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                  <text>._lit Court ,Won't Rule on the War

8- The Daily Senti nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct 11, 1971

,---------------------------. Herscher
TT7 . R .
I

:I

evzew 1

, •• J.n

1Continued from page I)
I
I 144 Butternut Ave, Pomeroy.

I

By RICK DU BROW

HOLLYWOOD l UP! I - What
was that force of energy that lit
up network televtston for two
hours during the weekend"
Whose face was lt, seemmgly
plam yet elechf) 1ngly vital and
beautiful when conumtted to a
pnnciple . that could make men
leap bmldmgs In a smgle
bound'~

Carne Snodgress IS the
answer to both questnnns. With
a dynamtsm and vibrance
rarely seen on the home screen,
sl!\, wo'e exuberant life and
unexpected pathos

mto

an

acting role of a concerned
social worker who can solve
ever~on e 's

problems but her

own, and thereby turned a twohour NBC-TV teleplay, "The
[mpaiien t Beal l," into the best
program by fa r on commercial
televtston thts season
, lt was a very lo vely
broadcast, this Al vin Sargent
teleplay that was presented
Friday mght, and I wish I could
have told you about It in
advan ce But NBC-TV's policy
is to forbid tota lly any prer e~ ie w of its shows, and one of
the results IS tha t outstandmg
programs like "The Impatient
Heart " are somellmes m1ssed
because no particular buildup is
given to them
Carne Snodgress, who was
nommated for an Oscar fOr her
role m "Diary of a Mad
Housewife, " has got to be the
most go rgeous pla in g1rl m
existence. When she IS on
screen, you can see the hvmg
proof of the old saymg that real
beauty comes from witlun . She
simply glows If one were to
look for the attitudes U1at are

