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•

n.t ~ti..h

·'

MlildlePoh-Poooeroy .I)..

Se~;;1,11711

Syracuse News, Soeiet)'

SYRACUSE
Recent
villtora of Mr. and Mn. Earl
Culler were Mrs. Bernice
LaValley and Mr. and Mn.
~marDalleyofRaclneRoute .
Mra. Harry Potts received
word that Florence Mwnaw
snyder, a lonner resident of
Syrllt'lllle, had beal confined in
a East liverpool hospital lor
- three montha.
Mr. and Mrs. George Cooper
and aon Georll• Jr. ol Racine
Route
day with Mr. and
Mrs. ClEm Cooper.
Mr andMrl Uncoln Slllllb of
·
· purdiUed d
=.r"!:ve tbe for.:'!r

and Mrs. Oyde Gerlach of
Letart, W. va. Sbe al.io villled
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
MatlackandchildrenofFroot
spent Sunday with his grandmother, Mra. Velma Camdy
andMr. andMrs. CiemCooper.
Mr. Floyd Gr1nun and Bon
Don and Mr. Harold Shackle of
Whitehall visited the former's
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymood Grimm and
family of Minersville, Route.
Helen Bear, aeslsled by Mrl.
Alberla Hubbard, bas opened a
grocery store in the Morris
Hardell building on Secoad St.
J
Cool
and
MJqam Bailey P'Operly In
":!..t
with":
~y':""Gnmm and 100 ......,.11 , Mr. and Mra. Clem

.

~~~:;; HOo~er Pinp0i~4 ~ Extremists;
r."':!'t ::. .
·'
~.::= Ejl!rt'OR'l! ~~ !. · tile or the di&amp;PiaY of •tudenl
Dhlrtet' c:a,reullin follolWDs .,.. Idler Ia eoUec• anhapplness~ver aopect!J ot&lt;H!r
Cllrnce 11!:. IIWer lAid Joe fludeot.. Ji'!li 111ree1or J. naUonal policy. Studentoplnloo
aDd 1 gnuplf bb e.ilapeo .14pr !hover P"'lllall elgltt Is a legjllmatuapect of public
lntheHo... are--""lor ployauaedby ncll.ealellre- oplnioninouraoclety. ,
the Ollllotmeal of 1 FOdenl mllll ta lbelr .ella$ to But there IB re!d ground for
Revenue Sbarla&amp; am W.re · jaallflalile &lt;IIJ!IPIII pmeot tate ronc&lt;lrn about the e11remism
the 1111 Coagnaa adjouru. Ylol&lt;!ll ""'! ·doalracllve cbaa- wblchledtoviolence,lawlessMiller Ia aeeklll&amp; 10 mo.. aeb. ·
·· ·
ness, and diNeapect for the
lbe biD lrom lbe Waya aDd
~
rlghll of othe~ oo many
MeaDs Commlllee and brlall
By J. EDGAR HOQVI!R
college campuaes during the
lltothellowleftoorby-..a
Dlrecler, FBI
put year.
.
of 1 dilcba 0 Ulloa _ 1
Wrlllea for UPI
Ememlsll Have Loel Faith
device
lbe
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Au The ellrembll are a 8IDall
111
algaoture of Z18 Houae 1970 eoUege •tudenl, you beloflll minority of students and faculty
memben.
to the best ed,..ted, most memben who haveloalfallb in
oophlalicated, most. poi9ed ge- ' America. They ridicule the llag,
''''''"'' ''''~:;:~~~~i&gt;'*'&lt;&lt;&lt;~'*'~"*'"'-~- neraUon In our history.
poke fun at American lnslltu·
The VBII majority of jou, I 110111, aeek to deslroy our
am convlnceoj 1111"""11 !live aoclety. They are notlnlerMie!!
SERVICE IS TUESDAY
America and want tb make ita in genuine reform. They take
Gravealde llel'Vice for J~ better counlf)'. "· .
advantag~ of the teoslonll,
Hunt,lnfantdaughterofEariR. You do haw Idalia of your strife, and often legitimate
and Glenda Deeter Hun~ Long ........,d that!s &amp;ood. Yoo 11!0" lruatraU0111 of sludenll In
Bottom RD, who died &amp;mday t111ngs wrong Ill our society promote campus chaos. 'IIley
evening at the Holler Medical which we adulll perbapa haw have no rallooal, Intelligent
Center wiU be beld at 2 p.m. minlmiled '!!' overlqoked. You plan of the future either for the
TUesday at the Meigs Memorial are ooilsJ&gt;oke!l and frank and llfllverslty or the nation.
Gardens. OiflciaUngw!Ubethe bate hypocrisy. That Is good The ellrembll are of wide
Rev. Robert Smith. Surviving too.
variety : Aclberenll of the
beaidea the parents is a sister,
There's nolhlns WI'ODII with Students lor . a Democratic
Betty Jo. The~ EWlng Funerlll student dilaent or student Society (Sl!S) includln8 the
Home is in charlie.
domanda 1..- cbangea In society Weathennan: members of the

to;,

Don and Mr.·and Mra Harold
llcNc!!le and "'"' and Mr. and
Mi'a.FtoydRoberiGrlmm,and
Brook Wilson of Whitehall
villted Mr. and Mra Melvin
Grimm.
Mra. Velma Cooper of Tuppen PlalnB u, been lrought to
tbe!llmeofherdaughter, Mra.
Qem Cooper, from Veterans
Memorill Hoopltal where she is
ncuperatlng fnm an Ulneas.
Sunday vlaltors of Mr. and
Mra. Dan Shane and grandaon9
.,... Mr. and Mra. Clarence
lhle of Mason and Mra. Bennie
Bleaslng of Albany.
u -. Myla Hudson ,_,1 a
_,::';with Mra. Mildred..,...,.,d,bs
-·
of PGm=Y·
Mr. Clair Cassaday ol Tuppers Plains visleatld•hlady IIIDlher,
: Mra. Velma
• ·
~ Mr.andMra. DonVanlangen
; and.dllltftnofQ&gt;l!IDbus9pOnl
a week'nacatlm here with her
: JIIIMIIa, Mr. and Mra. Orb
; Hubb!lrd.
; Mr. and Mra. Ola Blake of
' &amp;lmmeriVIUe. w. Va. and Mr.
· and Mrs. Edward Blake of
. Lotflld&amp;e visited m Saturday
. with tllelr sister, Mra. Ada
·~
• Sl.act.
' Mrs. Myla Hudaon spent
•. ~·-day and Monday wiUI ber
;;:... and brother-in-law, Mr.

s.:

Cooper.
Mr · Floyd Grimm ac·
compenledbyhlamolher,Mrl.
Melvin Grimm. visited Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Grimm of
Pomeroy ·
Mr. andMra. CariMadactof
~ Plains !lpl!lll Friday
evening with Mrs. Velma
CaaeadyandMr. andMra. Clem
Cooper.

f
·
~ong •

.L'

•

By Valled Proa laterud-'

The major Ohio candidates
spent the weekend stumping the
state and at many of their slops
bad unkind words for the opposllion.
Rep. Robert Taft Jr .• RepubHcan candidate for the U.S.
Senate, accuaecl Democrat oppooent Howard Metzenbaum of
trying to switch hla poaiUon on
thepromlnentlasuesofthedsy.
"My opponent ba• repre&amp;l!nted the typical bug-&lt;&gt;ul of Vietnam liberal," !l8id Taft in a
one-hour television debste to be
aired at Youngstown Tueeday
•••ht
... .
"Nowsuddenlyheistalking
about timetables. My opponent
has long called for a dialogue
on our coUege campuses. He
has told studenta to gel mad
aboutlhingstheythoughtwere
wrong in Amerlce. Now suddenlyheisjoiningmeinurging
wr
that reaponsiblllty must be
·
"a::&amp;
placed on the abouldero of
•
coUege and university admlnls·
· Mra. Marie Mills, Coal St., tratora."
.~ Middleport, was Iaten to
· Cl!arges ApiaUoa

•E·R Squad Has

.·.:·.Jusy

w

Op
'
All
Strange .
ponents.
'

--'-end

:v- ~~ u: ~ .

GiUigan warned that public
employe strlkea may opread In
coming mootha and proposed a
"positive prllllfam that wiU give
employera and employes the
chance to deal hooe!Uy and
conslrucUvely with their differ·
ences."
The former Cincinnati COD•
greasman, noting that there bad
been 110 work stoppages by
public employea In the lnlll8
months in Ohio, asld the silua·

3 Car8

o o o

(Continued from Page I)
edlcal
HewasiakentoHolzerM
Center by private ear·
The 1970 Plymouth Henderson
was driving was demolished.
There was no ciiaUm.
&amp;mdeyat2:40am.oncounty
road 5, about .6 of a mUe north
of SR 7, Charles F. Althouse,
Albany, Rt. 2, waS'Iravellng
north. Ills ~ swmed to the
left, going over an embankment
on the right side of the highway
into a fence. Althouse was

lion was the result of the "Re· leader John C. McJ)onald !l8id
... _,_ -·"'d
publlcan administration's re- hla party'a canwuoo...,. """' ,...
pealed refu.al to esiablish 111m integrity to the "scandal·
intelllaent syatems of e&lt;illective ridden statehouse.'' ·
bargaining for public agencies -Pblll Stab! UaJversity fool.
and pubUc employea."
ball coech WoodY Reyes aald
Gilllgan called the Ferguson ctoud would iel bi9 vote "and
Akta "universally dilcredlted lhopehegetsawholelotmore."

'

tht Communl91 party's Young
Workers UberaUon Leat!u•
(yWLL). Or they may be
afl!iOCklted with the Stut~~~nt
Mobilization Conunittee to End
tlt4! ,Warin VIetnam (SMC),a
Tro!&amp;kyist dominated anll,war
group.
· 14Jny are 11ot aSiliiCiated with
any national group. The key
point Ia not so much the
idi!nll!lcaUon of mnmists bUt
I~S to recognize aM
understand the men!plity of
ellremism wblch beHevea in
ylolence·lllld deetrucUon. ·
Baaed oa ·our experience Ia
the FBI, here are aome of the
mya in which extremisla wiU
ley to lure you into their
aCIIviUea:
'
IJearMacb Aboal FaUare
t, They'll encourage 7011 to
Joi8 retpeel for your parenta
and the \)lder generation. Yoo'U
heat mueb about the."failurea"
and "h)'pocrrsy" of your
(llt'O!IIlland their frienda. The
older' geileraUoo bas ma~
illlatakea.• But-your parents
and mllJJ.onJ of 9ther adults
wwked bani, buill, llfFificed
ariil suffered to make America
what It IB today. Yoli may
~with tliem, bu.l don't
dilcredlt their cantribuUO!ll.
2. They'll ley to conVfllt yoli
to the klea that your eollege Ia
"lrrevelanl" and a "tool o( tile
establl,!hmenl." The attack
agalnsllhe con.ge admlnlatra·
doo. oi~n Ia billet, arrogant,
andW!reasonlnil.
·,

PiiJ)i',

him f!:om ' ~l&gt;IUly. ifJa. '
basic common • aense. aell ·~Y iff~~Ct theof ~ ~~
Complel i9suel of ata~ are · U~. and I!I'OI*'IY
~~··
wrapped In slllll&amp;l)ll and cJI~· Just ~~ yO\I ..IIon't ~ • ' ,
YoushouldcatelullytiiiiUIIO llw . ~• mean JOQ .... ,
the fa$. Rational dlacuaalbn vio~~,ll ~~
~ie: ""''"""' •
and rational anlllyab are ,1, '.lbeY
you ...,..,•• ·
1
neededmorelhllleverbe!'!t· lliat you, u
4. They'D If)' to envelop you cllizel:l, are . (1010111'to:::!&gt;:-:,
in a rilood of liegatlvism, cleinocraUc meana
"""'
peaaiml$, and. ~lenalion tow· change In our~tyAm~
ani your!elf, your IIChool, your ber lhe boo · o.n
.....~..
nation. This Is one .of the IIIIJSI hlatory yo~
re;H· r~ : ..
~dioua of new IAift pollloM.. oplnloa 1~ eflet ~-~ ·:.
SO$ ~ . its aUles Judge ~
· poUIIct,
. ,I · ,
Ametlca escl1lslveiy from Ill meth~.
~·
,.
Daws. 1hw see nolhlng gOod,
Sbow Laelr; Ill ~~~.::::\Jo
~ve, ind .~cllw. · •·. They'll and~ "'•W
.The real siren~~~~ of our nation hul'l brlclu
1 . P~
Is the power of mor~ of log!~ J11111111011t ·~
decency; and corjtelence w
whodiaqree·wi~,~~~ .~
rlgh~ , the W1'0118.. correcta ~bet ~ ··· .I"'T"'Ji. ""',
en:or, ~d worka for equal wbo ·strlbt .thei~llilbil ~ :m
opp&lt;rl,uility un,. tile law·
run out of•lii4\U· ''l'lle ~ ~ ·
Cal! . for~
ofvMJienetehQWI11iM!~~"' ..
6. They'll encourile you to raUdria) ~~in ttra~lifll ·
dl.n.speet the low and bate the ln,abllity to C!JIIII up '!' IP1
law enforcement olficer. But lntallla.ent ~IIC(lM! of "'f.'
theofficerprotectsyourrlght., society.
·"'- &lt;
Hves, and Jll'OII8l'IJ· He Is your
~;I dtln'llblnk '"' ~
friend and he n~ your ouUook filr ·~ ·~::
oupport.
. ~. Ia U
'!if' u '
. ,
6. 'lbey'U tell you that IllY proplieta of P ''!'IF · 11!'0'. ,
1·
acUoil I! honorable and right If claim.
'
It's "•lnci!re" or ·~deallsllc"ln
~· 'lrith ~' of, ollioir
motivation. Here I! one of lbe atlulta; I'Di ~ ,1111 ti\I·Y~
moat aedUctlve ·of IHIW · lell 1Dalofily . m·'. ~~~
appea1B411at If an anonlat'a or ~ fllNnibdld, "'!!'f"'\\ ...l
anarchisl'a heart lain the rl&amp;hl · lnqldaiUva, but,~ ~ IIIOIJ1 •.
place, II he, !lela he II doing ~ . ~c · •~~ ·~· ·· ·
aometiJillg for ''h!IIIIBIIily" or a hUmaa dlllniiJ; J~ I!'!" lbt
"bigher cause( then hla act, rights of olben; , Qd a '
even 11 IBep, 11 jtiatlllable. ·~ to .~. •.l ·mil
The alleged sincerity of the confident our Iaiii) 1\111 ~ ~
perpetrator does not aboolve ·misplaced.
'
·•
\:','

•

"4::-:

{

¥,. ·

T

. BJ Vllled Preao bttenalloaal
• Large acale jaraeU lank
movement'. ...,.. reported to·
djiy along the Jordanian border
where braeU military dJa..
patches reported the Jordanian
army retreating aouthward
ioward Amman in the face of a
Syrian tank onslaught. GuerrU·
las repcrted Jordan's air .force
In action.
With the poeslhillty of Atnl.;.

•

can intorvenUon in&lt;reaslng,
Egypt warned the United Siatea
againat a~pping il&gt;, aaying this
would threaten w!i'ld ~·
EgypUan information Mlniller
Mol)amttied Hasaanein Keikal
aaid lntorvenUon woutd erulan·
ger American Uvea even
further.
A Syrtan Foreign Minlalf)'
spokesman In Oam&amp;ICUI aaid
Syrta will "violenUy and

death toll tl.ke wu'over 10,000.
G!l"l'rilla sour._ adlnllted
1;1109 dead and aaid there wm
tens of ~ WOWlded.
· u.s. military loreea. were
alertld to move Into try fo save
the 400 AmerJcans in Jordan
and the poeslblljl)' of la!erven·
lion seemed very real. Urael
;also was report«~ prepared to
act' if it felt Ita &amp;eell.'lty
lhreoteni.d:-and a Syrian move

airongly" red.tt '!flY 1\mfrican
in~etvenUon .' .Ahnbsl imlllecU·
a~1y 'the leadership of lhe
guerriUas warned against Inlet·
vention and said aU American
intereall In the Arab Middle
Eaat. would be destroyed if
Washington did intervene.
Qeavy fighting resumed In
Amlnan Itself -.ith failure of a
cease-lire called by King
Huaaeln, 8fH/ Helkal oaid Ill!!

•

Now You.Know

o•lo esleaded weather
oalloek - Tburaday aad
Friday:
ll!lllly fair ud warm4-ja wiUI hiP lemperalllrfa
raJ!IiDIItam the mid 7h to
the mid Ill aDd allbllbao
1ri1 from 111e mid lilllo the
lower IIIIo.

='*':':'i;;w.ii:~':'!'i-.W.1XX:~%~':&gt;i

wng Bottom
S0C ia} N0 leS

'BY VIOLET SMITH
Miss Pall)' Lawrence entertained Bryan Lawrence
PorUand, onhlaelghth birthday
by taking him ou1 to dlimer to

By GENE CADDEll
ilPI 8110(11 Writer
Coach Bill Heaa of Ohio 11111·
venit)' has hla \ivai Mid-Allier·
lean Conference coacbea ]UJI
about where he wanll them.
"We Uke to haW them feel·
ingaorryfor .us,"Hessaaidaft.
er hii Bobcala had taken Keat
State apart Salw'day 21-H. ·
ouwaaplckedbytheMAC
news media members. and the
leaguecoaebes,lnpoUacqnducted before the aeasoit alal'led, to
flnWialthebottomofthestandlitga, moaUy because Hall I!OWI·
ded the leaat optimi9Uc of the
sis conference coaches.
"I did say we would he repreaented," lieu aald.

.
runnlngofaopilomoreBIUGary
ofLbna, Whlll04ll~elaetu
OU recltd, and the puslng of
Steve Skiver oi Toledo who
ior two loucbdowna and
ICOJ'ed another. Gary , totaled
,IH. v•••• -··••·• of, the 227
...- •- made by the Bobeall, while
Skiver complelj!d IJ of :Ill (1111&amp;'
eo for 1111 yarda.
,.

~mll'. ,_, club," r· . : ...o.i. ,
,._, .....
""1"11
"'\'ou liDO!' ,'fll oal allrl .llll!l ''
aenlll' 011 dattnle."
;i:

Uma, aetan OU record by
carrying the ball t3 limes. He
ga1rted 151 yarda of. the 227
gained by the llobcala.
Gary'sl'!lllning wu balanced
by the passing of.Steve Skiver,
who hit on 12 of 20 .
for

decimtdefeNivatanl.
.'
. 1
r· !of
"()pet 11,1 JOIIild ~.ut IIMr
(Kent)~ Julf ~~ to 111111.
.., ~ IIGID8 idjusmltll_ll·
We bad lO Ita)' In tiQht llli flfll
baJf ~-of (Dtin) Nottlna;
bani. '

pi-

•t
•
.
oz erzng

and two

ao:~~candidate ~::;::!,.~~\,.= ,;!:'b;:'O::O~amJ:!:~J!t;f!~·~•lrtfli~'~~~"f:,:'.~r:!t ·
.
damage to tile car an4· no In- endure,"
', .., ...... '· '" t.Bwrehee and ilrenda, Mia. In 1lit 'llrird quarter and with· Juenger. Skiver .alaO nn f!to
has :.tf,;.'i"history of agitating juriea.
in other poUUcal develop- Ruth · Thornton !llld Mrs. atood a Kent Slate aerlalatlack yarda f9r the Boheata other

&gt;. .... ~ ....
\. w ..

.

~ .,..I

~-

'·"
.i

~·

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0

',r..

... ,., ..."

•"

f '• ,...

'.;~

•

,-1

0

(.)

zn

Loitering on town-&lt;&gt;wned
property from 10 p.m. to 6 am.
wasbannedbyPomeroycouncil
Monday night.
t;ouncll, in response to
numerous complaints of
loitering on the riverfront
parking loll, ga ve an ordinance
ordering it stopped the required
aecondand third readings under
emergency rules and voted
adopUon. A $SO fine, upon
conviction, is provided.
The ordinance banning
loitering follows persistent
complaints by the police
department of loitering on
village owned lots, especially
the riverfront lots.
In other business council
voted to advertise for bids to
resurface Pomeroy 's Main
Street, the business aecllon
from Sycamore to Bultemut
Ave., Butternut Ave., Mulberry
lleightB, Riverview Drive and
two aeetions of Mulberry Ave.
The Ohio Department of
Highways was authorized in
July to resurface Rts. 7-33 from
the upper corporation limit to

slveiT,"Iltli aaid. !'biii·~ 111!1 :.

qo

'\)

Chance of abowera ·
thundershowers
lol!ighl, LoWI tonight froilt ,._,;;
low 60s to the lower 701.
siderable cioudlnes.s and no1
warm with chance of . lihotNhl·~
Wedneaday . lfighs from the mid ·' :
70s to the mid Ills.

•

anne

Gary8elslleetnl
havea·1!aytoco. ~v•; 'ft L ..
Bill Gary, a IIO(Jbi!more from feel we lUi&gt;', 1he "1~PP Gh .J,

1811

,-1

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1970

POMERPY·MIDOLEP.ORT, OHIO

be improVed 'tbli ,..r . )lit
..L• .ill"'
BobcatsweniDbel!itCT q. · ',
"We ~ed ..Pill ilelel!'

·

~~

IJ :&gt;·

,.. o"'

VOL' XXII NO. 112

Weather.

·~

iJevo1et1 To 171e, ln~ Of171e Meigi·MIUOn Area

T)le del,~ Wu polntei! !Ol;
Hall U liJ!I one p1iue Of the ;l·.
OU 1eP1 whiclt,would h&amp;velf ti}

:

the PalesUnian guerrillas.
cen
·; 1&gt;ut i'epiJrts reached
llusaein, faced wilb a batUe lroclm &lt;A largescale lank
for aw'lrlvf\t .and deaerle!l by mov-11 Monday night and
IJI!IDY •of hl9 Arab allles, agalilje)day. The reporll said it
appealed to the ,Unl\ed Stales, wes uncertain whether they
the Soviet Union, Blilain and '!et'e deployment for poeslble
Fr~ for help,l&amp;t Waahing: ·..uoo .ln Jordan.
.
ton dispatches aaid .~dent On' '1\looday the JIM'daman
Ntxon had not yet decided on a army bad moved northward to
course of action.
,, fi'bid, Jordan 's aecond city
laraeli dispatches were wb- nestled m 2,1100 foot mOClntains
je'cted to inte...., military 45 mil., north of Amman and

e.ntt'l ~ .,~~

at y

Colorado 19 llnown as the
"Cen~Mtal State" beeause U
entered the Union in 18'16, 100
yean aflet the signing of the
Decletalloo of Independence.

,

ploye ·employer rela)ionshlp in
the pubUc aeetor."
Urges Ualoa Rtllill
Hepropoaed a aeries of stepa,
lopped by the ~ecogniUon '!"'I
guarantee of the right of all
public worton to organize and
90lect ,.,pre..ntaUvea of their
ownchonalng.
Metzenbawn, speaking in
Akron, called the 8.4 per cent
unemploymentrateamongNegroea a "national tragedy that
poses grave danger tO futore
generations."
"Those who murmur to
blaclta, 'it's your problem, not
ours,"' are bUnd to CllDdiU0111
in our clUes," Metzenbawn aald.
"Ailsodely pays the price. of
high cnme rates, tenslhening

.IOtllhward from .lrbtd would
bring Syrian lallks cl&lt;ooe to the
'Israeli border.
.
Jleikal aaid Egypt was .trying
to send a plane to Amlilan to
rescue 100 foreign correapondents, moaUy American,
trapped in the inter.Qmllnental
Hotel IQ the cen~et of the city.
Their hotel bat been hit
repeatedly in the showdown
civil war between Huaaein and

•

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~'6 " '

.

ntervetition

B
b
s
,
.
'
·
•
K
.'
..
t
,
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'
oflllwfawhiil"~hm'~~~~·~th20theyearem~ *'i:W.&gt;.: :::*~:::W.'¢mS:&gt;Y..if*:::$iii&lt;::~~
0 ' cats urp. nse ·. 'en '.. ', 1,...
w •

;

''

the 'J'ro!&amp;kylsl Youth Group; your

::,.r.

_,Ia

of':::.;..

Y~gSoolalbiAilli!nce(~) •. 3. They'U,a9kri!~toabondon

'.

.

.

Co.,

u .~

balance due all but
report«~ that the
landslides on Union Ave.,
caused when the aewer lines
were laid, is the responsibility
of the Miller Conslruction in·
surance Company to repair all
dsmages.
A letter from the Economic
Development Administration,
EDA, was received by the
mayor which stated that spproval bad been given by the
ElDA on the sewer conslruction
and the work would be under
warranty from June I, 1970 to
JW!e J, 1971.
CoW!cil discussed the giW'd
railiflll that bas been lnstaUed
on West Main St.,the locaUon of
another lot which has been the
subjectofnwnerouscomplalnts
filed by police officers, in
regard to its removal.
Council took no action
however. as PoUce Chief Jed
Webster said he has cootacted

125,1100. Legar

the State Highway Department
at Marietta and a letter 19 el·
peeled lrom the highway
deparimenl that wiD give the
information needed as to
whether or not the railing wiU
be removed.
In other action council
reviewed a proposal pre90ntld
by the parking meter commiltee on proposed parking
meter Increases.
The propoaed lncreaae would
change the penny rooters to
nickel meters. The proposal will
be presented in the fonn of an
ordinance at the next regular
meeting.
Council further approved a
propoaal from the Southe&amp;stern
Ohio Council of Govertun!!ntB to
seek lederal aid to purdtaae
radio equipment for the poUce
deparimenl.
Joe Struble who recenlly
attended the Oblo State Fire
SChool met with council to

e1~nd his lhanb lor the 01&gt;porlW!ity to attend tile ocbool.
Struble said he Ia hopeful
being able to upgrade.
Pomeroy's ayatem by Jlillll'lnl
m to other metuberl o1 dli•
depariment the tedmlque.tlliai
he bad learned dllt'ing the 11..,: ·
day course.
Slruble a1a0 suggaled
&lt;OUDcil conalder In nax1
budget the
at least four men to
nax1 yeor. Struble alated 1bat '
the achoul Ia vory •w tbwhlle ·
and ID attend would give t!ood
beneficial r.Wts.
Council agreed to iutd all ·
addiUonal . street llllbl in lbt: . .
Naylora Run area.
Attenlllng were
councilmen, Lucien
Ralph Werry, Bob~::;:
lloaald Colllna, e&lt;
Elma Ruaaell, clerk, Jue
·Walton, and treuurer Pbyllia.

'*

aem-,.

·

Roger

,

'~'''*" ~;'whe!l ""' · l£.t'B!.a!:roiiltJtfie!Weil' tlitlln a fall at home.

Al3:49p.m. the squad went to
the VIeth home on Turkey Run
Road, back of Cbeshlre, where
. KelthVelthbadsulleredan arm
laceralloa. He was taken to the
Boker 'Medical Center.
AI 7:52p.m. the squad wu
called to near the Hi-7 Club
below Jliddlep&lt;ri on Route 7
when a car ova tw ned. There
werenolnjUrlel,bllttheveblcle
4ld catdl fire. The blar.e was
........_.._.....,... ...... .......

-.....- v, ..., ...-

. 4t ' l:~ p.m. Sllw'day, ~
· .._..... tooUirl Naomi Hato-

""W.· · . '

· U-'taJ

•:;~~w-:"": ~tt;d~.

t.....,;;.. a 1a:'lbing dllficully
, &gt;.;._'1¥ lw• baidbeentaken ~
I
,...
. ~!:"the~ ~

':t

• to the halllrwll when they

~

LOCAL TEMPS

• Temperature in downtown
: ~ Monday at II aJD.
•wu 'It degrees under sunny
,~ Jklel.

BOIIUT DAY

London
:;!tad ita holtelt-lember day In
:u ,_. &amp;mday when the
;:tet....-ature e(itnbec! to 81.
• IDNIION (UPI) -

;. .

••

DRIVE~I

.••

BANKING

•

•
"

E-t of Bomb
"'o Be. Set lJirp

Plde

""'"""-

10

Sale!

aoo

Mr.

..

children,

NEW CAR J&gt;ELIVERED - Richard Rewllogs, lell, of R. H. Rawllnga Sona Company,
Mlddlepcrt, .,._.. the tey• to a new 1971 Dodge Coronet, whldt wiU be used in drleducallon cia 1 at Southern lli8b Sdtoolla Racine, to Robert Ashley, drl,.,r education inaln!ctor. ~ SaJrO, saperintendett and J!llllell Ad.sma, principal, look oa.

m

Mr.

•Convenient
•Courteous
Fridayf, Only ·
Tile Orlv9; In Window
Is il!Pn
tA,M..Io7 P.M.
ICGnlilluouslyl
'
Oll!or ........ - . ' to '
....... , ... _ ! ...

,,..,.,

:o:Mi

waibr.

;/'

..

O'Lw· GOI n .HMr.
., ' '

~~ ~.=~•ReC:~

.' .

· (Continued from l'ict h' ~"! ~ lptat 1 weell '
Opal Holl,on mov.d Into ber eebqolllnancing problemlllitl ~-.th Mr.
Uri. ·Bunieu
...
cdR~:~ unrat.
. :
· P'ti:Jberl Fits·~
•----~~~..,. newThehome
. bomecomillg at the kilie aet-in.the-hclle Ia' tifi' ~·
::r
requeated to be prtlllll.

lloapltal

~Y llllt'llbt$.
I

MEIGS

,

~aurene Ci)!l"cb waa well "aci{~d~l." despite
. .attendetL 't!le·slngltlg was flrt,. dlli!J!Jildt from

calpp •lbit be "llih

' ,. \!ilo"'soea .&lt;!lUnd

' ~f ..... ·Ilia band

.c""""' "'• and lboae.bums
,~:7rubbJ. lOll II .
~•Uc: State '

..

Agnew Rejects Charge

\

Aiu;•.,lJend .·

Slwrt
Strike
'

·2 ·teen.,eis·
•

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I

'

AD appanlll wlldclll

·

.

.'•;' 1

.-~

.trike

allbe Ml!h!esl Sleel ee. pial
Ia Pomeroy Monday ol·
-l!llded as abrqpiiJ u

J

V:du.

r:t!':

:.l ' eQulck

.,

." No•...,

Protection in

IPIDa,f~~--~-J:ep,'iiaP~l(~:~, ';

Lawrence.

•

l

Otester

•E

"bet to the boapttal.

••

ments:
·
Howard J:.awrence
byaclphomorequarterbackSteve touchdown.
-Cloud accepted offen to be Mr , and Mn Wayne Prince Broderick lite In the gllllt.
"Our young men Just bpt•
in three U.leviaed dobala - attended the ~g of their
The Bobcata Wef!lled by the their polle Tery well· for I
Ne~s
WJW-TVInCieveland, WKBN- gr81iddaughlet Jackie Dean
•...:;o
TV In Youngatown and WSTY- and Steven
at Columbus.
TV in ·Steubevllle -and chal·.. M•. and.Mrl. Wade Ralaton,
Attendance at the N•u~ lenged Gilll8an to do lbe 1181118. Girard, 0., irere visiUng Nenle
-Houae Democratic floor Stelhedl, Mr. and Mra. Garth
ChurcbSunday,Sepl.l3,wuf8
Smith
Mr. and Mrl. Em. .._..
1
al)d the collection wu f/.ll.
melt siethem
Mr. and Mrt. Cbarlea Woode TIIIO Dioo~ are
Mr 'Midt.b GeneSiriilband
I. 1
called on
and Mn. Pearl
·
Koblenlz.
G ._.3 b ,..___.- f""Uy· ,,'. pltilllcothe,
were"
Certain downtown ~
ran~ . y .....,.,..
visltlflll Mi- and Mrs J1ar014
will __.... radlatloa faDoul
Mr. and Mrl. JOhn Lildwldt,
· N-•··· ·
:
rv•Mr. and Mrl. Steve Uadwlct of
·~•""·
.,
shelter proteclloa Ill' many Weaterville oaUed on their Two dlvlln*! were granted Mr. ltllll Mrf;'Davld lfol!«
'
.: .,
penonsla ev&amp;t of emoraency · parenll he!e and at lleOdaviBe and one wu cUamillled In Mella and son, t"het*er, Mn. ;~
For community shelter plan they attended the Karr-Buckley County Commoa Pleas Court. WYDCO!IP, Joluwiown, and Mra.
pil'JI08fl, anyoae who livea wedding. Sunday.
Granted dlv~rcea we~e Jack S&amp;ellet, Colllrilbul, .~ ·
'
,(
witldDMiddle(mlandPWIIlroy
Curllas Turley Bonnie Shlelde Fiaber from vltiiUng · lolr.' and Mra. IW,Ik
should walk to a public falloul : ~~ ~ and r.ir Jolin F!Jhei. aiid Nlns Va)lllhan Holter.
. .... · . '
shelter. 'l1le olficiallnlormaUoa ~ul Myers ~
all ~ from Robei1 W. Vaughan, both Mr. lnd Mril. Burdell 'i&gt;ll\n,
to be dialrjbuted to the pu61c
•·-'"·1 ..... eekend oo cbarie&amp; of sroa IJtl)ect of Midland, Pa., apent ieveral
beginning Sept. 2' w1U coalaln Co...., ..... spen
w
dUty ancl ellrliiue cruelty. The daya .witiJ Ethel Larklna,
·
recommendallona oa lhiB potat with their parenll, Mr · ~ Mrl. divorce action by Cryllal E. . Mr. and Mrl. Keith F,.,..II
for people In various areas of WUUa Froe~p BIDy Jean.
...
Mr. and Mn. Dbnn1e Sher· Sln)n•on
... against Calvlp B. and fanPIJ, Fairborn, 0., and
the coun.,.
man and 1101111 of Canal Win- Slmpaon, Jr., was dtsnilaaed. Leota Ferrall, Midway, 0.,
II Ia vitally important that cbeater and Mr. and Mra. Tom
visiUng Mr. and Mra.
eadt member of the family Challn and chllilren of
· Ciirles llenaiBY· ·
1eam the locaUm of the aearesl
the
kend Velenu Memerlal Hoapllll
Brenda Lawrence, ~.
fallout shelt..- at work, at Columbua spent
1'"
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS ..,. waaanCIV'emightguealof~
school, and where the li"'Bte!ll ~~~=~·Mr.andMrs. Clara Garland Mlnerayille;
On Sunday Mr. and
(I'Otectloa esiats In the home. Rev. and Mrs. Slawlet from Joan Conkle, Cloeehlre; Stan J.in Clore!k\1! Lawr..., and
Forlhclinlnll lnlormallon wiU
Thompson, Cb~ahlte; Marie 111111 ,'PortlindiwerevialUngMr."
help famlllrw to pll&gt;folnt lheae ~~M:' ,;!!~~ Milia, Middleport; ~a and Mn. Howard La•tar;e.
locatloM.
~ SUver Rkl8e,
and Mrs. Ste':'art, Pomeroy; Charlea . .leaD Newluo 11 1 (II!Uaitt';t
Women of Claureh Richard Barton and family and ~~; 1'1-.t , Veterans Momor1a1 lloapltal.
other reliUves and attendell SATVIIDAY D~ Mr. ancl r.jn. Clarenj111lean ,
To Meet Thursday =meeUngaltheNuarene -Cil!llaFindley,JobDCollerlll, ~..:.~~ :.~~:
Mr. ~ Mn. Charlea Wooole Charlea Simon~. Gall Wayne Prince were it Hawk'~
The Women'• AllsociaUon of spent Thunday evening wilb m:~~oNS
N~. w,
Slelhem were
the Mlddleport urchFira:.WUni'*: Mr. and Mrs. George Charles Hyatt, Racine;·Eihel Vial~ .,._ J-'e
Preabyterian a.
mee Genheimer.
SUit, llaclne·, WIUiam "--, Edllb ....,... .., .._., ..,
at 6:30 pJD. Thureday al the
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Cook Ather~~· Sharon Glblil
~!j~ l'lallll and
dturch. All memben are to called 08 Mn. Erma HJctman dieport'
•
Ethel ,_...,er.
bring a covered dish
a MoncLoy ~
SUNDAY Df8CIWIGP)II _ • Vllllb!c , NeiBe · ~ " :
=~~u!t the
Rict KDblentz of ColtRDOOI Maxine Brumley Jaanle :';,n~~~~~ BjiJ ·
study and Mrs. Edward Burllett spent Sunday evenlni with hll ll(l'p, Zora
~ ~.
gratlll!lilmlta.
Mr.
and
Mn.
~
Jj
.
• •
'
the clevotl onal period.
Gecqe Gealtolmer.
.
n,. . Mr•. ,..wrence
'l.';
Toronto, 0., were
Hostesses wlll be Mrs. Mflt, M!lllll and Freda MlUer
Charnberl, Mrs. Kennedy, Mra. vislled •t Vtterllll Memorial
Jr,
'r ~ . and . . . Wa)'lle

studenll" and gets much of hla
aupport from the "left.wing ele·
menlloftheDemocralicparty."

• aiutll4.
....... ,., the

'"""II"'Y·

.. , a ...bentf·llle$kelwwwa
tndoli, C.I.O., left tile ~
.,.... about' U illl alpl

'._tile attt11e were (lltle4
·But .... 81. lilt lilt
,;,Ji.,Oil'i ••• eolra'!Oe· II wat
.

,_..
'** .. ,.--,.-.;'

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NEW YORK (UPI)- The
bitter student, face to face with
Spiro T. AtJnew, charged the
viCe president's opeeches bad
doae much to build an aura of
violence and aald AtJnew waa a
"precursor of violence.''
Flushing and opirit«&lt; but
posseaaed, the vice president in
reply st.uck at "the diagu9tlflll

·.

permiaaiw attitudes of the
people in command of college
campuses."
The exchange Dared at the
end of a 9Ckninute laping of a
television show in Which At!ntw
debJW&lt;I with five 1tudent
leaden Moaday night. They
appoared on the David Froat
Show, scheduled to be alred

Qy,een 's Future in

cillo.,,'.

Friday In moatlarg,..
Its broadcaat circle.
The student who
charge was Richard
president of the
Studenll of the
Washlngtoo, who IS
o doctorata in poUUcal

(Continued '"' ,-~· , ,

�·~ , r: -~
;.,

4 "4

;&lt;

I

,...~!

._, ,

$,'7'lf!li Q11UrSel\lillcl.~rt-P'"neroy,O~IItl'l -2?., 1970

,

'~

,t

'

'•

,

; ' '

··•

. R~ds. ~lank Br.~\fD$ Stab Jets, 31 'To 2·

' ·''0·'' S ·
.'•·· ·"'·;·•' ·s.ft!
.J
1 •·'·

ly RAY 'CiOMLEY, NEA Washington ~''
. '
.

-

WASHINGTON (NEA)
A few days ago this reporter received a' let(er ft'om a
Vfelllamese friend who in his younger days was a, guerrilla,
ftghllng for Vietnamese independence against the Freilcll
and now is a prominent civillan close to many Of•the top
111•n in the Saigon government.
·
: He is an Independent. however, in his thlnklllg. And he
does not hesitate to criticize.
This letter is pari of a continuing discussion between us
which has been going on now for more than six years.
Wbal follows, of co11rse, are excerpts :
,
•, ". . . 1 think that Presi&lt;lenl Nixon was right when be
red the strike into Cambodia. It helped and helps us
eal with the 1Viet Cong) sanctuaries, but we have to
ac with another problem: the Cambodian guerrina. Just
now, it' s not a threat for the Lon Nol government, but I
think that-and you will agree wlth me-the Communists
•re building their political underground and from that they
can lead a guerrilla war against the Lon Nol government
aa tlley did in 1960 In South Vietnam against (the) Diem
reJime.
· "And to face with this guerriDa problem, the CommunlstCambodlan guerrilla, the Cambodia ~overnment has to do
~ with his own troops and not w1th the Vietnamese or
Thai troops. The 'Cambodlanizallon' has to begin rlgbl now
and not one or two years further. This is the lesson from
the Vietnamfzation which bad to be done in 1963 and not
in 11168 or 19'10. . . .
·
"I agree wlth you that the Vietnamese army is buill up
along tile U.S. lines. Before, It was built up along the
French lines. This army is t.oo expensive for a sman coun·
try llke Vietnam with 17 mtlllon inhobltants: It was a
wrong thing ... (we) ftghlthe war without strategy, but
only with classical tactics.... (Ignoring the political, psycbologk:al and economic aapecis).
"You are questioning about what are we doing effectively
to prevent tile Communist political underground rebuilding.
I don't bow what you are doing in the American slde, but
llldnk thai, in the Vietnamese side, we are doing nothing.
I
strongly ... that we have to Improve the political
In Vietnam, especially to develop two major pollparties as the conslllutlon foresees. But I think that
wllll a mllltary reJime, we can't nach that aim, because
the generals don't have any conlldenr.e ln the political

.

force:; QleY .ilnly l)ave confidence In the army, In the gu,ius
~nc! munitlono and not In the polltie~l an!l psychological
weapons. They aJso fellr to 10$1! power. : .. (Therefore)
it's dif!lcult to btiild' up a nationallsl polltical strength to
fAce the Communist t»Utical undeiground Un' order to win)
the guerrllla war.
,·
·
"After the Colljmunlsl Tel olren~ive In 1968, President
Thieu took the lnitlattve1o form a ).iltge front with •lx most
important political parties in Vietnam. II we, a great hope
for the natton; .but after that he did noJ gtv 0 any. attention "
to that front ·which fa now quite lgncm!d for its Inactivity.
" ... the military situation is good, now, but the economic
&lt;silwilion) ls worse. The cl&gt;st of IIWII'g rises abilrply. ·...
The public servants do not get Dald enongb to'live m. How
can the soldiers fu(hl in the bat!Jefteld when they l!&gt;low that
their families arelmngry? The situation In the p~Dc servi~es is as foUows: The administrative offlcia!J In different
grades do not want to work for the government; they
to qwt, and if they cannot quit, ·they wilrk only ~e or two
ho11rs per day Instead of e~ght. They find another job in
town to .make money to r.rovide to the needs of !belt fam·
ilies. And so ... I don I want to (talk) about corruption
... because I think that it Is ridiculous to charge someone
who is hun~y and who tries to ma~e some mohey Wegully.
Besides, it s m01• ridl&lt;:,ulous to.chllrge lnsigolfleant poDce·
men while (higher ups) are corrupt with bilpunlty.
"The salary problem is the most important one th'at the
government has to deal with to improve the morale Of the
troops and the civil servants which are two pillars 'ol the
rogime. But I think this is not enough to improve the poll·
tical situation of President Thleu. He has to be supported
not only by the army and The civil servants but by a strong
political party or front, because masses !the people) can
not be organized by the adll!inislration. but by the political
parties. It's always a wrong thing in fighting the Commu·
nlsts to depend solely on the army and the administration.
You must (draw In) the masses, the people (In order to
win).
I
"In sum, the political situation is still worst and I think
that we must do something to improve this . .. I agree 1
with you that the Communists are in bad shape now and I
we must turn the occasion to account before they can lm· 1

.,

'-

.
. ' '
' ' .' '
Alan Truscott, the b'ridJ~
edil&lt;ir ol ,,tlle · N~w \'Q ~ '
'·
Times, 'llu·, l+st· •'lllrit!A!it •
book entilleH ''Practical

Bridge." .
~ ·
.,... ,
· His theme is that !lie wfh'
~r ,a t brld~e lan't· tha,, lllan• .,
per!l'rma·! most .. lirll'.. ·
1\Ali!iY but r•~ .!lie •DiaD, .
who ~es t~.e ·fewest ~~,~ .

wlw

tate•

'\
'iiir l ,
.
"'
.
. Today's luind WUStia .: '
'

Vo1ce · ong roa way

u
ep s

r---------------------------1
H I H I

ff B

.~!!~

~ ::nl::~~bealln. of the Ideal Of

baa~~~ berlblll..:~ .It's neGvler file· aameVIP~·- of

. ·P!fll\-

· ~ aunr, be •uggelis, lies at least partiaJJy in the

dlriiDic 'lack

of creature comfort~ the SOvist citizen 10

~~=::~;::'.Jei~ms and the shortages

one, ~e~hln~a!1 o}.one ~o-!.
trump. 'Thlo · wn them , Jr. '
1 116pele&amp;f
•Jll'oblem' at thew

1 ~:t~~ J;~-~ ~:~,

!

J · ':·

,-··,

tc.,~ of company equipment to the em~Ung Of bank

. ShOplifting In department store• and supermarkets is 10'·
'fideapread that lt adds a few &amp;ents to the cost of every
purchaae the honest person makes. Then and resale and
mla.- of credit cards has become a major Cl'iminal ac·
flvlty in recent yearo.
1
Our "carriers" are not downtrodden worl:era trying to
pta feW of the good things In life. By and large they al·
ready bave the Cood things and could eaaily get more of
'by worklllg for them. IJke the Russians, many of
\"1". orlean "carriers" consider their thievery to be a
ul fringe benet!!, something the company or society

·:n"

dllien

,:.:

::'!!1\:,

=·:

~"':~t ~~

,tl

A-TIIue ,,.,. are . _
moat ' often In heavy mell
'l'ibti"are' over··llo. Poorcy fitled Jhoea !llld arlblitll Will
a~v':,te ~ ~ondiUon. The

1111

f~~ !fot~==eI:;

)lll0r0111 or pro!Oncecl use of ..:..
' ,.._-"
t!rugs of Ute carllsOne group. r
It II
common In
,
wom'" wbo ~ve palled the • ~ 'bkldinr ,_.,""'.:
Qsleomyelllll, II W(lll' , llri ,&lt; ll!sC ,, "'""""'

=-·

••peclaUy

,..

!M

l.eaii·Roberl Boll " lilpvie ; Q-Jt)wW dl··m,:rc
"Lawrence of Aral!la" 'liill be ' platbod' are 01 · 0111
revived, lhll Unle wllli lbl illld jJtleOIIIJelllll'
erwt:.
"b~aeenu"promot..i llted, elpee1alllll!! lhelr
and pttMlclred for the ·flli.ealletl earl)' alapif ·~-;'&amp;\Jiie~
grubby "now" martel .... TheN ,themT
' ',. ·
same
qulbl
neeesaary . A-la om.op1110III there Ill .
..,...ncea were Inserted 11ith a dfffuae lOll' •Of·,~Julll
exeillng subtlety first. •llill"
~~la!IY .
rOiiHI, and bi r,ct 111e film's vertebra becoliies ~~: ·
depth, JIOiftl' 1n41 brlll1ance 'IY lteaiened ttmaJ-4loila~ere enhan.... .... .... em•• ' OateoniyfU!W ·I·· - ·-~" on
w
"'"'· u, ."'"
' "'!- ~ .
velously restrained presen· of the bi»&gt;e manv.t, lbal
taU of the 11111.... lnlllla bout may 8ffeet IIIJ 'bolie. II . '"'~ '-'""·"-'
on
? , a '"- 01use1 an ~.-. 'In \IJll.'
Lawrence; li1d ·~ ....,. 'lt'hi" bloOd .cell; eO\uit; Tbe
balance ol ~ effects COIIId boJie In tiJt ~
• ,.,·-- ""
tilt . the film; ~ ',ltnaallotial 'dlei aftariwllich:'lt
lhodtlineaa. /
·
• a 'fot.'ip body ·~ m111t, lie

=:ir

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_

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-~~ S:S~
litne ~

:: t:eQa~ll .,'~In

c..-

wtM.eIIi, •arl1 ' ~- but ' ~
HliiDI ' a ~ Ill II)Jell!lli · Ia II!~ ~·.

,

MoiJroe _. IIIli bir Tbe X-ray elwi,.. an .dlf·

,

,• ...;.._ ,....,.:,.

':1"- ...~ •. ,...,...

abe ' SCIIII"'il··
·'

·

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-·~·~~:u.~~ ::-:~::~:.~~·~::
rear.

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::::f':ot

Gul,lett m"'t pitc:h winter bali In
, ;_ ~to Rico.• to qualify for I
· · ' spot in lhe club's starUng rota'·,
lion next.
Gullett bluntly decl,area he
won't jjo.l!o baa~ saying so
.,
ever sin"' the aubjeel waa lint
diJcuMed 'lith him.
1111! r~kie lied left, realfirmed ' his s.land· Monday
night after letuntn8 up with
';
Clay Carroll aild Wayne Grans.r to blank the lloulton Aslroa
2-0 in the Opener of a three8.111'!" .serii'B a\ Riverfront Stadlwll.
"I just 'lli,ah they hadn't said
"
, anything to me about going to
~- Rico 1¢11111 the sea.son
'· ended," said Gullett.
He didn't have to elaborate.
...,,_
~-•"· ~ 111~--·
·-.,.-two
""""'
"" .,..,.
lltelldali 1111 Digbl'a QnciMall
• llaulloD baaebaD pme at
Rl.\'erfronl llltdlum In Cln·
elaaatl. · The aroap waa
,....,..ired Clll! llnCJ'I new fl
minion
ICoreboard
as
N!PIIIIEWIVetl of Rio Grande

'

2' •0

•"No pitcher'"can stand out
Puliett it. 'a y·oung man wltll !here! 1 in
ortl
or nne n..,.. ._ '!""•
tremendouaf tude.
. pouring on his fast baD,"
w:a~-.r~':,:r:" ~;::r~~: conUnued Sparky. "A pilcber
Gullett Monday night. But 11
~~ o~e a%. ':~:
001,1ld be Gullett has even more The Idea is fiX" Gullett to im·
fortitude than the ancinnati peove his CllrVe and develop a
Red. ~er and other club change • up while pitc:hlJI8 in

10,000 ottendld Jut night's

4-AII x roy ohow• a bone ferentlnd dlsflncUve.
South has t'Js g'' 6. . ,
·, ' ' ·:spur on my heel. It 11 yeey
Otteopou.JIJ ma)' be
ik ' ' ; ~ 1 &gt;tJ )•./ :1 ~
painful, can .11 ~ dlasolved causetl by a dlel.delldellt In
~ • ·
:,~; · ·' ·
or mutt It be eul·,oulf
ll~e, ~all!lt!J!II!Itd' plloe;

=

BERRY'S

:d;. ,'.

',.

do'f!!l

t;:

=ir~ 1 '*!':~,11r~

',

cw;;;,~~! ~1 !'!!IJ
""""'w""' ""'"""
M,-N~e Vtet. More lhln

..

Spur with neA' Pad

the llle ,alerted or why II else you ever knew.
'Jble word "SubiJelil' . miy .that I~ llilll !Me'the prellltl'e
fiouriahes.
.
Helen, 1 hear so ,.,Yother diA]ipear: The ~. David off
~er. ~l.
,

kids
paron
•.,...
labeUing 11 aa totally llllrue and ten you miile are tile best.
would save many a girl from - L. B., AGE 13
1 truckload of glass Illes from a factory thai wiD later be nl!'"alng · along "Mandarin Dear Belen:
aol4. to do-U.yourself home improvers wblle the thievea use length" naliJ in the mistaken I'm a Dtne overweight and
the money to meet the hlgli prices of a car or stereo set." ~ ol reapln8 great financial tills guy tea,... me. I lilted him
II is an interestlns theory, and there may be some trulb ~ .... We wort to make it not to make me the bull of a
toll. It is aisq Dice to be reassured about the batie faDure plleaible fiX" women to enjoy joke, and he said, "Wbf not,
of communism to provide a 4ecent living standard for peo- jdyely nan. - on lheir iiWn when you've got a job of, a
pie and to lielleve that in ~ heart of the averap Soviet • hloda! Sincorely youra, ANNS bull?" Is lhal kind? -MAD
eitizen there boats an ineradicable longipg to Uve under a MEREDI'Ill KEYLON
. Dear Mad.
I
capltallal ~stem. ·
len·'
·
-.
. Dear He ·
No,bulldndacleY'!r. ""'nql
Unfort~ly, lbil explanation raises some o!mbarru..
1 guea lh.re'1 always ro0rn compDmenllhia guy on his faat
lng queollons aDOul our own free enterprise BOCiety, for lor 'one more "Wbal is a comebacb and maybe be'D
we are not wltiulut our own' "carriers."
• '" ·
,
In this count:Y we caD II "white collar crime" and 11 is Mother· 10 here 8 mine:
start playing,up to you lnltead
e,l1maled. to cost buslneaa some $2 bi1Uoli a year. ' ll,goes
A moU. is the one who:
ol pla1lJI81.~ 1down. - H.
all tile wo;r from lbe petty pllfertng Of otnce IUJIIllielr to

q,! ~consumer goods that wlli lead an ordinartly honell
citizen to steal a can Of paint to cover the drabness o1 hi.f
eramped apartment," he says. "Or will lead 1o tile then of

.uta.

gove nearby

'

the mistakcr o! not JooidJ\g 1
ahead at yo~r flHI tUI'n to
bid
•
·.
'''" ·
When tbfa hand wai played
in a New York ~umam"'t .
some plfly'era Jllade .\he millillie of opWQI one club f,O!'

cocCI ~~raJ: r:;~ ·~ 2 .· .
••liOelilllt ~ss" lmder Clllnmunlit rule and the
a "'"'"~ ~
..,•..,
... ves 11"11 1
......
ImprQmp)u gllllj! - ~ auriical!1mOYal ~~ UsuallY lllattOW tbtoliib a rractlll"e • .
•
· · m·
lbat.lhleYery is a manlfeatalion of capltallsl greed; fingemiJia lli Revlon for fSO." where ~· W«ks.
Jots Q!WW n
juesta followed by a reeul-rence. or lhrou&amp;ll'jb$lliood ~~rpam. ¥""'
~ncles siiU be 10 manifest In tbe Soviet 1biJ baa NJ!N,ER bee11 ~ ilnd '" Slit's tile one you'd rather who . l)ligbt 108... IIIII' 11 The but- treatmeut . II tq
'·
• A
·. V " ?,MU 'writer Harry. ~tn.
we are,at. a loea 'wexplain 11o1r have 11,11 a mother than an~ palata11ie. ·
. ,_ ,_' ' , wear .a lieel ~- ao tlbaped
nanfrlendtl' ol
.

;;

a

!

'&lt;:'

Jlfi.._1

·
game. ~rs Wid.,~,t~
grub
'"'•bt Uve"'IIYltldllli"allhe ' wo~d ~"\.,,9llt.J!~-'; ·'
·
,
... • ,:• · •
it , . Tile blddlnfl. •lll·...tbfl-1.
The topleu-walttess fad is Belasco, The . fret! •n! • """'" · a ROWJ~ Slj!•
.
unzippill&amp; ilsain; City Hall" Daughter" at the Billy !kllf, reaj&gt;qn". to' *· OJie i\o·
~:
refused to Jet it prollftrole lalt "To Be or Not TG'llli ;- ~~ opeiillt(:foUow,ea )ly,1 J
,.
Ume,b!IIUlldsay'sladaaretoo Kind of Quetlllmll .'1'1181?' at .to tlttte ,~9-lru!iii),, !Jh.J'e·f
permiislve presently, an~ tile Barbison; aD opening in ~=· ·,~lr~ ·
~~i;
~b!Y ft .wtn be condoned, Oct.
'
.aelb: ,wltb caJ})ll&gt;l!l Jey(
encour11ed? .... Bdwy. wiD Paperback profiling llOIIIeo Soutli wm. lh~dllintonl~i!i' ~:.
have ~ one, aetloqa drama diana jUJI on the atancli ln hls hand and f!!lllf!ll ~ , ...
this. faD, Joob Dke: The 111e titles ita Jac~!• ,Ql~- suit; Wesl:a· ~-'P\aY,,IJ,:•IP;i .,
Lorraine Hansberry's "Ler· son portarll
Glulton ; duck, '!hereupon tlie. llntt.' .•
Blancs," starring James Earl lhat'a ~etroactlve . - The for care haa ~v~~· . ,r
J011e11 (Gfl!lll Whits Hope;IJim Fat One bas llheil amne Ill
Sou!h can C~!ll!l .f..fJ ~ J'. ·
star) and Cameron Mltc:lleU, Ilia. ... Pnlnfnenl tennis of. hearts,, three dtam~ ll!ld ·
opening Oct. 21atthe Lon!JJCte flclal scores ita f().Lovelnileed: a club but. he· ~an I affl!i'il
.... ThreeYiddiahahowlwtnbe He's married the IIIDe pi :o~ :".!'~111M1 ~·,
playing , simullaneoualy: three limes.
does that . Wut •C~~ 'Bet~ , • .
his fifth . dlamolld •41Dd the . ;
.
defense WID he able· to coll8
Ject two dlamon!la. two
w.wCTQA MAILBAG tP8d~ ~~ club. Instead
1 " -~· ~;11~' ""'
, , 1u Mqa •,·4 &lt;~ '"' · "~"J'·~q·'BCnltiJI ~
,, ••
•
,. •' '
" ''""'''''' -,ueerr
"""'"' l lu
"'J.l
·~""
0
·one " . : toward dumlli:Y'f " jack/'; Ifl\.l....
· · . 'f )' ' · · •· .. · · ·" • ..... ,.west takes the king :And• ·
clears the di~onds, Sctuth·
lli.l
wlli hay~ ae~ up -a ncMd .,
.
'
club ·ttiCtr to go wltti - iile "
ly WAYNE G. I~NDSTADT ·M.D. . three diamonds and four

prove their situation."

Russia's ThievesToo Much Like Us

'

1

•

f CINCINNATI (U~) ~ 'bon

A.

,-------·----------------------------------i
• al
B d -

I

•

'·

want

e en

II•

~
-

BY JACK O'IIRIAN
NEW YORK _ Ex-Mayor
Bob Wagner's martial agonies
m quietly atred tn court here
1
1 ~st week: The ~ was
I
I barred .... Meanwhile Bob's
I been quietly escorting a pretty
1 redhead around the E. 86th St.
1
I
I 'spots ... Esther William• is only
By Helen Bottel
1
30 lba. from 8 COIIIebacL. The
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
... Borro\08 money from you Howard Keels made 11 deftnlte
This colwnn is for young and when ahe pays you back she after =years and three klnd.r
people, tbelr problema and puts in some e1lra.
.... Youns Bdwy. producer
pleasures, their trouble• and ... Calls yo11r hamster a "rat" Arthur Whitelaw is 1 deUgbllo
fun. As wilb the rest of Helen when you first get 11 but when it his back.ro: J ..t sent out
A major embezzlement scandal has been unearthed at Belp Us!, it welcomes laughs dlesahe'sassadasyouareand checks totaling 100 p.r cent
the "Memory of Lenin" collective farm in Azerbaijan, but won't dodge a serto.. she helps you bury it.
profit on his "Butterfllea Are
U.S.S.R., the Los Angeles Times reports.
question with a brush41.
... GelsapariUmejobsoshe Free" (deUgbtful comedy _
The sbare·the-wealth seheme in which .account books
Send yo11r teenage questions can buy you more stuff wllhout brightest in town).
were Juggled under the nose of the dlstnct CommuniSt to YOUTH ASKED FOR rr, bothering your Dad about bilb. The SIDI1Dl.r doldrums seem
party Involves an unknown nu!"ber of farm officials, from care of Helen Help USL lhls ... Changes the filters oo the finished·
the cbafrman of the collective down to lowly tom~to . ne~per
fiahaN"•"'um••hM•~e•
"'····""'
~~
-~~ .J , ,..... "~ ...
' ~,,,1
"''''""'
,,.,..
•
•
•
•
, _ •..,,.," " " ' " .
,:f'r_l·d--:Ume-:~~
_,
.
~lflll"!
"&lt;'• ..•t,~ . rrJUSTISN'TSO'
..., ',
tired
. . $0Jilfe4' iricldimt, says the 'story.
Dear lleten .• ,. .. ' r ' " fianis ail oveo'~ fillb.i 0
ln thll'Si · n city of vuutsk farmeti'sold fruit grown
·
• ·, ' li'
...
·,
~ Zas with
~
on ~vate."'Jota at exorbitant prices whlli! hundreds of tons
Caughlcha!
'
one dress or certain pair ol dero, Miami Dolphinl' owner
of alate farm products rolled or had to be fed to animals
You l!lid !here Is no truth in shoes you want.
Earl Smalley (wholle 11v1ng1ng
because the fanners took all the trucks to transport their the "rti(IIIX"" that you can sen a ... Usteno to yo11r secreta and motto is "Wotto way to go!")
own produce.
0110-irK!h long fingernall lo a you know she 'won't tell anyone Darryl Zanuct~ exchon&amp;lng
ln a Rostov packing plant, 46 workers pilfered thousands eoometlc cunpany for fS(l. I - and tella yQu hers too.
supper bows with his &amp;,ues~~; Qte.
of rubles worth of meal to sell on the black market.
happen to know_that Revloi1 wiD .... Buys ,7011 ll(\lllelblng
Japanese gen~ who bombed
Nine workers on the Moscow-Ryazan railway looted pay good mmey for lhfm· - your birthday and~ aays,ils Ptarl Harbor .- and the I'iiPlreilht cars of butter, brandy and candy.
SMART
from yo11r brolh.r beeauae he poneae who plannf4. that tnPlflllderlng bas, in fact. become a sub rosa fringe henellt Dear_Slnart:,
,
l~rsl&gt;l to get you ln)'thlng. , . famous bacbtab .... All
01 tbe . Soviel wortera, acknowledges the government news1 eent your 'facta to Revlon ... Cbeen you up when you re promotion tor llllrryl's bot new
paper ,Izvestia.
,
aitd received the following aad and takes good ..r,. ol' Y"\1 ''Tora 1 Tcra• Total" mo9fe of
"Ev~ a word is lnveilted for those who c~ away f!!P~y:
'· /
when you'~ slclt.
Pelrl ~from both the u.
(hlngs ,!rom !heir place olemployment," it saya. 'Sucb a Dear Helen:
.,
... Makes the beat. spaptn s. ind JapaDeae vieR .... 1bO
Qe!:d is l;8l!ecl ·a 'carrier,' ·DO( .an Insulting nlckname. It
!Por several .pner,,Uon. a aauce In the w~rld even though v.ry lonnallltne . . IQOIIe

EDITORIALS

".

wilh the
front office is aomeUdng Gullett
wants to.avoid, especially with
thepisyoffaleu than two weeki
away.
"But I tloll't want to go to
.,.. ~. "'··
~· d
r""' w now and my wue oean't want to go," said Gullett.
"~ I don't want anyone
dlaciuaing it. with .her. I've al·
. ·relljy told her to let me know
itanyopedoea."
' 1'171Df1 To Help''
"WhM f lell Don we want

ard.
Gullett says he can accompDah the same thing bf pitch·
ln8 in the instruclionilleague
Iii Florida where he is willin8 to
go.
"Shepard baa helped Gullett
a lot lhls aeason and c:ln help
him even more th1i Wtrtter,"
eountero Anderson. "Don is o11r
prize. I'm not going to aend
him to anyone else." .
Anderson concedes that
Wayne Simpson, aldeDned fiX"
lhe remslnder o1 the oeaaon
with an alUng ahouldfl", pltc:hed
too many innings in Puerto
Rico last winter.
"But we didn't have any eontrol ov.r ~impoon," points out
Anderson. "Shepard won't Jet
th
th'•• ha
to Do
e aame ""' ppen
n.
!would say Don and the others
who go down there won't pltc:h
more than 80 to 100 lnnlJI88."
The ~':to~-:' sia
0 er roo
llr er• I·
ed to pltc:h in Puerto Rico are
Milt WDcox, Mel Behney and
~ ~~te • ...
ere
were go...,.
to hav~ a IJUY Dke Shepard
down there looking after lbem,"
--'d And
""'Anoo!":phaaizedthalthe
rookie pltc:hen wiD be in Puer·
lo Rico to learn, lint to win a
pennant for Silepard.
"]Jut they'D definitely help
the club down there," aald
Spar.._ _,._ "U der •• 050
..,, ..,uw,g. n "'
lights, lhey'D be urunerclful."
Gullett yielded only two hits,
walked one and struck out lis
while pitclllng the first five ln·
nlng.tMOftllaynight,
In his last II appearances, he
baa
up only elibt hits

out33lna ;~of

'
The .Jell were polll~l!Jed }'IJ:ds lor, a,toUfi~.
ty yeari ~~~ the Qnelsld JIUIIIIII good ldr, 145 ywd.s ill· ''Ibis wu 11 to\llh' foolboiD 161.Y'!'"III alid the Browns Jt. , After lbf 8rolml' ~-off
Broii'JW entet;ed "" Nallailol · cluding me toilc!lduwu .•to lead gam' as we have ev.r played. The ,llroWIIB took adVIIlltagt! .J'l(lll.ltll mpved l!le \!Jts 61
FootbaD l.eague 10ith an the Brown•' attack, ..before That Jue Namalh lo the .of •·.few New York 'penjllliea to nrds In eight playo with
Oll«&lt;lnC ~and Mo!ldaJ U,703 fans, the lar,eat In t•ug~'"tguywehaveevermet, puahacroeatwotouchdownain Emeraonlloolorgoii1&amp;Uiefinal
night lilt Bro'!ma made tlleir Browns' hiJIGry.
he Is ju8l fanlaatic," said Coaeh lhe litot quarter.
•
two yards and \110' Browns took
debfltln lhe Al)lerl&lt;an Football
"It's ......, been a lmg lime Blantoo OOer who watehed After a Jet punt bit a New a 1t71ead ~ llllftliJ!e.
Leaple a winning me.
llneelranthalfutandbardfor Namath throw 20 ~letlms York player, the BroWIIII took Jones'o~Jai!4Jauntmadeil
lbner Joneo aparlred \be . .., too8." said Jooes, who wu good f~r 302 yards.
the bali from their OWn ti--yard 21·7and llooWI:Iimaml an Ill).
Browns to a 31-21 victory over the first Browns "player 1o "The Jet• have a great nne and marched ~yards In yard tenili&amp;Y drive by ocoring
tile New York Jets by raclJI8 116 runback a kick-oil for a touch· football team and the penalties :re p~~ wir!; Net:;..hiWng from IG-yllrdaoul to make 1121·
yards With the - d half lddl· down since Carl Ward did the played an important part of the
s
the
eight 14 wilh 9:22 left in the third

ary

By Unltocl PreulnternotiGIIol
Notlonot Luau•

t~1=gh

A.,.rlun Leag..
East
w. L Pet. Gl

E•••
Pd
' .
W. L.
GB N'!: 1~~r•
. ~ :~
1 Bos\On

:m
.516

~' ~ :~~ 1i•i2

11 73 .526 18'12
New York
19 14
3'h oetroll
76 n .497 23
St. LO&amp;Jis
12 11 .411 10'12 Cleveland
:~ ~ ·41 25 '12
12
~~~rhta ~~ ~ :~
Washington West
.-46l 21 '
W. L Pd. GB
Wnt
~~p~~ta
~ ~
7·;12
•·Cincinnati ~ ~ Pd. GB California
81 12 .52'1 11
Los ~les 83 70 :~~ 13· Konns City 60 92 .395 31'12
San Francisco 83 70 .s.l 13 MCh111"f!~guokee · 54
5'1 ;: · : ~
Atlanta
74 80 .481 22'1•
~ . Mondoy'sResutis
~~~~ 0
~
:~ ~: Chicago 8 Kan City 4, 1st
•·CIInclild dlvlolon title
Kan City 8 Chi 3• lnd, 12 inns
~=~~~~~ wo::J.o~t 3

:l""

:rsl

:!

t
Boslon 2 Clevel•nd 1

Cinclnn~J!~t:,ull'
San Fran 7 Los Ang 0
(Only games scheduled)

Cat it 1 Milwaukee 6

oa~::r:,.~ ~.:.b':~~M.......

Todoy's Probable Pitchers
IAll Time• EDT)
New York (McAndrew 10.121
al Philadelphia I Bunning 10.141.
1
' tj,,~,;~~ (Hands 17-131 al St.
LoS: lg,'"""'\J?:~1 9 Ps~) 1
Atlanta t::Jio~h 12-ll.n::oi p.~.
Houston !Billingham 12-81 al
Clnclnnotl (Nolan 11-11. S:05
PTon Francisco (Bryant S-4) ••
Loa Angeles I Foster 9-131. 11
p.m.
Monff'eat (Stoneman 5-15 and
Wegener J.SI al Pittsburgh
and Veale 9·151. 2,
Wtdntodo~• O.mH

!~''p.~-9

!All Tlmts EDT)
Minnesota I Kaal 12 101 at
Ooktand !Dobson 16-131. 10. JC
p.m.
Califomlo (May 6·13) at
~~~aukee (Patlin 12 121. 9
Detroit (Kilkenny Hl at
Baltimore (Phoebu• • ·S) . s
P·\.'Vashlnglon \Bosman 1~piOl
at New York !Stottlemyre 13
13 ~,!:.-;,:d (McDowell 20-10)
at Boston 1Pelers 14-111, 1· 3e
p.m.
Kansas Cily 1Drago 8-1• and
,1 c

