<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9271" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9271?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:07:29+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19702">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/4bc72e100775b8fb7d178ce84324a2b3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>29dd6da76657321d8f38e430e2538709</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29782">
                  <text>------,~-------- - ~

.I

-!'I Dilly !I

lloel., ~G), 0., !ll!pl.U, 1m.

Crusade Planned
•

An ~ Crualde will
lllld at the First Baptist
reb, E. Main Street,
J'II!MII'OJ, "'CCnnnil«
..., Monday at
p.m. ud continuing
:...lllllih Sunday, Sepl 26, with
. Edward B. Fischer, Ohio
Japttst Olnvenllon evangeUat,
.pest ent~~~ellat.
I Rev. Ji'ilcber, a graduate of
Jlihejton College and NorBible College, came
the staff of the Olpo Baptist
Convention 18fter serving as
~rintendent of Tbe Baptist
JIOmeofUpperMiamiatPiqua,
-Ghio 51!! years. Previously be
~ad served in various
:pastorates JO years in Ohio, and
;was a chaplain during World
:War II.
~ He has been heard and
,.loved by many. RecenUy be
'¢ompleted a trip to the Holy

..,._tern
;fo

ppqp •: .

PAYMEI'ml DElAYED
COUJIIBUS (UP!) -Stille
Wtlfue Diredor Job ·E.
lb • uld Ieday •unlDg
••me payme•ls. will be

children. He and his wife,
Evelyn, reside in Piqua.
There will be a "Sped•!
"'--'·-'•"" each night of
_ the loee
delayed b)' at least 0 "" week
~,..,.......,
..ie lbe two l•terlm
services, with special music ., 'cot bills pusetl by tbe
and a .nur1ery provided. Each ~ euller lllls DIODtb
night services will be preceded did lilt . ....,.. flUids lor. lbe
with a prayer circle in the ant.c llemes.
JII1IYd" rooDl at the cburcb at
7:10p.m.
The public is cordially invited
IIARIUAGE UCENSE
to attend each service. 11Jere
Lawrence Coy Fields, 55,
will be a free-will offering Pomeroy, and Birdie May
received each night
Boyd, 45, Middleport, Rt. 1.

HazelL Gibb DietJ

..

Tr·~ J ....·,

·
•
S
~.1
Mrs. Hazel Lewis Gibbs, 79, of Lewis, Jr., Camden, Ohio.
near Letart, w. va. , died Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial at 1:30 p.m. Friday at the
Hospital.
Foglesong Funeral Home with
The daughter of the tate the Rev. George Hoschar ofEdward and Mary Gibbs Lewis, ficiating. Burial will be in
Mrs. Gibbs was b&lt;m in the Graham Cemetery. Friends
:Land.
Fairview cOmmunity July 5, may can at the funeral home
. Rev. Fischer is married and 1892. She was a former any time afler noon Thursday.
·ibe father of two married elementary school teacber in
~
Mason County. Besides her. JIISIJllity Pleaded
,
parents, she was preceded in
deaSurvthbl_vYm
. agbrareolherher,Wihtlusband,li•m. In Murder Case
; :
___
·.
Arthur E. Gibbs ; two At Pt. Pleasant
. (Continued from Page 1)
daughters, Mrs. Maxine'
PT. PLEASANT_ Not guilty
'affect or ~rhaps, encourage, Turnbull, Mason, and Mrs. E. by reason of insanity was the
otber jmiors to make similar Louise Gibbs, near Letart; plea of 21-year old steven
requests. Pocter pointed out to three sons, Arthur C., Hartford, SwaDD, Point Pleasant, in
the student tbat the board does and Carl J. and Leo F., New Masm County Circuit Court
wish Ill encourage students to Haven ; 16 grandchildren, eight Tuesday mcrning.
receive their diplomas but must grea !-grandchildren, two Swann, accused of the July
consider other factors.
sisters, Mrs. Ruth Cllasleeu, 4thmurderofSandraWilllams
~ board a~inted Dana Emore, Ohio, and Mra. Sally 19,CampConley~ appeared with
Kessmger as jun1or high school Allen, Toronto, Ohio, and two bls attorneys, R. G. and R. F.
cheerleader coach and .Gary brothers, Allen Lewis, of near Musgraw to enter biB plea and
:Walker as cD-&lt;!Il~rvisor of the Letart, w. Va., and Edward heard Judge James Lee
high school yearbook. William
'1'llcmpsan p&lt;8nl.out to him that
Hackett was named a substitute
Finel should be be found guilty of the
l:ustodian. Tbe board approved Defendantl munier charge be could be
Jbe employment of Aaron Zahl
sentenced to lif ·
.
'-' a teacber of industrial arts Two defendants were fined Judge ........,!_~ ~loraslongasbeisneededinthe and two forfeited bonds iu aa:epted o;;.:;"'~ te~
~trict
Pomeroy Mayor Charles ._Frida
se
•
·
Legar'S court Tuesda
y, Sepl71 at9:30 a.m.
, George Hargraves,
.
Y_ ~ Musgrave llld Musgrave asked
JUPerlntendent, reported tbat ~were Adam Collins, Big the judge to cbange the trial
fncrements in teacher pay Cre.k, W. Va., ~~~ _and ~Is datetolat.er " the term"to all
.....
days m jail,
Ill
.-••ot be made during the and
whilethree
intoxicated,
and dri-•"
J..,;.;;; them to prepare
their cases ow
on
Jovemment wage freeze and Hind Middl
$5 and .
sucb a serious charge
olbat school lunch prices must ..Y.
eporl,
costs,
· ·
~emain the same. 11 was drivmg the wrong way 011 a one
reported that Prosecutor ::;., s~~ ~ ~
8 ....,
llemard Fullz will handle the
rva, 0 el
PAREN'I'S TO MEET
]letails of a request by a RuUand :::ted~or !'=i•:bir inTbe playground committee of
~t to run a gas line under
ca
an .
ones, the Pomeroy Elementary
tchool property In that com- Columbus, forfeited an $1~7S School PI'A will meet Thursday
munity.
bond posted 00 a speeding at 7 p.m. at the school. All
• Mullen spoke on the charge.
parents are urged to attend.
iangerous intersection at State
Route 7 and County Road 5.
ter
. Jaaolmid

Plavgro1Jnd

·•·•t ,,...

~
..
•&gt; '"'

M
Go
Go
thaGil!l~anwillandconhatavcet
C
vem . t

jWn aend someone down to look

.• , tbliiltdttiiln.
SAIGON (UPI}-Sen. Gawge
and Sayre were McGovern, J&gt;..SD., was aelamedboardmemberstoserve luaJJy meeting with Viet Clllg
:ls representatives of the board ageuiB rather than the religiCIIS
3D meet for discussiOns with leaders be thought they were
Jl!iresentalives of the district's Tueaday night when a cburcb
feachers association on Oct. 19. was Jirt'bnmbed, tbe Saigm
~ Attending the meeting were police chief said today.
~ ·ard members, Porter,
Police Cbief ..........
90
· · - Si "'-•au
lfulle!l, Sayre, Virgil King, said the flrebunbs we-e lbrowll
lllram Slawter, Clerk L. w. atthecbtrebwberethesenalor
.McComas, Vaughan, Supt. \vas in a sea-et cmfereuce by
Jlargraves and Mrs. David manbers of the South VJelua'Jiowen from the teachers mese Popular Self-Defdllle ForJSSOCialion. Larry Morrison, ces home guard.
.
:psststant superintendent, was Saigon. Police Chief Trang Si
:IID8ble to attend due to illness. Tan sa1d Sen. McGovern,
•
"unwittingly" met with the Viet
Cong agents.
McGovern called the charge
outrageous and complained
T... iglll lnd Tllundly
~rsonally to President Nugyen
Sept. !Sind 16
Van Thien.
NOT OPEN
Tan said McGovern ''was oot
aware
he was meeting with V1et
Friuy t11ru Tuesday
Cong agents and cadres."
September 11-21
THE REIYERS
McGovern and four aides
!Tecllnicolorl
were meeting secretly with a
Steve McQueen
group
tbat had been described
Sharon Farrell
GP
as Vietnamese Buddhist and
A MAN
Reman Catholic leaders and a
CALLED HORSE
student group.
!Tecllnicolorl
Tan said sune of the students
Richard Harris
GP
meetinl! with McGovern were
part of a radical "Student
Assault Group" which aulb:ri-

! Mullen

MEIGS THEATRE

BY GOWIE CLENDENIN public and ·personal welfare. black brothers and sisters."
Women's lib's bra burning And if civilization is to survive .Another said, "Send them to
and karate ladies are deman- U1e home and institution of Vietnam ; after all, fighting a
.. ding more rights and freedomS : .narrlage must stay. .
. war is a man's job. That's what
Now this three year ·marriage Where does youth get its bent this fascinating womanhllod
license thing - or is it seven, is fur colilmQnal. living and wants. The great American ·
it just to run its · course With shacking up with just anyone? sport is no longer baseball, but
option to be renewed, and there Hasn't this sort of thing been a name calling."
will be no divorce in tbat time- "way of life" for many? With all - The Ub must be celebrating
equal and binding on both the cheating that goes on within their score now on allowing 12
parties- or just the men bomd the home?.- someliriles.
year old girls on paper routes in
by it?
Will these bra-less gals New York. Previously a boy
Could the liberated female really be happy with this could start at 12, but girls at 16.
walk out on it any time? Well, change in the system they're How many folk believe a 12it's different any way from the fightillg so hard for - going year old girl (or boy) to be safe ·
trial, companionate and againstalllawsofnature,God . on any street; deUvering and
common-law way, which for and man? The late Robert collecting for papers after
years has needed no license, Raurk said: " A man has one school?
just mutual consent.
pride, masculinity. When a wife
Some men can See and
And the post WW II times encroaches on that pride, she's acknowledge the lib movement
when the best the modern man lost a lover and gained a son." is only asking for the rights we
promised was a wedding It's sad, and hard to see if she claim are just for any one. They
tomorrow, for a honeymoon is smart or not. There's always say, "We fight to force freedom
tonight. Now the once pursued been this joke·about"smartinin' on people across the world is in pursuit.
pills." Now they really have but when our own wives, girlSeems like these ladies are some "smart pills," they're friends or daughters demand
anti-men, marriage and called.
.
this very thing they'~e a bunch
children; and forget about Andyouthandaged,too,want o'.dykes.
morals - not light-laced; just everything yesterday _ and
One black woman said,
loose '" a lot of !Vays.
pay for it tomorrow, maybo!. "liberation to us is lib for ·all
Every one's seeing and in- And looking for thrills! Smoke black~ople,andlet'snotallow
vestigating someone else. Now two packs of cigarettes a day; ourselves to be used and
Women's
Lib
demands take tranquilizers, drink liquor trapped by the white women's
apologies. from wliticians - and drive fast cars.
dissatisfaction with her own
"Snow White mu5t go." And It's said 4 415 women are man ···;'
most any kind of marriage, but attending law' school and more
Another said:
" White
the three or seven year period than half that many are Women's Ub has nothing to do
they decide to advocate.
practicing Jaw. They're . with us black folk -It's time
Is marriage really on its way "corning into their own," since you left us oul,_ of your abortive
out? Any trend or system tbat the draft began to cut into the movements and insane afattacks the home is hostile to male enrollment. Men say why fairs."
not draft them? Equal rights,
Chinese women · for years
Loss Was $45,000 equal obligations!
lived by the criteria set down in
.
Mrs. · Na'\ine Henninger of ''The Book of Rites," a ConLosses as a result of_a ftre Columbus, a flamboyant fucian classic:
which struck th~ Excelsior Salt speaker for "Women's rights in
To be humble and respectful,
Co. on East Mam St., Pomeroy, jobs" was in Athens recenUy. yielding and reverential, to put
Aug. 30 have been set at $45,000, Sbe sang, "We've COme a long herself after others ; not talk of
Pomeroy Fire Chief Henry Way, Baby....:. but we've sure got her merits nor argue about her
Werry said today.
a long way to go."
faults;
Of the total $23 0011 was to Another member of Women's
To bear with reproach and
'
contents, the balance to the Ub claimed Ohio has the most endure slights - always to act
buildings. Ther~ was Insurance, restrictive labor laws on women with circumspection; to retire
Chief Werry sa1d. Repatrs are ofanystate,andshemay take it late, and rise ear}y; not shirk
bem
" g made .
up with Gov. Gilligan . Mrs. exerti on from dawn t"Ill dark ;
Henninger agreed and urged
Not argue about her private
them to support other women to affairs; to be neat and· orderly.
THEY'LL WASH CARS . men, regardless of whether you
All this continued for
Meigs High School Jmtor yourself want the work, and thousands of years. Never
Vars1ty
and
Freshmen adds we've been discriminated heard what men were doing all
cheerleaders will hold a car agai.;.t by s. s., taxes and that time! Any way , the
wash Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 credit bureaus
Communists took over in 1949,
p.m. at Jack's Ashland, corner We do tbe ~me work and and one of their first acts was to
of_Beech and Locust Streets, receive $58 to men's pay for give women complete equality
Middleport.
$100. 1ndustry gives typing tests with men! Perhaps there was
to girls, but boys get the in- method in their madness.
telligence tests; and use them
In 1958 Louis Barcata
for the reason in not hiring described Chinese women :
females.
The hair is worn smooth, cut,
They cause men to have in- or in pigtails, even 50 year olds.
presic!en!, is to end a ~Y dustrial accidents by wearing Their bearing and gait have
visit to Vlelnam Thursday.
stretch pants on the assembly become mannish ;
their
Tan said tbe pastor of tbe line, too emotional, and not gestures neutralized.
Redemptory Reman Catholic ambitious enongh!
The practice of flirting has
church asked "a number of In the Black Lash against died out, to be replaced with
foreigners" who came to the Women's lib, one black said, comradeship. Chinese women,
meeting to leave and called in "They're a bunch of frustrated he was told haughtily were no
the Self-Derense Force when hugs," and, " there's no such longer serving the pleasure of
they refused.
thing as women's Ub for us men . They rea II y were
"The participants In the
meeting pushed .out the PSDF
andlockedthedoora,"Tansaid.
"So the PSDF and localRcmau
Catholic people reacted by
burning a truck and a number of
(Continued from Page I)
motor vehicles."
American military police in the panicky first moments of
finally restored order and the attack. "The man assigned
McGovern and his aides re- to kill me was down behind
turned lo their bote!. Tbe U.S. me," he said. "He's friendly
Embassy then assigned guards and wouldn't have killed me but
wben the bullets were flying be
to the McGovern party.
had me out in front of him."

wrong p arty
·

llessaylsresp+msil~eloc recent
Molotov cocktail attacks
against American jeeps and
tnda in Saigon.
Tbe Popular Self-Defense
Fon:e tried to break up the
liii!I!U. rut,_ barred from
the cburdl then they began
'--''••
_...,.. "o::O:=bo
,........, and shooting
into the air, lbe police chief
said.
Tan made his statement at
the daily war briefing for the
Saigon press cmps. He said he
wautm tn teD the full details ci

the incident "because we
learned that there were a
qunber ci peqlle involved for
disbmcrable pm I" e ."
McGovei"D, the only an!lOIIIced Cllndjcl•te for tbe 1m
Democratic nomination for

Hostages

News... in Briefs
(Continued from Page 1)
Cllllltries IAJday in ajoillt demand to the United States to devalue
the dollar aDd lift President NO: on's !Opel. import surcharge.
GovalliiJellt sources said Olancell!l" of tbe Exchequer Anlbony Barber told U. S. Treasury Secretary John B. Connally tbat
Britain agrees with the llllll"Rt countries tbat these are essential
first m"""' to eDI the mon~ld dollar crisis. Tbe United States
has said it will neither devalue tbe dollar nor lift the surcharge
mlil olber majcr lradln8 countries raise the value of their own

eastern Peunsylvania and in Texas, residents were asb!d to
ranain alert !ar flooding as beavy showers cauaed by Tropical
Sl«m Edith tbrmlenod swollen rivers and water reservoirs.
Gale warniDgs we-e issued foc Brownsville, Tex., north to
Port Man!lje)d as Edith slapped,the Gulf of Menco with 5Gmile-

an.1Jour willds. 1'1'1lpical Storm Edith had stalled about 100 miles

south II. Blowuville early today, but the storm was expected to
*ift slowly ncrtlnrard.
violets~

handpainted

purest white milk -

glass. and trimmed
with a ruffle of
sparkling cry!ilal--.
1his is Fenfon's
Violets in the

Snow!
COme and broMe our

Atleast .me persms drowned Tuesday as water raged 15 feet
deep ~ the main streets of Olester and Norristown, Pa.
Folr others were missi..: and assumed drowned.

Dlapman's ·Shoes
MAIN ST.

POMEROY

en1ire selection of

glass soon.

HANESEP T41111'11
You can wash them and ·wuh them and wuh
them. And they'll 81111 feel good. They're rntde ct
cotton that keeps its llhape. ~ reinforced where
It counts, to resist ugglng. Smail, me"dtum, large.
extra large.
3.·-for $Ut

Double Pinel llrtefl
Give him perfect comfort. Hann brlell t.. ,.._
forced eeams and asctentmc cut-for genUe support all da~ long. The elastic walatbend • ·heil
reslatan~ so the comfort lasts longer. stz• i!ll
oM.
~ ,.,~".39

Ill

Elberfelds

Pomeroy, Ohio

HEADOUARTERSFORCARHARTT

The high-scoring boot look. It
sports a snoot toe, harness
strap and easy·moving leather.
Step into a pair. You'll
have the look of a winner.

POM EROY-MIIJDLEPORT, OH 10

l

t.

'l

;1,..

,. •• .,.;._

l

I

RESERVE CREER1EADERS of Soutbem Local 111gb
School are front, 1..-, Stephanie Ord and Vickie Wolfe, back,
Ronda Ash holding Cindy Gooch.

Statements in
Disagreement
Two accidents were investigated Wednesday , the
Meigs COUJity Sheriff's Dept.
reported.
At 3:50 p. m. Uoyd H. Hoffman, Pomeroy Rt. 3, was
traveling on Comty Road 18,
nine miles north of Pomeroy in
a pickup truck when he met a
school bus driven by Unda Jett,
31, Pomeroy, · which Hoffman
stated was on the wrong side of
the highway rounding a curve.
Hoffman said when he pul!ed
to the right the berm gave way
and his truck rolled over the
embankment.
The driver of the Meigs Local
School bus, however, stated she
was on her side of the highway

! News ••• in Briefs

Belfa•t Rocking again
IIELFAST,NOR'lUERN IRELAND -BRITISH troopo came
under attack from snipers and stone .throwing crowds in Belfast
llld LOudmdeuy lllday while explosiona rocked the capital, in~ at least Uree pa-sons. Gunmen kidnaped a policeman near
the border with the IrlBh Republic, rut later released him
UDharmed. A British soldier died of gunshot wounds received in
an attack Tu~ raising to 21 the toll of soldiers killed in the
province tlda year.
.

Military Draft in MoriBl Danger
WASHINGTON '- FU'ItJR.E OF mE M!LlrARY draft,
.,~ a1n1e June 30, slill appeared to be In doubt lllday as
admlnl•traUm olllclals faced another Senate revolt in their effort
to pin I""'JJI~Iion of the drafl An aftemoon vote slated In the
Senate on a motion by Sen. Gordon Allott, R.Colo., to table the bill
wblcb wwld ellend the draft another two years.

Vuit Ended

and had witnesses to prove it.
The Hoffman truck was
demolished. Hoffman suffered a
lcaeration to his right shoulder
but was not immediately
treated. No arrest was made.
On Comty. Road 31 Wednesday at 7 p. m. Thomas
Edward , Wilson, 16, was
traveling west when the
steering went out on his truck as
be romded a curve. Wilson hit
the gas pedal instead of his
brake, causing the truck to
strike an embankment and turn
over several times.
There was heavy damage to
the truck. No injuries or arrests
were reported.

.
! F~reKept

S.UGON - AT LEMI' 15 PERSONS INCWDING an
American civilian, have been Uated dead by the U. S. conunand
lllday after the worst terrorlat Incident in the South Vietnamese
capital in slz years. Tbe ezploslon also Injured 57 other persons,
includlngaevenAmericanGIB, the command aMounced. Another
anti-American demonatralion lroke out at an Army base near
Salgm, and the U.S. Embassy advised Americans to take
precaullona foc their safety.

.

To Wiring
Pomeroy firemen were called
to the intersection of Butternut
and Brick Sis. at 10:57 p. m.
Wednesday when a car driven
by Ivan Powell of Pomeroy
caught fire . Damages were
restricted to the wiring, Fire
Chief Henry Werry said.
At 7:43 a. m. today, the
Pomeroy E-R squad was called
to the Dana Swift home in
Minersville wbere a visitor,
Carl McCimg of Natchez, Tex.,
had become ill. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital to
be admitted for treatment.
At 2:« p. m. Wednesday, the
squad answered a call to the
Bowers Restaurant on East
Main St. wbere an employe,
Vanessa Pettit, had fainted. Sbe
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted for treatment.

Radio to Speed
Scorekeepipg

S.UGON - SEN. GEORGE M&lt;XlOVERN LEFT South
Vlelnam IAJday after a three-Uy visit shrouded in controversy.
Tbe II!DIIilr couferred with President Nguyen Van Thieu and
demanded an apology frllll1bleu after police cbarged McGovern
bad met unwittingly with Viet Cong agents. Just before leaving
The Meigs Local Athletic
far bla rebm trip lo the United Stales, the plllr criticized
Boosters
approved purchase of
Prellident Nixon's Vletnamlzatlon program, likening It to "a·
a walkie-talkie ( tw~way radio)
bandag~ ~;~~~a malignant cancer."
to be used at football g~ to
provide instant and accura!e
information for the scorekeeper
Polke Fight Studentl, Farmers
Tuesday evening at the high
N.ARl'I'A, JAPAN- THOOSANDS OF STUDENTS and school. ·
farmer~ duhed with at least 5,000 pollee today at the site of an
11rpcrt undlr con~trucUon. At le•t three policemen were kllled
Kermit Walton, president,
llld IUGtber 150 olllcen InjUred. Tbe atudens and farmers were extended thanks to the .memII"OiilttUJW the ClllllrucUOII of the alrpcrt which Is being built 30 bers for working at the financially successful county fair
mlll!ll oulllde Tllkyo 18 handle jumbo jets. '
food stand. It was' decided to
give two footballs at the next
'
, Guerrilla~ Attack Pauenger Bus
home game. Fibns were shown
PIINOII PBNB- A CIVlLIAN PA!IIIENGER bua was at- of last week's game ' with
!ec+:ed llillll)' by perr111u a!OIIilli8bnY 5ucrthWIIII of Phuom Reemelin, won by the
.._.., '1'be
al!bart lime befcre a truck convoy was Marauders, ~14.
ttJIIIIIIraacblbe 1M ~ vi~ food auppllea. It was the Thll boosters will meet again
Caumnlnitrt attaek In the put month along the key next. Tuesday at 7:30. Refresh, IJIPw:qlllltfnlaiPIIIcm,._lotbt'ftt,l!andiMrder.
., ments will be served.
·

For Marauders

Shtr,i lintd nst tsV- Thl w•mnt vest 111d1 II Bllftt11lintd jadet IBW - For Mot PIIY IJ 81111~ 1 t lintel £till lilt-"'-" ......
W.. II Shll)l li11lll rllldl ca1 t 34CII -t~~XulieMs lflwp1 IIJiina !IM re•lsttl• Iii ~trJI lln14 lad:tl UCB-W~rm lftd ,._.,. rt1 111M • IIIMIIIIIII
qllih liMd jld:tt IDU-Utht wtl~~~ lnaulalian 11vt1 you mobility _
6 ln5ullttd qulltllntd COli IDLC - Sfyli119 with 114 """' ttilirr
ltw,-Th• •ll•Oillld work'*';' ID _carp tnter r.ll ho:J. O'ltr~llt 68FB- Oulunecl !qf lht Pfoftulonal atftlnltn IDl Fullllldt ltill 0\'ltllllIJL...:a . :
Nfll . . . 1111111 lltOOflnd wrnd r•lrllllll
Insulated wvertlls 9960 - TOll\ comla!'l lnd IO..Iwalllh IJl l.intd llllp·Dn hood-MIIcWfte hooll .......
for til jtdll, tat\ .... covertllalyln- m•ttt1ing lin iflgt tuo.

m

•• rugged aa the men
who wear them

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

carhartt
.

'

eml!n"'-

1111111••

. Seven tax levies and one bond in effect 12 years, and would
ISSUe will be voted on in various provide funds for new fire
sections of Meigs County at the department quarters.
Nov. 2 election.
The only school district
. Wednesday at 4 p.m. was the asking approval of a tax
deadline for these questions to measure is Southern Local
be filed with the Meigs County which proposes a new three mill
Board of Elections.
levy to cover current expenses .
Only one tax measure will be School spokesmen have said
voted upon by all voters in . that while ex~nses are inMeigs County, a .65 mill levy - creased in the district, district
a renewal ~fa current tax- for income from the personal
tuberculosiS care. If renewed property tax will be decreased
by voters, the levy will be in approximately $20 000 next
year.
'
effect five years.
The only bond issue to be Furthermore
school
voted 'Upon is in Middleport enrollment is . do~n. and the
where a 1I&gt; mill new tax will be district has lost state Faunsought for the Middleport Fire dation Funds for one unit
Department. The tax would be amounting approximately t~

$3,000. The district now has the . current operating expenses . The ~tition will bring to a
minimum 17.5 mills in effect for The levy is termed a new tax vote of the people for a final
schools. Passage of the levy and would be in effect five decision the ~rmissive auto
woul~ bring the district to 20.5. years. However, a m mill levy license tax measure approved
If passed, the levy would be in ·was discontinued in the town- recently by village council. If
the tax stands, vehicle owners
effect for a continuing period. ship during the past year.
A 'h mill new tax levy is being
Another township upon which in Middleport will pay an adasked in Pomeroy. This tax is a new tax levy will be voted ditional $5 fee when they purfor cemetery improvement and upon is Orange where voters chase license tags. Village
would be in effect for five years will decide upon a 'h mill levy council has pledged the amount
if passed.
for current expenses. In for street improvements.
Racine Village officials have Lebanon Township, voters also
placed a two mill lax levy will decide on renewal of a 'h
The referendum, however,
before voters there for current mill levy. Tbe levies in both will not be voted upon in Midoperating ex~nses. The entire townships would run five years dleport until the November
millage is a renewal of the levy, if approved.
election in 1972. Such measures
and if passed, would be in effect The Board of Elections also must be voted upon in general
five years.
reported that a referendum elections and the petition asked
In Olive Township, a one mill petition was filed by Middleport that the Middleport measure be
levy will be voted upon for aerk-Treasurer Gene Grate . . placed on the ballot in 1972.

One Hurt
In Wreck J

Ca.ually Lut Revued Upward

D

TEN CENTS

. PHONE 992-2156

.

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

Contro~H!rsial

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1971

7 Levies on November Ballot

By UalledPreu In-Uooal

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Brenda
Teaford, RaciM ; Lenore
Michael, Minersville; Eric
Philson, Racine ; Mary E.
Doerfer, Pomeroy ; Sarah
Congo, PorUand.
DISCHARGED
Lisa
Persons, Mabel Landaker,
Margaret Randolph , Wanda
Waylor, Rhonda Jordan,
Sherman Ford, Wilbur Imboden, Frank Niggemeyer,
Rebekah Hall, Henry Stanley.

THREE FINED
Fined $10 and costs by Middleport Mayor C. 0 . Fisher
Tuesday night were WilliiiJI!
Gardner, 62, Cheshire, intoxication;
Danny
Carl
Morrow, Gallipolis, reckless
operation, and Claude Fitzpatrick, Middleport, disb.trbing
the ~are.

I

DuEk

Continued on Page 5

MosU; cloudy and cooler with
showers and thundershowers
likely today and cha;.ce. of
showers tonight - and Friday•
Highs today from the dlid 60s to
the lower 70s. Lows tonight
from the up~r 40s to the mid
50s. Highs Friday in the 60s.

Devoted fo The lntere&amp;lll Of The Meig8-MaMJn Area

-Saigon
Riots
·SpreadSAIGON (UPI)-An angry
anti-American demonstration
broke out today at a U.S. Army
base near Saigon. The U.S.
Embassy advised Americans to
adopt"prolective security measures" against the wave of
firebomblngs and terrorist violence In Saigon.
Tbe latest anti-American
incident flared at the U.S.
Army headquarters base at
Long Blnh, 18 miles northeast of
Saigon, where nine ciVilians
were injured when their threewheeled bus was hit by a U.S.
army truck.
Upwards of 300 Lambretta
buses blocked the entrance to
the post and more tban 100
demonstrators, some waving
banners, demanded Ulat the
Army lake action against the
Gl driver. It was the second
such demonstration in that
region in five days.
Tbe four-hour demonstration
ended peacefully when U.S.
rnllitary spokesmen promised
to investigate the cause of the
accident in which a 21&gt; ton
truck collided with the civilian
bus outside the main gate at
Long Blnh, the largest u.s.
rnllitary post in Vielliam.
Last Sunday, a ll).ton U. S.
Army truck smashed Into a
civilian bus and two smaller
vehicles on the Bien Hoa Highway leading to Long Blnh,
killing at least eight Vietnamese and injuring about 30
Others. Tbe three American
occupants of the truck were
stoned by angry crowds.
In Saigon, the U. S, Embassy
IAJday ISsued amemqrandum to
all American mission personnel
in the capital · to adopt
''protective security measures"
because of a recent wave of
anti-American fire bombings
and the destruction Wednesday
night of Saigon's second biggest
nightclub by a plastic bomb.
Tbe explosion at the Tu Do
nightclub killed 15 persons
including 14 VIetnamese and an

Weather

enttne

VOL XXIV NO. 108

I

Hanes

•

· • The
coin
magazine
"Numismatist" says coiqs.
struck during Cleopatra's reign
In 50 to 30 B.C. Indicate the
Egyptian Queen was "ugly as a
toa_d /'

Hanes•

PleasPt Valley Hospital
ADMITI'ED: Albert Sisson,
Cottageville ; Carl Rairden,
Hartford; James Johnson,
Cindy VanMeter, both of
Mason; Kerry Smith, Otho
Thcmas, both of Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGED: Mrs . Bernard Lamp, Mrs. Luther Johns,
Mra. Goffrey Moore, Leo light.

DANCE BENEFIT
The Rulland Fire Dept. will
sponsor a square dance at the
gymnasium Friday beginning
ata:JOp.m. Music will be by the
Hilltops and proceeds will go
toward purchase of a new fire
·truck. Children mder 12 will be
admitted free. Admission for
adults is $1 and for those 12 to
18, 50 cents.

· Now You~ow

Give
him
..
Comfort
..
from

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Bra

11DtB RAIN WAS EXPECTED TODAYm flood-weary

delicately

:!~~~~/~"J::a~?.'"s::

'·

,.

some home,.)ork and concluded
equalized with men, doing. the our language should be
same amount of work for the changed.
same pay and paid alimony in And it's said in Russia, by folk
case of divorce.
who should know, · that
Bar~ata asked if this .stopped "Women's Ub is a myth," and
men drinking and beating their looking beyond the promises of
wives, or did wives beat them, equality there in its Con- .
and was told by a lady stitution, you'll find men still in ·
President with a sad look, ''No, charge everywhere, and hard
and the mulish men laugh at work women's lot. ··
They stick together now, but
"
us.
lued
In 1969 Bernice Sandler asked Ia ter will they come un-g
for a full time teaching job, an~ _and turn on~ne another? .

ti"',..,...,_..,.,..,..,_,......,...,__________________""

More Rain in Flooded Areas

Springtime fresh

a malE; faculty member said,

Reflectioris up
• on W
. omen's Lib
·

-

I

A SCHEDULE BILLBOARD of the Meigs Marauder
football games has been placed on the front lawn of the
former Pomeroy Senior High School by The Farmers Bank

and Saving~ Ctmpany. 'lbe llign was painted b)' Mrs. Nancy
Radford. Be.Vde the new llign are the J.2-1e~r-old twin
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vaughan, Pat, left, and

Pam.

On Sunday
Southeastern Ohio sport;;writers and sportscasters w1ll
predict the outcome of the 1971
SEOAL foothaU race Sunday at
Jackson.
Association President Lee
Hamilton of Radio Sta lion
WLGN, Logan, annomced the
members also will elect new
officers, pay dues, and receive
new press passes.
At Sunday's meeting,
scheduled for 1 p. m. at Jolly
Lanes, the membership will
review each team's returning
lettermen, injury situation,
coaching staffs, and performance by the tesms in their
first• two non-league contests.
Mter sifting this Information
carefully the members then
cast their vote for the champion, second, third, and etc.
It was noted by one sports
observer recently that the
scribes and play-by-play men
have successfully picked the
eventual champion over 60
~rcent average in the past 18
years.

B&amp;E of Riggs'
Home under Probe

.

'•

NEW HAVEN - A Middleport man was ·injured in a
two-vehicle traffic accident
Wednesday on Route 33 at the
Phillip Sporn plant entrance.
Harry D. Garnes Jr., 22,
Middleport, was cited for '
failure to yield righklf-way
when witnesses said he turned
his vehicle left into the plant
entrance in front of a southbomd car driven by Janet ·
Zerkle, 25, Letart Route 1.
William T. English, 23,
Middleport, a passenger in the
Garnes car, was treated at
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
minor injuries and released.
Property damage was
estimated at $1000 by the Mason
County Sheriff's Dept. which
investigated.
A IS.year-old Pt. Pleasant
youth was arrested Wednesday
evening also by the Sberlff''a
Dept. on an assault warrant.

Grid Race
Prediction

.

.

•

Question: . How Did They Die?
ATTICA, N.Y. (UPI)-One of
the first questions state lnvestigators will have to answer
about the five days of rioting at
the Attica State Correctional
Facility is how did the nine
hostages die.
They were killed by inmates
Monday when 1,700 state police,
National Guardsmen and sheriff's deputies stormed the 1,200
convicts who had held the
prison for five days?
Or were they shot by the men
who tried ~save them beca~
the conv1cts dressed thetr
hostages in prison denims and
hid behind them as the assault
force hit the prison with rifles,
shotguns and tear gas?
·:·. .,.. ·..·.·:·...v:··.
(!Si

Another nagging question is
whether the slaughter could
ruive been prevented if negotiations had gone a litUe longer or
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller had
appeared personally at the
prison?
Rockefeller met with aides
and correction officials today in
;;:;s;:-,;;:,:
...·.·... :-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-·--:--..-:-: :EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Obio: Extended outlook
Saturday througb Monday:
Chance of showers aud cool
Saturday, becoming fair
Sunday and Monday and
continued cool. Daytime
. higbs mostly In the 60s aud
tbe lows at night 411 to 50.

·""·•.·:··•··-·.·.·...;;.;.;.·.:-:-:-·-·.·.;.··.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·

;

,

,

Albany to plan the investigation Batavia, was postponed for
in to the Attica prlaon takeover autopsy after a funeral home,
and its recapturing.
H.E. Turner &amp; Co., said there
Ten prison employes and 32 · were no gunshot womds on the
convicts died during the rioting. body.
At one of today's meetings, Guard William Quinn, 28, who
Rockefeller will talk with Rep. was beaten the ftrst day of the
Claude 'pep~r. D-Fia., one of riot and died two days later of
the four members of the House bead Injuries, was buried
Select Committee on Crime Wednesday after a requiem
who have come to New York mass in a church a few doors
for their own investigation. away from his home In Attica.
Rockefeller also plans discus- About 400 uniformed correcsions with legislative leaders. lions officers from throughout
The governor named state the state formed an honor
investigator Robert E. Fiscber, guard.
nicknamed the state's "Supercop," b bead his probe .
Wednesday the burial
to
guard Richard Lewis, 49, ~

. ! -:·····:·:·:·:..-:···:-.: ··:·:· ·... :-:--.:-.::-:... ..:-:· -: .. ~x · :--·,. :·:·:. ·

l" T.
loyrnent Compensa. tw"n Th. reaten ed
vnemp

OOLUMBUS (UPI)- H the said Garnes. ''Otherwise, our
House continues to delay actioo unemployment cootpensation
.on a proposed unemployment laws will be declared out of cmcunpensallon bill, Ohio may f(l"ffijty and theref~re null and
''earn the dubious. distincUoo" void. ·
of_ becoming the ftrst state to ''These delaylnR tactics uaed
eliminate such cootpenaation, by the Republican controlled
lbe Ohio Burueau of Employ- dubious distinction of being the
ment Services aaid Wednesday. dubious distrinction of being the
WUllam E. Garnes, adminis- first state to eliminate unemtralllr, said Congress last year ployment com~nsalioil," be
mandated the states to improve ' said.
.
Ita unemployment com- Garnes also noted recipients
pensalion procedures by Jan. 1, of these payments are losing out
1972.
on Increased benefits because of
''That means we have to act," the failure of the House to act.

A breaking and entering into
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Riggs located on SR 7 northeast
of Eastern High School Is being
Investigated by Meigs County
Sheriff Robert c. Hartenbach
and Hennan Henry of the
Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI).
Tbe sheriff's dept. said the
entry occurred sometime
between 5:45 and 7 : ~ p. m.
Wednesday. ApparenUy stolen
were five guns, a coin collec- ;
lion, po~table TV, silver WASHINGTON (UPI) _
collecti~n and a set of diamond When President Nixon fired him
rings valued at $700.
is Interior Secretary last fall,
Walter J. Hickel felt "!Heel tall
BUGHTCHECKED
and totally- free. "
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Continued dry weather has kept Hickel, a former Alaska
the spread of Southern corn leaf governor, told of his firing in a
'blight near a slandslill In the new book, "Who Owns
corn belt.
America?" He said Nixon gave
him the word of his firing at the
White House, telling him he felt
LOCAL TEMPS
U1ere was "a mutual lack of
Temperature In downtown confidence."
Pomeroy Thursda~ at 11 a. m. "I got up to leave,". Hickel
wa_s 62 degrees under wet skies. said. "I didn't shake hands with

;u•
k
l
h lC e . Was

~I

Patriotism
Be Theme of
Ex- Teachers

I

The bill has been p8l8ed by the
Senate.
"I would hope that GOP Iegislalive leadtn would have
some compassion fer th01e who
find themselves unauployed
through no fault of their own "
he aaid. "'Ibe time has C(Qle ~r
the Republican legislators 1o
slop !heir stalllng tacUct."
Garnes said Republican
House members !lnd time to
mow the lawn of the slatebouse
to try to embarrass the
governor, but do notflnd time to
pass needed legislation.

The fourth annual meeling of
the Southeastern District of
Ohio ReUred Teachers Assn.
will be Wednesday Oct. 6 at
Burr Oak Lodge.
Meigs and Jackson Comty
chapters will be in charge of
registration. A geW.cqualnted
hour will begin at 11 a. m.
Luncbeon is at 12 noon .
The principal speaker will "be
Robert G. Hest, Lancaster, who
designed the SO...tar flag. A
patriotlc theme will prevail
throughout the meeting.
Miss Mildred Baver, a
of the state
member
organization, will discuss
financial aid for retired·
teachers. Reservations costing
$3.75
must be made with Miss
Hickel said Nixon then
complimented him on his wort Lucille Smith, 8oJ: a, Oteater,
in tbe 1968 Presidential com- Ohio, 45711), before Sept. JO.
paign and on his work aa Interior Secretary.
Tben, according to Hickel, the
LOOK TO END
President aald: "Wally, you're
a strong man, so I'd lite to be
NEW YORK (UPI) - Lad~
just as •trong when I tell you Mapllne wiD ceue P*'lllall
what I'm going to tell you. 1 with its Oct. It ..... Cawltll
believe that's the way you'd CommunlcaUona lllc. u-

Tall and Free

the President, but not out of
bitterness. I didn't think of it. 1
felt 14feet tall and totally free."
Hickel aaid Nixon ap~tired ill
at ease when the President
called him to the White House to
fire him. He said Nixon "looked
out the window for some time."
"He talked about the new
lighting which had been installed around the While House.
He said that be had to dedicate
it that evening."
want
it." point, Nilan ll1llde b1a
At that
Hickel aaid that finally be remark that there was mutual
said, "Mr. President, get to tbe lack of cOnfidence between
puinl.;,
·
them, Hickel ..~a.
.

I

toda)':~Tba==!=

n01!11C.'~U..
ed
cited
due 1o clecllninl
riling prod!actlaiJ
dldllon to -

�3- The Dally Sentlnel,l'cJmeroy-Middleport, 0., September 16. 1971
'

2-~ n.llJ SeDIItlel, Pcimeroy-Micldllport, 0., Seple;mber J.l.lrTI

BRUCE 810SSAT

GLOBAl. VIEW

Democrats Fear. Party . Milit~nts

I

Dissidents Put
Soviet in Bind
By RAY CROMLEY
WASIUNGTON (NEAl
A .careful analysis of reports !low. arriving ~re indicate that dissent in the Sov1et Uruon IS more senous than
bu been previously revealed. ,
What these reports disclose is not a great increase .in
'tile number of dissente.rs but. the. fac~ that the ~en ID·
volved bold crucial. positions m essential 'occupati~.
Tbe picture has been largely that of a revolt of artists,
writers, poets. Tbese, get publicity but their influence
Gil Soviet society is not that great.
New studies indicate scientists, engineers and technicians are the core of a much more effective resistance
-.!thin Russia.
. S
ExceUent work in this field has been done by LeWIS .
Feuer of the University of Toro~to, through a grant .bY
the Canada Council, Social Sciences and Humanities
Division.
If one takes for example, the '100 or sa !mown men
and women who have signed protests in Russia in the
past few years, it turns out ~t .almost 40 per cent are
~elentists, engineers and t~hnic1ans, sa far as can be
·etfunated. Twenty-two per cent were artists. Tbe rest
were an assortment of writers, teacbers, doctors, lawyers,
ltlldents, ordinary workers alld a miscellany of academic:ians.
Artists, writers, students, teacbe~s. doctors an d Ia!11'ers
are one thing. But scientists, engmeers and tecbniC1811S
are the core of the Kremlin's bope of becoming first in
the world economically and militarily. Tbey are at the
beart of Russia's current series of ~ve-y~ p~. .
Now it appears there is strong dissenSion Within this
t«lmical elite.
.
We are not talking about men low on thell' career ladders. A leader in the technical-scientific .opposition bas
been Piotr Kapitsa, probably the most respected of So- .
viet physicists. .
.
'
There iS evidence, too, this strong opposition bas spread
Into the Rnssi•n military forces. So far as can be told,
all military and naval officers wbo have recently ~
· bed as dissidents in Russia have been men With
~~scientific or technical responsibilities.
~ unhappy men complain that Marxist ideology
is forcing Soviet technology into grossly distorted pat-

Rapid Heart Be,at
Causes Anxiety

....

The calmer party reform adYacates COIIC&lt;!Iie today.~t
otherwise bealthy.
C&lt;:~mpliance with the McGovern-~ ~mission s By Lawraee Lallllt, M.D.
.
guidelines 011 coaventi~ delegale selection IS !ar from • Deu l)r. LaJDI.-I read
fn&gt;:c!uent a~ks, it II
complete. Yet, slow as it soems to be, they ree:'~~~trontionsg your column about paroxya- · Wise to gJve m~lne.-tbese
l!oPe that by year's end most state patty 0111
.
1 ......;.....,,. and 1 am medicines belong til or bave

WASHING10N t NEA I

wiU bave set the Jle'l! standards! &lt;'lbi!Y ~ve to do. 'With
opening up the selectiQD process, making 1t current; providing delegations balanced as to race, sex, age and other
factors.} .
·
_
One persisting fear among party regulars JSdepartthat tile
militants will -·. _upon
. even the smallest
touresthe
~,....,,..,..
f cbaUenges
from reform 5~ as ca.~ or
convention's credentials CODIIIIittft.
.
For instance, some regular leliders, ~g to !he
indictments of the party's center by arch'liberals like
Washingtoo attDmey Joseph Raub, believe the militantS
woo't consider the party reformed unless it oominates
McGovern New York Mayor John Lindsay, or someone

ma ';h'"~ u I
very victim of it. I've been
:"t!o doctors and they bo!"
tell me not to worry about 1t,
.but while YOI!, have it th~
Ia -eat a 0 z.·1_· e t y and 1t
.,. you, WWCII
"'-L n1y dds
scares
o .a
to the dilcomfort. The doctor said 1 have a ~ture
beart beat and twice 10 two
years my beart went into a
spasm. The fint attack
luted four bours and the
similar '
· second one lalted 10 bours.
1n ·other worm the militants are thought by these The doct(Jr aeemed undis-~mnd the light in such· a way that the turbed and gave me pbenctregulars to be ,......-.,...
be barb Only hi ,.___, my
nomination of centriit Sen. Edmtmd Mustie would
- · e r·~~ · t
automaticaUy portrayed as .proofsbortreforofrmcrit:ln~~m·the~tr eyba~to ~ ~ ~bytwb!
the Democrats' Old Guard (just .
.
'"'"' .
.. ·
•
machinations) bad prevailed once more.
Any info~tion YO!I can
Ma be an these fears are unwarranted. Maybe, as giVe would be.apprec18ted.
som/analysts say, the mili~t left ~ just trying to push
Deu Reader-Your story
tbe Democratic center a few incbes Its way. But the fact is typical for paroxysmal
is the ooise and motion scare the party. Weary of tachycardia. The heart may
triJuma, it wants political peace in tm-but fears war. be beating perfectly oormal
and then ll"'denly It starts
beating mucb faster_ If the
rale is veiy fast, the beart

a":::

worried-..,

0

Cop on the Beat

WIN AT BRIDGE :-"Pu:!Pf~~iio=

A Reason to
~ow' ." •
P''ay
1'
"'

r------'----,
11

IIOimi(D)

6QC

97&amp;

~~': says in essence

that controls, dialec~s ~d
· 'ties of Soviet functionaries force brigbt SCJentists
Into purely theoretical science, wbere they can be alone
and less managed. They're f!mni"# away from the blgbly
IIUpelVised experimental work. or best results ~
lhould be 3l to 31 experime~talists for ~very theoretical
scientlat. In th~ Soviet Umon the ratio Is almost the
·
reverse.
Tbis imbalance which Kap1tsa
attributes to the Soviet
system, could tu:ve the most serious consequences on
Soviet scientific and economic development, and eventually 00 Russian military technical developme~t as well.
Students of the Soviet Union say the Russlllll econ~my
is lagging progressively 'farther behind the Amencan
1n
tical applications in such important fields as com~act«hnology, petro-chemicals, cybernel;ics and .other
major forms of bigb technology. Tbey attribute this ~g
in tarj~e part to the research distortion and other Soviet

.Altt6SC
• A3Z
WIIS'l

6KZ

9J9U

.J7
.QJIOU
6AlOn715
9Alt
• 102

llwtll

z•4.

1.

1l'oot
._
.Po.
Po.
Paa

· S...
1.

.. ..
._ . ._
._

59

appear these scientific distortions are in-

of applied Marxist dialectics.
.
Most big)! caliber scientists do not carry banners, s1gn
titions
make impassioned public s~hes. &amp;it in a
l:untry so beavily dependent on scitntifil; technology,
the ideas these men bold cannot fo!l!ver be silenced. Tbey
wield a very particular sort of qwet power.

36

· CN.T.
SN.T.

By O.w ld " J . .u J..-,
"What is tbe wont thing
that ever happened tq )'Oil
at the bridge table!" Uked

or

~t.

·''

EDITORIAl.$

School Financing
Changes Likely
It seems inevitable that the U.S. Supreme Court wiU
eventually second the California SUPreme ,CQurt ~ the
matter of school financing. If the Califorrua case Itself
is not appealed there are similar ones pending in other
states, any one ~f wbicb could precipitate the "landmark"
school decision of the Seventies.
.
. .
AU have one thing in common-the contention that 1t IS
inherently unfair that school districts with greater resources of taxable real estate and lower tax rat,es !lfe
able to spend more money on schools than poorer districts
with fewer tax resources and blgher tax rates.
To take the example used in the Califoroi~ case, the
lower middleclass district of Baldwin Park m Los Angeles spent $840 per pupil in 1969, while upper-UPper-class
Beverly Hills spent $1,231. .
.
.
The variaoce in tax bases m Califorma rlll!s from one
extreme of S103 per pupil in the poorest district to ~­
other extreme of $952,156 per pupil in the wealthiest district.
· · 't ti
Tbe California Supreme Court ruled that this s1 ua on
violates the "equal protection" clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, a breach of the Constitution made no .less
repugnant by the existence of per-pu~il funds provided
by tbe state and by federal grants in aJd.
If the ruling stands, California, and m?st other states,
must drasticatly and fundamentally rev1se the systems
by wblch they finance their public schools. Tbe obv'tous
answer is for state governments to assume th~ full burd~n
-that is, to collect school tax Jl!.Onies statewide and dispense them on an equil!Jble bas.':5 statewide. Such a sys.
.
tem is already followed m Hawau. .
Tbe repercussions of the Califorma ruling m1ght not
stof there, however.
1 money available to schools is to be equal throughout
a state would it be legal for a district to tax itself extra
in order to provide a superior educatio~ fo~ its chil~en?
If inequality of education is unconstitutional Within . a
state, is it constitutional among the sta,tes? . Tbat 1s,
should a student be penalized because he lives m '! state
wblch cannot afford to spend as much on educatiod as
larger and richer states?
If not will the federal government sooner or later be
catled upon to "equalize" the financial quality of education· among the 50 states?

