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J

'

Now YoUi Know
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
(UPI) ~· Mayor .Jack Hunter
said today this highly · industrialized area doesn't need advice
·•from some "smart aleck little
at~ey from Columbus, Ohio"
on ·how to solve its pollution
problems an\1 said even recom,. mendations of federal officials

made him "a litUe sick."
The state has proposed cre~Hunter addressed a Cham\ler tion of a 400 millio.n gallon !aci Commerce Industrial Appre- . goon where the river runs into
elation Breakfast here and com- Pennsylvania where the water
men ted on testimony presented would he cleaned. The EnvironTuesday at a . hearing by the mental Protection Agency said
Ohio Water Pollution Control this proposed solution would
Board here on cleaning UP the still leave the river "an open
Mahoning River.
. sewer" in this area.

Assistant Ohio Attorney Gen- federal government and the
era! Maynard ThDn)pson said . guys in the Environmental Prl)during the hearing !hat on the tection·Agency making complete
basis of testimony the best way' fools of themselves," said Huntto clean up the river would be er. "I was ashamed to see the
for the area steel mills to move Ohio attorney general's office
elsewhere.
suggest the so1ution to our prl)"1 as Jllayor of this city, was blem would be to move steel
a litUe sick yesterday to see the out of the Mahoning Valley.
"So I think the timing of this

:New Budget'·Covers lODays
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
went into the month of September today operating on another
interim budget
But unlike the past two month• long stopgap measures, the new
budget covers ooly 10 days.
The House TUesday passed the
:,interim budget, 60-10, and im::mediately sent it to Gov. John
• J . Giltigan for signing. The
· measure calls for $57.5 million
dollars to be spent during the
firSt 10 days of the month.
Senate leaders said they felt

10 days was enough time to
bring a twl)-year budget bill -to
the floor for a vote.
Meantime TUesday, the Senate Ways and Means Committee heard testimony' on two alternative tax bills drawn by the
Republican leadership.
One called for a 1 to 3 per
cent graduated personal income
tax, shaved from the I to 4 per
cent in a House-passed bill. The
new measure also calls for a 3
to 6 per cent tax on corporate
net income, down from the 4 to
8 per cent in the House-passed
measure.

The other bill considered TUesday would hike the state sales
tax rate by 1.5 per cent from
the corrent 4 per cent and include the corporate income tax,
but no personal income tax.
A two car accident occurred
Senate Majority Whip Michael
today at 8:42a. m. on SR 7 the
Meigs County
Sheriff's
Department reported.
Cancer Society
Paul A. Duff, Dexter, was
~t !A!mpting to make a left turn
off of SR 7 onto Union Ave., Holds Meeting
;.hen his car was struck in the
The Meigs County American
len side by a vehicle driven by Cancer
Society Chapter
E laine , Duckett, 14, South
totaling
Carolina. The Buckett car was received funds
$1,786.72.
traveling in the same direction
;md had passed another vehicle Expenditures of the Meigs
County American Cancer
when it struck the Duff car.
Peggy Smith, a passenger in Society Chapter for the past
the Bucket! car, complained of year totaled $1,188.92 according
·an injury to her right arm but to the annual report presented
was not immediately treated. when the chapter met TUesday
')"here was heavy damage to the night in Middleport. Balance in
Duff car , medium to the the chapter. treasury as of Aug'.
Duckett vehicle. The accident is 31 totals $597.80.
under investigation.
RUMMAGE SALE
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Middleport Pentecostal Church
will hold a rummage sale
beginning at 10 "· m. Thursday,
Tonight, Tllu. &amp; Fri.
Friday and Saturday at the Fry
September l·l·l ·
building on Mill St. in Mid·
Double Feature Progr•m
_dleport.

:Two Car Wreck
Investigated

J . Maloney, R-Cincinnati, who
chairs the Ways and Means
Committee, said the income tax
plan would raise some $1.06 billion in new revenues during the
next 22 months, while the sales
tax proposal would raise about
$733 million.
OpJIIISes Provisions
Douglas Trail of the Ohio
Manufacturers Association told
committee members he opposed
the corporate tax provisions of
both bills on grounds "the total
tax burden on business is Pfl)portionaUy higher in Ohio !han
in other industrialized states."
Frank King, president of the
Ohio AFL-CIO, said he opposed
the personal income tax provision of the larger bill, maintaining it placed an "unfair burden"
on the individual taxpayer.
In other legislative activity
TUesday, the Senate passed, 290, a measure increasing workmen's compensation benefits
based on increases in the consumer price index.
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Paul R. Malia, R-WesUake, is
designed to maintain the value
of compensation to injured work-

·:::::::::::::::t::--::::=:::-::x:::::!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~=::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::.-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

MARRIAGE UCENSE
Charles Smedley,
45,
Columbus, and Ida Hysell, 34,
Middleport.

Steve·McQueen

-PtuoBONNIE &amp; CLYDE
(Color)

warren Beatty
=Fay=eDun=away==:All

MEIGS lHEAJRE

Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar.
Forfeiting bonds totaling $100
was James Van Meter of
Clifton. He forfeited bonds of $25
each on charges of disturbing
the peace and intoxication and a
$50 bond on a charge of resisting
arrest. Forfeiting $25 tonds
were David Camp, charged
with disturbing the peace and
Marjorie Speakman, charged
with intoxication. Addresses
were not listed on the records.
Richard Martin of Middleport
was fined $1110 and costs and
given a three day jail sentence
on a charge of driving while
intoxicated.
.
Others fined were Keith
Phalin, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
failure to have vehicle under
control, Alva Tulloh, Mason, $5
and costs, passing on a double
'yellow line, and Unda Reeves,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured
clear distance charge.

Steelworkers
•Go &lt;&gt;n. strik.e
,'
PORTSMOlfrH, Ohio (UPI)
- About . 2,0110 steelworkers
went on strtke early today after
an extensiOn of thetr local
contract with Empire-Detroit
Steel Corp. expired.
The strike began at midnight
as a ~ay extension of the pact
ended, but workers stayed on
several hours to shut down
furnaces and facilities. Pickets
appeared at all gates.
Despite
the
walkout,
negotiators for Local2116 of the
United steelworkers Union and
Empire-Detroit Steel continued
bargaining into the morning.
They reportedly were hung up
on rule changes after resolving

ik!:~:::: : : : : ::.:::~:;:&gt;~:,&gt;;::;:;_.._,._w;:~~:;::::::::::;,:,;,::::=:::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : :!fl!:: m~~i' i:.:~:~·

Set For Labor Day Event
•

agreed to the
contract extension in July,
which took effect Aug. I and
ended Aug. 31, after the national
contract was successfully
negotiated .

junior high school in time to throughout the day.
Tonight &amp; Tllundily
In the evening a teen dance
move out at the 10:45 starting
Sepltmber 1-l
time. All groups are invited to will he held in the former junior Exclusive Men's
NOT OPEN
take part in the annual parad~ . ~igh school auditorium with the
The chicken barbecue to he Jays emceeing.
Friday &amp; S.lllrdoY
Shop Robbed
served from the roofed pits on
Sepl.l-4
the upper parking lot will get
VANISHING ~INT
NEW YORK (UPI) - Four
underway at 11:15 a. m. and
!Tecllnico!orl
well-dressed holdup men, their
Barry Newman
dinners will be available
faces covered with stocking
Jagger Cleaver Utile
masks, walked into an exclusive
"G"
-PIU&gt;'T'_.J _ Manhattan men's club Tuesday
" CELEBRATIDN
Pleasant Valley Hospital
.l
night and robbed some 30
AT BIG SUR"
ADMISSIONS - Charles
-patrons at gunpoint, police said.
(Technicolorl
Wesimoreland, Cottageville;
COLUMBUS (UPI)-:- A sub- Detectives said about $18,000
Joan Boez
Mrs
.
Harold
Supple,
Point
commtttee
of the Ohw House in cash and jewelry was taken.
, Crosby Stills
Pleasant; Robert Errett, Point Envtronment ~nd Natural Re- The bandits were not apNash&amp; Young
Pleasant; Mrs. Richard Ben- sources Co~ttee was schedul- prehended.
nett Point Pleasant· Charles ed to take fmal testunony today The four men strolled
C(;:=:=:===:::::::=:;:=:::::~::::::===::::=::::::::::;J Wright, Leon ; Mrs: George on a compre~nsiv~ strip mine through the unlocked front door
Clendenin, Point Pleasant; Ben and reclamalton bill and was of the Town Club, at about 1:20
Kesterson , Pomeroy ; Mrs. Arl expected to send the measure p. m., police said. They went to
Allen, Rand.
to the ·full commtttee.
the fourth floor, where some
DISCHARGES - John Olive,
Rep. Ken~eth Creasy • R-Del- members were playing cards,
-Mrs. Donna Wilson, Mrs. H. B. aware, chatrman of both the and robbed them at gunpoint,
Chadwick , Mrs .
Elmus subcornrmttee and full co~t- police said.
DeVault, Mrs. Addis Wiltis, tee, _satd the leglSlatlDn was 10 There were no injuries to club
Brenda Jones, Carrie Taylor, tis ftnal stage Monday, but th~ members, police said, but one
Catherine Darst.
hearmg would allow fmal IA!slt· employe was slightly injured
mony before it goes to the full when he was struck by one of
committee.
the robbers.
Creasy expected the full comA 'l'HOUGHT lt mittee to begin consideration of
*
lt thecomprehensivemeasure Fri~ FOR TODAY : day. He would not predict, how- NUNS ENLIST
* ever, how long it would take the BOSI'ON (UPI)- Two nuns
* Those who spend too * 19 members to push t.he bill on- are to be sworn in today as
It much time on trifling ~ to the floor for a vote. . . mem.bers of th.e state_ Air
* things generally become ,..
. .
. .
.
lt incapable of great ones. * The leg1Slat10n,a combmalton Nattonal Guard m the offtce of
lt
La R h f
uld * ·of se veral bills introduced Gov. Francis W. Sargent.
...
oceouca
. k . of
...
* earher thts year, would toughen S'ts te r Shet.la MG
c utr
~
strip mine license applications South Grafton, a nurse's atde,
HIGHER-WIQER
~
lt and, require complete land rec- and Sister Judith Rosen!hal of
·BIGGER. ..
~ lalnation.
· Northampton, a licensed practi·
lt lfS Quick! Easy
cal nurse, wiU be attached to
llf 111101!1!1
*
the 10-lth Tactical Fighter
*
MEETFRIDAY
Group, Westover, AFB.
:
:
The Meigs County Pomona The two sisters will head for
1
5
Tile VENTURA
PEUFPIFEORt
*
* Grange will meet in regular Lacklanll AFB, Fla., for
C:Z003J
~
session at 8 p. 'Jl· Friday at the training this week.
20,000 Volts of Picture
Gracefully slim.
Power!
..Fn_
d
ays
On~y
;;:
Rock Springs Grange Hall with
cabinet in Med ium
Brown color . DeluJ.e
~The Dnve- ln Wtndow
the Rock Springs Grange as
. Video Range Tuning
SUPEA DEPENDABILITY!
tS Open
~ host group. The national an~
System ..Dipole
HANDCRAFTED!
*
9
A.
M.
to.z,
P.M.
state grange sewing and baking·
Antenna. Super Value
longer TV lile and fewer
:
I Continuously) ·
contests will he held at this
DANCE PUNNED
$ervice problems.
only
Jt 011,.r Banking Hours 9 10 l meeung and all subordmate · The Rutland Fire Department
lt
and 5 to 1 as usual on : winners are to compete. The will ~ponsor a public square
SUPER FEATURES
• CutkHft "htma·Set" YHF FiM Tuning
:Fridays.
tl- prince a'nd princess nominees dance beginning at 8:30 p. m.
. AMERICJI:S "1TV
• 3 ·5~ I.F. Atltlllifior • Aulomolic
are to be turned in to the Deputy Friday in the Rutland gym"Frl"'e-l.oc;:k'' C:lrc;ult
Master, Virgil Atkins.
.nasiull). Admission will be $1for
The q!Mfity goes m
~lore · IIJenatrK.' ~son·
adults, 50 cents for those up to
18, and those under /12 will be
:
POMEROY, OHIO
lt
LOCAL TEMPS .
admitted free. Prdceeds will be
ItMember FDIC
lt Temperature in downtown used forthe new fire truck fund.
ItMember Federa l . lt Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.·m. Providing music for dancing
OPEN . FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
Reserve System
was 70 degrees under suqny will be The Hill toppers. The
992-263S
Middleport
skies.
public is invited.
Aparade, a chicken barbecue
and a teen dance will highlight
the annual Labor Day
celebration of the Pomeroy Fire
Oeparunent.
The parade will move at 10:45
a. m. Monday from the former
Pomeroy Junior High School,
down Main St., out Butternut
Ave., and up Second St. Moving
out Mechanic St. the parade will
disband at the village-owned
parking lot on Mechanic St. Joe
Struble, representative of the
deparunent, asks all bands and
parade units to he at the former

Final Testimony

*

!

0

*****

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

~MANCI~

.

*

* . .
*
**
*

!

*

S}49S5

7J!'""

I

Furniture

state gotiemment got into -the
act
"We are going to do it but we
have to do it with the thought
of economics in our minds," he
said.
Hunter said it would be done
without bankrupting the people
who own thernlllsand the people
who work· in them.
"We are going to do it but we
are going to do it the right
way," said Hunter. "We are gl)ing to do it the way the greater
·Youngstown area and the
Mahoning Valley can live with
it. "

'

VOL XXIV

** fARMERS BANK :,.
*
· *
: and SAVINGS 00.:
*

*

************"**"

.

I

'

Devoted .To The lnler'e$,. Of The Me~·MIJI/On Area

NO. 99

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

By United Press Iotentational
More !han 10 million Egyptians, Syrians and Ubyans
voted today in a referendum
seeking approval for a loose
three-nation federation de·
scribed by their leaders as the
"Arab answer to Israeli aggression."
:rtJe Sudan is expected next
year to join the Federation of
Arab Republics, first agreed to
by the leaders of Egypt, Syria
and Libya at a conference in
Benghazi, Ubya, April17 in the
first serious attempt at Arab
unity in eight years.
&lt; In
Jerusalem, government
sources said Israel was reviewing its policy toward the Soviet
Union, with which diplomatic

relations were severed during
the 1967 Middle East War . A
government communique denied that a possible revision of
Israel's Soviet policy was
imminent. ·
The sources said Prime
Minister Golda Meir asked
former diplomat Dr. Benyamin
Eliav to evaluate the Soviet
policy toward the Middle East
and specifically Israel. There
have been rumors of a SovietIsraeli rapproachment since
May.
A military spokesman in Tel
Aviv said Israeli occupation
troops patrolling the turbulent
Gaza Strip killed an Arab
guerrilla who had thrown a
grenade at them near Shifa

1V In Review

Interesting Specials
Scheduled .For Viewers .
By RICK DUBROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI )- Notes
to watch television by:
The programs : acupuncture,
the ancient Chinese treatment
to core disease or relieve pain
by puncturing the body with
needles, is the subject of NBC·
TV's "First TUesday" next
wee.~ ... S~me ~etwo_rk's " To·
day sertes wtll ortgmate tis
broadcasts from . Japan the
week of Oct. 4, taping
programs in Kyoto and Hiroshima as well as Tokyo ... V10bmst
Yehudi Menuhin will conduct
the New York Philharmonic
Young People's Concert on
CBS-TV Sept. 26.
.

at~:~!~ g~~~r~~~· v~~~ 0~~~

TV's Dinah Shore show Sept.
14 ... Mrs .Mitchell will reportedly make spoon bread, offer
"her views on the Vietnam War
and Democratic presidential
candidates," show how she uses
hair pieces in doing her own
coiffeur and sing "Bye Bye'
Blackbird" ... "Strangers
in
Their Own Land- The Chicanos, " a half-hour documentary
about the daily life of MexicanAmericans will he shown on
ABC-TV Thursday.
Charles Kuralt, whose "On

The Road" vignet!A!s of Americana have added charming
moments to CBS-TV's nightly
Walter Cronkite News, will
have some of his travels across
the country n;corded in an hour
special on the network next
Tuesday "in prime time ...The
name of the broadcast will, of
course, be "On The Road. "
Personnel Dept. : Longtime
actor Darryl Hickman, who
succeeded Robert Morse in the
starring role of the Broadway
musical "How to Succeed in
Business Without Really Trying," has been named a general
program execotive by CBSTV... Associate producer of the
soap opera "Love of Life;, for
the. past four months, he will
specialize in the daytime
program area.

1

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Dayton Daily News filed suit in
the Ohio Supreme Court Wednesday in an attempt to force
the Lawrence County auditor to
make pubtic the tax records of
Sen. Oakley Collins, R-Jronton
who has been charged with u.
legal strip mining in a national
forest
The Daily News said County
Auditor Ray G. Waller refused
to give two of its reporters a

Hospital in Gaza City.
He said other soldiers shot
and wounded an Arab woman
who had broken the corfew in
Khan Yunis, the strip's second
largest community.
In Beirut, the anti-Iraq
newspaper AI Moharrer said
Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan
AI Bakr was wounded twice in
an assassination attempt Aug.
26 during a ceremony at his
palace for graduating army
officers. It said the unidentified
would-be assassin later was
found dead and !hat 200 officers
subsequently were arrested.
AI Moharrer said an army
officer fired several shots,
hitting Bakr in the shoulder and
left arm. The official Iraqi
News Agency recenUy reported
that Bakr, who · heads the
nation's military regime, briefly was admitted to a Baghdad
hospital for treaunent of an
undisclosed illness.
Bakr recently headed a purge
after expelling three British
Embassy staff memberS from
the country on grounds they
were behind a plot to overthrow
him.
The tripartite federation will
merge more !han 40 million
persons in IJ million square
miles of land, one-third the size
of the United States.
The constitution provides for
a presidential council, a federal
cabinet, national assembly and
constiutional court. Crucial
decisions wiD have to · be
adopted unanimously by the
presidential council, but each
nation will maintain a high
degree of independence.
The last effort at Arab unity,
made by Egypt, Syria and Iraq
in 1963, never enJ!lrged. The
Egyptian.Syrian union of 1958
which created the United Arab
Republic collapsed in 1961.

TIUS ATTRACTIVE MODERN home at the edge of
Shade River State Forest in Meigs County is being occupied
this week by Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bahr. Built by the Denver
Weber Construction Co. of Reedsville for Obio's Department

ESCAPE NABBED
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
second of two Tennessee
penitentiay honor farm inmates
who escaped June 13, taking a
hostage along with them to
Ohio, was arrested by the FBI
here Tuesday .
James Allen Byrd was
charged with kidnaping and if
convicted faces life imprisonment.
Byrd, 27, a native of Dayton,
Tenn., escaped with John Veslj
21, from the Brushy Mountain
State Penitentiary Hormr Farm
in Petros, Tenn. on.June 13. An
employe was taken along at
knifepoint in the prison truck,
but released unharmed later
just outside Bowling· Green,
Ohio.

Atlanla
000 000 ooo- 0 1 1
San Fran 013 050 OOx- 9 11 0
Stone, Herbel (5). Priddy (7)
and Williams ; Perry {14-10)
and Deilz . LP-Stone (6-51. HR
- He~derson ( t5thl.

of Natural Resources, Division of Forestry and Reclamation,
the house, white with accents of green, will be the residence
of Bahr who is division fire \\'Orden. The Bahrs reide in a
relatively new home between Chester and TUppers Plains at
the present time.

r---------------~-----------,

! News ••• in Briefs

! Senate Education

By United Press IDteraatloaal

COLUMBUS - A HOUSE SUBCOMMlTI'EE firming up
legislation that would toughen state laws on strip rnlnlng
scheduled a morning hearing today to conclude the consideration
ci amendments, including one that would give state inspectors
arrect powers.
The EnviriiiDlent and Na lura! Resources Subconunittee
Wednesday received from the Department of Natural Resources
a proposed change in the comprebelllive bill's enforcement
jl"ovisions. A quorem of the special panel, however, was lacking
so no official action could be taken.
·

Attorney
COLUMBUS (UP)) - A The big change is the remov- M
Senate subcommittee on educa- a1 of the ceilings on state aid
ay
Have
lion Wednesday put final touch· increases which the House im-

list of tangible personal property holders and a list of delinquent tax payers, stating they
were not a matter uf public
record.
The newspapers contended the
records are a matter of public
record and asked the Supreme
Court for a writ of mandamus
to force WaUer to give them to
the reporters.
The Daily News said the tax

list would show taxable equipment owned by a business such
as trucksand heavy eequipment
Waller contends he has not
pubtished a list of delinquent
tax payers, as required by state
law, because he has been un·
able to keep the list current
Collins, chainnan of the Senate Conunittee on Education
and Health, is the owner of the
Collins Mining Co. which was

BERLIN -A DISPUTE OVER THE German text of the Big
Four agreement m Berlin today forced postponement of the
signing of the accord by the ambassad~rs in West Bertin. ·
The ambassadors did not appear for the 1 p.m. (8 a.m. EDT)
ceremony at the former Allled Cmtrol Authority-}uilding in the
American sector because last minute meetings of four power
working ~riles still had not agreed m the German text ci the
acc«d.
'

Fumitura and Carpet Deparbnent

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Department of Education
said today it did not know if
Ohio IA!achers would receive increment increases this fall during the President's wage-price
freeze because there has been
no official clarification from
Washington.
It was ruled earlier that

worked on the new schedule by
Roger Lulow, administrative Aug. 15.
assistant to the superintendent, "But, the whole question of insaid be hoped to receive clari· crements is one we do not have
fication from federal officials clarification on," he • said.
"We're in no position to officsoon.
ially interpret, either."
"We just don't have anything Lulow said the education deto go on," said Lulow. "There's partment has sent several quersome confusion about the incre- ies to Washington asking for an
ment increases and we don't official interpretation of the
know how to interpret the wage-price freeze's effects on
teachers. He said the departfreeze.''
Lui ow said it appeared earlier ment has not received any clarthis week !hat teachers on new ification, yet.
salary schedules would receive "We kind of concluded there
increases if there was one per- must be a freeze on the mail,"
son in the district who had he said.

ify for the raises.

teachers would receive pay in·
creases if their schedules had
been.signed before Aug. 15. A
posed. The House lirnlts were
Treasury official said Wednes$7$905 pe
, r pup.il in fiscal 1972 and
day, however, that most of the
10 1973
nation's 2.1 million public
The lifting of the restrictions
has the effect of funneling more SAN FRANCISCO' (UPI)- school teachers would not qualmoney into poorer districts. Fugitive Stephen Mitchell BingThe Senate knocked out of the ham, thl radical attorney
House bill, however, language linked with San Quentin's
authorizing regional resource escape attempt 11 days ago,
centers which would have re-. held a valid passport and may
placed county boards of educa- have fled the country, accordWS ANGELES (UPI) - we could dono wrong," be said.
.lion.
ing to federal officials.
Charles "Tex" Watson, on trial The former high school star
The bill also included:
Although the FBI said only it for the Tate-LaBianca murders, athlete and scholar told of
-A raise in teacher salary if " no confirmed reports" has confessed on the witness coming to Los Angeles. in 1968
minimumsfrom$5,200to$5,700. lh8t Bingham had left the sland, pleading that he heard se kins "adventure." He had
-The superintendent and United States, ASsislant U.S. "Chartie's voice saying ldl1 never been away from his tiny
.president of the school board Attorney James Buren sai( everyone in the place."
hometown of Copeville, Tex.,
would have to certify !hat mon' "there is probable cause to
Watson, 25, who has entered acept for three yeara in
ey is available for leacher pay believe he has fled the state of a defense of not guilty by college in Denton, 50 mUes
raises before they are granted. California."
reason of insanity, told a jury away.
A federal fngutive warrant Wednesday he was so brain- On the day before the Aug. 8,
. _
was issued Wednesday for washed by drugs, ·· women, 1969, slayings, Watson said, he
B" ham and B
·told music and Olarles Manson's took belladonna and "speed"
n:~n tbl!.t atra~.: would philosophy !hat "I had no and that nlghl Manson took him
he sought immediately if the identity of my own."
aside and gave him a ltnife and
attorney was located outside
With his mother listening a gun.
the country.
from the rear of the courtroom, "Charlie told me to go to the
Bingham, 28, scion of a the neatly dressed Watson place where Terry Melcher
politically prominent Connecti- ..rela~ calmly~ in de~_the (son of Doris Day) used to live
cot family, was charged with/ slaymgs and satd the vtctims and kill everyone in the place,"
William B. Nye that the parks five counts of murder for were just " blobs without faces Watson said. "He told me to
would be closed in an austerity allegedly smuggling a gun to or. expressions."
malte it as gruesome as you
move previously announced by Soledad brother George Jack- Watson denied be had told can."
the governor.
son inside San Quentin prison, actress Sharon Tate a_nd the Watson said he had been at
Welker said that vandalism precipitating an escape attempt . others !hat "we are devils here the residence three times
and the expense of shutting in which Jackson, three guards to do the devil's work."
previously and thai Manson had
down the parks could cost more and two white tier-tenders were
"Charlie had taught us that told him some ''movie star"
than the state would save in
killed.
laying off park personnel.
Meanwhile, it was revealed
"Vandalism is always a that a possible material witness
problem at the state parks even to the Ia ·
· the · •
with a full complement of
s ymgs 10
pnso_n s
personnel," Welker said. "It adjustment cente~ . was. bemg
A traditim of 11118 standing barrow at the Ohio State Junior
will become an increasingly held by auth~ties at an
was followed Monday afternom Fair.
costly problem with reduced undiSClosed location.
at The Ohio Slate Fair, and two Evans also purchaaed the
staffs to police the parks."
young Ohioans struck it rich. Res ve Outmpion Hampshire
Welker said that the austerity
Bob Evans, president of 8Gb barrow fnm Tam! Jackson of
program ''was made necessary
TO MEET TUESDAY
Evans
Farms, ·Inc., purchased Powell, Ohio. Evans' succe.uful
by the less than prudent Mrs. Charles Goeglein has
managing of funds available to called a meeting of the program the Grand Champim !lamp- lid was $5.55 per pound - a
shire barrow frcm Michael world record price fiX' areserw
·the ,adrnJntstratlon.
conunittee of the Chester PTA Smith of Jamestown, Ohio for champim.
"The administration simply for 7 p. m. TUesday at the
encombered more money than school. This will be followed by $15 per pound, 1r $2925 - a new When ber prize barrow was
was coming in. It's as sit)lple as a meeting of .the executive record price for the Junior Fair. sold, tears filled the eyes of
This was the 12th time in the twelve-year-&lt;~ld Tami. Evans
that," Welker said.
'
committee at 7:30 p. m., Mrs. last 13 years, that Evans has dfered to pay her fer the hog,
Goeglein, PTA president, said. puichased the Grand Champim and let her keep it. Tami

Fled U.S.

Watson Confesses Killings

WASHINGTON - THE NATION'S LARGEST teachers
organization bas attacked as a "great disservice" a Treasury
Department undersecretary's assertion that the wage-price
freeze will bar pay increases for most teachers this fall.
Undersecretary Charles E. Walker Wednesday branded as
''not correct" press interpretations that perhaps 80 per cent of the
na lion's 2.1 million public school teachers would qualify for raises
despite the freeze ordered by President Nixon. "I believe when all
the facta are in, most teacher pay increases will not be permitted," Walker told a briefing for Congressmen and their employes.

Baler
Will Be Displayed
'
'

A new round hay baler which
produces450poundbaleswillbe
exhibited Sept. 8, 9, and 10, at
the Southeastern Branch of the
Obio Agricultural Research and
Development Center at Car:
penter.
This machine, manufactured
in Australia, was brought to this
count;y to determine its
suitability for use in yeararound grazing systems for beef
cattle and sheep under Ohio
conditions.

Prompt Delivery To Your Home
Dependable Service
Sensible Credit

ELBERFELD$

IN
POMEROY

- Round balers making·smaller
411-50 pound bales have been
successfully used for this
purpose,_jut no new units have
been manufactured here for
many years. ,
Interested penons are invited
to visit the reasearch station
located just' east of Carpenter
on State Route 143, to inspect
the new baler. Those who want
to see the unit in field operation
should contact the farm
manager, Robert Lich, 614-6984521 for expected times of use.

Democrats Hit
Campaign Trail

WE ARE HAVIMG A

By United Preis Ioteraatloul
J

STARTI"G SATURDAY, SEPT. 4
WATOi THIS PAPER FOR OUR SALE· AD
'

I';

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

At ·Jeas! two high-ranking
Democrats will be in Obio for
Labor Day speeches.
U. S. Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
O.Mlnn., will speak at the 25th
annual Barberton Joint Labor
.._gue's picnic. It wm. be his
second appearance at _that
funcllon. He was there fJrst in
111M aa vice president.
u.s. ·Sen• George McGovern,
O.S.D., will attend the Labor
Day plcnlc at~ Lake in
MedliJa County.
.
That picnic Is sponsored by
the .united Auto Workers
CGmmunlty Action Program
Council,

'•

Dedication ·Will
Last 45 Minutes
DAYTON (UPI) - Pre~ldent
Nixon's dedication of the U. S.
· Air Force Flight Museum at
Wright-Patterson (AFB) near
here Friday will last a spare 45
minutes, according to the White
House.
A schedule releaaed WedneSday said Nixon would depart
E1 Toro Marine Air Base, Calif.
shorUy after noon Pacific Coast
Time, and arrive at Wright
Field at 6:50 p. m. ~DT.
Nixon plans tO speak 11t 7 P'
m., review a display ;of parked
aircraft with Museum Director
Col. Bernie S. BBss and depart
at 7:35 p. m. for Chieago.

At Administration
COLUMBU~
State
Representative Ralph E.
Welker, Pomeroy, today
claimed that the closing of
Forked Run and Strouds Lake
State Parks "could cost more
money that the state administration anticipates
saving.~~

The lawmaker's charge came
in the wake of announcements
by Natural Resources Director

Meigs 4-Hers

Rate At Fair
Five Meigs County 4-H
members receiving ratings of
outstanding of the day on their
food interviews at the state fair
Tuesday.
They were Juli Whitehead,
Food Preservation; Jane
Whitehead, Quick Meals; Ingrid
Hawley, Tasty Meals; Niese!
Duvall, Breads, and Jenny
Chapman, Teenagers Entertain. Also participating was
Debbie Boatwright with otlldoor
cookery.
Demonstrations were given
by Deitise Pulllns, Magic of
Milk; Mandie Rose, Bread,
Basic of Every Meal; Jane
Holter, Flower Arrangements;
Crystal Erwin, Miraculous
Mulches, and Lola Walker,
'
Tuna Casserole.
The girls were judge&lt;j.s
professional judges on 'tli'e1r
poise, .appearance, knowledge
of subject matter, neatness and
presentation.
·

charged with willful lrespass
and illegal strip rnlnlng on 32.6
acres of national forest land.
Investigators for -the Department of Agriculture have asked
that Collins and the company
be prosecuted.
Collins is also a member. of
the Senate Committee on Highways and Urban Affairs which
is considering strip mine legislation.

Pay Increase Doubtful

Welker Takes P0 k•e

3rd Floor

THE ·sHOE BOX

Bill Fm·alized

rep«&lt;ed;

VISIT ELBERFELDS

F·IRE. SALE

Ohio Extended Outlook Saturday tbrougli MODday:
Warm
and
humid
throughout the period with a
chance uf showers or thundershowers each day. Highs
in the mid and upper 80s.
Lows in the 60s and low 70s.

'

es on ap elementary~condary
education spending package
which increases state aid to
public schools by a record $431
million and removes the ceilings
on state aid increases.
WASHINGTON -THE LATEST GOVERNMENT report on
The bill, which was to go to
the corn blight situation indicates that dry weather has helped the full committee, was inkeep the sp-ead of the disease to a virtual standstill in most areas. creased by $27 million over the
The Agricolture Department said Its observations sbowed House-passed package of $404
blight present in Tl per cent of 1,500 sample cornfields located in million for the 1972-73 school
operating budget
seven slates.
The appropriation is geared to
imposition
of a state income
WASHINGTON - HOG CHOLERA continued a heartening
decline in August with only three cues
the Agriculture tax and if an income tax Is not
enacted the subcommittee will
.
Department said today.
The department said cholera was diagnosed iD PUerto Rican resubmit a blll increasing alii)cations by $306 million which
swine herds on Aug. 2, :16 and 30, and aU animals involved were
would
be funded by a sales tax
(l'ornptly destroyed.
·
Qut, officials added, the three cases compar~ with 67 in- increase.
fected u . s. henm in August,l970, and 168in August, 1969.
For the first elgbt months ·of 1971, the report said, only 106
infected herds bave been reported compared with 500 In the same
period last year. ·

•
I

Warm and humid through
Friday with a chance of
showers or thundershowers
today
becoming
more
numerous tonight and Friday.
Highs today In the Mls. Lows
tonight mid 60s to low 71111. Highs
Friday in the rnld and upper 80s.

Lawrence Auditor

Scheduled uuuy

.*,. ,..,.,.,.,.**********

,

Henry L Stimson serv'ld in
the cabinets of four presidents
..,. Taft, Hoover, Franklin D.
Roosevelt and Trwnan -either
as secretary pf state or
secretary\of war.

