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Public Will Tour
Church on.Sunday

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THIS IS THE ATl'RACI'IVE newly decorated sanctuary of the Pomeroy Church of Christ
which will 'be a part of the church to be shown during an 'open house from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday.
The sanctuary is done in twQ-tone blue, carpeted in red and features new light fixtures and
refinished pews.

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BY BOB HOEFLICH
ttie local fire · department
The remodeled f&gt;omeroy arrived on the scene., probablY,.
Church o~ Christ, hea·vi!y due to the fact that all windows
damaged by fire last April, will and doors were tightly closed.
be displayed to the public at an Believing the fire extinguished,
open house from 1 to 4 p.m. firemen were ]'reparinlf to
Sunday.
leave when a second blaze wast
·The open house will be a "tour discovered near the ceiling in
type" event with visitors to be the rear of the tiuil.ding.
guided through the newly "Because of the peculiar·
redecorated sanctuary and construction of the building,
Bible classrooms.
firemen were unable to reach
·The Pomeroy church was the second blaze that seemed to
.' similarly damaged iri 1937. A be confined be!ween the ceiling
newspaper account of that fire and roof of the building. Flames
stated, in part:
ruined the wooden pulpit and
"Well laid plans for Easter some furnishings in the
Sunday worship services at tlle auditorium of the building and
Pomeroy Church of Christ were destroyed wooden sections of
disrupted Saturday morning rafters in the upper portions.
when a damaging fire swept "Barrels of water poured in
through the building wrecking an attempt to control the flames
the interior of the church.
weakened the ceiling plaster.
"Discovered shortly after ·g Sections of the ceiling gave
a.m. Saturday morning, the fire way, crashing · to
the
· had gained little headway when auditorium, co'nstantly en-

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dangering the lives of firemen
who remained in the building to
combat the flames.
"The blaze raged for several
hours before finally brought
under control. An over-heated
hot-air heating system was
believed to have started ~~e
fire ."
THE POMEROY Church of
Christ was only seven years old
a~ the time of the 1937 fire.
It was on April13, last spring,
at about 1:30a.m. that Pomeroy
fireman, Bob Hysell, noticed
orange flickering light through,
the side door of the church when
he was driving past the church.
He returned for a better look at
the light, then called -the
Pomeroy Fire Department,
which extinguished the fire.
The damage was estimated .at
$31,000, most of which was
covered by insurance. A short in
(Continued on page 12)

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THIS ELEcrRIC organ has been installed at tbe
Pomeroy Church of Christ replacing a pipe organ which was
destroyed in a fire at the church on April13, this year. Sound
amplifiers have been installed in the walls of the, church in a .
section where the pipes of tlle pipe organ were formerly
located.

Now You Know

Weather

In the autumn-winter season,
4.5 times as many adults as
childr~n visit Disneyland.

Sunny and warm today and
Saturday. High both days in 80s.
Clear and cool tonight with low
in 60s.

Devoted To The" lntert!$18 Of The Meigs-Mason -Area ____

VOL XXIV NO. 119

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

New Apportionment ian Grotesque Victims Say
Homecoming At Eastern

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The annual .homecoming will be observed at the
Eastern-Glouster game this evening.
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In pr~ame ceremonies, a parade will be featured
including floats made by schoo~ organizations and the
queen candidates and attendants.
At halftime the queen will be crowned. Contenders
for tlle crown are seniors, Mary Jo Wolfe and Kathy
Dill. Attendants are Becky Ebersbach, freshman;
Cheryl Kuhn, sophomore, and Nancy Sexson, junior.
Mrs. Ali~ Phillips, a faculty members, Is in charge of
tlle queen coronation.
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~j~j*~lllili~m~l~li~i~!iilillil§H;~iilii:i;m;m;m;m;tl:i;mmmmm~mmmm;:;:;:;:;:l:;;;:;;l;il\\\\r~:

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COLUMBUS (UPI) - is published Oct. 5.
' were swiftly declared "legally
The governor's plan puts two House, 54-45·, and the Senate by under federal "one-man, oneDemocrats, exercising their But the day belonged to the other Republican senators and 20-13. A turnover of five House vote" guidelines.
firm control of the state Ap-· Democrats - the governor three GOP House members in seats and four Senate seats He gave members one-half and constitutionally" deficient
portionment Board, have state Auditor Joseph T: strong Democratic areas. It would give the Democrats hour to view his plan and the on a party-line vote, despite the
pushed through a legislative Ferguson, and Senate Minority also sets up four new Senate control of ·both chambers in five submitted by Brown and fact that some of them contained districts closer to the
redistricting plan which could Leader Anthony 0. Calabrese, districts with no incumbents 1973.
Manning, none of which had "ideal" population than
help them win control of both D-Cleveland, who served on the and 13 new House districts with
Gilligan called the board ever been made public but all of
chambers of the General board along with Republican no incumbents - districts together for the second time in which had been hundreds of Gilligan 's.
The board then adopted
Assembly in· t~e 1972 elections. Secretary of State Ted w. which Democrats · will have two weeks to adopt a plan to hours in the making.
Gilligan's
plan, which he said
The five-member board voted Brown and state Rep. Robert A. their eyes on next year.
equalize the population of At the end of the recess, provides "equal representation
3-2 along party lines Thursday Manning, R-Akron.
Republicans now control the Senate and House districts Brown's and Manning's plans
(Continued on page 12)
to adopt the plan.of Gov. John J.
Gilligan designed to knock out
five Republican' senators and a
dozen GOP House members
through consolidation or attrition.
The plan, adopted at tlle end
of a twQ-hour meeting over
Republican objections, would
Continuing demand increases have had a limited sales policy
pair six GOP senators in half
for natural gas that exceed the in effect since April, 1970. This
that number of districts and do
immediate availability of new policy limited the amount of
the same to 18 Republican state
supplies requires that Columbia new gas tlle companies could
ATHENS, Ohio ( UPI) - Ohio or union of employes, supervirepresentatives.
Gas of Ohio, Inc., and Ohio sell for new industrial loads to
University administrators, in sors or representatives of either
Republicans labeled the
Valley Gas Co. impose further 300,000 cubic feet per day.
another try to get the 900 party will occur."
newly-mapped districts as
limitations on large volume In announcing the stricter
striking campus employes back Wilson told McGee, "We trust
"grotesque" and "blatantly
sales to protect supplies for sales limitation today, ·Cassell
to work, early today volun- this return to work will .start lltt
partisan," and indicated they
residential customer!
and Koebel emphasized there is
teered to convene a special soon as possible and in any
would appeal to the Ohio
C. T. Cassell, manager for the . no shortage of potential gas
greivance conference event no later than 4 p.m. SatSupreme Court, now controlled
gas company in the Pomeroy reserves.
"simultaneously" with the end urday, Oct. 2."
by Republicans, after the plan
and Middleport area, and J. M. "What we are facing today is
Union Rejects Idea
of a walkout.
IJake) Koebel, Gallipolis an energy gap, created by an
The university made the pro- The university had made an
manager, said today beginning expanding economy that has
posal in a letter to Oscar Mc- initial attempt at concilation
immediately, the companies developed an almost insatiable
REV. SHOOK
Gee, president of Local 1699, Wednesday in a letter in which
will not accept any new in- demand for all forms of energy
The Rev. Floyd Shook of American Federation of State, it proposed to put union grievdustrial loads, and will not and compounded by regulatory Newark will be evangelist for County and Municipal Employ- ances in binding arbitration a(taccept any new commercial and environmental restrictions revival services to be held at es, now on ·strike for nine days. er the strike ends.
loads - restaurants, shopping that have stifled exploration the Laurel Cliff Free McGee said he would take the McGee had rejected the idea,
centers, office buildings, etc., in and development of new gas Methodist Church at 7: 30 issue to the membership.
saying OU was, in effect, askeach evening from Monday,
Seven persons were indicted excess of 2,000 cubic feet per reserves," they said.
In a related development, act· ing the union to end the strike
hour.
"This
has
resulted
in
a
Oct.
4
through
Sunday,
Oct.
Thursday when a grand jury
ing Mayor Harry Crewson vol- before resolving the reasons for
Cassell emphasizes that the shortage of na'tural gas 10. The Rev. Mr.' Shook en- Jun tee red his offices to serve as it starting last Thursday.
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met in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to con- iimitation affects only new sales available for use right now. The tered evangellstlc work an intermediary .between the The grievances consisted of
and that current deliveries to all Columbia Gas System is ex- following three years of school and union .
non-wage issues.
sider nine cases.
Indicted in the session all day present customers, including ploring several alternatives service with the mllltary In
In thr letter to McGee, OU McGee was found in contempt
more
than
2,000
industries
jn
aimed
at
closing
this
energy
World
War
II.
He
accepted
until after 4 p.m., according to
Personnel.Pirector Ward Wilson of court Thursday for not obeygap. In addition to conventional ·pastorates in Pennsylvania also offered to return the strik: ing an injunction against the
Bernard Fultz, prosecutor, Ohio, are not affected.
Columbia Gas of Ohio and exploration for new reserves in before moving to Newark ing employes to the classifica- strike, but a $500 fine against ·
were Floyd Boring, charged
Ohio
Valley Gas, two Columbia Appalachia and offshore in the three years ago. The Rev. Mr. tion they were at before the both him and tlle Uliion were
with non-support; Ronnie
Bachtel, statutory rape; Harry Gas system subsidiaries that Gulf of Mexico, Columbia haS'" Shook will also be singing .strike started. A second facet postponed by Judge Harley MeyHayman, possession of nar- serve more than a million signed contracts to. import along with local talent at the of the proposal was that "no er of Hancock County, sitting in
services.
(Continued on page 12)
(Continued on-page, 12)
harassment by either university
cotics, and W. Thomas Evans, customers in 61 Ohio counties,
and Stanley G. Wells, both
charged with driving while
intoxicated.
In the cases of two others
indicted, names wi:ll be
released, with the charges,
will not 1M\ sent home until Friday on this first occasion
On this past Monday we were happy to welcome 30
By GEORGE HARGRAYES, Supt.
after they have been properly
because there will be no classes on Thursday, October Ohio University juniors who are plaMing to become
Meigs Local Scbool Dlslrict
served with the ·legal papers,
Prosecutor Fultz said. ·
We are receiving regular reports on our 14. On that day the Meigs County' Education elementary teachers. This is the second };ear that our
$erving on the jury were John enrollment and there are some slight changes in it. Our Association will hold its annual meeting. Please note district has worked witll OU on this project. ThiS exWill, Middleport; Edna Russell, most recent report was Monday of this week. At that that we will have classes on Monday, TUesday, Weq~ perience that comes one year before student teaching
Middleport; Russell Cullums, time we had 1504 in K-6, 540 in grades 7~, and 995· in nesday, an&lt;! Friday of tlle week of Oct. 11-15. There is t!xtremely valuable to these young people. Having
Pomeroy; Frank Gilkey, Jr., grades 9-12. This makes our total enrollment '3039.
won't be Classes on Thursday, Oct. 14.
tllem to assist in our classrooms Is also of measurable
Middlep.ort; Dana E. Hoffman,
Lookilig-ahead on tlle calendar you might also like value to our educational program. These 30 students
The early weeks of each school year are a time for
Jr., Rutland; Allen · Page, gathering great quantities of information and sub- to note that there will be no classes on Friday, Nov. 5, will be working · in Pomeroy and Middleport
Middleport; Judy Eichinger, mitting them op large, complicated forms. At present, as this is the date for the annual meeting of tlle South- Elementary Schools during this fall quarter. We are
near Minersville; Ruby Holley, all our staff are engaged in providing information that eastern Ohio Teachers Association in Atheris.
glad to have them.
·
Ponteroy Route 4; Juanita wil) go into these reports that will eventually arrive in
REPORTS THAT I HAVE RECEIVED early this
DRIVING A SCHOOL BUS is not an easy Job. You
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Bachtel, Middleport; Dean
week from Washington indicate that there is a strong have a schedule to meet, you face the ever present
Blackwood, Pomeroy; John
Speaking of Schools-No. 207 possibility that Congress may force some changes in problems of traffic, and you have 50 to 60 or 11)8Ybe 70.
Welsh, Middleport; Arthur
th!l school lunch support program. As I noted recently, students' lives as your responsibility. The students are.
Strauss, Middleport; W. S. tlle office of the State Department of Education. In- the presently existing changed support program has behind your back and you have to watch the road and
Michael, Pomeroy;' Charles
deed, the first tw~ months of each school year could produced tremendous financial problems for school tlle tra.ffic in front of you.
Hilton, Portland, and Norma G.
very aptly be called "report time".
lunch programs in every state in the union. These were
Do you have someone In your family who rides a
Wilcox, Middleport.
Speaking of reports, next Friday will.find us in the announced in mid-August and have caused great ·school bus? If so, won't you please encourage that
end of the first six weeks gPading period. Grades will conc_!!rn since that tirile. I am quite certain that much someone to do everything possible to assist the bus
be sent home with all students, except in grade 1, on communication has been aimed at Washington in the driver in maintaining the Safest p_ossible conditions
Veterans Memorial Hospital Friday, October 15. ·The reports in grades 2-6 are to be past six weeks and I'have some growing hope that during every bus trip. Fortunately, conduct on our
busses has been fairly good. Nevertheless, it could
ADMITTED
Maxine signed and returned to school. The reportS1 in grades 7- changes may result.
Please understand that tllere have been no always stand improvement.' A good common sense
Dugan, Pomeroy; Roy Russell, 12 do no.t have to be returned to school.
An important follow-up to the' report of grades may changes made yet, but there seem to be indications discussion betweep parent, and student should help.
Middleport; Timothy Dill, Long
Bottom; Leroy Cadle, Rutland; be a needed conference involving parent, teacher, and. some may be coming. l will try to keep you posted on · Call we count on your support and cooperation? I trust
we can.
Gall Shaffer, Racine; John principal. There is a place on the elementary grade this extremely important matter.
for
you
to
check
if
you
desire...a_conference.
A
note
.
A
special
meeting
of
the
delegate
assembly
of
the
NEWS &amp;NOTES"- We exteoo our best wishes for
card
Riffle, Racinil.
DISCHARGED - Ethel on the grade report for grades 7-12 directs you to call Ohio Education Association is meeting in C1&gt;ldft!bus M early recovery to Mrs, Cecelia Hart -Mrs. Thelma
Sigman, Donald Machir, Roy tlle principal for an appointment and a conference:"Tx tOday. The prime purpose of this meeting Is to survey Campbell has returned to Harrisonville as a remedial
Sears, Evelyn Landers, Charles tllis is needed, don't put it off until it's too late.
the statils of sctioollegislation in Ohio. Anumber of our .reading teacher- Eugene Campbellls substituting for
Cramer, Monty Wolfe, Ehristine
Grade reports normaily go home on the Thursday _staff members are attending this.significant meeting. Eric Hart at RuUaoo- TonJght It's Homecillning and
Branham, Thomas Atney.
following the final d11y of_tlle ~~x wee!ts period. They_ We await with Interest a report from it.
IrontonatMarauderfiilld',lhopetoaeeyoudiere.

Load Limits on
New Gas Sales

OU Makes

2nd Gesture

aroon 71ndicted

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! .News ••• in Briefs ! Th~day
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By United Press InternaUooal

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Nation's Seaports Threatened
. NEW
YORK
THE
INTERNATIONAL
LONGSHOREMEN'S Association (ILA) touchlid off a strike
today that could shut down all of the country's seaports. tLA
Presid4mt Thomas W. Gleason announced that'the bargaining
talks were over and that"his union was considering itself "locked
out" of the job.
It's believed that President Nixon may invoke the TaftHartley Act, which would send the longshoremen back to work for
90 days while further negotiations took place.

Enemy's Back Broken
SAIGON -A SOUTH VIETNAMESE com1nander said today
that allied forces have "broken tlle back" of a big North Vietnamese drive aimed at harassing next Sunday's South Vietnamese election. Meantime, one GI was killed and 32 were
wounded during a North Vielllamese bombardment of Fire Base
Pace, an American outpost ·on the Cambodian frontier.

Ky Has Solution to Election
SAIGON - VICE PRESIDENT . NGUYEN CAO KY said
today that South Vielllamese voters should boycott the polls in
Sunday's one-man presidential election to demonstrate their
hostility to the "tyraMy" of President Thieu. The president has
repeatedly stated that he will not think of himseH as re-elected
unless he draws tlle ballots of more than baH of the seven million
registered voters.

80,000 Coal Miners to Strike
WASHINGTON -THE CONTRACI' BETWEEN tlle United
Mine W~rkers Union and the mine owners exPired at one mineute
8fter mjdnight today, paving the way for 80,000 miners to leave
their Jobs. The miners had been _taking ~~~t _In wildcat strikes
(Continued on page 12)

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Meigs Local Enrollment Now at ·3,039

Union
Votes
No 57 to
13 .
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Fifty-seven members of Local
15S7, IBEW, of the · Itnperial
Electric C.o. of Middleport
~hursdaynlght voted against a
company proposal setting up
procedure.s to return to work.
There were 13 votes for
returning tQ work. Two ballots
were declared void, one being
unreadable and the other blank.
The Dally Sentinel ltarnfld

this morning through union
members at the meeting that
the company·will be invited to
reopen negotiations on a new
contract, probably next week, ·
which could not be effective
untilaitertheendofthepresent
nation freeze on wages, Nov. 14,·
1971. The work stoppage began
June 3.
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2- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, OciOOer 1, 1971

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BRUCE BIOSSAT

H her Education

i Hel~n Help

For Democrats

I

Florida Primary·:
Political Quagmire
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

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EDITORIALS
Once and for All

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On the lace of 11, Natwnal Drug Abuse Prevenhon Week ,
October 3 through Ute 9th, would seem to be hltle cause lor
celebration. Most "National" weeks are usually reserved for
spirited promotions and the honormg of achievement
1 Why then Drug Abuse Prevention Week? In looking lor an
answer we found a mol!vation designed wstimulate conunumly
action and involvement Behmd tbe action, Is a dedicated group of
people who are, mdeed, extremely senous about the matter of
drug abuse and add1cllon m Ute Um1ed States
The concerned federal agenc1es and Ute President's Special
Action Offlce lor Drug Abuse Prevention are developmg an all-out
effort to combat the disease of drugs that plagues our soctety The
task put before the new office was enormous and mcluded spectflc
assignmenls encompassmg the wtde range of related cause and
effect drug problems
As National Drng Abuse PreventiOn Week begins, the m1tlal
achievement of the of!1ce IS ev1dent
A program has been organtzed for use by individuals ,
families or larger groups that pmpomls problems 'in human
relations, wh1ch are often at the root of drug abuse problems
the program offers no easy solutions, but 1t provides a
reasonable, workable begmmng w1th the obJecl!ve of operung
channels of personal commurucattons
Des~gns for group encounters, detailed suggesl!ons for
bringmg together people w1th varymg 'mterests, and complete
source lis Is for further action and involvement are also mcluded.
It IS a practical, workable program and 11 puts Ute responSibility squarely where 11 belongs, w1Ut the individual
The concept is a departure, and cons1dermg Ute emphasis thts
program will recetve beginn~g w1Ut Natwnal Drug Abuse
Preventloo Week, tt seems that vanous government agencies
involved with the White House Special Action office have put
aside departmental differences lor the common good. We would
urge every responsible cttizen to make available to himself, hiS
family, or any interested group the ruaterrnl that has been so
painstakingly prepared . All!! takes IS a postcard Wrtte to The
Natiooal Clearmg House lor Drug Abuse Information, P 0. Box
1909, Rockville, Maryland 20850.
•
If enough people join together to work on the beginnmg that
has been established, perhaps we wtll discover a reasonable
answer to the problem of drug abuse in this country. Once and lor
all.
,

New Wrinkle in
Auto Insurance

•

All the fanfare and controversy IS over "no-fault" auto
msurance , but' a b11l qwetly enacted m Illinois recently
co uld be a Ieg1slattve landmark m 1ts own n ght ·
The b1li deals w1th property and hab1hty msurance
company bankruptcres, an mcreasmgly senous problem
m many states It concerns automobile owners parljcularly because, accord111g to a Department of Transportaj10n
study las\ year msurance company !atlures tend to be
concentrated m the h1gh-nsk auto msurance market.
Not only are the policyholders of fa!lmg compames af·
I !ected but also mnocent thlfd parties- people who may
have been InJUred by policyholders and who stand httle
chance of recovermg their losses
About 40 states presently have laws requmng guaranty
funds, de~1gned to protect pohcy holders in much the same
way as federal bank account msurance protects
depositors
There's a catch however Insurance guaranty fund s
are replemshed by assessmg every auto msurance company domg bus10ess m the state
"What 11 am oun ts to IS that the good compames end up
paymg for the bad companies' mista kes" says one ex pert m the f1eld
•
In the end . of course 1t's the policyholder who pays.
s111ce the cost of support1ng g uaranty fund s IS ultimately
·
reflected m auto 111surance pr emiums
In lllm01s , where a legislative comm1sston estim ated
that 400,000 people were the vtcllntS of 29 msurance company insolvencies m the past 13 years. the law now· requires fire . and casually msurer to set as1de spec111ed
amoun.ts of cash and sec unties in a " pol!C)holders secun
ty .depos1t account "
As well as helpmg assure that each company w11l b~
able to meet 1ts obllgat10ns to policy holders and claun anls, the new requH"efY' r a lso asstsls msurance regulators to momtor the fiS•
rf eac h compan y and to
detect early s1gns of 111
111cult)
Insurance people hail II 1dea and el mm 11 could mean
mulbm illlon-dollar sm rngs to 111sured drr ve1s annl!all y 11
adopted m the other 49 states
In the 1880s a demand for
sealskms for women's fashJOns en&lt;:ouraged the mdiS·
cnmmate k1lltng ol seals
near the US -owned Prtbllof Islands off the coast of
Alaska · The World AI·
manac notes that m order
to prese1·ve the seal herds
the United States restncted
the1r ktlling to certam sea.
Mns. of the year.

today·s FUNNY

Todcrr's FUNNY ••II poy $1 00 for

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POLLY'S POINTERS
Get YOLII' Tools

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THOUGHTS

Home to Roost

F'or the scnpture says ,
"You shall not muzzle an ox
when tl IS treadmg out the
gram," and "The laborer de
serves hts wages "- / Tzm
othy 5 18.

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Every man should make
up hts mmd that, 1f he ex
pects to succeed, he must
gtve an honest ret urn for
the other man's dollar - Ed
Wllfd R H a r r1 man, indus
tnahst

By POLLY CRAMER
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Polly's Problem ' ,

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y:g:-

YAS .
CERT'AINLY

coNJ~NIENT,I

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Rapid Heart Beat
Is Not Normal
By Lawreoce Lamb, M.D.

1

NORTH

.AI0842

WEST
· ·9543

.J982

tVoid
•KQ965

EAST
.KQ8762
.105
tQB63

•a

SOUTH (D)

•to

.Q4
tAKJ109542
.J7
Both vulnerable

West

North

3.

Pass

Eaat South
lt

2.

3t

Pass 4t

Pass 5+
Pass Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Openmg lead-• K

.

without -any apparent illness

(NEWSPA.PU ENTEitPIISE .\SSM)

1.

West

North

t:ast

South

Pass

2•

Pass

?

.J

You, South, hold .

than JUSt a stroke A perSistent fast heart rate IS not
normal.
He should have a careful
evaluation of his cardtac
status and possibly a thorough evaluation for overactive thyroid or other endocrine abnormally or anemta.
A person who had a stroke
two years ago should no
longer have thts type of
problem Wtless there JS
something else, too Damage to parts of the central
nervous system can cause
changes m the blood pressure and heart rate, but
these should not be present
while your husband IS restmg. lying down.

SF BeatS Roberts, Claims West Title

9 74 2 •2 tAK 108 7 .A Q
What do you do now?
A-JllSt bid two 1pades. U
your partner con't bid oplo you
bolonr at a low conlracl
TODAY'S QU!SnON
You do bid two spades and
your partner rat.Ses you to three.
What do you do now? ·

By JOE CARNICELLI
Fonal Major League Slandonil!;
Natlona I League
UP! Sporls Writer
By Un1ted Pren International
East
the
bndesmatd has. made 11
American League
w. L. Pel. GB
w the altar.
East
' Pt!lsbursh
~7 65
599
w. L. Pet. GB Sl LouiS
90 72 556 7
The San Francisco Giants,
Balltmore
101 57 639
83 79 512 14
Cht c a~o
who
became almost a joke with
Delrolt
9 71 562 12
New ork
II:J 79 512 14
Boston
85 -;-'71 525 18 Montreal
71 90 441 25 1f2 their annual second-place ItNew York 82 80 ' 502 20
Phliadelphra 67 95 414 . 30
nishes, had the last laugh .
Washmgton 63 96 396 38 1h
West
Thursday night. Led by veterw L. Pet. GB ans
Cleveland 60 102 370 43
Willie Mays and Juan
Scin Franctsc'o 90 72 556 West
Marichal and roOkie Dave
Los Angeles 89 73 549
l
w L. Pet GB Allan
Ia
82 80 506 8 Kingman, the Giants overpowOakland
101 60 627
Houston
79 83 488 II
Kansas Ct ly 85 76 528 16
ered the San Diego Padres i;-1 w
79 83 488 11
Chrcago
79 BJ 488 22 1/2 Cincinnali
61 100 379 28112 win the Nahonal League's
Caltfornia
76 86 469 25 1r 2 San Dteho
T ursday's Results
Western Division _titll!'-by a
Mtnnesota '74 86 463 26lf2
Pt!ts 4 Phria J
Milwaukee 69 92 429 32
game over the Los Angeles
New York 6 St Loufl
Thursday's Results
Dodgers as the 1971 baseball
Ch tcago 5 Montreal
Caltfornta 3 Mtnnesofa 2
Atlanta
6
Ctncmnalt
2
season
came to a close.
Chieago 2 Milwaukee 1
New York 9 Wash 0 by for fell) San Fran 5 San Otego 1
The Dodgers manage!Y w
Los Angeles 2 Houston 1
!Only games schedu led)
defeat Ute Houswn Astr6s 2-1
but tl dtdn't matter ~ince 'the
Gtanls had wrapped thtngs up
about a half-ltour earher. San
Francisco now plays host to
P!Itsburgh Saturday in the
opener of a best~f.ftve senes
for the National League pen·
nan I. Oakland will be at
Baltimore to open thell" best~!-

Major League

Attendance Up _
By United Press International
· MaJOr League baseball attendance rose to a record 29203,589 m 1971 but showed an
onunous· unbalance masmuch
as the Natwnal IJeague dre" 56
per cent of the natiOn's patrons
as opposed w 44 per cent by
the Amencan League
NL attendance was a
pmg 17,333,085, up 670,887 over
1970, wh1le AL attendance fell
from 12,085,135 1n 1170 to
11,870,504
Every NL club, except the

·P·

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medica l Center, F1rst
Ave and Cedar St General
VIStling hours 2-4 and i-8 p m

Matermty V!Sitmg hours 2 30 to
4 30 p.m Parents only on
Ped1atncs Ward
Btrths
'
Mr and Mrs Roger Dale
Hamilton,
We llston ,
a
daughter Mr and Mrs James
H Sisson, Gall1pohs, a daughter
and Mr and Mrs Jerry Lee
Cassidy Oak H1ll , a daughter
Dl~c harge s

Mrs Carl Bartrum, Mrs
Richard Blessmg and daughter,
Roy Burkha mmer , Clarence
Carter . Mrs George Dabne),
Roy Deanng, !\Irs Richard
Houck, Mrs Cleo Hulbert, Mrs
James Lema ster, T1mothy
Mamon, Jr . Mrs Charles
Markms, Mrs Delbert McCo),
Christopher Patterson, Carl
Ross, Jr , Kelly Sexton, Mrs
Charles Small, Mrs Mernll
Waugh and daughter, Joseph
W1lson, M1sha Fraz1er, Mrs
Elwood Wilson, Shan W!lhams,
Deanna Lynn Bragg and Mrs
John H Icenhower

Mator League Results
By Umted Press International
Amencan League

Cal &lt;lornra 000 100 02o- 3 6 2
Mrnnes ola 100 000 001 - 2 9-l
May . Allen 181 and Torborg
Kaa l (13 141 and Roo! WPMay Ill 121
Mol waukee
Chrcago
~~ gg~ = ~
Parsons Mor ros (6 ), Krausse
171 . Sanders 181 and Porter ,
Mag nuso n Hlnlon 131 Eddy
(5). O'Toole (7) Perzanowsk1
191 and Bnnkman WP- Hrnton
IJ 41 LP- Parsons 113171 HR
- Mellon 133 rdl
New Yor k 9 Was honglon 0 Iby
forferll
Natoonal League
p, llsburgh
001 300 ooo-4 5 0
Phil a
102 000 000 _ 3 8 0
Bro les Moose (4) , Johnson
16) , Moiler (7), Gruslo 18) and
Sangud len, Champ&lt;on Brandon
\ 4 ) Le rsch 151. Wolson IB J and
McCarver , Ryan 1&lt;1 WPMoose 111 7I LP- Champoon
IJ 51 HR - Sanguoll en 1?1
Montanez IJOthl

i i

C• ncmnal' 001 000 lOD- 2 4 J
Atlan la 1 000 000 60 ' - 6 8 1
Wilcox , Borbon (8) and
Plummer . House , Nerbauer IBI
and D&lt;doer WP- House II Ol
LP- Wol cox (2 2) HR - T
Perez (25th I. Breazeale llstl
Chocago 000 001 013- 5 10 0
Monl real 000 Oil 001- 3 9 l
Jenkons 124 IJ) And Rudolph ,
Stoneman (17 16) and Boccabel

Ia HR- Caii&lt;Son (8fh J Boc
cabella IJrd )

'Dear Reader - That's a
good attitude, and "guys"
often like little girls. Guys,
however, like to think of
themselves as " big, powerful, he-men" so 'they become
little Napoleons. It is too
bad, too, smce there are so
many better ways a man can
show s t r eng t h1 character
and ability. You are rightpeople should be happy with
their het~ht. If you are short
there isn t much you can do
about tl anyway, so enjoy it

Pallerson, Reuss (6). San ton
n1 (7) and Stmson , Seaver (20
10) and Gr ote LP- Patterson
10 II HR- Songle lon 121 12th &amp;

13th)

Hous lon

000 001 OOQ- I 6 0

Los Angeles

000 001 lOx-- 2 6 0
B&lt;i longham (10 16) and Ed

wards , Sutlon {1712) and S1ms

IN
RETURNABLE

Severmsen (9 ) and Barton LP
l7)
HR- King

~,

SAID PEOPL.E
G&lt;YI&gt;-.ND EAT?...
WHY, ACROSS

BRIGHTON • C2815W
Grained Kashmir Walnut I
Titan 80 Handcralled Chassis
• CustwnlZJ!l!.J!i!'i~g ! Supe~

I~
T~E .JOI~T

TI&lt;E STREET

WIT~ THE SMALL
P/&gt;-.RKI~(; LOT- ~_.

OUR
PRICE

for aglant·scraan

Zenith 23~
Fine-luning Conlrol color tv conBDietta
IIURRYJ /JmiJd, lim£ oJgl Video Range Tuner • Automatic

'(!.._.(&gt;NO &gt; AAT

• COV""''"""f
CENll!R,

To All Marauder Football Fans
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sept. 30, 1971
Bemg an av1d football fan lor many years,! am writing thts
letter to express the feelings of many area people who feel as I do .
The fll"st year Meigs High School was in extstence we had the
good forlune w win the SEOAL championship and everyone
seemed very exc1ted oyer the future of our school Since that time
·
I feel we have had JUSt as !me a teams but haven't won a champ10nsh1p.
!feel !his can partially be tbe fault of the fans and the Metgs
H1gh School Marching Band
Aller gmng w the game at Wellswn last week we returned
home by way of GallipoliS. As we drove through town we observed
all the store wmdows patnled w1th spirited signs and also numy
•• b11es w'"'
... similar messages on Ut em.
auwmo
Also, m the middle of town, was a large banner stretched
'
across the streetI boosting the team on. ·
Do we have any of thts spirit in our wwn? No! I feel we could
have beaten Gallipolis last year and went on wwm it all had we
the sp1r1t and deteriTllnation behmd our team that GaUipohs had
when they came w town. I believe thiS showed again last week
when many sportswnters picked Logan t'o defeat Gallipolis and
end their long wm streak. But did Utey' No. Again I feel this was
due to the tremendous sup'porl behind them.
At Wellston last week the band amved when we were kicking
off. Is thts backmg your team' No. On several occasions when we
scored there wasn 't a ~ound from the band to praiSe the team and
make them feel more spll"lted Every week you hear more people
m the crowd say how our b1g Marauder band IS being outdone by
much smaller schools.
I have nothmg but praiSe for the team and the coachmg staff.
We are very fortunate w have a coach such as we have m Mr
Chancey, but Utey do need support wgtve them the destre to wm 1t
all.
I am not wr11tng th1s letter to crtl!cize anyone but just w try
and wake the people up wmake the most of the great opportumty
we have
Let's not drag our feet in thts as the people of Meigs County
have m the past and rrussed out on many opportunities. I would
hke to see th1s letter p;,bllshed before Friday 's game w1th Ironton
and see If the townspeople can't show our team Ute support we
have seen m other nearby communities.
Name Withheld Upon Request.

1hurs~ay's Fight Results

Reds Bow

ap~mn

So W~EREDO

JiO. BOX 173

1,,

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The

$39995

R.&gt;-FFERTY

Letters of oplnloo are welcomed. They should be less
.!:! than 300 wordsloog (or be subject to reductloo by the editor)
and must be signed wllb the signee's address. Names may
§! he wltbheld ~poo pubUcaUon, however, on request. Letters
should be In good tasle, addressing Issues, n~t personalities.

Cmcm~t Reds closed out a dis-

1&gt;-.PPRECI/&gt;-.TE--

.JIN\

,-

BERRY'S WORlD

Pam m the chest with
.
exerbon
and a persistent
fast heart rate suggest there
may be more difficulties

", .. II there is .no other business, I move that the board
ol directors meeting be adjourned so thot we con begin
our group therapy st5sionl" ·

INGELS FURNITURE

"'· ;\

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

992-2635

Middleport

Ferguson Jenkms fmished as
the NL's b1ggest wmner as he
pttched a nine-lutter for ts 24th
v1clory as the Cubs beat
Montreal Jmt Htckman dfove
m two runs for Chtcago.
Ken Smgleton drove m four
runs w1lh a pmr of homers to hft
the Mets past Sl Lows and g1ve
Tom Seaver h1s 20th VIctory.
Seaver struck out 13 batters to
f1msh with 289, tops m Ute NL
and h1s I 76 earned run average
also led the league.
Jun Breazeale's f1rst 11)i!JOr
,,J

Cowboys Hope To End
-

Out With

•

J.2

;;::·
I'

.

San Fran 000 JOO 002- 5 10 I
San D•ego 000 010 ooo-- l 5 0
Marochal (l8l1 J and D1etz ,
Roberls. Arion (4 1. Corkrns 171 ,
- Roberls 114
ma n (6fh J.

'

beat Montreal :i-3, New York
npped St. Louis 6-1, Atlanta
downed Cincmna II 6-2 and
Pittsburgh edged Plilladelph1a
4-3 In Am~r1ean I.:eague play,
Washmgton lost 1ts last game m
the cap1tal by a 9-ll forfe1t when
fans poured onto the field m the
runth after the Senators had
taken a 7~ lead over New York,
Chicago shaded Milwaukee 2-1
and Cahforma edged Mmnesota

wrote us off two weeks ago, so Steve Blass ( l:i-81 The G~ants
Ne showed you we could do 11." w1ll send John . Cumberland
Marichal sa1d he was "as aga1nst Dock Elhs m the second
pr?pd of h1s record this year as I game Sunday
ca'n be. I won the games I had w "I don't want a smgle man to
ivm. We showed a lot of people hft a bat, throw a hall or even
we could wm when we had w." show up at the ball park wday ,"
"I'm lost for words," sa1d sa1d Fox . "We've been through
Gtants' Manager Charlie Fox the wrmger these last thrll&lt;!
"But tf I have w say one thing , weeks and we all can use a day
I'm happiest the most lor away from baseball. "
Horace Stoneham (Giants' own- The Giants scored three runs
er). He gave me a chance w m the fourth off Padres ' ace
manage a wonderful bunch of Dave Roberts on Tito Fuentes'
guys and he didn't leave a stone smgle, Mays' douxle and
unturned to pllt Ut1s team Kingman's homer They added
wgether.
two msurance runs in the ninth 1
"For my money, Mar1ehal IS Walter Alston, whose Dodgers
the best pitcher in baseball," put on a tomd .stretch run only
Fox added. "He's a true wfall short by a game, said he
professional and when all the was "d1sappom.ted we didn't go
money IS on the lme, I'll take all the way I'm proud of how
my chances on the pro."
the team played as a unit," he
Fox said the Giants will take added, "and I'm partiCularly
today off before Saturday's proud of Maury Wills I don't
playoff opener in which Gaylord thmk he's ever played harder m
Perry (16-12) w1ll p1tch lor the his hie "
G1ants against Pittsburgh's
Elsewhere m the NL, Ch1cago

Letters of .~ Redskin Jinx Sunday

t

Linescores

000 000 OlD- l 7 l
New York 000 015 OOx- 6 8 0

ROYAL CROWN COLA

I

~:

St LOU1S

girl who feels 1t is great to
be short, be proud of it. I
thmk people should accept
the1r height, whether short
or tall.

~

than 1-mrlhon fans at home I
wh1le only lour AL clubs topped
that mark
The New York Mets led both ~~::
i
leagues with 2,666,680 and the ~
Boston Red Sox led the AL w1th
1,678,579 The Philadelphia Phtll!es showed a huge gain of
802,976 over 1970 m the NL
wh1le the Chicago Wh1te Sox
J1ad a gam o[ :!38.536 m the AL.
&lt;;:

gff

five playoffs for the Amencan
League flag. .
·Mays, pllshmg hiS 4~year-old
body to the breaking point,
doubled in one nm , stored
another and stole two bases. His
outstanding performance came
almosl20 years wthe day after
he knelt on deck as a trembling
rookte while Bobby Thomson hit
his memorable two-out, three·
run homer in the ninth inning to
give the then New York Giants a
pennant playo!fvtctory over the
then Brooklyn Dodgers m the
Polo Gtounds.
Mar!Chal, who had a spotty
season, recorded his fourth
consecutive vicwry and 18th of
Ute season as he stopped the
Padres on five hits. Kingman ,
recalled from the nunors July
30, hit a two..-un homer.
"What can I say about wmnlng," sa1d Mays. "We knew we
had to win this game and we
went ou~ and did it. The victory
is about as gratifying to me as
any in the past Alot of you guys

~~J.edt~~-...:~!Z!!!!WC=:o:•!i:·:::~..::!!::::.

San D1ego Padres drew more ~

TH/&gt;-.T PEOPLE.

TIP TO

'

3- The Daily'Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, October (197!

hve longer in better health
than other individuals Your
husband has additional prob-

/ IF -"'--·- - ---"-

•

•

.AJ
.AK763
• 7 •

•

'
·'

Horseshoes
Take Skin

The b1dding has been

Dear Dr. Lamb - Read
your arttcle on low blood
pressure You stated 11 ts
usually harmless. My husband had a stroke and he
had low blood pressure.
Smce then, his heartbeat
never goes below 110 and
usually 1s 1:1Jl. Still low pressure If he does work w1th
any strain, he has a very
uneven beat, wtlh• pain in
the chest Also. he gets
shaky. I wish you would
comment on this. He also
has a nervous condition and
h1s left arm will shake if he
does much labor.
He has been told to cut
down on his activity. Stay
Dear Dr. Lamb-! read in
out of crowded places. Anr
the
paper about the person
comment would be appreciated. He ts 52 now and was who doesn't hke being five
50 when he had the stroke. feet tall. I would like to be
ftve feet tall mstead of five
Dear Reader-! doubt your feet and a quarter inch. 1
husband's stroke was re- would rather be an even
lated to h1s low blood pres- height. I ltke being short
sure. In reviewing my col- though I am shorter than
umn on low blood pressure, guys. I am 21 also. I am a
I see I pomted out that low
blood pressure as part of a
senous disease like tuberculosis. Shock or heart failure
was something else again.
It ts true that individuals
w1th I o w blood pressure

@
]§;,;~;;~~~::~ti~~~~~~~~;:~~;=====~~~~~~~~1
1ems
t
'"S, ~'"LL
EBBO '""' " "'""
DINER,BLir ~E 1S ALSO
Gar 1&gt;-.CRES OF
FI'-RKii--16 SPI'.CE

.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

::: ~ ~'@"}::;:; ~0,1 "~

®

1

WIN AT BRIDOi!

'By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We aren't concerned with
the ments of today's bidding, but the final contract
of six diamonds looks fairly
reasonable at first glance.
South rose with dummy's
ace of clubs and led a low
diamond to his ace. There
k
r·
was no reason to Ia e a mt
round fmesse. West showed
But block partles can be gtven ANY lime of the year - for no out of diamonds and South
other reason than to discover your neighbors are human too. paused.
Then he led king and anThey're kind of '.'grass..-oots country club" without the whopping
overhead. _ H.
other d1amond. East won
Dear Helen .
and returned a spade to ,_
, ·
dummy's ace. South got
You ve prmted so many letters about couples who regret back to his hand by rufflng
getting married and having children yoWig that I thought I would • a spade and ran off the rest
wr1teaboutacouplewhodoesn'tregretitatall!
of h1s trumps. The last
My husband and I were married when I was just 17 and be trump squeezed West m
was 19 not ooly because I was pregnant but because we wanted hearts ~nd clubs and South
.
.
•
made his slam
•
to Well, OUl' baby dted_ at b!l"th, and all the parents wanted us w " Horseshoes!" yelled East.
"You played for a 5·1 club
get an annulment, wh1ch we would not do.
We moved away, aoo have been married for nine years now. break and gave up the
We have two wonderful children, aged four and six, and we chance to get a quick discouldn't be happier. We've got each other and our kids!
card on a good heart."
COLETTE
South had done nothing of
Dear Helen :
tbe kinil Instead he had
.
.
"
made an excellent play and
Tell that person who got trapped mw sendmg $10 to earn had been properly rewarded.
money bemg a new products researcher" that she bas lots of
company. I c&lt;mplained wthe U.S. Attorney for that district, and Send $I lor JACOBY MODERN book
also to the U.S. Postal Service inspector, aoo have learned since to "Wm at Bml,e," (c/o this lttwS·
that this company is now in bankruptcy, after being invesUgated paper), P 0 lo• 41'9, RaJto City
(and evtdently found wanting). I got my money back, but doubt Station, Nrw Yorl:, NY 10019.
that others will be so lucky. As you said, Helen, ten bucks is a
small pnce to pay If you've learned a good lesson - never trust a
East was marked wtth six
mail-order company that Insists you pay out money to make spades for hJs vulnerable
Jump overcall. He had also
money.- A. F.
shown up with four diaDear Readers :
monds and one club. There
That now-defunct company really got its ads around! I've was no way he could also
been flooded with letters,all naming the same outftt (who shaD be hold three hearts, so there
was no way to make the
nameless) as the culprit. - H
hand by an immediate attack m the heart suit. South
had given himself a chance
and it materialized

~
~

..

Us

r
HOW TO ORGANIZE A BLOCK PARTY
Dear Helen :
,
Thooe block parties mentioned in IUfU sound interesting.
Please tell us m&lt;n about how to organize (llle. - WANTING 'J()
KNOW OUR NEIGHBORS
Dear WTKON :
Here's a letter thai explains block parties, July ftlt style:
Dear Helen:
·
•
• T.W. and R.O. who yearn for old-fashioned block parties
should move to San Antonio, Texas!
Last year we bad our !iftlt annual Jndependenee Day "block"
parade and street dance. Of course we live oo a very unusual
street: no one stiCks a nose In your buslned, but If you need help,
everyooeis there! We live oo Ute best block, in the best town ilbthe
whole U.S.A.
- .._
How do we get a block party going? Everybody _£ooperates.
We formally write -to the City Traffic Engineer and requ)!Sl
permissioo to have a slreetdance. Heagrees to close off"'he street
for Ute evening,
At 8 p.m. the children of Ute neighborhood march m a "dressup" parade. They carry flags aoo sing patriotic songs befitting
July fth. In Ute middle ci the block, we have taped music on one
side, and snacks, cheese, tamales, aU ma'i!JF of "pot-luck "food
on Ute other. Wlien the children arrive there, adults join in tljeir
songs. Then we eat, dance, play, talk_,- and you can be sure that
no &lt;lRe here would dream of taking a vacation away from home on
this holiday!
In our small way, we're reaffirming faith in our coWJlry and having a wooderful time.- MRS. L.W.H., Lantana Dr., San
.
Antoruo,
Tex.
NOTE FROM HELEN:

''
''

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve IS that manufacturers
do not put false cuffs on work pants It would be such a
rel 1ef to get 11d of those loose cu!!s whtch are only dust
and d!rt catchers and tack catchers for my husband. who
uses tac ks all day - ELLA
DEAR POLLY- In our
neighborhood each fam1ly
ha s d 1fIe rent tools and
So tS H W&lt;th the resurre c
we loan and borrow
then
twn of the dead What 1s
sown zs perzst1able , what !S fro m ou1 neighbors SomeraiSed IS tmperzshable It zs limes one would f o r get
sown m dzshonor, 1t IS razsed wh~eh tool be I o n g e d to
m glory It IS sown tn weakwh1ch ne1ghbor. so we deness , tt ts ratsed m power Cided to paml the handles
I Cor . J5 32 . 43
on ours the same color as
our
house and suggested
'
There 1s only one way to to the ne1ghbors that they
get ready for Immortality, do the same. so now we
and that 1s to love th1s life can eas1ly return tools to the proper placll':-ELSIE
DEAR POLLY-When bathmg a ch1ld, fust run all the
and live 11 as bravely and
hot
water 1n the tub and then the cold so in case baby
fa ithfully and cheerfully as
bumps
h1s or her head on the faucet it wtll be cool and
we can.-Henry Van Dyke,
not burn Th1s works well for me and saves baby from
clergyman
any unnecessary pam -ELLIE
DEAR POLLY and Mane, who does not know how to
treat the w1 ndow over her bathtub-! solved such a
Knowmg !he1r thought s, problem by replacmg the Venettan bhnd wtth a vinyl one
he smd to them, " Every that I had covered wtth pretty flowered, adhesive-backed
kzngdom dlvlded agaznst 1t· paper I applied enough paper to the shade so that, when
self shall be lazd waste , and 11 1s pulled down to the stll, nothmg shows but pattern
no cz!y or house d1v1ded The ~&gt;oodwork was all covered wtth this same paper I
agamst z!self wt ll sta nd " - cut !lowers from the paper and scattered them all over
Matthe w 12 25
the wall around the wmdow so the effect is almost that
' '
of !lowered wallpaper To top tt all off, I use a cafe curThrough un1ty of action tam md valance made of sheer Dacron This shade prowe can be a ventable colos- VIdes prrvacy, keeps the sun out during the hot part of
sus m support of peace No the dav and the curtains are full enough so that no one
one can defeat us unless we can see m when the shade is up I, too, keep the window
llfst defeat ourselves Every cracked for ve ntilation, even when the air conditioning
one of us must be gUided by IS on I do enjoy the column and have approved of so
this truth -Dw1ght D EI- ma ny of the Pet Peeves wh1ch happen to be mme too.senhower
MRS .T E F
'

They'll Do It Every Time

By Helen Bottel

~~·'h if'' '"' ,,-

DEAR POLLY- Is there any way to put elashc
back mlo the tops of socks' My little g1rl and my
husband go through them m no lime JUSt because
of the elashc and the socks are QUite useless, even
though they ltave no holes --~RG INIA
"i

,

1

MIAMI BEACH. (NEA)
Sen Henry M J aekson, presently the chief challenger
to Sen Edmund Musk1e m the btg March ltFiofilla primary , could find h1s path strewn wtth land mines.
The most dangerous would have the name of Alabama's
Gov. Gem ge Wallace on tt If he indicates 1972 presidential candidacy , Flonda Democratic officials say he almost
certamly w1ll be entered m the preference test. He is busy
po!1shmg up hiS credentials as an authentic Democrat.
Political apprmsers m Florida largely agree that a
Wallace pnmary b1d would cut severely, tf not disastrously, 10to Jackson's presumed strength among Democratic conserval!ves m the Panhandle and elsewhere. The
broad JUdgment 1s that the consequences would be to
bnghten Musk~e ' s VIctory prqspects
Without Wallace m the ptcture, Jackson is a pOtent factor m Flonda, espec1ally if New York's Ma)'O'l- John Lindsay JUmps m and sltces away at Muskie's stren~th from
the hberal side.
But the Musk1e people are not playmg a soft game.
They mtend to assaul t Jackson's northern Flonda bastions w1th a harsh argument:
"If you vote lor Jackson, you w1ll be votmg lor a man
who can't wm the 1972 Democratic nommatwn.
"He does not have w1de appeal m the crucial northern
states Indeed the better he does ui Flonda and elsewhere m the South and Southwest, the more he is likely
tollbe cnt1cally handicapped by a narrow, sell-defeating
conservative 1mage ''
No one can guess now how lhts lme of talk will be
rece1ved But 1t could be another land mine for Jackson.
A s1m1lar tactic was enormously effective for the late
John F Kennedy 10 h1s 1960 West Vugtma primary race
agamst Sen Hubert Humphrey .
II Jackson's Flonda strength can resist such battering,
then Musk1e may have to move hard to hold down encroachments from the liberal end It is here that Lindsay
looms large
:A.s 10 several other states, Sen George McGovern has
lmd some good orgamzat10nal groundwork m Flortda. But
11 1s mostly confined to Dade county (Miami areal. And
there 1s no clear s1gn tt ts b1hng deep into voter sentiment
Sen B~rch Bay h of Ind1ana has MIBmi's Mayor David
Kennedy, but 1s considered stuck on the launch-pad There
are no Jig-Jags on the se1sm1c chart for Sen. Fred Harris
of Ok lahoma
R1ght now yo u'd have to say the same about Lmdsay
But party sources here thmk he has a good deal more
potential thah the other libera ls My earher report that
the mayor's people have been takmg soundings m Flortda
was remforced on th1s viSit With hts chansma and ht~h
1ecogmhon factor , he IS feared and respected by his
p1 ospecl!ve adversaries He could grab many young voters
New polls, one ot wh1ch may surface m October, should
put a sha1pe1 gauge on Lmdsay and perhaps help h1m
dec1de wl1ether to become a candidate early rather than .
late
Yet no one thmks Lmdsay could wm Flonda The mam
v1ew He could hurt Musk1e, and m so domg make a good
start for lumself

each or1g,no l ' fun,r used Send gog'
to Today 1 FUNNY, 1200 W~s t Th1rd
St ' cr •• elund, OhiO o44lll .