....

r------------------------------------------I
I

BY JACJ[ O'IIBIAN
BI.JINX AND I.DW..DNX
IN 111E BAHAMA$
NEW YORK- News fnm llle !blwJ+
isn't good far Ainel'iean.owDI m;
; IIIJ
flftigo-nm firms f&lt;r that matter: ~Ell! b116s
we know baw shifted their cash out cl. 10
,
bave quietly g~•ed legal ber IQ las iD
other countries-·(MIIIIICOandP.!WIII- t.D)
wilb the expectatim !bat the~ I" • C
black government will go g., way II Salrtb
American cwntries eJpnp:i.ltq fill ·cr illl&amp;'esls, nolably ct CQU1'!Ie tbo!le con1zdW ill lbr
u. s.
Probably tbe biggest slot maeiDe
manufacturing ecmpany in the world was cl.fered to possible ~ owlkts' wbo "l&amp;o'
around and smelled the Iansky pafame _.
nixed the deal .... Gambling Jm•rts - he
tnmsportatim, bote! rocms and lllf!lls to . _ .
1igb and usually I &amp;peelable
rollers _ are at their own riS: all ait
manlfesls &lt;11 soch junhta are 11io?wl •
routinely by tbe u.S. Internal R e - Senil:e
- and every name gels a bltally
llli1lc

Man is the only creature capable of destroying the
environment-bls own lind that of all other creatures.
Yet man is the only creature that can care about p~eserving a haphazard arrangement of rocks on a mountamside.
After a two-year studv c' the Great Stone. Face on Cannon Mountain in NeVI h
c, overlookmg Francoma
Notch, a team of govern: "' •ismologists h¥ repo~ted
on the condition of the st:;r 's lure most tounst attr!lction.
They found that the grea1est danger to the stab1bty of
the famous profile was the wmd blowmg on the boulders
and vibrating the turnbuckles that hdld them together.
(Tbe turnbuckles were installed years ago to keep the
profile from disintegratin~.)
Tbe vibrations were eliminated by wedging supports
under the turnbuckles.
. .
. .
In addition to the wind, three other vanehes of seiSniJc
nomena could aft'ect the rocks that make uC tbe face.
rth
are quarry blasts • ea · qua kes and nuc ear exploto the rocks'
particularly.
Mountains.
under

sadder version.
II a
' .,
BookpubliaberLyleStuartbn&amp;ebisllipca lte . . C M 1V aet alii - wllen
0111 • a
IUJamaic:aeslate,wberebln&gt;ife~l 11!!1 'I £(ifM
. t zttU.S.TV)PIE

=C:~ne these:o~tf&lt;~e~rs~~~~1~~~~~~~(~it:hjr~~e~a~t
51

of
b'llt 18 the
~ !. yre,moeey
~· 8 If

the Old Man or
those nuclear

:::!1,

Jonpjca

*

na...,
.--•a$1'1,

ill.

.....,...-"J

that second hand will play
low if be bolda king-small.
If second hand does plly
low, yoU play dummy's fourspot and see what happena.
"I did this and West
played the deuc:e withOut
any problem. Dummy's four
lost to East's jaek md a club
wu rebmted. I won iD dum·
my, led the queen of trumps,
finer
zi and lost to the unguarded king_"
"What was 10 embarrauing about that!" asked the
student
"It was mJllapU'a remark
wben I COIIIplimented him on
his brilliant play. He aid,
"You have taupt me to play
semad hand.lmr. What eke
lhould I bave done!'"
"Secoad hand low aure
=it~ 1igbt that time,
--ASSM.l

E

...,_lrd

··- - - ,...

IIfll_._ _..
r' '

7

7

1be
Wat

J&gt;ido'i•c 11M be&lt;D:
lferlll

1l'oot

s.dl

~:

._
a
._
Po.
H
Paa
You, Sou1b, bold:

r

A •• ... -b

treatment would be easy.
PresSJD.g on the eyeballs
will stop the attacks, in SC!me
cases. 'this is a reflex action.
The nerves from t1ie eyes
send a slgiial to the brain and

stimulate the vagus nerve to
send a pOwerful. s1gna1 to the
heart and can slow the heart
markedly. When it works, the
rapid rate\ stops abruptly, as
you have described. Tbe
same effect can be accompUshed by pressure over the ·
neck (over the carotid artery) . This procedure should
only be done by a doctor
since it can cause problems.

· Sometimes g a Kgin g or
breath balding will stop an
attack tbrougb a similar reflex mecbl!nism.

PUNISHMENT OVERSHADOWS CRIME
Dear Slle and Helerl:
1 am a I&amp;o,ear.old guy wbo II beiDg pmlshed fir not much of
anylbq - I IIIli*.
. l.all Friday lbe'ld* we eo~t lnncb with weren't at acbool, so
my friend l'ltm and 1got a chedt«t to ccme boPle for lunch. The
te1epbc11e ran, wblle we were ealinll and It ns Mom's loudmoulbedfriend.Sbeukedmewbylnsthere,andnotwanlingto
aetlntoa hlgsplaNtlon,lsaldlwaulct,
.
When she e.me ovl!l" Salladay, fint thing abe liked was if I
was fee1iD8 belllr, wlicll callll!ll Mcm to m;plode beca111e abe
didn't know I heme, being at work.
Snce tills WC11D1D abot aft ber 1111111tb, I haw bad to wub
dilbes,sweepandmqJ flooraand lhatkindof~pilhrork. I can't
leaw the :rani after ICbool, ar driYe the atr, ar listen to my stereo
fartbreeweeb,ofwbldtonlyabontooeisgone-andlfyoutbink
Mcm's the type to bact down, forget it!
lln't tbllltoo darn rough? -H. C.
SUE'S VIEWS:
Dear H:
.
No kiddln', It's too darn rougb! Getting 8 cbecll«t isn't
catting acbool.
Yourmotber abonld at least listen to your aplanatiOD and if
abe bun't, I'd be tempted to ''acddenlally" break a glaa wlile
washing diabes; do a lousy jGb on the flocn (boys ll'e ~
slappy, y'bow); and sing at the top of my blip In place ol tbe
stereo.
Maybe she'd reWce the ll!llleoce in nrfvul(e far a little
peace and qulel _ SUE
HElEN YELIJN': And ma,tle she'd EXl'END the ll!lllenl:e
beealllemotbenleanlumevenstubbomerwbenkidstum'alo!iPYmiJU11MIII!. JlrrMnber bact, Slle! Parents aren't that eaally
Clll1ll!d .... and you sbould t.w!
1agree the pmlslnent DOESaeem rough, bat did H. C.llnish
11a "'-?TeD me, H., were you and Pam iniChoollbat afternoon
.
.... ·-•
Or where?H.
Dear Bottelrt:
My belt friem 11 my tiggeat p-oblem.l'm known as a ''good
Utile girl." Ton! is the applllite. l,,..ul!l" ber a great penon,
even If I dol!'t !Ike tbe tblnp abe &amp;.. Sbe jUit marches to a
dlfftrent drum,
Toni bas taken drup, IJ1ld[es graa,llells tbe stuff frlm ber
lntber's marijuana planta. Sbe lbmgM abe. ns pngnant once
llldthennttlmeshereallfwas,butbadamlacarriage. Recently
sbefeDDif!Ctlyinlove(aPn),andwenttobedwlthaguyshe'd
known aact1y
clap, It l&gt;ljoperw oflen.
1M tbe Giber tide of the pic1are, abe Is a straight Astudent and
!be DlCIIItiDteresling penon 1"11! ever met. Sbe's really turned on
til life and 11- about twice far mrye~~e elae'a once. Her main
ambitions 1ft 10 get married, bave habiel and becGne a
PIYcbolollat. tbnuBb not nee 11 riJr In that ardtr.
Sbe te11a me t11Jnp !bat WGl'I'J me awfully and abe's getting
fartberoutllltbetlme.Don'tWGI'I'J-abelrm'tlrlhpnci!Wme

two

: ; ' 11

aspects.

If tills sounds quacky, you aren'tdeceived.ltis.
Last &amp;mday, Gene disclosed, Mrs. Dodson joined husband
and other families at Fort Meigs for an IGA family picnic. What
better way to pass the time, after chaw, than to fish in the weDstocked pond there? So Mrs. Dodson prepared her line, bailed her
book wllb an attractive (to fish) worm, and made a well-executed
cast out todeepwater,aU the while relaxedly in conversation with
nearby friends.
In no time ataU she bad a strike but it was the strangest kind
on recard in these parts.
Apparently at the exact moment the worm landed on the
water 8 covey of ducks unnoticed bad lazily swam into range. One
ct tbem nailed that worm m Mrs. Dodson's hook as surely as
could any large mouth base .
Sir Duck, plainly suffering the shock of his life, immediately
set up the loudest abjections amidst determined efforts to eject
worm and book preparatory to getting the beck out of there.
But be couldn'tgetoff,Mrs. Dodson reeled him in, and friends
IOCIIed the duck.
Ccllle to think of It, lbere's one thing Gene forgot to tell me,
ind I forgot to ask: whether or not the Dodsons had duck that

light far dlmer.
Friday's Games
St. L at Mil, night.
Chi at Phlla; hkjht.
NY at Pitt, night.
Cinclat Hous, night.
Atlanta at LA. night.
SO at SF, night.

Friday's Games
KC at Minn. night.
Oak at Mllw, night .
Cal al Chicago.. night.
Balli at Del, 2. twi·nile.
Bos at Wash, night.
&lt;;:teve at NY, 2, fwi.nite.

TIRES
At l.ow Low Prices

650x13
Plus $' .76 Fed. Ex. Tax

Other Sizes Comparably

Low Priced

2OIWIGE

DRIVE IN
TODAY!

WAYI'f0 .

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

601 L MAIN

tt2-2094

POMIIOY, 0.

v.:..·

rqe.
_

.
__,_
lltltfrlellllaneedlotalneomiDfll-wldch,uolaTtiJI...,
~beJP-Jon~'tptanddCII'twanU-H. •

·

·.:in:&amp;".,. ~!..,If.._,..
Ia ilu 1 • *·
~&amp;· ~
-Y.~ild--------------~--,.:,,.:,__
.......,

-

-,,II'')

..

""1r MI.\....

Tile IDile manluu
Deatb is 00 respecter of
1 1l!i! eve•
~.~.
,_h~~,___~,
•.
~"fll~ll
periODS, wa.ther you are
""""" m "" ,.,..
•
klnl
t Ttie
t
f pm!riwd tllllt OM fate Zit
=Dtllll.~"

0::

COI!!CJ lo

aU of tl!em.-Eccl.

A~ Roman emperor"

•

••

~

American League

22 Ill. IAIL Y AIIUICAIIIIILI
GU$1 COLOIIIAL LAIIPS
.... ,.... ......_.... ......4 ."..,.'" ~~
-.! ....._
.
t.... •Ilk il•••• Allll4i• Hit ..W

Cit .,. ...................

~... - · hew.&lt;. c.. ..., ............. .
c....,t.te
with C~ ~~~· 1., ...... T., Hil

~-"- lltlf .,. '' • tl .. ., .... h t..-W. __

REG. lt98 SPECIAL

J17.77
Reg. 1.49

-!""-·-_..

-Arm.!
, .2 rtOf

'"-L
CM

!--...

......,..- ..

rr

-~-

Also 4 oz. yarnS. '"sit our arf USE OUR CONVENIENT
deporfment.
~Y)•Y!.AY PLAN!
.
.
. .·: ::: .. ··:. ::. :, .;.: ·:: :: :,
. ; . . ...

BEN,FRANKUN•
•

·p·r.
" 0···E
n ·

202 Eas,t Main. St.

·

992-3498
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATU
. RDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

__;:J__· ,;
3:;,.
14
;;;,._,;;,;,...;;,,...,,;;,_,;;,;_.,;:-= ; , - - - - - - ,II,.;.-•• · - - · - L - - - - -

r· "

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

East
W.
89
84
77

L. .Pet. GB
54 .622 ...
65 .564 8
Detroit
73 .513 15112
Boston
75 73 .507 16'/2
New York
Washington 58 77 .400 32
57 89 .390 33 11•
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pet. GB
94 5.1 .631 ...
•·Oakland
Kansas City 79 69 .534 13 112
70 79 .470 24
Chicago
70 79 .470 24
California
6S 78 .466 24112
Minnesota
Milwaukee 64 84 .432 29112
x-clinched division
Wednesday's Games
Clakland 3 Chi 2, (lsi)
Chicago 7 Qak 3 (2nd)
Calif 6 KC 2
Minn 1 Milw 0
Detroit 4 Wash 2
Boston 6 Cleve 5
NY 4 Balli 2
Today•s Probable Pitchers
California (Wright 14·151 at
Kansas City (Drago 16·9),
night.
Minnesota !Corbin 8·10) at
Milwau~ee I Krausse ] . 12),
night.
Washington (Bosman 11·14)
at Detroit (Cain 8.9).
Boston 1Garman 0·0) at
Clev~land I Hand 2·5L night.
New Yor~ I Keklch 10·1l at
Baltimore I Leonhard 2·2L
night.
Baltimore

.

•' - ' • •

:-~ .

....

By United Press International

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

y-vlen.Granled, Ttlllisfaaclnatlng,butsbemaybe
a1ng JOUIJABDactre.-an•QIIfnoc:e: to imp u,llllrer wltb
ber,andpl lblfpenude.IIIIII*yoa'niDMntbaDilittlened,
llld Jon t.w tbe aut llep: a ninii-1 If yow - ' t stnog
....,.toabootduw,tiiERdllablfuhalues,you•dbealraetontll

Ky., 14-6, Southern dropped a
22-0· decision to FederalHocking, and Glouster lost to
Crooksville, 42-0.
The probable starting lineup
for Coach Roger Kirkhart's
"Big Green Machine" will be
Jim Amsbary, 165 lb. senior,
quarterback; Rick Ssnders, 140
lb. senior, and Randy Boring,
140lb. junior, halfbacks ; Dennis
Eichinger, 190 lb. senior,
fullback; Bob Caldwell, 150 lb.
senior, and Rick Williams, 173
lb. senior, ends; Alan Holter,
2011b. senior, and either Dick
Stettler, 1751b. junior, or Roger
Karr, 170 lb. junior, tackles;
John Cline, ISS lb. senior, and
Rick Hauber, 175 lb. senior.

guards, and Tim Gumpf, 140 lb.
senior, center.
On defense, it should be
Warren Calaway, 140 lb . senior,
and John Sheets, 170 lb.
sophomore, ends; Holter and
Stettler, tackles; Hauber,
middle guard; Eichinger and
Alan Duvall, 182 lb. junior,
linebackers; Gumpf and
Williams, cornerbacks, and
Ssnders and Caldwell, halfbacks.
For the Tornadoes, it will be
Mitch Nease, 150 lb. freshman,
quarterback; Neil Baker 162lb.
senior, fullback; Jay Hill, 126
lb. junior, and Mike Nease, 146
lb. junior, halfbacks ; Nick lhle,
164 lb . junior, left end ; Larry
Wilcoxen, 217 lb. junior, left
tackle; Greg Middleswart, 146
lb. sophomore, left guard; Mike
Codner, 134 lb. sophomore,
center; Jim Smith, 142 .lb.
senior, right guard; Ron Hill,
240 lb. junior, right tackle, and
Jim Williams, !52 lb.

R eds Jolt GiaJJ,ts

······:- ·!

If«.

eapa

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles take on
the North Gallia Pirates in the
Eagles' home opener and the
Southern Local Tornadoes will
be looking for their first win as
they clash with the Glouster
Tomcats at Glouster this Friday
night in Class A area football
action. Eastern appears to be a
solid favorite and the Tornadoes
could have an edge over
Glouster.
The Eastern-North Gallia
game will be a Southern Valley
Athletic Conference tilt, while
the Tornado-Tomcat battle is a
non.leaguer. Last week the
Eagles beat Hannan Trace 43-0,
North Gallia lost to Fairview,

Willie Mays, who is exhausled
after the tough Dodger series
earlier this week, sat out
Wednesday's game and will be
on the bench today when the
Giants play the Reds again.
Ross Grimsley pitches for the
Reds and John Cumberland for
Ssn Francisco.
"One thing for sure," said
Fox, "McCovey and Kingman
will play but I plan some lineup
changes. I don't know what
they'll be, but there will be
some. You can bet on that."
The Reds tapped young Don
Carrithers for seven hits and
three of their four runs in the
first five innings and MeG lothlin made them stand up.
The Giants managed a lot of
line drives off the big
righthander, who had won 7
one of his previous eight starts,
but all were right at someone.
The Giants had a fine chance
to break through on McGlothlin
in the fifth when Kingman got
his double and Dietz followed
with a walk with none out. Fox
sent Frank Duffy up to hit for
Carrithers, with the idea of
bunting the two base runners
along. The Giants were behind
by two at 3-1 at the time.
Duffy bunled at the first
pitch and it went foul along the
third base line. He stepped
back in for the sign and said
later he was surprised when

'(

•

··:· ••• • ......

••

··~·.

:·. :-.'-'

.....

·•·

•

sophomore.
For Coach Bruce Wallace's
Tornado defense, it should be
Bill Cornell, 142 lb. senior,
middle guard; R. Hill and
Middleswart, tackles; Randy
Forbes, 145 lb. sophomore, and
Williams, ends ; Codner andBaker, linebackers; J. Hill and
lhle, cornerbacks, and Mitch
and Mike Nease, safeties.
For Coach Joe Bokovitz's
Tomcats, offensively, it wiD be
Ed Morris, 161 lb. senior, left
end; David Hartley, 162 lb.
freshman, left tackle; Carl
Kamento, 177 lb. senior, left
guard; Steve Moore, 175 lb.
junior, center; Terry Hooper,
l651b. junior, right guard; Gary

Tennis
Champs
Crowned

"But I don't
want my son

•

National League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
91 59 .6()7 ...
St. Louts
82 67 .550 a•;,
New York
77 72 .517 13'12
Chicago
76 73 .510 141!,
Montreal
65 82 .442 24112
Philadelphia 61 88 .409 291h
West
W. L. Pel. GB
San Francisco 83 66 · .557 .. .
Los Angeles 82 67 .550 1
Atlanta
76 74 .507 7•12
Houston
73 76 .490 10
Cincinnati
73 78 .483 t1
San Diego
56 93 .376 27
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 6 NY 2 (1st)
Chicago 3 NY 2 (2nd)
Mil 1 Phila 0
Pitt 4 St. L 1
Atlanta 4 Hous 2
SO 2 Los Ang 1
The Best Service
Clncl 4 SF 2
Today's Probable Pitchers
' for
Chicago I Pizarro 6·5) at New
Air Conditioners
York (Seaver 18·8)
Montreal !Renko 14·14) at and Refrigerators
Philadelphia !Champion 2·2),
night.
Shop or Field
St. Louis (Reuss 14.13) at
PI\. 992-2511
Pittsburgh !Walker B·BL night
Atlanta I Kelley B·Sl at
Houston IRichard 2-0), night
San Diego I Norman 2·12) at
Los Angeles !Alexander 6·5),
night
Cini:lnnati !Grimoley 8·6) at
Locust St.
San
FrMcisco (Cumberland 9. . .
Middteporf
4), night
_____
_ _•

atASE

HARDWARE

be a boxer!" •.:

.,

But you do want

your

!h is

Hwnphrey, 184 lb. senior, right
tackle; Jim Wright, 150 lb.
senior. right end; either
Stewart Patton, 130 lb. freshman, or Denny Gillott, 143 lb.
junior, quarterback; David
Meade, !56 lb. senior, · left
halfback; either Rick Stinson,
130 lb . junior, or Randy Trace,
125 lb. freshman, right halfback; and Mark Gillispie, 196
lb. junior.

winler .

Reliable

heating oil service from
Rizer Oil Co. will assure it.

Phone992·2101 for delivery .

1970 Dodge ...................$2795
Coronet 2 Dr. HT, VB, t-Il ite. p -steering. sharp,
one owner trade, now only S2795.

1970 Docige ...........~ ........S26S5
Super Bee 2 Dr. HT, va, 4 speed, pi urn crazy
color, ready, willing and able at $2695.

1969 Chevrolet.. .....;.......s2495
Townsman Wagon, 9 passenger, VB,
automatic. p-st., p-brakes, air conditioning.

1969 P~mouth .......... $1995
i,.

Satelite 2 Dr. HT, VB, t-flite. p·steering, red
with white top, sharp and ready.

1969 Volkswagen ..........$1795
Deluxe 2 Dr. Automatic transmission. very
sharp, new engine. ready for you at this
reduced price of $1795.

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.
Dependable City
MiddlePGrt 992~2151 - 992·2152
Still have 6 new 1971 American Motors and 7
new 1911 Dodge cars for sale on our '101'
over invoice price. Hurry while selection is
still available and prices never lower.

Lots and Lots of New Styles
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

MANY NEW ARRJJIALS!
,WANY NEW COLORS!

5.98 to 1.91

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
KERM'S KORNER
'

",

family lo be toasty warm

Olallenger 2 Or. HT, V8, I-llite. p·sleering,
bucket seats, factory air conditioning, full 5
year-50,000 mile warranty, specially priced to
go now:

Coach John McNamara flashed
him the "hit away" sign.
Duffy, a fine bunter, was so
surprised in fact that he
stepped out or the batter's box
and looked for the sign again.
"! couldn't believe it, so I
wanled to be sure," said Duffy.
Durfy took a strike and a ball
and then hit a shot to shortstop
which the Reds converled into
a doubleplay.
Fox, questioned on the move,
seemed a bit upset.
"The third baseman (Tony
Perez) was playing in close,"
the Giants skipper explained,
"and we figured Duffy had a
chance to hit one past him."
Fox called it "one of those
things."
"When you are playing good
you can't guess wrong," he
said. "When you aren't playing
good everything goes wrong."
McGlothlin coasled after that
inning, giving up Dietz' homer
in the seventh for the only
damaging blow as he picked up
his first victory since Aug . 24
and his eighth overaU in 20
decisions.
Sparky Anderson, the Reds
manager, said the Giants
looked tired to him.
"They should be," he said,
"after a long, tough race. Clubs
out of contention are always
The strength of a nation
is
derived from the integrity
loose and relaxed.l'm watching
the race very closely and wiD of its h o m e s. -Confucius, be sure to use the same Chinese philosopher.
pitchers against the two con-

second baseman, sa1d the
Giants are trying too hard.
" They should try to relax,"
said Helms.
That may be easier said then
done for a team which now has
lost three in a row and 10 of its
last II games. To make
matters worse there was some
bickering among the players
after Wednesday night's loss.
Fox, it would seem, really
has his bands full.
Counting today's game with
Cincinnati, both the Giants and
Dodgers have 13 left to play.
The race could be over sooner
than that.

'··
a!

1970 Dodge ......................$3395

FOREST HILLS, N. Y. (UP!)
--Stan Smith won the Men's
title, Billie Jean King won t:1e
Women's title and 16-year-old
Chris Evert won the U.S. Open
Tennis Championships.
Stan and Billie took expecled
victories over Czechoslovakian
Jan Kodes and Rosemary
Casals Wednesday but it was
still the little lass from Fort
Lauderdale who put over the
tournament.
Billie Jean, in an acceptance
speech after hfr 6-4, 7-6 win
over Miss Casals, said she
wanled "to especially thank
Chris Evert for having been
here."
Kodes, the unseeded back-tohack champion on clay in the
French Championships, bad
jolled the men's field by
upsetting Wimbledon champion
and top seed John Newcombe in
the opening round and then
downing third-seeded Arthur
Ashe in the semis.
Smilh, second seeded and
seeking his first major international title after losing the
Wimbledon final to Newcombe,
faltered in the first set. He then
capitalized on a strategy
change of service, cutting his
power but adding spin. That
and his basketball backboard
backhands at the net served to
defeat the ~year old Czech 3-6,
6-3, 6-2, 7~.

·G.i· te~:n~~~~t~ ~~;.a~:

MAJOil m:~~~
"' . ... ' ., .,. ·~·.,,,
Flower bulbs for fall planting just
arrived - tulips, hyacinths, narcissus, crocus, etc.

Corbin, 176 lb. senior, left
guard; Mike Ulwis, 164 lb.
seni&lt;r, center; Randy Counts,
161 lb. senior, right guard ;
Robin Willie, 175 lb. junior,
right tackle ; Boil Linch, 176lb:
senior, right end; Jerry
Meeyley, 170 lb. senior, quarterback; Steve Vanoy, 192 lb.
junior, fullback; Rich Miller,
164 lb. senior, tailback, and
Greg Kirk, !SO lb. senior, .,
halfback.
on dtfense, it will be
Crisinger and Corbin, ends;
Rod Smith, 220 lb. senior, right
tackle; Mike Bennett, 2M lb.
junior, left tackle; Jim
Meredith, 234lb. senior, midcDe
guard; Linch and Willie ,
linebackers; Counts and
Meeyley,c&lt;rnerbacks,andSsm
Alexander, 137lb. senior, and
Greg Adams, 1~ lb. sophcmore,
safeties.

Eagles Heavy Favorite over Pirates

SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI )Charlie Fox is puzzled, the
Giants are in one of those
ramous San Francisco fogs and
it's anybody's guess today
where it wiD all end.
Thanks to San Diego's
surprise 2-1 victory over Los
Angeles Wednesday nighl the
Giants are still a game in front
or the Dodgers in the waning
National League West race.
The Giants, with Willie
McCovey and Dave Kingman in
the lineup together for the first
time in nearly two weeks,
bowed without honor, 4-2, to the
Cincinnati Reds while the
Dodgers were losing to the
Padres.
It was another golden opportunity gone down the drain and
Fox seems in a quandry about
what he should do to shake up
his club.
"We're not hitting, that's
all," Fox said after Wednesday
night's loss to Jim McGlothlin,
a man with his own problems
of late. "If someone can figure
out how we can get more
hitting they can make a lot of
money."
The Giants managed only six
hils off McGlothlin and two of
them were bases-empty homers
by McCovey and Dick Dietz.
Kingman added a leadoff
double in the fifth which was
was led.

GUARDIAN PREMIUM
POl. Yf51'1R CORD

quarterback; M. .;~DIS or
Faulk, Jailback; Van lnwagen,
fullback; Ron Smith, 150 lb.
senior, wingback; Jeff Morris,
190 lb. senior, and Larry liarmoo, 1B7lb. senior, ends; Mark
Werry, 244 lb. junior, and Fred
Lee, 205 lb. senior, tackles;
Roger Dixon, 151lb. senior, and
either Lehew, Weber, or
Thcmas, guards, and Eddie
Young, 156 lb. senior, center.
On defense Morris and
Hannon, ends; Lee and John
Grueser, 199lb. senior, tackles;
Thomas, middle guard; T,
Williams and Weber or Lehew,
linebackers; Van lnwagen and
Smith, cornerbacks, and Rick
Ash, 1461b. senior, and Faulk,
deep backs.
For the Eagles, it should be,
offensively : Boil Crisinger, 165
lb. junior, left end; Carl Fry, 172
lb. junior, left tackle; Larry

to

., •-·

1oe doe

SFUNNY

the Eagles. Belpre's front five · ;ery capably last week, and
averages 210.pounds per man, Chuck Faulk, 160 lb. junior, who
and that's including a 165 lb. starts on defense, coold lake
and 176 lb. pair of ends. Their over for Mark at tailback.
two tackles and middle guard Maybe both will play, maybe
are 254, 234, and 220. That's a neither will play. Let's wait tiD
Iotta meat!
Friday and see.
Adding onto the probleDJS
other ·than what the Eagles Another Marauder who is
might present, are the fact that banged up and on the uncertain
maybe the "Williams Gang '' list is Ted Lehew, 1561b. senior
Mark and Tiny, will both be guard and linebacker. If he is
sidelined. Tiny, 175 lb. senior not able, e1ther John Thomas,
fullback and linebacker, did not 162lb. senior, or Dallas Weber,
see action in the Reemelin 174 lb. junior, both starters on
game, but should suit up for the defense, will probably get the
game this Friday. He probably caD. The Marauders are kneewiD see action only on defense. deep in talent here and cwld
Mark, 150 lb. senior tailback, have several replacements for
on the other band, has been Lehew.
banged up some this week in Other than those two, the
practice and it isn't known Marauders will be healthy.
whether he will play or not.
The probably starting lineup
If both are sidelined, Keith for the Marauders is as follows:
Van Inwagen, H6lb. senior, will Andy Vaughan, 175 lb. junior,
take over for Tiny where he did

MRS. GENE DODSON whose husband Gene
Foodland in Middleport Is telling a fish story with genuine ducky

DMrL.N.O.:
~
If Tani'smotber doesn't alread.J t.w what's going on, abe's

'IODA'I'S Q1J118110N
Do JetTCIIII t.w you're terrtb)J wculed, bot don't preach.
Your .,.._ nioos you to Mayllewbatsbeneedlmaatiatofeel tbat~ ·cans..,..IIJb
luuriiO:Inlmp.Wbat ... youdo toemnellbl&amp;btontwltb .......
now? ·
1f abewon'tliatlen, then tlbed-'ldiS! ve a best friend like
you,lllili'd&lt;"•MMercoaliiJcil''WIIdnerts"lllJIDelimesrublolfiD
-'te , . .d ..... ,.._tl-. -SUE
·FROM JIEIEN:
Dear U.lentr:
_
n•i a CIDI allied NIIUODablp wben yciu oniJ Usten and dCII't

l!yKEITHWISECUP
The Meigs Marauders wiU be
looking for victory No. 2 at
Belpre Friday night against the
Golden ·Eagles of Belpre in a
non-teague match.
Coach Charles Chancey's
Marauders are 1.0 with a 4G-14
win over Re~melin. Coach
Ralph Holden's Golden Eagles
are 1).1 after a 12-7 defeat by
Fort Frye.
There bas been only one
previous meeting in football
between the two schools, that
being last year when Meigs ran
&lt;if with a 42-8 win at Marauder
Stadium.
The Golden Eagles are the
defending champions of the TriValley C!llference. Tbey had a
J.().1 record in that league last
year, thetiebeingwithFederalHocking.
The Marauders may have a
little trouble running against

Southern Could Pull
1971
works atthe IGA Off First Victory of

YID

7

M

Desk

CoUections off the local Sports ~t:
Middleport's 65-66 football team, the next to the last before
ccnaolidstim with the Panthers of Pomeroy and the Red Devils of
Rutland, already has produced three coaches in that aport. Each
of then]. bas returned to southeastern Ohio to teach and coach.
One, Larry Gladwell, the latest addition, you wiD see Friday
nigbton the sidelines when the Marauders play Belpre. He'll be on
the Belpre side, though, as an assistant working with the line,
offensive and defensive.
A second is Willard (Buddy) Moore, who some of our fans
won't see until Oct. 29 when the Marauders go to Gallipolis where
Moore is an assistsnt to Johnny Ecker.
Tbe third Is John Blake who you csn see operating as a head
coach any weekend you care to follow the North Gallia Pirates of
Gallia County.
Moore was a cornerback on defense and left haU and quarterback on offense. Blake was a two-way guard (you played both
ways at Middlep&lt;rt in those days, or else, due to lack of manpower), and Gladwell was a tackle wbo never got himself above
155 lbs. Whatever size any of these boys may have lacked they
made up in grit.
Tbelr coach at Middleport that year (65-66) was Bob Ashley,
who moved over to Swthern High thefoUowingseason.

~
":1: ,_-!f' riPt 'prolllb]JIDoiJIC&amp;I'InlarestnlngetifnmbercNidnnto.bei111ch
=...,
.._..
belp. TdingtobermJcbtonlyllllkellli!ttenwone. .

7

ICU[Dturin8 abilitY.

=P~~~.:.~l~:J: ~

By Chet Tannehill

in~berklndofllfe,bntl'mwCibllosinglfl~~beroutoftllls
wilt p , Sltntlld I tell ber, teDbermotber,dtGp her, &lt;r juat keep
6AK.I191[2 .AK.5 .,_112 em being- LISTENER NUMBER ONE.
What ... ,.,.. ... -"1
SUE'S VIEWS:

7

II""..,-

he's trying to I 2 lie
estate bJ 1'U1IIIng wild adl (ia ,;,Ne
,;,
a

the Sports

!

1hld.-..,.- .. ._-

~;b~J~N~""~·~w;e~c~ID:!~~~~co~m~eiw~i~ll~~~~to~m~arv~e~l~dlet~d~frcm cancer;

~

M " - • far jpstame) sucll as ·~ Start
Sept Hoe" ek.; lie's at Kingston Bcllpital iD

far six 'Reb.
........_
llrltae o.is DaR beeamr a reli..--c:lllnisl !I'R - ' (we refuoe Ill '11113 "fr "'
. t we
-los the "Jeml FraU" pinle
n,; ....,. ri§rplngr in their fM!IsbJy sballr_. •...:, p.bat lhahacrilegioua contrail In
..-.n..
lied
ltiDB) . . . llllktoberl'llmlt._;..., inlillra
- c:ic ,._ to g., n
mznt cl. berN. Y.
li- ' ill g., jrrz:l: (daal:e llllln el) WGFtd,
!lle'dr'
'ill dtWtber J-1 trio (witb wllich
'-a! Msblia iD ._.) in a Menlellla
· .-1• w ; ri , t piano 8Ct In g., 1IGf'ld, witb
~
writtzrl by l.elll Bclme's 11 . , ,
So cA. Sid liiln.
1V p • " Gecwce Sohe!k Gllered Joe
TYdZI!landealledJoe''lbe
liMe Ball fl. Frtell " Joe llio'med, "A •
lhll iJaad! Y•'re ialultiDC Babe Ratb'l
rr•J !" -- Parelllbetleally, the Babe's
N;g' ' _ . , .&amp;r a~ yarus b m&gt;n•s
1-&amp; • . _. . . .,na:rear---.Ciba'lla~
- Jii¢'1J: c ' o'll staippal 111C11t II. llle ...,.
alll -naJ marble pia:s fnm
overbyinms~tc.n-bankbo)anos,nMMitwcl. amelzries ia aa-llld Oriente etc. and
living,oehrortb,spendi~babitaetc.,andatlile •atW the wlllt 1o :R ··far buller, gww,
gambiqcasinCII tbeirl'inni'l!J,losses ... CBII! C&amp;lb.
are spied mbyiRSwodetCO\ia 1DeJ1, lid lilly ill
lllfia '"5 I rt Jigs Flrimo bu becGne a
Las Vegas and the Bahamas, but from llae tAl ~ llcft.lllllll I' tas (police lwo!J+d) tell
YugCI!avia.
•-OII:ea-jalabyloct,pablpttbe'tia (!,
During Kwame Ntrnma's dielat..ial. rap will • 5
' •llil "iilllk" pi) I.. (back~
w&amp;"Gbana,theMeyeri.analymalmr 0 ltl&gt; 11.r lie lalz Jae Ailad), be's uaaa!J In a
get a gamNing casino located in 1hala• 1 '\J I q-b!l..na a '1wal attact" - wllldt IDif
pcKI'emerglng I.'OIIIIlry; anditeaJotd $7,~ -ilellleftlll,tbeabadi:eET lbyGCGII'rict
a year! Cmsidered a .gangland &amp;ade Jllq GaiWI lllldl ean:at pacJand )ll.w ....
Ninety pel II gambli'l! operatilm
fliDEEI nu•..-aezatfaraU.S.lleneW
Caribbean are Lansky.ftialed; alrtoiDlbellllia ._ writtzaa bcllll: tiled "BBIr I Made . . . . a
.... £1eaji.tewbichonegrUIPII:tlaewdGpt!l I s YtK•WT•e"';lllep.a......... wllla
m~ed
m
· ""a ,..,..,_,.a, undttstaJiro:l........, . ,__.__..._,• "'"'• Wlile • a bow ill......,
v•
Islands casino and managed to Ilia: llle pia ef illlle[l11!1r 1r #;file lbat !IIlier ''daillplb."
$125,000; bappaled last winter.
Welarllaftir•"'OI'TnctB thr"~
Joan (Mrs. Teddy) trrw~ ill ber Jll'l[
t? _ abeet bat can't find ORt
d*lla
-1 ...,
· andlotiiiVIP1'!111D'S
CullureCenterappearanceag.&amp;~polt
• -1 ;-mJ IJ
an unerring instinct far tbe uiica' le ia - 'il!eOIBI 8 4 • WbiCoatflt plans a b!&lt;Sevening clothes .... Madison Aw. beln ftaas lltt ' i51J, 5 iaiiJ 'ril 'rl V N; tile
Inc. pans four 111=• Dllglrilwc ' II!, 3
lflleWBJ•
% • rl • liS
photography, movies, paSO!IIl - - _ w1re1e 11e
tw 1 jw 1 =tr !be wiDFriend ct Frank Sinatra plnii'JIIO ltd,. w 3 tll!is.
,
__._ ~ _ ... "- .........
Snatra'sjetwasattbeNeWHaveil8partaswe
· Gar
lepultd,butlhatbe'wasn'tlberefarla '
'; ..., •• &amp;Y•C.Do"'qaia.""'*IIICIIpt.••
bewasatthebospitallbere-batuaiJIO~a ~1V. 1181! tat •
-.z I
friend
W .__
..._. _
..,_ ..
- llel
.. 100
· 'aII1Uf11em
qM!I'IIe.
....,...,
• a - 'I
· - 2.._..,
matter
fact even pray,
it's lnlee and
IJIIII!e
2 il 'l-ie - _.. ~; tlJe

Man's Assist to Mother Nature

ft'di[.

bad tbinphath:t~':i
fic:ult to select the worst. If
you will Rttle lor the 111011
emharraaing. bere It is,"
replied the ~~~-r"I was pla)'ing against
one of my poorer pupib and
had reached siJ: spades. I
won the club lead in my
hand and led the live of
spades toward dummy. This
is the best play from a prac-

! Voice along Broadway l :-~sr::~in~tt! c~
I

00

By Helen and Sue Bottel

.KB
Both Yulnenble

Weol

symptoms.
You are right, It certainly
makes a person aulous and
this does add J:'~roblem.
Despite the ·
ort, unJess there are other problema
such disturbances are not
likely to be damaging: They
cause more trouble in older
people because heart disease
Is usually also presenll saw
many pilotl and even astranaut candidates with this
P~:;:;;:so It can and ~n
~
in
wbo are

the same actions as q~·
dine Tbey decrease the llt'ltabuity of the beart muscle
making' it less likely to bave
s.uch rapid rates. Not ~v~ryone tolerates these m~s
wen so doctors are reluctant
to mve them to patients wbo
...
bave very few attacks. · Of
coorse any J&amp;tient wbo bas
sucb episodes must 1M! th"!'?~~Yh1 y studin't~:0so~:~
. r
""'
problem, like an overactiVe
thyroid gland that C8J! be
causing the trouble. One trate
reader wrote to inform me
they are caused by low blood
sugar. 'ntis is only one of
....... ( d not a very
many ca...,. an

•Generation Rap

soum

iramed in tite Soviet system, in large measure the result

'

4.,..___...,....,.____,......,_·..,.._..,..__~

for

Some Democratic leaders rear_tbal ~reformers
are trying to reform their party right out ef its sods.
The leaders' concern is tbaL in ':be aame ef ~
and healthy change., the militants mig!lt II!* suth
of the Democrats' pi'esidenlial 110111111&amp;~ IJI'GCI!SS
the public would, in revulsion.. reject thtir 1!Fl! A few party officials_ ~~ s~-nfanllers~
ting things up to ,provide J~lioo r... ~ ..._ ptan
' is
fourth party. As these
it, """
simple: Make demarids and preselll _c:ballellgles that are
sure to be rebuffed, then say lllat smo;e the Democrats
won't reform themselves a flllll1h par1J IS the only CC!QrSe.
Tbe broader con•iction, ~. is tbal the ··~"
won't go that far. Most of the miltaids are- as_peaple
who still want reve11ge on lhe par1J lw Jl!ll ~g
Eugene McCarthy in 1968, want it 10 s1l1lul its guill for
the Chicago convention dellac1e that J"&amp;&amp;', aDd woold like
to punish southern elements ef the paltJ.
In the spring of 1969, when Sm. G_eorge lkGcwem of
South Dakota was lryi!lg to rusUe D-:t' fGr ~ party
reform commission he theil beaded, be met wtth some
left-liberal money types in Nell' York City_ Tbe first question he got was:
" If this thing (reform! doesn't wart out, are JOU prepared to drive the South out ef the party!"
McGovern's answer was : '"No_" Tbe take that da:r was
a few thousand dollars. The gaaJ bad bem f2"1.- .

tbi!

riftt!i~d

Marauders Going for Victof!y No. 2

DR. LAWRiNCf f. LAMB .

•

'

~
c

�3- The Dally Sentlnel,l'cJmeroy-Middleport, 0., September 16. 1971
'

2-~ n.llJ SeDIItlel, Pcimeroy-Micldllport, 0., Seple;mber J.l.lrTI

BRUCE 810SSAT

GLOBAl. VIEW

Democrats Fear. Party . Milit~nts

I

Dissidents Put
Soviet in Bind
By RAY CROMLEY
WASIUNGTON (NEAl
A .careful analysis of reports !low. arriving ~re indicate that dissent in the Sov1et Uruon IS more senous than
bu been previously revealed. ,
What these reports disclose is not a great increase .in
'tile number of dissente.rs but. the. fac~ that the ~en ID·
volved bold crucial. positions m essential 'occupati~.
Tbe picture has been largely that of a revolt of artists,
writers, poets. Tbese, get publicity but their influence
Gil Soviet society is not that great.
New studies indicate scientists, engineers and technicians are the core of a much more effective resistance
-.!thin Russia.
. S
ExceUent work in this field has been done by LeWIS .
Feuer of the University of Toro~to, through a grant .bY
the Canada Council, Social Sciences and Humanities
Division.
If one takes for example, the '100 or sa !mown men
and women who have signed protests in Russia in the
past few years, it turns out ~t .almost 40 per cent are
~elentists, engineers and t~hnic1ans, sa far as can be
·etfunated. Twenty-two per cent were artists. Tbe rest
were an assortment of writers, teacbers, doctors, lawyers,
ltlldents, ordinary workers alld a miscellany of academic:ians.
Artists, writers, students, teacbe~s. doctors an d Ia!11'ers
are one thing. But scientists, engmeers and tecbniC1811S
are the core of the Kremlin's bope of becoming first in
the world economically and militarily. Tbey are at the
beart of Russia's current series of ~ve-y~ p~. .
Now it appears there is strong dissenSion Within this
t«lmical elite.
.
We are not talking about men low on thell' career ladders. A leader in the technical-scientific .opposition bas
been Piotr Kapitsa, probably the most respected of So- .
viet physicists. .
.
'
There iS evidence, too, this strong opposition bas spread
Into the Rnssi•n military forces. So far as can be told,
all military and naval officers wbo have recently ~
· bed as dissidents in Russia have been men With
~~scientific or technical responsibilities.
~ unhappy men complain that Marxist ideology
is forcing Soviet technology into grossly distorted pat-

Rapid Heart Be,at
Causes Anxiety

....

The calmer party reform adYacates COIIC&lt;!Iie today.~t
otherwise bealthy.
C&lt;:~mpliance with the McGovern-~ ~mission s By Lawraee Lallllt, M.D.
.
guidelines 011 coaventi~ delegale selection IS !ar from • Deu l)r. LaJDI.-I read
fn&gt;:c!uent a~ks, it II
complete. Yet, slow as it soems to be, they ree:'~~~trontionsg your column about paroxya- · Wise to gJve m~lne.-tbese
l!oPe that by year's end most state patty 0111
.
1 ......;.....,,. and 1 am medicines belong til or bave

WASHING10N t NEA I

wiU bave set the Jle'l! standards! &lt;'lbi!Y ~ve to do. 'With
opening up the selectiQD process, making 1t current; providing delegations balanced as to race, sex, age and other
factors.} .
·
_
One persisting fear among party regulars JSdepartthat tile
militants will -·. _upon
. even the smallest
touresthe
~,....,,..,..
f cbaUenges
from reform 5~ as ca.~ or
convention's credentials CODIIIIittft.
.
For instance, some regular leliders, ~g to !he
indictments of the party's center by arch'liberals like
Washingtoo attDmey Joseph Raub, believe the militantS
woo't consider the party reformed unless it oominates
McGovern New York Mayor John Lindsay, or someone

ma ';h'"~ u I
very victim of it. I've been
:"t!o doctors and they bo!"
tell me not to worry about 1t,
.but while YOI!, have it th~
Ia -eat a 0 z.·1_· e t y and 1t
.,. you, WWCII
"'-L n1y dds
scares
o .a
to the dilcomfort. The doctor said 1 have a ~ture
beart beat and twice 10 two
years my beart went into a
spasm. The fint attack
luted four bours and the
similar '
· second one lalted 10 bours.
1n ·other worm the militants are thought by these The doct(Jr aeemed undis-~mnd the light in such· a way that the turbed and gave me pbenctregulars to be ,......-.,...
be barb Only hi ,.___, my
nomination of centriit Sen. Edmtmd Mustie would
- · e r·~~ · t
automaticaUy portrayed as .proofsbortreforofrmcrit:ln~~m·the~tr eyba~to ~ ~ ~bytwb!
the Democrats' Old Guard (just .
.
'"'"' .
.. ·
•
machinations) bad prevailed once more.
Any info~tion YO!I can
Ma be an these fears are unwarranted. Maybe, as giVe would be.apprec18ted.
som/analysts say, the mili~t left ~ just trying to push
Deu Reader-Your story
tbe Democratic center a few incbes Its way. But the fact is typical for paroxysmal
is the ooise and motion scare the party. Weary of tachycardia. The heart may
triJuma, it wants political peace in tm-but fears war. be beating perfectly oormal
and then ll"'denly It starts
beating mucb faster_ If the
rale is veiy fast, the beart

a":::

worried-..,

0

Cop on the Beat

WIN AT BRIDGE :-"Pu:!Pf~~iio=

A Reason to
~ow' ." •
P''ay
1'
"'

r------'----,
11

IIOimi(D)

6QC

97&amp;

~~': says in essence

that controls, dialec~s ~d
· 'ties of Soviet functionaries force brigbt SCJentists
Into purely theoretical science, wbere they can be alone
and less managed. They're f!mni"# away from the blgbly
IIUpelVised experimental work. or best results ~
lhould be 3l to 31 experime~talists for ~very theoretical
scientlat. In th~ Soviet Umon the ratio Is almost the
·
reverse.
Tbis imbalance which Kap1tsa
attributes to the Soviet
system, could tu:ve the most serious consequences on
Soviet scientific and economic development, and eventually 00 Russian military technical developme~t as well.
Students of the Soviet Union say the Russlllll econ~my
is lagging progressively 'farther behind the Amencan
1n
tical applications in such important fields as com~act«hnology, petro-chemicals, cybernel;ics and .other
major forms of bigb technology. Tbey attribute this ~g
in tarj~e part to the research distortion and other Soviet

.Altt6SC
• A3Z
WIIS'l

6KZ

9J9U

.J7
.QJIOU
6AlOn715
9Alt
• 102

llwtll

z•4.

1.

1l'oot
._
.Po.
Po.
Paa

· S...
1.

.. ..
._ . ._
._

59

appear these scientific distortions are in-

of applied Marxist dialectics.
.
Most big)! caliber scientists do not carry banners, s1gn
titions
make impassioned public s~hes. &amp;it in a
l:untry so beavily dependent on scitntifil; technology,
the ideas these men bold cannot fo!l!ver be silenced. Tbey
wield a very particular sort of qwet power.

36

· CN.T.
SN.T.

By O.w ld " J . .u J..-,
"What is tbe wont thing
that ever happened tq )'Oil
at the bridge table!" Uked

or

~t.

·''

EDITORIAl.$

School Financing
Changes Likely
It seems inevitable that the U.S. Supreme Court wiU
eventually second the California SUPreme ,CQurt ~ the
matter of school financing. If the Califorrua case Itself
is not appealed there are similar ones pending in other
states, any one ~f wbicb could precipitate the "landmark"
school decision of the Seventies.
.
. .
AU have one thing in common-the contention that 1t IS
inherently unfair that school districts with greater resources of taxable real estate and lower tax rat,es !lfe
able to spend more money on schools than poorer districts
with fewer tax resources and blgher tax rates.
To take the example used in the Califoroi~ case, the
lower middleclass district of Baldwin Park m Los Angeles spent $840 per pupil in 1969, while upper-UPper-class
Beverly Hills spent $1,231. .
.
.
The variaoce in tax bases m Califorma rlll!s from one
extreme of S103 per pupil in the poorest district to ~­
other extreme of $952,156 per pupil in the wealthiest district.
· · 't ti
Tbe California Supreme Court ruled that this s1 ua on
violates the "equal protection" clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, a breach of the Constitution made no .less
repugnant by the existence of per-pu~il funds provided
by tbe state and by federal grants in aJd.
If the ruling stands, California, and m?st other states,
must drasticatly and fundamentally rev1se the systems
by wblch they finance their public schools. Tbe obv'tous
answer is for state governments to assume th~ full burd~n
-that is, to collect school tax Jl!.Onies statewide and dispense them on an equil!Jble bas.':5 statewide. Such a sys.
.
tem is already followed m Hawau. .
Tbe repercussions of the Califorma ruling m1ght not
stof there, however.
1 money available to schools is to be equal throughout
a state would it be legal for a district to tax itself extra
in order to provide a superior educatio~ fo~ its chil~en?
If inequality of education is unconstitutional Within . a
state, is it constitutional among the sta,tes? . Tbat 1s,
should a student be penalized because he lives m '! state
wblch cannot afford to spend as much on educatiod as
larger and richer states?
If not will the federal government sooner or later be
catled upon to "equalize" the financial quality of education· among the 50 states?