0 o· lls
~~~~;::!:~~~:~::~~~ 1·· 0 Mz.llz·on Go ""o
.l ~ r

. RENSSELEAR, IDd. &lt;UP() - Four Ohioans
were arrested near here Tuesday after police
said they found 500 pounds of marijuana when an
officer stopped a car because the license plate
.
.
hght had burned ou_t.
.
Held here for illegal possession of drugs
were William Westcott, 22, Ravenna, his wife,
Terry, 22; Pamela Moore, 19, Kent, and John
Donavan 27 Raveuna.
Polic~ si\id as the officer approached their
car, one of the women tossed out a plastic bag.
·
.
•
•
About the same hm~, pollee said, the two men
were • spotted walkmg toward ~e au!? and
carrymg bags later found to contam mariJUana.
Police reported confiscating along with the
marijuana, some hashish, a smoking device and
a quantity of pills which were sent to state police
labs for examin~tion.

stili

''BULLITT"
!Color)

men in the face of inflation.
Increases for temporary total
disability, which proponenets of
the measure said accounts for
90 per cent.of claims, are from
$63 to $84 for the first 12 weeks
of disability and from $56 to $77
for subsequent weeks.
The bill, passed by the House
in July, must be returned to the
lower chamber for concorrence
in technical amendments before
going to Gilligan for his signature.
Also passed and returned to
the House was a bill requiring
reflectorized license plates for
all motor vehicles beginning in
1973. The measure was amended in the Senate to set a 50
cent increase in license plate
fees to cover the extra cost of
producing reflectorized plates.
The House passed, 56-22, leg·
islation requiring the state personnel director to repare and
supervise an accident prevention program for aU state deparunents.
The House also approved, 63-5,
a biD requiring a rear stop tight
activated by the brake pedal on
aU motor vehicles.

Four Fined In
Mayor's Court

breakfast is extremely apprl)- Mahoning River !han the people
priatefotthepeoplewhohavein- here do.
·
vested in this valley," he said, "We put up a lot of private
'\the succession of managers capital. We put up a lot of public
over the years who have run money in improving the quality
this lndusry, the workers, 'gen- of the ... Mahonlng River,"
eration after generation who said Hunter. "I don't particoworked in these mills. This is Iarly care to swim in Uie Mawhat has made America great honing River. 1don't particularnot a smart aleck litUe attorney ly care tQ [ish in the Mahoning
from. Columbus, Ohio that prl)- River. 1 don't particularly care
bably has a brand new law de- to picnic on the h&lt;inks of the
gree and wants to show it off to . Mahoning River.
some equally wise ... person "We will clean it up," said
from Chicago or Washington Hunter. "This is something we
that thinks they know more have done on our own before
I about the Mahonlng Valley and the federal government and the

Weather

was living there now, ·
Accompanied by Linda Kasabian (who turlled stale's
witness), Susan Atkins and
Patricia Krenwinkel, Watson
said· he went to the home and
entered the ground,s after
cutting the telephone wires.
Manson, Miss Krenwlnkel and
Miss Atkins already have been
sente~ to death for the
murders.
Watson said he went Into the
home and confessed to stabbing
or shooting Jay Sebring,
Voityck Frykowsky and Abigail
Folger. Miss Atltins has confessed it was she who killed
Sharon Tate.
He slept all that day, Watson
said, and the nat night Manson
gave him another knife and
drove the car to the home of
grocer Leno LaBianca.
The trial was recessed before
Watson got into the details of
the LaBianca killings.

Tradition Continues At Ohio State Fair
gratefully accepted.
Bob
Evans
Farms
Restaurants, for whom the
champions lfere purchased,
operate
famUy
style
restauranla ·in Rio Gtande and
Oliiiicothe, and in COiwnbua at
1-71 and Route 161, (II Hamlltm
Road and I-70, and in the
WesUand Shopping Center.
Opening d. a sixth unit Is
scheduled fer mid-January In
Oncinnatl.

Volunteer
Help
Not Needed Yet
.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Robert
Marsh, decked out In patriotic
rell, white and blue overalla,
tried to do his part to keep the
"AU America City" tidy.
·But Marsh, 56, found out his
help was not wanted. After
mowing the statehouse lawn for
about 45 minutes Wednesday a
grounds supervisor halted his
project.
The lawn will not be trimmed
as frequently as before under an
austerity program !hat went
into effect Wednesday.
"I got rumors that Gov. John .•
J . Giltigan was going to cut aU
labor off, so I got the.notion in
FIRE DESTROYS AUTO
my head to put overalls on and
The Meigs Cotmty Sheriff's help out," he said.
Department reported that a
)958 Pontiac belonging to Dale
CLINIC SCHEDULED ·
Estep was destroyed by fire Girls of Meigs County -six
Wedneatlay night.
years old 1r older - with
A call was received at 10:07 asplratlons to be cheerleaders
p.m. from Bill Kennedy, are invited to a cheerleader
Pomeroy, Rl 4, reporling the clinic to be held Saturday from
incident. Kennedy Informed the lOa. m. to 3 p. m. at Meigs High
sheriff's department that the School. Conductlng the clinic
car had been found by its owner will be the high school varsity
in the middle of Route 143. The cbeerleaden. The particlpallon
incident is . still under in- fee Is $2 and girls 'taking part
-vesUgation.
are I!' take a 118Ck lunch.

11fiS LARGE C"emenl bled 1tuildln8 just olf Route 881 at
the edge of the Shade River State Forest in Meigs County will
be the new 3efVice center for the Dlvlsioo of F~ and
Reclam$tlon, Department of Natural a-rces. Ecptipment
of the illvisim.will be hOUied and serviced In litis structure
which was .bUilt by the Weber Cmstruction Co. of Reedsville.

Heir lhi6Witkeatructure Ia the- bame built by !be 11.te
far Dlvlalm Fire Warden VlciiJr Bahr and his family. Bqlb
lbe II!I'Vic;e cen'- and the bame are )•I Iff Rclute 881. Onr
lbe put ,an, Balr Iw provided 1111 aVIIIable ltontp aria
at hlar It'"" oe for !be dlWioo 'a operall1111. ClllttnlctloD of
bo~ the hD\a and the aervlce tenter started last IJPI'inB,

.·

�'
·f

'
1f/1

WIN AT BRIDGE

A Boy 'to Do a Man's Job

·Generation Rap

again, but have a

A ltB-RUN POl\ 111E AL80 RANS

CHAlone
Spells Trouble

By Helen and Sue Hottel
Soud agree~DS~t you can each date others." -

H.

O..Sae:
YOD'recloler to Ibis prllblem 80 I'm asking YOU~ (No offense,
BilleD.)
I'm lUck. Ilrled out for cheer leadq and was 1111e of seven
dMw•. Wlat ha.Bes me is: I'm afraid I am the "token Negro."
lbQeoftbe l!lrlatbatdldn'lmab it.were as good -I'm sure even
lie Iller -but Olle'lenth of-llchool is Minarity Race, 80 one out of
Clll lbe liqUid has to itjM
•t ''us."
I
.
.. .I _.., MY,....,... win be mad 811d, if I slay 1111, ~:
lbe Witts wUI.-t me, and I'll reel cruddy.l'm tired of
g
prailedas "tbeflrstNegr!)l!lrl" to do Ibis and tbat,like it's some
tlild of IIW'Wng iillr!lcle. But, at least, I've lbought I deserved the
Jlblr hlloon. 'Ibis time, I'm doubtful. Sbould I ask for another
lry-G~~tandinllst that the best girl wins?- TOKEN BLACK
Dear Blact:
I lblnk tli8 would prove beyCIIId 8il)'lllle's doubt that you
oba ve AU. the honors you'oewat.Good luck! -SUE

.AQJS
.Q96

Dear Helen and Sue:
. We reall,y dig Our new moU,.,., and all of us kids 81'1! 80 glad
Dad fomd her. lbce Mom died five years ago - wen Ibis Is the .
first lime we'oe bad a cmnp1ete family.
EverytiDilg about Mom-Eiaire is ~!real, euept ber cooking is
TOO GREAT. Dad and I are getting fat! And the little llids look
chunky, too. F!!ainedqeso'tgain becausesbe's alight eater - llld
maybe sbe doesl'l enjoy lbal good female-type cooking like
people wbo baven'tbad itfm- a~ time.
9le lows to see us .,......sate lllll eat hearty, and sbe cooks
"fat" -I mean willu:team and sauces 011 vegelables and oo wow
-the dell ts! My mind says "No" but my mouth ..ys ''Yes,"
and is there any wilY to solve Ibis problem wltbout hurtipg ber
fee~? - GE'ITING WEI.LIIOUNDED
HElEN'S VIEW:
DearGWR:
Wan ling to be the Perfect Wife and MoU,.,., Elaine may cook
Dear Belen and Sue;
mere "crealiolls" lbaD she really enjoys. When she sees you are
My pGblem is tli8 cJaclt I used to go wltb. llle wants to try worried about 1bose pno!JMis. sbe mlgbt welcome the chsnce to
JNkiDC It with me apln. But I've gone with her twice before and ''cOOk tbln" again.
holb t1mea lbe quit me fGr the same guy. Sure, I had a part. In our
Tslkitover, W4UI8II to woman: lb!'s a great person, 80 she'll
dllpates, beiDg a little hoi.J •qwed, but I like ber an awful lot. sui-ely undentand . .-BELEN
:f!oolk! we give lt _aootber whirl? -CAN'r DECIDE
SUE SAYS:
SUE !lAYS:
DearGWR:
&lt;'
·Dear ·CID't:
~ -.
Maybea~a!edcard,afterthe talk would help. Uke :
I YOU keeP taking her back, sbe'll keep right Clll ditcbing you
Your cookin' Mom, no ooe muld beat,
wiii!D lbeolblirfella becclmes avaDahlelqplin.l'd tell Ibis chick to
It's really good and fun to est.
go lay an eg. - stJE
But no olfense please
IIIQ'PI SAYS:
Great food is full of calaries!
Dear Can't:
Well, wbat I mean to say Is tbat:
· l'mnotaslougb as my daughter. Inasmuch as you admit you
Please "tbln"it.clown,orwe'llgetfat ~ - YOUR FAMILY
bad ''a part in some of the disputes'' I'd say, ''rake this chick out
Okay? -SUE

..

. ·.· ···. ·.. .

.

.LEGAL NOTICE
Charles Watkins, whose placr
of residence Is unknown; the

tetatees.

heirs.

. ·. ,· .-: ....· -: ·.·····=·····. ·: :-·-:·· ·: ··:·:·: :·:·:·:-:-:.:- ·.·

.......;. :.:-.. :-.·: ·.-:-:-:-:-:-:-;.:-.-::-:-::-:-:-:.: ·-::·:·:···:·:·:·:

dev i sees,

executors,

ad·

mlnlstrators and aasigns of
ChariH Watkins, If deceased,
whose names and places of

rnidence are unknown to the

plaintiff$; Marie L. Watkins,
whose place of residence is
unknown ; the unknown heirs,

devisees, legatees, executors,
administrators and assigns of

Marla L . Watkins, If deceased,
whose names and places Df
residence are unknown to the

plaintiffs : Edward Watk ins,
whose place of residence Is
unknown ; the unknown heirs,
deviSIIH, legatees, executors.
administrators and assigns of
Edward Watkins, It deceased,
whose names and places of
residence are unknown to the
p1alntiffl, will take notice that
Allen e. Ball and Freda Ball , on
the .17th day of August. 1971,
filed their compla int against
you in the Common Pleas Court
Of Meigs County, Ohio. being

Cose No. ••.919, for th~ parllllon

of the real estate herinafter
· described, and to quiet title to
said real est•te, and requiring
to set up r our Interest

1111}: H ony, ·which • .real
1J"'IIIr:fibwcl as folloW~ :
following described real
estat1 situated in the Township
Of Chester, County of Meigs and
SU1te of Ohlo. being In SectiOn 4,
T-n 2, Range 13, of the Ohio
Company's Purchase. and more
particularly described as
tallows, to-wit : Beginning at the
corner of the Barbara Wippel

farm , the same belno the corner
on FlatwOOds Road ; thence
west 2701 feet to the corner of
Morgan and Wippel ; thence
north 150 feet to the center of the
roed ; thence north 45 degrees
east 111 feet to a stake in the
center of-the road ; thence north
11 degrees 30' east 170 feet to a
stake in the center of the road ;
thtl"'ce north 51 degrees 27' east
317.3feet to 1 itake in the-center
of road; thence north 63 degrees
32' east 391.6 feef to a stake in
center of road ; thence north 47
dagrHS 52' east 329 feet to a
stake in center of r011d ; thence
north ..tt degrees east 1010feet. to
1 stake in center of road ; thence
north 11 degrees -"' Ent 394
teet to a stake Jn center of road;
thence north 59 degrees ent 270
teet to a stake in center of road
at Intersection of crossroads ;
thence south 31 degrees 50' east

115 teet to lhe Radford 'west
lint; then.c e sou1h 1345 feet to
corner, the place o4 beginning,

containing 57.73 acres. more or
tess, reserv ing to the grantors
herein, their heirs and assigns.
all the coal under the above
described premises with the
right to mine the same. Also the
exclusive right In perpetuity to
use so much of the surface of the
above dHcribed real estate as
may be necessary to open,
operate and equip a complete
coal mining property' with
buildings, and railroad switches
necessary to mine, load and
carry. away coal from adjacent
properties, Hid grantors, their
heirs and assigns to be relieved
from any surfan demage by
reason of m ln ing of coal under
Hid r,remlses.·Any sur9'ce land
requ red or used as above by
said grantors, their heirs and
assigns, to be paid tor at the
rate of 1125.00 per acre. EK·
ceptiR9 3.2acres conveyed to G.
T. Carleton, et al . Excepting "'h
Acre conveyed to Carroll and

tK

.AQ864

WEsT ·

Ever- since their profession was given a name, penologists have been confronted.with a curious fact: Punishment works best with those who need it least.
A man who shoots his wife's paramour in a blind rage
may never bave.committed a crime before and wiD never
commit another as long as he lives. The same may he
true of a man who, panic-stricken by personal deb~.
succumbs to temptation and embezzles funds from his
employer.
Both are sent to prison because society cannot toler~te
such violence and dishonesty, and as lessons to potential
murderers and embezzlers.
·
Yet beyond satisfying certain needs of society and
possibly of the criminals themselves, who may feel they
have "a debt to pay," of what use is their punishment?
Certainly not rebabilitati~n. for the:r are as fit to .re-enter
society on the day of therr sentencmg as they WJ!i he 10
years after it-and perhaps more so.
.
. It is otherwise with the career criminal, the man who
has been in and out of trouble since childhood and in and
out of refiil'mal:ilrles andpr!Sons since ·be-~ :11 ~n-ager . •
For ltiJn,-Bnd he is in the vast majoritf-4lQIIishment is •
a de.11ding and embittering and hardeoirig experience.
Rarely is the career criminal able to admit his own
I!Uilt or if he does rarely does he accept responsibility
for ii. It Is, as any number !If soci~lo~sts and psychologists wm.:l.asten to assure him, soc1ety s fault.
(SI:rante bow society is blamed_for the tens of _thousands of persons in pr1son, yet society gets no credit f~r
the tens of millions who have never been and never wiD
be in prison.)
Even rarer is it for this kind of criminal to feel any
responsibility 'for the welfare of his victim or his victim's
family, to vow that be will try to make amends for what
he may have done.
,
This shollld be a pari of rehabilitation, yet our Jaws
do not even have any provisions for encouraging the man
who wishes to make amends.
Of late a new dimension has been added to all the
other problems of penology-political radicalization.
"Political radicalization is becoming more commonplace in American prisons and the stale authorities in
charge of prisons are having . to become more a~are. of
the concept in dealing with 11nsoners who see theJr crrminal offenses as strictly political acts," said Race Re~­
tions Renorter a week before the shoot-out at San Quentin
in which "Soledad Brother" George Jackson was tiDed.
Jackson ·the No. 1 "political prisoner" in America in
some ey.;, is now the No. 1 political martyr.
Wrote journalist Tad Szulc after an interview with
·
Jackson, shortly before his death:
"The cpnvict-politicizing pr~ss obviously meshes wit!J
the growin~ opinion l!mong pr~oners and outside r~di­
cals including ideologically motivated lawyers and cnminol~gists, that most cr~es . committed in 1m: United
States. particularly by IDIDOritles and poor whiles, are
essentlany 'social' 1111d 'political' in nature. This is so,
the . argument runs! ,because _s_uch _crimes derive, trorn
sociological and political conditions m the country.
The same sort of nonsense was taken as an article of
faith by the architects of the Communist revolution in
Russia.
It is worth noting that not only have millions been imprisoned or liquidated in the U.S.S.R. for political
"crimes." but that more than 50 years after the overthrow of czarist oppression, there are proportionately just
as many bandits, burglars, rapists, murderers and garden-vanety crooks in Russian jails as ~ere ever were.
Crime is not as simple as some people, including criminals, would have us believe.

" Metroliner" passenger
service between New York
and Washington was begun
Jan. 10, 1969, making the
224.6-mile run with five
stops iii 2 hours, 58 minutes, averaging 75.3 miles
per hour overall. The
World Almanac says that
the "Metroliner" service is
partly the result of the fed~rai government's threeyear, $90-million program
for mass transportation
an11 deveidpmeht. •·• · ··
!"

.

T~mely Quotes
The exis\ing system of
auto insurance iD serves the
accident victim, the insuring
public and society at large.
It is basically inefficient and
expensive, incomplete and
slow ... It overburdens the
courts and t!'e le_gal syst~:'
· · · ~t ~~s httle if anythi g
to mmumze car crashes.

-Secretary of Transportalion John A. Volpe.
.
Somet IDles
one won ders if
anything would really
change if Congress just went
home and never came back
at all.
"t" G Pik D N y
-vIS

.

e,

.. ., as

Congress recessed.

We're not pro-Protestant
and anti-Catholic. We're just
anti people who shoot at us.
-Lt. Paul Clancy, a 26-yearold British paratrooper in

Belf0$t, Northern Ireland.

QUICK QUIZ
Q-What term is applied
to a fiU!le duck?
A- The male duck is caned
a drake, and the young is a
duckling. The 'emale duck
has no special ~arne.

tA643

t1087S2

.KJ93

.1072
SOUTH

· .Kl02
.JI08753
+QJS

•s
t•

1. 1.z•

None Vli!Derable
West

Nord!
4•

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soadl
Pass .

By Oswald &amp; James Jae.by
Those South players who
simply use the last two letters of "ARCH" would waste
little time wiUi today's hand.
They would Count j u s t
three losers.· The ace and
king of trumps and the ace
·of diamonds. T h e·y would
ask themselves, "How CJill
we make this hand?" and
note that they could simply .
knock out the ace and king
of trumps and then concede
a trick to the ace of dia-

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

friendship: It was late in WWil, Franchot and
yours thirstily were making the bibJIWs rouJI!a,
Franchot betimes ~ to locate Burgess
FREEREINON A
BRIDAL INTERVIEW
Meredith, then a wartime warrant offic8'
directing movies fer the gOYEJ nment with
NOSTALGIA . . . We always have en¥ied the spectacular succea, ,.;n,.;na awards, JwdOB,
;~alrinatiiJland •·...;- rl Cllle Ardis Smith, wbo
".._
-·.....-respect and 8J¥11Val f..- his first direclarial
reviewed the lighter arts fer the old Times in effll'is after a dis~ acting early-career
exotic BnffaiW, N. Y., when we were an iii:- ___ Alles' an, his lrilllant stardcm in "Wlnslalned cub . .. Ardis was·~ to trot IJVl!l' to . tersel" had set critics' typewriters dancing into
the Statler Hotel and interv1e1r the visiling and headlines with pcrtenta such as ''The IJamlet' of
exceedingly glamorous, as sbe slill is, Joan 19Ci0" and otber 011 es .. . Now II11ZZ was
O'awiCII'd,wbotbenhadjulltwedFranchotTIIle, engaged In a great celluldd war, resny sura S«W-hometown lad who'd grown up In passing industry and military ezpectations.
nearby Niagara FaDs --- Ardis duly showed ..,
About our fiftb stop that light was at the
at the appointed moment to he greeted by Mrs. Copacahana (we'd vislied the StArt, El Morocco,
Tme in an her glowing new«ide ~on ... Tbe Sardl's, ''21", and other wartime inposts), and as
exchange was lrief and cheerfully friendly, and we sat wailing Ill' Joe E. Lewis' late Door show
Ardis went bact to the Times to write his in- · Cll the sew11 Copa baJc&lt;my Burgess Meredith
terview, wmch,forlacklt~memory, went finaUy found us.
'
mt unlike Ibis:
Ute TODe &amp; O'Brian, Bull had been
''Miss Joan O'awford, the new Mrs. Franchot celelraling and drinking to tbat fine vld Irish
Tone, win di!..-ce Mr. TCIIIe and travel to India . bolidlly-Any~ ... In the lengthy process he
wllere she will become tbe nat Mrs. Mallllma bad picked up an apparently incui'ahle case of
Gandhi. On the way, sbe win stop olf at Londllll the bim1pa .. . Walters, dvilian caplains, a
for a quiet dance and rcmance with Winston management lieutenant, lrled their amateur
OIUrchill. Mnssolini has sent his pClpt•al, Dot a minislratiCIIIS 1111 Warrant Off'lcel" Meredith;
proposililll, to Miss Crawl~, and Joeepb Stalin m~ warted . . . After 1!i cr 211 minutes,
has jlined her marital.yearners, but while Franchot 11na11y said, aw, the hen with that, I
carefully halandng an such global
_ . ltfers, Miss want to ten you somelbing, Buzz . . . And
O'awlCII'd has "'"'ted them
order 1 to
re,...
lD
no
p-oceeded to voice elaborate admirati1111 fer
80
CCiilpU~Ie her
~lure." And • mt Meredith's nona~ triumph• since enterinR
euctlym these fandful Oighta, llltotbers, more his nalillll's service:
creatively effenescent, the Ardis Smith in''No Cllle has bad to 1e11 you that you're a great
lervie1l' was grabbed-up by the local populace in act« lately Buzz, Franchot said. "But you've
delighted gOilllijHungry hordea _.. Until the last amauol
~ted us an. You've beccme a
paragraph, which went somewhat like this·
'th ch 1a1n1 hrillian.t
tbat
,
.
.
·
direct« WI su P
Y
success
"!be foregomg of course IS ml really what you can write your I7Wil cmtract wllen you get
Miss Crawl~ has plamed, but sbe tdd me, , back to Hollywood after the war ... "
most cordially, tbat she didn't have a minute to
Franchot's sincerity tumbled out for
she
~--"-' to
t
her
''·
spare as
..........
mee
new ......w Meredith's Ullelpecfed 8CCOIIIPiishments on the
parenls, the elder Tlllles. Sbe told me to 'Just chairsideofthecamera forbistrlnmpbantnew
write anything you like. It'll he okay with-me.' career, in detail and length.
Therefore the aforedreamed is okay with me."
Buzz listened. Raptly Totally Franchot's

BY JACKO'BRIAN

Sar!-.ful

and

at

•

Tbe same FranchoiTOllewasag oodfriend of
yours hardly hlllllhly for SOllie 25 years; Franchot Uved near us in our Greenwich VIllage tn,
andweshan'lfqetthesceneon Easter SUnday,
•· near loth Sl •
1"''
....,, When we met Clll••tb nVe.
Franchotwithhistben-wife,aheauty,holdingin
. blu ..,__..
bea tful little boy
his arms, m
a e .........et, a
U
six weeks old. ,
l
II was a sight to delight anyone, mos•
esperiaJiy a good friend, and we wert certain the
marriage of Franchot and Jean WaUace never
-•~age '-tlhey
wouldend em:ep llntheir '""
; '"'
were
divorced not too iCIIIg after, and that BOD now is a
teachei at Colletiafe
School here in Manhattan.
~
But~1111- to anok ciate in ihe O'llrian:.T1111e

'

esteem steamed Cll:

"·ch renown ..__
such an IIIIP..,_ted
uwu
..,.....
direction, so iD8iiY dellerved tributes from once
envious cCJhm-ts, such veneralillll from the
Peniaglll boys 80 much aJI(llalllt from critics
..
'
_ approval even
· fnm'
military
and journalistic,
FDR General Manhall· they said Gen
• I
.
'
•
•
Eisenhower had viewed and areJaimed . ..
Franchot's enth,siasm mounted 811 Buzz gave
JUnhisego's total altenlillll. Suddenly Francbot
,___,
~~''I've cured your hiCcups," be slated, smiling
.
trlnmphanUy.
"H01r?" demanded Meredith. Franchot fixed
ti -'·Buzz with lU masI ..s......4nn..
~·MI-IJ SIII'C8S c 311Ln:::
"Flattery!" he said.
""

monds.
Mter that start they would
lead a trump at trick two.
East would lake his king
and lead another s p a d e.
They would win and play a
second trump. West would ·
win that and lead a diamond
to East's ace. East would
lead a third spade and West
would ruff for the fourth defensive trick.
Better declarers would Analyze the lead as the top of
a doubleton. They w o u I d
n o t e that potential fourth
loser and look to see if they
could do anything about it.
Mter a little thou~ht they
would see the possibilities of
the diamonds. Mter winning ·
the first trick in dummy, the
king of diamonds would be
led. Should East duck they
would fmd a way to avoid
the loss of a diamond trick.
Should East win and lead
hack a spade, South would
win in his hand and discard
dummy's last two spades on '
the queen and jack of diamonds. Then he would ruff
his last spade and then play
trumps.
INEWVAril lNl'UI'Illl Al$11.)

The bidding has been:
w..t North East
Pass

Pass
1+
Pass
2•
You, South, hold:
•A K 11 •K Qtu••K Q75
What do you do now?
A-Bid four ........ 'l'llls it •
otic
.. ~-~~ ov
..ermobi&lt;l-butot""du:ee"-~
· bicl.
••
........

p..,

I

!

The DaiJ $es11illl

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
cHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
i
ROI~~~·~c,EEdF~JCH ,
,
. City Edlt6t

Publ•shtd daiiV ep.cept
Saturday bv The Ohio Valle~ .

cPubJ ;sh;ng Co mpany, Jll
1 ourt St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
. 45769. Busin,ess . Omco Phone
. ;'(~;2156, Ed•tonal Phone 992-.
· Second class postage paid al
1 Pomeroy , Ohio.
Notional adverlislng
1reprennlative Botllnelll Galfagher, Inc .• 12 e.~ A2nd
St .. Now Yor~ City, New York.
! . Subscr•Pt•on r~tn : De • t•vered by carnu where
available 50 cents per week ;
By Nlotor Route where carrier "
service not available : One
month 11.75. By mail in Ohio
and W. Va .• One yeer suoo ·
Si• months 11.25. Threo
m~n ths SUO. Subscr;plion
pnc~
mcludes Sunday Times-.
I Senhnel .
~.--~-o=~--::---'

I

Jenkins Wins
21st Decision
'

ence?

BARBS

wtn:

..

Secoad Belt ERA
"SQ, " · a,dded Roberts, 11Kirby
~nd I figure that if we meet
Buzzy's demands maybe he'll
meet our!l at contract time."
Roberta' victory was his 12th
against 14 losses. Much more
impressive is the Padre lefty's
earned run average of 1.99
which ranks second only to that
of the New York Mets' Tom
Seaver.
A lhrowing error by Padre
third baseman Garry Jestadt
On JohMy Bench's twO • OUt
ground ~all in the ninth Inning
cost Rolierls a shutout.
"Alii can say," said the "rl-

Kirkhart was pleased with tbe
defense again in this scrimmage and had the same thought
about his offense -I twas not up
to par. ·coach Kirkhart called
his offeltse, 11So-so."

St dhtg

defending champion Texas for
the No. 2.spot.
The Looghorns, who failed to
garner a single first piact: vole
from tbe coaches, amasaed 219
points, beating out fourth place
Southern California by 36
points. Michigan was fifth witb
146 points and the Southeast
Conference grabbed the six,
seven and eight spots with
Tenn~. Auburn and lSU.
The Vols had 129 points while
AubU!'ll finished with 105. LSU
tallied 90 to beat out Oldabcmia,
the ninth place team with 78.
The Sooners, 7+1 in 1970, are
given tbe best chance to unseat
Nebraska in the Big Eight with
quarterback Jack Mildren, run-

Because, as Anderson now remarks, "when a guy has pitch. ed over 200 innings and sllll
The Eagles will prepare for has an earned run average untheir September 10 opener witb der 2.00, he can't be lucky."
a scrimmage this Saturday at
And that's what Roberts has
Eastern against the Nelsonville- done so far this season. ·
York Buckeyes starting around
Roberts was orig~ysill~
10 a. m.

ning back Joe Wylie, the conference sophomore of the year
in 1970, and defensive ace Steve
Aycock an returning.
Ohio Slate, which lost most of
its star-studded 1970 cast,
finished lOth with 6a points and
Alabama headed the second 10
with "r1 poinla. Following in
order behind the Crimson Tide
were Penn State (23), Arizooa
Stale (22), UCLA (21), Arkansas (19), and Oreg1111 (18).
Washington and Georgia
Tech, which boast two of the
nation's top quarterbacks is
Sonny Sixklller and Eddie
McAshan. tied for the No. 17
spot while Syr11cuse (13),
Stanford (4) and Houston (3)
completed the lop 20. OregCIII
State, Tems Tech, Georgia and
F1orlda were the other teams

board 1s
comprised of live coaches from

StorY Mark Dillard Tim King
and Jim Miller
'
For the To;n~does, Mike
Nease aga
· in paved tb e way.
OtherswereNicklhle,RonHIII;
Charles Yost, Vern Ord, Nell
Baker and Jay Hill.
ROLLER COACH NAMED
NEW YORK (UPI)-George
Werner, a major force in the
growth of roller skating in the
United Slates, Wednesday was
nsmed coach of tbe u.s. team
which will compete in the
Wadd RoUer Skating championships at Barcelona, Spain, Oct.
&amp;-9.

Ntw PIRATE
PITISBURGH (UPI)...carl
Taylor, a "rl-year old outfielder·
infielder, Wednesday was
purchased by the Pittsburp
Pirates from Omaha of the
Aqlerlcan Association. Taylor,
who played witb the Pirates in
1968 and 1969 had been property
of the Kansas City Royals.
A !hough! for today : American Gen. Douglas MacArthur
said, "It is fatal to enter any
war without !he will to win it."

D

l

B

•

teams with points awarded 011 a
10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis from
;first to lOth.
·---------·

SAVE
.

FOR YOUR OWN

SPECIAL
PURPOSE
Enjoy safety ... plus
extra earning power.

Coach
Dave
Boston's
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes
using a strong passing attack
scored five times here Wed.nesday night to take a 5-3 touchdown advantage from Kyger
Ceek in a scrimmage on the

The Buckeyes' first unit
outscored KC 5-l. Two Bobcat
scores came against the
visitors' second team.
Nelsonville-York scored its
first TP in the final 14 seconds
of the first half. Sophomore
quarterback Bill Woodson hit
end Greg Bookman with a IOI)g
pass on the sideline pattern,
Woodson's kick for the extra
point was good.
The visitors scored early in
the third period when Jerry
Wright returned a GielUI Smith
interception 70 yards, The
Buckeyes' third TD came on a
25yardpatl8 play from Woodson

to Greg Smathers.
Kyger Creek scored its first
taUy on a 50 yard· run up the ,
middle by senior haHback Gary ·
Collins. A pass to Collina was '
good for the extra points.
Nelsonville came back with
another touchdown on a six
yard run by Woodson. The •
Buckeyes scored in the fourth
stanza on an option pass from
Dave Pritchard to Dave Book~
man.
Two more Kyger Creek TD's
scored in the fourth period on
long runs by Collins. Nelsonville
had 12 first downs. Kyger Creek
collected seven firSt downs.

PASSBOOK RATE

MQ Co. Branch

GAS -OIL- ELECIRIC
Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County .Savings &amp;
Loon Co,
296 Second St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Member Federal Home Loan
Bank.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

----.J

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1

. ..

"Can't Be Lucky"

by the Philadelphia ~. but
was drafted by the Pittsburp
Pirates as a first year player
for only 18,000. Tbe Padrea ac·
quired him from the Pirates in
the el&lt;Jl'lnsion draft.
Roberts was told by Pirate
General Manager Joe L. Brown
that Pittsburgh had tried to
"slip him through the draft."
That would have been pretty
hard to do, though, since the
111-li record Roberts compned at
Columbus, Ohio, ill tbe Internati11118l League that same year
he was drafted by the Padres
had to make him more tban a
litUe conspicuous.
It could be the Pirates were
wary of Roberts' arm after he
underwent surgery on his left
elbow In 1967.
"What they did," said Roberts, ''was transplant the ulnar
nerve." That's the technical
tenn for the crazy bone.
But if the Plratea were wary,
the Padres weren't.

Meigs Reserves Score Four ~~~tines
~ ~ :ill Times In Scrimmage:Contest ?o:~!e!im!F~

Brun~:'e~ri.~~~~·:~:tio••l

fiRES

It 5eems /if:e yestetilay, when you were grousing obout
bow outrageous Sonny ond Cher looked .when Iiiey first
oppea,mf in hell bottoms!"

.
..
year.(Jid Padre lefty, "Is that Reds Manager Sparky AnderI'm sure glad we made !bose son.
two runs in the lop of the ninth Sparky was remembering an
Inning."
organizational meeting of the
A single by Don Mason, a San Diego brass which he attwo-out double by Ollte Brown tended at the end of tbe 1969
gave tbe Padres their two runs · season.
in the ninth. The victim was "I had been a coach and had
Tony Cloninger, who took oyer left !he club but still 1 was infor Gary Nolan after the latter vited to sit in on the meeting
had restricted the Padres to and express opinions " recaned
one run on five hits before lift- Anderson.
'
ed for a pinch hiller in the "And I can tell you at that
eightb inning.
time any club in baseball could
"Nobody and I mean nobody have had Roberts for as much
In the Padres' organization can as $25,000. That's how highly
take credit for Roberts' sue- the Padres regarded him."
cess but Dave himself," said Today money couldn't buy
Roberts.

Number One According To UPI

GUARDIAN PIIMIUM
POI.YISIIR CORD

..

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Dave cinnall Reds play a lhree.game
Roberts figures that hi! and .series in San Diego.
Clay Kirby will be in a pretty Before that, though, the Reds,
good bargaining pOsition come idle today, will make a week·
contract time for the 1972 sea- end stop off at Los Angeles.
son if they can win 30 or more The 3().victory goal for Kirby
games between them Ibis yeai. was set by Buzzy Bavasi, part
And, since the two San Diego owner and president of the
pitchers already have 25 vic- Padres, after Roberts and Klrtories between tbem, lheir goal by signed their 1971 .contract.
is well within reach, especially
"Buzzy said he would like to
since Padre Manager Preston see the two ~ us win 30 beGomez plans to start each of tween us and intimated we
them about seven more times would be well lsken care of if
before· the season ends. .
we did," said Roberts WednesOne of !bose seven starts for day night after he beat the
both Roberts and Kirby will Reds 3-1 in the windup of a
come next week when the Cin- four.game series.

Eastern Blanks SV In Practice

BERRY'S WORLD

l!m. ·

It Every Time

.Roberts Lowers ·ERA ·Mark To 1.99

By SIEVE 'WILSI'EIN
and twoJn the third.
UPISpertl Writer
"We sllll have a decent
Fergusoo Jenkins, the leading chance to ~ the pennant,"
candidate for the National Seaver said with more hope
League Cy Young Award, and tban conviction. "Wen, we have
T&lt;m Seaver, a former winner a slight chance," he added,
both turned in sparlling
Elsewhere in · the National
ning perfmnancea Wednesday League, Pittsburgh won its
night to remind their team- fourth game In a row, defeating
lilalesofwhalniighthave been Philadelphia 10-7, Los Angeles
in 1m if only ...
trounced Houston 9-2, San Diego
If only there had been man! dwnped Cincinnati 3-1 and San
hitting,morecoosistency,fewer Francisco beat Atlanta 4-0.
inJuries, and just a wee bit Manny Sanguillen singled in a
more luck, tbings certainly five-run first inning and hit a
would have been different. If two run homer in tbe second as
onl
.
Y, if only .....
the Pirates extended their
Instead, the Olicago Cubs, longest winning streak since
for whom Jenkins has won 21 late July, when they reeled off
games, and the New York 11 straigh,t victories.
Mets, for whom Seaver has Dave Roberts pitched a fiveThe Eastern Eagles blanked mage, but couldn't quite push
chalked up 233 strikeoots and hiller against the Reds to lower
the lowest ERA this ·side of his ERA to 1.99 and gain his Symmes Valley at Symmes the ball across the goal. He said
Vida Blue, are straddled in 12th victory against 14 losses. A Valley Wednesday night, two four touchdown passes were
dropped.
third and fourth place, the single by Emo Hernandez a touchdowns to none.
Coach
Roger
Kirkhart
said
The Eagles' defense, as it was
National League East, 8~ and sacrifice .and a single by Nate
12 ~ games respectively be- Colbert in the first inning gave his Eagles dominated SyllUDes last Saturday when they lost to
hind the first place Pittsburgh the Padres their first run off vaney throughout the scrinl. New Lexington ~. was Iough.
Pirates.
Gary Nolan who yielded only
Jenkins led the Cubs to a :;.2 five hits before being lifted for
victory over Montreal by a pinch-hitler after eight
limiting the Eipos to only six innings.
hils and driving in three runs Don Sutton held the Astros to
NEW YORK (UPI)-11 looks the Orange BowL Much of the
with a pair of homers. In the only four hils and rode an like Nelraska for 1971.
1970aggregate is back including
conclusion of a ....,...._
~·-""'ed game eight..run Dodger outburst in
....__
tb
u,..t•s e opinion of United quarterbacks Jerry Tagge and
from Tuesday, the Eipos, aided the second inning as he turned Press International's ~ Van Brownson, halfback
by an eight..run sixth inning, in his best performance of the board of coaches who, in the Jolmny Rodgers and defensive
downed the Cubs 11-2.
year, striking out 12 and first pre«ason conege football stalwarts wnue Harper, Joe
Jenkins, who has won 20 walking only one. He also ever conducted by UPI, over- mahak and Larry Jacobson.
games for five straight seasons, chipped in a single In the whelmingly tabbed tbe CornNotre Dame, with 254 points
trailed 2-1 going into the last of decisive rally.
huskers as the No. 1 team in and only five first place voles,
the fifth inning, bat unloaded San Francisco's John Cum- the country for 1971.
was second In the balloting
his third homer of the year berland beat Atlanta for the
The defending Big Eight . p-ohably due to tbe fact that,
with a man aboard to put the !bird time without a loss this · champion, Nebraska, which althoughloadedatalmostevery
Cubs ahead to stay. After Jim season, shutting out the Braves ranked third in last year's final position, the lriBh must come up
Hickman tripled home Brock on four hits. Three of the four UPI ratings behind Texas and with a suitable replacement for
Davis, who had singled, in the hits off Cumberland were Ohio Slate, drew 25 first place the departed Joe Thelamann at
sixth, Jenkins led off the smg
·
les and the only man to ballots for a total of 299 points quarterback. The fighting Irish,
seventh with anOther homer ·to reach second off the stocky left- with aU but tbree coaches on the who will have defensive hack
close out the Cubs' scoring.
bander was Marty Perez, who ratings board parlicipating.
Clarence Ellis, wide receiver
Nebraska capped its liJ-0.1 Tom Gatewood and defensive
Seaver (16.8) fired a four- doubled in the eighth.
hitter for his fifth consecutive
season off last year with a 17-12 tackle Walt Patulsi!i among
complete game viciLlry as the
victory over Louisiana Stale in their returnees, beat out
Mets beat the St. LouisAD
. S
Cardinals 7-1.
Seaver, healing BOO Gibson
for the third lime lhis season,
w. L. Pet. GB .
has allowed only four runs over
Baltimore
tile last 54 innings and has not Detroit
·lost a game since Aug. I. He Boston
1::%
lowered his league-leading ERA New York
Washington · 57 77 A25 27
to 1.92.
The
Meigs
Marauder nadoes drew first blood. Meigs
Cleveland
w~~t 82 ·393 311h reserves defeated the Southern went ahead 3-1, Southern Inched
New York knocked Gibson,
now 13-12, out of the game witb
Q , L. Pet. GB Local Tornadoes at Racine closer at 3-2, and the Little
three runs In the seventh after Oakland
47 .652
Kam;as City 88
70 63
.526 17... Wednesday night, four touch- Marauders put the icing on the
the second Chicago
1&gt;4 70 _478 231h downs to two.
. cake with a touchdown In the
California
63 73 .463 251h The Little ·Marauders came closing minutes.
Minnesota
60 72 A55 26'h from one touchdown down as
Meigs had several players
Milwaukee
57
76
A26
30
Coach
Bruce
Wallace's
Torh
. Iudin g bac'ks
Wednesday's Results
w o s lood ou I mc
Washington 2 New York o
Jon Dillard, Jon Buck, Tom
Milwaukee 3 Kan City 2 (night!
Quillen, Ron Couch, Robbie
Detroit 4 Cleveland 3 (night)
West
Eason, Alan McLan•hlin, and
W. L. Pel. GB
...,
Ballimore8 Boston 2 (night)
Chicg 2 Minn 0 (11 Inns, night) San Franclsco 80 56 .SSS
Mlck Ash. Playing outstanding
Oakland 7 California o (nlghl) Los Angeles 72 64 .529 8 game on the line were Randy
Taday's Probable Pitchers
Allanta
70 69 .504 11'12 Faulk, Victory Young, John
Balllmore (Dobson 17-6) at Cincinnati
68 71 .489 13'12
Boston (Siebert 14-9).
Houston
64 72 All 16 Lehew, Randy Chafin, J. D.
Kansas City (Hedlund 12-6) at San Diego
52 85 .380 28'12
MilwaukeelPatfin 11-13).
Wednesday Results
Cleveland !Dunning 8-12 or Mnll 11 Chi 2, comr spnd game -: :.:-:-:-·-:·:·····:-:-:-·-:·:-::·-.·:·..·.·:.· . ·..· ·..
McDowell 11-12) al Detroit Chicago5Montrea 2
Jackson outscored
( Lolich 21-10), night.
San Francisco 4 Atlanta 0
Washington (Thompson 1-6 or Pittsburgh 10 Phila 7 (night)
CbiWcolhe t-2 In a two-hour
Shellenback 3-9) at New York San Diego 3 Cincnntl 1 lnighl) scrimmage at Jacbon
(Bahnsen 10-10), night.
Los Allgls 9 Houston 2 (nighll
Friday's Games
New York 7 Sl. Louis 1 (night) Wednesday eveulnl!. to other
pre-seaoon scrim'magea
Oakland al Minnestoa 2, twi-n!
Taday's Probable Pitchers
California at Milwaukee, nlghl
Monlreal (McAnally 7-9 or around the Sautheastern Ohio
Kansas City at Chicago 2, twi-n Stoneman 14-IJl at Chicago · League, Irouton oullcored
Baltimore at Washington, night (Pizarro 5-3).
''Oil Heat?
Detroit al New York, night
New York (Gentry 10-9) at Soatb Point, t-1, while
Cleveland at Boston, night
Philadelphia IReynolds 4-6), Waverly bombed Ironton St.
night.
You
Los Angeles !Osleen 12-9) at Joe. Last Satnnlay, Ironton
National League
blanked St. Albans, W.Va., 3Houston !Wilson 12-8), night.
Easl
Friday's Games
0 wbUe Jackson ru over
bet!"
W. L. Pel. GB New York at Philadelphia,
Marletla.
Logan upped Ill
Pittsburgh
82 56 .594
night
St. Louis
pre-season mark to W with a
75 61 .551 6
Montreal at Pitfsburgh, nighl
Chicago
72
63
.533
8'
1
2
Chicago
at
St.
Louis,
night
~
victory over Marietta last
A dog's life Is great in a
112
New
York
67
66
.504
12
Cincinnati
at
Los
Angeles,
night
home using safe and
nlghl.
Montreal
57 76 .429 22'12 Atlanla at San Diego, night
convenient oil healing. Call
Philadelphia 57 77 .425 23
Houston at San Francisco, nighl .-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-. :-:-:-:: :-.-:-.·:
Rizer's for your summet"
refill today !

Q-What brothers signed

the Declaration of Independ-

•

S- The Dail;rlblinei,Middlepor.t-l'om«'oy, 0., Sept. 2,1971

'

A-Richard Henry Lee and
By PHIL r~RET
Francis Lightfoot Lee of VirVivian Johnson by deed doled
ginia were the only brothers
The difference between
1965, recorded In
the
document.
to
sign
Page 549, Meigs
snobbery and a true aKFneRecords. EX ·
ciation C?f the better t gs By Uuited Press toternatlonal
amveyed
tor------------------~--~~~-=-==---~==----------~--------,
of life JS a perceptiveness
Today is Thursday Sept 2,
deed dated
the
snob
will
qever
develop.
,
the
;n
Do
2451h day of
·• • •
The moon is between ils first
If
you
can
retoU
when
5o THE Sl' FS W/IKNE51W.FTIIE61UCE your grand fat h u . . . quarter and full phase.
10 GET' IY 11'· · THEN COMES THE BIG CE,IU • •
skip it, please.
The morning stars are
Mercury
and Sllturn.
217,
Records.
The evening stars are Venus,
The pr1yer of said complalntl'r,-T
Mars
and Jupiter.
is tor the partition of sa id real
· Those born on this day are
Htate, to have the interest of
tht plaintiff&amp; set off to them or·,
11""'-Ao 1 under the sign of Virgo.
If the ume cannotb~ dOne. then
that such real ntate be sold ;
American poet and hmnorist
that defendants ere required to
Eugen Field was born Sept. 3,
s4ft forth their Interest in sa id
reel ntate or be forever barred
Sthboi is "in," but it's 11150from asserting the same ; and
way-out
for some of the kids.
On this day in hisolry :
that plaintiffs' title · . .airt
In 1935 one of the worst
premis es bt qui~ted as
• • •
said defendants. and tc... '"''"
hurricanes 1 hit the U.S.
The pers on with 1
other rel ief as is proper.
mainland rit • ;d through the
The above men tioned pa r lin
broken hean usuaUy koiS
will further take notice that
a poor diagnosis: It's usuFlorida Keys, killing more tban
they have been made partln
ally
o
CO$e
of
wounded
36$ persons.
defendant to said complaint.
vanity.
and that they are required to
In IM$ Japan signed an
1nswer within twenty-eight &lt;211
days from the l lllf date of
IN VIETNAM
lllconditional surrender alloard
publication or this notice, the
Army
Private
First
Class
the U.S. ·batUeship Missouri in
answer dete being Octob~ 21,
1911. .
Harold F. Elliot, 21, whose Tokyo Bay, ending World War
moU~er, Mrs. Thelma V. Elliott, 0 · ·
AIll'" E. Boll
Freda Ball
and his wife, Catherine, live al ~ 1964 W~ld War I hero.
Plaintiffs .
2tl2 Madison Ave., Point. AIVIII York died al the age of
Webster and Fultz
Pleasant, is serving as an 76-·
.
Attorneys""' Plaintfffl
operations clerk witb the IIO!h In 1)168 the dealh ton m an
(I) 19, 26 (I) 2, t, 16, 23, lCI, 71
AviAtion Company near Tuy earlhquake which hit Iran w&amp;s
~~~;.!:~~~:.:.J lfoa, Vielnam.
nxed a1 12,000.
..

They'll

.K

.94

1

Time to Debunk
Beliefs on Crime

EAST
.8763

.A42

\VOO)~ iVoice along Broadway I

EDnORIAL

LEGAL NOTICE

unknown

...

z

NORTH (D)

'

MOORE'S

faVor. Pr-k,. ""'IIY •varv sllqhtly.

· VIlifY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
992-2709

MIDDLEPORT

'

124 W. MAIN

•
.

,.

•

•

\

992-2141

POIIEIOY

�'
·f

'
1f/1

WIN AT BRIDGE

A Boy 'to Do a Man's Job

·Generation Rap

again, but have a

A ltB-RUN POl\ 111E AL80 RANS

CHAlone
Spells Trouble

By Helen and Sue Hottel
Soud agree~DS~t you can each date others." -

H.

O..Sae:
YOD'recloler to Ibis prllblem 80 I'm asking YOU~ (No offense,
BilleD.)
I'm lUck. Ilrled out for cheer leadq and was 1111e of seven
dMw•. Wlat ha.Bes me is: I'm afraid I am the "token Negro."
lbQeoftbe l!lrlatbatdldn'lmab it.were as good -I'm sure even
lie Iller -but Olle'lenth of-llchool is Minarity Race, 80 one out of
Clll lbe liqUid has to itjM
•t ''us."
I
.
.. .I _.., MY,....,... win be mad 811d, if I slay 1111, ~:
lbe Witts wUI.-t me, and I'll reel cruddy.l'm tired of
g
prailedas "tbeflrstNegr!)l!lrl" to do Ibis and tbat,like it's some
tlild of IIW'Wng iillr!lcle. But, at least, I've lbought I deserved the
Jlblr hlloon. 'Ibis time, I'm doubtful. Sbould I ask for another
lry-G~~tandinllst that the best girl wins?- TOKEN BLACK
Dear Blact:
I lblnk tli8 would prove beyCIIId 8il)'lllle's doubt that you
oba ve AU. the honors you'oewat.Good luck! -SUE

.AQJS
.Q96

Dear Helen and Sue:
. We reall,y dig Our new moU,.,., and all of us kids 81'1! 80 glad
Dad fomd her. lbce Mom died five years ago - wen Ibis Is the .
first lime we'oe bad a cmnp1ete family.
EverytiDilg about Mom-Eiaire is ~!real, euept ber cooking is
TOO GREAT. Dad and I are getting fat! And the little llids look
chunky, too. F!!ainedqeso'tgain becausesbe's alight eater - llld
maybe sbe doesl'l enjoy lbal good female-type cooking like
people wbo baven'tbad itfm- a~ time.
9le lows to see us .,......sate lllll eat hearty, and sbe cooks
"fat" -I mean willu:team and sauces 011 vegelables and oo wow
-the dell ts! My mind says "No" but my mouth ..ys ''Yes,"
and is there any wilY to solve Ibis problem wltbout hurtipg ber
fee~? - GE'ITING WEI.LIIOUNDED
HElEN'S VIEW:
DearGWR:
Wan ling to be the Perfect Wife and MoU,.,., Elaine may cook
Dear Belen and Sue;
mere "crealiolls" lbaD she really enjoys. When she sees you are
My pGblem is tli8 cJaclt I used to go wltb. llle wants to try worried about 1bose pno!JMis. sbe mlgbt welcome the chsnce to
JNkiDC It with me apln. But I've gone with her twice before and ''cOOk tbln" again.
holb t1mea lbe quit me fGr the same guy. Sure, I had a part. In our
Tslkitover, W4UI8II to woman: lb!'s a great person, 80 she'll
dllpates, beiDg a little hoi.J •qwed, but I like ber an awful lot. sui-ely undentand . .-BELEN
:f!oolk! we give lt _aootber whirl? -CAN'r DECIDE
SUE SAYS:
SUE !lAYS:
DearGWR:
&lt;'
·Dear ·CID't:
~ -.
Maybea~a!edcard,afterthe talk would help. Uke :
I YOU keeP taking her back, sbe'll keep right Clll ditcbing you
Your cookin' Mom, no ooe muld beat,
wiii!D lbeolblirfella becclmes avaDahlelqplin.l'd tell Ibis chick to
It's really good and fun to est.
go lay an eg. - stJE
But no olfense please
IIIQ'PI SAYS:
Great food is full of calaries!
Dear Can't:
Well, wbat I mean to say Is tbat:
· l'mnotaslougb as my daughter. Inasmuch as you admit you
Please "tbln"it.clown,orwe'llgetfat ~ - YOUR FAMILY
bad ''a part in some of the disputes'' I'd say, ''rake this chick out
Okay? -SUE

..

. ·.· ···. ·.. .

.

.LEGAL NOTICE
Charles Watkins, whose placr
of residence Is unknown; the

tetatees.

heirs.