There were o the~ good
moments in the teleplay -a
showdown between Miss Snod·
gress and a wild young
takes
her
man
who
on a dangerous motorcycle
nde when she lr1es to
hel p hi m: and, also, her
relatiOnship With a proud,
antagomshc Mextcan ~Amenc an
man whose wife has etght
children but who wants no
charity for his family , Hector
Elizondo was excellent in this
role
In addition to Miss Snodgress
and Sargent, what made the
telepla} come off so well was
the direction of John M.
Badham, who gave the viewer
the unpresswn that he had been
wailing for a scnpt and an
actress like this for a · long
time One felt that Badham had
Immersed himself wholly m the
mood, the story and tbe
characters and brought forth a
work he loved -a touchmg,
fwmy, angry, real story of a
girl who cared so much that
she piCked up a phone and
called Sacramento and Wash·
mgton when things went wrong
professiOnally, but let her
person~! life go unaided.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
Matermty v1sitmg hours 2·30 to
4:30 p m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward .
Births
Mt and Mrs . James Neil
Hickman, Ra y, Ohio , a
daugh ter ; Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Walton, Ironton, a
daughter : Mr. and Mrs
best among the new Amencan Dwayne Lee Rees, RIO Grande,
woman, I don 't thmk anyone a son ; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
could be more representatiVe Curtis Houck, Crown City, a
than Miss Snodgress.
son, Mr. and Mrs. Franklm
"The Impatient Heart" was a Dale Hammond, Patriot, a son;
simple enough story MISS Mr and Mrs. Gary Edward
Snodgress, wholly Immersed m Freeman , Pomeroy , a son ; Mr.
her work so that she cannot see and Mrs . Daonal Hugh Davison,
the simple pleasures that she IS Cornmg, OhiO, a son ; Mr. and
missmg m her own life, ge ts Mrs. Glen Darrell Cardwell ,
mvolved with the son of a Crown City, a daughter ; Mr
fishmonger -a boy Wi th no and Mrs . Joel David Atha ,
ambltton except to carry on h1s Gallipolis, a daughter and Mr .
father's busmess because he 1s and Mrs. Andrew C. Beattie, Pt.
reall) afr aid to venture mto the Pleasant, a daughter.
Olscharges
world
Henen K. Anderson, Mrs
She has an affair with this
boy, well played by Michael John E Bishop, Orville E.
Brandon, but In her own way Bratton, Mrs Roscoe Davis,
she has turned him, Ill her Jr , Mrs. Wendell C. Dunn,
mmd, mto another one of her Samuel B. Ferrell, Mrs. John
cases In the end, she succeeds Hendershott and daughter, Mrs .
In liberatmg him so that he Billy B. Stevens and daughter,
wan ts to go fo rth in the world Mrs . Frankie Gene Tucker,
- but the Irony IS that he has, Mrs. Robert J. C'rush, Steven
by liien, Indeed turned mto one Edwards, Tammy Rossiter and
of her cases m lus own mmd Mrs. Herbert Tucker.
too, probably wi thout kn owing
Mrs
Margaret
E.
1t And the result IS that he Argabright, Mrs. David Ball ,
leaves her behmd. She has Mrs. Marie Brinkman, Mrs.
succeeded professiOnally, and Paul Christian , Mrs. Bessie
failed m the personal relatiOn· Cordial , Earl Dunn, Mrs. James
Ervin and daughter , Mrs ,
ship she has come to want
Milard Greenlee and son, Mrs.
George Hudson and son, Stacy
Hunt, Deborah Jackson, Mrs.
Forrest Lawless, Mrs. Homer
McQuaid and son, Mrs. Melvin
Moore, Mrs J. Larken Napier,
Oscar Poetker, Bradley Potter,
Mrs. Lantz Repp, Danny Siders,
Mrs. Giles Smith, Mrs. Larry
Terry and daughter, Mrs .
James Vennari , Rodney
Williams , Gomer Wright ,
Robert Rose, Mrs. Lena Lin·
dauer and Eugene H. Green.
Mrs Charles Bennett, John
O'Dell Blake , Mrs. Floyd W.
~~~~;~~~~J Carson, Mrs. Wayne L. Carter,
Mrs . Grant C.. Chnsty ,
Kenneth Clark, Mrs. Bil·
ly G. Cooper, Rebecca M. Crawford, Mrs .
Charles L. Ewing and._ son,
Orville J . Exline, Mrs. Bonnie..
M. Fisher , James R. GillenMidd t ~port, 0.
water, Jr , James Wesley Gray,
Amy Carol Hatcher, Mrs .
Thomas J . Justice, Anita Jo
lt A THOUGHT
Kelly, Clarence M. Myers,
*
: Arthur Vernon Nease, Mrs.
: FOR TODAY ll- NCIIIIe P. Sayre, James Robert
llll- Searles, Mrs . Richard E.
*Jt No m an 1s free w ho 1s not .,..- Speirs • VIctor D· Swain ' Mrs ·
lt mas ter of hi mself
lj- Courtney Swango, Mrs. Glenn
II: A. Young and Elza Marks.

I

BAKER
FURNITURE

**j;**•._..•***l\:****

*
!

!

- Epirtetus

* . ****-lo.
lt

:

*

:

:

It's ·Quick! Easy

A

E.

DRIVE-IN : L. I ley Talbott ) Knight. Mrs.
* Kmght died Saturday followmg
BANKING ll- a long Illness.

*
*
ll,
ll- ShCis survivedby adaughter,
:
Fndays Only
: Mrs
Weldon
Thacker ,
*The Dr::e· l::mdow Jt- Belington ; three sons, A. R. ;
*
Op
llll- 9 A.M. to 1 P. M.
:
Conhnuously)
llOther t&gt;ankong Hours 9 to J:
and s fo 7 as usual on*
Tomghl&amp; Tuesday
Fndays.
,~
October 11-11
.,.
THE OWL AND
llTHE PUSSYCAT
r.
(Technicolor)
Barbara Slroesand
Geo Segal

(
i

MEIGS THEA"ft(£

co.i

rARMERS BANK
and 'SAVINGS

~

.,.

POMEROY, OHIO

M~~~~~F~~r~ l
p., .....

&lt; v&lt;+om ' •

:

,._ ·
...

Fe~t~;~!'~okus
• &lt;uno"

"R"

JStooqes

&lt;TA DT&lt;, D . .

MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI) - At 11:28 a.m., the Sunday School
class at the First Baptist Church was discussl~~g the religious
implications of Charles Manson's hippie commune, In 17 minutes,
Michael Murphy, 30, would dismiss his class.
Suddenly a boiler encased in concrete on the middle floor of
the three-&lt;~tory church aMex exploded, The floor "crumbled like
an eggshell" and tons of concrete, metal and scalding water
cascaded down on Murphy's first floor classroom.
The teacher and four of his teenage students were killed .
Fourteen others attending his and other clflsses in the annex
building were injured, one critically,
William Hickman, teachmg
an adult class 20 feet from the
boiler, was flung to the floor by
the blast and cut by flying
glass. He groped his way
through smoke and blackness
mto an adjacent nursery, where

he heard two-year-old children
crying.
He told police he dug through
the rubble of a fallen wall and
rescued the three mfants.
"I found all three babies and
handed them to someone who
was standmg beside me and I

e

guess they took them out I
think the babies might have
suffocated had they not been
removed qUickly."
Debbie McLendon, 15, recalled from her hospital bed
later:
"Our teacher, Mr. Murphy,
was mterested in the Manson
case and we were talking about
the religious cults that surrounded the case.
"Then the explosiOn hit,
everything went dark-almost
completely black," she said.
"For about a minute or two l
couldn't see anything . Finally II
started to get light in the room
and it was filled with steam .
Someone yelled, 'get out."'
The blast, according to
Mayor John Burnworth, came
only three minutes after the
church custodian shut off the
boiler when he found the boiler
room full of steam and the
temperature 30 degrees above
normaL The boiler had been
started an hour earlier because
of the crisp October weather.
"The floor crwnbled like an
eggshell," Burnworth said. "It
just opened up and the boiler,
the concrete and steel fell onto
a class beneath it. It just blew
all to helL"
The three-story annex was
built on a slope. Half of
Murphy 's classroom was above
ground, the sectiOn on the
upward slope was below
ground. The bmler was on the
floor above.
The church, which was not
damaged, IS connected to the
annex by a small , enclosed
vestibule walkway ,
The bmler exploded sideways
and upwards as well as down,
collapsing a stairwell and a
wall Their weight brought the
floor down on Murphy's class.
A group of 6 to 8-year-olds
attending classes on the top
floor were unmjured.
The state fire marshal and a
five-man mvestigating team
worked through the mght

Bombs MIs S
ISTANBUL, Turkey (UPI)Two bomb explosions hit the
U.S. Consulate and a Consulate
automobile early today shortly
before Vice President Sptro T.
Agnew arrived for an official
two-day visit
The Agnew plane touched
down at Ankara Airport at
10:30 a.m . {4:30 a.m. EDT).
The bomb explosions had been
reported at 12:45 a.m. and I
a.m
There were no unmedtale
reports or trouble Ill Ankara,
but in Istanbul, two bombs
exploded at the U.S. Consulate,
and two automobiles, one of
them belongmg to U.S. Cultural
Attache Kenton W. Keith , were
reported destroyed.
"It's because that man Spiro
Agnew IS commg," one Istanbul
resident told UP!.
Turkish Premier Nihat Erim
greeted Agnew and his wife at
the airport
In a short statement at the
airport, Agnew said that "smce
'Kemal" Ataturk, Turkey's first
president "gave the new
republic Its direction and
mspiration, Turkey has become
and has served as an example
and inspiration to several
developing countries."
Agnew said Turkey's role m

world peace is an Important
one and added the United
States would do everything
poss1ble "to help Turkey
achieve its desired develop·
ments .11
En route to Ankara , Agnew's
plane landed m Torre jon, Spain,
at 4:15a.m.
The stopover lasted about one
hour . Mrs. Agnew left the plane
brtefly, but the vice president
remained mside .
BERTHA IS WELL
Elizabeth Conde is a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital,
not Bertha Conde, as was
reported in recent hospital
admisswns.
DIVORCE RATES
WASIDNGTON (UP!) - The
Census Bureau reports a higher
divorce rate for yowtg married
couples than for older ones,
parhculary
for
black
Amencans. Data for two
decades ending in 1967 showed
28 per cent of men married
before age 22 were divorced
within 20 years. For men 22 or
older when they married, the
rate was only 13 per cent.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature m downtown
Pomeroy at II a.m . today was
54 degrees under sunny skies.

picking debris for clues to the
cause of the blast.
Killed with Murphy were
Rick Morris, Gary Holey, Carol
Joy, all 14, and Heather
Dawson, 15, aU of Marietta.
Eight others were admitted
to Marietta Memorial Hospital
with burns and fractures, but
only one, Myla Martin, 15, wa~
in critical condition early today.
Six other youngsters were
treated and released.
Police Sgt. John Estes was in
·police headquarters at City Hall
across the street waiting for his
wife and seven of his nine
children to emerge from the
church .
"The blast shook City Hall,"
Estes said. "It sounded like a
sonic .boom and at . first that
was what I thought II was.
"But it was too close and too
loud. I looked outside and saw
smoke and steam coming from

SAIGON (UPI )-U.S. infantrymen defending an artillery
base that has been under heavy
Communist pressure for two
weeks refused to follow orders
and would not go on a patrol
Saturday, a military spokesman
said today.
The InCident took place at
Fire Support Base Pace, a jomt
U.S.-South Vietnamese base on
Highway 22 some 75 miles

Cora Hutton

Died Monday
RUTLAND -· Mrs. Cora M.
Hutton, 84, Rutland Route I,
died Monday mormng at
Veterans Memonal HospitaL
She is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Florence Barrett, Rutland
Route l, with whom she made
her home; five sons, Henry, of
Colwnbus ; Leroy, Nelsonville;
Hurley , Harrisonville; Don,
Athens, and Everett, Dyesville;
a sister, Mrs. Ina Stone ,
Lawrence, Pa .; a brother,
Emmett Gilmore, Pomeroy; 22
grandchildren, and 17 great·
grandchildren. Mrs . Hutton was
preceded m death by her
husband,
Wilham;
two
daughters, and SIX sons.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Marlin Funeral Home in
Rutland With the Rev. Cecil Cox
officiating. Burial will be in ~he
Riverview Cemetery, Mid·
dleport. Fnends may call at the
funeral home any lime
Tuesday .

northwest of Saigon near the
Cambodian border. There are
some 70 U.S. artillerymen and
90 infantrymen m addition to
South Vietnamese troops on
the beleaguered base.
The Third Regional Assis·
lance Command, responsible
for the area where the base is
located, said when the infantry
commander prepared to send
out a 12-man patrol at dusk
Saturday "some of the mem·
bers expressed a desire not lo

Warren, Mich., walked to
freedom Friday, the sources
said.
High Vietnamese sources said
the release was negotiated with
the Communists who originally
wanted two of their men
released for one American. The
South Vietnamese , however,
insisted that II be a one.for-&lt;&gt;ne
exchange . The United States
went along With this, spokesmen said, and flew the NV A
lieutenant to the Memot-Snuol

go."

area.

The order was repeated but
as the men prepared to move
out it was learned the South
Vietnamese already had gone
on the patrol so the order was
canceled. No further action was
taken, spokesmen said, but
commanders are investigating
the incident.
The U.S. military command
said that allied forces today
freed a Communist prisoner of
war m exchange for an
American Army sergeant re·
leased by the VIet Cong Friday
after two years in captivity .

The highway in that area is
under Communist control and is
about 20 miles from where
heavy fighting has been going
on for the past two weeks
around the Cambodian plantation border town of Krek.
Sexton was released by the
Viet Cong and made his way to
Loc Ninh, 70 miles north of
Saigon and about nme miles
from where he was captured
Aug . 12, 1969. He still was
under treatment today for old
shrapnel wounds and a partially
blind right eye at a U.S. Army

A U.S.
Army flew
URIa North
Huey hospital
nearmade
Saigon.
utility
helicopter
were being
to flyPlans
him
Vietnamese Army (NVA) lieu· home .
tenant, captured within the past
month by South Vietnamese
COUJSION KILLS 10
troops, to a secret location on BANGKOK (UPI) - Ten
Highway 7 between the Cambo· people were killed Sunday on
dian towns of Memor and the Friendship Highway near
Snuol. The drop off point was · Khon Kaen when a crowded bus
within 12 miles of where S. Sgt. rammed into the back of a truck
John C. Sexton Jr., 23, of carrying timber,

DETROIT (UP!) - General
Motors Corp. has submitted to
the government results of an
investigation into possible faul·
ty engine mounts and frames on
1966-69 Chevrolets.
GM confirmed &amp;lnday that It
had investigated reports of the
possible defects after having
been nolified by the National
Highway Traffic Safety Admi·
nistratioo (NHTSA) .
A GM spokesman said the
automaker was aware of
complaints of rusting frames
and engine mount failures on
1966-69 Chevrolet mndel vehicles. However, he said there
was no w~y of telllng now how
many vehicles were mvolved.
The entire mount porblems
found in the vehicles could lead
totbe "possibility of the throttl~
~tickmg of fuel-lin~ breakage
if the eng~ shifted durmg
usage, be satd.
When the mounts break, the
accelerator can be stuck Wide

open and the power brake
system can fail .
Last week, NHTSA head
Douglas W. 'l'oms said hls office
began Investigating engine
mount failures as a result of
reports from Ralph Nader, who
mentioned a dozen letters of
complaints be received from
persons around the country who
had experienced mount break·
age on their cars.
TOOlS said the Investigation so
far indica ted "that In over onehalf of the cases when the
engine mounts failed , the
engine ran wide open.''
"The average person finds It
very difficult to brake a car
under this condition," he said,
"The best thing tD do, besides
putting on the brakl!$, is tD turn
off the ignition and try to get It
out of gear."
The GM spokesman said the
automaker was walling for
NHTSA officials to review
repocts it submitted.

ELBERFELD$

1

·

•

1

OPTOMETRIST

•

•

OFFICEHOURS9:3QT012,2T05(CLOSE'
A1 NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT ST..

Wallace, head football coach,
spoke about the current football
season.
A membership drive is in
progress with Linda Diddle

namedpubhcitycha~rm,an.The

boosters meet each Monday at

JUST RECEIVED
IN THE
MEN'S DEPARTMENT
1ST FLOOR

Wrangler Blue Denim Jeans
For Men- Regular lean fitting Wranglers and
super leans . All sizes 27 to 42 waist. Plus Wrangl er
Flare leg Jeans in sizes 29 to 38 waist .
For Boys- Super lean Wranglers in sizes 6 to 18 •
s lims and regulars . Plus Wrangler flare leg Jean s 6
to 18 slims and regulars .
Wranglers are made of 14 oz. plus blue denim ·
extra durable for extra wear .

Elberfelds Second Floor

American Civil Uberties Union (ACLU) on behalf of two

eervlcemen.

See the complete line of rugged
dress trunks Brass plated steel
hardware and lock - leather

handles.

l------------~------~~--------'"1

Select Your
Dutch
Flower
Bulbs
Now
In The Housewares
Department, lst Floor
For early Spring flowers . for Indoor bulb.
gardening in the winter - buy your bulbs
now.
Big selection · excellent varieties Including
hyacinths. tulips, daffodils. narcissus. crocus,

anemones, muscarl and Iris. Remember•. 1ht

time to plant bulbs for early spring flowers Is
now. Let us help you with your selection.
Buy yourself a True Temper or
Ames Bulb Planter to make your
planting easier, quicker, and more
fune.

1-------------------"'!'--------.. . . .
Elberfelds In Pomerov
•.

.

,

( ,

V'~etnam.

The ACLU said reliance on "implied" congressional
authcrity "without a formal and explicit act by Congress is a
violation of the entire constitutional scheme."
The ACLU represented Salvatore Orlando and Douglas
Kaplan who argued that their orders to report for Vietnam
mty were unconstitutionaL
Last lenn, the court refused to consider a similar
cballe~~ge brought by the Stale of Massachusetts where the
legislature bad baMed the sendi~~g oflts draftees tD Vietnam.
Massacbusetts tried to bring the case dlrecUy In the high
court without first going through lower courts.
The high court started the new term with two seats vacant
and because of this, It decided previously to postpone action
on s&lt;me of the most controversial decisions it faces until it is
up to full strength These include legal challe~~ges to the
death penalty.

s
hy

•

?/llj
f-) A

a .I
NO. XXIV. NO. 126

DetiOIMl To 7Jae ln~resta Of1Jae Meigs-MtJ~KH~ Area
POM£ROY-MIDOLEPnRT. :Q.HiO
TUES~AY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
PHONE 992-2156

fEN CENTS
IT'S HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL TIME 118aln, 110 here is
Brian Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson, Portland, a
fourtli grader at tlie Letart Falls Elementary School, holding
a promotional poster for the school's annual carmval
Salurday,Oct. 23. Ajitney supper will get underway at 5 p.m.
and there will be a program at 7:30 under the direction of
Mrs. Chlorus Grunm. Games, prizes and a country s!Dre
featuring homemade candy and other items will round out
the carntvaL The event is sponsored by the Letart Falls PTA

Nation's Beauty
een May Re·
Over 1972 Regatta's Frog Jumping
The possibility of Miss
America attending the Big Bend
&amp;ptta -at a cost of $500 per
day pi~ expenses - was lllken
under advisement by the
Pmleroy Chamber of C&lt;Jm.
JIIei'Ce Monday.
Jack Kerr, president, read

correspondence on the matter opined that perhaps Miss
dlllcloel~~g Miss America had America could be invited to
dates open in the middle of attend the Frog Jump and the
June. Regatta dates are Junt Frog Ball,
16-17-18,
A proposed plan that will be
Fred Crow, past grand voted on by members of the
croaker of the Ohio Society for OSPBA would offer, for $1, a
the Promotion of the Bullfrog membership ticket, admittance
to the frog jwnp, and certain
other values.
Crow said such a promotion
could finance Miss America's
appearance. The concensus was
that Crow's plan should prove
successful.
I
I
In other business Kerr noted
By Ulltecl Pr.a hllilnall-1
that the Pomeroy Merchants'
Assn . would meet this evening
to study the annual Christmas
NtcGaa"- r1 zned today In W~ton In the !Way old promotion. He asked for
llrift 41 . . M'\le'a ·eoal mlnlrs. 'nit lll111411 Mille WorDI'Il' $11lgestions.
NaWbiUIIII Pl1llcy O*nmllleemetye!lerdly In New' Y.t
lillt1JIIW PitKIMt W. A.(~) I!Oylt Milt lbe 125-member
. . . t.M ll)illllhert had beat ,JIO pi'CJt!IIIS In Jlet!otlatlons
llilh the llllwa~- Coal Operatars Alsn. A~ ..n tor' the
UbiGil lllld Mlhlay the coal mine operatars have not made an ~~~.._.,::: ·~~~-==::
Dlf.- fGr anew cont:raet In the Jlet!otlltions whlcb began last Aug,
COURT GETS $795
lJ.
Rec!lpts for the office of
The unonls ~ a raise to S50 per day from the current Middleport Mayor C. 0.
P'l per day and an Increase In the contribution to the union's Flsller for tbe moalh of
~~'~~!lire and retlremllnt fund from the current 40 cents per ton to
SeJ*mber tolllled $795 which
II ctUts per 1«1.
laehMied ..-In fines and fees
.ad $1119 Ia merchant pollee
Se%ton
collectloas.
iNmlolr -S.SGT. JOliN c. IIISEllllY'I'JON Jll., 23, left Vlelnam
NO QUORUM
fGr 1he u,s. toda.v.,. be~ freed from two ,em of C«niiiiiNst
Due 111 the lack of 8
~ty. The n:-prilo!Mr and 1' other patlenl!l wW be cared for
aorum,
a rep1ar meeting of
11
by m doctars lnd nurses mrtng their »how flight tD Travis
Middleport Vlllll8e Couuell
AFB, Calif.
sc•eduled Moaday nlgbl Wti
ut lleld.

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

! News .•. in Briefs

!

A suggestiOn that free
parking be offered a week to 10
days before Christmas met with
disapproval when one member
held that parking places are too
difficult to find with free
parking.
On the matter of uptown
Christmas decorations Bill
Grueser suggested Fred
Morrow, local manager of the
Ohio Power Co., be invited to
attend the merchants meeting
and perhaps serve as chairman
of their decorating committee.
Attending were Kerr, Crow,
Carson Crow, Marjorie Hoffner,
Jtm Mees, Bob Jacobs, Dale
Warner, Wendall Hoover,
Grueser, C. E ..,!llakeslee, Jack
Carsey and Tom CasselL

Stiffer Controls

Unrestricted Pen? Safeguard

:

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Gov. John J, Gilligan today
said "the anreslrlcted pen af the journalist" Is a
Sllfegaanl to a free aeclety. Gllllgan, In obaerv•D&lt;e of
Nad-.1 Newspaper Week, urged 1'aU cltl!eiiS to voice
lbelr support Gf a free and Indepellllebl press.
"A democracy ean oaly survive wilb lbe existence of
. free elqlresslon alld free access to diverse Ideologies," he
: said. '"l'be unreslrleltd pen af the joui'IIIIHst serves as a
defease to guanllbe freedoms ol eur people, ct~~rageously
Jl'eseDIIIIg tile mGII vital tlllllponent of a free soclety, the
lruii," he said.
''Every lime we pick up a n"'"J1811el', we are exer·
elslng cme ol our - t Jl'ecieus rights -tile rilltl to rend
· DIIClellllored, complete e.,clse Information wllboat fear of
relrlbaUGB," said Gllllpn,

On Boilers Asked

MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI)
Mayor . John Burnworth said
Monday mght more stringent
con trois are needed for low
pressure boilers to prevent ex·
plosions such as the one which
killed five persons in a Sunday
School class at the First Bap·
tist Church here .
The explosion Sunday in the
church's educational wing rain·
ed !Alns of CQilcrete, metal
scraps and scalding water down
.
on classes. ln addition to the
deaths, .Hwere injured and the
: annex was left a shambles,
Burnworth said he was m·
~;;;&amp;."%~~'&amp;'%..~ fonned by Bob Katser Jr. of
DA NANG, Vletum (UP!) the State Association of Boiler
- The 12 U· S. Army track Engineers and the Auto Boiler
drivers who were kldupoed Burners Co. that legislation reand held lor l'IIIIOm Way by quiring state inspection of low
furious South VIIOQ!amese pressure boilers every two
clvlllans, were releued years had been passed by the
unhamfed neaily elg!Itbonrs Ohio General Assembly. Kaiser
later.
The civilians seUied for
ZIO,IIOO plasters or about $7%1
plus 170 cam of ullld on aud
lie caw of soybean mlxlure.
Provlaclal authorities
provided the salad on aad
U
soyhean mlx1ure. American
military authorities ap·
Free uarking in Pomeroy
parently paid the ral180m. lu
the past they have made cash during the Chrislmas season
eempe-tlon to die families was diScussed by Ppmeroy
of Vielllllmese killed or Jn. Mercllants Assn. Monday night.
Arrangements for free parking,
jured by U. S. Drivers.
would be compensated
which
$i:.o».:!~~~~~~*-"%~'»&amp;':-.~~o.;:-:-:
for by the Merchants Assn.,
would have to be made with
Pomeroy CounciL No decision
was readied . .
A $1,000bill as a special prize,
Mostly sunny and cool today.
Highs upper 5lk; to mid 60s . plus gift certificates, will be
Clear and not as cool tonight. awarded in the merchants
Lows in the 40s. Variable Christmas promotion , A new
cloudiness and mild Wed· retail merchants committee is
to work with the Pomeroy
nesday, highs In the 60s.
Ch·am'ber · of
Commerce
representing the retail merchants.
LODGE TO MEET
Serving on the comn:&gt;ittee are
A special meeting of Mid· Jack Kerr, chairman ; Bill
dleport Masonic Lodge 363, Anderson, Molly Hill , Ada
F&amp;AM, will be held at 7'3ll Nease, Jim Mees, James
tonight at the temple. There will, Danner, Paul Lutz, and Kermit
be work in !Jie third degree, All Walton . Bill Anderson is
Master Masons are invited.
chairman of the merchants'
Christmas " lighting
and
decorations project

,
d
Ransom
Demande
Balances Shown

.

wves Vietnam

Americans Pummeled at AirlJase

SAlOON -ENEMY GVNNERS PUMM£LED an American
~rllll«y '--the Clmbodian frontier with mortar fire today
for the lint time In tine days. The attack took plaee willie the
twnp'IIIY ol Gl'l ~ the base was being l'flllllced IJecause
ol AljiUi Ia lblt they bad refused to go on patrol.
'

footlockers , metal steamers and

,

n was brought In federal district court In New York by the

~non

TRUNKS • LOCKERS
STEAMERS

VIetnamese torpedo boats.
The resolution was interpreted bY President Lyndon B.
Jolnson as givl~~g him a free hand to escalate the U.S. role in

An amendment tD that effect JI'Oposed by Sen. Jacob K.
Javita, R-N.Y., to a defense appropriation bill was withdrawn.
The Tonkin resolution was a]lprOVed b}: Congress with only
two ~nting votes In 1984 following i'epOrts of a !tacks on
American ships In the Tonkin Gulf off Vietnam by North

C.O.l Talks are Resumed

fabricshrinkaie lm than l %

October 31st in Racine

N wCOMPTON 0 D
1

·JANFORIZED·

The Justice Department told the &amp;lpreme Court: "A PresIdent vtoiiiiB lhe oonstilutimal powers of COOgress In this
area at his peril-and Congress is the best judge of whether
lbere has been a violation."
The ACLU argued: ''The consequences of continued
slltnce by tlis court on Vlelnam can only be confusion,
unrest, and continued WICei'talnty about any fulure mllltary
actim. The nation requires a final answer to these questions
which have so troubled and perpleJ:ed our society."
The lower court oplnlona generally adopted the government's arguments, generating several statements by
senators that the meaning of their votes on the Tonkin Gulf
reii,O)ution had been mlslnterpreled,

power,
The government bad ~ lbe court tD dlsmlss the appeal
on the l!mlnd the Issue was one that only OJngress alld the
encutlve brancb could resolve.
,

Chevy Faults Reported

Smorgasbord ScheduJed

Birdsall of Cuyahoga Falls, and
RACINE - Plans for an Creek.
Herbert, of Akron; 15 grand- upcoming smorgasbord to be Bryce Sayre, representing
children, and 24 great- held Oct 31 were made by the RioGrande'salwnni team, was
grandchildren .
Southern :o\thletic Boosters present
to
complete
Funeral serviCes will be held recently.
arrangements for a game
at l p.m. Tuesday. at the Runner
Evelyn Young and Helen · scheduled Nov. 24,
Funeral Home .'" Belington and , Pickens, co~hairmen, said the The boosters , Ill other
bunal will be In the Fraternal dinnerwillbeatSouthern High business votedtohaveafloatin
Cemetery there.
School here from II :30 a.m. the hom'ecoming parade. Jim
Joming Mr. Knight at the until 6 p m. The dinner is $2 for. Adams, Southern High Athletic
fun,eral services will be Mrs. adults and high school students director, reported an athletic
Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Roger and $1 for children.
committee meeting and made a
Dillard, a~d Mr. and Mrs, The Boosters voted to sponsor financial report,
Vmcent Knight •. Pomeroy, and an alumni football s9uad. It is
Asa
Bradbury,
head
Mr . and Mrs. Wilham Kmght of hoped !haL a game will be basketball coach spoke on the
Pomf Pleasant and family .
played with Eastern or Kyger upcoming seaso~ anil Bruce

WASHING'roN (UPI) -The SUpreme OQrtrtfuaed today
fGr tile IICOIId llme"·to rule OCl tile CUISIItutlonallty of the
Vlellllm Ww; IIMr fonn.JJy "declanld." by Cclftllnils.
The cue was rejected on a W vote by tile 8IMliHilelllber
CGWt, at Ita llrat buslnel8 sesalon ol tile new term. Justices
WlllilmO. DmR)asalld 'lllllm J. Brennan Jt. voled tD hear
lbe cue.
The court'lllief cl'der ~ft s~ a rullllg last Aprllll,
by the hi U.S. OreuitCclurt ol Appeals In New York.
Tllat court held that eoogresslonal approval Of lbe war
cauldbelnferred from P""At! oflbe 'l'onldn Gulf resolution,
IIIJIINIIriaUm ol biWCIIS ol dollars tD carry an the conruct,
•e.n.lan ollbe draft law and specific conscription d. man-

the church. My first thought
was -my family is In there.''
Estes dashed across the
street and grabbed his two
daughters who were In Mur·
phy's class. "One of my
daughters said to me, 'Daddy,
it just blew up and fell In,"' he
said.
Murphy's wife Kay, an
organist at the church, had
played .during church services.
She went home with their
young son Damon before
Sunday SchooL Murphy was a
member of the church Board of
Deacons and a candidate for
the school board.
The church annex was built,
and its boiler installed, in 1958,
52 years after the church was
constructed.
Funeral services were held
today for the church pastor,
Rev. Doland D. Duncan, 59,
who died Friday.

Mission Declined

Mother of A. R. Knight Dies

R. Knight , Pomeroy
*~ busmessman,
was called to
** theBelmgton
, W Va , Saturday by
death of his mother, Mrs.

ll-

"You may consider this letter
as the approval of the Herscher
FoundatiOn, Inc., for the use of
Its funds, previously submitted
to you for this project.
"We wish you much success
as the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society."
It was reported today that
additiOnal contributions will be
needed by the society , Musewn
contributors who have paid to
date include:
Geraldme Young, Mr . and
Mrs. Seth Nicholson, Mr. and
Mrs Vernon Nease,lris Kelton,
Bea Burnette, Mrs. Helen Rath·
burn Clapp, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Goeglein, Mr , and Mrs. Charles