....

r------------------------------------------I
I

BY JACJ[ O'IIBIAN
BI.JINX AND I.DW..DNX
IN 111E BAHAMA$
NEW YORK- News fnm llle !blwJ+
isn't good far Ainel'iean.owDI m;
; IIIJ
flftigo-nm firms f&lt;r that matter: ~Ell! b116s
we know baw shifted their cash out cl. 10
,
bave quietly g~•ed legal ber IQ las iD
other countries-·(MIIIIICOandP.!WIII- t.D)
wilb the expectatim !bat the~ I" • C
black government will go g., way II Salrtb
American cwntries eJpnp:i.ltq fill ·cr illl&amp;'esls, nolably ct CQU1'!Ie tbo!le con1zdW ill lbr
u. s.
Probably tbe biggest slot maeiDe
manufacturing ecmpany in the world was cl.fered to possible ~ owlkts' wbo "l&amp;o'
around and smelled the Iansky pafame _.
nixed the deal .... Gambling Jm•rts - he
tnmsportatim, bote! rocms and lllf!lls to . _ .
1igb and usually I &amp;peelable
rollers _ are at their own riS: all ait
manlfesls &lt;11 soch junhta are 11io?wl •
routinely by tbe u.S. Internal R e - Senil:e
- and every name gels a bltally
llli1lc

Man is the only creature capable of destroying the
environment-bls own lind that of all other creatures.
Yet man is the only creature that can care about p~eserving a haphazard arrangement of rocks on a mountamside.
After a two-year studv c' the Great Stone. Face on Cannon Mountain in NeVI h
c, overlookmg Francoma
Notch, a team of govern: "' •ismologists h¥ repo~ted
on the condition of the st:;r 's lure most tounst attr!lction.
They found that the grea1est danger to the stab1bty of
the famous profile was the wmd blowmg on the boulders
and vibrating the turnbuckles that hdld them together.
(Tbe turnbuckles were installed years ago to keep the
profile from disintegratin~.)
Tbe vibrations were eliminated by wedging supports
under the turnbuckles.
. .
. .
In addition to the wind, three other vanehes of seiSniJc
nomena could aft'ect the rocks that make uC tbe face.
rth
are quarry blasts • ea · qua kes and nuc ear exploto the rocks'
particularly.
Mountains.
under

sadder version.
II a
' .,
BookpubliaberLyleStuartbn&amp;ebisllipca lte . . C M 1V aet alii - wllen
0111 • a
IUJamaic:aeslate,wberebln&gt;ife~l 11!!1 'I £(ifM
. t zttU.S.TV)PIE

=C:~ne these:o~tf&lt;~e~rs~~~~1~~~~~~~(~it:hjr~~e~a~t
51

of
b'llt 18 the
~ !. yre,moeey
~· 8 If

the Old Man or
those nuclear

:::!1,

Jonpjca

*

na...,
.--•a$1'1,

ill.

.....,...-"J

that second hand will play
low if be bolda king-small.
If second hand does plly
low, yoU play dummy's fourspot and see what happena.
"I did this and West
played the deuc:e withOut
any problem. Dummy's four
lost to East's jaek md a club
wu rebmted. I won iD dum·
my, led the queen of trumps,
finer
zi and lost to the unguarded king_"
"What was 10 embarrauing about that!" asked the
student
"It was mJllapU'a remark
wben I COIIIplimented him on
his brilliant play. He aid,
"You have taupt me to play
semad hand.lmr. What eke
lhould I bave done!'"
"Secoad hand low aure
=it~ 1igbt that time,
--ASSM.l

E

...,_lrd

··- - - ,...

IIfll_._ _..
r' '

7

7

1be
Wat

J&gt;ido'i•c 11M be&lt;D:
lferlll

1l'oot

s.dl

~:

._
a
._
Po.
H
Paa
You, Sou1b, bold:

r

A •• ... -b

treatment would be easy.
PresSJD.g on the eyeballs
will stop the attacks, in SC!me
cases. 'this is a reflex action.
The nerves from t1ie eyes
send a slgiial to the brain and

stimulate the vagus nerve to
send a pOwerful. s1gna1 to the
heart and can slow the heart
markedly. When it works, the
rapid rate\ stops abruptly, as
you have described. Tbe
same effect can be accompUshed by pressure over the ·
neck (over the carotid artery) . This procedure should
only be done by a doctor
since it can cause problems.

· Sometimes g a Kgin g or
breath balding will stop an
attack tbrougb a similar reflex mecbl!nism.

PUNISHMENT OVERSHADOWS CRIME
Dear Slle and Helerl:
1 am a I&amp;o,ear.old guy wbo II beiDg pmlshed fir not much of
anylbq - I IIIli*.
. l.all Friday lbe'ld* we eo~t lnncb with weren't at acbool, so
my friend l'ltm and 1got a chedt«t to ccme boPle for lunch. The
te1epbc11e ran, wblle we were ealinll and It ns Mom's loudmoulbedfriend.Sbeukedmewbylnsthere,andnotwanlingto
aetlntoa hlgsplaNtlon,lsaldlwaulct,
.
When she e.me ovl!l" Salladay, fint thing abe liked was if I
was fee1iD8 belllr, wlicll callll!ll Mcm to m;plode beca111e abe
didn't know I heme, being at work.
Snce tills WC11D1D abot aft ber 1111111tb, I haw bad to wub
dilbes,sweepandmqJ flooraand lhatkindof~pilhrork. I can't
leaw the :rani after ICbool, ar driYe the atr, ar listen to my stereo
fartbreeweeb,ofwbldtonlyabontooeisgone-andlfyoutbink
Mcm's the type to bact down, forget it!
lln't tbllltoo darn rough? -H. C.
SUE'S VIEWS:
Dear H:
.
No kiddln', It's too darn rougb! Getting 8 cbecll«t isn't
catting acbool.
Yourmotber abonld at least listen to your aplanatiOD and if
abe bun't, I'd be tempted to ''acddenlally" break a glaa wlile
washing diabes; do a lousy jGb on the flocn (boys ll'e ~
slappy, y'bow); and sing at the top of my blip In place ol tbe
stereo.
Maybe she'd reWce the ll!llleoce in nrfvul(e far a little
peace and qulel _ SUE
HElEN YELIJN': And ma,tle she'd EXl'END the ll!lllenl:e
beealllemotbenleanlumevenstubbomerwbenkidstum'alo!iPYmiJU11MIII!. JlrrMnber bact, Slle! Parents aren't that eaally
Clll1ll!d .... and you sbould t.w!
1agree the pmlslnent DOESaeem rough, bat did H. C.llnish
11a "'-?TeD me, H., were you and Pam iniChoollbat afternoon
.
.... ·-•
Or where?H.
Dear Bottelrt:
My belt friem 11 my tiggeat p-oblem.l'm known as a ''good
Utile girl." Ton! is the applllite. l,,..ul!l" ber a great penon,
even If I dol!'t !Ike tbe tblnp abe &amp;.. Sbe jUit marches to a
dlfftrent drum,
Toni bas taken drup, IJ1ld[es graa,llells tbe stuff frlm ber
lntber's marijuana planta. Sbe lbmgM abe. ns pngnant once
llldthennttlmeshereallfwas,butbadamlacarriage. Recently
sbefeDDif!Ctlyinlove(aPn),andwenttobedwlthaguyshe'd
known aact1y
clap, It l&gt;ljoperw oflen.
1M tbe Giber tide of the pic1are, abe Is a straight Astudent and
!be DlCIIItiDteresling penon 1"11! ever met. Sbe's really turned on
til life and 11- about twice far mrye~~e elae'a once. Her main
ambitions 1ft 10 get married, bave habiel and becGne a
PIYcbolollat. tbnuBb not nee 11 riJr In that ardtr.
Sbe te11a me t11Jnp !bat WGl'I'J me awfully and abe's getting
fartberoutllltbetlme.Don'tWGI'I'J-abelrm'tlrlhpnci!Wme

two

: ; ' 11

aspects.

If tills sounds quacky, you aren'tdeceived.ltis.
Last &amp;mday, Gene disclosed, Mrs. Dodson joined husband
and other families at Fort Meigs for an IGA family picnic. What
better way to pass the time, after chaw, than to fish in the weDstocked pond there? So Mrs. Dodson prepared her line, bailed her
book wllb an attractive (to fish) worm, and made a well-executed
cast out todeepwater,aU the while relaxedly in conversation with
nearby friends.
In no time ataU she bad a strike but it was the strangest kind
on recard in these parts.
Apparently at the exact moment the worm landed on the
water 8 covey of ducks unnoticed bad lazily swam into range. One
ct tbem nailed that worm m Mrs. Dodson's hook as surely as
could any large mouth base .
Sir Duck, plainly suffering the shock of his life, immediately
set up the loudest abjections amidst determined efforts to eject
worm and book preparatory to getting the beck out of there.
But be couldn'tgetoff,Mrs. Dodson reeled him in, and friends
IOCIIed the duck.
Ccllle to think of It, lbere's one thing Gene forgot to tell me,
ind I forgot to ask: whether or not the Dodsons had duck that

light far dlmer.
Friday's Games
St. L at Mil, night.
Chi at Phlla; hkjht.
NY at Pitt, night.
Cinclat Hous, night.
Atlanta at LA. night.
SO at SF, night.

Friday's Games
KC at Minn. night.
Oak at Mllw, night .
Cal al Chicago.. night.
Balli at Del, 2. twi·nile.
Bos at Wash, night.
&lt;;:teve at NY, 2, fwi.nite.

TIRES
At l.ow Low Prices

650x13
Plus $' .76 Fed. Ex. Tax

Other Sizes Comparably

Low Priced

2OIWIGE

DRIVE IN
TODAY!

WAYI'f0 .

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

601 L MAIN

tt2-2094

POMIIOY, 0.

v.:..·

rqe.
_

.
__,_
lltltfrlellllaneedlotalneomiDfll-wldch,uolaTtiJI...,
~beJP-Jon~'tptanddCII'twanU-H. •

·

·.:in:&amp;".,. ~!..,If.._,..
Ia ilu 1 • *·
~&amp;· ~
-Y.~ild--------------~--,.:,,.:,__
.......,

-

-,,II'')

..

""1r MI.\....

Tile IDile manluu
Deatb is 00 respecter of
1 1l!i! eve•
~.~.
,_h~~,___~,
•.
~"fll~ll
periODS, wa.ther you are
""""" m "" ,.,..
•
klnl
t Ttie
t
f pm!riwd tllllt OM fate Zit
=Dtllll.~"

0::

COI!!CJ lo

aU of tl!em.-Eccl.

A~ Roman emperor"

•

••

~

American League

22 Ill. IAIL Y AIIUICAIIIIILI
GU$1 COLOIIIAL LAIIPS
.... ,.... ......_.... ......4 ."..,.'" ~~
-.! ....._
.
t.... •Ilk il•••• Allll4i• Hit ..W

Cit .,. ...................

~... - · hew.&lt;. c.. ..., ............. .
c....,t.te
with C~ ~~~· 1., ...... T., Hil

~-"- lltlf .,. '' • tl .. ., .... h t..-W. __

REG. lt98 SPECIAL

J17.77
Reg. 1.49

-!""-·-_..

-Arm.!
, .2 rtOf

'"-L
CM

!--...

......,..- ..

rr

-~-

Also 4 oz. yarnS. '"sit our arf USE OUR CONVENIENT
deporfment.
~Y)•Y!.AY PLAN!
.
.
. .·: ::: .. ··:. ::. :, .;.: ·:: :: :,
. ; . . ...

BEN,FRANKUN•
•

·p·r.
" 0···E
n ·

202 Eas,t Main. St.

·

992-3498
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATU
. RDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

__;:J__· ,;
3:;,.
14
;;;,._,;;,;,...;;,,...,,;;,_,;;,;_.,;:-= ; , - - - - - - ,II,.;.-•• · - - · - L - - - - -

r· "

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

East
W.
89
84
77

L. .Pet. GB
54 .622 ...
65 .564 8
Detroit
73 .513 15112
Boston
75 73 .507 16'/2
New York
Washington 58 77 .400 32
57 89 .390 33 11•
Cleveland
West
W. L. Pet. GB
94 5.1 .631 ...
•·Oakland
Kansas City 79 69 .534 13 112
70 79 .470 24
Chicago
70 79 .470 24
California
6S 78 .466 24112
Minnesota
Milwaukee 64 84 .432 29112
x-clinched division
Wednesday's Games
Clakland 3 Chi 2, (lsi)
Chicago 7 Qak 3 (2nd)
Calif 6 KC 2
Minn 1 Milw 0
Detroit 4 Wash 2
Boston 6 Cleve 5
NY 4 Balli 2
Today•s Probable Pitchers
California (Wright 14·151 at
Kansas City (Drago 16·9),
night.
Minnesota !Corbin 8·10) at
Milwau~ee I Krausse ] . 12),
night.
Washington (Bosman 11·14)
at Detroit (Cain 8.9).
Boston 1Garman 0·0) at
Clev~land I Hand 2·5L night.
New Yor~ I Keklch 10·1l at
Baltimore I Leonhard 2·2L
night.
Baltimore

.

•' - ' • •

:-~ .

....

By United Press International

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

y-vlen.Granled, Ttlllisfaaclnatlng,butsbemaybe
a1ng JOUIJABDactre.-an•QIIfnoc:e: to imp u,llllrer wltb
ber,andpl lblfpenude.IIIIII*yoa'niDMntbaDilittlened,
llld Jon t.w tbe aut llep: a ninii-1 If yow - ' t stnog
....,.toabootduw,tiiERdllablfuhalues,you•dbealraetontll

Ky., 14-6, Southern dropped a
22-0· decision to FederalHocking, and Glouster lost to
Crooksville, 42-0.
The probable starting lineup
for Coach Roger Kirkhart's
"Big Green Machine" will be
Jim Amsbary, 165 lb. senior,
quarterback; Rick Ssnders, 140
lb. senior, and Randy Boring,
140lb. junior, halfbacks ; Dennis
Eichinger, 190 lb. senior,
fullback; Bob Caldwell, 150 lb.
senior, and Rick Williams, 173
lb. senior, ends; Alan Holter,
2011b. senior, and either Dick
Stettler, 1751b. junior, or Roger
Karr, 170 lb. junior, tackles;
John Cline, ISS lb. senior, and
Rick Hauber, 175 lb. senior.

guards, and Tim Gumpf, 140 lb.
senior, center.
On defense, it should be
Warren Calaway, 140 lb . senior,
and John Sheets, 170 lb.
sophomore, ends; Holter and
Stettler, tackles; Hauber,
middle guard; Eichinger and
Alan Duvall, 182 lb. junior,
linebackers; Gumpf and
Williams, cornerbacks, and
Ssnders and Caldwell, halfbacks.
For the Tornadoes, it will be
Mitch Nease, 150 lb. freshman,
quarterback; Neil Baker 162lb.
senior, fullback; Jay Hill, 126
lb. junior, and Mike Nease, 146
lb. junior, halfbacks ; Nick lhle,
164 lb . junior, left end ; Larry
Wilcoxen, 217 lb. junior, left
tackle; Greg Middleswart, 146
lb. sophomore, left guard; Mike
Codner, 134 lb. sophomore,
center; Jim Smith, 142 .lb.
senior, right guard; Ron Hill,
240 lb. junior, right tackle, and
Jim Williams, !52 lb.

R eds Jolt GiaJJ,ts

······:- ·!

If«.

eapa

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles take on
the North Gallia Pirates in the
Eagles' home opener and the
Southern Local Tornadoes will
be looking for their first win as
they clash with the Glouster
Tomcats at Glouster this Friday
night in Class A area football
action. Eastern appears to be a
solid favorite and the Tornadoes
could have an edge over
Glouster.
The Eastern-North Gallia
game will be a Southern Valley
Athletic Conference tilt, while
the Tornado-Tomcat battle is a
non.leaguer. Last week the
Eagles beat Hannan Trace 43-0,
North Gallia lost to Fairview,

Willie Mays, who is exhausled
after the tough Dodger series
earlier this week, sat out
Wednesday's game and will be
on the bench today when the
Giants play the Reds again.
Ross Grimsley pitches for the
Reds and John Cumberland for
Ssn Francisco.
"One thing for sure," said
Fox, "McCovey and Kingman
will play but I plan some lineup
changes. I don't know what
they'll be, but there will be
some. You can bet on that."
The Reds tapped young Don
Carrithers for seven hits and
three of their four runs in the
first five innings and MeG lothlin made them stand up.
The Giants managed a lot of
line drives off the big
righthander, who had won 7
one of his previous eight starts,
but all were right at someone.
The Giants had a fine chance
to break through on McGlothlin
in the fifth when Kingman got
his double and Dietz followed
with a walk with none out. Fox
sent Frank Duffy up to hit for
Carrithers, with the idea of
bunting the two base runners
along. The Giants were behind
by two at 3-1 at the time.
Duffy bunled at the first
pitch and it went foul along the
third base line. He stepped
back in for the sign and said
later he was surprised when

'(

•

··:· ••• • ......

••

··~·.

:·. :-.'-'

.....

·•·

•

sophomore.
For Coach Bruce Wallace's
Tornado defense, it should be
Bill Cornell, 142 lb. senior,
middle guard; R. Hill and
Middleswart, tackles; Randy
Forbes, 145 lb. sophomore, and
Williams, ends ; Codner andBaker, linebackers; J. Hill and
lhle, cornerbacks, and Mitch
and Mike Nease, safeties.
For Coach Joe Bokovitz's
Tomcats, offensively, it wiD be
Ed Morris, 161 lb. senior, left
end; David Hartley, 162 lb.
freshman, left tackle; Carl
Kamento, 177 lb. senior, left
guard; Steve Moore, 175 lb.
junior, center; Terry Hooper,
l651b. junior, right guard; Gary

Tennis
Champs
Crowned

"But I don't
want my son

•

National League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
91 59 .6()7 ...
St. Louts
82 67 .550 a•;,
New York
77 72 .517 13'12
Chicago
76 73 .510 141!,
Montreal
65 82 .442 24112
Philadelphia 61 88 .409 291h
West
W. L. Pel. GB
San Francisco 83 66 · .557 .. .
Los Angeles 82 67 .550 1
Atlanta
76 74 .507 7•12
Houston
73 76 .490 10
Cincinnati
73 78 .483 t1
San Diego
56 93 .376 27
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 6 NY 2 (1st)
Chicago 3 NY 2 (2nd)
Mil 1 Phila 0
Pitt 4 St. L 1
Atlanta 4 Hous 2
SO 2 Los Ang 1
The Best Service
Clncl 4 SF 2
Today's Probable Pitchers
' for
Chicago I Pizarro 6·5) at New
Air Conditioners
York (Seaver 18·8)
Montreal !Renko 14·14) at and Refrigerators
Philadelphia !Champion 2·2),
night.
Shop or Field
St. Louis (Reuss 14.13) at
PI\. 992-2511
Pittsburgh !Walker B·BL night
Atlanta I Kelley B·Sl at
Houston IRichard 2-0), night
San Diego I Norman 2·12) at
Los Angeles !Alexander 6·5),
night
Cini:lnnati !Grimoley 8·6) at
Locust St.
San
FrMcisco (Cumberland 9. . .
Middteporf
4), night
_____
_ _•

atASE

HARDWARE

be a boxer!" •.:

.,

But you do want

your

!h is

Hwnphrey, 184 lb. senior, right
tackle; Jim Wright, 150 lb.
senior. right end; either
Stewart Patton, 130 lb. freshman, or Denny Gillott, 143 lb.
junior, quarterback; David
Meade, !56 lb. senior, · left
halfback; either Rick Stinson,
130 lb . junior, or Randy Trace,
125 lb. freshman, right halfback; and Mark Gillispie, 196
lb. junior.

winler .

Reliable

heating oil service from
Rizer Oil Co. will assure it.

Phone992·2101 for delivery .

1970 Dodge ...................$2795
Coronet 2 Dr. HT, VB, t-Il ite. p -steering. sharp,
one owner trade, now only S2795.

1970 Docige ...........~ ........S26S5
Super Bee 2 Dr. HT, va, 4 speed, pi urn crazy
color, ready, willing and able at $2695.

1969 Chevrolet.. .....;.......s2495
Townsman Wagon, 9 passenger, VB,
automatic. p-st., p-brakes, air conditioning.

1969 P~mouth .......... $1995
i,.

Satelite 2 Dr. HT, VB, t-flite. p·steering, red
with white top, sharp and ready.

1969 Volkswagen ..........$1795
Deluxe 2 Dr. Automatic transmission. very
sharp, new engine. ready for you at this
reduced price of $1795.

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.
Dependable City
MiddlePGrt 992~2151 - 992·2152
Still have 6 new 1971 American Motors and 7
new 1911 Dodge cars for sale on our '101'
over invoice price. Hurry while selection is
still available and prices never lower.

Lots and Lots of New Styles
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

MANY NEW ARRJJIALS!
,WANY NEW COLORS!

5.98 to 1.91

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
KERM'S KORNER
'

",

family lo be toasty warm

Olallenger 2 Or. HT, V8, I-llite. p·sleering,
bucket seats, factory air conditioning, full 5
year-50,000 mile warranty, specially priced to
go now:

Coach John McNamara flashed
him the "hit away" sign.
Duffy, a fine bunter, was so
surprised in fact that he
stepped out or the batter's box
and looked for the sign again.
"! couldn't believe it, so I
wanled to be sure," said Duffy.
Durfy took a strike and a ball
and then hit a shot to shortstop
which the Reds converled into
a doubleplay.
Fox, questioned on the move,
seemed a bit upset.
"The third baseman (Tony
Perez) was playing in close,"
the Giants skipper explained,
"and we figured Duffy had a
chance to hit one past him."
Fox called it "one of those
things."
"When you are playing good
you can't guess wrong," he
said. "When you aren't playing
good everything goes wrong."
McGlothlin coasled after that
inning, giving up Dietz' homer
in the seventh for the only
damaging blow as he picked up
his first victory since Aug . 24
and his eighth overaU in 20
decisions.
Sparky Anderson, the Reds
manager, said the Giants
looked tired to him.
"They should be," he said,
"after a long, tough race. Clubs
out of contention are always
The strength of a nation
is
derived from the integrity
loose and relaxed.l'm watching
the race very closely and wiD of its h o m e s. -Confucius, be sure to use the same Chinese philosopher.
pitchers against the two con-

second baseman, sa1d the
Giants are trying too hard.
" They should try to relax,"
said Helms.
That may be easier said then
done for a team which now has
lost three in a row and 10 of its
last II games. To make
matters worse there was some
bickering among the players
after Wednesday night's loss.
Fox, it would seem, really
has his bands full.
Counting today's game with
Cincinnati, both the Giants and
Dodgers have 13 left to play.
The race could be over sooner
than that.

'··
a!

1970 Dodge ......................$3395

FOREST HILLS, N. Y. (UP!)
--Stan Smith won the Men's
title, Billie Jean King won t:1e
Women's title and 16-year-old
Chris Evert won the U.S. Open
Tennis Championships.
Stan and Billie took expecled
victories over Czechoslovakian
Jan Kodes and Rosemary
Casals Wednesday but it was
still the little lass from Fort
Lauderdale who put over the
tournament.
Billie Jean, in an acceptance
speech after hfr 6-4, 7-6 win
over Miss Casals, said she
wanled "to especially thank
Chris Evert for having been
here."
Kodes, the unseeded back-tohack champion on clay in the
French Championships, bad
jolled the men's field by
upsetting Wimbledon champion
and top seed John Newcombe in
the opening round and then
downing third-seeded Arthur
Ashe in the semis.
Smilh, second seeded and
seeking his first major international title after losing the
Wimbledon final to Newcombe,
faltered in the first set. He then
capitalized on a strategy
change of service, cutting his
power but adding spin. That
and his basketball backboard
backhands at the net served to
defeat the ~year old Czech 3-6,
6-3, 6-2, 7~.

·G.i· te~:n~~~~t~ ~~;.a~:

MAJOil m:~~~
"' . ... ' ., .,. ·~·.,,,
Flower bulbs for fall planting just
arrived - tulips, hyacinths, narcissus, crocus, etc.

Corbin, 176 lb. senior, left
guard; Mike Ulwis, 164 lb.
seni&lt;r, center; Randy Counts,
161 lb. senior, right guard ;
Robin Willie, 175 lb. junior,
right tackle ; Boil Linch, 176lb:
senior, right end; Jerry
Meeyley, 170 lb. senior, quarterback; Steve Vanoy, 192 lb.
junior, fullback; Rich Miller,
164 lb. senior, tailback, and
Greg Kirk, !SO lb. senior, .,
halfback.
on dtfense, it will be
Crisinger and Corbin, ends;
Rod Smith, 220 lb. senior, right
tackle; Mike Bennett, 2M lb.
junior, left tackle; Jim
Meredith, 234lb. senior, midcDe
guard; Linch and Willie ,
linebackers; Counts and
Meeyley,c&lt;rnerbacks,andSsm
Alexander, 137lb. senior, and
Greg Adams, 1~ lb. sophcmore,
safeties.

Eagles Heavy Favorite over Pirates

SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI )Charlie Fox is puzzled, the
Giants are in one of those
ramous San Francisco fogs and
it's anybody's guess today
where it wiD all end.
Thanks to San Diego's
surprise 2-1 victory over Los
Angeles Wednesday nighl the
Giants are still a game in front
or the Dodgers in the waning
National League West race.
The Giants, with Willie
McCovey and Dave Kingman in
the lineup together for the first
time in nearly two weeks,
bowed without honor, 4-2, to the
Cincinnati Reds while the
Dodgers were losing to the
Padres.
It was another golden opportunity gone down the drain and
Fox seems in a quandry about
what he should do to shake up
his club.
"We're not hitting, that's
all," Fox said after Wednesday
night's loss to Jim McGlothlin,
a man with his own problems
of late. "If someone can figure
out how we can get more
hitting they can make a lot of
money."
The Giants managed only six
hils off McGlothlin and two of
them were bases-empty homers
by McCovey and Dick Dietz.
Kingman added a leadoff
double in the fifth which was
was led.

GUARDIAN PREMIUM
POl. Yf51'1R CORD

quarterback; M. .;~DIS or
Faulk, Jailback; Van lnwagen,
fullback; Ron Smith, 150 lb.
senior, wingback; Jeff Morris,
190 lb. senior, and Larry liarmoo, 1B7lb. senior, ends; Mark
Werry, 244 lb. junior, and Fred
Lee, 205 lb. senior, tackles;
Roger Dixon, 151lb. senior, and
either Lehew, Weber, or
Thcmas, guards, and Eddie
Young, 156 lb. senior, center.
On defense Morris and
Hannon, ends; Lee and John
Grueser, 199lb. senior, tackles;
Thomas, middle guard; T,
Williams and Weber or Lehew,
linebackers; Van lnwagen and
Smith, cornerbacks, and Rick
Ash, 1461b. senior, and Faulk,
deep backs.
For the Eagles, it should be,
offensively : Boil Crisinger, 165
lb. junior, left end; Carl Fry, 172
lb. junior, left tackle; Larry

to

., •-·

1oe doe

SFUNNY

the Eagles. Belpre's front five · ;ery capably last week, and
averages 210.pounds per man, Chuck Faulk, 160 lb. junior, who
and that's including a 165 lb. starts on defense, coold lake
and 176 lb. pair of ends. Their over for Mark at tailback.
two tackles and middle guard Maybe both will play, maybe
are 254, 234, and 220. That's a neither will play. Let's wait tiD
Iotta meat!
Friday and see.
Adding onto the probleDJS
other ·than what the Eagles Another Marauder who is
might present, are the fact that banged up and on the uncertain
maybe the "Williams Gang '' list is Ted Lehew, 1561b. senior
Mark and Tiny, will both be guard and linebacker. If he is
sidelined. Tiny, 175 lb. senior not able, e1ther John Thomas,
fullback and linebacker, did not 162lb. senior, or Dallas Weber,
see action in the Reemelin 174 lb. junior, both starters on
game, but should suit up for the defense, will probably get the
game this Friday. He probably caD. The Marauders are kneewiD see action only on defense. deep in talent here and cwld
Mark, 150 lb. senior tailback, have several replacements for
on the other band, has been Lehew.
banged up some this week in Other than those two, the
practice and it isn't known Marauders will be healthy.
whether he will play or not.
The probably starting lineup
If both are sidelined, Keith for the Marauders is as follows:
Van Inwagen, H6lb. senior, will Andy Vaughan, 175 lb. junior,
take over for Tiny where he did

MRS. GENE DODSON whose husband Gene
Foodland in Middleport Is telling a fish story with genuine ducky

DMrL.N.O.:
~
If Tani'smotber doesn't alread.J t.w what's going on, abe's

'IODA'I'S Q1J118110N
Do JetTCIIII t.w you're terrtb)J wculed, bot don't preach.
Your .,.._ nioos you to Mayllewbatsbeneedlmaatiatofeel tbat~ ·cans..,..IIJb
luuriiO:Inlmp.Wbat ... youdo toemnellbl&amp;btontwltb .......
now? ·
1f abewon'tliatlen, then tlbed-'ldiS! ve a best friend like
you,lllili'd&lt;"•MMercoaliiJcil''WIIdnerts"lllJIDelimesrublolfiD
-'te , . .d ..... ,.._tl-. -SUE
·FROM JIEIEN:
Dear U.lentr:
_
n•i a CIDI allied NIIUODablp wben yciu oniJ Usten and dCII't

l!yKEITHWISECUP
The Meigs Marauders wiU be
looking for victory No. 2 at
Belpre Friday night against the
Golden ·Eagles of Belpre in a
non-teague match.
Coach Charles Chancey's
Marauders are 1.0 with a 4G-14
win over Re~melin. Coach
Ralph Holden's Golden Eagles
are 1).1 after a 12-7 defeat by
Fort Frye.
There bas been only one
previous meeting in football
between the two schools, that
being last year when Meigs ran
&lt;if with a 42-8 win at Marauder
Stadium.
The Golden Eagles are the
defending champions of the TriValley C!llference. Tbey had a
J.().1 record in that league last
year, thetiebeingwithFederalHocking.
The Marauders may have a
little trouble running against

Southern Could Pull
1971
works atthe IGA Off First Victory of

YID

7

M

Desk

CoUections off the local Sports ~t:
Middleport's 65-66 football team, the next to the last before
ccnaolidstim with the Panthers of Pomeroy and the Red Devils of
Rutland, already has produced three coaches in that aport. Each
of then]. bas returned to southeastern Ohio to teach and coach.
One, Larry Gladwell, the latest addition, you wiD see Friday
nigbton the sidelines when the Marauders play Belpre. He'll be on
the Belpre side, though, as an assistant working with the line,
offensive and defensive.
A second is Willard (Buddy) Moore, who some of our fans
won't see until Oct. 29 when the Marauders go to Gallipolis where
Moore is an assistsnt to Johnny Ecker.
Tbe third Is John Blake who you csn see operating as a head
coach any weekend you care to follow the North Gallia Pirates of
Gallia County.
Moore was a cornerback on defense and left haU and quarterback on offense. Blake was a two-way guard (you played both
ways at Middlep&lt;rt in those days, or else, due to lack of manpower), and Gladwell was a tackle wbo never got himself above
155 lbs. Whatever size any of these boys may have lacked they
made up in grit.
Tbelr coach at Middleport that year (65-66) was Bob Ashley,
who moved over to Swthern High thefoUowingseason.

~
":1: ,_-!f' riPt 'prolllb]JIDoiJIC&amp;I'InlarestnlngetifnmbercNidnnto.bei111ch
=...,
.._..
belp. TdingtobermJcbtonlyllllkellli!ttenwone. .

7

ICU[Dturin8 abilitY.

=P~~~.:.~l~:J: ~

By Chet Tannehill

in~berklndofllfe,bntl'mwCibllosinglfl~~beroutoftllls
wilt p , Sltntlld I tell ber, teDbermotber,dtGp her, &lt;r juat keep
6AK.I191[2 .AK.5 .,_112 em being- LISTENER NUMBER ONE.
What ... ,.,.. ... -"1
SUE'S VIEWS:

7

II""..,-

he's trying to I 2 lie
estate bJ 1'U1IIIng wild adl (ia ,;,Ne
,;,
a

the Sports

!

1hld.-..,.- .. ._-

~;b~J~N~""~·~w;e~c~ID:!~~~~co~m~eiw~i~ll~~~~to~m~arv~e~l~dlet~d~frcm cancer;

~

M " - • far jpstame) sucll as ·~ Start
Sept Hoe" ek.; lie's at Kingston Bcllpital iD

far six 'Reb.
........_
llrltae o.is DaR beeamr a reli..--c:lllnisl !I'R - ' (we refuoe Ill '11113 "fr "'
. t we
-los the "Jeml FraU" pinle
n,; ....,. ri§rplngr in their fM!IsbJy sballr_. •...:, p.bat lhahacrilegioua contrail In
..-.n..
lied
ltiDB) . . . llllktoberl'llmlt._;..., inlillra
- c:ic ,._ to g., n
mznt cl. berN. Y.
li- ' ill g., jrrz:l: (daal:e llllln el) WGFtd,
!lle'dr'
'ill dtWtber J-1 trio (witb wllich
'-a! Msblia iD ._.) in a Menlellla
· .-1• w ; ri , t piano 8Ct In g., 1IGf'ld, witb
~
writtzrl by l.elll Bclme's 11 . , ,
So cA. Sid liiln.
1V p • " Gecwce Sohe!k Gllered Joe
TYdZI!landealledJoe''lbe
liMe Ball fl. Frtell " Joe llio'med, "A •
lhll iJaad! Y•'re ialultiDC Babe Ratb'l
rr•J !" -- Parelllbetleally, the Babe's
N;g' ' _ . , .&amp;r a~ yarus b m&gt;n•s
1-&amp; • . _. . . .,na:rear---.Ciba'lla~
- Jii¢'1J: c ' o'll staippal 111C11t II. llle ...,.
alll -naJ marble pia:s fnm
overbyinms~tc.n-bankbo)anos,nMMitwcl. amelzries ia aa-llld Oriente etc. and
living,oehrortb,spendi~babitaetc.,andatlile •atW the wlllt 1o :R ··far buller, gww,
gambiqcasinCII tbeirl'inni'l!J,losses ... CBII! C&amp;lb.
are spied mbyiRSwodetCO\ia 1DeJ1, lid lilly ill
lllfia '"5 I rt Jigs Flrimo bu becGne a
Las Vegas and the Bahamas, but from llae tAl ~ llcft.lllllll I' tas (police lwo!J+d) tell
YugCI!avia.
•-OII:ea-jalabyloct,pablpttbe'tia (!,
During Kwame Ntrnma's dielat..ial. rap will • 5
' •llil "iilllk" pi) I.. (back~
w&amp;"Gbana,theMeyeri.analymalmr 0 ltl&gt; 11.r lie lalz Jae Ailad), be's uaaa!J In a
get a gamNing casino located in 1hala• 1 '\J I q-b!l..na a '1wal attact" - wllldt IDif
pcKI'emerglng I.'OIIIIlry; anditeaJotd $7,~ -ilellleftlll,tbeabadi:eET lbyGCGII'rict
a year! Cmsidered a .gangland &amp;ade Jllq GaiWI lllldl ean:at pacJand )ll.w ....
Ninety pel II gambli'l! operatilm
fliDEEI nu•..-aezatfaraU.S.lleneW
Caribbean are Lansky.ftialed; alrtoiDlbellllia ._ writtzaa bcllll: tiled "BBIr I Made . . . . a
.... £1eaji.tewbichonegrUIPII:tlaewdGpt!l I s YtK•WT•e"';lllep.a......... wllla
m~ed
m
· ""a ,..,..,_,.a, undttstaJiro:l........, . ,__.__..._,• "'"'• Wlile • a bow ill......,
v•
Islands casino and managed to Ilia: llle pia ef illlle[l11!1r 1r #;file lbat !IIlier ''daillplb."
$125,000; bappaled last winter.
Welarllaftir•"'OI'TnctB thr"~
Joan (Mrs. Teddy) trrw~ ill ber Jll'l[
t? _ abeet bat can't find ORt
d*lla
-1 ...,
· andlotiiiVIP1'!111D'S
CullureCenterappearanceag.&amp;~polt
• -1 ;-mJ IJ
an unerring instinct far tbe uiica' le ia - 'il!eOIBI 8 4 • WbiCoatflt plans a b!&lt;Sevening clothes .... Madison Aw. beln ftaas lltt ' i51J, 5 iaiiJ 'ril 'rl V N; tile
Inc. pans four 111=• Dllglrilwc ' II!, 3
lflleWBJ•
% • rl • liS
photography, movies, paSO!IIl - - _ w1re1e 11e
tw 1 jw 1 =tr !be wiDFriend ct Frank Sinatra plnii'JIIO ltd,. w 3 tll!is.
,
__._ ~ _ ... "- .........
Snatra'sjetwasattbeNeWHaveil8partaswe
· Gar
lepultd,butlhatbe'wasn'tlberefarla '
'; ..., •• &amp;Y•C.Do"'qaia.""'*IIICIIpt.••
bewasatthebospitallbere-batuaiJIO~a ~1V. 1181! tat •
-.z I
friend
W .__
..._. _
..,_ ..
- llel
.. 100
· 'aII1Uf11em
qM!I'IIe.
....,...,
• a - 'I
· - 2.._..,
matter
fact even pray,
it's lnlee and
IJIIII!e
2 il 'l-ie - _.. ~; tlJe

Man's Assist to Mother Nature

ft'di[.

bad tbinphath:t~':i
fic:ult to select the worst. If
you will Rttle lor the 111011
emharraaing. bere It is,"
replied the ~~~-r"I was pla)'ing against
one of my poorer pupib and
had reached siJ: spades. I
won the club lead in my
hand and led the live of
spades toward dummy. This
is the best play from a prac-

! Voice along Broadway l :-~sr::~in~tt! c~
I

00

By Helen and Sue Bottel

.KB
Both Yulnenble

Weol

symptoms.
You are right, It certainly
makes a person aulous and
this does add J:'~roblem.
Despite the ·
ort, unJess there are other problema
such disturbances are not
likely to be damaging: They
cause more trouble in older
people because heart disease
Is usually also presenll saw
many pilotl and even astranaut candidates with this
P~:;:;;:so It can and ~n
~
in
wbo are

the same actions as q~·
dine Tbey decrease the llt'ltabuity of the beart muscle
making' it less likely to bave
s.uch rapid rates. Not ~v~ryone tolerates these m~s
wen so doctors are reluctant
to mve them to patients wbo
...
bave very few attacks. · Of
coorse any J&amp;tient wbo bas
sucb episodes must 1M! th"!'?~~Yh1 y studin't~:0so~:~
. r
""'
problem, like an overactiVe
thyroid gland that C8J! be
causing the trouble. One trate
reader wrote to inform me
they are caused by low blood
sugar. 'ntis is only one of
....... ( d not a very
many ca...,. an

•Generation Rap

soum

iramed in tite Soviet system, in large measure the result

'

4.,..___...,....,.____,......,_·..,.._..,..__~

for

Some Democratic leaders rear_tbal ~reformers
are trying to reform their party right out ef its sods.
The leaders' concern is tbaL in ':be aame ef ~
and healthy change., the militants mig!lt II!* suth
of the Democrats' pi'esidenlial 110111111&amp;~ IJI'GCI!SS
the public would, in revulsion.. reject thtir 1!Fl! A few party officials_ ~~ s~-nfanllers~
ting things up to ,provide J~lioo r... ~ ..._ ptan
' is
fourth party. As these
it, """
simple: Make demarids and preselll _c:ballellgles that are
sure to be rebuffed, then say lllat smo;e the Democrats
won't reform themselves a flllll1h par1J IS the only CC!QrSe.
Tbe broader con•iction, ~. is tbal the ··~"
won't go that far. Most of the miltaids are- as_peaple
who still want reve11ge on lhe par1J lw Jl!ll ~g
Eugene McCarthy in 1968, want it 10 s1l1lul its guill for
the Chicago convention dellac1e that J"&amp;&amp;', aDd woold like
to punish southern elements ef the paltJ.
In the spring of 1969, when Sm. G_eorge lkGcwem of
South Dakota was lryi!lg to rusUe D-:t' fGr ~ party
reform commission he theil beaded, be met wtth some
left-liberal money types in Nell' York City_ Tbe first question he got was:
" If this thing (reform! doesn't wart out, are JOU prepared to drive the South out ef the party!"
McGovern's answer was : '"No_" Tbe take that da:r was
a few thousand dollars. The gaaJ bad bem f2"1.- .

tbi!

riftt!i~d

Marauders Going for Victof!y No. 2

DR. LAWRiNCf f. LAMB .

•

'

~
c

�4- The Daily Sentinel, P&lt;meroy-Middleport, 0., September 16,1971

5-The
Daily Sentinel, P®a oy-Middlepcrt, 0.,' September'
I&amp;, Im
.
.

.

GOP Governors In Nixon's Boat

RichmanLikesBengalsAll The Wa
By MILTON RICHMAN .
UPI SIJOrtS Writer
NEW YORK (UP[)-You
never met anybody more
enthusiastic in all your life than
the late Charlie Dressen.
It didn't matter what he was
doing, whether it was playing
pro football, which lie once did,

Sport Parade

Paul Brown showed he could
lead his club to a division title
even after losing his quarter. .
back, Greg Cook, last year.
~uppose the Bengals should lose
Virgil Car·ter this time? They'll
still he okay with Ken
Anderson, the rookie backup
man.
If I had to pick a darkborse it

would be the Pittsburgh Stee·
lers but since · they're in the
playirig baseball, managing a same AFC Central Division as
ball. club whipping up a b\g the Bengals, I can 'I see them
pot of chili for . everybody, any hetter than second.
something he also liked to do,
Terry Bradshaw is going to
Charlie always would. go at it come on to become one of the
with all his heart,
top quarterbacks In .the NFL,
·There were times he'd get so and now . that hiS young
enthusiastic while managing, receivers, have more seasoning,
and talk about his club's watch how many times the
chances so much, that some Steelers win ball games nobody
people would say "if Dressen · thought they would.
doesn't watch out he's gonna
I line 'em all up this way:
finish five games ahead of his
AFC East
players."
Miami
I liked Charlie, and knowingly New York
or not maybe I was influenced 'Baltimore
by him last year. I became a New England
little too enthusiastic.
Buffalo
First, I picked the Cincinnati
AFC Central
Bengals to win their division. Cincinnati
Fine. Then I say they'd go to Pittsburgh
the Super Bowl and win there, Cleveland
I'm still waiting.
Houston
Now it's time for this year's
AFC West
choices. Ready? Okay.
Kansas City
The Cincinnati Bengals all the Oakland
way.
San Diego
Yup, I'm going with them . Denver
again:
NFC East
Why?
Dallas
Well, for one thing the coach, St. Louis
and for another his players. Washington

or

No Disgrace To Lose
To Roberts - - Alston
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
The San Francisco Giants
remained one game ahead of
the Las Anlteles Dodgers in the
National League 's Western
Division race as both teams lost
Wednesday night but the at.
titudes of the teams following
the losses could be a forecast of
what's to happen in the next two
weeks.
.
Cincinnati handed !he Giants
a 4-2 loss, San Francisco's loth
:;'defeat in lis Ia'st ·u games, and
left them in a slate of disarray.
The Dodgers, on the other
hand, accepted their 2-1 loss to
Dave Roberts and the San Diego
Padres almost casually. The
pressure, e\•idently, is begin.
1ting to leU on the first-place
Giants.
Larry stahl's home run in the
sixth inning S118pped a 1-1 lie
and Roberts scattered eight hits
to record his 13th victory as the
Padres upended the Dodgers.
"There's no disgrace to be
beat by lhe guy Roberts," said
Dodger Manager Walter Alston .
"We hit the baU weD until the
last couple of innings. We can't
complain about lost op·

porlunities the way we've been
playing. We've had our share of
breaks lately. We swung at
some bad balls but you've got to
give credit to Roberts."
Elsewhere in the National
League, Pittsburgh beat St.
Louis 4·1, Atlanta edged
Houston 4-2, Chicago swept New
York 6-2 and 3-2 and Montreal
nipped Philadelphia 1.0.
In the American League,
Oakland earned the Western
title 'by beating Chicago 3-2
before bowing 7-&lt;l while
California eliminated Kansas
City 6-2. Minnesota edged
Milwaukee 1.0, Detroit downed
Washington 4-2, Boston shaded
Cleveland t;.:; and New York
topped Baltimore 4-2.
Hank Aaron, looking for his
most productive home run
season, crashed his 44th to boost
AUanta over the Astros. It was
Aaron's 636th career homer and
his 1,954th run batted in, tying
him with Ty Cobb . for third
place on the all.time list. Aaron
has 12' games left to beat his
previous homer high of 45 set in
1962. He has hit 14 homers in his
last 24 games.

CHOOSE
YOUR
COAT
NOW

Philadelphia
New York
NFC Ceatral
Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago
New York
NFC Ceatral
Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago
Detroit
NFC West
AUanta
San Francisco

l.os Al!geles
New Orleans
Anyway, a brand new
game and a brand new seaSon
comes up Sunday and the one
U1ing you know is that aU the
games won't go lhe way you
figure. Here's the way I figure:

tlau

AUanta over San FranciscoThe Dutchman has a theory:
you show 'em who'~ boss right
off.
Dallas over Buflalo -The
Cowboys were !HI pre.&lt;;eason

At hletlcs
e

Clinch
Division Crown

By STEVE WD.STEIN
UPI Sports Writer
Five months ago the Oakland
Athletics divorced themselves
from the rest of the American
League Western Division as
Jim "Catfish" Hunter pitched a
three-hit shutout against the
California ·Angels and Sal
Dando blasted a two-run homer.
The A's never relinquished the
division lead.
They rode aboard the fireball
of Vida Blue and the thunder of
Reggie Jackson's bat. They
blended the talents and
strength of the young and lhe
not-so-young and behind lhe
leadership of Manager Dick
Williams, the Athletics never
faltered, never lost their poise.
They clinched the division
title Wednesday night as they
split a doubleheader with the
Chicago While Sox, winning the
opener 3-2 before dropping the
second game 7-&lt;3.
It was Dando's twiH'IIII
homer in the eighth inning of
the first game that clinched a
lie for Oakland and the "race"
officially ended at 9:54 p.m.
when Kansas City was mathematically eliminated by California 6-2.
Reggie Jackson leads the
team with 29 home runs but

Careless
OpeJ;~ti~ns

Blamed

Dando has contribuied to
Oakland's offense with 21
homers while Rick Monday has
chipped in with 17.
The A's are a balanced young
and aggressive team and are
looking forward to their upcom..
ing playoff series with the
Baltimore Orioles. Finley ordered lhat no champagne be
used to celebrate the division·
clinching, urging his players to
save their festivities until after
they beat the Orioles.
In other American League
games Minnesota blanked Mil·
waukee 1.0, Detroit whipped
Washington 4-2, Boston edged
Cleveland t;.:;, and New York
beat Baltimore 4-2.
In the National League, San
Diego strock down Los Angeles
2-1, Cincinnati beat San Francisco 4-2, Atlanta downed
Houston 4-2, Montreal zipped
Philadelphia 1.0 and Chicago
swept New Yorlr. 6-2 and 3-2.
Andy Messersmith pitched a
four-bitter and belled a twiH'IIII
homer to notch his 17th Victory
as the Angels eliminated the
Royals from the division race.
The right-hander, who has lost
13, didn't allow an earned run.
Steve Braun's triple with twoout in the ninth inning, only thesecond hit off Milwaukee
starter Skip Lockwood, scored
Harmon Killebrew from first
after he had walked and gave
Bert Blyleven, who struck out
nine and gave up just six hits,
aU the offense be needed to run
his record to J3.15.
Joe Coleman picked up his
18th victory for the Tigers and,
aided by home runs by Aurelio
Rodriguez and Jim Northrup,
dealt Denny McLain his 20th
defeat with a seven hitter
against his former teammates.
Only three years ago McLain
won 31 games for Detroit but
was traded to Washington last
winter for Coleman. ColeJ11811.
struck out 14 batters and
moved his best-ever record to

COLUMBUS (UPI) - An
increasing nwnber of fish kills
are lhe direct result of careless
farm operations, the Natural
Resources Department said
today.
Dan C. Armbruster, chief of
the department's Division of
Wildlife, warned farmers they
are held equally responsible as 18-8.
industries or municipalities for
pollution damages resulting
from their operations.
Armbruster said farmers
should never dwnp any kind of
manure in a stream that is
likely to flood during heavy
rains; don'tallow silo liquors to
fOU SAVE
drain into streams; never dump
spoiled milk into a watercourse,
DOES liME A
use care in handling pesticides,
and control septic tank draining
so it is not directed into a
We INIY yeu to NVt
stream.
The Division also realeased . 1•1111 the P•Y is IIOOdl.
its rellOrl on the 1971 hatch for
ihe majority of species of riSb in
Western Lake Erie - rating it
as poor to fair.
The hatches for most of the
PAUIQOK
species )\'ere well below those of
1970, the division said.
Young walleye are now
averaging about eight inches in
size and the 1971 hatch for white
bass is slightly better than
average for other years, the
report said. Yellow perch is
only average.
flit Allltno
Some of the forage fis~,
S..illp&amp;t.uc..
including gizzard shad and
2Nhc lfst.
spottall shiners, and the smelt
are showing good hatching
' Member Fldtral
Home Loan Bank
success.
Member Federal Sevlngs &amp;
The division noted the spring
Loan Insurance CorporaHon.
All
accounts Insured up to
was unusually cold this year
$29,000.00
•.
and spawning
occu,rred
sporadically over several .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
weeks.

WHERE

DIFFERENCE

All STYLES
*LEATHER
*WOOL
*CORDUROY
*VINYL
*NYLON
*BRUSHED
FABRICS
'3Q"JTOtS()OO

-Co.

un
BlaiiiCh

arldhavealwayshadgoodearly like the Caids' defense. Jur·.
ftN&gt;t.
gensen could crack it but he
Cincinnati over Philadelphia won't be playing.
.
- This is the Eagles' flfSt ever
Pittsburgh over Chicago get.rogelher with Cincy and Two years ago the Steelers won
althoogh they've looked good so their· opener 'and never won
far, they don'llooll: good enough another game. This is a
to beat the Bengals right now. different year.
New York Jets over Balli· Green Bay over New Yorl&lt;
more - Do you get lbe feeling Giants -Giants have only two
this isn't the Super Bowl minor weaknesses that I can ·
champs' year? 1 do.
see. No offense and no defense.
, Kansas City over San Diego
Cleveland over Houston - .
-Give me Dawson, Podolak . Oilers have looked stronger
.and that KC defense, and you than the Browns up to now but
Nelsen is about due for a good
can have the other team.
Oakland over New England - day.
Lefty Ken Stabler has a li!Ue
Monday
more help than Jim Plunkett. Minnesota · over Detroit -I
Miami over Denver - wonder who Alex Karras likes
Dolphins are able to move lbe in this one.
ball either way, in the air with
Griese-Warfield, or on the
groundwithCsonka..l{iick.
FOI ATHLETE'S FOOT
Los Angeles over New USE DIATOLYnC ACDON

r;.