. ·. ,· .-: ....· -: ·.·····=·····. ·: :-·-:·· ·: ··:·:·: :·:·:·:-:-:.:- ·.·

.......;. :.:-.. :-.·: ·.-:-:-:-:-:-:-;.:-.-::-:-::-:-:-:.: ·-::·:·:···:·:·:·:

dev i sees,

executors,

ad·

mlnlstrators and aasigns of
ChariH Watkins, If deceased,
whose names and places of

rnidence are unknown to the

plaintiff$; Marie L. Watkins,
whose place of residence is
unknown ; the unknown heirs,

devisees, legatees, executors,
administrators and assigns of

Marla L . Watkins, If deceased,
whose names and places Df
residence are unknown to the

plaintiffs : Edward Watk ins,
whose place of residence Is
unknown ; the unknown heirs,
deviSIIH, legatees, executors.
administrators and assigns of
Edward Watkins, It deceased,
whose names and places of
residence are unknown to the
p1alntiffl, will take notice that
Allen e. Ball and Freda Ball , on
the .17th day of August. 1971,
filed their compla int against
you in the Common Pleas Court
Of Meigs County, Ohio. being

Cose No. ••.919, for th~ parllllon

of the real estate herinafter
· described, and to quiet title to
said real est•te, and requiring
to set up r our Interest

1111}: H ony, ·which • .real
1J"'IIIr:fibwcl as folloW~ :
following described real
estat1 situated in the Township
Of Chester, County of Meigs and
SU1te of Ohlo. being In SectiOn 4,
T-n 2, Range 13, of the Ohio
Company's Purchase. and more
particularly described as
tallows, to-wit : Beginning at the
corner of the Barbara Wippel

farm , the same belno the corner
on FlatwOOds Road ; thence
west 2701 feet to the corner of
Morgan and Wippel ; thence
north 150 feet to the center of the
roed ; thence north 45 degrees
east 111 feet to a stake in the
center of-the road ; thence north
11 degrees 30' east 170 feet to a
stake in the center of the road ;
thtl"'ce north 51 degrees 27' east
317.3feet to 1 itake in the-center
of road; thence north 63 degrees
32' east 391.6 feef to a stake in
center of road ; thence north 47
dagrHS 52' east 329 feet to a
stake in center of r011d ; thence
north ..tt degrees east 1010feet. to
1 stake in center of road ; thence
north 11 degrees -"' Ent 394
teet to a stake Jn center of road;
thence north 59 degrees ent 270
teet to a stake in center of road
at Intersection of crossroads ;
thence south 31 degrees 50' east

115 teet to lhe Radford 'west
lint; then.c e sou1h 1345 feet to
corner, the place o4 beginning,

containing 57.73 acres. more or
tess, reserv ing to the grantors
herein, their heirs and assigns.
all the coal under the above
described premises with the
right to mine the same. Also the
exclusive right In perpetuity to
use so much of the surface of the
above dHcribed real estate as
may be necessary to open,
operate and equip a complete
coal mining property' with
buildings, and railroad switches
necessary to mine, load and
carry. away coal from adjacent
properties, Hid grantors, their
heirs and assigns to be relieved
from any surfan demage by
reason of m ln ing of coal under
Hid r,remlses.·Any sur9'ce land
requ red or used as above by
said grantors, their heirs and
assigns, to be paid tor at the
rate of 1125.00 per acre. EK·
ceptiR9 3.2acres conveyed to G.
T. Carleton, et al . Excepting "'h
Acre conveyed to Carroll and

tK

.AQ864

WEsT ·

Ever- since their profession was given a name, penologists have been confronted.with a curious fact: Punishment works best with those who need it least.
A man who shoots his wife's paramour in a blind rage
may never bave.committed a crime before and wiD never
commit another as long as he lives. The same may he
true of a man who, panic-stricken by personal deb~.
succumbs to temptation and embezzles funds from his
employer.
Both are sent to prison because society cannot toler~te
such violence and dishonesty, and as lessons to potential
murderers and embezzlers.
·
Yet beyond satisfying certain needs of society and
possibly of the criminals themselves, who may feel they
have "a debt to pay," of what use is their punishment?
Certainly not rebabilitati~n. for the:r are as fit to .re-enter
society on the day of therr sentencmg as they WJ!i he 10
years after it-and perhaps more so.
.
. It is otherwise with the career criminal, the man who
has been in and out of trouble since childhood and in and
out of refiil'mal:ilrles andpr!Sons since ·be-~ :11 ~n-ager . •
For ltiJn,-Bnd he is in the vast majoritf-4lQIIishment is •
a de.11ding and embittering and hardeoirig experience.
Rarely is the career criminal able to admit his own
I!Uilt or if he does rarely does he accept responsibility
for ii. It Is, as any number !If soci~lo~sts and psychologists wm.:l.asten to assure him, soc1ety s fault.
(SI:rante bow society is blamed_for the tens of _thousands of persons in pr1son, yet society gets no credit f~r
the tens of millions who have never been and never wiD
be in prison.)
Even rarer is it for this kind of criminal to feel any
responsibility 'for the welfare of his victim or his victim's
family, to vow that be will try to make amends for what
he may have done.
,
This shollld be a pari of rehabilitation, yet our Jaws
do not even have any provisions for encouraging the man
who wishes to make amends.
Of late a new dimension has been added to all the
other problems of penology-political radicalization.
"Political radicalization is becoming more commonplace in American prisons and the stale authorities in
charge of prisons are having . to become more a~are. of
the concept in dealing with 11nsoners who see theJr crrminal offenses as strictly political acts," said Race Re~­
tions Renorter a week before the shoot-out at San Quentin
in which "Soledad Brother" George Jackson was tiDed.
Jackson ·the No. 1 "political prisoner" in America in
some ey.;, is now the No. 1 political martyr.
Wrote journalist Tad Szulc after an interview with
·
Jackson, shortly before his death:
"The cpnvict-politicizing pr~ss obviously meshes wit!J
the growin~ opinion l!mong pr~oners and outside r~di­
cals including ideologically motivated lawyers and cnminol~gists, that most cr~es . committed in 1m: United
States. particularly by IDIDOritles and poor whiles, are
essentlany 'social' 1111d 'political' in nature. This is so,
the . argument runs! ,because _s_uch _crimes derive, trorn
sociological and political conditions m the country.
The same sort of nonsense was taken as an article of
faith by the architects of the Communist revolution in
Russia.
It is worth noting that not only have millions been imprisoned or liquidated in the U.S.S.R. for political
"crimes." but that more than 50 years after the overthrow of czarist oppression, there are proportionately just
as many bandits, burglars, rapists, murderers and garden-vanety crooks in Russian jails as ~ere ever were.
Crime is not as simple as some people, including criminals, would have us believe.

" Metroliner" passenger
service between New York
and Washington was begun
Jan. 10, 1969, making the
224.6-mile run with five
stops iii 2 hours, 58 minutes, averaging 75.3 miles
per hour overall. The
World Almanac says that
the "Metroliner" service is
partly the result of the fed~rai government's threeyear, $90-million program
for mass transportation
an11 deveidpmeht. •·• · ··
!"

.

T~mely Quotes
The exis\ing system of
auto insurance iD serves the
accident victim, the insuring
public and society at large.
It is basically inefficient and
expensive, incomplete and
slow ... It overburdens the
courts and t!'e le_gal syst~:'
· · · ~t ~~s httle if anythi g
to mmumze car crashes.

-Secretary of Transportalion John A. Volpe.
.
Somet IDles
one won ders if
anything would really
change if Congress just went
home and never came back
at all.
"t" G Pik D N y
-vIS

.

e,

.. ., as

Congress recessed.

We're not pro-Protestant
and anti-Catholic. We're just
anti people who shoot at us.
-Lt. Paul Clancy, a 26-yearold British paratrooper in

Belf0$t, Northern Ireland.

QUICK QUIZ
Q-What term is applied
to a fiU!le duck?
A- The male duck is caned
a drake, and the young is a
duckling. The 'emale duck
has no special ~arne.

tA643

t1087S2

.KJ93

.1072
SOUTH

· .Kl02
.JI08753
+QJS

•s
t•

1. 1.z•

None Vli!Derable
West

Nord!
4•

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soadl
Pass .

By Oswald &amp; James Jae.by
Those South players who
simply use the last two letters of "ARCH" would waste
little time wiUi today's hand.
They would Count j u s t
three losers.· The ace and
king of trumps and the ace
·of diamonds. T h e·y would
ask themselves, "How CJill
we make this hand?" and
note that they could simply .
knock out the ace and king
of trumps and then concede
a trick to the ace of dia-

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

friendship: It was late in WWil, Franchot and
yours thirstily were making the bibJIWs rouJI!a,
Franchot betimes ~ to locate Burgess
FREEREINON A
BRIDAL INTERVIEW
Meredith, then a wartime warrant offic8'
directing movies fer the gOYEJ nment with
NOSTALGIA . . . We always have en¥ied the spectacular succea, ,.;n,.;na awards, JwdOB,
;~alrinatiiJland •·...;- rl Cllle Ardis Smith, wbo
".._
-·.....-respect and 8J¥11Val f..- his first direclarial
reviewed the lighter arts fer the old Times in effll'is after a dis~ acting early-career
exotic BnffaiW, N. Y., when we were an iii:- ___ Alles' an, his lrilllant stardcm in "Wlnslalned cub . .. Ardis was·~ to trot IJVl!l' to . tersel" had set critics' typewriters dancing into
the Statler Hotel and interv1e1r the visiling and headlines with pcrtenta such as ''The IJamlet' of
exceedingly glamorous, as sbe slill is, Joan 19Ci0" and otber 011 es .. . Now II11ZZ was
O'awiCII'd,wbotbenhadjulltwedFranchotTIIle, engaged In a great celluldd war, resny sura S«W-hometown lad who'd grown up In passing industry and military ezpectations.
nearby Niagara FaDs --- Ardis duly showed ..,
About our fiftb stop that light was at the
at the appointed moment to he greeted by Mrs. Copacahana (we'd vislied the StArt, El Morocco,
Tme in an her glowing new«ide ~on ... Tbe Sardl's, ''21", and other wartime inposts), and as
exchange was lrief and cheerfully friendly, and we sat wailing Ill' Joe E. Lewis' late Door show
Ardis went bact to the Times to write his in- · Cll the sew11 Copa baJc&lt;my Burgess Meredith
terview, wmch,forlacklt~memory, went finaUy found us.
'
mt unlike Ibis:
Ute TODe &amp; O'Brian, Bull had been
''Miss Joan O'awford, the new Mrs. Franchot celelraling and drinking to tbat fine vld Irish
Tone, win di!..-ce Mr. TCIIIe and travel to India . bolidlly-Any~ ... In the lengthy process he
wllere she will become tbe nat Mrs. Mallllma bad picked up an apparently incui'ahle case of
Gandhi. On the way, sbe win stop olf at Londllll the bim1pa .. . Walters, dvilian caplains, a
for a quiet dance and rcmance with Winston management lieutenant, lrled their amateur
OIUrchill. Mnssolini has sent his pClpt•al, Dot a minislratiCIIIS 1111 Warrant Off'lcel" Meredith;
proposililll, to Miss Crawl~, and Joeepb Stalin m~ warted . . . After 1!i cr 211 minutes,
has jlined her marital.yearners, but while Franchot 11na11y said, aw, the hen with that, I
carefully halandng an such global
_ . ltfers, Miss want to ten you somelbing, Buzz . . . And
O'awlCII'd has "'"'ted them
order 1 to
re,...
lD
no
p-oceeded to voice elaborate admirati1111 fer
80
CCiilpU~Ie her
~lure." And • mt Meredith's nona~ triumph• since enterinR
euctlym these fandful Oighta, llltotbers, more his nalillll's service:
creatively effenescent, the Ardis Smith in''No Cllle has bad to 1e11 you that you're a great
lervie1l' was grabbed-up by the local populace in act« lately Buzz, Franchot said. "But you've
delighted gOilllijHungry hordea _.. Until the last amauol
~ted us an. You've beccme a
paragraph, which went somewhat like this·
'th ch 1a1n1 hrillian.t
tbat
,
.
.
·
direct« WI su P
Y
success
"!be foregomg of course IS ml really what you can write your I7Wil cmtract wllen you get
Miss Crawl~ has plamed, but sbe tdd me, , back to Hollywood after the war ... "
most cordially, tbat she didn't have a minute to
Franchot's sincerity tumbled out for
she
~--"-' to
t
her
''·
spare as
..........
mee
new ......w Meredith's Ullelpecfed 8CCOIIIPiishments on the
parenls, the elder Tlllles. Sbe told me to 'Just chairsideofthecamera forbistrlnmpbantnew
write anything you like. It'll he okay with-me.' career, in detail and length.
Therefore the aforedreamed is okay with me."
Buzz listened. Raptly Totally Franchot's

BY JACKO'BRIAN

Sar!-.ful

and

at

•

Tbe same FranchoiTOllewasag oodfriend of
yours hardly hlllllhly for SOllie 25 years; Franchot Uved near us in our Greenwich VIllage tn,
andweshan'lfqetthesceneon Easter SUnday,
•· near loth Sl •
1"''
....,, When we met Clll••tb nVe.
Franchotwithhistben-wife,aheauty,holdingin
. blu ..,__..
bea tful little boy
his arms, m
a e .........et, a
U
six weeks old. ,
l
II was a sight to delight anyone, mos•
esperiaJiy a good friend, and we wert certain the
marriage of Franchot and Jean WaUace never
-•~age '-tlhey
wouldend em:ep llntheir '""
; '"'
were
divorced not too iCIIIg after, and that BOD now is a
teachei at Colletiafe
School here in Manhattan.
~
But~1111- to anok ciate in ihe O'llrian:.T1111e

'

esteem steamed Cll:

"·ch renown ..__
such an IIIIP..,_ted
uwu
..,.....
direction, so iD8iiY dellerved tributes from once
envious cCJhm-ts, such veneralillll from the
Peniaglll boys 80 much aJI(llalllt from critics
..
'
_ approval even
· fnm'
military
and journalistic,
FDR General Manhall· they said Gen
• I
.
'
•
•
Eisenhower had viewed and areJaimed . ..
Franchot's enth,siasm mounted 811 Buzz gave
JUnhisego's total altenlillll. Suddenly Francbot
,___,
~~''I've cured your hiCcups," be slated, smiling
.
trlnmphanUy.
"H01r?" demanded Meredith. Franchot fixed
ti -'·Buzz with lU masI ..s......4nn..
~·MI-IJ SIII'C8S c 311Ln:::
"Flattery!" he said.
""

monds.
Mter that start they would
lead a trump at trick two.
East would lake his king
and lead another s p a d e.
They would win and play a
second trump. West would ·
win that and lead a diamond
to East's ace. East would
lead a third spade and West
would ruff for the fourth defensive trick.
Better declarers would Analyze the lead as the top of
a doubleton. They w o u I d
n o t e that potential fourth
loser and look to see if they
could do anything about it.
Mter a little thou~ht they
would see the possibilities of
the diamonds. Mter winning ·
the first trick in dummy, the
king of diamonds would be
led. Should East duck they
would fmd a way to avoid
the loss of a diamond trick.
Should East win and lead
hack a spade, South would
win in his hand and discard
dummy's last two spades on '
the queen and jack of diamonds. Then he would ruff
his last spade and then play
trumps.
INEWVAril lNl'UI'Illl Al$11.)

The bidding has been:
w..t North East
Pass

Pass
1+
Pass
2•
You, South, hold:
•A K 11 •K Qtu••K Q75
What do you do now?
A-Bid four ........ 'l'llls it •
otic
.. ~-~~ ov
..ermobi&lt;l-butot""du:ee"-~
· bicl.
••
........

p..,

I

!

The DaiJ $es11illl

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
cHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
i
ROI~~~·~c,EEdF~JCH ,
,
. City Edlt6t

Publ•shtd daiiV ep.cept
Saturday bv The Ohio Valle~ .

cPubJ ;sh;ng Co mpany, Jll
1 ourt St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
. 45769. Busin,ess . Omco Phone
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Notional adverlislng
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! . Subscr•Pt•on r~tn : De • t•vered by carnu where
available 50 cents per week ;
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m~n ths SUO. Subscr;plion
pnc~
mcludes Sunday Times-.
I Senhnel .
~.--~-o=~--::---'

I

Jenkins Wins
21st Decision
'

ence?

BARBS

wtn:

..

Secoad Belt ERA
"SQ, " · a,dded Roberts, 11Kirby
~nd I figure that if we meet
Buzzy's demands maybe he'll
meet our!l at contract time."
Roberta' victory was his 12th
against 14 losses. Much more
impressive is the Padre lefty's
earned run average of 1.99
which ranks second only to that
of the New York Mets' Tom
Seaver.
A lhrowing error by Padre
third baseman Garry Jestadt
On JohMy Bench's twO • OUt
ground ~all in the ninth Inning
cost Rolierls a shutout.
"Alii can say," said the "rl-

Kirkhart was pleased with tbe
defense again in this scrimmage and had the same thought
about his offense -I twas not up
to par. ·coach Kirkhart called
his offeltse, 11So-so."

St dhtg

defending champion Texas for
the No. 2.spot.
The Looghorns, who failed to
garner a single first piact: vole
from tbe coaches, amasaed 219
points, beating out fourth place
Southern California by 36
points. Michigan was fifth witb
146 points and the Southeast
Conference grabbed the six,
seven and eight spots with
Tenn~. Auburn and lSU.
The Vols had 129 points while
AubU!'ll finished with 105. LSU
tallied 90 to beat out Oldabcmia,
the ninth place team with 78.
The Sooners, 7+1 in 1970, are
given tbe best chance to unseat
Nebraska in the Big Eight with
quarterback Jack Mildren, run-

Because, as Anderson now remarks, "when a guy has pitch. ed over 200 innings and sllll
The Eagles will prepare for has an earned run average untheir September 10 opener witb der 2.00, he can't be lucky."
a scrimmage this Saturday at
And that's what Roberts has
Eastern against the Nelsonville- done so far this season. ·
York Buckeyes starting around
Roberts was orig~ysill~
10 a. m.

ning back Joe Wylie, the conference sophomore of the year
in 1970, and defensive ace Steve
Aycock an returning.
Ohio Slate, which lost most of
its star-studded 1970 cast,
finished lOth with 6a points and
Alabama headed the second 10
with "r1 poinla. Following in
order behind the Crimson Tide
were Penn State (23), Arizooa
Stale (22), UCLA (21), Arkansas (19), and Oreg1111 (18).
Washington and Georgia
Tech, which boast two of the
nation's top quarterbacks is
Sonny Sixklller and Eddie
McAshan. tied for the No. 17
spot while Syr11cuse (13),
Stanford (4) and Houston (3)
completed the lop 20. OregCIII
State, Tems Tech, Georgia and
F1orlda were the other teams

board 1s
comprised of live coaches from

StorY Mark Dillard Tim King
and Jim Miller
'
For the To;n~does, Mike
Nease aga
· in paved tb e way.
OtherswereNicklhle,RonHIII;
Charles Yost, Vern Ord, Nell
Baker and Jay Hill.
ROLLER COACH NAMED
NEW YORK (UPI)-George
Werner, a major force in the
growth of roller skating in the
United Slates, Wednesday was
nsmed coach of tbe u.s. team
which will compete in the
Wadd RoUer Skating championships at Barcelona, Spain, Oct.
&amp;-9.

Ntw PIRATE
PITISBURGH (UPI)...carl
Taylor, a "rl-year old outfielder·
infielder, Wednesday was
purchased by the Pittsburp
Pirates from Omaha of the
Aqlerlcan Association. Taylor,
who played witb the Pirates in
1968 and 1969 had been property
of the Kansas City Royals.
A !hough! for today : American Gen. Douglas MacArthur
said, "It is fatal to enter any
war without !he will to win it."

D

l

B

•

teams with points awarded 011 a
10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis from
;first to lOth.
·---------·

SAVE
.

FOR YOUR OWN

SPECIAL
PURPOSE
Enjoy safety ... plus
extra earning power.

Coach
Dave
Boston's
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes
using a strong passing attack
scored five times here Wed.nesday night to take a 5-3 touchdown advantage from Kyger
Ceek in a scrimmage on the

The Buckeyes' first unit
outscored KC 5-l. Two Bobcat
scores came against the
visitors' second team.
Nelsonville-York scored its
first TP in the final 14 seconds
of the first half. Sophomore
quarterback Bill Woodson hit
end Greg Bookman with a IOI)g
pass on the sideline pattern,
Woodson's kick for the extra
point was good.
The visitors scored early in
the third period when Jerry
Wright returned a GielUI Smith
interception 70 yards, The
Buckeyes' third TD came on a
25yardpatl8 play from Woodson

to Greg Smathers.
Kyger Creek scored its first
taUy on a 50 yard· run up the ,
middle by senior haHback Gary ·
Collins. A pass to Collina was '
good for the extra points.
Nelsonville came back with
another touchdown on a six
yard run by Woodson. The •
Buckeyes scored in the fourth
stanza on an option pass from
Dave Pritchard to Dave Book~
man.
Two more Kyger Creek TD's
scored in the fourth period on
long runs by Collins. Nelsonville
had 12 first downs. Kyger Creek
collected seven firSt downs.

PASSBOOK RATE

MQ Co. Branch

GAS -OIL- ELECIRIC
Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County .Savings &amp;
Loon Co,
296 Second St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Member Federal Home Loan
Bank.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

----.J

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Look G00d l n .rracttce att e ..=2-CO~~-u~-~--ln-•u-red--up-to

1

. ..

"Can't Be Lucky"

by the Philadelphia ~. but
was drafted by the Pittsburp
Pirates as a first year player
for only 18,000. Tbe Padrea ac·
quired him from the Pirates in
the el&lt;Jl'lnsion draft.
Roberts was told by Pirate
General Manager Joe L. Brown
that Pittsburgh had tried to
"slip him through the draft."
That would have been pretty
hard to do, though, since the
111-li record Roberts compned at
Columbus, Ohio, ill tbe Internati11118l League that same year
he was drafted by the Padres
had to make him more tban a
litUe conspicuous.
It could be the Pirates were
wary of Roberts' arm after he
underwent surgery on his left
elbow In 1967.
"What they did," said Roberts, ''was transplant the ulnar
nerve." That's the technical
tenn for the crazy bone.
But if the Plratea were wary,
the Padres weren't.

Meigs Reserves Score Four ~~~tines
~ ~ :ill Times In Scrimmage:Contest ?o:~!e!im!F~

Brun~:'e~ri.~~~~·:~:tio••l

fiRES

It 5eems /if:e yestetilay, when you were grousing obout
bow outrageous Sonny ond Cher looked .when Iiiey first
oppea,mf in hell bottoms!"

.
..
year.(Jid Padre lefty, "Is that Reds Manager Sparky AnderI'm sure glad we made !bose son.
two runs in the lop of the ninth Sparky was remembering an
Inning."
organizational meeting of the
A single by Don Mason, a San Diego brass which he attwo-out double by Ollte Brown tended at the end of tbe 1969
gave tbe Padres their two runs · season.
in the ninth. The victim was "I had been a coach and had
Tony Cloninger, who took oyer left !he club but still 1 was infor Gary Nolan after the latter vited to sit in on the meeting
had restricted the Padres to and express opinions " recaned
one run on five hits before lift- Anderson.
'
ed for a pinch hiller in the "And I can tell you at that
eightb inning.
time any club in baseball could
"Nobody and I mean nobody have had Roberts for as much
In the Padres' organization can as $25,000. That's how highly
take credit for Roberts' sue- the Padres regarded him."
cess but Dave himself," said Today money couldn't buy
Roberts.

Number One According To UPI

GUARDIAN PIIMIUM
POI.YISIIR CORD

..

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Dave cinnall Reds play a lhree.game
Roberts figures that hi! and .series in San Diego.
Clay Kirby will be in a pretty Before that, though, the Reds,
good bargaining pOsition come idle today, will make a week·
contract time for the 1972 sea- end stop off at Los Angeles.
son if they can win 30 or more The 3().victory goal for Kirby
games between them Ibis yeai. was set by Buzzy Bavasi, part
And, since the two San Diego owner and president of the
pitchers already have 25 vic- Padres, after Roberts and Klrtories between tbem, lheir goal by signed their 1971 .contract.
is well within reach, especially
"Buzzy said he would like to
since Padre Manager Preston see the two ~ us win 30 beGomez plans to start each of tween us and intimated we
them about seven more times would be well lsken care of if
before· the season ends. .
we did," said Roberts WednesOne of !bose seven starts for day night after he beat the
both Roberts and Kirby will Reds 3-1 in the windup of a
come next week when the Cin- four.game series.

Eastern Blanks SV In Practice

BERRY'S WORLD

l!m. ·

It Every Time

.Roberts Lowers ·ERA ·Mark To 1.99

By SIEVE 'WILSI'EIN
and twoJn the third.
UPISpertl Writer
"We sllll have a decent
Fergusoo Jenkins, the leading chance to ~ the pennant,"
candidate for the National Seaver said with more hope
League Cy Young Award, and tban conviction. "Wen, we have
T&lt;m Seaver, a former winner a slight chance," he added,
both turned in sparlling
Elsewhere in · the National
ning perfmnancea Wednesday League, Pittsburgh won its
night to remind their team- fourth game In a row, defeating
lilalesofwhalniighthave been Philadelphia 10-7, Los Angeles
in 1m if only ...
trounced Houston 9-2, San Diego
If only there had been man! dwnped Cincinnati 3-1 and San
hitting,morecoosistency,fewer Francisco beat Atlanta 4-0.
inJuries, and just a wee bit Manny Sanguillen singled in a
more luck, tbings certainly five-run first inning and hit a
would have been different. If two run homer in tbe second as
onl
.
Y, if only .....
the Pirates extended their
Instead, the Olicago Cubs, longest winning streak since
for whom Jenkins has won 21 late July, when they reeled off
games, and the New York 11 straigh,t victories.
Mets, for whom Seaver has Dave Roberts pitched a fiveThe Eastern Eagles blanked mage, but couldn't quite push
chalked up 233 strikeoots and hiller against the Reds to lower
the lowest ERA this ·side of his ERA to 1.99 and gain his Symmes Valley at Symmes the ball across the goal. He said
Vida Blue, are straddled in 12th victory against 14 losses. A Valley Wednesday night, two four touchdown passes were
dropped.
third and fourth place, the single by Emo Hernandez a touchdowns to none.
Coach
Roger
Kirkhart
said
The Eagles' defense, as it was
National League East, 8~ and sacrifice .and a single by Nate
12 ~ games respectively be- Colbert in the first inning gave his Eagles dominated SyllUDes last Saturday when they lost to
hind the first place Pittsburgh the Padres their first run off vaney throughout the scrinl. New Lexington ~. was Iough.
Pirates.
Gary Nolan who yielded only
Jenkins led the Cubs to a :;.2 five hits before being lifted for
victory over Montreal by a pinch-hitler after eight
limiting the Eipos to only six innings.
hils and driving in three runs Don Sutton held the Astros to
NEW YORK (UPI)-11 looks the Orange BowL Much of the
with a pair of homers. In the only four hils and rode an like Nelraska for 1971.
1970aggregate is back including
conclusion of a ....,...._
~·-""'ed game eight..run Dodger outburst in
....__
tb
u,..t•s e opinion of United quarterbacks Jerry Tagge and
from Tuesday, the Eipos, aided the second inning as he turned Press International's ~ Van Brownson, halfback
by an eight..run sixth inning, in his best performance of the board of coaches who, in the Jolmny Rodgers and defensive
downed the Cubs 11-2.
year, striking out 12 and first pre«ason conege football stalwarts wnue Harper, Joe
Jenkins, who has won 20 walking only one. He also ever conducted by UPI, over- mahak and Larry Jacobson.
games for five straight seasons, chipped in a single In the whelmingly tabbed tbe CornNotre Dame, with 254 points
trailed 2-1 going into the last of decisive rally.
huskers as the No. 1 team in and only five first place voles,
the fifth inning, bat unloaded San Francisco's John Cum- the country for 1971.
was second In the balloting
his third homer of the year berland beat Atlanta for the
The defending Big Eight . p-ohably due to tbe fact that,
with a man aboard to put the !bird time without a loss this · champion, Nebraska, which althoughloadedatalmostevery
Cubs ahead to stay. After Jim season, shutting out the Braves ranked third in last year's final position, the lriBh must come up
Hickman tripled home Brock on four hits. Three of the four UPI ratings behind Texas and with a suitable replacement for
Davis, who had singled, in the hits off Cumberland were Ohio Slate, drew 25 first place the departed Joe Thelamann at
sixth, Jenkins led off the smg
·
les and the only man to ballots for a total of 299 points quarterback. The fighting Irish,
seventh with anOther homer ·to reach second off the stocky left- with aU but tbree coaches on the who will have defensive hack
close out the Cubs' scoring.
bander was Marty Perez, who ratings board parlicipating.
Clarence Ellis, wide receiver
Nebraska capped its liJ-0.1 Tom Gatewood and defensive
Seaver (16.8) fired a four- doubled in the eighth.
hitter for his fifth consecutive
season off last year with a 17-12 tackle Walt Patulsi!i among
complete game viciLlry as the
victory over Louisiana Stale in their returnees, beat out
Mets beat the St. LouisAD
. S
Cardinals 7-1.
Seaver, healing BOO Gibson
for the third lime lhis season,
w. L. Pet. GB .
has allowed only four runs over
Baltimore
tile last 54 innings and has not Detroit
·lost a game since Aug. I. He Boston
1::%
lowered his league-leading ERA New York
Washington · 57 77 A25 27
to 1.92.
The
Meigs
Marauder nadoes drew first blood. Meigs
Cleveland
w~~t 82 ·393 311h reserves defeated the Southern went ahead 3-1, Southern Inched
New York knocked Gibson,
now 13-12, out of the game witb
Q , L. Pet. GB Local Tornadoes at Racine closer at 3-2, and the Little
three runs In the seventh after Oakland
47 .652
Kam;as City 88
70 63
.526 17... Wednesday night, four touch- Marauders put the icing on the
the second Chicago
1&gt;4 70 _478 231h downs to two.
. cake with a touchdown In the
California
63 73 .463 251h The Little ·Marauders came closing minutes.
Minnesota
60 72 A55 26'h from one touchdown down as
Meigs had several players
Milwaukee
57
76
A26
30
Coach
Bruce
Wallace's
Torh
. Iudin g bac'ks
Wednesday's Results
w o s lood ou I mc
Washington 2 New York o
Jon Dillard, Jon Buck, Tom
Milwaukee 3 Kan City 2 (night!
Quillen, Ron Couch, Robbie
Detroit 4 Cleveland 3 (night)
West
Eason, Alan McLan•hlin, and
W. L. Pel. GB
...,
Ballimore8 Boston 2 (night)
Chicg 2 Minn 0 (11 Inns, night) San Franclsco 80 56 .SSS
Mlck Ash. Playing outstanding
Oakland 7 California o (nlghl) Los Angeles 72 64 .529 8 game on the line were Randy
Taday's Probable Pitchers
Allanta
70 69 .504 11'12 Faulk, Victory Young, John
Balllmore (Dobson 17-6) at Cincinnati
68 71 .489 13'12
Boston (Siebert 14-9).
Houston
64 72 All 16 Lehew, Randy Chafin, J. D.
Kansas City (Hedlund 12-6) at San Diego
52 85 .380 28'12
MilwaukeelPatfin 11-13).
Wednesday Results
Cleveland !Dunning 8-12 or Mnll 11 Chi 2, comr spnd game -: :.:-:-:-·-:·:·····:-:-:-·-:·:-::·-.·:·..·.·:.· . ·..· ·..
McDowell 11-12) al Detroit Chicago5Montrea 2
Jackson outscored
( Lolich 21-10), night.
San Francisco 4 Atlanta 0
Washington (Thompson 1-6 or Pittsburgh 10 Phila 7 (night)
CbiWcolhe t-2 In a two-hour
Shellenback 3-9) at New York San Diego 3 Cincnntl 1 lnighl) scrimmage at Jacbon
(Bahnsen 10-10), night.
Los Allgls 9 Houston 2 (nighll
Friday's Games
New York 7 Sl. Louis 1 (night) Wednesday eveulnl!. to other
pre-seaoon scrim'magea
Oakland al Minnestoa 2, twi-n!
Taday's Probable Pitchers
California at Milwaukee, nlghl
Monlreal (McAnally 7-9 or around the Sautheastern Ohio
Kansas City at Chicago 2, twi-n Stoneman 14-IJl at Chicago · League, Irouton oullcored
Baltimore at Washington, night (Pizarro 5-3).
''Oil Heat?
Detroit al New York, night
New York (Gentry 10-9) at Soatb Point, t-1, while
Cleveland at Boston, night
Philadelphia IReynolds 4-6), Waverly bombed Ironton St.
night.
You
Los Angeles !Osleen 12-9) at Joe. Last Satnnlay, Ironton
National League
blanked St. Albans, W.Va., 3Houston !Wilson 12-8), night.
Easl
Friday's Games
0 wbUe Jackson ru over
bet!"
W. L. Pel. GB New York at Philadelphia,
Marletla.
Logan upped Ill
Pittsburgh
82 56 .594
night
St. Louis
pre-season mark to W with a
75 61 .551 6
Montreal at Pitfsburgh, nighl
Chicago
72
63
.533
8'
1
2
Chicago
at
St.
Louis,
night
~
victory over Marietta last
A dog's life Is great in a
112
New
York
67
66
.504
12
Cincinnati
at
Los
Angeles,
night
home using safe and
nlghl.
Montreal
57 76 .429 22'12 Atlanla at San Diego, night
convenient oil healing. Call
Philadelphia 57 77 .425 23
Houston at San Francisco, nighl .-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-. :-:-:-:: :-.-:-.·:
Rizer's for your summet"
refill today !

Q-What brothers signed

the Declaration of Independ-

•

S- The Dail;rlblinei,Middlepor.t-l'om«'oy, 0., Sept. 2,1971

'

