. 3()-Reservea unlit 6 OOp m. tor tndustnal Group Outing
Oct !- Reserved for enltre day for large Labor OrganiZation Outing
Oct 7-Reserved unlit S:OO p m for Labor Organtza!Ion OUttng
Oct. 8-LAST DAY 01' lf72 SEASON. OPEN FOR FULL DAY .

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Apparel
Women's Apparel

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
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I

•

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5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21,1972

l

Weekend Forecast
By Col. Mole

I

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Pete
Rose apparently wasn't kidJing a few weeks ago when he
told his old buddy, Tommy
Helms, that the Reds would
hold off clinching the National
League West title until they got
to Houston.
"We're gonna do that so you,
Lee May and Jimmy Stewart
can attend our victory party,"
Rose had told Helms.
And Wednesday night, after
the Cincinnati Reds reduced
the magic number to two with a

victory
over the San Francisco Giants,
it's almost a cinch the victory
celebration will come in Houston . Rose and his teammates
come.from-be~ind ~

BY COL. LEE MOLE
The Moleman is back! Well, at least for the lime being.
meet the Aslrus in a 3-game
Yours truly reboWlded from an embarrassing 11-9 week to a
series beginning Friday night.
respectable 16-4 performance last week in the local
A triple by Rose with two
prognostication battle with the O\d veteran Major Anios B.
runners on base off Giant
Hoople.
righthander Jerry Johnson was
Hoople, however, posted a 17-.'! slate to tnke a one game lead
the key blow as the Reds
alter two weeks of predictions. Hoople missed only the
rallied for four runs in tl1e
Alexander-Vinton County, Minford-Oak Hill and Southwesterneighth inning to wipe out a &amp;-4
Hannan games. Mole missed Southwestern-Hannan; Logandeficit.
Hilliard, Federal-Hocking-Wabaina, Minford-Oak lUll.
Elia~ Sosa, a rookie DominiWe didn't have too many surprises last week. l suppose the
major surprise came Sunday when the SEOAL Sportswriters and
broadcasters, "the men in the know,'' predicted lronton would
win the title this fall. Maybe, it wasn't a surprise for the residents
of Ironton, but just consider, the Tigers have only scored seven
points all year.
Ironton's defense is said to be real rough ; however, one must
score to win. Jackson was picked to finish second, followed by
Athens and Logan.
It looks like it will be an interesting race in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference as·predicted. Eastern, Kyger Creek,
Southern and North Gallia were and remam early favorites.
How are things shaping up Friday night?
SEOAL
Atheas 28 Wellston 0. Bulldogs will take out their two week
losing streak against the lowly Golden Rockets . ·
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
nant clinching by pitching a
Jackson ZS Gallipolis 16. The Blue Devils improved last
UP! Sports Writer
five-hitter
lo give the Mets
week, but Kenny Valentine is just too much for GAHS to stop.
Steve Carlton, traded !rom their victory over the Pirates.
Ironton 1Z Waverly 6. Well, it's what the "experts" predic- St. Louis to Philadelphia
Seaver struck out 15, his high
ted. In order to win the tille, Tigers must start here .
during the off-season, pitched a lor the year, in winning his 18th
Meigs Z2Logon 19. I flipped cards on this one.
sixhitter to beat the Cardinals game of the season. Seaver,
SVAC
lor the fourth time this season who has lost 12, got .all the help
Southern 24 Eastern 20. Upset special of the week, month and Wednesdsy nigh! to !~ad the he needed when Duffy Dyer hit
maybe year.
Phillies to a 2-1 victory.
a two-run triple in the third
Kyger Creek 29 Hannan Trace 0. Bobcats are playing good
The National lrague's top inning.
ball for their new coach.
.candidate for Cy Young award
Milt Pappas pitched a sevenNorth Gallla 18 Southwestern 12. Pirates snap losing streak honors, he became the first
pitcher in modern baseball hitter to win his 200lh 'major
but Highlanders are no easy pushover.
Fort Gay 18 Symmes Valley 8. The Vikings have shown little history to win 25 games with a league game as the Cubs
last place club.
defeated Montreal. He gave up
offense thus far.
a
lirsl-inning home run to Mike
OfHERS
"I had been thinking about 25
Jorgensen
and then shut U1e
Wahama 16 Duvall 12
victories for a long time. My
whole program was geared to Expos until Ron Fairly hit a
Barboursville 21 Pt. Pleasant 6
it," Carlton said. "I'm very bases empty homer with two
Walton 32 Hannan 0
happy I reached it but I knew I out in the ninth.
Coal Grove 48 Rock Hill 16
would."
Columbus Unden McKinley 14 Portsmouth B
The victory improved CarlIt was the ninth straight
Chesapenke 18 Fairland 14
ton's
season's
record
to
25-9.
victory
for Pappas, who be·
Oak Hill 16 Ironton St. Joe 14
He leads t~e league in vic- ca me the 67th pitcher in rna jor
Nelsonville-York 24 Alexander 20
tories, in strikeouts with 282, in league history to win 200-but
Federal Hocking 12 Miller 8
complete
games with 'XI, in the first ever to do it without at
Portsmouth West 30 Northwest 6
starts with 38 and in innings least one 20-victory season.
pitched with :120 1-3 innings
· Menke Starts Rally
labored.
Elias Sosa, the Giants' rookie
The Phillies scored the Dominican righthander, had
winning run in the sixth whefl..___feeled of!four hitless innings in
Tommy Hutton doubled, ad- relief when Denis Menke
vanced on a single by Greg touched off the Reds' rally in
Luzinski and scored on a the eighth with a single to left.
grounder by Bill Robinson .
Mter Cesar Geronimo forced
New York Downs P!Usburgh Menke, Darrel Chaney walked.
In other National League Pinch-hitler Hal McRae
games New York downed singled home Geronimo and
Pittsburgh, 4-1, Cincinnati then took second when Giant
topped San Francisco, ~. leftfielder K~n Henderson
Atlanta ripped Houston, !3&lt;i, hobbled the hall . Rose followed
Chicago beat Montreal, 6-2, with his two-run triple, sending
By Vito Stelllno
reC() rd to Boston's 78-64.
and Los Angeles bested San the Reds ahead, 7&lt;i, and then
UP! Sports Writer
In the first game, Carlton
came home with an insurance
The 28,777 fans at Fenway Fisk and rookie Dwight Evans Diego, 5--3.
In the American League run on a single by Joe Morgan.
Park Wednesday night thought hit two-run singles as Boston
Boston
swept a doubleheader
Atlanta tied a 62-year old
they saw the end of the race in exploded for seven runs in the
from
Baltimore,
9-1
and
4-0,
club
record when they scored
the American League's fourth inning while routing Jim
Detroit topped Cleveland, 4-1, all of their runs-13-in the
Eastern Division.
Paimer. In the second game,
Their Red Sox are only a Tianl boosted his record to 13-S New York and Milwaukee were second inning in their easy
game ahead but there was with his four-hitter while rained out, Minnesota defeated victory over Houston. Manny
definitely an air of celebration besting Mike Cuellar. Evans Texas, 3-1, Oakland bypassed Mota 's pinch-single with the
at the old but cozy park as their had a homer and a triple in the Chicago, 6-3, and Kansas City · bases full in the eighth inning
walloped California, 9-2.
drove in a pair of runs to break
favorite~ jolted Baltimore
game.
Tom Seaver delayed Pitts- a 3-3 tie as the Dodgers went on
twice, 9-1 and 4~. and dealt a
Duke Sims doubled in the lieburgh's
drive to the National a 15-hit spree to trim the
severe blow to the Orioles' breaking run and winning
League
Eastern
Division pen- Padres.
hopes for a fourth consecutive pitcher Woody Fryman added
pennant.
a two-run single in the threeThe guy who got most of the run ninth inning as Detroit
cheers was veteran Luis Tiant, downed Cleveland. Fryman,
who pitched a four-hitter in the now 8-2, pitched a six-hitter.
second game and is now 9-1
In the other games, Oakland
since Aug. !st. He got a beat Chicago, 6-3, Minnesota
magnificent standing ovation edged Texas, 3-1, and Kansas
when he came to the plate in City beat California, 9-2.
the seventh inning that even
In the National League
impressed a veteran like Luis games, Philadelphia beat St.
Aparicio.
Louis, 2-1, New York downed
"l've never seen an ovation Pittsburgh, 4-1, Cincinnati
like Tiant got tonight in my 17 topped San Francisco, ~.
years of baseball," Aparicio Atlanta ripped Houston, 1:1-6,
said, "everybody was standing Chicago beat Montreal, 6-2,
and shouting and cheering . It and Los Angeles bested San
was great. That's the kind of Diego, 5-3.
thing that makes this the best
A's Magic Number
baseball town in the country."
The Oakland A's just about
Of course, it's not over yet knocked the White Sox out of
but the race now seems to have contention in the Western
boiled down to a two-team Division, stretching their lead
struggle between Boston and to six games and reducing their
Detroit- two clubs who have "magic number" to seven with
seven games left against each the victory over Chicago. Sal
other and open a four.game Bando and Reggie Jackson
series in Boston tonight.
homered and Rollie Fingers
Both Four Behind
• pitched 3 2-3 innings of shutout
Baltimore and New York, relief as the A's handed Wilbur
which was trailing Milwaukee, Wond , who's won 24, his 15th
2-ll, in the fourth Inning Wed- loss.
nesday night when the game
Minne;;ota explOded for three
was rained out, are both four runs in the eighth inning to beat
behind Boston in the loss Texas. Bobby Darwin hit a
column and they face an uphill bases-loaded single to highlight
struggle.
the rally. Jim Perry, who went
Detroit, which beat Cleve- eight innings, and Wayne
land, 4-1, is two behind Boston Granger combined on a threein the loss column with a 78-06 hitter.

Carlton Wins
..

25th; Astros

Bombed, 13-6

Orioles Reign
May
Be
Over
As
..
BoSox Win Wo

can righthander, had reeled off
four hitless innings in relief
when Penis Menke touched off
the Red uprising With a single
to left.
Hal McRae drove home the
first of the (our runs with a
pinch single and, after Rose's
, triple sent the Reds ahead, .Joe
Morgan drove home Rose with
an insurance run with a single

Bin Names
~

Mrs· sz·ng In
Golr.fJ Classz·c
.
·

ROBINSON, III. (UPl)- Jn
any other season, Frank Beard
would probably have been a
headliner in the Robinson Fall
Golf Classic which begins
today at Crawford Country
Club.
But this season, the 33-yearold slipped into this tiny
Southern Illinois communitypopulation 7,200-with something less than fanfare. He is a
respected, but not revered
member of a 144-man field
which is scheduled to compete
in the $100,000 tournament.
In fact, this year's Robinson
is indeed lacking in name
power- none of the top 10 is
present and only 18 of the lop 50
are here, but its the likes of Jim
Jamieson and Bob Goalby, a
pair of Illinois favorite sons
who are capturing the
spotlight.
Beard, meanwhile, is struggling through his worst season
since his second year on the
tour when he finished 45th on
the PGA money list.
"A lot of people have asked
what's happened," said Beard
whose earnings are $62,000
below 1971 and whose scoring
average has jumped to 73, two
above last year. "I don't know I
just haven 't been playing as
well-&lt;l bad drive here, a bad
putt there. But, l can't complain, I've made aroWld $50,000
this season, how many guys
make $50,000 in a season' l
guess you 'd have to say it's the
difference between a good
season and a great season .
The $20,000first-place Robinson check was won last year by
Labron Harris Jr. with a Illunder par 274. Using the
process of elimination from the
PGA honor roll, Jamieson
would have to be rated the
tournament favorite- the exMoline amall!ur whiz standing
lith on the money list with
$104,103.
Jamieson is one of !972 tour
winners in the field, joined by
Grier Jones, Lou Graham,
Hale Irwin, Jim Colbert, Miller
Barber , Bert Yancey, and
DeWitt Weaver. Also on hand
are three previous Robinson
champions including Goalby
(1969), George Kundson (1970)
and Harris-all winning their
titles In a sudden death playoff.

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to right.
"I just realized .that I've got
a chance to catch Lou Brock
. for the stolen base title," said
Morgan, wbose two steals in
the game gave him 55 for the

season.
"How about me batting first
the remainde_r of the season?"
he asked, directing the remark
to Rose.

''Wait a minute, Joe/' said a
gdnning Pete, "you're forgetling, I've got to stay ahead of
Billy Williams to lead the
league in base hits."
Rose shook his head In wonder.
HThat guy is amazing," he

said. "Honestly, he can steal a
,base anytime he wants to and
he does it even when everyone

in the park, inclnding the opposing catcher, knows he's going to steal."
Tommy Hall, possessor of a
lll-1 record, pitched two scoreJess innings to get the win.
Bobby Tolan slammed a tworWl homer and Johmy Bench
hit another, his 36th of the season, two shy of the league-leading total of San Diego's Nate
Colbert.
Bench, with 116 RB'rs leads·
the league. He would like to be
on top at season's end and
naturally he would like the
home run tiUe too.
.Couldn't Believe It.
"That is why l would like to
play in the remaining ten

games," said Johmy.
After McRae pinch hit for
Hall in tl)e eighth, Clay Carroll
!!lowed down the Gtanls
order in the ninth to gain
3:/nd save.
The 13 runs 1\Uanta put on
the scoreboard against
Houston in the second Inning
Wednesday night also was a
big conversational piece in the
Reds' postgame gabfest.
••1 couldn't believe it," said
nose. "[ asked Doug Harvey If
that was a I and a 3for AUanta
or 131•'
The umpire's answer?
"He told me that it was !3,
that someone missed an extra
point," said Rose laughing.

programs, minus the con.

·; ~ I

.,

"I '
· ~1 ,

.,

' .

~

1'

141 543 88 182 .335
406 59 133 .328
129 521 100 170 .326
124510 82165 .324
132 532 83 167 .314
142 584 78 183 .313
125 439 62 137 .312
139 519 70 161 .3 10

•

...

Rose, Cin

144 604 99 186 .308

-..
~.

117

.,.

~

·~
••·

Strgel. Pit 130 466 72 142 .3()5
Hebner, Pit I 15 400 58 122 .3()5
Am erica n League

ab

g.

r.

Carew, Min 133 509

Pniela, KC
Shblm, KC
Rudi , Oak
D Al len, Chi
Fisk. Bos
Mily. Ch1
Otis, KC
Mabery, KC
Berry, Cal

138 527
124 420
13B 55~
143 492
119 417
141 506
131 493
136 462
109 375

h . pet .

60 164 .322

62 164 .31I
59 130 .310
91 173 .309
88 152 .309
71 126 .302
79150 .296
68 145 .294
56 136 .294 .
38 I 10 .293

Hom e Runs
National League: Colbert, SO
38; Bench, Cin 36; Williams,
Chi and Stargel l, Pitt 33 ;
Aaron,aall 31.
American League : D. All en,
Chi 36 ; Murcer , NY 29 ;
Killebrew. M inn. Epste in and
Jackson, Oa k 25 .

veneers
~
end select 1
hordwood 1
solids I

Chi 111 ; Colbert , SD 104 ;

The OSLO

• D4St2W
Modern styled console. Titan
101 Chassis. Solid·Siale Super
VIdeo Range Tuner. Chromatic

American League : D. Allen ,

Chi 108 , Mayberry, KC 90 ;
Pitching
Nationa l League :

Carlton ,

Phil 25-9; Jenkins. Chi 20-12;
Os teen, LA 18 -10 ; Seaver, NY
18-12; Blass, Pill 17 -7; Gi bson,

d

Tuning. AFC.

ependable
"\~'
Zenith Qua'' 1

St .L 17-10.

49995
·

$

Panther (8) and Fahey ; Perry,
Granger (9) and M itterwa ld.

WP- Perry 113-14)
I 7-81.
Detroit

I,
•

I. •

Thursday

.• ,,

Friday

0

·... '

•~ ,

\,

:.-~

.~·,., r_... ,

,:

0

''

enrollees of the popular Head
Start preschool trai n111g
program.
Children from families with
an annual income of $4,320 or
lower will get fre e Head Start
services, but fees will be
cha rged on a sliding scale
above that level. Additionally,
10 pel. of all Head Start
openings must be reserved for
l1andicapped children.
The bulk of the authorization
- OEO actuall y got $2 billion in
approp ria tions las t fiscal year
-

Betty Ohlinger
loans and funds to pay for
repair of rural homes in
poverty areas.

VISIT OUR CANDY DEPARTMENT
~~--~~~~~~--~·~~·-~~·---------------­
....... ·-·-...
NEW CROP
Use our convenient Lay. A.
SPANISH PEANUTS Way
Plan for any merchandise you choose. A
JUST ARRIVED lb 69~ deposit holds your se lecCOOKED FRESH
•

--

DAILY

IN OUR

STORE
~-w-•----------·

_.. ._. . _. .__,__.
-

-- .

tion. Pay balance
conven ience.
~~ ..--..~

....

at your

.,

FLOWER BULBS- For Fall planting . Tulips,
Hyacinths, Crocus, etc. Wi II bloom in sp ring .

is fur Community Action

be thought of as being caused
by an electrical short circuit in the brain. When the
elec trical disorder occurs it
causes th e irregular brain
wave and stimulates the
body to respond to cause the
convulsion . The medicine
acts to decrease the excess
electrical activity in the
brain and thereby prevents
convuls ions.
. 1
1n mos t ms
ances when

sufficient medicine is give n,
the overactive
i c ab 1
" thbelectr
'
areas 10
e ram can e
calmed down enough to prevent them from precipitating
a conv ulsion, even in the
face of most normal events
f d'

Sole mates
by

GOLDFISH SET

Enough fish food for 6
months (for 2 fish) and 2
goldfish, ISc box .

Ne w sa fe -de s1gn
rtg td plasttc bo wl.

·" • •

"· -

"

20" FANS ·,

... v

..,.,.

3 SPEED

·

·

el:'e"er";~"""""""'i3.88"

u ... • • • • u u u u • ~ ~ .....

f

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTIR

.:::::::::::~:»;i~.:!8!:!:~~ruw~:::-~·:•=-:·-·· · · · ···.. »....

BE N
PHONE

992-3498

·

OPEN FRID ..

.....

"".
.

_&amp;{

FRAN KLII)I
200-202 East Main St.

fashion craft
I•IAO!;' I" U li ,o, ,

®

A fas hion uprisong . . . the platform.
The styl e's borrowed fr om yesteryea r, but
it cou ldn 't be more today. Try a sole
male on ... the adventurous spir it and
bold personality w il l keep you at
your fun lov ing best whereve r yo u
go . .. whateve r you do.

POMEROY, OHIO

ue~- ;o~o~r~m~a~ry~l-~-~~g~t-h-at~y-ou~~~~~~~~M~Y~a~M~Th~~~A~Y~~~~B~i~S~·~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

tack or seizure?

Dear Reader- Epilepsy is
not act uaUy caused by irregular brain waves. The irregular brain wave is a manJ!es tatwn of the epilepsy it·
self. The actual seizure may

At 60 mph a '73 Ford LTD rode quieter
than an airborne glider.

you can buy

•

On July 27, 1972, General Radio Co. testeu a '73 LTD against an airborne
ghder. Both at 60 mph and wi th id Pnt ieal sound level metet·s. The
re~ult: t he Ford was (jUieter. But t he new L'l'D is more than just quiet.
It IS well_made fro~ !ts power front d1 ~c brakes, power steering and
automatiC transm1SS1on, standard Pqutpolll' nl, to its lu xu rious
co mfortab le, roomy interior. There an· lti new Ford models t~ choose
ft·om and each will convince you t hat quiet is t he sound of a well-made car.

that_

La-Z-Boy

The '73

chair
you've
a lways
dreamed of at our low
pric es.

Ford LTD. 65 dectb~~-~ at 60'~·j,h'· ....•

Quiet is the sound of a well·madecar.

·

Authorized Dealer
THE QUIET

MASON
FURNITURE

1973

FORD LTD BROUGHAM

(shown with optional Deluxe Bumper Group ,
Convenience Group, de!tJJC e wheel covers,

f ront cornering lamps and whitewall tires) .

Herman Grate
777 -5592
Mason, W. Va.

A'73 Torino rode so smooth, a high wire
artist kept balance on a road of 2x4's.

.. ..
~

Chances ~~e Y-!!ll won't try to ~alance yourself o~ top of your new Torino. But,
when you 1e ndmg msKie, yo u II st oll app,·ce Jate r onn o's re fin ed suspensionbe:ause 1t helps to cus hiOn humps, a bsut· h l'lmd v ibra t io ns and reduce body
sway . You feel sohu ly m con lrol wh ilL' you I' I&lt; k m com forland luxury.
The solid mid-size Torin o. Smooth r iding, sll"O ng and quiet.

Our New

Jewelry
.....
••

tlJ_@
•

(shown with optional front bump er guards,
deluxe wheel covers an d wh itewall tires).

Ford, the comp)iny t~at bf!ilt t~e first basi~, solid, reliable car seventy years agohas bmlt today s bas1c, sohd rehable car : Pmto. I t's become America's top selling
economy car for more reasons than economy. Here are some of those reasons:
A 1600 ~c. engm~ devel~ped and perfected in over 10 years of actual driving. Rackand-Ptf!10n steermg. Sohd welded bod;y, elec~rocoated t~ fight corrosion. 4-speed
tran~mtss1on-lubed for hfe. Everythmg we ve learned m seventy years of car
makmg-all the basics- we bUild mto every Pinto Wagon, Runabout and Sedan .
When you get back to bastes, you get back to Pinto.

If it's new, we have it pierced · and clip earrings,
necklaces, fashion rings, girls'
&amp; boys'
rings, copper
bracelets, initial rings many, many items.

•

THE SOLID I973 FORD TORIN O BROUGHAM

'73 Pinto: When you get back to basics,
you get back to Ford.

Fabulous
Selection
On Display

•

992-2178

revision entirely, leaving the programs to OED - one to
c r eate
e nvironm enta l
pro~ram as is in OEO.
protection
jobs , such as
Aside from the Legal Services controversy, the act cleaning up parks, and the
establishes a fee sys tem for other to provide rural lwusing

High wire artist SUI Couch balancing on a '73 Torino ridina over a road of 2x 4's.

REFRESHMENTS

CADILLAC
,_,_OLDSMOBILE

given.

two new

Stephenson .

.

m

AUTHORIZED
fiEAJtS CATALOG
MERCHANT

ep1~~y.

The la w added

SHOE SHOP

teptic and1 am
havealsobeen ex- mentioned.
ami ned and found the cause
to be Irregular brain waves.
I have _medication for it. Is
1t poss1ble that being overly
exctted, overly tired, or
worned can bring on an at-

Now

Kan City
620 000 Olo- 9 7 2
California 002 000 ooo- 2 7 0
Busby 12-0) and Tayl or; May .
Allen IlL Dukes 12l. Foster
14). Sells (6). Barber (9) and

-- ~
I ~
" :

0

.,.,...,,mr.

dropped the Legal Services

.·· ·:.w.

Coffee
Donuts
Cookies

connocton deliver more in.itfalllutiDa powtr
than .an othmoioe idtntic&amp;l ~ttery with ~p-and-over cell conntctora. U your p.....,t bt.ttery illl't perlo~ u1t ahould, replace 11
,..~toN 1/,.li...-..tth a Sean Jll&amp;b Voltqt Battery, and
avoid the angoiob &amp;nd lruatntioo that a dead bt.ttery can cause on a told winter mo~ ,.,..
N!o'l "- IM """· Ertn-ol.rollg pol)'Propylene we provides tic:eptiooal resistance tO told &amp;nd vibration.

useless in these co nditions
unless th e underlying prob·
le m of the varicose ve 1·ns 1·s
corrected first and good
circulation is established.
Then a graft isn't needed.
IJear Dr. Lamb-Recently
" _reader wrote you about

MARGUERITE'S

vetu.
Afl er hammering out ont~ rlliike lu get OEO funding, but
compromise bUI, the conferees Con~ress left the contribution
returned to a new session and at the current 20 pet. level.

Skin grafts are completely

comfor ta ble

- Jackson (25th). Bando {15th),
Rei chard I 18th). May 11 It h).

*
to

deep veins within the large
muscles of the leg and thigh
that are equally important.
If the large veins in the
legs are normal, the little
tiny superficial network of
veins that some women have
can be eradicated by a little
elec trical needle, much in
the same way small dilated
veins in the nose can be correeled. This procedure is of
liltte value however. if the
large veins in the skin and
deeper in the legs are involved. tn this case, it is
sometimes possible to strip
out the varicose veins depending on the finding of
the medical examination.

a

fur an increase to 25 pel.
ir• the so-ca lled ' 'in kind"
cunt.ribut.i un a CAA has to

CHAIRS

100 000 003- .4 8 1

Herrmann ; Holt zman, Fingers
(~) and Tenace . WP- Holfzman
118 II ) . LP- Wood (24-15) . HRs

,. 1 ...

ported . But the conferees
placed restrictions on whom

/his brought th., threat of

a~kt!tl

LA-Z-BOY

Chicago
000 201 000- 3 6 1
Oakland
030 021 OOx- 6 9 I
Wood , Lemonds (7) and

?' .*

Saturday

.· "' .

LP- Paul

Tidrow , Hilgendorf (9 } and
Fosse. LP- Tidrow t IJ-l 5J.

-!~ \~
.~-

program to a private cur·
pora tion , which Nixon sup-

the corporation 's board, and

r--------------------

Cleveland 000 001 ooo- 1 6 0
Fryman 18-2) and Hailer:

·
*
0
-, ,,tf"k;a\
. .-- --\*. \·. . / .'--*~'''
....
..
"
.
.
. . . . ,,,. . , a
,·*·····

veins th at some women have

Texas
000 OiO ooo- I 3 0
Minn
000 000 03x - 3 10 0
Paul, Plna (8), Lindblad 181.

Middleport

Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

transfer of the Legal Services

Be Removed?

Its II .

INGELS .FURNITURE

Am eri(:an League : Wood , Chi

24-15; Perry . Clev 21-16;
Hun ter. Qak 20-7; Palmer. Ball
20-9; Lolich, Del 20-13.

'

no presidential comment.
A congressional conference
committee agreed ea rlier on

Can Ailing Veins

in the surface of the skin
game)
cause
no medical problem .
Baltim ore 000 100 OOD- I 5 I
and
are
only a cosmetic conBoston
002 700 OOlC - 9 10 1
Palmer , Harrison (4) , Rey - siderat ion .
nolds (4), Leonard ( 7) and
Before anything is du ne, a
Oa tes: Pattin IIS-12) and Fisk . complete physical examinaLP- Patmer (20-91 .
tion has to be accomplished
(2nd game)
Baltim ore
000 000 000- 0 4 1 to determine the state of all
Boston
000 010 21x - a 50 of the veins in the I c~s.
Cuellar, Alexander (7), Wall There are some superfic1al
(8) and Etchebarren, Oates 7) _ vei ns that some people can
Tiant 113-51 and Fi sk. LP- see and then there are large
Cuellar 117 -111 . HR - Evans

,.;

May. Hou 96.

Powe ll. Bait 78 .

League

Montrea l 100 ooo OOI - 2 7 1
Chocago
301 010 OOx- 6 10 0
Torrez. Renko (6). Walker (8)
and McCarver; Pappas 115 .71
and Rudolph. LP- Torrez 116 _
Ill._ HRs- Jorgensen (13th).
Wil_loams (33rd), Santo (17th)
Faorty (13th).
· By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Pittsbrgh
100 000 OOo- I 5 0 Dear Dr. Lamb- ! would
N.Y.
00310000x- 4110 like some adv ice on varicose
Walker , Johnson (5), Mi ller veins. l am in my early 50s
(8) and Sanguil len; Seaver (18- and enj oy sports suc h as
12) and Dyer . LP- Wa lker (4- tennis and swimming. But
6) .
while others wear shor·ts and
San Fran
00 1103 ooo- 6 I I 2 bathing sui ts, I have to wear
Cmc l
012 100 04x- 8 12 4 support hose and slacks beCarrithers, Sosa (4), John so n cause of unsightly dark pur·
181 and Rader . Gullett, Borbon pte vems . I have tried all
16i. Hal l (7) , Carroll (9) and kinds of cover-ups, but to no
Bench . WP- Hal l 111 -1) . LP1l. Are there any operaSosa 10-1). HRs Bench 136/h ), ava
lions bes1des skin grafts for
Tolan (8th)
my ank les and bends of my
knees
? My ankles and knees
Hous
000
105 OOD- 6 tO 2
Alta
0(13)0 000 OOx- 13 I S 0 are all purple with small
Griffin, Roberts (1) York )2 veins. l also have large knotRichard (2). Culver d1. Forsch ty ones in one leg. Please
15). Ray (8) and Howard gtve some advice . Is this
Stinson (2). Joh nson (5) ; Stone:
Schueler 171 and Didier. WP- type of operation dangerous'
Stone (6-101. LP- Gri tt in (5-4). I'm tired of bundling up in
HRs · Baker (16th ). Cedeno hot weather.
122nd). Rader (22nd) .
Dear R e ad c r- Varicose
veins
are a problem . The
Phila
100 001 OQO- 2 7 1
St . Louis
100 ooo ooo- 1 6 o lar ge veins can ca use acCarlt on (25 -9) and Bateman · cumulation of blood in th e
Wise . Folkers (8) and Sim '. legs and ankles causing
mon s. LP- Wise ( IS-16).
swelling. skin discoloration
and even ulcerat ion of th e
American Lea gue
skin . The very small ti ny
list

l

116 ; Slargell , Pitt 112 ; Wil -

Mur ce r , NY 88 ; Scalf, M i l 81 ;

Major league Resu lts
By United _Prl!s s lnternationa 1
Nattonal

In announcing the signin g,
!he While House said there was

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

New York ilf Milw, ppd , rain.

Runs Batted In
Nat ional Leag ue: Bench, Cin

liam s,

troversial free Legal Services
provision that had brought a
veto threat.
The ac t authorizes $2.1

Linescores

Leading Batters
National League
g. ab
r . h. pel.

1.00 to 3.00

,

lll&amp;b Voltq&lt; IIIWII alrlilbt-through-th ..partltion cell

LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
. Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal. 9to 5,
Thurs. 9 to Noon, Friday 9: oo to 9:00

Jl

By United Press International

Our biggest price cut this season for our
High Voltage Battery with 48-month guarantee

220 E. MAIN

,. ,. ,
• •• 1

'

billion in the fiscal year begun
lasl July I for Office of
Economic Opportunity (OEA)
programs, about $200 million
more than Nixon had budgeted
for the year . It also authorizes
$2.4 billion for the fi scal vcar
starling next July 1.
·
Actual appropriations must
be made in separate
legislation .

WASHJNGTON (UP!) - The
White House announced
Wednesday President Nixon
ha~ signed a two-year extension of federal antipoverty

Major league leader s

Wilms, Chi
Baker, All
Cdeno, Hou
Garr.Atl
Oli ver, Pit
Brock, St. L
Santo, Chi
Wat son , Hou

ICAAi programs
upcr,.IL&gt;d by, privale and public
gn,ups at the stale ond local
level to help the poor.
The administration had
/he President could appoint to

Anti-Poverty Extended 2 Years

Magic Number 2; Houston Next

!&gt;VANE OFF AGAIN
The white horse in the
The United States ranks
SAN DIEGO
(UP! )- New Te s t ame n t IJ ook of 16th among world nations in
Running back Duane Thomas ll eve lation sym bolizes Con - land use for hi ghway purposes.
left the San Diego Chargers qu est.
training camp Wednesday
after a one-day stay.
Coach Harland Svare said
Thomas did not report for the
team meeting and told hin1 he
was returning to his home in
Dallas. He said no reason was
102 £. MAIN
POMEROY

1\~ency

..

-·~ --A 1973 P1nto on the Michigan
cont~ecti 11 g

tne Pinto to the van

Pinto's per form&lt;Jnce .

•

1973

OLDSMOBILE OMEGA HATCHBACK COUPE

KARR &amp;VANZANDT
992-5342

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

'

THE 1973 PINTO WAGON
(ttJown with Squire Option, lupa&amp;e raek,
Deluxe Bumper Group an~ whitewall tire&amp;).

0

There are 39 new models to choose from.
And every 197~ Ford, Thunderbird, Torino, ¥u.stang,,Maverick and Pinto-comes equipped with new
energy-abwrbt~g bu_mpers and steel guard ratl~ mall s1de doors. Steel-belted radial ply tires and AM/ FM
stereo radios are opt10ns on all models. Test-dnve these new Fords at your Ford Dealer's now.