HUntinJ Vest, Coals,
Hats, Bells, Shells, Etc.

Ammunition

RIGHT IS RESERVED TO
LIM IT QUANTITIES

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

~~ 49'
ONLY

REG. 79'
.

''

24 TABLfTS

.

REG. 11.29

ARRID EXTRA
60Z.
CAN

COIJt:l8 &amp; - y l'aVIIR
aNUa C011Qa&amp;IION

ONLY

ONLY

REG. '1.49

36 TABL£TS FREE WITH 144

ONLY S

69

1 Ol CREAM
1.75 Ol LOTION

'11.'38 VAUJE

HALLS
METifO.LYPTUS

•

drafted a resolution on econOIJl..
ic policy Monday but had to
submit il under a procedure
requiring a ~lhs vote.
The Republican side viewed it
as a partisan docwnent and
refused to give the Democrats
the votes to call it up.
·Two other resolutions, each
requiring a three.fourths vote,

Base.
.J.
r;t
Sch00ls
..C' or
'T'aX
1

Opposed
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Tbe
Education Advisory Oxnmittee
It the Southeastern Region of
lhe Ohio Vivil Rights Comrnission said today it opposes the
use of the property tax base for
financing public school educalion.
The committee said it agreed
with California Supreme Court
decision that such a tax base
was discriminatory because It
wils inequitable.
.
"We seek equal educational
qlportunity for all schools pu·
pits," said C&lt;mrnittee chair~
man Paul Lyncb. " wide
disparity exists among school
districts often only a few miles
apart, as the Bexley and
Hamilton Twonship Districts in
Fr~ County.','
.
"Public expenditure IS defin·
itely tied to the quality of educa·
lion offered by a scbool
system," said Dr. James Kn01,
a
committee
member .
"Because democracy rests 1111
educated citizens, there is no
room in Ohio for unequal
education."

CHECKS MAILED
Checks totaling $4,961.110 have
been mailed from the office of
State Auditor Josepll T.
Ferguson representating Gallia
County's share in gasoline taxes
in September. All of Ohio's
cwnties, townsbips, cities and
villages sbared in the overaD
$8,628,978. Gallia's distribution
follows : GaUipolis City,
$4,066.110; Centerville Village,
$34; Cheshire Village, $175;
Crown aty, $196; Rio Grande,
$274 and Vintoo Village, $215.

Pleasaol Valley Hospital
ADMITTED
Robert
Adkins, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGED John
Edwards, Juanita Byus, Sandra
Westmoreland , Charles
Atkinson, Daniel Williams,
Charles Taylor, Mrs. Roy
Mattox, Mrs. Nicky Weaver.

ONLY

COUGH DROPS
REG. 29'
ONLY

22

ANACIN

~

FAST PAIN RELIEF
100 TABLITS

ABSORBINE
ARtHRITIC PAIN LOTION

REG. $1.59
ONLY

20Z.

Bll
REG. 98'

AYDS
REDUCING PLAN CANDY

WHITE RAIN

24 Ol

HAIR SPRAY

ONLY

13 Ol

29

One report endorsed the
House..approved welfare reform
bill with some suggestions for
Senate amendments and restated conference support for the
administration bill to share
federal income tax collections
with state and local govern·
meot. Another asked for fewer
restrictions on federal ald
grants to stales ior health,
education and other program.
The conference rejected a
motion to delete one provision
of a report urging federal tax
ince11tives to encourage indus·
trie~ to locate outside metropo.
lltan areas.

Alfred

Social Notes

REG. '1.19

VICKS
VAPORUB

Ter,;ife Control Concenirate. .Add . an Arab hoSe-end
spray Applicator and you're ready to comptefely fer mileproof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
compared to the cost of calling in a professional exlermlnator. Buy Arab .and oo both you and your home a
lavor.l Price may vary ~lightly .

·vAllEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY 00.
992·2709

MIDDLEPORT

Mr. and Mrs. Charley Woode
spent Tuesday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. George Genheimer.
MJ:. and Mrs. Bill Windon and
daughter
attended
the
WAshington County Fair
Sunday.
Charles King and family of
Glendale, W. Va., spent a
Sunday recently with his
mother, Mrs. Edith King and
daughter, Mabel.
Mrs. Life of Success Road
spent Sunday with Freda Miller
and Lenore Betzing.
.
Richard Barton and family
took supper Sunday evening
with her mother, Jane Smith,
Silver Ridge.
Mrs. Margaret Cox of Pt.
Pleasant spent Sunday with
Mrs. Robert Wond and family.
Attendance at the Nazarene
Sunday School Sept. 12 was 84.
Offering was $35.75.
Debbie Wood spent a couple of
days last week with Harold
Hawk
and
family
at
Hockingport.
Mrs. Freda Miller spent a
couple of evenings last week
with Mrs. Georgia Thoma.
William Hielman and Jerry
Diddle of Florida are spending
some time with their grandmother, Erma Heilman and
sister, Shirley Cogar of
Minersville.
of Columbus.
Visiting with relatives here is
Mrs. Mary Ellen Jagers and
daughter, Penny, of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. Mr. Jagers
will come later. Mrs. Jagers is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Grover Stout.
Mrs. Nellie Vale returned
Tuesday to her dulles in
Pomeroy after an absence of
five
weeks
due
to
hospitalization for rheumatoid
arthritis.
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Smith
of Hazard, Ky., and Mr. and
Mrs. Corwin Smith and family
of Columbus were weekend
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Wilson.
·

$

· ONLY

SERVICE

'

'

·-··=·c.:··:_c
- -::c-:-=..·--=-·......,·c=.-~
...,.,._•..,.

Send for a physician or ambulance while

Member Federal Reserve System

head level with hi1 body, and try lo dolor·

On Fridays our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m .• I Con·

mint the oxtont of hi1 injuries. Any 1eriou1

tinuouslyl.
$20,000 Maximum ln~ur;mce
For Each Deposttor

i,.

The Daily Sentinel

must

be aHtncloclto immediately to pre·

NEWOOMERS TO
OUR OOMMUNITY

··Exec. E4.

·

'

I

1

City Editor

Publist\ed

daiiV

e~tcept

.
"1

Saturday by The Ohio Valle)! ~
Company, J 11 ,
Court St., · Pomeroy, Ohio,

I 4S769.
1

1

Business Office Phone

992·2156, Edllorlal Phone 9922157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ne11onel

advertising 1

representative ·

8ott1nelll-~

Inc ., 12 Easl A2nd
I Gallagher,
51 ,, New York City, New York .

!

Subscription rales: De .
: livered by carrier whtrt
1 4ve"able SO cents per week;
l :evr~g;orn:ru~ev:n:bTe~ar~~~
, month $1.75. By mall in Ohio

WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COME IN 'AND SEE US!

ID Sene You!

Jilltt.l!f
......,._

. .:1

.-

OP£fl DAILY 8:00 A.ll. TO 10 P.M. • SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P.ll. &amp;
l'1

JlT

: and 'N . Va :, One year 514.00.

t:lt"ttt
. t:ll"t.'

IM4o

~...,..~

. MIDDLEPoRT, 0,

lji#.-•..,...,~

•

•

1 Si)(

months

S1 . 2S .

Three

monlhs ~4.50. Subscription

1p.rlce Includes Sunday Times-

,- _" _ "_•_1....,..,- ......,,_.:...~ .
50 11

Mrs. Lowell Greer and family
called on Mr. and Mrs .
Lawrence Johnston and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Dixon,
New Brighton, Pa., visited Mr.
and Mrs. Homer I~nhower.
Mrs. Elva Dailey, Syracuse,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dailey;
Lowell, Ohio, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Long
called on Mrs. Mona Long .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pauley,
Cottageville, W. Va., Mrs. Icy
Dailey, local, visited Mrs.
Hattie Powell and family.
Mr . and Mrs. I,awrence
Glusencamp, Nlckl, and Mrs.
Sylvia Carpenter spent a day at
the state fair.
Mr. Gene Long has built a
cattle barn.
Mrs. Dorothy Roseberry is
assisting Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Lawrence in their store.
Mrs. Annie Icenhower is
getting along well since she
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Cremeans called on her
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Johnston and family.
Miss Leota Birch and Mrs.
Maywood Johnston went to
Middleport and Pomeroy
recently.

I

· Publishing

r

temporalvN and do not move unltu it is

'

DEVOTED TO THE
\
INTERESTOF
.. •
fo'IEICH·MASON ARI!A
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
ROBERT HOEFLICH, '

bleeding. stoppago of breathing, or poison·

Flats News

BARBECUE SET
Vulture 776, 40 et 8, will hold a
public chicken barbecue all day
Sunday at the shelter on the
upper parking lot In Pomeroy.
Proceeds will go to the Charles
Marcinko nursing scholarship
fund.

IN CASE OF ACCIDENTS •••
you keep , ... injvrod penon lying down, hi1

Old Town

GATOR CAPER
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - A
three-foot alligator spent 30
hours uncaged near the San
Diego Zoo before being spotted
by a Hawaiian couple. The
visitors saw the reptile Wed·
nesday as it poked its head from
some bushes. They asked a zoo
official if It was customary for
large animals to run free.

FIRST AID TIPS

POMEROY, OHIO

By Mrs. Bertba Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Sept. 12 was 129. Offering for the
day was $162.
Rev. and Mrs. Lewis Diehl of
Kentucky spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Diehl, Mrs. Georgia Diehl and
Charles Anthony Diehl. ·
Mrs. Thomas Darst and
children of Milan spent a
weekend with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Edge! of
Long Bottom, Mrs. Marty
Williams and children of
Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs. Cliff
Jacobs and Dianne called on
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr.
Mrs. Fran Cline of Middleport
visited recenUy with her sister,
Mrs. Harmon Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs
attended the Buck reunion at
Lancaster campground.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met at the home of Mrs. Nellie
Tracy for their meeting and a
surprise birthday party for Mrs.
Tracy. Guests were Pennie
Eblin, Mrs. Georgia Williamson
and Mrs. Eva Schriber. Cake
and ice cream were served.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
McConnelsville attended
church services at the local
church and visited his parents,
Rev. and Mrs. Cecil Wise.
Miss Peggy Russell, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Russell of
Bradbury, who is a missionary
to Mexico, gave a talk and
showed pictures of Mexico at
the local church recenUy.

News Notes

Social Notes .

and Savings Co.

laurel Uiff

Chester East News Notes

Poi· nt Rock

The Farmers Bank

NEW YORK (UPI) - A
college professor has told a
legislative hearing that the
greatest source of hard drugs in
large cities is policemen and
narcotics agen,ls.
Laud Humphreys, professor
of criminal justice at the State
University in Albany, said,
"authorities in the field have
evidence that the greatest
single source of hard drugs in
any metropolitan area is the
pollee and narcotics agents."
Humphreys said his information suaaest narcotics

NEW HAT In the Uemo·
cratlc presldeatlal candl·
date ring belongs to Sen.
Wtulam Proxmlre. T b e
Wisconsin II be r a I, wbo
g a l n e d national prom!·
nence a• a watchdog on
mUitary spending and In
the successful congresslon·
al cam palgn t.o cut off
supersonic transport funds,
Is reported preparing to
announce himself In the
1972 race In October or
November.

university trustees action."
Olds sald the increase ap·
proved last spring for faculty
salaries "will be honored" after
the freeze ends in November.
"Cost of Living Council rulings
have ·superseded university
trustees action, freezes for the
fall term our present fee
structure," Olds said in a letter
circulated to faculty, students
and parents.
"ConsequenUy, there wlll be
no .fee increases for the fall
S. S. attendance on Sept. 12, quarter,,' he said.
was ~1. the offering $18.49.
Worship services were held at Tuppers Plains
11•with an attendance Of 30, and
Rev. Leiunan speaking from Society News
Luke 4:16-23.
- Several from Alfred Church
By Mrs. Evelyo Brlckles
attendedthebomecorningatthe Attendance at Sunday School
Orange Christian Cburch, Sun. at the Methodist Church was 37
Sept. 12. Rev. James Quisen· and the offering was $18.07.
berry was forenoon guest Worship attendance was 38 and
sp;alr.er and Rev. David offering $76.15.
Sbiufler, of Hemlock Grove Mr. and Mrs. Millard Brooks
Church was the afternoon of Reynoldsburg spent a
speaker,
along
with weekend here with her brother
Congregational singing and a Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Miller and
few special numbel's.
family .
The pastor of the Or~ge
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor
Church, Rev. Charles Do1n1gan, attended the Washington
was~ to. the ~try in County Fair last week.
special ordination services at Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Spencer
lhe Hemlock Grove Church, of Pomeroy RD 3 called on his
Sunday e!ening by the Rev. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
James Quisenbel'ry.
.
Brickles Thursday evening.
Alfred Church homecommg
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman
will be beld on Sunday, Sept. 19, visited relatives in Virginia last
With lbe usual mormng services week. She was accompanied
beginning at 9:§, with Sunday there by Mrs. Robert Gutheil
~hool, worship services at 11, and mother, Mrs. Frank Cluff of
with lbe Rev. Lehman. Basket Columbus.
dinner at I~ :3~. Afternoon
Patty Stethem of Long Botpr~ beg~ at . 2:00, lorn was a recent overnight
featurmg
Tbe
B1ssell guest of Mrs. Leone Babcock.
Brothers" and other local ~d
Mr. and Mrs. E . K. Grimes of
home talent. Everyone ~s Athens and brothe•, Howard
welcome. Helen Woode, Ollie Grimes of Idaho were Sunday
Atherton and .William Carr, guests 'of their sister, Mrs.
program COIIllJllttee.
Neisel Weatherman.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode and
Conni, of Circleville, spent the
week end with relatives here.
Vicki Carr, who had been
visiting the Woode's and attending the Ohio State Fair,
returned with them to her home
here.
. Mr. and Mrs . Clarence
By Nellie Vale
Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. David
Mrs. Fay Wood vacationed in
Williams and Aaron, and Mr. Canada the past week with her
and Mrs. Clair Follrod, Stevie daughter, Freda and husband.
and Kathy, attended the Harper
Mrs. Effie Hoosier is spen·
Reunion, held at the home It ding two weeks with relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Aulfty Bailey, at and friends near her former
Carthage, 0., on Sunday, Sept. home in Fort Gay and Hun·
12.
lington.
Week end guests mMr. and
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbel' Parter and Eddie Mrs. G. A. Radekin and Tina
were Mr. and Mrs. Eric Parker Marie were Mr. and Mrs. Arlin
and son of Plano, lli., and Larry
Radekln and daughter, Amy Jo,
Bogash of Chicago, m.
Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie and. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
received word that her sister-in- Holl1day, Judy, Gary • and
.
law, Mrs. Harland Story has Floyd.
Weekend
guests
of
Mrs.
Nellie
undergooe back surgery, in the
Vale w~re her son and
St. Joseph Hospital in daughter-111-law,
Mr. and Mrs.
Parkersburg.
John Vale and daughter, Stacy
Mrs. Marie Hopkiils, Rex
Hopkins, and Bolj Bunger of
Dayton, are visiting and word of the hospitalization of
squirrel bunting on the farm of their small grandson, Roger
Mr. and Mrs. Vete Swartz. The Swartz, in a Parkersburg
Swartz' bave also received Hospital.

ONLY

tempers, as evidenced· w~
day.
~. nate Minority Leader An·
thony 0. Calabrese, o.aeveland, and Frank W. King, president of the Ohlo AFL-ClO, ut·
tered unprintable e1pletives
when asked about the current

Drugs' Sources .Police, Agents

KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Kent
State University President
Glenn A. Olds said today
...,;viously announced fee hikes
for lbe fall quart;er will be
cancelled because President
Nixon's 9lklay wage-price
freeze bas - "superseded

¥11111 ''-s of life. K..p victim at normal body

. AND SAVE 1100 OR MORE

COLUMBUS (UPI)- lt's been
''" long, hot summer in the
Statehouse.
Moves and counter-moves,
mosUy political, on budg~t..tax
legislation have frustrated most
lawmakers and lobbyists.
And in some cases, shortened

from your
pharmacist!

3% Ol

REG. '1.45

Tempers Grow Shorter

Fee Hike Out At Kent SIJJte

CAN

RAZOR

ONLY

were re~tedafter the economic statement Both opposed
massive busing to aehieve
racial balance in schools. One
was spmson!d by Gov. George
C. Wallace It Alabama and lhe
other joinUy by 'Govs. Jimmy
Carter, Ge«gia Democrat, and
W:mfield Dunn, Tennessee Republican.
Regular procedure calls for
resolutions to be submitted a
month in advance for consider·
alion by the siJ; permanent
committees It conference. With
few disputes, resolutions report.ed from ~committees were
given routine approval.

,,.....,,~

..

MENSWE ~R

(Continued from Page I)
American civilian employe of a
contracting finn. Another 57
persons including 50 Viet·
namese and seven U. S. ser·
vicemen were wounded, some
seriously.
It was the worst such incident
in Saigon in nearly six years. On
JWJe 25, 1!165, 43 persons in·
eluding 12 Americans were
killed and at least 80 persons
injured in a similar explosion at
the My Canh floating restaurant
in the Saigon River.

SAT., SEPT.18
Several Antiques
Easy Dlredloos
Come up t.o Page St. Sale in
back yard of 611 High St.
Follow Page Street.
Mrs. Roscoe Satterfield

HAIR REMOVER

PKG. OF 10

ARTERS

Riots

Yard Sale

NED

BLADES

WARM JACKETS
SALE PRICED •500 to •15..

SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI)Republlcan governors appear
convinced.they are riding ln the
:"~me political boat as Pres1dent Nixon and that a safe trip
in 1972 depends largely on the
success of his economic pollcies.
As a. result, Republicans
attending the swnmer session
of the National Governors'
Conference were unwilling to
· attack Nixon's economic projlo.
sals and a Democratic-spon·
sored re8olution went down to
defeat before the meeting
adjourned Wednesday.
Ohio Gov. John J. Gilligan
was chairman of the committee
that drafted the resolution.
Republican governors attend·
ing the meeting also made it
clear they had no intention of
critkizing Nixon's proposed trip
to Conununist China nor were
they going to suggest substilutes for Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew on the 1972 Republi·
can ticket.
Led by Gov. Arch A. Moore
Jr. Of West Virginia, the newly·
elected conference chairman,
the nine-member executive
committee of the conference
was flying to Washington today
to participate with Nixon in a
conference on policies which
will follow the current 9&lt;klay
wage-price freeze.
Moore told reporters he
hoped the governors would not
speak with opposing viewpoints,
but then acknowledged they
must speak as individuals since
the conference had taken no
position.
The Democratic governors

. Don't Forget

SUPER PLENAMINS

.......,..,.'*-

COMPLETE SELECTION OF
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

'

·---..- ----------·.
Hunting Supplies

Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday Sale!

LAY-AWAY
PLAN
FOR YOU

•20 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

Shot Guns &amp; Rifles

really matter that this one will ~:;::.=. ~ ~c1t~.~'t!::
be played in Tulane stadium, FAST ..U.f or your 5lc bo&lt;k. NOW
which now has artificial turf.
ot Nel .. n's Drug Store; Swisher
.
asbington I &amp; Lohse Drugs.
St. Louis over W
-

-AJc.u""

WE HAVE A .

~~=- Remin&amp;tan, Wincllesbl
and Sale

Orl~
-'The~ ~d ~t ~-If!~... dk..l- off.....
the Samts on tee so 1t doesn t aida.. Lr ,., deepeet hlf.etloa to Ita

DR\Sl~N

·

Driver Suffers
Milwr Injuries
David A. Reed, Pomeroy, was
taken to St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg for trealment of
minor injuries suffered in a two
vehicle accident at 4:35 p. m.
Wednesday on Rt. 124 just south
of Rt. 681.
The Gallia·Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said Lewis E.
Gilliam, 26, Coolville, made a
left turn in the path of Reed's
car. Gilliam was charged with
failure to yield the right of way.
There was moderate damage to
both cars.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Debora
Holsinger, Racine; Lydia
Stewart, Pomeroy; Vanessa
Pettit, Pomeroy; Lyle Hysell,
Pomeroy; Irene Russell,
Middleport; Scott Hoover,
Pomeroy; Connie Adkins,
Pomeroy; Kevin Holter,
Racine; Patricia Smith, Mid•
dleport; Iva Fields, Minersville ; Winnie While, Pomeroy;
Linda Baer, Minersville.
DISCHARGED - James
Harmon, Edith Leach, Lovie
Watson, Alice Curtis.

public Jlllempt of Gov .. John J.
Gilligan's administration to lure
organ~ labor toward accepting a state IncOme ta1.
The administration Wednesday issued further mMiflca.
lions of its tax proposals to
placate organized labor, but the
result was the same - a solution appears no clOMr ihan ear·
lier in the week.
State Finance Director Bar·
old A. Hovey said the propoeed
severance tax on niinerals hu
been raised from 4 per cent to
5 per cent; and he confmned .,
the administration Is seeldng a
one-cent increase in lhe cigarette tax.
Both Calabrese and lOng
seem to feel the administration
is dealing privately with Senate
Republicans and the public
proposals are merely a sideshow.
"They got 20 votes," said
Calabrese of the Republicans.
"They can bring it (a tax bill)
out any lime they want to."
In other legislative activity
Wednesday :
-The Senate unanlmOWIIy approved House-paased legialatlon
updating Ohio's fruit and vegetable packaging law.
-The House paased, 25-t, a
House-approved bill increasing
the fees for licensing physicians.
- The House unanlmoualy
passed and sent to the Senate a
bill allowing public employes in
a private retirement system to
qualify for benefits under the
Public Employes Retirement
System.
-The House pa ed, 79-2,
and sent to the Senate, a bill
authorizing separate public auctions for National Guard
armories in Circleville, Galion,
Kent and Paulding.

Select Your
DUTCH
FLOWER
BULBS
1

NOWAT
ELBERFELD$

PLANT NOW!
g~~

For A Lovelier
Spring
.

.

Plant Bulbs

NOW!
Plan I bulbs now for beauty
ln the Spring . Spring
gardens are created In
autumn. September and
Oc:lober are the months to
plant bulbs although
planting ls possible unlit
the ground frt!l!les.
Choose your flower bulbs
now from lbe big setedlon
of Tulips, Narcissus,

Crocus,

Anemones.

Muscarl, Dutch Iris,
Daffodils and others .
Housewues Dept,
Malin Floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
PARK RISERVED
SAWRDAY- SEPT. 11th
UNnL 5 PM

FOR

''FAMILY
O.U. TING
Of
BOOT AND IHOI WOIKLQCAL UNION NO. au

1'01-.-mt,·-01110--....

�4- The Daily Sentinel, P&lt;meroy-Middleport, 0., September 16,1971

5-The
Daily Sentinel, P®a oy-Middlepcrt, 0.,' September'
I&amp;, Im
.
.

.

GOP Governors In Nixon's Boat

RichmanLikesBengalsAll The Wa
By MILTON RICHMAN .
UPI SIJOrtS Writer
NEW YORK (UP[)-You
never met anybody more
enthusiastic in all your life than
the late Charlie Dressen.
It didn't matter what he was
doing, whether it was playing
pro football, which lie once did,

Sport Parade

Paul Brown showed he could
lead his club to a division title
even after losing his quarter. .
back, Greg Cook, last year.
~uppose the Bengals should lose
Virgil Car·ter this time? They'll
still he okay with Ken
Anderson, the rookie backup
man.
If I had to pick a darkborse it

would be the Pittsburgh Stee·
lers but since · they're in the
playirig baseball, managing a same AFC Central Division as
ball. club whipping up a b\g the Bengals, I can 'I see them
pot of chili for . everybody, any hetter than second.
something he also liked to do,
Terry Bradshaw is going to
Charlie always would. go at it come on to become one of the
with all his heart,
top quarterbacks In .the NFL,
·There were times he'd get so and now . that hiS young
enthusiastic while managing, receivers, have more seasoning,
and talk about his club's watch how many times the
chances so much, that some Steelers win ball games nobody
people would say "if Dressen · thought they would.
doesn't watch out he's gonna
I line 'em all up this way:
finish five games ahead of his
AFC East
players."
Miami
I liked Charlie, and knowingly New York
or not maybe I was influenced 'Baltimore
by him last year. I became a New England
little too enthusiastic.
Buffalo
First, I picked the Cincinnati
AFC Central
Bengals to win their division. Cincinnati
Fine. Then I say they'd go to Pittsburgh
the Super Bowl and win there, Cleveland
I'm still waiting.
Houston
Now it's time for this year's
AFC West
choices. Ready? Okay.
Kansas City
The Cincinnati Bengals all the Oakland
way.
San Diego
Yup, I'm going with them . Denver
again:
NFC East
Why?
Dallas
Well, for one thing the coach, St. Louis
and for another his players. Washington

or

No Disgrace To Lose
To Roberts - - Alston
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
The San Francisco Giants
remained one game ahead of
the Las Anlteles Dodgers in the
National League 's Western
Division race as both teams lost
Wednesday night but the at.
titudes of the teams following
the losses could be a forecast of
what's to happen in the next two
weeks.
.
Cincinnati handed !he Giants
a 4-2 loss, San Francisco's loth
:;'defeat in lis Ia'st ·u games, and
left them in a slate of disarray.
The Dodgers, on the other
hand, accepted their 2-1 loss to
Dave Roberts and the San Diego
Padres almost casually. The
pressure, e\•idently, is begin.
1ting to leU on the first-place
Giants.
Larry stahl's home run in the
sixth inning S118pped a 1-1 lie
and Roberts scattered eight hits
to record his 13th victory as the
Padres upended the Dodgers.
"There's no disgrace to be
beat by lhe guy Roberts," said
Dodger Manager Walter Alston .
"We hit the baU weD until the
last couple of innings. We can't
complain about lost op·

porlunities the way we've been
playing. We've had our share of
breaks lately. We swung at
some bad balls but you've got to
give credit to Roberts."
Elsewhere in the National
League, Pittsburgh beat St.
Louis 4·1, Atlanta edged
Houston 4-2, Chicago swept New
York 6-2 and 3-2 and Montreal
nipped Philadelphia 1.0.
In the American League,
Oakland earned the Western
title 'by beating Chicago 3-2
before bowing 7-&lt;l while
California eliminated Kansas
City 6-2. Minnesota edged
Milwaukee 1.0, Detroit downed
Washington 4-2, Boston shaded
Cleveland t;.:; and New York
topped Baltimore 4-2.
Hank Aaron, looking for his
most productive home run
season, crashed his 44th to boost
AUanta over the Astros. It was
Aaron's 636th career homer and
his 1,954th run batted in, tying
him with Ty Cobb . for third
place on the all.time list. Aaron
has 12' games left to beat his
previous homer high of 45 set in
1962. He has hit 14 homers in his
last 24 games.

CHOOSE
YOUR
COAT
NOW

Philadelphia
New York
NFC Ceatral
Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago
New York
NFC Ceatral
Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago
Detroit
NFC West
AUanta
San Francisco

l.os Al!geles
New Orleans
Anyway, a brand new
game and a brand new seaSon
comes up Sunday and the one
U1ing you know is that aU the
games won't go lhe way you
figure. Here's the way I figure:

tlau

AUanta over San FranciscoThe Dutchman has a theory:
you show 'em who'~ boss right
off.
Dallas over Buflalo -The
Cowboys were !HI pre.&lt;;eason

At hletlcs
e

Clinch
Division Crown

By STEVE WD.STEIN
UPI Sports Writer
Five months ago the Oakland
Athletics divorced themselves
from the rest of the American
League Western Division as
Jim "Catfish" Hunter pitched a
three-hit shutout against the
California ·Angels and Sal
Dando blasted a two-run homer.
The A's never relinquished the
division lead.
They rode aboard the fireball
of Vida Blue and the thunder of
Reggie Jackson's bat. They
blended the talents and
strength of the young and lhe
not-so-young and behind lhe
leadership of Manager Dick
Williams, the Athletics never
faltered, never lost their poise.
They clinched the division
title Wednesday night as they
split a doubleheader with the
Chicago While Sox, winning the
opener 3-2 before dropping the
second game 7-&lt;3.
It was Dando's twiH'IIII
homer in the eighth inning of
the first game that clinched a
lie for Oakland and the "race"
officially ended at 9:54 p.m.
when Kansas City was mathematically eliminated by California 6-2.
Reggie Jackson leads the
team with 29 home runs but

Careless
OpeJ;~ti~ns

Blamed

Dando has contribuied to
Oakland's offense with 21
homers while Rick Monday has
chipped in with 17.
The A's are a balanced young
and aggressive team and are
looking forward to their upcom..
ing playoff series with the
Baltimore Orioles. Finley ordered lhat no champagne be
used to celebrate the division·
clinching, urging his players to
save their festivities until after
they beat the Orioles.
In other American League
games Minnesota blanked Mil·
waukee 1.0, Detroit whipped
Washington 4-2, Boston edged
Cleveland t;.:;, and New York
beat Baltimore 4-2.
In the National League, San
Diego strock down Los Angeles
2-1, Cincinnati beat San Francisco 4-2, Atlanta downed
Houston 4-2, Montreal zipped
Philadelphia 1.0 and Chicago
swept New Yorlr. 6-2 and 3-2.
Andy Messersmith pitched a
four-bitter and belled a twiH'IIII
homer to notch his 17th Victory
as the Angels eliminated the
Royals from the division race.
The right-hander, who has lost
13, didn't allow an earned run.
Steve Braun's triple with twoout in the ninth inning, only thesecond hit off Milwaukee
starter Skip Lockwood, scored
Harmon Killebrew from first
after he had walked and gave
Bert Blyleven, who struck out
nine and gave up just six hits,
aU the offense be needed to run
his record to J3.15.
Joe Coleman picked up his
18th victory for the Tigers and,
aided by home runs by Aurelio
Rodriguez and Jim Northrup,
dealt Denny McLain his 20th
defeat with a seven hitter
against his former teammates.
Only three years ago McLain
won 31 games for Detroit but
was traded to Washington last
winter for Coleman. ColeJ11811.
struck out 14 batters and
moved his best-ever record to

COLUMBUS (UPI) - An
increasing nwnber of fish kills
are lhe direct result of careless
farm operations, the Natural
Resources Department said
today.
Dan C. Armbruster, chief of
the department's Division of
Wildlife, warned farmers they
are held equally responsible as 18-8.
industries or municipalities for
pollution damages resulting
from their operations.
Armbruster said farmers
should never dwnp any kind of
manure in a stream that is
likely to flood during heavy
rains; don'tallow silo liquors to
fOU SAVE
drain into streams; never dump
spoiled milk into a watercourse,
DOES liME A
use care in handling pesticides,
and control septic tank draining
so it is not directed into a
We INIY yeu to NVt
stream.
The Division also realeased . 1•1111 the P•Y is IIOOdl.
its rellOrl on the 1971 hatch for
ihe majority of species of riSb in
Western Lake Erie - rating it
as poor to fair.
The hatches for most of the
PAUIQOK
species )\'ere well below those of
1970, the division said.
Young walleye are now
averaging about eight inches in
size and the 1971 hatch for white
bass is slightly better than
average for other years, the
report said. Yellow perch is
only average.
flit Allltno
Some of the forage fis~,
S..illp&amp;t.uc..
including gizzard shad and
2Nhc lfst.
spottall shiners, and the smelt
are showing good hatching
' Member Fldtral
Home Loan Bank
success.
Member Federal Sevlngs &amp;
The division noted the spring
Loan Insurance CorporaHon.
All
accounts Insured up to
was unusually cold this year
$29,000.00
•.
and spawning
occu,rred
sporadically over several .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
weeks.

WHERE

DIFFERENCE

All STYLES
*LEATHER
*WOOL
*CORDUROY
*VINYL
*NYLON
*BRUSHED
FABRICS
'3Q"JTOtS()OO

-Co.

un
BlaiiiCh

arldhavealwayshadgoodearly like the Caids' defense. Jur·.
ftN&gt;t.
gensen could crack it but he
Cincinnati over Philadelphia won't be playing.
.
- This is the Eagles' flfSt ever
Pittsburgh over Chicago get.rogelher with Cincy and Two years ago the Steelers won
althoogh they've looked good so their· opener 'and never won
far, they don'llooll: good enough another game. This is a
to beat the Bengals right now. different year.
New York Jets over Balli· Green Bay over New Yorl&lt;
more - Do you get lbe feeling Giants -Giants have only two
this isn't the Super Bowl minor weaknesses that I can ·
champs' year? 1 do.
see. No offense and no defense.
, Kansas City over San Diego
Cleveland over Houston - .
-Give me Dawson, Podolak . Oilers have looked stronger
.and that KC defense, and you than the Browns up to now but
Nelsen is about due for a good
can have the other team.
Oakland over New England - day.
Lefty Ken Stabler has a li!Ue
Monday
more help than Jim Plunkett. Minnesota · over Detroit -I
Miami over Denver - wonder who Alex Karras likes
Dolphins are able to move lbe in this one.
ball either way, in the air with
Griese-Warfield, or on the
groundwithCsonka..l{iick.
FOI ATHLETE'S FOOT
Los Angeles over New USE DIATOLYnC ACDON

r;.

HUntinJ Vest, Coals,
Hats, Bells, Shells, Etc.

Ammunition

RIGHT IS RESERVED TO
LIM IT QUANTITIES

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

~~ 49'
ONLY

REG. 79'
.

''

24 TABLfTS

.

REG. 11.29

ARRID EXTRA
60Z.
CAN

COIJt:l8 &amp; - y l'aVIIR
aNUa C011Qa&amp;IION

ONLY

ONLY

REG. '1.49

36 TABL£TS FREE WITH 144

ONLY S

69

1 Ol CREAM
1.75 Ol LOTION

'11.'38 VAUJE

HALLS
METifO.LYPTUS

•

drafted a resolution on econOIJl..
ic policy Monday but had to
submit il under a procedure
requiring a ~lhs vote.
The Republican side viewed it
as a partisan docwnent and
refused to give the Democrats
the votes to call it up.
·Two other resolutions, each
requiring a three.fourths vote,

Base.
.J.
r;t
Sch00ls
..C' or
'T'aX
1

Opposed
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Tbe
Education Advisory Oxnmittee
It the Southeastern Region of
lhe Ohio Vivil Rights Comrnission said today it opposes the
use of the property tax base for
financing public school educalion.
The committee said it agreed
with California Supreme Court
decision that such a tax base
was discriminatory because It
wils inequitable.
.
"We seek equal educational
qlportunity for all schools pu·
pits," said C&lt;mrnittee chair~
man Paul Lyncb. " wide
disparity exists among school
districts often only a few miles
apart, as the Bexley and
Hamilton Twonship Districts in
Fr~ County.','
.
"Public expenditure IS defin·
itely tied to the quality of educa·
lion offered by a scbool
system," said Dr. James Kn01,
a
committee
member .
"Because democracy rests 1111
educated citizens, there is no
room in Ohio for unequal
education."

CHECKS MAILED
Checks totaling $4,961.110 have
been mailed from the office of
State Auditor Josepll T.
Ferguson representating Gallia
County's share in gasoline taxes
in September. All of Ohio's
cwnties, townsbips, cities and
villages sbared in the overaD
$8,628,978. Gallia's distribution
follows : GaUipolis City,
$4,066.110; Centerville Village,
$34; Cheshire Village, $175;
Crown aty, $196; Rio Grande,
$274 and Vintoo Village, $215.

Pleasaol Valley Hospital
ADMITTED
Robert
Adkins, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGED John
Edwards, Juanita Byus, Sandra
Westmoreland , Charles
Atkinson, Daniel Williams,
Charles Taylor, Mrs. Roy
Mattox, Mrs. Nicky Weaver.

ONLY

COUGH DROPS
REG. 29'
ONLY

22

ANACIN

~

FAST PAIN RELIEF
100 TABLITS

ABSORBINE
ARtHRITIC PAIN LOTION

REG. $1.59
ONLY

20Z.

Bll
REG. 98'

AYDS
REDUCING PLAN CANDY

WHITE RAIN

24 Ol

HAIR SPRAY

ONLY

13 Ol

29

One report endorsed the
House..approved welfare reform
bill with some suggestions for
Senate amendments and restated conference support for the
administration bill to share
federal income tax collections
with state and local govern·
meot. Another asked for fewer
restrictions on federal ald
grants to stales ior health,
education and other program.
The conference rejected a
motion to delete one provision
of a report urging federal tax
ince11tives to encourage indus·
trie~ to locate outside metropo.
lltan areas.

Alfred

Social Notes

REG. '1.19

VICKS
VAPORUB

Ter,;ife Control Concenirate. .Add . an Arab hoSe-end
spray Applicator and you're ready to comptefely fer mileproof the average 3-bedroom home! Saves you over $100
compared to the cost of calling in a professional exlermlnator. Buy Arab .and oo both you and your home a
lavor.l Price may vary ~lightly .

·vAllEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY 00.
992·2709

MIDDLEPORT

Mr. and Mrs. Charley Woode
spent Tuesday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. George Genheimer.
MJ:. and Mrs. Bill Windon and
daughter
attended
the
WAshington County Fair
Sunday.
Charles King and family of
Glendale, W. Va., spent a
Sunday recently with his
mother, Mrs. Edith King and
daughter, Mabel.
Mrs. Life of Success Road
spent Sunday with Freda Miller
and Lenore Betzing.
.
Richard Barton and family
took supper Sunday evening
with her mother, Jane Smith,
Silver Ridge.
Mrs. Margaret Cox of Pt.
Pleasant spent Sunday with
Mrs. Robert Wond and family.
Attendance at the Nazarene
Sunday School Sept. 12 was 84.
Offering was $35.75.
Debbie Wood spent a couple of
days last week with Harold
Hawk
and
family
at
Hockingport.
Mrs. Freda Miller spent a
couple of evenings last week
with Mrs. Georgia Thoma.
William Hielman and Jerry
Diddle of Florida are spending
some time with their grandmother, Erma Heilman and
sister, Shirley Cogar of
Minersville.
of Columbus.
Visiting with relatives here is
Mrs. Mary Ellen Jagers and
daughter, Penny, of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. Mr. Jagers
will come later. Mrs. Jagers is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Grover Stout.
Mrs. Nellie Vale returned
Tuesday to her dulles in
Pomeroy after an absence of
five
weeks
due
to
hospitalization for rheumatoid
arthritis.
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Smith
of Hazard, Ky., and Mr. and
Mrs. Corwin Smith and family
of Columbus were weekend
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Wilson.
·

$

· ONLY

SERVICE

'

'

·-··=·c.:··:_c
- -::c-:-=..·--=-·......,·c=.-~
...,.,._•..,.

Send for a physician or ambulance while

Member Federal Reserve System

head level with hi1 body, and try lo dolor·

On Fridays our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m .• I Con·

mint the oxtont of hi1 injuries. Any 1eriou1

tinuouslyl.
$20,000 Maximum ln~ur;mce
For Each Deposttor

i,.

The Daily Sentinel

must

be aHtncloclto immediately to pre·

NEWOOMERS TO
OUR OOMMUNITY

··Exec. E4.

·

'

I

1

City Editor

Publist\ed

daiiV

e~tcept

.
"1

Saturday by The Ohio Valle)! ~
Company, J 11 ,
Court St., · Pomeroy, Ohio,

I 4S769.
1

1

Business Office Phone

992·2156, Edllorlal Phone 9922157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ne11onel

advertising 1

representative ·

8ott1nelll-~

Inc ., 12 Easl A2nd
I Gallagher,
51 ,, New York City, New York .

!

Subscription rales: De .
: livered by carrier whtrt
1 4ve"able SO cents per week;
l :evr~g;orn:ru~ev:n:bTe~ar~~~
, month $1.75. By mall in Ohio

WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COME IN 'AND SEE US!

ID Sene You!

Jilltt.l!f
......,._

. .:1

.-

OP£fl DAILY 8:00 A.ll. TO 10 P.M. • SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P.ll. &amp;
l'1

JlT

: and 'N . Va :, One year 514.00.

t:lt"ttt
. t:ll"t.'

IM4o

~...,..~

. MIDDLEPoRT, 0,

lji#.-•..,...,~

•

•

1 Si)(

months

S1 . 2S .

Three

monlhs ~4.50. Subscription

1p.rlce Includes Sunday Times-

,- _" _ "_•_1....,..,- ......,,_.:...~ .
50 11

Mrs. Lowell Greer and family
called on Mr. and Mrs .
Lawrence Johnston and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Dixon,
New Brighton, Pa., visited Mr.
and Mrs. Homer I~nhower.
Mrs. Elva Dailey, Syracuse,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dailey;
Lowell, Ohio, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Long
called on Mrs. Mona Long .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pauley,
Cottageville, W. Va., Mrs. Icy
Dailey, local, visited Mrs.
Hattie Powell and family.
Mr . and Mrs. I,awrence
Glusencamp, Nlckl, and Mrs.
Sylvia Carpenter spent a day at
the state fair.
Mr. Gene Long has built a
cattle barn.
Mrs. Dorothy Roseberry is
assisting Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Lawrence in their store.
Mrs. Annie Icenhower is
getting along well since she
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Cremeans called on her
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Johnston and family.
Miss Leota Birch and Mrs.
Maywood Johnston went to
Middleport and Pomeroy
recently.

I

· Publishing

r

temporalvN and do not move unltu it is

'

DEVOTED TO THE
\
INTERESTOF
.. •
fo'IEICH·MASON ARI!A
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL',
ROBERT HOEFLICH, '

bleeding. stoppago of breathing, or poison·

Flats News

BARBECUE SET
Vulture 776, 40 et 8, will hold a
public chicken barbecue all day
Sunday at the shelter on the
upper parking lot In Pomeroy.
Proceeds will go to the Charles
Marcinko nursing scholarship
fund.

IN CASE OF ACCIDENTS •••
you keep , ... injvrod penon lying down, hi1

Old Town

GATOR CAPER
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - A
three-foot alligator spent 30
hours uncaged near the San
Diego Zoo before being spotted
by a Hawaiian couple. The
visitors saw the reptile Wed·
nesday as it poked its head from
some bushes. They asked a zoo
official if It was customary for
large animals to run free.

FIRST AID TIPS

POMEROY, OHIO

By Mrs. Bertba Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Sept. 12 was 129. Offering for the
day was $162.
Rev. and Mrs. Lewis Diehl of
Kentucky spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Diehl, Mrs. Georgia Diehl and
Charles Anthony Diehl. ·
Mrs. Thomas Darst and
children of Milan spent a
weekend with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Edge! of
Long Bottom, Mrs. Marty
Williams and children of
Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs. Cliff
Jacobs and Dianne called on
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr.
Mrs. Fran Cline of Middleport
visited recenUy with her sister,
Mrs. Harmon Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs
attended the Buck reunion at
Lancaster campground.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met at the home of Mrs. Nellie
Tracy for their meeting and a
surprise birthday party for Mrs.
Tracy. Guests were Pennie
Eblin, Mrs. Georgia Williamson
and Mrs. Eva Schriber. Cake
and ice cream were served.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
McConnelsville attended
church services at the local
church and visited his parents,
Rev. and Mrs. Cecil Wise.
Miss Peggy Russell, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Russell of
Bradbury, who is a missionary
to Mexico, gave a talk and
showed pictures of Mexico at
the local church recenUy.

News Notes

Social Notes .

and Savings Co.

laurel Uiff

Chester East News Notes

Poi· nt Rock

The Farmers Bank

NEW YORK (UPI) - A
college professor has told a
legislative hearing that the
greatest source of hard drugs in
large cities is policemen and
narcotics agen,ls.
Laud Humphreys, professor
of criminal justice at the State
University in Albany, said,
"authorities in the field have
evidence that the greatest
single source of hard drugs in
any metropolitan area is the
pollee and narcotics agents."
Humphreys said his information suaaest narcotics

NEW HAT In the Uemo·
cratlc presldeatlal candl·
date ring belongs to Sen.
Wtulam Proxmlre. T b e
Wisconsin II be r a I, wbo
g a l n e d national prom!·
nence a• a watchdog on
mUitary spending and In
the successful congresslon·
al cam palgn t.o cut off
supersonic transport funds,
Is reported preparing to
announce himself In the
1972 race In October or
November.

university trustees action."
Olds sald the increase ap·
proved last spring for faculty
salaries "will be honored" after
the freeze ends in November.
"Cost of Living Council rulings
have ·superseded university
trustees action, freezes for the
fall term our present fee
structure," Olds said in a letter
circulated to faculty, students
and parents.
"ConsequenUy, there wlll be
no .fee increases for the fall
S. S. attendance on Sept. 12, quarter,,' he said.
was ~1. the offering $18.49.
Worship services were held at Tuppers Plains
11•with an attendance Of 30, and
Rev. Leiunan speaking from Society News
Luke 4:16-23.
- Several from Alfred Church
By Mrs. Evelyo Brlckles
attendedthebomecorningatthe Attendance at Sunday School
Orange Christian Cburch, Sun. at the Methodist Church was 37
Sept. 12. Rev. James Quisen· and the offering was $18.07.
berry was forenoon guest Worship attendance was 38 and
sp;alr.er and Rev. David offering $76.15.
Sbiufler, of Hemlock Grove Mr. and Mrs. Millard Brooks
Church was the afternoon of Reynoldsburg spent a
speaker,
along
with weekend here with her brother
Congregational singing and a Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Miller and
few special numbel's.
family .
The pastor of the Or~ge
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor
Church, Rev. Charles Do1n1gan, attended the Washington
was~ to. the ~try in County Fair last week.
special ordination services at Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Spencer
lhe Hemlock Grove Church, of Pomeroy RD 3 called on his
Sunday e!ening by the Rev. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
James Quisenbel'ry.
.
Brickles Thursday evening.
Alfred Church homecommg
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman
will be beld on Sunday, Sept. 19, visited relatives in Virginia last
With lbe usual mormng services week. She was accompanied
beginning at 9:§, with Sunday there by Mrs. Robert Gutheil
~hool, worship services at 11, and mother, Mrs. Frank Cluff of
with lbe Rev. Lehman. Basket Columbus.
dinner at I~ :3~. Afternoon
Patty Stethem of Long Botpr~ beg~ at . 2:00, lorn was a recent overnight
featurmg
Tbe
B1ssell guest of Mrs. Leone Babcock.
Brothers" and other local ~d
Mr. and Mrs. E . K. Grimes of
home talent. Everyone ~s Athens and brothe•, Howard
welcome. Helen Woode, Ollie Grimes of Idaho were Sunday
Atherton and .William Carr, guests 'of their sister, Mrs.
program COIIllJllttee.
Neisel Weatherman.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode and
Conni, of Circleville, spent the
week end with relatives here.
Vicki Carr, who had been
visiting the Woode's and attending the Ohio State Fair,
returned with them to her home
here.
. Mr. and Mrs . Clarence
By Nellie Vale
Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. David
Mrs. Fay Wood vacationed in
Williams and Aaron, and Mr. Canada the past week with her
and Mrs. Clair Follrod, Stevie daughter, Freda and husband.
and Kathy, attended the Harper
Mrs. Effie Hoosier is spen·
Reunion, held at the home It ding two weeks with relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Aulfty Bailey, at and friends near her former
Carthage, 0., on Sunday, Sept. home in Fort Gay and Hun·
12.
lington.
Week end guests mMr. and
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbel' Parter and Eddie Mrs. G. A. Radekin and Tina
were Mr. and Mrs. Eric Parker Marie were Mr. and Mrs. Arlin
and son of Plano, lli., and Larry
Radekln and daughter, Amy Jo,
Bogash of Chicago, m.
Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie and. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
received word that her sister-in- Holl1day, Judy, Gary • and
.
law, Mrs. Harland Story has Floyd.
Weekend
guests
of
Mrs.
Nellie
undergooe back surgery, in the
Vale w~re her son and
St. Joseph Hospital in daughter-111-law,
Mr. and Mrs.
Parkersburg.
John Vale and daughter, Stacy
Mrs. Marie Hopkiils, Rex
Hopkins, and Bolj Bunger of
Dayton, are visiting and word of the hospitalization of
squirrel bunting on the farm of their small grandson, Roger
Mr. and Mrs. Vete Swartz. The Swartz, in a Parkersburg
Swartz' bave also received Hospital.

ONLY

tempers, as evidenced· w~
day.
~. nate Minority Leader An·
thony 0. Calabrese, o.aeveland, and Frank W. King, president of the Ohlo AFL-ClO, ut·
tered unprintable e1pletives
when asked about the current

Drugs' Sources .Police, Agents

KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Kent
State University President
Glenn A. Olds said today
...,;viously announced fee hikes
for lbe fall quart;er will be
cancelled because President
Nixon's 9lklay wage-price
freeze bas - "superseded

¥11111 ''-s of life. K..p victim at normal body

. AND SAVE 1100 OR MORE

COLUMBUS (UPI)- lt's been
''" long, hot summer in the
Statehouse.
Moves and counter-moves,
mosUy political, on budg~t..tax
legislation have frustrated most
lawmakers and lobbyists.
And in some cases, shortened

from your
pharmacist!

3% Ol

REG. '1.45

Tempers Grow Shorter

Fee Hike Out At Kent SIJJte

CAN

RAZOR

ONLY

were re~tedafter the economic statement Both opposed
massive busing to aehieve
racial balance in schools. One
was spmson!d by Gov. George
C. Wallace It Alabama and lhe
other joinUy by 'Govs. Jimmy
Carter, Ge«gia Democrat, and
W:mfield Dunn, Tennessee Republican.
Regular procedure calls for
resolutions to be submitted a
month in advance for consider·
alion by the siJ; permanent
committees It conference. With
few disputes, resolutions report.ed from ~committees were
given routine approval.