A-Richard Henry Lee and
By PHIL r~RET
Francis Lightfoot Lee of VirVivian Johnson by deed doled
ginia were the only brothers
The difference between
1965, recorded In
the
document.
to
sign
Page 549, Meigs
snobbery and a true aKFneRecords. EX ·
ciation C?f the better t gs By Uuited Press toternatlonal
amveyed
tor------------------~--~~~-=-==---~==----------~--------,
of life JS a perceptiveness
Today is Thursday Sept 2,
deed dated
the
snob
will
qever
develop.
,
the
;n
Do
2451h day of
·• • •
The moon is between ils first
If
you
can
retoU
when
5o THE Sl' FS W/IKNE51W.FTIIE61UCE your grand fat h u . . . quarter and full phase.
10 GET' IY 11'· · THEN COMES THE BIG CE,IU • •
skip it, please.
The morning stars are
Mercury
and Sllturn.
217,
Records.
The evening stars are Venus,
The pr1yer of said complalntl'r,-T
Mars
and Jupiter.
is tor the partition of sa id real
· Those born on this day are
Htate, to have the interest of
tht plaintiff&amp; set off to them or·,
11""'-Ao 1 under the sign of Virgo.
If the ume cannotb~ dOne. then
that such real ntate be sold ;
American poet and hmnorist
that defendants ere required to
Eugen Field was born Sept. 3,
s4ft forth their Interest in sa id
reel ntate or be forever barred
Sthboi is "in," but it's 11150from asserting the same ; and
way-out
for some of the kids.
On this day in hisolry :
that plaintiffs' title · . .airt
In 1935 one of the worst
premis es bt qui~ted as
• • •
said defendants. and tc... '"''"
hurricanes 1 hit the U.S.
The pers on with 1
other rel ief as is proper.
mainland rit • ;d through the
The above men tioned pa r lin
broken hean usuaUy koiS
will further take notice that
a poor diagnosis: It's usuFlorida Keys, killing more tban
they have been made partln
ally
o
CO$e
of
wounded
36$ persons.
defendant to said complaint.
vanity.
and that they are required to
In IM$ Japan signed an
1nswer within twenty-eight &lt;211
days from the l lllf date of
IN VIETNAM
lllconditional surrender alloard
publication or this notice, the
Army
Private
First
Class
the U.S. ·batUeship Missouri in
answer dete being Octob~ 21,
1911. .
Harold F. Elliot, 21, whose Tokyo Bay, ending World War
moU~er, Mrs. Thelma V. Elliott, 0 · ·
AIll'" E. Boll
Freda Ball
and his wife, Catherine, live al ~ 1964 W~ld War I hero.
Plaintiffs .
2tl2 Madison Ave., Point. AIVIII York died al the age of
Webster and Fultz
Pleasant, is serving as an 76-·
.
Attorneys""' Plaintfffl
operations clerk witb the IIO!h In 1)168 the dealh ton m an
(I) 19, 26 (I) 2, t, 16, 23, lCI, 71
AviAtion Company near Tuy earlhquake which hit Iran w&amp;s
~~~;.!:~~~:.:.J lfoa, Vielnam.
nxed a1 12,000.
..

They'll

.K

.94

1

Time to Debunk
Beliefs on Crime

EAST
.8763

.A42

\VOO)~ iVoice along Broadway I

EDnORIAL

LEGAL NOTICE

unknown

...

z

NORTH (D)

'

MOORE'S

faVor. Pr-k,. ""'IIY •varv sllqhtly.

· VIlifY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
992-2709

MIDDLEPORT

'

124 W. MAIN

•
.

,.

•

•

\

992-2141

POIIEIOY

�,_,L_....,.. _.......""'

I

!

.

'

By Dehonlllf. c.klht
CeP'.y J;:n ""- Home Ecoa.
WIIen cloiiMII shopplng.for lhe
under41ve.tel, remember that a
cblld .llit1 to feel grown-up.
llekll ible to dress himself is
important to a child, says Mrs.
Orena . Hayne, Extension
clolblng specialist, the Ohio
Stale University. Choosing
·clolhes that a child can manage
himself aids independence, selftl)lllfldence, ·and muscle coordlnation.
Watch for self-belp features in
children's clothing,
the
cpeciallst1111!es. Lookfor snaps,

grippe111, and buttons large
enough to handle .easily. Buttons need . to be easY to gel
through the buttonholes. Watch
for zippers with easy-«&gt;-grasp
pull tabs.
Openings -regardless of lhe
type of fastener- should be In
the front of the garment. It
helps to have ,openings in all
garmenls in the same place.
Long openings are another help.
Avoid bullon loops, hooks and
eyes, and sashea that need
tying.
""'
Check for these . self-help
features, too:
-Generous size in sleeves
and armholes - no tight bands
on pUffed' sleeves!
- Roomy neck openings.
·
-Elastic waistbands in pan Is
and skirts.
-Features that niake the
backor_frontofa l!armenteasy
to identify.
-Suspender straps securely
fastened at the point of back
crossing.
-'rWO-Piece outfits - shirt
and psnls or blouse and skirt.
Buying clohtes too large for a
child is a false economy.
Clothes too large are uncomfortable and may make a

THE
PERFECT WAY
TO LEARN
As a school shoe It's
tops. The fashion's
right, and Miss Robin
has built-In durability
and lme fit all at a
reasonable price.

elHile~ber Technical and AdCOLUMBUS(UPI)-Aglance .pany. Vote : ~- ,
Holzer Medical Center, First Pleasant, a son.
at activity Wednesday in the Ain. H1!6$1, MeLin, Provides visory Oouhcil on 011 and .Ga8
Ave. and Cedar St. General
DISCHARGFJI
, Ohio General Assembly:
- for a national Museum of Afro- with a person having landvisiting hours 2-4 and 7_. p. m. . Elmer S. Bailey, James L.
HOUle .
American history and culture owners' royalty interesls in oil
and gas production.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Barlow, Vernon M. Canny, Clan
Billa Puaed
near Wilberforce. Vote: 79-3.
4:30 p. m. Parenls only on B. Cox, Shawn C. Fetty; Mrs. A. SB305, Armstrong, Revises ' Ain. HB598, Batchelder, AuthPedlatrlcs Ward.
Marvin L Folden and daughter, certain assessment and opera- orizes Deparlolent of Insurance .
BIRTHS
Randy L. Foley, Mrs. Herschel ting procedures for soU and wa- to regulate title insur_anco: pre?~·
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Gilkey, Timothy Ray Glenn, ter.conservationdistricts. Vote : ium rates and reqwre tille mTrader, Pomeroy, a daughter; DelbertM. Johnston, Shirley Jo au.
surance companies to file anYou can start losing weight
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Wells, Minnis, .Mrs. RUSBell G. Noll,
AID: HB500, Pemberton, En- nual reports with the depart- today
. MONADEX is a tiny
ta!;Jier and easy to take. '
Long Bottom, a son, and Mr. Mrs. Charles A, Queen, Mrs. abies boards of education to en- ment. Vote: 77_..
MONADEX will help curb your
and Mr_s. Larry L. Morgan, Pt. Carl B Ratcliff, Billy H. Roush, ter into special arrangments for
·
Seoate
desire tor excess fQOd, E·at le.ss •
weigh . less . t'ontalns no
Larry M. RUSBell, Lewis T. provldingfoodservlcesandpur·
BOis Passed
.
dangerOus drugs .ahd will not
- - - - - - - - - Taylor, Mrs. Gordon B. chasing food supplies. Vote: 91· Ain.SB413,Taft,Simpllfiesad- make you . nervous . No
Guards Replaced
·Teaford, M. Martha Tilton, o.
. ;
ministration of lhe estate tax by strenuous e~ercise . Change
life ... start today.
WNOON (UP!) -Khaki-clad Wm, V. Kelly, Patrick _ G.
Am. HB544, Schuck, Authori- reducing the time for filing and your
MONAOEX cOSI$ S3.00 for a 20
day supply . Lose ugly fat or
Royal Artillery troops took over Nortlrup, Belt J . Simpson.
zes a court to modify ·an order psying the tax. Vole: 3HI.
your mon~y will be refunded
guard duty · at Buckingham
in a divorce or separation de- Ain. HB136, Davidson, Granls with
no questions asked.
Palace Wednesday because of a
cree when such order is being free automobile license plates to MONADEX iS sold with this
guarantee by : Swisher &amp; Lohse
shortage of the regular redviolated by one of the parties. paralyzed veterans. Vote: Zl-3. Drugs • 112 E. Main &amp; DuHon
coated and bearll)dn-bitted .
Vote: 63-ZI. .
SB425, Armstrong, Replaces Drug Store ~ Middleport • Mall
palace guards who are serving
Am. SB350, Dennis, Transfers lhe public member on the sev- Orders Filled.
in Norlhern Ireland and over· ••....t
responsibility IO!''issuing water- --I
seas.
lUMo
craft tiUe certificates and regIt was the third time this
istrations from registrar of rnayear that troops of other
tor vehicles bureau to waterregimenls have been detailed to
craft division chief. Vote: 119-2.
gullfd lhe Royal Family's
Am. SB311, Tait, establishes
London residence because the
method for determining lhe
regular guard unils were "not · WASHIN_GTON
-The eq!Utableshare value of perpetavaiable. In November a unit Cost of LIVIng Council has ruled ual deposit insurance premiwns
of Gurkhas the British 'Army's that military commissaries in conversion to a stock comrenowned ;oldlers from Nepal, ~t increase lheir prices
o ·PEN
Y .
are sclieduled · to take over at dunng the 96-day freeze.
M4~ lB:OO AM to 10:o0---PM.
the palace
The council also ruled that
·
C&lt;llllpanies who have to buy
I

child feel unhappy or defensive.
Design features rather than
extra . size should allow for
growth.
You can help a child, too, by
buying garments that are
comfortable and stay in place.
This means socks that stay up
on the leg; shoes that stay on
the foot; panls and skirts that
slay at the waist; psnls ,that fit
closely at lhe crotch; tops tl!at
allow for reaching and bending:
Keep your child's "growing
up" needs in mind as you select
his clothing.

To Price Freeze
&lt;l!I")

J:1
AI,ar
.f.
A ttend .nl
U."ll R ltes :!~w~~n:'!a:::
Several .rrom
to

~hapman's .

Shoes
Main St.

1--------...,..--"'
'&lt;:H,..

.~ rv··~~

Ockerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Burnem
of Wheelersburg, 0 .; Rev. and
Mrs. Eddie Burnem of Mays·
ville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Hill of Uma; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Abbott of Julian, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Crever Saul,
Mr. and Mrs. Genela Settle,
"11 of
Mrs. Reba McComor, ow
Yawkey, w. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Henderson of Guysville;
Mr. and Mrs. James Manzi of
Rogers, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Wandall Ray and family, Mrs.

,-

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio is
in the midst "of a soaring epidemlc of venereal disease" with
Ohioans under 25 years of age

~""""----. the harde11t hit, the Ohio Phar·

j';.)t-,...

.,.

-:-:

·

SEE BAKERS···
YOUR HEADQUARTERS
FOR

ADMIRAL
e COlDR lV, RADIOS, STEREOS

e DUPLEX REFRIGERATORS
e AIR OONDITIONERS

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

PHOTO SPErJAL

more expensive, clean-burning

added cost their customers.
St. Clair Miller of Bidwell; In its latest annoimcement on
Thomas McClain of Cincinnati; questions arising from lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hill and administration's economic staDanny, of Scott Depot, W.Va.; bilization policies, the council
Rev. Pearl Casto of Stockdale, also said:
'
0.; MyrUe Parkins of Milton, Q: Can a municipality
w. va.
increase a utility franchise fee?
Mrs. Beulah .W~de Chaney of A: No. This Ia a charge for
Culloden, w. va.; ~-and Mrs. service and not a tax.
Jack !larless, Yawkey, W.Va.; Q·. Can a utili'ty company
Mrs. Jay Pancake of East pass on to customers a
Palestine, o.; Mrs. Bill Bigelow- franchise fee that has been
and Joe Hill of COlumbus and recentiy increased?
Mrs. Charles Mugroge and A: No. The rates are frozen
family of New Matamoras.
and increased costa cannot be
passed on during the freeze.
Q: If a regulatory agency
7\.T
permits a utility company to
1
adjust ita rates upward when
the cost of fuel increases can
' rL 0
the utility company r~ ils
rates if fuel costa Increase
during the freeze?
·
.
.
A- No
be a higher proportion of unre- · - ·
ported _cases In fringe areas.
LeadinS gonorrhea rates for TITLE FIGHT SET
cities in' Ohio per 100,1100 resi- MONTERREY, Mexico (UP!)
dents ,was: Cleveland, 99t.7; -Mexico's Clemente Sanchez,
Akron, 966.7; Dayton 723.8; Co- the fourth ranted featherweight
lumbus, 887.2; Cincinnati 399.8; in the world has accepted a
an~Toledo -~ · 5 · 'd the te $10,000 offe; to fight World
e assocl8 ~ 881
ra Boxing Council champion Kuniper 100,1100 residents between aki Sblbata of Japan for the
lhe ages of 15 to 19 years last t!Ue Nov. II in Japan, it was
year j~ped to _1,049.6 com- announced Wednesdsy.
pared With 420.3 m 1966.

enerea l DisBaSe "'Bar
Enidemic
State In Onw
'r
.
J'J:

maceutlcaiAssOciatlonreported
Wednesday.
The association, in a report,
said the gonorrhea rate is just
about double the showing made
by this disease in 1965.
The pharmacists group said it
would carry on an "intensive
grass roots" campaign aimed
at building public understanding cf the .mJor:-educa~on,
prevention and trealnlent in
bringing venereal disease under
.control.
The association said gonorrhea reached a rate last year
· of 260 reported cases out of
~ecy 100;1100 Ohio residents.
The association pointed out,
however, that there are from
three to nine unreported cases
for every one reported.
Cities generally showed higher VD rates than suburbs or
rural areas though there may

"*""',

Abide

0

Relatives from .a distance
attending funeral services for
Mrs. Orpha Hill at 'the Letart
FallsMethodistChurchMonday
were: Mrs. D. G. Thomas of
Lanham, W.Va.; Mr. Richard
. Burnem and Guy Burnem of
.CantOn, o:; Mrs. Patsy Nelson,
Mrs. Mary Stephens, Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Rous h an d
children, Mr. and Mrs. ',Robert
Euler and children, Mr. and
Mrs . Ray Hoppe, all of
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. John McCormick, Mr. and
Mrs. Opsl Van Meter, Mrs.
Russell LltUe, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Grinun, all of Columbus; Mrs. Albert McClain,
Janice and Bob of CuUer o. ·
Mr. ahd Mrs. Albert McOain:
Jr., Mrs. Donna McClain, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Alk!"e, Tracy and
Daron, all of Marietta; Mr. and
Pomeroy Mrs. Jerry McClain of Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth

Coach Bob Sang's Huntington fidenthebadbftallbeara's
East ~ will battle best players in lliR KirL
Coacb C. L ( Jobnny) Ecker's Da'rid While ..t 1\m Ward.
GAllS Blue Devils in a pre- ''White is as good !IS ladle as
. sm controlled scrimmage there is in lbe .TP-State area,n
on Memorial Field Friday , Sangstaled. "Be'sasgoodallid
beginning at 7:30p.m.
as I've had 111ft J[irt..t Wild
The Highlanders have II are !bitt • - ftgda's ..t
v~terans returning from lhe they're good - -n
1970 squad whicb posted a 3-6-1 The trio 1aeioed ldaable
season retu'd.
mention alJ.&amp;I:ate last
sm.
Sang, former GABS grid Kirk, a ~10. !Itt
goes
coacb (1957, 1958 and 1959) last both waysatrightelill Ward, a
week told the Huntington Ad- ~10, IMponnl fullbart, is a
vertiser that "a good season linebacker em doftiiiE.
depends on luck and the Eleven letkrmmrebn fnlm
last-avm's 3-6-1 squad- the
breakes."
Sang was hesitant to make largest (IUII!her al bullknas at
any predictions, but was con- East in lbe mnnbrr al years.

Commissaries

Stiversville News Notes
Mrs . Nadine Euler and
children and Mrs. Marge Roush
were recent guesls of Mr. Clint
Birch and Leota and attended
the Meigs County Fair. They
also visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Euler and Doyle Sargent at
Hemlock Grove.
Mrs. Iva Williams, Mr. and
Mrs. Raleigh Williams, Akron,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Slavens,
Bellville, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Allen and Darlene,
Ripley, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Evans and Paul Dean
were recent guesls of Mrs.
Sylvia Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van Meter
and Missey of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Evans and
children, Mrs. Blain Darley and
Bryan were Saturday guesls of
Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst,

Scotty and Jason, Athens, were
recent guesls of his parenls,
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst and
Torri.
Mr.andMrs. Randall Talbott,
New Lexington, and Mr. and
Mrs. George Souders, Xenia,
visited Mrs. Olive Talbott,
Tuesday.
Walter Crooks called on
Frank Cornell Monday evening.
Mrs. Dorsa Deal, Gambier,
spent two weeks with Mrs.
Sylvia Carpenter recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Allen
and family, Ripley, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Lawson and
Talks Postponed
family Sunday afternoon.
PARIS (UPI) -The I28th
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkerson
session of the Paris Vietnam
and Shawn spent a recent
peace talks will be held Sept. 9
weekend with her parents Mr.
instead of today because of the
and Mrs. Rudy Durst.
North Vietnamese national
. Mr. and Mrs. Danny Hains,
hoUday.
Columbus, -spent a recent
r---------•llllllilioll.iiliiiliii-ioiii..O.~
- weekend with her mother, Mrs.
Icy Daily. Melvin Dailey
returned home with them to
spend a week.
Mr. Tom Durst and Mr. Jack
Richard attended lhe races at
Proctorville recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Deibert Bissell
FOR ANY
and family of Columbus spent ·a
weekend with her parenls, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Brewer and sons.
Harold Brewer called on his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer and David Saturday
afternoon. ·
Recent guesls of E. H. Carpenter and family were Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Carpenter, . Mrs;
Dorsa Deal, Sylvia Carpenter,
The New Yon Clotlling
Mrs. Olive Talbott, Mrs. Oris
Frederick, Eber Ours, S. W.
House has it.
Durst, Sylvia Allen, Elva
Dailey, Brenda Lawrence,
Reserve Tickets
Rudy Durst, Danny Haines,
General Admission
Melvin
Dailey,
Patty
Tickets For Tbe
Gluesencamp, Mr. and Mrs. R.
Marauders Home
R. Durst, Tom Durst, Paul
Games Available Here

Make New Ycri\aothing tbiSe
YOUR FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

BYMrs.EVELYNBRICKLES
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Bush of
Uncasville, Conn., visited her
gr~ndmother, Mrs. Lola
Griffin, and also her aunt,~­
S~lt~U:? fam_IIy
'th
N IS .se~
WJ .
· · avy 111
nnecticut.
Ba~· kand turM~. h Thur;:;:
nding~ re nk
omCole b
"""
aHann
wee a1of De
urn us.
.
urn
nver,
Colo., and his mother, Mrs. Ella
Hannum of Lo~ Bottom, spent
a rec;;:~y WJdthbrMru;"d Mrs.
Fon
. yRanb 1 Mr. . k Mrs.
o er
arcm o
returne«! home from Veterans
Memoml Hosp1~l Sun~ay
where she was a medical
patient.
·
Dorsel Miller was taken to St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg
one dsy last week after he
became ill at his home.
Mr. and Mrs. c. R. Morton
and son of Dayton spent the
weekend here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Nichols. The Nichols other
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wilford
Tippie of Athens Route 5 also
visited them Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
Whiteside of Parkersburg
visited Mrs. Bessie Webster and
their granddaughter returned
home with them alter spending
the summer with Mrs. Webster.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Sammy Randin and Mr.
and Mrs. Riley Pigott of Long
Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Riggs
and family of Logan and Mrs.
Lindsey Lyons III and daughter
of Parkersburg were Sunday
guesls of Mr. and Mrs. L. L.
Lyons and family.
Rev. C. N. Watson of
Parkersburg visited Mrs ..Elfie
Watson Tuesday.

Dependabilily
Be Prepared,

-sundav 10:30 AM
to 12:30 PM and'
S:OOto9:00 PM

a Good MoHo
That good scout, your phar.

=::t.J:tu S

Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohse, Kenneth ·
McCullough, and Charles · Riffle are your
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
Rexall Drugs. They
have low prescription
prices and prompt
service and discount
drug prices seven days
a week. Let us serve you
for all your prescription
and drug rteeds.

"william

°

filr Qua/ily·SeiYice

DktL

Tuppers Plains
Society News

macist, has all the h~ aids
active

families need.

"The Creator of Rea-'* Dnog Prices"

Jtllanr 1llJannaQt
MIDDLEPoRT 0.

~-----------!~;;;;;;;;;!-~

Depend On

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy
For Your Drug Neeth

1

'

'

LOSE UGLY FAT ,

DEBBIE CONKLIN

I

8
Huntington East Has 11 ~~~CI~~:;~.. ~~~"--'~ ....... .::. ...
.
Veterans Back FrOm ' 70

LegislatureAt
A
Glance
HOSPITAL· NEWS\ l

r~--------------------~-----1

Security in Clothes

.

-

..

Missing, however, is quarterback Steve Morris.on, the
Highlanders' "Mr. Everything1•
last season.
Rex Stoler, :i-II, I:ill lb., is the
heir apparent at quarterback,
and Sang feels he can do an
" adequ~te job." Sophomore
David Morse, a strong 6-1, 180pounder, also is in the running
for the vacant spot.
"We'll have a lot more running support than we had in the
past," the veteran coach noted.
"Both Roger Muth and Ward
bave good speed."
The two backs have been
clocked at 4.7 in the 46-yard
dash, Sang said. Muth, a 5-8,
lfiO.powld junior, is expected to
alternate at wingback with
soplxmore David Looney (IHI,
150). Mark Patrick, a strong 5-8,
I70iJoumler, larunning ahead of

junior Mike Barbera, 5-8, 14ll, at
tailback.
Expedenced players are
available at every line position.
Kirk and David Adkins (6-1,
190) return at ends. While and
Dan Colerilan (5-9, l75) both
started at tackles last season as
did guards Jim Thompson (IHI,
200) and Tim Klim (5-9, 180).
Greg Priddy, (5-10, 190), who
alternated at center a year ago
is currently running ahead of
Rick Nolte (5-11, 2001 at that
spot.
Ondefense,JohnJobs (l25)is
stilllhe Highlander.s' stopper at
middle guard. Jim Gillespie, a
husky 6-1, 2ro-pound transfer
student from Wayne, is batlling
Thompson for a starling berth
on offense and is expected to see
action at defensive tackle.

Nelsen Praises
M l•ke

0

JllPPS

Hunting Supplies
tklnting Vest, Coals,

FREE!

Hats, Bells, Shels. Et.

36-DAY

Ammurlitilll

SUPPLY
when you buy the
144-tablet bottlel

_National League: Stargell,
Poll42; H. Aaron. All 39; May,
Cin 37; John$0n, Phil 29;
I
(
I
,\
Williams, All 28.
)
American League : Smith,
Bo•, Melton, Chi and Cash, Del
27 ; Jackson, Oak 26; Nettles,
Ciev and Murcer, NY 23.
-~iO. l&amp;g•Je Leaders
Runs Batted In
By United Press International
National League: Slargell,
Lading &amp;.otters
Pill and Torre, St. L 114; H.
IUIIGMI league
Aaron. All 100; May, Cin and
"'
G. AB R. H. Pet. Montanez, Phil 85 .
Torre. St.L 137 532 7'1192 .361
American League: Killebrew,
Bdrt, Chi 129 524 80 181 .345 Minn 95 ; Bando, Oak 114;
Omnt, Pi t 114 4.58 75 156 .341 Murcer, NY 81; Smith, Bo• 79 ;
Garr. At1 132 541 87 17'1 .331 B. Robinson and F. Robinson,
SngUn, Pit 121 465 56 154 .331 Bait 77.
Jones, NY 116 439 55 144 .328
Pitching
Br-ock. SI.L 132 533 107 170 .319
Na1ional League: Jenkins,
HAam, All 120 420 80 134 .319 C~i 21-11 ; Ellis, Pill and
Davis, LA 132 531 69 167 .315 Carlton, St. L 18-7; Downing, La
Alou, St. L 127 521 68 163 .313 and Seaver, NY 16-8; Pappa$,
American league
Chi 16-11.
G. AB R. H. Pel.
American League: Blue, Oak
Oiva, Min 110 432 67 151 .350 23-6; Lolich. Del 21 -10; Wood,
Murcer, NY 131 476 82 153 .321 Chi 18-10; Dobson, Ball 17-6;
Rttrnd, Bit 115 J97 70 122 .307 Cuellar, Ball 17-7; Hunler, Oak
Tovar, Min 129 542 80 164 .303 17-11.

o,

1'.•' ~'

,

REG.VAWE •1138

YOU PAY sa.&amp;9

and COMFORT

"AIIIrlcl's llrpst AIHR&amp;IIIIU·JIIIIIIn lluiU·IIIIItlll ,nJ I"
SUPER PLENAMINS ••• USED BY AU 21 TEAMS
OF THE NATIONAL FOOTBAU LEAGUE!

Buys!

• •

·uM IT 1 PER SUBJECT

2 PER FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT 991 PER SUBJECT
NO AGE LIMIT

Roof

THU~EPT. 4th
. ''

HOURS 10 A.M. ,· 6 P.M.
ONE DAY ONLY .

SHOPPERS MART
MASON, W. VA.
Honey Portraits

Box 7 l!:elpre, 0.

·The Farmers Bank

to wear to 'the game

Kerm Says: "Good Luck To All Tbe Area
Football . Teams"

New York Clothing House
- ~ ~'tt+y ~~

----

or-~m

POMEROY, OHIO

•
••

AWslos Aluminum
Wdh Asbest. Fibre

••

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., I Confinuousivl$20,000 Maximum lnsurjlnce ··
For Each Depositor

•"
•
••
•

H. D. I.EE

..
~

Matched OuiRts

rr.m.rruon -

•

•

'

CERTIFIED WELDER

I

Portable Equipment
Shop or Field ·
Jill, 992-2511

Dickie Permanent P,ww OutjiD

•

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

,,

Ebersbach Hardware

MAIN .ST. •

'

'

:

'

I

.l. -~-

I

10
OUR OOMMUNITY
WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
. COME IN AND SEE USI

POMEROY

(

·

1111 Ove•ulls. Dunp•••• and

••

GAliON

5 GAL CAN

Member Federal Reserve System

•

•375

•375 .

••

~

"Your Sportsminded Store"
Main Street
Pomeroy

~~TH-47'+.~~

-and _Savings Co.

Asllesb Fibre

88

REG. 199.95

COMPLETE Including
foot control at this
low price.

on
FEATURES:
Does
adj•.ostaHe
zig-zags,

ln1ernationar League

Standings
BY: United Pre$$ International
W L Pd. GB
x-Roche•ter
85 54 .612Charle•ton
78 61 .561 7
Tidewater
78 61 .561 7
Syracuse
73 66 .525 12
loui•ville
70 69 .504 15
Richmond
69 70 .496 16
t aledo
59 80 .4~4 .26
Winnipeg
44 95 .317 41
x-Ciinched Pennant
Wednesday's Results
Rochester 7 Syracuse 5
Louisville 14 Winnipeg 0
Toledo 12 Charle•lon 6
Tidewater 4 Richmond 3

. pctlable sewing

machine il-l Singer.
Take It home In Ita own

carrying case now I

We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.

MATHESON TRADED
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Unebacker Bob Matheson, the
Cleveland Browns top draft
choice in 1967, has been traded
to the Miami Dolphins for that
club's second draft choice in
1972.
Matheson, 6-4 and 235 pounds,
never became a starter with the
Browns.

.,..

.,.

.•

.•

SINGER SALES &amp;' SEIIIIItE
McCALL'$&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERN$-

992-2284

' 115 W. Second

APPROVED 51 NC 1111 DEALER

Pomeroy, 0 . .
: 'A Trademar'lldTHESINGERCOMPNIY

A FEW OF THE MANY SPECIALS

You might want

BLACK

Worthington ; Larry Craig, Can·
ton; Don Miller, Wooster, and
Paul Thomas, Zanesville.
Jim Brown of Kent and Chuck
Rotar of Cantoo both had 2868.
Tied at 'llfl were Bernie Haas,
Cleveland; Phil Ferrante,
Toledo ; Chuck ticker, Fairborn; Jack Orbnan, Columbus,
and Joe Talley, Kirtland
A field of 204 started the
tournament Monday, with lhe
field trimmed to 66 pros and 10
amateurs at the halfway point
of the 72-bole event.

FRANKLI

CLOTHING

99°
A 517 LIVING COLOR

Bill Gogolewslri pitched a
four-hitler for his lint major
league shutout u Washington
topped New York. Ron Kline
allowed sill hils while suffering
the loss. Tom McCI:aw's fly in
the first inning fell in between
Bobb Murcer and Ron Blomberg for a run-!!Corlng triple
and that was all lhe help
Gogolewski needed.
Reggie Jackson bit his 26th
huffier and a pair of singles a.s
Oakland blasted California.
Chuck Dobson pitched a sevenhitter for the A's to boost his
record to 1~. It was bls first
shutout of the seai!Oit

ISAVE $3()011

JOB

Evans and sons, Mrs. Bernice
Hart and Marthb, Walter
Crooks, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Durst and sons, Bob Hartenbach, Gilllan Taylor, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Miller and
children and Mr. and Mrs. Eiza
Birch.

r Chicago but Bart Jobnllon
go lhe victory in_relief. Wood,
1\1-1 WIIS pitching With two
days · t and baa llot ltarted
·five g
in the last two
weeks.
Ike Br n bit· a three4un
homer In
secmd and BW
Freehan singled home lbe deciding run in the sixth to llft
Detroit past Cleveland. Ltl
Cain went eight innings to (p!t
the VIctory
·
and Fred Scherman
finished up lor his 19th save.
Bob Helae singled with hro
out in the ninth inningr to IICOI'e
Ellie Rodriguez from third and
give Milwaukee the victory
over Kansas City. Rodriguez
douj)led off Tom Burgmeler and
took third on a groundout
before scoring on Helae's bit.

In the National League,
Pitlsburgh outlasted . PhiladelphiA 10-7, New York routed .St.
Louis 7-1, San Diego topped
Cincinnati 3-1, Los Angeles beat
Houston 9-2, Atlanta blanked
San Francisco 4-0 and Montreal
ripped Chicago II-2 in the
compleUon of a suspended
game before Chicago won the
regular game 5-2_
Bert Blyleven pitched 10
scoreless innings but Chicago
jumped on reliever Bob Beghard for two runs in lhe lith to
beat Minnesota . Carlos May's
bloop single and Walt Williams'
sacrifice fly ptoduced the only
runs of the game. Wilbur Wood

SALE HAS BEEN EXTENDED ONE MORE WEEK

ON
DIE

'r+ luillr81JIIW&lt;i!!i)l?"'la..

Septemb~r

to 10 feet and Cook is sinking
them from 35 feet," he added.
"I suppose 1 won it by hanging
in."
Wynn collected $1,1100 for his
first place finish. Cook received
$850 for second.
Frank Wharton of Akron fin.
ished fourth with 281. Tied .for
fifth at 284 were Bernie Alleman
of Westfield, Walker lrunan of
Columbus and Rex Wilsen of
Hudson.
Five finished at 285 - Rex
Baxter, Cleveland; Jim Canace,

ru::

'I

Shot Guns &amp;Rifles

the Orioles clobbered the
Boston Red Sox 8-2.
Merv Rettenmund, the team's
leading hitler with a .307
average, hit a three-run homer
in lhe five-run second inning
and Cuellar coasted to the
triumph.
This is how the records for
the Orioles' "big four" now
look :
Cuellar 17-7·, Pat Dobson-17 • ·,
"'
Dave McNally 16-4; Jim
Pahner 16-7.
In the other AL games,
Washington blanked New York
~. Milwaukee nipped Kansas
City 3-2, Detroit edged Cleveland 4-3, Chicago topped
Minnesota ~ in II innings and

Dayl01118D.
•
Cops Obi0 0pen T"t}
l e

MEDINA, Ohio (UP!)_ Defending champion Bob Wynn of
Dayton, wearing his ·~ucky"
floppy-brimmed, brightly colored, polka-dotted hat, won the
$10,1100 Ohio Open Golf Tourna·
ment Wednesday by one stroke
over Clifl Cook of Perrysburg.
Wynn let a live stroke lead
slip away during Wednesday's
final 36 holes, but held on and
1D
D L •
scored a final 36-hole total 142
'.D
,C
on the Westfield Country Club
.
- "
· COU!le, giving him a 72-bole toHIRAM,~hio (UP!_)- Cleve- New York Gianls Saturday tal of ZIG, 12 strokes under par.
J.ad quarterback Bill Nelsen, rught.
Cook h had I39 · · to
w11o will replace Mike Phipps ·
,w o
a
gomg m
· the s-~,.;
........ lineuP Saturda Y . Ne1sen,ever the optimist ' said T/7
the final
II
t tal round, shot a 138 for a
Digbt, said today the former he sees no reason why the
te. Do Albert f CoPunloeAil-Americanevenlually Browns can't f~ ~t the top lumb:S :ot an138 wect.:'esday
"will be a fine pro quarter- of ·lhe_ Central DiVISion of the and finished with a 280, third
back."
AmencanFootbaiiConference. be 1 . th to
NeJsen, who has been troubled
"We have basically _the same ~I'~ de~=e~ back next
with bad 1mees the past three personnel we won wtth lor a year to defend the tiUe " said
- - . said Phipps was "way couple of years," he said.
.
'
_.._~ of ha 1
·
"There ·
indi' ti to Wynn, who along With Cook had
....,.. w t was m my secIS every
ca on
p1a th final f hoi · the
11111 year."
me that the ingredienls to win to. Y e
our es m
·
lram
1!le Bruwns, winless in their are here. I expect ~. to have ..1· normally play well in the
fint ' - ,exbibitiCIIS, meet the a l!ood football tesm.
rain, and 1 certainly had to todsy ," Wynn said. "That fellow
Otis, KC
123 476 10 1« .303 Cook was hitting good and putRaja•. KC 115 414 56 124 .300 ting super-well.
Rchrdt, Chi 115 419 -46 125 .298 "I'm sinking pulls from eight
Carew, Mon 124 487 73 142 .292
Horton, Del 115 436 62 127 .291 - - - - - - - - - Smith, Bos 133 521 72 150 .288
Home Runs

and s.e

UPI Sporlll Writer
The · Baltimore Orioles now
hav~ exactiy one month before
"they .play another game Uiat
r.eally means something.
On Oct. 2, lhe Orioles will
play host to Oakland and Vida
Blue in the first game of the
American League playoffs
shooting for their third straight
pennant.
But that doesn't, mean the
Orioles are going to have a dull
final month. They still ·have a
realistic chance of becoming
the first team in 51 years to
boast four :IG-game winners.
Mike Cuellar became . the
second pitcher on the staff to
record No. 17 Tuesday night

·'

\

·~ -~

~Lt-:· ·,1

r-rttJ·~J

Reo. Sl Onward Filler Paper,SOO sheets
Reo. 59c Tootsie Roll Candles,
Reo. 1.99 Dress &amp;.ogs
Reo. 49c Shoe Boxes
Reo. 3.49 GE Alarm Clock
Reo. 1.98 Book Rack, SMII
R8fl. 2.99 Lunch Box Kits
Wi111 'f2 pl. Vacuum Bo111e
Reo. 19c ·Reparl Covers
Reo. 10.50 Elec. Hair Clipper
Reo.l.49Vinyl Aprons
Reg. 1.00 Kiddie Tole 8"11
Reg. 1.27 Professional Batons
Rog 2.79 Official Size Footballs
Reg: 1.75 Cover Girl Mediated Make-Up
Reg. 2.29 Toni Home Permanent Kit .
Reg. 1,69 Webster's Dictionary
Reg. 1.20 Pkg. 12 Art Brushes
Reg. 49c Blunt· End Scissors
Rog. 59c Pointed Scissors
Rog. 49c Paper Mate Flllr Pen
Reg. 51 Water Color Points
R!IO . 39c Barrel 0' Pule
Reg. Sl Wearever P"!'s, pkg. 10

ric
Special bag SJc
5]11!ciaii.57
Special37c
Speclal2.96
Specla 11.57
Special2.37
Speclal67c
S]ll!ciol6.96
Special97c
Special87c
Special99c
Speciall.99
94C
1.13
Special1.41
Special47c
Speciol27c
Speciol37c
Speclal28c
Special 57c
Speciol27c
Special67c

Rog. 51 Ball Pens, pkg. 10
Rog. 5120-Pencil Packs, No. 2's
Rog. 1.25 Tempera Colors, 6-color
Reg. S9c El Marko Pens .
Reg. 1.27 Scripto Special, 4 pc.
Rog. 99c Blc 11-Pack, colors
Rog. 25c Scllool51oragt Boxes
Reg. 44c Onward Cello Tope
Reg. 1.39 Ruth Barry Thigh-High Hose
Reg. 99c Panty Hose, girls', women's
Reg. 59c boys Craw Socks
,
Rog. 89c Men'$ Crew Socks
Rog. 89c Athletic Socks
Reg. 3.99 Boys' No-Iron Jeans
Reg. 79c Hi-Bulk Knee-Highs

Girls Sites,

R~ .

Sl. Misses Sizes, 77c

,.
sac

~mt:~

Sjleclll6k
SJ11CiaiU7

5fMCIII51c

Spec;llfPc'
SJ11CIIIU7
5fMCIII 17c

Reg. U9 Afirm Clocks

Sfooc111U7

FRANKLI~
.: 202 .. MAIN ST.

M2-3491

$Peela167c

SjiKIII lie
Sjleclal27c

Reg. 59c Elmer's Gluo
Rog. 3.95 Portable Radio
Reg. 29c &amp;.olteries

SALE NOW IN PROGRESS AT

· PHONE

SjiKIII37c
SjleclltUc

Speclll97cc

.,

BEN

$Peelllf7c
$Peell177c

Reg. 1.29 Folding ShOes,S-IOlh

MANY OTHER SPECIALS NOT SHOWN HERE-ASK FOR ASALE Bllt

'

SjiKIII67c

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SAtuRDAY ftiGHTS Uflnl 9

�,_,L_....,.. _.......""'

I

!

.

'

By Dehonlllf. c.klht
CeP'.y J;:n ""- Home Ecoa.
WIIen cloiiMII shopplng.for lhe
under41ve.tel, remember that a
cblld .llit1 to feel grown-up.
llekll ible to dress himself is
important to a child, says Mrs.
Orena . Hayne, Extension
clolblng specialist, the Ohio
Stale University. Choosing
·clolhes that a child can manage
himself aids independence, selftl)lllfldence, ·and muscle coordlnation.
Watch for self-belp features in
children's clothing,
the
cpeciallst1111!es. Lookfor snaps,

grippe111, and buttons large
enough to handle .easily. Buttons need . to be easY to gel
through the buttonholes. Watch
for zippers with easy-«&gt;-grasp
pull tabs.
Openings -regardless of lhe
type of fastener- should be In
the front of the garment. It
helps to have ,openings in all
garmenls in the same place.
Long openings are another help.
Avoid bullon loops, hooks and
eyes, and sashea that need
tying.
""'
Check for these . self-help
features, too:
-Generous size in sleeves
and armholes - no tight bands
on pUffed' sleeves!
- Roomy neck openings.
·
-Elastic waistbands in pan Is
and skirts.
-Features that niake the
backor_frontofa l!armenteasy
to identify.
-Suspender straps securely
fastened at the point of back
crossing.
-'rWO-Piece outfits - shirt
and psnls or blouse and skirt.
Buying clohtes too large for a
child is a false economy.
Clothes too large are uncomfortable and may make a

THE
PERFECT WAY
TO LEARN
As a school shoe It's
tops. The fashion's
right, and Miss Robin
has built-In durability
and lme fit all at a
reasonable price.

elHile~ber Technical and AdCOLUMBUS(UPI)-Aglance .pany. Vote : ~- ,
Holzer Medical Center, First Pleasant, a son.
at activity Wednesday in the Ain. H1!6$1, MeLin, Provides visory Oouhcil on 011 and .Ga8
Ave. and Cedar St. General
DISCHARGFJI
, Ohio General Assembly:
- for a national Museum of Afro- with a person having landvisiting hours 2-4 and 7_. p. m. . Elmer S. Bailey, James L.
HOUle .
American history and culture owners' royalty interesls in oil
and gas production.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Barlow, Vernon M. Canny, Clan
Billa Puaed
near Wilberforce. Vote: 79-3.
4:30 p. m. Parenls only on B. Cox, Shawn C. Fetty; Mrs. A. SB305, Armstrong, Revises ' Ain. HB598, Batchelder, AuthPedlatrlcs Ward.
Marvin L Folden and daughter, certain assessment and opera- orizes Deparlolent of Insurance .
BIRTHS
Randy L. Foley, Mrs. Herschel ting procedures for soU and wa- to regulate title insur_anco: pre?~·
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Gilkey, Timothy Ray Glenn, ter.conservationdistricts. Vote : ium rates and reqwre tille mTrader, Pomeroy, a daughter; DelbertM. Johnston, Shirley Jo au.
surance companies to file anYou can start losing weight
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Wells, Minnis, .Mrs. RUSBell G. Noll,
AID: HB500, Pemberton, En- nual reports with the depart- today
. MONADEX is a tiny
ta!;Jier and easy to take. '
Long Bottom, a son, and Mr. Mrs. Charles A, Queen, Mrs. abies boards of education to en- ment. Vote: 77_..
MONADEX will help curb your
and Mr_s. Larry L. Morgan, Pt. Carl B Ratcliff, Billy H. Roush, ter into special arrangments for
·
Seoate
desire tor excess fQOd, E·at le.ss •
weigh . less . t'ontalns no
Larry M. RUSBell, Lewis T. provldingfoodservlcesandpur·
BOis Passed
.
dangerOus drugs .ahd will not
- - - - - - - - - Taylor, Mrs. Gordon B. chasing food supplies. Vote: 91· Ain.SB413,Taft,Simpllfiesad- make you . nervous . No
Guards Replaced
·Teaford, M. Martha Tilton, o.
. ;
ministration of lhe estate tax by strenuous e~ercise . Change
life ... start today.
WNOON (UP!) -Khaki-clad Wm, V. Kelly, Patrick _ G.
Am. HB544, Schuck, Authori- reducing the time for filing and your
MONAOEX cOSI$ S3.00 for a 20
day supply . Lose ugly fat or
Royal Artillery troops took over Nortlrup, Belt J . Simpson.
zes a court to modify ·an order psying the tax. Vole: 3HI.
your mon~y will be refunded
guard duty · at Buckingham
in a divorce or separation de- Ain. HB136, Davidson, Granls with
no questions asked.
Palace Wednesday because of a
cree when such order is being free automobile license plates to MONADEX iS sold with this
guarantee by : Swisher &amp; Lohse
shortage of the regular redviolated by one of the parties. paralyzed veterans. Vote: Zl-3. Drugs • 112 E. Main &amp; DuHon
coated and bearll)dn-bitted .
Vote: 63-ZI. .
SB425, Armstrong, Replaces Drug Store ~ Middleport • Mall
palace guards who are serving
Am. SB350, Dennis, Transfers lhe public member on the sev- Orders Filled.
in Norlhern Ireland and over· ••....t
responsibility IO!''issuing water- --I
seas.
lUMo
craft tiUe certificates and regIt was the third time this
istrations from registrar of rnayear that troops of other
tor vehicles bureau to waterregimenls have been detailed to
craft division chief. Vote: 119-2.
gullfd lhe Royal Family's
Am. SB311, Tait, establishes
London residence because the
method for determining lhe
regular guard unils were "not · WASHIN_GTON
-The eq!Utableshare value of perpetavaiable. In November a unit Cost of LIVIng Council has ruled ual deposit insurance premiwns
of Gurkhas the British 'Army's that military commissaries in conversion to a stock comrenowned ;oldlers from Nepal, ~t increase lheir prices
o ·PEN
Y .
are sclieduled · to take over at dunng the 96-day freeze.
M4~ lB:OO AM to 10:o0---PM.
the palace
The council also ruled that
·
C&lt;llllpanies who have to buy
I

child feel unhappy or defensive.
Design features rather than
extra . size should allow for
growth.
You can help a child, too, by
buying garments that are
comfortable and stay in place.
This means socks that stay up
on the leg; shoes that stay on
the foot; panls and skirts that
slay at the waist; psnls ,that fit
closely at lhe crotch; tops tl!at
allow for reaching and bending:
Keep your child's "growing
up" needs in mind as you select
his clothing.

To Price Freeze
&lt;l!I")

J:1
AI,ar
.f.
A ttend .nl
U."ll R ltes :!~w~~n:'!a:::
Several .rrom
to

~hapman's .

Shoes
Main St.

1--------...,..--"'
'&lt;:H,..

.~ rv··~~

Ockerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Burnem
of Wheelersburg, 0 .; Rev. and
Mrs. Eddie Burnem of Mays·
ville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Hill of Uma; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Abbott of Julian, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Crever Saul,
Mr. and Mrs. Genela Settle,
"11 of
Mrs. Reba McComor, ow
Yawkey, w. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Henderson of Guysville;
Mr. and Mrs. James Manzi of
Rogers, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Wandall Ray and family, Mrs.

,-

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio is
in the midst "of a soaring epidemlc of venereal disease" with
Ohioans under 25 years of age

~""""----. the harde11t hit, the Ohio Phar·

j';.)t-,...

.,.

-:-:

·

SEE BAKERS···
YOUR HEADQUARTERS
FOR

ADMIRAL
e COlDR lV, RADIOS, STEREOS

e DUPLEX REFRIGERATORS
e AIR OONDITIONERS

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

PHOTO SPErJAL

more expensive, clean-burning

added cost their customers.
St. Clair Miller of Bidwell; In its latest annoimcement on
Thomas McClain of Cincinnati; questions arising from lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hill and administration's economic staDanny, of Scott Depot, W.Va.; bilization policies, the council
Rev. Pearl Casto of Stockdale, also said:
'
0.; MyrUe Parkins of Milton, Q: Can a municipality
w. va.
increase a utility franchise fee?
Mrs. Beulah .W~de Chaney of A: No. This Ia a charge for
Culloden, w. va.; ~-and Mrs. service and not a tax.
Jack !larless, Yawkey, W.Va.; Q·. Can a utili'ty company
Mrs. Jay Pancake of East pass on to customers a
Palestine, o.; Mrs. Bill Bigelow- franchise fee that has been
and Joe Hill of COlumbus and recentiy increased?
Mrs. Charles Mugroge and A: No. The rates are frozen
family of New Matamoras.
and increased costa cannot be
passed on during the freeze.
Q: If a regulatory agency
7\.T
permits a utility company to
1
adjust ita rates upward when
the cost of fuel increases can
' rL 0
the utility company r~ ils
rates if fuel costa Increase
during the freeze?
·
.
.
A- No
be a higher proportion of unre- · - ·
ported _cases In fringe areas.
LeadinS gonorrhea rates for TITLE FIGHT SET
cities in' Ohio per 100,1100 resi- MONTERREY, Mexico (UP!)
dents ,was: Cleveland, 99t.7; -Mexico's Clemente Sanchez,
Akron, 966.7; Dayton 723.8; Co- the fourth ranted featherweight
lumbus, 887.2; Cincinnati 399.8; in the world has accepted a
an~Toledo -~ · 5 · 'd the te $10,000 offe; to fight World
e assocl8 ~ 881
ra Boxing Council champion Kuniper 100,1100 residents between aki Sblbata of Japan for the
lhe ages of 15 to 19 years last t!Ue Nov. II in Japan, it was
year j~ped to _1,049.6 com- announced Wednesdsy.
pared With 420.3 m 1966.

enerea l DisBaSe "'Bar
Enidemic
State In Onw
'r
.
J'J:

maceutlcaiAssOciatlonreported
Wednesday.
The association, in a report,
said the gonorrhea rate is just
about double the showing made
by this disease in 1965.
The pharmacists group said it
would carry on an "intensive
grass roots" campaign aimed
at building public understanding cf the .mJor:-educa~on,
prevention and trealnlent in
bringing venereal disease under
.control.
The association said gonorrhea reached a rate last year
· of 260 reported cases out of
~ecy 100;1100 Ohio residents.
The association pointed out,
however, that there are from
three to nine unreported cases
for every one reported.
Cities generally showed higher VD rates than suburbs or
rural areas though there may

"*""',

Abide

0

Relatives from .a distance
attending funeral services for
Mrs. Orpha Hill at 'the Letart
FallsMethodistChurchMonday
were: Mrs. D. G. Thomas of
Lanham, W.Va.; Mr. Richard
. Burnem and Guy Burnem of
.CantOn, o:; Mrs. Patsy Nelson,
Mrs. Mary Stephens, Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Rous h an d
children, Mr. and Mrs. ',Robert
Euler and children, Mr. and
Mrs . Ray Hoppe, all of
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. John McCormick, Mr. and
Mrs. Opsl Van Meter, Mrs.
Russell LltUe, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Grinun, all of Columbus; Mrs. Albert McClain,
Janice and Bob of CuUer o. ·
Mr. ahd Mrs. Albert McOain:
Jr., Mrs. Donna McClain, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Alk!"e, Tracy and
Daron, all of Marietta; Mr. and
Pomeroy Mrs. Jerry McClain of Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth

Coach Bob Sang's Huntington fidenthebadbftallbeara's
East ~ will battle best players in lliR KirL
Coacb C. L ( Jobnny) Ecker's Da'rid While ..t 1\m Ward.
GAllS Blue Devils in a pre- ''White is as good !IS ladle as
. sm controlled scrimmage there is in lbe .TP-State area,n
on Memorial Field Friday , Sangstaled. "Be'sasgoodallid
beginning at 7:30p.m.
as I've had 111ft J[irt..t Wild
The Highlanders have II are !bitt • - ftgda's ..t
v~terans returning from lhe they're good - -n
1970 squad whicb posted a 3-6-1 The trio 1aeioed ldaable
season retu'd.
mention alJ.&amp;I:ate last
sm.
Sang, former GABS grid Kirk, a ~10. !Itt
goes
coacb (1957, 1958 and 1959) last both waysatrightelill Ward, a
week told the Huntington Ad- ~10, IMponnl fullbart, is a
vertiser that "a good season linebacker em doftiiiE.
depends on luck and the Eleven letkrmmrebn fnlm
last-avm's 3-6-1 squad- the
breakes."
Sang was hesitant to make largest (IUII!her al bullknas at
any predictions, but was con- East in lbe mnnbrr al years.

Commissaries

Stiversville News Notes
Mrs . Nadine Euler and
children and Mrs. Marge Roush
were recent guesls of Mr. Clint
Birch and Leota and attended
the Meigs County Fair. They
also visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Euler and Doyle Sargent at
Hemlock Grove.
Mrs. Iva Williams, Mr. and
Mrs. Raleigh Williams, Akron,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Slavens,
Bellville, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Allen and Darlene,
Ripley, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Evans and Paul Dean
were recent guesls of Mrs.
Sylvia Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van Meter
and Missey of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Evans and
children, Mrs. Blain Darley and
Bryan were Saturday guesls of
Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Durst,

Scotty and Jason, Athens, were
recent guesls of his parenls,
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst and
Torri.
Mr.andMrs. Randall Talbott,
New Lexington, and Mr. and
Mrs. George Souders, Xenia,
visited Mrs. Olive Talbott,
Tuesday.
Walter Crooks called on
Frank Cornell Monday evening.
Mrs. Dorsa Deal, Gambier,
spent two weeks with Mrs.
Sylvia Carpenter recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Allen
and family, Ripley, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Lawson and
Talks Postponed
family Sunday afternoon.
PARIS (UPI) -The I28th
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkerson
session of the Paris Vietnam
and Shawn spent a recent
peace talks will be held Sept. 9
weekend with her parents Mr.
instead of today because of the
and Mrs. Rudy Durst.
North Vietnamese national
. Mr. and Mrs. Danny Hains,
hoUday.
Columbus, -spent a recent
r---------•llllllilioll.iiliiiliii-ioiii..O.~
- weekend with her mother, Mrs.
Icy Daily. Melvin Dailey
returned home with them to
spend a week.
Mr. Tom Durst and Mr. Jack
Richard attended lhe races at
Proctorville recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Deibert Bissell
FOR ANY
and family of Columbus spent ·a
weekend with her parenls, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Brewer and sons.
Harold Brewer called on his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Brewer and David Saturday
afternoon. ·
Recent guesls of E. H. Carpenter and family were Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Carpenter, . Mrs;
Dorsa Deal, Sylvia Carpenter,
The New Yon Clotlling
Mrs. Olive Talbott, Mrs. Oris
Frederick, Eber Ours, S. W.
House has it.
Durst, Sylvia Allen, Elva
Dailey, Brenda Lawrence,
Reserve Tickets
Rudy Durst, Danny Haines,
General Admission
Melvin
Dailey,
Patty
Tickets For Tbe
Gluesencamp, Mr. and Mrs. R.
Marauders Home
R. Durst, Tom Durst, Paul
Games Available Here

Make New Ycri\aothing tbiSe
YOUR FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

BYMrs.EVELYNBRICKLES
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Bush of
Uncasville, Conn., visited her
gr~ndmother, Mrs. Lola
Griffin, and also her aunt,~­
S~lt~U:? fam_IIy
'th
N IS .se~
WJ .
· · avy 111
nnecticut.
Ba~· kand turM~. h Thur;:;:
nding~ re nk
omCole b
"""
aHann
wee a1of De
urn us.
.
urn
nver,
Colo., and his mother, Mrs. Ella
Hannum of Lo~ Bottom, spent
a rec;;:~y WJdthbrMru;"d Mrs.
Fon
. yRanb 1 Mr. . k Mrs.
o er
arcm o
returne«! home from Veterans
Memoml Hosp1~l Sun~ay
where she was a medical
patient.
·
Dorsel Miller was taken to St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg
one dsy last week after he
became ill at his home.
Mr. and Mrs. c. R. Morton
and son of Dayton spent the
weekend here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Nichols. The Nichols other
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wilford
Tippie of Athens Route 5 also
visited them Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
Whiteside of Parkersburg
visited Mrs. Bessie Webster and
their granddaughter returned
home with them alter spending
the summer with Mrs. Webster.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Sammy Randin and Mr.
and Mrs. Riley Pigott of Long
Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Riggs
and family of Logan and Mrs.
Lindsey Lyons III and daughter
of Parkersburg were Sunday
guesls of Mr. and Mrs. L. L.
Lyons and family.
Rev. C. N. Watson of
Parkersburg visited Mrs ..Elfie
Watson Tuesday.

Dependabilily
Be Prepared,

-sundav 10:30 AM
to 12:30 PM and'
S:OOto9:00 PM

a Good MoHo
That good scout, your phar.

=::t.J:tu S

Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohse, Kenneth ·
McCullough, and Charles · Riffle are your
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
Rexall Drugs. They
have low prescription
prices and prompt
service and discount
drug prices seven days
a week. Let us serve you
for all your prescription
and drug rteeds.

"william

°

filr Qua/ily·SeiYice

DktL

Tuppers Plains
Society News

macist, has all the h~ aids
active

families need.

"The Creator of Rea-'* Dnog Prices"

Jtllanr 1llJannaQt
MIDDLEPoRT 0.

~-----------!~;;;;;;;;;!-~

Depend On

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy
For Your Drug Neeth

1

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LOSE UGLY FAT ,

DEBBIE CONKLIN

I

8
Huntington East Has 11 ~~~CI~~:;~.. ~~~"--'~ ....... .::. ...
.
Veterans Back FrOm ' 70

LegislatureAt
A
Glance
HOSPITAL· NEWS\ l

r~--------------------~-----1

Security in Clothes

.

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..

Missing, however, is quarterback Steve Morris.on, the
Highlanders' "Mr. Everything1•
last season.
Rex Stoler, :i-II, I:ill lb., is the
heir apparent at quarterback,
and Sang feels he can do an
" adequ~te job." Sophomore
David Morse, a strong 6-1, 180pounder, also is in the running
for the vacant spot.
"We'll have a lot more running support than we had in the
past," the veteran coach noted.
"Both Roger Muth and Ward
bave good speed."
The two backs have been
clocked at 4.7 in the 46-yard
dash, Sang said. Muth, a 5-8,
lfiO.powld junior, is expected to
alternate at wingback with
soplxmore David Looney (IHI,
150). Mark Patrick, a strong 5-8,
I70iJoumler, larunning ahead of

junior Mike Barbera, 5-8, 14ll, at
tailback.
Expedenced players are
available at every line position.
Kirk and David Adkins (6-1,
190) return at ends. While and
Dan Colerilan (5-9, l75) both
started at tackles last season as
did guards Jim Thompson (IHI,
200) and Tim Klim (5-9, 180).
Greg Priddy, (5-10, 190), who
alternated at center a year ago
is currently running ahead of
Rick Nolte (5-11, 2001 at that
spot.
Ondefense,JohnJobs (l25)is
stilllhe Highlander.s' stopper at
middle guard. Jim Gillespie, a
husky 6-1, 2ro-pound transfer
student from Wayne, is batlling
Thompson for a starling berth
on offense and is expected to see
action at defensive tackle.

Nelsen Praises
M l•ke

0

JllPPS

Hunting Supplies
tklnting Vest, Coals,

FREE!

Hats, Bells, Shels. Et.

36-DAY

Ammurlitilll

SUPPLY
when you buy the
144-tablet bottlel

_National League: Stargell,
Poll42; H. Aaron. All 39; May,
Cin 37; John$0n, Phil 29;
I
(
I
,\
Williams, All 28.
)
American League : Smith,
Bo•, Melton, Chi and Cash, Del
27 ; Jackson, Oak 26; Nettles,
Ciev and Murcer, NY 23.
-~iO. l&amp;g•Je Leaders
Runs Batted In
By United Press International
National League: Slargell,
Lading &amp;.otters
Pill and Torre, St. L 114; H.
IUIIGMI league
Aaron. All 100; May, Cin and
"'
G. AB R. H. Pet. Montanez, Phil 85 .
Torre. St.L 137 532 7'1192 .361
American League: Killebrew,
Bdrt, Chi 129 524 80 181 .345 Minn 95 ; Bando, Oak 114;
Omnt, Pi t 114 4.58 75 156 .341 Murcer, NY 81; Smith, Bo• 79 ;
Garr. At1 132 541 87 17'1 .331 B. Robinson and F. Robinson,
SngUn, Pit 121 465 56 154 .331 Bait 77.
Jones, NY 116 439 55 144 .328
Pitching
Br-ock. SI.L 132 533 107 170 .319
Na1ional League: Jenkins,
HAam, All 120 420 80 134 .319 C~i 21-11 ; Ellis, Pill and
Davis, LA 132 531 69 167 .315 Carlton, St. L 18-7; Downing, La
Alou, St. L 127 521 68 163 .313 and Seaver, NY 16-8; Pappa$,
American league
Chi 16-11.
G. AB R. H. Pel.
American League: Blue, Oak
Oiva, Min 110 432 67 151 .350 23-6; Lolich. Del 21 -10; Wood,
Murcer, NY 131 476 82 153 .321 Chi 18-10; Dobson, Ball 17-6;
Rttrnd, Bit 115 J97 70 122 .307 Cuellar, Ball 17-7; Hunler, Oak
Tovar, Min 129 542 80 164 .303 17-11.

o,

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REG.VAWE •1138

YOU PAY sa.&amp;9

and COMFORT

"AIIIrlcl's llrpst AIHR&amp;IIIIU·JIIIIIIn lluiU·IIIIItlll ,nJ I"
SUPER PLENAMINS ••• USED BY AU 21 TEAMS
OF THE NATIONAL FOOTBAU LEAGUE!

Buys!

• •

·uM IT 1 PER SUBJECT

2 PER FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT 991 PER SUBJECT
NO AGE LIMIT

Roof

THU~EPT. 4th
. ''

HOURS 10 A.M. ,· 6 P.M.
ONE DAY ONLY .

SHOPPERS MART
MASON, W. VA.
Honey Portraits

Box 7 l!:elpre, 0.

·The Farmers Bank

to wear to 'the game

Kerm Says: "Good Luck To All Tbe Area
Football . Teams"

New York Clothing House
- ~ ~'tt+y ~~

----

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POMEROY, OHIO

•
••

AWslos Aluminum
Wdh Asbest. Fibre

••

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., I Confinuousivl$20,000 Maximum lnsurjlnce ··
For Each Depositor

•"
•
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•

H. D. I.EE

..
~

Matched OuiRts

rr.m.rruon -

•

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'

CERTIFIED WELDER

I

Portable Equipment
Shop or Field ·
Jill, 992-2511

Dickie Permanent P,ww OutjiD

•

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

,,

Ebersbach Hardware

MAIN .ST. •

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:

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I

10
OUR OOMMUNITY
WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
. COME IN AND SEE USI

POMEROY

(

·

1111 Ove•ulls. Dunp•••• and

••

GAliON

5 GAL CAN

Member Federal Reserve System

•

•375

•375 .

••

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"Your Sportsminded Store"
Main Street
Pomeroy

~~TH-47'+.~~

-and _Savings Co.

Asllesb Fibre

88

REG. 199.95

COMPLETE Including
foot control at this
low price.

on
FEATURES:
Does
adj•.ostaHe
zig-zags,

ln1ernationar League

Standings
BY: United Pre$$ International
W L Pd. GB
x-Roche•ter
85 54 .612Charle•ton
78 61 .561 7
Tidewater
78 61 .561 7
Syracuse
73 66 .525 12
loui•ville
70 69 .504 15
Richmond
69 70 .496 16
t aledo
59 80 .4~4 .26
Winnipeg
44 95 .317 41
x-Ciinched Pennant
Wednesday's Results
Rochester 7 Syracuse 5
Louisville 14 Winnipeg 0
Toledo 12 Charle•lon 6
Tidewater 4 Richmond 3

. pctlable sewing

machine il-l Singer.
Take It home In Ita own

carrying case now I

We have a credit plan designed to fit your budget.

MATHESON TRADED
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Unebacker Bob Matheson, the
Cleveland Browns top draft
choice in 1967, has been traded
to the Miami Dolphins for that
club's second draft choice in
1972.
Matheson, 6-4 and 235 pounds,
never became a starter with the
Browns.

.,..

.,.

.•

.•

SINGER SALES &amp;' SEIIIIItE
McCALL'$&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERN$-

992-2284

' 115 W. Second

APPROVED 51 NC 1111 DEALER

Pomeroy, 0 . .
: 'A Trademar'lldTHESINGERCOMPNIY

A FEW OF THE MANY SPECIALS

You might want

BLACK

Worthington ; Larry Craig, Can·
ton; Don Miller, Wooster, and
Paul Thomas, Zanesville.
Jim Brown of Kent and Chuck
Rotar of Cantoo both had 2868.
Tied at 'llfl were Bernie Haas,
Cleveland; Phil Ferrante,
Toledo ; Chuck ticker, Fairborn; Jack Orbnan, Columbus,
and Joe Talley, Kirtland
A field of 204 started the
tournament Monday, with lhe
field trimmed to 66 pros and 10
amateurs at the halfway point
of the 72-bole event.

FRANKLI

CLOTHING

99°
A 517 LIVING COLOR

Bill Gogolewslri pitched a
four-hitler for his lint major
league shutout u Washington
topped New York. Ron Kline
allowed sill hils while suffering
the loss. Tom McCI:aw's fly in
the first inning fell in between
Bobb Murcer and Ron Blomberg for a run-!!Corlng triple
and that was all lhe help
Gogolewski needed.
Reggie Jackson bit his 26th
huffier and a pair of singles a.s
Oakland blasted California.
Chuck Dobson pitched a sevenhitter for the A's to boost his
record to 1~. It was bls first
shutout of the seai!Oit

ISAVE $3()011

JOB

Evans and sons, Mrs. Bernice
Hart and Marthb, Walter
Crooks, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Durst and sons, Bob Hartenbach, Gilllan Taylor, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Miller and
children and Mr. and Mrs. Eiza
Birch.

r Chicago but Bart Jobnllon
go lhe victory in_relief. Wood,
1\1-1 WIIS pitching With two
days · t and baa llot ltarted
·five g
in the last two
weeks.
Ike Br n bit· a three4un
homer In
secmd and BW
Freehan singled home lbe deciding run in the sixth to llft
Detroit past Cleveland. Ltl
Cain went eight innings to (p!t
the VIctory
·
and Fred Scherman
finished up lor his 19th save.
Bob Helae singled with hro
out in the ninth inningr to IICOI'e
Ellie Rodriguez from third and
give Milwaukee the victory
over Kansas City. Rodriguez
douj)led off Tom Burgmeler and
took third on a groundout
before scoring on Helae's bit.

In the National League,
Pitlsburgh outlasted . PhiladelphiA 10-7, New York routed .St.
Louis 7-1, San Diego topped
Cincinnati 3-1, Los Angeles beat
Houston 9-2, Atlanta blanked
San Francisco 4-0 and Montreal
ripped Chicago II-2 in the
compleUon of a suspended
game before Chicago won the
regular game 5-2_
Bert Blyleven pitched 10
scoreless innings but Chicago
jumped on reliever Bob Beghard for two runs in lhe lith to
beat Minnesota . Carlos May's
bloop single and Walt Williams'
sacrifice fly ptoduced the only
runs of the game. Wilbur Wood

SALE HAS BEEN EXTENDED ONE MORE WEEK

ON
DIE

'r+ luillr81JIIW&lt;i!!i)l?"'la..

Septemb~r

to 10 feet and Cook is sinking
them from 35 feet," he added.
"I suppose 1 won it by hanging
in."
Wynn collected $1,1100 for his
first place finish. Cook received
$850 for second.
Frank Wharton of Akron fin.
ished fourth with 281. Tied .for
fifth at 284 were Bernie Alleman
of Westfield, Walker lrunan of
Columbus and Rex Wilsen of
Hudson.
Five finished at 285 - Rex
Baxter, Cleveland; Jim Canace,

ru::

'I

Shot Guns &amp;Rifles

the Orioles clobbered the
Boston Red Sox 8-2.
Merv Rettenmund, the team's
leading hitler with a .307
average, hit a three-run homer
in lhe five-run second inning
and Cuellar coasted to the
triumph.
This is how the records for
the Orioles' "big four" now
look :
Cuellar 17-7·, Pat Dobson-17 • ·,
"'
Dave McNally 16-4; Jim
Pahner 16-7.
In the other AL games,
Washington blanked New York
~. Milwaukee nipped Kansas
City 3-2, Detroit edged Cleveland 4-3, Chicago topped
Minnesota ~ in II innings and

Dayl01118D.
•
Cops Obi0 0pen T"t}
l e

MEDINA, Ohio (UP!)_ Defending champion Bob Wynn of
Dayton, wearing his ·~ucky"
floppy-brimmed, brightly colored, polka-dotted hat, won the
$10,1100 Ohio Open Golf Tourna·
ment Wednesday by one stroke
over Clifl Cook of Perrysburg.
Wynn let a live stroke lead
slip away during Wednesday's
final 36 holes, but held on and
1D
D L •
scored a final 36-hole total 142
'.D
,C
on the Westfield Country Club
.
- "
· COU!le, giving him a 72-bole toHIRAM,~hio (UP!_)- Cleve- New York Gianls Saturday tal of ZIG, 12 strokes under par.
J.ad quarterback Bill Nelsen, rught.
Cook h had I39 · · to
w11o will replace Mike Phipps ·
,w o
a
gomg m
· the s-~,.;
........ lineuP Saturda Y . Ne1sen,ever the optimist ' said T/7
the final
II
t tal round, shot a 138 for a
Digbt, said today the former he sees no reason why the
te. Do Albert f CoPunloeAil-Americanevenlually Browns can't f~ ~t the top lumb:S :ot an138 wect.:'esday
"will be a fine pro quarter- of ·lhe_ Central DiVISion of the and finished with a 280, third
back."
AmencanFootbaiiConference. be 1 . th to
NeJsen, who has been troubled
"We have basically _the same ~I'~ de~=e~ back next
with bad 1mees the past three personnel we won wtth lor a year to defend the tiUe " said
- - . said Phipps was "way couple of years," he said.
.
'
_.._~ of ha 1
·
"There ·
indi' ti to Wynn, who along With Cook had
....,.. w t was m my secIS every
ca on
p1a th final f hoi · the
11111 year."
me that the ingredienls to win to. Y e
our es m
·
lram
1!le Bruwns, winless in their are here. I expect ~. to have ..1· normally play well in the
fint ' - ,exbibitiCIIS, meet the a l!ood football tesm.
rain, and 1 certainly had to todsy ," Wynn said. "That fellow
Otis, KC
123 476 10 1« .303 Cook was hitting good and putRaja•. KC 115 414 56 124 .300 ting super-well.
Rchrdt, Chi 115 419 -46 125 .298 "I'm sinking pulls from eight
Carew, Mon 124 487 73 142 .292
Horton, Del 115 436 62 127 .291 - - - - - - - - - Smith, Bos 133 521 72 150 .288
Home Runs

and s.e

UPI Sporlll Writer
The · Baltimore Orioles now
hav~ exactiy one month before
"they .play another game Uiat
r.eally means something.
On Oct. 2, lhe Orioles will
play host to Oakland and Vida
Blue in the first game of the
American League playoffs
shooting for their third straight
pennant.
But that doesn't, mean the
Orioles are going to have a dull
final month. They still ·have a
realistic chance of becoming
the first team in 51 years to
boast four :IG-game winners.
Mike Cuellar became . the
second pitcher on the staff to
record No. 17 Tuesday night

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Reo. Sl Onward Filler Paper,SOO sheets
Reo. 59c Tootsie Roll Candles,
Reo. 1.99 Dress &amp;.ogs
Reo. 49c Shoe Boxes
Reo. 3.49 GE Alarm Clock
Reo. 1.98 Book Rack, SMII
R8fl. 2.99 Lunch Box Kits
Wi111 'f2 pl. Vacuum Bo111e
Reo. 19c ·Reparl Covers
Reo. 10.50 Elec. Hair Clipper
Reo.l.49Vinyl Aprons
Reg. 1.00 Kiddie Tole 8"11
Reg. 1.27 Professional Batons
Rog 2.79 Official Size Footballs
Reg: 1.75 Cover Girl Mediated Make-Up
Reg. 2.29 Toni Home Permanent Kit .
Reg. 1,69 Webster's Dictionary
Reg. 1.20 Pkg. 12 Art Brushes
Reg. 49c Blunt· End Scissors
Rog. 59c Pointed Scissors
Rog. 49c Paper Mate Flllr Pen
Reg. 51 Water Color Points
R!IO . 39c Barrel 0' Pule
Reg. Sl Wearever P"!'s, pkg. 10

ric
Special bag SJc
5]11!ciaii.57
Special37c
Speclal2.96
Specla 11.57
Special2.37
Speclal67c
S]ll!ciol6.96
Special97c
Special87c
Special99c
Speciall.99
94C
1.13
Special1.41
Special47c
Speciol27c
Speciol37c
Speclal28c
Special 57c
Speciol27c
Special67c

Rog. 51 Ball Pens, pkg. 10
Rog. 5120-Pencil Packs, No. 2's
Rog. 1.25 Tempera Colors, 6-color
Reg. S9c El Marko Pens .
Reg. 1.27 Scripto Special, 4 pc.
Rog. 99c Blc 11-Pack, colors
Rog. 25c Scllool51oragt Boxes
Reg. 44c Onward Cello Tope
Reg. 1.39 Ruth Barry Thigh-High Hose
Reg. 99c Panty Hose, girls', women's
Reg. 59c boys Craw Socks
,
Rog. 89c Men'$ Crew Socks
Rog. 89c Athletic Socks
Reg. 3.99 Boys' No-Iron Jeans
Reg. 79c Hi-Bulk Knee-Highs

Girls Sites,

R~ .

Sl. Misses Sizes, 77c

,.
sac

~mt:~

Sjleclll6k
SJ11CiaiU7

5fMCIII51c

Spec;llfPc'
SJ11CIIIU7
5fMCIII 17c

Reg. U9 Afirm Clocks

Sfooc111U7

FRANKLI~
.: 202 .. MAIN ST.

M2-3491

$Peela167c

SjiKIII lie
Sjleclal27c

Reg. 59c Elmer's Gluo
Rog. 3.95 Portable Radio
Reg. 29c &amp;.olteries

SALE NOW IN PROGRESS AT

· PHONE

SjiKIII37c
SjleclltUc

Speclll97cc

.,

BEN

$Peelllf7c
$Peell177c

Reg. 1.29 Folding ShOes,S-IOlh

MANY OTHER SPECIALS NOT SHOWN HERE-ASK FOR ASALE Bllt

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SjiKIII67c

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SAtuRDAY ftiGHTS Uflnl 9

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1- Tile Dlllly Seft~P~el, MlclclleJiort-P,O., Sept. 2,19'11

Rjjfks Welcome A
New Baby Boy
Mr. and Mra. Donald C. Rtffle
Ill k:!lVwe are 8JIDOIIIIClnl! the
birth of a 101!. at the St, Ann's
· ,llarpltal at Columbus.
' 'lbe eight powul, two ounce
llaby born on AUg. 00 has been
named
Donald Carroll.
Grudparenlll are Mr. and Mra.
later Roush of U!tarl Falls
and Mrs. U!la Robinson of
Gro9e City. Mrs. Edna Roush of
' Racine and Mrs. John Duffy of
ayracuse
are
great1l'81111Parents.
Mr, and Mrs. Riffle have a
daughter, Melissa.
COMPLETES BASIC
Private Dennis D. Schilling,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob E.
.Schilling, Carroll, recently
completed eight weeks of basic
training at Ft. Jackson, S. C.
His wife, Sandra, lives at 746 S.
Third Street, Middleport.

_..,.._ _ _ _ _...,
1"'

I

Social
Calendar
.
THURSDAY
EVANGELINE Cbapter 172
O.I!:.S. Thur~ay, 7:30_ P -~·
Party followmg meetmg m
honor of Mrs. EdiUt Bowman.
RED CROSS Thursday, Sept.
2at 7:30p.m. in Ute cafeteri~ of
Veterans Memortal Hospttal.
Alfred Justus, Red Cross
r~presentalive from Columbus,
will be present.
BRICKLAYERS Local 32
Thursday evening at Dre~
Webster Post 39 , American
Legion Home, Pomeroy ,
Refreshments.
AFTERt&lt;OON Circle, Heath
United Methodist Church
•
Thursday' Sept. 9. Devotions by
Mrs. Rose Mc~ade, P~!!"am
by Mrs.. l!:dtth J1v1den;
host.esses,
Mrs.
Emma
Lo
dM
WId
ay an an
rs.
rena
Davis.
FRIDAy
BAKE SALE Friday at Davis·
Warner Insurance office
beginning at 9:30a. m. sponsoreci by the WSCS of Forest
Run United MeUtodist Church.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange Friday, 8 p.m. at Rock
Springs ball with Rock Springs
Grange as host unit. National
and state grange sewing and
baking contests to be held with
all subordinate winners to
compete. Prince and princess
nominee names to be turned
over to Deputy Master Vlrgll
Atkins.
PUBLIC SQUARE dance
Friday, beginning 8 , 30 p. m. in
Rutland gymnasium under
sponsorship of Rutland . Fire
Department.
Music
by
HilJtoppers. Chlldren under 12
free,

DESCENDANTS of George
and Susanna Roush annual
reunion Sunday at Union Camp
Ground back of New Haven.
Basket dinner at noon.
"OlD FRIENDS" Reunion
and picnic Sunday at Krodell
Park beginning at 11 a. m.

Choose a

for only
$10.95
First, make sure it has a
jeweled-lever movement.
Precision-engineered parts,
not just stamped out. And
the case must be durable
metal with today's fashion
otyllng. Or, to make it easier,
just ask lor Caravelle"by
Bulova.
COM,ANION W1ter resistant
Shock rtllttenl. Unbrukable
mlinlp:rlng. 11D.IS

GOESSLER

MONDAY
CffiCKEN and spare ribs
barbeque Monday sponsored by
Chester Fire Department.
S..M,ing at 11 a. m. Parade at I
. garden tractor pull at 2 p.
m. All tractors to be weighed in
at Dale Kautz farm. Donations
of pies and cakes appreciated.
TEEN DANCE Monday at
Pomeroy Junior High, 8 to 11:30
p. m., sponsored by Pomeroy
Fire Department. The Jays will
emcee, 75c a person.
MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
DeMolay Monday, 7:30 p. m.
Masonic Temple, Middleport.
-- MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
Monday, 7:30 p. m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
I ~~e room. Hostesses, Mrs.
ll
Zerkle, Mrs . Walter
Hayes, and Mrs. Edward
Tewksbary.

The Ohio. Association . of
Garden Clubs annual Gar·
deners' Day Out meeting will be
on Sept. 23 at the ohio Historical
Center adjacent to the Ohio
State Fairgrounds, .Columbus.
The meeting will get underway at!Oa.m. wiUt the day's
activities to Include a complete
tour of the Center, lunch and an
unusual program by Mrs.
Marilyn G. Hood and membel'll
of Ute Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs' Judges Gulld of
Regions 8, 9, 11, and 12.
Mrs. l{ood is editor of ·special
publications of the Ohio
Histori~l Society, r~ching

researchingandwritingnewa-of
. Womaa's View
change, sponsored by Rep,
Ute state.
·
B)' MARGUERn'E DAVIS Charles E. Wiggins, R-Calil.,
She has worked as a
. WASHmGTON (UPI) - would freeze into the Constilunewspaper reporter, college
~~~ of a proposed tiori the very inequities against
public relations news writer and
cOnstilutional amendment to which they are fighting . Most
book editor in Minnesota,
1!1J81'811Iee equal rights · · to said they would rather bave
California, and New York. Her
women are confident the House nothing Utan the Wiggins
book, "The · First Ladies of
will approve their proposal in amendment-that with protecQhio" was publisbed in April
the form they want. live friends like this, who needs
19'10. She has done publications
Tbe proponents believe mem- enemies?
and articles on mills
bers wiJ1 ~!ect a proposal that Tiley are detemlined to erase
aerospace, personalities and
would
keep 10 force federal and . that offensive language and win
events in Ohio history.
. state laW!' deemed to "reasona- House approval of the simple
The OAGC flower show
bly'' promote the health and amendment women have been
judges participating in the
safety of femal~ that the pressing for ~ 1923. During
program are Mrs. Earl Bender,
amendment. then will pass.
the congressional vacation
Mrs. Frank Christy, Mrs . .
Aa the women proposed it, which ends next week they
Gilbert . Cullen, Mrs. Dwight ·.
the- conslutional amendment have been organizaing women
andwrttin~books,editingbooks DeVoss, Mrs. Quentin Elder,
stated, ''Equality of rights throughout the coun1ry to presS
by outstde authors, and Mrs. Allen Grossman, Mra.
und!!l' the law shall not be bard on their representatives to
Vance Hendricks, Mrs. Fred
de~ed or abridged by the support the amendment as it
Mili_tor, Mrs. Floyd Ruble, and
Uruted Stales or by any state originally was writte.n.
Mrs._ Robert Scbere~. Each ~
· on account of sex."
They did not say so, but it
"'
fashion Dower arrangements m
Tbe House Judiciary Commit- seenis clear they are relying on
keeping Wtth the style and
tee earlier tbiiJ year added Utis a new House rule to win their
tradition of many of the First
language: "This article shall fight.
"'
Ladi of Obi
not impair the validity of any
F ormanyyears
es
o.
the ·0 hi o
law of the Uliited States which
· Association of Garden Clubs
exempts a persoo from compulA reception honoring Mrs.
and the Ohio Historical Society .
· sory service or any other law of Osby A. Martin, Pomeroy, le
bsve been working together on
the United States or of any chapeau departemental, Eight
Wahkeena. Tbe goals of Utis
BROWN AND BLUE - ·state which reasonably pro- and Forty, will be held on
A reunion .of the descendanlll project are to maintain the 180 This s w i'r I in g, polyester motes the health and safety of . Sunday, oct. 3, from 2 to 4:30 p.
of the late Raymond and acreestatefortheserioussludy print, scoop neck dress with the people."
m. at the Middleport Church of
Meribab Miller Lee was held at of nature and preserve for trumpet skirt and sleeves is This amendment to the Cluist.
Ash cave recently.
wildlife.
from the Jerry Silverman amendment was adopted 19 to
The Meigs County Salon no
Attending
were
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Mrs . w. A- Wske, the rapy col~ect!on. The sash at the 16 in the committee.
Lee
and
d
Eight
and Forty, and the Ore~
Harry
Mr. an Mrs. chairman of the Four Seasons wa1st 1s or brown suede.
Irate women said this Webster Unit 39 American
Robert _Lee and chlldren of Garden Club of Mason will
!J!glon Auxiliary,
host the
Westerville; Mr · and Mra. Carl display and sell craft articles
l
reception honoring Mrs .
Lee of Long Bottom; Mr. and made by handicapped children.
Mrs .. Larry Lee and daughter • Reservations for the day must
Jennifer, and twin sons, Tony be in before Sept. 18 to Mrs.
:w.=:=:·:«~·Wx·==*~·. ~::::· .....,
:.»..»:-:::·:·:·::~:
and Todd, of Pomer?Y; Mr. and John. M. Scott, 2513 Cross
CONTEST SATURDAY
Mrs. George TheiSS, Karla, County Road, Fairborn.
to contact her.
A tractor pulling contest will
Kandy, Keith, Kelly_and Kerr!,
Girl Scout leaders for troops
The
first
neighborhood
be
heldSaturdayat7:30p. m. ill
ahd Debbie Smith . of Belpre;
in Pomeroy, Middleport,
meeting bas been set for Sept. the Harrisonville School.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ziegler
Rutland and the Chester15. Troops planning to march in · Weight classes are 4 5 6 and 8
and .grandson,
Scottie,
Tuppers Plains area are needed the Labor Day Parade in "
"'ou.sand pounds . Tr,op'hi'es and
Marysville.
as the Big Bend Neighborhood Pomeroy Monday are ask~ to. money will be awarded the
Mr. and Mrs . . Raymond
of the Four Rivers Girl Seoul contact Joe Struble lm· winners. Refreshments will be
Ziegler, Jr. and tWo sons of
Council reorganized for the fall mediately.
sold by the Harrisonville P.T.O.
Columbus; Mr. and Mra. Bruce ·
program.
G. W11llams and daughter, Mr.
Mrs. William Ohlinger, neighand Mrs. Chester Mayes and Mrs. Frank Calbetzor of borhood chainnan, reports that A council-wide service team
Peggy of Marysville ; Mr - and Barberton and Bill Koesel of leaders for .J'unior troops .in meeting bas been set for Sept.
Mrs. ArUt~ Ma~ and Angela Cleveland were weekend guests Rulland, Salisbury and Mid- 21 at the St. Mark's United
of Magnetic Spnngs, and Mr. of Mrs. Welby Whaley. Joining dleport are needed if lroops are MeUtodist Church In Belpre, 10
and Mrs. ~on Jolliff of them for Sun~ .were Mr. and to continue and that cadette to 2 p. m.
Broadway' Ohio. Mrs. Karl Grueser and son troop leaders and assistan;s are On Oct. 6 in Pomeroy the Four
Recogniti"? was given to Larry, Mrs. Gladys Cockier: needed in Rutland, Por,soy, Rivers Council will conduct a
Raymond Ziegler, ~ oldest \Mr. and Mrs. KermeUt Story and and the Chester-Tuppers Plains workshop 00 programs. Place
present; the Lee twins, Tony daughter, Lisa, Dayton, and area. Adults willing to work in for the workshop will be an·
and Todd, two months; Mr. and Dana Howett. The Story family the scouting program are asked nounced later.
Mrs. George Theiss for having .were guests of Mr. Howell for
Utelargestfamily,andMr.and theweekend
Mrs. Art !"ayes and daughter, Mrs. Glad;. Cockier was the
.
for traveling the farthest.
guest several days last week of

