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'72 ·
Laurie Schaefer

Of Bexley .Takes
Devoted To 1Jw Interest. Of 11w Meigs-MfUOn Area

Boardwalk :Prize

NO. XXIV NO. 105

POMEROY-MIDDLEPnRT. OHlO

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1971

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

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Operat/on
Head st:artAH't:L FOLLY '#ORE.
SON WMOI&gt;.R'I ·

\1\t)kt.~'- ANOTHS(

MAWNII-l'-AN'

SCORCHER!!

ftOLVE. TH

GoO' BYE, FOLKSAH IS OFF!! ·

I

_...... M'I'STERY-

BY BOB HOEFLICH
It's a long way from the tiny stage at the Pomeroy Junior
High School auditiirium to the vast Convention Hall in Atlantic
City,N. J. -In more ways than one.
However, bridging the gap beautifully fD become Miss
America of 1972 Saturday night In the Boardwalk City was Miss
Laurel Lea (Laurie) Schaefer of Bexley.
Miss Schaefer first caught the Miss America ''fever'' ln.
Pomeroy in 1968 when she was crowned Miss Southern Ohio
among a field of 17 contestants from Gallia, Meigs, Washington
and Athens Counties.
Her national vicfDry Saturday :-:·.·. .·"'.·,·:·:·. ··..,;·.···.·:···:·.·.·:·:·. ··:·.·:···:.··:··
night in AUantic City was no
The new Miss America '·'overnight success." Since Miss Laurel Lea Schaefer,
winning her first crown in the Bexley - wm make a perPomeroy Junior High School sonal appearance on the ·
way back in 1968, she has been Tonight Show of Johnny
constantly working fDwards seH Carson at 11:30 tonight.
improvement and grooming
herself for bigger things. Those
bigger things came Saturday all of the girls taking part in the
night and her composure was 1969 pageant. Local residents
amazing. Only toward the very who came into contact with her
end of the Miss America found her dynamic and
Pageant did Laurie seem to lose refreshing. She was sincere,
that calmness, and then it was ambitious and lovely.
While giving up her Miss
only momentarily.
After winning the Miss Southern Ohio Iitle in 1969, Miss
Southern Ohio Pageant in Schaefer the ssme year was
Pomeroy in 1968, Miss Schaefer named Miss Central Ohio at a
went to Cedar Point to compete pageant held in Colwnbus. Once
in the Miss Ohio finals. She "got more, she returned to the Miss
her feet wet" but that was about Ohio Pageant in Cedar Point.
it. However, there was a She did well, but couldn 'I come
up with the state tiUe.
challenge and she took it.
In 1970, Laurie took part in no
In 1969, Laurie returned to
Pomeroy to take part again in pageants but did however,
the 1969 Miss Southern Ohio appear as a performer during
Pageant, not as a contestant, ol the . between segment en~ourse, but ·as the reigning tertainment at the state
queen about to relinquish her pageant. It was good exposure
title. She thrilled local and good experience. .
audiences when she moved onto This year, Miss Schaefer
the runway in the junior high again tDok the Miss Central
auditorium to present her ef- Ohio title and for the third time
fective version of "The 1m- returned to the state compossible Dream." Her im- petition. There was no defeating
possible dream undoubtedly her ; she, by that time, had
came true Saturday night in become a top flight contestant.
ConsequenUy, she walked off
AUantic City.
When Miss Schaefer returned with the Miss Ohio tiUe and her
fD Pomeroy in 1969 her poise, chance at the national title
her talent, her style, and her which she captured Saturday
·
personality reflected vast night.
Probably
none
of
the 50
improvement. She was the
epitome
of graciOIIBiless toward
{Continued on Page 8)
... . ...... ... _. . .,
~

Seven reeks
Over eekend
4 Thefts I
I
:: :::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;;:::::~::::::::::=:~:::::::::::::~::.-:::::::..~oe·

Agnew Asks Governors End

Reported

C'MON CXJT!! R
J.IIIST AH GOT /16

MANLVATAN

AS"fStWS!!

"ltl'ALL 15 USIN'

SOME. ~Milt,

MIE.TMOO-'ro

MOOMIUATI. ME"
••

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.,

CAPTAIN EASY
Mcl&lt;E&lt;I?~

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

A 13U~INS~5 D'INAMO 51NCe

li AL.WA'I~
WA~ RATHE:Ft
·ER·6UL.B01JS,

l.tW ~SADING " THE NAPOl£0N TOUCH"!

WOW! iH55TOCk

OF THAT COMPANY
VOU TOOK OVER
ZOOMeD TWE:NTY

6TAATSeV~ ... IT:G

WA~N'T JT~

· AL-L- HE:TC:E IIJ

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THI? l.ITTI.S

POINT$1

5001&lt;..1

The 22-year.old beauty from
Bexley, Ohio, a suburb of
Columbus, was crowned Miss
America at midnight Saturday
in crowded convention hall
here. She stayed dry-eyed after
winning the title to keep her
false eyelashes from slipping.
She accepted congratulations
from her widowed mother, her
12-year old brother and her
"terribly proud" boy friend,
and slept for two hours.
She then appeared at the
news conference and fielded
questions about abortion, premarital sex, campus drugs and
politics. Under a new ruling,
Miss America is allowed to
comment on controversial
fDpics.

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PeUy Partisan Bickering

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LUNCH TOMORROW!

IT.DADI'V!
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MISS MIEJUCA 1972 ON POMEROY STAGE - This was the scene in Pomeroy in 1968
when Miss Laurel Lea (Laurie) Schaefer, Bexley, won her first crown in a preliminary Miss
America Pageant. Saturday night Miss Schaefer who was named Miss Ohio this summer at
Cedar Point after three attempts at the state crown, was named Miss America at AUantic City,
N.J . Shown with her court selected on May 4, 1968in Pomeroy, Miss Schaefer is third from the
left. Others, from the left, are Gloria Jean Jones, Grove City, a student at Marietta College at
the time, Miss Congeniality; Unda Moore, Canal Winchester, who was attending Ohio
University, second runner-up; Jeanne Diane Capri, Rye, N.Y., a Marietta College student at
the time, first runnerup, and Jayne Lee Hoeflich, Pomeroy, attendant to the queen and her
court.

Accompanied by a retinue of
state policemen and her chaperone, Miss America drove to a
convention in King of Prussia,
Pa . For an hour she greeted
guests at the convention of the
Holiday Fair Chrisbnas show,
sponsored by three large
Philadelphia wholesale druggists.
This morning she was attending another news conference in
New York City.

'"I'm conservative and I'm
very proud of it," said the new
Miss America, daughter of a
school teacher and grandaugh·
ter of a member of the
Dapghters of the American
Revolution.
In her four years at Ohio

University in Athens, Ohio,
where she majored in fine arts,
Miss Schaefer said she had
been offered drugs, but she

always turned them down .
"I faced a lot of pressure
from my peers, but I feel that
I'm a secure enougb individual,
I don 't need any escape," she
said.
On premarital sex she said,
"I'm against it. I know that I
am of a minority of girls of my ~~:e*:;:;o;:;:;s;:::;:,';:;.;;;:;:;.~-:;:;:;:-.;&amp;~'3~
age to believe as l do. I have
WARRINGTON, England
been brought up in such a way {UPII - About 200 cars and
that these are not the values I trucks crashed into o.ach
set for myself. "
other today on a fog-bound
superhighway
In northwestern Eugland, leaving
dead, Injured and crushed
vehicles in one of the worst
automobile pileups in British
freed but there was no im- history.
mediate word on the fate of the
Pollee said at least nine
others. The prisoners had persons died and more than
threatened to kill the '13 guards 60 were injured ID the mileand 11 civilian employes if long Irati of wreckage on the
amnesty demands were not M6
motorw~y
oear
met. Authorities rejected the Warrington,
15
miles
demands.
southeast of Liverpool.
A plea went out for "all
available ambulances" to come ss::0.~:;:;_-;:::;~~&gt;:::::s::;:,.~-».!!.~~~
to the scene to carry out the
"suffering and the injured,"
MEIGS MARRIAGE UC~E
Newsmen on the scene ssid Nicholas Joseph Neutzlmg,
23, and Rosemary Morris, 21,
(Continued on Page 8)
both of Pomeroy.

Some Hostages Freed
ATTICA,N. Y. (UP!) -More
than 1,000 state police and
sheriffs' deputies stormed the
Atlica prison today with guns
blazing in a tid to free 31

hostages held by rebellious
prisone111. Hellc~lers bovered
overhead, dr~plng tear gas on
tile facility .
At least U bostages were
,

By Uolled Press InternatiODal

MIG 17 Fired on over Heights
A MWTARY SPOKESMAN SAID in Tel Aviv that !Braeli
troops fired at a Syrian Soviekonstrucled MIG17 as it soared
over the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights today. It was not
disclosed whether the craft was hit. Israel protested the Olght fD
the U. S. Truce Supervisory Commission in Jerusalem. It was the
third overflight of the Golan Heights by Syrian planes since the
start of the current ceasefire.

soot nas
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Scientists reported today that
two environmental problems
have been successfully attacked
by using smokestack soot to
reclaim !arid wasted by coal
mining .
Soot, or Oy ash, presents a
giant disposal problem to
utilities that burn coal fD
generate electricity. · Power
plants produce 30 million tons
of it a year.
By applying the soot, which is
alkaline, to acidic coal mine
spoil and refuse areas, the land
can he made less sour and
more hospitable to plant life.
There are more than 600,000
acres of acid land in the big

.•

Value

strip mining states of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio,
lllinois and Kentucky.
John P. Capp and Lester M.
Adams of the Bureau of Mine's
Morgantown, W. Va ., Energy
Research Center reported the
findings to the American
Chemical Society at its annual
meeting.
Yields of hay grown on onceacid land reclaimed with fly
ash were comparable fD those
from nearby pastures and
meadows, they ,said.

Detmner
• on
Wanted Man
Adetainer has been placed on
Frances Levi (Hack) Pickens,
being returned from Florida fD
Talmadge, Ohio , by Meigs
County law enforcement
agencies, the office of Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach said
Sunday.
Sarasota County Sheriff Ross
E. Boyer has notified Harienbach and Meigs Prosecutor
Bernard V. Fultz that Pickens,
wanted here on a charge of
forgery, has waived extradition, and will .&gt;be
returned
II\.'
to Talmadge to answer to a
felony warrant. The detainer
will insure Pickens' return fD
Meigs County upon his release
at Talmadge.

A LiUle Late, for Some

TROPICAL STORM HEIDI, ONE of four stqrms in the
Atlantic Ocean and the Gillf of Mexico, parallel~d the Eastern
seaboard today and small craft warnings flew from Cape Hatteras fD New England. .
There appeared fD be no immedla!" danger, bow~ver, that the
toniJ,
with peak 50 mile per bour winds, would st!1ke the U.S.
8
mainland.

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. Heidi Lurking off Coast

$

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WASHINGTON- MANUFACI'URERS OF synthetic football
turf have been asked fD provide Congress with reports on safety
tests of their products. Rep. John E. Moss, D-Calif., sent lelte111
asking for the findings to Monsanto, the manufacturer of
Astroturl; 3M Co., the maker of '!'arlan Turf; and American
Blltrite Rubber Co., which produces Polyturf.
Moss, chairman of a House Commerce subconunittee, said
over the weekend the tests were sought becall8e a recent study
indicated athletes playing on synthetic turf suffered 50 pet. more
injuries than:thoSe playing on natural grass. The study was made
by Dr. James Garrick of the University of Washington.

t

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SAIGON -MILITARY SPOKESMEN SAID today that South
Vietnamese Black Panther troops seized jhree 12?nun long-l'ange
North Viefnanlese guns In the mountain jungles near the Laotian
border, and also wrecked a concealed Communist supply cache in
the same area. The Saigon forces found in this same region the
bodies of '13 enemy soldiers killed earlier in some of the heavy
allied air strikes.

IT

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SAN' JUAN, P.R. {UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. i:i
Sheriff Robert Harten bach 's
l:'
:
Department was. busy in Agnew called on the nai!OD's governors today to shun ij
?:
vestigating a wave of accidents
"petty bickering and partlsao joekeyiag" in debate over ~
that plagued the county
President Nlx011's new economic policy.
~
%
Saturday night and Sunday.
"fn this period of a freeze 011 wages, prices and ~
At 11:20 p. m, Sunday on
rents, and indeed in the stage that follows tbe freeze, let
Route . 124 in Rutland, minor
us work together ID the pubUc loterest through a rational ·!:i
damages were incurred to a ' discussion aod a spirit of cooperatiOD," Agnew told tbe
vehicle driven east by Paul E.
63nl annual National Governors Conference.
il.!
Ervin, 22, Racine, when two
In remarks prepared for the opening business :.~
deer ran into the highway,
sessioo of the meeting, Agnew returned to his role as :~
striking the right door of Erchief White House link with state government. He
vin's vehicle.
defended Nlx011's new economic policy agalust 1§
At 2:30 a. m. Sunday on
Democratic and labor movement charges tballt offered ~
County Road 4, a pickup truck
unfair tax relief based m a trickle down theory and tllat ~
was demolished when it went
profit controls shonld be tied to other controls as they
out of control in loose gravel
were not lo tile 91Mlay wage-{lrlce freeze . He said he was .
and off the right side of the
a believer io "honest partisanship, that the Nixon policy
road, overturning onfD its top in
til
was nothauded down from MI. Olympus aud was subject
a deep ditch. The vehicle was
to searching study leading to Improvement where It
owned by Clarence Hoffman,
Langsville Rt. 1 and was $, coold be Improved."
believed to have been driven by
•••·:
Kenneth D. McCune, Hi,
Rutland .
An
apparent
passenger, Jim Harmon, 16, John Newlun , a passenger, had 22, Pomeroy Rt. 3, traveling ·
Rulland , suffered a collarbone a scratched forehead and Er- west, had $400 damages when it
injury.
nest Newlun a sprained arm. skidded out of control into a.
At 7:05p.m. Saturday on Vine They were not treated im- ditch .
St. in Racine, mediwn damges mediately .
Meantime, several thefts
were reported when vehicles Saturday at 10 p. m. at the were reported. to the sheriff's
driven by Lynda D. Young, 22, intersection of County Road 28 dept. over the weekend .
Two guns were stDlen from
Racine , backed out of a and State Route 124, a vehicle
driveway and did not see an driven by Thomas L. the Mickey Hutton property,
oncoming car driven by Burroughs, 45, Tuppers Plains, l Rutland Rout~,kand 150tlfeetof
Deborah L. La Valley, 16, turning south onto the county lwnber from the VirgO Parions
Racine Route I.
road, skidded and went over 8 property at Pomeroy Route 3.
Earlier Saturday at 6:30p.m. slight embankment. Burroughs Fred Whitehead, New Albany,
on State Route 248, three miles was arrested for driving while reported the theft of a tent,
camp stove 81\d other equiP&lt;
east of Chester, a vehicle driven intoxlcatOO.
by Ernest Gale Newlun, 24, At 11:48 p. m. 1;8turaay "' ment from property he owns
Long Bottom, was a total loss Salem Township, at the in- near Pagetown, and Sam Hicks,
when it went out of controlfor 56 tersection of the Salem Langsville Route 1, said an auto
feet before skidding sideways ·Township Road and County engine, a car shaft and other
for 96 feet more and rolling over Road 31, an International Scout auto parts were removed from a
once, landing on its wheels. driven by William P. Radford, shed on his property.

Three Big Guns Seized

·r~V 5rU66S~TlNCS

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Miss Schaefer in Mainstream America
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UP!)
- Laurel Lea Schaefer of Ohio,
. Miss America 1972, is brownhaired, green-eyed, 36-24-34,
and, of course, beautifuL
She is against premarital sex,
has been offered drugs by her
peers but refused, always wore
skirts or dresses fD class, feels
President Nixon is doing a good
job, says she is a political
conservative, and has a boy
friend in Columbus.
The boy friend says "the
country's choice merely points
up my good taste."
"l'm not a typical co-ed, but
l feel the majority of my peers
feel the way I do," she said
Sunday in her first press
conference.

tM'c"O

Weather
RECEPTION - Mrs. James Carpenter, Ohio's
Hcmemakerofthe Year,washonoredwitharecepilon by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners in conjunction with their annual
Dower show Saturday. On behaH of the club, Mrs. Harold
WQI.fe, left, president, made a gift of jewelry to Mrs. Carpenter. The silver tea service was awarded fD her when she
was selected Homemaker of the Year at the r.j!Cent stale fair.
Other silver pieces were gifts fr001 her family, and the
flowers were presented by the Pomeroy Flower t.1op. (See
account on Page 5. )

•'

Light rain in the east ending
this afternoon; party cloudy
elsewhere. Hlglla In the 71111.
Pardy cloudy !might witll lows
In the SOS. Mostly sunny
.Tue:!daywith little temperature
change. Highs In the 7011.

~P~~ow

BEST OF SHOW AWARD- Mrs. Homer Pal-ker, right, received
of show award
for her modern arrangement in the "Saturday's Night.Out" class. Top blue ribbon winner in ·
the show was Mrs. Tom Stewart who displays her winner in the "Sunday's Peace" class. (See
acr.onnt on Page 5.)

Final plans for a horae allow
will be made when the F.tern
LocRI School District Atbletlc
Boosters meet at &amp; p. m.
Tuesday at the hlah ac:hool •

�Z- The DaUy Sentinei,Middltport-Pomeroy,O.,Sept.l3, 1fl1 .

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"He's Still Burning . Up!"

EDITORIAL

Statistici-regularly trotted out by the alarmists to
make all sorts o(impressive points-can also be quite
dull. mainly beeause we have heard them befo1·e. And
wewill h~ar them again.
The legions of ecology buffs over recent years h&amp;ve
trapped their figures and proceeded to beat us over the
head with them.
It's not fair to say that any particular figures are most
important- even critical- for as we all know statistical
games can be played .
Even in light of this, however. it can be said that some
statistics, tabulations or indices are interesting. Among
the most interesting and readily underst&amp;ndable statis·
tics available concerning this. co untry's environment are
issued yearly by the National Wildlife Federation in the
form of its annual EQ (environmental quality ) Index.
'!,'his year:s third annual EQ Index, published in the
October·November issue ·of National Wildlife magazine,
notes that the nation's · environment continued to deteriorate in 1971. But some critical areas have stabilized
and this year rrtay well be the turning point for which
we have all been waiting.
"Until now, I was afraid the script for the All-Ameri·
can dream was turning into a nightmare with acrid air,
stinking water, crowded slums and garbage-strewn land·
scapes crowding out and killing off the wildlife, flowers,
birds and trees. And, if that, what chance for man?" asks
Thomas Kimball, NWF executive director.
The most important fact cited by this yea r's EQ re·
port, says Kimball, is that apathy is no longer our biggest problem.
Here is the status, according to the NWF, of some of
the most crucial areas of our environment:
WATER-We have halted declining water quality, but
our waters are still incredibly foul and unacceptable.
NWF estimates that it will take an investment of $42
billion to clean up our water over a five-year period.
Since 65 per cent of water pollution is still caused by
industry, they should foot more than half of the bill.
AIR-Air pollution still ranks as our No. 1 environment problem-and it is still getting worse. Dirty air
costs each American family $117 a year in health, $100
a year in degraded property value, $90 in cost to mate·
rials and $2"in vegetation. It adds up to a $16.1 billion
cost to the nation each year. Some hope is held in the
new air quality standards Congress will require by 1975,
but that is still four years away.
LIVING SPACE-Trend. continues down as more peo·
pie crowd into less space. By the year 2000, .70 per cent
of people will be on 10 per cent of the land. Pressure on
national parks jumps with more visitors "getting away
from it all."
TIMBER- Trend gaining as last year. National Forest
timber cut reduced, but 60 per cent increase in lumber
need by 1978 may cause problems. Forest fires were the
worst ip 36 years.
· MINERALS-Trend is down as we use up minerals
and fossil fuels faster than we can replenish our reserves.
The EQ Index has gone down less this year than last,
or the year before. But it is still going DOWN. We have
gained an increased awareness of environmental problems, but the big question remains: Will we turn the
corner in 1972?
The NWF's answer is this: "Yes, if- but only ifwe're willing to work and fight for it."
Consumers must work through their representatives
and the courts as well as in more individualized ways.
Industries, which have shown improvement in the last
year, must continue to improve.
Next year, perhaps, the EQ Index will be up.
(For one free copy of this year's EQ Index write to
Educational Services, National Wildlife Federation, 1412
' 16th St. N.W.. Washington, D.C. 20036.)
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

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Opening lead- ' A

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By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "The first and
most important thing to
learn about the Blackwood
convention is that it is used
primarily to check on aces,
so as to keep out of slams
when you don 't hold at least
three of those nice cards ."
Jim : "This leads to the
corollary that a man who
b1ds four no-trump intends
to go to six any time his
partner's response shows
that his side holds three
aces."
Oswald: "Today's South
really abused the convention
when he bid four no-trump.
He would have bid six if his
partner had shown the mis·
sing ace. When his partner
showed no ace he thought a
While and only bid five ."

I

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"LLGGI!S,CAIII!IIA -NO .tenJN" .
. NEW YORI - Bdlly.-'limrs Square eops
baft addo!d .,.,..... - - lo their 98111
portabl~o iDftlllmy: lo snap pimps,
JrCISiles . . jGiias - · We SII1PfCl ~ best
dellneat to . . . . . IIJiilmtiaD WOIIId be to
pub6Bb t h e - ~ J*s feali1ll eDIIJ8b to fall
fir the ~Idles.
Netw.t
llllllle ArteCe is IUiql
BoUly ltfnnedJ's - Joe to Afrb for of
~8 Wide Wartdor~epi3odes ·- 'lbe
mugger w11o lried to ~ c:lfe aner
Jimmy Wesllll p11iD1J diola'l .... lbatelegant
type bad '-t 15 :r-s aN. Y. CGP-. 'lbe
. footpad got belled .......-. fir llis 'fidem
ambition.
·~..,Jets_. 8a1y Werb1in- is tbe lig
genentlr WdadNew .Joney'uportl complo!x.
'111&lt; gri!l Gimlll _....,. are iD. a racelrack is
parttfitandlbeN. Y.radllceslalllisiDI!Dtalso

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!Helen Help Us !
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Q-What type of song
does !he brown creeper

I hove?

By Helen Bottel

·

A-It bas a " wild, sweet
II song,"
heard only when the

CAR SALEsMAN TAKING HER FOR A RIDE
Dear Helen:
I am a new widow and not used to 1111!0.
I knew this man wbile I was married and so, when he asked
me out, I accepted. Actually he was a t&gt;nsjness acquaintance. I
believed him when he said he was divc.-ced. We got quite frieOO!y.
~n I plamed a Eurqlean trip, he said be wanted me to
write, but he gave me his cfiice address, saying he had a DOllY
landlady who snooped in his mail and sometimes didn't deliver it.
I asked f«r his phone number but be said he didn't bave one,
temporarily, because of a mix-up on b~. It aounded fishy to
me, and I said so. How did I know tbat be wasn't trying to bide me
frmn his wife? He neveroncetookme to his "apartment."
He became very angry ;mel accused me ri not !rusting him. I
haven'theard frWI himsince,altbougb !wrote a note ri apology.
My !rip is scheduled f1r lbe last rl. this month. Should I try to
reach him again, as I dm't want to c001e home to a manless
existence. (Bull don'twant to get mixed up with a married man,
either.)
Oh yes, I f..-got to say: He's a car salesman, and he ban-owed
$25 tba the hasn'treturned to me. -GLORIA
Dear Gloria:
My !GAP ("I'm Guessing Again Perception") says your car
salesman took you for a Tide. Be glad it was short and C(llt only
$25. - H.
""

bird makes its nest behind
loose bark .

--films;

Q-How much of the galberingatlbe~luw14•
was·dlendby
wood of ebony is black?
Santi's - Bemett woald"ft luftd lbal - ··
A-Only the heartwood. Bemett's ·~,zs; • estate as bis
The sapwood is white, graywilJilrobate rl.firially •"" M was that ml
ish-white or pinkish-white.
lots mtre; ma-e tban fivemill __ NBC's Ed
Q-Who is the only U.S. Newman is Cll an ll'IWinille 1V-Iene; tim 'ir
problems, in FDgland .... T as blo nmn.b
vice-president to resigfl?
A--John C. Calhoun in are seeking drama-movie critics: Jall1l
Sclllbeck left ABC, itpCRitoiJ far a bigger W.
1832.

we presume .••. New' eiCbl-CeDt llamp
~In ling the Statm lllandlerry-CIIIIbtlne
cents more 1baD tbe ride illelf -· . . _..
·· Ubben inwded Michel ~·s tJlylilll
beal!ty saloo and puled oallill!ntlft 1o ~ rlcb ,,
Tiry ladies UDder the diJen --~ Joe ru.th let
the gals at P. J. Cllrb'1111~ liS talloaiy if they added their plme .-mbon.
Jewrl 1bieves slnJck ~ iw11J illlnble
Southemptoo manse r1. Btpnble Oil's UaJd C.
&amp;nitb .... Millionaire yacbhm'" A. SummerLoog got arOllld to !lyre NJblfiy and lllllll
around to the cblc Gnmdier .••• 'l1le mod fadlists tbiJik tbey're ao brand new witb ·~
g~oups" ; it's been ammd •bncwt a c:eotlat 1l!ed to be Cllled the subwQ' 111111 bom- •••• Pll1l
ik:car111ey cabled his British fan doh; " P : '?
don't call me a Bet11le a&amp;ain" ••.. Dlnnnr w
...
wii:tdqe811'topenattbeCopaliDiilOcl7bulH'a
already swamped witb • as e valioas.
'l1le late blllimatre 1fil' a1mlnal Alfred
~·s aole heir Amdt, wbo 111ft ap ~
family's German lndaslries ftr a $7111,01111 _ - t
pmski«&lt;, is feeling tile pbrl1: beca- be bu 1111
tudeducticm (noil''lin eo1a
at all), his
'IUOBigOnesafter tuesoanesto ....ODDa,_-,
bardly enough to run liS -n,a ~ SolsiJnrg
estate (7Zrot111!1,70111!n'ants)piulf17.-ayear
for his MaraUsb vilLI, $7,000 fw a lwhelc.apartment, $115,llllll a year for his yadlt 1: crew,
lig allowances to bis motber ml wife; -tbelle
canccne crvet toN. Y.and stay at tbe Waldtrioo ...,ifare_Somebow "" can't pity tbe wilwne

E.-

.,t

Dim Deluise said N.Y. cbqes so fast,
''IMI time I was here you !1.1 a JlepMer
maytr" .... F'rtU1k McGee's Induing for his
'Today" NBC-1V takecrvet.frcn-Ba&amp;b Downs
by trying to beclhn bis ulcers and m-tic:alilis
.... i&gt;airq r1. great tmnis star Pancbo Gcm!lrs

llldhisaon Richard Jr. (lint f t kllew Pancbo's
spre tag) was a bullt.in ccmmercial fir Las
Vegas' Caesan ~: &amp;'. ani Jr. are the
court pros there.

Bleaching, Tinting Can Be Harmful

Don't Pull, Bind Problem Hair
By Lawre~~ee Lamb, M.D.

four cbildren. M.r J!Alblem is
almost as old as 1 am. 1
bave tried every remedy,
old and new, including protein trealments and my bair
still won't grow. Is it pas.sible this is due to vitamin
deficiency?
Can it be hereditary! My
parents a n d grandparents

BRUCf BIOSSAT

What to Believe
In Political 'News'

It Every

Bank rUJber Willie $IttGD reiiiJy Wlll1ll to do
TVCOIIl1Del'cills; topnlaliUlelllllleJIDaiiiJlt.

DR. LAWRENCE f. lAMB

Dear Dr. Lamb- I bave
been
having this problem for
Jim: ' 'North was an ethiA WIFE IS A WOMAN WHO:
quite
some time now and
cal player. He was sure
...
Reads
road
ma)l'l
upside
down
and
gets
you
hopelessly
lmt;
since
I read your colunm
from the hesitation that his
partner held three aces and then remarks, "A WOMAN would slop ani ask a service statioo." daily I though perhaps you
that six would make easily.
·... Stretches a teabag to 1be third cup of water, but spends 75 might ~ave a solution.
I am black, 25 years old,
'bucks on a newdressatlbe~ of a credit card.
married
and tbe mother of
Send 11 lor JACOBY MODfRN book
... Is always on a slrict diet- until you lake her out to an exto: "Win ot Britlge," (c/o this news· pensive restaurant. Puts YOU on a slrictdiet, then gels an urge to
paper), P.O. Box 489, Radio Citr
make cream puffs.
Stofion, New Yorl, N.Y. JOOJ9.
... Figures all cars will go ten miw.tes longer after tbe gas
But it is most unethical to gauge registers "empty" and, ifyoudrivefaster,you can beat the
take advanta~e of partner's odds.
... Can't replace a blo~ut fuse «r start 1be power lawn
hesitation, so North passed."
mower
(if a man Is there to do it fir her), but repairs a washing
Os iva ld : " Afterwards,
North pointed out that South machine with a hairpin and a toaster with a well-jJlaced'IIJJmp.
should have bid four clubs
... Complains that you sn«re, when an you're doirlg is humBy BRUCE BIOSSAT
or rour diamonds instead .of ming her to sleep.
four no·trump. This bid
... Can't figure oot lbe plot of any television show mere
WASIDNGTON (NEA l
would show slam interest
With the first 1972 presidential primary just six
and would enable North to complicated than "Lassie," yet spurns the direct approach in
months
away and the candidates back on the sawdust
bid the four rio-trump and favor of involved, devious schemes to make a husband think going
trail,
we
need a little readers' guide to politics. Purpose:
then continue to six when out was his idea.
serve as a corrective to the considerable volume ol
South showed his three
... Goes barefoot nine-tenth; of the lime, but always needs a to
nonsense sure to be uttered and wri«en between JI01II
aces."
new pair of shoes.
and tben.
Jim : "Needless to say
... Tears into lbe kids with stro~~~J words, but says, "Dear,
First off, watch out for stuff that talks glibly about
North was righ.t."
they're ONLY cbildren," when yoo try it.
the prospect the 1972 Democratic convention may
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
... Smears her face with cream so that a good night lriss Is like "deadlock."
Politics being an uncertain businesS, of course a deadstepping on a banana peel in an ice rink.
... Says it shows originality to improve on recipes, yet hollers lock is possible. Yet it is highly unlikely. In the 20 nawhen you experiment with a green tie , lllllfllm socks and a blue tional .conventions the two major parties bave beld from
The bidding hos been:
1932 on, 16 were decided on the first ballot. Two ftl1!
West North
East South suit.
settled in three ballots, one iD four, one in sii. Only the
?
... Saves empty gift boxes, but throws away your lucky fishing four-ballot affair, Franklin Roosevelt's first nomination
You, South, hold:
in 1932, could by any stretch be rated a deadloek. Last
hat.
rea:!
one: 1924.
·
.AK87 •Kz tAK5.K832
... Never wants a rest stop or a hamburger until you bit the
What do you bid?
You'll hear a Jot of gum-beating about bow the 19'12
freeway .
Democratic
convention is going to be ''wide open." If
A- Bid one club. With 20
... Spends two hours maldng something for nothing - which
high-card points you are a bit
that phrase bas any value, it means that, at oonvention
too weak to open two no-trump. she could buy for 39cenlsinfiveminutesata variety store.
time, a lot of fellows still will bave a c:bance to be nomi... Says the bank made 1be error.
nated for president. Not so as you could notice.
TODAY'S QUESTION
... Is reaUy not a bad sort whep you coosider her handicap of
It is true that the process by wljich delegates will be
You open one club and your
being
female.
BOB
BO'ITEL
selected
will probably be more open than ever, if the
partner responds one no-trump.
McGovern-Fraser
commission's reform guidelines are
NOfE FROM H: That last line was written before Women's
What do you do now?
followed.
Libera Uon made it a ''No-No" to say sucb things.
Answer Tomorrow
One of the offshoots of the "reform" fervor, however.
- -·-- ·- ·--·--- - - - - - - - - - ,
is that there will be more presidential primaries t11an
ever· 22 states and the District of Columbia. There will
Do
Time ®
also be a record number of state primaries (10 ) in wbich
the voters' verdicts will have legally binding effect on
FACTS
THE COPS MLJSr 8E
the delegates. Altogether, some 815 delegate votes will
~FTER BULI..GRAVY·· •
V.ONDER ~ERE HE
thus be firmly tied up in advance in 1972.
I THE BODIES ...
In another three states, primary laws provide that delegate candidates can, if they wish, bind themselves legally to a particular presidential choice. The poteotial
here is 59 votes. So, conceivably, a maximum of 874
delegate votes could be bound by convention time. That's
nearly a third of the total 3,000 votes. .
Furthermore, potentially another 503 delegates rould
reach Miami Beach witb some kind of moral commitment
to a particular candidate. At this writing, four states
specify that delegate candidates can indicate their presidential preferenee on the primary ballot, tbough they
not legally bound to support him. ln another state,
Rhinestones are artifi- are
Pennsylvania, ( 182 votes), delegate prospects can indicial, colorless gems of high cate intent to .support the presidential winner (whoever
Iuster that are used in in- he may be 1 in their respective congressional districts.
expensive jewelry. accordBefore balloting time next spring, a few more primary
ing to The World Almanac.
states
may provide delegate candidates witb the option
Th ~v are so named because
show
preference. .
to
they were first made along
The commission also encourages such declarations ol
~,e!_~~1'-&gt;~ · the Rhine River of a glasspreference
in the 28 states where the selection will l;e in
'"
like paste.
state
conventions.
I ' UII) ' r h: hl ~ J:t; J,
:\' o• \ \ ' )I J!IIIIt' r 1•: Ill•· rJI rj l"•' • \ ~~II .
Now. some 15 or the 28 convention states presenUy
plan to hold their sessions sometime after June I. 1912..
Q- Wiu, ,., ' " Fra Elber· with most probably after the vital .June 6 California pri. tus .. :-'
mary- 27l rlelPgates on a winner-take-all basis tbars
-\- Thi• was lh~ pen name not far from 20 per L-ent of what a candidate will nt'ed
I I :;11'1 1 to 1M' nom i nal ~rl in .llll:V.
nl !·:llwrl llnhhard.

They'll

'

·

~'llikeit:S...,IookN.J.Gcw.CabiDtothe
Saratoga lntS, coW brr a IIIDdlean faille, the
order was ~ 11m nsiDd!d, -fiaaily a
table ns foand in a aa- ., far bKt it prac&gt;lically was iD Alluy; polly Iawjiua ..t J011 CliD
bet the~ Wi+l 'I t N.Y. ~ears Alf
vandeltiltml Pat~b.liJI ' ctotlowitb
.that s11fn •.
·
Ollclr--winner Geaql! E •ell, playing a
·priest Iii NBC's nen1V .nes "Sarge," is
divorcing ... Oar fawrite Jlei&amp;bborbOOd
resta111'111t, IAui•'a Cll E. _.. SL, dDml for a
weet ~ redecoration - dllilil« 'lllml it was
burglari2led twice,
a- tb.
George c. Scott WI1Ud a 1ig pcllt In a
lluTy 8lld prvollur-wrili!J' (1114ber Rat) rnd
F. F!nklet.llfe fGuDd lim a lJiHGat« 11111bicb
thereluctantOIIcal-wiwa-isaiiDIICI}jq
Island Sound, bqsting balf a cllan plls ....
RmlsaM Bna:l:i's _,. plmqnrife was asbd if
sbe weren't.._,. ~ ~ d m ,._., laes the
bandsome cti boy stars witb
she
nplied, "He gO&lt;:S to the «Nc"" eftrJ cll,y 1Jut at
mgbt - lie oanes ~ to llle mlbelhl.n
BemeUCBf'sc I hiiJi k lpmt.f11Den1 lad.

ws.-

QUICK QUIZ

-

WORLD ALMANAC

aoo great grandparents and

cent of the lia!r follicles are

tifu1 beads or balr. Wbat
to. me! I bave
beell to doctors and they say
it is. !MJl due to a nervous
tiDliliw. 1 am not compWely bald, but I would lite
to. have more ani longet
bair.
Drar B 'zr - 'lbe fact
that you sWI bave bair is at
least encouraging that sometbiag MID lie &amp;me about your
pnJ1Jiem. Temporary loss of
bair Sllllll!times follows a
sa-ere illDess or after cbildbirtb but if you have really
bad this problem most of
your adult life it is probably
till another basis•
'111&lt; mast eommon diffi.
cully is doing too many
tbiJip with bair. Techniques
that put 11110 bair under tensiciD are particularly likely
to cause loss ol bair. I refer
to mating tight curls .or balr
slraigbteniDg techniques.
EiiM is hard ... bair. 'lbe
best bair care for someone
haYiDg a prnblem is not to
wasb it too fnquenUy. Do
not over-cmnb, do not brusb
too oileD « too bard. Let it
stay· loaR and don't use a
lot or medicatioos. Tbere
are no satisfactory mediciDes or shampoos to preftllt 1oss or bair.
'lbete are livm 90,000 to
JSII,IIII hairs t111 the scalp
aad mmnally about 10 per

a new bair. Hair is lbed at
a rate of about al balrs a
day. Once a bair follicle
really quits working, not just
resting, it usually doesn't

tbeir childrm aD bave beau- resting before they shoot out

Iwcv-rl

BEHHfS WORlD
J~c

produce bair again.
For 1be men wbo are sWI
trying to fiDd out the difference betweea blolldes, red
beads and brunettes, bere is
one. Blondes bave more bair
per square illcb, red beads
the least and brunettes In
between.
Too m ucb tinting and
bleaching ol bair ean be
harmful. Drastic changes In
bair color ean damage the
bair, too. Most lou or bair
from these causes lJ temporary if the practice lJ
stopped. P eo p 1e baYing
trouble with loss of bair
should leave it alone for
a wbile. Let it stay loose.
Don't pull it, tease it, bind
it into pony taiiJ braids
tigbt curls, or straighten ll
Don't medicate it witb u pensive shampoos or other
treatments. Nature will do
!JlOre forJou if you just let
It alone. that doesn't ·wort
bave a good checkup for possible endocrine problems like
a low-thyroid functitlll.. This
is unlikely however In a
young woman witb four successful pregilaDcies. Family
characteristics are important In detennining. balclness. ·

. ..

[!I OCJ~H!l §l l

]~ i~·[&amp;l~5J[
~

l

ilson Sweep Reds

I

.
IYJMX~

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

~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pmneroy, o .,Sepl.l3,1971

IVoice along Broadway I

The Turning Point
For Our Ecology?