r~F~~~~ .~JIMa~nus.':.li•rl~

~~r~:f~t·~ltts,"~,g~/ght

Wtdne&amp;day's Games
Minn at Oak. night

Chlc'IJ!o at St. Louis, night
~n ego1 ot 1At\ont~,h~lght
us on a nc • n g
Son Fran at Los Ang, night

Delrolt at Bat•. night
Wash at New York. night
Cleveland at Boston

?

NT.t

~!~~:: ~~wat"~~~ago

Sta~dz·ngs

.

~- "*'~Tq:~ Allanta at 'Green Bay

IOifmor
':."'"' '
I .t 0 J,OOO
1l
' '
'''PI~~!'e&lt;llwo
tnnlngs N.Y. Jets
' 0 1 0 .000
,, . •
whilegiviJiguponlyaharlnleu BuHolo
0 1 0 .000
0 1 0 ·000
single.
Gr~nser
preaerved
a
Miami
,.
shutout and Gullell'l fo11rth vie·
Centw~ 1 L. T. Pet.
Wy in ait declalons by blank· Cincinnati
1 0 0 1.000
NEW YORK (UPII-Tho top
Cleveland
I 0 0 1000
liOinalorcotteotfootbali leoma lJI8 the AStros the last two In· Houston
1 0 01 :000
11 Hlactocl ~Y. the 35-member ntngl
Pittsburgh
o 1 o 0011
II n I to~ Prell International
,
hom
W t
.
~rd . of· Coaches with nrst
Bobby Tolan doubled
e
"
· pJat~ vi&gt;tes and won-lost Tonuny Helma wilb the Reds Denver
w. L0 T. Pd,
, ,
r-ecork&lt;hl In p'aronth-: (First flral r111. in the second In· San Diego
~ 1 ~ '::
··
Polnfl . ntngandPtteRosec~ehome Ooklond
0 1 o .000
· .. T~
·
.,1 on an Astro error with the sec· Kansa.tCt!!~ 11 cono~.!.ncto .000
· 1. TfMl
(f-01
-ft••
2. Qhlo St. (t) tD-Ol
211 ond run In tile eighth inning.
East
3. Ptnn St. (1-41
202
Hoae, 'IIIIo rapped out two
w. L. T. Pd.
;:~-~,_&lt;J\ 11 2(~~0.1) ~l hits, wiD 60 into tonight's same Dalla•
~ ~ o 1.0011
a. MIISOVri (11 (2-4)
162 ~ only two hila to reach ~a~i.~:r~
0 1
7. Mlululppl (1-41
156 tlie 200 J;llltk.
Philadelphia
o 1 o .000
=~~ft-~1
~ , Tony Clontnget wiD oppose St. Louis centr"ol 1 0 .000
w. L T. Pd.
47 the Astroo' Wode 8la,lngame.
10. Mlchl~n (1-4)
,
n. Hauatonp-o&gt;
36
Detroit
1 0 o 1.000
'l:l)~~om
·":ll2-4)
1~
HOUSTON
Minneooto
1 0 · 0 1.000
1•
1 0
000
•
""'
ob
r
h
bl
Chicago
1
2
0 1 0 1.. 000
/, • ··)4,
1:0)
c.deno cf
~ 0 2 0 Gr..., Bay
&lt; ' ' 115. ~lorl"-&lt; .(2.0)
t Millerrt
Wnt
4 O O 0
1
••
16. {~:h!l&amp;'/~)
Wynn If
3 o o o
W. L T. Pel.
4 o 1 o ~~~r.,v•tes
g ~
5 Wa110(11b
11 ;· M~• ll;ll
' 19. (Tio) AU11iWn •(1.0)
3 Menkuo
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
- ITitl W•~ton fl-41 3 Roder 3b
3 0
(TieJw,;,tVIrtlnlo(2.0l 3 Howerdc
Lamr,ardph
0 0 0
0 00 Toto
' Other 1Mm1 .-Mno votos: Torrens
2
1
30 o 4 0
Air Fore., Arizona Slo)o, Morgan 2b
1 0 t 0
CINCINNATI
1 0 0 0
GtorglaTach.&amp;an Dleoostett, ·aorKhp ,
ob r hIll
1 0 0 0
Sollth Carollni&lt;TtXII AloM.
"· 1 ~ P. •
4 '0 2 t
4 1 2 0
2
1
...

