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,;JVeWs~·••.in ~riefs ,.

c •-ThrDaUySelltineJ,MJdi!lepor~.o,; Sept.a,tflt

I

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.... .,

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. r-·------!..:...~;..;-::---~-----~---:--.
· Black Picture· Painted I ·· HOSPITAL NEWS ,. . l
.

I

, · ,, · · · (Continued !~om page I)
·. . . ', .
, •ttle against environinental Jl!)llulion. "ln the l!iJt 10 yeara, the .
, eredlt card~ lncfe&amp;Sed the cost of living abOut 5pet:," C011.1leau
• · "Yet no one complained."
'·

business during the I'Ut two Jiolzer )ledical Center, First Vete~Mem~rlaiBoitpital .
years much less bridge the Ave. 1111d Cedar ·.St. ,General ADMITTED ~· Howard .
gap !bat has d.Veloped during visiting hours 2-4 and ?.a p.m. :.argent, SyraCWie· Christlile . ·
till! past decade," he said.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Branham, Pomeroy; Wllltam
Attac~ into Thifd Day
"The few crumbs !bat may 4:30 p.m. "Parents ·only ·on Stevens, . Kimauga; Donald
SAiGON - VIET CilNG TROOPS contlllled I« the third
be provided wiD prove to be loo Pediatrics W&amp;rd.
· ·
Machir, Letart, W. Va.;
alralght day !bell' pte-election attacks. against allied positions, .
litUe, too late, and ali emharBlrlbs . ·
•Stanford Denney, Pollleroy;
'~bey
struck allied oulpalts along the CambOdJ.an border .with
rassment to those districts go- Mr. and Mts. Richai')J David Howard. Seai'les; Pomeroy.
heavy rocket and m«tar lire. Saigon authorities sa.id lbat,ln the
ing to the Jl!l~ this November. Blessing, PO!ilerll)', a daughter; DISCHARGED - Dewey
period since the new enemy drive began, at least 230 Cooununist
In a word the state support Mr. and Mra. Erilline ,Johnson, Simpson, Wilbur Napper,
.
!IOidlers
h!id been killed. SOI!tb Vietnamese losses were .28 dead
picture Is dismal;"
Jackson, a daughter; Mr. and Mai~ie · Hannahs, H~riison
llld 176 WOI!hded.
Miller saitl . till! legislature .Mrs... Noxon Denton Nelson, Robinson, Charles Machir.
"might as well" lake ~ recess GalliJI!)Iis Ferry, a daughter;
•
·
History Made in Cop~nhagen'
from its work on the budget an- Mr..and Mts. Otarlea R. Small,
PLEASANT VALLEY
COP'ENaAGEN - IIISTORY WAs MADE in Copenh&amp;gen
til alter till! November elections Ga)lipolis, a daughter: and Mr · ADMISSIONS - Mrs. 0111
tOday as a Japanese emperor, f« the firsl tune In !be 264nwlred~ then_~~n and continue, and Mrs. Merrill R. Waugh, Knlg]Jt, Middleport; Mrs.
,ear
.annals of the Ghrysanthemlllll Throne, wandered about as a
until a ~gnificant job has been Crown City! .a daughter.
William Litchford Jac)lson ·
·tourist on foreign soil. Emper« Hirohito, accompanied by his
AIRMAN .DAVIS
completed.''
··
· OildwJes .
Mrs. · Richard Thoinas, Point
Mrs. Robert E. Auzier and Pleasant; Mrs. Jack Kinney,
SAN ANTONIO - Airman express, set out em a busy itinerary which included a visit to the
Fred E. Davis, sou of Mr, and Royal Danlsb PorCelain Factory and a luncheon with Derun¥k's
daughter, Denver Bowen, L. Point Pleasant.
.
queen,
WellmanBowman,PaulBurns, DISCHARGED - Leland Mts. Robert E. Davli oUt. R. king
Courtney ealidill, Mn..:t.fayteh Norman~ worthy Blain, Mfs. 1, Langsville, Oltlo, ba.s
Cleary, Harlan .Conley, .Mrs. W~ Chapmal), ~8 ; Ed. complel,ed bulc training at Lady Fleming Gets 16 Months
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) -With the first in American hlstpry, to
Clar.ence Crolbers, Brand~n Harman, Mrs. Lena Crookham, . LacldaQd AFB, T~, and has
A~ - l.ADY AMAIJA FLEMiNG, widow of the ~n
. a 'spirited defense of the right Obtain court. Injunctions · to
Curtis~ Mrs. Larry Goodwem Mrs. Pale Jacobs, Mrs.•Uonel been assigned · lo · Chanute who discovered penicillin, w'aa found goUty of conspiracy todaY
AFB, m., for tralJ1lDg In lbe and sentenced to 16 months imprisonment. Three other defen,
of the press to put forth even prevent n~wspapers from puband son, Mrs. James lJaley • Greer.
armament
systems lleld. · dan~ accused with 1!¢1' of plotting till! escape of a man sentenced
"thoughts and ideas which we lishing stories, a reference to
·
Woodrow Hudson, Mrs. Gary Births: Sept. '1:1, a son to Mr.
hate and despise," Sen. Sam J. the "Pentagon Papers" dispute.
Huston and son, Mrs. Ja_mea and. Mrs. Nortnan Nicholson, Airman· Davis, ·a 1981 for attempting to ass•ssinale Premier George Papadopoulos
Ervin Jr., D-N.C., today opened -The Issuance of subpoenas
Hulton lllld son, Ronald Kight, Evans·
gradual~ of Meigs · Blgb
were jailed for a total of 42 months.
a 'broad examination of the by grand juries and congresWilliam Knotts, Mrs. Thomas
·
Scboal, bas an aisociate
Theology student John Skelton of Yardley, Pa, was condegree In 1171 fr!lm .Oblo
status 1n this "general lime of siona] committees of reporters
~·
Rayburn arid daughter, Mrs.
victed,. given a seven-month jail sentence and told it would be.
tnstltute of Teclmology at
crisis" of freedom of the press and tlll!ir notes.
.
Clarence Sargent, Farrell
suspended for lhtee years.
in America.
-'!be widespread use of false
Shafer, Glenn Sales, Mrs. Lewis
~~~
Columbus.
Ervin, who observed his 75th press creden!ials by governTaylor, · Sr., and Mrs. Ellen
TV Industry in Semi-Shock
.
'
birthday Monday with a cup of ment investigators.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Walker.
HOLLYWOOD - mERE ARE SEVERAL staUstics
coffee with his staff, said three -And the ''new feara about Ohio Farm Bureau Federation Thomes E. Agee, Clarence
_
.
shocking to the television industry in the national ratings for the
weeks of hearings by his Senate government control and regula- said today State Senate passage Aldridge, Mrs. Edna M. Austin, Harold H. Hall, Ill, Midil!eport n
l
recent premiere week of the new sea&amp;OI!· One is !bat NBC-TV's
constitotional rights subcom. · lion of the broadcast media." of an increase in the sales tax Mrs. Elmer S. Bailey, Mosey Route· I, diecl early Tuesday at r'OSSl. 1e
"Bonanza," long a frontrunner, came In 50th among the listed
mittee would examine four Harding Bancroft, executive "does noUting to correct the Blackburn, Mrs. Rodney D. the Arcadia Nursing Home In
shows. It was knocked off by CBS-TV's new Sunday night comareas where !be press' freedom vice president of '!be New Ycirk basic Inequities of our present Davis, Jr., Dale E. Durst, Mrs. Coolville.
bination of an early movie -in Ibis case ''Guess Wbo's Coming
of ~ratiori has been dimi- 'l;imes, and Norman Isaacs, the properly tax System .. .''
George L. Fisher, Todd Wayne Mr. Hall was born May 16,
B
.
nished or challenged by govern- retired executive editor of the
C. William Swank, .executive Fisher, David L. GUliland, Mrs. 1891ln Uniontown, Pa., the son Sheriff Robert Bartenbach?s To Dinner" -and Glemi Ford's new series, ''Cade's County," In
ment in recent yeara:
Louisville, Ky. COurler.Journal vice president of the federation, Eugene R. Gurtis,lllra. Homer of the late Elisha and Zelia Dept. is investigating a Jl!)SSible which he plays a modern s!lerlff. It was also knocked off by ABC_The government's attempt, and Louisville Times, w)lo now said the action ·of the state Sen- A. Henderson and son, Mrs. Sue Glover Hall. He was preceded In breaking and entering at a TV's Sunday movie, "EI Dorado."
teaches at the Collllllbia ate "only succeeded in dbn- Jenks, Mrs, David L. Jividen death also by a daughter and by home on the New Lima Road
•'Guess Who's Coming To Dinner" came In third among aU
University School of Journa- ming our hopes for some long- and daughter, Mrs. Ferris C. his wife, Lula, the latter in 1966. near Rutland. Authorities said ~ogrlllll8, "Cade's County" ranked a alrong 11th am "El
Jism, . were among today's needed reform of Ohio's tax Jobnson, Mrs. James.T. Kittell, Surviving are a daughter, tlll!y were notified by a bottled Dorado" finished In a lie for seventh place. '!be networks are
·tnesaes
structure."
Mrs. Francis Maddy, Herbert Miss Rhoda R. Hall, at home; gas deliveryman !bat a window known to throw their most potent movies against the competition
w~rvln ~ned the hearing "TheSenateplandoesnothing E. Noel, JOhn E. Salts, Mrs. four sisters, Mrs. Leah Bryner, had been broken at the early In the season, so "Bonanza" might well come back, but the
with a quotation from Jef- to correct the basic Inequities Arthur F. ·Smith, Mrs. John Silver Springs, Md.; Mrs. Doris residence where the occupants ratings do indicate that the veteran Western series is wlnerable
(Continued from page I)
ferson: "No government ought of our present properly lax sy&amp;- William Stevens and son, Mrs. Sanl, ·Cuyahoga Fall!!: Mrs. were on vacation. A relative to tough opposition.
decided to. leave Hungary.
to be without censors and tern, and under the Senste's Larry Allen Vance and son, Allen (Wilma) Groff, Con- accompanied officers to the
He spent UU, lime In the where the press is free, no one plan, farmers would continue to ~ Walker, Mrs. Carlos R: fluence, Pa., and Mrs. James borne Monday, but it was not Soft Coal ·Deadline Near
fourll) floor, three-toom apart- · ever will."
pay an inordinate BJI)ount of White, Mrs._WUliam R. Wort- (Mary) Barton, Pittsburgh, Pa. determined what, if anything,
WASIIJN'GTON - WORKING AGAINST a strike .deadline
men! in the u.S. legation which The ilenator contrasted !bat their income for properly tax- man and son, Missey Evans, Mr. Hall,. a member of the had been removed from the just days away, negotiators for the soft coal InduStry am the
· later became the embassy view with "sharp and angry es," said Swank.
Lester Ohlinger, !lnd Charlotte Middleport Bllptiat Church, had home. The occupants will
United Mine Workers Union (UMW) contlllled meeting in closed
when U.S. -Hungarian relations attacks upon the newa media
"We are still. convinced !bat Rankin.
worked several years at the return Wednesday. ·
sessi0118 here today: The sessicns were reported Ill be keyed ·
improved. He read the newspa- by high government officials.'' a personal income tax would be Roy Blackburn, Jr., Earl Twin Coach Co. in Kent, Ohio
Monday on health, safety and welfare fund matters, but stW to be
(iel'$ left at his door, he said
Some of them, he said, !be most fair to all taxpayers, Foglesong, Johnathan before his retirement.
taclded is the key Issue of higher wages in the new three-year
' Mass for the Catholic members · "appear to believe that the would keep pace with the ever- Higginbotham, Mrs. Vaughn Funeral services will be held
VISIT IN DOVER
contract
covering lll,lioonnners. The old pact expires at midnight
of till! legation and he took purpose of the press Is to growing need for tax revenues Miller and son, Mrs. Merle at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Mts. George Nesselroad, Sr.,
solitary walks in the building's present the government's Jl!)li- and would provide a means for Morris and· son, Floyd Rawtings-&lt;:oats Funeral Home Mrs. Lanny Jenkins, and Mrs. Thunday.
enclosed courtyard.
cies and programs to•the public genuine properly · tax relief," Newsome, Mrs. Clyde Weaver, with the Rev. Charles Sjnions Clara Karr, Pomeroy, spent ' The UMW Is demanding a $13 per day ra~ ln. the present
Through,till! years Hungarian in the best possible light."
said Swank.
Carl Wheeler, Rebecca White, officiating. Burial will be.In the Saturday in Dover where they basic rate of f:li'. T))e wage Issue has been ~ticaled by unsecret Jl!)llce in plainJ:lotbes At the same lime, he said, Swank predicted continued Mrs. Edward Willis, Jr., Mrs. Riverview Cemetery. Friends ·Visited Mrs. Nesselroad's certainty about what ecoocmic controls President Nixon will put
waited in an automobile parked the press has reacted with troubles for Ohio schools if the Sam Wyatt, and Kenneth may call at the funeral borne brother, Pearl (Toots) Karr, on the economy when till! 9lklay wage-price freeze enda in
In front of the legation across "equally hostile respOnseS" and Senate version becomes law. Morrison,
anytime alter 10 a.m. Wed- and Mr. and Mrs. WUliam J. November. It was 'iJOSslble any pay raise agreement would be
rolled back by new gov~nt economic coi!IPiaints.
from Freedom Square to arrest has seffietimes forgotten that "There are going to be more u~.
"·t: '.f •.•: .L nesday.
Karr.
him If he s!louid appear.
till! FirSt Amendment's !l'ohitii- and more operating levies and lFU . .:nra
'!be
position with Hunga- lion against laws restricting the bond issues voted down," said
DANCE PLANNED
ry waa tlu\1 the matter of his press "was not intended as Swank. "The people luive had ·
A dance for members and
_ .JAY
0
asyllllll in the embassy was one their exclusive possession."
enough of high property taxes
lF~I '""'
gueats wiD be held Saturday by
to be settled between HUngary The First Amendment means, and patch work legislative acDrew Webster Post 39,
.
.
·d,
••-t
the
press
can
lion
on
taxes."
·
American
Legion
at
the
post
House must act on yet another
Ervm 881 ""'
and the Vatican.
Funeral
services
for
. . •
.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The until Saturday.
interim
budget lo tide the state
• Witbln minutes of Mlndszen- be "absurd, misleading and
Lawrence Strausba""" 74 of home.Muslcwillbeprovldedby Obi H
f Re
tali
The Hou:se formally receives
·
...,..,
•
Armand
at
the
organ
Ado
ouse
o
presen
ves
ty's arrival In Rome toda Y the vindictive ... lncompIete, unfall'
near Wilkesville, who . died .
is
was expected to give its nod of the $7.7 bUlion b~dget passed by over for the early part of Oc•
1
1
Vatican announced a new and even vicious." He left UtUe · W j
Monday at the Holzer Medical nuss on
ree.
approval to one budget tonight the Seiulte last Saturday and Is tober, Including paying
primate for Hungary. It said doubt that he felt it sometimes
Center, wiD be at 2 p.m.
FINE ORDERED
while sh)lking its head at expected to reject the massive legislators' salaries. The $75
Msgr. Imre Kis]jerk would take is.
Thursday at till! Strong and Son 'lb • A M
Langsville another as the General changes the upper chamber million package lo cover Oct, 1over the duties of apostolic "It means lbat thoughts and
Funeral Home In WUltesvllle.
omas · . yers,
Assembly gets its work week off . made in the biD passed in its 15, passed last Friday by the
1
10
administrator.
ideas which we hate and
A retired carpenter, Mr. Route • was fined and costs to a late start.
original form by the House last Senate, was the object of a
session today by the House
despise wiD appear in print and CLIFTON, W. Va. - Walter Struusbaugh was born Dec. 24 by Rutland Mayor Eugene B tb tb H
d Se te July.
·
be broadcast across the land W. Blake, 61, died at 2:30a.m. 1894, tlll!sonofthelateCiaren~ ~~on Mo~y night on a are osched~edo:"cC:vene ~ 8 ~cause of the prolonged Finance Conunittee.
... ," he said. "Most Americans Tuesday at his residence here. and Mary Cooper Strausbaugh. ~·g convlC on.
p.m. tonight instead of tlll!lr dilemma over the budget, the
have come to understand !bat Mr. Blake, a crane operator Besides his
_· parents, he w_as
CLOTHING OFFERED
general Monday night or early
the
irritating
excesses
of
the
with
till!
Foote
Mineral
Corp.,
bs
IT'S HOMECOMING
Tonight Only
preceded m death by
wife, F
1 thing da will be Tuesday starts because of work
The Meigs High School
September 28
ON HONOR ROLL
f:SSa ar;,:.,sm:::de~t pa~ ~~:t ;~'::s ofu':.7on~ni= G e r t r u de
WIlli a m s ob~;::edca~ till! Salv:tion Army !bat kept !be leglsiators here
Homecoming
dance wiD be held
Meigs County students who
"'''"" Unlied Strausbaugh;
belonged to the ..,..,..,n
Walt .Disney's
government control.''
d ·'·ler a son, Cooper, HQ on BuIIernu I Ave . ln
have been named to the honor Friday immediately following
"Sl,OOO,OOO DUCK"
In nine days of hearings, Methodist Church. He was born anSu~viv'ing
are
three Pomeroy Tb~y. Anyone ~
roll )It the GalliJI!)Iis Business the Meigs-Ironton game in !be
(Tecllnicolorl
representatives
of
till!
press
and
June
9,
1910
at
Glenwood,
W.
daughters,
Mrs.
Marlene
Keck,
the
area
needmg
clotblng
Ill
Dean Jones
College for the sununer quarter former Pomeroy Junior High
of
till!
academic
world
are
to
Va.,
till!
son
of
till!
late
James
N
k·
..
_
Mary
Hebn
welcome.
Sandy Duncan
are Mrs. Karolyn Soulsby School. Dress wiD be informal.
ewar me
' '"'"·d u - M 1 '
join government officials at till! and Frances Spurlock Blake · WUk
Black, Pomeroy, Miss Marcia Admission is $1 for singles and
u
esv 1 •Reyn
an ldsb
''" •• er ynd
PACK TO MEET
'
Wall Disney's
wiiness table.
Surviving are his ..
....
e, w·i1ma
old
0
0
McGraw, Racine, and Miss $1.50 for couples. MUsic will be
. BONGO
da hte Miss Doroth Am
urg; a?
Pomeroy Cub Scout Pack 249
J
provided by the "Stone Rose."
(Technh:olorl
Sandi Taylor, Middleport.
But Vice President Spiro T. B~~. of,o;i Pleasant·,
three sons, ~Y and ClOVIS, willmeetat7:30p.m. Thursday
"G"
Agnew' till! administration's
both of the WUltesville area and at the IOOF hall over the Blue
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
most outspoken press critic, sons,JamesW.,PointPleasant, Paul of Newark
The annual meeting of the . .- - - - - - - - - . . . - - - - - - - - - •
wasbertnotG.askKledein,to PrTdent. and Charles, of Letart, W.Va.; . Frienda may · call . at ~ :doug~r ~Y~"t::elrbparoysen~~! Meigs County Fann Bureau
VIsit Elberfelds 3rd Floor
Ber
four brothers, Charles H., of funeral home beginning tbis . 'led
.Federation has been set for
wectnlsdlly &amp; Thursdlly
Nixon's top adviser on press Baltimore, Ohio; Artley, evening until lime of services. mVJ •
Thursday, Oct. 21 , Henry
September 29-30
NOT OPEN
relations, sent a Jetter declining Ben ion and Berland, all of Burial .wiD ..be in . the Vinton
LOCAL TEMPS .,.
Frank, president. said today.
,an Invitation to testify.
Clifton; four sisters, Mrs. Rena Memorial &lt;Jeme~.
.Th te
ind
A fast-moving program is
·
Williams, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
·
e mperature owntown planned lor till! session which .
May Tolliver, Glenwood; Mrs.
,
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Tuesday will be at the Meigs High
Abna Zimmerman, Clifton, and
TAKEN To ~OSPlTAL
was '74 degrees under suimy School, Frank ssid. A steak
Mrs. Willa Jacobs, Pomeroy. The Pomeroy E-R squad skies. ·
dinner wiD' he served at 7, 28
Funeral services wiD be at answered a call to the Stewart
p.m. followed by a short
1:30 p.m. Thursday at the residence on Mulberry Heights
business meeting. Tex Harrison
Foglesong Funeral Home wilh at · 5:41 p.m. Monday from
and The Valley Boys will
till! Rev. Bernice Winkler of- where Stanford Demey, who
POMEROY I.ANES
ld . f ·
ficiating. Burial wiD be in the makes his home with the
INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE
prov e pro esswnal calibre
Stewarts, was taken to Veterans
Won lost entertainment.
Adamsv·ille Cemetery. Frlencb
K-CJewelers
12
4 Ticketsmaybeobtained.from
may call at the funeral home Memorial Hospital and ad- ~~ndzymFiavrek
12
4 the Farm Jilureau office, In
10
6 p
milled as a medical patient.
...,
alter 3 P·m· Wednesday·
Thomas Body Shop
10 . 6 omeroy, phone 992-2181, or
Team 3
4 12 from Rex Shenefield, Thomas
'
Mil
hone
Sohlo
o
16 Sayre Roy· MlUe •Mts H Je
SALES PLANNED
FIREMEN CAIJ ED
High Team Three Games ' · · , r,
· .e n
Xi Ganuna Mu Chapter of The Pomeroy .Fire Dept. was Landmark 2451; K-C Jewelers Williams, Ziba Midkiff, Mrs.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will called to Route, 33 near the 2370; Thomas Body Sl\op 2353. Roy Holter, John Colwell, Mrs.
High Team Game - K·C Edison , Hollon · Don Wilson
See the big se~
hold a rummage sale from 9 Reuter Service Statloo at 4 p.m. Jewelers
864; Landmark 852; Robert B d tte' J
W · •
Landma.k
842.
ur
e
,
r.,
ayne
a.m. to Sp.m. Friday and from 9 Monday when brake linings on a
Ind. High Three Games - L. Roush or Frank.
in ihe
a.m. to l p.m. Saturday at the truck had caught fire. However,
Thomas 574: Boyer 569; Gilbert
Coates building on North 'till! owner had eXtinguished the w~s5~.
,
Fumiture Department
Second Ave., Middleport. fire before the depariJllent High Ind. Ga!Yfe - Boyer 245;
Gilbert
Woods
204;
L.
Thomas
' .
Members are to take rummage arrived.
202.
FINED $15, COSTS
on the 3rd fklor.
to the sale location from 6 to 7
TRI
COUNTY
LEAGUE
SYRACUSE
Charles
M.
. They globe-tro! and . vacation
p.m. Thursday.
Pomeroy Bowling Unes •
·
Walnut ·
BAHR Gn,\DUATES ·
Sept. 21,1971
. McFarland, ~· )'lew Haven,
-and have fun. Luck? Not
Meigs Marriage Ucense
Roger Baht of near Long Team ,
Pis. w. L. TP was fined $15 and costs in tba
Oak
Ronald Lee Wagner, 19, Bo.tlom wiD be among the WCearnr.n'eBrlsoc,nks.
a bit of it. They have a regular
1~ ..5 1 · 5232 court of Syracuse. Mayor
. 10 . 4 2 S.S26 H
L d
da igh
Malllllee, anll Betty Louise Fnday gradQIItes from the Ohio Firestone
10 4 2 4987 erman on on Mon Y n t
,savings plan. Open your Savings
"aple
.
.•
Shaffer, 19, Racine Route 1.
Slate Patrol School in -Collllll- Rawl. DOdge
8 3 3 54&lt;40 on a charge of excessive Speed
Account here. Have fun.
bus Bahr and his wife Mary Larry's Ash.
6 2 4 . 42?0 for road conditions. Milton
Modern · Early American
. .·
.
•
• Holsurn
0 o 6 463 v· ·
Will move to Chillicothe where HI Team Series, Rawlings ar.lan, marsh~ II, llled the .
· Mediterranean
Full Service lank DtT·rUiiii'Di'!.t
till! new. patrolmllil bas been ·Dodge 3096, HI Team Game, charge.
assigned.
R~~~t~~~~:s.1 ~~rners Ins.
Matching
291 •• HI Tea!Yf Game, Warners
•'. '
Ins. 1055.
WARNING GIVEN
.· Chairs Availible
·,·
SAME DAY
-·~ IHIC:INIIATI
HI
Team
Series,
Larry
.SYRACUSE
Marshall
. VISITORS IJSTED
'
Ashland 2896, HI Team Game, M
. iltoil Vari.a,n is warnln• all .
SERVICE
'
'
lrd
Floor
MASON. ~ ~. Ferris Justla Firestone 1~1. .
.
•
1'•1
In At 9-0uf At 5
and Mn. EW\ice Hart, both of · Hllnd. Series.' Ed Voss 617, HI Syracuse residents th!lt dog
Furniture ~.,rtment
Ind.
Ga111e,
Ed
Voss 237 , ·
awners
must
k~p their ahlnials
''
~n: :Mrs. Freda Henry,
' deli~...., to yovr ho1,11e, Stnr.iblt Chell!,
Use Our Free Pfrkilll Lot
HI Ind. series, Paul Harris 'confined to. their' property.
Prompt
Clifton, and Mrs. Ruth Batey,
~:,;,,HJ24 _1nd. Game, ·G,orge' OWners In violation will be cited
New Haven, were Sunday
guests of Mrs. E8tyl Clark In . Hi trid. Series, A,. l:. Phelpi, to COIIfl and fined upon con216 E. 2nc1, Pomeroy
~fim, Hi Ind. Game,. Ole~ Alb vic lion, Varian l!lid,
New 'Haven.
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CINCINNATI (UP!) - In a ed his resignation and Monday
lmaJ report prior 19 leaving_of, · was his last 'day on till! job.
ftCI! ~ city schools !11Jperlnten- "As schools ppen tbrougb011t
.dent, PaUl Millet said the Ohio till! state, the state capital sits
General Assembly "sits abnost almost in a state of s!lock as
•in a stateofsehock" ov¢1' what to what to do about .state ·~
. to ·do about funding of educa- port, •• Miller said in the reJI!)rt
lion in the state.
to till! city school bGiird.
Miller, a frequent · critic llf "It Beeii\S quite evident !bat
-the state legislature during his no better way will be found to
years ~ superintendent here, finance education. The funds
called the outioolt for state aid now contemplated wiD barely
"dismal." He recently announc- meet the rising costs of doing

Ervin Defends
h
f
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R·. ... . ts 0 . ress. . Tax· B·m·..
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R e1.onn

H.arold i:Jall

Died Tuesday

'b

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Jnvestig. ted,

·
Mind
, .. szenty

"-::_us
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u.s:

Died .._,.

House Will Vote One Up One Down,

JF.lalter Blake

Died Tuesday

*

. MEIGS lHEATRE.

Farm Bureau's

Annual Meeting•
Js Octo.ber 21

tw!

1

LoeaJ. Bowling

lucky

people

are on
the go

!If

·Desks

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t.Ubens /falior\Df

·.

SHIRt
FINISHING

Robinsoo's Cleaners

Commissioners Asked 't o Support NeW Housiltg
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Lalldfill .Shown
In ·ovHs Film·
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A !i1m showing how one of the
first goverhment operated
landfill dlllllps was built was
presented by Jack Cummins of
the Ohio Valley Health Services
Tuesday night in the Meigs
County courtroom.

Attending the meeting were
township trustees, the Meigs
County commissioners, and
Prosecutor Bernard Fultz.
Purely informative, the
showing was to acquaint public
officials with necessary planning leading to a county landfill
which Meigs COunty will build
throUgh an approximate
$123,000 grant of Appalachia
fpnds,
It was explained that a
suitable site for the landfiU will

have to be approved, not only by
the Ohio Department of Health,
but also by the United . States
Government. However, Fultz
said salistactory progress is
being made to establish the
landfilL
·As a part of operation, pickup
stations will he located in
various areas so that residents
can haul their refuse to the
stations for pick up by county
employes. The stations are
expected to go far In helping
keep the county clean.
As a result of Tuesday night's
meeting, plans were made for
the conunissioners to meet
Thur•day with a representative
of an engineering firm which is
interested in building the landfilL

The Meigs County board of commissioners today had
taken under study a proposal by the county planning com"
mission that the commissioners establish subdivisions for
new- houslilg.
.
Carl Barnhill, representing the Meigs County Planning
Conunission, Tuesday discussed. wi!b. board members
Charles ~rr • .BOb Clark and Warden Ours neceSsary
procedures that would insure sewage treatment facilities,
roads, and utility services Into such subdivisions.
Barnhill stressed the Importance 0! the commissioners
approving subdivisions. The commissioners expressed interest in the p~oposal alld wiD study it furtlll!r with county
highway engineer Theodore Beegle.
Meeting with the· commissjoners Tuesday also was John
H. Beasley, executive director for the Buckeye BiUs:Jiocklng

Valley Regional Development District. F9liowing the con- .
ference with Beasley, till! Cmunissioners agreed to request
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to ask the U. S.
c.ps of Eligineers to JUJ!!Ire a jlood plan informati,.!
repu1 for Meigs County. '!be report, to be well-publicized,
would be sent to all planning bodies of till! county.
The Meigs ~ty Regional Planning Commissim has
begun an 11-montb project to produce an effective CUll·
Jnbensive plan in Meigs County, Total cost of the project
wiD be p),100 with till! commissioners to su~ly $6,900 and
the Ohio Department of Development the remaining $13,200
in BUD 701 funds.
The coxnpleted plan wiD include base maps, a land use
survey, an economic base and population study, a bousing
study and several other hasic plan elements.

The cOOipleted CUliprebensive plan, it is reported. will ·
serve as a. guide for. Meigs Colinty 3lld the Meigs Colllly
Regional PlahnU.: Commission in plaming and promotq .
the development of till! count¥.
The comintssioners ·agreec~ to accept mal bids tinlil.9
a.m. on Ocl 12 lor coal, Jump, in two ton lots 1o· the Courthouse, alld stoker, F.O.B. from the mine, until 9a.m. m Oct.
12. The bid of Texaco, Inc., to supply gasoline and diesel fuel
to the county for the next three monlljs was accepted
Tuesday.
Mrs. Martha Chambers, clerk, read a letter announcing
that rates for treatment or patients at the Southeast Ohio
Tuhercule&gt;tis Hospital in Nelsonville are raising from ~ to
$39 a day.

Devoted To The In~erest. OJ The Meigi-Mason Area

NO. XXIV

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHlO

NO. 117

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

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Uuiled Press lulernatlonal

Sunwatcher's Orbit Off
· SAIGON (UP!) - Tens of
thousands of American and
South Vietnamese troops
Jl!)ured into the Cambodian
border area 80 miles northwest
ci Saigon today in a majOr
counteroffensive against three
North Vietnamese divisions
menacing Tay Ninh !I'Ovince.

CAPE! KENNE!DY- ROCKET TROUBLE left America's
most advanced sunwatching satellite in an abnorma~ orbit today
but engineers worked quickly to recover from Initial control
!I'Oblems and salvage the $36 million scientific mission. The 1,41J(l.
Jl!)und orbiting solar observatory, called OSO 7, carried six instruments to study the sun and tell man more about the way ·it
generates the energy of billions of hjdrogen bombs.
OSO 7 was supposed to soar into a 34li-mlle high circular orbit,
but instead dropped Into an egg-11haped path ranging from 266 to
355 miles above earth. Engineers said the control system on the
satellite's rocket aimed it the wrong way.

Incompatibility Charged
COLUMBUS - JOHN MILLE'IT, chancellor of the Ohio
Board of Regents, said Tuesday stale universities "cannot live"
with the chopped-down appropriation ap!l'oved by the Ohio
Senate In its version of the stale budget.
The Senate passed a budget last Saiurday that calls for $610
million for higher education. It also dropped the ceiling on undergarduate lui lion from $200 set by !lie House to $185. The Board
of Regents had requested $649.5 mUlion for the next two years
based on raising fees to $200 this year and $230 in fall 1972. The
House cut only $1.5 million from that and authorized the tuition
increases.

It's Round Three Now
COLUMBUS - BOUSE AND SENATE leaders today were
Jnpared to enter Round three of Ohio's battle on the budget and
laxes.by namipg members of a joint conference committee to iron
out the· 'VIisl dltferences "betWeen the two chambers. Each
chamber was expected to send three men into closed-door
negolla lions - a total of .four Republicans and two Democrats
since the GOP gets 2-1 representation.
House Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, R-Bowting Green, was
expected lo go with Reps. Uoyd George Kerns, R-Raymond,
chairman of the Finance Committee, and Norman A. Murdock, RCincinnali, chainnan of the Education Conunittee, with Rep. E.
W. Lampson, R.Jefferson, chainnan of the Ways and Means
Conunittee, as an outside Jl!)SSibility.

Draft Bill (2-Years) Signed
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT NIXO~, declaring it is still
his goal to end the peacetime draft, has signed a biD extending
military co~criplion to mid-1973 and giving servicemen a $2.4
billion pay raise - the largest in history .
But Nixon decreed Tuesday the pay raise - intended to attract more volunteers to the services - could not take effect
Friday as schEiduled. He said it would have to be put off until his
9lklay wage-price freeze ends In mid-November.

Hopes for Tax Reform Dimmed
COLUMBUS -THE OHIO FARM Bureau Federation said
Tuesday action by the Ohio Senate in passing a sales tax Increase
has "only succeeded in dimming our hopes for some long-needed
reform of Ohio's tax structure.!'
"We are still convinced that a personal income tax !VOuld be
the most fair to all taxpayers, would keep pace with the evergrowing need for lax revenues and would provide a me~ for
genuine properly tax relief," said C. William Swank, executive
vice president of the Federation. ''The Senate plan does nothing to
correct the basic inequities of our present properly tax system,
and umer the Senate's plan, farmers would continue to pay an
inordinate amount of their income for·properly taxes," he said.

Wants High Living Explained ·
COLUMBUS -WILLIAM A. LAVELLE, chairman of the
States Democratic party, said Tuesday Lieutenant
Gov. JOhn W. Brown has some explaining to do about the trips he
has made at taxpayer expense.
Lavelle said Brown, a Republican has complained that Gov.
John J. Gilligan, a Democrat, has been spending money "like a
drunken sailor" but he said Brown has been "living high" himself.
Lavelle .said Brown turned In a $98-per-day hotel biD for five
days for a roolilalthe Regency Hyatt House In Atlanta, Ga. where
he attended the National Lieutenant Governors COnlerence in
June 1970; charged the state $240 in expenses for 10 days at the
Sonesta Beach Hotel, Key Biscayne, Fla., whDe attending the
meeting of the execulive committee of the National Lieutenant
Govetnors Conference in 1969; and spent $100 of the taxpayers
money to fly a Highways D6parbnent plane to Cleveland on Nov.
19, 1970, to address a Republican meeting.

P.arked. Car' Hedge
. ·Hit

Heavy damages · were right rear of the Kane car was
reJI!)rted and a ,driver was cited set. at .$500. Damages to the.
to mayor's court ail !be result of l'{inebrenner hedge and yard
an accident near the corner of were estimated at $15.
. Hamilton and s. Second Sis. in Burns told Jl!)lice be lost
Middleport at .1:50 a.m. today. control when he reached out to
Middleport J)ollce said a car turn on the windshield wipers.
dri~~n by Eddie R. Burns, 21, He was .cited to court on a
.l&gt;omeroy, .went ou\ of control charge of excessive speed for
and slrilck a !iarked car owned conditions.
by John Kane, Second- St.,
Middleport, and !ben went IntO '--" GRIN AND BEAR IT
the yard arid hedge at !be home · SA~TA FE, N.M. (UPI) , oi Mrs. Clyde Winebrenn~r.
The . vanishing frontier isn't
Burns' cat was judged compleltlly gone-a bear was
demolished by police 1111d an capt~red ·in New Mexico's
estimate of damages to the capital Tuesday.

REV. BUELL
The Rev. Marvin L. Buell,
on furlough from his
in
missionary
duties
Panama, will be speaker at
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday. The Rev. Mr. Buell
who received his BA Degree
from Eastern Nazarene
College in Quincy, Mass.,
served as pastor of the Mt.
Hope Canal Zone personnel
from 1963 to 1967 and he
preached for a period of
several months In Mexico
City. Before entering the
missionary field, he paslored
churches In Vermo•t and
Missouri, The Rev. Mr. Buell
will speak at 7:30 p.m. Friday
at the Syracuse Church of tbe
Nazarene.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Friday through Sunday:
Warm Friday and Saturday
with a chance of showers on
Saturday ~nd cooler Sunday.
Highs In 80s Friday, dropping
to 70s and lower 80s by
Sunday. Lows In 80s Friday
and Saturday morning and in
50s and upper 40s by Sunday
morning.
NOW YOU KNOW
Galusha Pennypacker was
the youngest general in the
American Civil War. Pennypacker was commissioned In
the Union Army at the age of 17.

Massive U.S. air support
including seven strikes by B52
bombers and jet fighterbombers was brought to bear in
the action which military men
said could he one of the few
major pitched battles of the
Vietnam War.
The Communists opened tlll!ir

offensive Sunday near the
Cambodian rubber plantation
town of Krell: across the border
from Tay Ninh city in an effort
to drive the South Vietnamese
from their last toehold inside
Cambodia.

mese Gen. Nguyen Xuan Tlnb
told him · about 50,000 South
Vietnamese troops , plus a
regiment of U.S. armored
cavalry and elements of the
U.S. lsi Air Cavalry Division,
were sent into the fight agaimlt
the three NVN divisions of
Military sources said till! . about 36,000 men.
Communists, using North Viet- Braddick said Tay Ninh city,
namese regulars,. hoped to 50 miles northwest of Saigon,
score a major. VIctory and was jammed with troops,
embarrass President Nguyen vehicles and i'llge piles of
Van Thieu before the &amp;mday supplies. He said '1ong, long
Jnsidentialelecliminwhich be columns of trucks have been
is the only candidate.
moving through the city in the
UP! correspoodent Kenneth rain all day long."
J . Braddick reported from Tah The South Vietnamese and
Ninh city lbat South Vietna- U.S. reinforcements pouring

region UJ, expressed concern
about till! situation. Be told
Braddick that because of troop
withdrawals "U.S. forces have
almost zero offensive capability" In the region.
'!be two bases under attack
were Alpha and Hung Dao, boul
a few mile from the hattie. Both
bases have been under heavy
shelling am ground assault
since Monday, and bad weather
prevented helicop!el" ~
from striking hack. Tlnb said
the defenders had inflicted
extremely heavy casualties on
till! Communists but he would
neither give an estimate nor
disclose government casualties.

into the area included two
lrigades of airborne troops,
armor, ranger groups, the
American lith Armored Cavalry Regiment and an undisciosed
II1Diber of troops and helicopters of the lsi Air Cavalry,
which bas its headquarters 50
miles east of Saigon in Xuan
Loc.
"Of course till! Communist
offensive is COIIIIected with the
elections in Saigm," Tlnb said.
"For this reason we have to
stay and win and prove lbat
they cannot interfere in our
Jl!)lilics."
Lt. Gen. J. J. Watstaff, the
U.S. cunmander for military

OU Grants One Demand
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - ln a
major move toward ending a
seven-day.,ld strike by service
workers at Ohio University, the
administration early today
granted one of three demands
and offered to len&lt;f the others to
binding arbitration.
Two letters were delivered to
Local 1699, American Federation of Stale, COunty and Municipal Employes, shortly after
midnight containing the propo-

sals.
One letter accompanied a list
of campus workers who bad
been laid off during the swnmer, which the striking union
had earlier requested.
The second Signed by OU Personnel Director Ward Wilson,
asked !be union president, Oscar McGee, to call till! 900 employes hack to work so that
mediation of the other grievances could proceed. '!bey in-

volved alleged discrimination
against women workers in the
school cafeterias and aUeged
use of supervisors in non-5Upel'visory capacities.
"Ohio University is willing to
proceed Immediately upon conelUsion of the strike to arbitralion of these two issues," the
letter authorired by President
Claude R. Sowle said.
"We would join you in a request through the Federal Me-

diation and Concilation Service ence upon conclusion of the
to furnish a list from which two strike to discuss other matters
impartial arbitrators may be of mutual interest as provided
chosen.
in our ag.ecment."
"Youhaveespeciallyexpress- ·The university. b!ld attempted ·
eddissalisfaclionwithourgriev- through legal action previously
ance procedure. We are willing to end the walkout tbat started
to submit !bat procedure and its last Thursday_ It twice has filed
operation in 1971 to an ii!lpart- a charge of cmtempt of court
iai referee for his binding rae- against McGee.
ommendation.
McGee was to ba\1e appeir"In addition, we would be will- ed Tuesday for a hearing in
ing to attend a special confer- Atlll!ns County Coo:unon Pleas
Court on the charge, but the
bearing was continued 1111il
Thursday because of Yom Kupper obsel'Yance.
OU filed the charge when the
strike continued despite a court
not revealed but such a House restraining onler and later an
redistricting would eliminate 11 in)tmclloo.
The t!J.thousand student camlb!publicans.
In the Senate, Education pus bas remained Open despite
O!alrman Oakley COllins of till! walkout, which includes
Ironton,' Lawrence County, is kitchen workers, trash
typists
and
paired against Sen .Harry Ann- collectors,
custodians.
(Continued on page 8)

Proposed .Match ups Hurt GOP
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Democrats, with a ·3-2 majority on
the state Apportionment Board,
have drawn up a legislativ.e re,
dislricting plan pairing incumbent Republicans against each
other in 11 Ohio House Districts
and at least one state Senate
District, it was rep!)rled today.
Scripps Howard Newspapers
said one district pits House
Speaker Charles Kurfess of
Bowling Green In Wood COunty

against Howard Knight of Ris- Kernso!Richwood UnionCouning Sun, Sandusky County. ty, or Rodney Hughes of BelleKnight is chainnan of the Ag- fO!ltaine, Logan COunty.
riculture, Commerce and Labor
Others Not Revealed
COmmittee.
Rep. John Galbraith of Maoln other matchups reported mee against Donald Fraser of
by till! Newspapers:
Toledo.
Majority Floor Leader Robert The other House pairings were
Levitto!CantonagainstRichard
Reichel, Massillon.
Speaker ProTem Otarles Fry
of Springfield against either ·
FinanceChainnanUoydGe!trge

An Editorial
Hopefully, Reason Will Prevail
Tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the American Legion beginning at the regular starting time on
Hall, South Fourth St., MiddleJI!)rl, !be mem- Mmday, September 'II, 1971.
bership of Local1587, International Brotherhood
2. '!be company will provide the union with
of Electrical Workers (AFL-CIO) will decide an up-!OO&amp;te seniority list. Besides seniority
whether or not the work stoppage since June 3 at dales, the tabulation will also list emplo:yee
the Imperial Electric CO. plant will be ended. home addresses and telephone numbers. The
This newspaper, interested in the welfare of company wiD Jl!lll the· membership using tbis
the Imperial employes, the company, and the seniority list and advise the unioo, wiUtin 48
several communities ci Meigs County !bat hours, as follows :
supply till! work personnel at lnlperial, strongly
li. those employees wbo are immediately
urges !bat reason prevail. We are confident !bat available for work.
if sober reflection is exercised the Imperial
b. the status ci employees wbo are not
Plant wiD be in ~rationlnamatter of days.
available to immediately go back to wen.
There are excellent bases for this hope: .
The c«mpany wiD then schedule those
- President Nixon's freeze on wages employ~ to be recalled to work using the list ci
through Sunday, Nov. 24, is an effective block to available employees, plant production scbedu1es
an immediate new contract between the union and considering normal plant start-up problems.
and till! company.
3. Employees not recalled in (2) above will
-A proposed procedure handed to the union be recalled as Soon as possible, depending upoo
negotiating committee Sept. 23rd by the com- availability of employees and production
pany, which was similar In every major respect requirements.
.
.
.
to one handed by International Re!l'esentalive .
4. The c&lt;mpany wiD not retaliate against
Robert Parker for the union to the company the employees for any aclion takend~ the strike
same day, is. fair and equitable imltrwnent. II or Immediately prior to the work stoppa
. ge.
he Old lab
t,
l9li9.June
wiD be noted that the agreement fixes Monday,
5. T .
or contrac. (June Z.
.Sept. 'II as till! day to open the plant. This date 3, 1971), wiD be extended, wttllout change, tlru ·
was in the prqposed agreement on the IISSIIJilp- Sunday, November 14, lfll.
lion the union w~ld take vote of its membership
6full.
Aflereeks
. till! plant~ been in-operadetion for
on the proposal at its Sept. 23rd meeting. It did two
w • negotialioos to provi a new
not, however.
working agreement wiD reswne and meeting
- An amendment lo .the cunpany's dates wiD be established by the Federal
!l'opoSal, which the union membership wiD vote Mediator based on availability of the pu1ies to
·on tomorrow night, is an additional gesture by meet.
the company bidding for a favorable . vote to
Anlendme'!t: Based on tbe current
return to work. •
availabilil¥ ofpeoplewbowere worldng oo June
Following is the complete text of the .com- .2,197i: appromnatelySOpct. wiD be re-c:aJied em
pany's !l'oposal, with the amendment11t the end: 1M. day tbeplant reopeas, and approllmately 90
·
peL 1o be· recailed within two weeks after the
I. The plant will be reopened for wotir plant reopens.

a

llllerfel• Ill Poineroy

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�2- The Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcxneroy, 0., Sept. 2!1,1971

fDifOIIA1S

r--------------------------1 WIN AT

"I Move We Get the' Roof Fixed!"

Forebears of the
'Flower People'? ·
.

!Helen Help Us!

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By

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Dear FWRTT:
Attagirl! The hDBry oid "female vaplrS" syndrome makes
many a woman steam, and rightfully.
I'm reminded of a male writer who blamed a prominent
woman's "gabbiness" m the menopause. Rlght then and there,
that gal gained me as a sapporter, even though I seldom agree
with all she says.
What do you bet women win job and wage equality sooner
than they bBnish the classic put-down: "POOr thing, it must be the
wrmg time of month for her."-H.

Travel Is So Broadening
Germans are among the most enthusiastic tourists in
Europe. (West Germans, that is ; no ri7ht·thinking East
Gerinan would want to leave the 'Worker s paradise.) And
like all tourists, they bring things back with them .
- This summer it included 15,000 tons of fat.
· According to family doctor's reports, one·third of the
1110re than 2Al million German tourists who went abroad
this year came back weighing four to five pounds more
than they did when they went away.
This is due, it is believed, to the fact that people on
holiday tend to overindulge in everything.
As yet, fortunately, no one has suggested slapping a
tarilf on all this imported avoirdupois.

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Sen. Russell Long, chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee, wants badly to separate proposed irpportant
Social Security changes from controversial welfare reform in the bill called lf.R. 1. He would delay welfare
action while pushing Social Security through tbis fall .
Even if he should succeed in this, however, the word
from the House side is that Ways and Means Chairman
Wilbur Mills will put welfare features right back in the
\ bill when it comes to conference.
It is Mills' continuing conviction that final passage of
welfare reform is dependent upon linking it to the Social

Security ' 1sweetener. ''
Long, on the other hand, is so exercised over what he
considers the vast catalogue of welfare abuses that he
· wants lots of time to tinker with reform proposals.
After the semltor's speech in mid,September to the
• Nation~ Go~ernors' Conference , ,al San Juan, Puerto
~ Rico, he campaigned among the governors to try to build
' grass · roots' support for separatijig welfare and Social
,: SecHrity in the pending bill.
He promised some governors he would send them perti·
nent materials on the welfare issue, with the evident
hope they would publicly urge slower handling of reform
to make sure abuses could be dealt with. There is no
clear indication ~ow many governors may respond to
Long's pleas.
.
President Nixon may have played into Long's hands
when he urged in his Aug. 15 economic speech that the
effective date of welfare reform be delayed a year.
Though the President later said he did not want to delay
action on the proposals in Congress, Long's purposes
benefit from the wide impression that Nixon is in no im·
mediate burry.
If the net effect of the delaying maneuvers is to endan·
ger the prospect of H.R. l's passage this year, a strong
possibility exists that some lawmakers may try to at·
tach the Social Security amendments in the bill to some
other sure.to-pass measure-so the changes can take ef·
feet in 1972. That tactic worked in March, when more
limited but urgently desired Social Security changes
whisHed through as a rider on other legislation.
.
The new modifications would add around $3.685 billion
in Social Security payments for the elderly, the disabled
and the widowed in the first full year of operation. Some
$2.1 billion of that would be an across·the·board boost in .
basic benefits, payable next June but r\troactive to Jan·
uary. More than 27 million Americans would get the
latter increase.
In addition, many changes in Medicare would be intro·
duced, most with the aim of providing tighter cost con·
trois on a prograin whose financial burden is rising
alarmingly.
As an indication of what that burden is doing, the So·
cia! Security Administration is announcing that beginning
in January the Medicare recipient will have to pay a
larger sum before he can start having his hospital bills
paid by the government.
This so-called "hospital deductible" figure is presently
fixed at $60, deemed heretofore to be the equivalent of
one day's charge for a hospital room. The boosting of this
figure reflects the painful upward spiral in hospital costs.
It is interesting to note that daily hospital charges are
still rising, even as the average length of stay in a hos·
pita! is declining for the Medicare patient. In the fiscal
year ended June 30, that average figure dropped to 12.2
-·. da ys per stay, as against 12.9 the previous year. There
was also a decline in the 1970 fiscal year from fisc~! 1969.

! Club Problem

WOMAN SI'E.UIII OVER ''JI'EMALE VAPORS"
21
NORTH
Dear Helen:
,
.K7
When a man gelll righiiully mad and blows up, people listen,
.10854
tKJ109
er at least pay hlm the COO!pliment 11 ~back on his lewl.
•nos.
-some~ cringes a bit And the air i.l cleared,
BASI (D)
WI!ST
because the MALE bas ASSERTED Nnwelfl
• Q1093
.J64
Not so with women. If, afier taJPng lt up IQ here 88 the sweet, . • Q93
t852 .
t A 7&amp;43
underStanding cmcillalfr, abe teara looee with the fury she;s held
tfoKQBH
back too lmg, does It "Clear the air"? No! Scmeone whispers, "It .92
SOtJTR
must be that time of the month,'' or-if she's older-"She's
• A852
startillg the change, you know, poor thing." Whenever we're
.AKJ62
righteously indignant, our bormmes get blamed. Instead of
tQ
.A63
LISI'ENING, people tippy-toe ai'OUIXI, actin!! sorry fer us.
North-South vulnerable
Be it known far and wide (and especially by..my Juab!lnd and
West North last South
famjly) that my reprnducUve organs have nothing-but
. Paao 1¥
NOTHING- to do with mY infrequent eiploslona. Isn •t it time we
p.., 2¥
Pass ••
had the right to a healthy ''mad,'' without having it attributed to
P... Pass
Pas
."female vapn?"-FOR WOMEN'S RIGHT TO TEMPER
Opening lead-tfo 9

Neanderthal men were .not the loutish, brutish. apelike
creatures we have long thought them to be. They may
actually have been the first "flower people ."
Recent arcbeological discoveries in a cave in a remote
area of Iraqi Kurdistan indicate that Neanderthals were
communal beings and · were the first to experience the
stirrings of a social and religious sense. They' took care
of the crippled and helpless among them and buried their
dead with ftowers .
This much·maligned group possessed very "human
feelings, to a very much greater extent than we have ever
known," says RalphS. Solecki, professor of anthropology
at Columbia University, rep.orting his findings in " Intel·
lectual Digest," a new national magazine devoted to cut·
lure and ideas.
So next time you see a shaggy, scraggly flower person
shuffling down toe street, think before you yell " Nean·
derthal !" Unless you want to compliment him .

,Welfare and SS--One Bill or Two?

s61vinga

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

1I Voice
along
Broadway
!
.
!
BY JACK O'BRIAN
1

HOWUPS DEVELOP INTO
A WARHOLPOP ART
NEW YORK - Pop artist Andy Warhol and
his leading man, Joe Assesandro, were held up.
Again .. :. The Plaza's ambivalent about guest
Tom Jones: love hlm as an entertainer but not
his all-night wham-dams after he finishes his
Long Island tent shows .... We suwose David
Merrick's cooferences 'l!ith SaiKira Dee are all
business .... Marie WUson, now an even bustier
54, is preparing a new act, she said at the Old
Homestead .... SO many Japanese restaurants in
N. V. and not enough Niwf.oese waitresses togo
round: chances are your Pittl Sing is a Ollnese
~ Korean kutie .... One of the "See No Evil"
movie reviews called Mia Farrow's role a
"cartoon"; it was directed by Ric;hard Fleischer
wbose dad was early-film cartoon pioneer Max
Fleischer ("What's Up, Doc?"). .
Viclfr Berge bas that "I've Got Mine" halo
because he's a millionaire from Saving moneyplus: he did a concert years ago for a Miami
promoler,tooknofeenerpercentagebutapiece
of a then-yet.~ oil well. As of now
Viclfr baa earned over $300,000 lrom that
gamble .... With depletion yet! ..... Egad! Monti
Rock Ill and Arthur Godfrey l announced their
show biz retirement the same day! ... While
Godfrey was sounding his swan song, his old
"humility" target, Julius La Rosa, was starring
at the Copacabana.
The Feds know the Black Panthers solicited
$6,000from Richard Bwtoo; but did they get it?
..... Anna L. Strong, Chinese Clmmuni.lt supporter who died in China last year, left $17,500 in an American bank- to the Black Psnthers ....
Gecrge Wallace's top backers are trying to get
the KKK not to support him .... The Gale (Chi.
·Bears) Sayers lost the baby.
"Clay Pigeon" p-oducer Tom Stern has L&lt;rd
Snowdon mulling an offer to direct ''The 14,''
about 14 homeless. waifs-who band
together to keep from gW!g to different erphanages; Tooy tJua would start at the top .:..
wilh no eq~erience .... The Old Cynic said abrut
Undsay: "He has mere chance of beco~
President than of becoming Mayor again."
Rowan &amp;Martin's firing &lt;I. producer Geerge
Schlatter may only mean he beats them off the .
air by one seaaon .... It's been an abrasive sorewinner ,company: R. &amp; M., Schlatter and Ed
Friendly all claimed they invented the show :
when really Olsen &amp; JohMon created It :;o years
ago .... When "Hee Haw" in a ridiculous
imltaUm, started, "Laugh-In" wanted to sue but
loog-memfried legal heads prevailed.

Michael Caine's ezperience in H'wood
brought this bit ri no doubt admlratim: ''Tbere
never were men of less skill, taste and talent in
posiUCIIS of power. Until the Nazis." .... Ann
Miller can have the Helen Gallagher role in the
touring "No, No, Nanette"lroupe .... The 37th St.
Hideaway owner Van Panopouloaes expect their
3rd little !Hnmth walter Uis week.
George ~·s ''Sarge" series i.l a fine,
warm, fascinating, skillfully plotted, and
sympathetically presented wbodwi.t TV series
(he plays an ex-Marine, ex..tetective priest who
adds compassion to his tools of experience) ....
Which may be the reason George and liis wife got
together again after a 6Cklay separation ....
George i.l the lad who got into show biz as a
Pentagoo ·Army captain teclllical eq~ert on Phil
Silvers'"Bilko"serieswbowasgivenafewroles
by ill crealfr Nat Hillen, and rode It straight to
an Oscar.
Lana Tilmer thought her summer theatre
tour in "40 Carals" naturally would necessitate
endless star-type parties and brought 8long 18
evening gowns -and rever got to wear one;
that's a denim«ene .... Merv Griffin's future
plans, despite lis scheduled CBS departure are
fairly coofident: Merv and his producer, Walter
Kempley, moved into new Bevhills homes ....
One of the splashiest Manhattan flats (5th Ave.
ri course) beloogs to controversial Judge Mitcbell Schweitzer.
Herschel Wuman's involvement with the
theater always baa beer\ behind bars _ of the
Brooks Alkinson Theater's boJ: ~ice: now he's
breaking out to proclice Irene Ffr088' ''Molly's
Dream"; Irene wrote the succeaful ctf..Jidwy.
"Promenade." Herschel's partner will be Peter
Mcreau of CBS .... George Cort, Sl Regis
Maisorettebandleader,provedhlsgoodmemcry
when Glfria Swanson dJ opped in unexpectedly
and he ad-libbed a whole chcrus of "Love Your
Magic Spell Is Everywhere" - a soog Glfria
dlvaed in ''The 'l'respa
" movie - f2 years
ago.
.
Benny Goodman's tom between ccming in to
the Rainbow Grill with a big band -or just a
sextet and himself .... Biggest illuminaijm in
Europe isn't a bulb-it's Jeanne Mcreau's torch
fir Lee Marvin .... The topicathisMytonos table
was shert.lived H'wood marriages- until Gene
Barry noted his 27th anniversary will be Oct.
~lh .... Does it count on Nielsen that ''Bmanza"
IS the No. I TV shows In ZaJJ!lia and Ollie? ....
Vacation Valley in the upstate Pocmos lured its
new chef, Cbris Howden, all the way from Bill
Holden's and Ray Ryan's l.mfinl! lodge in
Kenya, East Africa.

Dear Helen:
You advised a woman that hugging friends was fme, if she
feld like hugging, even though her husband was more restrained.
I wooder.
I've been married 19 years to an Oriental man wbo has
always refused to lmg orlrlss me in public. Reason: In Japan. it is
rude to show affecUon when others are present because some
lmely person, wilh no me to hug er kiss, might be watching and
he made mere lmely.
I'm used to this now-we dm't need to touch in public. Just
looking at each other exp-esses our love.
.Couldn't "just looking" at friends convey affectim too? As
Mr. Spock of Stsr Trek says, "Restraint is civilized." It can also
make the heart grow fonder.-AN ORIENTAL'S WIFE
Dear Wife:
Different strokes fer different folks. DemCIIStl'ated affection
i.l misery for more restrained people, but "the touchable" are
lllis!!rable without it. While a husband and wife should respect
either trait in the other; they shouldn't remold their own persmalities to conform.-H

post-freeze plans.

The Daily Sentilel

Ireland Is one country, '
DEVOTED TO THE
one people, and I think we
IN TEREST OF
.MEIGS·MASON AREA
are both small enough and
L. TANNEHILL ,
big ~nough to live together. (..!ESTER
··Extc . Ed.
'We have been one for cen
ROaEC~~ ·~~~:r~ICH.
'
turies and only divided ir
Pub Iis""d dall¥ egept ·
the last 50 years.
Saturday. by Th~ Ohio Valley·
-Prime Minister John , Publ is hing Company , Jl 1
1 Court St .• .Pomeroy , Oh io,

Lynch of Ireland.

, 45169 . Business Office Phone
Ph•.~· 992.

, l':Vls6. Editorial
A continent (South Amer·
ica) that should bave been
very cohesive on account of
•t 'd titi
f Ia
Is I en es o . nguages
and of races, of traditions and
of the styles of life bas been
' •· ted
one of the most diSInu;gra
of continents because Its
countries have been moved

SETTER IN···
~ ""D"- Tl-'10
MAC MILLER ( ·~
II F&gt;FTH AVE.
NEW~,

N.Y.

Pass

Pus

2tfo

2¥

P...

Pus

1.
2t

3t
?

p.,.
You, South, hold:
•.rt7-4Z
tAKll81 .a. an
.,.,. ...
What do you do now?
A-Bid four I{IMa. Your
por1aor 11111 been fordac ,......
You bope that .., "'"''I keep
oa, but H bo doN thlap _ ,
be all richt.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Pua

3.

•z

· second class postage paid al
: Pomeroy . Ohio.
'
· N • 1 i0 n • 1. • .d v •' II s t n v
I representahve Bottlnelll ·
Gallagher. Inc .. 12 East •2nd
, st., Ne"' York City , New York.
·~·Subscription ratu : De .
He does bid on to five spades.
lvered by carr1er where What do you do now?
vaitable so cents per week ;
ByMolor Roulewherecarrler
Answer Tomorrow
ser vice not avallabl&amp; : One

The goldenrod is the state
flower
of Kentucky, accord·
-President Miaael Pastrana months u .so. Subscription
Borrero of Colombia
price &gt;nctudes Sondav T•mes . ing·to Encyclopaedia Britan·
.. .
. nica.
1Sen!mel.

I

Six ·months

riVa leS.

~~

Three

S7.25.

_;__..:.._______~_ _,____....______

:-~!·!•'

....,

i

CoHee Stimulates Brain and Heart

'tBUT
HE T'RUlll
WI~~ OUT,
SOMETIMES IT'5

The bidding has been: ·
West North Eut SOilth

bv the caprices of ideological month S1.75. By mail &gt;n Ohio '
' lr*
and W. Va .• One year SU.OO,

DR. lAWRENCE E.1AM8

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. sociation of ideas. In other
words, it turns one on. How. Dear Dr. ~mb-1 w.ould ever, delicate muscular cohk.e t!l know tf the habitual ordination may be hampered
drmking of from one to three by this dose. And you can
cups of average strength get that mucb caffeine in one
coffee a day would aff«:et the or two cups of coffee, again
normal healthy function of depending upon the brew.
the adrenal glands over the
years. Please give me your The bad aspect of coffee
true' answer, irrespective of is its effeets on· the :f:;tioil
the effect on the coffee bust- of many peo~&gt;le, ca
an
ness.
increase m stomach actdity
.with burning in the pit of the
. Dear Re!!der~~ doubt the stomach. It should definitely
· coffee ·busmess ts gcting to not be used by anyone who
shudder very much from my
answer. The main problem has an ulcer.
posed by plain coffee is its It stimulates the heart ·and
caffeine content. For those heavy coffee drinkers often
who wish to avoid this prob· have mucl) higher heart
!em there are a number of rates than they .do after they
decaffeinated products on s t o p drinking coffee, or
the market.
switcb to a decaffeinated
An average cup of coffee product. Some studies sug·
contains from 70 to 150 milli· gest that drinking five to six
grams of caffeine, wbich cups of c~fee a da)' is assomeans that two cups can cJated With an InCreased
give you a pretty good jolt. .r ate of heart attacks.
How much depends on how Medical texts describe
strong the coffee is and how "untoward react i o. n s"
strong the drinker is. A dose (meaning bad) from 1,000
or carfeine of 150 to 250 mllli- milligrams of caffeine, or
grams stimulate~ the cortex about six or seven cups of
of the brain, it speeds up strong coffee. These "tiD·
typing performance and as· tow;~~·d reactions" I nclude

--

TIMELY QUOTES

.

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIA.TIOH

By Oswald &amp; Jaine• Jacoby
If South p u t s the code
word ARCH to w o r k, he
should bave no trouble with
his four-beart contract.
He Analyzes the lead as
top of a short suit. T h is
marks East with the king
and queen of clubs. Then he
Reviews the bidding and remembers that E a s t bas
passed throughout. East is
not vulnerable and S o u t h
can decide that if East beld
six clubs to the king-queen
and the ace of diamonds he
would have been in the bidding.
South Counts bis 't"inners
and losers and sees that be
can afford to lose one trump
trick and one club or one
club and a ruff but that be
can't afford to lose two clubs
and a trump.
Tben South plays dummy's
jack of clubs and lets East
hold the t r i c k with the
queen. After that East is
helpless to defeat the con·
tract.
-·
Suppose he returns a club.
It r.ides to dummy's jack.
Suppose he returns a spade.
. South wins in bis hand and
plays bis ace and king of
trumps. Then he leads bis
queen of diamonds. We s t
can take bis ace and bis

Dear Helen:
My husband Is a wooderful provider, a good man, not a
philanderer. Hi.l one bad habit i.lthat he flatters every woman he
meels. He bolsters theiregoatthe e1pe115e of mine, I.e.: "I'd give
anything if MY wife baked bread like this!" or "You're as young- Americo's lop ••ptf!J uploill j}oj,
tournamMf-willnittf tKit1tiqult1 ht 0'
looking 88 when you were in college with us."
.... 12I·IJG!It lxlok •• JA C0 I Y
If I retaliate by giving a man friend a compliment, my MODER/I. For .,_ CO/It ••I $1
husband implies I'm stuck m hlm. He was always a big tease. witlt )'OIIr IIOmt, 1l~tftS fiiHl ,;,
Cmsidering the terrible problems I read in your column, mine eo&lt;lo lo: "Wio of IMp; Tc/o tloit
seems slight, but Helen, I ean't stand the sly glances women give _,,.,.,), ,.0. Jo. 49, •olio Citr
Station. llf'lf York, 1/.Y. 10019.
me when he's slathering m the praise (which he doesn't meanyou should hear whst he says about them later at home!).queen of trumps but that will
DOROTHY
be all. Or West can duck. In
Dear Dorothy:
that case South overtakes·
It's blarney to your husband-baloney to you-and later on witb the king; continues the
you discover it's aU a bunch of bull. So smile at his teasing. He suit and discards.
"
could have worse hablts!-H
Suppose East started with
six clubs and the ace of diamonds. The duck play would
lose, but as Analyzed earlier
that was a very remote pos·
sibility.
·
·
You cannot have jawbon- Only · two kind of insects
ing that is effective without have been domesticated by
(HfWSPArEa fHTI~PllSl .WM.I
teeth.
man--the honeybee and one
-President Nixon, on his ·kind of moth, the silkworm.

~*~*;;~~;ili~~*~;~;~*~~;~~;r~fm~~;ll~~r:~~E~~;~*~~~~;~~r:~~~~;~~{;~t:~W;.;r::J.w:-a?.Biif:~~;r~~l:~i:~4fi~lff~~~*~~~*~$i~~~~;~;?.a!3.i;~~~~r:~~~~\

\

IHIWSPAPER IMTUPl&gt;SI ASSN.)

Alaska Is the only alate in
the Union without an o£flcial
nickname.

...•

Alive In Race
By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Time is running out and the
pressure is building for the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
The Dodgers remained in the
National League's Western
Divi.lion race Tuesday night by
beating the San Diego Padres 21 on Maury Wills' eight-inning
single. But it didn't gain them
any ground as Chris Speier hit
a three-run homer and Gaylord
Perry pitched a seven-hitter to
lift San Francisco to a 7-1
victory over the San Diego
Padres and keep the Giants a
game in front with two to go.
John Cumberland (9-6) will
try to keep the Giants' pennant
express rolling tonight when he
faces the Padres' Clay Kirby
(14-13). San Francisco's Juan
'Marlchal and the Padres'
Dsve Roberts, the staff aces,
will square off in Thursday's
finale . .
Speier's home run capped a
four-run sixth inning that

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Letta A. Spencer to Earl
Holman, Goldie M. Holman, I
A., Sulton.
!.etta A. Spencer to Jacob S.
Holman, Alice Holman, Parcels, Sutton.
Asa D. Stansbury, Golden
Faye Stansbury to Wanda Lou
Oxley, Parcels, Colwnbia.
Charles R. Spaun, Betty L.
Spaun to Stanley Edwin Cozart,
Ollie Mae Cozart, Lots, Racine.
Madge Baird, Oscar C. Baird
to H. Jennings Ellis, Estelle
Spaulding, 20 A., Salem.
Goldie Reed, Goldie Sargent,
Robert Reed to Guy Sargent,
56.98 A., Salisbury.
Alba Sinclair, Helen Sinclair
to Lyle R. Sinclair, Shila D.
Sinclair, Lot, Bedford.
.Paul Simon, Allie Mae Simon,
Guido Girolaml, Vedra
Girolami to Audrey C. Betl,
Lots, Sutllln.

wrapped up the game for the
Giants. San Francisco led 2-1 in
the sixth when Willie McCovey
doubled and one out later, Dick
Dietz was walked intenti\)llally.
AI Gallagher singled in McCovey for a 3-Jlead and Speier, a
rookie shortstop, followed with
his eighth homer off Ed Acosta,
also a rookie.
The Dodgers, who'll send 211game winner AI Downing
against young Ken Forsch (7-ll)
tonight were completely stymied for five innings by Don
Wilson, a surprise starter.
Wilson retired the first 15
Dodgers he faced before Duke
Sims led off the sixth with a
homer to tie the score at 1-1.
Bobby Valentine walked with
one out iil lhe eighth, took
second on winning pitcher Bill
Singer's sacrifice and scored
the winning run on Wills' single
off shortstop Rpger Metzger's
glove.
Should the race end in a tie,
it will be decided by a onegame playoff on Friday. The
winner faces the Pittsburgh
Pirates for the National League
pennant.
Elsewhere in the Nl., Montreal edged Chicago S-4, Philadelphia beat Pittsburgh 6-&lt;1,
Atlanta shut out Cincinnati U
and St. Louis downed New York
5-2.

College Ratings
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
United Stales International Top
20 small college football teams
with first place votes and wonlost records in parentheses:

lthird weeki
Team
1. North Dakota St.

Pvinls
(J.O)
217
2. Arkansas St. (11) (2-0) 286
3. Grambling (1) iJ.O)
217
4. Montana (2) (3-0l
207
5. Delaware (2·01
17~
6. Eastern Michigan (2·01 116
7. Eastern Kentucky 13~1 '17
8. Tennessee State (2~1
79
9. Western Kentucky (2·0)
73
10. Louisiana Tech (11 12-0)70
11. Drake 12·11
29
12. Boise State 13~)
27
13. Tampa (1 ·1)
19
U. Texas A&amp;l (11 !1·11
18
15. Weber Stall! (2·0)
1~
16. Southwest Loliisiana (2·0) 13
(tiel Central Okla. St. 12·0) 9
19. Tie) Akron (2~)
6
ltie) Abilene Christian (2·11 6
(17)

--

-

··-

IN A
GUARANTEED
USED CAR
AT••••

C)lt7J .,

ct- ~~,...

;lA, ....

"Moybe we ougllt to tec011sicler our positiM 011 Cltirta
too. lmagi,.._.,Sb ..UIIion Clli- ,.,.,iag ti'GIIfirtor '

rtldiot, MADE IH JAPAH!"

'

KEITH .GOBLE FORD.
NEW USED CAR LOT
3RD AVE.

MI~,O.

Wanna
Bet On it!

Wahama

White Hemby, 216 lb. tackle; Dwight
Campbell, 173 lb., tackle; Kim
CDBch John Blake's Pirates Hall, 171 lb., sophomore and
captured their first win of the David Wickline, 173lb., junior .
season last week ~ against The Pirates are 1-2 havin'g lost
the Southwestern Highlanders. 14.0 at Fairview, Ky., and 26.0
In defeating Coach Mel at Eastern. North Gallia has not
Carter's Highlanders , North beaten KC since 1960 .
Gallia employed a new quarCoach Bruce Wallace 's
terback and revitalized offense. Southern Tornadoes came close
John Eggleton, 186 lb. senior tp winning their first game of
was switched from tackle to the season last week but fell in
that position. Eggleton, no the last five minutes, 14-12 at
stranger at signal calling, was the hands of the Bobcats.
an alternating quarterback
Soulbern not only shows a
during his freshman year in well-drilled defense but its
football.
offensive game is beginning to
The Pirates also added a move. Two brothers, Milch and
awesome ground game led by Mike Nease and Mick Ihle
junipr fullback Phil Hollen. showed. some outstanding
baugh. He and Harvey Brown, running against Kyger Creek.
senior halfback, each scored Mitch Nease, a freshman , broke
touchdowns in a 20-point fourth loose on a 21 yard run and Ihle
quarter rally.
scored on a 61 yard gallop up the
Brown scored three touch· middle.
downs, two on passes and the The Tornadoe; lost ~ last
other on a punt return.
year to Don Van Meter's White
The Pirate defense is headed Falcons. Wahama 3-0-1 has an
by Loren Neal, 152 lb. senior unbeaten record but has
and all SV AC selection; Larry

played three barnburners.
A last minute 73-yard scoring
attention to Vinllln Friday night stubborn Tornado squad. That
pass from Mike White to
wbere the North Gallia Pirates close call proves the old adage
Chester Roush gave the West
host the Kyger Creek Bobcats in "that you can't gp on last year's
Virginians a come-from-behind
the only league contest slated score." KC won a 70.14 batUe