!·-·,

- llloe"t
Fellas. Someloow, it just cloesn't -...1
"'J'f- THE HACKENSACK GIANTS'!"
'

· CINCINNATI (UPI) ..:. SOmetimes a sore ann can he a
blessing in disguise.
The Reds' Gary Nolan hecame a complete pitcher after
experiencing arm misery. So
has the Houston Astros' Don
Wilson.
" I used. to throw the fast ball
and hard slider and that's all "
'
Wilson said Sunday after pitching the Astros to a 4-2 victory
over the Reds at Riverfront
stadiwn.
Wllson didn't compile any
stunning won and loss records

wbile relying slricUy on the two
pitches, ~ut he did pitch a couple of n&lt;Hlitters.
The n&lt;Hlitters give you an
idea just how bard Wilson
threw. Then late in the 1969
season, Wilson began having
shoulder trouble.
One heard a lot of l8lk in
those days of heart transplants.
"Me " said Wilson u1 was
looking' around for ' someone
who could perform a shoulder
transplant."
Stripped of his high lightning
fast ball, Wilson learned that he

bad to come up with a couple
of new pitches to survive. He
did. He now has a curve and
a ·changeup and he's not afraid
to throw either of them.
Time bas cured Wilson 's
shoulder. So be now also has
his fast ball. And if it's not as
good as it use to' be, hitters
don't notice it much. That's because of the curve and the
changeup he has added. He
also has learned to spot his
fast ball.
Wilson picked up his 15th victory against eight losses as the

Astros swept th.e three-game series with the Reds, who wiU
close out their current homestand with two games against
Atlanta beginning ((&gt;night. ·
Sunday's victory gave the Astros an 11-4 edge over the Reds
in the season series with three
games to go.
A three-run homer by John
Mayberry, his third in two
days, and a solo homer by Cesar Cedeno, gave Wilson all the
hitting support he needed Sun·
day as the Astros tagged
Wayned Simpson with the loss.

By United Pross International
American League

East

Pet. GB
88 51 .633
Baltimore ·
81 64 .559 10
Detroit
76 71 .517 16
Boston
N'e wYork
72 73 .497 19
58 85 .406 31
Washington
56 88 .JB9 34'12
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Dakland
92 53 .634
Kansas City
78 67 .538 14
Chicago
68 77.41&gt;9 24
W. L.

Californ ia

-Briles Sharp again as Starter
By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Nelson Briles stepped out of
\he bullpen and into the
s tarting rotation earlier in his
'career and Pittsburgh Pirate
·manager Danny Murtaugh
doesn't see why Briles can't
make the transition again.
Briles, used primarily as a
spot starter and a long relief
man this season, pitched a 6hitter in shutting out Montreal,
4-0, Sunday and snapping the
Expos' four-game winning
streak.
The 28-year old righthander
pitched his second consecutive

complete game victory in
raising his record to 7-3 as the
Pirates maintained their 5 '»
game lead over the St. lDuis
Cardinals in the National
Leagije East.
Briles, a former cardinal,
came out of the bullpen in 1967
and helped pitch St. Louis to
the World Championship, posting a 14-5 mark en route. The
next season, Briles was a fullfledged member of the Redbirds' starting rotation, winning
19 games to again lead. the
Cardinals to the World Series.
But Briles, traded to lbe
Pirates along with · outfielder

Matty Alou during the offseason, has been used as a fifth
starter and long man in the
bui!pen this year under Murtaugh. However, since his
return to the starting rotation
Briles has pitched impressively.
"I knew I just had to dn the
job," said Briles. "The name of
the game is winning. We need
the pennant."
The Pirates will entertain the
Cardinals for a two-game series
starting Wednesday and Briles
Is anxiously anticipating the
meeting of the top two clubs in
the NL East.
"I think the Cardinals have

Roster Trimming Next
Dawkins' 3l&gt;-yard run, a 61-yard
By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
punt return by Zeke Moore and
Pro football 's pre-season Charlie Johnson's 3l&gt;-yard pass
schedule, a season unto itself, to Jim Beirne accounted for
Jinally Is over and all that three Oiler scores iD the first
_remains before next weekend's half before Manning rallied the
opening games is the paring Saints for a pair of third
·down of rosters.
quarter TDS.
The exhibition season came Mac Percival kicked four
·to a close Sunday as Detroit field goals and Jack Concannon
clobbered Philadelphia 49-10, and Kent Nix threw a TD pass
Pittsburgh ripped the New each as the Bears rallied from
York Giants 211-3, Houston a 14iJoint first period deficit to
downed New Orleans 24-17 and defeat the Broncos. Denver
Oticago drubbed Denver 33-17. took a 14-0 lead on a pair of TD
What faces the National Foot- passes by Don Hom of three
ball League's 26 coaches today yards to .run Whalen and 64 to
is the 4 p.m. EDT deadline for Dwight Harrison before Don
trimming rosters to 40 players. Shy's six-yard run and ConcanAnd complicating the matter non's 17-yard pass to Bob
furlber is the fact that since Wallace tied the score.
Two field goals by Percival, a
~ is .Ute l"i!k ~ut of the
55-yard
TD pass from Nix to
eiliibiUon season', waivers cannot be recalled. There'll be lots Dick Gordon and two more
of juggling and manipulating to Percival field goals put the
avoid losing some valuable game out of reach.
properly for the $1110 waiver In Saturday action, ancinnati
and Wasbingtoo played to a 17price.
Detroit, prepping for its big 17 tie, Dallas slopped Kansas
season opener against Minneso- City 24-17, Minnesota shut out
ta, a game which could set the Miami 24-0, oakland crushed
tooe of the National Conferen- Baltimore 24-3 and San Diego
ce's tough Central Division whipped AUanla 21-14.
race, ran roughshod over Ute Bill Kibner, playing in place
hapless Eagles. Greg Landry,
out the last two weeks with a
twisted knee, returned to action
Sunday night with a four
touchdown perlonnance, including three TD passes to tigbt
end Charlie Sanders, to power
the Lions to victory.
Landry hit Sanders with TD
passes of 49, eight .and four
yards and also threw an 18-yard United Press Jntemaaonal
scoring pass to Ron Jessie. Mel Toledo University's football
Farrand BiU Triplett scored on team may bave lost its winning
short runs and reserve quarter- coach, 'but not lis winning ways.
back BiU Munson added a six- The Rockets blasted East
yard TD pass to Craig Cotton. Carolina 45-0 Saturday for their
Pete Liske's four -yard pass to 24th straight vlclllry.
Gary Ballman in the second The previous 23 cmsecutive
quarter provided the only wins came under coach Frank
Philadelphia TD.
· Laulel'bur, wbo left to lake the
John Fuqua rambled 52 yards top spot at Iowa.
wiUt a short pass from Terry But new coach Jack Murphy
Bradshaw to break open a close took up Saturday where Lauterdelensive battle and lead the burleflrl.fandkepttheqatioo's
Steelers over the Giants. longest win streak intact.
Pittsburgh led 13-3 on Preston In other games involving Obio
Pearson's one-yard plunge and colleges Saturday, Daytoo beat
a pair of Roy Gerela field goals Cincinnati 1it-3, _Kent State
when Bradshaw flipped a short edged North Carolina State 23pass to uqua, a former Giant, 21, Miami defeated 1be Unlm-and Ute ex-Morgan State star slty ri lbe Pacific 17-10 and
put on a spectacular display of Blufftoolostlts7Jith ~tift
broken field running to com- game, 7-0 In c-getown.
plete a 55-yard TD play.
In its Big Ten ani sea sm
opener, Oblo Slate rolled over
HDuston built up a 21-3 Iowa 5Z.21.
halftime lead and then held off
Veteran Toledo quarterback
New Orleans' second half rally Chuck Ealey connected m two
to beat the Saints. Joe touchdown passes to lead his
team's 45-0 win ovet East

of the injured Sonny Jurgesen,

threw ·a 42-yard TD pass to
Jerry Smith in the fourth
quarter to help the Redskins tie
Dncinnati.
Dallas finished with the
NFL's only unbeaten pre-season
record40-when Craig Morton threw a 711-yard TD pass to
Gloster Richardson with 4:03
remaining in the game to boost
the Cowboys over Kansas City.
Richardson, obtained from Kansas City in an off-season trade,
palled in the pass from Morton
on the 23 and raced in
untouched.
Len Dawson had TD passes
for 48 yards to rookie Elmo
Wright and 55 to Otis Taylor.
Clint Jones ran for two scores
and Norm Snead threw a 45yard TD pass to John
Henderson as ·: the Vikings
hwnbled Miami and veteran
George Blanda came off the
bench to Utrow a 54-yard TD
pass to Fred Blletnilroff as the
Raiders stunned Baltimore.
San Diego, taking advantage
of TDs by \hree rookies-Leon
Burns, BiUy Parks and Mike
Montgomery-squeezed past Atlanta.

R oc' k ets

Make
It 24/n Row

. . . - - - --

-

Tbe Daily Sentinel

·

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
,fo\EIGS·MASONAREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
·- exec. Ed.
,
RO&amp;ERTHOEFLICH,
City EdiiOI
Publisl&gt;ed daili' •fcept
:;oturdo.y by The Ohio Volley
Publishing Company , J.11
court St.. Pomeroy, Oh&gt;o,
45769. Busines• Otti~e Phone
1992-1156, 'Editorial Phone 992·
2151.
·
.d . t
second class postage pa• a
Pomeroy, Ohio .
, .
N0 t ion al o d v e r 1 • s •n g
representativ.e Bottlnelll·
• Gallagher , Inc ., 12 Eas1 42nd
Sf., New York City , New York .
Subscription ratu : De .
. Uvered by carrier . where
•ya~able 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where corner
service not avatlabl~ . O~e
month $1.75. By mall '" Oh•o
and w. Va., one year su.oo.
Sht months S7 .2S . Th~ee
monthS suo . Subscrlphon
price includes Sunday Times.
- ~tinel.
·.

~

'
J

•

'•

Carolina.
Ealey bit Glynn Smitb 111 a 53yard sccring play in lbe first
quarter aDd came !J!lck Iii tbe
'od 'th
_,.,
ned pen WI a seven-,-u
TD toss to Ricb EberUn.

Rocket~••mnttbackJoeSch·

·-. warlz bad opened tbe ICOring
Wl'tha '7-vardrunaniaddeclsiJ:
" ..,
Li...
more points later In the 11811
with a two-yard plunge. RunKe' scored
n1ng mate Ge«rge Dil
lbe last two touchdowns, one
fr(llll yard away and lbe other
z.i(lll 3 yards out.
u
Keirn also kicked ail extra
points and a .._uardfield ttoallo
--1
~~&gt;
give him a total of 21 points for
the ttsmo.
e-K.OIIDI Rtlls AllaiD
n..iYton's Gary Klllins also
&amp;Jill,
pickedupfromwbere be leftcfi
laSt season.
Klllins, wbo carried lbe ball

an average of 35 times per game
last year and was ooe of the
nation's leading ground
piners, carried 34 times Saturday as tbe Flyers beat OncinnaU llt-3.
Koslns picked up 172 yards
rushing and scored two toochdowns, one oo a 59-yard run.
Kent State provided a
dramaUc victory for new head
coach Doo James.
With just eight seconds remalning and the Flashes tralling North Carolina State 21-20,
Gcrdon Obel-, suffering from a
dislocated shoulder, kicked 22yard field goal to give Kent a
surprising 23-21 victory .
Ober injured his shoulder
on the opening kickoff
of the game, but ret~rn­
ed to boot two other f1eld
goals, lr&lt;im 22 and ~yards , In
acldltioo to his game winning
kick.
Miami turned back tbe Universlty of lbe Pacific 17-10, wiUt
senior defensive back Tim
Raybuck providing two key
plays.
Raybuck returned a first pe·
riod kickcfi 47 yards to set up a
__ _, fi Jd oaJ ""' DaJ
_,_u e
g
u' e
Wernecke.
With leas than one minute
remaining In the game, Raybuck intercepted a nooo to set
......._.
,., 'Ibe winning drive. QuarterbackJlmSbowalterhitend Tim
. """"'-with a 3J-vard DAn and
.. .w.u
,
..then halfback Bob Hitchens
went crver fr(lll the four-yard
line to give Miami the win .

Minnesota
Milwaukee

68 78 .466 24 1h

66 77 .462 25
63 81 .434 29
Sunday's Results

Detroit 3 Boston 2
Cleveland 5 New York 2
Chicago 3 Kansas City o
Minn. 7 Qak. 5 (10 inn)
Milwaukee 4 California 3
Wah. at Bal. (2)' ppd rain
Today's Probable Pitchers
Minnesota (Hamm 2·1 and
Kaat 11·11l at Cal ifornia !May
9·11 and Murphy 6·14), 1, twi·
nlfb~iroit (Niekro 6·71 and
Kllkennv 4·41 at Baltimore
!Gibson 17·7 and McNally 18·4),
2. twl·night. ·
Oakland thunter 19.11) at
Kansas City I Fitzmorris 6·3L
night.
Chicago (Johnson 9· 10) at
Milwaukee !Parsons 12·15),
night.
Washington !Thompson 1·61 at
Cleveland &lt;Colbert 5·4L night.
New York tStottlemyre 13·11 J
at Boston (Selberl 16·91. night.

done a commendable job to be
so close," Briles said. "We're
going to be meeting St. Louis
and a victory for me would be
sweet over the Cardinals."
In other NL action, San
Francisco topped Atlanta 6-1,
St. Louis blanked Chicago 4-0,
Los Angeles tripped San Diego
6-3 Houston defeated Cincinnati
y k ed ed
'
d N
4-2 an
ew
or
g
Philadelphia 3-2.
Tom Haller tied the score
'fi fl
dM
.th
WI a sacn ce y an aury
Wills broke the deadlock with a
bases-loaded fielder's choice as
the Dodgers scored four runs in
. .
the seventh wrung to beat the
Padres and record their sixth

Tuesday's Games

win a row.

The victory, the Dodgers'
lith in the last 13 games and
ninth in a row in San Diego,
allowed Los Angeles to stay
three games behind the Giants
in the National League West.
Home runs by Tito Fuentes,
and Bobby Bonds highlighted a
four-run first inning outburst to
snap a seven-game Giant losing
streak. With one out in the first
inning, Fuentes hit his fourth
hom~r of the season over .the
left f1eld fence and, after Willie
Mays followed with a walk,
Bonds powered a two-run
homer, his 29th of the year,
over the center field fence .
Bob Gibson reached a milestone by recording his 50th
major league shutout in pitch·
ing the Cardinals to their
triwnph over the Cubs with a
four-hitter.
Gibson, who beat the Cubs for
the first time since last Sept.
16, recorded his 19th complete
game of the year.
Home runs by Cesar Cedeno
and John Mayberry, the lattr•r's
coming with two aboard,
carried Houston past Cincinnati
as Don Wilson earned his 15th
victory against eight losses by
pitching a seven-hitter.
Mike Jorgensen singled home
the tie-breaking run with one
out in the ninth inning to drive
in winning pitcher Danny
FriseUa as the Mets dereated
Philadelphia.

Oakland at Kansas City {night)
Chicago at Mil. {night!
Wash. at Clev. (twilight)
New York at Boston {night)
IOnly games scheduled)
Saturday's ResuHs
New York 10 Cleveland 8
Detroit 1 Boston 0
Oak. 5 Minn. 3 (10 inn)
Kansas City 4 Chicago 2
Milwaukee 3 California 0

Wash . at Bait. (ppd rain)

u·

Grid Scores
Ohio High School
Football Scoru
By United Press International
Springfield
Shawnee
7
Springfield Cath. 6
Niles McKinley 34 Cleveland
East 0
Warren Western Reserve 39
Cleveland Collinwood 0
Warren John F. Kennedy 8
Ashtabule St . John6
Louisville 29 West Branch 15
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney
16

Youngstown South 6
Poland 8 Youngstown Woodrow
Wilson o
Columbiana 14 Beaver Local 0
Ports. N.D. 14
Waverly 0
Malvern
20 Licking · Heights 6
Mansfield
Malabar
19
Lexington 6
Tiffin Columbian 21 Mansfield
Madison 14
Garaway 16 Connoton Valley 14
Tuscarawas C. C. 19 Strasburg 0
Canton Lincoln 22 Canton weh·
man 7
Yorkville 24 Warwood (W. Va.l
6

•

hlanders Lose
1 0'
---e
·

Zane Trace of Ross County in
its first varsity year as a grid
team employed a bruising
ground attack Saturday night in
posting a 44-8 victory over the
Southwestern Hlgblanders.
After a scoreless first period,
the Pioneers reached the end
zone with 11:50 left in the first
half on a two-yard plonge by
sophomoce halfback Dale Hill.
A run for the conversion failed .
Zane Trace scored its second
Ially with 5:55 left when
fuUback Mike Jacobs hulled
over from Ute thiee yard line.
Hill ran the extras for a 14-0
lead.
The winners pushed across
their third TD of the evening
with 3:24left in the first half on
a 45 yard sprint around the end
by Bill Mlller, a speedy junior
halfback. Again the PAT attempt failed. Both teams falled
to score In lhe Utird stanza.
The Pioneers scored again
with 11:53 left In the game.
Q.Iarterback Bobby Banks hit
his split end Steve Rinehart
with a 13-yard aerial. Banks
scored on a run for the extra
points.
Zane T!'ace's deferute held
Southwestern again. With 1:35
remaining, Hill broke loose CHI

eek 's

Musklngum at West Llberl)
IW. Va.)
Slippery Rock at MI. Union
Centre (Ky.) at Denison
Marietta at Westminster ( Pa.) .
Ashland at Capital
Hillsdale (Mich.J at Baldwin·
Wallace
Case·Western Reserve at John
Carroll
Blufftoo determinedly battled Dellance at Adrian (Mich. I In)
Taylor (Ind.) at Bluflton tn)
c-getown, but couldn't avold
n - night game
its 7Jith straight loss.
Blufftoo was close to the
Getrgetown ttoaJ six times, but
Horses are ranked fourth
a
nn
the intelligen•e scale of
Rick Hally and Greg Spaulding
lower
ammals. according to
spBrked lbe defense and kept
F.ncyclopafdin
Britannica .
the Ohio team scoreless.

Portsmooth Notre Dime, tbe
def~nding Class A State
C]1ampions, won Ita 14th
straight game Saturday ntgbt,
14-0 over lbe WavetJy Tlgera.
Waverly, •in loeinli Its 10tb
straight crver a two year apan,
was the ooly SEOAL team to
this past weekend.
The Irish controUed the game
running 71 offensive plays to
Waverly's 36.
In another contest at Portamouth, the Trojans came from
behind to hand Washlngtoo C.
H. a H-12 setback . •
The visitors took a 12-0 lead
early In the first period
capitalizing on two blg Portamouth turnovers. Sldp Horne's
toe provided the winning
margin for PHA.

lose

SVAC STANDINGS
All Games
TEAM
W L T POP
Eastern
I 0
43 0
Kyger Creek
o o 1 6 6
North Gallla
0 1
6 14
Southern
0 I
0 22
Southwestern
0 1
8 4ol
Hannan Trace 0 1
0 ,(1
5VACONLY
TEAM
W l POP
Eastern
1 0 43 0
Kyger Creek
0 0 0 0
North Gall Ia
0 0 0 0
Southern
0 0 0 0
Southwestern
0 0 0 0
Hannan Trace

0 1

0 ~

TOTALS
1 1 43 ~3
This Week's G1mn:
North Galli a at Eastern;
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creel&lt; ;
Southwestern at Hannan, W.

Va .; Glouster at Southern and
Symmes Valley at Green Twp.
EXPOS SIGN MAUCH

MONTREAL (UP!)-Manager Gene Mauch ·of the
Montreal Expos has signed a
contract with the National
League club extending through
the 1973 season.

Apd reason to
INSURE 1lillt, us • • •
till Mll&gt;ll Wl'flll
till

Your
lnsur1nce
Aoent
Dele W1r·ner

Whether you . wa
auto,
life
homeowners
In
surance, we will design
a policy' .to fit your
lndlvldual
requirements
Discuss your spe~clflc I
needs with us .

Davis Wamer Ins.
PhoM'I'I2-2H6

114 court st

Pllmoroy

Pollution's
.Pied Piper

Rookie quarterback Ken Aniterson was reared seriously In·
jured when he limped off the
field, but Pullins explained that
Anderson feU on someone's
shoe and bruised his back.
Pollins said Anderson will he
"slowed" during practice this
week but should be ready to go
Sunday.
The Redskins used a "sleej)-·
er" fourth period 42-yard touch·
down pass to help tie the Bengals Saturday night.
Bill Kibner, taking over for
injured quarterback Sonny Jurgensen, fooled Ute Bengals by
not running on a third and one
situation. Instead he dropped
back and lobbed the tying TD .
toss to Jerry Smith who was
completely in the clear.
Washington tied it at 111-10 in
the third quarter on ·a ~yard
field goal by Curt Knight.

Fut one-day
on loans up to

•3500
You name II ••• we supply

I2S E. MAIN

992-2171

POMEROY, 0.

I '

AmeriCJn League

Waverly in
14-0 Loss

Hous
000 300 001- 4 5 2
Cin
000 000 02D-- 2 7 1
Wilson 115·81 and Edwards ;
Simpson. Sprague {71. Gibbon
{8), Granger (9) and Bench.
{4·6). HR5-MaY·
an eight yard run for his second LP·Simpson
berry (6thl. Cedeno I loth).
TD of the nigbt. John Stewart
021 010 ooo- 4 11 1
collected the extras 111 a run. S.L.
lc
000 000 oro- 2 4 D
Southwestern's sagging offense ChGibson
(15·121 and Simmons;
came to life when quarterback Holtzman. Bonham {7), New.
Larry Frasher, a 151 pound man (9) and Fernandez. LP·
sophomoce, hit Mark Smith, 152 Holtzman (9-15). HR- Simmons
(12th).
pound senior end CHI an 81-yard
TD play.
L.A.
000 020 400-- 6 6 3
S.D.
200 100 ooo- 3 8 I
The touchdown, however, was
Osteen, Alexander (3), Moiler
nullified CHI a cUpping penalty. {5), Wilhelm (7) and Hailer;
Officials marked the ball at the Arlin, Caldwell (71. Corkins (8)
24-bard slripe where junior and Barton. WP- Moeller (1·31
fullback Mike DiUoo, scam- LP- Arlln (9·6l.
pered into lbe end zone on the
next play from scrimmage.
A pass from freshman LARRANAGA TO COACH
YPSILANTI, Mich. (UPI)quarterback Terry Carter to
Jim
Larranaga, former Projunior end Dale Whitt was good
vidence star and the Detroit
for the extra points.
Zane Trace struck paydirt as Pistons' sixth draft choice,
the clock ran out. Quarterback agreed Sunday to take a
Banks went around his right end coaching position at Davidson
for a 56-yard TD. Stewart ran CoUege.
Larranaga was the fifth
the conversion making the final
highest scorer in Providence
score. 44-8.
Southwestern recorded four history. His departure from the
first downs and had 101 yards in Pistons' camp leaves seven
the air. Zane Trace had seven rookies compeling for jobs.
first downs. Rushing yardage
was not available foc either
learn. Southwestern travels to
Hannan, W. Va., Friday.
By ~arters:
0008--8
Southwestern
0 20 0 24-44
Zane Trace

Bengals Hopeful

Games

tnr-k v

By United Press Jnlernalional

Boston 001 100 oro- 2 3 0
Detroit 001 020 OOx- 3 10 · 0
Curtis, Lyle (8) and Jose·
phson ; Coin, Timmerman {AI
and Freehan~ WP - T&gt;im·
merman (6·5). LP - Curtis 10·
21. HR - Fish llstl Taylor
{Jrd) Kaline (15th) .
Chicago 000 020 001- 3 6 o
National League
K.C.
000 000 ooo- 0 5 2
East .
Wood (2D·IIJ and Herrmann ;
W. L. Pet. GB Drago, Butler (5 1, Clemons (8},
Pittsburgh
88 59 .599
Abernathy (9) and Montanez.
St. Louis
87 u .562 5'12 LP- Orago (16·9) .
New York
75 69 .521 11 '12
Chicago
74 71 .510 13
Mil
100 003 001f- 4 6 I
Montreal
63 tw .411 23
Cal
010 000 02D-- 3 9 0
Philadelphia
59 87 .404 28'12
Patt in, Sanders (8) and
West
Rodriguez; Fisher. LaRoche
W. L. Pet. GB {6). Reynolds 181 and Torborg,
San Francisco 83 63 .568
Kusnyer {8) . WP.Pattln I13·1 41 .
Los Angeles
80 66 .5~ 3
LP- Fisher I10·7). HR- Repoz
Atlanta
74 73 .503 9&gt;;, (13th ), Briggs {18th!.
Houston
72 74 .493 11
Cincinnati
71 77 .480 13
(10 innings)
San Diego
54 92 .370 29
Minn 000 001 130 2- 7 9 0
Sunday's Result.
Dak
100 000 031 o-- 5 11 1
Hous1on 4 Cincinnati 2
Perry, Strickland (8) , Geb·
San Fran cisco 6 Atlanta 1
hard 181. Corbin {91. Luebber
New York 3 Philadelphia 2
{10) and Mitterwald; Blue,
St. Louis 4 Chicago 0
Roland (9), Grant 110 ) and
Pittsburgh 4 Montreal 0
Duncan. Tenace {91 . WP·
Los Angeles 6 San Diego 3
Corbin
(8·10).
LP-Ro·
land (1 ·21 . HR- Mitlerwald
{13th), Jackson {181h &amp; 29th!.
Today's Probable Pitchers
Montreal (Morton 10·14 and N.Y.
200 000 001f- 2 6 0
Strohmayer 17-5) at New York Clev
300 000 02x- 5 11 0
1Sade&lt;;:ki6·6 and McAndrew 1-51
Peterson 113·12 ) and Mun.
2, twJ.night.
son ;, McDowell , Hennigan !61
Pittsburgh (Bia" JJ.7) at andFosse . WP·McOowell (12·
Chicago IPappas J7.12J .
14). HR !;-Nettles 1 {24th &amp;
Philadelphia I Reynolds 4.7) 25th). Foster (17th), Alou 18th) .
al St . Louis (Cleveland 12·111 .
night.
Washington at Blalimore
Atlanta (Neibauer o.oJ at
(2 games ppd, rain)
Cincinnati {Nolan 11·141. night .
National League.
. San Diego I Kirby 13·12l, at
Phil
000 011 001f- 1 5 I
Houston {Forsch 7.7) , night.
001 000 101- 3 11 0
Los Angeles IS i n~er 8·16) at N.Y.
San Francisco (Manchai14·10J. Champion . Hoerner 171 and
McCarber ; Gentry, McGraw
night.
(61. Frisella (B) and Over. WP·
Frisella 17-4) . LP- Hoerner
(4·5). HR-Luzinski {2nd) .
Tuesday's Games
Montreal at New York
100 100 02D-- 4 9 0
Pitt
Pittsburgh at Chicago
000 000 OQO- 0 6 I
Philadelphia at St. Lou is Mon
Briles (7-3) and Sangulllen :
(night)
Renko, Reed (9) and Bateman.
Atlanta at Cincinnati (night)
San Diego at Houston (night) . LP- Renko ! 14·141.
Los Angeles at S.F. (night)
S.F.
-400 000 002- 6 8 0
All
001 000 001f- I 7 3
Saturday's Result&gt;
Cumberland' {9-41 and Dietz ;
Chicago 7 St. Louis 0
Stone. Herbel II L Barber 161.
Montreal 4 Pittsburgh I
New York 9 Philadelphia 2
Priddy 191 and Williams. LPStone (6.7) . HRS - Fuentes
Atlanta 5 San Francisco 4
{4th), Bonds {19th), Perez
Houston 5 Cincinnati 2
{4th).

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Qncinnati Bengals, undefeated
·
in six exhibition
games, are
hoping their pre-season success
will carry over to the regular
season, which hegins at home
this Sunday against the Phila·
delphia Eagles.
The Bengals, 5-0 going into
their final exhibition game Saturday night at Washington, tied
IYJ:
the Redskins 17-17, and finished with a 5-G-1 record.
.
Only serious injury to come
out of the game·"was cornerback Ken Riley's broken coUarbone, which should keep him
out of action from four to six
Ohio College
weeks.
Football Schedule
By United Press International Cornerback Lamar Parrish
suffered a badly bruised right
Saturdoy
Bowling Green at Ohio U.
forearm, but should be able to
Miami at Xavier (nl
play in the regular season
Vlllanota al Toledo (n)
opener,
according to trainer
Kent State at Cincinnati (n)
Southerr Illinois at Dayton In) Marv Pullins.
Buller at Akron Inl
Youngstown
at
Central
Michigan
Otterbein at Kenyon
Heidelberg at Ohio Wesleyan
Wittenberg at Western Ken·

Th lS w

Unesrores

It only takes one person or one group within
a cit~ or town to take the lead in a good pollution
fight. Just one group or person that knows what
it takes to beat the problem.
Like keeping in close touch with local budget and zoning matters; or establishing clean-up
or beautification committees; or urging local
support for sewage treatment plants; maybe
driving for more trash receptacles and better
"street furniture ."
There's one more thing you can do to start
your.town's anti-pollution fight: Write for a free
booklet, "71 Things You Can Do To Stop Pollution:' Box 1771, Radio City Station, New York,
New York.

People start pollution. People can stop it.

�Z- The DaUy Sentinei,Middltport-Pomeroy,O.,Sept.l3, 1fl1 .

r----------------------- -----------~------­
.

I

"He's Still Burning . Up!"

EDITORIAL

Statistici-regularly trotted out by the alarmists to
make all sorts o(impressive points-can also be quite
dull. mainly beeause we have heard them befo1·e. And
wewill h~ar them again.
The legions of ecology buffs over recent years h&amp;ve
trapped their figures and proceeded to beat us over the
head with them.
It's not fair to say that any particular figures are most
important- even critical- for as we all know statistical
games can be played .
Even in light of this, however. it can be said that some
statistics, tabulations or indices are interesting. Among
the most interesting and readily underst&amp;ndable statis·
tics available concerning this. co untry's environment are
issued yearly by the National Wildlife Federation in the
form of its annual EQ (environmental quality ) Index.
'!,'his year:s third annual EQ Index, published in the
October·November issue ·of National Wildlife magazine,
notes that the nation's · environment continued to deteriorate in 1971. But some critical areas have stabilized
and this year rrtay well be the turning point for which
we have all been waiting.
"Until now, I was afraid the script for the All-Ameri·
can dream was turning into a nightmare with acrid air,
stinking water, crowded slums and garbage-strewn land·
scapes crowding out and killing off the wildlife, flowers,
birds and trees. And, if that, what chance for man?" asks
Thomas Kimball, NWF executive director.
The most important fact cited by this yea r's EQ re·
port, says Kimball, is that apathy is no longer our biggest problem.
Here is the status, according to the NWF, of some of
the most crucial areas of our environment:
WATER-We have halted declining water quality, but
our waters are still incredibly foul and unacceptable.
NWF estimates that it will take an investment of $42
billion to clean up our water over a five-year period.
Since 65 per cent of water pollution is still caused by
industry, they should foot more than half of the bill.
AIR-Air pollution still ranks as our No. 1 environment problem-and it is still getting worse. Dirty air
costs each American family $117 a year in health, $100
a year in degraded property value, $90 in cost to mate·
rials and $2"in vegetation. It adds up to a $16.1 billion
cost to the nation each year. Some hope is held in the
new air quality standards Congress will require by 1975,
but that is still four years away.
LIVING SPACE-Trend. continues down as more peo·
pie crowd into less space. By the year 2000, .70 per cent
of people will be on 10 per cent of the land. Pressure on
national parks jumps with more visitors "getting away
from it all."
TIMBER- Trend gaining as last year. National Forest
timber cut reduced, but 60 per cent increase in lumber
need by 1978 may cause problems. Forest fires were the
worst ip 36 years.
· MINERALS-Trend is down as we use up minerals
and fossil fuels faster than we can replenish our reserves.
The EQ Index has gone down less this year than last,
or the year before. But it is still going DOWN. We have
gained an increased awareness of environmental problems, but the big question remains: Will we turn the
corner in 1972?
The NWF's answer is this: "Yes, if- but only ifwe're willing to work and fight for it."
Consumers must work through their representatives
and the courts as well as in more individualized ways.
Industries, which have shown improvement in the last
year, must continue to improve.
Next year, perhaps, the EQ Index will be up.
(For one free copy of this year's EQ Index write to
Educational Services, National Wildlife Federation, 1412
' 16th St. N.W.. Washington, D.C. 20036.)
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

Takes,Abuse
NORTH

13

.K932

'Kl076
tK754
... 8
~T

EAST
• 4

.AQJ84
tl06
.10753

¥953

.105

SOUTH

t98 32
... K9642
(D)

•z

• AQJ876
tAQJ
... AQJ
North-South vulnera ble

West

North

2.

East South

s•

Pass 4N.T.
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- ' A

Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
5•
Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "The first and
most important thing to
learn about the Blackwood
convention is that it is used
primarily to check on aces,
so as to keep out of slams
when you don 't hold at least
three of those nice cards ."
Jim : "This leads to the
corollary that a man who
b1ds four no-trump intends
to go to six any time his
partner's response shows
that his side holds three
aces."
Oswald: "Today's South
really abused the convention
when he bid four no-trump.
He would have bid six if his
partner had shown the mis·
sing ace. When his partner
showed no ace he thought a
While and only bid five ."

I

.

I

"LLGGI!S,CAIII!IIA -NO .tenJN" .
. NEW YORI - Bdlly.-'limrs Square eops
baft addo!d .,.,..... - - lo their 98111
portabl~o iDftlllmy: lo snap pimps,
JrCISiles . . jGiias - · We SII1PfCl ~ best
dellneat to . . . . . IIJiilmtiaD WOIIId be to
pub6Bb t h e - ~ J*s feali1ll eDIIJ8b to fall
fir the ~Idles.
Netw.t
llllllle ArteCe is IUiql
BoUly ltfnnedJ's - Joe to Afrb for of
~8 Wide Wartdor~epi3odes ·- 'lbe
mugger w11o lried to ~ c:lfe aner
Jimmy Wesllll p11iD1J diola'l .... lbatelegant
type bad '-t 15 :r-s aN. Y. CGP-. 'lbe
. footpad got belled .......-. fir llis 'fidem
ambition.
·~..,Jets_. 8a1y Werb1in- is tbe lig
genentlr WdadNew .Joney'uportl complo!x.
'111&lt; gri!l Gimlll _....,. are iD. a racelrack is
parttfitandlbeN. Y.radllceslalllisiDI!Dtalso

.m

!Helen Help Us !
I

:

Q-What type of song
does !he brown creeper

I hove?

By Helen Bottel

·

A-It bas a " wild, sweet
II song,"
heard only when the

CAR SALEsMAN TAKING HER FOR A RIDE
Dear Helen:
I am a new widow and not used to 1111!0.
I knew this man wbile I was married and so, when he asked
me out, I accepted. Actually he was a t&gt;nsjness acquaintance. I
believed him when he said he was divc.-ced. We got quite frieOO!y.
~n I plamed a Eurqlean trip, he said be wanted me to
write, but he gave me his cfiice address, saying he had a DOllY
landlady who snooped in his mail and sometimes didn't deliver it.
I asked f«r his phone number but be said he didn't bave one,
temporarily, because of a mix-up on b~. It aounded fishy to
me, and I said so. How did I know tbat be wasn't trying to bide me
frmn his wife? He neveroncetookme to his "apartment."
He became very angry ;mel accused me ri not !rusting him. I
haven'theard frWI himsince,altbougb !wrote a note ri apology.
My !rip is scheduled f1r lbe last rl. this month. Should I try to
reach him again, as I dm't want to c001e home to a manless
existence. (Bull don'twant to get mixed up with a married man,
either.)
Oh yes, I f..-got to say: He's a car salesman, and he ban-owed
$25 tba the hasn'treturned to me. -GLORIA
Dear Gloria:
My !GAP ("I'm Guessing Again Perception") says your car
salesman took you for a Tide. Be glad it was short and C(llt only
$25. - H.
""

bird makes its nest behind
loose bark .

--films;

Q-How much of the galberingatlbe~luw14•
was·dlendby
wood of ebony is black?
Santi's - Bemett woald"ft luftd lbal - ··
A-Only the heartwood. Bemett's ·~,zs; • estate as bis
The sapwood is white, graywilJilrobate rl.firially •"" M was that ml
ish-white or pinkish-white.
lots mtre; ma-e tban fivemill __ NBC's Ed
Q-Who is the only U.S. Newman is Cll an ll'IWinille 1V-Iene; tim 'ir
problems, in FDgland .... T as blo nmn.b
vice-president to resigfl?
A--John C. Calhoun in are seeking drama-movie critics: Jall1l
Sclllbeck left ABC, itpCRitoiJ far a bigger W.
1832.

we presume .••. New' eiCbl-CeDt llamp
~In ling the Statm lllandlerry-CIIIIbtlne
cents more 1baD tbe ride illelf -· . . _..
·· Ubben inwded Michel ~·s tJlylilll
beal!ty saloo and puled oallill!ntlft 1o ~ rlcb ,,
Tiry ladies UDder the diJen --~ Joe ru.th let
the gals at P. J. Cllrb'1111~ liS talloaiy if they added their plme .-mbon.
Jewrl 1bieves slnJck ~ iw11J illlnble
Southemptoo manse r1. Btpnble Oil's UaJd C.
&amp;nitb .... Millionaire yacbhm'" A. SummerLoog got arOllld to !lyre NJblfiy and lllllll
around to the cblc Gnmdier .••• 'l1le mod fadlists tbiJik tbey're ao brand new witb ·~
g~oups" ; it's been ammd •bncwt a c:eotlat 1l!ed to be Cllled the subwQ' 111111 bom- •••• Pll1l
ik:car111ey cabled his British fan doh; " P : '?
don't call me a Bet11le a&amp;ain" ••.. Dlnnnr w
...
wii:tdqe811'topenattbeCopaliDiilOcl7bulH'a
already swamped witb • as e valioas.
'l1le late blllimatre 1fil' a1mlnal Alfred
~·s aole heir Amdt, wbo 111ft ap ~
family's German lndaslries ftr a $7111,01111 _ - t
pmski«&lt;, is feeling tile pbrl1: beca- be bu 1111
tudeducticm (noil''lin eo1a
at all), his
'IUOBigOnesafter tuesoanesto ....ODDa,_-,
bardly enough to run liS -n,a ~ SolsiJnrg
estate (7Zrot111!1,70111!n'ants)piulf17.-ayear
for his MaraUsb vilLI, $7,000 fw a lwhelc.apartment, $115,llllll a year for his yadlt 1: crew,
lig allowances to bis motber ml wife; -tbelle
canccne crvet toN. Y.and stay at tbe Waldtrioo ...,ifare_Somebow "" can't pity tbe wilwne

E.-

.,t

Dim Deluise said N.Y. cbqes so fast,
''IMI time I was here you !1.1 a JlepMer
maytr" .... F'rtU1k McGee's Induing for his
'Today" NBC-1V takecrvet.frcn-Ba&amp;b Downs
by trying to beclhn bis ulcers and m-tic:alilis
.... i&gt;airq r1. great tmnis star Pancbo Gcm!lrs

llldhisaon Richard Jr. (lint f t kllew Pancbo's
spre tag) was a bullt.in ccmmercial fir Las
Vegas' Caesan ~: &amp;'. ani Jr. are the
court pros there.