DLDSMOBilf

Pomeroy

POMEROY

FORO DIVISION

All1 973 cars must meet Federal Em iss•ons Slo.~mhuds behne sale. SeQyour Ford Oealtr tor detalll.

Open Daily 8 A.M. to 10

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business'

,. I nday 10:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 to 9 P.M.
Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P. M.

FORD

Sat.

\'

~I

•

KEITH GOBLE fORD, INC. 461 S. Third Sl, Middleport, Ohio

•

�' .
I

•

,..

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21,1972

l

Weekend Forecast
By Col. Mole

I

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Pete
Rose apparently wasn't kidJing a few weeks ago when he
told his old buddy, Tommy
Helms, that the Reds would
hold off clinching the National
League West title until they got
to Houston.
"We're gonna do that so you,
Lee May and Jimmy Stewart
can attend our victory party,"
Rose had told Helms.
And Wednesday night, after
the Cincinnati Reds reduced
the magic number to two with a

victory
over the San Francisco Giants,
it's almost a cinch the victory
celebration will come in Houston . Rose and his teammates
come.from-be~ind ~

BY COL. LEE MOLE
The Moleman is back! Well, at least for the lime being.
meet the Aslrus in a 3-game
Yours truly reboWlded from an embarrassing 11-9 week to a
series beginning Friday night.
respectable 16-4 performance last week in the local
A triple by Rose with two
prognostication battle with the O\d veteran Major Anios B.
runners on base off Giant
Hoople.
righthander Jerry Johnson was
Hoople, however, posted a 17-.'! slate to tnke a one game lead
the key blow as the Reds
alter two weeks of predictions. Hoople missed only the
rallied for four runs in tl1e
Alexander-Vinton County, Minford-Oak Hill and Southwesterneighth inning to wipe out a &amp;-4
Hannan games. Mole missed Southwestern-Hannan; Logandeficit.
Hilliard, Federal-Hocking-Wabaina, Minford-Oak lUll.
Elia~ Sosa, a rookie DominiWe didn't have too many surprises last week. l suppose the
major surprise came Sunday when the SEOAL Sportswriters and
broadcasters, "the men in the know,'' predicted lronton would
win the title this fall. Maybe, it wasn't a surprise for the residents
of Ironton, but just consider, the Tigers have only scored seven
points all year.
Ironton's defense is said to be real rough ; however, one must
score to win. Jackson was picked to finish second, followed by
Athens and Logan.
It looks like it will be an interesting race in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference as·predicted. Eastern, Kyger Creek,
Southern and North Gallia were and remam early favorites.
How are things shaping up Friday night?
SEOAL
Atheas 28 Wellston 0. Bulldogs will take out their two week
losing streak against the lowly Golden Rockets . ·
BY NEIL HERSHBERG
nant clinching by pitching a
Jackson ZS Gallipolis 16. The Blue Devils improved last
UP! Sports Writer
five-hitter
lo give the Mets
week, but Kenny Valentine is just too much for GAHS to stop.
Steve Carlton, traded !rom their victory over the Pirates.
Ironton 1Z Waverly 6. Well, it's what the "experts" predic- St. Louis to Philadelphia
Seaver struck out 15, his high
ted. In order to win the tille, Tigers must start here .
during the off-season, pitched a lor the year, in winning his 18th
Meigs Z2Logon 19. I flipped cards on this one.
sixhitter to beat the Cardinals game of the season. Seaver,
SVAC
lor the fourth time this season who has lost 12, got .all the help
Southern 24 Eastern 20. Upset special of the week, month and Wednesdsy nigh! to !~ad the he needed when Duffy Dyer hit
maybe year.
Phillies to a 2-1 victory.
a two-run triple in the third
Kyger Creek 29 Hannan Trace 0. Bobcats are playing good
The National lrague's top inning.
ball for their new coach.
.candidate for Cy Young award
Milt Pappas pitched a sevenNorth Gallla 18 Southwestern 12. Pirates snap losing streak honors, he became the first
pitcher in modern baseball hitter to win his 200lh 'major
but Highlanders are no easy pushover.
Fort Gay 18 Symmes Valley 8. The Vikings have shown little history to win 25 games with a league game as the Cubs
last place club.
defeated Montreal. He gave up
offense thus far.
a
lirsl-inning home run to Mike
OfHERS
"I had been thinking about 25
Jorgensen
and then shut U1e
Wahama 16 Duvall 12
victories for a long time. My
whole program was geared to Expos until Ron Fairly hit a
Barboursville 21 Pt. Pleasant 6
it," Carlton said. "I'm very bases empty homer with two
Walton 32 Hannan 0
happy I reached it but I knew I out in the ninth.
Coal Grove 48 Rock Hill 16
would."
Columbus Unden McKinley 14 Portsmouth B
The victory improved CarlIt was the ninth straight
Chesapenke 18 Fairland 14
ton's
season's
record
to
25-9.
victory
for Pappas, who be·
Oak Hill 16 Ironton St. Joe 14
He leads t~e league in vic- ca me the 67th pitcher in rna jor
Nelsonville-York 24 Alexander 20
tories, in strikeouts with 282, in league history to win 200-but
Federal Hocking 12 Miller 8
complete
games with 'XI, in the first ever to do it without at
Portsmouth West 30 Northwest 6
starts with 38 and in innings least one 20-victory season.
pitched with :120 1-3 innings
· Menke Starts Rally
labored.
Elias Sosa, the Giants' rookie
The Phillies scored the Dominican righthander, had
winning run in the sixth whefl..___feeled of!four hitless innings in
Tommy Hutton doubled, ad- relief when Denis Menke
vanced on a single by Greg touched off the Reds' rally in
Luzinski and scored on a the eighth with a single to left.
grounder by Bill Robinson .
Mter Cesar Geronimo forced
New York Downs P!Usburgh Menke, Darrel Chaney walked.
In other National League Pinch-hitler Hal McRae
games New York downed singled home Geronimo and
Pittsburgh, 4-1, Cincinnati then took second when Giant
topped San Francisco, ~. leftfielder K~n Henderson
Atlanta ripped Houston, !3&lt;i, hobbled the hall . Rose followed
Chicago beat Montreal, 6-2, with his two-run triple, sending
By Vito Stelllno
reC() rd to Boston's 78-64.
and Los Angeles bested San the Reds ahead, 7&lt;i, and then
UP! Sports Writer
In the first game, Carlton
came home with an insurance
The 28,777 fans at Fenway Fisk and rookie Dwight Evans Diego, 5--3.
In the American League run on a single by Joe Morgan.
Park Wednesday night thought hit two-run singles as Boston
Boston
swept a doubleheader
Atlanta tied a 62-year old
they saw the end of the race in exploded for seven runs in the
from
Baltimore,
9-1
and
4-0,
club
record when they scored
the American League's fourth inning while routing Jim
Detroit topped Cleveland, 4-1, all of their runs-13-in the
Eastern Division.
Paimer. In the second game,
Their Red Sox are only a Tianl boosted his record to 13-S New York and Milwaukee were second inning in their easy
game ahead but there was with his four-hitter while rained out, Minnesota defeated victory over Houston. Manny
definitely an air of celebration besting Mike Cuellar. Evans Texas, 3-1, Oakland bypassed Mota 's pinch-single with the
at the old but cozy park as their had a homer and a triple in the Chicago, 6-3, and Kansas City · bases full in the eighth inning
walloped California, 9-2.
drove in a pair of runs to break
favorite~ jolted Baltimore
game.
Tom Seaver delayed Pitts- a 3-3 tie as the Dodgers went on
twice, 9-1 and 4~. and dealt a
Duke Sims doubled in the lieburgh's
drive to the National a 15-hit spree to trim the
severe blow to the Orioles' breaking run and winning
League
Eastern
Division pen- Padres.
hopes for a fourth consecutive pitcher Woody Fryman added
pennant.
a two-run single in the threeThe guy who got most of the run ninth inning as Detroit
cheers was veteran Luis Tiant, downed Cleveland. Fryman,
who pitched a four-hitter in the now 8-2, pitched a six-hitter.
second game and is now 9-1
In the other games, Oakland
since Aug. !st. He got a beat Chicago, 6-3, Minnesota
magnificent standing ovation edged Texas, 3-1, and Kansas
when he came to the plate in City beat California, 9-2.
the seventh inning that even
In the National League
impressed a veteran like Luis games, Philadelphia beat St.
Aparicio.
Louis, 2-1, New York downed
"l've never seen an ovation Pittsburgh, 4-1, Cincinnati
like Tiant got tonight in my 17 topped San Francisco, ~.
years of baseball," Aparicio Atlanta ripped Houston, 1:1-6,
said, "everybody was standing Chicago beat Montreal, 6-2,
and shouting and cheering . It and Los Angeles bested San
was great. That's the kind of Diego, 5-3.
thing that makes this the best
A's Magic Number
baseball town in the country."
The Oakland A's just about
Of course, it's not over yet knocked the White Sox out of
but the race now seems to have contention in the Western
boiled down to a two-team Division, stretching their lead
struggle between Boston and to six games and reducing their
Detroit- two clubs who have "magic number" to seven with
seven games left against each the victory over Chicago. Sal
other and open a four.game Bando and Reggie Jackson
series in Boston tonight.
homered and Rollie Fingers
Both Four Behind
• pitched 3 2-3 innings of shutout
Baltimore and New York, relief as the A's handed Wilbur
which was trailing Milwaukee, Wond , who's won 24, his 15th
2-ll, in the fourth Inning Wed- loss.
nesday night when the game
Minne;;ota explOded for three
was rained out, are both four runs in the eighth inning to beat
behind Boston in the loss Texas. Bobby Darwin hit a
column and they face an uphill bases-loaded single to highlight
struggle.
the rally. Jim Perry, who went
Detroit, which beat Cleve- eight innings, and Wayne
land, 4-1, is two behind Boston Granger combined on a threein the loss column with a 78-06 hitter.

Carlton Wins
..

25th; Astros

Bombed, 13-6

Orioles Reign
May
Be
Over
As
..
BoSox Win Wo

can righthander, had reeled off
four hitless innings in relief
when Penis Menke touched off
the Red uprising With a single
to left.
Hal McRae drove home the
first of the (our runs with a
pinch single and, after Rose's
, triple sent the Reds ahead, .Joe
Morgan drove home Rose with
an insurance run with a single

Bin Names
~

Mrs· sz·ng In
Golr.fJ Classz·c
.
·

ROBINSON, III. (UPl)- Jn
any other season, Frank Beard
would probably have been a
headliner in the Robinson Fall
Golf Classic which begins
today at Crawford Country
Club.
But this season, the 33-yearold slipped into this tiny
Southern Illinois communitypopulation 7,200-with something less than fanfare. He is a
respected, but not revered
member of a 144-man field
which is scheduled to compete
in the $100,000 tournament.
In fact, this year's Robinson
is indeed lacking in name
power- none of the top 10 is
present and only 18 of the lop 50
are here, but its the likes of Jim
Jamieson and Bob Goalby, a
pair of Illinois favorite sons
who are capturing the
spotlight.
Beard, meanwhile, is struggling through his worst season
since his second year on the
tour when he finished 45th on
the PGA money list.
"A lot of people have asked
what's happened," said Beard
whose earnings are $62,000
below 1971 and whose scoring
average has jumped to 73, two
above last year. "I don't know I
just haven 't been playing as
well-&lt;l bad drive here, a bad
putt there. But, l can't complain, I've made aroWld $50,000
this season, how many guys
make $50,000 in a season' l
guess you 'd have to say it's the
difference between a good
season and a great season .
The $20,000first-place Robinson check was won last year by
Labron Harris Jr. with a Illunder par 274. Using the
process of elimination from the
PGA honor roll, Jamieson
would have to be rated the
tournament favorite- the exMoline amall!ur whiz standing
lith on the money list with
$104,103.
Jamieson is one of !972 tour
winners in the field, joined by
Grier Jones, Lou Graham,
Hale Irwin, Jim Colbert, Miller
Barber , Bert Yancey, and
DeWitt Weaver. Also on hand
are three previous Robinson
champions including Goalby
(1969), George Kundson (1970)
and Harris-all winning their
titles In a sudden death playoff.

BUY A SEARS BATTERY NOW!

Before You Buy You Should Try

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. Budget Tenns or BankAmericard

to right.
"I just realized .that I've got
a chance to catch Lou Brock
. for the stolen base title," said
Morgan, wbose two steals in
the game gave him 55 for the

season.
"How about me batting first
the remainde_r of the season?"
he asked, directing the remark
to Rose.

''Wait a minute, Joe/' said a
gdnning Pete, "you're forgetling, I've got to stay ahead of
Billy Williams to lead the
league in base hits."
Rose shook his head In wonder.
HThat guy is amazing," he

said. "Honestly, he can steal a
,base anytime he wants to and
he does it even when everyone

in the park, inclnding the opposing catcher, knows he's going to steal."
Tommy Hall, possessor of a
lll-1 record, pitched two scoreJess innings to get the win.
Bobby Tolan slammed a tworWl homer and Johmy Bench
hit another, his 36th of the season, two shy of the league-leading total of San Diego's Nate
Colbert.
Bench, with 116 RB'rs leads·
the league. He would like to be
on top at season's end and
naturally he would like the
home run tiUe too.
.Couldn't Believe It.
"That is why l would like to
play in the remaining ten

games," said Johmy.
After McRae pinch hit for
Hall in tl)e eighth, Clay Carroll
!!lowed down the Gtanls
order in the ninth to gain
3:/nd save.
The 13 runs 1\Uanta put on
the scoreboard against
Houston in the second Inning
Wednesday night also was a
big conversational piece in the
Reds' postgame gabfest.
••1 couldn't believe it," said
nose. "[ asked Doug Harvey If
that was a I and a 3for AUanta
or 131•'
The umpire's answer?
"He told me that it was !3,
that someone missed an extra
point," said Rose laughing.

programs, minus the con.

·; ~ I

.,

"I '
· ~1 ,

.,

' .

~

1'

141 543 88 182 .335
406 59 133 .328
129 521 100 170 .326
124510 82165 .324
132 532 83 167 .314
142 584 78 183 .313
125 439 62 137 .312
139 519 70 161 .3 10

•

...

Rose, Cin

144 604 99 186 .308

-..
~.

117

.,.

~

·~
••·

Strgel. Pit 130 466 72 142 .3()5
Hebner, Pit I 15 400 58 122 .3()5
Am erica n League

ab

g.

r.

Carew, Min 133 509

Pniela, KC
Shblm, KC
Rudi , Oak
D Al len, Chi
Fisk. Bos
Mily. Ch1
Otis, KC
Mabery, KC
Berry, Cal

138 527
124 420
13B 55~
143 492
119 417
141 506
131 493
136 462
109 375

h . pet .

60 164 .322

62 164 .31I
59 130 .310
91 173 .309
88 152 .309
71 126 .302
79150 .296
68 145 .294
56 136 .294 .
38 I 10 .293

Hom e Runs
National League: Colbert, SO
38; Bench, Cin 36; Williams,
Chi and Stargel l, Pitt 33 ;
Aaron,aall 31.
American League : D. All en,
Chi 36 ; Murcer , NY 29 ;
Killebrew. M inn. Epste in and
Jackson, Oa k 25 .

veneers
~
end select 1
hordwood 1
solids I

Chi 111 ; Colbert , SD 104 ;

The OSLO

• D4St2W
Modern styled console. Titan
101 Chassis. Solid·Siale Super
VIdeo Range Tuner. Chromatic

American League : D. Allen ,

Chi 108 , Mayberry, KC 90 ;
Pitching
Nationa l League :

Carlton ,

Phil 25-9; Jenkins. Chi 20-12;
Os teen, LA 18 -10 ; Seaver, NY
18-12; Blass, Pill 17 -7; Gi bson,

d

Tuning. AFC.

ependable
"\~'
Zenith Qua'' 1

St .L 17-10.

49995
·

$

Panther (8) and Fahey ; Perry,
Granger (9) and M itterwa ld.

WP- Perry 113-14)
I 7-81.
Detroit

I,
•

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Thursday

.• ,,

Friday

0

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•~ ,

\,

:.-~

.~·,., r_... ,

,:

0

''

enrollees of the popular Head
Start preschool trai n111g
program.
Children from families with
an annual income of $4,320 or
lower will get fre e Head Start
services, but fees will be
cha rged on a sliding scale
above that level. Additionally,
10 pel. of all Head Start
openings must be reserved for
l1andicapped children.
The bulk of the authorization
- OEO actuall y got $2 billion in
approp ria tions las t fiscal year
-

Betty Ohlinger
loans and funds to pay for
repair of rural homes in
poverty areas.

VISIT OUR CANDY DEPARTMENT
~~--~~~~~~--~·~~·-~~·---------------­
....... ·-·-...
NEW CROP
Use our convenient Lay. A.
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Plan for any merchandise you choose. A
JUST ARRIVED lb 69~ deposit holds your se lecCOOKED FRESH
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.,

FLOWER BULBS- For Fall planting . Tulips,
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is fur Community Action

be thought of as being caused
by an electrical short circuit in the brain. When the
elec trical disorder occurs it
causes th e irregular brain
wave and stimulates the
body to respond to cause the
convulsion . The medicine
acts to decrease the excess
electrical activity in the
brain and thereby prevents
convuls ions.
. 1
1n mos t ms
ances when

sufficient medicine is give n,
the overactive
i c ab 1
" thbelectr
'
areas 10
e ram can e
calmed down enough to prevent them from precipitating
a conv ulsion, even in the
face of most normal events
f d'

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by

GOLDFISH SET

Enough fish food for 6
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goldfish, ISc box .

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·

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A fas hion uprisong . . . the platform.
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ue~- ;o~o~r~m~a~ry~l-~-~~g~t-h-at~y-ou~~~~~~~~M~Y~a~M~Th~~~A~Y~~~~B~i~S~·~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

tack or seizure?

Dear Reader- Epilepsy is
not act uaUy caused by irregular brain waves. The irregular brain wave is a manJ!es tatwn of the epilepsy it·
self. The actual seizure may

At 60 mph a '73 Ford LTD rode quieter
than an airborne glider.

you can buy

•

On July 27, 1972, General Radio Co. testeu a '73 LTD against an airborne
ghder. Both at 60 mph and wi th id Pnt ieal sound level metet·s. The
re~ult: t he Ford was (jUieter. But t he new L'l'D is more than just quiet.
It IS well_made fro~ !ts power front d1 ~c brakes, power steering and
automatiC transm1SS1on, standard Pqutpolll' nl, to its lu xu rious
co mfortab le, roomy interior. There an· lti new Ford models t~ choose
ft·om and each will convince you t hat quiet is t he sound of a well-made car.

that_

La-Z-Boy

The '73

chair
you've
a lways
dreamed of at our low
pric es.

Ford LTD. 65 dectb~~-~ at 60'~·j,h'· ....•

Quiet is the sound of a well·madecar.

·

Authorized Dealer
THE QUIET

MASON
FURNITURE

1973

FORD LTD BROUGHAM

(shown with optional Deluxe Bumper Group ,
Convenience Group, de!tJJC e wheel covers,

f ront cornering lamps and whitewall tires) .

Herman Grate
777 -5592
Mason, W. Va.

A'73 Torino rode so smooth, a high wire
artist kept balance on a road of 2x4's.

.. ..
~

Chances ~~e Y-!!ll won't try to ~alance yourself o~ top of your new Torino. But,
when you 1e ndmg msKie, yo u II st oll app,·ce Jate r onn o's re fin ed suspensionbe:ause 1t helps to cus hiOn humps, a bsut· h l'lmd v ibra t io ns and reduce body
sway . You feel sohu ly m con lrol wh ilL' you I' I&lt; k m com forland luxury.
The solid mid-size Torin o. Smooth r iding, sll"O ng and quiet.

Our New

Jewelry
.....
••

tlJ_@
•

(shown with optional front bump er guards,
deluxe wheel covers an d wh itewall tires).

Ford, the comp)iny t~at bf!ilt t~e first basi~, solid, reliable car seventy years agohas bmlt today s bas1c, sohd rehable car : Pmto. I t's become America's top selling
economy car for more reasons than economy. Here are some of those reasons:
A 1600 ~c. engm~ devel~ped and perfected in over 10 years of actual driving. Rackand-Ptf!10n steermg. Sohd welded bod;y, elec~rocoated t~ fight corrosion. 4-speed
tran~mtss1on-lubed for hfe. Everythmg we ve learned m seventy years of car
makmg-all the basics- we bUild mto every Pinto Wagon, Runabout and Sedan .
When you get back to bastes, you get back to Pinto.

If it's new, we have it pierced · and clip earrings,
necklaces, fashion rings, girls'
&amp; boys'
rings, copper
bracelets, initial rings many, many items.

•

THE SOLID I973 FORD TORIN O BROUGHAM

'73 Pinto: When you get back to basics,
you get back to Ford.

Fabulous
Selection
On Display

•

992-2178

revision entirely, leaving the programs to OED - one to
c r eate
e nvironm enta l
pro~ram as is in OEO.
protection
jobs , such as
Aside from the Legal Services controversy, the act cleaning up parks, and the
establishes a fee sys tem for other to provide rural lwusing

High wire artist SUI Couch balancing on a '73 Torino ridina over a road of 2x 4's.

REFRESHMENTS

CADILLAC
,_,_OLDSMOBILE

given.

two new

Stephenson .

.

m

AUTHORIZED
fiEAJtS CATALOG
MERCHANT

ep1~~y.

The la w added

SHOE SHOP

teptic and1 am
havealsobeen ex- mentioned.
ami ned and found the cause
to be Irregular brain waves.
I have _medication for it. Is
1t poss1ble that being overly
exctted, overly tired, or
worned can bring on an at-

Now

Kan City
620 000 Olo- 9 7 2
California 002 000 ooo- 2 7 0
Busby 12-0) and Tayl or; May .
Allen IlL Dukes 12l. Foster
14). Sells (6). Barber (9) and

-- ~
I ~
" :

0

.,.,...,,mr.

dropped the Legal Services

.·· ·:.w.

Coffee
Donuts
Cookies

connocton deliver more in.itfalllutiDa powtr
than .an othmoioe idtntic&amp;l ~ttery with ~p-and-over cell conntctora. U your p.....,t bt.ttery illl't perlo~ u1t ahould, replace 11
,..~toN 1/,.li...-..tth a Sean Jll&amp;b Voltqt Battery, and
avoid the angoiob &amp;nd lruatntioo that a dead bt.ttery can cause on a told winter mo~ ,.,..
N!o'l "- IM """· Ertn-ol.rollg pol)'Propylene we provides tic:eptiooal resistance tO told &amp;nd vibration.

useless in these co nditions
unless th e underlying prob·
le m of the varicose ve 1·ns 1·s
corrected first and good
circulation is established.
Then a graft isn't needed.
IJear Dr. Lamb-Recently
" _reader wrote you about

MARGUERITE'S

vetu.
Afl er hammering out ont~ rlliike lu get OEO funding, but
compromise bUI, the conferees Con~ress left the contribution
returned to a new session and at the current 20 pet. level.

Skin grafts are completely

comfor ta ble

- Jackson (25th). Bando {15th),
Rei chard I 18th). May 11 It h).

*
to

deep veins within the large
muscles of the leg and thigh
that are equally important.
If the large veins in the
legs are normal, the little
tiny superficial network of
veins that some women have
can be eradicated by a little
elec trical needle, much in
the same way small dilated
veins in the nose can be correeled. This procedure is of
liltte value however. if the
large veins in the skin and
deeper in the legs are involved. tn this case, it is
sometimes possible to strip
out the varicose veins depending on the finding of
the medical examination.

a

fur an increase to 25 pel.
ir• the so-ca lled ' 'in kind"
cunt.ribut.i un a CAA has to

CHAIRS

100 000 003- .4 8 1

Herrmann ; Holt zman, Fingers
(~) and Tenace . WP- Holfzman
118 II ) . LP- Wood (24-15) . HRs

,. 1 ...

ported . But the conferees
placed restrictions on whom

/his brought th., threat of

a~kt!tl

LA-Z-BOY

Chicago
000 201 000- 3 6 1
Oakland
030 021 OOx- 6 9 I
Wood , Lemonds (7) and

?' .*

Saturday

.· "' .

LP- Paul

Tidrow , Hilgendorf (9 } and
Fosse. LP- Tidrow t IJ-l 5J.

-!~ \~
.~-

program to a private cur·
pora tion , which Nixon sup-

the corporation 's board, and

r--------------------

Cleveland 000 001 ooo- 1 6 0
Fryman 18-2) and Hailer:

·
*
0
-, ,,tf"k;a\
. .-- --\*. \·. . / .'--*~'''
....
..
"
.
.
. . . . ,,,. . , a
,·*·····

veins th at some women have

Texas
000 OiO ooo- I 3 0
Minn
000 000 03x - 3 10 0
Paul, Plna (8), Lindblad 181.

Middleport

Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

transfer of the Legal Services

Be Removed?

Its II .

INGELS .FURNITURE

Am eri(:an League : Wood , Chi

24-15; Perry . Clev 21-16;
Hun ter. Qak 20-7; Palmer. Ball
20-9; Lolich, Del 20-13.

'

no presidential comment.
A congressional conference
committee agreed ea rlier on

Can Ailing Veins

in the surface of the skin
game)
cause
no medical problem .
Baltim ore 000 100 OOD- I 5 I
and
are
only a cosmetic conBoston
002 700 OOlC - 9 10 1
Palmer , Harrison (4) , Rey - siderat ion .
nolds (4), Leonard ( 7) and
Before anything is du ne, a
Oa tes: Pattin IIS-12) and Fisk . complete physical examinaLP- Patmer (20-91 .
tion has to be accomplished
(2nd game)
Baltim ore
000 000 000- 0 4 1 to determine the state of all
Boston
000 010 21x - a 50 of the veins in the I c~s.
Cuellar, Alexander (7), Wall There are some superfic1al
(8) and Etchebarren, Oates 7) _ vei ns that some people can
Tiant 113-51 and Fi sk. LP- see and then there are large
Cuellar 117 -111 . HR - Evans

,.;

May. Hou 96.

Powe ll. Bait 78 .

League

Montrea l 100 ooo OOI - 2 7 1
Chocago
301 010 OOx- 6 10 0
Torrez. Renko (6). Walker (8)
and McCarver; Pappas 115 .71
and Rudolph. LP- Torrez 116 _
Ill._ HRs- Jorgensen (13th).
Wil_loams (33rd), Santo (17th)
Faorty (13th).
· By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Pittsbrgh
100 000 OOo- I 5 0 Dear Dr. Lamb- ! would
N.Y.
00310000x- 4110 like some adv ice on varicose
Walker , Johnson (5), Mi ller veins. l am in my early 50s
(8) and Sanguil len; Seaver (18- and enj oy sports suc h as
12) and Dyer . LP- Wa lker (4- tennis and swimming. But
6) .
while others wear shor·ts and
San Fran
00 1103 ooo- 6 I I 2 bathing sui ts, I have to wear
Cmc l
012 100 04x- 8 12 4 support hose and slacks beCarrithers, Sosa (4), John so n cause of unsightly dark pur·
181 and Rader . Gullett, Borbon pte vems . I have tried all
16i. Hal l (7) , Carroll (9) and kinds of cover-ups, but to no
Bench . WP- Hal l 111 -1) . LP1l. Are there any operaSosa 10-1). HRs Bench 136/h ), ava
lions bes1des skin grafts for
Tolan (8th)
my ank les and bends of my
knees
? My ankles and knees
Hous
000
105 OOD- 6 tO 2
Alta
0(13)0 000 OOx- 13 I S 0 are all purple with small
Griffin, Roberts (1) York )2 veins. l also have large knotRichard (2). Culver d1. Forsch ty ones in one leg. Please
15). Ray (8) and Howard gtve some advice . Is this
Stinson (2). Joh nson (5) ; Stone:
Schueler 171 and Didier. WP- type of operation dangerous'
Stone (6-101. LP- Gri tt in (5-4). I'm tired of bundling up in
HRs · Baker (16th ). Cedeno hot weather.
122nd). Rader (22nd) .
Dear R e ad c r- Varicose
veins
are a problem . The
Phila
100 001 OQO- 2 7 1
St . Louis
100 ooo ooo- 1 6 o lar ge veins can ca use acCarlt on (25 -9) and Bateman · cumulation of blood in th e
Wise . Folkers (8) and Sim '. legs and ankles causing
mon s. LP- Wise ( IS-16).
swelling. skin discoloration
and even ulcerat ion of th e
American Lea gue
skin . The very small ti ny
list

l

116 ; Slargell , Pitt 112 ; Wil -

Mur ce r , NY 88 ; Scalf, M i l 81 ;

Major league Resu lts
By United _Prl!s s lnternationa 1
Nattonal

In announcing the signin g,
!he While House said there was

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

New York ilf Milw, ppd , rain.

Runs Batted In
Nat ional Leag ue: Bench, Cin

liam s,

troversial free Legal Services
provision that had brought a
veto threat.
The ac t authorizes $2.1

Linescores

Leading Batters
National League
g. ab
r . h. pel.

1.00 to 3.00

,

lll&amp;b Voltq&lt; IIIWII alrlilbt-through-th ..partltion cell

LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
. Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal. 9to 5,
Thurs. 9 to Noon, Friday 9: oo to 9:00

Jl

By United Press International

Our biggest price cut this season for our
High Voltage Battery with 48-month guarantee

220 E. MAIN

,. ,. ,
• •• 1

'

billion in the fiscal year begun
lasl July I for Office of
Economic Opportunity (OEA)
programs, about $200 million
more than Nixon had budgeted
for the year . It also authorizes
$2.4 billion for the fi scal vcar
starling next July 1.
·
Actual appropriations must
be made in separate
legislation .

WASHJNGTON (UP!) - The
White House announced
Wednesday President Nixon
ha~ signed a two-year extension of federal antipoverty

Major league leader s

Wilms, Chi
Baker, All
Cdeno, Hou
Garr.Atl
Oli ver, Pit
Brock, St. L
Santo, Chi
Wat son , Hou

ICAAi programs
upcr,.IL&gt;d by, privale and public
gn,ups at the stale ond local
level to help the poor.
The administration had
/he President could appoint to

Anti-Poverty Extended 2 Years

Magic Number 2; Houston Next

!&gt;VANE OFF AGAIN
The white horse in the
The United States ranks
SAN DIEGO
(UP! )- New Te s t ame n t IJ ook of 16th among world nations in
Running back Duane Thomas ll eve lation sym bolizes Con - land use for hi ghway purposes.
left the San Diego Chargers qu est.
training camp Wednesday
after a one-day stay.
Coach Harland Svare said
Thomas did not report for the
team meeting and told hin1 he
was returning to his home in
Dallas. He said no reason was
102 £. MAIN
POMEROY

1\~ency

..

-·~ --A 1973 P1nto on the Michigan
cont~ecti 11 g

tne Pinto to the van

Pinto's per form&lt;Jnce .

•

1973

OLDSMOBILE OMEGA HATCHBACK COUPE

KARR &amp;VANZANDT
992-5342

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

'

THE 1973 PINTO WAGON
(ttJown with Squire Option, lupa&amp;e raek,
Deluxe Bumper Group an~ whitewall tire&amp;).

0

There are 39 new models to choose from.
And every 197~ Ford, Thunderbird, Torino, ¥u.stang,,Maverick and Pinto-comes equipped with new
energy-abwrbt~g bu_mpers and steel guard ratl~ mall s1de doors. Steel-belted radial ply tires and AM/ FM
stereo radios are opt10ns on all models. Test-dnve these new Fords at your Ford Dealer's now.

DLDSMOBilf

Pomeroy

POMEROY

FORO DIVISION

All1 973 cars must meet Federal Em iss•ons Slo.~mhuds behne sale. SeQyour Ford Oealtr tor detalll.

Open Daily 8 A.M. to 10

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business'

,. I nday 10:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 to 9 P.M.
Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P. M.

FORD

Sat.

\'

~I

•

KEITH GOBLE fORD, INC. 461 S. Third Sl, Middleport, Ohio

•

�II"

•

•

.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21,1972

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0., Sept. 21,1972 ·
.