E. Blakeslee, Mrs. William A.
Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. Leo R
Story, David C. and Betty Story
McConnaughey, Charles P. and
Jamce Story Lochary, Mr, and
Mrs. Virgil Atkins and Ruby
Halliday , Betty Milhoan, Dollie
Hayes, Evelyn Lucke, Ralph
Ours, Howard Frank.
Robert Clark, Rutland Dept
Store, Mr . and Mrs. W. P.
Lochary, Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Delmar and Bertha Canaday,
Kermit Walton, Ben Ewing,
Swisher &amp; Lohse, Paul and
Anme Chapman, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Clark, Wallace Bradford,
Pomeroy National Bank,
Elberfelds, OhiO Valley
Publishing Co. , Manmng
Webster, Sybil Ebersbach,
Colwnbia Grange.
Bill Mayer, Clara Garland in
memory of Ethel Garland, Mrs.
C. Byron Hayman, Gordon
Caldwell, Helen Lochary, John
Bacon, Thereon Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs . Lester Hart, Enc
Hart, Mrs. Hatti ' Nesselroad,
Portland Community Club,
Meigs Coon ty Conumssioner,
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Company, Theodore T. Reed
Jr. , Horace Karr . Edison
Hobstetter.
E F. Robmson, Gene Riggs,
Bill Grueser, R L. Jacobs, Dr.
R. E. Bmce, Racine Gran~,
Nellie Tracy, Roy Miller,
Eleanor
Robson,
Virgil
Teaford , Athens Messenger,
Marion Ebersbach, Lucille
Sm1 th , Radio Mid-Porn Inc.,
Ruby Diehl, Vernon Nease,
Dexter Ladies Aid, Racme
Home National Bank.

ast

urc

I

Chair Issue

- WASIIiNGTON- ASHOWDOWN betwMt the old guard and
mlli.IPI tllfoi DES over seleetir:ll ol a temporary chairman to
pollee dtkCate credentials for na:t ,--·s Democratic Natlmal
OaiMIItlon Jir&lt;llliles to dominate tiU net's meeting ol the
p.r\V'a Nati-1 Cqmmltlee. The tw~y .-ling, which opens
Wt t tlay aud may be the llnal sefl8ion before the June e«t·
~tiOII,allols ellpeCted to pus a reverse loyalty oath daigned to
-trol a.., Sflltentlr:ll deleples Alabama Gov. ~ C.
Wllll«!e might pick up In DeiiiOCI'IIic primaries.
'ftle CCII'-1 for letnpotary chairmanship ol the Ct:edentlals
Commltlltle maldles Palrlcla Roberta Harris, f0i'lll81' am·
b1 1 lhr to LllllembOurg, and Sen. Harold,E. Hughes of Ion. As
apecled, Rl&amp;bB hallhe bllcldng of the liberal, reform elements
Ia tile NatiOIIII C«nmittee. Mrs. Ranis has the 811~ d.
qllliled 1llbor and the old guard.

Su.pa IINrkets Clipped Hard
SAIII FIUNCL'I(X) - A sruDY 8BOWS the nation's superIDIIUiaare lilt llitb f40 mllllm worth of bad checb a :I'NI'. The
llud;y, made by the National Asaoclallon of Food Cllalns and the
Alilel'br1 Neplione I. ~ph Company, was prtBeiited
Mlhlay tD the MIOclatian's convention.
'
The ll1ldY qed supermarket owners tD establish better
with banta tD !mow U a cusllJmer's check Is
CCII'ered. It allo advocated a wal'Nng system among competitive
faecl dlllDI 011 bad risk check cuhers.

__.IIGns

Hars•aves at Workshop
~elllrgraves,Jr.,350N.

Cth St., Middleport, superlnltm ~Mt &lt;If llleigs LOcal Schools,
will represent southeastern
Ohio at lhe ann&amp;al workshop of
the Ohio Advisory Council for
Voc.tional Education at
Hueston Woods tomorrow
lllroulh Friday.
, All OhiO native, Hargraves
atliillded Ollio Stale, Kent State
lnd Ohio universities, and has
been .a IMcher, elementary and
hllh ac'hool pr.Inclpal and
14 bilenileut. He is acdve in
cloric
and
educationol
orcllnlaation~. lncludir;; the
App-.ll1chia Eldi: .. atlonal

Laboratory. Hargraves
represents · educational instltutions on the !l2-membar
council.
' On I!Ie workshop agenda are a
discussion of "What's New in
Vocational Education:· by sllff
members of the ..State Division
oj Wocatlonai Education·
~by State Deputy School
Superintendent F-ranklin B.
Walter; a description of Ohio's
ftve-year plan for voeatlonal
education by Dr, Byrl
ShOJeilw,ker, state dlrec!Dr of
vocational education, and the
concluding session on "objectlvl's and ll!'iorities."

~"&lt;:;&lt;:~'9;-)~'5'.-.-.,m-."&lt;-.'&lt;X

Disturbances
Produce Five
Of 20 Arrests
Twenty arrests, of which five
were ~or disturbing the peace,
were made by the Ml~port
Police Department in Sep·
tember, according tD Chief of
Police J. J, Cremeans.
Reckless operation of a motor
vehicle and intoxication were
tied with four arrests each.
Other charges were two for
squealing tires and one each for
driving while Intoxicated, speed
In excess for conditions,
assured clear distance, absent
without leave, and one for in·
vestigation only.

DANANG, South ' Vietnam
The balance in all funds of (UP!) - South ' Vietnamese
Middleport Village as of Sep- disabled veterans, angered by
tember 30 totaled $153,508.15, the crash of a U.S. Army truck
but only $19,558 was In the mto the back of a minibus,
general fund, Clerk-Treasurer captured six vehtcles and 12
Gene Grate reported Monday. Americans
today
and
Largest single balance is In demanded $9,000 for their
the sanitary sewer escrow fund, return, military sources said.
now at $56,36H6, almost a third Armed with crabines, .45
of the total of all funds.
caliber pistols and Ml6 rifles,
Receipts and disbursements, the veterans piled out of six
respectively, for the month and other minibuses in a funeral
the balance in each fund in- cortege nine miles south of
elude :
here, shot out the Ures of the SIX
General, $I,!HiUO, $3,189, U. S. trucks . leading a convoy
$19,558.11; cemetery, $916, and surrounded the vehicles.
$934.62, $242.51 overdrawn; fire The drivers and helpers of the
equipment, no receipts, $26.42, six Army irucks were captured
$241.73; swimming pool, $266, and the veterans, manning
$516.13, $2,947.95 ; planning electric bullhorns, demanded
commission, no receipts, that U. S. authorities pay them
$113.91, $1,271.01; street $9,000ransomforthe trucks and
maintenance, $5,444.55, soldiers.
$1,5:MI.70, $11,634.18; stale high· The incident was tOuched off
way, no receipts, no disbur- when the front truck of a convoy
sements, $309.14; sanitary of 10-20 semitrailer trucks
sewer·, $3,842.23, $3,472.57, rammed the rear minibus in the
$19,868.93; water, $6,196, cortege.
$5,795.55, $21,697.13; water Eight mourners were injured,
meter deposit trusts, $413, $155, three seriously, in the accident
$5,791.81; sanitary sewer which a!Jilarentiy aroused the
escrow, $776,5;, no disbur- anger of the veterans, who also
sements, $56,364.46; water were In the funeral procession .
Improvement, no receipts, The military sources said
$593.20, $711.01; general bond none of the servicemen, from
retirement, no receipts no the America! Division was
disbursements, $13,137.66, '
injured. Officers went i, the
Receipts for the month scene and offered the veterans
totaled $20,015.10 compared to about $1,100 compensation for
disbursements amounting to the Injuries suffered by the
$16,329.13.
Vietnamese on the minibus.

Free Meters
trying to re-construct
Under St d as"We're
much of the boiler as pos·
Ysible
to determine what caused
it to explode," Lynch said.

Weather

but the letter was held by the
Army for two years. The father
said he woulll like tD know
"why the letter was held up
that long" with the family not
knowlngwbetherthe22-year-old
Army sergeat was alive or
dead.
However, a Pentagon spokesman said Monday that Sexton's
parents lftre !Did of the general
contents of the letter, but did
not receive a copy of the note
which remained in Vietnam. He
said the Pentagon planned to
ask the i\nny for further
clarification as to how the
family was told, specifically
what was told and when.
1,
The spokesman said that unt'lr
clarification is received from
the Army, the Pentagon would
continue tD stand behind its
statement that the family was
told two years ago
Pe~tagon official~ ~id they
had listed Sexton as misslnR for

SIOn .

His office was expected to
continue its investigation for
several days before arriving at
any conclusion.
Funerals Scheduled
The explosion didn' t damage
the 65-year-old church itself,
which Is connected to the wing
by a halL Funeral services will
be held in the church Wednesday for the five victims.
'

Youth EScapes
Overturned Car

Larry E. Baker, 17, ReedsVIlle, escaped mjury Monday
evening in a single~ar accident
at 7· 07 p.m. on the Bridle-Trail
Rd:, five tenths of a mile south
of Rt. 681.
The Galha-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said Baker ran
off the right oide of the road,
struck an embankment and
turned over. There was heavy
damage to his car. No charge
was filed .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A Gallia County accident
occurred
at 2 p.m. on Boggstwo years because they were 1 have just a few scars.
By United Press luternattonal
Ohio extended outlook for Lmcoln Rd ., two and five tenths
uncerIa'm of the note's authenti·
"Whoever receives this letter,
miles south of Rt. 775 where
city. A handwriting analysis tell everyone 1 said hello, Thursday through Saturday;
was then begun, officials. said, especially Marvin, Harter and
Cool Thursday with war· Donald Earl Legg, 36, Rt. 4,
and was completed last Toes· Rossback (Army buddies), This miag trend Friday and Hillsboro, lost control of his car
day, wben i~ was confinned is no hoax letter, so take care Saturday, A chance of which ran off the right side of
that Sexton was the writer.
of yourself and maybe sbmeday showers 110rtheast portions the highway and overturned on
Nedzi, a Deiroit Democrat, you can all go home alive. Your Thursday. Higbs 'l'huraday In tts side. There was also heavy
said Monday he "could not friend, John Sexton Jr. ,
the lower tis rislag to the 7ts damage to his car. No one was
conceive of any valid reason for
The elder Sexton and his wife by Saturday. Overnl«bt lows Injured and no citation was
the Pentagon handling the first saw the letter last month In the Its Thurs41ay and issued.
•
matter this way."
when they went to Washing!Dn Friday and In the 50s
The letter, dated Aug. 19, to examine their son's file. Saturday.
Veteraas Memorial Hospital ·
1969, seven days after Sexton's Sexton said be and his wife saw ~-...::,.'---m-.%&gt;..,._"&gt;-'-'&lt;X'~'&lt;l&gt;.~~
ADMITTED Ernest
capture, said :
an Army major who "pulled ·
Collums, Pomeroy · Mildred
"Don't be too alarmed but this letter out of this folder and
DINNER REMINDER
Will, Pomeroy; An~ Berigan,
this is me (John Sexton Jr .) I we went after it. Tbere was no The
Tenth
District Albany ; Jeffrey Dilcher
am not dead, like everyone doubt in ·our mind that it was Democratic Action Club will Albany ; Constance Smith'
probably thinks. I am alive and ,whiten by John. "
meet Wednesday at the Masonic Middleport; Emma Bussell :
well in a National Uberation
A fadedrpicture of the •oldier Temple in Middleport with Mt, Alto, W.Va.; Slavy Sigman
Front h~ltaL As you know, was attached to the letter. The dinner at 7 p.m. in the social Middleport; Roy Sears, Mid:
my track was destroyed and I elder Sexton said there was a rooms followed by the biWiness dlepdrt ; Gertrude Mees
have shrapnel In my leg and · notation in Vielnamesc which meeting •with John Jones Pomeroy ,
'
face, none of which is too confirmed that his son was a executive direc!Dr of the Ohl~ DISCHARGED Anna
serious because they have all prisoner and was being treated Democratic Party, as speaker B~ton, Benny Spears, Enc
been treated welL The doctors well .
at 8 p.m. 1AII area Deinocrats Diddle, 'l'hornas Spencer, 8elle
have tobon the •hrannol nut and ·
are welcome.
. TheiaS, Harri8on Robtnonn llr

Sexton's Letter Held 2 Years
DETROIT (UPI) - A Michi·
gan .....,...........,
•• plans to seek
---...·-·-·
an Investigation Into a report
by the family of released
prisoners of war Sgt. John C.
Sexton Jr., that the Pentagon
withheld for two Y'11'9 a letter
written by Sex!Dn.
'
Rep, L.ucten N. Nedzi, a
member of the House Armed
Services ·Committee, revealed
t.is plans Monday, saying
"there appears to have been
extreme callousness on the part
of the Peniagon."
Sexton's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Sexton Sr., of
Warren, Mich., went to Denve~·
Monday where they plan .to see
their 'liOn for the first time in
U1ree years,
Before leaving, the elder
Sexton said his son · wrote a
Iefier 'Seven days after h.~ was
captured by the North V1etna~~ese saymg he W¥ not des~ .
like everyone pru~bly tlunks

told the mayor the bill was Sit·
ling on Gov. John J . Gilligan's
desk, awaiting his signature.
Robert Tenenbawn, Gilligan's
press secretary, said he was unaware any bill regulating boil·
ers was before Gilligan. He
said, however ,legislation reaches the governor's desk up to 10
days after it IS passed.
Manetta Fire Chief Beman
Biehl said current law only re·
QUires the state to Inspect low
pressure boilers when firs t installed.
Checked lu March
Biehl said city inspectors
checked the church's boiler last
March, but they "are not quaJi.
fied" to determme proper standards.
"I'm for all the safety that
can be put into any of these
things," Biehl said.
State Fire Marshal Robert
Lynch searched through the rub·
ble Monday in an effort to determine the cause of the explo-

�·'

)

•

3- ~ O.Uy Sentinel, ~dleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Oct. 12, 1971

•oles Take Cornman ing 2-0 Lea

., '0., Od. 12, 1f7l

• •

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., «Jer•.16

.-

•

PITISilURGH (UPI) - A
return to their spanking new
home in Three Rivers Stadium
gave the underdog Pittsburgh
Pirates a ray of hope today as
they faced the streaking
Baltimore Orioles in the third
game of the World Series.

Righthander Steve Blass (158) was scheduled to start for
the Pirates in the I p.m. EDT
game against southpaw Mike
Cuellar (26-9) of the Orioles,.
who lead the series 2-0 after
their 11-3 romp in Baltimore
Monday .

"Now they've got to try to do
it In our ball park," trumpeted
Pirate skipper Danny Murtaugh
as he railed his buccaneers for
a last-ditch stand.
"Now we are going to play in
a major league park," said
Pirate slugger Roberto Clemente. "The Baltimore park is
not a major league park, and
I'm surprised the Orioles play
as well as they do there."
The Orioles, who will be
seeking their 17th straight
victory in today's game in a
streak that began with the last
II games of the regular season,
stand only two more wins away
from being the first team
since 'the 1961-62 New York
Yankees to win baseball's world
championship two straight
years.
The Pirates, on the other
hand, must win at least two out
of three games here today,
Wednesday night, _and, if

NBA Opens New
VISITTHE STORE
NEAREST
YOU!
.,

REGUI.AI
DRIP
ElfC PERl

FOI.
GER'S. $1 •49'
COFFEE

FUI LY COOKED
ll11f or Whole

Sea,son Tonight
By GARY KALE
UPI Sporll Writer
The Detroit Pistons would like
to repeat the start of the 197().71
season a~ maybe this time go
all the way. They have a
trimmer Bob Lanier a~ two
highly touted rookies that could
make the motor City five quite a
threat to Milwaukee's defense
of the Midwest Division.
Detroit kicks off Its 1971-72
National Basketball Association
season In New York tonight and
the Pistons are bent on revenge .
Last season, they got off the
launching pad with a tremendous thrust thst carried Detroit
to victory in its first nine
games. Then they met the
, Knlcks and the illusion of a
record-breaking wiMing string
was shattered.
Three other games feature
the NBA's 1971-72 tap-off.
Atlanta is at Cincinnati, Philadelphia at Chicago and Sea tile
at Buffalo.
Dave Bing, the league's top
scoring guard last season, and
Jimmy Walker present one of
the most fonnidable backcourt
combos in the NBA. With Lanier
racing down court 25 pounds
lighter, and rookies Curtis
Rowe of UCLA and Willie
Norwood of Alcorn, Detroit may
spoil the Knicks' home season
opener.
New York features two
newc&lt;mers who are bou~ to
figure prominently in the
Knicks' chances. Jerry Lucas,
obtained from the Golden State

Warriors for Cazzie Russell,
and All-America bean Memlnger of Marquette contributed to
an excellent New York exhibition sesson.
Lucas provides rebounding
strength and can fill in at either
center or forward. Coaches who
have seen Menninger play in
pre«ason games rate him
above average as a backcourtman.
Howard Perter of Villanova
has Chicago talking about
succeeding Milwaukee as division tiUist. The Bulls' Chet
Walker and Bob Love led
Chicago to a winning season.
Coach Dick Motta ts also high
on rookie Ken Mcintosh, the
team's No. 1 draft choice.
Philadelphia plays Chicago
without veteran guard Wally
Jones, who was suspended
Monday for failing to accept
terms of a final contract offer.
Jones missed the 76ers training
camp and faces fines of up to
$2,800 at the rate of $100 a day.
Philadelphia counts on its
other veterans to move the
team this season. Hal Greer,
who made up his mind at the
II th hour to sign for another
year, starts his 14th NBA
campaign in the Chicago game.
Billy Cunningham, Archie
Clark and Jim Washington
showed considerable hustle in
exhibition action, while rookie
Dave Wohl from Pennsylvania
was one of the club's leading
scorers in pre-season competition.

necessary, Thursday afternoon,
in order to send the series back
to Baltimore for a final decision
next weekend.

"We've got a tough job, "
admitted Murtaugh . "Now
we've got to win four out of
five . But it can be done. After
an, we won four in a row
several times during the
regular sea"son."
"I've always thought we'd
have to win our games at home
to win the series," said
Clemente. "Now we've got to
do it. "
While the Pirates tried to
rally their tattered forces,
manager Earl Weaver of the
Orioles tried to keep overconfidence from sapping the
strength of his defending
champions. He called today's
third game "one of the most
important games we will play
all year. "
And Frank Robinson, a leader

World Series Facts, Figures
BALTIMORE. (LJ PII - Facts game •. according to oddsmaker
(The
Greek)
and figures on lhe 1971 World Jimmy
Snyder.
Series.
Odds were 2 to 1 against
Teams- Pt11sburgh Pirates,
'Natton-ai League;- Ballimore Baltimore winning the next two
games in a row and 20 to 1
Orioles, American League .
against
Pittsburgh winning the
Results _:_ l st game :
ne xt four games in a row .

Baltimore

5 Ptltsburgh 3; 2nd game :
Bal1tmore 11 , Pittsburgh 3.

By ·united Press lnterriational
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
2 0 1,000
Pl1tsburgh. Sixh and seventh Pittsburgh
0 2 .000
games, lf necessary, in Balti Remaining Games
more, Oct. 16-17. Afternoon Tues at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
games 1 p.m. EDT. Wednes- Wed at Pittsburgh, a p.m.
day's fourth game at a: 15 p.m. Thurs at Pitt, 1 p.m., if nee
EDT.
Sat at Baltimore, 1 p.m ., If nee
Broadcasting- radio and tele- Sun at Baltimore, 2 p.m., if nee
vision (NBC) .
Remaining games in best-of seven series. Oct . 12-13-14 in

Gross

receipts

$1, 1J2,20B;

Sl.029,~gQj

net

(2

games )

World Series Baseball
By United Press lnterna11ona I
Second Game
Plttsbrgh 000 000 03G- 3 a 1
Baltimore 010 361 OOx- 11 14 1
Johnson, Klson (4),, Moose
(41, Veale (5). Miller (6), Giusti
(81 and Sanguillen. Palmer,
Hall (91 and Hendricks. WPPalmer.. LP- Johnson . HRHebner.

receipts

_ c_gmmlssloners

share--$154,392 ; player's share
- $524,933 ; clubs and leagues
share--$349,952.
LAS VEGAS; Nev . (UPIJ Baltimor! Is now a 9-2 favorite
to w in the World Series over

the Pittsburgh Pirates and a 13
to 10 favorite to win the third

th·e Sports

Entries Up To 40.
POT Oct J6 ·11
111eet
.L'

By Chet Tannehill

Desk

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

·DIIUWilH
POPLAR

3

lb.

SL ED BACON

IIOIIHEIII

SPECIALS

FRESH, CRISP

TOWELS
·3 S::1s 99•

CAR.ROTS
10•BUlat

HEAD
LETTUCE

ThetrontongameatMarauderstadiumbroughtinthesecond
t
e
~I
highest gate by a few headl ,and dollars In the 41&gt; seasons of
football consolidated into Meigs Higs High School. When the final
The nwnber of high schools Evans Athletic and Recreation tabulation was made, counting season books, there were 3,92Q
and colleges entered in the Rio Field, and circles Lyne Center, persons at the game Oct. I who contributed $3,880.25 to · the
Grande College Invitational and Curtis said the course is a athletic fund.
Cross-Country Meet stands at 40 blend of various terrains that
The record game came last year when 4,148 fans packed into
with the addition of two high make it a good crosso(!ountry the great natural amphitheater (a few perhaps hanging out of
schools, according to Dr. Bruce test.
trees) a~ paid $4,004.7Sfor the privilege of seeing the Marauders
Curtis, meet director. The meet Entered in the Class A and the Blue Devils of Gallipolis play.
is set Saturday on the Rio competition are : Batavia,
Grande course.
Bethel-Tate, Caldwell, BloomBIU. WilSON, SON OF Mr. a~ Mrs. Willard Wilson, EnCurtis said that Wellston High Carroll, Pickerington , Indian terprise, one of Pomeroy's all-time complete athletes, finished
School has entered in the Class Lake, Southeastern, and the season with the Philadelphia Phillies with a ~ record, all in
AA division and Chillicothe in Waterford. Class AA schools short relief. Home lor a brief visit over the weekend, Bill was
Class AAA. Berea College has include: Madeira, Edgewood, hopeful the club could make some trades that would improve the
withdrawn from 'the College Chesapeake, Elgin, Mt. Gilead, team's 67-95 finish in the National League East, 30 games off the
Division , leaving six in that Brookville , Little Miami , pace . The big righthander, still owning his cheerful, boyish facial
William . Mason , Coshocton,
division .
Carrollton
, Ironton and mein, had no idea who was up for trade . "Maybe about
Lakeland Community , Mt.
everybody," he suggested.
Vernon Nazarene, Marietta, Wellston .
The
Class
AAA
schools
inOne genileman Bill was certain to visit was his old high school
Morris Harvey, Cwnberland
and Rio Grande are the six elude : Fairview, Upper coachatPomeroy High, Russ Moore, now out of coaching in favor
college teams entered. The six Arlington, Norwood, oak Hilts, of administration (Meigs Junior High principal).
Rusa led the PHS baseball team of 1960 to the Class AA (then
will start at I p.m. and will run Marietta, Be ave rcree k ,
Marion-Franklin
,
Jackson,
the
highest) regional finals . Bill, more a thirdbaseman than a
five nllles. The high school
Gahanna Lincoln , Stivers, pitcher in high school, pitched the regional final which he lost 1-0
distance is two miles.
Curtis said that the Class A Belmont, Roosevelt and to Bridgeport but showed such talent that the Phillies signed him.
.U my memocy is cocrect, Bill thst day 011Posed Phii Niekro (he
competition will begin at 10, the Chillicothe.
Class AA at 10:30 and the Class Curtis said that there will-be a with the flutter ball) who has been a standoutwithAUanta.
Wilson, who resides In Philadelphia, played litUe league, pony
AAA at II. He said that, in the coaches meeting at 10 the
College Division, trophies will morning of the Meet and that teague arid high school summer lesgue baseball (no Legion
be awarded to the first two award&amp;. will be presented at I baseball in the mid to late 50s In Meigs County). He drew attention
teams and the top seven in- p.m. do~ .. on the course.
at all levels.
dividual runners .
The Paul R. Lyne Center and '
As a sophomore he was one of the SEOAI.'s better guards on
Ih high school competition, the cross-country course are on the PHS basketball team a~ as a senior probably-its best.
trophies will' be awarded to the the southeast corner of the
He·tettered three years in football, usually as quarterback,
top team and the top five run- campus. Both h1gh sch~l and and in the defensive secondary. He was all~eague In the three
ners in each class.
college division competition ate sports.
The Rio Grande course ex- open to the pubhc.
Wilson never was the flashy athlete . Just steady, His job got
tends cross the Stanley L.
done. He didn't have great speed; rather, excellent coordination,
·
intelligence, a~ great desire.
Youcsngofar up the road on those qualities.

CARNATION

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COTTAGE

CHEESE

Watch Your
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'as you add to your savings

HUM

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uch week at fhe Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
Savings and Loan.

BRUD 611Ira..a $1
IIOI.SUI'

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RC. W

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Save by the lOth, earn
from the 1st.

IDlY

CAKE IX
3•sM•
llnlCGUiol·.

I

~

IJ.J.t.71
ONLY AT

OIII.YAJ

•

l' _ ...,
'

'

''wasn't

one of

my more

artistic performances."
The Oriole righthander was in
hot water all the time but he
didn't get burned until Hebner's
clout. Then, weary from
throwing 168 pitches in the first
eight innings, he gave way to
41-year-&lt;&gt;ld Dick Hail, who
pitched the ninth inning. All
told, the Pirates equalled a
series record for futility by
leaving 14 runners on base .

Brooks Robinson of the
Orioles tied another series
record by getting on base five
times-putting his name in the
book for that one alongside no
less than Babe Ruth (1926) and
Lou Brock (1967).
Brooks drove in three runs
with three hits, and brought the
crowd to its feet in the eighth
inning with one of his patented
diving stops on Manny Sanguillen's grounder .
Sanguillen also was litterally
a "fall guy" for the Orioles'
Dave Johnson, who knocked
him sprawling at home plate
trying to score on a fly ball .
Sanguillen, who held the ball
for the putout, said, "it looked

as if he wus trying to hurt me

-hf kicked me." Johnson, who
knocked Bosoon Red Sox
catcher Duane Josephson out of
action lor three weeks this
swnmer on R similar play,
denied trying to
hurt
Sanguillen.
\

All 14 Oriole hits off six
pirate pitchers were singles,
and the Buc hurlers also
walked seven batters and hit
one .
It all looked ridiculously

easy, and Weaver was asked
whether "the Orioles will ever
lose another game."
"Not until next year, I hope / '
he grinned.

CQwboys Outlast.Giants
DALLAS (UP! ) - The Dallas moaned after the game which
Cowboys beat the New York gave his. Cowboys a 3-1 record
Giants 211-13 for undisputed . and the Giants a 2-2 behind
second place in the National Eastern Division Leader WashFootball Conference East and ington 's 4-0.
set a record while doing so, but
Fran's 24-y"rd Pass
they're not very proud of it.
The Cowboys got 42-and 41A crowd of 68,378 and · a yard field goals from Mike
national television audience sat Clark and a final seconds seven
in on the ragged Monday night yard touchdown pass from
contest highlighted by 11 Roger Stauhach to tight end
turnovers, at least five of which Billy Tru~x for a 13-6 halftime
cost potential touchdowns.
lead and salted it away with a
The Cowboys fumbled seven 48-yard bomb from Craig
times, beating their own record Morton to Bob Hayes in the
of six which had stood since third quarter.
their second year of existence The Giants mustered only 35in 1961, and lost the ball on five . and 211-yard field goals by Pete
of those occasions as well as Gogolak in the first half and
once on an interception. The couldn't scratch again until
Giants lost all five of their Fran Tar kenton hit Clifton
fwnbles.
McNeil with a 24-yard pass
"Gosh, 1 lost track of who with just 1:16left in the game.
was getting hurt the most,"
Tarkenton had what normally
Cowboys coach Tom Landry would have been a superb

passing night by hitting 25 of 45
for 289 yards, but fumbles by
Joe Morrison and Bobby puhon
in scoring range helped hullify
his effectiveness.
Duhon was !he qianls'
workhorse, leading the rushers
with II carries for 28 yards and
snagging II passe~., for · Ill
more, but it was the lack of a
running game that hurt the
Giants as much as the fumbles.
Reeves Called In
"We didn't have any solid
running backs ," said coach
Alex Webster in reference to
the fact his two top rushing
artists- Ron Johnson and Tucker Frederickson are injured and
on the move list.
Dallas had the depth at both
running backs and quarterback
to pull it out as Landry pulled
Stauhach and fullback Walt
Garrison in favor of Morton

and Duane · Thomas in the
second half and then called in
Danny Reeves when Calvin Hill
suffered a leg hypertension.
Thomas, who made his
season debut in the game after
sitting out all of the pre-5eason
in a contract hassle , rushed for
60 yards on nine carries, and
Reeves picked up 58 more in
eight trips.
"We really don't have a
number two backfield," Morton
commented abOut the lineup
switches . "Duane was just
outstanding and Reeves was the
same old Reeves . We mixed
them (the plays) up in the
second half and ev~rything
went just as we anticipated
(except the fumbles) ."
Morton threw only five passes
and completed thee of them for
79 yards and relied heavily on
his running attack .

Sparky Showing Old Hard Face
By TERRY FLYNN
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Sparky
Anderson, the Cincinnati Reds
manager, may spend the winter
reading up on Machiavelli's
"The Prince " and a book titled
"Mein Kampf," because as he
put it:
"Next season some of these
guys are going to think Hitler is
running this club."
In 1970, his rookie year as a
major league manager , An?erson piloted the 'Reds to th1!
National League Pennant. This
season his club finished fourth
in the league's Western Division .
"The Prince" and "Mein

Kampf" are books on how to
become a dictator, and that's
just what Anderson says he will
be to get his club back on top
in 1972.
"We were winning in 1970 and
even though I didn't like
everything I saw, I thought that
was the way it is in the
majors/' said Anderson, who is
known for his easy-going ways.
"But !learned a lot last year
and more this year, " he said .
I'm going to become the old
George Anderson I was. I'm not
gonna shut my eyes.

Tochy's Sport Parade
going to have rules and whether
the players think the rules are
right or wrong they're going to
abide by them."
Anderson said he had given
the players a letter at the end
of the season outlining his new
policies and the reporting
weights for each player in the
spring . "And I'm letting them
know it'll cost them ·if their
weights aren't met," he ."sald.
"Enough so that a guy won't