10-14 win last Friday over
this week.
over Southern during the 1970
Duval. Earlier this season,
· KC will be seeking .its 11th season.
Wahama defeated Wirt County
straigbt grid vi&lt;:IDry over the The Bobcat offensive attack
in the last three seasons and
Pirates.
also features the running of
tied Kyger Creek 6-6. Their only
In
non-league action, sophomore halfback Rick
easy game was a 31~ romp at
6 Speaker AM-F M
Wahama travels to Southern; Smith, the league's fourth
FederaJ.Hocking.
Philco Console
Glwster's Tomcats will batUe leading scorer; senior fullback
Coach Roger Kirkhart's
Eastern in the ·E agles' Gary Collins who rushed for 117
Eastern Eagles tangle with the
Reg. $399
hoinecoming game; Symmes yards against the Tornadoes
Glouster Tomcats in a nonValley plays at Southwestern and John Roush, junior halfleague game. Eastern owns
and Green Local is at Hannan back who can also scoot.
easy victories over Hannan
Trace.
KC's mainstays on defense
Trace, North Gallia and
Coacb Dick Adams' Bobcats have been Terry Moles, C().
Frontier Local. Glouster is l-2
move into Pirateland with a w. captain and middle linebacker;
23" Mobala
on the year. The Tomcats
I overall record and U mark in Dan Swisher, 165 lb. senior
defeated Southern but have lost
CoiiSDiet T.V.
the SVAC. Kyger Creek and tackle; Mark Darst, I :ill lb., er.dto Crooksville and NelsonvilleEastern are tied fer the top spilt tackle; Bill Roush, J7S lb. end;
York. Eastern is led by the
in the league.
Clay Hudson, J581b., end; Curry
passing of senior quarterback
Tte Bobcats received their and Terry Sheets, a 180 lb.
Jim Amsbary and the hard
biggest sboct of the im season sophomore tackle.
running of halfbacks Rick
23" G.E. CoiiSDie T.V.
last Friday night at Southern. A The Bobcats own victories
Sanders and Randy Boring.
fourth period touchdown pass over Hannan Trace (~) and
Their biggest forte has been a
fnm senier quarterback Glenn Southern (14-12). Their only
stingy, almost untouchable
Smith to junier end George blemish is a 6-6 tie with the
defense. The Eagles had a
:=:=o:t&lt;:;:&lt;:::;~-;::;:;&gt;;~:=~:&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: similar 3-0 record going into last
year's game but Glouster pulled
off an ll.jJ upset.
Coach John Patton's Symmes
•
Valley Vikings. IU winners
36"
Vesta
Gas
over Hannan Trace, travel to
Southwestern for a clash with
the Highlanders. Coach Mel
Carter's eleven is still seeking
Norge Auto.
its first win of the season.
3 Sp. 2 Cyl.
Southwestern has lost to Zane
By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE
Montana 18, Idaho 6
.~;·1r;&gt;.;.;;w;~*~~ Trace, Hannan, W. Va., and
The Wizard of Odds
Nebraska 49, Utah State 14
North Gallia.
No. Carolina 17, N.C. State 7
Egad. friends, there are
Coach Tom Belville's Hannan
Northwestern 24, Wisconsin
some exceptionally prom·
Trace Wildcats are still seeking
21
ising intersectional contests
.that illusive win. HT dropped a
Notre Dame 22, Michigan St.
on this week's collegiate pig.
12~ decision last Friday to
20
.
skin parade, to coin a phrase.
11" Collled
Symmes Valley.
Ohio State 24, California 19
Topping the list is the
SYAC STANDINGS
meeting at Norman, Okla.,
Ollaboma 21, So. Cal. 21
CoiiSDie T.V.
All GAMES
of the high-scoring Sooners
Penn State 33, Air Force 27
TEAM
W l T POP
and Southern California Tro·
Pennsylvania 35, Brown 8
)
Eastern
3 o o 110 6
jans. Almost as enticing are
Kyger
Creek
2 0 1 65 18
Purdue 26, Iowa 16
the Stanford·Duke, 0 h i o
North Gallia
1 2 0 44 40
Boston Col. ofO, Richmond 20
State-California, Penn StateSouthern
0 3 0 20 60
·Major league leaders
21" R.CA
Air Force and Illinois-Wash0 3 0 s 9~
Cornell 35, Rutgers 18
By United Prtss International Southwestern
Hannan Trace
0 3 0 0 120
ington engagements. All of
leading Batters
Southern Ill. 11, Wichita St.
SVAC
ONLY
CalarCoiiSDie
these games will be played
The Old Boy Himself
National
'League
8 (N)
TEAM
W
L
T
POP
G.
AB
R
H
Pet.
on the home field of the team for Alabama's Crimson Tide, SJIIU 23, New Mexico St. 12
2 Yr. Guarantee
2 0 0 69 0
Torre,St.'L 161 634 97 230 .363 Eastern
first. named.
coached by my-ahem-&lt;lne2 o 0 59 t2
Garr. All 154 639 101 219 .343 Kyger Creek
Doping out the winners of time. protege, Paul Brrant, Stanford 28, Duke 22
North Galtia
1 1 0 38 26
Bckrt.
Chi
131
5530
so
181
.342
0 1 0 12 u
these contests, dear readers, to walk off the field wtth a Texas A&amp;M 17, Cincinnati 12 Ctmnte, Pit 131 518 81 177 .342 Southern
(N)
Southwestern
0 1 0 0 38
required the best efforts of well deserved 22·15 victory!
Aarn, All
139 495 95 162 .:m
Hannan
Trace
0
2 0 0 88
Texas
36,
Oregon
17
Sngiltn Pit 137 5505 59 169 .319
my eotire-kaff-kaff-staff Now go on with the fore·
Totals
5 5 o 111 171
Toledo
%5,
Ohio
V.
21
(N)
Jones.
Ny
135
502
62
160
.319
of assistants, and, in fact, cast.
FRIDAY'S GAMES
Atou St.L 149 609 85 192 .3t5
21, '1\'m. &amp; Mary K
Kyger
Creek at North Gallla
the services of my .assistants' Alabama 22, Mississippi 15 Tulane
Bck, St. L 156 636 126 199 .313
(Nt
assistants (several of whom
Wahama
at Southern
Dvis.LA
156 633 84 197 .311
UCLA 30, Oregon St. 20 (N)
are feilow astrology buffs) Arizona St. 17, U. of Tex.
Glouster
at
Eastern
American League
Washington St. 16, Utah 10
Symmes
Valley
at Soulll·
and the full facilities of our
(EI Paso) ID (N)
G. AB R H Pel.
western
Florida
St.
31,
Va.
Tech
11
Olva, Min 126 487 73 164 .337
huge computer complex- Arizona 27, Texas Teeb 16
Green Local at Hannan
Vanderbilt !9, Virginia IS
M&lt;cr, Ny 1« 522 92 173 .JJ1 Trace.
992-2238
um·kumpM
Artauas 25, TCV 17
Tulsa 37, West Texas St. 18 Rttnmnd Ball
Despite our combined ef· Missouri 18, Army 11
140 487 81 156 .320
(NJ
forts the Oklahoma-Southern Auburn :!9, Kentucky 13
Tvr.
Min
155
649 93 201 .310
Pittsburgh 24, W. VIrginia 14
Carew Min 146.576 as 177 .307
California joust defied solu· West. Michigan %2, Bowling Wyoming 18, Col. St. U. IS
Otis, KC
147 555 80 167 .301
lion. We were unable to fmd
G
\'ale !%, Colgate 12
May,Chi
140 500 65 147 .294
a scintilla of difference in
reeo U
·
Gallipolis 26 Waverly 8
White, NY 145 517 82 ISO .290
the abilities of these two fine New Mexico 14, Brigham
Ulndr. Clev 141 500 51 144 .288
Meigs 14 Ironton 13
elevens. The Hoople compu·
Young 6 (N)
Alou,
NY
131 463 51 132 .285
Alllens 22 Jackson 20
ter indicates a thrilling 21- Colorado 35, Kansas St. 0
Home Runs
Logao 38 WeU.ton ~
21 standoff! Impossible you Prlnteton 28, Columbia 7
National league: Stargell,
Pitt
48 ; H. Aaron, All 47; May,
Huntington
Vinson
24
Fairland
say! Hab! Let me remind Dartmouth Zt, Holy Cross 14
Cin
39 ; Johnson, Phil 34;
li
you it was the Hoople System Villanova 16, Delaware 15
Williams,
All and Bonds, SF JJ.
that gave you Colorado to
Seutb Point 24 Logan, w. American league: Cash, Del
edge Ohio State last week- Citadel !3, East Carolina II
Va. 19
and Jackson, Oak 32; Smith,
har-rumpb!
(NJ
llo&lt;k Hill 6 Ironton St. Joe 8os and Melton, Chi 30;
In the other games men- Tennessee :It, Florida za (N)
F.Robinson, Ball, Petrocelli,
D
Bos, Nettles, Clev and Kille·
tioned above, I confidently VMI 8, Furman 7· (N)
Chesapeake
U
Oak
Hill
6
brew,
Minn 28.
predict a Stanford triumph Georgia Tech %4, Clemson 7
Runs Batted In
Symmes
Valley
20
Southwestover the bighly·reganled Harvard 21, Northeastern 6
National
league: Torre, St. l
ern U
Duke Blue Devils by a 28-22 Houston 33, San Jose St. i3
t37; Stargell. Pitt 125; H.
count, and an Obio State 24- (N)
Eastern 3t Glouster 8
Aaron, All 118; Bonds, SF 102;
May. Cin 98.
19 conquest of California. The Waabingtoo· 42, Illinois 16
Wabama lli Soutbern 0
American League: Killebrew,
~whee~g Nitlar!Y Lions Syracuse 17, Indiana 10
Kyger Creek %% North Gailla Minn
119; F. Robinson. Ball 99;
~
.
will vanqUJSb the Air Foree 1
Smith. Bos 96; Bando, Oak 94;
Falcons, 33-27, and Sonny owa State 26, Kent State U
Green &amp; Hannan Trace 0
Powell. Ball and Murcer, NY 92. ·
Sixkiller and his Washington LSU 33, Rke 13 (N)
Pitching
mates will ride roughshod Louisville Zl, Dayton U (N) Upper Arllugton 48 Ports- Nalilnal League : .Jenkins, Chi
mouth&amp;
23·13; Downing, LA 20-8;
over Illinois, 42-16!
Wake Forest 19, Maryland 1~
Nelsouvllle-York
Z2
ZanesCarlton.
St. l. 20·9: Ellis, Pitt
In a big Southeastern Con- So. Carolina 41, Memphis St.
19.9;
Seaver,
NY 19-10.
ville Rosecrans U
ference clash, Alabama (3-0)
10 (N)
American League: lolich,
MIDer 22 Alei.BDder 0
Del 25-13; Blue, Oak 24.8;
and Mississippi (3-0) bump Miami, 0. 17, Marshall 6
Belpre
U
Federal-Hocking
McNally,
Ball 21 -5; Hunter,
beads at Birmingham. When Mlehllan 45 Navy 0
Oak
21
·11
;
Wood,
Chi 21 ·13.
li
the day's work is done I look Kansas 33, Minnesota :!8
Custom le Sabre~ dr. sedan, vinyl top, factory air condlticlnlng
fully equippo!d.' Sticker P,ice SS, 1CJ.C.7~.
'

Great

Bargains

STEREO
only •199•

'691'

'1191'

More Spo. rls

Top Intersectional Games
Dominate Collegiate Sked

bile

On

'129•

Page Six

J

~

Washer
'99·

~

ou ,.,,

'199•

H&amp;R

Firestone

Final
CloseOut
OF ALL STOCK
1971-1972

Buicks and Pontiacs
New Firm Takes Over
October 5th ·

New 71 Buick

Toledo Tackle,WM
Halfback Honored

GOBLE

STOP 'N' .SAVE
I-

Southern Valley Athletic Curry gave the Adamsmen a unbeaten

Conference fans will focus their hard-fought, 14-12 win over a Falcons.

Pigskin Parade

Dodgers Still

SAVE WITH

~

flashing lights, ringing in the
ears, nervousness (no won·
der) and tremulousness.
BUT there is no evidence
that it will affect the adrenal
glands adversely in t h e
amounts you have asked
about.
Coffee Is not a natural
beverage for man. It Is an
Arabic drink that spread to
Europe In the 17th century.
Like cigarettes, its consumption bas increased markedly
since the beginning of the
20th century, parallel with.
the increase m heart at·
tacks, ulcers, lung cancers
and other common: ailments.
The United States consumes
more than 70 per cent of the
world's coffee crop.
Tea also contains caffeine,
but the way it is brewed, the
usual cup contains half as .
much as corree. The best
approach Is for the coffee
lover to switch to a decaf.
feinated product.' This helps
prevent "corfee nerves. "

WEDNESDAY ROUNDUP : Look fer Bruce Wallace's Southern T&lt;111adoes ·to give the Wahama Falcms all they want - and
maybe mQre - Friday Digbt at Racine, even though the West
Vtrglnians are ilndefeated (3-0-1), and the T..-nadoes yet baw
not bad that sweet taste 11 victory in tiJree starts. Our Wahama
neigh~ ha~ had a little luck (always helped along by being
, aggressive) gomg for them, winning two games in the last burrab,
me wilb tbree seconds.left, another iiiside the final 1\io milllte.
Eastern, )r8llcing I,IIi!rrily along with a 3.0 record, should
have fun Friday night m Its borne gridiron making it U with
their born~ added to the gala doings.
'
Eastern's quarterback is a senior, Jim Amsbary, son of the
late Dr. .Ken Amsbary, popular Meigs County dentist and emservatimiallll John McKean's current series, ''You Can't Get
from There to Here No More" (a Sort 11 Journal).in your &amp;mday
Times-Sentinel, the name Amsbary pops up repeatedly. That's
right, Ken was an All.sEOAL foolballer fer the Gallipolis mue
Devils in the late liB. So, you see, Jim comes by his talents
naturally.
TheSEOAL 's secmd round this weekend impires me to try to
lllltdoMajor Hoople, though I'm going to go along \vlth hlm oothe
Ironton-Meigs game. He says Meigs 14, Ironton 13. I'll buy Meigs
12, Irooton ain ooe of the major upsets &lt;I. the season, Hoople also
getswayoutm aUmbwithGallipolis6, Waverly Band Athens 22,
Jackson ~. Here he's wrong. Jackson will defeat Athens by two
TDs, and Gallipolis will wbip Waverly also by two. Hoople baa to
be oo the right side with his Logan 38, Wellston ~.

B[RRY'S WORLD

......

~

'•

North G ·a Hosts Kyger Creek
In SVAC Gtid Headliner Frida

the· Sports
By Chet Tannehill · Desk

BY.REI .EN 80'lTEL

• ' !I

BRUCE BIOSSAT

H~len Bottel

BltiDOI

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Tackle
Mel Long of the University of
Toledo was given defensive
honors and Western Micbigan
halfback Larry Cates was
named offensive player of the
week in the Mill-American
Conference today.
Long, a 6-foot-1, 236pound
senioc !rom Toledo, figured In
17 tackles, making nine of them
unassisted, in last weekend's 230 viclfry over Texas Arlington.
The win stretched Toledo's win
streak to '5, longest in the
country.
Long also deflecte&lt;l a pass
that a teamputle ultimately
intercepted and also caused a
blocked punt
Cates, a sophomore from
Columbus, Obio, rolled up 14&amp;
yards in I&amp; carries, returning a
pair of kickoffs fer 64 yards. He
MOIORIST DIES

FORTWAYNE, Ind.(UPl)Janet Anderson, 17, of Hicksville, Ohio, died in Sl Joseph
Hospital bin Monday ri injarieuuffaed Friday in a head
oo auto ectllision on the west
side.
'

scored twice, including an 80yard scamper in the third
quarter that was the longest
scoring dash for Western
Michigan since 1954. The
Broncos went on to defeat
Northern lllinoi.l.

Goin .Snow
"SURE GRIP lll" AUTO TIRE
• The tread design for our famous Sure Grip tires
gives deep, int erlocking "L" center deals
teamed with double shoulder deal s for
grip-and-go power.
• Four full plies of 3-T Triple-lempered nylon cord
body for long-l11sting wear .

New 72 Buick
Skyl.ark 2 dr. hardfop .. power steering, trans. Stocker Price 1.1,766.19.

brakes

New 71 Pontiac

$]]27ZZ

'

auto

·

Catalina 4 dr. sedan, power steering, power brakes, auto. tr..,..
Slicker Price 54,086.82.

New
71
Pontiac
Catalina dr. &amp;edan. factory air conditicned, - r
~

steering,

power brakes, auto. tr.ans., tinted glass. Sticker Price u.nue.

700.13

tubeless
blac kwall
PIUS $1.95
ftd. (I, TJ~
and aid lire.

ROYAI.'I TRIUMPII
DAYTON (UPI ) - The
Cincinnati Royals rattled off II
straight points late in the
second period to break away
and win an exhibition
professional basketball game
over Buffalo 118-110 Tuesday
night.
Rookie Gil McGregor topped
all scorers with 22 points for the
Royals, followed by teammate
Nate Archibald with ~ and
rookie Nate Wiillams with 18.
Cincinnati and Buffalo were
tied at 24-24 at the end of the
first period, but the Royals got a
·fast break and pUt the game
away.
r
The game was played at
University
of
Dayton
Fieldb~ . The teams play
m ·ltot
700 E. Main
,
· POMEROY, 0 .
each other again tonight in
Huntington, Ind.
. ...._.. ._ _ _ _ __

';i!_.,...___..,=RIZER OIL m

LARGER SIZES
PRICED
SLIGHTLY
HIGHER ...

'FREE MOUNTING

71
Pontiac
Catalina
Brougham dr. hardtop.
very
~

demo.,

low mileage, faclury elr

New 72 Pontiac

'4139"

conditioning, .m cu. ln. engine, ~ bbl. lilt st. wheel, AM-FM
radio, vinyl top. Sticker Price $5233.32.

Catalina .t dr. sedan, facfvrv air conditJOMd, power sllarlrig,
power brakes, auto. trans. Sticker Price WC.11

.

New 72 Pontiac ·
Catalina Brougham 2 dr. hardlap, factary air condltlcning, vlnJI
top, fully equipPed. Slicker Price SS000.99.

New 72 Pontiac
LeMans 2 dr. hardtop, _.. steering, _..
trans. Slicker Price 13.6111.02.

~or--.

BLAEnNARS

F•&amp;Uaies'-Biidllt....

eu1a.

�2- The Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcxneroy, 0., Sept. 2!1,1971

fDifOIIA1S

r--------------------------1 WIN AT

"I Move We Get the' Roof Fixed!"

Forebears of the
'Flower People'? ·
.

!Helen Help Us!

'

·,

..

l

' -"., • :} 1•
~

'.

By

'

.,

Dear FWRTT:
Attagirl! The hDBry oid "female vaplrS" syndrome makes
many a woman steam, and rightfully.
I'm reminded of a male writer who blamed a prominent
woman's "gabbiness" m the menopause. Rlght then and there,
that gal gained me as a sapporter, even though I seldom agree
with all she says.
What do you bet women win job and wage equality sooner
than they bBnish the classic put-down: "POOr thing, it must be the
wrmg time of month for her."-H.

Travel Is So Broadening
Germans are among the most enthusiastic tourists in
Europe. (West Germans, that is ; no ri7ht·thinking East
Gerinan would want to leave the 'Worker s paradise.) And
like all tourists, they bring things back with them .
- This summer it included 15,000 tons of fat.
· According to family doctor's reports, one·third of the
1110re than 2Al million German tourists who went abroad
this year came back weighing four to five pounds more
than they did when they went away.
This is due, it is believed, to the fact that people on
holiday tend to overindulge in everything.
As yet, fortunately, no one has suggested slapping a
tarilf on all this imported avoirdupois.

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Sen. Russell Long, chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee, wants badly to separate proposed irpportant
Social Security changes from controversial welfare reform in the bill called lf.R. 1. He would delay welfare
action while pushing Social Security through tbis fall .
Even if he should succeed in this, however, the word
from the House side is that Ways and Means Chairman
Wilbur Mills will put welfare features right back in the
\ bill when it comes to conference.
It is Mills' continuing conviction that final passage of
welfare reform is dependent upon linking it to the Social

Security ' 1sweetener. ''
Long, on the other hand, is so exercised over what he
considers the vast catalogue of welfare abuses that he
· wants lots of time to tinker with reform proposals.
After the semltor's speech in mid,September to the
• Nation~ Go~ernors' Conference , ,al San Juan, Puerto
~ Rico, he campaigned among the governors to try to build
' grass · roots' support for separatijig welfare and Social
,: SecHrity in the pending bill.
He promised some governors he would send them perti·
nent materials on the welfare issue, with the evident
hope they would publicly urge slower handling of reform
to make sure abuses could be dealt with. There is no
clear indication ~ow many governors may respond to
Long's pleas.
.
President Nixon may have played into Long's hands
when he urged in his Aug. 15 economic speech that the
effective date of welfare reform be delayed a year.
Though the President later said he did not want to delay
action on the proposals in Congress, Long's purposes
benefit from the wide impression that Nixon is in no im·
mediate burry.
If the net effect of the delaying maneuvers is to endan·
ger the prospect of H.R. l's passage this year, a strong
possibility exists that some lawmakers may try to at·
tach the Social Security amendments in the bill to some
other sure.to-pass measure-so the changes can take ef·
feet in 1972. That tactic worked in March, when more
limited but urgently desired Social Security changes
whisHed through as a rider on other legislation.
.
The new modifications would add around $3.685 billion
in Social Security payments for the elderly, the disabled
and the widowed in the first full year of operation. Some
$2.1 billion of that would be an across·the·board boost in .
basic benefits, payable next June but r\troactive to Jan·
uary. More than 27 million Americans would get the
latter increase.
In addition, many changes in Medicare would be intro·
duced, most with the aim of providing tighter cost con·
trois on a prograin whose financial burden is rising
alarmingly.
As an indication of what that burden is doing, the So·
cia! Security Administration is announcing that beginning
in January the Medicare recipient will have to pay a
larger sum before he can start having his hospital bills
paid by the government.
This so-called "hospital deductible" figure is presently
fixed at $60, deemed heretofore to be the equivalent of
one day's charge for a hospital room. The boosting of this
figure reflects the painful upward spiral in hospital costs.
It is interesting to note that daily hospital charges are
still rising, even as the average length of stay in a hos·
pita! is declining for the Medicare patient. In the fiscal
year ended June 30, that average figure dropped to 12.2
-·. da ys per stay, as against 12.9 the previous year. There
was also a decline in the 1970 fiscal year from fisc~! 1969.

! Club Problem

WOMAN SI'E.UIII OVER ''JI'EMALE VAPORS"
21
NORTH
Dear Helen:
,
.K7
When a man gelll righiiully mad and blows up, people listen,
.10854
tKJ109
er at least pay hlm the COO!pliment 11 ~back on his lewl.
•nos.
-some~ cringes a bit And the air i.l cleared,
BASI (D)
WI!ST
because the MALE bas ASSERTED Nnwelfl
• Q1093
.J64
Not so with women. If, afier taJPng lt up IQ here 88 the sweet, . • Q93
t852 .
t A 7&amp;43
underStanding cmcillalfr, abe teara looee with the fury she;s held
tfoKQBH
back too lmg, does It "Clear the air"? No! Scmeone whispers, "It .92
SOtJTR
must be that time of the month,'' or-if she's older-"She's
• A852
startillg the change, you know, poor thing." Whenever we're
.AKJ62
righteously indignant, our bormmes get blamed. Instead of
tQ
.A63
LISI'ENING, people tippy-toe ai'OUIXI, actin!! sorry fer us.
North-South vulnerable
Be it known far and wide (and especially by..my Juab!lnd and
West North last South
famjly) that my reprnducUve organs have nothing-but
. Paao 1¥
NOTHING- to do with mY infrequent eiploslona. Isn •t it time we
p.., 2¥
Pass ••
had the right to a healthy ''mad,'' without having it attributed to
P... Pass
Pas
."female vapn?"-FOR WOMEN'S RIGHT TO TEMPER
Opening lead-tfo 9

Neanderthal men were .not the loutish, brutish. apelike
creatures we have long thought them to be. They may
actually have been the first "flower people ."
Recent arcbeological discoveries in a cave in a remote
area of Iraqi Kurdistan indicate that Neanderthals were
communal beings and · were the first to experience the
stirrings of a social and religious sense. They' took care
of the crippled and helpless among them and buried their
dead with ftowers .
This much·maligned group possessed very "human
feelings, to a very much greater extent than we have ever
known," says RalphS. Solecki, professor of anthropology
at Columbia University, rep.orting his findings in " Intel·
lectual Digest," a new national magazine devoted to cut·
lure and ideas.
So next time you see a shaggy, scraggly flower person
shuffling down toe street, think before you yell " Nean·
derthal !" Unless you want to compliment him .

,Welfare and SS--One Bill or Two?

s61vinga

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

1I Voice
along
Broadway
!
.
!
BY JACK O'BRIAN
1

HOWUPS DEVELOP INTO
A WARHOLPOP ART
NEW YORK - Pop artist Andy Warhol and
his leading man, Joe Assesandro, were held up.
Again .. :. The Plaza's ambivalent about guest
Tom Jones: love hlm as an entertainer but not
his all-night wham-dams after he finishes his
Long Island tent shows .... We suwose David
Merrick's cooferences 'l!ith SaiKira Dee are all
business .... Marie WUson, now an even bustier
54, is preparing a new act, she said at the Old
Homestead .... SO many Japanese restaurants in
N. V. and not enough Niwf.oese waitresses togo
round: chances are your Pittl Sing is a Ollnese
~ Korean kutie .... One of the "See No Evil"
movie reviews called Mia Farrow's role a
"cartoon"; it was directed by Ric;hard Fleischer
wbose dad was early-film cartoon pioneer Max
Fleischer ("What's Up, Doc?"). .
Viclfr Berge bas that "I've Got Mine" halo
because he's a millionaire from Saving moneyplus: he did a concert years ago for a Miami
promoler,tooknofeenerpercentagebutapiece
of a then-yet.~ oil well. As of now
Viclfr baa earned over $300,000 lrom that
gamble .... With depletion yet! ..... Egad! Monti
Rock Ill and Arthur Godfrey l announced their
show biz retirement the same day! ... While
Godfrey was sounding his swan song, his old
"humility" target, Julius La Rosa, was starring
at the Copacabana.
The Feds know the Black Panthers solicited
$6,000from Richard Bwtoo; but did they get it?
..... Anna L. Strong, Chinese Clmmuni.lt supporter who died in China last year, left $17,500 in an American bank- to the Black Psnthers ....
Gecrge Wallace's top backers are trying to get
the KKK not to support him .... The Gale (Chi.
·Bears) Sayers lost the baby.
"Clay Pigeon" p-oducer Tom Stern has L&lt;rd
Snowdon mulling an offer to direct ''The 14,''
about 14 homeless. waifs-who band
together to keep from gW!g to different erphanages; Tooy tJua would start at the top .:..
wilh no eq~erience .... The Old Cynic said abrut
Undsay: "He has mere chance of beco~
President than of becoming Mayor again."
Rowan &amp;Martin's firing &lt;I. producer Geerge
Schlatter may only mean he beats them off the .
air by one seaaon .... It's been an abrasive sorewinner ,company: R. &amp; M., Schlatter and Ed
Friendly all claimed they invented the show :
when really Olsen &amp; JohMon created It :;o years
ago .... When "Hee Haw" in a ridiculous
imltaUm, started, "Laugh-In" wanted to sue but
loog-memfried legal heads prevailed.

Michael Caine's ezperience in H'wood
brought this bit ri no doubt admlratim: ''Tbere
never were men of less skill, taste and talent in
posiUCIIS of power. Until the Nazis." .... Ann
Miller can have the Helen Gallagher role in the
touring "No, No, Nanette"lroupe .... The 37th St.
Hideaway owner Van Panopouloaes expect their
3rd little !Hnmth walter Uis week.
George ~·s ''Sarge" series i.l a fine,
warm, fascinating, skillfully plotted, and
sympathetically presented wbodwi.t TV series
(he plays an ex-Marine, ex..tetective priest who
adds compassion to his tools of experience) ....
Which may be the reason George and liis wife got
together again after a 6Cklay separation ....
George i.l the lad who got into show biz as a
Pentagoo ·Army captain teclllical eq~ert on Phil
Silvers'"Bilko"serieswbowasgivenafewroles
by ill crealfr Nat Hillen, and rode It straight to
an Oscar.
Lana Tilmer thought her summer theatre
tour in "40 Carals" naturally would necessitate
endless star-type parties and brought 8long 18
evening gowns -and rever got to wear one;
that's a denim«ene .... Merv Griffin's future
plans, despite lis scheduled CBS departure are
fairly coofident: Merv and his producer, Walter
Kempley, moved into new Bevhills homes ....
One of the splashiest Manhattan flats (5th Ave.
ri course) beloogs to controversial Judge Mitcbell Schweitzer.
Herschel Wuman's involvement with the
theater always baa beer\ behind bars _ of the
Brooks Alkinson Theater's boJ: ~ice: now he's
breaking out to proclice Irene Ffr088' ''Molly's
Dream"; Irene wrote the succeaful ctf..Jidwy.
"Promenade." Herschel's partner will be Peter
Mcreau of CBS .... George Cort, Sl Regis
Maisorettebandleader,provedhlsgoodmemcry
when Glfria Swanson dJ opped in unexpectedly
and he ad-libbed a whole chcrus of "Love Your
Magic Spell Is Everywhere" - a soog Glfria
dlvaed in ''The 'l'respa
" movie - f2 years
ago.
.
Benny Goodman's tom between ccming in to
the Rainbow Grill with a big band -or just a
sextet and himself .... Biggest illuminaijm in
Europe isn't a bulb-it's Jeanne Mcreau's torch
fir Lee Marvin .... The topicathisMytonos table
was shert.lived H'wood marriages- until Gene
Barry noted his 27th anniversary will be Oct.
~lh .... Does it count on Nielsen that ''Bmanza"
IS the No. I TV shows In ZaJJ!lia and Ollie? ....
Vacation Valley in the upstate Pocmos lured its
new chef, Cbris Howden, all the way from Bill
Holden's and Ray Ryan's l.mfinl! lodge in
Kenya, East Africa.

Dear Helen:
You advised a woman that hugging friends was fme, if she
feld like hugging, even though her husband was more restrained.
I wooder.
I've been married 19 years to an Oriental man wbo has
always refused to lmg orlrlss me in public. Reason: In Japan. it is
rude to show affecUon when others are present because some
lmely person, wilh no me to hug er kiss, might be watching and
he made mere lmely.
I'm used to this now-we dm't need to touch in public. Just
looking at each other exp-esses our love.
.Couldn't "just looking" at friends convey affectim too? As
Mr. Spock of Stsr Trek says, "Restraint is civilized." It can also
make the heart grow fonder.-AN ORIENTAL'S WIFE
Dear Wife:
Different strokes fer different folks. DemCIIStl'ated affection
i.l misery for more restrained people, but "the touchable" are
lllis!!rable without it. While a husband and wife should respect
either trait in the other; they shouldn't remold their own persmalities to conform.-H

post-freeze plans.

The Daily Sentilel

Ireland Is one country, '
DEVOTED TO THE
one people, and I think we
IN TEREST OF
.MEIGS·MASON AREA
are both small enough and
L. TANNEHILL ,
big ~nough to live together. (..!ESTER
··Extc . Ed.
'We have been one for cen
ROaEC~~ ·~~~:r~ICH.
'
turies and only divided ir
Pub Iis""d dall¥ egept ·
the last 50 years.
Saturday. by Th~ Ohio Valley·
-Prime Minister John , Publ is hing Company , Jl 1
1 Court St .• .Pomeroy , Oh io,

Lynch of Ireland.

, 45169 . Business Office Phone
Ph•.~· 992.

, l':Vls6. Editorial
A continent (South Amer·
ica) that should bave been
very cohesive on account of
•t 'd titi
f Ia
Is I en es o . nguages
and of races, of traditions and
of the styles of life bas been
' •· ted
one of the most diSInu;gra
of continents because Its
countries have been moved

SETTER IN···
~ ""D"- Tl-'10
MAC MILLER ( ·~
II F&gt;FTH AVE.
NEW~,

N.Y.

Pass

Pus

2tfo

2¥

P...

Pus

1.
2t

3t
?

p.,.
You, South, hold:
•.rt7-4Z
tAKll81 .a. an
.,.,. ...
What do you do now?
A-Bid four I{IMa. Your
por1aor 11111 been fordac ,......
You bope that .., "'"''I keep
oa, but H bo doN thlap _ ,
be all richt.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Pua

3.

•z

· second class postage paid al
: Pomeroy . Ohio.
'
· N • 1 i0 n • 1. • .d v •' II s t n v
I representahve Bottlnelll ·
Gallagher. Inc .. 12 East •2nd
, st., Ne"' York City , New York.
·~·Subscription ratu : De .
He does bid on to five spades.
lvered by carr1er where What do you do now?
vaitable so cents per week ;
ByMolor Roulewherecarrler
Answer Tomorrow
ser vice not avallabl&amp; : One

The goldenrod is the state
flower
of Kentucky, accord·
-President Miaael Pastrana months u .so. Subscription
Borrero of Colombia
price &gt;nctudes Sondav T•mes . ing·to Encyclopaedia Britan·
.. .
. nica.
1Sen!mel.

I

Six ·months

riVa leS.

~~

Three

S7.25.

_;__..:.._______~_ _,____....______

:-~!·!•'

....,

i

CoHee Stimulates Brain and Heart

'tBUT
HE T'RUlll
WI~~ OUT,
SOMETIMES IT'5

The bidding has been: ·
West North Eut SOilth

bv the caprices of ideological month S1.75. By mail &gt;n Ohio '
' lr*
and W. Va .• One year SU.OO,

DR. lAWRENCE E.1AM8

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. sociation of ideas. In other
words, it turns one on. How. Dear Dr. ~mb-1 w.ould ever, delicate muscular cohk.e t!l know tf the habitual ordination may be hampered
drmking of from one to three by this dose. And you can
cups of average strength get that mucb caffeine in one
coffee a day would aff«:et the or two cups of coffee, again
normal healthy function of depending upon the brew.
the adrenal glands over the
years. Please give me your The bad aspect of coffee
true' answer, irrespective of is its effeets on· the :f:;tioil
the effect on the coffee bust- of many peo~&gt;le, ca
an
ness.
increase m stomach actdity
.with burning in the pit of the
. Dear Re!!der~~ doubt the stomach. It should definitely
· coffee ·busmess ts gcting to not be used by anyone who
shudder very much from my
answer. The main problem has an ulcer.
posed by plain coffee is its It stimulates the heart ·and
caffeine content. For those heavy coffee drinkers often
who wish to avoid this prob· have mucl) higher heart
!em there are a number of rates than they .do after they
decaffeinated products on s t o p drinking coffee, or
the market.
switcb to a decaffeinated
An average cup of coffee product. Some studies sug·
contains from 70 to 150 milli· gest that drinking five to six
grams of caffeine, wbich cups of c~fee a da)' is assomeans that two cups can cJated With an InCreased
give you a pretty good jolt. .r ate of heart attacks.
How much depends on how Medical texts describe
strong the coffee is and how "untoward react i o. n s"
strong the drinker is. A dose (meaning bad) from 1,000
or carfeine of 150 to 250 mllli- milligrams of caffeine, or
grams stimulate~ the cortex about six or seven cups of
of the brain, it speeds up strong coffee. These "tiD·
typing performance and as· tow;~~·d reactions" I nclude

--

TIMELY QUOTES

.

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIA.TIOH

By Oswald &amp; Jaine• Jacoby
If South p u t s the code
word ARCH to w o r k, he
should bave no trouble with
his four-beart contract.
He Analyzes the lead as
top of a short suit. T h is
marks East with the king
and queen of clubs. Then he
Reviews the bidding and remembers that E a s t bas
passed throughout. East is
not vulnerable and S o u t h
can decide that if East beld
six clubs to the king-queen
and the ace of diamonds he
would have been in the bidding.
South Counts bis 't"inners
and losers and sees that be
can afford to lose one trump
trick and one club or one
club and a ruff but that be
can't afford to lose two clubs
and a trump.
Tben South plays dummy's
jack of clubs and lets East
hold the t r i c k with the
queen. After that East is
helpless to defeat the con·
tract.
-·
Suppose he returns a club.
It r.ides to dummy's jack.
Suppose he returns a spade.
. South wins in bis hand and
plays bis ace and king of
trumps. Then he leads bis
queen of diamonds. We s t
can take bis ace and bis

Dear Helen:
My husband Is a wooderful provider, a good man, not a
philanderer. Hi.l one bad habit i.lthat he flatters every woman he
meels. He bolsters theiregoatthe e1pe115e of mine, I.e.: "I'd give
anything if MY wife baked bread like this!" or "You're as young- Americo's lop ••ptf!J uploill j}oj,
tournamMf-willnittf tKit1tiqult1 ht 0'
looking 88 when you were in college with us."
.... 12I·IJG!It lxlok •• JA C0 I Y
If I retaliate by giving a man friend a compliment, my MODER/I. For .,_ CO/It ••I $1
husband implies I'm stuck m hlm. He was always a big tease. witlt )'OIIr IIOmt, 1l~tftS fiiHl ,;,
Cmsidering the terrible problems I read in your column, mine eo&lt;lo lo: "Wio of IMp; Tc/o tloit
seems slight, but Helen, I ean't stand the sly glances women give _,,.,.,), ,.0. Jo. 49, •olio Citr
Station. llf'lf York, 1/.Y. 10019.
me when he's slathering m the praise (which he doesn't meanyou should hear whst he says about them later at home!).queen of trumps but that will
DOROTHY
be all. Or West can duck. In
Dear Dorothy:
that case South overtakes·
It's blarney to your husband-baloney to you-and later on witb the king; continues the
you discover it's aU a bunch of bull. So smile at his teasing. He suit and discards.
"
could have worse hablts!-H
Suppose East started with
six clubs and the ace of diamonds. The duck play would
lose, but as Analyzed earlier
that was a very remote pos·
sibility.
·
·
You cannot have jawbon- Only · two kind of insects
ing that is effective without have been domesticated by
(HfWSPArEa fHTI~PllSl .WM.I
teeth.
man--the honeybee and one
-President Nixon, on his ·kind of moth, the silkworm.

~*~*;;~~;ili~~*~;~;~*~~;~~;r~fm~~;ll~~r:~~E~~;~*~~~~;~~r:~~~~;~~{;~t:~W;.;r::J.w:-a?.Biif:~~;r~~l:~i:~4fi~lff~~~*~~~*~$i~~~~;~;?.a!3.i;~~~~r:~~~~\

\

IHIWSPAPER IMTUPl&gt;SI ASSN.)

Alaska Is the only alate in
the Union without an o£flcial
nickname.

...•

Alive In Race
By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Time is running out and the
pressure is building for the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
The Dodgers remained in the
National League's Western
Divi.lion race Tuesday night by
beating the San Diego Padres 21 on Maury Wills' eight-inning
single. But it didn't gain them
any ground as Chris Speier hit
a three-run homer and Gaylord
Perry pitched a seven-hitter to
lift San Francisco to a 7-1
victory over the San Diego
Padres and keep the Giants a
game in front with two to go.
John Cumberland (9-6) will
try to keep the Giants' pennant
express rolling tonight when he
faces the Padres' Clay Kirby
(14-13). San Francisco's Juan
'Marlchal and the Padres'
Dsve Roberts, the staff aces,
will square off in Thursday's
finale . .
Speier's home run capped a
four-run sixth inning that

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Letta A. Spencer to Earl
Holman, Goldie M. Holman, I
A., Sulton.
!.etta A. Spencer to Jacob S.
Holman, Alice Holman, Parcels, Sutton.
Asa D. Stansbury, Golden
Faye Stansbury to Wanda Lou
Oxley, Parcels, Colwnbia.
Charles R. Spaun, Betty L.
Spaun to Stanley Edwin Cozart,
Ollie Mae Cozart, Lots, Racine.
Madge Baird, Oscar C. Baird
to H. Jennings Ellis, Estelle
Spaulding, 20 A., Salem.
Goldie Reed, Goldie Sargent,
Robert Reed to Guy Sargent,
56.98 A., Salisbury.
Alba Sinclair, Helen Sinclair
to Lyle R. Sinclair, Shila D.
Sinclair, Lot, Bedford.
.Paul Simon, Allie Mae Simon,
Guido Girolaml, Vedra
Girolami to Audrey C. Betl,
Lots, Sutllln.

wrapped up the game for the
Giants. San Francisco led 2-1 in
the sixth when Willie McCovey
doubled and one out later, Dick
Dietz was walked intenti\)llally.
AI Gallagher singled in McCovey for a 3-Jlead and Speier, a
rookie shortstop, followed with
his eighth homer off Ed Acosta,
also a rookie.
The Dodgers, who'll send 211game winner AI Downing
against young Ken Forsch (7-ll)
tonight were completely stymied for five innings by Don
Wilson, a surprise starter.
Wilson retired the first 15
Dodgers he faced before Duke
Sims led off the sixth with a
homer to tie the score at 1-1.
Bobby Valentine walked with
one out iil lhe eighth, took
second on winning pitcher Bill
Singer's sacrifice and scored
the winning run on Wills' single
off shortstop Rpger Metzger's
glove.
Should the race end in a tie,
it will be decided by a onegame playoff on Friday. The
winner faces the Pittsburgh
Pirates for the National League
pennant.
Elsewhere in the Nl., Montreal edged Chicago S-4, Philadelphia beat Pittsburgh 6-&lt;1,
Atlanta shut out Cincinnati U
and St. Louis downed New York
5-2.

College Ratings
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
United Stales International Top
20 small college football teams
with first place votes and wonlost records in parentheses:

lthird weeki
Team
1. North Dakota St.

Pvinls
(J.O)
217
2. Arkansas St. (11) (2-0) 286
3. Grambling (1) iJ.O)
217
4. Montana (2) (3-0l
207
5. Delaware (2·01
17~
6. Eastern Michigan (2·01 116
7. Eastern Kentucky 13~1 '17
8. Tennessee State (2~1
79
9. Western Kentucky (2·0)
73
10. Louisiana Tech (11 12-0)70
11. Drake 12·11
29
12. Boise State 13~)
27
13. Tampa (1 ·1)
19
U. Texas A&amp;l (11 !1·11
18
15. Weber Stall! (2·0)
1~
16. Southwest Loliisiana (2·0) 13
(tiel Central Okla. St. 12·0) 9
19. Tie) Akron (2~)
6
ltie) Abilene Christian (2·11 6
(17)

--

-

··-

IN A
GUARANTEED
USED CAR
AT••••

C)lt7J .,

ct- ~~,...

;lA, ....

"Moybe we ougllt to tec011sicler our positiM 011 Cltirta
too. lmagi,.._.,Sb ..UIIion Clli- ,.,.,iag ti'GIIfirtor '

rtldiot, MADE IH JAPAH!"

'

KEITH .GOBLE FORD.
NEW USED CAR LOT
3RD AVE.

MI~,O.

Wanna
Bet On it!

Wahama

White Hemby, 216 lb. tackle; Dwight
Campbell, 173 lb., tackle; Kim
CDBch John Blake's Pirates Hall, 171 lb., sophomore and
captured their first win of the David Wickline, 173lb., junior .
season last week ~ against The Pirates are 1-2 havin'g lost
the Southwestern Highlanders. 14.0 at Fairview, Ky., and 26.0
In defeating Coach Mel at Eastern. North Gallia has not
Carter's Highlanders , North beaten KC since 1960 .
Gallia employed a new quarCoach Bruce Wallace 's
terback and revitalized offense. Southern Tornadoes came close
John Eggleton, 186 lb. senior tp winning their first game of
was switched from tackle to the season last week but fell in
that position. Eggleton, no the last five minutes, 14-12 at
stranger at signal calling, was the hands of the Bobcats.
an alternating quarterback
Soulbern not only shows a
during his freshman year in well-drilled defense but its
football.
offensive game is beginning to
The Pirates also added a move. Two brothers, Milch and
awesome ground game led by Mike Nease and Mick Ihle
junipr fullback Phil Hollen. showed. some outstanding
baugh. He and Harvey Brown, running against Kyger Creek.
senior halfback, each scored Mitch Nease, a freshman , broke
touchdowns in a 20-point fourth loose on a 21 yard run and Ihle
quarter rally.
scored on a 61 yard gallop up the
Brown scored three touch· middle.
downs, two on passes and the The Tornadoe; lost ~ last
other on a punt return.
year to Don Van Meter's White
The Pirate defense is headed Falcons. Wahama 3-0-1 has an
by Loren Neal, 152 lb. senior unbeaten record but has
and all SV AC selection; Larry

played three barnburners.
A last minute 73-yard scoring
attention to Vinllln Friday night stubborn Tornado squad. That
pass from Mike White to
wbere the North Gallia Pirates close call proves the old adage
Chester Roush gave the West
host the Kyger Creek Bobcats in "that you can't gp on last year's
Virginians a come-from-behind
the only league contest slated score." KC won a 70.14 batUe
10-14 win last Friday over
this week.
over Southern during the 1970
Duval. Earlier this season,
· KC will be seeking .its 11th season.
Wahama defeated Wirt County
straigbt grid vi&lt;:IDry over the The Bobcat offensive attack
in the last three seasons and
Pirates.
also features the running of
tied Kyger Creek 6-6. Their only
In
non-league action, sophomore halfback Rick
easy game was a 31~ romp at
6 Speaker AM-F M
Wahama travels to Southern; Smith, the league's fourth
FederaJ.Hocking.
Philco Console
Glwster's Tomcats will batUe leading scorer; senior fullback
Coach Roger Kirkhart's
Eastern in the ·E agles' Gary Collins who rushed for 117
Eastern Eagles tangle with the
Reg. $399
hoinecoming game; Symmes yards against the Tornadoes
Glouster Tomcats in a nonValley plays at Southwestern and John Roush, junior halfleague game. Eastern owns
and Green Local is at Hannan back who can also scoot.
easy victories over Hannan
Trace.
KC's mainstays on defense
Trace, North Gallia and
Coacb Dick Adams' Bobcats have been Terry Moles, C().
Frontier Local. Glouster is l-2
move into Pirateland with a w. captain and middle linebacker;
23" Mobala
on the year. The Tomcats
I overall record and U mark in Dan Swisher, 165 lb. senior
defeated Southern but have lost
CoiiSDiet T.V.
the SVAC. Kyger Creek and tackle; Mark Darst, I :ill lb., er.dto Crooksville and NelsonvilleEastern are tied fer the top spilt tackle; Bill Roush, J7S lb. end;
York. Eastern is led by the
in the league.
Clay Hudson, J581b., end; Curry
passing of senior quarterback
Tte Bobcats received their and Terry Sheets, a 180 lb.
Jim Amsbary and the hard
biggest sboct of the im season sophomore tackle.
running of halfbacks Rick
23" G.E. CoiiSDie T.V.
last Friday night at Southern. A The Bobcats own victories
Sanders and Randy Boring.
fourth period touchdown pass over Hannan Trace (~) and
Their biggest forte has been a
fnm senier quarterback Glenn Southern (14-12). Their only
stingy, almost untouchable
Smith to junier end George blemish is a 6-6 tie with the
defense. The Eagles had a
:=:=o:t&lt;:;:&lt;:::;~-;::;:;&gt;;~:=~:&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: similar 3-0 record going into last
year's game but Glouster pulled
off an ll.jJ upset.
Coach John Patton's Symmes
•
Valley Vikings. IU winners
36"
Vesta
Gas
over Hannan Trace, travel to
Southwestern for a clash with
the Highlanders. Coach Mel
Carter's eleven is still seeking
Norge Auto.
its first win of the season.
3 Sp. 2 Cyl.
Southwestern has lost to Zane
By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE
Montana 18, Idaho 6
.~;·1r;&gt;.;.;;w;~*~~ Trace, Hannan, W. Va., and
The Wizard of Odds
Nebraska 49, Utah State 14
North Gallia.
No. Carolina 17, N.C. State 7
Egad. friends, there are
Coach Tom Belville's Hannan
Northwestern 24, Wisconsin
some exceptionally prom·
Trace Wildcats are still seeking
21
ising intersectional contests
.that illusive win. HT dropped a
Notre Dame 22, Michigan St.
on this week's collegiate pig.
12~ decision last Friday to
20
.
skin parade, to coin a phrase.
11" Collled
Symmes Valley.
Ohio State 24, California 19
Topping the list is the
SYAC STANDINGS
meeting at Norman, Okla.,
Ollaboma 21, So. Cal. 21
CoiiSDie T.V.
All GAMES
of the high-scoring Sooners
Penn State 33, Air Force 27
TEAM
W l T POP
and Southern California Tro·
Pennsylvania 35, Brown 8
)
Eastern
3 o o 110 6
jans. Almost as enticing are
Kyger
Creek
2 0 1 65 18
Purdue 26, Iowa 16
the Stanford·Duke, 0 h i o
North Gallia
1 2 0 44 40
Boston Col. ofO, Richmond 20
State-California, Penn StateSouthern
0 3 0 20 60
·Major league leaders
21" R.CA
Air Force and Illinois-Wash0 3 0 s 9~
Cornell 35, Rutgers 18
By United Prtss International Southwestern
Hannan Trace
0 3 0 0 120
ington engagements. All of
leading Batters
Southern Ill. 11, Wichita St.
SVAC
ONLY
CalarCoiiSDie
these games will be played
The Old Boy Himself
National
'League
8 (N)
TEAM
W
L
T
POP
G.
AB
R
H
Pet.
on the home field of the team for Alabama's Crimson Tide, SJIIU 23, New Mexico St. 12
2 Yr. Guarantee
2 0 0 69 0
Torre,St.'L 161 634 97 230 .363 Eastern
first. named.
coached by my-ahem-&lt;lne2 o 0 59 t2
Garr. All 154 639 101 219 .343 Kyger Creek
Doping out the winners of time. protege, Paul Brrant, Stanford 28, Duke 22
North Galtia
1 1 0 38 26
Bckrt.
Chi
131
5530
so
181
.342
0 1 0 12 u
these contests, dear readers, to walk off the field wtth a Texas A&amp;M 17, Cincinnati 12 Ctmnte, Pit 131 518 81 177 .342 Southern
(N)
Southwestern
0 1 0 0 38
required the best efforts of well deserved 22·15 victory!
Aarn, All
139 495 95 162 .:m
Hannan
Trace
0
2 0 0 88
Texas
36,
Oregon
17
Sngiltn Pit 137 5505 59 169 .319
my eotire-kaff-kaff-staff Now go on with the fore·
Totals
5 5 o 111 171
Toledo
%5,
Ohio
V.
21
(N)
Jones.
Ny
135
502
62
160
.319
of assistants, and, in fact, cast.
FRIDAY'S GAMES
Atou St.L 149 609 85 192 .3t5
21, '1\'m. &amp; Mary K
Kyger
Creek at North Gallla
the services of my .assistants' Alabama 22, Mississippi 15 Tulane
Bck, St. L 156 636 126 199 .313
(Nt
assistants (several of whom
Wahama
at Southern
Dvis.LA
156 633 84 197 .311
UCLA 30, Oregon St. 20 (N)
are feilow astrology buffs) Arizona St. 17, U. of Tex.
Glouster
at
Eastern
American League
Washington St. 16, Utah 10
Symmes
Valley
at Soulll·
and the full facilities of our
(EI Paso) ID (N)
G. AB R H Pel.
western
Florida
St.
31,
Va.
Tech
11
Olva, Min 126 487 73 164 .337
huge computer complex- Arizona 27, Texas Teeb 16
Green Local at Hannan
Vanderbilt !9, Virginia IS
M&lt;cr, Ny 1« 522 92 173 .JJ1 Trace.
992-2238
um·kumpM
Artauas 25, TCV 17
Tulsa 37, West Texas St. 18 Rttnmnd Ball
Despite our combined ef· Missouri 18, Army 11
140 487 81 156 .320
(NJ
forts the Oklahoma-Southern Auburn :!9, Kentucky 13
Tvr.
Min
155
649 93 201 .310
Pittsburgh 24, W. VIrginia 14
Carew Min 146.576 as 177 .307
California joust defied solu· West. Michigan %2, Bowling Wyoming 18, Col. St. U. IS
Otis, KC
147 555 80 167 .301
lion. We were unable to fmd
G
\'ale !%, Colgate 12
May,Chi
140 500 65 147 .294
a scintilla of difference in
reeo U
·
Gallipolis 26 Waverly 8
White, NY 145 517 82 ISO .290
the abilities of these two fine New Mexico 14, Brigham
Ulndr. Clev 141 500 51 144 .288
Meigs 14 Ironton 13
elevens. The Hoople compu·
Young 6 (N)
Alou,
NY
131 463 51 132 .285
Alllens 22 Jackson 20
ter indicates a thrilling 21- Colorado 35, Kansas St. 0
Home Runs
Logao 38 WeU.ton ~
21 standoff! Impossible you Prlnteton 28, Columbia 7
National league: Stargell,
Pitt
48 ; H. Aaron, All 47; May,
Huntington
Vinson
24
Fairland
say! Hab! Let me remind Dartmouth Zt, Holy Cross 14
Cin
39 ; Johnson, Phil 34;
li
you it was the Hoople System Villanova 16, Delaware 15
Williams,
All and Bonds, SF JJ.
that gave you Colorado to
Seutb Point 24 Logan, w. American league: Cash, Del
edge Ohio State last week- Citadel !3, East Carolina II
Va. 19
and Jackson, Oak 32; Smith,
har-rumpb!
(NJ
llo&lt;k Hill 6 Ironton St. Joe 8os and Melton, Chi 30;
In the other games men- Tennessee :It, Florida za (N)
F.Robinson, Ball, Petrocelli,
D
Bos, Nettles, Clev and Kille·
tioned above, I confidently VMI 8, Furman 7· (N)
Chesapeake
U
Oak
Hill
6
brew,
Minn 28.
predict a Stanford triumph Georgia Tech %4, Clemson 7
Runs Batted In
Symmes
Valley
20
Southwestover the bighly·reganled Harvard 21, Northeastern 6
National
league: Torre, St. l
ern U
Duke Blue Devils by a 28-22 Houston 33, San Jose St. i3
t37; Stargell. Pitt 125; H.
count, and an Obio State 24- (N)
Eastern 3t Glouster 8
Aaron, All 118; Bonds, SF 102;
May. Cin 98.
19 conquest of California. The Waabingtoo· 42, Illinois 16
Wabama lli Soutbern 0
American League: Killebrew,
~whee~g Nitlar!Y Lions Syracuse 17, Indiana 10
Kyger Creek %% North Gailla Minn
119; F. Robinson. Ball 99;
~
.
will vanqUJSb the Air Foree 1
Smith. Bos 96; Bando, Oak 94;
Falcons, 33-27, and Sonny owa State 26, Kent State U
Green &amp; Hannan Trace 0
Powell. Ball and Murcer, NY 92. ·
Sixkiller and his Washington LSU 33, Rke 13 (N)
Pitching
mates will ride roughshod Louisville Zl, Dayton U (N) Upper Arllugton 48 Ports- Nalilnal League : .Jenkins, Chi
mouth&amp;
23·13; Downing, LA 20-8;
over Illinois, 42-16!
Wake Forest 19, Maryland 1~
Nelsouvllle-York
Z2
ZanesCarlton.
St. l. 20·9: Ellis, Pitt
In a big Southeastern Con- So. Carolina 41, Memphis St.
19.9;
Seaver,
NY 19-10.
ville Rosecrans U
ference clash, Alabama (3-0)
10 (N)
American League: lolich,
MIDer 22 Alei.BDder 0
Del 25-13; Blue, Oak 24.8;
and Mississippi (3-0) bump Miami, 0. 17, Marshall 6
Belpre
U
Federal-Hocking
McNally,
Ball 21 -5; Hunter,
beads at Birmingham. When Mlehllan 45 Navy 0
Oak
21
·11
;
Wood,
Chi 21 ·13.
li
the day's work is done I look Kansas 33, Minnesota :!8
Custom le Sabre~ dr. sedan, vinyl top, factory air condlticlnlng
fully equippo!d.' Sticker P,ice SS, 1CJ.C.7~.
'

Great

Bargains

STEREO
only •199•

'691'

'1191'

More Spo. rls

Top Intersectional Games
Dominate Collegiate Sked

bile

On

'129•

Page Six

J

~

Washer
'99·

~

ou ,.,,

'199•

H&amp;R

Firestone

Final
CloseOut
OF ALL STOCK
1971-1972

Buicks and Pontiacs
New Firm Takes Over
October 5th ·

New 71 Buick

Toledo Tackle,WM
Halfback Honored

GOBLE

STOP 'N' .SAVE
I-

Southern Valley Athletic Curry gave the Adamsmen a unbeaten

Conference fans will focus their hard-fought, 14-12 win over a Falcons.

Pigskin Parade

Dodgers Still

SAVE WITH

~

flashing lights, ringing in the
ears, nervousness (no won·
der) and tremulousness.
BUT there is no evidence
that it will affect the adrenal
glands adversely in t h e
amounts you have asked
about.
Coffee Is not a natural
beverage for man. It Is an
Arabic drink that spread to
Europe In the 17th century.
Like cigarettes, its consumption bas increased markedly
since the beginning of the
20th century, parallel with.
the increase m heart at·
tacks, ulcers, lung cancers
and other common: ailments.
The United States consumes
more than 70 per cent of the
world's coffee crop.
Tea also contains caffeine,
but the way it is brewed, the
usual cup contains half as .
much as corree. The best
approach Is for the coffee
lover to switch to a decaf.
feinated product.' This helps
prevent "corfee nerves. "

WEDNESDAY ROUNDUP : Look fer Bruce Wallace's Southern T&lt;111adoes ·to give the Wahama Falcms all they want - and
maybe mQre - Friday Digbt at Racine, even though the West
Vtrglnians are ilndefeated (3-0-1), and the T..-nadoes yet baw
not bad that sweet taste 11 victory in tiJree starts. Our Wahama
neigh~ ha~ had a little luck (always helped along by being
, aggressive) gomg for them, winning two games in the last burrab,
me wilb tbree seconds.left, another iiiside the final 1\io milllte.
Eastern, )r8llcing I,IIi!rrily along with a 3.0 record, should
have fun Friday night m Its borne gridiron making it U with
their born~ added to the gala doings.
'
Eastern's quarterback is a senior, Jim Amsbary, son of the
late Dr. .Ken Amsbary, popular Meigs County dentist and emservatimiallll John McKean's current series, ''You Can't Get
from There to Here No More" (a Sort 11 Journal).in your &amp;mday
Times-Sentinel, the name Amsbary pops up repeatedly. That's
right, Ken was an All.sEOAL foolballer fer the Gallipolis mue
Devils in the late liB. So, you see, Jim comes by his talents
naturally.
TheSEOAL 's secmd round this weekend impires me to try to
lllltdoMajor Hoople, though I'm going to go along \vlth hlm oothe
Ironton-Meigs game. He says Meigs 14, Ironton 13. I'll buy Meigs
12, Irooton ain ooe of the major upsets &lt;I. the season, Hoople also
getswayoutm aUmbwithGallipolis6, Waverly Band Athens 22,
Jackson ~. Here he's wrong. Jackson will defeat Athens by two
TDs, and Gallipolis will wbip Waverly also by two. Hoople baa to
be oo the right side with his Logan 38, Wellston ~.

B[RRY'S WORLD

......

~

'•

North G ·a Hosts Kyger Creek
In SVAC Gtid Headliner Frida

the· Sports
By Chet Tannehill · Desk

BY.REI .EN 80'lTEL

• ' !I

BRUCE BIOSSAT

H~len Bottel

BltiDOI

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Tackle
Mel Long of the University of
Toledo was given defensive
honors and Western Micbigan
halfback Larry Cates was
named offensive player of the
week in the Mill-American
Conference today.
Long, a 6-foot-1, 236pound
senioc !rom Toledo, figured In
17 tackles, making nine of them
unassisted, in last weekend's 230 viclfry over Texas Arlington.
The win stretched Toledo's win
streak to '5, longest in the
country.
Long also deflecte&lt;l a pass
that a teamputle ultimately
intercepted and also caused a
blocked punt
Cates, a sophomore from
Columbus, Obio, rolled up 14&amp;
yards in I&amp; carries, returning a
pair of kickoffs fer 64 yards. He
MOIORIST DIES

FORTWAYNE, Ind.(UPl)Janet Anderson, 17, of Hicksville, Ohio, died in Sl Joseph
Hospital bin Monday ri injarieuuffaed Friday in a head
oo auto ectllision on the west
side.
'

scored twice, including an 80yard scamper in the third
quarter that was the longest
scoring dash for Western
Michigan since 1954. The
Broncos went on to defeat
Northern lllinoi.l.

Goin .Snow
"SURE GRIP lll" AUTO TIRE
• The tread design for our famous Sure Grip tires
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• Four full plies of 3-T Triple-lempered nylon cord
body for long-l11sting wear .

New 72 Buick
Skyl.ark 2 dr. hardfop .. power steering, trans. Stocker Price 1.1,766.19.

brakes

New 71 Pontiac

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'

auto

·

Catalina 4 dr. sedan, power steering, power brakes, auto. tr..,..
Slicker Price 54,086.82.

New
71
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Catalina dr. &amp;edan. factory air conditicned, - r
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700.13

tubeless
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PIUS $1.95
ftd. (I, TJ~
and aid lire.

ROYAI.'I TRIUMPII
DAYTON (UPI ) - The
Cincinnati Royals rattled off II
straight points late in the
second period to break away
and win an exhibition
professional basketball game
over Buffalo 118-110 Tuesday
night.
Rookie Gil McGregor topped
all scorers with 22 points for the
Royals, followed by teammate
Nate Archibald with ~ and
rookie Nate Wiillams with 18.
Cincinnati and Buffalo were
tied at 24-24 at the end of the
first period, but the Royals got a
·fast break and pUt the game
away.
r
The game was played at
University
of
Dayton
Fieldb~ . The teams play
m ·ltot
700 E. Main
,
· POMEROY, 0 .
each other again tonight in
Huntington, Ind.
. ...._.. ._ _ _ _ __

';i!_.,...___..,=RIZER OIL m

LARGER SIZES
PRICED
SLIGHTLY
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radio, vinyl top. Sticker Price $5233.32.

Catalina .t dr. sedan, facfvrv air conditJOMd, power sllarlrig,
power brakes, auto. trans. Sticker Price WC.11

.

New 72 Pontiac ·
Catalina Brougham 2 dr. hardlap, factary air condltlcning, vlnJI
top, fully equipPed. Slicker Price SS000.99.

New 72 Pontiac
LeMans 2 dr. hardtop, _.. steering, _..
trans. Slicker Price 13.6111.02.

~or--.

BLAEnNARS

F•&amp;Uaies'-Biidllt....

eu1a.

�..
'
'

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~ - Ttl!!

Daily Sentinel, MlddleporM'omeroy,_O.,Sept. a, 1171
'
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'

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..
.

.

PRICES GOOD ALL WEEK LONG - OR UNTIL SUPPLY IS GONE
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----------~------·~~---·· -------------------,-------- ------------------~-----------------.-------------

· - , . ~ S.nllnel, Mlddleporf..Pooiltlll)', 0., Sept. 29, 1971

7-~~-~~.~.0.,S.jll.29,1971

GABS Ninth In -UPI Grid Ratings ,
ly Unlltd Prns lnlerllalional
American League
East
'
W. L. Pel. GB
x-Balllmore 100 57 .637 ...
· Detroll
90 70 .565 11
Boston
85 76 ,528 11
New York
80 80 ·- .500 21 '12
Washington 63 U .401 37
Cleveland
59 102 .366 43

Nallomil League
· · East
W. l. Pel.
x-Piflsburgh 96 65 . .596
Sl. Louis
90 71 .559
Chicago
82 78 ._513
New York
82· 79 .509
Montreal
70 89 .440
Philadelphia 67 94 .416

GB
...
6

13'12
14

25
29

West
West
W. L. Pel. GB
G. L. Pet. GB San Francisco 89 71 .556 ...

•-Oakland
100 60 .625 ...
Kansas City 85 75 .531 15
Chicago
77 82 ,484 22lf:z
California
74 85 .465 251/:z
Minnesota 73 85 .462 26
Milwaukee 69 90 .434 30112
•-Clinched Division title
Tuuclay Results
Callfcirnla 6 Minnesota 2
Oaklans 2 Kansas City 1
Baltimore 10 8os 2 (lsi lwlnite.)
Baltimore 5 Bas 4 (2nd night!
Milwaukee 3 Chicago 2 (night)
Clev 8 Del 7 (suspended gametwilight
Del 4 Clev 2 (reg game-nigh!)
Wash 4 New York 2 {night)
Today's Probable Pilcllers
California (Wright 16-16) at
Minnesota I Blyleven 15-15}
Kansas City (Fitzmorris 7-5)
at Oakland {C. Dobson 15-5),
night.
Milwaukee (Slaton 10-7) at
C~lcago (Wood 21-131. night.
Detroit (Lollch 25-131 at
Cleveland (Colbert 6-6), night.
Basion (Garman (l-01 at
- IIi more ( P. Dobson 20-81.
: 1 t~w York (Stottlemyre i5-12J
t Washington (Mclain 10-221.
ight,
Thursday•s
Games
llfornla
at Minnesota
Ifwaukee at Chicago
='-"~ York at Washington
~n,ght)
(Only games scheduled)
·

Los Angeles 88 72 .550 1
Atlanta
81 80 .503 8'/:z
Cincinnati 79 82 .491 10'12
Houston
78 82 .488 11
San Diego 69 98 .337_ 28'12
x-Ciinched Division title
Tuesday's Result$
St. Louis 5 New Yor.k 2 _
Montreal s Chicago 4'(nlght)
Phlla 6 Pitts 3 (night)
Atlanta 4 Cinclnatti o (nigh!) ·
Los Angeles 2 Houston 1 (night)
San Fran 7 San Diego.1 {night)
Today's Probable Pitchers
Chicago (Pappas 17-14 or
Pizarro 7-6) at Montreal
I Renko 15-14), night.
Houston 1Forsch 7-8) at Las
Angeles {Downing 20-8], night.
San Francisco {Cumberland
9-6) at San DI-ego (Kirby 14-13),
night.
·
Thursday's Games
St. Louis at New York (night)
Chicago at Montreal (night)
Pitts al Phlla (nighl)
Cincinnati at Atlanta (night)
Houston al Los Angeles {night)
San Fran at San Diego (night)
SMITH SIDELINED
CHICAGO (UPI) --Goalie
Gary Smith of the Chicago
Black Hawks will be sidelined
about three weeks ·· with a
fractured ring finger Oil. his left
hand· He m
· j ured his han d In·
practice Tuesday.

Suarez IBI, 'Fosse 191 _ WPMcDowell 113-17) . LP- Timmerman (7-6) . HRs-Jones
(4th). Price (1st), Hinton (3r,d).
Kan City 000 001 ooo- 1 3 o
Oakland 000 100 lOx- 2 J 0
Hedlund (15-8) and Martinez;
Hunter, Fingers (8), Knowle.
(9) and Duncan . WP-Hunter
(21 -ll). HRs- Jackson (32nd),
Schaal I lOth!, Epstein {19th I.
California 101 001 012- 6 i2 2
Minnesota ooo 100 001- 2 9 o
Messersmith (20-13} and Forborg ;. HaU, Haydel 181, Gebhard (9) and Mltterwald . LPHall (4-71 . HRs-Almoar (4th),
Brye (Jrd) . -Milwakee 100 002 1100- 3 7 1
Chicago 010 000 01~ 2 4 1
Palin. Sanders (9) and
Porter; Bradley, Gura (0),
Foster (9) and Herrmann. WP
- Pattin {14-141. LP-Bradley
(15-15) . HR-Johnstone (16th).
National League ·
Cincinnall 000 000 ooo- o 3 o
Allanta
001 000 03x- 4 10 1
Grlmsl~y. Carroll (8) and
Bench; , N!e~ro (15-t4) and
Wllllamt:,.t P-Grimsley {10-71.

~

•

·

.

.

Second nine: 12. Steubenville

ATLANTA(UPI)-Twoyears
Phil . kr
.
ago
, Nl~ o help~ n~1l
down a diVIsiOn champiOnship
for the AUanta Braves.
He showed some of that old
form, his knucklebaU as mystifymg
· as ever, when he clin cbed
a lie for third place Tuesday
night with a three-bit, 4-G conquest of the Cincinnati Reds.
And it marked a comeback of
sorts after last year's debacle
in which he lost 18 games and
Atlanta wound up fifth. He finished with a 15-14 mark, second highest nwnber of victories
In his career_ second only to
1969's 23.
It was a relaxed Niekro who
did it. No panic buttons Tuesday night Even the fast ball
, ·
,
and slider, sometimes dubious
weapons when tried by Niekro,
were working.
"I felt relaxed - I just went
out there with the idea that I
was going to get Ute knuckle--------Pizarro. Bonham {2) , Regan
(8; and Rudolph; McAnally ( 1112) and Boccabella. LP-Regan
{5-51.

0)

36

Second 10:

11 .

Bluffton 30; 12.

St. Louis 320 000 ooo- 5 7 o
New York 000 002 ooo- 2 7 ·I
Carllon (20-9) and Simmons;
Ryan, McAndrew (I), Koosman
(41. Frisella (81 and grot. LPFryan (10-14}.

Houston ooo 100 ooo- 1 3 o
Los Angls 000 001 Olx- 2 3 0
~·~~t;,
4
·.una),. "'
Wilson {16-101 and Edwards;
Singer (10-17} and Sims. Haller
''"l~.ncled:!!.'!"~!
Pitlsbrg'f:: 010 001 01~ 3 9 1 191. HR-Sims (6th).
:":.
Phila
302 000 Olx- 6 8 1
Ellis (t9-9) and May; Wise San Fran 200 004 lOD- 7 7 2
(17-141 and Sanguillen. HRs- San Diego 100 000 llOO- 1 7 1
Luzinski (Jrd). Johnson (34th), Perry (16-12} and Dietz;
Slargell (48th), Anderson (2nd). Acosla, Phoebus (6) , Kelley
(7), Severlnsen (8) and Barton.
Chicago 040 000 ooo- 4 6 4 LP- Acosla (J.J). HR- Speier
Montreal· 040 000 001- 5 6 1 18th)'

said. "I started out had, caught
fire and won about nine of 11
and it was .500 ball 'the rest of
the way.
"I'm more mentaUy relaxed,
I don't get excited and I feel
strong enough to keep going
when the game's over,',' he continued. "There were times w(len
I lost a game on maybe one
bad pitch. But there were others
where I pitched weD. It aU
comes out in the wash.''
The Braves had more to cheer
about than Niekro's feat and the
clinching of third place. They
topped the million mark In attendance again - as they have
done each of the six years '
they've been in Atlanta. Tuesday night's ~,922 fans ran tbe
season gate, with one game to
go, to 1,030,000. And, they turned in two double plays to run
their season total to 179 - a
Braves record.
Atlanta and Cincinnati arP off
today, winding up the se' .son
here Thursday night with Ron
Reed (13-14) going against the
Reds' Don Gullett (16-6).

clnnati 51. Xavier 36; 15. Lima
Senior 35; 16. Parma Valley
Forge 34; 17. Toledo Woodward
33; 18. Newark32; 19. Lancaster
30; 20. Lak~ood St. Edward 29.
Others w1th 10 or more points:
Columbus Eastmoor, Dover,
Sa~dusky, (1), Parma, Ketter&gt;ng Fa~rmont West, Canton
McKinley, Canton Lincoln, East
Liverpool, Cclumbus Northland, Findlay, Barberton,
canton Central Catholic, Akr~
Elder,
Jackson
(1) .Clnclnnat•
and CinKenmore.
Ironton,
cinnati Roger Bacon.
Class AA
Team
Points
I. Steubenville Catholic
(8) (3-0) 153
2. Warren Kennedy
(3) (3-0) 100
3. Springfield Shawnee
(2) (3-0) 99
4. Youngstown North (3-0) 51
5 Au'r'on
(1) (3-01 39
6: ~t. Clairsville
(2-ll 38
7. Barnesville
(3-0) 37
8. Girard
(3-0) 34
9, Gallipolis
(1) 13-D) ll
10. (lie) Circleville
(3-0) 32
10. (lie) Bellaire
(2-ll 32
Second nine: 12. Cleveland
Holy Name 31; 13. campbell
Memorial and Akron St. Vincent 30 each; 15. New Lexington
19; 16. Mariemont (l) 17; 17.
Harrison and Tlflin Calvert I I)
IS each ; 19. Wauseon 14; 20.
Loveland and Bucyrus 13 each.

NICKLAUS KEEPS LEAD
NEW YORK (UPI)-Jack
Nicklaus continued as the
leading money winner on the
Professional Golf Association's
1971 tour with earnings of
$207,080. Nicklaus did not
compete in last week's event,
the Robinson ('IU,) classic won
by Labron Harris Jr.

Sympatlly FloRs

It has been estimated that
there are about 1,000 Komodo dragons, giant monitor
lizards. in Indonesia.

WEDNEsDAY
Ironton g•IJie . at former
wtLpWOOD GARDEN Club, Pomeroy JWI!or High SchOol.
8 p.m. Wed,_!ay, home of S.ml.fonnal dress, music by
Mrs. Henry Thomaa.
"Stone Rose."
'111UBSDAY
REVIVAL, Mt. Mo.riah
WOI!(EN'S ASSN., Mid- Church of God, starting 7:30
dleport
First
United p.m. Friday with the Rev.
. Presbyterian Church, potluck Gilbert Spelicer speaking.
dinner at 6:30 p.m. with each · YOUTH REVlVAL, Colwnbia
member to talt:e a covered dish. Chapel Christian Church at
RivERVIEW GARDEN Club Point Rock, Oct. 1-3, 7:30 each
will meet Thursday evening, eVening. Mike Hazelton, student
Sept. 30, at 7:30 at the home of at Kentucky Christian College,
Mrs. C8rl Buclt:ley, witli Mrs. leader with regular minister,
' Doriald Putnam as co-bostess. Rev. Eugene Underwood,
Installation of officers will be assisting,
held.
SATURDAY
pAST
MAT R 0 N S
SPAGHETTI SUPPER,
Evangeline Chapter OEs' beginning 4p.m. Saturday at St.
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at home oi Paul's United Methodist
Mary Hug~
Church, 'f"ppers Plains, adults,
$1.25; children, 75 centa.
POMEROY CUB Scout Pack DANCE SATURDAY,
249'lbursday, 7:30p.m.at IOOF beginning 9:30 p.m. at Drew
HaD, ovt:r .Blue and Grey. AU Webster Post 39, American
bQya, eight through 10 and ~gion · borne for members and
parents Invited.
guests. ·Armand at organ, no
. • FREE CLOTIUNG Day at charge.
Satyaticin Army Headquarters,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
SUNDAY
Thursday. Persons needing HOMECOMING Sunday at
clothing wel£oole.
Hemlock Grove Christian
FRIDAY
Church, Basket dinner at noon.
MEIGS HIGH School Afternoon program, I :30 p.m.
homecoming dance Friday, featuring Uhrig Brothers.
immediately foUowing Meigs- Public invited,

Millersport 24; u. Canal
Winchester
(1 J
and
SAME DAY
Mechanlcsbyrg 23 each · 15
McDonald and Minster 22 ~ch ;
SERVICE
18. Arlington and J..,..lhan
In At 11-0uf At 5
Alder 21 eaCI!; 20. Moadore 121
and Yorkville (2) 20 each.
Use Our Free P~rlci119 Lot •
Others with lOor more points:
Smithfield, Buckeye Central,
Portsmouth . East. Lorain
Catholic. Ada Sidney Lehman.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
Jeweti-Scio. 'Amanda Clearcreek and Cedarville.
· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .

Robinson's aeaners

Clifford Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Watson, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Barthelemy, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Watson, Gene, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Sanko, Dayton; Mrs.
Ronnie Sullivan, Carrollton,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wilson,
Janice, Matthew, and Audrey,
Cardington; Mr . and Mrs.
SAl.Es REPORT
Harold Watson, Roger, Mike,
0111o v.ney Uvatoek eo.
Mary Ann, Ajhens; Mrs. Glen
GlillpoU., Oblo
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Satmday, lleptz5, lt71
Robinson, Lori, Lee Ann, and
HOGS- 175 to 220 lbe. 19 to Mrs. Marlene Winebrenner,
19.60, 220 to 250 lbe. 11.00 to 19, Alfred; Mr. and Mrs. Jud
Lightl5 to 17.1$, Fat Sows 1~.50 Barth, Mr. and Mrs. John
to 16.10, S~ 13 down, Boars Ginther, Greg and Gary,
12.50 to 14, Pigs 6 to 12, Shoats 8 Diester.
to 15.
Mrs. Orville Watson and Jim,
CATTLE- Steers 21 to 35.50, Mrs. AI Peterson, Penny and
Heifers 22.50 to 30, Baby Beef Brian, Mr. and Mrs. William
32.50 to 41.50, Fat Cows 18 to 23, WatsoJ], Craig and Gerald, Mr.
Canners 18 to 21, Bulls 24 to and Mrs. Allen Coe, daughter
2U5, Milk Cows 115 to 300.
Cheryl, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
VEAL CALVES - Tops 42, Deem, and Penny, ReedsvWe;
Seconds 35 to 41.60, Medium Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Boyles,
33.50 to 37.25, Com. &amp; Hvs. 32.50 Joe and Brenda, Ray Watson,
to 31.75, Culls 32 down.
Mr. and Mrs. Elton · Ritchie,
...SHEEP -Baby Calves 25 to Beth, Jane, Kermeth, Tuppers
'"'·
Plains.

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.......·:

FAIRMONT

Salllrday,S.pt ZS, 1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 18.75 to
19.90, Heavies 17.25. to i8.5q,
Lights 14 to 17.50~ Fat Sows 13 to
16.75, Boars 13.40 to 1~.75, Pigs 3
to 8.50, Stock Shoats I to 16.25.
CATTLE - Steers 24.80 to
29.70, Hollers 21.50 to 27.25, Fat
Cowl 18 to 22.75, Canners 15.40
to-18.50, Bulls 21.25 to 26.60, Milk
CowlliO to 11$, Stock Cows and
Calves 180 to 285, Stock Steers
23.50 to 34.75, Stock Heifers 21.50
to ;19.10, Stoclt:Sieer Calves 25.75
to 31.50, Stoclt: Heifer Calves
23.75 to 36.25.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 42.50,
Seconds 31.25, Medium 31 to aa;
Common &amp; Heavies 35.50 to

16

MRYDAYI

SPECIAL PORK SALE!

cartoh

USDA

CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

..t
~

SMOKED
CALLIES

'

We GladlY kceot Fed. Food Stamps
'

Prices
Effa:bwe Sept 29-0ct.
..

5

IIGn. Tua; Wed.~-9 to 7
'IIIII~ Fri., Slt.---9 Ia 9

Fresh Pork· Side
SLICED
LB. 55'

r~ 39~

LEAN AND
MEATY

lb.

'

33~

Cheese Pizza ..~~~.~..~~:.-.~.~:~~~................. ::~y 49~
Chicken
Noodl
So
6
_
e UP............. ..
oz.
Shortening.......~~~~:~~~~.~..............:.
Mayonnaise... ~~~~~............................... ;~: .. 69~
Mario Olives...~~~.~.~.~~-·.~~ .......................!~~-~-. . 49~
Sl•ICed peaches..............................3 ·99~
Chunk Tuna .......~~~~.~.~~..... ................~;t~.. 39~ ~
T • t T"
scon1011
e ISSUe ...... ~!~..~~-~!~!................... 3·
Cake Mixes......~~~-~~-~~~-~~~·~············ 3 for

lb.

59~

FAMILY

HOLSUM

FRENCH BREAD

e

R£G.l9'
SPECIAL

Luncheon Loaf

3~:; 99~
Choice of Ctllcken Loaf
and Luncheon Loaf

•"+

•

(

BLUE DOT
REG. 1.49

99~

cans

4-roll
bxs.

'.

DELICIOUS

29C
~~~~~!~..... ~.
RED

