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                  <text>Gen. Hartinger Speaker Honoring .'71 ·Marauders
.I

WHAT WITH

' AT THE SMA!.~ !JUT F~IENP\.YHA~!JCIZ OF
M~TOR, OHIO, H~ATHE'~

I

WAS PATCH6.D Ul'
FO~~OWING OU~ (,~0!16~1ZING BY THE I~AC.K:
~QUALL. CA~? W~~E OFF6~EP U!7,Af.JP
WE F/i~f ~IKE. VI5/TING J{OYALTY. IT
WA? DIFFICULT TO l-E'A\'6, ~LIT TIME WM
P,_E5~1NG AND GOME liAY5 l-ATE'~': we WE~E
~ N1'E"Ii:IN~ I.AK~ :..:.:::;.~;__"-----..::.

l AM 5~t.:IOU5. I DON'T MI!AN --

TUII!N TJ.IE 'OAT Ali!OUI&lt;JD, NOW,
AND H&amp;At:&gt; SACK TO THE Ai~ANTIC..'
6UT, N~XT~~A50N ... IT WILL
TAKE A L.OT OF ~EPA~ATION
... PI.AN5 ...

PAMEG A~E 5U~E HA~D
OUT, Ami( WHAT YOU'VE
'IOU COM~ UP WITH iHI
GENERAL HARTINGER

l'M JUH

Now You Know

11 WOUI.l' EJe

The oldest tree in the world, a
4,500.year-old Bristlecone pine,
is in California's White
Mountains near Death Valley .

8EIN~
~E'AL.I6T IC,

A1i~IFIC.

EXP~IZIENC.~,
ANP WE'l-l. N6VE~

Into the Mid
/3/ue Yonder-·
®
-HE R TO REELI:L E '/0'
IS ROTTE&gt;-1, !;\OTTEN
PALPI-II E -AN'
AH HAINT.'!

NOW '/O'LL START IMAGININ'
ALL SORTS 0' STOOPJI) THINGS
'BOuT MAH GREAT BIG E-fi':SAN' IN NO TI ME
'IO'LL START

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SAIGON ( UP!)- U.S. planes
struck North Vietnamese air
defenses 150 miles north of lhe
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) today in lhe deepest bombing
penetration since lhe 1968 bait
of largescale bombing in North
Vietnam .

The double-barreled attacks
against an air field at Quang
Lang, 150 miles above the
DMZ, and againsl airfield
defenses al Vinh, followed two
strikes into Norlh Vietnam
Sunday in what lhe U.S.
command calls "protective

reaction" strikes above lhe
DMZ.
Quang Lang is on north-south
Highway 7 about 40 miles
inland from the Gulf of Tonkin
and is aboul 160 miles south of
Hanoi. Vinh, a major North
Vietnamese city, has been

~

HOW KINYO'MENGO ON
Ll K E THIS, WHE.N YO' KNOWS
IT BRINGS TEAKS TO
MAH GREAT BIG E'iES
-Cu SS 'EM?

Gl\l. ,tou r AH
VJOllLt.Hr I .'.'

ON LY v iAY TO Sf.TTLE IT IS

AH W OULDN'T BE IN THIS
MF-SS,II' /\H I-lAD Ll 'L B E.AI)'f
EY ES LIK C: MOST(.)' THE.
GA.l. S 'ROUND H r'. f'-10. -

TH'ON E. WHAT CLIMBS TO TH'
TOP C.Y T H' TR ASHBE.tJ,N S fA LV.

AN ' E&gt;RINGS BACK WHATEVER'S

THAI=&gt;_ -wINS

ME !! r----1

r-"'""'

.,

CAPTAIN EASY
HOW GHA?TLY- lF IT l-EAK~
OUT 9H5'S B5cN U?I!J6 'OUR
IJ~W

''MA&lt;ii/QUE. MUIJ DE.
RfiOUL McKEE" BE'AUTY

.MIH !!.A:::+==!-

'by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

. • e~ORE 'DAWIJ ... A

'COPTSR .DE:PO~IT,

A :;iRAf.JGS I.OAD IN

MANHATTAN'.7
CE:fJTRA[.. PARK!

~s

FO~ ~EAl..l

L.ADIE5AN'

GENT5~

FOR

A~'

why lhe United States would
suddenly resume bombing of
North Vietnamese airfields
after staying away from them
for at least a year and a half.
On Sunday four F4 Phantoms
escorting an unarmed cameraequipped F4 Phantom reconnaissance plane bombed Communis! gunners "in the vicinily
of lhe Dong Hoi airfield" 40
miles north of the Demilitarized
Zone after the spy plane was
fired upon .
Dong Hoi, the first 'inajor city
above the DMZ separating
Norlh from South Vietnam, was
lhe first target of American
bombers in the Indochina War
in August, 1964, Its airport has
been known to house M!Gs but
no M!Gs have been reported
sighted since the Laos invasion
of last spring.
Although the raid was listed
as "in the vicinily" of Dong Hoi
airfield, those conducted today
were on the airfields themselves "and the runways are
right in the vicinity of where
the bombs were aimed," the
spokesmen said.
Most of lhe "proJective
reaction " strikes in the past
have been directed at Norlh
Vietnamese
surface-to-air
(SAM) missile sites guarding
the passes along the mountain
openings into Laos. U.S. planes
have fired on the SAM sites
when lheir electronic devices
warned them lhat they had
been picked up by North
Vietnamese radar.
Announcement of the raids
came as U.S. troop strength
dropped to a six-year-low · of
191,100 men last week in a
withdrawal program that is
expected to shrink American
forces in Vieinam to a largely
advisory and supply operation
by next swnmer.

Thieves
.Busy on
Weekend

(---------------------------,
B . .:f.

WEEK? I SIN ,
DUNK'It-:1' MS F.ACEi

.•• zn

FIGGE!&lt;; It-!

•MAGI QUe M!JP
DS RAOIJL..

McKE:S" SSA'Urt.

'MTH!

'· FEAGT'
' YER EY~.?

o~ .THe

IN- ·

C~SPISLE '
R~5-UL1'~ ·

"

·

Vietnam, where he is credited
with 100 combat missions in the
F-4C.
From January 1968 to August
1968, he was F-Ill aircraft test
director in the U. S. Air Force
Tactical Fighter Weapons
Center at Nellis AFB, Nev . He
then assumed command of the
famed Flying Tiger unit, the
23rd Tactical Fighter Wing, at
McCo!Ulell AFB, Kan.
Gen . Hartinger became
assistanl deputy chief of staff
for
Plans at
NORAD
headquarters on July I, 1970. He
was promoted to his present
rank on Oct. I, 1970.
More than 4,000 of his 4,500
flying hours are in single-engine
jet aircraft . He has flown the F80, F-86, F-102, F-104, F-105, F106, F -4C and F-111 aircraft.
He has been awarded the
following decorations and
service awards: Legion of Merit
fContinued on page 8)

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

NOVELTIES CREATED -Mrs. Mabel Pickens of Syracuse bas developed her interesl
and talent in creating novelties with her sewing machine into a supplemental retiremenl in·
come for herself and her husband, Sam, Mrs. Pickens is shown with chicken replicas and Aunt
Jemima dol~ which she creates to sell direct and to a local gift shop,

She Has
Creative
Talents
'

BY BOB HOEFLICH
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Mabel
Pickens of College Road,
Syracuse, readily admits being
a fancy-work enthusiast for
WELL PREPARED FOR WEATHER -It was a bad night fo:: football but fans came
some 14 years. However, her
husband, Sam, says it's been
prepared to Racine Saturday night where the ancient Meigs County rivals, Soulhern and
going
on for all of their 46 years
Eastern, seltled things until 1972.
of married life.
Still - Mrs. Pickens' ability
and enthusiasm with handicraft
projects are currently serving a
practical purpose by helping the
Despite a cold rain which fell played lhe first song they had recognized with their parents
couple financially in their
during the evening, Eastern and learned in grade school, "Mary during the pre-game activities
retirement.
Southern High School bands Had a Little Lamb," in- during which each mother
Mrs. Pickens' latest "kick" is
presented their halftime shows tentionally making errors in lhe received a gold rose. A 12th rose
creating colorful ch icken
at the Eastern-Southern game music.
was presented to Mrs, Connie
replicas which make good
Saturday night in Racine,
Romine, the director,
doorstops and attractive Aunt
The Southern band honored The band then played : Senior members of the band
Jemima dolls which are used
its seniors who were marching "Joshua," "Gentle On My are Connie Warner, Roger
sometimes as just a decorative
in their final half time show Mind," and "United We Stand," Wilford, Belh Theiss, Bill
item or perhaps as a cover for a
wilh a presentation written up each tune representing a year Wheeler, Debra West, Ed Cross,
toaster, blender or some other
by the II graduating seniors during which the seniors were Renee Burke, Bob Cummins,
appliance in a kilchen.
themselves.
in the band. For the fourth year Candy Hoback, John Eichinger
The talented Mrs. Pickens
The bandsmen marched of their band work, the fight and Dennis Hart, band
Three breaking and enterlngs has created the colorful chicken
across the field forming a "72" song was played,
manager,
were reported over the weekend doorstops only since the past
and whlle in this formation
The 11 seniors were
to Meigs CoWLty Sheriff Robert Easter season while the dolls go
The Eastern Eagle Band,
directed by Charles Wills, used
C. Hartenbach.
back three years during which
Saturday evening the home of time she has made some 400.
"Eastern Tunes in To TV" as its
I
7\.T
•
I balftime show theme, opening
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Thomas,
The doorstops are . created
1 1 ~ews
1 with the theme from
County Road 1, one-tenth of a from old coats which Mrs.
mile norlh of SR 124 in Salem Pickens purchases at rummage
I
·
.
I ''Dragnet.''
Center,
was burglarized. Mr. sales. The dolls, however, must
Movin~ upfield in a marchinl!
By UDited Press IDlernalloaal
d~ill. the bandsmen played "No
. TORNADO Drummer and Mrs. Thomas, who operate have new, bright materials for
Col. Herbert Leaving Army
Matter What Shape Your · leaves the field after. the a business nearby, arriving full skirts and turban type hats,
home around 8:30 p, m., Mrs. Pickens picks up lhis
Stomach's
In," and then halftime show.
FT, McPHERSON, GA. - LT. COL. Anthony Herbert, a
discovered their house had been material at various locations
highly-decorated combat officer who lost his command in Viet· presented the majorettes in a
ransacked. When everything buying sale r~mnants since a
routine to "Hawaii Five.()" as
118m after acc1111lng his auperiors of covering up alleged war
missing is listed, losses are yard or less is needed for each
the band moved through a
BAD NEWS
crimes, said Sunday he wiD retire from the Army In February,
expected
to be considerable.
doll.
precision drill. The popular
They've done It again.
Herbert announced his lntenllon through a statement released by Partridge family tune, "I Think
Sale of the items apparently is
Sunday another newspaper . The couple believes that when
his attorney, Morris Brown, of the American Civil Uberties I Love You'.' als~ featured the sales rack was stolen from In they entered the back door • the not difficult. Residents learning
Union,
,
majorettes. The band left the front of The Dally Sentinel burglars went out the front of the articles, purchase them
In It Herbert said thai becall!e of restrlcllo~ placed on him field playing the Eagles Victory olflce on Pomeroy's Court St. door. The burglary is believed ,, 111e Pickens home for their
by the Army "which forbid me tO state my views to the media," March,
house
Publisher Rlcharll Owen'sald to tie .in wilh recent
.
.
.
' W• ! use or for gifts. A son in
he will not make himlelf available to the press. The Army
Majoreltes are Jan Holter, today a $25 reward Is offered burglan~s occun:mg 10 Vmton Tolcd, Jakes orders for them as
repeatedly has denied it Is trying to alienee Herbert.
. dc:es a niPce ity.Aillance. Mrs.
Cheryl ~uhn, Louann Newell, for Information leading to the and Galha Coun~tes,
The veteran officer said in the statement that "actions taken VIcki Spencer, and head Identification and conviction
Thts lS the second complamt · Ptckens alsv supplies her ar·
(Continued on page 8)
!Continued on page 8).
ticles lo the l'l'C&lt;nlly opencrl gift
majorette, Debbie Jeffers.
of the thief.

Bands Give Game Shows

WHAT I~ IH.. ,
~HE: CA~'T E&gt;E

1958 to June 1962, in the Air
Defense Interceptor Branch of
th e Directorate o f ~ Requirements.
From July 1962 to June 1963,
he attended Geor.ge Washington
University, D. C., where he
received a master's degree in
business administration. He
then served at Hickam AFB,
Hawaii, until June 1965 as an
operations staff officer in the
General Planning Branch of
Plans, Headquarters PACAF.
Following a year as a student
at lhe Industrial College of the
Armed Forces at Ft. McNair,
Washington, D. C., Gen. Hartinger received F -4C Phantom
replacement training with the
43rd Tactical Fighter Squadron
at MacDill AFB, Fla ., from July
1966 to December 1966.
He was then assigned as
command center director,
Headquarters Seventh Air
Force at Tan Son Nhut AB ,

Cloudy, chilly today, chance
of snow flurrie s northeast.
Cloudy tonight, lows in 20s
north . Increasing cloudiness
and warmer Tuesday, chance of
showers north and west.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1971

reported to be the site of a
MIG fighter plane base , though
no MIGs have been reported in
action in months.
U.S. military spokesman said
the raids were carried out by
F4 Phantom jet fighter-bombers but gave no explanation

."'IW.•••-1,._,
...... ..

'/0' MIGI \T ["lhH T 'E.OUT
1\ --~-/\' i.f· K ~' ~~I G J,:.JW_l&gt;

Williams AFB, Ariz. in 1950.
During the next three years,
General Hartinger had logged
two foreign assignments. The
first was at Fursten!elbruck,
Germany, as flight commander
of the 36th Fighter Bomber
Wing , and the second. at Kunsan, Korea, where he flew his
first combat missions in the F84E Thunderjet with the 474th
Fighter Bomber Wing.
He was a gunnery instructor
at Williams AFB, Ariz., from
July 1953 to September 1954 and
attended Squadron Officers '
School at Maxwell AFB, Ala .,
from December 1954 to April
1955.
Gen. Hartinger then moved to
StewartAFB, N.Y., as a fighter
pilot and air opera lions officer
with the 331st Fighter Interceptor Squadron from April
!955 to June 1958.' His next
assignment
was
at
Headquarters USAF, froll! June

Bombers Hit Air -Field
150 Miles Above DMZ

FIGHTJN'.'!

-

fur fourth with Wellston in 1968,
were second in 1969, tied for
second with Logan in 1970, and
tied aJlain wilh Logan in 1971,
but for third .
The 1971 team is 7-2.{1 overall
and 5-2.{1 in the league. It can
finish 8-2.{1.
Brig, General Hartinger is the
assistant deputy chief of staff
for Plans at the North American
Air
Defense
Command
(NORAD) headquarters in
Colorado Springs. In this
position he develops plans and
objectives for air defense of the
North American continent.
He enlisted in the U, S, Infantry in July 1943 and two
years later entered lhe U. S.
Military Academy at West
Point, N. Y. In 1949, upon
graduation, he was commissioned a second lieutenant
in the U. S. Air Force. He then
received his flying training at
Randolph AFB , Tex. and

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

VOL. XXIV NO. 145

LOOK IN' DEEP
1"-lTO 'EM MAKES
ME NOT WA'i TA
BE ROTTEN NO
MORt=. .'!r---T

Edison Baker and John We:ner .
This will be the fifth Rotary
banquet honoring Marauder
football teams which since the
consolidation of Rutland,
Pomeroy and Middleport High
Schools including this season of
play,
have
won
one
Southeastern Ohio Conference
championship, finished in
second, in a tie for second, in a
tie for third, and in a tie for
fourlh.
All Marauder football learns
have been coached by Charles
Chancey.
Through Friday night, with
non-league Point Pleasant to
play, Marauder football learns
are 36-11-3 overall and 24-8-2 in
league play . The Marauders
will be favored over the Big
Blacks. Two previous games
have produced Point Pleasant
victories.
The Marauders won the
SEOALfootball title in 1967, tied

Weather

SE SETTE~ ASI.E TO
li'O IT!

NOW THAT TH' VJ':IL 0' M'ISTER'I
IS LIFT CD, SI-IE'S NO DIFF'RUNT
FUM NO OT~ER GAL.--

Brigadier General James V.
Hartinger, a former Middleport
High School star athlete, will be
speaker at the annual Meigs
High School football banquet to
beheld at 6:30p.m, on Tuesday,
Nov. 16.
,
The son of Mrs. Violel Harlinger, Middleport, and the late
Lawrence Hartinger, Gen.
Hartinger graduated from
Middleporl High School in 1943.
Tickets for the banquet at lhe
Meigs 'High School Cafeteria
are available at the New York
Clothing House and Swisher
Lohse Drugs in Pomeroy, the
Citizens National Bank, Bahr
Clothing, Dutton's Drugs, and
the clerk's office in the junior
high school, Middleport; at the
Rutland Department Store, and
at the high school office.
Making up the committee
from the Middlep~rt - Pomeroy
Rotary Club, sponsors of the
banquet , are L. W. McComas,

rze1 s

'.·.

MRS. PICKENS is also a collector of salt and pepper
shakers. Here she is with just a part of th~ over 200 sets which
make up the collection.

shop of Mrs. Martha Rose who
is featuring articles which are
handmade by local residents.
Active in the Meigs County
Holiday Handicraft Club and
the Syracuse Home Demonstration Club, Mrs. Pickens
loves to try all of the new Ideas
which she encounters in
creating unusual and colorful
decorations for the home. The
Pickens' home is marked with
the results of such projects.
Besides fulfilling a desire to
create, Mrs. Pickens finds the
additional income provided by
her hobbies has been a boost
over the years. Mr. Pickens is
disabled and both .Mr. and Mrs.
Pickens arc tequired to take
medicine daily -a drain on any
income these days, ·
The Pickens art' parents of six
suns,'Ebuer, Letart Falls; Eber

and Shelby of Syracuse ; Emmett, Wesley and Donald of
Toledo, and a daughter, Mrs.
Clara Smith of Columbus. They
have 31 grandchildren and two
grea !-grandchildren .
A cousin to her handicraft
activi ties is the collecting of salt
and pepper shakers. Over 200
sets from about every state in
the Union make up the
colleclion.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook
Wedn~sday Through Friday:
Mild through Friday wllh a
chance of showers mahlly
east ·on Wednesday. Daytime
highs In 50!. Nighttime Iowa
In 30s,
......... .
h&amp;nn.

~-~·:&amp;

.. t\J

""

�•

z- The Daily Sentlnel,Midoleport-Pam,roy, 0., Nov. 1,1!1'11

EDITORIALS

Ah, Garbage Cans
Lined with Gold

Electric
Reducers
Can Kill

Innocent Bystander at the U.N.
•

•

The famous town whose Citizens supported themselves
by takmg m each othe1 s laundry was purely mylh1cal, of
course But there s a !01 real town m V1rgm1a that hopes
to solve 1ts economic problems by takmg m garbage from
Washmgton Baltimore and other nearby b•g Cities
Cra•gsv11le a Shenandoah Valley commumty With a
population of 978 the last time anybod) looked IS con
vertmg an abandoned cement plant mto a reg1onal gar
bage recychng cente1 wh1ch could provide 100 new JObs
and a $1 m1lhon payroll
The operation scheduled to start next January will m
volve the separatiOn of refuse mto 1ts bas1c components
- paper (usually about 50 per cent per ton) food scraps
111 per cent ) bottles 17 per cent) steel cans 14 per centl

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D
Dear Dr. Lamb-In the
paper you menhqned the use
of electrical d e VI c e s to
strengthen t h e abdommal
muscles and how dangerous
they were You suggested
they be d•scarded 1mmed1
ately
All I am mterested m
knowmg IS what kmd of de
v•ce--1 have a Relax a-C1zor
and was wondermg if you
meant th1s particular ma
chme

and so on

The steel cans Will be converted mto magnellte a ma
teual used m the p1ocessmg of coal and wh1ch sells for
$30 to $40 a ton Othe1 matenals that are not sold for re
cychng w11l e1ther be shredded mto a growmg med1um
for mushrooms or used as fuel m the cans mto magnetite
process
At fmt closed railroad cars Will brmg m about 500 tons
of garbage a day Cra1gsv1lle plans for an eventual dally
mput of 10 000 tons wh1ch IS about the amount generated
by four nulhon people
If the 1dea works- and 1f 1t does It w1ll be a model for
every other commumty m the nation especially as land
fill acreage runs out-the folks m Cra•gsvllle may want
to erect a Statue of Garbage beanng some such mswp
twn as
Send me yo ur JUnk your scrap the wretched refuse
of your teemmg a!fluence Send th1s the homeless trash
can-tossed to me I hit my lamp bes1de the golden re
cycling plant

.r,
r.:;;:--- '?I

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

i Voice along Broadway

$ Incentive to Study
In a first of 1ts kmd mcenbve expenment funded by
an $870 000 bundle from the U S Ofhce of Educallon par
ents and teachers of elementary schoolc hildren m four
c11les Will be pa1d hard cash 1! the k1ds enllre classes
make 's1gmf1cant Improvements m readmg and mathe
matics
Schools m Oakland Calif and San Antomo Tex w1ll
part1c1pate m both a parent and teacher bonus program
while schools m Cmcmnat1 OhiO, and Jacksonville Fla ,
w1ll llm1t themselves to a teacher bonus plan
In each school d1stnct two matchmg schools have been
selected one to serve as an expenmental school, the
other as a control school workmg With the same matenals
but not eligible for any fmanc1al reward
Pupils m all e1ght schools will be tested to determme
average class scores At the end of the year they Will be
, etested
Dependmg upon the amount of progress beyond the
avera~e yearly growth expected for a particular grade
level m a par\lcular school parents can be pa1d any
thmg from $25 to $100 and teachers from $500 to $1 200
By comparmg results w1th the control schools the
USOE hopes to be able to tell how much extra Improve
men! 1s made when teachers have a !manc1al stake m
the success of the1r students and also whether even
greater Improvement IS made when parents have a
stake as well
For much less than $870,000 we can tell them the an
swer nght now S1gmf1Cant Improvements" are gomg to
be forthcommg m at least two of these schools, or there
""'ll be a number of heart to heart talks between parents
and k1ds m Oakland and San Antomo next sprmg

I

(N EWSPAPER ENT£R.PRISE ASSN )

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

lHelen Help Us l
I

I

By Helen Bottel

j

I
I

1

SOME MATTERS OF ETIQUETTE
Dear Helen
About 50 of our friends gave us a b1g shower after Tod and I
announced our engagement They all went together and bought us
a television set Everyone contributed about $S each
Well, Tod and I aren't getting mamed He found another gil'I
and ran off With her
Ail we've already used the set, for about four months, I
couldn't turn 11 back to the store, and I couldn't sell 11 for half what
It's worth Also, I'm broke (and still m college and don1 have a
job or parents I can fall back on)
I know you're supposed to g•ve back engagement gifts if the
wedding falls through, but how can I refund $250 I don't have' lEFT, lDST AND LOW
Dear L.L and L
Your fr1ends will understand And though you may not think
so now, there'll be a next tune around When that day comes,
make sure those who were Invited to your first shower are
somehow !Did that they've already g1ven - H
Dear Helen
Ail a secretary to an exerutive of a large fll'lll, I find I have to
bite my tongue for silence when a caller learns that the person he
wants IS unavailable and says, "I'd like to talk to SOMEONE "
Does he think he's talklll8 to a tape recorder or computer'
Usually, by gentle prodding I fmd out what he wants, and give a
satisfactory answer After all, pnvate secretaries aren't stupid'
Wby can't busmess callers use better manners' SOMEONE
Dear Someone
Callers such as these are m the same box With busmess people
, who g~ve a name and number, but no message - and expect the •
busy executive to call them back' - H
Dear Helen
They don't ask what color you are on Job applications any
more How come they still have a space marked 'Sex"' I thought
discrimination was outlawed m such matters - NO "SEX"
PLEASE
Dear No
Not yet But perhaps soon, though there are stlJl a few Jobs
(longshoremen, for example) wh1ch aren't exactly suited to the
average woman
Mn WUma Scott He1de, president of National Organization
for Women gives tlliB adv1ce
"On employment appl• rations wh1ch ask "Sex" you can put
down, 'Yea' or 'What d
11 ' "ve m mind'' or 'Not In the office" "Butmyfavorlte• ,,, s 'lgaveat home'"-H
Dear Helen
Recently one of our neighbors had a golden wedding anDiversary. Their sons put on a big party On the bottom of the
lnvltatlons tbey wrote "Please lrmg money Instead of a gift "
'lbla aeem1 disgustlngly commerCIBI We had planned a nice
gift, but we don'tlike to be dunned for money Is thiS proper• - T

'

BY JACK O'Brian
NEW YORK (KFS) - New album out IS
titled "Fulton Fish Market' starring a lad
named Jamea Lat real name James Lategano,
he really works (the last SIX years) at the Fulton
Fish Market downtown, sang betimes (for free)
at the Village Gaslight Club and m Central Park,
where a Metromedia Records exec harkened and
Signed him to a 1record pact, songs all are by
James late, who lives m an East Harlem
tenement, and are about hiS beloved Fulton Fish
Market, so please don't carp at thell' authentiCity
John Wayne's 'The Cowboys" film IS hemg
hosannaed at Warners as "better than 'True
Gr1t ' " Next cops' scandal - bnbery to let
law-busting at skyscraper construction Sites
alone, and to let garages and parklll8 lots stash
their cars anywhere, on Sidewalks, doubleparked etc
A longplay petty larceny con·
tinues at small mght spots where doormen
double-park customers' cars Our entll'e street
was blocked one midnight, afl(l we called the
station house (the much-accused 19th precUICI)
told them who we were, and asked if they would
clear the street so an octngenanan lady we know
could be driven to the apartment house door
No cars came, we walked agam, and sugg~sted
we might put 11 m the paper W1lhm a mmute
men were pourmg out of the corner saloon,
hoppmg mto !hell' cars and driVIng them around
the block - someone obviOusly called someone
at the saloon
B1gN Y -based men's (maybe women's too)
clothing flnlls are c!osmg !hell' U S factones
and manufacturmg \hell' duds m Korea, why'
Uruon pay-&lt;!scalation demands The most skilled
seamstresses get $35 a month m Korea, and only
a couple of days off a year, one of them Chmtmas our spy told us
The runaway trend m
many mdustries IS!l't confined In H'wood and the
!ibn busmess even Germany's top camera
f1rms are manufacturmg their preciSion
products m Singapore
We were at the Hong Kong all'port once w1th
Morton Downey, and 11 was rainmg Exportunport executive Dick Malig was seemg us off,
doffed hiB plastic raincoat and draped if over
Mort Downey Mort demurred but D1ck mslSted
he had 4 more because he'd sent only several
of a dozen samples to a California Importer and,
"How many do I need'"
The deal was made on the spot and Mort sold
them for $1 each (they cost $8 to $12 here In those
days generally)
The dlagraceful N Y police scandals
comc1de exactly w1th the release (by Crown
Publishers) of James D (Red) Horan's 'The

Bm~rs

WORlD

Blue Messiah," all about crooked cops It antiCipated many of the Knapp Conunlssion 's
fmdmgs, deta1ls a precmct by-precinct
organization of centralized payoffs, formation of
a natwnal pollee group controlled and
manipulated by the mob mlo a natiOnal strike
One of the great mvest~gating reporters (on the
N Y Journal American), Red knows more about
such orgaruzed skulduggery than any newshawk
we ve known m our Manhattan decades
His
articles on drug addicts (Red noaed as an out-&lt;lf
state "pusher" m GreenWich Village) resulted m
psssage of a bill Signed by Gov Nelson
Rockefeller wh1ch made addicts "Sick persons"
rather than crunmals, second state to take that
humarutar1an step "The Blue Mess~ah" really
should be mslde.(!()ps-&amp;uff
Centimillionalre Nathan Cwnmlngs had one
of the year's great parties on hiB 75th llrthday at
the Waldorf - and he's already hll'ed Meyer
DaviS' orchestra for hls 80th "Locale remains
undeCided but the date lB definite," the blllhe
septu~enanan wrote Meyer
Revebitlon
rughtclub owner U!e Canaan formed Revelation
Records, company of the same name's also been
started by Michael Butler, producer of "Hair"
Lindsay says c1ty workers must stop
moonlightmg that mean Jawn must atop run·
nmg for preSident' VesuVIO Restaurant Is 70
years old - 35 years on Mulberry St , 35 years to
now at 1ts W 48th st (jst east of Bdwy ) location

Dear Dr Lam b- You
wrote that menstruahon 1s
unusual at 57 I w1ll soon be
62 and I still menstruate,
two to thr~ times a year It
stopped for slx years, now
for four years I have men
struated SIX days each time

Dear Reader- You are
deflmtely unusual I hope
you have had a checkup by
rour doctor to be sure that
11 1s menstruation Your
story IS so unusual that I
would like to repeat a~am,
that any woman m m1ddle
life who has stopped men
struatmg and starts bl~ding
agam should have an lm
mediate exammation by her
Actor George Segal as a TV guest IS an en- doctor Let your doctor de
thus•asbcally bland performer, noisily dull Clde 1! 1! 1s Important or not
when he bangs h1s frat-house banjo Nothing after he has had a chance
to examme you
startlmg any more about actresses and actors
announcmg they live together Without mamage,
Dear Dr Lamb-! am 12
years
old and have an un
British actress O!arlotte Rarnpling goes them
demable
habit of slumpmg
all one better- says she has two men m her life,
one a model and the other a theatncal manager Is there anythmg I can do
to break the habit bes1des
and, "I've never beenbapp!er mmylife"
weanng braces'
PariS has passed a law which only should
Dear Reader-Wanhng to
happen here motoriSts who splash pedesl1'1811S
IS half the battle Braces
are subJect to a lt)-franc fine ($! 90) We'd add
usually are not helpful 10
the cost of cleaning the victim's clothes On hiB correcting
posture unless
TV popcorn cornmerClal, Joe Namath fondles a there 1s a skeletal problem
football and says popcorn ls his :lnd favonte that needs correchon Mus
cles supported by a brace
love that puts hiB gll'ls m 3rd place?
The hockey wr1ter Stan Fischlers expect a become weaker and less ef
fective One of the best a1ds
little Jan skater
Elia Kazan at Mykonos to good posture IS a good
seemed not at all WOrried about Greek politicos all round exercise program
lookmg for locations for his "Trilogy" film, he If your muscles are strong
SBJd 1t 'll either be Greece or Spam and he prefers enough, you will be less like
Greece "I like the food better" We've never ly to slump Much of the rest
IS habit
been m Greece, but you can't much beat the
Start a regular set of exMadrid food m the Jockey Club or Horscher's
ewses to strengthen the
And the gazpacho In the Ritz Garden t We'll take muscles between your
Madrid
shoulder blades and the m uscles along your back If you
have a phys1cal educatiOn
Q-What IS the m1dmght teacher or gym teacher, ask
sun?
for help m developmg a good
A-The sun sh1n1ng at set of exerc1ses
m ldmght m the Archc or
(NEWSPAPER ENTf:lNISE A5SN )
Antarctic summer

Q-Wh1ch

tallest tree'

IS

the world's

A-The Howard Ubbey
redwood 367 6 feet With a
grrth of 44 feet, that stands
on Redwood Creek, Humboldt County Call!

BRUCE SIOSSAT

Oassy Eagles Win 2nd Straight SVAC Title

S. Viet Forces--Just How Ready?
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEA )
Though the North Vtetnamese shU like to stage assaults
to comc1de w1th events hke election and maugurallon m
South VIetnam their capac1ty to embarrass Sa1gon seems
hm1ted They seldom sustam attacks for very long
The net of thmr October operaUons m the Krek area
of eastern Cambodia and across the border m South V1et
nam's Tay Nmh provmce has not been much They sui
fered sharp casuallles as they nsked a concentratiOn of
forces of a siZe (three or four diVISIOnS ) seldom attempted
smce 1969
In the late phase of the operatiOn South VIetnamese
sold1ers probmg for the assault forces could fmd httle
The concentration had been dispersed
The North VIetnamese shU are not back ln the old
pnme Cambodian border sanctuanes at the Parrot's
Beak and south oppos•te the pnzed populous Mekong
Delta South V1etnamese patrols and sweeps are keepmg
these zones free from SIZable enemy bUild-ups
Even 1f Han01's forces could re establish large presence
m the sanctuanes their supply problems would be d•f
!1cult The allied Cambodian venture of 1970 cut off sea
born supplies commg m v•a the nearby Gulf of S1am
Today they would be dependent on the long vulnerable
mland trail route through Laos and Cambodia
It IS of course true that U S arhllery and a1r power
helped crucially m bluntmg Hanoi s Krek dnves Yet 11
1s not exactly fa1r to suggest, as some appraiSers have
done, that Sa1gon's reliance on thiS heavy a1r support
proves that the South V1etnamese ground troops can t
cut 11
Throughout the war, US ground forces notw•thstand
mg their own supenor firepower , were always greatly
dependent on direct tactical a1r power The calling m
of a1r stnkes m close orde1 operatwns has been routme
It has been the colllpensallon for Hanoi s tellmg mas
tery of guerrilla warfare wh1ch ne1ther U S troops no1
U S tramed South V1etnamese could match
The natural question IS What about Sa1gon s capac1ty
to prov1de 1ls own a1r support '
In the recent Krek area combat the South VIetnamese
a1r force flew hundreds of tactical sorbes-m h1gher pro
portiOn to ours than they ha&gt;e ever flown before They
were e!fecllve, but our commanders m V1etnam sa v
flatly they alone could not have done the JOb
The ARVN of course never a1e gomg to have an a1r
force which duphcates ours They w1ll have no B 52s and
few of the most sophisticated fighter bombers The)
probably Will have somewhat more bas1c alf strength
than they have today
If most of our a1r power 1s ultimately pulled out then
Sa1gon's forces obviOusly w1ll ha1 e to try to make up
the difference by gettmg more out of what they Will have
10 a1r support, and bv developmg still more ground fi re
power and maneuvermg skills
Assummg our pullout there w1ll be hard moments of
truth for Sa1gon when Han01 f1rst mounts so ~thmg b1g
to test South V1etnam's ab1hty to go 1! alone 1 the fullest
sense In the fleshmg out of Sa1gon's m•htar capacll)
to meet those tests every day counts
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

~

WIN AT BRIDGE

Top and Bottom Scores
NOK'I1i
8
.65
¥J86 2
tAK9 74
.97
WEST (D)
EAST
.A97 2
• Q 10 3
¥54
¥10 973
• Q62
tJIO
.A 105 4
... KJ83
SOUTH
.KJ84
¥AKQ
• 853
.Q6 2
None vulnerab le

West

North

East Soulh

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

It

1•

Pass INT.

Opemng lead- · 2

.
B;v Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald
'How about a
week or two of matchpomt
hands' Many of our readers
play duplicate "
J1m "Here's one from
Pittsburgh South plunked
h1s kin~ of spades on East s
queen and studied the hand
a wh1le At rubber bndge
he would undoubtedly have
cashed four hearts and two
d1amonds to be sure of h1s
contract but South felt that
makmg Just one no trump
MU!d not be a good match
pomt score Therefore he
ducked a diamond to East
at tnck two The result was
dehghtful for North and
South East returned the !0
of spades South covered
w1th the Jack West took his
ace cashed the nme of
spades and led the seven

whereupon South made the
rest of th e tncks for a top

score

Os" aid
I assu me that
East and West were mosl
unhappy '
Jtm
'The) sure were
East suggested that West
should have sh1!ted to a club
et ther before or after tak10g
h1s mne of spades West felt
that E a s t should have
p!~ye d a club mstead of the
10 of spades
Oswald
East s conten
t10n IS really vahd West
should have known tha t
South held the spade e1ght
As for West s contenllon
East m1ght well have tned
a low club when he got m
In etther case the1r JOIOl
errors gave South a top instead of what would proba
bly have been a bott o m

score

BY KEITH WISECUP
RACINE - Well, It's all overt
The Eastern Eagle 1971 football
campa1gn, that 1s They ended 11
Saturday mght here with a 51-0
threshmg of county-nval
Southern Local, to wm the1r
second stra1ght outnght
Southern Valley Conference
football IItle
And what a season 11 was'
Bes1des bemg undefeated m
nme outmgs, here are some of
the many highlights of the
season They allowed only 18
pmnts, turned 10 f1ve shutouts
scored 346 pom ts won the1r
closest game by 20 pomts
(Miller 20-0), all With rookie
coach, Roger Kirkhart wh1cH
has to make Kirkhart one of the
wmnmgest coaches m the
country at 1,000, for who can
beat that'
The Eagles also had more
than the1r share of mdlVldual
stars although all of the
starters are exceptwnal
athletes Standmg out among
the standouts were halfbacks
R1ck Sanders and Randy
Bonng
fullback Denms
E1chmger quarterback J1m
Amsbary ends Bob Caldwell
and RICk W1lhams tackles Alan

By GREG GALLO
United Press lnternallonal
Sports Writer
Wh1le Nebraska and Oklahoma the top two teams 10 the
nallon move toward a ThanksgiVIng Day showdown th1rd
ranked M1ch1gan rolls steadily
along demohshmg 1ts nvals
and still hopmg to f1msh No I
b) the season s end
1 he Wolvennes walloped
Iowa 63-7 Saturday for thm
mnth stra1ght Vlcl&lt;lry and s1xlh
m B1g Ten play th1s year
Top ranked Nebraska shut out
Iowa State 37-0 wh1le No 2
Oklahoma downed M1ssoun, 203 The two B1g E1ght schools
are expecled to go mto their
1Jov ~grudge match undefeat
ed
Ed Shuttlesworth a sopho
more fullback scored three
touchdowns and Alan Walker
added two more TD s to spark
M1ch1gan to v1ctory and an
almost cerlam mv1tat10n to the
Rose Bowl on New Years Day
E1ghth-ranked OhiO State was
upset by M1ch1gan State 17-10
and now M1ch1gan needs only to
defeat the Buckeyes m the !mal
game of the regular season to
wm the conference t1tle
Place kicker Dan Com

( N£W~PAPER ENT£1tPII.IS£ ASSN I

1.