•

,

•

g season Thursday
night 1 sing to the Atlanta
Braves.
The de!endmg Nat10nal
League champiOn Reds committed three errors that gave
the Braves a maJor · boost
toward gammg the 6-2 win.
Subshtute third baseman Jim·
my Stewart committed two of
the errors.
The Braves went inlo the
seventh innmg trailing 2-ll, but
Jtm Breazeale led off w1th his
first major league home run .
Then Stewart erred on Dusty
Baker's grounder and singltlSb•Y"
Tony Larussa and Bob Dtd1er
loaded the bases with only one
out
A second Stewart error, on a
grounder by pmch -J:!!ller Gi!
Gamdo, allowed two more runs
to score.
Leo Foster hit inw a force
out to score run No 4 and Oscar Brown followed wilh a dou·
ble to drive m the filth run.
An error by first baseman Lee
May on a grounder gave the
Braves thelr.slxlh run

By United Press International
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Mando Ramos, 136%, Long
Beach, Cahf , outpmnted Ruben
Navarro, 135, Los Angeles (10),
Arturo Pineda, 121 'h, Mex1co,
outpom ted Chuck Spencer,
121 ~,. Cleveland (10).

I

By GREG GALLO
UP! Sports Writer
The Dallas Cowboys, w1th one
of the best won-lost record m
football over the past two
years, w1ll have to snap a

season and a he with the
Cowboys lor first place tn the
Eastern DIVIsiOn of the Nal!onal Football Conference, holds a
3-0 l!fel!me record agamst .
Dallas Allen's Los Angeles
Rams defeated Dallas lwtce m
regular season play and once m
a playoff game
Dallas, wh1ch has won 15 of
1ts last ,16 games but 1s better
known lor 1ts knack lor losuig
the b1g one, must beat the
Redskms to stay on top tn the
and as he neared the dugout, East The oddsmakers have
Howard. swept off h1s balling made the Cowboys a 13-pomt
favonte . ·
helmet m appreciahon
In other games Sunday
'"Hondo, hondo, hondo," the Pittsburgh and San Otego and
llu ong chan ted "Hondo, hondo, Cmcmnal! and Green Bay are
hondo "
p1ck 'em, the Rams are lour
W1th play held up, the huge over Ch1cago, Kansas Cit) is
hero !mally emerged from the seven over Denver, Detrmt IS
dugout to doff h1s hehnet agam seven over Atlanta, Houston IS
to the fans and skm 11 mto the seven over New Orleans, M1ami
stands as a souvemr
1s seven over the Jets, St. Loms
It wasn't enough for the IS JO over the G1ants, Balltmore
frustrated spectators They 1s 14 over New England, San
conlmued their loot-stomping Francisco 1s 14 over Philadeland applause undimtmshed and phia and Mmnesota IS 14 over
Howard was, pushed from the Buffalo
dugout by h1s teammates
Oakland IS a 3-pomt favonle
Beammg with pnde, Howard over Cleveland on Monday
ra1sed h1s arms m response and . mght
blew a k1ss to the crowd .
Nor was the farewell crowd Tonight's Games
parl!al to Howard. Every
player m the openmg hne-up Jackson at Athens
drew applause and cheers and Gall1pohs at Waverly
when former starlmg catcher Ironton at Me1gs
Paul Casanova came up to Wellston at Logan
Upper
Portsmouth at
pmch-h1t m the f1fth mmng,
carrymg w1th h1m a 203 Arlington
batting average, he was award- Kyger Creek at North Galha
Rosecrans at Nelsonvilleed a standmg ovatwn.
Howard, s1ttmg m the dress- York
mg room after the game, clad Glouster at Eastern
m h1s long. JOhns and puf!mg a Waha111a at Southern
c1gar, sa1d of h1s lr1bute "the Symmes Valley at Southpeople were the greatest ot me western
I've ever expenenced. Every- Gree n at Hannan Trace
thmg after th1s -whatever South Pomt at Logan, W Va
P' Pleasant - Open
happens m Texas - will be an
Coal Grove - Open
antJchmax to me ,.
three-game losmg )lOX agamst
Washmgton Redskms' Coa1!h
George Allen Sunday
Allen, who has led the Skms
to two strmght v1cWnes th1s

Sens Have Wild
Finish Thursday
By SAM FOGG
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Washwgton Senators d1ed
Thursday mght at the age o[ 71.
The sta1d cap1tal vall neve r
forget the wake
Several thousand fans
streamed onto the field m the
mnth mmng w1th two outs and
the Senators leadmg the New
York Yankees, 7~ . When they
npped up the bases, tore out
the pitchers' rubber and scaled
the fence to sw1pe team names
from the scoreboard, the
urnp1res declared the game
forfeited a nd the Yanks 9-0
w1riners
" --?
It was the swan song of the
Amencan League m Washmgton The Senators, plagued w1th
poor attendance, will be moved
to Dallas-Fort Worth next
season after 71 yea rs of playmg
m the natiOn's capital
The crowd eruptwn sent
players of both teams streakwg
lor their dressmg rooms Alter
a three-mmute wall, head
urnptre Bill Odom declared the
game forfeited
Stx persons were arrested for
disorderly conduct
Unl1l that pmnt however, a
turnout of 14,460 had pa1d
valedictory to the1r team w1th
b1g league class. An estimated
4,000 others crashed the gate
gfter the !1Ith innmg, a club
offlc1al sa1d
The emotwnal h1gh pomt
came m the s1xth mmng when
fi.fool-7 Frank Howard dnlled
the last of h1s 237 home runs m
a Washmgwn umform to wuch
off a four-run Senator rally that
t1ed the game.
He had been g1ven a standmg
ovatiOn on h1s previous two
limes at bat when he walked
and failed to ge t the ball out of
the mfleld
The third lime the crowd
exploded to 1ts feet m a roar as
the balllelt h1s bat. He Circled
the bases In a tumult of sound

•

league homer tgruted a six..-un
seventh inning rally that
enabled the Braves to beat
Cincmnati. the Braves took
advantage of three Reds' errors
m the mmng to bounce back
from a 2-ll deficit.
JaQkie Hernandez doubled
home two runs m the fourU.
mnmg to boost the Pirates,past
Phtladelphia The Plnls' Larry
Bowa set a m~jor league
f1e)dmg record lor shortstops as
he--flrushed wtth a .987 percentage
The Senawrs, playmg their
last game m Washmgton, never
saw tl end as hundreds of fans
streamed onw the field in the
runth mrung and caused the
umpll"es w forfeit Ute game to
the Yankees. The Senators had
JUSt broken a 5-5 tie w1th two
runs m lhe e1ghth. It was the
fll"sl forfeit in the majors smce
July, 1954
B1!1 Melton 's third home run
m 18 hours earned hun the AL
homer title and helped lite
White Sox beat Milwaukee The
blow, Melton's 3:Td', broke a be
between Melton, Oakland's
Regg1e Jackson and Detroit'~
Norm Cash for the home run
lead
Pmch-h1tter Syd O'Bnen's
two..-un smgle in the e1ghth
mmng gave Cahforma tis
tr1umph over the Twms

•

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•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, OciOOer 1, 1971

'

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

BRUCE BIOSSAT

H her Education

i Hel~n Help

For Democrats

I

Florida Primary·:
Political Quagmire
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

l

-,
'

EDITORIALS
Once and for All

•

On the lace of 11, Natwnal Drug Abuse Prevenhon Week ,
October 3 through Ute 9th, would seem to be hltle cause lor
celebration. Most "National" weeks are usually reserved for
spirited promotions and the honormg of achievement
1 Why then Drug Abuse Prevention Week? In looking lor an
answer we found a mol!vation designed wstimulate conunumly
action and involvement Behmd tbe action, Is a dedicated group of
people who are, mdeed, extremely senous about the matter of
drug abuse and add1cllon m Ute Um1ed States
The concerned federal agenc1es and Ute President's Special
Action Offlce lor Drug Abuse Prevention are developmg an all-out
effort to combat the disease of drugs that plagues our soctety The
task put before the new office was enormous and mcluded spectflc
assignmenls encompassmg the wtde range of related cause and
effect drug problems
As National Drng Abuse PreventiOn Week begins, the m1tlal
achievement of the of!1ce IS ev1dent
A program has been organtzed for use by individuals ,
families or larger groups that pmpomls problems 'in human
relations, wh1ch are often at the root of drug abuse problems
the program offers no easy solutions, but 1t provides a
reasonable, workable begmmng w1th the obJecl!ve of operung
channels of personal commurucattons
Des~gns for group encounters, detailed suggesl!ons for
bringmg together people w1th varymg 'mterests, and complete
source lis Is for further action and involvement are also mcluded.
It IS a practical, workable program and 11 puts Ute responSibility squarely where 11 belongs, w1Ut the individual
The concept is a departure, and cons1dermg Ute emphasis thts
program will recetve beginn~g w1Ut Natwnal Drug Abuse
Preventloo Week, tt seems that vanous government agencies
involved with the White House Special Action office have put
aside departmental differences lor the common good. We would
urge every responsible cttizen to make available to himself, hiS
family, or any interested group the ruaterrnl that has been so
painstakingly prepared . All!! takes IS a postcard Wrtte to The
Natiooal Clearmg House lor Drug Abuse Information, P 0. Box
1909, Rockville, Maryland 20850.
•
If enough people join together to work on the beginnmg that
has been established, perhaps we wtll discover a reasonable
answer to the problem of drug abuse in this country. Once and lor
all.
,

New Wrinkle in
Auto Insurance

•

All the fanfare and controversy IS over "no-fault" auto
msurance , but' a b11l qwetly enacted m Illinois recently
co uld be a Ieg1slattve landmark m 1ts own n ght ·
The b1li deals w1th property and hab1hty msurance
company bankruptcres, an mcreasmgly senous problem
m many states It concerns automobile owners parljcularly because, accord111g to a Department of Transportaj10n
study las\ year msurance company !atlures tend to be
concentrated m the h1gh-nsk auto msurance market.
Not only are the policyholders of fa!lmg compames af·
I !ected but also mnocent thlfd parties- people who may
have been InJUred by policyholders and who stand httle
chance of recovermg their losses
About 40 states presently have laws requmng guaranty
funds, de~1gned to protect pohcy holders in much the same
way as federal bank account msurance protects
depositors
There's a catch however Insurance guaranty fund s
are replemshed by assessmg every auto msurance company domg bus10ess m the state
"What 11 am oun ts to IS that the good compames end up
paymg for the bad companies' mista kes" says one ex pert m the f1eld
•
In the end . of course 1t's the policyholder who pays.
s111ce the cost of support1ng g uaranty fund s IS ultimately
·
reflected m auto 111surance pr emiums
In lllm01s , where a legislative comm1sston estim ated
that 400,000 people were the vtcllntS of 29 msurance company insolvencies m the past 13 years. the law now· requires fire . and casually msurer to set as1de spec111ed
amoun.ts of cash and sec unties in a " pol!C)holders secun
ty .depos1t account "
As well as helpmg assure that each company w11l b~
able to meet 1ts obllgat10ns to policy holders and claun anls, the new requH"efY' r a lso asstsls msurance regulators to momtor the fiS•
rf eac h compan y and to
detect early s1gns of 111
111cult)
Insurance people hail II 1dea and el mm 11 could mean
mulbm illlon-dollar sm rngs to 111sured drr ve1s annl!all y 11
adopted m the other 49 states
In the 1880s a demand for
sealskms for women's fashJOns en&lt;:ouraged the mdiS·
cnmmate k1lltng ol seals
near the US -owned Prtbllof Islands off the coast of
Alaska · The World AI·
manac notes that m order
to prese1·ve the seal herds
the United States restncted
the1r ktlling to certam sea.
Mns. of the year.

today·s FUNNY

Todcrr's FUNNY ••II poy $1 00 for

•

POLLY'S POINTERS
Get YOLII' Tools

'

THOUGHTS

Home to Roost

F'or the scnpture says ,
"You shall not muzzle an ox
when tl IS treadmg out the
gram," and "The laborer de
serves hts wages "- / Tzm
othy 5 18.

.

'

Every man should make
up hts mmd that, 1f he ex
pects to succeed, he must
gtve an honest ret urn for
the other man's dollar - Ed
Wllfd R H a r r1 man, indus
tnahst

By POLLY CRAMER
''

Polly's Problem ' ,

0

·~

y:g:-

YAS .
CERT'AINLY

coNJ~NIENT,I

I

1
I,

Rapid Heart Beat
Is Not Normal
By Lawreoce Lamb, M.D.

1

NORTH

.AI0842

WEST
· ·9543

.J982

tVoid
•KQ965

EAST
.KQ8762
.105
tQB63

•a

SOUTH (D)

•to

.Q4
tAKJ109542
.J7
Both vulnerable

West

North

3.

Pass

Eaat South
lt

2.

3t

Pass 4t

Pass 5+
Pass Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Openmg lead-• K

.

without -any apparent illness

(NEWSPA.PU ENTEitPIISE .\SSM)

1.

West

North

t:ast

South

Pass

2•

Pass

?

.J

You, South, hold .

than JUSt a stroke A perSistent fast heart rate IS not
normal.
He should have a careful
evaluation of his cardtac
status and possibly a thorough evaluation for overactive thyroid or other endocrine abnormally or anemta.
A person who had a stroke
two years ago should no
longer have thts type of
problem Wtless there JS
something else, too Damage to parts of the central
nervous system can cause
changes m the blood pressure and heart rate, but
these should not be present
while your husband IS restmg. lying down.

SF BeatS Roberts, Claims West Title

9 74 2 •2 tAK 108 7 .A Q
What do you do now?
A-JllSt bid two 1pades. U
your partner con't bid oplo you
bolonr at a low conlracl
TODAY'S QU!SnON
You do bid two spades and
your partner rat.Ses you to three.
What do you do now? ·

By JOE CARNICELLI
Fonal Major League Slandonil!;
Natlona I League
UP! Sporls Writer
By Un1ted Pren International
East
the
bndesmatd has. made 11
American League
w. L. Pel. GB
w the altar.
East
' Pt!lsbursh
~7 65
599
w. L. Pet. GB Sl LouiS
90 72 556 7
The San Francisco Giants,
Balltmore
101 57 639
83 79 512 14
Cht c a~o
who
became almost a joke with
Delrolt
9 71 562 12
New ork
II:J 79 512 14
Boston
85 -;-'71 525 18 Montreal
71 90 441 25 1f2 their annual second-place ItNew York 82 80 ' 502 20
Phliadelphra 67 95 414 . 30
nishes, had the last laugh .
Washmgton 63 96 396 38 1h
West
Thursday night. Led by veterw L. Pet. GB ans
Cleveland 60 102 370 43
Willie Mays and Juan
Scin Franctsc'o 90 72 556 West
Marichal and roOkie Dave
Los Angeles 89 73 549
l
w L. Pet GB Allan
Ia
82 80 506 8 Kingman, the Giants overpowOakland
101 60 627
Houston
79 83 488 II
Kansas Ct ly 85 76 528 16
ered the San Diego Padres i;-1 w
79 83 488 11
Chrcago
79 BJ 488 22 1/2 Cincinnali
61 100 379 28112 win the Nahonal League's
Caltfornia
76 86 469 25 1r 2 San Dteho
T ursday's Results
Western Division _titll!'-by a
Mtnnesota '74 86 463 26lf2
Pt!ts 4 Phria J
Milwaukee 69 92 429 32
game over the Los Angeles
New York 6 St Loufl
Thursday's Results
Dodgers as the 1971 baseball
Ch tcago 5 Montreal
Caltfornta 3 Mtnnesofa 2
Atlanta
6
Ctncmnalt
2
season
came to a close.
Chieago 2 Milwaukee 1
New York 9 Wash 0 by for fell) San Fran 5 San Otego 1
The Dodgers manage!Y w
Los Angeles 2 Houston 1
!Only games schedu led)
defeat Ute Houswn Astr6s 2-1
but tl dtdn't matter ~ince 'the
Gtanls had wrapped thtngs up
about a half-ltour earher. San
Francisco now plays host to
P!Itsburgh Saturday in the
opener of a best~f.ftve senes
for the National League pen·
nan I. Oakland will be at
Baltimore to open thell" best~!-

Major League

Attendance Up _
By United Press International
· MaJOr League baseball attendance rose to a record 29203,589 m 1971 but showed an
onunous· unbalance masmuch
as the Natwnal IJeague dre" 56
per cent of the natiOn's patrons
as opposed w 44 per cent by
the Amencan League
NL attendance was a
pmg 17,333,085, up 670,887 over
1970, wh1le AL attendance fell
from 12,085,135 1n 1170 to
11,870,504
Every NL club, except the

·P·

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medica l Center, F1rst
Ave and Cedar St General
VIStling hours 2-4 and i-8 p m

Matermty V!Sitmg hours 2 30 to
4 30 p.m Parents only on
Ped1atncs Ward
Btrths
'
Mr and Mrs Roger Dale
Hamilton,
We llston ,
a
daughter Mr and Mrs James
H Sisson, Gall1pohs, a daughter
and Mr and Mrs Jerry Lee
Cassidy Oak H1ll , a daughter
Dl~c harge s

Mrs Carl Bartrum, Mrs
Richard Blessmg and daughter,
Roy Burkha mmer , Clarence
Carter . Mrs George Dabne),
Roy Deanng, !\Irs Richard
Houck, Mrs Cleo Hulbert, Mrs
James Lema ster, T1mothy
Mamon, Jr . Mrs Charles
Markms, Mrs Delbert McCo),
Christopher Patterson, Carl
Ross, Jr , Kelly Sexton, Mrs
Charles Small, Mrs Mernll
Waugh and daughter, Joseph
W1lson, M1sha Fraz1er, Mrs
Elwood Wilson, Shan W!lhams,
Deanna Lynn Bragg and Mrs
John H Icenhower

Mator League Results
By Umted Press International
Amencan League

Cal &lt;lornra 000 100 02o- 3 6 2
Mrnnes ola 100 000 001 - 2 9-l
May . Allen 181 and Torborg
Kaa l (13 141 and Roo! WPMay Ill 121
Mol waukee
Chrcago
~~ gg~ = ~
Parsons Mor ros (6 ), Krausse
171 . Sanders 181 and Porter ,
Mag nuso n Hlnlon 131 Eddy
(5). O'Toole (7) Perzanowsk1
191 and Bnnkman WP- Hrnton
IJ 41 LP- Parsons 113171 HR
- Mellon 133 rdl
New Yor k 9 Was honglon 0 Iby
forferll
Natoonal League
p, llsburgh
001 300 ooo-4 5 0
Phil a
102 000 000 _ 3 8 0
Bro les Moose (4) , Johnson
16) , Moiler (7), Gruslo 18) and
Sangud len, Champ&lt;on Brandon
\ 4 ) Le rsch 151. Wolson IB J and
McCarver , Ryan 1&lt;1 WPMoose 111 7I LP- Champoon
IJ 51 HR - Sanguoll en 1?1
Montanez IJOthl

i i

C• ncmnal' 001 000 lOD- 2 4 J
Atlan la 1 000 000 60 ' - 6 8 1
Wilcox , Borbon (8) and
Plummer . House , Nerbauer IBI
and D&lt;doer WP- House II Ol
LP- Wol cox (2 2) HR - T
Perez (25th I. Breazeale llstl
Chocago 000 001 013- 5 10 0
Monl real 000 Oil 001- 3 9 l
Jenkons 124 IJ) And Rudolph ,
Stoneman (17 16) and Boccabel

Ia HR- Caii&lt;Son (8fh J Boc
cabella IJrd )

'Dear Reader - That's a
good attitude, and "guys"
often like little girls. Guys,
however, like to think of
themselves as " big, powerful, he-men" so 'they become
little Napoleons. It is too
bad, too, smce there are so
many better ways a man can
show s t r eng t h1 character
and ability. You are rightpeople should be happy with
their het~ht. If you are short
there isn t much you can do
about tl anyway, so enjoy it

Pallerson, Reuss (6). San ton
n1 (7) and Stmson , Seaver (20
10) and Gr ote LP- Patterson
10 II HR- Songle lon 121 12th &amp;

13th)

Hous lon

000 001 OOQ- I 6 0

Los Angeles

000 001 lOx-- 2 6 0
B&lt;i longham (10 16) and Ed

wards , Sutlon {1712) and S1ms

IN
RETURNABLE

Severmsen (9 ) and Barton LP
l7)
HR- King

~,

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• COV""''"""f
CENll!R,

To All Marauder Football Fans
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sept. 30, 1971
Bemg an av1d football fan lor many years,! am writing thts
letter to express the feelings of many area people who feel as I do .
The fll"st year Meigs High School was in extstence we had the
good forlune w win the SEOAL championship and everyone
seemed very exc1ted oyer the future of our school Since that time
·
I feel we have had JUSt as !me a teams but haven't won a champ10nsh1p.
!feel !his can partially be tbe fault of the fans and the Metgs
H1gh School Marching Band
Aller gmng w the game at Wellswn last week we returned
home by way of GallipoliS. As we drove through town we observed
all the store wmdows patnled w1th spirited signs and also numy
•• b11es w'"'
... similar messages on Ut em.
auwmo
Also, m the middle of town, was a large banner stretched
'
across the streetI boosting the team on. ·
Do we have any of thts spirit in our wwn? No! I feel we could
have beaten Gallipolis last year and went on wwm it all had we
the sp1r1t and deteriTllnation behmd our team that GaUipohs had
when they came w town. I believe thiS showed again last week
when many sportswnters picked Logan t'o defeat Gallipolis and
end their long wm streak. But did Utey' No. Again I feel this was
due to the tremendous sup'porl behind them.
At Wellston last week the band amved when we were kicking
off. Is thts backmg your team' No. On several occasions when we
scored there wasn 't a ~ound from the band to praiSe the team and
make them feel more spll"lted Every week you hear more people
m the crowd say how our b1g Marauder band IS being outdone by
much smaller schools.
I have nothmg but praiSe for the team and the coachmg staff.
We are very fortunate w have a coach such as we have m Mr
Chancey, but Utey do need support wgtve them the destre to wm 1t
all.
I am not wr11tng th1s letter to crtl!cize anyone but just w try
and wake the people up wmake the most of the great opportumty
we have
Let's not drag our feet in thts as the people of Meigs County
have m the past and rrussed out on many opportunities. I would
hke to see th1s letter p;,bllshed before Friday 's game w1th Ironton
and see If the townspeople can't show our team Ute support we
have seen m other nearby communities.
Name Withheld Upon Request.

1hurs~ay's Fight Results

Reds Bow

ap~mn

So W~EREDO

JiO. BOX 173

1,,

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The

$39995

R.&gt;-FFERTY

Letters of oplnloo are welcomed. They should be less
.!:! than 300 wordsloog (or be subject to reductloo by the editor)
and must be signed wllb the signee's address. Names may
§! he wltbheld ~poo pubUcaUon, however, on request. Letters
should be In good tasle, addressing Issues, n~t personalities.

Cmcm~t Reds closed out a dis-

1&gt;-.PPRECI/&gt;-.TE--

.JIN\

,-

BERRY'S WORlD

Pam m the chest with
.
exerbon
and a persistent
fast heart rate suggest there
may be more difficulties

", .. II there is .no other business, I move that the board
ol directors meeting be adjourned so thot we con begin
our group therapy st5sionl" ·

INGELS FURNITURE

"'· ;\

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

992-2635

Middleport

Ferguson Jenkms fmished as
the NL's b1ggest wmner as he
pttched a nine-lutter for ts 24th
v1clory as the Cubs beat
Montreal Jmt Htckman dfove
m two runs for Chtcago.
Ken Smgleton drove m four
runs w1lh a pmr of homers to hft
the Mets past Sl Lows and g1ve
Tom Seaver h1s 20th VIctory.
Seaver struck out 13 batters to
f1msh with 289, tops m Ute NL
and h1s I 76 earned run average
also led the league.
Jun Breazeale's f1rst 11)i!JOr
,,J

Cowboys Hope To End
-

Out With

•

J.2

;;::·
I'

.

San Fran 000 JOO 002- 5 10 I
San D•ego 000 010 ooo-- l 5 0
Marochal (l8l1 J and D1etz ,
Roberls. Arion (4 1. Corkrns 171 ,
- Roberls 114
ma n (6fh J.

'

beat Montreal :i-3, New York
npped St. Louis 6-1, Atlanta
downed Cincmna II 6-2 and
Pittsburgh edged Plilladelph1a
4-3 In Am~r1ean I.:eague play,
Washmgton lost 1ts last game m
the cap1tal by a 9-ll forfe1t when
fans poured onto the field m the
runth after the Senators had
taken a 7~ lead over New York,
Chicago shaded Milwaukee 2-1
and Cahforma edged Mmnesota

wrote us off two weeks ago, so Steve Blass ( l:i-81 The G~ants
Ne showed you we could do 11." w1ll send John . Cumberland
Marichal sa1d he was "as aga1nst Dock Elhs m the second
pr?pd of h1s record this year as I game Sunday
ca'n be. I won the games I had w "I don't want a smgle man to
ivm. We showed a lot of people hft a bat, throw a hall or even
we could wm when we had w." show up at the ball park wday ,"
"I'm lost for words," sa1d sa1d Fox . "We've been through
Gtants' Manager Charlie Fox the wrmger these last thrll&lt;!
"But tf I have w say one thing , weeks and we all can use a day
I'm happiest the most lor away from baseball. "
Horace Stoneham (Giants' own- The Giants scored three runs
er). He gave me a chance w m the fourth off Padres ' ace
manage a wonderful bunch of Dave Roberts on Tito Fuentes'
guys and he didn't leave a stone smgle, Mays' douxle and
unturned to pllt Ut1s team Kingman's homer They added
wgether.
two msurance runs in the ninth 1
"For my money, Mar1ehal IS Walter Alston, whose Dodgers
the best pitcher in baseball," put on a tomd .stretch run only
Fox added. "He's a true wfall short by a game, said he
professional and when all the was "d1sappom.ted we didn't go
money IS on the lme, I'll take all the way I'm proud of how
my chances on the pro."
the team played as a unit," he
Fox said the Giants will take added, "and I'm partiCularly
today off before Saturday's proud of Maury Wills I don't
playoff opener in which Gaylord thmk he's ever played harder m
Perry (16-12) w1ll p1tch lor the his hie "
G1ants against Pittsburgh's
Elsewhere m the NL, Ch1cago

Letters of .~ Redskin Jinx Sunday

t

Linescores

000 000 OlD- l 7 l
New York 000 015 OOx- 6 8 0

ROYAL CROWN COLA

I

~:

St LOU1S

girl who feels 1t is great to
be short, be proud of it. I
thmk people should accept
the1r height, whether short
or tall.

~

than 1-mrlhon fans at home I
wh1le only lour AL clubs topped
that mark
The New York Mets led both ~~::
i
leagues with 2,666,680 and the ~
Boston Red Sox led the AL w1th
1,678,579 The Philadelphia Phtll!es showed a huge gain of
802,976 over 1970 m the NL
wh1le the Chicago Wh1te Sox
J1ad a gam o[ :!38.536 m the AL.
&lt;;:

gff

five playoffs for the Amencan
League flag. .
·Mays, pllshmg hiS 4~year-old
body to the breaking point,
doubled in one nm , stored
another and stole two bases. His
outstanding performance came
almosl20 years wthe day after
he knelt on deck as a trembling
rookte while Bobby Thomson hit
his memorable two-out, three·
run homer in the ninth inning to
give the then New York Giants a
pennant playo!fvtctory over the
then Brooklyn Dodgers m the
Polo Gtounds.
Mar!Chal, who had a spotty
season, recorded his fourth
consecutive vicwry and 18th of
Ute season as he stopped the
Padres on five hits. Kingman ,
recalled from the nunors July
30, hit a two..-un homer.
"What can I say about wmnlng," sa1d Mays. "We knew we
had to win this game and we
went ou~ and did it. The victory
is about as gratifying to me as
any in the past Alot of you guys

~~J.edt~~-...:~!Z!!!!WC=:o:•!i:·:::~..::!!::::.

San D1ego Padres drew more ~

TH/&gt;-.T PEOPLE.

TIP TO

'

3- The Daily'Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, October (197!

hve longer in better health
than other individuals Your
husband has additional prob-

/ IF -"'--·- - ---"-

•

•

.AJ
.AK763
• 7 •

•

'
·'

Horseshoes
Take Skin

The b1dding has been

Dear Dr. Lamb - Read
your arttcle on low blood
pressure You stated 11 ts
usually harmless. My husband had a stroke and he
had low blood pressure.
Smce then, his heartbeat
never goes below 110 and
usually 1s 1:1Jl. Still low pressure If he does work w1th
any strain, he has a very
uneven beat, wtlh• pain in
the chest Also. he gets
shaky. I wish you would
comment on this. He also
has a nervous condition and
h1s left arm will shake if he
does much labor.
He has been told to cut
down on his activity. Stay
Dear Dr. Lamb-! read in
out of crowded places. Anr
the
paper about the person
comment would be appreciated. He ts 52 now and was who doesn't hke being five
50 when he had the stroke. feet tall. I would like to be
ftve feet tall mstead of five
Dear Reader-! doubt your feet and a quarter inch. 1
husband's stroke was re- would rather be an even
lated to h1s low blood pres- height. I ltke being short
sure. In reviewing my col- though I am shorter than
umn on low blood pressure, guys. I am 21 also. I am a
I see I pomted out that low
blood pressure as part of a
senous disease like tuberculosis. Shock or heart failure
was something else again.
It ts true that individuals
w1th I o w blood pressure

@
]§;,;~;;~~~::~ti~~~~~~~~;:~~;=====~~~~~~~~1
1ems
t
'"S, ~'"LL
EBBO '""' " "'""
DINER,BLir ~E 1S ALSO
Gar 1&gt;-.CRES OF
FI'-RKii--16 SPI'.CE

.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

::: ~ ~'@"}::;:; ~0,1 "~

®

1

WIN AT BRIDOi!

'By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We aren't concerned with
the ments of today's bidding, but the final contract
of six diamonds looks fairly
reasonable at first glance.
South rose with dummy's
ace of clubs and led a low
diamond to his ace. There
k
r·
was no reason to Ia e a mt
round fmesse. West showed
But block partles can be gtven ANY lime of the year - for no out of diamonds and South
other reason than to discover your neighbors are human too. paused.
Then he led king and anThey're kind of '.'grass..-oots country club" without the whopping
overhead. _ H.
other d1amond. East won
Dear Helen .
and returned a spade to ,_
, ·
dummy's ace. South got
You ve prmted so many letters about couples who regret back to his hand by rufflng
getting married and having children yoWig that I thought I would • a spade and ran off the rest
wr1teaboutacouplewhodoesn'tregretitatall!
of h1s trumps. The last
My husband and I were married when I was just 17 and be trump squeezed West m
was 19 not ooly because I was pregnant but because we wanted hearts ~nd clubs and South
.
.
•
made his slam
•
to Well, OUl' baby dted_ at b!l"th, and all the parents wanted us w " Horseshoes!" yelled East.
"You played for a 5·1 club
get an annulment, wh1ch we would not do.
We moved away, aoo have been married for nine years now. break and gave up the
We have two wonderful children, aged four and six, and we chance to get a quick discouldn't be happier. We've got each other and our kids!
card on a good heart."
COLETTE
South had done nothing of
Dear Helen :
tbe kinil Instead he had
.
.
"
made an excellent play and
Tell that person who got trapped mw sendmg $10 to earn had been properly rewarded.
money bemg a new products researcher" that she bas lots of
company. I c&lt;mplained wthe U.S. Attorney for that district, and Send $I lor JACOBY MODERN book
also to the U.S. Postal Service inspector, aoo have learned since to "Wm at Bml,e," (c/o this lttwS·
that this company is now in bankruptcy, after being invesUgated paper), P 0 lo• 41'9, RaJto City
(and evtdently found wanting). I got my money back, but doubt Station, Nrw Yorl:, NY 10019.
that others will be so lucky. As you said, Helen, ten bucks is a
small pnce to pay If you've learned a good lesson - never trust a
East was marked wtth six
mail-order company that Insists you pay out money to make spades for hJs vulnerable
Jump overcall. He had also
money.- A. F.
shown up with four diaDear Readers :
monds and one club. There
That now-defunct company really got its ads around! I've was no way he could also
been flooded with letters,all naming the same outftt (who shaD be hold three hearts, so there
was no way to make the
nameless) as the culprit. - H
hand by an immediate attack m the heart suit. South
had given himself a chance
and it materialized

~
~

..

Us

r
HOW TO ORGANIZE A BLOCK PARTY
Dear Helen :
,
Thooe block parties mentioned in IUfU sound interesting.
Please tell us m&lt;n about how to organize (llle. - WANTING 'J()
KNOW OUR NEIGHBORS
Dear WTKON :
Here's a letter thai explains block parties, July ftlt style:
Dear Helen:
·
•
• T.W. and R.O. who yearn for old-fashioned block parties
should move to San Antonio, Texas!
Last year we bad our !iftlt annual Jndependenee Day "block"
parade and street dance. Of course we live oo a very unusual
street: no one stiCks a nose In your buslned, but If you need help,
everyooeis there! We live oo Ute best block, in the best town ilbthe
whole U.S.A.
- .._
How do we get a block party going? Everybody _£ooperates.
We formally write -to the City Traffic Engineer and requ)!Sl
permissioo to have a slreetdance. Heagrees to close off"'he street
for Ute evening,
At 8 p.m. the children of Ute neighborhood march m a "dressup" parade. They carry flags aoo sing patriotic songs befitting
July fth. In Ute middle ci the block, we have taped music on one
side, and snacks, cheese, tamales, aU ma'i!JF of "pot-luck "food
on Ute other. Wlien the children arrive there, adults join in tljeir
songs. Then we eat, dance, play, talk_,- and you can be sure that
no &lt;lRe here would dream of taking a vacation away from home on
this holiday!
In our small way, we're reaffirming faith in our coWJlry and having a wooderful time.- MRS. L.W.H., Lantana Dr., San
.
Antoruo,
Tex.
NOTE FROM HELEN:

''
''

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve IS that manufacturers
do not put false cuffs on work pants It would be such a
rel 1ef to get 11d of those loose cu!!s whtch are only dust
and d!rt catchers and tack catchers for my husband. who
uses tac ks all day - ELLA
DEAR POLLY- In our
neighborhood each fam1ly
ha s d 1fIe rent tools and
So tS H W&lt;th the resurre c
we loan and borrow
then
twn of the dead What 1s
sown zs perzst1able , what !S fro m ou1 neighbors SomeraiSed IS tmperzshable It zs limes one would f o r get
sown m dzshonor, 1t IS razsed wh~eh tool be I o n g e d to
m glory It IS sown tn weakwh1ch ne1ghbor. so we deness , tt ts ratsed m power Cided to paml the handles
I Cor . J5 32 . 43
on ours the same color as
our
house and suggested
'
There 1s only one way to to the ne1ghbors that they
get ready for Immortality, do the same. so now we
and that 1s to love th1s life can eas1ly return tools to the proper placll':-ELSIE
DEAR POLLY-When bathmg a ch1ld, fust run all the
and live 11 as bravely and
hot
water 1n the tub and then the cold so in case baby
fa ithfully and cheerfully as
bumps
h1s or her head on the faucet it wtll be cool and
we can.-Henry Van Dyke,
not burn Th1s works well for me and saves baby from
clergyman
any unnecessary pam -ELLIE
DEAR POLLY and Mane, who does not know how to
treat the w1 ndow over her bathtub-! solved such a
Knowmg !he1r thought s, problem by replacmg the Venettan bhnd wtth a vinyl one
he smd to them, " Every that I had covered wtth pretty flowered, adhesive-backed
kzngdom dlvlded agaznst 1t· paper I applied enough paper to the shade so that, when
self shall be lazd waste , and 11 1s pulled down to the stll, nothmg shows but pattern
no cz!y or house d1v1ded The ~&gt;oodwork was all covered wtth this same paper I
agamst z!self wt ll sta nd " - cut !lowers from the paper and scattered them all over
Matthe w 12 25
the wall around the wmdow so the effect is almost that
' '
of !lowered wallpaper To top tt all off, I use a cafe curThrough un1ty of action tam md valance made of sheer Dacron This shade prowe can be a ventable colos- VIdes prrvacy, keeps the sun out during the hot part of
sus m support of peace No the dav and the curtains are full enough so that no one
one can defeat us unless we can see m when the shade is up I, too, keep the window
llfst defeat ourselves Every cracked for ve ntilation, even when the air conditioning
one of us must be gUided by IS on I do enjoy the column and have approved of so
this truth -Dw1ght D EI- ma ny of the Pet Peeves wh1ch happen to be mme too.senhower
MRS .T E F
'

They'll Do It Every Time

By Helen Bottel

~~·'h if'' '"' ,,-

DEAR POLLY- Is there any way to put elashc
back mlo the tops of socks' My little g1rl and my
husband go through them m no lime JUSt because
of the elashc and the socks are QUite useless, even
though they ltave no holes --~RG INIA
"i

,

1

MIAMI BEACH. (NEA)
Sen Henry M J aekson, presently the chief challenger
to Sen Edmund Musk1e m the btg March ltFiofilla primary , could find h1s path strewn wtth land mines.
The most dangerous would have the name of Alabama's
Gov. Gem ge Wallace on tt If he indicates 1972 presidential candidacy , Flonda Democratic officials say he almost
certamly w1ll be entered m the preference test. He is busy
po!1shmg up hiS credentials as an authentic Democrat.
Political apprmsers m Florida largely agree that a
Wallace pnmary b1d would cut severely, tf not disastrously, 10to Jackson's presumed strength among Democratic conserval!ves m the Panhandle and elsewhere. The
broad JUdgment 1s that the consequences would be to
bnghten Musk~e ' s VIctory prqspects
Without Wallace m the ptcture, Jackson is a pOtent factor m Flonda, espec1ally if New York's Ma)'O'l- John Lindsay JUmps m and sltces away at Muskie's stren~th from
the hberal side.
But the Musk1e people are not playmg a soft game.
They mtend to assaul t Jackson's northern Flonda bastions w1th a harsh argument:
"If you vote lor Jackson, you w1ll be votmg lor a man
who can't wm the 1972 Democratic nommatwn.
"He does not have w1de appeal m the crucial northern
states Indeed the better he does ui Flonda and elsewhere m the South and Southwest, the more he is likely
tollbe cnt1cally handicapped by a narrow, sell-defeating
conservative 1mage ''
No one can guess now how lhts lme of talk will be
rece1ved But 1t could be another land mine for Jackson.
A s1m1lar tactic was enormously effective for the late
John F Kennedy 10 h1s 1960 West Vugtma primary race
agamst Sen Hubert Humphrey .
II Jackson's Flonda strength can resist such battering,
then Musk1e may have to move hard to hold down encroachments from the liberal end It is here that Lindsay
looms large
:A.s 10 several other states, Sen George McGovern has
lmd some good orgamzat10nal groundwork m Flortda. But
11 1s mostly confined to Dade county (Miami areal. And
there 1s no clear s1gn tt ts b1hng deep into voter sentiment
Sen B~rch Bay h of Ind1ana has MIBmi's Mayor David
Kennedy, but 1s considered stuck on the launch-pad There
are no Jig-Jags on the se1sm1c chart for Sen. Fred Harris
of Ok lahoma
R1ght now yo u'd have to say the same about Lmdsay
But party sources here thmk he has a good deal more
potential thah the other libera ls My earher report that
the mayor's people have been takmg soundings m Flortda
was remforced on th1s viSit With hts chansma and ht~h
1ecogmhon factor , he IS feared and respected by his
p1 ospecl!ve adversaries He could grab many young voters
New polls, one ot wh1ch may surface m October, should
put a sha1pe1 gauge on Lmdsay and perhaps help h1m
dec1de wl1ether to become a candidate early rather than .
late
Yet no one thmks Lmdsay could wm Flonda The mam
v1ew He could hurt Musk1e, and m so domg make a good
start for lumself

each or1g,no l ' fun,r used Send gog'
to Today 1 FUNNY, 1200 W~s t Th1rd
St ' cr •• elund, OhiO o44lll .

•

,

•

g season Thursday
night 1 sing to the Atlanta
Braves.
The de!endmg Nat10nal
League champiOn Reds committed three errors that gave
the Braves a maJor · boost
toward gammg the 6-2 win.
Subshtute third baseman Jim·
my Stewart committed two of
the errors.
The Braves went inlo the
seventh innmg trailing 2-ll, but
Jtm Breazeale led off w1th his
first major league home run .
Then Stewart erred on Dusty
Baker's grounder and singltlSb•Y"
Tony Larussa and Bob Dtd1er
loaded the bases with only one
out
A second Stewart error, on a
grounder by pmch -J:!!ller Gi!
Gamdo, allowed two more runs
to score.
Leo Foster hit inw a force
out to score run No 4 and Oscar Brown followed wilh a dou·
ble to drive m the filth run.
An error by first baseman Lee
May on a grounder gave the
Braves thelr.slxlh run

By United Press International
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Mando Ramos, 136%, Long
Beach, Cahf , outpmnted Ruben
Navarro, 135, Los Angeles (10),
Arturo Pineda, 121 'h, Mex1co,
outpom ted Chuck Spencer,
121 ~,. Cleveland (10).

I

By GREG GALLO
UP! Sports Writer
The Dallas Cowboys, w1th one
of the best won-lost record m
football over the past two
years, w1ll have to snap a

season and a he with the
Cowboys lor first place tn the
Eastern DIVIsiOn of the Nal!onal Football Conference, holds a
3-0 l!fel!me record agamst .
Dallas Allen's Los Angeles
Rams defeated Dallas lwtce m
regular season play and once m
a playoff game
Dallas, wh1ch has won 15 of
1ts last ,16 games but 1s better
known lor 1ts knack lor losuig
the b1g one, must beat the
Redskms to stay on top tn the
and as he neared the dugout, East The oddsmakers have
Howard. swept off h1s balling made the Cowboys a 13-pomt
favonte . ·
helmet m appreciahon
In other games Sunday
'"Hondo, hondo, hondo," the Pittsburgh and San Otego and
llu ong chan ted "Hondo, hondo, Cmcmnal! and Green Bay are
hondo "
p1ck 'em, the Rams are lour
W1th play held up, the huge over Ch1cago, Kansas Cit) is
hero !mally emerged from the seven over Denver, Detrmt IS
dugout to doff h1s hehnet agam seven over Atlanta, Houston IS
to the fans and skm 11 mto the seven over New Orleans, M1ami
stands as a souvemr
1s seven over the Jets, St. Loms
It wasn't enough for the IS JO over the G1ants, Balltmore
frustrated spectators They 1s 14 over New England, San
conlmued their loot-stomping Francisco 1s 14 over Philadeland applause undimtmshed and phia and Mmnesota IS 14 over
Howard was, pushed from the Buffalo
dugout by h1s teammates
Oakland IS a 3-pomt favonle
Beammg with pnde, Howard over Cleveland on Monday
ra1sed h1s arms m response and . mght
blew a k1ss to the crowd .
Nor was the farewell crowd Tonight's Games
parl!al to Howard. Every
player m the openmg hne-up Jackson at Athens
drew applause and cheers and Gall1pohs at Waverly
when former starlmg catcher Ironton at Me1gs
Paul Casanova came up to Wellston at Logan
Upper
Portsmouth at
pmch-h1t m the f1fth mmng,
carrymg w1th h1m a 203 Arlington
batting average, he was award- Kyger Creek at North Galha
Rosecrans at Nelsonvilleed a standmg ovatwn.
Howard, s1ttmg m the dress- York
mg room after the game, clad Glouster at Eastern
m h1s long. JOhns and puf!mg a Waha111a at Southern
c1gar, sa1d of h1s lr1bute "the Symmes Valley at Southpeople were the greatest ot me western
I've ever expenenced. Every- Gree n at Hannan Trace
thmg after th1s -whatever South Pomt at Logan, W Va
P' Pleasant - Open
happens m Texas - will be an
Coal Grove - Open
antJchmax to me ,.
three-game losmg )lOX agamst
Washmgton Redskms' Coa1!h
George Allen Sunday
Allen, who has led the Skms
to two strmght v1cWnes th1s

Sens Have Wild
Finish Thursday
By SAM FOGG
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Washwgton Senators d1ed
Thursday mght at the age o[ 71.
The sta1d cap1tal vall neve r
forget the wake
Several thousand fans
streamed onto the field m the
mnth mmng w1th two outs and
the Senators leadmg the New
York Yankees, 7~ . When they
npped up the bases, tore out
the pitchers' rubber and scaled
the fence to sw1pe team names
from the scoreboard, the
urnp1res declared the game
forfeited a nd the Yanks 9-0
w1riners
" --?
It was the swan song of the
Amencan League m Washmgton The Senators, plagued w1th
poor attendance, will be moved
to Dallas-Fort Worth next
season after 71 yea rs of playmg
m the natiOn's capital
The crowd eruptwn sent
players of both teams streakwg
lor their dressmg rooms Alter
a three-mmute wall, head
urnptre Bill Odom declared the
game forfeited
Stx persons were arrested for
disorderly conduct
Unl1l that pmnt however, a
turnout of 14,460 had pa1d
valedictory to the1r team w1th
b1g league class. An estimated
4,000 others crashed the gate
gfter the !1Ith innmg, a club
offlc1al sa1d
The emotwnal h1gh pomt
came m the s1xth mmng when
fi.fool-7 Frank Howard dnlled
the last of h1s 237 home runs m
a Washmgwn umform to wuch
off a four-run Senator rally that
t1ed the game.
He had been g1ven a standmg
ovatiOn on h1s previous two
limes at bat when he walked
and failed to ge t the ball out of
the mfleld
The third lime the crowd
exploded to 1ts feet m a roar as
the balllelt h1s bat. He Circled
the bases In a tumult of sound

•

league homer tgruted a six..-un
seventh inning rally that
enabled the Braves to beat
Cincmnati. the Braves took
advantage of three Reds' errors
m the mmng to bounce back
from a 2-ll deficit.
JaQkie Hernandez doubled
home two runs m the fourU.
mnmg to boost the Pirates,past
Phtladelphia The Plnls' Larry
Bowa set a m~jor league
f1e)dmg record lor shortstops as
he--flrushed wtth a .987 percentage
The Senawrs, playmg their
last game m Washmgton, never
saw tl end as hundreds of fans
streamed onw the field in the
runth mrung and caused the
umpll"es w forfeit Ute game to
the Yankees. The Senators had
JUSt broken a 5-5 tie w1th two
runs m lhe e1ghth. It was the
fll"sl forfeit in the majors smce
July, 1954
B1!1 Melton 's third home run
m 18 hours earned hun the AL
homer title and helped lite
White Sox beat Milwaukee The
blow, Melton's 3:Td', broke a be
between Melton, Oakland's
Regg1e Jackson and Detroit'~
Norm Cash for the home run
lead
Pmch-h1tter Syd O'Bnen's
two..-un smgle in the e1ghth
mmng gave Cahforma tis
tr1umph over the Twms

•

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

• of

Home

the Faburous

10m Boy
SANDWICH
Order By Phone
And Take Em Home
992-5432

Wanna
Bet On It!

Great
Bargains
6 Speaker AM-FM
Phi leo Con sole

STEREO Reg. $399
only •199'0
23" Motorola

Consolet T.V.

•64)00
PORTABLE CASSmE
PLAYER/RECORDER.

23" G.E. Console T.V.

'114)00
21" Sylvania T.V.

•7495
36" Vesta Gas Range

"We're Stealing"

'12fJOO

The"1i'ashion Scene

Norge Auto.

With Our ...

Washer

3 Sp . 2 Cyl.

*99"

FALL SUITS

$5000 to $11000
Sport Coats
$3250 to '6000
• Excellent Selection of
Famous Name Brands

18" Colored
Console T.V.
Portable Cassett e Player / Recorder
Mtcroph one and unreco rded casse tte

'19900

tape mfl uded Pnvate L1sten1ng
Earphone •nc luded Pl ays on AC
cu rrent or batter• es (not Included)

..

Record ·d1rect fr om Rad•o/TV / Phone

Sol1d State Chass•s- no tubes
Sturdy metal Ca rry Handl e H1gh .,
Impact polystyrene m Brown and
Ivory co lors

~

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~

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
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at

Werner Radio &amp; T.V.
·Middleport, 0.

21" R.CA •
Color Console
2 Yr Guarantee."

'244)00

H&amp;R
Firestone.
992-2238

�•

•

•

By UPI
COLUMBUS - TilE budgettax bill passed by the Ohio
Senate w"ould force the state to
cut payments to · the aged,
disabled and blind, slate
Wel fare Director John E.
Hansan said Thursday. Hansah
said, under the Senate bill, aid
for the disabled would be cut $20
per month; aid for the aged, $10
per month : and aid to !he blind
$10 per month.
He also released comparison
figures which showed the
present $44 average monthly
pa yment under !he. Aid to
Dependent Children program
would have to be maintained
next year.
COLU MB US - BEFORE
adjourning for the week, the
House passed and sent to the
Senate a bill requtring all ablebodied recipients of public

. '

•

...·.
COLUMBUS (UPI)
House Speaker Charles F. measure which would raise the
Me!Pbers of an Ohio House- Kurfess, ·tt-Bo)ll ling Green, sales tax in Ohio by U pet.
SenH'!e..!;~nference committee to chose Uoyd George Kerns of
take on the task of forging a Raymond, diairrrian . of the
compromise over the now three- Finance Corrlmi ttee, and
months overdue stale budget Norman A. Murdock of Cin·were named Thursday as the cinnati, cha irman of the
General Assembly wound up its . Education Committee, as House
work f~r the week and ad- GOP representatives.
journed.
House Minority teader A, G.
The committee is expe"cted to Lancione, D-Bellaire, and
get its work• underway next Senate · Minority Leader 7\.nweekwhilethestateoperateson .thony C. Calabrese, D . an interim budget.
Cleve land , both appointed
Senate President Pro Tem- themselves to the committee.
pore Theodore M. Gray, R - The committee will have to
Piqua, selected Robert R. Shaw resolve giant . differences beof Columbus, chairman of the twee~ the two versions of the
Senate Finance Fornmittee, and fiscal package - a House
·Oakley C. Collins of Ironton, passed $7.8 billion spending
chairman of the Education package calling for a Ito 4 pet.
Committee as the two Senate graduated personal income tax
Republicans on the committee. and a $7.7 billion Senate-passed

after similar legislation in other
states and was designed .to cut
down on the welfare caseload.
The bill doe&gt; not"cover the blind,
aged or disabled but only
general relief recipients and
heads9l, fami)jes with dependent '(11\ffitren. "I believe this
bi,ll is the first chance we've had
in the General Assemblv in
many years to miil&lt;e a
meanin gful ~ha n ge in the
welfare system." Hughes said,
adding about 29,000 Ohioans
would be covered by the bill . He
said it would cut into the $tl
· million per month the stale pays
in welfare.