S~vania

No. 21f•

pkgs.

BAKERY DELIGHT!

BILTMORE

Racine Food Ma,rlro•t
Expires 10-5-71

STOKELY

SPARE RIBS

CLOSED SUNDAYS
.

With Coupon

42
can

lb.
U. S. Government Inspected

$1.09

-CAMPBELL'S

PORK STEAK

~

oz.

King
Size

41.10.

USDA Dloice Young &amp; Tender

5th and·-PEARL STS., RACINE
'• 'The Store With A Heart
'
You, WE ·LIKE"
JI
::' Right reserved to limit quantities

OXYDOL

COTTAGE
· CHEESE

•••

Aash Cubes

POTATOES....... l0 1b. 89
Head
LETTUCE..........~~:.l9~
Several Kinds
APPLES..... 4Ib. 49~
Idaho

,

.

•

~

~---'L_ J

Band .Will Play For Festival
An invitation to play at the
Bob Evans " Ole Country"
Fai'IJI Festival on oCt. 16 at 10
a.m. has been accepted, David
Bowen, director of the Meigs
Marauder Band, announced at a
meeting of the Meigs Band
Boosters Monday night.
A concert by the hand will be
one feature of an "Ole Country
Gatherin' " at the Bob Evans
homestead located on Route 35

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Emergency Sqpd will ·
hold an organizational
_meeting on Thursday, Sept.
30, at 7 p.m. at the New Haven
'city Building. AU citizens are
urged to attend. An election of
officers wUI be held at that
time.
Many citizens have already
been taking the First Aid
Classes In connection with the
emergency squad. The new
ambulances for New Haven
and Mason wiD be delivered
. al any time and citizens are
asked to get behind this
organlzallon. They want to be
able to get the ambulances
into service with trained
personnel as soon as possible.
The first aid class wiD follow
the meeting.

at Rio Grande. The festival will
be held over a three dey period
and is free to the public.
During the meeting conducted by Mrs , Irene Bailey,
plans were finalized for tag day
activities Saturday. Band
sludenlll will be on .the streets
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The pep
hand will perfonn some time
during the dey In the villages.
Again this year the boosters
will sell gold and maroon
taboggans. Orders may be
placed with Mrs. Irene Bailey.
Lewis Hudson,
Cynthia The hats will sell for $2 each.
Gohring, Katie Young, EdiUt
Si&gt;encer,Mr. and Mr$. Harry E.
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Harold The crown of each tooth
Metzger and daughter, Jarie ha~ a ~overing of enamel,
New Orleans, La., has a
EDen, Lisa, Scottie, Mike and wh~ch 1s the_ hardest rna- museum which houses meSherry Manley.
tenal found m the human morabilia and artifacts of
jazz.
body.

Joe Meek Observes 90th Birthday
Mrs. ,Lola Meek, Sycamore
St., Middleport, entertained
with a dinner In observance of
the 90th birthday of her
husband, Joe.
During the afternoon, cake
and ice creJIDl were served.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.

Be Organi%ed

Go-to~hurch Sunday was set
for Oct. 10 at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church when
Be!hel 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, _ met
Monday night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
· Brenda Taylor, honored
queen, presided at the meeting.
The girls will meet -at the
church at 10:15 a.m. on Oct. 10
to attend church services with
Miss Taylor.
Plans were made during the
meeting to serve a dinner on
Oct. 9for the Shade River Lodge
and one on Oct. 13 to the Meigs
County Democralll. A holiday
bazaar and bake sole was set
for Nov. 6 with proceeds to be
used toward expenses of attending the 1972 Grand session.
It was decided to have an
inspection dinner on Nov. '!/
with Mrs. Peggy Taylor,
promoter of hospitality, as
chairman to work with a
committee of the girls.
A committee was named to
plan a Halloween party. Mrs.
Franklin Rizer and Mrs. Bernard Fultz were installed as

council members. a report
entitled "God's World" wu
given by the librarian. Mn.
•Debbie Flnlaw, guardian, .and
Thomas Edwards, usoclate
guarcjian, were presented at lbe .opening of the Bethel.

DINNER GIVEN
Dinner guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd T. Chiipman
and daughters, Shetley and
Kimberly, Columbus, were Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth RuBSell, ·
!iJJcine; Mrs. Dorothy 0.0•
dakis, Athens, and Mr, and Mrs.
Harry Hawk, New Marshfield.
YARD SALE SET
PORTLAND - A yard sale
will be held Oct. 8 and 9 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Johnson, Portland, by the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Pottland United
Methodist Church. Resldenlll. ·
with items to contribute may
contact either Mrs. Johnson or
Mrs. Ruth Ebersbach.

____________________________

WHOLE BAGGED FRYERS

Property
Transfers
State of Ohio to Katharine
Story, Leo R. Story, John S.
Riffle, Della M. Riffle, Journal
Entry, Vacation of Right of
Way, Bedford.
William Connolly, Erma
ConnoUy, to Warren ConnoUy,
Connie Connolly, Lot, Long
Bottom.
Elizabeth Marie Lawrence,
dec. tO Ruby Lawrence Ross,
Cert. for Trans., Lebanon.
Ruby Lawrence Ross, John 0 .
Ross to Charles Ray Lawrence,.
Sheryn J. Lawrence, Parcels,

Mail by t he _~;nCuckler
Delta Queen

....

WITH GIBLETS AND BACKS

we care

BOX OF CHICKEN

3 BREAST QTS.- I LEG QTS.- I WINGS- I GIBlETS

Good Thru Saturday,
October 2nd., 1971.

Pric:es

"SUPER-RIGHT" U.S. GOV'T. GRADE A

Turkeys ~~~~z:Nup • •
Round Steak • • • • s11a
Round Roast • • • • lb.$1 08
Eye Of Round • . ·~~159
BONElESS TOP CUT

.

l•.

BONELESS BOTTOM CUT

WHOLE

Meigs

c

SPLIT FRYERS

OR

FULL

BLADE

tONELESS

SHANK
HALF

•...

CUT

ROAST

IHI, Vtol Cllucl&lt; Wogon Or Pon Fritters

Jiffy Steaks c~J~~ :~~~ • .,..._88c
REGULAR OR SMOKE HOUSE FLAVOR
A&amp;P Pimento Spread . s.o.. 39c
•

pkr.