West

North

East

Soulh

Pass
Pass

2•
3•

Pass
Pass

2NT

Holter and D1ck Stettler, guards
R1ck Hauber and John Cline and
center Roger Karr The
defensive
leaders
were
lmebacker Alan Duvall, ends
Warre n Calway and John
Sheets and cornerback Tim
Gumpf along w1th others
ment10ned on the offense
Gettmg back to Saturday
mght s game, the Eagles
domma ted everythmg from
kiCkoff to the !mal wh1stle m the
ramy,
muddy,
miserable
weather
In newmg the Eagles '
defense for the f1rst lime th1s
year, I thought 11 was every b1t
as 1mpress1ve on the field as 1t
was on paper They allowed the
Tornadoes only s1x yards net
rushmg w1th many of those
commg late 10 the !mal quarter,
two fll'st downs, and 47 yards
passmg Those pass10g yards
came on one completion m the
second quarter The Eagles
were 10 the Tornado backfield
as often as Southern was
They say m the pros a
quarterback needs around three
or four seconds to drop back and
pass The Southern passers,
Buddy Ervm and M1tch Nease,
had about a second and a half

Top Teams
Win Easy

1

The btddmg hli5 been

"'•

==!:!:!:=!::!:!

established a natwnal colleg1ate
record when he converted after
all mne M1ch1gan touchdowns to
run h1s streak to 51 bettermg
the mark set b) Al Limahelu of
San Diego State 1n 1969
Nebraska easily beat Iowa
State as scatback Johnny
Rodgers scored 1w1ce, one a 62·
yard punt return The Cornhus
kers defense held State to 124
total offensive yards It was
Nebraska s 19th stra1ght wm
and stretched Its unbeaten
streak lo 28
Oklahoma had a tougher lime
of 1t agamst fired-up M1ssoun
The Sooners fumbled four tunes
and were held scoreless m the
second half by a M1ssour1
defense that featured an e1ght
man line a move to stop
Oklahoma's vaunted runnmg
game
No 4 Alabama had to play
part of the game without 1ts
AII-Amenca cand1dale Johnny
Musso but the Cnmson T1de
hung tough agamst 18th ranked
LoUisiana Stale to wm 14-7 m a
natwnally televised mghl game
al Baton Rouge La Quarter
back Terry DaviS spnnted 16
yards for the wmmng touchdown m the third quarter and
Musso scored the two pomt
conversion to msure the VIctory
F1fth ranked Auburn, behmd
quarterback Pat Sulhvan's
three touchdown passes, held on
to defeat MlSSISSlppl State 3~21
and No 6 Georgia routed
Flonda 49-7
No 7 Penn State crushed
Maryland 63-27 as Lydell
M1tchell scored !1ve touchdowns
wh•le mnlh-ranked Notre Dame
came alive agamst Pittsburgh
and buried the Panthers, 56-7

Your

spade support has bctomeJmore
than adequate

TODA \' S QUESTION
Your partner contmues to
foUJ no h ump You show t wo

By Untied Press tnternaltonat
Mtd Amertcan Conference

League At! Games
WLT WLT
4 0 o 9 0 o

Toledo

Bowlmg Green

410

West M1chtgan

230

620
630

Oh1 o Untverstty

2JO
440
Mtamt
I 3 0 5 3 0
KenI Slale 0 J 0 3 6 0
Oh1o Conference
League All Games
WLT WLT

Oh1o Wesleyan

500

710

Baldwm Wallace

4 1 0

Moun I Unton 3 1 0
Dentson

4 2 0

7

I

l;

0

~

2 0 5 3 o
2 0 4 4 0
2 o : j ~
2 0
3 0 4 3 o
4 0 3 5 0
4 o ~ ~ ~
I 5 0
0 3 0 o 1 o
Btg Ten
League At! Games
WLT WLT
Mtchtgan
6 0 0 9 0 0
OhloSiale 5 1 0 6 2 0
Mtch Stale 4 2 0 5 4 0
Northwestern
5 4 o
4 3 0

Hetdelberg
Martella
Wtllenberg
Woosler
Ollerbe•n
Kenr.on
Captlal
Musktngum
Oberltn

3
3
2
2
2
t
1

Wtsconsm

3 3 0

IllinOIS

3 3 0

Purdue
Mmnesota
Iowa
lndtana

Akron
Ashland
Wltmtnglon

3 3 0
2 4 0

I 6 0
0 6 0

Others

Crncmnalt

Findlay
John Carroll
Defiance

Daylon
Bluff!on
Cenlral Slale
Case Western Res
YounQslown State

Ohto Northern
Hiram
Xav1er

4 4 1

ll

~
3 5 1
1 8 o
1 s 0

6
5
5
5
5
4
4
4
3
2
2
1
1
1
0

2
2
2
3
J

4
4
5
6
4
6
5
6
6

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

o

On Southern's first play,
Ervm passed 47 yards to Jun
W1lhams who was dragged
down from beh10d by Sanders
on the Eastern 18 M1tch Nease
lost a yard on the fll'st play and
an mcomplete pass followed
Nease ran agam for seven to the
12 On fourth and four, Nease
agam ran, gammg only one
yard to the 11 This was
Southern's farthest penetratiOn
RUN AMUK
The Eastern offense went
Wild agam, gomg 89 yards m 11
plays, all runnmg In order,
they were Bormg 2, Amsbary
6 Bormg 7, Sanders 3, Amshary
14, Bormg 9, Bormg 3, Amsbary
6, E1chmger 26, E1chmger 15,
and E1chmger 3 for the touch·
down Rick Blake attempted the
extras by a kick but failed, and
w1th 3 30 remammg m the fll'st

MEXICO CITY (UPI) - I
knew I'd won when that putt on
the 18th hole dropped m,'
Spamsh golfer Angel Gallardo,
who beat out veteran B1lly
Maxwell on the 18th hole
Sunday to wm the Mex1can
Open, reflected afterwards m
the locker room
I had the eas1er putt, '
Gallardo, who collected the
$5,600 f1rst pnze, sa1d 'My
putt was uphill He (Maxwell)
had a very tough downhill putt
When my ball went m, I knew I
had won '
Gallardo sank a 15--foot b1rd1e
putt on the par-four 18th hole
before a gallery of 3,000 fans,
who roared With delight
Gallardo ripped hiS cap off his
head and Jumped w1th JOY H1s
partner m th1s week's World
Cup at Palm Beach Gardens,
Fla , Ramon Sola, raced onto
the green and lifted Gallardo m
h1s arms
The Barcelona, Spam, pro
scored b1rd1es on the f1rst,
second, seventh, mnth, 17th and
18th holes wh1le bogeymg the
fourth, 12th, 13th and 15th
holes
Maxwell b1rd1ed the f1rst, the
lith and the 17th holes wh1Ie
bogeymg the lOth and 15th
Gallardo had a fmal round of 70
-two under par -for a 72-hole
score of 275 to Maxwell s oneunder-par 71 for a total score of
276, one stroke back
Lee Trevmo fm1shed m a
d1sappomting lie for third place
m the Mexican Open which he

8 0

Saturday s Oh1o
Coll09e Football Scores
By Un1ted Press International
Mlch Slate 17 Ohto State 10
Ohto Untverstly 30 Tulane 7
Mtaml 7 West Mtchlgan 6
Kenl Slale 21 Marshall 0
Cinclnna11 SO No Tex Slate 7
Daylon 21 Xavier 10
Toledo 23 No tlltnotS 8

Coast Guard 27 Case West Res
14
·a .
W Va Wesleyan 24 Martella 23
Ml Union 35 DePauw 3
Taylor lnd 10 Wtlmlnglon 0
Deftance 15 Anderson tnd 13
Findlay 45 John Carroll 20

®

sneaked m the s1x-pomter from
one yard W1th 4 34 left m the
f1rst quarter, Sanders ran the
extras to make 1t 8--0
Cornell bad to punt again, th1s
one for 21 yards The Eagle
ground
attack
became
devastatmg The sequence
Sanders 7, Amsbary 5,
E1ehmger 16, Sanders 5, Sanders 6, Sanders 12, and Bormg 5
for the score W1th 10 47 left m
the second penod, Hauber
vooted the extras to make 11 !5-

half, Eastern led 21~
The same story for the Tornadoes Three plays and a punt
Eastern started from its own
36 It took them SIX plays to
score In order, Sanders 19,
Bonng 4, a 15 yard penalty, an
mcomplete pass Bormg 9, a 10
yard pass from Amsbary to
Randy Young, and Sanders
went one yard for the score
Hauber, a 175lb guard, picked
up the stray snap back from
center on an attempted k1ck and
ran mto the end zone for the
score W1th 17 seconds
remammg m the f~rst half,
Eastern led 29-0
SECOND HALF
Eastern went to the Southern
28 m four plays, but fumbled
w1th Southern s Nell Baker
recovenng Southern bad the
ball three plays and fumbled 1t
away on their 27
Four plays later, Eastern had
scored agam This was a two
yard run by Blake R1ck
Wllhams ran the extras to make
11 37-0 w1th 6 40 left m the third
quarter
Three plays and a punt
followed for Southern Eastern
fumbled agam w1th Southern
recovenng on the Southern 20
But an Eastern mterceptwn
followed and the Eagles had the
ball agam on the 20
After E1chmger ran f1ve,

ThiS Week's Ohio
College Football Schedule
By United Press International
Norlhweslern al Ohto State
Xav1er at Bowling Green

Miami al Kent Stale
Ctnclnnall al Ohio Untverslly
Toledo at Marshall
Vll.anova at Oayton
Guslavus Adolphus al
Youngslown Stale tn I
lnd Slale Pa at Akron (n)
Captlat al Otlerbetn (n)
Baidwtn Wal at Ferris Slale
Ohio Wesleyan al Denison
Martella at Heidelberg
Kenyon al Wash &amp; Jeff
John Carroll at Mt Union
Wtles Pa at Muskmgum
Oberlin al Woosler
Ashland at Wltlenberg
Carnegie Mellon at
Case Western Reserve

Central Slale at Wayne State
Olive! al Defiance
Ohto Northern at Findlay
Kalamazoo at Htram
Wtlmmgton al Rose Poly
(n) mdtcates n1ght game

f.o.Y&gt;"q;~~;.;

xo:- v;; :&gt;"""~ ,. .. 0:::0 ::::; :W.$ -7.~:-t::- ...

I Pro Standings
X

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLIC:H,
City Editor

Pubt•shed datlv ex c ept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publ.shmg company
1 11
Court Sl
Pomerov Oh o
45769 Busmess Otf1Ce Phvne
992 2156 Ed1torlal Phone 992

Keep up your car's start power wtth
our expert engme tune up It's a fast,
mexpenstve JOb that pays btg dividends
wtth trouble free starts all wmter long.
Bring m your car-today

2157

Second class postage paid at

Pomeroy Oh1o

Natrona! advertising
representative
Bottlnelli
Gallagher tnc 12 East 42nd
St New York C1ty New York

Sub$cnpt1on rates

Dear T

~\
"But

1f

1971 b, NEA

In~~

we ha•e all runnrng dogs oltmpena/ISm expelled
from UN -who
poy btlls~"

'"II

De

l1vered by carr ie r where
available 50 cents per week

Bv Motor Route where carrier

LARRY'S SERVICE STATION

serv1ce not av,a•lable
One
month
75 By mall In Oh10
and
One year $14 oo
S1x
S7 25
Three
Subscription
Sunday Times

12 INCH
ANY ONE ITEM 9~~.......... ~1.00
ANY ONE ITEM 12~~ ........•2.00
Offer Good
Nov.S-11 Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.

SHAMMY'S DRIVE-IN

Phone 992-2366

190 Mulberry Ave.

Phone 992-5786
Just Below the Bndge

Pomeroy, Ohro

NFL Slandtngs
By Untied Press tnternaltona I
Amencan Conference
East
W L T Pet
6 1 I 857
M1am1
5 2 0 714
Balhmore
3 5 0 375
NY Jels
3 5 0 375
New England
0
8 0 000
Buffalo
Central
W L T Pet
440500
Ptllsburgh
440500
Cleveland
161143
Houston
170000
Cmcmnatt
West
W L T Pel
Oakland
5 I 2 833
Kansas Ctty
5 2 I 714
San Otego
3 5 0 375
Denver
2 5 I 286
East
W L T Pet
Washmglon
6 I 1 857
Dallas
5 3 0 625
51 LoutS
J 5 0 375
NY Gtanls
3 5 0 375
Phtladelph•a
2 5 I 286
Central
WLTPcl
Mlnnesofa
620750
5 2 I 714
Detroit
Chtcago
530625
Green Bay
341429
West
W L T Pel
San Franmco
6 2 0 750
Los Angeles
4 2 1 667
Altanla
4 3 1 571
New Orleans
2 4 2 333
Sunday's Results
Altanla 9 Clnctnnat• 6
Ptllsburgh 26 Cleve 9
Mlamt 34 Buffalo 0
New England 28 Houslon 20
NY Jels 13 Kansas Ctly 10
Washtnglon 7 Phtla 7
N Y Gtants 35 San Otego 17
Dallas 16 St Louis 13
Green Bay 17 Chtcago 14
Oakland 21 New Orleans 21
San Fran 13 Mtnnesola 9
Delrotl 24 Denver 20
(Only games scheduled!
Monday's Games
Los Angeles al Ball (night!
(Only game scheduled!

Clncmnatt at Denver

Cleveland al Kansas Clly
Green Bay al Mtnnesola
Houslon al Oakland
Los Angeles al Delrotl
New Orleans at San Fran
N Y Giants at Atlanla
Phlladephla al Dallas
Plllsburgh al Mlamt
Washlnglon al Chtcago
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games

Sl Louts at San Diego {ntghl)
Marton Catholic 19 North Union
8

Cleve East Tech 23 Cleve
John Adams 12
Cle Benedlcttne 54 Cle John
Hay o
Cleve South 14 Cleve Rhodes 12
Eucltd 14 Shaker Hetghts 8
Cleve Lutheran East 26 Beach
woodO
Fatrporl Harbor 7 Ktrll•nd 6
Ktskl Prep 36
Western Reserve Academy 14
Lanton Lenrrar Lathollc 10
Canton 51 Thomas Acqutnas 9
Can Tlmken 26 Youngs Wilson
0

l

I

f

~)

Batllmore al NY Jets
Buffalo al New England

9 INQi

and pledged to do all he could
to make the next Mex1can Open
both a b1gger and a better
tournament
He said that he would talk
w1th the orgamzers about
mcreasmg the purse to about
$70,000 or 80,000 Trevmo
donated hiS $2,333 check to
Father Wilham Wasson, director of the Our Little Brothers
and S1sters" Catholic orphange
Trevmo also rece1ved an
honorary membership m the
mex1can Professwnal Golf As
soc1allon He gave h1s golf cap
and h1s ball away after the 18th
hole, was besieged by fans and
s1gned autographs on the backs
of sh1ris, p1eces of paper golf
clubs and whatever else was
handy

had wanted to wm very badly
to put together four nat1onal
open hUes m one year He won
the U S , Canadian and Bnt1sh
opens thiS year
"! m commg back to wm this
tournament next year and I'm
commg one week early to
pracllce," Trevmo sa1d He
added that 1l was very d•ff1cult
to wm two tournaments backto back, notmg that he was
fresh off his Sahara lnv1tatwnal
v1ctory m Las Vegas the
previOus weekend
The World Cup Tournament
starts on Thursday and Trevmo
left Monday mormng on a
direct MeXICO Clty-M1am•
fl1ght
At the awards ceremony,
Trevmo took the microphone

National Conference

Don't let winter
"won't starts"
catch you!

The Daily Sentinel

Sanders went the rema1mng 15
for the score w1th I 141efl m the
Uurd quarter Young, who made
the mterception mmutes before,
ran 10 the extras to make 11 45--0
Eastern p1cked off another
Southern pass and scored the 6
pomts 10 the fourth quarter fhe
drive went 50 yards m eight
plays w1th Alan Holter, a 200 lb
tackle, takmg 1t over from one
yard out This came w1th 6 12
remammg A pass from Hauber
to Marvm Taylor fell Ill·
complete for the extras A first
attempt was successful but
Eastern was offside
The Eagles had many of the1r
f1rst strmgers m the game
throughout the second half
The1r !1rst team offense was m
the game on thell' !mal series of
downs although they were
taken out earlier The Eagles
had their second team defense
durmg the !mal half of the
courth quarter
The undefeated season for the
Eagles was the longest wmnmg
streak ( 12-0, mcludmg three at
the end of last season) by any
Me1gs County team smce the old
Rutland Red Devils d1d the tnck
m 1959 Those Red Dev1ls,
coached by Jun Vennar1 went
17 stra1~ht over a penod of two
years without a defeat A tie
was mc!uded early m that
streak

!standings 1Gallardo Captures MO Title

0

aces at1d he b1ds f1ve no h ump
What do you do now?
An -. \\('T Tomorro\\

They'll Do It Every Time

Gnd

~

17
lndtana Slale 37 Akron 10
Ashland 45 Waynesburg Pa 7
DeniSon 35 Oterbetn 0
Bait Slale 28 Wltlenberg 21
Captlal 15 Bald Wallace 14
Ohio Wesleyan 37 Oberlin 7
Woosler 27 Centre, Ky 17
Heidelberg 30 Musk1ngum 3
Northwood Mtch 14 Blufflon 7
Edinboro Pa 19 Ohio Norlhern

Wh at do you do now?

rour spades

•

Bow l•ng Grn 34 Tex Arlmgton

?

You South hold
.AQ4 ¥K6 tAQI085 4Kl09
A-B1d

before they e1ther threw the ball
or were demohshed, many
limes both
Southern, coached by Bruce
Wallace, had 1ts three game
wmmng streak ended and any
chance of a lie for the Southern
Valley Conference IItle rumed
The Tornadoes are now 3--5
overall and 2-2 m SV AC play
They have a game w1th the
North Galha Pirates m Gallla
County next week
,
HOW IT WENT
After Eastern kicked off,
Southern ran three plays,
gammg only four yards Bill
Cornell's punt went almost
straight up m the a1r, came
down on an Eastern player's
shoulder, and was recovered by
the Tornadoes for a f1rst down
But three more runnmg plays
failed to get a fll'st down, so
Cornell punted agam, th1s tune
Tl yards
Th1s first Eastern senes of
downs totally described the
remamder of the game Bormg
ganed 11, Sanders went for 18,
Sanders earned two more times
for 14 yards, then three stra1ght
cames by Sanders after an
Eastern 15 yard penalty, gamed
24 yards Amsbary then

Sunday's Games

w

A ''money tree" plamed by non-relatives IS the mcest kind of
gift for Goldenyears (wlfo can use the cash toward a tr1p or some
other very speclal thmg)
But the IIlilS should have let frieods promote this part of the
party n "aeta" better with guests when the lmmed18te family
im't obviously involved with gift promotion - H

Dear Reader-Many peo
pie have wntten in about
this smce I mentioned the
young man of San Antomo
Tex , who was k1lled by
electrocution w1th one of
these dev•ces I usually do
not mention brand names but
w1ll make an exception The
Federal Trade CommiSSion
has banned the Relax a-Ctzor
from public sale as a health
hazard Th1s dev1ce and any
other s•m•lar dev1ce that
qses electriCity to stimulate
the -muscles to contract for
the purposes of shmmmg the
wa1st have been banned I
thmk the death of the
healthy young man men·
honed above should be ade
quate explanation for the
FTC act1on
The safest and best way to
f1ght the battle of the bulge
IS With proper exerciSe and
a sens1ble d1et to prevent
o be s 1t y I repeat, throw
away or tum m any eiectn
cal dev1ces you have pur
chased for th1s purpose
I am not talkmg about v1
brators-these do not deliver
an electTJc current to the
The VIbrators
muscles
m1ght be relaxmg but w11l
not do much for muscle tone
or we1ght reduction The
s1mple truth 1s there 1s no
short cut to prevenllon of
obes1ty and treatmg pendu
lous pots

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Nov 8,1971

NBA Slandtngs
By Untied Press tnternaltonal
Eastern Conference

'~

Statistics
E

Frrst Down s
Yards Ru sh mg
Yards Pass1 ng

Total Yards
Pa ss Atlempls

S
2 Amsbary

25
382
24
406

47
53

8
2
2

8
I
2

3
3

3
2

Pass Completions

tntercepltons 1Byl
Tolal Fumbles
Fumbles Lost

6

1 14
NO YDS

SOUfHERN
W1ll1am s

1

Sander s I 1 0 Southern
I82

Ervin

INDIVIDUAL PUNTING
Southern Cornell 5 87 17 4

None 5 87 Eastern none
17 4
KICKOFF RETURNS
Penalttes
3 33 4 36
Eastern
Blake
I 16
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Southern Mtke Nease 3 ~5 and
EASTERN
TC YDS Avg Baker J 31
Sanders
19 177 9 3
PUNT RETURNS
5 65 13 0
Erchlnger
None
Amsbary
10 57 57
INTERCEPTION RETURNS
Bortng
8 50 6 3
Eastern Young 1 5 and Dill 1
Parker
3 22 7 3 5 So"'hern lhie I 0 and Mike
Blake
3 10 3 3 Nease 1 0
W1ll1ams
1 1 10
INDIVIDUAL SCORING
Holter
I I I 0 Eastern
TO XP Tot
Mora
I
2 2 0 Sanders
2 2 1f
M Sanders
I 3 3 0 Blake
I o 6
TOTALS
52 382 7 4 Holter
1 0 o
SOUTHERN
TC YDS Avg Elchtnger
1 0 6
Mtlch Nease
12 5 0 4 Amsbary
I 0 6
Mtke Nease
9 20 2 2 Bortng
1 0 6
Robmson
3 1 0 3 Hauber
0 J 3
lhle
3 8 2 7 Young
0 2 2
Ervrn
3 14 4 7 Williams
0 2
2
J Htll
I 4 4 0 TOTALS
7 9 Sl
TOTALS
Jl 6 0 2
Southern none
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
By quarters
EASTERN
NO YDS Eastern
8 21 16 6-51
Youno
1 10 Southern
00011-0
Punts

West Paces Lakers
By Umted Press International
Jerry Wests recovery was a
pam!ul expenence for the New
York Kmcks
West, recently returned to
action after an mJury, scored 29
pomts Sunday mght as the Los
Angeles !.akers defeated New
York, 103 96 and gamed sole
possesSion of the Pacific
DIVIsiOn lead
New York hampered by
W1lhs Reed's absence for the
fifth consecutive game, got a
lot of mileage out of 1ts
starters but sorely m1ssed
captam Reed's game domm·
ance Dr Robert Kerlan, a
noted orthopaediC speClahst,
confirmed Reed has tendomlls
and the aliment should be
studied further
The Kmcks recovered bnefly
for a 93 92 lead w1th three
mmutes left, but West put m
four clutch foul shots to help
Los Angeles recover the lead
and pm New York w1th 1ts
seventh loss m 13 games
In other acbon, Golden State
defeated Seattle, 109-92, Balli·
more beat Houston, 109-106, and
Cleveland routed Portll&lt;J\d, 121\--

Chamberlam tallied only 10
pmnts, but h1s work under the
boards proved to be valuable
Jerry Lucas, Reed's f1ll10 as
startmg center, led New York
w1th 20 pmnts
San Franc1sco moved up a
half-game behmd Los Angeles
as Nate Thurmond led the
Warnors w1lh 28 pomts His
four consecullve hook shots In
the second period put the
Warnors m front for good
Spencer Haywood of Seattle
netted a game h1gh 32 pomts
Jack Mann scored 42 pomts
for Baltimore as the Bullets
won lhe1r f~rst road game of
the Natwnal Basketball AssOCI·
allon season He hit siX of mne
floor shots m the !mal quarter
to halt a Rocket surge Elvm
Hayes recovered hiS scormg
touch and tallied 32 pomts for
Houston
Bobby Sm1th and John
Johnson combmed for 50 pomts
and R1ck Roberson s.!l a
Cleveland rebound record of 23
retneves The Cavs VICtory
was the1r th1rd m nme games
They d1dn't wm No 3 until
their ~Oih game last seat10n
99
I
W1lhe McCarter paced Portland
Ga1l Goodnch netted 15 of h1s w1th 13 pomts
26 p01nts m the th1rd period to
support the Lakers attack Wilt

$

BEAT

Ohto Htgh School
Football Scores

AtlantiC DIVISIOn

W L Pel GB
Bv Umted Press International
Bos Ion
B 2 800
•
;,
Garretsvtlle
Garfield 24 Kent
Phtladelphoa B 3 727
State 0
New York
6 7 464 3112
Buffalo
5 8 385 41!2 M11an Edtson 48 South Central 0
Harnson 40 Taylor 0
Central Otvts•on
Sprtngfteld
C C 20 Ctnc Aiken 0
W L Pel GB
Tol
51
FranciS
0 To I Slrtlch 0
Ctncrnnatt
3 6 333
v, (ftel
Baltimore
4 8 333
Allanla
3 9 250 llf:z Toledo Woodward 35 Tal
Ltbbey 0
Cleveland
3 9 250 1'!2
Toledo
Scot121 Tot Macomber 6
Western Conference
Akron Hoban 27 Chane! 20
Mtdwest Dtvtston
W L Pet GB Akron Easl JS Buchtel 0
Akron Kenmore 21 Akron North
Mttwaukee
10 I 909
6
Chtcago
7 4 636 3
Delrotl
6 6 500 4'12 Ashtabula Harbor 14
Ashtabula 51 John 6
Phoentx
5 6 455 5
Da_yton Rooseveil 44 Daylon
Pacific DIVISIOn
Roth 8
W L Pel GB
Day Dunbar 14 Cine Hughes 0
Los Angeles
9 3 750
Rosecrans
6
GoldenSiale 9 4 692
'h Zanesville
Woodsfield
0
Seallte
8 4 M.7 1
Porlland
2 7 222 5'1&gt; Xenia Wtlson 16 Dtxle 6
Houston
2 11 154 1112 Ctn 51 Xavter 6 Cin Moeller 3
Ports N Dame JO New Boston
Sunday's Results
12
Balltmore 109 Houslon 106
Howland
21 Canfield o
Cleveland 120 Porlland 99
Brookfield 14 Youngs Chaney 6
Los Ang 103 New York 96
Steubenville C C 31
Golden 51109 Seallle 102
Youngstown North 0
!Only games scheduled)
1
Warren
JFK
38 Sharon Pa
Monday s Games
JF K 0
Boston vs Clncrnnat1
at Omaha Neb Lowellvtlle 35 Soulh Range 6
Nttes McKtnety 16 Sleubenvtlle
(Only game scheduled)
0

AHL Standtngs
By Un1ted Press lnlernaltonal
East
W L T Pis
8 1 I 17
Boston
7 2 2 16
Sprtngfleld
5 5 3 13
Nova Scotia
4 7 4 12
Prov•dence
4 6 2 10
Rochesler
West
W L T Pis
Hershey
9 1 1 19
Ctncmnatl
6 2 4 16
Cleveland
4 5 4 12
Batltmore
3 9 3 9
Richmond
4 5 1 9
Ttdewaler
1 12 1 3
Sunday's Results
Providence 3 Balttmore 2
Richmond 5 Ttdewaler I
(Only gam1e scheduled)

Newark Catholic 20 Danv1lle 0
Zanesville
Rosecrans
6

THE HIGH
COST OF
BUYING A

NEW CAR
F1n1nce your new car wltll
Nat1onw1dt

LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

~
CALL

P.J. PAULEY
PHONE 992 2311
307 Sprtng AYI , flomtroy

~~

u

NATIONWIDE

!~~~~~A,!:'~~

NATIOt!W tOf. llf[ INSURANCE CON!PANY

WoodSfteld 0

a handy budget
•
Improvement

kit

Monaav's Games

(No games scheduled I
NHL Slandtngs
By Un1ted Presslnlernaltonal
East
W L T Pis
9 I 4 22
New York
9 2 2 20
Monlreal
8 4 I 17
Baston
4
5 5 13
Toronto
5 B 2 12
Vancouver
4 7 4 12
Buffa to
3 10 2 8
Delroll
West
WLTPis
Minnesota
10 2 2 22
Chicago
11 4 0 22
Caltfornta
5 6 3 13
Pitlsburgh
5 8 2 12
Phlladetphta
S 7 t 11
51 Louis
3 9 I 7
Los Angeles
2 10 I 5
Sunday's Results
Monlreal 3 Boston 2
Mlnnesola 3 Ph tla 0
, Buffato 3 Delrotl 3
Chtcago 4 Plllsburgh 1
California 8 Toronlo I
(Only games scheduled)

i.7

INDIVIDUAL PASSING
Easlern Amsbary 1 1 2 and

• NOTE LOANS
• LARGER LOANS
• FINANCING
12SE

~~AIN

992 2171

POMEROY, 0 .

Monday's Games

I No games sched"ledl

'

L

�•

z- The Daily Sentlnel,Midoleport-Pam,roy, 0., Nov. 1,1!1'11

EDITORIALS

Ah, Garbage Cans
Lined with Gold

Electric
Reducers
Can Kill

Innocent Bystander at the U.N.
•

•

The famous town whose Citizens supported themselves
by takmg m each othe1 s laundry was purely mylh1cal, of
course But there s a !01 real town m V1rgm1a that hopes
to solve 1ts economic problems by takmg m garbage from
Washmgton Baltimore and other nearby b•g Cities
Cra•gsv11le a Shenandoah Valley commumty With a
population of 978 the last time anybod) looked IS con
vertmg an abandoned cement plant mto a reg1onal gar
bage recychng cente1 wh1ch could provide 100 new JObs
and a $1 m1lhon payroll
The operation scheduled to start next January will m
volve the separatiOn of refuse mto 1ts bas1c components
- paper (usually about 50 per cent per ton) food scraps
111 per cent ) bottles 17 per cent) steel cans 14 per centl

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D
Dear Dr. Lamb-In the
paper you menhqned the use
of electrical d e VI c e s to
strengthen t h e abdommal
muscles and how dangerous
they were You suggested
they be d•scarded 1mmed1
ately
All I am mterested m
knowmg IS what kmd of de
v•ce--1 have a Relax a-C1zor
and was wondermg if you
meant th1s particular ma
chme

and so on

The steel cans Will be converted mto magnellte a ma
teual used m the p1ocessmg of coal and wh1ch sells for
$30 to $40 a ton Othe1 matenals that are not sold for re
cychng w11l e1ther be shredded mto a growmg med1um
for mushrooms or used as fuel m the cans mto magnetite
process
At fmt closed railroad cars Will brmg m about 500 tons
of garbage a day Cra1gsv1lle plans for an eventual dally
mput of 10 000 tons wh1ch IS about the amount generated
by four nulhon people
If the 1dea works- and 1f 1t does It w1ll be a model for
every other commumty m the nation especially as land
fill acreage runs out-the folks m Cra•gsvllle may want
to erect a Statue of Garbage beanng some such mswp
twn as
Send me yo ur JUnk your scrap the wretched refuse
of your teemmg a!fluence Send th1s the homeless trash
can-tossed to me I hit my lamp bes1de the golden re
cycling plant

.r,
r.:;;:--- '?I

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

i Voice along Broadway

$ Incentive to Study
In a first of 1ts kmd mcenbve expenment funded by
an $870 000 bundle from the U S Ofhce of Educallon par
ents and teachers of elementary schoolc hildren m four
c11les Will be pa1d hard cash 1! the k1ds enllre classes
make 's1gmf1cant Improvements m readmg and mathe
matics
Schools m Oakland Calif and San Antomo Tex w1ll
part1c1pate m both a parent and teacher bonus program
while schools m Cmcmnat1 OhiO, and Jacksonville Fla ,
w1ll llm1t themselves to a teacher bonus plan
In each school d1stnct two matchmg schools have been
selected one to serve as an expenmental school, the
other as a control school workmg With the same matenals
but not eligible for any fmanc1al reward
Pupils m all e1ght schools will be tested to determme
average class scores At the end of the year they Will be
, etested
Dependmg upon the amount of progress beyond the
avera~e yearly growth expected for a particular grade
level m a par\lcular school parents can be pa1d any
thmg from $25 to $100 and teachers from $500 to $1 200
By comparmg results w1th the control schools the
USOE hopes to be able to tell how much extra Improve
men! 1s made when teachers have a !manc1al stake m
the success of the1r students and also whether even
greater Improvement IS made when parents have a
stake as well
For much less than $870,000 we can tell them the an
swer nght now S1gmf1Cant Improvements" are gomg to
be forthcommg m at least two of these schools, or there
""'ll be a number of heart to heart talks between parents
and k1ds m Oakland and San Antomo next sprmg

I

(N EWSPAPER ENT£R.PRISE ASSN )

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

lHelen Help Us l
I

I

By Helen Bottel

j

I
I

1

SOME MATTERS OF ETIQUETTE
Dear Helen
About 50 of our friends gave us a b1g shower after Tod and I
announced our engagement They all went together and bought us
a television set Everyone contributed about $S each
Well, Tod and I aren't getting mamed He found another gil'I
and ran off With her
Ail we've already used the set, for about four months, I
couldn't turn 11 back to the store, and I couldn't sell 11 for half what
It's worth Also, I'm broke (and still m college and don1 have a
job or parents I can fall back on)
I know you're supposed to g•ve back engagement gifts if the
wedding falls through, but how can I refund $250 I don't have' lEFT, lDST AND LOW
Dear L.L and L
Your fr1ends will understand And though you may not think
so now, there'll be a next tune around When that day comes,
make sure those who were Invited to your first shower are
somehow !Did that they've already g1ven - H
Dear Helen
Ail a secretary to an exerutive of a large fll'lll, I find I have to
bite my tongue for silence when a caller learns that the person he
wants IS unavailable and says, "I'd like to talk to SOMEONE "
Does he think he's talklll8 to a tape recorder or computer'
Usually, by gentle prodding I fmd out what he wants, and give a
satisfactory answer After all, pnvate secretaries aren't stupid'
Wby can't busmess callers use better manners' SOMEONE
Dear Someone
Callers such as these are m the same box With busmess people
, who g~ve a name and number, but no message - and expect the •
busy executive to call them back' - H
Dear Helen
They don't ask what color you are on Job applications any
more How come they still have a space marked 'Sex"' I thought
discrimination was outlawed m such matters - NO "SEX"
PLEASE
Dear No
Not yet But perhaps soon, though there are stlJl a few Jobs
(longshoremen, for example) wh1ch aren't exactly suited to the
average woman
Mn WUma Scott He1de, president of National Organization
for Women gives tlliB adv1ce
"On employment appl• rations wh1ch ask "Sex" you can put
down, 'Yea' or 'What d
11 ' "ve m mind'' or 'Not In the office" "Butmyfavorlte• ,,, s 'lgaveat home'"-H
Dear Helen
Recently one of our neighbors had a golden wedding anDiversary. Their sons put on a big party On the bottom of the
lnvltatlons tbey wrote "Please lrmg money Instead of a gift "
'lbla aeem1 disgustlngly commerCIBI We had planned a nice
gift, but we don'tlike to be dunned for money Is thiS proper• - T

'