Bleaching, Tinting Can Be Harmful

Don't Pull, Bind Problem Hair
By Lawre~~ee Lamb, M.D.

four cbildren. M.r J!Alblem is
almost as old as 1 am. 1
bave tried every remedy,
old and new, including protein trealments and my bair
still won't grow. Is it pas.sible this is due to vitamin
deficiency?
Can it be hereditary! My
parents a n d grandparents

BRUCf BIOSSAT

What to Believe
In Political 'News'

It Every

Bank rUJber Willie $IttGD reiiiJy Wlll1ll to do
TVCOIIl1Del'cills; topnlaliUlelllllleJIDaiiiJlt.

DR. LAWRENCE f. lAMB

Dear Dr. Lamb- I bave
been
having this problem for
Jim: ' 'North was an ethiA WIFE IS A WOMAN WHO:
quite
some time now and
cal player. He was sure
...
Reads
road
ma)l'l
upside
down
and
gets
you
hopelessly
lmt;
since
I read your colunm
from the hesitation that his
partner held three aces and then remarks, "A WOMAN would slop ani ask a service statioo." daily I though perhaps you
that six would make easily.
·... Stretches a teabag to 1be third cup of water, but spends 75 might ~ave a solution.
I am black, 25 years old,
'bucks on a newdressatlbe~ of a credit card.
married
and tbe mother of
Send 11 lor JACOBY MODfRN book
... Is always on a slrict diet- until you lake her out to an exto: "Win ot Britlge," (c/o this news· pensive restaurant. Puts YOU on a slrictdiet, then gels an urge to
paper), P.O. Box 489, Radio Citr
make cream puffs.
Stofion, New Yorl, N.Y. JOOJ9.
... Figures all cars will go ten miw.tes longer after tbe gas
But it is most unethical to gauge registers "empty" and, ifyoudrivefaster,you can beat the
take advanta~e of partner's odds.
... Can't replace a blo~ut fuse «r start 1be power lawn
hesitation, so North passed."
mower
(if a man Is there to do it fir her), but repairs a washing
Os iva ld : " Afterwards,
North pointed out that South machine with a hairpin and a toaster with a well-jJlaced'IIJJmp.
should have bid four clubs
... Complains that you sn«re, when an you're doirlg is humBy BRUCE BIOSSAT
or rour diamonds instead .of ming her to sleep.
four no·trump. This bid
... Can't figure oot lbe plot of any television show mere
WASIDNGTON (NEA l
would show slam interest
With the first 1972 presidential primary just six
and would enable North to complicated than "Lassie," yet spurns the direct approach in
months
away and the candidates back on the sawdust
bid the four rio-trump and favor of involved, devious schemes to make a husband think going
trail,
we
need a little readers' guide to politics. Purpose:
then continue to six when out was his idea.
serve as a corrective to the considerable volume ol
South showed his three
... Goes barefoot nine-tenth; of the lime, but always needs a to
nonsense sure to be uttered and wri«en between JI01II
aces."
new pair of shoes.
and tben.
Jim : "Needless to say
... Tears into lbe kids with stro~~~J words, but says, "Dear,
First off, watch out for stuff that talks glibly about
North was righ.t."
they're ONLY cbildren," when yoo try it.
the prospect the 1972 Democratic convention may
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
... Smears her face with cream so that a good night lriss Is like "deadlock."
Politics being an uncertain businesS, of course a deadstepping on a banana peel in an ice rink.
... Says it shows originality to improve on recipes, yet hollers lock is possible. Yet it is highly unlikely. In the 20 nawhen you experiment with a green tie , lllllfllm socks and a blue tional .conventions the two major parties bave beld from
The bidding hos been:
1932 on, 16 were decided on the first ballot. Two ftl1!
West North
East South suit.
settled in three ballots, one iD four, one in sii. Only the
?
... Saves empty gift boxes, but throws away your lucky fishing four-ballot affair, Franklin Roosevelt's first nomination
You, South, hold:
in 1932, could by any stretch be rated a deadloek. Last
hat.
rea:!
one: 1924.
·
.AK87 •Kz tAK5.K832
... Never wants a rest stop or a hamburger until you bit the
What do you bid?
You'll hear a Jot of gum-beating about bow the 19'12
freeway .
Democratic
convention is going to be ''wide open." If
A- Bid one club. With 20
... Spends two hours maldng something for nothing - which
high-card points you are a bit
that phrase bas any value, it means that, at oonvention
too weak to open two no-trump. she could buy for 39cenlsinfiveminutesata variety store.
time, a lot of fellows still will bave a c:bance to be nomi... Says the bank made 1be error.
nated for president. Not so as you could notice.
TODAY'S QUESTION
... Is reaUy not a bad sort whep you coosider her handicap of
It is true that the process by wljich delegates will be
You open one club and your
being
female.
BOB
BO'ITEL
selected
will probably be more open than ever, if the
partner responds one no-trump.
McGovern-Fraser
commission's reform guidelines are
NOfE FROM H: That last line was written before Women's
What do you do now?
followed.
Libera Uon made it a ''No-No" to say sucb things.
Answer Tomorrow
One of the offshoots of the "reform" fervor, however.
- -·-- ·- ·--·--- - - - - - - - - - ,
is that there will be more presidential primaries t11an
ever· 22 states and the District of Columbia. There will
Do
Time ®
also be a record number of state primaries (10 ) in wbich
the voters' verdicts will have legally binding effect on
FACTS
THE COPS MLJSr 8E
the delegates. Altogether, some 815 delegate votes will
~FTER BULI..GRAVY·· •
V.ONDER ~ERE HE
thus be firmly tied up in advance in 1972.
I THE BODIES ...
In another three states, primary laws provide that delegate candidates can, if they wish, bind themselves legally to a particular presidential choice. The poteotial
here is 59 votes. So, conceivably, a maximum of 874
delegate votes could be bound by convention time. That's
nearly a third of the total 3,000 votes. .
Furthermore, potentially another 503 delegates rould
reach Miami Beach witb some kind of moral commitment
to a particular candidate. At this writing, four states
specify that delegate candidates can indicate their presidential preferenee on the primary ballot, tbough they
not legally bound to support him. ln another state,
Rhinestones are artifi- are
Pennsylvania, ( 182 votes), delegate prospects can indicial, colorless gems of high cate intent to .support the presidential winner (whoever
Iuster that are used in in- he may be 1 in their respective congressional districts.
expensive jewelry. accordBefore balloting time next spring, a few more primary
ing to The World Almanac.
states
may provide delegate candidates witb the option
Th ~v are so named because
show
preference. .
to
they were first made along
The commission also encourages such declarations ol
~,e!_~~1'-&gt;~ · the Rhine River of a glasspreference
in the 28 states where the selection will l;e in
'"
like paste.
state
conventions.
I ' UII) ' r h: hl ~ J:t; J,
:\' o• \ \ ' )I J!IIIIt' r 1•: Ill•· rJI rj l"•' • \ ~~II .
Now. some 15 or the 28 convention states presenUy
plan to hold their sessions sometime after June I. 1912..
Q- Wiu, ,., ' " Fra Elber· with most probably after the vital .June 6 California pri. tus .. :-'
mary- 27l rlelPgates on a winner-take-all basis tbars
-\- Thi• was lh~ pen name not far from 20 per L-ent of what a candidate will nt'ed
I I :;11'1 1 to 1M' nom i nal ~rl in .llll:V.
nl !·:llwrl llnhhard.

They'll

'

·

~'llikeit:S...,IookN.J.Gcw.CabiDtothe
Saratoga lntS, coW brr a IIIDdlean faille, the
order was ~ 11m nsiDd!d, -fiaaily a
table ns foand in a aa- ., far bKt it prac&gt;lically was iD Alluy; polly Iawjiua ..t J011 CliD
bet the~ Wi+l 'I t N.Y. ~ears Alf
vandeltiltml Pat~b.liJI ' ctotlowitb
.that s11fn •.
·
Ollclr--winner Geaql! E •ell, playing a
·priest Iii NBC's nen1V .nes "Sarge," is
divorcing ... Oar fawrite Jlei&amp;bborbOOd
resta111'111t, IAui•'a Cll E. _.. SL, dDml for a
weet ~ redecoration - dllilil« 'lllml it was
burglari2led twice,
a- tb.
George c. Scott WI1Ud a 1ig pcllt In a
lluTy 8lld prvollur-wrili!J' (1114ber Rat) rnd
F. F!nklet.llfe fGuDd lim a lJiHGat« 11111bicb
thereluctantOIIcal-wiwa-isaiiDIICI}jq
Island Sound, bqsting balf a cllan plls ....
RmlsaM Bna:l:i's _,. plmqnrife was asbd if
sbe weren't.._,. ~ ~ d m ,._., laes the
bandsome cti boy stars witb
she
nplied, "He gO&lt;:S to the «Nc"" eftrJ cll,y 1Jut at
mgbt - lie oanes ~ to llle mlbelhl.n
BemeUCBf'sc I hiiJi k lpmt.f11Den1 lad.

ws.-

QUICK QUIZ

-

WORLD ALMANAC

aoo great grandparents and

cent of the lia!r follicles are

tifu1 beads or balr. Wbat
to. me! I bave
beell to doctors and they say
it is. !MJl due to a nervous
tiDliliw. 1 am not compWely bald, but I would lite
to. have more ani longet
bair.
Drar B 'zr - 'lbe fact
that you sWI bave bair is at
least encouraging that sometbiag MID lie &amp;me about your
pnJ1Jiem. Temporary loss of
bair Sllllll!times follows a
sa-ere illDess or after cbildbirtb but if you have really
bad this problem most of
your adult life it is probably
till another basis•
'111&lt; mast eommon diffi.
cully is doing too many
tbiJip with bair. Techniques
that put 11110 bair under tensiciD are particularly likely
to cause loss ol bair. I refer
to mating tight curls .or balr
slraigbteniDg techniques.
EiiM is hard ... bair. 'lbe
best bair care for someone
haYiDg a prnblem is not to
wasb it too fnquenUy. Do
not over-cmnb, do not brusb
too oileD « too bard. Let it
stay· loaR and don't use a
lot or medicatioos. Tbere
are no satisfactory mediciDes or shampoos to preftllt 1oss or bair.
'lbete are livm 90,000 to
JSII,IIII hairs t111 the scalp
aad mmnally about 10 per

a new bair. Hair is lbed at
a rate of about al balrs a
day. Once a bair follicle
really quits working, not just
resting, it usually doesn't

tbeir childrm aD bave beau- resting before they shoot out

Iwcv-rl

BEHHfS WORlD
J~c

produce bair again.
For 1be men wbo are sWI
trying to fiDd out the difference betweea blolldes, red
beads and brunettes, bere is
one. Blondes bave more bair
per square illcb, red beads
the least and brunettes In
between.
Too m ucb tinting and
bleaching ol bair ean be
harmful. Drastic changes In
bair color ean damage the
bair, too. Most lou or bair
from these causes lJ temporary if the practice lJ
stopped. P eo p 1e baYing
trouble with loss of bair
should leave it alone for
a wbile. Let it stay loose.
Don't pull it, tease it, bind
it into pony taiiJ braids
tigbt curls, or straighten ll
Don't medicate it witb u pensive shampoos or other
treatments. Nature will do
!JlOre forJou if you just let
It alone. that doesn't ·wort
bave a good checkup for possible endocrine problems like
a low-thyroid functitlll.. This
is unlikely however In a
young woman witb four successful pregilaDcies. Family
characteristics are important In detennining. balclness. ·

. ..

[!I OCJ~H!l §l l

]~ i~·[&amp;l~5J[
~

l

ilson Sweep Reds

I

.
IYJMX~

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

~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pmneroy, o .,Sepl.l3,1971

IVoice along Broadway I

The Turning Point
For Our Ecology?

!·-·,

- llloe"t
Fellas. Someloow, it just cloesn't -...1
"'J'f- THE HACKENSACK GIANTS'!"
'

· CINCINNATI (UPI) ..:. SOmetimes a sore ann can he a
blessing in disguise.
The Reds' Gary Nolan hecame a complete pitcher after
experiencing arm misery. So
has the Houston Astros' Don
Wilson.
" I used. to throw the fast ball
and hard slider and that's all "
'
Wilson said Sunday after pitching the Astros to a 4-2 victory
over the Reds at Riverfront
stadiwn.
Wllson didn't compile any
stunning won and loss records

wbile relying slricUy on the two
pitches, ~ut he did pitch a couple of n&lt;Hlitters.
The n&lt;Hlitters give you an
idea just how bard Wilson
threw. Then late in the 1969
season, Wilson began having
shoulder trouble.
One heard a lot of l8lk in
those days of heart transplants.
"Me " said Wilson u1 was
looking' around for ' someone
who could perform a shoulder
transplant."
Stripped of his high lightning
fast ball, Wilson learned that he

bad to come up with a couple
of new pitches to survive. He
did. He now has a curve and
a ·changeup and he's not afraid
to throw either of them.
Time bas cured Wilson 's
shoulder. So be now also has
his fast ball. And if it's not as
good as it use to' be, hitters
don't notice it much. That's because of the curve and the
changeup he has added. He
also has learned to spot his
fast ball.
Wilson picked up his 15th victory against eight losses as the

Astros swept th.e three-game series with the Reds, who wiU
close out their current homestand with two games against
Atlanta beginning ((&gt;night. ·
Sunday's victory gave the Astros an 11-4 edge over the Reds
in the season series with three
games to go.
A three-run homer by John
Mayberry, his third in two
days, and a solo homer by Cesar Cedeno, gave Wilson all the
hitting support he needed Sun·
day as the Astros tagged
Wayned Simpson with the loss.

By United Pross International
American League

East

Pet. GB
88 51 .633
Baltimore ·
81 64 .559 10
Detroit
76 71 .517 16
Boston
N'e wYork
72 73 .497 19
58 85 .406 31
Washington
56 88 .JB9 34'12
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Dakland
92 53 .634
Kansas City
78 67 .538 14
Chicago
68 77.41&gt;9 24
W. L.

Californ ia

-Briles Sharp again as Starter
By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Nelson Briles stepped out of
\he bullpen and into the
s tarting rotation earlier in his
'career and Pittsburgh Pirate
·manager Danny Murtaugh
doesn't see why Briles can't
make the transition again.
Briles, used primarily as a
spot starter and a long relief
man this season, pitched a 6hitter in shutting out Montreal,
4-0, Sunday and snapping the
Expos' four-game winning
streak.
The 28-year old righthander
pitched his second consecutive

complete game victory in
raising his record to 7-3 as the
Pirates maintained their 5 '»
game lead over the St. lDuis
Cardinals in the National
Leagije East.
Briles, a former cardinal,
came out of the bullpen in 1967
and helped pitch St. Louis to
the World Championship, posting a 14-5 mark en route. The
next season, Briles was a fullfledged member of the Redbirds' starting rotation, winning
19 games to again lead. the
Cardinals to the World Series.
But Briles, traded to lbe
Pirates along with · outfielder

Matty Alou during the offseason, has been used as a fifth
starter and long man in the
bui!pen this year under Murtaugh. However, since his
return to the starting rotation
Briles has pitched impressively.
"I knew I just had to dn the
job," said Briles. "The name of
the game is winning. We need
the pennant."
The Pirates will entertain the
Cardinals for a two-game series
starting Wednesday and Briles
Is anxiously anticipating the
meeting of the top two clubs in
the NL East.
"I think the Cardinals have

Roster Trimming Next
Dawkins' 3l&gt;-yard run, a 61-yard
By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
punt return by Zeke Moore and
Pro football 's pre-season Charlie Johnson's 3l&gt;-yard pass
schedule, a season unto itself, to Jim Beirne accounted for
Jinally Is over and all that three Oiler scores iD the first
_remains before next weekend's half before Manning rallied the
opening games is the paring Saints for a pair of third
·down of rosters.
quarter TDS.
The exhibition season came Mac Percival kicked four
·to a close Sunday as Detroit field goals and Jack Concannon
clobbered Philadelphia 49-10, and Kent Nix threw a TD pass
Pittsburgh ripped the New each as the Bears rallied from
York Giants 211-3, Houston a 14iJoint first period deficit to
downed New Orleans 24-17 and defeat the Broncos. Denver
Oticago drubbed Denver 33-17. took a 14-0 lead on a pair of TD
What faces the National Foot- passes by Don Hom of three
ball League's 26 coaches today yards to .run Whalen and 64 to
is the 4 p.m. EDT deadline for Dwight Harrison before Don
trimming rosters to 40 players. Shy's six-yard run and ConcanAnd complicating the matter non's 17-yard pass to Bob
furlber is the fact that since Wallace tied the score.
Two field goals by Percival, a
~ is .Ute l"i!k ~ut of the
55-yard
TD pass from Nix to
eiliibiUon season', waivers cannot be recalled. There'll be lots Dick Gordon and two more
of juggling and manipulating to Percival field goals put the
avoid losing some valuable game out of reach.
properly for the $1110 waiver In Saturday action, ancinnati
and Wasbingtoo played to a 17price.
Detroit, prepping for its big 17 tie, Dallas slopped Kansas
season opener against Minneso- City 24-17, Minnesota shut out
ta, a game which could set the Miami 24-0, oakland crushed
tooe of the National Conferen- Baltimore 24-3 and San Diego
ce's tough Central Division whipped AUanla 21-14.
race, ran roughshod over Ute Bill Kibner, playing in place
hapless Eagles. Greg Landry,
out the last two weeks with a
twisted knee, returned to action
Sunday night with a four
touchdown perlonnance, including three TD passes to tigbt
end Charlie Sanders, to power
the Lions to victory.
Landry hit Sanders with TD
passes of 49, eight .and four
yards and also threw an 18-yard United Press Jntemaaonal
scoring pass to Ron Jessie. Mel Toledo University's football
Farrand BiU Triplett scored on team may bave lost its winning
short runs and reserve quarter- coach, 'but not lis winning ways.
back BiU Munson added a six- The Rockets blasted East
yard TD pass to Craig Cotton. Carolina 45-0 Saturday for their
Pete Liske's four -yard pass to 24th straight vlclllry.
Gary Ballman in the second The previous 23 cmsecutive
quarter provided the only wins came under coach Frank
Philadelphia TD.
· Laulel'bur, wbo left to lake the
John Fuqua rambled 52 yards top spot at Iowa.
wiUt a short pass from Terry But new coach Jack Murphy
Bradshaw to break open a close took up Saturday where Lauterdelensive battle and lead the burleflrl.fandkepttheqatioo's
Steelers over the Giants. longest win streak intact.
Pittsburgh led 13-3 on Preston In other games involving Obio
Pearson's one-yard plunge and colleges Saturday, Daytoo beat
a pair of Roy Gerela field goals Cincinnati 1it-3, _Kent State
when Bradshaw flipped a short edged North Carolina State 23pass to uqua, a former Giant, 21, Miami defeated 1be Unlm-and Ute ex-Morgan State star slty ri lbe Pacific 17-10 and
put on a spectacular display of Blufftoolostlts7Jith ~tift
broken field running to com- game, 7-0 In c-getown.
plete a 55-yard TD play.
In its Big Ten ani sea sm
opener, Oblo Slate rolled over
HDuston built up a 21-3 Iowa 5Z.21.
halftime lead and then held off
Veteran Toledo quarterback
New Orleans' second half rally Chuck Ealey connected m two
to beat the Saints. Joe touchdown passes to lead his
team's 45-0 win ovet East

of the injured Sonny Jurgesen,

threw ·a 42-yard TD pass to
Jerry Smith in the fourth
quarter to help the Redskins tie
Dncinnati.
Dallas finished with the
NFL's only unbeaten pre-season
record40-when Craig Morton threw a 711-yard TD pass to
Gloster Richardson with 4:03
remaining in the game to boost
the Cowboys over Kansas City.
Richardson, obtained from Kansas City in an off-season trade,
palled in the pass from Morton
on the 23 and raced in
untouched.
Len Dawson had TD passes
for 48 yards to rookie Elmo
Wright and 55 to Otis Taylor.
Clint Jones ran for two scores
and Norm Snead threw a 45yard TD pass to John
Henderson as ·: the Vikings
hwnbled Miami and veteran
George Blanda came off the
bench to Utrow a 54-yard TD
pass to Fred Blletnilroff as the
Raiders stunned Baltimore.
San Diego, taking advantage
of TDs by \hree rookies-Leon
Burns, BiUy Parks and Mike
Montgomery-squeezed past Atlanta.

R oc' k ets

Make
It 24/n Row

. . . - - - --

-

Tbe Daily Sentinel

·

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
,fo\EIGS·MASONAREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
·- exec. Ed.
,
RO&amp;ERTHOEFLICH,
City EdiiOI
Publisl&gt;ed daili' •fcept
:;oturdo.y by The Ohio Volley
Publishing Company , J.11
court St.. Pomeroy, Oh&gt;o,
45769. Busines• Otti~e Phone
1992-1156, 'Editorial Phone 992·
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second class postage pa• a
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Subscription ratu : De .
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By Motor Route where corner
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price includes Sunday Times.
- ~tinel.
·.

~

'
J

•

'•

Carolina.
Ealey bit Glynn Smitb 111 a 53yard sccring play in lbe first
quarter aDd came !J!lck Iii tbe
'od 'th
_,.,
ned pen WI a seven-,-u
TD toss to Ricb EberUn.

Rocket~••mnttbackJoeSch·

·-. warlz bad opened tbe ICOring
Wl'tha '7-vardrunaniaddeclsiJ:
" ..,
Li...
more points later In the 11811
with a two-yard plunge. RunKe' scored
n1ng mate Ge«rge Dil
lbe last two touchdowns, one
fr(llll yard away and lbe other
z.i(lll 3 yards out.
u
Keirn also kicked ail extra
points and a .._uardfield ttoallo
--1
~~&gt;
give him a total of 21 points for
the ttsmo.
e-K.OIIDI Rtlls AllaiD
n..iYton's Gary Klllins also
&amp;Jill,
pickedupfromwbere be leftcfi
laSt season.
Klllins, wbo carried lbe ball

an average of 35 times per game
last year and was ooe of the
nation's leading ground
piners, carried 34 times Saturday as tbe Flyers beat OncinnaU llt-3.
Koslns picked up 172 yards
rushing and scored two toochdowns, one oo a 59-yard run.
Kent State provided a
dramaUc victory for new head
coach Doo James.
With just eight seconds remalning and the Flashes tralling North Carolina State 21-20,
Gcrdon Obel-, suffering from a
dislocated shoulder, kicked 22yard field goal to give Kent a
surprising 23-21 victory .
Ober injured his shoulder
on the opening kickoff
of the game, but ret~rn­
ed to boot two other f1eld
goals, lr&lt;im 22 and ~yards , In
acldltioo to his game winning
kick.
Miami turned back tbe Universlty of lbe Pacific 17-10, wiUt
senior defensive back Tim
Raybuck providing two key
plays.
Raybuck returned a first pe·
riod kickcfi 47 yards to set up a
__ _, fi Jd oaJ ""' DaJ
_,_u e
g
u' e
Wernecke.
With leas than one minute
remaining In the game, Raybuck intercepted a nooo to set
......._.
,., 'Ibe winning drive. QuarterbackJlmSbowalterhitend Tim
. """"'-with a 3J-vard DAn and
.. .w.u
,
..then halfback Bob Hitchens
went crver fr(lll the four-yard
line to give Miami the win .

Minnesota
Milwaukee

68 78 .466 24 1h

66 77 .462 25
63 81 .434 29
Sunday's Results

Detroit 3 Boston 2
Cleveland 5 New York 2
Chicago 3 Kansas City o
Minn. 7 Qak. 5 (10 inn)
Milwaukee 4 California 3
Wah. at Bal. (2)' ppd rain
Today's Probable Pitchers
Minnesota (Hamm 2·1 and
Kaat 11·11l at Cal ifornia !May
9·11 and Murphy 6·14), 1, twi·
nlfb~iroit (Niekro 6·71 and
Kllkennv 4·41 at Baltimore
!Gibson 17·7 and McNally 18·4),
2. twl·night. ·
Oakland thunter 19.11) at
Kansas City I Fitzmorris 6·3L
night.
Chicago (Johnson 9· 10) at
Milwaukee !Parsons 12·15),
night.
Washington !Thompson 1·61 at
Cleveland &lt;Colbert 5·4L night.
New York tStottlemyre 13·11 J
at Boston (Selberl 16·91. night.

done a commendable job to be
so close," Briles said. "We're
going to be meeting St. Louis
and a victory for me would be
sweet over the Cardinals."
In other NL action, San
Francisco topped Atlanta 6-1,
St. Louis blanked Chicago 4-0,
Los Angeles tripped San Diego
6-3 Houston defeated Cincinnati
y k ed ed
'
d N
4-2 an
ew
or
g
Philadelphia 3-2.
Tom Haller tied the score
'fi fl
dM
.th
WI a sacn ce y an aury
Wills broke the deadlock with a
bases-loaded fielder's choice as
the Dodgers scored four runs in
. .
the seventh wrung to beat the
Padres and record their sixth

Tuesday's Games

win a row.

The victory, the Dodgers'
lith in the last 13 games and
ninth in a row in San Diego,
allowed Los Angeles to stay
three games behind the Giants
in the National League West.
Home runs by Tito Fuentes,
and Bobby Bonds highlighted a
four-run first inning outburst to
snap a seven-game Giant losing
streak. With one out in the first
inning, Fuentes hit his fourth
hom~r of the season over .the
left f1eld fence and, after Willie
Mays followed with a walk,
Bonds powered a two-run
homer, his 29th of the year,
over the center field fence .
Bob Gibson reached a milestone by recording his 50th
major league shutout in pitch·
ing the Cardinals to their
triwnph over the Cubs with a
four-hitter.
Gibson, who beat the Cubs for
the first time since last Sept.
16, recorded his 19th complete
game of the year.
Home runs by Cesar Cedeno
and John Mayberry, the lattr•r's
coming with two aboard,
carried Houston past Cincinnati
as Don Wilson earned his 15th
victory against eight losses by
pitching a seven-hitter.
Mike Jorgensen singled home
the tie-breaking run with one
out in the ninth inning to drive
in winning pitcher Danny
FriseUa as the Mets dereated
Philadelphia.

Oakland at Kansas City {night)
Chicago at Mil. {night!
Wash. at Clev. (twilight)
New York at Boston {night)
IOnly games scheduled)
Saturday's ResuHs
New York 10 Cleveland 8
Detroit 1 Boston 0
Oak. 5 Minn. 3 (10 inn)
Kansas City 4 Chicago 2
Milwaukee 3 California 0

Wash . at Bait. (ppd rain)

u·

Grid Scores
Ohio High School
Football Scoru
By United Press International
Springfield
Shawnee
7
Springfield Cath. 6
Niles McKinley 34 Cleveland
East 0
Warren Western Reserve 39
Cleveland Collinwood 0
Warren John F. Kennedy 8
Ashtabule St . John6
Louisville 29 West Branch 15
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney
16

Youngstown South 6
Poland 8 Youngstown Woodrow
Wilson o
Columbiana 14 Beaver Local 0
Ports. N.D. 14
Waverly 0
Malvern
20 Licking · Heights 6
Mansfield
Malabar
19
Lexington 6
Tiffin Columbian 21 Mansfield
Madison 14
Garaway 16 Connoton Valley 14
Tuscarawas C. C. 19 Strasburg 0
Canton Lincoln 22 Canton weh·
man 7
Yorkville 24 Warwood (W. Va.l
6

•

hlanders Lose
1 0'
---e
·

Zane Trace of Ross County in
its first varsity year as a grid
team employed a bruising
ground attack Saturday night in
posting a 44-8 victory over the
Southwestern Hlgblanders.
After a scoreless first period,
the Pioneers reached the end
zone with 11:50 left in the first
half on a two-yard plonge by
sophomoce halfback Dale Hill.
A run for the conversion failed .
Zane Trace scored its second
Ially with 5:55 left when
fuUback Mike Jacobs hulled
over from Ute thiee yard line.
Hill ran the extras for a 14-0
lead.
The winners pushed across
their third TD of the evening
with 3:24left in the first half on
a 45 yard sprint around the end
by Bill Mlller, a speedy junior
halfback. Again the PAT attempt failed. Both teams falled
to score In lhe Utird stanza.
The Pioneers scored again
with 11:53 left In the game.
Q.Iarterback Bobby Banks hit
his split end Steve Rinehart
with a 13-yard aerial. Banks
scored on a run for the extra
points.
Zane T!'ace's deferute held
Southwestern again. With 1:35
remaining, Hill broke loose CHI

eek 's

Musklngum at West Llberl)
IW. Va.)
Slippery Rock at MI. Union
Centre (Ky.) at Denison
Marietta at Westminster ( Pa.) .
Ashland at Capital
Hillsdale (Mich.J at Baldwin·
Wallace
Case·Western Reserve at John
Carroll
Blufftoo determinedly battled Dellance at Adrian (Mich. I In)
Taylor (Ind.) at Bluflton tn)
c-getown, but couldn't avold
n - night game
its 7Jith straight loss.
Blufftoo was close to the
Getrgetown ttoaJ six times, but
Horses are ranked fourth
a
nn
the intelligen•e scale of
Rick Hally and Greg Spaulding
lower
ammals. according to
spBrked lbe defense and kept
F.ncyclopafdin
Britannica .
the Ohio team scoreless.

Portsmooth Notre Dime, tbe
def~nding Class A State
C]1ampions, won Ita 14th
straight game Saturday ntgbt,
14-0 over lbe WavetJy Tlgera.
Waverly, •in loeinli Its 10tb
straight crver a two year apan,
was the ooly SEOAL team to
this past weekend.
The Irish controUed the game
running 71 offensive plays to
Waverly's 36.
In another contest at Portamouth, the Trojans came from
behind to hand Washlngtoo C.
H. a H-12 setback . •
The visitors took a 12-0 lead
early In the first period
capitalizing on two blg Portamouth turnovers. Sldp Horne's
toe provided the winning
margin for PHA.

lose

SVAC STANDINGS
All Games
TEAM
W L T POP
Eastern
I 0
43 0
Kyger Creek
o o 1 6 6
North Gallla
0 1
6 14
Southern
0 I
0 22
Southwestern
0 1
8 4ol
Hannan Trace 0 1
0 ,(1
5VACONLY
TEAM
W l POP
Eastern
1 0 43 0
Kyger Creek
0 0 0 0
North Gall Ia
0 0 0 0
Southern
0 0 0 0
Southwestern
0 0 0 0
Hannan Trace

0 1

0 ~

TOTALS
1 1 43 ~3
This Week's G1mn:
North Galli a at Eastern;
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creel&lt; ;
Southwestern at Hannan, W.

Va .; Glouster at Southern and
Symmes Valley at Green Twp.
EXPOS SIGN MAUCH

MONTREAL (UP!)-Manager Gene Mauch ·of the
Montreal Expos has signed a
contract with the National
League club extending through
the 1973 season.

Apd reason to
INSURE 1lillt, us • • •
till Mll&gt;ll Wl'flll
till

Your
lnsur1nce
Aoent
Dele W1r·ner

Whether you . wa
auto,
life
homeowners
In
surance, we will design
a policy' .to fit your
lndlvldual
requirements
Discuss your spe~clflc I
needs with us .

Davis Wamer Ins.
PhoM'I'I2-2H6

114 court st

Pllmoroy

Pollution's
.Pied Piper

Rookie quarterback Ken Aniterson was reared seriously In·
jured when he limped off the
field, but Pullins explained that
Anderson feU on someone's
shoe and bruised his back.
Pollins said Anderson will he
"slowed" during practice this
week but should be ready to go
Sunday.
The Redskins used a "sleej)-·
er" fourth period 42-yard touch·
down pass to help tie the Bengals Saturday night.
Bill Kibner, taking over for
injured quarterback Sonny Jurgensen, fooled Ute Bengals by
not running on a third and one
situation. Instead he dropped
back and lobbed the tying TD .
toss to Jerry Smith who was
completely in the clear.
Washington tied it at 111-10 in
the third quarter on ·a ~yard
field goal by Curt Knight.

Fut one-day
on loans up to

•3500
You name II ••• we supply

I2S E. MAIN

992-2171

POMEROY, 0.

I '

AmeriCJn League

Waverly in
14-0 Loss

Hous
000 300 001- 4 5 2
Cin
000 000 02D-- 2 7 1
Wilson 115·81 and Edwards ;
Simpson. Sprague {71. Gibbon
{8), Granger (9) and Bench.
{4·6). HR5-MaY·
an eight yard run for his second LP·Simpson
berry (6thl. Cedeno I loth).
TD of the nigbt. John Stewart
021 010 ooo- 4 11 1
collected the extras 111 a run. S.L.
lc
000 000 oro- 2 4 D
Southwestern's sagging offense ChGibson
(15·121 and Simmons;
came to life when quarterback Holtzman. Bonham {7), New.
Larry Frasher, a 151 pound man (9) and Fernandez. LP·
sophomoce, hit Mark Smith, 152 Holtzman (9-15). HR- Simmons
(12th).
pound senior end CHI an 81-yard
TD play.
L.A.
000 020 400-- 6 6 3
S.D.
200 100 ooo- 3 8 I
The touchdown, however, was
Osteen, Alexander (3), Moiler
nullified CHI a cUpping penalty. {5), Wilhelm (7) and Hailer;
Officials marked the ball at the Arlin, Caldwell (71. Corkins (8)
24-bard slripe where junior and Barton. WP- Moeller (1·31
fullback Mike DiUoo, scam- LP- Arlln (9·6l.
pered into lbe end zone on the
next play from scrimmage.
A pass from freshman LARRANAGA TO COACH
YPSILANTI, Mich. (UPI)quarterback Terry Carter to
Jim
Larranaga, former Projunior end Dale Whitt was good
vidence star and the Detroit
for the extra points.
Zane Trace struck paydirt as Pistons' sixth draft choice,
the clock ran out. Quarterback agreed Sunday to take a
Banks went around his right end coaching position at Davidson
for a 56-yard TD. Stewart ran CoUege.
Larranaga was the fifth
the conversion making the final
highest scorer in Providence
score. 44-8.
Southwestern recorded four history. His departure from the
first downs and had 101 yards in Pistons' camp leaves seven
the air. Zane Trace had seven rookies compeling for jobs.
first downs. Rushing yardage
was not available foc either
learn. Southwestern travels to
Hannan, W. Va., Friday.
By ~arters:
0008--8
Southwestern
0 20 0 24-44
Zane Trace

Bengals Hopeful

Games

tnr-k v

By United Press Jnlernalional

Boston 001 100 oro- 2 3 0
Detroit 001 020 OOx- 3 10 · 0
Curtis, Lyle (8) and Jose·
phson ; Coin, Timmerman {AI
and Freehan~ WP - T&gt;im·
merman (6·5). LP - Curtis 10·
21. HR - Fish llstl Taylor
{Jrd) Kaline (15th) .
Chicago 000 020 001- 3 6 o
National League
K.C.
000 000 ooo- 0 5 2
East .
Wood (2D·IIJ and Herrmann ;
W. L. Pet. GB Drago, Butler (5 1, Clemons (8},
Pittsburgh
88 59 .599
Abernathy (9) and Montanez.
St. Louis
87 u .562 5'12 LP- Orago (16·9) .
New York
75 69 .521 11 '12
Chicago
74 71 .510 13
Mil
100 003 001f- 4 6 I
Montreal
63 tw .411 23
Cal
010 000 02D-- 3 9 0
Philadelphia
59 87 .404 28'12
Patt in, Sanders (8) and
West
Rodriguez; Fisher. LaRoche
W. L. Pet. GB {6). Reynolds 181 and Torborg,
San Francisco 83 63 .568
Kusnyer {8) . WP.Pattln I13·1 41 .
Los Angeles
80 66 .5~ 3
LP- Fisher I10·7). HR- Repoz
Atlanta
74 73 .503 9&gt;;, (13th ), Briggs {18th!.
Houston
72 74 .493 11
Cincinnati
71 77 .480 13
(10 innings)
San Diego
54 92 .370 29
Minn 000 001 130 2- 7 9 0
Sunday's Result.
Dak
100 000 031 o-- 5 11 1
Hous1on 4 Cincinnati 2
Perry, Strickland (8) , Geb·
San Fran cisco 6 Atlanta 1
hard 181. Corbin {91. Luebber
New York 3 Philadelphia 2
{10) and Mitterwald; Blue,
St. Louis 4 Chicago 0
Roland (9), Grant 110 ) and
Pittsburgh 4 Montreal 0
Duncan. Tenace {91 . WP·
Los Angeles 6 San Diego 3
Corbin
(8·10).
LP-Ro·
land (1 ·21 . HR- Mitlerwald
{13th), Jackson {181h &amp; 29th!.
Today's Probable Pitchers
Montreal (Morton 10·14 and N.Y.
200 000 001f- 2 6 0
Strohmayer 17-5) at New York Clev
300 000 02x- 5 11 0
1Sade&lt;;:ki6·6 and McAndrew 1-51
Peterson 113·12 ) and Mun.
2, twJ.night.
son ;, McDowell , Hennigan !61
Pittsburgh (Bia" JJ.7) at andFosse . WP·McOowell (12·
Chicago IPappas J7.12J .
14). HR !;-Nettles 1 {24th &amp;
Philadelphia I Reynolds 4.7) 25th). Foster (17th), Alou 18th) .
al St . Louis (Cleveland 12·111 .
night.
Washington at Blalimore
Atlanta (Neibauer o.oJ at
(2 games ppd, rain)
Cincinnati {Nolan 11·141. night .
National League.
. San Diego I Kirby 13·12l, at
Phil
000 011 001f- 1 5 I
Houston {Forsch 7.7) , night.
001 000 101- 3 11 0
Los Angeles IS i n~er 8·16) at N.Y.
San Francisco (Manchai14·10J. Champion . Hoerner 171 and
McCarber ; Gentry, McGraw
night.
(61. Frisella (B) and Over. WP·
Frisella 17-4) . LP- Hoerner
(4·5). HR-Luzinski {2nd) .
Tuesday's Games
Montreal at New York
100 100 02D-- 4 9 0
Pitt
Pittsburgh at Chicago
000 000 OQO- 0 6 I
Philadelphia at St. Lou is Mon
Briles (7-3) and Sangulllen :
(night)
Renko, Reed (9) and Bateman.
Atlanta at Cincinnati (night)
San Diego at Houston (night) . LP- Renko ! 14·141.
Los Angeles at S.F. (night)
S.F.
-400 000 002- 6 8 0
All
001 000 001f- I 7 3
Saturday's Result&gt;
Cumberland' {9-41 and Dietz ;
Chicago 7 St. Louis 0
Stone. Herbel II L Barber 161.
Montreal 4 Pittsburgh I
New York 9 Philadelphia 2
Priddy 191 and Williams. LPStone (6.7) . HRS - Fuentes
Atlanta 5 San Francisco 4
{4th), Bonds {19th), Perez
Houston 5 Cincinnati 2
{4th).