-

MPIRAND

Macaroni Salad

• • •

I ..... IJftc
• dD. - -

SEMI-IDNElESS PICNIC STYLE

Fresh Pork Roast • • • lb.sgc
ALL MEAT
hl*ior Frankies • • 2P~- s1 29

•

.- I &amp; P Sea food H11 .y...;!
55c
Ocean Perch Fillets r~~~ •. • •
Jlftc
Fried Fish Sticks rc~~. . . . • •
pq.
Fried Perch Fillets . J~~~. • • • • • • ,...._&amp;t
2lb. $149
Breaded Perch Portions J~~~ .
Sliced Halibut ·Steaks • • • • • • • lb.atc
Fried Fish Cakes • • • • • • • • • lb.ec
'

•

•

.

l~b.
l'kl·

•

II&gt;&lt;&gt;L

I

•

•

•

pk• •

...,~

pllr.

to James' F. 000111 IICOI r.Jll"1011 .......... ,._ Uc
Arnold, Lot No. 31, lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy.
.
Earl 0. Thoma, Patsy Ann
Thoma, Guy M. Thoma, Ellen
Thoma, Leo E. King, Helen .
Pauline King, Georgia Thoma
·
to James H. Hoyt, Korena K.
CINCINNATI (UP!)~ A tra- Hoyt, 143 Acres, Bedford.
c...,., •y Ill• Doua ......................................... 12 - $l.lt
dillon elating back almost 100 Edward D. Sloter, Judy M.
ye.ra wu reborn today as the Slater to Howard L. Barber,
stauwbeeler Delta Queen in- Barbara J. Barber, \il Acre,
c•..,..., •• Dole• ................._ ...................... 12- $1.93
augurated riverboat mail serv- Olive.
ice oo lbe Ohio and MississipRoy Z. Brlckles, Mabel &amp;OLDEN QUARTERS
qi rivera between Cincln- Brickles .to Charles D. HyseU, t ·
9
naU and New Orleans.
Acre, Bedford.
•
a..,.r •Y file Do.......... -................................. 12 - $2.19
· The Queen, America's last Juda Danielson, dec. to
4c OFF LABEL- WHIPPED STICK
overnJabt passenger riverboat, Minnie Danielson Hoi!Jian,
will eru1ae the rivers until Nov. Mildred Javell, Jacob S.
3~
11, ·pickillg_up and delivering Holman, Vlrg~ Napper, John
~
ttz ... , .... ······-····"....
12Duiii at 12 river cities.
S. Hobnan, William J. Hobnan, B6HT O'CLOCK
5
A special order from Post- Earl Holman, Wilkie Ho!m8n,
master General Winton M. Cert.- for Trans., Sutton.
mount resulted In the Boating Mildred Jewell,. Charlie INSTANT
c...,... ., "'• Dole• .......- ........- ..................... lZ - $l.lt
post office aboard the Delta JeweU, Jacob S. Holman, Alice
57
Queen. Capt. Ernest Wagner, Holman, Virginia Napper,
the'Que!en's flklpper, wW serve Clarence Napper, John S. JANE PARKER
as poetmuter aboard the ves- Holman, Shirley Holman,
c•Hper ltr tile Den• .......................................... 12 - SUt
sel and opened cerelllOIIIes William J . Holman, Earl
•
here by canceling the first , Hobnan; Goldie M. Holman, JANE PARKER
~ of IDIII. '
Wilkie Holman to Letta A•
floe Doze• .......................................... 12 - $2.29
After Ieavins · Cincinnati to- Spencer, Parcels, Sutton.
• • 1
clay lbe Queen will niate stops
JANE PARKER
in St. Loulnnd Hannibal, Mo.;
NAME OIIIITl'EII
M111C8tlne, Iowa; Li Crolse, ALFRED - The llllllf of
c•••p•r lty ... Delee .......- ... - ...........-..··-·-·... l Z - sz.zt
Wla.; · St. Paul and Winon.a, Ullian Frost, Cheater, was
liP
...
Dalrt
Crnzll'
........
.
·~
lie
Minn.; NaUYOO, W.; Memphis, mtnlenllonally llllitted from
ALU.ULI COUPON
[liE--•'YALUAILI COUPON_ICK_'I'I -CEIIII:'YALUAILI
• Tem.; Vll:hlnag and Natchez, lbe lilt of llelllmonlall In lbe
Mill.; and llully New ()rleana. ICCOUJit of lbe Alfred Olurcb
Dlllfti1y be~ points may annual llmlec:oin!ng (II'CICI'alll.
lie......,what !lklnr !ban peoWITH
WITH
4)8C "{~
REGULAR
THIS
JWI'G II1D
THIS
ple haft beCGme 8j:CIIIIIlmed
COUPON
SIZE
COUPON
1111.
·
COUPOH
to, howe«&lt;. Wllb a c:ruillng Edgar Allan ·Poe deliber- ·
6ood 11n S.lur!iay, Ombor 2od.
Good Thru Saturday, October .2nd.
IIJIIIed of II mllell per hour lbe ately got hirnsell dismissed
Good Thru Satwday, Octobe&lt; 2nd.
' At Y,.. All' Stort.
At
Your
A&amp;P
Store.
.
from
West
Point
Milftary
- ~Will be bard jklll d.to
At v- All' Start.
for
dllobedlencr.
la:il118-r:otlll
... fAMILYi::l
'
Aeaderny
-=--!=.::;~)HE P~!t fAMI~Y'I:IEI-HI MMILY~..:E!II
nulteh air mail 411 d•. I

SEMI-BONELESS I ST. THkU 4TH. RIIS

Beef Rib Roast • • •
FRYER THIGHS, DRUMSTICKS OR

Fryer Breasts • • • •
BONElESS

C~arcoal

Steaks • • •

...

. $111

SWIFT'S I'REMIUt.t

Brown &amp; Sene Sauu1e
OSCAR MAYER SUCED

Beef lolo1n1
OSCII MIYEI liEF FUllS ....

Look What $1.00 Will Buy!

liO'IIl'aled
lna·-e--·

MrL Filhrt sMargarine 3:.':;.s1oo
Blue Bonnet Margarine s1oo
lean Coffee • • • • 3~;; 1"
Netcafe Coffee . • • •~ s1
White Bread • •
eacb:tac
Ancel Food C.ke
Apple Pie • • • • • • ,..,gc

lona Tomatoes • • • • • • •4::$1 oo
lona Green Beans •••••• &amp;~~!:sloo
A&amp;P Cream Style Corn • · •5~ $1 oo
Libby Green Beans • • • • •4:= sro
c•..,.,
su•
Bush Shelhe Beans • • • • •4 ~ s1 oo
A&amp;P Cut Wax Beans •••• 4u::s1oo
A&amp;P· c•..,...
Potatoes
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
5
=
$1
oo
.,
A&amp;P.Applesauce • • • • • •5=$rO

·U. S. No. I ALL PUitPOSE

WHITE

,
r

POTATOES

79

M . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .: ••

Yellow Onions • • 11.:;7f
.
Jonathan a,les .. '&amp;.:;Jt
..
HoneydeWS CAI.IFOIINIA
s~n ... Green Peppers • • •
Green C••••ce ••
Arapes
TOICAY, ,,m
1LAC1C IIIB.
g
Vi11i1ia Paatb .&amp;
~

JUioiiO

QD WHITI

gs

a· . . .

COUPON=-:1-J:.:=~;-;;===;A~.U;A;~U;;;;;;;;;;;;.

•• Ill IOIP

r

1::.:1-..0•

•'

I ;

co.

Pl.~ W.Va.

DAIRY SPECIAL!

Keep
Your

•
McKenzie, and Mrs. Ora Hill.
A quiz on Ohio concluded the
meeting. Mrs .. Laura Watson
presided at the business session
which was preceded by a
potluck dinner.

Market Report

••'

'·

wedding •bells, · school bells,
dinner bells, sleigh belis .and
cow bells. Alliscilsslon was.held
by Mrs. Lillian Jividen, Mrs.
Edith Hayman, Mrs. Dorothy

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
dinner bonorlDI Nn. Effie
Wataoo on her 10th birthday
annivenary was beld recenUy
at ber TUppen Plains home.
Attending were the Rev.

•

!

"Bells Of Happiness" was the
program topic at a meeting of
the Happy Husllers Class of the
Racine . United · Methodist
Church recenUy.
Mrs. Ann Coe gave a history
of the Liberty BeD and commented on the inscription,
"PI-oclaim Liberty throughout
all the land _unto aU the
Inhabitants thereof." Scripture
was by Mrs. Ora HW. 'Mrs.
Mattie Circle and Mrs. Lavinia
Simpson sang a duet, "Golden
Bells of Jubilee,'' with chimes.
A poem taken from the
.McGuffey Reader was read by
Mrs. Circle.
Members responded to roll
call by naming various kinds of
bells Including church bells,

80th Birthday is Celebrated ·

-

The Gentle T-oO'ch
That Means So Much
"" 446-1 n1

&amp; Mason

Social Calendar

:::!.;: ::ii!!:i Go-to-Church Day

·· Liberty Bell's ·Histqry__ ~i_called

''

SHIR•
FINISHING

baU over -and from the pitch when I pitched like 1969," he 40. 13. Troy (2) 39; 14. Cln- Tuscarawas Catholic (1) 29; 13.

on, I was getting it over," he
said. " It was as good a game
as I've pitched all year as far
as getting ahead of the batters.
The knuckler was as good as I
can throw it."
Three Harmless Hils
The Reds, whom Niekro beat
six out of six in 1969 but didn't
fare so weD in Cincinnati's pennan t-winning year of 1970, could
do nothing of consequence this
time against .him. He allowed
three hannless singles - to
pitcher Ross Grimsley in the
third, Bernie Carbo in the fifth
and Johnny Bench in the eighth.
The Braves, meanwhile, got
the only run Niekro needed in
the third when Felix Millan
walked and came around to
score on a double by Ralph
Garr, extending Garr's hitting
streak to 22 games.
Allanta knocked out Grimsley
and roughed up ex-Brave Clay
carroll in the eighth with three
more runs. Earl Williams, whom
general manager Paul Richards
thinks should be a shoo-in as
rookie of the year, drove in'two
with a double and scored himsell on a two-base blow by fellow - rookie Dusty Baker,
Niekro, whose outward appearance would make you think
nothing could fluster ·him,
leaned back on a stool in the
dressing room, puffed casuaUy
on a cigarette and accepted
congratulations from his
teammates after his threehitter. He mused that it has
bee " funny season "
n a
·
" Started Out Bad.
There were tunes this year

•

.Behind Central catholic with . Headi(lg the ciass A list for RDcldord Parkway in the small Tile rest of the .Class A top
a~recordandl53polnts,comes the first week was Cory Raw- school i:atin&amp;l, with NcnraDt St. len conSista of Marion Local·,
Warren Jotm F. Kennedy with son, another famlliar name in Paul third and l,'llrlsmoUth No- Covington, _ Zanuvil~e
100 points, followed closely in the rating game.
Ire Dame and Marioo ~t Rosecrans West Jeffenon ·and
third by Springfield Shawnee Coach Jim Berry's Hornets, tied f..- fourth. Noire Dame is ~azt catholic, a11 with :t-0
_with 99 points.
· unbeaten in three games, beld the defeOO!ngchlun(ilon In Class recanls. ·
•
· a 1~ margin over runnerup A.
Last Friday's aclioo S8'fl' peremial power Upper Arlinglm,
With the Class AA coaches'
.
---------again for
votes scattered among 82 dif- . COLUMBUS (UP I) _ The others with 10 OT mare point: ezpected toUechallenge
,_inn beate )"
ferent teams, the point total for tlrst weekly United_Press In- Minerva West Milton, . Gib- the slate 11 • ~..,
n ....,
fourth place Youngstown North ternallonal Ohio _H&gt;gh school sonburg, Elyria Catholic, by Princeton, snapping the Goidr
to 51 'th
. H
s• football ratings (with first place Pommoulll West. Leavittsburg den Bears' 42-game winning
ops
, Wl
uron, -.. votes ·and won·lost records In La Brae (1) - Kentoo.
Clairsville, BarnesvWe, Girard parentheSes):
Closs A
streak.
Points 'l'llevictoryboostedCoachP~t
and Gallipolis. Circleville and
Class AAA
Poit\ts Team
Bellaire tied for lOth roimd out - ~':"~ssillon 1121 (3-0I 259 1. Ccry Rawson C5l &lt;J.Ol 125 . Mancuso's Princeton team Into
2. Parkway
(1) CJ.OJ 81 fourth place in the AAA ratlrigs
the list_'
2. Warren Harding
3. Norwalk St. Paul
121 IJ-01
121
(1) CJ.OI 69 despite the fact the Vikings are
3. Cincinnati Moeller
4. Ulel Portsmouth Notre I-1-1 in three games so far.
~me
Upper Arlington, oo the other
121 ll-tl 52
4. (lie) Marion Pleasant
hand, felt the sling of defeat In
..
(I l CJ.Ol 52 the rankings, as the Golden
~ ,., • I
6.
Elyria (2 (J-0)
82
Bean are lied for Zanesville for
7. Niles McKinley
Ill (3- 6. Marion Local
or 81
IJ.Ol &amp; lOth place In the first list, their
8. Freinonl Ross
131 (3- 7. Ccvington
12) (3-0) 44 lowest spot in at least the last
0)
62
I . Zanesville Rosecram
6ve years.
9. Mentor
(21 (J.OJ
51
1)113-01 4J
10. (lie) Upper Arlington
9. West Jefferson
'
(2-1)
"
Cll CJ.Ol .II)
10. (lie) Zanesyille (3-0) " 10. 'Newark Catholic
(1) (3-

Bnaves '~"'ake rrL z·...d ~: ~~~~o~ ,i{~ ~v~:
In
Division Chase

• ....,.nnres
Lin
""""

l2!1d G1mel
' Boston
m 100 ooo- 4 9 2
Baltimore 300 100 Olx- 5 8 1
Peters 04-111 and Fisk;
Cuellar, Richert (8) and Etche• barren. WP-Richerl (3-5). HR
-Smith (30th).

COLUMBUS (UPI)-With th,e · 259 points to 127 for the Panfootballseasononly,threeweeks lhers.
old,MassWonhasalreadysolid- The Tigers will get~ stern
ly esiabllshed itself as the team test Friday night, however;
to beat for the mythical United when they host unbeaten and
Press lnternationel ,Board of seventh ranked Niles ,McKinley
Coaches' Ohio high school Class in an important All-American
AAA C~pionship.
Conference game. Niles has
The Tigers of Coach Bob Com- . also been impressive in rolling
mings have realed off three to three straight w1ns.
straight shutouts and were re- In the Class AA ranks there
warded Tue!iday by receiving ·was a new leader in Steuben.
.
.
.
more than double the point to- vtlle Central catholi~, with the
tal 'of Warren Harding, -runner- def~ndmg ch_am_pwn, New
up in the first of eight weekly Lexmgton, chngmg to 15th
UPI ratings. Massillon amassed place with il 2-1 record.

r-- " '

·'

~------~

Downy Fa.ric Softener

'1J9

Pillsbury Flo.r

..
5. . .,7

.__a

�•.

----------~------·~~---·· -------------------,-------- ------------------~-----------------.-------------

· - , . ~ S.nllnel, Mlddleporf..Pooiltlll)', 0., Sept. 29, 1971

7-~~-~~.~.0.,S.jll.29,1971

GABS Ninth In -UPI Grid Ratings ,
ly Unlltd Prns lnlerllalional
American League
East
'
W. L. Pel. GB
x-Balllmore 100 57 .637 ...
· Detroll
90 70 .565 11
Boston
85 76 ,528 11
New York
80 80 ·- .500 21 '12
Washington 63 U .401 37
Cleveland
59 102 .366 43

Nallomil League
· · East
W. l. Pel.
x-Piflsburgh 96 65 . .596
Sl. Louis
90 71 .559
Chicago
82 78 ._513
New York
82· 79 .509
Montreal
70 89 .440
Philadelphia 67 94 .416

GB
...
6

13'12
14

25
29

West
West
W. L. Pel. GB
G. L. Pet. GB San Francisco 89 71 .556 ...

•-Oakland
100 60 .625 ...
Kansas City 85 75 .531 15
Chicago
77 82 ,484 22lf:z
California
74 85 .465 251/:z
Minnesota 73 85 .462 26
Milwaukee 69 90 .434 30112
•-Clinched Division title
Tuuclay Results
Callfcirnla 6 Minnesota 2
Oaklans 2 Kansas City 1
Baltimore 10 8os 2 (lsi lwlnite.)
Baltimore 5 Bas 4 (2nd night!
Milwaukee 3 Chicago 2 (night)
Clev 8 Del 7 (suspended gametwilight
Del 4 Clev 2 (reg game-nigh!)
Wash 4 New York 2 {night)
Today's Probable Pilcllers
California (Wright 16-16) at
Minnesota I Blyleven 15-15}
Kansas City (Fitzmorris 7-5)
at Oakland {C. Dobson 15-5),
night.
Milwaukee (Slaton 10-7) at
C~lcago (Wood 21-131. night.
Detroit (Lollch 25-131 at
Cleveland (Colbert 6-6), night.
Basion (Garman (l-01 at
- IIi more ( P. Dobson 20-81.
: 1 t~w York (Stottlemyre i5-12J
t Washington (Mclain 10-221.
ight,
Thursday•s
Games
llfornla
at Minnesota
Ifwaukee at Chicago
='-"~ York at Washington
~n,ght)
(Only games scheduled)
·

Los Angeles 88 72 .550 1
Atlanta
81 80 .503 8'/:z
Cincinnati 79 82 .491 10'12
Houston
78 82 .488 11
San Diego 69 98 .337_ 28'12
x-Ciinched Division title
Tuesday's Result$
St. Louis 5 New Yor.k 2 _
Montreal s Chicago 4'(nlght)
Phlla 6 Pitts 3 (night)
Atlanta 4 Cinclnatti o (nigh!) ·
Los Angeles 2 Houston 1 (night)
San Fran 7 San Diego.1 {night)
Today's Probable Pitchers
Chicago (Pappas 17-14 or
Pizarro 7-6) at Montreal
I Renko 15-14), night.
Houston 1Forsch 7-8) at Las
Angeles {Downing 20-8], night.
San Francisco {Cumberland
9-6) at San DI-ego (Kirby 14-13),
night.
·
Thursday's Games
St. Louis at New York (night)
Chicago at Montreal (night)
Pitts al Phlla (nighl)
Cincinnati at Atlanta (night)
Houston al Los Angeles {night)
San Fran at San Diego (night)
SMITH SIDELINED
CHICAGO (UPI) --Goalie
Gary Smith of the Chicago
Black Hawks will be sidelined
about three weeks ·· with a
fractured ring finger Oil. his left
hand· He m
· j ured his han d In·
practice Tuesday.

Suarez IBI, 'Fosse 191 _ WPMcDowell 113-17) . LP- Timmerman (7-6) . HRs-Jones
(4th). Price (1st), Hinton (3r,d).
Kan City 000 001 ooo- 1 3 o
Oakland 000 100 lOx- 2 J 0
Hedlund (15-8) and Martinez;
Hunter, Fingers (8), Knowle.
(9) and Duncan . WP-Hunter
(21 -ll). HRs- Jackson (32nd),
Schaal I lOth!, Epstein {19th I.
California 101 001 012- 6 i2 2
Minnesota ooo 100 001- 2 9 o
Messersmith (20-13} and Forborg ;. HaU, Haydel 181, Gebhard (9) and Mltterwald . LPHall (4-71 . HRs-Almoar (4th),
Brye (Jrd) . -Milwakee 100 002 1100- 3 7 1
Chicago 010 000 01~ 2 4 1
Palin. Sanders (9) and
Porter; Bradley, Gura (0),
Foster (9) and Herrmann. WP
- Pattin {14-141. LP-Bradley
(15-15) . HR-Johnstone (16th).
National League ·
Cincinnall 000 000 ooo- o 3 o
Allanta
001 000 03x- 4 10 1
Grlmsl~y. Carroll (8) and
Bench; , N!e~ro (15-t4) and
Wllllamt:,.t P-Grimsley {10-71.

~

•

·

.

.

Second nine: 12. Steubenville

ATLANTA(UPI)-Twoyears
Phil . kr
.
ago
, Nl~ o help~ n~1l
down a diVIsiOn champiOnship
for the AUanta Braves.
He showed some of that old
form, his knucklebaU as mystifymg
· as ever, when he clin cbed
a lie for third place Tuesday
night with a three-bit, 4-G conquest of the Cincinnati Reds.
And it marked a comeback of
sorts after last year's debacle
in which he lost 18 games and
Atlanta wound up fifth. He finished with a 15-14 mark, second highest nwnber of victories
In his career_ second only to
1969's 23.
It was a relaxed Niekro who
did it. No panic buttons Tuesday night Even the fast ball
, ·
,
and slider, sometimes dubious
weapons when tried by Niekro,
were working.
"I felt relaxed - I just went
out there with the idea that I
was going to get Ute knuckle--------Pizarro. Bonham {2) , Regan
(8; and Rudolph; McAnally ( 1112) and Boccabella. LP-Regan
{5-51.

0)

36

Second 10:

11 .

Bluffton 30; 12.

St. Louis 320 000 ooo- 5 7 o
New York 000 002 ooo- 2 7 ·I
Carllon (20-9) and Simmons;
Ryan, McAndrew (I), Koosman
(41. Frisella (81 and grot. LPFryan (10-14}.

Houston ooo 100 ooo- 1 3 o
Los Angls 000 001 Olx- 2 3 0
~·~~t;,
4
·.una),. "'
Wilson {16-101 and Edwards;
Singer (10-17} and Sims. Haller
''"l~.ncled:!!.'!"~!
Pitlsbrg'f:: 010 001 01~ 3 9 1 191. HR-Sims (6th).
:":.
Phila
302 000 Olx- 6 8 1
Ellis (t9-9) and May; Wise San Fran 200 004 lOD- 7 7 2
(17-141 and Sanguillen. HRs- San Diego 100 000 llOO- 1 7 1
Luzinski (Jrd). Johnson (34th), Perry (16-12} and Dietz;
Slargell (48th), Anderson (2nd). Acosla, Phoebus (6) , Kelley
(7), Severlnsen (8) and Barton.
Chicago 040 000 ooo- 4 6 4 LP- Acosla (J.J). HR- Speier
Montreal· 040 000 001- 5 6 1 18th)'

said. "I started out had, caught
fire and won about nine of 11
and it was .500 ball 'the rest of
the way.
"I'm more mentaUy relaxed,
I don't get excited and I feel
strong enough to keep going
when the game's over,',' he continued. "There were times w(len
I lost a game on maybe one
bad pitch. But there were others
where I pitched weD. It aU
comes out in the wash.''
The Braves had more to cheer
about than Niekro's feat and the
clinching of third place. They
topped the million mark In attendance again - as they have
done each of the six years '
they've been in Atlanta. Tuesday night's ~,922 fans ran tbe
season gate, with one game to
go, to 1,030,000. And, they turned in two double plays to run
their season total to 179 - a
Braves record.
Atlanta and Cincinnati arP off
today, winding up the se' .son
here Thursday night with Ron
Reed (13-14) going against the
Reds' Don Gullett (16-6).

clnnati 51. Xavier 36; 15. Lima
Senior 35; 16. Parma Valley
Forge 34; 17. Toledo Woodward
33; 18. Newark32; 19. Lancaster
30; 20. Lak~ood St. Edward 29.
Others w1th 10 or more points:
Columbus Eastmoor, Dover,
Sa~dusky, (1), Parma, Ketter&gt;ng Fa~rmont West, Canton
McKinley, Canton Lincoln, East
Liverpool, Cclumbus Northland, Findlay, Barberton,
canton Central Catholic, Akr~
Elder,
Jackson
(1) .Clnclnnat•
and CinKenmore.
Ironton,
cinnati Roger Bacon.
Class AA
Team
Points
I. Steubenville Catholic
(8) (3-0) 153
2. Warren Kennedy
(3) (3-0) 100
3. Springfield Shawnee
(2) (3-0) 99
4. Youngstown North (3-0) 51
5 Au'r'on
(1) (3-01 39
6: ~t. Clairsville
(2-ll 38
7. Barnesville
(3-0) 37
8. Girard
(3-0) 34
9, Gallipolis
(1) 13-D) ll
10. (lie) Circleville
(3-0) 32
10. (lie) Bellaire
(2-ll 32
Second nine: 12. Cleveland
Holy Name 31; 13. campbell
Memorial and Akron St. Vincent 30 each; 15. New Lexington
19; 16. Mariemont (l) 17; 17.
Harrison and Tlflin Calvert I I)
IS each ; 19. Wauseon 14; 20.
Loveland and Bucyrus 13 each.

NICKLAUS KEEPS LEAD
NEW YORK (UPI)-Jack
Nicklaus continued as the
leading money winner on the
Professional Golf Association's
1971 tour with earnings of
$207,080. Nicklaus did not
compete in last week's event,
the Robinson ('IU,) classic won
by Labron Harris Jr.

Sympatlly FloRs

It has been estimated that
there are about 1,000 Komodo dragons, giant monitor
lizards. in Indonesia.

WEDNEsDAY
Ironton g•IJie . at former
wtLpWOOD GARDEN Club, Pomeroy JWI!or High SchOol.
8 p.m. Wed,_!ay, home of S.ml.fonnal dress, music by
Mrs. Henry Thomaa.
"Stone Rose."
'111UBSDAY
REVIVAL, Mt. Mo.riah
WOI!(EN'S ASSN., Mid- Church of God, starting 7:30
dleport
First
United p.m. Friday with the Rev.
. Presbyterian Church, potluck Gilbert Spelicer speaking.
dinner at 6:30 p.m. with each · YOUTH REVlVAL, Colwnbia
member to talt:e a covered dish. Chapel Christian Church at
RivERVIEW GARDEN Club Point Rock, Oct. 1-3, 7:30 each
will meet Thursday evening, eVening. Mike Hazelton, student
Sept. 30, at 7:30 at the home of at Kentucky Christian College,
Mrs. C8rl Buclt:ley, witli Mrs. leader with regular minister,
' Doriald Putnam as co-bostess. Rev. Eugene Underwood,
Installation of officers will be assisting,
held.
SATURDAY
pAST
MAT R 0 N S
SPAGHETTI SUPPER,
Evangeline Chapter OEs' beginning 4p.m. Saturday at St.
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at home oi Paul's United Methodist
Mary Hug~
Church, 'f"ppers Plains, adults,
$1.25; children, 75 centa.
POMEROY CUB Scout Pack DANCE SATURDAY,
249'lbursday, 7:30p.m.at IOOF beginning 9:30 p.m. at Drew
HaD, ovt:r .Blue and Grey. AU Webster Post 39, American
bQya, eight through 10 and ~gion · borne for members and
parents Invited.
guests. ·Armand at organ, no
. • FREE CLOTIUNG Day at charge.
Satyaticin Army Headquarters,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
SUNDAY
Thursday. Persons needing HOMECOMING Sunday at
clothing wel£oole.
Hemlock Grove Christian
FRIDAY
Church, Basket dinner at noon.
MEIGS HIGH School Afternoon program, I :30 p.m.
homecoming dance Friday, featuring Uhrig Brothers.
immediately foUowing Meigs- Public invited,

Millersport 24; u. Canal
Winchester
(1 J
and
SAME DAY
Mechanlcsbyrg 23 each · 15
McDonald and Minster 22 ~ch ;
SERVICE
18. Arlington and J..,..lhan
In At 11-0uf At 5
Alder 21 eaCI!; 20. Moadore 121
and Yorkville (2) 20 each.
Use Our Free P~rlci119 Lot •
Others with lOor more points:
Smithfield, Buckeye Central,
Portsmouth . East. Lorain
Catholic. Ada Sidney Lehman.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
Jeweti-Scio. 'Amanda Clearcreek and Cedarville.
· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .

Robinson's aeaners

Clifford Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Watson, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Barthelemy, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Watson, Gene, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Sanko, Dayton; Mrs.
Ronnie Sullivan, Carrollton,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wilson,
Janice, Matthew, and Audrey,
Cardington; Mr . and Mrs.
SAl.Es REPORT
Harold Watson, Roger, Mike,
0111o v.ney Uvatoek eo.
Mary Ann, Ajhens; Mrs. Glen
GlillpoU., Oblo
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Satmday, lleptz5, lt71
Robinson, Lori, Lee Ann, and
HOGS- 175 to 220 lbe. 19 to Mrs. Marlene Winebrenner,
19.60, 220 to 250 lbe. 11.00 to 19, Alfred; Mr. and Mrs. Jud
Lightl5 to 17.1$, Fat Sows 1~.50 Barth, Mr. and Mrs. John
to 16.10, S~ 13 down, Boars Ginther, Greg and Gary,
12.50 to 14, Pigs 6 to 12, Shoats 8 Diester.
to 15.
Mrs. Orville Watson and Jim,
CATTLE- Steers 21 to 35.50, Mrs. AI Peterson, Penny and
Heifers 22.50 to 30, Baby Beef Brian, Mr. and Mrs. William
32.50 to 41.50, Fat Cows 18 to 23, WatsoJ], Craig and Gerald, Mr.
Canners 18 to 21, Bulls 24 to and Mrs. Allen Coe, daughter
2U5, Milk Cows 115 to 300.
Cheryl, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
VEAL CALVES - Tops 42, Deem, and Penny, ReedsvWe;
Seconds 35 to 41.60, Medium Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Boyles,
33.50 to 37.25, Com. &amp; Hvs. 32.50 Joe and Brenda, Ray Watson,
to 31.75, Culls 32 down.
Mr. and Mrs. Elton · Ritchie,
...SHEEP -Baby Calves 25 to Beth, Jane, Kermeth, Tuppers
'"'·
Plains.

WATER HEATER

30 GAL GAS FIRm
."STATE"

HOT WATER
HEATER
GlASS
UNm

fn·5560

64·'

5

HOGG &amp;.ZUSPAN

C. II Us For

Your Flower Needs

Dudley's Flolist

...

MAIERIALS CO.

Servi119: G1 tlipolis,
Pomeroy, Middieflorl

773-5554

Co .. W.Va.

WeDiiull'

PT. PLEA$ANT

MASON

UVESTOCI[ 8ALES

.......·:

FAIRMONT

Salllrday,S.pt ZS, 1971
HOGS - 175 to 220 18.75 to
19.90, Heavies 17.25. to i8.5q,
Lights 14 to 17.50~ Fat Sows 13 to
16.75, Boars 13.40 to 1~.75, Pigs 3
to 8.50, Stock Shoats I to 16.25.
CATTLE - Steers 24.80 to
29.70, Hollers 21.50 to 27.25, Fat
Cowl 18 to 22.75, Canners 15.40
to-18.50, Bulls 21.25 to 26.60, Milk
CowlliO to 11$, Stock Cows and
Calves 180 to 285, Stock Steers
23.50 to 34.75, Stock Heifers 21.50
to ;19.10, Stoclt:Sieer Calves 25.75
to 31.50, Stoclt: Heifer Calves
23.75 to 36.25.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 42.50,
Seconds 31.25, Medium 31 to aa;
Common &amp; Heavies 35.50 to

16

MRYDAYI

SPECIAL PORK SALE!

cartoh

USDA

CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

..t
~

SMOKED
CALLIES

'

We GladlY kceot Fed. Food Stamps
'

Prices
Effa:bwe Sept 29-0ct.
..

5

IIGn. Tua; Wed.~-9 to 7
'IIIII~ Fri., Slt.---9 Ia 9

Fresh Pork· Side
SLICED
LB. 55'

r~ 39~

LEAN AND
MEATY

lb.

'

33~

Cheese Pizza ..~~~.~..~~:.-.~.~:~~~................. ::~y 49~
Chicken
Noodl
So
6
_
e UP............. ..
oz.
Shortening.......~~~~:~~~~.~..............:.
Mayonnaise... ~~~~~............................... ;~: .. 69~
Mario Olives...~~~.~.~.~~-·.~~ .......................!~~-~-. . 49~
Sl•ICed peaches..............................3 ·99~
Chunk Tuna .......~~~~.~.~~..... ................~;t~.. 39~ ~
T • t T"
scon1011
e ISSUe ...... ~!~..~~-~!~!................... 3·
Cake Mixes......~~~-~~-~~~-~~~·~············ 3 for

lb.

59~

FAMILY

HOLSUM

FRENCH BREAD

e

R£G.l9'
SPECIAL

Luncheon Loaf

3~:; 99~
Choice of Ctllcken Loaf
and Luncheon Loaf

•"+

•

(

BLUE DOT
REG. 1.49

99~

cans

4-roll
bxs.

'.