We're Proud Of The Savings
We Bring You • • •
'

Students at Meigs Hi gh
School who are planning to
attend college will have five
opportunities to take the ACT
Assessment during the 1972-73
academic year.
The first of fi ve national
testing dates on which the
national
assessment
examination \vill be offered is
Saturday morning, Oct. 21.
Students planning to take the
fi ve-par t ACT Assessment on
that dale must have registered
no later than Oct. 2, according
to Harold Sauer, guidance
counselor.
Sauer also announced the
complete national ACT
sc hedul e for the 1972-73
academic year. The schedule is
( with
co rr es p o ndin g
registratpon period s in
parenthesis): Oct. 21, 1972
(Aug. 21-0cl. 2); Dec. 9, 1972
(Oct. 9- Nov. 131; Feb. 24, 1973
(Nov . 27-Ja n. 291; April 28,

OPEN 7 DAYS WEEK
CC)VERCJ~:

CLAIROL

Long &amp;
Silky

eyes

'shiny
shadows'

MICRIN

THI {X IRA SlHHiGIH PA IN RllH VER

CONDITIONER

glossy
eyeshadowl

Excedriri

Reg. '2.29

32 oz.

Reg. 13.39

16 oz.

ANACIN

!~!~~~!!'.!.!1':1; 1•

REG.

100's

'1.50

Only

99

EXCEDRIN
TABLOS

on~

~

.

. , 00

Limit One

(Limit One)

Reg. '1.77

99~-

100's

Property

197:1 (Feb. 12- April 2); July immediate plans for college,
and ca•·ecr aspirations.
21, 1973 (April16-June 25) .
II is recomme nd ed that
Cosl to students for the ACT
st
udents
lake the ACT
Assess ment, which takes about
1
3 , hours to complete, is $6.50. Assessment in their junior year
Resul ti ng information reports or early in the senior year of
are of valuable use to students high school.
With nationa l headquarters
and counselors in pre-college
in Iowa Clty, Iowa, ACT is an
planning.
Last year approx imately one independent and non profit
million persons in the U. S. and corporation that offers varied
overseas took the five-part services for use by students
examination _. questionnaire, and educational institutions.
whi eh is required or recoh1·
mended for applicants al more
than· 2,000 colleges, uni versities, two-year colleges.
sc holarship age ncies, and
athletic conferences.
The ACT Assessment ineludes a series or four tests
designed to assess general
ed ucational development.
Quarterly birthdays were
Another part is a questionna ire observed at the Tuesday night
Ihal collects information about meeting of Chester Council 323,
I he
students ' aca demic Daughters of America .
nona cademic background,
In the honored group were
Mrs . Hattie Frederick, Mrs.
Eli zabeth
Hayes,
Mrs .
Eli za beth Wickham, Mrs .
Betty Roush, Mrs. Doris
Koenig, Mrs . Doris Grueser,
Mrs. Ona Osborne, Mrs. Leona
Hensley, Mrs. Eula Swan , and
Mrs . Mary Kay Holter. They
were seated at the special table
centered with flowers, and
·, gifts were presented to each
one. The cake was baked and
decora ted by Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle.
Mrs. Thelma Whiie, councilor, presided for the practice
in balloting a nd rece iving
national and state officers. It
was announced at the 7:30p.m.
Oct. 3 meeting a 25 ce nt grab
bag sale wi ll be conducted by
the good of the order committee . The books will be
audi ted Sept. 28 at the home of
Mrs. Esther Ridenour . Inspection of the Council was
announced lor Oct. 17. Mrs .
Helen Wolfe was pianist.
Potluck refreshments were
served . Others attendin g were
Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs . Ada
Morris, Mrs. Ada Neutzling,
Mrs. Marga ret Tuttle, Mrs .
Alice Curti s, Mrs. Es th er
Ridenour, Mrs. Erma Cleland ,
Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs. Ada
Just A Few Of The Specials
Van Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr ,
1--~------..--...;;,------1 Mrs. OPal Hollon , Mrs.
ANTIQUE CLASSlt "'' ANTIQUE CLASSIC
Dorothy Mters, Mrs. Mae
LOMBAR~I ·BOWLS
BUD VASES
Spe nce r, Mrs.•·Mabel Van
Meter, Mrs. Dorothy Lawson,
Reg .
ONLY $150
Reg. J2. 99 Only $150
$2.99
Set
Mrs. Golda Frederick, Mrs.
Go lda Wolfe , Mrs . Leona
1---------t--N-Y··~--~-B-R_O••O_M_S-·1 Hensley , Mrs . Mary Showalter,
Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler, Mrs.
Reg . 51.99 Only SJ19
Inzy Newell, and Mrs. Ada
Bissell .
Otlly $119
WET MOPS

1oHonored
fior B. tr.• thdarys

SAVE $ AT DELL'S

Limit One

WHOLESALE PRICES FOR
EVERY ONE···

P'AVORITE SHAMPOO

FAMILY SIZE JAR

NOW ONLY 99~
For-~b
'Vout·Headlehe

New From Lilt

Ylt llorult EIM&gt;lJob
For YO\Jf Syslem

BODY WAVE

Reg. 11.09

69¢

GO's

POLl DENT
POWDER

Cotton Balls
130's

(limit

For Acne

Skin Bracer

Pimples and
Blackheads
Reg. '1.69

The WAKE-UP
After Shave

F-~

Reg. 11.25

39~

gal.

MENf'Urt

Economy Size

DISTILLED
WATER

NOW

MYADEC
VITAMINS :
'

!JI]~tJ

0 !J

!.)

100
With 30 Free

!)

1:1

Ho ~~~~n01 1 l oft who! ·

t vtr wllh A"'tr icoo
No liOI' OI ltltd (ron.

Optilets-M500'
100 With 50 Free

12.60 Value
only

Reg. 11.85

DIAL
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
Reg. '1.79

99¢

10.38 Value

With

I£H~·HATE:

.

... ..... !II

9~

Label Mate
Reg. 1.50
1

aa~

Save
At
Nelsons

LA
VORIS
SPECIAL

REFILLS

Reg. '1.69

49C:

lO's 79~

"THE WORLD'S MOST TR USTED.
MOST TAKEN VIIAMINS"

-~room &amp; Clean

Vitamins
Reg. '3.3~

100's

MEN

Reg. 85'

Reg. 11.00

9oz.

100's

DRISTI\N
, y

~

Reg. 59'

Reg. '2.19

72's

Give us $16.95 and we'll give you a precision-jeweled . water
shock resistan t watcn with an unbreakabl e mainspring, an
l ull nume ral dial, sweep second hand, and an adJustable
band. That's a lot of watcll lor your money. The Companion " B".
by Bulova . An expensive wat ch at an inex pensive price .

Goessler Jewelry Store
Court St., Pomeroy

Because that pen handles money t he easy 'vay. If
you t· pen were to come into contact regularly 'vi th
wide-awake ch ecks. il would do the ~l\[rle for You ..•
Beca use it wou ld do aw.ay with t he need to work

with cnsh .
Open a wid~-awake bank checking account. Put that
power in your hand.

·;
:" '

The wide-rnvtli'e chech11g _,.
ttccmmt mflkes it flll so ettSJ.!

c::&gt;----2'

Request)

THE FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reser\le System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is
Open 9 a .m . to 1 p.m .• (Continuously).
S20,000 Maximum Insurance

For Each Depositor

'•

•'

22~

·:-

·:

,·.

Sale Now ~In Progress!
CONVENIENT TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED

New From Contique

"Swirl Clean" Electric

~

PURCHASE ANY

WHEN YOU PURCHASE ANY

LIVING ROOM SUITE
And For On~
22~ You Can Purchase.

Contact Lens ·Cleaner

.

Reg. ~1.74
2.5 oz.

SIZE 12' x 15' NYLON CARPET
LYSOL
BOWL CLEANER
Reg. 59'

•

(Upon

-

ONLY

14 hour protection
REGUlAR 1.29

9ot

Caravelle®by Bulava.

UYCighty is the pen
that touches our check

2-HOUR
CLEANING

CHECK WHAT 22' WILL BUY!

Roll-On Deodorant

$133

Financial assistance towa rds
the purchase of a new
refrige rator lor the parsonage
of the Bradford Church of
Christ was pledged by the
Youn g Adu lt Class at a recent
meetin g held at the church.
Guy Hysell , president,
conducted the meeting during
which time it was decided to
send cards of appreciation to
Mr. Harry -De Ridder who
preached at the church on a
Sunday in the abse nce of the ·
pastor, and to Richard Wilt for
repairs on the chu rch.
The group disc ussed rally
day to be held in October and
made tentative pla ns for a
Halloween party to be held
next month. Fina l plans for the
party will be made at the Oct. BEDDING DOWN will be
12 meeting.
bedding up In NASA 's
Mrs. Larry Pickens gave the earth-orbiting S k y I a b In
pra yer to open the meeting and 1973. as demonstrated by
Mrs. Walter Morris had C harles Conrad Jr. , 42,
devotions taken from Hebrews who will coinmand the 28day mission. The " prac11 using the theme "Hold Fast tice"" is pro gress ing at
to Your Faith. " Mr. and Mrs. Houston , Tex . This setup
Ri chard Gilkey will have will keep hlm from ftoat!ng
dev oti ons at th e October around in weightlessness.
meeting with Mrs . Ralph
Painter to have refreshments.
Mrs. Pickens served sa ndwiches, cake and Kool-Aid to
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell, Mrs.
Ben Rife, Carla and . Becky,
Mrs. Walter Morris and Carol,
Vicky and Scotlie Pickens,
Mrs. Pain ter, Becky, Diana
and Victor, Mrs . Homer
Forest, H. J . and Belinda
Grim, and Mr. and Mrs. Gi lkey
and son, Mark .
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

We are celebratitzg our 22ncl year in business in Mason, W. Va. We are
offering values all over the store. Be sure and visit us during our

BAN

Reg. $2.19
30ct

on the birthday party held at
the Meigs County Children's
Home. She thanked Texanna
Well for accompanying her and
the members who dona ted
cakes. A rummage sale was
announ ced lor Oct. 6-7 in the
former Hughes Electric Co.
building on Third Ave ., Middleport. Mrs. Sue Zirkle gave
the cultural report on selfanalysis.

Adult Class
Will Help

:.:.::

A WALNUT BEDROOM SUITE

Nasal Mist

Members will be in the
costume or favorite story book
characters at a rush party to be
staged by the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority Tuesday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Final plans for the· party
were made at a meeting of the
chapt er last ni ght at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electri c Co. social room.
Mrs. Carol

IN FOIL

celebration.

Reg. ~1.49

oil

Sorority Plans Party

5

Swirls your lenses clean for new wearing comfort

43~
MISERIES FAST

baby

Baby

4oz.

Reg. 13.79

~

Odis Burris, Josephine E.
Burris, Gary Northup, Andrew
DeCoy, Betty Jo DeCoy to
Rodney Downing, lot, Middleport.
Lonnie LeMa ste r , Rena
Lemaster to James E. Pennin gton, Alice E. Pennington,
15.564 A., Bedford.
Albert Hill Jr., Ora E. Hill to
Howard G. Roush, Betty
Pauline Roush 0.08 A., Sutton.
Robert C. Hartenbach, Shill. ,
Lindy M. Harris to Lena
Turner, Lot, Pomeroy.
Lend a Turner, Bob Turn er to
Charles Otho
Lande rs,
Cla rabelle Lander s, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Richard W. Rawlings, Betty
J. Rawlings to Roy E. Jones,
Shehna Jones, Lot, Pomeroy.
Pearl Koehler to Charles
Leonard , Eilene Leo nard,
Parcel , Orange.
Thelma V. Custer to Gary E.
Freeman, Bonnie S. Freeman,
Lots, Minersville.
West S. Powell, Orva M.
Powell to Marion F. Marcum,
Lots, Middleport .

~~~~-~~-A~~~KA~-~SE~L=TD~R

OIL
10 oz.

Powder

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

Transfers

Ray ·Noecker , an !nA$100 conu·ibulion to the 4-H
Camp Fun&lt;,! was made during l&lt;;rnalional Farm Youth Exchange studen t to Argentina in
P · ..; Meigs County Junior
Leaders 4-H Club 's final 1968, was the guest speaker.
a
vocationa l
tneeting of the year Tuesday Noecker,
nigh t at the Meigs Pioneer agri culture teaclier at Ashville
now, showed slides of his visit
House.
Ed Cross presided at the there, the hos t family and their
meeting durin g which liine custom:;. He referred to IFFY
plans were formulated for the as a program of cultural exawards ni ght ceremony to be change where world peace ca n
held next Tuesday night at the he promoted. "The people are
Pomer·oy Elementary Sc hool. the same the world over, just
Trophies were prese nted to the their custom:; are different,"
was his concluding thought.
buwling tea ms.

Reg. 64'

4 oz.

BABY

ZBT

HAI!t
SPRAY
FOR

With Iron

Johnson's &amp; Johnson's

Open 9 Ti I 6 Mon . thru Sat.
In The Heart of Down Town Middleport

REGULAR
&amp;MINT

HAIR
SPRAY

oNiY'77e
CONTAC

PARENTS VISITED
Michael Andrews, who is
employed in Columbus, spent a
week's vaca ti on with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Andrews, a nd his sister ,
Barbara, Long Bottom.

DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

2

Dennison Mini

0

2 For $1

··~·
All Purp01e (ontD&lt;t lens
Solution·

Reg. 11.00

Reg. 13.39

ONLY

Con tact Lens Ca rr ying C:a1e

HAIR
SPRAY

Regular Size

9 oz.

'.

J

1

JUST
WONDERFUL

DIAL
SOAP

~

a.AW HAMMER

1

$560

.

I
;

Camp Fund Gains

Meigs

College ACT Test Offered ·
Five Times at Meigs High

sg~·

16 oz.

39~

Thermos
I

I'

. I

BoHI8

SOFA BEDS

~~~~-

99'

FOR ONLY
•

No. U42 .!,
• &gt;I

,.

GOLD &amp; GREEN COVER
••

You.Get

A SERTA MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
WHEN YOU PURCHASE

ANY 7 PC. DINEnE
22~

You .Get A

A '29.95 METAL UTILITY CABINET

WHEN YOU PURCHASE ANY

· JUST HEW

Reg. '2.75

ForOn~ 22~

For On~

RED, GREEN, GOLD, ORANGE
SIZE 12' x 12' ONLY

'

Pt.

8995

BASSETT BEDROOM SUITE

S

EUREKA UPRIGHT SWEEPER

22 ~

For Just
'

You Get ·

A SET OP AnACHMENTS

SOFA BED &amp; MATCHING CHAIR
ONLY 149.95 ·
For On~

22 ~

You Can Get

Set of End Tables-1 Coffee Table &amp; 2 Matching

Plastic Sofa Bed &amp; Matching Chair
Only 129.95

::::~Wee.! ~~. . . . . . . . . . . 8822

.

•

ALL VINYL PLATFORM' ROCKERS
REGULAR 59.95

For 2 Weeks On~, Just ......................
5 Colen to Qoose From
·

;4995
'

·~

�II"

•

•

.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21,1972

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0., Sept. 21,1972 ·
.

We're Proud Of The Savings
We Bring You • • •
'

Students at Meigs Hi gh
School who are planning to
attend college will have five
opportunities to take the ACT
Assessment during the 1972-73
academic year.
The first of fi ve national
testing dates on which the
national
assessment
examination \vill be offered is
Saturday morning, Oct. 21.
Students planning to take the
fi ve-par t ACT Assessment on
that dale must have registered
no later than Oct. 2, according
to Harold Sauer, guidance
counselor.
Sauer also announced the
complete national ACT
sc hedul e for the 1972-73
academic year. The schedule is
( with
co rr es p o ndin g
registratpon period s in
parenthesis): Oct. 21, 1972
(Aug. 21-0cl. 2); Dec. 9, 1972
(Oct. 9- Nov. 131; Feb. 24, 1973
(Nov . 27-Ja n. 291; April 28,

OPEN 7 DAYS WEEK
CC)VERCJ~:

CLAIROL

Long &amp;
Silky

eyes

'shiny
shadows'

MICRIN

THI {X IRA SlHHiGIH PA IN RllH VER

CONDITIONER

glossy
eyeshadowl

Excedriri

Reg. '2.29

32 oz.

Reg. 13.39

16 oz.

ANACIN

!~!~~~!!'.!.!1':1; 1•

REG.

100's

'1.50

Only

99

EXCEDRIN
TABLOS

on~

~

.

. , 00

Limit One

(Limit One)

Reg. '1.77

99~-

100's

Property

197:1 (Feb. 12- April 2); July immediate plans for college,
and ca•·ecr aspirations.
21, 1973 (April16-June 25) .
II is recomme nd ed that
Cosl to students for the ACT
st
udents
lake the ACT
Assess ment, which takes about
1
3 , hours to complete, is $6.50. Assessment in their junior year
Resul ti ng information reports or early in the senior year of
are of valuable use to students high school.
With nationa l headquarters
and counselors in pre-college
in Iowa Clty, Iowa, ACT is an
planning.
Last year approx imately one independent and non profit
million persons in the U. S. and corporation that offers varied
overseas took the five-part services for use by students
examination _. questionnaire, and educational institutions.
whi eh is required or recoh1·
mended for applicants al more
than· 2,000 colleges, uni versities, two-year colleges.
sc holarship age ncies, and
athletic conferences.
The ACT Assessment ineludes a series or four tests
designed to assess general
ed ucational development.
Quarterly birthdays were
Another part is a questionna ire observed at the Tuesday night
Ihal collects information about meeting of Chester Council 323,
I he
students ' aca demic Daughters of America .
nona cademic background,
In the honored group were
Mrs . Hattie Frederick, Mrs.
Eli zabeth
Hayes,
Mrs .
Eli za beth Wickham, Mrs .
Betty Roush, Mrs. Doris
Koenig, Mrs . Doris Grueser,
Mrs. Ona Osborne, Mrs. Leona
Hensley, Mrs. Eula Swan , and
Mrs . Mary Kay Holter. They
were seated at the special table
centered with flowers, and
·, gifts were presented to each
one. The cake was baked and
decora ted by Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle.
Mrs. Thelma Whiie, councilor, presided for the practice
in balloting a nd rece iving
national and state officers. It
was announced at the 7:30p.m.
Oct. 3 meeting a 25 ce nt grab
bag sale wi ll be conducted by
the good of the order committee . The books will be
audi ted Sept. 28 at the home of
Mrs. Esther Ridenour . Inspection of the Council was
announced lor Oct. 17. Mrs .
Helen Wolfe was pianist.
Potluck refreshments were
served . Others attendin g were
Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs . Ada
Morris, Mrs. Ada Neutzling,
Mrs. Marga ret Tuttle, Mrs .
Alice Curti s, Mrs. Es th er
Ridenour, Mrs. Erma Cleland ,
Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs. Ada
Just A Few Of The Specials
Van Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr ,
1--~------..--...;;,------1 Mrs. OPal Hollon , Mrs.
ANTIQUE CLASSlt "'' ANTIQUE CLASSIC
Dorothy Mters, Mrs. Mae
LOMBAR~I ·BOWLS
BUD VASES
Spe nce r, Mrs.•·Mabel Van
Meter, Mrs. Dorothy Lawson,
Reg .
ONLY $150
Reg. J2. 99 Only $150
$2.99
Set
Mrs. Golda Frederick, Mrs.
Go lda Wolfe , Mrs . Leona
1---------t--N-Y··~--~-B-R_O••O_M_S-·1 Hensley , Mrs . Mary Showalter,
Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler, Mrs.
Reg . 51.99 Only SJ19
Inzy Newell, and Mrs. Ada
Bissell .
Otlly $119
WET MOPS

1oHonored
fior B. tr.• thdarys

SAVE $ AT DELL'S

Limit One

WHOLESALE PRICES FOR
EVERY ONE···

P'AVORITE SHAMPOO

FAMILY SIZE JAR

NOW ONLY 99~
For-~b
'Vout·Headlehe

New From Lilt

Ylt llorult EIM&gt;lJob
For YO\Jf Syslem

BODY WAVE

Reg. 11.09

69¢

GO's

POLl DENT
POWDER

Cotton Balls
130's

(limit

For Acne

Skin Bracer

Pimples and
Blackheads
Reg. '1.69

The WAKE-UP
After Shave

F-~

Reg. 11.25

39~

gal.

MENf'Urt

Economy Size

DISTILLED
WATER

NOW

MYADEC
VITAMINS :
'

!JI]~tJ

0 !J

!.)

100
With 30 Free

!)

1:1

Ho ~~~~n01 1 l oft who! ·

t vtr wllh A"'tr icoo
No liOI' OI ltltd (ron.

Optilets-M500'
100 With 50 Free

12.60 Value
only

Reg. 11.85

DIAL
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
Reg. '1.79

99¢

10.38 Value

With

I£H~·HATE:

.

... ..... !II

9~

Label Mate
Reg. 1.50
1

aa~

Save
At
Nelsons

LA
VORIS
SPECIAL

REFILLS

Reg. '1.69

49C:

lO's 79~

"THE WORLD'S MOST TR USTED.
MOST TAKEN VIIAMINS"

-~room &amp; Clean

Vitamins
Reg. '3.3~

100's

MEN

Reg. 85'

Reg. 11.00

9oz.

100's

DRISTI\N
, y

~

Reg. 59'

Reg. '2.19

72's

Give us $16.95 and we'll give you a precision-jeweled . water
shock resistan t watcn with an unbreakabl e mainspring, an
l ull nume ral dial, sweep second hand, and an adJustable
band. That's a lot of watcll lor your money. The Companion " B".
by Bulova . An expensive wat ch at an inex pensive price .

Goessler Jewelry Store
Court St., Pomeroy

Because that pen handles money t he easy 'vay. If
you t· pen were to come into contact regularly 'vi th
wide-awake ch ecks. il would do the ~l\[rle for You ..•
Beca use it wou ld do aw.ay with t he need to work

with cnsh .
Open a wid~-awake bank checking account. Put that
power in your hand.

·;
:" '

The wide-rnvtli'e chech11g _,.
ttccmmt mflkes it flll so ettSJ.!

c::&gt;----2'

Request)

THE FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reser\le System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is
Open 9 a .m . to 1 p.m .• (Continuously).
S20,000 Maximum Insurance

For Each Depositor

'•

•'

22~

·:-

·:

,·.

Sale Now ~In Progress!
CONVENIENT TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED

New From Contique

"Swirl Clean" Electric

~

PURCHASE ANY

WHEN YOU PURCHASE ANY

LIVING ROOM SUITE
And For On~
22~ You Can Purchase.

Contact Lens ·Cleaner

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Reg. ~1.74
2.5 oz.

SIZE 12' x 15' NYLON CARPET
LYSOL
BOWL CLEANER
Reg. 59'

•

(Upon

-

ONLY

14 hour protection
REGUlAR 1.29

9ot

Caravelle®by Bulava.

UYCighty is the pen
that touches our check

2-HOUR
CLEANING

CHECK WHAT 22' WILL BUY!

Roll-On Deodorant

$133

Financial assistance towa rds
the purchase of a new
refrige rator lor the parsonage
of the Bradford Church of
Christ was pledged by the
Youn g Adu lt Class at a recent
meetin g held at the church.
Guy Hysell , president,
conducted the meeting during
which time it was decided to
send cards of appreciation to
Mr. Harry -De Ridder who
preached at the church on a
Sunday in the abse nce of the ·
pastor, and to Richard Wilt for
repairs on the chu rch.
The group disc ussed rally
day to be held in October and
made tentative pla ns for a
Halloween party to be held
next month. Fina l plans for the
party will be made at the Oct. BEDDING DOWN will be
12 meeting.
bedding up In NASA 's
Mrs. Larry Pickens gave the earth-orbiting S k y I a b In
pra yer to open the meeting and 1973. as demonstrated by
Mrs. Walter Morris had C harles Conrad Jr. , 42,
devotions taken from Hebrews who will coinmand the 28day mission. The " prac11 using the theme "Hold Fast tice"" is pro gress ing at
to Your Faith. " Mr. and Mrs. Houston , Tex . This setup
Ri chard Gilkey will have will keep hlm from ftoat!ng
dev oti ons at th e October around in weightlessness.
meeting with Mrs . Ralph
Painter to have refreshments.
Mrs. Pickens served sa ndwiches, cake and Kool-Aid to
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell, Mrs.
Ben Rife, Carla and . Becky,
Mrs. Walter Morris and Carol,
Vicky and Scotlie Pickens,
Mrs. Pain ter, Becky, Diana
and Victor, Mrs . Homer
Forest, H. J . and Belinda
Grim, and Mr. and Mrs. Gi lkey
and son, Mark .
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428

We are celebratitzg our 22ncl year in business in Mason, W. Va. We are
offering values all over the store. Be sure and visit us during our

BAN

Reg. $2.19
30ct

on the birthday party held at
the Meigs County Children's
Home. She thanked Texanna
Well for accompanying her and
the members who dona ted
cakes. A rummage sale was
announ ced lor Oct. 6-7 in the
former Hughes Electric Co.
building on Third Ave ., Middleport. Mrs. Sue Zirkle gave
the cultural report on selfanalysis.

Adult Class
Will Help

:.:.::

A WALNUT BEDROOM SUITE

Nasal Mist

Members will be in the
costume or favorite story book
characters at a rush party to be
staged by the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority Tuesday night at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Final plans for the· party
were made at a meeting of the
chapt er last ni ght at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electri c Co. social room.
Mrs. Carol

IN FOIL

celebration.

Reg. ~1.49

oil

Sorority Plans Party

5

Swirls your lenses clean for new wearing comfort

43~
MISERIES FAST

baby

Baby

4oz.

Reg. 13.79

~

Odis Burris, Josephine E.
Burris, Gary Northup, Andrew
DeCoy, Betty Jo DeCoy to
Rodney Downing, lot, Middleport.
Lonnie LeMa ste r , Rena
Lemaster to James E. Pennin gton, Alice E. Pennington,
15.564 A., Bedford.
Albert Hill Jr., Ora E. Hill to
Howard G. Roush, Betty
Pauline Roush 0.08 A., Sutton.
Robert C. Hartenbach, Shill. ,
Lindy M. Harris to Lena
Turner, Lot, Pomeroy.
Lend a Turner, Bob Turn er to
Charles Otho
Lande rs,
Cla rabelle Lander s, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Richard W. Rawlings, Betty
J. Rawlings to Roy E. Jones,
Shehna Jones, Lot, Pomeroy.
Pearl Koehler to Charles
Leonard , Eilene Leo nard,
Parcel , Orange.
Thelma V. Custer to Gary E.
Freeman, Bonnie S. Freeman,
Lots, Minersville.
West S. Powell, Orva M.
Powell to Marion F. Marcum,
Lots, Middleport .

~~~~-~~-A~~~KA~-~SE~L=TD~R

OIL
10 oz.

Powder

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

Transfers

Ray ·Noecker , an !nA$100 conu·ibulion to the 4-H
Camp Fun&lt;,! was made during l&lt;;rnalional Farm Youth Exchange studen t to Argentina in
P · ..; Meigs County Junior
Leaders 4-H Club 's final 1968, was the guest speaker.
a
vocationa l
tneeting of the year Tuesday Noecker,
nigh t at the Meigs Pioneer agri culture teaclier at Ashville
now, showed slides of his visit
House.
Ed Cross presided at the there, the hos t family and their
meeting durin g which liine custom:;. He referred to IFFY
plans were formulated for the as a program of cultural exawards ni ght ceremony to be change where world peace ca n
held next Tuesday night at the he promoted. "The people are
Pomer·oy Elementary Sc hool. the same the world over, just
Trophies were prese nted to the their custom:; are different,"
was his concluding thought.
buwling tea ms.

Reg. 64'

4 oz.

BABY

ZBT

HAI!t
SPRAY
FOR

With Iron

Johnson's &amp; Johnson's

Open 9 Ti I 6 Mon . thru Sat.
In The Heart of Down Town Middleport

REGULAR
&amp;MINT

HAIR
SPRAY

oNiY'77e
CONTAC

PARENTS VISITED
Michael Andrews, who is
employed in Columbus, spent a
week's vaca ti on with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Andrews, a nd his sister ,
Barbara, Long Bottom.

DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

2

Dennison Mini

0

2 For $1

··~·
All Purp01e (ontD&lt;t lens
Solution·

Reg. 11.00

Reg. 13.39

ONLY

Con tact Lens Ca rr ying C:a1e

HAIR
SPRAY

Regular Size

9 oz.

'.

J

1

JUST
WONDERFUL

DIAL
SOAP

~

a.AW HAMMER

1

$560

.

I
;

Camp Fund Gains

Meigs

College ACT Test Offered ·
Five Times at Meigs High

sg~·

16 oz.

39~

Thermos
I

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. I

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SOFA BEDS

~~~~-

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FOR ONLY
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A SERTA MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
WHEN YOU PURCHASE

ANY 7 PC. DINEnE
22~

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A '29.95 METAL UTILITY CABINET

WHEN YOU PURCHASE ANY

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Reg. '2.75

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For On~

RED, GREEN, GOLD, ORANGE
SIZE 12' x 12' ONLY

'

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S

EUREKA UPRIGHT SWEEPER

22 ~

For Just
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A SET OP AnACHMENTS

SOFA BED &amp; MATCHING CHAIR
ONLY 149.95 ·
For On~

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Set of End Tables-1 Coffee Table &amp; 2 Matching

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Only 129.95

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ALL VINYL PLATFORM' ROCKERS
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For 2 Weeks On~, Just ......................
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·

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·~

�• '- l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21, 1972

3 Projects Planned
By Church Circles
A Halloween vtsit to the
Meigs County infirmary, btrth·
day gifts for missionaries in
distant places, and remem·
brances for shut-ins were
among the projects planned
during the Tuesday night
meetings of the circles of the B.
H. Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport Ftrst Baptist
Church.
Pen sketches of the new Oh10
Baptist scholarshtp girl,
Stephame Hughes, a senior at
Denison Univers1ty, were
given at the meetings.
ELECTA CIRCLE
Meeting at the parsonage
with Mrs. Charles Simons and
Mrs . John Warner as
hostesses, the Electa Circle
members made arrangements
to send birthday money to Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Traywick
and three children who are
missionaries in Africa.
Plans were made to purchase a gift for Mrs. Raymond
Justis who is entering the
hospital and to visit the
residents of the Meigs County
infirmary around Halloween. A
get-well card was signed for
Mrs . Dorothy McCloud. Bottle
caps and cancelled stamps
were turned in by the mem·

.

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Several at
Inn Meeting
Several members of the
Meigs County Humane Society
attended the two day meeting
of the Great Lakes Region of
the Humane Society of the
United States held at the
University Inn, Athens.
A workshop in leader
development was conducted by
Dr. John A. Hoyt, president of
the Humane Society of the U.
S.; John W. Inman, Jr. ,
director of the Great Lakes
Regional Office; Miss Phylhs
Wright, executive director or
the
National
Humane
Education Center, and Dale
Hylton, director of the Youth
Division of the natwnal
organization.
Animal control, programs of
education , field operaltons,
animal shelter management,
legislation, and fund raising
were among the topics
discussed.
Attending from the local
Society were Mrs . Clinton
Fisher , president; Mtss
Carolyn Smith, treasurer; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Dill, county dog
warden, Mrs. Robert Roberts,
Mrs. Adison Seaman, and Mrs.
Frank Lewis, secretary.

,.
I

I
'

.....