LONG BOTTOM
Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth Dill,
Pomeroy, visi ted Connie
Connolly and Freda Larkins.
Mr . and Mrs. David Smith
wer·e in Toledo recently to
welfare to earn their welfal'e return Mrs . Alice Branstrom to
payments. Such work would be her h(lme.
done under state or local workMr . and Mrs. Jim Stetler,
relief programs. Rep. Rodney Coolville . visited Mr. And Mrs.
1
H. Hughes, R-Bellefonta1ne, Ernie Griffin.
sponsor of the bill, sa id the
Pat Smith has resumed her
measure would apply to anyone studies at OSU in Columbus
over 18 who IS not employed or after spending three weeks here
going to school and does not with her parents and friends.
plan to go to school for three
Harold Holter and family
months .
were ~i sitors of Mrs . Han.son
He said the bill was patterned Holter, Forest Run .

&amp;REI/T!

I' )I

BULOVA
... the

~~ll-tiii1~cl

WATal

Carmel News, By .the Day

. .1:.\
MISS AMERICA - This formal portrait "at Miss Laurel.Lea Schaefer, Bexley, the new
Miss America, was taken from the elevated throne overlooking the·seating area in Convention
Hall at Atlantic City. Miss Schaefer began her pursuit of the Miss America crown in Pomeroy
in 1968 when she was named Miss Southern Ohio. She won titles to take her into state competition for three years before winning the Miss Ohio title which entitled to compete in the
national contest at AUantic City two weeks ago.

,

a

\

"'i

Mrs. Mary Circle was a
recent guest of Mrs. Hattie
Powell and daughte r, Addie,
Racine RD.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark. Thorsden
and fa mily of Cedarville spent
Saturday and Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna
and Wa vie Circle . Mrs. Elrmal Schreckengost of
Parkersburg and Ralph Lee of
Racine RD called at the horne of
Eunie Brinker on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs. George Circle and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. James-

We ha'r:e a choice
collection Ql

Circle, all of New Haven, were
guests of Mary Cricle over the
weekend . ·
Mrs . Velma Taylor called at
the home of Betly Van Meter
and Margaret Ann Johnson
recently .
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur "E.
Johnson and family called on
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas Johnson
of Racine Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Carleton and a niece of Racine
called at the horne or Betty Van
Meter, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
Johnson and family on Tuesday
evening .

,I

,j
:I

modestly priced
Bulova watches,

'

'i

·I

I

i! ).
i

!·,'

1

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'\

beautifully timed
to give or get .

PROPER CARE OF HORSES, horsemanship and showmanship are taught through 4-H
work in Meigs cotinty. Lynn Baker, right, was named· grand champion in showmanship and
horsemanship and Aimee Huston was nained reserve champion in horsemanship this year.

Illustrated: Two
brand new 17 jewel
models at $55 earh.
Others from $~5.

874 Youths
4-H Programs

. l

•

VALUES

_IS_

IPlr£j}{A HO~~E Cf!OW~. .

ARE
FOUND

PROYSII 0'1 ~ ~SiS ~TM

P\IRIHA Holt'&gt;!: 2F..£AACH ~ll
~m 861MtTOI'~~s

MODERN SUPPLY
W. Main St .
Pomeroy
992-2164

AT

" The Store With

"All Kinds Of Stuff"

OF ALL STOCK
1971-1972
Buicks and Pontiacs
New Firm Takes Over

FRESHMEN STUDENTS entering Holzer Medical
(:enter's School of Nursing at Davis Hall, Fir•! Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio have completed their first week of orientation and training . The class of 41 students has pushed the
total enrollment to 96, the largest enrollment in the history of
Davis Hall . Included in this year's class is orll!omale student
and two sisters of older students . First row, I tor, Mrs . Aline
E. Clark and Marcia Smith, Gallipolis; Cheryl Pearson,_
Gallipolis Ferry; Jamie Folsom, West Portsmouth; Teresa
Barker, Ashland, Ky.; Roderick Hook, Gallipolis; Emily
· Grose, Cheshire; Judy Fisher, Gallipolis; Barbara Taylor,
Oak Hill ; Judy Carleton, Gallipolis ; second row, Patricia
Jean Botta, Huntington, W. Va .; Deborah Kay Wood,
Chester; Deborah Ann Gollihue, Oak Hill; Linda Lieving, Pt.
Pleasant; Cathy Hutchison, Jackson; Francy Simon,
Wheelersburg; Sharon Hall, Ironton; Susie Hacker,
Wheelersburg; Debbie Greene and Betsy Hughes, Jackson ;
Glenda Wilcoxon, S. Bloomfield ; Scharlotte Runyon, Port
William ; Jane Cochran, Chillicothe ; Teresa Gardner, Pt.
Pleasant; top row, Bridget Barker, Hunlington ; Pat Lucas,
Wtle Hocking; Debbie Mitchell, Albany ; Mary Bradbury,
Middleport; Gwen Llewellyn , New Marshfield; Debby
Hunte r, Wellston ; Alicia Jeffers, Winfield ; Jeanette Lambert, Gallipolis; Beverly Rowland, Gallipolis ; Karen Evans,
Oak Hill ; Linda M~Dougle, Belpre ; Beverly Branham,
Stoutsville; Mary K. Lucas, Circleville; Connie Tucker,
Christiansburg, and Debra Lorbach, Jackson.

October 5th

Watch YQur

New 71 Buick
Custom Le Sab~e 4dr . sedan, vinyl top , factory air ~on dif ioning ,
fully equipped. Sticker price $5 , 104.74.

$$Grow
as you add to your savings
each week a1 the Meigs Co.

~3'451 14

New 72 Buick

Skyla rk 2 dr . hardtop, power ste~ri ng , power b'rakes, auto.
tra ns . Stoc ker Pri ce $3,766. 19.•

New 71 Pontiac
Catalina 4 dr. sedan , power steering, power brakes, au to. tra ns.
Sticker Price $4,066.82 .

71 Pontiac Catalina

Branch of the Alhens Co.
S~vings

and Loan.

4~%
CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
Save by the lOth, earn
from the 1st.

Brougham 4 dr . hard top. demo.·, very low mileage, ~adory air
conditioning, 400 cu . in . engine, 4 bb!. til t st . wheel, AM -FM
radio, vinyl top . St icker Price $5233 .32 .

New 72 Pontiac
Catal ina 4 dr. sedan , factory a ir conditioned . power steering ,

brakes. auto . trans St icker Price $4747 .17

New 72 Pontiac
N·ew 72 ·.Pontiac
LttMans 1 dr. hardtop . power "Steer ing, power brakes, auto.
trans . Stic~ker Pnce $3,681.02
·

BLAETTNARS
10 Buicb to Blessings

'
POME"OY,

Tne Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
· 216 Second Sf.
. Ponieroy, Ohio

Catalina Bro u~ham 2 dr hardtop . f "ctory air cond it ioning, vinyl
top, tully equ ipped St 1cker Pr 1ce ' 5000 99.

~~om Buggies

~HIO

FURNITU.

BAKER

Final
lose Out

~XJwer

THE 4-H PROGRAM RECOGNIZES outstanding
abilities in many fields through the use of awards. Byron
McCoy displays an award presented him as grand champion
ffi'beef ca ttle showmanship while Becky Windon displays her
awards for reserve champion showmanship honors .

For Pets-Stables - Lar ge
and Small Animals . Lawns

- Gardens.

Member Federal Home Loc n

Bank.

"

Member Feder al Saving s &amp;
Loan IMu rante Corp. Ill
ac.coun ts ir1sure d up ~o

S20, 000.Dg,

MIDDl£PORT, 0.
4

MEIGS OOUNTY 4-H CLUB MEMBERS learn how to
become creative. This clever Charlie Brown float was made
by members of the Columbia Girls Make-It Club.

94 per cent a month ago and
96 per cent a year ago.

The index of prices received
by farmers stood at 111 per
cent of the 1967 base in midSeptember compared with 113
per cent a month ago and 110
per cent a year ago. The indcx of farm-costs was 121 per
cent ·of the base compared with
120 a month ago and 115 a year
ago.
The report said mid-Septem
ber prices received by farmers
for meat animals were 3 per
cent above a year ago; grain
prices, 12 per cent below a
. year ago.

LIVING MEMORY...

&amp;.JizeE~

Activities ' Summary ·

N..,
Irua" dou
andRepah

Warm
Air

Exchangees Go on

Fumaces

Wisconsin Trip

Your Choic&amp;Oil or. Gas Fired

Compactiy designed to save y011 ~p~ee · IIICI
money . Temperature control Is automltl~
set the thermostat end forget lt. Glv.s you
maximum heal 111 minimum cost - no u ~:~~::n~

b

Instal

Twenty-five Southern Ohio 4H club members and workers
were in Wisconsin this summer
as a part of a twt&gt;-year 4-H Club
Exchange. Next year, it is
anticipated the four Wisconsin
counties will send exchange"
members to the Southern Ohio

Especially suitable for

l_!&gt;ng Bottom

Social Notes

SAFETY IN OPERATION OF tractors can't be ern.phasized too much since Meigs County did have several
tractor fatalities this year . Eddie Cross learns safe and efficient tractor opera.ting through his 4-H club work , With
Cross is C. E. Blakeslee, extension agent.
·

Designs of
Distinction

Legar Monument
92 -531'
Pomeroy
. L;.;.;~-----Iiirlirlrl

-'
·,

POINT

PLEASA~T, ~·

area.
Leaders or the group this year
were Mrs. Deborah Conklin,
then County Extension Agent,
Home Economics, Meigs
Coun ty; Mrs. Roberta. Montie,

4-H 4-H club advisor and
member of the State 4-H Advisory Committee fronrr,Athens
County; and Mr. Richard
Conklin, who was completing
his Masters degree at Ohio
Unive rsity and had been
assisting in Meigs County 4-H
club prog
th"
·
rams
IS summer.
The exchange members
from .
Meigs County were Kathy
Cheadle, Teresa Gooch Geneva
King, Mary King, Mandie Rose
Ed Cross, Joe Nelson, Karl~
Beal, and Bonnie Smith .
Arrangements were worked out
with Larry Thompson, 4-H
youth agent at Baraboo,
Wisconsin and C. EJ. Blakeslee,
local County Extension Agent,
Agriculture.
The group left Columbus
Monday morning, July 5, by airconditioned bus and reached its
destination in the evening. Most
families met the bus at Portage
and Baraboo, Wis. During the
week the exchanges lived with
larm families in Columbia,
Sauk, Marquette, and Green
Lake Counties, Wisconsin . This
area is 25 to 70 miles north qf
Madison, in th e Wisconsin
Dells, heart of dairyland U.S.A.
production.
.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::z.1.-».!W.:~:~~:=:~O::':$::X~

THE4-H PLEDGE

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CITY ICE &amp;FUEL·CO.

0. D.
OFFIQ: HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO S·(CLOSE
AT NelON ON -THURS.) _:. EAST COURT ST:,
POMEROY .
.
.

Variety is emphasized in the 4-H club program which offers
874 young people their selection from a list of more than 100
projects to carry out in the club year.
Through 4-H young people between the ages of 10 and 19can
learn to sew, cook, decorate a room, raise a dog , calf, lamb or
horse, study insects, birds or trees, grow a garden, or work in
wood to name only a few of the activities that are offered .
4-H has been a popular youth activity in Meigs County through
the years. The county has 3!i organized clubs with 22 men and 58
women taking leadership roles with the young people. There are
12 boys and rT girls involved in junior and teen·leadership with
the clubs.
During the past year's program 246 boys and 628 girls were
club members for a total of 874 young people taking part.
The highlight of the club year, of course, is ·the annual junior
fair which is staged in August as a part of the Meigs County
Fair. The accompanying photographs of the 1971 junior fair
activities emphasize again the variety of projects carried out by
participaiing young people.

Prices .Off 2%

WASHI NGTON (U PI ) Slump in prices for hogs and
corn pulled the National Farm
Price Average down 2 per cent
in the month ending Sept. 15, the
Agric ultur e Department
reported Thursday.
The drop left farm prices averag ing I p~r cent above a year
earlier. It came after the price
average had remained level
from May 15 through midAugust.
The department said most of
the decline was due to lower
prices for oranges, tomatoes,
and soybeans, as well as
for hogs and corn. Seasonally
higher prices for milk were
only partially offsetting.
Farm costs, according to the
report, dropped I per cent.
The combination of rising
fa rm prices and higher costs
kept prices at 68 per cent of
the traditional ' 'fairearning powern parity ration. This compar·
ed with 70 per cent last month
and '7l per cent in Sept. 1970.
The report also presented a
second ration based on 1967
price - cost relations. By this
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, Mr. standard, the Sept. 15 farm
and Mrs: Charl es Hensley, pnce-&lt;:ostratwnwns 92per cent
Clara Friend, Mr. and Mrs. of the 1967 base compared w1th
Da.vid Smith and family, Mrs.
Harold Holter and rainily and
Nancy Baum attended the
wedding of Janet Bissell and
Torn Groenveld at Columbus
recently. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Harold German
have mgyed to Gallipolis.
Seveu-1 persons from here
a !tended the rece nt bridal
shower for Jean Newlun, bride
elec t of Kenny Reynolds.
Sandra Newlun was an
overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs.
George Fry , Parkersburg.
Vera Weber, Tuppers Plains,
and Donna Hauber recently
visited their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Larkins .
Millard Ball is a patient at
V: terans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young
of Paden City were visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Garth Smith.
Mr .. and Mrs. Harold Osborn
and sons visited Ethel Larkins.

SEWING IS THE PROJECf of many Meigs County girls taking part in 4-H club work.
From the left, Joy Hayes, Rutland; Sharon Holter and Bonnie Smith, Racine, model clothing
made in 4-H work .

•
In

"IT'S TRUE"· - -

¢'. -·
..·'

.,

.VA.

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

·1 pledge ...
my HEAD to clear
tliinking,
my HEART to gr:.eater
. • loyalty,
my HANDS to larger
service, and
,
. my HEALtH to better
living, for my club, my
community :ind my
. . 4-H CLUB MEMBERS LE~ proper practices in raising and showing cattle. Mike
countryBenedum, Reeds~lle,d!l!plays a reserve champion steer raised through his club"project. .

.

:~:::::::::::~:::::;~::::~:::;::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::

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Five Meigs County 4-H club members participated in the
annual Ohio 4-H Club Congress held at Ohio State University . In
addition, KenneU1 Bolen served as a counselor. Miss Karen
Griffith was trumpet soloist ai the 4-H Congress Youth Symphony
Concert.
The five Meigs County delegates were Mike Benedum, Edwin
Cross, Brenda Donohue, Ruth Ann Jordan and Sue Wood .
More than 800 4-H club members attended the Congress,
representing more than 100,000 4-Hers throughout the state. The
overall theme was "Now 4-H" (Newer Opportunities With 4-H).
Scliolarships for the young people were provided by the Citizens
National Bank, the Meigs County Agricultural Society, and the
Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee.
MARGIE JEFFERS, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Jeffers of Albany , and Alan Holter , son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Holter of Pomeroy, were selected to attend Citizenship Short
Course in Washington, D. c., this year.
Throughout the week participants attended scheduled classes
.
..
.
..
on leadership and cttizenshlp. They VISited the U. S. Department
of Agrlc
· ulture, the H.ouse an d Se na te bUl"ld"mgs, and th e Wh"te
t
House. They were grven a chance to meet w1th Congressman
Clarence E. Miller. Other points of interest were Lincoln and
Jefferson Memorials, Mount Vernon, Arlington National
Cemetery, and tiM' Smithsonian Institute.
The 4-H youth stayed at the National4-H Center in Bethesda,
Maryland. This trip was sponsored by Meigs County
businessmen and the Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee.

TWO YOUTHS REPRESENTING Meigs County at the 1971
Ohio 4-H Conservation Camp near Utica were Helen Cotierill,
daugh ter of Mr . and Mrs. Don Cotterill of Rutland, a member of
the Harrisonville Girls 4-H Club, and Lee Hysell, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Olan Hysell of Minersville, a member of the Chester Farm
Boys 4-H Club.
One boy and one girl from each of Ohio 's 88 counties participated in the camp, which provided an opporlunity for 4-H
members to understand arfd appreciate wise use of natura l and
human resources, and to gain new insight into environment
control. Local sponsorrw.,re the Meigs County.Soil and Water
Conser ~atioll..Bmu:d. and the Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee .
JANE JOROAN, OAUGHTER of Mr . and Mrs . Lavern
Jordan of Alhany, a!ld Steven Stanley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Duane
Stanley of_Harrisonville, represented Meigs County at the Ohio 4H Junior Leadership Camp held at Camp Ohio, near Utica in.
Licking County.
"Building Bridges, Not Walls" was the theme for the week
with the thought that people are lonely because they build walls
instead of bridges.
Some of the purposes of the camp included learning more
about communicating with and understanding others, learning
the meaning of citizenship and gaining the desire to practice it,
and sharing ideas about county programs and personal beliefs.
The camp was sponsored by the Ohio Farmers Insurance.
Group and the Ohio Cooperative Extension Service.

RAISING PRIZE SHEEP is one of the projects which
can be carried out by young people in 4-H work in Meigs
County. Displaying the grand champion single market sheep
this yea r was Greg Donohew.

THIS WE BELIEVE:
The boy and girl and their development are the most important parts of U1e 4-H Club Program .
4-H'ers should be their own best exhibit.
Each 4-H memlier needs to be noticed, to be considered important, to achieve and to be praised.
The 4-H project is an essential tool which provides a work
experienCe to help boys and girls grow. ..
·4-H is a family affair; parent interest is important.
4-H is an educational program.
Advisors are teachers.
Junior leadets are beginning teachers who are guided by
advisors. .
Our job is to teach 4-H'ers how to think, not what to think.
An advisor or teacher must understand those he guides or
teaches.

REMEMBER:
Life may not mean the same thing to someone else that it does
to you.
.
Boys and girls are persons, not objects or things - they
deserve dignity and respect.
You srould try to see and praise the positive and useful In
each person.
When you criticize, be sure that it is criticism of particular
behavior , not of the person as a person.
Every person sees some reasonableness in !Us own behavior.
You must - e\p each ~mber feel that tci ~ou he is a person of
· significance. •

�•

•

•

By UPI
COLUMBUS - TilE budgettax bill passed by the Ohio
Senate w"ould force the state to
cut payments to · the aged,
disabled and blind, slate
Wel fare Director John E.
Hansan said Thursday. Hansah
said, under the Senate bill, aid
for the disabled would be cut $20
per month; aid for the aged, $10
per month : and aid to !he blind
$10 per month.
He also released comparison
figures which showed the
present $44 average monthly
pa yment under !he. Aid to
Dependent Children program
would have to be maintained
next year.
COLU MB US - BEFORE
adjourning for the week, the
House passed and sent to the
Senate a bill requtring all ablebodied recipients of public

. '

•

...·.
COLUMBUS (UPI)
House Speaker Charles F. measure which would raise the
Me!Pbers of an Ohio House- Kurfess, ·tt-Bo)ll ling Green, sales tax in Ohio by U pet.
SenH'!e..!;~nference committee to chose Uoyd George Kerns of
take on the task of forging a Raymond, diairrrian . of the
compromise over the now three- Finance Corrlmi ttee, and
months overdue stale budget Norman A. Murdock of Cin·were named Thursday as the cinnati, cha irman of the
General Assembly wound up its . Education Committee, as House
work f~r the week and ad- GOP representatives.
journed.
House Minority teader A, G.
The committee is expe"cted to Lancione, D-Bellaire, and
get its work• underway next Senate · Minority Leader 7\.nweekwhilethestateoperateson .thony C. Calabrese, D . an interim budget.
Cleve land , both appointed
Senate President Pro Tem- themselves to the committee.
pore Theodore M. Gray, R - The committee will have to
Piqua, selected Robert R. Shaw resolve giant . differences beof Columbus, chairman of the twee~ the two versions of the
Senate Finance Fornmittee, and fiscal package - a House
·Oakley C. Collins of Ironton, passed $7.8 billion spending
chairman of the Education package calling for a Ito 4 pet.
Committee as the two Senate graduated personal income tax
Republicans on the committee. and a $7.7 billion Senate-passed

after similar legislation in other
states and was designed .to cut
down on the welfare caseload.
The bill doe&gt; not"cover the blind,
aged or disabled but only
general relief recipients and
heads9l, fami)jes with dependent '(11\ffitren. "I believe this
bi,ll is the first chance we've had
in the General Assemblv in
many years to miil&lt;e a
meanin gful ~ha n ge in the
welfare system." Hughes said,
adding about 29,000 Ohioans
would be covered by the bill . He
said it would cut into the $tl
· million per month the stale pays
in welfare.

LONG BOTTOM
Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth Dill,
Pomeroy, visi ted Connie
Connolly and Freda Larkins.
Mr . and Mrs. David Smith
wer·e in Toledo recently to
welfare to earn their welfal'e return Mrs . Alice Branstrom to
payments. Such work would be her h(lme.
done under state or local workMr . and Mrs. Jim Stetler,
relief programs. Rep. Rodney Coolville . visited Mr. And Mrs.
1
H. Hughes, R-Bellefonta1ne, Ernie Griffin.
sponsor of the bill, sa id the
Pat Smith has resumed her
measure would apply to anyone studies at OSU in Columbus
over 18 who IS not employed or after spending three weeks here
going to school and does not with her parents and friends.
plan to go to school for three
Harold Holter and family
months .
were ~i sitors of Mrs . Han.son
He said the bill was patterned Holter, Forest Run .

&amp;REI/T!

I' )I

BULOVA
... the

~~ll-tiii1~cl

WATal

Carmel News, By .the Day

. .1:.\
MISS AMERICA - This formal portrait "at Miss Laurel.Lea Schaefer, Bexley, the new
Miss America, was taken from the elevated throne overlooking the·seating area in Convention
Hall at Atlantic City. Miss Schaefer began her pursuit of the Miss America crown in Pomeroy
in 1968 when she was named Miss Southern Ohio. She won titles to take her into state competition for three years before winning the Miss Ohio title which entitled to compete in the
national contest at AUantic City two weeks ago.

,

a

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"'i

Mrs. Mary Circle was a
recent guest of Mrs. Hattie
Powell and daughte r, Addie,
Racine RD.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark. Thorsden
and fa mily of Cedarville spent
Saturday and Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna
and Wa vie Circle . Mrs. Elrmal Schreckengost of
Parkersburg and Ralph Lee of
Racine RD called at the horne of
Eunie Brinker on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs. George Circle and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. James-

We ha'r:e a choice
collection Ql

Circle, all of New Haven, were
guests of Mary Cricle over the
weekend . ·
Mrs . Velma Taylor called at
the home of Betly Van Meter
and Margaret Ann Johnson
recently .
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur "E.
Johnson and family called on
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas Johnson
of Racine Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Carleton and a niece of Racine
called at the horne or Betty Van
Meter, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
Johnson and family on Tuesday
evening .

,I

,j
:I

modestly priced
Bulova watches,

'

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I

i! ).
i

!·,'

1

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beautifully timed
to give or get .

PROPER CARE OF HORSES, horsemanship and showmanship are taught through 4-H
work in Meigs cotinty. Lynn Baker, right, was named· grand champion in showmanship and
horsemanship and Aimee Huston was nained reserve champion in horsemanship this year.

Illustrated: Two
brand new 17 jewel
models at $55 earh.
Others from $~5.

874 Youths
4-H Programs

. l

•

VALUES

_IS_

IPlr£j}{A HO~~E Cf!OW~. .

ARE
FOUND

PROYSII 0'1 ~ ~SiS ~TM

P\IRIHA Holt'&gt;!: 2F..£AACH ~ll
~m 861MtTOI'~~s

MODERN SUPPLY
W. Main St .
Pomeroy
992-2164

AT

" The Store With

"All Kinds Of Stuff"

OF ALL STOCK
1971-1972
Buicks and Pontiacs
New Firm Takes Over

FRESHMEN STUDENTS entering Holzer Medical
(:enter's School of Nursing at Davis Hall, Fir•! Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio have completed their first week of orientation and training . The class of 41 students has pushed the
total enrollment to 96, the largest enrollment in the history of
Davis Hall . Included in this year's class is orll!omale student
and two sisters of older students . First row, I tor, Mrs . Aline
E. Clark and Marcia Smith, Gallipolis; Cheryl Pearson,_
Gallipolis Ferry; Jamie Folsom, West Portsmouth; Teresa
Barker, Ashland, Ky.; Roderick Hook, Gallipolis; Emily
· Grose, Cheshire; Judy Fisher, Gallipolis; Barbara Taylor,
Oak Hill ; Judy Carleton, Gallipolis ; second row, Patricia
Jean Botta, Huntington, W. Va .; Deborah Kay Wood,
Chester; Deborah Ann Gollihue, Oak Hill; Linda Lieving, Pt.
Pleasant; Cathy Hutchison, Jackson; Francy Simon,
Wheelersburg; Sharon Hall, Ironton; Susie Hacker,
Wheelersburg; Debbie Greene and Betsy Hughes, Jackson ;
Glenda Wilcoxon, S. Bloomfield ; Scharlotte Runyon, Port
William ; Jane Cochran, Chillicothe ; Teresa Gardner, Pt.
Pleasant; top row, Bridget Barker, Hunlington ; Pat Lucas,
Wtle Hocking; Debbie Mitchell, Albany ; Mary Bradbury,
Middleport; Gwen Llewellyn , New Marshfield; Debby
Hunte r, Wellston ; Alicia Jeffers, Winfield ; Jeanette Lambert, Gallipolis; Beverly Rowland, Gallipolis ; Karen Evans,
Oak Hill ; Linda M~Dougle, Belpre ; Beverly Branham,
Stoutsville; Mary K. Lucas, Circleville; Connie Tucker,
Christiansburg, and Debra Lorbach, Jackson.

October 5th

Watch YQur

New 71 Buick
Custom Le Sab~e 4dr . sedan, vinyl top , factory air ~on dif ioning ,
fully equipped. Sticker price $5 , 104.74.

$$Grow
as you add to your savings
each week a1 the Meigs Co.

~3'451 14

New 72 Buick

Skyla rk 2 dr . hardtop, power ste~ri ng , power b'rakes, auto.
tra ns . Stoc ker Pri ce $3,766. 19.•

New 71 Pontiac
Catalina 4 dr. sedan , power steering, power brakes, au to. tra ns.
Sticker Price $4,066.82 .

71 Pontiac Catalina

Branch of the Alhens Co.
S~vings

and Loan.

4~%
CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE
Save by the lOth, earn
from the 1st.

Brougham 4 dr . hard top. demo.·, very low mileage, ~adory air
conditioning, 400 cu . in . engine, 4 bb!. til t st . wheel, AM -FM
radio, vinyl top . St icker Price $5233 .32 .

New 72 Pontiac
Catal ina 4 dr. sedan , factory a ir conditioned . power steering ,

brakes. auto . trans St icker Price $4747 .17

New 72 Pontiac
N·ew 72 ·.Pontiac
LttMans 1 dr. hardtop . power "Steer ing, power brakes, auto.
trans . Stic~ker Pnce $3,681.02
·

BLAETTNARS
10 Buicb to Blessings

'
POME"OY,

Tne Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
· 216 Second Sf.
. Ponieroy, Ohio

Catalina Bro u~ham 2 dr hardtop . f "ctory air cond it ioning, vinyl
top, tully equ ipped St 1cker Pr 1ce ' 5000 99.

~~om Buggies

~HIO

FURNITU.

BAKER

Final
lose Out

~XJwer

THE 4-H PROGRAM RECOGNIZES outstanding
abilities in many fields through the use of awards. Byron
McCoy displays an award presented him as grand champion
ffi'beef ca ttle showmanship while Becky Windon displays her
awards for reserve champion showmanship honors .

For Pets-Stables - Lar ge
and Small Animals . Lawns

- Gardens.

Member Federal Home Loc n

Bank.

"

Member Feder al Saving s &amp;
Loan IMu rante Corp. Ill
ac.coun ts ir1sure d up ~o

S20, 000.Dg,

MIDDl£PORT, 0.
4

MEIGS OOUNTY 4-H CLUB MEMBERS learn how to
become creative. This clever Charlie Brown float was made
by members of the Columbia Girls Make-It Club.

94 per cent a month ago and
96 per cent a year ago.

The index of prices received
by farmers stood at 111 per
cent of the 1967 base in midSeptember compared with 113
per cent a month ago and 110
per cent a year ago. The indcx of farm-costs was 121 per
cent ·of the base compared with
120 a month ago and 115 a year
ago.
The report said mid-Septem
ber prices received by farmers
for meat animals were 3 per
cent above a year ago; grain
prices, 12 per cent below a
. year ago.

LIVING MEMORY...

&amp;.JizeE~

Activities ' Summary ·

N..,
Irua" dou
andRepah

Warm
Air

Exchangees Go on

Fumaces

Wisconsin Trip

Your Choic&amp;Oil or. Gas Fired

Compactiy designed to save y011 ~p~ee · IIICI
money . Temperature control Is automltl~
set the thermostat end forget lt. Glv.s you
maximum heal 111 minimum cost - no u ~:~~::n~

b

Instal

Twenty-five Southern Ohio 4H club members and workers
were in Wisconsin this summer
as a part of a twt&gt;-year 4-H Club
Exchange. Next year, it is
anticipated the four Wisconsin
counties will send exchange"
members to the Southern Ohio

Especially suitable for

l_!&gt;ng Bottom

Social Notes

SAFETY IN OPERATION OF tractors can't be ern.phasized too much since Meigs County did have several
tractor fatalities this year . Eddie Cross learns safe and efficient tractor opera.ting through his 4-H club work , With
Cross is C. E. Blakeslee, extension agent.
·

Designs of
Distinction

Legar Monument
92 -531'
Pomeroy
. L;.;.;~-----Iiirlirlrl

-'
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POINT

PLEASA~T, ~·

area.
Leaders or the group this year
were Mrs. Deborah Conklin,
then County Extension Agent,
Home Economics, Meigs
Coun ty; Mrs. Roberta. Montie,

4-H 4-H club advisor and
member of the State 4-H Advisory Committee fronrr,Athens
County; and Mr. Richard
Conklin, who was completing
his Masters degree at Ohio
Unive rsity and had been
assisting in Meigs County 4-H
club prog
th"
·
rams
IS summer.
The exchange members
from .
Meigs County were Kathy
Cheadle, Teresa Gooch Geneva
King, Mary King, Mandie Rose
Ed Cross, Joe Nelson, Karl~
Beal, and Bonnie Smith .
Arrangements were worked out
with Larry Thompson, 4-H
youth agent at Baraboo,
Wisconsin and C. EJ. Blakeslee,
local County Extension Agent,
Agriculture.
The group left Columbus
Monday morning, July 5, by airconditioned bus and reached its
destination in the evening. Most
families met the bus at Portage
and Baraboo, Wis. During the
week the exchanges lived with
larm families in Columbia,
Sauk, Marquette, and Green
Lake Counties, Wisconsin . This
area is 25 to 70 miles north qf
Madison, in th e Wisconsin
Dells, heart of dairyland U.S.A.
production.
.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::z.1.-».!W.:~:~~:=:~O::':$::X~

THE4-H PLEDGE

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CITY ICE &amp;FUEL·CO.

0. D.
OFFIQ: HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO S·(CLOSE
AT NelON ON -THURS.) _:. EAST COURT ST:,
POMEROY .
.
.

Variety is emphasized in the 4-H club program which offers
874 young people their selection from a list of more than 100
projects to carry out in the club year.
Through 4-H young people between the ages of 10 and 19can
learn to sew, cook, decorate a room, raise a dog , calf, lamb or
horse, study insects, birds or trees, grow a garden, or work in
wood to name only a few of the activities that are offered .
4-H has been a popular youth activity in Meigs County through
the years. The county has 3!i organized clubs with 22 men and 58
women taking leadership roles with the young people. There are
12 boys and rT girls involved in junior and teen·leadership with
the clubs.
During the past year's program 246 boys and 628 girls were
club members for a total of 874 young people taking part.
The highlight of the club year, of course, is ·the annual junior
fair which is staged in August as a part of the Meigs County
Fair. The accompanying photographs of the 1971 junior fair
activities emphasize again the variety of projects carried out by
participaiing young people.

Prices .Off 2%

WASHI NGTON (U PI ) Slump in prices for hogs and
corn pulled the National Farm
Price Average down 2 per cent
in the month ending Sept. 15, the
Agric ultur e Department
reported Thursday.
The drop left farm prices averag ing I p~r cent above a year
earlier. It came after the price
average had remained level
from May 15 through midAugust.
The department said most of
the decline was due to lower
prices for oranges, tomatoes,
and soybeans, as well as
for hogs and corn. Seasonally
higher prices for milk were
only partially offsetting.
Farm costs, according to the
report, dropped I per cent.
The combination of rising
fa rm prices and higher costs
kept prices at 68 per cent of
the traditional ' 'fairearning powern parity ration. This compar·
ed with 70 per cent last month
and '7l per cent in Sept. 1970.
The report also presented a
second ration based on 1967
price - cost relations. By this
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, Mr. standard, the Sept. 15 farm
and Mrs: Charl es Hensley, pnce-&lt;:ostratwnwns 92per cent
Clara Friend, Mr. and Mrs. of the 1967 base compared w1th
Da.vid Smith and family, Mrs.
Harold Holter and rainily and
Nancy Baum attended the
wedding of Janet Bissell and
Torn Groenveld at Columbus
recently. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Harold German
have mgyed to Gallipolis.
Seveu-1 persons from here
a !tended the rece nt bridal
shower for Jean Newlun, bride
elec t of Kenny Reynolds.
Sandra Newlun was an
overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs.
George Fry , Parkersburg.
Vera Weber, Tuppers Plains,
and Donna Hauber recently
visited their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Larkins .
Millard Ball is a patient at
V: terans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young
of Paden City were visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Garth Smith.
Mr .. and Mrs. Harold Osborn
and sons visited Ethel Larkins.

SEWING IS THE PROJECf of many Meigs County girls taking part in 4-H club work.
From the left, Joy Hayes, Rutland; Sharon Holter and Bonnie Smith, Racine, model clothing
made in 4-H work .

•
In

"IT'S TRUE"· - -

¢'. -·
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.,

.VA.

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

·1 pledge ...
my HEAD to clear
tliinking,
my HEART to gr:.eater
. • loyalty,
my HANDS to larger
service, and
,
. my HEALtH to better
living, for my club, my
community :ind my
. . 4-H CLUB MEMBERS LE~ proper practices in raising and showing cattle. Mike
countryBenedum, Reeds~lle,d!l!plays a reserve champion steer raised through his club"project. .

.

:~:::::::::::~:::::;~::::~:::;::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::

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Five Meigs County 4-H club members participated in the
annual Ohio 4-H Club Congress held at Ohio State University . In
addition, KenneU1 Bolen served as a counselor. Miss Karen
Griffith was trumpet soloist ai the 4-H Congress Youth Symphony
Concert.
The five Meigs County delegates were Mike Benedum, Edwin
Cross, Brenda Donohue, Ruth Ann Jordan and Sue Wood .
More than 800 4-H club members attended the Congress,
representing more than 100,000 4-Hers throughout the state. The
overall theme was "Now 4-H" (Newer Opportunities With 4-H).
Scliolarships for the young people were provided by the Citizens
National Bank, the Meigs County Agricultural Society, and the
Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee.
MARGIE JEFFERS, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Jeffers of Albany , and Alan Holter , son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Holter of Pomeroy, were selected to attend Citizenship Short
Course in Washington, D. c., this year.
Throughout the week participants attended scheduled classes
.
..
.
..
on leadership and cttizenshlp. They VISited the U. S. Department
of Agrlc
· ulture, the H.ouse an d Se na te bUl"ld"mgs, and th e Wh"te
t
House. They were grven a chance to meet w1th Congressman
Clarence E. Miller. Other points of interest were Lincoln and
Jefferson Memorials, Mount Vernon, Arlington National
Cemetery, and tiM' Smithsonian Institute.
The 4-H youth stayed at the National4-H Center in Bethesda,
Maryland. This trip was sponsored by Meigs County
businessmen and the Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee.

TWO YOUTHS REPRESENTING Meigs County at the 1971
Ohio 4-H Conservation Camp near Utica were Helen Cotierill,
daugh ter of Mr . and Mrs. Don Cotterill of Rutland, a member of
the Harrisonville Girls 4-H Club, and Lee Hysell, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Olan Hysell of Minersville, a member of the Chester Farm
Boys 4-H Club.
One boy and one girl from each of Ohio 's 88 counties participated in the camp, which provided an opporlunity for 4-H
members to understand arfd appreciate wise use of natura l and
human resources, and to gain new insight into environment
control. Local sponsorrw.,re the Meigs County.Soil and Water
Conser ~atioll..Bmu:d. and the Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee .
JANE JOROAN, OAUGHTER of Mr . and Mrs . Lavern
Jordan of Alhany, a!ld Steven Stanley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Duane
Stanley of_Harrisonville, represented Meigs County at the Ohio 4H Junior Leadership Camp held at Camp Ohio, near Utica in.
Licking County.
"Building Bridges, Not Walls" was the theme for the week
with the thought that people are lonely because they build walls
instead of bridges.
Some of the purposes of the camp included learning more
about communicating with and understanding others, learning
the meaning of citizenship and gaining the desire to practice it,
and sharing ideas about county programs and personal beliefs.
The camp was sponsored by the Ohio Farmers Insurance.
Group and the Ohio Cooperative Extension Service.

RAISING PRIZE SHEEP is one of the projects which
can be carried out by young people in 4-H work in Meigs
County. Displaying the grand champion single market sheep
this yea r was Greg Donohew.

THIS WE BELIEVE:
The boy and girl and their development are the most important parts of U1e 4-H Club Program .
4-H'ers should be their own best exhibit.
Each 4-H memlier needs to be noticed, to be considered important, to achieve and to be praised.
The 4-H project is an essential tool which provides a work
experienCe to help boys and girls grow. ..
·4-H is a family affair; parent interest is important.
4-H is an educational program.
Advisors are teachers.
Junior leadets are beginning teachers who are guided by
advisors. .
Our job is to teach 4-H'ers how to think, not what to think.
An advisor or teacher must understand those he guides or
teaches.

REMEMBER:
Life may not mean the same thing to someone else that it does
to you.
.
Boys and girls are persons, not objects or things - they
deserve dignity and respect.
You srould try to see and praise the positive and useful In
each person.
When you criticize, be sure that it is criticism of particular
behavior , not of the person as a person.
Every person sees some reasonableness in !Us own behavior.
You must - e\p each ~mber feel that tci ~ou he is a person of
· significance. •

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1- The Dally Sentinel Pcmeroy·Middleport Oh10 Ocl&lt;lber 1 1971

CHURCH OF THE NAZ'A
RENE - ModdleDOrt Re v
Audry M 11er IJd:lofOr floyd
Carson supt Sunday school
9 30 a m
Morning
wor
shtp
10 30
am
1umor

socoely 6 30 p m NYPS &lt;&gt; 45

FIRST SOUTHERN Bo\P
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave
POMEROY TRINII Y- Rev Pomeroy alftltaled wtth S B C
W H Perrin paslor Roy the Rev Fred Hill pastor
Mayer Supt Church school Sunday Sc .... ool 9 30 a m

POMEROY

'il 15a m worsfHp 10 24a m
youth chotr rehearsal Monday

morn ng worshtp 10 30 a m
tu n or soctety 6 30 a m NYPS
6 30 p m Mrs Marv n Burl 6 45 p m Sunday evangelistiC
dtre ctor
sentor
cho tr meet ng 7 30 p m Prayer
rehear sa l 7 30 p m Thursday meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p lf1'

Mrs Paul Nease d rector Alt

MIDDLEPORT

day qu tltmg party for Busy . Bee

Class

Thutsday

at

church

soctal room
PO~EROY

CHURCH OF
THE NAZAREN E - Corner
Un on and Mulberry Rev
Clyde V Hend erson pa stor
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Raymond
Walburn
supl
Morn ng worsh p 10 30 a m
E~n ng serv1ce 7 30 p m M•d
week serv1ce Wednesday 7 30
p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev

Stanley Plattenburg m tn ster
Morn ng prayer and sermon
10 30 a m Holy communiOn
and sermon
ftrst Sundays
10 30 a m Church sc hool
k ndergarten thr ough eighth

grade 10 30 a m
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Mr Hoyt Allen Jr
pastor B ble School 9 30 a m
worsh 1p 10 30
serv ce and

MT MORIAH BAPTIST-

Corner Fourth and Matn

adult worsh ip
peoples

youn~

neel ng both

7 30 p m Sun
day Wednesday
comb 1ned
Btb l e study
and prayer
meet ng 7 30 p m

Middleport Rev Henry L Key

Jr pastor Sunday School 9 30
Arnold Rtchards supt
Mprnmg worship 10 30 a m

a m

JEHQVAH' S WITNE~ES

­

Larry Carnahan pres 1d ng
min sler Sunda y 81ble lecture
9 30 a m Watchtower study

10 30 a m Tuesday B ble
study 7 30 p m Thursday
mm stry school 7 30 p
serv ~ce

m

meet ng 8 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT

CHURCH

of Chnst m Chctsttan Umon-

Lawrence Man ley pastor Mrs
Russell Young

Sunday School

Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Even ng worsh tp

7 30

Wed

nesday prayer m ee t ng 7 30 p
m

Rev W II am Kn ttel pastor
Ronald Dugan Su nday Sc hool
supt
Classes fo r all ages
even n9 serv1ce 8 p m Yo ung
Peoples meet ng and B1ble

SACRI; 0 HEART -

Re v _ Study Fr day 8 p m
Father Bernard Kra 1co v c
paslor
Phone 9922825
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Saturday evenmg Ntass 7 30
p m Sun day Mass 8 and 10
a m Confess ons Saturday 7
7 30 p m

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
- Robert Kuhn pastor George
Sk nner Sunda y School supt
Sunday School 9 30 a m
morn ng worshtp 10 30 a m '

BYF 6 p m

Btble Study

CH URCH -

Corner Ash and

Plum
Mtddleoort
No e l
Herrman pastor Guy Pnddy

Sunday School Supt Saturday

even ng serv ce 7 p m Sunday
Sunday
School 10 a m
even ng worsh p 7 p m

FIRST BAPTI SfCH URCH of

Wednesday 7 p m
chotr M ddlepor t corner of S xth anrt
Palmer Streets Rev Charles
J?racftce Wed B 30 p m
S
mons
pastor
Danny
ST PAUL LUTHERAN - Thompson
Sunday Sc hoo l
Rev Arthur C Lund pastor Superintendent Sunday
Sunday School 9 15 a m church
school for everyone
Charle s Evans Supt worshtp
9
15
a
m
Morntng wor sh p
serv ce
10 JO a m Con
f rmat on class Tuesday 4 15 lO 15 a m
Evenmg serv1ces
Juntor Con
7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
to 5 JO p m
f rmal on class Thursday 6 30 serv ce 7 30 p m Extra youth
to 1 4s p m
-act v t es on Sunday 5 p m tor
all youth up to stxfh grade 6 30

SEVENTH DAY ADVENT

TIST Pom eroy Mulberry
Hgfs Herbert Morgan pastor

Sabbath School Saturday , 2 p

m worshtp 3 15 p m Dorcas
Soc ely lOa m eac h Thursday

for 1un or and sen or h gh
students

CHURCH

OF

m

ftrst and second
Sundays of each month fh 1rd
and fourth Sundays each month
worsh p serv ce at 7 30 p m
Wednesday even ngs at 7 30

Guests of Mr and Mrs
Dorsey Jordan and fam1ly were
Mrs Jordan s uncles and aunts
Mr and Mrs Arthur Mason
Orlando Fla and Mr and
Mrs Calvm Poston Lancaster
Recent v•s•lors at the Jordan
home were thetr cousms Mr
and Mrs Paul Hunsicker and
Dawn Akron
Rev and Mrs Chester
Pickett of Londonderry vuuted
w1th Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers
Mr and Mrs Dale Stansbury
and daughter Mrs Wanda
Oxley were overmght guests of
Mrs Oxley s son m law and
daughter Mr and Mrs Robert
Schm1dl
and
ch ildren
Canonsburg Pa
Mr and Mrs W1lltam
Cheadle and Mrs Metta Fisher
attended the Science Rev1ew
and then called on theu brother
1n law and sister Mr and Mrs
Lawrence
Woodyard
m
Columbus
A R I Ben) Caster of
Charleston W Va was a guest
of h1s brother m law and s•ster
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey and
called on other fmnds and
relatives m the area
Mr and Mrs Robert Mattox
have returned home after
spendmg a week viSitmg
relatives and special events
They attended t oe Science
Rev1ew were guests of h1s
uncle and aunl Mr and Mrs
John Hawkms Sprmgheld
VISited w1th her brother m law
and s1ster Mr and Mrs Edwm
Tague Columbus and atte nded
the Malloy Reumon at
Groveport along w1th other
activities
Mr and Mrs Walter Jordan
VISited with their grandparents
mcludmg Mr , and Mrs Lincoln
Russell Wolfpen Mrs Ava
Gilkey HarrisOnville an~ Mrs
Faye Jordan local
Mr and Mrs Edd1e Jordan
and Clay W1lham who are now
hvmg at Stanton Ky were
guests of the1r parents Mrs
Faye Jordan and Mr and Mrs
L D Cottrill and other relat1ves
Sund~y

7 30 Thursday evenmg prayer
servtce 7 30 p m

'MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts S'tan
Cra1g pastor Sunday school
9 45 a m worsh1p servrce 11
a m trammg uruon 6 Jo•p m
evenrng worship service 7 30
p.m Mrd week prayer serv1ce

p m All Welcome

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Letart Route l the Rev Stan
Cra g pastor Sunda y school
9 30 a m
prayer and Brbl e

"'

guests of Mr and
Mrs D•le Stansbury were Mr
and il{rs Clair Dale Stansbury
JuhH '\nn Clara Mae and
Bobby Joe Groveport Larry
Stansbury, Dale Eugene Turner
and Sus1e Scott Reynoldsburg
Mr and Mrs Jerry Stansbury

MIDWAY

n ng worsh1p 10 30 am
even1ng worship 7 30 p m
prayer serv ce 7 p m Wed
nesday

Eddy Educator s schedule for
October ~th m Me1gs Count)
MONDAY 9-9 30 Rutland
10-11 30 Salem Center
TUESDAY 12 30 3 Pearl
Street 3 15 3 45 M1ddl~t
Library 4-4 30 Gravel H1ll
4 45-.\ 15 Stiver Run 5 30-6
Cash &amp; Carry 6 30-7 30 Laurel
Chff
FRIDAY 9 10 15 Bradbury
10 30-11 30 Central 12 3 S 3rd
Avenue 3 15-4 15 WMPO
NOTE Please return all
overdue books to the book
mob1le or bookmobile office as
soonas possible Anyone havmg
overdue books and not return
mg them w11l not be able to get
anymore books from the book
mob1le until the overdues are
returned

9 30 a m

M ornrng worship

evenrng worshtp

7 30
7 30

Btble study Wednesday
pm

CHURCH

7 30
Wednesday even1ng
prayer meet ng 7 30 p m
Sunday evenrng youth serv rce
6 45 w1th Macy Lou Carter
leader No Tuesday serv.Jce

CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Servtces 315 Ma n St PI

MT UNION BAPTIST Rev Ceetl Cox pastor Sunday
BRADFORD CHURCH OF school Sllf'l Joe S&lt;l\lre Sunday
CHRIST - Cltfford Smtih school
9 45 a m Sunday
m 1mst er Sunday School 9 30 a even ng worshtp 7 30 Wed
rn morntng church 10 30 a nesday prayer and Btble study
Su nday evening serv1ce 7 30 p m
m
7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce 8
TUPP.ERS
PLAINS
P m
CHRISTIAN CHURCH ~ Mr
HOBSON CHRISTUN John Wyatt pastor J S DaviS
UNION - Darrel Doddnll Sunday School supt Sunday
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a school 9 30 a m Morntng
m Annie Mohler supt
Sermon 10 30 a m Evening
Leonard Gilmore ~trst elder se rmon 7 p m

event ng serv1ce 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer meeting
7 30 p m

mornmg worship 11 a m
Evemng serv1ces Tuesday and

Fnday 7 30

LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Robert
Shook paslor Hersc hel Norns
supl Sunday school 9 30 a m
morning sermon 10 30 a m
even1 ng serrrton 7 30 alter
naftng each Sunday Prayer
servtce Wednesday 7 30 p m

Prayer meeting 7 30 p m

alternating Sundays

a m
morn ng worsh p and
10 30 a m
co mmunron
Sunday evenmg youth Chc:tst1an
endeavor 6 30 Worsh1p ser
v 1ces Sunday 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventng prayer

meeltng and Btble study 7 30 p
m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN P ne Grove

the Rev

G II

pastor

W1lltam

Bat ley

supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morn ng worship 10 30 a m
Even tng worship 7 30 p m
Wednesday
Chrt st1an Youth
Crusade 6 30 p m
Prayer
meet ng 7 30 p m Thursday
chotr pract •ce 7 p m

DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST -Den ny Evans

Arthur pastor Norman C W II supt

Combs pastor Sunday School Sunday School 9 30 a

MEIGS COUNTY
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH

9a m

church servtce~ 10 a

m

m

Worsh p se rv ce 10 30 a m..
Chr st an Endeavor Sunday
evenmg

.._.Robert R Card J)rrector

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert R Card
Rev Stanten Smtth

CHESTER- Worshtp 9 15 a
m Church School 10 a m
ENTERPRISE- Worship 9

10 30 a m
youth meehng 6 m Morntng worship 10 30 a
p m eventng serv ce 7 p m
m Sunday eveni ng serv1ce 7
Chr sf an - Workers Cla ss p m
Wednesday even ng
Tuesday 7 30 p m prayer prayer serv ces 7 30 p m
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend Charles Norm
pastor Worship service 9 30 a
a m Chu r ch School 10 a m
KENO CHURCH OF CH RIST m
Sunday School 10 30 a m
FLATWOODS- Worship 11 - Hobart Newell supt Serv ces
a m Church School 10 a m week ly 9 30 am on Sunday
CARLETON CHURCH POMEROY - Worshtp 10 30 Prea ch1 ng f1rst and third Kmgsbury Road
Sund ar.
a m Church Schoo\9 15 a m
Sundays of month by Cl fford School 9 30 a m Ralph Car
UMYF 6 30 p m
Sm th 9 30 a m
supt Worsh p serv ce 10 30 a
ROCK SPRINGS - Worshtp
m an d 7 30 p m alternately
Chu r ch Schoo l 9 a m

UMYF 6 30 p m
Ml DOLE PI:&gt;RT CLUSTER

RACINE FIRST CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE Rev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 a Sunday School 9 30 a m

Chu rc h School 9 30 a
UMYF 7 p m

m

Church School 10 a
UMYF 7 p m

m

Morn ng Worsh1p 10 30 a m
Evenmg warshtp 7 30 p m

RUTLAND- Worsh p 9 15 a Wednesday

m

Sunday School

Super ntendent
Paultne Me
Clm tock pastor Rev Morn s

Prayer meeting
7 30 p m Rev
pastor

Wednesday

Jay Sltles

OLD
DEXTER
CON
GREGATIONAL CH!IRCH Rev Willa rd Dutcher pastor
Mrs Worley Franc ts Sunda y

School Supt Sunda.,.__ School

9 45 a m Church Serv 1ces f1rst
and lhtrd Sundays followmg

S

nJ

Reba and Aaron and Mr and
Mrs Harold Oxley local
Mr and Mrs Chester
Baumgardner and family of
Coshocton VISited w1th her
father Dale Dye and on Sun
day the group JOurneyed to
Thurman
where
they
celebrated Mr Dyes birthday
w1lh an other daughter and
fam ily Mr and Mrs Clyde
Walker and children
Mr and Mrs Ronald Whit Wednesday 8 p m
hngton spent Sunday at
GREAT BEND - Worshtp II
a
m 2nd and 4th Sundays
Ball1more OhiO w1th hiS
Church
School 10 a m
brother and s•ster m law Mr
LETA RT FALLS - Wors htp
and Mrs Leonard Whlttmgton 10 a m Church School 9 a m
MORNING STAR - Wo&lt;Shtp
and family I eonard Wh1t
9 30 a m Church School 10 30
lmgton has been returned home a m
MtdWeek Serv ce
from Umvers1ly Hosp1tal where Wednesday B p m
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship
he was taken for treatment of
II a m I st and 3rd Sundays
lnJUnes suffered 10 a serwus Church School 10 a m
accident at h1s employment
PORTLAND - Worshop 7 30
Mr and Mrs T H Spurlock p m Churc;t&gt; School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worsh p 11 a m
Albany Mr and Mrs Reed 2nd
and 4th Sundays Church
Jeffers and Mr and Mrs School 10 a m
WESLEYAN (Ractnel Mendal Jordan were Saturday
W
orshop
evemng guests at the home of School 10 a11 ma m Church
Mr and Mrs Arthur Crabtree
UM YF lor all churches of the
MOVIes of the recent vacahon Southern Cluster 7 30 p m
tr1p taken by the Crabtrees each Sunday at the Youth
Cenler (Oak Grove Road l
along w1th other mtereshng
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
films were shown to the g10up
Rev Jacob Lehman
Rev Standley Brandum
They were JOined for these by
ALFRED -Worshtp 11 a m
Mr and Mrs Carl Crabtree Church School 10 a m Prayer
Russell and Kevm
meet ng Wednesday 7 45 p m
JOPPA - Worship 10 a m
Among those from the area
Chur ch Sc hool 9 a m Prayer
who atte nded the Sc1ence Meel ng Wednesday 8 p m
Rev1ew were Rex and Don
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Cheadle J1mmy Stout B1ff services 9 a m Sunday Schoo l
45 a m Btble study every
Krebs Dorsey Jordan and 9Thvrsday
7 30 p m
Rodney
Murrell Bailey
NORTH BETHEL - Worsh p
Mendal and Dwame Jm dan 11 a m Church School 10 a m
REEOSVILLE - Worshop 8
Mr and Mrs Walter Jordan
p m Church School 10 a m
Mr and Mrs Bob LJtch Mr Praver Meetma Wedne ~fi;w A
and Mrs Clay Jordan and P m
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh p
Barbara Hilbert Cox Mr and
10 a m Church School 9 a m
Mrs R1chard Jeffers Mr and ' TUPPERS PLAINS
Mrs Lavern Jordan and Mr Worshtp 9 a m Church School
10 a m
and Mrs Reed Jeffers

John

H 2H l 2

•
Mont.! y

Fnghtenmg " " 1 •l? You see a p1cture l1 ke th1s
and suddenly you feel you are s1andmg al the edge
of 1 ch 1sm tn the d trk You arc confronted w1th
1he thre 11 of Ihe un known md you don t l1ke 11
Why yo u wonder? Why can 1 men l1ve together

Al:l s

'2 , ~ ] l

•

! e d I}

Rom n
~

12

'i

•
WeU nc J

m pe lce?