ASh Cav•b

Sc·bne O)j

ue Reunion

:.m

Pomeroy....

Personal Notes

Lar1Je tte uf.JOWer
('J_

The Cross ' Host
Family Barbecue
A chicken barbecue and
picnic dinner was beld at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cross
when . the family of Dee and
Ethel Cross got together
recently for a family reunion.
Attending were CM-Sgt. and
Mrs. Pat Roush and Pam, Mr.
and Mrs. Dee Roush and Patton, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Fuss, Point Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mitch, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sargent,
Middleport; Mr. and. Mrs. Dee
Cross, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cross,
Cindy, CaUty and Carol, and
Mra. RuUt Tucker, Racine.
Pictures were taken.
"
CM-Sgt. and Mrs. Roush and
daughter were enr~te from
Columbus to Fayetteville, N. C.,
and left Saturday for there.

Grange Contest

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. ville
will be the
host
unit. Grange
All subordinate
winners
are to compete in the contests.
Prince and princess nominees
are to be submitted to Virgil
Atkins, deputy master.

Mrs. Goldie Craig, Nelsonville. Mrs. carl Norton and ~- They were joined for refreshShe went espedally to attend Philip King entertained ments by Edwin King Philip
Ute Parade of the Hills~
recently with a layette sbower · King and Carl Norto~. Also
Mr. and Mrs. John Carper honoring Mrs. Allen Lee King. presenting gifts to Mrs. King
and son, Teddy, and Theodore The sbower was held. at the were Mrs. Sue Grueser, Miss
St~ele of Pensacola, Fla., Norton home.
Sandra Fow;ler, Mrs. Allen
VISited Mrs. Joe Conde and
Games were canducted by Lewis and Mrs. Earl !J!wis.
Bertha Conde over the Mrs. Stella King w!Ut prizes
weekend. OUter guests of Ute going to Mrs. Warren Stone,
Condes were Mrs. Jessie Mrs. Harry Clark and Mrs. !J!w Grange M eel Held ,
Zwilling and s?", Paul, Mrs. King.
A contribution was made to
Theresa Harr1ger and son, Others attending were the Salvation Army when the
Steve, and Hubert Bacon of Ramona Kay King, Mrs. Okey
Rock Springs Grange met
Bucyrus.
Our, Mrs. John King, Mrs. Don Monday night at the hall.
Becker, Mi-s. Harold Hanson, Read at the meeting was a
1!""~---~--""t
Mrs. Anna Neal, Mrs. Terry thank you note from Mr. and
U!wis, Mrs. Vicki Clark, Miss Mrs. Amos Leonard for flowers
April King, Mrs. Edwin King. sent on their golden wedding
anniversary. Meeting time was
changed to the second Thursday
of each month. Holiday cookbooks are for sale by the
grange.
Ray Wertz of Cleveland and
1It was noted that the grange
his son-in-law and daughter,
had taken third place in exhibits
Mrs. Ro Cesek and chlldren,
Steven and Elizabeth of The lith reunion of the E. F. at the Meigs County Fair. A
Willoughby, were Sunday Bolen famlly was held recently reading on fairs was given by
guests of Mrs. Harry Ellis. Mr. at Ute home of Mr. and Mra. Jim Mrs. W. A. Morgan.
Wertz is Ute son-in-law of Mrs. Nelson and sons, Stevie and

Personal Notes

Ellis. SALE PLANNED
The Winding Trail Garden
Club will sponsor a rummage
sale Frlday and Saturday, Sept.
!Oand 11, from 9 a.m. to • p.m.
at the second ward fire house,
Condor Street,. Pomeroy.
All proceeds will be used for a
beautification project at the
Meigs County Home. Anyone
wishing to donate may call aily
club member.

KIDOIE SHOPP£

Shirt Talk illd Talk About

. Size 4 thru 14
SOLIDS
STHil'ES

A Small Deposit Will
Lay It Away

PHINTS
P.t.;ASANT
· Skirts, jumpers, . slacks,
sweaters to · co"ordinate by·
Talk-Abouts.

l

Griffith.

·

Vitalis
Hair Tonic

FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT
' ......
d ......,•• .,,..,.,.
......
Eapo.•. ...
eeput iafectiOII to ita

~t:_:=_ ':: ~~~.~~';:
FAST ..u., or your ••• back. NOW

-

G~~itding were Mr. and Mrs.

4oz.

Chewable
Cold Tablets
for Children

congespiril
o..JJeCold~
lorQ-ihn •
~,.....Ok$1 II

FINISHING:
1
·uH'oiii- Free Parking Lot 1

Reg, '1'
3oz.

!Miles

Reg, '1"
10 oz.

88 . SWABS

MICRIN

I .

2Boxes sge

DRY FORIULA
3 .Ill.

2 50$

4

FOR

Stretdt Lace

sza
Reg. 55'

No-

$}19

ACTION

-~

•lidel Infra-Red ~P
Heat&amp;llaUiger, you ttl
4 .nap-on 1tttchment1.

'-:::"'

Penetrating INFRA-RED heat and

65's

---

;

Spray

~::::=:==
baby-soft, smooth ;:)""
Reg, '1•

29'

Rec. '1'

OIL

®

massage for quick temporary re-

lief of minor aches and pains

M
liuw
.........

.....
s.aa-..

~~

r..;.

Slra...

5681

~BABY

......

anoclated
New
Deep Heat~
Back Massager

---·

•. . : . - 1-'., _ ......,.,

IGIKtt,_. ....
lllck • •• " . . .1

Portable, easy to
use In home or ol·
fic.e. Like a health r
club treatment you can
have any time , sitting up
lying down. Airtine seat slyli11g.

SOH. long-v.·earing vinyl, cleans
with a damp cloth.

5's

3ar.

884

-

Health Club"'
ish-Style
Massager

. 69~

=·

Reg. $37.95

Tube

y~

a..

'MIDDLEP9RT, OHIO

'

I

.

gge·

bars

44~

$1 39

8 Ol.

m,.....

• -wful heavy~uty Unl·
ft~NimOtor

• Lexon®

houslftl-llchter,

II&gt;ICftor thin metal

~24.88

Reg.
S2.25

Tub
~ampoo

MatchabeUi Golden. Autumn .
Specials
'

'3.00 Per(ume Creme Sachet ....-. '2.15

Talc............. ..•.................••.•..•..• •1.75
lath Powcler •..•.•..••....•.•.•••••.••.• '2.t5

Aladdin Special

THERMOUS
80T1U

8 oz.

For
Shower

99~

•3.75 'Cologne only ................... '2.2!1

WON'T RUST

WORKMANS '

'1.5~9_7_7~~ COP~

4

Reg. $2.50

ute

. No. 1123C

__
R..
____

Lux Soap

motor·-

• Helpo relieve mUICular
f.tlpe ..• rellxeo tiled

SCOPE

BAlH SIZE

Your
Qtoice
Bonne Bel SuPer ··
Rewlon Hi &amp;Dri
ShiMer 2000 .
Anti-Perspirant ·

• Thousands of
pulsltlons por min-

Shampoo Fami~.
Lotion
Jar

'

• lrtllrttil • ,_....

·

. 10 oz.

THE SHOE BOX

with:

A complete collection ot the most exciting hair accessories on the fashion scene-in leathers, simulated
woods, tortoise and honey tones. Golds In smooth and
Florentine finishes add a touch of glamour to the simplest
hairdo. Many barrettes have the unique GOody-MatlcTII
spring clasp-holds fine and extra thick hair securely
and comfortably.

....

"Your Clwice"

'

- ·-

rtllol-minor

G-

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS

WATat THIS PAPER FOR OUR SALE AD•

$16.95

l . ......

51....
.......
..._...
Arttlrflls

77~

STARTING SATURDAY, SEPT. 4

59&lt;

New· P ollenex Deep Heat®
5 in 1 Massager Set If'

allen associated with :

32 oz.

ONLY

Reg.

Reg. $1.09

R" '1.29
12 oz.

BABY SOAP

Now Only

49&lt;

£FF£CTIVE 4-WAY

YOUR
CONFIDENCE BUILDER

Reg,

v-.

Reg.

,.... I • •

Reg, 1U9
9oz.

WORM MEDICINE ·
ANTIBIOTICS
RABIE Dill VACCINE

Adiusfable

·'3.54

Reg.

Reg. 6Sc

14 hour· protection

FLEA OOUARS

EOONOMY

2For 39$

liJ-.fol-1
double tipped
swabs

DUnONS

SARGENfS TICK AND

Sanitary Belts
Reg, 39'