C:,Ollege Ratings

.rnJ

t

•·

~":h'J':ll!"::t"~io~ouis
·

Miami at Housh"'
Ookland al San Diego
Plllsburgh at Denver
IOnly g~:,:.~.~~~~
Kan City ot Ball. night
(Only game scheduled!

;:

°

:

l·

°°

l::l

By UnHtd Prtsstnternatlonot
Natlonol Ltogue
G. AB R. H. Pd.
Carty,Atl 132-467 84171 .366
Willms. Chi 151 599 134 190 .321
Hckmn, Chi 139 481 98 157 .326
Torre, All 1525l7 85191 .m
Rose, Ctn
152 622 111198 .319
Tolan, Cin 145 564 107 180 .319
Sngten,PII ,121 4S8 59 141. .319
0
Parker, LA 153 584 80 186 .318
Per•z,Cin
151 560103
m .316
11
Davis,
LA 138
559 90 175
.313
0
Gaotn, SD 137 5SO 87 m .313
o
AIMlkln Luauo
~
·,
G. 1\1 R. H. !'&lt;f.
0 JoMin, Ca! 141
S19 19 187 .323
0
Ytnkj, Boi
SolO 111173 .370
0 1Oliva, Min
593 88 tilt .319
•••'·
0
~lclo.t. Chi
s.o 16 172 .317
Smith, 1001
106 171 .306
,Mun..,, NY '
59132 .J05
CAter, NY
62 171 .302
~;!Hi~nj; ,F.Rblll. Bat
831l1 .302
Min
116 119 .300
SB- ~lte,NV
105173 .299
c.n

:-

. Tow••·

M:::~.~Cl;~":

quarter.
• ~ ,;l
Namath moved lhi!•llew fllril
eleven 80 yards ~ }.,. '~
with a U.,.ard pql •19 0.
Sauer cuWng tile~·
lead ~&amp;~three poinla With Nl '
left in the game.
Brown lilleblicker
&amp;-ewsputtttll~e~~~;:'~~-=~
with 35 "'
plci!M off a ~~ pao
~!~;-for the

4"

p~

...atea

The PiliBburgh Pirates begin
their final pUJh for the National
League East Dlvisloo UUe
tonisht with Dock Ellis (12-9)
and Bob Vesle (9-IS) opposing
tile Montreal EI]&gt;Os in a twinight doubleheader at Pillsburgb. The Elpoo, a surprising 9-7 against the Pirates this
season, are sending Bill Stoneman (5-15) and Mike Wegener
(3-5) to the mound.
The Cubs. who play all their

remaining II games on the
road, open a three-game series
with tile st. .Louis Cardinals
with Bill Hands (17-13) slated to
oppose Bob Gibson (2U) on the
mound
.
The Mets, limpmg toward the
finish line with five losses in
their tasl 91x games and all but
desperate because of lhe lateseason slump of Tom Seaver,
start a two-game series wtlh
the PbiUies in Philadelphia with

Jun McAndrew ( IIH2) facing
Jun Bunning (10.14).
The Cincinnati Reds defeated
IJie ·Houston Astros, 2-0, and tile
San Francisco Giants blanked
the Los Angeles Dodgers, 7-4, in
the •nly NL games scheduled
Monday.
In the American League, 21·
year old Vida Blue pitched a
no-bltlerlhatgave the Oakland
Athletics a 6-0 victory over

car, it was re·
at Ken:
Rltidy .International Airport amounts to many mllllons
0( dollan a year. Add to this the constant loollng thai
ioel on at other airports, docks, warehouses and terminals.
About all these stories out of the U.S.S.R. really prove is
dial the Ruosiana are simply pretty much like .people
everywbe~ch In this case Is no compliment.

IAIII .• S

;

Mmnesota and prev~ ~
Twms from cllnchin&amp; ~
Western Division titie . Other.
scores were Chicago 8 Kanlll.lll
City 4, and Kanass aty 8
Chicago 2, New York Ill
Washington 2, Boston 2 Clevef
land I, Baltimore 4 Dolroit 3;
and California 7 Milwaukee 6.j
Don Gullett, Clay Carron and;
WayneGrangerteamedupona
fo~~r-bitter for the Reds willr.
the Ill-year old Gullett pilchlngl
two-bit baD for five innings and '
rectlvfn8 credit for his fo11rlli~
victory·
•
WiDie Mays drove in 'four '
runs with his 28th hom.r ol the.1
season and two singles and 1
Juan Marlcbal pitched a olJ:· l
hitter for his first shutout ol j
: : : : Dodgln
~~~·~~ ·•
~- .... ,

Blue M0-H zts
• Twzns,
• 6-o
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Wrller
Vida Blue believes that If at
ftrst you dm' succeed, try, try
again
The. 21-year-old left-bander
hadano-blttergoingagainsllhe
Kansas City &amp;yals on Sept. II
~&gt;hen Pat Kelly ruined it with a
two-out single in the eighth
inmng. On Monday night,
ho
be
wever, 81ue was not to
de.:.\oungster from Mans·
field, La., pitched lhe first M·
hiller of his career as the
Oakland Athletics beat Mione!Ota, 11-4, and postponed the
Twin , linchin' of the
·
s c
g
Amen·
can League's Western IJIYlsion
tiUe.
Blue said he threw "abo~t 95

per cent fastballs" at the his bat as he tripled in the first
ful
and scored the A's' first Mil on a
power b Twins' Un!?' The ood double play and hit a three-run
~!:=- ~~~g:~~o:...: ~:.i~s homer dW'ing a five-rw eighth.
o. Finley, who rewarded Blue In other American League
for his perlormanct with a action, Kansas City beat :~ed~n !!~~~in:::.8
I
t2,000 check.
Olicsgo, 8-2, alter losing the West.
'"'"
"I hope I get more phone caDI opener of the doubleheader, 8-4,
like that," said Blue, after New York beat Washington, 5-2, THE
finishing his conversation with Boaton edged Cleveland, 2-1,
•••• .,.....
Flnley. "I'm looking forward 1o Baltimore nipped Detroit, 4-3
-d Calilorn~a
'
-• ·pped ....
more good things in my -·
"'1
.,....
League
put into words ,
games scheduled, anclnnatt
blanked Houston, 2-0, and San
Tin ID Brilliant Plays
Francisco ahut out Los Angeles,
Bert Campaneris and Sal 7-4.
d
Danny Cater and Bobby
Ban o turned in brilliant
fielding plays to help Blue's MW'c.r drove in two nms each
performance. Campanerls also and Fritz Peterson achieved a lt'l
helped the Oakland cause with csreer high llllb victory as the Amtrlcl'•
llrplt Hllln&amp;
Yankeeo beat the Senators.
bnnd of cicars•
Jim York, making his pltch~~
ingdebulinthemaJors,lhrew4
~t
2-3 strmg innings of relief to
, load Kllnau City ov.r ~cago
"''g{; ''"''""''",'"" O
"'
"~j,
p l
~ · ~~·~, 'atter tbe White Sol. won the

::,u

Great l..uln..:U..

~;=~ t~~\;~·j..!"~an~h~ ~w::-:;l:-6Nalionai

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPIIIt's game plan week for the
Ohio State Buckeyes as Coach
Woody Hayes puts in the
fimshingtouchesforSaturday's
opener against Texas A &amp; Mat
Ohio Stadium.
"We have to take this week
to gel ready for Texas A &amp; M
and get into a game plan,"
Hayes said at the first weekly
press luncheon Monday.
"I don't lhtnk tllere's any
question we'll he playing a wellconditioned team," Hayes said.
"They've already played two
games."
The Aggies won their opener
41-14 over Wichita State and
Saturday night upset l.ooisiana
Slate »-18 on a 76-yard pass
playwilhl3secondsremalnlng.
Hayes pamted a rosy picture .
for his offensive team, saying
aD banda wiD be available for
Saturday's I :30 pm. kickoff,
b t del si 1 the Bucke
u
en ve Y
yes
WID not be 100 per cent.
The biggest hole tn the
defense will be tile ahsen&lt;e of
.
two-year regular and all B~g
Ten safety Mike Sensibaugh,
who
wtn miss
one and
maybe
t~ games
because
of a broken

For .
ener

"We've been advised by the
doctors lhal Tom Rabatin
shouldn't play any more
foothali this year," Hayes said.
"He's had a history of bead
bumps smce his sophomore
. h h 1W h
year in hlg sc oo . e ate to
lose him, but we're sure not
going to takeulanhy chancts. He
probably wo d ave been o(lr
third hnehacker .,
Esco Sarkkinen, ch1ef scout
for the Buckeyes, watched
Texas A &amp; M beat LSU
Saturday night at Baton &amp;uge.
"LSU was definitely stunned
by the way the Aggies came
back," Sarkltinen said. "They
aren't used to lhat.
"A &amp; M is a physically tough
team and they are always
challengiqg you on tile r1eld,"
Sarkldnen said.
"Lex James, their sophomore
quarterback, is tile type oi1J11y
who makes tile big plays go for
them He ... the hub of theu-'
· ..
offense.
James threw the mnntng
touchdown pass to split end
·
Hugh McElroy agamst LSU and
was named Southwest Conferenct Back of the Week.

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

Opener on Bill Mellojl's tielreaking homer, which also set
a club recotltl.
0 ·l'f /"'/ .. / /
Sbllps f.4 'ne
Oil4 '-#li14$''.t;~jJq
Melton's bom.r bls 30111 of
c
the 10810n sna~d a Wile in
lheseventh' and ~oke the Wbl'te
~·
Sox record shared by Gus
z.mta1 and Eddie Rubinson.
Carl Yastrzernsld and Rico
Pl!trocclD hit home rWilto lead
Boston over Cleveland, the Red
Sox' siJ:tb straight. victory.
Yllllrzemsld hll his 40th homer
and drove in his !IIIIth run off
loser Rich Hand in the firll
innlns and PetroceUi added his
28th an innJna,pter.
Mark Belanger's bases·
loaded single in the 12111 inning
9COI"ed rookie Johnny Oates to
pact the Orioles over file
ngers. Oalel bad tripled off
~
----an to'open the
·~u •uwuc&lt;w
inning and Terry Q-owley !lid
Om Buford were intmllonaDy
walltad before Belanger's hit.
l'lnch-hilter Jay Jabnston's
two-run homer rallied the
.......
then.- d
....,... paal
.,...,,..• an
gave Tml Murphy his 15th
victory of the year. Tommy
. , _ m-ove In three runs for
·-..Milwaukee wilb a pair of
homers and Plli1 Roof bad a
three-run hcmer for the~lft~w~-~2~2;0~N;·~2;n;d;;:;~~;

""

bone in a foot.
"Having Sensibaugh out of
the defensive backfield kind ol
.
~us up," Hayes said.
Hayes baa replaced Sensl·
baugh b• mo"'••junlor
'
'""'
--·•
Howard Into the safety spot and
inserting sophomore John
Hugheo into Howard's teiiuJar
Jeftbalfbadtposltloft.
Hayes lllld !If "!II "a Hille
thin at
end and

u.-

PBEII/1111*
POLYESTEI tORD TIRE
• Fa•r J'•ll Pllet
All Poi,.Hter Coni
Con•lnu:tio•
• Deep SlotiNI .•. T ... l'doa·

t ....~D.ola·

ib ft:~ R111alan workers looting a freight

~ reported that looting of frelg~t shipments

!i;;j'

.....

..,~,, tbem.

"

;

,

'

g ::

Win.-•

,

~ l::l

Cincinnati at O.ff'olt
New Orleans at Minnesota
N.Y. Giani! at Oolias
t~~~\'::f.t~~ a;.~~';'lr,0
Los An-les at Buffalo

1

h
O
' n
Expos Toug · ·

Buck 8 Get
,;.r,:.'t,J:ilm . .,,,. "'"' '
iOnJy=y~h::~:l "70
ason

By Unl=~~~l:.~otlooal San Frahclsco 1 0
Amerlun con-e• .
New OrJl::i:. , R0 ~
East {
\.,et..OJallij

::E~:~i!l~:::· ~.

' l!·,

Pm•·

~~ (UPI)"..:fwln. Gftandl!jiiN~IItilbltGIII2oU'I trick In 1987.

·.f18 X 14 '22.00
F78 X 15 '22.00
G78 x.14
or 15
.
'•
·.H78 X Of.
. 15
,

�·~ , r: -~
;.,

4 "4

;&lt;

I

,...~!

._, ,

$,'7'lf!li Q11UrSel\lillcl.~rt-P'"neroy,O~IItl'l -2?., 1970

,

'~

,t

'

'•

,

; ' '

··•

. R~ds. ~lank Br.~\fD$ Stab Jets, 31 'To 2·

' ·''0·'' S ·
.'•·· ·"'·;·•' ·s.ft!
.J
1 •·'·

ly RAY 'CiOMLEY, NEA Washington ~''
. '
.

-

WASHINGTON (NEA)
A few days ago this reporter received a' let(er ft'om a
Vfelllamese friend who in his younger days was a, guerrilla,
ftghllng for Vietnamese independence against the Freilcll
and now is a prominent civillan close to many Of•the top
111•n in the Saigon government.
·
: He is an Independent. however, in his thlnklllg. And he
does not hesitate to criticize.
This letter is pari of a continuing discussion between us
which has been going on now for more than six years.
Wbal follows, of co11rse, are excerpts :
,
•, ". . . 1 think that Presi&lt;lenl Nixon was right when be
red the strike into Cambodia. It helped and helps us
eal with the 1Viet Cong) sanctuaries, but we have to
ac with another problem: the Cambodian guerrina. Just
now, it' s not a threat for the Lon Nol government, but I
think that-and you will agree wlth me-the Communists
•re building their political underground and from that they
can lead a guerrilla war against the Lon Nol government
aa tlley did in 1960 In South Vietnam against (the) Diem
reJime.
· "And to face with this guerriDa problem, the CommunlstCambodlan guerrilla, the Cambodia ~overnment has to do
~ with his own troops and not w1th the Vietnamese or
Thai troops. The 'Cambodlanizallon' has to begin rlgbl now
and not one or two years further. This is the lesson from
the Vietnamfzation which bad to be done in 1963 and not
in 11168 or 19'10. . . .
·
"I agree wlth you that the Vietnamese army is buill up
along tile U.S. lines. Before, It was built up along the
French lines. This army is t.oo expensive for a sman coun·
try llke Vietnam with 17 mtlllon inhobltants: It was a
wrong thing ... (we) ftghlthe war without strategy, but
only with classical tactics.... (Ignoring the political, psycbologk:al and economic aapecis).
"You are questioning about what are we doing effectively
to prevent tile Communist political underground rebuilding.
I don't bow what you are doing in the American slde, but
llldnk thai, in the Vietnamese side, we are doing nothing.
I
strongly ... that we have to Improve the political
In Vietnam, especially to develop two major pollparties as the conslllutlon foresees. But I think that
wllll a mllltary reJime, we can't nach that aim, because
the generals don't have any conlldenr.e ln the political

.

force:; QleY .ilnly l)ave confidence In the army, In the gu,ius
~nc! munitlono and not In the polltie~l an!l psychological
weapons. They aJso fellr to 10$1! power. : .. (Therefore)
it's dif!lcult to btiild' up a nationallsl polltical strength to
fAce the Communist t»Utical undeiground Un' order to win)
the guerrllla war.
,·
·
"After the Colljmunlsl Tel olren~ive In 1968, President
Thieu took the lnitlattve1o form a ).iltge front with •lx most
important political parties in Vietnam. II we, a great hope
for the natton; .but after that he did noJ gtv 0 any. attention "
to that front ·which fa now quite lgncm!d for its Inactivity.
" ... the military situation is good, now, but the economic
&lt;silwilion) ls worse. The cl&gt;st of IIWII'g rises abilrply. ·...
The public servants do not get Dald enongb to'live m. How
can the soldiers fu(hl in the bat!Jefteld when they l!&gt;low that
their families arelmngry? The situation In the p~Dc servi~es is as foUows: The administrative offlcia!J In different
grades do not want to work for the government; they
to qwt, and if they cannot quit, ·they wilrk only ~e or two
ho11rs per day Instead of e~ght. They find another job in
town to .make money to r.rovide to the needs of !belt fam·
ilies. And so ... I don I want to (talk) about corruption
... because I think that it Is ridiculous to charge someone
who is hun~y and who tries to ma~e some mohey Wegully.
Besides, it s m01• ridl&lt;:,ulous to.chllrge lnsigolfleant poDce·
men while (higher ups) are corrupt with bilpunlty.
"The salary problem is the most important one th'at the
government has to deal with to improve the morale Of the
troops and the civil servants which are two pillars 'ol the
rogime. But I think this is not enough to improve the poll·
tical situation of President Thleu. He has to be supported
not only by the army and The civil servants but by a strong
political party or front, because masses !the people) can
not be organized by the adll!inislration. but by the political
parties. It's always a wrong thing in fighting the Commu·
nlsts to depend solely on the army and the administration.
You must (draw In) the masses, the people (In order to
win).
I
"In sum, the political situation is still worst and I think
that we must do something to improve this . .. I agree 1
with you that the Communists are in bad shape now and I
we must turn the occasion to account before they can lm· 1

.,

'-

.
. ' '
' ' .' '
Alan Truscott, the b'ridJ~
edil&lt;ir ol ,,tlle · N~w \'Q ~ '
'·
Times, 'llu·, l+st· •'lllrit!A!it •
book entilleH ''Practical

Bridge." .
~ ·
.,... ,
· His theme is that !lie wfh'
~r ,a t brld~e lan't· tha,, lllan• .,
per!l'rma·! most .. lirll'.. ·
1\Ali!iY but r•~ .!lie •DiaD, .
who ~es t~.e ·fewest ~~,~ .

wlw

tate•

'\
'iiir l ,
.
"'
.
. Today's luind WUStia .: '
'

Vo1ce · ong roa way

u
ep s

r---------------------------1
H I H I

ff B

.~!!~

~ ::nl::~~bealln. of the Ideal Of

baa~~~ berlblll..:~ .It's neGvler file· aameVIP~·- of

. ·P!fll\-

· ~ aunr, be •uggelis, lies at least partiaJJy in the

dlriiDic 'lack

of creature comfort~ the SOvist citizen 10

~~=::~;::'.Jei~ms and the shortages

one, ~e~hln~a!1 o}.one ~o-!.
trump. 'Thlo · wn them , Jr. '
1 116pele&amp;f
•Jll'oblem' at thew

1 ~:t~~ J;~-~ ~:~,

!

J · ':·

,-··,

tc.,~ of company equipment to the em~Ung Of bank

. ShOplifting In department store• and supermarkets is 10'·
'fideapread that lt adds a few &amp;ents to the cost of every
purchaae the honest person makes. Then and resale and
mla.- of credit cards has become a major Cl'iminal ac·
flvlty in recent yearo.
1
Our "carriers" are not downtrodden worl:era trying to
pta feW of the good things In life. By and large they al·
ready bave the Cood things and could eaaily get more of
'by worklllg for them. IJke the Russians, many of
\"1". orlean "carriers" consider their thievery to be a
ul fringe benet!!, something the company or society

·:n"

dllien

,:.:

::'!!1\:,

=·:

~"':~t ~~

,tl

A-TIIue ,,.,. are . _
moat ' often In heavy mell
'l'ibti"are' over··llo. Poorcy fitled Jhoea !llld arlblitll Will
a~v':,te ~ ~ondiUon. The

1111

f~~ !fot~==eI:;

)lll0r0111 or pro!Oncecl use of ..:..
' ,.._-"
t!rugs of Ute carllsOne group. r
It II
common In
,
wom'" wbo ~ve palled the • ~ 'bkldinr ,_.,""'.:
Qsleomyelllll, II W(lll' , llri ,&lt; ll!sC ,, "'""""'

=-·

••peclaUy

,..

!M

l.eaii·Roberl Boll " lilpvie ; Q-Jt)wW dl··m,:rc
"Lawrence of Aral!la" 'liill be ' platbod' are 01 · 0111
revived, lhll Unle wllli lbl illld jJtleOIIIJelllll'
erwt:.
"b~aeenu"promot..i llted, elpee1alllll!! lhelr
and pttMlclred for the ·flli.ealletl earl)' alapif ·~-;'&amp;\Jiie~
grubby "now" martel .... TheN ,themT
' ',. ·
same
qulbl
neeesaary . A-la om.op1110III there Ill .
..,...ncea were Inserted 11ith a dfffuae lOll' •Of·,~Julll
exeillng subtlety first. •llill"
~~la!IY .
rOiiHI, and bi r,ct 111e film's vertebra becoliies ~~: ·
depth, JIOiftl' 1n41 brlll1ance 'IY lteaiened ttmaJ-4loila~ere enhan.... .... .... em•• ' OateoniyfU!W ·I·· - ·-~" on
w
"'"'· u, ."'"
' "'!- ~ .
velously restrained presen· of the bi»&gt;e manv.t, lbal
taU of the 11111.... lnlllla bout may 8ffeet IIIJ 'bolie. II . '"'~ '-'""·"-'
on
? , a '"- 01use1 an ~.-. 'In \IJll.'
Lawrence; li1d ·~ ....,. 'lt'hi" bloOd .cell; eO\uit; Tbe
balance ol ~ effects COIIId boJie In tiJt ~
• ,.,·-- ""
tilt . the film; ~ ',ltnaallotial 'dlei aftariwllich:'lt
lhodtlineaa. /
·
• a 'fot.'ip body ·~ m111t, lie

=:ir

¥_,

_

i!!:=

-~~ S:S~
litne ~

:: t:eQa~ll .,'~In

c..-

wtM.eIIi, •arl1 ' ~- but ' ~
HliiDI ' a ~ Ill II)Jell!lli · Ia II!~ ~·.

,

MoiJroe _. IIIli bir Tbe X-ray elwi,.. an .dlf·

,

,• ...;.._ ,....,.:,.

':1"- ...~ •. ,...,...

abe ' SCIIII"'il··
·'

·

·

IIJ'

·' • : ....,._..,........:...,:.,""'
(If -

·

~T'!~=ii'-'!:::'-

fa;..:·· ''"'"''·''

·

.

1

1

:r

-·~·~~:u.~~ ::-:~::~:.~~·~::
rear.

h..

~;controv.rsy

,,

•······H·-

::::f':ot

Gul,lett m"'t pitc:h winter bali In
, ;_ ~to Rico.• to qualify for I
· · ' spot in lhe club's starUng rota'·,
lion next.
Gullett bluntly decl,area he
won't jjo.l!o baa~ saying so
.,
ever sin"' the aubjeel waa lint
diJcuMed 'lith him.
1111! r~kie lied left, realfirmed ' his s.land· Monday
night after letuntn8 up with
';
Clay Carroll aild Wayne Grans.r to blank the lloulton Aslroa
2-0 in the Opener of a three8.111'!" .serii'B a\ Riverfront Stadlwll.
"I just 'lli,ah they hadn't said
"
, anything to me about going to
~- Rico 1¢11111 the sea.son
'· ended," said Gullett.
He didn't have to elaborate.
...,,_
~-•"· ~ 111~--·
·-.,.-two
""""'
"" .,..,.
lltelldali 1111 Digbl'a QnciMall
• llaulloD baaebaD pme at
Rl.\'erfronl llltdlum In Cln·
elaaatl. · The aroap waa
,....,..ired Clll! llnCJ'I new fl
minion
ICoreboard
as
N!PIIIIEWIVetl of Rio Grande

'

2' •0

•"No pitcher'"can stand out
Puliett it. 'a y·oung man wltll !here! 1 in
ortl
or nne n..,.. ._ '!""•
tremendouaf tude.
. pouring on his fast baD,"
w:a~-.r~':,:r:" ~;::r~~: conUnued Sparky. "A pilcber
Gullett Monday night. But 11
~~ o~e a%. ':~:
001,1ld be Gullett has even more The Idea is fiX" Gullett to im·
fortitude than the ancinnati peove his CllrVe and develop a
Red. ~er and other club change • up while pitc:hlJI8 in

10,000 ottendld Jut night's

4-AII x roy ohow• a bone ferentlnd dlsflncUve.
South has t'Js g'' 6. . ,
·, ' ' ·:spur on my heel. It 11 yeey
Otteopou.JIJ ma)' be
ik ' ' ; ~ 1 &gt;tJ )•./ :1 ~
painful, can .11 ~ dlasolved causetl by a dlel.delldellt In
~ • ·
:,~; · ·' ·
or mutt It be eul·,oulf
ll~e, ~all!lt!J!II!Itd' plloe;

=

BERRY'S

:d;. ,'.

',.

do'f!!l

t;:

=ir~ 1 '*!':~,11r~

',

cw;;;,~~! ~1 !'!!IJ
""""'w""' ""'"""
M,-N~e Vtet. More lhln

..

Spur with neA' Pad

the llle ,alerted or why II else you ever knew.
'Jble word "SubiJelil' . miy .that I~ llilll !Me'the prellltl'e
fiouriahes.
.
Helen, 1 hear so ,.,Yother diA]ipear: The ~. David off
~er. ~l.
,

kids
paron
•.,...
labeUing 11 aa totally llllrue and ten you miile are tile best.
would save many a girl from - L. B., AGE 13
1 truckload of glass Illes from a factory thai wiD later be nl!'"alng · along "Mandarin Dear Belen:
aol4. to do-U.yourself home improvers wblle the thievea use length" naliJ in the mistaken I'm a Dtne overweight and
the money to meet the hlgli prices of a car or stereo set." ~ ol reapln8 great financial tills guy tea,... me. I lilted him
II is an interestlns theory, and there may be some trulb ~ .... We wort to make it not to make me the bull of a
toll. It is aisq Dice to be reassured about the batie faDure plleaible fiX" women to enjoy joke, and he said, "Wbf not,
of communism to provide a 4ecent living standard for peo- jdyely nan. - on lheir iiWn when you've got a job of, a
pie and to lielleve that in ~ heart of the averap Soviet • hloda! Sincorely youra, ANNS bull?" Is lhal kind? -MAD
eitizen there boats an ineradicable longipg to Uve under a MEREDI'Ill KEYLON
. Dear Mad.
I
capltallal ~stem. ·
len·'
·
-.
. Dear He ·
No,bulldndacleY'!r. ""'nql
Unfort~ly, lbil explanation raises some o!mbarru..
1 guea lh.re'1 always ro0rn compDmenllhia guy on his faat
lng queollons aDOul our own free enterprise BOCiety, for lor 'one more "Wbal is a comebacb and maybe be'D
we are not wltiulut our own' "carriers."
• '" ·
,
In this count:Y we caD II "white collar crime" and 11 is Mother· 10 here 8 mine:
start playing,up to you lnltead
e,l1maled. to cost buslneaa some $2 bi1Uoli a year. ' ll,goes
A moU. is the one who:
ol pla1lJI81.~ 1down. - H.
all tile wo;r from lbe petty pllfertng Of otnce IUJIIllielr to

q,! ~consumer goods that wlli lead an ordinartly honell
citizen to steal a can Of paint to cover the drabness o1 hi.f
eramped apartment," he says. "Or will lead 1o tile then of

.uta.

gove nearby

'

the mistakcr o! not JooidJ\g 1
ahead at yo~r flHI tUI'n to
bid
•
·.
'''" ·
When tbfa hand wai played
in a New York ~umam"'t .
some plfly'era Jllade .\he millillie of opWQI one club f,O!'

cocCI ~~raJ: r:;~ ·~ 2 .· .
••liOelilllt ~ss" lmder Clllnmunlit rule and the
a "'"'"~ ~
..,•..,
... ves 11"11 1
......
ImprQmp)u gllllj! - ~ auriical!1mOYal ~~ UsuallY lllattOW tbtoliib a rractlll"e • .
•
· · m·
lbat.lhleYery is a manlfeatalion of capltallsl greed; fingemiJia lli Revlon for fSO." where ~· W«ks.
Jots Q!WW n
juesta followed by a reeul-rence. or lhrou&amp;ll'jb$lliood ~~rpam. ¥""'
~ncles siiU be 10 manifest In tbe Soviet 1biJ baa NJ!N,ER bee11 ~ ilnd '" Slit's tile one you'd rather who . l)ligbt 108... IIIII' 11 The but- treatmeut . II tq
'·
• A
·. V " ?,MU 'writer Harry. ~tn.
we are,at. a loea 'wexplain 11o1r have 11,11 a mother than an~ palata11ie. ·
. ,_ ,_' ' , wear .a lieel ~- ao tlbaped
nanfrlendtl' ol
.

;;

a

!

'&lt;:'

Jlfi.._1

·
game. ~rs Wid.,~,t~
grub
'"'•bt Uve"'IIYltldllli"allhe ' wo~d ~"\.,,9llt.J!~-'; ·'
·
,
... • ,:• · •
it , . Tile blddlnfl. •lll·...tbfl-1.
The topleu-walttess fad is Belasco, The . fret! •n! • """'" · a ROWJ~ Slj!•
.
unzippill&amp; ilsain; City Hall" Daughter" at the Billy !kllf, reaj&gt;qn". to' *· OJie i\o·
~:
refused to Jet it prollftrole lalt "To Be or Not TG'llli ;- ~~ opeiillt(:foUow,ea )ly,1 J
,.
Ume,b!IIUlldsay'sladaaretoo Kind of Quetlllmll .'1'1181?' at .to tlttte ,~9-lru!iii),, !Jh.J'e·f
permiislve presently, an~ tile Barbison; aD opening in ~=· ·,~lr~ ·
~~i;
~b!Y ft .wtn be condoned, Oct.
'
.aelb: ,wltb caJ})ll&gt;l!l Jey(
encour11ed? .... Bdwy. wiD Paperback profiling llOIIIeo Soutli wm. lh~dllintonl~i!i' ~:.
have ~ one, aetloqa drama diana jUJI on the atancli ln hls hand and f!!lllf!ll ~ , ...
this. faD, Joob Dke: The 111e titles ita Jac~!• ,Ql~- suit; Wesl:a· ~-'P\aY,,IJ,:•IP;i .,
Lorraine Hansberry's "Ler· son portarll
Glulton ; duck, '!hereupon tlie. llntt.' .•
Blancs," starring James Earl lhat'a ~etroactlve . - The for care haa ~v~~· . ,r
J011e11 (Gfl!lll Whits Hope;IJim Fat One bas llheil amne Ill
Sou!h can C~!ll!l .f..fJ ~ J'. ·
star) and Cameron Mltc:lleU, Ilia. ... Pnlnfnenl tennis of. hearts,, three dtam~ ll!ld ·
opening Oct. 21atthe Lon!JJCte flclal scores ita f().Lovelnileed: a club but. he· ~an I affl!i'il
.... ThreeYiddiahahowlwtnbe He's married the IIIDe pi :o~ :".!'~111M1 ~·,
playing , simullaneoualy: three limes.
does that . Wut •C~~ 'Bet~ , • .
his fifth . dlamolld •41Dd the . ;
.
defense WID he able· to coll8
Ject two dlamon!la. two
w.wCTQA MAILBAG tP8d~ ~~ club. Instead
1 " -~· ~;11~' ""'
, , 1u Mqa •,·4 &lt;~ '"' · "~"J'·~q·'BCnltiJI ~
,, ••
•
,. •' '
" ''""'''''' -,ueerr
"""'"' l lu
"'J.l
·~""
0
·one " . : toward dumlli:Y'f " jack/'; Ifl\.l....
· · . 'f )' ' · · •· .. · · ·" • ..... ,.west takes the king :And• ·
clears the di~onds, Sctuth·
lli.l
wlli hay~ ae~ up -a ncMd .,
.
'
club ·ttiCtr to go wltti - iile "
ly WAYNE G. I~NDSTADT ·M.D. . three diamonds and four

prove their situation."

Russia's ThievesToo Much Like Us

'

1

•

f CINCINNATI (U~) ~ 'bon

A.

,-------·----------------------------------i
• al
B d -

I

•

'·

want

e en

II•

~
-

BY JACK O'IIRIAN
NEW YORK _ Ex-Mayor
Bob Wagner's martial agonies
m quietly atred tn court here
1
1 ~st week: The ~ was
I
I barred .... Meanwhile Bob's
I been quietly escorting a pretty
1 redhead around the E. 86th St.
1
I
I 'spots ... Esther William• is only
By Helen Bottel
1
30 lba. from 8 COIIIebacL. The
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
... Borro\08 money from you Howard Keels made 11 deftnlte
This colwnn is for young and when ahe pays you back she after =years and three klnd.r
people, tbelr problema and puts in some e1lra.
.... Youns Bdwy. producer
pleasures, their trouble• and ... Calls yo11r hamster a "rat" Arthur Whitelaw is 1 deUgbllo
fun. As wilb the rest of Helen when you first get 11 but when it his back.ro: J ..t sent out
A major embezzlement scandal has been unearthed at Belp Us!, it welcomes laughs dlesahe'sassadasyouareand checks totaling 100 p.r cent
the "Memory of Lenin" collective farm in Azerbaijan, but won't dodge a serto.. she helps you bury it.
profit on his "Butterfllea Are
U.S.S.R., the Los Angeles Times reports.
question with a brush41.
... GelsapariUmejobsoshe Free" (deUgbtful comedy _
The sbare·the-wealth seheme in which .account books
Send yo11r teenage questions can buy you more stuff wllhout brightest in town).
were Juggled under the nose of the dlstnct CommuniSt to YOUTH ASKED FOR rr, bothering your Dad about bilb. The SIDI1Dl.r doldrums seem
party Involves an unknown nu!"ber of farm officials, from care of Helen Help USL lhls ... Changes the filters oo the finished·
the cbafrman of the collective down to lowly tom~to . ne~per
fiahaN"•"'um••hM•~e•
"'····""'
~~
-~~ .J , ,..... "~ ...
' ~,,,1
"''''""'
,,.,..
•
•
•
•
, _ •..,,.," " " ' " .
,:f'r_l·d--:Ume-:~~
_,
.
~lflll"!
"&lt;'• ..•t,~ . rrJUSTISN'TSO'
..., ',
tired
. . $0Jilfe4' iricldimt, says the 'story.
Dear lleten .• ,. .. ' r ' " fianis ail oveo'~ fillb.i 0
ln thll'Si · n city of vuutsk farmeti'sold fruit grown
·
• ·, ' li'
...
·,
~ Zas with
~
on ~vate."'Jota at exorbitant prices whlli! hundreds of tons
Caughlcha!
'
one dress or certain pair ol dero, Miami Dolphinl' owner
of alate farm products rolled or had to be fed to animals
You l!lid !here Is no truth in shoes you want.
Earl Smalley (wholle 11v1ng1ng
because the fanners took all the trucks to transport their the "rti(IIIX"" that you can sen a ... Usteno to yo11r secreta and motto is "Wotto way to go!")
own produce.
0110-irK!h long fingernall lo a you know she 'won't tell anyone Darryl Zanuct~ exchon&amp;lng
ln a Rostov packing plant, 46 workers pilfered thousands eoometlc cunpany for fS(l. I - and tella yQu hers too.
supper bows with his &amp;,ues~~; Qte.
of rubles worth of meal to sell on the black market.
happen to know_that Revloi1 wiD .... Buys ,7011 ll(\lllelblng
Japanese gen~ who bombed
Nine workers on the Moscow-Ryazan railway looted pay good mmey for lhfm· - your birthday and~ aays,ils Ptarl Harbor .- and the I'iiPlreilht cars of butter, brandy and candy.
SMART
from yo11r brolh.r beeauae he poneae who plannf4. that tnPlflllderlng bas, in fact. become a sub rosa fringe henellt Dear_Slnart:,
,
l~rsl&gt;l to get you ln)'thlng. , . famous bacbtab .... All
01 tbe . Soviel wortera, acknowledges the government news1 eent your 'facta to Revlon ... Cbeen you up when you re promotion tor llllrryl's bot new
paper ,Izvestia.
,
aitd received the following aad and takes good ..r,. ol' Y"\1 ''Tora 1 Tcra• Total" mo9fe of
"Ev~ a word is lnveilted for those who c~ away f!!P~y:
'· /
when you'~ slclt.
Pelrl ~from both the u.
(hlngs ,!rom !heir place olemployment," it saya. 'Sucb a Dear Helen:
.,
... Makes the beat. spaptn s. ind JapaDeae vieR .... 1bO
Qe!:d is l;8l!ecl ·a 'carrier,' ·DO( .an Insulting nlckname. It
!Por several .pner,,Uon. a aauce In the w~rld even though v.ry lonnallltne . . IQOIIe

EDITORIALS

".

wilh the
front office is aomeUdng Gullett
wants to.avoid, especially with
thepisyoffaleu than two weeki
away.
"But I tloll't want to go to
.,.. ~. "'··
~· d
r""' w now and my wue oean't want to go," said Gullett.
"~ I don't want anyone
dlaciuaing it. with .her. I've al·
. ·relljy told her to let me know
itanyopedoea."
' 1'171Df1 To Help''
"WhM f lell Don we want

ard.
Gullett says he can accompDah the same thing bf pitch·
ln8 in the instruclionilleague
Iii Florida where he is willin8 to
go.
"Shepard baa helped Gullett
a lot lhls aeason and c:ln help
him even more th1i Wtrtter,"
eountero Anderson. "Don is o11r
prize. I'm not going to aend
him to anyone else." .
Anderson concedes that
Wayne Simpson, aldeDned fiX"
lhe remslnder o1 the oeaaon
with an alUng ahouldfl", pltc:hed
too many innings in Puerto
Rico last winter.
"But we didn't have any eontrol ov.r ~impoon," points out
Anderson. "Shepard won't Jet
th
th'•• ha
to Do
e aame ""' ppen
n.
!would say Don and the others
who go down there won't pltc:h
more than 80 to 100 lnnlJI88."
The ~':to~-:' sia
0 er roo
llr er• I·
ed to pltc:h in Puerto Rico are
Milt WDcox, Mel Behney and
~ ~~te • ...
ere
were go...,.
to hav~ a IJUY Dke Shepard
down there looking after lbem,"
--'d And
""'Anoo!":phaaizedthalthe
rookie pltc:hen wiD be in Puer·
lo Rico to learn, lint to win a
pennant for Silepard.
"]Jut they'D definitely help
the club down there," aald
Spar.._ _,._ "U der •• 050
..,, ..,uw,g. n "'
lights, lhey'D be urunerclful."
Gullett yielded only two hits,
walked one and struck out lis
while pitclllng the first five ln·
nlng.tMOftllaynight,
In his last II appearances, he
baa
up only elibt hits

out33lna ;~of

'
The .Jell were polll~l!Jed }'IJ:ds lor, a,toUfi~.
ty yeari ~~~ the Qnelsld JIUIIIIII good ldr, 145 ywd.s ill· ''Ibis wu 11 to\llh' foolboiD 161.Y'!'"III alid the Browns Jt. , After lbf 8rolml' ~-off
Broii'JW entet;ed "" Nallailol · cluding me toilc!lduwu .•to lead gam' as we have ev.r played. The ,llroWIIB took adVIIlltagt! .J'l(lll.ltll mpved l!le \!Jts 61
FootbaD l.eague 10ith an the Brown•' attack, ..before That Jue Namalh lo the .of •·.few New York 'penjllliea to nrds In eight playo with
Oll«&lt;lnC ~and Mo!ldaJ U,703 fans, the lar,eat In t•ug~'"tguywehaveevermet, puahacroeatwotouchdownain Emeraonlloolorgoii1&amp;Uiefinal
night lilt Bro'!ma made tlleir Browns' hiJIGry.
he Is ju8l fanlaatic," said Coaeh lhe litot quarter.
•
two yards and \110' Browns took
debfltln lhe Al)lerl&lt;an Football
"It's ......, been a lmg lime Blantoo OOer who watehed After a Jet punt bit a New a 1t71ead ~ llllftliJ!e.
Leaple a winning me.
llneelranthalfutandbardfor Namath throw 20 ~letlms York player, the BroWIIII took Jones'o~Jai!4Jauntmadeil
lbner Joneo aparlred \be . .., too8." said Jooes, who wu good f~r 302 yards.
the bali from their OWn ti--yard 21·7and llooWI:Iimaml an Ill).
Browns to a 31-21 victory over the first Browns "player 1o "The Jet• have a great nne and marched ~yards In yard tenili&amp;Y drive by ocoring
tile New York Jets by raclJI8 116 runback a kick-oil for a touch· football team and the penalties :re p~~ wir!; Net:;..hiWng from IG-yllrdaoul to make 1121·
yards With the - d half lddl· down since Carl Ward did the played an important part of the
s
the
eight 14 wilh 9:22 left in the third

ary

By Unltocl PreulnternotiGIIol
Notlonot Luau•

t~1=gh

A.,.rlun Leag..
East
w. L Pet. Gl

E•••
Pd
' .
W. L.
GB N'!: 1~~r•
. ~ :~
1 Bos\On

:m
.516

~' ~ :~~ 1i•i2

11 73 .526 18'12
New York
19 14
3'h oetroll
76 n .497 23
St. LO&amp;Jis
12 11 .411 10'12 Cleveland
:~ ~ ·41 25 '12
12
~~~rhta ~~ ~ :~
Washington West
.-46l 21 '
W. L Pd. GB
Wnt
~~p~~ta
~ ~
7·;12
•·Cincinnati ~ ~ Pd. GB California
81 12 .52'1 11
Los ~les 83 70 :~~ 13· Konns City 60 92 .395 31'12
San Francisco 83 70 .s.l 13 MCh111"f!~guokee · 54
5'1 ;: · : ~
Atlanta
74 80 .481 22'1•
~ . Mondoy'sResutis
~~~~ 0
~
:~ ~: Chicago 8 Kan City 4, 1st
•·CIInclild dlvlolon title
Kan City 8 Chi 3• lnd, 12 inns
~=~~~~~ wo::J.o~t 3

:l""

:rsl

:!

t
Boslon 2 Clevel•nd 1

Cinclnn~J!~t:,ull'
San Fran 7 Los Ang 0
(Only games scheduled)

Cat it 1 Milwaukee 6

oa~::r:,.~ ~.:.b':~~M.......

Todoy's Probable Pitchers
IAll Time• EDT)
New York (McAndrew 10.121
al Philadelphia I Bunning 10.141.
1
' tj,,~,;~~ (Hands 17-131 al St.
LoS: lg,'"""'\J?:~1 9 Ps~) 1
Atlanta t::Jio~h 12-ll.n::oi p.~.
Houston !Billingham 12-81 al
Clnclnnotl (Nolan 11-11. S:05
PTon Francisco (Bryant S-4) ••
Loa Angeles I Foster 9-131. 11
p.m.
Monff'eat (Stoneman 5-15 and
Wegener J.SI al Pittsburgh
and Veale 9·151. 2,
Wtdntodo~• O.mH

!~''p.~-9

!All Tlmts EDT)
Minnesota I Kaal 12 101 at
Ooktand !Dobson 16-131. 10. JC
p.m.
Califomlo (May 6·13) at
~~~aukee (Patlin 12 121. 9
Detroit (Kilkenny Hl at
Baltimore (Phoebu• • ·S) . s
P·\.'Vashlnglon \Bosman 1~piOl
at New York !Stottlemyre 13
13 ~,!:.-;,:d (McDowell 20-10)
at Boston 1Pelers 14-111, 1· 3e
p.m.
Kansas Cily 1Drago 8-1• and
,1 c