DELICIOUS

29C
~~~~~!~..... ~.
RED

S~vania

No. 21f•

pkgs.

BAKERY DELIGHT!

BILTMORE

Racine Food Ma,rlro•t
Expires 10-5-71

STOKELY

SPARE RIBS

CLOSED SUNDAYS
.

With Coupon

42
can

lb.
U. S. Government Inspected

$1.09

-CAMPBELL'S

PORK STEAK

~

oz.

King
Size

41.10.

USDA Dloice Young &amp; Tender

5th and·-PEARL STS., RACINE
'• 'The Store With A Heart
'
You, WE ·LIKE"
JI
::' Right reserved to limit quantities

OXYDOL

COTTAGE
· CHEESE

•••

Aash Cubes

POTATOES....... l0 1b. 89
Head
LETTUCE..........~~:.l9~
Several Kinds
APPLES..... 4Ib. 49~
Idaho

,

.

•

~

~---'L_ J

Band .Will Play For Festival
An invitation to play at the
Bob Evans " Ole Country"
Fai'IJI Festival on oCt. 16 at 10
a.m. has been accepted, David
Bowen, director of the Meigs
Marauder Band, announced at a
meeting of the Meigs Band
Boosters Monday night.
A concert by the hand will be
one feature of an "Ole Country
Gatherin' " at the Bob Evans
homestead located on Route 35

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Emergency Sqpd will ·
hold an organizational
_meeting on Thursday, Sept.
30, at 7 p.m. at the New Haven
'city Building. AU citizens are
urged to attend. An election of
officers wUI be held at that
time.
Many citizens have already
been taking the First Aid
Classes In connection with the
emergency squad. The new
ambulances for New Haven
and Mason wiD be delivered
. al any time and citizens are
asked to get behind this
organlzallon. They want to be
able to get the ambulances
into service with trained
personnel as soon as possible.
The first aid class wiD follow
the meeting.

at Rio Grande. The festival will
be held over a three dey period
and is free to the public.
During the meeting conducted by Mrs , Irene Bailey,
plans were finalized for tag day
activities Saturday. Band
sludenlll will be on .the streets
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The pep
hand will perfonn some time
during the dey In the villages.
Again this year the boosters
will sell gold and maroon
taboggans. Orders may be
placed with Mrs. Irene Bailey.
Lewis Hudson,
Cynthia The hats will sell for $2 each.
Gohring, Katie Young, EdiUt
Si&gt;encer,Mr. and Mr$. Harry E.
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Harold The crown of each tooth
Metzger and daughter, Jarie ha~ a ~overing of enamel,
New Orleans, La., has a
EDen, Lisa, Scottie, Mike and wh~ch 1s the_ hardest rna- museum which houses meSherry Manley.
tenal found m the human morabilia and artifacts of
jazz.
body.

Joe Meek Observes 90th Birthday
Mrs. ,Lola Meek, Sycamore
St., Middleport, entertained
with a dinner In observance of
the 90th birthday of her
husband, Joe.
During the afternoon, cake
and ice creJIDl were served.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.

Be Organi%ed

Go-to~hurch Sunday was set
for Oct. 10 at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church when
Be!hel 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, _ met
Monday night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
· Brenda Taylor, honored
queen, presided at the meeting.
The girls will meet -at the
church at 10:15 a.m. on Oct. 10
to attend church services with
Miss Taylor.
Plans were made during the
meeting to serve a dinner on
Oct. 9for the Shade River Lodge
and one on Oct. 13 to the Meigs
County Democralll. A holiday
bazaar and bake sole was set
for Nov. 6 with proceeds to be
used toward expenses of attending the 1972 Grand session.
It was decided to have an
inspection dinner on Nov. '!/
with Mrs. Peggy Taylor,
promoter of hospitality, as
chairman to work with a
committee of the girls.
A committee was named to
plan a Halloween party. Mrs.
Franklin Rizer and Mrs. Bernard Fultz were installed as

council members. a report
entitled "God's World" wu
given by the librarian. Mn.
•Debbie Flnlaw, guardian, .and
Thomas Edwards, usoclate
guarcjian, were presented at lbe .opening of the Bethel.

DINNER GIVEN
Dinner guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd T. Chiipman
and daughters, Shetley and
Kimberly, Columbus, were Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth RuBSell, ·
!iJJcine; Mrs. Dorothy 0.0•
dakis, Athens, and Mr, and Mrs.
Harry Hawk, New Marshfield.
YARD SALE SET
PORTLAND - A yard sale
will be held Oct. 8 and 9 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Johnson, Portland, by the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Pottland United
Methodist Church. Resldenlll. ·
with items to contribute may
contact either Mrs. Johnson or
Mrs. Ruth Ebersbach.

____________________________

WHOLE BAGGED FRYERS

Property
Transfers
State of Ohio to Katharine
Story, Leo R. Story, John S.
Riffle, Della M. Riffle, Journal
Entry, Vacation of Right of
Way, Bedford.
William Connolly, Erma
ConnoUy, to Warren ConnoUy,
Connie Connolly, Lot, Long
Bottom.
Elizabeth Marie Lawrence,
dec. tO Ruby Lawrence Ross,
Cert. for Trans., Lebanon.
Ruby Lawrence Ross, John 0 .
Ross to Charles Ray Lawrence,.
Sheryn J. Lawrence, Parcels,

Mail by t he _~;nCuckler
Delta Queen

....

WITH GIBLETS AND BACKS

we care

BOX OF CHICKEN

3 BREAST QTS.- I LEG QTS.- I WINGS- I GIBlETS

Good Thru Saturday,
October 2nd., 1971.

Pric:es

"SUPER-RIGHT" U.S. GOV'T. GRADE A

Turkeys ~~~~z:Nup • •
Round Steak • • • • s11a
Round Roast • • • • lb.$1 08
Eye Of Round • . ·~~159
BONElESS TOP CUT

.

l•.

BONELESS BOTTOM CUT

WHOLE

Meigs

c

SPLIT FRYERS

OR

FULL

BLADE

tONELESS

SHANK
HALF

•...

CUT

ROAST

IHI, Vtol Cllucl&lt; Wogon Or Pon Fritters

Jiffy Steaks c~J~~ :~~~ • .,..._88c
REGULAR OR SMOKE HOUSE FLAVOR
A&amp;P Pimento Spread . s.o.. 39c
•

pkr.

-

MPIRAND

Macaroni Salad

• • •

I ..... IJftc
• dD. - -

SEMI-IDNElESS PICNIC STYLE

Fresh Pork Roast • • • lb.sgc
ALL MEAT
hl*ior Frankies • • 2P~- s1 29

•

.- I &amp; P Sea food H11 .y...;!
55c
Ocean Perch Fillets r~~~ •. • •
Jlftc
Fried Fish Sticks rc~~. . . . • •
pq.
Fried Perch Fillets . J~~~. • • • • • • ,...._&amp;t
2lb. $149
Breaded Perch Portions J~~~ .
Sliced Halibut ·Steaks • • • • • • • lb.atc
Fried Fish Cakes • • • • • • • • • lb.ec
'

•

•

.

l~b.
l'kl·

•

II&gt;&lt;&gt;L

I

•

•

•

pk• •

...,~

pllr.

to James' F. 000111 IICOI r.Jll"1011 .......... ,._ Uc
Arnold, Lot No. 31, lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy.
.
Earl 0. Thoma, Patsy Ann
Thoma, Guy M. Thoma, Ellen
Thoma, Leo E. King, Helen .
Pauline King, Georgia Thoma
·
to James H. Hoyt, Korena K.
CINCINNATI (UP!)~ A tra- Hoyt, 143 Acres, Bedford.
c...,., •y Ill• Doua ......................................... 12 - $l.lt
dillon elating back almost 100 Edward D. Sloter, Judy M.
ye.ra wu reborn today as the Slater to Howard L. Barber,
stauwbeeler Delta Queen in- Barbara J. Barber, \il Acre,
c•..,..., •• Dole• ................._ ...................... 12- $1.93
augurated riverboat mail serv- Olive.
ice oo lbe Ohio and MississipRoy Z. Brlckles, Mabel &amp;OLDEN QUARTERS
qi rivera between Cincln- Brickles .to Charles D. HyseU, t ·
9
naU and New Orleans.
Acre, Bedford.
•
a..,.r •Y file Do.......... -................................. 12 - $2.19
· The Queen, America's last Juda Danielson, dec. to
4c OFF LABEL- WHIPPED STICK
overnJabt passenger riverboat, Minnie Danielson Hoi!Jian,
will eru1ae the rivers until Nov. Mildred Javell, Jacob S.
3~
11, ·pickillg_up and delivering Holman, Vlrg~ Napper, John
~
ttz ... , .... ······-····"....
12Duiii at 12 river cities.
S. Hobnan, William J. Hobnan, B6HT O'CLOCK
5
A special order from Post- Earl Holman, Wilkie Ho!m8n,
master General Winton M. Cert.- for Trans., Sutton.
mount resulted In the Boating Mildred Jewell,. Charlie INSTANT
c...,... ., "'• Dole• .......- ........- ..................... lZ - $l.lt
post office aboard the Delta JeweU, Jacob S. Holman, Alice
57
Queen. Capt. Ernest Wagner, Holman, Virginia Napper,
the'Que!en's flklpper, wW serve Clarence Napper, John S. JANE PARKER
as poetmuter aboard the ves- Holman, Shirley Holman,
c•Hper ltr tile Den• .......................................... 12 - SUt
sel and opened cerelllOIIIes William J . Holman, Earl
•
here by canceling the first , Hobnan; Goldie M. Holman, JANE PARKER
~ of IDIII. '
Wilkie Holman to Letta A•
floe Doze• .......................................... 12 - $2.29
After Ieavins · Cincinnati to- Spencer, Parcels, Sutton.
• • 1
clay lbe Queen will niate stops
JANE PARKER
in St. Loulnnd Hannibal, Mo.;
NAME OIIIITl'EII
M111C8tlne, Iowa; Li Crolse, ALFRED - The llllllf of
c•••p•r lty ... Delee .......- ... - ...........-..··-·-·... l Z - sz.zt
Wla.; · St. Paul and Winon.a, Ullian Frost, Cheater, was
liP
...
Dalrt
Crnzll'
........
.
·~
lie
Minn.; NaUYOO, W.; Memphis, mtnlenllonally llllitted from
ALU.ULI COUPON
[liE--•'YALUAILI COUPON_ICK_'I'I -CEIIII:'YALUAILI
• Tem.; Vll:hlnag and Natchez, lbe lilt of llelllmonlall In lbe
Mill.; and llully New ()rleana. ICCOUJit of lbe Alfred Olurcb
Dlllfti1y be~ points may annual llmlec:oin!ng (II'CICI'alll.
lie......,what !lklnr !ban peoWITH
WITH
4)8C "{~
REGULAR
THIS
JWI'G II1D
THIS
ple haft beCGme 8j:CIIIIIlmed
COUPON
SIZE
COUPON
1111.
·
COUPOH
to, howe«&lt;. Wllb a c:ruillng Edgar Allan ·Poe deliber- ·
6ood 11n S.lur!iay, Ombor 2od.
Good Thru Saturday, October .2nd.
IIJIIIed of II mllell per hour lbe ately got hirnsell dismissed
Good Thru Satwday, Octobe&lt; 2nd.
' At Y,.. All' Stort.
At
Your
A&amp;P
Store.
.
from
West
Point
Milftary
- ~Will be bard jklll d.to
At v- All' Start.
for
dllobedlencr.
la:il118-r:otlll
... fAMILYi::l
'
Aeaderny
-=--!=.::;~)HE P~!t fAMI~Y'I:IEI-HI MMILY~..:E!II
nulteh air mail 411 d•. I

SEMI-BONELESS I ST. THkU 4TH. RIIS

Beef Rib Roast • • •
FRYER THIGHS, DRUMSTICKS OR

Fryer Breasts • • • •
BONElESS

C~arcoal

Steaks • • •

...

. $111

SWIFT'S I'REMIUt.t

Brown &amp; Sene Sauu1e
OSCAR MAYER SUCED

Beef lolo1n1
OSCII MIYEI liEF FUllS ....

Look What $1.00 Will Buy!

liO'IIl'aled
lna·-e--·

MrL Filhrt sMargarine 3:.':;.s1oo
Blue Bonnet Margarine s1oo
lean Coffee • • • • 3~;; 1"
Netcafe Coffee . • • •~ s1
White Bread • •
eacb:tac
Ancel Food C.ke
Apple Pie • • • • • • ,..,gc

lona Tomatoes • • • • • • •4::$1 oo
lona Green Beans •••••• &amp;~~!:sloo
A&amp;P Cream Style Corn • · •5~ $1 oo
Libby Green Beans • • • • •4:= sro
c•..,.,
su•
Bush Shelhe Beans • • • • •4 ~ s1 oo
A&amp;P Cut Wax Beans •••• 4u::s1oo
A&amp;P· c•..,...
Potatoes
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
5
=
$1
oo
.,
A&amp;P.Applesauce • • • • • •5=$rO

·U. S. No. I ALL PUitPOSE

WHITE

,
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POTATOES

79

M . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .: ••

Yellow Onions • • 11.:;7f
.
Jonathan a,les .. '&amp;.:;Jt
..
HoneydeWS CAI.IFOIINIA
s~n ... Green Peppers • • •
Green C••••ce ••
Arapes
TOICAY, ,,m
1LAC1C IIIB.
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Vi11i1ia Paatb .&amp;
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Pl.~ W.Va.

DAIRY SPECIAL!

Keep
Your

•
McKenzie, and Mrs. Ora Hill.
A quiz on Ohio concluded the
meeting. Mrs .. Laura Watson
presided at the business session
which was preceded by a
potluck dinner.

Market Report

••'

'·

wedding •bells, · school bells,
dinner bells, sleigh belis .and
cow bells. Alliscilsslon was.held
by Mrs. Lillian Jividen, Mrs.
Edith Hayman, Mrs. Dorothy

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
dinner bonorlDI Nn. Effie
Wataoo on her 10th birthday
annivenary was beld recenUy
at ber TUppen Plains home.
Attending were the Rev.

•

!

"Bells Of Happiness" was the
program topic at a meeting of
the Happy Husllers Class of the
Racine . United · Methodist
Church recenUy.
Mrs. Ann Coe gave a history
of the Liberty BeD and commented on the inscription,
"PI-oclaim Liberty throughout
all the land _unto aU the
Inhabitants thereof." Scripture
was by Mrs. Ora HW. 'Mrs.
Mattie Circle and Mrs. Lavinia
Simpson sang a duet, "Golden
Bells of Jubilee,'' with chimes.
A poem taken from the
.McGuffey Reader was read by
Mrs. Circle.
Members responded to roll
call by naming various kinds of
bells Including church bells,

80th Birthday is Celebrated ·

-

The Gentle T-oO'ch
That Means So Much
"" 446-1 n1

&amp; Mason

Social Calendar

:::!.;: ::ii!!:i Go-to-Church Day

·· Liberty Bell's ·Histqry__ ~i_called

''

SHIR•
FINISHING

baU over -and from the pitch when I pitched like 1969," he 40. 13. Troy (2) 39; 14. Cln- Tuscarawas Catholic (1) 29; 13.

on, I was getting it over," he
said. " It was as good a game
as I've pitched all year as far
as getting ahead of the batters.
The knuckler was as good as I
can throw it."
Three Harmless Hils
The Reds, whom Niekro beat
six out of six in 1969 but didn't
fare so weD in Cincinnati's pennan t-winning year of 1970, could
do nothing of consequence this
time against .him. He allowed
three hannless singles - to
pitcher Ross Grimsley in the
third, Bernie Carbo in the fifth
and Johnny Bench in the eighth.
The Braves, meanwhile, got
the only run Niekro needed in
the third when Felix Millan
walked and came around to
score on a double by Ralph
Garr, extending Garr's hitting
streak to 22 games.
Allanta knocked out Grimsley
and roughed up ex-Brave Clay
carroll in the eighth with three
more runs. Earl Williams, whom
general manager Paul Richards
thinks should be a shoo-in as
rookie of the year, drove in'two
with a double and scored himsell on a two-base blow by fellow - rookie Dusty Baker,
Niekro, whose outward appearance would make you think
nothing could fluster ·him,
leaned back on a stool in the
dressing room, puffed casuaUy
on a cigarette and accepted
congratulations from his
teammates after his threehitter. He mused that it has
bee " funny season "
n a
·
" Started Out Bad.
There were tunes this year

•

.Behind Central catholic with . Headi(lg the ciass A list for RDcldord Parkway in the small Tile rest of the .Class A top
a~recordandl53polnts,comes the first week was Cory Raw- school i:atin&amp;l, with NcnraDt St. len conSista of Marion Local·,
Warren Jotm F. Kennedy with son, another famlliar name in Paul third and l,'llrlsmoUth No- Covington, _ Zanuvil~e
100 points, followed closely in the rating game.
Ire Dame and Marioo ~t Rosecrans West Jeffenon ·and
third by Springfield Shawnee Coach Jim Berry's Hornets, tied f..- fourth. Noire Dame is ~azt catholic, a11 with :t-0
_with 99 points.
· unbeaten in three games, beld the defeOO!ngchlun(ilon In Class recanls. ·
•
· a 1~ margin over runnerup A.
Last Friday's aclioo S8'fl' peremial power Upper Arlinglm,
With the Class AA coaches'
.
---------again for
votes scattered among 82 dif- . COLUMBUS (UP I) _ The others with 10 OT mare point: ezpected toUechallenge
,_inn beate )"
ferent teams, the point total for tlrst weekly United_Press In- Minerva West Milton, . Gib- the slate 11 • ~..,
n ....,
fourth place Youngstown North ternallonal Ohio _H&gt;gh school sonburg, Elyria Catholic, by Princeton, snapping the Goidr
to 51 'th
. H
s• football ratings (with first place Pommoulll West. Leavittsburg den Bears' 42-game winning
ops
, Wl
uron, -.. votes ·and won·lost records In La Brae (1) - Kentoo.
Clairsville, BarnesvWe, Girard parentheSes):
Closs A
streak.
Points 'l'llevictoryboostedCoachP~t
and Gallipolis. Circleville and
Class AAA
Poit\ts Team
Bellaire tied for lOth roimd out - ~':"~ssillon 1121 (3-0I 259 1. Ccry Rawson C5l &lt;J.Ol 125 . Mancuso's Princeton team Into
2. Parkway
(1) CJ.OJ 81 fourth place in the AAA ratlrigs
the list_'
2. Warren Harding
3. Norwalk St. Paul
121 IJ-01
121
(1) CJ.OI 69 despite the fact the Vikings are
3. Cincinnati Moeller
4. Ulel Portsmouth Notre I-1-1 in three games so far.
~me
Upper Arlington, oo the other
121 ll-tl 52
4. (lie) Marion Pleasant
hand, felt the sling of defeat In
..
(I l CJ.Ol 52 the rankings, as the Golden
~ ,., • I
6.
Elyria (2 (J-0)
82
Bean are lied for Zanesville for
7. Niles McKinley
Ill (3- 6. Marion Local
or 81
IJ.Ol &amp; lOth place In the first list, their
8. Freinonl Ross
131 (3- 7. Ccvington
12) (3-0) 44 lowest spot in at least the last
0)
62
I . Zanesville Rosecram
6ve years.
9. Mentor
(21 (J.OJ
51
1)113-01 4J
10. (lie) Upper Arlington
9. West Jefferson
'
(2-1)
"
Cll CJ.Ol .II)
10. (lie) Zanesyille (3-0) " 10. 'Newark Catholic
(1) (3-

Bnaves '~"'ake rrL z·...d ~: ~~~~o~ ,i{~ ~v~:
In
Division Chase

• ....,.nnres
Lin
""""

l2!1d G1mel
' Boston
m 100 ooo- 4 9 2
Baltimore 300 100 Olx- 5 8 1
Peters 04-111 and Fisk;
Cuellar, Richert (8) and Etche• barren. WP-Richerl (3-5). HR
-Smith (30th).

COLUMBUS (UPI)-With th,e · 259 points to 127 for the Panfootballseasononly,threeweeks lhers.
old,MassWonhasalreadysolid- The Tigers will get~ stern
ly esiabllshed itself as the team test Friday night, however;
to beat for the mythical United when they host unbeaten and
Press lnternationel ,Board of seventh ranked Niles ,McKinley
Coaches' Ohio high school Class in an important All-American
AAA C~pionship.
Conference game. Niles has
The Tigers of Coach Bob Com- . also been impressive in rolling
mings have realed off three to three straight w1ns.
straight shutouts and were re- In the Class AA ranks there
warded Tue!iday by receiving ·was a new leader in Steuben.
.
.
.
more than double the point to- vtlle Central catholi~, with the
tal 'of Warren Harding, -runner- def~ndmg ch_am_pwn, New
up in the first of eight weekly Lexmgton, chngmg to 15th
UPI ratings. Massillon amassed place with il 2-1 record.

r-- " '

·'

~------~

Downy Fa.ric Softener

'1J9

Pillsbury Flo.r

..
5. . .,7

.__a

�•&gt;
•
·...·.·.·.· ·:·.

•, ,•,,,

'

.·.··.·.·.·.·.···· ........ .

Weather.

Under Stu y m eanng
·
COLUMBUS 1UPI J,-TheOhio
Wela' p.!la!lon Control Board
- • • ' IH to hold a hear...... ledl)' tn 1 proposal to
lltiUIIdMis ol Ollio
.'-- 1!!ill!~~en stre8IJIS
"' · ~~Industry to be
·
'W 51111 ))lint and fish

w1'11161

Wt.
'l1le pcGjiUII&amp;Iwllll put togethtr b)' the tllllllrol board staff in

to cta~plaints by the
r.deral Environmental Pro teeUon Agency about the state's
standards.
:· nadopted, theproposalwould
be the third upgrading of water
quality standards since they
were first adopted In 1966.
Tenets of the plan include requiring streams now classified
as industrial water supply to
meet far more stringent "aq· uatic life" criteria.
It would also establish two
classes of recreational waters :
,Primary contact for swimming
:and water skiing, and secpmlaryoontactforboating,fishing and wading.
.' It would drop low level aquai(c life standards and establish
a.new "cold water fisheries" or
.lroutatream category with very
:high dissolved oxygen stan:~.
l tipOillle

GOP Hurt
, :: (Continued from page I)
·· $irong of Logan.
· The Apportionment Board
·JIIeels Thursday and will app e the Democratic plan.
.•. Democratic members of the
b9&amp;rd are Gov. John J. Gllli.gan, state Treasurer Joseph T.
F,erguson and Senate Minority
Leader Anthony Calabrese.
• The Republican members are
~tary of State Ted Brown,
who says he will submit two
GOP plans, and State Rep.
~bert Manning of Akron.
Request Pointless
.. Brown also said a Democratic
J;tquesl for maps based on the
1970 census was pointless.
•. "They already have the maps
they asked me to provide," said
Brown. "! see no need for me
to get the ·maps for them.
"When I got my maps, which
I used to prepare a Republican
plan, I was told by various
b9&amp;rds of elections that they had
lll!nl ~ps to the governor's office.
"In fact, I saw the boWidary
maps lor Hamilton and Cuyahoga ·coW!tles that were sent to
the governor's office," he said.
"! know they have the necessary map• which give the
boundaries of the wards and
precmcts."
The demand for the maps
was made by John C. McDonald, secretary of the Apportionment Board· and . legislative
aide to Gilligan.
He accused Brown of failing
f'1 provide "accurate maps dePicting political subdivision
boundaries as they existed in
Ohio at the time of the 1970

census."

Ernest C. Neal, a Department
of Health biologist ani! acting
secretary of the control board,
said Ohio divides the use of its
waters into five categories for
water quality purposes - industrialsupply,agricultilralsupjlly,
public supply, recreational waters and waters !or aquatic life.
"The EPA has told us in effeet that all waters In Ohio
must meet standards for use in
at least two of the categories,"
Neal said.

Ruth E. Moore
Died
. rr.uesJ-y
~ '
ua
Mrs. Ruth E. Moore, 91,
Middleport, diOd Toesday afternoon at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant.
Born Nov. 3, 1879 in Hartford,
W. Va., she was preceded in
death by her parents, her
husbar.d, George W. Moore,
four sons, a daughter, three
brothers and three sisters.
Sw·viving are three sons,
George Moore, Jr., Marysville,
Ohio; Donald, of Columbus, and
Willard of Parkersburg, and
several grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. Mrs .
Moore was a member of the
Middleport Church of Cbrist.
Funeral services·will be held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral !lome
with the Rev. Raullln Moyer
officiating. Burial will be In
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from !Oa.m. to noon and from 4
to 9 p.m. Thursday and on
Friday until time of services.
DANCE PLANNED
A teen dance will be held
following the Southern High
football game Friday, from 10
to midnight in the Racine Junior
High School building. Music will
be by "Mother's Speed." Band
Boosters are sponsoring the
event. Admission is 75 cents a
person.
SNAKE DANCE SET
School
Meigs
High
cheerleaders will do a snake
dance Thursday evening,
forming at 7:30 pm. on the
lower parking lot and moving to
the Pomeroy Junior High
School where a pep rally will be
held beside a bon fire.
SQUARE DANCE SET
A square dance will be staged
from 8:~ pm. to micin¥'t
Saturday m the Toppers Plains
Grade School under the sponsorship of the Toppers Plains
Community Oub. Music will be
by the Mike Gorrel Band and
the caller will be Jim Carnahan.
TAG DAY SET
RACINE - Tag Day will be
held in the Racine area
Saturday by the Southern High
School Ban&lt;l. The band will open
the activity with a short concert
beside the post office at 9 a.m.

.
John Paul Jonf$,.22, Vinton, is dition at the CabeU-Huntington
in serious condition today at the · Hospital was Jerald Campbell,
Holzer Medical Center where he 34, Gallipolis, with severe head
was admitted following a single injuries. A passenger in his car,
car accident at 10:re p.m. :IS-year old John Flint of
Tuesday on Rt. 35, one and nine GaUipolis, is in good condition
tenths miles west of Rio at the Holzer Medical Center.
Grande.
Flint also sustained head inAccording .to the Gallipolis juries.
Post State Highway ' Patrol,
Jones was a passenger in a car
According to invesiigating
operated by Roger D. Meade, officers, Campbell, . traveling
23, Vinton.who lost control after south, attempted to pass an auto
passing a ml)torcyele. liis auto operated by Charlotte Rankin,
struck a gu8rdrail, then rolled 24, Gallipolis. Campbell's car
over four times, Jones and hit the Rankin auto in the rear
Meade being thrown out.
and then slammed into a semiJones sustained severe . outfit operated by Kenneth
lacerations to the head, a Gothson, 29, Rt. 2, lro~ton.
crushed chest and fractured
The impact knocked the rear
arm, the latter injury when he wheels off the semi which was
was struck by a·car as he lay in loaded with steel. The highway
the highway driven by John .L. was blocked four to five hours
Helm, 23, Rio Grande.
while officials awaited a
Meade suffered lacerations wrecker toremov~ the semi and
and bruises over most of his .car from the highway. The
body. He was charged wjth incident is still under inreckless operation. There was vestigation.
heavydamagetohiscar.
A third mishap occurred at
Two
persons
were 4:45p.m. on Rt. 7, eight tenths
hospitalized following a car- of a tn!le sou~ of Rt. 554 w:here
truck collision at 1:10 a.m. a vehicle driven by Ercil L.
today on Rt. 7, one half mile Sleeth, Mason•.W. Va., flipped a
from the exit to the Silver stone into the windshield of a
Memorial Bridge.· '
car operated by Rita B.
Listed in satisfactory con- Buckley, 47, Rt. 2, Cheshire.

•

decide whether her deportation
would be sought.
The government's complaint
alleged Mrs. Ryan in 1939
became a guard at the
Ravensbruck
concentration
camp, one of six major camps
in Nazi Gennany at the time.
In 1942, the government alleged, she was transferred to
the Maidanek camp in Poland
where 1.5 million persons died,
according to Nurnberg trials
testimony. She returned to
Ravensbruck two years later,
the government said .
In 1945, Mrs. Ryan was
section supervisor of Ravensbrock when the Allies liberated it, the government said. The
British arrested her and the

President Anthony J. Garofoli,
the. endorsed capdidate, and
6,149 for former Pollee Olief
Patrick L. Gerity. ·
The Republicans .nominated
Cuyahoga County Auditor Ralph
W&gt;:&lt;-:'il-~.._,,:-;:,.-"·"'········-w..,-.·.·,·.w mary.
.1. Perk whQ had 12,156 vo~ to
• · w m .•.,wm ...w .w .• Carney's victory almost as- state Rep. George V. 'Vomosures that a Stokes-backed vich's 6,014. Perk lost to Stokes
GRANDSON HU.RT
· candidate will win the Nov. 2 by only 3,500 votes in 1969.
The Middleport E-R squad general election.
Stokes, the first black mayor
answered a call at 11:37 p.m. Carney, one of the city's most of a major American city,
Toesday to the Jerry Ward prominent businessmen, polled announced earlier this year he
residence on Beech St. where an unofficial total of 74,031 would not seek a third twothe Wards ' three-year old votes to 60,141 for City Council year term. He has not revealed
g~:andson, Mark Ferrell, had
. . his future political plans.
suffered a head laceration in a
"Deceat MaD"
fall. He was taken to Veterans
Stokes had feuded bitterly
Memorial Hospital, treated,
·
·
witll Garofoll during his terms
and released.
·
and had asked th~ 'city's black
voters, who make up 35 per
cent . of the electorate, to
DANCE FRIDAY
·support Carney, whom Stokes
The Rutland Volunteer Fire T
dcalled a "decent man."
Dept. .will_ ~~nsor a square ..IS
~e blacks ~ded by
dance · begmnmg at 8:30 p.m.
Y
voting oyerwhelmingiY for CarFriday in the Rutland gymWASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep:· ney.
nasium. Music wiD be by the William M. McCulloch, R.Qhio, By supporting Carney, stokes
Hilltoppers. Proceeds will go not satisfied by the three-year played two hands at once to
toward purchase of a new fire reprieve given the Delta Queen insure that either a black or a
truck.
last year, is now working to ~didate sympathetic to black
gain the last . overnight stern- mterests would be . elected
Marriage UceDBe
wheeler permanent acceptance. mayor .
Roy Alien Roush, 21, Mason,
The vessel has been the sub- carney is Stokes' second
and Jennie Lou Bowers, 20, ject of bitter congressional con- choice for mayor in the general
Pomeroy.
troversylnrecentyearsbecause election. His first choi~ is
it does not meet strict federal black School Board PreSident

PT. PLEASANT- Acontract asked that Supt. Withers leave Those
for Mason County's new
superintendent of schools was
changed regarding his salary,
Michael Whalen was appointed
Director
of
Secondary
Education, Walter Copley will
be assistant principal at Point
Pleasant High School and

the room briefly and It was
during this time that Stevens
asked the bOard to amend
Withers' contract "at least until
July I," observing "this will
eliminate a few budgetary
transfers."

Josephine Lyons is Sunnyside
School's new principal, in ac· k b th Board f
o
tlons ~ en
·
t
u1e
tin
Education a ~reg ar mee g
Toesday evenmg.
·
An 1ssue
concern 1ng th e
ousted superinten dent, [ .
Brooks Smith, came up . as a
controversial one at the same
session.
Board pres1'dent Ted Stevens

In turn Charles Eshenailr
made a motion that Charles
Withers be employed as
,Superintendent of Mason
County Schools from September
27 this year to July 1, 1972 at an
annual salary of $15,600payable
in monthly payments . Ray
Fields gave the second for the
motion and in voting it was
passed with a splot vote of 3-1.

r.

$200 Bond Taken

FINED $100
Rodney R. Sayre, Evansville,
Ind., was fined $100 and costs
and sentenced to three days in
jail when he appeared before
Pomeroy Mayor Olarles Legar
Toesday night on charges of
driving while intoxicated.
CLUB TO MEET
The Handicraft Club will
meet from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Bookmobile HQ
on East Main St. Pine eone
wreaths will be made
Everyone
interested
i~
welcome.

Austrian government ch!ltged
her with torturing inmates, said
the government brief. Morse
said she was convicted and
sentenced to three years in
prison.
Mrs. Ryan, however, was
credited with time served, fined
court costs, had her personal
property confiscated and in 1957
received legislative amnesty
from the Austrians, said Morse.
That year, he said, she married
a construction worker.
Morse said the consent order
culminated an investigation
which began in 1964, when a
private investigator of Nazi war
crimes idenlified Mrs. Ryan as
a former member of the Nazi
SS Elite Guard.

PRICE CONTROLS
We HM Always Had Price Conbols To SM You
Money. On Certified XE-110

SAVE UP
TO '1.00 ATANKFUL
You

Under Major Companies

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at II a.m. Wednesday
was 73 degrees, under sunny
skies.

**I\********
U ***
* A T.BOUGHT
~

·

Arnol~ R. Pinkney, who is
running as an independent.
Either Carney or Pinkney
should win ·because Democrats
outnumber ~publicans by almostseven-I&lt;H&gt;neandtheblack
voters have sh, own. . they will
supportStokes deciSIOn.
Supported Wltb Risk
"I think it was.a great night

fire laws, but the Congres)l
granted a new exemption until
Nov. 1, 1973, to give its o~ers
time to decide what to do.
McCulloch, who was a key
figure in the battle during the
gJst Congress on behalf of the
riverboat, asked Tuesday that
early hearings be held on the
feasibility of applying NASA
technological developments to
the vessel's wooden super~tructure to determine their effect In
· combusti'bill'ty.
r educmg
"I · ·
th this
·• t 15 unportant at · · ret f th H
t be ·
ques 0 e ouse no
lgnored," McCulloch said. "It is im-

for Cleveland with his victory,"
Stokes said. " In leaving as
mayor, I wanted to try to say
what was best for this town and
I did it at risli to (Pinkney)
who I ultimately feel Is best lor
the city."
•
Carney said he conducted his
.primary campaign on a pledge
to unify the city and ."I expect
and I will conduct the fall campaign on 'the basis of unity."
"Cleveland has been and can
be a great city," Carney said.
"It is,my purpose and my dedication to bring together all People regardless of race or nationality or what part of town they
live in. 11
The electorate also approved
two amendments to the city
charter, one of which makes the
primary non-partisan with the
two top vote-getters vying in a
general election.
The second amendment will
save ·the city an estimated $20,'ooo annually by removing a requirement that' copies of all
charter amendments be mailed
to every registered voter.

GATHER THESE

~

Pleasut Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Bartroe
Long, Apple Grove; Carroll
Casto, Point Pleasant; Larry
Whittington, Arbuckle; Harry
Goodrich, Point Pleasant.; Mrs.
Robert Hager, New Haven;
Mrs . James Farley, Point
Pleasant, and William E. Hunt,
Jr., New Haven.
NEW CITIZEN: Sept. 28, a
daughter to 'Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Kinney, Point Pleasant.

portant
Am
· that hthe millions oft
er1cans w o we represen .
d h
ed
th
an w o are concern over e
fat f th' h' to · link to
e o IS IS nc
our
·
past be g1ven,
at th every 1eas,t
h · · Co
"
a Feanng
· m ngress.
ths f th
or nme mon o e year,
the Delta Queen churns the
Mississippi, Ohio ~d ~enn~
Riv.ers. Its home c1ty IS Cincin' nail.
.
McCulloch sa1d the owners of
the Qu"':n completed $5DO,OOO of
restoration and safety unprovements last winter.

BLENDER

Make the greatest
cooking discovery
since fire.
~/ --:&gt;ada z a n1c ,

~-.-

~,:. .

• CiYe• 2·8 five-Qvnce cups of delicious coffee • Ha ndy
brew Lelector to odiust strength of c:offee • Eosy·to· reod
morkingt under ha ndle tells how n'vth wate r to odd.

JEWEL/It
DEPT.

129 MILL STREET
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MASKING TAPE

SKILLETS

YOUR a!OICE

==~133
1 5tr , 1 11r
10 s;r lllllfll

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:
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Member F~ .S
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,

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JEWEl/IY
DEPT.

$1588
IIICK'S
REG,
$11.96

JEWEL•r
IJEPT.

Heck'S Reg.
Sl696

SUNBEAM
ELECTRIC

eSIZES 36-42
eFISHIER · STRIPE

MAONmC

PHOTO ALBUM

TMIC

CORD
U. L APPROVED

$2 22

.\HEIIRINGBONE

JUST SAY

USE YOUR HECK'S

CHARGE IT!

CIIRJST/IIAS

CHARGE-A-CARD
JEWElRY DEPT.

MAN'S SHAVER

$1777

REG.
$19.96

·
TUCK TAPE
17c..

....

e

Dependable alarm clock •
Compact size • Easy to read
diale Antique White.

$277

• II po1ition switch e
10 1peed1, e Twin
powerful chrome beaten eughtweight for
portable m i ~~: i ng e
Fingert ip c:o ntrol •
Au tomotic beater re -

lease.
·.Q··

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

MEN'S TRI-FOLD WALLET

eREG. 33'- W' X 1000 IN.

MOTOR OIL

BOWL BRUSH
eREG. 59'

PICTURES

;;·.,~

.ASSORTED COLORS

JEWEUT IJII'T.

TEFLON FRY PAN
HECK'S REG.
$J.8.88

••

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Pl Pleasant Slm On~

Not Exactly as Illustrated ·

SHEAFFER CARTRIDGE PEN

USE YOUR HECK'S
CHARGE-A-CARD
I

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\

currency compartment.
HICK'S
RIG,
$4,99

NO,

DEi'T.

New money carrier and credit card case .
Each wallet ha• 3 card pockeh, 18 credit card
picture windows, ond a Hparote, full sized

TOIUT

HICK'S lEG,
$24.11

REGAL

JIWll/IY DEPT.

oMIH

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.

~.

$2277

JEWll/IY DEPT.

G.E. ALARM CLOCK

e6 COUNT PKG.

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JEWEl/IY DEPT.

SOFA PILLOWS

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HICK'S REG.
$3,19

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SUNBEAM
PASIIACI SHA.VU-a.-

HECK'S

~;:;,3~
LIGHT FIXTURE

1-El/IY DEPT.

• Oval power spray • 39 Steam vents • Magnified
water window e White handle e G.E. double nonstick coated plate.

DOt

NOW FOR

CIIUNG

~

HECK'SRIG. $11,96

JUMIO

eiN~LUDES

eREGULAR 29'
e20 W
5 QUARTS

Cordleu . RKhorgM automatically, four
btu~. 1 1 ~170 Wilt AC only. Color1:

blue or sand.

G.E. TEFLON SPRAY-STEAM IRON

GOAL SET

PERCOLATOR

TOOTHBRUSH

HECK'S REG. $9.96

JEWELRY DEPT.

BASKETBALL &amp;

5 CUPIUCIIIC

*

. ;: Fridays.

HECK'S REG •
$21.96

NEW "INSTA-CLEAN" CAN
O PENER . Brand -ne w de iig n
tho! lets you remove entire cut·
ting ossel'l"'bl r for easy clean·
ing. Powerful magnetic lid Iii ·
te r. ln white.

-~.

-·COVERALLS

eREG. '2"
eCHOICE
OF COLORS

•:

;and 5 to I as usual on

66

.

ELECTRICAL TAPE
OR

ttl;;

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU
SATURDAY, OCT.
.
. 2nd

WHILE QUANTITI

eSCHEW IN TYPE

11: other Banking Hours 91o 3

G.E. PERCOLATOR

""''"'". . .,--;;:..;."'::..:r:ze

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MUNSEY OVEN BAKER

IIECK'S REG.
$12.96

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HAS FOUR DIFFEREU LIGHT SETTINGS.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

Middleport

991-2635

-wM-d ;_,._

CAN OPENER

eFILIGREE DESIGN

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Ingels Furniture

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Pl Pleasant
Store On~

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CLAIROL
MAKE-UP
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Heck's Reg. '11.96

HAMILTON lEACH

-Samuel Johnson

:
Fridays Only
*The Drive-In Window
is Open
Jt- 9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

JEWEl/IY
DEPT.

. . ' ·

G.E. PERCOLATOR

L--------------------1

;:

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COOKER
FRYER

OPEN 9:5 MON, THRU THURS. - N FRIDAY - 9:t SAlUIDAY

**
*11: .
*****
* lfs Quick! Easy

DRIVE-IN
BANKING .

MUNSEY

HECK'S REG.
$22.96

61~•

.

HECK'S REG, '23.96

$1888
\

NOr EXACTLY

AS PICT UI~ ED

• 40 ounce gloss conta ine r • 8
pysh-button switch e cord star·
agee color: white.

Great works are per·
: formed not by strength •
but by perseverance.
:

G. E.
HAIR DRYER

HAMIL TON lEACH

Dont lik e to couk '·'

FOR TODAY

Certified Gas Stations ! an!M~!~~~!}n
PomeniJ, 0,
992-9981
538 W. Main
(We Honor BaniiAmericarcJ and Master C!'ll'll)

favoring it were
Eshenaur, Fields and Stevens.
Harry Siders voted against the
motion while Bill Withers,
brother of Charles Withers,
abstained.
.
Stevens explained that he had
asked for the .motion as a
matter of amending the minutes
•• meeting. It
of the September "'
Was at this time that th.e board
had taken action on a split
decision to pay Supt. Withers a
salary of $15,600 during . the
federal wage.nrice
freeze and
r
then $18,500 annually following
lifting of the freeze on wages.
Siders. stated he was
quest1·0 nmg· the parliamentary
procedure of such action, but
Stevens said the board was just
amending the minutes to make
it easier for the budget and
budgetary transfers.
Supt. Withers at this point
thanked the bciard and said "...
for trusting me ... " lfeel we can
all work together to do the job
that has to be done."

Charles Prunty, 32, Bidwell,
forfeited a $200 bond posted on a
charge of driving while intoxicated when he failed to
appear in the court of Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisheo'
Toesday night.
Fined were Joyce A. Roush, ·
18, Middleport, $5 and costs, ·
reckless operation; Danny W.
Robinson, 19, Clifton, W. Va.,
$JQ and costs, squealing tires;
Franklin Laudermilt, 21,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
squealing tires; John Taylor,
Middleport, $10 and costs,
disturbing the peace, and Harry
L. Moore, 20, Middleport, $10
and costs, intoxication.

SUPPORT ASKED
Laura J. Young, Chester, W.
Va., has filed suit for support
for herself against Alfred E.
Young, Pomeroy Route 3, in
Meigs County Common Pleas Veterans Memorial Hospital
Court under the States
ADMITTED - Jeffrey Bing,
Reciprocal Support Agreement. Pomeroy; Everett Dalley,
Pomeroy;
Edna
Stiles,
Pomeroy; Elsie Barnhart,
Middleport; Robbie Brown,
Pomeroy; Earla Pickens,
Racine ; Ruby Mossman,
Middleport; Franklin Triplett,
Middleport ; Minnie Hall,
Vinton; Mary Paynter, Albany.
DISCHARGED - Vivian
Johnson, Howard Largent, Carl
Alley, Bertha Nichols, William
Reynolds, Jr., Olarles Faulk,
Linda Baer, Jeffrey Bing.

CLEVELAND _IUP!) - With
the help of outgomg Mayor Carl
B. Stokes, attorney James M.
Carney upset the endorsed
partycandidateToeadaytowin.
the democratic mayorality pri•

Permanent
A ccepfa nee
Pro1n0se

·w··thers Salary
· I·s Changed' '

ueensHousewife
May be Deported
NEW YORK (UP!) - A
middle-aged housewife, officially accused ·of being "a cruel,
brutal and sadistic woman"
while allegedly serving as a
guard at two Nazi concentrat,i.on camps, has consented to
Itave her American citizenship
revoked.
. Mrs. Hermine Braunsteiner
Ryan, 52, of Queens, agreed
through her attorney in Brooklyn Federal Court Toesday, to
the revocation of her citizenShip.
:"There is ample evidence to
Support the conclusion that said
Hermine Ryan, during the 1939~ period was a cruel, brutal
and sadistic woman, who unnecessarilY" beat and tortured
defenseless prisoners in her
charge," the government said
in an affidavit.
. 'Mrs. Ryan, the wife of an
~erican construction worker,
' ~tered the United States on
Aprill4, 1959. On Aug. 22, 1968,
: &lt;~~~e government asked for her
denaturalization, saying she lied
: Iii her application for citizenlhip when she allegedly claimed
· she had never been arrrested,
jailed nor received amnesty'
said Robert A. Morse, an
assistant U.S. Attorney.
• Although Mr,s. Ryan did not
admit aoy guilt, the consent
order means she could be
deported. A spokesman for the
U.S. Immigration and Naturalllition Service said an inve~ti,
pti9f1 would be Clllldirted to

humid with a chance of showers
or thundershowers today.
aoudy, cooler !&lt;might, chance
of showers south: Lows in upper
~to lower ~. Sunny and less
humid Thursday. Highs in 70s
· northandupper70stolowerll0s
south.

HICK'SIIG.

IS•

59&lt;

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•
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.·.··.·.·.·.·.···· ........ .

Weather.

Under Stu y m eanng
·
COLUMBUS 1UPI J,-TheOhio
Wela' p.!la!lon Control Board
- • • ' IH to hold a hear...... ledl)' tn 1 proposal to
lltiUIIdMis ol Ollio
.'-- 1!!ill!~~en stre8IJIS
"' · ~~Industry to be
·
'W 51111 ))lint and fish

w1'11161

Wt.
'l1le pcGjiUII&amp;Iwllll put togethtr b)' the tllllllrol board staff in

to cta~plaints by the
r.deral Environmental Pro teeUon Agency about the state's
standards.
:· nadopted, theproposalwould
be the third upgrading of water
quality standards since they
were first adopted In 1966.
Tenets of the plan include requiring streams now classified
as industrial water supply to
meet far more stringent "aq· uatic life" criteria.
It would also establish two
classes of recreational waters :
,Primary contact for swimming
:and water skiing, and secpmlaryoontactforboating,fishing and wading.
.' It would drop low level aquai(c life standards and establish
a.new "cold water fisheries" or
.lroutatream category with very
:high dissolved oxygen stan:~.
l tipOillle

GOP Hurt
, :: (Continued from page I)
·· $irong of Logan.
· The Apportionment Board
·JIIeels Thursday and will app e the Democratic plan.
.•. Democratic members of the
b9&amp;rd are Gov. John J. Gllli.gan, state Treasurer Joseph T.
F,erguson and Senate Minority
Leader Anthony Calabrese.
• The Republican members are
~tary of State Ted Brown,
who says he will submit two
GOP plans, and State Rep.
~bert Manning of Akron.
Request Pointless
.. Brown also said a Democratic
J;tquesl for maps based on the
1970 census was pointless.
•. "They already have the maps
they asked me to provide," said
Brown. "! see no need for me
to get the ·maps for them.
"When I got my maps, which
I used to prepare a Republican
plan, I was told by various
b9&amp;rds of elections that they had
lll!nl ~ps to the governor's office.
"In fact, I saw the boWidary
maps lor Hamilton and Cuyahoga ·coW!tles that were sent to
the governor's office," he said.
"! know they have the necessary map• which give the
boundaries of the wards and
precmcts."
The demand for the maps
was made by John C. McDonald, secretary of the Apportionment Board· and . legislative
aide to Gilligan.
He accused Brown of failing
f'1 provide "accurate maps dePicting political subdivision
boundaries as they existed in
Ohio at the time of the 1970

census."

Ernest C. Neal, a Department
of Health biologist ani! acting
secretary of the control board,
said Ohio divides the use of its
waters into five categories for
water quality purposes - industrialsupply,agricultilralsupjlly,
public supply, recreational waters and waters !or aquatic life.
"The EPA has told us in effeet that all waters In Ohio
must meet standards for use in
at least two of the categories,"
Neal said.

Ruth E. Moore
Died
. rr.uesJ-y
~ '
ua
Mrs. Ruth E. Moore, 91,
Middleport, diOd Toesday afternoon at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant.
Born Nov. 3, 1879 in Hartford,
W. Va., she was preceded in
death by her parents, her
husbar.d, George W. Moore,
four sons, a daughter, three
brothers and three sisters.
Sw·viving are three sons,
George Moore, Jr., Marysville,
Ohio; Donald, of Columbus, and
Willard of Parkersburg, and
several grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. Mrs .
Moore was a member of the
Middleport Church of Cbrist.
Funeral services·will be held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral !lome
with the Rev. Raullln Moyer
officiating. Burial will be In
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from !Oa.m. to noon and from 4
to 9 p.m. Thursday and on
Friday until time of services.
DANCE PLANNED
A teen dance will be held
following the Southern High
football game Friday, from 10
to midnight in the Racine Junior
High School building. Music will
be by "Mother's Speed." Band
Boosters are sponsoring the
event. Admission is 75 cents a
person.
SNAKE DANCE SET
School
Meigs
High
cheerleaders will do a snake
dance Thursday evening,
forming at 7:30 pm. on the
lower parking lot and moving to
the Pomeroy Junior High
School where a pep rally will be
held beside a bon fire.
SQUARE DANCE SET
A square dance will be staged
from 8:~ pm. to micin¥'t
Saturday m the Toppers Plains
Grade School under the sponsorship of the Toppers Plains
Community Oub. Music will be
by the Mike Gorrel Band and
the caller will be Jim Carnahan.
TAG DAY SET
RACINE - Tag Day will be
held in the Racine area
Saturday by the Southern High
School Ban&lt;l. The band will open
the activity with a short concert
beside the post office at 9 a.m.

.
John Paul Jonf$,.22, Vinton, is dition at the CabeU-Huntington
in serious condition today at the · Hospital was Jerald Campbell,
Holzer Medical Center where he 34, Gallipolis, with severe head
was admitted following a single injuries. A passenger in his car,
car accident at 10:re p.m. :IS-year old John Flint of
Tuesday on Rt. 35, one and nine GaUipolis, is in good condition
tenths miles west of Rio at the Holzer Medical Center.
Grande.
Flint also sustained head inAccording .to the Gallipolis juries.
Post State Highway ' Patrol,
Jones was a passenger in a car
According to invesiigating
operated by Roger D. Meade, officers, Campbell, . traveling
23, Vinton.who lost control after south, attempted to pass an auto
passing a ml)torcyele. liis auto operated by Charlotte Rankin,
struck a gu8rdrail, then rolled 24, Gallipolis. Campbell's car
over four times, Jones and hit the Rankin auto in the rear
Meade being thrown out.
and then slammed into a semiJones sustained severe . outfit operated by Kenneth
lacerations to the head, a Gothson, 29, Rt. 2, lro~ton.
crushed chest and fractured
The impact knocked the rear
arm, the latter injury when he wheels off the semi which was
was struck by a·car as he lay in loaded with steel. The highway
the highway driven by John .L. was blocked four to five hours
Helm, 23, Rio Grande.
while officials awaited a
Meade suffered lacerations wrecker toremov~ the semi and
and bruises over most of his .car from the highway. The
body. He was charged wjth incident is still under inreckless operation. There was vestigation.
heavydamagetohiscar.
A third mishap occurred at
Two
persons
were 4:45p.m. on Rt. 7, eight tenths
hospitalized following a car- of a tn!le sou~ of Rt. 554 w:here
truck collision at 1:10 a.m. a vehicle driven by Ercil L.
today on Rt. 7, one half mile Sleeth, Mason•.W. Va., flipped a
from the exit to the Silver stone into the windshield of a
Memorial Bridge.· '
car operated by Rita B.
Listed in satisfactory con- Buckley, 47, Rt. 2, Cheshire.

•

decide whether her deportation
would be sought.
The government's complaint
alleged Mrs. Ryan in 1939
became a guard at the
Ravensbruck
concentration
camp, one of six major camps
in Nazi Gennany at the time.
In 1942, the government alleged, she was transferred to
the Maidanek camp in Poland
where 1.5 million persons died,
according to Nurnberg trials
testimony. She returned to
Ravensbruck two years later,
the government said .
In 1945, Mrs. Ryan was
section supervisor of Ravensbrock when the Allies liberated it, the government said. The
British arrested her and the

President Anthony J. Garofoli,
the. endorsed capdidate, and
6,149 for former Pollee Olief
Patrick L. Gerity. ·
The Republicans .nominated
Cuyahoga County Auditor Ralph
W&gt;:&lt;-:'il-~.._,,:-;:,.-"·"'········-w..,-.·.·,·.w mary.
.1. Perk whQ had 12,156 vo~ to
• · w m .•.,wm ...w .w .• Carney's victory almost as- state Rep. George V. 'Vomosures that a Stokes-backed vich's 6,014. Perk lost to Stokes
GRANDSON HU.RT
· candidate will win the Nov. 2 by only 3,500 votes in 1969.
The Middleport E-R squad general election.
Stokes, the first black mayor
answered a call at 11:37 p.m. Carney, one of the city's most of a major American city,
Toesday to the Jerry Ward prominent businessmen, polled announced earlier this year he
residence on Beech St. where an unofficial total of 74,031 would not seek a third twothe Wards ' three-year old votes to 60,141 for City Council year term. He has not revealed
g~:andson, Mark Ferrell, had
. . his future political plans.
suffered a head laceration in a
"Deceat MaD"
fall. He was taken to Veterans
Stokes had feuded bitterly
Memorial Hospital, treated,
·
·
witll Garofoll during his terms
and released.
·
and had asked th~ 'city's black
voters, who make up 35 per
cent . of the electorate, to
DANCE FRIDAY
·support Carney, whom Stokes
The Rutland Volunteer Fire T
dcalled a "decent man."
Dept. .will_ ~~nsor a square ..IS
~e blacks ~ded by
dance · begmnmg at 8:30 p.m.
Y
voting oyerwhelmingiY for CarFriday in the Rutland gymWASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep:· ney.
nasium. Music wiD be by the William M. McCulloch, R.Qhio, By supporting Carney, stokes
Hilltoppers. Proceeds will go not satisfied by the three-year played two hands at once to
toward purchase of a new fire reprieve given the Delta Queen insure that either a black or a
truck.
last year, is now working to ~didate sympathetic to black
gain the last . overnight stern- mterests would be . elected
Marriage UceDBe
wheeler permanent acceptance. mayor .
Roy Alien Roush, 21, Mason,
The vessel has been the sub- carney is Stokes' second
and Jennie Lou Bowers, 20, ject of bitter congressional con- choice for mayor in the general
Pomeroy.
troversylnrecentyearsbecause election. His first choi~ is
it does not meet strict federal black School Board PreSident

PT. PLEASANT- Acontract asked that Supt. Withers leave Those
for Mason County's new
superintendent of schools was
changed regarding his salary,
Michael Whalen was appointed
Director
of
Secondary
Education, Walter Copley will
be assistant principal at Point
Pleasant High School and

the room briefly and It was
during this time that Stevens
asked the bOard to amend
Withers' contract "at least until
July I," observing "this will
eliminate a few budgetary
transfers."

Josephine Lyons is Sunnyside
School's new principal, in ac· k b th Board f
o
tlons ~ en
·
t
u1e
tin
Education a ~reg ar mee g
Toesday evenmg.
·
An 1ssue
concern 1ng th e
ousted superinten dent, [ .
Brooks Smith, came up . as a
controversial one at the same
session.
Board pres1'dent Ted Stevens

In turn Charles Eshenailr
made a motion that Charles
Withers be employed as
,Superintendent of Mason
County Schools from September
27 this year to July 1, 1972 at an
annual salary of $15,600payable
in monthly payments . Ray
Fields gave the second for the
motion and in voting it was
passed with a splot vote of 3-1.

r.

$200 Bond Taken

FINED $100
Rodney R. Sayre, Evansville,
Ind., was fined $100 and costs
and sentenced to three days in
jail when he appeared before
Pomeroy Mayor Olarles Legar
Toesday night on charges of
driving while intoxicated.
CLUB TO MEET
The Handicraft Club will
meet from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Bookmobile HQ
on East Main St. Pine eone
wreaths will be made
Everyone
interested
i~
welcome.

Austrian government ch!ltged
her with torturing inmates, said
the government brief. Morse
said she was convicted and
sentenced to three years in
prison.
Mrs. Ryan, however, was
credited with time served, fined
court costs, had her personal
property confiscated and in 1957
received legislative amnesty
from the Austrians, said Morse.
That year, he said, she married
a construction worker.
Morse said the consent order
culminated an investigation
which began in 1964, when a
private investigator of Nazi war
crimes idenlified Mrs. Ryan as
a former member of the Nazi
SS Elite Guard.

PRICE CONTROLS
We HM Always Had Price Conbols To SM You
Money. On Certified XE-110

SAVE UP
TO '1.00 ATANKFUL
You

Under Major Companies

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at II a.m. Wednesday
was 73 degrees, under sunny
skies.

**I\********
U ***
* A T.BOUGHT
~

·

Arnol~ R. Pinkney, who is
running as an independent.
Either Carney or Pinkney
should win ·because Democrats
outnumber ~publicans by almostseven-I&lt;H&gt;neandtheblack
voters have sh, own. . they will
supportStokes deciSIOn.
Supported Wltb Risk
"I think it was.a great night

fire laws, but the Congres)l
granted a new exemption until
Nov. 1, 1973, to give its o~ers
time to decide what to do.
McCulloch, who was a key
figure in the battle during the
gJst Congress on behalf of the
riverboat, asked Tuesday that
early hearings be held on the
feasibility of applying NASA
technological developments to
the vessel's wooden super~tructure to determine their effect In
· combusti'bill'ty.
r educmg
"I · ·
th this
·• t 15 unportant at · · ret f th H
t be ·
ques 0 e ouse no
lgnored," McCulloch said. "It is im-

for Cleveland with his victory,"
Stokes said. " In leaving as
mayor, I wanted to try to say
what was best for this town and
I did it at risli to (Pinkney)
who I ultimately feel Is best lor
the city."
•
Carney said he conducted his
.primary campaign on a pledge
to unify the city and ."I expect
and I will conduct the fall campaign on 'the basis of unity."
"Cleveland has been and can
be a great city," Carney said.
"It is,my purpose and my dedication to bring together all People regardless of race or nationality or what part of town they
live in. 11
The electorate also approved
two amendments to the city
charter, one of which makes the
primary non-partisan with the
two top vote-getters vying in a
general election.
The second amendment will
save ·the city an estimated $20,'ooo annually by removing a requirement that' copies of all
charter amendments be mailed
to every registered voter.

GATHER THESE

~

Pleasut Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Bartroe
Long, Apple Grove; Carroll
Casto, Point Pleasant; Larry
Whittington, Arbuckle; Harry
Goodrich, Point Pleasant.; Mrs.
Robert Hager, New Haven;
Mrs . James Farley, Point
Pleasant, and William E. Hunt,
Jr., New Haven.
NEW CITIZEN: Sept. 28, a
daughter to 'Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Kinney, Point Pleasant.

portant
Am
· that hthe millions oft
er1cans w o we represen .
d h
ed
th
an w o are concern over e
fat f th' h' to · link to
e o IS IS nc
our
·
past be g1ven,
at th every 1eas,t
h · · Co
"
a Feanng
· m ngress.
ths f th
or nme mon o e year,
the Delta Queen churns the
Mississippi, Ohio ~d ~enn~
Riv.ers. Its home c1ty IS Cincin' nail.
.
McCulloch sa1d the owners of
the Qu"':n completed $5DO,OOO of
restoration and safety unprovements last winter.

BLENDER

Make the greatest
cooking discovery
since fire.
~/ --:&gt;ada z a n1c ,

~-.-

~,:. .

• CiYe• 2·8 five-Qvnce cups of delicious coffee • Ha ndy
brew Lelector to odiust strength of c:offee • Eosy·to· reod
morkingt under ha ndle tells how n'vth wate r to odd.

JEWEL/It
DEPT.

129 MILL STREET
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MASKING TAPE

SKILLETS

YOUR a!OICE

==~133
1 5tr , 1 11r
10 s;r lllllfll

SET

LAST

: FARMERS.BANK

:
•

*

MemberFDIC
Member F~ .S
.. J I
Reserve System
,

••********

JEWEl/IY
DEPT.

$1588
IIICK'S
REG,
$11.96

JEWEL•r
IJEPT.

Heck'S Reg.
Sl696

SUNBEAM
ELECTRIC

eSIZES 36-42
eFISHIER · STRIPE

MAONmC

PHOTO ALBUM

TMIC

CORD
U. L APPROVED

$2 22

.\HEIIRINGBONE

JUST SAY

USE YOUR HECK'S

CHARGE IT!

CIIRJST/IIAS

CHARGE-A-CARD
JEWElRY DEPT.

MAN'S SHAVER

$1777

REG.
$19.96

·
TUCK TAPE
17c..

....

e

Dependable alarm clock •
Compact size • Easy to read
diale Antique White.

$277

• II po1ition switch e
10 1peed1, e Twin
powerful chrome beaten eughtweight for
portable m i ~~: i ng e
Fingert ip c:o ntrol •
Au tomotic beater re -

lease.
·.Q··

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

MEN'S TRI-FOLD WALLET

eREG. 33'- W' X 1000 IN.

MOTOR OIL

BOWL BRUSH
eREG. 59'

PICTURES

;;·.,~

.ASSORTED COLORS

JEWEUT IJII'T.

TEFLON FRY PAN
HECK'S REG.
$J.8.88

••

'1

II

Pl Pleasant Slm On~

Not Exactly as Illustrated ·

SHEAFFER CARTRIDGE PEN

USE YOUR HECK'S
CHARGE-A-CARD
I

7814

\

currency compartment.
HICK'S
RIG,
$4,99

NO,

DEi'T.

New money carrier and credit card case .
Each wallet ha• 3 card pockeh, 18 credit card
picture windows, ond a Hparote, full sized

TOIUT

HICK'S lEG,
$24.11

REGAL

JIWll/IY DEPT.

oMIH

olflltllE

.

~.

$2277

JEWll/IY DEPT.

G.E. ALARM CLOCK

e6 COUNT PKG.

.a.o,_~

__.. tw hnt . . . ,_ l""' ..... tiM pick "'
~ ,_. """ ....... ..u. ~- ,.m.i- """'"
~ ..... Wode aol .............. ...t.iolo.om.
,....,... .... 'WI ~ llto4 . . . . "" ......

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

SOFA PILLOWS

~......

..,..,...._..,....._.._. heed~ot o •

HICK'S REG.
$3,19

,.00

SUNBEAM
PASIIACI SHA.VU-a.-

HECK'S

~;:;,3~
LIGHT FIXTURE

1-El/IY DEPT.

• Oval power spray • 39 Steam vents • Magnified
water window e White handle e G.E. double nonstick coated plate.

DOt

NOW FOR

CIIUNG

~

HECK'SRIG. $11,96

JUMIO

eiN~LUDES

eREGULAR 29'
e20 W
5 QUARTS

Cordleu . RKhorgM automatically, four
btu~. 1 1 ~170 Wilt AC only. Color1:

blue or sand.

G.E. TEFLON SPRAY-STEAM IRON

GOAL SET

PERCOLATOR

TOOTHBRUSH

HECK'S REG. $9.96

JEWELRY DEPT.

BASKETBALL &amp;

5 CUPIUCIIIC

*

. ;: Fridays.

HECK'S REG •
$21.96

NEW "INSTA-CLEAN" CAN
O PENER . Brand -ne w de iig n
tho! lets you remove entire cut·
ting ossel'l"'bl r for easy clean·
ing. Powerful magnetic lid Iii ·
te r. ln white.

-~.

-·COVERALLS

eREG. '2"
eCHOICE
OF COLORS

•:

;and 5 to I as usual on

66

.

ELECTRICAL TAPE
OR

ttl;;

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU
SATURDAY, OCT.
.
. 2nd

WHILE QUANTITI

eSCHEW IN TYPE

11: other Banking Hours 91o 3

G.E. PERCOLATOR

""''"'". . .,--;;:..;."'::..:r:ze

···"••••••un

~·.':;,

~~

'

MUNSEY OVEN BAKER

IIECK'S REG.
$12.96

~,

,,

HAS FOUR DIFFEREU LIGHT SETTINGS.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

Middleport

991-2635

-wM-d ;_,._

CAN OPENER

eFILIGREE DESIGN

*.

'

Ingels Furniture

•

~lor ond

.

/ -

Pl Pleasant
Store On~

If! hit• pid lht lighl lhot', joo•l right ta - ...,.. .,,
'"'""" - '-' . ft.oluffl Ovol Swiowl Mirron fho1 lih 111:1

.,..,. an11'- few both

[P~ •

. HD 51
.·R

CF 65

;-~ ~J :" . ."... Ama11a

·~i

.

;l

CLAIROL
MAKE-UP
MIRROR

Heck's Reg. '11.96

HAMILTON lEACH

-Samuel Johnson

:
Fridays Only
*The Drive-In Window
is Open
Jt- 9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

JEWEl/IY
DEPT.

. . ' ·

G.E. PERCOLATOR

L--------------------1

;:

i

COOKER
FRYER

OPEN 9:5 MON, THRU THURS. - N FRIDAY - 9:t SAlUIDAY

**
*11: .
*****
* lfs Quick! Easy

DRIVE-IN
BANKING .

MUNSEY

HECK'S REG.
$22.96

61~•

.

HECK'S REG, '23.96

$1888
\

NOr EXACTLY

AS PICT UI~ ED

• 40 ounce gloss conta ine r • 8
pysh-button switch e cord star·
agee color: white.

Great works are per·
: formed not by strength •
but by perseverance.
:

G. E.
HAIR DRYER

HAMIL TON lEACH

Dont lik e to couk '·'

FOR TODAY

Certified Gas Stations ! an!M~!~~~!}n
PomeniJ, 0,
992-9981
538 W. Main
(We Honor BaniiAmericarcJ and Master C!'ll'll)

favoring it were
Eshenaur, Fields and Stevens.
Harry Siders voted against the
motion while Bill Withers,
brother of Charles Withers,
abstained.
.
Stevens explained that he had
asked for the .motion as a
matter of amending the minutes
•• meeting. It
of the September "'
Was at this time that th.e board
had taken action on a split
decision to pay Supt. Withers a
salary of $15,600 during . the
federal wage.nrice
freeze and
r
then $18,500 annually following
lifting of the freeze on wages.
Siders. stated he was
quest1·0 nmg· the parliamentary
procedure of such action, but
Stevens said the board was just
amending the minutes to make
it easier for the budget and
budgetary transfers.
Supt. Withers at this point
thanked the bciard and said "...
for trusting me ... " lfeel we can
all work together to do the job
that has to be done."

Charles Prunty, 32, Bidwell,
forfeited a $200 bond posted on a
charge of driving while intoxicated when he failed to
appear in the court of Middleport Mayor C. 0. Fisheo'
Toesday night.
Fined were Joyce A. Roush, ·
18, Middleport, $5 and costs, ·
reckless operation; Danny W.
Robinson, 19, Clifton, W. Va.,
$JQ and costs, squealing tires;
Franklin Laudermilt, 21,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
squealing tires; John Taylor,
Middleport, $10 and costs,
disturbing the peace, and Harry
L. Moore, 20, Middleport, $10
and costs, intoxication.

SUPPORT ASKED
Laura J. Young, Chester, W.
Va., has filed suit for support
for herself against Alfred E.
Young, Pomeroy Route 3, in
Meigs County Common Pleas Veterans Memorial Hospital
Court under the States
ADMITTED - Jeffrey Bing,
Reciprocal Support Agreement. Pomeroy; Everett Dalley,
Pomeroy;
Edna
Stiles,
Pomeroy; Elsie Barnhart,
Middleport; Robbie Brown,
Pomeroy; Earla Pickens,
Racine ; Ruby Mossman,
Middleport; Franklin Triplett,
Middleport ; Minnie Hall,
Vinton; Mary Paynter, Albany.
DISCHARGED - Vivian
Johnson, Howard Largent, Carl
Alley, Bertha Nichols, William
Reynolds, Jr., Olarles Faulk,
Linda Baer, Jeffrey Bing.

CLEVELAND _IUP!) - With
the help of outgomg Mayor Carl
B. Stokes, attorney James M.
Carney upset the endorsed
partycandidateToeadaytowin.
the democratic mayorality pri•

Permanent
A ccepfa nee
Pro1n0se

·w··thers Salary
· I·s Changed' '

ueensHousewife
May be Deported
NEW YORK (UP!) - A
middle-aged housewife, officially accused ·of being "a cruel,
brutal and sadistic woman"
while allegedly serving as a
guard at two Nazi concentrat,i.on camps, has consented to
Itave her American citizenship
revoked.
. Mrs. Hermine Braunsteiner
Ryan, 52, of Queens, agreed
through her attorney in Brooklyn Federal Court Toesday, to
the revocation of her citizenShip.
:"There is ample evidence to
Support the conclusion that said
Hermine Ryan, during the 1939~ period was a cruel, brutal
and sadistic woman, who unnecessarilY" beat and tortured
defenseless prisoners in her
charge," the government said
in an affidavit.
. 'Mrs. Ryan, the wife of an
~erican construction worker,
' ~tered the United States on
Aprill4, 1959. On Aug. 22, 1968,
: &lt;~~~e government asked for her
denaturalization, saying she lied
: Iii her application for citizenlhip when she allegedly claimed
· she had never been arrrested,
jailed nor received amnesty'
said Robert A. Morse, an
assistant U.S. Attorney.
• Although Mr,s. Ryan did not
admit aoy guilt, the consent
order means she could be
deported. A spokesman for the
U.S. Immigration and Naturalllition Service said an inve~ti,
pti9f1 would be Clllldirted to

humid with a chance of showers
or thundershowers today.
aoudy, cooler !&lt;might, chance
of showers south: Lows in upper
~to lower ~. Sunny and less
humid Thursday. Highs in 70s
· northandupper70stolowerll0s
south.

HICK'SIIG.

IS•

59&lt;

�.. ,

'''

.......,

OPIIIIlllY

OliEID~I.Y

QUANTITIES LAST
..

,

OHIDAIL

10 TO 9

10T09'

10TO'

10 TO 9

SUNDAY OCT.

.

'

.

ONLYW

•
USE YOUR
· .HECK'S

DRINKING

CHARGE·A·CARO
12\1 OL

J&amp;J

BABY

HEAD

&amp;SHOULDERS

SHAMPOO
4.3 OZ. TUBE

SHAMPOO

REG.
$1.38

CDSIIITIC
/JilT.

It's amazing! Set it up ond
watch it work!

J&amp;J
BABY
. LOTION 9

.RIDEM

··~ ~~
.•
79'
HECK'S

HECK'S .
REG.
. $1.58

~

baey

lotion

Store Oply :

a oz. ·

EXCEDRIN
100'• .

94(

J&amp;J

BABY SOAP

HECK'S REG.
$1.36

CDSMR/C
IJIJIT.

1~
HECK'S REG.
25 1

l ggc·
-~
__
..
·-@

Double Bed
Single Control--

.

~-

LADIES'

't• · - '

OlE-SIZE
MIIACLE STIETCH

HOSE
stretch. One·size fits
1

IT."

LUSTROWARE
PLASTIC

24 GAL.
TRASH CAN

7 oz.

LADIES'

CANDY

DIAL

NYLON PANTS

'$.1 188

SPRAY DEODORANT

$ 99

67 Pair
1

ClOTHING
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. $5.66

HECK'S REG.

ClOTNI*' /JIPT.

$1.12

1.28

LUSTRO WARE ·PLASTIC

52c

DISH DRAINER
$111
HECK'S REG.

$1.60

NOUSIWAII .

$199
LUSTRO WARE PLASTIC

WOOD

HECK'S
REG.

POUNDING BOARD

$2.,99

79(
HECK'S REG .
$1.18

HECK'S
REG.
$1.20

TDYIJEPT.

/IOUSEWAIE DEPT.

COSMETIC IJIIIT.

BOYS' WOOL
PLAID

GIRLS.
TURTLENECK
- -- TOPS ·
.

CPO SHIRT
Bright bold plaid wool
shirts for boys. Just
the thing for the up·
coming fall cold.
Sizes: 5-M- L.

Cotton knit turtleneck
tops. Assorted colors.
~lzes: 7·14.

HAT&amp;COAT

FEDERAL GLASS

9¥2 OUNCE COFFEE MUGS

RACK

FEDERAL GLASS

10-PIECE BEVERAGE SET
LUSTRO WARE PLASTIC

$133

HECK'S
REG.

..

EFFERDENT
TABS
60's

HECK'S REG.

.·-

Woshoble coHon flannel shirts '
for men. Assorted colors. San· 1
forized, Sizes:. S-M-L·Xl.
·

$3.99

HECK'S
REG.

ClDTHI*'IJEPT.

$1.29

92c .

CDSMIT/C IIIPT.

I

IOYS'

I·

COnON FLANNEL

II
I
I

''
'

CPO SHIRTS

.

SPORT SHIRTS
Same os above.
Sizes: 6-16.

$144
·
Hl~~a\IG.

Warm and rugged ...
a great combination. Heavy wool
CPO style Shirts for
men. Sizes: S·M·L-XL

FLARE LEG

HECK'S REG. $1.88

HECK'S REG.
$1.18

HDUSEWAIE DEPT.•

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

WOOD

FORK&amp;SPOON

Denim jeans with trim an pock·
ets and legs. Colors: Berry
'
Brown and Rust. Size: 7 to 14.

.

$ 22

ClOTHIIIG DEPT.

CLDTIII*' IJHT.

GIRLS'.

JEANS

MEN'S WOOL PLAID

l·

HECK'S REG • .

$ 44

36" LONG

$744

JEANETTE

OVENWARE
SET
HECK'S REG. $3.99

$ 99

HECK'S REG. TO

$6.99

. $9.99

ClOTHIIIG DEPT.

IIHSIWAII.IJIJIT.

79•
HDUSIWAIE
DEPT.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

LAUNDRY BASm
$112
HECK'S
REG.
$1.60

· NOUSEWAIE IJIIIT.

WINDOW

·SHADES
· • 371,4 "x6'

SHOWER CURTAIN ·
WITH HOOKS

eWHITE ONLY

BOUNTY TEFLON

• Sol!, pliable plastic drapes
IIi Wipe clean with damp cloth

OINCHFRYP

•

Colorsl Avocado, Gold, Pappy
and Blue.

$2'6

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S RIG. $3.49

$4.99

NOUSIWAIEIJEPT.

sr•

NDI/SIWAII IJIJIT.

\

j

· DRAIN TRAY

e

• Natural woad finish Multi-co lored pegs • ln cludu
mallet

TOY
DEPT.

sse

$4~4

HECK'S
REG.

REFILLS

DEPT.

PITCHER

es: 8·18. Colors: Black, Navy, Red and
Green.

NDUSEWAIE
DEPT. .

Ckoose from 6 styles, Fred Fireman Nan Nurse
Mel Mailman, Sue Stewardess, Tina 'Teocher and
Pete Policema n.

FEDERAL GLASS
85 OUNCE

taman rib materials with stitch crease. Siz·

$6.40

14'f2'LRAG DOLLS

Pl Pleasant Store On~

Flare leg Nylon pants for women with a
pull-on waist. Chao.. from Vertical or Ot·

HECK'S REG.

TOY
DEPT.

16.99

2PAIR

REDUCING PLAN

$444

BUBBLE
GUM
BANK
$100
100COUNT

1

CHOICE
HECK'S
REG.
$2.79

IT!"

HECK'S
REG.
$8.88

HECK~S
REG.

all. Colors, Pacific,
Cinnamon, Brawn 0nd
Off Black.

e CHOCOLATE OR
VANILLA

"CHARGE

SOME OVER 6 FEET TALL .

A great buy! Miracle

.AYDS

"CHARGE

ARTIFICIAL
POnED
PLANTS

NYLON

JUST
SAY

TOY DEPT.

NDUSEWAIE DEPT.

DEPT.

..

JUST
SAY

ss33

ClDTHI*' IJIPr.'

Store Only

$1.58

Seat i1 built to hold baby in place with
comfort. Has tough, ye.t wft colorful
plo1lic coated fabric on seat , . . For
quiet pe ri od~ o~ play , this wa lkeriumptr has a chrome pla ted snap-in