,,.....,,~

..

MENSWE ~R

(Continued from Page I)
American civilian employe of a
contracting finn. Another 57
persons including 50 Viet·
namese and seven U. S. ser·
vicemen were wounded, some
seriously.
It was the worst such incident
in Saigon in nearly six years. On
JWJe 25, 1!165, 43 persons in·
eluding 12 Americans were
killed and at least 80 persons
injured in a similar explosion at
the My Canh floating restaurant
in the Saigon River.

SAT., SEPT.18
Several Antiques
Easy Dlredloos
Come up t.o Page St. Sale in
back yard of 611 High St.
Follow Page Street.
Mrs. Roscoe Satterfield

HAIR REMOVER

PKG. OF 10

ARTERS

Riots

Yard Sale

NED

BLADES

WARM JACKETS
SALE PRICED •500 to •15..

SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI)Republlcan governors appear
convinced.they are riding ln the
:"~me political boat as Pres1dent Nixon and that a safe trip
in 1972 depends largely on the
success of his economic pollcies.
As a. result, Republicans
attending the swnmer session
of the National Governors'
Conference were unwilling to
· attack Nixon's economic projlo.
sals and a Democratic-spon·
sored re8olution went down to
defeat before the meeting
adjourned Wednesday.
Ohio Gov. John J. Gilligan
was chairman of the committee
that drafted the resolution.
Republican governors attend·
ing the meeting also made it
clear they had no intention of
critkizing Nixon's proposed trip
to Conununist China nor were
they going to suggest substilutes for Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew on the 1972 Republi·
can ticket.
Led by Gov. Arch A. Moore
Jr. Of West Virginia, the newly·
elected conference chairman,
the nine-member executive
committee of the conference
was flying to Washington today
to participate with Nixon in a
conference on policies which
will follow the current 9&lt;klay
wage-price freeze.
Moore told reporters he
hoped the governors would not
speak with opposing viewpoints,
but then acknowledged they
must speak as individuals since
the conference had taken no
position.
The Democratic governors

. Don't Forget

SUPER PLENAMINS

.......,..,.'*-

COMPLETE SELECTION OF
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

'

·---..- ----------·.
Hunting Supplies

Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday Sale!

LAY-AWAY
PLAN
FOR YOU

•20 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

Shot Guns &amp; Rifles

really matter that this one will ~:;::.=. ~ ~c1t~.~'t!::
be played in Tulane stadium, FAST ..U.f or your 5lc bo&lt;k. NOW
which now has artificial turf.
ot Nel .. n's Drug Store; Swisher
.
asbington I &amp; Lohse Drugs.
St. Louis over W
-

-AJc.u""

WE HAVE A .

~~=- Remin&amp;tan, Wincllesbl
and Sale

Orl~
-'The~ ~d ~t ~-If!~... dk..l- off.....
the Samts on tee so 1t doesn t aida.. Lr ,., deepeet hlf.etloa to Ita

DR\Sl~N

·

Driver Suffers
Milwr Injuries
David A. Reed, Pomeroy, was
taken to St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg for trealment of
minor injuries suffered in a two
vehicle accident at 4:35 p. m.
Wednesday on Rt. 124 just south
of Rt. 681.
The Gallia·Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said Lewis E.
Gilliam, 26, Coolville, made a
left turn in the path of Reed's
car. Gilliam was charged with
failure to yield the right of way.
There was moderate damage to
both cars.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Debora
Holsinger, Racine; Lydia
Stewart, Pomeroy; Vanessa
Pettit, Pomeroy; Lyle Hysell,
Pomeroy; Irene Russell,
Middleport; Scott Hoover,
Pomeroy; Connie Adkins,
Pomeroy; Kevin Holter,
Racine; Patricia Smith, Mid•
dleport; Iva Fields, Minersville ; Winnie While, Pomeroy;
Linda Baer, Minersville.
DISCHARGED - James
Harmon, Edith Leach, Lovie
Watson, Alice Curtis.

public Jlllempt of Gov .. John J.
Gilligan's administration to lure
organ~ labor toward accepting a state IncOme ta1.
The administration Wednesday issued further mMiflca.
lions of its tax proposals to
placate organized labor, but the
result was the same - a solution appears no clOMr ihan ear·
lier in the week.
State Finance Director Bar·
old A. Hovey said the propoeed
severance tax on niinerals hu
been raised from 4 per cent to
5 per cent; and he confmned .,
the administration Is seeldng a
one-cent increase in lhe cigarette tax.
Both Calabrese and lOng
seem to feel the administration
is dealing privately with Senate
Republicans and the public
proposals are merely a sideshow.
"They got 20 votes," said
Calabrese of the Republicans.
"They can bring it (a tax bill)
out any lime they want to."
In other legislative activity
Wednesday :
-The Senate unanlmOWIIy approved House-paased legialatlon
updating Ohio's fruit and vegetable packaging law.
-The House paased, 25-t, a
House-approved bill increasing
the fees for licensing physicians.
- The House unanlmoualy
passed and sent to the Senate a
bill allowing public employes in
a private retirement system to
qualify for benefits under the
Public Employes Retirement
System.
-The House pa ed, 79-2,
and sent to the Senate, a bill
authorizing separate public auctions for National Guard
armories in Circleville, Galion,
Kent and Paulding.

Select Your
DUTCH
FLOWER
BULBS
1

NOWAT
ELBERFELD$

PLANT NOW!
g~~

For A Lovelier
Spring
.

.

Plant Bulbs

NOW!
Plan I bulbs now for beauty
ln the Spring . Spring
gardens are created In
autumn. September and
Oc:lober are the months to
plant bulbs although
planting ls possible unlit
the ground frt!l!les.
Choose your flower bulbs
now from lbe big setedlon
of Tulips, Narcissus,

Crocus,

Anemones.

Muscarl, Dutch Iris,
Daffodils and others .
Housewues Dept,
Malin Floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
PARK RISERVED
SAWRDAY- SEPT. 11th
UNnL 5 PM

FOR

''FAMILY
O.U. TING
Of
BOOT AND IHOI WOIKLQCAL UNION NO. au

1'01-.-mt,·-01110--....

�t-'l'lleDiii)'Sellllnei,Pameroy~,O., Seplember16,19l.

... : ·:·... :··.·.···

l"rrNESS DEMONSTRATION
NEW YO)U!: (UPI) - In
COLUMBUS (UPI) - 1be honor of National Physical
County Commlssloaers ' Fitness Day, a group of
Association of
Ohio's joggers, paCed by Joe Pardo a
Tautlon Committee Wed· . hlind llll!sseur at the Flushing,
oesday anuouuc.ed Its support N. V., YMCA, will J&amp;in ID a
of a personal Income and llll!SSive outdoor phySical fit.
corporate tax because a ness demonstration Friday at
. reveaue-ralslog plan .~ New York's Dag Hsmmerskjold
ou tile sales tu "would Plaza. The joggers will deJiart
generate
Inadequate from various YMCAs through.
revenues for counties and out ·the city and convene at the
local government."
plaza.
Fred Deerlog, Erie County
commissioner and chalrmaa
of the committee, said local
governments have been
slighted bi state fundlug In
TONIGHT
the past, but lbe personal
," Sepl. 16
Income tax approach would
NOT OPEN
give them more money.
Friday thru Tuesday
Seplember 17-21
THE REIVERS
(Tedlnicolorl
WCfUTOMEET
Steve McQueen
The annual meeting of the
Sharon Farrell
Meigs County WCTU will be
GP
A
MAN
held Sunday at 2 p. m. at the
CALLEO HORSE
Middleport Baptist Church .
ITtchnic:olorJ
James Roach will be the
Richard Harris
speaker.
GP

Green Thumb
Notes. • ..
A -'ly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

NELSON'

. MEIGS tHEAtRE~ ·

Ed. Note : Due to the Labor Day Holiday, Mrs. W. 0 .
Damitz' "Green Tllunb Notes" missed its publication date.
Her article is !Qbllslied below.
BY MRS. W. 0. liAKNli'Z
lleDd 0' Tile River Club,
Letart, RaciDe aDd Pcmeroy
'l'lllals the time of theyear when work grows less In our early
Oowergm-den&amp;. Tbe8UIIllllel'flowershavereacbed their peak and
require little care frcm now CHI. Mums which are next In blooming
..-derDeedlllllecare. So now we begin to prepare for neztseason.
~rbaps first In crde.- Is attention to Iris and peonies. The
foliage llbould have been cut from them by now. They may be
divided Cl' moved so that the new roots can fCI'Ill before freezing
weather. HOIII!Ver, IIley both stand neglect very well and without
lllOI'inC Cl' any special care will bloom profu.lely year after year.
.So now we can lbiJi: of our CU'tlll and bulbs for early spring
Oowerq. What is mCI'e cheerful than to look out on a gloomy
March day and see lovely Cl1JCU8 dotilng the lawn? To have them
next aprlng It Is time to set the CCI'DlS from now on until late Oc·
Iaber. They shwld be aet two to three Inches apart In a bed and
twa or three Inches deep. All varieties of which there are many,
are of easy cnllure . and should be planted In sun or light

7_ , . Dall7 sentinel, Pmieroy-Mid!lleport, 0 ,. September 16, 1971

...

''

French Singers
Coining to Area

Long Bottom

Social Notes

EYE DROPS

The Varel and Bailly Company .

%Ol

nouncing their reSPeCtive series
soon.
A complete cslendar of all
area concerts will be mailed to
each member with his memshade.
bership card.
Of many JIM!IJ!ben of the Narcissua family probably the mQSt
The current annual campaign
famutw are the joQqull and daffodil. They should not be moved
One of the mast pojlular and Waverly series will be
for
new members continues this
untlllbe foliage bas c&lt;mpletely died but before new root growth entertaining groups that has . Raymond Mlchaiski, · bass
week through Saturday. Ad·
bu begun. 1bis is in early autumn. They demand little care and appeared on a Tri-County baritone, on Nov. 8, and duonnission to the concerts is by
can be grown in almoat any aoll. With their wealth of lovely and Community Concert series In harpists, Longstreth and
membership card only, with no
recent years is returning this Escosa on April 3.
early biO!II1!IB they t!eaerve a place In any garden.
tickets sold at the door for an
A membership in the Tri·
'l'ull!lll, wblch ciCIIIely follow or interlap the narcissus, offer a season to Waverly.
individual
concert.
The Varel and Bailly Com- County Community Concert
great oppoi'lumty_fCI' co!CI' all tllmigb the spring. If a variety of
Mrs. James A. Beverly is
apecies is planted One can bave blossoms frOm early April until pany, alively_ Jll'OUI! of young Association entities its holder to
general
chairman of this year's
late ID May. Tiley shwld be aet In a sunny place In light fertile French singers, is coming to the attend all community concerts
membership drive, assisted by
1011, fo..- to six lncbes apart and about ten Inches below ground. Waverly High School for a given in the surrounding area,
Mrs. Donald M. Thaler.
Tbey shculd be planted between the mllldle of October and the community concert on Feb. 14. if seats are available. Last
Heading teams of workers in
mW!e of November. They may be left ID. the same place in- Other attractions on the year, local members could have
Gallipolis are Mrs. M. T. Bucci,
definitely and sUII bloom beautifully.
Mrs. L. R. Ford, Jr., Mr. and
ByaciDth bulbs should be planted between the middle of
Mrs. Jonathan Louden, Mrs.
Seplember and late October about three IDches below the surface
Lewis Schmidt, Mrs. Charles
'and four to liJ: inches apart. Tbey will do well In any good fertile By Uniled Preis lnlernationa.l
Lingo, Miss Susan White, Mrs.
American Laague
IIi!.
Robert Fanning, Mrs. John H.
New York 001 000 102- 4 9 1
There are many other, not so common, early flowering Balli
Smith and John T. Griffin.
000 001 001- 2 8 0
Kline (11 -13) and Munson ;
plan1B,ICII!le from cmns and same frcm bulbs, all of which may
Lawrence Huber is captain of
Cuellar
(18-9) and Hendricks.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis
be ael110011. Among them are the snowdrop, anemone and grape · HRs-Hansen
lite
Rio Grande team and other
(2nd), Murcer
entertained
with
a
cookout
bfaciDth. Each of these Is easily planted and easily cared for and (24th). Robinson (17th) .
workers are canvassing
recently.
Guests
were
Mr.
and
Jackson,
Oak Hill, Middleport,
win reward one with that calCI' and beauty which is so welcome (lsi game)
Mrs,
Hobart
Newell
and
family
Pomeroy, Racine and Syracuse.
after the lmg gloomy winter.
Oakld
100 000 02o- 3 .JJ 0
of
Chester
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
In West Virginia, teams have
Chicago 010 100 ooo-- 2 4 0
Dobson, Grant (7) and John Newell and sons of
beeli organized in Pt. Pleasant,
Tenace; Wood (20-12) and
Mason and Ravenswood.
operat e and equ ip a complete Herrmann. WP-Gran1 (6.J) . Columbus and Mary Pierce.
LEGAL NOTICE
coal m i ning property with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Garth
Smi!h
Anyone who has not yet
bu ildings, and railroad switches HRs-Johnslone (15th), Melton
LEGAL NOTICE
spent
a
weekend
with
Mr.
and
necessary to mine, load and
(301h) , Bando (21st) . - renewed his membership is
Charles Watkins, whose place
away coal from adjacent {2nd game)
Mrs. Howard Young of Paden
of residence is unknown ; the carry
urged to do so inunedlately.
properties, said grantors, their Oakld
000 100 101- 3 7 4
unknown heirs, devisees, heirs
City, W.Va.
Any
new resident who has not
and
assigns
to
be
relieved
Chicago
031
110
lOx7
11
0
leg•tees, executors. ad .
Odom
Roland
(6) and
Alice Curtis is a patient at
yet
ministretors end assigns of from any sur:face damage by
been
contacted by a worker
of mining of coal under
' Jah
1
)
d Ve te~ans Memorial Hospital. .- ---~-.--.-.--Chor!es Walkins. If deceased. reason
said pr8mlses. Any surface land • Dune~ ;
n 12·15 ,~n
may call 446-1~ or visit drive
whose names and plac;es of required or used as above by Egan. LP- Odom (10-11) . nRs
David
Smith,
Marietta,
spent
of
Tuppers
_
Plam:'
VISited
Mr.
headquarters at 11 Court St. to
reaidence are unknown to the said gr'antors, their heirs and - Egan (1011\), Monday (17th).
plai ntiffs; Mula L . Watkins, assigns, to be paid for at the
!he weekend with Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Riley ~gott and Mr. join the association.
whose place Of residence is
of $125.00 per acre . Ex. Ca I
and Mrs. Sanume Rairden.
040 000 02o- 6 12 3 David Smillt.
unknown ; the unknown heirs, rate
ceptlng
J
.2
acres
conYeyed
to
G.
KC
000
001
lDO2
4
1
devisees, legatees, executors,
Mr. and Mrs. Keillt Ridenour
Mrs . Jack Stalzer . ?nd
. Carleton , et al. Excepting 112
Messersmith
(17-13)
and
Toradmlnlstnlors and assigns of TAcre
to Carroll end
(Lilah Hayman) are an- daughter of Columbus VISited r.'-!1"'!"-..- - - - . ,
Marla L. Watkins, if deceased , VIvianconveved
Johnson by deed dated borg ; DaiCanton, BuHer (5).
whose names and places of October 13, 1965, recorded In York (7) and Kirkpatrick, nounclng the birth of a son, Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter.
residence are unknown to the Volume 225, Page 5-49, Meigs Paepke (5). LP- DaiCanton (8- Sept 1 at Sl Joseph Hospital
Mr. and Mrs. lloyd McPeek
M~SON
plalntltfs; Edward Watkins , County Deed Records . EX· 6) . HR- Messersmith (2nd) .
Par.kersbu.rg , Maternal of Belleville, W. Va., visited Mr.
whose place of residence is ceptlng 2.24 Acre conveyed to
unknown ; the unknown heirs, Ada Starcher by deed dated
000 000 001- I 2 o grandparent is Ernestine Hay- and Mrs. Charles Hensley.
devl&amp;ees, legatees, executors .. May 28 , 1968, recorded · in Mlnn
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Ml
lw
000 000 ooo-- 0 6 1 man and Mr. and Mrs.
administrators and ass igns of Volume 235, Page 909, Meigs
Pat and Dee Dee Smith were
Sepl. 17-18-19
Blyleven I13· !5) and Roof; Gordon Ridenour of Chester are overnight guests of Anderson
Edward Watkins, If deceased, County Deed Records . E xWho&amp;e names and places of cepting .85 Acre conveved to Lockwood (9:14) and Porter.
DOUBLE FEATURE
residence 1re unknown to the Ralph and Pearl Si sson by deed
paternal grandparents
Kibble, Reedsville.
3TIMESTHE LAFFIN
pla intiffS, will take notice that dated November 8, 1969, Wash
100 010 ooo-- 2 7 0 Mr. and Mrs. ~h Wells
Wes Stern
Violet
Smith
Allen E . Ball and Freda Ball, on r ecorded In Volume 241, Page Detroit
100
Ill
OOx4
6
0
Joan
Coll ins
the 17th day of August, 1971, 217 , Me i gs Count y
De ed
Mclain, Grzenda (8) and announce the birth of a son,
3 IN THE CELLAR
tiled their complaint against Recor ds.
Billings; Coleman (18-8) and Sept. I at Holzer Medical
you In the Common Pleas Court
Color
prayer of sa id compla int Freeman. LP-Mclaln (9-10) .
of Meigs County, Oh io, being is The
Center. Paternal grandparents Highest I c e b e r g reliably
PLUS
for the partition of said real
Case No. 14.tl9. for the partition
to have the interest of HRs-~odriguez (15th) , Unser are Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wells. recorded loomed 550 feet
3 JNTHEAnJC
of the real estate herinafter estate,
the plaintiffs set off to them or, llSth), Northrup (14th) .
Yvette M im i eu x
sevenabove
the
water,
yet
described, and to quiet title to if the same cannot be done, then
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Christopher
Jones
sa id real estate , and requiring that such real estate be solr:t ; Boston
000 211 011- 6 9 3 Larkins were Mr. and Mrs. eighths of it was below the
you to set up your interest that defendants ar e required to
Color
surface.
000 004 01o- 5 12 1
therein , if any, which real set forth their interest In said Cleve
Loren Ralph, Columbus, and
Lonborg,
Lee
(7)
,
Bolin
(8)
,
ntate Is described as follows : real estate or be forever barred
Smith, Nelsonville,
The following described real from asserting the same i and Lyle (8), Brett (9) and Fisk; Cora
tstate situated in the Township thai plaintiffs' title to sa id Foster, Lamb (6). Ballinger Howard Larkins and Brent of
of Chester , County of Meigs and
be quieted as age lnst (7) , Farmer (9) and Fosse. WP Portland and Mr. and Mrs.
\State of Ohio, being in Section 4, premises
said defendants·, and for such - Lyle (6-4). LP- Farmer 15-4) .
Town 2. Range 13. of the Ohio other relief as IS pr oper .
Junior Hauber.
HR- Pelrocelll (241h).
Company's Purchase, and more
The above mentioned parties
Visiting Serena Sisson were
particularly described as will further take notice tha·t
National League
follows, to-wit : Beg inning at the they have been made parties
010 210 ooo-- 4 9 2 Mr. and Mrs. Don Sisson and
corner of the Barbara Wippel defend•nt to sa id complaint, Atlanta
100 000 001- 2 4 0 daughters and Mrs. Georgia
farm , the same being the corner and that they are required to Houston
on Flatwoods Road ; thence anower with in twenty-eight !281
Nlekro {14-12) and Williams; Sisson of Vienna, W. Va., Nelson
west 2701 feet to the corner of deys from the last date of Billingham, Guinn (6), Ray (9)
Morgan and Wippel ; then ce publication of this notice, the and Edwards. LP- BIIIingham Sisson, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
north 150 feetto the center of the answer date being Octobef 28, (8-IS) . HR- Aaron (44th) .
House, Radnor.
roed ; thence north 6S degrees 1971.
Sue Gasters, Waverly, and
nst 111 feet to a stake in the
(1st gamel
center of the road; thence north
Varian Cozart were married at
Allen E. Ball Chicago
020 120 OIG- 6 II 0
77 di'Qrees 30' eest 170 f eet to a
Freda
Ball
Ashland, Ky., Sept. lOth.
stake In the center of the road ;
Pla intiffs New York 000 000 002- 2 5 2
thence north Sl degrees 27' east
Hands (I 1-18) and Fernandez;
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
:)17 .3 fHt to a Stake in the center
Koosman.
Captra
(51
Matlack
Webster
and
Ful
tz
of road ; thence north 63 degrees
Attorneys for Plaintiffs (91 and Grote. LP- Koosman
32' east 391.6 feet to a stake In
(6-10). HRs- Fernandez (3rd) , Hernandez (8) and Sanguillen,
(tnter of road ; thence north -47
18 ) 19, 26 (9 ) 2, 9, 16, 23, JO , 7t Popvlch (4th). Kranepool (13) . WP-EIIIs (9-7). LP-Carlton
degrees 52' east 329 teet to a
(18-9) . HRs-Qiiver (Uih), Simstake In center of road ; thence
Hooten (1-0) and Rudolph ; mons (7th) .
north oi9degrees east 1010 feet to
a st•ke in center of road; thence
McGraw, Frisella (9) and Dyer.
NOTICE OF SALE
north 17 degrees .., . East 39.4
010 001 ooo-- 2 10 2
LP- Frlsella (7-5). HRs-WII- so
By
y
lrtue
ot
an
Order
of
Sale
teet to a stake In center of road ; dulY Issued out of the Court ot Iiams (26th). Singleton (lOth).
Los Ang 010 000 ooo-- I 8 I
thence north 59 degrees east 270
Roberls (13-15) and Barlon ;
Pleas, Meigs County,
tnt to • st•ke in center of road Common
Sutton
(!4-121 and Sims. HROhiO,
in
the
case
of
RKE
Mil
000
000
OlG1
6
0
at Intersection of crossroads ; Federal Cred it Un ion vs . Ralph
Stahl
(6th)
.
000 000 ooo-- 0 4 1
thence south 31 de-grees 50' east Snider, et al. upon a judgment Phlla
McAnally
(10·10)
and
Bate115 teet to the Radford west therein rendered , being Cause
Clnci
lint ; thence south 1345 feet to No.
in sa id Cour t . 1 will man ; Fryman, Lersch (9) and SF
corner , the place of beginn ing , offer14,7U
Ryan.
LPFryman
(10-7)
.
public sale at the front
conta ining 57 .73 acres. more or door at
of fhe Court House in
Jess. reserYing to the or•ntors Pomeroy
000 000 1()()- 1 6 0
, Oh io, on the 27fh day
herein. their heirs and assigns, of September.
1971.
at
10:00
100 300 OOx11 .1
all the coal under the above

Linescores

enjoyed 23 attractions in 29
concerts throughout the area.
Other concert series already
announced in neighboring
communities are as follows :
Parkersburg, Roberta Peters,
soprano, Nov. 3; Longstrellt and
Escasa, Jan. 30, 1972; Worth
and Crow, duo organists, April
29.
Marietta , Frula Yugoslav
Dance Ensemble, Oct. 12;
Berkshire Chamber Players,
Jan. 7, 1m; _Vienna Academy
Chorus, Feb. 3, 1972 ; Lee
Luvisi, pianist, April 19, 1972.
Lancaster, Ohio State
University Chorale, Oct. 27;
Bruce Yarnell, baritone, Dec. 8;
DePasquale String Quartet,
Jan . 23, 19'i2 ; Indianapolis
Symphony, April 8, 1972.
Charleston, W. Va., Spanish
RTV Symphony_Orchestra of
Madrid, Oct. 20; Giorgio Tozzi,
bass baritone, Nov. 8; Vienna
Academy Chorus, March 16,
1972; Ronald Turini, pianist,
April17, 1m.
Portsmouth has scheduled the
New York Brass Quintet and lite
Norman Luboff Choir, with the
dates and the remainder of its
series to be announced after !he
close of a membership campaign . Ashla nd, Ky., and
Zanesville wiU also be an-

...~

llfiiCWI ~ IWIOit•

~-

Help Wanted

CERTIFIED firemen . equal
opportunity· employment.
Gallipolis. Pt. Pleasant ,
Middleport ar ea. Ideal
working conditions . Modern rea l estale is $2,400.00.
equ i pment. Inquiries con .

lldentlal. Reply Box 729-S, c-o
The Dally Senlinel, Pomeroy.
Ohio.
9-!6-3tp

ITEM: Jack

Kane ~

ou somehow get the
ling he hiS thO"'ht
bout
what · he'
aring wlltl you'. Your
ling i.s right.
.

-·

Terms of Sale : ca sh on da y Qf

s al ~ .

Robert c . Hartenba ch
Sheriff of Meigs County .
(8) 26 (9) 2. 9, 16, 23, 51

SHIRt
FINISHING

SIZE

For Car and Home

2 TUBES

KINDNESS"
REG. '2.50 ONLY •1.29

''The Porta-8"

Model

listening

750

90 dav warranty

,creme Rinse, 16

I.

oz., Reg. 99c

Shampoo Protein, 16 oz., Reg. 99c
S.th Beads, Reg. 99c
B;abY Shampoo, Reg. 99c

SAl£

95

M~

REG. 99'
ANY

~=~

MOORE'S

$1.7~

994

REG.

Now

L--------

VENTED
GAS H£ATERS

REG.

'2.50
.'

Fir•s de "

Radiants

Glowing

...
.,

'•I

•

DRISTAN

68~

24's

REG. '1.69

(Linit One)

77'

TABLETS

GELUSIL

99~

ROLL-ON

PAMPERS

. .

JOO'S

36's
REG. 7'1

6 oz.

Wlnt
24
FREE

AmR

RINSE
REG. 11.09

45
OA YTIME 30's .... ~.l:~?.... •
.
79"'
DAYTIME 15's................ __
1
29
NEWBORN 30 s......... · •
PAMPE~S
.

.

VITAMINS
-

69~

~-"?~
~NTIIIATIIO

IEIIDAL IIIIJIUIA

for $5.95 and three Pampers
proofs-of-purchase
See Our
Store lor
Details

Reg . • ,

PAMPERS

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

UNICAP

1% Ol
REG. 11.09

OHAIR

PAMPER$

•MODERN AND BEAUTIFUL WITH " PICTURE FRAME"
STYLING TO FIT ANY DECOR .
.
·
oDESERT SAND BEI GE SHERATON BROWij
MAHOGANY

POMEROY, OHIO

48 PADS

bari

$1.49
4-soxEs$1

NEW TOP-0-MATIC CONTROLS FOR COM f ORT

MAIN STREET ·

•1.2

REGULAR OR
MENTHOL
REG. '1.19

LIQUID ANTACID

PUFF
PRINTS

"EVERYTHIIG IN HARDWARE"
992·2811

CRAYONS
REG. '1.19

lZOl

REG.
11•49

~------------~---------~~w~-----------

ANACIN TA8l£1S

ANACII

1110's

REG.
'1.69

99~ ' .!e7..=!'~~.

99$
UIIT OIIE

DEODORANT

Alook inside the WARM MORNING gas
heater sl.s why it leads in sales!
11

ONLY

REG. '1.49

REG. _'2.50

- .......

DIFFERENT OOIDRED

CREAM

30's

oz.

...

64's

75•

sillS
disallnfulls

BORN BLONDE
KIT

'

CRAYOLAS

25's

CLEANS
BEAUTIFIES
PROTECTS

CLAIROL

•

3.

ALKA-SELTZER

IDIIII

COBCO.

1. Huvy Seam-Welded Heat 4. lnlernal Droll Hood
Chlmbor
s. Rigid Frame Construcllan
l . "Litt· Tiw.e" Cut Iron 6. Quiet Operating " Qirpetof
llltrnerl
Comfor1" BIOW(&gt; r

2 FOR$} ar 49~

POMEROY

Reg.

-

REG.

SINUTAB~ SHAVE
relieves
14

REG. sl.Z5

36's

EDGE

Just Spray ...
Brush ...
and •.. GO
7 oz.

8 OZ. BOTTLE

Excedriri

40l
REG. '1.00
. .

2.-99~

Pll 992·2848

KAOPECTATE

88'

VITALIS
DRY
CONTROL

NO. 724
REG. 89'

'1.49

or Match

New(W_£

•

oz.

REG.

............pers.special otter

Ust Our Free Parking Lot

216 E. 2nd, Porntroy

2%

Hair Spray, Reg. 99c

Stereo Tapes Good Selection 5.99

124 W. MAIN

[1 ouMt£ Sill]

'119

POWDER

SUAVE

RIIUiar
39.95 ~ •

29

'1.89

SPRAY

"

Includes ear plug for pr illate

DEODORANT

TABLETS

VESPRE

Pllfable 8 Track Tape Pla,er

Power- 6 "D" type batteries
Tone control

SPRAY

REG.

HEAT-ACTIVATED CONDITIONER

~......:;...--~---------j RINSE AWAY

fOR All

PUINITUII
MIDDUPOIT, 0 • .

59~

SPECIAL-SPECIAL

DC converter

n

60's

HEADQUARtERS

..

Breath Spray

9 Models To Choose From

Power jack for

15 Ol

LISTERINE

Car Stereo Tape Players
39.95 to 79.95

Completelv por tab le

V05 ·Shampoo

200l 99~
REG. '1.59

89~

REG. Br

sa~

USTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

44~

69'

AT MOORE'S

/rom /Jaf.r 'J •••

In At 9-0ut At 5

'1.50

.
X-lARGE

~4nol~er •(]ooJ 8"'1

SAME DAY
SERVICE

WMP0/1390 Robinson's aeailers

REG.

(5).

HOOVER

REG.

SO's

60's
REG. '1.39

FOR LOW COST, AUTOMATIC WARMFLOOR HEATING

O 'Clock A .M ., the following
lands and tenem ents :
Situated in the Village Of
Middleport , Meig s County ,
Ohio. Be ing Lot No. 85 In
Bosworth 's Addition to Lower
Pom eroy , now In corpora t ed
Into and made a part of the ,
VIllage of M iddleport.
Deed Reference : Vol . 207,
Pege •15, Meigs County Deed
Records .
Being also known as 207
Beech Street. Middleport, Ohio.
The l PPr aised value of the

REG.
$1.09

COPE
.......

F)R!VE·IN

described prem i ses w ith th e
right to mine the same. Also the
ex clusi ve right In perpetuity to
use so much of tHe surface of the
abOve described real estate as
may bt necessary to open ,

VISINE

---

Reg .

·

.

99c

1

MYCITRACIN
OINTMENT

"'

%OZ.

_5; .
Reg
51

Reg.

9

OVERNIGHT 12'•····· ·~~ ..

REG.

99~

REG.
'1.58

77~

UIIICAP
atEWABLE
VITAli liS

lOG's

Wmt
24
FREE

CHECK OUR BEAUTY DEPT.

· FABERGE KIKU
SPlASH ON

6 oz.

(---'= _

IIJT PAllS
aJLOGNE RDFF

:o~$1.99

�t-'l'lleDiii)'Sellllnei,Pameroy~,O., Seplember16,19l.

... : ·:·... :··.·.···

l"rrNESS DEMONSTRATION
NEW YO)U!: (UPI) - In
COLUMBUS (UPI) - 1be honor of National Physical
County Commlssloaers ' Fitness Day, a group of
Association of
Ohio's joggers, paCed by Joe Pardo a
Tautlon Committee Wed· . hlind llll!sseur at the Flushing,
oesday anuouuc.ed Its support N. V., YMCA, will J&amp;in ID a
of a personal Income and llll!SSive outdoor phySical fit.
corporate tax because a ness demonstration Friday at
. reveaue-ralslog plan .~ New York's Dag Hsmmerskjold
ou tile sales tu "would Plaza. The joggers will deJiart
generate
Inadequate from various YMCAs through.
revenues for counties and out ·the city and convene at the
local government."
plaza.
Fred Deerlog, Erie County
commissioner and chalrmaa
of the committee, said local
governments have been
slighted bi state fundlug In
TONIGHT
the past, but lbe personal
," Sepl. 16
Income tax approach would
NOT OPEN
give them more money.
Friday thru Tuesday
Seplember 17-21
THE REIVERS
(Tedlnicolorl
WCfUTOMEET
Steve McQueen
The annual meeting of the
Sharon Farrell
Meigs County WCTU will be
GP
A
MAN
held Sunday at 2 p. m. at the
CALLEO HORSE
Middleport Baptist Church .
ITtchnic:olorJ
James Roach will be the
Richard Harris
speaker.
GP

Green Thumb
Notes. • ..
A -'ly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

NELSON'

. MEIGS tHEAtRE~ ·

Ed. Note : Due to the Labor Day Holiday, Mrs. W. 0 .
Damitz' "Green Tllunb Notes" missed its publication date.
Her article is !Qbllslied below.
BY MRS. W. 0. liAKNli'Z
lleDd 0' Tile River Club,
Letart, RaciDe aDd Pcmeroy
'l'lllals the time of theyear when work grows less In our early
Oowergm-den&amp;. Tbe8UIIllllel'flowershavereacbed their peak and
require little care frcm now CHI. Mums which are next In blooming
..-derDeedlllllecare. So now we begin to prepare for neztseason.
~rbaps first In crde.- Is attention to Iris and peonies. The
foliage llbould have been cut from them by now. They may be
divided Cl' moved so that the new roots can fCI'Ill before freezing
weather. HOIII!Ver, IIley both stand neglect very well and without
lllOI'inC Cl' any special care will bloom profu.lely year after year.
.So now we can lbiJi: of our CU'tlll and bulbs for early spring
Oowerq. What is mCI'e cheerful than to look out on a gloomy
March day and see lovely Cl1JCU8 dotilng the lawn? To have them
next aprlng It Is time to set the CCI'DlS from now on until late Oc·
Iaber. They shwld be aet two to three Inches apart In a bed and
twa or three Inches deep. All varieties of which there are many,
are of easy cnllure . and should be planted In sun or light

7_ , . Dall7 sentinel, Pmieroy-Mid!lleport, 0 ,. September 16, 1971

...

''

French Singers
Coining to Area

Long Bottom

Social Notes

EYE DROPS

The Varel and Bailly Company .

%Ol

nouncing their reSPeCtive series
soon.
A complete cslendar of all
area concerts will be mailed to
each member with his memshade.
bership card.
Of many JIM!IJ!ben of the Narcissua family probably the mQSt
The current annual campaign
famutw are the joQqull and daffodil. They should not be moved
One of the mast pojlular and Waverly series will be
for
new members continues this
untlllbe foliage bas c&lt;mpletely died but before new root growth entertaining groups that has . Raymond Mlchaiski, · bass
week through Saturday. Ad·
bu begun. 1bis is in early autumn. They demand little care and appeared on a Tri-County baritone, on Nov. 8, and duonnission to the concerts is by
can be grown in almoat any aoll. With their wealth of lovely and Community Concert series In harpists, Longstreth and
membership card only, with no
recent years is returning this Escosa on April 3.
early biO!II1!IB they t!eaerve a place In any garden.
tickets sold at the door for an
A membership in the Tri·
'l'ull!lll, wblch ciCIIIely follow or interlap the narcissus, offer a season to Waverly.
individual
concert.
The Varel and Bailly Com- County Community Concert
great oppoi'lumty_fCI' co!CI' all tllmigb the spring. If a variety of
Mrs. James A. Beverly is
apecies is planted One can bave blossoms frOm early April until pany, alively_ Jll'OUI! of young Association entities its holder to
general
chairman of this year's
late ID May. Tiley shwld be aet In a sunny place In light fertile French singers, is coming to the attend all community concerts
membership drive, assisted by
1011, fo..- to six lncbes apart and about ten Inches below ground. Waverly High School for a given in the surrounding area,
Mrs. Donald M. Thaler.
Tbey shculd be planted between the mllldle of October and the community concert on Feb. 14. if seats are available. Last
Heading teams of workers in
mW!e of November. They may be left ID. the same place in- Other attractions on the year, local members could have
Gallipolis are Mrs. M. T. Bucci,
definitely and sUII bloom beautifully.
Mrs. L. R. Ford, Jr., Mr. and
ByaciDth bulbs should be planted between the middle of
Mrs. Jonathan Louden, Mrs.
Seplember and late October about three IDches below the surface
Lewis Schmidt, Mrs. Charles
'and four to liJ: inches apart. Tbey will do well In any good fertile By Uniled Preis lnlernationa.l
Lingo, Miss Susan White, Mrs.
American Laague
IIi!.
Robert Fanning, Mrs. John H.
New York 001 000 102- 4 9 1
There are many other, not so common, early flowering Balli
Smith and John T. Griffin.
000 001 001- 2 8 0
Kline (11 -13) and Munson ;
plan1B,ICII!le from cmns and same frcm bulbs, all of which may
Lawrence Huber is captain of
Cuellar
(18-9) and Hendricks.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis
be ael110011. Among them are the snowdrop, anemone and grape · HRs-Hansen
lite
Rio Grande team and other
(2nd), Murcer
entertained
with
a
cookout
bfaciDth. Each of these Is easily planted and easily cared for and (24th). Robinson (17th) .
workers are canvassing
recently.
Guests
were
Mr.
and
Jackson,
Oak Hill, Middleport,
win reward one with that calCI' and beauty which is so welcome (lsi game)
Mrs,
Hobart
Newell
and
family
Pomeroy, Racine and Syracuse.
after the lmg gloomy winter.
Oakld
100 000 02o- 3 .JJ 0
of
Chester
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
In West Virginia, teams have
Chicago 010 100 ooo-- 2 4 0
Dobson, Grant (7) and John Newell and sons of
beeli organized in Pt. Pleasant,
Tenace; Wood (20-12) and
Mason and Ravenswood.
operat e and equ ip a complete Herrmann. WP-Gran1 (6.J) . Columbus and Mary Pierce.
LEGAL NOTICE
coal m i ning property with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Garth
Smi!h
Anyone who has not yet
bu ildings, and railroad switches HRs-Johnslone (15th), Melton
LEGAL NOTICE
spent
a
weekend
with
Mr.
and
necessary to mine, load and
(301h) , Bando (21st) . - renewed his membership is
Charles Watkins, whose place
away coal from adjacent {2nd game)
Mrs. Howard Young of Paden
of residence is unknown ; the carry
urged to do so inunedlately.
properties, said grantors, their Oakld
000 100 101- 3 7 4
unknown heirs, devisees, heirs
City, W.Va.
Any
new resident who has not
and
assigns
to
be
relieved
Chicago
031
110
lOx7
11
0
leg•tees, executors. ad .
Odom
Roland
(6) and
Alice Curtis is a patient at
yet
ministretors end assigns of from any sur:face damage by
been
contacted by a worker
of mining of coal under
' Jah
1
)
d Ve te~ans Memorial Hospital. .- ---~-.--.-.--Chor!es Walkins. If deceased. reason
said pr8mlses. Any surface land • Dune~ ;
n 12·15 ,~n
may call 446-1~ or visit drive
whose names and plac;es of required or used as above by Egan. LP- Odom (10-11) . nRs
David
Smith,
Marietta,
spent
of
Tuppers
_
Plam:'
VISited
Mr.
headquarters at 11 Court St. to
reaidence are unknown to the said gr'antors, their heirs and - Egan (1011\), Monday (17th).
plai ntiffs; Mula L . Watkins, assigns, to be paid for at the
!he weekend with Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Riley ~gott and Mr. join the association.
whose place Of residence is
of $125.00 per acre . Ex. Ca I
and Mrs. Sanume Rairden.
040 000 02o- 6 12 3 David Smillt.
unknown ; the unknown heirs, rate
ceptlng
J
.2
acres
conYeyed
to
G.
KC
000
001
lDO2
4
1
devisees, legatees, executors,
Mr. and Mrs. Keillt Ridenour
Mrs . Jack Stalzer . ?nd
. Carleton , et al. Excepting 112
Messersmith
(17-13)
and
Toradmlnlstnlors and assigns of TAcre
to Carroll end
(Lilah Hayman) are an- daughter of Columbus VISited r.'-!1"'!"-..- - - - . ,
Marla L. Watkins, if deceased , VIvianconveved
Johnson by deed dated borg ; DaiCanton, BuHer (5).
whose names and places of October 13, 1965, recorded In York (7) and Kirkpatrick, nounclng the birth of a son, Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter.
residence are unknown to the Volume 225, Page 5-49, Meigs Paepke (5). LP- DaiCanton (8- Sept 1 at Sl Joseph Hospital
Mr. and Mrs. lloyd McPeek
M~SON
plalntltfs; Edward Watkins , County Deed Records . EX· 6) . HR- Messersmith (2nd) .
Par.kersbu.rg , Maternal of Belleville, W. Va., visited Mr.
whose place of residence is ceptlng 2.24 Acre conveyed to
unknown ; the unknown heirs, Ada Starcher by deed dated
000 000 001- I 2 o grandparent is Ernestine Hay- and Mrs. Charles Hensley.
devl&amp;ees, legatees, executors .. May 28 , 1968, recorded · in Mlnn
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Ml
lw
000 000 ooo-- 0 6 1 man and Mr. and Mrs.
administrators and ass igns of Volume 235, Page 909, Meigs
Pat and Dee Dee Smith were
Sepl. 17-18-19
Blyleven I13· !5) and Roof; Gordon Ridenour of Chester are overnight guests of Anderson
Edward Watkins, If deceased, County Deed Records . E xWho&amp;e names and places of cepting .85 Acre conveved to Lockwood (9:14) and Porter.
DOUBLE FEATURE
residence 1re unknown to the Ralph and Pearl Si sson by deed
paternal grandparents
Kibble, Reedsville.
3TIMESTHE LAFFIN
pla intiffS, will take notice that dated November 8, 1969, Wash
100 010 ooo-- 2 7 0 Mr. and Mrs. ~h Wells
Wes Stern
Violet
Smith
Allen E . Ball and Freda Ball, on r ecorded In Volume 241, Page Detroit
100
Ill
OOx4
6
0
Joan
Coll ins
the 17th day of August, 1971, 217 , Me i gs Count y
De ed
Mclain, Grzenda (8) and announce the birth of a son,
3 IN THE CELLAR
tiled their complaint against Recor ds.
Billings; Coleman (18-8) and Sept. I at Holzer Medical
you In the Common Pleas Court
Color
prayer of sa id compla int Freeman. LP-Mclaln (9-10) .
of Meigs County, Oh io, being is The
Center. Paternal grandparents Highest I c e b e r g reliably
PLUS
for the partition of said real
Case No. 14.tl9. for the partition
to have the interest of HRs-~odriguez (15th) , Unser are Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wells. recorded loomed 550 feet
3 JNTHEAnJC
of the real estate herinafter estate,
the plaintiffs set off to them or, llSth), Northrup (14th) .
Yvette M im i eu x
sevenabove
the
water,
yet
described, and to quiet title to if the same cannot be done, then
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Christopher
Jones
sa id real estate , and requiring that such real estate be solr:t ; Boston
000 211 011- 6 9 3 Larkins were Mr. and Mrs. eighths of it was below the
you to set up your interest that defendants ar e required to
Color
surface.
000 004 01o- 5 12 1
therein , if any, which real set forth their interest In said Cleve
Loren Ralph, Columbus, and
Lonborg,
Lee
(7)
,
Bolin
(8)
,
ntate Is described as follows : real estate or be forever barred
Smith, Nelsonville,
The following described real from asserting the same i and Lyle (8), Brett (9) and Fisk; Cora
tstate situated in the Township thai plaintiffs' title to sa id Foster, Lamb (6). Ballinger Howard Larkins and Brent of
of Chester , County of Meigs and
be quieted as age lnst (7) , Farmer (9) and Fosse. WP Portland and Mr. and Mrs.
\State of Ohio, being in Section 4, premises
said defendants·, and for such - Lyle (6-4). LP- Farmer 15-4) .
Town 2. Range 13. of the Ohio other relief as IS pr oper .
Junior Hauber.
HR- Pelrocelll (241h).
Company's Purchase, and more
The above mentioned parties
Visiting Serena Sisson were
particularly described as will further take notice tha·t
National League
follows, to-wit : Beg inning at the they have been made parties
010 210 ooo-- 4 9 2 Mr. and Mrs. Don Sisson and
corner of the Barbara Wippel defend•nt to sa id complaint, Atlanta
100 000 001- 2 4 0 daughters and Mrs. Georgia
farm , the same being the corner and that they are required to Houston
on Flatwoods Road ; thence anower with in twenty-eight !281
Nlekro {14-12) and Williams; Sisson of Vienna, W. Va., Nelson
west 2701 feet to the corner of deys from the last date of Billingham, Guinn (6), Ray (9)
Morgan and Wippel ; then ce publication of this notice, the and Edwards. LP- BIIIingham Sisson, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
north 150 feetto the center of the answer date being Octobef 28, (8-IS) . HR- Aaron (44th) .
House, Radnor.
roed ; thence north 6S degrees 1971.
Sue Gasters, Waverly, and
nst 111 feet to a stake in the
(1st gamel
center of the road; thence north
Varian Cozart were married at
Allen E. Ball Chicago
020 120 OIG- 6 II 0
77 di'Qrees 30' eest 170 f eet to a
Freda
Ball
Ashland, Ky., Sept. lOth.
stake In the center of the road ;
Pla intiffs New York 000 000 002- 2 5 2
thence north Sl degrees 27' east
Hands (I 1-18) and Fernandez;
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
:)17 .3 fHt to a Stake in the center
Koosman.
Captra
(51
Matlack
Webster
and
Ful
tz
of road ; thence north 63 degrees
Attorneys for Plaintiffs (91 and Grote. LP- Koosman
32' east 391.6 feet to a stake In
(6-10). HRs- Fernandez (3rd) , Hernandez (8) and Sanguillen,
(tnter of road ; thence north -47
18 ) 19, 26 (9 ) 2, 9, 16, 23, JO , 7t Popvlch (4th). Kranepool (13) . WP-EIIIs (9-7). LP-Carlton
degrees 52' east 329 teet to a
(18-9) . HRs-Qiiver (Uih), Simstake In center of road ; thence
Hooten (1-0) and Rudolph ; mons (7th) .
north oi9degrees east 1010 feet to
a st•ke in center of road; thence
McGraw, Frisella (9) and Dyer.
NOTICE OF SALE
north 17 degrees .., . East 39.4
010 001 ooo-- 2 10 2
LP- Frlsella (7-5). HRs-WII- so
By
y
lrtue
ot
an
Order
of
Sale
teet to a stake In center of road ; dulY Issued out of the Court ot Iiams (26th). Singleton (lOth).
Los Ang 010 000 ooo-- I 8 I
thence north 59 degrees east 270
Roberls (13-15) and Barlon ;
Pleas, Meigs County,
tnt to • st•ke in center of road Common
Sutton
(!4-121 and Sims. HROhiO,
in
the
case
of
RKE
Mil
000
000
OlG1
6
0
at Intersection of crossroads ; Federal Cred it Un ion vs . Ralph
Stahl
(6th)
.
000 000 ooo-- 0 4 1
thence south 31 de-grees 50' east Snider, et al. upon a judgment Phlla
McAnally
(10·10)
and
Bate115 teet to the Radford west therein rendered , being Cause
Clnci
lint ; thence south 1345 feet to No.
in sa id Cour t . 1 will man ; Fryman, Lersch (9) and SF
corner , the place of beginn ing , offer14,7U
Ryan.
LPFryman
(10-7)
.
public sale at the front
conta ining 57 .73 acres. more or door at
of fhe Court House in
Jess. reserYing to the or•ntors Pomeroy
000 000 1()()- 1 6 0
, Oh io, on the 27fh day
herein. their heirs and assigns, of September.
1971.
at
10:00
100 300 OOx11 .1
all the coal under the above

Linescores

enjoyed 23 attractions in 29
concerts throughout the area.
Other concert series already
announced in neighboring
communities are as follows :
Parkersburg, Roberta Peters,
soprano, Nov. 3; Longstrellt and
Escasa, Jan. 30, 1972; Worth
and Crow, duo organists, April
29.
Marietta , Frula Yugoslav
Dance Ensemble, Oct. 12;
Berkshire Chamber Players,
Jan. 7, 1m; _Vienna Academy
Chorus, Feb. 3, 1972 ; Lee
Luvisi, pianist, April 19, 1972.
Lancaster, Ohio State
University Chorale, Oct. 27;
Bruce Yarnell, baritone, Dec. 8;
DePasquale String Quartet,
Jan . 23, 19'i2 ; Indianapolis
Symphony, April 8, 1972.
Charleston, W. Va., Spanish
RTV Symphony_Orchestra of
Madrid, Oct. 20; Giorgio Tozzi,
bass baritone, Nov. 8; Vienna
Academy Chorus, March 16,
1972; Ronald Turini, pianist,
April17, 1m.
Portsmouth has scheduled the
New York Brass Quintet and lite
Norman Luboff Choir, with the
dates and the remainder of its
series to be announced after !he
close of a membership campaign . Ashla nd, Ky., and
Zanesville wiU also be an-

...~

llfiiCWI ~ IWIOit•

~-

Help Wanted

CERTIFIED firemen . equal
opportunity· employment.
Gallipolis. Pt. Pleasant ,
Middleport ar ea. Ideal
working conditions . Modern rea l estale is $2,400.00.
equ i pment. Inquiries con .

lldentlal. Reply Box 729-S, c-o
The Dally Senlinel, Pomeroy.
Ohio.
9-!6-3tp

ITEM: Jack

Kane ~

ou somehow get the
ling he hiS thO"'ht
bout
what · he'
aring wlltl you'. Your
ling i.s right.
.

-·

Terms of Sale : ca sh on da y Qf

s al ~ .