r~F~~~~ .~JIMa~nus.':.li•rl~

~~r~:f~t·~ltts,"~,g~/ght

Wtdne&amp;day's Games
Minn at Oak. night

Chlc'IJ!o at St. Louis, night
~n ego1 ot 1At\ont~,h~lght
us on a nc • n g
Son Fran at Los Ang, night

Delrolt at Bat•. night
Wash at New York. night
Cleveland at Boston

?

NT.t

~!~~:: ~~wat"~~~ago

Sta~dz·ngs

.

~- "*'~Tq:~ Allanta at 'Green Bay

IOifmor
':."'"' '
I .t 0 J,OOO
1l
' '
'''PI~~!'e&lt;llwo
tnnlngs N.Y. Jets
' 0 1 0 .000
,, . •
whilegiviJiguponlyaharlnleu BuHolo
0 1 0 .000
0 1 0 ·000
single.
Gr~nser
preaerved
a
Miami
,.
shutout and Gullell'l fo11rth vie·
Centw~ 1 L. T. Pet.
Wy in ait declalons by blank· Cincinnati
1 0 0 1.000
NEW YORK (UPII-Tho top
Cleveland
I 0 0 1000
liOinalorcotteotfootbali leoma lJI8 the AStros the last two In· Houston
1 0 01 :000
11 Hlactocl ~Y. the 35-member ntngl
Pittsburgh
o 1 o 0011
II n I to~ Prell International
,
hom
W t
.
~rd . of· Coaches with nrst
Bobby Tolan doubled
e
"
· pJat~ vi&gt;tes and won-lost Tonuny Helma wilb the Reds Denver
w. L0 T. Pd,
, ,
r-ecork&lt;hl In p'aronth-: (First flral r111. in the second In· San Diego
~ 1 ~ '::
··
Polnfl . ntngandPtteRosec~ehome Ooklond
0 1 o .000
· .. T~
·
.,1 on an Astro error with the sec· Kansa.tCt!!~ 11 cono~.!.ncto .000
· 1. TfMl
(f-01
-ft••
2. Qhlo St. (t) tD-Ol
211 ond run In tile eighth inning.
East
3. Ptnn St. (1-41
202
Hoae, 'IIIIo rapped out two
w. L. T. Pd.
;:~-~,_&lt;J\ 11 2(~~0.1) ~l hits, wiD 60 into tonight's same Dalla•
~ ~ o 1.0011
a. MIISOVri (11 (2-4)
162 ~ only two hila to reach ~a~i.~:r~
0 1
7. Mlululppl (1-41
156 tlie 200 J;llltk.
Philadelphia
o 1 o .000
=~~ft-~1
~ , Tony Clontnget wiD oppose St. Louis centr"ol 1 0 .000
w. L T. Pd.
47 the Astroo' Wode 8la,lngame.
10. Mlchl~n (1-4)
,
n. Hauatonp-o&gt;
36
Detroit
1 0 o 1.000
'l:l)~~om
·":ll2-4)
1~
HOUSTON
Minneooto
1 0 · 0 1.000
1•
1 0
000
•
""'
ob
r
h
bl
Chicago
1
2
0 1 0 1.. 000
/, • ··)4,
1:0)
c.deno cf
~ 0 2 0 Gr..., Bay
&lt; ' ' 115. ~lorl"-&lt; .(2.0)
t Millerrt
Wnt
4 O O 0
1
••
16. {~:h!l&amp;'/~)
Wynn If
3 o o o
W. L T. Pel.
4 o 1 o ~~~r.,v•tes
g ~
5 Wa110(11b
11 ;· M~• ll;ll
' 19. (Tio) AU11iWn •(1.0)
3 Menkuo
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
- ITitl W•~ton fl-41 3 Roder 3b
3 0
(TieJw,;,tVIrtlnlo(2.0l 3 Howerdc
Lamr,ardph
0 0 0
0 00 Toto
' Other 1Mm1 .-Mno votos: Torrens
2
1
30 o 4 0
Air Fore., Arizona Slo)o, Morgan 2b
1 0 t 0
CINCINNATI
1 0 0 0
GtorglaTach.&amp;an Dleoostett, ·aorKhp ,
ob r hIll
1 0 0 0
Sollth Carollni&lt;TtXII AloM.
"· 1 ~ P. •
4 '0 2 t
4 1 2 0
2
1
...

C:,Ollege Ratings

.rnJ

t

•·

~":h'J':ll!"::t"~io~ouis
·

Miami at Housh"'
Ookland al San Diego
Plllsburgh at Denver
IOnly g~:,:.~.~~~~
Kan City ot Ball. night
(Only game scheduled!

;:

°

:

l·

°°

l::l

By UnHtd Prtsstnternatlonot
Natlonol Ltogue
G. AB R. H. Pd.
Carty,Atl 132-467 84171 .366
Willms. Chi 151 599 134 190 .321
Hckmn, Chi 139 481 98 157 .326
Torre, All 1525l7 85191 .m
Rose, Ctn
152 622 111198 .319
Tolan, Cin 145 564 107 180 .319
Sngten,PII ,121 4S8 59 141. .319
0
Parker, LA 153 584 80 186 .318
Per•z,Cin
151 560103
m .316
11
Davis,
LA 138
559 90 175
.313
0
Gaotn, SD 137 5SO 87 m .313
o
AIMlkln Luauo
~
·,
G. 1\1 R. H. !'&lt;f.
0 JoMin, Ca! 141
S19 19 187 .323
0
Ytnkj, Boi
SolO 111173 .370
0 1Oliva, Min
593 88 tilt .319
•••'·
0
~lclo.t. Chi
s.o 16 172 .317
Smith, 1001
106 171 .306
,Mun..,, NY '
59132 .J05
CAter, NY
62 171 .302
~;!Hi~nj; ,F.Rblll. Bat
831l1 .302
Min
116 119 .300
SB- ~lte,NV
105173 .299
c.n

:-

. Tow••·

M:::~.~Cl;~":

quarter.
• ~ ,;l
Namath moved lhi!•llew fllril
eleven 80 yards ~ }.,. '~
with a U.,.ard pql •19 0.
Sauer cuWng tile~·
lead ~&amp;~three poinla With Nl '
left in the game.
Brown lilleblicker
&amp;-ewsputtttll~e~~~;:'~~-=~
with 35 "'
plci!M off a ~~ pao
~!~;-for the

4"

p~

...atea

The PiliBburgh Pirates begin
their final pUJh for the National
League East Dlvisloo UUe
tonisht with Dock Ellis (12-9)
and Bob Vesle (9-IS) opposing
tile Montreal EI]&gt;Os in a twinight doubleheader at Pillsburgb. The Elpoo, a surprising 9-7 against the Pirates this
season, are sending Bill Stoneman (5-15) and Mike Wegener
(3-5) to the mound.
The Cubs. who play all their

remaining II games on the
road, open a three-game series
with tile st. .Louis Cardinals
with Bill Hands (17-13) slated to
oppose Bob Gibson (2U) on the
mound
.
The Mets, limpmg toward the
finish line with five losses in
their tasl 91x games and all but
desperate because of lhe lateseason slump of Tom Seaver,
start a two-game series wtlh
the PbiUies in Philadelphia with

Jun McAndrew ( IIH2) facing
Jun Bunning (10.14).
The Cincinnati Reds defeated
IJie ·Houston Astros, 2-0, and tile
San Francisco Giants blanked
the Los Angeles Dodgers, 7-4, in
the •nly NL games scheduled
Monday.
In the American League, 21·
year old Vida Blue pitched a
no-bltlerlhatgave the Oakland
Athletics a 6-0 victory over

car, it was re·
at Ken:
Rltidy .International Airport amounts to many mllllons
0( dollan a year. Add to this the constant loollng thai
ioel on at other airports, docks, warehouses and terminals.
About all these stories out of the U.S.S.R. really prove is
dial the Ruosiana are simply pretty much like .people
everywbe~ch In this case Is no compliment.

IAIII .• S

;