BY JACK O'Brian
NEW YORK (KFS) - New album out IS
titled "Fulton Fish Market' starring a lad
named Jamea Lat real name James Lategano,
he really works (the last SIX years) at the Fulton
Fish Market downtown, sang betimes (for free)
at the Village Gaslight Club and m Central Park,
where a Metromedia Records exec harkened and
Signed him to a 1record pact, songs all are by
James late, who lives m an East Harlem
tenement, and are about hiS beloved Fulton Fish
Market, so please don't carp at thell' authentiCity
John Wayne's 'The Cowboys" film IS hemg
hosannaed at Warners as "better than 'True
Gr1t ' " Next cops' scandal - bnbery to let
law-busting at skyscraper construction Sites
alone, and to let garages and parklll8 lots stash
their cars anywhere, on Sidewalks, doubleparked etc
A longplay petty larceny con·
tinues at small mght spots where doormen
double-park customers' cars Our entll'e street
was blocked one midnight, afl(l we called the
station house (the much-accused 19th precUICI)
told them who we were, and asked if they would
clear the street so an octngenanan lady we know
could be driven to the apartment house door
No cars came, we walked agam, and sugg~sted
we might put 11 m the paper W1lhm a mmute
men were pourmg out of the corner saloon,
hoppmg mto !hell' cars and driVIng them around
the block - someone obviOusly called someone
at the saloon
B1gN Y -based men's (maybe women's too)
clothing flnlls are c!osmg !hell' U S factones
and manufacturmg \hell' duds m Korea, why'
Uruon pay-&lt;!scalation demands The most skilled
seamstresses get $35 a month m Korea, and only
a couple of days off a year, one of them Chmtmas our spy told us
The runaway trend m
many mdustries IS!l't confined In H'wood and the
!ibn busmess even Germany's top camera
f1rms are manufacturmg their preciSion
products m Singapore
We were at the Hong Kong all'port once w1th
Morton Downey, and 11 was rainmg Exportunport executive Dick Malig was seemg us off,
doffed hiB plastic raincoat and draped if over
Mort Downey Mort demurred but D1ck mslSted
he had 4 more because he'd sent only several
of a dozen samples to a California Importer and,
"How many do I need'"
The deal was made on the spot and Mort sold
them for $1 each (they cost $8 to $12 here In those
days generally)
The dlagraceful N Y police scandals
comc1de exactly w1th the release (by Crown
Publishers) of James D (Red) Horan's 'The

Bm~rs

WORlD

Blue Messiah," all about crooked cops It antiCipated many of the Knapp Conunlssion 's
fmdmgs, deta1ls a precmct by-precinct
organization of centralized payoffs, formation of
a natwnal pollee group controlled and
manipulated by the mob mlo a natiOnal strike
One of the great mvest~gating reporters (on the
N Y Journal American), Red knows more about
such orgaruzed skulduggery than any newshawk
we ve known m our Manhattan decades
His
articles on drug addicts (Red noaed as an out-&lt;lf
state "pusher" m GreenWich Village) resulted m
psssage of a bill Signed by Gov Nelson
Rockefeller wh1ch made addicts "Sick persons"
rather than crunmals, second state to take that
humarutar1an step "The Blue Mess~ah" really
should be mslde.(!()ps-&amp;uff
Centimillionalre Nathan Cwnmlngs had one
of the year's great parties on hiB 75th llrthday at
the Waldorf - and he's already hll'ed Meyer
DaviS' orchestra for hls 80th "Locale remains
undeCided but the date lB definite," the blllhe
septu~enanan wrote Meyer
Revebitlon
rughtclub owner U!e Canaan formed Revelation
Records, company of the same name's also been
started by Michael Butler, producer of "Hair"
Lindsay says c1ty workers must stop
moonlightmg that mean Jawn must atop run·
nmg for preSident' VesuVIO Restaurant Is 70
years old - 35 years on Mulberry St , 35 years to
now at 1ts W 48th st (jst east of Bdwy ) location

Dear Dr Lam b- You
wrote that menstruahon 1s
unusual at 57 I w1ll soon be
62 and I still menstruate,
two to thr~ times a year It
stopped for slx years, now
for four years I have men
struated SIX days each time

Dear Reader- You are
deflmtely unusual I hope
you have had a checkup by
rour doctor to be sure that
11 1s menstruation Your
story IS so unusual that I
would like to repeat a~am,
that any woman m m1ddle
life who has stopped men
struatmg and starts bl~ding
agam should have an lm
mediate exammation by her
Actor George Segal as a TV guest IS an en- doctor Let your doctor de
thus•asbcally bland performer, noisily dull Clde 1! 1! 1s Important or not
when he bangs h1s frat-house banjo Nothing after he has had a chance
to examme you
startlmg any more about actresses and actors
announcmg they live together Without mamage,
Dear Dr Lamb-! am 12
years
old and have an un
British actress O!arlotte Rarnpling goes them
demable
habit of slumpmg
all one better- says she has two men m her life,
one a model and the other a theatncal manager Is there anythmg I can do
to break the habit bes1des
and, "I've never beenbapp!er mmylife"
weanng braces'
PariS has passed a law which only should
Dear Reader-Wanhng to
happen here motoriSts who splash pedesl1'1811S
IS half the battle Braces
are subJect to a lt)-franc fine ($! 90) We'd add
usually are not helpful 10
the cost of cleaning the victim's clothes On hiB correcting
posture unless
TV popcorn cornmerClal, Joe Namath fondles a there 1s a skeletal problem
football and says popcorn ls his :lnd favonte that needs correchon Mus
cles supported by a brace
love that puts hiB gll'ls m 3rd place?
The hockey wr1ter Stan Fischlers expect a become weaker and less ef
fective One of the best a1ds
little Jan skater
Elia Kazan at Mykonos to good posture IS a good
seemed not at all WOrried about Greek politicos all round exercise program
lookmg for locations for his "Trilogy" film, he If your muscles are strong
SBJd 1t 'll either be Greece or Spam and he prefers enough, you will be less like
Greece "I like the food better" We've never ly to slump Much of the rest
IS habit
been m Greece, but you can't much beat the
Start a regular set of exMadrid food m the Jockey Club or Horscher's
ewses to strengthen the
And the gazpacho In the Ritz Garden t We'll take muscles between your
Madrid
shoulder blades and the m uscles along your back If you
have a phys1cal educatiOn
Q-What IS the m1dmght teacher or gym teacher, ask
sun?
for help m developmg a good
A-The sun sh1n1ng at set of exerc1ses
m ldmght m the Archc or
(NEWSPAPER ENTf:lNISE A5SN )
Antarctic summer

Q-Wh1ch

tallest tree'

IS

the world's

A-The Howard Ubbey
redwood 367 6 feet With a
grrth of 44 feet, that stands
on Redwood Creek, Humboldt County Call!

BRUCE SIOSSAT

Oassy Eagles Win 2nd Straight SVAC Title

S. Viet Forces--Just How Ready?
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEA )
Though the North Vtetnamese shU like to stage assaults
to comc1de w1th events hke election and maugurallon m
South VIetnam their capac1ty to embarrass Sa1gon seems
hm1ted They seldom sustam attacks for very long
The net of thmr October operaUons m the Krek area
of eastern Cambodia and across the border m South V1et
nam's Tay Nmh provmce has not been much They sui
fered sharp casuallles as they nsked a concentratiOn of
forces of a siZe (three or four diVISIOnS ) seldom attempted
smce 1969
In the late phase of the operatiOn South VIetnamese
sold1ers probmg for the assault forces could fmd httle
The concentration had been dispersed
The North VIetnamese shU are not back ln the old
pnme Cambodian border sanctuanes at the Parrot's
Beak and south oppos•te the pnzed populous Mekong
Delta South V1etnamese patrols and sweeps are keepmg
these zones free from SIZable enemy bUild-ups
Even 1f Han01's forces could re establish large presence
m the sanctuanes their supply problems would be d•f
!1cult The allied Cambodian venture of 1970 cut off sea
born supplies commg m v•a the nearby Gulf of S1am
Today they would be dependent on the long vulnerable
mland trail route through Laos and Cambodia
It IS of course true that U S arhllery and a1r power
helped crucially m bluntmg Hanoi s Krek dnves Yet 11
1s not exactly fa1r to suggest, as some appraiSers have
done, that Sa1gon's reliance on thiS heavy a1r support
proves that the South V1etnamese ground troops can t
cut 11
Throughout the war, US ground forces notw•thstand
mg their own supenor firepower , were always greatly
dependent on direct tactical a1r power The calling m
of a1r stnkes m close orde1 operatwns has been routme
It has been the colllpensallon for Hanoi s tellmg mas
tery of guerrilla warfare wh1ch ne1ther U S troops no1
U S tramed South V1etnamese could match
The natural question IS What about Sa1gon s capac1ty
to prov1de 1ls own a1r support '
In the recent Krek area combat the South VIetnamese
a1r force flew hundreds of tactical sorbes-m h1gher pro
portiOn to ours than they ha&gt;e ever flown before They
were e!fecllve, but our commanders m V1etnam sa v
flatly they alone could not have done the JOb
The ARVN of course never a1e gomg to have an a1r
force which duphcates ours They w1ll have no B 52s and
few of the most sophisticated fighter bombers The)
probably Will have somewhat more bas1c alf strength
than they have today
If most of our a1r power 1s ultimately pulled out then
Sa1gon's forces obviOusly w1ll ha1 e to try to make up
the difference by gettmg more out of what they Will have
10 a1r support, and bv developmg still more ground fi re
power and maneuvermg skills
Assummg our pullout there w1ll be hard moments of
truth for Sa1gon when Han01 f1rst mounts so ~thmg b1g
to test South V1etnam's ab1hty to go 1! alone 1 the fullest
sense In the fleshmg out of Sa1gon's m•htar capacll)
to meet those tests every day counts
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

~

WIN AT BRIDGE

Top and Bottom Scores
NOK'I1i
8
.65
¥J86 2
tAK9 74
.97
WEST (D)
EAST
.A97 2
• Q 10 3
¥54
¥10 973
• Q62
tJIO
.A 105 4
... KJ83
SOUTH
.KJ84
¥AKQ
• 853
.Q6 2
None vulnerab le

West

North

East Soulh

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

It

1•

Pass INT.

Opemng lead- · 2

.
B;v Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald
'How about a
week or two of matchpomt
hands' Many of our readers
play duplicate "
J1m "Here's one from
Pittsburgh South plunked
h1s kin~ of spades on East s
queen and studied the hand
a wh1le At rubber bndge
he would undoubtedly have
cashed four hearts and two
d1amonds to be sure of h1s
contract but South felt that
makmg Just one no trump
MU!d not be a good match
pomt score Therefore he
ducked a diamond to East
at tnck two The result was
dehghtful for North and
South East returned the !0
of spades South covered
w1th the Jack West took his
ace cashed the nme of
spades and led the seven

whereupon South made the
rest of th e tncks for a top

score

Os" aid
I assu me that
East and West were mosl
unhappy '
Jtm
'The) sure were
East suggested that West
should have sh1!ted to a club
et ther before or after tak10g
h1s mne of spades West felt
that E a s t should have
p!~ye d a club mstead of the
10 of spades
Oswald
East s conten
t10n IS really vahd West
should have known tha t
South held the spade e1ght
As for West s contenllon
East m1ght well have tned
a low club when he got m
In etther case the1r JOIOl
errors gave South a top instead of what would proba
bly have been a bott o m

score

BY KEITH WISECUP
RACINE - Well, It's all overt
The Eastern Eagle 1971 football
campa1gn, that 1s They ended 11
Saturday mght here with a 51-0
threshmg of county-nval
Southern Local, to wm the1r
second stra1ght outnght
Southern Valley Conference
football IItle
And what a season 11 was'
Bes1des bemg undefeated m
nme outmgs, here are some of
the many highlights of the
season They allowed only 18
pmnts, turned 10 f1ve shutouts
scored 346 pom ts won the1r
closest game by 20 pomts
(Miller 20-0), all With rookie
coach, Roger Kirkhart wh1cH
has to make Kirkhart one of the
wmnmgest coaches m the
country at 1,000, for who can
beat that'
The Eagles also had more
than the1r share of mdlVldual
stars although all of the
starters are exceptwnal
athletes Standmg out among
the standouts were halfbacks
R1ck Sanders and Randy
Bonng
fullback Denms
E1chmger quarterback J1m
Amsbary ends Bob Caldwell
and RICk W1lhams tackles Alan

By GREG GALLO
United Press lnternallonal
Sports Writer
Wh1le Nebraska and Oklahoma the top two teams 10 the
nallon move toward a ThanksgiVIng Day showdown th1rd
ranked M1ch1gan rolls steadily
along demohshmg 1ts nvals
and still hopmg to f1msh No I
b) the season s end
1 he Wolvennes walloped
Iowa 63-7 Saturday for thm
mnth stra1ght Vlcl&lt;lry and s1xlh
m B1g Ten play th1s year
Top ranked Nebraska shut out
Iowa State 37-0 wh1le No 2
Oklahoma downed M1ssoun, 203 The two B1g E1ght schools
are expecled to go mto their
1Jov ~grudge match undefeat
ed
Ed Shuttlesworth a sopho
more fullback scored three
touchdowns and Alan Walker
added two more TD s to spark
M1ch1gan to v1ctory and an
almost cerlam mv1tat10n to the
Rose Bowl on New Years Day
E1ghth-ranked OhiO State was
upset by M1ch1gan State 17-10
and now M1ch1gan needs only to
defeat the Buckeyes m the !mal
game of the regular season to
wm the conference t1tle
Place kicker Dan Com

( N£W~PAPER ENT£1tPII.IS£ ASSN I

1.

West

North

East

Soulh

Pass
Pass

2•
3•

Pass
Pass

2NT

Holter and D1ck Stettler, guards
R1ck Hauber and John Cline and
center Roger Karr The
defensive
leaders
were
lmebacker Alan Duvall, ends
Warre n Calway and John
Sheets and cornerback Tim
Gumpf along w1th others
ment10ned on the offense
Gettmg back to Saturday
mght s game, the Eagles
domma ted everythmg from
kiCkoff to the !mal wh1stle m the
ramy,
muddy,
miserable
weather
In newmg the Eagles '
defense for the f1rst lime th1s
year, I thought 11 was every b1t
as 1mpress1ve on the field as 1t
was on paper They allowed the
Tornadoes only s1x yards net
rushmg w1th many of those
commg late 10 the !mal quarter,
two fll'st downs, and 47 yards
passmg Those pass10g yards
came on one completion m the
second quarter The Eagles
were 10 the Tornado backfield
as often as Southern was
They say m the pros a
quarterback needs around three
or four seconds to drop back and
pass The Southern passers,
Buddy Ervm and M1tch Nease,
had about a second and a half

Top Teams
Win Easy

1

The btddmg hli5 been

"'•

==!:!:!:=!::!:!

established a natwnal colleg1ate
record when he converted after
all mne M1ch1gan touchdowns to
run h1s streak to 51 bettermg
the mark set b) Al Limahelu of
San Diego State 1n 1969
Nebraska easily beat Iowa
State as scatback Johnny
Rodgers scored 1w1ce, one a 62·
yard punt return The Cornhus
kers defense held State to 124
total offensive yards It was
Nebraska s 19th stra1ght wm
and stretched Its unbeaten
streak lo 28
Oklahoma had a tougher lime
of 1t agamst fired-up M1ssoun
The Sooners fumbled four tunes
and were held scoreless m the
second half by a M1ssour1
defense that featured an e1ght
man line a move to stop
Oklahoma's vaunted runnmg
game
No 4 Alabama had to play
part of the game without 1ts
AII-Amenca cand1dale Johnny
Musso but the Cnmson T1de
hung tough agamst 18th ranked
LoUisiana Stale to wm 14-7 m a
natwnally televised mghl game
al Baton Rouge La Quarter
back Terry DaviS spnnted 16
yards for the wmmng touchdown m the third quarter and
Musso scored the two pomt
conversion to msure the VIctory
F1fth ranked Auburn, behmd
quarterback Pat Sulhvan's
three touchdown passes, held on
to defeat MlSSISSlppl State 3~21
and No 6 Georgia routed
Flonda 49-7
No 7 Penn State crushed
Maryland 63-27 as Lydell
M1tchell scored !1ve touchdowns
wh•le mnlh-ranked Notre Dame
came alive agamst Pittsburgh
and buried the Panthers, 56-7

Your

spade support has bctomeJmore
than adequate

TODA \' S QUESTION
Your partner contmues to
foUJ no h ump You show t wo

By Untied Press tnternaltonat
Mtd Amertcan Conference

League At! Games
WLT WLT
4 0 o 9 0 o

Toledo

Bowlmg Green

410

West M1chtgan

230

620
630

Oh1 o Untverstty

2JO
440
Mtamt
I 3 0 5 3 0
KenI Slale 0 J 0 3 6 0
Oh1o Conference
League All Games
WLT WLT

Oh1o Wesleyan

500

710

Baldwm Wallace

4 1 0

Moun I Unton 3 1 0
Dentson

4 2 0

7

I

l;

0

~

2 0 5 3 o
2 0 4 4 0
2 o : j ~
2 0
3 0 4 3 o
4 0 3 5 0
4 o ~ ~ ~
I 5 0
0 3 0 o 1 o
Btg Ten
League At! Games
WLT WLT
Mtchtgan
6 0 0 9 0 0
OhloSiale 5 1 0 6 2 0
Mtch Stale 4 2 0 5 4 0
Northwestern
5 4 o
4 3 0

Hetdelberg
Martella
Wtllenberg
Woosler
Ollerbe•n
Kenr.on
Captlal
Musktngum
Oberltn

3
3
2
2
2
t
1

Wtsconsm

3 3 0

IllinOIS

3 3 0

Purdue
Mmnesota
Iowa
lndtana

Akron
Ashland
Wltmtnglon

3 3 0
2 4 0

I 6 0
0 6 0

Others

Crncmnalt

Findlay
John Carroll
Defiance

Daylon
Bluff!on
Cenlral Slale
Case Western Res
YounQslown State

Ohto Northern
Hiram
Xav1er

4 4 1

ll

~
3 5 1
1 8 o
1 s 0

6
5
5
5
5
4
4
4
3
2
2
1
1
1
0

2
2
2
3
J

4
4
5
6
4
6
5
6
6

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

o

On Southern's first play,
Ervm passed 47 yards to Jun
W1lhams who was dragged
down from beh10d by Sanders
on the Eastern 18 M1tch Nease
lost a yard on the fll'st play and
an mcomplete pass followed
Nease ran agam for seven to the
12 On fourth and four, Nease
agam ran, gammg only one
yard to the 11 This was
Southern's farthest penetratiOn
RUN AMUK
The Eastern offense went
Wild agam, gomg 89 yards m 11
plays, all runnmg In order,
they were Bormg 2, Amsbary
6 Bormg 7, Sanders 3, Amshary
14, Bormg 9, Bormg 3, Amsbary
6, E1chmger 26, E1chmger 15,
and E1chmger 3 for the touch·
down Rick Blake attempted the
extras by a kick but failed, and
w1th 3 30 remammg m the fll'st

MEXICO CITY (UPI) - I
knew I'd won when that putt on
the 18th hole dropped m,'
Spamsh golfer Angel Gallardo,
who beat out veteran B1lly
Maxwell on the 18th hole
Sunday to wm the Mex1can
Open, reflected afterwards m
the locker room
I had the eas1er putt, '
Gallardo, who collected the
$5,600 f1rst pnze, sa1d 'My
putt was uphill He (Maxwell)
had a very tough downhill putt
When my ball went m, I knew I
had won '
Gallardo sank a 15--foot b1rd1e
putt on the par-four 18th hole
before a gallery of 3,000 fans,
who roared With delight
Gallardo ripped hiS cap off his
head and Jumped w1th JOY H1s
partner m th1s week's World
Cup at Palm Beach Gardens,
Fla , Ramon Sola, raced onto
the green and lifted Gallardo m
h1s arms
The Barcelona, Spam, pro
scored b1rd1es on the f1rst,
second, seventh, mnth, 17th and
18th holes wh1le bogeymg the
fourth, 12th, 13th and 15th
holes
Maxwell b1rd1ed the f1rst, the
lith and the 17th holes wh1Ie
bogeymg the lOth and 15th
Gallardo had a fmal round of 70
-two under par -for a 72-hole
score of 275 to Maxwell s oneunder-par 71 for a total score of
276, one stroke back
Lee Trevmo fm1shed m a
d1sappomting lie for third place
m the Mexican Open which he

8 0

Saturday s Oh1o
Coll09e Football Scores
By Un1ted Press International
Mlch Slate 17 Ohto State 10
Ohto Untverstly 30 Tulane 7
Mtaml 7 West Mtchlgan 6
Kenl Slale 21 Marshall 0
Cinclnna11 SO No Tex Slate 7
Daylon 21 Xavier 10
Toledo 23 No tlltnotS 8

Coast Guard 27 Case West Res
14
·a .
W Va Wesleyan 24 Martella 23
Ml Union 35 DePauw 3
Taylor lnd 10 Wtlmlnglon 0
Deftance 15 Anderson tnd 13
Findlay 45 John Carroll 20

®

sneaked m the s1x-pomter from
one yard W1th 4 34 left m the
f1rst quarter, Sanders ran the
extras to make 1t 8--0
Cornell bad to punt again, th1s
one for 21 yards The Eagle
ground
attack
became
devastatmg The sequence
Sanders 7, Amsbary 5,
E1ehmger 16, Sanders 5, Sanders 6, Sanders 12, and Bormg 5
for the score W1th 10 47 left m
the second penod, Hauber
vooted the extras to make 11 !5-

half, Eastern led 21~
The same story for the Tornadoes Three plays and a punt
Eastern started from its own
36 It took them SIX plays to
score In order, Sanders 19,
Bonng 4, a 15 yard penalty, an
mcomplete pass Bormg 9, a 10
yard pass from Amsbary to
Randy Young, and Sanders
went one yard for the score
Hauber, a 175lb guard, picked
up the stray snap back from
center on an attempted k1ck and
ran mto the end zone for the
score W1th 17 seconds
remammg m the f~rst half,
Eastern led 29-0
SECOND HALF
Eastern went to the Southern
28 m four plays, but fumbled
w1th Southern s Nell Baker
recovenng Southern bad the
ball three plays and fumbled 1t
away on their 27
Four plays later, Eastern had
scored agam This was a two
yard run by Blake R1ck
Wllhams ran the extras to make
11 37-0 w1th 6 40 left m the third
quarter
Three plays and a punt
followed for Southern Eastern
fumbled agam w1th Southern
recovenng on the Southern 20
But an Eastern mterceptwn
followed and the Eagles had the
ball agam on the 20
After E1chmger ran f1ve,

ThiS Week's Ohio
College Football Schedule
By United Press International
Norlhweslern al Ohto State
Xav1er at Bowling Green

Miami al Kent Stale
Ctnclnnall al Ohio Untverslly
Toledo at Marshall
Vll.anova at Oayton
Guslavus Adolphus al
Youngslown Stale tn I
lnd Slale Pa at Akron (n)
Captlat al Otlerbetn (n)
Baidwtn Wal at Ferris Slale
Ohio Wesleyan al Denison
Martella at Heidelberg
Kenyon al Wash &amp; Jeff
John Carroll at Mt Union
Wtles Pa at Muskmgum
Oberlin al Woosler
Ashland at Wltlenberg
Carnegie Mellon at
Case Western Reserve

Central Slale at Wayne State
Olive! al Defiance
Ohto Northern at Findlay
Kalamazoo at Htram
Wtlmmgton al Rose Poly
(n) mdtcates n1ght game

f.o.Y&gt;"q;~~;.;

xo:- v;; :&gt;"""~ ,. .. 0:::0 ::::; :W.$ -7.~:-t::- ...

I Pro Standings
X

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLIC:H,
City Editor

Pubt•shed datlv ex c ept
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publ.shmg company
1 11
Court Sl
Pomerov Oh o
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992 2156 Ed1torlal Phone 992

Keep up your car's start power wtth
our expert engme tune up It's a fast,
mexpenstve JOb that pays btg dividends
wtth trouble free starts all wmter long.
Bring m your car-today

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Natrona! advertising
representative
Bottlnelli
Gallagher tnc 12 East 42nd
St New York C1ty New York

Sub$cnpt1on rates

Dear T

~\
"But

1f

1971 b, NEA

In~~

we ha•e all runnrng dogs oltmpena/ISm expelled
from UN -who
poy btlls~"

'"II

De

l1vered by carr ie r where
available 50 cents per week

Bv Motor Route where carrier

LARRY'S SERVICE STATION

serv1ce not av,a•lable
One
month
75 By mall In Oh10
and
One year $14 oo
S1x
S7 25
Three
Subscription
Sunday Times

12 INCH
ANY ONE ITEM 9~~.......... ~1.00
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Nov.S-11 Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.

SHAMMY'S DRIVE-IN

Phone 992-2366

190 Mulberry Ave.

Phone 992-5786
Just Below the Bndge

Pomeroy, Ohro

NFL Slandtngs
By Untied Press tnternaltona I
Amencan Conference
East
W L T Pet
6 1 I 857
M1am1
5 2 0 714
Balhmore
3 5 0 375
NY Jels
3 5 0 375
New England
0
8 0 000
Buffalo
Central
W L T Pet
440500
Ptllsburgh
440500
Cleveland
161143
Houston
170000
Cmcmnatt
West
W L T Pel
Oakland
5 I 2 833
Kansas Ctty
5 2 I 714
San Otego
3 5 0 375
Denver
2 5 I 286
East
W L T Pet
Washmglon
6 I 1 857
Dallas
5 3 0 625
51 LoutS
J 5 0 375
NY Gtanls
3 5 0 375
Phtladelph•a
2 5 I 286
Central
WLTPcl
Mlnnesofa
620750
5 2 I 714
Detroit
Chtcago
530625
Green Bay
341429
West
W L T Pel
San Franmco
6 2 0 750
Los Angeles
4 2 1 667
Altanla
4 3 1 571
New Orleans
2 4 2 333
Sunday's Results
Altanla 9 Clnctnnat• 6
Ptllsburgh 26 Cleve 9
Mlamt 34 Buffalo 0
New England 28 Houslon 20
NY Jels 13 Kansas Ctly 10
Washtnglon 7 Phtla 7
N Y Gtants 35 San Otego 17
Dallas 16 St Louis 13
Green Bay 17 Chtcago 14
Oakland 21 New Orleans 21
San Fran 13 Mtnnesola 9
Delrotl 24 Denver 20
(Only games scheduled!
Monday's Games
Los Angeles al Ball (night!
(Only game scheduled!

Clncmnatt at Denver

Cleveland al Kansas Clly
Green Bay al Mtnnesola
Houslon al Oakland
Los Angeles al Delrotl
New Orleans at San Fran
N Y Giants at Atlanla
Phlladephla al Dallas
Plllsburgh al Mlamt
Washlnglon al Chtcago
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's Games

Sl Louts at San Diego {ntghl)
Marton Catholic 19 North Union
8

Cleve East Tech 23 Cleve
John Adams 12
Cle Benedlcttne 54 Cle John
Hay o
Cleve South 14 Cleve Rhodes 12
Eucltd 14 Shaker Hetghts 8
Cleve Lutheran East 26 Beach
woodO
Fatrporl Harbor 7 Ktrll•nd 6
Ktskl Prep 36
Western Reserve Academy 14
Lanton Lenrrar Lathollc 10
Canton 51 Thomas Acqutnas 9
Can Tlmken 26 Youngs Wilson
0

l

I

f

~)

Batllmore al NY Jets
Buffalo al New England

9 INQi

and pledged to do all he could
to make the next Mex1can Open
both a b1gger and a better
tournament
He said that he would talk
w1th the orgamzers about
mcreasmg the purse to about
$70,000 or 80,000 Trevmo
donated hiS $2,333 check to
Father Wilham Wasson, director of the Our Little Brothers
and S1sters" Catholic orphange
Trevmo also rece1ved an
honorary membership m the
mex1can Professwnal Golf As
soc1allon He gave h1s golf cap
and h1s ball away after the 18th
hole, was besieged by fans and
s1gned autographs on the backs
of sh1ris, p1eces of paper golf
clubs and whatever else was
handy

had wanted to wm very badly
to put together four nat1onal
open hUes m one year He won
the U S , Canadian and Bnt1sh
opens thiS year
"! m commg back to wm this
tournament next year and I'm
commg one week early to
pracllce," Trevmo sa1d He
added that 1l was very d•ff1cult
to wm two tournaments backto back, notmg that he was
fresh off his Sahara lnv1tatwnal
v1ctory m Las Vegas the
previOus weekend
The World Cup Tournament
starts on Thursday and Trevmo
left Monday mormng on a
direct MeXICO Clty-M1am•
fl1ght
At the awards ceremony,
Trevmo took the microphone

National Conference

Don't let winter
"won't starts"
catch you!

The Daily Sentinel

Sanders went the rema1mng 15
for the score w1th I 141efl m the
Uurd quarter Young, who made
the mterception mmutes before,
ran 10 the extras to make 11 45--0
Eastern p1cked off another
Southern pass and scored the 6
pomts 10 the fourth quarter fhe
drive went 50 yards m eight
plays w1th Alan Holter, a 200 lb
tackle, takmg 1t over from one
yard out This came w1th 6 12
remammg A pass from Hauber
to Marvm Taylor fell Ill·
complete for the extras A first
attempt was successful but
Eastern was offside
The Eagles had many of the1r
f1rst strmgers m the game
throughout the second half
The1r !1rst team offense was m
the game on thell' !mal series of
downs although they were
taken out earlier The Eagles
had their second team defense
durmg the !mal half of the
courth quarter
The undefeated season for the
Eagles was the longest wmnmg
streak ( 12-0, mcludmg three at
the end of last season) by any
Me1gs County team smce the old
Rutland Red Devils d1d the tnck
m 1959 Those Red Dev1ls,
coached by Jun Vennar1 went
17 stra1~ht over a penod of two
years without a defeat A tie
was mc!uded early m that
streak

!standings 1Gallardo Captures MO Title

0

aces at1d he b1ds f1ve no h ump
What do you do now?
An -. \\('T Tomorro\\

They'll Do It Every Time

Gnd

~

17
lndtana Slale 37 Akron 10
Ashland 45 Waynesburg Pa 7
DeniSon 35 Oterbetn 0
Bait Slale 28 Wltlenberg 21
Captlal 15 Bald Wallace 14
Ohio Wesleyan 37 Oberlin 7
Woosler 27 Centre, Ky 17
Heidelberg 30 Musk1ngum 3
Northwood Mtch 14 Blufflon 7
Edinboro Pa 19 Ohio Norlhern

Wh at do you do now?

rour spades

•

Bow l•ng Grn 34 Tex Arlmgton

?

You South hold
.AQ4 ¥K6 tAQI085 4Kl09
A-B1d

before they e1ther threw the ball
or were demohshed, many
limes both
Southern, coached by Bruce
Wallace, had 1ts three game
wmmng streak ended and any
chance of a lie for the Southern
Valley Conference IItle rumed
The Tornadoes are now 3--5
overall and 2-2 m SV AC play
They have a game w1th the
North Galha Pirates m Gallla
County next week
,
HOW IT WENT
After Eastern kicked off,
Southern ran three plays,
gammg only four yards Bill
Cornell's punt went almost
straight up m the a1r, came
down on an Eastern player's
shoulder, and was recovered by
the Tornadoes for a f1rst down
But three more runnmg plays
failed to get a fll'st down, so
Cornell punted agam, th1s tune
Tl yards
Th1s first Eastern senes of
downs totally described the
remamder of the game Bormg
ganed 11, Sanders went for 18,
Sanders earned two more times
for 14 yards, then three stra1ght
cames by Sanders after an
Eastern 15 yard penalty, gamed
24 yards Amsbary then

Sunday's Games

w

A ''money tree" plamed by non-relatives IS the mcest kind of
gift for Goldenyears (wlfo can use the cash toward a tr1p or some
other very speclal thmg)
But the IIlilS should have let frieods promote this part of the
party n "aeta" better with guests when the lmmed18te family
im't obviously involved with gift promotion - H

Dear Reader-Many peo
pie have wntten in about
this smce I mentioned the
young man of San Antomo
Tex , who was k1lled by
electrocution w1th one of
these dev•ces I usually do
not mention brand names but
w1ll make an exception The
Federal Trade CommiSSion
has banned the Relax a-Ctzor
from public sale as a health
hazard Th1s dev1ce and any
other s•m•lar dev1ce that
qses electriCity to stimulate
the -muscles to contract for
the purposes of shmmmg the
wa1st have been banned I
thmk the death of the
healthy young man men·
honed above should be ade
quate explanation for the
FTC act1on
The safest and best way to
f1ght the battle of the bulge
IS With proper exerciSe and
a sens1ble d1et to prevent
o be s 1t y I repeat, throw
away or tum m any eiectn
cal dev1ces you have pur
chased for th1s purpose
I am not talkmg about v1
brators-these do not deliver
an electTJc current to the
The VIbrators
muscles
m1ght be relaxmg but w11l
not do much for muscle tone
or we1ght reduction The
s1mple truth 1s there 1s no
short cut to prevenllon of
obes1ty and treatmg pendu
lous pots

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Nov 8,1971

NBA Slandtngs
By Untied Press tnternaltonal
Eastern Conference

'~

Statistics
E

Frrst Down s
Yards Ru sh mg
Yards Pass1 ng

Total Yards
Pa ss Atlempls

S
2 Amsbary

25
382
24
406

47
53

8
2
2

8
I
2

3
3

3
2

Pass Completions

tntercepltons 1Byl
Tolal Fumbles
Fumbles Lost

6

1 14
NO YDS

SOUfHERN
W1ll1am s

1

Sander s I 1 0 Southern
I82

Ervin

INDIVIDUAL PUNTING
Southern Cornell 5 87 17 4

None 5 87 Eastern none
17 4
KICKOFF RETURNS
Penalttes
3 33 4 36
Eastern
Blake
I 16
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Southern Mtke Nease 3 ~5 and
EASTERN
TC YDS Avg Baker J 31
Sanders
19 177 9 3
PUNT RETURNS
5 65 13 0
Erchlnger
None
Amsbary
10 57 57
INTERCEPTION RETURNS
Bortng
8 50 6 3
Eastern Young 1 5 and Dill 1
Parker
3 22 7 3 5 So"'hern lhie I 0 and Mike
Blake
3 10 3 3 Nease 1 0
W1ll1ams
1 1 10
INDIVIDUAL SCORING
Holter
I I I 0 Eastern
TO XP Tot
Mora
I
2 2 0 Sanders
2 2 1f
M Sanders
I 3 3 0 Blake
I o 6
TOTALS
52 382 7 4 Holter
1 0 o
SOUTHERN
TC YDS Avg Elchtnger
1 0 6
Mtlch Nease
12 5 0 4 Amsbary
I 0 6
Mtke Nease
9 20 2 2 Bortng
1 0 6
Robmson
3 1 0 3 Hauber
0 J 3
lhle
3 8 2 7 Young
0 2 2
Ervrn
3 14 4 7 Williams
0 2
2
J Htll
I 4 4 0 TOTALS
7 9 Sl
TOTALS
Jl 6 0 2
Southern none
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
By quarters
EASTERN
NO YDS Eastern
8 21 16 6-51
Youno
1 10 Southern
00011-0
Punts

West Paces Lakers
By Umted Press International
Jerry Wests recovery was a
pam!ul expenence for the New
York Kmcks
West, recently returned to
action after an mJury, scored 29
pomts Sunday mght as the Los
Angeles !.akers defeated New
York, 103 96 and gamed sole
possesSion of the Pacific
DIVIsiOn lead
New York hampered by
W1lhs Reed's absence for the
fifth consecutive game, got a
lot of mileage out of 1ts
starters but sorely m1ssed
captam Reed's game domm·
ance Dr Robert Kerlan, a
noted orthopaediC speClahst,
confirmed Reed has tendomlls
and the aliment should be
studied further
The Kmcks recovered bnefly
for a 93 92 lead w1th three
mmutes left, but West put m
four clutch foul shots to help
Los Angeles recover the lead
and pm New York w1th 1ts
seventh loss m 13 games
In other acbon, Golden State
defeated Seattle, 109-92, Balli·
more beat Houston, 109-106, and
Cleveland routed Portll&lt;J\d, 121\--

Chamberlam tallied only 10
pmnts, but h1s work under the
boards proved to be valuable
Jerry Lucas, Reed's f1ll10 as
startmg center, led New York
w1th 20 pmnts
San Franc1sco moved up a
half-game behmd Los Angeles
as Nate Thurmond led the
Warnors w1lh 28 pomts His
four consecullve hook shots In
the second period put the
Warnors m front for good
Spencer Haywood of Seattle
netted a game h1gh 32 pomts
Jack Mann scored 42 pomts
for Baltimore as the Bullets
won lhe1r f~rst road game of
the Natwnal Basketball AssOCI·
allon season He hit siX of mne
floor shots m the !mal quarter
to halt a Rocket surge Elvm
Hayes recovered hiS scormg
touch and tallied 32 pomts for
Houston
Bobby Sm1th and John
Johnson combmed for 50 pomts
and R1ck Roberson s.!l a
Cleveland rebound record of 23
retneves The Cavs VICtory
was the1r th1rd m nme games
They d1dn't wm No 3 until
their ~Oih game last seat10n
99
I
W1lhe McCarter paced Portland
Ga1l Goodnch netted 15 of h1s w1th 13 pomts
26 p01nts m the th1rd period to
support the Lakers attack Wilt

$

BEAT

Ohto Htgh School
Football Scores

AtlantiC DIVISIOn

W L Pel GB
Bv Umted Press International
Bos Ion
B 2 800
•
;,
Garretsvtlle
Garfield 24 Kent
Phtladelphoa B 3 727
State 0
New York
6 7 464 3112
Buffalo
5 8 385 41!2 M11an Edtson 48 South Central 0
Harnson 40 Taylor 0
Central Otvts•on
Sprtngfteld
C C 20 Ctnc Aiken 0
W L Pel GB
Tol
51
FranciS
0 To I Slrtlch 0
Ctncrnnatt
3 6 333
v, (ftel
Baltimore
4 8 333
Allanla
3 9 250 llf:z Toledo Woodward 35 Tal
Ltbbey 0
Cleveland
3 9 250 1'!2
Toledo
Scot121 Tot Macomber 6
Western Conference
Akron Hoban 27 Chane! 20
Mtdwest Dtvtston
W L Pet GB Akron Easl JS Buchtel 0
Akron Kenmore 21 Akron North
Mttwaukee
10 I 909
6
Chtcago
7 4 636 3
Delrotl
6 6 500 4'12 Ashtabula Harbor 14
Ashtabula 51 John 6
Phoentx
5 6 455 5
Da_yton Rooseveil 44 Daylon
Pacific DIVISIOn
Roth 8
W L Pel GB
Day Dunbar 14 Cine Hughes 0
Los Angeles
9 3 750
Rosecrans
6
GoldenSiale 9 4 692
'h Zanesville
Woodsfield
0
Seallte
8 4 M.7 1
Porlland
2 7 222 5'1&gt; Xenia Wtlson 16 Dtxle 6
Houston
2 11 154 1112 Ctn 51 Xavter 6 Cin Moeller 3
Ports N Dame JO New Boston
Sunday's Results
12
Balltmore 109 Houslon 106
Howland
21 Canfield o
Cleveland 120 Porlland 99
Brookfield 14 Youngs Chaney 6
Los Ang 103 New York 96
Steubenville C C 31
Golden 51109 Seallle 102
Youngstown North 0
!Only games scheduled)
1
Warren
JFK
38 Sharon Pa
Monday s Games
JF K 0
Boston vs Clncrnnat1
at Omaha Neb Lowellvtlle 35 Soulh Range 6
Nttes McKtnety 16 Sleubenvtlle
(Only game scheduled)
0

AHL Standtngs
By Un1ted Press lnlernaltonal
East
W L T Pis
8 1 I 17
Boston
7 2 2 16
Sprtngfleld
5 5 3 13
Nova Scotia
4 7 4 12
Prov•dence
4 6 2 10
Rochesler
West
W L T Pis
Hershey
9 1 1 19
Ctncmnatl
6 2 4 16
Cleveland
4 5 4 12
Batltmore
3 9 3 9
Richmond
4 5 1 9
Ttdewaler
1 12 1 3
Sunday's Results
Providence 3 Balttmore 2
Richmond 5 Ttdewaler I
(Only gam1e scheduled)

Newark Catholic 20 Danv1lle 0
Zanesville
Rosecrans
6

THE HIGH
COST OF
BUYING A

NEW CAR
F1n1nce your new car wltll
Nat1onw1dt

LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING
BY NATIONWIDE

~
CALL

P.J. PAULEY
PHONE 992 2311
307 Sprtng AYI , flomtroy

~~

u

NATIONWIDE

!~~~~~A,!:'~~

NATIOt!W tOf. llf[ INSURANCE CON!PANY

WoodSfteld 0

a handy budget
•
Improvement

kit

Monaav's Games

(No games scheduled I
NHL Slandtngs
By Un1ted Presslnlernaltonal
East
W L T Pis
9 I 4 22
New York
9 2 2 20
Monlreal
8 4 I 17
Baston
4
5 5 13
Toronto
5 B 2 12
Vancouver
4 7 4 12
Buffa to
3 10 2 8
Delroll
West
WLTPis
Minnesota
10 2 2 22
Chicago
11 4 0 22
Caltfornta
5 6 3 13
Pitlsburgh
5 8 2 12
Phlladetphta
S 7 t 11
51 Louis
3 9 I 7
Los Angeles
2 10 I 5
Sunday's Results
Monlreal 3 Boston 2
Mlnnesola 3 Ph tla 0
, Buffato 3 Delrotl 3
Chtcago 4 Plllsburgh 1
California 8 Toronlo I
(Only games scheduled)

i.7

INDIVIDUAL PASSING
Easlern Amsbary 1 1 2 and

• NOTE LOANS
• LARGER LOANS
• FINANCING
12SE

~~AIN

992 2171

POMEROY, 0 .