want to pay it no matter how
much he 's making."
Anderson also vowed that the
atmosphere in the Reds clubhouse will show · a marked
change next year, including
more frequent meetings.
" If I have something to say
I'm going to hold a meeting
instead· of holding it inside me
the way I've done in the past, "

they can wait until they get
home to eat something,"
Anderson said.
Anderson indicated there
would be a change in his
thinking in regard to the
appearance and attitude of the
players, also.

This Week's Special

VALUE
RATED

USED CARS

66 CHEVELLE
MALIBU

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283 V-8 motor , auto. trans .,
radi o, w-s- w t ires.

he said.
"The clubhouse looked more
like a country club than a
clubhouse this year," he said.
So, no more sluffing ice " You'it Like Our Quality
cream and pop corn before . Way of Doi ng Bu si ness." ·
games, no more "playing
GMAC FINANCING
992
-5342
Pomeroy
childish games in the clubOpen
Evenings
'Til B:OO
house, " and no more "postTil .&lt; P.M. Sal.

'995
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

"I'm the manager," he said, game smorgasbords, either.''
"and I'm going to be boss. I'm " If the players are hungry,

getting
a bonus?"
The new MERCANTILE
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fu ll property damage, theft
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now about the Mercantile
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DowningChilds

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Tti,1fltilans County
Savings &amp; Loen Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Winter

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NEW Y-ORK (UPI)- The RACEWAY'SSECURITY
United Press International top
NEW YORK (UP!)- Yonkers
major college football teams Raceway announced Monday
with first place votes and wonthat it has joined the Harness
lost re cords In parentheses:
(On!~ Ia teams received votes)
Tracks Security, a protective
Fifth Week
organization
headed by John L.
Team
Potnts
Keep you r car
1. Nebraska (31 I (5-0)
345 Brennan, a former administraon the road w i th
2. Oklahoma (3) (4·01
2BS tive assistant in the Federal
our
3. Michigan (1 ) (5-01
2a1 Bureau of Investigation.
4. Alabama (5·0)
242
5. Colorado (S-Ol
172
6. Notre Dame (4.0)
170
7. Auburn .I4-0I
156
DEVOTED TO THE
B. Georgia (5-0)
a2
INTEREST OF
9. Penn State 14·01
62
,.EIGS·MASON AREA
10. Texas (3-ll
2B ' CHESTER L. TANNEHILL .
E 1tec. Ed.
11 . Ari1ona State 14-0)
24
ROBERT HOEFLICH
12. louisiana State 14-1)
21
City EditOr
13. 'Stanford (4·11
19
Publi s t\.ed dail~ e~cept
14. Tennessee 13-11
11
t aturd&amp;y by The Ohio Valley ,
15. Ohio State l3·1l
9 . Publish ing Company, Jll :
16. Florida Slate I5-01
7 1 c ou r t St ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
17. Arkansas(4-l)
5 45169 . Business Office Phone
lB. Washington (4·1)
1 992 ·2156, Editorial Phone 992 ·
'J.Une·up for quick starts and
(Only 1a teams received votes) 2157 '
peak performance; radiator
· Second class postage pa id at
Pomeroy , Oh io,
conditioning; lube . and
Nalional · advertising
How To Hold
tery service; exhaust system
repreuntatlve
sottlne\li .
2
r,~:~~~~e~.o~~'ci,~~ :ea~,v~ r":. . check .

t -... Th~ Dai~ ~ntl~el

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE

&lt;aMI ED)

was the man who saved
Pittsburgh from a ,shutout
Monday with a three-run homer
in the eighth inning.
Palmer , .the winner, had to
admit his second-game triumph

,._..._.,_ _.. College Ratings

PIZZA

ANNWERSAR Y
BAKERY BUYS

among the players, denied
Monday's runaway game was
what the athletes call "a
Iaugher"- "we'll laugh when
we've won four games," he
promised.
Murtaugh again delayed decision on whether he'll change his
lineup because of the change of
Baltimore pitchers from righthanded Jim Palmer, the second
gam; Jw·
1ner, to lefthander
CueUar ne complication is
that
ellar, master of a
screwball, often is more
effective against righthanders
than lefthanders. And leftyswinging Richie Hebner, who
would be benched for Jose
Pagan i~ a standard switch,

eomin1 loose when you eat, ·laugh,
or talk? A denture adheaive ean help.
FASTEETH•a:lvea denturetl. ton&amp;f!r, firmer, 11teadier hold. Makes eat.Jn~tmoreen j oye.ble. Formorel5eeuritY
and t:ornfort, Ulle FASTEETH Den.t um Adhe1ive Powder. Denturr.a
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1

By Motor ROute where carrier '
service not available : One
I rnon1h $1 .75 . ev mail in Ohio
, and w. V a .1 One year SlA.OO .
\ Sil( mon t h! $7 .25 . Three
months sc .so . Sub sc r iption
. pr 1ce lncludf!S SDnday Times -

1

sentinel

; ~·- .. ~- - -~-

.

LARRY'S ASHlAND1
SERVICE STATION,
Phono '92·2:N6
190 Mulberry Ave . Pomeroy

...

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because she
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(
COLU MBUS AND SOUTHERN.
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•

3- ~ O.Uy Sentinel, ~dleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Oct. 12, 1971

•oles Take Cornman ing 2-0 Lea

., '0., Od. 12, 1f7l

• •

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., «Jer•.16

.-

•

PITISilURGH (UPI) - A
return to their spanking new
home in Three Rivers Stadium
gave the underdog Pittsburgh
Pirates a ray of hope today as
they faced the streaking
Baltimore Orioles in the third
game of the World Series.

Righthander Steve Blass (158) was scheduled to start for
the Pirates in the I p.m. EDT
game against southpaw Mike
Cuellar (26-9) of the Orioles,.
who lead the series 2-0 after
their 11-3 romp in Baltimore
Monday .

"Now they've got to try to do
it In our ball park," trumpeted
Pirate skipper Danny Murtaugh
as he railed his buccaneers for
a last-ditch stand.
"Now we are going to play in
a major league park," said
Pirate slugger Roberto Clemente. "The Baltimore park is
not a major league park, and
I'm surprised the Orioles play
as well as they do there."
The Orioles, who will be
seeking their 17th straight
victory in today's game in a
streak that began with the last
II games of the regular season,
stand only two more wins away
from being the first team
since 'the 1961-62 New York
Yankees to win baseball's world
championship two straight
years.
The Pirates, on the other
hand, must win at least two out
of three games here today,
Wednesday night, _and, if

NBA Opens New
VISITTHE STORE
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Sea,son Tonight
By GARY KALE
UPI Sporll Writer
The Detroit Pistons would like
to repeat the start of the 197().71
season a~ maybe this time go
all the way. They have a
trimmer Bob Lanier a~ two
highly touted rookies that could
make the motor City five quite a
threat to Milwaukee's defense
of the Midwest Division.
Detroit kicks off Its 1971-72
National Basketball Association
season In New York tonight and
the Pistons are bent on revenge .
Last season, they got off the
launching pad with a tremendous thrust thst carried Detroit
to victory in its first nine
games. Then they met the
, Knlcks and the illusion of a
record-breaking wiMing string
was shattered.
Three other games feature
the NBA's 1971-72 tap-off.
Atlanta is at Cincinnati, Philadelphia at Chicago and Sea tile
at Buffalo.
Dave Bing, the league's top
scoring guard last season, and
Jimmy Walker present one of
the most fonnidable backcourt
combos in the NBA. With Lanier
racing down court 25 pounds
lighter, and rookies Curtis
Rowe of UCLA and Willie
Norwood of Alcorn, Detroit may
spoil the Knicks' home season
opener.
New York features two
newc&lt;mers who are bou~ to
figure prominently in the
Knicks' chances. Jerry Lucas,
obtained from the Golden State

Warriors for Cazzie Russell,
and All-America bean Memlnger of Marquette contributed to
an excellent New York exhibition sesson.
Lucas provides rebounding
strength and can fill in at either
center or forward. Coaches who
have seen Menninger play in
pre«ason games rate him
above average as a backcourtman.
Howard Perter of Villanova
has Chicago talking about
succeeding Milwaukee as division tiUist. The Bulls' Chet
Walker and Bob Love led
Chicago to a winning season.
Coach Dick Motta ts also high
on rookie Ken Mcintosh, the
team's No. 1 draft choice.
Philadelphia plays Chicago
without veteran guard Wally
Jones, who was suspended
Monday for failing to accept
terms of a final contract offer.
Jones missed the 76ers training
camp and faces fines of up to
$2,800 at the rate of $100 a day.
Philadelphia counts on its
other veterans to move the
team this season. Hal Greer,
who made up his mind at the
II th hour to sign for another
year, starts his 14th NBA
campaign in the Chicago game.
Billy Cunningham, Archie
Clark and Jim Washington
showed considerable hustle in
exhibition action, while rookie
Dave Wohl from Pennsylvania
was one of the club's leading
scorers in pre-season competition.

necessary, Thursday afternoon,
in order to send the series back
to Baltimore for a final decision
next weekend.

"We've got a tough job, "
admitted Murtaugh . "Now
we've got to win four out of
five . But it can be done. After
an, we won four in a row
several times during the
regular sea"son."
"I've always thought we'd
have to win our games at home
to win the series," said
Clemente. "Now we've got to
do it. "
While the Pirates tried to
rally their tattered forces,
manager Earl Weaver of the
Orioles tried to keep overconfidence from sapping the
strength of his defending
champions. He called today's
third game "one of the most
important games we will play
all year. "
And Frank Robinson, a leader

World Series Facts, Figures
BALTIMORE. (LJ PII - Facts game •. according to oddsmaker
(The
Greek)
and figures on lhe 1971 World Jimmy
Snyder.
Series.
Odds were 2 to 1 against
Teams- Pt11sburgh Pirates,
'Natton-ai League;- Ballimore Baltimore winning the next two
games in a row and 20 to 1
Orioles, American League .
against
Pittsburgh winning the
Results _:_ l st game :
ne xt four games in a row .

Baltimore

5 Ptltsburgh 3; 2nd game :
Bal1tmore 11 , Pittsburgh 3.

By ·united Press lnterriational
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
2 0 1,000
Pl1tsburgh. Sixh and seventh Pittsburgh
0 2 .000
games, lf necessary, in Balti Remaining Games
more, Oct. 16-17. Afternoon Tues at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
games 1 p.m. EDT. Wednes- Wed at Pittsburgh, a p.m.
day's fourth game at a: 15 p.m. Thurs at Pitt, 1 p.m., if nee
EDT.
Sat at Baltimore, 1 p.m ., If nee
Broadcasting- radio and tele- Sun at Baltimore, 2 p.m., if nee
vision (NBC) .
Remaining games in best-of seven series. Oct . 12-13-14 in

Gross

receipts

$1, 1J2,20B;

Sl.029,~gQj

net

(2

games )

World Series Baseball
By United Press lnterna11ona I
Second Game
Plttsbrgh 000 000 03G- 3 a 1
Baltimore 010 361 OOx- 11 14 1
Johnson, Klson (4),, Moose
(41, Veale (5). Miller (6), Giusti
(81 and Sanguillen. Palmer,
Hall (91 and Hendricks. WPPalmer.. LP- Johnson . HRHebner.

receipts

_ c_gmmlssloners

share--$154,392 ; player's share
- $524,933 ; clubs and leagues
share--$349,952.
LAS VEGAS; Nev . (UPIJ Baltimor! Is now a 9-2 favorite
to w in the World Series over

the Pittsburgh Pirates and a 13
to 10 favorite to win the third

th·e Sports

Entries Up To 40.
POT Oct J6 ·11
111eet
.L'

By Chet Tannehill

Desk

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

·DIIUWilH
POPLAR

3

lb.

SL ED BACON

IIOIIHEIII

SPECIALS

FRESH, CRISP

TOWELS
·3 S::1s 99•

CAR.ROTS
10•BUlat

HEAD
LETTUCE

ThetrontongameatMarauderstadiumbroughtinthesecond
t
e
~I
highest gate by a few headl ,and dollars In the 41&gt; seasons of
football consolidated into Meigs Higs High School. When the final
The nwnber of high schools Evans Athletic and Recreation tabulation was made, counting season books, there were 3,92Q
and colleges entered in the Rio Field, and circles Lyne Center, persons at the game Oct. I who contributed $3,880.25 to · the
Grande College Invitational and Curtis said the course is a athletic fund.
Cross-Country Meet stands at 40 blend of various terrains that
The record game came last year when 4,148 fans packed into
with the addition of two high make it a good crosso(!ountry the great natural amphitheater (a few perhaps hanging out of
schools, according to Dr. Bruce test.
trees) a~ paid $4,004.7Sfor the privilege of seeing the Marauders
Curtis, meet director. The meet Entered in the Class A and the Blue Devils of Gallipolis play.
is set Saturday on the Rio competition are : Batavia,
Grande course.
Bethel-Tate, Caldwell, BloomBIU. WilSON, SON OF Mr. a~ Mrs. Willard Wilson, EnCurtis said that Wellston High Carroll, Pickerington , Indian terprise, one of Pomeroy's all-time complete athletes, finished
School has entered in the Class Lake, Southeastern, and the season with the Philadelphia Phillies with a ~ record, all in
AA division and Chillicothe in Waterford. Class AA schools short relief. Home lor a brief visit over the weekend, Bill was
Class AAA. Berea College has include: Madeira, Edgewood, hopeful the club could make some trades that would improve the
withdrawn from 'the College Chesapeake, Elgin, Mt. Gilead, team's 67-95 finish in the National League East, 30 games off the
Division , leaving six in that Brookville , Little Miami , pace . The big righthander, still owning his cheerful, boyish facial
William . Mason , Coshocton,
division .
Carrollton
, Ironton and mein, had no idea who was up for trade . "Maybe about
Lakeland Community , Mt.
everybody," he suggested.
Vernon Nazarene, Marietta, Wellston .
The
Class
AAA
schools
inOne genileman Bill was certain to visit was his old high school
Morris Harvey, Cwnberland
and Rio Grande are the six elude : Fairview, Upper coachatPomeroy High, Russ Moore, now out of coaching in favor
college teams entered. The six Arlington, Norwood, oak Hilts, of administration (Meigs Junior High principal).
Rusa led the PHS baseball team of 1960 to the Class AA (then
will start at I p.m. and will run Marietta, Be ave rcree k ,
Marion-Franklin
,
Jackson,
the
highest) regional finals . Bill, more a thirdbaseman than a
five nllles. The high school
Gahanna Lincoln , Stivers, pitcher in high school, pitched the regional final which he lost 1-0
distance is two miles.
Curtis said that the Class A Belmont, Roosevelt and to Bridgeport but showed such talent that the Phillies signed him.
.U my memocy is cocrect, Bill thst day 011Posed Phii Niekro (he
competition will begin at 10, the Chillicothe.
Class AA at 10:30 and the Class Curtis said that there will-be a with the flutter ball) who has been a standoutwithAUanta.
Wilson, who resides In Philadelphia, played litUe league, pony
AAA at II. He said that, in the coaches meeting at 10 the
College Division, trophies will morning of the Meet and that teague arid high school summer lesgue baseball (no Legion
be awarded to the first two award&amp;. will be presented at I baseball in the mid to late 50s In Meigs County). He drew attention
teams and the top seven in- p.m. do~ .. on the course.
at all levels.
dividual runners .
The Paul R. Lyne Center and '
As a sophomore he was one of the SEOAI.'s better guards on
Ih high school competition, the cross-country course are on the PHS basketball team a~ as a senior probably-its best.
trophies will' be awarded to the the southeast corner of the
He·tettered three years in football, usually as quarterback,
top team and the top five run- campus. Both h1gh sch~l and and in the defensive secondary. He was all~eague In the three
ners in each class.
college division competition ate sports.
The Rio Grande course ex- open to the pubhc.
Wilson never was the flashy athlete . Just steady, His job got
tends cross the Stanley L.
done. He didn't have great speed; rather, excellent coordination,
·
intelligence, a~ great desire.
Youcsngofar up the road on those qualities.

CARNATION

MILK

.FAMILY -SIZE

COTTAGE

CHEESE

Watch Your
$$Grow

'as you add to your savings

HUM

FR8ZINBU¥S

CRISCO OIL

FRIES

-

uch week at fhe Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co.
Savings and Loan.

BRUD 611Ira..a $1
IIOI.SUI'

PIES

4%%

RC. W

-·

-lfl!fD3f

Save by the lOth, earn
from the 1st.

IDlY

CAKE IX
3•sM•
llnlCGUiol·.

I

~

IJ.J.t.71
ONLY AT

OIII.YAJ

•

l' _ ...,
'

'

''wasn't

one of

my more

artistic performances."
The Oriole righthander was in
hot water all the time but he
didn't get burned until Hebner's
clout. Then, weary from
throwing 168 pitches in the first
eight innings, he gave way to
41-year-&lt;&gt;ld Dick Hail, who
pitched the ninth inning. All
told, the Pirates equalled a
series record for futility by
leaving 14 runners on base .

Brooks Robinson of the
Orioles tied another series
record by getting on base five
times-putting his name in the
book for that one alongside no
less than Babe Ruth (1926) and
Lou Brock (1967).
Brooks drove in three runs
with three hits, and brought the
crowd to its feet in the eighth
inning with one of his patented
diving stops on Manny Sanguillen's grounder .
Sanguillen also was litterally
a "fall guy" for the Orioles'
Dave Johnson, who knocked
him sprawling at home plate
trying to score on a fly ball .
Sanguillen, who held the ball
for the putout, said, "it looked

as if he wus trying to hurt me

-hf kicked me." Johnson, who
knocked Bosoon Red Sox
catcher Duane Josephson out of
action lor three weeks this
swnmer on R similar play,
denied trying to
hurt
Sanguillen.
\

All 14 Oriole hits off six
pirate pitchers were singles,
and the Buc hurlers also
walked seven batters and hit
one .
It all looked ridiculously

easy, and Weaver was asked
whether "the Orioles will ever
lose another game."
"Not until next year, I hope / '
he grinned.

CQwboys Outlast.Giants
DALLAS (UP! ) - The Dallas moaned after the game which
Cowboys beat the New York gave his. Cowboys a 3-1 record
Giants 211-13 for undisputed . and the Giants a 2-2 behind
second place in the National Eastern Division Leader WashFootball Conference East and ington 's 4-0.
set a record while doing so, but
Fran's 24-y"rd Pass
they're not very proud of it.
The Cowboys got 42-and 41A crowd of 68,378 and · a yard field goals from Mike
national television audience sat Clark and a final seconds seven
in on the ragged Monday night yard touchdown pass from
contest highlighted by 11 Roger Stauhach to tight end
turnovers, at least five of which Billy Tru~x for a 13-6 halftime
cost potential touchdowns.
lead and salted it away with a
The Cowboys fumbled seven 48-yard bomb from Craig
times, beating their own record Morton to Bob Hayes in the
of six which had stood since third quarter.
their second year of existence The Giants mustered only 35in 1961, and lost the ball on five . and 211-yard field goals by Pete
of those occasions as well as Gogolak in the first half and
once on an interception. The couldn't scratch again until
Giants lost all five of their Fran Tar kenton hit Clifton
fwnbles.
McNeil with a 24-yard pass
"Gosh, 1 lost track of who with just 1:16left in the game.
was getting hurt the most,"
Tarkenton had what normally
Cowboys coach Tom Landry would have been a superb

passing night by hitting 25 of 45
for 289 yards, but fumbles by
Joe Morrison and Bobby puhon
in scoring range helped hullify
his effectiveness.
Duhon was !he qianls'
workhorse, leading the rushers
with II carries for 28 yards and
snagging II passe~., for · Ill
more, but it was the lack of a
running game that hurt the
Giants as much as the fumbles.
Reeves Called In
"We didn't have any solid
running backs ," said coach
Alex Webster in reference to
the fact his two top rushing
artists- Ron Johnson and Tucker Frederickson are injured and
on the move list.
Dallas had the depth at both
running backs and quarterback
to pull it out as Landry pulled
Stauhach and fullback Walt
Garrison in favor of Morton

and Duane · Thomas in the
second half and then called in
Danny Reeves when Calvin Hill
suffered a leg hypertension.
Thomas, who made his
season debut in the game after
sitting out all of the pre-5eason
in a contract hassle , rushed for
60 yards on nine carries, and
Reeves picked up 58 more in
eight trips.
"We really don't have a
number two backfield," Morton
commented abOut the lineup
switches . "Duane was just
outstanding and Reeves was the
same old Reeves . We mixed
them (the plays) up in the
second half and ev~rything
went just as we anticipated
(except the fumbles) ."
Morton threw only five passes
and completed thee of them for
79 yards and relied heavily on
his running attack .

Sparky Showing Old Hard Face
By TERRY FLYNN
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Sparky
Anderson, the Cincinnati Reds
manager, may spend the winter
reading up on Machiavelli's
"The Prince " and a book titled
"Mein Kampf," because as he
put it:
"Next season some of these
guys are going to think Hitler is
running this club."
In 1970, his rookie year as a
major league manager , An?erson piloted the 'Reds to th1!
National League Pennant. This
season his club finished fourth
in the league's Western Division .
"The Prince" and "Mein

Kampf" are books on how to
become a dictator, and that's
just what Anderson says he will
be to get his club back on top
in 1972.
"We were winning in 1970 and
even though I didn't like
everything I saw, I thought that
was the way it is in the
majors/' said Anderson, who is
known for his easy-going ways.
"But !learned a lot last year
and more this year, " he said .
I'm going to become the old
George Anderson I was. I'm not
gonna shut my eyes.

Tochy's Sport Parade
going to have rules and whether
the players think the rules are
right or wrong they're going to
abide by them."
Anderson said he had given
the players a letter at the end
of the season outlining his new
policies and the reporting
weights for each player in the
spring . "And I'm letting them
know it'll cost them ·if their
weights aren't met," he ."sald.
"Enough so that a guy won't
want to pay it no matter how
much he 's making."
Anderson also vowed that the
atmosphere in the Reds clubhouse will show · a marked
change next year, including
more frequent meetings.
" If I have something to say
I'm going to hold a meeting
instead· of holding it inside me
the way I've done in the past, "

they can wait until they get
home to eat something,"
Anderson said.
Anderson indicated there
would be a change in his
thinking in regard to the
appearance and attitude of the
players, also.

This Week's Special

VALUE
RATED

USED CARS

66 CHEVELLE
MALIBU

4. DOOR

283 V-8 motor , auto. trans .,
radi o, w-s- w t ires.

he said.
"The clubhouse looked more
like a country club than a
clubhouse this year," he said.
So, no more sluffing ice " You'it Like Our Quality
cream and pop corn before . Way of Doi ng Bu si ness." ·
games, no more "playing
GMAC FINANCING
992
-5342
Pomeroy
childish games in the clubOpen
Evenings
'Til B:OO
house, " and no more "postTil .&lt; P.M. Sal.

'995
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

"I'm the manager," he said, game smorgasbords, either.''
"and I'm going to be boss. I'm " If the players are hungry,

getting
a bonus?"
The new MERCANTILE
PACKAGE POLICY gives
fu ll property damage, theft
and liabil ity prolection at a
BONUS - 10 per cent to 20
per
cent
saving
In
premium . Inquire at the

Down ing Childs Agency
now about the Mercantile
Polic y.

DowningChilds

Agency,

I~

N. 2nd
Middle'
Phone 991-2342

uDid you know

that Debbie only
cleans her house
once a -month'?"

BmYCm£1

FldOIING MIX
. CASSOmt)

3
GOOD AT BrG 3 MARKETS

IOXfS

SJOO

WfTH .
EXPIRES

Meigs Co. Branch
~)
..__.
Tti,1fltilans County
Savings &amp; Loen Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Winter

1

1

.subscr ipt ion rate .,- o •..

1 tivered by carr1er where
Do fals e teeth embarrass you by 1 ~vailable 50 cents per week ;

Member Federal Savings

&amp;

accounts

lo

Loan Insurance Corp. 1.11

"Of course,

Protection

·FALSE TEETH
·
Securely

Bank.

insured up

.l

1

Member t-eaera I Home Lee n

520,000.00.

NEW Y-ORK (UPI)- The RACEWAY'SSECURITY
United Press International top
NEW YORK (UP!)- Yonkers
major college football teams Raceway announced Monday
with first place votes and wonthat it has joined the Harness
lost re cords In parentheses:
(On!~ Ia teams received votes)
Tracks Security, a protective
Fifth Week
organization
headed by John L.
Team
Potnts
Keep you r car
1. Nebraska (31 I (5-0)
345 Brennan, a former administraon the road w i th
2. Oklahoma (3) (4·01
2BS tive assistant in the Federal
our
3. Michigan (1 ) (5-01
2a1 Bureau of Investigation.
4. Alabama (5·0)
242
5. Colorado (S-Ol
172
6. Notre Dame (4.0)
170
7. Auburn .I4-0I
156
DEVOTED TO THE
B. Georgia (5-0)
a2
INTEREST OF
9. Penn State 14·01
62
,.EIGS·MASON AREA
10. Texas (3-ll
2B ' CHESTER L. TANNEHILL .
E 1tec. Ed.
11 . Ari1ona State 14-0)
24
ROBERT HOEFLICH
12. louisiana State 14-1)
21
City EditOr
13. 'Stanford (4·11
19
Publi s t\.ed dail~ e~cept
14. Tennessee 13-11
11
t aturd&amp;y by The Ohio Valley ,
15. Ohio State l3·1l
9 . Publish ing Company, Jll :
16. Florida Slate I5-01
7 1 c ou r t St ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
17. Arkansas(4-l)
5 45169 . Business Office Phone
lB. Washington (4·1)
1 992 ·2156, Editorial Phone 992 ·
'J.Une·up for quick starts and
(Only 1a teams received votes) 2157 '
peak performance; radiator
· Second class postage pa id at
Pomeroy , Oh io,
conditioning; lube . and
Nalional · advertising
How To Hold
tery service; exhaust system
repreuntatlve
sottlne\li .
2
r,~:~~~~e~.o~~'ci,~~ :ea~,v~ r":. . check .

t -... Th~ Dai~ ~ntl~el

CURRENT
PASSBOOK RATE

&lt;aMI ED)

was the man who saved
Pittsburgh from a ,shutout
Monday with a three-run homer
in the eighth inning.
Palmer , .the winner, had to
admit his second-game triumph

,._..._.,_ _.. College Ratings

PIZZA

ANNWERSAR Y
BAKERY BUYS

among the players, denied
Monday's runaway game was
what the athletes call "a
Iaugher"- "we'll laugh when
we've won four games," he
promised.
Murtaugh again delayed decision on whether he'll change his
lineup because of the change of
Baltimore pitchers from righthanded Jim Palmer, the second
gam; Jw·
1ner, to lefthander
CueUar ne complication is
that
ellar, master of a
screwball, often is more
effective against righthanders
than lefthanders. And leftyswinging Richie Hebner, who
would be benched for Jose
Pagan i~ a standard switch,

eomin1 loose when you eat, ·laugh,
or talk? A denture adheaive ean help.
FASTEETH•a:lvea denturetl. ton&amp;f!r, firmer, 11teadier hold. Makes eat.Jn~tmoreen j oye.ble. Formorel5eeuritY
and t:ornfort, Ulle FASTEETH Den.t um Adhe1ive Powder. Denturr.a
thll.t fit arc ~'lential to health. Sell
your •l~~ntiHl ti'JI(ularly.

1

By Motor ROute where carrier '
service not available : One
I rnon1h $1 .75 . ev mail in Ohio
, and w. V a .1 One year SlA.OO .
\ Sil( mon t h! $7 .25 . Three
months sc .so . Sub sc r iption
. pr 1ce lncludf!S SDnday Times -

1

sentinel

; ~·- .. ~- - -~-

.

LARRY'S ASHlAND1
SERVICE STATION,
Phono '92·2:N6
190 Mulberry Ave . Pomeroy

...

··J

because she
has Electric
Heatin "

(
COLU MBUS AND SOUTHERN.
OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY ::;;:..·---

�--- - ,
.-·-~he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Oct. 12,

.•

•

1971

Officers
Named

Community
Corner By

Social Holido:J Activity Planned by Church Class
.. ndar
Cafe
Holiday activities were
planned during the Friday night
meeting of the Young Adult
Cia~ of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
AHalloweenpartywassetfor
7 p.m. on Oct. 29 at the church
With games and pr_tzes. Donuts,
ctder and candy wtll be served.

The class voted to purchase a
Christian Otrlstmas film to be
shown as part Q( the Christmas
Eve service at 7p.m. The film is
'"Glory to the Highest." The
children's Christmas program
will be on Sunday, Dec. 19.
It was reporred that a new
Christian flag has been purchiised for the church.
Clifford Smith opened the
meeting with Mrs. Walter
Morris giving devotions using
the topic "Members of One
Body" scripture from 1st
Corinthians, and prayer. Mrs.
Larry Pickens was appoinred to
have devotions for the Nov. 12
class meeting with Mr. and
Mrs . Ben Rife .to provide the
refreshments then.
Present were Diana and

Election of new officers
·
highlighted a meeting of
TUESDAY
Evangelinee ~Ch~a~pre~rp;~~::-:.~10 ETA Phi Chapter Beta
Issue I ol the "Trinity Times" was distribul&lt;!d Sunday . Edited of
the Easll
r, Thursday Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15, p.m.
by capable Carrie Neulzling, with some assistance from Erma
mght
e Middleport Masonic Tuesday, Columbus and
Smith, the paper will be informal, featuring newsy bits about the Temple.
Southern Ohio Electric co.
people and happenings at Trinity Church:,
Elected were Mrs. Jenevee social room. Mrs. Judy Werry
Chesher, worthy matron, Harry and Miss Marilyn Swan,
INTERESTED IN TRYING your hand at bowling?
Chesher, worthy patron ; Mrs. hostesses. New pledges are not
CHESTY PULLER DIES
Geraldine Kessinger, president of the Eighth District Helen Milhoan, associate to atrend.
HAMPTON, Va. (UPI)- Lt.
American Legion Auxiliary, is in the process of organizing a~ matron; George Meinhart
FILM OF Eastern-Kyger Gen. Lewis B. "Chesty " Puller,
Auxiliary league.
·
·
associate patron; Mrs. 11~ Creek game Tuesday Night at the . most decorated U.. S.
· Auxiliary members whether you bowl or not, you are invited Darnell, secretary; Mrs. Lettie the Movies, Eastern High Manne, dted Monday mght m a
to meet at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes at 6 p.m. Friday. Either 18 Roush, treasurer; Mrs. Lena School 8 p.m. Everyone veterans_' hospital after a
Bunce, conductress ; Mrs . welcome. Refreshments.
&lt;r 24 will be requrred to form a league, Geraldine tells us.
lengthy Illness. He was 73.
Jacqueline Gaddis, associate SYRACUSEPTA Tuesday Puller rose through the ranks
conductress
, and Mary In 7:30 p.m. Representative of from priVate, and among hl8 14
. PFC. JOE REICHMAN, stationed with the U.S . Army near
T.B. &amp; Health Association
personal decoraltons were five
Ka~SE!rlaut&lt;&gt;rn, Germany, · just recently completed personnel Wilcox, trustee.