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Qncinnati Bengals, undefeated
·
in six exhibition
games, are
hoping their pre-season success
will carry over to the regular
season, which hegins at home
this Sunday against the Phila·
delphia Eagles.
The Bengals, 5-0 going into
their final exhibition game Saturday night at Washington, tied
IYJ:
the Redskins 17-17, and finished with a 5-G-1 record.
.
Only serious injury to come
out of the game·"was cornerback Ken Riley's broken coUarbone, which should keep him
out of action from four to six
Ohio College
weeks.
Football Schedule
By United Press International Cornerback Lamar Parrish
suffered a badly bruised right
Saturdoy
Bowling Green at Ohio U.
forearm, but should be able to
Miami at Xavier (nl
play in the regular season
Vlllanota al Toledo (n)
opener,
according to trainer
Kent State at Cincinnati (n)
Southerr Illinois at Dayton In) Marv Pullins.
Buller at Akron Inl
Youngstown
at
Central
Michigan
Otterbein at Kenyon
Heidelberg at Ohio Wesleyan
Wittenberg at Western Ken·

Th lS w

Unesrores

It only takes one person or one group within
a cit~ or town to take the lead in a good pollution
fight. Just one group or person that knows what
it takes to beat the problem.
Like keeping in close touch with local budget and zoning matters; or establishing clean-up
or beautification committees; or urging local
support for sewage treatment plants; maybe
driving for more trash receptacles and better
"street furniture ."
There's one more thing you can do to start
your.town's anti-pollution fight: Write for a free
booklet, "71 Things You Can Do To Stop Pollution:' Box 1771, Radio City Station, New York,
New York.

People start pollution. People can stop it.

�r-----------.-----~--------------------------------~~~-~~
'

'

t-'l'be Dally SeDtinel,MiMrpan.f'wdO), o ., Sep!.l3, 1971

5~ The ))ally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pm~eroy, 0., Sept. 13, 1971

No Funny Business about Coody's World Series G~lf Victory

URON, Obio (UPI) -Tile
lllbalrGia Is gme fNm ltOIIld
O.lle Coody's neck.
'l'be 3t-Jear-dd taciturn Ts~~~· from Abi..... will Dm!l" go
cloWll in aparts biaiAiry as a
l'lulay py to lisllen tD, lilre La
Trerino, and be lirmelf iDiilts
even mday, "I'm not a superltaT, I just do lhe best I C811."
But In the wake crf IU ooe
llrGte World SaV:s Ill Golf
viciAiry here Sunday, nobody
can ner say again that Charlie

Coody isn't a deadgame guy on
the golf course, that. he's the
type ~ a golfer who will fold
when the ~ gets really
llol
.
Because the tall, dark haired
renner Air F&lt;I'Ce lieutenant
looked disasll!r in the eye at
least three ~ in the final
rwnd and came througb with
great allots in the clutch b a
three owr par 73 that produced
a wiming total Ill 1ft for .the two
day, 3r.bole tournament ~ong

the winners Ill the U.. golf
champicnsbipl of 1971.
Jack Nicklaus, four . time
winnercrftheseries,wassecmd
with a 71-lt2, Bruce Q-ampton
of Australia was tbln:l with ro.
143 and Trevino, the U.S. and
British Open QJampim, was
last with a 74-lt6.
Here are the three crises of
Charlie Coody on a cool~
overcast day at the par 70, 7,11)
yard Firestone Country Club

... He siarted the day three I've ever played," be confessed that sU..ped 18 in~ from the
s~l!headofNicklaus,went lall!r. " It wasn't that I hit bad pin to setup a birdie.
four ahead with bia only birdie ..hots, it was thaH didn't think (I told him 'nice shot,'
crfthedayon.tbellrslbole then the whole through. For in- but what 1 .really wantblew the bole wad with a dauble stance, it never occured to me . ed · to do was hit him
bogey seven on the second hole to play down the third fair- over the head" said Coody in a
·as Nicklaus fired an eagle way.")
rare adventure into humor."
three. Coody made a rambling •.• He got bad! inro a two ... He went into the final hole
tour of the rough on two fair.· stroke lead as Nicklaus bogeyed leading Nicklaus and the
ways and a trap and wo111d up the 11th hole but saw Big Jacl! charging O'ampton by just one
muffing a four foot putt.
cut it to a single stroke with a stroke, and then seemed to set
" It was one of the worse holes fantastic iron shot on the 15th himself up fir a bogey when he

•

Langsville

Notes . ...

~~~···~·
····~·~
. A THOU(!HT

A ·weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

FOR TODAY

Wood Wins 20th For Chisox

Dahlias, Where and Why

......

Tuppers Plains Society News

BY MRS. TRACY WHALEY,
Pomeroy Garden Cluti
The dahlia is a most versatile and ac~odating plant. It
Will grow well under a variety of conditions, usually with only
nonnal care, although It responds weD to every bit of extra attention. The most colorful of aU fall flowers, it clings proudly to
the title, "King of Autumn," ·althirugh here there may be a battle
with the chrysanthemum.
Perhaps the most COIIUDon use of dahlias is in plantings
around foundations, where they are often combined with shrubs
or other sununer and fall flowers . Here it is best to use only one or
two varieties, preferably a single color, to complement \he
buDding against which they are planted- such as pink, against a
pastel blue house. Observe two rules here, plant the dahlias far
enough fr001 building and shrubs to leave adequate space fqr air
circulation around the mature plant; and add fertilizer and water
to replace that used by nearby shrubs.
Dahlias are a sensational ·autumn display wben combined
with chrysanthemums and other fall flowers. In such plantings,
space the dahlias five to eight feet spart, with IaUer varieties
toward the rear, and one or two cushion mums between and
slightly in frmt of each dahlia. Race st!D'dy garden stakes ex·
lending at least three feet above tbe soil, before the dahllss are
planted, and tie the plants to them as they grow. Attach the
variety label to the stake.
In larger yards, dahlias can provide great waves of color
through the use of large narrow beds just wide enough for three or
folD' rows, with taller plants in the center or at the rear and
shorter varieties in the foreground. This planting is representative of the new varieties in commerce today and contains im·
ports frtm abroad as well as United States originations.
Another effective planting method useful even in small yards
Is a round 1r rectangular bed of only one variety, which should be
a sh11rt, compact-grower. Dahlias do well when planted against a
woven wire fence, as there is no restriction of air circulation and
plants can be tied to the fence wires as they grow. Plants can be
seen from both sides and add to tbe pleasure of people on both
sides of the fence .
·
Varieties used in beds surrounded by lawns should he short
compact-groWers and also pinched ba~k to induce branching
wben five or six pairs of leaves hlive developed.
Simply cut off the top of the plant, leaving three pairs of
leaves, and new .tranches wil,l inunediately develop at each leaf
node . This should not affect flowering time by more than a few
days and will provide several blooms where only one would have
developed oo the !l'lginal stalk. Space plants in such beds
somewhat closer than usual, to flU out the bed completely and
cause plants to support each other without the use of stakes. ldeal
spacing here would be 2 to 2\2 feet.
The popularity of dahlias as cut nowers has increased greaUy '
in the last decade, because of the great improvement in keeping
qualities of the flowers. A few years ago, it was unusual to keep a
bouquet of dahlias for more than one day, but Ute stronger texture
of modern varieties has made it possible to have dahlias
arrangements last up to four days or longer.
The many types available provide unlimited scope in nora!
designs. There are tiny pompons and giant varieties that are
almost identical in form, small and large wall!r lily types, many
variati~ of quill and cactus styles - in fact a type for every
imaginable wish. The Super'iiant decoratives, when used either
as floaters in a howl or oo long, three-loot stems in a giant floor
vase, create excitement. A huge water pitcber conlaining three 13
inch blooins cut with three-foot stems are admired in a front haD.
Many limes 12inch blooms may be used in shallow bowls with just
a li!Ue greenery for trim, as centerpieces for dining or coffee
tables.
Any willing gardener can grow dahlias. like otber flowers
they have a few essential requirements and a few preferences.
They grow best in adequate sunshine. They prefer lots of organic
matter in the aoil, so the ambitious gardener will build ·up this
quality with Uberal aPPlications of rotten manures, leaf mold,
peat moss, and other organic materials.
U the soil is heavy,itcanbe improved with liberal amounts of
sand. Three inches of sand tilled 12 inches deep into heavy clay is
not too much.

By MRS. EVELYN BRICKLES Nichols and. son-in-law. Wilford
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Ledlie
· lfs Quick! Easy
are home after spending two
Sunday School attendance on Tippie and grandson.
'
Sept. 5 was 34. Offering was Audrey Torrence and Darlene·
years at Las Palmas, Spain
$13.14. Worship atU:ndance was took Mrs. Harry Allison to her
By STEVE WllSTEIN
them this season. 11 1 guess," he average to 2.00, second best where Mr. Ledlie is employed.
34 and offering $30.50.
doctor at Gallipolis for · her
Tim Willcox was brought to
said, ''winning 20 and winning only to Blue among starting the home of his iwents, Mr. and
UPI SporU Writer
Ruth Arnold of Middleport checkup.
Wilbur Wood taught SWlday 19 is lilre Ute difference between pitchers in the American
Fridays Only
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Swartz of
and
her sister, Esther Edwards,
League.
Mrs. Buck Willcox after spenSchool again and the lesson a ).99 ERA and a 2.00 ERA."
of
Miami
Beach,
Fla.,
were
Athens
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
~The Drive-In Window
Wood, ~11. who scattered ding several -weeks at Holzer
That's something. else the 29earned him his 20th victory of
is Open
Wednesday
guests
of
Mrs.
Robert
Halsey
of
Dayton
spent
Medical
Center.
the year, placing him with the year old lmuckleballer may five singles and struck out nine,
Alpha Barr is a medical
Audrey-Torrence.
a
day
with
Mr,
Halsey's
A.M. to 7 .P.M.
other mssters of the American achieve this year. llli sixth received all the support he
.Elmer
Newell
who
is
serving
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fon
:
!Continuously l
League, Vida Blue and Mickey shutout of the year enabled needed in the fifth when Walt patient at Holzer Hospital
wbere
tests
are
being
run.
in
the
U.S.
Navy
and
stationed
Halsey.
Lollch, in the ~arne-winner's Wood to lower his earned run Williams singled with two out, Mrs. Ella Rastofer is a
Other Banking Hours 9 to lit
at Philadelphia visited his
Mr; and Mrs. David Riggs . and 5 to 1 as usual on
stole second and went to third
circle.
grandpsrents, ·Mr. and Mrs. and family of Vienna, W. Va.,
on ·Buck Martinez' throwing medical patient at Holzer
Fridays.
Wood, pitching in his nth
Newell
Monday.
were
Wednesday
dinner
guests
Jessie
error.
Pat
K~Uy
singled
home
Hospilal
for
a
heart
condition.
straight Sunday afternoon game
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Belzing of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
Williams and Carol05 May
Duane B3rr of Oak Hill called
and gaining his sixth coosecuand Mr. and Mrs. Dana HoffMr. and Mrs. James Watson
followed with a run-scoring on his father, Alpha Barr at
tive triilmph on the Sabbath,
man
were
SWlday
dinner
guests
and
family of Kentucky· spent
triple.
Holzer Hospital.
became a ~arne winner for
of their children, Mr. and Mi-s . . the weekend at their home here.
Kansas City starter Dick
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby
the first lime in a career, spent Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
POMEROY, OHIO
Dana
Hoffman, Jr., of Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wakely
mosUy as a reliever, as the and Mrs. William King were Drago, 16-9, goirig !Qr an all- spent a week traveling and
Member FDIC .
It was an observance of the and family of Marion were
Chicago White Sox blanked the Mr. Clyde Cannan; Mr. and time Kansas City biih . in sightseeing through West
:
Member FedeWal
birthday of Mr. Betzing.
recent guests of his aunt, Mrs.
Reserve System
victories for one · season, . was Virginia and Virginia. They also
Kansas City Royals, ~ Mrs. Clifford Cannan, Mr. and the viclim.
Mrs.
Dinsmore
Boyles
spent
a
Effie
Watson.
spent
two
days
at
the
state
fair
"It's one of the biggest tbriDs
Mrs. Junior Rucker, aU of
few days 'II Eastern in the care
Wood retired the last 14 at Columbus.
in baseball," Wood said after Columbus. Other guests were
of her daughter, Mrs. Starling·
M~s. Glenna Fetty and
he beat the Royals for the fifth Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and batters in order as he hurled
Massar who was ill.
lime in as many starts against family and Harold White, local. his 18th complete game and ..Pauline Gorby called on Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle
became the White Sox' first ~ Ella Rostofe_r and Alpha Barr at
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Isaacs, game winner since Gary Peters Holzer Medical Center SWlday
· visited their daughter, Mr. and
Alita and Wade, of ScoUand, S. in 1964
·afternoon. Other callers were
Mrs. Hank Douglas of Pomeroy
D., spent several days with Mr.
·
Rev. Lemley and his family.
Rt. 3, Sunday. Mrs. Douglas had
In other American League
Mike Barr of Glenville State
and Mrs. Wayne Beal and
just returned home from the
family. Also visiting recently games, Ninnesota beat Oakland College spent the weekend with
hospital.
with the Beals were Mr. and 7~ in 10 innings, Detroit edged his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bricldes
FLOWERY - This meMrs. John Pedras Jr~ and Boston 3-2,. Cleveland kayoed
of Pomeroy were Sunday guests
lange of dark tones on
daughter, Mary, of Willoughby, New York ~2, Milwaukee
washable polyester knit is here of his brother Mr. and Mrs.
nipped California 4-3 and
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Smith of Obio.
from Swirl's new Passport Wayne Brickles. Also calling on
Pomroy were recent visitors of
Mrs. Jennie Hollie who has Washington saw both of its
collection. A large, high col· the Bricldes were Clarence
Mrs. Dale Smith and family.
been a patient at Veterans games washed away by. rain in
Mrs. John Stout was Jar on the neckline above a
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. .Williams Memorial Hospital has returned Baltimore.
In the National League, Los pleasantly surprised Sunday self-belted waistline buck.
and Mr. and Mri. Warren heme and is improving.
led with a gold square.
Ironton, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Picl!ens visited Sunday with
A pizza party was given by Angeles whipped San Diego IN, when Mrs. Eleanor Stout, her
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams and Mrs. Colloe Hudson recenUy at San Francisco beat AUanta 6-1, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dibley, - - - - - - - - - - Murphy of Huntington, W. Va. ,
James E. Murph y, Pough·
at the Bud Douglas borne at her home here for aU the young Pittsburgh blaltked Montreal 4- ber son, Bobby, and his girl
keepsie , N. Y., Mr . and'
0, St. Louis blitzed Chicago 4-0, friend, her daughter, Judy Stout
0
Harrisonville.
~le of the cOmmunity. Mrs. Donald Murphy , PittsMrs. Onita Button of Akron
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Houston beat Cincinnati 4-2, and and husband, and Grafton's
burgh, Mr. and Mrs. Larry B.
and granddaughter visited with Swearinger and son, Bobby, of New York downed Philadelphia Stouts mother, Opal Hasington,
Hammond (Patricia Murphy ),
all of Dayton, came with a
Mrs. Bess Larkins.
West Millon, and !lira. Myrtle 3-2.
eW S,
0 S Barry and Bath of Lancaster,
Cesar Tovar drove in two picnic lunch and took Mrs. Stout
JaneandJuli Whitehead were White of Madison, W. Va.,
Mr . and Mrs. Ray Hune and
overnight guests of Mary Ruth visited recenUy with Mr. and runs with a bases-loaded single to Forest Acres Park for lunch.
Mrs.
Sharon
Jewell
has
a
Mr.
Bill
McElroy
returned
to
grandchildren
, Linda, James
in the lOth inning as the Twins,
and Joy Sauer of Middleport Mrs. Nev White and family.
Vi.lllting with Mrs. Earl
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Counte, who wasted a four-run lead in badly infected hand caused by a Columbus after spending a and Susanne Hune of
Humphrey recently were Mr. Jeff, Van and Kelly, spent the the eighth, won the game after cut on glass. She is under a week with his parents, Mr. and Zanesville,Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Paul McElroy.
A. Murphy, Debbie, Mr. and
and Mrs. Len Stone and family weekend with Mrs. Coelle knocking Blue out of the game, doctor's care.
Tom and Bob Shaffer are Mrs . Harley T. Johnson ,
Blue who remains at 23-8, was Mr. and Mrs. F. -0. Whaley
din
f da
.th th _
~ Orveland, Rob Stone and Hudson, Jim and Victor.
elf Pomeroy Route 4 and Mr. and
Ttr17 Cbesnes, students at
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gilkey, touched for seven hits and five and Mr. and Mrs. Terry Whaley spen g a ew ys WI
FURNITURE
Cleveland State .College, and Tammy an!! Cindy, of Athens runs in the eight innings he have returned from a ten day parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mrs. John R. Murphy, Elaine,
trip
through
the
Eastern
slates.
Shaffer.
Tom
is
stationed
at
John, Peggy , Carmel and
Rick Stone and Terrie visited SWlday with Mr. and worked and issued a season
MIDDUPOII, 0 ..
Miss
Tamera
Clark
spent
Fort
Riley·
Barbara Kay. Unable to attend
high of six walks.
McAlister, students at Marietta Mrs. John Dean.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell due to illness were Mr. Mur·
Jim Roland, who took over Thursday night with her
College.
Richanl Dean, a member of
and Tina Rae were recent phy's father , Mr. and Mrs. John
Visiting their grandparents, the Ohio Youth Choir last year, for Blue in the ninth, loaded the grandparents, the Robert
Clarks.
·
visitors of his parents, Mr. and Murphy, Crooksville.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chevalier attended the Ohio State Fair on bases on two walks and a single
were Eddie,. Jeff, Carrie and Saturday and sang with the in the lOth. Tovar followed with Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGrath Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Scott Chevalier of Mansfield. State Youth Choir. Richard will his game-winning hit off Jim are moving to the rental Mrs . Larry Barr and
property of Harold Graham daughter, Rutland, were
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Williarru;, be entering Asbury College at Grant.
AI Kaline's twCH"un homer in formerly the Butcher property. Tuesday callers of Mrs. Doyle
Mrs, Lyle Balderson and Kay Wilmore, Ky., where he will be
the fifth inning, his 15th of tbe E. R. Carr will occupy the house Knapp and also called on her
visited with Mr. and Mrs. a pre-med student
they vacate.
mother, Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Edward Williams of Coolville.
Mr. and Mrs . Edward v•nmg year, hit the left field foul pole
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
Mrs. Eunice Sprague recently and family and Charles and and provided the victory for the Mr. Athur Goodwin is on the
Bill were in Columbus
sick
list.
and
celebrated her Mth birthday at Susan King were visitors of Tigers. Tom Timmerman
the Arcadia Nursing Home at their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed picked up the win by pitching 4 Mrs. Nellie Borgan made a Saturday to attend the wedding
trip to Gallipolis Friday.
of their son, Carl (Butch) .
Coolville.
King at Harrisonville. Mr. King 1-3 innings of one-bit ball.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Mrs. Freda Carsey is
Graig Ne!Ues drove in three
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomas has just recently returned home
babysitting
for
Mr,s.
Nancy
Columbus
were Tuesday
and family of Cheshire Visited after spending several weeks in runs with a pair of homers and
with Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Riebel. . the hospital. He is improving. Roy Foster belted a two-run White who teaches school here. visitors of his parents, Mr. and
IMAGINE - A
home run to help Sam Mrs. Sue Payne and Mrs. Mrs. Paul McElroy.
A reunion of the Murphy
McDowell pick up his 12th Sally Welsh visited Mrs. Harold
SERVICE · WITH ART,
family was held at the home of
victory of the season and first Graham Friday afternoon.
since Aug. 26, as the Indians Mrs. Bessie Graham is J . K. Murphy. A potl~ck_ dinner
COPY AND AD TOOLS
spending
a
week
with
her
and
an
afternoon
of
f1shing
and
overcame a two run first inning
AT YOUR DISPOSAL .•.
deficit and beat the Yankees. daughter in South Carolina. She . swunm_mg were enJoyed. Those
went
especially
to
her
grandattendmg
were
Mrs
.
Floyd
Johnny Briggs cracked his
STOP BY AND SEE.
Murphy, Mr. ~d Mrs. Donald
third homer in lour games to daughter's wedding.
MONDAY
eighth district commander,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell Murphy, Valer~e, Jay, Derek
SEPTEMBER meeting of the scheduled to be present. cap a three-run Brewer rally in and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins and Leah, all of Ironton, Mr.
Riverview P.T.A., Monday, Refreshments. All members the sixth inning and Marty enjoyed boating at an Athens and Mrs. James Murphy'. Jana
Pattin received retief help from
Sept. 13, at 7:30p.m.; program urged to attend.
Rae , Kaye and Jam1e of
Ken Sanders in the eighth to lake Sunday.'
by Jean Whitehead, wbo will
REVIVAL
SERVICES, quell an Angel uprising and Mrs. Lana Gibson received a
show slides of her European beginning Monday, Langsville
employed in the flower
give Milwaukee its victory. In telephone caD on her birthday, depsrlrnent of the Buckeye
Trip,
Christian Church , Charles registering his 28th save in 76
Sept. I, from her son, Dr. Don Mart in Athens.
POMEROY CHAMBER of Norris, evangelist. Services, appearances, Sanders was able Gibson and family .
The Dean reunion was held
Commerce Monday at noon, 7:30 each evening. Public to preserve Pattin's 13th Mrs. Stella Atkins visited the
welcome.
Gordon Atkins family in recenUy at the Clair Waggoner
Bowers Restaurant.
victory against 14losses.
nJESDAY
WSCS, HEATH United
Michigan recenUy.
h":~1 Foil Jr. and family of
OHIO ETA PHI Sorority
Methodist Church, 7:30 Monday
Mrs. Cremeans and son of Columbus spent a weekend with
night at the church. Mrs. Tuesday 8:15p.m. at Columbus
Shade
visited the Earl Mrs. Minnie Foil.
Beulah Hayes to have and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
McGraths SWlday.
Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Prine of
SYRACUSE P.T.A. Tuesday
devoti!'DS; Mrs. James CrisweU
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Terry
Whaley
Hermanda,
Fla., spent a night
to give study on Cuba. Mrs. 7:30 p.m., David Nease, school
and daughter, Erin, visited his with Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Jack Bechtle, Mrs. Nan Moore, board member, will be the guest
Mrs.
Maxine
Grimm,
John
grandmother, Ava Gilkey, Waggoner and Joy.
Mrs. C. F. Hibbs, Mrs. Criswell, speaker. Baton class members Grimm, Mrs. S. H. Rei!mire Sunday·
Mrs. Louise Gilkey. Karen
will also be featured .
· hostesses.
and Stanley Reilmire spent a Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son and Tad, visited Ava Gilkey
POMEROY GARDEN Club
week vacationing at Buckroe of Logan assisted the Earl Sunday afternoon.
WEDNESDAY
Monday 7:36p. m. home of Mrs.
Other recent callers of Ava
Beach, Hampton, Va. They also McGraths with their moving
PRESIDENTS ,
Walter Grueser with Mrs. PAST
Gilkey were Ray Douglas,
American Legion Auxiliary , visited other interesting places Monday.
Tracy Whaley co.Jlostess.
during their trip.
Mrs. Ava Gilkey and Frances Athens, Mrs. Doug Clay,
Save valuable time. Get proBETHEL 62, International Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 p,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bush of Alkire were in Athens Monday Downington , and Mr. and Mrs.
fessionally prepared ads with
Order of Jobs Daughters, m. Wednesday, home of Mrs. Allen Park, Mich., were recent to purchase new air con- Harold Graham.
Ellen
Couch.
Monday night at 7:30 p. m. at
the pulling power you want.
Mr. and Mrs. James Cheadle ~-----1111!1---•
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. WINDING TRAIL Garden guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald dltioners,
Roush. Cooke is a medical and children of · Columbus
Initiation will be held. Parents Club, 8 p. m. Wednesday, borne F.Robert
See ll~r trained advertising
and others with proper Masonic of Mrs. Allard Pratt.
pstienl at Veterans Memorial visited the Kenneth Paynes
representative today.
relationship invited. Practice BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, Hospital .
over
the
weekend.
for initiation to be heldat9 a.m. Royal and Select Masters,
Mr. and Mrs. Buell Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
stated assembly, 7:30 Wed·
Saturday.
·'
SAME DAY
of MI. Ster1ing, Ky., were of Albany R. D. visited her
nesday
,
Pomeroy
Masonic
EIGHT AND FORTY, Meigs
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. grandmother, Ava Gilkey
SERVICE
County Salon 710, Monday Temple.
John F. Roush. ·
Satheturday eveulningtheand ahoottended
In At 9- 0ut At 5
•evening, 7:30 p. m., home of
Mrs. Neil Haymaker was a
tractor P 1at
sc 11ol.
"rs. Harry Davis.
- - - - - - - - - - surgical pstient at Veterans Mr. and Mrs. John Updegraff
Use Our Free Parking Lot
RUTLAND P.T.A. 7:30 ·p.Iil. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cooke, Memorial Hospital last week. of Birmingham, Ala., are here
Mrs. Dorsey Lee Roush was a to visit Ava Gilkey, the Robert
Monday~ Rutland Elemen~ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller,
ll6 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
~Slum . New teachers will Mrs. George Jewell, Mr. Edgar medical pstienl at Veterans Alkires and the Robert Clarks.
be mtroduced. Parents urged to Layne, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Cooke Me111orial Hospital last week. l~M=rs~·.;W~i~ld~a~W~i~s;em;an~~is~;:;;:::;::;::::
Mr. and Mrs. James Layne
attend.
and Mr. and Mrs. Danny
SALEM CENTER P.T.A. Yonker and sons were at and daughter, Beth , were
,f
0
0
1
·
•
.
•
Monday 7:30p.m. at school. 4-H Wintersville 0 last weekend recent visitors at Morgantown,
OPTOMmiST
and Fair exhibits will be shown. to attend
~ding of Debra where Beth received a checkup
at
University
Hospital
where
OFFICE
HOURS
9: :10 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE"
. MEIGS CHAPTER 53, ~AV , Cooke, daughter of Mr. and
A.T NOON 01~ THURS.) - EAST COURT ST .•
7:30 p.m. Monday at home on Mrs. Donald Cooke, former she underwent heart surgery a
few years ago.
POMER Y.
Butternut Ave, Neal Petty, Mason residents.

::

DRIVE-IN
: BANKING

!

:

9

+
+

Kingsbury
News, Notes

...
FARMERS BANK :
· .and SAVINGS

oo.;

*

**

**********

Reedsville
News, Notes

Harrisonville
Society News

W lfpen

N-

N

le

BAKER

YOUR ART DEPARTMENT
AT WORK!

Dahlias are heavy feeders. Roots extend two feet in all
direction if the soil is of proper consistency. When the roots can
grow weD, the blossoms Invariably fare wen also. Appllcatlon of
phosphate (two pounds) and potash (one and one-half pounds) per
100 square feet, will aid in root development, increase color
lrlghtness and bloom quantity, and will guarantee strong roots
for winter storage.

Social Calendar

YV

The West family reunion was
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arley M. West at Portland,
Sept. 5.
A turkey dinner with all the
trimmings was enjoyed at noon
and the afternoon was spent
visiting and playing games.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
L. H. Jordan of MagadQ!:!! ; Mr.
and Mrs. Orville West, Karen,
and a friend, Bruce Bonifante,
of CUlton, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs.
James Hess, daughter, Lois
Ann, of Dearborn, Mich.; Mr.
and Mrs. John Watson, Lu Ann

Social Events

Fifth is a Son
l'·'

SHIRT'
fiNISHING

Robinson's Ceaners

u..;

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
PHONE 992-2156

\
\

•

.1 Reunzon
• ne
I.J /d
est Ramzr.1J
'J

Tl T

New Haven

N W COMPJiON 0 D

.

and Robbie, Wierton, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Maxwell,
Patsskala; Mr. and Mrs. L. C.
Jordan and daughter, Patty. St.
Albans, w. Va.; Mr . and Mrs.
Murrill West, Murrila and
Ricky, Ravenswood, W. Va.;
Mr. and .Mrs. R. C. Spencer of
Spencer, W.Va. ; Sgt. and Mrs.
Harry C. Spencer and daughter,
Beth, Greensboro, N. C.; Mr.
and Mrs. James Keeling and
sons, Danny and Randy, Elk·
view, W. Va.

Gift Presented
A feature of the Sunday
service at the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church was the
presentation of a gift to Kathy
Moore by the Rev. Clyde
Henderson on behalf of the
Sunday School.
Miss Moore will leave this
month for the N8%81"ene College
at Mount Vernon. She has been
teaching the kindergarten
children in the Sunday School.
The Rev, Gene Musser was
speaker for the worship service
and guests were Mr. · and Mrs.
Ralph Lambright and children
of Portland and Mr, John
Wogan of Colwnbus. Mr, and
Mrs. Lambright were charter
members of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church.

Mr. •imd Mrs. Bobby Roush of
Pearl St., Middleport, are
announcing the birth of · their
first son, David Alan, at the
l'lllasant Valley Hospital, Sept.
6. David Alan weighed eight
pounds, three ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Roush have four
daughters, Shelley: nine; Lori,
seven; Kimberly, six, and
Terri, three. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pinnell of
Toronto, Ohio; and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Roush of New
llilven, W. Va. Mrs: Mattie
Chasteen, Toledo, is a greatgrandmother.
Three of the five Roush
children have ·been born on
hOlidays, the newest arrival on
World's largest radio tele·
Labor Day. Shelly was born on
scope is located at the Arethe Fourth of July. and Lori on ciho Observatory in Puerto
Christmas.
Rico.

'·

.

Mrs. Parker;Mrs. Stewart Share Honors

Green Thumb

spanked his second shot into the
crowd at the right ri Ute green,
about 15 feet elf the putting
·
surface.
But he cmne back with a deft
chip allot that stopped three feet
fr001 the cup.
(''That chip shot was the shot
that won it for me.")
You mlghi as well fall flat
And !lien he walked up and
an your face as leari over
took nttie lime wrapping heme ; too far backward.
the short putt f!l' the $50,000 ....:.James Thurber

course:

~

The best of .Show award in
artistic arrangements at the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners•
flower show, "Busy Days,"
staged Saturday at the Rutland
Elementary School went to Mrs.
Homer Parker.
Mrs. Parker shared honors of
the show with Mrs . Tom
Stewart who took three blue
ribbons in the ar!istic
arrangements classes which
had a total of 70 entries.
Held in conjunction with the
show was a reception for Mrs.
James Carpenier, Ohio 's
Homemaker of the Year, an
active member of the garden
club. Cake and punch were
served to the visitors from a
table centered with an
arrangement of pink and white
mums, a gift from the Pomeroy
Flower Shop, flanked by pink
tapers. The table was covered
with · green with a while lace
overlay.
Besides the nwnerous floral
arrangements, houseplants,
and specimens, a number of
special exhibits were featured.
Ceramics and candles were
displayed by Mrs. Tom Martin
of Rutland Ceramics, corsage
making was demonstrated by
Mrs. Robert Snowden, wildflowers were exhibited by Mrs.
William Wi!Hord, several types
of bird feeders were shown by
Mrs. Harold Wolfe.
Anti-litter posters and litter
bags were displayed by Royal
Crown, a terrarium and in·
formation on how to make one
was shown by Mrs. Parker, and
there was a display on
poisonous plants with free
pamphlets prepared by Mrs.
Howard Birchfield , A garden
setting which centered the
auditorium was arranged by
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Parker

and Mrs. Joe Bolin .
Ribbon winners in the artistic
arrangements categories, listed
first, 'second, third and fourth,
respectively, were as follows :
"Sunday Serenity," for the
organ: Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. Larry
Edwards, Mrs. Bruce May,
Mrs. Richard Felly, Jr.

'

-

"Monday's Madness," mass

lHE HIGH

COST OF
BUYING A

NEW CAR
Fin1nce your new car with
Nationwide.
LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

Krautter ·
A potluck preceded the
meeting to mark the beginning
of the faD program . Mrs. Velma
Rue, ways and means chairman, announced a rummage
sale for the first week in Oc·
Iober. Service projects for the
comingyearwerediscussedby
,Mrs. Shirley Custer, serv1ce

R'Ort/and W.'"CS
J'
·

Met Recently
The Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew were guests at a
recent meeting of the Women 's
Society of Christian Service of
the Portland United Methodist
Church .
Mrs . Ruth Ebersbach,
president, opened the meeting
by reading the tOOth Psabn. The
Rev, Mr. Cheesebrew ·Jed the
group in prayer.
Mrs. Kathleen Ward read
" What Is Your Correct
Weight? " and Mrs. Esta Roush,
"Women Serve at the Point of
Need." Mrs. Ebersbach also
presented two Biblical quizzes.
The officers' reports were
given and it was decided to
stage a yard sale sometime in
October. Members were ad·
vised of the workshop at Camp
Francis Asbury on Sept. 21 and
urged to attend. Get well cards
were sent to Mrs. Ethel Swan
and Mrs. Ethel Johnson .
Others attending the meeting
were Mrs. Margery Roush,
Mrs. Elva Dailey, Mrs. Shirley
Johnson and Mrs . Carolyn
Price.
The U.S. Post Olfice De·
partment launched the coun·
try's first air m a i I servic~
from College Park , Md .. on
Aug. 12, 1918.

~

WINNERS ALL - Junior division ribbon winners displaying their arrangements left to
right were Teresa Brown, Debbie W11lillffiSOII, Denise Garnes, Kelly Brown, Karla Brown, and
Beth Mitchell.
·

CALL

Robert Canaday, Rutland
Garden Club, Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Bend o•
The River Garden Club, and
Mrs. Harvey F;rlewine, Rutland
Garden Club.
In the junior division, the
accredited judge gave ribbons
in the Friday's Slumber Party,
for juniors over 10, to Teresa
Brown, first ; Judy Snowden,
second ; Debbie Williamson,
third ; and Denise Garnes ,
fourth .
In the class for exhibitors
under
10,
"Monday's
Playtime," the ribbons went to
Jay Carpenter, first; Kelly
Brown, second; Beth Mitchell,
third, and Carla Smith, fourth.
Horticulture Division
Ribbon winners in the horticulture division listed first
through fourth respectively.
were :
Zinnias, Mrs. Roy Snowden,
Mrs , Birchfield, Mrs. Binda
Diehl, Mrs. WilHord.
Marigolds,
Mrs .
Roy
Snowden, Mrs. Giles Smith,
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Birch·
field .

Pomeroy....

Personal Notes

TourPlannedOct.14
Plans for a tour of German
Village in Columbus and lun·
cheon on Oct. 14 were an·
nounced by Mrs . Eleanor
Thomas, social chairman,
Thursday night when the Xi
Gamma My Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority met with
Mrs. Pearl Welker presiding at
the home of Mrs . Clarice

BEAT

Gladloti, Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. use in dri ed arranging, along
William Willford.
with a wall hanging made of
PHONE f?l·llll
Dahlias, Mrs. Roy Snowden, dried materials on gree n
307 Spring Ave., !o'omeroy
Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Diehl, and burlap .
Mrs. Russell Little.
A display of garden therapy
Mums, Mrs. Willford, Mrs. projects with the s pecial
Roy Snowden, Roy Snowden, education students at th e
and Mrs. Carpenter.
Rutl and School was on exhibit N,t,IIOMWI O( Llf[ IHSUU,HC(
Unclassified, Mrs. Birchfield along with dried nower pic·
for toile hallande, f1rst ; Mrs. tures, te rr ariums, ceramic
Wolfe , aster , second ; Roy
Snowden , celosia;
Mrs .
Willford, red plume celosia .
· In the Junior Division, ribbons went to:
Zinnia, Debbie Williamson,
Mike Willford, ·Jay Carpenter,
Kimberly Birchfield.
Marigold, Van Willford, Beth
BEAUTIFUL FLOORS,
Ann Wolfe , Jay Carpenter,
Kimberly Birchfield.
Unclassified, Judy
L.
Snowden, Rosemary Snowden,
and Raymond WilHord.
Educational Division
donation was made to the
Ribbon winners for blooming
Sq.
Salvation Army and a round·
houseplants were Miss Ruby
Yd.
robin card was prepared for
Diehl , African violet ; Rov
Charles Radford who is
Snowden, geranium; Mrs. C.O.
hospitalized.
Chapman, begonia, and Mrs.
Appointed to serve at the Oct.
Roy Snowden, begonia.
7 meeting were Mrs. Kennth
in non-blooming houseplants,
McCullough, Mrs . Roger
winners were Mrs. Carpenter
for philodendron, first; Mrs.
Kovalchik, Mrs. Charles
Virgil Atkins, tiger plant, Miss
Gloeckner and Mrs. Dorothy
Gloeckner .
Ruby Oiebl, smarock, and Roy
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
Snowden, sanseverice.
Krajcovic opened the meeting
Numerous books on garwith prayer following Mass and
dening were displayed by the
club members and Mrs. Carrosary. Refreshments w.:re
served by Mrs. Isabelle Recent visitors of Mrs. Vona penter showed her collection of
Wehrung , Mrs . Elizabeth McKnight and Mr. and Mrs. C. nature's resources suitable for
Horak, Mrs. Catherine Welsh W. Stansbury of Rutland were
and Mrs. Gertrude Raub.
Mr . and Mrs . Race Hill,
Langsville ; Mrs . Delphia
McCain of Ashville; Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Liesl of Amanda
and their daughter . Linda
chairman, who also proposed McFarland of Circleville; Mr.
and Mrs. Austin Woodgerd of
the budget.
Plans for invitations to new Mansfield and son Gerald, of
members were discussed by Tucson, Arizona ; Joseph
Mrs. Margaret Follrod, vice Martin of Painesville ; Carl
president. The Sept. 23 meeting Reeves of Fairport Harbor,
will be held at the home of Mrs. Ohio; Mrs. Myrtle St. Clair of
Nellie Brown, with Mrs. Welker Miami , Fla .; Mrs . Don
Crawford of Millwood, Ky. ; Mr.
as co.Jlostess.
and Mrs. W. A. Mudd of
Louisville, Ky.; and Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Knight of
Massillon. Following their visit
here, Mr. and Mrs. Stansbury
spent a weekend with the
Knights on a camping trip at
Cave Lake in Western Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Mayes Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Bel% have
of Marysville an d Mrs. Caro1 returned to their home at St.
Theiss and children of Belpre . Joseph, Mich. after visiting two
were visiting her psrents, Mr. weeks with Mrs. Bel%' mother,
and Mrs. Carl Lee.
Mrs. B. A. Dodson of Chester.
-Mr. and Mrs. Donald TrusseD Mr. and Mrs. ·Jack Conroy of
and Dawn of Mt. Vernon, Mr. Columbus were here for a
and Mrs. Robert TrusseD and week's vacation with their
Sandra and Mr. and Mrs. John
Ridenour of Chester and Mr. parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L.
Bahr of Chester and Mrs. B. A.
and Mrs. Ralph Trussell and Dodson.
children, local, spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
TrusseD.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Dill and
family returned home after
spending a three weeks
FOR YOUR OWN
TRAFFIC GOING
vacation in Canada and other
places of inU:rest.
BY? FOR THE
Mr, and Mrs. George Roberts
are spending a week can:ping
BEST RESULTS
near Zanesville.
Enjoy safety ... plus
The ladles auxiliary of the
extra earning power.
Bashan fire deparlrnent met on
USE OUR WANT
Wednesday evening at the fire
house. ·
ADS-IT WILL BE
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kirkhart
and children have moved to the
YOUR BEST MOVE
PASSBOOK RATE
Victor Bahr property near
Chester.
Mr . and Mrs . Warden Ours
attended the Ours reuni011 held
at the Rock Springs fairground ·
Put your business profits into high gear by using the vehicle
on Sunday.
Fire Chief Ralph TrusseD of
that is powerful enough to do the jab alone. Phone or co~e
the Bashan Volunteer Fire
Deparlment, with the fire truck, Meigs County Branch of The
by our Want Ad deportment for complete information. Stop
Athens County Savings &amp;
took part in the Labor Day Loan Co,
psrade at Chester. Miss Peggy
296 Second St.
today.
Sue Trussell and Belinda
Pomeroy, Ohio
Deeter, with the baton twirlers,
Mem ber Federal Home Loan
took psrt in the parade at Bank.
Chester and Pomeroy.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
992~2156
accounts
insured Up to
The Stanley Cup is award·
ed in the sport of ice hoc:key. S20,000 .M .

Bazaar, Dinner Set
The annual holiday bazaar of
the Catholic Women's Club will
be on Nov. 11 in the Sacred
Heart Church auditoriwn club
members decided Thursday
night at the church with Mrs. T.
A. Hennesy presiding .
A dinner will he served in
conj unction with the bazaar
with the charge to be $1.75 for
adults and $1 for children 12 and
under.
A rummage sale was planned
Oct. 4 and 5, and arrangements
were made to serve refresh·
ments at Ute games parties on
Tuesday evening. Mrs. Don
Mullen was elected vice
president of the group . A

I

arrangements: Mrs. Rober t
Snowden, Mrs. Bolin , Mrs.
Carpenter, and Mrs. Bill
Williamson.
''Tuesday ' s Ironing. ''
showing motion, Mrs . Tom
Stewart, Mrs. Robert Snowden,
Mrs. Harold Wolfe, and lying
for fourth place, Mrs. William
Brown and Mrs. Parker.
''Wednesday's Gardening,"
my favorite arrangement: Mrs.
Stewart, Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs.
Willford, Mrs. Fetty.
"Thursday's Cooking," using
a cooking utensil as continer:
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Bruce
Davis, Mrs. Harold Wolfe, and
Mrs. Stewart.
"Friday's Payday," all
foliage arrangement: Mrs.
Stewart, Mrs . Birchfield, Mrs.
Williamson, and Mrs. Wi!Hord.
" Saturday 's Night Out,
modern with written in terpretalion: Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
Birchfield, Mrs. Stewart, and
Mrs. Edwards.
"Week's End," dried or fresh
material with weathered wood:
Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. Carpenter,
Mrs. Fetty, and Mrs . Fred
Williamson.
~~sunday's
Peace ," interpretive: Mrs. Stewart, Mrs.
Robert Snowden, Mrs. Roy
Snowden of the Rutland Garden
Club and Mrs. Anna Elizabeth
Turner, Rutland Garden Club.
"Wednesday's Wishing," a
favorite arrangement : Mrs .

containers, specimen wll~·
nowers. and ceramic figurines
made by members ol the Merry
Gardeners.
Mrs. Willford and Mrs. Ed·
wards were chairmen for the
show.

P.J. PAULEY

I) ~!~oR:~~~~
CDW!P~~·J

CARPET SPECIAL
501 NYLON

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News Notes

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Meigs Co. Branch

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE

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.I

�r-----------.-----~--------------------------------~~~-~~
'

'

t-'l'be Dally SeDtinel,MiMrpan.f'wdO), o ., Sep!.l3, 1971

5~ The ))ally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pm~eroy, 0., Sept. 13, 1971

No Funny Business about Coody's World Series G~lf Victory

URON, Obio (UPI) -Tile
lllbalrGia Is gme fNm ltOIIld
O.lle Coody's neck.
'l'be 3t-Jear-dd taciturn Ts~~~· from Abi..... will Dm!l" go
cloWll in aparts biaiAiry as a
l'lulay py to lisllen tD, lilre La
Trerino, and be lirmelf iDiilts
even mday, "I'm not a superltaT, I just do lhe best I C811."
But In the wake crf IU ooe
llrGte World SaV:s Ill Golf
viciAiry here Sunday, nobody
can ner say again that Charlie

Coody isn't a deadgame guy on
the golf course, that. he's the
type ~ a golfer who will fold
when the ~ gets really
llol
.
Because the tall, dark haired
renner Air F&lt;I'Ce lieutenant
looked disasll!r in the eye at
least three ~ in the final
rwnd and came througb with
great allots in the clutch b a
three owr par 73 that produced
a wiming total Ill 1ft for .the two
day, 3r.bole tournament ~ong

the winners Ill the U.. golf
champicnsbipl of 1971.
Jack Nicklaus, four . time
winnercrftheseries,wassecmd
with a 71-lt2, Bruce Q-ampton
of Australia was tbln:l with ro.
143 and Trevino, the U.S. and
British Open QJampim, was
last with a 74-lt6.
Here are the three crises of
Charlie Coody on a cool~
overcast day at the par 70, 7,11)
yard Firestone Country Club

... He siarted the day three I've ever played," be confessed that sU..ped 18 in~ from the
s~l!headofNicklaus,went lall!r. " It wasn't that I hit bad pin to setup a birdie.
four ahead with bia only birdie ..hots, it was thaH didn't think (I told him 'nice shot,'
crfthedayon.tbellrslbole then the whole through. For in- but what 1 .really wantblew the bole wad with a dauble stance, it never occured to me . ed · to do was hit him
bogey seven on the second hole to play down the third fair- over the head" said Coody in a
·as Nicklaus fired an eagle way.")
rare adventure into humor."
three. Coody made a rambling •.• He got bad! inro a two ... He went into the final hole
tour of the rough on two fair.· stroke lead as Nicklaus bogeyed leading Nicklaus and the
ways and a trap and wo111d up the 11th hole but saw Big Jacl! charging O'ampton by just one
muffing a four foot putt.
cut it to a single stroke with a stroke, and then seemed to set
" It was one of the worse holes fantastic iron shot on the 15th himself up fir a bogey when he

•

Langsville

Notes . ...