Monday's Games

I No games sched"ledl

'

L

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomo.ro'y, 0., Nov . 8, 1971

.Delegates Tell
Of Convention

Eagles, Redskins Battle To 7-7 Tie
Jets jolt KC
Chiefs, 13-10
By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It was a bad day fo r Indians
Sunday.
The Washington Redskins and
the Kansas City Chiefs, the
National Football League's
"Indian" clubs, expected easy
games Sunday as they took on
a couple of the weaker teams in
the league. Both came away
quite surprised.
The surging Philadelphia
Eagles took adva ntage of four
interceptions and three fumble
recoveries to hold the oncebeaten Redskins to a 7-7 tie and
the inJury-ravaged New York
Jets pulled out a "college
defense " to stun the mighty
Chiefs 13-10.
The Eagles, winless in their
fi rst fi ve games this season,
oave become a different team
since new coach Ed Khayat
ordered clean shaves and close
haircuts to establish discipline.
Philadelph ia scored t wo
straight victories and carne
within

a

few

seconds

of

upsetting the Redskins, the
Nattonal Conference Eastern
leaders.
Af ter a scoreless first half,
Philadelphia took a 7-0 lead on
a 12-yard TD pass from Pete
Liske to Ronnie Bull m the
third period and the Redskins
fo ught back to tie the game in
the final period on Bill Kilmer's
32-yard pass to Clifton McNeil
with !:09 left.
Bill Bradley's interception
with 35 seconds left gave
Philadelphia the ball and Liske
passed 36 yards to Harold
Jackson on the Redskin .26 but
time ran out 'before the Eagles
could get off a field goal
attempt.

Los Angeles is at Baltimore
tonight in a nationally televised
game.

Gene Washington's diving
catch of John Brodie's pass at
3: 11 of the final quarter lifted
the Forty Niners past Minnesota. Rosy Taylor's interception
at U1e three with just over a
minute to play preserved the
San Francisco victory. Wash·
ington's touchdown came after
the Forty Niners' Bruce Gossett and the Vikings' Fred Cox
each kicked a pair of field
goals.
,
Dave Hampton's 62-yard kick·
off return and a 22-yard field
goal by Lou Michaels with 59
seconds left lifted Green Bay
past the Bears. Chicago had
tied the game with a pair of
TDs in the last six minutes as
Bobby Douglass passed 3o
yards to George Farmer for
one score and Douglass plunged
over for the second after Dick
Butkus stole the ball from
Hampton.
Hampton then returned the
kickoff to the Bears' 39 before
rookie John Brockington, carrying six straight times, moved
the ball to the 15 to set up
Michaels' field goal.
Toni Fritsch 's 26-yard field
goal wi th less than two minutes
left boosted Dallas over the
Cardinals . It was the third field
goal of the day for the
Austrian -born Frisch.
Bob Griese threw for two
TDS and Larry Csonka and
Mercury Morris ran for two
more as Miami crushed winless
Buffalo and Roy Gerela kicked
four field goals and reserve
quarterback Te1cy Hanratty
threw a 5().yard TD pass to
Dave Smith as the Steelers beat
Cleveland. The victory left the
clubs tied for the AFC Central
lead.
Jim Nance and Carl Garrett
plunged for scores in the last
4:15 as New England downed
Houston. Interception by Steve
Ki ner and Jim Cheyunski set up

Bobby Hpwfield 's 39-yard
held goa l early in the final
period provided the margin of
victory for the Jets, who
stopped the Chiefs' ''Offense of
the 70s" with an unusual fourlinebacker defense .
"We stopped a college offense
with a college defense," said
Buddy Ryan, one of the Jets'
defensive coaches . " It was just
a plain wide tackle six. Texas
has been using it for years."
New York moved strong
safety Gus Hollomon to linebacker and had W. K. Hicks ,
John Dockery and Steve
Tannen play as floating safetymen . The four linebackers
confused the Kansas City
blocking and the three safetymen cut down the explosiveness
of wide receivers Otis Taylor
and Elmo Wright.
Emerson Boozer 's one-yard
plunge and Howfield's first field
goal and Len Dawson's six-yard
TO pass to Mike Adamle and
Jan Stenerud 's 19-yard field
goal left the learns tied 1().10 at
the half. Howfield connected on
his field goal after a controversial personal foul call against
Kansas City defensive back Jim
Marsalis .
In othe r NFC action, San
franctsco stopped Minnesota
13-9, Gree n Bay upset Chicago
17-14 and Dallas edged St. Louis
16-13. Miami routed Buffalo 340, Pittsburg h stunned Cleveland
26-9 and New England topped
Houston 28-20 in other AFC play
while in inte r-conference
games, Oakland and New
Orleans played to a 21-21 tie,
Detroit beat Denver 24-20, the
New York Giants whipped San
Diego 35-17 and Atlanta nipped
Ctncinnati 9-6.
the sco res.

Parents Know the Drug Threat
Because of the viSions and exhilatlon which result from the

Tuday's Subject: Marijuana - The 'Innocent' Drug use of Marijuana, abusers

may lose all restraint and act in 1
manner
~gerous
to
themselves
and others. A user is usually
Provided by J, J . Cremeans
accident JrOne because of his time and space sense upheaval.
Middleport Pollee Otlef
Dependence leads to anti-social behavior and could be the
Oo Behalf of Lawmen of Melgfi Coullty
forerunner to use of other, far more deadly drugs.
Street terms (names) for Marijuana are: joints, sticks,
Marijuana ill probably the best known drug to most parents .
because for years we have been hearing abQUt it . Marijuana has reefers, weed, grass, pot, muggles, mooters, Indian hay,
long been in use in what we now term minority groups, but now it locoweed, Mu, gigglele-smoke, Griffo, Mohasky and Mary Jane.
By the millions, and rlghtfully so, parents are more and more
has spread acroSB the land like cancer. Its manufacture and
concerned
or even panicked about drug use. Most disturbing ill
distribution is, of cow-se, prohibit~ by law except for approved
that drugs, especially marijuana, are becoming popular even
research purposes.
Marijuana is the dried flowering or fruiting top of the plant among junior high and bigb school students. One 37-year-old
Camabis Sativa, L,, commonly called Indian Hemp. Usually it father said in a recent interview, "My seven-year-old daughter
looks like fine, green tobacco. It is smoked in pipes or cigarette can spell marijuana. I never beard of it until! was in college."
On and near bY high school and college grounds, raids and
form. Hashish, also a preparation from Camabis, ill taken orally
in many forms, and infrequently it Is made into candy, sniffed in arrests for possession of marijuana and other drugs are inpowder form, mixed with honey lor drinking or with butter to creasing across the country, Simple possession of marijuana is a
spread on bread . The primary effect is a feeling of great per- felony ~ rlgbUy or wrongly -that can be punished by jail tenns
ceptiveness and pleasure and an exaggerated sense of ability, of 2 to 10 years or more. Drug use is, without doubt, becoming a
resulting from even small doses. Erratic behavior, loss of way ollife lor some young people-and, for an untold but large, if
memory, distortion of time and spatial perceptions, and hilarity not larger nwnber of adults also. And so, think about these things,
without apparent cause occur. There is a marked unpredictability my friends- we are all in this together. As adults, it is up to US to
head this thing off in our community. To do this we must all know
of effect.
more
about drugs, their use and misuse. Will you be with me next
Of course, these reactions are usual in the user of alcohol,
too, but with the drug user there is no alcoholic breath odor. week? I hope so. What we are studying Is for a very worthwhile
cause!
·
Breath odor though is most always unpleasant.

Edd Harge tt passed 10 yards
to Dave Parks with eight
seconds left and Charlie Durkee
added the extra point as New
Orleans tied Oakland. The
Saints scored twice in the final
period after Oakland built a 21·
7 lead and left the Raiders a
half-game ahead of Kansas City
in the AFC West.
Greg Landry connected on 75
and five-yard TD passes to
rally the Lions over Denver.
The Broncos led 1().() at the half
before Landry hit Earl McCul!ouch with a 75-yarder and
Charley Sanders with a fiveyard toss.
Dick Shiner's 41\-yard TD pass
to Art Malone with 1:06 left
lifted Atlanta over Cincinnati
and saddled the Bengals with
their seventh siraight loss.

Canton Glenwood 6 Canton Leh ·

man 6 (tiel .
Akron Kenmor e 31 Akron

North

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Norm
Van Brocklin wore a satisfied
grin Sunday as he discussed the
Atlanta Falcons' 9-6 victory over
the sagging Cincinnati Bengals.
The Falcons took the game
away from Cincinnati with only
1:06 remaining as quarterback
Dick Shiner hit running back
Art Malone with a 41\-yard scoring pass play.

Coli

ege

Sc
ores

By United Press International
East
Yale 24 Penn l4
Penn Sl. 63 Maryland 27
Colum bia 31 Dartmout h 29
Notre Dame 56 Pittsburgh 7
Delaware 49 Lehigh 22
Shepherd 19 Salem 10
TemFie 40 Rhode Island 13

Th le 7 Geneva 6

West Lib 21 Fairmont 20

... . .. ' ' ...

Murray 16 Aus tin Peay 6

Southern Mis! 38 VM t 0
Hous ton 35 Memph is St. 7
Alabama t 4 LS U 7
Mid Tenn St. 27 Westrn Ky. 13
Eastn Mich 10 N.E.La . 10 (tiel
S.W. Tex 9 H. Payne 9 (lie)
JacksonS!. 7 Tex Soutn 7 (tiel
McNeese 3 N.W. La . 3 (lie)
South
Duke 31 Wesl Vir 15

"There must have been a mis·
take in their middle coverage,"
Can Brocklin said of Malone's
catch. "He was wide open ."
Malone grab~ the pass on
the Bengal 25-yard tine and
broke three tackles on his way
to scoring the deciding six
points.
"It was a great individual effort on his part," Van Brock·
lin said.
Shiner agreed that the Bengal linebackers apparently had
their assignments mixed up .
leaving Malone open in the mid·
die of the field.
Finally Caught Up
"But we beat a good football team,' he added. "Cincin·
nati played good football . We
were losing most of Ute game."
Atlanta went out in front on
a 23-yard field boa! by Bill Bell
in the first quarter, but Cincin·
nati kicker Horst Muehlmann

tied the contest with a 24-yard
effort.
Muhlmann added a 51-yard
field goal in the fourth period
and a goal line stand by the
Cincinnati defense deprived Atlanta of a touchdown, seeming
to put the game on ice .
When asked why he didn 't
try for the tying field goal rather than the touchdown on the
fourth down of that drive, Van
Brocklin replied : "We play to
win, not tie. "
Malone an NCAA wrestling
champ at Arizona State, said
he was "running with all I had"
when he headed for the goal
line after catching Shiner's pass.
"It was a beautiful pass," he
said . "Dick read the linebackers
perfectly."
Icy Playing Field
Shiner , who said he had some
trouble setting up because of
ice which had formed overnight
on the astroturf surface at Riv·
erfront Stadium , finished the
game wiUt 150 yards paSBing,
completing seven of 15 passes .
A dejected Paul Brown had
little to say about the loss, the
seventh for the Bengals following their season-&lt;Jpening victory
over Philadelphia.
"The coverage on the touchdown play was faulty, " he said .
" It was an obvious mental error.

Akron Easl35 Akron Buchtel 0

Can Be Used by Others
By POLLY CRAMER

·MUST
SEE!!

Miss Donna Looram Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford D.
Smith of 120 Old Hyde Rd.,
Weston, Conn., are announcing
the engagement of their
daughter, Donna Looram
Smith, to Mr . Charles
Alexander Downie, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore A. Downie,
High St., Pomeroy. The brideelect attended the Marymount
Academy at Tarrytown, N. Y.

and the College of William and
Mary at Willismsburg, Va . She
is employed as secretary to the
Director of Camp Robin Hood in
Center Ossipee, N. H.
Mr. Downie graduated from
Pomeroy High School and Rio
Grande College and teaches in
the Meigs Junior High School:
The wedding will be an event of
June 10, 1972.

100 at Family Night

25" giant-screen console
featuring color tv's largest
and linest picture.

••

·INGELS
FURNITURE

Skits, songs and recitations
highlighted a pre-Thanksgiving
family night o~rvance Sunday night at Trinity Church with
abQUt 100 members and guests
attending.
Recitations included "Wlly
We are Thankful" by Faith Ann
Perrin and James Rosenbawn ;
"OUr Turkey" by" Beth Perrin;
'"!bank Thee, Lord" by Linda
Rosenbawn; "I Wonder How
the Pilgrims Felt" by Rebecca
Thomas, and "Thankful For
Fall" by Lisa Thomas.
Under the direction of Mrs.
Don Thomas, a sextet composed
of Beth Perrin, Linda Rosenbaum, Rebecca Thomas, Usa
Thomas, Danny and Greg
Thomas sang "Cum Bah Yah"
and "He's Got the Whole World
In His Hands."
A playlet, "Am I My
Brother's Keeper" was
presented by Mrs . Donald

I want to thank the
voters
of
Olive
Township who voted
or me in the recent
lec tion.

ADA BISSELL
- Pd . Pot. Adv .

Mayer taking the role of Laura ;
Mrs. Roy Mayer, the motber ;
Mrs . Phil Globoksr, as Jimmy,
the teenage brother; Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, the world ; Mrs .
Allen Hampton and Mrs. Joseph
Cook, Africa; Mrs. Karl
Grueser and Mrs. Paul Cascl,
Poland ; and Mrs. Arnold
Richards , representing the
Indian .
·
Mrs. Linda Mayer presented
a vocal solo, "Let There Be
Peace On Earth."
A hymn sing concluded the
program. A potluck diruler was
held preceding tbe program
with the Rev, W. H. Perrin
giving the blessing . A welcome
was given by Roy Mayer,
Sunday school superintendent.
MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, Gallipolis,
home of Mrs. Pearl Knapp, 7:30
p m Food for basket, money for
cystic fibrosis, and funds from
candy sale to be taken to the
meeting.
TUESDAY
LEWIS MANLEY Post
American Legion Auxiliary, 7
p.m. Tuesday night at tbe
Mount Moriah Baptist Church,
Middleport.
TIIURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Members to take gifts for tbe
Athens Mental Health Center.

THANKS
I would like to say Thanks to All who
supported me and elected me as
Trustee of Lebanon Township in
Tuesday's Election.

4

1

"

NEW·

FU:fJ~Rf

MASON
FURNITURE.

~son.w_._
v_
a_
. ______________________~

Robinson's Ceaner$

Looking for
.jeweler who's
a real gem?

'

3 ROOMS

Convenient
Terms.

PAUL EVANS

1

1

W. COMPTON. 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 T05 (CLOSE.
AT NOON ON THURS .) - EAST COURT ST.,

Yellow
Pages

e cu taka to thex 'st' t w
werer . enCin . eti a e conven !On 10
cmna ·

Unwanted Old Books

SHIR
FINISHING

•

~pla{~ ~~e m:b~ ~~

NLLY'S MINTERS

COLOR

ASHE BEATS KODES
Unique! Designed to appeal
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UP!)
to the avant-garde. Ultra
- ArUtur Ashe of Gum Springs,
Modern styling for the most
contemporary room settings.
Va., seeded ninth in the $00,000
Stockholm Tennis Open, rallied
Modo! C4730X
fr om a 1-'1 deficit in the final
lay Away For Chris1mas!
set to wi n the title by a t\-1, 3-6,
No. Caroli na 26 Clemson 13
t\-2, 1-6, 6-4 score over Jan
Tenn 35 Sa. Carol ina 6
Kodes of Czechoslovakia.
Georgia Tech 34 Navy 21
Ky . 14 Vanderbilt 7
Ashe earned $10,000 for the
Georgia 49 Flor ida 7
victory
and Kodes received a
Eastern Ky. 14 Tenn Tech 7
MIDDLEPORT
$5,000 check as runner4!p in the
Auburn 30 Miss. St . 21
Morehead 19 East Tenn 7
tournament.
Ohio U. 30 Tulane 7
Tenn St . 61 Morris Brown 7
NICKLAUS WINS MATCH
La . Tech 35 Chattanooga 20
SYDNEY, Australia (UP! I Ariz St. 31 Brigham Young 7
Jack Nicklaus won the 128,000
Augus tana 20 Mill iki n 0
Dunlop International Golf TourCapital 15 Bald Wall 14
nament Sunday by seven
Southern Ill 34 Drake 32
Morningside21 So.Dak.St. 12
strokes with a 14-under-par 274
Val paraiso 48 Buller 12
and immediately left for the
Midwest
U.S. where he is scheduled to
Michigan St . 17 Ohio St. tO
. Illinois 22 Indiana 21
compete this week in the World
Michigan 63 Iowa 7
Cup Golf Matches at Palm
Cincinnati 40 N o Tex St 7
Beach Gardens, Fla.
Wisconsin 14 Purdue 10
Oklahoma 20 Missou ri 3
Nicklaus earned $4,480 as he
Northwestern 41 Minn 20
capped
his !our-round total with
Colorado 35 Kansas 14
a 70. He shot a brilliant second
Toledo 23 Northern Ill 8
Neb raska 37 Iowa St . 0
,. round 62 that helped offset a
Indiana Cent 7 Hanover J
third round 73. Bruce Crampton
THIS COULD BE THE CHEERLEADING corps of a
Be a Football Hero" are, from the left, Anita King, Joyce
tnd St (lnd) 37 Akron 10
of Australia and Peter Oosterlocal high school. However, it isn't. These girls are members
Hutchison, Debbie Taylor, Linda Rupe , Cindy Schneider,
51. John's 6 Macalstr ~
South Oak 29 North Oak 21
huis of Britain tied for second
of a dancing line which will salute the sport of football when
Judy Owen, Barbara Fultz, Vikki Kelly and Linda Gi!rard.
Southwest
at
281.
Ute "Fall Follies" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association plays
Working in the salute also will be Katie Crow, Big Bend
Louisvi lle 17 Tulsa 0
at 8:10pm. Saturday night at the Meigs High School. Making
Association president, with a comedy reading "Football."
Texas A&amp;M 27 SMU 10
Texas 24 Baylor 0
up the group whose routine will be built around "Vou Got To
TCU 17 Texas Tech 6
Arkansas 24 Rice 24 (tie)
'th
·
Louisiana 10 Ark St. 10
1 Han- S.W.
sprained left ankle .
Wt JUSt 2:33 to Pay,
New Mexico 59 Ulah 39
"Nothing Much"
ratty threw a 4().yard touch ·
West
SAME DAY
The second-yea r quarterback, down pass to Dave Smith to Oregon 23 Air Force l4
wrap
up
the
game
Wyom
ing
31
Utah
St.
29
SERVICE
whose improvement over his
·
Idaho 24 Weber 51. 20
In
At
9- 0ul AI S
Browns Had Chance
Stanford 20 UCLA 9
PITTSBUJiGH (UPI; - Terry ruw for the stumbling Browns rookie season can only be mea
"We had enough things hap· Southern Cal 30 Wash St. 20
Bradshaw has a sprained ankle and left even Nelsen. traded sured in light years, is expectUse Our Free Parking Lot
pen
today to give us a chance " W~shmg ton JO Callforn1a !
and Bill Nelsen has a sprained from Pittsburgh to Cleveland in ed to be ready to face the
Bo1se St. 22 Northern Anz l7
Nelsen satd. I don t know Arizona 34 Ore St. 22
e~o. but the Pittsburgh Steelers 1968, worndering if, just may· Miami Dolphins next Sunday.
wha
t's the matter."
Chico 51 54 SF St 7
"I
can
move
my
foot
all
kind
may be close to ending the most be, The Steelers fi nally were fo r
UOP 40 Hawai i 17
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
of ways," Bradshaw said as he
futile chase in professional real.
Reno 12 USF 0
''SUre, I'm worried, '' he admit· hobbled around on crutches af· MILL REEF NAMED
sports.
•
The Steelers, whose 38 sea· ted. "You've got to have a men- ter the game. "It's nothing LONDON (UP!) - Americansons in the NFL have been tal letdown after something like much .''
Terry Hanratty, who had ap- owned Mill Reef was named
marked by lailurP to win even this and tr y and figure out
peared only briefly in one other 1971 Horse of lhe Yeao Sunday
a divisional title, beat Nelsen what's wrong. I'm upset."
by the British Rae~course
Bradshaw, backed by a bril- game this year, played the sec- Association.
and the Cleveland Browns 26-9
1
All me11 co t1l end wi!b Ibe {/ueslioHs
,
Sw1day to tie the losers for the liant defense, set up the vic· ond half at quarterback lor
Paul Mellon's Mill Reef lost
IP&lt;•sed by the colllrasls of sic k~tess 1md &amp;ealih. p01&gt;erly a11 d plenty
lead in the Central Division of tory- leading the Steelers to Pittsburg h but was hampered only one race this year as he'
by
bad
field
position
and
adthe American Football Con- scores four of the first five times
And ask the question "why". 'Why lo neli11 ess
won the Greenham Stakes, the
they had the ball before he was mitted the inaction had left Derby, the Eclipse, the King
ference.
111 a 1vorld thai would ioin lwn&lt;is' Why war when
It was the third loss in a forced out of the game with a him rusty.
George
VI
and
Queen
Elizabeth
"My arm felt like it was in
the imf!lllsr of the hellrli Sio loue) )he 11 chi ng
Stakes and the Prix de L'Arc
slow motion, Hanratty said.
dJas m heiww1ihe real and the ideal e1&gt;ery 1vhere
Wllen Bradshaw went out, the de Triomphe .
Steelers led 16-0 but Cleveland
provokes !he quesiion .
got a safety and a touchdown
Busy. Airport
in the second half to close the
O'Hare International Airmargin to It\-~ before the rally port in Chicago set a singlewas snuffed out when L. C. day record on Sept. 9, 1966,
· Greenwood blocked a punt to when 2,006 landings and
set up Roy Gerela's fourth field take-offs were recorded by
SJS.OO Downthe airport control tower.
goal.
11alance On

Nelsen Worrying

Clarence E. Norton, Route I,
Minersville. She ~o~nced that
the County Council wtll sponsor
an appearance of the Rio
Gr~de ~orl!le on Nov. 22 at
Metgs H1gh School at 7 p.m.
U.nits were . reminded ~ ~et
the1r magazme subscnptlon
lists to Mrs. Vaughan and to
report tolal membership at the
end of November to Mrs.
Dugan.
.
•
Mrs. Gi!ne Mitch, prestdent of
the Pomeroy PI'A, gave the
welcome following the PTA
Jray~r and pledge to the flag ,
Umts represented were
Bradbury, Chea~r, Middleport,
Pomeroy, Racme, Rutland,
~!em center, and Syracwre.

6

Bengals Lose 9-6 Toughie

Pr ince ton 21 Har vard 10

.

CHIEF CRElifEANS

YOU

Army 30 Rutgers l7
Boston Coli. 10 Syracuse 3

'

Ohio PTA
convention
highlights were presented by
Mrs. · Robert Dugan and Mrs.
William Willford at Thursday
night's meetlrig of the Meigs
County Coul\l!il of Parents and
Teachers at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Resolutions Introduced at the
convention on control of pornography and placing Sesame
Street on commercial television
were discussed by the
delegates.
A program on parliamentary
Jrocedure was given by Mrs.
James Sheets who used slides
and literature to explain rules of
order.
Mrs . Richard Vaughan
reported that the $25 contribution to the scholarship fund
is due from all units before Jan.
I and should be sent to Mrs.

Pd . Pol. Adv.

THANKS
To the people in Meigs Local School
District for your support in Tues. Nov.
2 Election and electing me a member
of the school board.

CAROL F. "RUSTY" PIERCE
'

THANK YOU

HY?

FOR YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT IN
MY ELECTION AS.YOUR SCIPIO
TOWNSHIP CLERK

In a world looking for ans~ers
maybe God is the place to start
God is hope. God is now,

g --m_:
.........

Pd. Pol. Adv,

GLEN JEWELL
,· .

Pdt Pol. Adv.

DEAR POLLY- 1 want to remind Catherine that there
are many or!\anizations that can use old booh She might
call the public hbrary, Good Will or Salva!ton Army in
her city. Your trash may be just what someone else
wants .--CAROLINE
DEAR POLLY and Catherine- There are many people
lookmg for old, outdated books . Please do not ruin them
for reading purposes until sure no one want~ them . Some
book shops buy old hooks. Many are on tlie lookout for
first editions , so be sure to check yours before doing
away with them . It is a shame people throw books away
or pack them away when there are people who would
like to have them.--JANET
DEAR POLLY- Like Catherine, I, too, had a lot of old
books and put mine to use by putting Polly 's Pointers in
them with double-stick tape. Tear a few sheets out as you
go along so the thickness stays the same. Write the table
of contents on tape and stick over the book title. One of
mine has kitchen hints, another housecleaning hints, and
so on .-MRS . L. R. J .

Middleport
Personal Notes
Mrs. Annice Ohlinger is in
Olarleston, W, Va. visiting her
daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth
Parsons, who spent the
weekend in Middleport.
Mrs . Freda Welling has
returned to her home in Punta
Gorda, Fla. after spending a
few weeks here visiting Mrs
Pearl Reynolds and other ar~
friends
, Mr. ·and Mrs. Paul Haptonstall and Mr. Rohert L.
Sharp are in Reynoldsburg
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Sharp and son, Ronnie.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Frances
accompanied Keith Black to
Children's Hospital, Columbus,
today The youngster has been
con!u;ed to his home wiUt the
measles for Ute past two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. c. H. Wise
Waverly, were at the Holze;
Medical center Thursday for
.Mr. w·tse,s chec k up. Wh'l
1e
there they visited Mrs.
Elizabeth Allman who is im·
proving.

Holiday Project Taken
In lieu of a Christmas gift
exchange members of the
Happy Harvesters Class of
Trinity Church will fill a basket
for a needy family as a special
holiday project.
Meeting Friday night at the
church, the class set the annual
Christmas party for Dec. 10
with a planned covered dish
dinner. At that time members
will bring a $1 item for the
basket.
Mrs, Dale Smith presided at
the meeting and appointed Mrs.
Clara Karr, Mrs, Fred

Dessauer, and Mrs. Ori• Cinther to Ute nominating committee.lt was decided to change
the regular meeting time from
tile first Friday to the seoond
Friday of each month.
A card of thanks was read
from the Lanning family for
flowers and a dimer served at
Ute time ol the death of
Lawrence Laming , Plans were
completed for serving a dinner
to the Meigs County Retired
Teachers Associa lion.
Mrs. Stella Kloes reported on

Officers of Group I Named
Officers were elected at a
meeting of Group I of the
Women's Association , Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church, at the
home of Mrs. Michael Zirkle
Wednesday night.
Elected were Mrs. Zirkle,
Jresident ; Mrs. Karen Sprowre,
vice president; Mrs, Edward
Crooka, secretary; and Mrs.

Richard Vaugban, treasurer.
A Christmas party and gift
exchange will be held at the
next meeting. A soup sale was
planned for after Thanksgiving
with orders to be placed with
Mrs. Zirkle, 992-7206, Mrs.
Crooks, 992-2704, a nd Mrs .
Sprouse, 992-5368. Pumpkin pie
and coffee were served.

Hawley-Fry Vows Taken October 25th
St. John, the Evangelist
Church at Agawam, Mass., was
the scene of the wedding of Miss
Jacqueline A. Hawley and
Larry F . Frey on Oct. 25.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Hawley,
Middleport. The bridegroom is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack W.

Frey, New Haven, W. Va ,
The maSB for the double ring
ceremony was said by Father
Walter Joyce. Ross Frey,
brother of the groom, was the
lector for the wedding. The
bride is employed at the New
England Telephone Co . in
Springfield, Mass., and tbe

groom at Bradley International
Airport, Wiodsor Locka, Com.
A reception for the couple 's
relatives and friends was held
at the home of the bride's
parents in Middleport on Friday
evening, Oct. 29. The couple is
residing on Agawam.

the sale of fruit cakes and
cards. She noted that cards are
still available . Mrs. Louis
Reibel thanked the claSB for the
birthday observance and the
"This Is Your Life" program.
A round-robin card was
signed for William Grueser, a
patient at the Veterans Hospital
in Lexington, Ky . Cards will
also be sent to James Fugate, a
patient at Holzer due to hill hip
fracture, and to Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler who injured her knee in
fall .
Mrs.
Phil
Williamson
presented devotions using a
Thanksgiving theme, with a
story of a..Jlrisoner whose last
request wall to spend his last
hour with his mother who never
doubted his innocence. She
spoke of the need to "forget to
hate and learn to love," concluding with the Sermon on the
Mount, and prayer.
The birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Homer Holter was observed and the prayer from tbe
yearbook closed the meeting.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling conducted
games with prizes going to Mrs.
Smith, Mrs. Ginther, Mrs.
Clarence Massar, and Miss
Sybil Ebersbach.
Mrs. Phil Meinhart, Mrs.
Henry Reibel, and Mrs .
Lawrence Lanning served
chicken salad and hot rolls.

a

E-R Units Take Over Ambulances
MASON - Ambulance service by Foglesong's in Mason
has been discontinued according to Donald Foglesong of
Foglesong Funeral Home. The
mortuary's ambulance service

has been rel'laced by the New
Haven and Mason E·R squads.
Both ambulances are equipped
with the latest in life-saving
devices. All the personnel on the
squads have had first aid

training and caring for the sick
cow·ses.
Ambulance calls are received
. in Mason by calling 773-5574,
and New Ha ven by calling 8822015. Both of these numbers are
the same as the fire departments in both towns.
Charges for am bulance
services will cost the same as
fees
charged
by
end with his brother Bob Bobo the
Foglesong's.
Members
of
theEand family and attended Sunday School and preaching at the R squads are sub ject to call 24
Langsville Church . Mr . Bobo hours a day.
said it had been thirty years Foglesong 's has been in the
since he had attended church ambulance busin ess many
here. Mr . Bobo lives at Scot· years. Donald Foglesong
remembers when his lute
town, W. Va.
W. R .. Foglesong, used a
!ather,
Mr . and Mrs. Ron Stlles spent
the week end at their home horse pulled hearse to take
patients to the train in Mason
here.
and
were transported then to
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
spent Monday with her sister the hospital by train to
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Bail of Parkersbw·g.
Hamden, Ohio.
Mr . and Mrs. William B.
Ledlie went to Columbus today
where Mr . Ledlie will take a
plane to New York and from
there he will fly to Las Palmas,
an Island of Spain where Mr .
Ledlie is employed .