;

Rom n

o II

•

IH

1h r J )
Ro
n
XI I1

•

1-r I }
(ornlh n
' I '

•J

s

)
I (or n h n
., 7 1J

We all need th e courage to fa ce the future un
fr ud We need to find and to develop love unde r
st tnd tng 1nd pe 1cc of mmd But to attam our goal
v.e need Fa11h Th 11 help can be fou nd 1n church
On Worldw•dc Communt on Sund &lt;~y-. m•lhons
of men and women wdl un te m one of Chnsl•an1ty s
hols sac r ~rncn ts I here w II be new f tees at thou
s 1nds of tit tr S m@. tn d wome n who have only
rccc 1 tly begun to re 1lt?c \\he re m tn o;; Hope IS to
hCI&lt;Uld

t

Bob fv\oore

Sunday School Supt Sunday
School classes for all ages 9 30
a m

morillnQ worsh tp 10 45

NYPS Sunday

6 30 p m

evangeltsttc servtce Sunday
7 30 p m Mtd &gt;'{eek prayer

meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p n\

Ms s1onery meetrng second
Wednesday 7 30 p m

UNITED FAITH
DENOMINATION -

NON
Rev

Dennls Weaver pastor Sunda y

school 9 30 a m Bob Barber
supt

worship service

10 30

la 'fleader Chr sttan Endeavor
7 30 p m Sunday Roger
Buckley prestdent Prayer
meeltng Wednesday 7 30 p m

Board meet1ng ltrsl Monday
each monlh 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN -Rev
Russe ll Lester pastor Worshtp
"e rvlce 9 a m Sunday SchooL

10 a m

K&amp;CJEWELERS
Keepsake D1amond Rmgs
312 E Mam St
Pomeroy 0

ANTHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992 2550
240 Lmcoln St
M1ddleport

RUTLAND FIRST BAP
TIST - Rev Samuel Jackson

communio n and

devotion s

euMEROY LOWER Llt.HT
CHURCH-Harrisonville Road
t&lt;ev Roy Taylor pastor Henr{
Ebl n Sunday School Sup
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
evenmg worsh tp 7 30 p m

19 30 a m Regular board
meeting 7 30 thtrd Saturday
Pilch m ?nth
THE RUTLAND COM
MUNITY CHURCH -Rev
•
.A:mos T1llls pastor Sunday
School 9 30 a m Worship'
servtce 11 a , m Wednesday
prayer meeting 7 30 p m
Sunday ntght worsh tp 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev Lloyd
D Gnmm Jr pastor Sunda y

Prayer and prasJe serv1ce

School

7 30

p m
Mrs Lyda
Chevalter pres ident Son~
•
Mi
serv1ce an d sermon
8 20
Week prayer meeting Wed
nesday 7 30 p m Mrs Mazie
Holsmqer cla ss leader

Thursday 7 30 p m

9 30 a

m

worshtp 10 30 a m

peopl es servt~e

Morning

Young

6 45 p m
COMMUNITY CHURCH Evangel sttcs~r•1ces 7 30
Dexter - worship
serv tces m Wednesday even ng servrce

Salurday and Sunday 7 30 p m 7 30 P m

I

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Phone 992 3481
N Second•Ave
Mtddl eport 0

f/

..

Phone 992 3284

-

Middleport

-

VIUAGEandCUT RAJE
VILLAGE
R.OWER
SHOP
-Racine, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

Middleport
'

POMEROY OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

suggested that after the tops are
dr) they should be put m a dry
a1ry place and dusted w1th
msect1c1de The bulbs should
not be separated until sprmg
she sa1d
How to Succeed w1t h
Chnslmas Cactus was Mrs
Yeauger s top1c She sa1d the
plant should not be put m d1rect
sunlight and should not be
watered heav1ly until the buds
form The cactus may be
started from cuttmgs she sa1d
Flowers smtable for drymg
were exh1b1ted by Mrs Hollon
who showed b1tter sweet okra
pussy willow ~ron weed
celos1a th1stle and dock
Mrs Denver Holter gave a
demonslrahon on how to wax
bulbs for wmter storage She
sa1d that melted paraffm should
be poured mlo heated water and
that bulbs wh1ch have been
washed should be dipped mto

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
WE CREATE VALUES

Stop m and see Ray R1ggs for a
real deal at their new lot at
Chester

69 Ford F250". ". ". "" .... "...... 51895
68 Plymouth ... ...................... 51295

ROYAL OAK PARK

4 Dr

Fam1ly RecreatiOn
Sw1mmmg

3~5

69 atevy Nava II ................. '1595
4 Speed radio P S

Pomeroy

I.

ITUPPER!

4 Dr

0

ll,.,'
~
• at "a'
,
.~

1

949 4551

Racine

·,
I

1

o 0 • 0 I I 0 I 0 I I I.

$1295

2 dr H T

PS P B

65 Ford Mustang .................... '595
63 Ford Thunder Bird.............. '695
63 Oldsmobile Coovertible........ S395
Auto trans
See Ray R1ggs or AI Zeigler

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Rt 2

6 Cyl

t •• I I I 0 I I I • I I

65 Men:ury Monterey .............. .!695

BOWER'S DRIVE·IN
RESTAURANT
Pomer oy,

2 Dr PS PB

68 C«Jrnet

992 57 50

E Mam St

69 Olevy .. .. . ... .. ................ 1595
5

RIGGS BROS.,
INC.
915-4111
0. ·

Located on S Rt 7

Chester, 0

FRIDAY
SQUARE DANCE Fnday
8 30 p m Rutland H1gh School
gymnasmm w1th mustc by
Hill toppers Proceeds towards
new Rutland f1re tr uck
DANCE followmg Southern
H1gh School game 10 to 12
Fnday at Jumor h1gh bUlldmg
sponsored by Band Boosters
MuSic by Mothers Speed
MEIGS
HIGH
School
homecommg dance Fnday
Immediately followmg Meigs
Ironton game at former
Pomeroy Jun1or H1gh School
Semi formal dress mus1c by
Stone Rose
REVIVAL Mt Monah

and MISS Sheri Wigal
Lexmg ton
Also prese nt were the
honorees famthes mcludmg
Robert Klem Mrs Bill (Kate )__
H•cks Mrs Otis (Phyllis )
Bailey Mr and Mrs Jack

asslstmg SAIJ'URDAY

W1gal and Marty Lexmgton
M dM Cha 1 S th d
r an rs
r es nu an
Deah Lynn Greenwich Mr
dM TdB 1 M h 1
an
rs e a1ey 1c ae
Jm and Christa Dayton Mr
h
and Mrs Lawrence T e•s
Ga111po1IS an d MISS J an r~1 ac k
M
Oh 10 VISillng '" the
anon
afternoon were Mr and Mrs
George Leffler MarlOn

cl=

('

h

SYRACUSE - Mr and Mrs
Carl Hubbard VISited recently
w1th Mr and Mrs W1lham
Whitlock and fam1 ly of
Jacksonville Fla Enroule
there they stopped m Georg1a to
tour the Planta tion House
and spent the mghl m Forysth
They also stopped at Noms
Dam m Tennessee In Florida
they spent a day m St
Augushne and v1s1ted the
Mayport Naval base seemg the
home of
Julia
N1xon
Eisenhower
On the return trtp they spent a
mght m Williamsburg Ky and
viewed Renfr o Valley Ky Mr
Wh1tlock rellred from the
navy was statiOned at Mayport
the !mal few years of h1s duty

Relatives Come

A1r cond ltlonlng

THE AllfENS OOUNTY
SAVINGS Ph.&amp;992LOAN CO.
296 W. Second

Social
Calendar

Church of God startmg 7 30
P m Fnday With the Rev
Gilbert Spencer ' peakmg
YOUTH REVIVAL Columbia
Chapel Chnst1an Church at
Pmnt Rock Oct I 3 7 30 each

P S a1r

68 Ford Galaxie 500............... '1395

Me1os County Branch

810 W Mam

automatic trans

the water A good storage
temperature IS 65 degrees and
lhe wax method IS parhcularly
effecllve w1tn canna gladwh
peruv1an daffodil bulbs
Japanese Sandman was
the theme of arrangements
exhibited at the meelmg Blue
nbbon wmners were Mrs
Denver Holter Mrs Homer
Holter Mrs Thomas Mrs
Fred Nease
Pla~hng sprmg bulbs fer
tihzmg the lawn and pulling
leaves to use as mulch v.ere
among the gardenmg lips for
October
Mrs Thelma Call was a
guest Mrs Don Grueser won
the door prize Devotwns to
open the meetmg were g1ven by
Mrs Chfford Phillips She read
poems on September and had
prayer Refreshments were
served by the hostess

PROSPECT - A fam1ly
dmner was held at the home of
Mr and Mrs 1 lbert Wigal
Prospect OhiO m celebratiOn of
five family birthdays on Sept 26
"1th 30 guests present
,
Celebratmg birthdays were
Mrs Robert ( Phyll1s) Klem
Manon Bill Hicks wooster
OtiS Bailey and LOIS Racme

'hroulfr:ibut uOUt

The Store w1th A Heart
Racme
Q49 3342

Chester 011o

A t rrospect
n
u
llOme

'T'
.1

RACINE FOOD MARKET

GAUL'S MARKET

30 Attend Dinner

UUbba,.,-lS
TT.zszt
rU. V l

USED CARS at

Ohto 's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0

was noted that Barbara Roush
a new member has volunteered
to make cop1es of a letter for
umt members to s1gn regardmg
readmg of the B1ble m space
The letters favoring th1s would
be sent to NASA
Mrs Robert Beegle reported
that the umt 1s quota w1th 82
members ThiS mformat10n has
been for11arded to the Depart
ment chairma n Mrs Bernard
D1ddle served refreslunents
She also brought the traveling
pme won by Mrs Mary Roush

Each member 1s asked to
make a new 1tem for a bazaar
It table These may mclude
Christmas arti cles These l l i
...
.,. bazaar 1tems may be left allhe

1~

Sales All •s Cha lmers Serv1ce
Farm In dustn al Lawn Garden
Tupper s Plains
667 3435

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
and CONSTRUCTION CO.
240 Lincoln St

SYRACUSE - A rummage
sa le w1ll be held by the Women s
Aux1hary of Veterans Memonal
Hospital October 211-23 In tbe
Fry bmldmg m Middleport
Everyone having anythmg to
·de!!ate please notify one of th1s
committee as there Will be pick
up service Jessie White 7425304 Fneda Mossman 992-6366
Mary Pickens 773-5623 Jamce
Damels 992 3838 Ina Massar
667 3401 or Hazwe Snuth New
Haven

*
*,..
It
tt•************** hosp1tal

Paint Plumbing &amp; Electrical Sup
plies
Ph . 949·32/'i . Tuppers Platns
667 396:1"

Q92 2550

f

**

~

RACiNE PLANING MILl
Bulldtng Supplies and Millwork
General Contractmg
Ph 992 3978
.

~

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS -CO.~It

GAUL'S TRAILER
SALES
and
POMEROY ELECTJUC SERVICE
GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN
Electnc Motor Repatr
St Rl 7
Chesler Oh o
Choose the Church of Your Cho1ce

Fridays Only

**
It

1s
en
9 A M to 7 P M
...
)
..,.
( Conhnuously
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3
and s to 7 •s usua l on!:
.,.
Frtdays
..
..
AI!:
.,.

M•ddleport 01to

Federal Reserve System

Re xa ll Drugs
We Fill All Doctors PrescrTpt1ons
992 2955
Pomeroy

BANKING

ItIt

M&amp;RFOODLINER

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
Pomeroy- Member F D 1 C &amp;
SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

10'"

!., The DnveOpIn Wmdow

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

.

RUTLAND

;*

*****

QuiCk! Easy
!* Sale Da1JS Noted
.~~,. " lfsDRIVI!IN
*:

alternating

a m youth meeting, 6 45 p m
church 7 30 p m B1ble study pastor Sunday School 10 a m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Mrs Gertrude Butler supl
Prayer Service 1 30 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN orMchmq serv ice 2 p rrl
IN CHRIST - Elden R Blake
paslor Sunday School lOa m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Wnnle Holsinger supt Mor CHRIST- Sunday school 9 30
ntng sermon 11 a m Evenmg am V H Sraley supt
serv 1ce Chr1st tan Endeavor

*i

.

LYONS MARKET

Lar more pastor

*
I fe It

Elementary School The uml
will serve a luncheon at the
Legwn hall on Oct 10 for those
a t1end1ng the fall diStn c I
conference
Mrs Boyd announced that
August Simmons w1ll be m
Pomeroy Wednesday mght to
show a flhm on cystic fibrosiS
He IS the Oh10 Chapter
representative Showmg of the
f1lm open to the pubhc w1ll
take place at the Pomeroy
Elementary School
The recepl!on honormg Mrs
Mary Marlm Departemental
Chapeau Eight and Fort} on
Sunday at the Middlepor t
Church of ChriSt 2 to 4 P m was
th
announced ll was reported at
Mrs Mrytle Wa)ker and Mrs
Eume Bnnker had attended the
receptwn honor1ng Mrs
Raymond Sloan Deparlment of
OhiO
Amencan
Legwn
Auxiliary president
D
d 1 th
1
•scusse a e mee mg was
the Pearl S Buck Orphanage
Fund A memorial prayer was
g1ven for Mrs Josle Roush It

'J

OHIO VAllEY BAKING CO.

nesday 7 30 p m
each Sunday Class meetong 11
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF a m alternating Sunday
Alfr ed ~ Wolfe
THE NAZARENE - Rev M C m or n tngs

It~

En,oy your own
wlthoul compar ng t wtth It
lhal ot another
It
It--Condorce l :

W1th the hope 11 will m some measure foster and help sustam that wh1ch 1s
good m fam1ly and commumty l1fe th1s feature 1s sponsored by the bus1ness
firms and organ•zat1ons whose names appear below

OOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

sermon 7 30 p m

i**

~n t

FOR TODAy

*It

MARK VSTORE

Wed

**"'*************
.. A THOUGHT lt

."

HEINER'S BAKERY

p m Mrd week ser vtce

The E1ghth DIStnct con
ference held '" Athens next
Thursday was announced when
the American Legion Auxiliary
, of Racme Post met at the hall
Tuesday mght
Mrs Donna M•ller depart
ment of Oh10 first VIce
president w1ll be the guest
speaker Reg1strat10n w1ll begm
at 9 am With the meelmg to
convene at 10 a m at the K T
Crossan Post 21 home Several
members of Racme said they
Will attend the conference
Durmg the meetmg con
dueled by Mrs John Boyd
arrangements were made to
donate a flag to the Letart Falls

y

SALEM CENTER- Worshtp M Wolfe
m Church Schoo l 10 a m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - Sunday School Second and
UMYF Thursday 7 p m
Charles Norns pastor Sunday fourth Satur da y even ngs 8 p
SYRACUSE HUSTER
School 9 30 a m Morntng m ser vtces
Rev Forrest R Donley
worshi p 10 45 a m
Sunday
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
ASBURY - Worsh p 11 a m evenrng worsh tp 7 30 p m
Mr Roberl Wyatl paslor
Churc h Sc hool 9 50 a
m Wedne sday evenrng B bl e
Sunday
School supt Ronald
WSCS lsi Tu~sday
Study 7 30 o m
Bakers of Good Bread
Osborne
Bible School 9 30 a
FOREST RUN -Worsh p9a
Huntmgton W Va
DANVILLE WESLEYAN m preaching 10 45 a m
m
Church School 10 a m
Evenmg
services
7
30
p
m
WSCS 3rd Wednesday 7 30 p Rev Lawren ce Su llt van
paslor Sunday Sc hool 9 30
m
I
HYSELL RUN
FREE
a
MINERSVILLE - Worsh p m youth and tun or youth METHODIST
Cecil
Wise .
serv ce 6 45 p m
evemng
10 a m Church School 9 a m
Paslor
Sunday
School
W5CS 3rd Monday 7 30 p m worshtp 7 30 p m prayer and a m M orning worshtp 109 30
SYRACUE - Worship 8 a pra se Wednesday 7 30 p m a m Young Peoples serv1ce30
M•ddleport 0110
m Church School 9 a m
6 45 p m Evangel1sftc servrce
SILVER
RUN
FREE
BAP
Prayer and Btble Study TIST - Rev Howard Komble 7 30 p m Prayer meehng
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Thursday 7 30 p m
pas.ior Sunday school 10 a m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Henry
Davts
supl4
even
mg
Rev W Dale McClurg
FREEDOM GOSPEL
servrce 7 30 p m Prayer
Pomeroy
Rev Frank Cheesebrew
MISSION
- Bald Knobs Rev • Athens Koao
meel
ng
Thursday
7
30
p
m
Rev Martha Ann Mattner
A Fam•ly That Worsh•ps Together
L R Gluesencamp pastor
APPLE GROVE - Worshtp 8
Roger
Wtlfred
Sr
Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH OF
Sta ys Together
p m 2nd and 4th Sundays
School 5upt Sunday School
Church School 9 30 a m Mtd GOD - Rev Donald A Sheets 9 30. a m Sunday evenmg
Week Servtce Wed nesday B p paslor Sunda y School 9 30 a worship 7 30 Prayer meet1ng
m Worshtp servtce 11 a m
m
Evening service 7 30 Prayer Tuesday 7 30 p m Ernest
BETHANY !Dorcas)
serv
ce and youth servtce Deeter class leader Yough
Worship 9 30 a m
Church
Bakers of Hoi sum Bread
Meellng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Thursday
7 30 p m
School 10 30 a m
Ernes t Deeter leader
Middl eport 011o
CARMEL- Worship 11 a
LANGSVILL E CHRISTIAN
m 1st and 3rd Sundays - Homer Stephens pastor
MT HERMON UNITED
Church School 10 a m
BRETHERN
CHURCH IN
Sunda y School 9 30 a m
EAST LETART - Worshtp 9 morn ng worsh p 10 30 a m CHRIST - Rev Robert Shock
paslor Sunday School 9 30 a
a m I st and Jrd Sundays
Member of the B1g 3
Rober l Bobo Sunday school m
Roy
Pooler
supt
Alfred
Church School 10 a m 1st and supl
Sunday evenrng servtce Wolfe asst supt
General Merchand1 se
morning
3rd Sundays 9 a m 2nd and
7
30
Youth
meel
ng
Monda
y
7
Tuppers Plain s
4th Sundays M d Week Serv•ce
,_\torsh•p 11 a m
evening
667 3280

9a

Welcomed mto membership
were Mrs Don Gl'l!eser Mrs
Stacy Arnold Mrs Robert
Hamm and Mrs Eurana
Thomas New year books were
distributed 'lind state county
and regwnal dues were
collected Mrs Hollon pres1ded
at the meeting whtch had as 1ts
theme Bulbs'
Members answered roll call
w1th the name of their favorite
flowenng bulb Mrs Karl
Grueser m her paper entitled
Pomters on Planting Fall
Bulbs noted that sprmg
flowenng bulbs should be
planted m October so that the
roots can form well before
wmter The plantmg area
should be well drained and
bulbs should be purchased from
a reputable dealer
Mrs Homer Holter s paper
was How to Store Tender
Bulbs for W1nter
She

AthensConferencePlanned

BRADBURY CHURCH OF
REORGANIZED CHURCJI
CHRIST Roy Bill Carter OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT
evangeli St Thurman Carsey TE R DAY SAINTS- Portland
B ble School supt Btble School Ra cme Road Ralph John son
9 30 a m
morn ng worshtp paslor Sunday School 9 30 a

THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH

m

Arrangements to send gar
dening and arrangmg materials
to the Country Fa1r' at the
Southeastern Ohw Mental
Health Center were made
durmg a meeting of the Wild
woQd Garden Club Wednesday
mght at the home of Mrs Henry
Thomas
The counlry fair IS scheduled
for Oct 14 and proceeds are
used to fmance spec1al prOJects
at the hospital
Other features of the meeting
mcluded mstallat10n of officers
for the 1971 72 year and the
acceptance of four new
members
Installed by Mrs Fred Nease
were Mrs Ed1son Hollon,
pres1dent Mrs Denver Holter
v1ce president Mrs David
Nease treasurer and Mrs
Alfred Yeauger secretary
Each one was presen.ted a
corsage

Langsville Dexter
Prayer
meettng 7 30 p m Tuesday
Rev Robert S~arles pa stor

Pleasant Sunday servtces 11
a m Wednesday Teshmon al

meetmg 7 30 p m

•

church sc hool 10 30 a m
young people.., meelmg 6 30

BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHESHIRE'- CHURCH OF
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David GOD OF PROPHECY G P
sludy 7 30 p m Cottage prayer Jewell pastor Bible study 9 30 Sm tih pastor Sunday School
ser viCe Tuesday 10 a m
a m morntng worship 10 30 10 a m Arthur Henson Supt
worshrp servrce Fnday 7 30 eventng worship 7 30 p m Morn1ng Worshtp 11 a m
pm
Wednesday Btble study 7 30 Young Peopl es ser v1ce 7 p m
MA&gt;ON
~H URCH
OF pm
Evening serviCe 7 30 p. m
CHRIST - John Steele pastor
Wednesda y Mtd W..,k Prayer
Worsh p 10 a m B ble study
PLANTS COMMUNITY Serv rce 7 30 p m
11 t 5 a m evemng worshrp
MISSION - Anttqutly Ser meeting 6 30 p m Evenmg
7 30 p m Mrd week serv1ce
v1ces 7 30 p m Thursday and wor.shrp 7 30 p m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sunday even ngs John 0 II
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
I
pastor
NAZARENE
- Rev Herbert
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
Gra te pastor Worshtp ser vtce
GOD - Second St Mason W
11 a m and 7 30 p m Sunday
Va Ches ter Tennant pastor
STIVERSVILLE
COM
Sunday
School 9 30 a m
Sunday sc hool 10 a
m
R1chard Barton supt Prayer
MUNITY
Rev
Edsel
Hart
mormng worsh p 11 a m
pastor Sunday School serv tce roeetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
evangel st c serv ce 7 30 p m
10 a m Prayer llfleetmg each
HARRISONVILLE
PRES
B bte stud y and prayer ser v rce Thursday 7 30 p m Sunday
BYTERIAN - Mrs Norma
Wednesda y 7 30 p m Phone evenmg serv rce 7 30 p m
Lee Sunday Schaap S.11per n
7735133
tendenl Sunda y Schoo.-9 30 a
m Sunda y Serv ce 8 p m Rev
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Max
CHRIST n Chrstan Unton - - Pomeroy H ar n sonv 1lle pastor Donahue M ddleport
Rev 0 Dell Manley pastor Road Kenneth Eberts pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m Roger
Paul
McElroy
Sunday LAUREL CLIFF FREE
Manley supt evening servrce
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 METHODIST - Rev Eugene

10 a m

News, Event

m the area

THE HILAND CHAPEL
George Casto pastor Sunday
School 9 30 evenmp worshtp

HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN - David Slauffer
pastor Stanford Slj&gt;&lt;;kton supt
pm

...

MASOtll COUNTY

M dd l eport 5th and Ma n
Raul n Moyer pastor M chae l

Prayer and Btble Study

Carpenter

evd uge 1:::.

meet ng 7 30 p m Prayer
meeftng Wednesd ay 7 30 P m

CHRIST

GRAHAM UNITED METH Gerlach Sunday School supt
ODIST CHURCH - Preach ng B ble School 9 30 am mar

9 30 a

oct~

730pm

FIRST UNITED PRES Wednesday 7 30 p m
BYT£RIAN Mtddle por i- Rev
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
MT MORIAH CHURtH OF
Russell Lester pastor Sunday Serv ces at 315 Man St
PI
School 9 30 a m Lew s Sauer Pleasant Sunday School 9 15 GOD - Racine Route 2 The
Rev Charles Ha'l'ld pastor
supl
wor sh p se r v ce 10 30 a m Sundays 11 am
Wed
9 45 a m
am
nesday tes t man al meetrng 8 Sunday school

THE SALVATION ARMYEnvoy RayS Wtn ng ofl cer n MI DD LE P 0 R T PEN
cjlarge Sunday 10 a m 'TECOSTAL Th rd Ave the
Hoi ness meet ng 10 30 a m
Sunday School Young People s
L eg 1on 7 p m Thursday 1 to 3
p m Lades Home League 7
p m Preo rlass~s

-.~u

IJ

BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE
- Mtnersvrlle Sunday "School
10 a m
preachmg 11 a m
evenmg worship 7 30 p m MtC:
week prayer servlce Tuesday

to Roush Funeral

evemng Mike Hazelton student
at Kentucky Chnstlan College
leader With regular mlmster
Rev Eugene Underwood

SPAGHETTI SUPPER
begmmng 4 p m Saturday at St
Pa ul s Umted MethodiSt
Church Tuppers Plams adults
$1 25 children 75 cents
D
c
UR D y
AN E SAT
A
begmmng 9 30 p m at Drew
Webster Post 39 American
Legwn home for members and
guests Armand at organ no
charge
TAG DAY by Southern H1gh
Band '" Racme area Saturday
Band concert 9 am beSide
Racme Post Off1ce
SQUARE DANCE Saturday
8 30 p m to m1dmght at
Tuppers Plam s Elementary
schoo1 sponsored by Tupper s
PI
c
t Cl b M
ams ommum y u
USIC
by M1ke Gorrel band caller
J1m Carnahan
TEEN DANCE Saturday
8 30 to II 30 p m at Me•gs
Jumor H1gh Middleport w1th
Jays emceemg school spon
sored

Diary

Officers Named
By Chadeoe HoeHICh

An open house w1ll be held at the Four R1vers G~rl Scout
Council headquarters 1333 Market St Parkersburg W Va
Thursday evemng 7 to 9 p m
All gul scouts leaders committee members as well as the
general public are mv1ted «&gt;lour the Counc1l offiCe and meet the
staff
M1ss Alice McMann executive director and Mrs Robert
Savage recently employed as d1str1ct adv1sor w1ll be mtroduced
at that time Mrs Roger Patton, d!slriCI adVIsor Mrs E E
Sn•der, bookkeeper and regiStrar and Mrs Robert Wamsley
receptiOniSt and typiSt w1ll also be on hand to greet VISitors
The Council serves Athens Me•gs and part of Washmgton
CounUes m Ohio and Pleasant Tyler, Ritchie G\lmer Calhoun
Roane Jackson W1rt and Wood Counties'" West ~lrgliUa
POMEROY BROWNIES 171 - Burlap wall hangmgs of ar
tif1clal greenery and sea shells were completed Wednesday mght
at a meeting of the Pomeroy Brown ~ Mrs Margaret Sheridan
leader and Mrs Wayne SWisher ass1stant leader were assiSted
w11ll the handwork of Mrs Kelt/! Riggs
Plans were made to begm cookmg school on Oct 20 at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electnc Co Games were played and
refreslunents served
SAUSBURY CADETTES 208 - School dresses are bemg
made by members of the Salisbury Cadettes to qualify for their
dressmak;er badges
Last week the g~rls shopped for patterns selected matenals
and assembled the supplies they w1ll need to make their dresses
Last mght Mrs W11liam Ohhnger showed the scouts how to lay the
pattern on llle m~ter1al and cut 1t out
Involved mthe prOJect are Pam and Carla Nottmgham Kelly
W1lson Sandy Curbs and Kim Ohhnger

Mrs Howard.- Nolan was
elected pres)dent of the Hobday
Arts and Crafts Club durmg a
meeting Thursda y at the Book
mob1le headquarters on East
Mam St Pomero}
Other officers named for the
club wh1ch has a membership of
about 20 were Mrs Waype
Swisher v1ce pres1dent Mrs
August P•kkoJa secretary and
M1ss Sharon Buffmgton
correspondmg secretary
Meetmgs were set for the last
Thursday of each month to be
held from 10 a m to 2 p m w1th
a sack lunch at noon Emphasis
of the club w1ll be on creatmg

SEATTLE, Wash {UP!) The Washington State L1q uor
Regula lory Board s members
were Indicted by a grand Jury
Wednesday on charge of
stealing hquor
The Kmg County Grand
Jury Indictment charged all
three members of the
Washington State Liquor
Control Board and a former
board member with grand
larceny
fradulent ap
proprlatlon by a pubhc of
fleer, and using the1r
positions to obtain spwal
privileges

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39 - Troop 39 meeting
Monday mght at Healll Umted Methndlst Church orgamzed mto
patrols
A thought for the day
Leader of Patrol! w1th work on the hosp•tahty badge 1s Judy Amer1can statesman Dame!
Gilkey Terry McDamel IS the ass•stanl leader w1th Janelle Webster sa1d Thank God I
Kelly Lori Kloos and Julie B~ron m tbe patrol
also am an Amencan
Jenn1fer WISe 1s leader and Tracy Burdette her ass•stanl
w•th The Cherokees whose emphasis Will be on fulfilling
reqUirements for the Indian lore badge In that group are Laurel
Spencer Ann Filch Julie Byer1 Jtll Walburn and Kim Payne
The Bombers' w1th patrol work to be on the magic carpet
badge IS composed of Cann Bruley leader Trtna Gibbs assiStant
leader Rhonda Sn1der and Tammy McDamel Debbie Zirkle
Margo Martin, and Tern Zirkle
The fourth patrol The Sewmg Devils will work on the
sewmg badge In the patrol are Valer1e Lew1s leader, Mar1anne
Welsh assiStant leader JUlie Kitchen Angela Martm Marty
Krawsczyn Velvet SWisher and Jom Murray
Velvet Swisher IS lreasurer and Valene Lew1s assistant
treasurer of the lroop The group w11l collect Clark gum wrap
pers to be redeemed for contributions to UNICEF
Mrs Roscoe W1se leader announced that an outing to teach
campmg skills 1s planned for the near future Two tents have been
secured from the Four Rivers Council fo r use m mstruchon

practical useful and decor~t1ve
1terns from discards or Inex·
perlli1ve lteg1S
Teachmg new techmqufll and
shanng 1deas and materials '"
pre planned workshops 1s the
obJective of the club which was
started about a year ago The
club IS at th1s t1111e bemg
reg 1stered w1lh the Slate
l 1brary Serv1ce as a group
bemg sponsored by Meigs
Library ExtensiOn Service
Craft bo.!lJi.s are supplied
through theToca l hbranes
Thursday the group under the
d~rect10n of Mrs
Nolan
prepared wreaths made of
pme cones and other natural
matenals

BOOKS
For Those Who
Love To Read
Woman At The Well
By Dale Evans Rogers

'4 95
A New Song
By Pat Boone

4.95

1

At The

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

STORM DOORS
&amp;WINDOWS

Of Lasting Aluminum

POMEROY TROOP 61 - P&lt;lmeroy Elementary fifth and
s1xth graders are mv1ted to a meetmg of Troop 61 from 3 to 4 30
p m Thursday at the school
At las t rught s meeting the troop d1v1ded mlo patrols and
played a game about badges Completmg badge work were Paige
Sm1th my camera and community safety Cathy Blaettnar pets
s1gn of the star books community safety Jane Sisson Shan
M1lch Anna McKmney and Judy Hall commumty safety
Mrs Thomas Sm1 th IS leader of the troop

Each Window Made
to Your Exact
Opening Size

Order Early so You Can Have the
Full Benefit of Savings on Fuel,

POMEROY BROWNIES - Mrs Thomas Grueser ISleader of
the newly organ1zed Browme Troop at the Pomeroy Elementary
School
ORIENTATION WORKSHOP w1ll be held Wednesday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Eleclr1C Co social room for leaders,
assiStant leaders and comrmtlee members 9 30 to 12 noon From
the Four R1vers Council headquarters will come Browrne, Jurnor
and cadette consultants to mstruct m the all level workshop
CALENDAR ORDERS are due today from scout leaders and
should be telephoned to Mrs W11liam Ohlinger neighborhood
chrunnan

~~

As Well As Comfort

King Builders Supply
' Mtddleport, 0.

992-3748

Great Cars-Great Buys

Class Dines Saturday

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING Sunday at
Hemlock Grove Chnsharr
Apotluck dmner preceded the
Church Basket dmnelf at noon regula r meeting of the Adult
Afternoon program It 30 p m Class of the Pomeroy Nazarene
fealurmg Uhng Brothers Church Saturday evemng
PubliC InVIted
Entertamment followmg the
dmner mcluded smgmg and
MONDAY
B1ble qu1zzes The Rev Clyde
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club Henderson gave grace At
Monday 7 30 p m home of Mrs tendmg were the Rev ~r and
Garen Stansbury All members Mrs Henderson Mr and Mrs
to take an arrangement usmg Eshe Mossman Mr and Mrs
orange and black Mrs John Jerry Colmer Mr and Mrs
Kmcaid Mrs James Titus Raymond Walburn M1 and
Mrs J E Harley hostesses Mrs Harvey Whitlatch and
POMEROY Garden Club 8 children Mr and Mrs Fred
p m Monday mght at the home Pullms and daughter Mrs
of Mrs Harvey VanVranken
Mrs Tracy Whaley will be cohostess
VISIT IN BEVERLY

Madeline Haggy Glenn Me
Clung Mrs Mam1e Smder
Wilham Stephenson Mrs Clyda
Bmg and da ughter Mrs
Paulette Leach and sons Mrs
Ben Brown Mrs Myrtle Durst,
Mrs Gladys G1bson and Mrs
Ruby Erb McClung the adult
Sunday school teacher thanked
the women of the class for the
dmner Raymond Walburn gave
the bened1ct10n

USED CARS
71 cadillac Eldorado Cpe atr .......... '7495
I

~8
GUESTS FOR SUPPER
ALFRED - Saturday eve
nmg supper guests of Mr
and Mrs W1lber Parker and Ed
were hiS brother and family,
Mr and Mrs Edson Parker and
Gary of La Tuna Texas On
Sunday they all attended a
family reumon at the home of
Mr and Mrs Howard Parker
near Chester '

Mr and Mrs Raymond
SALEM CENTER PTA Walburn or Middleport spent
Several out-of town friends Monday 7 30 p m at s~hool several days last week m
and relat1ves were here for the Mrs Ruby Vaughan county Beverly w1th Mr and Mrs
funeral services of Mrs council president, speaker Denms Walburn and four
Richard (Josle) Roush Racme Travelmg pme to be awarded ch1ldren
held at the Ewmg Funeral
Home
Here for the serv1ces were
Mrs Robm Catlett Darrell
Roush Mr and Mrs Don
Roush Mr and Mrs Paul
Roiish Mr and Mrs Rwhard
Br1ggs Bonme Bobby Christy
and R1cky Columbus, Mrs Ins
Owens Janet and Steve
Westerville Mrs Htlda An·
dncks, Monte Roush Qrove
International Association of MathJnJSis
C1ty Mr and Mrs Howard
Roush Mansf~eld Mr and Mrs
and Aerospace W~ers, AFL-CIO
Jon Lott M1chele Mtchael and
LOCAL LODGE NO 598
Glen Belle Vernon Pa Mr
and Mrs
Perry Roush
Sunday, October 3rd will be th e last day of 1971
Greensboro N C Oth ers
Season SPECIAL REDUC ED RA:TE on nde t1ckets
calling at the funeral home
were Mr and Mrs Paul K1mes,
Or you may PAY ONE PRICE-$3 00 per personMrs Frances Packard Vance
and en(oy unlimited ndes from 11 00 am until 9 30
Rood of Athens and Gerald
m
Rood, Letart W Va

Oldsmobile 88 4 Door................ '1795

66 Olds 88 4 Door..... • • .. .. .. •.. .. .. '895

69 Olds 88 Holld~y Coupe, a1r. .. •.. .. • 12695
67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr HT..... . .. .. 11395
67 Pont1ac catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .....'1395
65 Olds 88 4 Door.. .. •.. •.. .. .. .. •.. •.. '495

PARK RESERVED

64 Chev. Statton Wagon ................... 1395

SATURDAY • OCTOBER 2nd

64 Buick Electra 4 Dr. H.T............... '395

UNTIL 5 P.M.

Extra! Extra! Out They Go!

..FAMILY OUTING"

2 New '11 Olds CuUass Rema1nmg

-------------------------·

•

1- 0ids 98 Luxury Sedan- Demo /

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll t.•ke Our Qual ity Way
r
of Domg Bus mess"
992 5342
GMC FINANCit-1 ~
POMEROY
Op~n Even mgs Untll8 00- Ti15 PM Sat

�•

•
l

•

•

•

\

1- The Dally Sentinel Pcmeroy·Middleport Oh10 Ocl&lt;lber 1 1971

CHURCH OF THE NAZ'A
RENE - ModdleDOrt Re v
Audry M 11er IJd:lofOr floyd
Carson supt Sunday school
9 30 a m
Morning
wor
shtp
10 30
am
1umor

socoely 6 30 p m NYPS &lt;&gt; 45

FIRST SOUTHERN Bo\P
TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave
POMEROY TRINII Y- Rev Pomeroy alftltaled wtth S B C
W H Perrin paslor Roy the Rev Fred Hill pastor
Mayer Supt Church school Sunday Sc .... ool 9 30 a m

POMEROY

'il 15a m worsfHp 10 24a m
youth chotr rehearsal Monday

morn ng worshtp 10 30 a m
tu n or soctety 6 30 a m NYPS
6 30 p m Mrs Marv n Burl 6 45 p m Sunday evangelistiC
dtre ctor
sentor
cho tr meet ng 7 30 p m Prayer
rehear sa l 7 30 p m Thursday meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p lf1'

Mrs Paul Nease d rector Alt

MIDDLEPORT

day qu tltmg party for Busy . Bee

Class

Thutsday

at

church

soctal room
PO~EROY

CHURCH OF
THE NAZAREN E - Corner
Un on and Mulberry Rev
Clyde V Hend erson pa stor
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Raymond
Walburn
supl
Morn ng worsh p 10 30 a m
E~n ng serv1ce 7 30 p m M•d
week serv1ce Wednesday 7 30
p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev

Stanley Plattenburg m tn ster
Morn ng prayer and sermon
10 30 a m Holy communiOn
and sermon
ftrst Sundays
10 30 a m Church sc hool
k ndergarten thr ough eighth

grade 10 30 a m
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Mr Hoyt Allen Jr
pastor B ble School 9 30 a m
worsh 1p 10 30
serv ce and

MT MORIAH BAPTIST-

Corner Fourth and Matn

adult worsh ip
peoples

youn~

neel ng both

7 30 p m Sun
day Wednesday
comb 1ned
Btb l e study
and prayer
meet ng 7 30 p m

Middleport Rev Henry L Key

Jr pastor Sunday School 9 30
Arnold Rtchards supt
Mprnmg worship 10 30 a m

a m

JEHQVAH' S WITNE~ES

­

Larry Carnahan pres 1d ng
min sler Sunda y 81ble lecture
9 30 a m Watchtower study

10 30 a m Tuesday B ble
study 7 30 p m Thursday
mm stry school 7 30 p
serv ~ce

m

meet ng 8 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT

CHURCH

of Chnst m Chctsttan Umon-

Lawrence Man ley pastor Mrs
Russell Young

Sunday School

Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Even ng worsh tp

7 30

Wed

nesday prayer m ee t ng 7 30 p
m

Rev W II am Kn ttel pastor
Ronald Dugan Su nday Sc hool
supt
Classes fo r all ages
even n9 serv1ce 8 p m Yo ung
Peoples meet ng and B1ble

SACRI; 0 HEART -

Re v _ Study Fr day 8 p m
Father Bernard Kra 1co v c
paslor
Phone 9922825
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Saturday evenmg Ntass 7 30
p m Sun day Mass 8 and 10
a m Confess ons Saturday 7
7 30 p m

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
- Robert Kuhn pastor George
Sk nner Sunda y School supt
Sunday School 9 30 a m
morn ng worshtp 10 30 a m '

BYF 6 p m

Btble Study

CH URCH -

Corner Ash and

Plum
Mtddleoort
No e l
Herrman pastor Guy Pnddy

Sunday School Supt Saturday

even ng serv ce 7 p m Sunday
Sunday
School 10 a m
even ng worsh p 7 p m

FIRST BAPTI SfCH URCH of

Wednesday 7 p m
chotr M ddlepor t corner of S xth anrt
Palmer Streets Rev Charles
J?racftce Wed B 30 p m
S
mons
pastor
Danny
ST PAUL LUTHERAN - Thompson
Sunday Sc hoo l
Rev Arthur C Lund pastor Superintendent Sunday
Sunday School 9 15 a m church
school for everyone
Charle s Evans Supt worshtp
9
15
a
m
Morntng wor sh p
serv ce
10 JO a m Con
f rmat on class Tuesday 4 15 lO 15 a m
Evenmg serv1ces
Juntor Con
7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
to 5 JO p m
f rmal on class Thursday 6 30 serv ce 7 30 p m Extra youth
to 1 4s p m
-act v t es on Sunday 5 p m tor
all youth up to stxfh grade 6 30

SEVENTH DAY ADVENT

TIST Pom eroy Mulberry
Hgfs Herbert Morgan pastor

Sabbath School Saturday , 2 p

m worshtp 3 15 p m Dorcas
Soc ely lOa m eac h Thursday

for 1un or and sen or h gh
students

CHURCH

OF

m

ftrst and second
Sundays of each month fh 1rd
and fourth Sundays each month
worsh p serv ce at 7 30 p m
Wednesday even ngs at 7 30

Guests of Mr and Mrs
Dorsey Jordan and fam1ly were
Mrs Jordan s uncles and aunts
Mr and Mrs Arthur Mason
Orlando Fla and Mr and
Mrs Calvm Poston Lancaster
Recent v•s•lors at the Jordan
home were thetr cousms Mr
and Mrs Paul Hunsicker and
Dawn Akron
Rev and Mrs Chester
Pickett of Londonderry vuuted
w1th Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers
Mr and Mrs Dale Stansbury
and daughter Mrs Wanda
Oxley were overmght guests of
Mrs Oxley s son m law and
daughter Mr and Mrs Robert
Schm1dl
and
ch ildren
Canonsburg Pa
Mr and Mrs W1lltam
Cheadle and Mrs Metta Fisher
attended the Science Rev1ew
and then called on theu brother
1n law and sister Mr and Mrs
Lawrence
Woodyard
m
Columbus
A R I Ben) Caster of
Charleston W Va was a guest
of h1s brother m law and s•ster
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey and
called on other fmnds and
relatives m the area
Mr and Mrs Robert Mattox
have returned home after
spendmg a week viSitmg
relatives and special events
They attended t oe Science
Rev1ew were guests of h1s
uncle and aunl Mr and Mrs
John Hawkms Sprmgheld
VISited w1th her brother m law
and s1ster Mr and Mrs Edwm
Tague Columbus and atte nded
the Malloy Reumon at
Groveport along w1th other
activities
Mr and Mrs Walter Jordan
VISited with their grandparents
mcludmg Mr , and Mrs Lincoln
Russell Wolfpen Mrs Ava
Gilkey HarrisOnville an~ Mrs
Faye Jordan local
Mr and Mrs Edd1e Jordan
and Clay W1lham who are now
hvmg at Stanton Ky were
guests of the1r parents Mrs
Faye Jordan and Mr and Mrs
L D Cottrill and other relat1ves
Sund~y

7 30 Thursday evenmg prayer
servtce 7 30 p m

'MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts S'tan
Cra1g pastor Sunday school
9 45 a m worsh1p servrce 11
a m trammg uruon 6 Jo•p m
evenrng worship service 7 30
p.m Mrd week prayer serv1ce

p m All Welcome

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Letart Route l the Rev Stan
Cra g pastor Sunda y school
9 30 a m
prayer and Brbl e

"'

guests of Mr and
Mrs D•le Stansbury were Mr
and il{rs Clair Dale Stansbury
JuhH '\nn Clara Mae and
Bobby Joe Groveport Larry
Stansbury, Dale Eugene Turner
and Sus1e Scott Reynoldsburg
Mr and Mrs Jerry Stansbury

MIDWAY

n ng worsh1p 10 30 am
even1ng worship 7 30 p m
prayer serv ce 7 p m Wed
nesday

Eddy Educator s schedule for
October ~th m Me1gs Count)
MONDAY 9-9 30 Rutland
10-11 30 Salem Center
TUESDAY 12 30 3 Pearl
Street 3 15 3 45 M1ddl~t
Library 4-4 30 Gravel H1ll
4 45-.\ 15 Stiver Run 5 30-6
Cash &amp; Carry 6 30-7 30 Laurel
Chff
FRIDAY 9 10 15 Bradbury
10 30-11 30 Central 12 3 S 3rd
Avenue 3 15-4 15 WMPO
NOTE Please return all
overdue books to the book
mob1le or bookmobile office as
soonas possible Anyone havmg
overdue books and not return
mg them w11l not be able to get
anymore books from the book
mob1le until the overdues are
returned

9 30 a m

M ornrng worship

evenrng worshtp

7 30
7 30

Btble study Wednesday
pm

CHURCH

7 30
Wednesday even1ng
prayer meet ng 7 30 p m
Sunday evenrng youth serv rce
6 45 w1th Macy Lou Carter
leader No Tuesday serv.Jce

CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Servtces 315 Ma n St PI

MT UNION BAPTIST Rev Ceetl Cox pastor Sunday
BRADFORD CHURCH OF school Sllf'l Joe S&lt;l\lre Sunday
CHRIST - Cltfford Smtih school
9 45 a m Sunday
m 1mst er Sunday School 9 30 a even ng worshtp 7 30 Wed
rn morntng church 10 30 a nesday prayer and Btble study
Su nday evening serv1ce 7 30 p m
m
7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce 8
TUPP.ERS
PLAINS
P m
CHRISTIAN CHURCH ~ Mr
HOBSON CHRISTUN John Wyatt pastor J S DaviS
UNION - Darrel Doddnll Sunday School supt Sunday
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a school 9 30 a m Morntng
m Annie Mohler supt
Sermon 10 30 a m Evening
Leonard Gilmore ~trst elder se rmon 7 p m

event ng serv1ce 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer meeting
7 30 p m

mornmg worship 11 a m
Evemng serv1ces Tuesday and

Fnday 7 30

LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Robert
Shook paslor Hersc hel Norns
supl Sunday school 9 30 a m
morning sermon 10 30 a m
even1 ng serrrton 7 30 alter
naftng each Sunday Prayer
servtce Wednesday 7 30 p m

Prayer meeting 7 30 p m

alternating Sundays

a m
morn ng worsh p and
10 30 a m
co mmunron
Sunday evenmg youth Chc:tst1an
endeavor 6 30 Worsh1p ser
v 1ces Sunday 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventng prayer

meeltng and Btble study 7 30 p
m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN P ne Grove

the Rev

G II

pastor

W1lltam

Bat ley

supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morn ng worship 10 30 a m
Even tng worship 7 30 p m
Wednesday
Chrt st1an Youth
Crusade 6 30 p m
Prayer
meet ng 7 30 p m Thursday
chotr pract •ce 7 p m

DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST -Den ny Evans

Arthur pastor Norman C W II supt

Combs pastor Sunday School Sunday School 9 30 a

MEIGS COUNTY
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH

9a m

church servtce~ 10 a

m

m

Worsh p se rv ce 10 30 a m..
Chr st an Endeavor Sunday
evenmg

.._.Robert R Card J)rrector

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert R Card
Rev Stanten Smtth

CHESTER- Worshtp 9 15 a
m Church School 10 a m
ENTERPRISE- Worship 9

10 30 a m
youth meehng 6 m Morntng worship 10 30 a
p m eventng serv ce 7 p m
m Sunday eveni ng serv1ce 7
Chr sf an - Workers Cla ss p m
Wednesday even ng
Tuesday 7 30 p m prayer prayer serv ces 7 30 p m
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend Charles Norm
pastor Worship service 9 30 a
a m Chu r ch School 10 a m
KENO CHURCH OF CH RIST m
Sunday School 10 30 a m
FLATWOODS- Worship 11 - Hobart Newell supt Serv ces
a m Church School 10 a m week ly 9 30 am on Sunday
CARLETON CHURCH POMEROY - Worshtp 10 30 Prea ch1 ng f1rst and third Kmgsbury Road
Sund ar.
a m Church Schoo\9 15 a m
Sundays of month by Cl fford School 9 30 a m Ralph Car
UMYF 6 30 p m
Sm th 9 30 a m
supt Worsh p serv ce 10 30 a
ROCK SPRINGS - Worshtp
m an d 7 30 p m alternately
Chu r ch Schoo l 9 a m

UMYF 6 30 p m
Ml DOLE PI:&gt;RT CLUSTER

RACINE FIRST CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE Rev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 a Sunday School 9 30 a m

Chu rc h School 9 30 a
UMYF 7 p m

m

Church School 10 a
UMYF 7 p m

m

Morn ng Worsh1p 10 30 a m
Evenmg warshtp 7 30 p m

RUTLAND- Worsh p 9 15 a Wednesday

m

Sunday School

Super ntendent
Paultne Me
Clm tock pastor Rev Morn s

Prayer meeting
7 30 p m Rev
pastor

Wednesday

Jay Sltles

OLD
DEXTER
CON
GREGATIONAL CH!IRCH Rev Willa rd Dutcher pastor
Mrs Worley Franc ts Sunda y

School Supt Sunda.,.__ School

9 45 a m Church Serv 1ces f1rst
and lhtrd Sundays followmg

S

nJ

Reba and Aaron and Mr and
Mrs Harold Oxley local
Mr and Mrs Chester
Baumgardner and family of
Coshocton VISited w1th her
father Dale Dye and on Sun
day the group JOurneyed to
Thurman
where
they
celebrated Mr Dyes birthday
w1lh an other daughter and
fam ily Mr and Mrs Clyde
Walker and children
Mr and Mrs Ronald Whit Wednesday 8 p m
hngton spent Sunday at
GREAT BEND - Worshtp II
a
m 2nd and 4th Sundays
Ball1more OhiO w1th hiS
Church
School 10 a m
brother and s•ster m law Mr
LETA RT FALLS - Wors htp
and Mrs Leonard Whlttmgton 10 a m Church School 9 a m
MORNING STAR - Wo&lt;Shtp
and family I eonard Wh1t
9 30 a m Church School 10 30
lmgton has been returned home a m
MtdWeek Serv ce
from Umvers1ly Hosp1tal where Wednesday B p m
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship
he was taken for treatment of
II a m I st and 3rd Sundays
lnJUnes suffered 10 a serwus Church School 10 a m
accident at h1s employment
PORTLAND - Worshop 7 30
Mr and Mrs T H Spurlock p m Churc;t&gt; School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - Worsh p 11 a m
Albany Mr and Mrs Reed 2nd
and 4th Sundays Church
Jeffers and Mr and Mrs School 10 a m
WESLEYAN (Ractnel Mendal Jordan were Saturday
W
orshop
evemng guests at the home of School 10 a11 ma m Church
Mr and Mrs Arthur Crabtree
UM YF lor all churches of the
MOVIes of the recent vacahon Southern Cluster 7 30 p m
tr1p taken by the Crabtrees each Sunday at the Youth
Cenler (Oak Grove Road l
along w1th other mtereshng
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
films were shown to the g10up
Rev Jacob Lehman
Rev Standley Brandum
They were JOined for these by
ALFRED -Worshtp 11 a m
Mr and Mrs Carl Crabtree Church School 10 a m Prayer
Russell and Kevm
meet ng Wednesday 7 45 p m
JOPPA - Worship 10 a m
Among those from the area
Chur ch Sc hool 9 a m Prayer
who atte nded the Sc1ence Meel ng Wednesday 8 p m
Rev1ew were Rex and Don
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Cheadle J1mmy Stout B1ff services 9 a m Sunday Schoo l
45 a m Btble study every
Krebs Dorsey Jordan and 9Thvrsday
7 30 p m
Rodney
Murrell Bailey
NORTH BETHEL - Worsh p
Mendal and Dwame Jm dan 11 a m Church School 10 a m
REEOSVILLE - Worshop 8
Mr and Mrs Walter Jordan
p m Church School 10 a m
Mr and Mrs Bob LJtch Mr Praver Meetma Wedne ~fi;w A
and Mrs Clay Jordan and P m
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh p
Barbara Hilbert Cox Mr and
10 a m Church School 9 a m
Mrs R1chard Jeffers Mr and ' TUPPERS PLAINS
Mrs Lavern Jordan and Mr Worshtp 9 a m Church School
10 a m
and Mrs Reed Jeffers

John

H 2H l 2

•
Mont.! y

Fnghtenmg " " 1 •l? You see a p1cture l1 ke th1s
and suddenly you feel you are s1andmg al the edge
of 1 ch 1sm tn the d trk You arc confronted w1th
1he thre 11 of Ihe un known md you don t l1ke 11
Why yo u wonder? Why can 1 men l1ve together

Al:l s

'2 , ~ ] l

•

! e d I}

Rom n
~

12

'i

•
WeU nc J

m pe lce?