ploy tray.

HECK'S REG.
$3.88

Pt. Pleasant

TDY
DEPT.

WALKA-JUMPER

$

Double Bed
Dual Control-

wella.

HECK'S"""'•,N

TDYIJEPT.

32-38.

Twin Bed
.
Single Controi -'--

HAIR
.CONDITIONER

88(

. SHIRTS

A large selection of styles
and collars. Chaase from
· prints and stripes. Sizes:

HECK'S REG.
88c

. Clothes by Mattei
for Barbie and P.J.
Dolls .
Assorted HECK'S

$2.99

LONG SLEEVE

•988
'1 o••
•1488

WELLA BALSAM

AND P.J. CLOTHES

LADIES'

Heck's own brand electric
blankets made by Beacon
manufacturing company. Two.year warranty backed by
Heck's. Colors: Avocado, Gold,
Blue and Pink. Nylon binding . ·
Made of polyester, cotton and
rayon blend.

Pt Pleasant

BARBIE

All new "rider" of ntro
hta¥)' walled polY plastic
In bright red. 21" long,
and 11" hlgh, no slip hand
grips, steel axles and
molded rolling wheels.

HECK'S ELECTRIC
BLANKETS.

HECK'S
REG.
'1.08

......

Pl. Pleasant
Store Only .

BIRD

HECK'S REG.

$1.29
I

NAIIJWAIE
/JIPT.

..

�.. ,

'''

.......,

OPIIIIlllY

OliEID~I.Y

QUANTITIES LAST
..

,

OHIDAIL

10 TO 9

10T09'

10TO'

10 TO 9

SUNDAY OCT.

.

'

.

ONLYW

•
USE YOUR
· .HECK'S

DRINKING

CHARGE·A·CARO
12\1 OL

J&amp;J

BABY

HEAD

&amp;SHOULDERS

SHAMPOO
4.3 OZ. TUBE

SHAMPOO

REG.
$1.38

CDSIIITIC
/JilT.

It's amazing! Set it up ond
watch it work!

J&amp;J
BABY
. LOTION 9

.RIDEM

··~ ~~
.•
79'
HECK'S

HECK'S .
REG.
. $1.58

~

baey

lotion

Store Oply :

a oz. ·

EXCEDRIN
100'• .

94(

J&amp;J

BABY SOAP

HECK'S REG.
$1.36

CDSMR/C
IJIJIT.

1~
HECK'S REG.
25 1

l ggc·
-~
__
..
·-@

Double Bed
Single Control--

.

~-

LADIES'

't• · - '

OlE-SIZE
MIIACLE STIETCH

HOSE
stretch. One·size fits
1

IT."

LUSTROWARE
PLASTIC

24 GAL.
TRASH CAN

7 oz.

LADIES'

CANDY

DIAL

NYLON PANTS

'$.1 188

SPRAY DEODORANT

$ 99

67 Pair
1

ClOTHING
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. $5.66

HECK'S REG.

ClOTNI*' /JIPT.

$1.12

1.28

LUSTRO WARE ·PLASTIC

52c

DISH DRAINER
$111
HECK'S REG.

$1.60

NOUSIWAII .

$199
LUSTRO WARE PLASTIC

WOOD

HECK'S
REG.

POUNDING BOARD

$2.,99

79(
HECK'S REG .
$1.18

HECK'S
REG.
$1.20

TDYIJEPT.

/IOUSEWAIE DEPT.

COSMETIC IJIIIT.

BOYS' WOOL
PLAID

GIRLS.
TURTLENECK
- -- TOPS ·
.

CPO SHIRT
Bright bold plaid wool
shirts for boys. Just
the thing for the up·
coming fall cold.
Sizes: 5-M- L.

Cotton knit turtleneck
tops. Assorted colors.
~lzes: 7·14.

HAT&amp;COAT

FEDERAL GLASS

9¥2 OUNCE COFFEE MUGS

RACK

FEDERAL GLASS

10-PIECE BEVERAGE SET
LUSTRO WARE PLASTIC

$133

HECK'S
REG.

..

EFFERDENT
TABS
60's

HECK'S REG.

.·-

Woshoble coHon flannel shirts '
for men. Assorted colors. San· 1
forized, Sizes:. S-M-L·Xl.
·

$3.99

HECK'S
REG.

ClDTHI*'IJEPT.

$1.29

92c .

CDSMIT/C IIIPT.

I

IOYS'

I·

COnON FLANNEL

II
I
I

''
'

CPO SHIRTS

.

SPORT SHIRTS
Same os above.
Sizes: 6-16.

$144
·
Hl~~a\IG.

Warm and rugged ...
a great combination. Heavy wool
CPO style Shirts for
men. Sizes: S·M·L-XL

FLARE LEG

HECK'S REG. $1.88

HECK'S REG.
$1.18

HDUSEWAIE DEPT.•

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

WOOD

FORK&amp;SPOON

Denim jeans with trim an pock·
ets and legs. Colors: Berry
'
Brown and Rust. Size: 7 to 14.

.

$ 22

ClOTHIIIG DEPT.

CLDTIII*' IJHT.

GIRLS'.

JEANS

MEN'S WOOL PLAID

l·

HECK'S REG • .

$ 44

36" LONG

$744

JEANETTE

OVENWARE
SET
HECK'S REG. $3.99

$ 99

HECK'S REG. TO

$6.99

. $9.99

ClOTHIIIG DEPT.

IIHSIWAII.IJIJIT.

79•
HDUSIWAIE
DEPT.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

LAUNDRY BASm
$112
HECK'S
REG.
$1.60

· NOUSEWAIE IJIIIT.

WINDOW

·SHADES
· • 371,4 "x6'

SHOWER CURTAIN ·
WITH HOOKS

eWHITE ONLY

BOUNTY TEFLON

• Sol!, pliable plastic drapes
IIi Wipe clean with damp cloth

OINCHFRYP

•

Colorsl Avocado, Gold, Pappy
and Blue.

$2'6

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S RIG. $3.49

$4.99

NOUSIWAIEIJEPT.

sr•

NDI/SIWAII IJIJIT.

\

j

· DRAIN TRAY

e

• Natural woad finish Multi-co lored pegs • ln cludu
mallet

TOY
DEPT.

sse

$4~4

HECK'S
REG.

REFILLS

DEPT.

PITCHER

es: 8·18. Colors: Black, Navy, Red and
Green.

NDUSEWAIE
DEPT. .

Ckoose from 6 styles, Fred Fireman Nan Nurse
Mel Mailman, Sue Stewardess, Tina 'Teocher and
Pete Policema n.

FEDERAL GLASS
85 OUNCE

taman rib materials with stitch crease. Siz·

$6.40

14'f2'LRAG DOLLS

Pl Pleasant Store On~

Flare leg Nylon pants for women with a
pull-on waist. Chao.. from Vertical or Ot·

HECK'S REG.

TOY
DEPT.

16.99

2PAIR

REDUCING PLAN

$444

BUBBLE
GUM
BANK
$100
100COUNT

1

CHOICE
HECK'S
REG.
$2.79

IT!"

HECK'S
REG.
$8.88

HECK~S
REG.

all. Colors, Pacific,
Cinnamon, Brawn 0nd
Off Black.

e CHOCOLATE OR
VANILLA

"CHARGE

SOME OVER 6 FEET TALL .

A great buy! Miracle

.AYDS

"CHARGE

ARTIFICIAL
POnED
PLANTS

NYLON

JUST
SAY

TOY DEPT.

NDUSEWAIE DEPT.

DEPT.

..

JUST
SAY

ss33

ClDTHI*' IJIPr.'

Store Only

$1.58

Seat i1 built to hold baby in place with
comfort. Has tough, ye.t wft colorful
plo1lic coated fabric on seat , . . For
quiet pe ri od~ o~ play , this wa lkeriumptr has a chrome pla ted snap-in
ploy tray.

HECK'S REG.
$3.88

Pt. Pleasant

TDY
DEPT.

WALKA-JUMPER

$

Double Bed
Dual Control-

wella.

HECK'S"""'•,N

TDYIJEPT.

32-38.

Twin Bed
.
Single Controi -'--

HAIR
.CONDITIONER

88(

. SHIRTS

A large selection of styles
and collars. Chaase from
· prints and stripes. Sizes:

HECK'S REG.
88c

. Clothes by Mattei
for Barbie and P.J.
Dolls .
Assorted HECK'S

$2.99

LONG SLEEVE

•988
'1 o••
•1488

WELLA BALSAM

AND P.J. CLOTHES

LADIES'

Heck's own brand electric
blankets made by Beacon
manufacturing company. Two.year warranty backed by
Heck's. Colors: Avocado, Gold,
Blue and Pink. Nylon binding . ·
Made of polyester, cotton and
rayon blend.

Pt Pleasant

BARBIE

All new "rider" of ntro
hta¥)' walled polY plastic
In bright red. 21" long,
and 11" hlgh, no slip hand
grips, steel axles and
molded rolling wheels.

HECK'S ELECTRIC
BLANKETS.

HECK'S
REG.
'1.08

......

Pl. Pleasant
Store Only .

BIRD

HECK'S REG.

$1.29
I

NAIIJWAIE
/JIPT.

..

�-··· ...

~

.

.,.......

'fit

.'

,..,., ....

.,

'

13 - The Dally Sentlrie~, M!ddleport.Pmteroy, 0., Sept. 29, 1971

Missions ·Discussed

OPEl lAlLY

OPIIIAILY
10TO 9

Aconversation on mls$ions in
a laundromat scene highlighted
Ute program at Tuesday night's
meeting of the Women's Society
of Christian Service of Ute
Racine. Wesleyan United
MethodiSt Church;
·
The meeting was held in the
annex of the church which is
nearing.
completion
of
remodeling sponsored by Ute
WSCS. Mrs . .Roy Spencer as
program chaJrman using "I'll

lOT09

.

.

PUMP SHOTGUN
HECK'S REG. $119.95

,SLEEPING BAG
Waterproof vinyl· bottom
c;~nd canopy. Half zipper :
Built·in,ground sheet.

INSULATED
SUIT
·
e.5

$CJ88

ounce dacron .
• Color: red

HECK'S REG.

$ .1 1.99 .

•
•
•
•

SPORTS
'•

ZEBCO 202 REEL

•''
'

Stainless steel spinnerhead, . nitrate hardened for resista~e to line wear. Thumb control button.
(

$199
,.

HECK'S REG.

$3.88

29 inches bolt face to muzzle
Post type front sight- adjustable rear sight
5-round capacity
Bolt cocks on closing
SPORTS IJEPT.

HECK'S REG. '12.99

SPORTS
DEPT. .

BICYCLE

ROD
&amp;
REEL.

PLAYING CARDS

INSULATED
Quality lining for warmth and comfort.
Cleated sole and heel with steel inner
support shank, Size! 6 io 12.

'3"

'

S]99
HECK'S REG. $4.99

GOLF BALLS
WILSON K·28

3Fol 5266

PACKS

HECK'UIG. 3 FOR $3.21

$699

3 FOR 99&lt;

HECK'S RIG. 4.c EACH

$8.99

SPOilS DEPT.

SHRTS DEPT. 1

lOAMP

BATtERY CHARGER
CAR
RUBBER

FLOOR MATS

'

'

'.
•,•'
l
I

:

FRONT,,,.

S]ZZ

REAR. , • • • • • • • s2u

I

INNER

COPPER

88

TUBES
MOST SIZES IN STOCK

$199

HECK'S REG. $19.99

• 8 It. in length
• Made of copper

AUTOMO;IVE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $2.99

AIITOMOTIVE DEPT.

BOOSTER
CABLES

SIMILARTO IllUSTRATION

20" 4-WAY

LUG WRENCH
$112
HECK'SREG. $1.88

TAIL&amp;
STOP LIGHT

99

BULBS
CARD OF TWO

66(

$4.99

NAIIDWARI
DEPT.

'

,..,.,

'
t

~·

INCLUDES PAN, ROLLER FRAME,
1 COVER, EXTENSION HANDLE,
BRUSH AND STIRRER.

::.~.
IIAIIWAIE

.

\

I.

,1.

$ 66

1. .

CHOICE

$100
. AIITOMOTIVE DEPT.

c

PAINT KIT
e

•6006
.• 6012

HECK'S REG. 70'

6 PIECE ROLLER

HECK'S

' .. ..,

48C

HOUSE &amp; GARDEN
BUG KILLER

i'J '

•

•

NO ODOR

STRIP

88( '

Bl~,.
NECK
BONES

12 OUNCE .

J-WAXKIT

~100

SLAB :BACON

HECK'S REG, $1.58

HECK'S REG.

$1.48
Point Pleasant
S1aq

WATER WAND
Wat&amp; r Wand simplifies dozens of
time-consuming jobs around· every
home . Preferred by users because
of its lightneSI and good balance.
Easily handles all typos of difficult
cleaning jobs requiring a power·
lui spray.

$1~.
RIG.
$2.66

Brand

.

Serving : Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport'
&amp; Mason Co .. W. V1,

...

,_.

.~.~,;

BRACKElS

(Sliced or HaH)

9CJc

MAGIC
BLEACH

•

•'

pL

•
•

t

1'1

39~

lb.

ALWAYS
. FREE.

PARKING
AT BIG 3 STORES

'·

bag

39e

·.~

AT RUTLAND

Rlattt
R._..
To
-:J:illt ..

'

RUTLAND .
. · ~TOlE .

0

Q 'IIIII

HIJ!IALTffl

BUTTERMILK ~~-39$
HOLSUM

(Reg. 45')

$WEn ROLLS

Mix or
Match
FROSTY ACRES
Cam
Peas

LYONs ··

•

65~

PREMIUM
CRACKERS

GIANT ,SIZE

2~sae . 3CJ~

SUGAR
5 lb.

ocr. 2

3 lb. can

NABISCO

BONUS

PEACHES

SAWHORSE

•r'
'

lb.

Golden Isle

I.

'' ''
I
I'

Dudley's Fbist

AT

COFFEE

Golden Isle

C
.
FRANKS .....~~.~~..........................~~:...6 9 .
Supe~ior

Maxwell
House

71b. S} 00

WHOLE OR HALF SLAB ........................... ..

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

RAID

'~ j~

.,''

HECK'S
REG.

13.5 oz.

l

I

'''

. Fits any drain hole. Keeps gutter downspouts free from cloggin g.

1•

I

t.

GUTTER DOWN SPOUT

•4001
•4002

Vase Arrangement
Designed By

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.

We Accept
Federal
Food Stamps

JOHNSON'S

COVER
HECK'S REG.

THICKNESS GAUGE

SEALED ·
BEAM
BULBS

All Steel Construction: Mirror Enclosed in a White En·amel Frame.
Two Spacious Metal Shelves. Easy
to Hang with Keyhole Slots.

With A

15 BLADE

99 1

MEDICINE
CABINET

Happy orBirthday
Happy Annivelsiwy

Carmel News

ODD LABEL

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. 69'
S/lfJITS /JOT.

Say

·Mothers l).ssigned Chester

SPORTS DIPT.

PELLET PISTOL

$100

Promotion Day is Held

HOSPITAL
NEWS

•

Made by ane of the finest European gun1mit~s that
have put oil of their skill inlo thi s precision pistol.
Blode type front sight. ln11xpensiv~ to shoot.

2

Bible Reading in
Sp ('
rted

Johnson, Mrs. Harold Sauer,
m!ISic ; 'Mrs. 0. B. Stout, Mn. ·
Wallace, Mrs. Carl Hork:r,
civic; Mrs. Forrest Bldltel,
Mrs. Nan Moore, Mill I uci!Jr
SmiUt, library; and Mn. M. L.
French, Mrs. Arthur Stra•,
and Mrs. James Harley, hWth
and holiSehold economics.
Mrs. French will review "Tbe
Grandees" at the first meeting
with members to relate an
important Jewish contribution
to the "American way of life. "
The meeting was postponl!ll .a
week due to a conflict with
another meeting.
The Second club meeting will
be at the home of Mrs. Ben
Philson in Racine Oct. 20, with
Mrs. Stout to review "Since
Silent Spring " by Fl-ank
Graham. The response will be a
wonder of nature. After the rii'St
two meetings, sessions will be
held on alternate Wednesdays,
October to May, at 2 p.m. ·

Churches Picnic

NTING

PRECISE~ 177 CAL.

COMIINATJON

Moort., treasurer. Mrs. Larry .
Spencer · has ·resigned as Vice
president since she will be
moving this weekend to
Louisville, Ky.

Pomeroy, Athens

HECK'S REG. $39.99 "

Pt Pleasant Store On~

ZEBCO

HECK'S REG.
$7.77

SHRTSDIPT. .

FOOTBALL OUTFIT
~mplete 4-pie~e uniform for the . future
All-American. Shoulder pads, jersey,
pants and helmet, complete with -face
guard. Assorted sizes. ·
.
.

Using the motto, "Why stay
we on earth unless to .grow?"
the Middleport literary Club,
organized in 1894 and federated
in 1900, wiD begin its 1971-72
club season at a meeting on Oct.
13 in the home of Mrs. Nan
Moore.
Mrs . Richard Owen is
president ; Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, secretary, and Mrs.

.

Halloween Party Set

S2tJ88

7mmRIFLE

.

Charlene Hoeflich \.
Ute group on the new church social hour.
•
cluster, giving statistics and
advantages
of
working ·
together. Mrs. Eileen Rees
Roger and Sandy J.,uckeydoo and their six-month~ld
Committees for the club are
presided at the meeting, and
daughter,AmyKathieen,arehomeafteri&amp;monthsinGermany.
Mrs . Owen , Mrs. Emerson
Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent -gave
Roger will be here for a couple of more weeks and then will be
Jones, Mrs. Spencer and Mrs.
the treasurer's report.
,.h h
leaVI.·ng for the Panama Canal Zone for two weeks of jungle
James Euler, program ; Mrs.
A report was given on Miss
tlCe oJUyyO .
.schooling before going to Vietnam for a year.
'
Everett Hayes, Mrs. Thereon
Pearl Hoffman's recent visit to
M b
f th W. 11 .
Sandy and Amy will be remaining in Middleport. The family
the church. Miss Hoffman is on W kern eCrls 0 f th eE te' mg . is delighted to be back in the States but admit thst they left lots of
furlough from her missionary
or ers ass 0 e n rpnse
od f · d he took d
·
work in West Pakistan where United Methodist Church were go
rten s. T Y
a vantage of thelf overseas stay and
urged to write letters to th
. e toured several counlries.. Enroute home they stopped off in
Go Where You Want Me to Go" she has spent eight ·years. She
E 1
d s ti nd to 1 k
und
as the opening .song. Scripture gave a resume of the way of life National Aeronautics and Space
ng and an co a
oo aro ·
Trinity Church Sunday School Seelig, Todd Smith, and Becky
was by Mrs. Alice Wolfe and a there, their dress and customs . Administration (NASA) supSandy ~ticipates~ quiet~ea~ although she says she may do
duet, "When They Ring Those and showed colored slides. porting Bible reading in space some substltute teaching. While m Germany she taught at the observed promotion day Sunday Crow, Primary II to Juniors.
llecky Thomas, Mary
Golden BeDs for You and Me" Joining the Racine group for duringameetingheid'fhursday ArmyEducationCenterforservicemen. ThiswasmosUyEnglish when certificates were awarded
FaiUt Perrin, Cheryl
Blaettnar,
.was sung by Mrs. Mattie Circle Miss Hoffnuin's program were night at the home of Mrs . Eldon and reading on the junior high and high school level for dropouts to Ute young people.
and Mrs. Lavinia Simpson who members of the East Letart, Weeks. ·
who had come to realize the necessity of that high school diploma. Promoted were Ruth Teaford Kennedy, Danny Will, Dawane
and Barbara Grueser from the McLaughlin , David Harris ,
· also had the prayer. Seven Letart FaDs, Apple Grove and
Mrs. Paul Frick was hostess College level courses were also offered.
kindergarten department to Randy Houdasheit and Mark
members of the society took Carmel Churches.
for the meeting with Mrs. Ed
MRS. LENA WELLS, WHO spent many years in the Ball Ron Primai-y I; Beth Perrin, Jan Mitch, from the Junior
part in the . laundromat con- Mrs . Simpson and Mrs . Bowen presiding. Group singing
·
of "What a Friend" and "When area, will observe her 88th birthday Monday. She is now at the Betzing, Mike Smith, Andrea Department to Ute Intermediate
versaIIon.
McClurg served a dessert
We All Get to Heaven" was Elmwood Nursing Home at Route 2, Coolville. Our best wishes to Riggs, David Kennedy and Lori Department; Ingrid Hawley,
Wisecup from Primary I to Janice Holter, Nancy Crow, Joe
foiiowed by reading of Psalms her Primary II; David Burl, Tom Rosenbaum, Morton Barnes,
119 by Mrs. Thomas Bentz and a
Hawley, Shari Mitch, Chuck Melanie Burt, and Alan
quiz on the scripture.
TIME CHANGES THINGS, AND HOW!
The wonder box donated by
Acopy of an 1849 sale bill from a Langsville reader shows just Kennedy, Jeff Grueser, Bobby McLaughlin, Intermediate
Department to the Young
Mrs. Mabel Moore was won by how much things have changed. The farmer who was having the
People's Deparlment.
Mrs. James Will. Mrs. Beulah sale was a Kentuckian.
A Halloween dinner party on club membership.
A skating party has been
Utterback conducted a contest
Here's ~ow the sale bill read:
planned for Sunday from 2 to 4
Oct. 20 at the Martin Restaurant
Birthday gifts were received which was won by Mrs. Herbert
· "Having sold my farm as I am leaving for the Oregon
p.m. at the Skate-A-Way Rink
was planned by the Sew·Rite by Mrs. Raymond Baity and Dixon and Mrs. Bentz. Refresh·
territory by oxen team on March I, 1849, I will sell all my personal
on the Chester Road . A
Sewing Club recenUy at the club Mrs. Edward WeDs. Mrs. Bill ments were served to those
property,
except
two
oxen
teams,
Buck
and
Ben
and
Lon
and
Halloween party will be held at
house wiUt Mrs. Larry Wehrung McDaniel and Mrs. George named and Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
Jerry,
consisting
of
the
foiiowing
:
the church on Oct. 24 and Rally
.and Mrs . James Neutzling Hoffman will be hostesses for Miss Freda Leiving, Mrs. Mary
The
Pomeroy
and
Athens
Two
milk
cows,
one
grey
mare
and
colt,
one
pair
of
oxen,
one
Day
will be observed Sunday.
hostesses.
the next meeting. Others at- Bowen and Patty Edwards.
Seventh-(]ay
Adventist
Churyoke,
one
baby
yoke,
two
ox
carts,
one
iron
plow
with
wood
mole
Members and visitors are urged
The group also discussed tending were Mrs. Flo
ches
enjoyed
a
picnic
at
the
board,
800
feet
of
poplar
weather
boards,
1,000
three.foot
clap
to attend.
other holiday activities and fall Strickland, Mrs. Willard Boyer,
Roadside
Park
on
Rou(f
33
boards,
1,500
ten-foot
fence
rails.
projects. Mrs. Don Mullen will Mrs. Don McKnight, Mrs. Doris
One 601!allon soap kettle, 83 sugar troughs made of white ash north of Pomeroy Sunday.
make a ceramic Christmas tree Carder, Mrs. Don Collins, Mrs.
Following the picnic the
timber, 10 gallons of maple syrup, two spinning wheels, 30 pounds
to be auctioned off at some Charles Hoffman, and Mrs.
of mutton tallow, one large loom, 300 poles, 100 split hoops, 100 group played games including
future meeting. Mrs. Robert Elza Gilmore.
empty barrels, one 32-gallon barrel of Johnson Miller Whiskey 7- horshoe, darts, and basebaU.
Potter was welcomed into the
Among those attending were
Holzer Medical Center, First year$ old .
Pastor
and Mrs. Herbert
20 gallons of apple brandy, one 50 gallon copper still, four
Ave. and Cedar St. General
Morgan and children, Mrs.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. sides of oak tanned leather, one dozen wooden pitchforks, a one· Clara Mcintyre, Herb and
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to half interest in lan yards, one 32 caliber rifle, bullet molds and Marilyn, Conley Cole, Mr. and
powder horn, rifle made by Ben Miller, 50 gallons of soft soap, 40 Mrs. Robert Lipscomb and four
•- Room mothers have been Mrs. Gordon Anderson, Mrs. 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
gallons of sorghum molasses, six head of fox hounds, all soft. sons, Miss Louise Pennington,
:;;: named at the Chester Richard Gaul, and Mrs. Herbert Pediatrics Ward.
mouthed but one.
Births
George Bush, Aaron and
• Elementary School. They are : WoHe.
AI the same time I will sell my six Negro slaves, together to Melissa, Bernice Lauffler, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Pettit,
. •· Grade 1: Mrs. Daryl Well, Grade 6: Miss Carolyn Smith,
Georgia Johnson, and Mrs.
teacher; Mrs. Keith Bentz, teacher; Mrs. Donald Mora, Jr., Jackson, a daughter and the same party as I will not separate them."
Yes, things have changed, with time- and thank heavens! Adalene France.
chairman, Mrs. Max Eichinger, Mrs. Max Cale, Mrs. Roger Mr. and Mrs. Richard Eugene
Those "good old days" with soft soap, spinning wheels, sorghum
Mrs. John Ambrose, and Mrs. Buckley, and Mrs. Robert Speirs, Gallipolis, a son.
and slaves have not the slightest appeal to the liberated ( ?) sex.
Discharges
Roger Reibel. Miss Carolyn Steele.
Mrs. Charles Barlow and son ,
Parker, teacher, Mrs. Philip Grade 7: John Lambert,
Mrs.
Nat
Carpenter,
teact.er:
Miss
Rosalie Bostic, David
Werry, chairman, Mrs. Robert
Elberfeld, Mrs. Alvin Tripp, Mrs. Ernest Deeter, Mrs. Ivan Briggs, Mrs. Merrill Davis and
Farrar, and Mrs. Henry son, Donald Denney, Mrs. Ott
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
and Mrs. Roger Kirkhart.
BOYS
FOUND
SAFE
BIRTHDAY
OBSERVED
New Haven, Mrs·. Paul Erwin
Farley, Mrs. Gladys Ford,
Grade 2: Miss Diana Mc- Hunter.
MORGANTOWN,
W.
Va
.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
0.
and Ralph Lee of Racine, RD.,
Clure, teacher; Mrs. Roger Grade 8: Mrs . Domigan , James Goodrich, Mrs. Elsa
Manley , Middleport, en- (UP! ) - Two nine-year-old visited recently with Mary
Mrs.
David
Holter,
teacher,
Kimes,
Mrs.
Kenneth
Love,
Gaul, Mrs. Gary Dill, Mrs.
tertained Sunday with a party boys lost in Cooper's Rock State Circle.
'
Nicholas Leonard, and Mrs. Mrs. Dale Kautz, . Mrs. Earl Mrs. Ronald Reynolds and son,
honoring their daughter, Forest for 22 hours during the Mrs. Fern Stansbury and
bean,
Mrs.
Kenneth
Amsbary,
Brent
A.
Saunders,
John
Strait,
Normah Baum.
Charlene Swartz, Angela Sue Crystal Dawn, on her second weekend were found safe and John Ferry of Athens visited
.p rade 3! Mrs. Rex Robinson, and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan.
sound Monday. Billy Smythe of
iea'cher'; Mrs. Harold Newell, Kindergarten morning ·class; Garretson · and Mrs. Gail birthday. Cake and ice cream Alliance, .ohio and Chuckle with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee
were served and gifts were
and famUy and Ralph Lee
Mrs. Roger Starcher, Mrs. Mrs. Jack Gillilan, Mrs. James Phillips.
Cunningham
of
Weirton,
W.
Va.
presented
to
the
youngster
.
recently.
Marvin White, and Mrs . Louks, Mrs. John Reibel, Mrs.
were found by road crews near Betty Van Meter and Eunie
Attending
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
Parker,
Mrs.
James
Demaris Sexson.
Odell Manley and son, Steve, Pisgah several miles from Uteir Brinker .called at the home of
Grade 4: Herbert MaUteny, Brooks; afternoon class, Mrs.
SALE DAYS SET
Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. family campsite.
Jesse Gainer of Pomeroy on
teacher; Mrs. Robert Shook, James Smith, Mrs. Ernest
A
rummage
sale
he
held
on
Wendell
Eblin
and
son,
Ray,
Mrs. Woodrow Mora, and Mrs. Deeter, Mrs. Charles Sayre, Thursday and Friday, Oct. 7 Pomeroy· Miss Lori Faulk and In 1963, Pope Paul V1 opened Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. He~ry Bahr, and Mrs.
Arthur E. Johnson, who is
Bruce Myers.
and 8, from 9:30 to 3 p.m. both the hon~red guest's great· the second session of the employed at Massilon spent a
Bailey.
Mrs.
Paul
Orr
is
James
Grade 5: Mrs. VirgO Roush,
Mrs. Nellie Ecumenical Council in St.
days at the Forest Run United
weekend at his home here.
teachir; Mrs. Roger Keller, the 'remedial reading teacher at
·
Peter'.s Basilica.
Methodist Church.

.W/1/CHISTER
• Unbeatable perfo rmance
• Rustproof aluminum receiver
• ,Cross bolt safety
e Weather-resistant stock finish

Mrs. Dale McClurg spoke to course during a concluding

Club Beginning 78th- Year

Community
Corner By

6-. S}

Kraft
Sliced lh Moon

Longhorn Cheese
.

3,
-. t

J)Qad

CElERY
BCil19t

0
•
=====~Red Grapes
10 Qt.;

�-··· ...

~

.

.,.......

'fit

.'

,..,., ....

.,

'

13 - The Dally Sentlrie~, M!ddleport.Pmteroy, 0., Sept. 29, 1971

Missions ·Discussed

OPEl lAlLY

OPIIIAILY
10TO 9

Aconversation on mls$ions in
a laundromat scene highlighted
Ute program at Tuesday night's
meeting of the Women's Society
of Christian Service of Ute
Racine. Wesleyan United
MethodiSt Church;
·
The meeting was held in the
annex of the church which is
nearing.
completion
of
remodeling sponsored by Ute
WSCS. Mrs . .Roy Spencer as
program chaJrman using "I'll

lOT09

.

.

PUMP SHOTGUN
HECK'S REG. $119.95

,SLEEPING BAG
Waterproof vinyl· bottom
c;~nd canopy. Half zipper :
Built·in,ground sheet.

INSULATED
SUIT
·
e.5

$CJ88

ounce dacron .
• Color: red

HECK'S REG.

$ .1 1.99 .

•
•
•
•

SPORTS
'•

ZEBCO 202 REEL

•''
'

Stainless steel spinnerhead, . nitrate hardened for resista~e to line wear. Thumb control button.
(

$199
,.

HECK'S REG.

$3.88

29 inches bolt face to muzzle
Post type front sight- adjustable rear sight
5-round capacity
Bolt cocks on closing
SPORTS IJEPT.

HECK'S REG. '12.99

SPORTS
DEPT. .

BICYCLE

ROD
&amp;
REEL.

PLAYING CARDS

INSULATED
Quality lining for warmth and comfort.
Cleated sole and heel with steel inner
support shank, Size! 6 io 12.

'3"

'

S]99
HECK'S REG. $4.99

GOLF BALLS
WILSON K·28

3Fol 5266

PACKS

HECK'UIG. 3 FOR $3.21

$699

3 FOR 99&lt;

HECK'S RIG. 4.c EACH

$8.99

SPOilS DEPT.

SHRTS DEPT. 1

lOAMP

BATtERY CHARGER
CAR
RUBBER

FLOOR MATS

'

'

'.
•,•'
l
I

:

FRONT,,,.

S]ZZ

REAR. , • • • • • • • s2u

I

INNER

COPPER

88

TUBES
MOST SIZES IN STOCK

$199

HECK'S REG. $19.99

• 8 It. in length
• Made of copper

AUTOMO;IVE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $2.99

AIITOMOTIVE DEPT.

BOOSTER
CABLES

SIMILARTO IllUSTRATION

20" 4-WAY

LUG WRENCH
$112
HECK'SREG. $1.88

TAIL&amp;
STOP LIGHT

99

BULBS
CARD OF TWO

66(

$4.99

NAIIDWARI
DEPT.

'

,..,.,

'
t

~·

INCLUDES PAN, ROLLER FRAME,
1 COVER, EXTENSION HANDLE,
BRUSH AND STIRRER.

::.~.
IIAIIWAIE

.

\

I.

,1.

$ 66

1. .

CHOICE

$100
. AIITOMOTIVE DEPT.

c

PAINT KIT
e

•6006
.• 6012

HECK'S REG. 70'

6 PIECE ROLLER

HECK'S

' .. ..,

48C

HOUSE &amp; GARDEN
BUG KILLER

i'J '

•

•

NO ODOR

STRIP

88( '

Bl~,.
NECK
BONES

12 OUNCE .

J-WAXKIT

~100

SLAB :BACON

HECK'S REG, $1.58

HECK'S REG.

$1.48
Point Pleasant
S1aq

WATER WAND
Wat&amp; r Wand simplifies dozens of
time-consuming jobs around· every
home . Preferred by users because
of its lightneSI and good balance.
Easily handles all typos of difficult
cleaning jobs requiring a power·
lui spray.

$1~.
RIG.
$2.66

Brand

.

Serving : Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport'
&amp; Mason Co .. W. V1,

...

,_.

.~.~,;

BRACKElS

(Sliced or HaH)

9CJc

MAGIC
BLEACH

•

•'

pL

•
•

t

1'1

39~

lb.

ALWAYS
. FREE.

PARKING
AT BIG 3 STORES

'·

bag

39e

·.~

AT RUTLAND

Rlattt
R._..
To
-:J:illt ..

'

RUTLAND .
. · ~TOlE .

0

Q 'IIIII

HIJ!IALTffl

BUTTERMILK ~~-39$
HOLSUM

(Reg. 45')

$WEn ROLLS

Mix or
Match
FROSTY ACRES
Cam
Peas

LYONs ··

•

65~

PREMIUM
CRACKERS

GIANT ,SIZE

2~sae . 3CJ~

SUGAR
5 lb.

ocr. 2

3 lb. can

NABISCO

BONUS

PEACHES

SAWHORSE

•r'
'

lb.

Golden Isle

I.

'' ''
I
I'

Dudley's Fbist

AT

COFFEE

Golden Isle

C
.
FRANKS .....~~.~~..........................~~:...6 9 .
Supe~ior

Maxwell
House

71b. S} 00

WHOLE OR HALF SLAB ........................... ..

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

RAID

'~ j~

.,''

HECK'S
REG.

13.5 oz.

l

I

'''

. Fits any drain hole. Keeps gutter downspouts free from cloggin g.

1•

I

t.

GUTTER DOWN SPOUT

•4001
•4002

Vase Arrangement
Designed By

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.

We Accept
Federal
Food Stamps

JOHNSON'S

COVER
HECK'S REG.

THICKNESS GAUGE

SEALED ·
BEAM
BULBS

All Steel Construction: Mirror Enclosed in a White En·amel Frame.
Two Spacious Metal Shelves. Easy
to Hang with Keyhole Slots.

With A

15 BLADE

99 1

MEDICINE
CABINET

Happy orBirthday
Happy Annivelsiwy

Carmel News

ODD LABEL

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. 69'
S/lfJITS /JOT.

Say

·Mothers l).ssigned Chester

SPORTS DIPT.

PELLET PISTOL

$100

Promotion Day is Held

HOSPITAL
NEWS

•

Made by ane of the finest European gun1mit~s that
have put oil of their skill inlo thi s precision pistol.
Blode type front sight. ln11xpensiv~ to shoot.

2

Bible Reading in
Sp ('
rted

Johnson, Mrs. Harold Sauer,
m!ISic ; 'Mrs. 0. B. Stout, Mn. ·
Wallace, Mrs. Carl Hork:r,
civic; Mrs. Forrest Bldltel,
Mrs. Nan Moore, Mill I uci!Jr
SmiUt, library; and Mn. M. L.
French, Mrs. Arthur Stra•,
and Mrs. James Harley, hWth
and holiSehold economics.
Mrs. French will review "Tbe
Grandees" at the first meeting
with members to relate an
important Jewish contribution
to the "American way of life. "
The meeting was postponl!ll .a
week due to a conflict with
another meeting.
The Second club meeting will
be at the home of Mrs. Ben
Philson in Racine Oct. 20, with
Mrs. Stout to review "Since
Silent Spring " by Fl-ank
Graham. The response will be a
wonder of nature. After the rii'St
two meetings, sessions will be
held on alternate Wednesdays,
October to May, at 2 p.m. ·

Churches Picnic

NTING

PRECISE~ 177 CAL.

COMIINATJON

Moort., treasurer. Mrs. Larry .
Spencer · has ·resigned as Vice
president since she will be
moving this weekend to
Louisville, Ky.

Pomeroy, Athens

HECK'S REG. $39.99 "

Pt Pleasant Store On~

ZEBCO

HECK'S REG.
$7.77

SHRTSDIPT. .

FOOTBALL OUTFIT
~mplete 4-pie~e uniform for the . future
All-American. Shoulder pads, jersey,
pants and helmet, complete with -face
guard. Assorted sizes. ·
.
.

Using the motto, "Why stay
we on earth unless to .grow?"
the Middleport literary Club,
organized in 1894 and federated
in 1900, wiD begin its 1971-72
club season at a meeting on Oct.
13 in the home of Mrs. Nan
Moore.
Mrs . Richard Owen is
president ; Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, secretary, and Mrs.

.

Halloween Party Set

S2tJ88

7mmRIFLE

.

Charlene Hoeflich \.
Ute group on the new church social hour.
•
cluster, giving statistics and
advantages
of
working ·
together. Mrs. Eileen Rees
Roger and Sandy J.,uckeydoo and their six-month~ld
Committees for the club are
presided at the meeting, and
daughter,AmyKathieen,arehomeafteri&amp;monthsinGermany.
Mrs . Owen , Mrs. Emerson
Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent -gave
Roger will be here for a couple of more weeks and then will be
Jones, Mrs. Spencer and Mrs.
the treasurer's report.
,.h h
leaVI.·ng for the Panama Canal Zone for two weeks of jungle
James Euler, program ; Mrs.
A report was given on Miss
tlCe oJUyyO .
.schooling before going to Vietnam for a year.
'
Everett Hayes, Mrs. Thereon
Pearl Hoffman's recent visit to
M b
f th W. 11 .
Sandy and Amy will be remaining in Middleport. The family
the church. Miss Hoffman is on W kern eCrls 0 f th eE te' mg . is delighted to be back in the States but admit thst they left lots of
furlough from her missionary
or ers ass 0 e n rpnse
od f · d he took d
·
work in West Pakistan where United Methodist Church were go
rten s. T Y
a vantage of thelf overseas stay and
urged to write letters to th
. e toured several counlries.. Enroute home they stopped off in
Go Where You Want Me to Go" she has spent eight ·years. She
E 1
d s ti nd to 1 k
und
as the opening .song. Scripture gave a resume of the way of life National Aeronautics and Space
ng and an co a
oo aro ·
Trinity Church Sunday School Seelig, Todd Smith, and Becky
was by Mrs. Alice Wolfe and a there, their dress and customs . Administration (NASA) supSandy ~ticipates~ quiet~ea~ although she says she may do
duet, "When They Ring Those and showed colored slides. porting Bible reading in space some substltute teaching. While m Germany she taught at the observed promotion day Sunday Crow, Primary II to Juniors.
llecky Thomas, Mary
Golden BeDs for You and Me" Joining the Racine group for duringameetingheid'fhursday ArmyEducationCenterforservicemen. ThiswasmosUyEnglish when certificates were awarded
FaiUt Perrin, Cheryl
Blaettnar,
.was sung by Mrs. Mattie Circle Miss Hoffnuin's program were night at the home of Mrs . Eldon and reading on the junior high and high school level for dropouts to Ute young people.
and Mrs. Lavinia Simpson who members of the East Letart, Weeks. ·
who had come to realize the necessity of that high school diploma. Promoted were Ruth Teaford Kennedy, Danny Will, Dawane
and Barbara Grueser from the McLaughlin , David Harris ,
· also had the prayer. Seven Letart FaDs, Apple Grove and
Mrs. Paul Frick was hostess College level courses were also offered.
kindergarten department to Randy Houdasheit and Mark
members of the society took Carmel Churches.
for the meeting with Mrs. Ed
MRS. LENA WELLS, WHO spent many years in the Ball Ron Primai-y I; Beth Perrin, Jan Mitch, from the Junior
part in the . laundromat con- Mrs . Simpson and Mrs . Bowen presiding. Group singing
·
of "What a Friend" and "When area, will observe her 88th birthday Monday. She is now at the Betzing, Mike Smith, Andrea Department to Ute Intermediate
versaIIon.
McClurg served a dessert
We All Get to Heaven" was Elmwood Nursing Home at Route 2, Coolville. Our best wishes to Riggs, David Kennedy and Lori Department; Ingrid Hawley,
Wisecup from Primary I to Janice Holter, Nancy Crow, Joe
foiiowed by reading of Psalms her Primary II; David Burl, Tom Rosenbaum, Morton Barnes,
119 by Mrs. Thomas Bentz and a
Hawley, Shari Mitch, Chuck Melanie Burt, and Alan
quiz on the scripture.
TIME CHANGES THINGS, AND HOW!
The wonder box donated by
Acopy of an 1849 sale bill from a Langsville reader shows just Kennedy, Jeff Grueser, Bobby McLaughlin, Intermediate
Department to the Young
Mrs. Mabel Moore was won by how much things have changed. The farmer who was having the
People's Deparlment.
Mrs. James Will. Mrs. Beulah sale was a Kentuckian.
A Halloween dinner party on club membership.
A skating party has been
Utterback conducted a contest
Here's ~ow the sale bill read:
planned for Sunday from 2 to 4
Oct. 20 at the Martin Restaurant
Birthday gifts were received which was won by Mrs. Herbert
· "Having sold my farm as I am leaving for the Oregon
p.m. at the Skate-A-Way Rink
was planned by the Sew·Rite by Mrs. Raymond Baity and Dixon and Mrs. Bentz. Refresh·
territory by oxen team on March I, 1849, I will sell all my personal
on the Chester Road . A
Sewing Club recenUy at the club Mrs. Edward WeDs. Mrs. Bill ments were served to those
property,
except
two
oxen
teams,
Buck
and
Ben
and
Lon
and
Halloween party will be held at
house wiUt Mrs. Larry Wehrung McDaniel and Mrs. George named and Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
Jerry,
consisting
of
the
foiiowing
:
the church on Oct. 24 and Rally
.and Mrs . James Neutzling Hoffman will be hostesses for Miss Freda Leiving, Mrs. Mary
The
Pomeroy
and
Athens
Two
milk
cows,
one
grey
mare
and
colt,
one
pair
of
oxen,
one
Day
will be observed Sunday.
hostesses.
the next meeting. Others at- Bowen and Patty Edwards.
Seventh-(]ay
Adventist
Churyoke,
one
baby
yoke,
two
ox
carts,
one
iron
plow
with
wood
mole
Members and visitors are urged
The group also discussed tending were Mrs. Flo
ches
enjoyed
a
picnic
at
the
board,
800
feet
of
poplar
weather
boards,
1,000
three.foot
clap
to attend.
other holiday activities and fall Strickland, Mrs. Willard Boyer,
Roadside
Park
on
Rou(f
33
boards,
1,500
ten-foot
fence
rails.
projects. Mrs. Don Mullen will Mrs. Don McKnight, Mrs. Doris
One 601!allon soap kettle, 83 sugar troughs made of white ash north of Pomeroy Sunday.
make a ceramic Christmas tree Carder, Mrs. Don Collins, Mrs.
Following the picnic the
timber, 10 gallons of maple syrup, two spinning wheels, 30 pounds
to be auctioned off at some Charles Hoffman, and Mrs.
of mutton tallow, one large loom, 300 poles, 100 split hoops, 100 group played games including
future meeting. Mrs. Robert Elza Gilmore.
empty barrels, one 32-gallon barrel of Johnson Miller Whiskey 7- horshoe, darts, and basebaU.
Potter was welcomed into the
Among those attending were
Holzer Medical Center, First year$ old .
Pastor
and Mrs. Herbert
20 gallons of apple brandy, one 50 gallon copper still, four
Ave. and Cedar St. General
Morgan and children, Mrs.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. sides of oak tanned leather, one dozen wooden pitchforks, a one· Clara Mcintyre, Herb and
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to half interest in lan yards, one 32 caliber rifle, bullet molds and Marilyn, Conley Cole, Mr. and
powder horn, rifle made by Ben Miller, 50 gallons of soft soap, 40 Mrs. Robert Lipscomb and four
•- Room mothers have been Mrs. Gordon Anderson, Mrs. 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
gallons of sorghum molasses, six head of fox hounds, all soft. sons, Miss Louise Pennington,
:;;: named at the Chester Richard Gaul, and Mrs. Herbert Pediatrics Ward.
mouthed but one.
Births
George Bush, Aaron and
• Elementary School. They are : WoHe.
AI the same time I will sell my six Negro slaves, together to Melissa, Bernice Lauffler, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Pettit,
. •· Grade 1: Mrs. Daryl Well, Grade 6: Miss Carolyn Smith,
Georgia Johnson, and Mrs.
teacher; Mrs. Keith Bentz, teacher; Mrs. Donald Mora, Jr., Jackson, a daughter and the same party as I will not separate them."
Yes, things have changed, with time- and thank heavens! Adalene France.
chairman, Mrs. Max Eichinger, Mrs. Max Cale, Mrs. Roger Mr. and Mrs. Richard Eugene
Those "good old days" with soft soap, spinning wheels, sorghum
Mrs. John Ambrose, and Mrs. Buckley, and Mrs. Robert Speirs, Gallipolis, a son.
and slaves have not the slightest appeal to the liberated ( ?) sex.
Discharges
Roger Reibel. Miss Carolyn Steele.
Mrs. Charles Barlow and son ,
Parker, teacher, Mrs. Philip Grade 7: John Lambert,
Mrs.
Nat
Carpenter,
teact.er:
Miss
Rosalie Bostic, David
Werry, chairman, Mrs. Robert
Elberfeld, Mrs. Alvin Tripp, Mrs. Ernest Deeter, Mrs. Ivan Briggs, Mrs. Merrill Davis and
Farrar, and Mrs. Henry son, Donald Denney, Mrs. Ott
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
and Mrs. Roger Kirkhart.
BOYS
FOUND
SAFE
BIRTHDAY
OBSERVED
New Haven, Mrs·. Paul Erwin
Farley, Mrs. Gladys Ford,
Grade 2: Miss Diana Mc- Hunter.
MORGANTOWN,
W.
Va
.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
0.
and Ralph Lee of Racine, RD.,
Clure, teacher; Mrs. Roger Grade 8: Mrs . Domigan , James Goodrich, Mrs. Elsa
Manley , Middleport, en- (UP! ) - Two nine-year-old visited recently with Mary
Mrs.
David
Holter,
teacher,
Kimes,
Mrs.
Kenneth
Love,
Gaul, Mrs. Gary Dill, Mrs.
tertained Sunday with a party boys lost in Cooper's Rock State Circle.
'
Nicholas Leonard, and Mrs. Mrs. Dale Kautz, . Mrs. Earl Mrs. Ronald Reynolds and son,
honoring their daughter, Forest for 22 hours during the Mrs. Fern Stansbury and
bean,
Mrs.
Kenneth
Amsbary,
Brent
A.
Saunders,
John
Strait,
Normah Baum.
Charlene Swartz, Angela Sue Crystal Dawn, on her second weekend were found safe and John Ferry of Athens visited
.p rade 3! Mrs. Rex Robinson, and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan.
sound Monday. Billy Smythe of
iea'cher'; Mrs. Harold Newell, Kindergarten morning ·class; Garretson · and Mrs. Gail birthday. Cake and ice cream Alliance, .ohio and Chuckle with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee
were served and gifts were
and famUy and Ralph Lee
Mrs. Roger Starcher, Mrs. Mrs. Jack Gillilan, Mrs. James Phillips.
Cunningham
of
Weirton,
W.
Va.
presented
to
the
youngster
.
recently.
Marvin White, and Mrs . Louks, Mrs. John Reibel, Mrs.
were found by road crews near Betty Van Meter and Eunie
Attending
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
Parker,
Mrs.
James
Demaris Sexson.
Odell Manley and son, Steve, Pisgah several miles from Uteir Brinker .called at the home of
Grade 4: Herbert MaUteny, Brooks; afternoon class, Mrs.
SALE DAYS SET
Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. family campsite.
Jesse Gainer of Pomeroy on
teacher; Mrs. Robert Shook, James Smith, Mrs. Ernest
A
rummage
sale
he
held
on
Wendell
Eblin
and
son,
Ray,
Mrs. Woodrow Mora, and Mrs. Deeter, Mrs. Charles Sayre, Thursday and Friday, Oct. 7 Pomeroy· Miss Lori Faulk and In 1963, Pope Paul V1 opened Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. He~ry Bahr, and Mrs.
Arthur E. Johnson, who is
Bruce Myers.
and 8, from 9:30 to 3 p.m. both the hon~red guest's great· the second session of the employed at Massilon spent a
Bailey.
Mrs.
Paul
Orr
is
James
Grade 5: Mrs. VirgO Roush,
Mrs. Nellie Ecumenical Council in St.
days at the Forest Run United
weekend at his home here.
teachir; Mrs. Roger Keller, the 'remedial reading teacher at
·
Peter'.s Basilica.
Methodist Church.

.W/1/CHISTER
• Unbeatable perfo rmance
• Rustproof aluminum receiver
• ,Cross bolt safety
e Weather-resistant stock finish

Mrs. Dale McClurg spoke to course during a concluding

Club Beginning 78th- Year

Community
Corner By

6-. S}

Kraft
Sliced lh Moon

Longhorn Cheese
.

3,
-. t

J)Qad

CElERY
BCil19t

0
•
=====~Red Grapes
10 Qt.;

�" ••

-·

t

.• ,

, ~.

r

••

,.~ .

---··

. . . ..

s;;u--;;ra~:S"ffieds Get Action I Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
'

I

..

New Haven Social Events
· The ttb, lOth, lith and 12th Workshop on Sept. 30 at

'

25181$
OF

.,...,.,

•tor Co.

B08WIRE

For Rent

FENCE!!

'

Busfu_ess Serviees. .. J

2 · BEDROOM mobile home In
Mlcldlei&gt;ort. Phone m-5433. : , •
·
9-29-2tc

p-ades of St. Paul .Lutheran Charleston; Conservation, Arts
Church, New ·Haven, are and Crafts Workshop Oct. 24-26
ipOIIIOI'ing a Ecology Retreat at Jacksons Mill; the State
FURNISHED and unfurnished .
POMEROY
the weekend of October 8th, 9th Convention March 16-18 at
apartments. CJos~ to school .
. Cp~}efP.
.
PhQne m -5434.
and lOth. The youth from Greenbrier Hotel, White
HOME &amp; AUTO
1968 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
$1495
10-l8-ttc·
Platrlct II and 12 ci the Sulphur Springs. Home Ule
.
·-.
270 Series. vinyl roof. white finish. all good tires. 6 cyl.,
Remotkling
992-2094
· Lutheran Church in America Conference at Cedar Lakes Oct.
-·· - - - --- .
automatic trans., radio. clean Interior.
Kitchens,
Baths :
TRAILER
space,
desirable
606
~Main
Pomeroy
have beeJI invited along with 12 and 13.
1967 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
$1495
Room
Additions
neighborhood,
phone
992-2084.
-GUARANTEEDSt. Wagon. Green finish with matching gr'l"n vinyl .Intlieir advisors to attend this The Luther League of St. Paul
And Patios
9-19-tfc
ter
ior,
all·
g~ w-w tires, VB engine, automatic trans.,
Phone 992-2094
retreat.
Lutheran Church asked per-------,-BadchaeAnd
power steering and brakes., luggage rack. A sharp wagon
And
Endloader Work
They wW register on Friday mission to use the club room to
TRAILER. BroWn 's Trailer
and priced -to please.
Pomeroy
Home
&amp;
Auto
.·
Park,
Minersville(
phone
992evening from 6 p.m. unti19 p.m. serve their meals there during
1967 FORO GALAXIE 500
$1595
Septic Tanks
3324.
4 Door , tow mllea9e by local one owner. Med . green finish
with a break the lee get- their Ecology Report Oct. S-10.
9-26-61c
And
Leach Bods.
open nus ·
Stop In and See Our
and spotless Interior, V8 engine, automatic and power
together. On SatUrday they wW Permission was given io them.
,
.
-_
.
MondaythruSaturday
Floor
Displ;~y.
steering, good w-w tires. A clean_car that has always been
pick up Utter ,on the highways Mrs. ·Gurtls explained how the
cared for.
APARTME,NT,
furnished
room
with bath, phone
m -2780
or . ~=~6=06-=~E-=·=Ma==in-:::'-:::P-:::o-=-m=e=ro~y=,-=-0=.=~:·, ·~;';;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;~
between the 14p of Hartford hill club could earn hpnor points for
m -3432.
to Roush's Drive-ln. They have competition: A state-wide
9 17
' -«c
&amp;
asked the merchants to con-. contest is nO. in effect for
4 ROOM and bath apartment.
tribute ten cents per· bag of bringing new members into the
WORK
Telephone 773-5147, Mason,
litter collecte.r, this money in club. A prize will be awarded at
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
w. Va., on main highway.
turn wW be . donated to the the state convention.
f'PMEROV, OHIO
Reynolds Flower Shop.
.
9-28-6tp
Residential,
Corner Union Ave.
newly organized New Haven Mrs.
William
Russell
and State Rt. 7
C
·Park and Recreation Com- reported on the Education
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
ommerci;~l
itours-Mo&lt;lday, Tuesday,
6 ROOM house and bath In
mission. The bagged litter wW Committee. Safety is being
AII Weather Roofl ng &amp;
and
Wednesday and Friday
Racine. Phone evenings only
992-5249.
Construction
Co.
and
AnIndustrial
Wiring
8:30 a. !II. to6 p.m.
be coUected by the State Road stressed this year.
IN~C::~A~?oN
Notice
9-28-31c thony _Plumbing &amp; Heating.'
24
Hour
Service
Thursday
Department.
They tenattively set Oct. 17
DEADLINES
Co!llplele
Plumbing,
1h,m.to8:30p.!11.
GIANT
YARD
SALE
.
Saturday,
· "Oil SUnday they wW. attend for a Car Rodeo. Watch for 5 P.M. Day Before Publicalion
house. 4 Healing and Ajr ConSaturday
Oclober 2. 1971, 9 a.m. at UNFURNISHED
rooms and bath, garage, 1655 ditioning.
church and wW be dismlssed further details.
Mondav Deadline 9a.m.
·
949-4551
8:30a.m. to1 p.m.
Foglesong Road, Mason City .
Point Lane, Pomeroy. Phone
th wW
held
th
. &lt;;an,qtlatlon &amp; Corrections
f 11-'•• dinn The
Turn at Texaco station
er.
you
A discussion was
on e Willbeaccepteduntll9a .m. for lowards
o ""u"'
992-3874.
lhe hill and follow
240
St., Middleport
2=====R:a:c:ine=,0:.
P.;.H;O:·
stay at the Church Social Room scholarship held each· year.
· Day of Publication
. 9-28-3tc
signs to Miller's. Items too
and the Parish House and wW Mrs. William Russell was to
REGULATIONS
Phone 992-2550
~.
numerous to mention, must
· be fed by the women of the check the rules and regulations • The Publisher reserves the' be seen lo be appreciated. ·In TRAILER tOTS, Bob's Mobile Insured- Experienced
FOUR NEW HOMES
right to edit or reject any ads· event of rain, sale will be held
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Work
Guaranteed
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION
church at the social room of the concerning this scholarship.
deemed obi ectlona 1. The
Ohio. 992-2951.
on front porch . Several an .
ONE
HOME
IN RACINE .
Ubrary Building.
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson, publisher will not be responsible
4-2-lfc · See - US for - Free
liques.
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
WOMAN'S CLUB
program committee chairman, lor more than one incorrect.
9-29-2tp
Estimate on Furnace
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
The New Haven Woman's reported that the president's insertion. RATES
Auto
Sales
Instalation.
NO MONEY DOWN
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
bubmetfor a business meeting Annual Tea would be held at the
For Want Ad Service
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
Sportsman Club, Sunday, Oct. 1962 FORD •;, ton pickup truck
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
on September 14 at the club home of Mrs. Thelma Scally on scents per Word one Insertion
3
at
12
noon
.
S450.
Phone
949-4551.
9-26-7tc
monthly
payment as low as S65.00 for a family wllh a base
Minimum Charge 75c
9-29-3tc
room with. Mrs. Robert G ur tis • Sept. 28.
12 cents per word three.
1966 COMET Cyclone. 289 cu. ln. fo.r Sale
salary of ss.ooo.oo and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
president, presiding. Members Mrs . Thompson also an- consecutive Insertions.
Hurst
4
speed,
rebuilt
EA"N
AT
home
addressln~
rate.
engine,
excess fluids with
engine, new paint, tape
"
gave the pledge to the flag and nounced a work day at the club
18 cents per word six con- REDUCE
Fluldex,
$1.69.
Lose
weight
envelopes. Rush ·stampe
player, good condllion, $600.
secutive Insertions.
safely with Dex-A-Diet, 98
the club collect.
room would be on Sept. 20. The
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Phone 992-6015 afler 5:30p.m.
self-addressed envelope. The
cents, at Nelson Drugs.
9-29-Jtc
Ambrose Co.. 4325 Lakeborn •.
Regular repcrts were given room was painted, new ads and ads paid within 10 days.
9-29-ltp
-•
·
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
and approved. Thank you cards draperies hung and given an
CARD OF THANKS
9-8-30tp
fr
Mabel
&amp; OBITUARY
were read om Mrs.
overall faceliftlng.
' suo for 50 word minimum . .fiRST ANNUAL reunion of the Mobile Homes for Sale
descendants of John Hansford
Mcrgan for the kindness shown Mrs. Gurtis reported on the Each additional word 2c.
Hudson and Amelia Roush Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE. "STAR" kills rats quickly.
her during her Wness; from Community Improvement
BLIND ADS
BILL NELSON
HILTON WOLFE
Hudson will be held Oct. 3,
No down payment, 12 years to Sure. 2112 pounds. Sl.69.
Mlu Cozy Cooke for &lt;NV&gt;•Oring Committee. She announced that
Additional 25c Charge per
992-:U57
Ebersbach
Hardware,
Sugar
. . 949-3211
1971
at
the
west
roadside
park
.
pay
to
qualified
Gl.
Up
to
·•··Advertisement.
Run
Mills,
,
Pickens
Hardon
Rt.
33.
Potluck
dinner
will
$2,500
available
for
lot
Im
OFFICE HOURS
her for Fair Queen; and from members of the club had
be held at 12:30. All
provements If you own ·a lot. ware, Mason.
_ _ p
Mlu Debbie Jones for the helped with the Red Cross 8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
NEIGLER Construction. For
9 21 301
descendants
and
friends
are
Get
your
new
mobile
home
-~-----___:..::.._:__.:_
building or r~modellng your
scholarship awarded her.
Bloodmoblle Canvass, had 8' 30 a .m. to 12 ' 00 Noon
invited.
now. See James Simpkins,
Saturday.
home.
Call Guy Nelgler,
9-29-3tc
Valley Estates Mobile Home APPLES - Fitzpatrick Qr.
The president read the worked in the Cancer Mobile
Racln~.
Ohio.
chards, State Route 689,
Sales, Rt. so East Athens resignation from Mrs. Ruth and had helped the town of New
LEGAL
7-31-tfc '·
RUMMAGE sale, Sept. 30, Oct. 593-8762.
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
NOTICE OF
Campbell from the membership Haven with the job of num230
S.
5th
Ave.
,
9·3-tfc
1
and
2
at
9-19-37tc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
PUBLIC SALE
Middleport, 9 to 5 each day.
ci the club.
bering the homes. Numbers will TO WHOM IT MAY CON·
Service, Phone 992·2522.
9-29·2fc
HALF RUNNER beans, $1.50
A schedule of meetings and be distributed at a later date. CERN :
6-10-tfc
For
Sale
bushel . pick your -own.
Notice Is hereby given that on
werbh""' was read: South ,\lso that the club luid sponsored October
12, 1971, at 10 :00 A.M. a PEP-UP witb new Zippies iron . A NEW medium grey frosted
Potatoes. Clarence Proffitt.
Re'a-1E. sta
" te For Sale . ROSEBERRY furnace Inpublic sale will be held at Karr
Western District Meeting Oc- a Fair Queen candidate.
pills.
Non-habit
forming.
Only
wiglet,
$20.
or
best
offer.
Portland
.
Phone
843-2254.
~~~a~i:,'~.~~~ ~~l'";,~te~:,
Van Zandt Motor Sales,
'Iober 23 at the Huntington Some members are attending &amp;Pomeroy
$1.98, Nelson Drugs.
Phone 742-5641.
9-22-tfc RACINE, 10 room house and
Service work . Call Cecil
, Ohio to sell for cash
9-22-301
9-29-3tc
. .
bath. Two lots. basement,
Woman's club; Clean Air theflrstaldclasses and they are the following collateral, to wit :
--------- P
roAL. limestone. Excelsior\
garage. Phone 949-4313 after
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio .
1965 Buick 6637 Serial No.
still interested in helping the 466375H937922, said collateral -REDUCE sale and fast with MINIATURE Schnauzers - ,._ ~all Works, E. "~
"·1 n St ·•1
Phone 614-843·227 4. ,. .30tp
S:30 p.m .
8
Park and RecreatiOn Com- betng held to secure an
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
AKC puppies, no shedding, o&gt;omeroy . Phone 992··3891. I
9-23-12tp ~-------obligation arising under a retail
9
mission.
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
odorless, permanent shols,
.
'· ·1fc: NEW, 3.bedroom home · (n THE SHOP, Custom l)leaf
instalment security agreement
301
9
22
667
585
Ronald
C.
and
exec;uted
by
Mrs. Jess Abel reported on
" · P wormed,
· Coolville
" 2- GAS circulating · heaters.
Middleport. Built-In kitchen. cutting, Ple~sant Ridge RQIId, .
Belly Grady and held by
6214
~':Vs
. the budg : ind finance com- General Motors A_cceptan-ce - -- - - - - - ·
9-29-12tp_ . Ph~e'992-5262 evenings.
• • ti~amlc tile ball\. all-electric , P.pmeroy,.D1ck Vaugf"'n. ~: ~
..
.
Kosmetics. Sep- --~;
9·21-tfc
heal, goOa neighborhood. Can 337~ and Oale.Cfitre, m -6346.
mittee. fie budget for ihe year Corporation as secured party . KOSCOT
lember Sales
Special
:
arrange
Fl-fA financing.
9-12-JOic
Said public sale Is to be con 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
K
L. K 1 52
was presented and after it ·was ducted according to the laws of
992
reamy 'P o e
now
10x50, A-1 condition. Phone FARM and home latex house
Telephone m -3600 or
-. - - -.
By Mn. Evelya Brickle•
$1.50, Frostlucent Up Kote
I
Kl
B tide
2186
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
;unended, the group approved the State ol Ohio. General
71
992
94
7
Acceptance CorpOration
$2 .50 now $2, 23 delicious
992· 56 or · 3 ·
paint sa e.
ng
u rs
·
· 7-25-tfc Reasonable rates. Ph. ~-4782,
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Shultz said budget. The club discussed Motors
9·29·31C
reserves the right to bid at this
tolors.
Call
992-5113
or
come
Supply,
Middleport.
.2&lt;2
tc
Gallipolis . John Russell.
·and 1011, ~.and Mrs. Lola holding a Chicken Barbecue in .sale . ·
9 4
see at 161 '1, '' ' h Ave.,
LOT IN SYRACUSE on St. Rt. Owner &amp; Operator.
The collateral is presently
Griffin vilited Mrs. GrHfln's the near future. Mrs. Harold
Middleporl. or.
EARLY American stereo, AM5-13-tf( '
stored and may be seen at Karr
124, phone m -56 12 .
8-29-lfc FM radio, 4 -s~d changer, 4!iater, Mrs. lillie Prushing, in Bumgarner was accepted as a &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales,
9-29-31p HACl&lt;N EY'S Ereortc servfce~·
speaker
sound
system,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
CGiumbull llunday.
new member.
-Balance
$79.32.
Use
our
GENERAL MOTORS YARD SALE, rain or shine, 572
all types of elecfrlcal work.
Clytie Kuhn was taken to St. Refreshments were served to
37 ACRES on Shade River,
ACCEPTANCE
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
S. 3rd, Middleport Thursday,
Phone m-6407.
CORPORATION
drilled well, modern 4-room
9-27-6tc
Joseph Hoapltal in Parkers- those present by Mrs. Robert
starting at 10 a.m.
9-29·301&lt;
house and bath, aluminum
9-28-2tc
burg last week after becoming Gurtis and Mrs . Kenneth 191 29 1101 6, 2t
siding, paneling, 7 acres river STANS Body Shop. Rt.' 1.
STEREO-RADIO combination,
NOTICE OF
Wat hlB hcme.
·
bottom. Phone m -6133 after 1
Thompson.
APPOINTMENT
SAVE up lo one half. Bring your lovely Walnul finish, 4-speed
Racine Is now open. Call 949·
p.m.
WUUam Kum Gf Cantm spent
Case No . 20533
12~ - 14' - 24' - WIDf
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop, intermixed changer , 4·
2789
for appointment .
Estate of Robert S. Blackwood,
9-29-6tp
speaker
sound
system .
151 Butt€:rnut Ave. , Pomeroy,
a couple Gf days bere with hlB
Speclallzin~ In painting, body
Deceased .
Balance $63.99 . Use our
phone 9'92-5080.
work and fiberglass .
molhel', Mrs. Grace Kuhn, and
Notice is hereby given that
budget
terms. Call m -7085.
9-24-tfc
HOUSE, 1642 'Lincoln Heights.
9·28·61c
Gladys
E
.
Blackwood
of
went aqulrrel hunting.
9-27-6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Harrison Rutland , Ohio , has been duly
Call Danny Thompson, m.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles and son Rodney were weekend appointed Executrix Of the L st
2196.
NEW CONTRACTOR In area.
0
8 ROOM house oo Union Ave.
7-18-tfc
Dry wall patching, general
observed Mrs. Brickles' visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Olen Eslate of RobertS . Blackwood ,
1220 Washington Blvd ..
deceased , late ol Rutland, s2s REWARD for brief case
Phone
992-5641.
painting
. Call Richard I.
Belpre,
Ohio
birthday Sunday when they Harrison.
Meigs County, Ohio .
9-2J.6tp
Oubbeld, phone 742-5825,
Creditors are required to file
containing important school
had dinner at a restaurant and
Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Dean their claims w ith said fiduciary papers lost on Walnut St .,
Rutland.
1llen were afternom guests Gf visited with Mr. and Mrs. within four months .
9-28-4tp
Middleport. Phone 992 -3979. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Real Estate
Dated lhls 16th day of Sep9-28-3tc
ber brother, Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey, Rick, Tammy
Parkview Kennels. Phone 992·
...
tember 1971 .
- - - - - - -- 5443.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller ,
~rlea Spencer of Belpre. and Cindy ~nd John Shim of
F . H. O'Brien ·
Sale
Trade
8·
15-lfc
Sanllallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Probate Judge
ltanted To Buy
They lila called Cll Mr. and Kcrea who Is now attending
662-3035.
of said County
USED fuel oil furnace. Phone 10.000 B. T. u. floor furnace, like HOUSE ·- Two apts., 4 rooms
Mrs. Henry Tayler of Little college at Athens and making 191 22. 29 1101 6, 31
2-12-tfc .
and bath each, near new
Cheshire 367-7680.
new, 4 circulating gas heaters
Hocking m their way home.
housing
project.
Trade
for
his home with Mr. and Mrs.
9·29-llc from 30,000 to 65,000 B.T.U.•
'SEWING MACHINES. R~lr ·
smaller house. Phone 992Rev. and Mrs. Randy Gilkey at Athens.
Bo:clktr
service, all makes, 992-228.4,
NOTICE OF
commode, drop In double
2608.
110
Machanlc
Street
OLD
Furniture,
dishes,
clocks,
Llvander and son of Athens
APPOINTMENT
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
sink. Albert Hill, Racine,
Linda Besl spent the past
9-26-30tc
Pomeroy, Ohio
complete households.
and-or
Case
No.
20,556
Authorized Singer Sales and
Ohio,
phone
949-2261.
were SUnday guests of Mr. and weekend in Mansfield where Estate of ROBERT R . ED · Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
9-24-6tc
Mrs. Kemeth Griffith.
WARDS , Deceased .
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
she visited with friends.
NEW LISTING -6 room frame
3·29-tlc
Not ice is hereby given that
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor,
8-25-tfc ~-----'----.· Real Estate For Sale
home. Garage. 1 acre at ----,-.,..,---..---~- ·
Recent visitors of Mrs. Robert G. Edwards of R. D.
Burlingham. $4,500.00.
BEAT the COLO WINTER 3 BEDROOM brick home.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tucker Ellzabeth Murray were Mr. and Reedsville. Ohio. and Will iam J . Female Help Wanted
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
and
IT'S
COST
WITH
Choice location In Middleport. '
located at Crossroads, Rt. -124.
and famUy. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Jim Gordon of St. Albans, Edwards. 32640 Farrell Dr ..
HEATING OIL FROM
Seen by appointment only. 1 NEW LISTING- 2 apartments
Sacramento,
California,
have
MO"'HERS
...
Beeline
Fashions
Complete front end service,
ThCIII88 Tayler and family, all W.Va.
been duly appointed Executors
•
- one 6 rooms, bath, large
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m .
LANDMARK.
tune up and brake service.
or
the
Estate
of
Robert
R.
offers
you
and
your
family
a
porch,
down.
Other
5
rooms,
attended the Brock reunion at
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Edwards, deceased, late of year round wardrobe plus a
5-7-tfc
We have the finest Budget
bath,
up.
Middleport . · · Wheels b~lanced elec·•
the hime ci Mr. and Mrs. Houdershalt and Audra visited Meigs County, Ohio.
Pay Plan. Delivery Services,
work
Ironically. . All
weekly paycheck . Call 446$23,500.00.
Cred ltors are required to tile
4146, 949-3703.
Automatic Degree Day $2.300 WILL lluY. &gt;J acres In
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Joseph Rlne ci Bethesda. Mrs. ooe evening recently with Mr.
their claims with said fiduciary
9-28-Jtc
Bedford Township, Wolfpen LUXU.IOUS
rales. Phone 992-3213.
,
Delivery and Duel Delivery
COUNTRY
Rlne is a sister of Mrs. Blain and Mrs. John Dean.
within four months .
---------Road.
20
minutes
from
·
7-27-lfc
Equipment.
HOME - New 4 bedrooms, 2
Dated lhis 16th day of Sep Taylor.
Pomeroy.
:v,
of
land
In
timber,
Mr. and Mrs. VlrgU King took
baths, family room with
We also have a complete line
F. H. O'Br ie n Help Wanted
balance In pasture. No
Terry Deem, son ci Mr. and their daughter Mary Lou to Mt. tember. 1971.
fireplace.
2 car garage. 15 AU rOMOBILE . Insui-ancebeen ·
of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
buildings. Call 992-2152 and
Lost
your ,
caocelled?
Probate Judge CAN YOU devole 10 hours a and Furnilces.
acres.
Asking
$37,500.00 . .
Mrs. William Watson and Vernon where she Is attending
ask tor Dick .
operator's
license?
Call
mof
said
County
week
for
$75
profits
and
a
~ with the u. s. Anny as the Nazarene College. Her
2966.
191 22. 29 110) 6, 31
wardrobe without paying · ~;. ·
9-22-tfc POMEROY
Buslne5!
, OMEROY
• . Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,
an MP In Vietnam, has been address is MI. Vernoo, Ohio.
6-15.tfc
- - -- - -- - building with 3. rentals .
cash? Ambitious housewives
.
Phone 992-2111 ··I 'SIX ~00111 house, bath, full
Asking
$25,000.00.
promoted to Sargeant SP 5. This
to
work
neighborhood
fashion
Several from this conununity
NOTICE OF SALE
basemen!, 133 Bullernut Ave ..,
The real estate of the late
shows . Car .needed. For free
Ia hlB second trip abroad.
attended the Stanley reunion Lucy
just walking distance . from · 120 ACRES - Dairy farm . - C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
A . Bolen. Deceased , in the
brochure. call 882-2070 or MUMS. all colors, field grown, downlown
Complete Service ,
Mrs. James Daniels of which was Sunday afternoon at Village of Pageville , Scipio wrile
Pomeroy. Contacl· Clean and productive. Plenty
ready to go Big Clusters.
P. 0. Box 186, New
Phone 949-3821
County,
Ohio,
~d
Hedrick,
2137
Wadsworthj
Township
,
Meigs
Mlddleperl was a Sunday guest the park on Route 33.
of barn and building space. 5
Reynolds Flower Shop.
Haven. W. Va .
being a lot of land 35 feet by 10
Racine, Ohio
urive,
Columbus,
Ohio,
phope,
Mason, W. va.
bedroom home . 2 ponds,
9-29-6tc
Gf Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Rowan.
Recent visitors of Mr. and rods on which Is situate a house,
_28 _6tp 237-4334, Columbus.
' drilled well , and Chester
Crill Bradford
9
Marvin ·walker returned Mrs. Nev White and sons were as described In Deed Recorded
5· l-Ife ·
5-9-lfd
water . A REAL FARM.
in Vol. 175, Page 647, Deed WILL PAY well for your spare
borne Saturoay fr1111 Camden Mr. and Mrs. Harrison White of R'
$60,000.00.
e cords of Meigs County , Ohio,
time working at home for us. NEW . 1971 zig-zag sewing .- - - - - - . . , . - - - - READY-:Mri( ~ CONCRE'f?
Clark Hospital where he spent Camp Myer, va,, Mrs. Myrtle will be offered for sale at the Anyone who can read and
machine
In
original
factory
delivered right to your .
offices of Crow , Crow &amp; Porter,
GENERAL STORE- 2 'houses.
carton . Zig-zag to make
several days fer observation. White ci Madison, W.Va., Mr. Attorneys at Law. Pomeroy, write can . qualify. Weekly
prolect. Fast and ,easy. Free
storage
building.
2
car
buttonholes,
sew
on
buttons,
salary. For .. details, write,
est
nrates. Phone 992-3284.
·Mr. and Mrs. Thurman and Mrs. Ralph Chase of Ohio, at 1:30 P .M . on Friday,
garage. One acre. LOCK,
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box · monograms and make fancy
October 1st, 1971. This property
Goegleln
Ready-MIK Co., ;
STOCK. and BARREL. Only
l!iabcock returned home after a Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. is appraised at $1,500.00, and
designs with justthe twl~t of a
.
324, Dept. K 479, Levittown,
Ohio.
.· '
Middleport;
$30,000.00.
single
dial.
left
In
lay-away
~annot be sold for less than the
Pa. 19053.
1ft days In Colwnbus.
William King, local, Mark appraised
6·30-tf&lt;."
value . Terms of sale
and never been used. Will sell
608 E
9-28-12tc
:Friends and relatives of Mrs. White Of Madison, W.Va., Mrs. are cash, and
the property will
for only $47 cash or credit
MAin
TO BUY OR SELL CALL 992·
.· .... '
':
..·~ - -··-.:
terms available. Phone 992POMEROY
BACKHOE AND DOZER work. ·
Eflle Waflon gathered at her Ferrell Holley and children of be sold subject to the lien for
3325 or t9H378
taxes for 1971.
TOWNSHIP ROAD T-l9 -11:16
Septic tanks Installed. Goorge ·
Employment Wanted
HELEN L. TEAFORD. ·
home Sunday to celebrate her Ashton, Mrs. Judy White and real estate Marjor
ie E . Stanley,
56 41ACRES, beautiful sile for
(Bill) Pullins, Phone m-2478.
ASSOACIATE
9-28-6tc
Administratrix of th.e MALE, 19 years of age needs
birthday. Approdmately 60 children, Mason, W. Va., Mr.
housing
prol'ecl
or
trailer
4-25-tfc
9·26-6tc
Estate of
job on Monday and Thursday
court, lde•l s te for e~cluslve
peno111 were In attendance and Jolmson Holley, Frazers BotELt::CTROLUX
vacuum
Lucy A. Bolen , Deceased
afternoons or · any '"evenlnQ.
ALMOST
IN
,. •
cleaner complete with at- hom.e .
abe received many lovely gifts. tom, W. Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Crow , Crow &amp; Porter,
Work cheap at home .or
POMEROY AND LEVEL.
Attorneys for Administratrix
tachments,
cordwlnder
and
Mr. and Mrs. Geerge Fran- Arvel HoUey of HunUngton, W.
business . For Information
paint spray . Used, but In like Jusl $12.900.
write P. 0. Box 57, Mid191 22. 29, 21
claco ol GaUon and mother, Va.
new
condition. Pay $34.45
dleport, 01\ln
cash
or
budget plan available. RACINE - I slory frame, 3
Mn. Iva WUaon of Delaware
9-2'1·5fc
bedrooms, storage space
NOTICE
OF
Phone
992-5641.
apent a recent weekend here
APPOI.NTMENT
9-28-6tc galore, carpeted, balh, nice
with Mn. Elfie Watson.
..
Case No. 20554
- - - -- - - - kllchen, large garage, .75
Estate of Augusta M . Wolfe , Male Help Wanted
1970
HONOA450
cc,
$550.
Phone
ACRE of ground, IN FIRST
ITEM: Jack Kane;
Deceased .
,IMMEDIATE
opening
for
a
992-3703
or
992-3751
.
·
CLASS
CONDITION. GOING
Notice is hereby given that
· Eus- RiuJ and aon Of You somehow get the Anna
man
over
21
years
old
to
work
.
9-28-6tc
AT
520,500.
THIS YOU
. M . Ryther of P . 0 . Box
$35 .Oo'llowriEallll'll were SUnday dinner
In
our
store.
Must
have
good
MUST
SEE.
eling he has tho.q ght
130, Pom ero y, Ohio , has been
Balanc;e•an
personality, like to meet DARK BROWN early American
ol Mr. and _Mrs. Oscar
bout
what · he's duly appointed Administratrix
public,
willing
lo
assume
·
love
seat,
$30;
4
pair
84"
HAVE
A
SELLING
of the Estate of Augusta M .
Convenient
Blbeaet.
haring with you. Your
Wolfe , deceased , late of Letart
responsibility, vacation plan,
bonded Burlington house PROBLEM? PLACE THE
Terms.
Townsh ip, Meigs County , Ohio .
IIJI, Tenia Llcomlle and
OF
YOUR
hospitalization plan and other drapes burnt orange and SALE
eeling is right.
Cred ltors are ·requ ired to file
lringe benellts. Please state avocad~ green miKiure$11 pr.;
PROPERTY
IN
COM·
.,......... called on Mr. and
th ei r claims with said fidicuary
,,
salary
requirements.
Send
one
dark
wooden
boo~case, 3
PETENT
HANDS.
within
four
months
.
111'1. WIJ!It Brlc:tlel recently.
resume of present and past shelves. $8; one metal bed
HENRY E. CLELAND
Dated this lOth day o( Sep .
Mn. Pete GGodln .ol
employ~rs lo Box 729-.L, c-o
and · springs, $5. ,.Contact
REALTOR
tember 1971.
The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy,
Roger Bahr. Chester. Ohio
Office 992;22.59
F . H. 0 ~ 8rien
JW•ad, Fla., were wnllend
Probate Judg e
Ohio.
985-395ll.
·
Residence m-2S61
,
of Mr.. NelHI
of said County
9-26-12tc
9-28-4ti:
9-24-6tc
- Mason. ''·
19 I
1s.
22.
29,
Jlc
W.tbnla!l.
-----~--;--'-