Langsville Social Notes

'

DEAR POLLY - CathMr. and Mrs. Gorden Carter
erine can use some of her
of
Petoskey, Mich. spent the
old, outdated books (but
week end recently .with Mr. and
not valuable ones ) to make
Mrs. Bernard Ledlie.
attractive boxes . Cut the
Mr. and Mrs . Bruce Morris
center portion out of each
page, leaving a margin on
and son Larry spent several
all four sides , and then glue
days visiting their daughter and
the pages together, margin
family, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
to margin, leaving the wont
Wright and children of Dublin ,
cover for the box top and
Va .
gluing the back cover to
Mrs. Clair Parkerson who has
the gi· ed-together pages
been
a patient in a Zanesville
for the bottom part of the box. Such a box looks like a
book until opened. It could te used on a table or as a . hospital is much improved and
desk accessory to hold staples, paper clips, etc. If the is recuperating at the home of
book's cover is not attractive, fabric could be glued to her daughter Evelyn Wycinski
the outside cover.-FLORENCE
in Corning, 0.
Mrs. Hazel Wright visited her
;taM~~_ _ _ Polly's Problem -llli··-~
son
David Wright of Point
DEAR POLLY - I have several lovely Mexican
Pleasant recently and enjoyed a
f; pottery casseroles but hesitate to cook anything in
birthday
party given in her
~ them since reading the warnings about not using
;; pottery with an iron glaze, and Mexican pottery in
honor.
~ particular . How does one know whether or not there
Mrs. Paul Sturgeon has been
fl is an iron glaze on pottery? Is there some test?
very ill but is improving slowly .
~ I will not use mine until I am sure there is no
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr
~ danger of food contamination.-MARY
gave
a dinner party Sunday in
~&lt;''
honor of their son David's 6th
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve concerns home hair- birthday . Dinner was served at
coloring sets that one buys In drug or grocery stores. noon with a beautiful decorated
Why are they so large that those of us with short hair birthday cake and home made
have so much left over and the package says not to re·
use it? I do wish they would sell smaller jars for those ice cream. The Halloween motif
was carried out in the
of us with short hair.- JUDY
decoration of the birthday cake
(NEWSPAPER ENTUPRISf ASSOCIATION)
and after David opened his
many gifts the afternoon was
You will receive a doUar If PoUy uses your favorite spent visiting. Guests were Mr.
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or aolatlon to a problem. Write PoUy In care of lhls newspaper. and Mrs. Howard Thoma and Pat of Pomeroy, 0.
and Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
and Mike Barr of Glenville, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
spent last week visiting Uteir
daughter and family Mr. and
Mrs. Blair Cadadwallader, of
MONDAY
OES meets at 8 Tuesday at Seaman, 0.
lola Bartrum has bought the
RIVERVIEW PTA, 7:30p.m. temple. •
Monday at school. Riverview
EILM of Southern-Eastern Ross Edward property and will
Girl Scout Troop 67 presenting game, 8 p.m. Tuesday when move there soon .
Frank Bobo spent the week
program at open house session. Eastern Athletic Boosters meet
at high school. Refreshments.
Refreshments.
VETERANS DAY dinner, 6 SYRACUSE PTA, Tuesday, ,..........................
p.m. Monday, Meigs Chapter
7:30p.m, at school. Program by
53, DAV, at home on Butternut
sixth grade.
Ave., Pomeroy. All members
WEDNESDAY
and wives invited. Business REGULAR MEETING,
meeting following dinner.
Middleport Amateur Garden
SOUTHERN Athleti c Club, Wednesday. Tour of
Boosters Monday, 7: 30p.m. at
Dudley Florists, 2419 Dudley
high school.
Ave ., Parkersburg. Leave
RUTLAND PTA, Monday,
Citizens National Bank comer,
7:30 p.m., Rutland Elementary
Middleport, 6:30p.m. For rides
School. ·Program on speech
therapy by two Meigs call Mrs. Roger Morgan by noon
Tuesday,
therapisls.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
WOMEN'S
Society
of
Christian Service, 7:30 Monday Royal Arch Masons , Wednesday, 7 p.m. Most excellllht
night at Heath Methodist
Uturch. Mrs. Geneva Yates to master degree to be conferred.
Refreslunents.
present devoti~ns ; Mrs.
E llza~eth Hibbs to conduct the
1'.-ogram and pledge service,
THURSDAY
and Mrs. Grace French, Mrs.
THURSDAY, Nov. II, annual
Lorena Davis and Mrs. Ruth
"Stufflng
Bee" for 'Christmas
Euler, hostesses.
TUESDAY .
Seals will be held at the First
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta Baptist Church, corner of Sixth
Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday, and Palmer Sts., Middleport,
8:15 p.m . Mrs. Kenneth Mc- beginning at 9 a.m.
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
'Cullough, Mrs. Jennifer An·
lions
Cltib, 7 p.m. Thursday, •
~erson to present the cultural
program. " Prose and Art". United Methodist Church, Joe
Mrs. Linda Riffle and Mrs. Ruth Haning , Nelsonville, zone
chairman to be present. District
THE ATHENS COUNTY
Riffle, hostesses.
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
PRESENTATION of 50 year meeting, All local Uons urged
296
W. lnd
Pomeroy
pin when Harri~&gt;Qnvllle Chapter to at lend.

Social Calendar

.Christmas
Club
49th Pavment
NOW DUE

fnsur•nce
AQent
'Dale Warner

For low-cost car,
boat, plane and
mortgage insurance
see us, Easy terms.

Davis-Wamer Ins.
Phone 992·2966

114 Court St.

Pllmoroy

. ~""''/ FLEX·O·GLASS
GLASS·O·NET
~ WYR·O·GLASS
ScREEN·GLASS
FLEx-O·PANE

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Nov. 8, the
312th day of 1971.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Melrcury , Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are
MUNS SAJJSfACJION OUAaANUU
under the sign ·of Scorpio.
British astronomer Edmond
Halley was born Nov . ft, 1656.
On this day In history :
In 1837 Mount Holyoke
992-2811
Seminary in Massachusetts
llOW. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
became the first college founded exclusively for women .
,- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - --

EBERSBACH HOWE. CO.

ke vout ··•indov.IS.
.. .

\t' s time to "'~ and breezewavs

*

WE MAKE

ONLY

36~un

THE 50TH

3ft. wide

*
JOIN OUR 1972

.Ft.

a.ua NOW

•

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Ia far stronger

than polyethyleneInsist an the ORIGINAL

0-GLASS is the only

window material that is

ARANTEED FULl~~ARS

l

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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomo.ro'y, 0., Nov . 8, 1971

.Delegates Tell
Of Convention

Eagles, Redskins Battle To 7-7 Tie
Jets jolt KC
Chiefs, 13-10
By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It was a bad day fo r Indians
Sunday.
The Washington Redskins and
the Kansas City Chiefs, the
National Football League's
"Indian" clubs, expected easy
games Sunday as they took on
a couple of the weaker teams in
the league. Both came away
quite surprised.
The surging Philadelphia
Eagles took adva ntage of four
interceptions and three fumble
recoveries to hold the oncebeaten Redskins to a 7-7 tie and
the inJury-ravaged New York
Jets pulled out a "college
defense " to stun the mighty
Chiefs 13-10.
The Eagles, winless in their
fi rst fi ve games this season,
oave become a different team
since new coach Ed Khayat
ordered clean shaves and close
haircuts to establish discipline.
Philadelph ia scored t wo
straight victories and carne
within

a

few

seconds

of

upsetting the Redskins, the
Nattonal Conference Eastern
leaders.
Af ter a scoreless first half,
Philadelphia took a 7-0 lead on
a 12-yard TD pass from Pete
Liske to Ronnie Bull m the
third period and the Redskins
fo ught back to tie the game in
the final period on Bill Kilmer's
32-yard pass to Clifton McNeil
with !:09 left.
Bill Bradley's interception
with 35 seconds left gave
Philadelphia the ball and Liske
passed 36 yards to Harold
Jackson on the Redskin .26 but
time ran out 'before the Eagles
could get off a field goal
attempt.

Los Angeles is at Baltimore
tonight in a nationally televised
game.

Gene Washington's diving
catch of John Brodie's pass at
3: 11 of the final quarter lifted
the Forty Niners past Minnesota. Rosy Taylor's interception
at U1e three with just over a
minute to play preserved the
San Francisco victory. Wash·
ington's touchdown came after
the Forty Niners' Bruce Gossett and the Vikings' Fred Cox
each kicked a pair of field
goals.
,
Dave Hampton's 62-yard kick·
off return and a 22-yard field
goal by Lou Michaels with 59
seconds left lifted Green Bay
past the Bears. Chicago had
tied the game with a pair of
TDs in the last six minutes as
Bobby Douglass passed 3o
yards to George Farmer for
one score and Douglass plunged
over for the second after Dick
Butkus stole the ball from
Hampton.
Hampton then returned the
kickoff to the Bears' 39 before
rookie John Brockington, carrying six straight times, moved
the ball to the 15 to set up
Michaels' field goal.
Toni Fritsch 's 26-yard field
goal wi th less than two minutes
left boosted Dallas over the
Cardinals . It was the third field
goal of the day for the
Austrian -born Frisch.
Bob Griese threw for two
TDS and Larry Csonka and
Mercury Morris ran for two
more as Miami crushed winless
Buffalo and Roy Gerela kicked
four field goals and reserve
quarterback Te1cy Hanratty
threw a 5().yard TD pass to
Dave Smith as the Steelers beat
Cleveland. The victory left the
clubs tied for the AFC Central
lead.
Jim Nance and Carl Garrett
plunged for scores in the last
4:15 as New England downed
Houston. Interception by Steve
Ki ner and Jim Cheyunski set up

Bobby Hpwfield 's 39-yard
held goa l early in the final
period provided the margin of
victory for the Jets, who
stopped the Chiefs' ''Offense of
the 70s" with an unusual fourlinebacker defense .
"We stopped a college offense
with a college defense," said
Buddy Ryan, one of the Jets'
defensive coaches . " It was just
a plain wide tackle six. Texas
has been using it for years."
New York moved strong
safety Gus Hollomon to linebacker and had W. K. Hicks ,
John Dockery and Steve
Tannen play as floating safetymen . The four linebackers
confused the Kansas City
blocking and the three safetymen cut down the explosiveness
of wide receivers Otis Taylor
and Elmo Wright.
Emerson Boozer 's one-yard
plunge and Howfield's first field
goal and Len Dawson's six-yard
TO pass to Mike Adamle and
Jan Stenerud 's 19-yard field
goal left the learns tied 1().10 at
the half. Howfield connected on
his field goal after a controversial personal foul call against
Kansas City defensive back Jim
Marsalis .
In othe r NFC action, San
franctsco stopped Minnesota
13-9, Gree n Bay upset Chicago
17-14 and Dallas edged St. Louis
16-13. Miami routed Buffalo 340, Pittsburg h stunned Cleveland
26-9 and New England topped
Houston 28-20 in other AFC play
while in inte r-conference
games, Oakland and New
Orleans played to a 21-21 tie,
Detroit beat Denver 24-20, the
New York Giants whipped San
Diego 35-17 and Atlanta nipped
Ctncinnati 9-6.
the sco res.

Parents Know the Drug Threat
Because of the viSions and exhilatlon which result from the

Tuday's Subject: Marijuana - The 'Innocent' Drug use of Marijuana, abusers

may lose all restraint and act in 1
manner
~gerous
to
themselves
and others. A user is usually
Provided by J, J . Cremeans
accident JrOne because of his time and space sense upheaval.
Middleport Pollee Otlef
Dependence leads to anti-social behavior and could be the
Oo Behalf of Lawmen of Melgfi Coullty
forerunner to use of other, far more deadly drugs.
Street terms (names) for Marijuana are: joints, sticks,
Marijuana ill probably the best known drug to most parents .
because for years we have been hearing abQUt it . Marijuana has reefers, weed, grass, pot, muggles, mooters, Indian hay,
long been in use in what we now term minority groups, but now it locoweed, Mu, gigglele-smoke, Griffo, Mohasky and Mary Jane.
By the millions, and rlghtfully so, parents are more and more
has spread acroSB the land like cancer. Its manufacture and
concerned
or even panicked about drug use. Most disturbing ill
distribution is, of cow-se, prohibit~ by law except for approved
that drugs, especially marijuana, are becoming popular even
research purposes.
Marijuana is the dried flowering or fruiting top of the plant among junior high and bigb school students. One 37-year-old
Camabis Sativa, L,, commonly called Indian Hemp. Usually it father said in a recent interview, "My seven-year-old daughter
looks like fine, green tobacco. It is smoked in pipes or cigarette can spell marijuana. I never beard of it until! was in college."
On and near bY high school and college grounds, raids and
form. Hashish, also a preparation from Camabis, ill taken orally
in many forms, and infrequently it Is made into candy, sniffed in arrests for possession of marijuana and other drugs are inpowder form, mixed with honey lor drinking or with butter to creasing across the country, Simple possession of marijuana is a
spread on bread . The primary effect is a feeling of great per- felony ~ rlgbUy or wrongly -that can be punished by jail tenns
ceptiveness and pleasure and an exaggerated sense of ability, of 2 to 10 years or more. Drug use is, without doubt, becoming a
resulting from even small doses. Erratic behavior, loss of way ollife lor some young people-and, for an untold but large, if
memory, distortion of time and spatial perceptions, and hilarity not larger nwnber of adults also. And so, think about these things,
without apparent cause occur. There is a marked unpredictability my friends- we are all in this together. As adults, it is up to US to
head this thing off in our community. To do this we must all know
of effect.
more
about drugs, their use and misuse. Will you be with me next
Of course, these reactions are usual in the user of alcohol,
too, but with the drug user there is no alcoholic breath odor. week? I hope so. What we are studying Is for a very worthwhile
cause!
·
Breath odor though is most always unpleasant.

Edd Harge tt passed 10 yards
to Dave Parks with eight
seconds left and Charlie Durkee
added the extra point as New
Orleans tied Oakland. The
Saints scored twice in the final
period after Oakland built a 21·
7 lead and left the Raiders a
half-game ahead of Kansas City
in the AFC West.
Greg Landry connected on 75
and five-yard TD passes to
rally the Lions over Denver.
The Broncos led 1().() at the half
before Landry hit Earl McCul!ouch with a 75-yarder and
Charley Sanders with a fiveyard toss.
Dick Shiner's 41\-yard TD pass
to Art Malone with 1:06 left
lifted Atlanta over Cincinnati
and saddled the Bengals with
their seventh siraight loss.

Canton Glenwood 6 Canton Leh ·

man 6 (tiel .
Akron Kenmor e 31 Akron

North

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Norm
Van Brocklin wore a satisfied
grin Sunday as he discussed the
Atlanta Falcons' 9-6 victory over
the sagging Cincinnati Bengals.
The Falcons took the game
away from Cincinnati with only
1:06 remaining as quarterback
Dick Shiner hit running back
Art Malone with a 41\-yard scoring pass play.

Coli

ege

Sc
ores

By United Press International
East
Yale 24 Penn l4
Penn Sl. 63 Maryland 27
Colum bia 31 Dartmout h 29
Notre Dame 56 Pittsburgh 7
Delaware 49 Lehigh 22
Shepherd 19 Salem 10
TemFie 40 Rhode Island 13

Th le 7 Geneva 6

West Lib 21 Fairmont 20

... . .. ' ' ...

Murray 16 Aus tin Peay 6

Southern Mis! 38 VM t 0
Hous ton 35 Memph is St. 7
Alabama t 4 LS U 7
Mid Tenn St. 27 Westrn Ky. 13
Eastn Mich 10 N.E.La . 10 (tiel
S.W. Tex 9 H. Payne 9 (lie)
JacksonS!. 7 Tex Soutn 7 (tiel
McNeese 3 N.W. La . 3 (lie)
South
Duke 31 Wesl Vir 15

"There must have been a mis·
take in their middle coverage,"
Can Brocklin said of Malone's
catch. "He was wide open ."
Malone grab~ the pass on
the Bengal 25-yard tine and
broke three tackles on his way
to scoring the deciding six
points.
"It was a great individual effort on his part," Van Brock·
lin said.
Shiner agreed that the Bengal linebackers apparently had
their assignments mixed up .
leaving Malone open in the mid·
die of the field.
Finally Caught Up
"But we beat a good football team,' he added. "Cincin·
nati played good football . We
were losing most of Ute game."
Atlanta went out in front on
a 23-yard field boa! by Bill Bell
in the first quarter, but Cincin·
nati kicker Horst Muehlmann

tied the contest with a 24-yard
effort.
Muhlmann added a 51-yard
field goal in the fourth period
and a goal line stand by the
Cincinnati defense deprived Atlanta of a touchdown, seeming
to put the game on ice .
When asked why he didn 't
try for the tying field goal rather than the touchdown on the
fourth down of that drive, Van
Brocklin replied : "We play to
win, not tie. "
Malone an NCAA wrestling
champ at Arizona State, said
he was "running with all I had"
when he headed for the goal
line after catching Shiner's pass.
"It was a beautiful pass," he
said . "Dick read the linebackers
perfectly."
Icy Playing Field
Shiner , who said he had some
trouble setting up because of
ice which had formed overnight
on the astroturf surface at Riv·
erfront Stadium , finished the
game wiUt 150 yards paSBing,
completing seven of 15 passes .
A dejected Paul Brown had
little to say about the loss, the
seventh for the Bengals following their season-&lt;Jpening victory
over Philadelphia.
"The coverage on the touchdown play was faulty, " he said .
" It was an obvious mental error.

Akron Easl35 Akron Buchtel 0

Can Be Used by Others
By POLLY CRAMER

·MUST
SEE!!

Miss Donna Looram Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford D.
Smith of 120 Old Hyde Rd.,
Weston, Conn., are announcing
the engagement of their
daughter, Donna Looram
Smith, to Mr . Charles
Alexander Downie, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore A. Downie,
High St., Pomeroy. The brideelect attended the Marymount
Academy at Tarrytown, N. Y.

and the College of William and
Mary at Willismsburg, Va . She
is employed as secretary to the
Director of Camp Robin Hood in
Center Ossipee, N. H.
Mr. Downie graduated from
Pomeroy High School and Rio
Grande College and teaches in
the Meigs Junior High School:
The wedding will be an event of
June 10, 1972.

100 at Family Night

25" giant-screen console
featuring color tv's largest
and linest picture.

••

·INGELS
FURNITURE

Skits, songs and recitations
highlighted a pre-Thanksgiving
family night o~rvance Sunday night at Trinity Church with
abQUt 100 members and guests
attending.
Recitations included "Wlly
We are Thankful" by Faith Ann
Perrin and James Rosenbawn ;
"OUr Turkey" by" Beth Perrin;
'"!bank Thee, Lord" by Linda
Rosenbawn; "I Wonder How
the Pilgrims Felt" by Rebecca
Thomas, and "Thankful For
Fall" by Lisa Thomas.
Under the direction of Mrs.
Don Thomas, a sextet composed
of Beth Perrin, Linda Rosenbaum, Rebecca Thomas, Usa
Thomas, Danny and Greg
Thomas sang "Cum Bah Yah"
and "He's Got the Whole World
In His Hands."
A playlet, "Am I My
Brother's Keeper" was
presented by Mrs . Donald

I want to thank the
voters
of
Olive
Township who voted
or me in the recent
lec tion.

ADA BISSELL
- Pd . Pot. Adv .

Mayer taking the role of Laura ;
Mrs. Roy Mayer, the motber ;
Mrs . Phil Globoksr, as Jimmy,
the teenage brother; Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, the world ; Mrs .
Allen Hampton and Mrs. Joseph
Cook, Africa; Mrs. Karl
Grueser and Mrs. Paul Cascl,
Poland ; and Mrs. Arnold
Richards , representing the
Indian .
·
Mrs. Linda Mayer presented
a vocal solo, "Let There Be
Peace On Earth."
A hymn sing concluded the
program. A potluck diruler was
held preceding tbe program
with the Rev, W. H. Perrin
giving the blessing . A welcome
was given by Roy Mayer,
Sunday school superintendent.
MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, Gallipolis,
home of Mrs. Pearl Knapp, 7:30
p m Food for basket, money for
cystic fibrosis, and funds from
candy sale to be taken to the
meeting.
TUESDAY
LEWIS MANLEY Post
American Legion Auxiliary, 7
p.m. Tuesday night at tbe
Mount Moriah Baptist Church,
Middleport.
TIIURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Members to take gifts for tbe
Athens Mental Health Center.

THANKS
I would like to say Thanks to All who
supported me and elected me as
Trustee of Lebanon Township in
Tuesday's Election.

4

1

"

NEW·

FU:fJ~Rf

MASON
FURNITURE.

~son.w_._
v_
a_
. ______________________~

Robinson's Ceaner$

Looking for
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Convenient
Terms.

PAUL EVANS

1

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W. COMPTON. 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 T05 (CLOSE.
AT NOON ON THURS .) - EAST COURT ST.,

Yellow
Pages

e cu taka to thex 'st' t w
werer . enCin . eti a e conven !On 10
cmna ·

Unwanted Old Books

SHIR
FINISHING

•

~pla{~ ~~e m:b~ ~~

NLLY'S MINTERS

COLOR

ASHE BEATS KODES
Unique! Designed to appeal
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UP!)
to the avant-garde. Ultra
- ArUtur Ashe of Gum Springs,
Modern styling for the most
contemporary room settings.
Va., seeded ninth in the $00,000
Stockholm Tennis Open, rallied
Modo! C4730X
fr om a 1-'1 deficit in the final
lay Away For Chris1mas!
set to wi n the title by a t\-1, 3-6,
No. Caroli na 26 Clemson 13
t\-2, 1-6, 6-4 score over Jan
Tenn 35 Sa. Carol ina 6
Kodes of Czechoslovakia.
Georgia Tech 34 Navy 21
Ky . 14 Vanderbilt 7
Ashe earned $10,000 for the
Georgia 49 Flor ida 7
victory
and Kodes received a
Eastern Ky. 14 Tenn Tech 7
MIDDLEPORT
$5,000 check as runner4!p in the
Auburn 30 Miss. St . 21
Morehead 19 East Tenn 7
tournament.
Ohio U. 30 Tulane 7
Tenn St . 61 Morris Brown 7
NICKLAUS WINS MATCH
La . Tech 35 Chattanooga 20
SYDNEY, Australia (UP! I Ariz St. 31 Brigham Young 7
Jack Nicklaus won the 128,000
Augus tana 20 Mill iki n 0
Dunlop International Golf TourCapital 15 Bald Wall 14
nament Sunday by seven
Southern Ill 34 Drake 32
Morningside21 So.Dak.St. 12
strokes with a 14-under-par 274
Val paraiso 48 Buller 12
and immediately left for the
Midwest
U.S. where he is scheduled to
Michigan St . 17 Ohio St. tO
. Illinois 22 Indiana 21
compete this week in the World
Michigan 63 Iowa 7
Cup Golf Matches at Palm
Cincinnati 40 N o Tex St 7
Beach Gardens, Fla.
Wisconsin 14 Purdue 10
Oklahoma 20 Missou ri 3
Nicklaus earned $4,480 as he
Northwestern 41 Minn 20
capped
his !our-round total with
Colorado 35 Kansas 14
a 70. He shot a brilliant second
Toledo 23 Northern Ill 8
Neb raska 37 Iowa St . 0
,. round 62 that helped offset a
Indiana Cent 7 Hanover J
third round 73. Bruce Crampton
THIS COULD BE THE CHEERLEADING corps of a
Be a Football Hero" are, from the left, Anita King, Joyce
tnd St (lnd) 37 Akron 10
of Australia and Peter Oosterlocal high school. However, it isn't. These girls are members
Hutchison, Debbie Taylor, Linda Rupe , Cindy Schneider,
51. John's 6 Macalstr ~
South Oak 29 North Oak 21
huis of Britain tied for second
of a dancing line which will salute the sport of football when
Judy Owen, Barbara Fultz, Vikki Kelly and Linda Gi!rard.
Southwest
at
281.
Ute "Fall Follies" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association plays
Working in the salute also will be Katie Crow, Big Bend
Louisvi lle 17 Tulsa 0
at 8:10pm. Saturday night at the Meigs High School. Making
Association president, with a comedy reading "Football."
Texas A&amp;M 27 SMU 10
Texas 24 Baylor 0
up the group whose routine will be built around "Vou Got To
TCU 17 Texas Tech 6
Arkansas 24 Rice 24 (tie)
'th
·
Louisiana 10 Ark St. 10
1 Han- S.W.
sprained left ankle .
Wt JUSt 2:33 to Pay,
New Mexico 59 Ulah 39
"Nothing Much"
ratty threw a 4().yard touch ·
West
SAME DAY
The second-yea r quarterback, down pass to Dave Smith to Oregon 23 Air Force l4
wrap
up
the
game
Wyom
ing
31
Utah
St.
29
SERVICE
whose improvement over his
·
Idaho 24 Weber 51. 20
In
At
9- 0ul AI S
Browns Had Chance
Stanford 20 UCLA 9
PITTSBUJiGH (UPI; - Terry ruw for the stumbling Browns rookie season can only be mea
"We had enough things hap· Southern Cal 30 Wash St. 20
Bradshaw has a sprained ankle and left even Nelsen. traded sured in light years, is expectUse Our Free Parking Lot
pen
today to give us a chance " W~shmg ton JO Callforn1a !
and Bill Nelsen has a sprained from Pittsburgh to Cleveland in ed to be ready to face the
Bo1se St. 22 Northern Anz l7
Nelsen satd. I don t know Arizona 34 Ore St. 22
e~o. but the Pittsburgh Steelers 1968, worndering if, just may· Miami Dolphins next Sunday.
wha
t's the matter."
Chico 51 54 SF St 7
"I
can
move
my
foot
all
kind
may be close to ending the most be, The Steelers fi nally were fo r
UOP 40 Hawai i 17
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
of ways," Bradshaw said as he
futile chase in professional real.
Reno 12 USF 0
''SUre, I'm worried, '' he admit· hobbled around on crutches af· MILL REEF NAMED
sports.
•
The Steelers, whose 38 sea· ted. "You've got to have a men- ter the game. "It's nothing LONDON (UP!) - Americansons in the NFL have been tal letdown after something like much .''
Terry Hanratty, who had ap- owned Mill Reef was named
marked by lailurP to win even this and tr y and figure out
peared only briefly in one other 1971 Horse of lhe Yeao Sunday
a divisional title, beat Nelsen what's wrong. I'm upset."
by the British Rae~course
Bradshaw, backed by a bril- game this year, played the sec- Association.
and the Cleveland Browns 26-9
1
All me11 co t1l end wi!b Ibe {/ueslioHs
,
Sw1day to tie the losers for the liant defense, set up the vic· ond half at quarterback lor
Paul Mellon's Mill Reef lost
IP&lt;•sed by the colllrasls of sic k~tess 1md &amp;ealih. p01&gt;erly a11 d plenty
lead in the Central Division of tory- leading the Steelers to Pittsburg h but was hampered only one race this year as he'
by
bad
field
position
and
adthe American Football Con- scores four of the first five times
And ask the question "why". 'Why lo neli11 ess
won the Greenham Stakes, the
they had the ball before he was mitted the inaction had left Derby, the Eclipse, the King
ference.
111 a 1vorld thai would ioin lwn&lt;is' Why war when
It was the third loss in a forced out of the game with a him rusty.
George
VI
and
Queen
Elizabeth
"My arm felt like it was in
the imf!lllsr of the hellrli Sio loue) )he 11 chi ng
Stakes and the Prix de L'Arc
slow motion, Hanratty said.
dJas m heiww1ihe real and the ideal e1&gt;ery 1vhere
Wllen Bradshaw went out, the de Triomphe .
Steelers led 16-0 but Cleveland
provokes !he quesiion .
got a safety and a touchdown
Busy. Airport
in the second half to close the
O'Hare International Airmargin to It\-~ before the rally port in Chicago set a singlewas snuffed out when L. C. day record on Sept. 9, 1966,
· Greenwood blocked a punt to when 2,006 landings and
set up Roy Gerela's fourth field take-offs were recorded by
SJS.OO Downthe airport control tower.
goal.
11alance On

Nelsen Worrying

Clarence E. Norton, Route I,
Minersville. She ~o~nced that
the County Council wtll sponsor
an appearance of the Rio
Gr~de ~orl!le on Nov. 22 at
Metgs H1gh School at 7 p.m.
U.nits were . reminded ~ ~et
the1r magazme subscnptlon
lists to Mrs. Vaughan and to
report tolal membership at the
end of November to Mrs.
Dugan.
.
•
Mrs. Gi!ne Mitch, prestdent of
the Pomeroy PI'A, gave the
welcome following the PTA
Jray~r and pledge to the flag ,
Umts represented were
Bradbury, Chea~r, Middleport,
Pomeroy, Racme, Rutland,
~!em center, and Syracwre.

6

Bengals Lose 9-6 Toughie

Pr ince ton 21 Har vard 10

.

CHIEF CRElifEANS

YOU

Army 30 Rutgers l7
Boston Coli. 10 Syracuse 3

'

Ohio PTA
convention
highlights were presented by
Mrs. · Robert Dugan and Mrs.
William Willford at Thursday
night's meetlrig of the Meigs
County Coul\l!il of Parents and
Teachers at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Resolutions Introduced at the
convention on control of pornography and placing Sesame
Street on commercial television
were discussed by the
delegates.
A program on parliamentary
Jrocedure was given by Mrs.
James Sheets who used slides
and literature to explain rules of
order.
Mrs . Richard Vaughan
reported that the $25 contribution to the scholarship fund
is due from all units before Jan.
I and should be sent to Mrs.

Pd . Pol. Adv.

THANKS
To the people in Meigs Local School
District for your support in Tues. Nov.
2 Election and electing me a member
of the school board.

CAROL F. "RUSTY" PIERCE
'

THANK YOU

HY?

FOR YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT IN
MY ELECTION AS.YOUR SCIPIO
TOWNSHIP CLERK

In a world looking for ans~ers
maybe God is the place to start
God is hope. God is now,

g --m_:
.........

Pd. Pol. Adv,

GLEN JEWELL
,· .

Pdt Pol. Adv.

DEAR POLLY- 1 want to remind Catherine that there
are many or!\anizations that can use old booh She might
call the public hbrary, Good Will or Salva!ton Army in
her city. Your trash may be just what someone else
wants .--CAROLINE
DEAR POLLY and Catherine- There are many people
lookmg for old, outdated books . Please do not ruin them
for reading purposes until sure no one want~ them . Some
book shops buy old hooks. Many are on tlie lookout for
first editions , so be sure to check yours before doing
away with them . It is a shame people throw books away
or pack them away when there are people who would
like to have them.--JANET
DEAR POLLY- Like Catherine, I, too, had a lot of old
books and put mine to use by putting Polly 's Pointers in
them with double-stick tape. Tear a few sheets out as you
go along so the thickness stays the same. Write the table
of contents on tape and stick over the book title. One of
mine has kitchen hints, another housecleaning hints, and
so on .-MRS . L. R. J .

Middleport
Personal Notes
Mrs. Annice Ohlinger is in
Olarleston, W, Va. visiting her
daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth
Parsons, who spent the
weekend in Middleport.
Mrs . Freda Welling has
returned to her home in Punta
Gorda, Fla. after spending a
few weeks here visiting Mrs
Pearl Reynolds and other ar~
friends
, Mr. ·and Mrs. Paul Haptonstall and Mr. Rohert L.
Sharp are in Reynoldsburg
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Sharp and son, Ronnie.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Frances
accompanied Keith Black to
Children's Hospital, Columbus,
today The youngster has been
con!u;ed to his home wiUt the
measles for Ute past two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. c. H. Wise
Waverly, were at the Holze;
Medical center Thursday for
.Mr. w·tse,s chec k up. Wh'l
1e
there they visited Mrs.
Elizabeth Allman who is im·
proving.

Holiday Project Taken
In lieu of a Christmas gift
exchange members of the
Happy Harvesters Class of
Trinity Church will fill a basket
for a needy family as a special
holiday project.
Meeting Friday night at the
church, the class set the annual
Christmas party for Dec. 10
with a planned covered dish
dinner. At that time members
will bring a $1 item for the
basket.
Mrs, Dale Smith presided at
the meeting and appointed Mrs.
Clara Karr, Mrs, Fred

Dessauer, and Mrs. Ori• Cinther to Ute nominating committee.lt was decided to change
the regular meeting time from
tile first Friday to the seoond
Friday of each month.
A card of thanks was read
from the Lanning family for
flowers and a dimer served at
Ute time ol the death of
Lawrence Laming , Plans were
completed for serving a dinner
to the Meigs County Retired
Teachers Associa lion.
Mrs. Stella Kloes reported on

Officers of Group I Named
Officers were elected at a
meeting of Group I of the
Women's Association , Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church, at the
home of Mrs. Michael Zirkle
Wednesday night.
Elected were Mrs. Zirkle,
Jresident ; Mrs. Karen Sprowre,
vice president; Mrs, Edward
Crooka, secretary; and Mrs.

Richard Vaugban, treasurer.
A Christmas party and gift
exchange will be held at the
next meeting. A soup sale was
planned for after Thanksgiving
with orders to be placed with
Mrs. Zirkle, 992-7206, Mrs.
Crooks, 992-2704, a nd Mrs .
Sprouse, 992-5368. Pumpkin pie
and coffee were served.

Hawley-Fry Vows Taken October 25th
St. John, the Evangelist
Church at Agawam, Mass., was
the scene of the wedding of Miss
Jacqueline A. Hawley and
Larry F . Frey on Oct. 25.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Hawley,
Middleport. The bridegroom is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack W.

Frey, New Haven, W. Va ,
The maSB for the double ring
ceremony was said by Father
Walter Joyce. Ross Frey,
brother of the groom, was the
lector for the wedding. The
bride is employed at the New
England Telephone Co . in
Springfield, Mass., and tbe

groom at Bradley International
Airport, Wiodsor Locka, Com.
A reception for the couple 's
relatives and friends was held
at the home of the bride's
parents in Middleport on Friday
evening, Oct. 29. The couple is
residing on Agawam.

the sale of fruit cakes and
cards. She noted that cards are
still available . Mrs. Louis
Reibel thanked the claSB for the
birthday observance and the
"This Is Your Life" program.
A round-robin card was
signed for William Grueser, a
patient at the Veterans Hospital
in Lexington, Ky . Cards will
also be sent to James Fugate, a
patient at Holzer due to hill hip
fracture, and to Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler who injured her knee in
fall .
Mrs.
Phil
Williamson
presented devotions using a
Thanksgiving theme, with a
story of a..Jlrisoner whose last
request wall to spend his last
hour with his mother who never
doubted his innocence. She
spoke of the need to "forget to
hate and learn to love," concluding with the Sermon on the
Mount, and prayer.
The birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Homer Holter was observed and the prayer from tbe
yearbook closed the meeting.
Mrs. Ben Neutzling conducted
games with prizes going to Mrs.
Smith, Mrs. Ginther, Mrs.
Clarence Massar, and Miss
Sybil Ebersbach.
Mrs. Phil Meinhart, Mrs.
Henry Reibel, and Mrs .
Lawrence Lanning served
chicken salad and hot rolls.

a

E-R Units Take Over Ambulances
MASON - Ambulance service by Foglesong's in Mason
has been discontinued according to Donald Foglesong of
Foglesong Funeral Home. The
mortuary's ambulance service

has been rel'laced by the New
Haven and Mason E·R squads.
Both ambulances are equipped
with the latest in life-saving
devices. All the personnel on the
squads have had first aid

training and caring for the sick
cow·ses.
Ambulance calls are received
. in Mason by calling 773-5574,
and New Ha ven by calling 8822015. Both of these numbers are
the same as the fire departments in both towns.
Charges for am bulance
services will cost the same as
fees
charged
by
end with his brother Bob Bobo the
Foglesong's.
Members
of
theEand family and attended Sunday School and preaching at the R squads are sub ject to call 24
Langsville Church . Mr . Bobo hours a day.
said it had been thirty years Foglesong 's has been in the
since he had attended church ambulance busin ess many
here. Mr . Bobo lives at Scot· years. Donald Foglesong
remembers when his lute
town, W. Va.
W. R .. Foglesong, used a
!ather,
Mr . and Mrs. Ron Stlles spent
the week end at their home horse pulled hearse to take
patients to the train in Mason
here.
and
were transported then to
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
spent Monday with her sister the hospital by train to
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Bail of Parkersbw·g.
Hamden, Ohio.
Mr . and Mrs. William B.
Ledlie went to Columbus today
where Mr . Ledlie will take a
plane to New York and from
there he will fly to Las Palmas,
an Island of Spain where Mr .
Ledlie is employed .