Plans were complerect during be guest speaker. Final plans N?vy Crosses and the Army's
trauung school. Joe went to Germany in early July to begin his
the
meeting fo~ serving the for Halloween Carnival will be Dlshngwshed Service Cross.
two year tonr of duty .
Democrat dinner on Wednesday made.
IF YOU'VE NEVER eal{m zucchini, do try it. We did and we night at 7 p.m. with workers to EASTERN BAND Boosters
loved it!
'
report at 5:15 p.m. It was noted Tuesday at the high school, 8 to ,
. Ullian Smith sent us one from her garden and I prepared it that brooms made by the blind 9:~0 p.m. All interesred persons'
just as she suggesred- peeled, sliced very thin, rolled in pancake have arrived and are for sale by urged to attend.
flour, and fried to a nice render brown. lt has a flavor all its own the chaprer.
- - WEDNESDAY Acucumber, I thought, when I first bpied it on the front seat
Friends night was announced
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
the car, then then I remembered that Mrs . Smith had promised a for Oct. 16 at the Harrisonville Gardeners Club, at 8 p.m.
zucchini, and there it was.
Chapter at 8 p.m. It will be a Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
joint affair with all Meigs John Werner .
HALLOWEEN ISN'T EVEN here yet, but so many places ·we· . C.ou.nty chapl&lt;!r~ to participate.
MASKED HALLOWEEN
PROTECT YOUR CARPET &amp;FLOORS!
look we see a hint of Christmas. Several churches have already Areport was gtven on the recent
Party Wednesday at Hemlock
scheduled holiday bazaars and the Meigs County Garden Clubs dtstrtct party at Me1gs Htgh Gra nge hall 8 p.m . Spon;
are getting set for the annual Christmas show.
School attended by 24 members
by
Hemlock
sored
TradiUonally, this show is staged on the Saturday and SUnday of the. Middleport Chaprer.
Grange
and
Woodmen
followlllg Thanksgiving. Addalou Lewis and Janet Bolin are show
Imttalton was set for 7:30 Lodge . Country store and
SIZE 6FT. X27 IN.
chairmen and already have the schedule complel&lt;!d.
p.m. on Nov . 4. Presenred at the
fishing pond will be featured.
"There's No Place Uke Home for the Holidays" is the theme medethng were the budget,
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
RIBBEDof th
f t
ill
au 1mg, and trustees' reports
d
an one
e new ea ures w be card table display;; depicting G d Ch
· Uons Club Wednesday at noon
ran
aprer amendments
Chrislrnas around the world
An the Ia · .. h' · .
were read and several Friend at United Methodist Church .
SEE
. . o r c ss ts 0 to Chrtstmas" and this is limil&lt;!d to Night observances were an- Program to be announced.
THRU
POMEROY CHAPTER, No.
exhibitors who have nev~r won a blue ribbon in a county flower nounced. The altar was draped
PLASTia
show. Just may enl&lt;!r tl.
in memory of Ralph Smith, past 80, RAM, stated meeting
THE'\'
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m . at
grand patron.
LAST!
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
WHITE ROSE LOOge, I :30
p.m. Wedn esday at the
American Legion Hall; Middleport.
Plans for . a coffee hour to "chw-chmanship din ner" to be
MIDDLEPORT Literary
ENTIRE STOCK!
follow the Oct. 25 afternoon held at the Athens Church on
Club, home of Mrs. Nan Moore,
program of Dr. and Mrs. Paul Oct. 19. A report on a recent TI
1
2 p.m. Response to roll call by
Getty, missionaries to Africa, wscs workshop held at Camp
I
naming an important Jewish
were. made during a recent Francis Asbury, Rio Grande,
contribution
to the American
Nine members of the MidIoleeting of the Asbury United was give n by Miss Marcia Karr
dleport
Business
and way of life. Mrs. M. L. French to
Methodist Church, Syracuse. and Mrs. Teaford.
review "The Grandees" by
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Four shut-in calls were made Professional Women's Club
Stephen
Birmingham.
Virgil Teaford •. the group the past month and the birth- were in Nelsonville Sunday for
THURSDAY
dtsc ussed the Vtsll of Dr. and days of Miss Karr and Mrs. the fall meeting of District 15.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE
Mrs. Getty at the Syra- Donald Lisle. were observed. They were Mrs . John Werner
NOW THRU SATURDAY
Heath
United Methodist
cuse Church at 2:30 p.m . Devotions by Mrs. Teaford were who conducted a workshop o~
The couple will be at the Mid- from Matthew 7. Mrs. William persona l development ; Mrs . Church, 2 p.m . Thursday. ,
dleport Church that evening. Winebrenner was assisting Pearl Reynolds, a hostess for Devotions by Mrs . C. M. Heny
the coffee hour; Mrs. Rita nosy; Program by Mrs. Walter
Also announced was a hostess.
Mrs. John Sauvage. presented Lewis , who assisted with Hayes. Mrs. Perry Mitch and
the program from the study registration, and Mrs. Molly Mrs . M. C. Wilson, hostesses.
PRICE
book,- "Leap In Faith" on Hill, Mrs. Mary Kunzelman,
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Mrs.
Linda
Stobart,
Mrs.
Betty
"Freedom
for
Our
Expression
Thursday night at the halL
7:30
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Cline,
Mrs.
Edith
Forrest,
and
First and second degree to be
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neutzling of Faith " written by Karen
Mrs.
Grace
Pratt.
Laub-novak.
Purpose
of
the
exemplified.
Refreshments.
enrertained at their Union Ave.
PACKAGE OF 25
BOX OF 50
Mrs. Martha Buckley , state
LAUREL CLIFF Better
home in Pomeroy Sunday program was to promote
of Health Club, 6:30 potluck dinner
secretary,
honoring their son, Jay, on his freeing the imagination for recording
at the home of Mrs . C. R. Karr.
third birtiJday, who received a creative ability, to allow a Cleveland, was the speaker.
The
Middleport
club
received
number of gifts. Refreshments better expression of God's love
of ice cream and a cake, done in and to share personal un: the "Nike award" for having
a purple and white color derstanding of creative the largest percentage of
Sandwich size . Top lock
DINNER GUESTS
Jumbo package, several
scheme, topped with a clown capacity by comparing the membership in attendance. The
type. Regular price is
Mr. and Mrs, Milton Hood
colors- useful at home ,
decoration, were served to Mr. religious person with the artist. Greek goddess figurine (Nike ) Middleport, and Mrs. Georgi~
41 cents.
Box or 50.
Assisting with the program symbolizes victory throu gh
on auto, etc.
·and Mrs. Norbert Neutzling and
Mrs .
William individual strength and Shears of St. Perersburg, Fla.
son, Mike; Mr. and Mrs. were
were recent dinner guests of
Truman Russell, all of Winebrenner and Mrs. Lisle. courage.
National B&amp;PW Week will be Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Helen Rife and Miss Karr, to conclude the
Pomeroy. Mrs. Spears has now
daughter , Joy , of Cheshire, the meeting, read "The Structure of observed Oct. 17-23 with returned to her home in Sl.
lnregrity, " the report of an members being urged to attend
hosts and the honored guest.
interview with J . Edgar the church of their choice on Petersburg.
Hoover. Others attending were Sunday. At the Monday night
•
Mrs . Ted Hilldore and Mrs. meeting of the club, special
guests will be Mrs. Elizabeth
Oma Winebrenner.
VISIT WEBSTERS
Yerian, Jackson , district
HAS SURGERY
Mr. and Mrs. Ellison Boatdirector,
and
Mrs
.
Marianne
Joyce
Bing, daughter of Mrs .
man and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Edwards, Jackson, district Guy Bing, Pomeroy, underwent
Allen of Lanham, Md. were the
A silver bowl and candle secre tary . A program on an appendectomy at Vererans
weekend guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Manning Websl&lt;!r, Pomeroy. holders were presented to Mrs. legtslatton w1ll be presented by Memorial Hospital Friday.
They came especially for the Willard Boyer in observance of Mrs. Forrest and her comfuneral services of Jarret Bobo her silver wedding anniversary mtttee .
at Point Rock. Spending at a recent meeting of the SewCOUPLE WEDDED
Saturday with the Websters Rite-Sewing Club. Mrs. Boyer
were George van zandt also received a silver gift from Mrs. Frances Stobart Fry and
Huntington, w. Va. , and Mrs: her secret stster. Mrs. George Mr. Elwin Robert Yost were
Mar garet Coughenour Hoffman and Mrs. Bill Me- married at 2 p.m. Saturday,
Cheshire.
' Dam:' were hostesses for the Oct. 9, at the Yost holl)e on 661
meetmg at the club house.
N. Second Ave., Middleport.
The annual Halloween dinner The Rev . Arthur Lund,
was
set for 7 p.m. Oct. 20 at the Lutheran Church pastor, ofPOST REPRESENTED
~eeney-Bennett Po~t 12 8 Marttn Restaurant in Mid- ficiated at the ceremony at·American Legion, and th~ dleport. Pillow cases made by tended by several relatives and
·
Auxiliary were represented by Mrs. Edward Wells were. friends.
. Mrs. Charles Kessinger, Mr. auctioned as a money-making
and Mrs. Albert Roush, and Mr. project to Mrs. Robert Potter.
A letter from Mrs. Sherrie
and Mrs . Gene Bass at the
A VARIETY OF
A Thought
Legion's Eighth District Con- Johnson, a former member and
EA.
COLORS &amp;
ESI
ference Sunday at Ractne. Mrs. resident of Lincoln Heights: was
For Today
Kessinger is also the Eighth . read. Mrs. Johnson is residing
Dtstnct president of the in Georgia. Mrs. Cha rles
To be happy. tru st
Auxiliary .
Hoffman and Mrs. Doris Carder
thyself.
will be hostesses for the first
- Aristotle
meeting in November.

Charlene Hoeflich

will

Becky Painrer, Mrs. Homer Mrs. Ben Rife; carla and
Forrest, Mrs. Larry Pickens, Becky, Mrs. Ivan Wood, B&lt;innle
Scottie and Vickie, Mrs. Morris, Wood, Mr, and Mrs. Clifford
Smith and Christy, Mr, and
Richard Gilkey_and Mark,
Hetzer Completes · Mrs.
and Mrs. Ralph Pamrer. Mrs.
Palnrer and Mi~. Wood' served
NCO Training
refreshments.
REEDSVILLE - Army
Specialist Five Kenneth P . . .- - - - - . - - - .
Hetzer, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Hetzer, Route I,
Reedsville, recently was
graduated from the 3rd Armored
Division
NonSAME DAY
commissioned Officer Academy
SERVICE
at Kirch Gons, Germany.
In At9-0ut At 5
He is a maintenance
specialist in Company A of the
Use Our Free Parking Lot
330 Armor's 3rd Balialion near
Kirch Gons. ·Hetzer is a 1967
graduate of Eastern High
SchooL

· SHI

FINISHING

VINYL FLOOR MAl

Nike A ward
TO b C' b
vv n ry IU

2

HANDI
BAGS

Assorted
Sponges

REDUCED! SAVE 95c PAIR!

MENS FLANNEL.

We have an
ArtCarved ring
made just
for you.

14

LIKE KNICK-KNACKS?

KEROSENE
LAMPS

~***************·

SIZE

$

A-B-C-D

$ OO

CAR

DRIVE-IN
BANKING
Fridays Only
The Drive-In Window
is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3
and 5 to 7 as usual on
Fridays.

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

Midd ·)port,

o.

Member FD IC

Member Federa l

Reserve System

Nylons and Cordu; oys, Some
quiltlined. Man,y are plle lined
with hoods.

Expressing your unique

personality. Slyled by a
fashion expert. Glowing

88

with a diamon d of
magnificent quality.

Can you ask tor anything
more? Come in and see
your ArtCarved diamond
engagement ring today.

A!! Carve~
A - BLISS
B - MANOIR

GOESSLER

JEWELRY STORE
USE OUR CHRISTMAS
LA\' AWAY PLAN f.

51.

Hi-Impact Plastic

Girls
Hair Bands
¢

PKG.
OF6

HAM

c

lb.

SAVE 30'

lb.

USDR

NEACH ONE!

cHew
FROM @nation

FAVORITE CIRCLE STITCH FATTERN

Sliced Bacon

3

-lb.

lb.

'1

-

Spreadables

FAIRMONT

71fz OZ. SIZE

BRAS

FRUIT DRINK
ORANGE, GRAPE, WITCHES BREW

SIZE
32 TO 42

•

CUPS
AFTER SALE

644

GIRLS

Scented
HAIR
DeodorettJ Barrettes

Circular cakes to take
away offensive odors. Lavender or apple blossom
scents.

Complete new selection
iust the right style fora
age gal or teen.

CREAM PIES

4roR•1.00

12 OZ. BOTTLES

6 pak

Reg, 69'

SEALTEST MILK
SHASTA or TOPPS

gal,

POP

JERZEE BRAND TALL CANS

EVAP. MILK
cans

COPPER COLORANODIZED ALUMNINUM

2 QT. $
SIZE

ASSORTED
FLAVORS

MARK V MONEY-SAVER!

SATURDAY ONLY!
FAVORITE

BREAD
I
I

I

~- ----- MARK

vSTORE COUPON------:

I

I

I
I

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A_lO_OZ. JAR OF

I

I

1

lnsta1t
MAXWELL HOUSEe
COFFEE

I
I

I
I
I
I
I

AT MARK V STORE

I

:

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

$119

I
I
I
L- _O!!COUPONP(Rf_!IILY•j_FFEIEXPIRlS...; 10-11-71 .- __ ...J
--~-- .

•

47

I .

WITH COUPON

20 lb. bag
THESE ITEMS
ON-SALE
POINT PLEASANT
OR

MASON

I

I
I

Unclassified

TO $10.88

I

OFF

Soup6ca! 1

Vegetable

OF

EVE

50~

I
'

A CARTON;

FILTER
CIGARETTES

cans

Scot Lad

50~ OFF
·----~

EVE

can

Scot Lad Pink Liquid $
DETERGENT 4 bots.

tall

'

16 oz. bottles

Hb.
bxs.

WATER PROOF- SIZE S-M-L-XL

EARLY AMERICAN

CARTON

1
o~
BISCUITS
Scot Lad
CRACKERS 3 .,
Scot Lad Chicken
.,
.Noodle Soup 6
Scot Lad

1fz gallon

4 P~. 94c

8-BOTTLE

'1.

GO THE GRADE A WAY

53c

pkg.

FAVORITE
51vs. tor
BREAD
Scot Lad Specials

7-UP

JAR

Toddlers
Plastic
Pants
PRINTED DESiGN-S! .
.. ·

oe
1

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE I

11 Ol

$1.07

Bis Mix aod pk&amp;.
Corn Muffin Mix

10115

Coffee-mate

74c

MARTHA WHITE FAVORITE

REAL ECONOMY

CARNATION

REGULAR

Get
with
The
Comer.

10e
.EDON TOILET 12 •1
TISSUE

FROZEN SPECIAL!
BANQUET

..:---

"Ban" Spr_ay Deo4orant

THURSDAY- ONE DAY ONLY! .

JIFFY CORN
MUFFIN MIX

.MY·T·FINE
PUDDING

CRTS.

BAD ODORS!

00

DESSERT IN A MINUTE

8 Ol

Tastes home-made I

FRESH BEEF
VALUES!

Ground Beef.. ......~.~--- 69~
Ground Chuck ....~~:-79~
Chopped Sirloin Steak -----~~: .99~
SPECIAL 10• SALE

CARNATION
.

WOMENS

A-B-C ·

CHOICE

SUPERIORS BUDGET

BOLOGNA

$2.941

COATS · · TEA
KnTLE.
AND JACKETS

***
lfs Quick! Easy

BOlLE

THURSDAY
ONLY
.,

ON SALE FRIDAY ONLY!

AF!E R SALE

lunch Meat .!~~~~.~~~.~.~-~~~!.~~.!~: . 79~
Polish Sausage . .~~:.~~~~-~---·--'~:. ,69~
Bologna .... ~~~~~.~-~~-~ ......................'-~·-· 59~
Wieners . .~~.~~.~~-~~~-~~.~~-~~- ... _....... ~~: . 6 "9~
Neck Bones ....~~~~--~-~~, ......... 51b.•1

SUPERIORS

eSAVE 20'

GIRLS WARM

PARENTS VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jacobs
and daughrer, Teri, Springfield,
were weekend guests of their
parents, Mrs. Clifford • Ebersbachand Mr. and-Mrs. Clifford
Jarobs, Pomeroy.

BUSH

PAJAMAS

CLEAN-UP
BAGS

IN BASIC
Benny Wright, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Pomeroy, is
tn basic training at
the
Lackland Air Force Base in
Texas. He enlisred for · four
years.

Better Meat

ROGER

LAWN and LEAF PLASTIC

Sew-Rite Meets

VISIT WALLACES
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Wallace
and daughter , Alison, Ashville,
were_guests of his parents, Mr .
and Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
Middleport.

SAYS

'BACON

DBA

1

SUPERIORS

Dart Sliced

NEW FALL STYLES

WOMENS

•

aeaners

oi

Coffee Hour Planned

MARK V STORE IN MIDDLEPORT ~ FREE ON-STREn PARKING AFTER 5:00 PM '

)

TO. MATOES:~;f~~. 2 lb. 59c
.

.

~

CABBAGE·. . .~~~~~~~~~~. . . . :~~:. 6c ·
ON ION·S. . . ~~~~~~. . 3 b~i 39c
•

SUPER MARKET • Open Dai~ 9 tCllO • Sun.

·

.

.

.

W~

Accept Feder:al Food Stomps
PHONE: 992·3480

~· we Reserve The Righi To limit Ovonl itio'$"

·'

MIDDLEPORT, Q. -~

�--- - ,
.-·-~he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Oct. 12,

.•

•

1971

Officers
Named

Community
Corner By

Social Holido:J Activity Planned by Church Class
.. ndar
Cafe
Holiday activities were
planned during the Friday night
meeting of the Young Adult
Cia~ of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
AHalloweenpartywassetfor
7 p.m. on Oct. 29 at the church
With games and pr_tzes. Donuts,
ctder and candy wtll be served.

The class voted to purchase a
Christian Otrlstmas film to be
shown as part Q( the Christmas
Eve service at 7p.m. The film is
'"Glory to the Highest." The
children's Christmas program
will be on Sunday, Dec. 19.
It was reporred that a new
Christian flag has been purchiised for the church.
Clifford Smith opened the
meeting with Mrs. Walter
Morris giving devotions using
the topic "Members of One
Body" scripture from 1st
Corinthians, and prayer. Mrs.
Larry Pickens was appoinred to
have devotions for the Nov. 12
class meeting with Mr. and
Mrs . Ben Rife .to provide the
refreshments then.
Present were Diana and

Election of new officers
·
highlighted a meeting of
TUESDAY
Evangelinee ~Ch~a~pre~rp;~~::-:.~10 ETA Phi Chapter Beta
Issue I ol the "Trinity Times" was distribul&lt;!d Sunday . Edited of
the Easll
r, Thursday Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15, p.m.
by capable Carrie Neulzling, with some assistance from Erma
mght
e Middleport Masonic Tuesday, Columbus and
Smith, the paper will be informal, featuring newsy bits about the Temple.
Southern Ohio Electric co.
people and happenings at Trinity Church:,
Elected were Mrs. Jenevee social room. Mrs. Judy Werry
Chesher, worthy matron, Harry and Miss Marilyn Swan,
INTERESTED IN TRYING your hand at bowling?
Chesher, worthy patron ; Mrs. hostesses. New pledges are not
CHESTY PULLER DIES
Geraldine Kessinger, president of the Eighth District Helen Milhoan, associate to atrend.
HAMPTON, Va. (UPI)- Lt.
American Legion Auxiliary, is in the process of organizing a~ matron; George Meinhart
FILM OF Eastern-Kyger Gen. Lewis B. "Chesty " Puller,
Auxiliary league.
·
·
associate patron; Mrs. 11~ Creek game Tuesday Night at the . most decorated U.. S.
· Auxiliary members whether you bowl or not, you are invited Darnell, secretary; Mrs. Lettie the Movies, Eastern High Manne, dted Monday mght m a
to meet at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes at 6 p.m. Friday. Either 18 Roush, treasurer; Mrs. Lena School 8 p.m. Everyone veterans_' hospital after a
Bunce, conductress ; Mrs . welcome. Refreshments.
&lt;r 24 will be requrred to form a league, Geraldine tells us.
lengthy Illness. He was 73.
Jacqueline Gaddis, associate SYRACUSEPTA Tuesday Puller rose through the ranks
conductress
, and Mary In 7:30 p.m. Representative of from priVate, and among hl8 14
. PFC. JOE REICHMAN, stationed with the U.S . Army near
T.B. &amp; Health Association
personal decoraltons were five
Ka~SE!rlaut&lt;&gt;rn, Germany, · just recently completed personnel Wilcox, trustee.
Plans were complerect during be guest speaker. Final plans N?vy Crosses and the Army's
trauung school. Joe went to Germany in early July to begin his
the
meeting fo~ serving the for Halloween Carnival will be Dlshngwshed Service Cross.
two year tonr of duty .
Democrat dinner on Wednesday made.
IF YOU'VE NEVER eal{m zucchini, do try it. We did and we night at 7 p.m. with workers to EASTERN BAND Boosters
loved it!
'
report at 5:15 p.m. It was noted Tuesday at the high school, 8 to ,
. Ullian Smith sent us one from her garden and I prepared it that brooms made by the blind 9:~0 p.m. All interesred persons'
just as she suggesred- peeled, sliced very thin, rolled in pancake have arrived and are for sale by urged to attend.
flour, and fried to a nice render brown. lt has a flavor all its own the chaprer.
- - WEDNESDAY Acucumber, I thought, when I first bpied it on the front seat
Friends night was announced
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
the car, then then I remembered that Mrs . Smith had promised a for Oct. 16 at the Harrisonville Gardeners Club, at 8 p.m.
zucchini, and there it was.
Chapter at 8 p.m. It will be a Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
joint affair with all Meigs John Werner .
HALLOWEEN ISN'T EVEN here yet, but so many places ·we· . C.ou.nty chapl&lt;!r~ to participate.
MASKED HALLOWEEN
PROTECT YOUR CARPET &amp;FLOORS!
look we see a hint of Christmas. Several churches have already Areport was gtven on the recent
Party Wednesday at Hemlock
scheduled holiday bazaars and the Meigs County Garden Clubs dtstrtct party at Me1gs Htgh Gra nge hall 8 p.m . Spon;
are getting set for the annual Christmas show.
School attended by 24 members
by
Hemlock
sored
TradiUonally, this show is staged on the Saturday and SUnday of the. Middleport Chaprer.
Grange
and
Woodmen
followlllg Thanksgiving. Addalou Lewis and Janet Bolin are show
Imttalton was set for 7:30 Lodge . Country store and
SIZE 6FT. X27 IN.
chairmen and already have the schedule complel&lt;!d.
p.m. on Nov . 4. Presenred at the
fishing pond will be featured.
"There's No Place Uke Home for the Holidays" is the theme medethng were the budget,
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
RIBBEDof th
f t
ill
au 1mg, and trustees' reports
d
an one
e new ea ures w be card table display;; depicting G d Ch
· Uons Club Wednesday at noon
ran
aprer amendments
Chrislrnas around the world
An the Ia · .. h' · .
were read and several Friend at United Methodist Church .
SEE
. . o r c ss ts 0 to Chrtstmas" and this is limil&lt;!d to Night observances were an- Program to be announced.
THRU
POMEROY CHAPTER, No.
exhibitors who have nev~r won a blue ribbon in a county flower nounced. The altar was draped
PLASTia
show. Just may enl&lt;!r tl.
in memory of Ralph Smith, past 80, RAM, stated meeting
THE'\'
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m . at
grand patron.
LAST!
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
WHITE ROSE LOOge, I :30
p.m. Wedn esday at the
American Legion Hall; Middleport.
Plans for . a coffee hour to "chw-chmanship din ner" to be
MIDDLEPORT Literary
ENTIRE STOCK!
follow the Oct. 25 afternoon held at the Athens Church on
Club, home of Mrs. Nan Moore,
program of Dr. and Mrs. Paul Oct. 19. A report on a recent TI
1
2 p.m. Response to roll call by
Getty, missionaries to Africa, wscs workshop held at Camp
I
naming an important Jewish
were. made during a recent Francis Asbury, Rio Grande,
contribution
to the American
Nine members of the MidIoleeting of the Asbury United was give n by Miss Marcia Karr
dleport
Business
and way of life. Mrs. M. L. French to
Methodist Church, Syracuse. and Mrs. Teaford.
review "The Grandees" by
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Four shut-in calls were made Professional Women's Club
Stephen
Birmingham.
Virgil Teaford •. the group the past month and the birth- were in Nelsonville Sunday for
THURSDAY
dtsc ussed the Vtsll of Dr. and days of Miss Karr and Mrs. the fall meeting of District 15.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE
Mrs. Getty at the Syra- Donald Lisle. were observed. They were Mrs . John Werner
NOW THRU SATURDAY
Heath
United Methodist
cuse Church at 2:30 p.m . Devotions by Mrs. Teaford were who conducted a workshop o~
The couple will be at the Mid- from Matthew 7. Mrs. William persona l development ; Mrs . Church, 2 p.m . Thursday. ,
dleport Church that evening. Winebrenner was assisting Pearl Reynolds, a hostess for Devotions by Mrs . C. M. Heny
the coffee hour; Mrs. Rita nosy; Program by Mrs. Walter
Also announced was a hostess.
Mrs. John Sauvage. presented Lewis , who assisted with Hayes. Mrs. Perry Mitch and
the program from the study registration, and Mrs. Molly Mrs . M. C. Wilson, hostesses.
PRICE
book,- "Leap In Faith" on Hill, Mrs. Mary Kunzelman,
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Mrs.
Linda
Stobart,
Mrs.
Betty
"Freedom
for
Our
Expression
Thursday night at the halL
7:30
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Cline,
Mrs.
Edith
Forrest,
and
First and second degree to be
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neutzling of Faith " written by Karen
Mrs.
Grace
Pratt.
Laub-novak.
Purpose
of
the
exemplified.
Refreshments.
enrertained at their Union Ave.
PACKAGE OF 25
BOX OF 50
Mrs. Martha Buckley , state
LAUREL CLIFF Better
home in Pomeroy Sunday program was to promote
of Health Club, 6:30 potluck dinner
secretary,
honoring their son, Jay, on his freeing the imagination for recording
at the home of Mrs . C. R. Karr.
third birtiJday, who received a creative ability, to allow a Cleveland, was the speaker.
The
Middleport
club
received
number of gifts. Refreshments better expression of God's love
of ice cream and a cake, done in and to share personal un: the "Nike award" for having
a purple and white color derstanding of creative the largest percentage of
Sandwich size . Top lock
DINNER GUESTS
Jumbo package, several
scheme, topped with a clown capacity by comparing the membership in attendance. The
type. Regular price is
Mr. and Mrs, Milton Hood
colors- useful at home ,
decoration, were served to Mr. religious person with the artist. Greek goddess figurine (Nike ) Middleport, and Mrs. Georgi~
41 cents.
Box or 50.
Assisting with the program symbolizes victory throu gh
on auto, etc.
·and Mrs. Norbert Neutzling and
Mrs .
William individual strength and Shears of St. Perersburg, Fla.
son, Mike; Mr. and Mrs. were
were recent dinner guests of
Truman Russell, all of Winebrenner and Mrs. Lisle. courage.
National B&amp;PW Week will be Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Helen Rife and Miss Karr, to conclude the
Pomeroy. Mrs. Spears has now
daughter , Joy , of Cheshire, the meeting, read "The Structure of observed Oct. 17-23 with returned to her home in Sl.
lnregrity, " the report of an members being urged to attend
hosts and the honored guest.
interview with J . Edgar the church of their choice on Petersburg.
Hoover. Others attending were Sunday. At the Monday night
•
Mrs . Ted Hilldore and Mrs. meeting of the club, special
guests will be Mrs. Elizabeth
Oma Winebrenner.
VISIT WEBSTERS
Yerian, Jackson , district
HAS SURGERY
Mr. and Mrs. Ellison Boatdirector,
and
Mrs
.
Marianne
Joyce
Bing, daughter of Mrs .
man and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Edwards, Jackson, district Guy Bing, Pomeroy, underwent
Allen of Lanham, Md. were the
A silver bowl and candle secre tary . A program on an appendectomy at Vererans
weekend guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Manning Websl&lt;!r, Pomeroy. holders were presented to Mrs. legtslatton w1ll be presented by Memorial Hospital Friday.
They came especially for the Willard Boyer in observance of Mrs. Forrest and her comfuneral services of Jarret Bobo her silver wedding anniversary mtttee .
at Point Rock. Spending at a recent meeting of the SewCOUPLE WEDDED
Saturday with the Websters Rite-Sewing Club. Mrs. Boyer
were George van zandt also received a silver gift from Mrs. Frances Stobart Fry and
Huntington, w. Va. , and Mrs: her secret stster. Mrs. George Mr. Elwin Robert Yost were
Mar garet Coughenour Hoffman and Mrs. Bill Me- married at 2 p.m. Saturday,
Cheshire.
' Dam:' were hostesses for the Oct. 9, at the Yost holl)e on 661
meetmg at the club house.
N. Second Ave., Middleport.
The annual Halloween dinner The Rev . Arthur Lund,
was
set for 7 p.m. Oct. 20 at the Lutheran Church pastor, ofPOST REPRESENTED
~eeney-Bennett Po~t 12 8 Marttn Restaurant in Mid- ficiated at the ceremony at·American Legion, and th~ dleport. Pillow cases made by tended by several relatives and
·
Auxiliary were represented by Mrs. Edward Wells were. friends.
. Mrs. Charles Kessinger, Mr. auctioned as a money-making
and Mrs. Albert Roush, and Mr. project to Mrs. Robert Potter.
A letter from Mrs. Sherrie
and Mrs . Gene Bass at the
A VARIETY OF
A Thought
Legion's Eighth District Con- Johnson, a former member and
EA.
COLORS &amp;
ESI
ference Sunday at Ractne. Mrs. resident of Lincoln Heights: was
For Today
Kessinger is also the Eighth . read. Mrs. Johnson is residing
Dtstnct president of the in Georgia. Mrs. Cha rles
To be happy. tru st
Auxiliary .
Hoffman and Mrs. Doris Carder
thyself.
will be hostesses for the first
- Aristotle
meeting in November.

Charlene Hoeflich

will

Becky Painrer, Mrs. Homer Mrs. Ben Rife; carla and
Forrest, Mrs. Larry Pickens, Becky, Mrs. Ivan Wood, B&lt;innle
Scottie and Vickie, Mrs. Morris, Wood, Mr, and Mrs. Clifford
Smith and Christy, Mr, and
Richard Gilkey_and Mark,
Hetzer Completes · Mrs.
and Mrs. Ralph Pamrer. Mrs.
Palnrer and Mi~. Wood' served
NCO Training
refreshments.
REEDSVILLE - Army
Specialist Five Kenneth P . . .- - - - - . - - - .
Hetzer, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Hetzer, Route I,
Reedsville, recently was
graduated from the 3rd Armored
Division
NonSAME DAY
commissioned Officer Academy
SERVICE
at Kirch Gons, Germany.
In At9-0ut At 5
He is a maintenance
specialist in Company A of the
Use Our Free Parking Lot
330 Armor's 3rd Balialion near
Kirch Gons. ·Hetzer is a 1967
graduate of Eastern High
SchooL

· SHI

FINISHING

VINYL FLOOR MAl

Nike A ward
TO b C' b
vv n ry IU

2

HANDI
BAGS

Assorted
Sponges

REDUCED! SAVE 95c PAIR!

MENS FLANNEL.

We have an
ArtCarved ring
made just
for you.

14

LIKE KNICK-KNACKS?

KEROSENE
LAMPS

~***************·

SIZE

$

A-B-C-D

$ OO

CAR

DRIVE-IN
BANKING
Fridays Only
The Drive-In Window
is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3
and 5 to 7 as usual on
Fridays.

FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

Midd ·)port,

o.

Member FD IC

Member Federa l

Reserve System

Nylons and Cordu; oys, Some
quiltlined. Man,y are plle lined
with hoods.

Expressing your unique

personality. Slyled by a
fashion expert. Glowing

88

with a diamon d of
magnificent quality.

Can you ask tor anything
more? Come in and see
your ArtCarved diamond
engagement ring today.

A!! Carve~
A - BLISS
B - MANOIR

GOESSLER

JEWELRY STORE
USE OUR CHRISTMAS
LA\' AWAY PLAN f.

51.

Hi-Impact Plastic

Girls
Hair Bands
¢

PKG.
OF6

HAM

c

lb.

SAVE 30'

lb.

USDR

NEACH ONE!

cHew
FROM @nation

FAVORITE CIRCLE STITCH FATTERN

Sliced Bacon

3

-lb.

lb.

'1

-

Spreadables

FAIRMONT

71fz OZ. SIZE

BRAS

FRUIT DRINK
ORANGE, GRAPE, WITCHES BREW

SIZE
32 TO 42

•

CUPS
AFTER SALE

644

GIRLS

Scented
HAIR
DeodorettJ Barrettes

Circular cakes to take
away offensive odors. Lavender or apple blossom
scents.

Complete new selection
iust the right style fora
age gal or teen.

CREAM PIES

4roR•1.00

12 OZ. BOTTLES

6 pak

Reg, 69'

SEALTEST MILK
SHASTA or TOPPS

gal,

POP

JERZEE BRAND TALL CANS

EVAP. MILK
cans

COPPER COLORANODIZED ALUMNINUM

2 QT. $
SIZE

ASSORTED
FLAVORS

MARK V MONEY-SAVER!

SATURDAY ONLY!
FAVORITE

BREAD
I
I

I

~- ----- MARK

vSTORE COUPON------:

I

I

I
I

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A_lO_OZ. JAR OF

I

I

1

lnsta1t
MAXWELL HOUSEe
COFFEE

I
I

I
I
I
I
I

AT MARK V STORE

I

:

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

$119

I
I
I