Mmnesota and prev~ ~
Twms from cllnchin&amp; ~
Western Division titie . Other.
scores were Chicago 8 Kanlll.lll
City 4, and Kanass aty 8
Chicago 2, New York Ill
Washington 2, Boston 2 Clevef
land I, Baltimore 4 Dolroit 3;
and California 7 Milwaukee 6.j
Don Gullett, Clay Carron and;
WayneGrangerteamedupona
fo~~r-bitter for the Reds willr.
the Ill-year old Gullett pilchlngl
two-bit baD for five innings and '
rectlvfn8 credit for his fo11rlli~
victory·
•
WiDie Mays drove in 'four '
runs with his 28th hom.r ol the.1
season and two singles and 1
Juan Marlcbal pitched a olJ:· l
hitter for his first shutout ol j
: : : : Dodgln
~~~·~~ ·•
~- .... ,

Blue M0-H zts
• Twzns,
• 6-o
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Wrller
Vida Blue believes that If at
ftrst you dm' succeed, try, try
again
The. 21-year-old left-bander
hadano-blttergoingagainsllhe
Kansas City &amp;yals on Sept. II
~&gt;hen Pat Kelly ruined it with a
two-out single in the eighth
inmng. On Monday night,
ho
be
wever, 81ue was not to
de.:.\oungster from Mans·
field, La., pitched lhe first M·
hiller of his career as the
Oakland Athletics beat Mione!Ota, 11-4, and postponed the
Twin , linchin' of the
·
s c
g
Amen·
can League's Western IJIYlsion
tiUe.
Blue said he threw "abo~t 95

per cent fastballs" at the his bat as he tripled in the first
ful
and scored the A's' first Mil on a
power b Twins' Un!?' The ood double play and hit a three-run
~!:=- ~~~g:~~o:...: ~:.i~s homer dW'ing a five-rw eighth.
o. Finley, who rewarded Blue In other American League
for his perlormanct with a action, Kansas City beat :~ed~n !!~~~in:::.8
I
t2,000 check.
Olicsgo, 8-2, alter losing the West.
'"'"
"I hope I get more phone caDI opener of the doubleheader, 8-4,
like that," said Blue, after New York beat Washington, 5-2, THE
finishing his conversation with Boaton edged Cleveland, 2-1,
•••• .,.....
Flnley. "I'm looking forward 1o Baltimore nipped Detroit, 4-3
-d Calilorn~a
'
-• ·pped ....
more good things in my -·
"'1
.,....
League
put into words ,
games scheduled, anclnnatt
blanked Houston, 2-0, and San
Tin ID Brilliant Plays
Francisco ahut out Los Angeles,
Bert Campaneris and Sal 7-4.
d
Danny Cater and Bobby
Ban o turned in brilliant
fielding plays to help Blue's MW'c.r drove in two nms each
performance. Campanerls also and Fritz Peterson achieved a lt'l
helped the Oakland cause with csreer high llllb victory as the Amtrlcl'•
llrplt Hllln&amp;
Yankeeo beat the Senators.
bnnd of cicars•
Jim York, making his pltch~~
ingdebulinthemaJors,lhrew4
~t
2-3 strmg innings of relief to
, load Kllnau City ov.r ~cago
"''g{; ''"''""''",'"" O
"'
"~j,
p l
~ · ~~·~, 'atter tbe White Sol. won the

::,u

Great l..uln..:U..

~;=~ t~~\;~·j..!"~an~h~ ~w::-:;l:-6Nalionai

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPIIIt's game plan week for the
Ohio State Buckeyes as Coach
Woody Hayes puts in the
fimshingtouchesforSaturday's
opener against Texas A &amp; Mat
Ohio Stadium.
"We have to take this week
to gel ready for Texas A &amp; M
and get into a game plan,"
Hayes said at the first weekly
press luncheon Monday.
"I don't lhtnk tllere's any
question we'll he playing a wellconditioned team," Hayes said.
"They've already played two
games."
The Aggies won their opener
41-14 over Wichita State and
Saturday night upset l.ooisiana
Slate »-18 on a 76-yard pass
playwilhl3secondsremalnlng.
Hayes pamted a rosy picture .
for his offensive team, saying
aD banda wiD be available for
Saturday's I :30 pm. kickoff,
b t del si 1 the Bucke
u
en ve Y
yes
WID not be 100 per cent.
The biggest hole tn the
defense will be tile ahsen&lt;e of
.
two-year regular and all B~g
Ten safety Mike Sensibaugh,
who
wtn miss
one and
maybe
t~ games
because
of a broken

For .
ener

"We've been advised by the
doctors lhal Tom Rabatin
shouldn't play any more
foothali this year," Hayes said.
"He's had a history of bead
bumps smce his sophomore
. h h 1W h
year in hlg sc oo . e ate to
lose him, but we're sure not
going to takeulanhy chancts. He
probably wo d ave been o(lr
third hnehacker .,
Esco Sarkkinen, ch1ef scout
for the Buckeyes, watched
Texas A &amp; M beat LSU
Saturday night at Baton &amp;uge.
"LSU was definitely stunned
by the way the Aggies came
back," Sarkltinen said. "They
aren't used to lhat.
"A &amp; M is a physically tough
team and they are always
challengiqg you on tile r1eld,"
Sarkldnen said.
"Lex James, their sophomore
quarterback, is tile type oi1J11y
who makes tile big plays go for
them He ... the hub of theu-'
· ..
offense.
James threw the mnntng
touchdown pass to split end
·
Hugh McElroy agamst LSU and
was named Southwest Conferenct Back of the Week.

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

Opener on Bill Mellojl's tielreaking homer, which also set
a club recotltl.
0 ·l'f /"'/ .. / /
Sbllps f.4 'ne
Oil4 '-#li14$''.t;~jJq
Melton's bom.r bls 30111 of
c
the 10810n sna~d a Wile in
lheseventh' and ~oke the Wbl'te
~·
Sox record shared by Gus
z.mta1 and Eddie Rubinson.
Carl Yastrzernsld and Rico
Pl!trocclD hit home rWilto lead
Boston over Cleveland, the Red
Sox' siJ:tb straight. victory.
Yllllrzemsld hll his 40th homer
and drove in his !IIIIth run off
loser Rich Hand in the firll
innlns and PetroceUi added his
28th an innJna,pter.
Mark Belanger's bases·
loaded single in the 12111 inning
9COI"ed rookie Johnny Oates to
pact the Orioles over file
ngers. Oalel bad tripled off
~
----an to'open the
·~u •uwuc&lt;w
inning and Terry Q-owley !lid
Om Buford were intmllonaDy
walltad before Belanger's hit.
l'lnch-hilter Jay Jabnston's
two-run homer rallied the
.......
then.- d
....,... paal
.,...,,..• an
gave Tml Murphy his 15th
victory of the year. Tommy
. , _ m-ove In three runs for
·-..Milwaukee wilb a pair of
homers and Plli1 Roof bad a
three-run hcmer for the~lft~w~-~2~2;0~N;·~2;n;d;;:;~~;

""

bone in a foot.
"Having Sensibaugh out of
the defensive backfield kind ol
.
~us up," Hayes said.
Hayes baa replaced Sensl·
baugh b• mo"'••junlor
'
'""'
--·•
Howard Into the safety spot and
inserting sophomore John
Hugheo into Howard's teiiuJar
Jeftbalfbadtposltloft.
Hayes lllld !If "!II "a Hille
thin at
end and

u.-

PBEII/1111*
POLYESTEI tORD TIRE
• Fa•r J'•ll Pllet
All Poi,.Hter Coni
Con•lnu:tio•
• Deep SlotiNI .•. T ... l'doa·

t ....~D.ola·

ib ft:~ R111alan workers looting a freight

~ reported that looting of frelg~t shipments

!i;;j'

.....

..,~,, tbem.

"

;

,

'

g ::

Win.-•

,

~ l::l

Cincinnati at O.ff'olt
New Orleans at Minnesota
N.Y. Giani! at Oolias
t~~~\'::f.t~~ a;.~~';'lr,0
Los An-les at Buffalo

1

h
O
' n
Expos Toug · ·

Buck 8 Get
,;.r,:.'t,J:ilm . .,,,. "'"' '
iOnJy=y~h::~:l "70
ason

By Unl=~~~l:.~otlooal San Frahclsco 1 0
Amerlun con-e• .
New OrJl::i:. , R0 ~
East {
\.,et..OJallij

::E~:~i!l~:::· ~.

' l!·,

Pm•·

~~ (UPI)"..:fwln. Gftandl!jiiN~IItilbltGIII2oU'I trick In 1987.

·.f18 X 14 '22.00
F78 X 15 '22.00
G78 x.14
or 15
.
'•
·.H78 X Of.
. 15
,

�;
' t'•.

&lt;

'

\

,, ' '

'

)

'

L9S Ang

HQU•Ion 000 000 0®-- 0 4 1
Cinci
010 ooo Olx- 2 9 0
Forsch, Roy 131. Gladding 181
and Howord ; Guilell, Carroll
(6), Granger (8) and Bench.
WP-Guilelf (,j.2). LP-Fors:h (1 .

"'""·••••!mii

.,

i

2) .

(Only gam.. scheduled)
-Icon 41111UO

list gomt)

Ken City OQ2 1110 180- • 5 2
Chicago . 020 Oil:l llx- I I 1
Rooker, Morehead (3), Man·
teagudo (1) , Burgme1er !I) and
Kirkpalrick ; Harten, Stange
(7), Wood (7) and Josephson,
Herrmann (1) . WP-Wood (9-131.
LP-Monloagudo (1-11. HRIS.riggs (lsi), Schaal (5th),
Melton (30thl.
(2nd gomol

~~II

9 I

~ ..fjlo rllti~

N·J.;gorew.~l~ o~~. s ~~~~Four

Attend

. .

.

Con'J1•erence., .

were Landmark, ~ack Qtaey,
manager· the )&amp;lgs·· Coun
_ ly
•
ASCS Committee, Wayne
Chase,chaltman,and'the Melp
Soil and Water Conservation
DistrlcJ, Thereon Johdaon,
chairman. Other spOII80I'II were·
the CoUege of Agriculture and
Home 'Economics, Ohio Stale
University, and the Ohio
Agrlcullural Council.
Pennant Racuto Gill nee
By Unlltd Prelllntwrnatlonlil
National League East
W, L Pel Gt
Pittsburgh
ei .,0 .539 ...
Chicago
80 12 .526 2
New York
19 lA .516 3'12
R•molnlng games:
Pittsbur~-Home t71 : Montrul IAI
t. 22 (2), 23, 24;
New York .I ) Sept. 25, 26 27.
Awa 131· St Lou·s (3) ~-·r
' '. ""~' ·
29 :lJ oCt i
Nov: York-Horne w: Chlca·
go IAl Sept. 28, 29, 30, Oct. 1;
Aw~ (5) : Phtledelhia 12) Sept.
~; '11: Pittsburgh 13) Sept. ?..5,
Chlc.,o - Away 1101, St.
Louis (3) Seot 22 23 24·
Philadelphia (3j Sept. 2l, 26,
27; New York lA) Sept. 21, 29,
31), Oct. I.

,

•
'
,,
quickly and have a deft ~h
~· keep the rolls ut .film
slralght 8lJ that IIJnij _slrlps of
lilm feed ink&gt;. the processing
equipment.
,
"When I first came here I
wail making splleo and loading
the magazines al!et "lllY three
hours," Smith said. "'lbey
shoived .me · Jiow to make the
eplices, s'-ed me IntO the
darkroom and I took it from

11\el'l!.

''Darkness is qo problem for
me. It might be for a slghled
person. I've Uvetl In It 'au my
life."
Cbarllellaumgartner,snotller
blind film epUcer, said that
since a blind person has been
"adapting tq working in the
dark all ills life" he has a bet.
·
,..., .
'
1er !eel for performing tasks In
totally 'dark surroundings.
·
,.
Baumgartner, who has a BA
·ThCitLoose•
degree In social science says
' ot Em L
'
. '•• d N
N
.... rrass he_has eve'l grown acutely senDon't ~ ...
sttivehinto theknotse
tniM t.ft' th will comf' looat a t t l1e_..__the1 splicing
is 4.....;,
Wronlf tlmt'. Par !1101'1! .lk'.CUrlty and mac
e ma es wucn t fUll~\; ..
CQmror t. • Prlnkle F M T EETU• ~n · tionin
\ are Adll ei1Ve PoWder 811 J011r den g properl
' y.
Can Ptapolat PrGblem
1\rmt'r nllltltra
lunJ.[er.l .lbkea
e&amp;tlnwhillier"I keep an ear on things to
morfl'
No KUmm y. u:ocwy.
PMtY tu11t e. Den t\l l'el! tll11t nt are
k
'"'""' ' &lt;o " '"""· So " ' ,., .,, rna e sure they are working
f,~1!.'.!,•1t m~ul,"l,! .• a tt ea•y-to-- ul)fl right " Banm.a••tner said. uu

wort

H\ab

"·i\

KEli'H ASHlEY, ROGEl!
SD.nl
ileltool
studenll auended the flflb Youtli llld Scleltce
' Merlbmi Audllliri'!JII.Oblo ll&amp;le
llnlvlll'l!ll7, Saturday. At right is Mr'a. Debora~! Cc!llkUn, Metp Cota~IJ'a oeiY eltenslon egeni,
ho- for the group.

Riddfeber110r (1) end Casanovo; Peter..., (11-11) and Three Southem High School
Munson. LP-Goooiewsk• 12-1). students and their host Mrs
HRs . Lyttle (Jrd), Epstein
•
'
(19th).
Deborah Conklin, new Meigs
extension agent, attended the
Cleveland 010 000 DOO- 1 8 0 filth Youth and Science ConBoslon
110 000 00.- 2 s 1
Hand, V. Colbert (7) ond Iorence held Saturday at
SimS; Siebert, ,B. Bolin (BI and Mershon Auditorium on the
Montgomery, WP-Siebert 114-B). Ohio Sllte UniYerslty campus.
LP·Hand 16-12). HRs-Pelroceili The conference attended by
l281h), Yastrzemski (40th! .
representatives of more than
California 000 200 320- 1 II 0 ~ Ohio high schools was
Mllw
000 300 102- 6 9 I
Murphy. Laroche (7), Fisher designed to enlighten Ohio's
(91 and Azcue; Krausse, high-ability high school science
Ellsworth Ill, Gel nor Ill end students In the appllcaUon of
Roof. WP-Murphy 115-13). LP- sclencetothe--'"""-offood
Krausse (4 - 12) . HRs · Roof
... -~·
ll:rth), Johnstone lllthl. Mur- an&lt;l_llber In a high quality en·
pht (lot), Harper 2, (28th &amp; vlroruilent.
291 ).
Southern High School
Minnesota 000 000 ooo- 0 0 1 repreaentaIIYes In cIuded Keith
O.kiend 100 000 005- 6 9 0 Ashley, Roger Nease and
Perry 123-12) end Mitlerweid ; Sharon Ervin Speakers on the
Biuo (2-01 and Tenoce. HR·
Campaneris (21st).
program ouUined tbe op-portunlties available for youth
~t IMI::?,''ooo 001 a®- 3 6 0 to develop a personal comBai
200 oor 000 oor- • 6 2 mllment to help meet the everNiekro, Timmerman 19) and Increasing demands for high
Hosl•r· Lamont 191; lopez, quaUty food and llber while
Hail 71 , Richert 191 , H~rdln d0In better j0b of tee"""
g a.
pro ~'6
Ill I and Oates. WP-Hardin (55) . LP-Timmermon 16-7) . HR- the enVll'onment.
Powell (35th).
Sponsoring the trip locaUy

Site
. 8*-12
'

12~H

'·'

.,,

'.

fALSE TEETH
w.,..,,.,, •'"""""'"

'""' •••TEETH ••••• '''" '""'

.

n.g• &amp;TH• •

r ul(l"t.)).m~en

'

-·.-

;;;:;;;.--.
e

"UPAGES"
r.ELW
TAPE

700 2NO ' AVE

• 2«111•- ,...
• On The C:cir-

Top LoCir I

o.lolful Prints I

Pl•.o\S'IlC

GIRlS
ElDERtON
PANTIFS

SANDWICH

BAGS

MartM

PR.

h.

Wed .• 9:30 ,

At All 3

44' '

19'

.'

I

"-4/
'I'

F~f~lit .
. '.

'

rr!

STARTS
WEDNESDAY
9:30A.M•

.'

'!" '
.

Cllll.DIII!NS

BOXER
'' r ;-' t BA.NT&amp; o l! 1r:.t

.moils !hjt\)iicf:;' '"''

Basements wm
Offer Shelter

Evangeline CbapiA!r, Order ol
the Eastern Star, with the
combined Friendship night of
Harrlsooville, Pomeroy, Racine
llld Middleport. Dinner at 6&lt;30,
II!Hting at 1:30 p.m. Worthy
Grand Matron to be present.
WEDNESDAY
CUB SCOUT Pack 250, Letart
FallsSchool,7p.m. Wednesday,
Parents to accompany boys.
WOMEN'S GIJILD, Trinity
Church, 7:30 Wednesday at the
church. Mrs. Philip Globokar
llld Mrs. karl k.autz, program
l~•ders;
Friendly Circle
members, hoatesses.
AUXILIARY , Feeney Bellnett Post 128, American
Legion, jWllors, 6:30; adults,
7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
'
naJRSDAY
CUB SCOUT Pack 249,
Thuraday,7:30p.m. IOOF hall.
Any boy who has pessed his
el¥hth birthday or IS In the third
~!fade is eligible to join.
XI GAMMA MlJ Thursday, I
p.m: home of Mrs. Margaret
Follrod.
WOMEN 'S ASSN ., Mid11eport United Presbyterian
Church, 6:~potluck ~
lhu•~ .
~butciG

Compare this offer!
2 SIMs To Pit
You CorNet!,

1

c..

.
$01ll0tlllng does go '!'rung with'
the '''"thine, J ClUI pinpoint u.e
problem aboil,t 9li per l'CDI of ' ·. '
tf1e _Ume just by the way It .
sounds."
.
TIJEIJDAY
Ned Tafjller, president of Best OHiO·ETA PHI Chilpter, Beta
1')loto Sewlee, said his seYetl Sigma 'Phi Sorority, l :l5'
Lllno empluyes do · excellent t:u•sd
work and do not recei•e pref· ~~·Ohl~:'!:eo and
erenti•llrealment liecause of RACINEAMERICAN'J4;on
the,,ir handicap_.
.
•··-~~~-- 7 30
..... ...
T....,
job
~~·
'
·
p.m
.
• .....,..yat
·~, are ~·•en I'!
to do hall. Polluck refreshmenll.
•Jid Iiley must pei'fonn," he
s,atd. "They have and . very PASr MATRONS, Pomeroy
well.
Chapter 181l, O.E.S. wiU meet
"We feel thai hiring persons Sep\. 29 ot the h&lt;IIJe of Mrs.
who are handicapped through J.:uCIUe Swackhammer, Mason,
bllndneso is good bualness. W.Va. No meeting will be held
They perform !heir jobs as well Tuesaay night.
as, If n~ better ln·many cases, ~~~
~"':~j=
Uotn periOII8 with sight."
of Dl:ew Webster Poat 3V, 7,30
p.m. Tu-•·v at poat h-.
ROCKETS TRIM·ROSTER
REVIVAL', .: MT, M-O·RI
~ •n
SAN DIEGO (UP!)- 1be sen Cll
.
nn
Diego Rockell of the National
urch of _God, Racme, ~h
lluketban A.uoclatlm trim· Sunday, 7.30eacheveningW!th
·
the Re• . Bill McDaniels
med their roster to 12 players evangelist. Special sl . each
Mof14ay bJ dropping Ron ••••t
Publi c welcorne.
ngmg
• ..,.. •
Be) ton, 6- forward from
MEIGS YOARC t
t
BeU-'·
and~ Dick
0 mee
an~owae,
&amp;.~alia
ens T
U guard lnm Azula-Paclllc: uesday • Pomeroy Grace
The IW':A
D--•eta play the •LAJ
-s Epl.--..
1 Church, 7:30 p.m.
-.....Officers to be elected New
Angeles Laker&amp; In Honolulu
·
'111'......... ".
members welcome.
.__,
• GRAND VISITATION,

Stu 4To14

" In • 1000 In

Actu1il 198 Values :·.'

Miller said that rloll and
bombings are not dissent.
"They're crimes," he IBid,
"and those engaging In such
activities should be treated as
criminals,"
"Wecanllatenaodleartlfrom
reaso~ and logic and the
democratic sysiA!m will respond
to fresh ideas which lnallifll'ole
constructive cbange," MIUer
said. "We must keep Unes of
communication open and
engege in oerlous dialoglle oo
·the vilallaaues of the day. But I
lind_II difficult to listen to an
arsonist or be responalve to a
seboteur."
Miller
said
primary
responsibility for order on ,
coUege cimpuses lhla faU resll
with college admlnlatreloh. He
OJPI'I.... hlaatrongaupportlor
unlveralty adml!tiJtraton who
have elated their lnlenUooa to
keep their ochooJa open and
preaerYe academiC Integrity.

'H!ISocl·al
Bleeding.
Christmas aazaar
'
Plans are M3clf '
a" ~- en da r lll.ust'.·•, be 0!~~·· fll!n5metliftt

Y - - - BUT YOU GET THE BARGAINS!!

,.-'

WASHINGTON- "It is by no and their testimony accepted
means an exaggeration to sey with an air of coniA!mpt. He
that academic freedom on lurthet said that testimony to
America's campuses hal been date appears to be welghled In
!IOWI'tiy crippled and will be favor of those causing trouble
aerlously challenged In the as oppoaed to thilse who are
coming ochool year," lOth lniA!relted In easing existing
District Congreuman Clarence tension.
E. MJUer said In a statement "A commission of thil
11ere last week.
magnitude should be totaUy
"My concern," !ollller stated, objective and not a political
"Is that the report of the football. It should be dedicated
PrealdenUal Commission on to reasoned analysis and
campua U~l, which wiD be reDection llld divorced from
dllclnoedln lhe I!OXI few weeki, emotion llld rhetoric. We won't
'llli1 on)J add fuel to the Yiolerit find the answer to the current
ne1!'·1eft radical movement situation thi-ough caustic
~cit Ia intlmldating those aUegations," he staled.
atudenll who are In school for Miller further IBid that the
an educ:atlon." He IS especially approaching school year wol!ld
concerned about the com· bealestof the determination of
position at the Comml.ulon and studenls and administrators to
111 rectpllon o1 testimony to reject the radical rhetoric aod
datA!.
tactics and keep the campuses
"They have lilrdly been open lor educational punulta.
objective lnYeatlgators," he He said that the crlala facing
oaid, "and It hu become our coUeges and ·Wliverslties is
evident that the Commiselon one caused by "the betrayal of
.has been prejudicial In Its the primary conunltment of a
hearlnp. It hal been an open WJIYerslty - that of learning."
forum for radlcala to pOWld the Adeviation from lhla purpose
po~um and alander the is playing into tile han~ of
Praidenj, the Vice Prealdent, "ftamboyant ultriH'adicals who
and an)'&lt;llle uiodatecl with the are bent on Ylolence and
'eatabllallmellt' and lilY peroon destruction," Miller continued.
wilo ••to .onega lor the sake ' ''1_be quest for knowledge is a
of simply getting a good vlrllle," Miller IBid. "It Is the
educ:atlda."
mallispting ol the educational
MWet uld that non-rlldlcala process. But academic
called ,before the Commission disruptiOn whlclt brings the
haYe beell treeted with dladaln ·process to a grinding hall is a

··

i I TH'S IS GALLIPOLIS BIRTHDAY· I.! ! SAVE AT ALL 3 STORES

~

·.•

I

I

22

I Rarnoo vlolied bore
'·
11'ilh her
OOOI.Vll.I.E, Oblo (UPI I .oapi!clatiy lor S..vcn.empluy"" of a piJv~'f!l'•·
at r,frtc phlc pr~ing plant. ·jn this
IHo pian~' -\thens 'County cotltn)imlly are
blind bqt their han&lt;li&lt;ap ~
~
~!lq,ol · proved to be '" llf!IOL.
:....~.t~;;..~..,-'0.
Theyworkln the .plant'sdark·
~
r.,Qq. prot;10~ing hundreds of
rDJis 'r.f flbit ~ch day.
.
LiwrellceSmlt)l, aiUn\spllCer, ootm~~ ari .average of 400 film
v··- an •,.,....
- -- . He epllcea,
c~trldg!'l'
, •llllj •!'dB ~&lt;&gt;gether and Ieoda a
cpnllnuouueel of fiiJIHn\0 one
of. lilll six automatic photo pr&lt;&gt;ceJ8ots.
''Most o1 my work IS dcine In
the dark~ vlalon .Isn't g&lt;&gt;log to do anyone any good,"
Sn\ith. said,
Must Wort Quickly
l!mJtll IJIUSt be able to

000 000 000.- 0 6 D

Washngtn 000 011 1100- 2

·,

.

o., Se~- ·:7. ·:iJli·nd·
~in
·
d
~~
d
v~n
,.oues
~
~
~e.

M!o&lt;ichal 112·101 and Dietz:
,..,.liar; SIOpheniOI\ (4). Hough
(6) , f"orman m and Hailer,
Fergusan 191. LP-Moellar (7J9l v
HR-.Mays (21th).
.

Ken Ci1y 1110 1103 040- 8 9 0
Chicago 000 100 011)- l 10 0
Butler, York 151 and Rodri guez; Weaver, Crider 16),
Murphy (71, Hamilton (8),
O'Toole IPI ond Kusnyer. WPYork 11·10). LP-Wuver (1.2) .
HR-McKinney list) .

f

"

~y u~ ...... ~ \nftrnotlo.at
JNIIOftlll Looguo
.
• 5arl Fran · 10~ 012 0®-- 7 12 o
·

'.. '.,

~

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

,._;:_t;_,,.

BWICIIBCB,

. Size Uo • ,,

l'rotOct Your

94'

, Cloth11 fr~m

Molbs, MlldOw, Dull
2Hool&lt;~~·

"C" or "D"

' Pen IJtr

·

Whilt

Lost

'~

ou·RNEI"COLORAIIC" IAAND.

HOUSE HOJ.O BROOM'

LATEX PAINT

79' '

IIITE AND I COLORS

SEMr-GLOSS

·.. ·,

I

$2~?
-

pAJNT$227

IIITE AND I COl OilS

,,

I

MeJii a-n! HOipllal

J..,l.l

'

S*".'onne
,:· ' _. .d
Z',{;'

POMEROY ~, ",.nowledge of
hO... to 1\i!ndlt llrearms and
whal'to do if 111111 when an ac·
eident otcura can make hun ling
eater a(ld more enjoyable for
the sportsman.
Donald Diener, ~hairman of
the Meigs ChaPt,e r of the
American Red · C~oss, ad•
minlstrator of VeteraOB
Memorisl Hoapltal, suggests
hunters heed · lbe following
points:
Hunting accidents usually
occurforfrommedicalhelp,so
in ••- party hould
SOOJeone
""'
s
know
how
to
give
first
aid,
'I'll....
l·
Ia t ,.,_ ·
J.l~ mos lDlpOI' n wm•K 18
first to Slop the bJ.....dOnn
of the
~'""'t!ii
wOWided •ictim.
''The •--t
. le me thad of
UQ
smg
tr0Uln bleedln is to
1
coo
g
g
app Y
direct pressure to a wowld with
several layers ol cloth or a
folded plocto1 clothing. Use lite
bare hand 11 a ~lng isn't
lmmedtately ava1iab,e and
remember,a non-olerue ctolllii
better than none at aU.
H the wound IS deep, the
fingers and-or dressing should
be lnserled Into the wound and
finn ~ure appUed. Don't
remove a
blood-8oaked
dreselng, but apply more lsyers
on top ~·'II. Direct pressure can
be I!PI&gt;lled by bandsglng the
cgntpress llrmly in place."
H no fractures are evident
elevate a bleeding arm or leg. If
the victim Ia In shock, lay him
down, keeping the Injured area
higher than his heart when
possible. Maintain nonilal body
temperature, but don't OYerheat
the victim. The size of the entry
wound may not be indicative of
the seriOliSileSS of the injury so
gel the person k&gt; a doctor aB
soon as poesible."
HWlting acctdenll can be
avoided If hWtlers will observe
basic safety precautions. Carry
gWIB correctly - Wtderarm,
shouldered, criidled or with
hande. Mate oure the safety Is
R· , )'0111'

a rn'ellt
ol Group II, \f~WD"'Ii~'
AssoclaUm, M~ ~United l'l'elbyterlltn ·a.~ jll
the h«ne of ..lfrs. ~ S,
Moore.
·
· ,,
1be bazaa.r will be ~Jii,Nov.
1711!14 II at the dunJ/1.' 1be
!)Otluck dinner· of · thJ,
•·--' lion was llllll®llcod lot
,.....,a
Thureday night at 8:30. "E~tlt •
in Action" was the dewtlonal
topic of Mrs. Mil«l'ed 'Ballfy,
1be book study by~- Pivl
Haptonstall
featured
a
discussion on youth-aduj\
conOicts. Mrs. Myron MUJer
proYided the goody basket 11111
by Mrs. Vlrg(nla Owen,·
Moore conclu~~ the' l!leetlng
with a poem, 'The Heai1 ola
Friend." She servid a dessert
course.

Mrs:

FINES LOWER
State Auditor Roger Cloud
sald today bond forfeitures and
fines collec~ by the courts cl
Ohio In Hlghway Patrol cases
amounted to •~ -,910,798 during
..
tile 1970 fl!Cal year. The total
r.,..;•ts from ••- 88 COW1ties
·-~
woo
were down $C,872 from fiscal
1969, The composite report
showed that Meigs CoWlty peld
·over to the state during the yeor
$6, 432, representing tile alate
share or lines and bond money.

IS
. ,.

,~Ji. ·
11s
'Ill a illl.ll
--•e•
,
When gelling ready for a
hunting trip, oblaln a first aid
kit In case of an accident, wear
brliht colored clothes so otherl
won't mistake you for game.
Know the IA!rraln where you'll ·' '
be hunting so a ran won't cost
you your life, and treat your gun
at an Umeo .. 11 u wuloarled.
Never point your gun at
anytlllng you doo't IDtend to
lboo~ and don't fire WIUl the
object Ia ctmpletely visible.
Some 2,600 penons die from
carelessness during hunting

. .. ·

•

MATHEWS TO OOACH
ADMI'I'rED - None.
MILWAUKEE (IJPI)-Eddle
DISCHARGED
Mrs. Mllthewa, the home-1'111 hitter
Mawle Crow.
-,played for the Braves In
Bolllm, Milwaukee and AtlaDta
from OO!hrvugb 1917, will join
ICE CREAM SALE
the team nest se810o ao a
The Racine Firemen's eoadl. Mathews played with the
atnlli•ry will soU homemade Detroit Ttcers In 1988.
l&lt;e cream lteglnnlng at &amp; p.m.
S.IUrday at the ~ - Ice
crwn wDI be available by the
clip or the quart. Proceeds will
10 toward the new ldtchen.

Gal

.

i4 OZ CAll - · "JUBILEE"
SPRAY EIIAIIEL

PAINT

THe mlw Meigs County
• Stielter , ,

,

PL\n:JUI cu IJ!!J) llP
. NEW VORl( (UPI)- Bob
Qerdn.,llldGary Jooee, ~
. ~llelped, 8)o\'lcule wtQ tl!e
Utile W~rld Serle• trom
Qnaba, ...... been caiiad uP kif
1111 lui da)'l ol the ....... by
· lbe NeW Y~ Ylllllees.
'

. Ri.ule No. 26, E,;st at't,\.~ilitta
S.turll•y, Sept. 26tlt, moat to: 30 A.M.

'

'

'

WORWVC

Auction On The Follawirig:

,

$TATE OF OHIO
,
:DE·PARTMENT oF 'H.IGHWAYS

bo....,,

.ll)ade doting

.

~&lt;/"' ~ ~·"'
~,1,.:' &gt;'} · ' ,~;.'~-&amp;% ... '

1-bwto
Choose 8
·
Good Watch ..
fo r onIy
$10 95
•

First , mak e sur e it has a
jeweled-lever movement.
~reci sio n -engineere d

,

,-

\

parts,

not just stamped out. And
th e case mu st be durabl e
meta l wilh today's fa shion
styling. Or , to make it easier,
jusl ask for Car avella-by

Butova.
COMPANIOH

., PORCH!IIIdDD$2971
' . ENA'GII .
1!-i I

Ouic'itJtlei .

•

Vetera111 Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Emmett
Tracy, Pomeroy; Freda Krl!ler,
Racine; Carsey Ramsey,
Gallipolis; William Buchanan,
Pomeroy; Thearlha Keefer, outingaeachyearbecause they
Point Pleasant; Pauline don't know first aid or obsene
safety precautions while
Gallagher, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Shirley huntlnJ. Tbla nwnber can bP.
if all hunters become
Parsons, William Ferguson, reduced !ely
1
Ethel SUit, Lucille Lambert, more S8
COiliC OUI.
N~llle Connolly, Howard
lla!nrlck, Gladyo Bosworth.

STAtt'HIGHwAY WAGE

\~&gt; 14

"1 ,.

I HOSPITAL NEWS I

AT

,ie\tintainers. Rollers. Dl$1ributors. Spreaders,
llt'1d Mlkellaneous Equlpnienl. · ' •
•

&amp;.oUW'J

IAoKennedy,Sr.,Mrs. Richard
Mrs. Chambers to have
:he book study, Mrs. Eddie
Burkett, devotions.

.Pub'llc Auction 1

Cars. Pick~up trucks. Tractors,
fohrwers, Station W•gons, Dump Tru.cks, ·

•

((arr,

the

· Pas!lenger

ft

lll:s- MarcUJ Cl!anlbera, Mrs.

44~r

'

•

"m,;'· ~

'

Wat er ru llt ent

Shock retl tlanl. Unb ru ka lll e

l'ftlintprlng. StD.H

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Court St. Pomeroy, 0.

�;
' t'•.

&lt;

'

\

,, ' '

'

)

'

L9S Ang

HQU•Ion 000 000 0®-- 0 4 1
Cinci
010 ooo Olx- 2 9 0
Forsch, Roy 131. Gladding 181
and Howord ; Guilell, Carroll
(6), Granger (8) and Bench.
WP-Guilelf (,j.2). LP-Fors:h (1 .

"'""·••••!mii

.,

i

2) .

(Only gam.. scheduled)
-Icon 41111UO

list gomt)

Ken City OQ2 1110 180- • 5 2
Chicago . 020 Oil:l llx- I I 1
Rooker, Morehead (3), Man·
teagudo (1) , Burgme1er !I) and
Kirkpalrick ; Harten, Stange
(7), Wood (7) and Josephson,
Herrmann (1) . WP-Wood (9-131.
LP-Monloagudo (1-11. HRIS.riggs (lsi), Schaal (5th),
Melton (30thl.
(2nd gomol

~~II

9 I

~ ..fjlo rllti~

N·J.;gorew.~l~ o~~. s ~~~~Four

Attend

. .

.

Con'J1•erence., .

were Landmark, ~ack Qtaey,
manager· the )&amp;lgs·· Coun
_ ly
•
ASCS Committee, Wayne
Chase,chaltman,and'the Melp
Soil and Water Conservation
DistrlcJ, Thereon Johdaon,
chairman. Other spOII80I'II were·
the CoUege of Agriculture and
Home 'Economics, Ohio Stale
University, and the Ohio
Agrlcullural Council.
Pennant Racuto Gill nee
By Unlltd Prelllntwrnatlonlil
National League East
W, L Pel Gt
Pittsburgh
ei .,0 .539 ...
Chicago
80 12 .526 2
New York
19 lA .516 3'12
R•molnlng games:
Pittsbur~-Home t71 : Montrul IAI
t. 22 (2), 23, 24;
New York .I ) Sept. 25, 26 27.
Awa 131· St Lou·s (3) ~-·r
' '. ""~' ·
29 :lJ oCt i
Nov: York-Horne w: Chlca·
go IAl Sept. 28, 29, 30, Oct. 1;
Aw~ (5) : Phtledelhia 12) Sept.
~; '11: Pittsburgh 13) Sept. ?..5,
Chlc.,o - Away 1101, St.
Louis (3) Seot 22 23 24·
Philadelphia (3j Sept. 2l, 26,
27; New York lA) Sept. 21, 29,
31), Oct. I.

,

•
'
,,
quickly and have a deft ~h
~· keep the rolls ut .film
slralght 8lJ that IIJnij _slrlps of
lilm feed ink&gt;. the processing
equipment.
,
"When I first came here I
wail making splleo and loading
the magazines al!et "lllY three
hours," Smith said. "'lbey
shoived .me · Jiow to make the
eplices, s'-ed me IntO the
darkroom and I took it from

11\el'l!.

''Darkness is qo problem for
me. It might be for a slghled
person. I've Uvetl In It 'au my
life."
Cbarllellaumgartner,snotller
blind film epUcer, said that
since a blind person has been
"adapting tq working in the
dark all ills life" he has a bet.
·
,..., .
'
1er !eel for performing tasks In
totally 'dark surroundings.
·
,.
Baumgartner, who has a BA
·ThCitLoose•
degree In social science says
' ot Em L
'
. '•• d N
N
.... rrass he_has eve'l grown acutely senDon't ~ ...
sttivehinto theknotse
tniM t.ft' th will comf' looat a t t l1e_..__the1 splicing
is 4.....;,
Wronlf tlmt'. Par !1101'1! .lk'.CUrlty and mac
e ma es wucn t fUll~\; ..
CQmror t. • Prlnkle F M T EETU• ~n · tionin
\ are Adll ei1Ve PoWder 811 J011r den g properl
' y.
Can Ptapolat PrGblem
1\rmt'r nllltltra
lunJ.[er.l .lbkea
e&amp;tlnwhillier"I keep an ear on things to
morfl'
No KUmm y. u:ocwy.
PMtY tu11t e. Den t\l l'el! tll11t nt are
k
'"'""' ' &lt;o " '"""· So " ' ,., .,, rna e sure they are working
f,~1!.'.!,•1t m~ul,"l,! .• a tt ea•y-to-- ul)fl right " Banm.a••tner said. uu

wort

H\ab

"·i\

KEli'H ASHlEY, ROGEl!
SD.nl
ileltool
studenll auended the flflb Youtli llld Scleltce
' Merlbmi Audllliri'!JII.Oblo ll&amp;le
llnlvlll'l!ll7, Saturday. At right is Mr'a. Debora~! Cc!llkUn, Metp Cota~IJ'a oeiY eltenslon egeni,
ho- for the group.

Riddfeber110r (1) end Casanovo; Peter..., (11-11) and Three Southem High School
Munson. LP-Goooiewsk• 12-1). students and their host Mrs
HRs . Lyttle (Jrd), Epstein
•
'
(19th).
Deborah Conklin, new Meigs
extension agent, attended the
Cleveland 010 000 DOO- 1 8 0 filth Youth and Science ConBoslon
110 000 00.- 2 s 1
Hand, V. Colbert (7) ond Iorence held Saturday at
SimS; Siebert, ,B. Bolin (BI and Mershon Auditorium on the
Montgomery, WP-Siebert 114-B). Ohio Sllte UniYerslty campus.
LP·Hand 16-12). HRs-Pelroceili The conference attended by
l281h), Yastrzemski (40th! .
representatives of more than
California 000 200 320- 1 II 0 ~ Ohio high schools was
Mllw
000 300 102- 6 9 I
Murphy. Laroche (7), Fisher designed to enlighten Ohio's
(91 and Azcue; Krausse, high-ability high school science
Ellsworth Ill, Gel nor Ill end students In the appllcaUon of
Roof. WP-Murphy 115-13). LP- sclencetothe--'"""-offood
Krausse (4 - 12) . HRs · Roof
... -~·
ll:rth), Johnstone lllthl. Mur- an&lt;l_llber In a high quality en·
pht (lot), Harper 2, (28th &amp; vlroruilent.
291 ).
Southern High School
Minnesota 000 000 ooo- 0 0 1 repreaentaIIYes In cIuded Keith
O.kiend 100 000 005- 6 9 0 Ashley, Roger Nease and
Perry 123-12) end Mitlerweid ; Sharon Ervin Speakers on the
Biuo (2-01 and Tenoce. HR·
Campaneris (21st).
program ouUined tbe op-portunlties available for youth
~t IMI::?,''ooo 001 a®- 3 6 0 to develop a personal comBai
200 oor 000 oor- • 6 2 mllment to help meet the everNiekro, Timmerman 19) and Increasing demands for high
Hosl•r· Lamont 191; lopez, quaUty food and llber while
Hail 71 , Richert 191 , H~rdln d0In better j0b of tee"""
g a.
pro ~'6
Ill I and Oates. WP-Hardin (55) . LP-Timmermon 16-7) . HR- the enVll'onment.
Powell (35th).
Sponsoring the trip locaUy

Site
. 8*-12
'

12~H

'·'

.,,

'.

fALSE TEETH
w.,..,,.,, •'"""""'"

'""' •••TEETH ••••• '''" '""'

.

n.g• &amp;TH• •

r ul(l"t.)).m~en

'

-·.-

;;;:;;;.--.
e

"UPAGES"
r.ELW
TAPE

700 2NO ' AVE

• 2«111•- ,...
• On The C:cir-

Top LoCir I

o.lolful Prints I

Pl•.o\S'IlC

GIRlS
ElDERtON
PANTIFS

SANDWICH

BAGS

MartM

PR.

h.

Wed .• 9:30 ,

At All 3

44' '

19'

.'

I

"-4/
'I'

F~f~lit .
. '.

'

rr!

STARTS
WEDNESDAY
9:30A.M•

.'

'!" '
.

Cllll.DIII!NS

BOXER
'' r ;-' t BA.NT&amp; o l! 1r:.t

.moils !hjt\)iicf:;' '"''

Basements wm
Offer Shelter

Evangeline CbapiA!r, Order ol
the Eastern Star, with the
combined Friendship night of
Harrlsooville, Pomeroy, Racine
llld Middleport. Dinner at 6&lt;30,
II!Hting at 1:30 p.m. Worthy
Grand Matron to be present.
WEDNESDAY
CUB SCOUT Pack 250, Letart
FallsSchool,7p.m. Wednesday,
Parents to accompany boys.
WOMEN'S GIJILD, Trinity
Church, 7:30 Wednesday at the
church. Mrs. Philip Globokar
llld Mrs. karl k.autz, program
l~•ders;
Friendly Circle
members, hoatesses.
AUXILIARY , Feeney Bellnett Post 128, American
Legion, jWllors, 6:30; adults,
7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
'
naJRSDAY
CUB SCOUT Pack 249,
Thuraday,7:30p.m. IOOF hall.
Any boy who has pessed his
el¥hth birthday or IS In the third
~!fade is eligible to join.
XI GAMMA MlJ Thursday, I
p.m: home of Mrs. Margaret
Follrod.
WOMEN 'S ASSN ., Mid11eport United Presbyterian
Church, 6:~potluck ~
lhu•~ .
~butciG

Compare this offer!
2 SIMs To Pit
You CorNet!,

1

c..

.
$01ll0tlllng does go '!'rung with'
the '''"thine, J ClUI pinpoint u.e
problem aboil,t 9li per l'CDI of ' ·. '
tf1e _Ume just by the way It .
sounds."
.
TIJEIJDAY
Ned Tafjller, president of Best OHiO·ETA PHI Chilpter, Beta
1')loto Sewlee, said his seYetl Sigma 'Phi Sorority, l :l5'
Lllno empluyes do · excellent t:u•sd
work and do not recei•e pref· ~~·Ohl~:'!:eo and
erenti•llrealment liecause of RACINEAMERICAN'J4;on
the,,ir handicap_.
.
•··-~~~-- 7 30
..... ...
T....,
job
~~·
'
·
p.m
.
• .....,..yat
·~, are ~·•en I'!
to do hall. Polluck refreshmenll.
•Jid Iiley must pei'fonn," he
s,atd. "They have and . very PASr MATRONS, Pomeroy
well.
Chapter 181l, O.E.S. wiU meet
"We feel thai hiring persons Sep\. 29 ot the h&lt;IIJe of Mrs.
who are handicapped through J.:uCIUe Swackhammer, Mason,
bllndneso is good bualness. W.Va. No meeting will be held
They perform !heir jobs as well Tuesaay night.
as, If n~ better ln·many cases, ~~~
~"':~j=
Uotn periOII8 with sight."
of Dl:ew Webster Poat 3V, 7,30
p.m. Tu-•·v at poat h-.
ROCKETS TRIM·ROSTER
REVIVAL', .: MT, M-O·RI
~ •n
SAN DIEGO (UP!)- 1be sen Cll
.
nn
Diego Rockell of the National
urch of _God, Racme, ~h
lluketban A.uoclatlm trim· Sunday, 7.30eacheveningW!th
·
the Re• . Bill McDaniels
med their roster to 12 players evangelist. Special sl . each
Mof14ay bJ dropping Ron ••••t
Publi c welcorne.
ngmg
• ..,.. •
Be) ton, 6- forward from
MEIGS YOARC t
t
BeU-'·
and~ Dick
0 mee
an~owae,
&amp;.~alia
ens T
U guard lnm Azula-Paclllc: uesday • Pomeroy Grace
The IW':A
D--•eta play the •LAJ
-s Epl.--..
1 Church, 7:30 p.m.
-.....Officers to be elected New
Angeles Laker&amp; In Honolulu
·
'111'......... ".
members welcome.
.__,
• GRAND VISITATION,

Stu 4To14

" In • 1000 In

Actu1il 198 Values :·.'

Miller said that rloll and
bombings are not dissent.
"They're crimes," he IBid,
"and those engaging In such
activities should be treated as
criminals,"
"Wecanllatenaodleartlfrom
reaso~ and logic and the
democratic sysiA!m will respond
to fresh ideas which lnallifll'ole
constructive cbange," MIUer
said. "We must keep Unes of
communication open and
engege in oerlous dialoglle oo
·the vilallaaues of the day. But I
lind_II difficult to listen to an
arsonist or be responalve to a
seboteur."
Miller
said
primary
responsibility for order on ,
coUege cimpuses lhla faU resll
with college admlnlatreloh. He
OJPI'I.... hlaatrongaupportlor
unlveralty adml!tiJtraton who
have elated their lnlenUooa to
keep their ochooJa open and
preaerYe academiC Integrity.

'H!ISocl·al
Bleeding.
Christmas aazaar
'
Plans are M3clf '
a" ~- en da r lll.ust'.·•, be 0!~~·· fll!n5metliftt

Y - - - BUT YOU GET THE BARGAINS!!

,.-'

WASHINGTON- "It is by no and their testimony accepted
means an exaggeration to sey with an air of coniA!mpt. He
that academic freedom on lurthet said that testimony to
America's campuses hal been date appears to be welghled In
!IOWI'tiy crippled and will be favor of those causing trouble
aerlously challenged In the as oppoaed to thilse who are
coming ochool year," lOth lniA!relted In easing existing
District Congreuman Clarence tension.
E. MJUer said In a statement "A commission of thil
11ere last week.
magnitude should be totaUy
"My concern," !ollller stated, objective and not a political
"Is that the report of the football. It should be dedicated
PrealdenUal Commission on to reasoned analysis and
campua U~l, which wiD be reDection llld divorced from
dllclnoedln lhe I!OXI few weeki, emotion llld rhetoric. We won't
'llli1 on)J add fuel to the Yiolerit find the answer to the current
ne1!'·1eft radical movement situation thi-ough caustic
~cit Ia intlmldating those aUegations," he staled.
atudenll who are In school for Miller further IBid that the
an educ:atlon." He IS especially approaching school year wol!ld
concerned about the com· bealestof the determination of
position at the Comml.ulon and studenls and administrators to
111 rectpllon o1 testimony to reject the radical rhetoric aod
datA!.
tactics and keep the campuses
"They have lilrdly been open lor educational punulta.
objective lnYeatlgators," he He said that the crlala facing
oaid, "and It hu become our coUeges and ·Wliverslties is
evident that the Commiselon one caused by "the betrayal of
.has been prejudicial In Its the primary conunltment of a
hearlnp. It hal been an open WJIYerslty - that of learning."
forum for radlcala to pOWld the Adeviation from lhla purpose
po~um and alander the is playing into tile han~ of
Praidenj, the Vice Prealdent, "ftamboyant ultriH'adicals who
and an)'&lt;llle uiodatecl with the are bent on Ylolence and
'eatabllallmellt' and lilY peroon destruction," Miller continued.
wilo ••to .onega lor the sake ' ''1_be quest for knowledge is a
of simply getting a good vlrllle," Miller IBid. "It Is the
educ:atlda."
mallispting ol the educational
MWet uld that non-rlldlcala process. But academic
called ,before the Commission disruptiOn whlclt brings the
haYe beell treeted with dladaln ·process to a grinding hall is a

··

i I TH'S IS GALLIPOLIS BIRTHDAY· I.! ! SAVE AT ALL 3 STORES

~

·.•

I

I

22

I Rarnoo vlolied bore
'·
11'ilh her
OOOI.Vll.I.E, Oblo (UPI I .oapi!clatiy lor S..vcn.empluy"" of a piJv~'f!l'•·
at r,frtc phlc pr~ing plant. ·jn this
IHo pian~' -\thens 'County cotltn)imlly are
blind bqt their han&lt;li&lt;ap ~
~
~!lq,ol · proved to be '" llf!IOL.
:....~.t~;;..~..,-'0.
Theyworkln the .plant'sdark·
~
r.,Qq. prot;10~ing hundreds of
rDJis 'r.f flbit ~ch day.
.
LiwrellceSmlt)l, aiUn\spllCer, ootm~~ ari .average of 400 film
v··- an •,.,....
- -- . He epllcea,
c~trldg!'l'
, •llllj •!'dB ~&lt;&gt;gether and Ieoda a
cpnllnuouueel of fiiJIHn\0 one
of. lilll six automatic photo pr&lt;&gt;ceJ8ots.
''Most o1 my work IS dcine In
the dark~ vlalon .Isn't g&lt;&gt;log to do anyone any good,"
Sn\ith. said,
Must Wort Quickly
l!mJtll IJIUSt be able to

000 000 000.- 0 6 D

Washngtn 000 011 1100- 2

·,

.

o., Se~- ·:7. ·:iJli·nd·
~in
·
d
~~
d
v~n
,.oues
~
~
~e.

M!o&lt;ichal 112·101 and Dietz:
,..,.liar; SIOpheniOI\ (4). Hough
(6) , f"orman m and Hailer,
Fergusan 191. LP-Moellar (7J9l v
HR-.Mays (21th).
.

Ken Ci1y 1110 1103 040- 8 9 0
Chicago 000 100 011)- l 10 0
Butler, York 151 and Rodri guez; Weaver, Crider 16),
Murphy (71, Hamilton (8),
O'Toole IPI ond Kusnyer. WPYork 11·10). LP-Wuver (1.2) .
HR-McKinney list) .

f

"

~y u~ ...... ~ \nftrnotlo.at
JNIIOftlll Looguo
.
• 5arl Fran · 10~ 012 0®-- 7 12 o
·

'.. '.,

~

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

,._;:_t;_,,.

BWICIIBCB,

. Size Uo • ,,

l'rotOct Your

94'

, Cloth11 fr~m

Molbs, MlldOw, Dull
2Hool&lt;~~·

"C" or "D"

' Pen IJtr

·

Whilt

Lost

'~

ou·RNEI"COLORAIIC" IAAND.

HOUSE HOJ.O BROOM'

LATEX PAINT

79' '

IIITE AND I COLORS

SEMr-GLOSS

·.. ·,

I

$2~?
-

pAJNT$227

IIITE AND I COl OilS

,,

I

MeJii a-n! HOipllal

J..,l.l

'

S*".'onne
,:· ' _. .d
Z',{;'

POMEROY ~, ",.nowledge of
hO... to 1\i!ndlt llrearms and
whal'to do if 111111 when an ac·
eident otcura can make hun ling
eater a(ld more enjoyable for
the sportsman.
Donald Diener, ~hairman of
the Meigs ChaPt,e r of the
American Red · C~oss, ad•
minlstrator of VeteraOB
Memorisl Hoapltal, suggests
hunters heed · lbe following
points:
Hunting accidents usually
occurforfrommedicalhelp,so
in ••- party hould
SOOJeone
""'
s
know
how
to
give
first
aid,
'I'll....
l·
Ia t ,.,_ ·
J.l~ mos lDlpOI' n wm•K 18
first to Slop the bJ.....dOnn
of the
~'""'t!ii
wOWided •ictim.
''The •--t
. le me thad of
UQ
smg
tr0Uln bleedln is to
1
coo
g
g
app Y
direct pressure to a wowld with
several layers ol cloth or a
folded plocto1 clothing. Use lite
bare hand 11 a ~lng isn't
lmmedtately ava1iab,e and
remember,a non-olerue ctolllii
better than none at aU.
H the wound IS deep, the
fingers and-or dressing should
be lnserled Into the wound and
finn ~ure appUed. Don't
remove a
blood-8oaked
dreselng, but apply more lsyers
on top ~·'II. Direct pressure can
be I!PI&gt;lled by bandsglng the
cgntpress llrmly in place."
H no fractures are evident
elevate a bleeding arm or leg. If
the victim Ia In shock, lay him
down, keeping the Injured area
higher than his heart when
possible. Maintain nonilal body
temperature, but don't OYerheat
the victim. The size of the entry
wound may not be indicative of
the seriOliSileSS of the injury so
gel the person k&gt; a doctor aB
soon as poesible."
HWlting acctdenll can be
avoided If hWtlers will observe
basic safety precautions. Carry
gWIB correctly - Wtderarm,
shouldered, criidled or with
hande. Mate oure the safety Is
R· , )'0111'

a rn'ellt
ol Group II, \f~WD"'Ii~'
AssoclaUm, M~ ~United l'l'elbyterlltn ·a.~ jll
the h«ne of ..lfrs. ~ S,
Moore.
·
· ,,
1be bazaa.r will be ~Jii,Nov.
1711!14 II at the dunJ/1.' 1be
!)Otluck dinner· of · thJ,
•·--' lion was llllll®llcod lot
,.....,a
Thureday night at 8:30. "E~tlt •
in Action" was the dewtlonal
topic of Mrs. Mil«l'ed 'Ballfy,
1be book study by~- Pivl
Haptonstall
featured
a
discussion on youth-aduj\
conOicts. Mrs. Myron MUJer
proYided the goody basket 11111
by Mrs. Vlrg(nla Owen,·
Moore conclu~~ the' l!leetlng
with a poem, 'The Heai1 ola
Friend." She servid a dessert
course.

Mrs:

FINES LOWER
State Auditor Roger Cloud
sald today bond forfeitures and
fines collec~ by the courts cl
Ohio In Hlghway Patrol cases
amounted to •~ -,910,798 during
..
tile 1970 fl!Cal year. The total
r.,..;•ts from ••- 88 COW1ties
·-~
woo
were down $C,872 from fiscal
1969, The composite report
showed that Meigs CoWlty peld
·over to the state during the yeor
$6, 432, representing tile alate
share or lines and bond money.

IS
. ,.

,~Ji. ·
11s
'Ill a illl.ll
--•e•
,
When gelling ready for a
hunting trip, oblaln a first aid
kit In case of an accident, wear
brliht colored clothes so otherl
won't mistake you for game.
Know the IA!rraln where you'll ·' '
be hunting so a ran won't cost
you your life, and treat your gun
at an Umeo .. 11 u wuloarled.
Never point your gun at
anytlllng you doo't IDtend to
lboo~ and don't fire WIUl the
object Ia ctmpletely visible.
Some 2,600 penons die from
carelessness during hunting

. .. ·

•

MATHEWS TO OOACH
ADMI'I'rED - None.
MILWAUKEE (IJPI)-Eddle
DISCHARGED
Mrs. Mllthewa, the home-1'111 hitter
Mawle Crow.
-,played for the Braves In
Bolllm, Milwaukee and AtlaDta
from OO!hrvugb 1917, will join
ICE CREAM SALE
the team nest se810o ao a
The Racine Firemen's eoadl. Mathews played with the
atnlli•ry will soU homemade Detroit Ttcers In 1988.
l&lt;e cream lteglnnlng at &amp; p.m.
S.IUrday at the ~ - Ice
crwn wDI be available by the
clip or the quart. Proceeds will
10 toward the new ldtchen.

Gal

.

i4 OZ CAll - · "JUBILEE"
SPRAY EIIAIIEL

PAINT

THe mlw Meigs County
• Stielter , ,

,

PL\n:JUI cu IJ!!J) llP
. NEW VORl( (UPI)- Bob
Qerdn.,llldGary Jooee, ~
. ~llelped, 8)o\'lcule wtQ tl!e
Utile W~rld Serle• trom
Qnaba, ...... been caiiad uP kif
1111 lui da)'l ol the ....... by
· lbe NeW Y~ Ylllllees.
'

. Ri.ule No. 26, E,;st at't,\.~ilitta
S.turll•y, Sept. 26tlt, moat to: 30 A.M.

'

'

'

WORWVC

Auction On The Follawirig:

,

$TATE OF OHIO
,
:DE·PARTMENT oF 'H.IGHWAYS

bo....,,

.ll)ade doting

.

~&lt;/"' ~ ~·"'
~,1,.:' &gt;'} · ' ,~;.'~-&amp;% ... '

1-bwto
Choose 8
·
Good Watch ..
fo r onIy
$10 95
•

First , mak e sur e it has a
jeweled-lever movement.
~reci sio n -engineere d

,

,-

\

parts,

not just stamped out. And