Langsville Social Notes

'

DEAR POLLY - CathMr. and Mrs. Gorden Carter
erine can use some of her
of
Petoskey, Mich. spent the
old, outdated books (but
week end recently .with Mr. and
not valuable ones ) to make
Mrs. Bernard Ledlie.
attractive boxes . Cut the
Mr. and Mrs . Bruce Morris
center portion out of each
page, leaving a margin on
and son Larry spent several
all four sides , and then glue
days visiting their daughter and
the pages together, margin
family, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
to margin, leaving the wont
Wright and children of Dublin ,
cover for the box top and
Va .
gluing the back cover to
Mrs. Clair Parkerson who has
the gi· ed-together pages
been
a patient in a Zanesville
for the bottom part of the box. Such a box looks like a
book until opened. It could te used on a table or as a . hospital is much improved and
desk accessory to hold staples, paper clips, etc. If the is recuperating at the home of
book's cover is not attractive, fabric could be glued to her daughter Evelyn Wycinski
the outside cover.-FLORENCE
in Corning, 0.
Mrs. Hazel Wright visited her
;taM~~_ _ _ Polly's Problem -llli··-~
son
David Wright of Point
DEAR POLLY - I have several lovely Mexican
Pleasant recently and enjoyed a
f; pottery casseroles but hesitate to cook anything in
birthday
party given in her
~ them since reading the warnings about not using
;; pottery with an iron glaze, and Mexican pottery in
honor.
~ particular . How does one know whether or not there
Mrs. Paul Sturgeon has been
fl is an iron glaze on pottery? Is there some test?
very ill but is improving slowly .
~ I will not use mine until I am sure there is no
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr
~ danger of food contamination.-MARY
gave
a dinner party Sunday in
~&lt;''
honor of their son David's 6th
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve concerns home hair- birthday . Dinner was served at
coloring sets that one buys In drug or grocery stores. noon with a beautiful decorated
Why are they so large that those of us with short hair birthday cake and home made
have so much left over and the package says not to re·
use it? I do wish they would sell smaller jars for those ice cream. The Halloween motif
was carried out in the
of us with short hair.- JUDY
decoration of the birthday cake
(NEWSPAPER ENTUPRISf ASSOCIATION)
and after David opened his
many gifts the afternoon was
You will receive a doUar If PoUy uses your favorite spent visiting. Guests were Mr.
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or aolatlon to a problem. Write PoUy In care of lhls newspaper. and Mrs. Howard Thoma and Pat of Pomeroy, 0.
and Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
and Mike Barr of Glenville, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
spent last week visiting Uteir
daughter and family Mr. and
Mrs. Blair Cadadwallader, of
MONDAY
OES meets at 8 Tuesday at Seaman, 0.
lola Bartrum has bought the
RIVERVIEW PTA, 7:30p.m. temple. •
Monday at school. Riverview
EILM of Southern-Eastern Ross Edward property and will
Girl Scout Troop 67 presenting game, 8 p.m. Tuesday when move there soon .
Frank Bobo spent the week
program at open house session. Eastern Athletic Boosters meet
at high school. Refreshments.
Refreshments.
VETERANS DAY dinner, 6 SYRACUSE PTA, Tuesday, ,..........................
p.m. Monday, Meigs Chapter
7:30p.m, at school. Program by
53, DAV, at home on Butternut
sixth grade.
Ave., Pomeroy. All members
WEDNESDAY
and wives invited. Business REGULAR MEETING,
meeting following dinner.
Middleport Amateur Garden
SOUTHERN Athleti c Club, Wednesday. Tour of
Boosters Monday, 7: 30p.m. at
Dudley Florists, 2419 Dudley
high school.
Ave ., Parkersburg. Leave
RUTLAND PTA, Monday,
Citizens National Bank comer,
7:30 p.m., Rutland Elementary
Middleport, 6:30p.m. For rides
School. ·Program on speech
therapy by two Meigs call Mrs. Roger Morgan by noon
Tuesday,
therapisls.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
WOMEN'S
Society
of
Christian Service, 7:30 Monday Royal Arch Masons , Wednesday, 7 p.m. Most excellllht
night at Heath Methodist
Uturch. Mrs. Geneva Yates to master degree to be conferred.
Refreslunents.
present devoti~ns ; Mrs.
E llza~eth Hibbs to conduct the
1'.-ogram and pledge service,
THURSDAY
and Mrs. Grace French, Mrs.
THURSDAY, Nov. II, annual
Lorena Davis and Mrs. Ruth
"Stufflng
Bee" for 'Christmas
Euler, hostesses.
TUESDAY .
Seals will be held at the First
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta Baptist Church, corner of Sixth
Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday, and Palmer Sts., Middleport,
8:15 p.m . Mrs. Kenneth Mc- beginning at 9 a.m.
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
'Cullough, Mrs. Jennifer An·
lions
Cltib, 7 p.m. Thursday, •
~erson to present the cultural
program. " Prose and Art". United Methodist Church, Joe
Mrs. Linda Riffle and Mrs. Ruth Haning , Nelsonville, zone
chairman to be present. District
THE ATHENS COUNTY
Riffle, hostesses.
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
PRESENTATION of 50 year meeting, All local Uons urged
296
W. lnd
Pomeroy
pin when Harri~&gt;Qnvllle Chapter to at lend.

Social Calendar

.Christmas
Club
49th Pavment
NOW DUE

fnsur•nce
AQent
'Dale Warner

For low-cost car,
boat, plane and
mortgage insurance
see us, Easy terms.

Davis-Wamer Ins.
Phone 992·2966

114 Court St.

Pllmoroy

. ~""''/ FLEX·O·GLASS
GLASS·O·NET
~ WYR·O·GLASS
ScREEN·GLASS
FLEx-O·PANE

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Nov. 8, the
312th day of 1971.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Melrcury , Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are
MUNS SAJJSfACJION OUAaANUU
under the sign ·of Scorpio.
British astronomer Edmond
Halley was born Nov . ft, 1656.
On this day In history :
In 1837 Mount Holyoke
992-2811
Seminary in Massachusetts
llOW. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
became the first college founded exclusively for women .
,- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - --

EBERSBACH HOWE. CO.

ke vout ··•indov.IS.
.. .

\t' s time to "'~ and breezewavs

*

WE MAKE

ONLY

36~un

THE 50TH

3ft. wide

*
JOIN OUR 1972

.Ft.

a.ua NOW

•

FLEX-0-GLASS
Ia far stronger

than polyethyleneInsist an the ORIGINAL

0-GLASS is the only

window material that is

ARANTEED FULl~~ARS

l

!.

�/

J

(

-

a-n •• Dally Sentinel, MtMieuort-IT ~m~y, o., Nov. a, 1971

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassifieds. Get Results!
Local Bowling
Junior League
Oct. JO, 1971
Standings

18
16
14
13
12

Individual

Game

Second High Ind . Game

Mlck Davenport 158.
High Series -

information
contact Jerry E. Miller, 446·
._4-96-3-G-all-ip-oli-s._ ___,
-

Stelle Bachner

.

Second High Series Carsey .dll.

Jackie

Team High Game -

Str ike

For

Home .

1966 CHEV ROLET IMPALA CPE .
Loc al owner car , 6 cyl ., std. trans ., radio . good tires .
1966

OLDS. CUTLASS CPE.

Employment Wanted

$695

1966CHEVELLEMALIBU4DR.

I

Br ing · this ad and get SlO off
1on your purchase of a new

HOUSEC LEAN lNG in Racine,
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .

$695

Phone 992-2876.

10-24-tfc

Locally owned , 6 cyl. , automati c, radio, spotless clean
interior .

Early Sunday Mi&gt;red League
Oct. 3! , 1971
Standings

Team
Eaoles Club
Tom's Carry OUt
Forest Run Block
Racine Food Market

W. L.
48 24
42 30
34 38

Roseberry's Sohio
Farmer's Bank

32
20

40 32
40
52

High Individual Game - A. L.
Phelps 220.
Women High Ind. Game Linda Winebr enn er 192 .
High Series - A. L. Phelps

578.
High Series -

Betty Smith

476.
High Game -

Tom's Carry

OUt 710.
Team High Series -

Tom's

Carry Out 1924.

Early Wednesday
Mixed League

oct. 21, 1971
Standings

Team
Young 's Market

44 28

Oiler's Soh io

44 28

W. L.

SmIth. Nelson Motors
Zlde's Sport Shop

42 30
32 40

Tenth Framers

28

Team No. 4

44

26 46

High Indi vidual Game -

Jr .

Phelps 264.
Women High Ind. Game -

Pat ·carson 196.
High Series - Jr. Phelps 645.
Women

H igh

Se r ies

-

Isabelle Couch 515 .
Tea m High Game -

Young' s

Market 719.
Team High Series -

Young' s

Market 1975.
Tri-County League
Nov . 2, 1971

Standings

Team
Pomeroy Cement Block
Davis Warner Ins .

Pts.
48

36

Larry's Ashland

34

Firestone

32

Rawlings Dodge
30
Holsum Bak ery
14
High Indi vidual Game - Paul

Po~neroy

OPEN EVU. 8:00 P.M.

'PMEROY, OHIO

Carmel News,

By the Day
Visiting with Mrs. Mary
Circle during the past week
were Mrs. Faye Dunlavy of
Columbus, and Mrs. James
Warner of Harrisonville Rd.,
Mrs. William Perry and family
of Hollon, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
James Circle, Mr. and Mrs.
George Circle and family, all of
New Haven, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Pierce of Athens and
Laura CirCle of Dorcas.
Charles Wayne Brinker of
Carey, Ohio, called on Betty
Van Meter, Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
thur E. Johnson and family on
Saturday and also called on
Ralph Lee.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lee and family and
Ralph Lee over the weekend
were Mrs. Dwight Swepston and
son, Mark, of Columbus, Mrs.
Fern Stansbury of Athens, her
daughter, Virginia of Califor·
nia, John FeiTy of Athens, Ada
Holter, Estella Grueser and
Roy Frecker, Minersville
Route.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Douglas
Johnson , Ra cine, called on
Betty Van Meter, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Johnson and family on
Sunday.

MQJ1day Deadline9a .m.
_c;a l"! c;.e! lqtion &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m . for

Day of Publ icatlon
REGULATIONS

$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Additional 25r

Charge

Wright 575.
High
High

News, Notes

Series

Rawlings Dodge 2972.

Senior League
Oct. 30, 1971
StandinQs

w.

L.
18 9
18
15 1
14 13
8 19
8 19

Team
Gutter Dusters
Born Losers
Pin Bu sters
Royal Crowns
Strikers

i

The Pros
High Individual

Game

Gene Davis 171.

Second High Ind . Game
Peg O' Brien 151.
High Series -

Ge ne Davi s

438.
Second High Series O'Brien 420.

Peg

Team High Game - Born
Losers 723.
Team High Series - Gutter
Dusters 2127 .
Bantam league

Oct. 30, 1971
Standings

w.

Team

Red Barons
Sneaky Snakes
Pin Busters
Ba ll Breakers

Zodiac's

Musta ng s
High Individual

Greg Smith 126.

11

10
10

L.
7

8
8

9 9
7 II
7 II
Game

Second High Ind . Game
Ronnie Cascl 117 .

High Series 234.

Greg Smith

Second High Series - Ronnie
Casci 208.
Team High Game - Zodiac's

707.
Team High Series - Zodiac 's

1383.

I

Old Town
Flats News
Meeting will begin at
Freedom Gospel Church Nov . 7.
The minister will be from

••

ca binet . Balance $69.52. Use

our budget plan. Call 992-7085.
ll -8-6tc

MAPLE stereo . radio com .
bination, AM· FM radi o, 4
speed changer, 4 speaker
sound system . Balance $79.89.

TO

OHIO
PAllET CO.

Use our budget plan. Call 992·
7085.
J1 .8.6tc

On Old Rt. 33

For Sale or Trade

Phone 91!2-2689

FOR CATTLE - a 15ft. boal

Pomeroy, Ohio

and t railer , 4 cyl., Crosley
motor , washer and dryer,
chain saw, aluminum boat ,
new 7 h.p. motor, small farm
tr aclor . M &amp; G Food Mkl.. 3
mi . south of M iddleport.

-anted To Buy

Ravenswood.
Mrs. Karen Burnside and
Mrs. Maywood Johnston called
on Mrs. Ella Hannum and Mrs.
Roy Ha nnu m Jr · Of Long Bot·
tom Route.
Both children of Mr. and Mrs.
Delmer Grady are in Holzer
Medical ·Center at Gallipolis.
Mrs. Helen Jeffers, Mrs .
Sandra Peyton of Syracuse,
Mrs. Patty Van Meter of
Minel'llville visited Mr. and
Ml'll. Homer lcen.hower.
Mr. and Mrs . Jim Autherson
and family of Syracuse, Mr. and
Mrs . Thomas Autherson,
Beverly, Mr. and Mrs . Wayne
Bryson of Newark visited Mr.
and Mrs. carl Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Autherson
were dinner guests of their
daughter, Mrs. Elva Dailey of
Syracuse.

By MRS. LYLE BALDERSON
The foll owing members of the
Riverside Garden Cl ub enjoyed
eating out at the Three Sons
Restaurant at Vienna , W. Va .,
Mrs. Harliss Frank, Mrs. Frank
Bise, Mrs. Roy Hannum, Mrs.
Donald Myers, Mrs. Walter
Brown, Mrs. Denver Weber,
Mrs. Ernes t Whitehead, Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle , Mrs.
Claremon t Harris, Mrs. Gene
Wilson, Mrs. Lyle Balderson
and a guest Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery . Grace was given by
Mrs. Harris. After dining out
the ladies shopped at the new
Hills store .
Carroll Randolph is a patient
at the Mt. Carmel Hospital, at
Col umbus. Mrs. Randolph is
staying with her aunt Mrs.
Gladys Morgan of Columbus.
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer is visiting
with Mr. and · Mrs . Marion
Hetzer of Toledo.
Earl Buchanan of Coolville
had a surprise dinner for his
mother and father, Mr . and
Mrs . John Buchanan of
Reedsville. Others attending
were Mrs. Ovalene Royse, Mr .
and Mrs. Roger Sheeler and
daughters Wanda and Pam of
Greenfield, Agnes Hill, Mr. and

'5.5S
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

992-2174

See

FREE KITTENS. Call Mrs.
Gerald

Shuster ,

lincoln

We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in
rooting to our staff.

Heights. 992-5284.
REV IVAL sta rting Nov . 7 at
7:30 p.m., Freedom Gospel
Mission,
Bald
Knobs .
Everyone wel co me . Pastor,
Gluesencamp;
L.
R.
evangelist, Rev . George
Hoschar , West Columbia , W.

Va .

5443.

11 -7-Jt c
~-:----­

fr om

Bradbury School. Cal l 992·
5308 or see Char les Lewis, 2nd
house so uth fr om Bradbur y
School. Pel s welcome .

THE AN NU AL Sacred Heart

11 -7-3tp

Churc h Bazaar will be held
Thursday night November 11
starting with a dinner from
4: 30 to 6:30 p.m . Donations
dinner, adu lts , $1 .75, children
$1 . Dinner. fancy work
booths, games and r a ffle s.
Prize wi ll be given every half
hour from 6 to 9 p.m.

1.2'. • 14' · 24' · WIDE.

BRANDnew, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom

11 ·2·6tc

·MILLER

- -- - - --

HOUSE in Long Bottom, Ohio .

2 BEDROOM mobile home In

Phone 985.3529.

Rac ine area. Phone 992·6329.

tr1• them&gt; Call 992.5113.
10·5-ttc

- - - - - , -HIDDEN

Gift

Treasures

Shoppe. A lot of new hand·
cra fted items arriving dally.
Com e browse arou nd. Would
make nice Chr ist ma s g ifts.

Hours 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. dally
eK.cept Monday .
Martha Rose.

Owner ,

overwe ight lad ies, teens and

farm . Farm work ca n app ly

6.08 East Main
to rent. Util ities paid. Call614-'
POMEROY
98.1-3832.
.
- .
·'
11.5-8tc HARRISONVILLE
- FARM 130 ACRES, 35 ti llable, barn,
TRAILER 'LOTS, Bob's -Mobil~· silo,. 4 buildings, 3 bedroom
home, bat h, bu ilding

'

sites

along the road, MINERALS,
ALL THIS FOR JUST $19,000.
RACINE - 35 wooded acres,

For Sale

pond , some

POT ATOE S. Charles Hillon ,

CELLENT

t i mber ,

e

an e

LEGAL NOTICE

ST OBART Deceased .
NOt ice Is hereby given tht~t
Frances M . Yost of M iddleport,
Ohio. has been duty appoint ed
Administratr ix of the Estate of
Charl es E . Stobart. deceased,
tat e ot Meigs Cou nty , Oh io.
Cr edito rs are required to lite
th ei r cl aims w ith said f idu ciary
within four months.
Dated th is 1st day of
November 1971 .
John C. Ba con
At:ting Judge
{11 1 8, IS , 22 , 3T

Sa lt Works. E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
4-9-tfc
POODLE puppies. Si lver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992-

5443.

8-Js.tfc
APPLES
Fitzpatrick Or·
chards, State Route 689 ,
phone Wilesvllle, 669.378.1.
9·3-tfc
GUNS.

raised, moved, underpinned,

remodeled. Estimates free,
anywhere . Nat i onal Hou se
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston,

ditioning.
240 Lincoln

Phone 992-2550

nghts,

rights

hou se

i

com pletely remodeled - tully
carpeted and buJit.in kitchen
wi th wall oven and cou nt er lo~

range. $20,750.
l&lt;EY REAL ESTATE
Ray Doug las . Broker
Ph. 592·34 t4
Bill and Dottie Kelton, Assoc.
Phone 592·1349
Athens, 0 .

EX -

Virgil B.

bu ilding si tes along th e road ,

home, ba th, moderr;~ kitchen,
utili ty r oom, large summer
patio, fuel -oil forced -a ir
furnace, large garage and
workshop, modern outsidf"
fruit r oom, frui ts and berr ies.

JUST $15.900.
PLACE THE SALE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPA'BLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
Office 992-2259
Residence 992·2568
11·7-6tc

TOOLS

a nd NICf 2.story home with full
miscellaneous ot her items.
basement , 2 lots. new for ced
Will buy , sell, trade for air furna ce. Near Pom eroy
almost anything . Used Elementary School. Phone
Winchester models 12-37-101· 992·7384 to see.
1100, etc. Remingtons and
11·7-Jfc

ot her s,
machine
shop
equipment. Open eve ning s

TEAFORD
SR.

-

29 ACRES - 6 room home,
ba th, FREE GAS HEAT.

#e ain't
LEGAL NOTICE
On November 9, 1971, in ac .
cor dan ce wi th Ch apter 1S1S.O\ .
u Rev ised Code of Ohio, the
Ohio SoH and Water Con serv ation Committee will cause
an elect ion to be he ld at th e
Salisbury Elementary Schoo l
Build ing , electing one super .
visor to l ilt the eK.pir ing term of
David Koblentz tor a Three year
term . Nominees to f ill the ex ·
piring term are Dav id Kobtentz
of Ch ester Township and
Dorsey Jordan ot Columbia
Town ship.
Nom inat ions will be acce pted
from the floor at the time &lt;*\'
election or by petit ion sub ·
miffed one week prior to
election
containing
the
signatures of twenfy .five tan .
dow ne rs . Only landowners and
occupiers are el ig ible to vote .

1101 25 1111

- ·- -

(11)

RUBBER stamps made to '

Ain' t
riqht

'zactl~

Gtealin' it,

t' "'teal

We i" jeG'
borrow(n'

fo' a 61)el .

hone~!

tv\ ista'
Joei 'G

donke~.

U:1ca'

Caleb!

''""
THE ·BORN IJ)SER
P"
l'cL.W''i?tl HA~ ~ Uf'S'NJD.tOio\IS 1J 1111S Mi~:Zv&lt;?&gt;:

•&gt;

J'ITLE ORPHAN ANNID. -- - ·
\!!illl!!' FOR MY INSTINCTS T' START
OPERATtJi; SANI7f-·· BOT All I SlOE ARE
PfOPLe 11 A HURRY!

I'M

8

50METHtrf' S CLICKIN' lrt MY BRAIN,
'5ANO'f .. - ~ IT'S 1NSTJI1CT ST-'IR.TIN'

l' GEl !1f' £! HEAD Q' ~I

1, 8, 15, 22,29

or Wilma Casto, Portland.
10·24-30tc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-10-tfc
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels balanced
Ironically .
All

elec.
·work

Re aso nable

rates. Phone 992 ·3213.

7·27-tfc

CARNIVAL

to

is onu
14. Pass over

I

ROUTE 7 - modern 5 rooms,
bath. gas hea t. Paneling, 4

! '

like a person.

stand. All

walnut

to

features

make

fan cy

~

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

· ·---.,-----,
Q

des ig ns , also buttonhole s,

blind hems, etc., $43.35 cash
price

or

terms

available.

Phone 992-5641.
11 -2-6tc

drlvew•r· Iorge yard with

plenty o shade trees, located
on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on

!~a111~4bl~ fJ:a~~~e~1 f~·

occupancy. To see,

phone·

;

block building

' ~·

for business.

I

I

ments

29. Adjust
again
30. The

16. Reveal
19. Blemish
22. Capone,
in "Scarface"
23. Wounded
24. Furniture
style
25. Spike the
punch
27. Resolve

chosen

few
34. Thera·
peutic
draught
36. One of a
Latin trio
31. P laying
marble

town. Remember when

~nee-high

l1'0NUK

to ·· ·

i" tM•
he

WQI

\

b
0
II

JEWD

.t SNORP
E
~ I
d

.

Il]

I to

Now arranp the eireled !etten
fonn the ourpri,. anawer, 11
aurreoted by the above cartoon.

JG~~-~~--~Nn~m~/(IXIIIXIJ

(Aiu"ert tamorrow)

Jumble" FEWER

TRYST

CORPSE JUNIOR

Seturdey'•
+ruwer: No lonser amwing

I HAVEN'T ~LEPT
·FOR TWO PAVS!
I WANT MV
BLANKET BACK!

AXYDLBAAXR
IB LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

in l'Duru - JESTERS

Tl115 I ~ WHV I lDLO '{OU To
KEEP IT FOR ME ... 1 THOUGHT I ,
COULD GIVE IT UP, 6UT I CAN'T.. .
I'VE GOT To HAVE IT BACK!

I llE6 '(OU! PLEASE GIVE
IT BACK! PLEA.;E! PLEA~E!

1'111~ I~

FUN!

1\ Cryptogram Quolallon
EOVDIOR

downtown Pomeroy . Contac~

· =d

Yrslcrder'• A.mwer

My, how they •hoot ""

one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordinary words.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

PROPERTY SELLING,
YOU BET
992.]325 992-2378
Helen L. Teaford,
Associate
11 ·7·6tc

shampooing carpet. Only •HOUSE; l642 Lincoln Heights.
Hedrick, 2137 Wadswo, &lt;t
$27.50 cash prlc ' or terms Call .Danny Thompson, 992·
ur lve, Columbus. O~io , phon
avai lable. Phone 992·5641. ·
21%.
237·4334, Columbus.
1
'
11·2·6k
7·18-t•- .
5·9-lfo

•

govern-

33. Ancient
35. -stroke
37. Peter,
Paul and
Mary
38. Paint

week days for appointment .
I

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

10. Compact
between

season

t

Ga ll ipolis446·9539after5p.m. 'SIX ROOM house. ba lli,' tul i'
baseme~t . 133 Bulternljl A've."
has all cleaning attachments, -..,--------1:.:0..:
· 3~·1:.1
just walking dlstall(:e' from ~

plus the new electro suds for

hy Hl Nf l l AfiNOlrl . m d 110fl l H

26. Shade;
hue
27. ~~squealed"
28. Say
further
29. Medical
prescrip·
lion
31. Jujube
32. French

VACUUM cleaner, ' Electro
Hygiene new demonstrator

9. Jai~it1~,

18. Oppor·
tune
20. Costume
jewelry
21. Un·
fri endl y
22. Breath
r;;;;;-;;~;;;;;~;;y-.,~===~
sweetener
23. Minuscule
25. Fencing

rooms, paneled in basement,

2 porches, garage, concrete '