~+s':as

Rei.'1.29 as~

accurately with the finest,

SPRAY OR POWDER •

~~~~

NEW!

77

'-""'"" Set A $6.00 Value NOW ONLY $3.50 EACH

88 ~

88'·

here to serve you promptly and

FRO~~

Reg. '1.50

lOTION

!IDDORANT

new prescription filled, we are

EAU DE COLOGNE AND PERFUMED BATH OIL

Reg, 'lit

PACQUINS

HYGII'-E

now. And when you need a

'

Robi.nson's CleanetS:

Spray Anti-PetSPirant

'1:)

fiM',N

ORANGE FLAVORED

FIRE SALE

!

Reg, 11"

V05 HAIR SO LOTION

WE ARE HAVING A

. :SHIRT: ---;:

Spray Deodorant

5oz.
TI-E f'.£W

~UtiSiiclnoble prescriptions and medicatiani

w. A. Gibbs, Mrs. Georgia
William!!ll'l, Mrs. Neille Tracy,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wells, Mra.
Emma Schoenberger, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Woodyard and family
Mr. and Mrs. Dale U!Ue and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Schrieber, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Long and family, Mr. and Mra.
Hartwell Curd, Mr. and Mra.
Walter Heilman, Mr. and Mrs.
Coined Phrase
Robert Laudermilt and Mrs.
Two Chicago baseball Ullian Napper.
players, Billy Sunday and
Joe Quest, are generally
credited with coining the
phrase, "Charley horse," for
a muscle strain in the leg,
after a horse they backed in
a race pulled up lame near
the finish line.
•

CALM

14 at

14 oz.

FLEA AND TICK

s 26!

49~

99~

49'
88'

39' t. size

Reg.

5oz.

on hand can be-dangerous. Get rid of those

Harold Bolen, Mrs. Keith Ball Run neighbors of Mr. and
Weaver, Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Napper and
Mrs. Roge~ Bolen of Lon· family, Route 2, Pomeroy,
d?"derry, MISS Susan Bolen of surprised them wiUt a farewell
~ln~tl, John Bolen, Miami party Sunday evening.
Uruverstty; Mr. and Mrs. Max Homemade ice cream and
Bolen, Richard _B~~ and Rick cake were served. A gift was
Bolen, Reyno!dS6urg; Mf· itiQ presented to the family who will
Mrs. G. Bl Stout, Ml' · and Mrs. move Sunday to Aberdeen,
Jack Bolfn. Mr. and Mrs. Ohio.
Albert Bolen, Greg and KenneUt · Attending were Mr. and Mra.

8oz.

7az.

&amp; Lohse Drugs.

Farewell Party

Reg, '1 11

FREEZER BAGS

Reg._99'

36's

ot Nelson's Drug Store; Swisher

freshest-quolity drugs.

WoodbUIJ
Shampoo

Reg, '1.59

Reg. $}33

.

USE IERATOLmC ACnON
IECAUSE-11
1

Cream
Hair
Ret'IKM!I'

Re&amp;. 98'
20's

Nelsons Hold
BO.en ReUnWn
•

'

.._

Reg, '1.89
12 oz.

chest was cleaned out? Keeping old medicines

- 21, E. 2nd.l'l!meriiy ": • .

•

Jim

How long has it been since yotli'" medicine

. .------~----------. Bolen, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
~•
•
Bernard Allen, Mrs. C. E. Stout,
@~
Bonme, Jtidy, Boyd and Bruce
• ·
THE
Allen of Albany.
Tbe next get-together of the
family~ be held on the last
Sunday m August, 1972, at the
On !he T In Midd~port
home of Mrs. C. E. Stout,
Lady-Uke
Albany.

For Girts By • •. •

•

. GOSPEL SING ~UNDAY
A Gospel Sing will be held at
Ute Plants Chm:ch Sunday at
1 : 30~. m. featuring the Duncan
Family of Tampa; Fla., Paw
and ~aw Duncan, Buren and
Bonme, Dan Hayman and the
McDaniel Trio, the Roush
Fam~ly, Dwain Wolfe and
Denrue Manuel, Mr. and Mra.
Wesley Youn~, Mrs. Florence
A~ and Slftgers, Ute Congo

Middleport

Blouses
A great selection of washable
blends, acrylic piles, fashion
wale corduroy, quilled and
other fall fabrics in the young
styles and colors of the
season . All budget priced!

could vote on cootroversial
que.Stions wtUtout being_record·
ed. But this year· for ihe first
time, record votes can be
forced on almost anything and
it Seems certain that few
members will wish to identify
themselves as opposed to
legislation possibly supported
by a majority of their
constituents. And women are In
the majority in the nation's
population.
·
The House tentatively plans
to debBie Ute amendment the
week of Sept. 20.
If approved, as expected, it
will go the the Senate for
action. That was tjle situation
last year, when the equal rights
amendment died in the Senate
wiUt the end of Ute congress.
But women expect a different
ending to Ute story this year_

From Your Pharmacist

'J

JEwELRY STORE

MANY FAKE .FURS!

Since 1789, c6ngressmen often

Troo s Need Leaders ~~i91fiW1W'WWwt*m ~~;;r:dan~Mr~v~t~
11
1j'

The national and state grange
• ;., ESDAY
sewing and baking contests will
Court St.
p
MIDDLEPORT Chapter 363 be held at the Frlday nlght
~-----o_m_e_r_o.;,y.JF&amp;AM Tuesday, 7:30p. m.
meeting of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange, 8 p. m. in the
Rock Springs hall. Harrison·

Girls Size 2 mo. to 14

7-Tbe Dally Sentinel, MiddJepc~tt-Pmneroy, 0 _, Sept. 2, 19'1!\

Equal Rights for WQmen

Gardeners ' Day Out

SUNDAY
ANNUAL SWARTZ family
reunion, Sunday, Woode Grove,
Alfred, with basket dinner at
noon followed by entertainment
.and games. Everyone welcome.
OURS FAMILY reunion
Sunday,
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds, basket dinner
served at I p. m.

r-bwto

I',_

.

Reg. S4.25
Reg. Sl.OS

unique formula for relief .
of nerwus tenSIOn ~lies

WITH
' THIS

Pllstic

·

GOOO ONLY AT

lit

.

'·
--------'-·

49• ·
9

NELSON'S DRUGS

OFFER EXPIRES 9-6-1971

Reg. 15."

.

ONLY .

&gt;)

COUPON _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,;;;__I

Woe mans

88'

FAMILY SIZE'

'.

�'

•

'

!

' ,I

I'
I •

1- Tile Dlllly Seft~P~el, MlclclleJiort-P,O., Sept. 2,19'11

Rjjfks Welcome A
New Baby Boy
Mr. and Mra. Donald C. Rtffle
Ill k:!lVwe are 8JIDOIIIIClnl! the
birth of a 101!. at the St, Ann's
· ,llarpltal at Columbus.
' 'lbe eight powul, two ounce
llaby born on AUg. 00 has been
named
Donald Carroll.
Grudparenlll are Mr. and Mra.
later Roush of U!tarl Falls
and Mrs. U!la Robinson of
Gro9e City. Mrs. Edna Roush of
' Racine and Mrs. John Duffy of
ayracuse
are
great1l'81111Parents.
Mr, and Mrs. Riffle have a
daughter, Melissa.
COMPLETES BASIC
Private Dennis D. Schilling,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob E.
.Schilling, Carroll, recently
completed eight weeks of basic
training at Ft. Jackson, S. C.
His wife, Sandra, lives at 746 S.
Third Street, Middleport.

_..,.._ _ _ _ _...,
1"'

I

Social
Calendar
.
THURSDAY
EVANGELINE Cbapter 172
O.I!:.S. Thur~ay, 7:30_ P -~·
Party followmg meetmg m
honor of Mrs. EdiUt Bowman.
RED CROSS Thursday, Sept.
2at 7:30p.m. in Ute cafeteri~ of
Veterans Memortal Hospttal.
Alfred Justus, Red Cross
r~presentalive from Columbus,
will be present.
BRICKLAYERS Local 32
Thursday evening at Dre~
Webster Post 39 , American
Legion Home, Pomeroy ,
Refreshments.
AFTERt&lt;OON Circle, Heath
United Methodist Church
•
Thursday' Sept. 9. Devotions by
Mrs. Rose Mc~ade, P~!!"am
by Mrs.. l!:dtth J1v1den;
host.esses,
Mrs.
Emma
Lo
dM
WId
ay an an
rs.
rena
Davis.
FRIDAy
BAKE SALE Friday at Davis·
Warner Insurance office
beginning at 9:30a. m. sponsoreci by the WSCS of Forest
Run United MeUtodist Church.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange Friday, 8 p.m. at Rock
Springs ball with Rock Springs
Grange as host unit. National
and state grange sewing and
baking contests to be held with
all subordinate winners to
compete. Prince and princess
nominee names to be turned
over to Deputy Master Vlrgll
Atkins.
PUBLIC SQUARE dance
Friday, beginning 8 , 30 p. m. in
Rutland gymnasium under
sponsorship of Rutland . Fire
Department.
Music
by
HilJtoppers. Chlldren under 12
free,

DESCENDANTS of George
and Susanna Roush annual
reunion Sunday at Union Camp
Ground back of New Haven.
Basket dinner at noon.
"OlD FRIENDS" Reunion
and picnic Sunday at Krodell
Park beginning at 11 a. m.

Choose a

for only
$10.95
First, make sure it has a
jeweled-lever movement.
Precision-engineered parts,
not just stamped out. And
the case must be durable
metal with today's fashion
otyllng. Or, to make it easier,
just ask lor Caravelle"by
Bulova.
COM,ANION W1ter resistant
Shock rtllttenl. Unbrukable
mlinlp:rlng. 11D.IS

GOESSLER

MONDAY
CffiCKEN and spare ribs
barbeque Monday sponsored by
Chester Fire Department.
S..M,ing at 11 a. m. Parade at I
. garden tractor pull at 2 p.
m. All tractors to be weighed in
at Dale Kautz farm. Donations
of pies and cakes appreciated.
TEEN DANCE Monday at
Pomeroy Junior High, 8 to 11:30
p. m., sponsored by Pomeroy
Fire Department. The Jays will
emcee, 75c a person.
MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
DeMolay Monday, 7:30 p. m.
Masonic Temple, Middleport.
-- MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
Monday, 7:30 p. m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
I ~~e room. Hostesses, Mrs.
ll
Zerkle, Mrs . Walter
Hayes, and Mrs. Edward
Tewksbary.

The Ohio. Association . of
Garden Clubs annual Gar·
deners' Day Out meeting will be
on Sept. 23 at the ohio Historical
Center adjacent to the Ohio
State Fairgrounds, .Columbus.
The meeting will get underway at!Oa.m. wiUt the day's
activities to Include a complete
tour of the Center, lunch and an
unusual program by Mrs.
Marilyn G. Hood and membel'll
of Ute Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs' Judges Gulld of
Regions 8, 9, 11, and 12.
Mrs. l{ood is editor of ·special
publications of the Ohio
Histori~l Society, r~ching

researchingandwritingnewa-of
. Womaa's View
change, sponsored by Rep,
Ute state.
·
B)' MARGUERn'E DAVIS Charles E. Wiggins, R-Calil.,
She has worked as a
. WASHmGTON (UPI) - would freeze into the Constilunewspaper reporter, college
~~~ of a proposed tiori the very inequities against
public relations news writer and
cOnstilutional amendment to which they are fighting . Most
book editor in Minnesota,
1!1J81'811Iee equal rights · · to said they would rather bave
California, and New York. Her
women are confident the House nothing Utan the Wiggins
book, "The · First Ladies of
will approve their proposal in amendment-that with protecQhio" was publisbed in April
the form they want. live friends like this, who needs
19'10. She has done publications
Tbe proponents believe mem- enemies?
and articles on mills
bers wiJ1 ~!ect a proposal that Tiley are detemlined to erase
aerospace, personalities and
would
keep 10 force federal and . that offensive language and win
events in Ohio history.
. state laW!' deemed to "reasona- House approval of the simple
The OAGC flower show
bly'' promote the health and amendment women have been
judges participating in the
safety of femal~ that the pressing for ~ 1923. During
program are Mrs. Earl Bender,
amendment. then will pass.
the congressional vacation
Mrs. Frank Christy, Mrs . .
Aa the women proposed it, which ends next week they
Gilbert . Cullen, Mrs. Dwight ·.
the- conslutional amendment have been organizaing women
andwrttin~books,editingbooks DeVoss, Mrs. Quentin Elder,
stated, ''Equality of rights throughout the coun1ry to presS
by outstde authors, and Mrs. Allen Grossman, Mra.
und!!l' the law shall not be bard on their representatives to
Vance Hendricks, Mrs. Fred
de~ed or abridged by the support the amendment as it
Mili_tor, Mrs. Floyd Ruble, and
Uruted Stales or by any state originally was writte.n.
Mrs._ Robert Scbere~. Each ~
· on account of sex."
They did not say so, but it
"'
fashion Dower arrangements m
Tbe House Judiciary Commit- seenis clear they are relying on
keeping Wtth the style and
tee earlier tbiiJ year added Utis a new House rule to win their
tradition of many of the First
language: "This article shall fight.
"'
Ladi of Obi
not impair the validity of any
F ormanyyears
es
o.
the ·0 hi o
law of the Uliited States which
· Association of Garden Clubs
exempts a persoo from compulA reception honoring Mrs.
and the Ohio Historical Society .
· sory service or any other law of Osby A. Martin, Pomeroy, le
bsve been working together on
the United States or of any chapeau departemental, Eight
Wahkeena. Tbe goals of Utis
BROWN AND BLUE - ·state which reasonably pro- and Forty, will be held on
A reunion .of the descendanlll project are to maintain the 180 This s w i'r I in g, polyester motes the health and safety of . Sunday, oct. 3, from 2 to 4:30 p.
of the late Raymond and acreestatefortheserioussludy print, scoop neck dress with the people."
m. at the Middleport Church of
Meribab Miller Lee was held at of nature and preserve for trumpet skirt and sleeves is This amendment to the Cluist.
Ash cave recently.
wildlife.
from the Jerry Silverman amendment was adopted 19 to
The Meigs County Salon no
Attending
were
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Mrs . w. A- Wske, the rapy col~ect!on. The sash at the 16 in the committee.
Lee
and
d
Eight
and Forty, and the Ore~
Harry
Mr. an Mrs. chairman of the Four Seasons wa1st 1s or brown suede.
Irate women said this Webster Unit 39 American
Robert _Lee and chlldren of Garden Club of Mason will
!J!glon Auxiliary,
host the
Westerville; Mr · and Mra. Carl display and sell craft articles
l
reception honoring Mrs .
Lee of Long Bottom; Mr. and made by handicapped children.
Mrs .. Larry Lee and daughter • Reservations for the day must
Jennifer, and twin sons, Tony be in before Sept. 18 to Mrs.
:w.=:=:·:«~·Wx·==*~·. ~::::· .....,
:.»..»:-:::·:·:·::~:
and Todd, of Pomer?Y; Mr. and John. M. Scott, 2513 Cross
CONTEST SATURDAY
Mrs. George TheiSS, Karla, County Road, Fairborn.
to contact her.
A tractor pulling contest will
Kandy, Keith, Kelly_and Kerr!,
Girl Scout leaders for troops
The
first
neighborhood
be
heldSaturdayat7:30p. m. ill
ahd Debbie Smith . of Belpre;
in Pomeroy, Middleport,
meeting bas been set for Sept. the Harrisonville School.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ziegler
Rutland and the Chester15. Troops planning to march in · Weight classes are 4 5 6 and 8
and .grandson,
Scottie,
Tuppers Plains area are needed the Labor Day Parade in "
"'ou.sand pounds . Tr,op'hi'es and
Marysville.
as the Big Bend Neighborhood Pomeroy Monday are ask~ to. money will be awarded the
Mr. and Mrs . . Raymond
of the Four Rivers Girl Seoul contact Joe Struble lm· winners. Refreshments will be
Ziegler, Jr. and tWo sons of
Council reorganized for the fall mediately.
sold by the Harrisonville P.T.O.
Columbus; Mr. and Mra. Bruce ·
program.
G. W11llams and daughter, Mr.
Mrs. William Ohlinger, neighand Mrs. Chester Mayes and Mrs. Frank Calbetzor of borhood chainnan, reports that A council-wide service team
Peggy of Marysville ; Mr - and Barberton and Bill Koesel of leaders for .J'unior troops .in meeting bas been set for Sept.
Mrs. ArUt~ Ma~ and Angela Cleveland were weekend guests Rulland, Salisbury and Mid- 21 at the St. Mark's United
of Magnetic Spnngs, and Mr. of Mrs. Welby Whaley. Joining dleport are needed if lroops are MeUtodist Church In Belpre, 10
and Mrs. ~on Jolliff of them for Sun~ .were Mr. and to continue and that cadette to 2 p. m.
Broadway' Ohio. Mrs. Karl Grueser and son troop leaders and assistan;s are On Oct. 6 in Pomeroy the Four
Recogniti"? was given to Larry, Mrs. Gladys Cockier: needed in Rutland, Por,soy, Rivers Council will conduct a
Raymond Ziegler, ~ oldest \Mr. and Mrs. KermeUt Story and and the Chester-Tuppers Plains workshop 00 programs. Place
present; the Lee twins, Tony daughter, Lisa, Dayton, and area. Adults willing to work in for the workshop will be an·
and Todd, two months; Mr. and Dana Howett. The Story family the scouting program are asked nounced later.
Mrs. George Theiss for having .were guests of Mr. Howell for
Utelargestfamily,andMr.and theweekend
Mrs. Art !"ayes and daughter, Mrs. Glad;. Cockier was the
.
for traveling the farthest.
guest several days last week of

ASh Cav•b

Sc·bne O)j

ue Reunion

:.m

Pomeroy....

Personal Notes

Lar1Je tte uf.JOWer
('J_

The Cross ' Host
Family Barbecue
A chicken barbecue and
picnic dinner was beld at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cross
when . the family of Dee and
Ethel Cross got together
recently for a family reunion.
Attending were CM-Sgt. and
Mrs. Pat Roush and Pam, Mr.
and Mrs. Dee Roush and Patton, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Fuss, Point Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mitch, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sargent,
Middleport; Mr. and. Mrs. Dee
Cross, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cross,
Cindy, CaUty and Carol, and
Mra. RuUt Tucker, Racine.
Pictures were taken.
"
CM-Sgt. and Mrs. Roush and
daughter were enr~te from
Columbus to Fayetteville, N. C.,
and left Saturday for there.

Grange Contest

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. ville
will be the
host
unit. Grange
All subordinate
winners
are to compete in the contests.
Prince and princess nominees
are to be submitted to Virgil
Atkins, deputy master.

Mrs. Goldie Craig, Nelsonville. Mrs. carl Norton and ~- They were joined for refreshShe went espedally to attend Philip King entertained ments by Edwin King Philip
Ute Parade of the Hills~
recently with a layette sbower · King and Carl Norto~. Also
Mr. and Mrs. John Carper honoring Mrs. Allen Lee King. presenting gifts to Mrs. King
and son, Teddy, and Theodore The sbower was held. at the were Mrs. Sue Grueser, Miss
St~ele of Pensacola, Fla., Norton home.
Sandra Fow;ler, Mrs. Allen
VISited Mrs. Joe Conde and
Games were canducted by Lewis and Mrs. Earl !J!wis.
Bertha Conde over the Mrs. Stella King w!Ut prizes
weekend. OUter guests of Ute going to Mrs. Warren Stone,
Condes were Mrs. Jessie Mrs. Harry Clark and Mrs. !J!w Grange M eel Held ,
Zwilling and s?", Paul, Mrs. King.
A contribution was made to
Theresa Harr1ger and son, Others attending were the Salvation Army when the
Steve, and Hubert Bacon of Ramona Kay King, Mrs. Okey
Rock Springs Grange met
Bucyrus.
Our, Mrs. John King, Mrs. Don Monday night at the hall.
Becker, Mi-s. Harold Hanson, Read at the meeting was a
1!""~---~--""t
Mrs. Anna Neal, Mrs. Terry thank you note from Mr. and
U!wis, Mrs. Vicki Clark, Miss Mrs. Amos Leonard for flowers
April King, Mrs. Edwin King. sent on their golden wedding
anniversary. Meeting time was
changed to the second Thursday
of each month. Holiday cookbooks are for sale by the
grange.
Ray Wertz of Cleveland and
1It was noted that the grange
his son-in-law and daughter,
had taken third place in exhibits
Mrs. Ro Cesek and chlldren,
Steven and Elizabeth of The lith reunion of the E. F. at the Meigs County Fair. A
Willoughby, were Sunday Bolen famlly was held recently reading on fairs was given by
guests of Mrs. Harry Ellis. Mr. at Ute home of Mr. and Mra. Jim Mrs. W. A. Morgan.
Wertz is Ute son-in-law of Mrs. Nelson and sons, Stevie and

Personal Notes

Ellis. SALE PLANNED
The Winding Trail Garden
Club will sponsor a rummage
sale Frlday and Saturday, Sept.
!Oand 11, from 9 a.m. to • p.m.
at the second ward fire house,
Condor Street,. Pomeroy.
All proceeds will be used for a
beautification project at the
Meigs County Home. Anyone
wishing to donate may call aily
club member.

KIDOIE SHOPP£

Shirt Talk illd Talk About

. Size 4 thru 14
SOLIDS
STHil'ES

A Small Deposit Will
Lay It Away

PHINTS
P.t.;ASANT
· Skirts, jumpers, . slacks,
sweaters to · co"ordinate by·
Talk-Abouts.

l

Griffith.

·

Vitalis
Hair Tonic

FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT
' ......
d ......,•• .,,..,.,.
......
Eapo.•. ...
eeput iafectiOII to ita

~t:_:=_ ':: ~~~.~~';:
FAST ..u., or your ••• back. NOW

-

G~~itding were Mr. and Mrs.

4oz.

Chewable
Cold Tablets
for Children

congespiril
o..JJeCold~
lorQ-ihn •
~,.....Ok$1 II

FINISHING:
1
·uH'oiii- Free Parking Lot 1

Reg, '1'
3oz.

!Miles

Reg, '1"
10 oz.

88 . SWABS

MICRIN

I .

2Boxes sge

DRY FORIULA
3 .Ill.

2 50$

4

FOR

Stretdt Lace

sza
Reg. 55'

No-

$}19

ACTION

-~

•lidel Infra-Red ~P
Heat&amp;llaUiger, you ttl
4 .nap-on 1tttchment1.

'-:::"'

Penetrating INFRA-RED heat and

65's

---

;

Spray

~::::=:==
baby-soft, smooth ;:)""
Reg, '1•

29'

Rec. '1'

OIL

®

massage for quick temporary re-

lief of minor aches and pains

M
liuw
.........

.....
s.aa-..

~~

r..;.

Slra...

5681

~BABY

......

anoclated
New
Deep Heat~
Back Massager

---·

•. . : . - 1-'., _ ......,.,

IGIKtt,_. ....
lllck • •• " . . .1

Portable, easy to
use In home or ol·
fic.e. Like a health r
club treatment you can
have any time , sitting up
lying down. Airtine seat slyli11g.

SOH. long-v.·earing vinyl, cleans
with a damp cloth.

5's

3ar.

884

-

Health Club"'
ish-Style
Massager

. 69~

=·

Reg. $37.95

Tube

y~

a..

'MIDDLEP9RT, OHIO

'

I

.

gge·

bars

44~

$1 39

8 Ol.

m,.....

• -wful heavy~uty Unl·
ft~NimOtor

• Lexon®

houslftl-llchter,

II&gt;ICftor thin metal

~24.88

Reg.
S2.25

Tub
~ampoo

MatchabeUi Golden. Autumn .
Specials
'

'3.00 Per(ume Creme Sachet ....-. '2.15

Talc............. ..•.................••.•..•..• •1.75
lath Powcler •..•.•..••....•.•.•••••.••.• '2.t5

Aladdin Special

THERMOUS
80T1U

8 oz.

For
Shower

99~

•3.75 'Cologne only ................... '2.2!1

WON'T RUST

WORKMANS '

'1.5~9_7_7~~ COP~

4

Reg. $2.50

ute

. No. 1123C

__
R..
____

Lux Soap

motor·-

• Helpo relieve mUICular
f.tlpe ..• rellxeo tiled

SCOPE

BAlH SIZE

Your
Qtoice
Bonne Bel SuPer ··
Rewlon Hi &amp;Dri
ShiMer 2000 .
Anti-Perspirant ·

• Thousands of
pulsltlons por min-

Shampoo Fami~.
Lotion
Jar

'

• lrtllrttil • ,_....

·

. 10 oz.

THE SHOE BOX

with:

A complete collection ot the most exciting hair accessories on the fashion scene-in leathers, simulated
woods, tortoise and honey tones. Golds In smooth and
Florentine finishes add a touch of glamour to the simplest
hairdo. Many barrettes have the unique GOody-MatlcTII
spring clasp-holds fine and extra thick hair securely
and comfortably.

....

"Your Clwice"

'

- ·-

rtllol-minor

G-

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS

WATat THIS PAPER FOR OUR SALE AD•

$16.95

l . ......

51....
.......
..._...
Arttlrflls

77~

STARTING SATURDAY, SEPT. 4

59&lt;

New· P ollenex Deep Heat®
5 in 1 Massager Set If'

allen associated with :

32 oz.

ONLY

Reg.

Reg. $1.09

R" '1.29
12 oz.

BABY SOAP

Now Only

49&lt;

£FF£CTIVE 4-WAY

YOUR
CONFIDENCE BUILDER

Reg,

v-.

Reg.

,.... I • •

Reg, 1U9
9oz.

WORM MEDICINE ·
ANTIBIOTICS
RABIE Dill VACCINE

Adiusfable

·'3.54

Reg.

Reg. 6Sc

14 hour· protection

FLEA OOUARS

EOONOMY

2For 39$

liJ-.fol-1
double tipped
swabs

DUnONS

SARGENfS TICK AND

Sanitary Belts
Reg, 39'