GUESTS HERE
Mrs. Mary Roush and Mr.
and Mrs . Nick Savino of
Youngstown were the weekend
guests of Mrs. Edith Burton,
Middleport.

hers.
Miss Rhoda Hall opened the
meetmg with "Thoughts for the
Day ." Mrs. Ethel Hughes had
devotions taken from the 91st
Psalm, and Mrs. Richard
Owen gave prayer. The love
gift offering was $26.60 and the
regular offering was $27.50.
Mrs. Ftelding Hawkms had
the program on the 23rd
Psalm . Refreshments were
served to those named and
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavtn, Mrs.
Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs .
Charles Edwards, Mrs. Arland
Kmg, Mrs. Leora Sigman and
guests, Judy Owen, Carol and
Wes Simons.
DORCAS CIRCLE
Material on China was
presented by Mrs. Davtd Darst
for the program at the Dorcas
Circle meetmg held at the
home of Mrs. Wilhs Anthony.
Mrs. Harold Hubbard gave
devotions from the book, "The
Person I Am." Offerings were
taken and Mrs. Pearl Hoffman
gave the dedication prayer
entitled "Confidence Wtthoul
Fear ."
The circle will host the
Sanborn Society meetmg on
Oct. 2. The Lord's Prayer in
unison concluded the meeting
attended by Mrs . Fred Lewts,

Louwred Doors Cleaned
With Furnitm·e Po1ish
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- I am answering Lee who asked how
to clean louvered doors. Mine are stamed and varntshed
1 dtp a soft cloth in furniture polish lor spray 11 ont .
put tl over a table kn ife and then run thi s along each
louver from end to end It works beautifully Wtth pamted
louvers you could use a cloth dtpped in an y good wall
cleaner. ' Do not have the cloth dnppmg, JUSt good and
damp, and tl works fme .- MARTHA

Polly's Problem

,,

_,.rlvrw:'~'~"'

DEAR POLLY - I would hke to know tf anyone
knows how to remove scorch marks from a wh1te
vm yl-type floor. Such mark s around our heat regis·
ters are very noticeable but I do not know what to
do about them.- MRS. D S
'4"~~~~m~n~~rur:..:wmw..,..fi.J';J£o~t

·,

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve ts more of a sugges tton
to some manufacturers I alwa ys keep a glass of water
on my bedstde ta ble at mght and have sptlled tl se veral
ltmes. 1 could not see tt and knocked it over whtle gropmg around for tl l wtsh I could buy a plastiC tumbler
wtlh fluorescent strtpes around tl , up and down or in a
sptral so I could eastl y see tl at mght wt thout turnm g
on a light - J . M
DEAR POLLY - In the part of my btllfold where I
keep paper money I keep a stamped, self·addressed envelope that contams the followmg note, " Keep the money
tf you must but please put the tmportant papers, cards
and ptctures in the enclosed envelope and drop m a matl
box. Thank you " I feel this gtves me a little btl more
msurance that my thmgs w1ll be returned as the thief
or a finder might not take the llme or not want to bother
with an envelope, stamp and the danger of havmg hand ·
wn!ing traced or recogmzed.-MRS. W. R. B.
DEAR POLLY- ! was so pleased with the looks of my
chrome-fmished kitchen tabl e and c h a 1 r set after I
sprayed them with spray furniture polish and then wiped
it off that I just had to write about it- ELEANOR
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AS:SH.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaklllg Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly lo care of tbls newspaper.

THE
HARNESS Hospitality Defined

BOOT

'.

'

ONLY

THE

. .....
'

I

I
r

Priced
MIDDL r:Dr\DT 0.

"Chrtstian Hospitality" from
Church Women at Worship was
the study topic presented by
Mrs. Roy Mayer when
Friendly Ctrcle, Trmity
Church, met Tuesday night.
Usmg Matthew 25, JJ.46, the
leader defined hospitality as a
distinct Christian virtue ,
diSCussed how it ts to be
prachced, and how tt relates to
other Christian virtues.
"Hospitality is not charity,
but it may include charity, "
satd Mrs. Mayer. Examples of
hospitality as practiced m the
New Testament were given by
Mrs. Donald Hauck who

BARBECUE PLANNED
RACINE - There will be a
chicken barbecue Sunday
beginning at 11 a.m. until the
supply is gone sponsored by the
Racine Fire Department at the
fire station here. Homemade
ice cream and cake will be sold
by the Ladies Auxiliary.

SHOWER GIVEN
A vote of thanks has beet,
extended by the Eastern Athletics Booster~ for the
donat!OIII of food and t!mt 1t
the recent bore show, to the
athletic student.! who aa!sled
at the gate and In the ground
work and to Homer Cole,
Norman Newell, and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Phillips.

~

·w, ... =e:::~:w.&amp;t

I

~

THURSDAY
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
chatrman : Mrs. Howard Well, Thursday. Mrs. Edith Jtviden
Mrs. Hubbard, Mrs . Paul to have the lesson. Mrs.
Smart, Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs. Emerson Jones, Mrs. Rose
Ltlhan McGhee, Mrs . Juha McDade , and Mrs Roy
Grtm, Mrs. Charles Whtte, Cassell, hostesses.
Mrs. Mary Lyons, Mrs. Milton
NEW HAVEN PTA 7:30
Hood, Mrs. George Freeland, p.m., new ca£etena.
Mrs. Agnes White, Mrs . Darst,
MIDDLEPORT Chtld
and Mrs . Beulah Wht!e.
Conservation
League, 7: 30
Refreshments were served.
Thursday, home of Mrs. Don
LOVEJOY CIRCLE
Grueser.
Mrs. Dan Thomas to
Special interest mtssionaries
speak
on
the
Meigs Community
were announced when the
Lovejoy Ctrclc met at the home Classes for Retarded Children .
EPISCOPAL Church
of Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner.
Women,
family picnic, 6 p.m.
They are the Rev. and Mrs. W.
A. Olsen of North Philadelphia, Thursday, home of Mr. and
and Mtss Isabelle Garris, Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Route
2, Racine . Take covered dtsh
Phoenix, Arizona. A gift of
and own table ser'.'lCe.
money w11l be sent to Miss
WILLING Workers Class,
Garns for her birthday .
Enterpnse United Methodist
Members signed a round·
robin card for Miss Emma Church. Home of Mrs Eldon
Matthews who restdes at the Weeks, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Metgs County Infirmary . Mrs. wtlh Mrs . Paul Fnck as
Manmng Kloes presided at the hostess.
MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
mee ting winch opened with a
p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs .
poem "l..€t Me Uve." Mrs.
Aaron
Kelton.
Gardner gave devotions from
FRIDAY
the Secret Place and Mrs. Bert
COMBINED
Fnendship
Bodtmer dedtcated the love gtft
mtht
to
be
observed
Frtday, 8
offenng. The ~rogram by Mrs.
Dana Hamm was onltlled p.m. at Racine Masonic
"New Machmes in the New Temple . Evangehne . of Mid·
Pomeroy and
Humamty. " Yearbooks were dleporl,
di stnbuted and a dessert Harrisonvtlle OES Chapters
wtll conlr1bule a part of the
course was served .

POLLY'S POINTERS

:-"Mmmm:~

·
s
·
1 · Mrs, Thomas Explains .Educational
t OCia ~l
ICalendarI Needs of Meigs ' Retarded Children
acli : er-r

recounted the stories of Mary
and Martha , Lydia, Priscilla,
and Mary, mother of John
Mark. A general discussiOn of
the topic and prayer by the
leader completed the program.
Miss Elizabeth Fick named
to the nominating committee
Mrs. Leonard Jewell and Mrs.
James Fugate. Illness in the
congregation was noted and
cards were sent.
Members were reminded or
the annual bazaar to be held on
Wednesday, Nov. 15. Hand·
woven baskets will be
available through the circle.
The refreshment table carried
out a late summer theme for a
dessert served by Mrs. Albert
Woodard and Mrs . Elza
Gilmore, Jr. to 17 members.

•

\

then consider the

'

Mrs . Jeanette Thomas,
supervisor of the Meigs
Communtty Classes for
Retard ed Children, was
speaker at the Monday night
meeltng of the Ra cine
Elementary School PTA.
In her talk to the group, Mrs.
Thomas stressed the needs of
the retarded child for more and
better education if they are to
learn to fun ction m society. She
said that while the mentally
retarded pearn more slowly
than others and are limited in
what they can learn, they shU
possess the same human needs
as those who are not retarded.
Mrs Thomas spoke briefly
on the financial structure of the
Community Classes, ex·
plammg that one.fourth of a
mtll levy to be voted on in
November is a renewal. She

had a chtld enrolled m the
Communtty Classes restding in
the Southern Local School
Dtslricl dtsplay several thmgs
he had made . His mother gave
her point of view of the school.
Dunng the business meeting
officers, teachers and committee chairmen were in ·
traduced. The officers are Mrs.
Sue Follrod, prestdenl; Mrs.
Sandr,;l Htll, vice president:
Mrs. Jamce Salser, secretary ;
and Mrs . Sue Ann Beegle,
treasurer.
program
Committee chalrmen are
THIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Mrs. Cora Lee Cummins.
p.m. Frtday, home of Mrs devottonal; Mrs. Karen Werrv.
Albert Ebersbach, 730High St , room mothers, Mrs. Delores
Middleport.
Wolfe, membershtp ; Mrs .
DANCE
FRIDAY
at Doris Fi sher , budget and
Wahama Htgh School from 8 to
II p.m Sponsored by the JUnior
class Jays will emcee.
SATURDAY
DANCE AT Southern High
School Saturday from 9 to 12.
Fall fes ltval plans were
Mustc by Van Johnson's new
made
during a meehng of the
group " Rip Van Winkle ."
Sahsbury PTA Tuesday night.
Sponsored by senior class
R. J . Browning, presidmg,
SUNDAY
asked
each family to conMEIGS COUNTY WCTU, 2
p.m. Sunday, home of Mrs . tnbute a book of tradtn g
Robert Warner. Mrs. Betty stamps to secure prizes for the
Cline is the president. fes tival. Arrangements were
Everyone ts welcome to attend. made for the PTA lo serve a
YOUTH SUNDAY, Zion dmner for the Sou ConChurch of Chnst, Pomeroy • servatiOn Servi ce annual
Harrisonvtlle Road. Youth in meeting on Nov. 9.
The Oct. 5 meeting of the
charge of 9:30 a.m. program;
Me1gs
County Council of
Meigs County youth rally m
aftern oon . Group of Ken tucky
Chrisllan College students on
hand : evening a fihn to be
shown . Everyone welcome.
HOMECOMING Sunday,
Eagle Rtdge Church; basket
dmner at noon ; Orr Famtly,
A vanety of numbers will be
Columbus, special singers; presented Frtday when the
public invited.
Ra cme , Middleport and
TUESDAY
Pomeroy Order of Eastern
RACINE AMERI CAN Star Chapters combme for the
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. observance of fnends night at
Tuesday night at the hall. the Racine Temple begmning
Potluck refreshments.
at 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
Skits will be presented by the
F. and A.M. annual father-son Pomeroy and Mtddleport
banquet, 6:15p.m. Tuesday at Chapters and ptano mustc by
th e Middleport Masonic Harrisonville Chapter. Gerald
Temple .
Powell of Racine Chapter wtll
present an organ medley and a
quartet from the Ractne
Chapter, the Rev . Charles
Norris, Duane Wolfe, Dennis
Manuel and :ani'"' Salser, wtll
present numbers. Lilhan
The Metgs County Teachers Hayman ts preparing a girls'
Association executive-council ensemble for the program and
committee has completed will accompany the group.
plans for the fall assoctation 's Solos wtll be presented by
annual meeting on Ocl. 13 at Shtrley Johnson and Denms
Meigs High School.
Manuel of the host chapter.
The program will include a
speaker from the Ohio
Education Association. Three
workshops and an exhibit are
also on the agenda. A dinner
will be served at noon. Further
informatiOn on the meeting will
be given in letters to teachers.

fmance j Miss Florence Circle,
pubhc1ty; Mrs. Sandra Htll,
magazine; Mrs. Erma Norris
and Mrs. Margaret West,
hospitality; Mrs. Grace Hoff.
man , delega te to the Metgs
County Council of Parents and
Teachers, and Mrs. Pauhne
Bnst1c, alternate.
The teachers introduced
were Robert Beegle, principal
and sixth grade teacher, Diiane •
Wolfe, ftfth; Mrs Sandra Hill,
fourth; Mrs. Edna Price,
thtrd ; MISS Circle, second, and
Mrs Mary Hill, first .

Ftrst: Mrs. Rita Jo Htll, Mrs.
Lilhe Mae Hart, Mrs. Davtd
Profitt!, Mrs. Judy Smith and
Mrs. Larry Holsmger.
Plans were made during the
meetmg for a fall festival to be
held in October wtlh Mrs. Betty

case of Harold, 6

Curfman to serve as chatrman.
The attendance banner was
won by the fourth grade.
Refreshments were served by
the officers. Fathers' Night
will be observed at the Oct. 16
meeting

BY PROF. ED. WALLEN
Should every boy and girl in
Southeastern Ohio have the opportunity
to receive an education? This may
seem like a stupid question in the year
1972, but tt ts a sertous question. Not all
or our youngsters have that op.
porlunity.
Consider the cases of Harold.
Harold is six years old, bright and
friendly. He is anxious to learn and he
likes people. More than anything,
Harold is lookmg forward to going to
school. What could be more natural for
a stx year.(lid chtld?
Oh yes, Harold does have one more
charactenstlc - he ts cnppled. The
illness Harold endures has confined
htm to a wheelchair. The wheelchair
makes it practically tmpossible for

j'
~.,

DAN
MEADOWS

see

Room mothers were named

as follows:
Stxlh grade : Mrs. Rose
Grindstaff, Mrs. Linda Htll,
Mrs. Jean Lyons, Mrs. Janice
Leffle, Mrs. Chns Shane, and
Mrs. Nettie Clark.
Ftflh : Mrs. Kay Warden,
Mrs. Betty Carpenter, Mrs.
Ruth Smith , Mrs . Grace·
Hoffman, Mrs Ruby Brinager,
and Mrs. Patty Pape .
Fourth: Mrs. Leola Wolfe,
Mrs. Irene Rhodes, Mrs
Donna Gheen, Mrs . Leanna
Beegle, Mrs. Martha Lee, and
Mrs. Ada Sellers.
Third : Mrs. George Atkms,
Mrs. Ella Jean Badgley, Mrs
Romaine Frederi ck, Mrs
Margaret Ann Johnson, and
Mrs. Mary Floater.
Second : Mrs. Jamce Salser,
Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle , Mrs.
Shtrley Dugan, Mrs. Donna
Jean Smtlh, Mrs. Karen
Werry , and Mrs. Pauhne
Bostic.

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Festival Planned

Skits Scheduled
For Observance

Teachers ' Fall
Meeting Set Up

CLOTHING WANTED
Mrs. Mar10o Francis, ad·
vtsor, reports that the Mid·
dlepor t 4-H Golddiggers are
collecting clothing for the
children at the Meigs County
Children's Home. Girls' sizes
five through 14 and boys' sizes
eight through 18 are needed,
she says.

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GUNS - SHEIJ.S
HUNTING CLOTHES
AND SUPPLIES

Parents and Teachers at the
Salem Center school was announ ced. Several members
mdicated they will attend.
Memberships are now being
taken. Mrs. Wendell Hoover's
first grade won the attendance
banner.
John Lisle, principal,
reported on the pilot program
tn spelling and reading un·
derway at the school. He said
Salisbur~ at/4 1l11olll)l Vernon
were the scliools selected by
the
Science
Research
Assoc tates to use the special
matenals. Lisle urged parents
to take advantage of "Conference Night," and announced
that Geor ge Hargraves,
supermtendent of the Meigs
Local School District, Larry
Mornson, assistant princtpal,
and Frank Porter, president of
the Board of Educatton, wtll
have the program at the Qc.
Iober meetin g.
A film , "To Touch a Chtld,"
was shown.

Harold to board the school bus. If he
were able to get to school, hts first
grade class meets on the second floor of
the school house.
By now, the picture is clear. A
young boy who wants to attend school Is
unable to do so through no fault of his
own . He is the victim of antiquated
architecture . Also, he would probably
be the victim of antiquated instruction
if he dtd make it to school, since being
crippled mtght requ ire different
learning expenences.
Of course,_a person could say that
Harold is only one child and one child
missing out on an education is not too
had. But Harold is not only one child.
He represents all handicapped
children.
It is estimated that three out of

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew has
0
rejected suggesttons that
President Nixon step up his
schedule of campaign trips and
debate Sen . George S.
McGovern on television.
The vice president told a
news conference Wednesday
that Nixon's record of accom·
pllshments speaks for itself;
that he does not need debates,
and that his proper place is in
Washington looking alter the
country's problems.
Agnew visited Columbus to
speak before the Ohio Republi·
can Convention, and he told the
news conference a series of
televised debates with McGov·
ern would "serve no useful
purpose and would help Sen.
McGovern improve his
recognition factor."
"Even three or four debates
would bring out only a handful
of questions," Agnew said.
"The performance of the
candidates would depend on
their ability of the moment to
be either sharp or fiat on that
particular ~
"The P!Qdent II~ been on
the tube a 'nwnber of times
nplainlng his policies, and
thtre is just no need for a debate. Furthermore, it just Isn't
good politics, just as It wasn't
when Barry Goldwater asked
President Johnson to debate in
1964. It would serve no useful
purpose and would help Sen.
McGovern improve his
recognition factor. "
Debate Uoneeded
Agnew also rebuffed a sug.
gestion that he debate his
Democrattc opponent, Sargent
Sit river.
11
He's on the trail, and I'm on
the trail," Agnew said .
"There's nothing on my mind
that you fellows haven't been
able to plumb or discover."
Asked why Nixon did not
plan more campaign trips to
keep up with his opponent, the
vice president replied:
"We only have one President
to deal with our nation's problems, and we need him in the
White HoUBe. There 's no dearth
of Information ahout the Presi·

record of accomplishments"
by the admlntstration, urging
his audience to carry the
record to Ohio voters.
Some 35 protesters, waving
McGovern signs and a pair of
Viet Cong flags, chanted from
the edge of the crowd as Agnew
arrived. Another small dem·
onstration outside the thrater
where Agnew later spoke resulted In the arrest of at least
five persons on varying
charges of disorderly conduct
and improper language. One
person was arrested and
charged with carrying a
concealed weapon.
Obsolete Weapons
Earlier In the day Agnew told
a Rotary IWtcheon In St. Louis
that McGovern 's defense proposals would leave the country
with nuclear retaliation as its
only course of action if it were
attacked.
"The McGovern defense proposal must be based on the as·

111.105::11 p.m. o.tty

.

MASON, W, VA.

7 •· m. h&gt;' p, m. Friday &amp; S.turdo,

sumption that we will never
face the challenge of a limited
non-nuclear war," he said.
"It guarantees that we
can't fight such a war because
it restricts the size of our tradl·
tiona! forces and leaves us with
weapons systems that are rapidly becoming obsolete in the
face of continuous moderniza·
lion of conventiona I armed for·

ces by other world powers."
Descrtbing McGovern's programs as "basically isolation·
ist," Agnew said. "I don 't
question hts sincertty, but I
totally disagree with his
concluswn. His proposal is, in
fact, frightening. "
The vice prestdent returned
to Washington followmg hts Co·
lurnbus address.

GOP Refused to
Endorse Repeal

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
group of Ohw House conservative Republicans failed
Wednesday to persuade the
GOP State Convention to endorse a repeal of the stale
income tax.
The party platform pledging
to "place a bid" on state taxes
was adopted by voice vote dur·
ing the' ·l,f~oon; convention
session.
"We pledged ourselves to
p'ace a lid on the level of taxa·
uon,"the plank read. "TheRepublican Party of Ohio is firm.
ly opposed to any increase m
rates or adjustments of brack·
ets in the existing state income
sales or other taxes and
pledges to oppose any attempt
The 24th annual Gallia
to increase such taxes and inCounty Agriculture Society sists on fiscal responsibility by
election will be held at the the present administration."
junior fairgrounds between
5:30 and 8:30 this evening
The junior fairboard's an· dtreclors are Brown, Burleson,
nual chicken barbecue will be Matthews, Morgan and
held between 6 and 8 p.m. in the Saunders.
Members of the nommatmg
, Aclivtties Buildmg.
committee
were : Richard
Individuals do not have to
Laktn
,
chairman;
Donald
attend the dinner in order to
vote . However, only those who Ours, Wayne Niday, Mrs. Opal
have Gallia County Agriculture Payne and Jim Howard.
The food commtttee for the
Society memberships are
annual dinner are : Mrs .
eligible to vote.
Tonight's menu consists of Robert Ball, Paul Butler ,
one-half piece of barbecued Jimmie Evans, Charles Fulks,
and W. R. (Dick) Brown.
chicken, beans , and slaw.
Eleven candidates are
running for election to a three·
year term to the fairboard this
year. Five of the 11 candidates
dent."
An estimated 3,000 persons are incumbent board mem·
oo their way home from work hers.
The candidates are : Waldo
turned our to greet Agnew as
he arrived at a downtown hotel Brown, David Bryan, Kail
across the street from the Burleson, Roger Deel, Eugene
Sam Damron, 70, Pomeroy,
Statehouse. A llke nwnber at Eliiott, Max Elliott, Glen
Rt.
4, dted Wednesday af·
the GOP state convention gave Graham, B. B. Matthews, Earl
him a rousing welcome and Jack Miller, John R. Morgan ternoon at Holzer Medical
beard him tick off a "solid and Jim Saunders. Incumbent Center .
Mr. Damron was preceded in
death by his parents, Ed and
Desiree Damron ; one son, Ed,
and a grandson.
Mr. Damron is survived by
his wife, Mae ; one daughter,
Mrs. Gary Gibson, PomFor School . . . And Watching T.V.
eroy, Rt. 4; one son,
Bob, of East Bank, W. Va.; six
and Gabbing With Her Friends
grandchildren ; three brothers,
Roy, of Cabin Creek and
Size 7 thru 14
Willard and Ernest, ''1/f
Grayson, Ky., and two sisters,
Edith Cooper and Lizzie Kuntz,
Knit and Corduroy Slacks both of Grayson.
Mr. Damron, a retired coal
miner, was a member of the
jeans, Knit Shirts
Carleton Church and United
- Mine Workers 750 local.
Funeral services will be held
(Stripes &amp; Solids)
' Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Sweaters and Slack Sets
Jay Stiles officiating. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery.
Frieods may call at the funeral
by Berkshire and
home after 9 a.m. on Friday.

Barbecue,

Election
Tonight

Sam Damron,
70 Died
Wednesday

After failing to get the plat·
form committee to support the
campaign to repeal the income
tax, the group of House GOP
members tried to insert an
amendment stating support for
"the principle that all future
stale income tax increases be
approved by a majority of the
voters."
The convention turqfl( down
the amendment by a close
voice vote.
Less than half the (l()().plus
convention dele gated utlet ed a vote on the
statement, but the opponents appeared to have a
slight edge in volume.
Rep . Robert A. Manning, RAkron, an opponent of the
amendment, said the plank as
accepted was "one of the
strongest statements on taxa·
lion ever adopted by this con·
vention."
Other planks in the platform
mclude:
- A pledge to study "under
what circumstances capital
punishment should be retained
in light of U.S. Supreme Court
decisions.''
- A promise to "continue
and mcrease efforts to reform
the nightmarish welfare
system to provide more
adequate care for those truly in
need antl to help eliminate the
inefltciency, waste and fraud
existing under the present
administration of welfare."
- A pledge to "work for a
honus and other further assistance to our Vietnam veter·

ans."
- A vow to make 11 Hn unremitting effort to provide all
young Ohioans with opportuni·
ties that will challenge them to
make their home state their
permanent home."

Astounding Victory in
Ohio Expected for GOP
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An
estimated 3,000 Ohio Republi·
cans attending the state par·
ty's one-day convention
Wednesday heard Vice
Prestdent Spiro T. Agnew
predict President Nixon would
"regtster the most astounding
win the state of Ohio has ever
seen.''

Agnew in the featured speech
of the evening, noted Nixon has
been popular tn Ohio during all
his previous campaigns.
"Ohio Republicans work
hard, and they get results," the
Vice president told the
cheering throng. "And this
time we have the good forh!ne
of having an opponent that has
alienated Millions of members
of his own party.
"We have the opportunity to
elect a majority in Congress
that will make the President's
second term even more
productive than hts first,"
Agnew said, forecasting
Republicans would soon
become the majority party m
the United States.
The vice president ltsted
what he called "the solid rec·
ord of accomplishments" by
Nixon and urged Ohio Republi·
cans to take the record to the
voters.
Belter Than Ever
Among the accompltshments
he detatled were winding down
the war in Vietnam, improving
the economy, curbing crime
and drug abuse, implementing
federal-state revenue sharmg,
and cleaning up the environ·
men!.
"In 1976, the nallon starts its
third century," Agnew said,
"and I believe the United
States will be an even better
nation then than it is today."
Agnew's wife Judy, accom·
pained him to the dais, which
was dotted with prominent
Ohto Republicans, including
former Gov. James A. Rhodes,
Lt. Gov. John W. Brown,
Republican State Chairman
John S. Andrews and former
state and national party
chairman Ray. C. 81\i!s..
Also on the speakers' plat-

'Festival
Slated
A spokesman for the
Gallipolts Merchants
Assoctalion announced today
that the week of Oct. 9·14 will
be Downtown Festival Week.
This will cmncide with the Bob
Evans Farm Festival.
Durmg Fesltval Week, anhques will be shown In
members' store windows and
anyone who has items of interest they would like to
display are asked to contact
Keith Thomas, chairman of the
event. Many people from
outside thts area are expected
and along with local residents,
w1ll be able to view items of
interest and reflection of local
hen !.age.
On Saturday, Oct. 14, a quilt
show will be held in the pubhc
park under the direction of
Earl Tope, chairman .
This will be the third annual
quilt show. Anyone is eligible to
enter a handmade quilt for
show and judging. Entry
blanks will be available at the
Chamber of Commerce office
and through the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune or Station

form were
Repubhcan
congresswnal candidates and
congressmen, legisla t ive
leaders and members of the
Ohio Supreme Court.
Prior to Agnew's address, at
least five persons were arrest·
ed outstde the RKO Palace
Theater, where the convention
was held, on charges varying
from disorderly conduct to
interfering with an officer. One
person was arrested and
charged with carrying a
concealed weapon .
A cheermg, stgn-wavmg
throng of an estimated 3,000
persons on !hell' way home
from work greeted the vice
president as he arrived in the
downtown area prior to his
convention appearance .
Agnew met party leaders

1-80 Will be
Renamed 1-76
COLUMBUS (UPI) - In·
terstate-80
ts
to
be
redestgnated Inlerstate-76 on
Oct 2, the Ohio Turnpike
Commission announced.
"This will end the confusion
of distinguishing between
lnterstate-liQ..S and InterstateDO," said Allan Johnson,
executive director of the
commission.

In Ohio, Interstale·BO·S
extends east from lnterstate71, midway between Medina
and Lodi, through Akron to the
Ohio Turnpike at the Niles·
Youngstown interchange. The
route then continues to the
Pennsylvania state line via the
turnptke.

and shook hands with those in
the front row of the public
gathering . Some climbed up on
a statute of William McKinley
in front of the Statehouse for a
better view. Others leaned out
of windows in the Neil House
Motor Hotel across the street.
Fringe Protesters
A pair of htgh school bands
played spririted mustc while
the crowd waved red, white
and blue signs reading : "Spiro
in '76" and "George, Have we
Got a Fall for Your."
Ahout 35 protesters, some
wavmg McGovern stgns and a
pair of VietCong flags, chanted
from the edge of the crowd for
an end to the war in Vietnam.

"Stop the mad dike born·
,ber," yelled one demonstralllr.
Agnew did not appear to bear
the protesters.
As he started his address to
the convention, the vice presi·
dent dispensed some Agnewbrand humor to the delight of
the partisan gathering.
"l understand McGovern's
campaign manager was
dtscovered moonlighting In
another job," Agnew said. "He
was the strategy manager for
Boris Spassky. " Agnew also expressed
pleasure wtth Bobby Fisher's
chess victory over the Russian.
"I'd love to have htm play golf
w1th me .'' he said.

heritage
house
IOUI~"lleA... Shot
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

W.nner of the Free
Bi c ycle drawmg, V1rgmia
Dud ley , Ma son , West
1/trguua

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WJEH.
Festival Week wtll be
chmaxed on Saturday, Oct. 14,
with an auction of hundreds of
dollars m merchandise whtch
may be purchased only with
" Fesltval Money" which
parltctpating merchants will
start putting mlo circulation on
Fnday, Sept.. 29 . Free
"Fesllval Money " will be given
with purchase made on and
after that date. More details
wtll be announced
Fesllval Week is another
promotion reflectmg the in·
teres! in keeping Gallipolis
"The Place To Shop."

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every 20 children are handica.PI?"'i·
This means thal15 pel. of the children
in Gallia. Jackson, Meigs, and the other
cuunttes of Southeastern OhiO are
handicapped children.
!~eluded in the term " Han·
dtcapped" are those youngsters who (I )
are mentally retarded, (2) have serious ·
emotwnal dtslurbances, (3) suffer
bram damage, (4) have speech im- ...
patrments, (5) are deaf or hard.()£. · :.
heanng, and (6 ) suffer from a variety :
of crtpphng diseases.
In southeastern Ohio, there IS an 11· .
county consortium of school districts .
workmg to include the handicapped .
chtld in good educational programs. In :
some cases ' an individual school .:
district can pt ovide needed educational :
servtces on tts own. In other cases,
several dtstricls must cooperate to
provtde such services.
:
If you believe that every boy and ::. :
girl m the area has the right to an ·:· :
education and if you believe that
programs should be established for
handicapped youngsters, let your local
superintendent and board members
know. They are aware of what can be
done and wtll welcome your en·
couragemenl. Schools do belong to you.

BAKER

FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, O.

BUCKLEY TO SPEAK
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen.
James L. Buckley, R-N.Y., Ia
to address a meeting of the

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�• '- l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21, 1972

3 Projects Planned
By Church Circles
A Halloween vtsit to the
Meigs County infirmary, btrth·
day gifts for missionaries in
distant places, and remem·
brances for shut-ins were
among the projects planned
during the Tuesday night
meetings of the circles of the B.
H. Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport Ftrst Baptist
Church.
Pen sketches of the new Oh10
Baptist scholarshtp girl,
Stephame Hughes, a senior at
Denison Univers1ty, were
given at the meetings.
ELECTA CIRCLE
Meeting at the parsonage
with Mrs. Charles Simons and
Mrs . John Warner as
hostesses, the Electa Circle
members made arrangements
to send birthday money to Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Traywick
and three children who are
missionaries in Africa.
Plans were made to purchase a gift for Mrs. Raymond
Justis who is entering the
hospital and to visit the
residents of the Meigs County
infirmary around Halloween. A
get-well card was signed for
Mrs . Dorothy McCloud. Bottle
caps and cancelled stamps
were turned in by the mem·

.

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Several at
Inn Meeting
Several members of the
Meigs County Humane Society
attended the two day meeting
of the Great Lakes Region of
the Humane Society of the
United States held at the
University Inn, Athens.
A workshop in leader
development was conducted by
Dr. John A. Hoyt, president of
the Humane Society of the U.
S.; John W. Inman, Jr. ,
director of the Great Lakes
Regional Office; Miss Phylhs
Wright, executive director or
the
National
Humane
Education Center, and Dale
Hylton, director of the Youth
Division of the natwnal
organization.
Animal control, programs of
education , field operaltons,
animal shelter management,
legislation, and fund raising
were among the topics
discussed.
Attending from the local
Society were Mrs . Clinton
Fisher , president; Mtss
Carolyn Smith, treasurer; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Dill, county dog
warden, Mrs. Robert Roberts,
Mrs. Adison Seaman, and Mrs.
Frank Lewis, secretary.

,.
I

I
'

.....

GUESTS HERE
Mrs. Mary Roush and Mr.
and Mrs . Nick Savino of
Youngstown were the weekend
guests of Mrs. Edith Burton,
Middleport.

hers.
Miss Rhoda Hall opened the
meetmg with "Thoughts for the
Day ." Mrs. Ethel Hughes had
devotions taken from the 91st
Psalm, and Mrs. Richard
Owen gave prayer. The love
gift offering was $26.60 and the
regular offering was $27.50.
Mrs. Ftelding Hawkms had
the program on the 23rd
Psalm . Refreshments were
served to those named and
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavtn, Mrs.
Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs .
Charles Edwards, Mrs. Arland
Kmg, Mrs. Leora Sigman and
guests, Judy Owen, Carol and
Wes Simons.
DORCAS CIRCLE
Material on China was
presented by Mrs. Davtd Darst
for the program at the Dorcas
Circle meetmg held at the
home of Mrs. Wilhs Anthony.
Mrs. Harold Hubbard gave
devotions from the book, "The
Person I Am." Offerings were
taken and Mrs. Pearl Hoffman
gave the dedication prayer
entitled "Confidence Wtthoul
Fear ."
The circle will host the
Sanborn Society meetmg on
Oct. 2. The Lord's Prayer in
unison concluded the meeting
attended by Mrs . Fred Lewts,

Louwred Doors Cleaned
With Furnitm·e Po1ish
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- I am answering Lee who asked how
to clean louvered doors. Mine are stamed and varntshed
1 dtp a soft cloth in furniture polish lor spray 11 ont .
put tl over a table kn ife and then run thi s along each
louver from end to end It works beautifully Wtth pamted
louvers you could use a cloth dtpped in an y good wall
cleaner. ' Do not have the cloth dnppmg, JUSt good and
damp, and tl works fme .- MARTHA

Polly's Problem

,,

_,.rlvrw:'~'~"'

DEAR POLLY - I would hke to know tf anyone
knows how to remove scorch marks from a wh1te
vm yl-type floor. Such mark s around our heat regis·
ters are very noticeable but I do not know what to
do about them.- MRS. D S
'4"~~~~m~n~~rur:..:wmw..,..fi.J';J£o~t

·,

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve ts more of a sugges tton
to some manufacturers I alwa ys keep a glass of water
on my bedstde ta ble at mght and have sptlled tl se veral
ltmes. 1 could not see tt and knocked it over whtle gropmg around for tl l wtsh I could buy a plastiC tumbler
wtlh fluorescent strtpes around tl , up and down or in a
sptral so I could eastl y see tl at mght wt thout turnm g
on a light - J . M
DEAR POLLY - In the part of my btllfold where I
keep paper money I keep a stamped, self·addressed envelope that contams the followmg note, " Keep the money
tf you must but please put the tmportant papers, cards
and ptctures in the enclosed envelope and drop m a matl
box. Thank you " I feel this gtves me a little btl more
msurance that my thmgs w1ll be returned as the thief
or a finder might not take the llme or not want to bother
with an envelope, stamp and the danger of havmg hand ·
wn!ing traced or recogmzed.-MRS. W. R. B.
DEAR POLLY- ! was so pleased with the looks of my
chrome-fmished kitchen tabl e and c h a 1 r set after I
sprayed them with spray furniture polish and then wiped
it off that I just had to write about it- ELEANOR
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AS:SH.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaklllg Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly lo care of tbls newspaper.