~~~···~·
····~·~
. A THOU(!HT

A ·weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

FOR TODAY

Wood Wins 20th For Chisox

Dahlias, Where and Why

......

Tuppers Plains Society News

BY MRS. TRACY WHALEY,
Pomeroy Garden Cluti
The dahlia is a most versatile and ac~odating plant. It
Will grow well under a variety of conditions, usually with only
nonnal care, although It responds weD to every bit of extra attention. The most colorful of aU fall flowers, it clings proudly to
the title, "King of Autumn," ·althirugh here there may be a battle
with the chrysanthemum.
Perhaps the most COIIUDon use of dahlias is in plantings
around foundations, where they are often combined with shrubs
or other sununer and fall flowers . Here it is best to use only one or
two varieties, preferably a single color, to complement \he
buDding against which they are planted- such as pink, against a
pastel blue house. Observe two rules here, plant the dahlias far
enough fr001 building and shrubs to leave adequate space fqr air
circulation around the mature plant; and add fertilizer and water
to replace that used by nearby shrubs.
Dahlias are a sensational ·autumn display wben combined
with chrysanthemums and other fall flowers. In such plantings,
space the dahlias five to eight feet spart, with IaUer varieties
toward the rear, and one or two cushion mums between and
slightly in frmt of each dahlia. Race st!D'dy garden stakes ex·
lending at least three feet above tbe soil, before the dahllss are
planted, and tie the plants to them as they grow. Attach the
variety label to the stake.
In larger yards, dahlias can provide great waves of color
through the use of large narrow beds just wide enough for three or
folD' rows, with taller plants in the center or at the rear and
shorter varieties in the foreground. This planting is representative of the new varieties in commerce today and contains im·
ports frtm abroad as well as United States originations.
Another effective planting method useful even in small yards
Is a round 1r rectangular bed of only one variety, which should be
a sh11rt, compact-grower. Dahlias do well when planted against a
woven wire fence, as there is no restriction of air circulation and
plants can be tied to the fence wires as they grow. Plants can be
seen from both sides and add to tbe pleasure of people on both
sides of the fence .
·
Varieties used in beds surrounded by lawns should he short
compact-groWers and also pinched ba~k to induce branching
wben five or six pairs of leaves hlive developed.
Simply cut off the top of the plant, leaving three pairs of
leaves, and new .tranches wil,l inunediately develop at each leaf
node . This should not affect flowering time by more than a few
days and will provide several blooms where only one would have
developed oo the !l'lginal stalk. Space plants in such beds
somewhat closer than usual, to flU out the bed completely and
cause plants to support each other without the use of stakes. ldeal
spacing here would be 2 to 2\2 feet.
The popularity of dahlias as cut nowers has increased greaUy '
in the last decade, because of the great improvement in keeping
qualities of the flowers. A few years ago, it was unusual to keep a
bouquet of dahlias for more than one day, but Ute stronger texture
of modern varieties has made it possible to have dahlias
arrangements last up to four days or longer.
The many types available provide unlimited scope in nora!
designs. There are tiny pompons and giant varieties that are
almost identical in form, small and large wall!r lily types, many
variati~ of quill and cactus styles - in fact a type for every
imaginable wish. The Super'iiant decoratives, when used either
as floaters in a howl or oo long, three-loot stems in a giant floor
vase, create excitement. A huge water pitcber conlaining three 13
inch blooins cut with three-foot stems are admired in a front haD.
Many limes 12inch blooms may be used in shallow bowls with just
a li!Ue greenery for trim, as centerpieces for dining or coffee
tables.
Any willing gardener can grow dahlias. like otber flowers
they have a few essential requirements and a few preferences.
They grow best in adequate sunshine. They prefer lots of organic
matter in the aoil, so the ambitious gardener will build ·up this
quality with Uberal aPPlications of rotten manures, leaf mold,
peat moss, and other organic materials.
U the soil is heavy,itcanbe improved with liberal amounts of
sand. Three inches of sand tilled 12 inches deep into heavy clay is
not too much.

By MRS. EVELYN BRICKLES Nichols and. son-in-law. Wilford
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Ledlie
· lfs Quick! Easy
are home after spending two
Sunday School attendance on Tippie and grandson.
'
Sept. 5 was 34. Offering was Audrey Torrence and Darlene·
years at Las Palmas, Spain
$13.14. Worship atU:ndance was took Mrs. Harry Allison to her
By STEVE WllSTEIN
them this season. 11 1 guess," he average to 2.00, second best where Mr. Ledlie is employed.
34 and offering $30.50.
doctor at Gallipolis for · her
Tim Willcox was brought to
said, ''winning 20 and winning only to Blue among starting the home of his iwents, Mr. and
UPI SporU Writer
Ruth Arnold of Middleport checkup.
Wilbur Wood taught SWlday 19 is lilre Ute difference between pitchers in the American
Fridays Only
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Swartz of
and
her sister, Esther Edwards,
League.
Mrs. Buck Willcox after spenSchool again and the lesson a ).99 ERA and a 2.00 ERA."
of
Miami
Beach,
Fla.,
were
Athens
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
~The Drive-In Window
Wood, ~11. who scattered ding several -weeks at Holzer
That's something. else the 29earned him his 20th victory of
is Open
Wednesday
guests
of
Mrs.
Robert
Halsey
of
Dayton
spent
Medical
Center.
the year, placing him with the year old lmuckleballer may five singles and struck out nine,
Alpha Barr is a medical
Audrey-Torrence.
a
day
with
Mr,
Halsey's
A.M. to 7 .P.M.
other mssters of the American achieve this year. llli sixth received all the support he
.Elmer
Newell
who
is
serving
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fon
:
!Continuously l
League, Vida Blue and Mickey shutout of the year enabled needed in the fifth when Walt patient at Holzer Hospital
wbere
tests
are
being
run.
in
the
U.S.
Navy
and
stationed
Halsey.
Lollch, in the ~arne-winner's Wood to lower his earned run Williams singled with two out, Mrs. Ella Rastofer is a
Other Banking Hours 9 to lit
at Philadelphia visited his
Mr; and Mrs. David Riggs . and 5 to 1 as usual on
stole second and went to third
circle.
grandpsrents, ·Mr. and Mrs. and family of Vienna, W. Va.,
on ·Buck Martinez' throwing medical patient at Holzer
Fridays.
Wood, pitching in his nth
Newell
Monday.
were
Wednesday
dinner
guests
Jessie
error.
Pat
K~Uy
singled
home
Hospilal
for
a
heart
condition.
straight Sunday afternoon game
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Belzing of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
Williams and Carol05 May
Duane B3rr of Oak Hill called
and gaining his sixth coosecuand Mr. and Mrs. Dana HoffMr. and Mrs. James Watson
followed with a run-scoring on his father, Alpha Barr at
tive triilmph on the Sabbath,
man
were
SWlday
dinner
guests
and
family of Kentucky· spent
triple.
Holzer Hospital.
became a ~arne winner for
of their children, Mr. and Mi-s . . the weekend at their home here.
Kansas City starter Dick
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby
the first lime in a career, spent Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
POMEROY, OHIO
Dana
Hoffman, Jr., of Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wakely
mosUy as a reliever, as the and Mrs. William King were Drago, 16-9, goirig !Qr an all- spent a week traveling and
Member FDIC .
It was an observance of the and family of Marion were
Chicago White Sox blanked the Mr. Clyde Cannan; Mr. and time Kansas City biih . in sightseeing through West
:
Member FedeWal
birthday of Mr. Betzing.
recent guests of his aunt, Mrs.
Reserve System
victories for one · season, . was Virginia and Virginia. They also
Kansas City Royals, ~ Mrs. Clifford Cannan, Mr. and the viclim.
Mrs.
Dinsmore
Boyles
spent
a
Effie
Watson.
spent
two
days
at
the
state
fair
"It's one of the biggest tbriDs
Mrs. Junior Rucker, aU of
few days 'II Eastern in the care
Wood retired the last 14 at Columbus.
in baseball," Wood said after Columbus. Other guests were
of her daughter, Mrs. Starling·
M~s. Glenna Fetty and
he beat the Royals for the fifth Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and batters in order as he hurled
Massar who was ill.
lime in as many starts against family and Harold White, local. his 18th complete game and ..Pauline Gorby called on Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle
became the White Sox' first ~ Ella Rostofe_r and Alpha Barr at
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Isaacs, game winner since Gary Peters Holzer Medical Center SWlday
· visited their daughter, Mr. and
Alita and Wade, of ScoUand, S. in 1964
·afternoon. Other callers were
Mrs. Hank Douglas of Pomeroy
D., spent several days with Mr.
·
Rev. Lemley and his family.
Rt. 3, Sunday. Mrs. Douglas had
In other American League
Mike Barr of Glenville State
and Mrs. Wayne Beal and
just returned home from the
family. Also visiting recently games, Ninnesota beat Oakland College spent the weekend with
hospital.
with the Beals were Mr. and 7~ in 10 innings, Detroit edged his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bricldes
FLOWERY - This meMrs. John Pedras Jr~ and Boston 3-2,. Cleveland kayoed
of Pomeroy were Sunday guests
lange of dark tones on
daughter, Mary, of Willoughby, New York ~2, Milwaukee
washable polyester knit is here of his brother Mr. and Mrs.
nipped California 4-3 and
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Smith of Obio.
from Swirl's new Passport Wayne Brickles. Also calling on
Pomroy were recent visitors of
Mrs. Jennie Hollie who has Washington saw both of its
collection. A large, high col· the Bricldes were Clarence
Mrs. Dale Smith and family.
been a patient at Veterans games washed away by. rain in
Mrs. John Stout was Jar on the neckline above a
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. .Williams Memorial Hospital has returned Baltimore.
In the National League, Los pleasantly surprised Sunday self-belted waistline buck.
and Mr. and Mri. Warren heme and is improving.
led with a gold square.
Ironton, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Picl!ens visited Sunday with
A pizza party was given by Angeles whipped San Diego IN, when Mrs. Eleanor Stout, her
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams and Mrs. Colloe Hudson recenUy at San Francisco beat AUanta 6-1, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dibley, - - - - - - - - - - Murphy of Huntington, W. Va. ,
James E. Murph y, Pough·
at the Bud Douglas borne at her home here for aU the young Pittsburgh blaltked Montreal 4- ber son, Bobby, and his girl
keepsie , N. Y., Mr . and'
0, St. Louis blitzed Chicago 4-0, friend, her daughter, Judy Stout
0
Harrisonville.
~le of the cOmmunity. Mrs. Donald Murphy , PittsMrs. Onita Button of Akron
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Houston beat Cincinnati 4-2, and and husband, and Grafton's
burgh, Mr. and Mrs. Larry B.
and granddaughter visited with Swearinger and son, Bobby, of New York downed Philadelphia Stouts mother, Opal Hasington,
Hammond (Patricia Murphy ),
all of Dayton, came with a
Mrs. Bess Larkins.
West Millon, and !lira. Myrtle 3-2.
eW S,
0 S Barry and Bath of Lancaster,
Cesar Tovar drove in two picnic lunch and took Mrs. Stout
JaneandJuli Whitehead were White of Madison, W. Va.,
Mr . and Mrs. Ray Hune and
overnight guests of Mary Ruth visited recenUy with Mr. and runs with a bases-loaded single to Forest Acres Park for lunch.
Mrs.
Sharon
Jewell
has
a
Mr.
Bill
McElroy
returned
to
grandchildren
, Linda, James
in the lOth inning as the Twins,
and Joy Sauer of Middleport Mrs. Nev White and family.
Vi.lllting with Mrs. Earl
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Counte, who wasted a four-run lead in badly infected hand caused by a Columbus after spending a and Susanne Hune of
Humphrey recently were Mr. Jeff, Van and Kelly, spent the the eighth, won the game after cut on glass. She is under a week with his parents, Mr. and Zanesville,Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Paul McElroy.
A. Murphy, Debbie, Mr. and
and Mrs. Len Stone and family weekend with Mrs. Coelle knocking Blue out of the game, doctor's care.
Tom and Bob Shaffer are Mrs . Harley T. Johnson ,
Blue who remains at 23-8, was Mr. and Mrs. F. -0. Whaley
din
f da
.th th _
~ Orveland, Rob Stone and Hudson, Jim and Victor.
elf Pomeroy Route 4 and Mr. and
Ttr17 Cbesnes, students at
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gilkey, touched for seven hits and five and Mr. and Mrs. Terry Whaley spen g a ew ys WI
FURNITURE
Cleveland State .College, and Tammy an!! Cindy, of Athens runs in the eight innings he have returned from a ten day parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mrs. John R. Murphy, Elaine,
trip
through
the
Eastern
slates.
Shaffer.
Tom
is
stationed
at
John, Peggy , Carmel and
Rick Stone and Terrie visited SWlday with Mr. and worked and issued a season
MIDDUPOII, 0 ..
Miss
Tamera
Clark
spent
Fort
Riley·
Barbara Kay. Unable to attend
high of six walks.
McAlister, students at Marietta Mrs. John Dean.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell due to illness were Mr. Mur·
Jim Roland, who took over Thursday night with her
College.
Richanl Dean, a member of
and Tina Rae were recent phy's father , Mr. and Mrs. John
Visiting their grandparents, the Ohio Youth Choir last year, for Blue in the ninth, loaded the grandparents, the Robert
Clarks.
·
visitors of his parents, Mr. and Murphy, Crooksville.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chevalier attended the Ohio State Fair on bases on two walks and a single
were Eddie,. Jeff, Carrie and Saturday and sang with the in the lOth. Tovar followed with Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGrath Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Scott Chevalier of Mansfield. State Youth Choir. Richard will his game-winning hit off Jim are moving to the rental Mrs . Larry Barr and
property of Harold Graham daughter, Rutland, were
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Williarru;, be entering Asbury College at Grant.
AI Kaline's twCH"un homer in formerly the Butcher property. Tuesday callers of Mrs. Doyle
Mrs, Lyle Balderson and Kay Wilmore, Ky., where he will be
the fifth inning, his 15th of tbe E. R. Carr will occupy the house Knapp and also called on her
visited with Mr. and Mrs. a pre-med student
they vacate.
mother, Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Edward Williams of Coolville.
Mr. and Mrs . Edward v•nmg year, hit the left field foul pole
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
Mrs. Eunice Sprague recently and family and Charles and and provided the victory for the Mr. Athur Goodwin is on the
Bill were in Columbus
sick
list.
and
celebrated her Mth birthday at Susan King were visitors of Tigers. Tom Timmerman
the Arcadia Nursing Home at their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed picked up the win by pitching 4 Mrs. Nellie Borgan made a Saturday to attend the wedding
trip to Gallipolis Friday.
of their son, Carl (Butch) .
Coolville.
King at Harrisonville. Mr. King 1-3 innings of one-bit ball.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Mrs. Freda Carsey is
Graig Ne!Ues drove in three
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomas has just recently returned home
babysitting
for
Mr,s.
Nancy
Columbus
were Tuesday
and family of Cheshire Visited after spending several weeks in runs with a pair of homers and
with Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Riebel. . the hospital. He is improving. Roy Foster belted a two-run White who teaches school here. visitors of his parents, Mr. and
IMAGINE - A
home run to help Sam Mrs. Sue Payne and Mrs. Mrs. Paul McElroy.
A reunion of the Murphy
McDowell pick up his 12th Sally Welsh visited Mrs. Harold
SERVICE · WITH ART,
family was held at the home of
victory of the season and first Graham Friday afternoon.
since Aug. 26, as the Indians Mrs. Bessie Graham is J . K. Murphy. A potl~ck_ dinner
COPY AND AD TOOLS
spending
a
week
with
her
and
an
afternoon
of
f1shing
and
overcame a two run first inning
AT YOUR DISPOSAL .•.
deficit and beat the Yankees. daughter in South Carolina. She . swunm_mg were enJoyed. Those
went
especially
to
her
grandattendmg
were
Mrs
.
Floyd
Johnny Briggs cracked his
STOP BY AND SEE.
Murphy, Mr. ~d Mrs. Donald
third homer in lour games to daughter's wedding.
MONDAY
eighth district commander,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell Murphy, Valer~e, Jay, Derek
SEPTEMBER meeting of the scheduled to be present. cap a three-run Brewer rally in and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atkins and Leah, all of Ironton, Mr.
Riverview P.T.A., Monday, Refreshments. All members the sixth inning and Marty enjoyed boating at an Athens and Mrs. James Murphy'. Jana
Pattin received retief help from
Sept. 13, at 7:30p.m.; program urged to attend.
Rae , Kaye and Jam1e of
Ken Sanders in the eighth to lake Sunday.'
by Jean Whitehead, wbo will
REVIVAL
SERVICES, quell an Angel uprising and Mrs. Lana Gibson received a
show slides of her European beginning Monday, Langsville
employed in the flower
give Milwaukee its victory. In telephone caD on her birthday, depsrlrnent of the Buckeye
Trip,
Christian Church , Charles registering his 28th save in 76
Sept. I, from her son, Dr. Don Mart in Athens.
POMEROY CHAMBER of Norris, evangelist. Services, appearances, Sanders was able Gibson and family .
The Dean reunion was held
Commerce Monday at noon, 7:30 each evening. Public to preserve Pattin's 13th Mrs. Stella Atkins visited the
welcome.
Gordon Atkins family in recenUy at the Clair Waggoner
Bowers Restaurant.
victory against 14losses.
nJESDAY
WSCS, HEATH United
Michigan recenUy.
h":~1 Foil Jr. and family of
OHIO ETA PHI Sorority
Methodist Church, 7:30 Monday
Mrs. Cremeans and son of Columbus spent a weekend with
night at the church. Mrs. Tuesday 8:15p.m. at Columbus
Shade
visited the Earl Mrs. Minnie Foil.
Beulah Hayes to have and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
McGraths SWlday.
Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Prine of
SYRACUSE P.T.A. Tuesday
devoti!'DS; Mrs. James CrisweU
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Terry
Whaley
Hermanda,
Fla., spent a night
to give study on Cuba. Mrs. 7:30 p.m., David Nease, school
and daughter, Erin, visited his with Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Jack Bechtle, Mrs. Nan Moore, board member, will be the guest
Mrs.
Maxine
Grimm,
John
grandmother, Ava Gilkey, Waggoner and Joy.
Mrs. C. F. Hibbs, Mrs. Criswell, speaker. Baton class members Grimm, Mrs. S. H. Rei!mire Sunday·
Mrs. Louise Gilkey. Karen
will also be featured .
· hostesses.
and Stanley Reilmire spent a Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son and Tad, visited Ava Gilkey
POMEROY GARDEN Club
week vacationing at Buckroe of Logan assisted the Earl Sunday afternoon.
WEDNESDAY
Monday 7:36p. m. home of Mrs.
Other recent callers of Ava
Beach, Hampton, Va. They also McGraths with their moving
PRESIDENTS ,
Walter Grueser with Mrs. PAST
Gilkey were Ray Douglas,
American Legion Auxiliary , visited other interesting places Monday.
Tracy Whaley co.Jlostess.
during their trip.
Mrs. Ava Gilkey and Frances Athens, Mrs. Doug Clay,
Save valuable time. Get proBETHEL 62, International Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 p,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bush of Alkire were in Athens Monday Downington , and Mr. and Mrs.
fessionally prepared ads with
Order of Jobs Daughters, m. Wednesday, home of Mrs. Allen Park, Mich., were recent to purchase new air con- Harold Graham.
Ellen
Couch.
Monday night at 7:30 p. m. at
the pulling power you want.
Mr. and Mrs. James Cheadle ~-----1111!1---•
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. WINDING TRAIL Garden guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald dltioners,
Roush. Cooke is a medical and children of · Columbus
Initiation will be held. Parents Club, 8 p. m. Wednesday, borne F.Robert
See ll~r trained advertising
and others with proper Masonic of Mrs. Allard Pratt.
pstienl at Veterans Memorial visited the Kenneth Paynes
representative today.
relationship invited. Practice BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, Hospital .
over
the
weekend.
for initiation to be heldat9 a.m. Royal and Select Masters,
Mr. and Mrs. Buell Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
stated assembly, 7:30 Wed·
Saturday.
·'
SAME DAY
of MI. Ster1ing, Ky., were of Albany R. D. visited her
nesday
,
Pomeroy
Masonic
EIGHT AND FORTY, Meigs
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. grandmother, Ava Gilkey
SERVICE
County Salon 710, Monday Temple.
John F. Roush. ·
Satheturday eveulningtheand ahoottended
In At 9- 0ut At 5
•evening, 7:30 p. m., home of
Mrs. Neil Haymaker was a
tractor P 1at
sc 11ol.
"rs. Harry Davis.
- - - - - - - - - - surgical pstient at Veterans Mr. and Mrs. John Updegraff
Use Our Free Parking Lot
RUTLAND P.T.A. 7:30 ·p.Iil. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cooke, Memorial Hospital last week. of Birmingham, Ala., are here
Mrs. Dorsey Lee Roush was a to visit Ava Gilkey, the Robert
Monday~ Rutland Elemen~ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller,
ll6 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
~Slum . New teachers will Mrs. George Jewell, Mr. Edgar medical pstienl at Veterans Alkires and the Robert Clarks.
be mtroduced. Parents urged to Layne, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Cooke Me111orial Hospital last week. l~M=rs~·.;W~i~ld~a~W~i~s;em;an~~is~;:;;:::;::;::::
Mr. and Mrs. James Layne
attend.
and Mr. and Mrs. Danny
SALEM CENTER P.T.A. Yonker and sons were at and daughter, Beth , were
,f
0
0
1
·
•
.
•
Monday 7:30p.m. at school. 4-H Wintersville 0 last weekend recent visitors at Morgantown,
OPTOMmiST
and Fair exhibits will be shown. to attend
~ding of Debra where Beth received a checkup
at
University
Hospital
where
OFFICE
HOURS
9: :10 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE"
. MEIGS CHAPTER 53, ~AV , Cooke, daughter of Mr. and
A.T NOON 01~ THURS.) - EAST COURT ST .•
7:30 p.m. Monday at home on Mrs. Donald Cooke, former she underwent heart surgery a
few years ago.
POMER Y.
Butternut Ave, Neal Petty, Mason residents.

::

DRIVE-IN
: BANKING

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9

+
+

Kingsbury
News, Notes

...
FARMERS BANK :
· .and SAVINGS

oo.;

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**********

Reedsville
News, Notes

Harrisonville
Society News

W lfpen

N-

N

le

BAKER

YOUR ART DEPARTMENT
AT WORK!

Dahlias are heavy feeders. Roots extend two feet in all
direction if the soil is of proper consistency. When the roots can
grow weD, the blossoms Invariably fare wen also. Appllcatlon of
phosphate (two pounds) and potash (one and one-half pounds) per
100 square feet, will aid in root development, increase color
lrlghtness and bloom quantity, and will guarantee strong roots
for winter storage.

Social Calendar

YV

The West family reunion was
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arley M. West at Portland,
Sept. 5.
A turkey dinner with all the
trimmings was enjoyed at noon
and the afternoon was spent
visiting and playing games.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
L. H. Jordan of MagadQ!:!! ; Mr.
and Mrs. Orville West, Karen,
and a friend, Bruce Bonifante,
of CUlton, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs.
James Hess, daughter, Lois
Ann, of Dearborn, Mich.; Mr.
and Mrs. John Watson, Lu Ann

Social Events

Fifth is a Son
l'·'

SHIRT'
fiNISHING

Robinson's Ceaners

u..;

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
PHONE 992-2156

\
\

•

.1 Reunzon
• ne
I.J /d
est Ramzr.1J
'J

Tl T

New Haven

N W COMPJiON 0 D

.

and Robbie, Wierton, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Maxwell,
Patsskala; Mr. and Mrs. L. C.
Jordan and daughter, Patty. St.
Albans, w. Va.; Mr . and Mrs.
Murrill West, Murrila and
Ricky, Ravenswood, W. Va.;
Mr. and .Mrs. R. C. Spencer of
Spencer, W.Va. ; Sgt. and Mrs.
Harry C. Spencer and daughter,
Beth, Greensboro, N. C.; Mr.
and Mrs. James Keeling and
sons, Danny and Randy, Elk·
view, W. Va.

Gift Presented
A feature of the Sunday
service at the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church was the
presentation of a gift to Kathy
Moore by the Rev. Clyde
Henderson on behalf of the
Sunday School.
Miss Moore will leave this
month for the N8%81"ene College
at Mount Vernon. She has been
teaching the kindergarten
children in the Sunday School.
The Rev, Gene Musser was
speaker for the worship service
and guests were Mr. · and Mrs.
Ralph Lambright and children
of Portland and Mr, John
Wogan of Colwnbus. Mr, and
Mrs. Lambright were charter
members of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church.

Mr. •imd Mrs. Bobby Roush of
Pearl St., Middleport, are
announcing the birth of · their
first son, David Alan, at the
l'lllasant Valley Hospital, Sept.
6. David Alan weighed eight
pounds, three ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Roush have four
daughters, Shelley: nine; Lori,
seven; Kimberly, six, and
Terri, three. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pinnell of
Toronto, Ohio; and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Roush of New
llilven, W. Va. Mrs: Mattie
Chasteen, Toledo, is a greatgrandmother.
Three of the five Roush
children have ·been born on
hOlidays, the newest arrival on
World's largest radio tele·
Labor Day. Shelly was born on
scope is located at the Arethe Fourth of July. and Lori on ciho Observatory in Puerto
Christmas.
Rico.

'·

.

Mrs. Parker;Mrs. Stewart Share Honors

Green Thumb

spanked his second shot into the
crowd at the right ri Ute green,
about 15 feet elf the putting
·
surface.
But he cmne back with a deft
chip allot that stopped three feet
fr001 the cup.
(''That chip shot was the shot
that won it for me.")
You mlghi as well fall flat
And !lien he walked up and
an your face as leari over
took nttie lime wrapping heme ; too far backward.
the short putt f!l' the $50,000 ....:.James Thurber

course:

~

The best of .Show award in
artistic arrangements at the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners•
flower show, "Busy Days,"
staged Saturday at the Rutland
Elementary School went to Mrs.
Homer Parker.
Mrs. Parker shared honors of
the show with Mrs . Tom
Stewart who took three blue
ribbons in the ar!istic
arrangements classes which
had a total of 70 entries.
Held in conjunction with the
show was a reception for Mrs.
James Carpenier, Ohio 's
Homemaker of the Year, an
active member of the garden
club. Cake and punch were
served to the visitors from a
table centered with an
arrangement of pink and white
mums, a gift from the Pomeroy
Flower Shop, flanked by pink
tapers. The table was covered
with · green with a while lace
overlay.
Besides the nwnerous floral
arrangements, houseplants,
and specimens, a number of
special exhibits were featured.
Ceramics and candles were
displayed by Mrs. Tom Martin
of Rutland Ceramics, corsage
making was demonstrated by
Mrs. Robert Snowden, wildflowers were exhibited by Mrs.
William Wi!Hord, several types
of bird feeders were shown by
Mrs. Harold Wolfe.
Anti-litter posters and litter
bags were displayed by Royal
Crown, a terrarium and in·
formation on how to make one
was shown by Mrs. Parker, and
there was a display on
poisonous plants with free
pamphlets prepared by Mrs.
Howard Birchfield , A garden
setting which centered the
auditorium was arranged by
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Parker

and Mrs. Joe Bolin .
Ribbon winners in the artistic
arrangements categories, listed
first, 'second, third and fourth,
respectively, were as follows :
"Sunday Serenity," for the
organ: Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. Larry
Edwards, Mrs. Bruce May,
Mrs. Richard Felly, Jr.

'

-

"Monday's Madness," mass

lHE HIGH

COST OF
BUYING A

NEW CAR
Fin1nce your new car with
Nationwide.
LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

Krautter ·
A potluck preceded the
meeting to mark the beginning
of the faD program . Mrs. Velma
Rue, ways and means chairman, announced a rummage
sale for the first week in Oc·
Iober. Service projects for the
comingyearwerediscussedby
,Mrs. Shirley Custer, serv1ce

R'Ort/and W.'"CS
J'
·

Met Recently
The Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew were guests at a
recent meeting of the Women 's
Society of Christian Service of
the Portland United Methodist
Church .
Mrs . Ruth Ebersbach,
president, opened the meeting
by reading the tOOth Psabn. The
Rev, Mr. Cheesebrew ·Jed the
group in prayer.
Mrs. Kathleen Ward read
" What Is Your Correct
Weight? " and Mrs. Esta Roush,
"Women Serve at the Point of
Need." Mrs. Ebersbach also
presented two Biblical quizzes.
The officers' reports were
given and it was decided to
stage a yard sale sometime in
October. Members were ad·
vised of the workshop at Camp
Francis Asbury on Sept. 21 and
urged to attend. Get well cards
were sent to Mrs. Ethel Swan
and Mrs. Ethel Johnson .
Others attending the meeting
were Mrs. Margery Roush,
Mrs. Elva Dailey, Mrs. Shirley
Johnson and Mrs . Carolyn
Price.
The U.S. Post Olfice De·
partment launched the coun·
try's first air m a i I servic~
from College Park , Md .. on
Aug. 12, 1918.

~

WINNERS ALL - Junior division ribbon winners displaying their arrangements left to
right were Teresa Brown, Debbie W11lillffiSOII, Denise Garnes, Kelly Brown, Karla Brown, and
Beth Mitchell.
·

CALL

Robert Canaday, Rutland
Garden Club, Mrs. Stewart,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Bend o•
The River Garden Club, and
Mrs. Harvey F;rlewine, Rutland
Garden Club.
In the junior division, the
accredited judge gave ribbons
in the Friday's Slumber Party,
for juniors over 10, to Teresa
Brown, first ; Judy Snowden,
second ; Debbie Williamson,
third ; and Denise Garnes ,
fourth .
In the class for exhibitors
under
10,
"Monday's
Playtime," the ribbons went to
Jay Carpenter, first; Kelly
Brown, second; Beth Mitchell,
third, and Carla Smith, fourth.
Horticulture Division
Ribbon winners in the horticulture division listed first
through fourth respectively.
were :
Zinnias, Mrs. Roy Snowden,
Mrs , Birchfield, Mrs. Binda
Diehl, Mrs. WilHord.
Marigolds,
Mrs .
Roy
Snowden, Mrs. Giles Smith,
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Birch·
field .

Pomeroy....