QUALITY

DADBURN

.,

.

••

AND MEEK

BALL~ O'FIRE!!
I CAN'T
WAL:&lt; 11\J TH'
SETTLEMENT
LOOK IN'
LiKE THIIS/7~ 'I

r-~~M-~:")

~---v---

JOHNsON MAStfRRY .

EXPERT·

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

•

OFFICE SUPPLiES .

..

BADGE GUYS

•

tS IT MV l)VNAMIC
DELIVSR.V, MY
CLEVIiP. SCII.IPT, MV
CHAR.tSMA, ff,V~~

FuRNITURE

THIS EVENIN&lt;S AN
OLCI SOY FRIEND
IS DROPPit&lt;l&lt;O ElY.

,M2-7608

ROOFiNG

Pomeroy Motor Co.

CARPENTER

O'BRIEN ·
El£CJRIC.·

SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

Lin~ln

I!~R:t:.

.

JOHN IE'S

BEAUtY SHOP

~~==·

L:====- - --_J

.

'

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'

c"uct&lt;,Ler!- r!N TH'
TIME WE. AAAIVES,
THAA'LL BE PLIN'N!!
THEY IS-&amp;-USH ROMANTIC LI'L
SOULS -,..~t'.-.....

N::E:":l:-7:47:4:·:~

'
WE' L~ TAKE 'I-lUFF
GU~.o\ WR.~, POP
llOTTLES f&gt;N' 8eR ~

I

FO' A SAACK 01-1 Tl-1'
' - - TRIP-euT TI-lEY'S
HEAIU'i LI'L

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LIKG
TO I'(GNI
A COUPLG
OF HOI&lt;'?fiG!

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GASOLINE
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Kingsbury

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THE BO.RN WSER

y

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MILLER

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MOBiL£ HOMES

Virgil B.

For

TEAFORD

or

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of -

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affair
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wdo.)
YeMna,-'• Aa•••
fast
look
22. 1!ooton
30. Getahead
(2 wds.)
!!ruins'
of (2wda.)
5. Amorous
!lobby
32.8onof
chap
23. Blrd's
Odin
33.Pa.uenger
6. Look up to
beak
7. 100 dinars

27. Verdi

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Unscramble those rwr Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
Coim four ordinary worda.

itAMBY

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31.L&amp;wn

33. Where to

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s-AID WHEN

THE eiJU. 5WAU.ONEP
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Nourranettheelreledletlen ::. ·

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X I I XI II I ]t"
(Aae eu 1

Ju.,bl.,, FIFTT MADLY AGHAST NII'HIW
AM•·erl Licktd nml pal

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AXYDLBAAXB

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LONG~ELLOW

One letter almply standi for another. In th1l umple A Ia
uood'for the thne L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Slnste ltltel'll,
apostropheo, the tmcth and fonnaUon of the wordl aio all
hbttl. Each day tho coda !etten are different.

A &lt;JeyptoJrun Qaotaaft
CNLGL WGL CJD JWAH DP YLLCVSM TVPPVKBRCVLH: ADB WRCLG
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I

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(2wda.)
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title

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1

admlral

36. Card game
37. - de
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40. ODie's

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garden
36.-

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34. Biblical

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FURNITURE

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1W liiET 1111011'
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HA'311£ SCARS

LAURELS, LlBICRTY KNOWS NCJliill11G BUT VICTOIUiiL .. 1,(
- DOUGLAS )(AC ARTHUR
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19. Work

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'349.95

.-11

dilly
3. Boston's

opera
18. Kind of
In Teheran
dance
8.Recount
28. Wood- ,
20. Brittany
9. Brynner
ward's
13. Electrical
mate
native
2.1.. Table scrap
unit
29. Political
. group
25. Before
16. Tease
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Parthenon ~"ft'"""'l""'"'!l'"­
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temple .
-=----130. Raiment

NEW

WMP0/1390

farewell
12. Tree
14.Battle
- fryor
15.
June 17,
· 1775
(2 wds.)
17. More
unctuous

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18. Feather
scarf

historic

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s;;u--;;ra~:S"ffieds Get Action I Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
'

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..

New Haven Social Events
· The ttb, lOth, lith and 12th Workshop on Sept. 30 at

'

25181$
OF

.,...,.,

•tor Co.

B08WIRE

For Rent

FENCE!!

'