L- _O!!COUPONP(Rf_!IILY•j_FFEIEXPIRlS...; 10-11-71 .- __ ...J
--~-- .

•

47

I .

WITH COUPON

20 lb. bag
THESE ITEMS
ON-SALE
POINT PLEASANT
OR

MASON

I

I
I

Unclassified

TO $10.88

I

OFF

Soup6ca! 1

Vegetable

OF

EVE

50~

I
'

A CARTON;

FILTER
CIGARETTES

cans

Scot Lad

50~ OFF
·----~

EVE

can

Scot Lad Pink Liquid $
DETERGENT 4 bots.

tall

'

16 oz. bottles

Hb.
bxs.

WATER PROOF- SIZE S-M-L-XL

EARLY AMERICAN

CARTON

1
o~
BISCUITS
Scot Lad
CRACKERS 3 .,
Scot Lad Chicken
.,
.Noodle Soup 6
Scot Lad

1fz gallon

4 P~. 94c

8-BOTTLE

'1.

GO THE GRADE A WAY

53c

pkg.

FAVORITE
51vs. tor
BREAD
Scot Lad Specials

7-UP

JAR

Toddlers
Plastic
Pants
PRINTED DESiGN-S! .
.. ·

oe
1

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE I

11 Ol

$1.07

Bis Mix aod pk&amp;.
Corn Muffin Mix

10115

Coffee-mate

74c

MARTHA WHITE FAVORITE

REAL ECONOMY

CARNATION

REGULAR

Get
with
The
Comer.

10e
.EDON TOILET 12 •1
TISSUE

FROZEN SPECIAL!
BANQUET

..:---

"Ban" Spr_ay Deo4orant

THURSDAY- ONE DAY ONLY! .

JIFFY CORN
MUFFIN MIX

.MY·T·FINE
PUDDING

CRTS.

BAD ODORS!

00

DESSERT IN A MINUTE

8 Ol

Tastes home-made I

FRESH BEEF
VALUES!

Ground Beef.. ......~.~--- 69~
Ground Chuck ....~~:-79~
Chopped Sirloin Steak -----~~: .99~
SPECIAL 10• SALE

CARNATION
.

WOMENS

A-B-C ·

CHOICE

SUPERIORS BUDGET

BOLOGNA

$2.941

COATS · · TEA
KnTLE.
AND JACKETS

***
lfs Quick! Easy

BOlLE

THURSDAY
ONLY
.,

ON SALE FRIDAY ONLY!

AF!E R SALE

lunch Meat .!~~~~.~~~.~.~-~~~!.~~.!~: . 79~
Polish Sausage . .~~:.~~~~-~---·--'~:. ,69~
Bologna .... ~~~~~.~-~~-~ ......................'-~·-· 59~
Wieners . .~~.~~.~~-~~~-~~.~~-~~- ... _....... ~~: . 6 "9~
Neck Bones ....~~~~--~-~~, ......... 51b.•1

SUPERIORS

eSAVE 20'

GIRLS WARM

PARENTS VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jacobs
and daughrer, Teri, Springfield,
were weekend guests of their
parents, Mrs. Clifford • Ebersbachand Mr. and-Mrs. Clifford
Jarobs, Pomeroy.

BUSH

PAJAMAS

CLEAN-UP
BAGS

IN BASIC
Benny Wright, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Pomeroy, is
tn basic training at
the
Lackland Air Force Base in
Texas. He enlisred for · four
years.

Better Meat

ROGER

LAWN and LEAF PLASTIC

Sew-Rite Meets

VISIT WALLACES
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Wallace
and daughter , Alison, Ashville,
were_guests of his parents, Mr .
and Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
Middleport.

SAYS

'BACON

DBA

1

SUPERIORS

Dart Sliced

NEW FALL STYLES

WOMENS

•

aeaners

oi

Coffee Hour Planned

MARK V STORE IN MIDDLEPORT ~ FREE ON-STREn PARKING AFTER 5:00 PM '

)

TO. MATOES:~;f~~. 2 lb. 59c
.

.

~

CABBAGE·. . .~~~~~~~~~~. . . . :~~:. 6c ·
ON ION·S. . . ~~~~~~. . 3 b~i 39c
•

SUPER MARKET • Open Dai~ 9 tCllO • Sun.

·

.

.

.

W~

Accept Feder:al Food Stomps
PHONE: 992·3480

~· we Reserve The Righi To limit Ovonl itio'$"

·'

MIDDLEPORT, Q. -~

�..

,

I .

-·
•

•- Tbe Dally ~nt~I. Middleport, Pcmeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1971

..

Sentinel ·Cla_ssifieds Get Action,! Senti{tel Classifieds Get Results I
I

..

Generation Rap

@)

By Helen and Sue Bottel
(GOI a problem? Or a subject for dlscussloo, two.geoeraUoo
1tyle? Direct your qaesUoDS lo eltber Sue or Helen Bolte! -or
botb, If yon want a eomblnaUoo mother-&lt;laugbter answer.)

QUALITY

Fairlane 500 4 door . Local owner, new tires, clean int., 6
cyl. std. trans ., radio.

sneaked up on!

V-8 motor, auto. trans .,- radio, good w-s- w ti res, white

Special $595

Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8-25-tfc

1965 BUICK SPECIAL 4 DR.

I Auto

Last year Ute midi skirt flopped - and Ute more promotion it
finish, like new blue vinyl int.
got the less it was accepted. This year, just take a look! With
scarcely a peep .about the new length in any news story, we find
that skirts have mainly dropped below the knee, and they're going
longer all the time . Pretty soon there won't be a short skirt on the
f"' Ill
rack.
OPEH EVES. 8:00 I'.M.
.
Do fashion designers figure Utat what Utey can't foist on us
-'~,PM
_ EROY, OHIO
with all-wt publicity, Utey can get us to accept by a quiet • L ___________________ _

dard, running condition. First

$50 takes If. Phone 992-7583.
10·12-31c

PAINT damage. 1971 Zig-Zag
sewing machines. Still In
.J • original ·cartons. No at techments

Dear SSL:

Loc8 1 BoW 1'mg
Wed d L 1
nes League
ay a e
Mixed
Oct. 6,1971
Individual High Game IMen I
C. Blakeslee 220; D.
Rosen baum 195; R. Moore 183.
Ind iv idual
High
Game
(Women) _ M. Voss 187 ; s.
Owen 170 ; J. Boyles 167 _

How about: ''To each her own skirllength"? And I'm wondering if last season's fashion rebellion didn't accomplish just
. llyen ded women's slav'ish adherence to a
that. It may have fma
Wliversal style for , while stores are pushing longer skirts, they
"' gh to an kl e;ow.
'
sti II carry every ••·
•• mg from thi gh...
If I'm wrong, and mid-calf monstrosities sneak in for a quiet
takeover,never fear: There'll be a long, loud howl of protest from
GENERATION RAP, whose two authors agree here: we've never
seenanuglierstylethanthenu
. 'di! - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE:
I treat my clothes as if !bey had feelings. So I wouldn't DARE
put a "midi" in my closet to live wiUt my other outfits. It would be
a leklown for my mini skirts and a hang-up with my maxis. SUE
LAS!' WORD FROM HELEN :
Or, as the upset father once wrot., about his so.:alled
.
Th
"long-haired hi pp1e" sons : " ey hang around Ute wrong places
and need a good trinuning." Same for mid.:alf styles. - HELEN
Dear Sue:
Unfoctunalely you DO speak for most high school girls when
you say Utey're more interested in getting Ute guy Ulan fighting
1um -and, after marriage , it's time enough for liberation.
Wrong! Aft.,r marriage It's often too late to become more "a
person" than simply "his wife." This is not to knock marriagethe equal, non-jjtifling kind , But girls should establish equatity
first- which means career-training, recognition of Uteir worth as
PEOPLE.
Most girls have a romantic image of life : school, marriage, a
family- and they live happily ever after. The truth is that nine
out of ten girls will work (for wages) sometime in their lives. Half
Ute women aged 18 to 65 are working now and the percentage is
rising. Yet in 1969, Ute median wage for full-time women workers
was
as compared to $8,227 for 'fnen! (Dept. of Labor
~~b) .
'
What women's liberation and feminism stand for is doing an
equal share as a person for family and society, not wasting your
post-motherhood years in psychosis, meddling in~awhood , idle
boredom or clerical slavery.
Teenage girls areslill caught up in Ute "ge t your man" myth .
Be realislic, girls : it's more important to get your care~r going
first! - BARBARA

Individual High Series (Men)
c. · Blakeslee 513; D.
Rosenbaum 508 ; R. Moore 500.
lndl v ld ua 1 H'•g h s er 1es
!Women) - M. Voss 497; S.
Owen
; J. Series
Boyles _167.CassellHigh490
Team
Carsey 1967 ; Owen-Holler 1874;
F
B
ultz- entley 1l9B.
Team Standings:
Owen-Halter
Pt~
30
Morrow-Moore
Rosenbaum-Meadows
28
Cassell-Carsey
26
Blakeslee-Hoyt
12
12
Fultz-Benlley

-

Senior League
Oct. 2, 1971
standings
Team
Pin busters
Born Losers
Gutter Dusters
Royal Crowns
The Pros

Paul Taylor 211.
Women High Ind. Game Susie Grueser 225.

Men High Series Taylor 561 .
Wome11 High Series Winebrenner 546.

Paul
Li11da

Team High Game Run Block 777 .

Foresl

Team High Series -

Forest

Run Block 2067.

10 5

96
8 7
8 7
7 8

Strikers

3 12

High Ind ividual Game- Oebi
Gallagher 185.
Second High Ind . Game Dave Swisher 170.

High Series- Debi Gallagher
436.
Second High Series -

Stobart 419
Team High Game -

Rick

Royal

Crowns 806.
Team High Series -

Royal

Crowns 2207.
National Bank

Team

Junior League
Oct. 2, 1971
Standings

Ra iders

Bengals
Thundering Herd
Rams

Pts.
10 5
10 5
9 6

7 8

Strike Outs

6 9

3 12

Zodia c's

High Individual Game
George Gum 155.
Second High Ind . Game Steve Bachner 137

High Series Meadows 368.

Mitchell

Second High Series -

Steve

Bachner 359.
Team High Game- Bengals
8S9.

Team High Series- Bengals

2390.

r-----------------------------------------1

needed

as

HILTON WOLFE
•949-3211

PdMEROY

992-2094
.
606 E. Main Pomeroy

FURNITURE

PEP-UP with new Zippies Iron
pills. Non -habit form ing . Only

$1. 98, Nelson Drugs.

'249.95

9-22-30tp

20 FT. UPRGifT
'259.95 ~~-

YARD SALE, Friday and
Saturday, Ocl. IS and 16, 10
a .m. to 5 p.m., m isce llaneous
items, 1165 Vine Street,

Middleport, Ohio.

10-10-61c

~~·

' 1'..

Q

Jack

POMEROY

w. Carttv, Mtr.

Phcme ff2-2111

Voice along Broadway j
•

i

I
i

•
loiOW DURING

Tf.tiS MAKE•UP
EXAM, I WAIIN

vov ...

Service, Phone 992-2522.

Real Estate For Sale

THINK

~,..--._-

SHOULDER
TO SHOUl-DER

LIKE HIM-

w~{('""' ~j

WI"PH VOU,
DAD.':"'

- ~

' I••
~I

~

BEAUtY SHoP

BUGS BUNNY

COrner Union Av&amp;.
ond Slate Rt. 7
Hour.-Monday, T,.sda y,
Wedneoday and Friday
8;30 a.m. to6 p.m.
Thursday
tO a.m. to 8:30p.m.

,. ' -

.

. lr lolfA,

It'll

IH ~

.

..

1 ; ) If
~

'

TM . lot U~ . r01. .QIP. -

..

EMI'LOVEE MCRAI.f HIT ROCK
80TTOM-AND IIRININDG/LT
EVIDENT!.Y 11-iiNI&lt;e&gt; 1 WA~
PAAT OF II CON6PIRACY
~ll'm" HIM!

Sal~rday

8:30a.m. to 1 p.m.
.11HQN E 992-7474

HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc,·
raised , moved, underpinned,

remodeled. Estlmales free ,
anywhere. Nationlll House

Movers, Box 5002, Ch&lt;lrleston,
W. Va . 25311 , or phone 304-9253279 .
9-30-60tp

IOHNSON MASONRY
Complete
Remodeling

~EWING MACHINES. Repafr

7 ROOMS and bath on Un ion

Kitchens, B•fhs
Room Additions
And Patios
Blckhoe And
Endloader Work

service, all makes, 992·228.4,

The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy_.
Author ized Singer Sales and

Ave ., Pomeroy, Ohio . Phone
RUMMAGE Sale in Fry
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
992-5641.
3-2'1 -tfc
Building , Middleport, Ocl . 13
10-IHtp
thru 16. Funds lor building of HOME Comfort co&lt;ik stove,
good condition. 2 wheel
Free Will Baptist Church .
Septic Tank$
NEiGLER Building Supply.
!railer. Phone 992-6467. No NEW HAVEN - 12 x 50 mobile
Also have Mink Stole for sale,
Free estimate on building
And Lneh Beds.
Sunday calls.
$50 cash or lrade for 20 books
home on an 80 x 235 level lol.
your new home. Will draw
10-8-61p
of S 1!. H or TV Stamps. Call
Block ut ilily building . washer
prints to suit the lay of your
992-2324 if interested in stole.
and dryer , on Mill St., Phone
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
10-10·31c ~OAL. limeston~ . Excelsior•
882·2117.
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
AWNINGS. storm doors and.
~ alt Works, E. Main St.,
10-11 -lfc
aluminum siding, soffet and
windows,
carports,
&gt;'omeroy . Phone 992-3891. · 1
ANYONE interesled in forming
gutter . Call Donald Smith,
marquees,
aluminum
siding
A-9-tfc HOUSE, l-642 Lincoln Heights.
a small organ ization for the
Racine, Oh lo.
and
railing
.
Call
A.
·
Jacob
..
10-).ttc
care of pets ; such as dogs,
Call Danny Thompson, 9921
sales
representative.
For
free
cats 1!. birds, please call 992- MINIATURE Sc~naoLers 2196.
estimates,
phone
Charles
·
AKC puppies. no shedding.
6978.
CONCRETE .
7· 18-tfc .READY ·MIX
Lisle
,
Syracuse
.
V.
V.
I0-7-6tc odorless , permanent shots , - - - -- 1.
delivered right to your
Johnson and Son. Inc.
wormed, $8S. Coolville 667- 3 BEDROOM brick home .
prQject. Fast and easy . Free
5-17-tfc ;
6214.
SAVE up lo one half. Bring your
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284.
Choice
location
in
Middleport
.
9-29·12tp
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co ., HACKNEY'S Electric Service,.
Seen by appointment only.
151 But t(;rnut Ave., Pomeroy,
Middleport, Ohio.
,·
Phone 992-5S23 alter 4 p.m.
all types ot electrical work .
phone 992-S080.
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
6·30-tf&lt;."
5-7·1fc
Phone 992-6407.
9-24-tfc
Park view Kennels . Phone 9929-2'1 -30tc
-----S443.
Au
1UM(Jtjl L.t:. m~urance oeen
FT. of Frontage on Rt . 7
8·15-tfc 1,000
Los t
your THE SHOP . Custom meat
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
between Chester and Tuppers caAcelled?
operator's license? Call 992 cutting, Pleasant Ridge Road.
overweigh t ladies, teens and ···Pla ins with water lap . With or 2966.
Fitzpatrick OrPomeroy . Dick Vaughan, 992·
men interested in a Weight APPLES - without 25 wooded acres.
chards, State Route 689,
6-15-jfc-• 3374 and Dale Little, 992-6346.
Watchers IRI Class in
Henry Bahr, Phone 985-:W88 .
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
9-12·30tc
Pomer oy write : Weight
10·7-61p
9-3-tfc
Watchers I R). 1863 Section
C. BRAD ... uKu, Auctioneer
Rd ., Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
Complete Service
ROSEBERRY furnace fn$2.300 WILL ou y :.t:J acres in
10-3-lfc POTATOES for winter. Ken Phone
949-3821
stallation. Free estimates on
Bedford Township, Wolfpen
nebec, red Pont ia c. 1 mile off
Racine.
Ohio
new furnaces, all or gas.
Road . 20 minutes from
Critt Bradford
Service work . Call Cecil
REDUCE sa fe and fast with 124 on 338 loward ferry Great
Pomeroy. 3/_. of land in timber ,
5- j.jfc
Roseberry , Rac ine, Ohio.
Gobese tablets and E·Vap Bend . Tom Sayre. Phone 843- balance i n pasture. No
Phone 614-843-2274.
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs. 2436.
buildings. Call 992-2152 and ·sEPTIC tanks ·cleaned. Miller'
9-8-30tp
9-22-30tp _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1o_-6-6tp
ask for Dick .
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
9-22-tfc
" kills rats quickly.
662-3035 .
KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale, "STAR
2-12-tfc .
Sure. 2'1:! pounds , $1.69.
N·Ew, 3-bedruurn uu me in
delivered to your door. New
Ebersbach
Hardware.
Sugar
Middleport . . Built-in kitchen,
product s
coming
auf
Run Mills, Pickens Hard·
NOTICE OF
ceramic tHe bath, all -electric O'DELL W,HEEL aJignmenl
regularly . Would you like to ware,
located
at
Crossroads,
Rt
.
124.
APPOINTMENT
Ma son.
heat, good ne ighborhood . Can
try them? Call 992-Slt3.
9-21 -30tp
Complete front end service,
cue No. 20557
arrange FHA financing .
10-S-tfc
tune up and brake serv ice. Estate of Marion A . Nicholson ,
Telephone 992·3600 or 992Wheels
bqlanced
elec- Decease d.
4 SPEED tran sm iss ion for 289
2186.
Ironica lly . · All
work
Not1ce IS hereby given that
$75.
Phone
949-4843.
Help Wanted
7-2S·tfC
guaranteed .
Rea sonable Da_l e Nicholson_. of Sl Nor_th
10-6-61p

992-7608

"1

l JIJST L.OV6 'tiJR COSTt».\E,

liU.D'IS! rrs so cu:I'!;R!

"Fiddler on the Roof" closed in London wiUt
BY JACK O'BRIAN
producer Harold Prince several million dollars
NEW PLAY IS A MiSDEAL
richer
; while Ute Bdwy. original profits on and
NEW YORK - The new theater season
opened, not wiUt a bang, nor with a thud, but a on .... Neva Small signed for Ute title role in "F.
whimper: "Solitaire, Double Solitaire" by Jasmine Addams," a tWled-up "Member of Ute LIGHT delivery, must have car,
paid daily. Phone 992·5958.
FARM and Home latex house 'S IX ROOM house, balh, full
Robert Anderson is two little plays wiUt little on Wedding" revival, and couldn't possible've seen
10-12-ltc
·
paint sale, King Builders
?asement, 133 Buttern\.t} Ave.,
Uteir respective mindo! : "Solitaire" is about a Ute 1900 original: Neva was born Nov. 17, 1952 ....
Supply, Middleport .
·
juSt walking distance . from
TELEPHONE
soliciting,
no
10-6-12tc
down
town Pomeroy . Contact'
Buddy
Rogers,
Mary
Pickford's
husband,
will
man In some sort of capsule living at a futuristic
experience necessary . Phone ..---------~
:
d
Hedrick,
2137 Wadswo. t~
moment wherein everything civilized is denied represent Mary at Ute announcements of release 992-5958.
Urive. Columbus, Ohio, phone, •
10-12-ltc
to all, the nostalgic zombie must find family life of Mary's old flicks.
237-433 4, Columbus.
5-9-tfd
Repeat
telecasts
of
the
Johnny
Carson
shows
'
by means of a speakeasy supplying ersatz ·wifedouble-take· Carson's EARN AT HOME addressing
childrelhSanta Claus or whatever strikes his .Sat• nightsgiveaviewera
.
.
·
envelopes. Rush stamped
wallowing mood of reminiscent baUtos; it's quite lfl all his nuddle-aged, gray-haired decline addressed envelope. Osswald
awful, undoubtedly more drearily worse than the weeknights, bul on Saturdays, Johnny's still Mail Service, 5173 68th· Lane.
moment in future time it attempts to anticipat., younger than autumn with dyed-black locks .... Sl. Petersburg, Fla. ~~:Pri_-61 P
.... "Double Solitaire" concerns a couple and a Tiny Tim gives autographed copies of his
companion
few relatives driveling about their soap operatic shopping bags ; signed one for photog Bob HOUSEKEEPER.
for elderly lady . Private
sexual frustrations and marital disap- Lichtman .... Comic stayed at Ute posh Park Ave.
living quarters. Write to Box
729· B, c-o The Dally Sentinel.
Regency
Hot.,!,
and
for
tips
to.
the
staff
which
pointments; also terminally awful .... Robert
Bt:Oker
Pomeroy . ,
'
110
Mechanic
Street
served
him
so
solicitously,
his
reward
was
(to
Anderson's first Bdwy . play was "Tea and
10-8-61p
Pomeroy,
Ohio
1220 Washington Blvd ..
Sympathy," which ran some 720 performances me chambermaid): "See those empty soda - - - - - - Belpre, Ohio
WAITRESS,
no
experience
in 1952; his "You Know I Can't Hear You When hotUes. Return Utem and keep the deposit!"
CHESHIRE - Business lot with
night
shifl,
apply
necessary,
Carol Burnett's taking flying lessons .... The
block building .
The Water's RWlning" ran longer, but Utis
in person . Blue Tartan .
BEAUTIFUL
Early
American
,
Middleport.
doleful seasonal premiere pairing undoubt.,dly Gabors purportedly don't get togeUter socially
- One 5 room s, bath,
10-8-6tc maple , stereo -r!3dio com- 2. HOUSES
much because they bicker-bicker; but at Ute
will accomplish Anderson's briefest run.
bination, AM-FM radio, 4 furnace and garage. ' $6,500.QO
other $4,500.00.
speed changer, separate
Recession or no, Manhattan's getting a slew Camelot the other evening, Mama, Eva and Zsa Lost
controls,
-.4 speaker sound
of new night clubs: El Morocco promises to open ZO;a looked like a happy reunion ... : The
system . Balance $79.15. Use HERE IT IS.-4acreson Route
soon ; Ute new Casino Russe is here as of your "Solitaire, Double Solitaire" production is a THREE MONTH OLO Black
7. 5 rooms, bath, panelinQ ,
our budget lerms . Call 992·
and White English Setter on
carpeting. Only $10,500.00.
7085.
reading this, and if its premises and mood keep " limited gross" opera lion ; meaning the
Wippel Rd. near Five Points .
10-1
1·6tC
knowing
the
to Ute blithe diversion of its annoum;ements (a Uteater•s scaled to $25,000 top, and backstage Anyone
4 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas
whereabouts
call
Bill
furnace . Nicely arranged .
welcome sense of silliness), Ute club will have a expenses are cut way down by the unions; but it Buckley, 98S·3341 or 992-7086. MODERN WALNUT StereoNew
double
garage .
radio
combination
•
.
AM-FM
won't
make
its
25G
maximwn.
chance to hit the jetset heights .... It lured
10-10-3tc
$14,500.00.
radio, separate controls, --4
Some 6,500 firms operat., 5,000,000 coin
headwait.,r William and his aide Mino from Ute
speed changer, 4 speaker
sound system, Balance$67 .35. LOOK - 30 acres on 143.
long~stablished private dub Raffles (whose machines in the U.S.; it's a cash business intd For Rent
Several building siles. Only
Use our budget terms. Call
popularity lilllazes us ; an oddly gloomy whichorganizedcrimehasmoved .... Among Ute 3 ROOMS and "bath: furnished . 992-7085.
$5,000.00.
Phone 992·2431 after 5 p.m.
premises with no live music, just recordings, and mob's coin-machine ploys : apartment houses
10-ll -6tc
WARM- Nice J bedrooms, 11;,
have
laWldries
in
basements
with
coin-jjlot
10-11
-tfc
a pret.,ntiously formal and neO&lt;hic ambience)
balhs, gas furnace . Modern
Young Women's Towne ilouse will benefit financing; unwilling to take only the huge pr.. FURNISHED and unfurnished SWEET peppers. hot peppers,
kitchen
with stove and
m
· obs have managed
a bushel.Adams,
pick yourLetart
own .
l
from "An Evening Honoring Kate Smith"' on from these 'nstalia"ODB,
refrigerator, 2 lots, double
w
apartmenls. Cl ose to sc hoo I· 11
Marshall
garage.
Phone 992-S434.
Falls.
Nov . 11; Hildegarde is one of the carbonating' wiUtout police nor municipal inwrference to
10·18-tlc
10-7-6tc
spirits of .the estimable Towne House, -which collect more coins simply by inserting false
REASONABLE- 3 &amp;edrooms,
befriendo! lonely girls in New York .... Sam metal bottoms into lhe machines so tenants can TRAILER LOTS; Bob's Mobii~­ 2· GAS circulating heaters. bath, gas furnace. Garage. 2
Courl, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
acres. Only $8,000.00.
~iegel 's editing his "Nicholas &amp; Alexandra "
insert less laundry at any one time .. .. The
Phone 992-5262 evenings .
.:lhio. 992-2951.
·
9-2rttc
(mUBtmean he's looking at the russias) .... N. Y. recession has kept many a N.Y. diner at home,
4-2-tfc
PRICES ARE RISING.
. BETTER BUY NOW
vice squad dete.ctive bugged a prostitut., 's bra to and the result : six restaurants have lowered
~paces, exira large, HALF -RUNNER beans, $1
AND SAVE.
oost up a pimp's cart.,! .... Bdwy. pimps are their prices !(}a uniform $6 a meal : Charley 0'&amp;, TRAILER
overlooking the Ohio River bushel. Pick your own .
HHEN L. TEAFORD,
$25 a month. Velma G. · Clarence Profflll, Portland .
lnsolenUy amazing : their vulgarly decorated La Fonda del Spl, Brasserie, Charley Brown's,
ASSOCIATE
Zuspan,
Mason.
W.
Va
.
Pho')_e
843-2254.
·
9.92-3325
992-2371
Tavern-&lt;Jn-the-Green
and
Trattoria
....
All
owned
Oldlllacs, dress, vicious manners, and disdain
- 10-5-20tc
10-5-10tc
I0-10-6tc
by Restaurant Associat.,s. ·
for c&lt;JPS is their arrogant tradelllMk.

SHORE --· THE

DAILY CROSSWORD

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

AcaoM
1. PLuatt

40. Reprdlnr 11. Apo
(hrllt,)

DOWN
1.Edor
Naoey

2. Appl'llle
3. CompJalnt
from

?.ROOM

block

!1ouse,

(8wa)

(pold)

port
10.1WIIor'•
prob-

4

lem

HAVE
A
HAPPY

floors. Natural gas furnace,
50- gallon elecfrlc water
heater, 2 large recreation
rooms, paneled In basement,
2 porches, garage, concrete
dr•vewa(. large yard with

plenty o shade trees, located
on large lof, 250ft. by 250ft. on
SR 124 in Syracuse, Ohio.
Available tor immediate
occupancy. To see, phone
Gallipolis 446-9539after 5 p.m.

(2
wdo. )

. ,_..... _. ••.•:: ,=~
''.1 . •, -1'.'

I ..;,;'

....... .........
· :•-·-j
•• :.1: .J1I

II '
-' II

16. -

wlll
lt. Old

Peru·
\'lan
empire

.1.

,

26. Glrl'o
Iotta

capttal
32. Kind of

23. Up-tothe·

&lt;maehtM

33.Ukewloe

minute
Info

:u. Con·

'

'

CO lr71 Xlq J'ooturu 81Micot.e, 1oc.)

-a!Jlg~rb[£;t.W!~...J=
Ulllmlti!IM &amp;heM four Jumblfa,
oM ltUn to etth ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

I

EUQIR

I

CUDD

38. "--tUld

front

Sympathy''

MELFYS

I

"""" IT. mitrt!

DII'LED

Ht "!IE

"N&amp;tr4•?'•

\.lp.Ci•r

Moytlg
Automatics

2 speed operation .

Choice of water
te-mps.
Auto .
water
level

·contrcn ~·-·-

ITnl'

. Filter or- Power
Fin Agitator .

I!

Moytog

Filler. .
WI Specllllll In

MAY TAG
Rod tirpitl
StrVICI

RUTLAND FURNITUR-E
Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0

•

•

• •

CAPl'AIN EASY

Perma-Pren ·

HIIO of Hilt
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat. No hot spots ~
no overdrylng ,
'Fine Mesh Lint

I

ptdl••

t

' .to worlllt:
DAILY CIII'PI'OQtJarE-IIen'• llow
.&amp;llYDLB.&amp;Alla

.. LOJfGJ'BLLOW
0111 llttn *'PIT .... , tor IIIOUitr. Ill t111t tampk A ta
_ . f« tile lllne L'l, X tor lilt two O't, otc. illlliM litton,
''HIIOJ- o, lilt '-lUI ... r_.Uoa ot l i l t - an an
IIIBU.· Ifldld&amp;)' tilt .... llttoniA Ctirh&amp;s •
AKDZBJ'

OKIIf.QKZ

KQ' KZJ'

.;tt

--t.

II I 111

UDA Jll D

lfA . JXZKrlfOJ'

CHZU
8AOMI

Jlfl IRA UDXKl D CHHI HO llfV·

1I I

I

I
.

ON YOUR DIAl.
Dllill

-

I KJ I I I

WMP0/1390

10-3-lf

Wl~t.:ER ...

T•lerdaJ't CrJptGqaote: 'nil: LUST OJ' J'AME 18 THII
LAST THAT A WJS:Il MAN lllAKU OJ'F'.-TACITUB

35. Suburb ot
London

'fOU'ft""

DAY

week days for appointment·.

742-4211

tm!'i

26. Canea

f.,.r
22. Chlna

,

name

21.8wamp

T. N.,..

Gub&gt;u.

''} H ..J o;

-~ r.;,l -~ 'J · I

'.J :; ..J ~ ._. ·-··- .•. -:• 1

. ..

5. Bouquet.t
6.-up

1101 s. 12, 19, 31

room . bath with shower, lar!l"
kitchen wilh lots ot bullt-1n
birch cabinets . Hardwood

,

f .. ..
pi'O'f'e
12. Drink' '-' .· 1 .1 ; . : · : •nr.•
: '.' II .. '.' II 'II : '
r.t
• .• •
'' ' • j
the
'
{•'. :·~;. :: J:
Lut
·•:un:
Chlllt&lt;l ._.: n•

4. Drunkarcl

F . H. O'Brien
Probate Judge of said County

bedrooms, living room, dining

'

AU..?

19 1

Real Estate For Sale

~tl:l&lt;¥

~

rates Phone 99 2. 3213
Th•rd Street, Middleport , Oh 1o,
·
·
1 has been duly appointed
~- .,
7-27-tfc Executor of the Estate of
Marion A . Ni cholson , deceased,
NEW contractor in area . Dry late of R . D . Rutland, Meigs
wall
patching,
general County, Ohio .
Credi1ors are required to f ile
pa inting . Call Richard I.
their
with sa id fidu ci ary
Dubbeld , phone 742 -5825, withinclaims
four montps.
Rutland .
? ~ted this 2nd day of October
10 _11 _5fc

-------

lllm:S", MAt'€, U,I;'Re "THo

I

LEGAL NOTICE

12: · 14' - 24' · WIDE
MILLER
MOBiL£ HOMES

~IGU~G OF 'i&gt;PEE~H f

I STAND

JOHNIE'S

6-10-lfc

housing project. Trade -for
smaller house. Phone 992-

9-26-30tc

I DOI&lt;ol'T

.1..-=.,::..::..::.:.::..:..::......:.:_;;.....:.-.J

I0-12-6tc

HARRISON' S TV and Anlenn;

- ----------

· Open8Til'
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Miin, Pomeroy, 0 .

Se rvices .

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell,
Owner 1!. Opera tor .
5-13-lfc ;

HOUSE - Two apts., 4 room s
and bath each, near new
2608.

,.----- -

( ~~~~· ~'ii?ANO ! THAT\;

~UT­

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto .

.BACKHOE ANtl DOZER work~
Septic lonks installed. George '
IBill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4-2Hfc

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

\u...--:~====::::~.:....---------------;o::;;j.

T~E COUit$1! OF '

-GUARANTEEDPhone 991-2094

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

BOOKKEEPING
Phone 992-2903.

~

I
~

ss.ss -

992-2174

And

i

FER NOTHIN'-·

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

PHONE NUMBER

OFFICE SUPPUES

new condition. Pay $37 .45
cash
or
credit
terms

FREEZER SPECIALS
23 FT. CHEST

NELSON
MOTOR, INC.

HOME &amp; AUTO

insertion . . RATES
Stop In and See Ou.available. Phone 992-S641 .
For Wanl Ad Service
Fioor Display.
10-I0-6tc
5 cents per Word one ·,nsert,·on
Minimum Charge 75c
BTU, Sears 600 series
12 cents per word lhree 140,000
fuel oil furnace and tank,
consecutive lnserlions ..
basement type, used one
18 cents per word six con
winter, $300. Phone 949-2571 .
secutive insertions.
10-10-6tc
Mobile Homes for Sale
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ~ds paid wilhin 10 days . 1970 VW 7 passenger slation Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE .
CARD OF THANKS
wagon " bus," 24,000 miles,
No down payment , 12 years to
,
1!. OBITUARY
excellent
condition
inside
and
,
pay to qualified Gl. Up to
$1.50 for SO word min imum .
out, includes at no extra ' $2.500 available for lot 1m Each additional word 2c.
charge (4} mud and snow, _·provements if you own a lot.
BLIND ADS
,
studded tires ," S2,400. Call :r'Get your new mobile home
Additional 25 c Charge per
(day I 992-2196 (after 6) 949- ,.. now. See James Simpkins.
Advertisement.
4651,
ask for Frank Gheen . · , Valley Estales Mobile Home
OFFICE HOURS
I0-10-6tc ;, Sales, Rt . SO East Athens 8: 30a.m. to s:oo p.m. Da ily, 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - j ' :593-8762.
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
·; ·
9-19-371c
Saturday .
LANDMARK'S FALL ,

Notice

S~ITH

.

5

Insured . Experienced
Work Guarante~d
See us tor Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnst.alation.

our

WANT AD
controls are. built-in. Sews
INFORMATION
wilh 1 or 2 needles, makes
DEADLINES
butlonholes, sew on buttons,
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
monograms, and blind he'1'
MondayDea'dline9a .m.
h F 11
1 $3850
slitc
. u case
ce,
.
.C.an_ct.II • tl on~• Co rre ctl ons
or
. budget
plan pr available.
Wlllbeaccepleduntll9a.m . for
Phone 992-5641.
Day of Publication
10-10-6tc
REGULATIONS
, The Publisher reserves the ELECTROLUX Vacuum
right to edll or reject any ads
Cleaner complele with atdeemed object ional . The
tachments , cordwlnder and
publi sherwillnotberesponsible
paint spray . Used but in like
for more than one incorrect.

.BILL NELSON
992-3657

A "TRIP

.

Phone 991-2550

- - - -- -

"·8'17

Early Sunday Mixed League
October 3, 1971
Standings
Team
Pis.
Team No.1
28 12
Forest Run Block
26 14
Team No. 3
24 16
Eagles Club
20 20
Roseberry's Sohio
20 20
Tom'o Carry-Oul
2 38
Men High Individual Game -

Pts.

1

1

OOIIVG

UH-··

NEW &amp; OLD .WORK'
All Wea-ther !looflng &amp;
Consttucllon Co. and An-.,
thony flumblng &amp; Healing_. ·
Comp.lete
Plutnblng,
Heating and A,lr Con, dillonlng.
' 24QLincoln SI.,Middlep011

2 MALE ponies. 2 yr. old. cheap,
halt Arabian. See Mrs.
g:r~~r~o~~r ~an~ar Royal
10-12-Jic

takeover ?
Well' Utey will - if we who fought Ute midi don't rise up and
flghtagain. Already our fall dresses ar~ being called "too short"
by sales clerks. No telling how far down Utey'll go.
••em pull a sneaky . You've already
Come on' gals. don 't let "'
' above-the S8l"d you ha'"'nu'd -&lt;: aHIeng ths - and you feeI grea t m
knee skirts. So keep 'em .lhat way ! We can do it by letting the
longies hang in Ute stores. How about another campaign, Helen ?
. - SHORT SKIRT LOVER
HELEN SAYS:

WORK .
SPOUTING, •
ROOF PAINTIN~

Foi Sale '

@
.
,Do-eroy Motor Co.

r

Sales

' '60 DODGE , 6 cylinder, stan-

H50

~OOFING l CARPENTER

FOUR NEW HOMES .
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A ~~b~ht~!d,r&lt;r~~~":r :~:·:.~~~
home can be purchased with a
n
as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
~~~~;~:: and · three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