;

Rom n

o II

•

IH

1h r J )
Ro
n
XI I1

•

1-r I }
(ornlh n
' I '

•J

s

)
I (or n h n
., 7 1J

We all need th e courage to fa ce the future un
fr ud We need to find and to develop love unde r
st tnd tng 1nd pe 1cc of mmd But to attam our goal
v.e need Fa11h Th 11 help can be fou nd 1n church
On Worldw•dc Communt on Sund &lt;~y-. m•lhons
of men and women wdl un te m one of Chnsl•an1ty s
hols sac r ~rncn ts I here w II be new f tees at thou
s 1nds of tit tr S m@. tn d wome n who have only
rccc 1 tly begun to re 1lt?c \\he re m tn o;; Hope IS to
hCI&lt;Uld

t

Bob fv\oore

Sunday School Supt Sunday
School classes for all ages 9 30
a m

morillnQ worsh tp 10 45

NYPS Sunday

6 30 p m

evangeltsttc servtce Sunday
7 30 p m Mtd &gt;'{eek prayer

meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p n\

Ms s1onery meetrng second
Wednesday 7 30 p m

UNITED FAITH
DENOMINATION -

NON
Rev

Dennls Weaver pastor Sunda y

school 9 30 a m Bob Barber
supt

worship service

10 30

la 'fleader Chr sttan Endeavor
7 30 p m Sunday Roger
Buckley prestdent Prayer
meeltng Wednesday 7 30 p m

Board meet1ng ltrsl Monday
each monlh 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN -Rev
Russe ll Lester pastor Worshtp
"e rvlce 9 a m Sunday SchooL

10 a m

K&amp;CJEWELERS
Keepsake D1amond Rmgs
312 E Mam St
Pomeroy 0

ANTHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992 2550
240 Lmcoln St
M1ddleport

RUTLAND FIRST BAP
TIST - Rev Samuel Jackson

communio n and

devotion s

euMEROY LOWER Llt.HT
CHURCH-Harrisonville Road
t&lt;ev Roy Taylor pastor Henr{
Ebl n Sunday School Sup
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
evenmg worsh tp 7 30 p m

19 30 a m Regular board
meeting 7 30 thtrd Saturday
Pilch m ?nth
THE RUTLAND COM
MUNITY CHURCH -Rev
•
.A:mos T1llls pastor Sunday
School 9 30 a m Worship'
servtce 11 a , m Wednesday
prayer meeting 7 30 p m
Sunday ntght worsh tp 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev Lloyd
D Gnmm Jr pastor Sunda y

Prayer and prasJe serv1ce

School

7 30

p m
Mrs Lyda
Chevalter pres ident Son~
•
Mi
serv1ce an d sermon
8 20
Week prayer meeting Wed
nesday 7 30 p m Mrs Mazie
Holsmqer cla ss leader

Thursday 7 30 p m

9 30 a

m

worshtp 10 30 a m

peopl es servt~e

Morning

Young

6 45 p m
COMMUNITY CHURCH Evangel sttcs~r•1ces 7 30
Dexter - worship
serv tces m Wednesday even ng servrce

Salurday and Sunday 7 30 p m 7 30 P m

I

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE
Phone 992 3481
N Second•Ave
Mtddl eport 0

f/

..

Phone 992 3284

-

Middleport

-

VIUAGEandCUT RAJE
VILLAGE
R.OWER
SHOP
-Racine, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

Middleport
'

POMEROY OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

suggested that after the tops are
dr) they should be put m a dry
a1ry place and dusted w1th
msect1c1de The bulbs should
not be separated until sprmg
she sa1d
How to Succeed w1t h
Chnslmas Cactus was Mrs
Yeauger s top1c She sa1d the
plant should not be put m d1rect
sunlight and should not be
watered heav1ly until the buds
form The cactus may be
started from cuttmgs she sa1d
Flowers smtable for drymg
were exh1b1ted by Mrs Hollon
who showed b1tter sweet okra
pussy willow ~ron weed
celos1a th1stle and dock
Mrs Denver Holter gave a
demonslrahon on how to wax
bulbs for wmter storage She
sa1d that melted paraffm should
be poured mlo heated water and
that bulbs wh1ch have been
washed should be dipped mto

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
WE CREATE VALUES

Stop m and see Ray R1ggs for a
real deal at their new lot at
Chester

69 Ford F250". ". ". "" .... "...... 51895
68 Plymouth ... ...................... 51295

ROYAL OAK PARK

4 Dr

Fam1ly RecreatiOn
Sw1mmmg

3~5

69 atevy Nava II ................. '1595
4 Speed radio P S

Pomeroy

I.

ITUPPER!

4 Dr

0

ll,.,'
~
• at "a'
,
.~

1

949 4551

Racine

·,
I

1

o 0 • 0 I I 0 I 0 I I I.

$1295

2 dr H T

PS P B

65 Ford Mustang .................... '595
63 Ford Thunder Bird.............. '695
63 Oldsmobile Coovertible........ S395
Auto trans
See Ray R1ggs or AI Zeigler

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Rt 2

6 Cyl

t •• I I I 0 I I I • I I

65 Men:ury Monterey .............. .!695

BOWER'S DRIVE·IN
RESTAURANT
Pomer oy,

2 Dr PS PB

68 C«Jrnet

992 57 50

E Mam St

69 Olevy .. .. . ... .. ................ 1595
5

RIGGS BROS.,
INC.
915-4111
0. ·

Located on S Rt 7

Chester, 0

FRIDAY
SQUARE DANCE Fnday
8 30 p m Rutland H1gh School
gymnasmm w1th mustc by
Hill toppers Proceeds towards
new Rutland f1re tr uck
DANCE followmg Southern
H1gh School game 10 to 12
Fnday at Jumor h1gh bUlldmg
sponsored by Band Boosters
MuSic by Mothers Speed
MEIGS
HIGH
School
homecommg dance Fnday
Immediately followmg Meigs
Ironton game at former
Pomeroy Jun1or H1gh School
Semi formal dress mus1c by
Stone Rose
REVIVAL Mt Monah

and MISS Sheri Wigal
Lexmg ton
Also prese nt were the
honorees famthes mcludmg
Robert Klem Mrs Bill (Kate )__
H•cks Mrs Otis (Phyllis )
Bailey Mr and Mrs Jack

asslstmg SAIJ'URDAY

W1gal and Marty Lexmgton
M dM Cha 1 S th d
r an rs
r es nu an
Deah Lynn Greenwich Mr
dM TdB 1 M h 1
an
rs e a1ey 1c ae
Jm and Christa Dayton Mr
h
and Mrs Lawrence T e•s
Ga111po1IS an d MISS J an r~1 ac k
M
Oh 10 VISillng '" the
anon
afternoon were Mr and Mrs
George Leffler MarlOn

cl=

('

h

SYRACUSE - Mr and Mrs
Carl Hubbard VISited recently
w1th Mr and Mrs W1lham
Whitlock and fam1 ly of
Jacksonville Fla Enroule
there they stopped m Georg1a to
tour the Planta tion House
and spent the mghl m Forysth
They also stopped at Noms
Dam m Tennessee In Florida
they spent a day m St
Augushne and v1s1ted the
Mayport Naval base seemg the
home of
Julia
N1xon
Eisenhower
On the return trtp they spent a
mght m Williamsburg Ky and
viewed Renfr o Valley Ky Mr
Wh1tlock rellred from the
navy was statiOned at Mayport
the !mal few years of h1s duty

Relatives Come

A1r cond ltlonlng

THE AllfENS OOUNTY
SAVINGS Ph.&amp;992LOAN CO.
296 W. Second

Social
Calendar

Church of God startmg 7 30
P m Fnday With the Rev
Gilbert Spencer ' peakmg
YOUTH REVIVAL Columbia
Chapel Chnst1an Church at
Pmnt Rock Oct I 3 7 30 each

P S a1r

68 Ford Galaxie 500............... '1395

Me1os County Branch

810 W Mam

automatic trans

the water A good storage
temperature IS 65 degrees and
lhe wax method IS parhcularly
effecllve w1tn canna gladwh
peruv1an daffodil bulbs
Japanese Sandman was
the theme of arrangements
exhibited at the meelmg Blue
nbbon wmners were Mrs
Denver Holter Mrs Homer
Holter Mrs Thomas Mrs
Fred Nease
Pla~hng sprmg bulbs fer
tihzmg the lawn and pulling
leaves to use as mulch v.ere
among the gardenmg lips for
October
Mrs Thelma Call was a
guest Mrs Don Grueser won
the door prize Devotwns to
open the meetmg were g1ven by
Mrs Chfford Phillips She read
poems on September and had
prayer Refreshments were
served by the hostess

PROSPECT - A fam1ly
dmner was held at the home of
Mr and Mrs 1 lbert Wigal
Prospect OhiO m celebratiOn of
five family birthdays on Sept 26
"1th 30 guests present
,
Celebratmg birthdays were
Mrs Robert ( Phyll1s) Klem
Manon Bill Hicks wooster
OtiS Bailey and LOIS Racme

'hroulfr:ibut uOUt

The Store w1th A Heart
Racme
Q49 3342

Chester 011o

A t rrospect
n
u
llOme

'T'
.1

RACINE FOOD MARKET

GAUL'S MARKET

30 Attend Dinner

UUbba,.,-lS
TT.zszt
rU. V l

USED CARS at

Ohto 's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0

was noted that Barbara Roush
a new member has volunteered
to make cop1es of a letter for
umt members to s1gn regardmg
readmg of the B1ble m space
The letters favoring th1s would
be sent to NASA
Mrs Robert Beegle reported
that the umt 1s quota w1th 82
members ThiS mformat10n has
been for11arded to the Depart
ment chairma n Mrs Bernard
D1ddle served refreslunents
She also brought the traveling
pme won by Mrs Mary Roush

Each member 1s asked to
make a new 1tem for a bazaar
It table These may mclude
Christmas arti cles These l l i
...
.,. bazaar 1tems may be left allhe

1~

Sales All •s Cha lmers Serv1ce
Farm In dustn al Lawn Garden
Tupper s Plains
667 3435

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
and CONSTRUCTION CO.
240 Lincoln St

SYRACUSE - A rummage
sa le w1ll be held by the Women s
Aux1hary of Veterans Memonal
Hospital October 211-23 In tbe
Fry bmldmg m Middleport
Everyone having anythmg to
·de!!ate please notify one of th1s
committee as there Will be pick
up service Jessie White 7425304 Fneda Mossman 992-6366
Mary Pickens 773-5623 Jamce
Damels 992 3838 Ina Massar
667 3401 or Hazwe Snuth New
Haven

*
*,..
It
tt•************** hosp1tal

Paint Plumbing &amp; Electrical Sup
plies
Ph . 949·32/'i . Tuppers Platns
667 396:1"

Q92 2550

f

**

~

RACiNE PLANING MILl
Bulldtng Supplies and Millwork
General Contractmg
Ph 992 3978
.

~

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS -CO.~It

GAUL'S TRAILER
SALES
and
POMEROY ELECTJUC SERVICE
GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN
Electnc Motor Repatr
St Rl 7
Chesler Oh o
Choose the Church of Your Cho1ce

Fridays Only

**
It

1s
en
9 A M to 7 P M
...
)
..,.
( Conhnuously
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3
and s to 7 •s usua l on!:
.,.
Frtdays
..
..
AI!:
.,.

M•ddleport 01to

Federal Reserve System

Re xa ll Drugs
We Fill All Doctors PrescrTpt1ons
992 2955
Pomeroy

BANKING

ItIt

M&amp;RFOODLINER

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
Pomeroy- Member F D 1 C &amp;
SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

10'"

!., The DnveOpIn Wmdow

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.

.

RUTLAND

;*

*****

QuiCk! Easy
!* Sale Da1JS Noted
.~~,. " lfsDRIVI!IN
*:

alternating

a m youth meeting, 6 45 p m
church 7 30 p m B1ble study pastor Sunday School 10 a m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Mrs Gertrude Butler supl
Prayer Service 1 30 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN orMchmq serv ice 2 p rrl
IN CHRIST - Elden R Blake
paslor Sunday School lOa m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Wnnle Holsinger supt Mor CHRIST- Sunday school 9 30
ntng sermon 11 a m Evenmg am V H Sraley supt
serv 1ce Chr1st tan Endeavor

*i

.

LYONS MARKET

Lar more pastor

*
I fe It

Elementary School The uml
will serve a luncheon at the
Legwn hall on Oct 10 for those
a t1end1ng the fall diStn c I
conference
Mrs Boyd announced that
August Simmons w1ll be m
Pomeroy Wednesday mght to
show a flhm on cystic fibrosiS
He IS the Oh10 Chapter
representative Showmg of the
f1lm open to the pubhc w1ll
take place at the Pomeroy
Elementary School
The recepl!on honormg Mrs
Mary Marlm Departemental
Chapeau Eight and Fort} on
Sunday at the Middlepor t
Church of ChriSt 2 to 4 P m was
th
announced ll was reported at
Mrs Mrytle Wa)ker and Mrs
Eume Bnnker had attended the
receptwn honor1ng Mrs
Raymond Sloan Deparlment of
OhiO
Amencan
Legwn
Auxiliary president
D
d 1 th
1
•scusse a e mee mg was
the Pearl S Buck Orphanage
Fund A memorial prayer was
g1ven for Mrs Josle Roush It

'J

OHIO VAllEY BAKING CO.

nesday 7 30 p m
each Sunday Class meetong 11
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF a m alternating Sunday
Alfr ed ~ Wolfe
THE NAZARENE - Rev M C m or n tngs

It~

En,oy your own
wlthoul compar ng t wtth It
lhal ot another
It
It--Condorce l :

W1th the hope 11 will m some measure foster and help sustam that wh1ch 1s
good m fam1ly and commumty l1fe th1s feature 1s sponsored by the bus1ness
firms and organ•zat1ons whose names appear below

OOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

sermon 7 30 p m

i**

~n t

FOR TODAy

*It

MARK VSTORE

Wed

**"'*************
.. A THOUGHT lt

."

HEINER'S BAKERY

p m Mrd week ser vtce

The E1ghth DIStnct con
ference held '" Athens next
Thursday was announced when
the American Legion Auxiliary
, of Racme Post met at the hall
Tuesday mght
Mrs Donna M•ller depart
ment of Oh10 first VIce
president w1ll be the guest
speaker Reg1strat10n w1ll begm
at 9 am With the meelmg to
convene at 10 a m at the K T
Crossan Post 21 home Several
members of Racme said they
Will attend the conference
Durmg the meetmg con
dueled by Mrs John Boyd
arrangements were made to
donate a flag to the Letart Falls

y

SALEM CENTER- Worshtp M Wolfe
m Church Schoo l 10 a m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - Sunday School Second and
UMYF Thursday 7 p m
Charles Norns pastor Sunday fourth Satur da y even ngs 8 p
SYRACUSE HUSTER
School 9 30 a m Morntng m ser vtces
Rev Forrest R Donley
worshi p 10 45 a m
Sunday
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
ASBURY - Worsh p 11 a m evenrng worsh tp 7 30 p m
Mr Roberl Wyatl paslor
Churc h Sc hool 9 50 a
m Wedne sday evenrng B bl e
Sunday
School supt Ronald
WSCS lsi Tu~sday
Study 7 30 o m
Bakers of Good Bread
Osborne
Bible School 9 30 a
FOREST RUN -Worsh p9a
Huntmgton W Va
DANVILLE WESLEYAN m preaching 10 45 a m
m
Church School 10 a m
Evenmg
services
7
30
p
m
WSCS 3rd Wednesday 7 30 p Rev Lawren ce Su llt van
paslor Sunday Sc hool 9 30
m
I
HYSELL RUN
FREE
a
MINERSVILLE - Worsh p m youth and tun or youth METHODIST
Cecil
Wise .
serv ce 6 45 p m
evemng
10 a m Church School 9 a m
Paslor
Sunday
School
W5CS 3rd Monday 7 30 p m worshtp 7 30 p m prayer and a m M orning worshtp 109 30
SYRACUE - Worship 8 a pra se Wednesday 7 30 p m a m Young Peoples serv1ce30
M•ddleport 0110
m Church School 9 a m
6 45 p m Evangel1sftc servrce
SILVER
RUN
FREE
BAP
Prayer and Btble Study TIST - Rev Howard Komble 7 30 p m Prayer meehng
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Thursday 7 30 p m
pas.ior Sunday school 10 a m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Henry
Davts
supl4
even
mg
Rev W Dale McClurg
FREEDOM GOSPEL
servrce 7 30 p m Prayer
Pomeroy
Rev Frank Cheesebrew
MISSION
- Bald Knobs Rev • Athens Koao
meel
ng
Thursday
7
30
p
m
Rev Martha Ann Mattner
A Fam•ly That Worsh•ps Together
L R Gluesencamp pastor
APPLE GROVE - Worshtp 8
Roger
Wtlfred
Sr
Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH OF
Sta ys Together
p m 2nd and 4th Sundays
School 5upt Sunday School
Church School 9 30 a m Mtd GOD - Rev Donald A Sheets 9 30. a m Sunday evenmg
Week Servtce Wed nesday B p paslor Sunda y School 9 30 a worship 7 30 Prayer meet1ng
m Worshtp servtce 11 a m
m
Evening service 7 30 Prayer Tuesday 7 30 p m Ernest
BETHANY !Dorcas)
serv
ce and youth servtce Deeter class leader Yough
Worship 9 30 a m
Church
Bakers of Hoi sum Bread
Meellng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Thursday
7 30 p m
School 10 30 a m
Ernes t Deeter leader
Middl eport 011o
CARMEL- Worship 11 a
LANGSVILL E CHRISTIAN
m 1st and 3rd Sundays - Homer Stephens pastor
MT HERMON UNITED
Church School 10 a m
BRETHERN
CHURCH IN
Sunda y School 9 30 a m
EAST LETART - Worshtp 9 morn ng worsh p 10 30 a m CHRIST - Rev Robert Shock
paslor Sunday School 9 30 a
a m I st and Jrd Sundays
Member of the B1g 3
Rober l Bobo Sunday school m
Roy
Pooler
supt
Alfred
Church School 10 a m 1st and supl
Sunday evenrng servtce Wolfe asst supt
General Merchand1 se
morning
3rd Sundays 9 a m 2nd and
7
30
Youth
meel
ng
Monda
y
7
Tuppers Plain s
4th Sundays M d Week Serv•ce
,_\torsh•p 11 a m
evening
667 3280

9a

Welcomed mto membership
were Mrs Don Gl'l!eser Mrs
Stacy Arnold Mrs Robert
Hamm and Mrs Eurana
Thomas New year books were
distributed 'lind state county
and regwnal dues were
collected Mrs Hollon pres1ded
at the meeting whtch had as 1ts
theme Bulbs'
Members answered roll call
w1th the name of their favorite
flowenng bulb Mrs Karl
Grueser m her paper entitled
Pomters on Planting Fall
Bulbs noted that sprmg
flowenng bulbs should be
planted m October so that the
roots can form well before
wmter The plantmg area
should be well drained and
bulbs should be purchased from
a reputable dealer
Mrs Homer Holter s paper
was How to Store Tender
Bulbs for W1nter
She

AthensConferencePlanned

BRADBURY CHURCH OF
REORGANIZED CHURCJI
CHRIST Roy Bill Carter OF JESUS CHRIST OF LAT
evangeli St Thurman Carsey TE R DAY SAINTS- Portland
B ble School supt Btble School Ra cme Road Ralph John son
9 30 a m
morn ng worshtp paslor Sunday School 9 30 a

THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH

m

Arrangements to send gar
dening and arrangmg materials
to the Country Fa1r' at the
Southeastern Ohw Mental
Health Center were made
durmg a meeting of the Wild
woQd Garden Club Wednesday
mght at the home of Mrs Henry
Thomas
The counlry fair IS scheduled
for Oct 14 and proceeds are
used to fmance spec1al prOJects
at the hospital
Other features of the meeting
mcluded mstallat10n of officers
for the 1971 72 year and the
acceptance of four new
members
Installed by Mrs Fred Nease
were Mrs Ed1son Hollon,
pres1dent Mrs Denver Holter
v1ce president Mrs David
Nease treasurer and Mrs
Alfred Yeauger secretary
Each one was presen.ted a
corsage

Langsville Dexter
Prayer
meettng 7 30 p m Tuesday
Rev Robert S~arles pa stor

Pleasant Sunday servtces 11
a m Wednesday Teshmon al

meetmg 7 30 p m

•

church sc hool 10 30 a m
young people.., meelmg 6 30

BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHESHIRE'- CHURCH OF
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David GOD OF PROPHECY G P
sludy 7 30 p m Cottage prayer Jewell pastor Bible study 9 30 Sm tih pastor Sunday School
ser viCe Tuesday 10 a m
a m morntng worship 10 30 10 a m Arthur Henson Supt
worshrp servrce Fnday 7 30 eventng worship 7 30 p m Morn1ng Worshtp 11 a m
pm
Wednesday Btble study 7 30 Young Peopl es ser v1ce 7 p m
MA&gt;ON
~H URCH
OF pm
Evening serviCe 7 30 p. m
CHRIST - John Steele pastor
Wednesda y Mtd W..,k Prayer
Worsh p 10 a m B ble study
PLANTS COMMUNITY Serv rce 7 30 p m
11 t 5 a m evemng worshrp
MISSION - Anttqutly Ser meeting 6 30 p m Evenmg
7 30 p m Mrd week serv1ce
v1ces 7 30 p m Thursday and wor.shrp 7 30 p m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sunday even ngs John 0 II
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
I
pastor
NAZARENE
- Rev Herbert
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
Gra te pastor Worshtp ser vtce
GOD - Second St Mason W
11 a m and 7 30 p m Sunday
Va Ches ter Tennant pastor
STIVERSVILLE
COM
Sunday
School 9 30 a m
Sunday sc hool 10 a
m
R1chard Barton supt Prayer
MUNITY
Rev
Edsel
Hart
mormng worsh p 11 a m
pastor Sunday School serv tce roeetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
evangel st c serv ce 7 30 p m
10 a m Prayer llfleetmg each
HARRISONVILLE
PRES
B bte stud y and prayer ser v rce Thursday 7 30 p m Sunday
BYTERIAN - Mrs Norma
Wednesda y 7 30 p m Phone evenmg serv rce 7 30 p m
Lee Sunday Schaap S.11per n
7735133
tendenl Sunda y Schoo.-9 30 a
m Sunda y Serv ce 8 p m Rev
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Max
CHRIST n Chrstan Unton - - Pomeroy H ar n sonv 1lle pastor Donahue M ddleport
Rev 0 Dell Manley pastor Road Kenneth Eberts pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m Roger
Paul
McElroy
Sunday LAUREL CLIFF FREE
Manley supt evening servrce
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 METHODIST - Rev Eugene

10 a m

News, Event

m the area

THE HILAND CHAPEL
George Casto pastor Sunday
School 9 30 evenmp worshtp

HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN - David Slauffer
pastor Stanford Slj&gt;&lt;;kton supt
pm

...

MASOtll COUNTY

M dd l eport 5th and Ma n
Raul n Moyer pastor M chae l

Prayer and Btble Study

Carpenter

evd uge 1:::.

meet ng 7 30 p m Prayer
meeftng Wednesd ay 7 30 P m

CHRIST

GRAHAM UNITED METH Gerlach Sunday School supt
ODIST CHURCH - Preach ng B ble School 9 30 am mar

9 30 a

oct~

730pm

FIRST UNITED PRES Wednesday 7 30 p m
BYT£RIAN Mtddle por i- Rev
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
MT MORIAH CHURtH OF
Russell Lester pastor Sunday Serv ces at 315 Man St
PI
School 9 30 a m Lew s Sauer Pleasant Sunday School 9 15 GOD - Racine Route 2 The
Rev Charles Ha'l'ld pastor
supl
wor sh p se r v ce 10 30 a m Sundays 11 am
Wed
9 45 a m
am
nesday tes t man al meetrng 8 Sunday school

THE SALVATION ARMYEnvoy RayS Wtn ng ofl cer n MI DD LE P 0 R T PEN
cjlarge Sunday 10 a m 'TECOSTAL Th rd Ave the
Hoi ness meet ng 10 30 a m
Sunday School Young People s
L eg 1on 7 p m Thursday 1 to 3
p m Lades Home League 7
p m Preo rlass~s

-.~u

IJ

BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE
- Mtnersvrlle Sunday "School
10 a m
preachmg 11 a m
evenmg worship 7 30 p m MtC:
week prayer servlce Tuesday

to Roush Funeral

evemng Mike Hazelton student
at Kentucky Chnstlan College
leader With regular mlmster
Rev Eugene Underwood

SPAGHETTI SUPPER
begmmng 4 p m Saturday at St
Pa ul s Umted MethodiSt
Church Tuppers Plams adults
$1 25 children 75 cents
D
c
UR D y
AN E SAT
A
begmmng 9 30 p m at Drew
Webster Post 39 American
Legwn home for members and
guests Armand at organ no
charge
TAG DAY by Southern H1gh
Band '" Racme area Saturday
Band concert 9 am beSide
Racme Post Off1ce
SQUARE DANCE Saturday
8 30 p m to m1dmght at
Tuppers Plam s Elementary
schoo1 sponsored by Tupper s
PI
c
t Cl b M
ams ommum y u
USIC
by M1ke Gorrel band caller
J1m Carnahan
TEEN DANCE Saturday
8 30 to II 30 p m at Me•gs
Jumor H1gh Middleport w1th
Jays emceemg school spon
sored

Diary

Officers Named
By Chadeoe HoeHICh

An open house w1ll be held at the Four R1vers G~rl Scout
Council headquarters 1333 Market St Parkersburg W Va
Thursday evemng 7 to 9 p m
All gul scouts leaders committee members as well as the
general public are mv1ted «&gt;lour the Counc1l offiCe and meet the
staff
M1ss Alice McMann executive director and Mrs Robert
Savage recently employed as d1str1ct adv1sor w1ll be mtroduced
at that time Mrs Roger Patton, d!slriCI adVIsor Mrs E E
Sn•der, bookkeeper and regiStrar and Mrs Robert Wamsley
receptiOniSt and typiSt w1ll also be on hand to greet VISitors
The Council serves Athens Me•gs and part of Washmgton
CounUes m Ohio and Pleasant Tyler, Ritchie G\lmer Calhoun
Roane Jackson W1rt and Wood Counties'" West ~lrgliUa
POMEROY BROWNIES 171 - Burlap wall hangmgs of ar
tif1clal greenery and sea shells were completed Wednesday mght
at a meeting of the Pomeroy Brown ~ Mrs Margaret Sheridan
leader and Mrs Wayne SWisher ass1stant leader were assiSted
w11ll the handwork of Mrs Kelt/! Riggs
Plans were made to begm cookmg school on Oct 20 at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electnc Co Games were played and
refreslunents served
SAUSBURY CADETTES 208 - School dresses are bemg
made by members of the Salisbury Cadettes to qualify for their
dressmak;er badges
Last week the g~rls shopped for patterns selected matenals
and assembled the supplies they w1ll need to make their dresses
Last mght Mrs W11liam Ohhnger showed the scouts how to lay the
pattern on llle m~ter1al and cut 1t out
Involved mthe prOJect are Pam and Carla Nottmgham Kelly
W1lson Sandy Curbs and Kim Ohhnger

Mrs Howard.- Nolan was
elected pres)dent of the Hobday
Arts and Crafts Club durmg a
meeting Thursda y at the Book
mob1le headquarters on East
Mam St Pomero}
Other officers named for the
club wh1ch has a membership of
about 20 were Mrs Waype
Swisher v1ce pres1dent Mrs
August P•kkoJa secretary and
M1ss Sharon Buffmgton
correspondmg secretary
Meetmgs were set for the last
Thursday of each month to be
held from 10 a m to 2 p m w1th
a sack lunch at noon Emphasis
of the club w1ll be on creatmg

SEATTLE, Wash {UP!) The Washington State L1q uor
Regula lory Board s members
were Indicted by a grand Jury
Wednesday on charge of
stealing hquor
The Kmg County Grand
Jury Indictment charged all
three members of the
Washington State Liquor
Control Board and a former
board member with grand
larceny
fradulent ap
proprlatlon by a pubhc of
fleer, and using the1r
positions to obtain spwal
privileges

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39 - Troop 39 meeting
Monday mght at Healll Umted Methndlst Church orgamzed mto
patrols
A thought for the day
Leader of Patrol! w1th work on the hosp•tahty badge 1s Judy Amer1can statesman Dame!
Gilkey Terry McDamel IS the ass•stanl leader w1th Janelle Webster sa1d Thank God I
Kelly Lori Kloos and Julie B~ron m tbe patrol
also am an Amencan
Jenn1fer WISe 1s leader and Tracy Burdette her ass•stanl
w•th The Cherokees whose emphasis Will be on fulfilling
reqUirements for the Indian lore badge In that group are Laurel
Spencer Ann Filch Julie Byer1 Jtll Walburn and Kim Payne
The Bombers' w1th patrol work to be on the magic carpet
badge IS composed of Cann Bruley leader Trtna Gibbs assiStant
leader Rhonda Sn1der and Tammy McDamel Debbie Zirkle
Margo Martin, and Tern Zirkle
The fourth patrol The Sewmg Devils will work on the
sewmg badge In the patrol are Valer1e Lew1s leader, Mar1anne
Welsh assiStant leader JUlie Kitchen Angela Martm Marty
Krawsczyn Velvet SWisher and Jom Murray
Velvet Swisher IS lreasurer and Valene Lew1s assistant
treasurer of the lroop The group w11l collect Clark gum wrap
pers to be redeemed for contributions to UNICEF
Mrs Roscoe W1se leader announced that an outing to teach
campmg skills 1s planned for the near future Two tents have been
secured from the Four Rivers Council fo r use m mstruchon

practical useful and decor~t1ve
1terns from discards or Inex·
perlli1ve lteg1S
Teachmg new techmqufll and
shanng 1deas and materials '"
pre planned workshops 1s the
obJective of the club which was
started about a year ago The
club IS at th1s t1111e bemg
reg 1stered w1lh the Slate
l 1brary Serv1ce as a group
bemg sponsored by Meigs
Library ExtensiOn Service
Craft bo.!lJi.s are supplied
through theToca l hbranes
Thursday the group under the
d~rect10n of Mrs
Nolan
prepared wreaths made of
pme cones and other natural
matenals

BOOKS
For Those Who
Love To Read
Woman At The Well
By Dale Evans Rogers

'4 95
A New Song
By Pat Boone

4.95

1

At The

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

STORM DOORS
&amp;WINDOWS

Of Lasting Aluminum

POMEROY TROOP 61 - P&lt;lmeroy Elementary fifth and
s1xth graders are mv1ted to a meetmg of Troop 61 from 3 to 4 30
p m Thursday at the school
At las t rught s meeting the troop d1v1ded mlo patrols and
played a game about badges Completmg badge work were Paige
Sm1th my camera and community safety Cathy Blaettnar pets
s1gn of the star books community safety Jane Sisson Shan
M1lch Anna McKmney and Judy Hall commumty safety
Mrs Thomas Sm1 th IS leader of the troop

Each Window Made
to Your Exact
Opening Size

Order Early so You Can Have the
Full Benefit of Savings on Fuel,

POMEROY BROWNIES - Mrs Thomas Grueser ISleader of
the newly organ1zed Browme Troop at the Pomeroy Elementary
School
ORIENTATION WORKSHOP w1ll be held Wednesday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Eleclr1C Co social room for leaders,
assiStant leaders and comrmtlee members 9 30 to 12 noon From
the Four R1vers Council headquarters will come Browrne, Jurnor
and cadette consultants to mstruct m the all level workshop
CALENDAR ORDERS are due today from scout leaders and
should be telephoned to Mrs W11liam Ohlinger neighborhood
chrunnan

~~

As Well As Comfort

King Builders Supply
' Mtddleport, 0.

992-3748

Great Cars-Great Buys

Class Dines Saturday

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING Sunday at
Hemlock Grove Chnsharr
Apotluck dmner preceded the
Church Basket dmnelf at noon regula r meeting of the Adult
Afternoon program It 30 p m Class of the Pomeroy Nazarene
fealurmg Uhng Brothers Church Saturday evemng
PubliC InVIted
Entertamment followmg the
dmner mcluded smgmg and
MONDAY
B1ble qu1zzes The Rev Clyde
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club Henderson gave grace At
Monday 7 30 p m home of Mrs tendmg were the Rev ~r and
Garen Stansbury All members Mrs Henderson Mr and Mrs
to take an arrangement usmg Eshe Mossman Mr and Mrs
orange and black Mrs John Jerry Colmer Mr and Mrs
Kmcaid Mrs James Titus Raymond Walburn M1 and
Mrs J E Harley hostesses Mrs Harvey Whitlatch and
POMEROY Garden Club 8 children Mr and Mrs Fred
p m Monday mght at the home Pullms and daughter Mrs
of Mrs Harvey VanVranken
Mrs Tracy Whaley will be cohostess
VISIT IN BEVERLY

Madeline Haggy Glenn Me
Clung Mrs Mam1e Smder
Wilham Stephenson Mrs Clyda
Bmg and da ughter Mrs
Paulette Leach and sons Mrs
Ben Brown Mrs Myrtle Durst,
Mrs Gladys G1bson and Mrs
Ruby Erb McClung the adult
Sunday school teacher thanked
the women of the class for the
dmner Raymond Walburn gave
the bened1ct10n

USED CARS
71 cadillac Eldorado Cpe atr .......... '7495
I

~8
GUESTS FOR SUPPER
ALFRED - Saturday eve
nmg supper guests of Mr
and Mrs W1lber Parker and Ed
were hiS brother and family,
Mr and Mrs Edson Parker and
Gary of La Tuna Texas On
Sunday they all attended a
family reumon at the home of
Mr and Mrs Howard Parker
near Chester '

Mr and Mrs Raymond
SALEM CENTER PTA Walburn or Middleport spent
Several out-of town friends Monday 7 30 p m at s~hool several days last week m
and relat1ves were here for the Mrs Ruby Vaughan county Beverly w1th Mr and Mrs
funeral services of Mrs council president, speaker Denms Walburn and four
Richard (Josle) Roush Racme Travelmg pme to be awarded ch1ldren
held at the Ewmg Funeral
Home
Here for the serv1ces were
Mrs Robm Catlett Darrell
Roush Mr and Mrs Don
Roush Mr and Mrs Paul
Roiish Mr and Mrs Rwhard
Br1ggs Bonme Bobby Christy
and R1cky Columbus, Mrs Ins
Owens Janet and Steve
Westerville Mrs Htlda An·
dncks, Monte Roush Qrove
International Association of MathJnJSis
C1ty Mr and Mrs Howard
Roush Mansf~eld Mr and Mrs
and Aerospace W~ers, AFL-CIO
Jon Lott M1chele Mtchael and
LOCAL LODGE NO 598
Glen Belle Vernon Pa Mr
and Mrs
Perry Roush
Sunday, October 3rd will be th e last day of 1971
Greensboro N C Oth ers
Season SPECIAL REDUC ED RA:TE on nde t1ckets
calling at the funeral home
were Mr and Mrs Paul K1mes,
Or you may PAY ONE PRICE-$3 00 per personMrs Frances Packard Vance
and en(oy unlimited ndes from 11 00 am until 9 30
Rood of Athens and Gerald
m
Rood, Letart W Va

Oldsmobile 88 4 Door................ '1795

66 Olds 88 4 Door..... • • .. .. .. •.. .. .. '895

69 Olds 88 Holld~y Coupe, a1r. .. •.. .. • 12695
67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr HT..... . .. .. 11395
67 Pont1ac catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .....'1395
65 Olds 88 4 Door.. .. •.. •.. .. .. .. •.. •.. '495

PARK RESERVED

64 Chev. Statton Wagon ................... 1395

SATURDAY • OCTOBER 2nd

64 Buick Electra 4 Dr. H.T............... '395

UNTIL 5 P.M.

Extra! Extra! Out They Go!

..FAMILY OUTING"

2 New '11 Olds CuUass Rema1nmg

-------------------------·

•

1- 0ids 98 Luxury Sedan- Demo /

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll t.•ke Our Qual ity Way
r
of Domg Bus mess"
992 5342
GMC FINANCit-1 ~
POMEROY
Op~n Even mgs Untll8 00- Ti15 PM Sat

�I .

---...
-

''
~ --

:. .: .

_ ThetlOily Sentinel , Pomeroy-MiddlcpurUlhio, Oo:Wb&lt;•r l, 197 1

Hint, Hint: Sto'r e Corn,·. Some
... Grain

Seven ·Colleges, 33-High
Schools Entered In Meet
Rio Grande Colle~e will b€
one ·- of 40 high schools and
colleges entered tn the first R10
Grande College Invitational
Cross-Country Meet. The meet
is set for Oct. 16, wi th a noo n
starting time for co llege
competilion .
·
Rio is one of seven colleges·
entered . Others include
Lakeland Community College,
Mt. Vernon Nazarene College ,
Marietta College, Morris
Harvey College, Berea College,

and t;umberland College.
Accordw g to Dr . Bruce
Curtis, nwet dt rec tor. the
college dts tance wtll bt&gt; ftve
m!les oYer th ~" Rio Grande
co ur se. The ht gh - se houl
dts Lanee \\ tll be two mtles.
'rhe Rt o Grande cour se extends a('ross the Slanle y I,

Evans Athlehc and Recreatwn
~'~e ld and ·mcles i.)ne Center.
All but a very small por twn of
th e coutse ts vtstble fr om Lv. ne

.

'

Ce nte r, aud Curtis satd !he
cu ursr IS ~~ blend u£ v;.u·wus
typl'S of tc rra tn tha t !&lt;J rm a
guud cnfss-cuun tr} lt'.sl
In ,1ddi thm tll lhf' ('oileg tate
c ump~:tit i un , lht'n'

\\ Ill

Sooners Face Southern Cal
By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
There may not be a tougher
three weeks of schedulin g on
the entire 1971 college football
· calendar than eighth-ranked
Oklahoma must undertake on
successive weekends, begrn nin g
this saturday at Norman, Okla.
The Sooners, who have
- climbed back in to ,national
prominence afte r a three-year
reburlding program, meet 14thranked · Southern Californra
Saturday, ta ke ,on third-ranked
Texas the following Saturday
and face sixth-ranked Colorado
on Oct. 16. "'
A challenge," says
Sooners' defensive coach ~rry
Lac&lt;IWO!t "Probab ly the brggesl challenge a defensive team
has ever undertaken
';Southern Cal comes rn here
w1th Jrmmy Jones 1quarterback ) and Sam Cunmngham
(fullback). Then we got Texas
and Jim Bertelsen and Eddre
Phihps. When we play Colo&lt;ado
we gotta figure a way to stop
Cliff Branch, Charlte Davis and
John Tarver. I'd say it's got to
be one of the greatest
challenges our players have
ever bee n confronted with. 1
don't remember fa cing so many
potential All-Americans rn my
life."
Other games involvrng the
lop 10 teams Saturday find top-

,.·

SHIRt
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At9- 0ul At5
Use Our Free Parking Lo1

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomerov

ranked Nebraska hostrng Utah
State, second-ranked Mrch1gan
·entertarnrng Navy, Texas pia) rng host to Oregon, fourth ranked Notre Dame e nte rt a in ~
ing M1~h1gan State. [rflh-ran ked
Alabama takm g on MISSl"ippi
at Birrmngham , Ala . Colorado
hoshng Kansas Stille, seventhI'&lt;Jnked Aub'urn enlertmning
Kentucky , ' mnth-ranked Stanford hostmg Duke and lOtllranked Washington v1sitmg
I\l mms.
Lacewell IS feilrful or South ern Cal, whtc h after an openrng
loss to Alabama has scored
successive shutouts m Its l~;~ st
t\\O games agmnst Ri ce and
llhnors.
··Southern Cill has been on
the verge of offenst\'C expl osrons all three Saturdays
they've played thts year ." sa~ .s
Lacewell . " If the) hadn 't
fumbled m ce rta m,situatlUns, it
could have been awesome
You're gonna see some people
when · th ey take the fi eld here
&amp;rturda) . Some real people "
Head coach Chuck Fa1rbanks
concurs with Lacewell's evaluatron of the TroJans. " ] don 't
think we 'II pla y another team
so deep m talent This team
will present a tremendous
challenge to our squad. It will
klke a complete and umfred
effort by our squad and coaches
to win this ga me.
satd
Farrbanks.
Oklah oma, whrc h has scored
85 pmn ts rn tw o games, 1s ra ted
a st x-.p ow t choic e but mus t
count heavli) on Its offense to
produce If Jl ts tu whip the
Trojan:-;. Quarterback Jack
Mlldren cmd running back Greg
Pru itt have bee n outsta ndi ng
fo r the Sooners in th e first two
games . w1th :Vllldrcn ha\ 1ng
scored four toucbdowns and
Pruitt havm g averaged 9 0
yards a carry.
A battle o[ undefea ted teilms

Red -Brand Fence
WE
HAVE
WHAT
YOU NEED

.BARB
and

WOVEN

SUGAR RUN MILLS
"Service For Over 100 Years"
180 Mulbeny 992-2115
Pomeroy

Leadmg BaUers
· National Leaque
G AB R. H. Pet.
Torre. 51 L 16 1634 97 230 .363

be tugh G-a-rr , All
schoo\compeht lon m A. AA and Bckrt. Ch1

AAA . A total of :!3 high schools
are 110\\ t' ntered. Hi gh schoo-l
Lumpet1 tiun beg ms a t 10 a m on
llr t• 16th. Both high sc hool ""d
co ll ege d1v1sion co mpetlll on Is
open to the publlc. •

\\Ill !.&lt;:1 kc placr a t Birn nngllilm
where Alabama mee ts old R1val
M ISS ISSlppt Bot h teams are 3-0,
ill though Ala bama 's vrctorres
have come agamsl much
tougher competi tion. The Rebels wh1pped Alabama soundly
i:l year &lt;.~ go. l;ut the Crimson
T1de 1s a 1:&gt;-pomt choice to
avl' ngt' las t ~ e ar' s se tback
r\ nolhe r old n va lry will be
held at South Bend , Ind .. ~&lt;here
l\ otre D.:une hosts M1 chi gi:l n
Slate F'1ve years ago tillS
!Hatc h was labeled "the greatest college fo otball g"me ever
pla) ed" when the two clu bs,
ra nk ed No. 1 om! 2 in the
f
cuuntr) . ba ttl ed to a memorable !Q-lJJ t1e . Since then the
lnsh have kep t up !her r
tradllhl n of top grade football
wlrrle the Spa rtans have fall en
on hard t11ncs This one still
get.s nat wtwl telens1oTT exposure . hm, ever, r ven though
:Vlicl11gan State is a dec1ded li·
pomt und erdog
Elsew here, Slilndord rs a 15''
pmnl chotce over Duke, Washmgttm IS a 13 1:: poiut fa\' onte
o\'e r llhn OIS, Auburn IS favored
b\ 24 O\'rr Kentucky and
c·olorado. Ne braska. Texas and
'vl1ch1g&lt;:m ar r all pruhtb1t1ve
fa vun les ove r !herr oppone nts

Homemakers
Meet In
Pt. Pleasant

154 639 10 1 219 .343
13 f'S30 80 181 342

Clmn le, Prl 132 522 82 178 .341
HArn, All
139 495 95 162 .327
SJog ll ln, p 1t 138 533 60 170 .319
Jones. NY

136 505 63 161 319

Alou Sr L
149 609 85 192
Brck, Sl L 11'7 640 126 200
Slew b. Mont 162 599 94 186
Amenca n League
G. AB R. H.
Olva . M1n
Mrc r . NY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO·'

.315
.313
311

Pel.