Robert c . Hartenba ch
Sheriff of Meigs County .
(8) 26 (9) 2. 9, 16, 23, 51

SHIRt
FINISHING

SIZE

For Car and Home

2 TUBES

KINDNESS"
REG. '2.50 ONLY •1.29

''The Porta-8"

Model

listening

750

90 dav warranty

,creme Rinse, 16

I.

oz., Reg. 99c

Shampoo Protein, 16 oz., Reg. 99c
S.th Beads, Reg. 99c
B;abY Shampoo, Reg. 99c

SAl£

95

M~

REG. 99'
ANY

~=~

MOORE'S

$1.7~

994

REG.

Now

L--------

VENTED
GAS H£ATERS

REG.

'2.50
.'

Fir•s de "

Radiants

Glowing

...
.,

'•I

•

DRISTAN

68~

24's

REG. '1.69

(Linit One)

77'

TABLETS

GELUSIL

99~

ROLL-ON

PAMPERS

. .

JOO'S

36's
REG. 7'1

6 oz.

Wlnt
24
FREE

AmR

RINSE
REG. 11.09

45
OA YTIME 30's .... ~.l:~?.... •
.
79"'
DAYTIME 15's................ __
1
29
NEWBORN 30 s......... · •
PAMPE~S
.

.

VITAMINS
-

69~

~-"?~
~NTIIIATIIO

IEIIDAL IIIIJIUIA

for $5.95 and three Pampers
proofs-of-purchase
See Our
Store lor
Details

Reg . • ,

PAMPERS

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

UNICAP

1% Ol
REG. 11.09

OHAIR

PAMPER$

•MODERN AND BEAUTIFUL WITH " PICTURE FRAME"
STYLING TO FIT ANY DECOR .
.
·
oDESERT SAND BEI GE SHERATON BROWij
MAHOGANY

POMEROY, OHIO

48 PADS

bari

$1.49
4-soxEs$1

NEW TOP-0-MATIC CONTROLS FOR COM f ORT

MAIN STREET ·

•1.2

REGULAR OR
MENTHOL
REG. '1.19

LIQUID ANTACID

PUFF
PRINTS

"EVERYTHIIG IN HARDWARE"
992·2811

CRAYONS
REG. '1.19

lZOl

REG.
11•49

~------------~---------~~w~-----------

ANACIN TA8l£1S

ANACII

1110's

REG.
'1.69

99~ ' .!e7..=!'~~.

99$
UIIT OIIE

DEODORANT

Alook inside the WARM MORNING gas
heater sl.s why it leads in sales!
11

ONLY

REG. '1.49

REG. _'2.50

- .......

DIFFERENT OOIDRED

CREAM

30's

oz.

...

64's

75•

sillS
disallnfulls

BORN BLONDE
KIT

'

CRAYOLAS

25's

CLEANS
BEAUTIFIES
PROTECTS

CLAIROL

•

3.

ALKA-SELTZER

IDIIII

COBCO.

1. Huvy Seam-Welded Heat 4. lnlernal Droll Hood
Chlmbor
s. Rigid Frame Construcllan
l . "Litt· Tiw.e" Cut Iron 6. Quiet Operating " Qirpetof
llltrnerl
Comfor1" BIOW(&gt; r

2 FOR$} ar 49~

POMEROY

Reg.

-

REG.

SINUTAB~ SHAVE
relieves
14

REG. sl.Z5

36's

EDGE

Just Spray ...
Brush ...
and •.. GO
7 oz.

8 OZ. BOTTLE

Excedriri

40l
REG. '1.00
. .

2.-99~

Pll 992·2848

KAOPECTATE

88'

VITALIS
DRY
CONTROL

NO. 724
REG. 89'

'1.49

or Match

New(W_£

•

oz.

REG.

............pers.special otter

Ust Our Free Parking Lot

216 E. 2nd, Porntroy

2%

Hair Spray, Reg. 99c

Stereo Tapes Good Selection 5.99

124 W. MAIN

[1 ouMt£ Sill]

'119

POWDER

SUAVE

RIIUiar
39.95 ~ •

29

'1.89

SPRAY

"

Includes ear plug for pr illate

DEODORANT

TABLETS

VESPRE

Pllfable 8 Track Tape Pla,er

Power- 6 "D" type batteries
Tone control

SPRAY

REG.

HEAT-ACTIVATED CONDITIONER

~......:;...--~---------j RINSE AWAY

fOR All

PUINITUII
MIDDUPOIT, 0 • .

59~

SPECIAL-SPECIAL

DC converter

n

60's

HEADQUARtERS

..

Breath Spray

9 Models To Choose From

Power jack for

15 Ol

LISTERINE

Car Stereo Tape Players
39.95 to 79.95

Completelv por tab le

V05 ·Shampoo

200l 99~
REG. '1.59

89~

REG. Br

sa~

USTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

44~

69'

AT MOORE'S

/rom /Jaf.r 'J •••

In At 9-0ut At 5

'1.50

.
X-lARGE

~4nol~er •(]ooJ 8"'1

SAME DAY
SERVICE

WMP0/1390 Robinson's aeailers

REG.

(5).

HOOVER

REG.

SO's

60's
REG. '1.39

FOR LOW COST, AUTOMATIC WARMFLOOR HEATING

O 'Clock A .M ., the following
lands and tenem ents :
Situated in the Village Of
Middleport , Meig s County ,
Ohio. Be ing Lot No. 85 In
Bosworth 's Addition to Lower
Pom eroy , now In corpora t ed
Into and made a part of the ,
VIllage of M iddleport.
Deed Reference : Vol . 207,
Pege •15, Meigs County Deed
Records .
Being also known as 207
Beech Street. Middleport, Ohio.
The l PPr aised value of the

REG.
$1.09

COPE
.......

F)R!VE·IN

described prem i ses w ith th e
right to mine the same. Also the
ex clusi ve right In perpetuity to
use so much of tHe surface of the
abOve described real estate as
may bt necessary to open ,

VISINE

---

Reg .

·

.

99c

1

MYCITRACIN
OINTMENT

"'

%OZ.

_5; .
Reg
51

Reg.

9

OVERNIGHT 12'•····· ·~~ ..

REG.

99~

REG.
'1.58

77~

UIIICAP
atEWABLE
VITAli liS

lOG's

Wmt
24
FREE

CHECK OUR BEAUTY DEPT.

· FABERGE KIKU
SPlASH ON

6 oz.

(---'= _

IIJT PAllS
aJLOGNE RDFF

:o~$1.99

�1-'I'II!DIIIJS :5 ),PwaUJ.Mddlepert,O.,SL!ptemberl6,1971

First Negro
Commander
Paid Honors

POLLY'S POINTERS
Convert Litter

.

Into Ash Trays

-·

By POLLY CRAftiER

Mrs. Mary Martin, chapeau
of Ohio Departemental, Eight
and Forty, and Mrs. Myrtle
Walker, her le secretalrecassiere were among those
attending the Saturday night
testimonial dinner honoring
Charles R. Green, new commander of Department of Ohio,
American Legion.
The dinner was held at 6 p. m.
at the Roumanian Orthodox
Fellowship Hall at Warren.
Green is the first Negro to be
elected a state commander in
the history of the American
Legion.
Present for the testimonial
dinner was John H. Geiger, Des
Plains, Ill., national comm~nder _ Past department

_ _ ._.,... Polly's Problem _ _ _ _.,.,

.' .

DEAR POLLY-Several years ago I covered a
bedroom window with that popular adhesive-backed .
paper to keep !be light out. Now I want to remove
this paper and do bope some of the readers can tell ~
me bow to do it.--JOAN.
~

!

DEAR POLLY-One of my Pet Peeves concerns labels
: that are sewn into the seams of upholstered furniture.
; Even ~r lbeir removal a part is Left clearly visijlle
. because of !be way it was attached plus the fact that
the label was sewn to a frQnt seam. Also labels are sewn
. to !be OUTSIDE of waistbands to boys' trousers. I see
' no reason why they could not he sewn on the inside so
• the seam would not have to be ripped in order to completely remove the label.:-P~S.
DEAR POLLY-My husbaod's work shoes and hoots
developed an odor after several months wear but after
. we shook a little borax into the shoes the odor completely ·
. disappeared. Now we also use it in our tennis shoes.
-. Cbarlene might try this in her wooden clogs that have
an odor.-MRS. L . B.
DEAR POLLY'-Our forests and side roads might be
, kept cle811er if aluminum refreshment cans were saved
• and put to use ralber !ban being .pitched out along the
way_ To make ash trays and other table decorations
' cut off the lop of a can with old scissors or tin snips··· a bole can be made on the side so the scissors blade
- can be inserted to start. Next cut '14 -inch strips from
· • the lop io within one-fourth inch of the bottom. Finally
• curl the$e strips with a round toy stick with a slot in it
•or 8D old slotted screw driver. These curls could extend
up from the round-base as high or low as wanted to make
space for cigarettes when the cans are used for ash
" trays.-BETH ANN.
~ " ~ DEAR POLLY-When the lamb's wool on your ha~d
~ sboe buffer gets worn and full of polish slip it in a worn~ out Orion or nylon knee sock. This is a sure way to have
~ shoes with a spit-shine look.-'-MRS. J . H.
DEAR POLLY-When I clean the sink after doing the
t dinner disbes I put a few mint leaves from my garden
;. in the disposal turn it on for a second or two and have
~ a very pleasant scent in the kitcben.-MRS. B. J . G.

••

~

~

Attend Wedding Anniversary

'

{ SYRACUSE - Alleoding the
~ 2Sth wedding anniversary
1:
on Aug. 29 rl. Mr.
' and Mrs. Gecqe Sctmeider
~ flun out of llllm were Mr. and
WiDiam Ductworth, Mr _
:and Mrs. William Dactwcalb
~ Jr. and daughters, Diane,
; Doni-, Karen, 8Dd Lynn, Mr.
! and Mn. C2llrles Dactworlb,
tllils EftlyD Jones rl. Rittman;

William McKelvey aod Bruce,
Poriland; Mr. aod Mrs. Roy
Jones of Racine; Mr. H. A.
Sedgwick and Don, Tuppers
Plains; Mr. aod Mrs. Paul
Kloes and Michael, Mrs. Ralph
Robson, Miss Eleanor Robson,
Minersville, and a host of local
relatives aod friends.

ae.naoce

pm.

Ours Fami/11
'J

tur.
8Dd Mrs. Wayne Brubaker
;~RmandCarU, Wadsworlb;
tllr. and Mrs. Gemge Dempsey,

~::r~- ~d Di~::

in 21st Reunion

:C.Iif.; Mr. Earl Barden, .,._ 21st Ours family reum·~
:C.Otm; Miss Jackie Vaddell,
'""'
w•
hw-..;- llle Bev. L. M. was bellt SUnday _at the Rock
,"Stebbina, Gallipolis; Miss Springs ·fairgrounds with a
==~
basketdinnerallp.
m. Officers
._..ns,
A....... ; Mrs. -'-ted
Warden
"'"·Jcmes and cbildren """'
were
v~ ••
-Kim and Sue ~ president; Roy H. Bush, vice
~=-ba~~~Mr=5 _ 'Dwight p-esidenl, and Bettie Pigott,
PI
, PomaOJ; Mr. and ~lary~r. .
b
JIIJIIeS Clahrorthy and .,.,art ......., were giVen y
:'l'lrila. Mr. 8Dd Mrs. Ernest Dale Polrell, Bob ~ aod
ICICidleport- 11r and Lawrence DeL&lt;IIg. Prizes were
ThomPson awarded to Bob Ours and Albert
; Mrs. Don Jobnsm: Rinehart, lbe oldest men
8Dd Bruce Mr and Mrs pr I 1 ot; Emma Saunders and
• .
. Martha ~lock, the oldest
WO!IIen; Danny Casey and
Heath Casey, the youngest
•
JWirJ IS
attendi~; Mr. and Mrs. John
Morgan, who Ira veled the
The er--mmioo was held farthest; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H.
the 1mie rl. Mr. and Mrs. Ours, married the longest, 52

.__

~

Held

~

=~

llobstetle' SUnday. A yea.
dinner was enjoyed at Door prizes went to Barlett
Rinehart, Vera Ours, Wtllard
Atteodinc were llr- and Mrs. Ours, Myrtle Harrison,
:;E..my 0'111..- and daugbter, Lawrence Delmg and Ruby
:::=~W.Va. ; Mrs. Bessie Jones. A to1al of 132 attended
2:
Liberty, W. Va.; Mr. the reunioo to be held in 19'12 at
Mrs. Robert O'OUser and the same place oo the first
Olarlestm, W. Va.; Mr. &amp;inday in September.
Mrs. D. livingston and
~:dao!lgb~!l', Donbar, W.Va.; Mr.
PRESIDENT NAMED
WI)' Welty and Elected president recently of
~lildre., Mansfield; Mr. and the Future Homemakers
W. E. Crouser, Mr. and Association (FHA ) at Southern
James W. Bobstetter and High School was Kathy Boyd.
Mr. and Mrs. Other officers elected were
J. Bobsletter of Connie Bush, vice president,
and Mr. and Mrs. Sharon Holter, ~ecretary,
Rife and children,., Barbara Sarson, treasurer,
Debbie Milliron, reporter.

REV. STREUTKER

~ssionary

~o

Boys &amp;: Girls
lnfan1s thru Size 12
Washable fake fur
Corduroy
Nyloo, Wool
Poplin, Suede
811 lill Sell ction of

lnit and Fur Hals

GilliS

Sea Is ' Hat Sels

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
Gl H T• IIODL£POIT

FOOD FO,R AMERICANS

The Rev. Raymond Streutker
will share his experiences
missionary to the Philippines at
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church Friday, Sept. 17, at 7:30
p. m. He has completed four
terms there of missionary
service.
In his last one he was
assigned to pioneer a new
congregation in the large city of
Cagayan de Oro, _an industrial
and educational center. There
the Streutkers joined a small
group of believers for whom a
visitation program and home
Bible studies proved an ef.
fecUve means of evangelism.
Many people were brought into
the fellowship.
When a rented bali became
too small, plans were drawn for
a new church aod youth center.
Under Mr. Steutker's supervision the building was completed. A vital part of the
ministry in the city has been a
radio broadcast and half-hour
television program produced by
Mr . Streutker. When the
Streutkers left for furlough,
they left behind a growing and
enthusiastic congregation
under the leadership of a
c-dpable Filipino pastor.
The Streutkers have had
many experiences in the
Philippines since first coming to
the islands in 1951. For a time
they lived in a screenless,
lllalch-roo!ed hOUSe wiih an
outboard motorboat as the only
means of transportation to
isolated villages. Mr. Streutker
will use slides, recordings and
original chalk talks with his
message.

HOME VISITED
Members of the Eleda Circle
of the B. H. Sanborn Society,
Middleport First Baptist
Church, visited the Elmwood
Rest Home Tuesday night. In
the group which took cupcakes
and ice cream and spent the
evening visiting with the men
and women and singing songs
were Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mrs.
Beulah While, Mrs. Pearl
Mrs.
Robert
Hoffman,
Richardson, Mrs. Fred Lewis,
Miss Kathryn Werner and Mrs.
Betty Denny.

Commander Green recetved a
life membership from.his post,
a gift from the company for
which he works, and a plaque
from the _Masonic Order. His
wife and daughter presented
him with a set of praying hands,
symbolic of the role of religjon
in the life of the new comrnander.

Tickets Going
The Community Concert
ticket sales will conclude
Saturday afternoon . Two
concerts have aiready been
booked and the number of
additional concerts will be
based on the successfulness of
the ticket sales. Tickets will not
be available for individual
performances.
Selling tickets in Meigs
County are Jean
Eastern; Mrs. John Lee,
Racine; Mrs . A. E. Lee,
Syracuse; Mfs. James O'Brien,
Mrs. W. P. Lochary, Mrs.
Theodore Reed, Jr., Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer,
Pomeroy-Mason area, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mid-

Being an optimist is out these days. The ''io" thing
to be is disillusioned. An optimist is hard put to keep out
of the clutches of despair .
OPTIMIST: I have great hopes for the future . We're
on the threshold of miracles in medicine, for starters.
PESSIMIST: What good will new vaccines do? Save
the popula~ion from disease so it can die of starvation?
OPTIMIST: Scientists are at the breakthrough point
on new foods, fantastic foods made from materials here·
tofore thought of as waste products!
PESSIMIST: So, you keep people alive and where do
you put them? Into ghettos, that's where.
OPTIMlST: Inexpensive and comfortable housing can
he designed !
,

OPTIMIST: You do make i~ hard for _me ~ut may I
point out that government and industry Will JOin to1!t~e~
and do the .sensible, practical thing about our po u e
rivers and streams.
PESSIMIST: So what? What will we do with clean. air
and water if the bottles and old cars keep piling up · din
a decade we'll be buried in our own garbage. What , o
you say to that?
OPTIMISf: Tell you what l'II borrow your shovel
while you slart a game of Kick the Can.

PICNIC IS SUNDAY
Annual picnic of the Rock
Springs United Methodist
Church Sunday Scnool will be
held Sunday at 12:30 at the East
Roadside Park on Route 33.
Games and contests will be held
during the afternoon. In the
event of rain, the picnic will be
held at the church.

RE~IVALA~OUNCED
AreviVal meetmg wtll be held
at the Hiland Chapel begmnmg
Monday, Sept. 27. The
evangelist. will be _Sister Essie
Lee. Spec1al smgmg . will be
presented ~ach everung. The
serv1ce woll be held each
~vemng at 7:30p. m. The public
IS mvoted to attend.
SERVICE PLANNED
A county prayer service will
be held Sunday at 2 p. m. at the
Joppa Church. Okey Ahart will
be the leader.

new
species
of

Fall
Sweaters
Bulky
knit
cardigan
sweaters to turn to for
comfort. warmth and · ex- ·
citing good looks. From our
smart, new fall collection.

'5.98
THE NEW FALL

KNIT PANT SUITS
STRIPED TOP
WITH SOLID PANTS

WASHABLE

s

Beverly Long of Middleport to decorate it.
was named Valentine Girl of the Guest at the meeting was
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Nancy Prisner of Point
Sigma Phi Sorority at a meeting Pleasant, who has membership
The annual Sunday School
Tuesday night at the Columbus in a chapter at Wheeling, W. Va. · picnic to be held at the Midand Southern Ohio Electric Co. The group voted to sell fruit dleport Park at 3 p; m. Sunday
Selection of the Valentine Girl cakes during the holidays. The was announced during a
is made by vote of the general ·cultural report, ''Orator" was meeting of Hearthstone Class
membership on the basis of given by Annie Chapmsn and of the Middleport First Baplisl
Linda Riffie. The 1970 and 1971 Church at the home of Mr. and
activities in the sorority.
During the meeting con- pledges served refreshments. Mrs. Edison Baker.
dueled by Mrs. Vikki
David Darst conducted the
Gloeckner, plans were made for
meeting in the absence of
.the rush party to be held at 7 p.
Milton Hood, president. He
m. Tuesday at the Middleport
presented devotions laking
First United Presbyterian Petty Officer 3-c and Mrs. scripture from Matthew 25.
Church. Members are to meet Gary L. Green, formerly of Mrs. John McNeil read
at the church a\ I p.m. Monday Mason are announcing the birth . "Somewhere Along the Way."
of their first child, Christina
Officers reports were given
Ann, born Sept. 7 at the Thomas and thank you notes were read
Memorial
Hospital
in from Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Charleston, W. Va.
Hubbard for .serving the
'J
Grandparents are Mr. and reception at their daughter's
'
Mrs. Wayne Green, Wellston, wedding, and Mr. and Mrs.
IJ
and Mr. and Mrs. Forest Milton Hood for kindnesses
Lie
Parkins, Hurricane, W. Va. during their bereavement. John
Great-grandparents are Mr . McNeil thanked the class for a
PORTLAND - The Swan and Mrs. Albert E. Hawk of planter sent him while he was
reunion (descendants of A. F. near Shade; Mr. and Mrs. Guy hospitalized.
Swan and Laura Bonar) 'was
Easler, Hurricane, and Mrs. . The Rev. Charles Simons
held Sept. 12 at Portland Park.
Clarence Parkins, Millon, W. · reported on plans for the
Officers elected for the new Va. Great-great-grandparents evangelisUc crusade to be held
year were Ada Bissell, are Mrs. G. W. Stephens, Feb. 22 to March 5 with Dr.
president; Mae McPeek, vice
Milton, and Mrs. L. D. Moore of James DeWeerd as the
president; Leona Hensley,
Ashland, Ky.
evangelist.
secretary-treasurer; and
Refreshments were served by
program committee, Leola
. SAREVIVALSET
the hosts to Darst, Mr. and Mrs.
Ferrell and Clara Friend.
The Salvation Army, 115 Willia Anthony, Mr. and Mrs.
For the program, Ada Bissell Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, will
was honored for giving seven hold revival services Sunday Allen Hughes, Mr. and Mrs.
gallons of blood and Leona through Sept. 26. There will be Paul Snwt•.Mr. and Mr. John
Hensley for perfect attendance special young peoples services Werner, ,the Rev. Mr. Simons,
at Sunday School for 20 years. each evening at 7 p. m. with and Mr. and Mrs. McNeil.
Attending were Leota Ferrell, regular service at 7:30 p. m.
Medway, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. The Rev. R. Persons of
Keith FerreU and family of Cheshire will be the evangelist.
Fairborn; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Envoy Ray Wining extends an
Ferrell and daughter, Dayton; invitation to the public.
Jan Bissell, Tom Groeneveld
Mrs. Marily~ Hayman and
REViVAL PLANNED
family, Pat Smith and Mike
Revival
at HyseU Run Free
Bissell, Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd McPeek BelleviUe Methodist Church beginning
w. Va.; Mr. and' Mrs . J~ Monday through Sept. 26 with
Bissell and son, Mr. and Mrs. Rev. 0 . H. Cart as evangelist.
Charles Hensley, Clara Friend, Vocal numbers will be
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter and presented by Patty Mays and
family, Mrs. David Smith and Priscilla Dodrill. Services at
7:30 P- m. each evening. The
family and Nancy Baum.
public is invited to attend.

$}}95

more ...

a Diamond
Watch

byBU

Food Editor

Smali fry appetites can
~nd the. weekly food budget
mto a spm. However, making
ho_me snacks helps economiZe and keeps youngsters
happy_
VANILLA 'N CHIP
ICE CI\EAM POPS
1 paekace Uldlavo!fd
gelatin
·
1 tableapooa cold water
! CUJII lll:bt cream
4 ' " yort., beaten
% cup 1agar
% teu)IOOil nit
! OUDeet leml..weet cboe. tlate, eo&amp;l'lely grated
Sprinkle gelatin over cold
water; let stand 5 minu!A!s to·
softe~- In_ a small saucepan
combme light cream with e~g
yolks, sugar and salt; m1x
well. Cook over moderate
heat,_ stirring constantly, for
5 mmutes. Remove from
beat. Stir in softened gelatin
Tum mixture Into ice cube
lr!IY without divider; cool
slightly- Place in freezer and
freeze until almost firm. Re• mo~e from tray and beat
until fluffy. Beat in chocolate. Spoon into ice cream
pop forms or into ice cube
tray with divider. If using
pop forms insert sticks at
onc:e. If _usinj: ice cube tray
WIUt until DUXture is partly
frozen to insert sticks. Freeze
until firm. To unmold, separate cream from the sides
of the molds with a hot knife
Lift out carefully. Makes i
quart or 16. pops of '(, cup
each..

PESSIMISf: So, people are fed· and hOused-they'll die
of breathing dirty air.
OPTIMIST: If we start practicing today what we know
about cle.aning polluted air .. .
PESSIMIST: Weill all die of drinking dirty water.

VA

Birth Announced

Swan Fami/11
Whilehead,Reunt'on /d

dle~ort-Rulland .

~

!:1..
By BE'TTY CANARY

1411
solid rold.

Cooldng lesa011s
started
!c ltlay night by Dena I and
4 of the l'lmeroy Cub Scout
Pack 248 at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. with
Mlas Joanna DiBUer, home

Homemade ice cream pops ease budget and keep
small fry happy.
ORANGE·LEMON
ICE POPS
I package qnflavored
gelatin
1 cup orange juice
~ cup lemon juice
2 cups water
"14 cup sugar
1 table1poon pure vanilla
extract

6 diamonds.
23ltwtll.
$15CI.

Because Bulova on th e
dial says the d iamonds
are real. Not chips. Each

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2--4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Masters, Galli'polis
· , a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry E. Arthur,
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Terry E. Russell, Jackson,
daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
William H. McGinnis, Jackson,
d
G
a daughter; Mr. an Mrs. ary
Gene Daily, WeDs too, a son, and
Mr. and Mrs. Royall Estes
Beattie, Pt. Pleasant, a

economist.
'lbe CGUrse will he conducted
over the four week period with

diamond has at least 17
fa ce ts to unle as h thedeep fire and sparkle.

the boys to entertain wllb a tea
fer their mothers at the final

Anion g ou r d ia mo nd
Bulo va wa tches you ' re
sure to find th e one }'DU
want for her. From $55
to $1 ,250.

~011-

· Meeting Wednesday after
school, Den 4 made .....tal'll ~
,....._ ~·
Otlzensblp Day whlcb will he
displayed In downtown lien
wind9WJ}'rlday.
It was noted that ''COD·

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
St.

daughte~.DISCHARGES

ck olruittbeme
the
m
PI rec
ment night hill been at for
Sept. 30 at lbe IOOF baD, 0&lt;11
'lbcmu ta cubqpsler and boyl,
el3ht,nlneandl0,areell0bleto
join the pact.
AI a recent meeting rl. Den 4
at the borne of Mrs. Bemlce
McKinney, den mother, Ricky
Blaettnar, Ron CUI11111111, CUff
Kennedy, Scott McKinney,
Todd MuTtaou, Steve WIJ!i•ms
llld Cilia Wooda cmapleted
work an their pby11ca1 tlllleaa
achievement. An obstacle
COUI'IIe wu uaed to fuiiW the
hqlllremenla. Refresbmenta
were w ved.

oolb and Iatbat
!ler'VatiCII"
the

Mrs. Jessie L. Anderson, Mrs.
Denver W. Ash, Jr. and son,
Alpha L. Barr, Mrs. Harry vCrabtree, Mrs. Clarence
Crothers, Debra L. Darling
· •
Robert J. Fisher, Mrs. Stephen
E. Frazier and son, Mrs. Bazel
Haas, Miss Patsy Ann Haner,
Mrs. Robert ~arrlsoBarvnand
daughter, Ronrue W.
ey,
Mrs. Buddy Haught and son,
Thomas C. Hayman, Mrs. Jobn
W. Hlpes, Mischelle L. Holley,
Mrs. Qyde A. Hunt, Mrs. Jobn
J. Johnston and son, Mrs. WI)'
Allen Lane and son, Raymood
B. Lester, Mrs. Lemma L.
Lighter, Jerry Wayne McClung,
Jobn David Morgan, Michael A
Neutzling, Mrs. Donald E.
Ragland, Mrs. Edith M. Sayre,
Mrs. Jessie M. Scurlock, Mrs.
Ralph W. Spence, Clarence A.
Turley, Mrs. W. Brooklyn
Wallis, Albert B. Walta, Mrs.
Etla Welch, Mrs. Robert D.
Wicker and son, Mrs. Larry L.
Wiley and daugb!A!r, Mrs.
Minnie Peters, Gabriel Jaques
and Bloodena Gllberl.

NAME OMJITED
Unintentionally omitted from
a list tf thol1e attending a
reception honoring the Rev. and
Mrs. Stanton Smith Sunday
night at the Enterprise United
Methodist Church was the name
of Dorothy Long.

Womens

KEDETTES

Qalck Recopltloll
Quickest -recognition ever
offered a foreign country by
the Ullited States came
when Panama was recognized three days after it was
proclaimed a republic in
1903.

a.EARANCE , 2 • 0 0

VAWES TO '6.99 .

.

Sprinkle g e I a l i n over
orange and lemon juices; let
soften 5 minu!A!s. In a small
saucepan combine water and
sugar; bring to boiling point
and boil 5 minutes. Pour over
juice. Stir in vanilla. Pour
mixture into ice cube trays
with dividers. Push slicks in
when almost frozen.

Scouts Begin HOSPITAL Family
Culinary Art
NEWS Picnic in
were
w..
Watertown

OUR•••
GRAND CLEARANCE
OF FIRE SALE.••
KEDS

z.,._____....,....,_______,.......,....,oo#o

. By AILEEN CLAIRE

,

CanvasW'sShoes For

HERE FOR FUNERAL

Mrs. Oliver Landers of
Columbus was here over the
weekend for the funeral of her
aunt, Mrs. Addie Barton. Wbile
bere she visited Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Weeks.

CoBrewelumhusand;MrJ
. ane,
andMrsLong.HarBoo~
r
Marietta;
andMrs.
Mr.WI)'
and Close,
Mrs.
tom; Mr. and
Clyde ·Close, Leland, Rita,
Wayne and Roy.
In the afternoon a visit was
d to the
b
hich
mae
new &lt;mew
Mr. and
Mrs. WI)' Close have
based
pure
in Watertown.
_Mr ·and Mrs. Clyde aose ~
Rita, Wayne and Roy, hav~ JUSl

:::~/~~=

THURSDAY
SA11JRDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child Con- CHICKEN NOODLE dinner
servation League, Thursday, Saturday, 12 to 6 p. m. at
7:30p.m. Columbus aod South- Middleport Pentecostal Olurch,
ern Ohio Electric Co. social South Third Ave. (building
room. Speaker will be Mrs. beside church). Dinner includes
Carolyn Heines using "Want to dessert, $1.25. Free delivery if
Improve Your Children's order called in by Friday at 9!12Speech?".
2502.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 4G
DANCE Saturday Meigs
' Junwr High, Koddlepwt, 1:30 to
Royal and Select Masters, 11 :30 p.m. Jays will . __
slated assembly, 7:30 Wed- ,
SUNDAY
nesday, Pomeroy Masonic ANNUAL HOW'ro"'NG,
Temple.
Sunday, Alfred Methodist
MOTHER - DAUGHTER Omrch, be:ginning wilb Sunday
banquet of Evangeline Chapter schoo~9 : 4Sa.m. ; worsbipat 11;
172 O.E.S. Middleport, Thurs- basket dinner, 12:30. Afternoon
day at 6:30 p.m. at Masonic program, 2 p.m., featuring
Temple.
Bissell Brothers and others.
ROCK SPRING Better Health Public welcome.
Oub, I: 15 p.m. home of Mrs. HYMN SING, Morse Chapel
Clifford Leifheit. Mrs. Mark United Melbodist Omrch, 2
Grueser to have the program p.m. Sunday. Public invited.
and Mrs. Lewis Grueser the SPORTSMAN MOTO Q-os,;,
contest, A style revue will be a Sunday, Meigs Motorcycle club
feature of the program.
grounds on Route 33, five miles
MEIGS COUNTY Tuber- north of Pcaneroy. Trophies in
culosis and Respiratory Assn., all cJaSS"S. Practice, 11 a.m. to
7:30 Thursday at the home of I p.m., racing to start at 1:30
Mrs. Glenn Dill, Syracuse_
p.m.
Refreshments
at
CLASS 12, HEATH United cloubhouse.
Methodist Church, Thursday REVIVAL AT Salvation
7:30 at the church.
Army,
But!A!rnlj.t
Ave.,
EPISCOPAL CHURCH Pomeroy SUnday through Sept
women of Episcopal Church 2S at 7:30 p. m. Young ~les
Thursday, 12:30 luncheon.
services each evening at 7 p. m.
MAGNOLIA O.UB Thursday Rev. R. Persons, evangelist.
7:30 p.m. home of Mrs. Aaron MIDDLEPORT- RuUand
Kelton.
Youth Fellowship joint meeting,
FRIDAY
Sunday evening at the Rutland
THIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Church, 7 p. m. Sbort )11'1lgf8Dl,
p.m. Friday, home of Marie refreshments, recreation.
Dailey.
Banners for county youth rally
AFTER GAME Dance Friday to be made.

::S

&amp;9• or 2Pl

New Darker Fall Shade·

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced

'

Tbe sightseeing was added to
the wcmen's trip to Houstm,
Teus, to attend the Eight and
Forty nati&lt;llal convention. All
are members rl. the Meigs
Cwnty Salon 710. Mrs. Martin is
the chapeau of Ohio Deparlmlen1al Eight and Forty.
,

farm at Hot ~. and a
llmosine tour rl. San Antonio.
They visited NASA, the
Astrodcme, and the AstrOOan in
Houston,. and loured personal
aparlmenl 0( the owner li the
Astroworld Holl!llocated on the
top floor, decorated in a cirrus
motif, and furnished wilb imported antiques.

Griffith Speaks Saturday
Mrs. William Griffith will
speak at the evening service of
the Rio Grande Baptist
Association Saturday at the Rio
Grande Baptist Association
meeting beginning al2 p. m. at
the Calvary Baptist Olurch at
Rio Grande.

MONDAY
CHESTER PTA Monday 8 p.
m. at school. Get acquainted
meeting. Film on "Who Says
You Can ' t." Room mother
chainnen meet 7:30 p. m.
MEIGS CBAPTER Order of
DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m. at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mothers meet at same time in
basement.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, IOOF
Hall, 7:30 Monday night.
Refreshments with members to
take sandwiches or cookies.
Door prize. Members in need of
insurance papers to contact the
councilor.

NOON TIMt~SPECIALS

Members going from the
Middleport clllrcb are to meet
at the cburch at 1:15 p. m.
Registralloo will begin at 2 and
from 2:30to4 p. m.lbere will be
installation of new youth
associatioo officers and a guest
speaker, Eric Chambers of
Middleport.
From 4:15 to 5:15 p. m. the
Rev. Henry Lancaster will talk
about " Mlasion Tomorrow."
Dinner will be served at the Rio
Grande College cafeteria at&amp; p.
m. and the general aS9P!I!bly
with 'Mrs. Griffith as the
speaker will be at 7:30 p. m.

and

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS- OIL- ELECIRIC
eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
•EASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN
&amp; ABBOTT
'

.

0.

.

-~ SUNBEAM
.,

PERCOLATOR'

... 11-72

MONADEX will help cur:'b your
desire for excess fOod . Ealles$ .

we igh

less .

Conta ins

no

dangerous drugs end witt not
make
you
nervous..
No

strenuous n :erclse . Changt
your

life

... start

today .

MONA DEX costs S3.00 for a 20
day supply . Lose ugly fat or
your money will bt refunded
w i th no questions asked .
MONADEX Is sold with th is
guarantee by : Swisher &amp; L•ltse
Drugs • 112 E . Main &amp; Outten

Drug Store - Mi&lt;ldleport - Moil

Ordus F Uled.

501 NYIDN

CARPET

•3.99
INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

s

s:oo:;
ai

REFUND
tram WILKINSON.
with the mail-in

certificate enclosed
in packap.

TABLE
MIRROR

BABY
POWDER

ISTILLED
WATER

noxzem
SKIN CREAM
GREASELESS•MEDI~JED

Rea. '1.59

Make-up mirror
one side,
Magnifies,

Dec:orated base

... 99'
Dilly

12-hour relief
ofcolds
and hay fever

DE8IOIB

1001HBRIIHES
.... 69'

HAIL'S

Mentho-LJptus
Cough Drops

95·~-

. . '1.&amp;9

SHOULD NOT HAVE BAD

lDSE UGLY FAT
You can start los ing weight
today . MONADEX iS a tiny
tablet and eesy to take .

BEAUTIFUL ROOIS,

S DA'I$' IOd NIGHTS' CONTINUOIIS RELIEf

'1196

.

•-•-----------------------------------------

Johnson

ltd's Reg.

.

CARPET SPECIAL

N----------------•

Maine iB the olliy state in
the Union that adjoins only
one other state, according
to The World Almanac. It
is separated from the rest
of the United States by New
Hampshire,

PROCTOR SILEX
PERCOLATOR

Tau;

Potato Rings

52.00

.'

The group ~ vilited Seit-A·
Rama , Marloeto.p . at.
Galveston, toured the U.S.S. ·
Sell WWf and the U.S.
viewed the relllliDI ~ !be
World's Flir, and stopped at
Fort Sam Houston. While in
Telas the group vlailed Mrs.
Martin's son, Frank Kelton,
Enroute to Tens, they
slopped al ''M7 Old Kentucty
HOllie" in Bardstown; went to . ,
Memphis to eee the bome of
Elvis Presley; wlile there took
a ride &lt;11 a sky_lift llld an CJid
steam train, and vililed 11ny
Town at Rock ~. Aft.
1bey picted cotiCII iD 141ioJI!I!!
aod toured the Jesse James
Wax Musemn in Missouri.

TryOru

Buy the Wilkinson
Bonded Razor Set
at '2.00
and receive

WEDNESDAY'S ADVEII'ISEMENT
SHOULD HAVE READ

.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~ 10 states and Mexico,
!raft~ in all 4,297 miles.

Harben

. CORRECTION

Pair Reg. $12.99

. One Size Fits All
111

tour

You make

White Nurses Oxfords

SPECIAL PANTY HOSE

Hackett, Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Mexico, a day oo an tndian
aod Mrs, Mary Martin returned reservation at Livingston,
Saturday from a sightseeing Texas, a trip to the alligator

western states. On the return
trip they . 'ted 'th Mrs
a
, .
Mr ~ Mrs.
Am~: ~
family
N bor lnd
ew g,
-

79~

Clearance '7"
WOMEN'S DRESS &amp; CASUAL
REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE
SOMEMISSAMERICA • 2• fO ·•"
Values to $16.99

1

Eastern
p.m. JaysHigh
willSchool10
emcee. to 11:30 ...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - DANCE AT Southern Junior
High in Racine Friday following
football game from 10 p. m. to 12
midnight. Sponsored by
Southern Local Band Boosters.
Music by Foxx. Admission is 75
cents.
SQUARE DANCE BEGINNING 8:30 p. m. Friday at
Rutland gymnasium under
sponsorship of Rutland Fire
Department.
Music
by
Hilltoppers. Proceeds to new
fire truck fund.
SAl\IRDAY
CAR WASHSaturday,IOa.m.
J ck' Ashla d
to 4 p.m. at a .s
n •
corner Beech and Locust
Streets, Middleport, sponsored
4th &amp; Locust
992-5241
Middleport. 0.
by ·Meigs Junior Varsity and
Freshmen Cheerleaders.

M's,
Childrens
Values to $6.so

59~

Mrs. Eu!rie Brinker, Mrs.
j{igblights of their trip inPearl Knapp, · Mrs. Rhoda eluded two visits into Old

WATCH FOR OUR

A family picnic was held
Suoday, SepU2, at the home of
Mr' and Mrs. Qyde Qose at
Watettertownnding.
were Mr. aod Mrs.
A
Allen Brewer and David of
P Ua d
~ ; ; Mr. anll Mrs. Ken~of Co~erb, TeresaMr ,aodKenneMrsth
um us;
·
·
John Beall and Mark, Columbus; Mrs. Louise Brewer of
Portland;' Miss Linda aose;

_,

Sights Seen in 10 States

Social Calendar

Economic -Snack Treat

What Optimism 'll Getcha

Speak
Here Friday .~:r:::~~r~~=k~;~rds, Valentine Girl Named Picnic.Plans
ntJa M'-,]
as
U. ry
(JI,,e

.-.rs.

COATS &amp; JACKETS
SNOW SUITS

t - Tbe Dally Senllnel, l'cmerO).Mlddleport, o., Septembes-16, 1m

B!TJY CANARY

�1-'I'II!DIIIJS :5 ),PwaUJ.Mddlepert,O.,SL!ptemberl6,1971

First Negro
Commander
Paid Honors

POLLY'S POINTERS
Convert Litter

.

Into Ash Trays

-·

By POLLY CRAftiER

Mrs. Mary Martin, chapeau
of Ohio Departemental, Eight
and Forty, and Mrs. Myrtle
Walker, her le secretalrecassiere were among those
attending the Saturday night
testimonial dinner honoring
Charles R. Green, new commander of Department of Ohio,
American Legion.
The dinner was held at 6 p. m.
at the Roumanian Orthodox
Fellowship Hall at Warren.
Green is the first Negro to be
elected a state commander in
the history of the American
Legion.
Present for the testimonial
dinner was John H. Geiger, Des
Plains, Ill., national comm~nder _ Past department

_ _ ._.,... Polly's Problem _ _ _ _.,.,

.' .

DEAR POLLY-Several years ago I covered a
bedroom window with that popular adhesive-backed .
paper to keep !be light out. Now I want to remove
this paper and do bope some of the readers can tell ~
me bow to do it.--JOAN.
~

!

DEAR POLLY-One of my Pet Peeves concerns labels
: that are sewn into the seams of upholstered furniture.
; Even ~r lbeir removal a part is Left clearly visijlle
. because of !be way it was attached plus the fact that
the label was sewn to a frQnt seam. Also labels are sewn
. to !be OUTSIDE of waistbands to boys' trousers. I see
' no reason why they could not he sewn on the inside so
• the seam would not have to be ripped in order to completely remove the label.:-P~S.
DEAR POLLY-My husbaod's work shoes and hoots
developed an odor after several months wear but after
. we shook a little borax into the shoes the odor completely ·
. disappeared. Now we also use it in our tennis shoes.
-. Cbarlene might try this in her wooden clogs that have
an odor.-MRS. L . B.
DEAR POLLY'-Our forests and side roads might be
, kept cle811er if aluminum refreshment cans were saved
• and put to use ralber !ban being .pitched out along the
way_ To make ash trays and other table decorations
' cut off the lop of a can with old scissors or tin snips··· a bole can be made on the side so the scissors blade
- can be inserted to start. Next cut '14 -inch strips from
· • the lop io within one-fourth inch of the bottom. Finally
• curl the$e strips with a round toy stick with a slot in it
•or 8D old slotted screw driver. These curls could extend
up from the round-base as high or low as wanted to make
space for cigarettes when the cans are used for ash
" trays.-BETH ANN.
~ " ~ DEAR POLLY-When the lamb's wool on your ha~d
~ sboe buffer gets worn and full of polish slip it in a worn~ out Orion or nylon knee sock. This is a sure way to have
~ shoes with a spit-shine look.-'-MRS. J . H.
DEAR POLLY-When I clean the sink after doing the
t dinner disbes I put a few mint leaves from my garden
;. in the disposal turn it on for a second or two and have
~ a very pleasant scent in the kitcben.-MRS. B. J . G.

••

~

~

Attend Wedding Anniversary

'

{ SYRACUSE - Alleoding the
~ 2Sth wedding anniversary
1:
on Aug. 29 rl. Mr.
' and Mrs. Gecqe Sctmeider
~ flun out of llllm were Mr. and
WiDiam Ductworth, Mr _
:and Mrs. William Dactwcalb
~ Jr. and daughters, Diane,
; Doni-, Karen, 8Dd Lynn, Mr.
! and Mn. C2llrles Dactworlb,
tllils EftlyD Jones rl. Rittman;

William McKelvey aod Bruce,
Poriland; Mr. aod Mrs. Roy
Jones of Racine; Mr. H. A.
Sedgwick and Don, Tuppers
Plains; Mr. aod Mrs. Paul
Kloes and Michael, Mrs. Ralph
Robson, Miss Eleanor Robson,
Minersville, and a host of local
relatives aod friends.

ae.naoce

pm.

Ours Fami/11
'J

tur.
8Dd Mrs. Wayne Brubaker
;~RmandCarU, Wadsworlb;
tllr. and Mrs. Gemge Dempsey,

~::r~- ~d Di~::

in 21st Reunion

:C.Iif.; Mr. Earl Barden, .,._ 21st Ours family reum·~
:C.Otm; Miss Jackie Vaddell,
'""'
w•
hw-..;- llle Bev. L. M. was bellt SUnday _at the Rock
,"Stebbina, Gallipolis; Miss Springs ·fairgrounds with a
==~
basketdinnerallp.
m. Officers
._..ns,
A....... ; Mrs. -'-ted
Warden
"'"·Jcmes and cbildren """'
were
v~ ••
-Kim and Sue ~ president; Roy H. Bush, vice
~=-ba~~~Mr=5 _ 'Dwight p-esidenl, and Bettie Pigott,
PI
, PomaOJ; Mr. and ~lary~r. .
b
JIIJIIeS Clahrorthy and .,.,art ......., were giVen y
:'l'lrila. Mr. 8Dd Mrs. Ernest Dale Polrell, Bob ~ aod
ICICidleport- 11r and Lawrence DeL&lt;IIg. Prizes were
ThomPson awarded to Bob Ours and Albert
; Mrs. Don Jobnsm: Rinehart, lbe oldest men
8Dd Bruce Mr and Mrs pr I 1 ot; Emma Saunders and
• .
. Martha ~lock, the oldest
WO!IIen; Danny Casey and
Heath Casey, the youngest
•
JWirJ IS
attendi~; Mr. and Mrs. John
Morgan, who Ira veled the
The er--mmioo was held farthest; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H.
the 1mie rl. Mr. and Mrs. Ours, married the longest, 52

.__

~

Held

~

=~

llobstetle' SUnday. A yea.
dinner was enjoyed at Door prizes went to Barlett
Rinehart, Vera Ours, Wtllard
Atteodinc were llr- and Mrs. Ours, Myrtle Harrison,
:;E..my 0'111..- and daugbter, Lawrence Delmg and Ruby
:::=~W.Va. ; Mrs. Bessie Jones. A to1al of 132 attended
2:
Liberty, W. Va.; Mr. the reunioo to be held in 19'12 at
Mrs. Robert O'OUser and the same place oo the first
Olarlestm, W. Va.; Mr. &amp;inday in September.
Mrs. D. livingston and
~:dao!lgb~!l', Donbar, W.Va.; Mr.
PRESIDENT NAMED
WI)' Welty and Elected president recently of
~lildre., Mansfield; Mr. and the Future Homemakers
W. E. Crouser, Mr. and Association (FHA ) at Southern
James W. Bobstetter and High School was Kathy Boyd.
Mr. and Mrs. Other officers elected were
J. Bobsletter of Connie Bush, vice president,
and Mr. and Mrs. Sharon Holter, ~ecretary,
Rife and children,., Barbara Sarson, treasurer,
Debbie Milliron, reporter.

REV. STREUTKER

~ssionary

~o

Boys &amp;: Girls
lnfan1s thru Size 12
Washable fake fur
Corduroy
Nyloo, Wool
Poplin, Suede
811 lill Sell ction of

lnit and Fur Hals

GilliS

Sea Is ' Hat Sels

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
Gl H T• IIODL£POIT

FOOD FO,R AMERICANS

The Rev. Raymond Streutker
will share his experiences
missionary to the Philippines at
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church Friday, Sept. 17, at 7:30
p. m. He has completed four
terms there of missionary
service.
In his last one he was
assigned to pioneer a new
congregation in the large city of
Cagayan de Oro, _an industrial
and educational center. There
the Streutkers joined a small
group of believers for whom a
visitation program and home
Bible studies proved an ef.
fecUve means of evangelism.
Many people were brought into
the fellowship.
When a rented bali became
too small, plans were drawn for
a new church aod youth center.
Under Mr. Steutker's supervision the building was completed. A vital part of the
ministry in the city has been a
radio broadcast and half-hour
television program produced by
Mr . Streutker. When the
Streutkers left for furlough,
they left behind a growing and
enthusiastic congregation
under the leadership of a
c-dpable Filipino pastor.
The Streutkers have had
many experiences in the
Philippines since first coming to
the islands in 1951. For a time
they lived in a screenless,
lllalch-roo!ed hOUSe wiih an
outboard motorboat as the only
means of transportation to
isolated villages. Mr. Streutker
will use slides, recordings and
original chalk talks with his
message.

HOME VISITED
Members of the Eleda Circle
of the B. H. Sanborn Society,
Middleport First Baptist
Church, visited the Elmwood
Rest Home Tuesday night. In
the group which took cupcakes
and ice cream and spent the
evening visiting with the men
and women and singing songs
were Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mrs.
Beulah While, Mrs. Pearl
Mrs.
Robert
Hoffman,
Richardson, Mrs. Fred Lewis,
Miss Kathryn Werner and Mrs.
Betty Denny.

Commander Green recetved a
life membership from.his post,
a gift from the company for
which he works, and a plaque
from the _Masonic Order. His
wife and daughter presented
him with a set of praying hands,
symbolic of the role of religjon
in the life of the new comrnander.

Tickets Going
The Community Concert
ticket sales will conclude
Saturday afternoon . Two
concerts have aiready been
booked and the number of
additional concerts will be
based on the successfulness of
the ticket sales. Tickets will not
be available for individual
performances.
Selling tickets in Meigs
County are Jean
Eastern; Mrs. John Lee,
Racine; Mrs . A. E. Lee,
Syracuse; Mfs. James O'Brien,
Mrs. W. P. Lochary, Mrs.
Theodore Reed, Jr., Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer,
Pomeroy-Mason area, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mid-

Being an optimist is out these days. The ''io" thing
to be is disillusioned. An optimist is hard put to keep out
of the clutches of despair .
OPTIMIST: I have great hopes for the future . We're
on the threshold of miracles in medicine, for starters.
PESSIMIST: What good will new vaccines do? Save
the popula~ion from disease so it can die of starvation?
OPTIMIST: Scientists are at the breakthrough point
on new foods, fantastic foods made from materials here·
tofore thought of as waste products!
PESSIMIST: So, you keep people alive and where do
you put them? Into ghettos, that's where.
OPTIMlST: Inexpensive and comfortable housing can
he designed !
,

OPTIMIST: You do make i~ hard for _me ~ut may I
point out that government and industry Will JOin to1!t~e~
and do the .sensible, practical thing about our po u e
rivers and streams.
PESSIMIST: So what? What will we do with clean. air
and water if the bottles and old cars keep piling up · din
a decade we'll be buried in our own garbage. What , o
you say to that?
OPTIMISf: Tell you what l'II borrow your shovel
while you slart a game of Kick the Can.