th e case mu st be durabl e
meta l wilh today's fa shion
styling. Or , to make it easier,
jusl ask for Car avella-by

Butova.
COMPANIOH

., PORCH!IIIdDD$2971
' . ENA'GII .
1!-i I

Ouic'itJtlei .

•

Vetera111 Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Emmett
Tracy, Pomeroy; Freda Krl!ler,
Racine; Carsey Ramsey,
Gallipolis; William Buchanan,
Pomeroy; Thearlha Keefer, outingaeachyearbecause they
Point Pleasant; Pauline don't know first aid or obsene
safety precautions while
Gallagher, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Shirley huntlnJ. Tbla nwnber can bP.
if all hunters become
Parsons, William Ferguson, reduced !ely
1
Ethel SUit, Lucille Lambert, more S8
COiliC OUI.
N~llle Connolly, Howard
lla!nrlck, Gladyo Bosworth.

STAtt'HIGHwAY WAGE

\~&gt; 14

"1 ,.

I HOSPITAL NEWS I

AT

,ie\tintainers. Rollers. Dl$1ributors. Spreaders,
llt'1d Mlkellaneous Equlpnienl. · ' •
•

&amp;.oUW'J

IAoKennedy,Sr.,Mrs. Richard
Mrs. Chambers to have
:he book study, Mrs. Eddie
Burkett, devotions.

.Pub'llc Auction 1

Cars. Pick~up trucks. Tractors,
fohrwers, Station W•gons, Dump Tru.cks, ·

•

((arr,

the

· Pas!lenger

ft

lll:s- MarcUJ Cl!anlbera, Mrs.

44~r

'

•

"m,;'· ~

'

Wat er ru llt ent

Shock retl tlanl. Unb ru ka lll e

l'ftlintprlng. StD.H

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Court St. Pomeroy, 0.

�.C ommunity
Corner

•
'

By charlene Hoeflich

'

\

I
Judy Arnold Smith had the nicest birthday surprise Ssturdsy!
Ahigh school and college classmate, the former Vera Olver\,
telephoned from Houston, Texas. Judy 1111d Vera had been out of
touch for more than seven yesrs, and even via long distance, did
ots of reminiscing. For aome time now Vera has been operating a
nursery school there in Houston .
. Earlier Judy was the guest Mrs. Helm Shuler fur a birtht dsy dinner at Bob Evans Steak House. Other guests were Mrs.
Ruth Arnold and Miss Evelyn Fick.
L

.

ff

of

KEITH MORGAN i• wrapping up requirements lor bis
· . aster 's in industrial technology at Ohio University this quarter.
For the past two quarters he has maintained a 4.0.

::

INQUIRED about Mrs. Laura Bradbury and was told Utat she
s still a patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital. She has been
fine&lt;! there since late March and whD.e her healUt isn't
ythlng to write home about, she remains alert snd interested In
erythlng and everybody. Csn 't beat that for 93!

!

I

:r__ A NUMBER OF senior citizens viii be contacted tomorrow
Information on income, housing , health and recreation to be
;us&lt;d lor l'!hlte House O&gt;nferences on Aging to be conducted on
3:':~1ooal, sfale and national levels. Complete cooperation of aged
cestdents Is nee&lt;le&lt;l and it'. important that they speak right out
t;when asked questions IIY the Interviewers.
!!&gt;
While no specific allocation of funds or other services have
~en made at U.ls time•.the basts lor ronsideration will be the
ronnation on the questionnaires completed tomorr9W.
ij;Il&gt;f

WE FEATURE

USDA

0HWI
Mr. Friendly

C'HOICE
BRAND

t

f•

l

'

AL, DOROTHY snd Elleeo Smith oilnear Rae'"" are just
:;)&gt;ack from a week's vacation in Tennessee. They took their son,
~b, to Nashville where he entered the Nashville Auto Diesel
~eldlng School lor a 28-week course. Incidentally, at that school
i'lbere are eight Meigs O&gt;unty boys snd they all live together in a
:,ti&amp; house and do their own cooking.
~
~ Saturday night the Smith family attended the Grand Old
~()pry where Agnes Morehead was a guest, snd then went on to
.~ Morristown, TeM. to visit some of Al's relatives.

!•today

KATHERN ROUSH SMITH entere&lt;l Mount Cannel Hospital
for more surgery. This time she will have sn artificial joint
~pulln her lefl hip. The right one was replace&lt;l about a year ago
~and the surgery was quite successful . She expects to be
~spltallzed about a month.

.

Pomeroy....
Personal Notes

.

" Eugene Norris, Kingston ,
le&lt;l Wednesday and Thursy with his mother, Mrs.
~en Norris, W. Main St.
Mrs. Anna Loudenbach of
i\&gt;aklma, Wasb. is here for a
· eral weeks' Vlail with her

,\llld

dl!~w, Mr..

d Mrs. Orval wnes and

y.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
~Udren,

Sherrie and David of
;II. Albans hsve spent the past
)evera! days hl"e with Mr. and
)Irs. Charles Kessinger.
l Alire&lt;! Young of Olester, W.
Wa. was the weekend guest of
~s. J\lma YolDlg, Puneroy.
• Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
~er, Mrs. Royal Thomas,
Sue Pubrick and Mr. and
~s. Robert Roush and
f"ughler, Nancy, Columbus,
nl the woekend here with
. and Mrs. owen Watson of
ino, Route 1.
Jolm F. Goett, Sr. of Shade,
ute I, Is confined to the
~ Medical Center. His
pllll number is 233.

presented

the

Folmer

•

I

BAKER September

12"
CEILING

'

' '.

I
.
Cont~~m,Wary •tvl• whR• b•nt

REG.119

had charge or the meeting
whicb opened with grou.p
singing ul " 'Tis .So -Sweet. to
Trust in Jesus." Mro. Wiseman
gave prayer, and Mrs. Leilhelt
read scripture from Isaiah ~.
There were readings by M•s.
Wise, Mrs. Leifheit, M s.
Wiseman, and Mrs. Gilmore.

-

t*• •hod• if

t

··_

'

,

,.

- Sf~y' Qnly

d.:oral.d Willi delkclte iftlll rond leaf
W~H• holdtr. Vt• two 60-wott
clu~..t), Otplh 5-1/4". StyiiCI fot

.

.t

.

~r BOLOGNA......~ .......~ 5·9'

RICH LOAF

or fi;oiMtay.

)Ia* ~

FOCKES

BREAD
,.00

Roll ~ausage.......... .t}~~-~139•
FOCKES

A. Epple

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

JOWL BACON..........~.. 39•

•:·~Ina'

• '! 1'1'

t'Pii~l. at

.

•.

Has Part in Eighth District Meeting
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, president
of the Eighth District,
American Legion Auxlliary,
atlende&lt;l the executive board
meeting held Thursday, Friday
and Ssturdsy at the Neil Motor
Hotel, Columbus.
Plans for the work of the
Auxiliary were made during the
meeting and several policy
changes particularly relating to
child welfare work and
rehabilitation programs were
noted. A lull el)&gt;tanation of the
changes will be lnclu&lt;le&lt;l in the
bulletin, . Mrs. Neutzling
reports.
1
Several dinners were held for
the 14 district presidents and
five department officers at·
lending the board meeting.
Following the Frldsy dinner,

initiatory work for new district
presidents was conducted. Mrs.
Neutzllng had charge of this.
The !aU conference of the
Eighth District Auxiliary will
be held on Oct. 8 at Junction
City. Reservations are to he
made with Mrs. Burl Spohn,
IJ~u.nc•ti··on~Ci-'t,;,y.Obi.y.OOc.;.;t..;S;.,- . .

unuR
2"'lU

10 ct.
1M&amp;

• •Quick

•Convenient
•Courteous

E
·
J
UICE
. . ... ..... ,. c

Fridays Only
The Drive-In Window
Is Open
J A.M. to 1 P.f,\.
(C:Ontinuo,usly)

cans
-

lanlllng Houn 9, to l
find J to 1 IS USUII on

AWilA .

Member FDIC
Member Fe-Qeral

8" flu .. CQII

Reg.

I"" ~ott..,

134'8 ~24~~_;J

flr-.creen.

R"er"~ Svstem

17~.90 .

5le h

N' '•' ,'

~

D ...... -.:&amp;:.1' -Spicbum
~ ·

UVCIIIUI..

r.oir ...;. of

Helps 'You ·

S•l Out Winter
For Metal ·~taction

'

Our Goacl "Cnlef''
GALLON

Wo havo this good motall&gt;oint In red
and green. It has a rust preventative
Inhibitor. Use It for all exfttlor ani::l
Interior metal Including aluminum.

. IMPOIAL ASBESTOS

..IIOOF "'"·

7 49
,

. ~,

l

I

'"';&gt;!·

.

IAWION

'

J .•

DIDatiig
.

,··

,·

FOCKES
LARD

.

f0'ft

'

New·llb.

'

lb•
BOWLS
.........,....•.......~·-~····························

.f

•

-·

•

.

SALE!

J.

..

BACON.....

1
, : 79~

2 lb•...•.•. 49•
4 lb•.•..•.• 99•
8 lb•.... •1.89
2s lb•..•••s."

Prrce

I

'

Grip-Seal Paint

',

Off .·

For Your FaB

'

.,

by fOcte's

. Paints

:.: 'I

WITH lHESE. ..
.

Pratt ~ lambert

..,

.

.

MEDICINE CABINET

Stalnl'"' tiJtf trrm. 2: th.Jvn. Styr.n,•
li·ht·..~~; l""',..loi\hl·llgh.... SOlo•
whlle.l~' ·a2A"»9·1/2".
.. i '
.,.. 24.~1 '
•·
·

.

"Home Protectors"
.

8 ' 01.

SNJD

Pomeroy, Ollio

'

lob's ,HolM Style

CHICKEII-CXI.E SLAW

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS 00.

216 E. 2nd
Phone 992.5421

' .'

.

;;

MM'.ARONI-POTA~-HAM

lHE

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
·Pomeroy

, .

Coontry Maid and Scat ,..

PORK
NECK BONES
SALADS

Fridays.

(Upon Request)

Thrusday
Only!

1

Olhor

CLEAN'I·NG

.

.

.

program

of

lb.·s•·.•.
•

Eight 50-Year Members Are Honored

Made to SA

prepared by Mrs. Scott Folmer
on heart disease. Articles were
given by Mrs. James Conkle,
Mrs. Folmer, Mrs. George
Skinner, Mrs. William Grueser
Mrs. Fred Goegleln, Mrs. Loui~
Grueser, Mrs. William Morgan,
Mrs. Harold Blackston, Mrs.
Wolby Wbaley and Mrs. Clifford
Leilhelt.
k poem was read by Mrs .
Folmer and the contest conducted by Mrs. Skinner was won
by Mrs. Folmer and Mrs. Louis
Grueser. Devotions were by
Mrs. Skinner, chaplain with the
Lord's Prayer in unison and the
*
ptedge to the flag.
A dessert cour"" was served.
Attending
besides those named
REUNION HELD
were
Mra.
Amos Leonard snd
:trhe annual Byers reunion was
Mrs.
Ollie
Clark.
$lid Sunday at Oglehay. Park,
eling, W. VA. Among those
ndlng were Mrs. Sylvia
ATTEND SCHOOL
ers, Middleport ; Mrs. Gladys
Mrs.
Charles Keasinger,
ers, Huntington, W.Va.; Mr.
District
junior
d Mrs. Ralph Radcliff, Eighth
acuse; Mr. and Mn. Ray activities chairman for
ers, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. the American Legion Auxerick •Grimm, Racine; and Iliary; Miss Diana Car.r. and Mrs. Jim Lewis, sey, the District 8 president,
Miss Oleryl Barnhart and Miss
~I umbos.
Maureen Hennesy, presidents
~
of local junior units, and Mrs.
~
Harry Davis, department junior
! ADDRESS CHANGED
activities committee member,
~~.o~~~: ofcadet
address baa been attended a scbool of instructloo
"
John Ritchwho il al.lendlng West at the Nell House Ssturday.
Academy. John is the
~:::.of Mildre&lt;l Hemsley or You can rent a bicycle at
~
His new address il one· railroad station and turn
John Rilchhart, H·L OJ., II in at any other station in
Point, New York 10996. Switzerland.

Joss

50 YEARS SERVICE -Mrs. Laura Schaefer, Mn. Est a Wise, Mrs. Marguerite Leilheil,
and Mro. Tina Jacobs, left to right, were lour of the eight honored for service to th w
•
Missionary Society of Ute Laurel Cliff Free Methodlsl Church.
e omen;s

Contribution

Braunschweiger

BEEF

••

Eight Sl).year members of the and punch were served.
Women's Missionary Society of Tributes were given to each one
the Laurel Clilf Free Methodist in recognlUon of lllelr 50 years
ChW'ch were honore&lt;l dW'ing a of service to the Society, Plans
meeting held in the parsonage were made to fW'nish a Sunday
basement.
school room in the ·new church
lnclude&lt;l in the honored group in their honor.
were Mrs. Marguerite Leifheit, Reading certificates were
A contribution was made to Mrs. Esta Wise, Mrs. Tin&amp; presented to Mrs. Schaefer,
the Sslvation Army when the Jacobs, Mrs. carman Evans, Mrs. Jacobs, Mrs. Leilheit,
Rock Springs Better Health Mrs. Laura Schaefer, Mrs. Mrs. Wise , Mrs . Richard
Club mel Thursday at the home Della Curtis, Mrs. Dorothy Friend, Mrs. David Wiseman,
of Mrs. Arlee Abbott.
Bailey, and Mrs. Bertha and Mrs. James Gilmore.
Plans were made lor the next Parker.
It was decide&lt;! to charge two
meeting to be held at the home Adecorated cake with names cents a day on all overdue books
of Mrs. Hugh. Bearhs. A "pig.ln of the honor.ees inscrihe&lt;lon it of the~lety, Mrs. Eugene Gill
a poke" 1-Wi&amp;W'-'bdi wtth' ' · ~-:~:~;)-. ·:.·. ·~~~ "" ·· · 'I:,.~. -~- .,'; "~1. , ·"~ •l:,:t'. Iiili• t- .-. ;~;t·
each merriber to take or send an
" ~·
~•
lfi ~--article, and sunshine sisters will
.
he~;;~Ie&lt;Iwuuam

.

"

PRE PACKED MEATS AND
FRESH BEEF AND PORK

'

BIRDSEYE
·..COOL AND CIEAMY
I
,,.

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.•
Lo

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·--•

�.C ommunity
Corner

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By charlene Hoeflich

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I
Judy Arnold Smith had the nicest birthday surprise Ssturdsy!
Ahigh school and college classmate, the former Vera Olver\,
telephoned from Houston, Texas. Judy 1111d Vera had been out of
touch for more than seven yesrs, and even via long distance, did
ots of reminiscing. For aome time now Vera has been operating a
nursery school there in Houston .
. Earlier Judy was the guest Mrs. Helm Shuler fur a birtht dsy dinner at Bob Evans Steak House. Other guests were Mrs.
Ruth Arnold and Miss Evelyn Fick.
L

.

ff

of

KEITH MORGAN i• wrapping up requirements lor bis
· . aster 's in industrial technology at Ohio University this quarter.
For the past two quarters he has maintained a 4.0.

::

INQUIRED about Mrs. Laura Bradbury and was told Utat she
s still a patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital. She has been
fine&lt;! there since late March and whD.e her healUt isn't
ythlng to write home about, she remains alert snd interested In
erythlng and everybody. Csn 't beat that for 93!

!

I

:r__ A NUMBER OF senior citizens viii be contacted tomorrow
Information on income, housing , health and recreation to be
;us&lt;d lor l'!hlte House O&gt;nferences on Aging to be conducted on
3:':~1ooal, sfale and national levels. Complete cooperation of aged
cestdents Is nee&lt;le&lt;l and it'. important that they speak right out
t;when asked questions IIY the Interviewers.
!!&gt;
While no specific allocation of funds or other services have
~en made at U.ls time•.the basts lor ronsideration will be the
ronnation on the questionnaires completed tomorr9W.
ij;Il&gt;f

WE FEATURE

USDA

0HWI
Mr. Friendly

C'HOICE
BRAND

t

f•

l

'

AL, DOROTHY snd Elleeo Smith oilnear Rae'"" are just
:;)&gt;ack from a week's vacation in Tennessee. They took their son,
~b, to Nashville where he entered the Nashville Auto Diesel
~eldlng School lor a 28-week course. Incidentally, at that school
i'lbere are eight Meigs O&gt;unty boys snd they all live together in a
:,ti&amp; house and do their own cooking.
~
~ Saturday night the Smith family attended the Grand Old
~()pry where Agnes Morehead was a guest, snd then went on to
.~ Morristown, TeM. to visit some of Al's relatives.

!•today

KATHERN ROUSH SMITH entere&lt;l Mount Cannel Hospital
for more surgery. This time she will have sn artificial joint
~pulln her lefl hip. The right one was replace&lt;l about a year ago
~and the surgery was quite successful . She expects to be
~spltallzed about a month.

.

Pomeroy....
Personal Notes

.

" Eugene Norris, Kingston ,
le&lt;l Wednesday and Thursy with his mother, Mrs.
~en Norris, W. Main St.
Mrs. Anna Loudenbach of
i\&gt;aklma, Wasb. is here for a
· eral weeks' Vlail with her

,\llld

dl!~w, Mr..

d Mrs. Orval wnes and

y.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
~Udren,

Sherrie and David of
;II. Albans hsve spent the past
)evera! days hl"e with Mr. and
)Irs. Charles Kessinger.
l Alire&lt;! Young of Olester, W.
Wa. was the weekend guest of
~s. J\lma YolDlg, Puneroy.
• Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
~er, Mrs. Royal Thomas,
Sue Pubrick and Mr. and
~s. Robert Roush and
f"ughler, Nancy, Columbus,
nl the woekend here with
. and Mrs. owen Watson of
ino, Route 1.
Jolm F. Goett, Sr. of Shade,
ute I, Is confined to the
~ Medical Center. His
pllll number is 233.

presented

the

Folmer

•

I

BAKER September

12"
CEILING

'

' '.

I
.
Cont~~m,Wary •tvl• whR• b•nt

REG.119

had charge or the meeting
whicb opened with grou.p
singing ul " 'Tis .So -Sweet. to
Trust in Jesus." Mro. Wiseman
gave prayer, and Mrs. Leilhelt
read scripture from Isaiah ~.
There were readings by M•s.
Wise, Mrs. Leifheit, M s.
Wiseman, and Mrs. Gilmore.

-

t*• •hod• if

t

··_

'

,

,.

- Sf~y' Qnly

d.:oral.d Willi delkclte iftlll rond leaf
W~H• holdtr. Vt• two 60-wott
clu~..t), Otplh 5-1/4". StyiiCI fot

.

.t

.

~r BOLOGNA......~ .......~ 5·9'

RICH LOAF

or fi;oiMtay.

)Ia* ~

FOCKES

BREAD
,.00

Roll ~ausage.......... .t}~~-~139•
FOCKES

A. Epple

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

JOWL BACON..........~.. 39•

•:·~Ina'

• '! 1'1'

t'Pii~l. at

.

•.

Has Part in Eighth District Meeting
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, president
of the Eighth District,
American Legion Auxlliary,
atlende&lt;l the executive board
meeting held Thursday, Friday
and Ssturdsy at the Neil Motor
Hotel, Columbus.
Plans for the work of the
Auxiliary were made during the
meeting and several policy
changes particularly relating to
child welfare work and
rehabilitation programs were
noted. A lull el)&gt;tanation of the
changes will be lnclu&lt;le&lt;l in the
bulletin, . Mrs. Neutzling
reports.
1
Several dinners were held for
the 14 district presidents and
five department officers at·
lending the board meeting.
Following the Frldsy dinner,

initiatory work for new district
presidents was conducted. Mrs.
Neutzllng had charge of this.
The !aU conference of the
Eighth District Auxiliary will
be held on Oct. 8 at Junction
City. Reservations are to he
made with Mrs. Burl Spohn,
IJ~u.nc•ti··on~Ci-'t,;,y.Obi.y.OOc.;.;t..;S;.,- . .

unuR
2"'lU

10 ct.
1M&amp;

• •Quick

•Convenient
•Courteous

E
·
J
UICE
. . ... ..... ,. c

Fridays Only
The Drive-In Window
Is Open
J A.M. to 1 P.f,\.
(C:Ontinuo,usly)

cans
-

lanlllng Houn 9, to l
find J to 1 IS USUII on

AWilA .

Member FDIC
Member Fe-Qeral

8" flu .. CQII

Reg.

I"" ~ott..,

134'8 ~24~~_;J

flr-.creen.

R"er"~ Svstem

17~.90 .

5le h

N' '•' ,'

~

D ...... -.:&amp;:.1' -Spicbum
~ ·

UVCIIIUI..

r.oir ...;. of

Helps 'You ·

S•l Out Winter
For Metal ·~taction

'

Our Goacl "Cnlef''
GALLON

Wo havo this good motall&gt;oint In red
and green. It has a rust preventative
Inhibitor. Use It for all exfttlor ani::l
Interior metal Including aluminum.

. IMPOIAL ASBESTOS

..IIOOF "'"·

7 49
,

. ~,

l

I

'"';&gt;!·

.

IAWION

'

J .•

DIDatiig
.

,··

,·

FOCKES
LARD

.

f0'ft

'

New·llb.

'

lb•
BOWLS
.........,....•.......~·-~····························

.f

•

-·

•

.

SALE!

J.

..

BACON.....

1
, : 79~

2 lb•...•.•. 49•
4 lb•.•..•.• 99•
8 lb•.... •1.89
2s lb•..•••s."

Prrce

I

'

Grip-Seal Paint

',

Off .·

For Your FaB

'

.,

by fOcte's

. Paints

:.: 'I

WITH lHESE. ..
.

Pratt ~ lambert

..,

.

.

MEDICINE CABINET

Stalnl'"' tiJtf trrm. 2: th.Jvn. Styr.n,•
li·ht·..~~; l""',..loi\hl·llgh.... SOlo•
whlle.l~' ·a2A"»9·1/2".
.. i '
.,.. 24.~1 '
•·
·

.

"Home Protectors"
.

8 ' 01.

SNJD

Pomeroy, Ollio

'

lob's ,HolM Style

CHICKEII-CXI.E SLAW

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS 00.

216 E. 2nd
Phone 992.5421

' .'

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MM'.ARONI-POTA~-HAM

lHE

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
·Pomeroy

, .

Coontry Maid and Scat ,..

PORK
NECK BONES
SALADS

Fridays.

(Upon Request)

Thrusday
Only!

1

Olhor

CLEAN'I·NG

.

.

.

program

of

lb.·s•·.•.
•

Eight 50-Year Members Are Honored

Made to SA

prepared by Mrs. Scott Folmer
on heart disease. Articles were
given by Mrs. James Conkle,
Mrs. Folmer, Mrs. George
Skinner, Mrs. William Grueser
Mrs. Fred Goegleln, Mrs. Loui~
Grueser, Mrs. William Morgan,
Mrs. Harold Blackston, Mrs.
Wolby Wbaley and Mrs. Clifford
Leilhelt.
k poem was read by Mrs .
Folmer and the contest conducted by Mrs. Skinner was won
by Mrs. Folmer and Mrs. Louis
Grueser. Devotions were by
Mrs. Skinner, chaplain with the
Lord's Prayer in unison and the
*
ptedge to the flag.
A dessert cour"" was served.
Attending
besides those named
REUNION HELD
were
Mra.
Amos Leonard snd
:trhe annual Byers reunion was
Mrs.
Ollie
Clark.
$lid Sunday at Oglehay. Park,
eling, W. VA. Among those
ndlng were Mrs. Sylvia
ATTEND SCHOOL
ers, Middleport ; Mrs. Gladys
Mrs.
Charles Keasinger,
ers, Huntington, W.Va.; Mr.
District
junior
d Mrs. Ralph Radcliff, Eighth
acuse; Mr. and Mn. Ray activities chairman for
ers, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. the American Legion Auxerick •Grimm, Racine; and Iliary; Miss Diana Car.r. and Mrs. Jim Lewis, sey, the District 8 president,
Miss Oleryl Barnhart and Miss
~I umbos.
Maureen Hennesy, presidents
~
of local junior units, and Mrs.
~
Harry Davis, department junior
! ADDRESS CHANGED
activities committee member,
~~.o~~~: ofcadet
address baa been attended a scbool of instructloo
"
John Ritchwho il al.lendlng West at the Nell House Ssturday.
Academy. John is the
~:::.of Mildre&lt;l Hemsley or You can rent a bicycle at
~
His new address il one· railroad station and turn
John Rilchhart, H·L OJ., II in at any other station in
Point, New York 10996. Switzerland.

Joss

50 YEARS SERVICE -Mrs. Laura Schaefer, Mn. Est a Wise, Mrs. Marguerite Leilheil,
and Mro. Tina Jacobs, left to right, were lour of the eight honored for service to th w
•
Missionary Society of Ute Laurel Cliff Free Methodlsl Church.
e omen;s

Contribution

Braunschweiger

BEEF

••

Eight Sl).year members of the and punch were served.
Women's Missionary Society of Tributes were given to each one
the Laurel Clilf Free Methodist in recognlUon of lllelr 50 years
ChW'ch were honore&lt;l dW'ing a of service to the Society, Plans
meeting held in the parsonage were made to fW'nish a Sunday
basement.
school room in the ·new church
lnclude&lt;l in the honored group in their honor.
were Mrs. Marguerite Leifheit, Reading certificates were
A contribution was made to Mrs. Esta Wise, Mrs. Tin&amp; presented to Mrs. Schaefer,
the Sslvation Army when the Jacobs, Mrs. carman Evans, Mrs. Jacobs, Mrs. Leilheit,
Rock Springs Better Health Mrs. Laura Schaefer, Mrs. Mrs. Wise , Mrs . Richard
Club mel Thursday at the home Della Curtis, Mrs. Dorothy Friend, Mrs. David Wiseman,
of Mrs. Arlee Abbott.
Bailey, and Mrs. Bertha and Mrs. James Gilmore.
Plans were made lor the next Parker.
It was decide&lt;! to charge two
meeting to be held at the home Adecorated cake with names cents a day on all overdue books
of Mrs. Hugh. Bearhs. A "pig.ln of the honor.ees inscrihe&lt;lon it of the~lety, Mrs. Eugene Gill
a poke" 1-Wi&amp;W'-'bdi wtth' ' · ~-:~:~;)-. ·:.·. ·~~~ "" ·· · 'I:,.~. -~- .,'; "~1. , ·"~ •l:,:t'. Iiili• t- .-. ;~;t·
each merriber to take or send an
" ~·
~•
lfi ~--article, and sunshine sisters will
.
he~;;~Ie&lt;Iwuuam

.

"

PRE PACKED MEATS AND
FRESH BEEF AND PORK

'

BIRDSEYE
·..COOL AND CIEAMY
I
,,.

'

.•
Lo

.

•

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·--•

�. •.

I

•-~DaUy~nt~l.~iddltll&gt;rl·Pm.f.o,'; $.~. 2:d9'io

"#1 ':!·~gr,~~~:!'4~

.

·.ctassitiedif,

Bargains, Bargairrs.,

®
(}f.

THE
SYRACUSE
Ladies
Au11.iliary of Volunteer Fire
Department, w•sh to thank. all

the merc hant s and the
Sy&lt;acuse &lt;esidents lor their
donati ons that made the

Tim WiUCOll was taken to the

of Foslorta were weekend
gut&amp;ta of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Gorby and also called on Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Gorby and Mabel
Golf.
The family of Alpha Barr held
their annual picnic at Lake
Jackson Swtday. All of the
children and .grandchildren
were at the dinner. At noon a

,.• .,.,
• . Co

tor

QUAlnY

The annual humecomihg was
held at the Langsville church
Labor Day dinner and Ilea
SUnday . A basket dinner was
market • great success
held at noon. The afternoon
9 n. llc
program started at 2 p.m. with - - -- -- - special singing by the Virgil
Notice
King Family of Pomeroy . the HAYMAN'S
AUCTION tlouse,
Mount Uniun Quartet and Mrs. Laurel Cliff. now open each
Friday to re ce ive con Paul Taylor. An enjoyable time
signments
at 10 a.m . Auction
was bad by all.
starting at 7 p.m. let us sell
hoopilal by Marlin ambulance
Sunday aftemooo and remains
seriously ilL
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Prilly

2 -~
Of

For Sale
a-

NEW

~·~il#l!!f!.~~"!l'"'!.~·;"~;;;f:&gt;,iJ;

,,

'
· WHAT ARE 'IOU
GAWI&lt;JIV' AT,
NOSE'I?

•

•

r----'-r------::~----- 1

Card r Thanks

........

,

.

toot truck camper.

Sleeps six. Pt)on~ 992.39:54.
9-18·61c

l.

MOBILE Home. 12 x 51, Salem
st. in Rutland. large lot, new
uarage, out of high water .

•

lnquire anv tlrne except

1969 CHEVROLET

$2495

Sunday. C. J . Wise, Phone 142·
5911 ·

Townsman Station Wagon, V·B motor ,
automatic transmission .
1969 FORD

9 SfX.WEEKS old pigs. Phone
949-2165.

$2095

Mustang 2 Dr. hardtop. 6 cyl ., standard shilL
Real Nice.
·

your merchandise.

LEGAL NOTICE

Bottom 98H1S4J.

!ires.

lEGAL NOTICE
Doroth'l' Kathryn White;
Mildred Belle White whose

r'E'Sidence {SI are unknown to the
plaintiff, and the unknown heir s
or devisees of Dorothy Kathryn
White. deceased. the unknown
heirs or devis&amp;eS of Mildred
Belle Wt1 ite . deceased. and the
unknown 1'1eirs or devisees of
Mary Peeples, deceased , also
known as Mary Peoples , whose
names and address.es are
unknown to the pla intiff. will
take not ic e that they have been
sued by the Director of High ot the State of Ohio, who
dinner was served to Mr. and ways
hillS instituted a proceed ing in
Mrs. Chester Messer and the Common Pleas Court ot
County, Otlio , to ap ·
children, Joe, Frank, Mary Meigs
proprlale certain property
Tere55a and Danny, all of descr ibed hereafter for high way purposes, namely !he
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Duane making,
construct1on or 1m ·
Barr and Shawn of Oak Hill ; provement of Stale Rou te No. 7,
6.JA, Meigs County, OhiO
Mr. and Mrs. BlaLr Cadwallader Section
and to fl lC. the value of said
and sons, Chris and Brian, of property . The propel'"fy sought
Winches~r ; and Mr . and Mrs. to be appropr iated is more
specifically de scr ibed as
Larry Barr, Michelle and David toltows :

BLAEltNARS

Phone ?92·5552.

PCIMIROY, OHIO

9-16·6tc

For Sale

200 BUSHEL old corn, $1.S4J at
crib. Call 985-3532, Russell

LOTS - Building lots or mobile

3 ROOM unfurnlsh•d apart.
DEADLINES
P M Day Before Publication
ment. Phone 99o:·.i:288.
Monday Deadtine9a .m .
l·l·ffc 1968 PONTIAC ,Bonneville, 2·

line. Al$0 school bus route . On
County Rd. 25, l mile west of
Chester, Ohio. If Interested

For Rent

WANT AD
INFORMATION

, EXPERT
.

shape. Needs tires . S39.5 . L-"~·"'---2t_,_,_ __ P_o_
m_•_ro_:r__,

OI'IM EYES. 1:00 P'.IL

VII

1•.

9·1...1p

From 1he lArgest Truck' or
Bulldozer Radiator fo the
Smallest Heater Core.

1961 CHEVROLET Impala, 2
door. hard lop. V'ery good

Pomeroy Motor Co.
~

9·16-6tc

26- FOOT i'louseli'·ailer, good
condition. Price reduced for
quick ule. Also, grocery .
s.tore lnvtn1ory and about 900
bales ml•ed hay. can tong

1969 VOLKSWAGEN
51895
2 Dr. Sedan, radio, custom equipment, white

3-22-tfc

'

.9·21}fp

Findling. Allred, Ohio.
9·20·3fc

home space. On new water ·

Have Your Yearly
.

wtaJ: Alignment
$5.55
-GUARANTEED-

Phone 992-2094
call 985-4197.
door, hardtop : Also, 1970, 17·
M2·6fp
horsepower wheel horse
riding tractor and mower .
BABY furniture, baby bed,
Phone Coolvltle 98$-4176.
stroller, high chair, dressing
9·20·61P
606 E. Main, P&lt;imoroy, 0.
tabte. Phone 992-3952.
9-22·3fc
BEANS, Kentucky Wonders .
Pick your own, S2 bushel ,
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
Sweet potatoes and Irish MAPLE breakfast set and
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
potatoes . Bnng container .
?92·2522 ..
plastic living room suite. l;k&gt;th
Andrew Cross, Letart Falls,
6-lO·ffC
In good condition. Inquire at
Ohio.
181 Locust St., Pomeroy.
9·20·12tc

Ca n( el!ation &amp; Corrections
ill be accepted unlit 9 a .m . tor
Day at Publication

.

Air.f.onditionlti•·
,
,·
InspectiOn And
Re-Charp
Plus
6.98
.. Parts
Blaettna~s

FURNISHED first floor ef ficiency apartment, utilities
REGULATIONS
furnished . Phone 992-J874.
I h e Publisher reserves the
B-12-lfc
r19h t to e dit or reiect any adS
Phono m-210
dee med objectional . The
pub Iis her will no t be responsible
lor more than one incorrect T-RAILER space. one mile from
new Meigs High School on old
insertion
Rt. 33. Phone ?92-2'141.
RATES
~or Want Ad Service
'1 ·20·30fC
5 ce nts per Word one insert ion
Mi n imum Charge 75c
548 S. SECOND St., Middleport.
12 cen ts per w Jrd three
CONCRETE
Ml·lfC READY·MIX
Juhllng property. 5 room
consecutiv e inv•rlinn o;;
to y_our
dell•ered
right
house . 2 bedrooms . bath, INTERNATIONAL grain drill .
18 cents per word six con ·
Fnt
and
easy.
Free
~ecutive
inse•
'ion
s
'
basement.
Cont.act
Edgar
.
of Langsville; Mr . and Mrs.
Also,
Co-Op
manure
est
matis.
Phone
992-328-4.
The follow ing pa rcel, lo cated
Per cer:t Di ~c ount on pai d
Tuckerman , .471 Richland
spreader. Call Pomeroy 992·
Alpha Barr and Michelle Barr. In Section 30, Town 2. Range 13, ad~15 and
!ioegleln Re-ady -MIX Co.,
ads paid within 10 days.
Ave., Athens, Ohio. Phone
Salisbury
Township.
Meigs
196~ - 6 CYLINDER Farci,
2277.
'Middleport,
Glhto.
CAR D Of- THAN!~.~
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and County, Ohio, lylf'g on the right
592·2035.
9·20·ffc
50,000 actual mll&amp;s, no· rust.
..
6LJO.ffc
&amp; OBITUAHY
9·20·lfP
Michelle, and Mrs. Alpha Barr side ot the centerline ot a survev
PhOne 992-6412 evenings. .
Sl SO for 50 word minimum.
made
by
the
Department
of
.
'I·:J0.6tp SEPTIC tanks clt8ned. Mlllll
spent a day shopping in Highway ~. and recorded in the lM h additional word 2c .
FURNISHED apartment, 211 ONE new 041 Stlkl chain saw.
BLIND ADS
Also, one small2 wheel trailer
records of Meigs County, Ohio,
Gallipolis.
SenltatiCW1, Stew1rt. otUo. ,.;,,
Additional 2~c Charge per
3rd Ave., Middleport. Nice
being more tully described Advertisement
for Gravely tractor. N. E. 1964 FORD ~laxle 4.door,
Mrs. Sharon Barr and uandfollows
yard.
porch,
private
en·
662·3935·
:
Vanaman , Rutland, Ohio . clean .v inyl inside, good
Of-F-ICE HOUf.l S
2·12·JIC
trances. Phone 992-2780 or 992children called on her mother,
PARCEL NO. 134-WL
rubber,
good
26Q
..
englne,
s.t.
1'1 JO am to 5 DO p .m
Daily,
Phone 742-5322.
3432.
I
HIGHWAY)
9·20·31p Black. can W/.•:1316. ' · .
Mrs . Howard Thoma of ALL RIGHT. TITLE 1\NO H JO am to 12 · 00 Noon
S.:U.ffc
9·:J0.3tc ATHERTON TV end EloctrOnlc
~d lurday
Pomeroy R.D.
INTEREST IN ~'=EE SIMPLE.
Service. New Channel Ml'"' WHEEl:
INCLUDING LIMITATION OF
Service.
'
AUCTION
1966
OODGE
truck,
slanf.slx,
T.V.S. Phano lanii 8011om
ACCESS,
IN
THE
NEWLY decorated, l room SAT., SEPT. 26, at 1:00 P.M. at
Company,
'
•12-ton, standard trans·
1185-3&amp;19.
FOLLOWING DE SCRI BED
furnished apartment, adults
Phone 9tS.3301.
the Jimmy Hollon farm 1 mile mission. l6,000 mlles, $750.
PROPERTY
oniy . 126 Mulberry Ave .
East ol Five Point!. on the
Phone W/.·6468.
Phone 992-66'18.
Racine-Chester Road (follow
Commencing at a point in the
NE JGLER Construction. For
9·6·ffC
BY GLENNA SIRJLER
sale signs from Rt. 11. 3 Piece --------~---9-·:JO.lfp
southwest corner of the east WILL give plano lessons in my
building or nomodellng your AIR · CONDIHON 'iNG,
halt of ~ nctlonal Section 30;
Relrlgerllftan urvfct, 'Jed&lt;'•
Uving Room Suite, 2 Piece
home. Phone 992-3666.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoy and thence
home, cell Guy Nelglor,
North 1 degree S-A
'MOBILE homespace5or lob. If
RolrlgenoiiQn, New I:Ut~·..
Living Room Suite, 3 beds 1969 FORD Econollne Van. J,o!OO
8-1
6-tfc
Racine,
Ohio.
Samantha of Springfield visited m inutes 25 seconds East ator.o
miles, must sell. See at
Interes-ted, contact J. M.
Phone 112·2019. ·
· · '
complete, Antique handmade
7·ll-!fc
the hall section nne of said
Newell'~ Sunoco. Phone
..
ol+tfc
Gaul
,
Co
.
Rd
.
36,
11.
'
2
miles
fr41111 Friday until Swtday with section.
bed.
3dressers,
Antique
Chest
109.20 teet to a po int; MILLER AND SONS Grrocery
Chester 985·331.).
north of Chester, Olio. Phone
of drawers, Kitchen cabinet,
Mr. and Mrs . James Conkle. thence South 72 degrees A1
and Ashland Service Stati-on
9·13·ffc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer SEWING /MCHINE~. !!.Wfr..
985·3832.
base
cabinet,
2
Refrigerators,
minutes
24
seconds
East
along
at the Crossroads on .Rt . 124
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Leonard of a line. 1S6.U feet to a point in
9·20·6fp
Complete Service
service, all m•kes, m~ftt4..
Wringer
washer,
RCA
Con·
between
Pomeroy
and
Rock Springs speni ·SUnday in the owners' nor thwest property
The Fabric Shoji; Poo~
Phone '$·3821
1ole TV (almost new), 1970 CHEVELLE SS 396; ..
Rutland Is now open for
corner
and
tne
real
point
ot
Racine;
Ohio
Authorized Singer SitiM".,..
speed,
power
steering,
power
Radio,
Rockers
and
odd
the Conkle home.
buslnei•. Both the store and
beginning for the land herein
Service. We Sharpth SCI..ori; •·,
Crlff Brodlord
disc
brakes, cowl lndudiQn,
chairs,
Gas
and
Electric
the
garage
have
been
Mr. and Mrs . Clifford described , said point located
3-p-!lc .
s.t.ffc
vinyl top, $2,700. C.ll992·3.120 .
heaters, Round Table and 6
remodeled to provide a .4 ROOM house. bath , all
23.A8 feel right of and at right
Whitatone of Columbus and angtes
9o17-6tp
chairs. 12Xl2 Olson rug, desk,
utilities, porch . Cctve St .,
to centerline stallon 372
pleasant atmosphere for
DOZER Work. Phone 9$-2171.
Lot hand tools (many enMrs. Dennl.wn of Wilkesville plus 71.96 ; thence South 72
Pomeroy . Will sell on land
shoppers.
Store hours,
9o13·ffc
Al minutes 2.4 seconds
tlquel. Electric Mower , 1964 14-000R Chevrolet, 213,
contract. Call 992 -5122 or
Monday through Saturday are
spent SUnday with Mr. and Mrs. degrees
East along the owners' !'lOr Wheelbarrow,
Dishes,
cook
·
standard
with
overdrive.
Gallipolis
4&lt;6·930~.
6a.m . to9 p.m . Garage hours,
Perry Bradbury. The Whit.. theUt rropE!rll earner and the
9·16·6fp ware, earthenware Iars, and
Priced reaS.onablv . Ptione ·
Monday throug_h Saturday, 8
stones a'nd Bradbury&amp; met last center lne o old Chester · a.m.
many other misc. Items,
Chester
985·3361.
Pete
to~ p.m. Qosed Sunday.
. -.~..~ 1
Rutland Roed; thence South 3o4
i.ncludliimany antiques. Not . Elberfeld.
, .
We at Miller and Sons are GET YOUR travel trailer ready
winter wlwe ~.~n::y w~re m degrtH SJ_mlnutes. .~0. ''"f.nds
· - le ' f~•- .l!ctl•eots.
, 7
(,}
.
.
,ap~'t li:im'·owhler"T 71.
~ .1 i.l
, ll··
•
! •'; ... -"1.~ 1 0£!
t .. l""i~=~~·Q~i!~~··f-~fil~
. Henrietta!· -v,elth of of Old ....L'hester . Rutland Road,
our out-Dt"C stOre with the
go hunting this tall? Rent a
c" tw:.Coy, ii\ICIIoneer.
·and Mrs·. George Veith 82 .50 Net to a point In the
9·20·Jtc
in-town prices.
frailer or buy any rental at
·
owners' southeast property
9·l6-61c
reduced cost. Gaul's Trailer
of Middleport spent a day corner; thence North n degrees
2 BEDROOM home In good
Sales, Co. Rd. 36, 1'12 miles
neighborhood, rectntly
recenUywithMr.andMrs. John .41 mlnutel 24 seconds West - - - - - - - - - north
of
Chester,
Ohio,
Rt.
3
Bob
Hunnor
9·l2-6fp
along lhe own~rs' south WILL pick up merchandise and
remodeled.
Immediate
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 91.5· saVs:
Veith and Mr. and Mrs. Donald propertv line, U1 .24 feet to a ~ take to auction on a per ·
possntlon, Inquire at 181
Leach and family.
point In the owners' southwest
3832.
3 ADJOINING LOTS, 501&lt;100
centage basis. Call Jim
Locu11 St ., Pomeroy.
9·20·6fp
property corner; thence North
each, Syracuse, Ohio. Phone
Adems, auctioneer, Rutland.
9·21·3fc
Mr ,and Mrs . Ra Y Searls and 11 degrees 48 minutes 34
W/.·58880
Phone
7&lt;2-4&lt;61.
daughter of Rutland spent a seconds Etst elong the owners•
Dollars
9·22·31p
9·23·1fC
.
west propertv line, 71.65 teet to
reeent evemng with Mr. and the point of beginning, con ·
OLD furni1url, dlihes, brass
MrJ,, Clarence Searls Terry talnlng 0.24 of an acre, more or
LOllS WITH all utilities.
TRUCK LOA II
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
'
ten, tMcluslve of the present
Rtlfrlcted sub dlvlaton. V. to
and Stanley ·
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. C.SII
TIRE SALE
road which occupies D.OJ ot en COUNTRY and western band ,
POMEROY- 5 mile aut - 112
2·acre !ojo, Phone Ches"'
·WI.-6271.
Buy
l
Tiro
ot
Rot.
Price.
Get
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland acre. more or tess . ·
some rock. Friday and
·
Said station being the Station
acres, lots ot timber, 2 story
985-3301, night ?85·330!1.
----,------9·1·ff&lt; 2nd at Hell-Price Willie ttols
Saturday nights . Write Box
of Dexter spent a recent Number as stipulated in the
frame home, now kitchen,
1-+,ffc
-,
Supply
IJtstsl
729·A, c.o The Daily Stnllnel. OLO UPRIGHT pianos, any
evening with Mr. and Mrs. hereinbefore mentioned 1urvey.
new
bath,
new
llvl,ng
room,
2
.
-'--:~------- · '
S..pir
Service
Slaflotl
Owners claim title by inPomeroy, Ohio.
cond!flon, as long as have not
J w ,._
~drooms, COULO HAVE 7 ROOM modem homo wtlh
Marlin Rife.
strument of r«ord In Deed
9-72-6tc
been wet. Paying 110 each.
· · -rsey, Mgr.
FOUR, large barn, out· 'baument, glirage/ two·
Mr.and.Mrs. Perry Bradbury Book W, Poge 3S1, Count&gt;
First floor ooly. Mondays will ,
Ph. 992:-H33
porches, shade trftl, 11ft •Crt:
building with cellar, pond,
..
·
·
Aecorder'a Otflct.
are· ppding a few days with
Together with ali rlohts or WOMAN or girl. Apply In
be plck·up day . Wrlle, giving ·~===~Otto_n_,_•_Ho
_ur_s_.J ALL FOR $10,900.
groUnd located an Rt. 12A,
person. Call 992 -2565 for
good directions, Witten "Plano .Mr. ahd-Mr-s. Robert Wood and easements of access to or from
$yracu5t, Ohio, by owner.
1
appointment.
Company, Box 188, Sitrdls, SMALL busln ..s. going con. POMEROY
chi•._
t Canal Win •-ter seld limited acce11 hlahwav.
Mulberry
Phme ~lllpolls -95a9 191' ·
All'l1" a
Ca111;0
• from or to the land of said
9-22-Jtc
Ohio 43946.
cern. Right price to right
Avenue - 2 s1ory brick, 3
appointmeni.
.
and 'Mrs Joey Leach of persons abutting upon that
8-20-tfc person. Our books open tor
bedrooms, b.ot~ • .be~utlful
.:!}~
•
·
portion ot said limited acc:ess MAN OR woman to supply _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_;:::
your Inspection . Central
kitchen, 3 C~r ' .oar~gi,
Wbeelenburgand Mr. and Mrs. highway, as shown b'r' the plans
consumers with Rawlelgh
location.
Write Box 71.9-V,
COMPLETELY
REMOD· GOOD investment propirty.·
Donald Leach, Marcia, Johnny, ot said Improvement herein
t
Products . Can tarn $60
85
8
care of Dally Sentinel, E L E D, E X C E L L E N T· House •with fllree furolahtd
_.
R
t
S
da
with
referred
to
.
Weekly part-time, $1511 and up BASSET purples, AKC reg.
a,., oger apen un y
Pomeroy, Ohio, end we'll give CONDITIOif, 519,200.
·'
apartinentsM, bethslmtni; tYto ·
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Leach and Said persons named or notad fulf .tlme. Write Charlie Penn, lstered o Belbly herl- you complete information.
'
\
gar•o••· on ly l.nco"'''
abon shall further take notice
W. T. Rawlelgh Co., P. 0 . Bo.•
togo. S3HS4J. Just oH Rt. 1
9·22-6tc
,,
s1911. Priced ....nanal&gt;ty tor
Arthur.
that unless they answer on or
204, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601,
Tuppers 'Plains, Ohio. -.,-.,------,--POMEROY- CLOSE IN FOR
qul~k oelo. P~me .~·;I!W. .
Mr. and Mrs. Harry ~onard befort Saturdlty, the 7th day of giving name, address and near
Francis Benedum, Phone FIELD · grown
chryun .
November, 1970, they will be
SHOPPING
-"
IV.
·•tor'/
-___
_:__ _ _ _7_
,19·1fc, '-.·--·~,=,:
phone number .
·
themums
and
mums .
Coolville 667·3856.
frame, 3 bedr&lt;Kif!!l, bOjh, full
r
of Chester spent a recent deemed to heve waived their
9·22· ltc
1·16·30tc
Reynolds' Flower Shop,
bosemenl, A IT"AL: AT
evening with Mr. and Mrs. rfghttoanawer,andthePetftion
wilt be teken u true and
$6,500.
.
Meson.
Va.
lns~Jance
James Conkle. Mr. Conkle is Judgment will be rendered HOUSEWIVES and mothers! PARKVIEW Kennels, Poodles, --------9--22·21c
,
enjoying a week's vac,tlon according!)' .
and bird dogs. AKC. Pot ·ancl
POMEROY- NEXT TO THE AUTOI,IOBILE lnsura'nct been
Pay for your Christmas with
show puppies. Grooming. AUCTION. Saturday, S.p·
NEW GlADE SCHOOL, canc~lle.d?
Lo1t
your
Beeline's _profit check from
from his duties at ~r's at
P. E. M01heter
Phone
?9H..U.
tem~r
26,
Hartford,
W.
Va.
I
Mulberry
Aven~~e
.
2
ofory
operalor'l
license?
C.Stl
992·
Beeline
fashions
In
showing
Ravenawood.
Director- of Hfghwavs
2966. ·; . .
•
will offer for sale my entire
frame, 3 bedrooms, blth, aas
your free time. Use of car
J.ll·ffC
Recent
ID the Rev. tOl&amp;, 1s.22.2t, noJ6, 13,61&lt;
'
6-]5.fl(
antique collection. Collectors forcea alr heat, ruu
neceSSII'y . C.SII Jan Robinson,
be here. C.Smlval glen, old
besemant, · EXTRA LARGE
4'6 ·~1&lt;6 or Jan Knapp, ?92·
Raymond Fife home were

Pomeroy Home l Auto

Auto Sales

Rlt.L'I ME, AN"iO'LL
&amp; n.i' FUST f.iOOMIN
f&gt;EAN TO~ WHAT
Alol SEEN!.' ,---.

prolecf.

-------

Storys Run

Notice

py;, '

For Rent or Sale

u....

.

:~'1'61,1,: 1t:':,":'(f,~~l •I W'tlWtl'w~~-f,;

,-:.:;}.,, .. .

.=::::::::::.===;;;;;;;;;;;;;
SM

-----Wanted To Buy

Now!

Help Wanted

,

wo. .-. .
Rea I E
.. state For

Cleland Realty'

'Nr

P

For SaI

w.

caUen

Frank Cool! of Pt. Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe E. Fife
and daughter, CrlsUe, of lJIUe
Kyger; Mrs. Rayritond Fife, Jr.

Jack
..,.,.'
,

'

Kane,
You,
~

and
'~

'

9·20·6fc

For Sale

sewing machines,, .,1\llst Iran
kettles, copper kettfes, otd

GARAGE an.ct IN EX·
CELL.ENT . CONDITION.

COAL. limestone. excelsior

lamps, silverware. olllstov81.
ol~ bollles, oldJars and stone

$13,300-.

Salt Works, E. Mlln St.,

T. V. technician for bench and
service calls. Must be ex. perltnced.
Phone Lang
BoHom 915--.
No. 21331
9-6-tfc

PRESUMED

of Turkey Run.
TO BE DEAD.
Michael Conkle, son of Mr .
NOTICE
and Mrs. Robert Conkle, suiBetty Peoples, the presume&lt;:!

and

6371.

IN THE

COMMON PlEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OMIO
PROaATI! DIVISION
IN RE: ESTATE OF lETTY
PEOPLES,
A
PERSON

Pomeroy. Phone 992-38f1.

•

4-9·ffC

1910 SEWING Machine uiiiCI
just a few times. Full
equlpptd
to zlg·'"ll, makes
EXPERIENCED beautician In
buttonholes, overcast, ·ap.
Mldditporf arH. Phone WJ. .
pllqun and many embroidery
3.1«1.
designs. Will sacrifice lor
9·17-6tc
only ~.«!Cosh or termo ;,:{.
be arranged. Phone 992.

dececfent, Is hereby notified that
she is ,-equlred, If alive. to
produce in the Common Pitas
Court of Meigs Countv, Ohio,
Probate Division , sallstactorv
evidence of her contlnuOf1c&amp; In
life , within twelve weeks from
~elp
September :Z2nd, 1970, the do"Jte
~
need 1
of th&amp; test publication of this IF You - 'hi • -·
yoy
notice
job, which means you ....,
F. H. O'IRtb,
money. Let me shoW~ the
Judttlnd Ex·Otticlo Cllrll
easiest and best way 1ctr
Cammon PI til COurt
hou•ewlfe.mothor to wor k
Meigs Cauntv. Ottlo
make good monl!l' wi1h
and
Probatt Dlvlslan
Beeline
Fashions. Full or
(9) 1, 8, 15, 22 • .4tc:

-----Female

fe~ed a knee Injury while

. •loolballatKygerCreek.
Playm
•
He is getUng about on crutches.
Recent vi.sitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Mat Iin Rife were Mrs.
Gaye Sqwards, c. heryl and
Allen, and Donna Sowarda of
SanduSky; Mr. and Mr*. Hurley
Rile, Karen, Shirley and Joe,

lilr. and .Mra. Dallu ' Rif~ or
WeJisto.,; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
ruie. Lorry, Valerie, Debbie
..

Wanted

9-tWc
"SPECIAL SALE," Early
VACUUM Cleaner brond ,.,..,
AmlrJ'can Storao •ra~lo
1910 model. Comploto wljlt all
com·btilittlan,
"F .. r-•ro
m _.
a cllljlnlng tool•. Small 'pain! 4 ·-ker .._.,d r, JYttotn,
•
damage In shipping. Wllllako speed c~~Jngor. 'BtllriC!I
S27 cash or Ierma Jldlllted.
$78.15. U"' ou'l~ !orms.
Phano tf2.2615.
.
Cell 992·3352.
' ·
partllme work. Free w_.rd· :
9· 11-6~
.
. .- , ,
9-:n-6tc
robe. Plellt call Joan
·
' L· ·
·
Trussell 9$.ol603.
. AWNINGS, storm doors and ' WA NUT Storpo, ·four ,spited
9·:J0.3fc
windows , carpor•h,
lnllf'f'lxoclnd fhlliatri , . •
------~-mll'quees, blown lind . belt
Sl!llll~tr lou •Yl...,. """"'
Insulation. Elmer Wttlto,
~~~' will dlocount lor
LC!St and Found
salesrepresentallve. For''"
calh:·i'M far scr..ches. Use
LOST. Walch at Melgs· D-f
~IJ!t:• .,umates,
Litle, Syracuse.
v. V. bur.
3352, •jtgular
priceC.SII
11$.95,
phont Ch•rlu
et "'ms.
9?2· . L
game, Friday. Phone Wl.·7]'1f' J~•- and Son. tnc.
now.
or 742·51,2.
·
~··-·
' - •t
9·22·3fc
' ·
s.JO.ffc
•••·• c'