Personal Notes

TourPlannedOct.14
Plans for a tour of German
Village in Columbus and lun·
cheon on Oct. 14 were an·
nounced by Mrs . Eleanor
Thomas, social chairman,
Thursday night when the Xi
Gamma My Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority met with
Mrs. Pearl Welker presiding at
the home of Mrs . Clarice

BEAT

Gladloti, Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. use in dri ed arranging, along
William Willford.
with a wall hanging made of
PHONE f?l·llll
Dahlias, Mrs. Roy Snowden, dried materials on gree n
307 Spring Ave., !o'omeroy
Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Diehl, and burlap .
Mrs. Russell Little.
A display of garden therapy
Mums, Mrs. Willford, Mrs. projects with the s pecial
Roy Snowden, Roy Snowden, education students at th e
and Mrs. Carpenter.
Rutl and School was on exhibit N,t,IIOMWI O( Llf[ IHSUU,HC(
Unclassified, Mrs. Birchfield along with dried nower pic·
for toile hallande, f1rst ; Mrs. tures, te rr ariums, ceramic
Wolfe , aster , second ; Roy
Snowden , celosia;
Mrs .
Willford, red plume celosia .
· In the Junior Division, ribbons went to:
Zinnia, Debbie Williamson,
Mike Willford, ·Jay Carpenter,
Kimberly Birchfield.
Marigold, Van Willford, Beth
BEAUTIFUL FLOORS,
Ann Wolfe , Jay Carpenter,
Kimberly Birchfield.
Unclassified, Judy
L.
Snowden, Rosemary Snowden,
and Raymond WilHord.
Educational Division
donation was made to the
Ribbon winners for blooming
Sq.
Salvation Army and a round·
houseplants were Miss Ruby
Yd.
robin card was prepared for
Diehl , African violet ; Rov
Charles Radford who is
Snowden, geranium; Mrs. C.O.
hospitalized.
Chapman, begonia, and Mrs.
Appointed to serve at the Oct.
Roy Snowden, begonia.
7 meeting were Mrs. Kennth
in non-blooming houseplants,
McCullough, Mrs . Roger
winners were Mrs. Carpenter
for philodendron, first; Mrs.
Kovalchik, Mrs. Charles
Virgil Atkins, tiger plant, Miss
Gloeckner and Mrs. Dorothy
Gloeckner .
Ruby Oiebl, smarock, and Roy
The Rev. Fr. Bernard
Snowden, sanseverice.
Krajcovic opened the meeting
Numerous books on garwith prayer following Mass and
dening were displayed by the
club members and Mrs. Carrosary. Refreshments w.:re
served by Mrs. Isabelle Recent visitors of Mrs. Vona penter showed her collection of
Wehrung , Mrs . Elizabeth McKnight and Mr. and Mrs. C. nature's resources suitable for
Horak, Mrs. Catherine Welsh W. Stansbury of Rutland were
and Mrs. Gertrude Raub.
Mr . and Mrs . Race Hill,
Langsville ; Mrs . Delphia
McCain of Ashville; Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Liesl of Amanda
and their daughter . Linda
chairman, who also proposed McFarland of Circleville; Mr.
and Mrs. Austin Woodgerd of
the budget.
Plans for invitations to new Mansfield and son Gerald, of
members were discussed by Tucson, Arizona ; Joseph
Mrs. Margaret Follrod, vice Martin of Painesville ; Carl
president. The Sept. 23 meeting Reeves of Fairport Harbor,
will be held at the home of Mrs. Ohio; Mrs. Myrtle St. Clair of
Nellie Brown, with Mrs. Welker Miami , Fla .; Mrs . Don
Crawford of Millwood, Ky. ; Mr.
as co.Jlostess.
and Mrs. W. A. Mudd of
Louisville, Ky.; and Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Knight of
Massillon. Following their visit
here, Mr. and Mrs. Stansbury
spent a weekend with the
Knights on a camping trip at
Cave Lake in Western Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Mayes Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Bel% have
of Marysville an d Mrs. Caro1 returned to their home at St.
Theiss and children of Belpre . Joseph, Mich. after visiting two
were visiting her psrents, Mr. weeks with Mrs. Bel%' mother,
and Mrs. Carl Lee.
Mrs. B. A. Dodson of Chester.
-Mr. and Mrs. Donald TrusseD Mr. and Mrs. ·Jack Conroy of
and Dawn of Mt. Vernon, Mr. Columbus were here for a
and Mrs. Robert TrusseD and week's vacation with their
Sandra and Mr. and Mrs. John
Ridenour of Chester and Mr. parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L.
Bahr of Chester and Mrs. B. A.
and Mrs. Ralph Trussell and Dodson.
children, local, spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
TrusseD.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Dill and
family returned home after
spending a three weeks
FOR YOUR OWN
TRAFFIC GOING
vacation in Canada and other
places of inU:rest.
BY? FOR THE
Mr, and Mrs. George Roberts
are spending a week can:ping
BEST RESULTS
near Zanesville.
Enjoy safety ... plus
The ladles auxiliary of the
extra earning power.
Bashan fire deparlrnent met on
USE OUR WANT
Wednesday evening at the fire
house. ·
ADS-IT WILL BE
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kirkhart
and children have moved to the
YOUR BEST MOVE
PASSBOOK RATE
Victor Bahr property near
Chester.
Mr . and Mrs . Warden Ours
attended the Ours reuni011 held
at the Rock Springs fairground ·
Put your business profits into high gear by using the vehicle
on Sunday.
Fire Chief Ralph TrusseD of
that is powerful enough to do the jab alone. Phone or co~e
the Bashan Volunteer Fire
Deparlment, with the fire truck, Meigs County Branch of The
by our Want Ad deportment for complete information. Stop
Athens County Savings &amp;
took part in the Labor Day Loan Co,
psrade at Chester. Miss Peggy
296 Second St.
today.
Sue Trussell and Belinda
Pomeroy, Ohio
Deeter, with the baton twirlers,
Mem ber Federal Home Loan
took psrt in the parade at Bank.
Chester and Pomeroy.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
992~2156
accounts
insured Up to
The Stanley Cup is award·
ed in the sport of ice hoc:key. S20,000 .M .

Bazaar, Dinner Set
The annual holiday bazaar of
the Catholic Women's Club will
be on Nov. 11 in the Sacred
Heart Church auditoriwn club
members decided Thursday
night at the church with Mrs. T.
A. Hennesy presiding .
A dinner will he served in
conj unction with the bazaar
with the charge to be $1.75 for
adults and $1 for children 12 and
under.
A rummage sale was planned
Oct. 4 and 5, and arrangements
were made to serve refresh·
ments at Ute games parties on
Tuesday evening. Mrs. Don
Mullen was elected vice
president of the group . A

I

arrangements: Mrs. Rober t
Snowden, Mrs. Bolin , Mrs.
Carpenter, and Mrs. Bill
Williamson.
''Tuesday ' s Ironing. ''
showing motion, Mrs . Tom
Stewart, Mrs. Robert Snowden,
Mrs. Harold Wolfe, and lying
for fourth place, Mrs. William
Brown and Mrs. Parker.
''Wednesday's Gardening,"
my favorite arrangement: Mrs.
Stewart, Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs.
Willford, Mrs. Fetty.
"Thursday's Cooking," using
a cooking utensil as continer:
Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Bruce
Davis, Mrs. Harold Wolfe, and
Mrs. Stewart.
"Friday's Payday," all
foliage arrangement: Mrs.
Stewart, Mrs . Birchfield, Mrs.
Williamson, and Mrs. Wi!Hord.
" Saturday 's Night Out,
modern with written in terpretalion: Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
Birchfield, Mrs. Stewart, and
Mrs. Edwards.
"Week's End," dried or fresh
material with weathered wood:
Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. Carpenter,
Mrs. Fetty, and Mrs . Fred
Williamson.
~~sunday's
Peace ," interpretive: Mrs. Stewart, Mrs.
Robert Snowden, Mrs. Roy
Snowden of the Rutland Garden
Club and Mrs. Anna Elizabeth
Turner, Rutland Garden Club.
"Wednesday's Wishing," a
favorite arrangement : Mrs .

containers, specimen wll~·
nowers. and ceramic figurines
made by members ol the Merry
Gardeners.
Mrs. Willford and Mrs. Ed·
wards were chairmen for the
show.

P.J. PAULEY

I) ~!~oR:~~~~
CDW!P~~·J

CARPET SPECIAL
501 NYLON

CARPET·

•3.99

INGELS FURNITURE

WE DELIVER THE GOODS!

Bashan

News Notes

SAVE

SPECIAL
PURPOSE

4%%

Meigs Co. Branch

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE

~--~----~~-----~--- \

.I

�rr

I - 'tilt DlllJ leallpel, Middlepor~Ptmi'I'Oy, O.,Sept. 13,19'11

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action ! Senti~~:el Classifieds Get Results!
Apple Grove

LEGAL NOTICE

251815

ORDINANCE NO , 419
PROVIDI.NG FOR DAMAGES
SUSTAINED BY RESIDENCE

News, Events

OF THE COMMUNITY BY
THE INSTALLATING OF THE
SANITARY SoWER SYSTEM .
Be It ordained by the counc il

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
of the Ville~ge of Pomeroy , State
of Oh io, all members fhereto
Mrs. Willi•m Mitchell of concurring
:
Columbus spent Wednesday
Sec . 1. That whereas it was
with her sister, Mrs. Gerald necessary tor the Village of

Hayman.

Pomeroy to relocate sa nitar y

sewer lines of certain re~sidents
of the Village of Pomeroy , Main

OF QUALITY

. Pomeroy
,Motor («

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3Jf5
Less than 11.000 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 hydromatic, power steering &amp;

brakes. 350 cu. in. v.s engine. Really Sharp.
1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR
52895
Less than IO,oog miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish , 350 v.s engine, power

ONE

A.K.C.

Phone 992-5473.

·, .

.

9-9-61c

f'OMEROY

.~IOHN.SON MASONRY

EXPERIENCED .

HOME &amp; .AUTO

Complete

992-2094

Re.modl!_ling

Radiator SeiVice

COAL, limestone. Excelsior• ·
~alt Works. E. Main Sf.,
t'omeroy. Phone 992-3891.
.t.9.tfc .

APPLES ~ Fitzpatrick Qr .
chards, Stale Route 689 ,
phone Wilkesville, 669·3785.
9·3-lfc

6.06

E. Main

Pomeroy

AUNT LOWEEZY'.!

1HESE ~X

~ITWA5"

1::06· EAT-!XlG IIJJRlD,.,

'{E 'LL SPOIL 'lORE
SUPPER!!

,~··

·*
rl.o!f

' .
I •

Kitchens, Ballts
Room Additions
And PaHos
BatkhoeAnd
Endloader Work

OFFICE SUPPLIES
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cornwell of
GREEN BEANS, pick your
Street, tor installation of the
Gallipolis visited Sunday with sanitary sewer system , and
And
own, Sl.lO a bushel, Andrew
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. covers.
Sec.
2.
Whereas.
the
Village
ot
Cross,
Racine,
Ohio.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
.,..
1910 DODGE POLARA
12495
Pomeroy des ires to pay
FURNITURE
4 Dr .• V-8 engine, automatic trans .• P.S ..-factory air, good
Edward MIUer.
Sepfic Tanks
damages to the property owners
-----~--9--=-3· 1Bic
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior.
whose
sewer
and-or
water
lines
Stop In and See
And Leach Beds.
Mrs. Everette Parsons and
From fhe Largest Truck or
were · altered and changed.
OurJ
HALF ARABIAN mare colt, 6Floor
Display.
Bulldozer
Radiator to the
daughters, Iris, Shlrfey, Ruth,
Sec. J. Now therefore council
months, halter broke, very
Smallest
Heater
Core.
of
the
·village
of
Pomeroy
Cathy, Kay of Negley, Ohio,
gentle. Not registered, $175.
desi res to appropriate the sum
Coolville 667-6214.
Mrs. Ruth Parsons of Tanners of $13,000.00 to property owners
9-8·12tp
for
the
damages
sustained
by
FOUR NI!W HOMES
Run spent Tuesday afternoon them in the changing and
Pomeroy_
Ph. 992-2143
O~EM
EVES.
8:00
P.M.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
with Mr. and MrS. Herbert altering of the sanitary sewer ,
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
ONE HOME IN RACINE
1 N:IMEROY, OHIO
Roush and were dinner guests lines in the Village of Pomeroy .
Sec . 4 . Furthermore no
Parkvlew Kennels. P~one 992·
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
of Mrs. Edna Parsons and prOperty owner shall receive
5443.
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
Preston Parsons Tuesday more than 65 pet. as damages
8-15-lfc
NO MONEY DOWN
WANT
AD
for the cost of chang ing the
Notice
evening at-Antiquity.
INFORMATION
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
sewer and -or water lines. Thai
WORK
2';, ACRE LOT with 110'
DEADLINES
A
3
bedroom
$16,900.00
home
can
be
purchased
with
a
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner the amount of said damages to
Eblin Reunloo will be
frontage on State Route 124
be awarded to property owners
SPOUTING,
Day Before Publication ANNUAL
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
held
on
Sunday,
September
were camping over Labor Day shall be determined by the 5 P.M.
near High School just oulside
Monday
Deadline
9 a.m.
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'14 Pet. annual
19th, at the west side slate
Racine corporation. All
weekend at Shady Rest Park, Mayor of said Village and the
ROOF PAINTING
Cao~llatlon &amp; C:Orr~lons
park on Rt. 33. All descen- ulililies available. See Dale
Clerk and ' Treasurer are
rate.
~
Will
bea~:cepted
until9a.m.
for
Rutland.
authorized to disperse said
dants of Allen and Mary Ann
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
McGraw or phone ·949-2832.
Day of Publication
monies to the said ~ proper1y
Eblin,
friends
and
relatives
Mrs. Erma Wilson attended a owners
All
Weather Roofing &amp;
9-10-3tc
.
REGULATIONS
.
12:30.
birthday party Friday evening
Construction Co. and An·,
Sec. 5. This ordinance shall
The Publisher reserves the are welcome. Dinner at9·1l-6tc
NEW
DELUXE
sewing
lltony Plumbing &amp; HeaHng.
atthehomeofMr.andMrs. Roy take effect and be in force from right to edit or reject any ads
machine,
Zig-Zag,
heavy
and after the earliest period deemed
Complete
Plumbing,
objectional.
The
Van Meter at Morning Star in allowed by law.
duty, built-in motor and light,
publisher
will
not
be
respbnsible
Healing
and
Ajr Con·
Passed August JO , 1971 .
does everything. ()]ly $64.88.
honor of Roy's father, Chester
difioning,
Charles W . Legar for more than one incorrec'
Twin City s,wing ,Machine.
MIDDLEPORT
inserti on .
Van Meter.
Attest:
BILL NELSON
240 Lincoln 51., Middleport
HILTON WOLFE
Phone 992-7095.
RATES
992-3657
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson Jane Walton . Clerk
949-3211
9·10·6tc
For Want Ad Service
and baby of Charleston spent (9) 13 , 20, 21
Phone 992-2550
5 cents per Word one insertion
PORTABLE Singer sewing
Labor Day weekend with Mrs.
Minimum Charge 75c
Insured - Experienced
machine, will sell for repair
12 ~ents per word three, BACK IN BUSINESS
Erma Wilson,
ORDINANCE NO. 420
bill,
$19.22.
Twin
City
Sewing
Have
Your
Seasonal
Work Guaranteed
Declar ing that it is necessary consec ·Jtive insertions.
Mr. and Mrs . Everette
Machine. Phone 992-7085.
18
cents
per
word
six
con24
Hr.
Service,
Same
Prices
for the payment Of current
See u:; tor Free
9·10-6tc
Connolly were dinner guests expenses of the Village of secutive insertions.
As Always.
Air
Con~itioning ·
Estimate on Furnace
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pomeroy, Oh io, and declaring
the amoun t of taxes 1hat may be
ads paid within 10 days.
HENS~ Aiba Yost, Miners·
lnstalation.
Connolly and family at levied at the maximum rate ads and
Inspection and
CARD OF THANKS
ville.
Phone
949-4980.
Residential.
authorized by law without a
Syracuse.
&amp; OBITUARY
9-12·31p
vote of erectors to be inCommercial
$1.50 for 5o word minimum .
Miss Joan Roush visited her sufficient and declaring .the
Re-Charge
Each
additional Word 2c.
and
1954 DODGE truck, 2 ton $400,
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Don Riffle necessity of a levy in excess of
DRIVERS
:
Eli
&amp;
James
BLIND ADS
1962 Chrysler 300 ~ $200. Will
such rate .
Industria I Wiring
Special
Plus
and family and assisted in the
Addilional 25c Charge per
BE IT RESOLVED by the
trade for pickup. phone 949·
· At
•
Parts
24 Hour Service
3915.
care of Mrs. Riffle and new son, Council of the Village of Ad .Jertisement.
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs . SepPomeroy, State of Oh io, all
OFFICE HOURS
tember Sales
Special:
9-12-61c
Dooald Carroll. Mr. and Mrs. members thereto concurring:
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily.
Kreamy
Lip
Kate
$2
now
949-4551
Sec. 1: That it is necessary to
Lester Roush and family also
a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
OLDSMOBILE
Vista
Sl.lO, Frostlucent lip Kate '66
Rl.
2
have additional monies for the 8:30
Racine, 0 .
PHONE 992-2143
Cruiser Wagon ~ $650, '64
called on tbe Riffles Wednesday payment of current expenses of Saturday.
12.50 now $2, 23 delicious
-GUARANTEEDBuick Wlldcat ~ $450, 3 men's
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
to see tbeir new grandson the Village of Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 992,2094
rings - I diamond, 1 black
Se-c . 2: That the amount of
see at 16Jlh "'
'h Ave. ,
enroute to 1Ny to visit Mr. and taxes that may be raised by the Notice
lindie sapphire, 1 blue sap. Real Estate For Sal"
Middleporl, Or.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
levy of taxes at the maximum
Mrs. Walter McDade.
phire. near Coopers' store,
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782.
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
8-29-tfc
author iz ed by Section
Rt.
124,
Portland.
Phone
843Gallipolis.
John
Russell,
Roy Pearson, Roger Theiss rate
5705.02 of t he Revised Code on
2608.
Ov;ner &amp; Operator.
Open8Til 5
and Tiny Webb spent Labor the taxable property in said
Instruction
9-12·31c
5-)3-tf&lt;
Monday
thru Saturday
Village will be insufficient to
Day weekend at McConnelsville provide an adequate amount for
606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy, 0.
SEMI ORIVER TRAINING. We
QUEEN
Canst.
Roofing.
at Ohio Power Park and en- the necessary requirements of
SUCCESS
are currently offering tractor HALF RUNNER ~ans, 12
B id Village, and that it is
remodeling,
aluminum
trailer training through the
joyed fishing.
bushel , watermelons, cannecessary for the purpose of
siding
.
Phone
992-7324.
facilities of the folfowing
taloupes,
sweet
corn,
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
atURCH OF atRIST
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Warn,er, provid ing additional funds for
8-25.tfc service, all makes, 992-2284,
lruck lines . Truck Line
the payment of cu rren t ex potatoes. Clarence Proffitt,
----"--Mike and Usa, were dinner penses of the Village of ,
Distribution Systems, Inc .•
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Portland. Phone 843-2254.
Sept. ll-19
SEWING machine service in
Express Parcel Deliveries,
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Pomeroy , Oh io. as provided in
Authorized Singer Sales and
9·1·ffc
Broker ·
Section 5705.19 of the Revised
7:30p.m .
your home. Clean, oil and
Inc., Skyline Deliveries, ln_c .
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Warner.
Code , that taxes be levied on the
110 Mechanic Street
adjust,
only
14.
Call
992-7085.
For
application
and
in3·29-tfc
Clifford
Shilver,
Pomeroy, Ohio
The WSQI of tbe Letart Falls taxable property with in the
te rview, call 304-344-8843, or NYLON Oval braided rug,
9·10-6tc
Village for a period of five years
approximalely 12' x 15"- $50.
Evangelist
Methodist Church met at the at a rate in excess of such
write School Safety Division,
READY -MiX
CONCRETE
Phone 949-2739.
delivered right to your
Uniled Systems, Inc., c-o
9-10-3tc NEW LISTING- Kanauga - 3 NEIGLER Construction . For
heme of Mrs. Jim Roush Friday maximum rate authorized in
Section 5705 .02 of the Revised
prQject. Fast and easy. Free
bedrooms, bath, gas forced
Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland - - - - - -- - building or remodeling your
evening. Attending were Lois Code.
estimates.
Phone 992-3284 .
air
furnace.
Modern
kitchen,
Drive, Charleston, West WHIRLPOOL washer
and
home . Call 'Guy Neigler,
Sec . 3: That it is necessary to L - - - - - - - - Bell, Margie Roush, Nora Cross
Goeglein
Ready
-Mix Co .,
Full
basement.
Racine, Ohio.
Virginia, 25306.
dryer, like new. Phone 992le vy the taxes for the years 1971.
Ohio.
Middleport,
and 1)Ql!Z Hill.
: ~
. 1972, 197 3t'l.97~ .al\d 1975 at the TRYING to locate, first name
9·13·21c 2555 or 992-7296.
7-31 -tfc ·
unknown, last name, Morris,
NEW LISTING.- Dexter ~ 6
6.30-,jfc.&lt; "
Mrs. Dallas Hill, Jlni. Dolly rate ofl"'l on..e.llalf" mill on each ~ 2nd
9-10-6fc
Lt., H Co., 109th Infantry,
rooms, bath, gas furnace.
dollar o"f the tax valuation of the
TRENCHER and complete
Wolfe, Mrs. Marsball Roush taxable property with in the 28th Keystone Div. Contact Female Help Wanted
Business bulldlifg, 30x44.
C. BRADFb~'o: Auctioneer '"
water line Installation. Phone
village
of
Pomeroy
in
excess
of
Warren Lynd, 1717 7th St.,
and Joey, Miss Jan Hill acComplete Service
BEAT
the
COLD
WINTER
985-3373
week
days
after
5
the rate author ized by the said
NEEDED NOW ~ Women with
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662.
POMEROY - Nice 3 bedrooms,
Phone 949-3821
companied Billy Dye to his Section 5705 .02 of the Revised
and
IT'S
COST
WITH
p.m
.
or
weekends.
ambition to earn money . Good
1'12 baths, large living and
9-12-3tc
Racine, Ohio
HEATING
OIL
FROM
9·9·121c
heme in Columbus Saturday Code. That there would be
income . Part time . Write
dining. Double garage.
Crill
Bradford
tevied lhe sum of 5 cents on each
Personal Shopper Dept .. Box LANDMARK.
and visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert S100.00 of the taxable property I WILl not be responsible for
5·1 -tfc
10, Watkins Products, Inc.,
We have the finesl Budget 2 ACRES -On Rt. 33 North.
ROSEBERRY furnace In within the said Village of
debts contracted by (Jnyone
Casper.
Winona, Minnesota 55987.
Pay Plan, Delivery Services,
stallation . Free estimates on THE SHOP, Custom meat
.
other lhan myself. Signed :
Artie Hill, student at Rio Pomeroy
9-13-llc
Sec . -4 : That the Clerk be and
Marion R. Hawk.
CHESHIRE - Fast lunch lot .
new furnllces, .oil or gas. .cutting, Pleasant Rld!le Road,
Automatic Degree Day
9-12-Jtp
Grande College, spent Labor she is hereby directed to certify
Service work . Call Cecil
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Pomeroy. Dick Vaugnan, 992a
copy of th is Ordinance to the - - - - - - -POMEROY - Renovated 3
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio .
Day weekend with his parents, Deputy State Supervisors and
Equipment.
3374
and Dale Lillie, 992-6346.
Help
Wanted
Phone 614·843-2274. ,
bedrooms, bath, furnace. nice
Inspectors
of
elect
ions
of
Meigs
SAVE
UP
to
one
half.
Bring
We
also
have
a
complete
line
9-12-301c
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas HID. Mr.
kitchen.
·
" ·8·30tp
County, Ohio, in order that said
your sick TV to Chuck's TV WOMAN lo live in , light
of
Siegler
Fuel
Oil
Heaters
and Mrs. Raymond Hensler of Supervisors and Inspectors of Shop, 151 Butternut Ave .
housework , cooking with a
O' DELL WHEEL allgnme tt
and Furl'\i ces.
Pomeroy.
Racine spent Sunday afternoon erections may make the
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
day
off
a
week
~ $35 per
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
' POMEROY
necessary arrangements for the
Septic tanks Installed . George
with tbe Hills.
Complete
front end ser.vice,
4-23-ltc week . Phone 992-3507.
submission of such question to
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
~Bill) Pullins, Phone 992·2478.
9-I0-31c
up
and
brake service.
tune
the
electors
of
said
Village,
as
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor are
Phone 992-2181
4-25-tfc
provided by law. (See 5705.171.
Wheels
balanced elecvisiting relatives in Columbus.
SU,T( OF OHIO, O!PAJITMUT or 1~ ­
Sec . 5 : That th is Ordinance is
tronically. · All
work
SUIII.UCE. CUTtFICATt l!f COMPLIA,.CE. EARN AT home addressing 1968 RIVERSIDE Motorcycle,
Real
Estate
Sale
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell and hereby declared to be an Tilt
envelopes.- Ru sh stamped
guaranteed .
Reasonable
undf~!ilu~. &amp;v.rilltmnt fll lrm~ rlll"!
emergency Ord i nance
650 cc, good condition- $290.
ra tes. Phone 992-3213.
~ 6tl!' a( Ohio. llfttbf Ml ib
t.bl t
sell-addressed envelope. The
children of Letart, W. Va. necessary tor the safety and eflilDU
Call after 5 p.m . 773-5474.
liF[ tNSUIIANCE. COMPANY, nf
Ambrose
Co.,
4325
Lakeborn,
7-27-tf c
_...:.
Route, spent Sunday with Mr. welfare of the said Village of thiup, rilal t flf Jllblol&lt;l, hu compH~ •11h
9-13-31c
Davisburg, Mich .. 48019.
Pomeroy .
tbt 11-1 tf thb !Irate II!Plktbl• ttl ,it an!t i~
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and . Sec. 6 : That the Clerk be and a•JtiH!ri!td 1UrJni th! rurttnt tl'lr t ~ lfln&amp;ltt
9·8-JOfp STEREO-Ra dio console, 4
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
9-12-61c
m thb !iUte. itt IPI!f1II'J itle OOslnrs1 !!r JnKeith. Dan Hayman and she is hereby directed to cause llllnn!:t.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
llJ
IIDIMitl
ennditlcn
is lho'lon ~ It!
speed intermixed changer,
notice of such election to be
662·3035.
.
daughters, April and Mrs. published , as requ ired by law. .mmaJ st~ttm':'llt t fl M•t llml 11 i nllol"l"s 00 Employment Wanted
but
secluded
-CONVENIENT
dual
volume
co
ntrol,
4
Occ. 31. I!JiO: Admlltr1 Am tl s :, :; . li t~ .­
2·12-lfc
building lots on T79 at Rock
Charles Legar UUI : Lbt!Uitit:~ I S0,3 &lt;i~.:SS ~ . I ~: l\"••t .\s·
speaker sound system,
Cindy Smith and baby of
608 East Main
Mayor HIJ $~.~S'!.O:!J . :J2; Capital ll.OOlJ .OU 'l , +ll~; 19-YEAR -OLD girl wants
Springs
.
Within
walking
beauliful
hand
rubber
Walnut
Syracuse called Monday on Mr. Passed : Sept. 8, 1971
S. UT'IUs $~ ,2 SM2:l .3::: lncomt f:: ::,ui~.­
distance of Meigs High ·
POMEROY
ROOF PAINT and minor
babysitting lob Monday mru
finish . Balance $66.34. Use our
t.B. I .!iO; t~lturc~ lt i!,liiT,tf"II ..J "; . I ~
Attest : Jane Walton
and Mrs. Hayman.
FARM
63.37
ACRES
repair. For estimate, call992.
Friday.
Wll
live
in.
Phone
School,
a
5
minute
drive
from
budget
terms.
Call
992-7085.
Wl'l:iESS wm.Rr.:ur, r ,.~ ,t: hcmmto l•lb Clerk
Rutland Township, nice 5
2239.
'
992-5709.
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
9-13-6tc
Mrs. Mlllle Norris of Laurel,
'rrtoos ., narr.t and c~~r'l "'.:" i{a\ '" "'
room
home,
out
cellar,
barn,
9-Hip
allhtrt at f:o lu mbu~. Ubi~. th is ''·'f ~~~ ~ 1111~
9-12-Jfc
Witte weekends or after 5.
------Md., and Mrs. Marshall Adams 191 1], 20, 27, 31
July I. I!!Tl . K~uncth t:. IJrShrltrr. Muvtdti· - - - - - - - - shop,
fruit
trees
,
berries,
A
p.m.
weekdays.
Phone
992MAPLE Stereo-radio com ttr&amp;knl ol Jn:.1nnce ·Dl tlttlo. t ~t;ALI
visited Mr. and Mrs .. Floyd
STEAL AT JUST $5,500.00.
.
bination, AM -FM radio, •4 6887.
Wanted
LESS
THAN
1100.00
AN
'
'lARRlSON'S
'f'V
AND
AN
Norris.
speaker sound system, 4
7·11 -tfc
where he is stationed with the
ACRE
.
TENNA
SERVICE
.
Phono
WOMAN needs someone to slay
speed automatic changer,
Ralph Ours of New Brighton, Air Force.
992·2522.
5 days a week, some nights.
separate controls . Balance 3 BEDROOM home. wllh bath,
•· 10-t~
Pa., called on Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY
~
1
story
frame,
Mr. and Mrs. Clint Sarsons of
1h acre lot, on new public
Phone 992-5586.
$78.29. Use our lime paymenl
balh·,
3
bedrooms,
basement,
Herbert Roush Sunday.
Beaver Falls, Pa., visited the
plan. Call 992-7085.
water syslem,localed )usf off
9-12-6tc
porches, gas forced air heat. AWNINGS, s torm doors and .
Rl. 7 on County Rd. 25 at
9-13-6tc
VirgO Roush and son, Mar- latter's sister, Mrs. Elizabeth
windows, carports ,
$5,000.00.
Chester, Ohio. If Interested
marquees. aluminum siding
shall, and Greg Donohew en- Roush, recently.
Attendance' at the Nazarene Wanted To Buy
call 985-4262.
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
~ 2 story trame, 6
joyed fishing and camping at
Sunday School Sept 5 was 73. OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks, FARM and home late/ house
9-5-12tc POMEROY
sales
representative. For free ·
rooms. 3 bedrooms, utility
point sale. King Builders
Stockport over the weekend.
and-or complete households.
estimates, phone Charles ·
Offering
was
$114.73.
room,
bath,
ALMOST
NEW
Supply, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Farrand
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V
Mr. and Mrs. George
GAS FORCED AIR HEAT,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alpha
Smith
of
9-2·24fc
Ohio.
Call
992-6271
.
two children of Cuyahoga Falls,
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
Johnson
and Son, Jnc.
··
some hardwood floors. JUST
Donohew and family of
2196.
8-25-tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Butram and Reedsville visited his sister,
5-17-tfc
SJ,SOO.OO WORTH MUCH
Colwnbus spent Labor Day
- - - - - - CANNING lomatoes, already
7-18-tfc
MORE.
two children of Cincinnati spent Mrs. Richard Barton, Maralyn LOCAL . MAN wishes to buy
picked, S1.25 bu ., bring
AUTOMOBILE Insurance' been .
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ray
and
Caralyn
Saturday
evening.
the Labor Day weekend with
acreage close to Pomeroy.
containers. Geraldine NEW. 3-bedroom home · in
cancelled?
Lost
your
RUTt:AND- l'h story frame, 3
Donohew. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
Phone 992-3374.
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
operator's license? Call 992.
their grandparents, Mr. and
Middleport
..
Built-in
kitchen,
bedrooms,
bath,
storm
doors
Ours of New Brighton, Pa., also
7- ~S - tfr
2966.
9-12·12tc
or Reedsville spent a day
ceramic file bath, all -electric
and windows, nice porch ;
Mrs. Ernest Grimm.
visited the Donohews.
heat,
good
neighborhood.
Can
6-15-tfc
large lot, GOOD FOR A
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Dines recently with Mrs. George GINSENG. Clean bone dry. S38
arr.mge. FHA financing .
Mrs. Clarence (Clara) Adams
FAMILY . $6.900.00 TAKES
Genheimer.
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
THIS PLACE.
lb. Snake Root, $5 lb. Bill
is a medical patient at Holzer of Parkersburg spent Labor
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hines and
2186.
Bailey , Reedsville, Ohio,
Day
weekend
with
the
latter's
Medical Center.
7-25-tfc
Second St. Phone 378-6208.
PLACE THE SALE OF
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Butch ramily of Belpre spent Sunday
)'OU
Mr. and Mrs. Early Roush
YOUR PROPERTY IN
8-31-IOtc
evening
with
their
grandWilson.
Real
Estate
Opportunity
CAPABLE
HANDS
visited Monte Quillen of Belpre
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charley
CAN YOU SELL???
HENRY E. CLELAND
at Royal Oak Park Monday.
Woode.
YOUR own full -time business,
REALTOR
For Rent
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert MIUer
Mrs. Ferne Hayman is a
Real
Estale,
right
in
this
Office
992-2259
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Scar12'
14'
·
24'
WIDE
area.
National
company,
Residence
992-2568
FURNISHED
2
bedroom
attended the Washington medical patient at Gallipolis tiger entertained company from
apartment,
Middleport.
es
lablished
In
1900,
largest
in
9·8·61c
County Fair Sunday.
Clinic.
West Virginia Sunday.
Phone 992-3874.
ils ' field , (Unlicensed? - - - - - - - - - Mr. and Mrs. David Hadley
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Grueser of
wrile us.l All advertising, all
Bob Wood and family at9-J0.3tc
signs, forms. supplies fur · 3 Bt:uROOM brick home .
are announcing the birth of a Pomeroy spent Labor Day tended the state fair at - - - - - - - - - ,
Choice location In Middleport.
nished. Skilled Training and
son at Jewish Hospital at weekend at their cabin.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Seen by appointment only.
Columbus Sunday.
1220 Washington Blvd ..
Instruction given for rapid
Court. Rt . 12~. Syracuse,
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m.
Cincinnati. He weighed 7 lb, 6
Mr. and Mrs. John Rowe and
Belpre, Ohio
development ~ from Start to
Mr. and Mrs. Richard and
Ohio.
992-2951.
5-7-tfc
Succe$$. Na tionwide ad·
oz. , and has been named family have moved from the ramily visited her brother in
4·2:tfc
vertising brings Buyers from
Christopher David. Grand- Inez Hill residence to the Sayre Reynoldsburg , Mr. and Mrs.
Everywhere . Can
you
Auto
Sales
parents are Mr. and Mrs. re.sidence (former parsonage ) Herbert and Glen On Monday FURNISHED and unfurnished
qualify? You must have
GREMLIN, automatic,
initiative, excellent character
Demeric Hadley of New Rich- at Letart Falls.
. Close
to school. 1970
th ey a II wen t to ·Mans1'feld t o aparlmenls
Phone 992 .5434
.
good conditioo, one owner,
!bondable), sales ability, be
mond, Mr. a!Id Mrs. Herbert
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Cady tour Kingwood Center. Tuesday
will sell or take over
financially respons1ble .
10 _18.tfc
Mlller, , local.
Great- and children of Columbus they toured Ohio Historical --'-----~---payments. Phone 992-3663 or
Commission - volume opat· 448 S. Second Sf ..
grandparents
are
Mrs . brought Mrs. Millie Norris of Center. Their son , Kevin, 3 ROOM apartment and balh. see
portunity
for man, woman,
Middleport.
couple or leam Thai Can Sell.
Elizabeth Roush, local, and Laurel, Md., to the home of Mr. remained f6r a longer visit.
Built-in electric wall oven and
9.J2.3fc
Information
wllhout
Herbert Miller, Sr., of Rutland. and Mrs. Marshall Adams
Miss Doris Smith of Glen
lable top range, double bowl - - - - - - - - obligalion .
sink. overlooking the Ohio ,67 MERCURY Colony Park
Christopher was greeted by a Saturday and spent the night
·I. ·M. Diggs, Gen. Sales Mgr.
DownMd.,
and
Glen
Smith
of
rrver.
real clean and n1ce. Wagon, v.s, power sleering,
Burnie,
S I IWUT REALTY, Inc.
sister, Devannia.
with their daughter, Mr. and Reyno ldsburg spent several
4
·Satan~e'On
Phone GallipoliS 46-9539 power brakes. aulomatic,
311-F Springfield Ave.
Mrs . Mike O'Brien and days last week with Mr. and
afler 5 p.m.
many extras, 10 passenger.
Summit, N. J. 07901
Convenient
9· 5·tfc
Sgt. Skip Miller spent children. Mrs. Norris remained Mrs. Barton, Kevin , Carolyn - - - -- - - - -Phone 367-7554.
9·10·31c
Terms.
Tuesday through Saturday with for a week's visit with the
9' 12' 2tc .:S1X
- 1-l 00
:--M
- -ho_u_se.- b-a-1h-, lu II
and Maralyn . They also visited For Sale
his · parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adams ' and other relatives. Mr. their grandmother, Mrs. Jane
--------~asement, 133 Burternul Ave .,,
Herbert Miller enroute from and Mrs. Adams accompanied Smith , Silver Ridge.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
ius I walking dis lance' from
· CLEAN RUGS like hew, so easy
downtown
Pomeroy . Contact·
lo
do
with
Blue
Lustre.
Rent
Chanute Field, Ill., where he h~r home to Maryland and
"d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswot In
Guy Thoma and family or electric shampoo"r, Sl. Baker RACINE - Lol for sale, 108' x
was enrolled in advanced spent Friday night ret{lrning Flatwoods Road called 'on his
240' - s2,000. Ni ce locat ion .
Unve, Columbus, Ohio, phon~:
Furniture Company .
Mason, W.Va.
machinist school, to Texas ho"!e Saturday.
Phone
949
-~703.
·
237·4334,
Columbus.
·
9·B·6fc
.mother, Mrs. Georgia Thoma.
9.9-6tc
5·9·11d

992-7608

Po11eroy Motor Co.

m

STOP THAT,
TATER!!
'

Business Services _ _

registered

m inia lure . dachs-h und , $50.

'
TATER'S EATIN'
SAND AG'IN !!

.

I

For Sale

·~ •

I

. BlAElTNA)JS

1 COULD 1'\FT -.,nnl

OH,M'{ FORMER
!!&gt;ELO\IED CHIEI"!.'

AN

IDIOT COULD SEE

IT'S TJ.IE C:HAII\!!
CAN'T "'''U SEE IT?

INTO A 1-\0ME.,
FOSDICK, AT
NO EXPENS E.!!
WE COULD
CLAIM

yOU

\NEf~T

NUTS ON

CAB CO.

O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC SERVICE

992-7338

Blaettnar's

GOSPEL MEETING

IN 1HE MEANTIME;

WE HAVE A
GENTLEMENS
AGREEMENT!

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
.

698

- - - -- -

BUGS RUNNY
~AT

OH-oH!

MFI. GILT, OUR. HAND·

WP.SMY

IM"'EDIATE

&amp;HAKE IS AS GCOD

SUPEftiOR!

ASANY PIECE OF
PAPER!

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Careful cro66inq
streets! liot ljOur

milk mone4?