126 A87 73 164 .337
146 52 9 94 175 331

R lnm nd . Sa l

141
157
147
147

P.AUL CARD
Airmail Paul Card, son of
Will iams, At! dnd Bon ds, SF 33
Amcncan League · M e llot_l, Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Ca rd
Ch1 33, Cash, De t and Ja ck son.
of 211 Mulberry · Ave.,
Oak 32 .- Sn11lh. Bos 30 . F
Pomeroy, has . co mpleted
Robm son. Bai t, Petrocelli, eos,
N et ll es , ( lev and K1lle brew, basic training at Lackland
M1n11 28
AFB, Tex., and has been
Runs Batted In
assig ned to Chanute AFB,
NatiOnal League : Torre, Sl. L
137 , Starg ell, P1t t 125, H. IlL, for training in the airAar on, Al l 11 8, Bond s, SF 102; craft equipmen t maintenance
Man lan el, Phil 99
field He is a 1971 graduate of
Amencan l eague : Ki llebrew,
M 1n n 11 9 . F. Rob111son, Ba l199 ; Meigs High SchooL

Officiating

.

PHONE 992-2171
125 E. Main
Pomeroy

Study Opens

PREPARE FOR WINTER NOW!
24': BAMBOO RAKE

Southern in ATHENS - A class dealing
w1th the rules, mecha mes and
• basketball
procedures of
, m
Tomcat W
games will begtn at

Syracuse
News~ Society

Oh1o Unrve rsity'&lt;; Gcover
Center Tuesday, October 5.
Alt hough the co urse rs
desrgned pnmanly for persons
rn
be comrng
interes ted
basketba ll officials, it is open to
all coaches. players, and sports
fa ns of sou theastern Ohio.
Tuesday 's is the first of eight
sessrons from 7 p. m. to 9:30 p.
m. Partrcipants may officiate
rntramural league games if
they WlSh .
Richa rd Woolison, instructor
in healt h, physical educa tion
and recreat ion at Ohio
Unrvers rty, wr ll teach the
course and will be available to
cntrque student perfromances.
Partic rpants successfull y
comple ting the exami na tron
wrll be elrgible for state cerlr[icati on
as
baske tball
referees.
A fee of $25 incl udes an Ohio
H1 gh Scho ol Ath letic Assor Ja tJOn char~e of $7 for
tex ts, the sl&lt;ite cerl!frcalion
test, and mernbt;rshlp dues.
Re •rstratron IS made through
w,:kshcps Offrce, 301 Tupper
Hall. Further in[ormation on
th iS course and a ·baseball
umpiring course being planned
for early next year may be
obtained by calling 594-7201,
E t 'B
X . ' .

I

I

675:2460

PT, PLEASANT, W.VA.

C. H

II: EG. 3 29

REG 1.1 9

77~
11urdw ood hu mlle st ee l r e .nror{ ed
2-l · W1de v.nh 48 IHmdle

131 , 2 ' wrde.•20 lee!h

•

•

Addie 13arton funera l services.

f;

22 GALLON TRASH
CAN ~~

E9

SALE
PRICE

PLASTIC BAG

BUTLER

~

LAWN CLEAN-UP
LEAF BAGS
REG . 1.98

97~
eosl e r

lull

l e oh u~11"ii

o Iosi er,

•

tab

I •

~~~~::.,e ~~~ndq~b~~nagn th~~:,

TRASH CAN LINERS
50 BAG ECONOMY PACK

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MO M
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REG 4.19

~l r o p

holds pl ash( !Jug on rrm
hom e yord or olf,,e H o l ~.h

Greol for

up to 30 gal bog l e5s bqJ

PLASTIC ROOF
CEMENT
NAI URAt
Al UM INUM
f iNISH
TAYL O ~

J33

197

J

PLASTIC ROOF CEMENT

~ ..... JIMMY-PROOF
~)v LOCK
jj
367
REG. 4 49
1

! AYlOR

Opera tio n fr om ouh1de by o key, mSide by nl humb lu r n

34~
Full w,d lh drip cap Ser111 cor~·
cea led olummum hinges A!.ll u~t ob le bot tom e(po nde r with
\l l rl ~l

$WB6p

. lfo. :·.~ 87~

DOOR
(Hw•• :(e]Ui,..
WEATHER
WAil:P'S
STRIPPING. STORM DOOR
KIT
SET
REG. 49t
SALE PRICE ·

187

16 FOOT

37~

DENNIS

357

Mod !I of fl e~lbl e eMiru ded tubbe r.

__._

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-'
' ""ffJ fl?J
)

2 · 7' ~l n yl
I · 3' stnp.

foo rn

und wood

~ lr1p ~

Conlnms

:r ~

plo~ li c

sheel,

I' clear

21'

lrbre mold1 n

DRAFT SEAL
3/ 8-INCH
SALE
PRICE

47~
3[ 4-INCH

SALE

PRICE

\ /2 ' lu'Jh
o b i~

J

36" long w, th r ePioce

v1uyl inil:rl

11~

.27~ ~~2 - 72" )( 36"
plastic sheeh 36'
m o lding a nd
no1ls. Cove rs 2
wrndowt.

POMEROY -CEMENT
BLOCK COMPANY
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

••••••••••••••••••lliill••-•••••••••••111

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GARAGE DOOR SEAL

9 FOOT

TUBE

CAULKING GUN
SALE PRICE

~U~C~

'

0

Ar1 o~pl·all odhesr~e that ln~ls lor
yean I A prochccl buy

by bu tlon

0

8

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SALE PRICE

NIGHT LATCH
REG. 2.59

[S ]

GALLON

pi: ..

fiscally frantic days.
_ -------------- ------------------ · · ------------~---------------Watched the N. Y. Philharmonic play Bartok and,
distracted from the music for a
moment, noted every single one 1
of the 9()-piece symphony lacked ,
any semblance of "long hair" ·
as all classical musicians once
nominally were dubbed : the '
tooters looked like ri ch middleaged bankers , acco untants,
etc.-even YehudiMenuhin; not
even long sideburns !
The gov't is just about ready 1--- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for charter flight swindle in....._ QQ
..
~ ~ ~ .,
dictments ... Harry Markson,
~
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not abandoning boxing : "To the
00
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Z ::!: • u.
best of my knowledge it just
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the last movie to pl&lt;iy Bdwy's
8 ~ 8 g 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 g 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 g 8 ~ 8 ~ g ~ 8 :;: 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 ~8 ~ 8 ~ 8
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Times Square office tower.
More than $100.000,000 worth '
u~
of Coast mansions (recession- 1
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slugged show biz, space execs
~
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Eloshc

w1lh llll.IIOI
24·3 1 4" toll
lod

G1 ~e n Wi ll. b lu( ~

REG 3 ~9

~O W l IE

Mak e

c

HP&lt;w ~ du t~· pi(UI!(

lod mq hand les

~

8

rE

LO MA

fl

PACKAGE
OF 10

.

Mrs. Elizabeth.Memtt visrted
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kay a nd
other relatives of Ashton, W.
Va.
r-Mr. Floyd Grtmm, Don and
Teresa , of Columbus, visited hrs
parents, M"' and Mrs. Melvin
Gnrnm.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Gerald Cowie of
Beaver Falls, Pa., spent a week
with her sister, Mrs. Oma
Hyse ll.
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Phillips
and Michael Miller of Middl eport spent a weekend in .
Logan County, W.Va.
Weekend guests of Mrs. Elva ,
Dailey were Mr. and Mrs. JerrJ
Dailey of Lowell, and Mr . and
Mrs. Wayne Bryson and son of
Newark .
Mrs. Jewel Case and five
children of Columbus spen t a
Sund ay with Mr. and Mrs.
Myron Bess.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Beegle
of Fairborn vis ited Mrs. Myrtle
McBride and attei,ded the ·

PLASTIC

~a · hn,,dle

Bo ll moy be re loined or dead-loc ked

- - - - - -- - - -and Btll Hysell of Columbus.
Mrs. Vena Soulsby and fanuly
of Cleveland spent a few days
wi th Glenna Soulsby.
Spending a recent day with
Mr . and Mrs. Donald Co ttrill
and fam ily were Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Quick of Columbus. ,
Mrs Robert Grmstead and
Vina Rickard of Albany, visited
the former's brother and sisterin-law. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Gnmm .
. Mr. and Mrs. Wayland Lance
of Salem spent a few days with
Mrs. Daisy Roush a nd other
re latrves and fne nds.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kouns of
South Point have purchased and
moved rn to the Ia te Dan Rizer

home.

UTILITY LAWN RAKE

eo~D

orfic ia tm g

NE W. HAVE N - The HalCn
Homemakers met at the home
or Mrs. Ru ssell Maynard rn
Poml Pleasant for their September mee tin g with Mrs.
Harry Vtckers Jr, pres1d1ng.
Mrs Jim Wise, chamnan uf
the Cl lr zenshrp committee. gave
a report on pollulwn Mrs.
David Zrrk le gave the lesson.
·wha t's In Ydu r Shopping
B ;;~ ~ ')" , dt:Jcu.s~wg \'.'hat to look
fur 111 fab n cs, and un what ha nd
tags sa y and what the} mea n.
Ga mes were pla ye d and
pnzes won by Mrs Iva
Ca pe ha rt , Mrs. Harry Vi ckers
.Jr ., Mrs Sadw Warth and Mrs.
SYR ACUSE _ Mrs. R
Jrm Wise. The door prrze w.s
oy
won by Mrs. Emory Ha!·t
Wrnebrenner . Mr. and Mrs.
Refreshmen t.s were served 1u
Wrlhanr Gordoo Wme brenner
.Mrs. Iva C:apehart, Mrs. Jun
and famrly attended recent
Wrse. Mrs. Em ory Hart, Mrs. churc h serv1ces HI the Gu1dmg
Dav id Zirkle, Mrs. Har ry
Star Ad ve nt Ch; rstran Church at
Vickers, Jr., Mrs. Sadie WArth,
Letart, W. Va . They also vrsrted
Mrs. Al Sprouse, and the
" ' th Mrs. J oe H ollms and Mr.
hostess, Mrs. Rusself Maynmd. """ Mrs. Ph rl rp Krnzel of Mt.
The October meetm g will be AI to.
at the home of Mrs. AI Sprouse
Mr. and Mrs Ezra Phillips
in New Have n.
a nd her father. Mr . Walter
Cook, spent a weekend with Mr.
a
nd Mrs. Gilbe rt Donovan and
OPEN TWO EVENINGS
Th e Middleport Public sons or Wellsburg, W. Va . and
Litirary is now open two Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cook
evenings ·a we(•k. Tuesday and ranuly and Mr. and Mrs.
and Thursda y from 6 to 8:30 Cecrl Cook and famrly of East
p.m., ~~·car roll Harper, Li ve rpool. The)' were accompamed by Michael Mrller of
librarian reporl'i.
The evening hours arr in Middleport.
Mrs. Edna Summerfield or
addition to th e ·Monday
'
Long
Bottom , R.oute, spent a
through SatUrday hours of
noon to 5 p.m. On Mondays week' with her daughter and
[rom 1:30 to 2:30p.m. a story son -1n -law, Mt' . a nd Mrs.
hour is being held for pre- Herbert Parker
Spendmg a recenl weekend
sc hool children by Miss Jane
with Mrs Oma Hysell were Mr .
Bailey.
;.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::-:=:-;-;:;.: an d Mrs. Gene Mills and family

I'

,.

On Tuesaay

HACl NE _ Glouster Jr. Hrgll
beat So ul hern .rumor Hi gh tw ice
in 1970. and las t nrght Southern
gl&gt;t 1ts reve nge, dumpmg the
lrttle Tomcats 34-14.
Scorers for Sou the1·n were J .
F. Youn g threeTDs on r uns of 1,
5 and 7 ya rds; Errc Dunning one
on a 10-yard run, and Monk
J en krns a TO on a 45-yard run
Southern Jumor H1 gh IS un defeated so fa r, winnin g 3
s traight. Soutl1ern 's defe nse
wa s thcu· st ronges t point aga1n
last mght
The next ga me will be
Thursdil y, Oct 7, at Wahama at
4 30 p.m .
Gl ouster
0 0 68- 14
Southern
1666 6- 34

.,.

~5

Pitching
(M ilun , ~I L 20 9, Seave r . NY
20 10 , El l iS, P1t1 19 9
Amertcan League : Lol1ch ,
Del 25 14. Bl ue, Oak 24 8 ,
Wood. Ch1 22 13 , M c Nall y. Ba ll
21 5, H unter , Oa k 2111

.

for Convenient Reference

Smith , Bas 96, Mur cer. NY and
Ba nda. Oa k 94

Nat10nal League . Jenk 1ns,
O u ?&lt;1 13 Down•ng . LA and

.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
Al,SO.RAN THOUGIIT
SHE fAS LEADING
LADY
James Mason's surprise
marriage in Switzerland to
Clarissa Kaye startled a rich
divorcee who thought she was '
it. .. The hollering in Shubert .
Alley is Gower Champion and ,
David Merrick. and It's hardly
SATURDAY
close· harmony . .. The Mercer
Flowers"
11 : 30-8, " Belle Starr"
8: 30--13, " Thief"
t
1:
3Q-8, " Love Happy ' ~
(son of Duke) Elllngtons hit the
MONDAY
9: Q0-3, " Return of the Seven"
11
:
30-13, "Stratton Story"
wrong chord .. The guests that'
11 : 20- 3, " Champagne Mur - 7:00- 13, " Love With th e
THURSDAY
Proper Stranger"
ders "
Norway's King Olav so cour9:
OQ-8,
"
Butterfield 8"
9: OQ-3, "Speedway"
11 : 30- 8, " Young Guns · of
11:
30-8,
"
Lisbon"
teously hosted at his own
11
:
JQ-8,
"Ox
Bow
Incident"
Texas"
11 :30-13, " The Sellout"
Chateau Madrid table were his~
11 : JD-13, " Time Travelers" 12: 30-13, " Pat &amp; Mike"
FRIDAY
TUESDAY
and "One Hundred Cries of
bodyguards .. . Franco Uffirelli ~
8:30-3,
"T he
Impa ti en t
8: JQ-13, " The Last Child"
Terror"
Heart''
says there's· a big return ton
11
·
30-13,
"
Nancy
Goes
to
Rio"
SUNDA·y
9:36--8, " Face of Fear"
,
religion, and he's hopping on the
5:00-13, "A G lrl Named 11 : 30-8, "Artie Flight"
11
: 3Q-8, " The lion"
WEDNESDAY
. Tamlkl"
.
c hurchwagon with
" Thel
11
:30-13,
"Vengeance Valley"
7:00-3, "Send Me No
7:30-8, " To Sir With Lo ve"
Execution of Christ" film (his!
9:00-13, "Von Ryan's Exlast was "Brother Sun, Sister'
press"
Moon ,"
another
knee bender) . :uenry Ford's son-inlaw. Johnny Uzielli, sold his St.
Maartens Hotel and is buying a
Ft. Lauderdale motel; Johnny :
and wife expect another baby.'
Hugh O'Brian left his "21" .
table, introduced himself to
Italy's motor magnate, Gianni
Agnelli, sl&lt;iyed dirt-kicking for 1
severa,l minutes and left;
Gianni then turned to his
beautiful companion and asked,
" Who is he?" .. Freda Payne's
seeking publicity because the
American Forces Vietnam
Network banned her "Bring the
Boys Home " coldcake ; the
r..,.. QQ
~
uniformed staff banned it, not
~.
~ o "-o
-~
VI
Q.lt
the Pentagon .. Producer Lore
""
•
E E::lo
o ECJ~
o.._·-o
G.
Nato' s planning a Harlem \
11'1
'"
E? 111:: ~.
~ 0 - t--o_ - ~
c
...
...
Dl.o .~
o~ ""'tl c.r:. e.c....J
version of his running-forever · r.tJ
~ :::.111 ~ ~ tl~
~ ~, L-0 ~~ ~ j
~
Waspish and charming "The : ~
•·
•
~., •· ~
&lt;
.,
c; ..,
... ::!£
).. - c- w
0'11/) - i:: l1l
w - Fantasticks" .It's tough all ·
&lt;l
,.
~
"·~1!
•
•
0 -~o·a..cuo-~c~o•·c:
over : DickCavett'sdowntoone
:5~~ E'E. E~-e~g~g£~:§b8rgr-~
~§~g~ ~
~ -~
gagwriter(DavidUoyd)forhis
:E
TV monolog ues.
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WEEKLY· GUIDE
TO BETTE.R
TV-VIEWING

l1r'Way

For fast money serVtce •• ~

49 1 81 156 31 8
657 94 204 3ll
577 88 177 -307
C~ r ew , Mm
555 80 161 .301
Orrs. KC
].j] soo 65 147 294
May ,C hi
Whil e, NY
HI 524 86 153 .292
11 9 450 64 130 289
Hr t n, Del
Ulnd r Cle 1-11 500 52 144 288
133 469 51 135 288
A lo u, NY
Home Runs
Nat1onal League: Slargetl ,
Pil l 48 , H Aar on. All 47, May ,
Cin 39, Joh nson. Phil 34 ,
Tv r , M1n

Trust Your Home Heat To

992-5186

crops this fall to avoid produc- a clear recommendation that
!ion-punctured prices.
farmers hold what grain they
Local storage pl&lt;lblems' 'may could until the price rebounded.
prevail at harvest time, the deCommercial grain _storage apa1·tn1ent said in a special· , mounts to about 4.8 bllhon bushs4a teme nt. "But there should be els total _capactty. The departgenerally ~ mpl e facililifs, ment estunated that as of July
especially in on-[arm structures 1, about 1.5 b!lhon bushels _of
to store any excess &lt;lf'lhe 1971 gram were held m commercial
• and earlier corn crops carried warehouses or under governover into the 1972 ·marketing ment storage plans. Farm stoyear. "
rage of all grains on the s~ me
' 'Consequen tly,
producers date were_estimated to be JUst
have alternatives available to under 2 b1lhon bushelS.
.
them which they can use to asTo !a). grain storage capactty
sure an orderly marketing of on md1v1dual farms ts not
their grain."
known. But, the departinent
With the,depantment predict- sald. farmers have added subing record corn and grain sorghum harvests thlS fall, prices
'
already have begun to break in
expectation of the huge supply
of feed grains.
The reference to "an orderly,
marketing of their grain " was

By Un i1ed Press International

Voice J
along

sl&lt;i ntially to storage capacity by
building new structures or buying surplus bins. .
Loans for these purchases amounted to $16 million thrugh
Aug. 31 and the tol&lt;il since .Ja nua•·y, 1969, is $106.4 million, the
department said.
The department said there
has been a sharp decline in
grain held under loan during
the past three years, and stor age faci lities therefore are not
burdened with holdover crops.
A similar decrease in soybean
storage makes additional space
available for a bout 225 million
bushels of grain.

WASHINGTON (UPl i - '!'he
Agncutture Department, while
nurmaking the recommendation
ln so many words, has strongly Implied tho! farmers should
consider storing some of their
bumper corn and grain sorghum

J

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Frankovich's "Stand Up and Be
_________-_:_:,.:_:_:__ ____________ - - - - _ :._:_ :_:_ _______ j
Counted," has a running role in ---1";--Rock Hudson's "McMillan &amp; .
M
Wife" TV series, co-stars nights
1"'4
on'stage with Phil Silvers in "A
Funny Thing," and betimes, is
all over TV commercials.
The Burt Bacharachs moved
into the sky-high Excelsior at
2nd Ave. &amp; 57th ; if Burt needs a
cup of lyrics any late nigfit,
brilliant Carolyn Leigh lives in
the same cloud-tickler . . .Dong
Kingman's one-man show at the
Hammer Galleries was half
sold-out a week in advance ... Woody Allen has no,
time to b€ a sex symbol: In siX'
mont!Is he's written two films, a
TV special, a p)ay. several
essays, his new book just was
published; and Wed. nights he
plays clarinet at J immy
Weston's jazz emporium .

LISTEN TO
20th CENTURY
EFORMATION.HOU

Mon•.thru Fri.
9:30AM
THE
1"360-0N.
PIAL .
.WMO.w.-v
V •.
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_ ThetlOily Sentinel , Pomeroy-MiddlcpurUlhio, Oo:Wb&lt;•r l, 197 1

Hint, Hint: Sto'r e Corn,·. Some
... Grain

Seven ·Colleges, 33-High
Schools Entered In Meet
Rio Grande Colle~e will b€
one ·- of 40 high schools and
colleges entered tn the first R10
Grande College Invitational
Cross-Country Meet. The meet
is set for Oct. 16, wi th a noo n
starting time for co llege
competilion .
·
Rio is one of seven colleges·
entered . Others include
Lakeland Community College,
Mt. Vernon Nazarene College ,
Marietta College, Morris
Harvey College, Berea College,

and t;umberland College.
Accordw g to Dr . Bruce
Curtis, nwet dt rec tor. the
college dts tance wtll bt&gt; ftve
m!les oYer th ~" Rio Grande
co ur se. The ht gh - se houl
dts Lanee \\ tll be two mtles.
'rhe Rt o Grande cour se extends a('ross the Slanle y I,

Evans Athlehc and Recreatwn
~'~e ld and ·mcles i.)ne Center.
All but a very small por twn of
th e coutse ts vtstble fr om Lv. ne

.

'

Ce nte r, aud Curtis satd !he
cu ursr IS ~~ blend u£ v;.u·wus
typl'S of tc rra tn tha t !&lt;J rm a
guud cnfss-cuun tr} lt'.sl
In ,1ddi thm tll lhf' ('oileg tate
c ump~:tit i un , lht'n'

\\ Ill

Sooners Face Southern Cal
By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
There may not be a tougher
three weeks of schedulin g on
the entire 1971 college football
· calendar than eighth-ranked
Oklahoma must undertake on
successive weekends, begrn nin g
this saturday at Norman, Okla.
The Sooners, who have
- climbed back in to ,national
prominence afte r a three-year
reburlding program, meet 14thranked · Southern Californra
Saturday, ta ke ,on third-ranked
Texas the following Saturday
and face sixth-ranked Colorado
on Oct. 16. "'
A challenge," says
Sooners' defensive coach ~rry
Lac&lt;IWO!t "Probab ly the brggesl challenge a defensive team
has ever undertaken
';Southern Cal comes rn here
w1th Jrmmy Jones 1quarterback ) and Sam Cunmngham
(fullback). Then we got Texas
and Jim Bertelsen and Eddre
Phihps. When we play Colo&lt;ado
we gotta figure a way to stop
Cliff Branch, Charlte Davis and
John Tarver. I'd say it's got to
be one of the greatest
challenges our players have
ever bee n confronted with. 1
don't remember fa cing so many
potential All-Americans rn my
life."
Other games involvrng the
lop 10 teams Saturday find top-

,.·

SHIRt
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At9- 0ul At5
Use Our Free Parking Lo1

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomerov

ranked Nebraska hostrng Utah
State, second-ranked Mrch1gan
·entertarnrng Navy, Texas pia) rng host to Oregon, fourth ranked Notre Dame e nte rt a in ~
ing M1~h1gan State. [rflh-ran ked
Alabama takm g on MISSl"ippi
at Birrmngham , Ala . Colorado
hoshng Kansas Stille, seventhI'&lt;Jnked Aub'urn enlertmning
Kentucky , ' mnth-ranked Stanford hostmg Duke and lOtllranked Washington v1sitmg
I\l mms.
Lacewell IS feilrful or South ern Cal, whtc h after an openrng
loss to Alabama has scored
successive shutouts m Its l~;~ st
t\\O games agmnst Ri ce and
llhnors.
··Southern Cill has been on
the verge of offenst\'C expl osrons all three Saturdays
they've played thts year ." sa~ .s
Lacewell . " If the) hadn 't
fumbled m ce rta m,situatlUns, it
could have been awesome
You're gonna see some people
when · th ey take the fi eld here
&amp;rturda) . Some real people "
Head coach Chuck Fa1rbanks
concurs with Lacewell's evaluatron of the TroJans. " ] don 't
think we 'II pla y another team
so deep m talent This team
will present a tremendous
challenge to our squad. It will
klke a complete and umfred
effort by our squad and coaches
to win this ga me.
satd
Farrbanks.
Oklah oma, whrc h has scored
85 pmn ts rn tw o games, 1s ra ted
a st x-.p ow t choic e but mus t
count heavli) on Its offense to
produce If Jl ts tu whip the
Trojan:-;. Quarterback Jack
Mlldren cmd running back Greg
Pru itt have bee n outsta ndi ng
fo r the Sooners in th e first two
games . w1th :Vllldrcn ha\ 1ng
scored four toucbdowns and
Pruitt havm g averaged 9 0
yards a carry.
A battle o[ undefea ted teilms

Red -Brand Fence
WE
HAVE
WHAT
YOU NEED

.BARB
and

WOVEN

SUGAR RUN MILLS
"Service For Over 100 Years"
180 Mulbeny 992-2115
Pomeroy

Leadmg BaUers
· National Leaque
G AB R. H. Pet.
Torre. 51 L 16 1634 97 230 .363

be tugh G-a-rr , All
schoo\compeht lon m A. AA and Bckrt. Ch1

AAA . A total of :!3 high schools
are 110\\ t' ntered. Hi gh schoo-l
Lumpet1 tiun beg ms a t 10 a m on
llr t• 16th. Both high sc hool ""d
co ll ege d1v1sion co mpetlll on Is
open to the publlc. •

\\Ill !.&lt;:1 kc placr a t Birn nngllilm
where Alabama mee ts old R1val
M ISS ISSlppt Bot h teams are 3-0,
ill though Ala bama 's vrctorres
have come agamsl much
tougher competi tion. The Rebels wh1pped Alabama soundly
i:l year &lt;.~ go. l;ut the Crimson
T1de 1s a 1:&gt;-pomt choice to
avl' ngt' las t ~ e ar' s se tback
r\ nolhe r old n va lry will be
held at South Bend , Ind .. ~&lt;here
l\ otre D.:une hosts M1 chi gi:l n
Slate F'1ve years ago tillS
!Hatc h was labeled "the greatest college fo otball g"me ever
pla) ed" when the two clu bs,
ra nk ed No. 1 om! 2 in the
f
cuuntr) . ba ttl ed to a memorable !Q-lJJ t1e . Since then the
lnsh have kep t up !her r
tradllhl n of top grade football
wlrrle the Spa rtans have fall en
on hard t11ncs This one still
get.s nat wtwl telens1oTT exposure . hm, ever, r ven though
:Vlicl11gan State is a dec1ded li·
pomt und erdog
Elsew here, Slilndord rs a 15''
pmnl chotce over Duke, Washmgttm IS a 13 1:: poiut fa\' onte
o\'e r llhn OIS, Auburn IS favored
b\ 24 O\'rr Kentucky and
c·olorado. Ne braska. Texas and
'vl1ch1g&lt;:m ar r all pruhtb1t1ve
fa vun les ove r !herr oppone nts

Homemakers
Meet In
Pt. Pleasant

154 639 10 1 219 .343
13 f'S30 80 181 342

Clmn le, Prl 132 522 82 178 .341
HArn, All
139 495 95 162 .327
SJog ll ln, p 1t 138 533 60 170 .319
Jones. NY

136 505 63 161 319

Alou Sr L
149 609 85 192
Brck, Sl L 11'7 640 126 200
Slew b. Mont 162 599 94 186
Amenca n League
G. AB R. H.
Olva . M1n
Mrc r . NY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO·'

.315
.313
311

Pel.

126 A87 73 164 .337
146 52 9 94 175 331

R lnm nd . Sa l

141
157
147
147

P.AUL CARD
Airmail Paul Card, son of
Will iams, At! dnd Bon ds, SF 33
Amcncan League · M e llot_l, Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Ca rd
Ch1 33, Cash, De t and Ja ck son.
of 211 Mulberry · Ave.,
Oak 32 .- Sn11lh. Bos 30 . F
Pomeroy, has . co mpleted
Robm son. Bai t, Petrocelli, eos,
N et ll es , ( lev and K1lle brew, basic training at Lackland
M1n11 28
AFB, Tex., and has been
Runs Batted In
assig ned to Chanute AFB,
NatiOnal League : Torre, Sl. L
137 , Starg ell, P1t t 125, H. IlL, for training in the airAar on, Al l 11 8, Bond s, SF 102; craft equipmen t maintenance
Man lan el, Phil 99
field He is a 1971 graduate of
Amencan l eague : Ki llebrew,
M 1n n 11 9 . F. Rob111son, Ba l199 ; Meigs High SchooL

Officiating

.

PHONE 992-2171
125 E. Main
Pomeroy

Study Opens

PREPARE FOR WINTER NOW!
24': BAMBOO RAKE

Southern in ATHENS - A class dealing
w1th the rules, mecha mes and
• basketball
procedures of
, m
Tomcat W
games will begtn at

Syracuse
News~ Society

Oh1o Unrve rsity'&lt;; Gcover
Center Tuesday, October 5.
Alt hough the co urse rs
desrgned pnmanly for persons
rn
be comrng
interes ted
basketba ll officials, it is open to
all coaches. players, and sports
fa ns of sou theastern Ohio.
Tuesday 's is the first of eight
sessrons from 7 p. m. to 9:30 p.
m. Partrcipants may officiate
rntramural league games if
they WlSh .
Richa rd Woolison, instructor
in healt h, physical educa tion
and recreat ion at Ohio
Unrvers rty, wr ll teach the
course and will be available to
cntrque student perfromances.
Partic rpants successfull y
comple ting the exami na tron
wrll be elrgible for state cerlr[icati on
as
baske tball
referees.
A fee of $25 incl udes an Ohio
H1 gh Scho ol Ath letic Assor Ja tJOn char~e of $7 for
tex ts, the sl&lt;ite cerl!frcalion
test, and mernbt;rshlp dues.
Re •rstratron IS made through
w,:kshcps Offrce, 301 Tupper
Hall. Further in[ormation on
th iS course and a ·baseball
umpiring course being planned
for early next year may be
obtained by calling 594-7201,
E t 'B
X . ' .

I

I

675:2460

PT, PLEASANT, W.VA.

C. H

II: EG. 3 29

REG 1.1 9

77~
11urdw ood hu mlle st ee l r e .nror{ ed
2-l · W1de v.nh 48 IHmdle

131 , 2 ' wrde.•20 lee!h

•

•

Addie 13arton funera l services.

f;

22 GALLON TRASH
CAN ~~

E9

SALE
PRICE

PLASTIC BAG

BUTLER

~

LAWN CLEAN-UP
LEAF BAGS
REG . 1.98

97~
eosl e r

lull

l e oh u~11"ii

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~~~~::.,e ~~~ndq~b~~nagn th~~:,

TRASH CAN LINERS
50 BAG ECONOMY PACK

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REG 4.19

~l r o p

holds pl ash( !Jug on rrm
hom e yord or olf,,e H o l ~.h

Greol for

up to 30 gal bog l e5s bqJ

PLASTIC ROOF
CEMENT
NAI URAt
Al UM INUM
f iNISH
TAYL O ~

J33

197

J

PLASTIC ROOF CEMENT

~ ..... JIMMY-PROOF
~)v LOCK
jj
367
REG. 4 49
1

! AYlOR

Opera tio n fr om ouh1de by o key, mSide by nl humb lu r n

34~
Full w,d lh drip cap Ser111 cor~·
cea led olummum hinges A!.ll u~t ob le bot tom e(po nde r with
\l l rl ~l

$WB6p

. lfo. :·.~ 87~

DOOR
(Hw•• :(e]Ui,..
WEATHER
WAil:P'S
STRIPPING. STORM DOOR
KIT
SET
REG. 49t
SALE PRICE ·

187

16 FOOT

37~

DENNIS

357

Mod !I of fl e~lbl e eMiru ded tubbe r.

__._

_,
-'
' ""ffJ fl?J
)

2 · 7' ~l n yl
I · 3' stnp.

foo rn

und wood

~ lr1p ~

Conlnms

:r ~

plo~ li c

sheel,

I' clear

21'

lrbre mold1 n

DRAFT SEAL
3/ 8-INCH
SALE
PRICE

47~
3[ 4-INCH

SALE

PRICE

\ /2 ' lu'Jh
o b i~

J

36" long w, th r ePioce

v1uyl inil:rl

11~

.27~ ~~2 - 72" )( 36"
plastic sheeh 36'
m o lding a nd
no1ls. Cove rs 2
wrndowt.

POMEROY -CEMENT
BLOCK COMPANY
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

••••••••••••••••••lliill••-•••••••••••111

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GARAGE DOOR SEAL

9 FOOT

TUBE

CAULKING GUN
SALE PRICE

~U~C~

'

0

Ar1 o~pl·all odhesr~e that ln~ls lor
yean I A prochccl buy

by bu tlon

0

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NIGHT LATCH
REG. 2.59

[S ]

GALLON

pi: ..

fiscally frantic days.
_ -------------- ------------------ · · ------------~---------------Watched the N. Y. Philharmonic play Bartok and,
distracted from the music for a
moment, noted every single one 1
of the 9()-piece symphony lacked ,
any semblance of "long hair" ·
as all classical musicians once
nominally were dubbed : the '
tooters looked like ri ch middleaged bankers , acco untants,
etc.-even YehudiMenuhin; not
even long sideburns !
The gov't is just about ready 1--- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for charter flight swindle in....._ QQ
..
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dictments ... Harry Markson,
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not abandoning boxing : "To the
00
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Z ::!: • u.
best of my knowledge it just
~
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W~&gt; C) 1 I
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the last movie to pl&lt;iy Bdwy's
8 ~ 8 g 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 g 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 g 8 ~ 8 ~ g ~ 8 :;: 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 ~ 8 ~8 ~ 8 ~ 8
Criterion Theatre : it then
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PACKAGE
OF 10

.

Mrs. Elizabeth.Memtt visrted
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kay a nd
other relatives of Ashton, W.
Va.
r-Mr. Floyd Grtmm, Don and
Teresa , of Columbus, visited hrs
parents, M"' and Mrs. Melvin
Gnrnm.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Gerald Cowie of
Beaver Falls, Pa., spent a week
with her sister, Mrs. Oma
Hyse ll.
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Phillips
and Michael Miller of Middl eport spent a weekend in .
Logan County, W.Va.
Weekend guests of Mrs. Elva ,
Dailey were Mr. and Mrs. JerrJ
Dailey of Lowell, and Mr . and
Mrs. Wayne Bryson and son of
Newark .
Mrs. Jewel Case and five
children of Columbus spen t a
Sund ay with Mr. and Mrs.
Myron Bess.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Beegle
of Fairborn vis ited Mrs. Myrtle
McBride and attei,ded the ·

PLASTIC

~a · hn,,dle

Bo ll moy be re loined or dead-loc ked

- - - - - -- - - -and Btll Hysell of Columbus.
Mrs. Vena Soulsby and fanuly
of Cleveland spent a few days
wi th Glenna Soulsby.
Spending a recent day with
Mr . and Mrs. Donald Co ttrill
and fam ily were Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Quick of Columbus. ,
Mrs Robert Grmstead and
Vina Rickard of Albany, visited
the former's brother and sisterin-law. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Gnmm .
. Mr. and Mrs. Wayland Lance
of Salem spent a few days with
Mrs. Daisy Roush a nd other
re latrves and fne nds.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kouns of
South Point have purchased and
moved rn to the Ia te Dan Rizer

home.

UTILITY LAWN RAKE

eo~D

orfic ia tm g

NE W. HAVE N - The HalCn
Homemakers met at the home
or Mrs. Ru ssell Maynard rn
Poml Pleasant for their September mee tin g with Mrs.
Harry Vtckers Jr, pres1d1ng.
Mrs Jim Wise, chamnan uf
the Cl lr zenshrp committee. gave
a report on pollulwn Mrs.
David Zrrk le gave the lesson.
·wha t's In Ydu r Shopping
B ;;~ ~ ')" , dt:Jcu.s~wg \'.'hat to look
fur 111 fab n cs, and un what ha nd
tags sa y and what the} mea n.
Ga mes were pla ye d and
pnzes won by Mrs Iva
Ca pe ha rt , Mrs. Harry Vi ckers
.Jr ., Mrs Sadw Warth and Mrs.
SYR ACUSE _ Mrs. R
Jrm Wise. The door prrze w.s
oy
won by Mrs. Emory Ha!·t
Wrnebrenner . Mr. and Mrs.
Refreshmen t.s were served 1u
Wrlhanr Gordoo Wme brenner
.Mrs. Iva C:apehart, Mrs. Jun
and famrly attended recent
Wrse. Mrs. Em ory Hart, Mrs. churc h serv1ces HI the Gu1dmg
Dav id Zirkle, Mrs. Har ry
Star Ad ve nt Ch; rstran Church at
Vickers, Jr., Mrs. Sadie WArth,
Letart, W. Va . They also vrsrted
Mrs. Al Sprouse, and the
" ' th Mrs. J oe H ollms and Mr.
hostess, Mrs. Rusself Maynmd. """ Mrs. Ph rl rp Krnzel of Mt.
The October meetm g will be AI to.
at the home of Mrs. AI Sprouse
Mr. and Mrs Ezra Phillips
in New Have n.
a nd her father. Mr . Walter
Cook, spent a weekend with Mr.
a
nd Mrs. Gilbe rt Donovan and
OPEN TWO EVENINGS
Th e Middleport Public sons or Wellsburg, W. Va . and
Litirary is now open two Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cook
evenings ·a we(•k. Tuesday and ranuly and Mr. and Mrs.
and Thursda y from 6 to 8:30 Cecrl Cook and famrly of East
p.m., ~~·car roll Harper, Li ve rpool. The)' were accompamed by Michael Mrller of
librarian reporl'i.
The evening hours arr in Middleport.
Mrs. Edna Summerfield or
addition to th e ·Monday
'
Long
Bottom , R.oute, spent a
through SatUrday hours of
noon to 5 p.m. On Mondays week' with her daughter and
[rom 1:30 to 2:30p.m. a story son -1n -law, Mt' . a nd Mrs.
hour is being held for pre- Herbert Parker
Spendmg a recenl weekend
sc hool children by Miss Jane
with Mrs Oma Hysell were Mr .
Bailey.
;.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::-:=:-;-;:;.: an d Mrs. Gene Mills and family

I'

,.

On Tuesaay

HACl NE _ Glouster Jr. Hrgll
beat So ul hern .rumor Hi gh tw ice
in 1970. and las t nrght Southern
gl&gt;t 1ts reve nge, dumpmg the
lrttle Tomcats 34-14.
Scorers for Sou the1·n were J .
F. Youn g threeTDs on r uns of 1,
5 and 7 ya rds; Errc Dunning one
on a 10-yard run, and Monk
J en krns a TO on a 45-yard run
Southern Jumor H1 gh IS un defeated so fa r, winnin g 3
s traight. Soutl1ern 's defe nse
wa s thcu· st ronges t point aga1n
last mght
The next ga me will be
Thursdil y, Oct 7, at Wahama at
4 30 p.m .
Gl ouster
0 0 68- 14
Southern
1666 6- 34

.,.

~5

Pitching
(M ilun , ~I L 20 9, Seave r . NY
20 10 , El l iS, P1t1 19 9
Amertcan League : Lol1ch ,
Del 25 14. Bl ue, Oak 24 8 ,
Wood. Ch1 22 13 , M c Nall y. Ba ll
21 5, H unter , Oa k 2111

.

for Convenient Reference

Smith , Bas 96, Mur cer. NY and
Ba nda. Oa k 94

Nat10nal League . Jenk 1ns,
O u ?&lt;1 13 Down•ng . LA and

.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
Al,SO.RAN THOUGIIT
SHE fAS LEADING
LADY
James Mason's surprise
marriage in Switzerland to
Clarissa Kaye startled a rich
divorcee who thought she was '
it. .. The hollering in Shubert .
Alley is Gower Champion and ,
David Merrick. and It's hardly
SATURDAY
close· harmony . .. The Mercer
Flowers"
11 : 30-8, " Belle Starr"
8: 30--13, " Thief"
t
1:
3Q-8, " Love Happy ' ~
(son of Duke) Elllngtons hit the
MONDAY
9: Q0-3, " Return of the Seven"
11
:
30-13, "Stratton Story"
wrong chord .. The guests that'
11 : 20- 3, " Champagne Mur - 7:00- 13, " Love With th e
THURSDAY
Proper Stranger"
ders "
Norway's King Olav so cour9:
OQ-8,
"
Butterfield 8"
9: OQ-3, "Speedway"
11 : 30- 8, " Young Guns · of
11:
30-8,
"
Lisbon"
teously hosted at his own
11
:
JQ-8,
"Ox
Bow
Incident"
Texas"
11 :30-13, " The Sellout"
Chateau Madrid table were his~
11 : JD-13, " Time Travelers" 12: 30-13, " Pat &amp; Mike"
FRIDAY
TUESDAY
and "One Hundred Cries of
bodyguards .. . Franco Uffirelli ~
8:30-3,
"T he
Impa ti en t
8: JQ-13, " The Last Child"
Terror"
Heart''
says there's· a big return ton
11
·
30-13,
"
Nancy
Goes
to
Rio"
SUNDA·y
9:36--8, " Face of Fear"
,
religion, and he's hopping on the
5:00-13, "A G lrl Named 11 : 30-8, "Artie Flight"
11
: 3Q-8, " The lion"
WEDNESDAY
. Tamlkl"
.
c hurchwagon with
" Thel
11
:30-13,
"Vengeance Valley"
7:00-3, "Send Me No
7:30-8, " To Sir With Lo ve"
Execution of Christ" film (his!
9:00-13, "Von Ryan's Exlast was "Brother Sun, Sister'
press"
Moon ,"
another
knee bender) . :uenry Ford's son-inlaw. Johnny Uzielli, sold his St.
Maartens Hotel and is buying a
Ft. Lauderdale motel; Johnny :
and wife expect another baby.'
Hugh O'Brian left his "21" .
table, introduced himself to
Italy's motor magnate, Gianni
Agnelli, sl&lt;iyed dirt-kicking for 1
severa,l minutes and left;
Gianni then turned to his
beautiful companion and asked,
" Who is he?" .. Freda Payne's
seeking publicity because the
American Forces Vietnam
Network banned her "Bring the
Boys Home " coldcake ; the
r..,.. QQ
~
uniformed staff banned it, not
~.
~ o "-o
-~
VI
Q.lt
the Pentagon .. Producer Lore
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:E
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Ern es t Bor gnine's cup
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In 19S2, James Meredith
betame the frrst Negro to
enroll at the University of
Mississrppr.

WEEKLY· GUIDE
TO BETTE.R
TV-VIEWING

l1r'Way

For fast money serVtce •• ~

49 1 81 156 31 8
657 94 204 3ll
577 88 177 -307
C~ r ew , Mm
555 80 161 .301
Orrs. KC
].j] soo 65 147 294
May ,C hi
Whil e, NY
HI 524 86 153 .292
11 9 450 64 130 289
Hr t n, Del
Ulnd r Cle 1-11 500 52 144 288
133 469 51 135 288
A lo u, NY
Home Runs
Nat1onal League: Slargetl ,
Pil l 48 , H Aar on. All 47, May ,
Cin 39, Joh nson. Phil 34 ,
Tv r , M1n

Trust Your Home Heat To

992-5186

crops this fall to avoid produc- a clear recommendation that
!ion-punctured prices.
farmers hold what grain they
Local storage pl&lt;lblems' 'may could until the price rebounded.
prevail at harvest time, the deCommercial grain _storage apa1·tn1ent said in a special· , mounts to about 4.8 bllhon bushs4a teme nt. "But there should be els total _capactty. The departgenerally ~ mpl e facililifs, ment estunated that as of July
especially in on-[arm structures 1, about 1.5 b!lhon bushels _of
to store any excess &lt;lf'lhe 1971 gram were held m commercial
• and earlier corn crops carried warehouses or under governover into the 1972 ·marketing ment storage plans. Farm stoyear. "
rage of all grains on the s~ me
' 'Consequen tly,
producers date were_estimated to be JUst
have alternatives available to under 2 b1lhon bushelS.
.
them which they can use to asTo !a). grain storage capactty
sure an orderly marketing of on md1v1dual farms ts not
their grain."
known. But, the departinent
With the,depantment predict- sald. farmers have added subing record corn and grain sorghum harvests thlS fall, prices
'
already have begun to break in
expectation of the huge supply
of feed grains.
The reference to "an orderly,
marketing of their grain " was

By Un i1ed Press International

Voice J
along

sl&lt;i ntially to storage capacity by
building new structures or buying surplus bins. .
Loans for these purchases amounted to $16 million thrugh
Aug. 31 and the tol&lt;il since .Ja nua•·y, 1969, is $106.4 million, the
department said.
The department said there
has been a sharp decline in
grain held under loan during
the past three years, and stor age faci lities therefore are not
burdened with holdover crops.
A similar decrease in soybean
storage makes additional space
available for a bout 225 million
bushels of grain.

WASHINGTON (UPl i - '!'he
Agncutture Department, while
nurmaking the recommendation
ln so many words, has strongly Implied tho! farmers should
consider storing some of their
bumper corn and grain sorghum

J

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b

:Z:
li!~?~~ 8.~~~~OO~~NN~~NNMM~~~~~~
~ ?~?l'J? l'J 8.~8. ~8.~8. ~8.~ 8.~ 8.~8~~~
~8: 8.~~
8. ~~
~ 8.~~~~
~Qo = ~~~~~

Frankovich's "Stand Up and Be
_________-_:_:,.:_:_:__ ____________ - - - - _ :._:_ :_:_ _______ j
Counted," has a running role in ---1";--Rock Hudson's "McMillan &amp; .
M
Wife" TV series, co-stars nights
1"'4
on'stage with Phil Silvers in "A
Funny Thing," and betimes, is
all over TV commercials.
The Burt Bacharachs moved
into the sky-high Excelsior at
2nd Ave. &amp; 57th ; if Burt needs a
cup of lyrics any late nigfit,
brilliant Carolyn Leigh lives in
the same cloud-tickler . . .Dong
Kingman's one-man show at the
Hammer Galleries was half
sold-out a week in advance ... Woody Allen has no,
time to b€ a sex symbol: In siX'
mont!Is he's written two films, a
TV special, a p)ay. several
essays, his new book just was
published; and Wed. nights he
plays clarinet at J immy
Weston's jazz emporium .

LISTEN TO
20th CENTURY
EFORMATION.HOU

Mon•.thru Fri.
9:30AM
THE
1"360-0N.
PIAL .
.WMO.w.-v
V •.
._...:._;;
.~.

e

:C
8~
~ 8.~8~
8 ~ 8~8 ~ 8.~8~8 ~ 8.~8 ~ 8~ 8:·8. :;:~: ~~ ~ 8.~8.
CJ
~~~~
~
~000'~00-~NN..--~NNMM~~~~~
~~ ~~-~~N
_____ _ L ______ -·~--;__-=._-=:-_.--_ _____ - ~ ----- _______ : :._ ... _____ _

•

�14 •

I

I

f

f,

F

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..

•
10 - The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Midd}ep«l, Ohio, QcW.,.,r 1, 1971

•

.

.

· .

.·

.

,

S P.M . Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m:
. C.•mceU.~tloiL&amp; CqrrectiQns
Wilrbe accepted unt i ~ 9 a.m . for
Day of Pub1icat ion

REGULATIONS
The Publisher . reserves the
right to edit or reject any ,..ads
d eemed
object ional
The
publisher will not be responsl~
for more than one incorrect
insertion

RATES
For Want Ad Service
scents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents · per word three.
~..· onsecutiv~ insert ions .
18 ce nts per word six con
secutive insertions.
iS Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads pa id within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OS.ITUAR'(
$1. 50 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Charge

per

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 am . to 5:00p.m Da ily ,
8· 30 am. t o 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

In Memory
IN MEMORY ot Uan E Rees,
who passed away October 2,
1968. It ' s lonesome here
without you, I miss you every
day ; Somehow life doesn't
seem the same. I think and
talk of you a lot and the happy
years we spent toge1her , I
loved you so very much , and
knew it was returned . The
years may wipe out many
t,tlings, but t hi s they wipe out
?{ever, ' the memories of the
happy days when we were
here together
Sadly missed by wife ,

Clara

10· 1· lfp

.. LEGAL

•

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION .&gt;
DEADLINES .

Additional 25c
Advert isement

'I

,

NOTIC~

TO WHOM it may · con cern : I
w ish to announc~ to the pUblic
·and especially to business
organizatiQ ns
and
fir e
departme ~· ~S of Meigs County
and to al l other local benefit
clubs who put on dan ces for
such . as cripp led children .
new police equipment and
any other needy qmse, tha t as
a local band member of a
rou nd and square dance and
other music, we have been
play ing at the Rutland 1-f igh
School for the Rutland Fire
Department to raise money
tor the ir new fire truck on
Fri da y nights, 8:30 P·"D · to
12 00 midnight . We are fully
equipped
with
e!ec;tric
gui t ars,
sound
sys tem ,
microphones, electric banjo ,
elec tr ic harmonics and other
inst ruments "if needed . Also
we have Square Oance ca llers
and singers . We are some
times .known as the Hilltop
Band mad e up by local .
ci tizens such as myself .
Edward __Tempi eton
Electric Guitar, Floyd and
Don Harr ison Electr ic
Gu itar , Harry Thomas Electric Ban jo, Joan Conkle
- Pla yer and singer, Frank
Hudson Jnd Bob Pickett player ~nd callers . We also
have a drummer so m etimes
by the name of AI who plays
with us when he can. Feel free
to call or drop a l ine to the
Rutland Fire Departm ent or
to any member that I have
men t ioned above. We are not
under con tract or obligation
to anyone and are tully
equi pped to set up and play .
Feel tree to call us tor any
needy cause . We would like to
see one and all of you at the
Rutland High School tonight
and if any change you Wi ll be
noti fied and it wil l be made
public through thi s paper
Thank you one and all. Ed ·
ward Templeton . Box 18,
Pomeroy. Ohio.