VII·"·

F R :..

sperta tfC&lt;nl evening wjth',Qr,
•ltd Mrs. Pearl Stanley (rt ' l
'

'

""~

ll.llllp

--

··~

U)poot

1. 0 -

I.Oodal

10.8pttd
17.Rolllod
11. ~

dip

20.Dv a1b

ILI'-4fut

(fill',)

M
, .I .

l ,l t M

or '"'

Olilq;
lindStanley
Mrs. Leo
RIIJ&gt;&lt;, .:' F.UR~tSHED
· and ~~turnt$hed
.
Kyger;Mr.
ll!rs.
Rope~~~
tfudie of'.Cieveland.
.
apartments. CIIIH to sc:hoql.
c..
J'llOI1'
WI.·~· ·
Mr.and Mrs. Pe.,y Bra~btu:Y
· ,
.
,
tO.lS.ffc

4.11'o-

------

TRAILER, Brown's Troller
Par(, f,NnorJvllle. Phone 99:!332~. '
:'
and· Teresa of Sugar Grove,
f.9.tfc

'

jugs. Hou.. hol furniture and PROPERTY IS · SELLING
other Items too numerous to FAST, LET (1$ SILL YOURS
mention. Time 11 a.m. TODAY · ·
.
AuCtioneer J. L. "Joy" C.sio.
' HEN flY CLiLAND
Owner, James Fields. Lunch
REALTOR
·
served.'
OHico tn-2259 Rfl, tf2.2J61
---------,--'-·22-lfp - - - -- - ----'..:::
·20-6fc
2 MARE ponies. Call Bill
Harden. Phone 949· ~·
'9·22-6tc

.....

DAILY CROSSWORD

~~!~t~f1i·~~~:~
··-c P'

v

i~~~~~~;~;~~.:;]

'

''

....... -·

Y..., "'..]• ·,'! ' ~ . ~iii·
I

I

-~·

'

"""''"" "1-Wtta
""'. ~. fYQiriJftll!"
.
. '
' .....,_
'
.

I

' · . ' .: ' ...

'""""

I

~r;:'f,'

'

'

.

~

•wu ,...''1' ..'.· 1''.
..

'·'
.,

�. •.

I

•-~DaUy~nt~l.~iddltll&gt;rl·Pm.f.o,'; $.~. 2:d9'io

"#1 ':!·~gr,~~~:!'4~

.

·.ctassitiedif,

Bargains, Bargairrs.,

®
(}f.

THE
SYRACUSE
Ladies
Au11.iliary of Volunteer Fire
Department, w•sh to thank. all

the merc hant s and the
Sy&lt;acuse &lt;esidents lor their
donati ons that made the

Tim WiUCOll was taken to the

of Foslorta were weekend
gut&amp;ta of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Gorby and also called on Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Gorby and Mabel
Golf.
The family of Alpha Barr held
their annual picnic at Lake
Jackson Swtday. All of the
children and .grandchildren
were at the dinner. At noon a

,.• .,.,
• . Co

tor

QUAlnY

The annual humecomihg was
held at the Langsville church
Labor Day dinner and Ilea
SUnday . A basket dinner was
market • great success
held at noon. The afternoon
9 n. llc
program started at 2 p.m. with - - -- -- - special singing by the Virgil
Notice
King Family of Pomeroy . the HAYMAN'S
AUCTION tlouse,
Mount Uniun Quartet and Mrs. Laurel Cliff. now open each
Friday to re ce ive con Paul Taylor. An enjoyable time
signments
at 10 a.m . Auction
was bad by all.
starting at 7 p.m. let us sell
hoopilal by Marlin ambulance
Sunday aftemooo and remains
seriously ilL
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Prilly

2 -~
Of

For Sale
a-

NEW

~·~il#l!!f!.~~"!l'"'!.~·;"~;;;f:&gt;,iJ;

,,

'
· WHAT ARE 'IOU
GAWI&lt;JIV' AT,
NOSE'I?

•

•

r----'-r------::~----- 1

Card r Thanks

........

,

.

toot truck camper.

Sleeps six. Pt)on~ 992.39:54.
9-18·61c

l.

MOBILE Home. 12 x 51, Salem
st. in Rutland. large lot, new
uarage, out of high water .

•

lnquire anv tlrne except

1969 CHEVROLET

$2495

Sunday. C. J . Wise, Phone 142·
5911 ·

Townsman Station Wagon, V·B motor ,
automatic transmission .
1969 FORD

9 SfX.WEEKS old pigs. Phone
949-2165.

$2095

Mustang 2 Dr. hardtop. 6 cyl ., standard shilL
Real Nice.
·

your merchandise.

LEGAL NOTICE

Bottom 98H1S4J.

!ires.

lEGAL NOTICE
Doroth'l' Kathryn White;
Mildred Belle White whose

r'E'Sidence {SI are unknown to the
plaintiff, and the unknown heir s
or devisees of Dorothy Kathryn
White. deceased. the unknown
heirs or devis&amp;eS of Mildred
Belle Wt1 ite . deceased. and the
unknown 1'1eirs or devisees of
Mary Peeples, deceased , also
known as Mary Peoples , whose
names and address.es are
unknown to the pla intiff. will
take not ic e that they have been
sued by the Director of High ot the State of Ohio, who
dinner was served to Mr. and ways
hillS instituted a proceed ing in
Mrs. Chester Messer and the Common Pleas Court ot
County, Otlio , to ap ·
children, Joe, Frank, Mary Meigs
proprlale certain property
Tere55a and Danny, all of descr ibed hereafter for high way purposes, namely !he
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Duane making,
construct1on or 1m ·
Barr and Shawn of Oak Hill ; provement of Stale Rou te No. 7,
6.JA, Meigs County, OhiO
Mr. and Mrs. BlaLr Cadwallader Section
and to fl lC. the value of said
and sons, Chris and Brian, of property . The propel'"fy sought
Winches~r ; and Mr . and Mrs. to be appropr iated is more
specifically de scr ibed as
Larry Barr, Michelle and David toltows :

BLAEltNARS

Phone ?92·5552.

PCIMIROY, OHIO

9-16·6tc

For Sale

200 BUSHEL old corn, $1.S4J at
crib. Call 985-3532, Russell

LOTS - Building lots or mobile

3 ROOM unfurnlsh•d apart.
DEADLINES
P M Day Before Publication
ment. Phone 99o:·.i:288.
Monday Deadtine9a .m .
l·l·ffc 1968 PONTIAC ,Bonneville, 2·

line. Al$0 school bus route . On
County Rd. 25, l mile west of
Chester, Ohio. If Interested

For Rent

WANT AD
INFORMATION

, EXPERT
.

shape. Needs tires . S39.5 . L-"~·"'---2t_,_,_ __ P_o_
m_•_ro_:r__,

OI'IM EYES. 1:00 P'.IL

VII

1•.

9·1...1p

From 1he lArgest Truck' or
Bulldozer Radiator fo the
Smallest Heater Core.

1961 CHEVROLET Impala, 2
door. hard lop. V'ery good

Pomeroy Motor Co.
~

9·16-6tc

26- FOOT i'louseli'·ailer, good
condition. Price reduced for
quick ule. Also, grocery .
s.tore lnvtn1ory and about 900
bales ml•ed hay. can tong

1969 VOLKSWAGEN
51895
2 Dr. Sedan, radio, custom equipment, white

3-22-tfc

'

.9·21}fp

Findling. Allred, Ohio.
9·20·3fc

home space. On new water ·

Have Your Yearly
.

wtaJ: Alignment
$5.55
-GUARANTEED-

Phone 992-2094
call 985-4197.
door, hardtop : Also, 1970, 17·
M2·6fp
horsepower wheel horse
riding tractor and mower .
BABY furniture, baby bed,
Phone Coolvltle 98$-4176.
stroller, high chair, dressing
9·20·61P
606 E. Main, P&lt;imoroy, 0.
tabte. Phone 992-3952.
9-22·3fc
BEANS, Kentucky Wonders .
Pick your own, S2 bushel ,
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
Sweet potatoes and Irish MAPLE breakfast set and
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
potatoes . Bnng container .
?92·2522 ..
plastic living room suite. l;k&gt;th
Andrew Cross, Letart Falls,
6-lO·ffC
In good condition. Inquire at
Ohio.
181 Locust St., Pomeroy.
9·20·12tc

Ca n( el!ation &amp; Corrections
ill be accepted unlit 9 a .m . tor
Day at Publication

.