THE
HARNESS Hospitality Defined

BOOT

'.

'

ONLY

THE

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'

I

I
r

Priced
MIDDL r:Dr\DT 0.

"Chrtstian Hospitality" from
Church Women at Worship was
the study topic presented by
Mrs. Roy Mayer when
Friendly Ctrcle, Trmity
Church, met Tuesday night.
Usmg Matthew 25, JJ.46, the
leader defined hospitality as a
distinct Christian virtue ,
diSCussed how it ts to be
prachced, and how tt relates to
other Christian virtues.
"Hospitality is not charity,
but it may include charity, "
satd Mrs. Mayer. Examples of
hospitality as practiced m the
New Testament were given by
Mrs. Donald Hauck who

BARBECUE PLANNED
RACINE - There will be a
chicken barbecue Sunday
beginning at 11 a.m. until the
supply is gone sponsored by the
Racine Fire Department at the
fire station here. Homemade
ice cream and cake will be sold
by the Ladies Auxiliary.

SHOWER GIVEN
A vote of thanks has beet,
extended by the Eastern Athletics Booster~ for the
donat!OIII of food and t!mt 1t
the recent bore show, to the
athletic student.! who aa!sled
at the gate and In the ground
work and to Homer Cole,
Norman Newell, and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Phillips.

~

·w, ... =e:::~:w.&amp;t

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THURSDAY
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, 2 p.m.
chatrman : Mrs. Howard Well, Thursday. Mrs. Edith Jtviden
Mrs. Hubbard, Mrs . Paul to have the lesson. Mrs.
Smart, Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs. Emerson Jones, Mrs. Rose
Ltlhan McGhee, Mrs . Juha McDade , and Mrs Roy
Grtm, Mrs. Charles Whtte, Cassell, hostesses.
Mrs. Mary Lyons, Mrs. Milton
NEW HAVEN PTA 7:30
Hood, Mrs. George Freeland, p.m., new ca£etena.
Mrs. Agnes White, Mrs . Darst,
MIDDLEPORT Chtld
and Mrs . Beulah Wht!e.
Conservation
League, 7: 30
Refreshments were served.
Thursday, home of Mrs. Don
LOVEJOY CIRCLE
Grueser.
Mrs. Dan Thomas to
Special interest mtssionaries
speak
on
the
Meigs Community
were announced when the
Lovejoy Ctrclc met at the home Classes for Retarded Children .
EPISCOPAL Church
of Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner.
Women,
family picnic, 6 p.m.
They are the Rev. and Mrs. W.
A. Olsen of North Philadelphia, Thursday, home of Mr. and
and Mtss Isabelle Garris, Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Route
2, Racine . Take covered dtsh
Phoenix, Arizona. A gift of
and own table ser'.'lCe.
money w11l be sent to Miss
WILLING Workers Class,
Garns for her birthday .
Enterpnse United Methodist
Members signed a round·
robin card for Miss Emma Church. Home of Mrs Eldon
Matthews who restdes at the Weeks, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Metgs County Infirmary . Mrs. wtlh Mrs . Paul Fnck as
Manmng Kloes presided at the hostess.
MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
mee ting winch opened with a
p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs .
poem "l..€t Me Uve." Mrs.
Aaron
Kelton.
Gardner gave devotions from
FRIDAY
the Secret Place and Mrs. Bert
COMBINED
Fnendship
Bodtmer dedtcated the love gtft
mtht
to
be
observed
Frtday, 8
offenng. The ~rogram by Mrs.
Dana Hamm was onltlled p.m. at Racine Masonic
"New Machmes in the New Temple . Evangehne . of Mid·
Pomeroy and
Humamty. " Yearbooks were dleporl,
di stnbuted and a dessert Harrisonvtlle OES Chapters
wtll conlr1bule a part of the
course was served .

POLLY'S POINTERS

:-"Mmmm:~

·
s
·
1 · Mrs, Thomas Explains .Educational
t OCia ~l
ICalendarI Needs of Meigs ' Retarded Children
acli : er-r

recounted the stories of Mary
and Martha , Lydia, Priscilla,
and Mary, mother of John
Mark. A general discussiOn of
the topic and prayer by the
leader completed the program.
Miss Elizabeth Fick named
to the nominating committee
Mrs. Leonard Jewell and Mrs.
James Fugate. Illness in the
congregation was noted and
cards were sent.
Members were reminded or
the annual bazaar to be held on
Wednesday, Nov. 15. Hand·
woven baskets will be
available through the circle.
The refreshment table carried
out a late summer theme for a
dessert served by Mrs. Albert
Woodard and Mrs . Elza
Gilmore, Jr. to 17 members.

•

\

then consider the

'

Mrs . Jeanette Thomas,
supervisor of the Meigs
Communtty Classes for
Retard ed Children, was
speaker at the Monday night
meeltng of the Ra cine
Elementary School PTA.
In her talk to the group, Mrs.
Thomas stressed the needs of
the retarded child for more and
better education if they are to
learn to fun ction m society. She
said that while the mentally
retarded pearn more slowly
than others and are limited in
what they can learn, they shU
possess the same human needs
as those who are not retarded.
Mrs Thomas spoke briefly
on the financial structure of the
Community Classes, ex·
plammg that one.fourth of a
mtll levy to be voted on in
November is a renewal. She

had a chtld enrolled m the
Communtty Classes restding in
the Southern Local School
Dtslricl dtsplay several thmgs
he had made . His mother gave
her point of view of the school.
Dunng the business meeting
officers, teachers and committee chairmen were in ·
traduced. The officers are Mrs.
Sue Follrod, prestdenl; Mrs.
Sandr,;l Htll, vice president:
Mrs. Jamce Salser, secretary ;
and Mrs . Sue Ann Beegle,
treasurer.
program
Committee chalrmen are
THIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Mrs. Cora Lee Cummins.
p.m. Frtday, home of Mrs devottonal; Mrs. Karen Werrv.
Albert Ebersbach, 730High St , room mothers, Mrs. Delores
Middleport.
Wolfe, membershtp ; Mrs .
DANCE
FRIDAY
at Doris Fi sher , budget and
Wahama Htgh School from 8 to
II p.m Sponsored by the JUnior
class Jays will emcee.
SATURDAY
DANCE AT Southern High
School Saturday from 9 to 12.
Fall fes ltval plans were
Mustc by Van Johnson's new
made
during a meehng of the
group " Rip Van Winkle ."
Sahsbury PTA Tuesday night.
Sponsored by senior class
R. J . Browning, presidmg,
SUNDAY
asked
each family to conMEIGS COUNTY WCTU, 2
p.m. Sunday, home of Mrs . tnbute a book of tradtn g
Robert Warner. Mrs. Betty stamps to secure prizes for the
Cline is the president. fes tival. Arrangements were
Everyone ts welcome to attend. made for the PTA lo serve a
YOUTH SUNDAY, Zion dmner for the Sou ConChurch of Chnst, Pomeroy • servatiOn Servi ce annual
Harrisonvtlle Road. Youth in meeting on Nov. 9.
The Oct. 5 meeting of the
charge of 9:30 a.m. program;
Me1gs
County Council of
Meigs County youth rally m
aftern oon . Group of Ken tucky
Chrisllan College students on
hand : evening a fihn to be
shown . Everyone welcome.
HOMECOMING Sunday,
Eagle Rtdge Church; basket
dmner at noon ; Orr Famtly,
A vanety of numbers will be
Columbus, special singers; presented Frtday when the
public invited.
Ra cme , Middleport and
TUESDAY
Pomeroy Order of Eastern
RACINE AMERI CAN Star Chapters combme for the
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. observance of fnends night at
Tuesday night at the hall. the Racine Temple begmning
Potluck refreshments.
at 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
Skits will be presented by the
F. and A.M. annual father-son Pomeroy and Mtddleport
banquet, 6:15p.m. Tuesday at Chapters and ptano mustc by
th e Middleport Masonic Harrisonville Chapter. Gerald
Temple .
Powell of Racine Chapter wtll
present an organ medley and a
quartet from the Ractne
Chapter, the Rev . Charles
Norris, Duane Wolfe, Dennis
Manuel and :ani'"' Salser, wtll
present numbers. Lilhan
The Metgs County Teachers Hayman ts preparing a girls'
Association executive-council ensemble for the program and
committee has completed will accompany the group.
plans for the fall assoctation 's Solos wtll be presented by
annual meeting on Ocl. 13 at Shtrley Johnson and Denms
Meigs High School.
Manuel of the host chapter.
The program will include a
speaker from the Ohio
Education Association. Three
workshops and an exhibit are
also on the agenda. A dinner
will be served at noon. Further
informatiOn on the meeting will
be given in letters to teachers.

fmance j Miss Florence Circle,
pubhc1ty; Mrs. Sandra Htll,
magazine; Mrs. Erma Norris
and Mrs. Margaret West,
hospitality; Mrs. Grace Hoff.
man , delega te to the Metgs
County Council of Parents and
Teachers, and Mrs. Pauhne
Bnst1c, alternate.
The teachers introduced
were Robert Beegle, principal
and sixth grade teacher, Diiane •
Wolfe, ftfth; Mrs Sandra Hill,
fourth; Mrs. Edna Price,
thtrd ; MISS Circle, second, and
Mrs Mary Hill, first .

Ftrst: Mrs. Rita Jo Htll, Mrs.
Lilhe Mae Hart, Mrs. Davtd
Profitt!, Mrs. Judy Smith and
Mrs. Larry Holsmger.
Plans were made during the
meetmg for a fall festival to be
held in October wtlh Mrs. Betty

case of Harold, 6

Curfman to serve as chatrman.
The attendance banner was
won by the fourth grade.
Refreshments were served by
the officers. Fathers' Night
will be observed at the Oct. 16
meeting

BY PROF. ED. WALLEN
Should every boy and girl in
Southeastern Ohio have the opportunity
to receive an education? This may
seem like a stupid question in the year
1972, but tt ts a sertous question. Not all
or our youngsters have that op.
porlunity.
Consider the cases of Harold.
Harold is six years old, bright and
friendly. He is anxious to learn and he
likes people. More than anything,
Harold is lookmg forward to going to
school. What could be more natural for
a stx year.(lid chtld?
Oh yes, Harold does have one more
charactenstlc - he ts cnppled. The
illness Harold endures has confined
htm to a wheelchair. The wheelchair
makes it practically tmpossible for

j'
~.,

DAN
MEADOWS

see

Room mothers were named

as follows:
Stxlh grade : Mrs. Rose
Grindstaff, Mrs. Linda Htll,
Mrs. Jean Lyons, Mrs. Janice
Leffle, Mrs. Chns Shane, and
Mrs. Nettie Clark.
Ftflh : Mrs. Kay Warden,
Mrs. Betty Carpenter, Mrs.
Ruth Smith , Mrs . Grace·
Hoffman, Mrs Ruby Brinager,
and Mrs. Patty Pape .
Fourth: Mrs. Leola Wolfe,
Mrs. Irene Rhodes, Mrs
Donna Gheen, Mrs . Leanna
Beegle, Mrs. Martha Lee, and
Mrs. Ada Sellers.
Third : Mrs. George Atkms,
Mrs. Ella Jean Badgley, Mrs
Romaine Frederi ck, Mrs
Margaret Ann Johnson, and
Mrs. Mary Floater.
Second : Mrs. Jamce Salser,
Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle , Mrs.
Shtrley Dugan, Mrs. Donna
Jean Smtlh, Mrs. Karen
Werry , and Mrs. Pauhne
Bostic.

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Festival Planned

Skits Scheduled
For Observance

Teachers ' Fall
Meeting Set Up

CLOTHING WANTED
Mrs. Mar10o Francis, ad·
vtsor, reports that the Mid·
dlepor t 4-H Golddiggers are
collecting clothing for the
children at the Meigs County
Children's Home. Girls' sizes
five through 14 and boys' sizes
eight through 18 are needed,
she says.

p

•

GUNS - SHEIJ.S
HUNTING CLOTHES
AND SUPPLIES

Parents and Teachers at the
Salem Center school was announ ced. Several members
mdicated they will attend.
Memberships are now being
taken. Mrs. Wendell Hoover's
first grade won the attendance
banner.
John Lisle, principal,
reported on the pilot program
tn spelling and reading un·
derway at the school. He said
Salisbur~ at/4 1l11olll)l Vernon
were the scliools selected by
the
Science
Research
Assoc tates to use the special
matenals. Lisle urged parents
to take advantage of "Conference Night," and announced
that Geor ge Hargraves,
supermtendent of the Meigs
Local School District, Larry
Mornson, assistant princtpal,
and Frank Porter, president of
the Board of Educatton, wtll
have the program at the Qc.
Iober meetin g.
A film , "To Touch a Chtld,"
was shown.

Harold to board the school bus. If he
were able to get to school, hts first
grade class meets on the second floor of
the school house.
By now, the picture is clear. A
young boy who wants to attend school Is
unable to do so through no fault of his
own . He is the victim of antiquated
architecture . Also, he would probably
be the victim of antiquated instruction
if he dtd make it to school, since being
crippled mtght requ ire different
learning expenences.
Of course,_a person could say that
Harold is only one child and one child
missing out on an education is not too
had. But Harold is not only one child.
He represents all handicapped
children.
It is estimated that three out of

VISIT OUR NEW ENLARGED
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THE ENTIRE FAMILY

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LOSE UGLY FAT
Star t 1os 1ng wei ght today or
m one y ba ck M ONAOE X is a
t1 ny tab le t and eas y to t ake
M ONAD E X Wtl l help curb your
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we 1gh l ess Conta1ns no
danQer ous dr ugs and will not
ma ke you ner vous No stren .
uous exerc ise Change your
l ife
start today . MONADEX
cos ts S3 00 for a 20 dav supply
Large economy size i s $5 .00
Lose ug ly tat or your money will
be refund ed w it h no quest 1ons
asked MONAOE X Is sold with
th is guar antee by Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drugs , 112 E Main,
Pomeroy &amp; Dutton Drug Store1
Middleport. Mail Orders Filled . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

"THE CREATOR OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"

271 North Second

Middleport, Ohio

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew has
0
rejected suggesttons that
President Nixon step up his
schedule of campaign trips and
debate Sen . George S.
McGovern on television.
The vice president told a
news conference Wednesday
that Nixon's record of accom·
pllshments speaks for itself;
that he does not need debates,
and that his proper place is in
Washington looking alter the
country's problems.
Agnew visited Columbus to
speak before the Ohio Republi·
can Convention, and he told the
news conference a series of
televised debates with McGov·
ern would "serve no useful
purpose and would help Sen.
McGovern improve his
recognition factor."
"Even three or four debates
would bring out only a handful
of questions," Agnew said.
"The performance of the
candidates would depend on
their ability of the moment to
be either sharp or fiat on that
particular ~
"The P!Qdent II~ been on
the tube a 'nwnber of times
nplainlng his policies, and
thtre is just no need for a debate. Furthermore, it just Isn't
good politics, just as It wasn't
when Barry Goldwater asked
President Johnson to debate in
1964. It would serve no useful
purpose and would help Sen.
McGovern improve his
recognition factor. "
Debate Uoneeded
Agnew also rebuffed a sug.
gestion that he debate his
Democrattc opponent, Sargent
Sit river.
11
He's on the trail, and I'm on
the trail," Agnew said .
"There's nothing on my mind
that you fellows haven't been
able to plumb or discover."
Asked why Nixon did not
plan more campaign trips to
keep up with his opponent, the
vice president replied:
"We only have one President
to deal with our nation's problems, and we need him in the
White HoUBe. There 's no dearth
of Information ahout the Presi·

record of accomplishments"
by the admlntstration, urging
his audience to carry the
record to Ohio voters.
Some 35 protesters, waving
McGovern signs and a pair of
Viet Cong flags, chanted from
the edge of the crowd as Agnew
arrived. Another small dem·
onstration outside the thrater
where Agnew later spoke resulted In the arrest of at least
five persons on varying
charges of disorderly conduct
and improper language. One
person was arrested and
charged with carrying a
concealed weapon.
Obsolete Weapons
Earlier In the day Agnew told
a Rotary IWtcheon In St. Louis
that McGovern 's defense proposals would leave the country
with nuclear retaliation as its
only course of action if it were
attacked.
"The McGovern defense proposal must be based on the as·

111.105::11 p.m. o.tty

.

MASON, W, VA.

7 •· m. h&gt;' p, m. Friday &amp; S.turdo,

sumption that we will never
face the challenge of a limited
non-nuclear war," he said.
"It guarantees that we
can't fight such a war because
it restricts the size of our tradl·
tiona! forces and leaves us with
weapons systems that are rapidly becoming obsolete in the
face of continuous moderniza·
lion of conventiona I armed for·

ces by other world powers."
Descrtbing McGovern's programs as "basically isolation·
ist," Agnew said. "I don 't
question hts sincertty, but I
totally disagree with his
concluswn. His proposal is, in
fact, frightening. "
The vice prestdent returned
to Washington followmg hts Co·
lurnbus address.

GOP Refused to
Endorse Repeal

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
group of Ohw House conservative Republicans failed
Wednesday to persuade the
GOP State Convention to endorse a repeal of the stale
income tax.
The party platform pledging
to "place a bid" on state taxes
was adopted by voice vote dur·
ing the' ·l,f~oon; convention
session.
"We pledged ourselves to
p'ace a lid on the level of taxa·
uon,"the plank read. "TheRepublican Party of Ohio is firm.
ly opposed to any increase m
rates or adjustments of brack·
ets in the existing state income
sales or other taxes and
pledges to oppose any attempt
The 24th annual Gallia
to increase such taxes and inCounty Agriculture Society sists on fiscal responsibility by
election will be held at the the present administration."
junior fairgrounds between
5:30 and 8:30 this evening
The junior fairboard's an· dtreclors are Brown, Burleson,
nual chicken barbecue will be Matthews, Morgan and
held between 6 and 8 p.m. in the Saunders.
Members of the nommatmg
, Aclivtties Buildmg.
committee
were : Richard
Individuals do not have to
Laktn
,
chairman;
Donald
attend the dinner in order to
vote . However, only those who Ours, Wayne Niday, Mrs. Opal
have Gallia County Agriculture Payne and Jim Howard.
The food commtttee for the
Society memberships are
annual dinner are : Mrs .
eligible to vote.
Tonight's menu consists of Robert Ball, Paul Butler ,
one-half piece of barbecued Jimmie Evans, Charles Fulks,
and W. R. (Dick) Brown.
chicken, beans , and slaw.
Eleven candidates are
running for election to a three·
year term to the fairboard this
year. Five of the 11 candidates
dent."
An estimated 3,000 persons are incumbent board mem·
oo their way home from work hers.
The candidates are : Waldo
turned our to greet Agnew as
he arrived at a downtown hotel Brown, David Bryan, Kail
across the street from the Burleson, Roger Deel, Eugene
Sam Damron, 70, Pomeroy,
Statehouse. A llke nwnber at Eliiott, Max Elliott, Glen
Rt.
4, dted Wednesday af·
the GOP state convention gave Graham, B. B. Matthews, Earl
him a rousing welcome and Jack Miller, John R. Morgan ternoon at Holzer Medical
beard him tick off a "solid and Jim Saunders. Incumbent Center .
Mr. Damron was preceded in
death by his parents, Ed and
Desiree Damron ; one son, Ed,
and a grandson.
Mr. Damron is survived by
his wife, Mae ; one daughter,
Mrs. Gary Gibson, PomFor School . . . And Watching T.V.
eroy, Rt. 4; one son,
Bob, of East Bank, W. Va.; six
and Gabbing With Her Friends
grandchildren ; three brothers,
Roy, of Cabin Creek and
Size 7 thru 14
Willard and Ernest, ''1/f
Grayson, Ky., and two sisters,
Edith Cooper and Lizzie Kuntz,
Knit and Corduroy Slacks both of Grayson.
Mr. Damron, a retired coal
miner, was a member of the
jeans, Knit Shirts
Carleton Church and United
- Mine Workers 750 local.
Funeral services will be held
(Stripes &amp; Solids)
' Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Sweaters and Slack Sets
Jay Stiles officiating. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery.
Frieods may call at the funeral
by Berkshire and
home after 9 a.m. on Friday.

Barbecue,

Election
Tonight

Sam Damron,
70 Died
Wednesday

After failing to get the plat·
form committee to support the
campaign to repeal the income
tax, the group of House GOP
members tried to insert an
amendment stating support for
"the principle that all future
stale income tax increases be
approved by a majority of the
voters."
The convention turqfl( down
the amendment by a close
voice vote.
Less than half the (l()().plus
convention dele gated utlet ed a vote on the
statement, but the opponents appeared to have a
slight edge in volume.
Rep . Robert A. Manning, RAkron, an opponent of the
amendment, said the plank as
accepted was "one of the
strongest statements on taxa·
lion ever adopted by this con·
vention."
Other planks in the platform
mclude:
- A pledge to study "under
what circumstances capital
punishment should be retained
in light of U.S. Supreme Court
decisions.''
- A promise to "continue
and mcrease efforts to reform
the nightmarish welfare
system to provide more
adequate care for those truly in
need antl to help eliminate the
inefltciency, waste and fraud
existing under the present
administration of welfare."
- A pledge to "work for a
honus and other further assistance to our Vietnam veter·

ans."
- A vow to make 11 Hn unremitting effort to provide all
young Ohioans with opportuni·
ties that will challenge them to
make their home state their
permanent home."

Astounding Victory in
Ohio Expected for GOP
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An
estimated 3,000 Ohio Republi·
cans attending the state par·
ty's one-day convention
Wednesday heard Vice
Prestdent Spiro T. Agnew
predict President Nixon would
"regtster the most astounding
win the state of Ohio has ever
seen.''

Agnew in the featured speech
of the evening, noted Nixon has
been popular tn Ohio during all
his previous campaigns.
"Ohio Republicans work
hard, and they get results," the
Vice president told the
cheering throng. "And this
time we have the good forh!ne
of having an opponent that has
alienated Millions of members
of his own party.
"We have the opportunity to
elect a majority in Congress
that will make the President's
second term even more
productive than hts first,"
Agnew said, forecasting
Republicans would soon
become the majority party m
the United States.
The vice president ltsted
what he called "the solid rec·
ord of accomplishments" by
Nixon and urged Ohio Republi·
cans to take the record to the
voters.
Belter Than Ever
Among the accompltshments
he detatled were winding down
the war in Vietnam, improving
the economy, curbing crime
and drug abuse, implementing
federal-state revenue sharmg,
and cleaning up the environ·
men!.
"In 1976, the nallon starts its
third century," Agnew said,
"and I believe the United
States will be an even better
nation then than it is today."
Agnew's wife Judy, accom·
pained him to the dais, which
was dotted with prominent
Ohto Republicans, including
former Gov. James A. Rhodes,
Lt. Gov. John W. Brown,
Republican State Chairman
John S. Andrews and former
state and national party
chairman Ray. C. 81\i!s..
Also on the speakers' plat-

'Festival
Slated
A spokesman for the
Gallipolts Merchants
Assoctalion announced today
that the week of Oct. 9·14 will
be Downtown Festival Week.
This will cmncide with the Bob
Evans Farm Festival.
Durmg Fesltval Week, anhques will be shown In
members' store windows and
anyone who has items of interest they would like to
display are asked to contact
Keith Thomas, chairman of the
event. Many people from
outside thts area are expected
and along with local residents,
w1ll be able to view items of
interest and reflection of local
hen !.age.
On Saturday, Oct. 14, a quilt
show will be held in the pubhc
park under the direction of
Earl Tope, chairman .
This will be the third annual
quilt show. Anyone is eligible to
enter a handmade quilt for
show and judging. Entry
blanks will be available at the
Chamber of Commerce office
and through the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune or Station

form were
Repubhcan
congresswnal candidates and
congressmen, legisla t ive
leaders and members of the
Ohio Supreme Court.
Prior to Agnew's address, at
least five persons were arrest·
ed outstde the RKO Palace
Theater, where the convention
was held, on charges varying
from disorderly conduct to
interfering with an officer. One
person was arrested and
charged with carrying a
concealed weapon .
A cheermg, stgn-wavmg
throng of an estimated 3,000
persons on !hell' way home
from work greeted the vice
president as he arrived in the
downtown area prior to his
convention appearance .
Agnew met party leaders

1-80 Will be
Renamed 1-76
COLUMBUS (UPI) - In·
terstate-80
ts
to
be
redestgnated Inlerstate-76 on
Oct 2, the Ohio Turnpike
Commission announced.
"This will end the confusion
of distinguishing between
lnterstate-liQ..S and InterstateDO," said Allan Johnson,
executive director of the
commission.

In Ohio, Interstale·BO·S
extends east from lnterstate71, midway between Medina
and Lodi, through Akron to the
Ohio Turnpike at the Niles·
Youngstown interchange. The
route then continues to the
Pennsylvania state line via the
turnptke.

and shook hands with those in
the front row of the public
gathering . Some climbed up on
a statute of William McKinley
in front of the Statehouse for a
better view. Others leaned out
of windows in the Neil House
Motor Hotel across the street.
Fringe Protesters
A pair of htgh school bands
played spririted mustc while
the crowd waved red, white
and blue signs reading : "Spiro
in '76" and "George, Have we
Got a Fall for Your."
Ahout 35 protesters, some
wavmg McGovern stgns and a
pair of VietCong flags, chanted
from the edge of the crowd for
an end to the war in Vietnam.

"Stop the mad dike born·
,ber," yelled one demonstralllr.
Agnew did not appear to bear
the protesters.
As he started his address to
the convention, the vice presi·
dent dispensed some Agnewbrand humor to the delight of
the partisan gathering.
"l understand McGovern's
campaign manager was
dtscovered moonlighting In
another job," Agnew said. "He
was the strategy manager for
Boris Spassky. " Agnew also expressed
pleasure wtth Bobby Fisher's
chess victory over the Russian.
"I'd love to have htm play golf
w1th me .'' he said.

heritage
house
IOUI~"lleA... Shot
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

W.nner of the Free
Bi c ycle drawmg, V1rgmia
Dud ley , Ma son , West
1/trguua

'\ /c'U/1
Ci( 4C~l 7/\

( l/ '

h 7Lh
•h&lt;Juhl I)W n l ~\IO~Ofl 'il

~~

l\ 1'1 I\

'""' l ~ • '" ~H.J i h J•&gt;tl p ro 1, • 1

WJEH.
Festival Week wtll be
chmaxed on Saturday, Oct. 14,
with an auction of hundreds of
dollars m merchandise whtch
may be purchased only with
" Fesltval Money" which
parltctpating merchants will
start putting mlo circulation on
Fnday, Sept.. 29 . Free
"Fesllval Money " will be given
with purchase made on and
after that date. More details
wtll be announced
Fesllval Week is another
promotion reflectmg the in·
teres! in keeping Gallipolis
"The Place To Shop."

' "

I '

Ol'tj \o/ ~

G • ~y lll uc Unow l\

New 100% Solid State Modular
Chassis for improved reliability.
New nHands Off" tuning!

GIRLS WEAR

Big Selection of Furniture to De_~orate Your Home

desrgns for

iv1ng

By Makers You Will Know!

Country Aire

m.ssu

every 20 children are handica.PI?"'i·
This means thal15 pel. of the children
in Gallia. Jackson, Meigs, and the other
cuunttes of Southeastern OhiO are
handicapped children.
!~eluded in the term " Han·
dtcapped" are those youngsters who (I )
are mentally retarded, (2) have serious ·
emotwnal dtslurbances, (3) suffer
bram damage, (4) have speech im- ...
patrments, (5) are deaf or hard.()£. · :.
heanng, and (6 ) suffer from a variety :
of crtpphng diseases.
In southeastern Ohio, there IS an 11· .
county consortium of school districts .
workmg to include the handicapped .
chtld in good educational programs. In :
some cases ' an individual school .:
district can pt ovide needed educational :
servtces on tts own. In other cases,
several dtstricls must cooperate to
provtde such services.
:
If you believe that every boy and ::. :
girl m the area has the right to an ·:· :
education and if you believe that
programs should be established for
handicapped youngsters, let your local
superintendent and board members
know. They are aware of what can be
done and wtll welcome your en·
couragemenl. Schools do belong to you.

BAKER

FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, O.

BUCKLEY TO SPEAK
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen.
James L. Buckley, R-N.Y., Ia
to address a meeting of the

TH E K1DD1ESH0.P_PE :::r.e

--===

ReJX!blican Club here

O;.;N::TH:E:T:I:N:M:ID:DL:E:P:O:RT==:::::.J

-~.:=~ ~ ~e:,::

rit

ner.

Model C7461BPN
Knotty Pine veneers and sol ids

Your
Wrangler Headquarters

PHILCOMATICTM
25'~13gonal COLOR

MENS

Wrangler Jeans
Button Front
Flare~
'

and
Collegiate Cut

Phi leo malic Color Conrrolllghl-" hands off"the picture's r~ghl , automatically
• Now Phil co®Super Black Matrix
plctoratube
•100% SoildSiatechuolowtth 14Command
modulas lor long lila, dapendablllly- ask
about tha new 1-year service warranty an

thlo modal

m

TV

• Tumng so automatic you have to try It to
believe 11! You JUSt select a ohannel - see the

New Shipment

Simulated Pictura

EARLY AMERICAN
Sculptured molded side panels,
gallery rall . Hideaway contrcls.
Oelachable rerlectlon Sh 1eld

Our price-ONLY

$69995

• Channa~Set 7D·poaltton UHF selector

ONE IDEA BETTER FROM PHILCO-FORO

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�'

'
I '

/

10 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21, 19'12

·

.,

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resulis!
2 SIGNS
oy
®
l'"lllltr
0«
· ..
Busmess
. . · Servtc
. es
Of
• fOr ( ·o
WANT. AD~

. .. ...

·-· .. -

D

INFORMATION
, • DEAM.INES
.S P.M . Day Belon~ Publ lcatiolf:

Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
cancellation- corrections
Will be accepted until -9 a .m . far .
Day 01 PU.blication

.,.

QU·L
·m
A

REGULATIONS

• The!' Publisher reserves the
right to edlt or reject any ads .
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be respons ible,

tor more than · one Incorrect
Insertion .

' RlATES

'For Wan., Ad Service
5 cents per Word one .lnser~on
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Jnsertrori's.
18 cents per 'word s~ con ....

secutive Insertions . 1

'

25 Per Cent Discount on paid :
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
I OBITUARY

.

Sl.SO for SO word minimum:
Each addjtlonal word 2c .

BL·IND ADS

Additional 25c · Char'ge · per .
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOIIR" •

•

1971 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR

13095

Beige finish, vinyl top, vinyl interior, fac:tory air conditioned, w-w tires, like new, 327 V-8 engine, power
steeri ng, Turbo Hydramatlc. radio &amp; many other extras.

See this now.
1970 MONTE CARLO

12895

Locall owner with less than 21.000 miles. factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body , blk . knit interior, radio. Turbo
Hydramatlc power steering, &amp; disc brakes, white-wall
tires, like new. A nice luxury car.