tree

~~~

basement . Garage. 2 acres .
only. Fife's, 711 S. Third, 7-ROOM block house. 4
bedrooms, living room , dlnlng
Middl eport. Phone 992-7494.
room, bath with shower, large SALEM CENTER - 4 bedroom
Inquire any pla ce ln M idwith lots of built-I n
kitchen
modern homes, 1-1/2 baths ,
• dlepor t for location .
birch
cabinets.
Hardwood
radiant panel heat. ~dern
11 -2·6tc
floors . Natural gas furnace •.
kitchen, cook unils, stainless
-----,--50.gallon electric water
si nk . Insulated. 10 ACRES.
TWIN
NE ED LE
sewing
heater, 2 large recreation
$22,500.00. NEW LISTING
machine 1971 model in new

bu ilt-In

6. Man's

name
17. Stretch,
1.
Indian
with"out"

acres .

furnace ,

(2 wds.)
4. Craving
5. Macmillan

hill

by Dick Turner

baths, eleclric heat. 4 acres.

bedrooms , bath,

many

15. - diem
16. Craggy

you

~lJJJM@M® IJ.GJ ktow&amp;'d .-J ,-.

offerings

move

ROUTE 7 BY-PASS - New 3
bedrooms, split level. m

nice 3

40. Down·
grade
41. Oh, joy!

DOWN
12. Island in
1. Sustain
Arthurian 2. Rosie's
legend
device
13. Where
3. Visionary
the "hent
goal for

TO BE DONE:'

NEW LISTING. $13,500.00.

MINERSVILLE -

5. Wrangle
II. "The ofthe
Mariner"

MORE LIFTING

Spri ng water, small barn .
Mineral s, oil and gas well.

CHESHIRE -

39. Vaude·
ville

Ancient

ALOT

{ lif~~l~ l ntiff .

We tJJlk

I. Beseech

ACROSS

order, 24-hour serv lce. Dwaln

guaranteed.

Bl&lt;clker
. 10 Methanic Stree1
~me roy , Ohio

... HOLY TOLEDO!
l.OOK UP THERE!

lnst.a lation .

LEGAL NOTICE
Charles F . Powell , whose last
known place of res idence Is
Route 1, Middlepor t. Ohio is
hereby noliffed that on th e 2Ist
day of Se~_tember , 197 1 Lela A .
Po~ell , bemg plainT iff flied her
READY-MI X CO NCRETE pet•tJon against h im as
del ivered right to your defendant in the Cov rt 01
pro jec t. Fa st and easy. Free Cor:nmon Pleas, Mej gs Count y,
estimates. Phone 992-3284 . Oh •o ~ Case No , 14,93 5, pra ying
dtvorce from said Charles F
Goeglein Read y· Mix Co .• for
Powell
on the grovn ds of grosS
Middleport, Ohio.
neglect of duty and extreme
6-30·tt c crue lty ' suppor t and &amp;l!mony
and div ision of property and
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED ot.her proper rel ief ; said ~a use
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, W ill be for hea ri ng on or after
Gall ipolis . John Ru sse ll , the 11th day of December 1971
Leta A. Powell , pl&amp;intif;
O.Vner &amp; Operator.
J . B. O'Brien , &amp;ttorney
5-12.ttc

SNOWVILLE
80 Acres on State Route 681. !'.'
buildings, just land at $5,900.
FARM IN SNOWVILLE
105 acres, good land and
outbuildinqs. free ga s.
mineral

St., ,MiddlepOo't

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
662·3035.
2·12-lfc

120 ACRES, SNOWVILLE
mineral

-AND THE''SADIE HAWKI NS DA'I
RACE" BECAME AN ANNUAL (sHuDDER.')
EVENT WHICH S PRE AD ALL OVER
THE WORLD!.'
caa_

Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us lor Free
Estimate on Furnace

W. Va. 253 11 , or phone 304·925·
3279.
9·30·60tp

6 room house, 3 bedrooms, 1

HUNTING,

men inlerested in a Weig ht
Portland, Ohio. Phone 843·
$3,500.
Watc hers (R) Class in
2268.
Pomeroy write : Weig ht
10-28-Jfc CHESTER GRACIOUS
Watchers (R) , 1863 Section
Rd .. Cincinnat i, Ohio 45237. FIREWOOD. Phone 992-7595. COUNTRY LIVING - 3.05
BEAUTIFUL ACRES _ _ _ _ __ _ _1 o_-3. tf~
11·7-61c practically new 3 bedroom
COAL. limestone . Excelsior

HOUSE MOVING: Houses, etc.

contra ct , $15 ,000 .

.Realty

MOBILE home space, on a

4·2-tfc

10·7·ttc

clear. Can be bought on land

Cleland

11 ·5-lOtc

Court, Rt. 124, Sy racuse ,

Racine. Ohio.

bath, 2 barns. pond, other out

992-5248 or 992·3436.

.Jhlo. 992-2951.

gutter . Call Donald Smith,

Between
Albany
and
Harri sonvi lle. Nice 4 bedroom
home, bath , 3 ba r ns, fenced ,
excellent
pa stur e
and
meadows. $24,000.

build in gs,

Contact Mc Clure's Dairy Isle,

ll ·Hk
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...

ll -4·6tc

11·3-Jtc

Racine, Ohio. For repair and
alum i num siding, soffet and

$38,000.
17t ACRES

Real Estate For Sale

11 ·3·6tp

Approx . 175 acres, excellent
land for crops and ~sture,
seve ral good outbuildings,
three ponds and Free Gas:
First floor of house has car.
peted liv i ng room wit h
firepla ce, dining or family
room , oven counter top range,
plent y of cu pboard space,

seco nd floor has three
bedrooms . This house also ha s
a clean. dry basement . A
great b uy for a beautiful farm .

1220 Washington. illvd.
Belpre, Ohio

ll ·Htc --:=::-::-:-=--c--1 BEDROOM trailer apart.
m ent. ideal f or coup l es .
KOSCOT Kosmet ics tor sale.
delivered to your door . New
coming
out
p roducts
regularly . Would you l ike to

prints to suit the lay of your
land . Call Guy Neigl er,

large bedroom and bath .· The

MOBIL£ HOMES

2 BEDROOM mobi le home in
Tuppers Plains. Phone 696·

1135 after 5 p.m.

Free estimate on building
your new home. Will draw

HAR RISONY I LLE

cond i tioning in Middleport
area . Adu l ts on l y. Phone 992·

mobi le home acr oss

NE IGLE R Burlding Supply .

FARMS RlR SALE!

11 ·7·3fp

'
--- - - -

MAYOR
HAWKINS
SUMMONS
THE
LOCAL
BACHELOPS

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and An.
thony )'lumbing &amp; Heating .'
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and A,jr Con ·

New Service

Mobile Homes for Salt

WA'rolt BUT'
AFTE/lNOON
7rLeri$I(JN I

•

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTIN)

- -- -- -

WITH NOTNING 71)

Our ·.

HI LTQN WOLFE .949·~211
DALE DUTTON, 992.2534

Now Offering A

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

HE's SA/tlt~P
IIV$/Pf A "NGI.~

KOOM/

Stop• In and
Floor Display.

Original Cabinet
"'
Company

PHONE NUMBER

HU., 1..-., l .lll

FURNITURE ;

Open 8Ti1'5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR, INC.

~

PROCE$SIN~

A!ld

Pet.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .

(I ltl l

t fi.IOUG~T IT WAS
A CO\IRSE IN MTE

OFFICE SUPPLiES

Notice

Mrs. Jack Davis and daughter, Instruction
Parkersburg, W. V. and Mr. and
Mrs . Neil Niggemyer and THO USA NDS of men needed in
Tru ck ing lndu s lry . 129.0po
Nancy, Mike and Angie of iobs
open annually accordi ng
Guysville.
lo U. S. Depl. of Labor. Ex.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess ce ll ent earn ings after short
ing period . For ap .
Larkins were Mr. and Mrs. ptrain
lication and in terview ca ll or
Harvey Newland of Mason, W. write : Trl ·Sf ate Dr i ver
Va ., Mr . and Mrs. Joe Smith of Training. 602 Kanawha Valley
Bank Bldg ., Charteslon, Wesl
Laurelville, Don Smith of Virginia
25301. Phone: (304)
Columbus, and Mr . and Mrs. 346-1556. Li censed by State ot
Robert Wyatt of Parkersburg , Ohio S52.
11·7-2tc
W. Va .
Mrs. R. E. Williams, Mrs. H I W I d
Lyle Balderson and Kay, visited
p
with Mrs. Rosie Randolph of EAR N at home address ing
Parkersburg w. va. Mrs . e nve lopes . Rush stamped
'
. '
self.addressed envelope . The
Hazel Balderson of V1enna, W. Ambrose Co .. 4325 Lakeborn,
Va . accompanied them to visit Davisburg , Mich . 48019.
with Mrs. Randolph .
10·24·30tp
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Milhoan, of
· Par kersburg, W. Va . were
recent dinner guests of An·
derson B. Kibble.
NOTICE OF
Kim Reed and Kay Balderson
APPOINTMENT
were overnight guests of Susan
Case No. 20573
Es tate of
CHARL ES
E.
Hannum of Long Bottom.

Mr . and Mrs. Maywood'
J ohnslon visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Joh nston.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wise of
Middleporl visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrc11cc' .Johnston.
- May Johnston

Wheel Alignment

-------

trai ler space . M &amp; G Food
Mlk ., 3 mi. south of Mid dleporL

THE

..

Ph. M2-77t6

Baptism . Everyone we lcome .

'

992-2094
606 ~. Main Pomeroy

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
0::!: HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN Ml DDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home con be purchased with a
monthly jlllynlen't as low as $65.00 tor a fami ly with a base
~;.~~~~l:~~:::oo and : three children. 711.
annual

EXPERT

li.J.Jtp

OLD Furnitur e, dishes, clocks ,
and·or comp lete household s.

11 ·5·3k NEW. 2 bedroom home with air

Game

Rawlings Dodge 1032.
Te am

sound

system. Walnut veneer finish

HOME &amp; AU'IO

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 99H271. Auto Sales
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
OFFICE HOURS
Septic tanks installed. George
8·25-tfc
'59
FORD,
Automatic,
will
sel
l
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. DailY:·
(B ill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
for part s. l new tire , new
8: 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 N oon
4·25·tfc
battery and star ter. Phone
:..ost
afler 5 p.m. 992·5598, 1716 SEW ING 1\MCHINES. Repa ir
Chester Road.
AWNINGS, storm doors and
FEMALE rabbi! dog wi thout
serv ice, all mak es. 992-2284.
ll -3-6tp
windows , carports ,
collar, w h ite with spots .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
aluminum siding
marquees,
Reward. Phone 949·3182.
NO HUNTING or lrespassing
Author ized Si nger Sa les and
and
railing
.
Cal l A. Jacob.
1968
PONTIAC
GTO.
Black
with
n
.3.3tc
allowed on my farm in Scipio
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
sales
representative.
For tree
red
interior,
400
t:
u
in
..
4
Township.
3·29·tfc
es timat es, phone Charles
speed, A. 1 shape, Phone 772.
George H. Baker
5417, Clifton, West Virginia.
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
ll ·2·6tc For Rent
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Johnson and Son, In c.
ll -J.9tp
Comolete Service
FURNISHED apartmen t.
5·27-tfc
Phone 949 3821
PRAYER mee ting at Gl ennis
Three large r ooms and bath .
Ra cine. Oh io
Hoffman residence, 1 mi .
Adulls only. See at 256 South 1970 DODGE Dar t Swinger, V-B,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance
automatic , 24,000 miles.
Cri tt Bradford
North of Chester on Rf. 7,
Fourth Ave. , Middleporl.
been ~.:ancelled? Lost your
Phone 992-7092.
s.J.tfc
Saturday, Nov.' l3, 7:30p.m.
11·8 tc
operator's license? Call rrn.
ll.J.3t
p
Rev . Freddie Steel, Mt. Hope,
2966.
-----W. Va . Sermon : Water
6· JS.tfc
3 ROOM apt . furnished , also
Real Estate For Sale
ll ·7·51p

Reedsville

992-7608_

Advertisem~nt .

Second High Ind. Game - Ed

Team

per

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.'

J1 .2.6tc

CONTEMPORARY co nsol e
stereo, AM· FM radio, 4 speed

DELIVERED

RATES

,

two

992·7351.

'·00 Per Ton

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 ce nts per word three.
consecutive insert ions.
18 cents per word six con .
secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Arrow

POMEROY

JOHNIES
,,
BEAUTY SHOP
- SPECIALsNovember 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. $6.50
Now $5.00
November 8 thru t 3
PERMANENT
Reg. $12.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
,,orner Union Ave. &amp;St. Rt. 1

Room Addition~
And Patios
Backhoe And
EndiO.der Work

11 ·7·6tc

bedroom housetrailer . Phone

I

Kitchens, Baths

·----------

changer, 4 speaker

The Publ is her r eserves the
right to edit or reiect any ads
objectional.
The
deem ed
publi she r w ill not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion.

Complete
R emodeiinl(

I f inance, se rv ice.
I
. .
I
1
1
~
POMUOY • ;
I • Jackw.car.. y,M,r. I
PhonottM111
J

MICHIGAN

1O" on
Largest End

5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion

.

LARGE Warm Morning heater .
Phone 985.3544.
lJ .7.31p

Poles
Maximum
Diameter

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

I
I

JOHNSON MASONRY' :

and bridle, Janie Coleman ,

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

llotor Co.

Harris 241.

Voss 233.
High Series - Ed Voss 606 .
Second High Series- George

FUEL OIL
All stzes tn stock . we install.

Phone 742·5829.

Slt ike

OU ts 2554.

SIEG.LER
HEATERS

I
I
I
1

BLACK and white pony, saddle

Wanted

OUts 871 .
Team High Series -

I
I
II

Siegler heater.

KELP!

Business Services

Save SlO.OO Nowl

man and wife
wanted for the, position of
matron - superintendent of
the Gallia County Children's

V·8, automatic , p. steering, white finish , blk . vinyl in.
terior . radio.

Chuck Follrod 160.

as.

HELP WANTED

Mature

..DON'T NEvieERRfP;ijUrTT-:-.-..::;;::====r==fif=)::F::--~1]
NO CURLIN' IRON ON
THAT.'IOUNG·UN'S HAIR
AGAIN \!

PAW?

,----------,r---------·
1
II

9
11

13
14
15
8 19

Btngals
Rams
Strike Outs
Zodiac's
High

Of
IUAlln

w. L.

Team
Raiders
Thundering Herd

Ponaeroy
Motor Co.

ZSIGNS

Pomeroy Nation a I Bank

For.Sale

Help Wanted

GREAT
BALLS 0'
FIRE!!

DO i!E NOTICE
ENNifTHING NEW
SINCE 'IE BEEN
GONE OFF,

EEKANDMEEK

'

'·

"It's like sonar,

.

Mom! • • "

LROEVA ,

ENEP

AVDHZ . - U10EWNA

FZ

VXBC

OIB

EOVD IOR

RNGR

EBBH

LID ·

FOWME

:saturday·s o;ryptoquoie: 'l'HE BOOKS THAT HELP, YOU
THE MOST AilE TIIOSF. WHICH MAKE YOU THINK TilE
,. MOST.-THEODO RE PARKER
j

\. 'J

OFNRNVNRA

f'I 1D7\ I&lt; inA" Ft•n tu rt•M~:Vn• ,:... 11tcl, lnc.J

., .

•

�/

J

(

-

a-n •• Dally Sentinel, MtMieuort-IT ~m~y, o., Nov. a, 1971

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassifieds. Get Results!
Local Bowling
Junior League
Oct. JO, 1971
Standings

18
16
14
13
12

Individual

Game

Second High Ind . Game

Mlck Davenport 158.
High Series -

information
contact Jerry E. Miller, 446·
._4-96-3-G-all-ip-oli-s._ ___,
-

Stelle Bachner

.

Second High Series Carsey .dll.

Jackie

Team High Game -

Str ike

For

Home .

1966 CHEV ROLET IMPALA CPE .
Loc al owner car , 6 cyl ., std. trans ., radio . good tires .
1966

OLDS. CUTLASS CPE.

Employment Wanted

$695

1966CHEVELLEMALIBU4DR.

I

Br ing · this ad and get SlO off
1on your purchase of a new

HOUSEC LEAN lNG in Racine,
Syracuse and Pomeroy area .

$695

Phone 992-2876.

10-24-tfc

Locally owned , 6 cyl. , automati c, radio, spotless clean
interior .

Early Sunday Mi&gt;red League
Oct. 3! , 1971
Standings

Team
Eaoles Club
Tom's Carry OUt
Forest Run Block
Racine Food Market

W. L.
48 24
42 30
34 38

Roseberry's Sohio
Farmer's Bank

32
20

40 32
40
52

High Individual Game - A. L.
Phelps 220.
Women High Ind. Game Linda Winebr enn er 192 .
High Series - A. L. Phelps

578.
High Series -

Betty Smith

476.
High Game -

Tom's Carry

OUt 710.
Team High Series -

Tom's

Carry Out 1924.

Early Wednesday
Mixed League

oct. 21, 1971
Standings

Team
Young 's Market

44 28

Oiler's Soh io

44 28

W. L.

SmIth. Nelson Motors
Zlde's Sport Shop

42 30
32 40

Tenth Framers

28

Team No. 4

44

26 46

High Indi vidual Game -

Jr .

Phelps 264.
Women High Ind. Game -

Pat ·carson 196.
High Series - Jr. Phelps 645.
Women

H igh

Se r ies

-

Isabelle Couch 515 .
Tea m High Game -

Young' s

Market 719.
Team High Series -

Young' s

Market 1975.
Tri-County League
Nov . 2, 1971

Standings

Team
Pomeroy Cement Block
Davis Warner Ins .

Pts.
48

36

Larry's Ashland

34

Firestone

32

Rawlings Dodge
30
Holsum Bak ery
14
High Indi vidual Game - Paul

Po~neroy

OPEN EVU. 8:00 P.M.

'PMEROY, OHIO

Carmel News,

By the Day
Visiting with Mrs. Mary
Circle during the past week
were Mrs. Faye Dunlavy of
Columbus, and Mrs. James
Warner of Harrisonville Rd.,
Mrs. William Perry and family
of Hollon, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
James Circle, Mr. and Mrs.
George Circle and family, all of
New Haven, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Pierce of Athens and
Laura CirCle of Dorcas.
Charles Wayne Brinker of
Carey, Ohio, called on Betty
Van Meter, Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
thur E. Johnson and family on
Saturday and also called on
Ralph Lee.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lee and family and
Ralph Lee over the weekend
were Mrs. Dwight Swepston and
son, Mark, of Columbus, Mrs.
Fern Stansbury of Athens, her
daughter, Virginia of Califor·
nia, John FeiTy of Athens, Ada
Holter, Estella Grueser and
Roy Frecker, Minersville
Route.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Douglas
Johnson , Ra cine, called on
Betty Van Meter, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Johnson and family on
Sunday.

MQJ1day Deadline9a .m.
_c;a l"! c;.e! lqtion &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m . for

Day of Publ icatlon
REGULATIONS

$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Additional 25r

Charge

Wright 575.
High
High

News, Notes

Series

Rawlings Dodge 2972.

Senior League
Oct. 30, 1971
StandinQs

w.

L.
18 9
18
15 1
14 13
8 19
8 19

Team
Gutter Dusters
Born Losers
Pin Bu sters
Royal Crowns
Strikers

i

The Pros
High Individual

Game

Gene Davis 171.

Second High Ind . Game
Peg O' Brien 151.
High Series -

Ge ne Davi s

438.
Second High Series O'Brien 420.

Peg

Team High Game - Born
Losers 723.
Team High Series - Gutter
Dusters 2127 .
Bantam league

Oct. 30, 1971
Standings

w.

Team

Red Barons
Sneaky Snakes
Pin Busters
Ba ll Breakers

Zodiac's

Musta ng s
High Individual

Greg Smith 126.

11

10
10

L.
7

8
8

9 9
7 II
7 II
Game

Second High Ind . Game
Ronnie Cascl 117 .

High Series 234.

Greg Smith

Second High Series - Ronnie
Casci 208.
Team High Game - Zodiac's

707.
Team High Series - Zodiac 's

1383.

I

Old Town
Flats News
Meeting will begin at
Freedom Gospel Church Nov . 7.
The minister will be from

••

ca binet . Balance $69.52. Use

our budget plan. Call 992-7085.
ll -8-6tc

MAPLE stereo . radio com .
bination, AM· FM radi o, 4
speed changer, 4 speaker
sound system . Balance $79.89.

TO

OHIO
PAllET CO.

Use our budget plan. Call 992·
7085.
J1 .8.6tc

On Old Rt. 33

For Sale or Trade

Phone 91!2-2689

FOR CATTLE - a 15ft. boal

Pomeroy, Ohio

and t railer , 4 cyl., Crosley
motor , washer and dryer,
chain saw, aluminum boat ,
new 7 h.p. motor, small farm
tr aclor . M &amp; G Food Mkl.. 3
mi . south of M iddleport.

-anted To Buy

Ravenswood.
Mrs. Karen Burnside and
Mrs. Maywood Johnston called
on Mrs. Ella Hannum and Mrs.
Roy Ha nnu m Jr · Of Long Bot·
tom Route.
Both children of Mr. and Mrs.
Delmer Grady are in Holzer
Medical ·Center at Gallipolis.
Mrs. Helen Jeffers, Mrs .
Sandra Peyton of Syracuse,
Mrs. Patty Van Meter of
Minel'llville visited Mr. and
Ml'll. Homer lcen.hower.
Mr. and Mrs . Jim Autherson
and family of Syracuse, Mr. and
Mrs . Thomas Autherson,
Beverly, Mr. and Mrs . Wayne
Bryson of Newark visited Mr.
and Mrs. carl Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Autherson
were dinner guests of their
daughter, Mrs. Elva Dailey of
Syracuse.

By MRS. LYLE BALDERSON
The foll owing members of the
Riverside Garden Cl ub enjoyed
eating out at the Three Sons
Restaurant at Vienna , W. Va .,
Mrs. Harliss Frank, Mrs. Frank
Bise, Mrs. Roy Hannum, Mrs.
Donald Myers, Mrs. Walter
Brown, Mrs. Denver Weber,
Mrs. Ernes t Whitehead, Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle , Mrs.
Claremon t Harris, Mrs. Gene
Wilson, Mrs. Lyle Balderson
and a guest Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery . Grace was given by
Mrs. Harris. After dining out
the ladies shopped at the new
Hills store .
Carroll Randolph is a patient
at the Mt. Carmel Hospital, at
Col umbus. Mrs. Randolph is
staying with her aunt Mrs.
Gladys Morgan of Columbus.
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer is visiting
with Mr. and · Mrs . Marion
Hetzer of Toledo.
Earl Buchanan of Coolville
had a surprise dinner for his
mother and father, Mr . and
Mrs . John Buchanan of
Reedsville. Others attending
were Mrs. Ovalene Royse, Mr .
and Mrs. Roger Sheeler and
daughters Wanda and Pam of
Greenfield, Agnes Hill, Mr. and

'5.5S
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

992-2174

See

FREE KITTENS. Call Mrs.
Gerald

Shuster ,

lincoln

We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in
rooting to our staff.

Heights. 992-5284.
REV IVAL sta rting Nov . 7 at
7:30 p.m., Freedom Gospel
Mission,
Bald
Knobs .
Everyone wel co me . Pastor,
Gluesencamp;
L.
R.
evangelist, Rev . George
Hoschar , West Columbia , W.

Va .

5443.

11 -7-Jt c
~-:----­

fr om

Bradbury School. Cal l 992·
5308 or see Char les Lewis, 2nd
house so uth fr om Bradbur y
School. Pel s welcome .

THE AN NU AL Sacred Heart

11 -7-3tp

Churc h Bazaar will be held
Thursday night November 11
starting with a dinner from
4: 30 to 6:30 p.m . Donations
dinner, adu lts , $1 .75, children
$1 . Dinner. fancy work
booths, games and r a ffle s.
Prize wi ll be given every half
hour from 6 to 9 p.m.

1.2'. • 14' · 24' · WIDE.

BRANDnew, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom

11 ·2·6tc

·MILLER

- -- - - --

HOUSE in Long Bottom, Ohio .

2 BEDROOM mobile home In

Phone 985.3529.

Rac ine area. Phone 992·6329.

tr1• them&gt; Call 992.5113.
10·5-ttc

- - - - - , -HIDDEN

Gift

Treasures

Shoppe. A lot of new hand·
cra fted items arriving dally.
Com e browse arou nd. Would
make nice Chr ist ma s g ifts.

Hours 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. dally
eK.cept Monday .
Martha Rose.

Owner ,

overwe ight lad ies, teens and

farm . Farm work ca n app ly

6.08 East Main
to rent. Util ities paid. Call614-'
POMEROY
98.1-3832.
.
- .
·'
11.5-8tc HARRISONVILLE
- FARM 130 ACRES, 35 ti llable, barn,
TRAILER 'LOTS, Bob's -Mobil~· silo,. 4 buildings, 3 bedroom
home, bat h, bu ilding

'

sites

along the road, MINERALS,
ALL THIS FOR JUST $19,000.
RACINE - 35 wooded acres,

For Sale

pond , some

POT ATOE S. Charles Hillon ,

CELLENT

t i mber ,

e

an e

LEGAL NOTICE

ST OBART Deceased .
NOt ice Is hereby given tht~t
Frances M . Yost of M iddleport,
Ohio. has been duty appoint ed
Administratr ix of the Estate of
Charl es E . Stobart. deceased,
tat e ot Meigs Cou nty , Oh io.
Cr edito rs are required to lite
th ei r cl aims w ith said f idu ciary
within four months.
Dated th is 1st day of
November 1971 .
John C. Ba con
At:ting Judge
{11 1 8, IS , 22 , 3T

Sa lt Works. E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·3891.
4-9-tfc
POODLE puppies. Si lver Toy,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992-

5443.

8-Js.tfc
APPLES
Fitzpatrick Or·
chards, State Route 689 ,
phone Wilesvllle, 669.378.1.
9·3-tfc
GUNS.

raised, moved, underpinned,

remodeled. Estimates free,
anywhere . Nat i onal Hou se
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston,

ditioning.
240 Lincoln

Phone 992-2550

nghts,

rights

hou se

i

com pletely remodeled - tully
carpeted and buJit.in kitchen
wi th wall oven and cou nt er lo~

range. $20,750.
l&lt;EY REAL ESTATE
Ray Doug las . Broker
Ph. 592·34 t4
Bill and Dottie Kelton, Assoc.
Phone 592·1349
Athens, 0 .

EX -

Virgil B.

bu ilding si tes along th e road ,

home, ba th, moderr;~ kitchen,
utili ty r oom, large summer
patio, fuel -oil forced -a ir
furnace, large garage and
workshop, modern outsidf"
fruit r oom, frui ts and berr ies.

JUST $15.900.
PLACE THE SALE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPA'BLE HANDS
HENRY E. CLELAND
Office 992-2259
Residence 992·2568
11·7-6tc

TOOLS

a nd NICf 2.story home with full
miscellaneous ot her items.
basement , 2 lots. new for ced
Will buy , sell, trade for air furna ce. Near Pom eroy
almost anything . Used Elementary School. Phone
Winchester models 12-37-101· 992·7384 to see.
1100, etc. Remingtons and
11·7-Jfc

ot her s,
machine
shop
equipment. Open eve ning s

TEAFORD
SR.

-

29 ACRES - 6 room home,
ba th, FREE GAS HEAT.

#e ain't
LEGAL NOTICE
On November 9, 1971, in ac .
cor dan ce wi th Ch apter 1S1S.O\ .
u Rev ised Code of Ohio, the
Ohio SoH and Water Con serv ation Committee will cause
an elect ion to be he ld at th e
Salisbury Elementary Schoo l
Build ing , electing one super .
visor to l ilt the eK.pir ing term of
David Koblentz tor a Three year
term . Nominees to f ill the ex ·
piring term are Dav id Kobtentz
of Ch ester Township and
Dorsey Jordan ot Columbia
Town ship.
Nom inat ions will be acce pted
from the floor at the time &lt;*\'
election or by petit ion sub ·
miffed one week prior to
election
containing
the
signatures of twenfy .five tan .
dow ne rs . Only landowners and
occupiers are el ig ible to vote .

1101 25 1111

- ·- -

(11)

RUBBER stamps made to '

Ain' t
riqht

'zactl~

Gtealin' it,

t' "'teal

We i" jeG'
borrow(n'

fo' a 61)el .

hone~!

tv\ ista'
Joei 'G

donke~.

U:1ca'

Caleb!

''""
THE ·BORN IJ)SER
P"
l'cL.W''i?tl HA~ ~ Uf'S'NJD.tOio\IS 1J 1111S Mi~:Zv&lt;?&gt;:

•&gt;

J'ITLE ORPHAN ANNID. -- - ·
\!!illl!!' FOR MY INSTINCTS T' START
OPERATtJi; SANI7f-·· BOT All I SlOE ARE
PfOPLe 11 A HURRY!

I'M

8

50METHtrf' S CLICKIN' lrt MY BRAIN,
'5ANO'f .. - ~ IT'S 1NSTJI1CT ST-'IR.TIN'

l' GEl !1f' £! HEAD Q' ~I

1, 8, 15, 22,29

or Wilma Casto, Portland.
10·24-30tc
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-10-tfc
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .

Wheels balanced
Ironically .
All

elec.
·work

Re aso nable

rates. Phone 992 ·3213.

7·27-tfc

CARNIVAL

to

is onu
14. Pass over

I

ROUTE 7 - modern 5 rooms,
bath. gas hea t. Paneling, 4

! '

like a person.

stand. All

walnut

to

features

make

fan cy

~

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

· ·---.,-----,
Q

des ig ns , also buttonhole s,

blind hems, etc., $43.35 cash
price

or

terms

available.

Phone 992-5641.
11 -2-6tc

drlvew•r· Iorge yard with

plenty o shade trees, located
on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on

!~a111~4bl~ fJ:a~~~e~1 f~·

occupancy. To see,

phone·

;

block building

' ~·

for business.

I

I

ments

29. Adjust
again
30. The

16. Reveal
19. Blemish
22. Capone,
in "Scarface"
23. Wounded
24. Furniture
style
25. Spike the
punch
27. Resolve

chosen

few
34. Thera·
peutic
draught
36. One of a
Latin trio
31. P laying
marble

town. Remember when

~nee-high

l1'0NUK

to ·· ·

i" tM•
he

WQI

\

b
0
II

JEWD

.t SNORP
E
~ I
d

.

Il]

I to

Now arranp the eireled !etten
fonn the ourpri,. anawer, 11
aurreoted by the above cartoon.

JG~~-~~--~Nn~m~/(IXIIIXIJ

(Aiu"ert tamorrow)

Jumble" FEWER

TRYST

CORPSE JUNIOR

Seturdey'•
+ruwer: No lonser amwing

I HAVEN'T ~LEPT
·FOR TWO PAVS!
I WANT MV
BLANKET BACK!

AXYDLBAAXR
IB LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

in l'Duru - JESTERS

Tl115 I ~ WHV I lDLO '{OU To
KEEP IT FOR ME ... 1 THOUGHT I ,
COULD GIVE IT UP, 6UT I CAN'T.. .
I'VE GOT To HAVE IT BACK!

I llE6 '(OU! PLEASE GIVE
IT BACK! PLEA.;E! PLEA~E!

1'111~ I~

FUN!

1\ Cryptogram Quolallon
EOVDIOR

downtown Pomeroy . Contac~

· =d

Yrslcrder'• A.mwer

My, how they •hoot ""

one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordinary words.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

PROPERTY SELLING,
YOU BET
992.]325 992-2378
Helen L. Teaford,
Associate
11 ·7·6tc

shampooing carpet. Only •HOUSE; l642 Lincoln Heights.
Hedrick, 2137 Wadswo, &lt;t
$27.50 cash prlc ' or terms Call .Danny Thompson, 992·
ur lve, Columbus. O~io , phon
avai lable. Phone 992·5641. ·
21%.
237·4334, Columbus.
1
'
11·2·6k
7·18-t•- .
5·9-lfo

•

govern-

33. Ancient
35. -stroke
37. Peter,
Paul and
Mary
38. Paint

week days for appointment .
I

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

10. Compact
between

season

t

Ga ll ipolis446·9539after5p.m. 'SIX ROOM house. ba lli,' tul i'
baseme~t . 133 Bulternljl A've."
has all cleaning attachments, -..,--------1:.:0..:
· 3~·1:.1
just walking dlstall(:e' from ~

plus the new electro suds for

hy Hl Nf l l AfiNOlrl . m d 110fl l H

26. Shade;
hue
27. ~~squealed"
28. Say
further
29. Medical
prescrip·
lion
31. Jujube
32. French

VACUUM cleaner, ' Electro
Hygiene new demonstrator

9. Jai~it1~,

18. Oppor·
tune
20. Costume
jewelry
21. Un·
fri endl y
22. Breath
r;;;;;-;;~;;;;;~;;y-.,~===~
sweetener
23. Minuscule
25. Fencing

rooms, paneled in basement,

2 porches, garage, concrete '

tree

~~~

basement . Garage. 2 acres .
only. Fife's, 711 S. Third, 7-ROOM block house. 4
bedrooms, living room , dlnlng
Middl eport. Phone 992-7494.
room, bath with shower, large SALEM CENTER - 4 bedroom
Inquire any pla ce ln M idwith lots of built-I n
kitchen
modern homes, 1-1/2 baths ,
• dlepor t for location .
birch
cabinets.
Hardwood
radiant panel heat. ~dern
11 -2·6tc
floors . Natural gas furnace •.
kitchen, cook unils, stainless
-----,--50.gallon electric water
si nk . Insulated. 10 ACRES.
TWIN
NE ED LE
sewing
heater, 2 large recreation
$22,500.00. NEW LISTING
machine 1971 model in new

bu ilt-In

6. Man's

name
17. Stretch,
1.
Indian
with"out"

acres .

furnace ,

(2 wds.)
4. Craving
5. Macmillan

hill

by Dick Turner

baths, eleclric heat. 4 acres.

bedrooms , bath,

many

15. - diem
16. Craggy

you

~lJJJM@M® IJ.GJ ktow&amp;'d .-J ,-.

offerings

move

ROUTE 7 BY-PASS - New 3
bedrooms, split level. m

nice 3

40. Down·
grade
41. Oh, joy!

DOWN
12. Island in
1. Sustain
Arthurian 2. Rosie's
legend
device
13. Where
3. Visionary
the "hent
goal for

TO BE DONE:'

NEW LISTING. $13,500.00.

MINERSVILLE -

5. Wrangle
II. "The ofthe
Mariner"

MORE LIFTING

Spri ng water, small barn .
Mineral s, oil and gas well.

CHESHIRE -

39. Vaude·
ville

Ancient

ALOT

{ lif~~l~ l ntiff .

We tJJlk

I. Beseech

ACROSS

order, 24-hour serv lce. Dwaln

guaranteed.

Bl&lt;clker
. 10 Methanic Stree1
~me roy , Ohio

... HOLY TOLEDO!
l.OOK UP THERE!

lnst.a lation .

LEGAL NOTICE
Charles F . Powell , whose last
known place of res idence Is
Route 1, Middlepor t. Ohio is
hereby noliffed that on th e 2Ist
day of Se~_tember , 197 1 Lela A .
Po~ell , bemg plainT iff flied her
READY-MI X CO NCRETE pet•tJon against h im as
del ivered right to your defendant in the Cov rt 01
pro jec t. Fa st and easy. Free Cor:nmon Pleas, Mej gs Count y,
estimates. Phone 992-3284 . Oh •o ~ Case No , 14,93 5, pra ying
dtvorce from said Charles F
Goeglein Read y· Mix Co .• for
Powell
on the grovn ds of grosS
Middleport, Ohio.
neglect of duty and extreme
6-30·tt c crue lty ' suppor t and &amp;l!mony
and div ision of property and
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED ot.her proper rel ief ; said ~a use
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, W ill be for hea ri ng on or after
Gall ipolis . John Ru sse ll , the 11th day of December 1971
Leta A. Powell , pl&amp;intif;
O.Vner &amp; Operator.
J . B. O'Brien , &amp;ttorney
5-12.ttc

SNOWVILLE
80 Acres on State Route 681. !'.'
buildings, just land at $5,900.
FARM IN SNOWVILLE
105 acres, good land and
outbuildinqs. free ga s.
mineral

St., ,MiddlepOo't

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph.
662·3035.
2·12-lfc

120 ACRES, SNOWVILLE
mineral

-AND THE''SADIE HAWKI NS DA'I
RACE" BECAME AN ANNUAL (sHuDDER.')
EVENT WHICH S PRE AD ALL OVER
THE WORLD!.'
caa_

Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us lor Free
Estimate on Furnace

W. Va. 253 11 , or phone 304·925·
3279.
9·30·60tp

6 room house, 3 bedrooms, 1

HUNTING,

men inlerested in a Weig ht
Portland, Ohio. Phone 843·
$3,500.
Watc hers (R) Class in
2268.
Pomeroy write : Weig ht
10-28-Jfc CHESTER GRACIOUS
Watchers (R) , 1863 Section
Rd .. Cincinnat i, Ohio 45237. FIREWOOD. Phone 992-7595. COUNTRY LIVING - 3.05
BEAUTIFUL ACRES _ _ _ _ __ _ _1 o_-3. tf~
11·7-61c practically new 3 bedroom
COAL. limestone . Excelsior

HOUSE MOVING: Houses, etc.

contra ct , $15 ,000 .

.Realty

MOBILE home space, on a

4·2-tfc

10·7·ttc

clear. Can be bought on land

Cleland

11 ·5-lOtc

Court, Rt. 124, Sy racuse ,

Racine. Ohio.

bath, 2 barns. pond, other out

992-5248 or 992·3436.

.Jhlo. 992-2951.

gutter . Call Donald Smith,

Between
Albany
and
Harri sonvi lle. Nice 4 bedroom
home, bath , 3 ba r ns, fenced ,
excellent
pa stur e
and
meadows. $24,000.

build in gs,

Contact Mc Clure's Dairy Isle,

ll ·Hk
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...

ll -4·6tc

11·3-Jtc

Racine, Ohio. For repair and
alum i num siding, soffet and

$38,000.
17t ACRES

Real Estate For Sale

11 ·3·6tp

Approx . 175 acres, excellent
land for crops and ~sture,
seve ral good outbuildings,
three ponds and Free Gas:
First floor of house has car.
peted liv i ng room wit h
firepla ce, dining or family
room , oven counter top range,
plent y of cu pboard space,

seco nd floor has three
bedrooms . This house also ha s
a clean. dry basement . A
great b uy for a beautiful farm .

1220 Washington. illvd.
Belpre, Ohio

ll ·Htc --:=::-::-:-=--c--1 BEDROOM trailer apart.
m ent. ideal f or coup l es .
KOSCOT Kosmet ics tor sale.
delivered to your door . New
coming
out
p roducts
regularly . Would you l ike to

prints to suit the lay of your
land . Call Guy Neigl er,

large bedroom and bath .· The

MOBIL£ HOMES

2 BEDROOM mobi le home in
Tuppers Plains. Phone 696·

1135 after 5 p.m.

Free estimate on building
your new home. Will draw

HAR RISONY I LLE

cond i tioning in Middleport
area . Adu l ts on l y. Phone 992·

mobi le home acr oss

NE IGLE R Burlding Supply .

FARMS RlR SALE!

11 ·7·3fp

'
--- - - -

MAYOR
HAWKINS
SUMMONS
THE
LOCAL
BACHELOPS

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and An.
thony )'lumbing &amp; Heating .'
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and A,jr Con ·

New Service

Mobile Homes for Salt

WA'rolt BUT'
AFTE/lNOON
7rLeri$I(JN I

•

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTIN)

- -- -- -

WITH NOTNING 71)

Our ·.

HI LTQN WOLFE .949·~211
DALE DUTTON, 992.2534

Now Offering A

FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

HE's SA/tlt~P
IIV$/Pf A "NGI.~

KOOM/

Stop• In and
Floor Display.

Original Cabinet
"'
Company

PHONE NUMBER

HU., 1..-., l .lll

FURNITURE ;

Open 8Ti1'5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR, INC.

~

PROCE$SIN~

A!ld

Pet.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .

(I ltl l

t fi.IOUG~T IT WAS
A CO\IRSE IN MTE

OFFICE SUPPLiES

Notice

Mrs. Jack Davis and daughter, Instruction
Parkersburg, W. V. and Mr. and
Mrs . Neil Niggemyer and THO USA NDS of men needed in
Tru ck ing lndu s lry . 129.0po
Nancy, Mike and Angie of iobs
open annually accordi ng
Guysville.
lo U. S. Depl. of Labor. Ex.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Bess ce ll ent earn ings after short
ing period . For ap .
Larkins were Mr. and Mrs. ptrain
lication and in terview ca ll or
Harvey Newland of Mason, W. write : Trl ·Sf ate Dr i ver
Va ., Mr . and Mrs. Joe Smith of Training. 602 Kanawha Valley
Bank Bldg ., Charteslon, Wesl
Laurelville, Don Smith of Virginia
25301. Phone: (304)
Columbus, and Mr . and Mrs. 346-1556. Li censed by State ot
Robert Wyatt of Parkersburg , Ohio S52.
11·7-2tc
W. Va .
Mrs. R. E. Williams, Mrs. H I W I d
Lyle Balderson and Kay, visited
p
with Mrs. Rosie Randolph of EAR N at home address ing
Parkersburg w. va. Mrs . e nve lopes . Rush stamped
'
. '
self.addressed envelope . The
Hazel Balderson of V1enna, W. Ambrose Co .. 4325 Lakeborn,
Va . accompanied them to visit Davisburg , Mich . 48019.
with Mrs. Randolph .
10·24·30tp
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Milhoan, of
· Par kersburg, W. Va . were
recent dinner guests of An·
derson B. Kibble.
NOTICE OF
Kim Reed and Kay Balderson
APPOINTMENT
were overnight guests of Susan
Case No. 20573
Es tate of
CHARL ES
E.
Hannum of Long Bottom.

Mr . and Mrs. Maywood'
J ohnslon visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Joh nston.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wise of
Middleporl visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrc11cc' .Johnston.
- May Johnston

Wheel Alignment

-------

trai ler space . M &amp; G Food
Mlk ., 3 mi. south of Mid dleporL

THE

..

Ph. M2-77t6

Baptism . Everyone we lcome .

'

992-2094
606 ~. Main Pomeroy

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
0::!: HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN Ml DDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home con be purchased with a
monthly jlllynlen't as low as $65.00 tor a fami ly with a base
~;.~~~~l:~~:::oo and : three children. 711.
annual

EXPERT

li.J.Jtp

OLD Furnitur e, dishes, clocks ,
and·or comp lete household s.

11 ·5·3k NEW. 2 bedroom home with air

Game

Rawlings Dodge 1032.
Te am

sound

system. Walnut veneer finish

HOME &amp; AU'IO

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 99H271. Auto Sales
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
OFFICE HOURS
Septic tanks installed. George
8·25-tfc
'59
FORD,
Automatic,
will
sel
l
8:30a.m . to 5:00p.m. DailY:·
(B ill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
for part s. l new tire , new
8: 30 a.m . to 12 : 00 N oon
4·25·tfc
battery and star ter. Phone
:..ost
afler 5 p.m. 992·5598, 1716 SEW ING 1\MCHINES. Repa ir
Chester Road.
AWNINGS, storm doors and
FEMALE rabbi! dog wi thout
serv ice, all mak es. 992-2284.
ll -3-6tp
windows , carports ,
collar, w h ite with spots .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
aluminum siding
marquees,
Reward. Phone 949·3182.
NO HUNTING or lrespassing
Author ized Si nger Sa les and
and
railing
.
Cal l A. Jacob.
1968
PONTIAC
GTO.
Black
with
n
.3.3tc
allowed on my farm in Scipio
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
sales
representative.
For tree
red
interior,
400
t:
u
in
..
4
Township.
3·29·tfc
es timat es, phone Charles
speed, A. 1 shape, Phone 772.
George H. Baker
5417, Clifton, West Virginia.
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
ll ·2·6tc For Rent
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Johnson and Son, In c.
ll -J.9tp
Comolete Service
FURNISHED apartmen t.
5·27-tfc
Phone 949 3821
PRAYER mee ting at Gl ennis
Three large r ooms and bath .
Ra cine. Oh io
Hoffman residence, 1 mi .
Adulls only. See at 256 South 1970 DODGE Dar t Swinger, V-B,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance
automatic , 24,000 miles.
Cri tt Bradford
North of Chester on Rf. 7,
Fourth Ave. , Middleporl.
been ~.:ancelled? Lost your
Phone 992-7092.
s.J.tfc
Saturday, Nov.' l3, 7:30p.m.
11·8 tc
operator's license? Call rrn.
ll.J.3t
p
Rev . Freddie Steel, Mt. Hope,
2966.
-----W. Va . Sermon : Water
6· JS.tfc
3 ROOM apt . furnished , also
Real Estate For Sale
ll ·7·51p

Reedsville

992-7608_

Advertisem~nt .

Second High Ind. Game - Ed

Team

per

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.'

J1 .2.6tc

CONTEMPORARY co nsol e
stereo, AM· FM radio, 4 speed

DELIVERED

RATES

,

two

992·7351.

'·00 Per Ton

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 ce nts per word three.
consecutive insert ions.
18 cents per word six con .
secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Arrow

POMEROY

JOHNIES
,,
BEAUTY SHOP
- SPECIALsNovember 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
Reg. $6.50
Now $5.00
November 8 thru t 3
PERMANENT
Reg. $12.50
Now $8.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992-7474
,,orner Union Ave. &amp;St. Rt. 1

Room Addition~
And Patios
Backhoe And
EndiO.der Work

11 ·7·6tc

bedroom housetrailer . Phone

I

Kitchens, Baths

·----------

changer, 4 speaker

The Publ is her r eserves the
right to edit or reiect any ads
objectional.
The
deem ed
publi she r w ill not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion.

Complete
R emodeiinl(

I f inance, se rv ice.
I
. .
I
1
1
~
POMUOY • ;
I • Jackw.car.. y,M,r. I
PhonottM111
J

MICHIGAN

1O" on
Largest End

5 P.M . Day Before Publicat ion

.

LARGE Warm Morning heater .
Phone 985.3544.
lJ .7.31p

Poles
Maximum
Diameter

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

I
I

JOHNSON MASONRY' :

and bridle, Janie Coleman ,

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

llotor Co.

Harris 241.

Voss 233.
High Series - Ed Voss 606 .
Second High Series- George

FUEL OIL
All stzes tn stock . we install.

Phone 742·5829.

Slt ike

OU ts 2554.

SIEG.LER
HEATERS

I
I
I
1

BLACK and white pony, saddle

Wanted

OUts 871 .
Team High Series -

I
I
II

Siegler heater.

KELP!

Business Services

Save SlO.OO Nowl

man and wife
wanted for the, position of
matron - superintendent of
the Gallia County Children's

V·8, automatic , p. steering, white finish , blk . vinyl in.
terior . radio.

Chuck Follrod 160.

as.

HELP WANTED

Mature

..DON'T NEvieERRfP;ijUrTT-:-.-..::;;::====r==fif=)::F::--~1]
NO CURLIN' IRON ON
THAT.'IOUNG·UN'S HAIR
AGAIN \!

PAW?

,----------,r---------·
1
II

9
11

13
14
15
8 19

Btngals
Rams
Strike Outs
Zodiac's
High

Of
IUAlln

w. L.

Team
Raiders
Thundering Herd

Ponaeroy
Motor Co.

ZSIGNS

Pomeroy Nation a I Bank

For.Sale

Help Wanted

GREAT
BALLS 0'
FIRE!!

DO i!E NOTICE
ENNifTHING NEW
SINCE 'IE BEEN
GONE OFF,

EEKANDMEEK

'

'·

"It's like sonar,

.

Mom! • • "

LROEVA ,

ENEP

AVDHZ . - U10EWNA

FZ

VXBC

OIB

EOVD IOR

RNGR

EBBH

LID ·

FOWME

:saturday·s o;ryptoquoie: 'l'HE BOOKS THAT HELP, YOU
THE MOST AilE TIIOSF. WHICH MAKE YOU THINK TilE
,. MOST.-THEODO RE PARKER
j

\. 'J

OFNRNVNRA

f'I 1D7\ I&lt; inA" Ft•n tu rt•M~:Vn• ,:... 11tcl, lnc.J

., .

•

�News ... in Briefs
(Conhn ued from page I ) •
by certam members of the Army at both the local and Pentagon
level have convlllCed me that to continue seek111g correction
within the military would be useless."
Herbert, a battalion commander m V1etnam, has four Silver
Stars, three Bronze Stars, lour Purple Hearts, two Army Commendation medals and the Combat Infantry medal.

Liberal Party Has Early Lead
MANILA -mE OPPOSITION Liberal Party took a surpriSe
early lead today over President Ferdinand E Marcos'
Nac10nalista candidates as voters cast ballots as the close of the
bloodiest election campaign m the Ph1lippme republic's ~year
history
As of 8 p m. (7 a.m EST) the Philippme News Serv1ce
reported campaign - connected deaths stood at 184 w1th another
205 persons wounded. The total included 16 killed today and
surpassed the toll of 99 dead and 90 wounded in the 1967 elections.
The campaign began July 9.

..

Wife, 3 Sons, Self Killed
OSHAWA, ONT. - A YOUNG FATilER killed hiS wile and
three sons SQJlday, then shot h1JI18elf through the head after h1s 14year-&lt;Jld daughter escaped from the house, police sa1d. He left a
note saying "I love my family" but gave no motive for the mass
slaymgs
Detective James Powell sa1d John Sanders, 33, a General
Motors employe, ll'!lt a note saymg, "I've killed my wile and now I
have to kill my children, God help me. I love my family and want
them all buried together " The note also asked that the family's
bills be paid with the Insurance money Underneath his Signature
Sanders scrawled, "Conrue got away. Look after her."

Watch Underway on Amchitka
CINDY PATTERSON, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Pat
Patterson, Syracuse , Wllh two of the 14 trophies she won at
the Grand ChampiOn Twirl Off contest held recently at
Parkersburg Cmdy won tbe Grand Champton award and
was presented a 42 mch trophy The smaller trophy p1ctured
IS the htgh pomt charnpwnshtp trophy She placed fll'sl m II
events out of 12 Cmdy has won a total of 127 tropbtes m
competttion She ts a student of Mrs Judy Rtggs Cindy will
be featured twtrhng her hoop baton m the Btg Bend Follies
Saturday at 8 10 p m at Me1gs H1gh School Cmdy IS the
current State Hoop Tw1rlmg ChampiOn m the juvemle
diviSIOn

Overnight Wire
B) the UP!
COLUMBUS - SEN Henry
M Jackson, D-Wash , sa1d he
wtll not make public unltl 1972
\\he ther ort;~ ot he 1s a candida te
for the Democrattc nomma tton
for President ' I wtll make up
m) mmd m a week m tY. o about
runnm g but I won't make a
public announcement th iS
yeat , 'Jackson satd het e durtn g
the weekend
The undecla1ed candidate
spoke before a convenlton of the
Oh1o State Council
of
MachmiSts here Saturda) m
wh tch he rtpped P restdenl
N1xo n's economtc pollctes
NEWCOMERSTOWN, OHIO
- Gov John J Gtlltgan planned
to speak tomght at a testtmomal
dmner here honortng the new
mayor of th1s Tuscarawa s
County commumty , 19-year-&lt;l)d
Donald Hooker Hooker, who
atte nded Rto Grande College,
wtll be come the ) oungest
ma vor m the counlr) when he
assumes office Jan I
"I can thmk of no better way
to pay tnbute to all of the newlyenfranchtsed you th of our
nat ton than by JOtmng the
people of Newcomerstown m
honormg Rona ld Hooker ,"
Gtlltgan satd Ill announctng he
would appear at the dmner, to
he held at Newcomerstown
Htgh School
COLUMBUS - ALB ERT
Hadden Martm , who leaches
drama tn the seven elementary
schools tn East Cleveland , \\as
named Ohto's teacher of the
Year for 1972 toda y Marltn, 57,
Will represent the state as a
candtdate for natto nal Teacher
of the Year
He ha s taught tn East
Cleveland schools for 24 yea rs
and sponsors · Le Masque," a
student drama club \\htch

r**************\.
A Th
...