Air.f.onditionlti•·
,
,·
InspectiOn And
Re-Charp
Plus
6.98
.. Parts
Blaettna~s

FURNISHED first floor ef ficiency apartment, utilities
REGULATIONS
furnished . Phone 992-J874.
I h e Publisher reserves the
B-12-lfc
r19h t to e dit or reiect any adS
Phono m-210
dee med objectional . The
pub Iis her will no t be responsible
lor more than one incorrect T-RAILER space. one mile from
new Meigs High School on old
insertion
Rt. 33. Phone ?92-2'141.
RATES
~or Want Ad Service
'1 ·20·30fC
5 ce nts per Word one insert ion
Mi n imum Charge 75c
548 S. SECOND St., Middleport.
12 cen ts per w Jrd three
CONCRETE
Ml·lfC READY·MIX
Juhllng property. 5 room
consecutiv e inv•rlinn o;;
to y_our
dell•ered
right
house . 2 bedrooms . bath, INTERNATIONAL grain drill .
18 cents per word six con ·
Fnt
and
easy.
Free
~ecutive
inse•
'ion
s
'
basement.
Cont.act
Edgar
.
of Langsville; Mr . and Mrs.
Also,
Co-Op
manure
est
matis.
Phone
992-328-4.
The follow ing pa rcel, lo cated
Per cer:t Di ~c ount on pai d
Tuckerman , .471 Richland
spreader. Call Pomeroy 992·
Alpha Barr and Michelle Barr. In Section 30, Town 2. Range 13, ad~15 and
!ioegleln Re-ady -MIX Co.,
ads paid within 10 days.
Ave., Athens, Ohio. Phone
Salisbury
Township.
Meigs
196~ - 6 CYLINDER Farci,
2277.
'Middleport,
Glhto.
CAR D Of- THAN!~.~
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and County, Ohio, lylf'g on the right
592·2035.
9·20·ffc
50,000 actual mll&amp;s, no· rust.
..
6LJO.ffc
&amp; OBITUAHY
9·20·lfP
Michelle, and Mrs. Alpha Barr side ot the centerline ot a survev
PhOne 992-6412 evenings. .
Sl SO for 50 word minimum.
made
by
the
Department
of
.
'I·:J0.6tp SEPTIC tanks clt8ned. Mlllll
spent a day shopping in Highway ~. and recorded in the lM h additional word 2c .
FURNISHED apartment, 211 ONE new 041 Stlkl chain saw.
BLIND ADS
Also, one small2 wheel trailer
records of Meigs County, Ohio,
Gallipolis.
SenltatiCW1, Stew1rt. otUo. ,.;,,
Additional 2~c Charge per
3rd Ave., Middleport. Nice
being more tully described Advertisement
for Gravely tractor. N. E. 1964 FORD ~laxle 4.door,
Mrs. Sharon Barr and uandfollows
yard.
porch,
private
en·
662·3935·
:
Vanaman , Rutland, Ohio . clean .v inyl inside, good
Of-F-ICE HOUf.l S
2·12·JIC
trances. Phone 992-2780 or 992children called on her mother,
PARCEL NO. 134-WL
rubber,
good
26Q
..
englne,
s.t.
1'1 JO am to 5 DO p .m
Daily,
Phone 742-5322.
3432.
I
HIGHWAY)
9·20·31p Black. can W/.•:1316. ' · .
Mrs . Howard Thoma of ALL RIGHT. TITLE 1\NO H JO am to 12 · 00 Noon
S.:U.ffc
9·:J0.3tc ATHERTON TV end EloctrOnlc
~d lurday
Pomeroy R.D.
INTEREST IN ~'=EE SIMPLE.
Service. New Channel Ml'"' WHEEl:
INCLUDING LIMITATION OF
Service.
'
AUCTION
1966
OODGE
truck,
slanf.slx,
T.V.S. Phano lanii 8011om
ACCESS,
IN
THE
NEWLY decorated, l room SAT., SEPT. 26, at 1:00 P.M. at
Company,
'
•12-ton, standard trans·
1185-3&amp;19.
FOLLOWING DE SCRI BED
furnished apartment, adults
Phone 9tS.3301.
the Jimmy Hollon farm 1 mile mission. l6,000 mlles, $750.
PROPERTY
oniy . 126 Mulberry Ave .
East ol Five Point!. on the
Phone W/.·6468.
Phone 992-66'18.
Racine-Chester Road (follow
Commencing at a point in the
NE JGLER Construction. For
9·6·ffC
BY GLENNA SIRJLER
sale signs from Rt. 11. 3 Piece --------~---9-·:JO.lfp
southwest corner of the east WILL give plano lessons in my
building or nomodellng your AIR · CONDIHON 'iNG,
halt of ~ nctlonal Section 30;
Relrlgerllftan urvfct, 'Jed&lt;'•
Uving Room Suite, 2 Piece
home. Phone 992-3666.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoy and thence
home, cell Guy Nelglor,
North 1 degree S-A
'MOBILE homespace5or lob. If
RolrlgenoiiQn, New I:Ut~·..
Living Room Suite, 3 beds 1969 FORD Econollne Van. J,o!OO
8-1
6-tfc
Racine,
Ohio.
Samantha of Springfield visited m inutes 25 seconds East ator.o
miles, must sell. See at
Interes-ted, contact J. M.
Phone 112·2019. ·
· · '
complete, Antique handmade
7·ll-!fc
the hall section nne of said
Newell'~ Sunoco. Phone
..
ol+tfc
Gaul
,
Co
.
Rd
.
36,
11.
'
2
miles
fr41111 Friday until Swtday with section.
bed.
3dressers,
Antique
Chest
109.20 teet to a po int; MILLER AND SONS Grrocery
Chester 985·331.).
north of Chester, Olio. Phone
of drawers, Kitchen cabinet,
Mr. and Mrs . James Conkle. thence South 72 degrees A1
and Ashland Service Stati-on
9·13·ffc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer SEWING /MCHINE~. !!.Wfr..
985·3832.
base
cabinet,
2
Refrigerators,
minutes
24
seconds
East
along
at the Crossroads on .Rt . 124
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Leonard of a line. 1S6.U feet to a point in
9·20·6fp
Complete Service
service, all m•kes, m~ftt4..
Wringer
washer,
RCA
Con·
between
Pomeroy
and
Rock Springs speni ·SUnday in the owners' nor thwest property
The Fabric Shoji; Poo~
Phone '$·3821
1ole TV (almost new), 1970 CHEVELLE SS 396; ..
Rutland Is now open for
corner
and
tne
real
point
ot
Racine;
Ohio
Authorized Singer SitiM".,..
speed,
power
steering,
power
Radio,
Rockers
and
odd
the Conkle home.
buslnei•. Both the store and
beginning for the land herein
Service. We Sharpth SCI..ori; •·,
Crlff Brodlord
disc
brakes, cowl lndudiQn,
chairs,
Gas
and
Electric
the
garage
have
been
Mr. and Mrs . Clifford described , said point located
3-p-!lc .
s.t.ffc
vinyl top, $2,700. C.ll992·3.120 .
heaters, Round Table and 6
remodeled to provide a .4 ROOM house. bath , all
23.A8 feel right of and at right
Whitatone of Columbus and angtes
9o17-6tp
chairs. 12Xl2 Olson rug, desk,
utilities, porch . Cctve St .,
to centerline stallon 372
pleasant atmosphere for
DOZER Work. Phone 9$-2171.
Lot hand tools (many enMrs. Dennl.wn of Wilkesville plus 71.96 ; thence South 72
Pomeroy . Will sell on land
shoppers.
Store hours,
9o13·ffc
Al minutes 2.4 seconds
tlquel. Electric Mower , 1964 14-000R Chevrolet, 213,
contract. Call 992 -5122 or
Monday through Saturday are
spent SUnday with Mr. and Mrs. degrees
East along the owners' !'lOr Wheelbarrow,
Dishes,
cook
·
standard
with
overdrive.
Gallipolis
4&lt;6·930~.
6a.m . to9 p.m . Garage hours,
Perry Bradbury. The Whit.. theUt rropE!rll earner and the
9·16·6fp ware, earthenware Iars, and
Priced reaS.onablv . Ptione ·
Monday throug_h Saturday, 8
stones a'nd Bradbury&amp; met last center lne o old Chester · a.m.
many other misc. Items,
Chester
985·3361.
Pete
to~ p.m. Qosed Sunday.
. -.~..~ 1
Rutland Roed; thence South 3o4
i.ncludliimany antiques. Not . Elberfeld.
, .
We at Miller and Sons are GET YOUR travel trailer ready
winter wlwe ~.~n::y w~re m degrtH SJ_mlnutes. .~0. ''"f.nds
· - le ' f~•- .l!ctl•eots.
, 7
(,}
.
.
,ap~'t li:im'·owhler"T 71.
~ .1 i.l
, ll··
•
! •'; ... -"1.~ 1 0£!
t .. l""i~=~~·Q~i!~~··f-~fil~
. Henrietta!· -v,elth of of Old ....L'hester . Rutland Road,
our out-Dt"C stOre with the
go hunting this tall? Rent a
c" tw:.Coy, ii\ICIIoneer.
·and Mrs·. George Veith 82 .50 Net to a point In the
9·20·Jtc
in-town prices.
frailer or buy any rental at
·
owners' southeast property
9·l6-61c
reduced cost. Gaul's Trailer
of Middleport spent a day corner; thence North n degrees
2 BEDROOM home In good
Sales, Co. Rd. 36, 1'12 miles
neighborhood, rectntly
recenUywithMr.andMrs. John .41 mlnutel 24 seconds West - - - - - - - - - north
of
Chester,
Ohio,
Rt.
3
Bob
Hunnor
9·l2-6fp
along lhe own~rs' south WILL pick up merchandise and
remodeled.
Immediate
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 91.5· saVs:
Veith and Mr. and Mrs. Donald propertv line, U1 .24 feet to a ~ take to auction on a per ·
possntlon, Inquire at 181
Leach and family.
point In the owners' southwest
3832.
3 ADJOINING LOTS, 501&lt;100
centage basis. Call Jim
Locu11 St ., Pomeroy.
9·20·6fp
property corner; thence North
each, Syracuse, Ohio. Phone
Adems, auctioneer, Rutland.
9·21·3fc
Mr ,and Mrs . Ra Y Searls and 11 degrees 48 minutes 34
W/.·58880
Phone
7&lt;2-4&lt;61.
daughter of Rutland spent a seconds Etst elong the owners•
Dollars
9·22·31p
9·23·1fC
.
west propertv line, 71.65 teet to
reeent evemng with Mr. and the point of beginning, con ·
OLD furni1url, dlihes, brass
MrJ,, Clarence Searls Terry talnlng 0.24 of an acre, more or
LOllS WITH all utilities.
TRUCK LOA II
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
'
ten, tMcluslve of the present
Rtlfrlcted sub dlvlaton. V. to
and Stanley ·
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. C.SII
TIRE SALE
road which occupies D.OJ ot en COUNTRY and western band ,
POMEROY- 5 mile aut - 112
2·acre !ojo, Phone Ches"'
·WI.-6271.
Buy
l
Tiro
ot
Rot.
Price.
Get
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland acre. more or tess . ·
some rock. Friday and
·
Said station being the Station
acres, lots ot timber, 2 story
985-3301, night ?85·330!1.
----,------9·1·ff&lt; 2nd at Hell-Price Willie ttols
Saturday nights . Write Box
of Dexter spent a recent Number as stipulated in the
frame home, now kitchen,
1-+,ffc
-,
Supply
IJtstsl
729·A, c.o The Daily Stnllnel. OLO UPRIGHT pianos, any
evening with Mr. and Mrs. hereinbefore mentioned 1urvey.
new
bath,
new
llvl,ng
room,
2
.
-'--:~------- · '
S..pir
Service
Slaflotl
Owners claim title by inPomeroy, Ohio.
cond!flon, as long as have not
J w ,._
~drooms, COULO HAVE 7 ROOM modem homo wtlh
Marlin Rife.
strument of r«ord In Deed
9-72-6tc
been wet. Paying 110 each.
· · -rsey, Mgr.
FOUR, large barn, out· 'baument, glirage/ two·
Mr.and.Mrs. Perry Bradbury Book W, Poge 3S1, Count&gt;
First floor ooly. Mondays will ,
Ph. 992:-H33
porches, shade trftl, 11ft •Crt:
building with cellar, pond,
..
·
·
Aecorder'a Otflct.
are· ppding a few days with
Together with ali rlohts or WOMAN or girl. Apply In
be plck·up day . Wrlle, giving ·~===~Otto_n_,_•_Ho
_ur_s_.J ALL FOR $10,900.
groUnd located an Rt. 12A,
person. Call 992 -2565 for
good directions, Witten "Plano .Mr. ahd-Mr-s. Robert Wood and easements of access to or from
$yracu5t, Ohio, by owner.
1
appointment.
Company, Box 188, Sitrdls, SMALL busln ..s. going con. POMEROY
chi•._
t Canal Win •-ter seld limited acce11 hlahwav.
Mulberry
Phme ~lllpolls -95a9 191' ·
All'l1" a
Ca111;0
• from or to the land of said
9-22-Jtc
Ohio 43946.
cern. Right price to right
Avenue - 2 s1ory brick, 3
appointmeni.
.
and 'Mrs Joey Leach of persons abutting upon that
8-20-tfc person. Our books open tor
bedrooms, b.ot~ • .be~utlful
.:!}~
•
·
portion ot said limited acc:ess MAN OR woman to supply _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_;:::
your Inspection . Central
kitchen, 3 C~r ' .oar~gi,
Wbeelenburgand Mr. and Mrs. highway, as shown b'r' the plans
consumers with Rawlelgh
location.
Write Box 71.9-V,
COMPLETELY
REMOD· GOOD investment propirty.·
Donald Leach, Marcia, Johnny, ot said Improvement herein
t
Products . Can tarn $60
85
8
care of Dally Sentinel, E L E D, E X C E L L E N T· House •with fllree furolahtd
_.
R
t
S
da
with
referred
to
.
Weekly part-time, $1511 and up BASSET purples, AKC reg.
a,., oger apen un y
Pomeroy, Ohio, end we'll give CONDITIOif, 519,200.
·'
apartinentsM, bethslmtni; tYto ·
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Leach and Said persons named or notad fulf .tlme. Write Charlie Penn, lstered o Belbly herl- you complete information.
'
\
gar•o••· on ly l.nco"'''
abon shall further take notice
W. T. Rawlelgh Co., P. 0 . Bo.•
togo. S3HS4J. Just oH Rt. 1
9·22-6tc
,,
s1911. Priced ....nanal&gt;ty tor
Arthur.
that unless they answer on or
204, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601,
Tuppers 'Plains, Ohio. -.,-.,------,--POMEROY- CLOSE IN FOR
qul~k oelo. P~me .~·;I!W. .
Mr. and Mrs. Harry ~onard befort Saturdlty, the 7th day of giving name, address and near
Francis Benedum, Phone FIELD · grown
chryun .
November, 1970, they will be
SHOPPING
-"
IV.
·•tor'/
-___
_:__ _ _ _7_
,19·1fc, '-.·--·~,=,:
phone number .
·
themums
and
mums .
Coolville 667·3856.
frame, 3 bedr&lt;Kif!!l, bOjh, full
r
of Chester spent a recent deemed to heve waived their
9·22· ltc
1·16·30tc
Reynolds' Flower Shop,
bosemenl, A IT"AL: AT
evening with Mr. and Mrs. rfghttoanawer,andthePetftion
wilt be teken u true and
$6,500.
.
Meson.
Va.
lns~Jance
James Conkle. Mr. Conkle is Judgment will be rendered HOUSEWIVES and mothers! PARKVIEW Kennels, Poodles, --------9--22·21c
,
enjoying a week's vac,tlon according!)' .
and bird dogs. AKC. Pot ·ancl
POMEROY- NEXT TO THE AUTOI,IOBILE lnsura'nct been
Pay for your Christmas with
show puppies. Grooming. AUCTION. Saturday, S.p·
NEW GlADE SCHOOL, canc~lle.d?
Lo1t
your
Beeline's _profit check from
from his duties at ~r's at
P. E. M01heter
Phone
?9H..U.
tem~r
26,
Hartford,
W.
Va.
I
Mulberry
Aven~~e
.
2
ofory
operalor'l
license?
C.Stl
992·
Beeline
fashions
In
showing
Ravenawood.
Director- of Hfghwavs
2966. ·; . .
•
will offer for sale my entire
frame, 3 bedrooms, blth, aas
your free time. Use of car
J.ll·ffC
Recent
ID the Rev. tOl&amp;, 1s.22.2t, noJ6, 13,61&lt;
'
6-]5.fl(
antique collection. Collectors forcea alr heat, ruu
neceSSII'y . C.SII Jan Robinson,
be here. C.Smlval glen, old
besemant, · EXTRA LARGE
4'6 ·~1&lt;6 or Jan Knapp, ?92·
Raymond Fife home were

Pomeroy Home l Auto

Auto Sales

Rlt.L'I ME, AN"iO'LL
&amp; n.i' FUST f.iOOMIN
f&gt;EAN TO~ WHAT
Alol SEEN!.' ,---.

prolecf.

-------

Storys Run

Notice

py;, '

For Rent or Sale

u....

.

:~'1'61,1,: 1t:':,":'(f,~~l •I W'tlWtl'w~~-f,;

,-:.:;}.,, .. .

.=::::::::::.===;;;;;;;;;;;;;
SM

-----Wanted To Buy

Now!

Help Wanted

,

wo. .-. .
Rea I E
.. state For

Cleland Realty'

'Nr

P

For SaI

w.

caUen

Frank Cool! of Pt. Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe E. Fife
and daughter, CrlsUe, of lJIUe
Kyger; Mrs. Rayritond Fife, Jr.

Jack
..,.,.'
,

'

Kane,
You,
~

and
'~

'

9·20·6fc

For Sale

sewing machines,, .,1\llst Iran
kettles, copper kettfes, otd

GARAGE an.ct IN EX·
CELL.ENT . CONDITION.

COAL. limestone. excelsior

lamps, silverware. olllstov81.
ol~ bollles, oldJars and stone

$13,300-.

Salt Works, E. Mlln St.,

T. V. technician for bench and
service calls. Must be ex. perltnced.
Phone Lang
BoHom 915--.
No. 21331
9-6-tfc

PRESUMED

of Turkey Run.
TO BE DEAD.
Michael Conkle, son of Mr .
NOTICE
and Mrs. Robert Conkle, suiBetty Peoples, the presume&lt;:!

and

6371.

IN THE

COMMON PlEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OMIO
PROaATI! DIVISION
IN RE: ESTATE OF lETTY
PEOPLES,
A
PERSON

Pomeroy. Phone 992-38f1.

•

4-9·ffC

1910 SEWING Machine uiiiCI
just a few times. Full
equlpptd
to zlg·'"ll, makes
EXPERIENCED beautician In
buttonholes, overcast, ·ap.
Mldditporf arH. Phone WJ. .
pllqun and many embroidery
3.1«1.
designs. Will sacrifice lor
9·17-6tc
only ~.«!Cosh or termo ;,:{.
be arranged. Phone 992.

dececfent, Is hereby notified that
she is ,-equlred, If alive. to
produce in the Common Pitas
Court of Meigs Countv, Ohio,
Probate Division , sallstactorv
evidence of her contlnuOf1c&amp; In
life , within twelve weeks from
~elp
September :Z2nd, 1970, the do"Jte
~
need 1
of th&amp; test publication of this IF You - 'hi • -·
yoy
notice
job, which means you ....,
F. H. O'IRtb,
money. Let me shoW~ the
Judttlnd Ex·Otticlo Cllrll
easiest and best way 1ctr
Cammon PI til COurt
hou•ewlfe.mothor to wor k
Meigs Cauntv. Ottlo
make good monl!l' wi1h
and
Probatt Dlvlslan
Beeline
Fashions. Full or
(9) 1, 8, 15, 22 • .4tc:

-----Female

fe~ed a knee Injury while

. •loolballatKygerCreek.
Playm
•
He is getUng about on crutches.
Recent vi.sitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Mat Iin Rife were Mrs.
Gaye Sqwards, c. heryl and
Allen, and Donna Sowarda of
SanduSky; Mr. and Mr*. Hurley
Rile, Karen, Shirley and Joe,

lilr. and .Mra. Dallu ' Rif~ or
WeJisto.,; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
ruie. Lorry, Valerie, Debbie
..

Wanted

9-tWc
"SPECIAL SALE," Early
VACUUM Cleaner brond ,.,..,
AmlrJ'can Storao •ra~lo
1910 model. Comploto wljlt all
com·btilittlan,
"F .. r-•ro
m _.
a cllljlnlng tool•. Small 'pain! 4 ·-ker .._.,d r, JYttotn,
•
damage In shipping. Wllllako speed c~~Jngor. 'BtllriC!I
S27 cash or Ierma Jldlllted.
$78.15. U"' ou'l~ !orms.
Phano tf2.2615.
.
Cell 992·3352.
' ·
partllme work. Free w_.rd· :
9· 11-6~
.
. .- , ,
9-:n-6tc
robe. Plellt call Joan
·
' L· ·
·
Trussell 9$.ol603.
. AWNINGS, storm doors and ' WA NUT Storpo, ·four ,spited
9·:J0.3fc
windows , carpor•h,
lnllf'f'lxoclnd fhlliatri , . •
------~-mll'quees, blown lind . belt
Sl!llll~tr lou •Yl...,. """"'
Insulation. Elmer Wttlto,
~~~' will dlocount lor
LC!St and Found
salesrepresentallve. For''"
calh:·i'M far scr..ches. Use
LOST. Walch at Melgs· D-f
~IJ!t:• .,umates,
Litle, Syracuse.
v. V. bur.
3352, •jtgular
priceC.SII
11$.95,
phont Ch•rlu
et "'ms.
9?2· . L
game, Friday. Phone Wl.·7]'1f' J~•- and Son. tnc.
now.
or 742·51,2.
·
~··-·
' - •t
9·22·3fc
' ·
s.JO.ffc
•••·• c'

VII·"·

F R :..

sperta tfC&lt;nl evening wjth',Qr,
•ltd Mrs. Pearl Stanley (rt ' l
'

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ll.llllp

--

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U)poot

1. 0 -

I.Oodal

10.8pttd
17.Rolllod
11. ~

dip

20.Dv a1b

ILI'-4fut

(fill',)

M
, .I .

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or '"'

Olilq;
lindStanley
Mrs. Leo
RIIJ&gt;&lt;, .:' F.UR~tSHED
· and ~~turnt$hed
.
Kyger;Mr.
ll!rs.
Rope~~~
tfudie of'.Cieveland.
.
apartments. CIIIH to sc:hoql.
c..
J'llOI1'
WI.·~· ·
Mr.and Mrs. Pe.,y Bra~btu:Y
· ,
.
,
tO.lS.ffc

4.11'o-

------

TRAILER, Brown's Troller
Par(, f,NnorJvllle. Phone 99:!332~. '
:'
and· Teresa of Sugar Grove,
f.9.tfc

'

jugs. Hou.. hol furniture and PROPERTY IS · SELLING
other Items too numerous to FAST, LET (1$ SILL YOURS
mention. Time 11 a.m. TODAY · ·
.
AuCtioneer J. L. "Joy" C.sio.
' HEN flY CLiLAND
Owner, James Fields. Lunch
REALTOR
·
served.'
OHico tn-2259 Rfl, tf2.2J61
---------,--'-·22-lfp - - - -- - ----'..:::
·20-6fc
2 MARE ponies. Call Bill
Harden. Phone 949· ~·
'9·22-6tc

.....

DAILY CROSSWORD

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(Contlllued from page I)
ID 1Ift .., a Vl&gt;lce for god and ~." a mlnlllter and 111r&lt;o
membeuolhls congregation Monday aiDod in a downpour olllllde
amovie theatre to prvteslthe showing of ''Bob and carol and Ted
.,d Allee."
·
The Rev. Richard Heatherly of tile Calvary Baptist &lt;llurch
aald the R-coted film ''portroyo wife swapping and free love and
makes fun of decency," He aald he feared theatres h...., might
!Wenlwllly turn "ID that Swedish stuff."
TOLI!IJO, OHIO- DIBSIDENT PIJBUC schoolteachers and
the board of educalim receesed their aalary lallra Indefinitely
Monday night and the Toledo Teacllera Federation urged its
members today ID man a picket line.
The 2,500 teachers, who went back to work laat Friday after
striking for 10 days, are under a court order not to walk out. The
otate Ferguson Act prohibits strikes by publlc employes under
threat of dlamissal. There was no Indication when negotlatloos
would resume.
OOUJMBUS - THE &lt;BAIRMAN of the Ohio Interstate

Coordlnatnrs Conference said Mnnday th' federal decision not to
build a portion of lllterotate 7lln Cincinnati was ''dlaalltrous."
James W. Sbockneasy told a meeting of tho cooferenee that the
dedBion announced by Transportation Secretary John Volpe
should be foiJ8hl. The decision was made to call off plans for
Victory Parkway because it would violate federal restrictloos on
freeway right-of-way through park prvperty.
"It's a disastrous declslon,''liloclmessy said. "Even If we get
over this hurdle, we may have ID redesign the whole deal. anclnnati wlli suffer lntermlnalie delays and Inconveniences."

Mrs. Howard B. Pilchard, 86, are two daugh~rs, Mrs. R. M.
the fonner Della Lowery of 1Mildred) Daugherty of Tijeras
Pomeroy, died Sept. 6 In New and Mrs. Val (MOline) of

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Mexico where she had resided
for the past few months after
moving there from Florida.
Her husband, who is among
the survivors, resides st
Tijeras, New Mexico, and some
years ago served the Methodist
Churches In Letart, Racine,
Syracuse and Minersvllie In
Meigs County. Other survivors

Townships Have
32 at Convention
Thirty-two

township

delegates were present for the
Meigs County

Agriculture

Stabilization and Conservation
Convention held at the Masonic

~ .. '
(9"1'~~ J!lille •I)

Toledo,twograndsonsandelght
great-grandchildren .

violence. And there's one small
falling left out here. And this is
the distinction between your
being a political joke and your
being a very serious man.
"And that is thai you

yourself, singularly, are perhaps the grealest precursor of

D

in

MASH

AKRON (UP)) - Three
major banks here have lowered
Donald Sutherland
the 8 per cent prime interest
Ell toll Gould
rate
to 71&gt; per cent because of
Rated "R" under 17 not
easing
of the light money
admitted without parent.
situation.
'
ColorCirtooRI:
Fnlghl Fright
The American Bank of
Don't Spill the Boons
Commerce, the Goodyear Bank
an..tt....... t
and the Firestone Bank h....,
Admllsl..,: $1.00 Adults, 60c
followed similar action by East
Chlldl'on
Coast banks during the
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
weekend.
,
Two Cleveland Banks, the
-ntldty &amp; Thursctay
Society National and ConSept. 2:1-24
Unental Bank, also lowered
NOT OPEN
.__ _
_ _ _ __, · their rates Moodoy.
(Tochnlcolor)

In Ohio

COLUMBUS (UP)) - Chan-

cellor John Millett of the Board
of ~gents said today he ...
peeled the openings ol Ohio's
colleges and universities to be
"peacelul, but subdued."
Miami University, ooe of
four state supported universities sbut t1own last spring becsuse of student disturbances,
was scheduled ID become the
first to reopen today.
"We haven1 received any Indication of trouble,'' said MilleU. "We upecl the openings
to be peaceful, but subdued."
.Mlllett aald a new campus
disruption law passed by the
last session of the general assembly is ellpeCied to help keep
things under control.
"The law lll8koa It clear that
there is a new criminal offense
-cunpus disturbance-in the
otate," he aald. "The law ...
provides for an lmmedl,ate
hearing of perSOill involved In
an outbreak and f,.. dlsmlaaal
of those convictad of disrup-

tion."

Millett also said IOCIIrity at

the lnslltullons have been llghl.ened.

"Many of the lna!ltullona

han lncreued the lliJe o1 th.!lr

Check ·and Double 'Check
Isn't It about time you up·dated your method
of bill pay1ug and record keeping with a
Olecklng Account? To assure your money Is
protected yet readily available, see us.

clpen Your Checking Account Today .

DESPOSITS INSURED TO '20,000.00

IIOCIIrity forces,'' he said: "ID
addition, IIOCIIrlt)' arrangemenll, such u ldentlfleallon
cards and control of ID
campus, will be ln. effect when
ltudenll report·for claaes."
Mlllell aald many 0( the Wllversitlel and
.
campus
trajnlnc
the Ohio

.,_

atlmprovinc
ll&lt;e capacity

'

ble on the CID'lpU8U,"

I.

M'

"•'' :;,, -,' ' ·

{;

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a.r;ms
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noun~ement

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.

Pleasant Valley lloapllal
ADMITTED - Kimberly
Klnnlard, Apple Grove; Herbert McDonald, Mro. Era ·
Wallace, Rei Veazy, Charles
Rainey, Pl. Pleasant; Charles
Atkjnson, Henderson; Mrs.
Teddy lllckman, Leon; Mrs.
Dewitt Browning, Pl. Pleasant;
Ralph Elias, Clifton; William
Powell, New Haven; Mrs.
Harold Young, Clifton; Norma
Harrison, Leon; Richard
Wallace, Jr., Pl. Pleasant.
DISCHARGES - Vivian
Pifer, J. Kathleen UtUe, Mrs.
Eugene Spaats, Barbara
Oldaker, Mrs. Richard Shirley,
Mrs. Charles Burrows, Mrs.
Larry Leiving, and Mrs. Rusaell

Ust _the free parking loJ on 2nd Street white '·

Charged

shopping~ Fumiture-Roor Coverings..;.a~d·l

~IAIMBVII (UPI) - State
Democratic Party Chief
Eu(lene P. O'Grady today ac£9'e4 Franklin County
~tor. C. l!oward Jolmaon
~. a'!IIS.UI proaecuiDr John
~II'
with
"ev•slon,
milclre!.11on and tilDe wasting
p'~ures" In tbe special
rtrabd Jm'l' Investigation of the
alate.ljlpn program.
, O'Grlilll appeared Tueaday
liefOre 'dit Franklin County
Gtanci o!Ury ' which Ia ln.' ...u,.... Joena llllde UroiJ8h
tht' ollll!e of llate Trelllllrer
.Tobn D. Herbert and through
·tiiol llebool Employea .

'·

·Furnishings for your home and'
Wearing Apparel for your family.

'

-

Be Thrifty! Save all of your Nleslipl from

Elberfehls in Pomeroy

Cundiff.

-

.~.

lletlremoftt System.
·~Jom 1/tck and C. lfDward
ttllould on with the

·

are w1s1ng up

···:.-····
,-1J...

' "•'.

. ..;. l

"

to the low cost of electric heat
More homeowners than ever before switched to electric heat last year.
switched because they found out. through an estimate,,. how .!!!!!! the differenCe i~.
between electrtc heat and other forms of heating. Do they: think they made e w,ise'
decision? Ask some people who have electric ·lieat. TheY:re ou~ mo5t convincing :
salesmen. Call us or your Reddy Kilowatt
~
. .
Recommended Dealer lor an estimate.. It's
.:::::" •·
'
free. It's accurate. And a real eye-opener.
:...,., tgMtAIY
.
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23;

POME~OY·'MIDDLEPORT, 0~10

eace

I

over AJpman
Radio, Marshal Habes AI·
Majaii, the Jordanian Chief ol
Stall, said his force.B had beaten
back the Syrian invading f....es
from Jordonlan territory· lniD
Syria.
Ills statement broacl&lt;;ast by
Amman radio followed King
Husaeln's assertion that his
army and air force had
bloodied the nose of the
Invading Syrian lonk force In a
tank batUe thls morning.
lsraell sources had re)l9rted
the an- ear!let the Middle East allua-

Evasion

'

...

tng

Shor Uy before

,_•,{"1 ,

en tine

~

•

Cairo.

•

· ~ Te» ,.,.,,.,,..,,. Of n.. ...Mcuora ~

'

ByUoltedPreuiDternaltoial
King HUIBOin sald today the
. •Jordanian government and
Paltsllnlan guerrillas had
' ' agreed ID end theli' civll war
alter a decisive tan)t batUe in
:1!blcll Invading Syrlsn forces
_ , driven back lniD Syria.
c b j H~11eln made the annooneemenlln a Jolnlstaiement
:itt!) Sudanese Premier G;aafar
EINumeiry, one of a fourofllBil
.., · mediating team sent ID Amman
by an An!b sUllllfltlileellng in

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'l , •;•, vi)( ·XXII NO. 113 •

Coroner Rules

Banks Drop Rates

JJ101118t!• ·

· ff'Oill Wellfleet: Mus., Jan. II,
)...,, and contalne&lt;l a greeting
,.,. !. Jl:om ' frul~~nt Theodore
~,.-'liOOoeveltto King Edward VII
' ' . ol)!:~!and. :

GriiJder .Death

...

tlrst wb:eleu

,.,

,;l,l •

'

;·,.rver ,10111 over~•• (~l the
. 'urijted Sta~ , w~s ·.transmitted

John W. Dowler,
violence
In
this
country.
You
Division
10 Highway
1 lO rlltfem
have done more to build an Director, Marietta,
aura of violence, to build a revealed this morning
mllteu In which violence is that a ~onsulting
accepted, than anyone I !mow." engineering firm has
"U.t me Just point out one been Invited to submit
thing," Agnew replied. "Long
CLEVELAND (UPI) - before 1 became a household o proposal to the Ohio
Cuyahoga County Coroner word, violence was rampant in Department of HighSamuel Gerber ruled today the this country. The Berkeley . ways for the Rt. 35 Bydeath of a high school football campus el!Pioded when 1 was Pass project from
player here last Aug. 'll was due still back In county govern- Thurman to Gallipolis.
to heart !allure brought on by ment."
..ertion and ..treme heat.
"Now to use me 88 some
Dowler did not reveal
Gerber aald Michael Root, 18, convenient bete noire for the
the name of the firm,
a senior at John Hay Righ violf!lee that's a1sled In this but said a final
Sch"?l, dropped dead during a country because of the disgusl- decision should be
runrung drill.
ing permlsslve attitudes of the
forth~omiog within the
Gerber said his office devoted people In command of college
ned two weeks.
many hours studying the case campuses is one of the moat ;:;:::;&gt;;~:::::::::::::::::~::::&gt;::::::&gt;;~::::::;::::::::::,:::::·:·:
and similar cases around the ridiculous chargeo I've ·ever
country attempting to find a beard."
pattern.
usut our efforts proved
fruiUess," sald Gerber. "We
found no pattern that could be
used as a caulton Ughl.
"HR.\\ ""' ~"""'~""" In a ·
- ~ ..~
J\.T

Colieges

Tonight, Soptamber 22

The

in tile fteld fit l1l'bllt vi~ .
Ciodllited ..b Good 5pjrlb ·
The ptececliJll SIICiiOIIB ollhe
sbow, while ·olton eriUcaJ on
both sides, was condilcted with
generally good spirits. Student
unrest and Agnew's recent
addresses got a going over·
DiscWISion of lhe Kent State
University campus slayingsled
to the healed final five mlnules.
Agnew said "the evidence
seems to Indicate the National
Guard overreacted"ln the Kent
shootings that kllled four
students,
"! doo't e•cuse what they
did," Agnew said of the guard,
but he added It w.. amazing
how the American people had
"forgotten the precurs0l'S 11 of
the shooting-the two nights of
rioting, the burning Df the
ROTC Building and the cutting
of hoses of firemen trying to
fight the blaze.
Silverman aald Agnew had "a
strange sense about what
happened" at Kent Stale in
suggesting the cause was rock
throwing and protests.
One Fallliag Left Oot
"You talk about an aura of

Temple building in Pomeroy on
Monday.
The group elected Orion W.
Rousll to a three year term on
the county committee with
Clarence Price named first
alternate and VirgU C. King
second altemate. Wayne H.
Chase was named chairman of
the COU!!ty committee and Earl
H~ ''D611~ li'aa named vl'ce rlm'nJngitrtll~~ ·. Ciill.&amp;~~i(jj'tid~~
chairman.
pra;frS," said Gerber.
~uvu ~u
"Yet he was the lone one
affected. It's puzzling."

MEIGS THEATRE

..Now You i(JaOw ·

violence, about precW'sors of

Mrs. Pilchard Dies in New Mexico

.,

1

mored,
artillery
and
engineering corps acted In close
cooperation, with the support of
the Jordanian Royal Air Force.
"Those operations were In
lrbid and Ramlha In the
northern sector against the
Invading Syrian troopo which
occupied that sector.
"Since early today, our forces
have launched fierce counteraltacks and putsued the Syrians
until they began to retreat In
~~Our annored forces have disorder and confusion.
"At · 2:~ p.m. (8:15 a.m.
launched large scale military
EDT)
the Invaders aompletely
operations In which the ar-

Uon was easing and there were
lridicaUons the Syrians .might
be preparing to withdraw. '
Tbe S)'t'lans were bit by the
Jordanian army and air. force
bill they also were under
pressure from the Soviet Union
ID withdraw to their borders.
The United Stales and Brllaln
had asked the Kremlin to try to
bring about a withdrawal.
Matall's statement, broadcast
by Amman radio, said:

;

.

withdrew acrll68 the Syru10- ·
Jor~ian border into Syrian ·
territory in the direction of
lleraa."
The announcement said "they
suffered heavy losses In vehicles and equipment."
"The planning of the Syrian
rulel" and their aides was a
complete failure," Majatl sald.
"Their treacherous conspiracy
was defeated and they have
been disgraced and caused
large losses to the brotherly
Syrian Army for which they
(Continued oo page 3)

33 Begin
Nursing

Training
)Jlauguratlng the 50th year ol
the School of Nursing of Holzer
Medical Center, .33 freshmen
will enter the school on Sep.
tcmher 28.
The school was opened In 1920
by the late Mrs. Charles Holzer,
who was then director of nursing in the hospital. Four

students comprised the first
class.
. In. 19:11), students learned by
working with patienis almost
from their first day, supplemenUng the care given by
graduates and carrying the
' burden of patient care in the
hospitaL
Today, students take courses
in sciences and academic
subjects through the Off
Campus Program of Ohio
University wlllch carry coUege
credit. In tllelr nursing courses
actentlflc prlndples

FIVE-YEAR-OW SIIERRI MARSHAlL, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ollrles M lid,
Jlemlock Grove, a vicllm of cystic Dbrosls, pre1011ls Pomeroy Mayor &lt;llarles Lepr an information sheet on the disease as the annual fund drive opened in Meigs Olunty 'I.'Uooday.
Volunteers are needed ID assist with the drive and those Interested In helping are aaked 1D Clll
Mrs. Marie Boyd,II49-ZI!Il; Mrs. Marshallai99U974 or Mrs. Mary Marlin 993-7022. Olllaticlll
may he sent to the Meigs County Cystic Fibrosis Drive, P. 0. Bo• tot Pomeroy. This Is thefiNl
annual drive for tbe disease sponsored by Meigs Sslon 710, 8 and 40. Slerri Is the teCODd
member of her family ,ID have cystic Dbrosia. ·

.
IFeudm'

(---------------------------,

: News •.• in Briefs

:

BJ u.ited Prta

l!ltena~

.

IEn d.1n .'o': ,.. .

1I

:w.AiinNG'l'Oih.........,. ~ .....If,.. .. . .. . ~ ' ..
air ~all In the ,q to thwart bljacters appe&amp;rl llelded for
AfJANtA (lli'l) - W~ 1

peanut ,(anner ~IIJ!1D1 ~ "
soushl 1D ""l~ 011e IIi
biggest ups~ts In mOdem
Georgia politics today In •
runoff Bl!ainst former Gov. pat!, ·
E. Sand~s for the DemocratiC ·
nomination for governor.
The campaign got 10 bll!tl'ilt
cslled to appear today·
its finalllages that Rept'Mil"'!
gubernatorial candidate Hill
MEMPIDS, TENN.- VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T. Agnew &amp;Ill had "People are (• )fed up
aald Tueaday nighiCIIOofthe major questions of this election year with aU this feuding and fwllnl
Is whetlier the President or "radlcal.Uberals" will make (thai) we stand to win no matter
America's foreign policy. ''Tills Is the year whf!l Republlcans who loses."
must seek out the millioos of aolid Democrats In this country wbo
Gov. Lester G. Maddol, wilD
do not shari&gt; the radlcal.Uberal philoaophy and work together for won the Democratic nii'Dinatilll
the defeat ol the racial left ... " Agnew said.
lor Ueutenanl governor wilholll
Speaking at a GOP fund-calslng dinner fur candy mllllonalre a runoff (be is prohibited by
WUllsrn Brocll, who is seeking ID unseal veteran Sen. Atherl Gore, from succeeding hlmaeU),
D-Tenn., Agnew aald Gore "Ia for an Intents and ~ the remained neutral. Black leaclSouthern ~lcml chalnnan ol the Eastern llberaJ establish- en appeared divided. llolll
ment." Earlier Tueaday at GOP luncheon In Louisville, Ky., Carter and Sallden are COIIIIAgnew had attacked a federal conununicaliorul commissioner as dered moderates.
There were two DemotnliC
an eumple of the ''pOOdlHolnded, super.permlsalve" llberal
congressional
runoffs, the IIIOiit .. ,
wbo hu encouraged the naUoo's youth to use drugs. He did not
interest
centering
oo the 1111 · ,:
Identify the ofDciaJ.
lllsirlct were Andrew Ytlllll,,~ · ·
WASHINGTON - A FEDERAL MEDIATOR predicted former aide to the late ))ai.
agreement would be reached today to avoid a nationwide rail Marlin Luther King Jr., facoil
white attorney Wyman C. lDI!ii
strike thai could he called at midnight. Negoll'itcrs In an 11-year
for the right to challe¥ ~
dispute over whether firemen sbould be used oo diesel freight
Rep. Fletcher 'lbcmpoon af :.
locomotives scheduled a sessloo for 10:30 a.m. ID dlseuss a aeries
AUanla. GOP runoffs ••~\~jlJ
of federal proposals glvf!l to both sides Tllesday. o.talls of the local.
ll'OP&gt;sals were not announced.
Fewer than1 hallt.theatale'i
New York attorney Fred Uvlngstoo, head of an emergency mllUon registered voters
mediation board, aald Tueadoy be wu confident a setU~~~~tnt apected to decide the
would he reached today. Ills coofidence was echoed by Asslatant about the same num~
Labor Secretary W. J. Usery, who aald, "We are very opllmlalic portlcipaltd In the
that II can be -ked out."
)l'lmary that gave
llulllllng tlO,GOO-vote
' LAYOFn IN RELATED INDVSTIUES Sanders.
ADDMONAL
caused by the United AulD WorkII'S union strike against Gf!leral The boyish, 1011111~
Motora hav. inereued the coat of tha waltout to Oillo'BI!CCIIOIIIf Carter. 45, C8l't'tad all
to f2.$ mllUon I day In payrolls alone.
Georgia's 159 ·~:~~~
Fo!l' planla, not llnlcll by the UAW, announced the layo(la 111'-1 by only tO
'l'lleadl)' of 16,200 worker~ becanae ola euthltct.tn the demand for lflllng • rnajli'IIJ In,
llliD parla. The Jnlttalloal to the ecoDODlY W88 t1.7 tDilllon a day mao race .
sanders, alao
In payrolls when 40,500 111:da8 ill'udt II Gil ladlitles In Ohio
Sept. 15 as part ol a na~wjde~~Ul .by tbe UAW aga!Mt the lgnand Carter Ill
auto 'mlnufllCiurill&amp; 81anl·
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certain ~nal appnwal before Congress lldjourns.
Equally sure of f!lactmeal is the tai on airline piUIIIellgers to pay
for 11.
The House Fore~&amp;n Affairs Committee, however, still was
wrestling with a variety of congressiooal resolutions aimed at
nther measures to loll the growing number of hijacklnp. Witnesses from the Departments of Transportatioo and State were

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