1970 CAMARO H.T.

12295

Local owned &amp; less than 24,000 miles. Green finish, green
vrn·yr bucket seats with console. 350 V-8 engine , J speed
trans. , power steering , rear air reflector, rad io, like new
w-w tires. no teenage driver. Sharp, man. sharp.

S113.

Reward.
Connie Jarrell
Bidwell, Ohio
Phone 388-9979

Silicon Price is
Restored at 16c
EXTON, Pa . Foote
Mineral Company has announced effective on Oct. I its
price of 50 pet. ferrosjlicon will
be ·16 cents per pound of contained
silicon,
F .O.B.
producing plan is. This rescinds
a price reduction of I cent
made Jan. I, 1971 .
The added I cent per pound
will only partially compensate
for increases In the costs of
power, labor and materials
·which. have occurred since the
price · reducUon of March 1,
·1972, tile company said. Foote
Mineral operates a plant at
Graham Station In Mason
County, W. Va .

-=========~

~

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

8·17.tfc

Bring Your Unhulled

Window•
Air Conditioners

WALNUTS

Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992·2448

9.3-tfc

Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

$

Pounds
Aller they
are Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1972.

P.O. Boxl6i
992·3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

mediate opening. Phone 992-

Laurel Cliff thi s week . There
wilt be rugs , recliners,
furniture, glassware and
other articles too numerous
to mention. Be thrifty and
Christmas
shop
at
Hayman's. Come early and
avoid the rush . See you at
Hayman 1s sale starting at 1
p.m. Friday.

ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
December with the oldest Toy
Party Plan in the Coun try .
Highest commissions, No
Cash Out lay . Call or write
"San ta's Parties", Avon Ct.

06001. Tel. 1 (203) 673·3455.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
9-1-tlc
HELP WANTED, Toy Coun se lors . Santa Claus jusl told

me, someth ing t o tell you.
He is very busy , this Christmas

'72'
So ioin our Playhouse Party
gang,
Earn money and Green Sta mps ,
too ;
Give Sanla Claus a help ing

TV technician, must be ex perienced, good salary, good
benefits, equal opportunity
employer . Apply in person or
call Sears in Gall ipolis, Ohio

446·2770.
9-16·61c

Thursday

Friday

EAGLES CLUB

Poml!nrt, 0.

Gospel Time
Broadcast

.

buy a · business . Will buy
business and property or
business with lease. Call

to

I

Firestone
Deluxe
SUP·R·BELT

September Special

VIRGINIA's 3eauty Salon on
Success
Road
between
Tuppers Plains and Long
Bottom. Open 6 days ; some

evenings . Phone 667 -3041 ,
Operator, Virg inia Hayman .

9·1 4·30tc
YARD Sa le, household goods,

White Stripe

E-78-14
F78-14
H78-14
G78-15

$2388
$2488
$2788
$2681

Above Price Include Fed.
Taxes.

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
"2-7141

'

clothing, antiques and fur niture, 304 Sf.ring Avenue,

Friday and Sa urday , 10 a.m.
lo S p.m.; phone 992.7556.
9·21 -21p

-------

esl males . Phone 992·328•.
Goeglein Ready ·Mi x Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.
.
6-30·11&lt;

Frtzpatr lck Or · 3 ROOM apartment, un ·
chards, Sla te Route 689 .
furnished, 408 Spring Ave ..
Phone Wilkesville 669.3785.
Pomeroy .

8·30·11&lt;

8-lO·ffC

FOR YOUR hea llh 's sa ke eat

MOBILE home , 2 bedroom,

orga nically grown tomatoe s;
8 . Qu ise nberry has larg e
ones, 10c pound at the old Post
Office bui l ding, Syra cuse ,
Ohio .

Gallipolis 446·4408.
9-20·12tc
GENSENG, ISO lb . Beet hide
$3 .50 each. Maran Fure
House, Mason, W. Va . 773-

9·20·3tc

~::cc-::c-:---:-:-:­

furnished , utilities paid .
references required. Phone

992.7133 or 992·1364.

9.2Q.31 c

--

Cou rt , Min ers v i lle , Ohio ;
phone 992 -3324 .

9·19-61c

Bargain For You!

The Daily Sentinel

PANTS &amp; JEANS
SPECIAL

For Sale

1946 4 WHEEL drive Jee p,
meta I cab, good condition ;

phone 992.6983.

Buy 2 Pairs and
Getl PAIR FREE

Auto Sales
1970 WHITE Plvmouth , 4 door, 4
barr el, automatic , air, power
brak es &amp; stee ring ; good
condition , $1,475; phone 992

J:.

9-19-Stc

9-21 -61c

9-17-0ip

12' ALUM INUM boal with oars

'69 PLYMOUTH , 4 speed , good

- -----a nd

ca rr ie r.

r easo nable ;

5 TRIPLE -lrack a l uminum
phone 992·7009.
storm windows , new; 1
9·21-31p
wooden pi cture window, 5' x
6', three sections ; 1 Welts
$1,000 DOWN buy s 4 room s.
e_lectric fry kettle, restaur an,!
bath , nice 80ft . lot; take late
s1ze, 220 V . 15 lb. ca p.; 1 20
model car or housetrailer in
dinner bell ; 1 new electric
trade ; M &amp; G Food Mkl. , 3 mi.
gara9e door opener , operates
Court of Appeals
South,
Middl eport , Rt . 7.
8'. 10 or 16' ; 1 two-wheel farm
It Is ordered that the time of
9 2i 31p
trailer on rubber ; J . W.
the beg inn ing of the term s of the
Court of Appeals of the several
McMur ra y, Mason , W. Va .,
Counties In saiCIAdams County
16' CAMPING TRAILER ,
773·5323.
on the •th day of APRI L and the
Shasta. like n!:"w . Phone 9859-19·3tp
17th day of OCTOBER .
3849 .
ATHENS Co un ty on the 22nd
9-7-30tc
day of FE B. and the 27th day of POTATOES, excellent oualllv .
SEP TEMBER .
home grown Kennebecs and
JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
BROWN Countv on the 5th
Ir ish Cobblers, nice supply ,
Sewing Machine . Will sell lor
day of APRIL and the 18th day
just dug. Order w ithin next
of OCTOBER .
small balance ol $36.2 1 or
two weeks. Phone 843·2286.
GALL IA County on the 8th
payments may be arranged .
Paul Sayre, Portland, Ohio,
day of FE B. and the 13th day of
Phone 992·5331.

LEGAL NOTICE

-------

ROSS County on the 19th day
of APR IL and the 15th day of
NOVEMBER .
SC IOTO county on the 2151
day of MARCH and the Ji s t day
of OCTOBER ,
V INTON County on the 6th
dayotFEB . andthellfhdayof

SEPTEMBER .

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader wark,
ponds , basement , landscaping. We have 2 size

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Meehanic Street

9·1·1fc
8 TRACK STEREO. freighl
damaged, in beaut iful walnut
console. Will sell for $101 .50 or

pay$1.SOperweek. Phone9n
5331.
9-7-tfc
- - -- , - - - - - 1971 KAWASAK I 100 excellent

condillon . Ready

lo go,

sacr ifice for only $285 .
Coolvil le 667 -6214.
1
9-15-12 p

condili on; phone 992-7624 .

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

9-17-61p
1966 PLYMOUTH , good con·
dition, $300 ; phone 9'12 -2927.
9·19·3tc
-------

AIIEIIIOI

FOR RENT
FURNISHED3.room house and lember 1971 .
Manning D. Webster
balh, adulls only. Phone 992·
Probate Juctge
5592.- of said county
9·21 .tfc
(91 7, 14 , 21 , 31

gradua te

of

M eigs

9-21 -ltc

- - -- - -

1220 Wnhlngton Blvd.
•23.7521
BELPRE, 0 .

CiiOMP...

WINNIE WINKLE

S~Ui&lt;!FI!P!

\PUCAN'r

UNDERNY.il-1 STAN$ Ill: 't"'LKING
ORUFF EXTERIOR
A80UTSTAN
.&lt;JANIEf8&amp;\T6 A I
ADAM;,!
HEAR A$ SOFT
AS MUSH!

!'.ONE O!HER. I ASKED HIM 10
FIND A SPOT IN HIS _ _...,
DEPARTMENT fOR

~AUNT1 8ESSIE I

AND HE
AGI?E/Kl!

106 ACRES - 30 acres of meadow. Balance in pasture,
and other . Good renovated 4 bedroom modern home .
Barn room for 6 horses. All minerals. large garage .

Asking 127.000.00.
NEW LISTING
30 ACRES - Several In cultlvallon . Gas well , owned by
some paneling, and ceiling tile. Fronl porch. Located on
good gravel road. Only $15.000.00.
NEW LISTING
6 ACRES - On 143 . Has 3 spr ing s, R.EA eleclrlc
avai lable. Some good fences and tra iler spots. All or

part.

a

NEAR SHOPPING
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, bath, wood burning fireplace
with bookshelves and built-In stereo . Gas forced air
furnace, full bllsement with garage and 3 rooms . Asking

just $21,000.00.
A BARGAIN
POMEROY - 2 nice bedrooms. bath. living , dining and
kitchen . Fronl porch, basement and uti lily building. Nice
lot In back for garden or yard. Only 15.500.00.
NEW HOME
LARGE ROOMS - 3 nice bedrooms, with large closets.
Spacious kitchen with dining area, 11!, baths, large utility ,
2 car garages. All ele clrlc. For only $25.000.00.
HURRY AND BUY NOW WHILE PROPERTY IS
REASONABLE . TOMORROW IT PROBABLY WILL BE
A LOT HIGHER , AND SOLD, AND YOU' LL BE
WITHOUT. CALL US TODAY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

· . YHierdiJ''I er,p•- ote
WELL IN· PIIA ...,.a : LIBERTY DOESN'T WORK AS
ROGERS
CTICE AS IT DOES IN SPEECHES.-WIU,

REAL
ESTATE
-- FOR SALE

992·2259

Vocational School taguhl by

2 YEARS OLO

BLOCK Laying by contract.
Phone 992.3364.
9.7-12tc

Real Estate For Sale
NEW all eleclric home by
owner, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs.
f ireplace, carpet, near Meig s

High School, $25,000 firm .
Phone 992·3183.
9-15-121c

phone 992·3502,
phone 675·2372.

evenings
8·30·tlc

TWO homes for sale: 1 mite

North ol Easlern High
School ; both have bath and a
half , 4 bedrooms; built· in
kilchens and walt ·lo .wall
carpet ; call 985·3598.
9· 11·121c

Large living with fireplace .
Kitchen has bulll·ln range,
double oven , ref. and
freezer . 3 large bedrooms.

walk In closets. Balh wllh
shower, ceramic tile. double
conso le lavatories.
All

ca rpeled excepl kitchen and
balh .
Ulillly
room .
Basemen!. Large level lol.
MIDDLEPORT. $23,000.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS
bedrooms. d ining. living ,
balh with shower. Cellar.

Real Estate Broker

Large workshop. 1 acre level
ground . On main street.

Ph, 992·3731

Middleport,

$11,500.00.
2 BEDROOM BRICK
MIDDLEPORT - 11h story .
Carpeted and paneled.

'

dining room . level lot .
Concrete front porch. Gas

·we·talk. to JOU

heat. Slorage.bulldlng. JUST
$7,000.00 ..
MIDDLEPORT Rl. 1
1 story, 3 large bedrooms.
New bath. New lorced air
furnace, nice . kitchen .
Paneling, uti lily room . Fruit
Large

~8'i:R;;;:OO~M:;:;::H:;;O~UF.!S'; !E"'.n~i":'ce~l;:a'rg-:::,e
:'

in kilchen . Close to radio
slatlon In Bradbury . Phone
9'12-2602 .
9-14-12tp

I

.

11. Human
19. Footprinl
ZO. Tete-a·
tete
%1. Irish river
22.Pbony
24. Trans·
parent
25. Medieval
lyric
26. Strip of
wood
L-L-----..J...----1 2,, Nigerian
tribesman
%8. Shack
Coitfure
radget
Sty

roads
of
America"

(0 1172XIh&amp;' Ptaturoo S)'lldicato, Inc,)

~tJJJMIDM;~~.~ 14·~·~~J-.~ ,_
l&gt;'o' HI Nlil 1\liNOI ll ,111&lt;1 fl0111 £[

UnseramblethesefwrJumbler,
one lett~r to each aquare, to
form four ordln~r.r words.

18, South
American
bird
21. Joie
de

9. Hero's
beloved
11. Freneh
Revolutionary
15. Rose

LYGUL

Yesterday's Answer

equitable

23. Tirane

(var.)

is
Its
capital

I

VACHO

28. Harpoon
29."-a
Builder
Upper"
33. Approach
35. Maori
root
pit
36.Any

vlvre
22. Most

essence

24. Highland
group
26. Fulton

I
[j
I

tSOYR4V

)

RUNS OtrT 'TO iEL.L
"THE TIME.

woman

KAHETSj

I
.

I

"-

(I

llil·--_ _

· Yetterd•r'•

Cassius
.._. .hath ..."
34 Dinner
-

liket~

_

I I I
.

Now arranrt the clreltcllettera
to form the oufllrloe anower, ao
. auueated by the ~e cartoon.

.

I AN t I I I I I X X I )
(A.wen l0111arro•J

Jumloleo, NOISE GASST MARMOT fOIILE
Auwerr Well

Ol&amp;

the .eny acr.Ju ehe de•r.rJ! - AN OASIS

course

Veer
Dto
Israeli
dance
st. Daughter
of David
tO.W,ter
pitcher

WMP0/1390

recreation

room . GOOO AT JUST
$9.800.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR
PHONE 992·2259

s. ncross·

18, Relllti ves

bath up. 630 Mill Si.
RUTLAND
One story frame . 5 rooms &amp;
bath. two enclosed porches .
all utilit ies.

Rodney Downing

2. Vapor
3. Go down·
hill (3
wds.)
4. Eventful
period
5. A goody
with
lox
6. Kin
to
pilsner
7. Degener·
ate (3
wds.)

measure

bath downstairs . 2 rooms , 'h

2 story frame . 4 large

room.

DICK TRACY

MIDDLEPORT ,
2 Slory, frame . double - 5
rooms &amp; bath upstairs . 6
rooms &amp; balh down. 63 So. ,
3rd.
2 Story lrame . 4 rooms &amp;

1 story frame, alum . siding .

9·11·61c

ACROSS
I. Opponenl
for Tom
Okker
5.Rathbone
10. Agitate
11. Fine stiff
net
U. Bristle
13. Proceed·
ings
14. Word
with plug
or phone
15. Metric
land

HOUSE In Long Boflom , phon~··
985-352'1.
.
6·11 -tfc

Mr s. Paul ine Hysell ; phone

992.6288.

992·3325

L------

High

·~R;-;A;:-;C:;.I;:;N-; E-:-:.=l;;;O:::;roo::::;m~h~o=u...,

Co ., C. C. Bradford, Avelloneer , A. C. Bradford , i·
Manager. Lunch served.

MEAl..! WHA"T _ __.,.,
AI!IOUT MY
F'WEE BONUS?

5~upp. ..

plenty of room for the children, and ponies. Asking
126,000 .00.
NEW LISTING
6 ACRES - On 124 west. No bu ild ings. Has fence. Asking
$3,500.00.

LICENSED beaul ic ian , 1972

- -------

t,'\ILLER
MOBILE HOM.ES

I'VE FINISHSC' MY

MuNcfl ...

limber. All minerals . Good 9 room home, 2 baths, gas
heat. Drilled well . A place of privacy . Large garden and

!

'UN YOUR. DIAL
•

s.

GET

HAS SOME
SPLENDID NEWS.

NEW LISTING
120 of good hunl ing woods . Some saw

125 ACRES -

Pomeroy

MObl'le
Sale
WA SHINGTON County on the
20th day of FEB . and th e 25th AUCTION . Salurday, Sep lember 23, 1972, 10:30 a.m. I 1970 3 BEDROOM lolal -electric,
day of SEPTEMBER .
have moved lnto a trailer and
12 x 60, wilh expando livipg
Said terms beg in at 9: 30
o'c lock A .M.
wi ll sel l the following per ·
room and bedroom , e:xcellenl
condition, pr;ce $7,000; for 5 ROOMS &amp; baih, "i story -block·
sonal property at the home on
September 13th , 1972.
Water Street in Syracuse,
more information cal l West
house; gas forced air furnace,
1/• acre lot. Rt. 7 &amp; Old Chesler
Ohio.
Watch
for
SALE
signs
Jelferson
,
0.
619·7593.
Homer E. Abele
9-17-6tc
from
Slate
Roule
124;
Maylag
Rd . · $5,500; phone 992·3674.
Earl Earl E . Stephenson
Automat i c
Washer. =~----~~8·29·tfc
Gordon B. Gray
Kelvina tor
refrigerator. cA:sf.j pdid for all ma1&lt;e5 ana. ~=--::-::-----.:....:­
Judges .
191 21. 28 1101 5, Jtc
models of mobile homes. OUT OF STATE . IDEAL
davenport, end tables, round
Phone area code 614-423'9Sar.
ACRE RANCH . Lake Con.
coffee table, map le vanity
·4 - 13·11;~ ·
chas, New Mexico' $2'175. No
and chest , vanity with stool. 3
down . No inlerest. S25 per mo.
NOTICE OF
si ngle beds, book she lves, .- - - ' - . , - - - - - - for 119 mos . Vacation
APPOINTMENT
antique oil lamp, rollaway
Paradise. Free Brochure.
case No. 20742
bed, pictures. sleds, 30''
~Air Conditioners
Ranches Lake Conhas : Box
Frigidaire Range. 2 living
Estate of Harrle Marie Smith
2001 DO. Alameda, California
Deceased .
room suites, plafform rocker,
•Awnings
Notice Is hereby given that
console t.able, pole lamp, &amp;leg
94501.
· ·Underpinning · · '
8-2'1.30fp
Michael J . Fry, Ches"ire , Ohio
stand, stands, cabinet. chesl
and Franc is Biron of Mid dleport , Ohio, have been duly
of drawers. antique split
Complete ml)blle hQm.e '
appointed Co -Executors of the
bottom chair, other chairs,
·serv,lce - plus gigantic ·
bath, basement, garage, lwo
'Estate of Harrle Marie Smith ,
dishes and [ug_s, aluminum
1
deceased, tate of Middleport,
boat with Evinrude motor. 'display of mobile liomes . . • ols. Phone 949·4313.
Meigs County, Ohio . .
other articles not ll sted . always available at ...
4· S.tf~
Creditors are required to file
Terms : Cash . Sam Arnold,
fof;'
the ir claims with said fiduciary
Owner. Not resrcons lble for
within four month$.
na\ ural gas, built-In cabinets
oated this 2nct day 01 sep .
accidents. Brad ord Auc t ion

__._

MR.&lt;XlRKSCREW

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CLELAND REALTY
608 E. Main St.

Employment Wanted

6 room
Limestone, -- ExcelsiOi- . PT PLEASANT
house, 1 1J~ baths. recreation
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,
room , new built-in kitchen,
Pomeroy , Phone 992·3891.
must sell , leaving town . Days
4·12-tlc

Homes For

BAscCJM;DEAR-

.

· coAL

Cleaner comple te with at- . . . .
.
tachmenfs, cordwlnder and 1970 KAWASAKI Avenger 350,
new sprocket, chain , baftery
paint spray . Used but in like
and tires . $550 : Robert
new condition . Pay $34.45
Pau lsen, 992-6977.
cash or budget
t erms
9·11·6tp
available. Phone 992-5641.
9-17-6tc

U'L ABNER

owner . All m inerals . Good fences. 7 room home, bath,

OLD Furn iture , oak tables,
53 10.
organs, dishes, clocks, brass " t972" APACHE Ea9ie Fold·uP All kinds, all sizes for men.
9·21 ·3tc
camper ; includes spare l ire, women, young men , boys
beds, or com plete households.
can opy and plastic storm and girls. Hurry to
Write M. D. Miller, Rl 4,
1972 CH EVRO LET lr uck ; call
window. Trailer ha s been
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
992.5592 .
POMEROY
wired for electric, 3 outlets.
6·28·1fc
9-21 -31c
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Excel lent cond ition, $725 ; ca ll
Phone
992·2181
992-5815 aller S p.m .
1966 CHEVROLET Impala , A
WANTED - Old upright
9 19 Sic
dr . sedan , power steering,
pianos, grand pianos, old
1970 TRAVELMATE Camper ,
power
brakes,
air ·
pump organ . Any condition.
model Safari, S1,400 ; phone
cond i li oned ; phone 992 -2980 or
Paying $10 each . Wr ite giving 1950 1 "' TON Ford pickup tru ck ;
99?.5492.
rifle and boar hog : phone 247992.6 157 .
directions. Witten Piano Co ..

2161.

NEW JERSEY,
BtMO

DIDN'T YOU SAy
. PEOPI..IO ARlO MOR!i.I&gt;ENSE
IN NEW JERSEY TJJ,AN IN
AN'I' OT~ER STATE1

Enclosed balh. wllh large uti lily room . Beautllul kitchen .

9-17-12t p T RA ILER , Brown 's Trail er

PHONE 992-2156

RIJTGERS, ~ERe, IS ·
ONE OF ONL'I' n.IREE
VNIVERSITIES IN

WilH A TENINCH BUTCHER
KNIFE'?

-HOW CAN VOU

· 51\"i SUCI+ A lHii% 7

606 E. Mil in, Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate For Sale

.

APPLES ,

Hartford, W. Va.

On this day in history :
In 1792, Its royal family
deposed, France became a
republic.
In 1893, the first successful
7:30 a.m.
American - made gasoline - Sunday 7
operated motor car appeared on
the streets of Springfield, Mass.
With Evangelist
It was designed and built by
John Elswick
SEPTEMBER .
Greal Bend Road, Rt. 338, 1
Charles and Frank Duryea.
HIGH LAND County on the
mile below Ravenswood ferry
Jrd day of APR IL and the 16th
In 1938 , an estimated 600
landing .
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run day of OCTOBER .
9-21 ·3tc
persons were killed by a
HOCKING County on the 17th
Sportsman Club, Sunday, 12
of
APR
IL
and
the
1
3th
day
day
hurricane which battered the
noon . Also rifle matches of November .
NEW 1972 Zig -za g sewing
open sites only .
coast of New England.
JA CK SON County on the ilth
h'
·
· · 1 1 1
9-20·31c
day
of
MAR:CH
and
the
nd
day
mac me tn ong 1na ac ory
2
In 195S, Rocky Marciano
of OCTOBER .
carton . Zig-zag to make
knocked out Archie Moore in YAROSALE, Thursday, Friday
LAWRENCE county on the
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monog ram s, and make fancy
and Saturday on Larkin St. , 7th day of MARCH and the 3rd
tte nintll round at Yankee
dav of OCTOBER .
desi 9nswithlusllhetwlstofa
Rulland
.
· Stadium in New York, successMEIGS County on the 7th day
si ngle-dial. Lett In lay.away
9·20·31c
of FEB . and the 12th day of
and never been used. Will sell
fully defending his heavyweight
SEPTEMBER
.
PICKAWAY county on th e
for •only $47 cash or credit
RUMMAGE sale in the Coals
ti tie for the sixth time .
f APR
terms available. Phone 992Building across from Mid· 16th d
5641.
dleport Lunch Room, Wed. day ota~~VEM~~:~d the l4th
PIKE
Counly
on
lhe
201h
day
9-17-6tc
nesday ,
Thursday
and
ol MARCH and lhe 30th day of
Friday, 9 to 4 p.m.
ELE CTROLUX Vacuum
9·20-21c OCTOBER .

WMPO 1390

8-29-301c

For Rent

9·19-3tp

Rummage Sale

cellars; phone 949-3221 .

speed changer, 4 speaker
sou nd system . Balance $73.45 .
C ll 2 BEDROOM lraHer , Bob's
Use our budget terms . a
M obi le Court , Sy racus e,
092-7085.
Ohio; phone 992 -2951.
9-17-61c

Clifton and

Wanteo To Buy

Open BTII 5
Monday thru Saturday

prole~. Fast and easy. Free

La mbert , POODLE puppies, Silver Toy, j AND 4 ROOM lurnfshed !irlti
Park view Kennels , Phone 992·
unfur,.ished
apartments .
5443.
~hone 992-54~.
•
9·10·tfC
. 8 IS tfc
4·12·1fc.

IN

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

WILL CUT or trim trees, REAOY · MIX
CONCRETE
reasonable ; also clean out
dellvvred
right
to )lOUr
basements ,
attics
and ·

9·2f.lf c

CARRIERS
WANTED

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

PHONE 992-2550

v

CAMPUS CLATIER

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
servlc.e, all makes. 992·2284.
dozers, 2 size loaders ~ Work
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
done by hour · or contract.
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
lieen
Aulhorlzed Singer Sale• and
Free E•tlmates. We also
cancelled?
Lost'
your
~ervlce . We Sharpen Scissors .
haullill dirt, lop soil. Dump
operator's license? Call 9923·2'1·tlc
trucks and low-boy for hire .
2966. .
U-;-'b"'"·E_L
_L_ W_H
_E_E_L
_ a_l ig-n-m enl
6·15·1f&lt; See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3525
locatedal Crossroads, Rt. 124. ·sEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
aller
7 p.m. or phone 992·
Complete front end service,
REASONABLE
rale•.
Ph
.
446·
5232.
tune up and brake service.
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell. , L_ _ _ _ _...,..._ _ _....J
NEW Steel traps , $7.75 doz .. five
Wheels
balanced
elec12 gauge shotgun s $27 each
Owner &amp; Operator .
tronically.
All
work
while thev last . four 22 r il les,
.
.
5.12-lfc
guaranteed .
RP.A&lt;n"~..,, ~
DOZER and back hoe work.
S24 each. Maran Fur House,
rales . Phone 742 ·3232 or
ponds and septic tanks . ditMason, W. Va . Phone 773C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
9'12·3213.
1·1/· ltC
ching
service; top so1l, fill
Complete
Service
5296.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex no.3tc
Phone
949·3821
SEE US FOR: Awnings, sfiJ;';;i
cavaling. Phone 992.5367.
Racine", Ohio
doors and windows, carp'orts.
Dick Karr, Jr .
MODERN Walnut slereo, AM·
'Cri
ll
Bradford
9·1-tlc
marquees, aluminum 'iding
5·
l·tfl
FM radio, 4 spee d c hanger, 4 and
railing.
"A.
Jacob,
sales
speaker
sound
system .
representative . For fret . ~
!i""E_P_
TIC-ta~n~ks~crle-a"'n""ed-.-M
--i(ier .BACKHOE AND DOZER" wor~
Balan ce $68 .27 . Use our
Sepllc tankslnslalled . Georoe
budgel lerms. Call 992-7085 . . estimate•. phone Charleo
Sanitation, ~rewa rf , Ohio. Pn .
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.,
lllifll Pullins. Phone 99H4!~
9-17 -6fc
662-3035.
.
4-25-tli
Johnson and Son , Inc.
- - - -- - - - - 2·12·tlc
MAPLE ste rea.radio com · _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _3:_::·Hf&lt;
binalion , AM-FM radio , 4

hand ,

5414 or Barbara
446·341L

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American ·c ars

•ROOFING
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
.•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate

CALL Margaret Forlune, 949

Pomeroy. 0.

5296.

HAYMAN'S

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph: 992·2174
Pomeroy

on old At. 7 by.pass al

GAL LIPOLIS 'resident wanls lo

Excelsior
SaH Works, Inc.

Let's All Go to

Radiato_
r Specialist

needed. lm·

Wanted
Per Hundred

NOTICE

--

Credit Union deoires part
time Bookkeeper (approx. 20
hrs. per week). Send resume
to Box 81, Gallipolis, Ohio.

~==========--===========-::=========~
•-====
From the largest
Bulldozer Radlalor lo
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs

AUCTION

9·20-llc

This Chr istmas '72.

The Almanac
By United Press International
-----Today is Thursday, Sept. 21,
&amp;
tile 265th day of 1972 witll!Ol to
follow .
The moon is approaching Its
full phase.
Box 188, Sard is, Ohi o, 43946.
The morning stars are Venus,
9·15·61C
Mars and Saturn.
- - - -- The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on tills date are
TIMES FOR HOLDING
COURTS OF APPEALS,
under tile sign of Virgo .
.----------A. D. 1973
English author and historian
STATE OF OHIO ,
FOURTH Judicial Distr ict
H. G. Wells was born Sept. 21,

1866.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, giving
full resume with re:erences,
previous employment, and
training .

9·20-31c

.

9· 11·61 C

729·A. C·O The Daily Sentinel.

Notice

wigs, more new products
c?mlng soon. For free
demonstration , phone 992 -

ears .and black spot over tall.

9·19.6tc

-HAVE immediate opening for
part time offi Ce girl ; typing
essentiaL shorthand helpfui
but not required: Write Box

BOOKKEEPER

GIGANTIC Yard Sale, dishes. WILL give away kittens . Call
992-5247 or see at 1165 Vine
knicknack, m is c.; Broad
Street, Middleport .
Street beh;nd bank al Albany,
9·1Htc
~ Saturday, 23rd and Sunday,

black

7, Tupper~ Pla ins , Ohio . Open
to 8 p .m .; closed Mondays.
Ph one: 667-3858.

5101.

24th ; phone 698·3743. 9-21-31p
-:-:-:c:-::-:-:::--:-:c:--..,.,KOSCOT KOSMETICS and

Willie wilh

KUHL 'S BAR.GAIN CEN ·
LOWEST
ices inlight,"
the area
TER.
" al pr
caulion
Rl ..

lim ~ ;
no
ex per ience
necessary ; night sh ill ; apply
in person , Blue Tartan .

-·---·-- - -·

us _

YOU' LL LIKE

n;lure. clean appliances at

WAI TRESSES, lull and pari·

.

us.

qood se lection of used fur ·

9 21 -3tp

· - --

OPEH EYES. 1:00 P.M.
. fPMEIIO\', OHIO

Notice

LOST I

3429.

TRY

good pay . Phone 446-0677.

• 1'•

Lost

NEED a maid ~or par t-l ime
housecleaning ; phone 992 ·

IMMEDIATE work, lull time,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

\8:30a.m, tQ S:OO..p.m, Daily,.
8: 30 a.m . to 1"01 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

For Sale

Help Wanted

&lt;{QU AAVENO

IDEA HOW IMIIIIITANT
I~ FOR A 61Rl
6HPRESENT5

DOWN
l.Mrlean
antelope

MILL_ER.·&amp; SONS
At the Cross Roads on Rt. 124 ·
SPECIAL - ~ONTINUE~-

LET~ TAIL
HIM AND !IEE-

WHI!R! He t40u:s UP,.DtJ!liNiS THe

. ,~C_._COLA

~6~~\otls. 73~· I
Plus Tax
. &amp;' 'O.poslt

viiVT/*461

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work
.

AXYDLlAAXR

.used tor the three L'a, X tor .the two O'o, ete. SIIIW)e !etten.
•P'I•trophes, the lenf(b and formation of the wordl 1re Ill
hlrill. Eacb day the code letters are .cWfenut.

CJIYP'l'OQVOTBS

J

SYJN

HKTU

HKRA.PMRPZY,

W1111Nch $2.01 PurciiiM
ef Allllend Gtsolfnt,

-

~

II L 0 N 'G F B L L 0 W
One ,letter limply stands for another. ID thia IIIDple A 11

SE1tRE

CAKOQKTD

CEKTDil

AYRYKGY

DAYJC

REYKCYAOitYQU

Kll

Q1tNY

l

RJDTKOKYK
IVC

RlTTPC

PTYII.-QPAU

IF NO ONE GIVE$ f!ER
PRESENT~, HEti: LIFE HAS
NO MEANING!

�'

'
I '

/

10 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 21, 19'12

·

.,

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Resulis!
2 SIGNS
oy
®
l'"lllltr
0«
· ..
Busmess
. . · Servtc
. es
Of
• fOr ( ·o
WANT. AD~

. .. ...

·-· .. -

D

INFORMATION
, • DEAM.INES
.S P.M . Day Belon~ Publ lcatiolf:

Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
cancellation- corrections
Will be accepted until -9 a .m . far .
Day 01 PU.blication

.,.

QU·L
·m
A

REGULATIONS

• The!' Publisher reserves the
right to edlt or reject any ads .
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be respons ible,

tor more than · one Incorrect
Insertion .

' RlATES

'For Wan., Ad Service
5 cents per Word one .lnser~on
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Jnsertrori's.
18 cents per 'word s~ con ....

secutive Insertions . 1

'

25 Per Cent Discount on paid :
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
I OBITUARY

.