PICNIC IS SUNDAY
Annual picnic of the Rock
Springs United Methodist
Church Sunday Scnool will be
held Sunday at 12:30 at the East
Roadside Park on Route 33.
Games and contests will be held
during the afternoon. In the
event of rain, the picnic will be
held at the church.

RE~IVALA~OUNCED
AreviVal meetmg wtll be held
at the Hiland Chapel begmnmg
Monday, Sept. 27. The
evangelist. will be _Sister Essie
Lee. Spec1al smgmg . will be
presented ~ach everung. The
serv1ce woll be held each
~vemng at 7:30p. m. The public
IS mvoted to attend.
SERVICE PLANNED
A county prayer service will
be held Sunday at 2 p. m. at the
Joppa Church. Okey Ahart will
be the leader.

new
species
of

Fall
Sweaters
Bulky
knit
cardigan
sweaters to turn to for
comfort. warmth and · ex- ·
citing good looks. From our
smart, new fall collection.

'5.98
THE NEW FALL

KNIT PANT SUITS
STRIPED TOP
WITH SOLID PANTS

WASHABLE

s

Beverly Long of Middleport to decorate it.
was named Valentine Girl of the Guest at the meeting was
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Nancy Prisner of Point
Sigma Phi Sorority at a meeting Pleasant, who has membership
The annual Sunday School
Tuesday night at the Columbus in a chapter at Wheeling, W. Va. · picnic to be held at the Midand Southern Ohio Electric Co. The group voted to sell fruit dleport Park at 3 p; m. Sunday
Selection of the Valentine Girl cakes during the holidays. The was announced during a
is made by vote of the general ·cultural report, ''Orator" was meeting of Hearthstone Class
membership on the basis of given by Annie Chapmsn and of the Middleport First Baplisl
Linda Riffie. The 1970 and 1971 Church at the home of Mr. and
activities in the sorority.
During the meeting con- pledges served refreshments. Mrs. Edison Baker.
dueled by Mrs. Vikki
David Darst conducted the
Gloeckner, plans were made for
meeting in the absence of
.the rush party to be held at 7 p.
Milton Hood, president. He
m. Tuesday at the Middleport
presented devotions laking
First United Presbyterian Petty Officer 3-c and Mrs. scripture from Matthew 25.
Church. Members are to meet Gary L. Green, formerly of Mrs. John McNeil read
at the church a\ I p.m. Monday Mason are announcing the birth . "Somewhere Along the Way."
of their first child, Christina
Officers reports were given
Ann, born Sept. 7 at the Thomas and thank you notes were read
Memorial
Hospital
in from Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Charleston, W. Va.
Hubbard for .serving the
'J
Grandparents are Mr. and reception at their daughter's
'
Mrs. Wayne Green, Wellston, wedding, and Mr. and Mrs.
IJ
and Mr. and Mrs. Forest Milton Hood for kindnesses
Lie
Parkins, Hurricane, W. Va. during their bereavement. John
Great-grandparents are Mr . McNeil thanked the class for a
PORTLAND - The Swan and Mrs. Albert E. Hawk of planter sent him while he was
reunion (descendants of A. F. near Shade; Mr. and Mrs. Guy hospitalized.
Swan and Laura Bonar) 'was
Easler, Hurricane, and Mrs. . The Rev. Charles Simons
held Sept. 12 at Portland Park.
Clarence Parkins, Millon, W. · reported on plans for the
Officers elected for the new Va. Great-great-grandparents evangelisUc crusade to be held
year were Ada Bissell, are Mrs. G. W. Stephens, Feb. 22 to March 5 with Dr.
president; Mae McPeek, vice
Milton, and Mrs. L. D. Moore of James DeWeerd as the
president; Leona Hensley,
Ashland, Ky.
evangelist.
secretary-treasurer; and
Refreshments were served by
program committee, Leola
. SAREVIVALSET
the hosts to Darst, Mr. and Mrs.
Ferrell and Clara Friend.
The Salvation Army, 115 Willia Anthony, Mr. and Mrs.
For the program, Ada Bissell Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, will
was honored for giving seven hold revival services Sunday Allen Hughes, Mr. and Mrs.
gallons of blood and Leona through Sept. 26. There will be Paul Snwt•.Mr. and Mr. John
Hensley for perfect attendance special young peoples services Werner, ,the Rev. Mr. Simons,
at Sunday School for 20 years. each evening at 7 p. m. with and Mr. and Mrs. McNeil.
Attending were Leota Ferrell, regular service at 7:30 p. m.
Medway, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. The Rev. R. Persons of
Keith FerreU and family of Cheshire will be the evangelist.
Fairborn; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Envoy Ray Wining extends an
Ferrell and daughter, Dayton; invitation to the public.
Jan Bissell, Tom Groeneveld
Mrs. Marily~ Hayman and
REViVAL PLANNED
family, Pat Smith and Mike
Revival
at HyseU Run Free
Bissell, Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd McPeek BelleviUe Methodist Church beginning
w. Va.; Mr. and' Mrs . J~ Monday through Sept. 26 with
Bissell and son, Mr. and Mrs. Rev. 0 . H. Cart as evangelist.
Charles Hensley, Clara Friend, Vocal numbers will be
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter and presented by Patty Mays and
family, Mrs. David Smith and Priscilla Dodrill. Services at
7:30 P- m. each evening. The
family and Nancy Baum.
public is invited to attend.

$}}95

more ...

a Diamond
Watch

byBU

Food Editor

Smali fry appetites can
~nd the. weekly food budget
mto a spm. However, making
ho_me snacks helps economiZe and keeps youngsters
happy_
VANILLA 'N CHIP
ICE CI\EAM POPS
1 paekace Uldlavo!fd
gelatin
·
1 tableapooa cold water
! CUJII lll:bt cream
4 ' " yort., beaten
% cup 1agar
% teu)IOOil nit
! OUDeet leml..weet cboe. tlate, eo&amp;l'lely grated
Sprinkle gelatin over cold
water; let stand 5 minu!A!s to·
softe~- In_ a small saucepan
combme light cream with e~g
yolks, sugar and salt; m1x
well. Cook over moderate
heat,_ stirring constantly, for
5 mmutes. Remove from
beat. Stir in softened gelatin
Tum mixture Into ice cube
lr!IY without divider; cool
slightly- Place in freezer and
freeze until almost firm. Re• mo~e from tray and beat
until fluffy. Beat in chocolate. Spoon into ice cream
pop forms or into ice cube
tray with divider. If using
pop forms insert sticks at
onc:e. If _usinj: ice cube tray
WIUt until DUXture is partly
frozen to insert sticks. Freeze
until firm. To unmold, separate cream from the sides
of the molds with a hot knife
Lift out carefully. Makes i
quart or 16. pops of '(, cup
each..

PESSIMISf: So, people are fed· and hOused-they'll die
of breathing dirty air.
OPTIMIST: If we start practicing today what we know
about cle.aning polluted air .. .
PESSIMIST: Weill all die of drinking dirty water.

VA

Birth Announced

Swan Fami/11
Whilehead,Reunt'on /d

dle~ort-Rulland .

~

!:1..
By BE'TTY CANARY

1411
solid rold.

Cooldng lesa011s
started
!c ltlay night by Dena I and
4 of the l'lmeroy Cub Scout
Pack 248 at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. with
Mlas Joanna DiBUer, home

Homemade ice cream pops ease budget and keep
small fry happy.
ORANGE·LEMON
ICE POPS
I package qnflavored
gelatin
1 cup orange juice
~ cup lemon juice
2 cups water
"14 cup sugar
1 table1poon pure vanilla
extract

6 diamonds.
23ltwtll.
$15CI.

Because Bulova on th e
dial says the d iamonds
are real. Not chips. Each

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2--4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Masters, Galli'polis
· , a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry E. Arthur,
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Terry E. Russell, Jackson,
daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
William H. McGinnis, Jackson,
d
G
a daughter; Mr. an Mrs. ary
Gene Daily, WeDs too, a son, and
Mr. and Mrs. Royall Estes
Beattie, Pt. Pleasant, a

economist.
'lbe CGUrse will he conducted
over the four week period with

diamond has at least 17
fa ce ts to unle as h thedeep fire and sparkle.

the boys to entertain wllb a tea
fer their mothers at the final

Anion g ou r d ia mo nd
Bulo va wa tches you ' re
sure to find th e one }'DU
want for her. From $55
to $1 ,250.

~011-

· Meeting Wednesday after
school, Den 4 made .....tal'll ~
,....._ ~·
Otlzensblp Day whlcb will he
displayed In downtown lien
wind9WJ}'rlday.
It was noted that ''COD·

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
St.

daughte~.DISCHARGES

ck olruittbeme
the
m
PI rec
ment night hill been at for
Sept. 30 at lbe IOOF baD, 0&lt;11
'lbcmu ta cubqpsler and boyl,
el3ht,nlneandl0,areell0bleto
join the pact.
AI a recent meeting rl. Den 4
at the borne of Mrs. Bemlce
McKinney, den mother, Ricky
Blaettnar, Ron CUI11111111, CUff
Kennedy, Scott McKinney,
Todd MuTtaou, Steve WIJ!i•ms
llld Cilia Wooda cmapleted
work an their pby11ca1 tlllleaa
achievement. An obstacle
COUI'IIe wu uaed to fuiiW the
hqlllremenla. Refresbmenta
were w ved.

oolb and Iatbat
!ler'VatiCII"
the

Mrs. Jessie L. Anderson, Mrs.
Denver W. Ash, Jr. and son,
Alpha L. Barr, Mrs. Harry vCrabtree, Mrs. Clarence
Crothers, Debra L. Darling
· •
Robert J. Fisher, Mrs. Stephen
E. Frazier and son, Mrs. Bazel
Haas, Miss Patsy Ann Haner,
Mrs. Robert ~arrlsoBarvnand
daughter, Ronrue W.
ey,
Mrs. Buddy Haught and son,
Thomas C. Hayman, Mrs. Jobn
W. Hlpes, Mischelle L. Holley,
Mrs. Qyde A. Hunt, Mrs. Jobn
J. Johnston and son, Mrs. WI)'
Allen Lane and son, Raymood
B. Lester, Mrs. Lemma L.
Lighter, Jerry Wayne McClung,
Jobn David Morgan, Michael A
Neutzling, Mrs. Donald E.
Ragland, Mrs. Edith M. Sayre,
Mrs. Jessie M. Scurlock, Mrs.
Ralph W. Spence, Clarence A.
Turley, Mrs. W. Brooklyn
Wallis, Albert B. Walta, Mrs.
Etla Welch, Mrs. Robert D.
Wicker and son, Mrs. Larry L.
Wiley and daugb!A!r, Mrs.
Minnie Peters, Gabriel Jaques
and Bloodena Gllberl.

NAME OMJITED
Unintentionally omitted from
a list tf thol1e attending a
reception honoring the Rev. and
Mrs. Stanton Smith Sunday
night at the Enterprise United
Methodist Church was the name
of Dorothy Long.

Womens

KEDETTES

Qalck Recopltloll
Quickest -recognition ever
offered a foreign country by
the Ullited States came
when Panama was recognized three days after it was
proclaimed a republic in
1903.

a.EARANCE , 2 • 0 0

VAWES TO '6.99 .

.

Sprinkle g e I a l i n over
orange and lemon juices; let
soften 5 minu!A!s. In a small
saucepan combine water and
sugar; bring to boiling point
and boil 5 minutes. Pour over
juice. Stir in vanilla. Pour
mixture into ice cube trays
with dividers. Push slicks in
when almost frozen.

Scouts Begin HOSPITAL Family
Culinary Art
NEWS Picnic in
were
w..
Watertown

OUR•••
GRAND CLEARANCE
OF FIRE SALE.••
KEDS

z.,._____....,....,_______,.......,....,oo#o

. By AILEEN CLAIRE

,

CanvasW'sShoes For

HERE FOR FUNERAL

Mrs. Oliver Landers of
Columbus was here over the
weekend for the funeral of her
aunt, Mrs. Addie Barton. Wbile
bere she visited Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Weeks.

CoBrewelumhusand;MrJ
. ane,
andMrsLong.HarBoo~
r
Marietta;
andMrs.
Mr.WI)'
and Close,
Mrs.
tom; Mr. and
Clyde ·Close, Leland, Rita,
Wayne and Roy.
In the afternoon a visit was
d to the
b
hich
mae
new &lt;mew
Mr. and
Mrs. WI)' Close have
based
pure
in Watertown.
_Mr ·and Mrs. Clyde aose ~
Rita, Wayne and Roy, hav~ JUSl

:::~/~~=

THURSDAY
SA11JRDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child Con- CHICKEN NOODLE dinner
servation League, Thursday, Saturday, 12 to 6 p. m. at
7:30p.m. Columbus aod South- Middleport Pentecostal Olurch,
ern Ohio Electric Co. social South Third Ave. (building
room. Speaker will be Mrs. beside church). Dinner includes
Carolyn Heines using "Want to dessert, $1.25. Free delivery if
Improve Your Children's order called in by Friday at 9!12Speech?".
2502.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 4G
DANCE Saturday Meigs
' Junwr High, Koddlepwt, 1:30 to
Royal and Select Masters, 11 :30 p.m. Jays will . __
slated assembly, 7:30 Wed- ,
SUNDAY
nesday, Pomeroy Masonic ANNUAL HOW'ro"'NG,
Temple.
Sunday, Alfred Methodist
MOTHER - DAUGHTER Omrch, be:ginning wilb Sunday
banquet of Evangeline Chapter schoo~9 : 4Sa.m. ; worsbipat 11;
172 O.E.S. Middleport, Thurs- basket dinner, 12:30. Afternoon
day at 6:30 p.m. at Masonic program, 2 p.m., featuring
Temple.
Bissell Brothers and others.
ROCK SPRING Better Health Public welcome.
Oub, I: 15 p.m. home of Mrs. HYMN SING, Morse Chapel
Clifford Leifheit. Mrs. Mark United Melbodist Omrch, 2
Grueser to have the program p.m. Sunday. Public invited.
and Mrs. Lewis Grueser the SPORTSMAN MOTO Q-os,;,
contest, A style revue will be a Sunday, Meigs Motorcycle club
feature of the program.
grounds on Route 33, five miles
MEIGS COUNTY Tuber- north of Pcaneroy. Trophies in
culosis and Respiratory Assn., all cJaSS"S. Practice, 11 a.m. to
7:30 Thursday at the home of I p.m., racing to start at 1:30
Mrs. Glenn Dill, Syracuse_
p.m.
Refreshments
at
CLASS 12, HEATH United cloubhouse.
Methodist Church, Thursday REVIVAL AT Salvation
7:30 at the church.
Army,
But!A!rnlj.t
Ave.,
EPISCOPAL CHURCH Pomeroy SUnday through Sept
women of Episcopal Church 2S at 7:30 p. m. Young ~les
Thursday, 12:30 luncheon.
services each evening at 7 p. m.
MAGNOLIA O.UB Thursday Rev. R. Persons, evangelist.
7:30 p.m. home of Mrs. Aaron MIDDLEPORT- RuUand
Kelton.
Youth Fellowship joint meeting,
FRIDAY
Sunday evening at the Rutland
THIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30 Church, 7 p. m. Sbort )11'1lgf8Dl,
p.m. Friday, home of Marie refreshments, recreation.
Dailey.
Banners for county youth rally
AFTER GAME Dance Friday to be made.

::S

&amp;9• or 2Pl

New Darker Fall Shade·

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced

'

Tbe sightseeing was added to
the wcmen's trip to Houstm,
Teus, to attend the Eight and
Forty nati&lt;llal convention. All
are members rl. the Meigs
Cwnty Salon 710. Mrs. Martin is
the chapeau of Ohio Deparlmlen1al Eight and Forty.
,

farm at Hot ~. and a
llmosine tour rl. San Antonio.
They visited NASA, the
Astrodcme, and the AstrOOan in
Houston,. and loured personal
aparlmenl 0( the owner li the
Astroworld Holl!llocated on the
top floor, decorated in a cirrus
motif, and furnished wilb imported antiques.

Griffith Speaks Saturday
Mrs. William Griffith will
speak at the evening service of
the Rio Grande Baptist
Association Saturday at the Rio
Grande Baptist Association
meeting beginning al2 p. m. at
the Calvary Baptist Olurch at
Rio Grande.

MONDAY
CHESTER PTA Monday 8 p.
m. at school. Get acquainted
meeting. Film on "Who Says
You Can ' t." Room mother
chainnen meet 7:30 p. m.
MEIGS CBAPTER Order of
DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m. at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mothers meet at same time in
basement.
THEODORUS Council 17,
Daughters of America, IOOF
Hall, 7:30 Monday night.
Refreshments with members to
take sandwiches or cookies.
Door prize. Members in need of
insurance papers to contact the
councilor.

NOON TIMt~SPECIALS

Members going from the
Middleport clllrcb are to meet
at the cburch at 1:15 p. m.
Registralloo will begin at 2 and
from 2:30to4 p. m.lbere will be
installation of new youth
associatioo officers and a guest
speaker, Eric Chambers of
Middleport.
From 4:15 to 5:15 p. m. the
Rev. Henry Lancaster will talk
about " Mlasion Tomorrow."
Dinner will be served at the Rio
Grande College cafeteria at&amp; p.
m. and the general aS9P!I!bly
with 'Mrs. Griffith as the
speaker will be at 7:30 p. m.

and

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS- OIL- ELECIRIC
eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
•EASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN
&amp; ABBOTT
'

.

0.

.

-~ SUNBEAM
.,

PERCOLATOR'

... 11-72

MONADEX will help cur:'b your
desire for excess fOod . Ealles$ .

we igh

less .

Conta ins

no

dangerous drugs end witt not
make
you
nervous..
No

strenuous n :erclse . Changt
your

life

... start

today .

MONA DEX costs S3.00 for a 20
day supply . Lose ugly fat or
your money will bt refunded
w i th no questions asked .
MONADEX Is sold with th is
guarantee by : Swisher &amp; L•ltse
Drugs • 112 E . Main &amp; Outten

Drug Store - Mi&lt;ldleport - Moil

Ordus F Uled.

501 NYIDN

CARPET

•3.99
INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

s

s:oo:;
ai

REFUND
tram WILKINSON.
with the mail-in

certificate enclosed
in packap.

TABLE
MIRROR

BABY
POWDER

ISTILLED
WATER

noxzem
SKIN CREAM
GREASELESS•MEDI~JED

Rea. '1.59

Make-up mirror
one side,
Magnifies,

Dec:orated base

... 99'
Dilly

12-hour relief
ofcolds
and hay fever

DE8IOIB

1001HBRIIHES
.... 69'

HAIL'S

Mentho-LJptus
Cough Drops

95·~-

. . '1.&amp;9

SHOULD NOT HAVE BAD

lDSE UGLY FAT
You can start los ing weight
today . MONADEX iS a tiny
tablet and eesy to take .

BEAUTIFUL ROOIS,

S DA'I$' IOd NIGHTS' CONTINUOIIS RELIEf

'1196

.

•-•-----------------------------------------

Johnson

ltd's Reg.

.

CARPET SPECIAL

N----------------•

Maine iB the olliy state in
the Union that adjoins only
one other state, according
to The World Almanac. It
is separated from the rest
of the United States by New
Hampshire,

PROCTOR SILEX
PERCOLATOR

Tau;

Potato Rings

52.00

.'

The group ~ vilited Seit-A·
Rama , Marloeto.p . at.
Galveston, toured the U.S.S. ·
Sell WWf and the U.S.
viewed the relllliDI ~ !be
World's Flir, and stopped at
Fort Sam Houston. While in
Telas the group vlailed Mrs.
Martin's son, Frank Kelton,
Enroute to Tens, they
slopped al ''M7 Old Kentucty
HOllie" in Bardstown; went to . ,
Memphis to eee the bome of
Elvis Presley; wlile there took
a ride &lt;11 a sky_lift llld an CJid
steam train, and vililed 11ny
Town at Rock ~. Aft.
1bey picted cotiCII iD 141ioJI!I!!
aod toured the Jesse James
Wax Musemn in Missouri.

TryOru

Buy the Wilkinson
Bonded Razor Set
at '2.00
and receive

WEDNESDAY'S ADVEII'ISEMENT
SHOULD HAVE READ

.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~ 10 states and Mexico,
!raft~ in all 4,297 miles.

Harben

. CORRECTION

Pair Reg. $12.99

. One Size Fits All
111

tour

You make

White Nurses Oxfords

SPECIAL PANTY HOSE

Hackett, Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Mexico, a day oo an tndian
aod Mrs, Mary Martin returned reservation at Livingston,
Saturday from a sightseeing Texas, a trip to the alligator

western states. On the return
trip they . 'ted 'th Mrs
a
, .
Mr ~ Mrs.
Am~: ~
family
N bor lnd
ew g,
-

79~

Clearance '7"
WOMEN'S DRESS &amp; CASUAL
REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE
SOMEMISSAMERICA • 2• fO ·•"
Values to $16.99

1

Eastern
p.m. JaysHigh
willSchool10
emcee. to 11:30 ...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - DANCE AT Southern Junior
High in Racine Friday following
football game from 10 p. m. to 12
midnight. Sponsored by
Southern Local Band Boosters.
Music by Foxx. Admission is 75
cents.
SQUARE DANCE BEGINNING 8:30 p. m. Friday at
Rutland gymnasium under
sponsorship of Rutland Fire
Department.
Music
by
Hilltoppers. Proceeds to new
fire truck fund.
SAl\IRDAY
CAR WASHSaturday,IOa.m.
J ck' Ashla d
to 4 p.m. at a .s
n •
corner Beech and Locust
Streets, Middleport, sponsored
4th &amp; Locust
992-5241
Middleport. 0.
by ·Meigs Junior Varsity and
Freshmen Cheerleaders.

M's,
Childrens
Values to $6.so

59~

Mrs. Eu!rie Brinker, Mrs.
j{igblights of their trip inPearl Knapp, · Mrs. Rhoda eluded two visits into Old

WATCH FOR OUR

A family picnic was held
Suoday, SepU2, at the home of
Mr' and Mrs. Qyde Qose at
Watettertownnding.
were Mr. aod Mrs.
A
Allen Brewer and David of
P Ua d
~ ; ; Mr. anll Mrs. Ken~of Co~erb, TeresaMr ,aodKenneMrsth
um us;
·
·
John Beall and Mark, Columbus; Mrs. Louise Brewer of
Portland;' Miss Linda aose;

_,

Sights Seen in 10 States

Social Calendar

Economic -Snack Treat

What Optimism 'll Getcha

Speak
Here Friday .~:r:::~~r~~=k~;~rds, Valentine Girl Named Picnic.Plans
ntJa M'-,]
as
U. ry
(JI,,e

.-.rs.

COATS &amp; JACKETS
SNOW SUITS

t - Tbe Dally Senllnel, l'cmerO).Mlddleport, o., Septembes-16, 1m

B!TJY CANARY

�-,..,.,....,.
, r r
I

'
11 -Tile IMiJy Seatillel, Pwwo, " t ' : zrt, 0., 5 t'

'

.

2 11, lJ'/1

.

·,

_

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action I Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!-~.
II ANT AD

Notice

insertions.

Sef-

. 25 Per Cent Discount on paid KOSCOT Kosmetlcs.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
tember
Sales
Specia :
CARD OF THANKS
Kreaony Lip Kote S2 &amp;OBITUARY
SL50, Frosducent Up Kote
S1.SO for SO word minimum :
$2.50 S2. 23 delicious
Each additional w..-d 2c.
~ol..-s. Call 992-5113 or mme
BLIND ADS
see at t61'h ~· "lh Ave.,
• Additional 2SC Charge per
Middlep..-1,
.Ad~ertlse"""t.
1-29-tfc
OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a.m. to 5: 00 p;on. Dally,
8: 30 a . m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.
HEY MRS. HOUSEWIVE!
Bored of the same ofd job.
Notice
Join Beeline FashionS. Call
SAVE UP lo -ane half. Bring
~'-16 or 949-3703.
"(001' sick TV to Clluck's TV .
9-1"-Jtc
511op, 151 Butternut Ave.. ...,
~
·
B:ly .
Pomeroy .
·
._23-tfc OLD Furniture.
docks.
;:::========::.,
and-or amplete households.
Write M. D. Miller, f&gt;Gmeroy,
Qoio. Call 992-6271.
1-25-tfc

a..

.anted To

dlshe5.

DMCE

NilE Q.U8

SATURDAY NIGHT

SEPTEMBER 18
FROM 10 ru 2

Music .By
Bill Carr and
Nashville Swingers
From Parkersburg, W.·
Va .,__
• _ _.:_.-=-:--:-:-'

LOCAL MAN wishes to buy
acreage dose to f&gt;Gmeroy.
Phone 992.J37~.
9-12·12tc

AWORD
TO THE
WISE:

. lost

WE'R_~ HE~E

1967 Fonl Muslanl ------- '1595
HT Cpe.• 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine. wide oval fires,
P.S .• P. B.. fact..-y air cood.• radio&amp; other extras.

1968 Dodge Dart 4 Door-----'1495
automatic trans., radio, clean iAterior.

1967 a.rdet Bel ··-----· '1495

St. Wagon. Green finish with maldling green vinvt interior, all good WW tires, V8 engine, automatic trans.,
power steering and brakes, luggage rack. A sharp wagon
and priced to please.

1967 Fonl Galuie 500 4 Door--'1595
low mileage by local one owner. Med. green finish and
spotless interior, V8 engine, automatic and power
steering, good WW tires. A clean car that has always been
cared f«.

Maximum
Diameter
10" on ·
Largest End

'6.00 Per Ton

ELECTROLUX vacuum
cleaner comple"' with al. tachmenls, ardwinder and
paint spray. Used, but in like
new condition. Pay $37.6

DEUVERED

m
OHIO

PMJ.£T en
On Old Rt. 33
Phone 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio

Help Wanted

EA~N

AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush stamped
self-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co., ~5 Lakeborn,
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
9·8-30tp

BUSINESS .
LEADER

We uted a man who
has the ability to
progress and take on
additional
respon·
sibitity fast. To · the
man who can, we offer
S9700 starting salary
plus incentive. group
insurilnce.
and
retirement. If you fit
Ibis description, send a
llrief resume to PM'·
......, Manager. Post
Office
Box
356,
· Gelllpolls. Ohio.
All Equal ~portunity
Employer.
Pd. Adv.

cash

or

Credit

terms

available. Phone 992·5641.
9-1+6tc
SHOTGUN, 12 ga. Remington
automatic. also pits. 9 weeks
old. Phone 949-2115.
9-16-Jfp

BEAT file COLD WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
HEATING OIL FROM
LANDMARK.
We have the fiAest Budget
Pay Plan, Oeliv«y Services.
Automatic Degree Day
Delivery and Duel Oeliv«y
E..,ipment.
We also have a complete line
·of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
and-Fu"'lc;es.
.
POMEROY
Joct
W. Carser, Mtr.
..
r•-m-t111

.APPLES .
Fitzpa!rlck ()-.
chards, State Route 619,
phone Wilkesville, Mt-3785.
9-3-tfc
GREEN BEANS, pick your
own, SI.SO a bushel, AndrCross, Racine, Ohio.
9-3-181c

-ies.

POODLE
Sil- Toy,
Park vi.W Kennels. Phone 992~-

1-IS.Ifc

~~~~----,=:::c-

1954 DODGE lnldt. 2 taio-s«&lt;lf.
1962 Chrysler 300 - S21Q. Will
!rade tor ..~..... phclne 9493915.

3 water system, located just off
Rl. 7 on Countv Rd. 25 at
Chester. Olio. If interested
call985-•262.
9-5-121c
HOUSE - 6 rooms and bath,
modern kitchen and bath,
built -in cabinets. fuel oil
furnace, 7 acres, just off U. S.

33 by Enterprise U.M .
Church. Phone 992-5679 alter 5
p. m .
9-16-Jtc

19720.. Piaups
1972 4 Wh. Drille BitlEr
1972 4 Wh. Drille Pickup

Yoru CAevy Dealer
Pomeray

- -

• • ~ • • -

.•.

' lirpr., Olilo
•

.•.

-

·--------

B.ECTRIC SERVIa:
\

Residential.
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hour Service

POMEROY
•
HOME &amp; AU10

GEORGE Hobstetfer, Real
Estate Broker, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Hilton Wolfe, Salesman.
1 LOT in Racine, Ohio. good
location 1..- trailer - s1.100.
9- 1~

Cleland

-·

..........

·

I'ADPEJI

li':&amp;l11m
__N M•_ll'Aiil •y ROOFING_l__

GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr.

HOIST EITEl

·-

-

O'BRIEN

Racino, 0.

992-2094
606 E. Main

c~

-- ~ ·

HOISTETTEI

POMEROY- FAMILY HOM£
CLOSE TO ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL-~ large bedrooms,
closets. 1\'2 baths, large living
room with fireplace. hard·
wood floors, gas forced air
furnace.
garage
with
renovated room over. ALL IN
GOOD CONDITION. GOING
AT $11,500.00.
PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY IN
CAPABLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2W
9-16-6tc

- ::~t B.
V
.
O
RD
TEAF
U OU

6 cyl. stanSee Fred

NEW.
DELUXE
sewing
mechlne, Zig-Zag, heavy
7&lt;12--1962.
clrty, buiH-in mot..- and light,
9-16-llc
does everything. Oily $6-1.88.
Twin Citv Sewing Machine. 1964 CORVAIR, 3 speed standard transmission, runs good
Phone 992-1085.
-$100.
1'161 Olds 4 dr. Hardlop
9-1~1c

9-1~tc

es we're alone?""

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPUES
And

~

Complete
Re.modeJing

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

I~

SPOUIING..
ROOF PAIIIlllli

-."

~·

_,•

Kitchtlls, S.flls
Room Addilions
AlldPalios
llacklloe And
End!Nder Work

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Wedller .Hfi.. &amp;
COnslrvdiooo Co. . - All-.
_ , Plumlliq &amp; _.,._

Septic Tonks
And LMch Beds.

Com;lete
PI••••••·
Hnling •"" A.j_r Ceodilialling.
2~
St•• Midllloforf

--- ·

992-7608
Have Your S

•~lal

Air~g·

Inspection and

Re-OIQ

6.98. Plus
Parts
Blaettnar's
Special
AI

FURNITURE

11011

Ulnft

PHONE 992-2143

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
101 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 1..- a family with a base
salary of 55.000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
rat.,.

u_.,

•''
.;
~
..;

..

Phone 992-2550
insured • Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us tor Free
Esti"'ate on Fumaw
tnstatation.

EXPERT
Wheel . . . . .

15.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

;:-... .&amp;&lt;

Pclnllllf lkaxt ' . .

\ imu: ORPHAN ANNIE

Opeto1n1s

Mondor 111n1 Sa-r

-------

~~60i;;E;.;M;IM;·~;•P;;tl;•;·~~;··;o.~~ -

----

DillE'S

BEMJiY StiJp
Corner Ullilo A...

•

.... s.... Rt.J

Houn MIRUy., T..-y,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

PORTABLE Singer sewing
machine, will sell for repair
bill, $19.22. Twin City Sewing
Machine. Phone 992-7085.

--

M9-4551

POMEROY - 1 story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, basement. 2
glassed p..-ches, front p..-ch,
garage, A STEAL AT JUST
55,500.00.

..

automatic

.t.~

Rt. 2

6GII E•st Main
.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT - 1\'2 story
BRICK, 2 nice bedrooms,
bath, nice kitchen, dining
room, paneling, carpeting,
full width front porch, storage
building, level lot. $6.950.00.

ALSO GOOD SELECTION

Open Eves. Til B

transmission,

SR •

Broker
11 o Med!Mic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wdn dor . - Frillly
I,::II&amp;.IIL le6J1-••
BILL NELSON
992-l6SJ

,
••

HILTON WOLFE
Mt-3211

IOI.M. lei::IIJI-••

Sa....,
1::11 &amp;.01, .. ! ' ·"'·

Auctioneer -

Yes__.. C17Ptotuole: II:VBRY GIIN:SRATION

--

Thrsday

ACBOSS
1- 0klahom&amp;
t . Augury

'·

B. ABsent

•
~·

17.IDgh

S-9-lfo - , -

------

=-·

on
IC8.le
18.CUrve

•a....~~""j

-------rl

PLUMBING, , _ or repairs.
.
_ .
All w«k guaranteed. Phone · AWNINGS. storm do..-s and:
_ .992-23C3.
w
i n dow s,aluminum
c a r'posiding
r t s , l~~~~:=~=~1~
9-U-12tc
marquees,
----::c---cc:-:-:-:::-:=='
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
_
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
sales representative. For free'
,
__
estimates, phone Charles · HATRERNINSONASSERTVVICAEND..._~ - ~
Reasonable rates. Ph. 4o16-4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V. 992,2m.
•
;&lt;(.
Owner &amp; Operator.
Johnson and Son. Inc.
•
, • _ ·~.
S-13-tf&lt;
S-27-tfc
• 1~·... •

19.

LAUGHS AT THill OW FA.SmONS, Btl'I' FOLLOWS •.
RELIGIOUSLY THill NEW.-H. D. THORII:AU
&lt;C&gt; 1171 Xloc J'eaturer 8)'1141eolt, IDe.)

16. -

Indian

on

the
DOWN
1. Salt (Fr.)

2. Eapou...
3.Breakfast
food
•. Pabnleaf

5.Courta

tan
city
22cllepubllcof

M

Ireland

lass
24. "'l'be
(3wds.)
Sch»MS' '
6. Pemlclolla 26. 30 dayw

7. ZolaJI&lt;IVel

B. Dismay
9.Bore
10.Time
killer
(lllwdl.)

(abbr.)
workman
30. Baby-

Bitter'•

42· c;;;.,m•fNNEElE~MYi¥1

starulby

lr-.i-.ri!lr-----rl 23.
21!. Ghutly
Sha.rl or

CRESIB

~erry

l'lllp

:29. Challenged
31. Tiber
tributary

n":""

lr-+-+THIFES

32. Lukewarm
34.Languld
311. Vamlsh
Ingredient
37.Greek
letter
38. Hoatelry

..

Nebraoka

Testament

•
;:
'

~~~~l~~~
·~ ~
· ~~~

.-..~..

...

AXYDLBAAXB

ZSMW

••
-~

NEIGLER Construction. For .
building or remodeling your ·
hqme. Call Guy Neigle• .'
· '742-4211
Amlld •...
Rwll • 0.
Recine, Doio.
·L_ __:_____..;._:-"""":------'..;·...;.·. .;.'_.,.

••

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's llow to WG!tl It:

A.Cl'Diop -~

o&amp;

~- :

ln-+-+--i-

Ia LONc:IFili.LOW
'
One tetter aimply standa for another. In thll 81D1Pie A Ill
uoed for the three L's, X for the two 0'1, ete. BIDP letterll.
o.pootlopltoe, tile length and fonnatlon of the worlltl an ~
hlnto. lliadl day the code !etten ore dl1!ereal

•

I

bOok
45.Wtthem

-,

PIJ

SLOM

KSLWD

NP

Slot

DVPRWB

RC

DSM

RD'C . NMCD

"·

Now . . . . _ tlw dJded itUen

to,.. the Aifilw - · · · · .

/r::.::::!l. Discard
U.Oid

HE. 15 IN THE

MIWLE OF iHI5
I&lt;IND OF PLAN.

a~o~~ut.lll7lilo...,.an" ..

39.chalnber

-~-

u!::=lk I ...J
ro,..._
............
Jl.--=lii\

28. Leatber

27.Entlre

~ -

=

market
20. Alger·

euda
21. Go for

Real Estate For Sale

-

11. Volcanic
spew
12. Paleneas
13. eoo...ngulnoous
U.Favoring
15.Foot
(comb.
form)

MARhiUANA.

power steering and brakes ~~~-~~-~~
$100. Phone 992-2«-4 alter 5: 30
QUEEN
Const.
Rooting ;· AUTOMOBILE lnsura*ai· t~ten-: HACKNEY'S Electric Semce. : :.
p .m ., Ge..-ge Hackel!, Jr., 93 NEW LISTING- Kan~uga- 3
remodel i ng , aluminum
cancell";d?
Lost
your
all types of electrical - "· •
7th Ave., Middleport, Olio.
bedrooms, bath, gas lorced
siding. Phone 992- 732~~-at..- s license? Call· 992·
Phone 992+107:
~.air furnace. Modern kitchen.
9- 1~-Jtp
11-25-tfc
·~
J.IUk ••
Full basement.
6-15-tfc

~~r:;~ F~~n:oci~: CHESHIRE - Fast lunch lot
STEREO-Radio console, •
speed intermixed changer,
2!86.
Renovated 3
dual volume control, 4
7 ~tfc POMEROY -------.....!..-~~
bedrooms,
bath,
furnace, nice
speak,r sound system ,
kitchen.
·
beautiful hand rubber Walnut J BEDROOM brick home.
Clloice location in Middleport ·
finish. Balance $66.34. Use our
Seen by appointment only. MINERSVILLE - Good 3
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
bedrooms, bath, furnace.
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m:
9-13-6tc
5-7-tfc
Garage.
MAPLE Stereo-radio com- .::-:-- - : - - - - - - - binallon, AM-FM radio, • ':it X ROOM house, bath, full 30 ACRES- on Rl. U3 N..-fh.
speaker sound sys tern, •
:.asement, 133 Butternut Ave.,.
speed automatic changer.
just walking distance from S£E USBEFO.REY.OUBUY
separate controls. Balance
downtown Pomeroy. Cmtact . HELEN L TEAFORD,
$78.29. Use our time payment
Ed Hedrick, . 2137 Wadswooth,
ASSOCIATE
pian. Call 992-7085. ·
i)rive, ColumbUs Olio, phone
992·ll2S
9-IJ.61c
237- ~3•, Columbu•.
9-12-61c

{6.Caddoan

Indian

PHON£ tft-1414

SEWING MACHINES. Replir
service, all makes, 992-2214,
The Falric Shop, Pomeo oy.
Auth«ized Singer Sales and
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
5-1 -tfc
3-29-tlc
O'DELL WHEEL alignmeni c--7, ..,.r-:.:--=--~-­
locatedal Crossroads, Rl. l24. ~READY-MIX
CONCRETE
Complete front end service,
delivered right to rour
,....., up and !rake service.
pr9 jecl. Fast and easy. Free
· Wheels
b~lanced
elec - eslinTales. Phone 992-328~.
Ironically.
All
work
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Middlep..-t, Ohio.
.·
rates. Phone 992-3213.
6-30-tfc.o
7-27-tfc ----~""7'-..,---=
=sE=PT=t~C'-t:a:-nks:---c:-1-ea-ned-:-.-Mi~'ller THE SHOP. Custom meat
Sanitation, Stewart. Olio. ·Ph.
culling, Pleasant Ridae Road,
662-3035.
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, 992·
3374 and Dale LitHe, 992-63-46.
2-12-tfc
9-12·30tc

WHIRLPOOL
washer
and
NEW LISTING - Oe&gt;der - 6
dryer, like new. Phone 992- HOUSE, 16-12 Lincoln Heights.
rooms, bath, gas fiJmace.
2SSS ..- 992-72'16.
Call Danny Thompson, 992Business building, 30x.U.
2196.
9-10-6ic
- - - - - -- - - 7-111-tlc POMEROY-Nice3bedrooms,
FARM and h«ne latex . house -.N"E"w",-;3;-;_be=d-::r0::0::m:-;h;::o::m=e '"
l'h baths, large living and
!l::lnt sale. King Builders
Middlep..-t . . Buill-in kitchen, dining. DoUble garage .
pply, Middlep..-1. 9. 2.Ufc
ceramic tile_bath, all-electric 2 ACRES_ On Rt 33 N..-th.
heat. good neighborhood. Can
··

- -- - - - -

Of' COURSe
I BELIEVE
'IUU.

Why not.a~ lono

.
~E:.~t.m:::.:.th:bl'l'~ ~:;;=~~•;•~s~J~·~~~e~s=:=s==~=
-~-~-~-·~·~v~~~-~c~es~.~-;·~~~; ~

Realty

3 NEW 1971 atEV. lh TON PICKUPS
1 NEW 1971 atEV. 34 TON PICKUP

B ..

Real Estate Fli Sale

STILL A J'AIUBLE

!

COAL; ·limestone. Excelsior
•au Works, E. Main St•••
r'omeroy . Phone 992-31191.
,
'-9-Hc.

-

'sa Ti•••• To-lu
a TUtae To Savel
·Now-Do loti•!·

original cartons. No at tachments nee tied as OUI'"
controls are buill-in. Sews

-

IIAlll

-

."•·:

Real Est•te Broker
P.O. Bo~ 101, Pomeroy, Qoio
" ' - 915-4116
Hilion Wolfe Sr.. Salesman
" ' - 949-3211
Contact us tor your housing
needs .
9-16-Jtc

New '71 Chevrolets

sewing machines. still in

OF 1,4AIR. IN OtRECT
PROPORTION TO 1\IE
SPEED OF TilE LINE~

UERE

'

HURRY TO •••

1220 Washlngion Baulevanr·

270 Series, vinyl roof. while finish, all good fires, 6 cyl.,

· ' ISON .

... OlliS TilE QUANTJ'N

~

·---

PH. 423-7521

Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine. power
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. C~~vers .

OUR CLEARANCE

t i)OII'T !(NOW IF I
WANT' TO G£r IN "THAT
IJNfi, IS t:r JUST A
COtNCti&gt;ENCI! ...

MILLER HOMES

1970 Olevtalet BeiNr 4

----PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zit-zag

with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew Ul bullons.
monograms. and blind hem
stitch. Full cash price, S3l.5ll
., budget pian available.
Phone 992-56&lt;11.
9-1Uic

COME &amp; SHOP -

tinted glass. fact..-y air conditioned. sports mlrr..-s,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromalic,. power steering &amp;
lrak.e s, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

NEW IDEA corn picker, phone
7&lt;12-&lt;4731.
9-14-Jtp

00 ..

'

GIGANTIC SAVINGS

Sport equipped, Classic copper with sanda,_ lnterl..-.

Wanted

Poles

TO DO

1970
ran.o Cpe. --~----- '3395
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 ..-!. Rally

~-

S/(,t..Pe!

DON'T

WE WANT ACTION • ••
We're Moving 'Em Out At

IHE JOB FOR YOU

WILL DO w«k of any s..-1 at
home or business. Clean
yards. wash windows ..- car,
pairit, elc. Male, 19 years of SPINET PIANO: Wanted,
age. Write P.O. Box S7,
responsible party to take over
Middlep..-t.
a spinel piano. Easy terms
9-16-Stc
available • . Can be seen
locally.
Write
Credit
Manager, P. 0. Box 17.1,
Clover, S. C.• :zwtQ.
WOMAN needs someone to slay
9-16-11p
5 days a - · some nights.
Phone 992-5586.
9-12-.llc HALF RUNNER beans, S2
-=========--,
bushel . Potatoes. Carence
·r
Prolfitf, Portland. Phone 102254.
9-1.,1fc

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

TO SEE HE

•

50-New.
and·
Used
..
Mobile Homes Go On Sale

Smart buyers all over this
.-ea have found lhe ,place
to really save money is .a t
Pomeroy Motor Co. Your
business is imp..-tant to us
and we'll do everything
possible to make yoo a
regular customer. If yoo' ve
been thinking about a new
cr used car, make a point of
seeing our selection.

4 Or., V-8 engine. automatic trans., P.S.• factory air, good
tires, radio &amp; other extras. white finish, clean inferior.

3 ROOM unfurnished apartment. Phone 992-2288.
9-1•ttc

~ IIJ .'S~Wt:, F~ ll.WIT?
tiS DOESIJT ~ A .JOe..,
Do:l6S HE?

EX.ERCIS IIJG

10 I&lt;EEP /IJ

•

SUNDAY 1105

DAILY 9 T09

SLEEPINGroams with kitchen
privileges. Phone 992-3131 or

MEIGS SENIORS - P..-tralls
will be taken Saturday,
September t8 and Saturday,
September 25. Call , _ for . NICE trailer, 1 bedo-n, ideal
1..- couple, 10 miles n..-fh of
yOUr appointment. Grover's
Pomeroy. Phone 992-6d2.
.
Studio, 992-2.05, Middlep..-1,
t-t•ttc
Olio.
9-15-9lc
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Moblie
Court, Rt. 12~. Syracuse.
GUN SHOOT. Sunday, SepOhio. 992-2951.
. !ember 19, 1 p.m .• Mile Hill
Road. 20 lbs. Steak, Assorted
•2-tfc
Meats by Racine Fire Dept
9~15--jfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
GUN SHOOT. Forked Run
Phone 992-5434.
Sp«tsman Clwb, Sunday,
111-11-tfc
September 19, 12 moon.
·
9-15-Jtc
3 ROOM lment and bath.
Buill-in eledrlc Willi own and
table top range, doooble sink. overloolting the Olio
LOST IN court house or belri-. real clelln and nice.
ween court house and parking
'Phone
Gallipolis 416-9539
lol: A family pin, crown
after
5
p.m.
shaped, birthstone, husband,
9-5-tfc
wile, children, grandchildren.
gr"fl-grandchlldren. It found
please call 992-:R2C •·
9-16-2tc
ANTIQUE glassware. jewelry,
zither,
celluloid,
mis .
YELLOW male kitten lost in
JUNKATIQUE. open 10-6
Leading Creek area. Call Joy
except Sul)day. Guysville on
Sauer. 7&lt;12·3654.
Route 329.
9-16-Jtc
9-15-Jtc

Employment Wanted

FRIDAY. SATURDAY, SUND~Y, SEPT. 17-11-19

1970 Dodge , . . ·-------·~495
9-16-lfc

~'s

AIMIN'

•

For Rent
992-762~-

AN' I'M

'·I

Female Help lanted

WHISPERING PINES

•

.

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
YARD SALE, 617 Hith Slteel,
· S P.M. Day Before Publication
Gravel Hill, · ~lddleport.
Monday Deadline9a.on.
Saturday, September II
.. _Can_gtiWion #o Corrf!Cii.o ns
beginning 10 a .m.
Will be ""cepted until9 a .m. for
9-15-Jic
Da~ of Publication
· •
REGULATIONS
REWARD FOR relum « inThe P\Jblisher ·reserves the
formation canceming a 6rlght lo edit or rej~ any a.d s
month old Siamese cal. Write
deemed objectional
The
Box 293. MHldleporl, Olio.
publisher will not be risjb.slble
9-IUtc
for more- than one incorrect.
insertion. · .
ANNUAL Eblin Reunion will be
RATES
held on Sunday, September
For W~nt Ad Service
19th. at the -st side state
Scents pl!r Word one Insertion
peri&lt; an Rt. :D. All descen' Minimum Charge 7SC
~ dants of Allen and MitJTy Ann
· 12 cents per word three.
Eblin, friends and relatives
consecutive insertions.
are welcome. llinner at 12: 30.
18 cents per w..-d six con9-12-61c
~utive

'·

. L . ' GR.WUIGW

DI

BID

SRWF

LW

NGM·

GMB,

LWF

:01

VJW

LZLP,

GMD

BRE

VJW.-

�-,..,.,....,.
, r r
I

'
11 -Tile IMiJy Seatillel, Pwwo, " t ' : zrt, 0., 5 t'

'

.

2 11, lJ'/1

.

·,

_

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action I Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!-~.
II ANT AD

Notice

insertions.

Sef-

. 25 Per Cent Discount on paid KOSCOT Kosmetlcs.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
tember
Sales
Specia :
CARD OF THANKS
Kreaony Lip Kote S2 &amp;OBITUARY
SL50, Frosducent Up Kote
S1.SO for SO word minimum :
$2.50 S2. 23 delicious
Each additional w..-d 2c.
~ol..-s. Call 992-5113 or mme
BLIND ADS
see at t61'h ~· "lh Ave.,
• Additional 2SC Charge per
Middlep..-1,
.Ad~ertlse"""t.
1-29-tfc
OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a.m. to 5: 00 p;on. Dally,
8: 30 a . m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.
HEY MRS. HOUSEWIVE!
Bored of the same ofd job.
Notice
Join Beeline FashionS. Call
SAVE UP lo -ane half. Bring
~'-16 or 949-3703.
"(001' sick TV to Clluck's TV .
9-1"-Jtc
511op, 151 Butternut Ave.. ...,
~
·
B:ly .
Pomeroy .
·
._23-tfc OLD Furniture.
docks.
;:::========::.,
and-or amplete households.
Write M. D. Miller, f&gt;Gmeroy,
Qoio. Call 992-6271.
1-25-tfc

a..

.anted To

dlshe5.

DMCE

NilE Q.U8

SATURDAY NIGHT

SEPTEMBER 18
FROM 10 ru 2

Music .By
Bill Carr and
Nashville Swingers
From Parkersburg, W.·
Va .,__
• _ _.:_.-=-:--:-:-'

LOCAL MAN wishes to buy
acreage dose to f&gt;Gmeroy.
Phone 992.J37~.
9-12·12tc

AWORD
TO THE
WISE:

. lost

WE'R_~ HE~E

1967 Fonl Muslanl ------- '1595
HT Cpe.• 1 owner &amp; very nice, V-8 engine. wide oval fires,
P.S .• P. B.. fact..-y air cood.• radio&amp; other extras.

1968 Dodge Dart 4 Door-----'1495
automatic trans., radio, clean iAterior.

1967 a.rdet Bel ··-----· '1495

St. Wagon. Green finish with maldling green vinvt interior, all good WW tires, V8 engine, automatic trans.,
power steering and brakes, luggage rack. A sharp wagon
and priced to please.

1967 Fonl Galuie 500 4 Door--'1595
low mileage by local one owner. Med. green finish and
spotless interior, V8 engine, automatic and power
steering, good WW tires. A clean car that has always been
cared f«.