~+s':as

Rei.'1.29 as~

accurately with the finest,

SPRAY OR POWDER •

~~~~

NEW!

77

'-""'"" Set A $6.00 Value NOW ONLY $3.50 EACH

88 ~

88'·

here to serve you promptly and

FRO~~

Reg. '1.50

lOTION

!IDDORANT

new prescription filled, we are

EAU DE COLOGNE AND PERFUMED BATH OIL

Reg, 'lit

PACQUINS

HYGII'-E

now. And when you need a

'

Robi.nson's CleanetS:

Spray Anti-PetSPirant

'1:)

fiM',N

ORANGE FLAVORED

FIRE SALE

!

Reg, 11"

V05 HAIR SO LOTION

WE ARE HAVING A

. :SHIRT: ---;:

Spray Deodorant

5oz.
TI-E f'.£W

~UtiSiiclnoble prescriptions and medicatiani

w. A. Gibbs, Mrs. Georgia
William!!ll'l, Mrs. Neille Tracy,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wells, Mra.
Emma Schoenberger, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Woodyard and family
Mr. and Mrs. Dale U!Ue and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Schrieber, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Long and family, Mr. and Mra.
Hartwell Curd, Mr. and Mra.
Walter Heilman, Mr. and Mrs.
Coined Phrase
Robert Laudermilt and Mrs.
Two Chicago baseball Ullian Napper.
players, Billy Sunday and
Joe Quest, are generally
credited with coining the
phrase, "Charley horse," for
a muscle strain in the leg,
after a horse they backed in
a race pulled up lame near
the finish line.
•

CALM

14 at

14 oz.

FLEA AND TICK

s 26!

49~

99~

49'
88'

39' t. size

Reg.

5oz.

on hand can be-dangerous. Get rid of those

Harold Bolen, Mrs. Keith Ball Run neighbors of Mr. and
Weaver, Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Napper and
Mrs. Roge~ Bolen of Lon· family, Route 2, Pomeroy,
d?"derry, MISS Susan Bolen of surprised them wiUt a farewell
~ln~tl, John Bolen, Miami party Sunday evening.
Uruverstty; Mr. and Mrs. Max Homemade ice cream and
Bolen, Richard _B~~ and Rick cake were served. A gift was
Bolen, Reyno!dS6urg; Mf· itiQ presented to the family who will
Mrs. G. Bl Stout, Ml' · and Mrs. move Sunday to Aberdeen,
Jack Bolfn. Mr. and Mrs. Ohio.
Albert Bolen, Greg and KenneUt · Attending were Mr. and Mra.

8oz.

7az.

&amp; Lohse Drugs.

Farewell Party

Reg, '1 11

FREEZER BAGS

Reg._99'

36's

ot Nelson's Drug Store; Swisher

freshest-quolity drugs.

WoodbUIJ
Shampoo

Reg, '1.59

Reg. $}33

.

USE IERATOLmC ACnON
IECAUSE-11
1

Cream
Hair
Ret'IKM!I'

Re&amp;. 98'
20's

Nelsons Hold
BO.en ReUnWn
•

'

.._

Reg, '1.89
12 oz.

chest was cleaned out? Keeping old medicines

- 21, E. 2nd.l'l!meriiy ": • .

•

Jim

How long has it been since yotli'" medicine

. .------~----------. Bolen, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
~•
•
Bernard Allen, Mrs. C. E. Stout,
@~
Bonme, Jtidy, Boyd and Bruce
• ·
THE
Allen of Albany.
Tbe next get-together of the
family~ be held on the last
Sunday m August, 1972, at the
On !he T In Midd~port
home of Mrs. C. E. Stout,
Lady-Uke
Albany.

For Girts By • •. •

•

. GOSPEL SING ~UNDAY
A Gospel Sing will be held at
Ute Plants Chm:ch Sunday at
1 : 30~. m. featuring the Duncan
Family of Tampa; Fla., Paw
and ~aw Duncan, Buren and
Bonme, Dan Hayman and the
McDaniel Trio, the Roush
Fam~ly, Dwain Wolfe and
Denrue Manuel, Mr. and Mra.
Wesley Youn~, Mrs. Florence
A~ and Slftgers, Ute Congo

Middleport

Blouses
A great selection of washable
blends, acrylic piles, fashion
wale corduroy, quilled and
other fall fabrics in the young
styles and colors of the
season . All budget priced!

could vote on cootroversial
que.Stions wtUtout being_record·
ed. But this year· for ihe first
time, record votes can be
forced on almost anything and
it Seems certain that few
members will wish to identify
themselves as opposed to
legislation possibly supported
by a majority of their
constituents. And women are In
the majority in the nation's
population.
·
The House tentatively plans
to debBie Ute amendment the
week of Sept. 20.
If approved, as expected, it
will go the the Senate for
action. That was tjle situation
last year, when the equal rights
amendment died in the Senate
wiUt the end of Ute congress.
But women expect a different
ending to Ute story this year_

From Your Pharmacist

'J

JEwELRY STORE

MANY FAKE .FURS!

Since 1789, c6ngressmen often

Troo s Need Leaders ~~i91fiW1W'WWwt*m ~~;;r:dan~Mr~v~t~
11
1j'

The national and state grange
• ;., ESDAY
sewing and baking contests will
Court St.
p
MIDDLEPORT Chapter 363 be held at the Frlday nlght
~-----o_m_e_r_o.;,y.JF&amp;AM Tuesday, 7:30p. m.
meeting of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange, 8 p. m. in the
Rock Springs hall. Harrison·

Girls Size 2 mo. to 14

7-Tbe Dally Sentinel, MiddJepc~tt-Pmneroy, 0 _, Sept. 2, 19'1!\

Equal Rights for WQmen

Gardeners ' Day Out

SUNDAY
ANNUAL SWARTZ family
reunion, Sunday, Woode Grove,
Alfred, with basket dinner at
noon followed by entertainment
.and games. Everyone welcome.
OURS FAMILY reunion
Sunday,
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds, basket dinner
served at I p. m.

r-bwto

I',_

.

Reg. S4.25
Reg. Sl.OS

unique formula for relief .
of nerwus tenSIOn ~lies

WITH
' THIS

Pllstic

·

GOOO ONLY AT

lit

.

'·
--------'-·

49• ·
9

NELSON'S DRUGS

OFFER EXPIRES 9-6-1971

Reg. 15."

.

ONLY .

&gt;)

COUPON _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,;;;__I

Woe mans

88'

FAMILY SIZE'

'.

�.

)
•--ftellailwlh4hrl, Jil,•teiM*t.l'linaoy,O.,Sept.2,lf11

.

.

,

.

.

.

..

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! :·
.

(

.

Notice

For Rent

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, SeD· FURNISHED 3 bedroom
Wnlber 5, 1 p.m., Mile Hill
apartment, adults only,
Road. 10 lb. steak. bacon,
Middleport. Phone 9'12·38U.
- Cjlglt.ttlaft• Carr~ ions
hams
by
Racine
Fire
9-2-Jtp
Will be~ W~lil9 a .iii. lOr
Department.
~of Publication
• .
9-2-3tc
REGULATIONS
l'llblisher ' tOserves the
: Angus
Hereford
right to l!dlt w reject any ads BLACK
weighing abOut 600 lb. Either
~"""' objectiona_l~- The:
lost or stolen In the Thomas GENERAL STORE and service
llUblisherwill not be re&gt;panslble
Fork or Laurel Cliff area.
station across from PorHand
lor tnGfto than one incorrect,
Phone 992-&lt;1167.
I Park. Phone 8-43-2-491 .
9-2·fc
8-27-&lt;llc
RATES
Fw W~l Ad Service
YARD SALE-some antiqoles
$cents !*r Word one insertion
plus church
rummage.
• Minimum Charge75c
Corner
of
park
and Pearl
· 12 C81ts per word three
Streets.
starting
Labor
Day 10
.o:uiSMuti ve insertions.
a.m
..
II cents per word s ix ton
9-2-Jtp WILL PAY well for your spare
secutive insertions.
time working at home for us.
lS.Per Cent Discount on paid I WOULD like to do typing in
Anyone who can read and
ads and ad!&gt; paid with in 10 day•.
write can qualify. Weekly
my lfome•. Reasonable rateo.
• CARD OF THANKS
salary. For details write,
Phone 992.J.I97.
&amp;081TUA"Y
James Bliss Co.. P. 0 . Box
8-29-&lt;ltc
$1...50: tor SO WG'd m inimum.
324, Dept. K ~79. Levittown.
liiadl adiliticnal wwd 2c.
Pa .• 19053.
BLIIIO ADS
.
8-27-&lt;llc
Additional l5c Charge per

n.e

F·or Sale or' lease
·

---.

-------+ ------Male or Female
Help Wanted ·

Adva lise.,..t.

OFfiCE HOURS
1:311 a .m . to 5:00 p:m. Da ily,
1:30 a .m. to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday.

In llelldl
IN MEMORY of Navada
Beaver who passed awa y
s.p.mber 2, 1967.
'
A I"Cious one from us Is gone,
The 'WOke - loved is still,
A place is vacant in our home,
wtoch never can be filled.
Sadly missl!d by husband,
~nry Beaver, t!~~hter,
Danna S... son.
I and
Family. M;llheo, Mrs. Harry
Allisarl. sister. Mrs. Roland
Torrence. brofher. Paul
Allison and Mattie.
9-2·11c
IN MEMORY ol o...- dear
husband and lather, Edward
You!J9. who deparll!d this life
six •years ago ~y. SepWnlber 2.
eau no1 bado. the dear departed.
- l ! d sale where storms

.-e o'er.
On the bui.., land -left him
Soon to meet and part no more.

-.. -

leaw this warld of

-.. -

leaw this warld of

changes.

care.

We shall lind our missing loved
one

In our

Fa~s

mansion fair.

Sadly missed by wife. Katie,
children, Otho, Howard,
Beffie, Bernice, Edith. Elva.
Jean families.
9-2-1fp

lEGAL N011CE
NOTICE OF SALE
By vil'1ue of an Ordet" of Sale
duly issued out at the Court of
Common Pleas , Meigs County,
Ohio. in the case of R: K E
Fedl!ral Credit Union vs. Ralph
Snider, et al . upon a jud9ment
lht!rein rencterect~ being Cause
No. ••.7~ iA said court .. 1 will

- a t public sale at llle tront
of lh• Court Houoe in

For Sale
REGISTERED quab er horse,
gelding, 3 years old, gentle.
Phone 949-479~.
9-2-Jic

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sportsman Club. Sunday,
~-:-:-:=c--­
September 5, 12 noon.
tOAL. limestone: ExcolsiQr
9-1-ltc
&lt;.all Works, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
RUMMAGE SALE sponsored
.t..9-ffc
by Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Friday and RINGNECK . Pheasants, 4
Saturday. September 3 and ~ .. weeks old to adults. Phone
at Coats Building In MidCoolville, Ohio 667-3361.
·
9-2-Jtc
dleport next to Firestone.
Starts at 9 a.m.
9-1-ltc 1971 HONDA 350 Super Sport,
like new condition· $695. Call
YARD SALE. collectors' Items,
evenings only 992-7173.
antiques, carnival glass and ___________ 9_·2_-Jtc
ather Items at Dora Hysells
on Eagle Ridge and Bashan 32 _ 350 h.p., partolesscam and
Road on September

9-1-Jtp
SAVE ' UP to,.,., half. ·Brllig
your sid&lt; TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
...
'
4-23-ttc .
PLEASE REQUEST your
favorite disc jockey to play' 'God and I" - 8-W- "The
Glory ol The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A.
published by Sawenlr Songs
(ASCAP), free recording to
OJs. Address. John Mohler.
Rt. 1, Box 210, Middleport,
Ohio &lt;15760, phone 992-&lt;1903.
. 8-2S.12tp
KOSCOT . Kosmetics . September
Sales
Special :
Kream~ Lip Kote $2 now
$1.50, Frosllucent Lip Kote
$2.50 now 12, 23 delicious
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161'h ,.. &lt;th Ave .•
Middleport, Oho.
8-29-ttc

--:::--.,........,..---......:....::..
anted
111

w,

EXPERIENCED timber cutter.
Phone 992-5644.
B-31-5fp

Pomero,.. Ohio.; an Hie 27th d1y
of Seplem-. 1911, •• 10,00
O 'Cklck A.M., llle fOllowing . · •.
. . _ and tonements:
Situated "in the Village of
Mi~dlepo~l.

M•igs Count~ .

Olloa. Be1ng L~! No. 15 •n
Bosworth"s Add•hon to Lower

PoMeroy .. now incorporated
;nto and m - a p;trl of the
Village o1 Middtl!pOI1.
Deed

Reference :

~-

anted T0 BUJ

GINSENG. Clean bone dry. $38
lb Snake Root $5 lb Bill
B·
' .
· .
alley, ReedSVIlle, Oh10,
Second St. Phone 378-62011.
B-31-10fc

Vol . 207.

Page •u.. Meigs County Deed ONE BOTTLE gas heater with
Records..
blower and thermostat, 50,000
Being also known as 207
to
60,000 BTU. Phone 992-6W
leech Street. Middleport, Ohio.
alter
5:311 p. m.
The aDDraised v•lue of the
8-31-Jtp
reel es.~te is S2,AOO.OO:.
Term sot $ale : CaSh on day of

sale.

OLD Furniture; dlsheo, dodo.s.
and.or complete households.
Rober1 c. Hartenbach
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Slier rtf of Meigs County.
Ohio.
Call 992-&lt;1271.
111 26ltl2. '· 16. 23. 51
8·25-ffc

Laurel OUT

----100 TO 300 ACRES, old farm,

abandoned farm or vacant
BJBI!BDIAPABQK
land with all rights. Will pay to
Sablalb Sdlaol •IIMtdanre $5,000 cash. Write to John
Aag. as !15. Offeo iog far lbe Huffman. 1500 Semlnola ,
day was $1'/U!I. Alfendance Akron, Ohio 4-4305.
Aag. 21 was 1._ 1'be day's of- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _a._27-61p

zz

(siltg was $UUL
111e FMY of tbe 1oca1 cburcb Wanted
lrldai*ICI*"'Sundaye'l'eling .ATHENS

wti 1lliS 111!11 altmded.
11r Uldllrs. William JacOOI
.

•
llld grallddaagbler, Bobbie
Ardrr cf O+tm!.. 'Visited

reci!DII;J with ft!alifts ben.
,llr. 8ld llrs. Gem ~.

aDd
Kevin,
o•unb•. spent averal days

Kimberlee

To Rent

CAR HOP and waitress . Apply
In person. Crow' s Steak

Curd's malber, .Mrs. Nora

~2-ttc
-------~-------

Jlalller.

House.

.. • _

llrs. Ernie Bagu is staying FURNISHED and unfurnished
aparlm~ts . Close to school..
with ber .-eats. llr. aDd Mrs.
Phone .....5(1.4.
111-18-ffc
James Gilmore, wbile her
.......,, En*, is slalimed iii
"wilh_lbe u. s. Army. 3 ROOM W~furnished apartment. Phone 992-2288.

8-29-lfc

We .. foJUU
lille a pam

.

.

.

WMP0/1390

PRIVATE frailer lot in Cheoter
"'ith utility building. PhOne
985-4106.
8-27 -61c
I BEDROOM trailer apart ment, Idea l for couples.
Contact McClure' s Dairy Isle.
992-S2ol8 or 992-3436.
8-29-&lt;llc
A ROOM apartment. all utilities

paid, lurnished - $80.00
mo\lh. Phon~ 992-3975. ·
8-JJ.Ifc .

And

'

MIWR

LEAR Jet 8 lrado. tape player
with 2 speakers and 2 tapes.
Phone 992-J.457.
9-1-ltc

!~~~~ ·~~~r~r.ste~~ 1 ad~~~

$67.40. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
B-29-61c

colonial maple
slere~, AM. &amp;peedFM rad io, fo ~r
spea ers, • s
au 1oma1 1c
changer. separate controls.
Balance $80.99 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.

•'
•

•

RACINE -- 1 story frame. 3 FOR SMALLER house, a large
house (2 apts.) corner of
large bl!drooms with closets,
Pearl &amp; Park Sis., Ml~­
bath, nice kitchen, large
dleport
.
living rvllm, CARPETED,
8-29-6tc
large garage with shop, .75
acre, LIKE NEW. $20,500.
POMEROY-- 1'12 story frame,
J bedrooms. bath, living
room,
dining
room ,
basement, porch, large lot.
Storm doors, windows. ALL
IN GOOD CONDITION.
BARGAIN AT JUST$7,900
PLACE THE SALE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPABLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office tt2·2259
Residence m -2561
8-29-&lt;llc

------

RUTLAND -- 6 rooms, bath,
basement, nice lol. $3,500.00.
CHESTER
AREA
2
bedrooms , nice kitchen and!
living . Only $7,600.00.

Ya.

~------~~-

Auto Sflles
1967 CHEVELLE Malibu,
standard, phone 992-&lt;1978 .
9-1-ltc

Filter or Power
·Fin Agitator .

~
.,••

Maytag

.."..

-·-nrma:Priil"

·~RIJTlAND FURNITURE_:
742-4211

..

Arnold Grate

~I

o.
--·

Rutland,
~-

CARS &amp; TRUCKS •

••
•

•

'

•

• 1964 fcrd Galax' 500
'795 •
• 4 Door. va engine. au'!nallc ;;;;:::-::~:teer.l,;;i, e
•
radio, clean Interior. radio, good tlreo, rl!d over white •
,. ·sh
•
•
Dodge Dart 4 Door
1968
~495 •
•
·
·---1
"'

•
•
•

~'-mpt.J~
lA.I
.,..,

•

R-

- .e_mode1mg

•

•

Septic Tanks
And Leach Bl!ds.

742-4902.
.

$500. Phone
8-31-llc
-1_ _ __- V_O_L_K
__
S_W_A.....:.G.:...
EN
9 70
automatic slick shift, radio:
electric defroster, dark blue
and white interior. Phone 675-

;;·4

. :.::~-8
1970 Wftm....::_l
brak eo

'2895 ••
-.•

r

• 1966

I'M 1\i; BE$1' FmiO

txl AAV!i, ·

~~ 11.1 $.1.11)), txllHiS

ft)L.IGY, I'M J?a7!1~ ~ OJ 10

uve -v~o RJP!i.Cl.D IU€!

•
•
•
•
•

a..n.-. lmpal., ·-----·$1395 :

Conv. cpe .• local owner &amp; low mileage. Vinyl Interior, •
dark blue finish, white top. air conditioned. V-8 engine,
automatic trans., power steering, radio. A nice cor .
•

1966 Buick WiUdcat Cpe.

•

~----'1195 •

1967 r.....l
I'ID
'1595
NU L · - - - - - - - - - -

•e 1970
•

•
•

DAILY CROSSWORD

automatic Iran•. &amp; factory air conditioning Special.

dre4

21. Spanish
queen
2%. Up-

e

Special, •
•

Dodge Polara ·-------.'2495

~Or., V-8 engine, automatic trans .. P.S.. factory air, good

poWder,
and
rouge

LOCAL

wds.)
2,. Lyric
poem
25. Wlld

e
•
•

goat
27. Inti-

e 1967 Ford Mustang -- --- '1595 e
•
•

•

sinki

native
31. Kind
of beer

·'995 :

: 1966 Fcrd Galaxie HT Cpe.

form four ordinary words.

cheese

YANDS

33. Solitary
35. Ruaslan

•e
:

river

corres·

j( VILIC

pondent
39.Never

(T

(Ger.)

!0. Brlghest

III

star

DAYDEL

•

••
•• ·

:

.

•

PliCa WIU. MIVa II LOWiil · :

.. Open Eves. Till

1

JwablnoTASTY IHYME ISLAND

m~2126

Yn~e..Ur••

•

•

-~ ~Pomeroy Motor
Rawlings
Dodge
City .: Your Chevy ~ler
'
.

II

I

........... ....,

e

TO GO
.,..,.~. Q 'W'!IIII8
II'

:

••
•.•

j

11-IIN6S 6CT OUT
OF HAND ~EN
'IOU t:'O iHI~!

(

•

1io·.au· •
a ti~ To Savel :
Now-Do lollll •

•

~

•

ONLY 17
NEW '71 CHEVROLET$

•

Cl =~=-

36.Gulnness
37. Noted war

6 Cyl. engine, std. trans ., air conditioning, good fires •
'
.clean interior. dark green finish.

••
•

mating

29. Hel-

HT Cpe.• 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine, wide cfvaltlreo, •
P.S.. P.B .• Iadory air cond .• radio&amp; other extras.
•

Unscramble these rwr Jumbles,
one letter to each aquare, to

32. Dutch

(2

-·

tires. radio &amp; other extras. white finl•h. clean Interior.

rJJ1gp)1l1;u..i ..,.,.&amp;w .-J , _

sUck,

MAYOR ANO
COMMISSIONER ~A)JE
OI&lt;AVEO 'rnESE AWAROS,
DONATED BY Ti-lE

•

•

Yeotenlq'o C&gt;n&gt;toqaote: HEo.LTH IS '11IE TIUNG
THAT MAKES YOU FEEL THAT NOW IS THE Ban'
TIME OF THE YEAR.--FRANKLIN P. ADA)(S
(0 llrll .KIDI' Featuru Syndicate, IDe.)

19.Angerlng
20. Kln·

.
AutomatiC trans .• power steering &amp; brakes, good w-w •
llreo. radio. healer, while finish , clean Interior. Reg. price •
$l39~.oo. Special.
• .

$2295 '2195 •

••
•.•

Co.:
'

· : '
Pvmeroy!

..____. ••••••••••••••••••••

~-------------~P

THE BORN LOSER

• . ~ .. cab io axle, good 825&gt;&lt;20 tires. 2 speed rear axle, Int. &amp; •
• cab like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. ln . eng. A real clean
• lrudo..
.
•

$2895 '2795 e

992-2151 . 992·2152

.. ,

R eaiDcloJiy
Sharp.

•

5203.

.

MAINlENANCE CAN
DONE BY 11-IE
ROBOT ITSE\.F!

~E

less than ll,Ooo miles &amp; appearance of 71 model. Rally •
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior, •
tinted glass. factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler. turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp; •

•

1959 FUIW ,12 ton pickup. very •

.

SIJCil114AT /loW

270 Series, vinyl root. while finish. all good tires, 6 cyl., •
al)tomatlc trans .• radio, clean Interior.
.-

•

•

. ~L 2 Dr . H. T., V-8, automatic. p.-st., very
· nrce one owner trade.

THE"""'' "M» ARE

•

Less than 10.000 m1leo by local owner. Sharp as new In all
way•. white over gold flnl•h. 350 V-8 engine, power •
steering , radio, while-walls. wh. covers.
•

•

Auto Sales

$1695 '1595

N0~~1 _DOC ...

; • 1966 a.. 2 Ton On~ ------'1750 •

Endloader Work

1967 GAWIE

IN MY LIFE !

•
•
•

•
•

IOHJtsoN _M
_ASOIIRY .•

2 .Dr. H.T., V-8, T·Fiite, p.·st., p-br., 36,000
m 1les. Sharp.
·

MORE 5ERIOU~

ITl!

••
.•
•

•

I WASNEVER

JUY

···············~···'

•
•
•

OpeniTitf
Monday tttru S.,turday
606 E. Main, Pameroy,O.

1968 POIARA.

-·
•
•'

l1970 c.naro Cpe. •-----· '3395 •

'440' 2 Dr. H.T., 318 V-8, T-Fiite. p·steerjng.
chrome wheElls · new tires.
·

)

•
•
·t,.

POIIIeniJ Home &amp; AulD

1970 OORONET

I

Service

•

NOW

;

''

-GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

WAS

'•
''·I

: We Specllllleln
MAYTAG
Red Carpet

EXPERT
Wheel Afi&amp;nment
!1:.55
';A

Your response to our '101' sale has
been so great that we .are ge!!ing
overstocked on sharp trade-ins. We
don't want to forget our used car
buyers, so we're going to offer a· pricereduction sale on these sharp trades
listed below ... hurry on in and get the
best deal ever from "Dependable
City".

•

,Surround cloth•s
with gentle, even'~
heat . No hot spots, ,
no overdrylng ..
!Fine Mesh Lint
Filter. .

~========:=:~

SALE
CONTINUES .

Middleport .-....

&lt;

HIIO Df Htlt
Dryers

Pomeror

"101" DEPENDABLE CITY

.

"..

L ,.;·,

.;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;-ii8i;;·i;;31i.-&lt;l~tc ••• vinyl
~DOorroof,
Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes. vlnyllnterlor, blk.
maroon fini•h. radio, new w-w tires, V-8 with

i'

IF !Hi'S SO BRIG~T, ~W

COME H~S NEVER I-lEARD
OF A CREW CUT~

~~ .

Auto.:
I IV. e f

BCAEtlltARS

~37'J:'ndltion.

GO~, YOU WEllE; BALD. Ell·WITWOUT HAIR,
EVEN TWSN

:·

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

~~:~~,:d

I

•'

6.98.

klleftens, K~ths
Room Additions

TillS PllOTO

'
•

O'DELL WHEEL al ignment
locatedai'Crossroads, Rt. 12~.
Complete front end ser.vice, ·
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec - ·
Ironically. ' All
work
From the largest Truck or
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Bulldozer Radiator to the
rales . Phone 992-3213.
Smalleot Heater Core.

--=---'~=====:=--=-S....,.Il.,..·tt~.

IN

WAS A FllES~MAN AT
1&gt;00/..ITTLE COI.J.EGE

i

Air
.
Inspection and
Re-ChaJge

Ph.992·2143

'1· 1.

.·'

BILL NELSON
992-3657

Blaettnar's

MIDDLEPORT - 4 bl!drooms.
bath, large living, garage.
Only $7,500.00.
'
- = = = = = = = : : 8:.:
29::._-"..,c
_
COUNTRY LIVING - new ~
r
bedroom, 2 bath, double
garage,
15 acres . $37,500.00.
BEAT the COLD WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
RT. 7 BYPASS -- new 5
HEATING OIL FROM
bedroom home, 1'12 baths. ~
LANDMARK.
acres.
We have the fineot Budget
Pay Plan , Delivery Services,
NEW HOME - 3 spacious
Automatic . Degree Day
bedrooms. P.as heat, large
living and kitchen . $19,500.00.
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Equipment.
your own
lNV ESTMENT . We also have a complete tine
home
and
busin~ss with
of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
renta l. Store with Mock and
and FurQ~ces .
fixtures .
POMEROY
IAiil Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
INVESTMENT - 2 stories Phonttf2 ·2T~I
large rental on first floor ~ 2
on second. 218 E. Main.
APPLES-Peaches. Fiizpatrick
tt2·332$ .
Orchards, Stale Route 689,
~len L. Teaford
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
Associate
a-29-6tc
8-15-lfc
..:..._

_____

~

•,.

ltM Your sri

For Sale or Trade

·11 • 14' • 24' • WIDE

•

.•

-115 tor-

..

BLESSIN'

•I ,

Real Estate Fcir Sale.

__

MVGOURMEr

•,.

FOUR
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HoME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN ·
100 PCT. FINANCING AV·AILABLE
A 3 bl!draom $16,900.00 home Clln be purchased with a
monthly payment a slow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pd. annual ·

FuRNITURE

Realty

~ BEAUTIFUL

TRCAILE RRL 0TS, .Bobs's Mobile
1. IU, yracuse,
o~r 1•
Oh10. 992-2951.

Pomeroy

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER
WORK
.
SPOIJT!NG, ·
ROOii PAINnNG

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. iood An~top In and See Our
thony
Plumbing &amp; HNiing.
Floor Display.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Ajr ConNEIGLER Construction. For , ditioning.
.building or remodeling your · 240 Lincoln St., Middleport
home. Call Guy Nelgler.
Racine, Ohio.
"SIX ROOM house. bath; . luli
Phone 992-2550
7-31·ttc '
basement, .J33Jlulfernul Ave., -------=,----Insured
• Experienced
just walking distance from • SEWINGMACHINES. Repair
Woric Guaranteed
~owntown Pomeroy. Contact· service, all makes, 992.221(,
_d_ Hedrick, 2137 WadswO&lt;th, The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
See
Free
Drove, Columbus, Ohlo,.rhone! Authorized Singer Saleo and ,
Estimate on Furnace
237-4334, Columbus. .
Service' We Sharpen Scissors.
lnstalatjon.
::-:=-='':':-::-:----- - , ;5;..:·9·11&lt;;
3-29-ltc
3 BEDROOM home. Electric
.
heat, remodeled recently QUEEN AND Shamblin Canst.
sn.-111
inside,7thstreet,NewHaven.
Roofing , remodeling,
Owner transferred. Phone aluminum siding. Phone 992· ·
882-2263.
7324 or 742--4979.
Con~itioning
8-29-&lt;llc
8-25-ffc '
..,.
BA_C_K_H_O_E_A_N.,._D_OO_Z_E_R-work.' .
HOUSE. 16-42 Lincoln Heights.
Septic tanks installl!d. George
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
!BIIIJ Pullins. Phone 992-W8 .
2196.
_______________7__
-18-ttc ----~----------~-15-ff_c
Special
Plus
3 BEDROOM brick home. ~EPT_IC _tanks cleaned. Miller
Parts
At
Choice location In Middleport.· Sam tall on, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
Seen by appointment only. 662·3035.
Phone 992-5523 atler ~ p.m .
2-12-tfc
5-7-ttc PHONE tt2-214l
-------'---.,..--:---- HARRISON'S TV AND AN
'CONVENIENT but -secluded·
TENNA SERVICE . Phono
·992-2522.
building lots on T79 at Rock
6-10-tf•
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from SEWING MACHINE service in
your home. Clean, oil and
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
adjust, $-1. Phone 992-7085 . .
Witte weekends or alter 5.
Twin City Sewing Machine
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992Company.
·
~7 ·
8-31-6tc
' 7-11-lfc

· •sR.

Heights. Phone 992-5127 alter
.~ p.m .
8·31-ltc

AU10

OFFICE SUPPUES

HALF RUNNER beans, $2
bushel. watermelons, cantaloupes.
sweet
corn,
potatoes. Clarence Proffitt,
Portland. Phone 1143-2254.
9-1-ffc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

.

•

992-2094

9- 1 ~4tc

VOLKSWAGEN camper, good
condition. Less than 20.00P
STA NLEY Home Products
miles. 439 Lincoln St.. Midneeds 5 tall and Christmas
dleport, Paul Scott.
representatives .
Car
8-25-ttc
necessary. Write Mrs. Lib·
man, J.4 W. Carpenter St .•
BEAGLE, 5 months old, A. K.C.
Athens w call 593-885-t
regislerl!d. Ha• had all shots
8-31-&lt;ltc
$40. Phone 992- 359~ after ~
p.m .
soMEONE nel!ded Ia slay with
Broker
8-29-61c
invalid 5 days a week. some
110 Mec~anic Street
Pameroy ,~a
nights. Phone 992· 71558-29-&lt;llc
·
WALNUT stereo-radio com : .
binallon . Four speed in termixed changer . Four SYRACUSE--4raoms. nice lot.
$1 ,800.00.

For Rent

'

!fO~E&amp;

24" COAL furnace - $50. 609
Pearl St. Phone 992-2-446.

8-31-6tc

2 BEDROOMnoose on Lin&lt;oln

.

IF I I&lt;NOWED IT
WUZ GOIN'TO BE
ALL THAT GOOD ..

:~J ~

Busfu.ess· Sertie~;

PcJMEROY

~06 E. Main

Oeland

MOBiL£. HOMES

Help Wanted

40" HOT POl NT range, white, 2
years old, excel.t enl condition
. $150.00. Can be seen after 5
· p.m . at 105 Union Avenue.
Phone 992-3293.
8-31 -llc

..

NEW. 3-bedroom home in
Middleport . . Buill-in kitchen,
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
POODLE puppieo, Silver Toy,
Parkview Kennels. Phone 992heal, good neighborhood. Can
arrange FHA financing .
5«3.
8-15-ttc
Telephone 992-3600 or 9922186.
.
7-25-lfc
CANNING tomatoes, already
picked . $1.25 bu., bring
c---·:...
· - - = =-=--7-·27-ltc
containers. Geraldine LARGE 2 apartment home.
Furnished, beautiful river READY -MIX
CONCRETE
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
view
. Rental trailer on
7-~8-ttr
delivered
to your
prQject. Fastright
and easy.
Free
premises. Inquire at Dairy
.
..
estimates. Phone 992-328~.
Corner,
Letart.
W.
Va
.
Phone
NICE 8 week old p1gs - $10 to
895-3357.
Goe~leln Ready-Mix Co.,
$12. County Road 30. Phone
8-31-&lt;~tc
949-2115.
Mid leport, Ohio.
t.-30-tt&lt;'
B-ll -Jtp -19_7_0_ R_IC
_H
__
A_R_O-SO
__
N__m--oblle
' ·
10&gt;&lt;25 HOUSE TRAILER. set up
home with washer and dryer. AWNINGs",- s torm doors and·
windows , carports,
on 1ar3e lot In Harrisonville.
fully carpeted, also 5 room
marquees. aluminum siding
house with basement, both
W1' ll se llra'·1 er or both · Phone
located on two lots In
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
742-4781 .
sales
representative. For free
Syracuse.
Phone
992-7019.
8-31 -llc
eolimales, phone Char leo
8-31-&lt;ltc
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
USED SINGER portable sewing
machine with zlg-za_gger. 11.16 ·ACRES located T-79 at
Johnson and Son, Inc . S-27-ttc
blind hem. Fashion des1g~-- Rock Springs, close to Meigs
etc. $31.75. Phone 992-7085. • - High School. Contad Bill
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
B-31~tc
Wllfe-for L. Fields -alter 5 Reasonable rateo. Ph . .w.- 4712 ,
- - - - - - - - - - -- · p. m. or on weekends 992-6887 .
Gallipolis. John Russell,
MAKE beaten down carpet nap
B-27-101c
Owner &amp; Operator.
at doorways bright and flutfy - - - - - - - - - - - - - - again with Blue Lustre. Baker
Furniture Company.
C. BRADFORD, . A~ciloneer
9-1-61c
Complete Service
Phone 9#7-3821
REFRIGERATOR. stove,18 cu.
Racine, Ohio
ft. upright freezer. couch, 2
Crill Bradford
chairs, set of end tables.
S-1-tfc
coffee table. 2 table lamps, 1
601 East Main
tloor- lamp, utility •land, 1
AUTOM&lt;IBI LE Insurance b&lt;!en
POMEROY
used clarinet, hair dryer. 1
cancelled?
Lost
your
kitchen cabinet, all In good
~ator's license? Call 992·
MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A
condlllon._.f!!9ne ~47-2135.
2966.
BUY FOR YOU -- 1112 story
6-15-ttc
brick, living room, dining
room, CARPETED, nice
kitchen, bath, 2 bl!drooms,
storage building. JUST $6,950.

business couple
!rio washingron Bivd ..
transferring to Pomeroy .
Belpre, Ohio
Would _like house or apartmen! m Pomeroy or Mid·
dleport. No children. Ex· TWO 55" mireS; S ~d 7 years
cellenl reference. Phone Vera
old, pony saddle. Karen
Eblen at 593-7783 or 593-3710.
Griffith, phone 992.5712.
9-1 -3tp
8-29-&lt;ltc

wilb MR. Alllire'smollrt,Mrs.
l!erlba Parker.
Mrs. Marion Howell of
Colnmbul spent tbe past week
Wilb Mr. aDd Mrs. Walter
Walt« and Mr. Fra'* ~llr. Oaarles Diebl in
Co~ambas
at University
HG!piDI recently far JDOJ!ical
lrf.etment
llrs. Oaarles Diehl bas been
~ImbEd bome fnm Hdzer
..._.D) wbere sbe bad been a
....,..
..lientfar ~ da,s.
Mrs. Caralyn Banis of St.
Albans, w. va., and Mrs.
Avmell 11ro1m of Gallipolis
m!e~~U, visited their molber,
Mrs. Cara Rembaw. .
Jlrs. Marie CUrd, BaD Run,
and , grandsm, Sle'l'l! ' Elkins,
"""'='= ........... -'tb Mrs.

.,._......,. ·-""' ~·

crankshaft. Will sell all or
part. Phone 9#7·2571.
9-2-&lt;llc
_F_A_R_M--an-d--hom--e--la-l-ex-house
palnt sale. King Builders
Supply, Middleport .
9·2·24fc

Business Service$

For Sale

I'D A-GIVg IT

L.IKE IT?

.

'

;··

WANT AD
.INFORMATION
DEADLINES
SP.M. Dily-., Publication
Mllo"'-Y Deadline9a.m .

..

I

Aatwen TIN1e an •omelimet bNNI iftto .Ua di.btp
p ...........- TIAI5

HERE'S THE
lllORLO FAMOUS

FOOTeAl.L COACH
WAlKING OUT

ONTO lHE FlRD
WINNING 15
EVERI{TlliN6!
L051N6 15

DAILY CKYPI'OQUOlE-Here'a how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXB
Ia . LONGFELLOW
One letter almply otanda for another. In thiB sample A 13
uoed for the three L'o, X for the two O'o, etc. Single !etten,
apootrophoo, the length and fonnatlon of the words ""' all
hints. Each day the ~ letters ""' different.

J B'P

W M G Z Y

0 S T B U S

J B P

LESXY, WMB1 BWMSU TBVVBN KSWL
GZ

KGL

KBNS

ABYS

•

!i

i:

{I

A c.n&gt;topam Quotation
G T

LIKE tom'HIII&amp;!

1,i

TGU .LW .'-- 8 .

N.

,[

PIOJIU

TO

..

�.

)
•--ftellailwlh4hrl, Jil,•teiM*t.l'linaoy,O.,Sept.2,lf11

.

.

,

.

.

.

..

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! :·
.

(

.

Notice

For Rent

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, SeD· FURNISHED 3 bedroom
Wnlber 5, 1 p.m., Mile Hill
apartment, adults only,
Road. 10 lb. steak. bacon,
Middleport. Phone 9'12·38U.
- Cjlglt.ttlaft• Carr~ ions
hams
by
Racine
Fire
9-2-Jtp
Will be~ W~lil9 a .iii. lOr
Department.
~of Publication
• .
9-2-3tc
REGULATIONS
l'llblisher ' tOserves the
: Angus
Hereford
right to l!dlt w reject any ads BLACK
weighing abOut 600 lb. Either
~"""' objectiona_l~- The:
lost or stolen In the Thomas GENERAL STORE and service
llUblisherwill not be re&gt;panslble
Fork or Laurel Cliff area.
station across from PorHand
lor tnGfto than one incorrect,
Phone 992-&lt;1167.
I Park. Phone 8-43-2-491 .
9-2·fc
8-27-&lt;llc
RATES
Fw W~l Ad Service
YARD SALE-some antiqoles
$cents !*r Word one insertion
plus church
rummage.
• Minimum Charge75c
Corner
of
park
and Pearl
· 12 C81ts per word three
Streets.
starting
Labor
Day 10
.o:uiSMuti ve insertions.
a.m
..
II cents per word s ix ton
9-2-Jtp WILL PAY well for your spare
secutive insertions.
time working at home for us.
lS.Per Cent Discount on paid I WOULD like to do typing in
Anyone who can read and
ads and ad!&gt; paid with in 10 day•.
write can qualify. Weekly
my lfome•. Reasonable rateo.
• CARD OF THANKS
salary. For details write,
Phone 992.J.I97.
&amp;081TUA"Y
James Bliss Co.. P. 0 . Box
8-29-&lt;ltc
$1...50: tor SO WG'd m inimum.
324, Dept. K ~79. Levittown.
liiadl adiliticnal wwd 2c.
Pa .• 19053.
BLIIIO ADS
.
8-27-&lt;llc
Additional l5c Charge per

n.e

F·or Sale or' lease
·

---.

-------+ ------Male or Female
Help Wanted ·

Adva lise.,..t.

OFfiCE HOURS
1:311 a .m . to 5:00 p:m. Da ily,
1:30 a .m. to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday.

In llelldl
IN MEMORY of Navada
Beaver who passed awa y
s.p.mber 2, 1967.
'
A I"Cious one from us Is gone,
The 'WOke - loved is still,
A place is vacant in our home,
wtoch never can be filled.
Sadly missl!d by husband,
~nry Beaver, t!~~hter,
Danna S... son.
I and
Family. M;llheo, Mrs. Harry
Allisarl. sister. Mrs. Roland
Torrence. brofher. Paul
Allison and Mattie.
9-2·11c
IN MEMORY ol o...- dear
husband and lather, Edward
You!J9. who deparll!d this life
six •years ago ~y. SepWnlber 2.
eau no1 bado. the dear departed.
- l ! d sale where storms

.-e o'er.
On the bui.., land -left him
Soon to meet and part no more.

-.. -

leaw this warld of

-.. -

leaw this warld of

changes.

care.

We shall lind our missing loved
one

In our

Fa~s

mansion fair.

Sadly missed by wife. Katie,
children, Otho, Howard,
Beffie, Bernice, Edith. Elva.
Jean families.
9-2-1fp

lEGAL N011CE
NOTICE OF SALE
By vil'1ue of an Ordet" of Sale
duly issued out at the Court of
Common Pleas , Meigs County,
Ohio. in the case of R: K E
Fedl!ral Credit Union vs. Ralph
Snider, et al . upon a jud9ment
lht!rein rencterect~ being Cause
No. ••.7~ iA said court .. 1 will

- a t public sale at llle tront
of lh• Court Houoe in

For Sale
REGISTERED quab er horse,
gelding, 3 years old, gentle.
Phone 949-479~.
9-2-Jic

GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
Sportsman Club. Sunday,
~-:-:-:=c--­
September 5, 12 noon.
tOAL. limestone: ExcolsiQr
9-1-ltc
&lt;.all Works, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
RUMMAGE SALE sponsored
.t..9-ffc
by Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Friday and RINGNECK . Pheasants, 4
Saturday. September 3 and ~ .. weeks old to adults. Phone
at Coats Building In MidCoolville, Ohio 667-3361.
·
9-2-Jtc
dleport next to Firestone.
Starts at 9 a.m.
9-1-ltc 1971 HONDA 350 Super Sport,
like new condition· $695. Call
YARD SALE. collectors' Items,
evenings only 992-7173.
antiques, carnival glass and ___________ 9_·2_-Jtc
ather Items at Dora Hysells
on Eagle Ridge and Bashan 32 _ 350 h.p., partolesscam and
Road on September

9-1-Jtp
SAVE ' UP to,.,., half. ·Brllig
your sid&lt; TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
...
'
4-23-ttc .
PLEASE REQUEST your
favorite disc jockey to play' 'God and I" - 8-W- "The
Glory ol The Angels," Action
Records No. AC 1014A.
published by Sawenlr Songs
(ASCAP), free recording to
OJs. Address. John Mohler.
Rt. 1, Box 210, Middleport,
Ohio &lt;15760, phone 992-&lt;1903.
. 8-2S.12tp
KOSCOT . Kosmetics . September
Sales
Special :
Kream~ Lip Kote $2 now
$1.50, Frosllucent Lip Kote
$2.50 now 12, 23 delicious
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
see at 161'h ,.. &lt;th Ave .•
Middleport, Oho.
8-29-ttc

--:::--.,........,..---......:....::..
anted
111

w,

EXPERIENCED timber cutter.
Phone 992-5644.
B-31-5fp

Pomero,.. Ohio.; an Hie 27th d1y
of Seplem-. 1911, •• 10,00
O 'Cklck A.M., llle fOllowing . · •.
. . _ and tonements:
Situated "in the Village of
Mi~dlepo~l.

M•igs Count~ .

Olloa. Be1ng L~! No. 15 •n
Bosworth"s Add•hon to Lower

PoMeroy .. now incorporated
;nto and m - a p;trl of the
Village o1 Middtl!pOI1.
Deed

Reference :

~-

anted T0 BUJ

GINSENG. Clean bone dry. $38
lb Snake Root $5 lb Bill
B·
' .
· .
alley, ReedSVIlle, Oh10,
Second St. Phone 378-62011.
B-31-10fc

Vol . 207.

Page •u.. Meigs County Deed ONE BOTTLE gas heater with
Records..
blower and thermostat, 50,000
Being also known as 207
to
60,000 BTU. Phone 992-6W
leech Street. Middleport, Ohio.
alter
5:311 p. m.
The aDDraised v•lue of the
8-31-Jtp
reel es.~te is S2,AOO.OO:.
Term sot $ale : CaSh on day of

sale.

OLD Furniture; dlsheo, dodo.s.
and.or complete households.
Rober1 c. Hartenbach
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Slier rtf of Meigs County.
Ohio.
Call 992-&lt;1271.
111 26ltl2. '· 16. 23. 51
8·25-ffc

Laurel OUT

----100 TO 300 ACRES, old farm,

abandoned farm or vacant
BJBI!BDIAPABQK
land with all rights. Will pay to
Sablalb Sdlaol •IIMtdanre $5,000 cash. Write to John
Aag. as !15. Offeo iog far lbe Huffman. 1500 Semlnola ,
day was $1'/U!I. Alfendance Akron, Ohio 4-4305.
Aag. 21 was 1._ 1'be day's of- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _a._27-61p

zz

(siltg was $UUL
111e FMY of tbe 1oca1 cburcb Wanted
lrldai*ICI*"'Sundaye'l'eling .ATHENS

wti 1lliS 111!11 altmded.
11r Uldllrs. William JacOOI
.

•
llld grallddaagbler, Bobbie
Ardrr cf O+tm!.. 'Visited

reci!DII;J with ft!alifts ben.
,llr. 8ld llrs. Gem ~.

aDd
Kevin,
o•unb•. spent averal days

Kimberlee

To Rent

CAR HOP and waitress . Apply
In person. Crow' s Steak

Curd's malber, .Mrs. Nora

~2-ttc
-------~-------

Jlalller.

House.

.. • _

llrs. Ernie Bagu is staying FURNISHED and unfurnished
aparlm~ts . Close to school..
with ber .-eats. llr. aDd Mrs.
Phone .....5(1.4.
111-18-ffc
James Gilmore, wbile her
.......,, En*, is slalimed iii
"wilh_lbe u. s. Army. 3 ROOM W~furnished apartment. Phone 992-2288.

8-29-lfc

We .. foJUU
lille a pam

.

.

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WMP0/1390

PRIVATE frailer lot in Cheoter
"'ith utility building. PhOne
985-4106.
8-27 -61c
I BEDROOM trailer apart ment, Idea l for couples.
Contact McClure' s Dairy Isle.
992-S2ol8 or 992-3436.
8-29-&lt;llc
A ROOM apartment. all utilities

paid, lurnished - $80.00
mo\lh. Phon~ 992-3975. ·
8-JJ.Ifc .

And

'

MIWR

LEAR Jet 8 lrado. tape player
with 2 speakers and 2 tapes.
Phone 992-J.457.
9-1-ltc

!~~~~ ·~~~r~r.ste~~ 1 ad~~~

$67.40. Use our budget terms.
Call 992-7085.
B-29-61c

colonial maple
slere~, AM. &amp;peedFM rad io, fo ~r
spea ers, • s
au 1oma1 1c
changer. separate controls.
Balance $80.99 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.

•'
•

•

RACINE -- 1 story frame. 3 FOR SMALLER house, a large
house (2 apts.) corner of
large bl!drooms with closets,
Pearl &amp; Park Sis., Ml~­
bath, nice kitchen, large
dleport
.
living rvllm, CARPETED,
8-29-6tc
large garage with shop, .75
acre, LIKE NEW. $20,500.
POMEROY-- 1'12 story frame,
J bedrooms. bath, living
room,
dining
room ,
basement, porch, large lot.
Storm doors, windows. ALL
IN GOOD CONDITION.
BARGAIN AT JUST$7,900
PLACE THE SALE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPABLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office tt2·2259
Residence m -2561
8-29-&lt;llc

------

RUTLAND -- 6 rooms, bath,
basement, nice lol. $3,500.00.
CHESTER
AREA
2
bedrooms , nice kitchen and!
living . Only $7,600.00.

Ya.

~------~~-

Auto Sflles
1967 CHEVELLE Malibu,
standard, phone 992-&lt;1978 .
9-1-ltc

Filter or Power
·Fin Agitator .

~
.,••

Maytag

.."..

-·-nrma:Priil"

·~RIJTlAND FURNITURE_:
742-4211

..

Arnold Grate

~I

o.
--·

Rutland,
~-

CARS &amp; TRUCKS •

••
•

•

'

•

• 1964 fcrd Galax' 500
'795 •
• 4 Door. va engine. au'!nallc ;;;;:::-::~:teer.l,;;i, e
•
radio, clean Interior. radio, good tlreo, rl!d over white •
,. ·sh
•
•
Dodge Dart 4 Door
1968
~495 •
•
·
·---1
"'

•
•
•

~'-mpt.J~
lA.I
.,..,

•

R-

- .e_mode1mg

•

•

Septic Tanks
And Leach Bl!ds.

742-4902.
.

$500. Phone
8-31-llc
-1_ _ __- V_O_L_K
__
S_W_A.....:.G.:...
EN
9 70
automatic slick shift, radio:
electric defroster, dark blue
and white interior. Phone 675-

;;·4

. :.::~-8
1970 Wftm....::_l
brak eo

'2895 ••
-.•

r

• 1966

I'M 1\i; BE$1' FmiO

txl AAV!i, ·

~~ 11.1 $.1.11)), txllHiS

ft)L.IGY, I'M J?a7!1~ ~ OJ 10

uve -v~o RJP!i.Cl.D IU€!

•
•
•
•
•

a..n.-. lmpal., ·-----·$1395 :

Conv. cpe .• local owner &amp; low mileage. Vinyl Interior, •
dark blue finish, white top. air conditioned. V-8 engine,
automatic trans., power steering, radio. A nice cor .
•

1966 Buick WiUdcat Cpe.

•

~----'1195 •

1967 r.....l
I'ID
'1595
NU L · - - - - - - - - - -

•e 1970
•

•
•

DAILY CROSSWORD

automatic Iran•. &amp; factory air conditioning Special.

dre4

21. Spanish
queen
2%. Up-

e

Special, •
•

Dodge Polara ·-------.'2495

~Or., V-8 engine, automatic trans .. P.S.. factory air, good

poWder,
and
rouge

LOCAL

wds.)
2,. Lyric
poem
25. Wlld

e
•
•

goat
27. Inti-

e 1967 Ford Mustang -- --- '1595 e
•
•

•

sinki

native
31. Kind
of beer

·'995 :

: 1966 Fcrd Galaxie HT Cpe.

form four ordinary words.

cheese

YANDS

33. Solitary
35. Ruaslan

•e
:

river

corres·

j( VILIC

pondent
39.Never

(T

(Ger.)

!0. Brlghest

III

star

DAYDEL

•

••
•• ·

:

.

•

PliCa WIU. MIVa II LOWiil · :

.. Open Eves. Till

1

JwablnoTASTY IHYME ISLAND

m~2126

Yn~e..Ur••

•

•

-~ ~Pomeroy Motor
Rawlings
Dodge
City .: Your Chevy ~ler
'
.

II

I

........... ....,

e

TO GO
.,..,.~. Q 'W'!IIII8
II'

:

••
•.•

j

11-IIN6S 6CT OUT
OF HAND ~EN
'IOU t:'O iHI~!

(

•

1io·.au· •
a ti~ To Savel :
Now-Do lollll •

•

~

•

ONLY 17
NEW '71 CHEVROLET$

•

Cl =~=-

36.Gulnness
37. Noted war

6 Cyl. engine, std. trans ., air conditioning, good fires •
'
.clean interior. dark green finish.

••
•

mating

29. Hel-

HT Cpe.• 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine, wide cfvaltlreo, •
P.S.. P.B .• Iadory air cond .• radio&amp; other extras.
•

Unscramble these rwr Jumbles,
one letter to each aquare, to

32. Dutch

(2

-·

tires. radio &amp; other extras. white finl•h. clean Interior.

rJJ1gp)1l1;u..i ..,.,.&amp;w .-J , _

sUck,

MAYOR ANO
COMMISSIONER ~A)JE
OI&lt;AVEO 'rnESE AWAROS,
DONATED BY Ti-lE

•

•

Yeotenlq'o C&gt;n&gt;toqaote: HEo.LTH IS '11IE TIUNG
THAT MAKES YOU FEEL THAT NOW IS THE Ban'
TIME OF THE YEAR.--FRANKLIN P. ADA)(S
(0 llrll .KIDI' Featuru Syndicate, IDe.)

19.Angerlng
20. Kln·

.
AutomatiC trans .• power steering &amp; brakes, good w-w •
llreo. radio. healer, while finish , clean Interior. Reg. price •
$l39~.oo. Special.
• .

$2295 '2195 •

••
•.•

Co.:
'

· : '
Pvmeroy!

..____. ••••••••••••••••••••

~-------------~P

THE BORN LOSER

• . ~ .. cab io axle, good 825&gt;&lt;20 tires. 2 speed rear axle, Int. &amp; •
• cab like new truck, 6 cyl. m cu. ln . eng. A real clean
• lrudo..
.
•

$2895 '2795 e

992-2151 . 992·2152

.. ,

R eaiDcloJiy
Sharp.

•

5203.

.

MAINlENANCE CAN
DONE BY 11-IE
ROBOT ITSE\.F!

~E

less than ll,Ooo miles &amp; appearance of 71 model. Rally •
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior, •
tinted glass. factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler. turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp; •

•

1959 FUIW ,12 ton pickup. very •

.

SIJCil114AT /loW

270 Series, vinyl root. while finish. all good tires, 6 cyl., •
al)tomatlc trans .• radio, clean Interior.
.-

•

•

. ~L 2 Dr . H. T., V-8, automatic. p.-st., very
· nrce one owner trade.

THE"""'' "M» ARE

•

Less than 10.000 m1leo by local owner. Sharp as new In all
way•. white over gold flnl•h. 350 V-8 engine, power •
steering , radio, while-walls. wh. covers.
•

•

Auto Sales

$1695 '1595

N0~~1 _DOC ...

; • 1966 a.. 2 Ton On~ ------'1750 •

Endloader Work

1967 GAWIE

IN MY LIFE !

•
•
•

•
•

IOHJtsoN _M
_ASOIIRY .•

2 .Dr. H.T., V-8, T·Fiite, p.·st., p-br., 36,000
m 1les. Sharp.
·

MORE 5ERIOU~

ITl!

••
.•
•

•

I WASNEVER

JUY

···············~···'

•
•
•

OpeniTitf
Monday tttru S.,turday
606 E. Main, Pameroy,O.

1968 POIARA.

-·
•
•'

l1970 c.naro Cpe. •-----· '3395 •

'440' 2 Dr. H.T., 318 V-8, T-Fiite. p·steerjng.
chrome wheElls · new tires.
·

)

•
•
·t,.

POIIIeniJ Home &amp; AulD

1970 OORONET

I

Service

•

NOW

;

''

-GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

WAS

'•
''·I

: We Specllllleln
MAYTAG
Red Carpet

EXPERT
Wheel Afi&amp;nment
!1:.55
';A

Your response to our '101' sale has
been so great that we .are ge!!ing
overstocked on sharp trade-ins. We
don't want to forget our used car
buyers, so we're going to offer a· pricereduction sale on these sharp trades
listed below ... hurry on in and get the
best deal ever from "Dependable
City".

•

,Surround cloth•s
with gentle, even'~
heat . No hot spots, ,
no overdrylng ..
!Fine Mesh Lint
Filter. .

~========:=:~

SALE
CONTINUES .

Middleport .-....

&lt;

HIIO Df Htlt
Dryers

Pomeror

"101" DEPENDABLE CITY

.

"..

L ,.;·,

.;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;-ii8i;;·i;;31i.-&lt;l~tc ••• vinyl
~DOorroof,
Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes. vlnyllnterlor, blk.
maroon fini•h. radio, new w-w tires, V-8 with

i'

IF !Hi'S SO BRIG~T, ~W

COME H~S NEVER I-lEARD
OF A CREW CUT~

~~ .

Auto.:
I IV. e f

BCAEtlltARS

~37'J:'ndltion.

GO~, YOU WEllE; BALD. Ell·WITWOUT HAIR,
EVEN TWSN

:·

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

~~:~~,:d

I

•'

6.98.

klleftens, K~ths
Room Additions

TillS PllOTO

'
•

O'DELL WHEEL al ignment
locatedai'Crossroads, Rt. 12~.
Complete front end ser.vice, ·
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec - ·
Ironically. ' All
work
From the largest Truck or
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Bulldozer Radiator to the
rales . Phone 992-3213.
Smalleot Heater Core.

--=---'~=====:=--=-S....,.Il.,..·tt~.

IN

WAS A FllES~MAN AT
1&gt;00/..ITTLE COI.J.EGE

i

Air
.
Inspection and
Re-ChaJge

Ph.992·2143

'1· 1.

.·'

BILL NELSON
992-3657

Blaettnar's

MIDDLEPORT - 4 bl!drooms.
bath, large living, garage.
Only $7,500.00.
'
- = = = = = = = : : 8:.:
29::._-"..,c
_
COUNTRY LIVING - new ~
r
bedroom, 2 bath, double
garage,
15 acres . $37,500.00.
BEAT the COLD WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
RT. 7 BYPASS -- new 5
HEATING OIL FROM
bedroom home, 1'12 baths. ~
LANDMARK.
acres.
We have the fineot Budget
Pay Plan , Delivery Services,
NEW HOME - 3 spacious
Automatic . Degree Day
bedrooms. P.as heat, large
living and kitchen . $19,500.00.
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Equipment.
your own
lNV ESTMENT . We also have a complete tine
home
and
busin~ss with
of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
renta l. Store with Mock and
and FurQ~ces .
fixtures .
POMEROY
IAiil Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
INVESTMENT - 2 stories Phonttf2 ·2T~I
large rental on first floor ~ 2
on second. 218 E. Main.