LEGAL NOTICE
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP ,
MANAGEMENT AND
CIRCULATION

Title of Publication - The
O.aily Sentinel and Sunday
Times -Sentinel
Date of Fil ing - Oct 1, 1971
3 . . Frequency of
Issue :
Monday thr oug h Friday and
Sunday .
4. l ocation of Known Off ice of
Pub l ication : 111 Court Stre.e t,
Pomeroy . Ohio 45769 .
5
Location
of
th e
Headquarters or
Gen eral
Business
Oll i ces
of
the
Publishers : 111 Court Slree t,
Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
6. Names and Address es of
Publisher ,
Editor .
and
Manag inn Editcr · Publisher .
Richard S. Owe n. Midd leport ,
Ohio .
Edi tor · Chester Tan ne hill,
Middleport , Ohio
Managing Edi t or . Rob er t
Hoeflich , Pomeroy , Oh io
7. Owner : Ohio Valley
Publish ing Co .. Pomeroy , Oh io ,
R ichard S. Owen , Midd leport ,
onio ;
Ewing
T.
Bo l es,
Columbus , Ohio : Edgar S.
11oland \deceased ). Co l um bu s.
OhiO .
8.
Known
Bondholders ,
Mortgages, and Other Security
Holders Owning or Hold ing 1
Percent or m or e of To t a l
Amount ot Bonds , "V'Ortgages or
other Securities Ohio Valley
Bank , Gallipolis , Ohio , Hun tington
Nat ional
Bank ,
Columbus , Ohio .
A'llerage t.o . Copies Each Issue
During Preceding 12 MOnth s
11. Extent and Nature of
Circu lation :
A Total No . Cop ies Pr inted :
Dai l y 5,600 : Sunday I L400
B, Paid Circulat ion : I Sales
through Dealers and Carr iers ,
Street vendors and Count er
Sales : Da i ly 4, 112; Sunday
7,517 .
1 Mail Subscript ions · Da ily
1,257 ; Sunday 3.332 .
C. Total Pa id Circulat ion :
Daily 5,369 ; Sunday 10 ,849
0 Free Distribut ion by Ma il ,
Carrier or Other Means
1. Samples , Comp limentary ,
and other Free Copies : DailY
60 ; Sunday 124 .
2. Cop ies Distributed to News
Agen ts, but not sold : Da i ly 23 :
Sunday 135 .
E . Total Distr ibut ion Da il y
5,429 ; Sunday 1\, 108 .
F . Off ice Us e, Left Over ,
Unaccounted . Spoiled All e r
Pr inting · Daily 171 ; Sunday 292 .
G Total · Da ily 5,600 , Sunday
11.400.
Actual Number of Copies. ot
Single Issue Publi she d Neares t
to Fili ng Date
11 . Extent and Nature of
Circulation
A . Total No . Copies Printed,
Daily 5,650 ; Sunday , 11 ,400 .
B. Paid Circulation
1. Sa le s Through Dea lers and
Carriers . St re et Vendors and
Counter Sales : Daily 4,096 ;
Sunday 7,607 .
2. Ma il Subscr ipt ions : Da ily
1.2013; Su nda'i, 3,302 .
C Tota l Paid Circu lat ion :
Daily 5.304 ; Sunday 10,909 .
0 Free Distr ibution by Ma il,
Carr ier or Other Means
1 Samples, Compl imen tar y .
and Other Free Copies · Daily
75 ; Sunday 124 .
2. Copies Distributed to News
Agents , but not so ld : Daily 28 ;
Sunday l80 .
E . To ta l Distribution : Daily
5,379 ; Sunday 11 ,213 .
F
Off ice Use , Lelt .Qver ,
Unaccounted , Spo i led Af ter
Pr inting : Daily 27 l ; SU11day 187.
G TOTAL . O : ily 5 .650 :
Sunday 11 , 4QD .
1 certify th at the statement s
made by me above are correct
and comple te.

10 ·1·11P

-------

GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
and Gun Club . New Haven, W.
Va ., Su nda y, October 3, noon
til - .

1.

\

~ 101 1-lt c

,

RICHARDS . OWEN

The Almanac

ByUnited Press Internatio nal

-

Today is Friday, Oct. I, the
274th day of 1971 with 91 to
follow .
The moon is between its first
quarter and full stage.
The morning stars are
Mercury,.~nd Saturn .
•
The eV'ti nfng stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
On this day in history :
In 1885,. special delivery mail
service went into effect in the
United States, restricted to
towns of at least 4,000
population.
In lt03, the fi rst World Series
started in Boston. The Boston
lean. , C the American League
beat Pittsburgh of the National ·
Leag ue in .eight games.
In , 1908, Henry Ford intm·

.,.,u-o.,...J

th.D Mnrttal rr

10· I 2tc

\.
SACR E 0

Heart

FIRST ANNUAL reunion of the
descendants of John Ha nsfor d
Hudson and Amelia Roush
Hudson will be held Oct. 3,
1971 at the west roadside park
on Rl . 33 . Potluck dinn er will

held

at

12 , 30.

Al l

descendants and friends are
invited.

9.29 3fc
GIANT YARD SALE. Sa turday .
October 2, 197 1, 9 a.m . at
Foglesong Road, Mason City.
Turn at Texaco station
towards th e hill and follow
signs to Mi l ler's. Items too
numerous to - mention, must
be seen to be appreciated . In
event of ra in , sa l e will be held
on fron t porch . Severa l an tiques .

10· I lip
GU N SHOOT, Oct. J. 1 p.m ..
Mile Hill Road ; 1 2 hog ,
asSorted meats, sponsored by
Racine Fire Dept .

9·J0 .31c

YARD

SALE,

Fr iday

and

Sa turday , on North Main St.,
Rutland . Starts 10 a.m.

9.J0.21c

I S
2 SGII
OF

KOSCOT

Kosmetics .

Sep ·

! ember
Sales
Spec i al .
Kreamy Up Kate $2 now
$1.50, Frostlucent Lip Kote
$2 .50 now S2 , 23 del icious
colors . Cal l 992-5113 or come
see at l6 1'h ,., ·th Ave .,
Middlep ort. Oh

8·29· ftc

1970 DODGE POLARA

12495

'f

Chuck's TV Shop,

151 Bu*h:l nut Av e., Pomeroy ,

phone 992 5080.

engine , Hurst 4 speed, rebui l t
engine , new paint, tape
player, good cond iti on, $600.
Phone 992-60 15 (lfter 5:30p.m.

24~

BILL NELSON
992 -3657

St.,

,.&gt;omeroy . Phone 992-3891.

•

9-21 -tfc

Comvlete
Remodeling

OLD Fu rniture, dishes, clocks. "STAR" kill s rats quickly .
and.or complete households.
Sure . 2 1!1 pound s, $1.69 .
Write M . D. Mill er , Pomeroy .
Ebe r sbach Hardware, Sugar
Ohio. Ca ll 992-6271.
Run Mills, Pi ckens Ha r d·
8·25·1fC
ware, Mason .

9-21 -30tp

1800 ser ies, long wheel base,
good solid cab. good con·
dillon . Phone 985 -3988.

IQ. 1-6fc

'67 MERCURY Co lony

Park

Wagon ,
10
passenger.
automatic. power steering r
power brakes. clean - $1000.

Phone 367·75JO.

9·30-Jfc

Help Wanted
HOUSE KEEPE R·Companion
for e lderly lady. Private
living quarter s. Write to Box

i.29 B, C-0 The Dai ly Sentinel,
Pom eroy.

9-30-6fp

Rf. 7.
BABY

-

heifers, due to freshen soon.
John Rose 949·2822 .

9-29 -6lc
W I LL PAY we l l for your spare
time working at home for us.
Anyone who can read and
wri te can qualify. Weekly
sala r y FOr, details, wri te,
James Bliss Co ., P. 0. Box
324 , Dept. K 479 , Le vi ttown ,

Pa . 19053 .
9·28 -12tc

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS!

Employment Wanted

Male Help Wanted
IM MED IA TE

opening for a

man over 21 years old to work
in our stor e. M ust have good
persona lity , like to mee t
public, willing to assume
responsibility, v,pcation plan ,
hospitalization p lan and other
fr inge benefits . Please state
sa lary requirements . Send
resume of present and past
emp loyers to Box 729- L, C·O
The Dai ly Sentinel, Pomeroy ,
Ohio .

9·26 12fc

For Rent

GUN SHOO T. Forked Run

3 BEDROOM home in Rutland.
Phone 992-6329.
9-30-61c

Forest Showa lter , Chester.

Ohio, 985-3356. Open evenings
and weekends.

A NEW medium grey frosted
wig let, $20,

or

Phon e 742-5641 .
REG ISTERED

Mid lepor t, Ohio .

9-29-3fc
toy ·pood le,

3 BEDROOM br ick

Walter Robinson, Larkins St..

home .

Choice location in Middl eport . '
Seen by appointment onl y.'
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p .m .

Rutland. Phone 742 -5174.
9-J0-3tc

5-7-tfc

CAR STEREO, comp lete with
11 tapes. $50 . Red '66 Ford

Q.22- ff c

2· YEAR old sorrel I, Amer ican 'SIX t&lt;OOM house, balh , ful l
saddle bred s1ud . Phone 992 -

::&gt;a seme n! , 133 Butternut Ave .•
jusl walking dista nce from
downtown Pomeroy . Contact
~d Hedrick , 2137 Wadswo1 th.;
Orive. Co lumbus, Ohio, phone
237 .4334 , Columbu s.

2436.
9·30·31c
2 BEDROOM

home,
Phone

mobil

10x50, A· l COJ1di tio

5·9-lfCI

992-7156 or 992-7394 .
29·3fc

RACINE, 10 room hou se and
bath . Two lots, basement ,
EARLY American stereo, AM .
garage
. Phone 949-.4313 after
FM rad! o, 4-speed changer , 4·
5
30
p.m.
speaker
sound
system,
9 23-12fp
Balance $79.32 . Use our

budget terms . Call 992·7085.
9-27·61 c LOT IN SYRACUSE on St. Rt .
124, phone 992-5612 .
9·29-3fp
STE REO-RADIO combination .
lov ely Walnut fin ish, 4-s peed
changer,
4i nt erm ixe d
speaker
sou nd
system .
Balance $63 .99. Use our

HOUSE . 1642 Lincol n Heights.
Call Danny Thompson, 992 ·

· 9·29.J01c

Virgil
B.
.
TEAFORD·

POODLE· puppies, Silver Toy ,
Parkv ie w ·Kennels. Phone 992 ·

I

WMP0/.}_390 -

provemen ts if you own a lot.
Gel your new mobile' home
now . See James Simpkins,

Valley Estates Mobile Home
Se les. Rt. 50 East Alhens 59J.a762.

your

home . Cal l Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio .

7·31 .tfc
HARRISO N'S TV and Antenna
Se r vice, Ph one 992 ·2522 .

8·15-lfc
NEW Black 4ft . and 5 ft ., J.pt.

SR.

rotary mower - $220 and
$260, Ferguson 20 tractor S675. New 6 ft . 3.pt. grader
blad e - $80. Ermel Luckett,

Albany , 698-1032 .

home. Garage. 1 acre
Burlingham. $4,500.00.

BEAT the COLO WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
HEATING
OIL FROM
LANDMARK.
We have the fines t Budget
Pay Plan, Delivery Services,
A utomat ic Degree Day
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Equ ipment.
We also ha ve a co.mptete line
of Sieg ler Fue! 01 1 H e~ters
and .F urm¥=eS.

19•~

'

at

NEW LISTING - 2 apartments
- one 6 room s, bath, large
porch, dawn. Other 5. rooms,

ba lh ,
up .
$23,50000.

Ga ll ipo lis.

John

..

POMEROY

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,
Phone 992 ·2181 · l

POMEROY
Bus i nes s
building with 3 rentals. .
Asking $25,000.00 ..
'

120 ACRES -

Dairy farm .

cash lir budget plan avai labl e.
Phone 992 -5641.
9·28-6fc
1970 HONDA 450 cc, S550. Phone
9923703 or '992,3751 .
9-28-6tc
love sea t, $30 ; 4 pa ir 84"
bon ded Burlington hou se
drapes, burnt orange . and
avocado green mixture$~ pr. ; ,
one dark wooden bookca se, 3
she lves, $8 ; one m etal bed

and springs , 55 . Contact
ROger Bahr, Chester, Ohio
985-3958.
9-28·4fc

FURNI_TURE
sJs:oo Down-

YOU MEAN YOU 1RE

NO,THAT

ATTH£
~lC.IT?

OOIN' llACK 10 '
130NNAZ ANI:?
ASK MR. GILT?

WOULC7NT

MR. GILT HA'B
&amp;Ale;&gt; HE:

HONWILL

WORK 1 PAI

SELL

YOU FIND

our?

ME

urnace

n-

ALLEY OOP
...IT MEANS ONE OF US

Will HAVE 'YO GO BA0&lt;
AND FINO HIM/

9.8.30fp

I je6' pull up a

3 PC. MAPLE

Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio . Ph .

2· 12.tfc

service, all makes, 992-228.4,
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Author ize d Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

O' DE LL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroa ds . Rt. 124.

COONTRYGIDE ... MEETING 1&lt;/0HDfRFUL
PfDPlE "'DOING THEM KINONE56f6 ..,

GLEEPING OUT -.. I GUESS I MUST Bf ...

SUITE

•9900

'69"
New 7 pc.

Swivel &amp;
Platform Rockers

"'2995

AOROSS
order

1-----------1-----------4

AUTOMOBILE Ins urance been
ca~:~ce ll ed?

Lost
your
operator's license ? Ca ll 992-

2966.

New Mahogany

. Racine, Ohio

BOOK 'CASE

Critf Bradford

Sliding glass doors.

•2195

receptiOn
H. Emissary

15, Rainbow
16.Peak
17. Nothing
18. Word of

New
BABY CRIBS
Complete

cheer
19. Julie's

New
Box Springs
&amp; Mattresses

:TERRY
-

G E Aut om a tic
WASHER
&amp; DRYER

. ..

-

•1000 up

'2000 up

-- _________..

EVE~Y PIECE IN PLACE I
TtfEY GOT TttEIR I'£)CI(5
INTO I!O~Li, fORCfP
HIM TO 170 SU51NES5

ll\?LO~E5/ GOT TO

Conve~ient

Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
·Mason,
Va.

recti on
"

of

AWAY.

29. Scar-

lett's

(2wds.)
6. Until

(2
wds.)

7. Dia mon,d

25. Othello

throw
10. Coffeeand item

character
26. Hunger

(2 wds.)
11, Sloping

28. Pro-

after
voke

planta~

tlon

30. City in
Idaho
32. Subsided
37. Swiss river

38. - double

Used
akdr9om Suite

•1500 up

.•sr ·up

ARR£111

I I
I.!11EENAC
·I I

an ism

CEP1'W

tJ
~

10 · 1

I 1·

Now arranae the clr&lt;led Jetton
to form the ourprilt !IIIIWer, U
~~b~d~===·===·====~~.J:_~•urreoted by the above cartoon.

r

24 . 0. T. book
26. Prompt
27. City in
Florida
29. "High

WJTH "THEIR ~ fP IKURE

•"" I II• Il l I I!

Uno&lt;ramble these four Jumbles,

23. Follower

SEE YOU RI6HT

'i

-- I

yr "1

*=SURPRISI==
ANSWIII=~~re:.:__jl (

__..

XI I I I I )

L........CPrill=·

(Aaawen tomorrow)

30. Inventor'::t
"insect"

Jumbl"' MILKY

ADAGE

EXTENT

FORBID

Ye11erd•r'•

31. Exist
33. Gardner
:H. Yoko 35. Shed (!!ars
36. Wtnback
38. Part of a
ticket
39. Relaxing

. An••er1 What they often lake on the
..,..,.. - THEY TAKE AIM

I'VE TRIED

f5't"CHI.2t.TRIC

"e'r 5'-f

1lJ 6E A

BETTER
PERSON..

I'VE TRIED, AND TRIED AND

TRIED~ I'VE REALLI{ TRIED!

40, Gaelic
41. 1!llectrical
unit '

42. WatCljed

DAILY ·CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

•

l1
One

A~

A X Y D L B
R .
L
0 N 0 F E L L 0X W

letter simply stands for another. In thia aampJe ~A ll

used for tho thr:ee L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apoatrophos, the length· and formation of the words ""' all
hintS. ~ch day the code letters are different.

·

8alance On

to Jersey

Clty tube

f)

ione letter to each square. to
form four ordinary words.

(2w~.)

USED
DINETTES

USED T.V.s

l• y ttl N f ii /\ IINOI

21. Disdain

'1500·-up
USED
WASHERS

31Y~M;-Ut.i 4o-'w lliM4,.....

20. Badly

·-

Gas &amp; Electric
RANGES

USED
.REFRIGERATORS

110 1971 Kin&amp;" Fea.turee Syndicate, lnc.)

Mom

SNACKS"

USED

..

the Life
of Ivan
Denisovich"

(2 wds.)
13. Lavish

Many More Bargains . Come &amp; ·See

,

9 . "- - in

BOOK ,

BOSTON
ROCKERS

(2wds.)
2. Verdl's
.works

12. Shout
16. Port
in
Guam
22 . Greek

3. False
clan
bravery
divi(2 wda.)
sian
14. Peer Gynt's 23. "- mother
the·
5. Manhattan
resur-

work

•2195
I

'

8. Musical

SKYDIVER· NAI&lt;COTICS
~~GENT EXPLAINS THE
TAGGED NUMBERS
IN HIS LITTLE e.LACK

New

•4595

6-15-lfc .

1-. Until now

5.Smite - and thigh

"'6995

-Dutchess
Dinette Ses

DOWN

1. Fountain

•

New S pc.

Y..terday'o Cryptoquore: HONEST DIFFERENCES ARI!l
OFTEN A HEALTHY SIGN OF PROGREsS .-MAHATMA
GANDHI

DAILY CROSSWORD

Dutchess
Dinette Sets

•

a::ot&lt;'

1

I!OT TltOSf KIDS DON'T GET TO (\()
WITH THEIR FATHERS ... All OVER THE

Sofa Bed
and Chair

New

3-29-lfc

Real Estate F'or Sale

A~D

New 2 Pc.

BED ROOM

SEPTI C tanks cleaned. Miller

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Seplic lanks installed . George
( Bill ) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4.25-tf c

ro AHeAD NJD WATCH lELEVIStal, IF
'OJ Uf(E ... I PREFeR lllE CCMPA!J~ Cf'

-NEW-

9.28-4fp

5-1-lfc

THE

50 Miles

Rutland .

Phone 949-3821

have a
talk!

'5 111 DeliveiJ
Charge Within

742 5825 .

Com ple te Service

better

or

Dry wa ll patch ing, general
painting . Call R ichttr d I.

Ironically. .
ARea
l l sona
work
guaranteed
ble
rates. Phone 992 ·3213 .
....... 7-27-tfc

HI:Re!'S 1'0 A Pl'Y OF' GOOC'
SE~~tNG ... THAT SORT OF
THING, GUV'NOil!

lHEN

You Haul It

NEW CONTRACTOR in area .

elec.

H 'fC)tJ

I

Specials

9·28-6lc

balanced

, ~A~1'

an' me

5 13·1f&lt;

662-3035.

VfiRY W&lt;i~~!

THOSE WOLJLI7 ONW
GKIP THREE Tlh\EG!

p.m.

Phone 614·843-227 4.

Racine is now open. (all 949.
2789
fo r
appointment.
Specia lizing in paint ing. body
work and fiberglass .

Dubbeld . phone

NON,E'N,S , WRI f
IH!'SE ARE E-VEN
~Hifit&lt;: THAN THE

! 'M ;;Qi(t'?'( lfoH CCOKII'~
171r:&gt;N'1' TURN OUT

ljOU

USED BEDS

~9.95

CLAWING

THAR LI'L NOSES
STAfl.TED CiiUtVE:~IN' ;:=:"""WIF ECSTASY,
WHEN TH!:.Y SEEN
TH' SMOG OYER --'-,...c, .~
ER IE, PA.!'

stallation . Free estlmates on
new furnaces. oil or gas .
Service work . Ca II Ceci 1
Ro se berry , Ra c ine, Oh io .

--------------------.
,.
STA NS Body Shop, Rf. 1,

Clean and pr oductive. Plenty
of barn and bu jl ding space. 5
bedroom home. 2 pond s, NEW, J·bedroo m h ome In
M iddleport . Buill -in kitchen,
dri lied wei t, and Cheste r
cera mi c tile bath , all -el ectric
wafe r . A REAL FARM .

NEW

ROSEBE

Russell .

Owner &amp; Operator .

C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer

baths , family room witli
fireplace . 2. car garage. 15
acres. Asking $37,500.00.

WH'I ARE
THE'I

o' th' iceoox!

Middl eport .

LUXURIOUS
COUNTRY
HOME - New 4 bedrooms, 2

10 !I(E' li'AOIO f&lt;I'JOM ...

'&gt;-"::"""' ASTI&lt;ONAUT !

chair here in front

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

·Wheel s

NEW LISTING - 6 room frame

10 a.m. to 8: JO

Reasonable rates . Ph . 446-4782,

tune up and brake service.

Pomeroy, Ohio

10-1 3fc

ALL TH '

GO.,OP AS FAR NORTH
AS e&gt;ANGOR,MA INE AN' AS FAR SOUTH
AS MLTtMORE.'.'

9·30-601p

Comple te front end se rvice.

Br.oker
II 0 Mechanic Street

AH IS LEAVIfJ' ' NUFF
GOBBLEGLOPSifJ NOO
'IAWK T0 - [3LU5H.~·­
MU LTIPL'I --

-AN' Goeel!O

and State Rt . 7
Hours- Monday , Tuesday,
Wednesday and Friday
8: !O a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday

6lO·ffC

3279 .

'

5443

Gl F INAN CING AVAILABLE . DA RK BROWN early American
pay to qualified · GI. Up lo
$2.500 available for lot im -

For

r~modeting

718·ffc "S EWIN G MACHINES . 'Repair

3 ROOMS

No down payment, 12 years tO"

N E IGLE R Const ruction.
build ing or

raised. moved, underpinned,
remodeled . Estimates free,
anywhere. Na tiona l House
Mover s, Box 5002 , Charleston,
W. Va. 25311, or phone 304 -925-

2196 .

budget lerm s. Call 992.7085.
9-27·61c

/!J(,(T 5TVP li'EFc~li'llr'G

Saturday
8,30-.), m. to 1 p, m.
eHONE 992-7474

Futura. 6-cycle ... automati c. $2.300 WILL ouy 'L J acres in THE SHOP . Custom meat
Call 949-2951.
Bedford Township , Wolfpen
cutting , Pleasant Ridge Road ,
9-30·3tc
Road. 20 m i nute s from
Pomeroy . Dick Vaughan, 992 ·
Pomeroy . 3.• of land in timber,
3374 and Da le Litt le, 992-6346.
WARM Morning coal hea ter
balan ce in pasture . No
9-t2 ·30fc
and gas fl oor furnace. Phone
bu il ding s. Call 99'2-2152 and
985·421 I.
ask tor Dick .

- - -- - -

Mobile ·Homes for. Sale

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

HOUSE MOVING Houses , etc.

Real Estate For Sale

MUMS, all colors, field grown,
ready to go Big Clusters.
10-18-lfc
Reynolds
F,lower
ShOp,
Mason,
W.
Va
.
----

---~-'------

FURNITURE

Phone 992.6407 .

9·26·30fc

@

Corner Union Avi!.

And

·
6·30-ttC'

A L I CE ..
K A THEL I NE
SAUND E RS ,
wh os e
la st - - -- - - 9-28-6fp
TRA ILER space, desirab le
known
pla c e
of
r esi
1
dence is South Cha rleston .
neigh borhood ! phone 992-2084.
West Virginia , and whOse exact
9-19-lfc NEW 1971 zig · zag sewing
. heal, good neighborhood. Ca n .
$60,000.00.
address and place of residence
machine in or igina l factory
a rrang e FHA financing .
is unknown , is hereby notif ie d TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
carton . Zig -zag to make
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
GENERAL
STORE
2
houses,
.
that on the '" l si day of Sep ·
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Park, Miner svil le, Phone 992·
2186.
te"m ber , 1971, Art ie B. Saunders ,
storage
building
.
2
ca
r
monograms and make fan cy
3324.
being pla intiff filed his" cam .
7-25-tfc
garage.
One
acre
.
LOCK
,
9-26-6tc
designs wi1h just the twi st of a ,
plain t aga i ns t her as defendant
STOCK,
and
BARREL.
Only
37 ACRES on Shade River.
sing le dial. Left In la y.away
in the Common F' leas Court .
$30,000.00.
dr illed well , modern 4-room
and
never
been
used
.
Wi
ll
sell
Me igs County, Oh io, Case No. APARTMENT, furnished room
house
and bath , aluminum
14,930, praying for d ivorce fr om
for
on
ly
$47
cash
or
cred
it
wi th bath, phone 992-2780 or
TO BUY OR SELL CALL 992 said Katheline Alice Saunde r s
sicling,
paneling,
7 acres river
terms
available.
Phone
992992-3432.
3325 or 992-2378
on the grounds of gr oss neglect
bottom . Phon e 992-6133 after 1
5641.
9-17-ffc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
of duty and e)(t r eme cruelty ;
9-28-6fc
p.m.
said cause will be for hea r ing on '
ASSOACIATE
.
9-29·6fp
or after the 22nd day of October , 4 ROOM and bat h apartment .
9)6 -~fc
ELECTRO
LU
X
vacuum
Tel
ephone
773
·5147,
Ma
son,
191 I .
cleaner Co mplete with at Arlie 8 . Saunde r s, Plain! iff
W. Va ., on main highway .
tachmen ts, cordwinder and
J . B. 0 ' Bf'ien , his attornt.'T"
Reynolds Flower Shop.
(9) 3, 10, 17 , 24 flO l \, 6, 15, He
paint
spray . Used, but In llke
9-28-61p
new condition . Pay $34 .45

.ITEM : Morning . A
'zestful time for some
people. Double dismal
for others. Jim Mees
some?lo'w ·gets '· us all
toge ther. every day ,

OFFICE SUPPLiES

estimates. Phone 992 .3284
Goe91ein Ready -Mix Co .,

2608 .

best offer .

NEW 91FOCIILS

Lincoln St., Middleport

. JOHNIE'S
BEAUTY SHoP

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

HOUSE --lt Two apts .. 4 rooms
and bath each, near new
housing proj ec t. Trade for HA.C KN EY 'S Electri c Service,
all types of electrica l work.
sma ller house . Phone 992 -

apartments . Close tu school.

TRA ILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992·2951.
4-2-tfc

. HOME &amp; AUTO

prp ject. Fas.t and easy. Free

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

TROP ICAL"' hsh a nd supplies.

FURN ISHED and unfurnished
Phone 992~5434.

railing . Call A. Ja cob,

sales representa t ive. For fr~
es ti ma fes, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse.
V . V.
Johnson and Son, In c.

se pti c tank. Get Klean. Em 5-J7 .tfc
·mo Washington. Bl.vd .
All Septic Tank Cl eaner.
Land m ar k Farm Burea u,
CREA _
D_
Y--M
~
..I~
X ' - C-O-NCRETE
Belpre , Ohio
Pomeroy.
10· 1·ltc . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
de li vered right to y_our

9-30·31c

WANTED!

~ · and

MOBil£ HOMES

DON'T PUMP your slugg ish

I KNOW YOO REALLY
WANTED 10 liE AN

BALL FOR

A I'ICKER Wlla'S WSARtNG

POMEROY

windows,
carpo rt s,
marquees, aluminum sid ing

MILLER

10-1-3tc

~Ltl ~E

NEVER

949-4 551

AWNINGS. storm doors and

10 1 21p
CAN YOU dev ote 10 hours a
week for $75 pro fits and a
wa rdr obe w i thout paying
cash? Ambitious housewives
lo work neighborhood fashion
shows . Car needed . For tree
br ochure. ca ll 882 ·2070 or
write P. 0. Box 186, New
Haven, W. Vq.

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 . . •·

992-7608
12' · 14' · 2~' ; WIDE

Co. and An-,

Resideotial,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hour Service

Open8Til5

And Leach Beds.

8 Holstein

I WAS RE~OW"'ED,
tN loW DAY, AS ~E
'GOLIIEN TO!:."

ELECTRIC SERVICE

Pomeroy HoRle &amp; Auto

Septic Tank s

10 1 3fc
PIGS

•.

.j·_·

O'BRIEN

- GUARANTE-EDPhone 992-2094

Backhoe And
Endloader Work

Crosley inboard motor, 12 It .
alum inum boat, new 7 h.p.
motor. M &amp; G Food Market, 1
mi. South , Middleport on Rt.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

f5.55

Ki1chen5, Baths
Room Add itions
And Patios

9-29-31c 15 FT. BOAT trailer. 4 cyl.,
1965 INTERNATIONAL truck,

HILTON WOLFE
' 949-3211

JOtmSON MAS6intY .

GAS circu lat ing heaters.
Phone 992 ·5262 evenings .

For Sale .

MIND

.

'Phone 992-2550
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for f-ree
l:stimate on Furnace
lnstalation, ·

- .t.9-tfc '

~anted To Buy

Middleport on St. Rt. 7.
10-1-3fp

LEGAL NOTICE

E.' Main

HER'N_OON'l

AN' I A~WI'WS
THOUGHT HE '
HATED ME WUSS'N
WOLF PIZEN

. .

--..___,

diti oning :

limestone . Excelsior\
Works.

FER TWO·THREE DA'IS·· UH ·· IF
THATWUTHLESS HUSBAND OF

MIND,
70NIE MAf .. l

WEll, IT ThST'E&lt;;
Ut&lt;;E MEOKAID !

LEMOf\JADE !

thony ,Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
PlumbinG.
Heating and t.Jr Con -

~------

~a ft

··

Constructton

Portland. Phone 843-2254.
9-22- tfc
~OAL,

·

TO VISIT WIF MY BRBV'SISTER .

HE DON'T

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;

bushe l , pick your ·own .
Potatoe-s . Clarence Proffitt,

2

Food Market, 3 mi. South,

LEGAL NOTICE

669-3785.

-

CAME

l
''

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
'
WORK
•
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

' HALF RUNNER. beans. Sl.sO

i'~EROY , OHIO

$450. Phone 949·4551. 9. 26 _71 c
1966 COMET Cyclone, 2~ cu. in.

·

'

'

9-3-tfc

OPEN EVES. 8!00 P.M.

9-24-tf c

9·29·3fc

APP LE S - Fitzpatric k Or·
chard;, State Route 689,

Pomeroy llotor Co.

TRAILER space. inqu ire M &amp; G

Sport sman Club, Sunday, Oct .
3 at 12 noon . ·

9-8-301p

Wilkesville,

'

FOUR NEW HOMES
. (
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
lliO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A J bedroom $16,900.00 home ca n be purchased with a
monthtypayment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
~alary of $5,000.00 and · three children. 7•;, Pet. annual

Davisburg, Mich., 48019 .

phone

·

.

HOWDV,LOWEEZY·: I

BL.E SS
HIS HEART!!

•

,

w

s8s. coolville

Ambrose Co .•. 4325 Lakeborn,.

4 Dr. , V-8 engine, automatic trans, P.S, factory air, good
tires, rad io &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior .

1962 FORD 1/ :r ton p ick up truck

·

EARN AT home addressing
enve l opes. Rush stamped
self·addressed enve lope. The

12795

Less tha n 10,000 mi les by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish, 350 V·8 engine, power
steering, r~dio , whif'e. walls, wh . covers.

SAVE up to one ha l t . Bring· your

sick TV

~~~med.

'

e

~~~~e~~.PP~~~m~~e~~e~~~;: 1

MINIATURE Schnauzers ...

9 29 121p

1970 CHEVROLET BELA1R 4 DOOR

9·22·30fp

9·22 -30fp

·

1970 CAMARO CPE .
13295
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appeararice of 71 model. Rally
Sport eq l!ipped , Classic copper with sandalwood inter ior,
tinted glass, 1actory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
conso le,- air spoiler, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. in. V-8-.engine. Really Sharp.

Auto Sales

.

For Sale

r"Dmeroy
Motor Co.

QUAliTY

WILL DO sewing in my home . MALE , 19 years of age needs
Mrs . Arthur Barr , phone 992 ·
job on Monday and Thursday
7252 .
aft"er noons or any evening .
9-30 3fc
Work cheap at home or
business. For information
write P. 0 . Bo x 57, Mid·
PEP -UP with new Zippies iron
pills. Non -habi t forming . Only
dleport, Ohio.
9-29-Sfc
Sl.98, Nelson Drugs.
REDUCE safe and fast wi th
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Water Pills . Nelson Drugs .

B

BUSmeSS
•· •. s
·
_ervtCCS_

'

1

Chu rch ,

Pomeroy wi ll hold a Rum ·
mage
Sale,
M ond ay &amp;
Tuesday, October 4 &amp; 5 in the
church ba sement from 9 a.m .
to 3 30 p.m.
10· 1 3tc

be

@)

·

'

SHUX-

.

Sentinel Classifieds
·Get
Action
!
Sentinel
Classifieds
Get~
Results,!
.,
.
.
'

.,

EEKAND MEEK

SWAP SHOP

t:=====~~=~'
2 ~::;:::.
•!
to-t .
r
;::::::::::::===~
1(011 KNOW .HOW &gt;lARD
I'VE TRIED ~ TELL ME

HOW I'Vt; TRIED ...

.A CryptOJram' quotation ·
N

305 N. 2nd Ave ,

Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-7261
.
Open From 9 A.M. until6 P.M.
Monday Through Saturday

EGKKFMMDD FV

R DD WV

.K ·F A 'L M D V

N XJGLW MSNM
NA H

BG VDV

SG. LJ\1 . - KF· BMGA QDJBl&gt;
r

...
'

' .

;

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'
'

.

�14 •

I

I

f

f,

F

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,

''

..

•
10 - The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Midd}ep«l, Ohio, QcW.,.,r 1, 1971

•

.

.

· .

.·

.

,

S P.M . Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m:
. C.•mceU.~tloiL&amp; CqrrectiQns
Wilrbe accepted unt i ~ 9 a.m . for
Day of Pub1icat ion

REGULATIONS
The Publisher . reserves the
right to edit or reject any ,..ads
d eemed
object ional
The
publisher will not be responsl~
for more than one incorrect
insertion

RATES
For Want Ad Service
scents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents · per word three.
~..· onsecutiv~ insert ions .
18 ce nts per word six con
secutive insertions.
iS Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads pa id within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OS.ITUAR'(
$1. 50 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Charge

per

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 am . to 5:00p.m Da ily ,
8· 30 am. t o 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

In Memory
IN MEMORY ot Uan E Rees,
who passed away October 2,
1968. It ' s lonesome here
without you, I miss you every
day ; Somehow life doesn't
seem the same. I think and
talk of you a lot and the happy
years we spent toge1her , I
loved you so very much , and
knew it was returned . The
years may wipe out many
t,tlings, but t hi s they wipe out
?{ever, ' the memories of the
happy days when we were
here together
Sadly missed by wife ,

Clara

10· 1· lfp

.. LEGAL

•

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION .&gt;
DEADLINES .

Additional 25c
Advert isement

'I

,

NOTIC~

TO WHOM it may · con cern : I
w ish to announc~ to the pUblic
·and especially to business
organizatiQ ns
and
fir e
departme ~· ~S of Meigs County
and to al l other local benefit
clubs who put on dan ces for
such . as cripp led children .
new police equipment and
any other needy qmse, tha t as
a local band member of a
rou nd and square dance and
other music, we have been
play ing at the Rutland 1-f igh
School for the Rutland Fire
Department to raise money
tor the ir new fire truck on
Fri da y nights, 8:30 P·"D · to
12 00 midnight . We are fully
equipped
with
e!ec;tric
gui t ars,
sound
sys tem ,
microphones, electric banjo ,
elec tr ic harmonics and other
inst ruments "if needed . Also
we have Square Oance ca llers
and singers . We are some
times .known as the Hilltop
Band mad e up by local .
ci tizens such as myself .
Edward __Tempi eton
Electric Guitar, Floyd and
Don Harr ison Electr ic
Gu itar , Harry Thomas Electric Ban jo, Joan Conkle
- Pla yer and singer, Frank
Hudson Jnd Bob Pickett player ~nd callers . We also
have a drummer so m etimes
by the name of AI who plays
with us when he can. Feel free
to call or drop a l ine to the
Rutland Fire Departm ent or
to any member that I have
men t ioned above. We are not
under con tract or obligation
to anyone and are tully
equi pped to set up and play .
Feel tree to call us tor any
needy cause . We would like to
see one and all of you at the
Rutland High School tonight
and if any change you Wi ll be
noti fied and it wil l be made
public through thi s paper
Thank you one and all. Ed ·
ward Templeton . Box 18,
Pomeroy. Ohio.

LEGAL NOTICE
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP ,
MANAGEMENT AND
CIRCULATION

Title of Publication - The
O.aily Sentinel and Sunday
Times -Sentinel
Date of Fil ing - Oct 1, 1971
3 . . Frequency of
Issue :
Monday thr oug h Friday and
Sunday .
4. l ocation of Known Off ice of
Pub l ication : 111 Court Stre.e t,
Pomeroy . Ohio 45769 .
5
Location
of
th e
Headquarters or
Gen eral
Business
Oll i ces
of
the
Publishers : 111 Court Slree t,
Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
6. Names and Address es of
Publisher ,
Editor .
and
Manag inn Editcr · Publisher .
Richard S. Owe n. Midd leport ,
Ohio .
Edi tor · Chester Tan ne hill,
Middleport , Ohio
Managing Edi t or . Rob er t
Hoeflich , Pomeroy , Oh io
7. Owner : Ohio Valley
Publish ing Co .. Pomeroy , Oh io ,
R ichard S. Owen , Midd leport ,
onio ;
Ewing
T.
Bo l es,
Columbus , Ohio : Edgar S.
11oland \deceased ). Co l um bu s.
OhiO .
8.
Known
Bondholders ,
Mortgages, and Other Security
Holders Owning or Hold ing 1
Percent or m or e of To t a l
Amount ot Bonds , "V'Ortgages or
other Securities Ohio Valley
Bank , Gallipolis , Ohio , Hun tington
Nat ional
Bank ,
Columbus , Ohio .
A'llerage t.o . Copies Each Issue
During Preceding 12 MOnth s
11. Extent and Nature of
Circu lation :
A Total No . Cop ies Pr inted :
Dai l y 5,600 : Sunday I L400
B, Paid Circulat ion : I Sales
through Dealers and Carr iers ,
Street vendors and Count er
Sales : Da i ly 4, 112; Sunday
7,517 .
1 Mail Subscript ions · Da ily
1,257 ; Sunday 3.332 .
C. Total Pa id Circulat ion :
Daily 5,369 ; Sunday 10 ,849
0 Free Distribut ion by Ma il ,
Carrier or Other Means
1. Samples , Comp limentary ,
and other Free Copies : DailY
60 ; Sunday 124 .
2. Cop ies Distributed to News
Agen ts, but not sold : Da i ly 23 :
Sunday 135 .
E . Total Distr ibut ion Da il y
5,429 ; Sunday 1\, 108 .
F . Off ice Us e, Left Over ,
Unaccounted . Spoiled All e r
Pr inting · Daily 171 ; Sunday 292 .
G Total · Da ily 5,600 , Sunday
11.400.
Actual Number of Copies. ot
Single Issue Publi she d Neares t
to Fili ng Date
11 . Extent and Nature of
Circulation
A . Total No . Copies Printed,
Daily 5,650 ; Sunday , 11 ,400 .
B. Paid Circulation
1. Sa le s Through Dea lers and
Carriers . St re et Vendors and
Counter Sales : Daily 4,096 ;
Sunday 7,607 .
2. Ma il Subscr ipt ions : Da ily
1.2013; Su nda'i, 3,302 .
C Tota l Paid Circu lat ion :
Daily 5.304 ; Sunday 10,909 .
0 Free Distr ibution by Ma il,
Carr ier or Other Means
1 Samples, Compl imen tar y .
and Other Free Copies · Daily
75 ; Sunday 124 .
2. Copies Distributed to News
Agents , but not so ld : Daily 28 ;
Sunday l80 .
E . To ta l Distribution : Daily
5,379 ; Sunday 11 ,213 .
F
Off ice Use , Lelt .Qver ,
Unaccounted , Spo i led Af ter
Pr inting : Daily 27 l ; SU11day 187.
G TOTAL . O : ily 5 .650 :
Sunday 11 , 4QD .
1 certify th at the statement s
made by me above are correct
and comple te.

10 ·1·11P

-------

GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
and Gun Club . New Haven, W.
Va ., Su nda y, October 3, noon
til - .

1.

\

~ 101 1-lt c

,

RICHARDS . OWEN

The Almanac

ByUnited Press Internatio nal

-

Today is Friday, Oct. I, the
274th day of 1971 with 91 to
follow .
The moon is between its first
quarter and full stage.
The morning stars are
Mercury,.~nd Saturn .
•
The eV'ti nfng stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
On this day in history :
In 1885,. special delivery mail
service went into effect in the
United States, restricted to
towns of at least 4,000
population.
In lt03, the fi rst World Series
started in Boston. The Boston
lean. , C the American League
beat Pittsburgh of the National ·
Leag ue in .eight games.
In , 1908, Henry Ford intm·

.,.,u-o.,...J

th.D Mnrttal rr

10· I 2tc

\.
SACR E 0

Heart

FIRST ANNUAL reunion of the
descendants of John Ha nsfor d
Hudson and Amelia Roush
Hudson will be held Oct. 3,
1971 at the west roadside park
on Rl . 33 . Potluck dinn er will

held

at

12 , 30.

Al l

descendants and friends are
invited.

9.29 3fc
GIANT YARD SALE. Sa turday .
October 2, 197 1, 9 a.m . at
Foglesong Road, Mason City.
Turn at Texaco station
towards th e hill and follow
signs to Mi l ler's. Items too
numerous to - mention, must
be seen to be appreciated . In
event of ra in , sa l e will be held
on fron t porch . Severa l an tiques .

10· I lip
GU N SHOOT, Oct. J. 1 p.m ..
Mile Hill Road ; 1 2 hog ,
asSorted meats, sponsored by
Racine Fire Dept .

9·J0 .31c

YARD

SALE,

Fr iday

and

Sa turday , on North Main St.,
Rutland . Starts 10 a.m.

9.J0.21c

I S
2 SGII
OF

KOSCOT

Kosmetics .

Sep ·

! ember
Sales
Spec i al .
Kreamy Up Kate $2 now
$1.50, Frostlucent Lip Kote
$2 .50 now S2 , 23 del icious
colors . Cal l 992-5113 or come
see at l6 1'h ,., ·th Ave .,
Middlep ort. Oh

8·29· ftc

1970 DODGE POLARA

12495

'f

Chuck's TV Shop,

151 Bu*h:l nut Av e., Pomeroy ,

phone 992 5080.

engine , Hurst 4 speed, rebui l t
engine , new paint, tape
player, good cond iti on, $600.
Phone 992-60 15 (lfter 5:30p.m.

24~

BILL NELSON
992 -3657

St.,

,.&gt;omeroy . Phone 992-3891.

•

9-21 -tfc

Comvlete
Remodeling

OLD Fu rniture, dishes, clocks. "STAR" kill s rats quickly .
and.or complete households.
Sure . 2 1!1 pound s, $1.69 .
Write M . D. Mill er , Pomeroy .
Ebe r sbach Hardware, Sugar
Ohio. Ca ll 992-6271.
Run Mills, Pi ckens Ha r d·
8·25·1fC
ware, Mason .

9-21 -30tp

1800 ser ies, long wheel base,
good solid cab. good con·
dillon . Phone 985 -3988.

IQ. 1-6fc

'67 MERCURY Co lony

Park

Wagon ,
10
passenger.
automatic. power steering r
power brakes. clean - $1000.

Phone 367·75JO.

9·30-Jfc

Help Wanted
HOUSE KEEPE R·Companion
for e lderly lady. Private
living quarter s. Write to Box

i.29 B, C-0 The Dai ly Sentinel,
Pom eroy.

9-30-6fp

Rf. 7.
BABY

-

heifers, due to freshen soon.
John Rose 949·2822 .

9-29 -6lc
W I LL PAY we l l for your spare
time working at home for us.
Anyone who can read and
wri te can qualify. Weekly
sala r y FOr, details, wri te,
James Bliss Co ., P. 0. Box
324 , Dept. K 479 , Le vi ttown ,

Pa . 19053 .
9·28 -12tc

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS!

Employment Wanted

Male Help Wanted
IM MED IA TE

opening for a

man over 21 years old to work
in our stor e. M ust have good
persona lity , like to mee t
public, willing to assume
responsibility, v,pcation plan ,
hospitalization p lan and other
fr inge benefits . Please state
sa lary requirements . Send
resume of present and past
emp loyers to Box 729- L, C·O
The Dai ly Sentinel, Pomeroy ,
Ohio .

9·26 12fc

For Rent

GUN SHOO T. Forked Run

3 BEDROOM home in Rutland.
Phone 992-6329.
9-30-61c

Forest Showa lter , Chester.

Ohio, 985-3356. Open evenings
and weekends.

A NEW medium grey frosted
wig let, $20,

or

Phon e 742-5641 .
REG ISTERED

Mid lepor t, Ohio .

9-29-3fc
toy ·pood le,

3 BEDROOM br ick

Walter Robinson, Larkins St..

home .

Choice location in Middl eport . '
Seen by appointment onl y.'
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p .m .

Rutland. Phone 742 -5174.
9-J0-3tc

5-7-tfc

CAR STEREO, comp lete with
11 tapes. $50 . Red '66 Ford

Q.22- ff c

2· YEAR old sorrel I, Amer ican 'SIX t&lt;OOM house, balh , ful l
saddle bred s1ud . Phone 992 -

::&gt;a seme n! , 133 Butternut Ave .•
jusl walking dista nce from
downtown Pomeroy . Contact
~d Hedrick , 2137 Wadswo1 th.;
Orive. Co lumbus, Ohio, phone
237 .4334 , Columbu s.

2436.
9·30·31c
2 BEDROOM

home,
Phone

mobil

10x50, A· l COJ1di tio

5·9-lfCI

992-7156 or 992-7394 .
29·3fc

RACINE, 10 room hou se and
bath . Two lots, basement ,
EARLY American stereo, AM .
garage
. Phone 949-.4313 after
FM rad! o, 4-speed changer , 4·
5
30
p.m.
speaker
sound
system,
9 23-12fp
Balance $79.32 . Use our

budget terms . Call 992·7085.
9-27·61 c LOT IN SYRACUSE on St. Rt .
124, phone 992-5612 .
9·29-3fp
STE REO-RADIO combination .
lov ely Walnut fin ish, 4-s peed
changer,
4i nt erm ixe d
speaker
sou nd
system .
Balance $63 .99. Use our

HOUSE . 1642 Lincol n Heights.
Call Danny Thompson, 992 ·

· 9·29.J01c

Virgil
B.
.
TEAFORD·

POODLE· puppies, Silver Toy ,
Parkv ie w ·Kennels. Phone 992 ·

I

WMP0/.}_390 -

provemen ts if you own a lot.
Gel your new mobile' home
now . See James Simpkins,

Valley Estates Mobile Home
Se les. Rt. 50 East Alhens 59J.a762.

your

home . Cal l Guy Nelgler,
Racine, Ohio .

7·31 .tfc
HARRISO N'S TV and Antenna
Se r vice, Ph one 992 ·2522 .

8·15-lfc
NEW Black 4ft . and 5 ft ., J.pt.

SR.

rotary mower - $220 and
$260, Ferguson 20 tractor S675. New 6 ft . 3.pt. grader
blad e - $80. Ermel Luckett,

Albany , 698-1032 .

home. Garage. 1 acre
Burlingham. $4,500.00.

BEAT the COLO WINTER
and IT'S COST WITH
HEATING
OIL FROM
LANDMARK.
We have the fines t Budget
Pay Plan, Delivery Services,
A utomat ic Degree Day
Delivery and Duel Delivery
Equ ipment.
We also ha ve a co.mptete line
of Sieg ler Fue! 01 1 H e~ters
and .F urm¥=eS.

19•~

'

at

NEW LISTING - 2 apartments
- one 6 room s, bath, large
porch, dawn. Other 5. rooms,

ba lh ,
up .
$23,50000.

Ga ll ipo lis.

John

..

POMEROY

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,
Phone 992 ·2181 · l

POMEROY
Bus i nes s
building with 3 rentals. .
Asking $25,000.00 ..
'

120 ACRES -

Dairy farm .

cash lir budget plan avai labl e.
Phone 992 -5641.
9·28-6fc
1970 HONDA 450 cc, S550. Phone
9923703 or '992,3751 .
9-28-6tc
love sea t, $30 ; 4 pa ir 84"
bon ded Burlington hou se
drapes, burnt orange . and
avocado green mixture$~ pr. ; ,
one dark wooden bookca se, 3
she lves, $8 ; one m etal bed

and springs , 55 . Contact
ROger Bahr, Chester, Ohio
985-3958.
9-28·4fc

FURNI_TURE
sJs:oo Down-

YOU MEAN YOU 1RE

NO,THAT

ATTH£
~lC.IT?

OOIN' llACK 10 '
130NNAZ ANI:?
ASK MR. GILT?

WOULC7NT

MR. GILT HA'B
&amp;Ale;&gt; HE:

HONWILL

WORK 1 PAI

SELL

YOU FIND

our?

ME

urnace

n-

ALLEY OOP
...IT MEANS ONE OF US

Will HAVE 'YO GO BA0&lt;
AND FINO HIM/

9.8.30fp

I je6' pull up a

3 PC. MAPLE

Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio . Ph .

2· 12.tfc

service, all makes, 992-228.4,
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Author ize d Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

O' DE LL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroa ds . Rt. 124.

COONTRYGIDE ... MEETING 1&lt;/0HDfRFUL
PfDPlE "'DOING THEM KINONE56f6 ..,

GLEEPING OUT -.. I GUESS I MUST Bf ...

SUITE

•9900

'69"
New 7 pc.

Swivel &amp;
Platform Rockers

"'2995

AOROSS
order

1-----------1-----------4

AUTOMOBILE Ins urance been
ca~:~ce ll ed?

Lost
your
operator's license ? Ca ll 992-

2966.

New Mahogany

. Racine, Ohio

BOOK 'CASE

Critf Bradford

Sliding glass doors.

•2195

receptiOn
H. Emissary

15, Rainbow
16.Peak
17. Nothing
18. Word of

New
BABY CRIBS
Complete

cheer
19. Julie's

New
Box Springs
&amp; Mattresses

:TERRY
-

G E Aut om a tic
WASHER
&amp; DRYER

. ..

-

•1000 up

'2000 up

-- _________..

EVE~Y PIECE IN PLACE I
TtfEY GOT TttEIR I'£)CI(5
INTO I!O~Li, fORCfP
HIM TO 170 SU51NES5

ll\?LO~E5/ GOT TO

Conve~ient

Terms.

MASON
FURNITURE
·Mason,
Va.

recti on
"

of

AWAY.

29. Scar-

lett's

(2wds.)
6. Until

(2
wds.)

7. Dia mon,d

25. Othello

throw
10. Coffeeand item

character
26. Hunger

(2 wds.)
11, Sloping

28. Pro-

after
voke

planta~

tlon

30. City in
Idaho
32. Subsided
37. Swiss river

38. - double

Used
akdr9om Suite

•1500 up

.•sr ·up

ARR£111

I I
I.!11EENAC
·I I

an ism

CEP1'W

tJ
~

10 · 1

I 1·

Now arranae the clr&lt;led Jetton
to form the ourprilt !IIIIWer, U
~~b~d~===·===·====~~.J:_~•urreoted by the above cartoon.

r

24 . 0. T. book
26. Prompt
27. City in
Florida
29. "High

WJTH "THEIR ~ fP IKURE

•"" I II• Il l I I!