Busfu_ess Serviees. .. J

2 · BEDROOM mobile home In
Mlcldlei&gt;ort. Phone m-5433. : , •
·
9-29-2tc

p-ades of St. Paul .Lutheran Charleston; Conservation, Arts
Church, New ·Haven, are and Crafts Workshop Oct. 24-26
ipOIIIOI'ing a Ecology Retreat at Jacksons Mill; the State
FURNISHED and unfurnished .
POMEROY
the weekend of October 8th, 9th Convention March 16-18 at
apartments. CJos~ to school .
. Cp~}efP.
.
PhQne m -5434.
and lOth. The youth from Greenbrier Hotel, White
HOME &amp; AUTO
1968 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
$1495
10-l8-ttc·
Platrlct II and 12 ci the Sulphur Springs. Home Ule
.
·-.
270 Series. vinyl roof. white finish. all good tires. 6 cyl.,
Remotkling
992-2094
· Lutheran Church in America Conference at Cedar Lakes Oct.
-·· - - - --- .
automatic trans., radio. clean Interior.
Kitchens,
Baths :
TRAILER
space,
desirable
606
~Main
Pomeroy
have beeJI invited along with 12 and 13.
1967 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
$1495
Room
Additions
neighborhood,
phone
992-2084.
-GUARANTEEDSt. Wagon. Green finish with matching gr'l"n vinyl .Intlieir advisors to attend this The Luther League of St. Paul
And Patios
9-19-tfc
ter
ior,
all·
g~ w-w tires, VB engine, automatic trans.,
Phone 992-2094
retreat.
Lutheran Church asked per-------,-BadchaeAnd
power steering and brakes., luggage rack. A sharp wagon
And
Endloader Work
They wW register on Friday mission to use the club room to
TRAILER. BroWn 's Trailer
and priced -to please.
Pomeroy
Home
&amp;
Auto
.·
Park,
Minersville(
phone
992evening from 6 p.m. unti19 p.m. serve their meals there during
1967 FORO GALAXIE 500
$1595
Septic Tanks
3324.
4 Door , tow mllea9e by local one owner. Med . green finish
with a break the lee get- their Ecology Report Oct. S-10.
9-26-61c
And
Leach Bods.
open nus ·
Stop In and See Our
and spotless Interior, V8 engine, automatic and power
together. On SatUrday they wW Permission was given io them.
,
.
-_
.
MondaythruSaturday
Floor
Displ;~y.
steering, good w-w tires. A clean_car that has always been
pick up Utter ,on the highways Mrs. ·Gurtls explained how the
cared for.
APARTME,NT,
furnished
room
with bath, phone
m -2780
or . ~=~6=06-=~E-=·=Ma==in-:::'-:::P-:::o-=-m=e=ro~y=,-=-0=.=~:·, ·~;';;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;~
between the 14p of Hartford hill club could earn hpnor points for
m -3432.
to Roush's Drive-ln. They have competition: A state-wide
9 17
' -«c
&amp;
asked the merchants to con-. contest is nO. in effect for
4 ROOM and bath apartment.
tribute ten cents per· bag of bringing new members into the
WORK
Telephone 773-5147, Mason,
litter collecte.r, this money in club. A prize will be awarded at
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
w. Va., on main highway.
turn wW be . donated to the the state convention.
f'PMEROV, OHIO
Reynolds Flower Shop.
.
9-28-6tp
Residential,
Corner Union Ave.
newly organized New Haven Mrs.
William
Russell
and State Rt. 7
C
·Park and Recreation Com- reported on the Education
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
ommerci;~l
itours-Mo&lt;lday, Tuesday,
6 ROOM house and bath In
mission. The bagged litter wW Committee. Safety is being
AII Weather Roofl ng &amp;
and
Wednesday and Friday
Racine. Phone evenings only
992-5249.
Construction
Co.
and
AnIndustrial
Wiring
8:30 a. !II. to6 p.m.
be coUected by the State Road stressed this year.
IN~C::~A~?oN
Notice
9-28-31c thony _Plumbing &amp; Heating.'
24
Hour
Service
Thursday
Department.
They tenattively set Oct. 17
DEADLINES
Co!llplele
Plumbing,
1h,m.to8:30p.!11.
GIANT
YARD
SALE
.
Saturday,
· "Oil SUnday they wW. attend for a Car Rodeo. Watch for 5 P.M. Day Before Publicalion
house. 4 Healing and Ajr ConSaturday
Oclober 2. 1971, 9 a.m. at UNFURNISHED
rooms and bath, garage, 1655 ditioning.
church and wW be dismlssed further details.
Mondav Deadline 9a.m.
·
949-4551
8:30a.m. to1 p.m.
Foglesong Road, Mason City .
Point Lane, Pomeroy. Phone
th wW
held
th
. &lt;;an,qtlatlon &amp; Corrections
f 11-'•• dinn The
Turn at Texaco station
er.
you
A discussion was
on e Willbeaccepteduntll9a .m. for lowards
o ""u"'
992-3874.
lhe hill and follow
240
St., Middleport
2=====R:a:c:ine=,0:.
P.;.H;O:·
stay at the Church Social Room scholarship held each· year.
· Day of Publication
. 9-28-3tc
signs to Miller's. Items too
and the Parish House and wW Mrs. William Russell was to
REGULATIONS
Phone 992-2550
~.
numerous to mention, must
· be fed by the women of the check the rules and regulations • The Publisher reserves the' be seen lo be appreciated. ·In TRAILER tOTS, Bob's Mobile Insured- Experienced
FOUR NEW HOMES
right to edit or reject any ads· event of rain, sale will be held
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Work
Guaranteed
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION
church at the social room of the concerning this scholarship.
deemed obi ectlona 1. The
Ohio. 992-2951.
on front porch . Several an .
ONE
HOME
IN RACINE .
Ubrary Building.
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson, publisher will not be responsible
4-2-lfc · See - US for - Free
liques.
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
WOMAN'S CLUB
program committee chairman, lor more than one incorrect.
9-29-2tp
Estimate on Furnace
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
The New Haven Woman's reported that the president's insertion. RATES
Auto
Sales
Instalation.
NO MONEY DOWN
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
bubmetfor a business meeting Annual Tea would be held at the
For Want Ad Service
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
Sportsman Club, Sunday, Oct. 1962 FORD •;, ton pickup truck
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
on September 14 at the club home of Mrs. Thelma Scally on scents per Word one Insertion
3
at
12
noon
.
S450.
Phone
949-4551.
9-26-7tc
monthly
payment as low as S65.00 for a family wllh a base
Minimum Charge 75c
9-29-3tc
room with. Mrs. Robert G ur tis • Sept. 28.
12 cents per word three.
1966 COMET Cyclone. 289 cu. ln. fo.r Sale
salary of ss.ooo.oo and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
president, presiding. Members Mrs . Thompson also an- consecutive Insertions.
Hurst
4
speed,
rebuilt
EA"N
AT
home
addressln~
rate.
engine,
excess fluids with
engine, new paint, tape
"
gave the pledge to the flag and nounced a work day at the club
18 cents per word six con- REDUCE
Fluldex,
$1.69.
Lose
weight
envelopes. Rush ·stampe
player, good condllion, $600.
secutive Insertions.
safely with Dex-A-Diet, 98
the club collect.
room would be on Sept. 20. The
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Phone 992-6015 afler 5:30p.m.
self-addressed envelope. The
cents, at Nelson Drugs.
9-29-Jtc
Ambrose Co.. 4325 Lakeborn •.
Regular repcrts were given room was painted, new ads and ads paid within 10 days.
9-29-ltp
-•
·
Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
and approved. Thank you cards draperies hung and given an
CARD OF THANKS
9-8-30tp
fr
Mabel
&amp; OBITUARY
were read om Mrs.
overall faceliftlng.
' suo for 50 word minimum . .fiRST ANNUAL reunion of the Mobile Homes for Sale
descendants of John Hansford
Mcrgan for the kindness shown Mrs. Gurtis reported on the Each additional word 2c.
Hudson and Amelia Roush Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE. "STAR" kills rats quickly.
her during her Wness; from Community Improvement
BLIND ADS
BILL NELSON
HILTON WOLFE
Hudson will be held Oct. 3,
No down payment, 12 years to Sure. 2112 pounds. Sl.69.
Mlu Cozy Cooke for &lt;NV&gt;•Oring Committee. She announced that
Additional 25c Charge per
992-:U57
Ebersbach
Hardware,
Sugar
. . 949-3211
1971
at
the
west
roadside
park
.
pay
to
qualified
Gl.
Up
to
·•··Advertisement.
Run
Mills,
,
Pickens
Hardon
Rt.
33.
Potluck
dinner
will
$2,500
available
for
lot
Im
OFFICE HOURS
her for Fair Queen; and from members of the club had
be held at 12:30. All
provements If you own ·a lot. ware, Mason.
_ _ p
Mlu Debbie Jones for the helped with the Red Cross 8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
NEIGLER Construction. For
9 21 301
descendants
and
friends
are
Get
your
new
mobile
home
-~-----___:..::.._:__.:_
building or r~modellng your
scholarship awarded her.
Bloodmoblle Canvass, had 8' 30 a .m. to 12 ' 00 Noon
invited.
now. See James Simpkins,
Saturday.
home.
Call Guy Nelgler,
9-29-3tc
Valley Estates Mobile Home APPLES - Fitzpatrick Qr.
The president read the worked in the Cancer Mobile
Racln~.
Ohio.
chards, State Route 689,
Sales, Rt. so East Athens resignation from Mrs. Ruth and had helped the town of New
LEGAL
7-31-tfc '·
RUMMAGE sale, Sept. 30, Oct. 593-8762.
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
NOTICE OF
Campbell from the membership Haven with the job of num230
S.
5th
Ave.
,
9·3-tfc
1
and
2
at
9-19-37tc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
PUBLIC SALE
Middleport, 9 to 5 each day.
ci the club.
bering the homes. Numbers will TO WHOM IT MAY CON·
Service, Phone 992·2522.
9-29·2fc
HALF RUNNER beans, $1.50
A schedule of meetings and be distributed at a later date. CERN :
6-10-tfc
For
Sale
bushel . pick your -own.
Notice Is hereby given that on
werbh""' was read: South ,\lso that the club luid sponsored October
12, 1971, at 10 :00 A.M. a PEP-UP witb new Zippies iron . A NEW medium grey frosted
Potatoes. Clarence Proffitt.
Re'a-1E. sta
" te For Sale . ROSEBERRY furnace Inpublic sale will be held at Karr
Western District Meeting Oc- a Fair Queen candidate.
pills.
Non-habit
forming.
Only
wiglet,
$20.
or
best
offer.
Portland
.
Phone
843-2254.
~~~a~i:,'~.~~~ ~~l'";,~te~:,
Van Zandt Motor Sales,
'Iober 23 at the Huntington Some members are attending &amp;Pomeroy
$1.98, Nelson Drugs.
Phone 742-5641.
9-22-tfc RACINE, 10 room house and
Service work . Call Cecil
, Ohio to sell for cash
9-22-301
9-29-3tc
. .
bath. Two lots. basement,
Woman's club; Clean Air theflrstaldclasses and they are the following collateral, to wit :
--------- P
roAL. limestone. Excelsior\
garage. Phone 949-4313 after
Roseberry , Racine, Ohio .
1965 Buick 6637 Serial No.
still interested in helping the 466375H937922, said collateral -REDUCE sale and fast with MINIATURE Schnauzers - ,._ ~all Works, E. "~
"·1 n St ·•1
Phone 614-843·227 4. ,. .30tp
S:30 p.m .
8
Park and RecreatiOn Com- betng held to secure an
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
AKC puppies, no shedding, o&gt;omeroy . Phone 992··3891. I
9-23-12tp ~-------obligation arising under a retail
9
mission.
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
odorless, permanent shols,
.
'· ·1fc: NEW, 3.bedroom home · (n THE SHOP, Custom l)leaf
instalment security agreement
301
9
22
667
585
Ronald
C.
and
exec;uted
by
Mrs. Jess Abel reported on
" · P wormed,
· Coolville
" 2- GAS circulating · heaters.
Middleport. Built-In kitchen. cutting, Ple~sant Ridge RQIId, .
Belly Grady and held by
6214
~':Vs
. the budg : ind finance com- General Motors A_cceptan-ce - -- - - - - - ·
9-29-12tp_ . Ph~e'992-5262 evenings.
• • ti~amlc tile ball\. all-electric , P.pmeroy,.D1ck Vaugf"'n. ~: ~
..
.
Kosmetics. Sep- --~;
9·21-tfc
heal, goOa neighborhood. Can 337~ and Oale.Cfitre, m -6346.
mittee. fie budget for ihe year Corporation as secured party . KOSCOT
lember Sales
Special
:
arrange
Fl-fA financing.
9-12-JOic
Said public sale Is to be con 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
K
L. K 1 52
was presented and after it ·was ducted according to the laws of
992
reamy 'P o e
now
10x50, A-1 condition. Phone FARM and home latex house
Telephone m -3600 or
-. - - -.
By Mn. Evelya Brickle•
$1.50, Frostlucent Up Kote
I
Kl
B tide
2186
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
;unended, the group approved the State ol Ohio. General
71
992
94
7
Acceptance CorpOration
$2 .50 now $2, 23 delicious
992· 56 or · 3 ·
paint sa e.
ng
u rs
·
· 7-25-tfc Reasonable rates. Ph. ~-4782,
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Shultz said budget. The club discussed Motors
9·29·31C
reserves the right to bid at this
tolors.
Call
992-5113
or
come
Supply,
Middleport.
.2&lt;2
tc
Gallipolis . John Russell.
·and 1011, ~.and Mrs. Lola holding a Chicken Barbecue in .sale . ·
9 4
see at 161 '1, '' ' h Ave.,
LOT IN SYRACUSE on St. Rt. Owner &amp; Operator.
The collateral is presently
Griffin vilited Mrs. GrHfln's the near future. Mrs. Harold
Middleporl. or.
EARLY American stereo, AM5-13-tf( '
stored and may be seen at Karr
124, phone m -56 12 .
8-29-lfc FM radio, 4 -s~d changer, 4!iater, Mrs. lillie Prushing, in Bumgarner was accepted as a &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales,
9-29-31p HACl&lt;N EY'S Ereortc servfce~·
speaker
sound
system,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
CGiumbull llunday.
new member.
-Balance
$79.32.
Use
our
GENERAL MOTORS YARD SALE, rain or shine, 572
all types of elecfrlcal work.
Clytie Kuhn was taken to St. Refreshments were served to
37 ACRES on Shade River,
ACCEPTANCE
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
S. 3rd, Middleport Thursday,
Phone m-6407.
CORPORATION
drilled well, modern 4-room
9-27-6tc
Joseph Hoapltal in Parkers- those present by Mrs. Robert
starting at 10 a.m.
9-29·301&lt;
house and bath, aluminum
9-28-2tc
burg last week after becoming Gurtis and Mrs . Kenneth 191 29 1101 6, 2t
siding, paneling, 7 acres river STANS Body Shop. Rt.' 1.
STEREO-RADIO combination,
NOTICE OF
Wat hlB hcme.
·
bottom. Phone m -6133 after 1
Thompson.
APPOINTMENT
SAVE up lo one half. Bring your lovely Walnul finish, 4-speed
Racine Is now open. Call 949·
p.m.
WUUam Kum Gf Cantm spent
Case No . 20533
12~ - 14' - 24' - WIDf
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop, intermixed changer , 4·
2789
for appointment .
Estate of Robert S. Blackwood,
9-29-6tp
speaker
sound
system .
151 Butt€:rnut Ave. , Pomeroy,
a couple Gf days bere with hlB
Speclallzin~ In painting, body
Deceased .
Balance $63.99 . Use our
phone 9'92-5080.
work and fiberglass .
molhel', Mrs. Grace Kuhn, and
Notice is hereby given that
budget
terms. Call m -7085.
9-24-tfc
HOUSE, 1642 'Lincoln Heights.
9·28·61c
Gladys
E
.
Blackwood
of
went aqulrrel hunting.
9-27-6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Harrison Rutland , Ohio , has been duly
Call Danny Thompson, m.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles and son Rodney were weekend appointed Executrix Of the L st
2196.
NEW CONTRACTOR In area.
0
8 ROOM house oo Union Ave.
7-18-tfc
Dry wall patching, general
observed Mrs. Brickles' visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Olen Eslate of RobertS . Blackwood ,
1220 Washington Blvd ..
deceased , late ol Rutland, s2s REWARD for brief case
Phone
992-5641.
painting
. Call Richard I.
Belpre,
Ohio
birthday Sunday when they Harrison.
Meigs County, Ohio .
9-2J.6tp
Oubbeld, phone 742-5825,
Creditors are required to file
containing important school
had dinner at a restaurant and
Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Dean their claims w ith said fiduciary papers lost on Walnut St .,
Rutland.
1llen were afternom guests Gf visited with Mr. and Mrs. within four months .
9-28-4tp
Middleport. Phone 992 -3979. POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
Real Estate
Dated lhls 16th day of Sep9-28-3tc
ber brother, Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey, Rick, Tammy
Parkview Kennels. Phone 992·
...
tember 1971 .
- - - - - - -- 5443.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller ,
~rlea Spencer of Belpre. and Cindy ~nd John Shim of
F . H. O'Brien ·
Sale
Trade
8·
15-lfc
Sanllallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Probate Judge
ltanted To Buy
They lila called Cll Mr. and Kcrea who Is now attending
662-3035.
of said County
USED fuel oil furnace. Phone 10.000 B. T. u. floor furnace, like HOUSE ·- Two apts., 4 rooms
Mrs. Henry Tayler of Little college at Athens and making 191 22. 29 1101 6, 31
2-12-tfc .
and bath each, near new
Cheshire 367-7680.
new, 4 circulating gas heaters
Hocking m their way home.
housing
project.
Trade
for
his home with Mr. and Mrs.
9·29-llc from 30,000 to 65,000 B.T.U.•
'SEWING MACHINES. R~lr ·
smaller house. Phone 992Rev. and Mrs. Randy Gilkey at Athens.
Bo:clktr
service, all makes, 992-228.4,
NOTICE OF
commode, drop In double
2608.
110
Machanlc
Street
OLD
Furniture,
dishes,
clocks,
Llvander and son of Athens
APPOINTMENT
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
sink. Albert Hill, Racine,
Linda Besl spent the past
9-26-30tc
Pomeroy, Ohio
complete households.
and-or
Case
No.
20,556
Authorized Singer Sales and
Ohio,
phone
949-2261.
were SUnday guests of Mr. and weekend in Mansfield where Estate of ROBERT R . ED · Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
9-24-6tc
Mrs. Kemeth Griffith.
WARDS , Deceased .
Ohio. Call 992-6271.
she visited with friends.
NEW LISTING -6 room frame
3·29-tlc
Not ice is hereby given that
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor,
8-25-tfc ~-----'----.· Real Estate For Sale
home. Garage. 1 acre at ----,-.,..,---..---~- ·
Recent visitors of Mrs. Robert G. Edwards of R. D.
Burlingham. $4,500.00.
BEAT the COLO WINTER 3 BEDROOM brick home.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tucker Ellzabeth Murray were Mr. and Reedsville. Ohio. and Will iam J . Female Help Wanted
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
and
IT'S
COST
WITH
Choice location In Middleport. '
located at Crossroads, Rt. -124.
and famUy. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Jim Gordon of St. Albans, Edwards. 32640 Farrell Dr ..
HEATING OIL FROM
Seen by appointment only. 1 NEW LISTING- 2 apartments
Sacramento,
California,
have
MO"'HERS
...
Beeline
Fashions
Complete front end service,
ThCIII88 Tayler and family, all W.Va.
been duly appointed Executors
•
- one 6 rooms, bath, large
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m .
LANDMARK.
tune up and brake service.
or
the
Estate
of
Robert
R.
offers
you
and
your
family
a
porch,
down.
Other
5
rooms,
attended the Brock reunion at
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Edwards, deceased, late of year round wardrobe plus a
5-7-tfc
We have the finest Budget
bath,
up.
Middleport . · · Wheels b~lanced elec·•
the hime ci Mr. and Mrs. Houdershalt and Audra visited Meigs County, Ohio.
Pay Plan. Delivery Services,
work
Ironically. . All
weekly paycheck . Call 446$23,500.00.
Cred ltors are required to tile
4146, 949-3703.
Automatic Degree Day $2.300 WILL lluY. &gt;J acres In
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Joseph Rlne ci Bethesda. Mrs. ooe evening recently with Mr.
their claims with said fiduciary
9-28-Jtc
Bedford Township, Wolfpen LUXU.IOUS
rales. Phone 992-3213.
,
Delivery and Duel Delivery
COUNTRY
Rlne is a sister of Mrs. Blain and Mrs. John Dean.
within four months .
---------Road.
20
minutes
from
·
7-27-lfc
Equipment.
HOME - New 4 bedrooms, 2
Dated lhis 16th day of Sep Taylor.
Pomeroy.
:v,
of
land
In
timber,
Mr. and Mrs. VlrgU King took
baths, family room with
We also have a complete line
F. H. O'Br ie n Help Wanted
balance In pasture. No
Terry Deem, son ci Mr. and their daughter Mary Lou to Mt. tember. 1971.
fireplace.
2 car garage. 15 AU rOMOBILE . Insui-ancebeen ·
of Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters
buildings. Call 992-2152 and
Lost
your ,
caocelled?
Probate Judge CAN YOU devole 10 hours a and Furnilces.
acres.
Asking
$37,500.00 . .
Mrs. William Watson and Vernon where she Is attending
ask tor Dick .
operator's
license?
Call
mof
said
County
week
for
$75
profits
and
a
~ with the u. s. Anny as the Nazarene College. Her
2966.
191 22. 29 110) 6, 31
wardrobe without paying · ~;. ·
9-22-tfc POMEROY
Buslne5!
, OMEROY
• . Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,
an MP In Vietnam, has been address is MI. Vernoo, Ohio.
6-15.tfc
- - -- - -- - building with 3. rentals .
cash? Ambitious housewives
.
Phone 992-2111 ··I 'SIX ~00111 house, bath, full
Asking
$25,000.00.
promoted to Sargeant SP 5. This
to
work
neighborhood
fashion
Several from this conununity
NOTICE OF SALE
basemen!, 133 Bullernut Ave ..,
The real estate of the late
shows . Car .needed. For free
Ia hlB second trip abroad.
attended the Stanley reunion Lucy
just walking distance . from · 120 ACRES - Dairy farm . - C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
A . Bolen. Deceased , in the
brochure. call 882-2070 or MUMS. all colors, field grown, downlown
Complete Service ,
Mrs. James Daniels of which was Sunday afternoon at Village of Pageville , Scipio wrile
Pomeroy. Contacl· Clean and productive. Plenty
ready to go Big Clusters.
P. 0. Box 186, New
Phone 949-3821
County,
Ohio,
~d
Hedrick,
2137
Wadsworthj
Township
,
Meigs
Mlddleperl was a Sunday guest the park on Route 33.
of barn and building space. 5
Reynolds Flower Shop.
Haven. W. Va .
being a lot of land 35 feet by 10
Racine, Ohio
urive,
Columbus,
Ohio,
phope,
Mason, W. va.
bedroom home . 2 ponds,
9-29-6tc
Gf Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Rowan.
Recent visitors of Mr. and rods on which Is situate a house,
_28 _6tp 237-4334, Columbus.
' drilled well , and Chester
Crill Bradford
9
Marvin ·walker returned Mrs. Nev White and sons were as described In Deed Recorded
5· l-Ife ·
5-9-lfd
water . A REAL FARM.
in Vol. 175, Page 647, Deed WILL PAY well for your spare
borne Saturoay fr1111 Camden Mr. and Mrs. Harrison White of R'
$60,000.00.
e cords of Meigs County , Ohio,
time working at home for us. NEW . 1971 zig-zag sewing .- - - - - - . . , . - - - - READY-:Mri( ~ CONCRE'f?
Clark Hospital where he spent Camp Myer, va,, Mrs. Myrtle will be offered for sale at the Anyone who can read and
machine
In
original
factory
delivered right to your .
offices of Crow , Crow &amp; Porter,
GENERAL STORE- 2 'houses.
carton . Zig-zag to make
several days fer observation. White ci Madison, W.Va., Mr. Attorneys at Law. Pomeroy, write can . qualify. Weekly
prolect. Fast and ,easy. Free
storage
building.
2
car
buttonholes,
sew
on
buttons,
salary. For .. details, write,
est
nrates. Phone 992-3284.
·Mr. and Mrs. Thurman and Mrs. Ralph Chase of Ohio, at 1:30 P .M . on Friday,
garage. One acre. LOCK,
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box · monograms and make fancy
October 1st, 1971. This property
Goegleln
Ready-MIK Co., ;
STOCK. and BARREL. Only
l!iabcock returned home after a Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. is appraised at $1,500.00, and
designs with justthe twl~t of a
.
324, Dept. K 479, Levittown,
Ohio.
.· '
Middleport;
$30,000.00.
single
dial.
left
In
lay-away
~annot be sold for less than the
Pa. 19053.
1ft days In Colwnbus.
William King, local, Mark appraised
6·30-tf&lt;."
value . Terms of sale
and never been used. Will sell
608 E
9-28-12tc
:Friends and relatives of Mrs. White Of Madison, W.Va., Mrs. are cash, and
the property will
for only $47 cash or credit
MAin
TO BUY OR SELL CALL 992·
.· .... '
':
..·~ - -··-.:
terms available. Phone 992POMEROY
BACKHOE AND DOZER work. ·
Eflle Waflon gathered at her Ferrell Holley and children of be sold subject to the lien for
3325 or t9H378
taxes for 1971.
TOWNSHIP ROAD T-l9 -11:16
Septic tanks Installed. Goorge ·
Employment Wanted
HELEN L. TEAFORD. ·
home Sunday to celebrate her Ashton, Mrs. Judy White and real estate Marjor
ie E . Stanley,
56 41ACRES, beautiful sile for
(Bill) Pullins, Phone m-2478.
ASSOACIATE
9-28-6tc
Administratrix of th.e MALE, 19 years of age needs
birthday. Approdmately 60 children, Mason, W. Va., Mr.
housing
prol'ecl
or
trailer
4-25-tfc
9·26-6tc
Estate of
job on Monday and Thursday
court, lde•l s te for e~cluslve
peno111 were In attendance and Jolmson Holley, Frazers BotELt::CTROLUX
vacuum
Lucy A. Bolen , Deceased
afternoons or · any '"evenlnQ.
ALMOST
IN
,. •
cleaner complete with at- hom.e .
abe received many lovely gifts. tom, W. Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Crow , Crow &amp; Porter,
Work cheap at home .or
POMEROY AND LEVEL.
Attorneys for Administratrix
tachments,
cordwlnder
and
Mr. and Mrs. Geerge Fran- Arvel HoUey of HunUngton, W.
business . For Information
paint spray . Used, but In like Jusl $12.900.
write P. 0. Box 57, Mid191 22. 29, 21
claco ol GaUon and mother, Va.
new
condition. Pay $34.45
dleport, 01\ln
cash
or
budget plan available. RACINE - I slory frame, 3
Mn. Iva WUaon of Delaware
9-2'1·5fc
bedrooms, storage space
NOTICE
OF
Phone
992-5641.
apent a recent weekend here
APPOI.NTMENT
9-28-6tc galore, carpeted, balh, nice
with Mn. Elfie Watson.
..
Case No. 20554
- - - -- - - - kllchen, large garage, .75
Estate of Augusta M . Wolfe , Male Help Wanted
1970
HONOA450
cc,
$550.
Phone
ACRE of ground, IN FIRST
ITEM: Jack Kane;
Deceased .
,IMMEDIATE
opening
for
a
992-3703
or
992-3751
.
·
CLASS
CONDITION. GOING
Notice is hereby given that
· Eus- RiuJ and aon Of You somehow get the Anna
man
over
21
years
old
to
work
.
9-28-6tc
AT
520,500.
THIS YOU
. M . Ryther of P . 0 . Box
$35 .Oo'llowriEallll'll were SUnday dinner
In
our
store.
Must
have
good
MUST
SEE.
eling he has tho.q ght
130, Pom ero y, Ohio , has been
Balanc;e•an
personality, like to meet DARK BROWN early American
ol Mr. and _Mrs. Oscar
bout
what · he's duly appointed Administratrix
public,
willing
lo
assume
·
love
seat,
$30;
4
pair
84"
HAVE
A
SELLING
of the Estate of Augusta M .
Convenient
Blbeaet.
haring with you. Your
Wolfe , deceased , late of Letart
responsibility, vacation plan,
bonded Burlington house PROBLEM? PLACE THE
Terms.
Townsh ip, Meigs County , Ohio .
IIJI, Tenia Llcomlle and
OF
YOUR
hospitalization plan and other drapes burnt orange and SALE
eeling is right.
Cred ltors are ·requ ired to file
lringe benellts. Please state avocad~ green miKiure$11 pr.;
PROPERTY
IN
COM·
.,......... called on Mr. and
th ei r claims with said fidicuary
,,
salary
requirements.
Send
one
dark
wooden
boo~case, 3
PETENT
HANDS.
within
four
months
.
111'1. WIJ!It Brlc:tlel recently.
resume of present and past shelves. $8; one metal bed
HENRY E. CLELAND
Dated this lOth day o( Sep .
Mn. Pete GGodln .ol
employ~rs lo Box 729-.L, c-o
and · springs, $5. ,.Contact
REALTOR
tember 1971.
The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy,
Roger Bahr. Chester. Ohio
Office 992;22.59
F . H. 0 ~ 8rien
JW•ad, Fla., were wnllend
Probate Judg e
Ohio.
985-395ll.
·
Residence m-2S61
,
of Mr.. NelHI
of said County
9-26-12tc
9-28-4ti:
9-24-6tc
- Mason. ''·
19 I
1s.
22.
29,
Jlc
W.tbnla!l.
-----~--;--'-

QUALITY

DADBURN

.,

.

••

AND MEEK

BALL~ O'FIRE!!
I CAN'T
WAL:&lt; 11\J TH'
SETTLEMENT
LOOK IN'
LiKE THIIS/7~ 'I

r-~~M-~:")

~---v---

JOHNsON MAStfRRY .

EXPERT·

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

•

OFFICE SUPPLiES .

..

BADGE GUYS

•

tS IT MV l)VNAMIC
DELIVSR.V, MY
CLEVIiP. SCII.IPT, MV
CHAR.tSMA, ff,V~~

FuRNITURE

THIS EVENIN&lt;S AN
OLCI SOY FRIEND
IS DROPPit&lt;l&lt;O ElY.

,M2-7608

ROOFiNG

Pomeroy Motor Co.

CARPENTER

O'BRIEN ·
El£CJRIC.·

SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

Lin~ln

I!~R:t:.

.

JOHN IE'S

BEAUtY SHOP

~~==·

L:====- - --_J

.

'

'
'

c"uct&lt;,Ler!- r!N TH'
TIME WE. AAAIVES,
THAA'LL BE PLIN'N!!
THEY IS-&amp;-USH ROMANTIC LI'L
SOULS -,..~t'.-.....

N::E:":l:-7:47:4:·:~

'
WE' L~ TAKE 'I-lUFF
GU~.o\ WR.~, POP
llOTTLES f&gt;N' 8eR ~

I

FO' A SAACK 01-1 Tl-1'
' - - TRIP-euT TI-lEY'S
HEAIU'i LI'L

~·!?

LIKG
TO I'(GNI
A COUPLG
OF HOI&lt;'?fiG!

.•

I"ATJORS ---

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.",
.,

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lOlHE
5HE5AID

WHO

NOTICE

GASOLINE
. ALLEY
-

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'

Tuppers Plains

SQCiety N
,

Kingsbury

.,

THE BO.RN WSER

y

...

•••

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~

... •GOOO, l1lf MORE ~ICA1fD
-THE MORE ABUIIOAKT GROWS·--•

•'
•

MILLER

'·.-•

MOBiL£ HOMES

Virgil B.

For

TEAFORD

or

-----

ACROSS
1. Hoofbeat
5. Borgnine's

Oscar role

••t

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THEN
l·lrvu
WAS A

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11te'f WCJ1K TliE IA5 VE6'.S
NlfA. snaALtZE tN Lt.IRII«7

'lj6,L-ro-ro H16ll ROlLERS
MO PRIVAlE GAAIE5 AHP

c;w.NIN5' THEM.

\

------

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of -

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PRI7If IT!

CC 1171 K.IDC J'eaturu SyAdlcate, lac::.)

21. BoBton

-1773.

(2 wds.)
affair
.Ch-urch
(2
4. Take a
wdo.)
YeMna,-'• Aa•••
fast
look
22. 1!ooton
30. Getahead
(2 wds.)
!!ruins'
of (2wda.)
5. Amorous
!lobby
32.8onof
chap
23. Blrd's
Odin
33.Pa.uenger
6. Look up to
beak
7. 100 dinars

27. Verdi

~t!JJWIDI!JE;:!!::U:!-tc::
Unscramble those rwr Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
Coim four ordinary worda.

itAMBY

.....

31.L&amp;wn

33. Where to

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s-AID WHEN

THE eiJU. 5WAU.ONEP
A eoMf!l.

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(Aae eu 1

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in a comer-A STAMP

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~

Square
name
42. Neophyte

:t

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DOWN
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DAILY 'CRYPTOQUOTE-:-Here'• how to work. It:
AXYDLBAAXB

Ia

LONG~ELLOW

One letter almply standi for another. In th1l umple A Ia
uood'for the thne L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Slnste ltltel'll,
apostropheo, the tmcth and fonnaUon of the wordl aio all
hbttl. Each day tho coda !etten are different.

A &lt;JeyptoJrun Qaotaaft
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partner

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(2wda.)
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title

C N I,

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L
KJ I lJ I I ~u!=~r-=.~ - ~

' find carl

4t. Red

L

1

admlral

36. Card game
37. - de
.mer

40. ODie's

•

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garden
36.-

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34. Biblical

ahow

, MASON
FURNITURE

----- -

1W liiET 1111011'
IIN#f:CA'
HA'311£ SCARS

LAURELS, LlBICRTY KNOWS NCJliill11G BUT VICTOIUiiL .. 1,(
- DOUGLAS )(AC ARTHUR
.;

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va:

19. Work

Streot

FUR"IJU.RE
'349.95

.-11

dilly
3. Boston's

opera
18. Kind of
In Teheran
dance
8.Recount
28. Wood- ,
20. Brittany
9. Brynner
ward's
13. Electrical
mate
native
2.1.. Table scrap
unit
29. Political
. group
25. Before
16. Tease
:ze. wuher
Parthenon ~"ft'"""'l""'"'!l'"­
r.
temple .
-=----130. Raiment

NEW

WMP0/1390

farewell
12. Tree
14.Battle
- fryor
15.
June 17,
· 1775
(2 wds.)
17. More
unctuous

.f8QOMS

*·and

18. Feather
scarf

historic

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~~:~:'or

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sound

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II-· Tilt DlliiJ lmlhiel, lfilidlleport-P•t~t~e~roy .•o., Sept. 2!1, 1971

Kent Death SUit
Ordered ,b y Court

BenPhilson Honored by Masons at Racine
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of Eastern Star,
presented "Masons' Night"
Saturday, honoring Right
Worshipful Ben H. Philson,
Racine, district deputy grand
master of .District 12, Free and
Accepted Masons.
Highlighting the occasion

BEN .PHRSON

Kingsbury
.

:News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young
. ·(Yvonne Beijl) are announcing
the birth of a son, Wesley
Roger. Grandparents are Mr.
.. and Mrs. Wayne Beal and Mrs.
Homer
Bailey.
Great, grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
.willliun Beal and Mr. and Mrs.
. Frank Douglas.
•. Roy Lyon~, who is stationed in
. New Mexico with the Air Force,
· will spent 30 days of duty
in Germany
· Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
: Rodney visited recently with

her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Ha'rrison.
Mrs. Myrtle White of
Madison, W.Va., is visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Nev White and family.
Mary Lou King, who wiD be
entering MI. Vernon College
and Richard Dean who entered
a Wilmore, Ky., college were
presented a gilt of a college
dictionary by the Carleton
Sunday School recently.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold spent a few
days recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Arnold and Billy at
Columbus.
Kenneth Hartley was home
oyer a recent weekend to visit
h1s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Hartley.
. Walter Terrell ~I Pataskala
VISited recently With Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean and John
Walter.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean spent
a weekend at Wilmore, Ky.,
yisiUng their son, Richard, who
IS a student at Asbury CoUege

were a gift presentation from
his Masonic brothers and from
Racine OES members and an
excellent program in which Mr.
Philson, known for his vocal
singing talent, took part.
Barbara Dugan , worthy
matron of Racine Chapter,
presented the welcome with

William Stewart, pa~t patron of
Racine . Chapter and a. Past
Master of Racine Lodge, introducing the nwnerous guests
present. Among these were
Past Grand Matron Roberta K.
Mindling of Beverly ·Chapter;
Deputy Grand Matron Wilma
Styer, Beverly, of the 25th

Al"red

District and officers of the
Racine Masonic Lodge and
Racine Chapter OES.
Chlorus Grimm was program
chairman with Duane Wolfe and
•Dennis Manuel opening the
presentation with a comedy
routine featuring' Wolfe playillg
the guitar. Shir!ey ,Johnson

Poi· nt Rock

there. Richard's address is Box
191, Asbury College, Wilmore,
:! 1
"
Ky., 60390. ·
S • l 7\J l
Mrs. Winn1'e Wh1'te has
OCUl 1 'tO es
returned home from Veterans Sunday School attendance on
.
BYNELUEVALE
Memorial Hospital and is Sept. 26 was il7, the offering
better.
$14.70.
Mr. Jarrot Bolio, Colwnbia
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Murray Wocshipservices were held at
an d ch1'ldren spen t a weekend 11 am. (attendance of 25) with Township's oldest resident, . is
with his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth , the Rev. Jacob Lehman,
Murray.
.
. bringing the message from Miss Loner, and Mrs. Elder, by
Rev. Jay Stiles, who IS pastor Jeremiah 18:1-17, ''How Young all.
of the Car!eton Church, IS a Shall I Start My Child to
Questions for discussion
~~tent at 0 Bleness HO$pltal at Church?"
~~;~~de~enPe~'fe'••~ ~rya~~
" ens.
The- Women's Society of
group, In unison. The hostess
Christian Service held Its served delicious refreshments
reg ular meeling on Tuesday during the Social hour. The next
· Sept· 21 • a t the horne of meeting will be .heldatthe home
evenmg,
Isola Taylor, with an at- of Alma Swartz on Tuesdav
tendance of 11 members and
'
. ·t
evening, Oct. 19, with June
0
one VtSI or· .
Steams, program leader.
Tbe mee ling • in cha rge of-- Nellie Parker June Stearns
·
N~e Parker, Pres., opened and Helen Woode, attended~~
Sunday visitors of Mr. and w1th prayer by Thelma Hen- District Wockshop meeting of
Mrs. Lincoln RusseU were Mr. derson, followed by the hymn, the Women'sSociety held in the
and Mrs. Bill Earnheart of "Take Time to Be Holy·"
First United Methodtst Church
Logan, Mr. and Mrs. John Plans were made to .serve
· Athe ns, on Thursday evenmg,
·
te , m
skf t to thhe Min19rsSept 23
Haning and Mr. and Mrs. breas
Jimmy Haning and son of Fellowahip on Saturday, Oct. 2, ~. a~d Mrs. Chas. D. Woode
Columbus, Mrs. Clinton Gilkey at 8 a.m. at the churCh here. attended the Eagle Ridge
and Karen of Albany and Mr.
Thelma Henderson gave a Church Homecoming Sunday
Dale RusseU arid Susie of mission rep~rt from the afternoon, Sept. 26. '
Colwnbus.
workshop me~tlng at Logan, .on Nina Robinson and Clara
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith Sept. 16, which was very m- Follrod spent the week end with
were Sunday dinner guests of teresting.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Follrod and
By Clarence
his brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Plans were made to. attend Sue Ann, in Athens and helped
Harley Smith of Kanauga.
the Workahop meetmg at celebrate Sue Ann's birthday.
Miller
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce Athens on ThursdaY evening, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz,
of Colwnbus and Mr. and Mrs. Sept. 23.
.
accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.
William Russell were Sunday
Alma Swarli leq the program Lee Henderson spent the day
accounted fer more than $155 visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard on ~~~.etireJ_Dent: Boon or with Mr. and ~s . Wald Swartz
million' of the total $731 million Russell.
Bor~ . ,~h1ch opened ~r in Athens. Joining them there
invested in these projects.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Earnheart smgmg He Leadeth Me . were six of the Kimes' cousins
Statlatics,however,donottell of Logan, Mr. and Mrs. John Stripture from Psalma 16! by from Colwnbus, o. The dinner
the complete story of the Haning and Mr. and Mrs. Kate Honacher, and readings was in honor of the BOth
dramatic changes between the Jimmy Haning and son of from Social Worker, Joe birthday of Lee Henderson.
inception of the Hill-Burton Columbus (Dublin).
Aver a gem a 11 •. M_r s · The five cliildren of Mr. and
cooperative approach - to
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and Averageman, Mrs. Gtrl Fr~day, Mrs. vernon swartz of
federal-local health services Michelle, of Rutland were
..
Hockingport, 0., spent last
and today. Though the need for
Saturday afternoon VISitors of Saturday with their grandnew and expanded health
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vere
facilities in rural America
Mrs . Geneva Shumate Swartz.
remains a high domestic
returned home ·Monday after Mr. and Mrs Carleton
priority, the situation in the
spending several days with her Follrod and Chuckle of
same rural areas at the close of
Women Thursday ·
' son, Mr . and Mrs. Leon Pomeroy, were Sunday evening
Afternoon League
Werld War II was - in the
Shwnate and sons of Ban- guests of her parents, Mr. and
Sept. 16, 1971
truest !llense - extremely
STANDINGS
dytown, W. Va.
Mrs. Lee Henderson.
critical. Due to a lack of funds, TEAM
W. L.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pierce,
Mr. andMrs.RoserAllmanof
18 6 and Randy were weekend Buckhannon, w. va., spent
the depression forced the New York Clothing
15 9
closing of nearly 800 hospitals Simon's Mkt.
Forest Run Block
14 10 VISitors of her brother, Mr. and Salurdaynightand Sunday with
and few new ones were built Team No.4
13 11 Mrs. Leon Shwnate ll"d sons of Mr. and Mrs. David -Williams
during Wocld War U. Public Pomeroy Bowling Lanes 8 16 Bandytown, W. Va. Geneva and family.
4 20
health, facilities in non- Team No. 1
Team High Series - Pomeroy Shwnate returned home with Sunday evening callers on
metropolitan areas were vir- Lanes 1792.
the Pierces.
Clara Follrod ·and Nina
tually nonezistent.. It would be
Team High Game- Pomeroy
Mrs.
Larry
Barr,
David
and
Robinson were the Bill Follrods
inaccurate to say that the Hill- Lanes 614.
High Ind. Series - Drema Michelle, Rutland, visited of Athens and the Gerald
Burton concept has cured all Smith
570.
Saturday with her parents, Mr. Swartz fanrlJy of Marietta.
health service problems
Second High Ind . Series - and Mrs. Howard Thoma and Marlene Winebrenner, RN.,
prevalent 25 years ago, but it is Betty Smith 516.
went to work as a nurse at the
· High Ind. Game - Drema Patricia.
not an overstatement to say that Smith
221 .
Sunday visitors of Mr. ~d Gavin Power Plant, near
the cooceptgave this nation the
Second High Ind. Game - Mrs. James Reeves and family Cheshire, 0., this Monday
most significant start we've Julie Boyles 196.
were Mr. and Mrs. Eugene morning, Sept. 27. She had been
known. The program provided
Haning, Rhonda, Ronald and employed at the Veterans
for health care facUlties of all
Thursday Afternoon League Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill Memorial Hospital for quite a
Sept. 23, 1971
kinds, and aimed its ·thrust at
and Carolyn.
number of years.
STANDINGS
the long-neglected pockets of
L.
Mrs.
Richard
Vaughan
was
a
TEAM
W.
rural poverty.' Such programs New York Clothing House
Sunday visitor of her daughter,
22 10 Mr. and Mrs. Ted WArner,
in turn have generated corn19 13
munity support for · ever Simon's Mkt .
Team No.4
19 13 Patty, Kimberly and Scott.
expanding health care serv- Pomeroy Bowling Lanes 16 16
Kail, Charles and Kevin
ices and continued public Forest Run Block
14 18 Knapp were Saturday overnight
6 26
interest has done much to Team No. 1
guests of their grandparents,
Team
High
Series
Pomeroy
sustain this tremendous Bowling Lanes 1771.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
program which began a quarter
Team High Game - Pomeroy
Bill McElroy of Colwnbus
Bowling Lanes 668.
century ago.
High Ind. Series - susie spent a few days with his
The Hill-Burton program has Grueser
497.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
kept pace with the times .
Second High Ind. Series - McElroy.
Changes are reflected in the Drema Smith 496.
Mrs. Berdie Wyatt is a patient
High Ind. Game - Becky
way bospltalis around the Dunfee
229.
at Holzer Medical Center of
country are planned, designed,
Second High Ind . Game
medical treatment.
equipped and operated. Public Betty Smllh 191.
health officials working under
Hill-Burton guidelines are
Wednesday Late
·Mixed League
leaders in their field. They have
Sept. 22, 1971
issued more than 100 planning
individual High Game (Men)
guides on such subjects as - D. Rosenbaum 207 ; R. Moore
hospital lighting, noise control, 200 ; J. Carsey 189.
individual High Game
infecti0118 disease control, lind !Women)
- B. Smith 171;
the concept of "intensive care VIrginia Hoyt 16 ; S. Wayland
units," for patients requiring l 55.
Individual High Series (Men)
round-the-clock medical at- D. Rosenbaum 581; R. Moore
tention. The formulation of 548; J. Carsey 518.
these guidelines has alleviated
Individual High Series
- B. Smith 461;
(Women)
much of the cost burden that
VIrginia Hoyt 438 ; N. Carsey
might have been spent by local 419.
hospitals in Independent
High Team Series
Rosenbaum
· Meadows 1922:
research.
Morrow
Moore
1759; Cassell .
For selling the pattern of Carsey 1753.
providing ready hospital and
Team Standings:
26
medical services to the public, Morrow-Moore
22
O.Ven-Hoiler
we have the Hill-Burton Rosenbaum-Meadows
18
program to thank.
18 .
Cassell-Carsey
8
Fultz- Bentley
Blakeslee-Hoyt
4

Social Notes

Wolfpen

News, N tes

Charles Norris, Duane Wolfe, Basa" which was followed by
Dennis Manuel and Robert. .Frank Cleland, Louise Stewart,
Hart. Providing variety to the. James - Clatworthy, Maxine
program were Gerald and Mary Wingett, Jim Buchanan, DeMis
Powell dancing a waltz, "Just a Manuel, Shirley Johnson and
Wearyin' for You".
Margaret Yost narrating in·
The quartet then presented a cidents from Philson's ii(e.
1m1ooth versiqp of "Daddy Sang
Mrs. Styer conducted a
musical segment, assisted by
Paul Sayre who sang an Irish
seriously Ill at his home. here.. double trailer which will be , lullaby. A medley of hit songs
He has been atlended lJ&gt;: his s_on, placed on property purchased from Philson's high schpol days
H_enry, who resides With him, from John Holliday. Mr. was sung after which lime
his son and daughter-m~w, Holliday is employed by the Philson sang "Sweethearts on
Mr.. a_nd Mrs. Wesl.ey Bobo of Ohio Power Company here. The Parade" accompanied by Mrs.
Ch1II1cothe and his son Me'rI family formerly lived in Styer.
Bobo of Lancaster. Mr. Bobo IS W006ter where Mr. Hoillday. Mrs. Mindllng gave a tribute
95 years old. ,
.
was employed at the Research to the guest of honor and the
Mr. and Mrs. John Holliday Center there.
quartetclosedtheprogram with
returned Friday from a week's Mr. and Mrs. Marvin WUson "''In Times Uke These". Prayer
vaca tlon in the Dak0 las • Mr• and Mrs. Effie HOOSier were in was by the Rev. Charles Norris.
and Mrs. Robert Hoillday ahd Hazard, Ky. fer the week end.
During the evening on behalf
family stayed at Jheir home in They .went especially fer a of the Racine Chapter, Stewart
thetr absence.
. surprise birthday dinner .lor presented Mrs. Styer with an
Mr~. Maude Holco!"b IS their son.in~w. Mr. Randall honorary membership in
spendmg some lime WI~ ·her Smith. Wlile there they visited Racine Chapter. Philson in·
daughters, Mrs. Adnenne other frineds and relatives.
troduced his wife, Maxine, and
Fish nd Mrs H 1 E
of
era
· e en ssex
d
son, .Rush.
Columbus.
A large crow attended the
Group sm·ging of "Blest Be
tI k ·
t the Dyesvill
. Mr.· and Mrs·. Marv..in Morris Cli
po uch supper
a
Saturda
· e the Tie" closed the evening
18 m process~ building a new
M
·urc onT . Udy edverungof. after which lime refreshments
001
home on thetr property forr·
var Y
were served in the dining hall
merly known as the Mr. Cleveland spent the past two from
· tables attractively cenWallace property
weeks a t the Lowth er pia ce
.
Mr. and Mrs. R~bert Holliday here. He waa joined, on week lered With fall ~owers. Clara
build'
b
t . ends by his wife, Beulah of Adams was chairman of the
are
_mg a ase'!'en m
.
·
'
refreshment committee.

presented vocally "Faith
Unlocks the Door." A medley of
old favorites, "Down by the Old
Mill Stream", '!This Oid
House", "Heart of My Heart"
and "In the Evening by the
Moonlight" was well done by a
vocal quartet composed o(

Washington
.! Report

·: I
.I
.I
I

• Twenty.five years ago, the
Hospital Survey and Construction Act of 1946 was signed
. into law. This law and the
.· monumental program it
· created became better known
as the· Hill-Burton Act in
deference to its original
. sponsors in the U. S. Senate Senator Harold Burton of Ohio
and Senator Uster Hill of
· Alabama.
Thls cunprehensive prosram
- which has provided for
federal suppoct in the con• atruction of h!I!Jiitals, public
helllth centers, long-term care
wtlts, mental, out-patient, and
rehabilitation facilities all
acrQSS America has just observed ifB 25th all!liversary and
it is werth noting because, In
one way er another, Hill-Burton
. has affecli'd the health and
welfare of practically every
American.
In working partnership with
stale and local governments as
; well as voluntary bealth and
hospital associations, the HillBurtoninvesbnentof$3.7blllloo
·, in federal grants has produced
over $12.7 billion wocth of new
or modernized health care
facilities in close to 4,000
• communities. According to
. federal figures, more than
.· 10,400 separate projects in the
U. s. and its territories have
. been assisted under the Hill.· Burton program.
Ohio has shared substantially
in the progress brought on by
". the Hill-Burton program. The
. Department
of
Health,
· Education and Welfare reports
· that since 1947 more than 420
:.. projects have been funded in the
.. Buckeye State with Hill-Burton
&gt; assistance. These projects have
. : provided 24,523 ini'lltient beds
.. in various health service
facilities. Hill-Burton funds

·,

...--......

.· MEIGS THEAlllE:
Tonight and Thursday
Septembir 29-30 ·
NOT OPEN

Local Bowling

Elberfeld• In Pomeroy Are Open :rhundays
•

See the many new arrivals all over the store. Wearing apparel for your
family and furnishings for your home.

"G''

DRAPERY DEPAR]MENT

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lARGE GROUPING OF OUR

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112 PRICE

Check these bargains now in our lf2 price
group. See our new wide selection of fal!
styles.

.:· Chapman's

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MAIN ST.
'

Early Bird League
Wednesday, Sept. 22
Team Standings:
D. G. PinneHes
22
Evelyn's Grocery
20
RawllngsDodge
20
Larry's Ashland
12
Team No.4
12
Meigs Mobile Home
10
Team Game - first, D. G.
Pinnelles 790: second, D. G.
Plnneltes 772; third. D. G.
Plnneffes 770.
.
High Team Series- tlrst. D.
G. Plnnettes 2332 ; second,
Evelyn's Grocery 2150: third,
Rawlings-Doge 2067.
High Ind. Game - first, Mary
Voss 190; second , Shirley
Bl•hop 188; third, Mary Hoff.
man 177.
High Ind. Series. - llrsl,
Mary Voss 488; second, Louise
Gilmore 459 ; third, Ann Thomas

a three-day relurned a verdictjlwardin_g.the
hearing, awarded Meigs County Facemyers $20,000. In addition,
·property owners almost double plaintiffs will collect interest on
the amount offered them by the the amount from the lime of the
Stale of Ohio in Common Pleas refusal of the stale's offer which
Court Wednesday afternoon.
was in 1968.
Plaintiffs in the action. were Jurors in the trial were Lester
Dennis L. Facemyer, et al, who Hawk, Coolville; Lillian
had been offered $10,551 by the Pickens, Reedsville; Linley
State Highway Dept. for Roush, Jr., Rutland; Emma
property needed ln a highway Hayman, Syracuse; Sylvia
Improvement program. ,
Byers, Middleport; Mildred
The plaintiffs refused the swn Hawley, Middleport; Mabel
and the case went to trial -Moore, Pomeroy; Don E. Rea,
Monday. Wednesday, the jury Minersville ; Clarice Krautter,

fi,

Washable, Mothproof, Non-allergenic.
Control
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!I
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I

LOND:ON - THE BRJriSH FOREIGN Office today named
Soviet trade mission member Oleg Lyalin as the defector 'who
gave British security officials information which led to the expulsion of 100Sovietolllcials from Britain as spies.
A Fcrelgn Office spokesman said Lyaiin, 34, was "an official
of the Soviet trade delegation" but declined to give any further
information about him or the circumstances of the defection.
In a statement last week annOIIIICing the expulsion of the 100
Russians, the fcrelgn office referred to the then wmamed defector
as "an officer of the KGB (Sovletsecretpollce)."

YEAR OLD
I

- ..

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1971

We Invite You To Use Our Services

Bishops Warned by Pope

Now paying the highest Interest rate on passbook savings ac·
counts .. · any type home loan at fair interest rates. These
factors have ~elped make our first year a successful one. We .
pl.e~ge to cont;nue these fair practices during the coming years.
Vrs;t us now.

VATICAN CITY - THE TIIIRD AND LARGEST Werld
Synod of Bishops opened today at the Vatican with Pope.Paul VI
warning the delegates to ignoce or reject pressures to change
Roman C.,tholic teaching or tradition. Observers said they
beHeved the Pope's address was a veiled appeal to the churchmen
not to bend under pressure to change the law banning married
priests.

Airlijb Put to Work

e. :f~

WITH US
•

4%%

• •

~ Meils

County Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY

SAVINGS I LOAN CO.
2H W. lad St., p

OJ,

Ohio

SAIGON-AMERICAN helicopters airlifted thouaands Of
South Vietnamese infantrymen through curtains of !'1orlh Vietnamese rocket and mortar fire today in what could be developing
aa one of the major batties of the Vietnam war. Tbe fighting,
centered around the besieged Cambodian town of Krek 85 miles
northWest of Saigon, also tbtew locallzed phases of the American
1roop withdrawal into reverse. Allied forces fought their way up
Highway 22 between Tay Ninh, South Vietnam and Krek in an
effert to reach ·the emba!tied town.

Rogera, Gromyko Ready Pens ·

PAID ON
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

Tomorrow!

FIRST.

7\T
1.

By UnltedPresaiDiemaUooal

...

e 769

tion."

"The possibility that the removal of sovereign immunity
Continued on Page 5

.,

WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Wllliam P.
Rogers and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko are
alated to sign two arms control agreements tod8y. One Is designed
to prevent accidental nuclear war and the other will establi.Sb a
sateillte-borne "hotllne" between the two capitals. Both
stalelmen have made "some steady progreu'.' Iowan! reacling
an agreement to Umit costiy antibaulsUc miui1e systems, Whlte
Houae aources repertecl.

Ginger Getting Real Mean
WILMINGTON, N. C. - HtJRRICANE GINGER stormed
abore today ,lllrl!ng 11 mile per hoUr windslllld tlde8 three feet
&amp;bon nll"lllllaplnst llle North Clrolilla cout. 'l1le brunt of the
llllrlcane, 111e lonc•t an ~ Ia not expected to strike the
caul Willi iller !GUy. Several tlloaland per10111, In the path of
the IWirU.. storm, had to be -led.

SITE DEDICATED - Twenty.five membe111 of the
congregation of the St. Paul's United Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plsins and their pastor, the Rev. Jacob Lehman
Wednesday night dedicated the site of their proposed new
church, of which plans are being drawn and the Rev. Mr.
Lehman indicated that it is the congregation's hope that the
church will be built by spring. The site, almost an acre and a
hall, has been owned by the church about two years. It is
located on Route 7in the heart of Tuppers Plaina. The preaent
frame church is over 100 years old.

TEN CENTS

Alert on
for Killer

•

Ins, 16-0
sors.
Tbe committee voted down an
amendment offered by Rep.
Keith McNamara, R-Colwnbus,
to exempt from the proposed
law those mining operaf.ions
that were licensed under the
old law.
' On an 11-3 vote, the amendment was discarded after committee chairman, Rep. Kenneth
Creasy, R - Delaware, warned,
"If you want to put a big hole
in this bill, add this amendment"
Another McNamara amendment, however, was adopted
that would require a person appealing the decision of the state

chief of reclamation to release a
reclamation bond to pay court
costs if the appeal failed.
The Senate was scheduled to
hold a "skeleton" session today,
allowing its members to return
home until next Tueaday. Both
House and Senate leaders will
confer in the next few days on
the makeup of a joint conference committee to work on the
budget, now three months overdue.
Senate Pre~idenl Pro Ternpore Theodore M. Gray, RPiqua, said Senate conferees
could not be officially named until the House names its members.

The cOIIUIIittee, consisting of
two Republicans and one Dem~&gt;­
era! from each chamber, will
be given the task of negotiating
the differences between the
House • passed budget which
calls for a graduated personal
income tax, and the Senatepassed version, which requires
an increase in the sales tax.
Those vast Senate changes
made in the budget drew the
wrath of Gov. John J . Gilligan
Wednesday, who announced at
a news conference that be
would continue to push for his
graduated personal income tax.
" I intend to continue to push
Continued on Page ~

To Host
Thomp~:~: Fall Cam no ree

Pomeroy; Daniel
Pomeroy; Willis Anthony,
Middleport; Charles Bush, RD
Racine, and an alternate, Dear!
PT. PLEASANT - Mason
Porter, Pomeroy Route 4.
County's 4-H camp site at
Representing the Facemyers · Southside will become a virtual
was Frank W. Porter. State "tent city" this weekend wben
lawyers represented the Boy Scouts from the MeigsDepartment of Highways.
Gallia-Mason District converge
ADD JURY 3 38 Pl SENT eld there lor their annual Fall
Camporee.
The property involved is
The three day event opens
located in Columbia Township, Friday afternoon and will end
the last piece needed in Meigs · Sunday following worship
County for the Appalachia service..
Highway, all others having been
Saturday, however, has been
secured.
set aside for nwnerous activities when Girl Scouts,
Brownies, Cub Stouts, parents
and friends are invited to attend.
John Whitley Jr., assistant

B
.
,.t,
1
,ews.•. zn rze1 s : Appeal
Defector to Britain Named
Is Lost
r---------------------------~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

News
We have a choice
collection of
modestly priced
Bulova watches,
beautifully timed
to give or get . •
Illustrated: Two
brand new 17 jewel
models at S55 each.
Others from S35.

passed 12-2, although the commitlee refused such a change
three weeks ago.
State Rep. Sam Speck, R-New
Concord, chief arcliitect of the
reforms which were the
combination of four measures,
admitted he was stumped by
the unanimous vote and even
more so when several former
opponents asked that their
names be added to the bill.
· "That's like struggling to
catch ao train alter you put dynamite under the tracks," he
said.
No "Grandfather" Clau.e
. The bill now carries 20 Republican and 12 Democratic spon-

Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Saleslips From

First Anniversary .

BELOW COST!

NO. 118

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•

VISIT . ELBERFELDS
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lui or injurious) acts of its authocized agents."
Tlie judg~ said "a special
shield for the ·)tate against .responsibility for its tortious acts
is unjust, arbitrary and unreasonable and results in discrim·
ination prohibited by the equal
protection and due process
clauses of the 14th amendment
to the United States Constitu-

Devoted To TM lntereJI&amp; Of The Meigs·MlUIOn Area
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OH.LO
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1971
PHONE 992·2156

COLUMBUS (UP!) - With
even longtime foes of the legislators jwnping on the bandwagon, the Ohio House Environmen! Committee gave unanimousapprovalWedneadaynight
to comprehe'nsive reforms in
laws governing the strip mining
of coal in the state.
The committee sent the measure on to the House Rules Committee on a IS.O vote with a
recommendationforpassageafter wrangling with it for six
months.
Clearance hinged on several
key factors, including the removal of clay and shale mining
from the bill. That amendment

I

Until 5. Fridays and Satur.days Until 9

students killed, back to the
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Court for trial.
Cuyahoga County Collll!lon
Pleas Court Judge George J.
McMonagle had dismissed tile
suit on the grounds that the
state has soverign immunity
and cannot be sued.
Presiding Appellate Judge
Jack G~ Day and Judge Alvin
I. Krenzler said the lower court
erred and declared:
"The stale of Ohio is responsible ... for the tortious (wrong-

Strip Bill

WATCH

Friday thru Tuesday
October 1-S
LITTI,E BIG MAN
(Technlcolorl .
Dustin Hoffman
Faye Dunaway

..

'NO. XXIV

lp~re•p•a•r•al.io•n-f•o•r•t•h•e•lr-n•e•w-Chilli-•c•othe-·---~-------------.

r--------------------------,

_. !

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Eighth Ohio District AppeUate
Court today ruled the state of
Ohio could be sued for the
deaths· of four Kent ·State students killed by National Guard
troops and said the "special
shield" of soverign immunity is
"uitjust, arbitrary and unreasonable" in such cases.
The court, In a 2-1 decision,
ordered the $2 million wrongful death suit filed by Arthur
Krause of Pittsburgh, father of
Aillson Krause, 19, one of the

THE FUTURE
SITE OF THE ·

district commissioner, who is
Camporee Chief, advises
visitors that they may bring
along their own lunches and
also attend the campfire
session. The fire will be lighted
at 7 p. m. Troop awards will be
presented.
During the annual observance, scouts will learn
various sltills in working toward
badge achievements.
Camporee festivities will
conclude with the outdoor
worship service Sunday.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Ohio extended outlookSaturday through Monday:
Fair Saturday and Sunday
with a ebance of showers on
Monday. High temperatures
In low to mid 808. Lows In
upper 50s to low 808.
:~'lf:O:.~*"»-&lt;»&gt;m«o:,~W@ .!!M_
ss:m

Copter Makes

Local 1587, IBEW, Imperial
Electric Co., of Middleport, has
lost its next to last appeal for
unemployment benefits, it was
learned today.
The board of review, last
place of . appeal in the Ohio
Bureau of Unemployment, has
upbeld an earlier finding by the
bureau that the work stoppage
at the plant in Middleport on
June 3 was in reality a work
stoppage, not a lockout, as the
union claimed in its actions.
A final appeal may be made
within 30 days to the court of
common pleas, the hoard of
review said. SUch an appeal
would come before Judge John
C. Bacon who would rule on the
legality of the board of review's
action. No further hearings or
taking of testimony would be
involved.

Two men escaped injury
Thursday evening when a new
helicopter which they were
Dying from Toledo to Durham,
N. C., ran out of gas near
Racine.
The North Carolina men,
whose names were not obtained, had been in Toledo
where they picked up the new.
helicopter and were enroute to
Durham. Over Meigs County,
they ran out of gas but glided to
a clearing in a wooded area
close to the Darell Taylor
residence on McKenzie Ridge
three miles east of Racine.
Taylor drove the men to
GaUipolis to pick up gas. There
was only light damage to the
helicopter which they Oew to
SUIT FILED
the Gallia-Meigs Airport to stay
Charging gross neglect of overnight.
duty and extreme cruelty,
Sandra Lee Swisber, Vinton
r. ••• - J
Route I, has filed suit lor
~nJun::u
divorce from Gerald Lee r.n u;,;.,,..
Swisher, same address, in Jl nt..... oe W o
Meigs County Common Pleas Heavy damages were
Court. A suit for money filed reported to a car when it went
earlier by Isabel Simpson, et al, out of control on Middleport Hill
a~l~t James Horner has been about 4 a.m. Thursday and
dlSIDisaed due to an out of court · crashed into a retaining wall
settlement.
\.
Middleport police said theca~
'I driven by Basil• L. Haynes,
Middleport Route 1, was
traveling west when it went out
of control and crashed into the
Partly cloudy today. Hlgha in wall.
upper 70s to mid 806. ·Mostly Haynes was taken to Veterans
cloudy tonight and Friday with Memorial Hospital by police
chance of showers southeast and was discharged following
tonigh_t and east Friday. Lows lreal.!nent of facial lacerations.
tonight in 60s. High Friday in He was. cited to Mayor's court
(or reckless operation.
806.

JJri

Weather.

';I'

REV.HUNDLEY
The Rev. E. J. Hundley of
Columbu. will be evangelist
for revival services whlcb
will begin this Sunday and
conUnue through Oct. 10 at
tbe Rutland Church of the
Nazarene. Services will be
held at 7:30 each evening and
at 10:30 a. m. each Sunday.
The Crusaders Quartet will
be at the church on Saturday,
Oct. 29, and at %:30 p. m. on
Sunday, Oct. 10 · lor a
slngspiratlon. The public ill
Invited.

ver

ITJ:all

A lot of emphasis is being placed on drug use prevention
programs these days and if your group is interested in the subject,
Carl Hysell of Rutland will help you.
Carl has purchased two filma on the subject entitled
"Marijuana, Good, Bad, Right or Wrong," and "rm, Insight and
Insanity". Both filma are from 30 to 40 minutes in length and are
avatlable for loan fr&lt;lll Hysell. Groups interested may contact
him at 74Z-1334 or call the Pomeroy Police Department, which will
relay your request to Carl.
ROGER GliAIORE AND TIM GLAZE had their "last fling "
in the form of a bicycle kick before returning to Ohio State where

they are sopb&lt;l!lores. Roser and Tim left on English bicycles a
week ago SUnday and rode about 100 miles a day on country roads
through Ohio into Kentucky. They slept in parks and ate at dairy
shops, occasionally purchasing SOOle lunch meat, bread and soft
drinks along the way for quick snacks.
Roger and Tim, devoted campers, had a baU. They returned
home Friday evening.
.u.mouGR THE WEATHER stays pretty warm, fall is
moving right along and absentee voting fOr the Nov. 2 election will
get underway at the Meigs County Board of Electiona, Masonic
TempleBuilding,Mondsy. 'lbeofficewill be open from 1 to4 p.m.
Monday throughSaturdayeach week until the Oct. 28deadline for
such voting.

MRS. MARmA E. ROSE will be opening her lndden
Treasures Gilt Sbowe Saturday at her residence located one mile
off Route 7near Royal Oak Park on County Road 34.
'l1le shoppe will feature handcrafted articles supplied by
peq,le of the COIIlty, many of wh&lt;m do outstanding work. In
addition, Mrs. Rose will feature some antlques and collectables at
her new business witch she is opening with the bqJe of being able
to spend mere lime in her home due to her '-band's health
proljem_
•
The shoppe will be open from 10 a. m. to 6 p. m., Monday
through Friday, and fr&lt;lll1 to &amp;p. m. each Saturday and &amp;lnday.
Coffee and tea will be serwd to visitors to the sboppe Ibis ·

.

&amp;~.

.

CONGRATULATIONS TO the Meigs County Branch of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co. which will be marking Its
first year Clf business In Meigs County tomorrow, Oct. 1.

PROCTORVIlLE - Lawrence County authorities have
called trl-atate alert for two gunmen In connection with the
slaying Wednesday night of Doris Garrettaon, 59, Rt. 1, Procl«vllle, and the attempted robbery of the Gus Collins residence
there.
The suspects were last seen In a late model car traveling
north on Rt. 7 toward Gallia County.
Accocdlng to the Lawrence County sheriff's deparbnent, a
man wearing a Halloween mask attempted to rob the Collina
home located in the East Rome area at Riverside Terrace, just olf
Rt. 7. Collins is manager ol a Huntlngtoo.market. It was rePorted
the gunman entered the h«me where Betty Garretllon, 16, Rt. 1,
Proctorville, granddaughter of the victim, waa babysitting. .
He demanded a coin collection be turned over to him. It telephoned for an ambulance.
was apparently about this lime The description of one of the
that the girl's grandmother gunmen wasrepcrtedasa white
returned to the house and came male, six feet tall, weighing 200
onto the porch where she was pounds. He was cwearing blue
shot.
jeans and a jacket made of blue
An autopsy is being per- jean material.
formed today to determine the He apperentiy hurriedly after
the sbootlni got into a car
caliber of the fatal bullet.
parted in the vlctnlty of the
The Garretlson girl was taken Collins home. No description
to the Cabell-Huntington was available on the other
Hospital for treatment of shock suspect.
and hysteria.
The Bureau of Criminal In·
First reports indicated she vesljgatlon has been invited to
witnessed the shooting and assist.

$3 Bolt Costs $65
WASHINGTON (UP!) -As Lee Poore, executive vice
members of the Congressional president of Lockheed.{;eorgia
committee watched, former who said the big transport Will
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. em- considered "a great bird" by
ploye no. ~26 798 reached into a the pilots who Oy it and a
plastic bag and pulled out a "dream to service" by the
shiny, three-inch object.
mechanics who work on it.
"Here is a standard aircraft
bolt," said Henry M. Durham.
"We are only peqlle," Poore
"It is a common bolt that said. " ...and as other people in
probably would cost $2 or $3. . other endeavcn, we are not
"Lockheed bought four of perfect."
these bolts for $65 each."
Poore said it was "IIIOilt
As Durham told it to the unfortunate that the stalemenll
committee, that was why he of this one individual, with only
quit his job belping build the partial information, receive IIJid
Air Force's C5A transport - the require the attention of 10
largest plane in the world --at 'many other people who are
Lockheed's Marietta, Ga ., dedicated to the C5 program,
plant. He said he couldn't stand ita efficient executioo IIJid
the massive waste and misman- completion."
agement he saw, and that he But Durham, who said he
tried to correct the situation.
was assigned employe no. ~
"I was told to shut up," he 7911 when he worked lor
said. "That kind of thing just Lockheed, kept reaching into a
stuck in my craw."
cardboard filing cabinet at hill
Durham said he observed side.
waste at the Lockheed plant He pulled out a package of
while working as a production rust-covered drill bits and aald
engineer. He said hardware they had been stored outdoon
was purchased at "exorbitant" in a rain barrel along with
prices and that "thousands and other. expensive equipment. He
thousands of parts and assem- said 4211 tons of steel were left
. blies were misplaced and left outside on racks to rust in a
out, of the planes."
waste of hundreds of thou.sands
The hearing was called to of dollars. look into why the C5A exceeded Then he produced a four-inchits original cost estimates by $2 steel rod that,he IBid Lockheed
billion.
had bought for ~ -many
The plane wu defended at times Its actual value -and .
the session Wednesday by H. then casually discarded.

Candle Blamed in Fire
MASON - A candle wu
blamed for starting a fire near
here Wednesday that destroyed
a mobile home.
Fire Chief George CII"IOII
said three young men, who were
not identified, made their home
in the furnished lrailer located
on the riverbank just above
Mason. It W8l owned by F'rlnt
Hendrickson of Masm.
Becall88 electricity had not
been turned on, the men were
using a ~ for lilbt. 'l1le

.

randle burned to llle boltlm and
tcnited. the fire,
llle . .. :

wben

cupula nn•t tbe rlnr'a ....

ftlblnc. Notidnl tbe lire, •
grabbed • b!ppt IIIII 1'111 tt
the water to , _ 'it lilt ..-,
retumiJIC to 1111 tralilr .....
had ........ tbe .........
Canan addld.
New H&amp;ftD'I Vjtlu.... .
fliaw • I led
liM~~.
Dlpt.l'iremlil IT att ~

a.

and l'ellllblld at tbe lfMI
boar,

..
l

•

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