Sl.SO for SO word minimum:
Each addjtlonal word 2c .

BL·IND ADS

Additional 25c · Char'ge · per .
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOIIR" •

•

1971 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR

13095

Beige finish, vinyl top, vinyl interior, fac:tory air conditioned, w-w tires, like new, 327 V-8 engine, power
steeri ng, Turbo Hydramatlc. radio &amp; many other extras.

See this now.
1970 MONTE CARLO

12895

Locall owner with less than 21.000 miles. factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body , blk . knit interior, radio. Turbo
Hydramatlc power steering, &amp; disc brakes, white-wall
tires, like new. A nice luxury car.

1970 CAMARO H.T.

12295

Local owned &amp; less than 24,000 miles. Green finish, green
vrn·yr bucket seats with console. 350 V-8 engine , J speed
trans. , power steering , rear air reflector, rad io, like new
w-w tires. no teenage driver. Sharp, man. sharp.

S113.

Reward.
Connie Jarrell
Bidwell, Ohio
Phone 388-9979

Silicon Price is
Restored at 16c
EXTON, Pa . Foote
Mineral Company has announced effective on Oct. I its
price of 50 pet. ferrosjlicon will
be ·16 cents per pound of contained
silicon,
F .O.B.
producing plan is. This rescinds
a price reduction of I cent
made Jan. I, 1971 .
The added I cent per pound
will only partially compensate
for increases In the costs of
power, labor and materials
·which. have occurred since the
price · reducUon of March 1,
·1972, tile company said. Foote
Mineral operates a plant at
Graham Station In Mason
County, W. Va .

-=========~

~

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

8·17.tfc

Bring Your Unhulled

Window•
Air Conditioners

WALNUTS

Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992·2448

9.3-tfc

Your Walnuts will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We Will Pay You.

$

Pounds
Aller they
are Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1972.

P.O. Boxl6i
992·3891
Pomeroy, Ohio

mediate opening. Phone 992-

Laurel Cliff thi s week . There
wilt be rugs , recliners,
furniture, glassware and
other articles too numerous
to mention. Be thrifty and
Christmas
shop
at
Hayman's. Come early and
avoid the rush . See you at
Hayman 1s sale starting at 1
p.m. Friday.

ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
Toys &amp; Gifts now thru
December with the oldest Toy
Party Plan in the Coun try .
Highest commissions, No
Cash Out lay . Call or write
"San ta's Parties", Avon Ct.

06001. Tel. 1 (203) 673·3455.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
9-1-tlc
HELP WANTED, Toy Coun se lors . Santa Claus jusl told

me, someth ing t o tell you.
He is very busy , this Christmas

'72'
So ioin our Playhouse Party
gang,
Earn money and Green Sta mps ,
too ;
Give Sanla Claus a help ing

TV technician, must be ex perienced, good salary, good
benefits, equal opportunity
employer . Apply in person or
call Sears in Gall ipolis, Ohio

446·2770.
9-16·61c

Thursday

Friday

EAGLES CLUB

Poml!nrt, 0.

Gospel Time
Broadcast

.

buy a · business . Will buy
business and property or
business with lease. Call

to

I

Firestone
Deluxe
SUP·R·BELT

September Special

VIRGINIA's 3eauty Salon on
Success
Road
between
Tuppers Plains and Long
Bottom. Open 6 days ; some

evenings . Phone 667 -3041 ,
Operator, Virg inia Hayman .

9·1 4·30tc
YARD Sa le, household goods,

White Stripe

E-78-14
F78-14
H78-14
G78-15

$2388
$2488
$2788
$2681

Above Price Include Fed.
Taxes.

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
"2-7141

'

clothing, antiques and fur niture, 304 Sf.ring Avenue,

Friday and Sa urday , 10 a.m.
lo S p.m.; phone 992.7556.
9·21 -21p

-------

esl males . Phone 992·328•.
Goeglein Ready ·Mi x Co .,
Middleport, Ohio.
.
6-30·11&lt;

Frtzpatr lck Or · 3 ROOM apartment, un ·
chards, Sla te Route 689 .
furnished, 408 Spring Ave ..
Phone Wilkesville 669.3785.
Pomeroy .

8·30·11&lt;

8-lO·ffC

FOR YOUR hea llh 's sa ke eat

MOBILE home , 2 bedroom,

orga nically grown tomatoe s;
8 . Qu ise nberry has larg e
ones, 10c pound at the old Post
Office bui l ding, Syra cuse ,
Ohio .

Gallipolis 446·4408.
9-20·12tc
GENSENG, ISO lb . Beet hide
$3 .50 each. Maran Fure
House, Mason, W. Va . 773-

9·20·3tc

~::cc-::c-:---:-:-:­

furnished , utilities paid .
references required. Phone

992.7133 or 992·1364.

9.2Q.31 c

--

Cou rt , Min ers v i lle , Ohio ;
phone 992 -3324 .

9·19-61c

Bargain For You!

The Daily Sentinel

PANTS &amp; JEANS
SPECIAL

For Sale

1946 4 WHEEL drive Jee p,
meta I cab, good condition ;

phone 992.6983.

Buy 2 Pairs and
Getl PAIR FREE

Auto Sales
1970 WHITE Plvmouth , 4 door, 4
barr el, automatic , air, power
brak es &amp; stee ring ; good
condition , $1,475; phone 992

J:.

9-19-Stc

9-21 -61c

9-17-0ip

12' ALUM INUM boal with oars

'69 PLYMOUTH , 4 speed , good

- -----a nd

ca rr ie r.

r easo nable ;

5 TRIPLE -lrack a l uminum
phone 992·7009.
storm windows , new; 1
9·21-31p
wooden pi cture window, 5' x
6', three sections ; 1 Welts
$1,000 DOWN buy s 4 room s.
e_lectric fry kettle, restaur an,!
bath , nice 80ft . lot; take late
s1ze, 220 V . 15 lb. ca p.; 1 20
model car or housetrailer in
dinner bell ; 1 new electric
trade ; M &amp; G Food Mkl. , 3 mi.
gara9e door opener , operates
Court of Appeals
South,
Middl eport , Rt . 7.
8'. 10 or 16' ; 1 two-wheel farm
It Is ordered that the time of
9 2i 31p
trailer on rubber ; J . W.
the beg inn ing of the term s of the
Court of Appeals of the several
McMur ra y, Mason , W. Va .,
Counties In saiCIAdams County
16' CAMPING TRAILER ,
773·5323.
on the •th day of APRI L and the
Shasta. like n!:"w . Phone 9859-19·3tp
17th day of OCTOBER .
3849 .
ATHENS Co un ty on the 22nd
9-7-30tc
day of FE B. and the 27th day of POTATOES, excellent oualllv .
SEP TEMBER .
home grown Kennebecs and
JUST TAKEN IN , Singer
BROWN Countv on the 5th
Ir ish Cobblers, nice supply ,
Sewing Machine . Will sell lor
day of APRIL and the 18th day
just dug. Order w ithin next
of OCTOBER .
small balance ol $36.2 1 or
two weeks. Phone 843·2286.
GALL IA County on the 8th
payments may be arranged .
Paul Sayre, Portland, Ohio,
day of FE B. and the 13th day of
Phone 992·5331.

LEGAL NOTICE

-------

ROSS County on the 19th day
of APR IL and the 15th day of
NOVEMBER .
SC IOTO county on the 2151
day of MARCH and the Ji s t day
of OCTOBER ,
V INTON County on the 6th
dayotFEB . andthellfhdayof

SEPTEMBER .

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader wark,
ponds , basement , landscaping. We have 2 size

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Meehanic Street

9·1·1fc
8 TRACK STEREO. freighl
damaged, in beaut iful walnut
console. Will sell for $101 .50 or

pay$1.SOperweek. Phone9n
5331.
9-7-tfc
- - -- , - - - - - 1971 KAWASAK I 100 excellent

condillon . Ready

lo go,

sacr ifice for only $285 .
Coolvil le 667 -6214.
1
9-15-12 p

condili on; phone 992-7624 .

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

9-17-61p
1966 PLYMOUTH , good con·
dition, $300 ; phone 9'12 -2927.
9·19·3tc
-------

AIIEIIIOI

FOR RENT
FURNISHED3.room house and lember 1971 .
Manning D. Webster
balh, adulls only. Phone 992·
Probate Juctge
5592.- of said county
9·21 .tfc
(91 7, 14 , 21 , 31

gradua te

of

M eigs

9-21 -ltc

- - -- - -

1220 Wnhlngton Blvd.
•23.7521
BELPRE, 0 .

CiiOMP...

WINNIE WINKLE

S~Ui&lt;!FI!P!

\PUCAN'r

UNDERNY.il-1 STAN$ Ill: 't"'LKING
ORUFF EXTERIOR
A80UTSTAN
.&lt;JANIEf8&amp;\T6 A I
ADAM;,!
HEAR A$ SOFT
AS MUSH!

!'.ONE O!HER. I ASKED HIM 10
FIND A SPOT IN HIS _ _...,
DEPARTMENT fOR

~AUNT1 8ESSIE I

AND HE
AGI?E/Kl!

106 ACRES - 30 acres of meadow. Balance in pasture,
and other . Good renovated 4 bedroom modern home .
Barn room for 6 horses. All minerals. large garage .

Asking 127.000.00.
NEW LISTING
30 ACRES - Several In cultlvallon . Gas well , owned by
some paneling, and ceiling tile. Fronl porch. Located on
good gravel road. Only $15.000.00.
NEW LISTING
6 ACRES - On 143 . Has 3 spr ing s, R.EA eleclrlc
avai lable. Some good fences and tra iler spots. All or

part.

a

NEAR SHOPPING
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms, bath, wood burning fireplace
with bookshelves and built-In stereo . Gas forced air
furnace, full bllsement with garage and 3 rooms . Asking

just $21,000.00.
A BARGAIN
POMEROY - 2 nice bedrooms. bath. living , dining and
kitchen . Fronl porch, basement and uti lily building. Nice
lot In back for garden or yard. Only 15.500.00.
NEW HOME
LARGE ROOMS - 3 nice bedrooms, with large closets.
Spacious kitchen with dining area, 11!, baths, large utility ,
2 car garages. All ele clrlc. For only $25.000.00.
HURRY AND BUY NOW WHILE PROPERTY IS
REASONABLE . TOMORROW IT PROBABLY WILL BE
A LOT HIGHER , AND SOLD, AND YOU' LL BE
WITHOUT. CALL US TODAY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

· . YHierdiJ''I er,p•- ote
WELL IN· PIIA ...,.a : LIBERTY DOESN'T WORK AS
ROGERS
CTICE AS IT DOES IN SPEECHES.-WIU,

REAL
ESTATE
-- FOR SALE

992·2259

Vocational School taguhl by

2 YEARS OLO

BLOCK Laying by contract.
Phone 992.3364.
9.7-12tc

Real Estate For Sale
NEW all eleclric home by
owner, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs.
f ireplace, carpet, near Meig s

High School, $25,000 firm .
Phone 992·3183.
9-15-121c

phone 992·3502,
phone 675·2372.

evenings
8·30·tlc

TWO homes for sale: 1 mite

North ol Easlern High
School ; both have bath and a
half , 4 bedrooms; built· in
kilchens and walt ·lo .wall
carpet ; call 985·3598.
9· 11·121c

Large living with fireplace .
Kitchen has bulll·ln range,
double oven , ref. and
freezer . 3 large bedrooms.

walk In closets. Balh wllh
shower, ceramic tile. double
conso le lavatories.
All

ca rpeled excepl kitchen and
balh .
Ulillly
room .
Basemen!. Large level lol.
MIDDLEPORT. $23,000.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS
bedrooms. d ining. living ,
balh with shower. Cellar.

Real Estate Broker

Large workshop. 1 acre level
ground . On main street.

Ph, 992·3731

Middleport,

$11,500.00.
2 BEDROOM BRICK
MIDDLEPORT - 11h story .
Carpeted and paneled.

'

dining room . level lot .
Concrete front porch. Gas

·we·talk. to JOU

heat. Slorage.bulldlng. JUST
$7,000.00 ..
MIDDLEPORT Rl. 1
1 story, 3 large bedrooms.
New bath. New lorced air
furnace, nice . kitchen .
Paneling, uti lily room . Fruit
Large

~8'i:R;;;:OO~M:;:;::H:;;O~UF.!S'; !E"'.n~i":'ce~l;:a'rg-:::,e
:'

in kilchen . Close to radio
slatlon In Bradbury . Phone
9'12-2602 .
9-14-12tp

I

.

11. Human
19. Footprinl
ZO. Tete-a·
tete
%1. Irish river
22.Pbony
24. Trans·
parent
25. Medieval
lyric
26. Strip of
wood
L-L-----..J...----1 2,, Nigerian
tribesman
%8. Shack
Coitfure
radget
Sty

roads
of
America"

(0 1172XIh&amp;' Ptaturoo S)'lldicato, Inc,)

~tJJJMIDM;~~.~ 14·~·~~J-.~ ,_
l&gt;'o' HI Nlil 1\liNOI ll ,111&lt;1 fl0111 £[

UnseramblethesefwrJumbler,
one lett~r to each aquare, to
form four ordln~r.r words.

18, South
American
bird
21. Joie
de

9. Hero's
beloved
11. Freneh
Revolutionary
15. Rose

LYGUL

Yesterday's Answer

equitable

23. Tirane

(var.)

is
Its
capital

I

VACHO

28. Harpoon
29."-a
Builder
Upper"
33. Approach
35. Maori
root
pit
36.Any

vlvre
22. Most

essence

24. Highland
group
26. Fulton

I
[j
I

tSOYR4V

)

RUNS OtrT 'TO iEL.L
"THE TIME.

woman

KAHETSj

I
.

I

"-

(I

llil·--_ _

· Yetterd•r'•

Cassius
.._. .hath ..."
34 Dinner
-

liket~

_

I I I
.

Now arranrt the clreltcllettera
to form the oufllrloe anower, ao
. auueated by the ~e cartoon.

.

I AN t I I I I I X X I )
(A.wen l0111arro•J

Jumloleo, NOISE GASST MARMOT fOIILE
Auwerr Well

Ol&amp;

the .eny acr.Ju ehe de•r.rJ! - AN OASIS

course

Veer
Dto
Israeli
dance
st. Daughter
of David
tO.W,ter
pitcher

WMP0/1390

recreation

room . GOOO AT JUST
$9.800.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR
PHONE 992·2259

s. ncross·

18, Relllti ves

bath up. 630 Mill Si.
RUTLAND
One story frame . 5 rooms &amp;
bath. two enclosed porches .
all utilit ies.

Rodney Downing

2. Vapor
3. Go down·
hill (3
wds.)
4. Eventful
period
5. A goody
with
lox
6. Kin
to
pilsner
7. Degener·
ate (3
wds.)

measure

bath downstairs . 2 rooms , 'h

2 story frame . 4 large

room.

DICK TRACY

MIDDLEPORT ,
2 Slory, frame . double - 5
rooms &amp; bath upstairs . 6
rooms &amp; balh down. 63 So. ,
3rd.
2 Story lrame . 4 rooms &amp;

1 story frame, alum . siding .

9·11·61c

ACROSS
I. Opponenl
for Tom
Okker
5.Rathbone
10. Agitate
11. Fine stiff
net
U. Bristle
13. Proceed·
ings
14. Word
with plug
or phone
15. Metric
land

HOUSE In Long Boflom , phon~··
985-352'1.
.
6·11 -tfc

Mr s. Paul ine Hysell ; phone

992.6288.

992·3325

L------

High

·~R;-;A;:-;C:;.I;:;N-; E-:-:.=l;;;O:::;roo::::;m~h~o=u...,

Co ., C. C. Bradford, Avelloneer , A. C. Bradford , i·
Manager. Lunch served.

MEAl..! WHA"T _ __.,.,
AI!IOUT MY
F'WEE BONUS?

5~upp. ..

plenty of room for the children, and ponies. Asking
126,000 .00.
NEW LISTING
6 ACRES - On 124 west. No bu ild ings. Has fence. Asking
$3,500.00.

LICENSED beaul ic ian , 1972

- -------

t,'\ILLER
MOBILE HOM.ES

I'VE FINISHSC' MY

MuNcfl ...

limber. All minerals . Good 9 room home, 2 baths, gas
heat. Drilled well . A place of privacy . Large garden and

!

'UN YOUR. DIAL
•

s.

GET

HAS SOME
SPLENDID NEWS.

NEW LISTING
120 of good hunl ing woods . Some saw

125 ACRES -

Pomeroy

MObl'le
Sale
WA SHINGTON County on the
20th day of FEB . and th e 25th AUCTION . Salurday, Sep lember 23, 1972, 10:30 a.m. I 1970 3 BEDROOM lolal -electric,
day of SEPTEMBER .
have moved lnto a trailer and
12 x 60, wilh expando livipg
Said terms beg in at 9: 30
o'c lock A .M.
wi ll sel l the following per ·
room and bedroom , e:xcellenl
condition, pr;ce $7,000; for 5 ROOMS &amp; baih, "i story -block·
sonal property at the home on
September 13th , 1972.
Water Street in Syracuse,
more information cal l West
house; gas forced air furnace,
1/• acre lot. Rt. 7 &amp; Old Chesler
Ohio.
Watch
for
SALE
signs
Jelferson
,
0.
619·7593.
Homer E. Abele
9-17-6tc
from
Slate
Roule
124;
Maylag
Rd . · $5,500; phone 992·3674.
Earl Earl E . Stephenson
Automat i c
Washer. =~----~~8·29·tfc
Gordon B. Gray
Kelvina tor
refrigerator. cA:sf.j pdid for all ma1&lt;e5 ana. ~=--::-::-----.:....:­
Judges .
191 21. 28 1101 5, Jtc
models of mobile homes. OUT OF STATE . IDEAL
davenport, end tables, round
Phone area code 614-423'9Sar.
ACRE RANCH . Lake Con.
coffee table, map le vanity
·4 - 13·11;~ ·
chas, New Mexico' $2'175. No
and chest , vanity with stool. 3
down . No inlerest. S25 per mo.
NOTICE OF
si ngle beds, book she lves, .- - - ' - . , - - - - - - for 119 mos . Vacation
APPOINTMENT
antique oil lamp, rollaway
Paradise. Free Brochure.
case No. 20742
bed, pictures. sleds, 30''
~Air Conditioners
Ranches Lake Conhas : Box
Frigidaire Range. 2 living
Estate of Harrle Marie Smith
2001 DO. Alameda, California
Deceased .
room suites, plafform rocker,
•Awnings
Notice Is hereby given that
console t.able, pole lamp, &amp;leg
94501.
· ·Underpinning · · '
8-2'1.30fp
Michael J . Fry, Ches"ire , Ohio
stand, stands, cabinet. chesl
and Franc is Biron of Mid dleport , Ohio, have been duly
of drawers. antique split
Complete ml)blle hQm.e '
appointed Co -Executors of the
bottom chair, other chairs,
·serv,lce - plus gigantic ·
bath, basement, garage, lwo
'Estate of Harrle Marie Smith ,
dishes and [ug_s, aluminum
1
deceased, tate of Middleport,
boat with Evinrude motor. 'display of mobile liomes . . • ols. Phone 949·4313.
Meigs County, Ohio . .
other articles not ll sted . always available at ...
4· S.tf~
Creditors are required to file
Terms : Cash . Sam Arnold,
fof;'
the ir claims with said fiduciary
Owner. Not resrcons lble for
within four month$.
na\ ural gas, built-In cabinets
oated this 2nct day 01 sep .
accidents. Brad ord Auc t ion

__._

MR.&lt;XlRKSCREW

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CLELAND REALTY
608 E. Main St.

Employment Wanted

6 room
Limestone, -- ExcelsiOi- . PT PLEASANT
house, 1 1J~ baths. recreation
Salt Works, E. Main St. ,
room , new built-in kitchen,
Pomeroy , Phone 992·3891.
must sell , leaving town . Days
4·12-tlc

Homes For

BAscCJM;DEAR-

.

· coAL

Cleaner comple te with at- . . . .
.
tachmenfs, cordwlnder and 1970 KAWASAKI Avenger 350,
new sprocket, chain , baftery
paint spray . Used but in like
and tires . $550 : Robert
new condition . Pay $34.45
Pau lsen, 992-6977.
cash or budget
t erms
9·11·6tp
available. Phone 992-5641.
9-17-6tc

U'L ABNER

owner . All m inerals . Good fences. 7 room home, bath,

OLD Furn iture , oak tables,
53 10.
organs, dishes, clocks, brass " t972" APACHE Ea9ie Fold·uP All kinds, all sizes for men.
9·21 ·3tc
camper ; includes spare l ire, women, young men , boys
beds, or com plete households.
can opy and plastic storm and girls. Hurry to
Write M. D. Miller, Rl 4,
1972 CH EVRO LET lr uck ; call
window. Trailer ha s been
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
992.5592 .
POMEROY
wired for electric, 3 outlets.
6·28·1fc
9-21 -31c
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Excel lent cond ition, $725 ; ca ll
Phone
992·2181
992-5815 aller S p.m .
1966 CHEVROLET Impala , A
WANTED - Old upright
9 19 Sic
dr . sedan , power steering,
pianos, grand pianos, old
1970 TRAVELMATE Camper ,
power
brakes,
air ·
pump organ . Any condition.
model Safari, S1,400 ; phone
cond i li oned ; phone 992 -2980 or
Paying $10 each . Wr ite giving 1950 1 "' TON Ford pickup tru ck ;
99?.5492.
rifle and boar hog : phone 247992.6 157 .
directions. Witten Piano Co ..

2161.

NEW JERSEY,
BtMO

DIDN'T YOU SAy
. PEOPI..IO ARlO MOR!i.I&gt;ENSE
IN NEW JERSEY TJJ,AN IN
AN'I' OT~ER STATE1

Enclosed balh. wllh large uti lily room . Beautllul kitchen .

9-17-12t p T RA ILER , Brown 's Trail er

PHONE 992-2156

RIJTGERS, ~ERe, IS ·
ONE OF ONL'I' n.IREE
VNIVERSITIES IN

WilH A TENINCH BUTCHER
KNIFE'?

-HOW CAN VOU

· 51\"i SUCI+ A lHii% 7

606 E. Mil in, Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate For Sale

.

APPLES ,

Hartford, W. Va.

On this day in history :
In 1792, Its royal family
deposed, France became a
republic.
In 1893, the first successful
7:30 a.m.
American - made gasoline - Sunday 7
operated motor car appeared on
the streets of Springfield, Mass.
With Evangelist
It was designed and built by
John Elswick
SEPTEMBER .
Greal Bend Road, Rt. 338, 1
Charles and Frank Duryea.
HIGH LAND County on the
mile below Ravenswood ferry
Jrd day of APR IL and the 16th
In 1938 , an estimated 600
landing .
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run day of OCTOBER .
9-21 ·3tc
persons were killed by a
HOCKING County on the 17th
Sportsman Club, Sunday, 12
of
APR
IL
and
the
1
3th
day
day
hurricane which battered the
noon . Also rifle matches of November .
NEW 1972 Zig -za g sewing
open sites only .
coast of New England.
JA CK SON County on the ilth
h'
·
· · 1 1 1
9-20·31c
day
of
MAR:CH
and
the
nd
day
mac me tn ong 1na ac ory
2
In 195S, Rocky Marciano
of OCTOBER .
carton . Zig-zag to make
knocked out Archie Moore in YAROSALE, Thursday, Friday
LAWRENCE county on the
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monog ram s, and make fancy
and Saturday on Larkin St. , 7th day of MARCH and the 3rd
tte nintll round at Yankee
dav of OCTOBER .
desi 9nswithlusllhetwlstofa
Rulland
.
· Stadium in New York, successMEIGS County on the 7th day
si ngle-dial. Lett In lay.away
9·20·31c
of FEB . and the 12th day of
and never been used. Will sell
fully defending his heavyweight
SEPTEMBER
.
PICKAWAY county on th e
for •only $47 cash or credit
RUMMAGE sale in the Coals
ti tie for the sixth time .
f APR
terms available. Phone 992Building across from Mid· 16th d
5641.
dleport Lunch Room, Wed. day ota~~VEM~~:~d the l4th
PIKE
Counly
on
lhe
201h
day
9-17-6tc
nesday ,
Thursday
and
ol MARCH and lhe 30th day of
Friday, 9 to 4 p.m.
ELE CTROLUX Vacuum
9·20-21c OCTOBER .

WMPO 1390

8-29-301c

For Rent

9·19-3tp

Rummage Sale

cellars; phone 949-3221 .

speed changer, 4 speaker
sou nd system . Balance $73.45 .
C ll 2 BEDROOM lraHer , Bob's
Use our budget terms . a
M obi le Court , Sy racus e,
092-7085.
Ohio; phone 992 -2951.
9-17-61c

Clifton and

Wanteo To Buy

Open BTII 5
Monday thru Saturday

prole~. Fast and easy. Free

La mbert , POODLE puppies, Silver Toy, j AND 4 ROOM lurnfshed !irlti
Park view Kennels , Phone 992·
unfur,.ished
apartments .
5443.
~hone 992-54~.
•
9·10·tfC
. 8 IS tfc
4·12·1fc.

IN

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

WILL CUT or trim trees, REAOY · MIX
CONCRETE
reasonable ; also clean out
dellvvred
right
to )lOUr
basements ,
attics
and ·

9·2f.lf c

CARRIERS
WANTED

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

PHONE 992-2550

v

CAMPUS CLATIER

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
servlc.e, all makes. 992·2284.
dozers, 2 size loaders ~ Work
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
done by hour · or contract.
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
lieen
Aulhorlzed Singer Sale• and
Free E•tlmates. We also
cancelled?
Lost'
your
~ervlce . We Sharpen Scissors .
haullill dirt, lop soil. Dump
operator's license? Call 9923·2'1·tlc
trucks and low-boy for hire .
2966. .
U-;-'b"'"·E_L
_L_ W_H
_E_E_L
_ a_l ig-n-m enl
6·15·1f&lt; See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3525
locatedal Crossroads, Rt. 124. ·sEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
aller
7 p.m. or phone 992·
Complete front end service,
REASONABLE
rale•.
Ph
.
446·
5232.
tune up and brake service.
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell. , L_ _ _ _ _...,..._ _ _....J
NEW Steel traps , $7.75 doz .. five
Wheels
balanced
elec12 gauge shotgun s $27 each
Owner &amp; Operator .
tronically.
All
work
while thev last . four 22 r il les,
.
.
5.12-lfc
guaranteed .
RP.A&lt;n"~..,, ~
DOZER and back hoe work.
S24 each. Maran Fur House,
rales . Phone 742 ·3232 or
ponds and septic tanks . ditMason, W. Va . Phone 773C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
9'12·3213.
1·1/· ltC
ching
service; top so1l, fill
Complete
Service
5296.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex no.3tc
Phone
949·3821
SEE US FOR: Awnings, sfiJ;';;i
cavaling. Phone 992.5367.
Racine", Ohio
doors and windows, carp'orts.
Dick Karr, Jr .
MODERN Walnut slereo, AM·
'Cri
ll
Bradford
9·1-tlc
marquees, aluminum 'iding
5·
l·tfl
FM radio, 4 spee d c hanger, 4 and
railing.
"A.
Jacob,
sales
speaker
sound
system .
representative . For fret . ~
!i""E_P_
TIC-ta~n~ks~crle-a"'n""ed-.-M
--i(ier .BACKHOE AND DOZER" wor~
Balan ce $68 .27 . Use our
Sepllc tankslnslalled . Georoe
budgel lerms. Call 992-7085 . . estimate•. phone Charleo
Sanitation, ~rewa rf , Ohio. Pn .
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.,
lllifll Pullins. Phone 99H4!~
9-17 -6fc
662-3035.
.
4-25-tli
Johnson and Son , Inc.
- - - -- - - - - 2·12·tlc
MAPLE ste rea.radio com · _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _3:_::·Hf&lt;
binalion , AM-FM radio , 4

hand ,

5414 or Barbara
446·341L

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American ·c ars

•ROOFING
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
.•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate

CALL Margaret Forlune, 949

Pomeroy. 0.

5296.

HAYMAN'S

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph: 992·2174
Pomeroy

on old At. 7 by.pass al

GAL LIPOLIS 'resident wanls lo

Excelsior
SaH Works, Inc.

Let's All Go to

Radiato_
r Specialist

needed. lm·

Wanted
Per Hundred

NOTICE

--

Credit Union deoires part
time Bookkeeper (approx. 20
hrs. per week). Send resume
to Box 81, Gallipolis, Ohio.

~==========--===========-::=========~
•-====
From the largest
Bulldozer Radlalor lo
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs

AUCTION

9·20-llc

This Chr istmas '72.

The Almanac
By United Press International
-----Today is Thursday, Sept. 21,
&amp;
tile 265th day of 1972 witll!Ol to
follow .
The moon is approaching Its
full phase.
Box 188, Sard is, Ohi o, 43946.
The morning stars are Venus,
9·15·61C
Mars and Saturn.
- - - -- The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on tills date are
TIMES FOR HOLDING
COURTS OF APPEALS,
under tile sign of Virgo .
.----------A. D. 1973
English author and historian
STATE OF OHIO ,
FOURTH Judicial Distr ict
H. G. Wells was born Sept. 21,

1866.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, giving
full resume with re:erences,
previous employment, and
training .

9·20-31c

.

9· 11·61 C

729·A. C·O The Daily Sentinel.

Notice

wigs, more new products
c?mlng soon. For free
demonstration , phone 992 -

ears .and black spot over tall.

9·19.6tc

-HAVE immediate opening for
part time offi Ce girl ; typing
essentiaL shorthand helpfui
but not required: Write Box

BOOKKEEPER

GIGANTIC Yard Sale, dishes. WILL give away kittens . Call
992-5247 or see at 1165 Vine
knicknack, m is c.; Broad
Street, Middleport .
Street beh;nd bank al Albany,
9·1Htc
~ Saturday, 23rd and Sunday,

black

7, Tupper~ Pla ins , Ohio . Open
to 8 p .m .; closed Mondays.
Ph one: 667-3858.

5101.

24th ; phone 698·3743. 9-21-31p
-:-:-:c:-::-:-:::--:-:c:--..,.,KOSCOT KOSMETICS and

Willie wilh

KUHL 'S BAR.GAIN CEN ·
LOWEST
ices inlight,"
the area
TER.
" al pr
caulion
Rl ..

lim ~ ;
no
ex per ience
necessary ; night sh ill ; apply
in person , Blue Tartan .

-·---·-- - -·

us _

YOU' LL LIKE

n;lure. clean appliances at

WAI TRESSES, lull and pari·

.

us.

qood se lection of used fur ·

9 21 -3tp

· - --

OPEH EYES. 1:00 P.M.
. fPMEIIO\', OHIO

Notice

LOST I

3429.

TRY

good pay . Phone 446-0677.

• 1'•

Lost

NEED a maid ~or par t-l ime
housecleaning ; phone 992 ·

IMMEDIATE work, lull time,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

\8:30a.m, tQ S:OO..p.m, Daily,.
8: 30 a.m . to 1"01 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

For Sale

Help Wanted

&lt;{QU AAVENO

IDEA HOW IMIIIIITANT
I~ FOR A 61Rl
6HPRESENT5

DOWN
l.Mrlean
antelope

MILL_ER.·&amp; SONS
At the Cross Roads on Rt. 124 ·
SPECIAL - ~ONTINUE~-

LET~ TAIL
HIM AND !IEE-

WHI!R! He t40u:s UP,.DtJ!liNiS THe

. ,~C_._COLA

~6~~\otls. 73~· I
Plus Tax
. &amp;' 'O.poslt

viiVT/*461

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work
.

AXYDLlAAXR

.used tor the three L'a, X tor .the two O'o, ete. SIIIW)e !etten.
•P'I•trophes, the lenf(b and formation of the wordl 1re Ill
hlrill. Eacb day the code letters are .cWfenut.

CJIYP'l'OQVOTBS

J

SYJN

HKTU

HKRA.PMRPZY,

W1111Nch $2.01 PurciiiM
ef Allllend Gtsolfnt,

-

~

II L 0 N 'G F B L L 0 W
One ,letter limply stands for another. ID thia IIIDple A 11

SE1tRE

CAKOQKTD

CEKTDil

AYRYKGY

DAYJC

REYKCYAOitYQU

Kll

Q1tNY

l

RJDTKOKYK
IVC

RlTTPC

PTYII.-QPAU

IF NO ONE GIVE$ f!ER
PRESENT~, HEti: LIFE HAS
NO MEANING!