APPLES-Peaches. Fiizpatrick
tt2·332$ .
Orchards, Stale Route 689,
~len L. Teaford
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
Associate
a-29-6tc
8-15-lfc
..:..._

_____

~

•,.

ltM Your sri

For Sale or Trade

·11 • 14' • 24' • WIDE

•

.•

-115 tor-

..

BLESSIN'

•I ,

Real Estate Fcir Sale.

__

MVGOURMEr

•,.

FOUR
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HoME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN ·
100 PCT. FINANCING AV·AILABLE
A 3 bl!draom $16,900.00 home Clln be purchased with a
monthly payment a slow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pd. annual ·

FuRNITURE

Realty

~ BEAUTIFUL

TRCAILE RRL 0TS, .Bobs's Mobile
1. IU, yracuse,
o~r 1•
Oh10. 992-2951.

Pomeroy

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER
WORK
.
SPOIJT!NG, ·
ROOii PAINnNG

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. iood An~top In and See Our
thony
Plumbing &amp; HNiing.
Floor Display.
Complete
Plumbing,
Healing and Ajr ConNEIGLER Construction. For , ditioning.
.building or remodeling your · 240 Lincoln St., Middleport
home. Call Guy Nelgler.
Racine, Ohio.
"SIX ROOM house. bath; . luli
Phone 992-2550
7-31·ttc '
basement, .J33Jlulfernul Ave., -------=,----Insured
• Experienced
just walking distance from • SEWINGMACHINES. Repair
Woric Guaranteed
~owntown Pomeroy. Contact· service, all makes, 992.221(,
_d_ Hedrick, 2137 WadswO&lt;th, The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
See
Free
Drove, Columbus, Ohlo,.rhone! Authorized Singer Saleo and ,
Estimate on Furnace
237-4334, Columbus. .
Service' We Sharpen Scissors.
lnstalatjon.
::-:=-='':':-::-:----- - , ;5;..:·9·11&lt;;
3-29-ltc
3 BEDROOM home. Electric
.
heat, remodeled recently QUEEN AND Shamblin Canst.
sn.-111
inside,7thstreet,NewHaven.
Roofing , remodeling,
Owner transferred. Phone aluminum siding. Phone 992· ·
882-2263.
7324 or 742--4979.
Con~itioning
8-29-&lt;llc
8-25-ffc '
..,.
BA_C_K_H_O_E_A_N.,._D_OO_Z_E_R-work.' .
HOUSE. 16-42 Lincoln Heights.
Septic tanks installl!d. George
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
!BIIIJ Pullins. Phone 992-W8 .
2196.
_______________7__
-18-ttc ----~----------~-15-ff_c
Special
Plus
3 BEDROOM brick home. ~EPT_IC _tanks cleaned. Miller
Parts
At
Choice location In Middleport.· Sam tall on, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
Seen by appointment only. 662·3035.
Phone 992-5523 atler ~ p.m .
2-12-tfc
5-7-ttc PHONE tt2-214l
-------'---.,..--:---- HARRISON'S TV AND AN
'CONVENIENT but -secluded·
TENNA SERVICE . Phono
·992-2522.
building lots on T79 at Rock
6-10-tf•
Springs. Within walking
distance of Meigs High
School, a 5 minute drive from SEWING MACHINE service in
your home. Clean, oil and
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
adjust, $-1. Phone 992-7085 . .
Witte weekends or alter 5.
Twin City Sewing Machine
p.m . weekdays. Phone 992Company.
·
~7 ·
8-31-6tc
' 7-11-lfc

· •sR.

Heights. Phone 992-5127 alter
.~ p.m .
8·31-ltc

AU10

OFFICE SUPPUES

HALF RUNNER beans, $2
bushel. watermelons, cantaloupes.
sweet
corn,
potatoes. Clarence Proffitt,
Portland. Phone 1143-2254.
9-1-ffc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

.

•

992-2094

9- 1 ~4tc

VOLKSWAGEN camper, good
condition. Less than 20.00P
STA NLEY Home Products
miles. 439 Lincoln St.. Midneeds 5 tall and Christmas
dleport, Paul Scott.
representatives .
Car
8-25-ttc
necessary. Write Mrs. Lib·
man, J.4 W. Carpenter St .•
BEAGLE, 5 months old, A. K.C.
Athens w call 593-885-t
regislerl!d. Ha• had all shots
8-31-&lt;ltc
$40. Phone 992- 359~ after ~
p.m .
soMEONE nel!ded Ia slay with
Broker
8-29-61c
invalid 5 days a week. some
110 Mec~anic Street
Pameroy ,~a
nights. Phone 992· 71558-29-&lt;llc
·
WALNUT stereo-radio com : .
binallon . Four speed in termixed changer . Four SYRACUSE--4raoms. nice lot.
$1 ,800.00.

For Rent

'

!fO~E&amp;

24" COAL furnace - $50. 609
Pearl St. Phone 992-2-446.

8-31-6tc

2 BEDROOMnoose on Lin&lt;oln

.

IF I I&lt;NOWED IT
WUZ GOIN'TO BE
ALL THAT GOOD ..

:~J ~

Busfu.ess· Sertie~;

PcJMEROY

~06 E. Main

Oeland

MOBiL£. HOMES

Help Wanted

40" HOT POl NT range, white, 2
years old, excel.t enl condition
. $150.00. Can be seen after 5
· p.m . at 105 Union Avenue.
Phone 992-3293.
8-31 -llc

..

NEW. 3-bedroom home in
Middleport . . Buill-in kitchen,
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
POODLE puppieo, Silver Toy,
Parkview Kennels. Phone 992heal, good neighborhood. Can
arrange FHA financing .
5«3.
8-15-ttc
Telephone 992-3600 or 9922186.
.
7-25-lfc
CANNING tomatoes, already
picked . $1.25 bu., bring
c---·:...
· - - = =-=--7-·27-ltc
containers. Geraldine LARGE 2 apartment home.
Furnished, beautiful river READY -MIX
CONCRETE
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
view
. Rental trailer on
7-~8-ttr
delivered
to your
prQject. Fastright
and easy.
Free
premises. Inquire at Dairy
.
..
estimates. Phone 992-328~.
Corner,
Letart.
W.
Va
.
Phone
NICE 8 week old p1gs - $10 to
895-3357.
Goe~leln Ready-Mix Co.,
$12. County Road 30. Phone
8-31-&lt;~tc
949-2115.
Mid leport, Ohio.
t.-30-tt&lt;'
B-ll -Jtp -19_7_0_ R_IC
_H
__
A_R_O-SO
__
N__m--oblle
' ·
10&gt;&lt;25 HOUSE TRAILER. set up
home with washer and dryer. AWNINGs",- s torm doors and·
windows , carports,
on 1ar3e lot In Harrisonville.
fully carpeted, also 5 room
marquees. aluminum siding
house with basement, both
W1' ll se llra'·1 er or both · Phone
located on two lots In
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
742-4781 .
sales
representative. For free
Syracuse.
Phone
992-7019.
8-31 -llc
eolimales, phone Char leo
8-31-&lt;ltc
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
USED SINGER portable sewing
machine with zlg-za_gger. 11.16 ·ACRES located T-79 at
Johnson and Son, Inc . S-27-ttc
blind hem. Fashion des1g~-- Rock Springs, close to Meigs
etc. $31.75. Phone 992-7085. • - High School. Contad Bill
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
B-31~tc
Wllfe-for L. Fields -alter 5 Reasonable rateo. Ph . .w.- 4712 ,
- - - - - - - - - - -- · p. m. or on weekends 992-6887 .
Gallipolis. John Russell,
MAKE beaten down carpet nap
B-27-101c
Owner &amp; Operator.
at doorways bright and flutfy - - - - - - - - - - - - - - again with Blue Lustre. Baker
Furniture Company.
C. BRADFORD, . A~ciloneer
9-1-61c
Complete Service
Phone 9#7-3821
REFRIGERATOR. stove,18 cu.
Racine, Ohio
ft. upright freezer. couch, 2
Crill Bradford
chairs, set of end tables.
S-1-tfc
coffee table. 2 table lamps, 1
601 East Main
tloor- lamp, utility •land, 1
AUTOM&lt;IBI LE Insurance b&lt;!en
POMEROY
used clarinet, hair dryer. 1
cancelled?
Lost
your
kitchen cabinet, all In good
~ator's license? Call 992·
MIDDLEPORT- HERE IS A
condlllon._.f!!9ne ~47-2135.
2966.
BUY FOR YOU -- 1112 story
6-15-ttc
brick, living room, dining
room, CARPETED, nice
kitchen, bath, 2 bl!drooms,
storage building. JUST $6,950.

business couple
!rio washingron Bivd ..
transferring to Pomeroy .
Belpre, Ohio
Would _like house or apartmen! m Pomeroy or Mid·
dleport. No children. Ex· TWO 55" mireS; S ~d 7 years
cellenl reference. Phone Vera
old, pony saddle. Karen
Eblen at 593-7783 or 593-3710.
Griffith, phone 992.5712.
9-1 -3tp
8-29-&lt;ltc

wilb MR. Alllire'smollrt,Mrs.
l!erlba Parker.
Mrs. Marion Howell of
Colnmbul spent tbe past week
Wilb Mr. aDd Mrs. Walter
Walt« and Mr. Fra'* ~llr. Oaarles Diebl in
Co~ambas
at University
HG!piDI recently far JDOJ!ical
lrf.etment
llrs. Oaarles Diehl bas been
~ImbEd bome fnm Hdzer
..._.D) wbere sbe bad been a
....,..
..lientfar ~ da,s.
Mrs. Caralyn Banis of St.
Albans, w. va., and Mrs.
Avmell 11ro1m of Gallipolis
m!e~~U, visited their molber,
Mrs. Cara Rembaw. .
Jlrs. Marie CUrd, BaD Run,
and , grandsm, Sle'l'l! ' Elkins,
"""'='= ........... -'tb Mrs.

.,._......,. ·-""' ~·

crankshaft. Will sell all or
part. Phone 9#7·2571.
9-2-&lt;llc
_F_A_R_M--an-d--hom--e--la-l-ex-house
palnt sale. King Builders
Supply, Middleport .
9·2·24fc

Business Service$

For Sale

I'D A-GIVg IT

L.IKE IT?

.

'

;··

WANT AD
.INFORMATION
DEADLINES
SP.M. Dily-., Publication
Mllo"'-Y Deadline9a.m .

..

I

Aatwen TIN1e an •omelimet bNNI iftto .Ua di.btp
p ...........- TIAI5

HERE'S THE
lllORLO FAMOUS

FOOTeAl.L COACH
WAlKING OUT

ONTO lHE FlRD
WINNING 15
EVERI{TlliN6!
L051N6 15

DAILY CKYPI'OQUOlE-Here'a how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXB
Ia . LONGFELLOW
One letter almply otanda for another. In thiB sample A 13
uoed for the three L'o, X for the two O'o, etc. Single !etten,
apootrophoo, the length and fonnatlon of the words ""' all
hints. Each day the ~ letters ""' different.

J B'P

W M G Z Y

0 S T B U S

J B P

LESXY, WMB1 BWMSU TBVVBN KSWL
GZ

KGL

KBNS

ABYS

•

!i

i:

{I

A c.n&gt;topam Quotation
G T

LIKE tom'HIII&amp;!

1,i

TGU .LW .'-- 8 .

N.

,[

PIOJIU

TO

..

�."

•

'
10-The DaUy SerUinel, Middleport-P001eroy, 0., SepU, 1971
.

Bookmobile
Schedule Is ·

Sales lu collecG,.. &lt;111iulomoltllea pudMed by Meigs
Coufla• ~ng lbe mooIll of Augalt totaled PI,JSLa,lllri.
Evelya l.ucke, eouaty clerk of courll, report.~
. ill adcliUon reslden .. .-ld $4,M7.511D casu! aad -la:l:
,.. vehicles and $Z8Z on auto inspecUo• 011 velllclea bnugbt
into the eou!)' frim uolber state. •
ID other aulomoUve activities, the ctfflce of Mn. udie
Issued 198 certifies tea of 1111e; %53 nola II- of Ilea; JJI
memcraiMinms; liS affidavits and lJ d..Ucate titles. Tbese
aclvilieo brought reeelpll of $1• with tbe couty'J dare
beiag $1219.75 and tbe sllle's share $38U5.

Announced
No penally charge wiD be
levied against 'jJatrons of the
bookmobile returning overdue
books to the Wlit, it was
reported today.
However, a charge of five
cents a book penalty wiD be
levied in the future on overdue

Dooks.

'

~~M\ti~Willt~llftitJMi¥4lt1tl:%YOC~Yiil1illli.Mitf~~i~

Holzer Medical Center

The schedule for the Wlit for
next week includes :
Tuesday - 12:30 - 3, Pearl
St.; 3:1~ - 3:45, Middleport
Library; 4 - 4:30, Gravel Hill;
4:45- ~:I~, Silver RWl; ~ : 30 - 6,
Cash &amp; Carry; 6:30 . 7:30,
The Holzer Medical Center
Laurel Cliff.
Friday- 9 • 10 : 1~, Bradbury; Clinic will be closed Monday,
10:30-11 :30, Central; 12- 3, S. September 6, according to an
3rd Ave.; 3: 15 - US, WMPO. announcement made today by
Robert Daniel, clinic administra!cl'. He said the facility
Veterans Memorial Hospilal would be closed so employees
ADMITIED - Phil Baldwin, could enjoy the long Labor Day
weekend with their families.
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Sheryl L. According to the anHudson, Carol Haning, Layman nouncement, both the First and
Cedar Street and the Sycamore
Dotson, Amanda Stover.
•

Oinic To Oose Monday
Street locatiCIIS will be closed
from noon Saturday until
'1\lesday mcrning.
In case ri. emergency during
the holiday weekend, members
of the Holzer Medical Center
medical staff will be oo duty at •
First and Cedar Street to handle
emergency cases llllly. Holzer
Medical Center Clinic will
resume operation Tuesday
morning, Sept. 7.

'

World Money Market
Has Mixed Reactions
The price of gold staged a
By United Prell illlenlalloaal devaluation of the dollar from
quick
jump on the Londoo
The U.S. dollar made a mixed tbe old rate of 360 to 1.
showing on world money
Britain further reinforced its market, rising 50 cents an
markets today. It held steady defenses against speculative ounce to $41.60. Dealers said
in West Germany and Hong money flows by cutting the the recent low prices of the
Kong but feU slighUy in bank rate to 5 per cent, the metal had tempted buyers back
Switzerland, Britain, France first time it has been at such a into tbe market again.
and Japan where a governmen- low level for more tban seven
tal agency blamed U.S. econ- years.
omic policies lor halting
Tbe Bank of England said the
Japan's recovery from a mild lower interest rate was derecession.
.
signed to shut out international
While traders appeared to be gambling money at a time
adopting ll waiWIId-see policy w~ Britain's gold and currenfollowing outcome of several cy reserves and balance of
world economic meetings this payments already were strong . .
month, Britain cut its lw!nk rate
Tbe dollar bas been quoted at
SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S.
(the controlling intere;Jt rate) $2.4570 to tbe pound but the cut Command said today 19 Ameriby 1 per cent to 5 per cent to ,in 'uiterest rates weakened it ~ Gls were killed in tbe
discourage currency specula- ""to $2.~. or a · market VIetnam war last week and
lion.
devaluation of about 2.5 per reported for the first time that
In Tokyo, where the yen bas cent. Tbe dollar was down 142soldiershavediSappearedin
risen 5.97 per cent in relation to about 4 per cent in Paris and noncombat situations since 1961
the dollar, Japan's economic 7.2 per cent in West Germany,
Tbe Command said tbe loU
planning agency said the a level that has held for several last week bas Dine more !ban
Japanese economy showed days.
the pn!Vloua week's total
signa last month of reviving
Another 95 Americans were
from a slight recession but Elderly Burglar
wounded.
President Nixon's new economTbe allied C&lt;mlll8llds said 269
ic policies had wiped out
'
Vietnamese were killed in
whatever gains were made.
Jumps From Porch South
the war lsst week. dmm 154
"As far as the indicators
from the previous week.,were concerned, the Japanese CINCINNATl .n - William
North Vietnamese and VIet
economy was on the brink ol Patrick McDonald, 71, leaped Cong dead ~taled 1,234, a drop
taking an upward tum wben from a second-!!tory porch when from the previous week's 1,'125
President Nixon announced his surprised in the act of burglary, and the fewest since tbe 97$
dollar-611ving policy," the agen- police said.
killed in the week-ended July
cy said.
McDonald was not burt by the
The yen closed at 3311.50 to drop Wednesday. Pollee capthe dollar, up slightly from lured him half a block away and
Wednesday's closing price of charged him with bouseDU QUOIN, DL (UPI) 338.60, the fourth consecutive breaking.
day of upward revaluation. This Ann Steed said sbe fOWld the Speedy Crown, a $Zt,HO
reflected at 5.97 per cent latch of the door to her apart- Jr.II'Ciwe liUie IIIGI'e lllan a
year ago, relwaed lle In- - - - - - - -. .· mentbroken
when
she
returned
vestment
tllreelold Wedborne and found McDonald
•
inside. Her dog chased the nesday, troUIIIC t. u easy
suspect to the porch, where be victory Ill ltnlllbt beats Ill
hal'lleas racing's classic
jumped.
Tonight, Sept. 2
HamhletomaD for 3-yeaMid
NOT OPEN
trotters.
r~
Speedy Crewn, drlveu by
Friday &amp; Saturday
M~&lt;n~
Howard Beisslager, who
Sepl. 3-4
piloted hla seeoad HamVANISHING POINT
Tonight &amp; Friday
bletoniall wblller Ia lbree
(Technicolor'l
September 2-3
years,
missed the world
Barry Newman
Double
Feature
Program
record by lea llum a semnd
Jagger Cleaver Lillie
"BULLITT"
"G"
and the race record by 3-li of a
(Color)
-Piusseeoad wileD be trotted tbe
•
Steve McQueen
"CELEBRATION
lint heat ill 1:5'1 M to win by
-PlusAT BIG SUR"
lbree lengtlla.
·
BONNIE &amp; CLYDE
!Technicolor)
(Color)
Joan Boet
.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.,.,. ..,............-,.m.·-······-w.»"'i!W~
warren Beatty
Crosby Stills
tf~!ilfi~k@MNMJf@i:tt:N:0~~
Faye Dunaway
Nash &amp; Young

Funds

ELBERFELD$ IN POMERO~

Total ·

Open Friday and Saturday Nights Until 9

$86,719.73
Pomeroy VLilage funds as d.
Aug. 3 tolaled $86,719.73 according to tbe report of Clert

Jane Walton submitted to
Pomeroy Council Monday
night

Receipts, disblrsements

and clerk's balance, tespectively, in lbe aciive fund were:
General, $1'159.20, $4709.54,
$947.18; boat dock, no receijils,
no expendibres, f603.95; - r ,
no receipts, $1725.74, $2&amp;,11U3; ·
fire deparlme!lt, $706.09,
$195.54, $2574.99; cemete.-y,
$350.74, $437.70, fll).71; street, .
no receipts, $1471.84, ~49.71;
state highway, no receipts,
.-.~. $1602.21; utility, $1312.17,
$931.62, $12,654.76; water
operating,
no
receipts,
$12,261.70, $2841.44 over draWil;
water improvement, no
receipts, no expenditures,
$15.61; gnaranty meter, no
receipts, $1~.00. $3422.74;
parking meter, $1217.00, no
expenclltures, $9115.99; sanitary
sewer constructioo, 110 receipts,
no expenditures, $50115.511. Total
receipts, diahurseme!lts and tbe
~»lance in the active fund
respectively, .were, ~415.20,
PJ,9115.43, .,.,816.26.
Receipts, dlsbursemmts and
clerlr;'s balaJW respeclively in
the inactive fund include,
special street repair bond
relirement, $393.65, $24.03,
$2023.15; bond retirement,
$1961.26, $120.13, $14,8'19.62.
Receipts, disbursements and
balances in all funds respectively
totaled
nm.n,
$22,129.59, $86,719.73.

19 Amencans
•
Killed
Last week In war

MEIGS THEATRE

-

--

!)!t!Vl·IN

-----

CORRECTION

SIMON'S MARKET
WEST MAIN ST. 992-3975 POMEROY

axwell House

3·lbs. $2·
McCLURE'S

29

For A Treat

That Can't

SLACKS

Womens

'8.95
Choose

of won1ens slacks - flares

It's Got tje Best
B1tti•1 AretiJI
i• tje L111••

.____...,._..,!'11"__________,
41h&amp; LOfUSt

Middleport, 0.

You'll enjoy your shopping trip to Elberlelels.

Other Slaclls

Famous Makes

$l.ts111 $12.ts

Wome"s Winter

UGHIWEIGHJ PANTY GIRDlES

COATS
•29.50
womens
including all weather

While -blad&lt; . blue -pink- beige . Suntan . navy.
Sizes S-M-L-XL.
..
Reg. 51 ." -TwaOaysOnly

2

FOR

'"

A wide :.S.Ortment a/long
sleeve slad&lt; tops - sdlds
and pattems - long sleeve zi- bacll • 100 per cent
' acetate yam and washable
polyester knit.
Sizes small, medium and
large'
Other Slad&lt; Tops

54.95111,12.95

A special group of
COllis coats, car coals, capes, pants coals and casual coals - knits,
all wool fabrics, and crushed velvels. Many styles to choosa

•3.29 .

from .

Sale! A Group of Womens

Sizes B to 20 and 14'12 to 24'12.
Other coats S16.SO to $129.00

CoHon Wash

SPIRIT HOSIERY SALE

Sale J,2 Price
Washable cotton dresses in zipper and button
front styles- sleeveless styles- prints and solids.
Sizes 1~ to 20 and 14'1&gt;_ to 221h .

All styles of Popular Spirit by Steven$ Pantyhose
and Stockings.
Now at Fall Sale Prices

VIsit Elba: falcls 3nl Floor
Furniture and Carpet .,......._..

Reg- 69c

llliED

3

Wig Sale
While they last

Sale S.ll

Wigs . . .

Sale 4.11

Reg. 510.00

Devoted To ",w

Intere~IA

VOL. XXIV NO. 100

.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 19ll
.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

(-----------~-------------~-,

!t News .•• in Briefs· !

cloudiDeQ,

, warm and humid tbroup
Saturday with a cltana! Ill
mainly afternoon and ..,aq
thundershowers. High today
~· Saturday in tbe mid 10
upper IIOs. Low tonight in the «&lt;a
and low 7Clo.

Of 'The Meigs-MtuOn Area

j

·

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Middleport Man
Killed In Wreck

I
WASHINGroN- SEN. WILLIAM Proxmire, D.-Wls., said
today President Nixoo's I!CCIIomic program C!llltains provisions
f..at 'll'ould cut . c:orpcnte lues a record 20 per cent in one year,
giving bwiiness a "windfall profit."
. He~ the Nixon plan needs to be overhauled "on a selective
and raticilal .basis" to give average taxpayers and consumers
some relief along with business when Congress returns from a
recess next week.
Further evidence tbat Congress intends to take a band in the
program annOUJJCed Aug. 15 by the President came with Rep.
Jenme Waldie;· D-Callf., 81Diounced he would introduce a
resolulioit when Congress reconvenes next Wednesday that would
disapprove N"LJ.oo's action delaying a pay raise for federal employes.

Larry .Sam Hood, 22, Middleport, son of Milton L. and
Freda R. Turner Hood of
Middleport, was killed instantly
Thursday evening on the West
Virginia Turnpike about 17
miles from Princeton, W. Va .
Young Hood · was enroute
home from Henderson, N. C.,
where be had been working with
the Benton Corporation of
Meigs COWlty. The company
had completed a highway job
there and workers were
returning to their homes.
Mr. Hood was driving alone in.
his vehicle when the accident

SAIGON -VICE PRESIDENT NGUYEN ao Ky said today
that PresldentNguyen Van Thieu may be leading South Vietitam
lilward dictatorship. Thleu Is the only candidate in the Oct. 3
presldenUal election.
As Ky made&gt;·his charge, tbe South Vietnamese command
npcrted that government troops had closed out operation Lam
Son 720, tbe majcr post-Laos drive below the Demilitarized Zone

SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. -PRESIDENT NIXON winds up
a low key two-week California stay today and heads back to
Washington witli speakq stops at Dayton, Obloand Chicago.
'!be chief executive also will deliver a nalionwide Labor Day
radio adtress Mooday praising tbe "working man's conlribution
to 1he stre~tli of America" according to aides.
The President will be spending tbe holiday weekend at camp
Davis, and will make a live broadcast from the mOWltaintop
presidenUal retreat - an unprecedented location, making it
another Nixoo "first."

First Floor
Accessories Dept.

W"ogs . . -

enttne

346Soutlt Vielnamesedead,1,257 wOWlded and 23mlssing.

$1.00

Reg. $15.00
Wigs . . Reg. 512.00

· 1 Considerable

occurred. It was reported tbat
his car struck the rear of a
lractor -!railer.
A 1967 graduate of Middleport
High School, he had served in
the U. S. Navy for approximately two years. He was
planning to enroll at Kent Slate
University this fall.
Born in Gallipolis on July 5,
1949, Mr. Hood was a member of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church. Besides his parents, be
is survived by two brothers,
James M. of FOWllain Valley,
Calif.; and John P. of Middleport; two aunts, Mrs. D. M.

Shears of St. Petersburg, Fla.,
and Mrs. Betty Swan of Athens,

and two nieces and
nephews.

two

Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Rawlings-Coats FWleral Home
with the Rev. Charles Simons
officiating. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cenletery,
Pomeroy. Conducting mililary
rites will be Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion.
Friends may &amp;!U at the funeral
home anytime alter noon oo
Saturday.

Mllllary spokesmen said the campaign which began April14
in the 1101 tlkm Thua Thien and Quang Tri provinces ended Aug.
31 after kiiiiDg 3,1()4 Ncrth Vietnamese and VietCong at a cost of

Two Day Sale
Boxes

t1te 8D)OWI! of IDOIJe'l spent
for !be l!urebase er Care of
bouaeltoJd pets in the United
States Ia upected to reach $3.5
.biUion by 1975, accCc'ding to a
report by the Bank of Ambica.

W~ther

(DMZ).

STATIONERY

'II

MRS. PAUL(JEAj'i~) LAWRENCE,Racine, is the only woman in Meigs County wbo
operates an Emergency vehicle. Jeanette bas been a member of the Racine Emergency Squad
for the past one and a half years. She took her first course through the Civil Defense sponsored
by the Ladles Auxiliary of Racine Legion Post. Jeanette manages to goon aU the daytime runs.
S&gt;e feels thatsmce the male members of the squad are at work during the daytime that she can
he of use to the villi!ge by accepting this responsibility . "Whenever I can be helping someone
else does me more good than doing for myself" Jeanette states. There are two other women
that are members of the squad. However, they do not drive the emergency vehicle . They are
Emma Lyons and Grac1e Roush . The squad welcomes other ladies to join the unit. Jeanette is
employed part time at Modern Supply in Pomeroy. Jeanette and her husband Paul have one
son, Gene, who Is serving in the U. S. Army stationed in Vietnam.

,

Special Purehae
Perm.11nent Press
SailreiNsafinisll

17. Commwlist dead for the
war tolal 768,007.
It brought to 45,471 the total
of AmeriC811$ killed in the war
since Jan. 1, 1961. Tbe U.S.
wounded tolal is now 301.~
wbile 1,473 Gls are missing,
captured or interned.
Tbe U.S. military command
disclosed that 142 men were
milling ''not as · a result ri.
hostile action" and said the
total was for Vietnam, Camt.o.
dia and Laos since the
beginning of 1961. Spokesmen
said they were listed as
casualties and that next ol kin
were informed but tbat !bose
missing did not include any
known cases of absent without
leave (AWOL) or desertion.

Table OM!rs

Reg. 4.91
60110 . - . .
Reg. 5.91
•
60d6 - . . .
Reg. 5.91
60d6 OVal - - Reg. 7.91
60xl04 - - . .
Reg. 6.91
61" round - - -

•

Sale 3.79

Prompt de&amp;ery to your home Dependable Seroice - Sensible Credit

Sale 4.49
Sale 4.49
Sales.,
Sale 5.29

·

. TUJO Day Sale

lUG-KNIT
$3.19 -100 per cent Acrilan ~· wide Jeney bonded
to 100 per cent Acetate
Tricot. Wet wash or dry
clean. Colors: grape,
Malaya, Claret, Poinsetlia,
Rio. Acorn. Blarney.

Sew attractive Tunics,
Short -Ails ,
Dresses .
Separates.
Friday and Salurday

SaJe ll')69

TWO SUITS FILED
Two suits for divorce each ...,_ _ _-,
_ _ _--4

charging gross negtect of duty
and extreme cruelty have been

TUJO D·•y
''-le.'
'" .:M

~:!sin= CoWlty eommon

TERRY WARP

Larry Wayne Lavender,

KNITS

SyraCUlle, filed suit against

Sandra Lynn Lavender' St.
John, Indiana and Arlie
Saunders, Racine, against
Kathleline Alice Saunders
·address unknown.
'

100% Texturized
Dacron Polyester
Double Knllln the La Costa slilch. Regular
Machine washable.

$5 .&lt;1'1 .

wide. 90 per cent
Arnel - 10 per cent Nylon.

58" · 60" Wide

Whip up Dunkables! Dresses. Panlsuils,
Jumpsuits. 10 Beautiful Fall colors.
TwoOays

Sale '4.89
Two Excellent Styles

Mens Sweat Shi1s

, Sol. 99 ~"

Machine

washable .

Beautiful stripes. Ideal tor
sporting separates.
Sale Friday
• and Salurday

TOATI'END
Miss Vicky Ellen Crouch,
daughter of Mrs. Ruth Crouch,
SyraCUlle, has been accepted at
tbe Gallipolis Business College
for tbe fall quarter beginning 1---~-----r
Sept. 16. Miss Crouch, a 1969
Mens and Young Mens

Small, medium, large and extra large
sizes. Short Sletve . Crew Neck Sweat
Shirts.
50 per cent Kodel Polyester, 50 per cent
Collon. Solid colors with conlrast trim.
Exposed stretch - raglan shoulders. Solid
colors: navy blue, brown, purple, mixed
blue.

'2.88

graduate of East Bank Senior
' High School, Cbarleston, is
enrolled in tbe executive
secretarial course.

REUNION SUNDAY
The annual reunion of tbe
family .of George and Susan
LOCAL TEMPS
Rouah willbe held at the Union
camp GrOWld at New Haven, at Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a. m.
12:30 p. m. SUnday.
was 76 degrees under cloudy
skies.
ANNOUNCE SALE
A rummage sale will be beld
Fr~day and Saturday at tbe Fry
bmldmg on. ~Ill Bt., Middleport, begmrung at 10 a.
m. each day under the sponsorship of the Ladies Auxiliary
of the Middleport Pentecostal
Church.

SPORT BRTS

LOng SIMve V Neck Pullover Slyle
100 per cent orion acrylic - fleece lined.
Popular V neck - solid colors: Red, brown,
bright green, navy.

'4.69

'2.50

New Selection
Mr. Wrangler

Reversible Belts - I inch
wide - e&gt;Cpanded vinyl -

MENS IDDO FlARES

black. Polished gold color
bud&lt;le. Sizes 26 to 38.

Many new styles just received for men and
young men. Jean type flares and dressy
flares. Waist sizes 29 to 38. All are permanent press.
.
Slop in the busy mens department, lsi
floor - try on a pair or lwo and buy what

reverses from brown to

'1.75

APPORTIONMENT NEAR
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Tbe
Mens Genuint Le-ather
state apporlionment board
Work &amp;ens. Sizes JO to 50.
Brown or black. I'I• inches
which must meet each ten
wide.
years to draw up boundaries
fer House and Senate districts
will be convened Sept. 17.
Auditor JOseph T. Ferguson t - - - - - - - - - l
Mens Garrison Belts 1
and Secrelary ol Stale Ted W.
Blacll leather. Sizes JO to
Brown · are memben of tbe
50.
PLEASANT VAlLEY
board, along witb a state legisADMISSIONS: Howard later from each of the RepubliJeffers, Puneroy; Mnl. Luther can and Democratic party.
Johns, Buffalo; Delmer Games,
West Columbia; \Franklin Cook~
Point Pleasant; Mrs. llaytcn TENTATIVE APPROVAL
You'll find 111 size gym
Duncan, Point Pleasant; Mrs. CLEVELAND (UPI)- Teniashorts for men and boys. 22 ·
Edwin HudsoR, Llitart; Charles live agreement was reached belo 42 w1ist. Wllile. Bour
WliSI • official slyle.
Rogers, Mrs. Robert Emit and tween machinists and tbe AdMrs. Glerm Goodman, all Point dressograph-Mulligraph Corp.
Pleasant.
plant in suburban Euclid, on
DISCHARGES : Cynthia strike for tbree months.
Smith, Mason Roberts, James Scme 1,100 membelil of the
Deweese, Franklin Cook.
lnternationaJAssociationofMaAlhlelic supporters in boys
BIRTHS: August 31, a chinists will vote on !be pro- and meRs sizes. FaiMUS
Bike brand.
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. posed three-year contract Sept.
Donald Martin, Point Pleasant; a.
Sept. 1, a 'ion to ·Mr. and Mrs. Scme 700 office workers reGeorge Cle~denen, Point mainonstrike.NegoUationsare
Pleasant.
continuing.

'1.75

$1.29

.a

'3A9

Another new saledion of
these popular bells - 1'1/.o
inches wide. Sizes JO to 38.

'f.25

'

· Music accessories . H~~!lres . .:..~.ing~!~·

washable.
Sizes 8 to 20 and 38 to -12.

•

I

Slack Tops 57.9

merchandisa all river the store
Mens and BOys wear - Womens . Girls . lnlanls wear.
Drapertes · Bedspreads - luqqage - Sewing notions . Yard
goods · RCA Televisions - Riiilios . Stereos . Furnllure tor
every room in your home - Carpeting - Records . Sheet music

and straight legs - knits,
flannels and tweeds. All

GYM SHORTS

Be Beat

~the excel len) selections of

from a large group

j.

Now You Know

· Womens

Slql in Call Comfllt on
• three ftooiS

r

you need now.

'

.

Friday and Saturday

Fall '71 Fabrics

·SS.49
Mother Knits
68-70" wide. 100 per cent Acrilan -

yarn dyed single kni1s. Machine
washable. A pearl of a fabric for
dresses or pants suifs.

Sale '3.59
Gel

Rudy For

Fill -

Winter Now

Mens and Boys Department
You can sa led whal you need now tor fall

and winter wear.

Sweaters for men In regular and extra
large sizes. Sweaters for boys in sizes 2 to
12 - Juvenile and 6 to 20 boys.
Complelesaledlon olli"::Jadlelsand car
coals In all boys sizes
mens regular
and extra large sizes.
Shirts by !be hundreds lor men and boys in
cut and sawn type plus aline group of kr\11
shirts - Boysslzes2to7, 6to20 and Mens
sizes small, medium, large and extra
large.
Take lime to visit the mens and boys
department - look around . see the line
saleclions - ready for you lo buy.

Mens ·Lee Tech Twill

WORK UNIFORMS
Lee Prest 50 per cenl Polyesler and 50 per
cent Cotton. Expertly tailored pants .
comfortable Ill - long wearing. Sizes 29 to
4-4 waisl In olive and charcoal grey
.
Shirts to match have two button - lhr~ flap
pockels. Never Iron. Slzes141), to 20. You'll
want to buy a couple ol suils when you see
how they wear and - easy they are to
wash.

Lee ·Riders

Mens

WESTERN JEANS

OOVERAU.S - UNION AI is

Another shlpmenl el these popular
weslern jeans - made of heavy weight
blue ilenim -true weslern style. Super slim
Lee Riders in sizes 28 to J6 waist and
regular cui Lee Riders in sizes 29 to 4-4
waist.
,
Complete selection of waist sizes and leg
lengths.

Mens

Regular cut _DRESS SLACKS
Sizes 321o 4-4 waisl. Permanent press dress
slacks in regular leg style tor the more
conservative.
50 percent acrllan acrylic - 3S per cent
avril rayon, IS per cent acetate with
Scolchgard finish. Dark blue -blad&lt; . dark
olive.
'1.95

Buy your needs In overalls,__Camplete
selection of Lee and Blue Bell Wr-ler
coveralls In shorls, regular and fang
lengths.
Choose blue ·ctenlm - Herringbone Fisher
stripe · F!l"esl green and dark olive. Now
is a perlecllimetobuyw~t ~need.

fair runs four more days. Attendance during the first eight
days totaled 1 , 4~3.~99. about 7,000 short of last year's figure.
A total of 1~2,149 visited the
grounds Thursday, which was
12,000 higher than the corre-

Jury AwardS
f} 0 ()()()

In

sponding day la~t year .
Singer Johnny Cash continues
to highlight grandstand entertainment today as be did
Thursday, with 4:30 and 8:30
p.m. performances, along with
wife, JWle Carter, the Carter
Family, Tennessee Three, Slatler Brothers and Carl Perkins.
Doc Severensen of the "Tonight" television show will perform Saturday, SWlday and

WASHINGTON- 'I1IE FBI HAS 8JARTED an investigation flight.
Monday.
within the Stale Department becauSe recent news "leaks"
He_has crossed the Alps, the
'
Cyrus Eaton Acadia Farms
FALCON SENIORS- 'lbereare 14eenlcn GO the lrtl
Scboolfoothell r.m
'dered damag" to th . ti 1 .
English Channel and Lake Ene
of Northfield owned by the
tion CCIISI
revealed
inf
anna
mg
e
na
ona
m·
baD
His
ds
·
1
d
'
roster.
The
FalcCIIs
will
open
llleir
season
!might
againlt
Wlrt
iBgb
at
Ellzabetll.
The sen1on
teres!.
m
oons. _ recor me u e
Clevelsndmillionaireindustrialare
front
row,
fnm
left,
Mike
White,
Vernon
Roulb,
Dave
Morpn,Rob
I•mbert.
Sec:ond
row,,
.
the longest flight (900 nules),
ist exhibited the grand cham~esman Robert J. McCIOiSkey saJd department officers longest flight duration (42
'' f
1
If ha · f
Otesler Roush, Barry Harris, Tim Drake, Ou1l8 Roulh, DonjMacbir. Back row, Randy
have also been warned to use discreetness in their conversations . hours 35 minutes) and highest After a two day trial a jury plo~ ema e, ca cd mhamplon. efrawford, Randy Clark, Tcm Samsel, Nathan YCIIIter and MUiard Morrb.
wlth newsmen and to practice "cOOllllon sense" in deciding what 1. '
rna e, reserve gran ~
pton
a titude (21,000).
awarded Russell Bailey $10,000
(Contmued on page 10)
to talk about '!be instruclions, he said, cover matters considered
He also has made 73 flights in Meigs County common Pleas
m
"sensitive."
· "rigid" airships, including Court last Thursday afternoon. :::::::::&lt;:::;:::::::::::{:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;,~,:the Graf Zepplin and the Von
Bailey had sought $20,000 in
COLUMBUS (UPI) SAN CLEMENTE, CAIJF. - JACQUELINE KENNEDY !Iindenberg.
his suit filed against Harry G.
-(Continued on page 10)
The other parlicipants in the Brown, Minersville, as a result The state Department of
race scheduled to be laWlched of the death of his daughter, Education said today lhat
LOS ANGELS (UPI) - Manson "gave me a shotgun alrea4y has been cmvicted and
from the grandstand area at Barbara, who was killed in a under the present ln- Charles "Tex" Watson said be and told me be thought a forest sentenced to die for tbe Tate
noon, were Ward T. Vanorman, lraffic accident on May 26, 1970. terprelaUon of tulings by tbe obeyed the orders of Charles ranger and a blgbway patrol slaylngs, becauae repeated wte
Akron, Ohio; Deke Sonnicbsen, The accident occurred on SR 7 Cost of Uving CouncU ·that Manson "to kill" and shot or officer would come that night of drugs affected his mind and
Menlo Park, Calif.; Frank Pirt- following tbe deceased's teachers In 275 of Ohio's 625 slabbed six of the seven Tate- and be told me to kill them." made him a "robot."
chard, Flushing, Mich.; Wilma graduation from Eastern Hi~h school dlstrids will get LaBianca victims, but fled the "Jleft tbe ned day,'' be said.
Tbe defense was prepared
contracted pay raises tbls
Piccard, Newport Beach, Calif.; School.
cult after be was told to "I just knew !ben not to kill," today to call eight psychiatrists
school year.
Peter Krieg, Indianapolis, Ind.; Jurors were Lester Hawk,
murder again.
be continued. "Other people I and the proeecution live in the
State Sch.ools SuperinDon Kersten, Fort Dodge, Lillian Pickens, Linley Roush,
Watson, 25, admitted on the killed • I didn't even know I decisive battle over Wallon's
Iowa; Foster Lane, Columbus, Jr., Harold Lohse, George B. tendent Martin Esses said the wilness stand Thursday be killed, but things were becom- sanity at the time.
Ohio; Robert Rechs, Van Nuys, Skinner, Ora N. Carsey, Virgil teachers In the 275 SC!hool fataUy stabbed Rosemary and ing real to me."
districts are covered by Leno LaBianca and four He said he hitchbiked away Delays in extradillm caused
of
the
lraflic
to
West
Berlin
Calif.
and
Norton
Grim,
San
King,
Loyce
E.
Hoback,
Reta
Jo
his trial to be separated fnm'
BERLIN ( UPI) - Tbe Big
"master"
contracts
and
the
runs
through
East
Germapersons at actress Sharon from the Spahn movie ranch, tbat of tbe otber defendants.
Bernardino, Calif.
HiD, Don E. Rea, Sylvia Byers,
Four ambassadors signed today tbat
others are not.
ny.
The
city
Is
110
miles
inside
Cash
Show
Continues
Clarice
Krautler,
Jeanne
A.
Tate's
borne.
went home to Texas and lster
an historiC Bertin agreement
Including today, the 1971 slate Bradbury.
But be said he balked when drifted to Mexico.
Defense attcrney Samuel
designed to ease tension in tbls East Ger,many .
But even then, be told tbe Burbrick asked tbe Iarmer high
divided city. It was the first
jury,
"a magnetic pull was school scholar and atblellc star
major Berlin agreement since
taking me back to Manson. I whether ·be felt any tEllllli&gt;e
tbe end of tbe 1948-1949 Berlin
was
confused. It was like living over tbe seven savage kiJHnp.
blockade during the beigbt of
in tbree or four different
"I do know," be said. "At the
tbe cold war.
worlds."
time,
I was in a dar.e. Nolhlng
The ambassadors of the
He
said
be
could
not
resist
eemed real."
United States, Britain, France
the
"magnelic"
pull
and
finally
Prosecutor Vincent 81'3lkW
and tbe Soviet Union inked the
went
back
to
tbe
cult
bangout
PRINCIPALS - High School - James Diehl;
later questioned Watson in an
SAUSBURY - Mrs. Martha Hoover, Mrs. Helen
document at the former Allied
. By George Hargraves, Superintendent
in
neath
Valley
but
found
no
Junior
High
School
Russell
Moore;
Robert
Morris
attempt
to shake his testimony
Dais, Miss Rlli!lalle Story, Mr. W"tlliam Wickline, Mr.
Control Authority building in
Meigs Loeal School Dlatrlct
one
there.
M81l501l
and
tbe
Is at P&lt;meroy, Middleport and Bradbury; James
that be was just an extension ol
tbe American sector at I p.m.
I would like to use this column space tonight to John Arnott, Mrs. Dorothy Chaney, Mr. John Usle.
others
had
been
arrested
for
Manson.
Vermari is at RuUand and Harrisonville; Salem
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL - Mrs. Lin&lt;la
(la.m. EDT) after a u.hour introduce our 1971-72 professional staff. To conserve
car
theft.
Center
-Roberta
Wilson;
Salisbury
-John
Usle.
delay caused by technicalities. on space I will not list tbe grade or subject taught. Aiktnan, Mrs. Kay -Barr, Mr. Ed Bartels, Mr. Roger
Q. "On tbe night ol tbe Tate
He went back home to Texas,
Assistant principals are: Mrs. Hackett at Bradbury,
t1te signing had been set for The staff is as follows :
Birch, Mrs. Eleanor Blaetlnar, Mr. James
Mrs. Wolfe at Mi&amp;llepcrt, Mrs. Y~ at Plmeroy, Watson said, and subsequenUy murders, you knew your
tbe same time ,Thursday but a
BRADBURY - Mrs. Betty Fuliz, Mrs. Marjorie Brewington, Mrs. Joan Corder, Mr. W"tlliam CoffMr. McCall at Harrismvilte, Mr. Hart at Rutland, was arrested for the murden. mission was murder?"
hitch developed over the G9ett, Mrs. Phyllis Hackett, Mr. Donald Hanning, man, Mr. _Donald Dixon, Mr. Charles Downie, Mrs.
Watson has pleaded innocent A. "Yes ... ~ I had no
wording of the German transla- Mrs. Sabra Mcrrlson, Mrs. Maxine Philson.
Mr. Young at tbe High School.
Betsy Hcirky, Mr. Leo Kennedy Jr., Mrs. Dana
thought."
tion -iniportant because the
MUSIC TEACHERS -Mr. David Bowen Is the and innocent by reason of
HARRISONVIlLE - Mrs. Margaret Goodwin, Kessinger, Mrs. Unda ~ar. Mr. Marvin McKelvey,
insanity. The defense contends Q. "You knew you weren't
pact musf be ratified by both Mrs. Katbleen Scott, Mrs·. Helen Carper, Mrs. Nancy Mr. Robert Meier,Mrs. Phyllis Miller, Mrs. Emalene
instrmnenlalmusicdirectcr and Mr.LewiaStielda is
he blindly carried out the going tbel'!l to play (:anoA,
East and West Germany. The
his
assistant.
Mrs.
Otristine
Gotbrie
baa
tbe
high
Pratt,
Mrs.
Carla
Saelens,
Mrs.
Evelyn
Sweet,
Mr.
White, Mrs. Doris BUckley, Mr. Gregory McCall, Mr.
orders of M81l501l, who along didn't you'!"
.technicality was Ironed out in
school
vocal
music.
Mrs.
Manrlla
Miller
leaches
Carl
Wolfe.
A. "I had no thougbt."
Olarles Bartels.
with three women followers
all-night meetings.
vocal Dlusic at Salem Center, Harrisonville and
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL - Mrs. Mildred Bailey,
MIDDLEPORT
Miss
Mary
Franels,
Mrs.
Cancellation of Thursday's
RuUand. Mrs. I.Dcille Swackhamer bas the vocal na: •emu :::u::em unr.wuo:r ·1· ... .,..-;:~~
Mr. Jobn BenUey, Mrs. Joy BenUey, Mrs. Daisy
ceremony was blamed officially Bernice.Carpenter, Mrs. Helen Maag, Mrs. Jennifer Blakeslee, Mrs. Jeanne Bowen, Mr. Carl Brarman,
music
at Puneroy and part ri. tbe juni4l' high scbool.
MARIETTA, Ohio &lt;UPII - A cor}iiUiioa
on tbe "sudden indisposllion" of Butcher,Mrs. Sara Rope, Mrs. Jolla McComas, MisS Mr. Charles Chancey, Miss Mary Chapman, Mrs.
Mrs.
Alice
Nease
bas
part
ri.
the
jwi.or
high
vocal
has been created. fulllled by a federal grot, to
U.S. Ambaisador Kenneth Carol WaliZ, Miss Marianne Daniszewski, Mrs. S&gt;erley Chapman, Mr. Richard Coleman, Mr.
music plus that at Salisbury and Mlddlepcrt.
&amp;tzame
Wolfe,
Mrs.
Nellie
Hughes.
work on the unemployment problems ol a 5Rwdl, but Western diplomalic
Mrs. &amp;!san Hines will serve as a half-time speech
Charles Corder, Mrs. Gladys Cox, Mr. Wheeler
sources said tbe real reason
c:ounty area of Southeastern Oblo.
and hearing therapist.
was the East-West conflict over
POMEROY- Mrs. Mary C. W"Liey (Mrs. Margaret Drake, Mr. K'!lllleth Eblin, Mrs. Kaye Fick, Mr.
John Matthews said Tb.anday · the c•These staff members plus Mr. Morrison Md tbls
tbe translalion.
Parsonssubslltutlng), Mrs. Jean Kuhn, Mrs. Dorothy Michael Gerlach, Mr. William P. Gibbs, Mrs.
poration's staff three prefessloaall wll work
writer make up the Meigs Local professional slalf as
An aiDed cOOllllunique Issued Woodard, Mrs. Ida Diehl, Miss Mary V. Reibel, Mrs. Elizabeth Gooding, Mr. Roher! HAmm, Mr. Dale
the 1971-72 scbool year begins. I trust I .haven't
with community leaden and establish leeal
today said Rush had bad a Nonga Roberti, Mrs. Mae Young, Mrs. Marjorie Harrison, Mrs. Cecelia Hart, Mrs. Bernice Hoffman,
deleted
anyooe.
HI
did,
I
apologize.
The
professional
development c:orporatloas In the App·laeblu
headache Thursday but that be Gibbs, Mrs. Ina .Meadows, Mrs. Mary HYsell, Mr. Mr. Everette Holcomb, Mrs. Clarice Hopkins, Mrs.
staff
totals
one
hundred
forty.five.
Martha
Husted,
Mrs.
Pauline
Hysell,
Mr.
Th&lt;mas
area under $10,000 from the fecleral govera•at.
was healtlly apin tbls morning. Dooald Slivers, Mrs. Bmnie Fisher, Mrs. Helen
Kelly,
Miss
Leda
Kraeuter,
Mrs.
Margaret
Le;,..;.,
'!be· statement llicl Rush had Williams, Mrs. Kate JarreD, Miss Wendy Schmidt,
"Local dollars wll be gaerated to Mit . ,
NEWS AND NOTF.'I - Fifteen girls cunpleled the
Mr. John Mora, Mrs. Mary Powell, Mr. John
symptcml ol hypertension, but Mrs. Katherine Jacobs.
cosmetology course last spring. Twelve of tbem have small Industries to provide f• •eatpl8ylll • •
It added he hacl a good night's RUTLAND - Mi'lS Mary Francis, Miss Barbara Redovlan, Mrs. hances Roberts, Mr. John Teaford,
successfully pa ! e~ the state hoard rvmin•tioo and under-employed peno11 Ia tlleae areal,"
sleep and was fully capable of . Logan, Mrs. Ann Webster, Mrs. Janice Kilker, Mrs. Mrs. Harolil Sauer, Mrs. Rita Slavin, Mr. Ben
are cr will be licensed cosnetolosis!s- We have llllly Matthews said. "However, it ca " lieu llq u
carrying out hil duties again. Janet Deetz, Miss Janis Sclmoll, Mr. Eric Hart, Mrs. Slawter,Miss Helen Smith, Mr. EmUy Sprague, Mr.
lour lootbaU games at home !lis year. t1te flnl one II . two years before IDY taaglltle nnllt cu lie
t1te Big Foar agreement Norma WilsCII, Mrs. Thelma Campbell, Mrs. Muriel Nol~n ·p, Swackhamer, Mr. Mitchell Swpa, Mr.
with aeemelin oo Friday. Srptember to. Try not to seen."
spelled out fer the lint time Foley,
Fenton Taylor, Mrs. Jeannie Taylor, Mrs. Martha
Project diredor II George
Tlif•a••"'
inany of the Western righll in SAlEM CENTER - Mrs. Gladys Majoc, Mrs. Ve!Ulari, Mr. Gary Walker, Mrs. Anna Welsh, Miss . . miss it. We won'tplay at home again until October 1.
-Thanks tO aU the lll8Jl)' people who helped us ll"t off ol Clnelnaatl.
tbe city. It was cleligned to el1d OOve Page, Mrs. Linda McManus, Mrs. Anna Turner, Mooa P. Williams, Mr. Donald Wo)fe, Mr. ·Earl
;;: to a good start fer tbls new school year.'.
.· ·.·····.·.· ··.··.···.·.· ·:· . ....·.
Young, Mr. Aaron Zahl.
tbe East German harusmellt Mrs. Roberla·Wilson, Mr. Kim Neal .

"'"' "'111gb

Da.rnages

..

Watson Obeyed Orders

Historic Berlin
Pact Is

Sign~d

Speaking Of Schools - - No. 203

Meigs Professional Staff Introduced

or

Mens Umbrellas
For Back To College
We've an excellent selection o1 col~
mens umbrellas. Black -- La~ size . Snip
open style. 100 per cent nr•IGn co-lng.
Mem and Boys dep.orfmen . tst floor.

OPEN FRIDAYS MID.SAlUIDAYS nL·9 P.Jl

· ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
...

'

-·

FINANCIAL EXPERTS mOM the world's 10 richest nations
met today in Paris, and French sources said France would
demand the United States dev:alue the dollar to ease the world's
economic and monetary crisis.
In Rcme, Italian Treasury Minister Mario Ferrari-Aggradl
Cl)led on EliJ'OI)e8ll nat111111 to lir'eak away from the "dollar
standard" by gradual establishment of new international
lllCIIetary system. Italy is a member of the group of ten and Is
upected to make tbls demand in Paris.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A 78year-&lt;&gt;ld Frenctunan who has
made 507 free balloon ascents
over the past 60 years was
among 10 balloonists entered in
the 7-Up International Balloon
Race as a feature of the Ohio
State Fair today.
. .
Charles DoUfus, of Pans, lS
known ~ ~~ "Fa~er of Balloon Racmg for hiS long-tune
fascination with lighter than air

w.

•

I .

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