ME NEITHER, ELVINEV··
IT'S A PLUMB SHAME
W~ HAD TO COME ALL
TH' WA\1 OUT HERE
TOTH'GOSSIP FENCE

LOWEEZV

' .

clock.

and-or complete households.

270 Series, vi nyl roof, white fin ish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,
automatic trans., radio, clean interior.

1966 FORO

~~~~~~rnTt~re~~rshes:

- -----

11495

ARE F ASH! ON HOUSES
PULUNG A SNEAKY ?
Dear 11 Rap":
'Olisismore o! a yap Ulan a rap. I think we females are being

Business Services

TRAILER space, desirable
neighborhood, phone 992-2084.
9-19-tfc

_ l ·,

1968 DODGE DART 4 DOOR

DON'T HAVEA DAOBURN
SMICKET Of·NEWS
THIS MORNINl

For Rent

Pomeroy
.••.!l!~!lt.o.r_c.o••

2 SIGNS
Of

i

'

I

.

.

CA..wen .....,......,,

J-~ LOATH

IIIIT CASKIT DIOWIY
•

- . . . u HI

,..-141 d&lt;U..ry- Till ITOIK

...

�..

,

I .

-·
•

•- Tbe Dally ~nt~I. Middleport, Pcmeroy, 0., Oct. 12, 1971

..

Sentinel ·Cla_ssifieds Get Action,! Senti{tel Classifieds Get Results I
I

..

Generation Rap

@)

By Helen and Sue Bottel
(GOI a problem? Or a subject for dlscussloo, two.geoeraUoo
1tyle? Direct your qaesUoDS lo eltber Sue or Helen Bolte! -or
botb, If yon want a eomblnaUoo mother-&lt;laugbter answer.)

QUALITY

Fairlane 500 4 door . Local owner, new tires, clean int., 6
cyl. std. trans ., radio.

sneaked up on!

V-8 motor, auto. trans .,- radio, good w-s- w ti res, white

Special $595

Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 992-6271.
8-25-tfc

1965 BUICK SPECIAL 4 DR.

I Auto

Last year Ute midi skirt flopped - and Ute more promotion it
finish, like new blue vinyl int.
got the less it was accepted. This year, just take a look! With
scarcely a peep .about the new length in any news story, we find
that skirts have mainly dropped below the knee, and they're going
longer all the time . Pretty soon there won't be a short skirt on the
f"' Ill
rack.
OPEH EVES. 8:00 I'.M.
.
Do fashion designers figure Utat what Utey can't foist on us
-'~,PM
_ EROY, OHIO
with all-wt publicity, Utey can get us to accept by a quiet • L ___________________ _

dard, running condition. First

$50 takes If. Phone 992-7583.
10·12-31c

PAINT damage. 1971 Zig-Zag
sewing machines. Still In
.J • original ·cartons. No at techments

Dear SSL:

Loc8 1 BoW 1'mg
Wed d L 1
nes League
ay a e
Mixed
Oct. 6,1971
Individual High Game IMen I
C. Blakeslee 220; D.
Rosen baum 195; R. Moore 183.
Ind iv idual
High
Game
(Women) _ M. Voss 187 ; s.
Owen 170 ; J. Boyles 167 _

How about: ''To each her own skirllength"? And I'm wondering if last season's fashion rebellion didn't accomplish just
. llyen ded women's slav'ish adherence to a
that. It may have fma
Wliversal style for , while stores are pushing longer skirts, they
"' gh to an kl e;ow.
'
sti II carry every ••·
•• mg from thi gh...
If I'm wrong, and mid-calf monstrosities sneak in for a quiet
takeover,never fear: There'll be a long, loud howl of protest from
GENERATION RAP, whose two authors agree here: we've never
seenanuglierstylethanthenu
. 'di! - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE:
I treat my clothes as if !bey had feelings. So I wouldn't DARE
put a "midi" in my closet to live wiUt my other outfits. It would be
a leklown for my mini skirts and a hang-up with my maxis. SUE
LAS!' WORD FROM HELEN :
Or, as the upset father once wrot., about his so.:alled
.
Th
"long-haired hi pp1e" sons : " ey hang around Ute wrong places
and need a good trinuning." Same for mid.:alf styles. - HELEN
Dear Sue:
Unfoctunalely you DO speak for most high school girls when
you say Utey're more interested in getting Ute guy Ulan fighting
1um -and, after marriage , it's time enough for liberation.
Wrong! Aft.,r marriage It's often too late to become more "a
person" than simply "his wife." This is not to knock marriagethe equal, non-jjtifling kind , But girls should establish equatity
first- which means career-training, recognition of Uteir worth as
PEOPLE.
Most girls have a romantic image of life : school, marriage, a
family- and they live happily ever after. The truth is that nine
out of ten girls will work (for wages) sometime in their lives. Half
Ute women aged 18 to 65 are working now and the percentage is
rising. Yet in 1969, Ute median wage for full-time women workers
was
as compared to $8,227 for 'fnen! (Dept. of Labor
~~b) .
'
What women's liberation and feminism stand for is doing an
equal share as a person for family and society, not wasting your
post-motherhood years in psychosis, meddling in~awhood , idle
boredom or clerical slavery.
Teenage girls areslill caught up in Ute "ge t your man" myth .
Be realislic, girls : it's more important to get your care~r going
first! - BARBARA

Individual High Series (Men)
c. · Blakeslee 513; D.
Rosenbaum 508 ; R. Moore 500.
lndl v ld ua 1 H'•g h s er 1es
!Women) - M. Voss 497; S.
Owen
; J. Series
Boyles _167.CassellHigh490
Team
Carsey 1967 ; Owen-Holler 1874;
F
B
ultz- entley 1l9B.
Team Standings:
Owen-Halter
Pt~
30
Morrow-Moore
Rosenbaum-Meadows
28
Cassell-Carsey
26
Blakeslee-Hoyt
12
12
Fultz-Benlley

-

Senior League
Oct. 2, 1971
standings
Team
Pin busters
Born Losers
Gutter Dusters
Royal Crowns
The Pros

Paul Taylor 211.
Women High Ind. Game Susie Grueser 225.

Men High Series Taylor 561 .
Wome11 High Series Winebrenner 546.

Paul
Li11da

Team High Game Run Block 777 .

Foresl

Team High Series -

Forest

Run Block 2067.

10 5

96
8 7
8 7
7 8

Strikers

3 12

High Ind ividual Game- Oebi
Gallagher 185.
Second High Ind . Game Dave Swisher 170.

High Series- Debi Gallagher
436.
Second High Series -

Stobart 419
Team High Game -

Rick

Royal

Crowns 806.
Team High Series -

Royal

Crowns 2207.
National Bank

Team

Junior League
Oct. 2, 1971
Standings

Ra iders

Bengals
Thundering Herd
Rams

Pts.
10 5
10 5
9 6

7 8

Strike Outs

6 9

3 12

Zodia c's

High Individual Game
George Gum 155.
Second High Ind . Game Steve Bachner 137

High Series Meadows 368.

Mitchell

Second High Series -

Steve

Bachner 359.
Team High Game- Bengals
8S9.

Team High Series- Bengals

2390.

r-----------------------------------------1

needed

as

HILTON WOLFE
•949-3211

PdMEROY

992-2094
.
606 E. Main Pomeroy

FURNITURE

PEP-UP with new Zippies Iron
pills. Non -habit form ing . Only

$1. 98, Nelson Drugs.

'249.95

9-22-30tp

20 FT. UPRGifT
'259.95 ~~-

YARD SALE, Friday and
Saturday, Ocl. IS and 16, 10
a .m. to 5 p.m., m isce llaneous
items, 1165 Vine Street,

Middleport, Ohio.

10-10-61c

~~·

' 1'..

Q

Jack

POMEROY

w. Carttv, Mtr.

Phcme ff2-2111

Voice along Broadway j
•

i

I
i

•
loiOW DURING

Tf.tiS MAKE•UP
EXAM, I WAIIN

vov ...

Service, Phone 992-2522.

Real Estate For Sale

THINK

~,..--._-

SHOULDER
TO SHOUl-DER

LIKE HIM-

w~{('""' ~j

WI"PH VOU,
DAD.':"'

- ~

' I••
~I

~

BEAUtY SHoP

BUGS BUNNY

COrner Union Av&amp;.
ond Slate Rt. 7
Hour.-Monday, T,.sda y,
Wedneoday and Friday
8;30 a.m. to6 p.m.
Thursday
tO a.m. to 8:30p.m.

,. ' -

.

. lr lolfA,

It'll

IH ~

.

..

1 ; ) If
~

'

TM . lot U~ . r01. .QIP. -

..

EMI'LOVEE MCRAI.f HIT ROCK
80TTOM-AND IIRININDG/LT
EVIDENT!.Y 11-iiNI&lt;e&gt; 1 WA~
PAAT OF II CON6PIRACY
~ll'm" HIM!

Sal~rday

8:30a.m. to 1 p.m.
.11HQN E 992-7474

HOUSE MOVING : Houses, etc,·
raised , moved, underpinned,

remodeled. Estlmales free ,
anywhere. Nationlll House

Movers, Box 5002, Ch&lt;lrleston,
W. Va . 25311 , or phone 304-9253279 .
9-30-60tp

IOHNSON MASONRY
Complete
Remodeling

~EWING MACHINES. Repafr

7 ROOMS and bath on Un ion

Kitchens, B•fhs
Room Additions
And Patios
Blckhoe And
Endloader Work

service, all makes, 992·228.4,

The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy_.
Author ized Singer Sales and

Ave ., Pomeroy, Ohio . Phone
RUMMAGE Sale in Fry
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
992-5641.
3-2'1 -tfc
Building , Middleport, Ocl . 13
10-IHtp
thru 16. Funds lor building of HOME Comfort co&lt;ik stove,
good condition. 2 wheel
Free Will Baptist Church .
Septic Tank$
NEiGLER Building Supply.
!railer. Phone 992-6467. No NEW HAVEN - 12 x 50 mobile
Also have Mink Stole for sale,
Free estimate on building
And Lneh Beds.
Sunday calls.
$50 cash or lrade for 20 books
home on an 80 x 235 level lol.
your new home. Will draw
10-8-61p
of S 1!. H or TV Stamps. Call
Block ut ilily building . washer
prints to suit the lay of your
992-2324 if interested in stole.
and dryer , on Mill St., Phone
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
10-10·31c ~OAL. limeston~ . Excelsior•
882·2117.
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
AWNINGS. storm doors and.
~ alt Works, E. Main St.,
10-11 -lfc
aluminum siding, soffet and
windows,
carports,
&gt;'omeroy . Phone 992-3891. · 1
ANYONE interesled in forming
gutter . Call Donald Smith,
marquees,
aluminum
siding
A-9-tfc HOUSE, l-642 Lincoln Heights.
a small organ ization for the
Racine, Oh lo.
and
railing
.
Call
A.
·
Jacob
..
10-).ttc
care of pets ; such as dogs,
Call Danny Thompson, 9921
sales
representative.
For
free
cats 1!. birds, please call 992- MINIATURE Sc~naoLers 2196.
estimates,
phone
Charles
·
AKC puppies. no shedding.
6978.
CONCRETE .
7· 18-tfc .READY ·MIX
Lisle
,
Syracuse
.
V.
V.
I0-7-6tc odorless , permanent shots , - - - -- 1.
delivered right to your
Johnson and Son. Inc.
wormed, $8S. Coolville 667- 3 BEDROOM brick home .
prQject. Fast and easy . Free
5-17-tfc ;
6214.
SAVE up lo one half. Bring your
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284.
Choice
location
in
Middleport
.
9-29·12tp
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co ., HACKNEY'S Electric Service,.
Seen by appointment only.
151 But t(;rnut Ave., Pomeroy,
Middleport, Ohio.
,·
Phone 992-5S23 alter 4 p.m.
all types ot electrical work .
phone 992-S080.
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
6·30-tf&lt;."
5-7·1fc
Phone 992-6407.
9-24-tfc
Park view Kennels . Phone 9929-2'1 -30tc
-----S443.
Au
1UM(Jtjl L.t:. m~urance oeen
FT. of Frontage on Rt . 7
8·15-tfc 1,000
Los t
your THE SHOP . Custom meat
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
between Chester and Tuppers caAcelled?
operator's license? Call 992 cutting, Pleasant Ridge Road.
overweigh t ladies, teens and ···Pla ins with water lap . With or 2966.
Fitzpatrick OrPomeroy . Dick Vaughan, 992·
men interested in a Weight APPLES - without 25 wooded acres.
chards, State Route 689,
6-15-jfc-• 3374 and Dale Little, 992-6346.
Watchers IRI Class in
Henry Bahr, Phone 985-:W88 .
phone Wilkesville, 669-3785.
9-12·30tc
Pomer oy write : Weight
10·7-61p
9-3-tfc
Watchers I R). 1863 Section
C. BRAD ... uKu, Auctioneer
Rd ., Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
Complete Service
ROSEBERRY furnace fn$2.300 WILL ou y :.t:J acres in
10-3-lfc POTATOES for winter. Ken Phone
949-3821
stallation. Free estimates on
Bedford Township, Wolfpen
nebec, red Pont ia c. 1 mile off
Racine.
Ohio
new furnaces, all or gas.
Road . 20 minutes from
Critt Bradford
Service work . Call Cecil
REDUCE sa fe and fast with 124 on 338 loward ferry Great
Pomeroy. 3/_. of land in timber ,
5- j.jfc
Roseberry , Rac ine, Ohio.
Gobese tablets and E·Vap Bend . Tom Sayre. Phone 843- balance i n pasture. No
Phone 614-843-2274.
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs. 2436.
buildings. Call 992-2152 and ·sEPTIC tanks ·cleaned. Miller'
9-8-30tp
9-22-30tp _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1o_-6-6tp
ask for Dick .
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
9-22-tfc
" kills rats quickly.
662-3035 .
KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale, "STAR
2-12-tfc .
Sure. 2'1:! pounds , $1.69.
N·Ew, 3-bedruurn uu me in
delivered to your door. New
Ebersbach
Hardware.
Sugar
Middleport . . Built-in kitchen,
product s
coming
auf
Run Mills, Pickens Hard·
NOTICE OF
ceramic tHe bath, all -electric O'DELL W,HEEL aJignmenl
regularly . Would you like to ware,
located
at
Crossroads,
Rt
.
124.
APPOINTMENT
Ma son.
heat, good ne ighborhood . Can
try them? Call 992-Slt3.
9-21 -30tp
Complete front end service,
cue No. 20557
arrange FHA financing .
10-S-tfc
tune up and brake serv ice. Estate of Marion A . Nicholson ,
Telephone 992·3600 or 992Wheels
bqlanced
elec- Decease d.
4 SPEED tran sm iss ion for 289
2186.
Ironica lly . · All
work
Not1ce IS hereby given that
$75.
Phone
949-4843.
Help Wanted
7-2S·tfC
guaranteed .
Rea sonable Da_l e Nicholson_. of Sl Nor_th
10-6-61p

992-7608

"1

l JIJST L.OV6 'tiJR COSTt».\E,

liU.D'IS! rrs so cu:I'!;R!

"Fiddler on the Roof" closed in London wiUt
BY JACK O'BRIAN
producer Harold Prince several million dollars
NEW PLAY IS A MiSDEAL
richer
; while Ute Bdwy. original profits on and
NEW YORK - The new theater season
opened, not wiUt a bang, nor with a thud, but a on .... Neva Small signed for Ute title role in "F.
whimper: "Solitaire, Double Solitaire" by Jasmine Addams," a tWled-up "Member of Ute LIGHT delivery, must have car,
paid daily. Phone 992·5958.
FARM and Home latex house 'S IX ROOM house, balh, full
Robert Anderson is two little plays wiUt little on Wedding" revival, and couldn't possible've seen
10-12-ltc
·
paint sale, King Builders
?asement, 133 Buttern\.t} Ave.,
Uteir respective mindo! : "Solitaire" is about a Ute 1900 original: Neva was born Nov. 17, 1952 ....
Supply, Middleport .
·
juSt walking distance . from
TELEPHONE
soliciting,
no
10-6-12tc
down
town Pomeroy . Contact'
Buddy
Rogers,
Mary
Pickford's
husband,
will
man In some sort of capsule living at a futuristic
experience necessary . Phone ..---------~
:
d
Hedrick,
2137 Wadswo. t~
moment wherein everything civilized is denied represent Mary at Ute announcements of release 992-5958.
Urive. Columbus, Ohio, phone, •
10-12-ltc
to all, the nostalgic zombie must find family life of Mary's old flicks.
237-433 4, Columbus.
5-9-tfd
Repeat
telecasts
of
the
Johnny
Carson
shows
'
by means of a speakeasy supplying ersatz ·wifedouble-take· Carson's EARN AT HOME addressing
childrelhSanta Claus or whatever strikes his .Sat• nightsgiveaviewera
.
.
·
envelopes. Rush stamped
wallowing mood of reminiscent baUtos; it's quite lfl all his nuddle-aged, gray-haired decline addressed envelope. Osswald
awful, undoubtedly more drearily worse than the weeknights, bul on Saturdays, Johnny's still Mail Service, 5173 68th· Lane.
moment in future time it attempts to anticipat., younger than autumn with dyed-black locks .... Sl. Petersburg, Fla. ~~:Pri_-61 P
.... "Double Solitaire" concerns a couple and a Tiny Tim gives autographed copies of his
companion
few relatives driveling about their soap operatic shopping bags ; signed one for photog Bob HOUSEKEEPER.
for elderly lady . Private
sexual frustrations and marital disap- Lichtman .... Comic stayed at Ute posh Park Ave.
living quarters. Write to Box
729· B, c-o The Dally Sentinel.
Regency
Hot.,!,
and
for
tips
to.
the
staff
which
pointments; also terminally awful .... Robert
Bt:Oker
Pomeroy . ,
'
110
Mechanic
Street
served
him
so
solicitously,
his
reward
was
(to
Anderson's first Bdwy . play was "Tea and
10-8-61p
Pomeroy,
Ohio
1220 Washington Blvd ..
Sympathy," which ran some 720 performances me chambermaid): "See those empty soda - - - - - - Belpre, Ohio
WAITRESS,
no
experience
in 1952; his "You Know I Can't Hear You When hotUes. Return Utem and keep the deposit!"
CHESHIRE - Business lot with
night
shifl,
apply
necessary,
Carol Burnett's taking flying lessons .... The
block building .
The Water's RWlning" ran longer, but Utis
in person . Blue Tartan .
BEAUTIFUL
Early
American
,
Middleport.
doleful seasonal premiere pairing undoubt.,dly Gabors purportedly don't get togeUter socially
- One 5 room s, bath,
10-8-6tc maple , stereo -r!3dio com- 2. HOUSES
much because they bicker-bicker; but at Ute
will accomplish Anderson's briefest run.
bination, AM-FM radio, 4 furnace and garage. ' $6,500.QO
other $4,500.00.
speed changer, separate
Recession or no, Manhattan's getting a slew Camelot the other evening, Mama, Eva and Zsa Lost
controls,
-.4 speaker sound
of new night clubs: El Morocco promises to open ZO;a looked like a happy reunion ... : The
system . Balance $79.15. Use HERE IT IS.-4acreson Route
soon ; Ute new Casino Russe is here as of your "Solitaire, Double Solitaire" production is a THREE MONTH OLO Black
7. 5 rooms, bath, panelinQ ,
our budget lerms . Call 992·
and White English Setter on
carpeting. Only $10,500.00.
7085.
reading this, and if its premises and mood keep " limited gross" opera lion ; meaning the
Wippel Rd. near Five Points .
10-1
1·6tC
knowing
the
to Ute blithe diversion of its annoum;ements (a Uteater•s scaled to $25,000 top, and backstage Anyone
4 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas
whereabouts
call
Bill
furnace . Nicely arranged .
welcome sense of silliness), Ute club will have a expenses are cut way down by the unions; but it Buckley, 98S·3341 or 992-7086. MODERN WALNUT StereoNew
double
garage .
radio
combination
•
.
AM-FM
won't
make
its
25G
maximwn.
chance to hit the jetset heights .... It lured
10-10-3tc
$14,500.00.
radio, separate controls, --4
Some 6,500 firms operat., 5,000,000 coin
headwait.,r William and his aide Mino from Ute
speed changer, 4 speaker
sound system, Balance$67 .35. LOOK - 30 acres on 143.
long~stablished private dub Raffles (whose machines in the U.S.; it's a cash business intd For Rent
Several building siles. Only
Use our budget terms. Call
popularity lilllazes us ; an oddly gloomy whichorganizedcrimehasmoved .... Among Ute 3 ROOMS and "bath: furnished . 992-7085.
$5,000.00.
Phone 992·2431 after 5 p.m.
premises with no live music, just recordings, and mob's coin-machine ploys : apartment houses
10-ll -6tc
WARM- Nice J bedrooms, 11;,
have
laWldries
in
basements
with
coin-jjlot
10-11
-tfc
a pret.,ntiously formal and neO&lt;hic ambience)
balhs, gas furnace . Modern
Young Women's Towne ilouse will benefit financing; unwilling to take only the huge pr.. FURNISHED and unfurnished SWEET peppers. hot peppers,
kitchen
with stove and
m
· obs have managed
a bushel.Adams,
pick yourLetart
own .
l
from "An Evening Honoring Kate Smith"' on from these 'nstalia"ODB,
refrigerator, 2 lots, double
w
apartmenls. Cl ose to sc hoo I· 11
Marshall
garage.
Phone 992-S434.
Falls.
Nov . 11; Hildegarde is one of the carbonating' wiUtout police nor municipal inwrference to
10·18-tlc
10-7-6tc
spirits of .the estimable Towne House, -which collect more coins simply by inserting false
REASONABLE- 3 &amp;edrooms,
befriendo! lonely girls in New York .... Sam metal bottoms into lhe machines so tenants can TRAILER LOTS; Bob's Mobii~­ 2· GAS circulating heaters. bath, gas furnace. Garage. 2
Courl, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
acres. Only $8,000.00.
~iegel 's editing his "Nicholas &amp; Alexandra "
insert less laundry at any one time .. .. The
Phone 992-5262 evenings .
.:lhio. 992-2951.
·
9-2rttc
(mUBtmean he's looking at the russias) .... N. Y. recession has kept many a N.Y. diner at home,
4-2-tfc
PRICES ARE RISING.
. BETTER BUY NOW
vice squad dete.ctive bugged a prostitut., 's bra to and the result : six restaurants have lowered
~paces, exira large, HALF -RUNNER beans, $1
AND SAVE.
oost up a pimp's cart.,! .... Bdwy. pimps are their prices !(}a uniform $6 a meal : Charley 0'&amp;, TRAILER
overlooking the Ohio River bushel. Pick your own .
HHEN L. TEAFORD,
$25 a month. Velma G. · Clarence Profflll, Portland .
lnsolenUy amazing : their vulgarly decorated La Fonda del Spl, Brasserie, Charley Brown's,
ASSOCIATE
Zuspan,
Mason.
W.
Va
.
Pho')_e
843-2254.
·
9.92-3325
992-2371
Tavern-&lt;Jn-the-Green
and
Trattoria
....
All
owned
Oldlllacs, dress, vicious manners, and disdain
- 10-5-20tc
10-5-10tc
I0-10-6tc
by Restaurant Associat.,s. ·
for c&lt;JPS is their arrogant tradelllMk.

SHORE --· THE

DAILY CROSSWORD

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

AcaoM
1. PLuatt

40. Reprdlnr 11. Apo
(hrllt,)

DOWN
1.Edor
Naoey

2. Appl'llle
3. CompJalnt
from

?.ROOM

block

!1ouse,

(8wa)

(pold)

port
10.1WIIor'•
prob-

4

lem

HAVE
A
HAPPY

floors. Natural gas furnace,
50- gallon elecfrlc water
heater, 2 large recreation
rooms, paneled In basement,
2 porches, garage, concrete
dr•vewa(. large yard with

plenty o shade trees, located
on large lof, 250ft. by 250ft. on
SR 124 in Syracuse, Ohio.
Available tor immediate
occupancy. To see, phone
Gallipolis 446-9539after 5 p.m.

(2
wdo. )

. ,_..... _. ••.•:: ,=~
''.1 . •, -1'.'

I ..;,;'

....... .........
· :•-·-j
•• :.1: .J1I

II '
-' II

16. -

wlll
lt. Old

Peru·
\'lan
empire

.1.

,

26. Glrl'o
Iotta

capttal
32. Kind of

23. Up-tothe·

&lt;maehtM

33.Ukewloe

minute
Info

:u. Con·

'

'

CO lr71 Xlq J'ooturu 81Micot.e, 1oc.)

-a!Jlg~rb[£;t.W!~...J=
Ulllmlti!IM &amp;heM four Jumblfa,
oM ltUn to etth ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

I

EUQIR

I

CUDD

38. "--tUld

front

Sympathy''

MELFYS

I

"""" IT. mitrt!

DII'LED

Ht "!IE

"N&amp;tr4•?'•

\.lp.Ci•r

Moytlg
Automatics

2 speed operation .

Choice of water
te-mps.
Auto .
water
level

·contrcn ~·-·-

ITnl'

. Filter or- Power
Fin Agitator .

I!

Moytog

Filler. .
WI Specllllll In

MAY TAG
Rod tirpitl
StrVICI

RUTLAND FURNITUR-E
Arnold Grate

Rutland, 0

•

•

• •

CAPl'AIN EASY

Perma-Pren ·

HIIO of Hilt
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat. No hot spots ~
no overdrylng ,
'Fine Mesh Lint

I

ptdl••

t

' .to worlllt:
DAILY CIII'PI'OQtJarE-IIen'• llow
.&amp;llYDLB.&amp;Alla

.. LOJfGJ'BLLOW
0111 llttn *'PIT .... , tor IIIOUitr. Ill t111t tampk A ta
_ . f« tile lllne L'l, X tor lilt two O't, otc. illlliM litton,
''HIIOJ- o, lilt '-lUI ... r_.Uoa ot l i l t - an an
IIIBU.· Ifldld&amp;)' tilt .... llttoniA Ctirh&amp;s •
AKDZBJ'

OKIIf.QKZ

KQ' KZJ'

.;tt

--t.

II I 111

UDA Jll D

lfA . JXZKrlfOJ'

CHZU
8AOMI

Jlfl IRA UDXKl D CHHI HO llfV·

1I I

I

I
.

ON YOUR DIAl.
Dllill

-

I KJ I I I

WMP0/1390

10-3-lf

Wl~t.:ER ...

T•lerdaJ't CrJptGqaote: 'nil: LUST OJ' J'AME 18 THII
LAST THAT A WJS:Il MAN lllAKU OJ'F'.-TACITUB

35. Suburb ot
London

'fOU'ft""

DAY

week days for appointment·.

742-4211

tm!'i

26. Canea

f.,.r
22. Chlna

,

name

21.8wamp

T. N.,..

Gub&gt;u.

''} H ..J o;

-~ r.;,l -~ 'J · I

'.J :; ..J ~ ._. ·-··- .•. -:• 1

. ..

5. Bouquet.t
6.-up

1101 s. 12, 19, 31

room . bath with shower, lar!l"
kitchen wilh lots ot bullt-1n
birch cabinets . Hardwood

,

f .. ..
pi'O'f'e
12. Drink' '-' .· 1 .1 ; . : · : •nr.•
: '.' II .. '.' II 'II : '
r.t
• .• •
'' ' • j
the
'
{•'. :·~;. :: J:
Lut
·•:un:
Chlllt&lt;l ._.: n•

4. Drunkarcl

F . H. O'Brien
Probate Judge of said County

bedrooms, living room, dining

'

AU..?

19 1

Real Estate For Sale

~tl:l&lt;¥

~

rates Phone 99 2. 3213
Th•rd Street, Middleport , Oh 1o,
·
·
1 has been duly appointed
~- .,
7-27-tfc Executor of the Estate of
Marion A . Ni cholson , deceased,
NEW contractor in area . Dry late of R . D . Rutland, Meigs
wall
patching,
general County, Ohio .
Credi1ors are required to f ile
pa inting . Call Richard I.
their
with sa id fidu ci ary
Dubbeld , phone 742 -5825, withinclaims
four montps.
Rutland .
? ~ted this 2nd day of October
10 _11 _5fc

-------

lllm:S", MAt'€, U,I;'Re "THo

I

LEGAL NOTICE

12: · 14' - 24' · WIDE
MILLER
MOBiL£ HOMES

~IGU~G OF 'i&gt;PEE~H f

I STAND

JOHNIE'S

6-10-lfc

housing project. Trade -for
smaller house. Phone 992-

9-26-30tc

I DOI&lt;ol'T

.1..-=.,::..::..::.:.::..:..::......:.:_;;.....:.-.J

I0-12-6tc

HARRISON' S TV and Anlenn;

- ----------

· Open8Til'
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Miin, Pomeroy, 0 .

Se rvices .

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell,
Owner 1!. Opera tor .
5-13-lfc ;

HOUSE - Two apts., 4 room s
and bath each, near new
2608.

,.----- -

( ~~~~· ~'ii?ANO ! THAT\;

~UT­

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto .

.BACKHOE ANtl DOZER work~
Septic lonks installed. George '
IBill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
4-2Hfc

Real Estate
For Sale or Trade

\u...--:~====::::~.:....---------------;o::;;j.

T~E COUit$1! OF '

-GUARANTEEDPhone 991-2094

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

BOOKKEEPING
Phone 992-2903.

~

I
~

ss.ss -

992-2174

And

i

FER NOTHIN'-·

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

PHONE NUMBER

OFFICE SUPPUES

new condition. Pay $37 .45
cash
or
credit
terms

FREEZER SPECIALS
23 FT. CHEST

NELSON
MOTOR, INC.

HOME &amp; AUTO

insertion . . RATES
Stop In and See Ou.available. Phone 992-S641 .
For Wanl Ad Service
Fioor Display.
10-I0-6tc
5 cents per Word one ·,nsert,·on
Minimum Charge 75c
BTU, Sears 600 series
12 cents per word lhree 140,000
fuel oil furnace and tank,
consecutive lnserlions ..
basement type, used one
18 cents per word six con
winter, $300. Phone 949-2571 .
secutive insertions.
10-10-6tc
Mobile Homes for Sale
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ~ds paid wilhin 10 days . 1970 VW 7 passenger slation Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE .
CARD OF THANKS
wagon " bus," 24,000 miles,
No down payment , 12 years to
,
1!. OBITUARY
excellent
condition
inside
and
,
pay to qualified Gl. Up to
$1.50 for SO word min imum .
out, includes at no extra ' $2.500 available for lot 1m Each additional word 2c.
charge (4} mud and snow, _·provements if you own a lot.
BLIND ADS
,
studded tires ," S2,400. Call :r'Get your new mobile home
Additional 25 c Charge per
(day I 992-2196 (after 6) 949- ,.. now. See James Simpkins.
Advertisement.
4651,
ask for Frank Gheen . · , Valley Estales Mobile Home
OFFICE HOURS
I0-10-6tc ;, Sales, Rt . SO East Athens 8: 30a.m. to s:oo p.m. Da ily, 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - j ' :593-8762.
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
·; ·
9-19-371c
Saturday .
LANDMARK'S FALL ,

Notice

S~ITH

.

5

Insured . Experienced
Work Guarante~d
See us tor Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnst.alation.

our

WANT AD
controls are. built-in. Sews
INFORMATION
wilh 1 or 2 needles, makes
DEADLINES
butlonholes, sew on buttons,
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
monograms, and blind he'1'
MondayDea'dline9a .m.
h F 11
1 $3850
slitc
. u case
ce,
.
.C.an_ct.II • tl on~• Co rre ctl ons
or
. budget
plan pr available.
Wlllbeaccepleduntll9a.m . for
Phone 992-5641.
Day of Publication
10-10-6tc
REGULATIONS
, The Publisher reserves the ELECTROLUX Vacuum
right to edll or reject any ads
Cleaner complele with atdeemed object ional . The
tachments , cordwlnder and
publi sherwillnotberesponsible
paint spray . Used but in like
for more than one incorrect.

.BILL NELSON
992-3657

A "TRIP

.

Phone 991-2550

- - - -- -

"·8'17

Early Sunday Mixed League
October 3, 1971
Standings
Team
Pis.
Team No.1
28 12
Forest Run Block
26 14
Team No. 3
24 16
Eagles Club
20 20
Roseberry's Sohio
20 20
Tom'o Carry-Oul
2 38
Men High Individual Game -

Pts.

1

1

OOIIVG

UH-··

NEW &amp; OLD .WORK'
All Wea-ther !looflng &amp;
Consttucllon Co. and An-.,
thony flumblng &amp; Healing_. ·
Comp.lete
Plutnblng,
Heating and A,lr Con, dillonlng.
' 24QLincoln SI.,Middlep011

2 MALE ponies. 2 yr. old. cheap,
halt Arabian. See Mrs.
g:r~~r~o~~r ~an~ar Royal
10-12-Jic

takeover ?
Well' Utey will - if we who fought Ute midi don't rise up and
flghtagain. Already our fall dresses ar~ being called "too short"
by sales clerks. No telling how far down Utey'll go.
••em pull a sneaky . You've already
Come on' gals. don 't let "'
' above-the S8l"d you ha'"'nu'd -&lt;: aHIeng ths - and you feeI grea t m
knee skirts. So keep 'em .lhat way ! We can do it by letting the
longies hang in Ute stores. How about another campaign, Helen ?
. - SHORT SKIRT LOVER
HELEN SAYS:

WORK .
SPOUTING, •
ROOF PAINTIN~

Foi Sale '

@
.
,Do-eroy Motor Co.

r

Sales

' '60 DODGE , 6 cylinder, stan-

H50

~OOFING l CARPENTER

FOUR NEW HOMES .
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A ~~b~ht~!d,r&lt;r~~~":r :~:·:.~~~
home can be purchased with a
n
as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
~~~~;~:: and · three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

ME NEITHER, ELVINEV··
IT'S A PLUMB SHAME
W~ HAD TO COME ALL
TH' WA\1 OUT HERE
TOTH'GOSSIP FENCE

LOWEEZV

' .

clock.

and-or complete households.