EVERYONE WELCOME

For

Cleland

_

THE BORN LOSER
~!;RE';

BUT CLOU~ SOMETIMES
OBSCURE THO'OE HEAVENLY
ORBS AND CONCEAL THEM
FROM US--• IT'S THAT
WA"f WITH "MR . ?"!

GUESS ME

AH' 'SAMOY'LL

I')SICI(IJ!$1/

AllOW~

w;; H!i eriSS
M~ LVtt:H!

1

YOUR WORD
FOR IT,
JOHNNY!

___ _

ACROSS
1. Gaelic
5. Peggy or
Brenda
8. Landscape

feature
9.\Unwllling
13. Roman

poet
14. Italian

city

like a peiSOII.

2. Gorge

16. Tum's

3. Expense
account
f slang)
( 2 wds.l
4. Quarterback's
target
5. Sumptuous
6. Happening
7. Ending for

partner
19. Neigh
bor

U .money
auctlon
16. Stannum
10. What
17. Word with
sugar

man or

---------..1

811T IF THE MAN'S BfEN PIAliiNG
l&gt;oiMI;, WllH Ffi'EI!Al FUNDS,
IT'LL BE A GOO!&gt; IlEAL IE55

CllN1ltU61D

HAVE TO PEAL WITH HIM TO
GeTTO TALK TO MY OWN GIRL!

Ye.terdar'• .U•wer

of funds
26. Descriplive of

29. Gave

a

11. - -

drum

menacing

look
31. Watered
fabric

27. Monopollze the
market

36. Dilly

28 . Place in

a container

37. Chalice
veil

t1'ERROM

~

rary. ~n

I K

b-+--l-

Parts

32. Bulgarian
weight
33. Valuable

ll5fFUL A5 A
MEM~EROF
1'0(0Rf5
PEf~IX'5

THE5E: MleHT
!5E INVITED.

1

rJ

'
JamW..o HAVOC

35. - - mind

Now orranre the cln:led lett4n
to fonn the .wpr1......... ..
ougated b11he aboot WW..

ClOTH

INlAID DISMAL

Saturd•f•

(consider.\_

Antwf'r. TIIU •ou...U

(2 wds.l
.37. Jewish ,
month
38. Aggregate i.r-+~39. Otherwise

WMP0/1390

AT A NOISV PARTY,

i(III
IIIIIIJ
I ""'·--·

mineral
3-i. Golf score

5TAFF- WHICH
miRY FINDS
lf5S AIW
l!55 AAW5&lt;NG,

~

ISUfHBEJ

31. Contempo-

E.III!ARRA551NG IF lOU NAIL

me 111M5EtF

U~~~tramble thew lour Jumbl..,
one letter 1.1 euh "'tiW'I!, to
form four ordina17 words.

25. "Bereft

21. Enjoy
12. otate
greatly
22. Letter
Radiate
23.
24. U.N. name
25. Straw - - l:r-+--+--t27. Annul
30. Cheer

L

~llJJWJJ3r!J];f:l :::Y.!! ..4J ~ .

of Ala.
22. qua
non
24. Load

an old
bucket

often do
(3 wds.)

"three''

JlA5T THA1' PRECOCIOUS
POWER IIROI&lt;fR.' NOll I

a

daddies

rnald
18. Farthest
20. Llsl's

------

We talk to

Satunla.J'o Cryptoquoltt: THE FOOLISH AND THE
DEAD ALONE NEVER CHANGE THEIR OPINION.-J. R.
LOWELL
(0 1971 Kin&amp;" Features Syndicat e, Jne.)

DAILY CROSSWORD

------

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

A Ci4EESE SMIMCH

Cf ICC

HAFTA TAKE

------

.,

110~ fotDYr lHAT
KID!Gtt.AlliS

LU~ :

A JlAAD-IlOILED M .

Realty

Chester
News Notes

'IGI!R

ONI

Wrr.

ll~nd.tfear TIHI

6J'eW

•!- YOUI "CHilD :":::000':.=::..'___ __ _....,
HOioJ CAN WE liE llU~~ ?
WE NEVER EVEN STARTED !

.

-40. For P.ach

UStem
DOWN
l . Romeoor

3 800MS

Juliet; e.g.

NEW

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

FURN111JRE
'349.95

lo

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter siinply stands for another. In thls sample A is ,..,..,.,...---....,

used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc. Single lettel'&gt;',

m:oo

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters arc ·different .

A Cryptogram Quotation
WJCF

MASON ..

i .J LW

FURNITURE

OFJOHF
TITS

!PZUV

!PT!

SJA ·

UKLWFW

ATU

OK!

WAI, 'r C MHFR
.I p F

wp

F H H .

F QQW

s .1 r.

.J 1 p X

MTAV . Z'J l .T
A T

u

B

zF

H

s

E:::~=======3 ~~~:§=~~:::::

•
;
I

�rr

I - 'tilt DlllJ leallpel, Middlepor~Ptmi'I'Oy, O.,Sept. 13,19'11

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action ! Senti~~:el Classifieds Get Results!
Apple Grove

LEGAL NOTICE

251815

ORDINANCE NO , 419
PROVIDI.NG FOR DAMAGES
SUSTAINED BY RESIDENCE

News, Events

OF THE COMMUNITY BY
THE INSTALLATING OF THE
SANITARY SoWER SYSTEM .
Be It ordained by the counc il

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
of the Ville~ge of Pomeroy , State
of Oh io, all members fhereto
Mrs. Willi•m Mitchell of concurring
:
Columbus spent Wednesday
Sec . 1. That whereas it was
with her sister, Mrs. Gerald necessary tor the Village of

Hayman.

Pomeroy to relocate sa nitar y

sewer lines of certain re~sidents
of the Village of Pomeroy , Main

OF QUALITY

. Pomeroy
,Motor («

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3Jf5
Less than 11.000 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 hydromatic, power steering &amp;

brakes. 350 cu. in. v.s engine. Really Sharp.
1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR
52895
Less than IO,oog miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish , 350 v.s engine, power

ONE

A.K.C.

Phone 992-5473.

·, .

.

9-9-61c

f'OMEROY

.~IOHN.SON MASONRY

EXPERIENCED .

HOME &amp; .AUTO

Complete

992-2094

Re.modl!_ling

Radiator SeiVice

COAL, limestone. Excelsior• ·
~alt Works. E. Main Sf.,
t'omeroy. Phone 992-3891.
.t.9.tfc .

APPLES ~ Fitzpatrick Qr .
chards, Stale Route 689 ,
phone Wilkesville, 669·3785.
9·3-lfc

6.06

E. Main

Pomeroy

AUNT LOWEEZY'.!

1HESE ~X

~ITWA5"

1::06· EAT-!XlG IIJJRlD,.,

'{E 'LL SPOIL 'lORE
SUPPER!!

,~··

·*
rl.o!f

' .
I •

Kitchens, Ballts
Room Additions
And PaHos
BatkhoeAnd
Endloader Work

OFFICE SUPPLIES
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cornwell of
GREEN BEANS, pick your
Street, tor installation of the
Gallipolis visited Sunday with sanitary sewer system , and
And
own, Sl.lO a bushel, Andrew
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. covers.
Sec.
2.
Whereas.
the
Village
ot
Cross,
Racine,
Ohio.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
.,..
1910 DODGE POLARA
12495
Pomeroy des ires to pay
FURNITURE
4 Dr .• V-8 engine, automatic trans .• P.S ..-factory air, good
Edward MIUer.
Sepfic Tanks
damages to the property owners
-----~--9--=-3· 1Bic
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior.
whose
sewer
and-or
water
lines
Stop In and See
And Leach Beds.
Mrs. Everette Parsons and
From fhe Largest Truck or
were · altered and changed.
OurJ
HALF ARABIAN mare colt, 6Floor
Display.
Bulldozer
Radiator to the
daughters, Iris, Shlrfey, Ruth,
Sec. J. Now therefore council
months, halter broke, very
Smallest
Heater
Core.
of
the
·village
of
Pomeroy
Cathy, Kay of Negley, Ohio,
gentle. Not registered, $175.
desi res to appropriate the sum
Coolville 667-6214.
Mrs. Ruth Parsons of Tanners of $13,000.00 to property owners
9-8·12tp
for
the
damages
sustained
by
FOUR NI!W HOMES
Run spent Tuesday afternoon them in the changing and
Pomeroy_
Ph. 992-2143
O~EM
EVES.
8:00
P.M.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
with Mr. and MrS. Herbert altering of the sanitary sewer ,
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
ONE HOME IN RACINE
1 N:IMEROY, OHIO
Roush and were dinner guests lines in the Village of Pomeroy .
Sec . 4 . Furthermore no
Parkvlew Kennels. P~one 992·
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
of Mrs. Edna Parsons and prOperty owner shall receive
5443.
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
Preston Parsons Tuesday more than 65 pet. as damages
8-15-lfc
NO MONEY DOWN
WANT
AD
for the cost of chang ing the
Notice
evening at-Antiquity.
INFORMATION
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
sewer and -or water lines. Thai
WORK
2';, ACRE LOT with 110'
DEADLINES
A
3
bedroom
$16,900.00
home
can
be
purchased
with
a
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner the amount of said damages to
Eblin Reunloo will be
frontage on State Route 124
be awarded to property owners
SPOUTING,
Day Before Publication ANNUAL
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
held
on
Sunday,
September
were camping over Labor Day shall be determined by the 5 P.M.
near High School just oulside
Monday
Deadline
9 a.m.
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'14 Pet. annual
19th, at the west side slate
Racine corporation. All
weekend at Shady Rest Park, Mayor of said Village and the
ROOF PAINTING
Cao~llatlon &amp; C:Orr~lons
park on Rt. 33. All descen- ulililies available. See Dale
Clerk and ' Treasurer are
rate.
~
Will
bea~:cepted
until9a.m.
for
Rutland.
authorized to disperse said
dants of Allen and Mary Ann
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
McGraw or phone ·949-2832.
Day of Publication
monies to the said ~ proper1y
Eblin,
friends
and
relatives
Mrs. Erma Wilson attended a owners
All
Weather Roofing &amp;
9-10-3tc
.
REGULATIONS
.
12:30.
birthday party Friday evening
Construction Co. and An·,
Sec. 5. This ordinance shall
The Publisher reserves the are welcome. Dinner at9·1l-6tc
NEW
DELUXE
sewing
lltony Plumbing &amp; HeaHng.
atthehomeofMr.andMrs. Roy take effect and be in force from right to edit or reject any ads
machine,
Zig-Zag,
heavy
and after the earliest period deemed
Complete
Plumbing,
objectional.
The
Van Meter at Morning Star in allowed by law.
duty, built-in motor and light,
publisher
will
not
be
respbnsible
Healing
and
Ajr Con·
Passed August JO , 1971 .
does everything. ()]ly $64.88.
honor of Roy's father, Chester
difioning,
Charles W . Legar for more than one incorrec'
Twin City s,wing ,Machine.
MIDDLEPORT
inserti on .
Van Meter.
Attest:
BILL NELSON
240 Lincoln 51., Middleport
HILTON WOLFE
Phone 992-7095.
RATES
992-3657
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson Jane Walton . Clerk
949-3211
9·10·6tc
For Want Ad Service
and baby of Charleston spent (9) 13 , 20, 21
Phone 992-2550
5 cents per Word one insertion
PORTABLE Singer sewing
Labor Day weekend with Mrs.
Minimum Charge 75c
Insured - Experienced
machine, will sell for repair
12 ~ents per word three, BACK IN BUSINESS
Erma Wilson,
ORDINANCE NO. 420
bill,
$19.22.
Twin
City
Sewing
Have
Your
Seasonal
Work Guaranteed
Declar ing that it is necessary consec ·Jtive insertions.
Mr. and Mrs . Everette
Machine. Phone 992-7085.
18
cents
per
word
six
con24
Hr.
Service,
Same
Prices
for the payment Of current
See u:; tor Free
9·10-6tc
Connolly were dinner guests expenses of the Village of secutive insertions.
As Always.
Air
Con~itioning ·
Estimate on Furnace
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pomeroy, Oh io, and declaring
the amoun t of taxes 1hat may be
ads paid within 10 days.
HENS~ Aiba Yost, Miners·
lnstalation.
Connolly and family at levied at the maximum rate ads and
Inspection and
CARD OF THANKS
ville.
Phone
949-4980.
Residential.
authorized by law without a
Syracuse.
&amp; OBITUARY
9-12·31p
vote of erectors to be inCommercial
$1.50 for 5o word minimum .
Miss Joan Roush visited her sufficient and declaring .the
Re-Charge
Each
additional Word 2c.
and
1954 DODGE truck, 2 ton $400,
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Don Riffle necessity of a levy in excess of
DRIVERS
:
Eli
&amp;
James
BLIND ADS
1962 Chrysler 300 ~ $200. Will
such rate .
Industria I Wiring
Special
Plus
and family and assisted in the
Addilional 25c Charge per
BE IT RESOLVED by the
trade for pickup. phone 949·
· At
•
Parts
24 Hour Service
3915.
care of Mrs. Riffle and new son, Council of the Village of Ad .Jertisement.
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs . SepPomeroy, State of Oh io, all
OFFICE HOURS
tember Sales
Special:
9-12-61c
Dooald Carroll. Mr. and Mrs. members thereto concurring:
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily.
Kreamy
Lip
Kate
$2
now
949-4551
Sec. 1: That it is necessary to
Lester Roush and family also
a.m. to 12 : 00 Noon
OLDSMOBILE
Vista
Sl.lO, Frostlucent lip Kate '66
Rl.
2
have additional monies for the 8:30
Racine, 0 .
PHONE 992-2143
Cruiser Wagon ~ $650, '64
called on tbe Riffles Wednesday payment of current expenses of Saturday.
12.50 now $2, 23 delicious
-GUARANTEEDBuick Wlldcat ~ $450, 3 men's
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
to see tbeir new grandson the Village of Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 992,2094
rings - I diamond, 1 black
Se-c . 2: That the amount of
see at 16Jlh "'
'h Ave. ,
enroute to 1Ny to visit Mr. and taxes that may be raised by the Notice
lindie sapphire, 1 blue sap. Real Estate For Sal"
Middleporl, Or.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
levy of taxes at the maximum
Mrs. Walter McDade.
phire. near Coopers' store,
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782.
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
8-29-tfc
author iz ed by Section
Rt.
124,
Portland.
Phone
843Gallipolis.
John
Russell,
Roy Pearson, Roger Theiss rate
5705.02 of t he Revised Code on
2608.
Ov;ner &amp; Operator.
Open8Til 5
and Tiny Webb spent Labor the taxable property in said
Instruction
9-12·31c
5-)3-tf&lt;
Monday
thru Saturday
Village will be insufficient to
Day weekend at McConnelsville provide an adequate amount for
606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy, 0.
SEMI ORIVER TRAINING. We
QUEEN
Canst.
Roofing.
at Ohio Power Park and en- the necessary requirements of
SUCCESS
are currently offering tractor HALF RUNNER ~ans, 12
B id Village, and that it is
remodeling,
aluminum
trailer training through the
joyed fishing.
bushel , watermelons, cannecessary for the purpose of
siding
.
Phone
992-7324.
facilities of the folfowing
taloupes,
sweet
corn,
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
atURCH OF atRIST
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Warn,er, provid ing additional funds for
8-25.tfc service, all makes, 992-2284,
lruck lines . Truck Line
the payment of cu rren t ex potatoes. Clarence Proffitt,
----"--Mike and Usa, were dinner penses of the Village of ,
Distribution Systems, Inc .•
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Portland. Phone 843-2254.
Sept. ll-19
SEWING machine service in
Express Parcel Deliveries,
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Pomeroy , Oh io. as provided in
Authorized Singer Sales and
9·1·ffc
Broker ·
Section 5705.19 of the Revised
7:30p.m .
your home. Clean, oil and
Inc., Skyline Deliveries, ln_c .
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Warner.
Code , that taxes be levied on the
110 Mechanic Street
adjust,
only
14.
Call
992-7085.
For
application
and
in3·29-tfc
Clifford
Shilver,
Pomeroy, Ohio
The WSQI of tbe Letart Falls taxable property with in the
te rview, call 304-344-8843, or NYLON Oval braided rug,
9·10-6tc
Village for a period of five years
approximalely 12' x 15"- $50.
Evangelist
Methodist Church met at the at a rate in excess of such
write School Safety Division,
READY -MiX
CONCRETE
Phone 949-2739.
delivered right to your
Uniled Systems, Inc., c-o
9-10-3tc NEW LISTING- Kanauga - 3 NEIGLER Construction . For
heme of Mrs. Jim Roush Friday maximum rate authorized in
Section 5705 .02 of the Revised
prQject. Fast and easy. Free
bedrooms, bath, gas forced
Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland - - - - - -- - building or remodeling your
evening. Attending were Lois Code.
estimates.
Phone 992-3284 .
air
furnace.
Modern
kitchen,
Drive, Charleston, West WHIRLPOOL washer
and
home . Call 'Guy Neigler,
Sec . 3: That it is necessary to L - - - - - - - - Bell, Margie Roush, Nora Cross
Goeglein
Ready
-Mix Co .,
Full
basement.
Racine, Ohio.
Virginia, 25306.
dryer, like new. Phone 992le vy the taxes for the years 1971.
Ohio.
Middleport,
and 1)Ql!Z Hill.
: ~
. 1972, 197 3t'l.97~ .al\d 1975 at the TRYING to locate, first name
9·13·21c 2555 or 992-7296.
7-31 -tfc ·
unknown, last name, Morris,
NEW LISTING.- Dexter ~ 6
6.30-,jfc.&lt; "
Mrs. Dallas Hill, Jlni. Dolly rate ofl"'l on..e.llalf" mill on each ~ 2nd
9-10-6fc
Lt., H Co., 109th Infantry,
rooms, bath, gas furnace.
dollar o"f the tax valuation of the
TRENCHER and complete
Wolfe, Mrs. Marsball Roush taxable property with in the 28th Keystone Div. Contact Female Help Wanted
Business bulldlifg, 30x44.
C. BRADFb~'o: Auctioneer '"
water line Installation. Phone
village
of
Pomeroy
in
excess
of
Warren Lynd, 1717 7th St.,
and Joey, Miss Jan Hill acComplete Service
BEAT
the
COLD
WINTER
985-3373
week
days
after
5
the rate author ized by the said
NEEDED NOW ~ Women with
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662.
POMEROY - Nice 3 bedrooms,
Phone 949-3821
companied Billy Dye to his Section 5705 .02 of the Revised
and
IT'S
COST
WITH
p.m
.
or
weekends.
ambition to earn money . Good
1'12 baths, large living and
9-12-3tc
Racine, Ohio
HEATING
OIL
FROM
9·9·121c
heme in Columbus Saturday Code. That there would be
income . Part time . Write
dining. Double garage.
Crill
Bradford
tevied lhe sum of 5 cents on each
Personal Shopper Dept .. Box LANDMARK.
and visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert S100.00 of the taxable property I WILl not be responsible for
5·1 -tfc
10, Watkins Products, Inc.,
We have the finesl Budget 2 ACRES -On Rt. 33 North.
ROSEBERRY furnace In within the said Village of
debts contracted by (Jnyone
Casper.
Winona, Minnesota 55987.
Pay Plan, Delivery Services,
stallation . Free estimates on THE SHOP, Custom meat
.
other lhan myself. Signed :
Artie Hill, student at Rio Pomeroy
9-13-llc
Sec . -4 : That the Clerk be and
Marion R. Hawk.
CHESHIRE - Fast lunch lot .
new furnllces, .oil or gas. .cutting, Pleasant Rld!le Road,
Automatic Degree Day
9-12-Jtp
Grande College, spent Labor she is hereby directed to certify
Service work . Call Cecil
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Pomeroy. Dick Vaugnan, 992a
copy of th is Ordinance to the - - - - - - -POMEROY - Renovated 3
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio .
Day weekend with his parents, Deputy State Supervisors and
Equipment.
3374
and Dale Lillie, 992-6346.
Help
Wanted
Phone 614·843-2274. ,
bedrooms, bath, furnace. nice
Inspectors
of
elect
ions
of
Meigs
SAVE
UP
to
one
half.
Bring
We
also
have
a
complete
line
9-12-301c
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas HID. Mr.
kitchen.
·
" ·8·30tp
County, Ohio, in order that said
your sick TV to Chuck's TV WOMAN lo live in , light
of
Siegler
Fuel
Oil
Heaters
and Mrs. Raymond Hensler of Supervisors and Inspectors of Shop, 151 Butternut Ave .
housework , cooking with a
O' DELL WHEEL allgnme tt
and Furl'\i ces.
Pomeroy.
Racine spent Sunday afternoon erections may make the
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
day
off
a
week
~ $35 per
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
' POMEROY
necessary arrangements for the
Septic tanks Installed . George
with tbe Hills.
Complete
front end ser.vice,
4-23-ltc week . Phone 992-3507.
submission of such question to
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
~Bill) Pullins, Phone 992·2478.
9-I0-31c
up
and
brake service.
tune
the
electors
of
said
Village,
as
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor are
Phone 992-2181
4-25-tfc
provided by law. (See 5705.171.
Wheels
balanced elecvisiting relatives in Columbus.
SU,T( OF OHIO, O!PAJITMUT or 1~ ­
Sec . 5 : That th is Ordinance is
tronically. · All
work
SUIII.UCE. CUTtFICATt l!f COMPLIA,.CE. EARN AT home addressing 1968 RIVERSIDE Motorcycle,
Real
Estate
Sale
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell and hereby declared to be an Tilt
envelopes.- Ru sh stamped
guaranteed .
Reasonable
undf~!ilu~. &amp;v.rilltmnt fll lrm~ rlll"!
emergency Ord i nance
650 cc, good condition- $290.
ra tes. Phone 992-3213.
~ 6tl!' a( Ohio. llfttbf Ml ib
t.bl t
sell-addressed envelope. The
children of Letart, W. Va. necessary tor the safety and eflilDU
Call after 5 p.m . 773-5474.
liF[ tNSUIIANCE. COMPANY, nf
Ambrose
Co.,
4325
Lakeborn,
7-27-tf c
_...:.
Route, spent Sunday with Mr. welfare of the said Village of thiup, rilal t flf Jllblol&lt;l, hu compH~ •11h
9-13-31c
Davisburg, Mich .. 48019.
Pomeroy .
tbt 11-1 tf thb !Irate II!Plktbl• ttl ,it an!t i~
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and . Sec. 6 : That the Clerk be and a•JtiH!ri!td 1UrJni th! rurttnt tl'lr t ~ lfln&amp;ltt
9·8-JOfp STEREO-Ra dio console, 4
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
9-12-61c
m thb !iUte. itt IPI!f1II'J itle OOslnrs1 !!r JnKeith. Dan Hayman and she is hereby directed to cause llllnn!:t.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
llJ
IIDIMitl
ennditlcn
is lho'lon ~ It!
speed intermixed changer,
notice of such election to be
662·3035.
.
daughters, April and Mrs. published , as requ ired by law. .mmaJ st~ttm':'llt t fl M•t llml 11 i nllol"l"s 00 Employment Wanted
but
secluded
-CONVENIENT
dual
volume
co
ntrol,
4
Occ. 31. I!JiO: Admlltr1 Am tl s :, :; . li t~ .­
2·12-lfc
building lots on T79 at Rock
Charles Legar UUI : Lbt!Uitit:~ I S0,3 &lt;i~.:SS ~ . I ~: l\"••t .\s·
speaker sound system,
Cindy Smith and baby of
608 East Main
Mayor HIJ $~.~S'!.O:!J . :J2; Capital ll.OOlJ .OU 'l , +ll~; 19-YEAR -OLD girl wants
Springs
.
Within
walking
beauliful
hand
rubber
Walnut
Syracuse called Monday on Mr. Passed : Sept. 8, 1971
S. UT'IUs $~ ,2 SM2:l .3::: lncomt f:: ::,ui~.­
distance of Meigs High ·
POMEROY
ROOF PAINT and minor
babysitting lob Monday mru
finish . Balance $66.34. Use our
t.B. I .!iO; t~lturc~ lt i!,liiT,tf"II ..J "; . I ~
Attest : Jane Walton
and Mrs. Hayman.
FARM
63.37
ACRES
repair. For estimate, call992.
Friday.
Wll
live
in.
Phone
School,
a
5
minute
drive
from
budget
terms.
Call
992-7085.
Wl'l:iESS wm.Rr.:ur, r ,.~ ,t: hcmmto l•lb Clerk
Rutland Township, nice 5
2239.
'
992-5709.
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
9-13-6tc
Mrs. Mlllle Norris of Laurel,
'rrtoos ., narr.t and c~~r'l "'.:" i{a\ '" "'
room
home,
out
cellar,
barn,
9-Hip
allhtrt at f:o lu mbu~. Ubi~. th is ''·'f ~~~ ~ 1111~
9-12-Jfc
Witte weekends or after 5.
------Md., and Mrs. Marshall Adams 191 1], 20, 27, 31
July I. I!!Tl . K~uncth t:. IJrShrltrr. Muvtdti· - - - - - - - - shop,
fruit
trees
,
berries,
A
p.m.
weekdays.
Phone
992MAPLE Stereo-radio com ttr&amp;knl ol Jn:.1nnce ·Dl tlttlo. t ~t;ALI
visited Mr. and Mrs .. Floyd
STEAL AT JUST $5,500.00.
.
bination, AM -FM radio, •4 6887.
Wanted
LESS
THAN
1100.00
AN
'
'lARRlSON'S
'f'V
AND
AN
Norris.
speaker sound system, 4
7·11 -tfc
where he is stationed with the
ACRE
.
TENNA
SERVICE
.
Phono
WOMAN needs someone to slay
speed automatic changer,
Ralph Ours of New Brighton, Air Force.
992·2522.
5 days a week, some nights.
separate controls . Balance 3 BEDROOM home. wllh bath,
•· 10-t~
Pa., called on Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY
~
1
story
frame,
Mr. and Mrs. Clint Sarsons of
1h acre lot, on new public
Phone 992-5586.
$78.29. Use our lime paymenl
balh·,
3
bedrooms,
basement,
Herbert Roush Sunday.
Beaver Falls, Pa., visited the
plan. Call 992-7085.
water syslem,localed )usf off
9-12-6tc
porches, gas forced air heat. AWNINGS, s torm doors and .
Rl. 7 on County Rd. 25 at
9-13-6tc
VirgO Roush and son, Mar- latter's sister, Mrs. Elizabeth
windows, carports ,
$5,000.00.
Chester, Ohio. If Interested
marquees. aluminum siding
shall, and Greg Donohew en- Roush, recently.
Attendance' at the Nazarene Wanted To Buy
call 985-4262.
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
~ 2 story trame, 6
joyed fishing and camping at
Sunday School Sept 5 was 73. OLD Furniture, dishes, clocks, FARM and home late/ house
9-5-12tc POMEROY
sales
representative. For free ·
rooms. 3 bedrooms, utility
point sale. King Builders
Stockport over the weekend.
and-or complete households.
estimates, phone Charles ·
Offering
was
$114.73.
room,
bath,
ALMOST
NEW
Supply, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Farrand
Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V
Mr. and Mrs. George
GAS FORCED AIR HEAT,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alpha
Smith
of
9-2·24fc
Ohio.
Call
992-6271
.
two children of Cuyahoga Falls,
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
Johnson
and Son, Jnc.
··
some hardwood floors. JUST
Donohew and family of
2196.
8-25-tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Butram and Reedsville visited his sister,
5-17-tfc
SJ,SOO.OO WORTH MUCH
Colwnbus spent Labor Day
- - - - - - CANNING lomatoes, already
7-18-tfc
MORE.
two children of Cincinnati spent Mrs. Richard Barton, Maralyn LOCAL . MAN wishes to buy
picked, S1.25 bu ., bring
AUTOMOBILE Insurance' been .
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ray
and
Caralyn
Saturday
evening.
the Labor Day weekend with
acreage close to Pomeroy.
containers. Geraldine NEW. 3-bedroom home · in
cancelled?
Lost
your
RUTt:AND- l'h story frame, 3
Donohew. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
Phone 992-3374.
Cleland, East Main, Racine.
operator's license? Call 992.
their grandparents, Mr. and
Middleport
..
Built-in
kitchen,
bedrooms,
bath,
storm
doors
Ours of New Brighton, Pa., also
7- ~S - tfr
2966.
9-12·12tc
or Reedsville spent a day
ceramic file bath, all -electric
and windows, nice porch ;
Mrs. Ernest Grimm.
visited the Donohews.
heat,
good
neighborhood.
Can
6-15-tfc
large lot, GOOD FOR A
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Dines recently with Mrs. George GINSENG. Clean bone dry. S38
arr.mge. FHA financing .
Mrs. Clarence (Clara) Adams
FAMILY . $6.900.00 TAKES
Genheimer.
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
THIS PLACE.
lb. Snake Root, $5 lb. Bill
is a medical patient at Holzer of Parkersburg spent Labor
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hines and
2186.
Bailey , Reedsville, Ohio,
Day
weekend
with
the
latter's
Medical Center.
7-25-tfc
Second St. Phone 378-6208.
PLACE THE SALE OF
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Butch ramily of Belpre spent Sunday
)'OU
Mr. and Mrs. Early Roush
YOUR PROPERTY IN
8-31-IOtc
evening
with
their
grandWilson.
Real
Estate
Opportunity
CAPABLE
HANDS
visited Monte Quillen of Belpre
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charley
CAN YOU SELL???
HENRY E. CLELAND
at Royal Oak Park Monday.
Woode.
YOUR own full -time business,
REALTOR
For Rent
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert MIUer
Mrs. Ferne Hayman is a
Real
Estale,
right
in
this
Office
992-2259
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Scar12'
14'
·
24'
WIDE
area.
National
company,
Residence
992-2568
FURNISHED
2
bedroom
attended the Washington medical patient at Gallipolis tiger entertained company from
apartment,
Middleport.
es
lablished
In
1900,
largest
in
9·8·61c
County Fair Sunday.
Clinic.
West Virginia Sunday.
Phone 992-3874.
ils ' field , (Unlicensed? - - - - - - - - - Mr. and Mrs. David Hadley
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Grueser of
wrile us.l All advertising, all
Bob Wood and family at9-J0.3tc
signs, forms. supplies fur · 3 Bt:uROOM brick home .
are announcing the birth of a Pomeroy spent Labor Day tended the state fair at - - - - - - - - - ,
Choice location In Middleport.
nished. Skilled Training and
son at Jewish Hospital at weekend at their cabin.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Seen by appointment only.
Columbus Sunday.
1220 Washington Blvd ..
Instruction given for rapid
Court. Rt . 12~. Syracuse,
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m.
Cincinnati. He weighed 7 lb, 6
Mr. and Mrs. John Rowe and
Belpre, Ohio
development ~ from Start to
Mr. and Mrs. Richard and
Ohio.
992-2951.
5-7-tfc
Succe$$. Na tionwide ad·
oz. , and has been named family have moved from the ramily visited her brother in
4·2:tfc
vertising brings Buyers from
Christopher David. Grand- Inez Hill residence to the Sayre Reynoldsburg , Mr. and Mrs.
Everywhere . Can
you
Auto
Sales
parents are Mr. and Mrs. re.sidence (former parsonage ) Herbert and Glen On Monday FURNISHED and unfurnished
qualify? You must have
GREMLIN, automatic,
initiative, excellent character
Demeric Hadley of New Rich- at Letart Falls.
. Close
to school. 1970
th ey a II wen t to ·Mans1'feld t o aparlmenls
Phone 992 .5434
.
good conditioo, one owner,
!bondable), sales ability, be
mond, Mr. a!Id Mrs. Herbert
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Cady tour Kingwood Center. Tuesday
will sell or take over
financially respons1ble .
10 _18.tfc
Mlller, , local.
Great- and children of Columbus they toured Ohio Historical --'-----~---payments. Phone 992-3663 or
Commission - volume opat· 448 S. Second Sf ..
grandparents
are
Mrs . brought Mrs. Millie Norris of Center. Their son , Kevin, 3 ROOM apartment and balh. see
portunity
for man, woman,
Middleport.
couple or leam Thai Can Sell.
Elizabeth Roush, local, and Laurel, Md., to the home of Mr. remained f6r a longer visit.
Built-in electric wall oven and
9.J2.3fc
Information
wllhout
Herbert Miller, Sr., of Rutland. and Mrs. Marshall Adams
Miss Doris Smith of Glen
lable top range, double bowl - - - - - - - - obligalion .
sink. overlooking the Ohio ,67 MERCURY Colony Park
Christopher was greeted by a Saturday and spent the night
·I. ·M. Diggs, Gen. Sales Mgr.
DownMd.,
and
Glen
Smith
of
rrver.
real clean and n1ce. Wagon, v.s, power sleering,
Burnie,
S I IWUT REALTY, Inc.
sister, Devannia.
with their daughter, Mr. and Reyno ldsburg spent several
4
·Satan~e'On
Phone GallipoliS 46-9539 power brakes. aulomatic,
311-F Springfield Ave.
Mrs . Mike O'Brien and days last week with Mr. and
afler 5 p.m.
many extras, 10 passenger.
Summit, N. J. 07901
Convenient
9· 5·tfc
Sgt. Skip Miller spent children. Mrs. Norris remained Mrs. Barton, Kevin , Carolyn - - - -- - - - -Phone 367-7554.
9·10·31c
Terms.
Tuesday through Saturday with for a week's visit with the
9' 12' 2tc .:S1X
- 1-l 00
:--M
- -ho_u_se.- b-a-1h-, lu II
and Maralyn . They also visited For Sale
his · parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adams ' and other relatives. Mr. their grandmother, Mrs. Jane
--------~asement, 133 Burternul Ave .,,
Herbert Miller enroute from and Mrs. Adams accompanied Smith , Silver Ridge.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
ius I walking dis lance' from
· CLEAN RUGS like hew, so easy
downtown
Pomeroy . Contact·
lo
do
with
Blue
Lustre.
Rent
Chanute Field, Ill., where he h~r home to Maryland and
"d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswot In
Guy Thoma and family or electric shampoo"r, Sl. Baker RACINE - Lol for sale, 108' x
was enrolled in advanced spent Friday night ret{lrning Flatwoods Road called 'on his
240' - s2,000. Ni ce locat ion .
Unve, Columbus, Ohio, phon~:
Furniture Company .
Mason, W.Va.
machinist school, to Texas ho"!e Saturday.
Phone
949
-~703.
·
237·4334,
Columbus.
·
9·B·6fc
.mother, Mrs. Georgia Thoma.
9.9-6tc
5·9·11d

992-7608

Po11eroy Motor Co.

m

STOP THAT,
TATER!!
'

Business Services _ _

registered

m inia lure . dachs-h und , $50.

'
TATER'S EATIN'
SAND AG'IN !!

.

I

For Sale

·~ •

I

. BlAElTNA)JS

1 COULD 1'\FT -.,nnl

OH,M'{ FORMER
!!&gt;ELO\IED CHIEI"!.'

AN

IDIOT COULD SEE

IT'S TJ.IE C:HAII\!!
CAN'T "'''U SEE IT?

INTO A 1-\0ME.,
FOSDICK, AT
NO EXPENS E.!!
WE COULD
CLAIM

yOU

\NEf~T

NUTS ON

CAB CO.

O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC SERVICE

992-7338

Blaettnar's

GOSPEL MEETING

IN 1HE MEANTIME;

WE HAVE A
GENTLEMENS
AGREEMENT!

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
.

698

- - - -- -

BUGS RUNNY
~AT

OH-oH!

MFI. GILT, OUR. HAND·

WP.SMY

IM"'EDIATE

&amp;HAKE IS AS GCOD

SUPEftiOR!

ASANY PIECE OF
PAPER!

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Careful cro66inq
streets! liot ljOur

milk mone4?

EVERYONE WELCOME

For

Cleland

_

THE BORN LOSER
~!;RE';

BUT CLOU~ SOMETIMES
OBSCURE THO'OE HEAVENLY
ORBS AND CONCEAL THEM
FROM US--• IT'S THAT
WA"f WITH "MR . ?"!

GUESS ME

AH' 'SAMOY'LL

I')SICI(IJ!$1/

AllOW~

w;; H!i eriSS
M~ LVtt:H!

1

YOUR WORD
FOR IT,
JOHNNY!

___ _

ACROSS
1. Gaelic
5. Peggy or
Brenda
8. Landscape

feature
9.\Unwllling
13. Roman

poet
14. Italian

city

like a peiSOII.

2. Gorge

16. Tum's

3. Expense
account
f slang)
( 2 wds.l
4. Quarterback's
target
5. Sumptuous
6. Happening
7. Ending for

partner
19. Neigh
bor

U .money
auctlon
16. Stannum
10. What
17. Word with
sugar

man or

---------..1

811T IF THE MAN'S BfEN PIAliiNG
l&gt;oiMI;, WllH Ffi'EI!Al FUNDS,
IT'LL BE A GOO!&gt; IlEAL IE55

CllN1ltU61D

HAVE TO PEAL WITH HIM TO
GeTTO TALK TO MY OWN GIRL!

Ye.terdar'• .U•wer

of funds
26. Descriplive of

29. Gave

a

11. - -

drum

menacing

look
31. Watered
fabric

27. Monopollze the
market

36. Dilly

28 . Place in

a container

37. Chalice
veil

t1'ERROM

~

rary. ~n

I K

b-+--l-

Parts

32. Bulgarian
weight
33. Valuable

ll5fFUL A5 A
MEM~EROF
1'0(0Rf5
PEf~IX'5

THE5E: MleHT
!5E INVITED.

1

rJ

'
JamW..o HAVOC

35. - - mind

Now orranre the cln:led lett4n
to fonn the .wpr1......... ..
ougated b11he aboot WW..

ClOTH

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month
38. Aggregate i.r-+~39. Otherwise

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AT A NOISV PARTY,

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5TAFF- WHICH
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31. Contempo-

E.III!ARRA551NG IF lOU NAIL

me 111M5EtF

U~~~tramble thew lour Jumbl..,
one letter 1.1 euh "'tiW'I!, to
form four ordina17 words.

25. "Bereft

21. Enjoy
12. otate
greatly
22. Letter
Radiate
23.
24. U.N. name
25. Straw - - l:r-+--+--t27. Annul
30. Cheer

L

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of Ala.
22. qua
non
24. Load

an old
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often do
(3 wds.)

"three''

JlA5T THA1' PRECOCIOUS
POWER IIROI&lt;fR.' NOll I

a

daddies

rnald
18. Farthest
20. Llsl's

------

We talk to

Satunla.J'o Cryptoquoltt: THE FOOLISH AND THE
DEAD ALONE NEVER CHANGE THEIR OPINION.-J. R.
LOWELL
(0 1971 Kin&amp;" Features Syndicat e, Jne.)