Uno&lt;ramble these four Jumbles,

23. Follower

SEE YOU RI6HT

'i

-- I

yr "1

*=SURPRISI==
ANSWIII=~~re:.:__jl (

__..

XI I I I I )

L........CPrill=·

(Aaawen tomorrow)

30. Inventor'::t
"insect"

Jumbl"' MILKY

ADAGE

EXTENT

FORBID

Ye11erd•r'•

31. Exist
33. Gardner
:H. Yoko 35. Shed (!!ars
36. Wtnback
38. Part of a
ticket
39. Relaxing

. An••er1 What they often lake on the
..,..,.. - THEY TAKE AIM

I'VE TRIED

f5't"CHI.2t.TRIC

"e'r 5'-f

1lJ 6E A

BETTER
PERSON..

I'VE TRIED, AND TRIED AND

TRIED~ I'VE REALLI{ TRIED!

40, Gaelic
41. 1!llectrical
unit '

42. WatCljed

DAILY ·CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

•

l1
One

A~

A X Y D L B
R .
L
0 N 0 F E L L 0X W

letter simply stands for another. In thia aampJe ~A ll

used for tho thr:ee L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apoatrophos, the length· and formation of the words ""' all
hintS. ~ch day the code letters are different.

·

8alance On

to Jersey

Clty tube

f)

ione letter to each square. to
form four ordinary words.

(2w~.)

USED
DINETTES

USED T.V.s

l• y ttl N f ii /\ IINOI

21. Disdain

'1500·-up
USED
WASHERS

31Y~M;-Ut.i 4o-'w lliM4,.....

20. Badly

·-

Gas &amp; Electric
RANGES

USED
.REFRIGERATORS

110 1971 Kin&amp;" Fea.turee Syndicate, lnc.)

Mom

SNACKS"

USED

..

the Life
of Ivan
Denisovich"

(2 wds.)
13. Lavish

Many More Bargains . Come &amp; ·See

,

9 . "- - in

BOOK ,

BOSTON
ROCKERS

(2wds.)
2. Verdl's
.works

12. Shout
16. Port
in
Guam
22 . Greek

3. False
clan
bravery
divi(2 wda.)
sian
14. Peer Gynt's 23. "- mother
the·
5. Manhattan
resur-

work

•2195
I

'

8. Musical

SKYDIVER· NAI&lt;COTICS
~~GENT EXPLAINS THE
TAGGED NUMBERS
IN HIS LITTLE e.LACK

New

•4595

6-15-lfc .

1-. Until now

5.Smite - and thigh

"'6995

-Dutchess
Dinette Ses

DOWN

1. Fountain

•

New S pc.

Y..terday'o Cryptoquore: HONEST DIFFERENCES ARI!l
OFTEN A HEALTHY SIGN OF PROGREsS .-MAHATMA
GANDHI

DAILY CROSSWORD

Dutchess
Dinette Sets

•

a::ot&lt;'

1

I!OT TltOSf KIDS DON'T GET TO (\()
WITH THEIR FATHERS ... All OVER THE

Sofa Bed
and Chair

New

3-29-lfc

Real Estate F'or Sale

A~D

New 2 Pc.

BED ROOM

SEPTI C tanks cleaned. Miller

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Seplic lanks installed . George
( Bill ) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4.25-tf c

ro AHeAD NJD WATCH lELEVIStal, IF
'OJ Uf(E ... I PREFeR lllE CCMPA!J~ Cf'

-NEW-

9.28-4fp

5-1-lfc

THE

50 Miles

Rutland .

Phone 949-3821

have a
talk!

'5 111 DeliveiJ
Charge Within

742 5825 .

Com ple te Service

better

or

Dry wa ll patch ing, general
painting . Call R ichttr d I.

Ironically. .
ARea
l l sona
work
guaranteed
ble
rates. Phone 992 ·3213 .
....... 7-27-tfc

HI:Re!'S 1'0 A Pl'Y OF' GOOC'
SE~~tNG ... THAT SORT OF
THING, GUV'NOil!

lHEN

You Haul It

NEW CONTRACTOR in area .

elec.

H 'fC)tJ

I

Specials

9·28-6lc

balanced

, ~A~1'

an' me

5 13·1f&lt;

662-3035.

VfiRY W&lt;i~~!

THOSE WOLJLI7 ONW
GKIP THREE Tlh\EG!

p.m.

Phone 614·843-227 4.

Racine is now open. (all 949.
2789
fo r
appointment.
Specia lizing in paint ing. body
work and fiberglass .

Dubbeld . phone

NON,E'N,S , WRI f
IH!'SE ARE E-VEN
~Hifit&lt;: THAN THE

! 'M ;;Qi(t'?'( lfoH CCOKII'~
171r:&gt;N'1' TURN OUT

ljOU

USED BEDS

~9.95

CLAWING

THAR LI'L NOSES
STAfl.TED CiiUtVE:~IN' ;:=:"""WIF ECSTASY,
WHEN TH!:.Y SEEN
TH' SMOG OYER --'-,...c, .~
ER IE, PA.!'

stallation . Free estlmates on
new furnaces. oil or gas .
Service work . Ca II Ceci 1
Ro se berry , Ra c ine, Oh io .

--------------------.
,.
STA NS Body Shop, Rf. 1,

Clean and pr oductive. Plenty
of barn and bu jl ding space. 5
bedroom home. 2 pond s, NEW, J·bedroo m h ome In
M iddleport . Buill -in kitchen,
dri lied wei t, and Cheste r
cera mi c tile bath , all -el ectric
wafe r . A REAL FARM .

NEW

ROSEBE

Russell .

Owner &amp; Operator .

C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer

baths , family room witli
fireplace . 2. car garage. 15
acres. Asking $37,500.00.

WH'I ARE
THE'I

o' th' iceoox!

Middl eport .

LUXURIOUS
COUNTRY
HOME - New 4 bedrooms, 2

10 !I(E' li'AOIO f&lt;I'JOM ...

'&gt;-"::"""' ASTI&lt;ONAUT !

chair here in front

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

·Wheel s

NEW LISTING - 6 room frame

10 a.m. to 8: JO

Reasonable rates . Ph . 446-4782,

tune up and brake service.

Pomeroy, Ohio

10-1 3fc

ALL TH '

GO.,OP AS FAR NORTH
AS e&gt;ANGOR,MA INE AN' AS FAR SOUTH
AS MLTtMORE.'.'

9·30-601p

Comple te front end se rvice.

Br.oker
II 0 Mechanic Street

AH IS LEAVIfJ' ' NUFF
GOBBLEGLOPSifJ NOO
'IAWK T0 - [3LU5H.~·­
MU LTIPL'I --

-AN' Goeel!O

and State Rt . 7
Hours- Monday , Tuesday,
Wednesday and Friday
8: !O a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday

6lO·ffC

3279 .

'

5443

Gl F INAN CING AVAILABLE . DA RK BROWN early American
pay to qualified · GI. Up lo
$2.500 available for lot im -

For

r~modeting

718·ffc "S EWIN G MACHINES . 'Repair

3 ROOMS

No down payment, 12 years tO"

N E IGLE R Const ruction.
build ing or

raised. moved, underpinned,
remodeled . Estimates free,
anywhere. Na tiona l House
Mover s, Box 5002 , Charleston,
W. Va. 25311, or phone 304 -925-

2196 .

budget lerm s. Call 992.7085.
9-27·61c

/!J(,(T 5TVP li'EFc~li'llr'G

Saturday
8,30-.), m. to 1 p, m.
eHONE 992-7474

Futura. 6-cycle ... automati c. $2.300 WILL ouy 'L J acres in THE SHOP . Custom meat
Call 949-2951.
Bedford Township , Wolfpen
cutting , Pleasant Ridge Road ,
9-30·3tc
Road. 20 m i nute s from
Pomeroy . Dick Vaughan, 992 ·
Pomeroy . 3.• of land in timber,
3374 and Da le Litt le, 992-6346.
WARM Morning coal hea ter
balan ce in pasture . No
9-t2 ·30fc
and gas fl oor furnace. Phone
bu il ding s. Call 99'2-2152 and
985·421 I.
ask tor Dick .

- - -- - -

Mobile ·Homes for. Sale

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

HOUSE MOVING Houses , etc.

Real Estate For Sale

MUMS, all colors, field grown,
ready to go Big Clusters.
10-18-lfc
Reynolds
F,lower
ShOp,
Mason,
W.
Va
.
----

---~-'------

FURNITURE

Phone 992.6407 .

9·26·30fc

@

Corner Union Avi!.

And

·
6·30-ttC'

A L I CE ..
K A THEL I NE
SAUND E RS ,
wh os e
la st - - -- - - 9-28-6fp
TRA ILER space, desirab le
known
pla c e
of
r esi
1
dence is South Cha rleston .
neigh borhood ! phone 992-2084.
West Virginia , and whOse exact
9-19-lfc NEW 1971 zig · zag sewing
. heal, good neighborhood. Ca n .
$60,000.00.
address and place of residence
machine in or igina l factory
a rrang e FHA financing .
is unknown , is hereby notif ie d TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
carton . Zig -zag to make
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
GENERAL
STORE
2
houses,
.
that on the '" l si day of Sep ·
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Park, Miner svil le, Phone 992·
2186.
te"m ber , 1971, Art ie B. Saunders ,
storage
building
.
2
ca
r
monograms and make fan cy
3324.
being pla intiff filed his" cam .
7-25-tfc
garage.
One
acre
.
LOCK
,
9-26-6tc
designs wi1h just the twi st of a ,
plain t aga i ns t her as defendant
STOCK,
and
BARREL.
Only
37 ACRES on Shade River.
sing le dial. Left In la y.away
in the Common F' leas Court .
$30,000.00.
dr illed well , modern 4-room
and
never
been
used
.
Wi
ll
sell
Me igs County, Oh io, Case No. APARTMENT, furnished room
house
and bath , aluminum
14,930, praying for d ivorce fr om
for
on
ly
$47
cash
or
cred
it
wi th bath, phone 992-2780 or
TO BUY OR SELL CALL 992 said Katheline Alice Saunde r s
sicling,
paneling,
7 acres river
terms
available.
Phone
992992-3432.
3325 or 992-2378
on the grounds of gr oss neglect
bottom . Phon e 992-6133 after 1
5641.
9-17-ffc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
of duty and e)(t r eme cruelty ;
9-28-6fc
p.m.
said cause will be for hea r ing on '
ASSOACIATE
.
9-29·6fp
or after the 22nd day of October , 4 ROOM and bat h apartment .
9)6 -~fc
ELECTRO
LU
X
vacuum
Tel
ephone
773
·5147,
Ma
son,
191 I .
cleaner Co mplete with at Arlie 8 . Saunde r s, Plain! iff
W. Va ., on main highway .
tachmen ts, cordwinder and
J . B. 0 ' Bf'ien , his attornt.'T"
Reynolds Flower Shop.
(9) 3, 10, 17 , 24 flO l \, 6, 15, He
paint
spray . Used, but In llke
9-28-61p
new condition . Pay $34 .45

.ITEM : Morning . A
'zestful time for some
people. Double dismal
for others. Jim Mees
some?lo'w ·gets '· us all
toge ther. every day ,

OFFICE SUPPLiES

estimates. Phone 992 .3284
Goe91ein Ready -Mix Co .,

2608 .

best offer .

NEW 91FOCIILS

Lincoln St., Middleport

. JOHNIE'S
BEAUTY SHoP

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

HOUSE --lt Two apts .. 4 rooms
and bath each, near new
housing proj ec t. Trade for HA.C KN EY 'S Electri c Service,
all types of electrica l work.
sma ller house . Phone 992 -

apartments . Close tu school.

TRA ILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Ohio. 992·2951.
4-2-tfc

. HOME &amp; AUTO

prp ject. Fas.t and easy. Free

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

TROP ICAL"' hsh a nd supplies.

FURN ISHED and unfurnished
Phone 992~5434.

railing . Call A. Ja cob,

sales representa t ive. For fr~
es ti ma fes, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse.
V . V.
Johnson and Son, In c.

se pti c tank. Get Klean. Em 5-J7 .tfc
·mo Washington. Bl.vd .
All Septic Tank Cl eaner.
Land m ar k Farm Burea u,
CREA _
D_
Y--M
~
..I~
X ' - C-O-NCRETE
Belpre , Ohio
Pomeroy.
10· 1·ltc . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
de li vered right to y_our

9-30·31c

WANTED!

~ · and

MOBil£ HOMES

DON'T PUMP your slugg ish

I KNOW YOO REALLY
WANTED 10 liE AN

BALL FOR

A I'ICKER Wlla'S WSARtNG

POMEROY

windows,
carpo rt s,
marquees, aluminum sid ing

MILLER

10-1-3tc

~Ltl ~E

NEVER

949-4 551

AWNINGS. storm doors and

10 1 21p
CAN YOU dev ote 10 hours a
week for $75 pro fits and a
wa rdr obe w i thout paying
cash? Ambitious housewives
lo work neighborhood fashion
shows . Car needed . For tree
br ochure. ca ll 882 ·2070 or
write P. 0. Box 186, New
Haven, W. Vq.

Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 . . •·

992-7608
12' · 14' · 2~' ; WIDE

Co. and An-,

Resideotial,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hour Service

Open8Til5

And Leach Beds.

8 Holstein

I WAS RE~OW"'ED,
tN loW DAY, AS ~E
'GOLIIEN TO!:."

ELECTRIC SERVICE

Pomeroy HoRle &amp; Auto

Septic Tank s

10 1 3fc
PIGS

•.

.j·_·

O'BRIEN

- GUARANTE-EDPhone 992-2094

Backhoe And
Endloader Work

Crosley inboard motor, 12 It .
alum inum boat, new 7 h.p.
motor. M &amp; G Food Market, 1
mi. South , Middleport on Rt.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

f5.55

Ki1chen5, Baths
Room Add itions
And Patios

9-29-31c 15 FT. BOAT trailer. 4 cyl.,
1965 INTERNATIONAL truck,

HILTON WOLFE
' 949-3211

JOtmSON MAS6intY .

GAS circu lat ing heaters.
Phone 992 ·5262 evenings .

For Sale .

MIND

.

'Phone 992-2550
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for f-ree
l:stimate on Furnace
lnstalation, ·

- .t.9-tfc '

~anted To Buy

Middleport on St. Rt. 7.
10-1-3fp

LEGAL NOTICE

E.' Main

HER'N_OON'l

AN' I A~WI'WS
THOUGHT HE '
HATED ME WUSS'N
WOLF PIZEN

. .

--..___,

diti oning :

limestone . Excelsior\
Works.

FER TWO·THREE DA'IS·· UH ·· IF
THATWUTHLESS HUSBAND OF

MIND,
70NIE MAf .. l

WEll, IT ThST'E&lt;;
Ut&lt;;E MEOKAID !

LEMOf\JADE !

thony ,Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
PlumbinG.
Heating and t.Jr Con -

~------

~a ft

··

Constructton

Portland. Phone 843-2254.
9-22- tfc
~OAL,

·

TO VISIT WIF MY BRBV'SISTER .

HE DON'T

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;

bushe l , pick your ·own .
Potatoe-s . Clarence Proffitt,

2

Food Market, 3 mi. South,

LEGAL NOTICE

669-3785.

-

CAME

l
''

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
'
WORK
•
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

' HALF RUNNER. beans. Sl.sO

i'~EROY , OHIO

$450. Phone 949·4551. 9. 26 _71 c
1966 COMET Cyclone, 2~ cu. in.

·

'

'

9-3-tfc

OPEN EVES. 8!00 P.M.

9-24-tf c

9·29·3fc

APP LE S - Fitzpatric k Or·
chard;, State Route 689,

Pomeroy llotor Co.

TRAILER space. inqu ire M &amp; G

Sport sman Club, Sunday, Oct .
3 at 12 noon . ·

9-8-301p

Wilkesville,

'

FOUR NEW HOMES
. (
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
lliO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A J bedroom $16,900.00 home ca n be purchased with a
monthtypayment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
~alary of $5,000.00 and · three children. 7•;, Pet. annual

Davisburg, Mich., 48019 .

phone

·

.

HOWDV,LOWEEZY·: I

BL.E SS
HIS HEART!!

•

,

w

s8s. coolville

Ambrose Co .•. 4325 Lakeborn,.

4 Dr. , V-8 engine, automatic trans, P.S, factory air, good
tires, rad io &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior .

1962 FORD 1/ :r ton p ick up truck

·

EARN AT home addressing
enve l opes. Rush stamped
self·addressed enve lope. The

12795

Less tha n 10,000 mi les by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, white over gold finish, 350 V·8 engine, power
steering, r~dio , whif'e. walls, wh . covers.

SAVE up to one ha l t . Bring· your

sick TV

~~~med.

'

e

~~~~e~~.PP~~~m~~e~~e~~~;: 1

MINIATURE Schnauzers ...

9 29 121p

1970 CHEVROLET BELA1R 4 DOOR

9·22·30fp

9·22 -30fp

·

1970 CAMARO CPE .
13295
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appeararice of 71 model. Rally
Sport eq l!ipped , Classic copper with sandalwood inter ior,
tinted glass, 1actory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
conso le,- air spoiler, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. in. V-8-.engine. Really Sharp.

Auto Sales

.

For Sale

r"Dmeroy
Motor Co.

QUAliTY

WILL DO sewing in my home . MALE , 19 years of age needs
Mrs . Arthur Barr , phone 992 ·
job on Monday and Thursday
7252 .
aft"er noons or any evening .
9-30 3fc
Work cheap at home or
business. For information
write P. 0 . Bo x 57, Mid·
PEP -UP with new Zippies iron
pills. Non -habi t forming . Only
dleport, Ohio.
9-29-Sfc
Sl.98, Nelson Drugs.
REDUCE safe and fast wi th
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
Water Pills . Nelson Drugs .

B

BUSmeSS
•· •. s
·
_ervtCCS_

'

1

Chu rch ,

Pomeroy wi ll hold a Rum ·
mage
Sale,
M ond ay &amp;
Tuesday, October 4 &amp; 5 in the
church ba sement from 9 a.m .
to 3 30 p.m.
10· 1 3tc

be

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·

'

SHUX-

.

Sentinel Classifieds
·Get
Action
!
Sentinel
Classifieds
Get~
Results,!
.,
.
.
'

.,

EEKAND MEEK

SWAP SHOP

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1(011 KNOW .HOW &gt;lARD
I'VE TRIED ~ TELL ME

HOW I'Vt; TRIED ...

.A CryptOJram' quotation ·
N

305 N. 2nd Ave ,

Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-7261
.
Open From 9 A.M. until6 P.M.
Monday Through Saturday

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---writer Dies in -Escape ··

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Said,· "let's have some fun,'' e n~red the rool)l and either
·and ordered the women to shot Mrs. Taylor, or yelled,
undress. He took them into a causing her to lose her grip on
bedr oom of the six-room the sheet. She fell to the
dwelling and raped Mrs. courtyard below.
Taylor's roommate twice.
Mrs. Taylor was locked in
The ma n fled but left hehind
one bedroom while the, man a scribbled note which read,
took her roommate to another ''Bleeker D. T. Pigs:" Police
room. While alone, Mrs. Taylor said they did not know what the
tied a sheet to a bedroom ' message meant.
wi ndow frame and .tried to The name of Mrs. Taylor 's
lower herself to the floor below. roommate was not released.
While she was tiying to She was taken to a hospital in a
escape, police sa id , the rapist hys~rical condition,

·

News ... in BriefS
1Continued from page 1)

·

through'ou t the unsuccessful negotiations.
-. All signs i'!dicate that no settlement o(Jlle dispute can be
reached before Monday .

s
ABOUT 8,000 OHIO MINERS today joined a nationwide
United Mine Worker~ union strike against the soft coal industry,
shutting down at least 16 surface and strip mining operations,
mostly in eastern Ohio. About 1,600 eastern Ohio miners went on a
(Continued from page I 1
wildcat strike Thursday in an at~mpt to put the pressure on the
Athens County Common Pleas coal industry to agree to a new contract.
Cour t.
Meyer , however, at OU attor·
....
ney's reques t, ordered McGee
CHICAGO - CLEVELAND MAYOR CARL STOKES has
and the union to each post a urged black voters to join in a coalition with other minority
$1,000 bond.
groups in a move to .gain power within the existing two party
Later in the day, AFSCME system. Stokes said the new political stra~gy "may mean tbe
Director Herschel Sigall reveal- ac tual running of a black'person for 'President" in 1972.
ed that representatives of the
The two-term black mayor Thursday urged black voterS in
state attorney's office had attemp ted to set up a meeting be- both the Republican and Democratic parties to concentra~ their
tween the union and the school, energies on delegate selection lor the 1972 presidential
but that OU officials refused. nominating conventions . Stokes, who has been mentioned as a
possible presidential candida~. said he was not in~res~d in
Demands Kept Secret
OU President Claude Sowle, either post. '
however, replied late Thursday
that the offer was rejected beOES TO MEET
cause the union gave him,
Elec tion pf officers will be I[JeCUJ
BSS
through assistan t Attorney Genheld at 7:30p.m. Tuesday when
eral George Jenkins, II new demands, including a demand that Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
meels at the temple. Members
the demands be kept secret.
Replying to questions abo ut are asked to pay dues at that
time.
the strike on a call-in show on
the campus radio station,
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J .
WOUB, Sowle said he decided to
o
Graber of 419 Homewood Ave.,
reveal the demands after Sigall
Day ton, will observe their 50th
held the news conference.
(Continued from page 1)
wedding anniversary, Tuesday,
Sowle said the union also ask- natural gas in liquid form by Oct. 5. A special mass will be
ed for a list of summer help ship from overseas, is par- said in their honor at the Corpus
laid off, those called back to ticipating in studies. aimed at Christi Church located on
work, those newly hired, the au- bri nging hu ge amounts of Forest and Homewood Aves. at
tumn layoff number, restoring Alaskan and Canadian gas to II a. m. After the mass,.friends
formerly demoted workers to th~ Uni ted States, has acquired and relatives may congratulate
their previous rank, not allowing righls to buy large volumes of the couple at the church.
supervisors to take on non-super- this gas, and has announced
The three .daughters of the
visory roles, returning the staff plans to construct a plant near couple, Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
level to last year's standard, Green Springs, Ohio, to convert Foster (Mary Catherine ) and
the firing of OU labor counsel petroleum liquids into pipeline nine children of Dayton ; CoL
Frank Stewart wi thin 30 days quality gas.
and Mrs. Robert Funke, parents
and no reprisals or layoff of
"\t is also participating in of nine children (the former
strikers.
.,
research aimed at converting Teresa Marie ) of Alabama, and
Sowle said he believed the this nation's vast coal reserves Sister Grace AntOn, S. C., a
campus could ''stay open defin- into gas," they said .
Sister of Charity teaching at the
itely" despite the strike if the
A company spokesman in St. Bernard School in
deliveries of food and coal con- Gallipolis said this morning this Springfield, Ohio, the former
tinue, if there are no major will be effective apparently Virginia Graber. An anbreakdowns of equipment and if after 1973, because most of the niversary card shower is
students and supervisors contin- several new projects have heen planned .
ue handling jobs of the str,ikers. committed in the Gallia area
Mr . Graber is suffering from
A university spokesman said through the next two years . Gas arthritis and Mrs. Graber uses
several trash can fires were set company officials have been in a walker since a fall last ApriL
during the evening on the West close touch with local industrial
·
·
Green and that a board was and construction represen- Mrs. Ada Taylor
tossed through a truck window. tatives, it was reported.
D'
Th da

OU Strike

~

·· ~

s ' l M.

Is Planned on
A •
nnzversary

GaS .Lnn1"t

1es on

urs

y

Mrs. Elbert (Ada) Taylor, 61,
Pomeroy Route 2, died Thursday at the Cabeii-Huntington
Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
Mrs. Taylor was a member of
the Hemlock Grove Christian
Church.
She is survi,ved by her
husband, three sons, Cecil of
Trenton , Ohio ; Donald,
Cheshire, and Capt. Roland
Taylor of Miesau, Germany; a
daughter, Mrs. Robert DWJcan,
Pomeroy ; a sis~r , Mrs. Lula
Bass, Syracuse; nine grand·
children, and several nieces and
nephews.
Mrs . Taylor was preceded in
death by her parents, Rosa and
Reuben Midkiff, lour brothers,
two sisters, and a son.

Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
Funeral Home where friends
may call anytime af~r 7 this
evening. Burial will be in the
Hemlock Grove Ceme~ry .
~Checking

Account is !he easiest wa y

to keep an accurate record ol money you receive .

And money you spe nd. And ... a cancelled check is
leg at proof of payment. Good way Ia ·do business!

POMEROY
NATIO-NAL BANK
POMEROY :·

RUTLAND

MEIGS TltEATR£
Tonighlthru Tuesday
October 1·5
LITTLE BIG MAll
(Technicolor) ·
Dustin -Hoffman
Faye Dunaway

"G"
Color Cartoon
Crazy Over Daisy

Show.StartsAt7 P.M.

Seroing Meigs County

Apportionment
(Continued from page I )
for every Ohio citizen."
Colllos Objects
"If this isn't gerrymandering,
don·t know what is ... exclaimed Sen. Oakley C. Collins,
R-lronton, who found himself
lumped in wit!\ Sen. Harry 'L.
Armstrong , R-Logan, in a
district stretching from Ironton
to just south of Columbus and
westward halfway across the
state.
"We guide ourselves by theprinciples set forth by the
highest court in the land, and
are firm in our intention that the
outcome of our efforts here will
see the voices of all the people,
not muffled or distorted by
arbitrary constraints, but freely
and clearly expressed and
heard," Gilligan told the board
in offering his plan.
"Look at that," exclaimed
Sen. Paul E. Gillmor, R-Tiflin,
as he examined the governor's
maps during tjte recess and
found·out his district resembled
a s!lllke encompassing Marion,
the hometown of Sen. Robin T.
Turner, R-Marion :
House Speaker. Charles F.
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green; one
of a number of RepubUcan
leaders whose districts were
combined with other' GOP incumbenls, called the plan a
"blatantly partisan drawing of
districls to place incumbent
legislators in the same district
where not necessary to assure
equal representation."
He said the map contained
" grotesque geographic patterns, " incJuding one new
House district which runs from
the Pennsylvania line in
Ashtabula County to.a few miles
east of Cleveland and then in a
tunnel down to North Canton.

0

Member Fed er a l Deposit Insurance ·c orporat ion
Alll!lccounts Insured Up To $20,000 .00

Continuous Service On
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
..

Ri chard Benjam in

Carrie Snodgress
--'" FiltQJ&lt; Langelta
- Plus"I LOVE MY ... WiFE "
Elliot Goold
R

By GENE BERNHARDt . Office of Economic Opportunity cases and prohibit the allorneys
WASHING'l'ON (UPI )-The anti-poverty programs for twQ from aiding clients in demonHouse has approvi!d a new anti- years, until June 3().1973, with a' strations against federal, state
poverty bill that would reform total two-year authorization of or local governmental policie5.
the program of free legal . $5 billion, the same fiture as in
services for the poor and create. the Senate-passed measure.
a • multi-billion dollar plan of OEO's legal services prochild care designed .to help •gram, under fire from mayors
youngs~r of working mothers. and governors who have been
.
,,.,.
The
easure , approved brought into court by project MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!) - . nearby cbmmunlty of .Bellville, :'::
y on a .251-115 roll call attorneys representing mino(ity An emergency rescue am- wlfs not immedla~ly l4~ntlfii!d, ~­
vote,. s similar to .a . Se~te- groups, would be transferred to bulance cras)led into the back of Aut~orities said the body . was :'::
4il ,,
pass bill, but differences. will a pdvate corporation run by a a loaded school bus and burst badly burned.
•••1'
have to. be worked out m a 17-member board of directors. into flames when it was siruck The accident occurred · on ;;/
conference of House-Senate
President Nixon, who favors by a truck today about 6ne mile Ohio 13 about a mile north
memhers.
the corporation letup but wants' north of here. The ambulance here. The Madison Local School ::;
The .!louse bill would extend power to pick his own people driver was killed and about· 25 District bus had just made a,;,::
for the board, compromised students taken to a hospitaL
turn )Vhen it was struck by the :.
with the House bill which
·
••
Authorities said Qnly . about ambulance.
\
restricts his appointments to eight of ·the students .,.ere ·inthe board. Six of the directors jured but it was not imTOSEE FILM
must come from, national bar mediately determined to what "Tuesday night at the.~:
associations, four from among
movies" will be held when the ·;·
degree. ,
.
,
the poor and project attorneys, The driver of the ambulance, Eastern High School Athletic :
and the remaining seven would which was coming from the Boos~rs meet at 8 p.m. at the "
be the President's choice. All
high school. A film of the
..
appointments would be subject
Eastern-Glouster. game will bO ·-:
to Senate confirmation.
· LOCAL TEMPS
shown a~d plans will be made ,:
The R. G. Follrod Co., , The .·House measure would
The temperature·m downtown for a horse show to be staged by
Pomeroy , is the apparent low han corporation attorneys from Pomeroy at II a.m. Friday was the group on Oct. 9. All inbidder on a $105,400.60 representing clients in criminal 77 degrees under sWlny skies. terested persons are invited.
(estimated ) landscape planting
project at the Racine Locks and
Dam 'on the Ohio River, the U.
S. Corps of Engineers at
Huntington disclosed today.•
Follrod's bid of $84,880.50 was
";
followed by one of $85,457 en~red by Kroslak Landscaping
and Tree Moving Co., of Copley,
Ohio, second low, and .one of
$87,645 by the East Side Nursery
1.:
Inc., Canal Winchester, third
lowest.
Eighl other firms bid on the
job, the highest being by the
Paul E. Bleile Co., Norwalk,
Ohio, for $215,875.05.
The work, to begin withill"'IO
days after receipt of notice to
••• and this week end a sale on all 3 floo,n proceed, consists of planting
various kinds of trees and
furniture for ~our home a.nd wearing apparel
shrubs at the dam site.
'
*"

25 Students Are ·. InJured~

..

~lberfelds In ·Pomeroy Are Open Until

9 At Night

(Continued from page I I
the wiring of the electrified pipe
organ is believed to have caused
the blaze.
During the summer months
the congregation met in the
church basement. The public is
invited to stop by the church
any time during the open house
hours.

For All Occasions
wire
..,_..___

We
flowers
Everywhere ·

With last year's Charger sales up 75
percent, you know that a lot of peopla
think Charger is the car for them. Most

people are initially attracted to Charger's

g•eat·tooking shape. But when you take

a new Charger for a test drive, you'll
discover other reasons for Charger's
success. like the real _family-sized room

ot Cherger. .If you want a roll family
spans car-got a '72 Charger. Take one
•

Bring

Your

,.

-

test-drive
MONACOI ,

When you take Monaco on the road. you'll
1

find out what "the ride with the quiet

venlence of Coronet's four big doors.

inside" is all about. It' s Torsion-Quiet

tions, the kids won't be crawling .over ·
·you every lime you stop. And your wife

Ride that i1oletes you from road and
engine noises. .I t also gives · Monec:o
those great handling characteristics. Stop
in and ask for the keys. ·Test-drive a new

Easy in. Edsy out. On those long vaca-

witt lika Coronet's new styling, So before
you buy your family a new car, bring
them att down to your loeat Dodge Boy'o.
And tda a ride in the new 1972 Dodge
Coronet. · {

1972Dodge Monaco. You'll beimpreiMCI.

.• ....,. .

'

·

Dot;lge
AIRHOIIIZED DEALERS

992-2039

R. H. RAWLINGS SON_S CO.,

Pomeroy·Flower Shop

Mill.&amp; Second Streets, :Middleport, 0.

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r,JARY JO WOLFE,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George WoUe of Long Bottom, a
senior, was crowned queen of the Eastern High School Homecoming Friday night
by last year's queen; Brenda Boring , Miss Wolfe 's escort is Sam Brown ; the tiny
crownbearer is Laura Jean Eichinger, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Henry Eichinger
of Ches~r .

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 11,000

•

Families
15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Plea_sant

of the Paul R. Lyne Center and Boyd Hall .
The lat~r structure was named in honor of
Mr. Davis .
Mr . Davis was assocla~ general agent
lor the Penn Mutual Ufe Insurance Co.
He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth
Jones Davis, and these children, Hugh
Davis, Columbus; Mrs. Margaret Parks,
Worthington; Mrs. William (Mary
Elizabeth) Morris, Old Greenwich, Conn .;
Mrs . Jack E. (Jane Elliott ) Grant,

VINTON - All that is left of
the bridge here, built around
1830 spanning Raccoon Creek
used by Confederate raider
John Hunt Morgan, and
destroyed by him after he had
plundered bare this village, are
ils two stone abutmenls.
Vinton town council believes
thiB is enough, however, to
rebuild upon ,
A new bridge, according to
the two women and four men on
the coWJcll, on the si~ of the one
• burned by Morgan, and of the
bridge replacing it that lasted
until 1927, and of the one
replacing it now in disrepair,
could be a genuine tourist attraction.
A cable suspension type
bridge, the present. structure
was used by foot traffic until
1969 when its planking had
rotted away. Today it is little
more '' than a . picturesque
remnant of a past era, though
wed frequently by the more
daring of the sub-teen set as a
play site.
The present bridge in its day
of youth was ah Important
artery of commerce in Vinton,
· eVen supporting automobiles,
though never designed lor that
slze load.
The first bridge went up In
flames after Morgan and his
. men - who proceeded to
Danville and Rutland in Meigs
Colmty, then 1'9 an Ohio River
crossing near Portland, also In
Meigs CoWJty - had sacked

. I

Vinton and drove their horses
and wagons across it. Stores
and homes were raided, as were
farm houses, All were plundered; many crops were burned. Legends abound yet of the
colorful scene as the raiders
raced from town, cloth
streaming from bolts carried·on
their horses and ·wagons taken
from the stores.
In time, afler Morgan was

gone, the bridge was replaced .
It lasted about 64 years, until
1927 when it literally tumbled
into the creek. The bridge
standing today is the one that
replaced it.
The ancient stone abutments ,,
still intact and apparently
sound, could conceivably be
used for still a fourth bridge, if
needed.
However,. Mrs. Evelyn Daft,

Kathryn Rece , Walter MeCarley , Woodrow Browning,
Beecher Davis and Howard
Neekamp, have been asking the
Gallia County commissioners,
or any other agency willing to
help, to donate money toJ:epair
the present structure for foot
traffic . The limited funds
Vinton has available for road
maintenance are inadequate.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs County
Democratic Chairman E. A. Wingett
Saturday said advance ticket sales for the
Wednesday, Oct. 13 Democratic dinner in
Middleport thus far have exceeded expectations.
Featured speak\" lor the occasion will
be John E. Jones, executive director of the
Ohio Democratic party . Evangeline
Chap~r . Order of Eas~n Star, will serve
a s~ak dinner at 7 p.m. in the social rooms
GALlJPOUS - Plans are well un- of the ~mple in Middleport to open the
derway for the 1971 Quilt Show sponsored
by the Gallipolis Retail Merchants Assoc.
Orientation Today
on Saturday, Oct. 16 in tbe City Park.
A "rain date" has been set lor the
POMEROY - Meigs County JWJior
following Saturday,
Miss contestants and their parenls are
All area qullters and quilt owners are invi~d to an orientation meeting at 2 p.m.
urged to participate by picking up entry , today at the educational bullding of the
blanks at Gallipolis stores, Chamber of Trinity Cburch in Pomeroy,
Commerce office or on page 3 in this
Casual attire will be appropria~ ahd
newspaper today.'
there will be a short rehearsal following
There is no limit to the nwnber of the meeting. Miss Margie Jeffers, 1972
quilts one person may en~r .
Meigs Junior Miss and daugh~ of Mr.
Prizes will be awarded to outstanding . and Mrs. Gene Jeffers, Albany, wiU crown
quilts displayed. All exhibitors are asked the new jWJior miss who will be selec~
tn regis~r their qullts at the Chamber of during the ninth annual pageant to be held
Commerce office beginning at 9 a.m. ' Nov. 20 at Eastern High School.
Salurday, Oct. 18. More details will be
announced following a merchants'
meeting Tuesday.

Sales Tax Take Was
$19,533 in September

Washington, D. C. Thir~en grandchildren
and seven great-grandchildren -survive.
Mr . Davis was a member of North
Broadway iJni~ Methodi,st Church, a
graduate with Honorary Doctorate
Business Administrafon, Rio Grande
College ; Trus~e Emeritus and Honorary
Doctora ~ of Finance Ohio Northern
University; Masonic Lodge F&amp;AM, Ur. bana, Ohio; member Franklin Chapter
(Continued on page 2

Dinner Tabs Going

To Have Show

Town W~ts to Repair Bridge

to the

.

;=::

Quilt Makers

The Third Vinton Bridge: Tourist Attraction?

dowri

*!

?-:
.&lt;•

·'·''

COLUMBUS (Special) - J. Boyd
Davis, 86, Columbus, president emeritus of
the Rio Grande College Board of Trus~es ,
died at his home, 56 Kenworth Rd., Friday
morning .
Mr. Davis, whose lather was third
president of Rio Grande College, served
the Gallia County institution of higher
learning for 50 years. He, along with the
Ia~ Atty. Henry Cherrington, became
college trustees in 1921.
. In 1~ Mt; · Davis was elected
president of the board of trus~es . He held
that position until 1964, when he was
named president emeritus. Dr. F . W.
Shane succeeded Mr. Davis as president of
the board in 1964.
,
Mr. Davis' last visit to the campus was
less than two years ago, in January, 1970,
when he attended dedication ceremonies

yououghtto

whole familv

POMERo·y - P omeroy
police Saturday were in ~
~?. vestigating a report by Tom
Meyers of Langsville that
r.:~ thieves broke into his auto
~~;
Friday night and stole a tape
~:;
player, 15 tapes, and two
~· · speakers.
•
!l!. Myers' car was parked in the
:·i area of the Marauder Stadiwn
;:;; where Myers was attending the
«
·.; Meigs-Ironton football game. ·
j!j Police said Leo Vaughan,
ro::
Pomeroy, reported a wing
window on his auto was forced
j!l and an 6-foot tape measure
:;:; taken from his car, also while
;;!; pafked near the stadium.
"·
:::.
;:::

?:

@

J. Boyd 'Davis, 86-, Dies

-

we think

showroom and check out the real con.

Speakers, and
rnL
utyer Stolen.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1971

THINK

-~

Bullerriut Ave.. 1'6mtroy
Mrs, Millard Van Meltr

Pomeroy-Middleport

VOL VI NO. 36

~

.·test-drive
CORONET!

*:

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•'"

4 SECTIONS

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

d

=:::

?:!

'l"""'""

34 PAGES

ELBERFEL.DS IN POMEROY

•

•j
....

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Saleslips From

DODGE BOYS

i~r!~,,,,i~=~r;::;,:::;:r:~~}~1 .

tmts

••
"••

eUse the free parking lots on 2nd Street across from the store

vansdium and silicon' aUoys for the s~el
industrY . .,
The local plant was formerly known as
the Vanadiwn Corparalion of America.
Operations were started in 1952.

+

Cooler today, highs in the 60s,
south. Continued cool Monday ;
chance of showers .

..-

for your family.

r

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - An e stima ~
375 employes of the Foote Mineral' c ompany plant near here went on strike at
midnight Friday af~r negotiations for' a
contract settlement broke ·off Friday
evening .
Hershel Hun~r. staff represenlative
of the ln~rriational Uni~ S~lworkers·of
America, and ·nencil Matheny, president
ri Local 5171, USA said talks broke off
around 7 p.m., Friday between union and
company officials and the old thfee-year
contract expired at midnight.
The union officials said three plants
are affected after pickels were set up at
midnight. In addition to the local plant,
·others involves are loca~ at S~ubenville
and Cambridge, Ohio. ,
At midmorning Saturday, HWl~r said
no meetings have bt.en scheduled for
negotialions.
Meanwhile, company officials,
through local plan~ manager Cljl'l Adler,
118ld:
"Foo~ Mineral Company's planls at
Cambridge and S~ubenviUe, Ohio and
Graham, W, Va., were struck by the
United S~l Workers of America at 12:01
Saturday morning , Octoher 2, 1971 at the
expiration of the current 'agreements. No
further negotiation meetings are
scheduled at this time.
"The plants produce chromium ,

WEATHER REPORT

On · Friday and Saturday

for a test drive soon I

FLOWERS

MISS SHERRY KING, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William King, Bradbury, was
'
crowned homecoming
queen of Meigs High School by Principal James Diehl
Friday night at Pomeroy Stadiwn. Miss King's e8cort is Tony Vaughan, son of Mr.
"and Mrs. Leo Vaughan, Pomeroy. Mls$ King is also head majorette of the Meigs
High Sch()()l marching band. Ceremonies were conduc~d prior to.the start of the ·
Marauder-Ironton game with the hand providing appropriate music ..

0

test-drive
CHARGER!

mit~ .

•

od!

Remo
· de}e d

.

'

........

F:ollrod
Has· Low
·.
d
Dam n.·

....

·FOote··Mineral
Plant ClOSed

A move .to block .transfer
legal services to the co~oor••· ;;;.
!ion plan was defeated on a ~1u. ;.
152 vo~.
'
,.,..

test-dtive COLT!

'

Tonight, Sal., Sunday
Oct. 1-2-3
Double Feature Program
DIARY OF A
MAD HOUSEWIFE R

Ho·use Passes ~~w Anti-Poverty ~cf ·

any"WithoutregardtothefateofTHE
particular legislator, this is
·
.
•
a sad day for responsible
government in Ohio," Kurfess
said. "Never before has the will
of the people, the concept of
effective community
representation, · and common
sense and decency been so
patently abused. "
The plan probably will be
appealed to the Ohio Supreme
Court and wind up in federal
court for a final decision.
If the plan holds, Republicans
combined with other JegiBiators
could move their residences and
in many cases find themselves
in a district with no incumbent.
Brown was continually
rejected during the meeting in
his efforts to get a 24-hour delay
for further consideration of the
various plans.
He said his two plans contained districts with a
maximum population variance
of one-half per cent from the
"ideal" districts f~uired by
the U. S. Supreme Court.
GiUigan said the districts on
his map deviated 0.9 per cent
either way from the norma, and
he conceded his delegation had
not been able to adhere to the
state constitutional
requirement that local political
subdivisions not be split into
You'll quickly find ou1 why is one of the smoothest
different districts.
,
we th~nk, " For a Httle car, shiftin' sticks on the road.
The plan combines the
it's a lot of car." Things · Try Colt's amazing overdistricts of Sena~ President
you
'd never exPect ·•re haadcamHemlengine(and
Pro Tempore Theodore M.
"ttandard on Colt. Ad}ust remember, it gets up to 30
Gray, R-Piqua, and Sen. Donald
tho steering column to the mpg), Get behind tho wheel
E. Lukens, R-Middletown, a
height that fits you best today I
possible gubernatorial aspirant
Colt's four· speed gearbox
in 1974.
It also throws Republican
incwnbents in the new districts
of such GOP leaders as Kurless; House Speaker Pro
Tempore Charles E. Fry, RSpringfield ; House Majority
Leader Robert E. Levitt, RCanton ; Collins. Chairman ofthe Sena~ Education Commit~ , and Rep. Lloyd George
Kerns, R-Raymond, chairman
of the House Finance Com-

M~~n~ ~9!V! · IH

Member Federa l Reserve System _
•

''

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
~ Ohio extended Outlook lor
Sunday through Tuesday: ·
A cooling trend wilh. highs
pnSuoday in the 80s dropping
to the. upper 60s .and 70s by
'Tuesday and lows around 60 ·
Sunday and In the low to mid
SOs Tuesday. A chance of
showers northwest Sunday
· and over the state Monday
. and Tuesday.

Even Calabrese. did not
escape, but he was thrown in
with Sen.' William W. Taft, RShaker Heights, in a diBtrict
Calabrese was calcula~d to tie
. able to capture.

'

Since 1872

I,
J

12 - ThiDaily Sentinel, Pomeroy-MiddiOp.rt, Ohio, October I. 1971

NEW YOI\J( (UP! i~A freelance writer, trying to escape
out her window from a man
raping her roommate in an
'adjoining room, fell 12 stories
to her death Thursday from her
Manhattan penthouse.
Mrs. Betty Taylor , 34, either
lost hold of the sheet she was
using to lower herself to
"another floor or was shot,
pollee said . An autopsy was
being conducted today.
·
According to police reconstruction oi the crime, the man
walked to the top floor of the
hotel, climbed across the roof
and lowered himself to the
penthouse patio . He then
walked through the open door
to where the tvlD women were
preparing dinner .
The man,' in his 20s, pulled a
gun and demanded money.
After collecting about $150, he

-.

evening's activities.
Tickets for the meeting . were
originally allot~d on the basis of 10 for
each precinct in the county. Many committeemen repor~ that their supply is
nearly exhaus~ and some have taken
more, Wingett said. All ticket sellers are
requested to report the number sold by
Thursday, Oct. 7 so that the proper
reserva !ions may be made.
"We are very gratified ," Wingett said,
"that these tickels have been going not
only to Democrats but lo Republicans and
independents as well. It serves to point up
the fact that there is considerable interest
in local races this year."
Everyone wishing to secure tickets
may contact Paul Gerard, Middleport;
Frances Brown, Pomeroy ; Edwin Cozart,
Racine ; Dorsel MiUer, Tuppers Plains or
Raymond Wilcox, Rolland, or call 9925418,
Those who cannot attend the dinner
but would like to hear Jones speak are
welcome. The program has been prepared
by the lOth District Democratic Action
Club. Jones will conduct a question and
answer session following his address.

Bridge Interchange
Opening is Tuesday

POMEROY - Meigs CoWJtians paid
$19,533.09 in sales tax on vehicles purPI'. PLEASANT - The interchange to Company, North Canton, Ohio, got the $1.8
chased during the month of september,
according to the office of Mrs. Evelyn feed Silver Memorial Bridge traffic million contract with the Department of
Lucke, Meigs County Clerk of Courts. In dlrecUy onto West Virginia 2 will be Highways for the work in spring 1970.
The bridge as well as the interchange
addiUon, Meigs res.ldents paid $4,~. 92 in opened to motorists Tuesday , according to
Governor
Arch
A
..
Moore,
Jr.
and a contract for Installation of tower
casual and use taxes on vehicle!! and $297
The
Ohio
River
bridge,
which
serves
lignting which is expected to get WJder
for inspection of motnr vehicles brought
U. S. 35 traffic south of Point Pleasant in way shortly, all have been funded with
into the county from another sta~ .
Mason
County, was opened to traffic federal money.
In other automotive activities in the
Another contract, also to be financed
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - The list of employes furloughed meet but it was expected they office of Mrs. Lucke during the month, 707 December 15, 1969, ex~cUy two years after
the
collapse
of
the
Sllver
Bridge.
with federal money, will provide lor
striking members of Local 1699 during the summer.
would hold sessions early· next certificates of title were issued ; 212
The
interchange
consists
of
a
span
removal of the old bridge piers and apAmerican Federation of State, The university had agreed week since the union was pres- notations of lien; 131 memorandum cerCounty and Municipal Em- earlier to furnish the Jist of sing that its demands be met. tifi~ates; 619 affidavils · and assignments which carries bridge traffic over West proaches from the Silver Bridge and the
ploy,es voted Saturday to end a laid off employes and also had ' An OU spokesman, who did and 12 certified copies. For these ac- Virginia 2 to ramps from which it can s~l still In the area . "! hive personally
Hl.ctay strike at Ohio Universi- voiWl~red to convene a spe- not wish to be identified, said UviUes, the o.lfice collected a Iota! of enter R~te 2 direcUy without first having directed this con tract be ready for letting
during t~ first quar~r of next year," the
ty,
cia! grievance conference If the "they voted . to end the strike $1,477.50 with the county's share being • to cr05,'1 the highway.
Melbourne
Brothers
Construction
Govemll'
advised.
Local president Oscar Me- strikers would go back to work but are holding the threat of $1,141.75 and ·the state's share $335.75.
Gee said the vote of the 900 and said . they would be rein- another strike over our heads
'
workers was "nearly WJanim- stated to their classifications if we don ;t meet all their deNursing Schools Approved
ous" and the 'next step for the held before the work stoppage. mands ."
COLUMBUS (UP! ) _ The
union and OU representatives OU Per~onnel Director Ward
. Ohio Board of Nursing
w~uld be, to "s~t down across' Wil~?n said Friday 1there wio
d , Both McGee and the univer- Education
and , Nurse
the table . and ~ron out differ- he no harassment~
stty gave a lot of credit to Registration approved 114 GALLJPOUS - Two more ting Judge F. H. O'Brien of in the last two weeks, One inences.
univer~lty or union of e lo. es, Harry Crewson, Athens City _ schools of nursing Friday which local youths have been charged Meigs County.
l'olved a teenage boy who-was
The non-academic employes : superv!Sors or represeR hves Counctl Prestdent and a pro- it said meet minimum state here with the illegal .distribution Another ~enager w~s arres~ for being under the
lessor at. OU for acting as standards.
struck the university ·in a dis- of either party."
of dang~rous drugs.
arrested on a similar charge influence of barbiturates .
pu~ over non-wage issues such
'The workers Saturday accept- mediator and helping to end
Ptl. Joe Owens Friday filed last week . . Other cases are Another invqlved a ~nage boy
as supervisory personnel doing ed a nine point proposal that the strike. . .
,
RED LINE SUSPENDED
warrants in Juvenile Court Wlder investigation and may who was treated at the Holzer
non-supervisory work, dlscrim- had first been accepted by the. The university ren:tJiined open
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Red against two boys, one age 13 and result-in additional arrests .
Medical Cen~r far an overd~
ination in the work load 11!1£ university, The details of the during the strike with students l!ne Express Inc .,.of Toledo has the other H years of age. They
of sleeping plils which had been
women in the' OU cafeter~ proposal were not revealed. and non&lt;:ontract personnel been given 6Q-ctay suspension were released to the custody of . It was repor~d 'that there given to him as barbiturates at
and the failure of the Wliversl- McGee declined to say when taking up the slack of the strik- for illegal service thropghout their parents for a cnurt ap- have been three separate in- school by another .teenage boy.
pearance Tuesday before Ac· cidenls involving four ~nagers
ty to present the union with a negotiators for both sides would ing workers ..
Ohio.

Strike At OU Ended

O'Brien to Hear

•

~gs

Case

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