270 Series, vi nyl roof, white fin ish, all good tires, 6 cyl.,
automatic trans., radio, clean interior.

1966 FORO

~~~~~~rnTt~re~~rshes:

- -----

11495

ARE F ASH! ON HOUSES
PULUNG A SNEAKY ?
Dear 11 Rap":
'Olisismore o! a yap Ulan a rap. I think we females are being

Business Services

TRAILER space, desirable
neighborhood, phone 992-2084.
9-19-tfc

_ l ·,

1968 DODGE DART 4 DOOR

DON'T HAVEA DAOBURN
SMICKET Of·NEWS
THIS MORNINl

For Rent

Pomeroy
.••.!l!~!lt.o.r_c.o••

2 SIGNS
Of

i

'

I

.

.

CA..wen .....,......,,

J-~ LOATH

IIIIT CASKIT DIOWIY
•

- . . . u HI

,..-141 d&lt;U..ry- Till ITOIK

...

�......
•
/

r---------------------------•
•
I.
Of the Bend

Public
Employes
!

By Bob Hoeflich

l

~....

WIN AT

;
I

I
I

What with !oday"s modern conveniences, few housewives
lrUdge through the canning bit.
Mrs. Eldon Weeks, however, is an exception and does her
thing with enthusiasm .
Mr. and Mrs. Weeks (he's retired from the Pomeroy National
Bank) raise a good sized garden at their home on Route 33 and
Mrs. Weeks poiots with pride - and no wonder - to a well.lilled
hill cellar with picturesque jars of vegetables, relishes and juices.
Incidentally, Mr . and Mrs. Weeks reside in the homeplace of
her parents, Mr.and Mrs. John Frick, tl)ese days.
INADVERTENTLY, Mrs. Jerry Kessinger, president of the
Eighth District Ladies Auxiliary of the American legion, was
overlooked when dinitaries were lined up fer a picture at a district
fall conference in Racine Sunday. Mrs. Kessinger is really a hard
wcrker on behalf of the legion and the Auxiliary so the slip.up
was unfcrtunate.
Incidentally, it's probably a good idea to have organizations
such as the American legion around promoting America these
days. Kind of offsets some other things.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Sup~e Court held constltutiooal today laws denying public
emaloyes the right to strike,
thus setUing a long, bitter and
previouslyunresolveddlspute.
The court affirmed the
judgment of a lower court last
spring upholding a law forbidding strikes by federal em·
ployes. The case was brought
by the United · Federation of
Postal Clerks against the
federal government.
-QIIio's Ferguson Act bans
· strikes by public employes.
The . court acted in a brief
crder with no explanation. Only
Justice Wtlliam 0. Douglas
wanted to hear argW!lenls in
the case and decide it by
written opinion.
The ruling affects all federal

government employes and probably an state and municipal
jObholders IS well. Although
many slate courts have ruled
public employe strikes illegal
and forced strikers back to
wcrk, it was the first time the
Supreme Court had ruled on the
isaue.
Nearly. one out of every five
workers in the American labor
force .is employed by govern,
ment, according to lAbor
Department data. These include
2.6 million clvllians at the
federal level and another 10.6
million by state and local units.
All federal employes and most
state and local government
workers have been barred from
striking.
A three-judge panel of the
U.S. District Court for the

N...'ftl

Jolm W. Neal Died Monday
CUFTON, W.Va . - John W.
Neal, 80, Clifton, W. Va., died
Monday evening at his
residence . A retired farmer , he
was the son of the late John W.,
Sr., and Flora Neal. Besides his
parents he was preceded in
death by his wife, Carrie, in
19611.

surviving

.are

A

MEIGS THEATR£
Tonight, Oct. 12

daughter, Nellie Wine , Los
Angeles, Calif.; a half -brother,
Alex Cutshaw, Reedley, Calif.,
anti several step nieces and step
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Church of Christ in Christian
Union in Hartford. Officiating
step· will be the Rev. Ira Wellman
and the Rev. O'Dell Manley.
Burial will be in Graham
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
from 7 to 9 Wednesday evening.

THE OWL AND
THE PUSSYCAT
(Tochnicolorl
Barbara Sfrlesand

Geo. Segal
" R"

Featuretfe ,
Hokus Pokus , 3 Stooges ·
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

MRS. BIT.IKAM DIES
Mrs. Hattie M. Bilikam died
Monday evening at the Kimes
Convalescent Center in Athens .
She is survived by a son, Carl,
Lincoln Heights , Pomeroy.
Funeral arrangements are
being completed in Columbus
for Thursday.

,-,~~~~~~~~~~~~""'''lll""'''lll""'''llllllll--. father's homeland.

There were two explosions in
Istanbul aimed at Americans
only hours before Agnew's
arrival. One blast destroyed the
car of U. S. cultural attache
Kenton W. Keith. The other
blew up a ~r outside the U. S.
Mission . Istanbul's martial law
conunand prohibited the city's
newspapers from printing news
of the explosions. A martial law
order circulated to newspapers
said : "We are in coosultation
with the government. For the
time being, refrain from
printing news of the blasts."
WASHINGTON
The
&amp;!preme Court, two of its seals
vacant, moved into its first

mathematical odds
4'3
· in favor of l'OIIf
the
'-·· • '-• ""'&amp;
q,uee11, ....t " ...ve fttebed
WIST
EAST
ybu In adJOn for
,- -• 9 u
• 10 73 2 hands and , ·you are COOd
• Q7
•u~+- ~eiiOIIgMo-111~--a• 10 u 2
H 5s
heart at . your first elutnlle
tfo 173
• 85
should you reaUy be llttlng
SOUTH (D)
with the queen. Of cou....,
• AJ 6
had you tbou&amp;bt I wu aay.
•A102
thi11g but a11 old man play• Q J7
~~-' out of his deptll1 yoq
• KJ u
~~bt have double-ci'Oaled

·hoi"'"'"

CajJt. Tate in
Air Forces
Staff College

MaUory Dies
Of Injuries

business sessiim of the new
term today, facing such sticky
legal issues as the constitutionality of the Vietnam
War. There was continued
speculation NiJ:on was con·
sidering Sen. Robert C. Byrd, 0W. Va.,for ontof the slots. Byrd
remained silent but Sen. George
S. McGovern, O-S. D., said Byrd
has a "bad record on civil
rights" and expressed hope
Nixon would not appoint him.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, 0Wash., however, said be would
vote for Byrd if he is nominated.
The Was~ington Post,
me~ntime, quoted his ad·
momstratlon sources today as
saying that Byrd was only one
of several persons being considered,andlhathisnameisnot
on top at the moment. n quoted
the source as saying the Byrd
speculation was unwarranted

and that he did not expect Byrd
to get the nod.
WHEELING, W. VA. - U.s.
district attorneys from Ohio and
West VIrginia plan tomeetllere
Wednesday with representatives from the Environmenlal
Protection Agency (EPA) to
discuss possible legal actjon
against pollutors of the Ohio
River. District Attorney
William w. MiUegan is to
represent Ohio at the meeting,
the first major federal conterence called to deal with the
situation in ihls area.
Milligan said the meeting
woul~ be concerned with
pollution along the river frun
Toronto to Shadyside · oo the
Ohio side and include the heavy
s.teel
and . steel-related
manufacturing industries In the
Steubenville-Wheeltnglarea.

BASIC COMPLETED
Army Private Edward F.
Smith, 20, whose parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Elmo F. Smith, and
wile, Janet, live on Roule 2,
Pomeroy, recenUy completed
eight weeks of basic training at
the U. S. Army Training Center,
Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky. Pvt.
Smith, a 1969 graduate of Meigs
High School, received an
associate's degree in 1971 from
Tri.COunty Technical Institute,
Nelsonville.
Pl\OBING HITSKIP
The
ty heriff' d
.
.
.coon s . 5 . e~t. 15
mvestigating a hilsldp mcodent
that occurred ~ntly some
time Saturday mght or Sunday
mQrnmg. A car parked at the
Hobson railroad yards owned
by Walter Roush, Middleport,
had damage to its rear bumper,
taillight and deck lid.

Pleasul Valley Hospllal
ADMISSIONS : Tara Lanier,
Point Pleasant; Frank Sheater,
Red House ; Orville Poar, West •
Columbia; Jobnny Arnett,
Glenwood; Mrs. M~cy HusseU,
Oden Pearson, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Charles Powers, Apple
Grove; Haydie Young, Apple
Grove; Mrs. Maniin Bennett,
Keith Oliver, Point Pleasant·
•
Patricia Shiflet, Gallipolis.
DISCHARGES : Janette
Smith, Mrs. Garland Mayes,
Roy Clark, Mrs. Roy Domigan,
Ronrue Neal, Mrs. Thomas
Parsons, Roger CI.trk, Mrs
Paul Pullins and 5011 M ·
Bruce Cassell and son ar:rt ~­
Ralp'h Davis.
·

Word has been received here
!i the death !i a Racine ffiln
employed as a civilian In
YleNin. •
Dead~ the result of inJuries
suffered 1n an aulcmoblle accident in VieNin Saturday is
!lObbY Ray Mallory, 43. Mr.
Mallory, a veteran of the U. S.
Navy, was In Vietnam while In
the armed f«"CeS but had been
employed as an electrician with
the Vinnell Corp. In VleNin the
past year.
&amp;!Mri.vlng are his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clutrles Mallory,
Racine; a sister, Mrs. David
Hill, Racine, and two brothers,
C!Iarles D. Mallory, Rlvenlale,
Ga., and Lynn Mallory. Athem.
The parents haft been adviaed
by the Vinnell Corp. that the
body wiU anive at the Ewing
Funeral Home in about two
~-

-m

s-

North-8outh vulntroble
North. Eost S...lll
1 N.T.
Pass 7 N.T. Pass Pus
Pass
Oponing lead-• 10

me. '
East

w..t

~

the Overnight Review
By UP!
!llcCONNELSVILLE, Ohio EAkrarl Thedodh?re 'fMarFtlin, 63,
on, an os Wl e, orence,
were found dead in their travel
trailer Monday, the apparent
victirns of toxic fwnes from a
propane . gas heater·, The
~organ ?ounty ' sheriff 5 oflocers saod the bodies were
found by Mrs. ~oy Goggs, also
of Akron, who troed to awake
them.
.
.
Hwa~ believed l!'e heater m
the traoler, parked about 15
l!Jiles n?rtheast of here •
maif~nchoned ~hole the
M:!~;:'-slv~8~de t
.
n
Sporo _T. Agnew · has_assured
Prem_oer N~hat_ Enm that
~ashmgton woll _con~tnue
Illtary and econonuc Bid to
Turkey, government soun;es
saod today. ~w met woth
Erom for 90 mtnutes Mooday
shcrUy alter his arrival. Turkey
is the first stop on an II-day trip
that will take Agnew to Iran for
the 2,SOOth anniversary
celebrations and to Greece, his

also knew the at ra · II t '

• KJ 3
.AK4
•AQ 1o6

District of Columbia held In lhe
postal clerks caae on April •
that while government w01 ket a
have a "fundamental right" 10
organiae and bargain coUectlftJy, that right did not extend 10
striking to achieve their labor
objectives.
Because there "is no constllll- ·
tional right to strikt," lhe
lower court reasoned, It is not ·
"irrational, or arbitrlr)l" for
CAPI'. TATE
the government to prohibit
strikes by Its workers.
The challenged statute says
no one who "particlpa\6" in a
.
strike against the federal
government or the District of
Colwnbia m.,- "accept or hold".
a government job. Violators are
subjeCt to fines of up to $1,000,
a year and a day in prison, or
Capt. Joe D. Tate, Henderson,
both.
Tex., whose wife is the fonner
Sandra Swatlel of Pomeroy, is
attending the U. S. Air ForceCommand and Staff College at
Maxwell AFB, Aalabama:
He is one .d more than 6011
Perry counties, to enlarge Its
select
government officials and
board of education from nine
officers from U. S. and allied
to II members.
armed
fDffi!s enrolled in the !If.
-Decided to continue state
foundation payments to Belle month class. The curriculwn
Center Local School District in covers . advanced .military
Logan County through Dec. 31, leadership, management and
allowing the district enough use of aerospace forces leading
time to associate with another to higher command and staff
positions.
district.
-Approved a cellng price of The captain, commissioned
$8,661 for a 66-ilassenger school through the aviation cadet
program, holds an aeronautical
bus this year.
rating of a pilot.. He attended
Baylor University and Southern
-Allocated $200,000 in federal
funds to the Scioto County Methodist University. His wife
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
JVSD for construction, reoovaWilliam E. Swatzel of 154
tion and equipment.
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
-Allocated $15,979 in federal
work-6tudy funds to 21 districts.

(~AI'ft

By OSwald &amp; James JtcOby
The late Charles Loch·
ridge, one of the ~t players of the '30s and 40s, made
his last tournament IPilear·
ance in the Eastern block·
out team game a few years
ago. His team lost In the sec-ond round, although Charley
gained 20 IMPs by locating
the queen of hearts at a notrump grand slam.
Charley WllS a fast pl.,-er.
He ran off 10 tricks in clubs,
spades and diamond. No one
doscarded a heart until East
produced one at trick 10.
Five seconds later, Char.
ley had finessed successfully
against West's queen and
chalked up 2,220 points.
East, a young e x p e r t,
asked, "Did you know that I
had started with four hearts
and my partner with three?"

·'

fllmMISI AS111.)

1.3. "- ,.1.s•2.

Pass

u

5.

Pas

Pass ' .
Pass
Pass
Pass
You, Soulh,· hold:

.At ••

.AitltU

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What do you do 11001!
A--11141 "" 1110-..............

.... wa 1111 . . v)'&lt;&gt;Oir
........
..,. .. ...,._

to Eastern Local Board

Mt..,-i&amp;bttr wll.

TODA Y'S QCJISIIOII

lnsteod of ahowinl your ponner hu shown 110 in a LIIJ a,.. to your four no~
trump. What do you do .....,,

j
•

I

l

Larry Hoffman Died on Monday

'

Holf!nanofMArl...lncnUJe; his
matemal grandmoCIIw, Mrs.
Ethel Radetin, NeArau-, m1
his paternal grandfather,
Harley Hoffman of near
Langsville.
Funeral services will be
conducled at! p.m. 'lburltlly at
the Martin Funeral H~ In
Rolland will! the Rev. .,._
Cwnm1ngs olllcla~. Burial
wiU be in the Alhena County
Memory Garden. Fr11~ ill may
can at the fllleral home any
time after ·s p.m. Wedt ~The WllkesviJie Muclnlc Loclce
wiU conduct aervtces at the
funeral home at 7:30 Wednesdayevenlng with WllkesviJie
OES aerv1ces to follow it 1
·

' \

' I

l

•,-)'

the Pomeroy Elementary School Tuesday night to start
rehearsals of pony chorus lines for the "Fall FolHes", the
annual production ollhe Big Bend Minstrel Association to be

held on Saturday, Nov. 13at Ute Meigs High School under the
sponsorship of the Meigs Athletic Boosters. Instructors for
the opening session were Sherry King, Milisa Rizer, Susie
Soulsby and Debbie Keebaugh Buck.

Nixon Will Seek Less

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended outlook for
Friday through Sunday:
Mild with a chance of
showers throughout the
period. Highs in the 60s
Friday and mid 60s to mid 70s
Saturday and Sunday.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Pres- history.
between the two nations," the Overnight lows in the 405
Friday morning ranging to
Ident Nixon's trip to Moscow in
The Moscow visit, announced President said .
May will be an attempt to ease Tuesday, appeared to be
Nixon will be the first U.S. the 50s by Sunday morning.
the type of friction between the intended to further the "era of president to visit the Soviet &lt;':&lt;':':'''''''''''''''''''''''' ' ' ' ' ' ' :::,:&lt;::,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,
United States and the Soviet negotiations" Nixon proposed Union while in office since
Union that was once epitomized almost three years ago and to Franklin n. RooSevelt attended
by his "kitchen debate" with reassure Soviet leaders that his the wartime Yalta Conference,
Nikita Khrushchev .
effor( to Improve -relations with and he will be the first
The trip to Russia, following China was not a veiled attack president ever to visit Moscow.
closely on the heels of his on the Soviet Union .
it will be Nixon 's third trip to
precedent-ahattering visit to
Moscow. He visited as a private
"Neither trip is being taken citizen in 1967 and in July, 1959
Red Ooina, may establish Nixon
NEW HAYEN - Another
as the most avid practitioner of for the purpose of exploiting as vice president. It was during
summit diplomacy in U.S. what differences ma y exist the 1959 trip that Nixon meeting has been scheduled by
engaged in his lamed kitchen officials of the United Steel
~---------------------------. debate with Khrushchev, then Workers Union, Foote Mineral
I
7\.T
•
l Communist party chairman and Company, and Federal
: ·1
premier, when the two met in a Mediator, Howard Steele for
model
kitchen at a trade 1:30p.m. Friday in Cambridge.
•
By United Press lnternaUonal
exhibition.
The new session was agreed
,.... Nixon said the journeys to upo n at Monday 's meeting
Rollbacks Out Says Hodgson
China and the Soviet Union which broke off with "no
WASHINGTON- LABOR SECRETARY James D. Hodgson were announced far in advance progress" according to Mershel
said today lew union men would face the possibility of a rollback to give adequate time for Hunter, staff representative of
of already-won wage increases under Phase n of President thorough preparations at lower tl)e International USA.
Nixon's economic plan.
diplomatic levels. The Peking Pickets have been set up since
Hodgson also said !here would be no limitation on the right to . trip is scheduled for some time October 2 at three Foote
strike under the new economic controls that go into effect Nov . 13 before May, with the exact date Mineral Company plants
located near New Haven in this
following the present wage-price freeze. The labor secretary's to be worked out tater.
Nixon has been critical in the state and !::ambridge and
comments continued the conciliatory tone set by the administration toward labor . Labor .leaders agreed Tuesday to past of "instant-summits" in Steubenville, Ohio, since excooperate with the Nixon economic plan following personal which world leaders met piration of the old three.year
assurances from Nixon that the administration would not williouh adequate preparations. contract at midnight Oct. I.
"I do not believe in having
Meanwhile, Hunter said a
overrule wa~e decisions of the 15-man pay board.
summit meetings simply lor meeting has been scheduled for
Five Copters Destroyed
the purpose of having a members of Local 5171, USA,
meeting,"
Nixon said. "I think who live in West Virginia. It will
SAIGON - COMMUNIST GUERRIU.AS destroyed five
helicopters at a U. S. base eight miles from Saigon early today. that tends to create euphoria. It be held Thursday at 2:30p.m. in
The sappers placed satchel charges inside the five UHI raises high hopes that are then the Mason Youth Center to
dashed, as was the case with discuss the Food Stamp
helicopters parked at DiAn, northeast of Saigon. It was lhe first
Glassboro. We are not making program. A representative of
helicopter base attacked by the Communists since July
that mistake."
the government will be present
·That comment was a dig at · toexplain rules and regulations.
Two China Line in Trouble
former President Lyndon B.
UNITED NATIONS - DIPLOMATS at the United Nations
Johnson who met with Soviet
prfdtcted today Utat the U. S. plan to seat both Chinas will fail. Premier
Alexei Kosygln at
Sources said unofficial tabulations showed more than 60 delegates Glassboro, N.J., in the swnmer
opposed the U. S. plan which would retain Nationalist China's of -1967. The "Spirit of
seat, while less than that nwnber supported it.
Glassboro" faded after several
monlhs .
Old School Diplomat Dead
Nixon has been careful to
SANDY SPRING, MD.- DEAN Gooderham Acheson, 78, the avoid discussions of his summit
A suit for money, one for
·impeccably tailored diplomat who helped forge colq war policy meetings in terms of domestic partition of real estate, and two
when the United States was the only stable power In the free · politics . But White House actions for di vorce have been
world, died Tuesday of an apparent heart attack at his country political strategists clearlv ex- filed in Meigs County ·common
estate.
pect the trips to boost the Pleas Court.
His son, David C., said funeral arrangements and the official President's standing with the
The Citizens National Bank
cause of death would be made today . The son said Acheson was voters.
filed suit against Theodore E.
stricken about 6 p.m. Tuesday with his wife, the former Allee
In purely political terms, if a Smith and Susan Thomas
Stanley of Detroit, in attendance. President Nixon said, "It is a "Spirit of Moscow" lasts lor six Smith, etal , Langsviile, RD, for
measure of Dean Acheson's stature as man and statesman that months, that would carry $13,507.09 . plus interest from
almost 20 years after his service as secretary of state he con- through the November election Sept. 7, 1971. Asking partition of
ijnued to be recognized as one of the towering figures of his time." when Nixon is expected to seek real estate jS Lawrence A.
a second term.
Hysell vs Ch'll'les E. and Susan
Nixon said the Moscow trip Hysell , etal, Middleport, Rt. 1.
·Watson No Mindless Zombie
was scheduled for May, instead The property is located in
LOS ANGELES - A JURY ignored defense contentions that
of June or July when the Rutland Township.
Charles "Tex" Watson was a mindless ·zombie carrying out the Russian weather would be
Belinda K. Tanner, Pomeroy,
.,-ders rJ. Charles Manson and convicted Watson Tuesday of the better, to avoid interfering with Rt. 4, filed suit for divorce
seven Tate-LaBianca murders .
the U.S. election campaign.
against David W. Tanner ,
The S8Jile six-man, six-woman jury that found Watson guilty
The White House said dipio· Vienna , W. Va., and Joseph E.
now must decide whether his punishment will be life in prison or malic pro,locol cailed lor Nixon Martin, Middleport against.
the gas chamber.
lo visit the Soviet Union to Clara E. Martin, Middleport,
Manson pnd three young women followers were sentenced to repay Kosygin's trip to Glass· each on charges ofgross"'leglect
· (Continued on Page \OJ
buro.
of duty and extreme cruelty.

Friction with Kremlin

Full Strvice Bonking, including
Savings Accounb
Checking Accounts
Personal LOins
Auto Loons
S.lety Otpoolt
Bonk by Moll
Trovtlt" Clltc:lts

Elberfelds In Pomeroy.

They are lllllrable. Bri1ag tlaem

in. anytime to be lidded.

filii

00

Models on '4le, with
cablnefs or carrying case.
L1y

aw•v

now

for

'l:lirtUmos dtlivtry.

litbens"

. OES TO MEET
!larrisonville OES will meet
this evening at 8 at the Masonic
Hall. Election oi officers will be
held.
SINGER SALES I. SERVICE
M&lt;CALL"S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

11.\iOOLEP·: 'RT. OHIO
Mtmber ~I'll Do:J.-11 lulllT.lf! ~.;o.,.raUoa

MEET TIJESDAY
The Past Councilcrs Club will
meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
the home of Carrie Meinhart.

I'

'

-

Pomeroy, 0.

............,.,,....,""'&amp;I

»-.~·---------·---""'"'-·-~'""""

LOCAL TEMPs ·
The temperature in dol\'fltown
Pomeroy at II a.m. Tuesday .
111•s 52 degrees under · sunny

Our roomiest mld-siz:e car ever.
Strong, smooth, comfortable .•• a choice of two wheelbases. ·
Gran Torino ha It •Ill Luxu~oua new IO&lt;Iml,.... lllgFord-llkt quttt ride. Tllvtl tmOattolng new coll-4pf!IIQ
autPtnalon. IIUGOed MW bod~lrramt -..~no. lt'l

?nt
of nine gMt '12 Tonnoo tronnat '71 jlritOII. •
II&amp;MdOftfnii'MiicUw'l IU88Ult"-...all....-. •

,

I!- ·
~

.10'72 -

'

·

......

,._lburMGwe'lb Ford C.•lby..._ • ·

_
K·EITH GOBLE FORD, JNC.,

461 DmllHIID sr.;

IIIIIIDOIT, 0..

Coal Bid
Awarded

B
.
,+,
,ews••• zn rze1 s :

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

NOW YOU KNOW
As the result of I misunderstanding, Andrew Jackson
- before he became President
- married Mrs . Rachel
Robards while she was stiU
ffilrried.

I

than usual to permit parents of students affected to appear.
However, none showed. It was reported that several
planned to attend last night's meeting of the Eastern Local
Board.
The tuition ra I.e in the Meigs District was set last night at
$14.10 a monlh . It was disclosed that about 25 students are
attending classes in lhe district at the present time on a
b.Jition basis. It has been reported lhat the Eastern District
students involved in the controversy will be required to pay
tuition if they are not "released" by the Eastern Board to
continue attending classes at Meigs Local Schools. However,
such releases are generally not granted because districts
releasing students living in their boundary lines lose state
foundation funds lor such released students.
TEACHER RESIGNS
The Meigs Board last night accepted the resignation of
· vocal music teacher, Mrs. Alice Nease of Pomeroy Route 3.
Mrs. Nease resigned this week, it was reported. She had been
teaching at the Middleport and Salisbury Elementary
Schools. Mrs. Theima Campbell was approved as a Title l
teacher in the district retroactive to Oct. I.
Use of the Middleport Elementary School playground,
which has been a controversial matter, was brought up for
discussion because complaints had been received from
residents near the playground of noise and profanity.
However, board members had no complaints in tbe past
month, so no action was tm&lt;en . The board earlier threatened
to close the playground if the problems did not cease.
The board approved the use of a school bus to transport
lhe "Spirit Club," a high school pep group, to away athletic
(Continued On Page 10)

Agreed

is

~
. ro
•ao. .

The question of what to do about at least 22 students
residing in Chester Township continuing to attend schools of
the Meigs Local School District has been left in the hands of
the Eastern Local Board of Education .
The Meigs Local School District in a regular session
Tuesday nigh t discussed lhe problem with Robert Bowen,
Meigs County Superintendent of Schools, who had maps
showing the ·areas in question.
Board President Frank W. Porter said approximately 22
pupils have been attending schools in the Meigs District
although they reside in Chester Township. As many as 30
students could be involved in the problem, Porter said.
Bowen expressed hope that the problem can be solved
agreeably, although Porter said that some parents of the 22
students are threatening legal action.
Bowen stated flatly that if the stud~nts are in the Eastern
Local District, then they are legally bound to attend schools
in that district, or pay tuition to attend Meigs Local Schools.
Bowen, however, pointed out that seven of the some 22 to
30 involved are residing in an area which is a part of the
Meigs Local School District, although it "appears" that their
homes are in Chester Township.
ll was pointed out lhat some residents of Chester
Township have been paying taxes to the Meigs Local School
District where their children have been attending classes.
Meigs Local District Superintendent George Hargraves
pointed out there has been no written agreement located despil.eclaims to the contrary - which permit those students
living in the Eastern District to attend classes of the Meigs
Local schools.
Last night's Meigs Local Board meeting opened earlier

New Date

S.ve aU
ul~;p. /rum
. of yoru
.

In Ford
you've neverseen

1\~

'

TIIIRTY COEDS OF Meigs Local School District came to

Be thrifty!

Anew
kind
Of
.
The Arst Gran

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Fate of 22 Pupils Up

·Sw"ts FiJed

Join the many satisfied people who know the
convenience and ease' of banking· the one-stop
way - with us. We'll provide you with com ·
plete, dependable service for Loans, Savings
and Checking Accounts - every banking
need . · For Full -Service banking designed to
your specific requirements. get acquainted
with us.

Pfi~K

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 13, 1971

?

We Welcome You

'!()LJ \1'&gt;11

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

4N.T.

to Our Family of
Happy Customers

,',HI~J

Devoted To The lnteresl8 OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

Pass

I

Larry G. Hoffman, · 28,
Radford Road, Athens, died
Monday afternoon at the Holler
Medical Center.
Mr. Hollman, a graduate of
RutlAnd High School In 1961,
was a member of the lAngsville
Christian Church and worshipful master of Orphans
Friends Masonic Lodge liO'I at
Wilkesville. Mr. Holtman had
been employed the past six
years with the MO&lt;ft Ford Co.
in Athens.
Surviving are his wife,
Patricia ; two sons, Steven
Gregg and James Leslie, at
home; a sister, Miss Marlene
Hoffman, Gallipolis; his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie

Partly cloudy tonight with a
chance of showers east portions
tows in the 40s and low 50s.
Mostly sunny and mild Thurs·
dav highs in the 60s and low 71\&lt;

VOL XXIV NO. 127

The bicldin&amp; hu boon:
w..t North. 111et s..lll

Pass
Pus

' would be enariy family living in paris of these
two sectors
tilled to attend Meigs Local Schools even though they are in
Chester Township because of the arrangement made in 1936.
In a second resolution approved by the Eastern Local
Board, it was made clear !hat the release of the IS students in
question is for the remainder of this year only. Next fall, they
are expected to enroll in Eastern Local Schools if they are
still residing in their present Chester To~hip homes. The
decisions Tuesday night Will give parents 10 months to work
out any plarrthey-wish to follow .
Attending the meeting to d;••uss tl&gt;• problem with
1Continued on Page 101

Weather

Jade first reached Europe
when the early Spanish
navigators, helieving it helped
cure and prevent kidn ey
diseases, brought it back from
Mexican and Central American
co1onies.

"Have you ever l'layecl .[n
this event befoA~!
"Yes," said Charley. "I
won It four times before you

were born."

The discussion brought out that children of two families
1n the letter , students were told !hey would have to attend
- Jack King and Walter Wilson - seven in all, who atl.end
Eastern School District Schools since they resided in that ·
district, or pay tuition if they continued to attend Meigs Local
Meigs Schools, are entitledtodo so because even though they
' reside in Chester Township, which helps make up the
Schools.
Tuesday.night'smeeting of the Eastern Local Board with
Eastern District, t!Je area in which lhe two families reside is
a part of lhe Meigs Local School District.
P&amp;renls was orderly, the board concluding the_discussion
wilh the patents by releasing 15 students to continue classes
This arrangement, according to courthouse records,
in the Meigs Local School District. John Riebel, Eastern
dates back to 1936 when paris of Sections 11 and 12 of Chester
District Superintendent, said it was the consensus of board
Township were transferred to the Salisbury School District,
that it would be better for the students to release them than to - w hich later became a part of lhe Meigs Local School District.
cause any emotional problems in their adjusting to changing
The Wilsons reside in what is known as the Peach Fork
schools at this time of the year.
Road area while the Kings reside on old Route 33. Riebel said

Now You Know

s mi I e d sheepishlY.

•

'

Students living in lhe Eastern Local School District.some 15 in all - but attending Meigs Local School District
Schools, were released for this year only - to continue
classes in Meigs Local Schools by the Eastern Board of
EducatJ,on Tuesday night. Seven others, of Chester Township, but living in Meigs Local District, won permanent
release to continue In Meigs Local Schools.
Approximately 20 parents, accompanied by an attorney,
Allen Goldsberry of Athens, were on hand lor the meeting of
the Eastern Board. They had been notified by letter through
Meigs Supt. George Hargraves that the students - at first
believed to number 22 - lived In ihe Eastern Local District.

ChiEHJe. "I

"YM." said

12

• KQa

2 Voc-Ed Districts JUnked
would give the districts a "bel·
ter opportunity to gain career
development skills." Total public school enrolbnent in the
area is 121,807.
Members of the JacksonVinton County JVSD wiU be
able to join the Gallia County
JVSD after the board's action.
The dissolution was made possible, the board said, because
a new pattern of highways in
southeastern Ohio enabled the
transportation of students over
a larger area than formerly
possible.
In other action, the board :
-Granted a request by the
Tri.County JVSD, which in·cludes Athens, Hocking and

8ftlt;)dl

Style .ol Play a factor .

•

Denied St

KRISTEN ANDERSON, DAUG!ITER of Mr. and Mrs.
Willi8Jil Anderson and a student at the Pomeroy Elementary
School, has been returned to her Mulberry Ave. home after being
confined to the Holzer Medical Center a few days. Nothing
serious, just one of those virus things which makes old parents out
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
of young roes.
state Board of Education Monday disbanded two joint voca.
And what's cooking on the Nov. 13 production of the Big Bend ttonal school districts to allow
Minstrel Association? Much !
them to recombine with other
A pony dance line - just like the teen lines - composed of districts.
some secood and third graders .from the Pomeroy Elementary
Disbanded by the board, on
School has gooe into rehearsals and It looks like a group of real state Schools Supt. Martin Es·
comers is developing.
sex's recommendation, were
The art development of the Meigs High School has started the South Central 'Joint Vocawcrk on stage ·settings for the 1971 Big Bend "FaU FolHes" under tional School District and the
Uledirection of Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis. This is the second year Jackson-Vinton County JVSD.
that the students have wcrked on the project. The popular "smile
The South Central district
face" wiU be used in this year's Props.
lending an able helping hand with the show is Mrs. Paul will now be able to join the
Chapman who spent some of ber spare weekend time creating H811lilton County JVSD. The
special effect items to be used by dancers and singers of the show. transition will be aided by the
Sponsoring 1his year's production will be the Meigs Athletic use of a 4S()..acre portion of
Clinton County Air Force Base.
Boosters.
The board said the change

LAURIE LEA SCHAEFER, BEXLEY, who got her start
towards the coveted Miss America crown at Pomeroy in 1968, will
return to Ohio this weekend and will be toasted at Sandusky, home
of the Miss Ohio Pageant - the event which sent Miss Schaefer to
the natiooal c&lt;mpetition at Atlantic City. The following weekend
Miss Schaefer will visit her Alma Mater, Ohio University, where
she will attend several functions.

.

•

8- The Dally Seooinel, Middleport-Pmleroy, 0., Oct. 12, It'll

1

.

•

••

••'

''
''

W•"th Court

1

HOMECOMING
SOUTHERN Homecoming
Queen Candidates and attendonts, above, will feature
the Friday night haU·tlme
activities. of the Hannan
Trace · Southern football
game when the homecoming
queen will be crowned.
Candidates, front, l·r, are
Sharon Craven, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Horner,
Connie Warner, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Warner
and Debbie LaValley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard LaValley ; second
row, queen attendants, Roma
Nease, daughter of Mr. and
M~s. David Nease, Diane
Holstein, daughter of Mr. and
· Mrs. Robert Holstein, and
Ronda Ash, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edwin Ash. The
candidates and attendants
will be featured In a parade
Friday afternoon. The parade
will leave the high school at 2
p.m. The event Is being
sponsored by the Student
Council. John Eichinger is
president.
ALSO taking part in haUtime aetlvltles ol right, will
be Debbie Michael, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald

The Jeffers Coal Co. was
awarded a contract for the
purchase of coal, an anin'&lt;ll
claim was approved, and an
inspection trip of pickup spots
were viewed for the proposed
county landfill , by the Meigs
Coun ty Commissione r s
Tuesday .
The county will pay the
Jeffers firm of Syracuse $14.50
per ton for coal delivered to the
courthouse and $12 a ton for
stoker coal picked up at the
mine si te by the coun ty highway
department.
The only other bid w",; from
Excelsior Oil Company which
bid $14.50 per ton for coal
delive red and $12.50 at the
mine.
Ronald E. Beegle, Racine, Rt.
I, was paid $520 lor 26 sheep
kiiled by dogs.
Jack Cwnmins of the Ohio
Valley Health Services, and
the commissioners inspected
proposed pickup sites for the
county landfill.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr , Sr., Bob Clark and
Warden Ours, commissioners,
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

Driver Held on
DWI Citation
Damage to two cars was
heavy and an Arizona driver
was arrested on a charge of
driving while intoxicated in an
accident on .West Main St. at
8:38p.m. Tuesday.
Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Willard Moore, 52,
Tempe, Ariz. , went out of
control and struck a utility pole
on the sidewalk. Moore's car
was backed up and restarted
headed south, then struck the
Iron t of a northbound car driven
by Patricia Collins, 20, of
Pomeroy. There were no in·
juries.

Michael, who will act as
flower girl and Erich Philson,

son of Mr. uol Mn. John
Philson,. ci'OWD bearer.

MAN FINED
Geor_ge Casto, 51, ColumbuS,
was fmed $5 and costs by
Pomeroy Mayor Charles legnr
Tuesday night on conviction of
failing to yield right of way.

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