Maximum
Diameter
10" on ·
Largest End

'6.00 Per Ton

ELECTROLUX vacuum
cleaner comple"' with al. tachmenls, ardwinder and
paint spray. Used, but in like
new condition. Pay $37.6

DEUVERED

m
OHIO

PMJ.£T en
On Old Rt. 33
Phone 992-2689
Pomeroy, Ohio

Help Wanted

EA~N

AT home addressing
envelopes. Rush stamped
self-addressed envelope. The
Ambrose Co., ~5 Lakeborn,
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
9·8-30tp

BUSINESS .
LEADER

We uted a man who
has the ability to
progress and take on
additional
respon·
sibitity fast. To · the
man who can, we offer
S9700 starting salary
plus incentive. group
insurilnce.
and
retirement. If you fit
Ibis description, send a
llrief resume to PM'·
......, Manager. Post
Office
Box
356,
· Gelllpolls. Ohio.
All Equal ~portunity
Employer.
Pd. Adv.

cash

or

Credit

terms

available. Phone 992·5641.
9-1+6tc
SHOTGUN, 12 ga. Remington
automatic. also pits. 9 weeks
old. Phone 949-2115.
9-16-Jfp

BEAT file COLD WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
HEATING OIL FROM
LANDMARK.
We have the fiAest Budget
Pay Plan, Oeliv«y Services.
Automatic Degree Day
Delivery and Duel Oeliv«y
E..,ipment.
We also have a complete line
·of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
and-Fu"'lc;es.
.
POMEROY
Joct
W. Carser, Mtr.
..
r•-m-t111

.APPLES .
Fitzpa!rlck ()-.
chards, State Route 619,
phone Wilkesville, Mt-3785.
9-3-tfc
GREEN BEANS, pick your
own, SI.SO a bushel, AndrCross, Racine, Ohio.
9-3-181c

-ies.

POODLE
Sil- Toy,
Park vi.W Kennels. Phone 992~-

1-IS.Ifc

~~~~----,=:::c-

1954 DODGE lnldt. 2 taio-s«&lt;lf.
1962 Chrysler 300 - S21Q. Will
!rade tor ..~..... phclne 9493915.

3 water system, located just off
Rl. 7 on Countv Rd. 25 at
Chester. Olio. If interested
call985-•262.
9-5-121c
HOUSE - 6 rooms and bath,
modern kitchen and bath,
built -in cabinets. fuel oil
furnace, 7 acres, just off U. S.

33 by Enterprise U.M .
Church. Phone 992-5679 alter 5
p. m .
9-16-Jtc

19720.. Piaups
1972 4 Wh. Drille BitlEr
1972 4 Wh. Drille Pickup

Yoru CAevy Dealer
Pomeray

- -

• • ~ • • -

.•.

' lirpr., Olilo
•

.•.

-

·--------

B.ECTRIC SERVIa:
\

Residential.
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hour Service

POMEROY
•
HOME &amp; AU10

GEORGE Hobstetfer, Real
Estate Broker, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Hilton Wolfe, Salesman.
1 LOT in Racine, Ohio. good
location 1..- trailer - s1.100.
9- 1~

Cleland

-·

..........

·

I'ADPEJI

li':&amp;l11m
__N M•_ll'Aiil •y ROOFING_l__

GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr.

HOIST EITEl

·-

-

O'BRIEN

Racino, 0.

992-2094
606 E. Main

c~

-- ~ ·

HOISTETTEI

POMEROY- FAMILY HOM£
CLOSE TO ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL-~ large bedrooms,
closets. 1\'2 baths, large living
room with fireplace. hard·
wood floors, gas forced air
furnace.
garage
with
renovated room over. ALL IN
GOOD CONDITION. GOING
AT $11,500.00.
PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY IN
CAPABLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2W
9-16-6tc

- ::~t B.
V
.
O
RD
TEAF
U OU

6 cyl. stanSee Fred

NEW.
DELUXE
sewing
mechlne, Zig-Zag, heavy
7&lt;12--1962.
clrty, buiH-in mot..- and light,
9-16-llc
does everything. Oily $6-1.88.
Twin Citv Sewing Machine. 1964 CORVAIR, 3 speed standard transmission, runs good
Phone 992-1085.
-$100.
1'161 Olds 4 dr. Hardlop
9-1~1c

9-1~tc

es we're alone?""

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPUES
And

~

Complete
Re.modeJing

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

I~

SPOUIING..
ROOF PAIIIlllli

-."

~·

_,•

Kitchtlls, S.flls
Room Addilions
AlldPalios
llacklloe And
End!Nder Work

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Wedller .Hfi.. &amp;
COnslrvdiooo Co. . - All-.
_ , Plumlliq &amp; _.,._

Septic Tonks
And LMch Beds.

Com;lete
PI••••••·
Hnling •"" A.j_r Ceodilialling.
2~
St•• Midllloforf

--- ·

992-7608
Have Your S

•~lal

Air~g·

Inspection and

Re-OIQ

6.98. Plus
Parts
Blaettnar's
Special
AI

FURNITURE

11011

Ulnft

PHONE 992-2143

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
101 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 1..- a family with a base
salary of 55.000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
rat.,.

u_.,

•''
.;
~
..;

..

Phone 992-2550
insured • Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us tor Free
Esti"'ate on Fumaw
tnstatation.

EXPERT
Wheel . . . . .

15.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

;:-... .&amp;&lt;

Pclnllllf lkaxt ' . .

\ imu: ORPHAN ANNIE

Opeto1n1s

Mondor 111n1 Sa-r

-------

~~60i;;E;.;M;IM;·~;•P;;tl;•;·~~;··;o.~~ -

----

DillE'S

BEMJiY StiJp
Corner Ullilo A...

•

.... s.... Rt.J

Houn MIRUy., T..-y,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

PORTABLE Singer sewing
machine, will sell for repair
bill, $19.22. Twin City Sewing
Machine. Phone 992-7085.

--

M9-4551

POMEROY - 1 story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, basement. 2
glassed p..-ches, front p..-ch,
garage, A STEAL AT JUST
55,500.00.

..

automatic

.t.~

Rt. 2

6GII E•st Main
.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT - 1\'2 story
BRICK, 2 nice bedrooms,
bath, nice kitchen, dining
room, paneling, carpeting,
full width front porch, storage
building, level lot. $6.950.00.

ALSO GOOD SELECTION

Open Eves. Til B

transmission,

SR •

Broker
11 o Med!Mic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wdn dor . - Frillly
I,::II&amp;.IIL le6J1-••
BILL NELSON
992-l6SJ

,
••

HILTON WOLFE
Mt-3211

IOI.M. lei::IIJI-••

Sa....,
1::11 &amp;.01, .. ! ' ·"'·

Auctioneer -

Yes__.. C17Ptotuole: II:VBRY GIIN:SRATION

--

Thrsday

ACBOSS
1- 0klahom&amp;
t . Augury

'·

B. ABsent

•
~·

17.IDgh

S-9-lfo - , -

------

=-·

on
IC8.le
18.CUrve

•a....~~""j

-------rl

PLUMBING, , _ or repairs.
.
_ .
All w«k guaranteed. Phone · AWNINGS. storm do..-s and:
_ .992-23C3.
w
i n dow s,aluminum
c a r'posiding
r t s , l~~~~:=~=~1~
9-U-12tc
marquees,
----::c---cc:-:-:-:::-:=='
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
_
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
sales representative. For free'
,
__
estimates, phone Charles · HATRERNINSONASSERTVVICAEND..._~ - ~
Reasonable rates. Ph. 4o16-4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V. 992,2m.
•
;&lt;(.
Owner &amp; Operator.
Johnson and Son. Inc.
•
, • _ ·~.
S-13-tf&lt;
S-27-tfc
• 1~·... •

19.

LAUGHS AT THill OW FA.SmONS, Btl'I' FOLLOWS •.
RELIGIOUSLY THill NEW.-H. D. THORII:AU
&lt;C&gt; 1171 Xloc J'eaturer 8)'1141eolt, IDe.)

16. -

Indian

on

the
DOWN
1. Salt (Fr.)

2. Eapou...
3.Breakfast
food
•. Pabnleaf

5.Courta

tan
city
22cllepubllcof

M

Ireland

lass
24. "'l'be
(3wds.)
Sch»MS' '
6. Pemlclolla 26. 30 dayw

7. ZolaJI&lt;IVel

B. Dismay
9.Bore
10.Time
killer
(lllwdl.)

(abbr.)
workman
30. Baby-

Bitter'•

42· c;;;.,m•fNNEElE~MYi¥1

starulby

lr-.i-.ri!lr-----rl 23.
21!. Ghutly
Sha.rl or

CRESIB

~erry

l'lllp

:29. Challenged
31. Tiber
tributary

n":""

lr-+-+THIFES

32. Lukewarm
34.Languld
311. Vamlsh
Ingredient
37.Greek
letter
38. Hoatelry

..

Nebraoka

Testament

•
;:
'

~~~~l~~~
·~ ~
· ~~~

.-..~..

...

AXYDLBAAXB

ZSMW

••
-~

NEIGLER Construction. For .
building or remodeling your ·
hqme. Call Guy Neigle• .'
· '742-4211
Amlld •...
Rwll • 0.
Recine, Doio.
·L_ __:_____..;._:-"""":------'..;·...;.·. .;.'_.,.

••

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's llow to WG!tl It:

A.Cl'Diop -~

o&amp;

~- :

ln-+-+--i-

Ia LONc:IFili.LOW
'
One tetter aimply standa for another. In thll 81D1Pie A Ill
uoed for the three L's, X for the two 0'1, ete. BIDP letterll.
o.pootlopltoe, tile length and fonnatlon of the worlltl an ~
hlnto. lliadl day the code !etten ore dl1!ereal

•

I

bOok
45.Wtthem

-,

PIJ

SLOM

KSLWD

NP

Slot

DVPRWB

RC

DSM

RD'C . NMCD

"·

Now . . . . _ tlw dJded itUen

to,.. the Aifilw - · · · · .

/r::.::::!l. Discard
U.Oid

HE. 15 IN THE

MIWLE OF iHI5
I&lt;IND OF PLAN.

a~o~~ut.lll7lilo...,.an" ..

39.chalnber

-~-

u!::=lk I ...J
ro,..._
............
Jl.--=lii\

28. Leatber

27.Entlre

~ -

=

market
20. Alger·

euda
21. Go for

Real Estate For Sale

-

11. Volcanic
spew
12. Paleneas
13. eoo...ngulnoous
U.Favoring
15.Foot
(comb.
form)

MARhiUANA.

power steering and brakes ~~~-~~-~~
$100. Phone 992-2«-4 alter 5: 30
QUEEN
Const.
Rooting ;· AUTOMOBILE lnsura*ai· t~ten-: HACKNEY'S Electric Semce. : :.
p .m ., Ge..-ge Hackel!, Jr., 93 NEW LISTING- Kan~uga- 3
remodel i ng , aluminum
cancell";d?
Lost
your
all types of electrical - "· •
7th Ave., Middleport, Olio.
bedrooms, bath, gas lorced
siding. Phone 992- 732~~-at..- s license? Call· 992·
Phone 992+107:
~.air furnace. Modern kitchen.
9- 1~-Jtp
11-25-tfc
·~
J.IUk ••
Full basement.
6-15-tfc

~~r:;~ F~~n:oci~: CHESHIRE - Fast lunch lot
STEREO-Radio console, •
speed intermixed changer,
2!86.
Renovated 3
dual volume control, 4
7 ~tfc POMEROY -------.....!..-~~
bedrooms,
bath,
furnace, nice
speak,r sound system ,
kitchen.
·
beautiful hand rubber Walnut J BEDROOM brick home.
Clloice location in Middleport ·
finish. Balance $66.34. Use our
Seen by appointment only. MINERSVILLE - Good 3
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
bedrooms, bath, furnace.
Phone 992-5523 after ~ p.m:
9-13-6tc
5-7-tfc
Garage.
MAPLE Stereo-radio com- .::-:-- - : - - - - - - - binallon, AM-FM radio, • ':it X ROOM house, bath, full 30 ACRES- on Rl. U3 N..-fh.
speaker sound sys tern, •
:.asement, 133 Butternut Ave.,.
speed automatic changer.
just walking distance from S£E USBEFO.REY.OUBUY
separate controls. Balance
downtown Pomeroy. Cmtact . HELEN L TEAFORD,
$78.29. Use our time payment
Ed Hedrick, . 2137 Wadswooth,
ASSOCIATE
pian. Call 992-7085. ·
i)rive, ColumbUs Olio, phone
992·ll2S
9-IJ.61c
237- ~3•, Columbu•.
9-12-61c

{6.Caddoan

Indian

PHON£ tft-1414

SEWING MACHINES. Replir
service, all makes, 992-2214,
The Falric Shop, Pomeo oy.
Auth«ized Singer Sales and
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
5-1 -tfc
3-29-tlc
O'DELL WHEEL alignmeni c--7, ..,.r-:.:--=--~-­
locatedal Crossroads, Rl. l24. ~READY-MIX
CONCRETE
Complete front end service,
delivered right to rour
,....., up and !rake service.
pr9 jecl. Fast and easy. Free
· Wheels
b~lanced
elec - eslinTales. Phone 992-328~.
Ironically.
All
work
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Middlep..-t, Ohio.
.·
rates. Phone 992-3213.
6-30-tfc.o
7-27-tfc ----~""7'-..,---=
=sE=PT=t~C'-t:a:-nks:---c:-1-ea-ned-:-.-Mi~'ller THE SHOP. Custom meat
Sanitation, Stewart. Olio. ·Ph.
culling, Pleasant Ridae Road,
662-3035.
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, 992·
3374 and Dale LitHe, 992-63-46.
2-12-tfc
9-12·30tc

WHIRLPOOL
washer
and
NEW LISTING - Oe&gt;der - 6
dryer, like new. Phone 992- HOUSE, 16-12 Lincoln Heights.
rooms, bath, gas fiJmace.
2SSS ..- 992-72'16.
Call Danny Thompson, 992Business building, 30x.U.
2196.
9-10-6ic
- - - - - -- - - 7-111-tlc POMEROY-Nice3bedrooms,
FARM and h«ne latex . house -.N"E"w",-;3;-;_be=d-::r0::0::m:-;h;::o::m=e '"
l'h baths, large living and
!l::lnt sale. King Builders
Middlep..-t . . Buill-in kitchen, dining. DoUble garage .
pply, Middlep..-1. 9. 2.Ufc
ceramic tile_bath, all-electric 2 ACRES_ On Rt 33 N..-th.
heat. good neighborhood. Can
··

- -- - - - -

Of' COURSe
I BELIEVE
'IUU.

Why not.a~ lono

.
~E:.~t.m:::.:.th:bl'l'~ ~:;;=~~•;•~s~J~·~~~e~s=:=s==~=
-~-~-~-·~·~v~~~-~c~es~.~-;·~~~; ~

Realty

3 NEW 1971 atEV. lh TON PICKUPS
1 NEW 1971 atEV. 34 TON PICKUP

B ..

Real Estate Fli Sale

STILL A J'AIUBLE

!

COAL; ·limestone. Excelsior
•au Works, E. Main St•••
r'omeroy . Phone 992-31191.
,
'-9-Hc.

-

'sa Ti•••• To-lu
a TUtae To Savel
·Now-Do loti•!·

original cartons. No at tachments nee tied as OUI'"
controls are buill-in. Sews

-

IIAlll

-

."•·:

Real Est•te Broker
P.O. Bo~ 101, Pomeroy, Qoio
" ' - 915-4116
Hilion Wolfe Sr.. Salesman
" ' - 949-3211
Contact us tor your housing
needs .
9-16-Jtc

New '71 Chevrolets

sewing machines. still in

OF 1,4AIR. IN OtRECT
PROPORTION TO 1\IE
SPEED OF TilE LINE~

UERE

'

HURRY TO •••

1220 Washlngion Baulevanr·

270 Series, vinyl roof. while finish, all good fires, 6 cyl.,

· ' ISON .

... OlliS TilE QUANTJ'N

~

·---

PH. 423-7521

Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine. power
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. C~~vers .

OUR CLEARANCE

t i)OII'T !(NOW IF I
WANT' TO G£r IN "THAT
IJNfi, IS t:r JUST A
COtNCti&gt;ENCI! ...

MILLER HOMES

1970 Olevtalet BeiNr 4

----PAINT DAMAGE. 1971 zit-zag

with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew Ul bullons.
monograms. and blind hem
stitch. Full cash price, S3l.5ll
., budget pian available.
Phone 992-56&lt;11.
9-1Uic

COME &amp; SHOP -

tinted glass. fact..-y air conditioned. sports mlrr..-s,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromalic,. power steering &amp;
lrak.e s, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

NEW IDEA corn picker, phone
7&lt;12-&lt;4731.
9-14-Jtp

00 ..

'

GIGANTIC SAVINGS

Sport equipped, Classic copper with sanda,_ lnterl..-.

Wanted

Poles

TO DO

1970
ran.o Cpe. --~----- '3395
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 ..-!. Rally

~-

S/(,t..Pe!

DON'T

WE WANT ACTION • ••
We're Moving 'Em Out At

IHE JOB FOR YOU

WILL DO w«k of any s..-1 at
home or business. Clean
yards. wash windows ..- car,
pairit, elc. Male, 19 years of SPINET PIANO: Wanted,
age. Write P.O. Box S7,
responsible party to take over
Middlep..-t.
a spinel piano. Easy terms
9-16-Stc
available • . Can be seen
locally.
Write
Credit
Manager, P. 0. Box 17.1,
Clover, S. C.• :zwtQ.
WOMAN needs someone to slay
9-16-11p
5 days a - · some nights.
Phone 992-5586.
9-12-.llc HALF RUNNER beans, S2
-=========--,
bushel . Potatoes. Carence
·r
Prolfitf, Portland. Phone 102254.
9-1.,1fc

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

TO SEE HE

•

50-New.
and·
Used
..
Mobile Homes Go On Sale

Smart buyers all over this
.-ea have found lhe ,place
to really save money is .a t
Pomeroy Motor Co. Your
business is imp..-tant to us
and we'll do everything
possible to make yoo a
regular customer. If yoo' ve
been thinking about a new
cr used car, make a point of
seeing our selection.

4 Or., V-8 engine. automatic trans., P.S.• factory air, good
tires, radio &amp; other extras. white finish, clean inferior.

3 ROOM unfurnished apartment. Phone 992-2288.
9-1•ttc

~ IIJ .'S~Wt:, F~ ll.WIT?
tiS DOESIJT ~ A .JOe..,
Do:l6S HE?

EX.ERCIS IIJG

10 I&lt;EEP /IJ

•

SUNDAY 1105

DAILY 9 T09

SLEEPINGroams with kitchen
privileges. Phone 992-3131 or

MEIGS SENIORS - P..-tralls
will be taken Saturday,
September t8 and Saturday,
September 25. Call , _ for . NICE trailer, 1 bedo-n, ideal
1..- couple, 10 miles n..-fh of
yOUr appointment. Grover's
Pomeroy. Phone 992-6d2.
.
Studio, 992-2.05, Middlep..-1,
t-t•ttc
Olio.
9-15-9lc
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Moblie
Court, Rt. 12~. Syracuse.
GUN SHOOT. Sunday, SepOhio. 992-2951.
. !ember 19, 1 p.m .• Mile Hill
Road. 20 lbs. Steak, Assorted
•2-tfc
Meats by Racine Fire Dept
9~15--jfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
GUN SHOOT. Forked Run
Phone 992-5434.
Sp«tsman Clwb, Sunday,
111-11-tfc
September 19, 12 moon.
·
9-15-Jtc
3 ROOM lment and bath.
Buill-in eledrlc Willi own and
table top range, doooble sink. overloolting the Olio
LOST IN court house or belri-. real clelln and nice.
ween court house and parking
'Phone
Gallipolis 416-9539
lol: A family pin, crown
after
5
p.m.
shaped, birthstone, husband,
9-5-tfc
wile, children, grandchildren.
gr"fl-grandchlldren. It found
please call 992-:R2C •·
9-16-2tc
ANTIQUE glassware. jewelry,
zither,
celluloid,
mis .
YELLOW male kitten lost in
JUNKATIQUE. open 10-6
Leading Creek area. Call Joy
except Sul)day. Guysville on
Sauer. 7&lt;12·3654.
Route 329.
9-16-Jtc
9-15-Jtc

Employment Wanted

FRIDAY. SATURDAY, SUND~Y, SEPT. 17-11-19

1970 Dodge , . . ·-------·~495
9-16-lfc

~'s

AIMIN'

•

For Rent
992-762~-

AN' I'M

'·I

Female Help lanted

WHISPERING PINES

•

.

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
YARD SALE, 617 Hith Slteel,
· S P.M. Day Before Publication
Gravel Hill, · ~lddleport.
Monday Deadline9a.on.
Saturday, September II
.. _Can_gtiWion #o Corrf!Cii.o ns
beginning 10 a .m.
Will be ""cepted until9 a .m. for
9-15-Jic
Da~ of Publication
· •
REGULATIONS
REWARD FOR relum « inThe P\Jblisher ·reserves the
formation canceming a 6rlght lo edit or rej~ any a.d s
month old Siamese cal. Write
deemed objectional
The
Box 293. MHldleporl, Olio.
publisher will not be risjb.slble
9-IUtc
for more- than one incorrect.
insertion. · .
ANNUAL Eblin Reunion will be
RATES
held on Sunday, September
For W~nt Ad Service
19th. at the -st side state
Scents pl!r Word one Insertion
peri&lt; an Rt. :D. All descen' Minimum Charge 7SC
~ dants of Allen and MitJTy Ann
· 12 cents per word three.
Eblin, friends and relatives
consecutive insertions.
are welcome. llinner at 12: 30.
18 cents per w..-d six con9-12-61c
~utive

'·

. L . ' GR.WUIGW

DI

BID

SRWF

LW

NGM·

GMB,

LWF

:01

VJW

LZLP,

GMD

BRE

VJW.-

�'
I

Pressures Heat Up Tempers in Ohio Legislature

Septm!lwl6, 1171 ·

Elberfe~dsJ~

Friday and Saturday Sale •••
"WW'U

WOMEN'S UNIFORMS

Special GrQup

7.00

Friday-Saturday

Sale 49'

GIRLS
SKIRTS
Save this weekend on girls skirts, an excellent
value in bonded acrylic, pleated and straight
styles, all new fall colors.
Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14
Friday
Saturday

A fine selection of girls bonded jumpers in solids
and plaids, many styles to choose from. Sizes 3 to
6x and 7 to 14.

3 • 00

GIRLS SLACKS

This week end. an excellent value in womens
dresses from our regular stock, a beautiful
selection of new fall dresses in solids and prints,
cottons. knits, challis, and wool plaids. All size
ranges.

14• OO

65 percent wool, 35 percent Kadel polyester.
Popvlar V
'large and
raspberry,
blue, steel

neck style in sizes small, medium,
extra large sizes. Rust heather,
apricot. lemon yellow, plum. navy
blue.
Friday- Saturday

SWEATER SETS

Lee's heavy duty blue
denim bib overalls of excellent quality. Sizes 36 to
SO waist. Saddle crotch,
lined hip pockets, shield
back, 4 in 1 bib pocket,
corded button holes. Save
on your needs Friday and
Saturday.

Introductory Sale

MEN'S UNSULATED COVERALLS

6.89
Tweeds, stripes and
solid colors. Belted
models, semi-boxer
waist styles, regular
slacks, all permanent
press. Sizes 3 to 7.

Men's 3.95 Sport Shirts

Hand
washable
polyester knit slacks,
elastic slipon style, full
cut. Sizes 8 to 20 in dark
brown, dark green,
navy blue, purple, and
black.

Long sleeve shirts in all sizes. Small (1414Vol. m"l!dlum (15:15'12), large (16-161/o),
extra large (17-17112). Solid colors : Stripes,
plaids, geometric patterns. All permanent
press. Choose your favorite model and
color .

Permanent Press

ROBES

-

Solld colors and stripes.
Sizes small, medium, large
and extra large. 65 percent
polyester and 35 percent
com bed cotton.
Fricl.ly- S.tvrdly

5.88

8

Carharlt Quilted

NYLON
JACKETS

2tor7.QO

Choose severai of these beautiful tailored
blouses, many styles. fabrics and colors to
choose from, all famous makes. Regular and
extra sizes.

MEN'S PAJAMAS

Zipper fly front oPening,
self collar, knit culls,
machine washable. Sizes 36
to 50. Black or Ioden green.
Friday. S..turdoy

Sizes A. B. C and D. Button front coal
style lop. Adjustable gripper boxer
waist bottom. Solid colors and laney
palterns. Permanent press.
Friday. S..turday

3.00

2 pair 7.00

BESTFORM SPECIAL.VALUES

Savings on Bras and Girdles

8.00

Men's Lee _R ider ~.98 Western Style

BWE DENIM JEANS
Slim cut -or regular cuf Friday - Saturday on
sale.

Boys' 2.95 Loog Sleeve Sport Shirts
Sizes 6 to 20. Stripes, solid colors, novelty prints,
permanent press .
Friday - Saturday

2 to·r 5.00

5.95

IN OUR FIRST FLOOR UNGERIE DEPT.

Choose from an excellent selection of colors and patterns.

p

-

·

Both the Pomeroy and
Middleport .fire departments
went out on hoax calls early
today .
Middleport received its alann
at 7:29 a.m. Mrs. Connie
Hendricks, who took the call in
her quarters above Middleport
town hall, said the caller
identified himself on the phone
as Roscoe Fife, who said his
house was on frre and asked for

-

KNimNG WORS'dD

woor.

Dupont Polyester Fiberfill

· MAT RESISTANT
NON AlllRGENIC

Attractive all cotton covering
Weekend Sale

3.69
4.98

SCRM10N
•

POLYESTER
washable.
Beautiful solids, checks
and stripes.

sa".60" .

yd.

foolball game.

r------·- ------.- ------------.,
II News ..•in Brie-fs
I' :I Trucker

6&gt;&lt;6. Heavy viny! films In
good range of colors and

patterns. Ail colors wash·
fast and sunfast.

Friday and S..tvrday

3.99

ZkiUIRRIC!S! -Ninr,lt"'thtFia,ullistnwatall!l'IIIP !bat will be playq at Soutbem
Janill' lli8b Seboo! in RadDe fnm 10 to midnight tonight following the Southern-Glouster

SIIJWER
QJRI'AINS

OOUBLE KNIT

8J IJwiW Pna blltt•a-1

F4 Pluntoms Fired on

1.95

J!INiMY GUNS lfiiUlD TODAY on three
American F4 p!uonlm! jels wbi1e tile)' 'tlln carrying out a
milslm in !Aas, in lhe w lbetn half Ill the Demj)itamed Zone.
The je1a lbeleupou bomhel tbe aniHiinralt gunsife from which
tbe firing came, located •miles soulb Ill tbe coastal city of IM!g
Bel.. On 'l'l!unday, North YJrlnam I aJJii.eircnft fire dCIWIII!d an
OOii obsa vati111 helirqller 22 miles below Da Nang, wounding
SAIGON -

IOihor showlr curtains
3.01, uo and Ull

8 TRACK TAPE .

•

bJD

A nice selection of 8 Track Tape in country
Western, easy listening and sacred music.
2nd Floor Music Dept.

AmericaD UtWI1W51.

Showdown Vote Coming today
W.ASIIINGION -ASIIOWOOWN \'OIEise.peded today oo
tbe isme &lt;1reviting lhe military draft Jaw wbicb died 2~ monlbs
ago. thtSmale, wi1ha pesilmlialnrDIIgrillging in its ears, is
at IDVI!Ie m tbe qaestion late Ibis IIILWning. President Nboo told
II IIIII a faibJre toota)' a 21-monlb prolongaliall at the draft wtWd
be one &lt;1 "the JIIC!6l irrespnwible ads Cll lbe part &lt;1 tbe Ultted
Stales Senate llllt I CQJJd prea'bly tiJink fi."

5.68

-~ - - - - - -·- - - - - a
I
Also 8 track tape carrying cases,
cleaning tape and 8 track blank recor-.
ding tape.
·

------------REOORD ALBUMS

Tu Speci.lim Hning S.,.

1

WASIDNGTON -A GBOIIP OF TAX sperialist• will testify
•wit
llldaybefuetbelloaleW'Q'SandMransOmmitt.ee,
wtach Ia ••,...;.1ering Piesilmt Nixon's DEW "'""JIIIie prngram.
1ht tuCJPtttaravcr tucutsflrlheJICIII"wbicb would go beyood
tbe ~Ill N'um's rw•v• Is

Another shipment of record albums In popular
and old tunes.

1.89

Gilligall V'WIDII

Ofl

Today SlwU7

NEW YOU -GOV. ·JOIIN J. GII.UG.AN said taday the
ualed~teslain tbe " wcasteenmirerisis sDla! tbe l!lllil, and
tbe •tical ia ll!ll ,eding the help II' I tmlip frliD lhe Nixon
w!mjnjsfntical !bat It sboald be g Uirlg Gilligan, in an appe.wance Clll NBC's "TGGIay Sbaw" said ''Ire lirE Jelling our ears
bealeD atf eeoncaniall)"' .md NiDa's wage price rr- is merely
a "llme-Qif' in lhe ball poe.
'"'lbeCGDCe111~1emtoiJeemamtingfnmWaslringtm

IDdllectCU'ec&amp;IC!lllic affairs ill any W8J IIIII gives us any degree
«f t++f"trner." r.jlfipn said.. &lt;"..mipn also Slid tbe PI · W ,s
mt1i1Hbuing pop I, wlidl bas been put Ci1 lhe sbelf tem--n..
..
l!:able ..
..--"~'..

Kroehler Cape Cod 2 piece Living Room Suites
LusCious 84" Cape Cod sofa with extra high sink-in
"Sleepy Hollow" back, designed for people who$
want comfort more than anything . Tailored box
pleat skirt. Tough, sturdy, long life quality, durable
Gold tones and
tones.

Sale

288

. DINETTE SETS
THE MOST PO~ULAR STYLES AND COLORS.
EXTENSION TABLE AND 6 OfAIRS.
REGUW OR OVAL TABLES

oo
•

t-urniture-lrd Floor. Friday - Saturday

E

•

~~te

~

Advanced sale lid:ets (Cl' the
Farm s.:;..,:e Review will still
be awilable Monday morning,
Sept. 30, aCCGI'ding to C. E.
.Blakeslee, county EJ:tension
llgelll Adnnced sale littels
.e 75 cnts. At the game !bey
will be $UO.
Fumers may 11 1 •e tirh!s
.... railing lbe Eldellsion Qlfire,
~ I • 'l1leJ ue also sale
at the IADilmar\, SUpr Ran
llill, ASCS, and Soil Coo-

Twin
bed size or double bed size
smooth top. Genuine Serta quality mattresses.
Also you may buy the box spring to match at the
same prJce. Friday-Saturday.

on

SHOP IN COMFORT AU OVER THE STORE FRIDAY ANQ _SATU.AY UNTIL 9 AT NIGifi

'

UDW&amp;

~-r• ..Tip;n:.,...
ora

Sale! 7 Piece
. SAI.£1 . ,• .

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17. 1971

. PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTs·

the fire department.
The firemen went to fl1e Fife
home at 1308 Powell St. and
there was no frre. The Fifes
were shocked; surprised ID see
the firemen.
Mrs. Hendricks said the voice
said like a youtbful male. He
gave the infonnation ID her and
then hung up before she could
ask any questions.
Having received a similar

caUa couple of days ago which
turned out ID be a prank caU,
Mrs. Hendricks was skeptical
thismorning.However,shesaid
that she did not dare to take a
chance on the call being a hoax,
and so called out fl1e departmen!. Three trucks went to the
Fife home.
The voice on both calls to Mrs.
Hendricks sounded to be the
same, she said. Neither time

was the person calling exci!OO
or upset However, he was
anxious to get off the telephone
line, allowing no time for
questioning, Mrs . Hendricks
sta!OO.
In Pomeroy, an alarm was
received at 7:35 a.m., &amp;3d two
trucks responded, going to the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Neutzling on Lincoln Hill Road.
There was no fire there eifller.

This family was similarly
shocked and surprised.
The voice description in
Pomeroy fits the descriplion of
a voice heard on the two calls
received in Middleport, officials
said.
The calls are being investigated. Fire Chief Henry
Werry of .Pomeroy said that he
will prosecute any such offender to the limit of the law.

Meigs
Hurt in
Census

SLEEPCRAFT DACRON BED Plua1S
RESiLIENT
ODORLESS

Considerable cloudiness and
cool with chance of showers and
of a few thundershowers south
portion tonight. Lows wnight
mid 50s southeast. Partly
cloudy with little change in
temperature Saturday with
highs in the 60s .

2 Fake Fire Runs Made

(Some thermal lined) Single width, 84" length In Fiberglass
and Acetate. - - · ·- ___ __
OUtstanding Values!

4.49

Save Friday - Saturday

WOMEN'S BLOUSES .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sale· 1.19 SKEIN

· Mens 7.95

not JX!tllng ourselves In the position of balling them out. H we
do that, everybody'sgolng ID run out fi money."
The Speaker produced figures from the state Departli!ent &lt;1
Education which he said showed many of the 22 school districts
threatened will! closings are below average in local laling
effort.
"Half of !bern ha~e local opera~ millage less than the
state average, and you can't blame the state~ll't," he said,
adding it was an "easy aii!Wer" to blame
legislaiJU"e's
inactioo oo a budget for the plight of the schools
"In many cases, they (Ule schools) have
ed a burden
!bat the pellple aren't willing to support," Kurfess said. '"lbey
have wanlCi!ly and willingly turned their backs til thelf
inability to meet cmunitmenta and have overextended
themselves."
Kurfess said the short.-lenn aid tD the 22 districts would have
ID be repaid ID the stale next year.
He also said House Republicans are preparing legislation for
lnll'oducllm next month l.o place under slate trusteeship any
school dlsbict forced ID close because of financial difficulty.

Devoted To The Interes" Of The Meigs-Mason Area

100 percent pure virgin
tangleproof yarn.
Ready to knit, pull out skeins. Washable solid
colors · and variegated 3112 oz. 4 ply.

sa~

to remain open,'' l{urfess said.
"We're not o(fertRg tiQ as a solutlm whatsoever," he Clll·
linued. "All we're giV\Iig them is a Utile ttfn lifetime. We are

Weather

VOL XXI'/ . NO. 109

Cl011eouts and Diacontinued
Patterns!

Canvas binder with clip, filler paper, theme
book . Loose leaf dictionary, index guides.

All FOR

No M-,. Fer Sclloell
The slate Jaw is DOW operating oo a 2lklay interim budget
wbi.ch lasts lbrwgb the end &lt;1 the month but conlains no money for liCbools and welfare, whicb will require additillllll
lllOII!!Y starling Sept. 23.
·
The Hwse FinaDee Clmmltt.ee beard brief testimony on the
new awopti.alions and scheduled a Mooday meeting for
further actioo.
At lbat time, Republicans are e:~peCted to insert some
ameo:lmenls in an attempt to change Gilligan's priorities til
austerity measures. One of them probably will be furnishing
mmey for the reopening of slate parb.
Tepper ~ the ccmmiUee tbe OOffiinisb'ation no looger
supp&lt;rts inlerim spending on groullls a tw()oyear program is
overdue by 2~ monlbs.

Sale! 1.39 Yarn
COATS AND CLARK
RED HEART

School Mate Binder Sets

R.EG. 2.18 VALUE

Countercharges at 10 Ft?

3.79

First Floor Stationery Dept.

2.20

A Sper.ia I Group Of

Another Shipment Factory

14.88

RARE SlACKS

Broad &amp; High, with Clutrges And

James Smltbson, the man
who left his .fortune to tbe
United Slates govemmeot ID
begin the Smithsonian Institution, was the ilJel:itimate
soo &lt;1 Sir Hugh Smitbsoo and
bad never been to America.

Drap~ries

Ready-Made

100 percent cotton twill coveralls with nylon quilt
lining, zips from top to bottom or bottom to top.
Pleated ~ck for extra comfort and fullness.
Plenty of pockets. Adjustable snaps on each leg.
Sizes 36 to 46.
Friday- Saturday•

·What'll it bet a Shootout at

"I bave prepared tiJis budget in response to a request made
by tiJis ecanmltlee last 'lbur3day and Ill' no other re&amp;Sill,"
Tepper said. ''The budget is yours to do with as you see fit."
llaJJknt!l .Tile Slate
He said the supplemenlal aJllli'Ojlriallons will ''banknipt the
state unless measures are taken to reclif)' the situation."
"If lbe Jegislalllre chooses ID continue its delay ,It should not
expect assistaree frliD tbe admilllstralion," Tepper said.
Kurfess, at a separate news conference, accused cerlain
school disbicts faced with dosing schools of ' 'waniDnly and
willingly" overextending tbeir spending while ignoring voter
reluc~ io raise taxes.
However, he said Republicans will include in the supplemental appropriatiCl!S $2.7 millim worth of short-term aid
to school districts threatened with closings, including $1.5
million for Dayton city schools.
· Kmfess explained the II!Oiley will be used for the disbicts to
borrow,if tbeywisb, toremainopeq until about Nov. 20, giving
them lime to get an operating levy on the ballot in November
and get it passed .
AUempl ·Te PUI
'"11lis will allow them ID attempt to pass a levy at the Nov. 2
electioo and make arrangements to borrow against it in order

Now You Know

8.35 A SET

Friday-Saturday

7

hygiene and uxraliGns..

Small, medium, large and extra large sizes. A
button front cardigan sweater and a hi·crew
neck short sleeve sllpover, 100 percent acrylic
knit. Striped pattern in navy blue-white, or rustwhite.

WOMEN'S
POLYESTER
K·NIT SLACKS

Friday
Saturday

SWEATER~

V NECK SLIPOVER

Mens 2 Piece

OVERALLS

SPECIAL SALE lHIS WEEKEND!

Friday
Saturday

Mens Sizes Sleeveless

'4.88 .

LITTLE BOYS '2.95
PERMANENT PRESS

WOMEN'S DRESSES
Friday
Saturday

mittens, g loves, hats and
sets for women and girls.

BWE
DENIM

acrylic fabric in solids and plaids, bell bottom
and straight leg, machine washable. Sizes 3 to 6x
and 7 to 14.

3.00

Save now during our two
day sale of knit scarfs.

LEE

An outstanding value in girls slacks, 100 pet.

Friday
Saturday

KNIT
ACCESSORIES

SALE PRICE
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

3.00
GIRLS JUMPERS

Friday
Saturday

Pre-Seas9n Sale

Reg. 4.00-3.00
2.00-1.00 r
EARRINGS ,
PINS- ROPES

OJLlDIBll'l (llPI}-tht OlaD c-nl .. iibly baa adjoarned far tbe WI , , ~ still liD claler to a soln!ian oo a twoyear tu ..t r lyt prucram bat ready ·to ad nen .....s on
$111! ll!l'Djm wmlllllf ......,.., "''' iJI!PI apt ialims to finao&lt;e
•I ;Ilk ..t W' Ua'e I*CCIW tbroai!IJ the end at the IDCIIIU!.
• • • •+m 4eJ ~~M~~et .. . ill~ in the House
'l'bui &amp;d.o)' -a hrdie . . ."ive da)' wbidl saw a bardeoing.of
atlibles on aD sides, Sllcb as:
. ~alice fnm sblle l!lld!let Dila:lir Jay 0 . Tepper that the
: •luiuisb:aliall at Gw. Jolll J . Gillipn, lind at wailing for a
pemu!"""lt budget, wiD 1111 longer assist in tbe passage d. interim spe!ing m
ts.
-A boii)'"Wildtd sbllrment !run Bllllse !V'Jker (l!arles F.
Kmff:!S, ft..Boorli.ng Gn!m. lbat tbe ~IH:Cl!lrolled
c-nl A rrl&gt;l)'ls nohe•••Jsibleflr the financial pligbt al
ldloal distrids..t 11011qtr wiD bail !hem ool
-Calllnued Gjljliilili111 m lhe part of SeDate Republicans to
adminislratim pJans to~ lhe tax burden ClJ bnsjness to
atlracl crgari&amp;llala S!4JIII* lfor a pt1SiHJal income tax.
1ht snppJeonental 8J11*1111rialic!ns incbMie $M.9 millim tOr
tbe operatioo o1 de ,ientary .md 5eCClldacy schools, $46.6
millim fll' pub&amp; welhft programs and $'I millioo for mental

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY - 9130 A.M. TO 9aOO P.M.

Jewelry

A famous name brand, save this week end. many
styles to choose from in white and colors. Nylon
and polyester blend, machine washable.
Junior sizes - Misses sizes and half sizes.

Pomeroy

"*"'" .....,,

" - ...... ._ ..m-

ltn'a .....,

•

'

•

Vdemls M-ilot lhlpi1al
ADM11TED - Ann Jarboe,
RuUand; Carleton McClung,
Fort Nalde, Tex. ; Donald
Combs, Pomeroy ; George
Nesselroad, Jr., Panaoy.
DISCHARGED John
Harrison., Dellara Rice, Cberyl
Stevens, J!e&gt;eu SeeJq:, Roger
Yming, Lenora Micbael

CruShed

Marshall Oliver Reeves, 65,
Albany Route 2, was killed
Thursday morning by a log
which rolled frtm his truck at
fl1e Ohio Pallet Co. in Rock
Springs.
Mr . Reeves bad arrived at the
CWJpany with the load of Jogs

and was unfastening chains
holding his load, at the side of
fl1e truck, wben the top Jog
rolled off.
Meigs Coroner llr. R. R.
Pickens said Mr. Reeves died as
the result of internal
bemonilage and shock caused
by a crushed right chest and
lower abodornen.
An ambulance took Mr.
Reeves to lbe office of llr~ J. J.
Davis in Middleport Where be
was pronounced dead. The
accident occurred about 10 a.m.
Surviving are his wife, Jessie
Bilcber Reeves; a daughter,
Janet Lynn Reeves, Albany
Route 2; two sons, Eugene and
Harold, Pomeroy Route 4; four
sisters, Edna Reeves, Middleport Route 1; Florence
Boring, Albany; Mary Ellen
Boring, Columbus, and Mrs.
Shirley Darenberger, Albany
Rt. 2; eight grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Two brothers, Eldon and
William, preceded him in
deatb ; two surviving are
Ronnie and Albert, of Cohnnbus.
FWJeral services will be. at 1
p.m. Saturday at tbe Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
William Strausbaugh officiating. Burial will be in Wells
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral heme at any lime.
.
U !I MdbdJdbLJJJ !I .

Meigs County's population
dropped from 22,159 in 1960 to
19,799 in 1970, a decrease of 10.7
pet., according to figures
relea&gt;ed by the U. S. Bureau of
fl1e Census.
Few villages and townships of
the county showed increases in
the 1970 head count. Showing
fl1e greatest increase, 16.8 pel.
was Racine village which went
from499to S83pellple. Next was
Chester Township which increased 1.2 pel, from 1,404
residents to 1,573. Columbia
Township showed a 6.9 pet.
increase going from 579
to 619.
Sutton
Township showed a 1.4 pet.
increase, its population in.creasing from 2,560 in 1960 w
2,595 in 1970. The only other
IDwnsbip ID show an increase
was Olive with only one-tenth of
one pet., gaining two people,
from 1,403 to 1,400.
Showing fl1e greatest loss in
population was Scipio Township, 21.9 pel., which decreased

BLUE RIBBON FAIIILY -

aDd Gecqe

H~ter families were honored recently
Oblo Slate Fair
1m Meigs County's Blue Ribbon Farm Family, A host of

dignitaries bonored tbe Hollers and 25 otber Blue Ribbon
families .for tbeir contributions to bolb tbe farm and clXIImunity life in their respective counties. The families selected

for lbe Bille RlbiiCll awerd were s-11 &lt;1 the Columbus
Diapak:h for a day at the falr and an evening dinner .md
program. Tenth District Coogressman Clarence E. MliJer
(right), the only Ohio member on the House Agriculture
Canmitlee, spoke at the al1lll8l !UnetiOII. From the left ue
Ray Karr, Harry H~t.er. Mra. Denver Holter, Mrs. Horace
(Oil'otey Holler) Karr and Cmg. Mlller.

~:r:~~ge:~=n~Comprehensive Health Seroices Bill Approved

percentage decrease, 20.1 pet.,
going from 3,34:i to 2,672.
Otber decreased population
areas include Bedford Township, from 785 to 750 (4.5 pel.) ;
Lebanon Township, from 939 to
782 (16.7 pel.); Letart Township, 1,028 to 854 (16.9 pet.);
(Continued on Page 10)

COLUMBUS (UPI)- A comprehensive health services bill,
ID " bring doWn costs" of health
care by avoiding duplication of
services through cooperation of
facilities, was passed by . fl1e
Ohio House of Representatives

Thursday.
The measure, sponsored by
Rep. Norman Murdock, R-Cincinnati, was approved unanimously and sent to the Senate
for concurrence.
" This is a giant slep forward

in health care for our citizens," nwnber and quality of facilities
Murdock said. "Health care is and generally upgrade the quala major concern for all Ameri- ity of health care.
cans and 1111 Ohioans."
Murdock said the measure
Murdock said the legislation would pennlt public and non'would reduce the cost of healll! 'profit agencies to share bospicare, improve and increase the
(Continued on Page 10)

Schools' Lunch Programs in Trouble.
By George HuJraves, Sapt.
Meip L«:al SebMI Dlolrlel
In lliB evening's coJwnn I wtWd like to report
lriefly c111ceming a number of items.
OnroriiiCl'l!maJprove to be of Interest.
!l!anged in federal support for the school luncb
program have been reported in tbe press over a period
&lt;1 several weeks. Tbese changes have caused grave
concern among acbool people across the nation.
A signifnnt reduction in tbe support far scbool
•

Speaking of Schoolii-No. 205

. .
.
lmcbes Ia a fact that we face. Couple Ibis With a pnce
!reezelbatprecludestbe~Uoo&lt;1increaslngtheprlce
for • schoolluncb and you will !Didersland the real
problem we face.
We wiD diacua tiJis matter further in future
calumns.~me,itis one lbatis.tH ingin every
acbool dlatrlct m lhll state and natioo.
_mE ACl'I\'ll'mi and meeting of PI'As will be
EXTENDED 00'11.001[
~ fair ... He! laking place nguJarly now that the scbool year bas
lluwP dJe palooL Daytime beg~~~~. May I enccJUrage your atlendaooe at PrA? Go
PrA 111 IIIEtrl'
.... illll!e • ..UJ-'Iiile to tbexhoolancl meet your cblld's teacher. l'm certain
RACINE -tht Racine PrA 'lt MdJ pwlioa. JAn a1 that Ibis persalal cClltact will produce better IDIwill meet Monda)' at 1:lD p.m. a;pt DlOIIIy Ia 111e ...
dlrstandlng for all •'Clltemecl
at lbe elemenll!ry school.
'""' ::..._,_, • ",
YOU NO DOUB1 h!ad about our concern over the

MicWeport playground's basketball court. It is our must have recent letams shots. This is a wise policy
sincere b..,e that those who use it will do so in S!lcb a !bat is desi8Red to P"otect our young people from lhll
mannerlllltitwillnotbeadisturbanceto lbe residents rare but dreaded dis"eoe. We want to thank the Metes
al that area. If Ibis doesn't work out tiJis way, the County Heailb Department fqr assls~ us in a III2SIJ
futureofthebastetballcoortwilll!avea large queatlm lnoculatloo of ouratuden1a at the Jdgh acbool reoently.
mark llangiog over it.
AMERICANS MOVE a lot. lbey·move ecna lhe
I WANT TO EXTEND my sincere gratitude to aD na1ion, aer0111 the state, or abOC!er dlltalices. Wben a
the employees fi tbe Meigs Local Board of Educatim family moves !r&lt;m me BCbool cllalrlel to another; lbe
who are helping m to get o(f to a smootb start at the students &lt;1 the family should atll!nd acboolln the new
be~ of Ibis school year. They did a fine job. lbls sebooldisbict In which !bey reslde.lf 1hey doo't, tbere
gratitudesbouldalso beextendecitothestuden1a and to are legalrequlrtmellts involved with the afler!dN1r"f1
lbeir parents for their excellent cooperaliCll and un- BChools In another school district Silled brleloy, tbele
derstanding as IDs scbool year started. Tlie help of all are the rules. H y011 want to attend IICIIoolln a dlltrlc:t
inv~ved is needed ID get tiJis ratbet alenaive In wlicb you do nat live you have to Pl1 tuiUon and
cperatioo under way eacb year.
provide your 01111 tranlporlaUoo. Certain Jecal
NEXTWEEKWEwillfindthearrlvalofac:orpaof tecbnlcalilles may cauae varlaUou In IIIII
student teachers from Ohio University. Tbeae YOUIIII arranaemmt. 'but t1*i is tbe g.-al paltem !bat emta
pe~le will be working at the bigb school, tbe junior in Sautlalllnl ado.
ligh school, plus Pomeroy, Midclleport, and Bradbury
NEWS 1; N&lt;1I'ES- We want to wllb an eer)J .
EJementary Schools. Having stwlen\ teacbers bas h!COtery to JU' " '11Dt aq,ertaterMient, Mr.
some good points and some bad points. Up to tiQ time . Mea, lion, wbo bM not been feeiiitc Will lhe pat
we have felt the advantage far outweigh the disad- le'leral days- 'lbe Maramer foolte!J team and bud
vantages. We bope lbat our experience with tbla new will be trave11na to llelpn Ibis week aDd to W•IW«
groop of young people wiD to IIIJIIIorl our past nutWftk. Webopew .."a 11ra1rc 1Df11 fGiloWIIIa at
pOsillve feelqs.
.
bolll CCII!Ielta _ 'lbe lllir md a math 11...-- ' A POUCY OF thli IIOIJrd fi F.J;ucalilll require~ mclnd IDID ar* 7 II* JW; ill c,dt wBI bt CCfat •
that all students In sllqJ prGCtams at the Jigh IICbool pleted neat,_. '!fblaltaOIIIIIID litiJdtl,
I

..

•

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="80">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1800">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29784">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29783">
              <text>September 16, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