.j(
~
-IC

ought
For Today

.;

-!&lt;
-1e
-1e The people who get on m -IC

t-....

t

the world are those who .;

get up and look lor the il
if Circ um stance s they ~&gt;'an t , ,.

il

ic

and tf they can't
them, make th em

~

....
t

-Ceorge Bernord Shaw

-~e

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

t

it

fmd

11
iC

t
* * * ........

lfs Quick! Easy t

..

!-~e
t
t

Frtdays Only
-IC The Drive -In Window-IC
is Open
-1e
9A.M . to7P.M. :
( Contmuously)
-IC
Other Bankmg Hours 9 to l-je

t

and 5 to 7 as usual on.;
~r&gt;days

~

...
i&lt;

:

1:

BANK f
and ~VINGS CO. -~e
F~RMERS

POMEROY, OHIO

Member FDI C
Member Federa l
Reserve System

t

:

..**************"

AMCHITKA, ALASKA -A SCIENTIFIC watch IS underway
today for the fll'st indications of collapse m the surface at ground
zero more than a mile above the blast of a five-megaton nuclear
warhead on Amchitka Island. Experts expect that a dish-shaped
crater, more than 50 feet deep and 2,000feet Wide, will form wben
super thermal temperatures cool and pressure lessens in the subsurface chamber created by tbe Cannikin test Saturday.

Red Contingent Due in New York

Hartinger

SAIGON -A SIX-YEAR WW m American military strength
mVIetnam was reached last week. U.S. military manpower fell
presents pubhc performances by 5,61]0 - the largest one-week reducllon smce the week ended
last May 6 when 6,300 men were pulled out. The 191,100 soldiers
each year
remammg were the smallest number smce December, 1965 C L E VE L AND
ALTHOUGH the Ntxon Afl, when 184,300 Gl's were m the war zone
rmmstratwn's new economic
po l1cy
has
mcreased
busmess10en 's optlmtsm about
Horace H McEihmney, 69, Lawren ce Edgar Reynolds ,
next year~s sa les, tndustry
contmues to be cautious about dted unexpectedly Saturday Mt~dleport , Gardner Reynolds,
htrtng ,
Industry
Week mghl at hiS home on Lead10g Lebanon , Mrs Sara Rupe,
magazme satd today Ftrms Creek Road near Mtddleport. Mtddleport; Mrs Bess1e Bailey,
ge nerally are keepmg !hell' The Middleport E-R squad Rutland; Mrs Myrtle Waters,
employment rolls stable and answered a call to the ZanesVIlle ; Mrs Fauna Cohen,
hopmg for producllVlly gams , residence, at 6 59 p m Rwn!ord, R I ; Mrs. Georg1a
the busmess rna gazme smd However, Mr McElhmney was McGrothers, Colwnbus, Mrs
Most maJor mdustr1es are domg dead upon the squad's amval Opal Klev1el, and Mrs Maxme
Born 10 Me1gs County on Dec N31rn, both of Clifton, N J , and
no nell htrt ng except for
replacement F1rms that are 30, 1901 , he was the son of the a stsler-m-law, Mrs Allen
mcreastng employment are late Homer and Fan me Gardner (Freda ) Ball, of Pomeroy
ge nerally calling back prevtous McElhmney Bestdes h1s Mr McElhmney was a
furlough employes or addmg parents, he was preceded m member of Middleport Lodge
ne w ones only to a small degree, death by h1s w1fe, Sadie Warner 363, F&amp;AM , Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES, Mtddleport,
McElhmney, m 1969
the magazme sa1d
and the K of P Lodge,
Surv1vmg
are
these
cousms,
NEW YORK - THE steel
Galhpolts
mdustry plans an mlffiedtale
Masomc serv1ces will he held
test of the government's wageat 7.30 p m. Monday at the
pnce gutdehnes and will push
for steel prtce h1kes posted Two autos were damaged and Rawlings-Coats Funeral Horne
before the 90-day freeze began , one dnver was c1ted to court m Funeral servtces will he at 2
Iron Age sa1d today . The a traffiC accident at 3 15 p m p m Tuesday at the funeral
naltonal metalworkmg weekly Sunday on West Mam St 10 home wtth the Rev Robert R
Card offlclatmg Bur1al wtll he
sa1d the mdustry already has Pomeroy
tn Middleport Hill Cemetery
set the machmery 10 molton and
Pollee sa1d an eastbound car
Fnends
may call at the funeral
steel executtves ha ve been busy dr1ven by Jamce Salser, 26,
tn Washtngton lay10g the Racme, was slopped m a lane of home any t1me
groundwork for the mcreases traH1c when tt was struck m the
The steel compantes m rear by a car driven by Vtcki
··--e·
August began paymg a 15 pet Deem, 21, Pomeroy V1ckt
wage boost on the first leg of Deem was c1ted on an assured Medmm damages were
thetr three-year, 31 pet-plus clear distance charge There reported to three cars and one
dnver was c1ted to mayor's
contract wtth the Un1ted were no InJUfles
court m a traHtc acc1dent on
Steelworkers, but they were
South Fourth St Ill Middleport
able to get m the compensatmg
at 10 15 p m Saturday
pnce boosts on only 45 pet of
Pollee satd a car driVen by
shtpments before the wageSteven R Tatterson, Pomeroy,
pnce freeze The wage boost,
turned from Locust St. onto
toge ther wtlh the postsettlement drop-&lt;Jff m shipPT PLEASANT - Mrs Fourth and struck parked cars
ments , cut deeply mto th1rd Ferne Burns1de Krodel of Point owned by Eber LeWIS, Mason,
quarter proftls
Pleasant dted Sunday 111 OhiO, and Wilham R Kennedy,
Overlook Chnst1an Science Rutland There were no mSamtartwn m Cleveland, OhiO, Junes. Tatterson was c1ted for
where she had been a pabenl reckless operatiOn
SKINNER TO SPEAK
the past two months
Veterans Memorial Hospital
MARIE'ITA, OhiO (UP!)
Mrs Krodel was the Widow of
Controversial Behavioral
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS the late Walter B Krodel, who Charles King, Hamson ville,
psycholotllsl Dr B. F Skmner
mayor of Pomt Pleasant 32
Dewey Pullins, Pomeroy ,
"to speak Tuesday afternoon at was
the F1rst Baptist Church here years She was a member of Charlene Cochran, Gallipolis ,
opemng Martella College ' ~ Mother Church, the First Ada F . Carson, Middleport ,
Th
L
Church of ChrtSt, Sctenttsl of Robert L. Bailey, Reedsville ,
omas ecture sertes
Boston , Mass , and helped
Mmme Johnson, Athens; W1lma
orgamze the Informal Group of Barth, Chester; Gay F1elds,
Christian Sclenbsls m Point
Pomeroy; Raymond Byers,
Pleasant 28 years ago She was
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Ractne
ADMISSIONS Mrs Dollie a member of one of Po10t SATURDAY DISCHARGES
Waugh, Ashton, Mrs Ed1th Pleasant's older and most - Vtola Edwards, Maude
Brent, Sprmgf1eld, 0 ; Helen prominent families who spent Connolly, Dale NICholson
R•ce, Po10t Pleasant, Guy almost her entire life here. AI SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Roush, Mason, Mrs Bernard one Ume she was active in all Roberta Roush, Letart, W Va.)
Her Carl B Hussell Mason . LiU•
Wallace, Pomeroy, Mrs Ralph communtly affatrs
.
'
'
'
Anderson, New Haven ; Mrs. husband d1ed 111 1966.
Coates, Pomeroy; Robert
The remams were cremated
Everett Sayre , Pomt Pleasant ;
Craig, Middleport; Elmer SinkMerlm Prater, Lavalette, W. tn Cleveland PriVate Chnstian mann, Parkersburg.
Va , Thelma Ltlchheld, &amp;•enlist memonal serv1ces are
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Southside, and Lilah Powell, to be conducted 111 Point Donald Hendricks , W1lma
Pleasant later
New Haven
Barth, Sandra Cobb, Dtane
Survivors mclude . two
DISCHARGED Mrs Dewey
Jones.
Ferguson, Mrs Clifford Cor- daughters, Mrs. Florence K
nell , Bas1l Crews, Mrs Charles McCormtck of Pomt Pleasant
WOMEN TO MEET
Powell, Mrs Edna Rolhns, Mrs and Mrs. Carol Jane Shadle of
The American Lutheran'
Genevteve H1ggms, Mrs Southstde; two sons, Rush A.
Church Women of the Sl Paul
Luctlle Moreland, Stephen John Krodel, Jt , of Pomt Pleasant
Lutheran Church will meet at
Neeley , Wa yne Capehart, and Captam Nicholas Krodel of
Vmton Cossm, Mrs. Wilham Daytona Beach, Florida; two B·30p m. Tuesday to the soc1al
Davts, Douglas Stewart, Mrs ststers , Mrs Jane (Hugh ) . room of the church. Mrs. V1da
Curry of Charleston and Mrs. DaviS will conduct the bustness
Ayton Curry and 0 . W Dye.
BIRTH Nov, 8, a daughter to Florence B (Ewell) Arnell of meeting which w1ll be followed
Mr and Mrs Robert Logan, Potnt Pleasant and 13 grand- by a pro~ra~ on stewardshtp
chtldren
led by Pash&gt;r Arthur Lund
Galltpohs Ferry

.

.

H. McElhinney Died Saturday

Driver Cited

Autos DBFn.Rued

Ferne Krodel
Died Sunday

1

.:en

·. . . . . . . . . . , Rutland Getting

I
ro:o ! o ou~ o nnun

u

onno o

,

o

!! 7 K .v~"""" L!l....t.JW:t U:tdL;O!d Ltb!,CJLU!bbbbLOb:CUC:: C:S!:U:LJL:CUb rr;·

(Contmued from page I)
w1th oak leal cluster,
Distlnguisbed Flying Cross, Air
Medal wtth eight oak leaf
clusters, A•r Force Commendation Medal, Army QOod .
Conduct Medal, World War II
VIctory· Medal, Army of Oc·
cupation Medal, Korean Service
Medal, National Defense
Semce Medal with one bronze
service star, Air Force
Longetity Service Award With
four oak leaf clusters, VIetnam
Semce Medal with two bronze
serv1ce stars , Repubhc of
V1etnam campaign Medal, and
the Small Al:ms Marksmanship
R1bbon .
Gen. Hartinger IS married to
the former Susan Allensworth
of Middleport, Oh1o, and they
have three children, Jnnmer,
20, Kr1s, 18, and Mike, 16.
THREE FINED
Fmed $5 and costs m the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Charles
Legar Saturday mght were
Virg1ma L1tner, Pomeroy,
charged w1th mtox1callon, and
Larry Spencer, Colwnbus, and
Dollie W1ll, Pomeroy, both on
assured clear distance charges

New Bank Branch
A modermsttc approach to
customer serv1ce was taken
today by the Pomeroy Natwnal
Bank tn !Is announcement that a
new all..,Jectnc hank butldtng
wtll be butlt on Salem St m
Rutland ConstructiOn wtll start
tmmedw tely
Planmng lor the fac1hly was
done through the efforts of
POMEROY National
Bank's new branch bank wlll
be located on Salem St. Jr.
Rutland William J . Hobstetter •s Vtce-Presideot and
Branch Manager.

ACTION IN the Eastern grid victory over Southern Saturday night at Racine was not easy
to catch in the rain and mud. Here photographer Katie Crow gets a bit ol1t, which resulted in a
51~ victory by Eastern, capping an undefeated season in which the Eagles won thell' second
straight league champtonshlp and erlended thell' viCtory strmg to 12 games, 1nclnding three of
last season.

DENVER (UPI ) - Lyn Helton, 20, a housewife who
learned about love through
death, d1ed Saturday m Children's Hospital of a rare bone
cancer that doctors could not
cure
Lyn never wanted to dte and
she readily admtlted 11. But she
came to gnps w1th the thought
of death and fmally accepted tl
"I th10k death ts sort of

you "'
Lyn was 19 when she first
dtscovered she had osteo
sarcoma , a dtsease doctors smd
was 90 per cent fata l She ftrst
was shocked, then morose
Fmally she accepted 11 and
dec1ded to help others m the
Residents of Middleport
and a section of Pomeroy
served by PolnTVlew Cable
TV \\ere wllhout service late
Sunday and early today after
vandals cut the malo trunk
line on the West Virginia side
of the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge.
OHlcers of the firm, Paul
Crabtree, president, said the
hoe was spliced this morning
and service was restored by
noon.
West VIrginia State Pollee
and the Mason County
sheriff's office Is investigating.

same sttuatton
She borrowed a tape recorder
from a hospital to record her
thoughts about death to "get
across how 11 feels to he dymg
and ra1sing children at the
same ttme "
Lyn had read "lots of arttcles
about people who have had
cancer and lived But readers
ge t a false 1mpress10n from
th1s I've never read an arllcle
by someone who 1s dymg
"I thmk 1f I'd seen somethmg
hke that, tl would have helped
me get through a Jot of
emotional pam."
She d1d her work qUietly and
wtthout pubbc1ty unhl a thtef
stole the recorder Then her
story became nattonally known
and scores of persons offered
new tape recorders to replace
the one that was stolen

Anyone convtcted of w•febeal!ng m South Carol10a IS
dtsquahfted from votmg

begmmng as ram and snow

Chance of showers possibly

Deer Killed by
Trailways Bus

Two acc1dents were investtgated Saturday mght b:1
the Me1gs County Shenff 's
Dept
Thomas Edward Meadows,
33, Cleveland, dnvmg a
Trallways Bus southeast on SR
33, h1t and killed a deer that ran
onto the highway to his front
Saturday mght on the Success
Road, a truck loaded wtth logs
- drtver unknown - turned
over on tts stde at a curve,
dwnpmg logs over a htll onto
the Robert Young property The
Three Runs Made dnver had left the scene when
The Pomeroy E-R squad offtcers amved
answered three calls Sunday
At 10·25 a m. to the home of
Ltlly Coates, Ltncoln Htll ,
Pomeroy, who was til, taken to
(Continued from Page l )
Veterans Memortal Hospttal
and admttted, at 10·59 am for m a month where homes m
Guy Roush, Mason, W. Va ., who Salem Township have been
was 1ll, taken to Pleasant Valley entered and properly stolen
Sometune Saturday evemng
Hospital, and at 4 40 p m
or
early Sunday mornmg the
Sunday, to the home of Mrs
Maggte Gttmore, East Mam Sl , residence of Mr. and Mrs Fred
where Mrs. G1lmore had fallen Robmson , Pomeroy, Rt 4, Kmg
down steps She was taken to Ridge, apparently was entered.
Veterans Memonal Hospital, The mc1dent ts still under
mvest1gat10n, as the restdents
treated, and released.
left Saturday mornmg for
Florida and officers have been
21% MR.UON BV 2000
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The unable to gather any In U S. population by the year 2000 formatiOn other than that the
will range from 271 million to residence had been entered
Sometime between 6 p. m
322 milllon - compared with
the current 204.8 million -the Saturday and 8 a m. Sunday a
store owned and operated by
Census Bureau sa1d today
Fred Burson, Burhngham, was
reported broken mto Burson
AGNEW AGAIN
sa1d
someone had lrted to force
WASHINGTON (UPI )
PreSident NIIon will keep V1ce the front door open. The shenff
President Spiro T. Agnew on the sa1d apparently whoever at1972 ticket, according to White tempted to enter the store was
House Communications scared off by passmg motoriSts
Director Herb Klem.

Thieves

MEIGtlHEATR£

BARONET
45 per cenl Polyesler - 35 per cenl Rayon . 20
per cent Cotton. 100 per cent Nylon Top
Stitched Bottom

COLORS: AVOCADO, GOLU, llWE, PINK
REFLECTIONS OF THE Roaring Twenties will be
presented by Dick Nease and Susie Soulsby during the
Saturday night "Fall Folliea". Both performers are veterans
of a number of Big Bend Minstrel Association presentations.

WASHABLE - MOTHPROOF NON-AU£RGENIC

&lt;See Page 2)

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

"G"

One admo.. ton only, Sl
SHOW 5TARTS7 P.M.

TERMS

protesr a recent action by
council rentmg a Jot on North
Fourth Ave to Cass Hmdy at
the rate of $25 a year. Epple
said he has mowed and taken
care of the small lot which he
needs for parkmg for the past
three years. He satd he should
have been not1fted of the renting
of the lot before any act10n was
taken He offered to pay $100
annually to rent the lot
Council wen t mto execullve
session for flVe mtnutes to

dtscuss the problem When tl
returned , 11 was announced that
council had apparently been m
error m renltng the property
smce the lot ts really under the

Gallia County recorded 1ts
fifth traffic fatality of the year
at 12:35 a.m. today when
Richard 0 White, 19, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, died in a spectacular
smgle car acc1dent on old 35,
eight tenths of a mile north of
Rt 160 near the Paul Wilhams
residence
Accordmg to the GallipoliS
Post State Highway Patrol,
While, apparently traveling at a
high rate of speed, lost control
of his 1969 Chevrolet Malibu,
which went off the right Side of
the h1ghway, Jumped a guardrat!, flew through the a1r,
knocked down a tree and two
fence posts and crashed into an
embankment.
White was killed mstanUy,
but a passenger, John C.
Henderson, 19, PatriOt Star Rt.,
escaped senous m)ury. He was
treated and released at tbe
Holzer Medical Center for
mmor cuts and abrasions.
White's body was not
removed from the wreckage

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEP.oRT, 0.

FREE
DELIVERY

•

'

JUrtSdlcllon of the board of
public affarrs Counctl sa1d the
Iotts not to be used by anyone,
and referred whatever actwn IS
to be taken back to the board of
public affa trs
Davtd Hendncks took the
floor to say that he and hiS Wife
had not had an adeq uate
fman ctal settlement when they
moved from the apartment over
the ftre statton where they had
served as pohce dispatchers A
long dtscusston followed, and
counctl agt eed to pay Mr and
Mrs Hendrtcks $20 to settle the
matter
It was agreed to forward
charges incurred by the vtllage
m the repatr ot hft sta twn
equtpment of the sewage
dtsposal system The amount
mvolved ts 10 the area of $17,000,
tl ts reported, and the repatr
work was !!lade necessary due
to alleged faulty equtpment
The amount of expendtlures on
the project w \1 be forwarded to
Floyd G Browne and Assoc at
Manon for collectwn It ts
reported that the f1rm will then
sue the supply10g f1rm for tis
retmbursement
Council approved the report
of Mayo( C 0 F1sher showmg
receipts of $912 m fines and fees
and $147 tn merchant collectiOn
fees for a lola) of $1 ,059 m Octo ber It was agreed that the
Safety Commtltee w11l study the
placement of present stop s1gns
at mtersectwns in the town
Ch1ef of Pohce J J Cremeans
exhtbtted a sample of vartous
drugs whiCh he w1U use 10 h1s
aniHlrug campaign.
Attend10g the meetmg were
Chase, Mayor Fisher, ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate, and
councilmen John Zerkle,
Lawrence Stewart, and Davtd
Ohlinger and council woman
Mrs Roger Morgan .

until 2 a.m. today.
Dr Donald R. Warehime,
Gal11a County Coroner, ruled
death was caused by masstve
head and chest injuries.
Richard Owen Whtte was
born Sept. 19, 1952, m Huntington, W.Va., son of Fred and
Ruth Dillon White.
A 1970 Gallia Academy High
School graduate, Wh1te had
been employed by the mamtenance department, Holzer
Medical Center, for the past
year
He Is surVIved by two Sisters,
Terry and Brenda, both at
home. He spent most of his life
in Gallia County. He attended
the Garfield Ave., Church of
Christ.
Funeral services will be held
10:30 am., Thursday at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home with burl31 m Mound Hill
Cemetery.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITIED - Shern Jewell,
Friends may call at the
Bernard Gilkey,
Langsville;
funeral home between 7-9 p.m.,
Middleport, Judy Michael,
Wednesday.
Racine; Jacquelyn Moyers ,
Manetta; John Hamson,
Middleport ; Lynn Connolly,
Mason; Naomt Bis.ell, Chester ,
Hamson,
Pomt
Dame!
Pleasant , Grace Thompson ,
Syracuse, Linda Baer, Mmersvtlle; Opal Prtddy
DISCHARGED - Mary
he yelled the faster the bttle mule went.
Bowers, Rtchard Dailey, Terry
Harvey hit the roadway, h1s arm
Jewell, Roy Russell, Gladys
full of sprags (wooden clubs) whtch he
Rumfield.
began slugging 10to those spmning
wheels at a ternflc rate. But the more
he spragged, the harder Harry pulled
Harvey ran to the sidewalk to get m
the clear and watch what was gomg to
happen
Charlie Schwarz of Mason (now
Jack Kerr, president of the
deceased) the engmeer on the fast
Pomeroy Chamber of Comflyer , looked out the cab window, ptllled
merce, Monday publicly exdown on the whiStle of old 888, a 4-4-0
pressed concern about apparent
passenger engme, for the crossover at
lack of mterest and response by
Dr. Sayre's off1ce. Qu•okly he shut off
local merchants m regard to the
the steam, and applied the brakes But
Chamber's
Chrtstmas
little Harry didn'tstop. Yes, he made tt
promotwn
across, but suddenly there went fly10g
Meeltng
at
Bower's
through the air lumpr ~coal, pteces of
Restaurant Chamber members
wood, and mine car wheels. Big Charlie
d1scussed the Christmas
Schwarz didn'tget old 888 stopped until
promotiOn set up by the Retatl
he was way up past Hen W10ters'
Merchants Assoc1al10n
Barber Shop.
Each merchant parhc1patmg
After Charlie Schwarz cleaned
10
the 1971 Chrtslmas promollon
everythtng off the front of the engine,
IS bemg asked to contrtbute $00
he saw that be had lost his cow catcher
and
a gift certtflcate from the1r
to a mule I
st.n e tn the amount of $10 or
That was one time the people of
ntut e, whtch IS left I; lhe1r
Mason got a lot of free coal.

Ha1Ty at the Crossing

You are invited to come, look, create beauttlul
rooms! With the finest furniture for beauty,
comfort •.jtnd styling in this area .

EASY

behalf of The CitiZens Natwnal
Bank, counctl also approved the
establishment of a dnve-tn
bankmg facthty The dnve-m
area w1ll be from the rear to the
front of the bmldmg now occup•ed by the Shoe Box wh1ch
recently was damaged by f1re
The area would be roofed and
three parkmg meters would be
removed from near the planned
extt on North Second Ave Fultz
observed that a constderable
amo unt of engmeenng and
planmng remamed to be done
on the project but tha t the bank
was hes1tantto proceed wtthout
the consent of counctl
Frank Epple appeared to

Control adjusts to room temperature changes .
Attracttve gift box.

Ross Hunter's

Dean Martin
Burt Lancaster

The former Middleport Chase smd the land had value to
landfill dump was sold and the vtllage 1n provtdtng a
adverllsmg lor bids on the localton to dump leaves and
cons tructiOn of a ne\\o f1re tree limbs
department headquarters was
Sohcttor Bernard Fultz met
approved Monday mght when wtt h council and represe nMtddleport Vtllage Counctl met tatives of the ftre department,
m regular sesston
Tom Darst, Bob Ftsher and
Recently, counctl had ad- Pete Kloes, who were acvertised for btds on the 6!&gt;-acre compamed by an archttect,
Jandftll properly located m the Douglas Strang, of Athens, to
Leadm g Creek area off the dtscuss procedures leadmg to
Route 7 by-pass There was on ly the constructton of the new fire
one bid on hand last mght That department headquarters A
was from the Jaymar Coal Co bond tssue was passed for the
near Cheshire whtch btd $5,500 ne w butldtng at the Nov 2
for the
The btd was electton Coun ctl voted to ada
However, Matn- ve rtise for btds on the bmldmg
Superv•sor Harold
At the request of Fultz, on

ELECTRIC BLANKETS

AT SPECIAL FALL SAVINGs ...... ..

AIRPORT
I Techntcolorl

Lan fill Dump IS

FULLY AUTOMATIC

Smgle Bed Size 60x84 - ·· · - Single Control
Double Bed Size 72x84 • - · • - Single Control
Double Bed Size 72x84 · - - - - Dual Control

BY ALMA MARSHALL
MASON - There once was an
under-s1ze~ but very smart and stubborn mule named Harry that made
history m th1s small OhiO River town m
the days after the CIVIl War when salt
and coal were the substance of mdustry
Those also were the days when
gambling was legal and nver and ratl
trafftc flourished
Millard Gress, who 1s retired m
Bellatre, Ohw, grew to manhood here
m1dst the sounds ~nd smells of this busy
mdustr1al community. He recalls the
mc1dent of Harry, the smart little mule,
that occurred while hiS Uncle George
Gress (father of Stella Gress, of Mason )
was supermtendent of the salt works
coal mme. But let Mlllard tell it :
The mmers loaded coal on railroad
cars, and used the1r own coal for the
salt works The mme was located up
Ltars Hollow (where the Ruttencutter
Packmg House is located) m Mason.
The tracks from the mme went down
Center Street, past the former Lutz
property and the George Johnson
home.

Well, anyhow, the trtp from the
mme was downgrade so the coal was
' sent to
hauled by mules The company
Mtssoun for a load of ponies and mules
for the mmes One mule, although ,
smallm siZe, was such a "character,"
they named htm Harry. Smart as a
wh1p and very stubborn, Harry was
used mostly ins1de the mine to pull the
cars fr om the rooms to the mam entry
where Nelhe, a larger mule, hooked on
to the loads and took them on down to
the salt works
Nellie, who could pull e1ghl cars,
gols1ck one day so 11 was dec1ded to use
httle Harry to help out They cut the
load m half, and little Harry had no
trouble pulling four cars down grade.
However, pla10ly pa d1dn't hke the
JOb, bemg more mteresled 10 the oats at
the mule barn . He lost no time trymg to
get there. The wheels were really
spmmng that day, w1th Harry on the
Job
Harvey Rowley~ the driver, looked
at hts watch, became alarmed.
The Pittsburgh flyer from Huntmgton was due He yelled at the mule,
"Whoa ·- Harry , Whoa- " but the more

SERVICE RECOGNIZED- C. E. Blakeslee, Meigs County Erlenalon Agent, Agriculture,
was me of seven Extenslllll agents in the United States recognized for ?,1; years of service at the
25th annual meetmg olthe National Association of Extenswn Agents, 4-H, m Atlantic C1ty, N. J
last week. Blakeslee is tbe fll'st agent in Ohio ever to-have served 4-H clubs 25 years The
Citation says, "There is no more noble a cause than the development of young people. The
attlludes and abilities formulated in the growmg years are retamed forever, and effect the
dec1stons and act1ons of these people as adults." The 25th annual meetmg was held at the
~elbourne Hotel Both Mr. and Mrs Blakeslee attended the entll'e sess10n Oct 3- Nov 4 and
were present at the banquet when the citatiOn was presented
·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:;:-:-:-:·:·:{·!·!{·!·!·!•!-!•!•!•!•!•'•!•!•!•!•!•

The Cheshire Village
Counctl will meet at 7 p.m.
this
evenmg
with
representatives of the U. S.
Corps of Engineers to discuss
possible federal assistance in
the cleanup of the Ohio River
basm along the banks near
the vlllage.
Ohio Power Company officials wlll construct a levee
on the Ohio River opposite the
new Gavin Plant.

Meter Take is In
October parkm g meter
collectwn s 111 Middleport
totaled $1,092.75 accordmg to
the rep or l of Ch1ef of Pollee J J
Cremeans submitted to M•d
dleport Council Monday mghl
The Middleport Pollee
Department arrested 31 persons
durmg the month w1th mtox•ca lton leadmg to the most
arrests, mne altogether ~'our
were arrested for speedmg and
four for dlSturbmg the peace
Other arrests mcluded two each
for drtvmg wh1le mtoxtcated;
reckless opera It on ; assured
clear dtstance and one each for
dnvmg left of center, foll owmg
too closely, usmg a weapon m a
careless manner, destruction of
properly and charges were
dropped m three mstances.

Wage Increases
Nailed at 5.5%
By GENE CARLSON
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - In
the
most
comprehensive
government-Imposed wage pohcy smce the Korean War, the
Pa} Board has voted to hold
future wage mcreases to about
55 per cent
The deciSion, whtch came
Monday mghl over strong labor
oppos11ton, would bar most
workerF from colleclmg wages
they lost durmg the 90-day
freeze
The board also agreed to let
most contracts negollaled belore or durmg the freeze take
effect unchanged when the
controls are lifted at m1dmght
Saturday
It was the most tmportant
dectswn yet on Phase 2 of
PreSident Ntxon's new economIC policy The cost of Livmg
Council could announce today
what mdustrtes will he covered
durmg the extended controls,
and the Pnce Comm1sswn ts
expected to announce tis
standards by the end of the
week
The post-freeze wage rules

were approved 10-5 wtlh labor
votmg no and mdustry and
public members 10 favor .
" It means they nulhfled our
contracts" satd AFL-CIO PresIdent George Meany afte r the
two-hour meetmg. Meany sa1d
he would take the 1ssue to
Mtam t where meetings precedmg the AFL.CIO annual convention were gettmg underway
thiS week
The ftve umon prestdenls on
the Pay Board dtd not rule out
an eventual walkout-a lactic
they used on sumlar Pay
Boards dunng World War II
and the Korean War
For the present, however,
they were expected to attend
the next meetmg Thursday
whtch w1ll set up rules for
enforcmg the new wage pobcy
The umon leaders were also
expected to take the1r case to
Congress where the retroactive
pay prmc1ple overturned by the
Pay Board maJonty has
rece1ved tmportant endorsement from the House Bankmg
Commtltee and Chairman W•l(Continued on page 2)

Promotion in Doldrums

d J;o;C:I't'l ltl ll

C\lsf

I

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992 2156

•

Fifth Fatality

'

To01ght &amp; Tuesday
Nov. &amp;-9

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1971

Young Gallian

LODGE TO MEET
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
Will meet m spec1al sessiOn at
7:30 P m Tuesday at the
Temple Robert King IS worSh1pful
te
mas r
SCOUTS TO MEET
Rac10e Gtrl Scout Troop 137
w1ll meet at 3.45 p m. Tuesday.
Members are to brmg handbooks and scissors.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO'

VOL XXIV NO .146

ELBERFELD$

If It's Fif!e Upholstered Furniture
You Are Looking For. ...

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature m downtown
Pomeroy Monday at II a m.
was 32 degrees, under sunny
sk1es

mtxed north and west today
Htghs m upper 30 to upper 40s
Cloud; tomght, chance of
showers southeast Lows m 30s
Par tly cloudy and warmer
Wednesday

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

love everythmg I can "
Lyn sa1d the prospect of
death "bothers me a little b1t I
have a little grrl and I don't
want to lose seemg her grow
up
"But you come to accept thiS,
and I learned a lot about
myself m the process, " she
said "People don 't realize that
death IS a part of hie They are
too afraid of 11 "
Attorney Shelley Don, a
fam1ly spokesman, sa1d Mrs
Helton was hospttahzed for
e1ght days at Children's Hospital before her death
"She was in a great amount
of pam near the end," he said
''It's a horrible way to d1e "
Survtvors mclude her 20month-&lt;Jld daughter, Jenmfer,
and her husband, Tom, a
professiOnal mus1c1an and photographer Funeral arrangements were mcomplete

depus1tory, as well as the dnveup wmdow, will be shelte red lor
protecllon from the weather
Customer serv1ce operattons
wtll be !acthtated by a funcltonal, well-planned ld)er area
Located tn thiS area, d1rectly
behtnd the lour statwn teller
lme, w1ll be an msulated ledger
housmg umt, two tellers' desks,
the dnve-up wmdow, and the
mght depository receiVIn g
locker
Adjacent to the teller area IS a
secunty vault Htghhghtmg the
vault wtll be a vault door that
p1 ov1des contents maximum
secunty Instde the vault, the
(Contmued on page 2)

Weather

'

"It's sort of an autobiOgraphy
to get across how 11 feels to be
dymg and ra1s10g children at
the same time," she once sa1d
of her book
"Maybe the readers wtll try
to read something mlo what
I've sa1d and learned, and they
can make someth10g of tt
theOISelves 1f they're faced wtth
the same SituatiOn "
Wh1le workmg on her book,
she contmued to undergo
treatment for the disease.
However, she eventually or·
dered a halt to radtat10n
treatments and some of the
drugs because of the effect 11
was hav10g on her
"! would rather dte m a
shorter length of time w1th a
happy slate of m10d, than take
the drugs and be unhappy and
mentally deflctent, " she satd
"Be10g th1s close to death, I
realize how unpor tant tt ts to

Prestdent Ed1son Hobstetter,
V•ce-Pres1dent Denms E
Keney , Vtce-Prestdent and
Branch Manager, Wtlham J
Hobstetter, the Board of
Dtrectors, and Sales Engmeers
of the LeFebure Corp wtth
of!tces m Columbus
The coloma! styhng of the new
butldmg wtll provtde a rather
umque seltmg for the bank's
operahons Customers wtll
parllcularly like the easy access to the bank, espectally the
convemence of the LeFebure
Spartan drtve-up wmdo" Ntght
depos1tory servtce wtll also be
offered customers by a recessed
The
envelope depos ttory

Now You Know

Young Mother Dies hut Knows Love

NEW YORK- NEW YORK POLICE announced that a group
of Chmese Communist officials, who are en route from PariS to
take over Peking's seat m the U.N., are expected to amve here at
12 15 p.m. EST aboard an Air France jetliner. It's believed they
are low-level functionanes, ass1gned to make preliminary
arrangements fo' the takeover The regular delegatiOn was ex- beautiful," she once satd ' 'I've
learned to love people I'm not
pected to reach here on Wednesday or Thursday.
afraid to say, 'Hey, I love

Vietnam Forces at 6-Year Low

:e.\SJ:::.

of

lhC'

promotton was es timated at
$2400 Th1s tncluded the
Chnstmas gtve-11ways and free
park10g on the two vtllage
park10g Jots
Kerr no ted lha t a pproxtmately $800 has been
collected from merchants He
observed that the Chnstmas
promotton ts not movmg hke tt
should Rtchard Chambers satd
the chamber 1~,\ ' I gomg to be
able to fi nance "a) 1 of the three
p1 ograms, g1ve aways, free
parkmg and Chrtslmas hghtmg,
let alone all of them "
Ken satd Bill Anderson, who
ts m charge of Clmstmas lights,
It ad secured !Ioree $100

letter from Kissel Brother!
Amusement Company mregard
to furmsh10g ndes for the 1972
Btg Bend Regatta It was
suggested that Kerr wnte the
company m regard to how much
particlpallon ~n revenue the
company would offer
B•ll Grueser noted that Nolan
Amusement Company, whtch
has been engaged by the
Chamber th prevtous years,
would be here before January
wtth a contract for next year's
Regatta. Informalton desired
It om Kissell would have to be
secured at once Grueser noted
A letter was also read by Kerr
m regard ta a small bus10ess
dunahuns
luco tmg m the area. Fred Crow
Ch1 1s1mns . ln 1•lht•r i.Ju:-;nw:ss, Ktll r cttda offe•ed to reply to the

quest10nmg asked by the
compan y Kerr also reported
that he has recetved several
apphcattons for the pos1tion of
secretary which the chamber
had discussed previously The
matter was tabled until the f1rst
of the year, however
Crow reported that the Ohto
Society for the PromotiOn of the
Bullfrog w1ll try to fmance Miss
Amenca's appearance at the
B1g Bend Regatta at a cost of
~00

Crow expressed a destre to
have Mtss America at the Frog
Jump and Frog Ball. Attending
were Kerr, Crow, Earl Ingels,
Chambers, Thereon Johnson,
Jack Carsey, C E Blakeslt!l!,
Grueser and Bob Jacobs.

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