�. . .

•

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmervy, 0., Sept. 21, 1972

Teenager Killed Accidentally.
PT. PLEASANT - A 32·
caliber pistol fired in jest in a
friend 's bedroom ~esuilsd in
the deah of a teenager here
Wednesday night.
Steven Show, 15'year-oid
of the Rev. Kenneth Show, 2905
Meadowbrook Dti ve and Mrs.
Jo Hill Show, Woodriver, Ill.,
died in the emergency room of
Pleasant Valley Hospital as a
team of surgeons tried to save
him.
·
Dr. John Grubb, Mason
County Coroner, ruled death
was by accidental shooting.
Sheriff Troy Huffman and
deputy Bob Huffman, investigating officers, said the
ruling was fully supportsd by
statements taken from two
teenage companions of young
Show.
The tragedy occurred at 7:30
p.m. in the bedroom of Mark
Calandros on Chandler Drive.
Ca landros,

and

Francis

(Buster) Sayre, were in the
home alone where they had
been playing pool. While stili in
a playful mood they were in
Mark's bedroom where Buster
Sayre got a gun out, turned
around and pulled .the trigger,
not knowing it was loaded,
police said.
The shot hit young Show in
the lower left side of his chest,
police disclosed, exiting near
his heart.
Steven was a sophomore at
Point Pleasant High School and
the three had been close
friends several years, friends
reported.
He was born Nov. 25, 1956.
The Rev. Show is chaplain at
Lakin State Hospital,
In additior. to his parents,
survivors in.clude two brothers,
·Thomas A. Show, stationed
with the U. S. Army at Fort
Jackson, S. C., and Edward·
Allen Show, Point Pleasant;
maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Hill, Aiton,
Iii., and paternal grandparents, who are Mr. and Mrs.

Democrats
(Continued from page I)
pro-labor while President
Richard Nixon was ratsd 83
pet. anti-labor, the committee
was informed.
Winge tt requested all persons atteriding to be present at
a meeting of the Democrat
Executive Committee at 8 this
eve nin g ·at the Episcopal
Parish House in Pomeroy. The
public is welcome, Wingett
said.

Stsphen ·c. Show of La wren- Rev. C.·s. Thompson of Point
Ctlville, Ill.
Pleasant of!iciatirig.
Arrangements are under the
A memorial service will be
held at 3 p.m. Saturday in direction of the Wilcoxe n
Beckley at t!Je Keyser and Funeral Home here, but no
Bryant Crematory with the ca lling hours have been

scheduled. .
The family asks that flowers
be omitted and persons
deSiring to do so make
donations to the Youth Center
of Point Pleasant.

.'ELBERFELoS~··lfl;, ·ftoM·E·Ro¥ ·
"

Shop

•

.'

'

'

" 1'

,

' , 1, .

Friday.~nd Saturdaj ·g::3o,arri,to fpni:· .·.·

Ambulance Is Obtained

,'

· BICY:CLES

For Emergency Service
Deputy sheriff Kenny
Deckard, one of the four
members of the Gallia County
!iberiff's Department named to
a conunittee to organize 24hour emergency ambulance
service for Gallipolis and
Galli&amp; County, went to
Nelsonville this morning to

pick-up a 1967 Cadillac ambulance.
Deckard, Charles Camden,
Bill Mitchell and Jay
Cremeens of the Gallia County·
Sheriff's Department purchased the vehicle from the
First National Bank of
Nelsonville. They will donate It

to the colinty commission.
Contributions from Interested
individuals will be used toward
the purchase of the ambulanc;e.
Purpose of the conunittee is
to seek the support of residents
in establishing emergency
ambulance service temporarily until the seven county
Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation Ambulance project
is in operation.
The plan calls for the ambulance to be stationed at the
Rubber, Cork, Unoleum and sheriff's department "on
Plastic Workers of America, alert" to answer all emEi'gency
AFL-C!O met wi th Com- calls24hoursa day, seven days
missioner Clair Replogle, a a week. The ambulance will be
federal mediator, at the Blue equipped with all the necessary
Fountain Motel in a session equipment such as oxygen and
that began at 3:30p.m. lasting first aid supplies.
Anyone wishing to help
until 9 p.m. Mr. Replogle atsupport
the rogram in any way
tended in the absence of
Commissioner Howard Steele is requested to call any of the
who reportedly is hospitalized. four committee members.
A company spokesman Cash or check contributio)IB
disclosed " We had a may be sent to the Gallia
meaningful discussion, but did County Emergency Amnot resolve any issues". Union bulance Committee, Bill
officials could not be reached Mitchell, chairman.
lor comment.

PT. PLEASANT - The long
strike at the Goodyear Tire and
Rubber Company plant at
Apple Grove continues despits
continued bargaining sessions
between company and union
officials
with
federal
mediators.
A meeting Wednesday af·
ternoon for some five and a
hslf hours failed to bring the
strike to a halt, but Is to be
followed with additional talks
scheduled for I p.m. September 28 at the Blue Fountain
Mots! in Gallipolis, 0 .
Company officials as well as
those from Local 644, The

Ford f.aiJing Back Cars
DETROIT (UP!) - Ford
Motor Co. today announced it is
recalling 900,1100 i972 model
cars and light trucks in an
attempt' to locate some 200
vehicles with suspected power
steering malfunctions.
Ford said it also has instructed dealers to inspect the
steering mechanisms of all
early-production 1973 intermediate, standard-sized and

luxury cars and light trucks
and 1972 vehicles in stock
before deliveri ng them to
customers.
A total of five malfunctions
·have been discovered on late
1972 and early 1973 model ca rs,
none involving accidents or
injuries, Ford said. The cause
was traced to an omitted
steering gea r manufacturing
operation.
Involved in the recall are
1972 model Torinos, Montegos,
Fords, Mercurys, Thunderbirds, Uncoln Continentals,
Mark !Vs, Rancheros and light
trucks buil t since March 1.

\.,

'
$top In
5elect The
Bicycle You
Like and
Really Save
These Two
Days.

Sale! Friday and Saturday

Sizes 29 to 44 waist - in your correct length.
Solid colors · stripes · fancy patterns . Save
during this sale.
and 11.9S Knit
and 1J.Y5 Knit
and 15.95 Knit
Knit Slacks ·

Slacks
Slacks
Slacks
- - • ·

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

9.00
10.00
12.00
13.00

Sale!

I

---------t

1

To~~~tos~~';t

Fridaythru Tuesday
September 22 •26
Wall Disney's
NAPOLEON &amp; SAMANTHA

PICNIC SET
The Chester Fire Dept. will
hold a picnic for workers and
helpers at the county fair booth
at 5 p.m. Sunday at the
firehouse. Those attending are

tO take a covered dish and llleir
own table service. Meat,
potatoes, baked beans and
drinks will be provided.

(Technicolor)

Michael Douglas
Will Geer
Also
Wall Oisney's
MYSTERIES OF THE
DEEP
Oisney Cartoon : Bearly
Asleep
Admission :
Adulls$1.50
Children 75c
1.-,;S;,;h;,;;•,;;w,;Stiia,;,rtii.sitTioPii.Miii._. .

MRS. GILKEY ILL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to Headley St.
at 11 :53 p.m. Wednesday lor
h
Mrs. Blanche Gilkey w o was
having difficulty breathing.
She was laken to the Holzer
Medical Center by a Rawlings·
Coats Ambulance.

Patience!
Please bear with us
while we're

Remodeling and
Installing
New Fixtures
Ebersbach Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

MAIN ST.

POMEROY

News .. . in Briefs
(Continued from pa~e I)
There was also a death threat against a rabbi In South Africa.
The explosive devices, so Small they can be sent in an ordinary letter, have been received in a number of cities of Europe,
Tel Aviv, Montreal and New York. The first one in London killed
an Israeli emhsssy official; the others have been detected before
they could cause harm,
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE Agriculture Conunittee
hss rejected an administration. opposed bill which would have
compensalsd farmers who sold llleir wheat crop before the
government annowtced a $650 million grain deal with the Soviet
Union.
A similar bill is expected to come before the House
Agriculture Committee next week. It stands a better chance of
approval there.
NEW YORK - TWO FIREBOMBS WERE discovered today
planted on aU. S. Army vehicle assigned to a colonel in the New
York National Guard, police reported.
The devices were discovered by a neighbor at 6:20a.m. tn the
rear of a 1972 Ford assigJ:Wd to Col. Harry Moldaw. Pollee said
the car was parked in front of Moldaw's home In the Fiallands
section of Brooklyn.

'"

PART OF THE CROWD of over I~ attending tile picnic
of the Meigs County Cowtcil on Aging who enjoyed them-

On~ $598

MR. AND MRS. JAMES DOSS, Rutland, entertained with these hand-carved dancing dolls.
The dolls were ~arved by Mr. Doss who nrovided harmonica accompaniment as Mrn. Doss
operated the dolls.
::;~:;:;:::::;s;:w.8n:e:sm

percent pol yester - SO percent
colton . Permanent press.
Pants size 29 to 44 .

ShirtS size 141Jz to 17112 neck,
32, 33, 34 inch length sleeves.

at y

)

7.29 TROUSERS

Sale 6.00
6.19 SHIRTS

Sale 5.00
Hanes Mens Underwear
T Shirts
Sizes small (34-36) , medium (38-40). large (4244). extra large (46· 48). Reinforced neck will not
sag . Haneset controlled length shrinkage. Full
cut and very comfortable.

3 for '3.39
KNIT BRIEFS
Sizes 30 to 50 . Tailored
to body fit for com fori .
gentle elasllc leg
opening . double panel
seat for comfort and

long wear.

3 for '3.39
Boys Sites

HANES T SHIRTS

3 for '2.59
· HANES KNIT BRIEFS

3 for '2.59

3.49
4.49 •
5.49
6.49
7.49
9.79

Don't forget to take advantage of the Country
Western Special Album advertised on WSAZ-TV.

'2.98
SAVE$$ S
During Elberfelds In Pomeroy

September Fumnure Sale
- Great values in Kroehier Living Room Suites,
Sofas, Love Seats, Sleep or Lounges, Oc·
casional Chairs and Platform Rockers.
- Berkllne Chairs
- Bessell, Broyhill, Riverside, Webb, Lane,
Thomasville and Caldwell Bedroom Suites .
- Howell and Duchess Dinettes.
- Lane Cedar Chests
- Simmons and Serta Mattresses
- Magic Chef Gas Ranges
- Grandfather Clocks
- Desks · Curio Cabinets, Gun Cabinets.
COme to the 3rd Floor Furniture Department 111d
take advantage of these Grand B1rgalns. Use
our Sensible Credit Plan and have your new
furniture delivered at once.

See Our Selection of 1973 Models!
- CASSETTE PLAYERS ANO RECORDERS
- CASSETTE PLAYERS, RECORDERS ANO AM AND FM
RADIOS
-8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER ANO RECORDERS
-8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER
-8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER AC-DC AND CAR PLAYER
AOAPTER
- AM RADIOS
-AM-FM RADIOS
- AM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIOS
AM-FM OIGITA.L CLOCK RAOIOS
- AM TRANSISTOR RADIOS
- AM-FM TRANSISTOR RADIOS
- PORTABLE COLOR TV's - ·
- PORTABLE BLACK AND WHITE TV's
- CONSOLE BLACK AND WHITE TV's
- CONSOLE COLOR TV's
Well known makes RCA and Pailuonlc.

Special
Fanny Farmer

CANDY ·BARS

Get, ., ....

·Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Sak&amp;lips From

ELBERFELDS IN POM

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1972

MRS. HAZEL THOMSON at the plano and Mrs. Bernice
Winn, standing, both of Bradbury, entertained over I~
guests with group singing and piano numbers.

1M
,
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
· ews•. zn Brzefi .
"'h·

0

......

"~

By United Preu International

111E FIRST DAY OF AtmJMN WAS EXPECTED to bring
the nation's first hard freeze of the season, with temperatures
dipping into the mid 20s in the higher levels of sou th-eentral New
Mexico.
.
Low temperatures, clear skies and dry conditions, resulting
from a high pressure system stretching from the Rockies to
Appalachians and from Canada to Texas, prevailed over much of
the rest of the nation.
UNITED NATIONS - SECRETARY GENERAL Kurt
Waldheim's hopes for U.N. action this year against international
terrorism appeared dead today after the powerful African bloc
opposed his request for General Assembly debate on the issue.
Shortly after the 41-nation African group in a closed~oor session
late Thursday decided to turn down Waldheim's appeal for full
debate on measures to combat terrorism, the General Assembly's main political conunittee voted to suspend discussion of the
item wttil today .
The vote came on a motion by Ambassador Radha Krishma
Ramphul of Mauritius, the committee chsirman, who also
reconunended the terrorism issue be deferred until the 1973 U. N.
session .
WASHINGTON - ATrORNEY GENERAL RICHARD G.
IQeindlenst said Thursday night the FBI investigation of alleged
aiminal violations in fund raising for President Nixon's reelection campaii!Jl will not be completed wtlil after the Nov. 7
election.
"I'm sure that no one would want the FBI to do such a quick
investigation, just in order to salilfy somebody's desire to have it
beard before the election because if they did that then they would
he accused of ... a whitewash," Kleindienst said.
SAN , FRANCISC()....UNJ&gt;R()nTABLE
branch
lines
should be abandoned by tile railroad industry, John W. Ingram,
federal railroad administrator said Thursday,
Ingram told tile As3oclallon of American Railroads' Cost
Analysta organization that the branch line bas been obsolete for
40 years, due mostly to motorized carriers. "These branches are
Indeed monuments to management inertia and regulatory oblltaclflli" said Ingram. "But they are being paid lor in 1972
dollars~~YUCCA FLATS, NEV.- THE A1UMIC ENERGY ComrnL!aion Thursday exploded the moll powerlul nuclear device
tested tills year, jiggling some bulldlns in Las Vegas. A nuclear
explosive that was "weapons related" was exploded at the
bottom of a 1,800-foot shaft In a remote desert area of the AEC's
Nevada Test Site, an annowtcemenl s,ld. It was the fifth underground test this year, and there were no mishaps, the AEC
said.
The AEC said the device had a yield between 211 and 200
kllotona, a maximum destructive force equal to 200,000 tons of
TN't. AU other tests tills yell' utilized explosives of less than. ~
kilotons llrength.
WASHING1UN -THE FOOD AND DRUG AdminlBiratlon
(FDA) today plarmed to aMG~~Dce a "major regulat«y action"
1ga1n11 heuchloropbene," a germ kWer widely ueed in IOBJII,
llhampooe, toothpaste and other Clllllletics and cleaneQ.
111e Impact of tile action accordlna to one FDA source, will
be "to wtpe bexachlorop~ oft the over-tite-a~Witer market"
w1iJe allowing docton to preiCI'ibe the antibacterial agent. He
clecllatd to dllcuN fllrtll« detaill. Scientists have found the
hexadlkropb- cau~e~ brain damage aqd paralyill In
labontory 1'1111 and monkeys.
. (Continued on pace 12)

President Nixon, searching
for support In states rich with
electoral votes, became an
active campaigner in Texas
today while road-weary
George S. McGovern moved
Into Roohester, N.Y., after a
chaGtic battle with tile New
York City rush-llour.
Nixon, who lost Texas by
fewer than 40,000 votes in 1968,
hopes to win the Lone Star
state's 26 electoral votes this
fall with the assistance of a
group of disenchanted Democrats, led by former Treasury
Secretary and Texas Gov. John
B. Connally.
Nixon will be the guest of
honor tonight at a dinner
sponsored by the Democrats
for Nixon organization at the
Connally
ranch
near
Floresville.
Before
joining
the
Democrats, he will make visits
to two border towns, Laredo
and Rio Grande City. During
his Laredo appearance, he will
inspect a customs station on
the Mexican border to study
methods used to detect
smugglers.
Nixon Will Travel
Nixon, in his first active
campaigning, will travel to
New York and California next
week.
McGovern made stops In
Philadelphia, Camden, N.J.,
New York City and Detroit
Thursday in a bid to corral the
lunchbox and straphanger
vote.
His attempt at sidewalk
campaigning, after meeting
with soccess in an Italian
section of Brooklyn, came to a

Dog Case
Continued
One
Week
Meigs Cowt!y court Judge
Frank W. Porter continued for
one week today a hearing on a
charge against Edward Wells
that Wells shot a dog belonging
to Danny Griffith. The incident
occurred the evening of Sept.
14 on Lincoln Heights where
both parties reside.
Griffith contends that Wells
shot his border Collie, which
later died, on the sidewalk as
his two daughters were
walking will! the dog. The dog
also was pistol whipped. It died
later in care of an· Athens
veterinarian who may testify
that llle:whlpping proved faial.
Wells, who was without
counael, &amp;~ted he thought the
Collie had KIQicked his ,Beegle
dog. How~r. it wu admitted
that WeUa 4id nothing when the
Collie waa .mppoeed to have
attacked bla dCJI, but shot It
later on·the lidewalt.
WeUa' dog wu lied in the
(Go.i~

·~

.a,.. , .

Economy Rosy
During August
dentsrose by89 centsinAugust
to $121.94. The administration
has pointed to recent increases
in real earnings as proof that it
is winning its fight against
inflation .
The price report showed a
slackening in the recent sharp
JX'ice rise for food . The food
index , which includes both
grocery purchases and restaurant meals, rose 0.3 per cent.
· This compared to July's 1.0 per
cent rise.
Nonfood commodities, which
showed no price rise in July,
edged up 0.1 per cent last
month. Service prices rose 0.2
per cent in August compared to
0.3 per cent in the previous
month.
For the 12-month period
through August-marking the
first full year of the admlnis!ration's economic
stabilization program- the
consumer price index rose at
an amual rate of 2.9 per cent,
ssonally adjusted.
This was just within Pres!dent Nixon's goal of cutting
the annual increase in consumer JX'ices to between 2 and
3 per cent by the end of this
year .
The Labor Department said
the price of food bought In
(Continued on Page 12)

Secret Service elbowed their
way out.
Addresses Presidents
McGovern later addressed
the presidents of 25 major
Jewish organizations before
flying to Detroit to appear at an
Elect McGovern C..nunlttee •
function.

10,995 Restored
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A
Hamilton Couaty Common
Pleas judge Thursday ordered 10,995 of 12,135
disputed signatures be
restored to petitions here
calUng for the question of a
state income tax to be placed
on the state's November
ballot.
The court action, ac·
cording to state Rep. Chester
T. Craze, R·Cinclnnati,
"assures the issue will be on
the ballot."
Cruze said !be order by
Judge William Morrissey
reduced the original
deficiency from 34,000 to
19,000 signatures. It was the
llrst court decision or several
pending around the state
concerning the Income tax
repeal issue.
~:::::::::::::::::=::::::::-;~:~~~:::;.;:::;::

Diddle Appeals

Job Tennination
An appeal contesting termination of employment has
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Courl by Floyd
Diddle of Syracuse.
Diddle was notified in a letter
from the clerk of tile Southern
Local School Board that his
employment as custodian at
Syracuse Elementary School
was tenninated effective Aug.
26. No explanation was given.
Diddle claims in his appeal
he has a continuing contract.

TEN CENTS

exas

OOlR

Service bodyguards were
Flushing , Queens. Rival forced to rush McGovern back
crowds of teen-age Nixon to a waiting car.
supporters and McGovern
He never appeared to be in
hackers engaged in a slogan- danger, although the crowds
shouting match . Subway pirined him and Sen. Edmund
commuters and hornblowing S. Muskie, D-Maine, against a
drivers added to the street- row of telephone booths and a
corner chaos and Secret Woolworth store until the

WASHINGTON (UP!) Consumer prices rose a modest
0.2 per cent in August while
workers' take home pay made
the largest Increase for the
month of August in at least
eight years, the Labor Department reported today.
Last month's rise in the
Consumer Price Index, the
government's key measure of
the cost of living, compared to
July's 0.4 per cent increase.
The 0.2 per cent tiae in August
was the same when measured
by actual prices or when adjusted for tile usual seasonal
price changes.
The department said the
August rise was chiefly due to
higher prices for meats,
restaurant meals, gasoline and
household services. Prices for
automobiles and clothes were
downforthemonth.
In a separate report, the
department said average
weekly earnings of fac!or.y
workers rose D.7 per cent
between July and August. This
was the largest such increase
for any August since the
govenunenl began compiling
such statistics In 1964.
In paycheck terms, this
meant that the after tax weekly
earnings of the average married worker with three depen-

PHONE 992-2156

•

By United Press lnternalional chaotic halt at a subway stop in

Music Department 2nd Floor
Rock, Popular, Sacred and easy listening .

Buy 6...

POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

•

RECORD ALBUMS

Boys Sizes

NO. 112

VOL XXV

resz ent
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

en tine

Devoted To T1u! lntere.ll Of 'I'M Meigs-Mwon Area

Sizes 29 to .44 waisl. Select your corred lenQth .
Rugged 10 oz . sanforized 'denlm · full cut· triple
stitched.
Friday· Saturday

•
Record Albums
Record Albums
Record Albums
Record Albums
9.79 Record Albums
• · · •
12.79 Record Albums · · · · - -

bountiful potluck supper.
favorite songs, Accompanying
Mr. and Mrs. James Doss, was her sister, Mrs. Hazel
Rutland, set toes to tapping Thomson, who has rewith their carved dancing dolls tired here. Mrs. Thommade by Mr. Doss who son played several repr ovided harmonica ac- quest numbers on the piano
companiment.
to the delight of the crowd.
Mrs. Brnice Winn led the
Mrs. Bertha Parker of the
guests through a number of
I Continued on page 12)

Now You Know

•

WORK DUNGAREES

Stock up ·now on what you
need.

Charcoal Grey
Forest Green
Dark Olive
.Army Tan

BY BOB HOEFLICH
highway construction at the
While the emphasis may be new Rt, 33-7 interchange, were
on youth today, let's not sell on hand Thursday evening for
those senior citizens short! a picnic given by the Meigs
They're lively ones!
County Council on Aging.
When a nine-banded ar- Over 120 of these folk, despite
And furthermore, they had a
madillo gives birth, ali the an almost hide 'n seek game of ball ! Several "did their thing"
offspring in the litter are of the reac hin g
the
Rock to entertain the crowd . The
same sex.
Springs Fairgrounds due to evening was topped off with a

Sale! Mens Blue Denim

4.79
5.79
6.79
7.79

selves llloroughly Thursday. Twelve residents over 80 at·
tended.

120 at Older Citizens' Picnic

MRS. BERTHA Parker
brought wide smiles in the
audience as she presented
readings, SCJme on aging.
.

Ask any of the salespeople to help you
with -your purchase.

Sale! Frida_y and Saturday

WORK
SUITS
... ,.

.•.:.:.Ra ~: ::::cc

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Sunday through Tuesday:
Mild wllb a chance of
showen Sunday and Monday. Highs in the 7lls arul
lows mostly in the 50s.
•u,. c:.;;: am.•.:IE.•.s..?.m:?.f:;:;:;n::-~

'2.49

Famous Lee Teen Twill. 50

University.
Cattle health and handling
facilities - Ateam of research
scientists from OARDC will
deal with health problems of
Ohio beef cattle and demonstrate handling facilities. The
team includes Dr. C. K. Smith,
Dr. J. E. Jones, and Dr . D. R.
Redman of the Department of
Veterinary Science; and
Robert R. Bishop, assistant
JX'Ofessor of animal science.
High energy rations and
stripmine feedlots - Dr. R. L.
Preston, research animal
scientist at OARDC will
discuss the feeding of high
energy rations and the
utilization of old stripmine
areas for cattle feedlots.
Fence buildi ng demon strations will be conducted by
Don Pollock, Monroe County
Extension Agent; Dale Bonnett, Belmont County Extension Agent ; and Davi d
Merritt, manager of Belmont·
Monroe Grasslands, Inc.
Year-round grazing with
field storage of hay will be
explained during tours of the
grazing plots by Dr. R. W. Van
Keuren, OARDC research
agronomist, an d Extension
Agronomist Donald K. Myers.

·'· .

Select the style and size you want now.
Ready for your selection. Thermal shirts
and drawers . cotton rib knit union
suits.

For Friday and Saturday

SHARP RISE
WASHINGTON (UPI) Payroll taxes would rise
sharply next year to pay for
a broad liberalization of
Social
Security
and
Medicare health Insurance
benefits under provisions
approved Wednesday by the
Senate Finance Commjttee.
The committee is expected
to complete action on the
measure today or Friday
after approving other
provisions replacing tbe
welfare system with a
" work-or-else'' program.
Senate debate may start
next week.

·DAYT'IME
·oRESSES ·

Hanes Winter Underwear

MENS KNIT SLACKS
10.95
12.95
14.95
16.95

' Blefld .

Big selection of styles
and colors In sizes 12
to 52.
·

'

Beef Cow-Calf
Day Set Sept. 27
WOOSTER
Beef
producers and others interested in the production of
beef cattle have an opportunity
to hear the latest results of
Ohio's beef research program
at a specialized field day Sept.
27. "Beef Cow-Calf Day" will
be held at Unit I of the Eastern
Ohio Resource Development
Center, two miles east of Belie
Valley in Noble Cowtty.
Registration for Beef Cow·
Calf Day will begin at 9 a.m.
The morning program features
tours and demonstrations.
Visitors will be offered five
optional topics during the
morning. These will begin at
9:30 a.m. and each will be
repeated at approximately 40.
minute intervals and again at 3
p.m. The five interest areas
are :
Beef cattle
breeding
research and production
testing- Breeding research
will be discussed by Dr.
Dlarles Parker, professor of
animal science at· the Ohio
Agricultural Research and
Deve lopm e nt Ce nter .
Production testing will be
covered by William W.
Wharton, Exte nsion animal
scientist at The Ohio State

· Coti(M!Poi)Ser

A big sale this week-en&lt;( on .
l;licycies lnciudliig . the
p&lt;ipular 10 speed . bikes and
thpse with banana seat and hi ·
rise handle bars.

Strike Continues

They were like Animals ...
Vio lent and Save!

MEIGS TW:'ATD£ .

J

SPECIAL
PURCHAsE! .

SALEI
'
. .•

~ '

.:;~;;;:;.:'";,;,;;Lniiiililltiiii
R;;,-f

, ·!I ' •

·'

FIVE FINED
Five defendants were fined
and a sixth forfeitsd bond in the
court &lt;if Pomeroy Mayor
William Baronick Wednesday
night. Fined were Gary
Erlewine, 18, Dexter, $10 and
costs, recklesS operation; Don
Lovett, Letart Falls, $10 and
costs, intoxication ; Emmett
Weich, Rutland, $10 and costs,
MASON DRIVE-IN mtoxication; George Stohart,
Jr., 25, Racine, $17 and costs,
'.
l '
speeding, and Terry Proffitt,
21, Porlland, $10 and costs,
Fri .. Sat.- Sun.
squealing tires . Forfeiting
September 22-23-24
Double Feature
bonds was Randy Mulford, no
"BONNIE'S KIOS"
age or address listed, $25
Steve Sandor
Rated R postsd, disturbing the peace
and $50 for resisting arrest.
. Also
" BRUTE CORPS"
Rated ( Rl

~

McGovern, in a speech
prepared for delivery to a local
retail store employes union in
Detroit today, made his fll'sl
attack against the administration's stance. on busing since
his nomination.
He charged the White House
with
"cynical
and

"demagogic" exploitation of
the busing issue to divert attention · from his failures in
public education.
"The man who was elected
on a pledge to bring us together
is engaged in a shabby attempt
to drive us apart-Pitting
· (Continued on Page 12)
'

Senate Wants
Hijack Sensors
WASHINGTON (UPI)- An
anti-llijacking blll requiring
electronic screening of airline
passengers and sanctions
against countries aiding
hijackern or terrorists has
passed the Senate,
The bill approved ThlD'sday,
75 to I, included an amendment
requiring the Federal Aviation
Administration to install weapons detection devices at all
airports.
The measure provides $5.5
million to purchase such
devices and an additional $35
million a year to establish an
FAA security force authorized
to search ali passengers and
baggage and make arrests
without warrants.
Anyone who refuses a .personal or baggage search could
be denied air travel.
Anyone convicted of committing acts of air piracy, as
defined by the international air
piracy Hague Treaty sii!Jled by
the Unitsd States would be
punishable by either tile death
penalty or a minimum :!G-year
sentence.
Chief provisions of the bill
would:
.
- Authorize the President to
suspend air service with any
country he determines is
aiding or
encouraging
hijacking.

-Ban concealed firearms or
other deadly weapons on board
an aircraft.
·
- Apply the sanctions to
countries that give sanctuary
or other aid to terrorist
o~ganizalions
which
"knowingly use the illegal
seizure of aircraft or the
threat...as an instrument of
policy,"
- Authorize the transportation secretary to
withhold, revoke or limit tile
operating authority of any
foreign air carrier whose
government does not adopt
security measures at least
equal to the Hague Treaty.
Sen. Warren Magnuson, 0Wash ., chairman of the Commerce Committee which drafted the bill, said that unless tile
nations of the world could
reach agreement soon on
troader international steps to
combat hijacking, pilots would
take action.
"They are the ones getting
shot. And I wouldn't blame
them," Magnuson said.
The Senate, also approved
t'!Vo other amendments, which
would allow the airlines to offer
reduced fares for the elderly on
a standby basis and for tile
hsndicapped on a reservedseal basis.

New Kindergarten Schedule Apparent Su~cess
BY GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Mel&amp;l l.Ac.I School District
In last week's column 1 described the plan to
revise our kindergarten achedule. This plan went into
·effect last Mmday and seems to have worked out
quite well. WeaPJI'eciate your patienee as we worked
out the rough ectaea In letting It up.
1 I trust you took adVIIltage of the opportunity to

Speaking of &amp;hoofs:::-No. 249
read last Swlday'a Sentinel's article on the new
. spelling program at Bradbury, This program was
developed In Utah and holds great promise for
providing individualized inltruction in spelling.
Let me rtmind you Ibis one last time that nell
Thursday, Sept. D, !Ia date that lhould be circled on
yolD' calendar. On )hat afternoon students will be
dismlsaed 2\j, houra early. 1bil will be juat after
l111ch. There will ba no afternoon ldndergarten
cluaea.
Durinl the period frcm 7to 1:30pm. all teachen
will be In thelf cia H1Gilll in lbi&amp;Chooll to 1114111 wiUi
-~-·-----

parents to try to answer wltatever questions they
might have. Please take advantage of this opportuolty. lt comes early in the school year and gives
ynu a real chance to find out what kind of a start your
child has made.
WE WISH TO EXTEND the district's gratitude to
the Meigs County Health Department for providing
tetan\18 lnununization for the large number of our
students wl1o work in shop situallo111 in the high
school. This is the second year that we have hsd this
fine cooperation 'and we appreciate it. Our board's
policy requires lelanua lnunuaization for all those
who work in scboql shopa.
·
TONIGIIT MARKS 1'HE beginning of the SEOAL
football schedule. We play our Drst league game at
Logan. We will be · at home next week against
Wellston in our second league 111ne. We hope to 1ee
many Melp booltera in the stands at lAgan tonight.
THE MINE rnalnten~~~ee rnechlnicl cluB II now
in operation at the Pomeroy Junior Hiah School
Bulldin(i. We are uaing the former lncmtrial arta
shop 1'110111 .00 the claa'oom ~there for dmrinJ .

All of our equiJIIlent, including !lie heavy training

panels, has been moved into this building. We have 15
boys in this claas. Their t~acher is Dorsel Smith.
We would like to direct this request to the parents
of our students, particularlY those in the elementary
Jll'ades. We prefer not to have students on the football
field before or during any game. There Is a certain
amo111t of djonger preaent. We want to avoid it. We
will appreciate your cooperation.
NEWS AND NOTES - Today marka the end of
four weeka in IICbool; there are two weeka remaining
in tills first grading period - Please circle Friday,
November 24, aa a apeciaJ day - The Big iieild ·
Minstrel Allociation will [nllllt its fall ~am
111der the 1p01110ntllp of the Mete&amp; Band Booatera As you have probably IICited, the Melp Hip Bind il
becoming involved in muy ~-. CCIIIIpiiWiou,
etc. We wilb tbem luck in all their endelllWI -One
final reminder' don't fur&amp;et tbM next 'lburldaJ
evening will provide ,uu wltb 1111 opporttmlty to lllllll
trld talk wltb yoar ,.,...._.•• teacblra in llllldloola
between tbe houri of 1 IDd t:a

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