DAILY CROSSWORD

------

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

A Ci4EESE SMIMCH

Cf ICC

HAFTA TAKE

------

.,

110~ fotDYr lHAT
KID!Gtt.AlliS

LU~ :

A JlAAD-IlOILED M .

Realty

Chester
News Notes

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ll~nd.tfear TIHI

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NEW

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

FURN111JRE
'349.95

lo

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter siinply stands for another. In thls sample A is ,..,..,.,...---....,

used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc. Single lettel'&gt;',

m:oo

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters arc ·different .

A Cryptogram Quotation
WJCF

MASON ..

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FURNITURE

OFJOHF
TITS

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(

Pageant
IContin·.le&lt;l from Page I)
conteslanls, from every stale in
the unioo, deserved any more to
win the Miss AmeriCII crown

Saturday night than Laurie
Schaefer. Those in the Big Bend
area wbo have bad the pi~
of linowing her are aware of the
hard wort that bas gofue into
the victor)'.
She is modest, kind, considerate and dediealed in addition to being talented and
most pleasant oo the eyes. It's
encouraging to know that
people of her caliber do mate
ohe grade whether it be in the
·Miss America coolest or in any
other pursuit.
As a student at Ohio
University - she bas since
graduated- Miss Schaefer was
eligible for the Miss Southern
Ohio Pageant which started her
oo her way back in 1968.
· Sponsoring the pageant that
year were the Pomeroy
&lt;llamber of Commerce and
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. Jack
Carsey was president of the
chamber at the time and Lila
Milch headed the sorority.
Laurie was crowned oo the
evening of her first ·victory in
Pomeroy by Gloria Bock, Miss
Southern Ohio of 1967 and
Mayor Charles Legar. The new
Miss America bas mainlained·
through the several years that
have passed since her first
victorJ, contact with Mrs.
Richard (Betty) Rawlings, who
bas always taken an active role

.,
'

..

'.:-•-'

.

i

.'

''

'

",

HONORED .C. Republican National Olainnan Bob Dole, left, praised Cong.
Clarence Miller, loth Ilislrict, Obio, Friday night at a special dinner in Lancaster honoring
Miller as "one ri the most conscienoious Members oo Capitol Hill," noting Miller has a perfect
record in answering roll call votes (l,OOOtb in June). Miller, fmner mayor of Lancaster, is in
his tbird term. Martin Hecht, Ohio University's vice president of development, cooferred a
special award ri appreciation on Miller in behalf of the University. John Gushman, a
(rominent community leader in Lancaster, praised Miller in behalf of the civic leaders of
Southeastern Ohio. Special messages of aweciatioo were also received from Secretary of
Agriculture aifford Hardin and from President Richard Nixon.
MillER

Kremlin Sent a Wreath
MOSCOW (UPI)-Former family friends and a small crowd
of unknown Russian admirers
today buried Nikita S. Khrushchev in a remote and liUiehooored corner of Moscow's
second best cemetery. The
Kremlin sent a wreath. It
rained.
The eulogy for Khrushchev's
non-political burial at Novodevichy Cemetery was spoken
over his body by his blonde,
bespectacled son, Sergei. He
stood in the light mist,
occasionally glancing down at
the open coffin and Khrushchev's bare head and said:
"There were many who loved
him, many who haled him, but
few could pass him by."
Khrushchev's wife of 48
years, Nina Petrovna, stood by
in a black lace mantilla and a
dark black coat.
She fought back tears

in the Miss Southern Ohio
Pageants.
A lot of people have been in
touch with Laurie since her
initial win and no doubt these
people and Meigs County can
feel some llegree of reflected
glory.
Many. too, will remember
Laurie's mother, Mrs. Eleanor
Schaefer, who also visited
Pome1 OJ when Laurie first woo
her title and when she returned
the following year as reigning
queen.
And do the new Miss AmeriCII
and her mother remember
Pomeroy? Let me assure you
that they do and quite affectionately . We bad the
pleasure of chatting with them
at the Ohio state Fair just a
week before they left for
Atlantic City and they have the
highest praise for tbe comm..Uty where Laurie started oo SAN JUAN (UP!) - Gov.
her almost unbelievable suc- John J. Gilligan said Sunday
revenue sharing program would
cess slol)'.
face
"severe implementation
As Miss America for 1972,
Laurie is coounitted to many problems'' without a "clear, cotravels and appearances. She's herent and vigorous federal polin for a busy year as will be her icy designed to stimulate modmother. However ,I do hope that ernization of state governsomewhere along the way they menl.n
find lime for a return to GiUigan, in a statement presented to the Committee on RuPomeroy - don't you?
ral and Urban Development at
the National Governors Conference, said Nixon administration
proposals for helping states
meet urban and rural developBy Ulliled Pial llltenau.a.J ment crises "have focused exAt least 24 persons were killed clusively on funding."
in Ohio weeteod traffic ac- He said they have ignored
cidents, making it one of the the need for a co'"l'pre~ellliive
worst non-holiday weekend overhaul of state government's
periods of the year. Six persoos
were killed Friday night, 12 oo
Saturday and six Sooday. Four
were double fatality accidents,
SCIOTO I.JVm'OCK
two oo Friday night and two
SEPTEMBER 10, 1971
Saturday.
Hogs : 200-230, 18.35; No. I,
Six of the 24 ltilled were 18.60; 2211-240, 18.10; 246-260,
teenagers and 12-year-old 17.60; 2litl-280, 17.10; 190-200,
Karen Simon of Ashland was 18.10; Sows: J00.500,1~16-95;
killed when struck by a car on 400-550, 17.30-18.20; Boars, I3.60an Ashland street.
15; Stock Hogs,lt-16.30; Pigs by
the Head, 7.5!)-13.
.
Cattle : Choice Steers, 33.1().
34; Good Steers, 26.7532. ~; Holstein Steers 26.7&gt;-10;
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Choice Heifers, 28.60-32.25;
5epl. ll - 14
Good Cows, 23.~24.10; Utility
Walt Disney's
Cows, 26-22.6:i; Canner and
AU Car1oon-Feature
-INOCCHIO"
Cutter, 18 down; Bulls, 24.50(TechnicDior)
27.50; Heav Stock Cattle ~
It's Pure Enchantment!
33.50;
Heavy Stock Calves ,
G
26.50-38.25; Holstein feeders,
FLAP

throughout tbe 30 minute least prestigious corner of
preliminaries. But when the Novodevichy Cemetery.
final moment came, at 12:23 It was as far as one could gel
p.m. (6:23 a.m. EDT) she from the inner sanctum area
caressed his forehead, lifted· where other honored political
her hands for one second in the figures such as the wife of
prayer symbol and burst into Premier Alexei N. Kosygin are
sobs.
buried, diagonally across the
sprawling cemetery and within
No one of note attended the sight of elevated railway trains
funeral outside Khrushchev's that pass outside the cemetery
family. The Kremlin shed one walls.
terse public tear for him in a There were about 250 to 300
seven-line death notice in persons gathered around his
Pravda, referring to him as grave. Khrushchev was laid out
"merit pellliioner Nikita Ser- under a red satin coverlet done
up to his chin in the open
geyevich."
coffin.
A man stood holding a
The Communist Party and
government leadership also black umbrella over Khrushsent one of tbe seven-foot high chev's head to shield him from
pine bough wreaths tha! were the light rain.
slacked on Khrushchev's grave. His medals, including three
The former Communist Party stars of the hero ol the Soviet
leader and premier was buried Union- the nation's highest
in a red and black crepe draped honor~were strewn across his
collin in tbe most remote and feet.

\'eterallli Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Elmer Medford, Ewington;
Harry Hall, Hartford; Lola
Southern, Middleport; Everett
Hutton, Albany; Kyle Barnett,
Syracuse; Margaret Randolph,
Athens; Joseph Dunfee,
Pomeroy; Richard Salser,
Middleport; Eddie King,
Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Dorothy Greathouse, Mary
Ford, Eugene Jacks, Ray
Wayn e Shrimplin, William
Haley, Phil Baldwin, Charles
Radford Ill.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS James Harmon, Rutland;
Marie Ray, Racine; Wilbur
Imboden, Rutland; Nellie
Hendrix, Syracuse; Ina Mae
Howard, Hartford; Mary Ellen
Hendricks, Syracuse; Clara
Garland, Minersville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Lelah Mora, Eddie King.
Pleasant \'alley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Arthur MeCoy, Henderson; Thomas
Russell, Guysville, 0.; Sharon
Long, Point Pleasant; Charles
Conley, Leon; Mrs. Ona Dyer,
New Haven; Mrs. Homer Hill,
New Haven.
DISCHARGEs: Mrs. John
Brunicardi and daughter ; Mrs .
Shirley Chapman; infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Martin·, Charles VanMeter, Weldon Jorgenson,
Charles Humphries and Alfred
Stover.
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-B "p." m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and~- Denver W. Ash,
Jr., Cheshire, a son; Mr. and
Mrs. John James Fry, Middleport, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert D. Wtcker,
Jackson, a 500 •
· Discharges
Harlin M. Amos, Mrs. Larry
E . Bailey, Mrs. Leo C. Bea n,
Mrs. Robert G. Brmnfield and
soo, Vi1rgil S. Car ter, Mrs.

Trouble Forecast In Sharing Plans

24 Killed on
Ohio HighiiJIIys

MEIGS lHEATRE

I tolar

Anthony Quinn
Claude Akins
GP

SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.

Douglas R. Childers, Mrs.
Charles E. Dempoey and soo,
Mrs. John A. Epling, Edward J,
Frey, Fred H. George, Christine
L. Gillespie, James C. Graham,
Robert A. Grube, Mrs. Cleo V.
Holley, Michelle L.. Holley,
David York Ingels, Gary Neal
Kent, Wm. A. Marcwn, Nathan
Hale McDonald, Mrs. Larcy P.
McPherson and daughter ,
Albert L. Neal, Jay Anthony
Neutzling, Henry S. Nut!, Mrs.
Donald Price and infant son,
Hollis Baker Searles, Mrs. Ezra
J. Sheetsandson,Mrs.Eidon E.
Sowers, Miss Helen J. Spears,
Quentin J. Stapleton, Doona J .
SleraPl, Mrs. Flora Williams,
Mrs. Raymond R. Williams and
son, Mrs. Rodney G. Wmters
and daughter, Ellen C. Jeffers.
Robert Hazell, Mrs. David
Caldwell, Mrs. Robert Chesser,
Mrs. Chalmer Dailey and son,
John Gillespie, Mrs. Lowell
Hughes and son, Mrs. Donald
Leedy, Mrs. Edith Mitchell,
Miss Florence Palrick, Mrs.
Phillip Reed, Eadker Russell,
Verlin Stevens, Mrs. James
Thompsoo, Louis Varga, Mrs.
Arthur Wolfe and daughter,
Mrs. Cecil Matheny, Clarence
Roach, Mrs. Clark Kinzel.
Mrs. Clarence E. Anderson,
Mrs. Gregory Bonecuiler and
daughter, Roger E. carpente~.
Jr., Mrs. James Leo Collins,
1r·IS eoX, Mr S. Rick B• Dun •
t d son Mrs Ernest
navan
· Mr
·
EdwardsanJ r. and' son,
s. Ora
H h A Boyd Legg Mrs
osc ar, ·
•
·
Lesl~r M. Lewis, Mrs. John
McGmrus, Mrs. Charles Allen
Mulholland, Roger Plybon,
Mrs. Ella Rostover, Mrs. John
Sexton, Mrs. Herbert Simpson
and daughter , Joe Smith,
Charles M. Starkley, Mrs .
Ronnie C. Waugh, Thorton R.
Wilson and Harry Baldwin.

R 0 bert EdWBI"IUJ
_..J _

Died Saturda

Y

Robert Roscoe Edwards, 67,
Langsville, died Saturday a!ternoon at his residence. A
il
pipefitter most of his li 1e unt
his retirement, he was a
member of Eastern Star Lodge
207 of Wilkesville, Star Grange
No. 776, Orphans Field Lodge
No. 275 at Wilkesville, and of the
Langsville Church of Christ.
Surviving are five daughters,
Karen May Lee King in
Nevada; Carol Millcoff, Indiana; Jean Kennedy, Rutland
Route I; Pauline Lambert,
Scotts AFB, Illinois, and Bertie
Parker, Marion; four sons,
WiUiam and James, both in
California; Chesler in West
Virginia, and Robert, of
Reedsville; a sister, Mrs. Edith
Bornam, Gallipolis; two half
sisters, Mrs. Katherine Long,
Henderson, W. Va., and Mrs.
Mace! Dunlavy, Chauncey; four
half brothers, Chester Hudson,
Addison; Lester Hudson, Point
Pleasant; George and Paul of
Southside, W. Va.; 31 grandchildren, and seven greatgrandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his wife.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Langsville Christian Church
with the Rev. Gene Musser
officiating. Burial will be in
Salem Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Martin Funeral
Home Tuesday and until noon
Wednesday when the body will
be taken to the church. Orphans
Friend Lodge 275 will hold
services at the fun eral home at
7:30p.m. Tuesday.

ability to effectively manage Gilligan ·said "apparently the wagfiJrice freeze.
added funds.
revolution has lasted only eight The Ohio governor said he
Governors are currently months" in a reference to the was "deeply disturbed" that
\vithout the management power
Nixon could espouse programs
and capability needed to deliver
and eight months later ''turn
quality state services, quickly
his hack, walk away from
and economically, to those citithem.
zens who need them," said Gil(Continued !roll\ Page 1)
" I am disturbed by the 'obligan.
more than 50 shots were fired. vious change in philosophy, I
Gilligan asked the Nixon ad- As heavily armed officers am very deeply disturbed, "
ministration to:
entered the prison Army said Gilligan .
- Help states and major met- helicopters flew o~erhead Gilligan also reiterated his
ropolitan areas improve their pumping tear gas into cellblock previous position that he favcapabilities to manage develop- "D" where the prisoners held ored a complete federalization
ment.
their hoslages since last of the welfare system.
- Launch a nationwide cam- Thursday when the riot erupted. Gilligan has been selected by
paign to educate the penple re- Abwl ~ minutes after the fellow Democratic governors to
garding the need for stronger police stormed the high gray head a committee that will outstate and metropolitan area walls of the 46-year-old prison, a line party alternatives to Nixgovernments.
National Guard artillery unit on 's wage price freeze.
- Narrow federal require- moved in with several hundred The position paper, which is
ments for state planning to a more men.
expected to be presented to the
relatively few broad programs "Surrender peacefully, you 29 Democratic governors today,
coordinated through the gover- will not be harmed," a loud apparently will denounce the
nors and their central planning speaker blared . "Surrender the wage-price freeze as a bonanza
staff.
hostages. Surrender the for business.
- Re - establish and improve hostages. Lie down on the Door It is expected to also call for
state technical services pro- and put your hands on your tax reductions for lower income
gram to smooth technology head."
groups as part of the economic
transfer to the private sector The move on the prison came package.
and state government.
nearly two hours after Slate
- Establisbment of a White Correction Commissioner
House office to implement fed- Russell G. Oswald issued an
eral programs involved in in- ultimatwn to the prisoners to
PLAYBOY BUNNY RAPED
creasing management capabili- surrender the hoolages.
ties of state and local governShoctly after Oswald issued READING,England (UPI) - ·
ments.
what he called his "final Agang of youths raped and beat
VISIT IN POMEROY
GiUigan earlier Sunday said request" on behalf of the a Londoo Playboy Club Bunny
Mr.
and Mrs. Bentley Peeples
he was "deeply disturbed" by hostages, Gov . Nelson A. and left her lying injured,
an apparent shift in tbe econo- Rockefeller- who put off a trip behind a railroad station, police of Mansfield and Miss Linda
mic policies of President Nixon . to the National Governors' said. Officers said A.ntonia Peeples of Missouri, visited
GiUigan, one of six governors Conference in Puerto Rico - Draboczyk, 21, was found un- recently with Mr. and Mrs. Otto
who appeared oo "Meet the placed the National Guard on cooscious in a pool of blood by Lohn of Pomeroy.
an unidentified man on his way
Press" here during the National alert
29.6:i.
Governor's Conference, noted About 500 inmates were to work.
CLUB TO MEET
Veal Calves: Choice, 43.50; that Nixon had called revenue reportedly taking an active part "The hooligans pounced on
The
Third
Friday Club will
Good, 40.25; Mediwn, 36; Baby sharing and welfare reform in the disturbance while another her like a pack of wolves," said
Calves by the Head, 25-ii2; part of the "new American rev- 500 were reported not under a police spokesman. ''The poor meet at 7:30p.m. Friday at the
borne of Marie Dailey.
Choice Lambs, 26.90.
girl did not have a chance."
prison controL
olution" last January.
41

Hostages

Market Report

-

•

·Now You Know
Cartoonist Charles Schulz
earned $90 the first mouth hiS

Brakes Failed
.

•
•
GUNNISON; Colo. (UPI)The school bus transporting the
Gunnison High Sc.hool junior
varsity to a football game was
coming down the east side of
the 11,312-fool Monarch Pass
when the odor of smoke drifted
back to the players.
"One of the boys noticed the
brakes smelled," said Bob
Ragatz, a It-year-old junior
.varsity football player at
Gunnison High SchooL "Not bad
at first, but it got worse-the
smell of smoke."
The bus slowly gathered
momentum. The bus driver,
Royce Mustain, 23, pushed on
the brake pedal, and then
pushed harder. The force of his
efforts brought him boll upright
out of his seat, his fool
pumping the pedaL
"One of the coaches got up to
try and help the driver put the

I

bus in first gear," Ragatz said.
"But then the brakes SE1lllled to
go, and then tbe transln,ission."
Down the winding mountain
road the bus sped out of
control, --50, 60, 70 miles per
hour.
"A couple of the kids began
to scream," Ragatz said.
The bus careened out of
control for 21,2 miles before the
driver swerved to miss two
cars and crashed into a parking
lot at Garfield. The bus rolled
over and split open.
Eight piayers and a coach
were killed and 39 others "'ere
injured in the accident Saturday. Nineteen persons were still
hospitalized today-three in
critical condition, including
Mustain. Mustain was among 15
ol the injured who were
airlifted to Denver for medical
treatment.

$600,000 Damage
Acti•On 1•S Filed
According to the petitioo,
Mrs. con entered the hospital
Aug. 5, 1970, for a vaginal
hysterectomy. Following
surgery, she was treated by all
physicians named in the fcrm of
general treatment of her ·condition. Plaintiffs charge the
defendant, Holzer Hospital,
through its agents, was
negligent in that it failed to
provide proper care and
treatment at various times
from her admission on Aug. 5
through ber discharge on Sept.
16. They claim that as a direct
and proximate result of the joint
and concurrent negligence,
Mrs. Coil sustained permanent
damages to her abdtmen and
vaginal area.
Mrs. Coli seeks damages
totaling $500,000 while her
husband seeks $100,000 for
lll
additional expenses incurred
On lUO
andlossofhiswife'sservicestn
the future. They demand a jury
Marion (Hood ) Nicholson , 77, trial.
Route I, Rutland, who died
early today at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, was a
retired bridge carpenter for the
New York Central Railroad, a
member of tbe Mt. Union
Baptist Church, and of Star
Grange No. 778.
He is survivecj by a daughter,
Mrs . • Evelyn Schilling, Vermilion, Ohio; four sons, Waid,
Rt. I, Dexter; Dale, Middleport ; Ernest, Rutland, and
Marion, of Columbus; 13
grandchildren, six great- SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Half the city's 47,000 elementagrandchildren.
He was preceded in death by ry school pupils were being
bused today to new assignhis wife, Bernice.
ments
to achieve racial balance
Services will be held Thursday at 2 p m. at the Martin in the classroom. Thousands of
Funeral Home, Rutland, with parents were expected to
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating. protest by keeping their childBurial will be in the While Oak ren home from school.
Cemetery, Harrisonville. The Board of Educa!ion hired
Friends may call at the funeral a private firm to provide 130
new yellow buses to carry out
home any time Wednesday.
the court-ordered integration
program for the city's 97
grammar schools. The city's
jynior and senior high schools
were not involved.
U.S. District Judge Stanley A.
Plsns are being made to Weigel in July ordered the
expand the handicraft and schools integrated as a result of
business book services of the a suit by the NAACP. The
Meigs, Jackson, Vintoo Book- school board adopted a plan
mobile, Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, dividing the city into seven
supervisor, said today.
busing zones.
Numerous books on hanPolice dispatched patrohnen
dicraft and business are to possible trouble spots as the
available through the book- new school year opened. City
mobile which has access to oflicials urged antibusing
many volumes through the state parents to refrain from vilibrary service. Residents olence.
·
wishing material oo handicraft ~ All children were given name
or business are invited to e•- tags to be worn un their outer
pre~ their Interests at book- clothing. The ta11 listed the
mobile stops or telephone lbe child's name, the nwnber of hts
bookmobile service office in bus, his classroom and school.
Pomeroy.

A Jackson, Ohio, couple has
filed a $600,li00 damage suit in
Gallia County Common Pleas
Court against the Holzer
Hospilal Foundation, First Ave.
and Cedar St., Gallipolis, five of
its physicians and other employee as the result of an
operation performed ·Aug. 5,
1970_
Mary Jo and Daniel E Coil
221 David Ave., Jackson;
the action against the foundation, Dr. Thm~~~s P. Price,
Dr. Charles E. Holzer, Dr.
Donald E. O'Rourk, Dr .
Richard G. Patterson, Dr .
Lewis A. Schmidt Ill and Catby
Pickens, another hospital
employee.

1

filed

Mr. Nreholson
ruJa
Died
Y

Pupils
Take
to Bus

More Seroices
Are Available

enttne

comic strip, "~uts" was
syndicated, $500 the secood
mootb, $1,0110 the tbird month;
in 1966 $300,li00 plus income
from boots, toys, sweatshirts,
and occasional TV shows.

~

Elberfelds Warehouse on
Sale at •
_ pomeroy
MechaniC Street Terrific vaaues_
Myton Rugs cle
12 foOt Vlf1
- b 12 up to site \2 bV \6.

•88

00

S1teS \'1 V
$88 00
All on sale tor
.

Covering in all
, new Vinyl Floor s ·g Sale of Armstrong s "de or 4 yards w•de.
Also I
ds wide, 3 yards WI
widthS -2 yar

'

\

•

•

Continued cloudy and eool
tonighl Clearing Wedr ky.
Highs lir&gt;-~.

Devoted To The Interesl$ OJ The Meigs·MO$On Area

VOL XXIV NO. Hl6

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TEN. CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1971

2 GM Plants
Closed in Bus

THE SlliOOL SAFETY PATROL bu hem arp!Ued far the new year
at the Ptmeroy Elementary School wxler the direction of Pomeroy Chief ol
Police Jed Webster. Making up the group, composed of sixth graders, are,
front row, I tor, Mark Mitch, Randy Roach, Randy Phillips, Timmy Hood,
Jimmer Soulsby, Buddy McAngus, Jeff English, Ricky Glaze, Todd
Rawlings, lieutenant, and Jim Rosenbawt, captain; second row, from the

left, Peggy Glrolaml, 1te11y Smith, Kim Itrau~~n. Cbief wa.w. Mrs.
Marlene Fisher, teacher and advisor; Cathy Baleltnar, Jane Sisson, Paige
&amp;nith; third row, from left, Randy Hoodashelt, Dwayne Qualls, Susan
~ns, Vicky Hysell, Rhonda Hudson, Rema Chafin, Kim Williams, Marcia
Dillard, Chuck Follrod and Davis Harris.

Abandoned Dump Will Be Sold
Middleport Village Council
voted Monday night to advertise
for sale a 27-4lcre plot which
until a few months ago was used
as a sanitary landfill.
Council voted unanimously to
advertise tbe land upon the
suggestion of Councilman John
Zerkle who pointed out that the
Meigs County Commissiooers
have received about $123,000 in
Appalachia funds to establish a
countywide landfill and apparently will proceed with the
project.
· Middleport opened the landfill
on the 27-4tcre plot off the Rt. 7
bypass several years ago when
the stale ordered that open
dumps be discontinued. An old
rat-infested dwtp on the Oood
road was cJOIII!d and the village
attempted ' to operate Its own
landfill on the 27 acres located
In the Leading Creek area of
Salisbury Township off the bypass.
However, the landfill was the
subject of many complaints by
residents of the sector and as a
result was closed several

months ago.
Council heard Chief of Police
J. J. Cremeans list complaints
of play activities after school
hours on the playground of the
Middleport Elemenlary SchooL
A petition asking that the
basketball court there be
removed from tbe playground
was reported being circulated.
The chief asked council to
authorize him to close a section
of a street at various times
during the week so that cllildren
could play under pollee
supervision. However, council
took no action on the request.
Councilman Dick Vaughan
was named to attend a meeling
of the Meigs Local School
Dislricl Board of Educallon
tonight to express the desire of
village officials that the
playground be Jell open each
evening if requests to the
contrary are lodged.
Mayor C. 0. Fisher reported
that he has recetved several
complaints of a well on the hack
porch ofaband?ned property on
Third Ave. whtch IS dangerous

lor children to be around. He
asked Mrs. Roger Morgan,
councilwoman, to ask the
property owner to take immediate action to fill the well.
Council approved the report
of Mayor C. 0. Fisher for tbe
month of August showing
receipts of $723 of which $547
was collected in fines and fees.
Council also approved the
report of Fire Chief Thomas
Darst. Firemen answered three
calls in August, two in town and
one in Cheshire and two calls in
July, one in town and one in
Cheshire, the report showed.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
read a letter from the Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehicles in-

dicating that the village in the
future can expect a faster
distribution of license tax fees.
Duplications in the system are
being eliminated and computers are being put into use.
Councihnan David Ohlinger
asked that the intersection of
Palmer and Fifth Ave. be investigated for safety hazards.
At one point, due to parking and
trees, visibility of drivers is
greatly handicapped, Ohlinger
said. The matter will be investigated.
Others attending the meeting
were Councilman Lawrence
Stewart and Harold Chase,
maintenance supervisor.

Dea th so Close
.

B LYNN JOHNSON
y A 1 ld to
United Pr:s: IDternatlonal
ATIICA N.Y. (UPI)- We
' near dea th .
were a1ways
I knew they would kill us
r---------------------------~ when the attack began. I was
I
7\T
•
1 so scared. I was ready to die. I
just hoped and prayed.
: 1
Each of us bad an execulionBy Ualted Prell IDimlallonal
eer assigned to us. My
executioner was shot just
Rocky IV Sued by Stripper
before he could get to me.
The stale police sharpshoot1IARLESTON, w. VA. -A ~.•surrincoMection with
ters saved a lot of lives. Just
termination of a strip mine Job in Braxton County bas been filed
before they started to go for us,
against Secretary of Slate JOOil D. Rockefeller IV, the Ap- a slug would hit one of them
palachian Research and Development Fund and several others.
The suit was filed In Kanawha County Circuit Court oo behalf of
land owner Peal Dennia and Tri-state Mines -Minerals Co.
The Eastern Local Athletic
The suit staled Tri-State moved In mining machinery shprtly
Boosters
Assn. will meet this
after the state Department of Natural Resources granted a
evening at tbe high school at 8
pennlt Jan. 18. But because of acts by the defendants, the suit
p.m.
claimed, the mining operation was terminated and tbe plaintiffs
Tbe film ol last week's
were unable to sell coal. The suit described the defendants as game will be shown and a
being cmcerned with tbe ''purported social progress and anti- "sideline quarterback club"
pollution matters in Bruton County."
will be organized. All alumni
and
Interested persons are
Somebody May Get Socked
Invited to attend. The
BRUSSEIJJI - THE SIX EUROPEAN Cornmoo Markel association plans to meet
nations will urge the United States Wednesday to devalue tbe every Tuesday of each week.
dollar, abollsb its 10 pet. SJrcharge on imports, and join other
counlries In restoring woi-14 monetary order. "We are really
going to sock it to them," one Common Markel official said.
The Common Market's tough stand emerged from a sevenhour meeting Mooday of tbe finance and economics ministers of
West Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, l.m:embourg and The
Netberlands. The crisis was triggered by ~linn's Aug. 15decision
to free tbe dollar frcm 1111 fixed exchange value and allow it to
"fioat" and find its own level with other currencies. The
!'resident also imposed a 10 pet. s..-cbarge on all imports.

B
.
..f.
,ews••• rn r1e1 s :

and they !ell. Tbe knives were
still in their hands.
Just before tbe assault
started they took eight hostages
into a cellblock. There was no
way for the sharpshooters to
get in there. They slit their
throats.
They put some other guys in
trenches and poured gasoline
over them. But they apparently
chickened out and didn't light
it.
The remaining hoslages were
blindfloded and lied-up- hands
and fe~t.-iust like pigs.
They didn't move toward us
when the assault started. The
guy in charge of the executioners told the others to keep cooL
They were not going to ltill us
unless one of them was hurt.
When the shooting and
gassing began, my executioner
knocked me to the ground,
pulled me up, knocked me down
again and at that point I
blacked out.
'
When I came to-! wasn't out
more than a minute or two-the
guy was there beside me. Dead.
(Continued oo Page 8)

Meters Collect
Over $1,527

In Middleport

arrests by his department
durmg the month mcluding
seven for intoxication, four,
assault · and battery; two. for
mvestigat10n ; two for ftghting ;
two, drivin~ while intoxicated;
two, squealing tires, and one
each for running a red light,
~allur~ to y:eld ~ r;ght: :a~
o owmg oo c ose y, c .
assured clear distance, lin·
proper turn, reckless operation
and distur_bing the
_ peace. .
Th
li
dr
e ~ ce crrnser was tven
3,695 miles durmg the month.

Office

·

The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Monday voted to

c!:

=~~:;e.;t~bein

afternoons Monday through
Friday. A parltime secretary

SAIGON (UPI ) - AntiAmerican violence broke out
today in Saigon where terrorists
fire-bombed an American
truck, badly wounding a U. S.
sailoc The old imperial capital
ofH~.;..declaredofflimitsto
American troops following antiAmerican rioting there.
The Saigon outbreaks
stemmed in part from past
American support of Ptesident
Nguyen Van . 'l'bieu and his
decision to run unoppooed in tile
Oct. 3 presidential electioos.
Disabled war veterans have
demonstrated against 'l'bieu,
the United Stales and the war
itself.

will be employed in the office.
Jack Kerr, now C of C
president, will ask the county
commission for courthouse
space. Members agreed tbe
office should be oriented toward
service to the county as well as
to Pomeroy. The secretary will
. t the chamber in local
assiS
promotions.
The chamber will send a
letter of congratulations to Miss
Laurel Lea (Lauri~) Schaefer
,
whowascrownedMissAmerica
1972 Saturday night.
Miss Schaefer was crowned
Miss Southern Ohio at the~ No injuries were re~ in
Southern Ohio Pageant ' 10 two smgle-car acctdents
Pomeroy in 1968 which was Monday.
sponsored by the Chamber of The Meigs County Sheriffs
Commerce and Ohio Ela Phi Dept. said that Joseph T.
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Vosick, 23, Uhrichsville,
Sorority. Flowers will also be traveling on SR 7 at t p.m.
sent to Miss Schaefer when she passing a line of cars wentlo the
returllli to Ohio.
left into the yard of the James
Kerr reported that 25 Grueser borne when a car in
memberships have been front of him also pulled out to
received, making the total dues pass.
paid $650.
Vosick, whose car went ~
Kerr also said the Regatta yards before stopping nff tile
fund has a balllnce of $333.02, highway, was arrested on
with notes at the Pume!oy charges of passing without
National Bank and The Far- assured clear distance.
mers Bank and Savings Co., Monday at 6 p.m. on Collaty
paid.
Road 3, Robert E. Hawkins, Zl,
Attending the noon lundteon Rutland,lraveling nartb anDid
at Bower's Drive-In were Bob a curve, got in wet grass
Jacobs Earl Ingels, Jack causingbimtoklle&lt;:~~~lrol Tbe
Carsey,' Bill Grueser, Walter car skidded across tbe biglnray
Grueser, Tom Cascell, Richard and...,... an -•nktnrnt backChambers and Dean Lutz, wards. There was Jicbt"';m•ge
advertising salesnlan for to the car. No citlr. WMPO Radio.
issued.

The Hue violence came after
an American SGidier sbot and
killed a youth who bad s1olen a
waleb from anolbel' Gl. A mob
of Yielnamese youths hurled
firebombs into American
vehicles befcre they were dispersed by po[i&lt;.oe. The city was
declared off limits and U. S.
vehicles forbidden to enter it.
Little figbting was reporied
em '"" war fruits but tn Laos
'""&lt;
government lroops entered the
town of Patsontodayin a major
victmy ...,... North VieiN:m s
and Patbet Lao lroops wbo
overran tile Bolovens Plateau
last May. Tile plateau controls
large parts Ill tile Ho Chi Minb
Trail infillratim routes to South

T wo Autos
Jn Mishaps Fl•eJd Tour
On Sepl. }5·

SOt.miERN IUGH SCHOOL varsity cheerleaders who will work overtime this faD to help
rebuild school spirit and support for their football team are, liD r, front, Nancy Ours; second
row, Jean Sloter; third row, Teresa Gooch, Judy Roberts and Lee Ann
Pam Hill was

absent.

Platt said Fisher Body
remains only four hours ahead
of the Pontiac assembly line in
its output of auto bodies.
"Why us?" asked a dismayed
(Continued on Page 8)

FIFTEEN WAS'l'OOMANY - .A - (.tlDve) owned by

Mr. and Mrs. 1'cm Jones, crown City RD, ~ ll8bn Ibis
month with a double blrlllfll 2t pigs five dl;ya apart, then
righted tbiDgll by beuelf. 011 SepU slle bad nine pip aDd on
the 8th, five days later, U llllft. 'l'lr odds of Ibis hot,...ing
no one learned in animal husbandry was willing to guess. One
local veterinarian l8l'eed wilb the J-•
II is ''very rare,"
occurring only when there is emceplinD in ucb Ill the two
horns ri the ulerua. Unable to feed wbllt slle prlldliced, tbe
sow by last weekend hid killed an but of 11er double
Iiller, of wJjcb one re:nainr.t weak &amp;mdly. Jcmes said an
infant pig will oot lbrive m food fnm any !lliRf! other tban
its mother.

L"'fLamb
\.,dl
er
~fd::::t ~~~:~:da~ To Open Truck Bombed

.

SAIGON - MILITARY IIOURCI!S repocted today that the
South Viellllmv· IK1IlY is setting up ila first new division since
111115 to take tbt place of American forces scheduled to be withcnwnllong lbe allied defatle net....n llong the Demilitarized
. Z!JDe, Meantime, In Stqon, a U. S. sailor was iDjured wben VIet
OtlllC guerrillaa firebcmbed IR Amaicu truck. And In the DDrtbJn city o1 Hue, Vietnem esi youtha IIII'Jed Molotov cocktails at
-~~u.s. veblcleufter aGifltllly 8hot a VIetnamese boy as
(CGDtllltletl• Pile I)

tions."

Parking meter collections in
Middleport for U1e month of
August were $1,527.50, Police
Chief J. J. Cremeans reported

LONDON- ROBERT ROWLANDS turned on his silprt-wave
radio hoping to pick up 8011leme In Aulllralia. Jnatead be tuned in
on a gang ri thieves tunneling into a central I.Alndon bank vault
only bl1f a mile away. POllee lllid tbe haul in the robbery could be
u hl8b as $U million. It also loucbed nff a massive investigation
u to why pollee failed to acton Rowlands'llpllld, when they did,
how tbe)o DWlllled to visit the bMk being robbed without noticing
llll)'lbiDg , . going on.
RowJands said pollee an but ignored blm and it was more than
IJboun law tllat radio detection trucb were t.ougbt to the area
-jUitulraJII!Dissiooulopped.Itwasnot until Monday morning
- M hourailfter Rowllnda f1nt ltmed lnlo lbe bank robbers lbatlbecrlmewu dilcovered. The lloyd's Bant liranch involved
Wll at 115 Balrer Street, one block !rem Sherlock Holmes' flcUonal 22 Baker Street reiideoce and not farm from Madame
n.&amp;ud'a wu muaeum.

First-NeUJ Outfit Since 1965

Object,
Pressure
On Court

By RICHARD HUGHES
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI )Picketing opponents of school
0',. busing succeeded today in
forcing giant General Motors
Mrs. Meadows in Corp. to close two of its plants,
hoping that the world's largest
would use its
Leaders' Volume corporation
poli.tical clout against courtMrs. Dan Meadows ol ordered integration.
Middleport, a teacher at the
Approximately 500 pickets
Pomeroy Elementary School, massed in front of the gales of
bas been selected for listing a Fisher Body plant before the
in "Leaders of American start of the ftrSt day shift,
Elementary Education for jeering workers who went in
1971," according to Robert and arguing with UAW repreMorris, principal of the sentatives who lried to urge
Pomeroy scbool. She was employes into the plant.
nominated earlier this year
A sborlage of auto bodies
by the school administrators. forced GM to shut down the
Leaders of American companioo Pontiac Motor DiviElementary Education Is an sion assembly line, wllich
annual program honoring the employs 14,000 hourly workers.
men and women who have The only GM complex in
distinguished themselves by Pontiac not llit by the boycott
their service and leadership was the GMC plant wllich
in the field of elementary makes school buses.
education. Each year, tile
APontiac spokesman said the
biographies ol those honored assembly line which produces
are featured in the awards 70 cars per hour, would be
volume, Leaders ol American halted, forcing 1,Zll workers Ill
Elementary Education.
be sent home early.
a.u:m:cc : ~u ~ "We experienced more tban
60 per cent absenteeism," said
Albert F. Platt, Fisher Body
plant manager. ''We cannot
operate under these coodi-

Story the Yard Didn't Believe

I

Wmthe,·_

Nease.
'

V"1etnam.

Meigs Area farmers are inviled to a On Oboervation
Field Day at tile farm Ill Dale
K&amp;lll&amp;, near Chester Wednesday, Sepl 1~ at I p.m.
Agroncmy !p"Cialists I*
11
will be John U..... wuod, EJ;.
tension Ara Agronomist at the
Jarbm Center; Sam Bolle,
Extension Soil Scientist at Ohio
State UniYtrsity, and pc Ny
Larry Shepherd, &amp;zteasioo
Agron&lt;mist in Corn at OhiD
State Univasity.
Some corn hybrids still
growing will be - . The an
!elf blight I* I'
will Ill
evalaatal, -.1 idMI fw -..
meW. tm I* .,, n Ill'
acre will be llll&amp;al
Eva)- illla 'tl ill an
pc-.ctNo is latM I lUI C.£..
Blakeslee, COIIDlJ ad rt•
agenl

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